<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12152" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12152?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T14:35:55+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43122">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/f0f473cd52588f2b690e938bf521864f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>60bd1bd9abdf5093d7e6dc1d78257ae0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38177">
                  <text>,,.,

~'

.,

. '

.

-.

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."
'

'' lt •

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

•

-··

'. . '

' .

..

~&lt;c:·::owww::::::~:));((-:~h~~::.

~

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.

.

- ....

·~

;.

· --- ...... .... ..

..

•'.

'

.,

~

t

·.

' .•
~

•

•

I .

.

News.

'

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."

. '•

.

. .·. ' MEN~S DEPARTMENT •

1!191!1i':i11i.

.
.
EXTENDED OUTLj)OK

·Goessler's Jewelry .Store
cou~st

·

'i»oMEROY

:~. : .w

·lS

/

Homecoming

SELECTION
YOU NEED N()W.

•

e

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.

e

' ,I

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.

· rs%ur:T ...

.

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 . .

.

• •

in Briefs

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.

; ..UI:.. LJ18!!8 11

•

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.

...

MIDDLEPORT
OI:IIQ

~- '

st¥£

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

--..C,_.INCINNA Tl

.

. .__
. ""· ...

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
.

' (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

_,. - ·-

.

-

.

'• "dlfl!t l'd

Xi

•:

&lt;·

1

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.

.'

Depend on Uo foe All lanklna Needo

.

.

~

•

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."

'

~

•
"'

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

~

,I .&lt;

'

'

...•

~.

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

'

'

•

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)
'
.

'

-~
I
I

t

•
' ' ' . ''

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(

.

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 • •
.

'·

~

,.

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

'·

! '

..
./

. .
~

.

•'

~-

�'

...

.....

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

~.

: '·. ,-..!

"'"'·-

One hWldred and sixty Meigs

High School st~dents including Ida Casci, David Cole, Tina
. the majorette~ and flag corps, Duffy , Cindy Eads , Scott
make up the iMarauder mar- Fraser, Marc Fultz, Cindy
· ching band un~er. the direction Glaze, Crystal Glaze, Julie
of Dwight' G&lt;llns assisted by Hamm, Tami Hoffman, Vickie
Fred Ruth. Mrs. Judy Riggs is Hoffman , Desi Jeffers, Mary
instructor for the majorettes Johnson, Kim Jones, Mona
and flag corps.
King, Cheryl Lehew, f?sther
Students who make un the· Lowery, Janice Young, Sharon
band are Rhonda ·Hudson, Bing , Vicki · Brauer, Kim
Paula Kloes , Kim · Krautter, . ~rowning, Terri Bumgardner,
Valerie Lewis ;· Ju)Tror . !lie- •Teresa Jean Burchell, Jenny
Daniels, Cindy McKirin·ey, Joni Chapman, Marcella Charles,
Murray, Pam Powers, Randy Ann · Colwell, Ric Couch, Jo
Roach, Nita Rusche!, Mark Lynn Chafin, April Fraser,
Slater, Diane . Smith, Paige Barb Fultz, Cinrli Garnes,
Smith, Melody Snouffer, Nancy Linda Gerard, Ken Hoffman,
Stanley, Steve Stout, Velvet Joyce Hutchison, ~arol Lewi,s,
Swisher, Teresa Taylor, Deborah K. McLaughlin and
Teresa Van Meter, Pal Martha McNeal.
Vaughan, Paula Eichinger,
Rita Bailey, Jill ·Baity, Cathy
Teresa Ellis, I Trina Faulk, Blaettnar, Rena Chafin, Rory
Theressa Fish·, Becky Fultz, Cole, Cindy Dorst, Jeri
Sandy Garnes, Jeni Grate, Kirn Faullmer, Anne -Fitch, Terri
Grueser, Kathy Haley, Debbie Fife, Becky Fry, Trina Gibbs,
Harteribach, Denise Marshall, Peggy Girolami, Carl Gheen,
Beth
McKnight,
Cathy Christi Hess, Judy Holliday,
Meadows, Vickie Might, Laura Hoover, Kathy Howard,
Tammy Mossman, Pam Of- Sally Walters, Joe Watkins,
fenberger, Debbie Osborne, Jennifer Wise, Susan Wright,
Faith Perrin and Margaret ' Keith Bailey, Cheryl Barnhart,
Darlene Barrett, Debbie
Province.

' '

.

.

.

The Meigs

--

"""•' ,,..·.._.

~ ·

.
~

~

'

.•

Maraud~r Marr.hing Bank in formation in front of Marauder Stadium in Pomeroy
l'it:ture.~

Brenda Bolin,Jackie Carsey,

by 1\atit' Crow .

Hog men

in tight

nar ,
Teresa
Brow?,
· Bruce Bumgardner, Kcllle

.

OAKLAND t UP! I - Every'

\

Burdette, Carolyn Cha rl es,
Mark Davis, Robin Dewhurst,
Barbara Douglas, Mary Sue
Durst, Opal Dye~.. ~
Darrell Puckett , Trudy
Roach, Suzy Samuels, Melody
Scaggs, Kim Sebo, Tammi
Smith, Debbie Taylor, Becky
Meter, '

Beth Vaughan, Pam Vaughan,
Sherri Vining, Jtu1e Wamsley,

Patty Warner, Beverly Wilcox, ·
Teresa Wildermuth, Dan Will,

Ronnie Wood, Debi Bailey,
Jane
Ann
Bobo,
Rick
Macomber, Vicki Manley,
Tammy ' Mowery, Carmel
Murphy, .Pam Nicinsky,
, Tammy Offenberger , Kim

All former football players or those who never played in high
school but desire the chance to try their effort.s are encouraged to
help begin an independent football league in southeastern Ohio.
The league, being formed under the efforts of Clarence
Mcintyre aod Harold White, hopes to begin operation next fall
with players from Meigs, Gallia, Jackson, Vinton, Athens and
Washington Counties in Ohio and from Mason and Jackson
Counties in West Virginia.
It will be strictly amateur, tackle football for those who get
squirmy watching from the stands on Friday nights or S_aturday

Ohlinger, Terri Owens, Dina

Pratt, Judy . Radford, Faye
Riebel, Dave Ridgway, Mary
Rusche!, Terri Russell, Angie
Sisson, Lisa Thomas, Donna

afternoons. Anyone wishing to either start a team or wanting to

Thornton, Kathy Werry, David
Moore, Phil Ohlinger, Judy
Owen, Barbara Price, Debbie
Priddy, Joy White, and Babs
Witte.

join a team should contact Mcintyre at 949-2404 or White at 9927716.

Can't help but laugh at the failure of Joe Thomas in his attempt to show that the Baltimore Colts' problems are mostly
coaching related.
'Taint as easy as it seemed when you second guessed from
'
your cozy little stadium booth, is it, Joe?
Maybe what the Colts didn't need was a coaching change but
a few fresh faces in the front office.

+++
Whether you felt the high school tnjury special Monday
evening was a good one or not, or whether or not you felt the
presentation by ABC was biased against the stick '.llm in the
numbers' coach, one fact came through with resounding
clearness - there's a need for revamping of some high school
lockerrooms as far as equipment is concerned.

The clarinet section

I'm sure there are some schools in this area that don't have

the proper equipment, at least updated to the ever changing
quality standards such as ability of a helmet to withstand a force
and yet give a little so the inside of the head isn't "scrambled" as
one physician noted.
Especially the smaller, rural schools that don't have the big
athletic budget to work with, should check through and see just
how good the equipment is that the players are using.
The purchase of good equipment is a small price to pay as
compared to the rude awakeni• when a life is lost or permanent
injury is incurred.

Flute section
WRITERS NAME FEENEY

.

..
·-,

-..
--.

A first, the flag corps.

:.

r

"•

rise 10.5%

l

~

1

..-JillSNO, Calif. (UPI) ...:. A
tee shot on the 12th hole of the
Fort Washington Golf Course ·
beaned a crop dusting pilot who
WIIS spraying the fairways.
."J was .dazedlor a minute,"
Sldd David Hughes, the pilot.
He said the ball soared throUgh ·
the · plane's . windshield and
bounced off his h~linet.

"I circled a few times and
when my head cleared, set
down on this little airstrip in
Pap3gni's

vineyard," · the

veteran ·flyer said Tuesday.
Golf course officials Said the
incident occurred l~st week
and · the 24-year..,ld ·golfer,
Mike Bakula, of Fresno, offered his profuse apologies.

Rev. Ceeil Wise was guest
minister at the local church
Sunday evening.·
..Miss Wanda Peters, Penn-

News Notes

sylyania, spent the week_end

BY BERTHA PARKER
with her aunt and uncle, Rev.
Sabbath School attehdance and Mrs. Floyd Shook.
Oct. 13 at. the Free Methodist
Mr. and Mrs. Jewel CUrtis,
Church was 104. drfering was Mrs. Ruth Evans, Mrs . .Ger.
$ii.65, ~orshlp service a1te'r!d- . trudeMitchell and Mrs. Bertha
ance was 7,6. Several children .Parker attended · the Bob
· received recognition of the . Evans Fair Friday.
·
church.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stahl are
Mrs. l .:a_ donna Gilmore, Mrs.
expected home this week from
Je~m Wri~:f' ' and Mrs. J9an
. Veterans ·Memorial Hospital ..

.. .......
~

..

Drummers and sousaphone players.

attended Missionary
Laurel Cliff. Clark
Retreat at Lancaster.

Pilot bean~
by tee shot.
.

. .......

;:.)

OJ
~

~

'! _._

HOMECOMINGSET
The homecoming of the
Dexter Church of Christ will be
observed Sunday. Bible School
at 9:30 a.m. will be followed
by a worship service at 10:30
and a basket dinner at 12::iO
p.m. An afternoon service at 2
will feature special music and
a talk by Orval Morgan, former minister of the church .'
Special presentations are to be
featured. The public is invited'
·

•

·

o

.

-~--

.

'

.-

1.
1

'·

I
I

.

..

w·ash ffi
• gton

I R e 0 rt
P

.

'

...•"'
:l
......
..
•
.....•
..•:::
--....
...
-:::2
.--......
;

Saxophone section.

I
I
I
I

*

Ex-president
with

I
1 popular
I
,
I
• k,

·

I tnc

By. Clarence
Miller

I

M

treats

~

CHICAGO (UP!) - Richard

·~~~.~~~

.

among the trick or treat set.
Mrs. Frieda Fenster, owner
1 hsve joined a number of for years. over-stimulated our
other congressmen in sup- economy, pushing demand of a Chicago novelty shop, said
porting a do-it•now anti- past our ability to produce, and she has already sold out her
inflation measure.
Congress must bear the supply of Nixol) masks, though
the big business doesn '\ start
Although there have been responsibility.
nwnefous outcries about the
The . proposal, of course, is until two weeks before Halhuge debt, there has been little. not a panacea . but could be a loween.
"I sold out all the Nixon
meaningful action on the brake on inflation as well as a
I had last week and all
masks
congressional level.
start to -chop away at the
the
supply
houses seem to be
, · I reel that one positive step in astronorhical national debt.
the fight ~gains! inflation is in
It is time for the )gwmakers otit of them, toot'' Mrs. Fenster
a bill mandating a bal~ced in Washington to stand up and said.
"I guess it's the Watergate
budget with any surplus being be counted on the debt and
thlrig,
or the resignation, or
applied . to national debt inflation iss~es. With so ll)any
reduction.
co·ngressmen voting . for both, that made the difference
It has become obvious .the spending progr~ms, it is this year. We only 8oid a few
House Ways and Means .doubtful debt reduction will last year."
Committee intends to botUe up take place witliout !l)andatory
the measure. So I am seeking legislation being enacted into
to forc.e a f)oor vote by signing law.
·
a · discharge petition. U 218
As one who·has consistently ·
signatures of House members opposed inflationary spending
DANCE ON 'I'AP
can be obtained, . a floor vote habits of the Congress; and as
- A dance' wiU be
RACINE
w6,uld be requjred.
.one who ha,$ fought ·the in. T~is .ls a diffiCult procedure, creasing ·!Jf the national, debt1 held following the Southern
. as indicated by the record. A limit, I feel the use of the 'Football Game at the' .gym in
.discha•ge· . petitipn has been disCharge petition procedure to ' RaCine from 10 p.m. to .1 a.m.
' successful • only twic~ in 20 draw attention to, and action ll.'ith music by "Zerpba". The
years.
_
on this bill isworth the -eilort. senior class is sponsoring the
eVent.
, Deficit
le,deral
spcn~:"!i·
has
. . .
.
.

..

&gt;

...

..

·

~

. .. ..

• :

'

~

..•••
••
•.
;

•.
i•

-....
•...
•

......"'t

...
-..•:::•
........

OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) The Baseball Writers Association of America Tuesday
named Charlie Feeney of the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette as
their national president of at

the group's annual World
Series meeting.
The BBWAA also named
Richard Dozer of the Chicago
Tribune as vice president,
while Jack Lang of the Long
Island Press was reelected

secretarytreasurer.

GOOD;!'YEAR
SMALL CAR SPECIAL

SNOW
'FIRES
ffSURE GRIPW"
• DoUble multi-angle
cleata ... . aiv'e poaitlve
grip·and·go traction
and stability
• Four biat plies of
triple-tempered
Nylon cord
• Deep center, shoul~er
srooves .. ~ built deep
to bite deep.

'1599

M1•ss(•rsulilh

t.he

stup, who

wtll

~u

back to

A's MaO&lt;Jger Alvin Dark
desel'ved a better fate.
ca lled the vietory in the third
Not since Jimmy Wilson of game a big one but he said
the St. Louis Cardinals in 1928 tonigHt's fourth game "really
had a catcher made two errors
in a World Series game until

is the irr 'ortant one."
" In a seven game series, the

field to catcher, committed two

third and helped the A's to a first before you can start

errors to tie a World Series
record and the A's won again 32.

pair of un~arned rWls. His

thinking about the nexl game.

second followed in the fourth

Still, when you are in this

a nd while the A1s registered

position (leading two games to

their final run in that inning,

one). you start thinking about

the error didn ' t figure in the

winding it up in Five."

So today, with the two-time
defending World Champion A·s
holding the edge, lefty Ken
Holtzman will pitch against
Andy Messersmith. They were
pitcher~. witl-.

Win will
give SC
West title

TEAM SlATS
M OPP

Western

"We've been waiting all
season for this game,'' said Sun

Coach Tom Fears. "We
haven't forgotten our mistakes
from our last meeting. Birmingham is a much better
team than when we played
them in July but we are too."
Southern California goes into
the game with an 11-4 record.
The· Suri has won six straight
and nine of its last 10. Birmingham, with a 12-3 record, is
in second place, one game
behind Memphis in the WFL
Central Division.
" I just fee l we'll go QUI there
and

play

well,"

· safd

Americans Coach Jack Golla.
The Sun .will send the WFL
passing leader, Tony Adams,

Jst Downs
64
66
1st Downs Rush.
44
54
Jst Downs Passing
15
9
1st Downs by Penalty
5
3
Rushing Att.
2J6 257
Yards Rushing
834 995
Yards Passing
310 251
Passes Att.
74
38
Passes Cornp.
32
15
Pa.s ses Int. by
5
5
To lal Yards
1144 1246
Fumbles

20

Fumbl es lost
Punts
Punt Yardage
Ave . Yds . Punt
Punt Ret. Yds .
KO Ret . Yds.
Penalties
.~ e nalty Yds .

Oakland 3 Los Angeles 2

snap losing strea ks in league
games this weekend in the

So uthern

26

Valtey

Athletic

Conference.

9
12
24
25
826 818
34.4 32 .7
61
57
203 234
25
22
. _197 194

Buffington

Howard
Coats
Bailey
1\'\agnotta
Thomas
Randolph
Williamson
Anderson

11 92 0.4
8 27 3.4
4 15 3.8
12 10 .B
4
1 .25

Coac h John Blake's Pirates
will host Hannan Trace while
Symmes Valley travels to
Southern in the other leag ue
battle . In non-league affairs,

6

following losses to Southern

1

and Piketon the past two
weeks . Th e Pirates' offense

·2 · .3
-5 -2.5

2

1 ·6 ·6

I ·B ·B

HEADS FOR JAPAN
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UP! )
257 995 3.9 10
Veteran
slugger Orlando CepePASSING
A C Yds tnt TO Pel da, recently released by the
Anderson 72 32 310
o1
0 .44 Kansas City Royals after
Coats
1 0 0 0 0 .00
Whlltatch 1 o o 1 o .00 catching on as a designated
TOTALS 74 32 310 s 0 .42 hitler late in the '74 season, will
OPPON . 38 15 251 S 2 .39 play in the Japanese League in
PASS RECEIVING
the 1975 and 1976 season, it was
c Yds Ave learned
Tuesday.
Whitlatch
1111010
Davenport
8 92 11 .5
According to local sports
Magnotta
5 28 5.6 ,.. sources, the 37-year old
Blanchard
4 4411
Cepeda, who batted just .215
Quails
3 14 4 6
Stewart
-1 22 22 ·
for the Royals after being
PUNTING
released by the Red Sox in
Yds
Ave
spring
training ' has signed a
P
George
24 826 34.4
OPPON .
25 818 32.7 $250,000 contr~ct to play in
PUNT RETURNS
Japan.
R'Yds Ave
TOTALS
OPPON.

20 ·37 -1.3
236 834 3.5

a

who has piled up 2,900 yards
passing in 15 games, against
Birmingham's George Mira in
a quarterback matchup.
In other WFL action tonight,
Florida is at Memphis, the
Hawaiians at
Portland,
Shreveport at Philadelphia and
Chicago at Charlotte.
Florida, with a two.game
lead over Charlotte in the East,
must face a Memphis team
that has won the most games in
the league - 13. The Blazers Coats
8 61 7.6
lead the league in total defense OPPON.
11 57 5.2
KICKOFF RETURNS
while Memphis is tops ·in total
R Yds Ave
offense. · Quarterback Bob Coats
10 210 21
Davis artd running back Magnotta
2 31 15.5
I 18 18
Tommy Reamon spark the Qvalls
1 14 14
Florida of.fense while the · Thomas
Marshall
1 10 10
Southmen are led by running TOTALS
IS 283 18.9
backs J.J. Jennings and Willie OPPON.
13 234 18.0
INTERCEPTION
Spencer. Jennings leads the
RETURNS
league in rushing and Reamon
tnt Yds
Autt
is No. 2.
3
25
Coats
1
29
Whitlatch
1
0
5
54
TOTALS
worl'tl Series Stand•ngs
5
54
OPPON .
(Best- of-Seven)
w I
SCORING
Oakl.!lnd
2 1
TO PAT Pis
Los Angeles
1 2 Whitlatch
' 3
1 20
Tuesday's Result

North Gallia, Hannan Trace
and Sym mes Valtey wilt try to

unbeaten Kyger Creek visits
INDIVIDUAL STA·TS
Alexander : Trimble is at
RUSHING
.
C Yds Ave TO ·Eas.tern and Green plays
Whitlatch
76 378 4.9 3 Southwesterh .
Qvalts
40 190 4.8
I
North Gallia is 2-3 overall
Oiler
43 178 4. 1 3

Seth

Oiler

Quails
Tonight's Game
Los Angeles (Messersmith 20· Buffington
6) at Oakland (Ho ltzman 19· 171 • Georg e-x
8 ; 30 pm .
x-a l so
Thursday's Game
safety.
Los Angeles at Oakland

3
1
1
0

credited

innings ). .
" He was missing a little with
his pitches," sa id Alston. " I

think he pitched pretty good
under the circumstances."

After the Dodgers got
through kicking the ball
around, Downing was in the
hole 3-0 and so lo homers by Bill

Buckner in the eighth and
Willie Crawford in the ninth
couldn't pull it out.
Billy North, who hadn't had a
hit in his last 20 playoff and
Series appeara nces, singled to
left after one out in the third
and then showed the Dodgers
why he was the AL's leading
base stea ler with 54 this year.
Bert Campaneris followed
with a smash behind third
which Cey made a fine stop on

~

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

-

.

;'

The

l)aj~

Sentinel

Dl!VCYI'I!DTOmE
CRE8TER. LT~,

·· ··

Eut.Rll.

';

This price includes
Fed. Ex. Tax ••
and Mounting ,

Jim Brewer came on to strike
out Banda to end the in11ing, but
as things turned out that was
the run that won the game.
Alston conceded defense is
not his club's strong suit.

