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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., M~nday, &lt;X·L 14,1974

Apple Grove

Six-weeks honor list 3nnoimced
RACINE - The first six:
weeks honor roll at Southern
High School has 16 seniors. four

with all A records.

....-----.

· MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday

Oct. 14-17
NOT OPEN
Fri., Sat., Sun.

October 18-20
MAGNUM FORCE
(Technicolor)
Cl int Eastwood
Hal Holbrook

CARTOON
Show Starts 7 p.m.

_j

Parsons,

The roll (capital letters note
students with straight "") :
SENIORS - RONDA ASH,
Howard Black, Harold Black,
Jeff Circle. Susan Gooch, Mary
Hawk. Steve Hupp, Danny
Huston, Mitch Nease, Nola
Neigler, STEPHANIE ORD,
Tammy Roush, Jeannie
Sellers, GLENN SIMPSON ,
Helen Wilcoxen, VICKI
· WOLFE .
JUNIORS - William Bush ,
Keith Circle, Paul Cross ,
Randy Dudding,CKoste Hy~li,
David Neigler, Lee Ord, Pam

!

Corena

Rhodes ,

Debbie Roush,
BECKY
SAYRE. Sheryl Simpso~ .
. S 0 P H0 M0 R E S
PATRICIA AUTHERSON ,
Mona Black, Bobbi Chapman ,
Eric Dunning, .Anna Frank,
Carol Glenn, Alisa Harris,
Dreama Jenkins, Carl John-ston , Brenda Lawr~n c e ,
Brenda Lewis, Nina Miller,
Lee Smith, Denise Talbott,
TRACI WEESE, Kevin Will·
ford, SCOTT WOLFE.
FRESHMEN
LOIS
BAILEY, Steve
Baker ,
SHARON BIKACSAN ; Vicki
Boso, Shelley Chev ~)ier,
Donald Dudding, Larry Fisher.
Lori Gilinther, PERRY HILL.
Okey
Kiser,
TERESA
. MEADOWS, JAYE ORD, Jean
Ritchhart, Patricia Robinson,
Kimberly Taylor, Richard
Teaford, CARMEN THOMA,
Debbie Weddle , MYRA
WOODS.

l1
EXTENDED Ol1TLOOK
Wednesday Through
Friday,.. mostly fair weather
with highs In the 50s and low
60s and lows In the 40s and
upper 30s. ·

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Three ·player
swap announced

News, Events
Mrs. Pamela l''isher and .

lly IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Frank Torre was .visiting with ·
Tom Seaver one day a few.
seasons back in the New York
Mets' clubhouse.
As they chatted, Seaver
.pointed to a player dressing
across the room from him. a
third baseman b,y the name of
Joe Foy, who had shot up and
then suddenly down on the
baseball scene like a comet.
"Just think," Seaver said,
"that should be your brother
over there."
After six years of trying and
a few bad trades, Joe Torre
finally became a New York
Met Sunday.
Frank, his older brother, a
first baseman on Milwaukee's
pennant winners in 1957 and
1958 and now a sporting goods

children of Carroll, 0 ., Mrs.
Woodrow Daughtery of Mid·
dleport visited Mr. and Mrs.
Erwin Gloeckner and Mrs. Ada
NorriS.

Mr . and Mrs. Ted Hayman of
Westerville, 0 . spent tl;le
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald 'Hayman and Keith.
Mrs. Winona Randolph and
sons, Brian and Barry of
Pennhills, Pa. visited Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Smith, Sr.

AIRPORT HIT
PHNOM PENH (UP!)
Communist gunners slammed
10 Chinese-built rockets into
the eastern fringes of
Ochentong international air·
port southwest of the Cam·
bodian capital early today.
Police said seven civilians
living in the area were

wounded but no airport
facilities were affected.

STILL ACTIVE In op·
position to government
secrecy, Daniel Ellsberg, the
' 'leaker"

or

the Pentagon

Papers, is participating in
efforts . of the Center lor
National Security Studies, a
privately financed arm of
The Fund for Peace, to bring
the CIA under gre3ter public
control and accountability.

Mrs.

Arnold dies
Saturday evening

Bank with us
from the
driver's seat of your car

Scrubber

Jfaster service
Jno parking problem

two of the good
reasons for using our
Drive-In Banking facilities.
This is just one of the many
services we provi1e to make you
glad you did .. . when you choose
our bank to be y~ bank. ·

Kroger

The Farmers Ban"k

Pleasant, a son, and Mr . and

Mrs . William Rice ,
Pleasant, a da~ghter ..

Continued from page 1
here in West Virginia and we
believe we should have com·
parable wages."
Kroger Charleston, W. Va.,
Vice President Edwin A.
SievekiQg said, ''Kroger
cannot agree to Local 347's
inflationary demands."
The Ohio stores affected by
the 347 strike are in Marietta,
Belpre, Gallipolis, Pomeroy ·
and . Ironton, Ohio. In Ken·
lucky, the strike has closed
stores in Ashland, Preston burg
and Pikeville, Ky.

and Savings Co.
POMEROY I OHIO
All Deposits Guaranteed to $20,000.00
By The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
Member Federal Reserve System

Pt.

•

j. Frank
Eaton·,
'
.
'
!

29-unit low-rent apartnieni build~g is ·approved

of Huntington '
died on Sunday

salesman, told the Seaver story
after the thre.,..Piayer. swap
was announced at World Series
headquarters.
Tbe deal, first major one
since the er.• of the season,
sent the 34-yea · -old Torre·from
the St. Louis Cardinals to the
Mets for a pair Qf second line
pitchers-lefthander Ray Sadecki, also ·34, and Tommy
Moore, a 26-year...ld rookie
righthander,
New York has coveted Joe
Torre, a Brooklyn native and
powerful rightlianded batter,
for years,
Tbe Mets tbought they had
him before the 1969 season, and
Gil Hodges, who-was then their
manager, went s0 far as to tell
Joe during spring training that
"You'll be with us ina couple of
days."
But that deal fell through
because of the Mets' reiusal to
part wllh Amos Otis, then a
red-hot prospect to play centerfield for New York.
"The deal was that close,"

Mrs. Elizabeth Moban Ar·
MRS. FERRELL DIES
nold, 86, Poplar Bluff, Mo., who
Maggie Ferrell died Sunday
has been making her home in
·at Guthrie Memorial Hospital,
Middleport, died Saturday
Hun ling ton. She is survived by
morning at the Holzer Medical
a sister, Sally Byers of
GLENN ENDORSED
Center.
Pomeroy RD. Services will be .DAYTON, Ohio (UP!)- The
Mrs. Arnold was born June
Continued from page 1
held in Huntington .
Dayton Daily News, in its 18, 1888 in Ripley County, Mo.,
coal.
Sunday edition, endorsed John· the daughter of the late Mike
A company spokesman told
ROUNDUP-SET
Glenn, the Democratic U. S.
UP! : "It does work. It seems to
A membership roundup will Senatorial candidate in the and Alice Graves Mohan. She
was also preceded in death by a
continue to operate as long as be held when Drew Webster
daughter, a brother and a
we want it to." In general the Post 39, American Legion, November general election.
f1r111 seemed a&amp; pleased as the meets at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
grandson.
Surviving are a daughter,
EPA was.
hall . Oyster stew will be ser·
COME TO BERLIN
Mrs . Guy (Beth) Cowan,
But a second company
ved.
BERLIN (UP!)- More than Middleport; a son, Barney
pointed to with pride by the 700
scientists, industrialists Arnold, Irving, Tex.; a sister,
Boston Edison -was not as
FORDS INVITED
and bankers converged on Mrs. Nora Marlin, Naylor,
enthusiastic.
WASHINGTON (UP!)
A company spokesman said, President and Mrs. Ford have West Berlin today to discuss Mo., 17 grandchildren, and
"Wbile It Is running it is suc· been invited to visit Poland by ·proposals for overcoming the thre• great-grandchildren .
cessful. The bad news is that as Polish Communist leader world's. food, ~opulation and
Fuoera! services will be held
far as reliability is concerned Edward Gierek.
energy crises.
at 2 _p.m. Wednesday at the
it's not totally satisfactory. It
Franj Cottrell Funeral Home
has a relatively poor
in ·POO!ar Bluff, Mo. with burial
BOOSTERS TO MEET
availability. During the test
to ~. in the Naylor, Mo.,
Holzer Medical Center
RACINE - The Southern
period it has only been able to
Cemr.tery . The body was flown
No births Oct. II.
operate seven days at a time, · High School Athletic Boosters
Oct. 12 - Mr. and Mrs . this rl 'orning from .Gallipolis to
will mc~t at 7:30 p.m: Tuesday Thomas Willard, Radcliff, a Popli ,. Bluff. Mrs.; Arnold was
then shut down," he said.
Asked whether the EPA's night at the high school here . daughter.
a .fllel'lber of the Poplar Bluff
claimed breakthrough is here,
Oct. 13 - Mr. and Mrs. Floyd 'Methodist Church.
The
LOCAL TEMPS
he said: "It's just not proven
Baker, Jr., Jackson, a son; Mr. Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
Temperature in downtown and Mrs. Stephen Carmlchaei, in Middleport was in charge of
yet."
1
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a.m.
Letart, W.Va., a son; Mr. and local arrangements.
was 71 degrees under cloudy
Mrs. Russell Priddy, Jr., Pt.
skies:

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Frank Torre said on Sunday,
balding his thwnb and Index
linger perhaps a half-Inch
apart.
·
Torre, a lifetime .300 hitter,
hit .282 with 11 homers and 70
RBI in 1974. His best season
was 1971, when ' be won the
MVP award in the National
League for his :league..leading
.363 average and 137 RBI plus
24 hoine runs. The Indications
are now the Mets plan to use
him at first base.
The St. Louis f~st base job he
vacates probably1will go to 21year...Jd Keith Hernandez, who
led the Ameriean Association
in batting with a ·.351 mark at
Tulsa this past season.

Velerallll Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
-None.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- John Blosser, Tina Moore,
Crystal McCourt. .
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Charlene Wells, Albany; Oscar
Patterson, Rutland; Max
Manuel, Racine.
SUNDAY D!Sci:IARGES William Anderson\ Jr., Mar·
jorte Stewart, Mary Pickens,
, NOW YOU KNOW
S11uer;
Daisy
Thd Tibetan name for Mount Harold
'}lassburn, Michael Deem.
Ever.st is Chomolungma.

. Resignation of one councilman was accepted and efU!bllng · of two buildlrigs. Barr sho~ed _plans for the apartments which intelligentiy about the situation without seeihg It'. It was dedded
willlriclude '!I one bedroOm unlts·and two two-bedroom. Council for councilmen to meet with McClure at the site Friday evening.
legislation for construction of a 29-unlt rent ap,artment building
,pproved legislation to r~ate sidewalks, remove parking McClure said he has purchased the Helen Lewis home near his
was pU!Ied Monday night by Middleport Village Council.
meters, prohibit on.the«reet parking, and approved the private dairy shop.
Reslgrling due ·to new out.-of.Wwn employment was Counparking plait for the coinpllll&lt;.
-~,
'
cihnan David Jenkins who began his term of office the first of
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate reported the receipt of $2,439 in
Council apprqved alao an ordinance providffig an ap- federal revenue sharing funds. The mayor's report for Sep.Ibis year. Jepklns, who said he will be moving to Marietta, had
pr-tli 19 pet. Increase in charges for electric power In the tember showing $2,114.80 in fines and fees and $127 in merchant
submi~ his resignation verbally as of Oct. 21. He will be·emtowri: WIBlam ~. Bellamy of the Colwnbus and Southern Ohio police collections for a total of $2,241.80 was approved.
ployed by an insw'ance agency after teaching Iaiii year In Meigs
High School.
'
EJ.eCtrlq' Co.'explained the increase as approved by the Ohib
At the suggestion of Mayor Hoffman, council unanimously
Public Utilities Commission. Residents and businesses pay the
The.rel!gnation makes the council shorthanded, .since only
charges for street lighting on their monthly bills and the com· approved a resolution commending the late Mayor John Zerkle
laat week Cpuncll president Fred Hoffman moved Into the
for his long years of service to the community. Mr. Zerkle had
pany serves as the collection agency.
mayor's seat succeeding the late Mayor John Zerkle. Jenkins'
.Jf. council had not approved the ordinance, the company . served 29 years on village council before his three years as
resignation lowers tile usual six council membera to foiU'. Council
would c:il.a!!ontinue as the collection agency, Bellamy said. , mayor.
baa 30 days to elect replacements fl)l' both council membera, and
CowiCihnan Marvin Kelly objected the PUCO approving rate
Mayor Hoffman expressed his confidence in the work of
if It does not, tbe replacements are made by the mavor.
·
increases being sought from time to time by utility companies. Pollee Chief J . J . Cremeans and his deparlrnent; Harold Chase,
• Speaking befOre council also was Herschel McClure, who maintenance supervisor and his crew, aod Clerk·Treasurer Gene
Tony Barr of the Barr.Qrcle Development Co ., Gallipolis,
operates
a dairy ,shop In lower Middleport. ~cClure said he . Grate as well as in council.
which will build a new apartment compllll&lt; at the coiner of Third
Mayor Hoffman said ihat he wants everyone in town treated
would like to lll&lt;pand his business. It was decided that It would be
and Mill St. reported developments to council.
Impossible to close an alley between Th1rd and short Fourth ·sts. in the same manner and wants to execute the duties of his job in a
The company baa applied to the state lot its building permit
for the expansion, but council discussed the possibility of ·per- legal and proper way. He said further that he wants to maintain a
and will start aa soon as the permit Is received.
mitting McClure to expand his store towards Fourth St. and to village government Qf which people will be proud and want to be
The compllll&lt; Is expected to be completed about May, 1975.
use angle parking there.
Originally, It wai planned to build a five structure complex, but
" part of.
However, several council members said thev could not talk
The vllJage will provide every service possible for the people
the plan has been revised and the complex will now be composed

J. Frank Jton, 14;16 15th St.,
HuntliJgton; W. Va ., an at·
torney and a former Judge in
that city, was found dead of
naturaJ. causes at his home
Sunday morning.
Mr. Eaton, formerly of
Meigs County, taught at the
Racine High School several
years a nwnber of years ago.
He was married to the former
Elzada Spencer of Racine, ·a
sister of Mrs. Ann Coe and Mrs.
Maxine Wingett, Racine
residents.
Mrs.
Eaton
preceded her husband in death.
Mr. Eaton was a graduate of
Rio Grande College and served
on Its board of trwltees. He Is
survived by three children,
Mrs. John (Alice Ann) Davies,
and a son, Wllllam, both of
Akron, and Frank, Jr., of
Rochester, · N. Y.; eight
grandchildren, a brother,
Russell, of Huntington, and a
nwnberof nieces, nephews and

WHILE QUANTill

Friends may call at the
Beard Mortuary, 3001 Third
Ave., Huntington, from 4 to 9
p.m. Tuesday. Funeral services will be held at 11 a .m.
Wednesday at the First
Methodist Church on Fifth St.,

VOL XXVI

H~tington.

PICKLE LOAF
BREAKFAST ·LOAF
PIZZA

KRAFT WHIPPED
KRAFT 1

YOUR CHOICE
1-LB. OR MORE

lb.·89e

MAR~RINE

LB.

WHAT A. WAY to go to
school - wil.h a pollee .
escort. It's been the practice in Boston since schools
opened under a controversial integration pl1ln.

in half-time
show at game

'
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PATRIOT - Three well
performed musical nwnbers
and appropriate drills were
given here Friday evening by_
the Eastern Hlsh School band
directed by Charles Wills at
halftime of the EHS - Southwestern football game.
The show opened with ''Tile
Entertainer" to a downfleld
drill moving Into a diamond at
midfield, followed by "Eres
Tu,'" a pop tune, with the band
in a flashback drill and the
majorettes in a flag routine, .
and coricluded with "Sweet
Little Sixteen," a Chuck Berry ,
standard nwnbec of the 1950s, '·
with the band In place and the ,
majorettes In a hoop routine. ,

."
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3 oz.

'

m~

49•
:79•
•1A8

11. XL-100, 100'1!t solid alate reliability

2. RCA'a beat picture tube ever-XL-100 sets
with the black matrl11 picture tube g!ve you .
sparkling bright, dramati ally detailed color
pictures ·and natural, war er, more pleasing
flesh tones.
3. Autorna.tlc Fine Tuning con nlenee. .
More TV eXparll own RCA • ·• ; ore TV program
directors; TV station chief engineers, senior TV
cameramen and Independent TV service
technicians own RCA than .any other color TVI

.SALE
fob with AMES GARDEN
TOOLS
from
the
"FRIENDLY .ONES."
AMES has been perfecting
garden tools for 100 years
to make your job easier.
'

•585
This RCA XL.:.100 . .
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LIMITED TO
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ALL MODELS
ONSALEt

A gre'l ..:alue , ,.- .,and you'll really appreciate _the convenience
of the swivel base that lets you turn the screen to your
best viewing angle.
·

, Sh' Monday through
'

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ThuJSd~,' 9:30 to

5:00 - Open Friday and Saturday

. MECHANIC$fREET WAREHOUSE

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~i&amp;hts Until 8

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. ELBERFELD$ I.N .POMEROY
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S a ers

By United Presa llllematlaaal
ALGIERS-SECRETARYOFSTATEHENRYA. Kiasingl!l' ·
'
wound up his eight-day Arab-Israeli peace mls81on today,
traveling to Morocco for a fiiJal tour .hCJID'I of ta1b before flying
hoine. Kiaslnger met Algerbin President HOOarl Boumedleme
for three houra Monday night, briefed the third world leader on
·
peace negotiations and talked about oU prices.
CHARLESTON, , w. va.
The secretary. of state waa scheduled to.fly 11)1* morning to (UP!) _ A firebomb was
·Rabat, theMoroccancapltAlandalte~the. cominiOct. 28Arab thrown·lhrougb a window Into
·sunliiilt D!!!!!llng, on the last leg of his-eight-day visit, to the . an empty, grade school
Mldd1e Eut llld North Africa. "I want to be Invited to the Arab cluaroom Monday, shattering
aummll beciluael thlnt I know more Arab foreign mlnlalers tha.n an Wll!-.y cillrn that prevalled
do 111011 he&amp;ds' of atate,"' Klalnger told Boumedleme Joldngly. for several clays lit the dispute
&lt;Y'ier lchool boi1U hel't. ·
WASHINGTON -THE AGRictn.TURE DEPARTMENT
'lbe floor of the claa8room
says priceS foi' iDost !lOft drlnlril, already liP 25 per cent or more and tope of eeveral deab 1rere
from lut year, are likely to inqe8lte again lhlB fall as a result ol acorcbe&lt;i bY the~
· lillnll augar prices. The loft drink lndultry 111ea nearly me Jar, school (!lflclall laid.
fourth ·of the annual sugar. supply, lleCOOd only to holliehold
Damaae to the Loudendale
~ at grocery stores.
·
Jllementary School wu · ter· &amp;!gar prlcea have not climbed 10 far liDCe the 18111, llld
med mlnlma1 by the Kanawha
soft drlpb - which con~ 10 to. 15 per cent lllg&amp;r - are . County .Sheriff's Departreflecting ~tgaln. Sen. Pete V. Damenlcl, fi,.N.M., charged.ln a ment.
letter to Attorney GeDfral William B. Sube Monday that lllegal
Picketing went cin at variOus
prlc:e fixing wu responalble for the nearly five.lold price hike for . ICbool inllallatl0111 and ~
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sugar.
. ' 1
•
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around~oclc vigil wu conDomenlel called I« an Investigation of prlciJII policies of tinued butalde the Kanawha
sugar reftnen 'and. said he had evidence that would 'llhow "a County Jllll where lbe . ·Rev.
llrong presumption of admlnlBtraU~ price fixing and con.
Ezra Graley, one of the 1ellden
splracy."
of tbe derilon~Jratlllna •aat¥
the booill, wu..v~nc. a (16.day
. l.OSANGEl.ES-.MANY AlJILJNESTEWARDFJis!M wish
Jall tenn for~ of court.
.1 Playboy's MIBa October blid kept one thing cowred when ahe .
Graley, a Churi:b of God
bued all-her occupetlon. ''For tide of ua lryfng to change olD'
IDiJliller, wu jailed for violat~ma&amp;e: it only tak• one U~ number ~· this tw peaple·to go Ing cota't Injunctions against
~.~ Y!JU'rell'YID&amp; to'~e lt' .~' ..ld
~·
lnterfer'int, with acbool ~·
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-. ·r :; ·;lr'K'J . '8I~r··'

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s·j}ence

Look whatyOI.I get In every RCA XL-1001

Do that fall yard cleaning ·

JMIIMIIIIII!MUMUUMJUMUUMUUMUUI':II:UI':IIU:I':IIUf!MIIf!MIIf!MIIII'm&gt;JWd~~-&gt;JWd-roro'ol~~"""'§

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as~

KRAFT
VEL VEnA

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BOSTON (UPI) - Ractal
flpll broke out among black
struellon, for Glliigan and his
administration have not
and · white cblldrea In the
developed
a
highway hallway• of tronbled Hyde·
progrl!Jilin three and three
Park lllch Scllool today. At
quarter years.
1eaot four otudenll were
Injured, lncladlag two wbltei
"In the eight yeara that Jim
Rbodea and I served the people
who were stabbed.
of this state, our highway
Some children were
system was the envjr of every
carried out of the ichool on
other state and It will be again.
stretchers. One of tb01e
"We pledge to you that we
stabbed was a 15-year-old
will use every means at our
wblle boy. offlclala said. The
dlsp&lt;!BIIl 'to get Route 7 on the
-Injured were taken to Carney
Fed~ral system and to the
and Faulkner hospitals . .
The outbreak caused the
construction of a four.Jane
highway so II can be a major
school to close early. Bases
connector to the U.S. 50 High.were aent to lake the black
atudenta bome.
way at Coolville. We will work
with the State of West VIrginia
The City Hall Information
In urging them to complete
Center said the acbool was
their connecllons of U.S. 50 at
"Ia an uproar" with
"generalconfnstonand IIODle
Belpre thereby tying Into Intara tate 77. ·
'
w.bile parenll ta••·•
..._ their
· · "The people who pay the
children oat" rfgbt after lbe
IIPII were preporled.'
taxes that produc;e the money
deserve the best ,high war · 'IP.,...... IW@ll.lli~INir''Wgl8KW~
system they can get, Browns
statement concluded.
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• 'B. rze
·•
ews•• lR
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oz. CAN ·

12 OZ.:

"Governor Gllllgan and his
admlnlBiration are trying to .
get their banda on the 400
million dollars produced each
year In highway use. and
gasoline tax and spend It for
other than highway projects",
Lt. Johil W. Brown said in
Pomeroy Monday.
Referring to the 'Governor
and his administration's
support of an effort to. repeal
the provision In the Constitution that requires their
funds to be spent for highway
construction, repair and
policing, Brown told a group of
supporters meeting at the
Meigs Inn, "This Is just one
more attempt on the part of
this administration to get
cmnpleta control of the purse
strlnga of all funds and to spend
them or..wbatever they like".
Is administration has
II
regSrd for the people and
xpayera who produce liUs
money for highway con-

&gt;

131h OZ. JAR

ARMOURHASI-l
ARMOUR ·TREET

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Racial fights
break out in
.&amp;ston school

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Henry Wells, candidate for election as a Meigs County Commiaaloner; E. F.
Roblnsou. Pomeroy, chairman of Brown's campaign In Meigs County, and
Ralph Welker, Pomeroy, candidate for district representotive to the General
Assembly.

LT. GOVERNOR IN POMEROY -Lt. Gov.John W. Brown, R., center,
stopped In Pomeroy Mmday afternoon In his bid for reelection. ,\11 Informal
coffee hour was held for him at the Melp Inn. Pictured with the lieutenant
governor are, I tor, Howard Frank, candidate for Meigs County Auditor;

It's here!
·RCA's lowest-priced
XL-100 "
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100% solid state
Color.,Tv

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TEN CENTS

Lawyer,: 'Nixon
lied, misled'

.J'

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ARMOUR &amp; PriRK .SLOPPY JOE IN CANS
ARMOUR
WINO
15.5 oz.
BEANS

'
Cape Roca,
Portugal, is the
westernmost point In conllnental Europe.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1974

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 129

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enttne

Eastern hand

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Now You Know

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ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

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Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

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FRESH MEAT SPECIAL
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a1 y

Chance of rain early tonight,
low In the 40ri. High Wednesday
55 to 60. Probability of rain 50
per cent tonight, 20 per cent
tommow.

cousins.

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MONDAY THRU???

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Weather

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of the town, the new mayor commented. He suggested that
council committees should be working and bringing reports into
council sessions .
Mayor Hoffman said he will be in the mayor's office from 8 to
II a .m. each Saturday so that anyone in town can visit him to
discuss problems.
Council votM to teswne this year with trick or treat night,
and it was set for Oct. 30 from 6:45 to 7:45p.m. The village siren
will mark the opening and dosing of the event. Youngsters an!
asked by council to remain within tbe boundarl011 of their own
neighborhood. Police Chief Cremeans had recommended tbat
trick or treat night be observed In town this year.
"It's a tradition, and enough tradtions have been taken
away," Chief Cremeans said.
·
Chief Cremeans also stated that the Middleport Hill area of
the town is dangerous. Five people have been killed on the hill in
auto accidents over recent yeara, the cbief said. Council
discussed the possibility of a caution light or a sign near the top of
the hill. Mayor Hoffman referred the matter to the safety
committee.
Attending the meeting were those named earlier and
Councilmen James Brewer, William Walters and Allen Lee King,
Attorney Bernard Fultz, and the Rev . Dwight Zavitz who gave
prayer to open the meeting .

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WASHINGTON (UP!) John D. Ehrlichman's lawyer
charged today that former
President Richard M. Nixon
"deceived, misled, lied to and
used" his former No. 2 While
House aide throughout the
Watergate cover-up "to save
his own neck."
Attorney William S. Frates,
his voice booming through U.S.
District Judge John J . Slrica's
hushed court room, charRed

that Ehrllchman was the
victim of the cover-up plot and
not a participant as the
government has charged.
Frates' opening statement In
Ehrlich man's defense con·
firmed speculation In recent
weeks that Nixon's former aide
had broken with Nwm and
would accuse him of complicity
in the cover-up plot.
"Richard ·Nixon deceived,
misled, lied to and used John

.,,

Ehrllchnlan to cover up Jlil ~:
own knowledge and activities •
while publicly lllating tbat John
Ehrlichrnan was one of the
finest public servants be had
ever known," Frates told the
jury whlcb will decide the fate
of Ehrllclunan and four other
former Nixon associates.
"He
(Nixon)
was
deliberately withholding In·
formation from him
Continued on page 10

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ExPloSiVe ether,.found m PHS
Ether, stored In the old
Pomerqy High School building,
Is reportedly just part of the
total across the state that Is
capable of explosion or other
disaster according to Stall!
Fire Marshall David Lucht.
Lucht Issued a warning
concerning the ether over the
weekerid, and slated tbat an
Army ordinance team will
travel to the approximately 100
sites throughout Ohio where
the ether Is ·stored.
The ether, according to

searched through the Pomeroy shortly to remove the ether
High School Sunday morning from the building.
The ether ·was found on the
andJocated a box containing 96
one-quarter pound . cans of stage of the Pomeroy High
ether. Legar then notified School building.
Legar has advised school
Lucht In Colwnbua who stated
that a demolition squad from officials not to allow anyone In
the Air Force woUld arrive the building, although it Is not

Coshocton school officials

·· ·•· ··· · · ·u:»..::::::::::::".x:::"««=~:&gt;.":::::::::::::::::oxo:&gt;.:::.::~-:=::w.-:::~~:(W,"'&amp;;'I'l'.l..
'lm~gm~ll'm&gt;JWd&gt;JWd&gt;JWd&gt;JWd~f!MIIf!MIIfiMIII1Rii

reported ether leaking from · '
such a site In an unidentified '.
city school .
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles ';
Legar and several firemen

51· give blood Monday
·

Flfty,..ne pints of blood were
taken from 67 prospective
donora Monday In a regular
bloodmobile visit to the
Pomeroy Elementary School
conducted by the American
Red Cross, Meigs Chapter,
Seventeen pints were
,
received In replacement of
-::!EVELAND (UP!)- For· and didn't want to see any two blood used by a friend or
mer Gov. . J ames A. Rhod es students walking together on
~~:~~:~n~:~e a~~reJ~:e!lr~
allegedly told offlcera of the the eampus.
Ohio National Guard to "use
Michael w. Delaney, who wao Anderson became a gallon
any amount of force necessary" responsible for pre&amp;S releases donor.
to break up student anti-ww while the . guard occupied the
Physicians In charge were
Drs.
L. D. Telle, M.D,, John
demonstrators at Kent State ·campus, recollected Rhodes •
Unlveralty on May 3, 1970, _the statements during that week of Ridgway, P.O., Roger Daniels,
Cleveland Plain Dealer report- May and filed the deposition M.D., and Raymond Boice,
ed today.
last month In connection with a M.D. Nurses assisting were
Four students were killed In a civil damage suit arising out of Wilma Tillis, LPN, and Rbonda
hall of guard rifle fire on May the shootings. Tbe evidence will Dailey, R.N. .
The canteen was served by
4, 1970 as they protested the be presented pext April In lhe
the
Child Conservation League,
U.S. Invalion of Cambodia and U.S. District Court in Toledo.
the presence of the guard on Z:C Delaney also said Rbodes Mrs. Louis Osborne, chair·
campus.
remarked that if he closed the woman. Loading and ilnloadlng
Releasing a depoaltion made university, he would be giving were petformed by Boy Seoul
by a former guard sergeant, In to what "they wanted", but Troop 249, Henry Cleland,
the newspaper reported Rbodes did not explain exactly who scoutmaster, and Retired
said he was asswnlng lull "they were." Delaney recalled Senior V!II'!Vteers.·
Clerical work was performed
responslblllty for the situation
Continued on page 10 ,

Rhodes' orders
at K ent to ugh

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In use at the present lime any
way.
Besides Pomeroy, other Ohio
IDwna that are being checked
are Athena, Springfield,
Lisbon, Salem, Greenville,
Washington Court House,
Continued on page 10

Lucht, was to be used by Civil
Defense Packaged Disaster
Hospitals )n many Ohio cities,
with each hospital kit con.
talning surgical and other
medical supplies to be used In
disasters .
The destruction of the ether
began last Friday after

by Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
June Ashley, Juanita Sayre,
· Lula Hampton, Clara Mcln·
tyre, Beulab Strauss, Emma
K. Clatworthy, Joyce Hoback,
Eloise Wbite, Helen Pickens,
Grace Drake, Freda Durbam,
Vernon Nease and Mace!
Barton.
Donations were by the

Quality Print Shop, ·Meigs
Local Schools, The Dally
Sentinel, Athens Messenger,
WMPO Radio, Pomeroy
Emergency Squad
and
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY Robert
Vaughn. William Radford,
Frank Vaughan, Susan Blaker,
Pearl Lelfhell, Bobby J .
Conllnued on page 10

Day set to go fishing
A fishing derby for senior
citizens will be held along the
Ohio River b~k· across from
the Senior CitiZens Center in
Pomeroy from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Thursday.
· All persons 55· or over are
Invited to take part.
Registration fee Is 25 cents and
prizes will be offered including
$10 for the largestllsh caught,
· $5 for the second largest and $3
for the 'most fiah caught.
Participants muat have a
fishing license. Senior citizens,
however, can purchase a·

-$ 60,000 for a book ·goes sour

lifetime fishing license for
~. 50.

Those attending are to bring
their own folding chairs .
Participants will be pennltted
only mie pole, either with two
single or a triple hook.
It was announced today that
the center cleared $700 In a
recent auction sale. Thank&amp;
were extended to all who gave
from the aucllon. To all senior
volunteer workera who helped
and to 'auctioneers Dan Smith
and Jim Carnahan, who
donated their services.

Auto bounces
oft eniliankJnent

WASHINGTON(UPI)-The governor, and another old Vegaa that he baa aaked the Ford, was not elected vice
seo,ooo which Laurence Rock- queatlm will come up again: Senate Rules Committee and president by the ·people."
efeller p8ld for a biography of can· Rockefellef put aside .his the House Judiciary Com- · One Committee member who
Under invesll8ation by the
Arthur Goldberg may co111 his peraonal w~lh and IIC1Wer and mittee to reopen hearings on has question$ Ia Rep. Edward Meigs County Sbeiitrs &amp;!Bee Is
brother' Nelson an easy thatolhisfamUyifhebecmnes Rockefeller's nomination.
Meavfnalty, D-Iowa. "'lbeae a .single car accident that
"It Is not a question of revelationsoflhopaStfewdaya occurred Monday al8!35 p.m.
nomination to the vice · vice preli.dent?
presidency of the United · Goldberg, :whoni Rockefeller apology," Goldberg ""ld. "It Is have raised questlms In my on U. S. 33 at Darwin.
· Statel.
defeated fo'r New York's a qnestion of stating frankly to mind and in, the mlnda of
Roy E. Turner, Pl. PleasaiJt,
No one !S sugga.ting yet tbat governorship by \ a record the Cbmmittee all that has others," he said in a telephone was rravellng norl)l wben 1be
Rockefeller Wf1J be ~enled the ..breaking majority In 19'10, uses occurred -not only In regard interview.
car went off the highway on .the
.vice presidenCy, but ~ con- the term "hatChet job" to to the book incident and gifts "The climate baa changed, right in a curve after leaving
. greulonar committees 'which describe the biography . by 10 the committee. can deter· and It's changed to such a the four lane. The car went Into
were expected to cilnllnn·hlm · joumallit Vlcior Lasky which mine whether or riot it Is going · degree that imleaa the &amp;MWers a dlleh, struck an em- .
easily now are scheduling · was not sold but widely to make Ibis eonllrmatioo.: • :are frank and 'candid Mr. b8nkmeilt, bounced back on
more hearinlla to investipte , distributed as ,.. campaign
Some House-Judiciary Com- Rockefeller could find his · the ·" highway, . croued the ·
the bOok and the reported ~· material in 'New''\'ork. ..
.mlttee members said they nomination In real JeOpardy." centerline, !hen car~ oft
mUUon in giftS and· forglveJJ : LBIU'enceRockefeller!Nildhe . wanted a Jot mote lnvestlga·
Rep. Olarlea B. Rangel, D- the road on the right into an
loans f« Rockefeller friends investecl f60,000 In the !look. tion:
N.Y., said the FBI's lll&lt;tensive ~kme!l~
an4 aide&amp;.
~
.
andNeiloliRockefelleraccept·"We've
got
to
be Investigation of Rock~feller
'nie driver lelllbe ~of
' Newque&amp;tlonsareespeeted ed · "full respoM!lilllty." and scrupulously careful,". had turned up notbln&amp; 'more the· accldent. · ,He wiU 'be
to revolve around1 .whetber apci~oglzed to the former ' Olairman·felet'W. Rodlno, D- da!riaglng !ban ~e Goldberg 'cliarged~ however, ~ with
111ere were· "dirty lJ'Ieb" on . S¥i)rlime C9urt Jllltli:e. ' ·
N.J. said lir'tJUcago, ''because ·biography. ·
.
/
' reckleul_ operation, .the ·
1
, ~h~lf ~t the, New Y~ril~:" IQold~rg,..lbtori&lt;layin:Laf R~ckefeller, , llk e ·_ Presh;tent
' ~ _ll)lrffl'•llent: ._
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Baptists 'select
Trinity church ·class student award.
planning two events
Family night and holiday
bazaar plans were discussed
during a meeting of the Happy
Harvesters Class of Trinity
Church Friday night.
The family night observance
will be held on Nov. 3 at 5 p.m.
and the request for assistance
was made by Roy Mayer,
Sunday school superintendent.
It w&amp;s noted that the church·
wide holiday bazaar date has ·
been changed from Nov. 8 to
Dec. 6. Miss Erma Smith,
president, reported that in
conjunction with the bazaar, a
luncheon will be served during
the afternoon and evening. She
also reported flyers will be
inserted in the bulletin and
each member will be asked to

Grace ." Her topic was "One
Day at a Time," and she talked
about needless worry on
happenings which mjght never
take place. She concluded with
a story about the love of
adoptive parents and read a
poem, " Walk on a Rainbow
Trait "
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, Mrs. Ruby Erb,
Miss Sybil j;:bersbach, and
Mrs . Byrd. A fall motif was
carried out in! the table
decorations for a salad course
served by Miss Smith, Mrs ,
Genevieve Meinhart, and Mrs.
Neva Seyfried.
~;~~18118111l1!1118118i871&gt;11?7.·az'ilillll"'*'';e'.l'""""'.l.&amp;f.

~~:~~hat they will do for the 1~
The class voted to retain the
same officers for another year.
Plans were made for a birthday card shower honoring Mrs.
Frances Reibel, Oct. 22.
Members sang "Happy Birthday" to Mrs. Rose Ginther and
Mrs. Reibel who was unable to
attend.
A report was given on Mrs.
Edna
Reibel
who
is
·recuperating from a heart
attack. Appointed as hostesses
for November were Mrs .
Reibel, Mrs. Edith Lanning,
and Mrs. Marie Dailey. Mrs.
Eva Dessauer will be the
devotional leader.
Members exchanged names
for a Christmas gift exchange.
It was .noted that fruit cakes
and pecans are being sold by
the class . Mrs. Ethel
Williamson was welcomed
back after an absence , along
with her companion , Mrs.
Polly Byrd .
Meeting with the Happy
Harvesters was Robert Buck,
president of church council. He
talked of the "overwhelming
burden which the women of the
·church carry," and advised
: that the Council is always
: ready to help in whatever way
•possible. He spoke of the
:vestibule box for sugg,estions
:an,d.asked the women to use it.
.~ Mrs. Stella Kloes opened the
•meeting with devotions using
:scripture from Matt. 6, 34 and
:group singing of "Amazing

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SOC·I· aI

' More than 2,000 Masons fro·,
throughout the slate W"l
convene at tile Veteraf•
Memorial Auditorium ,;,
Colwnbus Friday and Satur·
day, Oct. 18-19 for the 165tt..
, nual meeting of the Grand
an
Lodge of Free And Accepted
Masons of Ohio. De legates
from Ohio's 681 Masonic
Lodges will e Iect new Grand
J.,odge officers for 1975.
Outgoing gran d mas ter of the

Tbe scholarship student to be
assisted by the . Missionary
Society of the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church this year is

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caIen dar\[
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nJF.SDAY
CHESTER Council . 323,
Daughters of America, 7:30
p.m. at the hall. Inspection to
be held.

group sang the theme song,
"All My Hope on God is
Founded" with prayer by Mrs.
Mary Shelton. It was voted to
Paula Sarver , student at pay dues for Church Women
Judson College in Elgin, Ill.
United. As Mrs. Kuhn read a
Meeting Thursday night at prayer from the state
the church, Mrs. L. P. Sterrett missionary president, and a
read a reswne on Miss Sarver . message entitled "I Got Up
It was announced that the Early This Morning," the
Dayton Christian Center is in taped recording of "Fill My
need of used clothing, school Cup , Lord" was played.
supplies and personal items.
Mrs. Joseph Cook reviewed
Mrs. Robert Kuhn who the book, "Twelve Angels from
presided in the absence of the Hell," written by the Rev.
president, also asked that the David Wilkerson, also author
Society begin work on layettes of "The Cross and the Swi lchto be taken to the 1975 state blade." The book is about a
convention for the "share and country minister who felt a
care" project.
challenge to help rehabilitate
Members decided that again drug addicts. Mrs. Cook made
this year they will go to the reference to two young addicts
Meigs County Infirmary for the without hope for recovery until
December meeting. Programs they · reached out to God.
for the 1974-75 year were Prayer by Mrs. Kuhn conplanned. .
cluded the meeting.
It was announced that World
The Halloween motif was
Community Day will be ob- carried out on the table
served on Nov. 1 and that decorations for a dessert
World Day of Prayer will be course served by Mrs . Kuhn
celebrated on Nov. 4. The love and Mrs. Michael to those
gift offering of $10 was named and Mrs. Harry Bailey ,
dedicated by Mrs . Oliver Mrs. I. B. Walker, and Mrs.
Michael.
George Skinner.
To open the mee tin~ the

Recognition to choir

oldest and largest fraternal

CElEBRATE ANNIVERSARY .- Mr.' arid Mrs.
Emerson Johnson of Portland celebrated their 25th wedding
anniversary on Aug. 1. They were honored with a surprise
party hosted by their children. Attending were Ronnie and
Johnnie Johnson, Portland; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Johnson and
son, Billy, Minersville; Mrs. C!ydeJohnson and daughters,
Cathy, Jeannie, and Kris, Portland; and Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Folmer, Pomeroy.

Logans announcing birth
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight (Skip)
Logan, 4671 Edwardian Court,
v'irginia Beach, Va., announce
the birth of their first child, a
son, named Shawn William,
weighing six pounds and 8'h
ounces.

Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. William Lester,
South Charleston ; paterna!
grandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
Dwight Logan, Sr., Pomeroy;
maternal great-grandparents

Downing hopes to get 'CatfiSh' on the hook

Ohio ·masons to
convene Oct. 18-19

are Mr. and Mrs . Clyde
Shaffer, Los Angeles, Calif.;
maternal
great-great!!fandmother Is Mrs. Mamie
ltllward, South Charleston, and
a paternal great-grandfather is
George Logan, Hemlock
Grove. Mr. Logan, a former
Pomeroy resident, is a First
Class Petty Officer sendng
with the U.S. Navy at Virginia
Beach.

·OAKLAND ( UP!) - Jim
"Catfish" Hunt"er, Oakland's

''money
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESSOFTHETEN
MILL LIMITATION

NOTICE is hereby g iven that
in pur!uance of a Resolut ion of

the Council of the V;)tage ot
Rac ine, Ohio , passed on the 6th .
day of August , 1974, there willbe submitted to a vote of the
people of said Village at a
General ELECTION to be held
in the Village of Racine , Ohio , at
the regular place of vot ing
thereln . on Tuesday , the 5th day
of November , 1974, the question
of levying , in excess of the ten
mill limitation, fc;tr the benefit of
lhc ine Village for the purpose
'of Providing and m aintaln ing
f i re apparatus , applian c es,
building s, or sites tllerefor , or
sources of water supply and
materials therefor , or the
establishment and maintenan ce
of lines of f ire alarm telegraph
or the pavmenl of permanent ,
part -time, Qr volvnte~r firemen

;,.... tion in Ohio is Royal C.
organ .__.
Scofield of Sebring, 0 ., who is
sales office manager for the
Morgan Engineering Co. of
Alll·ance.
Present officers of the Grand
Lodg of Ohio besides Scofield or t;re t;ght ;ng compan;e&lt; lo
e
~~
w -1 q~rate the sam e.
are Robert D. Sager of w\~:;u"' ., Said tax .being : a renewal of
J ' .di'I"Jx.i sting tax of 2.0 mills to run
deputy grandmaste r ' wh~
.e~ ; . -o,. f1ve years, at a rate not
line to be elected g

no

master; Calvin T. Hubler of
Dayton senior grand warden ;

Chart es' S· Ward of M entor '
junior grand warden; Charles
B. Moody of Zanesville, grand
treasurer; Robert A. Hinshaw

of
Worthington,
gran.d
secretary; the Rev." Mr . Morns
E. Allton of Westerville, grand
chaplain; Jerry C. Rasor, of
Commercial Point, grand
orator ; Daniel F. Iceman of
Wooster, grand marshal;
Charles A. Brigham Jr. of
Cincinnati, senior grand
deacon; Edgar L. · Miller of
Bellefont~ine, junior grand
deacon; and Clifford M. Powell
of Youngstown, grand tyler.
Masonic dignitaries from
throughout
the United States
readings led by Mrs. Mamie
and
Canada,
including several
Buckley. ·
A letter from the district past grandmasters, will attend
office was read and 12 sick the . convention . The corners lone was laid Sept. 29 for a
calls were reported.
A white elephant sale will be new building on the grounds of
held at the next meeting and a the Ohio Masonic Home in
visit to the county infirmary Springfield which cares forwas discussed for a later date. nearly 500 residents at an
A game was played with prizes annual cost of $3.5 million.
Following the devastating
awarded.
tornado
that struck Xenia and
Refreshments were served to
Ohio Aoril3, The
Sputhwestem
the above and Mrs. Gladys
Morgan, Mrs. Verna Rose, Grand Lodge of ' Ohio
Mrs . Dorothy Cashdollar distributed in excess of $125,000
to ·needy families and widows.
guests, Mrs. Dorotha Riebel,
Other activities include a
Mrs. Nell Wilson, Mrs. Viviari
Grand
Lodge scholarship
Humphrey, and Mrs. Ulllan
prolj!ram
in
which
27
Pickens. Mrs. Cashdollar was
scholarships
are
awarded
each
awarded the door prize. The
next · meeting Is with Mrs. year to 27 Ohio colleges,
universities and theological
Wilson .
seminaries.
'
All Master Masons, may
attend the Grand Lodge activities from 8:15a.m. until 4
HOFFMAN IN TURKEY
p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. until
LETART, W.Va.- U.S. Air noon Saturday.
Force · Sergeant .James 0.
Freemasonry in Ohio began
Hoffman, son of Mrs. Lyta M. in January, 1808 when 12
Hoffman has arrived for duty . delegates from six lodges met
with an Air Force support unit 4n Chillicothe and formed The
at Karamursel Common
Grand Lodge of Free and
Defense Installation, Turkey. Accepted Masons of ohio.'
A precision measurement
The Grlll)d Lodge of Ohio is
specialist, he Is a 1968 graduate the
largest
Masonic
of Wahama High Schoo!, .and
h u 'I d
attended United Electronics' jurisdiction in I e
m e
States and second lar~est in the
Institute.
world.

exceeding 2 0 mills for each on e

~~~~~~ts0 'to v:~~~:~0 ~'en~h if~~

each one hundred dollars of
valuation, for F ive years
The Polls for said Election

w;11 be open at 6 :30 o'clock AM .

~~c~oc~e~~~~ eofs~~rnu~~~nd6a ;g
T;me ot sa id day .
El:c!tig~:,er 01°f J~~ s Bo~~~nt~:
Oh;o

1

Festival ·is set

Sak schedukd

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes

DETROIT (UP!) - The
crowd was on its feet yelling
"Dee-fense" at Detroit for the
first time in a long while-and
for the first time in quite a spell
the Lions were playing it.
"The referees told us to raise
our hands up and quiet the
crowd," defensive end Ernie
Price of the Lions said. "We

said, 'You crazy, man? We
haven't heard this in a long

Chairman
Dorothy M . Johnston

Director

Dated Oct. ' ·
&lt;tO) 7, " · 21,

1974
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NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

As animals go, man is

long lived. Only some kinds
of tortolses or land turtles
live longer than man . An
elephant lives fo be a·round
60 years of age, a parrot so
years. As large as a whale
is, he reaches full maturity
at fke age of 12 years and
lives approximately 40
years . A housefly on ly li ves
a few months. A marigold
plant Is old in three or four
months, while some plants
live to be hundreds of years

old. The tree family puts all
to shame, as some of the
species li ve to be thousands
of years old, such as the
giant California trees.
Your water bearing
appliances, your sinks,
plumbing fixtures, your
clothes, in fact. almost
everything In your home
will keep its new look
longer and perform longer

and better with Refined
Water
from
Miracle.
Refined water and a small
amount of soap are all that
Is needed to keep your

household In lip lop shape.

A Miracle Refiner Is built
for heavy duty
per formance, yet is beautiful
enough to place anywhere
in your home - kitchen.
utility, basement or even
garage.
The
Miracle
Refiner- uses only 18" of
space, yet gives you all the
Refined water you need.
Your home will always look

new and shiny bright with
Refined Water cleaning
and so will you feel fresh
with no hard scrubbing
chores.
Let
Miracle
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News, Event

Card tricks
welcome here

•

SAYRE
l'IARDWARE
182-2525

•

W.Va . .

time."'
That third quarter goal line
struggle was the turning point
as Detroit came right back
with a touchdown to cement its
first victory, a 17-13 decision
over the San Francisco 49ers.
Rookie Wilbur Jackson had
NEW YORK (UPI)
just sped 64 yards to the Detroit
There's the same old names at
two fqr his longest gain of a 91the top of the United Press
yard night and it looked like the
International
Board
of
Lions were headed for their
Coaches' top 10, but there 's a
fifth loss. The 49ers are now 2-3
brand, new one in the No . ' 10
while all of Detroit's losses
spot.
have come by a total of 14
Ohio State continues to lead
points.
the nation's football teams, but
"I feel the crowd yelling
Arizona made it to the top 10
'defense' helped the team,"
for the first time in the school's
Coach Rick Forzano said
history.
savoring his (irst pro head
The Wildcats have ripped off
coaching win. "I was kind of five straight victories to start
yelling 'defense' myself on the
the season as Coach Jim Young
sidelines.''
continues the remarkable job
Linebackers
Charlie begun last year.
Weaver, Naurnoff, and Jim
Young's first squad last year
Las!avic thwarted successive
was an overwhehning choice to
plays and Bruce Gossett had to
finish dead last in the Western
step back and kick a 19-yard
Athletic Conference, but infield goal, cutting Detroit's
stead tied Arizona State for the
halftime lead to 1Q.6.
. title and finished with ·an 8-3
Gossett had kicked a 27-yard
mark.
field goal in the first quarter
The Wildcats this season are
only to have Steve Owens cap
tied for 5th in the nation in total
an ensuing 81-yard drive with a
offense, 12th in scoring offense
one-yard dive for a touchdown.
and ninth in rushing defense.
Errol Mann added a 31-yard
Quarterback Bruce Hill is
field goal for Detroit.
fifth in total offense and his
Herman Weaver punted 61
favorite iarget "T" Bell is
yards to put San Francisco in a
seventh in receptions .
hole after the second Gossett
But the Wildcats face their
field goal and when t!]e 49ers
toughest task yet when they
kicked, Dick Jauron ran the
travel to Texas Tech Saturday.
punt back 45 yards to the 13.
Ohio State collected 33 of the
Two running plays got
34 first-place ballots cast, with
nowhere so quarterback Bill
No. 2 Michigan receiving the
Mtinson whipped a 13-yard
other one.
bullet into Larry Walton's
A pair of undefeated Southwaiting-lmnds to hike the edge
eastern Conference teams ,
to 17~, a margin that proved
Alabama and Auburn, were
necessary when left-handed
third and fourth respecrookie Dennis ~orrison finally ·uve!y.
got his Forty Niners moving.
Southern California was
fifth, Texas A&amp;M sixth and
Notre Dame seventh.
Undefeated North Carolina
DEAL COMPLETED
State climbed from loth to
ST. LOUIS, Mo . (UP!)
eighth and Penn Stale from
Minor League pilcher Dan 13th to ninth.
Larson Monday was sent·by the
Kansas jumped from 14th to
St.. Louis Cardinals to the 11th, while Florida fell from
Houston Astros, completing an fifth to 12th after losing to
Aug. '15 deal.
'
Vanderbilt.
The earlier trade sent veterMaryland was 13th and
an Claude Osteen to the Cards Nebraska and Vanderbilt tied
for pitcher Ron Selak. Larson for 14th.
was assigned to the Astros'
Miami (Fia) was 16th, with
Denver farm team.
Miami (Ohio), Ariwna State
and Illinois tied for 17th. Texas
and Tulane were tied for 20th.
UNDERGOING SURGERY
NE'W YORK (UPI) The
ST . LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) 1974 United Press International
Running back Ken Willard of Board ol Coaches top 20 major
ll ege football ratings With
the St. Louis Cardinals will co
won -lost records and first place
undergo surgery for a knee votes in parentheses ·
Points
injury Tuesday, it was an- Team
1. Ohio St. (33 ) (5 -0 )
339
2. M ichigan (1) (5 Ol
280
nounced Monday.
3. Alabama (5 -0J
263
The Cardinals said Willard, 4. Auburn (S-Ol
200
the team's leading rusher, 5. Southern Callfornio~~ {3 . 1) 163
6 Texas A&amp;M (4· 11
137
could be hack later this season 7.
Notre Dame (4 -1)
132
if the surgery is successful.
8 North Carolina St . (6 -0 l
110

top pick

i~

Pleased

{v
Present.

BEAUTIFUL ·PORTRAITS
IN NATURAL LIVING COLOR

.

seams

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Ollloo-.-.'*!Nl-•

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'""'" -n:i':' Dill•;: ::;•:; .,

ihe

Council

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COMPLETE
WITH ·
THIS AD

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and concentrate on pr tching."'
Downiilg, winner of only ft vc
of 11 decisions for Los Angeles

kn ow what it 's all abou t In my
case I have to tell myself .to
stop wor rying about going a set

this year, said the fa ct he
pitched previously in World
Series competition should help
but it really doesn't mean tha n
much.
"Sure the pressure will be
ther'e," said the 33-year-{)!d
vetera n l eft--h andcr , "and any·

number of innings and just
concentrate on eac h batter as
he com es up."
Since pttching is the name of
th e game m a World Series, the

home field for the next three
gCJ mes.
With Hunter pitching for the
A's, Dodger Manager Walter
Alston has juggled his lin eup a
bit to compensate. He has

The A's will go w1tl1 the same
hne up as in the fir st two games
except for a poss1ble sw1 tch of

be nched catcher Steve Yeager

the season with Campaneris, a
good hit-and-run man , battin g
behind him . However , m the
fir st two series ga mes m Los

edge , on paper, today 1s with
th e A 's, mostly bee use Hunter

and put Joe Ferguson behind
the plate. with Willie Crawford,
a left-handed batter , taking

be~

over F er guson 's place in n ght

is pitchmg. an

secondly

Be rt Campaneris and B1lly
North . North was Oakland' s
leadoff man throughout most of

Angeles Campanens wa s the
leadoff batter .
" I may swa p them ar ound,"
sa1d A's ~' an age r Alvin Dark,
"but I,won 't make up my mind

for sure until just before the
star t of the third game. I think
w1th Campy hitting second we
have a better chance to play
our kind of ga me."

fie ld .

one who says tt won 't doesn 't

cause th e club is back on its

CLI':VELAND (U P!)
Likeable Cleveland Brown s
head coach Nick Skonch, with
his team grinding to a 1-4 start,
is beginning to get some hea t
from the fan s.
The Browns had lost two
straight games going into last
Sunday's match w1th Cincinnati , and fans hung out a

Defe nsive tackle Carl Ba r1sich

''crucial'' for the Browns to get

w1ll be !ned at end.
"You ca n't let peop~ come
out and control your rush week
after week," Skorich said.
"Cin cinnati just look a page
out of Oakland's boo~ the

gomg and was asked if the loss

Defense k ey
Skorich tries to
for Detroit Buckeyesb f
h
remain
ee up pass rus

Carpenter

Polly 's -Pointers

faces Al Dow~

Edwm S. Cozart

SOUTHERN Band Boosters,
7:30p.m. , at the high school.
NOTICE is hereby given that
Recognition
of
choir night. The Society· also agreed
All parents urged to attend.
in pursuan ce of a Reso l ution of
REEDSVILLE- The United
the Board of County Com ·
REV. FRANK Snare will members of the Middleport to serve a Christmas dinner for
miss ioners of the County of
speak on " The Love That Church of Christ highlighted the Busy Bee Class of the Methodist Women met at the
Meigs. Pomeroy, Oh io. passed
on the 30th day of August, 1974,
Forgives" 7:30 p.m., at the •the Philathea Society meeting Middleport First Baptist home of Mrs. Rose Thomas
there will be submitted to a vo te
with Mrs. Alberta Edwartls coRacine First Baptist Church. held Thursday night at the Church.
of the people of said County at a
·
A yellow and ·green color hostess last week. The
Special music by Mrs. Robert church.
General ELECTION to be held
In the County of Meigs, Ohio , at
Receiving
special scheme was carried out in the devotional topic, "Power of
Kuhn, Pomeroy.
the regular places of voting
tMereln , on Tuesday, the 5th day
MEMBERSHIP Roundup recognition and presented table decorations. Mrs. Erwin · Christ," consisted of scripture
of November, 1974 •. the question
readings
,
prayer,
and
other
corsages
were
Mrs.
Beulah
and
Mrs.
McKinley
presided
at
and oyster stew night when
of levying, In excess of U\e ten
mill limitation, tor the benefit of
Drew Webster Post 39, Roush, .the ojdest member ; the coffee and punch.
Meigs County for the purpose of
Christi
Hess,
the
youngest;
Hostesses
were
Mrs.
Denver
American Legion, meets at 8
· the maintenance and operation
Mrs
.
Michael
Gerlach,
of schopts, training centers,
Rice,
Mrs.
Robert
McElhinny,
p.m . at post home.
workshops and clinics for
director; Mrs. Chester Erwin, Mrs. Lula Mae Lynch, Mrs.
m entalty re-tarded persons.
TOPS CLUB, 7 p.m. at the organist; and Mrs . Clyde Ernest Lallance, Mrs. Errol!
SYRACUSE Reading
Said tax being : a renewal of a
Middleport American Legiqn
tax of 0.75 mills and an increase
Allensworth who has been a Conroy, Mrs. Farie Cole, and materials for the first grade
of 2.0 mIlls to constltute ·a tax of
Hall.
will be purchased by the
member of the choir for the Miss Mildred Hawley.
2.75 mills to run for Five years,
SALISBURY PTA, 7:30p.m.
at a rate not ex ceeding 2 75
Syracuse PTA, it was decided
longest period of time, about 50
mills tor each one dollar of
at the school. New Federal years.
at a recent meeting.
valuation, which amounts to
Teacher Corps representative
Twenty .seven and one half
Plans for the fall festival to
Expressions of appreciation
cents for each one hundred
appear on program . Parents to
he
held
Oct.
24
were
completed
for the contribution of the choir
dollars of valuation , for Five
A rummage sale to be held
• turn in stamp books or money
years .
to the church program were Oct. 17, 18 and 19 at the Mid- with a ticket price change
The Polls for said Election
for tall festival, Nov . 16.
given by Mrs. Betty McKinley dleport Masonic Temple made. The tickets will sell for
w i ll be open at 6: 30 o'clock A .M
Refreshments.
· and remain open until 6 : 30
two for 25 cents. It was
who presented the "Little
o 'clock P .M . Eastern Standard
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, Men's Quartet" composed of · basement was planned during reported that the Southern
Time ot said day .
the
Friday
night
meelirJg
of
Pomeroy Masonic Temple, first and second graders, Darin
By order of . the Board of
Local Schoo! Board will purElections , of Meigs County ,
7:30p.m. Tuesday. Work in the Wolfe, Shaun Baker, Scott Mary Shrine 37, Order of the chase stage curtains. Next
Ohio .
mark master 3itd past master McKinley, and Darin Roach. White Shrine of Jerusalem.
Edwin S Cozart
meeting will be on Nov. 12 with
The rummage sale will start
Chairman
degrees.
They sang several numbers at 9 a.m. each morning and on the fifth grade to serve.
OHIO ETA PHI Charter, accompanied by Miss Trudy
Ooroth v M . Johnston
The attendance banner was
.Oct. 19 a bake sale will also be won by the second grade. Mrs.
Director
Beta Sigma Phi, 7:30 Tuesday, Roach.
Dated October 4, 197-t
held
by
the
Shrine
at
Dudley's
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Unda Hubbard was elected
For roll call members gave
OO) 7 , 14 , 21 , 28 , 4fc
in
Middleport
Electric Co. with Kathy Fry choir memories. There were Florists
secretary. Two of the Syracuse
beginning
at
the
same
hour.
and Janet Downie to give \he tributes to several former
College trustees met with the
Mrs. Midgie Abbott, worthy
cultural
program,
and
Sandi
NOTICE UN t-ILINb
PTA to give a history of the
~
choir members.
OF INVENTORY
High Priestess, and Thomas
Korn and Barbara Logan to
school and the land use
Mrs. Don Erwin welcomed Edwards, watchman
AND APPRAISEMENT
of
serve refreshments.
restrictions.
the members and guests with
The _..S tate of Ohio , Meigs ·
GROUP n, Middleport First the Rev. George Glaze giving shepherds pro !em, presided at
.&gt;
County
/ Court of Common
.United Presbyterian Church, prayer . Plans were made to the meeting. Reported ill were
Pleas ~ Probate Division
Mr. and Mrs. David Henry,
To the Executor of the estat e,
Mrs. Elizabeth Lear, Mrs.
to su Ch of th e following as are
Jon and Jason, Columbus, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday , ~home of serve the .Homebul!ders Class Nellie Tracy, and Mrs. Lillian
residents of the State of Ohio,
anniversary dinner Tuesday Steil!. Cards were sent.
HELPS wrnt TWINS
.were weekend guests of Mr. Mrs. DWight Waljace .
viz : ......... the surviving spouse, the
SOUTHERN"
Athletic
Mrs . Beatrice Buck has
next of kin , the beneficiaries
and Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
underfthe will; and to the at returned from New Lexington
Recent guests of Mrs. T. G. Boosters, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
AtTEND WORKSHOP
torney
or
attorneys
where she assisted her son and
repre~entlng
any
of
the
Hilldore, Syracuse, were Mr. high school, Racine.
Mrs. Dwight Zavitz, Mrs. atorel"flentioned
persons
:
WEDNESDAY
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. John Hayhurst,
Jack Coleman, and Mrs.
'
Ma&lt;- Damron , Deceased .
PAST Presidents, American
Bennie Buck, in the care of
Pome~oy, Oh io Rf. 4, Sc ip io
Canton .
.
Dwight Wallace of the Mid- TownShip,
No. 21,284 .
their identical twin daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McPhail, Legion Auxiliary, Drew
dleport
First
United
You are hereby notified that
The twins, Beliilda Kaye, eight
Corey and Scott, Syracuse, Webster Post 39, 7:30 p.m.
Ap Presbyterian · Church were in· the Inventory and
praisement of the estate of th e
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
Wednesday
three
ounces,
ancl
pounds
and
visited over the weekend in
Waverly Monday for a fall aforementioned, deceased . late
By Polly Cramer
Brenda Raye, seven pounds,
Grafton, W. Va., with Mrs. Mary Martin.
of said Countv, was filed in th is
Presbyterian workshop.
MIDDLEPORT
Literary
Court . Said Inventory and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Kalb,
three
ounces,
were
hom
on
Jean McPhail, and in
Appraisement will be for
Minneapolis, Minn., are
Sept. 28 at the Bethesda
hearing before this Court on the
Morgantown, W. Va., with Mr. Club, Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at
18th !=lay of October , 1974, at
th~ home of Mrs. Nan MO{Ire.
spending a vacation here with
Hospital in Zanesville. Mr. and
SERVICES ADDED
and Mrs. R. S. Corson.
10 :00 o 'clock A .M .
Mrs.
Harold
·Sauer
to
review
her
sister,
Mrs.
William
Mrs. Buck have five other
Sunday evening services,
Dr. Russell Hayes and sons,
Anv person des iring to f ile
"Alice
Andes
SW'Vivors"
by
exceptions
thereto must file
Thomas.
children.
The
maternal
beginning
at
7:30
each
week,
Allen and Kevin, have returned
them at least five ·davs prior to
Piers
Paul
Reed,
and
Mrs.
surFriends
and
relatives
grandparents
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
have been added to the the date set fur hearing .to their home in Buffalo, N. Y.
Gi ven under my hand and
prised Earl Starkey with. a schedule of the Bethlehem
· POLLY'SPROBLEM
George Craig of New
after visiting here with Mrs. Bernard Fultz to review "To
seal of $lid Court. this Jrd day
Race
the
Wind,"
by
Harold
party
for
his
birthday.
Ice
-1
hope
someone
can
tell
mt
..
ow
c:.e
could
DEAR
POLLY
'
Lexington.
of Octotler 1974.
Baptist Church.
Everett R. Hayes, Great Bend.
Krentz.
Roll
call,
comment
on
cream
and
cake
were
enjoyed
use
Incomplete
decks
of
playing
cards.
I
prefer
a
creative
way
if
Manning 0 . Webster
Lawrence and
Louise
Judge
the
program.
by
Mr.
and
Mrs:
Doyle
Hudson
possible.SALLY.
q!uesencamp and Henry and
and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wood
By Ann B . Watson
DANCE S&lt;BEDULED
SYRACUSE Third WedG'arnet Ervine. of Portland,
Oeputv Clerk
daughters
,of
RuUand
and
and
A square dance will .be held
DEAR POLLY -My big Pet Peeve is with the post office . !
have returned from a trip nesday Homemakers Club 10
00) J.$~ ,22, 2tc
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman, in the near future.
which took them to Clarksburg, a.m. at Municipal building. do wish they would put the name of the town and its zip code at Shade School Saturday, Oct.
· ~-c~
..:&gt;-.
Harrisonville.
Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Herb Wolfe and Beth ---·~
19
from
9
p.m.
to
12
midnight.
Covered
dish
at
noon.
Project
number
on
letters
when
stamping
them
and
then
we
would
W. Va ., Pittsburgh, Pa .,
Music will be provided by Donald Jones of Nelsonville Ann spent 11M! weekend In
~HE
·
Buffalo, N. Y., and into is making candles. Bring always knOw the zip code. -MRS. E .B.K.
r.OMJ.\4)N P,LEAS COURT,
DEAR POLLY -:- With very litUe .sewing Sue could make "Frog Stack · and The visited her parenta during the Frnkfort ' with her parents,
Niagara Falls, Canada. While parawax, old candles, Upstick
pjlcilfATE DIVISION
Gifts
were , Rev.andMrs . DavidWhiteand
MEIGS -COUNTY , OHIO
in Canada, they drove the for color, and containers for teimis racket covers from the legs cut off her dungarees. SUp.the Greenhorns." The dance is afternoon.
'
presented to the honored guest. daughters' while her husband IN ·THE MATTER
coincide with the frame of· the sponsored by .Shade PTA.
scenic King Highway and mold . Mrs. Jane Teaford,. racket Into a leg so the
OF ·sET ·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clay
Jordan
reporiedfordutywithhl.
n
rmy
Mfs.
Janice
Lawsotmnd
Wanda
racket
and
the
bottom
hem
is
about
lhree
or
four
inches
from
the
'
TLEMENT OF ACCOUN[S.
Queen Highway.
PROBATE COU .RT, MEIG S
and Barbara t~J~!!Rt a vacation unit.
Teaford • hostesses.
AI! ' handle. Cut too" upper part of the dWlgaree leg to parallel the
CO.UNTY , OHIO
FUNNIGRI'SET
.
'
in Florida. where tl1ey vlllted
Mrs.
Mildred
Angeil,
welcome.
curve of the racket, allowiitg an inch for a good sturdy seam.
SERMON NOTED
Accounts and vouchers of the
CHESTER - ·The PTA here their 8IXi ititd .daughter.uHaw, Mbaouli, Mont., Is viaitlng her
· "MAN WHERE Are You"
Remove
the
racket,
a
nd
sew
this
one
M!am. Attach or sew a cord
following named fiduciaries
"Young at Heart" was the
the topic of message by the or lacing to the outside of the cova: ·so that when the rack~ Is in will sponsor a jitney supper Mr. and ·Mrs. Dale Jordan at cousina in the area including have b'en flied. in the Probate
sermon topic of the Rev. Rev . Frank Snare at Racine the new cover the lacing will gather the bottom of the cover and Halloween carnival Del..tind, and Iter parenta, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Swett and Court, Meigs County , Ohio, for
and settlement:
Wilbur. Perrin at the Sunday First Baptist Church, 7:30p.m. mug!y around the handle. Sue coUld even "fancy up" the case as Saturday. Oct. 19, at Chester and Mrs. C. B. Dwelley and Mr, and Mrs. G. A. Radekln, approwal
' CASE NO. 19925 Fifth Annual
mChorningh service of Trinity Special music by Mrs. Manuel · she did her dungarees. - ELIZABE:ffi.
.
Elementary School. Dinner other relatives ill the Orlando local, Mr. and Mrs. W. I Swett, Accoun.t of Dorothy G ilmore.
Guardian of Delbert Norman
urc . Presenting special Gheen and Larry Fisher.
DEARPOLLY-IamaDerglctometalsewiitgth!mblesand will be served at · &amp;- pnt. area.
.
Middleport, and Mrs. Dorothy _Call, an Incompetent person
music "ere members of the
not a Store In town had a piUtlc thimble in my. size. 1 wrote the follo'l!ed by the carnival at 7. A
CASE NO . 20478 Second and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald, Smith Johnaon, l'oJneiw. ·
Final Account of wendell c.
Senior atlzens choir directed
companies who make them but did not receive a reply so niade wide variety of meats, and Betty, Belpre, visited at
Mr. and Mrs. ·wuuam Gerlach. Trustee Under the
by Mrs. Ben Neutzling, with
THURSDAY
my own. 1 took maSking tape and carefully wound that around vegetables and desserts will be the h&lt;me of Mr. and Mrs. Carl CleadleandMettaFlsher Wen. . Last Will and Testament of
Bertie N'. Watts, Deteased
RACINE Twin City Shrine thetopandbottomandoverthetipofmyfinger;sllditonandoff available.
Mrs. Hazel Thomson as
Greenlees on Sunday af, .at Stoataville during the · CAS!! ·No . 20181 second
nrl'anist. ·
• Club Thursday, 7 p.m. at several times until there ' was easy movement and hail a .t ape
temoon,
weekend where they vlllted Account Of Paul ,E . Kloes,
Guardi~t~ of the Person and
Racine Club House, All nobles thimble that Is now hard and firm and really works.- JENNIE.
CarJ G~ees attended the with the Chead!es' da'qghter. Estate C\" Amv Esther Graham ,
·'TM
Sentinel 1 and \heir wives Invited. . DEAR POLLY_ Those' who are tired of havjng unsightly
' I'
TW()si)AY SALE
Barltlw Fair at ' Barlow and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bob an Incompetent Pel'lon
CASE NO . 21121 First and ,
llftMiiBD roTD
.J Potluck will be served. Flbns vitamin' and prescription medicine botUes sitting around can
RACINE- There will be a recetily. .
Harrison and family. Mr. Final Afcount of Everett Gard · iNiilllllftOF
will be' shown by Pat Potentate .
·
·
'
Mr~ and Mrs. Walter SWett Harrison is convalescing ner, ExecutOr of the Estate of
. • -..,..
keep them in a spice rack .. I transfer my vitamins to a labeled nmunage sale 'at: Citt B.r adEtna G•rdner. Deceas'ed.
ca&amp;IOI. T~
of
Aladdin
_Temple. spice jar. Most prescriptions are taped on the bottles and the ford's store on Vine St. here were :reMit guests of A. R. satisfactorily
at
home • CASE NO . 21'215 First and
-......
Prospective candidates and tapes can be removed and transferTed to spice jars. They look Friday and Saturday, Oct. 18 , Caster and , Mr. and Mrs. folloW.IIJI'Bei'Y at. Columhus Final Account of Eleanore K .
Enevoldsen, Guardian of Jo
•-Otii'*"IBTI=uat,
wives welcome.
much neater this way and are never noticed as being medicine and 19 frool_l a.m. untirt p.m.' OlesterSpencer in Charlet!ton, .Rive• side Mel))odi8t _Hoopital, JLynn
Enevoldsen .
Unless ••ceptlons · ant flied
....._ ~ -~· ; "" ·.
REVIvAL Service at First botUes. If there are UtUe ones &amp;rOWld the house the rack should sponsored by the Happy W. Va. The Spencers had
Mr.
and Mrs. Lewil Smith
, said - accounfs will be
~!"""" ....-.....
· 1111 Baptist Church,
Rafllne, beh·-gtn' aplacetheycannotresch.Minehangsabovethestove Hustlers Sunday School Claa • receiVed iWon:l of the birth of a visited his brother-In-law and fhereto
for he1rln9 before said court on
. ~--.-.
- , ., Th d
30
Th
R
~·
uts ay, 7: _p.m. e e~. whereulechlldrencannotgettoit.-JUDI~
.
· of the Wesleyan United second 8011 to their 8011 and slaler, Mr. and Mrs. Edward the Sth day of November , 1974,
at which tlme said accounts will
polllat,....;.,i
Frank Snare wtll use the ,toptc
DEAR POLLY- t,{ost of us change purses ~enUy and Methodist ,~· .
daughter4n-law, Mr. )II1CI Mrs. lngnD!, Laurelville.
' be
considered and continued
· ~·
· , i
"You(th) On the Run". SpeciaJ that Is not easjO: There are .s omany things carriedlti an average
Stephef!Spencer, whore:alde ln .' Callers on Saturday af, 1'rom d1y to day until flnallv
a•sposed of .
· ·
."f'n.!~.=..~=:.:.':.i: ;
music by girls' trio and . wcxnait'spurse. lputalltheessentialthingsthatalwaysgoinmy
SHOTS OFFERED
. Poftland, Oregon.
, ternoon at the Earl Starkey
Any person Interested mav_
lfnYtiL.-Y..-:
·
•
William Beegle. ·
purse ln'a cleaqllaatlc bag . .When anything is needed I just lift
Flu shota will be glve!l at the . Mrs, D. V. Cummings; llome &lt;were Mr. ud. )ln. fll_e written exceptlona to said
account~ or to matl'irs per·
MEIGS M)lseum, o'pen 011t the tiag and find th~ ite~q ~tltout a lot. of sear,ching. When Senior Citizens Cl!nter at 12:30 , AthelW, wasa weekend guest of , Dennis Aml!ld Of Wooster.
talning to the execution of the
trust. not less than five days
·.,
Tuesday
~nd Thursday cjtang~ bags there is'just this one plastic ~. to transfer.from Wedn.esday, Mrs: Elea 11 o~ · Murl Ga!away . •Mrs, , Leon . Zella~ ,isagainconf!ned prlor
to the ·date a:et for hearing·.
· ~· ----.#.ll.llr...Ofo · ,· evenings, 7:30p.m. this week onepurseto · theother.- · MRS.J.~.W. ,
' ,
·
. Thomas director Meigs Woodrum and Rick of to
0
Bleneu1 Memoria!
Of!!o.- .w. Va, Qoo v-. lll:tlk
andnexlweek and Sunday 2to
MANNING D. WEBSTER
Coun!Y
foe'
Aged, McArthur also. visited her H0111italiD AtheiB, wtJ.e_ttlte.
- · .... ,... · - ... . '5 . . f
. . the dis' Ia
·
J.UOG.E .
11oc .... _ , _ , ... ..,...at.a,
.' p.m. or v1ewmg
P Y
Yoa win recelv~J'~II PoDy - • yoar favorite home- . advises. ·Seniqr citizens who mothtpecently 1 ~. WOOilrum hal uri:IMJp IIUI'Iei'J'. S11e •
Common Pleas Coult,
~-; ~· , ;t ! ~ prieo · _·.of ~ho~raphy Vk of Walter m'ulng' Idea, Pet
, P!llly's Problem jr.·soludoa to a watit,to .have 1hi: vaccine
probate Division·, •
w:u . unde.rgo . • urgery a~ would.aftpnclate hearing from
Meigs County_. OhiO·\ .
.asked to
the center. . 0 Blehess · M~ IJOspl~ her friends.
,,
-: - ,: .
:
·.
Setnsheunerr Clnc:ln~ ;, I .: •• problem. Wrjte. PoUy ID . • of . ~~ DI!WI~rr: ' .. ..
.

Mrs. Thomas hosts church women

marl ,"

ning, the Los Angeles Dodgers'
' 'forgotten man," today in the
third game of the all California
World Series with the defending Wor\d Champion A's 7-5
favorites.
Hunter is unbeaten in three

World Series decisions over the Los Angeles pitching staff this
last two seasons and was the . past season but after a sixweek
man who nailed down the final rest, pitched a one-hitter
out in Oakland's 3-2 victory against San Francisco for a
Saturday in the openi~me key victory down the pennant
stretch drive.
of the 1974 classic.
" You never quite get used to
Downing, who lost World
Series decisions with the New being calm when it comes to
York Yankees in 1963 and 1964, pitching in the World Series,"
was the last starter on a solid said Hunter, winner of 25
games in 1974 and a leading
candidate for American
League Cy Young Award
honors. "But once the game
gets started, I expect I'll be
able to shut everything else off

Plus 50c
Handling
Chorge

ONE 8x 10 NATURAL LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT

l

~~:;rs m~ 1 t be accompanied by o panni. Only one odv.rtiled
per subject ond one per family nery three month&amp;. Graups
•00 e"tra per penol).

--· - PRESENT TH!!: AD TO OUR PHOTOGRAPHER
· THURSDAY O~TOBER11 .HOURS: 11-5 P.M.

'

AT FIRE HALL

Middlepgrt, Ohio
Grandparents In for • FRE

'

8x10

Color Portrait

OF

pre viou s week . We'r e not

getting much rush by our ends ,
and teams are doubling up on
Danner which r ead, " Three m a our tackles."
row . Skorich must go , (owner
On offense, he wtll replace all
Art) Modell must spend some three receivers, including Judough. ''
bilee Dunbar who suffered a
The Browns did lose 34-24, cracked wrist bone Sunday a nd
however. and Skorich now has will miss four to five weeks.
the difficult task of gearing his
Newcomer Tim Ge or ge ,
team to snap the streak a gainst dropped earlier by Cincinnati
the powerful Steelers in Pitts- and Detroit, wilt replace
Dunbar on the left side, Dave
burgh next Sunday.
The Sttelers will face a Sullivan will step in for Gloster
drastically revised Browns Richardson at the other wide
team,
Skorich r eveal ed spot and Jim Thaxton will
Monday at his weekly news move a head of Mill Morin at
conference, with changes both tight. end .
on offense and defense m hopes
'·Morin is not open as much
of jarring the Browns out of the as we had expected, and his
blocking has not been overslump.
Walt Sumner will replace whe!mmg ," Skorich said of the
Van Green at stron g safety so 10-year man who caught a
Green can replace Clifford touchdown pass against the
Brooks at right cornerback, Bengals. 11 Thaxton has more
Skorich said. On the line, N1ck speed and can attack their
Roman will move from left to coverage.''
Skortch, in the. next-to-last
right defensive end. rookie
Mari('Seifert will start a t left year of his contract, was
end, and right-sider All en reminded that last week he had
Aldridge will back up Seifert . ca lled the Cincinnati game

now meant it's too late for

them to contend this year.
"We still have to gel winmng ," he said. "Our chances
are gelling slimmer unless we
get this learn turned around.
We' re another game further
behind now ."

"Can I afford
anind,~pendent

insurance expert
to figure out
what's best for me?"

• rhis Week :s S.Pe.Ciet'

VALUE
RATED

USED CARS

72 OLDS
HT SEDAN
White w ith black v inyl top,
bla ck int , fu ll power eq Ui p. , Ra d 1a l tires, one
own er .

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" You'l l LJke Our Quality
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GMAC FINANCING
~~'2 - 5342

Pomeroy
Open Ev ening s 'Til6 : 00
Td S P.M . SiJf
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Sure.
Anindependen~t~~~

agent makes
no extra
charge for
his services.
As independent age nts . we rcprJtsc nt sc\ocr,ll strong insuram:e
r o mp.mics . \V.: a rc free to select t he r1gl1t kmd of msurance
l u r yom car. home. or husuH.'S'i , and we make no cKtra
c harge lor ttus se rvice .
A o nc-c~un pa n y ~alc 'i m .an, on the ot her h.md, must neces~ . 1r i l\ try to 'it'l l \ Oll the pnlic:- h1" cnll ll''lll\' llfTc r~.
A-. l!l dcp~.·mk r ll rn, urancc ·I!;Cnts. we l11Tc r yo u l"hc Big
D • tferc n ~.:c m 1nsuran..:c- our conu nutn a. ocrsonal auenrion

C ull us.

William D. Childs

Downing-Childs Agency, Inc.
Middleport, Ohio

...

l

9. Penn Sta t e (4 1J
78
10. Arizona (5.0)
55
11. Kansas {4-1)
35
12. Florida (4 -1)
14
13 . Marrland &lt;3 -2)
13
14 . (Tie Nebraska ( 3-2)
6
{Tiel Vanderbilt {:I-ll
6
16. Miami (F i a} (J.t)
5
17 . (Tiel Arizona Sta te {3 1l
3
(Tie) Miami (Ohio) (4-0-1) 3
Ctiel Illinois (4-H
3
20 (Tiel Texas (3 -2)
2
&lt;tiel Tulane&lt; 4.·01
2
Note: By agreement with the
American Football Coaches, ·
teams on probation by the
NCAA are Ineligible far top 20
and r'tatlonal championship consldeTatlon by the U PI Board of
Coaches. Those teams currently
on probation are: Oklahoma,
SMU, California, Long Beach
. State and SOuthwestern Louisiana . ·

RETURN TO PENGUINS
.PI'ITSBURGH (UPI) - Defensernen Dave Burrows and
Steve Durbano of the Pittsburgh Penguins, both of whom
missed the first · two season~
games, have returned to the
NHL club's lineup and will see
action against the Stanley Cup
chlll!'pion Philadelphia · Flyers
here Saturday. .
Burrows had been sidelined
· with an ankle injury, while
Durbano was serving a twogame sl!lipension imposed by
the league as a result of a fight
in a preseason game with the
WHA Cleveland Crusaders.
The Penguins also announced that left wing Wayne
Bianchin, whO sustained . a
broken ,neck in a surfing accident in Hawaii in May, had
rejoined the team.

.i .

•

What makes us a diff~t kind of loan company_makes us a better kind. mloan
mlllpa~.

CITY LOAN
&amp;SAVINGS.
EST.~

•
'

.

125 E. Main St. • 992-2171

�.

F .;

~

'

.

'·

'

·~

'

·•
•
' 3 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1974

•

,

..

Baptists 'select
Trinity church ·class student award.
planning two events
Family night and holiday
bazaar plans were discussed
during a meeting of the Happy
Harvesters Class of Trinity
Church Friday night.
The family night observance
will be held on Nov. 3 at 5 p.m.
and the request for assistance
was made by Roy Mayer,
Sunday school superintendent.
It w&amp;s noted that the church·
wide holiday bazaar date has ·
been changed from Nov. 8 to
Dec. 6. Miss Erma Smith,
president, reported that in
conjunction with the bazaar, a
luncheon will be served during
the afternoon and evening. She
also reported flyers will be
inserted in the bulletin and
each member will be asked to

Grace ." Her topic was "One
Day at a Time," and she talked
about needless worry on
happenings which mjght never
take place. She concluded with
a story about the love of
adoptive parents and read a
poem, " Walk on a Rainbow
Trait "
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, Mrs. Ruby Erb,
Miss Sybil j;:bersbach, and
Mrs . Byrd. A fall motif was
carried out in! the table
decorations for a salad course
served by Miss Smith, Mrs ,
Genevieve Meinhart, and Mrs.
Neva Seyfried.
~;~~18118111l1!1118118i871&gt;11?7.·az'ilillll"'*'';e'.l'""""'.l.&amp;f.

~~:~~hat they will do for the 1~
The class voted to retain the
same officers for another year.
Plans were made for a birthday card shower honoring Mrs.
Frances Reibel, Oct. 22.
Members sang "Happy Birthday" to Mrs. Rose Ginther and
Mrs. Reibel who was unable to
attend.
A report was given on Mrs.
Edna
Reibel
who
is
·recuperating from a heart
attack. Appointed as hostesses
for November were Mrs .
Reibel, Mrs. Edith Lanning,
and Mrs. Marie Dailey. Mrs.
Eva Dessauer will be the
devotional leader.
Members exchanged names
for a Christmas gift exchange.
It was .noted that fruit cakes
and pecans are being sold by
the class . Mrs. Ethel
Williamson was welcomed
back after an absence , along
with her companion , Mrs.
Polly Byrd .
Meeting with the Happy
Harvesters was Robert Buck,
president of church council. He
talked of the "overwhelming
burden which the women of the
·church carry," and advised
: that the Council is always
: ready to help in whatever way
•possible. He spoke of the
:vestibule box for sugg,estions
:an,d.asked the women to use it.
.~ Mrs. Stella Kloes opened the
•meeting with devotions using
:scripture from Matt. 6, 34 and
:group singing of "Amazing

:,.::

·.[':~:.;
~

]
:,:

SOC·I· aI

' More than 2,000 Masons fro·,
throughout the slate W"l
convene at tile Veteraf•
Memorial Auditorium ,;,
Colwnbus Friday and Satur·
day, Oct. 18-19 for the 165tt..
, nual meeting of the Grand
an
Lodge of Free And Accepted
Masons of Ohio. De legates
from Ohio's 681 Masonic
Lodges will e Iect new Grand
J.,odge officers for 1975.
Outgoing gran d mas ter of the

Tbe scholarship student to be
assisted by the . Missionary
Society of the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church this year is

i

caIen dar\[
ij
~~
~~

nJF.SDAY
CHESTER Council . 323,
Daughters of America, 7:30
p.m. at the hall. Inspection to
be held.

group sang the theme song,
"All My Hope on God is
Founded" with prayer by Mrs.
Mary Shelton. It was voted to
Paula Sarver , student at pay dues for Church Women
Judson College in Elgin, Ill.
United. As Mrs. Kuhn read a
Meeting Thursday night at prayer from the state
the church, Mrs. L. P. Sterrett missionary president, and a
read a reswne on Miss Sarver . message entitled "I Got Up
It was announced that the Early This Morning," the
Dayton Christian Center is in taped recording of "Fill My
need of used clothing, school Cup , Lord" was played.
supplies and personal items.
Mrs. Joseph Cook reviewed
Mrs. Robert Kuhn who the book, "Twelve Angels from
presided in the absence of the Hell," written by the Rev.
president, also asked that the David Wilkerson, also author
Society begin work on layettes of "The Cross and the Swi lchto be taken to the 1975 state blade." The book is about a
convention for the "share and country minister who felt a
care" project.
challenge to help rehabilitate
Members decided that again drug addicts. Mrs. Cook made
this year they will go to the reference to two young addicts
Meigs County Infirmary for the without hope for recovery until
December meeting. Programs they · reached out to God.
for the 1974-75 year were Prayer by Mrs. Kuhn conplanned. .
cluded the meeting.
It was announced that World
The Halloween motif was
Community Day will be ob- carried out on the table
served on Nov. 1 and that decorations for a dessert
World Day of Prayer will be course served by Mrs . Kuhn
celebrated on Nov. 4. The love and Mrs. Michael to those
gift offering of $10 was named and Mrs. Harry Bailey ,
dedicated by Mrs . Oliver Mrs. I. B. Walker, and Mrs.
Michael.
George Skinner.
To open the mee tin~ the

Recognition to choir

oldest and largest fraternal

CElEBRATE ANNIVERSARY .- Mr.' arid Mrs.
Emerson Johnson of Portland celebrated their 25th wedding
anniversary on Aug. 1. They were honored with a surprise
party hosted by their children. Attending were Ronnie and
Johnnie Johnson, Portland; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Johnson and
son, Billy, Minersville; Mrs. C!ydeJohnson and daughters,
Cathy, Jeannie, and Kris, Portland; and Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Folmer, Pomeroy.

Logans announcing birth
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight (Skip)
Logan, 4671 Edwardian Court,
v'irginia Beach, Va., announce
the birth of their first child, a
son, named Shawn William,
weighing six pounds and 8'h
ounces.

Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. William Lester,
South Charleston ; paterna!
grandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
Dwight Logan, Sr., Pomeroy;
maternal great-grandparents

Downing hopes to get 'CatfiSh' on the hook

Ohio ·masons to
convene Oct. 18-19

are Mr. and Mrs . Clyde
Shaffer, Los Angeles, Calif.;
maternal
great-great!!fandmother Is Mrs. Mamie
ltllward, South Charleston, and
a paternal great-grandfather is
George Logan, Hemlock
Grove. Mr. Logan, a former
Pomeroy resident, is a First
Class Petty Officer sendng
with the U.S. Navy at Virginia
Beach.

·OAKLAND ( UP!) - Jim
"Catfish" Hunt"er, Oakland's

''money
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESSOFTHETEN
MILL LIMITATION

NOTICE is hereby g iven that
in pur!uance of a Resolut ion of

the Council of the V;)tage ot
Rac ine, Ohio , passed on the 6th .
day of August , 1974, there willbe submitted to a vote of the
people of said Village at a
General ELECTION to be held
in the Village of Racine , Ohio , at
the regular place of vot ing
thereln . on Tuesday , the 5th day
of November , 1974, the question
of levying , in excess of the ten
mill limitation, fc;tr the benefit of
lhc ine Village for the purpose
'of Providing and m aintaln ing
f i re apparatus , applian c es,
building s, or sites tllerefor , or
sources of water supply and
materials therefor , or the
establishment and maintenan ce
of lines of f ire alarm telegraph
or the pavmenl of permanent ,
part -time, Qr volvnte~r firemen

;,.... tion in Ohio is Royal C.
organ .__.
Scofield of Sebring, 0 ., who is
sales office manager for the
Morgan Engineering Co. of
Alll·ance.
Present officers of the Grand
Lodg of Ohio besides Scofield or t;re t;ght ;ng compan;e&lt; lo
e
~~
w -1 q~rate the sam e.
are Robert D. Sager of w\~:;u"' ., Said tax .being : a renewal of
J ' .di'I"Jx.i sting tax of 2.0 mills to run
deputy grandmaste r ' wh~
.e~ ; . -o,. f1ve years, at a rate not
line to be elected g

no

master; Calvin T. Hubler of
Dayton senior grand warden ;

Chart es' S· Ward of M entor '
junior grand warden; Charles
B. Moody of Zanesville, grand
treasurer; Robert A. Hinshaw

of
Worthington,
gran.d
secretary; the Rev." Mr . Morns
E. Allton of Westerville, grand
chaplain; Jerry C. Rasor, of
Commercial Point, grand
orator ; Daniel F. Iceman of
Wooster, grand marshal;
Charles A. Brigham Jr. of
Cincinnati, senior grand
deacon; Edgar L. · Miller of
Bellefont~ine, junior grand
deacon; and Clifford M. Powell
of Youngstown, grand tyler.
Masonic dignitaries from
throughout
the United States
readings led by Mrs. Mamie
and
Canada,
including several
Buckley. ·
A letter from the district past grandmasters, will attend
office was read and 12 sick the . convention . The corners lone was laid Sept. 29 for a
calls were reported.
A white elephant sale will be new building on the grounds of
held at the next meeting and a the Ohio Masonic Home in
visit to the county infirmary Springfield which cares forwas discussed for a later date. nearly 500 residents at an
A game was played with prizes annual cost of $3.5 million.
Following the devastating
awarded.
tornado
that struck Xenia and
Refreshments were served to
Ohio Aoril3, The
Sputhwestem
the above and Mrs. Gladys
Morgan, Mrs. Verna Rose, Grand Lodge of ' Ohio
Mrs . Dorothy Cashdollar distributed in excess of $125,000
to ·needy families and widows.
guests, Mrs. Dorotha Riebel,
Other activities include a
Mrs. Nell Wilson, Mrs. Viviari
Grand
Lodge scholarship
Humphrey, and Mrs. Ulllan
prolj!ram
in
which
27
Pickens. Mrs. Cashdollar was
scholarships
are
awarded
each
awarded the door prize. The
next · meeting Is with Mrs. year to 27 Ohio colleges,
universities and theological
Wilson .
seminaries.
'
All Master Masons, may
attend the Grand Lodge activities from 8:15a.m. until 4
HOFFMAN IN TURKEY
p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. until
LETART, W.Va.- U.S. Air noon Saturday.
Force · Sergeant .James 0.
Freemasonry in Ohio began
Hoffman, son of Mrs. Lyta M. in January, 1808 when 12
Hoffman has arrived for duty . delegates from six lodges met
with an Air Force support unit 4n Chillicothe and formed The
at Karamursel Common
Grand Lodge of Free and
Defense Installation, Turkey. Accepted Masons of ohio.'
A precision measurement
The Grlll)d Lodge of Ohio is
specialist, he Is a 1968 graduate the
largest
Masonic
of Wahama High Schoo!, .and
h u 'I d
attended United Electronics' jurisdiction in I e
m e
States and second lar~est in the
Institute.
world.

exceeding 2 0 mills for each on e

~~~~~~ts0 'to v:~~~:~0 ~'en~h if~~

each one hundred dollars of
valuation, for F ive years
The Polls for said Election

w;11 be open at 6 :30 o'clock AM .