"Defense is probably the
weakest spot on our club," he
said . "But we got here this way
and I wouldn't change it now .
Don 't get do~n on Fer~uson as

a catcher. He's stilt a pretty
good catcher but Yeager will
catch tha next game."
That's tonight.
Tuesday' s Baseball Results
By United Pres s 1nternational
World Series , Jrd Game
LA
000 000 011 · 2 7 2

001 100 oox- 3 s 2

Oklnd

Downing, Brewer (4). Hough
(5),
Marshall {7) and Fer guson ; Hunt er , Fingers (8) and
Fosse
WP ·Hunler . l . P · Dow
ntng . HR s Buckner , Crawford .

Mark Zoulek, a junior.
· Larry Bean is the quar· .

terback. Gilders is also the
team 's field goa l kicker. He
had the only points Alexander
could muster last week against

Trimble .
Last year at Cheshire, both
squads battled to a 21-21 tie.
Eastern 's Eagles fresh off a
31-22 victory over Southwestern will host the Trimble
Tombcats. Trimble owns a 4-1·
1 record this season .

Coach Spike Berkhimer's
Eagles were led in that win by
the passing of quarterback
Randy Blake, the punting of
senior Mike Larkins and the
running of Donnie Eichinger.
Coach Bob Ashley's Southwestern Highlanders will seek
their second victory of the year

against the Green Bobcats.
Southwestern 's offense came

to life last week against
Eastern .

Quarterback Terry Carter
threw for one touchdown while
Chris Lewis, a sophomore,
scored two TO's . Carter
completed 16 of 23 passes
against the Eag le secondary
for 180 yards. He also averaged
31 yards punting the ball.
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
Team
W L POP
Kyger Creek
5 0 136 27
Eastern

Southern

North Gall Ia

Southwestern

S. Valley

4 2 83 47
3 3 91 73
2 3 84 93

1 4 75 107

o s 22

114

3 1 51

29

SVAC ONLY
Team
W L POP
Kyger Creek
5 0 136 21

Eastern

Southern

North Gall Ia
Southwestern
Symmes Valley
Hannan Trace

2 2 58 41
227071
1 3 69 81

o

a

3

0 2

73

0 64

'
l,

1

RDBERTIIOEIUOI, i

Qlyi'Aior
·'
I ...,_ ....,,...,,~,bytl!.
I

auo von.,

Pu-.,· Comt&gt;ony,

lll1 '

1"""'so .. """"""' Ohio, 11171tt........
, otllco ~ otWIII. Edll«&lt;at ,_on. 11
/ 2167.

,.

1 Seeond clua P'l*ll Pll4 at Pomeroy,~
Oblo.
'
: N1tlonal advertlalna: reprelenti!Uvr 1
Boltinelll.Oallt&amp;heri lnc.,12 Eut G1d St., - ~
I N... Y..... N... Yoot:

I

. _

PANELING

.... .-,DeUnreclbycarrlor
where .valllble iiiJ oentt per week; By !
Motor RrAIIe n.. carri• wvtce not j
0 18 aYalllbll. OM RKI'III:II, t2.•. By mall lll 1
1 8 {Ohio and W. Va., .On* Year, fll; db
0 6 ' montha, •. 60; T~ree rnonth1, tS. I
5 5 ; Ellewheri$ZI.OOyt~~t ; lh~lhlt1Ut;
with a · three mmlhl, fii.IO . .&amp;lblcriPtion ..-Ice

I
1

1

BOISE CASCADE QUALITY

!nchiikllamday 'l'\mul6enUnel.

eLIGHT
eMEDIUM
eDARK
eWHITEIGOLD

.ANTIQUE

Regular 6.95

...

117.77

one backing him up, he went

!,

3%-Quart Crock-Pots

Whites

no

to th.ird .
That fini shed Downing and

ll

·

INTEIIEIITOF
.
MEJGS.MABONAIIEA

centerfielder Jimmy Wynn
threw home and when the ball
got away rrom Ferguson, with

. BEST BUY IN AREAl

.--- ---.

Real Special For You

BlaCks and

and threw to first in time for
the out . But North, running on
the pitch, made it to third as
first baseman Steve Garvey
hesitated making a return
th•ow \oCey and it was too late
by then .
Reggie Jackson, warned by
Commiss ioner Bowie Kuhn
before the game for his run-in
with a sports writer the day
before, was th e next batter and
he topped the ball in front of the
plate. Ferguson took off after ...
the ball, got his glove on it and
then saw the ball trickle out for
an error. North scored on the
miscue and Banda went to
second from where he scored
on a single by Joe Rudi.
In the fourth, Dick Green,
who tied a Series record by
taking part in three double
plays, walked leading off, went
to second on a ~;tacrifice by
Hunter and scored on a single
by Campaneris. Campy continued on to second when

.44

smm•

PRE-fi~ISHED

4x8
SHEET

REG.$25.15

--~~------~~
.

MOULDINGS TO MATCH
•

-rFREE DELIVERY-

Why Buy Recaps When You Can Buy New
Tires at this Price •

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

.MEIGS
TIRE CENTER .

•

'

992•2101

PH.

•

.:fir' '"

773-555~

1
1•. . ,

'

...

.

.

I .

J

' .

.·''

.

.

MATERI.ALS ·CO.
·

MASON.
W. VA.
,,
·,..~. jW. ..

.

,.·

.

look a setback in the Southern scored both touchdowns for
ga me
when
sophomore Symmes Valtey in last
quarterback Ma;k Theiss was Friday's 28-14loss to Fort Gay,
injured .
W. Va. Pine rushed over from
Richard Eggleton, a junior, one and 10 yards out. The
fired a touchdown pass to Don VIkings are 0-5 this fa ll.
Coach Jim Sprague's Kyger
Spencer in the closing minutes
of last week's 22-14 loss to Creek Bobcats clinched at least
Piketon to prove he could be an a share of the SVAC chamadequate .replacement. ,
pions hip last Friday will have
Leading the Pirate running their work cut out for them this
game are Jeff Hollenbaugh, 140 week against a well-drilled
pound tailback ; Bruce Runyon, Alexander Spartan team .
250 pound fullback and speedy
Coach Dave Snipes squad
Fred Logan at wingback.
lost 19 seniors by gr.duation
Hannan Trace Is sti ll looking last spring but are 4-1·1 this
for its illusive first victory of fall. Alexander's only loss was
the year. The Wildcats, also a 10-3 squeaker last Friday by
have been hit by the injury Trimble. The tie , was a C\.0
jinx. Coac h Dave Owens ' · battle at Ne lsonville· York .•
Wildcats were shutout last
The Bobcats own a 5-0
Saturday by Ironton's reser- record, against SVAC teams.
·
Kyger Creek has scored 136
ves .
Wayne He~ Is the Wildcat points, a 27'2 average while its
quarterback. ~ running defense hasallowed 27 points, a
mates are Kevin Swain, a 5.4 average per outing.
Leading the Bobcat offense
senior and Jeff Wells, a junior.
The Wildcats use a wishbone ·are junior quarterback Tim
offense.
Lucas who has scored 34 points
Coac h Bill Jewell's Southern this fall; Chris Preston, junior
Tornadoes with power running tailback, who has rushed for
Mitch Nease and Greg Dunning 593 yards and eight touchdowns
leading the way are expected and Mark Waller, senior
to rebound from last week's 28- fullback who has scored five
13 loss a t Kyger Creek against - touchdowns.
the winless Vikings o(
Alexander's running game is
Lawrence County.
led by fullback Roger Gilders,
Terry Pine, senior halfback, Ron White, senior halfback and

Cooks all day While the cook's away! Just
load It and leave it-cooics slowly, automatically, deiiciousfy. No stirring or .
..
burning. Decorative ~eel ca.tt wlth stay-~ .
COOl feet, glass lid. Flal:ne or avocado. .. .·.

520x13
600x13
700x13
560xU
685x15

he lhought Downing, who

pit ched in both the 1963 and
t9f&gt;4 World Series for the
Yankee::;, wasn't as bad as the
figures would indicate (four
hits and four walks in 3 2-3

I

'\ .

. ·- -

-4_,. .....

Pirates, Vikings .hope
to end losing streaks

t- oll ow1ng are the statistics
for the first si)( games of the
1 97~ Meigs Marauder football
seas on .

victory will give Southern

California
the
Division title.

scoring.
Dodger Manager Walter AlStill, it hung the goat horns ston , whose mood rarely varies
on the likeable Dodger back- whether his team wins or loses,

Marauder slats

By United Press Intetnational
In July in its WFL inaugural,
the Southern California Sun
lost at Birmingham 11-7.
Tonight the Sun is rematched
with the · Americans and a

s~id

pi&lt;Jying right rield in tonight's
g;m1c wi th Steve Yeage r laking
· over ~hind the plate.
"They t the A's) got away
with murder," said, Ferguson.
"We hit lhree or four line shots
that they raught. They are a
tea m uf opportunists, to say the
1€'ast. "

margi n of difference , and . Ferguson in the third game of fourth game, I think, is the big
Tuesday night here,- Joe Fer- I his year's Classic.
one," said Dark. "Of course-,
guson, switched from right
His first error ca me in the you have to win the third one

ANY SIZE LISTED
BELOW

• ' I

.. ' \

Last Saturday in the opener,
a throwing error by Dodger
third baseman Ron Cey helped
the A's to the run in the eighth
inning that wound up "~ the

the first game

The World Football League, which this column, last summer,stated would fall flat on its face, is doing a good job living up
to that prediction .
Several teams have already had the rest or their 1974 season
schedule canceled, and 2 teams are presently not even paying
their players. The Detroit Wheels, one of the teams that is
through for the year, has probably the flattest tire of all; and the
Jacksonville Sharks also are not payi• their players (for 5 of the
last 6 games).
There are plenty of capable players still with that burning
desire to bump heads, which is one reason for supporting the
WFL in it.s venture. But the American public, over.saturated with
things I&lt;&gt; do both partiCipatory and on the boob tube, doesn' t need
the WFL and ob\l'iously doesn't want it.
Ftiday night high school football, Saturday afternoon
collegiate ball and Sunday afternoon pro football is enough for
one week without adding the WFL on Thursday night ; all of
which is intertwined with conflicting sports such as the World
Series, and the approaching sports of basketball and hockey.

Baritones and Trombones

~-------------·------------

was the loser although he

have gotten the brea~ twice,
so maybe it's no surprise they

+++

ffiLUMBUS .(UP!) - State
sales tax collections for the
first three months of fiscall975
were up by $25 million, or 10.6
per cent, over the corresponding period in fiscal 1974, Ohio
Treasurer Gertrude W. Donahey said Tuesday.
CoUections of $261 million
through Sept. 30 compared
with $236 million in ftscal 1974,
said Mrs. Donahey. She said
I .
September coilections totaled
$81.8 million.
September state ineome tax
collections were $33.8 million, ·
bringing 'to $117 million the
.
total for the three-mon!h
'
.
·~ !
period. The treasurer said
state income tax collections
were· ahead · oi last year's
comparable total by $1L7
million, or 11.1 per cent.
Also ahead of last year's
' ·.
.,:
schedule were the estate tax,
by $2.1 million; the.intangibles
. DWIGHT GOINS, MEIGS HIGH SCHOOt band director,
tax, by $7.2 million; the
is
showing
giving out the orders during practice session.
cigarette tax, by $1.6 million;
Fred
Ruth
is
assistant band instructor.
and the corporation franchise
tax, by $1.1 million.
'l'otal September state tax
coljectionS were $210 million, tipn to $70!!,5 million, $48.5
. '
bringing the year's accumula- million over•the 1973 figure.

games to one.

along the Oakland A's and IA&gt;s
An~eles Dod'"gers are S(l evenly
matched that the ·breaks wilt
decide the 1974 World Series.
Mter three games, the A's

Trumpet section

Collections

lead the Dodgers today two

loser and
Holtzman guing out &lt;~fter 4 1-3
inning.'i with no decision .
Tut-sd~y night, .lim "Ga tfish " Hunter , a 25-game winner
during lhP regular season,
wf.'nt 7 1-3 innings and wound
up with his fourth World Series
vil'tory in as many decisions
nvel' three seasons. Al Downing

body has been saying l'ighl

balances
CHICAGO (UP!) - Hog
producers today can barely
break even, an Indiana farmer
who raises hogs along the
Wabash River said, and predicted pork supplies will be
down 15 to 20 'per cent next
year.
The farmer, William Rothenberger, told the annual
meeting of the American Meat
Institute here Tuesday that
counting the price of corn, bel!n
meal and "all-other costs," it
took $34.80 in mid-September to
produce 100 pounds of live hog.
"With analysts projecting
corn prices of $4. and soybean
prices of $8 per bushel, costs of
producing pork could go as
high as $45 per hundredweight," he said.
Rothenberger included buildings, equipment, interest,
medicine, supplies·, taxes, fuel,
electricity and labor in his "all
other costs."
Though more sophisticated
equipment has served to pare
down labor costs, he said
"added electricity, fuel, taxes
and annual ·Use costs of
buildings and equipment have
increased our total overhead
cost. These costs have increased about 50 per cent in the ·
last three years," he said.
He said building costs increased to $57 per hog
marketed in 1974, compared
with $35 in 1972.
Excessively large supplies of
cheaper beef will be the major
factor in keeping pork prices
down, he said.
"But with a possible reduction of 15 to 20 per cent in pork
supplies in th.e fall of 1975,
prices will probably rise to 1\&gt;e
upper $40 (range)," he said.

.. . . . ..

Oakland slips- past Los Angeles, 3-2

Birchfield, Brenda Bishop,
Tammy Blake, Mary Blaett- ,.

Thomas, Janie Va~

, ~

..

~ ~ ~·

3- The Da~ly SeiJl.inet, M.iddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesd")·., 0&lt;·1 . 16. tn74

.160 in Marauder Band

Jo

·... ' r

.'

,.
I .·.
&gt;

•

•
I

...

�'

...

.....

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

~.

: '·. ,-..!

"'"'·-

One hWldred and sixty Meigs

High School st~dents including Ida Casci, David Cole, Tina
. the majorette~ and flag corps, Duffy , Cindy Eads , Scott
make up the iMarauder mar- Fraser, Marc Fultz, Cindy
· ching band un~er. the direction Glaze, Crystal Glaze, Julie
of Dwight' G&lt;llns assisted by Hamm, Tami Hoffman, Vickie
Fred Ruth. Mrs. Judy Riggs is Hoffman , Desi Jeffers, Mary
instructor for the majorettes Johnson, Kim Jones, Mona
and flag corps.
King, Cheryl Lehew, f?sther
Students who make un the· Lowery, Janice Young, Sharon
band are Rhonda ·Hudson, Bing , Vicki · Brauer, Kim
Paula Kloes , Kim · Krautter, . ~rowning, Terri Bumgardner,
Valerie Lewis ;· Ju)Tror . !lie- •Teresa Jean Burchell, Jenny
Daniels, Cindy McKirin·ey, Joni Chapman, Marcella Charles,
Murray, Pam Powers, Randy Ann · Colwell, Ric Couch, Jo
Roach, Nita Rusche!, Mark Lynn Chafin, April Fraser,
Slater, Diane . Smith, Paige Barb Fultz, Cinrli Garnes,
Smith, Melody Snouffer, Nancy Linda Gerard, Ken Hoffman,
Stanley, Steve Stout, Velvet Joyce Hutchison, ~arol Lewi,s,
Swisher, Teresa Taylor, Deborah K. McLaughlin and
Teresa Van Meter, Pal Martha McNeal.
Vaughan, Paula Eichinger,
Rita Bailey, Jill ·Baity, Cathy
Teresa Ellis, I Trina Faulk, Blaettnar, Rena Chafin, Rory
Theressa Fish·, Becky Fultz, Cole, Cindy Dorst, Jeri
Sandy Garnes, Jeni Grate, Kirn Faullmer, Anne -Fitch, Terri
Grueser, Kathy Haley, Debbie Fife, Becky Fry, Trina Gibbs,
Harteribach, Denise Marshall, Peggy Girolami, Carl Gheen,
Beth
McKnight,
Cathy Christi Hess, Judy Holliday,
Meadows, Vickie Might, Laura Hoover, Kathy Howard,
Tammy Mossman, Pam Of- Sally Walters, Joe Watkins,
fenberger, Debbie Osborne, Jennifer Wise, Susan Wright,
Faith Perrin and Margaret ' Keith Bailey, Cheryl Barnhart,
Darlene Barrett, Debbie
Province.

' '

.

.

.

The Meigs

--

"""•' ,,..·.._.

~ ·

.
~

~

'

.•

Maraud~r Marr.hing Bank in formation in front of Marauder Stadium in Pomeroy
l'it:ture.~

Brenda Bolin,Jackie Carsey,

by 1\atit' Crow .

Hog men

in tight

nar ,
Teresa
Brow?,
· Bruce Bumgardner, Kcllle

.

OAKLAND t UP! I - Every'

\

Burdette, Carolyn Cha rl es,
Mark Davis, Robin Dewhurst,
Barbara Douglas, Mary Sue
Durst, Opal Dye~.. ~
Darrell Puckett , Trudy
Roach, Suzy Samuels, Melody
Scaggs, Kim Sebo, Tammi
Smith, Debbie Taylor, Becky
Meter, '

Beth Vaughan, Pam Vaughan,
Sherri Vining, Jtu1e Wamsley,

Patty Warner, Beverly Wilcox, ·
Teresa Wildermuth, Dan Will,

Ronnie Wood, Debi Bailey,
Jane
Ann
Bobo,
Rick
Macomber, Vicki Manley,
Tammy ' Mowery, Carmel
Murphy, .Pam Nicinsky,
, Tammy Offenberger , Kim

All former football players or those who never played in high
school but desire the chance to try their effort.s are encouraged to
help begin an independent football league in southeastern Ohio.
The league, being formed under the efforts of Clarence
Mcintyre aod Harold White, hopes to begin operation next fall
with players from Meigs, Gallia, Jackson, Vinton, Athens and
Washington Counties in Ohio and from Mason and Jackson
Counties in West Virginia.
It will be strictly amateur, tackle football for those who get
squirmy watching from the stands on Friday nights or S_aturday

Ohlinger, Terri Owens, Dina

Pratt, Judy . Radford, Faye
Riebel, Dave Ridgway, Mary
Rusche!, Terri Russell, Angie
Sisson, Lisa Thomas, Donna

afternoons. Anyone wishing to either start a team or wanting to

Thornton, Kathy Werry, David
Moore, Phil Ohlinger, Judy
Owen, Barbara Price, Debbie
Priddy, Joy White, and Babs
Witte.

join a team should contact Mcintyre at 949-2404 or White at 9927716.

Can't help but laugh at the failure of Joe Thomas in his attempt to show that the Baltimore Colts' problems are mostly
coaching related.
'Taint as easy as it seemed when you second guessed from
'
your cozy little stadium booth, is it, Joe?
Maybe what the Colts didn't need was a coaching change but
a few fresh faces in the front office.

+++
Whether you felt the high school tnjury special Monday
evening was a good one or not, or whether or not you felt the
presentation by ABC was biased against the stick '.llm in the
numbers' coach, one fact came through with resounding
clearness - there's a need for revamping of some high school
lockerrooms as far as equipment is concerned.

The clarinet section

I'm sure there are some schools in this area that don't have

the proper equipment, at least updated to the ever changing
quality standards such as ability of a helmet to withstand a force
and yet give a little so the inside of the head isn't "scrambled" as
one physician noted.
Especially the smaller, rural schools that don't have the big
athletic budget to work with, should check through and see just
how good the equipment is that the players are using.
The purchase of good equipment is a small price to pay as
compared to the rude awakeni• when a life is lost or permanent
injury is incurred.

Flute section
WRITERS NAME FEENEY

.

..
·-,

-..
--.

A first, the flag corps.

:.

r

"•

rise 10.5%

l

~

1

..-JillSNO, Calif. (UPI) ...:. A
tee shot on the 12th hole of the
Fort Washington Golf Course ·
beaned a crop dusting pilot who
WIIS spraying the fairways.
."J was .dazedlor a minute,"
Sldd David Hughes, the pilot.
He said the ball soared throUgh ·
the · plane's . windshield and
bounced off his h~linet.

"I circled a few times and
when my head cleared, set
down on this little airstrip in
Pap3gni's

vineyard," · the

veteran ·flyer said Tuesday.
Golf course officials Said the
incident occurred l~st week
and · the 24-year..,ld ·golfer,
Mike Bakula, of Fresno, offered his profuse apologies.

Rev. Ceeil Wise was guest
minister at the local church
Sunday evening.·
..Miss Wanda Peters, Penn-

News Notes

sylyania, spent the week_end

BY BERTHA PARKER
with her aunt and uncle, Rev.
Sabbath School attehdance and Mrs. Floyd Shook.
Oct. 13 at. the Free Methodist
Mr. and Mrs. Jewel CUrtis,
Church was 104. drfering was Mrs. Ruth Evans, Mrs . .Ger.
$ii.65, ~orshlp service a1te'r!d- . trudeMitchell and Mrs. Bertha
ance was 7,6. Several children .Parker attended · the Bob
· received recognition of the . Evans Fair Friday.
·
church.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stahl are
Mrs. l .:a_ donna Gilmore, Mrs.
expected home this week from
Je~m Wri~:f' ' and Mrs. J9an
. Veterans ·Memorial Hospital ..

.. .......
~

..

Drummers and sousaphone players.

attended Missionary
Laurel Cliff. Clark
Retreat at Lancaster.

Pilot bean~
by tee shot.
.

. .......

;:.)

OJ
~

~

'! _._

HOMECOMINGSET
The homecoming of the
Dexter Church of Christ will be
observed Sunday. Bible School
at 9:30 a.m. will be followed
by a worship service at 10:30
and a basket dinner at 12::iO
p.m. An afternoon service at 2
will feature special music and
a talk by Orval Morgan, former minister of the church .'
Special presentations are to be
featured. The public is invited'
·

•

·

o

.

-~--

.

'

.-

1.
1

'·

I
I

.

..

w·ash ffi
• gton

I R e 0 rt
P

.

'

...•"'
:l
......
..
•
.....•
..•:::
--....
...
-:::2
.--......
;

Saxophone section.

I
I
I
I

*

Ex-president
with

I
1 popular
I
,
I
• k,

·

I tnc

By. Clarence
Miller

I

M

treats

~

CHICAGO (UP!) - Richard

·~~~.~~~

.

among the trick or treat set.
Mrs. Frieda Fenster, owner
1 hsve joined a number of for years. over-stimulated our
other congressmen in sup- economy, pushing demand of a Chicago novelty shop, said
porting a do-it•now anti- past our ability to produce, and she has already sold out her
inflation measure.
Congress must bear the supply of Nixol) masks, though
the big business doesn '\ start
Although there have been responsibility.
nwnefous outcries about the
The . proposal, of course, is until two weeks before Halhuge debt, there has been little. not a panacea . but could be a loween.
"I sold out all the Nixon
meaningful action on the brake on inflation as well as a
I had last week and all
masks
congressional level.
start to -chop away at the
the
supply
houses seem to be
, · I reel that one positive step in astronorhical national debt.
the fight ~gains! inflation is in
It is time for the )gwmakers otit of them, toot'' Mrs. Fenster
a bill mandating a bal~ced in Washington to stand up and said.
"I guess it's the Watergate
budget with any surplus being be counted on the debt and
thlrig,
or the resignation, or
applied . to national debt inflation iss~es. With so ll)any
reduction.
co·ngressmen voting . for both, that made the difference
It has become obvious .the spending progr~ms, it is this year. We only 8oid a few
House Ways and Means .doubtful debt reduction will last year."
Committee intends to botUe up take place witliout !l)andatory
the measure. So I am seeking legislation being enacted into
to forc.e a f)oor vote by signing law.
·
a · discharge petition. U 218
As one who·has consistently ·
signatures of House members opposed inflationary spending
DANCE ON 'I'AP
can be obtained, . a floor vote habits of the Congress; and as
- A dance' wiU be
RACINE
w6,uld be requjred.
.one who ha,$ fought ·the in. T~is .ls a diffiCult procedure, creasing ·!Jf the national, debt1 held following the Southern
. as indicated by the record. A limit, I feel the use of the 'Football Game at the' .gym in
.discha•ge· . petitipn has been disCharge petition procedure to ' RaCine from 10 p.m. to .1 a.m.
' successful • only twic~ in 20 draw attention to, and action ll.'ith music by "Zerpba". The
years.
_
on this bill isworth the -eilort. senior class is sponsoring the
eVent.
, Deficit
le,deral
spcn~:"!i·
has
. . .
.
.

..

&gt;

...

..

·

~

. .. ..

• :

'

~

..•••
••
•.
;

•.
i•

-....
•...
•

......"'t

...
-..•:::•
........

OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) The Baseball Writers Association of America Tuesday
named Charlie Feeney of the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette as
their national president of at

the group's annual World
Series meeting.
The BBWAA also named
Richard Dozer of the Chicago
Tribune as vice president,
while Jack Lang of the Long
Island Press was reelected

secretarytreasurer.

GOOD;!'YEAR
SMALL CAR SPECIAL

SNOW
'FIRES
ffSURE GRIPW"
• DoUble multi-angle
cleata ... . aiv'e poaitlve
grip·and·go traction
and stability
• Four biat plies of
triple-tempered
Nylon cord
• Deep center, shoul~er
srooves .. ~ built deep
to bite deep.

'1599

M1•ss(•rsulilh

t.he

stup, who

wtll

~u

back to

A's MaO&lt;Jger Alvin Dark
desel'ved a better fate.
ca lled the vietory in the third
Not since Jimmy Wilson of game a big one but he said
the St. Louis Cardinals in 1928 tonigHt's fourth game "really
had a catcher made two errors
in a World Series game until

is the irr 'ortant one."
" In a seven game series, the

field to catcher, committed two

third and helped the A's to a first before you can start

errors to tie a World Series
record and the A's won again 32.

pair of un~arned rWls. His

thinking about the nexl game.

second followed in the fourth

Still, when you are in this

a nd while the A1s registered

position (leading two games to

their final run in that inning,

one). you start thinking about

the error didn ' t figure in the

winding it up in Five."

So today, with the two-time
defending World Champion A·s
holding the edge, lefty Ken
Holtzman will pitch against
Andy Messersmith. They were
pitcher~. witl-.

Win will
give SC
West title

TEAM SlATS
M OPP

Western

"We've been waiting all
season for this game,'' said Sun

Coach Tom Fears. "We
haven't forgotten our mistakes
from our last meeting. Birmingham is a much better
team than when we played
them in July but we are too."
Southern California goes into
the game with an 11-4 record.
The· Suri has won six straight
and nine of its last 10. Birmingham, with a 12-3 record, is
in second place, one game
behind Memphis in the WFL
Central Division.
" I just fee l we'll go QUI there
and

play

well,"

· safd

Americans Coach Jack Golla.
The Sun .will send the WFL
passing leader, Tony Adams,

Jst Downs
64
66
1st Downs Rush.
44
54
Jst Downs Passing
15
9
1st Downs by Penalty
5
3
Rushing Att.
2J6 257
Yards Rushing
834 995
Yards Passing
310 251
Passes Att.
74
38
Passes Cornp.
32
15
Pa.s ses Int. by
5
5
To lal Yards
1144 1246
Fumbles

20

Fumbl es lost
Punts
Punt Yardage
Ave . Yds . Punt
Punt Ret. Yds .
KO Ret . Yds.
Penalties
.~ e nalty Yds .

Oakland 3 Los Angeles 2

snap losing strea ks in league
games this weekend in the

So uthern

26

Valtey

Athletic

Conference.

9
12
24
25
826 818
34.4 32 .7
61
57
203 234
25
22
. _197 194

Buffington

Howard
Coats
Bailey
1\'\agnotta
Thomas
Randolph
Williamson
Anderson

11 92 0.4
8 27 3.4
4 15 3.8
12 10 .B
4
1 .25

Coac h John Blake's Pirates
will host Hannan Trace while
Symmes Valley travels to
Southern in the other leag ue
battle . In non-league affairs,

6

following losses to Southern

1

and Piketon the past two
weeks . Th e Pirates' offense

·2 · .3
-5 -2.5

2

1 ·6 ·6

I ·B ·B

HEADS FOR JAPAN
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UP! )
257 995 3.9 10
Veteran
slugger Orlando CepePASSING
A C Yds tnt TO Pel da, recently released by the
Anderson 72 32 310
o1
0 .44 Kansas City Royals after
Coats
1 0 0 0 0 .00
Whlltatch 1 o o 1 o .00 catching on as a designated
TOTALS 74 32 310 s 0 .42 hitler late in the '74 season, will
OPPON . 38 15 251 S 2 .39 play in the Japanese League in
PASS RECEIVING
the 1975 and 1976 season, it was
c Yds Ave learned
Tuesday.
Whitlatch
1111010
Davenport
8 92 11 .5
According to local sports
Magnotta
5 28 5.6 ,.. sources, the 37-year old
Blanchard
4 4411
Cepeda, who batted just .215
Quails
3 14 4 6
Stewart
-1 22 22 ·
for the Royals after being
PUNTING
released by the Red Sox in
Yds
Ave
spring
training ' has signed a
P
George
24 826 34.4
OPPON .
25 818 32.7 $250,000 contr~ct to play in
PUNT RETURNS
Japan.
R'Yds Ave
TOTALS
OPPON.

20 ·37 -1.3
236 834 3.5

a

who has piled up 2,900 yards
passing in 15 games, against
Birmingham's George Mira in
a quarterback matchup.
In other WFL action tonight,
Florida is at Memphis, the
Hawaiians at
Portland,
Shreveport at Philadelphia and
Chicago at Charlotte.
Florida, with a two.game
lead over Charlotte in the East,
must face a Memphis team
that has won the most games in
the league - 13. The Blazers Coats
8 61 7.6
lead the league in total defense OPPON.
11 57 5.2
KICKOFF RETURNS
while Memphis is tops ·in total
R Yds Ave
offense. · Quarterback Bob Coats
10 210 21
Davis artd running back Magnotta
2 31 15.5
I 18 18
Tommy Reamon spark the Qvalls
1 14 14
Florida of.fense while the · Thomas
Marshall
1 10 10
Southmen are led by running TOTALS
IS 283 18.9
backs J.J. Jennings and Willie OPPON.
13 234 18.0
INTERCEPTION
Spencer. Jennings leads the
RETURNS
league in rushing and Reamon
tnt Yds
Autt
is No. 2.
3
25
Coats
1
29
Whitlatch
1
0
5
54
TOTALS
worl'tl Series Stand•ngs
5
54
OPPON .
(Best- of-Seven)
w I
SCORING
Oakl.!lnd
2 1
TO PAT Pis
Los Angeles
1 2 Whitlatch
' 3
1 20
Tuesday's Result

North Gallia, Hannan Trace
and Sym mes Valtey wilt try to

unbeaten Kyger Creek visits
INDIVIDUAL STA·TS
Alexander : Trimble is at
RUSHING
.
C Yds Ave TO ·Eas.tern and Green plays
Whitlatch
76 378 4.9 3 Southwesterh .
Qvalts
40 190 4.8
I
North Gallia is 2-3 overall
Oiler
43 178 4. 1 3

Seth

Oiler

Quails
Tonight's Game
Los Angeles (Messersmith 20· Buffington
6) at Oakland (Ho ltzman 19· 171 • Georg e-x
8 ; 30 pm .
x-a l so
Thursday's Game
safety.
Los Angeles at Oakland

3
1
1
0

credited

innings ). .
" He was missing a little with
his pitches," sa id Alston. " I

think he pitched pretty good
under the circumstances."

After the Dodgers got
through kicking the ball
around, Downing was in the
hole 3-0 and so lo homers by Bill

Buckner in the eighth and
Willie Crawford in the ninth
couldn't pull it out.
Billy North, who hadn't had a
hit in his last 20 playoff and
Series appeara nces, singled to
left after one out in the third
and then showed the Dodgers
why he was the AL's leading
base stea ler with 54 this year.
Bert Campaneris followed
with a smash behind third
which Cey made a fine stop on

~

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

-

.

;'

The

l)aj~

Sentinel

Dl!VCYI'I!DTOmE
CRE8TER. LT~,

·· ··

Eut.Rll.

';

This price includes
Fed. Ex. Tax ••
and Mounting ,

Jim Brewer came on to strike
out Banda to end the in11ing, but
as things turned out that was
the run that won the game.
Alston conceded defense is
not his club's strong suit.

"Defense is probably the
weakest spot on our club," he
said . "But we got here this way
and I wouldn't change it now .
Don 't get do~n on Fer~uson as

a catcher. He's stilt a pretty
good catcher but Yeager will
catch tha next game."
That's tonight.
Tuesday' s Baseball Results
By United Pres s 1nternational
World Series , Jrd Game
LA
000 000 011 · 2 7 2

001 100 oox- 3 s 2

Oklnd

Downing, Brewer (4). Hough
(5),
Marshall {7) and Fer guson ; Hunt er , Fingers (8) and
Fosse
WP ·Hunler . l . P · Dow
ntng . HR s Buckner , Crawford .

Mark Zoulek, a junior.
· Larry Bean is the quar· .

terback. Gilders is also the
team 's field goa l kicker. He
had the only points Alexander
could muster last week against

Trimble .
Last year at Cheshire, both
squads battled to a 21-21 tie.
Eastern 's Eagles fresh off a
31-22 victory over Southwestern will host the Trimble
Tombcats. Trimble owns a 4-1·
1 record this season .

Coach Spike Berkhimer's
Eagles were led in that win by
the passing of quarterback
Randy Blake, the punting of
senior Mike Larkins and the
running of Donnie Eichinger.
Coach Bob Ashley's Southwestern Highlanders will seek
their second victory of the year

against the Green Bobcats.
Southwestern 's offense came

to life last week against
Eastern .

Quarterback Terry Carter
threw for one touchdown while
Chris Lewis, a sophomore,
scored two TO's . Carter
completed 16 of 23 passes
against the Eag le secondary
for 180 yards. He also averaged
31 yards punting the ball.
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
Team
W L POP
Kyger Creek
5 0 136 27
Eastern

Southern

North Gall Ia

Southwestern

S. Valley

4 2 83 47
3 3 91 73
2 3 84 93

1 4 75 107

o s 22

114

3 1 51

29

SVAC ONLY
Team
W L POP
Kyger Creek
5 0 136 21

Eastern

Southern

North Gall Ia
Southwestern
Symmes Valley
Hannan Trace

2 2 58 41
227071
1 3 69 81

o

a

3

0 2

73

0 64

'
l,

1

RDBERTIIOEIUOI, i

Qlyi'Aior
·'
I ...,_ ....,,...,,~,bytl!.
I

auo von.,

Pu-.,· Comt&gt;ony,

lll1 '

1"""'so .. """"""' Ohio, 11171tt........
, otllco ~ otWIII. Edll«&lt;at ,_on. 11
/ 2167.

,.

1 Seeond clua P'l*ll Pll4 at Pomeroy,~
Oblo.
'
: N1tlonal advertlalna: reprelenti!Uvr 1
Boltinelll.Oallt&amp;heri lnc.,12 Eut G1d St., - ~
I N... Y..... N... Yoot:

I

. _

PANELING

.... .-,DeUnreclbycarrlor
where .valllble iiiJ oentt per week; By !
Motor RrAIIe n.. carri• wvtce not j
0 18 aYalllbll. OM RKI'III:II, t2.•. By mall lll 1
1 8 {Ohio and W. Va., .On* Year, fll; db
0 6 ' montha, •. 60; T~ree rnonth1, tS. I
5 5 ; Ellewheri$ZI.OOyt~~t ; lh~lhlt1Ut;
with a · three mmlhl, fii.IO . .&amp;lblcriPtion ..-Ice

I
1

1

BOISE CASCADE QUALITY

!nchiikllamday 'l'\mul6enUnel.

eLIGHT
eMEDIUM
eDARK
eWHITEIGOLD

.ANTIQUE

Regular 6.95

...

117.77

one backing him up, he went

!,

3%-Quart Crock-Pots

Whites

no

to th.ird .
That fini shed Downing and

ll

·

INTEIIEIITOF
.
MEJGS.MABONAIIEA

centerfielder Jimmy Wynn
threw home and when the ball
got away rrom Ferguson, with

. BEST BUY IN AREAl

.--- ---.

Real Special For You

BlaCks and

and threw to first in time for
the out . But North, running on
the pitch, made it to third as
first baseman Steve Garvey
hesitated making a return
th•ow \oCey and it was too late
by then .
Reggie Jackson, warned by
Commiss ioner Bowie Kuhn
before the game for his run-in
with a sports writer the day
before, was th e next batter and
he topped the ball in front of the
plate. Ferguson took off after ...
the ball, got his glove on it and
then saw the ball trickle out for
an error. North scored on the
miscue and Banda went to
second from where he scored
on a single by Joe Rudi.
In the fourth, Dick Green,
who tied a Series record by
taking part in three double
plays, walked leading off, went
to second on a ~;tacrifice by
Hunter and scored on a single
by Campaneris. Campy continued on to second when

.44

smm•

PRE-fi~ISHED

4x8
SHEET

REG.$25.15

--~~------~~
.

MOULDINGS TO MATCH
•

-rFREE DELIVERY-

Why Buy Recaps When You Can Buy New
Tires at this Price •

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

.MEIGS
TIRE CENTER .

•

'

992•2101

PH.

•

.:fir' '"

773-555~

1
1•. . ,

'

...

.

.

I .

J

' .

.·''

.

.

MATERI.ALS ·CO.
·

MASON.
W. VA.
,,
·,..~. jW. ..

.

,.·

.

look a setback in the Southern scored both touchdowns for
ga me
when
sophomore Symmes Valtey in last
quarterback Ma;k Theiss was Friday's 28-14loss to Fort Gay,
injured .
W. Va. Pine rushed over from
Richard Eggleton, a junior, one and 10 yards out. The
fired a touchdown pass to Don VIkings are 0-5 this fa ll.
Coach Jim Sprague's Kyger
Spencer in the closing minutes
of last week's 22-14 loss to Creek Bobcats clinched at least
Piketon to prove he could be an a share of the SVAC chamadequate .replacement. ,
pions hip last Friday will have
Leading the Pirate running their work cut out for them this
game are Jeff Hollenbaugh, 140 week against a well-drilled
pound tailback ; Bruce Runyon, Alexander Spartan team .
250 pound fullback and speedy
Coach Dave Snipes squad
Fred Logan at wingback.
lost 19 seniors by gr.duation
Hannan Trace Is sti ll looking last spring but are 4-1·1 this
for its illusive first victory of fall. Alexander's only loss was
the year. The Wildcats, also a 10-3 squeaker last Friday by
have been hit by the injury Trimble. The tie , was a C\.0
jinx. Coac h Dave Owens ' · battle at Ne lsonville· York .•
Wildcats were shutout last
The Bobcats own a 5-0
Saturday by Ironton's reser- record, against SVAC teams.
·
Kyger Creek has scored 136
ves .
Wayne He~ Is the Wildcat points, a 27'2 average while its
quarterback. ~ running defense hasallowed 27 points, a
mates are Kevin Swain, a 5.4 average per outing.
Leading the Bobcat offense
senior and Jeff Wells, a junior.
The Wildcats use a wishbone ·are junior quarterback Tim
offense.
Lucas who has scored 34 points
Coac h Bill Jewell's Southern this fall; Chris Preston, junior
Tornadoes with power running tailback, who has rushed for
Mitch Nease and Greg Dunning 593 yards and eight touchdowns
leading the way are expected and Mark Waller, senior
to rebound from last week's 28- fullback who has scored five
13 loss a t Kyger Creek against - touchdowns.
the winless Vikings o(
Alexander's running game is
Lawrence County.
led by fullback Roger Gilders,
Terry Pine, senior halfback, Ron White, senior halfback and

Cooks all day While the cook's away! Just
load It and leave it-cooics slowly, automatically, deiiciousfy. No stirring or .
..
burning. Decorative ~eel ca.tt wlth stay-~ .
COOl feet, glass lid. Flal:ne or avocado. .. .·.

520x13
600x13
700x13
560xU
685x15

he lhought Downing, who

pit ched in both the 1963 and
t9f&gt;4 World Series for the
Yankee::;, wasn't as bad as the
figures would indicate (four
hits and four walks in 3 2-3

I

'\ .

. ·- -

-4_,. .....