~~c~oc~e~~~~ eofs~~rnu~~~nd6a ;g
T;me ot sa id day .
El:c!tig~:,er 01°f J~~ s Bo~~~nt~:
Oh;o

1

Festival ·is set

Sak schedukd

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes

DETROIT (UP!) - The
crowd was on its feet yelling
"Dee-fense" at Detroit for the
first time in a long while-and
for the first time in quite a spell
the Lions were playing it.
"The referees told us to raise
our hands up and quiet the
crowd," defensive end Ernie
Price of the Lions said. "We

said, 'You crazy, man? We
haven't heard this in a long

Chairman
Dorothy M . Johnston

Director

Dated Oct. ' ·
&lt;tO) 7, " · 21,

1974
28 ,

''•

•

4tc

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

As animals go, man is

long lived. Only some kinds
of tortolses or land turtles
live longer than man . An
elephant lives fo be a·round
60 years of age, a parrot so
years. As large as a whale
is, he reaches full maturity
at fke age of 12 years and
lives approximately 40
years . A housefly on ly li ves
a few months. A marigold
plant Is old in three or four
months, while some plants
live to be hundreds of years

old. The tree family puts all
to shame, as some of the
species li ve to be thousands
of years old, such as the
giant California trees.
Your water bearing
appliances, your sinks,
plumbing fixtures, your
clothes, in fact. almost
everything In your home
will keep its new look
longer and perform longer

and better with Refined
Water
from
Miracle.
Refined water and a small
amount of soap are all that
Is needed to keep your

household In lip lop shape.

A Miracle Refiner Is built
for heavy duty
per formance, yet is beautiful
enough to place anywhere
in your home - kitchen.
utility, basement or even
garage.
The
Miracle
Refiner- uses only 18" of
space, yet gives you all the
Refined water you need.
Your home will always look

new and shiny bright with
Refined Water cleaning
and so will you feel fresh
with no hard scrubbing
chores.
Let
Miracle
Refiner do the work for
you. Call 882-2525 .

News, Event

Card tricks
welcome here

•

SAYRE
l'IARDWARE
182-2525

•

W.Va . .

time."'
That third quarter goal line
struggle was the turning point
as Detroit came right back
with a touchdown to cement its
first victory, a 17-13 decision
over the San Francisco 49ers.
Rookie Wilbur Jackson had
NEW YORK (UPI)
just sped 64 yards to the Detroit
There's the same old names at
two fqr his longest gain of a 91the top of the United Press
yard night and it looked like the
International
Board
of
Lions were headed for their
Coaches' top 10, but there 's a
fifth loss. The 49ers are now 2-3
brand, new one in the No . ' 10
while all of Detroit's losses
spot.
have come by a total of 14
Ohio State continues to lead
points.
the nation's football teams, but
"I feel the crowd yelling
Arizona made it to the top 10
'defense' helped the team,"
for the first time in the school's
Coach Rick Forzano said
history.
savoring his (irst pro head
The Wildcats have ripped off
coaching win. "I was kind of five straight victories to start
yelling 'defense' myself on the
the season as Coach Jim Young
sidelines.''
continues the remarkable job
Linebackers
Charlie begun last year.
Weaver, Naurnoff, and Jim
Young's first squad last year
Las!avic thwarted successive
was an overwhehning choice to
plays and Bruce Gossett had to
finish dead last in the Western
step back and kick a 19-yard
Athletic Conference, but infield goal, cutting Detroit's
stead tied Arizona State for the
halftime lead to 1Q.6.
. title and finished with ·an 8-3
Gossett had kicked a 27-yard
mark.
field goal in the first quarter
The Wildcats this season are
only to have Steve Owens cap
tied for 5th in the nation in total
an ensuing 81-yard drive with a
offense, 12th in scoring offense
one-yard dive for a touchdown.
and ninth in rushing defense.
Errol Mann added a 31-yard
Quarterback Bruce Hill is
field goal for Detroit.
fifth in total offense and his
Herman Weaver punted 61
favorite iarget "T" Bell is
yards to put San Francisco in a
seventh in receptions .
hole after the second Gossett
But the Wildcats face their
field goal and when t!]e 49ers
toughest task yet when they
kicked, Dick Jauron ran the
travel to Texas Tech Saturday.
punt back 45 yards to the 13.
Ohio State collected 33 of the
Two running plays got
34 first-place ballots cast, with
nowhere so quarterback Bill
No. 2 Michigan receiving the
Mtinson whipped a 13-yard
other one.
bullet into Larry Walton's
A pair of undefeated Southwaiting-lmnds to hike the edge
eastern Conference teams ,
to 17~, a margin that proved
Alabama and Auburn, were
necessary when left-handed
third and fourth respecrookie Dennis ~orrison finally ·uve!y.
got his Forty Niners moving.
Southern California was
fifth, Texas A&amp;M sixth and
Notre Dame seventh.
Undefeated North Carolina
DEAL COMPLETED
State climbed from loth to
ST. LOUIS, Mo . (UP!)
eighth and Penn Stale from
Minor League pilcher Dan 13th to ninth.
Larson Monday was sent·by the
Kansas jumped from 14th to
St.. Louis Cardinals to the 11th, while Florida fell from
Houston Astros, completing an fifth to 12th after losing to
Aug. '15 deal.
'
Vanderbilt.
The earlier trade sent veterMaryland was 13th and
an Claude Osteen to the Cards Nebraska and Vanderbilt tied
for pitcher Ron Selak. Larson for 14th.
was assigned to the Astros'
Miami (Fia) was 16th, with
Denver farm team.
Miami (Ohio), Ariwna State
and Illinois tied for 17th. Texas
and Tulane were tied for 20th.
UNDERGOING SURGERY
NE'W YORK (UPI) The
ST . LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) 1974 United Press International
Running back Ken Willard of Board ol Coaches top 20 major
ll ege football ratings With
the St. Louis Cardinals will co
won -lost records and first place
undergo surgery for a knee votes in parentheses ·
Points
injury Tuesday, it was an- Team
1. Ohio St. (33 ) (5 -0 )
339
2. M ichigan (1) (5 Ol
280
nounced Monday.
3. Alabama (5 -0J
263
The Cardinals said Willard, 4. Auburn (S-Ol
200
the team's leading rusher, 5. Southern Callfornio~~ {3 . 1) 163
6 Texas A&amp;M (4· 11
137
could be hack later this season 7.
Notre Dame (4 -1)
132
if the surgery is successful.
8 North Carolina St . (6 -0 l
110

top pick

i~

Pleased

{v
Present.

BEAUTIFUL ·PORTRAITS
IN NATURAL LIVING COLOR

.

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'""'" -n:i':' Dill•;: ::;•:; .,

ihe

Council

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COMPLETE
WITH ·
THIS AD

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and concentrate on pr tching."'
Downiilg, winner of only ft vc
of 11 decisions for Los Angeles

kn ow what it 's all abou t In my
case I have to tell myself .to
stop wor rying about going a set

this year, said the fa ct he
pitched previously in World
Series competition should help
but it really doesn't mean tha n
much.
"Sure the pressure will be
ther'e," said the 33-year-{)!d
vetera n l eft--h andcr , "and any·

number of innings and just
concentrate on eac h batter as
he com es up."
Since pttching is the name of
th e game m a World Series, the

home field for the next three
gCJ mes.
With Hunter pitching for the
A's, Dodger Manager Walter
Alston has juggled his lin eup a
bit to compensate. He has

The A's will go w1tl1 the same
hne up as in the fir st two games
except for a poss1ble sw1 tch of

be nched catcher Steve Yeager

the season with Campaneris, a
good hit-and-run man , battin g
behind him . However , m the
fir st two series ga mes m Los

edge , on paper, today 1s with
th e A 's, mostly bee use Hunter

and put Joe Ferguson behind
the plate. with Willie Crawford,
a left-handed batter , taking

be~

over F er guson 's place in n ght

is pitchmg. an

secondly

Be rt Campaneris and B1lly
North . North was Oakland' s
leadoff man throughout most of

Angeles Campanens wa s the
leadoff batter .
" I may swa p them ar ound,"
sa1d A's ~' an age r Alvin Dark,
"but I,won 't make up my mind

for sure until just before the
star t of the third game. I think
w1th Campy hitting second we
have a better chance to play
our kind of ga me."

fie ld .

one who says tt won 't doesn 't

cause th e club is back on its

CLI':VELAND (U P!)
Likeable Cleveland Brown s
head coach Nick Skonch, with
his team grinding to a 1-4 start,
is beginning to get some hea t
from the fan s.
The Browns had lost two
straight games going into last
Sunday's match w1th Cincinnati , and fans hung out a

Defe nsive tackle Carl Ba r1sich

''crucial'' for the Browns to get

w1ll be !ned at end.
"You ca n't let peop~ come
out and control your rush week
after week," Skorich said.
"Cin cinnati just look a page
out of Oakland's boo~ the

gomg and was asked if the loss

Defense k ey
Skorich tries to
for Detroit Buckeyesb f
h
remain
ee up pass rus

Carpenter

Polly 's -Pointers

faces Al Dow~

Edwm S. Cozart

SOUTHERN Band Boosters,
7:30p.m. , at the high school.
NOTICE is hereby given that
Recognition
of
choir night. The Society· also agreed
All parents urged to attend.
in pursuan ce of a Reso l ution of
REEDSVILLE- The United
the Board of County Com ·
REV. FRANK Snare will members of the Middleport to serve a Christmas dinner for
miss ioners of the County of
speak on " The Love That Church of Christ highlighted the Busy Bee Class of the Methodist Women met at the
Meigs. Pomeroy, Oh io. passed
on the 30th day of August, 1974,
Forgives" 7:30 p.m., at the •the Philathea Society meeting Middleport First Baptist home of Mrs. Rose Thomas
there will be submitted to a vo te
with Mrs. Alberta Edwartls coRacine First Baptist Church. held Thursday night at the Church.
of the people of said County at a
·
A yellow and ·green color hostess last week. The
Special music by Mrs. Robert church.
General ELECTION to be held
In the County of Meigs, Ohio , at
Receiving
special scheme was carried out in the devotional topic, "Power of
Kuhn, Pomeroy.
the regular places of voting
tMereln , on Tuesday, the 5th day
MEMBERSHIP Roundup recognition and presented table decorations. Mrs. Erwin · Christ," consisted of scripture
of November, 1974 •. the question
readings
,
prayer,
and
other
corsages
were
Mrs.
Beulah
and
Mrs.
McKinley
presided
at
and oyster stew night when
of levying, In excess of U\e ten
mill limitation, tor the benefit of
Drew Webster Post 39, Roush, .the ojdest member ; the coffee and punch.
Meigs County for the purpose of
Christi
Hess,
the
youngest;
Hostesses
were
Mrs.
Denver
American Legion, meets at 8
· the maintenance and operation
Mrs
.
Michael
Gerlach,
of schopts, training centers,
Rice,
Mrs.
Robert
McElhinny,
p.m . at post home.
workshops and clinics for
director; Mrs. Chester Erwin, Mrs. Lula Mae Lynch, Mrs.
m entalty re-tarded persons.
TOPS CLUB, 7 p.m. at the organist; and Mrs . Clyde Ernest Lallance, Mrs. Errol!
SYRACUSE Reading
Said tax being : a renewal of a
Middleport American Legiqn
tax of 0.75 mills and an increase
Allensworth who has been a Conroy, Mrs. Farie Cole, and materials for the first grade
of 2.0 mIlls to constltute ·a tax of
Hall.
will be purchased by the
member of the choir for the Miss Mildred Hawley.
2.75 mills to run for Five years,
SALISBURY PTA, 7:30p.m.
at a rate not ex ceeding 2 75
Syracuse PTA, it was decided
longest period of time, about 50
mills tor each one dollar of
at the school. New Federal years.
at a recent meeting.
valuation, which amounts to
Teacher Corps representative
Twenty .seven and one half
Plans for the fall festival to
Expressions of appreciation
cents for each one hundred
appear on program . Parents to
he
held
Oct.
24
were
completed
for the contribution of the choir
dollars of valuation , for Five
A rummage sale to be held
• turn in stamp books or money
years .
to the church program were Oct. 17, 18 and 19 at the Mid- with a ticket price change
The Polls for said Election
for tall festival, Nov . 16.
given by Mrs. Betty McKinley dleport Masonic Temple made. The tickets will sell for
w i ll be open at 6: 30 o'clock A .M
Refreshments.
· and remain open until 6 : 30
two for 25 cents. It was
who presented the "Little
o 'clock P .M . Eastern Standard
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, Men's Quartet" composed of · basement was planned during reported that the Southern
Time ot said day .
the
Friday
night
meelirJg
of
Pomeroy Masonic Temple, first and second graders, Darin
By order of . the Board of
Local Schoo! Board will purElections , of Meigs County ,
7:30p.m. Tuesday. Work in the Wolfe, Shaun Baker, Scott Mary Shrine 37, Order of the chase stage curtains. Next
Ohio .
mark master 3itd past master McKinley, and Darin Roach. White Shrine of Jerusalem.
Edwin S Cozart
meeting will be on Nov. 12 with
The rummage sale will start
Chairman
degrees.
They sang several numbers at 9 a.m. each morning and on the fifth grade to serve.
OHIO ETA PHI Charter, accompanied by Miss Trudy
Ooroth v M . Johnston
The attendance banner was
.Oct. 19 a bake sale will also be won by the second grade. Mrs.
Director
Beta Sigma Phi, 7:30 Tuesday, Roach.
Dated October 4, 197-t
held
by
the
Shrine
at
Dudley's
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Unda Hubbard was elected
For roll call members gave
OO) 7 , 14 , 21 , 28 , 4fc
in
Middleport
Electric Co. with Kathy Fry choir memories. There were Florists
secretary. Two of the Syracuse
beginning
at
the
same
hour.
and Janet Downie to give \he tributes to several former
College trustees met with the
Mrs. Midgie Abbott, worthy
cultural
program,
and
Sandi
NOTICE UN t-ILINb
PTA to give a history of the
~
choir members.
OF INVENTORY
High Priestess, and Thomas
Korn and Barbara Logan to
school and the land use
Mrs. Don Erwin welcomed Edwards, watchman
AND APPRAISEMENT
of
serve refreshments.
restrictions.
the members and guests with
The _..S tate of Ohio , Meigs ·
GROUP n, Middleport First the Rev. George Glaze giving shepherds pro !em, presided at
.&gt;
County
/ Court of Common
.United Presbyterian Church, prayer . Plans were made to the meeting. Reported ill were
Pleas ~ Probate Division
Mr. and Mrs. David Henry,
To the Executor of the estat e,
Mrs. Elizabeth Lear, Mrs.
to su Ch of th e following as are
Jon and Jason, Columbus, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday , ~home of serve the .Homebul!ders Class Nellie Tracy, and Mrs. Lillian
residents of the State of Ohio,
anniversary dinner Tuesday Steil!. Cards were sent.
HELPS wrnt TWINS
.were weekend guests of Mr. Mrs. DWight Waljace .
viz : ......... the surviving spouse, the
SOUTHERN"
Athletic
Mrs . Beatrice Buck has
next of kin , the beneficiaries
and Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
underfthe will; and to the at returned from New Lexington
Recent guests of Mrs. T. G. Boosters, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
AtTEND WORKSHOP
torney
or
attorneys
where she assisted her son and
repre~entlng
any
of
the
Hilldore, Syracuse, were Mr. high school, Racine.
Mrs. Dwight Zavitz, Mrs. atorel"flentioned
persons
:
WEDNESDAY
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. John Hayhurst,
Jack Coleman, and Mrs.
'
Ma&lt;- Damron , Deceased .
PAST Presidents, American
Bennie Buck, in the care of
Pome~oy, Oh io Rf. 4, Sc ip io
Canton .
.
Dwight Wallace of the Mid- TownShip,
No. 21,284 .
their identical twin daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McPhail, Legion Auxiliary, Drew
dleport
First
United
You are hereby notified that
The twins, Beliilda Kaye, eight
Corey and Scott, Syracuse, Webster Post 39, 7:30 p.m.
Ap Presbyterian · Church were in· the Inventory and
praisement of the estate of th e
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
Wednesday
three
ounces,
ancl
pounds
and
visited over the weekend in
Waverly Monday for a fall aforementioned, deceased . late
By Polly Cramer
Brenda Raye, seven pounds,
Grafton, W. Va., with Mrs. Mary Martin.
of said Countv, was filed in th is
Presbyterian workshop.
MIDDLEPORT
Literary
Court . Said Inventory and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Kalb,
three
ounces,
were
hom
on
Jean McPhail, and in
Appraisement will be for
Minneapolis, Minn., are
Sept. 28 at the Bethesda
hearing before this Court on the
Morgantown, W. Va., with Mr. Club, Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at
18th !=lay of October , 1974, at
th~ home of Mrs. Nan MO{Ire.
spending a vacation here with
Hospital in Zanesville. Mr. and
SERVICES ADDED
and Mrs. R. S. Corson.
10 :00 o 'clock A .M .
Mrs.
Harold
·Sauer
to
review
her
sister,
Mrs.
William
Mrs. Buck have five other
Sunday evening services,
Dr. Russell Hayes and sons,
Anv person des iring to f ile
"Alice
Andes
SW'Vivors"
by
exceptions
thereto must file
Thomas.
children.
The
maternal
beginning
at
7:30
each
week,
Allen and Kevin, have returned
them at least five ·davs prior to
Piers
Paul
Reed,
and
Mrs.
surFriends
and
relatives
grandparents
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
have been added to the the date set fur hearing .to their home in Buffalo, N. Y.
Gi ven under my hand and
prised Earl Starkey with. a schedule of the Bethlehem
· POLLY'SPROBLEM
George Craig of New
after visiting here with Mrs. Bernard Fultz to review "To
seal of $lid Court. this Jrd day
Race
the
Wind,"
by
Harold
party
for
his
birthday.
Ice
-1
hope
someone
can
tell
mt
..
ow
c:.e
could
DEAR
POLLY
'
Lexington.
of Octotler 1974.
Baptist Church.
Everett R. Hayes, Great Bend.
Krentz.
Roll
call,
comment
on
cream
and
cake
were
enjoyed
use
Incomplete
decks
of
playing
cards.
I
prefer
a
creative
way
if
Manning 0 . Webster
Lawrence and
Louise
Judge
the
program.
by
Mr.
and
Mrs:
Doyle
Hudson
possible.SALLY.
q!uesencamp and Henry and
and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wood
By Ann B . Watson
DANCE S&lt;BEDULED
SYRACUSE Third WedG'arnet Ervine. of Portland,
Oeputv Clerk
daughters
,of
RuUand
and
and
A square dance will .be held
DEAR POLLY -My big Pet Peeve is with the post office . !
have returned from a trip nesday Homemakers Club 10
00) J.$~ ,22, 2tc
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman, in the near future.
which took them to Clarksburg, a.m. at Municipal building. do wish they would put the name of the town and its zip code at Shade School Saturday, Oct.
· ~-c~
..:&gt;-.
Harrisonville.
Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Herb Wolfe and Beth ---·~
19
from
9
p.m.
to
12
midnight.
Covered
dish
at
noon.
Project
number
on
letters
when
stamping
them
and
then
we
would
W. Va ., Pittsburgh, Pa .,
Music will be provided by Donald Jones of Nelsonville Ann spent 11M! weekend In
~HE
·
Buffalo, N. Y., and into is making candles. Bring always knOw the zip code. -MRS. E .B.K.
r.OMJ.\4)N P,LEAS COURT,
DEAR POLLY -:- With very litUe .sewing Sue could make "Frog Stack · and The visited her parenta during the Frnkfort ' with her parents,
Niagara Falls, Canada. While parawax, old candles, Upstick
pjlcilfATE DIVISION
Gifts
were , Rev.andMrs . DavidWhiteand
MEIGS -COUNTY , OHIO
in Canada, they drove the for color, and containers for teimis racket covers from the legs cut off her dungarees. SUp.the Greenhorns." The dance is afternoon.
'
presented to the honored guest. daughters' while her husband IN ·THE MATTER
coincide with the frame of· the sponsored by .Shade PTA.
scenic King Highway and mold . Mrs. Jane Teaford,. racket Into a leg so the
OF ·sET ·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clay
Jordan
reporiedfordutywithhl.
n
rmy
Mfs.
Janice
Lawsotmnd
Wanda
racket
and
the
bottom
hem
is
about
lhree
or
four
inches
from
the
'
TLEMENT OF ACCOUN[S.
Queen Highway.
PROBATE COU .RT, MEIG S
and Barbara t~J~!!Rt a vacation unit.
Teaford • hostesses.
AI! ' handle. Cut too" upper part of the dWlgaree leg to parallel the
CO.UNTY , OHIO
FUNNIGRI'SET
.
'
in Florida. where tl1ey vlllted
Mrs.
Mildred
Angeil,
welcome.
curve of the racket, allowiitg an inch for a good sturdy seam.
SERMON NOTED
Accounts and vouchers of the
CHESTER - ·The PTA here their 8IXi ititd .daughter.uHaw, Mbaouli, Mont., Is viaitlng her
· "MAN WHERE Are You"
Remove
the
racket,
a
nd
sew
this
one
M!am. Attach or sew a cord
following named fiduciaries
"Young at Heart" was the
the topic of message by the or lacing to the outside of the cova: ·so that when the rack~ Is in will sponsor a jitney supper Mr. and ·Mrs. Dale Jordan at cousina in the area including have b'en flied. in the Probate
sermon topic of the Rev. Rev . Frank Snare at Racine the new cover the lacing will gather the bottom of the cover and Halloween carnival Del..tind, and Iter parenta, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Swett and Court, Meigs County , Ohio, for
and settlement:
Wilbur. Perrin at the Sunday First Baptist Church, 7:30p.m. mug!y around the handle. Sue coUld even "fancy up" the case as Saturday. Oct. 19, at Chester and Mrs. C. B. Dwelley and Mr, and Mrs. G. A. Radekln, approwal
' CASE NO. 19925 Fifth Annual
mChorningh service of Trinity Special music by Mrs. Manuel · she did her dungarees. - ELIZABE:ffi.
.
Elementary School. Dinner other relatives ill the Orlando local, Mr. and Mrs. W. I Swett, Accoun.t of Dorothy G ilmore.
Guardian of Delbert Norman
urc . Presenting special Gheen and Larry Fisher.
DEARPOLLY-IamaDerglctometalsewiitgth!mblesand will be served at · &amp;- pnt. area.
.
Middleport, and Mrs. Dorothy _Call, an Incompetent person
music "ere members of the
not a Store In town had a piUtlc thimble in my. size. 1 wrote the follo'l!ed by the carnival at 7. A
CASE NO . 20478 Second and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald, Smith Johnaon, l'oJneiw. ·
Final Account of wendell c.
Senior atlzens choir directed
companies who make them but did not receive a reply so niade wide variety of meats, and Betty, Belpre, visited at
Mr. and Mrs. ·wuuam Gerlach. Trustee Under the
by Mrs. Ben Neutzling, with
THURSDAY
my own. 1 took maSking tape and carefully wound that around vegetables and desserts will be the h&lt;me of Mr. and Mrs. Carl CleadleandMettaFlsher Wen. . Last Will and Testament of
Bertie N'. Watts, Deteased
RACINE Twin City Shrine thetopandbottomandoverthetipofmyfinger;sllditonandoff available.
Mrs. Hazel Thomson as
Greenlees on Sunday af, .at Stoataville during the · CAS!! ·No . 20181 second
nrl'anist. ·
• Club Thursday, 7 p.m. at several times until there ' was easy movement and hail a .t ape
temoon,
weekend where they vlllted Account Of Paul ,E . Kloes,
Guardi~t~ of the Person and
Racine Club House, All nobles thimble that Is now hard and firm and really works.- JENNIE.
CarJ G~ees attended the with the Chead!es' da'qghter. Estate C\" Amv Esther Graham ,
·'TM
Sentinel 1 and \heir wives Invited. . DEAR POLLY_ Those' who are tired of havjng unsightly
' I'
TW()si)AY SALE
Barltlw Fair at ' Barlow and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bob an Incompetent Pel'lon
CASE NO . 21121 First and ,
llftMiiBD roTD
.J Potluck will be served. Flbns vitamin' and prescription medicine botUes sitting around can
RACINE- There will be a recetily. .
Harrison and family. Mr. Final Afcount of Everett Gard · iNiilllllftOF
will be' shown by Pat Potentate .
·
·
'
Mr~ and Mrs. Walter SWett Harrison is convalescing ner, ExecutOr of the Estate of
. • -..,..
keep them in a spice rack .. I transfer my vitamins to a labeled nmunage sale 'at: Citt B.r adEtna G•rdner. Deceas'ed.
ca&amp;IOI. T~
of
Aladdin
_Temple. spice jar. Most prescriptions are taped on the bottles and the ford's store on Vine St. here were :reMit guests of A. R. satisfactorily
at
home • CASE NO . 21'215 First and
-......
Prospective candidates and tapes can be removed and transferTed to spice jars. They look Friday and Saturday, Oct. 18 , Caster and , Mr. and Mrs. folloW.IIJI'Bei'Y at. Columhus Final Account of Eleanore K .
Enevoldsen, Guardian of Jo
•-Otii'*"IBTI=uat,
wives welcome.
much neater this way and are never noticed as being medicine and 19 frool_l a.m. untirt p.m.' OlesterSpencer in Charlet!ton, .Rive• side Mel))odi8t _Hoopital, JLynn
Enevoldsen .
Unless ••ceptlons · ant flied
....._ ~ -~· ; "" ·.
REVIvAL Service at First botUes. If there are UtUe ones &amp;rOWld the house the rack should sponsored by the Happy W. Va. The Spencers had
Mr.
and Mrs. Lewil Smith
, said - accounfs will be
~!"""" ....-.....
· 1111 Baptist Church,
Rafllne, beh·-gtn' aplacetheycannotresch.Minehangsabovethestove Hustlers Sunday School Claa • receiVed iWon:l of the birth of a visited his brother-In-law and fhereto
for he1rln9 before said court on
. ~--.-.
- , ., Th d
30
Th
R
~·
uts ay, 7: _p.m. e e~. whereulechlldrencannotgettoit.-JUDI~
.
· of the Wesleyan United second 8011 to their 8011 and slaler, Mr. and Mrs. Edward the Sth day of November , 1974,
at which tlme said accounts will
polllat,....;.,i
Frank Snare wtll use the ,toptc
DEAR POLLY- t,{ost of us change purses ~enUy and Methodist ,~· .
daughter4n-law, Mr. )II1CI Mrs. lngnD!, Laurelville.
' be
considered and continued
· ~·
· , i
"You(th) On the Run". SpeciaJ that Is not easjO: There are .s omany things carriedlti an average
Stephef!Spencer, whore:alde ln .' Callers on Saturday af, 1'rom d1y to day until flnallv
a•sposed of .
· ·
."f'n.!~.=..~=:.:.':.i: ;
music by girls' trio and . wcxnait'spurse. lputalltheessentialthingsthatalwaysgoinmy
SHOTS OFFERED
. Poftland, Oregon.
, ternoon at the Earl Starkey
Any person Interested mav_
lfnYtiL.-Y..-:
·
•
William Beegle. ·
purse ln'a cleaqllaatlc bag . .When anything is needed I just lift
Flu shota will be glve!l at the . Mrs, D. V. Cummings; llome &lt;were Mr. ud. )ln. fll_e written exceptlona to said
account~ or to matl'irs per·
MEIGS M)lseum, o'pen 011t the tiag and find th~ ite~q ~tltout a lot. of sear,ching. When Senior Citizens Cl!nter at 12:30 , AthelW, wasa weekend guest of , Dennis Aml!ld Of Wooster.
talning to the execution of the
trust. not less than five days
·.,
Tuesday
~nd Thursday cjtang~ bags there is'just this one plastic ~. to transfer.from Wedn.esday, Mrs: Elea 11 o~ · Murl Ga!away . •Mrs, , Leon . Zella~ ,isagainconf!ned prlor
to the ·date a:et for hearing·.
· ~· ----.#.ll.llr...Ofo · ,· evenings, 7:30p.m. this week onepurseto · theother.- · MRS.J.~.W. ,
' ,
·
. Thomas director Meigs Woodrum and Rick of to
0
Bleneu1 Memoria!
Of!!o.- .w. Va, Qoo v-. lll:tlk
andnexlweek and Sunday 2to
MANNING D. WEBSTER
Coun!Y
foe'
Aged, McArthur also. visited her H0111italiD AtheiB, wtJ.e_ttlte.
- · .... ,... · - ... . '5 . . f
. . the dis' Ia
·
J.UOG.E .
11oc .... _ , _ , ... ..,...at.a,
.' p.m. or v1ewmg
P Y
Yoa win recelv~J'~II PoDy - • yoar favorite home- . advises. ·Seniqr citizens who mothtpecently 1 ~. WOOilrum hal uri:IMJp IIUI'Iei'J'. S11e •
Common Pleas Coult,
~-; ~· , ;t ! ~ prieo · _·.of ~ho~raphy Vk of Walter m'ulng' Idea, Pet
, P!llly's Problem jr.·soludoa to a watit,to .have 1hi: vaccine
probate Division·, •
w:u . unde.rgo . • urgery a~ would.aftpnclate hearing from
Meigs County_. OhiO·\ .
.asked to
the center. . 0 Blehess · M~ IJOspl~ her friends.
,,
-: - ,: .
:
·.
Setnsheunerr Clnc:ln~ ;, I .: •• problem. Wrjte. PoUy ID . • of . ~~ DI!WI~rr: ' .. ..
.

Mrs. Thomas hosts church women

marl ,"

ning, the Los Angeles Dodgers'
' 'forgotten man," today in the
third game of the all California
World Series with the defending Wor\d Champion A's 7-5
favorites.
Hunter is unbeaten in three

World Series decisions over the Los Angeles pitching staff this
last two seasons and was the . past season but after a sixweek
man who nailed down the final rest, pitched a one-hitter
out in Oakland's 3-2 victory against San Francisco for a
Saturday in the openi~me key victory down the pennant
stretch drive.
of the 1974 classic.
" You never quite get used to
Downing, who lost World
Series decisions with the New being calm when it comes to
York Yankees in 1963 and 1964, pitching in the World Series,"
was the last starter on a solid said Hunter, winner of 25
games in 1974 and a leading
candidate for American
League Cy Young Award
honors. "But once the game
gets started, I expect I'll be
able to shut everything else off

Plus 50c
Handling
Chorge

ONE 8x 10 NATURAL LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT

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· THURSDAY O~TOBER11 .HOURS: 11-5 P.M.

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AT FIRE HALL

Middlepgrt, Ohio
Grandparents In for • FRE

'

8x10

Color Portrait

OF

pre viou s week . We'r e not

getting much rush by our ends ,
and teams are doubling up on
Danner which r ead, " Three m a our tackles."
row . Skorich must go , (owner
On offense, he wtll replace all
Art) Modell must spend some three receivers, including Judough. ''
bilee Dunbar who suffered a
The Browns did lose 34-24, cracked wrist bone Sunday a nd
however. and Skorich now has will miss four to five weeks.
the difficult task of gearing his
Newcomer Tim Ge or ge ,
team to snap the streak a gainst dropped earlier by Cincinnati
the powerful Steelers in Pitts- and Detroit, wilt replace
Dunbar on the left side, Dave
burgh next Sunday.
The Sttelers will face a Sullivan will step in for Gloster
drastically revised Browns Richardson at the other wide
team,
Skorich r eveal ed spot and Jim Thaxton will
Monday at his weekly news move a head of Mill Morin at
conference, with changes both tight. end .
on offense and defense m hopes
'·Morin is not open as much
of jarring the Browns out of the as we had expected, and his
blocking has not been overslump.
Walt Sumner will replace whe!mmg ," Skorich said of the
Van Green at stron g safety so 10-year man who caught a
Green can replace Clifford touchdown pass against the
Brooks at right cornerback, Bengals. 11 Thaxton has more
Skorich said. On the line, N1ck speed and can attack their
Roman will move from left to coverage.''
Skortch, in the. next-to-last
right defensive end. rookie
Mari('Seifert will start a t left year of his contract, was
end, and right-sider All en reminded that last week he had
Aldridge will back up Seifert . ca lled the Cincinnati game

now meant it's too late for

them to contend this year.
"We still have to gel winmng ," he said. "Our chances
are gelling slimmer unless we
get this learn turned around.
We' re another game further
behind now ."

"Can I afford
anind,~pendent

insurance expert
to figure out
what's best for me?"

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A o nc-c~un pa n y ~alc 'i m .an, on the ot her h.md, must neces~ . 1r i l\ try to 'it'l l \ Oll the pnlic:- h1" cnll ll''lll\' llfTc r~.
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William D. Childs

Downing-Childs Agency, Inc.
Middleport, Ohio

...

l

9. Penn Sta t e (4 1J
78
10. Arizona (5.0)
55
11. Kansas {4-1)
35
12. Florida (4 -1)
14
13 . Marrland &lt;3 -2)
13
14 . (Tie Nebraska ( 3-2)
6
{Tiel Vanderbilt {:I-ll
6
16. Miami (F i a} (J.t)
5
17 . (Tiel Arizona Sta te {3 1l
3
(Tie) Miami (Ohio) (4-0-1) 3
Ctiel Illinois (4-H
3
20 (Tiel Texas (3 -2)
2
&lt;tiel Tulane&lt; 4.·01
2
Note: By agreement with the
American Football Coaches, ·
teams on probation by the
NCAA are Ineligible far top 20
and r'tatlonal championship consldeTatlon by the U PI Board of
Coaches. Those teams currently
on probation are: Oklahoma,
SMU, California, Long Beach
. State and SOuthwestern Louisiana . ·

RETURN TO PENGUINS
.PI'ITSBURGH (UPI) - Defensernen Dave Burrows and
Steve Durbano of the Pittsburgh Penguins, both of whom
missed the first · two season~
games, have returned to the
NHL club's lineup and will see
action against the Stanley Cup
chlll!'pion Philadelphia · Flyers
here Saturday. .
Burrows had been sidelined
· with an ankle injury, while
Durbano was serving a twogame sl!lipension imposed by
the league as a result of a fight
in a preseason game with the
WHA Cleveland Crusaders.
The Penguins also announced that left wing Wayne
Bianchin, whO sustained . a
broken ,neck in a surfing accident in Hawaii in May, had
rejoined the team.

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.

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1974

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ~ find the "middle of the road"
Ohio State coach Woody Hayes for his Buckeyes this week in
is well aware of all the upsets practice.
and near upsets which have
"You can ease up and get
occurred so far in the 1974 . into trouble, " said Hayes, "or
football season.
you can work too hard and get
At Mon&lt;J,ay's weekly press into trouble."
luncheon, the Buckeyes coach
Hayes said the versatility of
noted losses by Nebraska, . the Buckeyes offense and the
Florida and Texas Tech the ability to shut off Wisconsin
past weekend and closer-than- quarterback Gregg .Bohlig
expeeted wins by heavily were the two things which
favored
0 k 1ahoma, stood out in his mind in the 52-7
Alamabama and Notre Dame: dismantling of the Badgers last
"You ,see that," Hayes said, Saturday.
"and you realize it can happen
"We ran a lot of different
to you."
plays, " Hayes said, "as many
Hayes and the top-ranked as we've run in a long time. But
Buckeyes would appear to· be we still have some in the bank.
ripe for upsetting Saturday
" People say our football is
whentheyentertainlndiana (4- simple," Hayes went on, "but
1), except for ·the fact HaY,es is I'll bet we have more blocking
already working to prevent it. adjustments and diversions
"We'll prepare for Indiana," than any other team in the
Hayes said. "They'll want to nation, with the possible excepspring an upset, but damned if lion of Southern California."
we'll let them,"
Quarterback Cornelius GreeHayes called the Hoosiers, ne , the !H}., 170-pound junior
"an improving team," going who engineered the nearalong with his long-time theory flawless
offensive
perthat at midseason teams are formance, drew Hayes' praise.
either getting better or worse.
"Coroy had a great game in·
Hayes said he would try to many ways," Hayes said ,

OAKLAND (UP!) ~ Everbody knows that old Army warning,
never volunteer, and Gene Tenace knows it as well as anybody
else, but he wants to stand up and say something anyway, in
behalf of an Oakland A's: team member, who has been accepted
by them only up to a point.
Herb Washington doesn't really qualify for full membership
witli the A's.
·
He can shower with them, but he isn't allowed to play ball with
them.
As the only one of his kind in the major leagues, purely a pinch
runner, and nothing more, Herb Washington is not regarded a
full-blooded baseball player by his fellow players. They respec.t
the fact he can run, that he's still the world record-holder in both
the 50-and OO.yard dashes, but they have little or no regard for his
baseball instinct because they feel he has none.
That feeling could only be strengthened after what happened in
Los Angeles Sunday, when Washington took them out of what
could' ve been a big inning, what could've been the ball game, in
fact, after he was put in to run for Joe Rudi with one out in the ninth and he was picked off first base by dodger reliever Mike
Marsliall with a move the likes of which he had never seen·
before.
"'!be thing about Herbie is that he's a tremendous person, and
he has done a tremendous job for us," says Gene Tenace. "You
have to remember he came to us right off the track. Put yourseH
In his place. You got 24 guys who regret he's even on the ball club.
.They know the only thing he can do is run.
"But I'll say this about him, he adjusted. He certainly did, and
you have to give him credit for that. I know I do. I really like the
guy. He made up his mind it didn't matter to him what people
thought, he was going to do his job, and he did.
"He has gotten thr:own out at times and he has been picked off
at times, but he still did what he was brought here to do, and he
overCfme a lot of obstacles to do it. When he was picked off
Sundah nobody criticized him-nobody said anything oli the
bench. They knew how he felt. They knew it wasn't really his
fault."
.
Alvin Dark, the A's manager, was among those who felt
'compassion for the inexperienced, 23-year-old Washington after
what happeni!d to him Sunday.
"As we were getting our luggage, Alvin came over and patted
me ori the butt," says the A's sprint specialist, "and when he does
that, I get a certain f~ling, a good feeling, like 'Don't worry,
Herbie, we'll get It back.'" ·
· QtiMir members of the A's alSo went out of their way to show
WaShington they were not, in effect, abandoning him because he
had'been picked off in such a critical situation.
On ·the bus which took the A's from Dodger .S tadium to the .
airport Reggie Jackson sato down alongside Washington and
talked so!Uy to him.
' "We just rapped," says Washington. "Reggie conveyed the
fact he, had confidence I would bounce back from this sort of
thmg, and that It was something I should learn ~om in the future.
I thlnlt I have learned; I'm sure I have. All this helps at a later
time. It helps you grow. From tr~ck, I'm used io nothing but
applause. Now I'm
in. another situation.''
_
Washington Is aware of how many of the A's feel about hun.
"Soinl!gu~ on the club feel! shouldn't~ used atall," he says
without any bltterneils.
,
•
·
''It'S·difflcult;" he adds, still teterrlng to the general feeling
, among his teammates aoouthlin. "But I can ll!'derstand the way
they feel. I.J,te the average fan, you get loud cheers from them
when you succeed or do well, aild only boos when you fail. That's
only natural when you stop and.think about lt.''
Herb Washington is not only a quick young man, he's a brij!ht
one alSo.
He says the Dodgers will hear from him before it's all over. He
doesn't say rt In a bragging way, and !lOmething about the way he
says it makes me believe he's going to be heard from yet.

cast

H UllfJry Kid•?
Don't .Argr&lt;e

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Mon.lhru Thurs.-9 A.M. to 11 P.M.
Fr,. &amp; Sat-9 A.M. to 1 A.M.