Pirates, Vikings .hope
to end losing streaks

t- oll ow1ng are the statistics
for the first si)( games of the
1 97~ Meigs Marauder football
seas on .

victory will give Southern

California
the
Division title.

scoring.
Dodger Manager Walter AlStill, it hung the goat horns ston , whose mood rarely varies
on the likeable Dodger back- whether his team wins or loses,

Marauder slats

By United Press Intetnational
In July in its WFL inaugural,
the Southern California Sun
lost at Birmingham 11-7.
Tonight the Sun is rematched
with the · Americans and a

s~id

pi&lt;Jying right rield in tonight's
g;m1c wi th Steve Yeage r laking
· over ~hind the plate.
"They t the A's) got away
with murder," said, Ferguson.
"We hit lhree or four line shots
that they raught. They are a
tea m uf opportunists, to say the
1€'ast. "

margi n of difference , and . Ferguson in the third game of fourth game, I think, is the big
Tuesday night here,- Joe Fer- I his year's Classic.
one," said Dark. "Of course-,
guson, switched from right
His first error ca me in the you have to win the third one

ANY SIZE LISTED
BELOW

• ' I

.. ' \

Last Saturday in the opener,
a throwing error by Dodger
third baseman Ron Cey helped
the A's to the run in the eighth
inning that wound up "~ the

the first game

The World Football League, which this column, last summer,stated would fall flat on its face, is doing a good job living up
to that prediction .
Several teams have already had the rest or their 1974 season
schedule canceled, and 2 teams are presently not even paying
their players. The Detroit Wheels, one of the teams that is
through for the year, has probably the flattest tire of all; and the
Jacksonville Sharks also are not payi• their players (for 5 of the
last 6 games).
There are plenty of capable players still with that burning
desire to bump heads, which is one reason for supporting the
WFL in it.s venture. But the American public, over.saturated with
things I&lt;&gt; do both partiCipatory and on the boob tube, doesn' t need
the WFL and ob\l'iously doesn't want it.
Ftiday night high school football, Saturday afternoon
collegiate ball and Sunday afternoon pro football is enough for
one week without adding the WFL on Thursday night ; all of
which is intertwined with conflicting sports such as the World
Series, and the approaching sports of basketball and hockey.

Baritones and Trombones

~-------------·------------

was the loser although he

have gotten the brea~ twice,
so maybe it's no surprise they

+++

ffiLUMBUS .(UP!) - State
sales tax collections for the
first three months of fiscall975
were up by $25 million, or 10.6
per cent, over the corresponding period in fiscal 1974, Ohio
Treasurer Gertrude W. Donahey said Tuesday.
CoUections of $261 million
through Sept. 30 compared
with $236 million in ftscal 1974,
said Mrs. Donahey. She said
I .
September coilections totaled
$81.8 million.
September state ineome tax
collections were $33.8 million, ·
bringing 'to $117 million the
.
total for the three-mon!h
'
.
·~ !
period. The treasurer said
state income tax collections
were· ahead · oi last year's
comparable total by $1L7
million, or 11.1 per cent.
Also ahead of last year's
' ·.
.,:
schedule were the estate tax,
by $2.1 million; the.intangibles
. DWIGHT GOINS, MEIGS HIGH SCHOOt band director,
tax, by $7.2 million; the
is
showing
giving out the orders during practice session.
cigarette tax, by $1.6 million;
Fred
Ruth
is
assistant band instructor.
and the corporation franchise
tax, by $1.1 million.
'l'otal September state tax
coljectionS were $210 million, tipn to $70!!,5 million, $48.5
. '
bringing the year's accumula- million over•the 1973 figure.

games to one.

along the Oakland A's and IA&gt;s
An~eles Dod'"gers are S(l evenly
matched that the ·breaks wilt
decide the 1974 World Series.
Mter three games, the A's

Trumpet section

Collections

lead the Dodgers today two

loser and
Holtzman guing out &lt;~fter 4 1-3
inning.'i with no decision .
Tut-sd~y night, .lim "Ga tfish " Hunter , a 25-game winner
during lhP regular season,
wf.'nt 7 1-3 innings and wound
up with his fourth World Series
vil'tory in as many decisions
nvel' three seasons. Al Downing

body has been saying l'ighl

balances
CHICAGO (UP!) - Hog
producers today can barely
break even, an Indiana farmer
who raises hogs along the
Wabash River said, and predicted pork supplies will be
down 15 to 20 'per cent next
year.
The farmer, William Rothenberger, told the annual
meeting of the American Meat
Institute here Tuesday that
counting the price of corn, bel!n
meal and "all-other costs," it
took $34.80 in mid-September to
produce 100 pounds of live hog.
"With analysts projecting
corn prices of $4. and soybean
prices of $8 per bushel, costs of
producing pork could go as
high as $45 per hundredweight," he said.
Rothenberger included buildings, equipment, interest,
medicine, supplies·, taxes, fuel,
electricity and labor in his "all
other costs."
Though more sophisticated
equipment has served to pare
down labor costs, he said
"added electricity, fuel, taxes
and annual ·Use costs of
buildings and equipment have
increased our total overhead
cost. These costs have increased about 50 per cent in the ·
last three years," he said.
He said building costs increased to $57 per hog
marketed in 1974, compared
with $35 in 1972.
Excessively large supplies of
cheaper beef will be the major
factor in keeping pork prices
down, he said.
"But with a possible reduction of 15 to 20 per cent in pork
supplies in th.e fall of 1975,
prices will probably rise to 1\&gt;e
upper $40 (range)," he said.

.. . . . ..

Oakland slips- past Los Angeles, 3-2

Birchfield, Brenda Bishop,
Tammy Blake, Mary Blaett- ,.

Thomas, Janie Va~

, ~

..

~ ~ ~·

3- The Da~ly SeiJl.inet, M.iddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesd")·., 0&lt;·1 . 16. tn74

.160 in Marauder Band

Jo

·... ' r

.'

,.
I .·.
&gt;

•

•
I

...

�~

. ..

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

...... ,.

... ..... .

.. ,

'

'

..

~._..

·1' '· •

i

• .•

• .1

.... ..

• .

.,

I" &gt; •

•

' I

"'

"'

_.

•I

•

,.

·'
4- The Daily Se nt in£'1, Middleport-Ponwroy , 0 ., Wt'dnt.•.sd.a~: , (h'L Hi, lfl74

Spotlight ·o n Big Eight .slate;
•d
l
Tennessee to· stein Crimson T . e
.

.

'

Ihal \\UUht ht.• ~~f in. I ~-~~~~- llh · 1•td
Buy ~ I

By l\'lajor Amos R; Hooplt•
Frarless Fon•&lt;·ash•r
Egad. frit'nds, this Sa lurday
the spotlight will shine nwn•
brightly tha n ever on tlw
glitteri ng t'Ollec linn of Big
Eight elevens as the lt'a~ ue
boasts of four excellen t rontests.
Highli ghting
the
sc hedule wi ll be the Nebraska'Kansas fr ay at Law ren rr .
whic h marks the 8Ist mee ting
or these riva ls. The other
games match Oklahoma vs.
Coloredo at Boulder, Iowa
State hosting Kansas Stale in
Ames and Oklahoma Stale
entertaining Missouri in Sti llwater .
The hi gh-scoring, bow l .
minded Nebraska Cornhuskers
will rack up victory No. 57 in
this long-lime series as they
roll to a 37-21 win . For
Okl ahoma.
still
under
bowlgame suspension, it will
be a wild and woolly 42-22
co nquest of the Colorado
Buffaloes. The other two
contests wi ll be very tight with
Kansas State taking a 15-14
victory over Iowa State and
Missouri 's T igers tur ning back
the Cowboys, 17·14.
A pair of interesting intrastate games are on tap as
Florida and Florida State meet
in Tallahassee, a nd No rth
Carolina State visits North
Carolina. Our crysstal ball heh heh - sees the Florida
Gators s lidin g past the
Sminoles , 17-14 , and the
Wolfpack clawing out a 31-18
triwnph ove r North Ca rolina 's
Tar Heels .
Jove, friends , tempus fugit!
And this Saturday at Champaign has been declare d
"Golden Aniver sary - Red
Grange Day." Can yo u believe
50 years have passed since that
memo rable after noon when
Red Gra nge blasted off on
endzone run s of 96, 67, 56 an d 44
yards the first four times he
handled the ball as he led the

So ul h •·r·n ~~ 111 s

F 1w 111(' clouiJii' I'S amnP L: ~ - PI. I,

lpt lilt' n~t){f l's 1ly remi 11d y1 •11 it
was t!w Hnup!e l•'ort'I.'~I SI wliicl1
~il\'t' you Wi sl'Hnsin In
j1·l!
Ni' hr as ka and M i ssouri 1u

s!wck

Arizon:~

rum ph !
Now

go

St,.!i·
on

wit h

!1;11··
111~

fur t"('HSI.

Air Forrt• 21. NaY.\' 17
Arizona St. as. t :tah 20
,\uburn 21. Ga. 1\·(·h 6
Bri~. Young 2K. t:TEP 17
Hrnwn 15, Dartmouth 13
Dukt• 24 ,' Clrmso n 20
Oklahoma 42. Cn loradu 22
Tnll'do J:t Dayton 21
F urm an 2~. E. Tt•nn St. 6
Florida 17. Florida St. 14
Parifi&lt;· 39. F r rs no St. 7
. Gt•orgia 23. Vanderbilt 20
Harvard 32. fornell 14
lltini to a 39-14 win over fabled Houston 42 , Villanova 13
Michigan ? Ye~. he did , a nd for Idaho 36. Montana 8
those among you too yo un g to lltinois 27, Mich. St. 14
remember the feats of the Kansas St. lS. luwa St. ;
Galloping Ghost. let me a lso Nt• braska 37, Kansas 21
te ll you Red scored a fifth Kent St. 44. Utah St. 6
touchdown that day and passed Kentucky 22. LSt: li
for the on ly other Illinois score.
Penn. 21. Lafayette 6
Egad. there may never be
Louisville 35, Drake H
another like hirn!
W. Mieh. 26. Mar&lt;hall 6
There' ll be anothej Michiga n Maryland 49, Wake Fon•st 7
te am at Champaign this Miss. St. 35, Mmphis St.
Saturday and the lllini is
12
cooking up some surprises ror Miami 1OJ 3~. Bowling Grrf.'n
them . In a knockdown , dragout
H
battle, the '74 Illinois eleven Minnesota 21, Iowa 14
will whip the Michigan State
Miss. 44, S. Carolina 6
Spartans. 27-14.
N. Carolina St. 31, N.
Saving the best for the last.
Carolina 28
we - um-kumph are N. Tex. St. 25, N. Mex. St.
pre pared to give you the upset
21
of the yea r - Tennessee 31, Purdue 36, Northwestern 1i
Alabama 28! Can't be, you Notre Dame 49, Army t4
say? Well, dear reade rs, Ohio St. 47, Indiana 6
shocking as that may be that's Ohio U. 39, Morehead St. 7
what's in the cards and 'tis a Missouri 17, Okla. St. 14
shame indeed that previ ous Calif. 25. Oregon St. 6
commitments preclude my Southern Cal. 38, Oregon 7
being in vene raiJie Ney land Penn St. 44. Syracuse 21
Stadiwn to see the Volunteers Pitt. 35, Boston Col. tJ
startle Bear Bryan t's Boys. Princeton 20. Colgate 0
That's one game I'd - hak-kaff San .Jose St. 24 . San Diego
- pay to see! ~Ed . Note : t\nd
St. 21

-.'
FliT LL
F••EI••T

"'Pulhcf'n Ill.

:u;,

'\urllwru Il l.

~~~

S\H ' :!!1. Hkt· li
Su. !\1iss. :'~ . \ "\-11 10
Stanfurtl :li . W:1sh. 2H
T:lllltm :Ill. SW l.uuisimm

to
llul.\ ('russ 21.

T~·tn Jih-

6

Tt·nn. :n . .'\lahama 2~
Tt·x. ;\&amp; M :?ti. TCl) 14
Tt•x. Tt•t·h :\fi, .'\ rizmm 20
Tt·xas ~-; . .1\ rk1111sas ~ I
T ulan t· :r;. l'il:ult·l S
Tulsa 17. W. Tt·x. St. 15
t ·t ·l .1\ :1,1. Wash. St. 15
\'irgini;:l :!0. \ ' ot. Tt·&lt;·h 1i
Miami, F la. ::!4. Wt•st \ 'a. 12

Wis&lt;·nnsin 28
\o\ ~· uming 46. Nt•w ~h'x. 26
Yak '!S, ( 'nlumbia 12
lrnnlun 20 Atlwns 7
(~a llipnli s 22 ~.o~-:a n 20
.l;ukson 66 Wavt'rly 21'1
Mt'igs H Wt'llslnn j ·
North Gallia 28 Hannan TnH'l'
:~; .

P h i l.;
Atlanta
NY RangC'rs

1

1

1

I

1

0
1

o

w.

he desires .
Balanga also attempted to
offset rwnors that the rainy
season had set in in his cotmtry
and that the fight could run into
another delay. " Whil e th e
rainy season begins Oct. 1, the
ful l effect does not make itself
felt until Nov. 15 and even then
rain occurs only two to three
timd- a week for a maximum
ollfltvo hours a day," he
claimed.
And if it does r ain? Balanga
was ready for that . ."A
structure has been constructed
IJJ cover the rin g and all

3

"I

7

'

Vancouver
Mi nn es ota

Chicago
Kan C ity

0 2 0 0
0 ) 0 0

•I

5

6

15

2 0

2

6

2
.7

0 0
1

a. 11 1 1

Montreal
Washington

0
0

1 'l
2 1

2
1

d

II
11
4

IS
1)

Ca l if
Bu ffalo
B oston

0

I
7

1 ]
0 2

1

1

I

10
11

11
15

7

II

Tuesday's Re su lt s
NY I s l ander s 6 Montr('al J
L os Angeles I Washington 1
Va n couver 6 St . L oui s 4
Tonigllf's Games
Ca lifornia at NY Ranger s
Al l a n Ia a r Oe t roil
Los Angeles a l T oronto
Bos lo n at Chicago
Vancouver at Minnesota

70 91

~VB

•,

ll]li:JOII:J

1u..ua

SllOII

NHO)

·3nssu

HVr 70 II

H3WV3H~
S31131HVI\ 11"

31VIN·33JJOO

.-

~

•'
'•·,

NOilVNHVl

~

3lAVS

•

lll3H9VdS

i

.-'•
i
I

VALUES
TO 17.98

NV'J

~6l

USE OUR
CONVENIENT
No.cHARGE
LAYAWAY PLAN
51 HOLDS
MOST ITEMS

SPEGAL PRICES thru SAl OCT. 19TH

·zo tz

'ZO 8Z

M31S
318V1393A

.18IJIIQ

a1dde

~MOll~~

•

. REGULAR 51.79

••

STRETCH NYLON
BRA AND BIKINI

'.

SNV'J£

0300311HS ~
• 1.:11111!_.......

·~

NBOl
AU&gt;IO!S

WV3H~

13NH3M 310HM HO

3HOOW UNIO .

',

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · P~EAS.E F ·OLD

SET

.

REMOVE FROM PAPER AND USE AS A SHOPPING GUIDE

HERE---------------------------------------------------------•--•

GIRLS

DC POWER
SUPPLY

SLACKS
ONE SIZE
FITS ALL

Artd
Recorder
Complete
with
Cassette

Big selection of
assorted sty les
and
fabrics .
Sizes 7 to 14.

CHARGE IT

STURDY

MEN'S
BAN-LON

TOKAY

,..

"

p
0

u
N
D

SOC:KS

YARD

Large selection
of Sol ids and

WHITE

Comfortable
stretch
nylon
fashion
basic .

s

CORDUROY
-MATERIAL

DELAWARE U.S. NO. 1

RED

REG. 129.94

ringside seats."

91

~
·-·~~ •·OlVlOd
sana
~~-

·zo 81

VOl

,
:;'

TERRIFIC
SAVINGS

TAPE
PLAYER

68
~

r
.
ICIJ~ ~. ·zo
ltNIIIOd

"91

~z

'Hl

NIVld

..

•

CASSETII

•

131101

'I

NO. 7608

~

993 Y m8

$~)1Y1:1

'·
,_

Brown

AC OR

•

...,

Mist y Navy
and

SOUNDESIGN

.

SH3&gt;1lVHl V91

MOHl 900 ~

,•

Fa II Fashion
NEWS!

MISS
AMEPJCA.
SHOES

-

·~n-I

66"t

': ,

Chapman's
SHOES POMEROY

.

X09

,.

• - --«r--7

6

Oiv1sion 4
w. I. t. pis g t ga
2 0 I 5 15 7

Tor on t o

Sl )IVl~ OllSOHJ L

·-...

gf ga
I ,J 9

Pittsburgh
Detroit

o

r

.

\

,... 9118 "81

·.'

12
4

12

O tv is ion 3
w . 1. 1. ph
Lo sAn g e res

10

1 J
0 2

B

r

89

pt s g l ga
1 J 1J 13

1. t .
1 t

St Lo u is

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

Tickets are ·not selling
well for big title fight

-1

Oivis1on 2

6

Snutht•rn 30 Symmt•s \'ullt· ~,
12
Kygt·r fn·t·k 14 Alt·xc.utdt•r
12
Trimblt.• 28 Eas tt.•rn 20
Grt•f.'n 20 Sout hwt.•st't•rn 6
Calhoun 20 Wahama 0
Pt. Pl&lt;•asant J8 Ripley 0
F t. Fryt.• 44 Wa rf&lt;'n Lo&lt;'a I
6
Ft.• dt•ral-Horking 1 Vinton
County 6
Relpr(' 8 Nelsonvill~York 7
Chesapeake 20 Crum 8
S&lt;1uth P oint 40 Coat Grove 14
Ironton St. Joe 6 Fairland 0
Rot·k Hill 30 Oak Hill 20

7

.

..

the Falcons' 26.10 win ove•
jur ed regu lar Jeff Kelly ,
Kent
State.
responded with 16 tacliles and
Scott, who had been injured
twice sacked Ohio University
the week before and was
quarter backs for
losses
considered questionable him·
totaling 16 ,yards in Sa turday 's
self,
tossed scor ing passes of
31-3 Redskins victory. Five of
22, 52, eigh t, 27 and three
his tack les were solo efforts.
yards, his only five &lt;:Om·
A 6--1, 21(4Jound sophomor e
pletions in seven a ttempts . He
from Garfield Heights, Ohio,
also rushed for 49 yards on 11
Hasenohr l becomes Miami's
carries.
•
third defensive P layer. of the
Scott, a senior from SycamoWeek · t his season. Middle
re, Ill., came off the bench
b'Uard Brad Cousino previously
was select~d · twice for the · when starting quarterback Art
xaroc h s uffere d a broken
honor.
collarbone on the third play of
Scott edged out Bowling
the game and threw -a schoolGreen's sophomore tailback
record five touchdown passes
Dave Preston, who ga ined 179
in the Cardinals' 38-23 win over
yards in 28 carries and had a
Richmond .
touchdown run of 26 yards in

CO LUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) ~
Miami defensive tackle Joe
Ha s l'nohrl and R~ll Slate
quarterback Rick Scott have
14.
been voted Mid-American Con· AI Gallipolis, the Blue Devils ference defensive and ofwon 15-6 and Hi-14, then lost 15· fensive Players of the Week.
'l.. The next mat('h for Southern
Hasenohrl edged out Toledo
0
is o~· t • 22 at 6 p .m . when the free safety Scott Resseguie a nd
Tornados will host Gallipolis . Ball State safety Shafer Suggs
for the defens ive honor . Resseguie had · two pass lnterceplinfls, one which he returned
for a touchdown, and was in on
13 tac kles last Sa turday. Suggs
blocked two field goa l a ttempts
and had a pass interception in
Ball State's victory .
NHL S!andtng s
Diviston I
Hascnohrl, starting his first
w. I. I . pi S 9 1
NY lslndrs
2 0 1 'i 11 qr~ college game in place of in-

Pro Standings

('iun. :,2 , Wkhila St. 12

!\1khigan

RI\CINJ ·:
Tht..• Southl'm
Turn ;tdo vu lh- yh;_l ll tet.tn 1
dd:(•:tlt•d Ml'i.gs 2 ~&lt;11 1\CS lu I
h1•! q re droJ1JllllJ.( 2 oul nf :1 to
t:a ll ipolis lasl week. The
Turnadu m·tlcr:-;, lopped Ml'ig s
J:,.n, 1[)-fl, then lost the third , 16-

Miami tackle, Ball Sta~e
quarterback M·AC honorees -

•

'

Reg. 94c. Stock
up at this low,
low price.

50 LB.
,;..
~~

BAG

St~elers

healthy ·
first time
PEAK

PITTSBURGH ( UP! ) Coach Chuck Noll .says for the
first time this season all his
Pittsburgh Steelers players
will be physically fit Sunday
when they meet the Cleveland
Browns at Three Rivers StadiDefensive end Dwight White
suffered a bruised heel last
Sunday when the Steelers beat
the Kansas City Chiefs, 34-24,
but was expected to be ready
for the Browns.
F'rarico Harris, AFC Rookieof-the•Year in 1972, who missed
th1, last two games because of ·
an ankle injury, also will play.
- Noll said the former Penn State
star could have played ·· i'n
' Kansas City bu\ he wanted him
-to be completely healthy before
S(&lt;!ing action.

· ·RUFFLED TIER &amp;
VALANCE· SET
Use Our. Christmas lay Away Plan!

•
_/

~~f::~d
~v~3
97
a
to ·18

Large Selection.

· ·

· ·

EA.

:o .-c. MU

·

VALUES TO 7.98 1

Assorted . ·
· Styles and

'

.
'

..

'$497

Fabrics. Misses ·. ·

GROUND HOURLY

.BEEF

BEANS

MISSES SlACKS

DEG. 14.57 TO '5.44

Si~es

Sets

Permanent pre ss po l yester / rayon .

S!"T

Sizes· 10 to 18.
.
CHARGE IT. .

·2LB.·
BAG

·LB.

PHY CO.
.

'

,.

.
. . ....o.•.•.o:&gt;OCo.o
;.;.;.:.-..:•;•;O::•!&lt;¢~'•''f}fJ•(•',...,•,y,::u..,...._,.,.,..-....y..·,:.:.:.ooN··- · :::!ll!l
, ~-~~~
...
.o:.:!~ ·
• !o~U.6»Y.&lt;!b!o!o':o!·'•'...-.0•:v.o"o':~ • • ,

•
.... 'r .

RE~.
SET'2.98

'$7,99

pet. cotton
Jr . · Boys Mat100

BOYS .SLACKS

Yellow, green, p ink , blue-, white .

'

..

DENIM SETS
Regular

~-2 5 !
~

. JR. BOYS

~- GRO. UND

NAVY

TERRIFIC SAVINGS
ON

cA(mp!fi} "COLLEEN" .

um.

,

\

.I

.

•

'

'

.~
·· . . ,

\'

..

...
·'

.• ..•
'

'·

..I

.
.

1

'
·~

..

'·

·.~·..

,.

•

.

.ll

_,,

... ,

.

.,

'

' , .. · I

.'

L

�~

. ..

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

...... ,.

... ..... .

.. ,

'

'

..

~._..

·1' '· •

i

• .•

• .1

.... ..

• .

.,

I" &gt; •

•

' I

"'

"'

_.

•I

•

,.

·'
4- The Daily Se nt in£'1, Middleport-Ponwroy , 0 ., Wt'dnt.•.sd.a~: , (h'L Hi, lfl74

Spotlight ·o n Big Eight .slate;
•d
l
Tennessee to· stein Crimson T . e
.

.

'

Ihal \\UUht ht.• ~~f in. I ~-~~~~- llh · 1•td
Buy ~ I

By l\'lajor Amos R; Hooplt•
Frarless Fon•&lt;·ash•r
Egad. frit'nds, this Sa lurday
the spotlight will shine nwn•
brightly tha n ever on tlw
glitteri ng t'Ollec linn of Big
Eight elevens as the lt'a~ ue
boasts of four excellen t rontests.
Highli ghting
the
sc hedule wi ll be the Nebraska'Kansas fr ay at Law ren rr .
whic h marks the 8Ist mee ting
or these riva ls. The other
games match Oklahoma vs.
Coloredo at Boulder, Iowa
State hosting Kansas Stale in
Ames and Oklahoma Stale
entertaining Missouri in Sti llwater .
The hi gh-scoring, bow l .
minded Nebraska Cornhuskers
will rack up victory No. 57 in
this long-lime series as they
roll to a 37-21 win . For
Okl ahoma.
still
under
bowlgame suspension, it will
be a wild and woolly 42-22
co nquest of the Colorado
Buffaloes. The other two
contests wi ll be very tight with
Kansas State taking a 15-14
victory over Iowa State and
Missouri 's T igers tur ning back
the Cowboys, 17·14.
A pair of interesting intrastate games are on tap as
Florida and Florida State meet
in Tallahassee, a nd No rth
Carolina State visits North
Carolina. Our crysstal ball heh heh - sees the Florida
Gators s lidin g past the
Sminoles , 17-14 , and the
Wolfpack clawing out a 31-18
triwnph ove r North Ca rolina 's
Tar Heels .
Jove, friends , tempus fugit!
And this Saturday at Champaign has been declare d
"Golden Aniver sary - Red
Grange Day." Can yo u believe
50 years have passed since that
memo rable after noon when
Red Gra nge blasted off on
endzone run s of 96, 67, 56 an d 44
yards the first four times he
handled the ball as he led the

So ul h •·r·n ~~ 111 s

F 1w 111(' clouiJii' I'S amnP L: ~ - PI. I,

lpt lilt' n~t){f l's 1ly remi 11d y1 •11 it
was t!w Hnup!e l•'ort'I.'~I SI wliicl1
~il\'t' you Wi sl'Hnsin In
j1·l!
Ni' hr as ka and M i ssouri 1u

s!wck

Arizon:~

rum ph !
Now

go

St,.!i·
on

wit h

!1;11··
111~

fur t"('HSI.

Air Forrt• 21. NaY.\' 17
Arizona St. as. t :tah 20
,\uburn 21. Ga. 1\·(·h 6
Bri~. Young 2K. t:TEP 17
Hrnwn 15, Dartmouth 13
Dukt• 24 ,' Clrmso n 20
Oklahoma 42. Cn loradu 22
Tnll'do J:t Dayton 21
F urm an 2~. E. Tt•nn St. 6
Florida 17. Florida St. 14
Parifi&lt;· 39. F r rs no St. 7
. Gt•orgia 23. Vanderbilt 20
Harvard 32. fornell 14
lltini to a 39-14 win over fabled Houston 42 , Villanova 13
Michigan ? Ye~. he did , a nd for Idaho 36. Montana 8
those among you too yo un g to lltinois 27, Mich. St. 14
remember the feats of the Kansas St. lS. luwa St. ;
Galloping Ghost. let me a lso Nt• braska 37, Kansas 21
te ll you Red scored a fifth Kent St. 44. Utah St. 6
touchdown that day and passed Kentucky 22. LSt: li
for the on ly other Illinois score.
Penn. 21. Lafayette 6
Egad. there may never be
Louisville 35, Drake H
another like hirn!
W. Mieh. 26. Mar&lt;hall 6
There' ll be anothej Michiga n Maryland 49, Wake Fon•st 7
te am at Champaign this Miss. St. 35, Mmphis St.
Saturday and the lllini is
12
cooking up some surprises ror Miami 1OJ 3~. Bowling Grrf.'n
them . In a knockdown , dragout
H
battle, the '74 Illinois eleven Minnesota 21, Iowa 14
will whip the Michigan State
Miss. 44, S. Carolina 6
Spartans. 27-14.
N. Carolina St. 31, N.
Saving the best for the last.
Carolina 28
we - um-kumph are N. Tex. St. 25, N. Mex. St.
pre pared to give you the upset
21
of the yea r - Tennessee 31, Purdue 36, Northwestern 1i
Alabama 28! Can't be, you Notre Dame 49, Army t4
say? Well, dear reade rs, Ohio St. 47, Indiana 6
shocking as that may be that's Ohio U. 39, Morehead St. 7
what's in the cards and 'tis a Missouri 17, Okla. St. 14
shame indeed that previ ous Calif. 25. Oregon St. 6
commitments preclude my Southern Cal. 38, Oregon 7
being in vene raiJie Ney land Penn St. 44. Syracuse 21
Stadiwn to see the Volunteers Pitt. 35, Boston Col. tJ
startle Bear Bryan t's Boys. Princeton 20. Colgate 0
That's one game I'd - hak-kaff San .Jose St. 24 . San Diego
- pay to see! ~Ed . Note : t\nd
St. 21

-.'
FliT LL
F••EI••T

"'Pulhcf'n Ill.

:u;,

'\urllwru Il l.

~~~

S\H ' :!!1. Hkt· li
Su. !\1iss. :'~ . \ "\-11 10
Stanfurtl :li . W:1sh. 2H
T:lllltm :Ill. SW l.uuisimm

to
llul.\ ('russ 21.

T~·tn Jih-

6

Tt·nn. :n . .'\lahama 2~
Tt·x. ;\&amp; M :?ti. TCl) 14
Tt•x. Tt•t·h :\fi, .'\ rizmm 20
Tt·xas ~-; . .1\ rk1111sas ~ I
T ulan t· :r;. l'il:ult·l S
Tulsa 17. W. Tt·x. St. 15
t ·t ·l .1\ :1,1. Wash. St. 15
\'irgini;:l :!0. \ ' ot. Tt·&lt;·h 1i
Miami, F la. ::!4. Wt•st \ 'a. 12

Wis&lt;·nnsin 28
\o\ ~· uming 46. Nt•w ~h'x. 26
Yak '!S, ( 'nlumbia 12
lrnnlun 20 Atlwns 7
(~a llipnli s 22 ~.o~-:a n 20
.l;ukson 66 Wavt'rly 21'1
Mt'igs H Wt'llslnn j ·
North Gallia 28 Hannan TnH'l'
:~; .

P h i l.;
Atlanta
NY RangC'rs

1

1

1

I

1

0
1

o

w.

he desires .
Balanga also attempted to
offset rwnors that the rainy
season had set in in his cotmtry
and that the fight could run into
another delay. " Whil e th e
rainy season begins Oct. 1, the
ful l effect does not make itself
felt until Nov. 15 and even then
rain occurs only two to three
timd- a week for a maximum
ollfltvo hours a day," he
claimed.
And if it does r ain? Balanga
was ready for that . ."A
structure has been constructed
IJJ cover the rin g and all

3

"I

7

'

Vancouver
Mi nn es ota

Chicago
Kan C ity

0 2 0 0
0 ) 0 0

•I

5

6

15

2 0

2

6

2
.7

0 0
1

a. 11 1 1

Montreal
Washington

0
0

1 'l
2 1

2
1

d

II
11
4

IS
1)

Ca l if
Bu ffalo
B oston

0

I
7

1 ]
0 2

1

1

I

10
11

11
15

7

II

Tuesday's Re su lt s
NY I s l ander s 6 Montr('al J
L os Angeles I Washington 1
Va n couver 6 St . L oui s 4
Tonigllf's Games
Ca lifornia at NY Ranger s
Al l a n Ia a r Oe t roil
Los Angeles a l T oronto
Bos lo n at Chicago
Vancouver at Minnesota

70 91

~VB

•,

ll]li:JOII:J

1u..ua

SllOII

NHO)

·3nssu

HVr 70 II

H3WV3H~
S31131HVI\ 11"

31VIN·33JJOO

.-

~

•'
'•·,

NOilVNHVl

~

3lAVS

•

lll3H9VdS

i

.-'•
i
I

VALUES
TO 17.98

NV'J

~6l

USE OUR
CONVENIENT
No.cHARGE
LAYAWAY PLAN
51 HOLDS
MOST ITEMS

SPEGAL PRICES thru SAl OCT. 19TH

·zo tz

'ZO 8Z

M31S
318V1393A

.18IJIIQ

a1dde

~MOll~~

•

. REGULAR 51.79

••

STRETCH NYLON
BRA AND BIKINI

'.

SNV'J£

0300311HS ~
• 1.:11111!_.......

·~

NBOl
AU&gt;IO!S

WV3H~

13NH3M 310HM HO

3HOOW UNIO .

',

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · P~EAS.E F ·OLD

SET

.

REMOVE FROM PAPER AND USE AS A SHOPPING GUIDE

HERE---------------------------------------------------------•--•

GIRLS

DC POWER
SUPPLY

SLACKS
ONE SIZE
FITS ALL

Artd
Recorder
Complete
with
Cassette

Big selection of
assorted sty les
and
fabrics .
Sizes 7 to 14.

CHARGE IT

STURDY

MEN'S
BAN-LON

TOKAY

,..

"

p
0

u
N
D

SOC:KS

YARD

Large selection
of Sol ids and

WHITE

Comfortable
stretch
nylon
fashion
basic .

s

CORDUROY
-MATERIAL

DELAWARE U.S. NO. 1

RED

REG. 129.94

ringside seats."

91

~
·-·~~ •·OlVlOd
sana
~~-

·zo 81

VOl

,
:;'

TERRIFIC
SAVINGS

TAPE
PLAYER

68
~

r
.
ICIJ~ ~. ·zo
ltNIIIOd

"91

~z

'Hl

NIVld

..

•

CASSETII

•

131101

'I

NO. 7608

~

993 Y m8

$~)1Y1:1

'·
,_

Brown

AC OR

•

...,

Mist y Navy
and

SOUNDESIGN

.

SH3&gt;1lVHl V91

MOHl 900 ~

,•

Fa II Fashion
NEWS!

MISS
AMEPJCA.
SHOES

-

·~n-I

66"t

': ,

Chapman's
SHOES POMEROY

.

X09

,.

• - --«r--7

6

Oiv1sion 4
w. I. t. pis g t ga
2 0 I 5 15 7

Tor on t o

Sl )IVl~ OllSOHJ L

·-...

gf ga
I ,J 9

Pittsburgh
Detroit

o

r

.

\

,... 9118 "81

·.'

12
4

12

O tv is ion 3
w . 1. 1. ph
Lo sAn g e res

10

1 J
0 2

B

r

89

pt s g l ga
1 J 1J 13

1. t .
1 t

St Lo u is

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

Tickets are ·not selling
well for big title fight

-1

Oivis1on 2

6

Snutht•rn 30 Symmt•s \'ullt· ~,
12
Kygt·r fn·t·k 14 Alt·xc.utdt•r
12
Trimblt.• 28 Eas tt.•rn 20
Grt•f.'n 20 Sout hwt.•st't•rn 6
Calhoun 20 Wahama 0
Pt. Pl&lt;•asant J8 Ripley 0
F t. Fryt.• 44 Wa rf&lt;'n Lo&lt;'a I
6
Ft.• dt•ral-Horking 1 Vinton
County 6
Relpr(' 8 Nelsonvill~York 7
Chesapeake 20 Crum 8
S&lt;1uth P oint 40 Coat Grove 14
Ironton St. Joe 6 Fairland 0
Rot·k Hill 30 Oak Hill 20

7

.

..

the Falcons' 26.10 win ove•
jur ed regu lar Jeff Kelly ,
Kent
State.
responded with 16 tacliles and
Scott, who had been injured
twice sacked Ohio University
the week before and was
quarter backs for
losses
considered questionable him·
totaling 16 ,yards in Sa turday 's
self,
tossed scor ing passes of
31-3 Redskins victory. Five of
22, 52, eigh t, 27 and three
his tack les were solo efforts.
yards, his only five &lt;:Om·
A 6--1, 21(4Jound sophomor e
pletions in seven a ttempts . He
from Garfield Heights, Ohio,
also rushed for 49 yards on 11
Hasenohr l becomes Miami's
carries.
•
third defensive P layer. of the
Scott, a senior from SycamoWeek · t his season. Middle
re, Ill., came off the bench
b'Uard Brad Cousino previously
was select~d · twice for the · when starting quarterback Art
xaroc h s uffere d a broken
honor.
collarbone on the third play of
Scott edged out Bowling
the game and threw -a schoolGreen's sophomore tailback
record five touchdown passes
Dave Preston, who ga ined 179
in the Cardinals' 38-23 win over
yards in 28 carries and had a
Richmond .
touchdown run of 26 yards in

CO LUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) ~
Miami defensive tackle Joe
Ha s l'nohrl and R~ll Slate
quarterback Rick Scott have
14.
been voted Mid-American Con· AI Gallipolis, the Blue Devils ference defensive and ofwon 15-6 and Hi-14, then lost 15· fensive Players of the Week.
'l.. The next mat('h for Southern
Hasenohrl edged out Toledo
0
is o~· t • 22 at 6 p .m . when the free safety Scott Resseguie a nd
Tornados will host Gallipolis . Ball State safety Shafer Suggs
for the defens ive honor . Resseguie had · two pass lnterceplinfls, one which he returned
for a touchdown, and was in on
13 tac kles last Sa turday. Suggs
blocked two field goa l a ttempts
and had a pass interception in
Ball State's victory .
NHL S!andtng s
Diviston I
Hascnohrl, starting his first
w. I. I . pi S 9 1
NY lslndrs
2 0 1 'i 11 qr~ college game in place of in-

Pro Standings

('iun. :,2 , Wkhila St. 12

!\1khigan

RI\CINJ ·:
Tht..• Southl'm
Turn ;tdo vu lh- yh;_l ll tet.tn 1
dd:(•:tlt•d Ml'i.gs 2 ~&lt;11 1\CS lu I
h1•! q re droJ1JllllJ.( 2 oul nf :1 to
t:a ll ipolis lasl week. The
Turnadu m·tlcr:-;, lopped Ml'ig s
J:,.n, 1[)-fl, then lost the third , 16-

Miami tackle, Ball Sta~e
quarterback M·AC honorees -

•

'

Reg. 94c. Stock
up at this low,
low price.

50 LB.
,;..
~~

BAG

St~elers

healthy ·
first time
PEAK

PITTSBURGH ( UP! ) Coach Chuck Noll .says for the
first time this season all his
Pittsburgh Steelers players
will be physically fit Sunday
when they meet the Cleveland
Browns at Three Rivers StadiDefensive end Dwight White
suffered a bruised heel last
Sunday when the Steelers beat
the Kansas City Chiefs, 34-24,
but was expected to be ready
for the Browns.
F'rarico Harris, AFC Rookieof-the•Year in 1972, who missed
th1, last two games because of ·
an ankle injury, also will play.
- Noll said the former Penn State
star could have played ·· i'n
' Kansas City bu\ he wanted him
-to be completely healthy before
S(&lt;!ing action.

· ·RUFFLED TIER &amp;
VALANCE· SET
Use Our. Christmas lay Away Plan!

•
_/

~~f::~d
~v~3
97
a
to ·18

Large Selection.

· ·

· ·

EA.

:o .-c. MU

·

VALUES TO 7.98 1

Assorted . ·
· Styles and

'

.
'

..

'$497

Fabrics. Misses ·. ·

GROUND HOURLY

.BEEF

BEANS

MISSES SlACKS

DEG. 14.57 TO '5.44

Si~es

Sets

Permanent pre ss po l yester / rayon .

S!"T

Sizes· 10 to 18.
.
CHARGE IT. .

·2LB.·
BAG

·LB.

PHY CO.
.

'

,.

.
. . ....o.•.•.o:&gt;OCo.o
;.;.;.:.-..:•;•;O::•!&lt;¢~'•''f}fJ•(•',...,•,y,::u..,...._,.,.,..-....y..·,:.:.:.ooN··- · :::!ll!l
, ~-~~~
...
.o:.:!~ ·
• !o~U.6»Y.&lt;!b!o!o':o!·'•'...-.0•:v.o"o':~ • • ,

•
.... 'r .

RE~.
SET'2.98

'$7,99

pet. cotton
Jr . · Boys Mat100

BOYS .SLACKS

Yellow, green, p ink , blue-, white .

'

..

DENIM SETS
Regular

~-2 5 !
~

. JR. BOYS

~- GRO. UND

NAVY

TERRIFIC SAVINGS
ON

cA(mp!fi} "COLLEEN" .

um.

,

\

.I

.

•

'

'

.~
·· . . ,

\'

..

...
·'

.• ..•
'

'·

..I

.
.

1

'
·~

..

'·

·.~·..

,.

•

.

.ll

_,,

... ,

.

.,

'

' , .. · I

.'

L

�................ -

'f

... ... 'i

:

7

. '•

WELL STOCKED DISPLAYS
NOW .
.
.

..

.GOLDEN &amp; RED DEUCIOUS
WINESAPS, ROME BEAUTY ·

LARGE 100 SIZE

I M'ddl

lnf:'.

l

APPLES
3 LB.
BAG

EA.

,,

.'

I-

·-'•

·,

.

l'h·r e"e ·.B
.·UCk 8

'II 'I.I .!'ISSI()EI.INEH

qvestionable

..·

·Sport

•

•

..- . .:o.-o.
.. . . ... ...
..