Adolph's Dairy Valley ·

Oct.
'

·,·,•,·,~· ··· ·· · ··•~~· ·:-;.·.-.-,·.:.;o····;o····-.···············v ~···

•

Rich IS
at' top,
_finally

Woody:-.won 't let
fl,pset bug strike

•
••

By DEE SIEGELBAUM
"some of them too subtle to . NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UP I)
see, but we won 't divulge - Charlie Rich, who struggled
those."
ror 20 years in the country
Hayes said the Buckeyes music rield before reaching the
offense, which scored the first top, was named the industry's
eight times it had the ball , with "Entertainer of the Year'' at
the exception of when time ran the Grand Old Opry Monday
out at the h.rtf, reached nine of night.
.·
its 10 goals.
Rlch , 41, known aS ' "The
Greene rushed for 146 yards, Silver Fox" for his long grey
passed for 81 on five ol seven hair, also won "album of the
completions, scored twice a nd year" honors for "A Very
passed for another in his best Special Love Song, " which
performance as a Buckeye.
included "The Most Beautiful
All-America Archie Griffin Girl," and " ! Love My
made it 16 straight games of Friend ."
gaining over 100 yards with 112
In his acceptance speech,
in 18 tries to close in on the all- Rich, whose smash record
time record held by Steve " Behind Closed Doors," won
Owens of Oklahoma .
him the top single prize last
Owens had 17 straight regu- year, read a poem by his wife_
lar-~;eason games over 100
" Whatever
you
are,
yards rushing and another in whatever you do, if you have a
the Bluebonnet BOwl his junior dream hang on to it, " said
year . The NCAA , however, Rich.
recognizes only regular~ason
Songwriter Pee Wee King,
contests.
who wrote the "Tennessee
Griffin's 16 in a row includes Waltz," and performerthe Jan . 1, 1974, Rose Bowl win producer Owen Bradley were
over Southern California, so he named to the Country Music
is still two short of equaling Hall of Fame, the industry's
Owens' mark of either 17 or 18, highest honor .
.
depending on whether or not
Blind recording stru: Ronnie
you count bowl games.
Milsap, a newcomer in country
Defens ive coordinator music whose hits included
George Hill, who had been "The Girl Who Waits on
somewhat disappointed in the Tables/' "Pure Love," and
Buckeyes defense the first " Please Don't Tell Me How the
three games of the year, says it Story Ends," received the
is "coming along, getting male vocalist of the year
better each game.
·award, and Australia-born
" The most
important Olivia NewtonJohn was named
statistic is keeping them out of remale vocalist of the year.
the end zone ," Hill said,
Miss Newton-John has
"nothing else matters."
recorded " If You Love Me (let
Linebacker Ken Kuhn, who meJrnow )," "I Honestly Love
reinjured a shoulder against You," and 11 Let Me Be There."
the Badgers, will sit out the
Single or the year was
Indiana game, and cornerback "Country Bumpkin," sung by
Tim Fox and tackle Pete Cal Smith,'! former member of
. Cusick are still question .the Texas Troubadours. The
marks. The offense is expected tale of a lanky cowboy and a
to be at full strength.
waitress also won song of the
year honors for writer Don
Wayne.
Loretta Lynn and Conway
Twitty were named vocal duo
of the year for their recording
of " As Soon As I Hang Up the
Phone."
Other winners were the

·Ohio grid
standings

Ohio College Foofball Records
St atler Brothers, 11VOCal group
By United Press International
f
Mid-American conference
o the year," whose big hit was
Conference
Overall 11 Thank You Woi'ld· ' 1 Danny
W
LT
" an dthe N3 sh V1!liP
Bowling Green
2 1 0. W3 L
2T
Q • D3VlS
T Bras.s,
Toledo
J 0 0 J 2 0 "instrumental group of the
1
Miami
O 24 O
Ohio Un iv.
1' o
2 o
3 o year; an d th e 1a te Don R'tc h ,

..

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••••••••~· o· , ·. -,.,.,.,.,;o:·······~;•.;o·o;o··;o
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...
....... Noh'•'•'•'• ,•,•,•,•.-.-,•,-.TIOO#, • • • ·••. ·•. ·•.

.:o;:~~·~·~~·~:•!·~ :o.o!•.•.~.- ~».•:•:•.•X•:•:O:O:•:•:•:&lt;O:•.•:v.•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•.•:•:•:•!•:•:•:•: :o:•:•:•;.o;«•:-.O:O:o;o;o;.o;.o;.o;.o.~o;.o;o:o;o:o;.o,...;o-.-;o;y;..-:;..::::~.:·:•:•:O:•!o!•!•!•~·.•:

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·

Your hospi~al reports:

.
By Hugh P. Klrkel,
Exec~tlve Vice President
Holzer Medical Center
Adj'ustments in charges at Holzer
Medical Center went into effect on
October I as a direct result of the .
~ons tantly increasing costs of providing
hosp ital ca re .
Th'e increase in the daily rate of the
private room is from $74 to $85 and for
semi-private rooms from $69 to $79.
During the past year, double digit inflation has ca used a sharp increase in
the cos t of all essential products,
equipment and, services purchased for
the care of our patients, J'ust as
skyrocketing costs have pin.ched the
buying power of the public.
Since January I, 1974, the cost to
the hospital for bedding and towels has
increased 40 percent; bandages,
dressing and intravenous solations are
up 25 perce nt; paper supplies reflect a
29 percent increase , and plastics cost 30
t
perccn more .
During the past year Holzer has
b
1
d b a1m t
een severe Y squeeze
Y
os
th
t
th
h
' tal '
11
.
every th mg a
e ospo
norma Y
ha
· 1 dr
1
pure ses, me u mg , or examp e, a
f od
t ·
f 32
t
o cos mcrease ,o
percen • an
·mcrease of 29 percen t fore·1ec tr tct
' ·tY, an
·
mcrease
of 26 percen t for na tura1 gas
d
f 25
t - th
an an mcrease o
percen tn e

postal rate.
. The average increase in the cost of ''
Pharmaceuticals is 20 percent ,·
however, some antibiotics -cost 400
percent more than they did six months
ago .
THE FEDERAL minimum wage
has increased by 19 percent withi,'n the
past year and is due to' again Increase
by more than 5 percent this coming
January 1. This, plus a 29 percent increase in the hospital's share of Social
Security costs based on wages, has a
tremendous impact on the operation of
a not-for-profit hospital such as Holzer
Medical Center. ·
With 732 men and women on our
· ta-m a
payro 11' the hospt'tal mus t mam
competitive wage and salary program
which .is so necessary ro attract and
maintain a competent and trained staff
to
'd
h' h
l't f
r t
provo e our tg qua 1 Y 0 . pa ten
care.
Our personnel have felt the intense
pressure of a constantly increasing cost
f . .
1 Th ey t oo
o 1tvmg, justaseveryoneese.
must receive · fair and competitive
wages in order to maintain a decent and
dignified s.tandard of living in an inflationary economy .
In fact, out of every dollar of expense that the hospital incurs, 55c goes
to our. personnel for wages and fringe

·

~

USDA CHOICE

benefits, JOe ·to our vendors for s~ppUes
and services, and the remaining 1\i_C for
· tere t on th h Ita!'
1'ns urance, 10
s
e osp
s
1ong
te
d bt d d
· t'
rm e an
eprecta ton.
Hoi
M dt' al Center 1·
no'fo
zer e c
s a '" rprofit hospital, and as such, cannot
1
f ds · to
·
P ace any excess un
tn reserve.
Th h 'tal b d t 1 d 1 ed '"ha
e ospt
u ge s es gn "' ve
suff'tcten
· t tncome
·
to c overa11 expenses
of
tl
'th t
d ·
th
opera on WI ou re ucmg · e
q
tit
rt of t' t
··
uan y or qua I y pa ten servtces.
During the next 12 months, it is
e tim t d that e
1· t · H 1z
s ae
ev ry pa ten tn o er
will pay to the hospital an average of
$134 a day for care. This includes not
on! th
t ha
b t a1s 11
y e room ra e c rges, u
oa
oth
har
f
· 1
d 1n
er c ges or specta an
tha t are tailored
d'tvt'duallzed servtces
to meet the needs of each patient.
A t ' t'
1 gth of ta
pa ten s average en
s y
t'n Hoi
h
· 72d
hi h ·
zer, owever, ts · ays, w c ts
significantiy less than in the three
closest urban areas. This can be transIa ted into a savings in the cost of care at
Holzer by an aver.age of $96.48 in every
patient's total bill.
0 ur concern for pa t'ten t costs is
renected In the positive efforts of our
physicians and the entire hospital staff
to limit hospital stays as much ·as
possible without endangering the health
and weHare of our patients, while at the
same time providing · for them a
meaningful savings.

SUPER MARKET - Open Dailj 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
Reserve Tbe

Prosecution is setting up
Nixon as coverup's guide
,_._

i 8

' aides, Haldeman and Ehrlicb- man, had devised a strategy to
pin the blame on Dean, to
"push him outl;ide the
wagons.''
· "As the President puts it,"
Ben-Veniste said, evidently
quoting from a still-secret
Nixon tape, '"Give the investigators an hors d'oeuvre and
maybe they won't come back
for the main course.'"
The next day, he said, the
three men agreed they would
have to stick with the story that
the money paid the Watergate
burglars was not hush money
but for "humanitarian" purposes.
"That's what it ought to be~
that'sgot to be the story; that's
got to be the defense," BenV_eniste " quoted Nixon as
saying.
.
I AccOrding to sworn public
. testimony elsewhere, Nixon at
the same time was expressing
surprise and shock when
Watergate investigators told
him they ·had cracked the case
and found that his moSt trusted
advisers were involved.
...

·

Hanover (Incl. ) at F indlay
Hiram at Thie l CPa . )
Manchester
( Ind . )
at
Wilmington
·
Batdwin :watlace at Heidelberg

(n I
Wo.oster at Mar ietta ·
Musklngum at Otterbein
&lt;;apltat at Mount Union
Wittenberg at Denison
OhiO Wesleyan at Washington

u _ !M . I

Kenyon at Oberlin
Ohio Northern at westminster

: !Pa.

·with Sinatra.'' he

. . 1·
pkg
WI ENE S • • • • • ~ • • • ~ • • • • • • ~
SUPERIORS - BY THE PIECE -

BOLOGNA. • • • • • • • • • • • }~.

SUPERIORS

of

Australia

with

"con-

siderable interest,"
"He is a pretty strange sor.t
of fellow, he call be terribly
nice one minute and, well, ' not
so nice the next, " Charles said.
purfng the . tour Sinatra
blasted members of the Aus-'
tralia news media and called '
women journalists'hoqkers and
broads and ci11led male
journalists
bums
and
parasites.

' '

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election. Only $35,000 can be
the candidate's money.
House members in 1976 will
be limited to $70,000 in the
prinnarles and $70,000 In the
general election . Their personal funds are limited. to
$25,000.
The new law limits an Individual to $25,000 contributions for all candidates in a
single year and no more than
$3,000 to one candidate -$1,000
in a prinnary, $1,000 if there's a
runoff, and $1,000 for the
general election.
However, the law permits
candidates to spend 20 per cent
over their limits for raising
money from small contributions.
Candidates would be forced
to establish a-central campaign
committee,
report contributions and expenditures,
refuse cash contributions over
$100, refuse contributions from
foreigners or In another person's name, and their loans will
be treated as contributiOllS.
If they are elected, their
outside income for articles and
speeches will be limited to
$15,000, with $1,000 for any
single article. If there's any
campaign money left, it can be
used to defray the expenses of
holding public office.
· But the biggest changes will
be In the 1976 p-esldentlal
campaign and thereafter, because tax money will be used
for primaries, general elections, and nominating conventions.
The money can come either
from the $1 checkoff on income
tax returns -by 1976 this kitty
is expected to be $75 mi111on ~
or smaU contributions, but not
both.
The
Democratic
and
Republican candidates wlll
each get $211 mi111on, up to f5
mi111on for primaries, and their
party Win receive f2 mi111on to
finance their conventions.

campaigns than the old way of
letting candidates privately
raise all the money they can
and spend all they get.
The reforms will take effect
for · the 1976 campaign so the
Nov. 5 election will be the last
of a breed:
Those sen11tors who will seek
re-election in 1976 will be
limited to spending 8 cents
times the voting age population
in their states or $100,000 in
prinnary election, and 12 cents
times the voting age population
or $150,000 in the general

trial for conspiracy in the
Watergate cover-up.
There is no question that the
alleged excesses of former
President Nixon 's r~lection
campaign are behind many of:
the reforms .
Up until 1972, campaign
reform was regularly discussed, but little was done.
·After that campaign, investigalion after investigation
found corruption so. pervasive
that a majority of Congress
decided it was better that
taxpayers pay for presidential

.,

OHIO LOTTERY TICKETS HERE

Congress will watch ·signing
WASHINGTON (UP!) ~
Every member of Congress
was invited to the White House
today to watch President Ford
sign a law making some of
their campaign methods obsolete in next month 's election.
The Federal Election Campaign Act Amendments of 1974
are the most sweeping political
campaign
reforms
fio
American history.
Five of the men directly
responsible for the law are in
U.S. District court today, on ·

't

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1

'. )

:

p ••

Adjustments in chal-ges

By JANE DENISON
Nixon friend C.G. "Bebe"
WASHINGTON ( UP!)
Rebozo to the cover-up plot,
Government prosecutors are contending he furnished $25,000
Kent State
1 2 o 4 2 o "instrumentalist of the year."
seeking to portray former that helped to pay for the
Western Mich.
0 3 O 2 ' O
Preshlent Richard M. Nixon as silence of the Watergate burOhio Conference
Red Division
-guidiui; 'the Watergate cover- ~ars two years ago.
Conference Overall
f
h
•- t
d 1
The opening arguments laid
W l T.W l T
Up rom t e s ... r an ater
He idelberg
1 1 0 d 1 0
contriving a new defense after out the case the government
Baldwin -Wallace
1 0 o 4 1 0
the cover·up began to unravel. hopes to prove at the cover-up
Marietta
0 1 0 3 2 0
h
1
Wooster
o 1 o 2 2 o T e Sa isbury Elementary
They said Nixon urged his trial of five former Nixon
Muskingum
1 1 o 2 3 0 School honor roll for the first closest .advisers to serve up aides.
Otterbein
1 0 0 3 2 0
.
Blue Division
SIX weeks grading period has • John W. Dean like !'an hors
The trial started two weeks
Conference
Overall been announced by Principal _ d'oeuvre" to quell inves· ago before U.S. District Judge
WLT . WLT
Den ison
o 2 o 2 3 o John Lisle .
tigators' appetite for the truth. John J. Sirica, but had been
Mount Union
o0 o 4 I o
Named were, with the first
In his opening argument devoted to jury ~election until
Wittenb erg
0 0 0 3 l 0
d
t
d d f th f ' t
capital
1 o o 3 2 o gra e no gra e
or e trs
Monday , Assistant Special opening arguments Monday.
Ohio wesleyan
1 o o 3 2 o stx weeks:
Prosecutor Richard BenOn trial are former Attorney
x -Kenyon
x x x 2 2 1 . SECOND G
h
x .ooerl in
x x x 2 J o
RADE ~ Rut
Veniste quoted Nixon as saying General John N. Mitchell, onex -Ohio Northern
x x x 1 4 t Ann Fry, Cynthia Haze'lton, that it 's "got to be the story" time key White House aides
x -not comp~~ii~gT~o: title
Sandra Hoyt, Sandra Johnson, that hush money payments to H.R. "Bob" Haldeman and
conference Overall Greg.l\'luiray, Jimmy Parker, Watergate defendants actually John D. Ehrllchman, and
WLT . WLT J k
Ohi"o State
2 o o so o
ac Je We lker.
were for humanitarian pur~ Nixon re-&lt;!lectlon campaign
Michigan
2 o 0 5 0 0
TH£RD GRADE ~ William poses.
ofricials Robert C. Mardian
Illinois
2 0 0 4 l 0 C
11
Mich . state
1 1 o 2 3 o
arswe , James Evans ,
Dean, the one-time White and Kenneth W. Parkinson.
Wisconsin
1 1 o 3 2 o Johnda
Gillispie, Rhonda House counsel who refused to
Sirlca Monday denied three
Minn esota
0 2 0 2 3 0 J ff
M'k K
Purdue
o 2 o 1 3 1 · e ers, t e ennedy, Cratg be made lhe Watergate scape- defense mistrial motions and
lowa
1 1 o 2 3 o Sinclair, Paula Swindell.
goat, takes the stand later two for directed verdicts of
Indiana
, 1 o 1 4 o
FOURTH
h
GRADE ~ Jo n today as the first witness acquittal.
Norlhwestern
o 2 o 1 ' o
Others
w L T Smith, Lori Pickett, Sherri ag~iiost his former colleagues.
He alSo excused one of the 12
His appearance as the go- jurors without explaining why
4 0 0 Marshall, Natalie Lambert,
Youngstown State
Findlay
J J o Valerie Jeffers, Terry Hysell, vernment's
star witness and replaced her with one of
John Carrol l
~
Angela
Hatfield ,
Scott follows opening arguments by the six alternates.
Cincinnat i
Dayton
2 ' o Harrison.
the defense.
In his. three-hour, 11kninute
Akron
~
~
~
FIFTH
GRADE
~
Dale
Prosecutors also for the first
Bluffton
opening statement, BenCentral State
J 3 o Brickles, Steven Hood, Eric time linked the name of close Veniste sketched the cover-up
Wilmington
~ ~ g Lipscomb, Kathleen · Parker,
Ashland.
charges made familiar at last
Hiram
2 J o Laura Smith, Fredric· Young.
year's Senate Watergate
Defi ance
j ' ~ g SIXTH GRADE - David
Case.we stern
hearings -a story of )laper
Kennedy, Brian King , Carol
shredding, payoffs and perjury
Morris, Laura Ohlinger, Steve PODGORNY,
KEKKONEN at "the very summit of
Ohlinger, Angela Sinclair, TALK
. govermnent."
.
Camille Swindell, Linda
He told of the June 23,'1973,
HELSINKI (UPI) ~ Soviet
Williams.
President Nikolai V. Podgomy White House tape just six days
and Finnish President Urho K. after the bugging arrests In
Kekkonen held three ·hours of which, he said,Nixon approved
CHARLES NOT IMPRESSED talks Monday and then helped using the CIA to block the
MELBOURNE, Austraiia ~ celebrate the 30th anniversary FBI's Investigation -and, as
Prince Charles says he isn't of the Finland-Soviet Union · the ·cover-up began collapsing
impressed with the "goons, · Society.
the following spring, of the plan
This Week's
creeps
and
Mafia-types"
who
to "draw the wagons .around
Podgorny
is
in
Helsinki
for
Ohio College
.
associate with singer Frank four days of festivities 'tied to the White House" to protect the
Football Schedule
By Uni1ed Press ln1ernational
Sinatra.
the 30th anniversary of the end inner ~ircle.
Ind i ana at Ohio State
Bowling Green at M iami
"I have met Sinatra twice of the last Finnish-Soviet war. . By April 14, 1973, BenUtah . St . at Kent St.
Veniste said, Nixon and his key
Morehead St. (Ky . ) at Ohio and was absolutely charmed
University
by him," The .MelbOurne Sun
Toledo at Dayton
' reported Prince Charles as
Youngstown St. at Bail St.
For Your Dining and Listeniilg
saying. ''BU\ I am not imCincinnati at Wich ita St . (n)
Fairmont St. '(W . Va .) .. at pressed with the goons, creeps
Ashland ···
Pleasure •••
antl Mafia-types who associate
Defiance at Bluffton

•
'Hon·o·r Jist m
5 graaes fiOted

·

'

1974

16 ounce

..
1 19
•

·
.

'

�..
4,~ The

.

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1974

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ~ find the "middle of the road"
Ohio State coach Woody Hayes for his Buckeyes this week in
is well aware of all the upsets practice.
and near upsets which have
"You can ease up and get
occurred so far in the 1974 . into trouble, " said Hayes, "or
football season.
you can work too hard and get
At Mon&lt;J,ay's weekly press into trouble."
luncheon, the Buckeyes coach
Hayes said the versatility of
noted losses by Nebraska, . the Buckeyes offense and the
Florida and Texas Tech the ability to shut off Wisconsin
past weekend and closer-than- quarterback Gregg .Bohlig
expeeted wins by heavily were the two things which
favored
0 k 1ahoma, stood out in his mind in the 52-7
Alamabama and Notre Dame: dismantling of the Badgers last
"You ,see that," Hayes said, Saturday.
"and you realize it can happen
"We ran a lot of different
to you."
plays, " Hayes said, "as many
Hayes and the top-ranked as we've run in a long time. But
Buckeyes would appear to· be we still have some in the bank.
ripe for upsetting Saturday
" People say our football is
whentheyentertainlndiana (4- simple," Hayes went on, "but
1), except for ·the fact HaY,es is I'll bet we have more blocking
already working to prevent it. adjustments and diversions
"We'll prepare for Indiana," than any other team in the
Hayes said. "They'll want to nation, with the possible excepspring an upset, but damned if lion of Southern California."
we'll let them,"
Quarterback Cornelius GreeHayes called the Hoosiers, ne , the !H}., 170-pound junior
"an improving team," going who engineered the nearalong with his long-time theory flawless
offensive
perthat at midseason teams are formance, drew Hayes' praise.
either getting better or worse.
"Coroy had a great game in·
Hayes said he would try to many ways," Hayes said ,

OAKLAND (UP!) ~ Everbody knows that old Army warning,
never volunteer, and Gene Tenace knows it as well as anybody
else, but he wants to stand up and say something anyway, in
behalf of an Oakland A's: team member, who has been accepted
by them only up to a point.
Herb Washington doesn't really qualify for full membership
witli the A's.
·
He can shower with them, but he isn't allowed to play ball with
them.
As the only one of his kind in the major leagues, purely a pinch
runner, and nothing more, Herb Washington is not regarded a
full-blooded baseball player by his fellow players. They respec.t
the fact he can run, that he's still the world record-holder in both
the 50-and OO.yard dashes, but they have little or no regard for his
baseball instinct because they feel he has none.
That feeling could only be strengthened after what happened in
Los Angeles Sunday, when Washington took them out of what
could' ve been a big inning, what could've been the ball game, in
fact, after he was put in to run for Joe Rudi with one out in the ninth and he was picked off first base by dodger reliever Mike
Marsliall with a move the likes of which he had never seen·
before.
"'!be thing about Herbie is that he's a tremendous person, and
he has done a tremendous job for us," says Gene Tenace. "You
have to remember he came to us right off the track. Put yourseH
In his place. You got 24 guys who regret he's even on the ball club.
.They know the only thing he can do is run.
"But I'll say this about him, he adjusted. He certainly did, and
you have to give him credit for that. I know I do. I really like the
guy. He made up his mind it didn't matter to him what people
thought, he was going to do his job, and he did.
"He has gotten thr:own out at times and he has been picked off
at times, but he still did what he was brought here to do, and he
overCfme a lot of obstacles to do it. When he was picked off
Sundah nobody criticized him-nobody said anything oli the
bench. They knew how he felt. They knew it wasn't really his
fault."
.
Alvin Dark, the A's manager, was among those who felt
'compassion for the inexperienced, 23-year-old Washington after
what happeni!d to him Sunday.
"As we were getting our luggage, Alvin came over and patted
me ori the butt," says the A's sprint specialist, "and when he does
that, I get a certain f~ling, a good feeling, like 'Don't worry,
Herbie, we'll get It back.'" ·
· QtiMir members of the A's alSo went out of their way to show
WaShington they were not, in effect, abandoning him because he
had'been picked off in such a critical situation.
On ·the bus which took the A's from Dodger .S tadium to the .
airport Reggie Jackson sato down alongside Washington and
talked so!Uy to him.
' "We just rapped," says Washington. "Reggie conveyed the
fact he, had confidence I would bounce back from this sort of
thmg, and that It was something I should learn ~om in the future.
I thlnlt I have learned; I'm sure I have. All this helps at a later
time. It helps you grow. From tr~ck, I'm used io nothing but
applause. Now I'm
in. another situation.''
_
Washington Is aware of how many of the A's feel about hun.
"Soinl!gu~ on the club feel! shouldn't~ used atall," he says
without any bltterneils.
,
•
·
''It'S·difflcult;" he adds, still teterrlng to the general feeling
, among his teammates aoouthlin. "But I can ll!'derstand the way
they feel. I.J,te the average fan, you get loud cheers from them
when you succeed or do well, aild only boos when you fail. That's
only natural when you stop and.think about lt.''
Herb Washington is not only a quick young man, he's a brij!ht
one alSo.
He says the Dodgers will hear from him before it's all over. He
doesn't say rt In a bragging way, and !lOmething about the way he
says it makes me believe he's going to be heard from yet.

cast

H UllfJry Kid•?
Don't .Argr&lt;e

Fast

Fami~
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Snacb Here
.

. It's friendly and economical; quick
and diversified- enough to satisfy
everybody's mood and appetite. See
our glorious _menu..

_NQW OPEN
SUndly-10 A.M. ton P.M.
Mon.lhru Thurs.-9 A.M. to 11 P.M.
Fr,. &amp; Sat-9 A.M. to 1 A.M.

Adolph's Dairy Valley ·

Oct.
'

·,·,•,·,~· ··· ·· · ··•~~· ·:-;.·.-.-,·.:.;o····;o····-.···············v ~···

•

Rich IS
at' top,
_finally

Woody:-.won 't let
fl,pset bug strike

•
••

By DEE SIEGELBAUM
"some of them too subtle to . NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UP I)
see, but we won 't divulge - Charlie Rich, who struggled
those."
ror 20 years in the country
Hayes said the Buckeyes music rield before reaching the
offense, which scored the first top, was named the industry's
eight times it had the ball , with "Entertainer of the Year'' at
the exception of when time ran the Grand Old Opry Monday
out at the h.rtf, reached nine of night.
.·
its 10 goals.
Rlch , 41, known aS ' "The
Greene rushed for 146 yards, Silver Fox" for his long grey
passed for 81 on five ol seven hair, also won "album of the
completions, scored twice a nd year" honors for "A Very
passed for another in his best Special Love Song, " which
performance as a Buckeye.
included "The Most Beautiful
All-America Archie Griffin Girl," and " ! Love My
made it 16 straight games of Friend ."
gaining over 100 yards with 112
In his acceptance speech,
in 18 tries to close in on the all- Rich, whose smash record
time record held by Steve " Behind Closed Doors," won
Owens of Oklahoma .
him the top single prize last
Owens had 17 straight regu- year, read a poem by his wife_
lar-~;eason games over 100
" Whatever
you
are,
yards rushing and another in whatever you do, if you have a
the Bluebonnet BOwl his junior dream hang on to it, " said
year . The NCAA , however, Rich.
recognizes only regular~ason
Songwriter Pee Wee King,
contests.
who wrote the "Tennessee
Griffin's 16 in a row includes Waltz," and performerthe Jan . 1, 1974, Rose Bowl win producer Owen Bradley were
over Southern California, so he named to the Country Music
is still two short of equaling Hall of Fame, the industry's
Owens' mark of either 17 or 18, highest honor .
.
depending on whether or not
Blind recording stru: Ronnie
you count bowl games.
Milsap, a newcomer in country
Defens ive coordinator music whose hits included
George Hill, who had been "The Girl Who Waits on
somewhat disappointed in the Tables/' "Pure Love," and
Buckeyes defense the first " Please Don't Tell Me How the
three games of the year, says it Story Ends," received the
is "coming along, getting male vocalist of the year
better each game.
·award, and Australia-born
" The most
important Olivia NewtonJohn was named
statistic is keeping them out of remale vocalist of the year.
the end zone ," Hill said,
Miss Newton-John has
"nothing else matters."
recorded " If You Love Me (let
Linebacker Ken Kuhn, who meJrnow )," "I Honestly Love
reinjured a shoulder against You," and 11 Let Me Be There."
the Badgers, will sit out the
Single or the year was
Indiana game, and cornerback "Country Bumpkin," sung by
Tim Fox and tackle Pete Cal Smith,'! former member of
. Cusick are still question .the Texas Troubadours. The
marks. The offense is expected tale of a lanky cowboy and a
to be at full strength.
waitress also won song of the
year honors for writer Don
Wayne.
Loretta Lynn and Conway
Twitty were named vocal duo
of the year for their recording
of " As Soon As I Hang Up the
Phone."
Other winners were the

·Ohio grid
standings

Ohio College Foofball Records
St atler Brothers, 11VOCal group
By United Press International
f
Mid-American conference
o the year," whose big hit was
Conference
Overall 11 Thank You Woi'ld· ' 1 Danny
W
LT
" an dthe N3 sh V1!liP
Bowling Green
2 1 0. W3 L
2T
Q • D3VlS
T Bras.s,
Toledo
J 0 0 J 2 0 "instrumental group of the
1
Miami
O 24 O
Ohio Un iv.
1' o
2 o
3 o year; an d th e 1a te Don R'tc h ,

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Your hospi~al reports:

.
By Hugh P. Klrkel,
Exec~tlve Vice President
Holzer Medical Center
Adj'ustments in charges at Holzer
Medical Center went into effect on
October I as a direct result of the .
~ons tantly increasing costs of providing
hosp ital ca re .
Th'e increase in the daily rate of the
private room is from $74 to $85 and for
semi-private rooms from $69 to $79.
During the past year, double digit inflation has ca used a sharp increase in
the cos t of all essential products,
equipment and, services purchased for
the care of our patients, J'ust as
skyrocketing costs have pin.ched the
buying power of the public.
Since January I, 1974, the cost to
the hospital for bedding and towels has
increased 40 percent; bandages,
dressing and intravenous solations are
up 25 perce nt; paper supplies reflect a
29 percent increase , and plastics cost 30
t
perccn more .
During the past year Holzer has
b
1
d b a1m t
een severe Y squeeze
Y
os
th
t
th
h
' tal '
11
.
every th mg a
e ospo
norma Y
ha
· 1 dr
1
pure ses, me u mg , or examp e, a
f od
t ·
f 32
t
o cos mcrease ,o
percen • an
·mcrease of 29 percen t fore·1ec tr tct
' ·tY, an
·
mcrease
of 26 percen t for na tura1 gas
d
f 25
t - th
an an mcrease o
percen tn e

postal rate.
. The average increase in the cost of ''
Pharmaceuticals is 20 percent ,·
however, some antibiotics -cost 400
percent more than they did six months
ago .
THE FEDERAL minimum wage
has increased by 19 percent withi,'n the
past year and is due to' again Increase
by more than 5 percent this coming
January 1. This, plus a 29 percent increase in the hospital's share of Social
Security costs based on wages, has a
tremendous impact on the operation of
a not-for-profit hospital such as Holzer
Medical Center. ·
With 732 men and women on our
· ta-m a
payro 11' the hospt'tal mus t mam
competitive wage and salary program
which .is so necessary ro attract and
maintain a competent and trained staff
to
'd
h' h
l't f
r t
provo e our tg qua 1 Y 0 . pa ten
care.
Our personnel have felt the intense
pressure of a constantly increasing cost
f . .
1 Th ey t oo
o 1tvmg, justaseveryoneese.
must receive · fair and competitive
wages in order to maintain a decent and
dignified s.tandard of living in an inflationary economy .
In fact, out of every dollar of expense that the hospital incurs, 55c goes
to our. personnel for wages and fringe

·

~

USDA CHOICE

benefits, JOe ·to our vendors for s~ppUes
and services, and the remaining 1\i_C for
· tere t on th h Ita!'
1'ns urance, 10
s
e osp
s
1ong
te
d bt d d
· t'
rm e an
eprecta ton.
Hoi
M dt' al Center 1·
no'fo
zer e c
s a '" rprofit hospital, and as such, cannot
1
f ds · to
·
P ace any excess un
tn reserve.
Th h 'tal b d t 1 d 1 ed '"ha
e ospt
u ge s es gn "' ve
suff'tcten
· t tncome
·
to c overa11 expenses
of
tl
'th t
d ·
th
opera on WI ou re ucmg · e
q
tit
rt of t' t
··
uan y or qua I y pa ten servtces.
During the next 12 months, it is
e tim t d that e
1· t · H 1z
s ae
ev ry pa ten tn o er
will pay to the hospital an average of
$134 a day for care. This includes not
on! th
t ha
b t a1s 11
y e room ra e c rges, u
oa
oth
har
f
· 1
d 1n
er c ges or specta an
tha t are tailored
d'tvt'duallzed servtces
to meet the needs of each patient.
A t ' t'
1 gth of ta
pa ten s average en
s y
t'n Hoi
h
· 72d
hi h ·
zer, owever, ts · ays, w c ts
significantiy less than in the three
closest urban areas. This can be transIa ted into a savings in the cost of care at
Holzer by an aver.age of $96.48 in every
patient's total bill.
0 ur concern for pa t'ten t costs is
renected In the positive efforts of our
physicians and the entire hospital staff
to limit hospital stays as much ·as
possible without endangering the health
and weHare of our patients, while at the
same time providing · for them a
meaningful savings.

SUPER MARKET - Open Dailj 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10
Reserve Tbe

Prosecution is setting up
Nixon as coverup's guide
,_._

i 8

' aides, Haldeman and Ehrlicb- man, had devised a strategy to
pin the blame on Dean, to
"push him outl;ide the
wagons.''
· "As the President puts it,"
Ben-Veniste said, evidently
quoting from a still-secret
Nixon tape, '"Give the investigators an hors d'oeuvre and
maybe they won't come back
for the main course.'"
The next day, he said, the
three men agreed they would
have to stick with the story that
the money paid the Watergate
burglars was not hush money
but for "humanitarian" purposes.
"That's what it ought to be~
that'sgot to be the story; that's
got to be the defense," BenV_eniste " quoted Nixon as
saying.
.
I AccOrding to sworn public
. testimony elsewhere, Nixon at
the same time was expressing
surprise and shock when
Watergate investigators told
him they ·had cracked the case
and found that his moSt trusted
advisers were involved.
...

·

Hanover (Incl. ) at F indlay
Hiram at Thie l CPa . )
Manchester
( Ind . )
at
Wilmington
·
Batdwin :watlace at Heidelberg

(n I
Wo.oster at Mar ietta ·
Musklngum at Otterbein
&lt;;apltat at Mount Union
Wittenberg at Denison
OhiO Wesleyan at Washington

u _ !M . I

Kenyon at Oberlin
Ohio Northern at westminster

: !Pa.

·with Sinatra.'' he

. . 1·
pkg
WI ENE S • • • • • ~ • • • ~ • • • • • • ~
SUPERIORS - BY THE PIECE -

BOLOGNA. • • • • • • • • • • • }~.

SUPERIORS

of

Australia

with

"con-

siderable interest,"
"He is a pretty strange sor.t
of fellow, he call be terribly
nice one minute and, well, ' not
so nice the next, " Charles said.
purfng the . tour Sinatra
blasted members of the Aus-'
tralia news media and called '
women journalists'hoqkers and
broads and ci11led male
journalists
bums
and
parasites.

' '

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GROUND BEEF

lb.~ 79e

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FRESH SIDE BACON
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HAM SUCES, lb. '1.39

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HOME

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NICKERSON'S

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SCOT tAD

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30L

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39
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25 ft. \$
rolls
ALUM.• FOIL
FAIRMONT gallon $
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togg;
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AND THE HA_LLMARKS

foi .100%

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Bulld.ing oosts htve lnatlltd substlntl1lly o• tht Pill y.s.

HOMO MILK

6g~

Everyday I.Dw Price

Twin ·Pack

Hal your insur1n01 policy been lncrtiMd 10 ~ottet yOur lmntmtnt7
Could you rebuild Your hornt for the amount of lnsUraftcl you .,w'
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bot.

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16 oz. bot.

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FR~E.

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99* !: ~.99~
8

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bots.
pak

. With, 'l.AO

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Everyday Price -8 Pa •1.39
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DAD'S ROOT

OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREE)

.8

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DIAPERS
KLEENEX
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TOWELS
15' Size
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Prince Charles said he
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12 oz.

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college games

St,

lb.

POLISH SAUSAGE ••••• • .'~·. 79~

This week's

•John Carroll at Case Western
Federal City ( D .C.) at Central

fo Limit Quantil'les"

SUPERIORS

~

'

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LOW PRICE

election. Only $35,000 can be
the candidate's money.
House members in 1976 will
be limited to $70,000 in the
prinnarles and $70,000 In the
general election . Their personal funds are limited. to
$25,000.
The new law limits an Individual to $25,000 contributions for all candidates in a
single year and no more than
$3,000 to one candidate -$1,000
in a prinnary, $1,000 if there's a
runoff, and $1,000 for the
general election.
However, the law permits
candidates to spend 20 per cent
over their limits for raising
money from small contributions.
Candidates would be forced
to establish a-central campaign
committee,
report contributions and expenditures,
refuse cash contributions over
$100, refuse contributions from
foreigners or In another person's name, and their loans will
be treated as contributiOllS.
If they are elected, their
outside income for articles and
speeches will be limited to
$15,000, with $1,000 for any
single article. If there's any
campaign money left, it can be
used to defray the expenses of
holding public office.
· But the biggest changes will
be In the 1976 p-esldentlal
campaign and thereafter, because tax money will be used
for primaries, general elections, and nominating conventions.
The money can come either
from the $1 checkoff on income
tax returns -by 1976 this kitty
is expected to be $75 mi111on ~
or smaU contributions, but not
both.
The
Democratic
and
Republican candidates wlll
each get $211 mi111on, up to f5
mi111on for primaries, and their
party Win receive f2 mi111on to
finance their conventions.

campaigns than the old way of
letting candidates privately
raise all the money they can
and spend all they get.
The reforms will take effect
for · the 1976 campaign so the
Nov. 5 election will be the last
of a breed:
Those sen11tors who will seek
re-election in 1976 will be
limited to spending 8 cents
times the voting age population
in their states or $100,000 in
prinnary election, and 12 cents
times the voting age population
or $150,000 in the general

trial for conspiracy in the
Watergate cover-up.
There is no question that the
alleged excesses of former
President Nixon 's r~lection
campaign are behind many of:
the reforms .
Up until 1972, campaign
reform was regularly discussed, but little was done.
·After that campaign, investigalion after investigation
found corruption so. pervasive
that a majority of Congress
decided it was better that
taxpayers pay for presidential

.,

OHIO LOTTERY TICKETS HERE

Congress will watch ·signing
WASHINGTON (UP!) ~
Every member of Congress
was invited to the White House
today to watch President Ford
sign a law making some of
their campaign methods obsolete in next month 's election.
The Federal Election Campaign Act Amendments of 1974
are the most sweeping political
campaign
reforms
fio
American history.
Five of the men directly
responsible for the law are in
U.S. District court today, on ·

't

We Accept Federal Food 8tamps
PHONE: 992-3480

;t, , :,: : : : : :~: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ~;:;:~: : ;:;:;:;:;::~.::.~~.:::::::::::::~::~~.;&lt;~:::::::::::::::::&lt;.&lt;:::?-7..::::::::::::::~~:&gt;.:::~~{&lt;':&gt;.&gt;,;;:~;~:;:;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:~;:-~;~~:~~:=::::-=~~~.,::

1

'. )

:

p ••

Adjustments in chal-ges

By JANE DENISON
Nixon friend C.G. "Bebe"
WASHINGTON ( UP!)
Rebozo to the cover-up plot,
Government prosecutors are contending he furnished $25,000
Kent State
1 2 o 4 2 o "instrumentalist of the year."
seeking to portray former that helped to pay for the
Western Mich.
0 3 O 2 ' O
Preshlent Richard M. Nixon as silence of the Watergate burOhio Conference
Red Division
-guidiui; 'the Watergate cover- ~ars two years ago.
Conference Overall
f
h
•- t
d 1
The opening arguments laid
W l T.W l T
Up rom t e s ... r an ater
He idelberg
1 1 0 d 1 0
contriving a new defense after out the case the government
Baldwin -Wallace
1 0 o 4 1 0
the cover·up began to unravel. hopes to prove at the cover-up
Marietta
0 1 0 3 2 0
h
1
Wooster
o 1 o 2 2 o T e Sa isbury Elementary
They said Nixon urged his trial of five former Nixon
Muskingum
1 1 o 2 3 0 School honor roll for the first closest .advisers to serve up aides.
Otterbein
1 0 0 3 2 0
.
Blue Division
SIX weeks grading period has • John W. Dean like !'an hors
The trial started two weeks
Conference
Overall been announced by Principal _ d'oeuvre" to quell inves· ago before U.S. District Judge
WLT . WLT
Den ison
o 2 o 2 3 o John Lisle .
tigators' appetite for the truth. John J. Sirica, but had been
Mount Union
o0 o 4 I o
Named were, with the first
In his opening argument devoted to jury ~election until
Wittenb erg
0 0 0 3 l 0
d
t
d d f th f ' t
capital
1 o o 3 2 o gra e no gra e
or e trs
Monday , Assistant Special opening arguments Monday.
Ohio wesleyan
1 o o 3 2 o stx weeks:
Prosecutor Richard BenOn trial are former Attorney
x -Kenyon
x x x 2 2 1 . SECOND G
h
x .ooerl in
x x x 2 J o
RADE ~ Rut
Veniste quoted Nixon as saying General John N. Mitchell, onex -Ohio Northern
x x x 1 4 t Ann Fry, Cynthia Haze'lton, that it 's "got to be the story" time key White House aides
x -not comp~~ii~gT~o: title
Sandra Hoyt, Sandra Johnson, that hush money payments to H.R. "Bob" Haldeman and
conference Overall Greg.l\'luiray, Jimmy Parker, Watergate defendants actually John D. Ehrllchman, and
WLT . WLT J k
Ohi"o State
2 o o so o
ac Je We lker.
were for humanitarian pur~ Nixon re-&lt;!lectlon campaign
Michigan
2 o 0 5 0 0
TH£RD GRADE ~ William poses.
ofricials Robert C. Mardian
Illinois
2 0 0 4 l 0 C
11
Mich . state
1 1 o 2 3 o
arswe , James Evans ,
Dean, the one-time White and Kenneth W. Parkinson.
Wisconsin
1 1 o 3 2 o Johnda
Gillispie, Rhonda House counsel who refused to
Sirlca Monday denied three
Minn esota
0 2 0 2 3 0 J ff
M'k K
Purdue
o 2 o 1 3 1 · e ers, t e ennedy, Cratg be made lhe Watergate scape- defense mistrial motions and
lowa
1 1 o 2 3 o Sinclair, Paula Swindell.
goat, takes the stand later two for directed verdicts of
Indiana
, 1 o 1 4 o
FOURTH
h
GRADE ~ Jo n today as the first witness acquittal.
Norlhwestern
o 2 o 1 ' o
Others
w L T Smith, Lori Pickett, Sherri ag~iiost his former colleagues.
He alSo excused one of the 12
His appearance as the go- jurors without explaining why
4 0 0 Marshall, Natalie Lambert,
Youngstown State
Findlay
J J o Valerie Jeffers, Terry Hysell, vernment's
star witness and replaced her with one of
John Carrol l
~
Angela
Hatfield ,
Scott follows opening arguments by the six alternates.
Cincinnat i
Dayton
2 ' o Harrison.
the defense.
In his. three-hour, 11kninute
Akron
~
~
~
FIFTH
GRADE
~
Dale
Prosecutors also for the first
Bluffton
opening statement, BenCentral State
J 3 o Brickles, Steven Hood, Eric time linked the name of close Veniste sketched the cover-up
Wilmington
~ ~ g Lipscomb, Kathleen · Parker,
Ashland.
charges made familiar at last
Hiram
2 J o Laura Smith, Fredric· Young.
year's Senate Watergate
Defi ance
j ' ~ g SIXTH GRADE - David
Case.we stern
hearings -a story of )laper
Kennedy, Brian King , Carol
shredding, payoffs and perjury
Morris, Laura Ohlinger, Steve PODGORNY,
KEKKONEN at "the very summit of
Ohlinger, Angela Sinclair, TALK
. govermnent."
.
Camille Swindell, Linda
He told of the June 23,'1973,
HELSINKI (UPI) ~ Soviet
Williams.
President Nikolai V. Podgomy White House tape just six days
and Finnish President Urho K. after the bugging arrests In
Kekkonen held three ·hours of which, he said,Nixon approved
CHARLES NOT IMPRESSED talks Monday and then helped using the CIA to block the
MELBOURNE, Austraiia ~ celebrate the 30th anniversary FBI's Investigation -and, as
Prince Charles says he isn't of the Finland-Soviet Union · the ·cover-up began collapsing
impressed with the "goons, · Society.
the following spring, of the plan
This Week's
creeps
and
Mafia-types"
who
to "draw the wagons .around
Podgorny
is
in
Helsinki
for
Ohio College
.
associate with singer Frank four days of festivities 'tied to the White House" to protect the
Football Schedule
By Uni1ed Press ln1ernational
Sinatra.
the 30th anniversary of the end inner ~ircle.
Ind i ana at Ohio State
Bowling Green at M iami
"I have met Sinatra twice of the last Finnish-Soviet war. . By April 14, 1973, BenUtah . St . at Kent St.
Veniste said, Nixon and his key
Morehead St. (Ky . ) at Ohio and was absolutely charmed
University
by him," The .MelbOurne Sun
Toledo at Dayton
' reported Prince Charles as
Youngstown St. at Bail St.
For Your Dining and Listeniilg
saying. ''BU\ I am not imCincinnati at Wich ita St . (n)
Fairmont St. '(W . Va .) .. at pressed with the goons, creeps
Ashland ···
Pleasure •••
antl Mafia-types who associate
Defiance at Bluffton

•
'Hon·o·r Jist m
5 graaes fiOted

·

'

1974

16 ounce

..
1 19
•

·
.