- , .,

.

~

-.

.;- ~~~

HEIU:A, Ohiu r UPI.1
Following I he rcshurfling uf

Sunday's gcnnc against . the
Pittsburgh Steelers .
The Rrowns, according to
oddsma kcrs in Las Vegas, are
15-poi nt underdogs to the
Steelers for the 1\FC Central
Divis ion contest at Three
Rivers Stadiwn . The game is a

players on [)ul.h the 11ffensivc
Mullin!' fra('tun•d a bi.m.t• in and ddt•nsivc te &lt;Jrus Hm.l
hi:; hand fiUI'ing pra('fice Hntl diangt•s in ('oaching assignwill lw ,)li T ilf nw lim.·up for .. mt•nt s. lht• ClcvelamJ Rrowns
luday
bcgctn
full-scale
workuuls in preparation for

Taxpayers file suit

SALE PLANNED
RACINE - The Happy
Husl!e rs Sunday School Class
uf th e We s leya n United
Methodist Church. Racine , will
hold a rummage sa le from 9
a .m . to 4 p .m .. Friday and
Salurday &lt;.~t !he Critt Rrmiford

;

OAKLAND 1UPI) - !\ group
of taxpayers has filed suit in
Alameda County Superior
Cnurt to prevent Char les 0 .
Finley from moving the A's
from 0,·: .and.
At the sam(' time , Robert T.
"•ha s. president of the Oaklaild Coliseum Commission,
'f,a id Tuesday that Finley
cannot break a lease with the
Colisewn which runs through
1987.
"Neith er Mr. Finley nor the
American League has ever
indicated by word or deed their
desire to move the team," said
Nahas.
However,
a
part
o£
paragraph seven of the lease
Finley signed with the

Srore. Vine Sl., Hat'ine .'

1\F.IIOS DROP TWO

HOUSTON 1 UP! I - Free
agent goalie I':arl Bowie and
defenseman Le Crozier were
sent to the minor leagues
Tuesday by the Houston !\eros,
champions of the World
Hockey Association.
Bowie was sent to Spokane,
Wash . while Crozier went to
Winston-Salem as the Aeros
trimmed down to 20 players.

Colisewn before the A's move d
here in 1968 states that Finley
could move or sell the team
w 11 ~ the approval of Coliseum
Inc., " which consent shall not
unreasonably withheld ."
Finley refused to comment
on the suit and said he stands
on H s tatement he made in Los
Angeles Sunday that "we have
talk ed with no one abo ut
moving the ball club. "
There were publis hed
reports last week. on the eve of
the first game of the World
Series, that The A's were
headed for Seattle and that
conferences to that effect had
been held with the concurrence
of American League Presidenl
Lee MacPhaiL

oo

sellout.

ing system for thi s weekend's

Sec.:ond -year wide receiver
.Steve Holden, still nurs ing OJ
knee injury, wa1&gt; listed Hs
doubtful for the ga m e, and
offensive ta ckle Pete Adams
may see sorJll! aclion &lt;:~ga ins t
the Sleelers.
Definitely out ror the game
are offensive guard Chuck
Hutchinson , suffering from a
groi n injury, and wide rece iver
Jubilee Dunbar, who broke hi s
wrist in last Sundays 34-24 loss
to Ci ncinnati.
For the first time this season,
all 47 of the Stee lers will be
physica lly fit when they battle
the Browns. Pitt&lt;;burgh had the
usual Monday off , but returned
for a brief workout Tuesday
afternoon follow ing a brief
rtleeting.
After the Browns reviewed
film s of the loss to the Ben gals,
the team broke up into individual unit meetings 1'uesday and then ran the mile.
Coaches began preparing the
ga me plan to be used aga inst
the Steelers.
Browns head coach Nick
Skorich has changed his coach·

/';.~ra de

g:une. He sa id offensive coordin &lt;Ator Oick Wood and defen-

sive coordinator Richie McCHbe would leave the !-i ideli ne
to work upstairs from a
scou ting booth in order to get a
better view of the action.
Thl..'y will rep lace line ba cker
coach Dale Lindsey and Fran
Polsfoot , coach of the wide
rere1vers, who r.Jow will he
relegated to field duty.
FESTIV 1\L SF.T
A fall festival will be he ld
Saturday, Or: l. 19 at 6 ::10 p.m .
at the Portl and Elementa r y
School. Children in costumes
will b.e awarded prizes . The re
will he free enter'tainment
There will be games , door
prizes will be given a nd
refresh me nt~ sold . The event is.

bemg sponsored by the PTO.
SALE DAYS SF.T
A rwnmage sal e sponsor ed

hy th e Me igs Com munity
School will be held fr om 9 a. m.
to 4 p.m. Thursday and Friday
at the Fry buildin g; Mill St.,
Middleport.

"SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY

$

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

·..

- -· ,.. - .......

Browns prepare for ·Steelers

SI\N VHAJ'&lt;a'IS('q &lt;.lll'l 1
Vl' llT&lt;•• • (;,,]cl,•n Sl ;~lt• Warriurs
gu;ll·•l .lt•ff Mullin~ \'&gt;ils sidl·!iJ•Ptl Tu~·:-;tlav a fh• r hn•;.•king
II is · ho•••d ir~ pra.t ':iu•. llw
N c• 1 i u 11 ; 1 1 Has k t' 1b l.l II
A~~ol'i;1 ! ior1 dub n·vcalt'&lt;L

WHERE ECONOMY ~RIGINATES
'.'

....

~

f'po rt-Pomrru.v .O .. Wedul•sd.t\', Od ."'t6. t'!174

COLUMBUS illl'll - Lint•. backer Ken Kuhn, rtefensive
Big Ten F'"Jtbal! Roundup
CHICAGO l UP! l - North- moving better than he had in . tackle Pete Kusirk and safely
western may have a 1-4 record three weeks ._He is expected to Tim Fox or Ohio State all wL'rP
lis ted as questionable for ·nw
but Purdue Coach Alex Agasc • start Saturday against lowa .
.Iowa prepared .for the game Buckeyes' lry at ::; ix stn\igltt
says the Wildcats- his team's
1
opponent this week--are "a ~ J.tl a. ~WO·hour drill emphasiz- wins here Saturday against
mg Mmnesota's multi~et or.. Indiana .
good foolball team."
fen
se. Coach Bob Commings
Kuhn, out with a shoulder
Agase should know. He
lauded
offensive
tackle
Rod
injury,
and Kusick and Fox,
helped recruit some of the
Wildcats while head coach· Walters as a legitimate All both sidelined with knee inthere before shifting to Purdue America candidate, saying the juries , sa t out Tuesday's
last season. Indiana Coach 6-fooH. 24().pound junior "does routine practice session. OSU
John Pont took Agase's spot at his job as well as anyone football coaeh · Woody Hayes
Northwestern, making for a a roWld and has made very few was expected to begin scaling
mistakes.''
down workouts Wedn esday for
healthy rivalry since then .
At Wisconsin , Coach John his No. 1 Buckeyes.
"Northwestern is coming
Also missing practice Toesback frJm som~ injuries and is Jardine found a few bright
spots
in
reviewing
his
team's
day
were tigh t, end Mike
a good football teani," Agase
crushing
defeat
by
Ohio
State.
Bortoszek,
who stL,tain&lt;'!i a
said. "Every 'team on our
He
said
offensive
Dennis
Lick·
lower
back
spra.in
on the bus
schedule is very capable of
beating people, and Northwest- had "a helluva day" and also ride to last Saturday 's game
ern bas some good football praised defensive back Tim ag'ainst Wisconsin : tailback
McConnell , fullback Larry Archie Griffin, recovering
players.''
Canada,
linebacker Rick Jaki- from minor bumps and bruises
Purdue has not been overpowering either at 1-3-1. Agase ous and defensive lineman picked up ·against the Badgers;
guard Steve Myers, who
said, "The big thing now is to John Rasmussen.
More
Badgers
will
have
to
sprained
an ankle in drills
keep our kids up mentally and
have
good
days
this
Saturday
Monday:
and center Dick
physically. They are so close to
being a winning football team, when they host second-ranked Mack, out with a knee injury
suffered in last week's game.
record-wise. I've got a lot of Michigan.
Indiana gets Ohio State this
confidence. i'n them. "
week, and Hoosier Coach Lee
Pont announced Tuesday Corso said his team may get
that one of a long list of injured - involved with some "reckless
Wildcats, tailback Greg
abandonment." He added, "InBoykin, will be redshirted. diana has very little to lose and
Boykin, a starter last year as a much to gain. We can't change
sophomore, has been out of
our method of coaching or try
action with a cracked fibia in to change our game for this
his leg and would need two single game."
more weeks to recover before
Ohio State defensive safety
he · could even retuurn to Tim Fox and tackle Pete
practice.
Cusick, both out with knee
Minnesota Coach Cal Stoll injuries, and linebacker Ken
got good news. Regular Kuhn, sidelined with a shoulder
quarterback Tony Dungy took injury, all were listed as
his regular turn in a practice questionable for the game.
scrimmage Tuesday and was

..

AT HUGE SAVINGS

ORANGES

•

good team-Agase

IGA TRUCKLOAD SALE OF FINE QUALITY
FRUITS AND VEGETABLES

COME IN AND BUY YOURS FROM

The D"ilv Sen!'

w/;ldcats·
ha·ve
f'Y ...

'

FLORIDA
SWEET &amp;
JUICY

-

... . .

.

'

L

..

... ' ""

lb.

MON.-TUES. ,WED. 9-6
THURS.-FRI.-SAT. 9 to 9

.•,•,

•.·.

V.PI ....;p.,, ·...

ARMOUR GOLD BAND

SUPERIOR
CHUNK

"·

TURKEYS·

BRAU"SCHWEIGER

'"
··~

,,. ,

14-16 LB.

•.•

NOW

1

'OJ

ARMOUR
STAR

.'
"'

'

"'

su
SMOKED

"Sure/' he said.
Tommy Lasorda tells how he counseled Ferguson that he could
reach the majors quicker as a catcher than an ouUieldei' while he
was managing him, at Spokane in 1971 . ..
Lasorda told Ferguson that Bill Dickey , 1\!ickey Cochrane and
Gabby Hartnett all had started out as outfielders and became
· , .
,,
great catchers. .
Joe F'erguson listened to what La'!"''da had to ·say and went
back behind the platnvith renewed enthusiasm. · · ·
Sometime later, a newsman straightened out Lasorda, pointing out to him'that Dickey, Cochrane and Hartnett all began their
pro careers as catchers..
.
•I
_. "You know that and I know that,'' said Lasorda, " but Joe
Ferguson doesn't know it."
It doesn't matter.
Joe Fer~n .knows. he -loves to play anywhere.
That's all he really needs to wind up with that car.

PICNIC HAM··s
WHOLE

,.

'

" '.

'''"' '

.

"

"

.

''

·,

!

..

/,
'~

..

'

.

•'

UeflciOU3 A~
ANJOU, BOSC,
OR RED BARTLETT. U.S.

,.

•••

•••
FRESH

. '

7

YELLOW ~ •

ANY SIZE PIEC E

Jumbo Bologna
FROZEN . . . EXCEPT BEEF &amp; HAM

Sultana Dinners
L.,.,

Snowball
Head

49¢
H

~1b. 49c

.~bag

Salad Shrimp

'"69&lt;
''"·79.
•
' ''59&lt;
99

•

•

.'~~:,~

-

~

'·"· $129

•

•

&lt;

• p i&lt;)( .

ELDO~ADO

Breaded Shrimp

..,,

( tkl(

lEAN , FRESH

Corned Beef Round

A&amp;P CHUNK STYLE

TuuaF~k

Ckiclwt

4

•

•

CAP N JO HN 'S

•• • •

tOLLEGE INN

u.7s-o~JOO

9 112•01.

cans

con

69¢

OUR OWN

ANN PAGE

Tea
100
ct. pkg.

•

so•
Ice Cream Sandwiches:r"fi ~

SU lTANA

SORDEN 'S

JANE PARKER

'/• -lb. STICI(S

• • • • VALUABLE COUPON • • - •

'

• • • •VAI.'UABLE COUPON • • - ··

I

Salad Dressing • • •~~:·79c
•
Angel Food Ca.ke .~~-:: 69. Nu Maid Margarine .:~t &amp;3·
JAN E PARKER
·.
79• riitsb~H;~u~;;~~~ts 4!:, 59&lt;
· Fr.esh Apple Pie. :. . ·~-:
•
! 3 $100
75
·Red Kidney Beans :""
French Fries · .; ""''
·
g
g·
65.
.
·:;.~· ·
Pumpkin Pie .. . ;::~
Grape Jelly·.. · • . •
A&amp;P FRO ZEN -

.

ANN P-:'GE

l·lh.

MRS SMITH S F ~OZEN

.:...... .

p•~tVALUAILE COUfiPN••'!"1 r • • • VALUABLE

~

I
I
I
I

.

• I

I

.

I

•

r•••VALUAIL~

COU'O""•••

l Save ·16e ~:~.r.~, : : SaVe20~

I

37·01.

.

" SU LTA NA

I I

I

l·

W i!o n i.

Co~o~pon
,

I
I
I

,I I
I I
I I

.
I

. I~ .

79c

canto'"'"

Jumbo S's •

== 1

f'te4\k 'PWI3
"'· $100

....
.

'

Smoked Picnic

•• •

• • _.,VALUABLE COUPON • - - •

I I

::save Cash

.

I I
I I

With Th is
Coup on

I I
I I

•

v,

' .
J

RED OR ~OLDEN EXTRA FANCY

1

'

(

:

LE AN. TENDE R

.

' to the maximum 12
COLBlJ1lN CUT,
roster
I
,HOUSTON (UP!)
. Lee players for tl)e start of the· I
I
Colburn a 6-6forward Tuesday season whic)l Opeils Thiii'Sdliy.
I '
I
was c~t by·· The Houston
-Colburn was the team·~ · I
c;· ~~ ::l ~hru S:J•.' Oe.i . ; q•&gt;. ·
I · c.~~ '!! ' t'· t.o -~: " ; .. Or.f .-- ; 9t~
&lt;} ! ,.,, ,.qp_w~o Sl-;-·. ~
-- 1· •
Rockets, bringing their Nation• . fourth round' drl!f! pkk in 1973
'
.'~ ' all Ac\P .W EO . St.~_r:. ·,,. -_, _. : 1' ·: ~
L •• LIMit ONE COUPON• .... .of·· 1. •• liMIT ONE COIJ.PON•••J
'al Basketball Association out of South Dakoll!cSta\e,

LB.
.

"SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY

OA~LAND (UPI) - If you listen to Joe Ferguson, he 's a
" butcher" back there behind the plate, but don't listen to him
because he's not.
As" matter of fact. he still has a shot at winding up with that
shm;v new car they ~ave the outstandilig World Series performer
each year.
Why not? Remember that eye-popping throw of his from right
field to cut down barreling Sal Bando at home plate in the eighth
inning of Saturday's opener at Los Angeles ? They're going to talk
about that one for a long time.
And what about that 'dramatic -home run he nailed Vida Blue
for in the sixth inning of Sunday's contest? It came with one on
and proved the Dodgers' ultimate margin of victory.
Okay, so he made a couple of'errors in Tuesday night's 3-2
setback to the Oakland A's. Big deal!
Those two errors equaled a World Series record set by Jimmy
. Wilson of the St. Louis Cardinals in 1928, and if you ever saw
Jimmy Wilson catch, then you know be was no bum. The greatest
catchers in the world, Bill Dickey, Mickey Cochrane, Roy
Campanella and Gabby Gartnett, all made errors.
This is not to suggest Joe Ferguson is in their class, or that he's
even on a par with the Dodgers' other receiver, Steve Yeager,
who some day may rank with the best, but he's better than he lets
'on. Especially for someone who started out as an outfielder and
still plays there as much as he d~ behind the plate.
Somebody was asking him how much trouble he has handling
Charlie Hough, the Dodgers' Hawalian-born knuckle-baller who
came into the pall game in the fifth inning Tuesday night, and
Ferguson said "they should give me a medal every time I catch
the baiL"
·
Don't believe it.
Joe Ferguson can catch.
He doesn 't say he set a major league record for the fewest
errors by a catcher last year when he committed only three.
Now does he volunteer the fact he led all National League
·
catchers last year in double plays with 17.
When you ask Joe Ferguson which he prefers, catching or
playing the outfield, he shrugs and says :
"It doesn't make any difference. I just like to play."
You can tell' that right away.
He was upset when the Dodgers lost Tuesday night's ball game
but he wasn't bothered by the fact he had made two errors or that
he hadn't looked good in his own backyard, so to speak, because
he comes from this area, and among those who watched his
performance were his father and mother, his brother and sister,
his grandfather and his wife.
"I tried as bard as I could on every play," he said, sitting in
front of his locker with a piece of cold roast beef on a paper plate.
"It just didn't work outright.l,'mnotmad at myself. Ii you try as
hard as you can, and you don't come up with the play, that's it.
When you give your best, you have nothing to apologize for. "
Joe Ferguson certainly hasn't.
Jim "Catfish" Hunter struck him out his first two times up
Tuesday but that didn' t make Fergy break out in any sweat
either.
" l've struck out five times in one game and made two ecrors a
·
Iotta times," he said.
"A lotta times?': someone pressed him.

"

EXTRA SPECIAL

1 · .\ ~· . ·

..

.

.

'

'

.

Save
34e
•

: sGVe20e

W i ~h

Thi\ I
Coupon I 1
I I
I I
I

I
I

I

I

I I
I 1.
Go cr:Hh ru So;~l ., ·O ct. ' 19th
; ~ ,I I
! l .I I · dt all A&amp;,P WW Stores , [ t j
L•-·LIMIT ONE COUPON••~-"' L--•LIMIT ONE COUPON•••~ .. •••LIMIT ONE COUP0~·-•11.
I ·.,.._ Good thr11 Sat,, Oc( 19t.h
I
a t c~ll A&amp;P WEO Stor('\

I

th r.. ~&amp;! ., Oct. 19th
at all A&amp;P WEO Stores

COUPON•••t r•••YAI.UABLE COU.PON•••w r•••VALUAILE COUPON•·• • t . .----------&gt;~
I

I
I
I
I .

I
I I
I I
.I I

Wilh ih i&lt; :
Coupon I

·

s'ave 20~

W ilh Thi• :
Coupo n I

I
I
I

I
I
I
I

I
I·
I.

I
I

!

Coca-Cola
4 32 oz. bottles

I
GoOd ' tMr u So;lt,, Oct , HHI,
I
,11 111! A&amp;P WEO . Sior ~ s
• I
.1 4 &lt;~II A&amp;P ltfEO~ Sioa. s
· r a •I I
I '
·
• I
• • • •LIMIT ONE C!Ji,;PON••••
''MIT ONE COUPON·-•

(i;ood &gt;hr" So&gt;:. lJ&lt;t. "" '

·-~--

'· I

-.

•

•

I

\

.

• •'

~

'

'.

.

'·

-- -

...

~

. .

�................ -

'f

... ... 'i

:

7

. '•

WELL STOCKED DISPLAYS
NOW .
.
.

..

.GOLDEN &amp; RED DEUCIOUS
WINESAPS, ROME BEAUTY ·

LARGE 100 SIZE

I M'ddl

lnf:'.

l

APPLES
3 LB.
BAG

EA.

,,

.'

I-

·-'•

·,

.

l'h·r e"e ·.B
.·UCk 8

'II 'I.I .!'ISSI()EI.INEH

qvestionable

..·

·Sport

•

•

..- . .:o.-o.
.. . . ... ...
..

- , .,

.

~

-.

.;- ~~~

HEIU:A, Ohiu r UPI.1
Following I he rcshurfling uf

Sunday's gcnnc against . the
Pittsburgh Steelers .
The Rrowns, according to
oddsma kcrs in Las Vegas, are
15-poi nt underdogs to the
Steelers for the 1\FC Central
Divis ion contest at Three
Rivers Stadiwn . The game is a

players on [)ul.h the 11ffensivc
Mullin!' fra('tun•d a bi.m.t• in and ddt•nsivc te &lt;Jrus Hm.l
hi:; hand fiUI'ing pra('fice Hntl diangt•s in ('oaching assignwill lw ,)li T ilf nw lim.·up for .. mt•nt s. lht• ClcvelamJ Rrowns
luday
bcgctn
full-scale
workuuls in preparation for

Taxpayers file suit

SALE PLANNED
RACINE - The Happy
Husl!e rs Sunday School Class
uf th e We s leya n United
Methodist Church. Racine , will
hold a rummage sa le from 9
a .m . to 4 p .m .. Friday and
Salurday &lt;.~t !he Critt Rrmiford

;

OAKLAND 1UPI) - !\ group
of taxpayers has filed suit in
Alameda County Superior
Cnurt to prevent Char les 0 .
Finley from moving the A's
from 0,·: .and.
At the sam(' time , Robert T.
"•ha s. president of the Oaklaild Coliseum Commission,
'f,a id Tuesday that Finley
cannot break a lease with the
Colisewn which runs through
1987.
"Neith er Mr. Finley nor the
American League has ever
indicated by word or deed their
desire to move the team," said
Nahas.
However,
a
part
o£
paragraph seven of the lease
Finley signed with the

Srore. Vine Sl., Hat'ine .'

1\F.IIOS DROP TWO

HOUSTON 1 UP! I - Free
agent goalie I':arl Bowie and
defenseman Le Crozier were
sent to the minor leagues
Tuesday by the Houston !\eros,
champions of the World
Hockey Association.
Bowie was sent to Spokane,
Wash . while Crozier went to
Winston-Salem as the Aeros
trimmed down to 20 players.

Colisewn before the A's move d
here in 1968 states that Finley
could move or sell the team
w 11 ~ the approval of Coliseum
Inc., " which consent shall not
unreasonably withheld ."
Finley refused to comment
on the suit and said he stands
on H s tatement he made in Los
Angeles Sunday that "we have
talk ed with no one abo ut
moving the ball club. "
There were publis hed
reports last week. on the eve of
the first game of the World
Series, that The A's were
headed for Seattle and that
conferences to that effect had
been held with the concurrence
of American League Presidenl
Lee MacPhaiL

oo

sellout.

ing system for thi s weekend's

Sec.:ond -year wide receiver
.Steve Holden, still nurs ing OJ
knee injury, wa1&gt; listed Hs
doubtful for the ga m e, and
offensive ta ckle Pete Adams
may see sorJll! aclion &lt;:~ga ins t
the Sleelers.
Definitely out ror the game
are offensive guard Chuck
Hutchinson , suffering from a
groi n injury, and wide rece iver
Jubilee Dunbar, who broke hi s
wrist in last Sundays 34-24 loss
to Ci ncinnati.
For the first time this season,
all 47 of the Stee lers will be
physica lly fit when they battle
the Browns. Pitt&lt;;burgh had the
usual Monday off , but returned
for a brief workout Tuesday
afternoon follow ing a brief
rtleeting.
After the Browns reviewed
film s of the loss to the Ben gals,
the team broke up into individual unit meetings 1'uesday and then ran the mile.
Coaches began preparing the
ga me plan to be used aga inst
the Steelers.
Browns head coach Nick
Skorich has changed his coach·

/';.~ra de

g:une. He sa id offensive coordin &lt;Ator Oick Wood and defen-

sive coordinator Richie McCHbe would leave the !-i ideli ne
to work upstairs from a
scou ting booth in order to get a
better view of the action.
Thl..'y will rep lace line ba cker
coach Dale Lindsey and Fran
Polsfoot , coach of the wide
rere1vers, who r.Jow will he
relegated to field duty.
FESTIV 1\L SF.T
A fall festival will be he ld
Saturday, Or: l. 19 at 6 ::10 p.m .
at the Portl and Elementa r y
School. Children in costumes
will b.e awarded prizes . The re
will he free enter'tainment
There will be games , door
prizes will be given a nd
refresh me nt~ sold . The event is.

bemg sponsored by the PTO.
SALE DAYS SF.T
A rwnmage sal e sponsor ed

hy th e Me igs Com munity
School will be held fr om 9 a. m.
to 4 p.m. Thursday and Friday
at the Fry buildin g; Mill St.,
Middleport.

"SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY

$

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

·..

- -· ,.. - .......

Browns prepare for ·Steelers

SI\N VHAJ'&lt;a'IS('q &lt;.lll'l 1
Vl' llT&lt;•• • (;,,]cl,•n Sl ;~lt• Warriurs
gu;ll·•l .lt•ff Mullin~ \'&gt;ils sidl·!iJ•Ptl Tu~·:-;tlav a fh• r hn•;.•king
II is · ho•••d ir~ pra.t ':iu•. llw
N c• 1 i u 11 ; 1 1 Has k t' 1b l.l II
A~~ol'i;1 ! ior1 dub n·vcalt'&lt;L

WHERE ECONOMY ~RIGINATES
'.'

....

~

f'po rt-Pomrru.v .O .. Wedul•sd.t\', Od ."'t6. t'!174

COLUMBUS illl'll - Lint•. backer Ken Kuhn, rtefensive
Big Ten F'"Jtbal! Roundup
CHICAGO l UP! l - North- moving better than he had in . tackle Pete Kusirk and safely
western may have a 1-4 record three weeks ._He is expected to Tim Fox or Ohio State all wL'rP
lis ted as questionable for ·nw
but Purdue Coach Alex Agasc • start Saturday against lowa .
.Iowa prepared .for the game Buckeyes' lry at ::; ix stn\igltt
says the Wildcats- his team's
1
opponent this week--are "a ~ J.tl a. ~WO·hour drill emphasiz- wins here Saturday against
mg Mmnesota's multi~et or.. Indiana .
good foolball team."
fen
se. Coach Bob Commings
Kuhn, out with a shoulder
Agase should know. He
lauded
offensive
tackle
Rod
injury,
and Kusick and Fox,
helped recruit some of the
Wildcats while head coach· Walters as a legitimate All both sidelined with knee inthere before shifting to Purdue America candidate, saying the juries , sa t out Tuesday's
last season. Indiana Coach 6-fooH. 24().pound junior "does routine practice session. OSU
John Pont took Agase's spot at his job as well as anyone football coaeh · Woody Hayes
Northwestern, making for a a roWld and has made very few was expected to begin scaling
mistakes.''
down workouts Wedn esday for
healthy rivalry since then .
At Wisconsin , Coach John his No. 1 Buckeyes.
"Northwestern is coming
Also missing practice Toesback frJm som~ injuries and is Jardine found a few bright
spots
in
reviewing
his
team's
day
were tigh t, end Mike
a good football teani," Agase
crushing
defeat
by
Ohio
State.
Bortoszek,
who stL,tain&lt;'!i a
said. "Every 'team on our
He
said
offensive
Dennis
Lick·
lower
back
spra.in
on the bus
schedule is very capable of
beating people, and Northwest- had "a helluva day" and also ride to last Saturday 's game
ern bas some good football praised defensive back Tim ag'ainst Wisconsin : tailback
McConnell , fullback Larry Archie Griffin, recovering
players.''
Canada,
linebacker Rick Jaki- from minor bumps and bruises
Purdue has not been overpowering either at 1-3-1. Agase ous and defensive lineman picked up ·against the Badgers;
guard Steve Myers, who
said, "The big thing now is to John Rasmussen.
More
Badgers
will
have
to
sprained
an ankle in drills
keep our kids up mentally and
have
good
days
this
Saturday
Monday:
and center Dick
physically. They are so close to
being a winning football team, when they host second-ranked Mack, out with a knee injury
suffered in last week's game.
record-wise. I've got a lot of Michigan.
Indiana gets Ohio State this
confidence. i'n them. "
week, and Hoosier Coach Lee
Pont announced Tuesday Corso said his team may get
that one of a long list of injured - involved with some "reckless
Wildcats, tailback Greg
abandonment." He added, "InBoykin, will be redshirted. diana has very little to lose and
Boykin, a starter last year as a much to gain. We can't change
sophomore, has been out of
our method of coaching or try
action with a cracked fibia in to change our game for this
his leg and would need two single game."
more weeks to recover before
Ohio State defensive safety
he · could even retuurn to Tim Fox and tackle Pete
practice.
Cusick, both out with knee
Minnesota Coach Cal Stoll injuries, and linebacker Ken
got good news. Regular Kuhn, sidelined with a shoulder
quarterback Tony Dungy took injury, all were listed as
his regular turn in a practice questionable for the game.
scrimmage Tuesday and was

..

AT HUGE SAVINGS

ORANGES

•

good team-Agase

IGA TRUCKLOAD SALE OF FINE QUALITY
FRUITS AND VEGETABLES

COME IN AND BUY YOURS FROM

The D"ilv Sen!'

w/;ldcats·
ha·ve
f'Y ...

'

FLORIDA
SWEET &amp;
JUICY

-

... . .

.

'

L

..

... ' ""

lb.

MON.-TUES. ,WED. 9-6
THURS.-FRI.-SAT. 9 to 9

.•,•,

•.·.

V.PI ....;p.,, ·...

ARMOUR GOLD BAND

SUPERIOR
CHUNK

"·

TURKEYS·

BRAU"SCHWEIGER

'"
··~

,,. ,

14-16 LB.

•.•

NOW

1

'OJ

ARMOUR
STAR

.'
"'

'

"'

su
SMOKED

"Sure/' he said.
Tommy Lasorda tells how he counseled Ferguson that he could
reach the majors quicker as a catcher than an ouUieldei' while he
was managing him, at Spokane in 1971 . ..
Lasorda told Ferguson that Bill Dickey , 1\!ickey Cochrane and
Gabby Hartnett all had started out as outfielders and became
· , .
,,
great catchers. .
Joe F'erguson listened to what La'!"''da had to ·say and went
back behind the platnvith renewed enthusiasm. · · ·
Sometime later, a newsman straightened out Lasorda, pointing out to him'that Dickey, Cochrane and Hartnett all began their
pro careers as catchers..
.
•I
_. "You know that and I know that,'' said Lasorda, " but Joe
Ferguson doesn't know it."
It doesn't matter.
Joe Fer~n .knows. he -loves to play anywhere.
That's all he really needs to wind up with that car.

PICNIC HAM··s
WHOLE

,.

'

" '.

'''"' '

.

"

"

.

''

·,

!

..

/,
'~

..

'

.

•'

UeflciOU3 A~
ANJOU, BOSC,
OR RED BARTLETT. U.S.

,.

•••

•••
FRESH

. '

7

YELLOW ~ •

ANY SIZE PIEC E

Jumbo Bologna
FROZEN . . . EXCEPT BEEF &amp; HAM

Sultana Dinners
L.,.,

Snowball
Head

49¢
H

~1b. 49c

.~bag

Salad Shrimp

'"69&lt;
''"·79.
•
' ''59&lt;
99

•

•

.'~~:,~

-

~

'·"· $129

•

•

&lt;

• p i&lt;)( .

ELDO~ADO

Breaded Shrimp

..,,

( tkl(

lEAN , FRESH

Corned Beef Round

A&amp;P CHUNK STYLE

TuuaF~k

Ckiclwt

4

•

•

CAP N JO HN 'S

•• • •

tOLLEGE INN

u.7s-o~JOO

9 112•01.

cans

con

69¢

OUR OWN

ANN PAGE

Tea
100
ct. pkg.

•

so•
Ice Cream Sandwiches:r"fi ~

SU lTANA

SORDEN 'S

JANE PARKER

'/• -lb. STICI(S

• • • • VALUABLE COUPON • • - •

'

• • • •VAI.'UABLE COUPON • • - ··

I

Salad Dressing • • •~~:·79c
•
Angel Food Ca.ke .~~-:: 69. Nu Maid Margarine .:~t &amp;3·
JAN E PARKER
·.
79• riitsb~H;~u~;;~~~ts 4!:, 59&lt;
· Fr.esh Apple Pie. :. . ·~-:
•
! 3 $100
75
·Red Kidney Beans :""
French Fries · .; ""''
·
g
g·
65.
.
·:;.~· ·
Pumpkin Pie .. . ;::~
Grape Jelly·.. · • . •
A&amp;P FRO ZEN -

.

ANN P-:'GE

l·lh.

MRS SMITH S F ~OZEN

.:...... .

p•~tVALUAILE COUfiPN••'!"1 r • • • VALUABLE

~

I
I
I
I

.

• I

I

.

I

•

r•••VALUAIL~

COU'O""•••

l Save ·16e ~:~.r.~, : : SaVe20~

I

37·01.

.

" SU LTA NA

I I

I

l·

W i!o n i.

Co~o~pon
,

I
I
I

,I I
I I
I I

.
I

. I~ .

79c

canto'"'"

Jumbo S's •

== 1

f'te4\k 'PWI3
"'· $100

....
.

'

Smoked Picnic

•• •

• • _.,VALUABLE COUPON • - - •

I I

::save Cash

.

I I
I I

With Th is
Coup on

I I
I I

•

v,

' .
J

RED OR ~OLDEN EXTRA FANCY

1

'

(

:

LE AN. TENDE R

.

' to the maximum 12
COLBlJ1lN CUT,
roster
I
,HOUSTON (UP!)
. Lee players for tl)e start of the· I
I
Colburn a 6-6forward Tuesday season whic)l Opeils Thiii'Sdliy.
I '
I
was c~t by·· The Houston
-Colburn was the team·~ · I
c;· ~~ ::l ~hru S:J•.' Oe.i . ; q•&gt;. ·
I · c.~~ '!! ' t'· t.o -~: " ; .. Or.f .-- ; 9t~
&lt;} ! ,.,, ,.qp_w~o Sl-;-·. ~
-- 1· •
Rockets, bringing their Nation• . fourth round' drl!f! pkk in 1973
'
.'~ ' all Ac\P .W EO . St.~_r:. ·,,. -_, _. : 1' ·: ~
L •• LIMit ONE COUPON• .... .of·· 1. •• liMIT ONE COIJ.PON•••J
'al Basketball Association out of South Dakoll!cSta\e,

LB.
.

"SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY

OA~LAND (UPI) - If you listen to Joe Ferguson, he 's a
" butcher" back there behind the plate, but don't listen to him
because he's not.
As" matter of fact. he still has a shot at winding up with that
shm;v new car they ~ave the outstandilig World Series performer
each year.
Why not? Remember that eye-popping throw of his from right
field to cut down barreling Sal Bando at home plate in the eighth
inning of Saturday's opener at Los Angeles ? They're going to talk
about that one for a long time.
And what about that 'dramatic -home run he nailed Vida Blue
for in the sixth inning of Sunday's contest? It came with one on
and proved the Dodgers' ultimate margin of victory.
Okay, so he made a couple of'errors in Tuesday night's 3-2
setback to the Oakland A's. Big deal!
Those two errors equaled a World Series record set by Jimmy
. Wilson of the St. Louis Cardinals in 1928, and if you ever saw
Jimmy Wilson catch, then you know be was no bum. The greatest
catchers in the world, Bill Dickey, Mickey Cochrane, Roy
Campanella and Gabby Gartnett, all made errors.
This is not to suggest Joe Ferguson is in their class, or that he's
even on a par with the Dodgers' other receiver, Steve Yeager,
who some day may rank with the best, but he's better than he lets
'on. Especially for someone who started out as an outfielder and
still plays there as much as he d~ behind the plate.
Somebody was asking him how much trouble he has handling
Charlie Hough, the Dodgers' Hawalian-born knuckle-baller who
came into the pall game in the fifth inning Tuesday night, and
Ferguson said "they should give me a medal every time I catch
the baiL"
·
Don't believe it.
Joe Ferguson can catch.
He doesn 't say he set a major league record for the fewest
errors by a catcher last year when he committed only three.
Now does he volunteer the fact he led all National League
·
catchers last year in double plays with 17.
When you ask Joe Ferguson which he prefers, catching or
playing the outfield, he shrugs and says :
"It doesn't make any difference. I just like to play."
You can tell' that right away.
He was upset when the Dodgers lost Tuesday night's ball game
but he wasn't bothered by the fact he had made two errors or that
he hadn't looked good in his own backyard, so to speak, because
he comes from this area, and among those who watched his
performance were his father and mother, his brother and sister,
his grandfather and his wife.
"I tried as bard as I could on every play," he said, sitting in
front of his locker with a piece of cold roast beef on a paper plate.
"It just didn't work outright.l,'mnotmad at myself. Ii you try as
hard as you can, and you don't come up with the play, that's it.
When you give your best, you have nothing to apologize for. "
Joe Ferguson certainly hasn't.
Jim "Catfish" Hunter struck him out his first two times up
Tuesday but that didn' t make Fergy break out in any sweat
either.
" l've struck out five times in one game and made two ecrors a
·
Iotta times," he said.
"A lotta times?': someone pressed him.

"

EXTRA SPECIAL

1 · .\ ~· . ·

..

.

.

'

'

.

Save
34e
•

: sGVe20e

W i ~h

Thi\ I
Coupon I 1
I I
I I
I

I
I

I

I

I I
I 1.
Go cr:Hh ru So;~l ., ·O ct. ' 19th
; ~ ,I I
! l .I I · dt all A&amp;,P WW Stores , [ t j
L•-·LIMIT ONE COUPON••~-"' L--•LIMIT ONE COUPON•••~ .. •••LIMIT ONE COUP0~·-•11.
I ·.,.._ Good thr11 Sat,, Oc( 19t.h
I
a t c~ll A&amp;P WEO Stor('\

I

th r.. ~&amp;! ., Oct. 19th
at all A&amp;P WEO Stores

COUPON•••t r•••YAI.UABLE COU.PON•••w r•••VALUAILE COUPON•·• • t . .----------&gt;~
I

I
I
I
I .

I
I I
I I
.I I

Wilh ih i&lt; :
Coupon I

·

s'ave 20~

W ilh Thi• :
Coupo n I

I
I
I

I
I
I
I

I
I·
I.

I
I

!

Coca-Cola
4 32 oz. bottles

I
GoOd ' tMr u So;lt,, Oct , HHI,
I
,11 111! A&amp;P WEO . Sior ~ s
• I
.1 4 &lt;~II A&amp;P ltfEO~ Sioa. s
· r a •I I
I '
·
• I
• • • •LIMIT ONE C!Ji,;PON••••
''MIT ONE COUPON·-•

(i;ood &gt;hr" So&gt;:. lJ&lt;t. "" '

·-~--

'· I

-.

•

•

I

\

.

• •'

~

'

'.

.

'·

-- -

...

~

. .

�.. ..... ...... .............

'

!

9- The Da•lySentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Wednesday Oct 16 1'1 74

8- The Dally Sent mel M1ddlenort Pomeroy 0 , Wednesday, Ocl 16 1974

Meigs golfers end at 14-11
The Me1gs Marauder Golf
Team concluded its first fall
season w1th a successful 14-11
record Tuesday night, although
the swmgers of Ron Logan
went down to defeat m the1r
!mal match of the year
Nelsonville-York captured

'

Man cited after
Tuesday accident
Arthur Sm1th 75 Pomt
Pleasant was charged w1th
failure to stop w1thm the

assured

clear

distan ce

followmg an acc1dent at 1 50
p m Tuesday on Rt 35, two
nules east of Gallipolis
City police sa1d the Smith
veh1cl e struck the rear end of a
car operated by Gary Self 19
of Patnot There was moderate
damage
A smgle car m1shap occurred
at 6 50 a m Tuesday on Rt 160
f1ve tenths of a m1le south of
Rt 35 were Weltha Clagg, 45
Gallipolis, swerved her car to
avOid two deer which entered
the h1ghway
Mrs Clagg lost control of her
car wh1ch slid off the highway
LONG ILLNESS ENDS
Michael Fernando husband
of former Meigs County
res1dent, Ruby Young Fer
nando, died Monday at the
Marshall Community Hospital,
Moundsville, W Va , followmg
a hngenng illness Funeral
services wtU be held at the
Wells Funeral Home m New
Martinsville where Mr and
Mrs Fernando resided, at 11
a m Thursday The body will
be brought to the Pine Grove
Cemetery m Me1gs County for
graveside services at 2 p m
Thursday, w1th Rev Roller!
Bwngarner off1c1atmg Mrs
Young surviVes her husband

Refonn
Con tmued from page I
functlonanes of Congress and
m a Justice Department that
sunply had no appetite for
election law prosecutwns
There was a distlllCt unprovement after the 1971 law
put pres1dent1al campa1gn
finance enforcement under the
General Accounting Office,
and the creation of a new
agency to take over that function along w1th policmg of
congresSional campmgns could
become the most effect1ve
refonn of all

to have party
RACINE - " ilulloween
party for children of Racme
sponsored by Racme Village
Council w1ll be held Wed
nesday Oct 30, from 7 to 9
pm
Children 12 and under are
mv1ted to the event at the new
addi lion of the f1re house
Prizes will be awarded to the
prettiest ugliest funmest,
most ongmal and the youngest
masked There w1ll be games
and refreshments and each
child w1ll be given a sack treat
There will be no tr1ck or treat

DISSOLUTION ASKED
F1ling for a dissolution of
marnage m Me1gs County
Common Pleas Court are Jean
F Dalley and Elson R Dalley,
Portland
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature m down
town Pomeroy at 11 a m
Wednesday was 53 degrees
under cloudy but apparently
clearmg skies

Ford tells
Con tmued from oage 1

ners and the retU"ed,

restrtc~

tmg conswner credit, taxing
excess prof1ts, and creating a
program of jobs £or people out
of work
' The nation 1s m an
econom1c emergency," said
Mansfield

1 DAY ONLY
SATURDAY
OCTOBER 19

¢

YOUR CHOICE
1st Print

No Hllfldhng
Charge

9:30 to 4:30 PM

e

Age L•mil 12 yean and Under
or Senior Catizens

or 2 Children

1 DAY ONLYy
SAJURDA
OCJiOBER 19

Posep Together
2 49
• Addit1onll pr~nts and
re orders at reasonable prices

Set•sfactlon Guerenteed or Your Money

SHOP AT SEAlS
AND SAVE

.,

•

Back

~ 220E.MAIN
~ POMEROY, 0.