'

�•

6 - The Dmly Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesday, Oct.15,1974

::1:;~:~;~;~;;:~;;:::~:::::1
~

~~

/

:S1
~
~

~

~

~

IS

Ford vetoes aid cutoff

model cars consider the soon-to-disappear Ignition Interlock
system one of the least liked features of their cars, according
to a survey by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
A Senate - House conference committee has already ,
agreed to legislation which wiD allow automakers to stop
Installing the Ignition Interlock which made Its debut on 1974
models It also will allow dealers, distributors and repair
shops to dlscom~ect already Installed system.
Although most of the Interviewed drivers ol1974 model
cars gave high ratings to the value and efleetlveness of
safety belts, more than 40 per cent of the drivers observed on
the road were not using the belts In their lnterlock-&lt;!qulpped

WASHINGTON (UP!) - In
his first maJor confrontation
with Congress, President Ford
has vetoed legislation to halt
U S military a1d lo Turkey
The House votes today

..=··· :·:·:·:· .:::·w-;.-;.:=:!i-:·.=:·:::::::~!i-:::w-s..;:~-;.'$...&lt;:'*.~·=·

-=:-:::::~:-: : :·:·-::·::w~:·:·::.·.·······=

'

LONG BEACH, Calif (UPI)
- Richard NIXon IS recuperatIng on schedule, his doctor sa1d
Monday, with no sighs of a
flare-up of the phlebitiS thll.l IS
keeping hun off the w•tlless
stand at the Watergate coverup
trtal
The former president's
"lower left leg IS still swollen
but non-tender, " Dr John
Lungren commented after an
examination which he S8ld took
place this weekend at San
Clemente
NIXOn, 61, was hospitalized
under Lungren's care Sept. 23
to be treated for the rblebltis
condition, wh1ch goes back
e.ght years
He was released 11 days
later, Oct. 4, to return to hiS
estate at San Clemente, where
he has been m seclusiOn smce
recngnlng the presidency.
NIXon IS "proceeding on
schedule with the recommended period of recovery
following his demanding
hospitalization," Lungren swd,
w1th "no clinical evidence Of
reactivation" of the bloodclotting that could threaten his
life
N1xon must continue to
follow a plan of controlled
physical activity, the phySICI3n
S8ld, lnchcating no change m
his opinion that NIXon should
not go to Washmgton m the
foreseeable future to testify m
the Watergate trial

Nixes Rocky

Mrs. Bonham
MASON - Funeral services
were neld on Wednesday afternoon at the Brucker K1shler
Funeral Home at Newark, OhiO
for Margaret Knopp Bonham,
age 51 who died of a heart
attack The Rev Joseph
Branon off1c1ated She had
many fnends in Mason County
The daughter of the late
Margaret McGlone and
Thomas J Reynolds, she was
born on the Ma(esltc Show
Boat, Pomt Pleasant
Surv1vmg are the husband,
W Robert Bonham, Newark,
three sons, Thomas Knopp,
Cendo , Oh10, Sgt Peter
Knopp, stalloned w1th the
Mannes, Cherry Pomt, N C ,
Clarence , at home ; four
daughters, Mrs. Eva Freas,
Newark, Mrs
Margaret
Dunham, Canton, and Carol
and Jodie Bonham, at home
She was a member of the
Christ Umted Methodist
Church at Newark Bur1al was
in the Cedar H1li Cemetery,
Newark

whether to overnde that veto
and the Senate aw8lte&lt;hts tum
to act Opuuons differed on who
would wm the showdown.
At stake were
- About $6 million worth of

Nixon's phlebitis quiet

CRill.

Services held for

CHATTANOOGA,
Tenn
(UP!) - The Chattanooga
News-Free Press Monday
called on the Senate to reJect
Nelson Rockefeller for v1ce
president
The newspaper sa1d the
former New York governor
should be reJected ' because he
has a hberal record of taxmg
and spendmg and leamng m
d11 Pcltons other than those that
appear best for the nallon
"He should be rejected
because 1fh1S New York record
Is enlarged and supenmposed
upon the whole nallon, 11 would
not be good for the United
States,' the ed1tonal said

PURDUE ASSISTANT DIES
WEST LAFAYETI'E, Ind
{UPI) - Longtime Purdue
ass1stant football coach AI
Parker, 57, who served as an
ass1stant at theschool17 years,
died Sunday of cancer
Parker, who served from
1956 through 1972 under Jack
Mollenkopf's and Bob Demoss'
The 3,989 m1ies of border terms as head coach, had been
between the Umted States an admimstrative ass1stant to
and Canada IS the longest un· Athletic Director George King
defended border 10 the world the past two years

NIXon has been subpoenaed
as a wttness by both s1des
Lungren sa1d before NIXon's
discharge that 11 would be at
least a month, and poSSibly as
long as three months, before he
could travel without endangermg his health

m1htary a1d 10 the p1pehne to
Turkey
-Continued operation of several b•g government agenCies , mcludmg the departments of Agncultuie, Labor,
and Health, Education and
Welfare, whose funds have
become hostage 10 the dispute
-Congress' own vacation,
delayed since Friday Members can't go home to start
campaignmg for the November
elections until the a1d dispute IS
somehow settled
The dispute arose thts way

·:·:· :·: :·:··:·:·····=·. ·:·:.::.·:::.~;:."$::'$...&lt;::;
Contrary to popular behef,
George Washmgton d1d not
have wooden teeth! H1s false
teeth were of f10ely carved
Ivory, held mto poslllon on
the palate by wooden pegs

NADER URGES SAFETY
RIVER FALLS, W1s {UPI)
- Ralph Nader, a cntic of the
auto mdustry for years, says
I ;
-!!•.•:*:::
the mdustry should start :::.::: &lt;·:::::::-:-:.::..:·:•••••
makmg safety 1ts No I today could build cars that
product
"would allow people to walk
"Safety IS by far the best away from 60-m•le-an-hour
econonuc bar gam," Nader told crashes" if 11 wanted to
a crowd of a bout 1,000 on the
But he S8ld the auto mdustry
Umvers1ty of W1sconsm IS not trymg to bulid cars that
campus here
are safe and sa1d 11 won't for a
the mdustry long time
Nader
0 -:-:: : : : ::;:· :0:0• .::.· :••0 . •.

.

BAGS

'

D av 1s

PAIR

FOR

o.

,..
••

••
••
••
••

-·

•
'••

$ 00

~~~.
1r

Asst. cake, pie and
muffin pans by O.ilton.
Save 68c.

~ioo

HALLOWEEN COSTUMES
For Age 3 To 14
A B1g Variety of Different
Characters and Costumes

:
"
•
...
\:
._
•
t::

""
"

'21.95

A 35' VAWE

AM-FM

$199

PORTABLE
RADIO

Men's Insulated

TEFLON COATED

RUBBER

BAKEWARE

'

VALUES TO $1.93

$7!!.

SOCKS
.

47c

YOUR CHOICE!
Tell.., Coottd
For E.sy Cleanl1111

9

REGULAR 77'

Save Now. Select a bouquet
of dned flowers at big
reducticms. Available only in
Po~nt Pleasant and Silver
Bridge Plaza stores.

~

•:•
•

•

••
•
•
..

'

...

MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE i s hereby grven that
•n pursuance of a Resolut 1on of
the Counct l of the VIllage of
Syracu se, Ohio pa sse d on th e
1st day of August , 1974 there
wtll be subm •fled to a vote of the
people of sai d Vtllag e at a
General ELECTION to be held
•n the V•llage- of Syracuse Oh o
at th e regular place of vo tmg
therern on Tuesday the 5th day
of November 1974 the quest •on
of levy ing , In e xcess of th e ten
mlllltmttatron for the ben e fit of
Syracuse V111age for 1'he pur
pose of Current Expenses
Sa1d tax betng a renewal of
an extsftng tax of 30m tll s to run
for f rv e years at a rate not

~ ~~~~:~·n~f 3 ~~ ~~st~~~ ea~h ~~~
~ amounts

to Th rrty Cents for
.~: each one hundred dollar s of
.. va luatton for F rve years
Th e Poll s for sa•d Electron
wtll be open at 6 JO o'clo c k A M
, and rem am open until 6 30
o clock PM Eastern Standard
T1me of sa1d day
By order of the Board of
Elect •on s of Me tgs County
OhiO
Edw rn S Cozart
C ha~rman

Dorothy M Johnston'
Dr rect or
Dated Oct 4 1974
(10) 7

'

PLAINTIFF

. vs

REGULAR VAWES TO 15'

HAND
1
FLASHLIGHT
Never Needs
~

Batt11~ies

"'$I .89

47

~

DEFENDANT

r.

I

., I
•

w~~e i!~~

15
Paul Stemmetz
known address 1S c p Donald
Weaver Route 1, Harrrsonvrll e
Ohio ts hereby not1fu~d t hat on
fhe 4th day of June 1974 Judy
Stelnmets, being plaintiff flied
her comple1nt against him as
defendant 1n the Court of
Common Plea s, MetOS Co unty
Ohio case No 15 ,577 praying
for d1vorce from sa•d J!a ul
Ste•nmetz on the grounds of
gross neglect ol dutY. and ex
treme cruelty, p.taint1ff fu rt h er
prays tor custody of m tnor
ch rtd~"en
support and dther
rop r relief said cause wrll be
or h arrng on or after the 26th
day of October 1974

Value!

..,

21, 28 4tc

PAUL STEINMETZ.

A

I'

u

PUBLIC NOTICE
JUDY STEINMETZ

3 Sizes-Use For Yeat-s

DISPOSABLE

FORD Trnclor 'lnd
b ru sh hoq
? whn I
trarter $1 SOO IQ69
Chev t ruck i t 100 or
for bePI cattle Pho nf'
Vanaman 742 ~3?2
10

RN

Paul Sternmetz
Plalnttfr

19110 11 2A 110) I 8 15 6tc

5895

Spt Cpe 1 red f1msh blk vinyl top spotl ess mterior good
trres radio automat1 c tran s , V 8 power steenng

1969 FORD TORINO CPE

ton
lrad c
N 11c
I)

31p

Call Collect 1 592 5544

Athens. Ohio

Edwm S Cozart
Cha1rman
Dorothy M Johr1ston
Dtrector
Dated October 4 1974

ClOJ 7 14 21 28 4tc

G£T YOUR MAN Wl11l A

Want Ad

NATURAL gas fu rnace 150 000
BTU A r ms t rong forced a tr
w th control s $80 30 ga ll on
n at ur a l gas wa t er heater $30
Phon e 378 6297
Reedsvtlle
10 13 61p

Lost
SM A L L black mm ature pood l e
around Sy r ac use
Reward
Phone 992 3792
10116t p

THREE f am ily yard sale
Thursday and Frtday from 9
to 5 F •r st road to th e left aft er
pa sstng WMPO r a d to stat1on
Lot s of ch ildr en s t htngs
10 15 3tp
BASEMENT Sa le 572 South
Th1rd Avenue Middleport 5
t 1res and wheels moun te d
radtat or
baby
s troller
e l ec tr• c m• xer c lot1'1tng of a ll
ktnds F1ll grocery sack for
$1 Wednesday Thursday
a nd Sa turday 10 unt!l dark
10 15 J tc
BACK porch sa le 22 8 6th Ave
Mrddleport Cou c h and c ha tr
electrtc r oas t er w1th s tand
coffee tab le
lamps
many
hou s ehold 1tems
9 to 5
F nday Oct 16
10 I S Jtc

WANTED old uprt ght P•anos
any cond t10n
Payrng 510
eac h F •rst floor only Write to
and 9111e d tr ec t 1on s to Wttten
P ana Co
Bo x 188 Sar dt S
OhtO -l 3946
10 15 6tp
FARM 200 ac re s more or l ess
$S 000 down rest n payments
to owner Wnte R Breun 19
Bow1 e
1916 Blueberry La
Md 207 15 o r ca ll (3 01 ) 262
2057
10 IS H e

EARN ext ra cash the easy way'
Prt ces are 9 r ea t for your
sc rap tr'on sheet •ron copper
brass
alumtnum
IBM
Pap e r s sta m !ess steel auto
batter•es auto rad1ator s Sell
to one of th e larg est recy c lrng
co mpan tes 1n thtS part of th e
stat e The Rosenb erg Com
pany At h en s Ohto
10 9 ttc
J UN K autos
complete and
delivered to our yard We P• Ck
up all ktnds of sc rap metals
and •ron R tders Salvage St
Rt 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh10
Ca ll 99 2 5468
10 11 26tp

-----------....-.--

CA~H patd for all

m akes and
models of mobil e homes
Phone area code 614 -423 9531
A 13 tfc

O L, D FURNITURE oak tables.
clocks tee boxes brass beds,
d!Shes desk s or complete
households
Wrtte M
D
Miller. Rt 4 Pomero y Oh•o,
call 992 7760

5 13 lie
NO 1 c opper .4Sc r adiator'S
25c
brass
25c
batter1es
$1 30
Gmseng $60
yellow
root
$4
tops 51 SO May
Apple 70c , M A H a ll Reeds
v rll e Oh•o Phone 37 8 6249
10 4 tfc

For Rent
4 ROOM hou se unfurntshed on
1650 L.n co ln H e1g hts Phone
992 387 ,j
10 8 tic

F U R NI S HED
apartment
wtthout utilrfle s
$90 per
month Phone 992 7556
10 13 Jt c
TWO fu r niSh ed rooms
992 3429

phone

Close to
Pow e ll s Super Valu phone
992 3656
10 13 tfc

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

TH REE furn rshed rooms on
East Ma1n St adults only No
pets Phone 992 2381
10 15 3tc
12)(6 0 2 BEDROOM mobtl e
home
country
tocatron
publiC
water&gt;
'ystem
R ef e ren ces requti'~d Carf~949
2461 after 5 p m
10 13 6tc
-----.,.-------;'!,..._ _ _

3 AND -4 ROOM furni Shed and
unturnr she d
a\partments
Phon e 992 S434
PRIVATE meeting room for
any organ• zatton , phone 992

3915

311 tic
4--;. oom- and bath- apts ~n
Middleport For information,
call 992 2S50 or 742 6S51
7 3 tiC

twO

5 12 tic
COUNTRY MobtU~ Home Park ,
Rl 33 ten mile ~ north of
P.omeroy
Large lots with
co n crete pat tos, si dewalks
r unners
and
Off
street
parktn9
Also
spaces for
small tra ilers Phon~ 992 7479
.._
7 21 tfc

Help Wanted
T RAC T OR
trader
drtver
wan l ed ('.t.ust be 23 years o ld
Phone 99' 3311
10 13 3tc

A FEW n ew b a nd mstrum ents
Con tac t Renee Stone 992 7567
9 4 lf c

SOME ONE to help w rth e l derly APPLES F tt zpa tn ck Orcflard
woman or tu st sta y n1ghts 5
State
R ou t e 6fl9
Ph one
Wtlk esvl ll e 669 37SS
da ')!%per week No housework
nvolved Phone 992 39 23 o r
9 25 26 t c
99 2 3255
- KOS METI CS
&amp;
10 9 6tc KOSCOT
WIGS
(The Mtnk 0 I Base
Cosmetrcs)
Phon e
WAITRE SS wanted apply tn
BROWN S 992 5113
person at Crows
St eak
8 20 tfc
House

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

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

10 8 10tc

Employment Wanted

phone 992 7407
10 I 6tp

POTATOES
Kennebec
cob
bier will d el 1ve r Phon e Tom
Sayr e 843 2491
10116t p

DAY NU ~S ERY 8 to 6 any age
c htfd
reasonable
rates
r e liable peop le wrth medtcal
trarnmg
Phone 992 7608
before 5 p m phon e 7.42 4902
a fter 5 p m
10 3 12tc

-

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

Real Estate For Sale
L OTS for sale•trall4!r or hou se
Al l ut1ltt1es Phone 7JJ7 1. ""1'i
Rutland Ohto Pr ce $2 SOD
7 16 ftc

For Rent or lease

All:.~.~~THER I
~

.... ""'

P&amp;J

VINYL SIDING

~00 """

... C.

Free

IIQOI &gt;10

II"

REDECORATING?

Parts_

Hea11ng
Coolmg Refrrg
Plumbrng ,
Elecfn ca l
Applian ce
All
work
gu a r a nteed
Discount t o
Senter C1t11en s

215 N Second Sl
Middleport Ohro
992 3509

It so, Call us Now for
Free Eshmate

a

Water Electnc, Gas, Sewer
Ltnes ,
tns1alled
WorN
guaranteed
Dozer Backhoe, Trucks
l1mestone &amp; F1ll D1rt
Commercial Resrden11al
Construction &amp; Remodel

Pets For Sale

Emergency Phone 992
3995 or 992 -7582

ALl WEATHER
HARDWARE
337 North Second Av e
M•ddleport Oh1o
992 2 sso

All Small Appliances

On State Rt 124, l!:z m1 from
Route 7 by pas s towards
Rutland

Lawn Mowers
Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3
C BRADFORD AU Cl tOnt:t: .
Comp l ete Serv tce
P hon e 949 3821 o r 949 3161
Racme Ohto
C rttt Bradford
S 1 tfc

F OR
FREE
esttma t es on
a lu m num
replacement
w ndows Std tn g storm doors
and wtndows Ra•lmg Ph on e
Cha rl es LtSie Syra~: IS!!' OhtO
Carl
J acob
Sa l es
Rep r esenta tt ve
v
v
J oh n son and Son In c
11 30 ffc

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

BUS IN ESS bu il dtng
50)(60
ce m en t d r 1ve Rt 124 n ea r
Rutland Phone 742 5052
8 2 1 tt c

EXCELSIOR ~a ll Vvv ..
~
Ma!n St P omeroy A ll kmds
of sa lt water pellets w a ter
nu gge ts block salt a nd own
Ohto R tver Salt Ph one 992
389 1
6 5 He

BUILDING lo t 80 ft fron t age x
165 tt Th e second lo t on left o n
R 1ve rvt ew Drtve
L ncoln
H ill Pomeroy Ohto If 10
tere s t ed cal l 992 3230 after 5
pm
10 6 tfc

LAS T BID Home I mp r ovement
car pentry work
roottng
pan t n g ca rp et tn s ta ll o tt on
f ree est1ma t es
All work
guaranteed
Phone 742 5081
9 22 lfc

A UT OMOB I LE mwran ce been
WILL TRADE - F IN A N CIN G
ca n ce ll ed?
Lost
your
ARRANGED
WI TH
operato r s ltcense Ca ll 992
MINIMUM DOWN
WILL
1428
constder t rade for o der
6 15 tfc
home trailer o r l a nd on th e
----new 3 bed r oom 2 bath hom e C REME- A N S
CO N CRE TE
w th ? ca r garage
large
deltver e d Monday through
family r oom atr c o ndl tton1ng
Sa tu rday
and
eve n tn gs
Move 10 •mmed ta t ely Ca ll
Phon e 446 1142
992 S976 no w
6 13 tf c
10 13 tfc
DOlE R o r b ack ho e wor k
NO MONEY DOW N - Month l y
Phone 446 J98 1 or 446 3459
payments accord ng to 1n
9 B tfc
come New 3 bed ro om home
w th wall to wall ca rp e ttn g on
1 ac r e landscaped lo ts Ca ll
today for mor e nformatton
992 5976
10 13 tfc
5 ROOM house on Ch es t er wate r
I n e on Rl 33 tncludes 2 lot s
and 14 of ac r e $5 500 Ca l l
alter 7 p m 992 5875
10 9 6tc

--

----

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

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

"

0

d\Jt

For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

BONANZA

9....-.

7 ROOM house w•th 2 baths l n
Pomeroy Phone 992 3478
10 15 l6tc

---------------TWO bedroom house for $a l e at
550 South Thtrd Me nu e
Mrddle port Phone 992 7074 or

992 3465

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Caney, Mgr
Phone 99'2 2111

[1-

_ _ _ ....__

\
---

10 1S Stc

~-- --

NEW HONi E tn Mason With
garage
Good 1ocat1on
3
70 000 BTU fuel ott sto:v:e, "$12.5
bectrQ(Jms fully car p e ted .

PMne 1304) 173 5&gt;128

Phone 1304! 713 5A68

__
10 10 6tp
11
- - - - .--- - - - - - - - --.""J

.,

"TIRED
OF
Dry Red Itchy Skin Red , Smelly
II

Hard Wa terTh en ca lf us for a
Wat er Analysts

FREE

R1ghl Now AI

CULLIGAN
WATER
CONDITIONING
593 6366
PIANO tun ng &amp;nd r epa tr
Phon e Cha rl es Sco tt 992 37 18
9 17 32tp

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

READY MJX
lUN\..rn;; 1 (..:;
d e lr vered r1ght
to
your
proJect F ast an d easy F r ee
es tt mates Phone 992 3284
Goeg l e tn R eady M• x Co
Midd l eport Ohto
6 30 tf c

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

SE PTI C
l A NK S Cle aned
reason a bl e rates
Ph
446
4782 Gal llpo l ts John Rus.se ll
own er and operator
5 12 lf c
SE PII C TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE
S Y S TEMS
C L EA N ED
REPA IR ED
M I LLER
SA NITATION
ST EWAR T OHIO PH 662

3035
10 4 tf c
SEWING MACHINE!:! ~ t ~o
serv tce a ll m akes 992 2284
Th e Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Author zed Stng e r Sa les and
Ser v1ce We shar pen Sc rss ors
3 29 tfc
DOZER work land clearr n g by
th e ac r e hour ly or contra c t
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator with over
20 years exper te n ce Pul l ins
EKca vatlng Pomeroy Oh10
Phon e 992 247 8
12 19 tfc

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

..

lo ca t~d

0 DELL A l•n ement

behmd Ruttand Grade Schad,
co mplete fr on t end servtce
bra kes and tuneups wheels
balanced electron•cally Open
8 to 8 dally Ca!l 742 3232 on
Sunday for a ppt
7 16 tfc

NEAR LANGSVILLE -

2

acres 2 story fra me some
carpeting, 4 B R dtnmg R J
porch es some outbulldtng s
&amp; ga rage gas well Pr iced to

serf
POMEROY AREA - 5 room

frame bath 3 B R porches
n1ce
k1tchen
s torag e
bu1ld1ng natural g as hea t
plenty of ground, the prr ce •s

rlghl
POMEROY -

1 1/oor plan 2

B R
bath , n a tural gas
furnac e
H W
floor s
ba sement with utll1t&gt;' large
lol Just $10,000 00

SYRACUSE -

Buy of the

week double lot wrth cham
fence
3 bedroom frame
basem en t N G for ce d a 1r
furnace, porc hes
st orage

bldo
WE
HAVE
OTHER
LISTING S
HOUSES,
LOTS,
FARM S,
AND
COMMERCIAL COME IN
OR CALL
992·2259 or 992 2568

EXCAVATING dozer- loade r
and ba ckhoe work
sept ic
t anks m stalled dump trucK s
and l o boys for h1r e will haul
f il l d tr t to p sot l l rme sto n e &amp;
gra v el Ca ll Bob or RQQer
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992

5232

2 11 tf c
SE PTIC
TAN)\ :)
'- ' ta 1ed
Modern Sa nttatton 992 395 4 or
992 73 49
9 18 tf c

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

GRE T
CO.UNTRI
STEREO

92.1

WMPO-FM
Mtddjeporl !'!'mero

the~~~::::::;::=~;~;:::·::~
ZEN Iti

FALL BARGAIN

Phore 992 39 7S or 992 2571
10 II tfc

Open Mon Sat
SAM 6PM

Real Estate For Sale

--- -------

You,.re Jnvlted 1

Ph 992 5682or9 ,, 7121
All Mechamcal Work

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

742-6261

&amp;

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

GREAT PAINT VALUES AT
ALL WE: ATHER
HARD
WARE
On Sa l e Now quality D evoe
Bnght Whtte Latex Hou sc
Pamt m 2 gallon ca n s Only
S6 49 p er gallon
Brand nam e RDo f Patnt tO
pet off Whil e th ey la st
Take advantage of th ese
great buy s whtle th ey are
sftll m stock

KIIOWil

BOWERS
REPAIR

949-5961, Racme, 0.

TEAFORD

2 BEDROOM house to r ent

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550
R eliJJble .Service

RACINE PLUMBING
AND HEATING

CALL

Reg1ster For Prtzes!
Shop for Bargams 1

ALL-WEATHER

717 Pearl Street
Mtddleport, Ohm
Phone 992 5367 or 992 3861

Mobile Homes For Sale

OCT 7THRUOCT 19

All tha t rs needed for a free
estimate ts a phone ca ll
Please Phone

COMPANY

CONSTRUCTION

___ _________ _

Don I forget the roof of yo ur
hom e Have a beauftful new
soot Installed by AH W epther
Roofm9 Co

8-K EXCAVATING
See
Us for
your
Plumb1ng and Heatmg
Needs

PH. 992-7454 o
992-7129
Est1mate1, Micldlepor-t,.oJ

~

MIDD ~POU (j

CLINE'S

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

Interior, lwludar
•
Decorating •rMI
KenUJdi!UI'nr

1 l1 N ~

SMA LL bu s in ess buddtng on
S R 33 7 and 124 575 per
month
Also apartment
4 WILL TRAD E - F INAN C ING
ARRANGED
WITH
rooms
and bath
$65 per
MINIMUM
DOWN
Will
month also 12 room hou se
constder trad e for older
Can be two ap...rtments $150
home trader or land an th s
per month Ca ll 992 5786
n ew 3 bedroom , 2 balh hom e
10 9 26tc
la rge
w rth 2 car garage
lam tty room a•r co nd•t ontng
Move m tmmed• at e ly Ca ll
now 992 5976
REDUCTION of grown AKC toy
9 24 He
pood tes 550 each pups S6S
Sta m ese k1tt ens $15 Phon e 1 NO MONEY DOWN Monthly
New homes for sale
256 62.47
payment s accordtng to tn
Route 143
10 1 26 tc
co me New 3 bed~oom home
with wall to wall carpetmg on
Jlh Acre Lots
1 acre lan t o aped tots Ca l l
3 bedroom, 1'h bath,
today for
ore nformat1on
99 2 5976
available m 3 weeks .
9 24 tf c
TRAILER for sale at Hysell
Run 2 bedrooms Ph one 992
3975 or 99 2 2S71
SMALL H o u se and l ot on
10 11tfc
Condor Stre et
Phon e 992
7126
8x452 BEDR00Mmob l e h o me
10 3 tf c
Phone 992 3324
....._
10116tc 78 ACRES M e 1g s County S~le m
Townshrp Rd 625 deadends
•nto property
two l akes
1970 VALIANT 65 X l2 3 bedroom
ro11 1ng hd ls 1d es beaut!fUI
fully car'peted, LP g ~s h ea t
'/I '1•1 /1 f I dh•t d '.1
trees l USt north of Sa le m
Phone 992 7751
H1 &lt;&gt; 1(1·
Ce nter. Walters R eal ty Bo x
8 25 tte
324 Wo rthmgton Ohto 43085
:.~. (h ... ! I( &lt;.,j,..
Phone (6 14 ) 888 1892
IJ,HTlo-IIJY Oht() i',i'•''
1972 WINCHE S TER Mobile
10 I S 6tc
Home 60 x T2 2 bedrooms
co mpletely f u rn•shed ca r
LISTING pe ted gas heat central a tr WILL TRADE - FINANClNO
au
33 North E xce llent
ARRANGED
WITH
Phone 992 S2S4 o r (3 04 1 892
spring and good township road
MINIMUM
DOWN
Wtll
2277
All minerals
co nSider trade for old er
10 15 6tp
hom e trail e r or la nd on th•s
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
new 3 bedroom 2 bat h hom e
bungalow
near Rout e 7 Half
1972 WINCHESTER Mobrle ~ w1th 2 c ar garage
!arge
acre
lot
near
Middle port Want
home 60x12 2 bedrooms Jl/ ;z
family room a•r c ondltronmg
baths central a•r furna ce and
only $5,500 oo
Move In tmm edtately Cal l
carpeted Phon e 99 2 S254 or
992 5976 now
SYRACUSE - 4 bedrooms and
130A ) 882 2211
10 15 ltc
de n Bath, d i ning room, por
'9 2'9 tfc
ches ba sement carport and
NO MONEY DOWN - Montl'11y
workshop henhouse and pony
payment s a c cordmg to tn
2 BEDROOM mobile hom e m
barn
come New 3 bedroom hom e
town $4 500 Ca ll 992 3975 o r
wtth wall to wall carpetmg on
VET CLINIC l.OCATION 992 2S7l
t12 acre landscaped lots can
9 13 tf c
Ideal also for
rate store,
toda y for more mformafton
antique s hop , etc
Br1ck
99 2 5976
business
buildrng
only
a
few
10 15 ltc
years old A real buy for you
AFTER 3 monthS ol renewmg
5 ACRES - 2 bedroom home
POTATOES
Phone 843 2495
and r edeco ra ti ng rnstde and
10 3 12tc
out th tS attract tve fr ve room
country $6 500 00
one floor plan hom e •s ready
With
basement
In
ALL full
CARPETED
- Neat'
to move rrito tomorrow
POLLED Hereford bulf phone
older home of 3 bedrooms
949 2622
L1 v1 ng room
d1nlno room
n 1ce utrltfy bu tldmg , kitchen
bath natural gas he al fru1t
9 10 6tc
~ .two bedrooms
lbath, all
cellar And m ce lot on town
co mfortable
s rze
New
Only 512,500 00
Lu)(a 1re furnace system
Something Fof Everyone!
RACINE - Modern 3 bedroom
hardwood floors new k1tchen
and b ath t tl e floo rs love l y home Extra large IIVmg , bath,
woods you c an 't even buy
ut1ltty 7 nice large closets w•th
today R easonably pn ce d for
storage
she lves
galore
today's housmg market
Baseme nt , garden shop and
Charlene Hoefl •ch 992 5292
• 1014tfc garage An excellent buy

________ ______
------- -

.
1

GROCERY bus•ness for sa le
Buildmg for sale or lease
Phone 773 56 18 f rom 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appotntm en t
3 20 tfc

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

FUR,NISHED
apartment
adults on ly 10 M tddleport
Phone 992 3874

Edwrn S Coza rt
Chatrman NICE- 3- room apt ana bcuu,
all electrtc 1n Pom er oy
I
Tabletop r ange wall oven
Dorothy M Johnston
nicest" ap t
around
Phone
Drrector
Date d C"ctober 4, 1974
GalltPotis
,.46 7699
or
evenings , 446 9539

4.

phone 949 3023
STERE O RA DI O
am fm
8
10 13 3tc
4
track tap e co mb•n a lto n
s pe aker
so und
sys tem
19 72
PONTIAC
Ca taltn a
Bal a nc e $ 10 8 72 o r easy
Brougha m blac k w rt h wh•te
terms Call 992 3965
mten or p s
p b
atr con
10 15 He
d1t1onmg A m 8 tra c k st e r eo
built m 19 000 m• les Phon e
KNAPP s h oes
s ocks and
?47 2063
1ackets 11 s ty les on sa l e
10 13 6tc
Phone 992 5324
10 1 tfc
19 68 CHEVROLET Impa la
P S
P B a1r cond ltt on rng
FIREWOOD for sa te Phone
Phone 593 7390
7t.2 4631
10 1J 3t c
10 1 l 2tc

POTATOES

4 ROOM turn sh ed apt

110) 1 "· 21 28

1966 DART

Wanted To Buy

10 l3 6tp

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTI C E is h ereby grven that
In pursuan ce of a Resolutron of
the Board ol Trustees of the
TOWN SHIP OF Scipio Oh10
passed on the 5th day of July
1974 there Wi l l be submrtted to
a vote of the peopl e of sa td
Town s hip
at
a
General
ELECTION to be held m the
Townshtp of Sc tpro , Ohro at the
regular places of vot1ng theretn
on Tuesday the Sth day of
November 1974 the questron of
l ev yrng rn excess of th e ten m til
ltmrtatron for the benef1t of
SCIPIO TownShiP for the pur
po se of Provrdlng and marn
ta•ning f1re apparatus
ap
pltances butldmgs or Sties
ther e for , or sources of wat f: r
supply and matertals therefor
or the establishment
and
maintenance of l tnes of ftr e
alarm tel eg raph or th e payment
of
permanent
part time
volunteer f1remen o r
f.re
f1ght 1ng compani es t o p e rat e
the sa m e
Sard tax betng a renewal of
an extst mg t ax of 1 m 111 to run
for S y ea r s, at a rate not ex
ceedrng I 0 mrll for ea c h one
dollar of valuatton, whrch
amounts to Ten Cents for each
one
hundre d
dollars
of
va1uat1on tor F1ve years
The Polls for sa rd El ectton
W1l1 be open at 6 30o'clock AM
and rema1n open unttl 6 30
o clock P M !;astern Standard
T 1me of sa rd day
By order of the Board of
Electtons of Me.gs County
Ohto

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

---- ----- -- - ~

BABY c radle ftntshed or ur1
f tn tshed Phone 992 2083 a n d
992 387 1
10 13 3tc

1970 DOD GE Sport Coupe !ow
fl YEAR old Pa om no
mileage Excellent cond tfron 1
geld m g 2 reg rs ter ed sorrel
Ph o ne Don Be ll 247 2022
quarterhorse mar es
Phon e
10 15 3t c
Rutland 742 ,(2 11 af1er 5 p m
742 5S01 or 742 686 3
1965 PLYMOUTH 100 ser1 es
10 13 M e
standard Sh•ft
6 cv l•nd er
$ ISO Phone 9-l9 321 1
EX TR A n ce shoat s 3 m os o d
10 13 Jtp
also AKC r eg 1stere d Pek e A
Poo pupptes $75 bl ac k and
1971 DODGE P1ckup w th
whtte Tup p ers Hill Ke nnel
topper
automat 1c
power
Rl 68 1 Phone 378 6152
brakes $1 450 Also Honda
10 I J 31C
Cycle 7SO 1972 model w nd
~ tlt e ld
crash bar foot p eg
1 SPOKE type road whee ls to f1 t
ba ck res t
luggag e rack
any 4 ' m bolt pa tt ern for
saddle bags excellent co n
$75 A lso ftv e HR 71!15 radt al
dlt10n Sl 250 Phon e 742 6254
t tres rn good cond1t ron for $85
10 9 6t c
or best o ff er Phon e 94~ 2181
10 13 31c
1969 VAN , 8 cy lmd er Phone 772
5651
Machmes brand new
8 16 tf c SEWING
Ztg Zag m n• ce wa ln ut t ab l e
In or•g tna l cartons
Never
1969 CHEVELLE SS 396 gold
u se d
C l earance
on
74
W1fh
b l ack
v nyl
top
Models
(O nly
a
few
a utom a t• c
transmtss o n
available J
$43 40 c ash or
radt O h eater p s p b good
terms ava rlab l e Phone 992
cond•t•on Phone 949 2116 1
7755
10 13 3tc
10 15 ti c

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

Yard Sales

949 3832 or 843 2667

THE DEPENDABLE

OONTRACJING CO.

PHONE

Serv1ce

~

EXCESS OF THE TEN

ser vtc e-s,

~ (}92-2550
I
-

SUPER10R
VINYl PRODUCTS

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN

Does
your
home
r e qu1re any of these

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

From a sh e lt to a house
Pa1ntmg srd1ng, roofing
paper hangtng
kitch e n
cabmet s, etc

FREE HOME ESTIMATES

5895

loca l ca r bucket sert vmyl 1nte rror 4 speed trans , 35 1
V 8 rad1o good tires Real n1ce

,'-========~~==========~~~==============~====~~======::::::::::::::::::

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

Produce d from a spec ta l
vmyl co mpound made by B
F Goodn c h and Mon sa n to 5
t•mes thtcker than me tal
Std mg Will not dent c h•P
crack
peel
rot
ru s t or
c halk

clean lntenor radto

1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA

4 tl
f.-rrm

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU
51895
H T Cp e V 8 automattc power steenng good w w t1res

PIANO tunmg Lane Dantels
992 2082
D scou n t to pen
ston e r s
10 6 12fp

EXCESS OF THE TEN

00

7

Thursday
a nd
A U CTIO N
Sa turday n1ght
7 p m
at
Mason Au cl on Horton St m
Ma so n W Va Constgnment s
welc.ome
Phon e (304) 773
54 71
1o 3 tf c

ON TAX LEVY IN

AU FAU STYLES
MUST GO TO MAKE
SPACE FOR CHRISTMAS
FLOWERS NOW ARRIVING!

PLASTIC

919 ? 1H1
Dart Pr1ce d a t $J5 10Phone
11 31c

2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

FI L E cab m e ts wanted
pre f
l ega l s ze Ca l l 992 5847 9 a m
t o 4 p m or 991 3833 a ft er s
pm
10 13 6tc

Business Services

1

Auto Sales

R&amp;J Coms w II be at th e MGM
r l ea Marke t Saturday a nd
Sunday Wil l buy se ll and
trad e silver
10 13 2tc

NOTICE OF ELECTION

k

UMBRELLAS 7 ~

ARTIFICIAL

g~

~

..
.._

WOMEN'S VINYL

PR.

Square C.ke Pan Pie Pan
Muffin Pan Uyer Cake Pan
Loaf Pan

..
:

.,

EACH

T.CH

,
R

TELESCOPIC
ANTENNA
LEATHERETIE
CASE

OR FOR ROUS

wtshes

James S
to express

s orrow May God n c hly bless

Values to 89'

BREAD
BASKET

REG. 24'

et

Not1ce

MILL LIMITATION
and repay you r kmdness
NO TICE tS hereby gtv en that
10 15 ltp
-~ - ------- -- -•n pur s uance of a Reso lut•on of
- _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ the Board of Trust ees of the
Townsh rp o f Cheste r
Oh ro
IN THE
pa ssed on tt1e 31st day of
COMMON PLEAS COURT
August
1974 ther e will b e
OFMEIGSCO~TY OHIO
subm 1fted t o a vote of the people
of sa1d Townshtp at a General
T HE FARMERS BAN K &amp;
ELECTION to be held m th e
SAV IN GS CO MP ANY
To wnshrp of Chester
Me tgS
Platn t •ff
County Oh 10 " a t the regular
vs
plac es of vottng th ere m
on
DA NN YM BA RB ER
Tue sday
t h e 5th
day of
ET AL
Nov em ber 1974 the que s tion of
Defendants
levymg tn e)(cess of the ten m II
No IS 502 lim tt at •on for th e beneftt of
PUBLIC NOTICE
P\Jrsuan t to an O rd er of Sale Chester Townshtp for th e
and
rss u ed by tl'1e C our t of Com mon purpose of pro v•d mg
Plea s of Me rgs Count y Oh o 1 rna ntammg ftre apparatus
wil l off e r for sale at publtc ap pl tances bu•ldmgs or Sties
auc Iron on t he 9th
day of therefor or sources of water
Novemb er 1974 at 10 00 A M supp ly and matertals t herefor
at the Cou rt House Steps rn th e or the establ iS hment and
V rll ag e of Pomeroy County of matntenance o f l tnes of ftr e
Mer9s
Sta te of Oh•o
tl'1e a t arm t e l eg raph or t h e p aym e nt
permanent
part ttm e
fo!lowtng descr.bed real estate of
Th e followrng rea l es tate volunteer ft re m e n or ftre
St luate In th e Town s hrp of Olrve ftghting companres to operate
County of M etgs and Stat e of th e same
Sa 1d fa)( berng a renewal of
Ohm
1
Bemg a part of Lo t No 138 an ex 1sf.ing tax of 2 m1ll to run
for
f
1v
e
years
at
a rate not
Town No 3 Sec l•on No 24 a nd
Range No
11 of th e 01'1to excee dmg 'h mrll for eac h one
WhiCh
Company s Purcha se
beg n do ll ar of valuat to n
n •o Q on th e nortl'1 Side of th e amounts to Ftve Cents for each
hundred
dollars
of
road tea drng from Long Bot to m one
Ohro to Pomeroy Oh10 on a valuatton for F1ve years
The Pol ls for sa1d E te ct1on
lrne b et ween Lots 138 and 139
t h enc e West along sa td road 6 Wtll be open a! 6 30 o'clock AM
and r e ma tn open unt11 6 30
rods
thence north 20 rods
then ce east 8 rods to d tv •d ng o clock P M Eastern Standard
lrne of L ots 138 r;tnd 139 thence T1me of sa1d d ay
By order of the Board of
south 20 rod s to t h e place of
of M e gs Co unty
begmntng contarnmg one acre Elect tons
OhiO
more or l ess
A l so the fol low mg pr e m ts.es m
Edwrn S Cozart
Olive Town shtp Me rgs County
Cha rman
Oh•o and bemg m Range No 11
Town No 3 Sect •on N o 24 and
Dorothy M Johr1ston
rn 100 Acre Lot No 139 of th e
D re ctor
Ohto Company s Purch ase and
bounded and descrrbed as Dated October 4 197 4
follow s Begmntng 21 rods west
of t he l tne between 100 Acre (10) 7 14 21 28 4tc
Lot s 138 and 139 In the hor
thea st corner of a 5 06 acre lo t
NOTICE OF ELECTION
be longtng to Mary A Cham b er s
ON TAX LEVY IN
and at the southeast cor ner of a
EXCESS OF THE TEN
one acre lot belongrng to F l ora
MILL LIMITATION
E Sm 1th rn public road leadmg
NOTI C E ts hereby g1ven tha t
from Long Bottom
Ohto to
Tupper s Plams Oh tO thenc e •n pursuance of a Resolutron of
north 20 rods t o a s take at the the Board of Trust ees of t he
Ohto
southeast corner of a lot now Town s hip of Orange
passed on the 1st day of July
own ed by Grant Sta lnak er
thence east 12 rod s to a s ta ke 197 4 th ere w rl l be submtfted t o
Situate 9 rods west of the lm e a vote of the people of sa td
at
a
General
betwee n 100 Acre Lots 138 and TownShiP
139 thence south HI r ods more ELECTION to b e h e ld m t he
or less to the ce nter of se d Town shtp of Orange Ohro at
publi c road
thence a lttt!e the regular places of vottng
south of westerJy along t h e therem on Tuesday , th e Sth day
center of Satd r oad to t l'1e place of Novemb er 1974 the que st ton
Of begrnnmg , co ntam tn g 1 4 of l evymg m exce ss of the ten
ac re s b e mg the same more or m til lim •tafton for the benefit of
Orange Town s htp for
t h~
tess
and
Ex.ceptmg all c oal under satd purpose of Provrd1ng
land descr•bed 1n t he la s t pt ece matntammg f1 re apparatus
WhiCh the co al •S ex pre ssly applianc es butldtng s or srtes
reserved by Clmlon A Roberts therefor or sources of water
together Wl fh al l the pr.v1leg es supply and matertals therefor
and
of m nmg and removmg and or the es tabt• shment
maintenance
of
lm
es
of
f rre
also of mmmg coa t from other
a l arm telegraph or th e p a yment
property
perma n ent,
part t t me
Exceptmg a parce l of land of
re c orded •n Vol 228 Page 823 volunteer f •r e men or ftre
f1gh t mg com panre s to operate
Deed Re cords of Me rgs County
the sa m e
Oh 10
Sa d t a x betng a renewal of a
Reference Deed
Vol
2S&lt;l
1
Page 861 Deed Records M et gs tax of 12 mtll and an m c r ease of
lh m dl to const •tu te a tax of I
County Oh ro
m •II to run for f1ve years at a
Term s of sa le Cash for not
rate not exceedtng 1 o m til for
l ess than two t h1rds of t he ap
prarsed value and sub1ect t~ ea c h one doll a r of va luallon
WhiCh amounts to Ten Cents for
the I ten for r ea l esta te taxes tor
each one hundred dollars of
)974
for Five years
Property
appra 1Se d
at valuaflon
The Polls for sard Elect ton
5912000
Wtll be open ~t 6 30o c lock AM
and r emam open unfll 6 30
Robert c Har tenbach
o clock P M Eastern St andard
Sh er 1ff of
Metg S County Oh tO T1me of sa1d day
By order of the Board of
(10) 7 14 21 28 (Ill 4 Stc
Elect1ons
Of Me !gS County
Oh !O

Dudley•s Florist
Middleport,

of

Emergency
Squad
the
co ntrrbutor s of fl owe rs food
and expresstons of sympat hy
1n our ltme of need and

WHITNIAW .CANDY
FOR ONLY $1000
59 N. Second St.

FAMILY

heartfelt gratitude a nd ap
pr ec atlo n to the R a c tn e

ALUMINUM BAKEWARE

FLOWERS

•F•r st 3 n"'lnutes 5 11 PM weekdays, plus tax

THE

WOVEN STRAW

WASH CLOTHS

FALL

tiji:a
r
6EOERALTELEPHOOE

Card of Thanks

AND POUND BOX OF

99

THIRSTY TERRY

DRIED

Wherever you are, wherever you want to call,
1t's always much cheaper to dial d1rect.

10 15 ltp

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

•

I

J

Mrs Oscar Weber

VASE OF FLOWERS

REGUlAR
8!r

Jlh" HIGH - 15112" ROUND
Gold-Ohve-Tan- Black
W1pe Clean
Madrid Vmyl (over

sad

Sa d ly m1s£ed by htS w tfe
Dor.s ch ildren mother Mrs
Doro th y S m alley and s 1ster

MEN'S THERMAL

LARGE VfNYL HASSOCKS
$ 88

w 1th

Loved and r emembered e\'ery

WORK SOCKS

$

comes

s ta v

W1th A Beauhful Cut Crystal

PACKAGE OF 10

Men's fleece hned colored sweat
sh~rts at a low, low pr1ce. Slight
irregulars, but big bargam buys.
Wh1le they last.

1964

Th e day t h e month we will
never forget
Fo rm our hearts h e wdt a lw ays

KEEPS FEET WARM

&lt;

costs s2.40*person-to-person,
'
s1.45· operator
assisted,
s .65* dialed direct.

regrets

OCTOBER 19TH

MEN'S SWEAT SHIRTS

MEN'S
SIZES

~lchertown, Mass.,

Oc tob e r

SWEETEST DAY

A two-thirds vote m both
chambers of Congress IS

FOR GARBAGE
OR LEAVES
VALUE I

BOOTS

'

passed away
today Oc t 15

memory
of
Koe n• g w ho
10 years ago

· assz ze s

l , For Sale
r
esu ts. A~:.~.'~~:"b~;',·;,o·~~~,~,"'~~

R

day

cho1ce."

CHILTON

Aphone
caltfrom
.
Gas City; I
to

In MemOI)
IN
LOV IN G
L eonar d H

Reme ~r Your Favonte G1rl On · -

PLASfiC UTILITY

SIZES SM AND MED.
In 1938 a synthetic substance
was
mtroduced
called
d1ethylstllbesterol, better
known as stilbesterol It IS
chemically different from
estrogen but has the same
effects Today this drug IS used
primarily to treat menopause
symptoms
One very Important dif ference IS that stilbesterol can
be taken in tablet form by
mouth Real estrogen hormones cannot They are
destroyed by the d1gesllve
action So, you can see why
stilbesterol bas become so
popular ,you don't have to have
an mjection to get results
There are two main hormones (or groups of hormones)
prodllCed by the ovaries, the
estrogens arid progesterone
The estrogens dominate the
first part of the menstrual
cycle, and the progesterones
the latter part. The body uses
two carbon units from any of
your food and changes 11 to
cholesterol, chiefly in the liver
Cholesterol is converted to
progesterone
And,
progesterone Is converted to
testogerone (male hormone)
on the way to formmg the
estrogen group. So, 11 1sn't
surprlSlng that males and
females have both estrogen
and testosterone

entzne

~
PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THRU SUNDAY

Testicle problem-eneeds repair
produce male hormone ,
though, sbll function If both
testicles are undescended then
the male may have a normal
male personality and appearance, but he wdl be sterile
W1th one normal testicle
producmg sperm, though, he
may still be able to father
children
This cond1hon as rare, occurrmg 10 only about one m 200
male babies. Many of these Will
have a spontaneous descent m
the f1rst year of life After that
most of them won 't descend
unless corrected And, there Is
an mcreased nsk of cancer of
the undescended testicle if 1t Is
not corrected ThiS IS a small
nsk but, nevertheless, an
additional consideration
DEAR DR LAMB - What is
the
difference
between
sllibesterol and estrogen• Are
they both hormones•
DEAR READER - Actually
the body forms several dif·
ferent but cbenncally similar
hormones that are estrogens
Substances that have the same
or s1mdar actiOns on the body
can occur m nature They can
be obt8lned from petroleum,
peat, hgmte and even pussyWillow Estrogemc substances
have even been found m the
mud at the bottom of the Dead
Sea

U S laws require that mili·
tary a1d g1ven other countries
be used only for self defense
Liberal
members
of
Congress were angl!l'ed when
Turkey used UA• weapons m
its IDVBSIOn of Cyprus, and they
persuaded both houses to
suspend military 8ld to Turkey
until Ford could certifY substantial progress was bemg
made toward removal of the
Turkish forces
Ford --argmng that the
cutoff would weaken NATO, of
which Turkey IS a member,
hurt the U S position m the
Mediterranean, and wreck
efforts to negotiate a Cyprus
settlW'~nt --threateqed to veto
~.*};
'&gt;I
,
tlie measure
A proposed compromiSe was
reJected by the House Friday,
se ttmg the stage for a
showdown
On Monday Ford formally
vetoed tbe cutoff, saymg m his
message "I take th1s step with
great reluctance, but 10 the
belief that I have no other

G

STbeDaily Sent:el, Mld~elport-~comeroly,O,Tuesday,~,"t~5~1974d

Rep John BradeJ!l&amp;S, D-Ind.,
a House leader for the aid
cutoff, disagreed The President's position ''flies m the face
of reason, law, and the expressed will of Congress,"
Brademas said.
" Further illegal shipments
of military supplies must stop,
and I believe the veto will be
overriden "

•

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My 7year old grandson has an
undescended teshcle H1s
doctor says it Will have to be
surgically descended m to the
scrotwn and that it should be
done by the lime he 1s 8 years
old Further, he says that
normal development depends
upon both testicles bemg m
place m the scrotum
My question IS, In what way
is normal development affected• What would be likely to
happen if nothmg were done
about this• Is th1s a common
Situation among boy bab1es• If
so, I wonder about the countless ones whose paren Is cannot
afford surgery'
DEAR READER - Most
doctors agree somethmg
should be done about the
problem before puberty gets
very far along, so domg 11 by
age 818 quite reasonable Some
boys can be treated by hormones at an early age, but th1s
should not delay surgiCal
correction If the boy 1s approaching puberty That IS why
your doctor wants 11 done by
age 8
In the undescended tesllcle
the part that forms sperm cells
will degenerate and Will not
produce any hve sperm cells
for reproduction The cells that

needed to override a vetp
House Republican leader
John J. Rhodes, R-AriZ , and
Senate Republi can leader
Hugh Scott, R-Pa , predicted
the veto would be upheld, if not
m the House, then m the
Senate
ThiS would oblige Congress
fo redraft the ' " contmumg
resolution " h

10 14 6tc

ALL
THE
ABOVE
PROPERTIES ARE VERY
GOOD
YOUR
INV
FOR
TOMOR
TOO
LATE ,
EL SE
MIGHT
SO

,ULUK I'
..-

, C' ACK &amp;
WHITE TV

•

~·

MASON FURNIRIRE
HERMAN GKA It "- ·
.,. MASON, W:•v•

r

�•

6 - The Dmly Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesday, Oct.15,1974

::1:;~:~;~;~;;:~;;:::~:::::1
~

~~

/

:S1
~
~

~

~

~

IS

Ford vetoes aid cutoff

model cars consider the soon-to-disappear Ignition Interlock
system one of the least liked features of their cars, according
to a survey by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
A Senate - House conference committee has already ,
agreed to legislation which wiD allow automakers to stop
Installing the Ignition Interlock which made Its debut on 1974
models It also will allow dealers, distributors and repair
shops to dlscom~ect already Installed system.
Although most of the Interviewed drivers ol1974 model
cars gave high ratings to the value and efleetlveness of
safety belts, more than 40 per cent of the drivers observed on
the road were not using the belts In their lnterlock-&lt;!qulpped

WASHINGTON (UP!) - In
his first maJor confrontation
with Congress, President Ford
has vetoed legislation to halt
U S military a1d lo Turkey
The House votes today

..=··· :·:·:·:· .:::·w-;.-;.:=:!i-:·.=:·:::::::~!i-:::w-s..;:~-;.'$...&lt;:'*.~·=·

-=:-:::::~:-: : :·:·-::·::w~:·:·::.·.·······=

'

LONG BEACH, Calif (UPI)
- Richard NIXon IS recuperatIng on schedule, his doctor sa1d
Monday, with no sighs of a
flare-up of the phlebitiS thll.l IS
keeping hun off the w•tlless
stand at the Watergate coverup
trtal
The former president's
"lower left leg IS still swollen
but non-tender, " Dr John
Lungren commented after an
examination which he S8ld took
place this weekend at San
Clemente
NIXOn, 61, was hospitalized
under Lungren's care Sept. 23
to be treated for the rblebltis
condition, wh1ch goes back
e.ght years
He was released 11 days
later, Oct. 4, to return to hiS
estate at San Clemente, where
he has been m seclusiOn smce
recngnlng the presidency.
NIXon IS "proceeding on
schedule with the recommended period of recovery
following his demanding
hospitalization," Lungren swd,
w1th "no clinical evidence Of
reactivation" of the bloodclotting that could threaten his
life
N1xon must continue to
follow a plan of controlled
physical activity, the phySICI3n
S8ld, lnchcating no change m
his opinion that NIXon should
not go to Washmgton m the
foreseeable future to testify m
the Watergate trial

Nixes Rocky

Mrs. Bonham
MASON - Funeral services
were neld on Wednesday afternoon at the Brucker K1shler
Funeral Home at Newark, OhiO
for Margaret Knopp Bonham,
age 51 who died of a heart
attack The Rev Joseph
Branon off1c1ated She had
many fnends in Mason County
The daughter of the late
Margaret McGlone and
Thomas J Reynolds, she was
born on the Ma(esltc Show
Boat, Pomt Pleasant
Surv1vmg are the husband,
W Robert Bonham, Newark,
three sons, Thomas Knopp,
Cendo , Oh10, Sgt Peter
Knopp, stalloned w1th the
Mannes, Cherry Pomt, N C ,
Clarence , at home ; four
daughters, Mrs. Eva Freas,
Newark, Mrs
Margaret
Dunham, Canton, and Carol
and Jodie Bonham, at home
She was a member of the
Christ Umted Methodist
Church at Newark Bur1al was
in the Cedar H1li Cemetery,
Newark

whether to overnde that veto
and the Senate aw8lte&lt;hts tum
to act Opuuons differed on who
would wm the showdown.
At stake were
- About $6 million worth of

Nixon's phlebitis quiet

CRill.

Services held for

CHATTANOOGA,
Tenn
(UP!) - The Chattanooga
News-Free Press Monday
called on the Senate to reJect
Nelson Rockefeller for v1ce
president
The newspaper sa1d the
former New York governor
should be reJected ' because he
has a hberal record of taxmg
and spendmg and leamng m
d11 Pcltons other than those that
appear best for the nallon
"He should be rejected
because 1fh1S New York record
Is enlarged and supenmposed
upon the whole nallon, 11 would
not be good for the United
States,' the ed1tonal said

PURDUE ASSISTANT DIES
WEST LAFAYETI'E, Ind
{UPI) - Longtime Purdue
ass1stant football coach AI
Parker, 57, who served as an
ass1stant at theschool17 years,
died Sunday of cancer
Parker, who served from
1956 through 1972 under Jack
Mollenkopf's and Bob Demoss'
The 3,989 m1ies of border terms as head coach, had been
between the Umted States an admimstrative ass1stant to
and Canada IS the longest un· Athletic Director George King
defended border 10 the world the past two years

NIXon has been subpoenaed
as a wttness by both s1des
Lungren sa1d before NIXon's
discharge that 11 would be at
least a month, and poSSibly as
long as three months, before he
could travel without endangermg his health

m1htary a1d 10 the p1pehne to
Turkey
-Continued operation of several b•g government agenCies , mcludmg the departments of Agncultuie, Labor,
and Health, Education and
Welfare, whose funds have
become hostage 10 the dispute
-Congress' own vacation,
delayed since Friday Members can't go home to start
campaignmg for the November
elections until the a1d dispute IS
somehow settled
The dispute arose thts way

·:·:· :·: :·:··:·:·····=·. ·:·:.::.·:::.~;:."$::'$...&lt;::;
Contrary to popular behef,
George Washmgton d1d not
have wooden teeth! H1s false
teeth were of f10ely carved
Ivory, held mto poslllon on
the palate by wooden pegs

NADER URGES SAFETY
RIVER FALLS, W1s {UPI)
- Ralph Nader, a cntic of the
auto mdustry for years, says
I ;
-!!•.•:*:::
the mdustry should start :::.::: &lt;·:::::::-:-:.::..:·:•••••
makmg safety 1ts No I today could build cars that
product
"would allow people to walk
"Safety IS by far the best away from 60-m•le-an-hour
econonuc bar gam," Nader told crashes" if 11 wanted to
a crowd of a bout 1,000 on the
But he S8ld the auto mdustry
Umvers1ty of W1sconsm IS not trymg to bulid cars that
campus here
are safe and sa1d 11 won't for a
the mdustry long time
Nader
0 -:-:: : : : ::;:· :0:0• .::.· :••0 . •.

.

BAGS

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PAIR

FOR

o.

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••
••
••
••

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$ 00

~~~.
1r

Asst. cake, pie and
muffin pans by O.ilton.
Save 68c.

~ioo

HALLOWEEN COSTUMES
For Age 3 To 14
A B1g Variety of Different
Characters and Costumes

:
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•
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\:
._
•
t::

""
"

'21.95

A 35' VAWE

AM-FM

$199

PORTABLE
RADIO

Men's Insulated

TEFLON COATED

RUBBER

BAKEWARE

'

VALUES TO $1.93

$7!!.

SOCKS
.

47c

YOUR CHOICE!
Tell.., Coottd
For E.sy Cleanl1111

9

REGULAR 77'

Save Now. Select a bouquet
of dned flowers at big
reducticms. Available only in
Po~nt Pleasant and Silver
Bridge Plaza stores.

~

•:•
•

•

••
•
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..

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...

MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE i s hereby grven that
•n pursuance of a Resolut 1on of
the Counct l of the VIllage of
Syracu se, Ohio pa sse d on th e
1st day of August , 1974 there
wtll be subm •fled to a vote of the
people of sai d Vtllag e at a
General ELECTION to be held
•n the V•llage- of Syracuse Oh o
at th e regular place of vo tmg
therern on Tuesday the 5th day
of November 1974 the quest •on
of levy ing , In e xcess of th e ten
mlllltmttatron for the ben e fit of
Syracuse V111age for 1'he pur
pose of Current Expenses
Sa1d tax betng a renewal of
an extsftng tax of 30m tll s to run
for f rv e years at a rate not

~ ~~~~:~·n~f 3 ~~ ~~st~~~ ea~h ~~~
~ amounts

to Th rrty Cents for
.~: each one hundred dollar s of
.. va luatton for F rve years
Th e Poll s for sa•d Electron
wtll be open at 6 JO o'clo c k A M
, and rem am open until 6 30
o clock PM Eastern Standard
T1me of sa1d day
By order of the Board of
Elect •on s of Me tgs County
OhiO
Edw rn S Cozart
C ha~rman

Dorothy M Johnston'
Dr rect or
Dated Oct 4 1974
(10) 7

'

PLAINTIFF

. vs

REGULAR VAWES TO 15'

HAND
1
FLASHLIGHT
Never Needs
~

Batt11~ies

"'$I .89

47

~

DEFENDANT

r.

I

., I
•

w~~e i!~~

15
Paul Stemmetz
known address 1S c p Donald
Weaver Route 1, Harrrsonvrll e
Ohio ts hereby not1fu~d t hat on
fhe 4th day of June 1974 Judy
Stelnmets, being plaintiff flied
her comple1nt against him as
defendant 1n the Court of
Common Plea s, MetOS Co unty
Ohio case No 15 ,577 praying
for d1vorce from sa•d J!a ul
Ste•nmetz on the grounds of
gross neglect ol dutY. and ex
treme cruelty, p.taint1ff fu rt h er
prays tor custody of m tnor
ch rtd~"en
support and dther
rop r relief said cause wrll be
or h arrng on or after the 26th
day of October 1974

Value!

..,

21, 28 4tc

PAUL STEINMETZ.

A

I'

u

PUBLIC NOTICE
JUDY STEINMETZ

3 Sizes-Use For Yeat-s

DISPOSABLE

FORD Trnclor 'lnd
b ru sh hoq
? whn I
trarter $1 SOO IQ69
Chev t ruck i t 100 or
for bePI cattle Pho nf'
Vanaman 742 ~3?2
10

RN

Paul Sternmetz
Plalnttfr

19110 11 2A 110) I 8 15 6tc

5895

Spt Cpe 1 red f1msh blk vinyl top spotl ess mterior good
trres radio automat1 c tran s , V 8 power steenng

1969 FORD TORINO CPE

ton
lrad c
N 11c
I)

31p

Call Collect 1 592 5544

Athens. Ohio

Edwm S Cozart
Cha1rman
Dorothy M Johr1ston
Dtrector
Dated October 4 1974

ClOJ 7 14 21 28 4tc

G£T YOUR MAN Wl11l A

Want Ad

NATURAL gas fu rnace 150 000
BTU A r ms t rong forced a tr
w th control s $80 30 ga ll on
n at ur a l gas wa t er heater $30
Phon e 378 6297
Reedsvtlle
10 13 61p

Lost
SM A L L black mm ature pood l e
around Sy r ac use
Reward
Phone 992 3792
10116t p

THREE f am ily yard sale
Thursday and Frtday from 9
to 5 F •r st road to th e left aft er
pa sstng WMPO r a d to stat1on
Lot s of ch ildr en s t htngs
10 15 3tp
BASEMENT Sa le 572 South
Th1rd Avenue Middleport 5
t 1res and wheels moun te d
radtat or
baby
s troller
e l ec tr• c m• xer c lot1'1tng of a ll
ktnds F1ll grocery sack for
$1 Wednesday Thursday
a nd Sa turday 10 unt!l dark
10 15 J tc
BACK porch sa le 22 8 6th Ave
Mrddleport Cou c h and c ha tr
electrtc r oas t er w1th s tand
coffee tab le
lamps
many
hou s ehold 1tems
9 to 5
F nday Oct 16
10 I S Jtc

WANTED old uprt ght P•anos
any cond t10n
Payrng 510
eac h F •rst floor only Write to
and 9111e d tr ec t 1on s to Wttten
P ana Co
Bo x 188 Sar dt S
OhtO -l 3946
10 15 6tp
FARM 200 ac re s more or l ess
$S 000 down rest n payments
to owner Wnte R Breun 19
Bow1 e
1916 Blueberry La
Md 207 15 o r ca ll (3 01 ) 262
2057
10 IS H e

EARN ext ra cash the easy way'
Prt ces are 9 r ea t for your
sc rap tr'on sheet •ron copper
brass
alumtnum
IBM
Pap e r s sta m !ess steel auto
batter•es auto rad1ator s Sell
to one of th e larg est recy c lrng
co mpan tes 1n thtS part of th e
stat e The Rosenb erg Com
pany At h en s Ohto
10 9 ttc
J UN K autos
complete and
delivered to our yard We P• Ck
up all ktnds of sc rap metals
and •ron R tders Salvage St
Rt 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh10
Ca ll 99 2 5468
10 11 26tp

-----------....-.--

CA~H patd for all

m akes and
models of mobil e homes
Phone area code 614 -423 9531
A 13 tfc

O L, D FURNITURE oak tables.
clocks tee boxes brass beds,
d!Shes desk s or complete
households
Wrtte M
D
Miller. Rt 4 Pomero y Oh•o,
call 992 7760

5 13 lie
NO 1 c opper .4Sc r adiator'S
25c
brass
25c
batter1es
$1 30
Gmseng $60
yellow
root
$4
tops 51 SO May
Apple 70c , M A H a ll Reeds
v rll e Oh•o Phone 37 8 6249
10 4 tfc

For Rent
4 ROOM hou se unfurntshed on
1650 L.n co ln H e1g hts Phone
992 387 ,j
10 8 tic

F U R NI S HED
apartment
wtthout utilrfle s
$90 per
month Phone 992 7556
10 13 Jt c
TWO fu r niSh ed rooms
992 3429

phone

Close to
Pow e ll s Super Valu phone
992 3656
10 13 tfc

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

TH REE furn rshed rooms on
East Ma1n St adults only No
pets Phone 992 2381
10 15 3tc
12)(6 0 2 BEDROOM mobtl e
home
country
tocatron
publiC
water&gt;
'ystem
R ef e ren ces requti'~d Carf~949
2461 after 5 p m
10 13 6tc
-----.,.-------;'!,..._ _ _

3 AND -4 ROOM furni Shed and
unturnr she d
a\partments
Phon e 992 S434
PRIVATE meeting room for
any organ• zatton , phone 992

3915

311 tic
4--;. oom- and bath- apts ~n
Middleport For information,
call 992 2S50 or 742 6S51
7 3 tiC

twO

5 12 tic
COUNTRY MobtU~ Home Park ,
Rl 33 ten mile ~ north of
P.omeroy
Large lots with
co n crete pat tos, si dewalks
r unners
and
Off
street
parktn9
Also
spaces for
small tra ilers Phon~ 992 7479
.._
7 21 tfc

Help Wanted
T RAC T OR
trader
drtver
wan l ed ('.t.ust be 23 years o ld
Phone 99' 3311
10 13 3tc

A FEW n ew b a nd mstrum ents
Con tac t Renee Stone 992 7567
9 4 lf c

SOME ONE to help w rth e l derly APPLES F tt zpa tn ck Orcflard
woman or tu st sta y n1ghts 5
State
R ou t e 6fl9
Ph one
Wtlk esvl ll e 669 37SS
da ')!%per week No housework
nvolved Phone 992 39 23 o r
9 25 26 t c
99 2 3255
- KOS METI CS
&amp;
10 9 6tc KOSCOT
WIGS
(The Mtnk 0 I Base
Cosmetrcs)
Phon e
WAITRE SS wanted apply tn
BROWN S 992 5113
person at Crows
St eak
8 20 tfc
House

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

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

10 8 10tc

Employment Wanted

phone 992 7407
10 I 6tp

POTATOES
Kennebec
cob
bier will d el 1ve r Phon e Tom
Sayr e 843 2491
10116t p

DAY NU ~S ERY 8 to 6 any age
c htfd
reasonable
rates
r e liable peop le wrth medtcal
trarnmg
Phone 992 7608
before 5 p m phon e 7.42 4902
a fter 5 p m
10 3 12tc

-

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

Real Estate For Sale
L OTS for sale•trall4!r or hou se
Al l ut1ltt1es Phone 7JJ7 1. ""1'i
Rutland Ohto Pr ce $2 SOD
7 16 ftc

For Rent or lease

All:.~.~~THER I
~

.... ""'

P&amp;J

VINYL SIDING

~00 """

... C.

Free

IIQOI &gt;10

II"

REDECORATING?

Parts_

Hea11ng
Coolmg Refrrg
Plumbrng ,
Elecfn ca l
Applian ce
All
work
gu a r a nteed
Discount t o
Senter C1t11en s

215 N Second Sl
Middleport Ohro
992 3509

It so, Call us Now for
Free Eshmate

a

Water Electnc, Gas, Sewer
Ltnes ,
tns1alled
WorN
guaranteed
Dozer Backhoe, Trucks
l1mestone &amp; F1ll D1rt
Commercial Resrden11al
Construction &amp; Remodel

Pets For Sale

Emergency Phone 992
3995 or 992 -7582

ALl WEATHER
HARDWARE
337 North Second Av e
M•ddleport Oh1o
992 2 sso

All Small Appliances

On State Rt 124, l!:z m1 from
Route 7 by pas s towards
Rutland

Lawn Mowers
Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3
C BRADFORD AU Cl tOnt:t: .
Comp l ete Serv tce
P hon e 949 3821 o r 949 3161
Racme Ohto
C rttt Bradford
S 1 tfc

F OR
FREE
esttma t es on
a lu m num
replacement
w ndows Std tn g storm doors
and wtndows Ra•lmg Ph on e
Cha rl es LtSie Syra~: IS!!' OhtO
Carl
J acob
Sa l es
Rep r esenta tt ve
v
v
J oh n son and Son In c
11 30 ffc

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

BUS IN ESS bu il dtng
50)(60
ce m en t d r 1ve Rt 124 n ea r
Rutland Phone 742 5052
8 2 1 tt c

EXCELSIOR ~a ll Vvv ..
~
Ma!n St P omeroy A ll kmds
of sa lt water pellets w a ter
nu gge ts block salt a nd own
Ohto R tver Salt Ph one 992
389 1
6 5 He

BUILDING lo t 80 ft fron t age x
165 tt Th e second lo t on left o n
R 1ve rvt ew Drtve
L ncoln
H ill Pomeroy Ohto If 10
tere s t ed cal l 992 3230 after 5
pm
10 6 tfc

LAS T BID Home I mp r ovement
car pentry work
roottng
pan t n g ca rp et tn s ta ll o tt on
f ree est1ma t es
All work
guaranteed
Phone 742 5081
9 22 lfc

A UT OMOB I LE mwran ce been
WILL TRADE - F IN A N CIN G
ca n ce ll ed?
Lost
your
ARRANGED
WI TH
operato r s ltcense Ca ll 992
MINIMUM DOWN
WILL
1428
constder t rade for o der
6 15 tfc
home trailer o r l a nd on th e
----new 3 bed r oom 2 bath hom e C REME- A N S
CO N CRE TE
w th ? ca r garage
large
deltver e d Monday through
family r oom atr c o ndl tton1ng
Sa tu rday
and
eve n tn gs
Move 10 •mmed ta t ely Ca ll
Phon e 446 1142
992 S976 no w
6 13 tf c
10 13 tfc
DOlE R o r b ack ho e wor k
NO MONEY DOW N - Month l y
Phone 446 J98 1 or 446 3459
payments accord ng to 1n
9 B tfc
come New 3 bed ro om home
w th wall to wall ca rp e ttn g on
1 ac r e landscaped lo ts Ca ll
today for mor e nformatton
992 5976
10 13 tfc
5 ROOM house on Ch es t er wate r
I n e on Rl 33 tncludes 2 lot s
and 14 of ac r e $5 500 Ca l l
alter 7 p m 992 5875
10 9 6tc

--

----

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

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

"

0

d\Jt

For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

BONANZA

9....-.

7 ROOM house w•th 2 baths l n
Pomeroy Phone 992 3478
10 15 l6tc

---------------TWO bedroom house for $a l e at
550 South Thtrd Me nu e
Mrddle port Phone 992 7074 or

992 3465

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Caney, Mgr
Phone 99'2 2111

[1-

_ _ _ ....__

\
---

10 1S Stc

~-- --

NEW HONi E tn Mason With
garage
Good 1ocat1on
3
70 000 BTU fuel ott sto:v:e, "$12.5
bectrQ(Jms fully car p e ted .

PMne 1304) 173 5&gt;128

Phone 1304! 713 5A68

__
10 10 6tp
11
- - - - .--- - - - - - - - --.""J

.,

"TIRED
OF
Dry Red Itchy Skin Red , Smelly
II

Hard Wa terTh en ca lf us for a
Wat er Analysts

FREE

R1ghl Now AI

CULLIGAN
WATER
CONDITIONING
593 6366
PIANO tun ng &amp;nd r epa tr
Phon e Cha rl es Sco tt 992 37 18
9 17 32tp

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

READY MJX
lUN\..rn;; 1 (..:;
d e lr vered r1ght
to
your
proJect F ast an d easy F r ee
es tt mates Phone 992 3284
Goeg l e tn R eady M• x Co
Midd l eport Ohto
6 30 tf c

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

SE PTI C
l A NK S Cle aned
reason a bl e rates
Ph
446
4782 Gal llpo l ts John Rus.se ll
own er and operator
5 12 lf c
SE PII C TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE
S Y S TEMS
C L EA N ED
REPA IR ED
M I LLER
SA NITATION
ST EWAR T OHIO PH 662

3035
10 4 tf c
SEWING MACHINE!:! ~ t ~o
serv tce a ll m akes 992 2284
Th e Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Author zed Stng e r Sa les and
Ser v1ce We shar pen Sc rss ors
3 29 tfc
DOZER work land clearr n g by
th e ac r e hour ly or contra c t
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator with over
20 years exper te n ce Pul l ins
EKca vatlng Pomeroy Oh10
Phon e 992 247 8
12 19 tfc

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

..

lo ca t~d

0 DELL A l•n ement

behmd Ruttand Grade Schad,
co mplete fr on t end servtce
bra kes and tuneups wheels
balanced electron•cally Open
8 to 8 dally Ca!l 742 3232 on
Sunday for a ppt
7 16 tfc

NEAR LANGSVILLE -

2

acres 2 story fra me some
carpeting, 4 B R dtnmg R J
porch es some outbulldtng s
&amp; ga rage gas well Pr iced to

serf
POMEROY AREA - 5 room

frame bath 3 B R porches
n1ce
k1tchen
s torag e
bu1ld1ng natural g as hea t
plenty of ground, the prr ce •s

rlghl
POMEROY -

1 1/oor plan 2

B R
bath , n a tural gas
furnac e
H W
floor s
ba sement with utll1t&gt;' large
lol Just $10,000 00

SYRACUSE -

Buy of the

week double lot wrth cham
fence
3 bedroom frame
basem en t N G for ce d a 1r
furnace, porc hes
st orage

bldo
WE
HAVE
OTHER
LISTING S
HOUSES,
LOTS,
FARM S,
AND
COMMERCIAL COME IN
OR CALL
992·2259 or 992 2568

EXCAVATING dozer- loade r
and ba ckhoe work
sept ic
t anks m stalled dump trucK s
and l o boys for h1r e will haul
f il l d tr t to p sot l l rme sto n e &amp;
gra v el Ca ll Bob or RQQer
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992

5232

2 11 tf c
SE PTIC
TAN)\ :)
'- ' ta 1ed
Modern Sa nttatton 992 395 4 or
992 73 49
9 18 tf c

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

GRE T
CO.UNTRI
STEREO

92.1

WMPO-FM
Mtddjeporl !'!'mero

the~~~::::::;::=~;~;:::·::~
ZEN Iti

FALL BARGAIN

Phore 992 39 7S or 992 2571
10 II tfc

Open Mon Sat
SAM 6PM

Real Estate For Sale

--- -------

You,.re Jnvlted 1

Ph 992 5682or9 ,, 7121
All Mechamcal Work

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

742-6261

&amp;

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

GREAT PAINT VALUES AT
ALL WE: ATHER
HARD
WARE
On Sa l e Now quality D evoe
Bnght Whtte Latex Hou sc
Pamt m 2 gallon ca n s Only
S6 49 p er gallon
Brand nam e RDo f Patnt tO
pet off Whil e th ey la st
Take advantage of th ese
great buy s whtle th ey are
sftll m stock

KIIOWil

BOWERS
REPAIR

949-5961, Racme, 0.

TEAFORD

2 BEDROOM house to r ent

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550
R eliJJble .Service

RACINE PLUMBING
AND HEATING

CALL

Reg1ster For Prtzes!
Shop for Bargams 1

ALL-WEATHER

717 Pearl Street
Mtddleport, Ohm
Phone 992 5367 or 992 3861

Mobile Homes For Sale

OCT 7THRUOCT 19

All tha t rs needed for a free
estimate ts a phone ca ll
Please Phone

COMPANY

CONSTRUCTION

___ _________ _

Don I forget the roof of yo ur
hom e Have a beauftful new
soot Installed by AH W epther
Roofm9 Co

8-K EXCAVATING
See
Us for
your
Plumb1ng and Heatmg
Needs

PH. 992-7454 o
992-7129
Est1mate1, Micldlepor-t,.oJ

~

MIDD ~POU (j

CLINE'S

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

Interior, lwludar
•
Decorating •rMI
KenUJdi!UI'nr

1 l1 N ~

SMA LL bu s in ess buddtng on
S R 33 7 and 124 575 per
month
Also apartment
4 WILL TRAD E - F INAN C ING
ARRANGED
WITH
rooms
and bath
$65 per
MINIMUM
DOWN
Will
month also 12 room hou se
constder trad e for older
Can be two ap...rtments $150
home trader or land an th s
per month Ca ll 992 5786
n ew 3 bedroom , 2 balh hom e
10 9 26tc
la rge
w rth 2 car garage
lam tty room a•r co nd•t ontng
Move m tmmed• at e ly Ca ll
now 992 5976
REDUCTION of grown AKC toy
9 24 He
pood tes 550 each pups S6S
Sta m ese k1tt ens $15 Phon e 1 NO MONEY DOWN Monthly
New homes for sale
256 62.47
payment s accordtng to tn
Route 143
10 1 26 tc
co me New 3 bed~oom home
with wall to wall carpetmg on
Jlh Acre Lots
1 acre lan t o aped tots Ca l l
3 bedroom, 1'h bath,
today for
ore nformat1on
99 2 5976
available m 3 weeks .
9 24 tf c
TRAILER for sale at Hysell
Run 2 bedrooms Ph one 992
3975 or 99 2 2S71
SMALL H o u se and l ot on
10 11tfc
Condor Stre et
Phon e 992
7126
8x452 BEDR00Mmob l e h o me
10 3 tf c
Phone 992 3324
....._
10116tc 78 ACRES M e 1g s County S~le m
Townshrp Rd 625 deadends
•nto property
two l akes
1970 VALIANT 65 X l2 3 bedroom
ro11 1ng hd ls 1d es beaut!fUI
fully car'peted, LP g ~s h ea t
'/I '1•1 /1 f I dh•t d '.1
trees l USt north of Sa le m
Phone 992 7751
H1 &lt;&gt; 1(1·
Ce nter. Walters R eal ty Bo x
8 25 tte
324 Wo rthmgton Ohto 43085
:.~. (h ... ! I( &lt;.,j,..
Phone (6 14 ) 888 1892
IJ,HTlo-IIJY Oht() i',i'•''
1972 WINCHE S TER Mobile
10 I S 6tc
Home 60 x T2 2 bedrooms
co mpletely f u rn•shed ca r
LISTING pe ted gas heat central a tr WILL TRADE - FINANClNO
au
33 North E xce llent
ARRANGED
WITH
Phone 992 S2S4 o r (3 04 1 892
spring and good township road
MINIMUM
DOWN
Wtll
2277
All minerals
co nSider trade for old er
10 15 6tp
hom e trail e r or la nd on th•s
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
new 3 bedroom 2 bat h hom e
bungalow
near Rout e 7 Half
1972 WINCHESTER Mobrle ~ w1th 2 c ar garage
!arge
acre
lot
near
Middle port Want
home 60x12 2 bedrooms Jl/ ;z
family room a•r c ondltronmg
baths central a•r furna ce and
only $5,500 oo
Move In tmm edtately Cal l
carpeted Phon e 99 2 S254 or
992 5976 now
SYRACUSE - 4 bedrooms and
130A ) 882 2211
10 15 ltc
de n Bath, d i ning room, por
'9 2'9 tfc
ches ba sement carport and
NO MONEY DOWN - Montl'11y
workshop henhouse and pony
payment s a c cordmg to tn
2 BEDROOM mobile hom e m
barn
come New 3 bedroom hom e
town $4 500 Ca ll 992 3975 o r
wtth wall to wall carpetmg on
VET CLINIC l.OCATION 992 2S7l
t12 acre landscaped lots can
9 13 tf c
Ideal also for
rate store,
toda y for more mformafton
antique s hop , etc
Br1ck
99 2 5976
business
buildrng
only
a
few
10 15 ltc
years old A real buy for you
AFTER 3 monthS ol renewmg
5 ACRES - 2 bedroom home
POTATOES
Phone 843 2495
and r edeco ra ti ng rnstde and
10 3 12tc
out th tS attract tve fr ve room
country $6 500 00
one floor plan hom e •s ready
With
basement
In
ALL full
CARPETED
- Neat'
to move rrito tomorrow
POLLED Hereford bulf phone
older home of 3 bedrooms
949 2622
L1 v1 ng room
d1nlno room
n 1ce utrltfy bu tldmg , kitchen
bath natural gas he al fru1t
9 10 6tc
~ .two bedrooms
lbath, all
cellar And m ce lot on town
co mfortable
s rze
New
Only 512,500 00
Lu)(a 1re furnace system
Something Fof Everyone!
RACINE - Modern 3 bedroom
hardwood floors new k1tchen
and b ath t tl e floo rs love l y home Extra large IIVmg , bath,
woods you c an 't even buy
ut1ltty 7 nice large closets w•th
today R easonably pn ce d for
storage
she lves
galore
today's housmg market
Baseme nt , garden shop and
Charlene Hoefl •ch 992 5292
• 1014tfc garage An excellent buy

________ ______
------- -

.
1

GROCERY bus•ness for sa le
Buildmg for sale or lease
Phone 773 56 18 f rom 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appotntm en t
3 20 tfc

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

FUR,NISHED
apartment
adults on ly 10 M tddleport
Phone 992 3874

Edwrn S Coza rt
Chatrman NICE- 3- room apt ana bcuu,
all electrtc 1n Pom er oy
I
Tabletop r ange wall oven
Dorothy M Johnston
nicest" ap t
around
Phone
Drrector
Date d C"ctober 4, 1974
GalltPotis
,.46 7699
or
evenings , 446 9539

4.

phone 949 3023
STERE O RA DI O
am fm
8
10 13 3tc
4
track tap e co mb•n a lto n
s pe aker
so und
sys tem
19 72
PONTIAC
Ca taltn a
Bal a nc e $ 10 8 72 o r easy
Brougha m blac k w rt h wh•te
terms Call 992 3965
mten or p s
p b
atr con
10 15 He
d1t1onmg A m 8 tra c k st e r eo
built m 19 000 m• les Phon e
KNAPP s h oes
s ocks and
?47 2063
1ackets 11 s ty les on sa l e
10 13 6tc
Phone 992 5324
10 1 tfc
19 68 CHEVROLET Impa la
P S
P B a1r cond ltt on rng
FIREWOOD for sa te Phone
Phone 593 7390
7t.2 4631
10 1J 3t c
10 1 l 2tc

POTATOES

4 ROOM turn sh ed apt

110) 1 "· 21 28

1966 DART

Wanted To Buy

10 l3 6tp

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTI C E is h ereby grven that
In pursuan ce of a Resolutron of
the Board ol Trustees of the
TOWN SHIP OF Scipio Oh10
passed on the 5th day of July
1974 there Wi l l be submrtted to
a vote of the peopl e of sa td
Town s hip
at
a
General
ELECTION to be held m the
Townshtp of Sc tpro , Ohro at the
regular places of vot1ng theretn
on Tuesday the Sth day of
November 1974 the questron of
l ev yrng rn excess of th e ten m til
ltmrtatron for the benef1t of
SCIPIO TownShiP for the pur
po se of Provrdlng and marn
ta•ning f1re apparatus
ap
pltances butldmgs or Sties
ther e for , or sources of wat f: r
supply and matertals therefor
or the establishment
and
maintenance of l tnes of ftr e
alarm tel eg raph or th e payment
of
permanent
part time
volunteer f1remen o r
f.re
f1ght 1ng compani es t o p e rat e
the sa m e
Sard tax betng a renewal of
an extst mg t ax of 1 m 111 to run
for S y ea r s, at a rate not ex
ceedrng I 0 mrll for ea c h one
dollar of valuatton, whrch
amounts to Ten Cents for each
one
hundre d
dollars
of
va1uat1on tor F1ve years
The Polls for sa rd El ectton
W1l1 be open at 6 30o'clock AM
and rema1n open unttl 6 30
o clock P M !;astern Standard
T 1me of sa rd day
By order of the Board of
Electtons of Me.gs County
Ohto

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

---- ----- -- - ~

BABY c radle ftntshed or ur1
f tn tshed Phone 992 2083 a n d
992 387 1
10 13 3tc

1970 DOD GE Sport Coupe !ow
fl YEAR old Pa om no
mileage Excellent cond tfron 1
geld m g 2 reg rs ter ed sorrel
Ph o ne Don Be ll 247 2022
quarterhorse mar es
Phon e
10 15 3t c
Rutland 742 ,(2 11 af1er 5 p m
742 5S01 or 742 686 3
1965 PLYMOUTH 100 ser1 es
10 13 M e
standard Sh•ft
6 cv l•nd er
$ ISO Phone 9-l9 321 1
EX TR A n ce shoat s 3 m os o d
10 13 Jtp
also AKC r eg 1stere d Pek e A
Poo pupptes $75 bl ac k and
1971 DODGE P1ckup w th
whtte Tup p ers Hill Ke nnel
topper
automat 1c
power
Rl 68 1 Phone 378 6152
brakes $1 450 Also Honda
10 I J 31C
Cycle 7SO 1972 model w nd
~ tlt e ld
crash bar foot p eg
1 SPOKE type road whee ls to f1 t
ba ck res t
luggag e rack
any 4 ' m bolt pa tt ern for
saddle bags excellent co n
$75 A lso ftv e HR 71!15 radt al
dlt10n Sl 250 Phon e 742 6254
t tres rn good cond1t ron for $85
10 9 6t c
or best o ff er Phon e 94~ 2181
10 13 31c
1969 VAN , 8 cy lmd er Phone 772
5651
Machmes brand new
8 16 tf c SEWING
Ztg Zag m n• ce wa ln ut t ab l e
In or•g tna l cartons
Never
1969 CHEVELLE SS 396 gold
u se d
C l earance
on
74
W1fh
b l ack
v nyl
top
Models
(O nly
a
few
a utom a t• c
transmtss o n
available J
$43 40 c ash or
radt O h eater p s p b good
terms ava rlab l e Phone 992
cond•t•on Phone 949 2116 1
7755
10 13 3tc
10 15 ti c

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

Yard Sales

949 3832 or 843 2667

THE DEPENDABLE

OONTRACJING CO.

PHONE

Serv1ce

~

EXCESS OF THE TEN

ser vtc e-s,

~ (}92-2550
I
-

SUPER10R
VINYl PRODUCTS

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN

Does
your
home
r e qu1re any of these

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

From a sh e lt to a house
Pa1ntmg srd1ng, roofing
paper hangtng
kitch e n
cabmet s, etc

FREE HOME ESTIMATES

5895

loca l ca r bucket sert vmyl 1nte rror 4 speed trans , 35 1
V 8 rad1o good tires Real n1ce

,'-========~~==========~~~==============~====~~======::::::::::::::::::

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

Produce d from a spec ta l
vmyl co mpound made by B
F Goodn c h and Mon sa n to 5
t•mes thtcker than me tal
Std mg Will not dent c h•P
crack
peel
rot
ru s t or
c halk

clean lntenor radto

1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA

4 tl
f.-rrm

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU
51895
H T Cp e V 8 automattc power steenng good w w t1res

PIANO tunmg Lane Dantels
992 2082
D scou n t to pen
ston e r s
10 6 12fp

EXCESS OF THE TEN

00

7

Thursday
a nd
A U CTIO N
Sa turday n1ght
7 p m
at
Mason Au cl on Horton St m
Ma so n W Va Constgnment s
welc.ome
Phon e (304) 773
54 71
1o 3 tf c

ON TAX LEVY IN

AU FAU STYLES
MUST GO TO MAKE
SPACE FOR CHRISTMAS
FLOWERS NOW ARRIVING!

PLASTIC

919 ? 1H1
Dart Pr1ce d a t $J5 10Phone
11 31c

2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

FI L E cab m e ts wanted
pre f
l ega l s ze Ca l l 992 5847 9 a m
t o 4 p m or 991 3833 a ft er s
pm
10 13 6tc

Business Services

1

Auto Sales

R&amp;J Coms w II be at th e MGM
r l ea Marke t Saturday a nd
Sunday Wil l buy se ll and
trad e silver
10 13 2tc

NOTICE OF ELECTION

k

UMBRELLAS 7 ~

ARTIFICIAL

g~

~

..
.._

WOMEN'S VINYL

PR.

Square C.ke Pan Pie Pan
Muffin Pan Uyer Cake Pan
Loaf Pan

..
:

.,

EACH

T.CH

,
R

TELESCOPIC
ANTENNA
LEATHERETIE
CASE

OR FOR ROUS

wtshes

James S
to express

s orrow May God n c hly bless

Values to 89'

BREAD
BASKET

REG. 24'

et

Not1ce

MILL LIMITATION
and repay you r kmdness
NO TICE tS hereby gtv en that
10 15 ltp
-~ - ------- -- -•n pur s uance of a Reso lut•on of
- _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ the Board of Trust ees of the
Townsh rp o f Cheste r
Oh ro
IN THE
pa ssed on tt1e 31st day of
COMMON PLEAS COURT
August
1974 ther e will b e
OFMEIGSCO~TY OHIO
subm 1fted t o a vote of the people
of sa1d Townshtp at a General
T HE FARMERS BAN K &amp;
ELECTION to be held m th e
SAV IN GS CO MP ANY
To wnshrp of Chester
Me tgS
Platn t •ff
County Oh 10 " a t the regular
vs
plac es of vottng th ere m
on
DA NN YM BA RB ER
Tue sday
t h e 5th
day of
ET AL
Nov em ber 1974 the que s tion of
Defendants
levymg tn e)(cess of the ten m II
No IS 502 lim tt at •on for th e beneftt of
PUBLIC NOTICE
P\Jrsuan t to an O rd er of Sale Chester Townshtp for th e
and
rss u ed by tl'1e C our t of Com mon purpose of pro v•d mg
Plea s of Me rgs Count y Oh o 1 rna ntammg ftre apparatus
wil l off e r for sale at publtc ap pl tances bu•ldmgs or Sties
auc Iron on t he 9th
day of therefor or sources of water
Novemb er 1974 at 10 00 A M supp ly and matertals t herefor
at the Cou rt House Steps rn th e or the establ iS hment and
V rll ag e of Pomeroy County of matntenance o f l tnes of ftr e
Mer9s
Sta te of Oh•o
tl'1e a t arm t e l eg raph or t h e p aym e nt
permanent
part ttm e
fo!lowtng descr.bed real estate of
Th e followrng rea l es tate volunteer ft re m e n or ftre
St luate In th e Town s hrp of Olrve ftghting companres to operate
County of M etgs and Stat e of th e same
Sa 1d fa)( berng a renewal of
Ohm
1
Bemg a part of Lo t No 138 an ex 1sf.ing tax of 2 m1ll to run
for
f
1v
e
years
at
a rate not
Town No 3 Sec l•on No 24 a nd
Range No
11 of th e 01'1to excee dmg 'h mrll for eac h one
WhiCh
Company s Purcha se
beg n do ll ar of valuat to n
n •o Q on th e nortl'1 Side of th e amounts to Ftve Cents for each
hundred
dollars
of
road tea drng from Long Bot to m one
Ohro to Pomeroy Oh10 on a valuatton for F1ve years
The Pol ls for sa1d E te ct1on
lrne b et ween Lots 138 and 139
t h enc e West along sa td road 6 Wtll be open a! 6 30 o'clock AM
and r e ma tn open unt11 6 30
rods
thence north 20 rods
then ce east 8 rods to d tv •d ng o clock P M Eastern Standard
lrne of L ots 138 r;tnd 139 thence T1me of sa1d d ay
By order of the Board of
south 20 rod s to t h e place of
of M e gs Co unty
begmntng contarnmg one acre Elect tons
OhiO
more or l ess
A l so the fol low mg pr e m ts.es m
Edwrn S Cozart
Olive Town shtp Me rgs County
Cha rman
Oh•o and bemg m Range No 11
Town No 3 Sect •on N o 24 and
Dorothy M Johr1ston
rn 100 Acre Lot No 139 of th e
D re ctor
Ohto Company s Purch ase and
bounded and descrrbed as Dated October 4 197 4
follow s Begmntng 21 rods west
of t he l tne between 100 Acre (10) 7 14 21 28 4tc
Lot s 138 and 139 In the hor
thea st corner of a 5 06 acre lo t
NOTICE OF ELECTION
be longtng to Mary A Cham b er s
ON TAX LEVY IN
and at the southeast cor ner of a
EXCESS OF THE TEN
one acre lot belongrng to F l ora
MILL LIMITATION
E Sm 1th rn public road leadmg
NOTI C E ts hereby g1ven tha t
from Long Bottom
Ohto to
Tupper s Plams Oh tO thenc e •n pursuance of a Resolutron of
north 20 rods t o a s take at the the Board of Trust ees of t he
Ohto
southeast corner of a lot now Town s hip of Orange
passed on the 1st day of July
own ed by Grant Sta lnak er
thence east 12 rod s to a s ta ke 197 4 th ere w rl l be submtfted t o
Situate 9 rods west of the lm e a vote of the people of sa td
at
a
General
betwee n 100 Acre Lots 138 and TownShiP
139 thence south HI r ods more ELECTION to b e h e ld m t he
or less to the ce nter of se d Town shtp of Orange Ohro at
publi c road
thence a lttt!e the regular places of vottng
south of westerJy along t h e therem on Tuesday , th e Sth day
center of Satd r oad to t l'1e place of Novemb er 1974 the que st ton
Of begrnnmg , co ntam tn g 1 4 of l evymg m exce ss of the ten
ac re s b e mg the same more or m til lim •tafton for the benefit of
Orange Town s htp for
t h~
tess
and
Ex.ceptmg all c oal under satd purpose of Provrd1ng
land descr•bed 1n t he la s t pt ece matntammg f1 re apparatus
WhiCh the co al •S ex pre ssly applianc es butldtng s or srtes
reserved by Clmlon A Roberts therefor or sources of water
together Wl fh al l the pr.v1leg es supply and matertals therefor
and
of m nmg and removmg and or the es tabt• shment
maintenance
of
lm
es
of
f rre
also of mmmg coa t from other
a l arm telegraph or th e p a yment
property
perma n ent,
part t t me
Exceptmg a parce l of land of
re c orded •n Vol 228 Page 823 volunteer f •r e men or ftre
f1gh t mg com panre s to operate
Deed Re cords of Me rgs County
the sa m e
Oh 10
Sa d t a x betng a renewal of a
Reference Deed
Vol
2S&lt;l
1
Page 861 Deed Records M et gs tax of 12 mtll and an m c r ease of
lh m dl to const •tu te a tax of I
County Oh ro
m •II to run for f1ve years at a
Term s of sa le Cash for not
rate not exceedtng 1 o m til for
l ess than two t h1rds of t he ap
prarsed value and sub1ect t~ ea c h one doll a r of va luallon
WhiCh amounts to Ten Cents for
the I ten for r ea l esta te taxes tor
each one hundred dollars of
)974
for Five years
Property
appra 1Se d
at valuaflon
The Polls for sard Elect ton
5912000
Wtll be open ~t 6 30o c lock AM
and r emam open unfll 6 30
Robert c Har tenbach
o clock P M Eastern St andard
Sh er 1ff of
Metg S County Oh tO T1me of sa1d day
By order of the Board of
(10) 7 14 21 28 (Ill 4 Stc
Elect1ons
Of Me !gS County
Oh !O

Dudley•s Florist
Middleport,

of

Emergency
Squad
the
co ntrrbutor s of fl owe rs food
and expresstons of sympat hy
1n our ltme of need and

WHITNIAW .CANDY
FOR ONLY $1000
59 N. Second St.

FAMILY

heartfelt gratitude a nd ap
pr ec atlo n to the R a c tn e

ALUMINUM BAKEWARE

FLOWERS

•F•r st 3 n"'lnutes 5 11 PM weekdays, plus tax

THE

WOVEN STRAW

WASH CLOTHS

FALL

tiji:a
r
6EOERALTELEPHOOE

Card of Thanks

AND POUND BOX OF

99

THIRSTY TERRY

DRIED

Wherever you are, wherever you want to call,
1t's always much cheaper to dial d1rect.

10 15 ltp

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

•

I

J

Mrs Oscar Weber

VASE OF FLOWERS

REGUlAR
8!r

Jlh" HIGH - 15112" ROUND
Gold-Ohve-Tan- Black
W1pe Clean
Madrid Vmyl (over

sad

Sa d ly m1s£ed by htS w tfe
Dor.s ch ildren mother Mrs
Doro th y S m alley and s 1ster

MEN'S THERMAL

LARGE VfNYL HASSOCKS
$ 88

w 1th

Loved and r emembered e\'ery

WORK SOCKS

$

comes

s ta v

W1th A Beauhful Cut Crystal

PACKAGE OF 10

Men's fleece hned colored sweat
sh~rts at a low, low pr1ce. Slight
irregulars, but big bargam buys.
Wh1le they last.

1964

Th e day t h e month we will
never forget
Fo rm our hearts h e wdt a lw ays

KEEPS FEET WARM

&lt;

costs s2.40*person-to-person,
'
s1.45· operator
assisted,
s .65* dialed direct.

regrets

OCTOBER 19TH

MEN'S SWEAT SHIRTS

MEN'S
SIZES

~lchertown, Mass.,

Oc tob e r

SWEETEST DAY

A two-thirds vote m both
chambers of Congress IS

FOR GARBAGE
OR LEAVES
VALUE I

BOOTS

'

passed away
today Oc t 15

memory
of
Koe n• g w ho
10 years ago

· assz ze s

l , For Sale
r
esu ts. A~:.~.'~~:"b~;',·;,o·~~~,~,"'~~

R

day

cho1ce."

CHILTON

Aphone
caltfrom
.
Gas City; I
to

In MemOI)
IN
LOV IN G
L eonar d H

Reme ~r Your Favonte G1rl On · -

PLASfiC UTILITY

SIZES SM AND MED.
In 1938 a synthetic substance
was
mtroduced
called
d1ethylstllbesterol, better
known as stilbesterol It IS
chemically different from
estrogen but has the same
effects Today this drug IS used
primarily to treat menopause
symptoms
One very Important dif ference IS that stilbesterol can
be taken in tablet form by
mouth Real estrogen hormones cannot They are
destroyed by the d1gesllve
action So, you can see why
stilbesterol bas become so
popular ,you don't have to have
an mjection to get results
There are two main hormones (or groups of hormones)
prodllCed by the ovaries, the
estrogens arid progesterone
The estrogens dominate the
first part of the menstrual
cycle, and the progesterones
the latter part. The body uses
two carbon units from any of
your food and changes 11 to
cholesterol, chiefly in the liver
Cholesterol is converted to
progesterone
And,
progesterone Is converted to
testogerone (male hormone)
on the way to formmg the
estrogen group. So, 11 1sn't
surprlSlng that males and
females have both estrogen
and testosterone

entzne

~
PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THRU SUNDAY

Testicle problem-eneeds repair
produce male hormone ,
though, sbll function If both
testicles are undescended then
the male may have a normal
male personality and appearance, but he wdl be sterile
W1th one normal testicle
producmg sperm, though, he
may still be able to father
children
This cond1hon as rare, occurrmg 10 only about one m 200
male babies. Many of these Will
have a spontaneous descent m
the f1rst year of life After that
most of them won 't descend
unless corrected And, there Is
an mcreased nsk of cancer of
the undescended testicle if 1t Is
not corrected ThiS IS a small
nsk but, nevertheless, an
additional consideration
DEAR DR LAMB - What is
the
difference
between
sllibesterol and estrogen• Are
they both hormones•
DEAR READER - Actually
the body forms several dif·
ferent but cbenncally similar
hormones that are estrogens
Substances that have the same
or s1mdar actiOns on the body
can occur m nature They can
be obt8lned from petroleum,
peat, hgmte and even pussyWillow Estrogemc substances
have even been found m the
mud at the bottom of the Dead
Sea

U S laws require that mili·
tary a1d g1ven other countries
be used only for self defense
Liberal
members
of
Congress were angl!l'ed when
Turkey used UA• weapons m
its IDVBSIOn of Cyprus, and they
persuaded both houses to
suspend military 8ld to Turkey
until Ford could certifY substantial progress was bemg
made toward removal of the
Turkish forces
Ford --argmng that the
cutoff would weaken NATO, of
which Turkey IS a member,
hurt the U S position m the
Mediterranean, and wreck
efforts to negotiate a Cyprus
settlW'~nt --threateqed to veto
~.*};
'&gt;I
,
tlie measure
A proposed compromiSe was
reJected by the House Friday,
se ttmg the stage for a
showdown
On Monday Ford formally
vetoed tbe cutoff, saymg m his
message "I take th1s step with
great reluctance, but 10 the
belief that I have no other

G

STbeDaily Sent:el, Mld~elport-~comeroly,O,Tuesday,~,"t~5~1974d

Rep John BradeJ!l&amp;S, D-Ind.,
a House leader for the aid
cutoff, disagreed The President's position ''flies m the face
of reason, law, and the expressed will of Congress,"
Brademas said.
" Further illegal shipments
of military supplies must stop,
and I believe the veto will be
overriden "

•

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My 7year old grandson has an
undescended teshcle H1s
doctor says it Will have to be
surgically descended m to the
scrotwn and that it should be
done by the lime he 1s 8 years
old Further, he says that
normal development depends
upon both testicles bemg m
place m the scrotum
My question IS, In what way
is normal development affected• What would be likely to
happen if nothmg were done
about this• Is th1s a common
Situation among boy bab1es• If
so, I wonder about the countless ones whose paren Is cannot
afford surgery'
DEAR READER - Most
doctors agree somethmg
should be done about the
problem before puberty gets
very far along, so domg 11 by
age 818 quite reasonable Some
boys can be treated by hormones at an early age, but th1s
should not delay surgiCal
correction If the boy 1s approaching puberty That IS why
your doctor wants 11 done by
age 8
In the undescended tesllcle
the part that forms sperm cells
will degenerate and Will not
produce any hve sperm cells
for reproduction The cells that

needed to override a vetp
House Republican leader
John J. Rhodes, R-AriZ , and
Senate Republi can leader
Hugh Scott, R-Pa , predicted
the veto would be upheld, if not
m the House, then m the
Senate
ThiS would oblige Congress
fo redraft the ' " contmumg
resolution " h

10 14 6tc

ALL
THE
ABOVE
PROPERTIES ARE VERY
GOOD
YOUR
INV
FOR
TOMOR
TOO
LATE ,
EL SE
MIGHT
SO

,ULUK I'
..-

, C' ACK &amp;
WHITE TV

•

~·

MASON FURNIRIRE
HERMAN GKA It "- ·
.,. MASON, W:•v•

r

�,.
••

I

..

'
I

8 - The IJally Sentinel, MiddleP.,rt-Pomeroy, 0. , Tuesday, Oct.l5,187C

-

,

•

9- The DaiJY·Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday, 0!!1. 15; 1974

'

~-G-e~ne~.r-at-io~~ii:;--1 -

··Television Log
TUESDAY, OCTOBER. 1&lt; 1074

4:30-Bo~anza 15 ; Mod Squad
5

Lucy Show a.
0
20 33

' ~ro~;~d~

.

6;

Gil ligan's Is 13 · B
.

·

·

·1 h ·d .
e 3,

ew1 c

1~ers

• ' Merv Griffin 4; F Bl 3; Andy Grillilh 8;
'
•5·30
· I-S. Elec · Co · 33 ; H0 d gepodge Lodge 2il : News 6; Trail s Wesl
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,15 ; ABC News 13 ; Sesame st. :ro: News 6 ,
Dragnosllc &amp; Prescnpt1ve Teaching of Reading 33
6:3Q-News 3.4.8.10,15 ; Journey lo Japan 33 · Bewit~hed 6·
Gomer Pyle 13.
'
'
7,00-News 10; What's My Line 8, Trulh or Cons. 3, Celeb.
Sweepstakes. 3; Zoom 22 ; I Spy 15; Elec. Co. 20; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; B&lt;g Red Machine 4
7:3!)-Let's Make a Deal6; Mel Tillis 8; Poli ce Surgeon 3; Name

i

tha t Tune 4; Anttques 20; Episode Action 33; .

8:00-Basebali World of Joe Garagiola 3.4,15; Happy Days 6, 13;

At

Good Ttmes 8,10 ; Amer ica 20,33.
8: 15-World Series 3,4, 15.
,-.
8: 30- Great A'meric an Dream 'M4;1chine

..

'

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8

10.

; ._. .

12:3Q-Wi ld Wild. Weslo : Wide World Special.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; Take Five for Life 15.

2:00- News 4;13.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16,1974
6:00- Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.

6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:3Q-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8; The
Story 13 ; School Scene 10.
6:35-Columbus Today ~-

t ·

· -.

fulp:
1 have been going out with this guy 'for about lhree months
andreallylikehim.TheonlythingiS,heneverdressesup f
He always looks like a slob, wit the same T shirt and wornout jeans. I've told him about it many times, and have had some
of his friends talk to him, but nothing helps, Even to a formal
wedding, it's the same old rags .

How can I get him to dress up fpr a change? - SLOB'S
GffiLFRIEND
'
S.GF:
This fellow is flaunting something, but whether it's his
hostility , nonconformity or lack of funds, I don't know.
If "nothing helps" - and he won't discuss his ol&lt;klothes
fetish - there are only two choices: resignation, or a new
boyfriend. Honest now, do you like him well enough not to be
ashamed of him and his slobbiness at dress-up affairs? HELEN
SGF :
You might try dressing down to his level. Perhaps when he
sees YOU barefoot, in ragged jeans, no make-up and messy hair
- and all ready to go on a date- he'll get the message. (Tben
again, he may like you better that way, in which case he's
probably too anti-establishment for a girl like you.)- SUE
Dear Helen and Sue:
You commented on girls who write: "I'm not for women's
liberation, but I AM for equal rights," saying "What a shame
they don't realize they're one and the same."
.
True, "liberation" and "equal rights" SHOULD mean the
same, but it just isn 'I so. Too often, the first stands for "antimen." That's why we moderates picked up the habit of saying
we're for eqwd rights .
.
Every guy I know has run into sOme Ubber who treated him
like dirt. Besides, if our culture had been exactly opposite in se,...
rules, which would you feel better hearing from a male : ''men's

6:45-Morning Report' J ; Farmtime 10.

7:00-Today 3.4,15; CBS News 8,10; Farmer' s Daughter 13 ;
Yogi's Gang 6.

7:3Q-New Zoo Revue 6; Lidsvllle 13.
8:00-New Zoo Revue 13; Capl . Kangaroo 8, 10; Jeff's Collie 6:
Sesame St. 33.
8:25-Jack Lalanne 13 ; Capt. Kangaroo 10.
8: 3Q-Brady Bunch 6.
8: 55-News 13.
9:00-Paul Dixon 4: AM 3; Phil Donahue 15; Wild Wild West 6;
Bullwinkle 8; Movie "When My Baby Smi les at Me" 13 ;
Cover to Cover 33.
9:25-Chuck Whih( Reporls 10.
9:30-Not For Wome.n 0nly 3; HazelS; Tattlelales 10.
10:00-Joker's Wil~ 8, 10i Company 6; Name lhat Tune 3, 15.
IO:JQ-Gambit 8.10: Winning Streak 3,4·, 15; F'hil Donahue 4.
ll :oo-Password 13; High Rollers 3,15; Now Yo See It 8,10 i
SIO,OOO Pyramid 6.
11 :3Q-Hollywood Squares 3.4.15; Brady Bunch 13; Lucy Show
6; Love of Life 8.10; Sesame St. 33;
11 :55-CBS News 8; Dom !mel's World 10.
12:00-Jackpot3.15; Password6 ; News 8,10; Bob Brawn's 50-50
Club 4.
12:3Q-Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Spilt Second 6; Celebrity
Sweepstakes 3,15; Afternoon with OJ 13.
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
.
1:00-News 3; All My Childr~n 6,13 ; Not For Women Only 15;
Phil Donahue 8; Young &amp; Restless 10.
1:15-Let's All Sing 33 .
1:3!)-As the World Turns 8,10; Jeopardy 3,4, 15: Let's Make A
Deal 6, 13.
2:00-0ays of Our Li Jes-3,4, 15 ; Guiding Llghl8,10; Newlywed
Game 6,13.

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.

" Playmates" 6•13 ; MASH 8, 10 ; Cen·Showcase 20·' Evening
'
ovate
Syl)1phony 33.
,.
'
9:00-,Hawail Five-0 B.IO.
9:3o-Woman 2 o m · il ,f %eethoven 33.
10:00-Marcus
. I~;
~by . Jones 8, 10 ; News 20:
Mountatn See . . U
, ~ I" ...,v: l
.

Catro

SOFAS FROM
539911

.

1

11. 00-News 3.~'111l·W; 11~: A.!!,CJo!e~ 33.
'" "lo.. ~(
l l:JQ-Johnny_ Ca~&lt;l'.¥ 3; Mission '· Impassible 6; U'r\Mchables
13i. J~nakt JJ~~_,.Movie "See the Man Run" 8; " Trunk to

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fine furniture
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of Vectra!

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M

Gilligan's Is. 6;_$10,000 Pyramid 13; Bonanza 4; Movie 10.
10:30-- Day at N!:.~~t 3~_,- YP,-y.r Futu~e is ~.ow 2.o. ·;_., . ;,

THIS WE
ONLYI

,l

20 33 ·

D11CiothesMaluitheMan?

WIN AT BRIDGE

2: 30-Doctors 3,4, 15; Edge of NightS, 10; Girl in My Lite 6,1 3.
3: 00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13 : Price is
Right 8,10: RFD 20.
.
3: JO-One Life to Live 13; Match Game 8 ,10; Lassie 6: How to
Survive a Marriage 3,4,15: Antiques 20: lTV Utilization 33.
4: 00-Mr. Cartoon 3; Sesame St. 33; Tattletales 8; Somerset IS ;
Gilligan's Is . 6; $10.000 Pyramid 13; Bonanza 4; Movie
11
Tarzan's Three Challenges" 10.
4 : 30-Bona~za 15; Mod Squad 6: Gilligan's Is. 13; Bewitched 3;
Lucy Shbw 8.
S;_OO-Mr. Rogers 20,33; Merv Griffin 4; FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8;
"&gt;Ironside 13.
5:30-Eiec. Co. 33; Hodgepodge Lodge 20: News 6: Trails West
. 15; Beverly Hillbillies 8.
6c00-News 3,4,8,10,15; ABC News 13: News 6: Elec. Co. 20;
DiagnostiC: &amp; Prescriptive Teaching of Reading 33.
6: 30-News 3,4,8,10, 15; Bewitched 6; Gomer Pyle 13; Zoom 20;
Your Fulure Is Now 33 .
7:00-News 10; What's My Line 8; Truth or Cons 3,4; Celeb.
Sweepstakes 3; Zoom 22; I Spy 15; Bowling for Dollars 6;
Zee Cooking Schools 20; KnowYour Schools 33.
7:30-Lel's Make A Deal6; Mel Tillis 8: Pollee Surgeon 3; Name
That Tune 4; Episode Action 33 ; The Judge 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Book Beal 20; Episode Action 33.
8:00-That's My Mama 6,13; Sons &amp; Daughters 10; Baseball
3,4,15; Tracings 33; Columbys Town Meeflngs 10.
_
8:?!)-Movles "Mister Jericho" 6: "All My· Darling Daughters"
13.
9:00-Can,non 8,10; Great · Performances 20 ; Masterpiece
Theater 33.
10:00-Petrocelli 3,4,15; Man Hunter 8.10: Reasoner Report
6, 13.

10: 30-Day at Night 33; News 20.
11 :00:--News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11:30-Johnny Carson 3; Mission Impossible 6; Unlouchables
13; Janaki 33; Movies "The Adventures Qf Dick Carter" 8;
"The Long Voyage Home" 10..
notrump over your three clubs. 12: 30-WIId Wild West 6; Wide World Special 13.
What do you do now?
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; Take Five for Life 15.
2: 00-News 4.13.

"For Wednesdey, Oct. 16,

1974
.
ARIES (March 21 - Aprll 19)

t5

... K Q 108
WEST
EAST
4o1098
4oK753
'J73
,865 2
+962
+8743
...J974
... 5

This is one olthose days when
. things ol a material nature are
likely to be handed to you
without need for you to put out
much effort.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22)

You will eventually benefit in
some manner from confidential
information that will be giv~n
you now. Secrecy is essenttal
lor the present.
·

you stick with your own ideas
and not those of another. Pro ceed as your logic dictates .

TAURUS (April 20-May 201

0ec. 21) ThOse rAi iable l ittl e

Your judgment is especially
keen today. Act on your deci·
sions. It isn't likely you 'll over·
look anything relevant in
weighing evidence .

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
You're lortunate in coping with
matters that can advance or
enhance your wortt or career.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

There's something much larger
and beneficial behind what will
appear to be a moderate
gesture of goodwill from a
friend .

LEO (July 23·Aug . 22)
You're very much on the mind
of one with whom you have
strong emoti onal ties. This per·
son will shortly act generously
toward you .

VIRGO (Aug. :&gt;ll-11...,1 . ??)

You 're lucky now, provided

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23insights you've teamed to depend upon wHI be extremely
accurate today . Blend intuition
with reason for guidance.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) To influence a' group,
single out the few key people
and wortc. in close accord with
them rather than with the ma jority .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
.19) You 're still •n a fortunate
cycle wtlere your occupation
is concemAd. Don't let anythino rewa. ~.'· l'lg slip through by
being indlt\rent.

PISCEB (Feb. 20-March 20)
In your dealings now. keep the
broader picture before you .
'The smaller pieces will fall into
place once the general outline
is· perceived .

Your bank account

We aren't liberating women, we're liberating people . Men
are in as big a rut as we are . Women don't want to trade ruts,
they want everyone out of them.
Until we're fre~ of labels, I'm still for E.R.! -LINDA
Unda:
Perhaps the phrase, "Women's Liberation" has outgrown its
llSefulness, bt,~tiet's give credit : if it hadn't been for those ardent
Uberationists; ·equal rights would still be cowering in a dark
closet, ignored by employers and legislators who "had m.ore
important things to do ." Soffragettes, feminists, Uberallonists
have all been maligned, but without them, well, we wouldn't have
come a long way, baby. Nor would so many men have discovered
that liberation is for everyone.
So now - let's just shorten it to "personhood" and get on
with being equal where It's necessary, different where it counts.
-HELEN

JJlYWIDlb)];- lkaJ ......".1-.l

'J'W

ll y Ht N flt AllN Ot U .uH I U O H l. tE

l'nscramhle\1he!'e four Jumhlt!\
one letter lo each square, i.o
form four ordinary words .

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began

~

~by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

5Tooth
substance
6 Ungulate
&amp; Laughing
11 Soap plant
sound
12 Minnea7 Fruit
polis suburb
drink
13 CIA
8 Nonsense!
satellite
9 Black
(C wds.)
10 Marlha - 11 .
15 Lass
14 Working
Yeslenlay's Answer
16 Bind
record
17 Texas town
(2 wds.)
24 Commotion 35- out
18 Small
18 Mates of
26 Slavery
(apportion)
change
baronets
30 Greek
36 Presently
zo Senseless
19 One of the
island
37 Sicilian
22 Beverage
Ages
31 Bavarian
volcano
2S 007 (2 wds.) ZO Ni~lllldtl!lltl~"t ·lriver
39 Matter
Z7 Unclose
nativt!'
32 Withered
( law )
_(poet.)
21 Forty winks 33 Israeli
40 Colloidal
%8 John Wayne 23 Terminate
port
substance
I Quoted

29 Setting
31 "loveWann
Puppy"
(2 wds.)
3C Fiery
35 West of
Hollywood
38 25 Across
Is 1111e
(2 wds.)
41 Old French
decree
tZ Progress
(2 Wds.)

n Della u "Marla -"
DOWN
I Peggy z Kaffir
warr10r
3 Playthings
4 Samuel's
mentor

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter olmply stands for onother. In this sample A to
used for the three L's, X for the two O's; etc. Single leiters,
apostropheo, the leneth ond formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code !etten are different.

I"""".-r:

BJ

BK

JW

Sow arranr• the circled leiters
to rorm the 1urpriae answer, aa
~::::::·==·==~~~t&gt;_~JVI~':'::~·_•:.:u:.:g::;rested by the above tartoon.

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apt to be

CRYPTOQUOTES

V~ ·

II

You're being

@.
' -~ -' - ~',
'-'!
- &lt; - I/

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1::, j

1S

much faller at the end ol lh1s
year than 1t was when the yea r

movie

lib" or "equal rights!'"

Fishy false,card .can .fool ,'em
NORTH
4o A64
'AQIO
+QJS

Oct. 16, 1!i74

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)

.:'f

· By llelen and Sue BotteJ

1.

Your larger 1deas have more
chance of being successful
than your lesser ones do. Paint
your canvas with bold strokes .

GZPU
ZBK

QBNNBASFJ

~UQPMKJXUQ

ZBK
UWJ

KXFXMV

JW

DPJ

X

YXU

KWYPJZBUD
QPTPUQK

SUQPMKJXUQBUD

STWU
BJ . -

STJWU
KBUAFXBM
Yetlerday'a Cryptoquote: EVERYTIME A BOY SHOWS HIS

HANDS, SOMEONE SUGGESTS HE WASH THEM. - E.W.
HOWE

H "lurt th('/1 :tmid fl'hf•n (',llflmhllll rmfhtd
.-1m(•rit·(l- CHRIS CROSSED

(C) Jt74 Kin~ Foatuno S7ndlca,.,loe.) .

DiCK TRAt.'Y

LITTLE

we'RE
&lt;:;OING
TO MAKE
A HAT•

SOUTHIDI
... QJ2

VEFlA,

'K94
AK 10

+

... A632

CHECK' THESE

FLEX.S TEEC

Pass v

1
Famous Flexsteel arch springs
'

2

f•ss

.

'

I

South
I N.T.
P,ass

~0

•

•

!ASOLINE ALLEY

.

wins the first trick
the king of, spades and
the suit ba€k, The slam
a good one. Sbuth has alIos! the spade ·finesse
make )lis contract if
score four club tricks.
has a sure thing against
3-2 club break - only a
break can hurt him . ln·the
df events he
uu:1_un~' king of
.back to
has '
the jack-nine
is no way to pick the

3

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Expert tailoring-even includes
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At

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CAPTAIN EASY

,--.: :;.-::----::--.....1 Th..t-:.:; where

.Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Some automatic plays are
automatic than others.
one shown today was
used by Harry Fishbein
York, one of the great
&gt;ia·ver·s back in the '30s. This
exact hand but the
&gt;ril1ci1Pie involved is the

Select hardwood framesdouble dowelled,glued and with
"Screwed-in corner blocks
for years of trouble free service

i6

AT THAT MOM~'-JT-- THE A~C I E~T

puttinCI up
his new

'•,

·.

MIDDLEPORT;·oHIO
'

•

il~ASS KNOCKE~ SOUNDS AT THE

EtJTR"ANCE OF- VULE

CA~TL-6 ...

buildim~!

ONlllE~J..I31LLY.

TODAY, I'D ..,..,.,=.,ATE

I ... I DCJN&gt;'r 8UPP06E
rT'.9 ANY USE ASKING'

A RIDE. VERY MVCH!

IF YOU'D LIKE. A LIFT

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VECTRA IS THE REQ . T.M . OF THE VECtRA CORf'.,
SUBSID IARY CHEVWN CHEMICAL CO .. FOR ITS OLEF IN FISER .

East"

Pass

QUALITY FEATURES:

Vectra

'·North
"

North·South vulnerable

'
'•'

will show out on the
1seconct club. South will ,have
nr.nv••n · finesse against
lw.:.,•, jack-nine and be h01ne..l'
bacon.
WI·~- he defended the ho&gt;nrl ·
played the nine of
on the first le~Will

•,

ALLEY (lOP

This fal5ecard ga;;JJi
chance to guard against
clubs to the jack in
hand . He fell for it like
ton of bricks. Played the
ieC!mc:l. high club from du,milnd went down one. trick.
'

_&gt;·,

The bidding has been:
15
Nb.rlh East Soutb,
I+
2 N.T.
3+

s•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

t•

3..
4 N.T.
?

You, SOuth, hold:
A K 8 4 3 'A 2 tQ 4 .. K Q 8 7
.

and a long-diamond

1.

.,
'·

,

.

.

What do you do now?
,
Bid ,even notru..-p. ·Voar
oart. .. r holds the· king of dla-

·•

'

,I

'

.

•.

KEERFUL "'E DON'T SLOSH
NONE OUT ON TH' WAV
· BACK HOME, CALEB--·
I JEST RUN SHORT OF
CORNCOB

·.
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'STOPPERS

~i&amp;.

ean ·oome _to 13 even without
...... . kiO¥.
TODAY!S QUESTION
lnstead.'' bf bidding three dia·
lOnokvnoor partner has bid three

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8 - The IJally Sentinel, MiddleP.,rt-Pomeroy, 0. , Tuesday, Oct.l5,187C

-

,

•

9- The DaiJY·Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday, 0!!1. 15; 1974

'

~-G-e~ne~.r-at-io~~ii:;--1 -

··Television Log
TUESDAY, OCTOBER. 1&lt; 1074

4:30-Bo~anza 15 ; Mod Squad
5

Lucy Show a.
0
20 33

' ~ro~;~d~

.

6;

Gil ligan's Is 13 · B
.

·

·

·1 h ·d .
e 3,

ew1 c

1~ers

• ' Merv Griffin 4; F Bl 3; Andy Grillilh 8;
'
•5·30
· I-S. Elec · Co · 33 ; H0 d gepodge Lodge 2il : News 6; Trail s Wesl
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,15 ; ABC News 13 ; Sesame st. :ro: News 6 ,
Dragnosllc &amp; Prescnpt1ve Teaching of Reading 33
6:3Q-News 3.4.8.10,15 ; Journey lo Japan 33 · Bewit~hed 6·
Gomer Pyle 13.
'
'
7,00-News 10; What's My Line 8, Trulh or Cons. 3, Celeb.
Sweepstakes. 3; Zoom 22 ; I Spy 15; Elec. Co. 20; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; B&lt;g Red Machine 4
7:3!)-Let's Make a Deal6; Mel Tillis 8; Poli ce Surgeon 3; Name

i

tha t Tune 4; Anttques 20; Episode Action 33; .

8:00-Basebali World of Joe Garagiola 3.4,15; Happy Days 6, 13;

At

Good Ttmes 8,10 ; Amer ica 20,33.
8: 15-World Series 3,4, 15.
,-.
8: 30- Great A'meric an Dream 'M4;1chine

..

'

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8

10.

; ._. .

12:3Q-Wi ld Wild. Weslo : Wide World Special.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; Take Five for Life 15.

2:00- News 4;13.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16,1974
6:00- Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.

6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:3Q-Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8; The
Story 13 ; School Scene 10.
6:35-Columbus Today ~-

t ·

· -.

fulp:
1 have been going out with this guy 'for about lhree months
andreallylikehim.TheonlythingiS,heneverdressesup f
He always looks like a slob, wit the same T shirt and wornout jeans. I've told him about it many times, and have had some
of his friends talk to him, but nothing helps, Even to a formal
wedding, it's the same old rags .

How can I get him to dress up fpr a change? - SLOB'S
GffiLFRIEND
'
S.GF:
This fellow is flaunting something, but whether it's his
hostility , nonconformity or lack of funds, I don't know.
If "nothing helps" - and he won't discuss his ol&lt;klothes
fetish - there are only two choices: resignation, or a new
boyfriend. Honest now, do you like him well enough not to be
ashamed of him and his slobbiness at dress-up affairs? HELEN
SGF :
You might try dressing down to his level. Perhaps when he
sees YOU barefoot, in ragged jeans, no make-up and messy hair
- and all ready to go on a date- he'll get the message. (Tben
again, he may like you better that way, in which case he's
probably too anti-establishment for a girl like you.)- SUE
Dear Helen and Sue:
You commented on girls who write: "I'm not for women's
liberation, but I AM for equal rights," saying "What a shame
they don't realize they're one and the same."
.
True, "liberation" and "equal rights" SHOULD mean the
same, but it just isn 'I so. Too often, the first stands for "antimen." That's why we moderates picked up the habit of saying
we're for eqwd rights .
.
Every guy I know has run into sOme Ubber who treated him
like dirt. Besides, if our culture had been exactly opposite in se,...
rules, which would you feel better hearing from a male : ''men's

6:45-Morning Report' J ; Farmtime 10.

7:00-Today 3.4,15; CBS News 8,10; Farmer' s Daughter 13 ;
Yogi's Gang 6.

7:3Q-New Zoo Revue 6; Lidsvllle 13.
8:00-New Zoo Revue 13; Capl . Kangaroo 8, 10; Jeff's Collie 6:
Sesame St. 33.
8:25-Jack Lalanne 13 ; Capt. Kangaroo 10.
8: 3Q-Brady Bunch 6.
8: 55-News 13.
9:00-Paul Dixon 4: AM 3; Phil Donahue 15; Wild Wild West 6;
Bullwinkle 8; Movie "When My Baby Smi les at Me" 13 ;
Cover to Cover 33.
9:25-Chuck Whih( Reporls 10.
9:30-Not For Wome.n 0nly 3; HazelS; Tattlelales 10.
10:00-Joker's Wil~ 8, 10i Company 6; Name lhat Tune 3, 15.
IO:JQ-Gambit 8.10: Winning Streak 3,4·, 15; F'hil Donahue 4.
ll :oo-Password 13; High Rollers 3,15; Now Yo See It 8,10 i
SIO,OOO Pyramid 6.
11 :3Q-Hollywood Squares 3.4.15; Brady Bunch 13; Lucy Show
6; Love of Life 8.10; Sesame St. 33;
11 :55-CBS News 8; Dom !mel's World 10.
12:00-Jackpot3.15; Password6 ; News 8,10; Bob Brawn's 50-50
Club 4.
12:3Q-Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Spilt Second 6; Celebrity
Sweepstakes 3,15; Afternoon with OJ 13.
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
.
1:00-News 3; All My Childr~n 6,13 ; Not For Women Only 15;
Phil Donahue 8; Young &amp; Restless 10.
1:15-Let's All Sing 33 .
1:3!)-As the World Turns 8,10; Jeopardy 3,4, 15: Let's Make A
Deal 6, 13.
2:00-0ays of Our Li Jes-3,4, 15 ; Guiding Llghl8,10; Newlywed
Game 6,13.

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" Playmates" 6•13 ; MASH 8, 10 ; Cen·Showcase 20·' Evening
'
ovate
Syl)1phony 33.
,.
'
9:00-,Hawail Five-0 B.IO.
9:3o-Woman 2 o m · il ,f %eethoven 33.
10:00-Marcus
. I~;
~by . Jones 8, 10 ; News 20:
Mountatn See . . U
, ~ I" ...,v: l
.

Catro

SOFAS FROM
539911

.

1

11. 00-News 3.~'111l·W; 11~: A.!!,CJo!e~ 33.
'" "lo.. ~(
l l:JQ-Johnny_ Ca~&lt;l'.¥ 3; Mission '· Impassible 6; U'r\Mchables
13i. J~nakt JJ~~_,.Movie "See the Man Run" 8; " Trunk to

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fine furniture
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of Vectra!

I

M

Gilligan's Is. 6;_$10,000 Pyramid 13; Bonanza 4; Movie 10.
10:30-- Day at N!:.~~t 3~_,- YP,-y.r Futu~e is ~.ow 2.o. ·;_., . ;,

THIS WE
ONLYI

,l

20 33 ·

D11CiothesMaluitheMan?

WIN AT BRIDGE

2: 30-Doctors 3,4, 15; Edge of NightS, 10; Girl in My Lite 6,1 3.
3: 00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13 : Price is
Right 8,10: RFD 20.
.
3: JO-One Life to Live 13; Match Game 8 ,10; Lassie 6: How to
Survive a Marriage 3,4,15: Antiques 20: lTV Utilization 33.
4: 00-Mr. Cartoon 3; Sesame St. 33; Tattletales 8; Somerset IS ;
Gilligan's Is . 6; $10.000 Pyramid 13; Bonanza 4; Movie
11
Tarzan's Three Challenges" 10.
4 : 30-Bona~za 15; Mod Squad 6: Gilligan's Is. 13; Bewitched 3;
Lucy Shbw 8.
S;_OO-Mr. Rogers 20,33; Merv Griffin 4; FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8;
"&gt;Ironside 13.
5:30-Eiec. Co. 33; Hodgepodge Lodge 20: News 6: Trails West
. 15; Beverly Hillbillies 8.
6c00-News 3,4,8,10,15; ABC News 13: News 6: Elec. Co. 20;
DiagnostiC: &amp; Prescriptive Teaching of Reading 33.
6: 30-News 3,4,8,10, 15; Bewitched 6; Gomer Pyle 13; Zoom 20;
Your Fulure Is Now 33 .
7:00-News 10; What's My Line 8; Truth or Cons 3,4; Celeb.
Sweepstakes 3; Zoom 22; I Spy 15; Bowling for Dollars 6;
Zee Cooking Schools 20; KnowYour Schools 33.
7:30-Lel's Make A Deal6; Mel Tillis 8: Pollee Surgeon 3; Name
That Tune 4; Episode Action 33 ; The Judge 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Book Beal 20; Episode Action 33.
8:00-That's My Mama 6,13; Sons &amp; Daughters 10; Baseball
3,4,15; Tracings 33; Columbys Town Meeflngs 10.
_
8:?!)-Movles "Mister Jericho" 6: "All My· Darling Daughters"
13.
9:00-Can,non 8,10; Great · Performances 20 ; Masterpiece
Theater 33.
10:00-Petrocelli 3,4,15; Man Hunter 8.10: Reasoner Report
6, 13.

10: 30-Day at Night 33; News 20.
11 :00:--News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11:30-Johnny Carson 3; Mission Impossible 6; Unlouchables
13; Janaki 33; Movies "The Adventures Qf Dick Carter" 8;
"The Long Voyage Home" 10..
notrump over your three clubs. 12: 30-WIId Wild West 6; Wide World Special 13.
What do you do now?
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; Take Five for Life 15.
2: 00-News 4.13.

"For Wednesdey, Oct. 16,

1974
.
ARIES (March 21 - Aprll 19)

t5

... K Q 108
WEST
EAST
4o1098
4oK753
'J73
,865 2
+962
+8743
...J974
... 5

This is one olthose days when
. things ol a material nature are
likely to be handed to you
without need for you to put out
much effort.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22)

You will eventually benefit in
some manner from confidential
information that will be giv~n
you now. Secrecy is essenttal
lor the present.
·

you stick with your own ideas
and not those of another. Pro ceed as your logic dictates .

TAURUS (April 20-May 201

0ec. 21) ThOse rAi iable l ittl e

Your judgment is especially
keen today. Act on your deci·
sions. It isn't likely you 'll over·
look anything relevant in
weighing evidence .

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
You're lortunate in coping with
matters that can advance or
enhance your wortt or career.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

There's something much larger
and beneficial behind what will
appear to be a moderate
gesture of goodwill from a
friend .

LEO (July 23·Aug . 22)
You're very much on the mind
of one with whom you have
strong emoti onal ties. This per·
son will shortly act generously
toward you .

VIRGO (Aug. :&gt;ll-11...,1 . ??)

You 're lucky now, provided

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23insights you've teamed to depend upon wHI be extremely
accurate today . Blend intuition
with reason for guidance.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) To influence a' group,
single out the few key people
and wortc. in close accord with
them rather than with the ma jority .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
.19) You 're still •n a fortunate
cycle wtlere your occupation
is concemAd. Don't let anythino rewa. ~.'· l'lg slip through by
being indlt\rent.

PISCEB (Feb. 20-March 20)
In your dealings now. keep the
broader picture before you .
'The smaller pieces will fall into
place once the general outline
is· perceived .

Your bank account

We aren't liberating women, we're liberating people . Men
are in as big a rut as we are . Women don't want to trade ruts,
they want everyone out of them.
Until we're fre~ of labels, I'm still for E.R.! -LINDA
Unda:
Perhaps the phrase, "Women's Liberation" has outgrown its
llSefulness, bt,~tiet's give credit : if it hadn't been for those ardent
Uberationists; ·equal rights would still be cowering in a dark
closet, ignored by employers and legislators who "had m.ore
important things to do ." Soffragettes, feminists, Uberallonists
have all been maligned, but without them, well, we wouldn't have
come a long way, baby. Nor would so many men have discovered
that liberation is for everyone.
So now - let's just shorten it to "personhood" and get on
with being equal where It's necessary, different where it counts.
-HELEN

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form four ordinary words .

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ACROSS

5Tooth
substance
6 Ungulate
&amp; Laughing
11 Soap plant
sound
12 Minnea7 Fruit
polis suburb
drink
13 CIA
8 Nonsense!
satellite
9 Black
(C wds.)
10 Marlha - 11 .
15 Lass
14 Working
Yeslenlay's Answer
16 Bind
record
17 Texas town
(2 wds.)
24 Commotion 35- out
18 Small
18 Mates of
26 Slavery
(apportion)
change
baronets
30 Greek
36 Presently
zo Senseless
19 One of the
island
37 Sicilian
22 Beverage
Ages
31 Bavarian
volcano
2S 007 (2 wds.) ZO Ni~lllldtl!lltl~"t ·lriver
39 Matter
Z7 Unclose
nativt!'
32 Withered
( law )
_(poet.)
21 Forty winks 33 Israeli
40 Colloidal
%8 John Wayne 23 Terminate
port
substance
I Quoted

29 Setting
31 "loveWann
Puppy"
(2 wds.)
3C Fiery
35 West of
Hollywood
38 25 Across
Is 1111e
(2 wds.)
41 Old French
decree
tZ Progress
(2 Wds.)

n Della u "Marla -"
DOWN
I Peggy z Kaffir
warr10r
3 Playthings
4 Samuel's
mentor

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter olmply stands for onother. In this sample A to
used for the three L's, X for the two O's; etc. Single leiters,
apostropheo, the leneth ond formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code !etten are different.

I"""".-r:

BJ

BK

JW

Sow arranr• the circled leiters
to rorm the 1urpriae answer, aa
~::::::·==·==~~~t&gt;_~JVI~':'::~·_•:.:u:.:g::;rested by the above tartoon.

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apt to be

CRYPTOQUOTES

V~ ·

II

You're being

@.
' -~ -' - ~',
'-'!
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much faller at the end ol lh1s
year than 1t was when the yea r

movie

lib" or "equal rights!'"

Fishy false,card .can .fool ,'em
NORTH
4o A64
'AQIO
+QJS

Oct. 16, 1!i74

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)

.:'f

· By llelen and Sue BotteJ

1.

Your larger 1deas have more
chance of being successful
than your lesser ones do. Paint
your canvas with bold strokes .

GZPU
ZBK

QBNNBASFJ

~UQPMKJXUQ

ZBK
UWJ

KXFXMV

JW

DPJ

X

YXU

KWYPJZBUD
QPTPUQK

SUQPMKJXUQBUD

STWU
BJ . -

STJWU
KBUAFXBM
Yetlerday'a Cryptoquote: EVERYTIME A BOY SHOWS HIS

HANDS, SOMEONE SUGGESTS HE WASH THEM. - E.W.
HOWE

H "lurt th('/1 :tmid fl'hf•n (',llflmhllll rmfhtd
.-1m(•rit·(l- CHRIS CROSSED

(C) Jt74 Kin~ Foatuno S7ndlca,.,loe.) .

DiCK TRAt.'Y

LITTLE

we'RE
&lt;:;OING
TO MAKE
A HAT•

SOUTHIDI
... QJ2

VEFlA,

'K94
AK 10

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CHECK' THESE

FLEX.S TEEC

Pass v

1
Famous Flexsteel arch springs
'

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South
I N.T.
P,ass

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!ASOLINE ALLEY

.

wins the first trick
the king of, spades and
the suit ba€k, The slam
a good one. Sbuth has alIos! the spade ·finesse
make )lis contract if
score four club tricks.
has a sure thing against
3-2 club break - only a
break can hurt him . ln·the
df events he
uu:1_un~' king of
.back to
has '
the jack-nine
is no way to pick the

3

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Expert tailoring-even includes
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At

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CAPTAIN EASY

,--.: :;.-::----::--.....1 Th..t-:.:; where

.Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Some automatic plays are
automatic than others.
one shown today was
used by Harry Fishbein
York, one of the great
&gt;ia·ver·s back in the '30s. This
exact hand but the
&gt;ril1ci1Pie involved is the

Select hardwood framesdouble dowelled,glued and with
"Screwed-in corner blocks
for years of trouble free service

i6

AT THAT MOM~'-JT-- THE A~C I E~T

puttinCI up
his new

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MIDDLEPORT;·oHIO
'

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il~ASS KNOCKE~ SOUNDS AT THE

EtJTR"ANCE OF- VULE

CA~TL-6 ...

buildim~!

ONlllE~J..I31LLY.

TODAY, I'D ..,..,.,=.,ATE

I ... I DCJN&gt;'r 8UPP06E
rT'.9 ANY USE ASKING'

A RIDE. VERY MVCH!

IF YOU'D LIKE. A LIFT

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VECTRA IS THE REQ . T.M . OF THE VECtRA CORf'.,
SUBSID IARY CHEVWN CHEMICAL CO .. FOR ITS OLEF IN FISER .

East"

Pass

QUALITY FEATURES:

Vectra

'·North
"

North·South vulnerable

'
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will show out on the
1seconct club. South will ,have
nr.nv••n · finesse against
lw.:.,•, jack-nine and be h01ne..l'
bacon.
WI·~- he defended the ho&gt;nrl ·
played the nine of
on the first le~Will

•,

ALLEY (lOP

This fal5ecard ga;;JJi
chance to guard against
clubs to the jack in
hand . He fell for it like
ton of bricks. Played the
ieC!mc:l. high club from du,milnd went down one. trick.
'

_&gt;·,

The bidding has been:
15
Nb.rlh East Soutb,
I+
2 N.T.
3+

s•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

t•

3..
4 N.T.
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You, SOuth, hold:
A K 8 4 3 'A 2 tQ 4 .. K Q 8 7
.

and a long-diamond

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What do you do now?
,
Bid ,even notru..-p. ·Voar
oart. .. r holds the· king of dla-

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KEERFUL "'E DON'T SLOSH
NONE OUT ON TH' WAV
· BACK HOME, CALEB--·
I JEST RUN SHORT OF
CORNCOB

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ean ·oome _to 13 even without
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TODAY!S QUESTION
lnstead.'' bf bidding three dia·
lOnokvnoor partner has bid three

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DQ_nations wanted for .party
child attending, free cookies
and pop, and prizes for winners
in the various games to be
offered.
There will be prizes for
costuming in four categories,
ugliest, funniest, prettiest, and
most original. Each winner in
the four categories will be
given a .silver dollar.
It was also noted that help is
ne'eded in preparation for the

·Lawyer
i ·,,;•t! nut•d from page 1

Blood
t ·llH.IJnued trom page 1
Werry , ·Grace Warner , Jerry
Harper,
Howard
logan ,
Margare1
Eskew,
Perry

Kennedy , Homer Baxter ,
William Pyne, Robert Couch,
Leo Vaughan, Wallace ·Hat·
field. Richard Shuler , Shiel~
Taylor , Marvin Taylor , Sarah

Gibbs, Robert Shook.
MIDDLEPORT ~ Ernest
Smith, Robert D. Pockllngton,
Judith
Pockling1on,
Joe
Chapman. Robert King , Freda
Durham, Freda Gilmore,
Sarah J . Fowler, Edward W.
Durst, Linda Haley , Mary
Bacon, Milton Hood, Emmett
Rawson, Danny Tillis. Peter

Chase.
RACINE - Ror Van Meter.
Dorothy
Badg ey.
Ralph
Badgley.
Emma
Adams ,
Micflael J . Brown , Ronda
Oliiley, Martin Wllcoen, Aaron ·
Wolfe.

SYRACUSE

Ariella

Vanover, Richard Ash .

LONG BOTTOM Barton , Henry

Richard

Bahr,

Ralph

Ballard.

l.I-IF~TF~ -

Alh""d M.-din

Rev. Dan Ayres .

MINERSVfl.LE - James R.
Anderson. Clara Mcintyre ,
Stacie
Arnold.
Herbert

Mcintyre. Norman Will .
RUTLAND Imogene
Dean , Denny Garnes. Jane
Garnes, Robert L. Imboden,
Donna
Dav i dson ,
Mary
Davidson , Homer Parker .

HEMLOCK . GROVE
Sharon M. Welker.
HOUSTON, Texas - Maggie
Belderback .

PORTLAND -

Joyce Rit·

chey.

NEW HAVEN
Gilland.

-

Larry

MEIGS lHEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday
October 15-17

NOT OPEN

Fri., Sat., Sun.
. October 18-20
MAGNUM FORCE
(Technicolor)
Clint Eastwood
Hal Holbrook .

CARTOON

Show Starts 7 p.m .

covering up to save his own
neck ."
Frates ~id the evidenceparticularly the secret White
House tapes-will prove that
Ehrlichman "repeatedly
recommended
a
lull
disclosure" of the truth about
Watergate.
"The tapes may have done
some people harm but they're
the greatest thing that ever
happened to John Ehrlichman," he said. "Contrary to
obstructing justice, it was
everything but that and the
tapes will show that chilpter
and verse."
He stressed that Nixon and
former White House Cbief of
Staff H.R. Haldeman, one of
the co-defendants in the coverup, never told Ehrllchman
about the secret taping system.
He also sought to divorce
Ehrlichrnan from Haldeman,
once Ehrlichman's close
friend. The two of them once
were the powerful men in
Nixon's White House.
11
Your natural inclination
will be to put these defendants
in one pot and frankly that's
my problem," Frates said.
"The government, in its
opening statement, was always
saying ' HaldemanEhrlichinan, HaldemanEhrlichman, HaldemanEhrlichman.' We're here to
defend John Ehrlichman.
We're not here to defend the
other defendants, nor are we
here to prosecute.''
Joho w. Dean m, the former
White House counsel who
became Nixon's chief accuser,
was to be the first Witness
called later today after defense
attorneys completed their
opening statements. Sirica
indicated the first of the White
House tapes would be played as
evidence on Wednesday.
The prosecution Monday
charged that Nixon guided the
cover-up and urged his closest
advisers to serve up Dean like
"an hors d'oeuvre" to quell
investigators' appetite for the
truth.

see a\\
tne

NE'H
·.

event and the night of the party
which is at 7:30 p.m. The
committee will meet again
next Monday at 7:30p.m.
Attending last night's session
were Mrs. Neutzling, Mrs.
Blake, Mrs . Emmogene
Holstein, Mrs. Mary Pickens,
Mrs . Linda Parsons, Mrs .
Naomi London, Mrs. Mildred
Pierce, Mayor Herman London , Police Chief Milton
Varian, Robert Wingett,
president or council, and Katie
Crow .

Ether
.Jued from page 1
Chardon, Cambridge, Cincinnati, Findlay, Cadiz,
Napoleon,
Millersburg,
Willard,
Bloomingdale,
Ironton, Benefontaine, Lorain,
London , Marion, Celina, Troy,
Zanesville, Camden, Portsmouth, Tiffin, -Perry Township
in Stark County, Akron,
Newton Falls, Warren, Dover,
Marysville, Van Wert, West
Salem, Ashtabula and Mont.
pelier.
Lucht said the ether was
stored as long ago as 1952 at the
Civil Defense sites in Ohio. He
said the ether may deteriorate
into organic peroxide which
can explode on impact.
"According to the Army
people, the possibility of explosion is not extremely high ,"
Lucht said. "They feel it would
take a rather heavy shock to
set it off, but the possibility
exists and that Is why we feel it
is important to get the stuff out
as soon as possible."
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Poll workers
come in fOtl%

--

There was 100 percent attendance - 831n all - Monday
night for the first of'.(our
training sessions for poH
workers in the Nov. 5 election.
The session conducted·by' the
Meigs County Board of
Elections was held at the Meigs
Junior High School ill' Middleport. Every poll worker
from Pomeroy and Middleport
villages and Middleport
Precinct scheduled to attend
the first session was present. In
addition threre were five
alternates
from
those
precincts .
Six other poll workers
scheduled to attend the second
session at the Harrisonville
Elementary
School this
evening, but unable to do so
because of previous commithnents, also atlended the
Monday night meeting.

$117,600 cable
addition made
along Route 143

Completion of a $117,600
cable addition in the Pomeroy
exchange was announced
today by Donald H. Pearch,
Jr. , Pomeroy customer service
supervisor
of
General
Telephone Co. of Ohio.
The new cable, which extends along Ohio 143, was
buried where possible. Portions of it will replace existing
facilities for · maintenance
reasons, Pearch Said.
Librarians going
This project - designed to
serve future growth - was not
affected by the company's
to Cleveland
curtaihnent of the construction
Mrs. Louise Brewer and Mrs. budget, which was announced
VIlma Pikkoja of the Meigs July · 24. The Pomeroy exBookmobile staff and Miss change served 5,050 telephones
Susan Fleshman, Pomeroy· in a 90.4 square-mil~rea of
Middleport librarian, will Meigs county.
leave this evening for the 79th
annual Ohio Ubrary Assn.
FASTGULPER
Conference and the 45th annual
HEINSBERG, Germany
conference of the Ohio Library (UP!) - Gaby Von Hehl, an
Trustees Assn. at the atb'active blonde, was crowned
Cleveland Plaza Hotel in the 1974 " Beer Queen" in this
Cleveland.
beer-brewing Rhineland town .
Among
the
featured Gaby, 18, won the trophy
speakers will be Gwendolyn against strong competition
Brooks; Pulitzer prize-winning from male contestants by
poet and author or mor~· than a gulping down a quart 10
dozen books; OWen Heggs , seconds fasler in the runpresident of the Cleveland against-the clock event.
Urban League, and Art BuchVeterus Memorial Hospital
. walk, natinoally known author
ADMI'ITED - Bessie Stitt,
and huroorist.
Racine; John Johnston, Bidwell; Everett Evans, Long
Bottom .
COUNCIL TO MEET
DISCHARGED Della
CHESTER
Chester
Powell,
Richard
Stahl,
Hattie
Council 323, Daughters of
America, will meet at 7:30 this Swan, Ruth Thorla, Myla
evening. Inspection will be Hudson, Margie Hall, Ada
held. Dorothy Ritchie,. deputy Cramlet.
state councilor, asks that all
members attend and wear
CALL ANSWERED
white. Refreshments will be
The
Middleport Fire Dept.
served.
answered a call to the home of
Mrs. Frank Brooks in · the
· Kyger area at 3:37 p.m .
Ladies and Girls
Monday. The kitchen was
damaged, it was reported.

Suede,
leather,
tapestry patent.

heritage-house
YourThom MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

Goessler Jewelry

Walk:Up Window
\1 !NICE
1)/\NK 'Open Friday Evenings 5 to

FOR
CHRISTMAS

7 P.M.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FP.EE

A DESPOSIT WILL HOlD

YOUR SELECTION

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MAO HAS HAD IT
LONDON
(UPI)
Chlneoe Communist party
leader Mao Tse-ung suffered
a severe stroke at the end of
September which has vii'
tually ended his a~tlve role
In the country's political life,
the Dally Telegraph said
today.
The newspaper, ln a
LondoD-wrltten report by Its
Communist
affalr.s
correspondent DaVId Floyd,
said "news of the sudden
worsening of the health of
Mao, 81, this year and the
blUer baU1es for ouccesslon
wblcb are now under way
was brought out by Western
busJnessmen rec~ntly in
Peking who bad unique
access to top .Chinese
leaders."
?.o."&lt;f.:::::;:::~:~:;::&lt;!~®:;:;:;S?.m::!".!»}:!&amp;:~

FORFEITS BOND
Dennis I. Boothe, Pomeroy,
forfeited a $27.50 bond in
Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's court Monday night
on charges of speeding. Boothe
was cited to court by Police
Chief Milton Varian.

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BALTIMORE: - NOW mAT HER QUlNTUPLETS are a
week old, Mrs. Karen Rohrer says the shock of having five
chlldrenatonce is "kind of sinking in." She says she can't walt to
get home and start caring for them herself. Mrs. Rohrer, 28,
smiling but nervlous, held tightly to her husband's hand Monday
as she met newsmen In her first public appearance since the
'
multiple birth Oct. 8.
She ·said doctors told her she may be released from the
hospltal.today to ret~ home to catonsvWe, Md. Mrs. Rohrer,
who ·took fertillty drugs eight weeks before conception, said
doctors who acbnlnistered the drug had told her she could expect
twins but she eventually realized there might be more.
"In the beginning It felt Uke two," she said, " but later on
when they all started kicking at once, there were too many places
where I could feel it."

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1!191!1i':i11i.

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EXTENDED OUTLj)OK

·Goessler's Jewelry .Store
cou~st

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'i»oMEROY

:~. : .w

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Homecoming

SELECTION
YOU NEED N()W.

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at y

time Friday voL xxv1 No. POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, oH~evoted
B l d we ll man
13o

To

entine

r:~:;:;~:;~cias::~6~~~;-Mason

TEN cENTs

Area

------------------~------~~~~~~~~--------------------~~

Friday evening in Meigs
County is homecoming time.
Queens will he announced
and honored, together with
their escorts and princesses at
football games of the Meigs
Marauder, the Eastern Eagles,
and the Southern Tornados.
The candidates, above, left:
Three senior girls of Eastern
High School, seated, are the
candidates for homecoming
queen. They are, I tor, Becky
Ebershach, daughter Of Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Ebersbach,
Chester;
Liz
Edwards,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Edwards, Reedsville,
and Anita Buckley, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Buckley,
Pomeroy.
The gll'ls were. selected as
candidates by members or the
seniorcll\88. The entire student
body will vote on the queen.
Siani:Uug lire '&gt;tho! claS&amp;- attendants selected b~ ' the
respecllve classes. They are, I
to r, Sandy Hensley, freshman,
daughler of Mr. and Mrs.
George Hensley, Reedsville;
Jewell Blake, sophomore ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon Blake, Reedsville Route
1, and Cathy Maxey, junior,
daughler of Mr. and Mrs.
VIvian Maxey, Reedsville.
The queen will be crowned in
pre~game ceremonies with the
Eastern High School Band also

participating. Floats prepared

by school or~anizations will be
presented m a pre-game
parade.
CENTER, ABOVE: These
five senior girls of Meigs High
School are the candidates for
horiJ.ecoming queen. The·queen
will be crowned by Principal
James Diehl in pre-game
ceremonies Friday night .
. Candidates were nominated by
the entire study body which
will now vote for the queen.
The candidates from the left
are Joyce Hutchison, daughter
or Mr. and Mrs. Milo Hutchison, Rutland; Babs Witte,
daughter or Mr. and Mrs.
William Wille, Rock Springs;
Cathy Osborne, daughter or
Mr. and Mrs. Lou Osborne,
Pomeroy;
Judy
Owen,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Owen, Middleport, and Jehny
Chapman, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Chapman, Pomeroy.
AT RIGHT, ABOVE: Thr~e
Southern High School senior
girls are vying for the title of
homecoming queen . Front,
are, Megan Brown, daughler of
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Brown,
Minersville; back 1-r, Ronda
Ash, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Ash, Minersville, and
Slephanie Ord, danghter of Mr.
and Mrs. Bobby Ord, Syracuse.
The queen will be crowned
during half-time activities.

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electrocuted

Ford tells how
to win battle

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature In downtown Pomeroy at Jla.m . today
was 56 degrees .with light rain
falling.

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ELB ' RFELDS IN· ·POMEROY

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES- Mrs. Carl
Wilson, son, New Havel!; Glen ·
Logan, Point Pleasant; B.obby
Allen, Lakin; Ruth Dangherty,
Gallipolis; Greta Riffle,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Jesse Huff,
Mason . .

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Continued from page 1
Continental Airline stewardesS.
ConUnental has its own problems with some of Ita stewardesses, who. object to the company slogan, "We really move.oW'.
tall for you." It is that, and things like the "Fly me" slogan &lt;if
National, women's lib and "coffee, tea or me'' jokes that have
stewardesses a bit touchy about being seen as sex objects.

SQUAD CALLED
The Racine ER squad was
called at I: 20 a.m. today for
Harriett Hyatt, Letart Falls,
who was having difficulty
breathing. She was ireated by
the squad.

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Max Therlow Manuel, '(2,
Racine, Rt. 2, died M~y
evening at Veterans Memorial
· Hospital.
· He was the. son of the late
William Henry and Anne ..B.
Dawson Manuel. He was
preceded in death In 1968 by lila
wife, Effie. He was also
preceded in death by thtee
brothers and four sisters.
Mr. Manuel .is survived :)ly
five sons, Charles, Max J:r.,
·non, Joe and Thomas, all •-of
Raclne, two daughlers, Mrs.·
Arnold (lana) Hupp, and Mi,s.
Ernest (Flossie) Bush, both;or
Racine, Rt. 2, 24 grandc~n
and nine great-grandc~n
and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at I p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Free~d
Norris officiating. Burial w!ll
be in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 6 this evening.

LONDON ~ PRIME MINISI'ER HAROLD WILSON today
asked trade union and ,Industry leaders.for belp In what he called
"a fight for national survival" In Britain's gravest economic"
crisis since World War n.
Wilson invited the councils of the 10 miWon-member ·Trades- .
Union· Congress and the Confederation of British Industry to
confer with him separately today. His invitation came after brief'
NO ENTRY
preliminary talks Monday with tbe unlona' general se&lt;:retary
MESTRE, Italy (UP!)
Len Murray and Campbell Adamson, director general of the
Paolo Pavan could not carry busmess federation.
his bride, Anna, across the
lhreshold, because when the
STOCKHOLM- BRITISH RADIO ASTRONOMERS Martin
couple returned home from Ryle and Anthony Hewish tOday were awarded the 1974 Nobel
their wedding banquet they Prize for physics, the Swedish Academy of Sciences announced.
Both men are professors at cavendish Laboratory of
found only solid -wall where
their apartment door should C&amp;mllrldge University In England. 1bey were honored for their
have been . Friends had pioneering work tn radio astrophysics. Ryle, 56, was specifically
bricked up the · door and cited for "his observations and Inventions, in particular ol the
painted It to matCll the rest of aperture-i!ynthesis technujue." Hewish, 50, received his award
for "his decisive roletn the discovery of pulsars."
the hall as, a -practical joke.

REVIVAL SET
There will be a revival at the
Rutland Community Church
beginning Thursday, Oct. 17
through the 20th at 7:30 p.m.
nightly, The Rev. Russell
Harper of Fremont. Everyone '
is welcome. The pastor is
Brother Engene Roush.

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MIDDLEPORT
OI:IIQ

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st¥£

Friday,. e~eartq' saturday.
RIP: Ill tile 11pper lOs and

--..C,_.INCINNA Tl

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of Racine die~

said Ford's popularity has
sagged sharply since he took
·office, attributing the decline
to his pardon of former
President Nixon.
The Gallup survey found
Ford's rating down 21 points to
50 per cent in termsof approval
for his overall performance on
the job and the Harris Poll
gave him a positive raUng
from only 45 per cent of those
questioned ---down from If/ Per
cent in early September before
·
the Nixon pardon.
The trip West was the second
major string of political aJ)pearances. - Last week, the
President made separate aJ)pearances in Detroit, Philadelphia and Burlington, Vt. He
planned to continue tbe stumJ)ing Saturday with appearances
in North Carolina, South
Carolina and Kentucky.

Tbnuday. tbrougb
Sat11rday, a c.bance of
obowero
Tla11rsday or

.tJtbet\s ,a~ional
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' (UP!) WASHINGTON
With his own' iloPularlty sliPping, President Ford is
heading for a swing throngh
traditional GOP country in
anotber attempt. to win support
for his ant~tlon program
and to aid Republicans in next
month's electloris.
Ford planned', to leave late
today for the • 36-hour trip
through Missouri, Nebraska,
South Dakota and Indiana-all
traditional Republican strongholds.
.
Before his departure, the
President arranged a round of
aides and
meetings for
invited all 535 ' members of
Congress to the East Room for
a signing cerelnony of the
campaign refo".l' bill.
The President's first appearance will be in 'Kansas City,
Mo., at a conv,ntion of the
Future Farmers; of America.
White House aides called it a
nonpolitical appl!arance and
Ford said last week his address
would include 10 recommendations for voluntary citizen
action to slow the rise in the
cost of living .jnd conserve
energy.
Mter spending' the night In
Kansas City, t!\e President
scheduled open . politicking,
with:
-Two fund raising events In
Kansas Uty, a $1,000 perperson
coffee reception before a $100.
per person " breakfast"
designed mainly to assist Gov.
Christopher Bon~ and former
Rep. Thomas .Curtis, who is
running for the Senate.
-A noonthne P.,litical rally
in SioW&lt; Falls, S.D.
-A mldaftemoon rally at the
Lincoln, Neb., ait:port.
- Two more fund raising
affairs in Indianapolis, beginning with a $500 per couple
reception and then a $100 per
couple dinner in the city's
convention center.
Over the weekend, results of
polls conducted by the Gallup
and Louis Harris drganizations

101. Lowo Ia the upper 30s
and tOo · Tbunday and
. Friday. Wat'llllllg tci blglu Ia
tbe Ito and low 711o Saturday,
wHb alcbttbile lows ID tbe

MIDDLEPORT, OFOO
~·MembeJ. Federal ~ll lllllri.ace r:~.,.,....!!'Jil

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TwO SALE DAYs
The Meigs Community
School willsponaor a rummage
sale from 9 a.m. to 4 .p.m.
Thursday and Friday at the ·
Fry Building, ~ St., Mid;
dlepor.t.

1974

Auto TeBer Window and

1\ I ULL

A name that has been known for
quality Diamonds, Watches and
Jewelry for 100 years.

going
out ·.politicking

frt1m page 1
that the former governor made
reference to several controversial student groups -Siudents
for a .Democratic Society,
Weathermeil and Brown Shirts
- who allegedly travelled to
college campuses stirring up
the anti-war mood.
The Plain Dealer said It
secured a copy of Delaney's
statement Monday. · Rhodes
could not be reached for
comment early this morning.
Rhodes answered questions
Oct. 3 and 4 In connection with
the suit, bui asked the court to
keep his testimony. sealed until
a(ter the Nov. 5 gubernatorial
election. Rhodes is challenging
Democratic Gov.. John J.
Gilligan for an unprecedented
third term.
Rhodes' lawyers said his
testimony might influence
Ohio's voters because fragmented statements could distort
the publi~'s image. District
Court Judge Don J . Young has
not yet ruled on Rhodes'
request, but ordered the lestimony kept secret until ·a
decision is made. ·
In a separate trial which
hegins Monday, eight former
guardsmen face criminal
·charges in the U.S. District
Court in Cleveland for allegedly
violating the Constitutional
rights of the student demonstrators. ·

SUPPER SET
A vegetable and bean soup
(and pie) supper will be held at
the Bethany Church ·annex
from 4:30· to 6:30p .m. Thursday. Residents are to bring
their -own containers for
carryout. The event is sponsore&lt;! by the Dorcas Women's
Fellowship.

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Depend on Uo foe All lanklna Needo

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Max T. Manuel.

Presiden~

·:Rhodes

for meeting

PURSES

You're seeing the "i5" beauties. ·.
the all-new cars. Now get the show .
on the road. Come in and talk to us
about an Auto Loan. You'll get the
cash fa~t, and our low bank rates
will save you money. . .maybe
enough for some auto "extras."

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10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday,Qct. 15, 1974

Donations are bei~g accepted lor the upcoming
Halloween party according to
the Syracuse Community
Amusement committee which
met Monday night at the
Syracuse Municipal Building .
The party is to be held at the
municipal building fire bay for
all the youths of Syracuse. The
council voted to disband trick,
or treat night following ri
survey at the last council
meeting.
Donations may be sent to
Mrs.
Nancy
Neutzling,
chairwoman,
Box
291 ,
Syracuse , or to Mrs. Charolette
Nease, co-chairwoman, Box
221, Syracuse.
Treats will be given to each

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KANSASCITY,Mo . (UP!) President Ford delayed the
start of a World Series game to
give Americans a fatherly
lecture on bow to fight inflation
--save money, hunt bargains,
drive more slowly, turn off
lights, deal) yqur plates, and
get enough sleep.
It was a homespun speech to
a homespun audience Tuesday
__., couvention of the Future
Farmers of America -and
Included tbe kind of advice he
beard from his parents:
- "Take all you want, but eat
all you take," he said.
"The first words I can
remember were: 'clean up
your plate! ' When you aren't
using them, turn off the lights,
turn off the television, turn off
the radio, turn off the heater.
"Use less h&lt;it water. lnaulate
attics and windows. Shut doors.
KeeprOOI!lBat &amp;a degrees In the
wtnterthne when you're awake
and at. lower temperatures
wben you sleei&gt;."
Other
major
points:
"Balance your family budget"
... "Use credit wisely" ...
"Save as much as you can" ...
"Conserve energy" ... "Keep '
wages and pri!'OB , low" ...
"Increase pro!luctlvlty" ...
"Shop wisely, . look for
bergafna," ... "Do it yourself"
... "Help with recycling
· prosrama" ... "Guard your
health."
·
Tbe television networks had
originally decided Ford's .
Jllee~ didn't have " enough
''neWB value'' to lie carried
Uve. But tben Ford peraonally
requestedthetlme-&amp;!'dgotit.
NBC had to ask . Baseball
CommiSSioner Bowie Kuhn to·
·delaY the slar\ of the World'
Series g.me
. 15 minutes. to get

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all of Ford's' speech on before
the opening pitch. That meant
Ford had the large baseball
audience to hear his suggeslions.
Many of his ideas came from
the Citizens' Action Committee
to Fight Inflation, chaired by
economist Sylvia Porter, which
met last Saturday to draw up
recommendations.
Ford illustrated the recommendatlons with comments
from some of the letters he
received with proposals from
citizens to fight inflation.
The President promised government action as well. The
Treasury, he said, is considering issuing "WIN" bonds with
competitive interi!St rates;
state and local officials are
being asked to strictly enforce
the 55 mile-per-boui' speed
limit· and WIN flags will- be
awar~ to business, stores 6r
other enterprises which fight
inflation.
·
One large and perhaps
complicated government
proposal involves the creation
of WIN committees in states
and IQCallties to set specific
goals and monitor ways of
fighting' inflation .
.
·While Ford was propoaing
things citizens could do, Mike
Mansfield, the Senate's Democratlc leader, went on
television to object to what
Ford's admlnist~ation wa~
doing.
He recommended more
widerangtna action.s to fight ·
Inflation, :which • Included
'standby controls on wages,
prices profits and rents,
rationing of energy supplies,
cutting · .taxes for low and ·
moder~!". ,Income wage ear(Continued
on page 8)
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Tom Blaine, 28, Rt. 2, Bidwell, was killed in an industrial
accident at 3:15 p.m. Tuesday
at the MG Transport Service
Inc., Upper Rt. 7.
Blaine was dead on arrival at
the Holzer Medical Center
where he was rushed by the
Gallia County Volunteer
Emergency Squad.
According to Gallla County
sheriff's deputies, Blaine and
two fellow emllloyees, John
" Butch" Gardner, 31, Pt ..
Pleasant, and Jackie Juniper,
'!I, Pt. Pleasant, were assisting
crane operator John Workman
of Leon, W.Va. in unloading .of
steel from a truck when the
crane boom came into contact
with a power line .
Gardner and Juniper were
treated for electrical shock and
released.
Dr. Donald R. Warehime,
Gallia County Coroner has
delayed a ruling on Blaine's
death until an autopsy is
performed.
Thomas A. Blaine, Jr ., 27,
was born in Pomeroy, July 21,
1947, a son of Thomas A.
Blaine, Sr., and Willie Fay
Wilson ·Blaine, Middleport.
Surviving besides his parents

and his wife, Rosalie Casey

Blaine; a daughter, Tonya
Michelle,
Bidwell;
his
maternal grandmother, Mrs.
Fay Abrams, New Castle, Ind.;
a brother, Michael Edward
Blaine, Gallipolis ; a sister,
Mrs. Deborah Fay (Debbie)
Zuspan, Morgantown, W. Va.
Mr. Blaine was a veteran of
The Vietnam War. He was
emplOyed at Defiance for about
four years in home in ..
stallations for the Johns-Mansville Co. He was a welder and
had been with the Gallipolis
fjrm for a little over a year.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Friday at the Rawlings Coats Funeral Home with
George Glaze officiating.
Burial will be in ' Meigs
Memory Garden. Friends may .
call at the funeral home any -·
time after 10 a.m., Thursday.
EVENT THURSDAY
The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Project will
conduct a free clothing day for
low income families on Thurs.
day, Oct. 17, from 9 a.m. until3
p.m. In the Cheshire Community Building.

Reform possible
in three options
By ARNOLD B. SAWISLAI(

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of the 25 per cent (also
UP! Senior. Editor
estimated) spending increases
WASHINGTON (UP!) .:.._ in each of the last two
Watergate's child, the new presidential campaigns, it has
federal election law signed dramatic inflation-stopping
Tuesday by President Ford, possibilities.
holds out three main chances of
In permitting the bulk of this
reform for the scandal- money -up to $25 million for
buffeted U.S. political system. each candidate -to come from
-First, It should stem the federal Treasury instead of
rampaging Inflation in the cost private pockets, the law elimiof electing presidents, and with nates the need for the kind of .
it the near-extortion that crude pressure dozens of
passed for campaign fund business executives reported
was applied to get donations
raising in recent years.
--Second, it should permit two years ago.
presidential · candidates to
And the public financing of
speak their minds without presidential campaigns ·aJso
having to worry about the giv.S candidates a kind of
effect on big individual, cor- freedom they haven't had for'
porate or labor union con- years.
-,
Right or wrong, Sen. George
tributors.
- Third, it should bring some McGovern felt the strongest
law and order to a political pressure to dump Sen. Thomas
jungle, where campaign Eagleton from his ticket In 1972
finance restrictions of the post came from campaign conhave been a. standard to which tributors.
Presitlential candidates who
only the naive' repaired.
The new laJ will limit any decide to uS. pJblic funds iri
single presidential candidate's the future will still have to .
tot81 spending to f32 million.
speak to voters and their own
·. Because the law also permits parties, but no longer will the
any candidate to spend up to big stick be in the hands of the
$12 million In presidential campaign donors.
jrlmaries and .Provides lome
Finally, the new law's jrovifunda for lllinor parties and sion for a full time, inconvenUons, grand total dependent elec!ion law enspending In 1976 conceivably forcement agency is a
could a~ch $100 miWon. departure almost as striking 1!8
Tbat might not seem ilke . th.e public financing feature.
much of a refonn compared to . · Enforcement in the past .has
th'i esthnated t125 million be~ a joke, residing prtnc!P.aJspent by all presidential ly in the politically •rioointed
candidates in um: but In light
(Continued on page • •
.

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World War 2 httv ut:uor:lul
James M. Gavin, who now is an
AEP director and chairman of
Arthur D. Utile, Inc.
Unit 1 will bring the
American Electric Power
System capability to 16.4milllon kw, helping to ensure
an adequate supply of electric
energy to the 1.&amp;-miWon AEP
customers in Ohio, West
Virginia, Virginia , Tennessee,
Kentucky,
Indiana
and
Michigan. Built into Gavin
Plant are the most modem air
and water. pollution control
devices ava ilable today, including :
Electrostatic precipitators
are deaigned tb remove 99.7 per
cent of the fly ash from the
exhaust. The fly ash is
collected into a hopper .mixed
with water and piped in slurry
form to a nearby storage pit.
The 1 10:!-foot stack which
serVes ' both units , dhi~rses
1

I
~

Picture and Story from the
Ohio Power Revll!w, Oct,1974
CHESHIRE .:.._ The first of
two 1.3-milllon kilowatt unitS at
the Gerieral James M. Gavin
Plant is near commercial
operation. Testing of the unit
has been underway for the past
several months.
Unit 2 , ~s expected to be
completed m the last quarler of
1975. Total cost of the project is
estimated at $550-million, With
about $50-million of that
amount going toward ·the
purchase and installation or air
and water pollution control
devices.
Original estimate or the cost
of the plant, w!Jen it was announced early in 1971, wa s~
million. The increased costs
are attributed · tO inflation and
additional
environmental '
cOnsiderations.
,
Gavin Plant, located near
.here, is . named in honor of

•I

gasses into the atmosphere,
permitting them to dissipate
over a wide area.
Two cooling towers ( one for
each unit) create ·a closedcirculi cooling system for the
plant's .operation. Each towerc,
rising 492 feet from the ground,
Is capable of cooling 600,000
gallons or water by 20 degrees
in one minute. The towers help
wconserve water through reuse , and no heated-water re.
enters the Ohio River.
.
An ecology dike .built during
lhe early stages of construction
has served many purposes. It ·
shields the area from dust and

SALES PUT OFF
Due to the circumstancea or
another organization selling
Ugh! bulba, the Pomeroy Middleport Uona Club will not
sell light bulbs this Thursday
evening as previously announced:

noise, It lessens distractions for
motorists along Rt. 7, and, with
!tees planted on the dike, helps
wbeautify the area.
Coal for the plan tis delivered
vis an overland belt coriYeyor
line from Meigs Mine and via
barge on the Ohio River.
Currently on the plant payroll
are aOOut 250 persons.

Defemlants fined
Two defendants were fined
and a third forfeited a bond in
the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Mahlon G. Eblin, 50,
Pomeroy, was fined $150 and
·costs and given a three day jail
sentence on a charge of driving ·
while intoxicated' and .Richard
A. Ward; 28, Middleport, was
fined $5 and costs on a charge
of Ml!lning a stop sign. Forfeiting a $30 bond posted on a
disorderly manner charge was
Billy Shoemaker, · no age or
addresa listed.
·

I

.,
('

First Gavin unit
in final testing

NEARLY READY for commercial operation is Unit I of
Gavin Plant: The plant features twin cooling towers, a 1,103foot stack and modem electrostatic precipitators. The unit's
capacity is 1.3-million kilowatts.

I

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