I

dr1cks as part-time secretary
until Dec 31,1974 for the Head
Start Program
In other business, the board
discussed
the
proposed
Manpower Program to be
funded under Title I of the

CARPENTER - Nlrla C
Chase, 81, a long-time res1dent
of this community, passed
away Tuesday afternoon 10
Hillsdale, M1ch
Mrs Chase was born April
30, 1883, the daughter of the
late Mr and Mrs William
Nicholson She was also
preceded m death by her
husband, Marvm Chase who
died in 1970, a daughter, three
SISters and a brother
A member of the Carpenter
BaptiatChurch, she IS surv1ved
by a daughter, Mrs G Harold

Co mimtt €"es haH• b ee n
named for th e Nov 7 bazaar of

~
.

Hem, Hillsdale, Mich ,
a sister, Mrs Alice Epple,
Rutland , a brother, Seth
Nicholson, Rutland, four
grandchildren and one greatgrandchild

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharged, Ocl. 15)
Jeffrey Black, Flossie
Burble, James R Burns, Jr
Courtney Caudill, Kathy Clark,
Deborah
Clary,
Sharon
Durham Dorothy Edmundson
Elalyn
Eubanks,
Alice
Featherolf Bula Hale, Emory
Hart, Dora Hersko, Mary C
Hughes , Carl Hysell Cynthia
lgleheart Mrs Junwr Jeffers
and daughter Jean Johnson
Ruban Johnson, Nicholas King,
John Uoyd, Kathy Martm,
FlOSSie Mattox, Unda Moore,
Kenneth Newsome, Mrs Cec1l
Queen, Sr , and daughter
BOOSTERS MEET
Twenty persons attended
Tuesday s Blue Dev1l Boosters
meeting at Oscar's F1hns of
the GAHS Jackson game were
shown by Coach C L (Johnny)
Ecker Members discussed
VariOUS club prOjeCts

TOM TIEDE

MILK

Earl Morris wins Foote promotion
NEW HAVEN, W Va John Wolfe, plant manager of
the Graham Plant, Foote
Mmeral Co , New Haven, W
Va , announced the promotion
of Earl B Morris to general
foreman 10 the productiOn
deparbnent, effective Oct 1
Morris started h1s employment with Foote Mineral

Co, June 26, 1952 m the
production deparbnent where
he worked at var1ous-posttions
He was promoted to assistant
foreman on Jan 23, 1956 On
Oct 1, 1972, he was promoted to
foreman in the product1on
deparbnent, a pos1lion which
he has held until hls recent
promotion
Morr~s
graduated from
Racme
High
School m 1943 He
Edgar Rutherford Lloyd
Sears Sr , Mrs Gary Sunpson and his w1fe, Opal res1de wtth
and son Grace Snyder, !herr daughter at Rt 1, Racme
Margaret Sullivan, Sandra
Vetth , Kathryn Walsh, Mary
TRICK· TREAT
Wamsley, Ruth Weaver ,
RUTLAND -Trick or Treat
Fremont W1lson
N1ght wtU be observed. this
(Births)
year in Rutland V1Uage, Mayor
Mr and Mrs Rudiger Eugene Thompson announced
Brons!, a daughter, GaU1pohs , today The observance IS for
Mr and Mrs Paul Chesser, children of the community only
Jr , a daughter, Oak Hill, Mr and w1U be from 7 to 7 30p m,
and Mrs Dale Edmonds, a Oct 30 The town s1ren will
daughter Glenwood, W Va mark the openmg and closmg
of actiVIties The event is for
youngsters 12 and under

Mary Martm

Piers Paul Reed

79~
'100

mustc by g irls'

triO

a nd

Wilham Beegle
MEIGS Museum
open
Tuesday
and
Thurs day
evemngs, 7 30 p m th1s week
and next week and Sunday, 2 to
5 p m for v~ewmg the display
of photography work of Walter

99~
With Coupon Exp1res Sat.

Semshe1mer, Cincmnab

pm
take contamers for
carryout service sponsored by

Dorcas Women s Fellowship
SENIOR C11lzens hshmg

~

derby across from Semor

Cillzens Center 8 a m to 4
p m for everyone 55 or over
Pr1zes of $10 and $5 for £~rst and
second largest respectively
and $3 for most caughl
FRIDAY
I HAVE a Date w1ll be
presented by Rev Frank Snare
at Racm e F1rst Baptist
Church, 7 30 p m , w1th spec1al
muSic by the Manuel Trw
SATIJRDAY
CHESTER PTA J1tney
Supper and Halloween carmval
at Chester Elementary School
Servmg at 5 p m carmval at 7
p m W1de var1ety of food to be
offered
SQUARE DANCE at Shade
School !rom 9 p m to 12
lllldmght Mus1c by Frog Stack
and The Greenhorns Sponsored by Shade PTA
FALL Fesllval at Portland
School at 6 30 p m Pr1zes £or

at

Big Shef®

2/$1.25

2/$1.00
Save38¢

Save45¢

v.-1th th•s coupon

wHh thla coupon
Our llnquet on a Bun! Two
open flame broiled bttf·
burg.,. topped wllh molted

Th•s •s the BIG one A full

'• pound pally of cho•ce
ground beef brot led aver

open flames served on a
toast,ed bun with lettuce

Kralt Chllat our apeclal

..uct and 'Chopped lettuce

tomato and sweet Bermuda
onion
Oct 25

Coupon good until
It BIJRGI:R CHEF,

costummg

Coupon i.ood until Oct 2&lt;
at BURGI:R CHEF,

1503 Eaatern Avenue ,&lt;liiUpo)il!

1503 Ellllern Av•nue GIIHpolla

Sta

CheesebUrger

2/994

4/994

Save31¢

Seve41¢

with thla coupon

With thll I:OUpon
100% frtah ground bttf
broiled over o"n fl1m11
topped with melted Kraft
chHH on a touted bun

A hot heapfn' htlpln
country flavored ham all
melted over. Wlth .. vary
Sw•le chetH ~d our tpe-

clal ••uce on a touted bun

25

'

•
'•

2/994

-

Save31¢
wilh thlt coupon

Two full ••zt paffin of openfie,. bro•led ground beef..
1nCI a topping of melltd
Krall chH• on 1 toatt.d
bun

••
••

Mtfl ttl 1 coupon
14 tatty flth tllltt topped
with melted Krall chttlt
chopped lettuce and our
apeclal tartar 81uct

•
••

•

...
"

•

"

t

I

•

Suthetla nd

Aml a

Jacobs

Hilda Ha rns

Katie

B1ron Barbara M 1~le n Helena
BJ ickl es Bec ky Brode n c k ,
G1rola m•

Rosemary Gagnon

I I

~jlOW( h. n

Kovalchi k All ee F 1ee m a n
Julie Hamm R1 ta Hamm
Sharon Machael Sus1e Stewart

Chrtstme Gr ueser Philom ena

V1d1 a

I, \

The1 arc Phvlbs Hackett
Ph) Ill s
Kno pp
Sa ndy

Tma Duffy

Ros1e Colburn

V1cky Blankenship Ma ureen
Hennessy Mar} Kay Hen
nessy Jo Ellen Ro ush Di ane

Isa be l

Wehrun g Hedw1g Cremeans

(

----·

I_

Free

en

tertamment Games and door
pnzes Refreshments w1ll be
sold Sponsored by PTO
CHICKEN DINNER at St
Paul s Umted MethodiSt
Church annex, 4 to 7 p m
complete dmners
SUNDAY
REVIVAL, 7 30each evemng
through 'Sunday at the Racme
Apostolic Church w1th Elder
Daymond Adams, Manetta
speaking
GUEST preacher at Grace
Episcopal Church at 10 30 a m
w1ll be Rev James Trapp
newly appointed youth o£f1cer
for the Ep1scopal Church m the
Dwcese o£ Southern Oh10
Youth of the pansh begmmng
at junior h1gh level and youth
leaders wtll meet personally
with Rev Trapp durmg a
luncheon at 12 noon followmg
the church service and coffee
hour
REVIVALnow m progress at
Rutland Community Church
through Sunday ServiCes are
7 30 p m Evangelist IS Rev
Russell Harper, Fremont
Brother Eugene Roush IS
pastor The pubhc IS mv1ted to
attend
HOMECOMING at Mornmg
Star Church Mormng worship
at 9 30 a m S1111day School at
10 30 basket dmner IS 12 30
p m Afternoon songfest at 1 30
w1th Rev Larry Poling , pastor ,
m charge Everyone welcome

.'
I

• I

H 1

l s

\1 11 \

( 1 t -;s

S li t Ill

\ lt h. 111 ~h
I'~ !II M ~ K11q.:, ! !
H1t 1 ( 1St 1 h l 1 ( 1s 11 md It m
"b it s
or ht 1 \ \ ~• k• , s r , tht h \l': ;i d l
It
t tkt
sl1n d
Yer 1
Bm h :&amp;n u• Bt 11) Oh lmgt: l &lt;md
P~1t Mt Kr 1gli t
I&lt; ~1n n W1 1 k Ca 1ol Mt
Cu llou g h V1kk u~ Gl &lt;)(r kne l
md Y\ unne I ulz
Re h g aJu s a 1 t l l h s Hh oda
Ha ckett I ll C'tta Bll gle a nd
BC'I na dm e Mt 1e1
Pa rl e! post P hylh::; H("n
nessv J cm e F1 ymye r tnd

Manlyn F:pple
Fash [}On d George Kor n
Sa ndv Korn i:jnd Jane l Korn
Pop
Jo \nn e I a tte r so n
Ha1 ba• a Sm1th a nd Ka th y

~

ht 11m :-.lt ul z! n g Hu II r d
n d M 11 11\ n P1 ulm M u k md
N il( \ ( l l!i.str Mr liHI M rs

t

P ul l l tt l ls ( fr uits md " " "

{ Ill! s II Ill ~
WI! sir Dt n nr s
S ~l.'ll.' n s

&lt;Hid

cHid Ann :i
1nd Cf.l l la
Ro bc at &lt;.~nd

M u In Mt ll.' r

1 he
ba~r qu l.'t

!5t h
.rn nl\ e r s a 1 )
of the Hom eburld er s

Cl1ss of the Middlepor t Ch w ch

Dmlev and Br onw} n Da lley

of Chri st v.1lh eledwn of new
offi{ers and r ecogmllon of
those \.u th per fec I atte ndance
The new offt cers we re Mrs
Bum ga rd ne r
S h 1r le}
prcsrden t Bud Wrlson vace
pres 1d~ nl
Mrs Coleen Vo-m
Meter secreta ry Mrs Mary
Hysell assrst£Jn t secre tary

P 1e ro tt1

P earl Poulin a nd

Eli za beth Horak
Cle f:l n up

Norbe rt

a nd

By Polly Cramt r

Bleach leaches
hardwood floor
POLLY SPROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Not knowmg there was a leak m the bottle I
put my bleach on my hardwood floor and now have a "hlle nng J
would apprectate any suggestwns a s to how l can tak e ca re of
thiS and restore my floor to Its ongmal conditiOn - ISABELLE

n&lt;ghl al lhe Middleport Ch urch

a nd Mr s

Doro lh)

Roac h

Several fr1ends Jomed the

family for hom•made •ce
cream and cake Shane 's
grandparents are Mr and
Mrs Douglas Circle, Racine
and Mr and Mrs James
Cundiff, Columbus

Salon 710
has meeting

-

a n eedy
fam1ly wtth a food basket and
sendmg b1rthday cards w1th
d•mes to the NatiOnal Jew1 sh
R emembenn g

Hospital m Denver v. ere ta ken

on as November proj ects by
the Me1gs County Salon 710
E1ght and Forty at a meetmg
Monday mght at the home of
Mrs Mary Martm chapeau
It was reported durmg the
meetmg that the salon had pa1d
$36 for new lenses for Sheme
Marshall a cyst1c f1bros1s
child m the county A proJect
for nurses scholarship was

earned out by Mrs Mary
Roush w1th $22 25 bem g
collected from the members
Next month everyone

IS

asked

the Amen c an

Legw n

Amuhary
Fmance

proJects

were

outlined by Mrs Pearl Knapp
and these mclude a candy sale

the sale of Christmas cards
date books Jewelry kmves
candles and bells Another
rwnmage sale was set for Nov
2 3 and 4 with the place to be

announced
It was reported that Mrs
Gladys Mowery IS not well
The birthdays o£ Mrs
Catherine Welsh and Mrs
Knapp were observed w1th a
decorated cake bemg served
actmg l'awnomer and closed

the meetmg w1th Helen Siemer
R1ce s poem, So Sw1ft the
Day ~ Short the Way '

GRANDCHILD BORN
,Mrs Carl Wellman, Fort
G'!Y W Va
formerly of
Pomeroy has a new grand
daughter The e1gh,t.pound g1rl
Beth Mar1e, was ~n Oct 8 to
Mr and Mn; J1mmte Sutton

Pritchard W Va

NAI

\
XII S I I
:t
TO PER MI T L AWS REDUCI NG
REA L ES T A T E T A X ES O N T H E

H OM ESTE A OS Of' P E RM A NENTLY
f. N O T O TAL L Y D I SAB L ED
RES ID E N TS
If aUop lcd lh e t1 m ~nd m t! n l r. hall
l'alre e Hec 1 Ja n u a ry I 197.\
1

I

v

fIt~

I

I'
s

I \1 I
F.
I JS I: f)
"I \I! I NU:\ 11 ~ 1
I ~ J\ t I I
)

P hlla t hea

Women

of

teachers for the past year A
h1 stury of the cla ss was read
Mrs Her man Km ca rd

b~

If Sl f)
A 11

Art

eJ~

NS I
&gt;'~ ~

1

J I II
:-.; r

~I\

Section 13

V II

TO IN CL:JDr: THE FOLLOW JN C
AMONG TI-lE P URPOSES F O R
WHI CH P UBLIC I N D U STRI A L
DEVEL OP M E N T REV E N UE
BO N DS MAY BE ISSUED A ND
LOAN G U ARANTEE PRO G RA M S
UNDER T A K E N W IT HOUT
OBLIG ATJNC OR PLE DGI N G
MO N EYS RA I SED B Y TA X ATION
l

THE PRESE RVA T ION OF
EX IST IN G J OBS

2

THE CO NTROL O f' A IR

J

n -E

4

T HE CO N S TR UCT I O N OF
ELECTR IC AN D CAS
t, ri LI TY SER V ICE
f'AC L l fiE :. FOR POL L U
TION CON TROL OR SO LID
VIAS T E DIS POSA L

D SPOSAL OF SOLID
WAS T E AND

I

I

I

'

I

l~

1r
II

''uo I

I \

r

he

)

rn
f

r

1 ase; r~g

S\ 1! 11/E

I !JPSf.U
\ i\ F.:\1 / lM Nr
Rf \DO! 1 f.IJ

2

I ()J J&lt;.; l } C C ;\!'-' II U I I J N A
\:\1 1 :-./ 0\ 11 N I

EXP L ANAT I O N OF I SS U E NO

3

TO R E PEA L S EC TION ll Of'
ART ICL E VIII Of' T HE OH I O
CON STI T UTION W HI CH RE
O i.J IRES r u E G OV EH N O R T O
APPOI NT A S UP ER INTENDENT
O f' I l rn.IC W O RKS FOR 1\
om:: YEAn TE RM
lc

Attend mg were Mr a nd Mrs

Lawrence Stewart

Mr

and
I

and
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs

1 I

I H

O:: EC I I ON DE
F: I E \lHJ

Leonard Van Meter Mr and

Work at lhe Athens Mental
Heall h Cen ter was rev1ewed by

Mrs Chester Er\\m , Mr and
Mrs Herman Km ca1d Mr a nd

Mr s

Russe ll M1ll cr

Raymond Ba ker

Mrs

Mrs

Carl

Roach Mrs Eliza beth Sm1lh
Mr s

I

01

r a rn e Ne ff

Bum ga rdner

Mrs

a nd

Mr s

Bn ckles

DEAR POLLY - W T wa nted mformatwn a bout the ca re of
Damsh lea ther charrs We bought leather -covered dtmn g chatrs

when we were m Denmark The clerk told us s1mpl) wipe them
from tame to tame w1th a cloth that has som e pet roleum Jelly o n
1t This cleans and prevents crackmg I then Wipe ll off w1th a dry

cloth Our cha1rs look hk e new after 10 years of use a nd suc h
treatment _ M w
DEAR GIRLS _ Real leather IS a££ecled by heal excessive
dr;ness and dampness Keep leather-covered pteces away from
radiators and open \\indows during damp weather Saddle soap
can be used, according tu d1rectwns , or leather can be washed

wllh m1ld suds and a very little b1t of water Follow such washing
wllh a leather dressmg Daily clcamng w1Lh a soft, dry cloth
and an uccasmnal wiping with a damp one should keep a piece m
good shape U leather has become stiff from neglect soften with a
hghl applicatum of oil, such as neat's foot oil but do not use IOO

much Rub m well and lhen w1pe off w1th a dry cloth -POLlY
DEAR POLLY - Children have a habit of turmng the water
faucet on full when washmg thelf hands brushmg Lhe1r t eet~ or
gelling a dnnk of water To conse rve water reduce the wa ter bill
and elumnate spla shmg locate the water valve under or nea r

your wash basm m the bathroom a nd turn the pressure down JAN
DEAR POLLY - I had some lmen napkins yellowmg w1th
age m a drawer I use the fme quality paper dmner napk1ns to
save laundry Fmally Iilad the 1dea of sewmg enough of the lme n
ones together to make a table cloth for our dmmg table Lmmg up
the edges of the nepk1ns on a na t firm surface I wh1pped them
together usmg !men thread and fme e ven stllches I ha\ e had
many compliments on this and a fnend th ought such a cl oth
would be sinking sewed together w1 th gold Silver or colored
thread - AGNES

Bankers attend meeting
Mrs Rose Reynolds vacc
pr e s ad e nt
a nd
d1 r el to r
C1t1ze n s Nat aon al
Ba nk
M1ddl epo1t
a nd l
E
Re vno lds
Mrs
I oas
McElhmney assistant cashier
CJl! zens
Na ti o na l
Bank

ass istant ca sJuer Th e C1t1zens

M1ddle po1t

Na tw na l Bank McCo nnel s

a nd

SON BORN
Mr and Mrs Gar y Lee
S1mpson 329% North Th1rd
Ave Middleport a re an
noun cmg the birth of the1r f~rst
child a son Oct 10 at the
Holzer Medical Center The 6
lbs 1 ozs baby has been
named Kyle Arthur Grand
parents are Mr and Mrs Paul
A Simpson
Rose H•ll
Pomeroy and Mrs

Marjone

Grogan Wigal Middleport and
the late Lawrence Grogan
Mr and Mrs Ernest Wells
Th1rd Ave Middleport are
great grandparents

prestdent and Mrs Marga re t

Stacy Belpre Scnpture £rom
Mark 14 was read by Mrs
Stacy w1th a m edtlatlon fr om
The Upper Room and prayer
g1ven by Mrs Hoselton
Mr s
Stacy
natw n a l
represe ntatl\e gave a report
on the nat aonal sessiOn a t

Atlanll c C1ty N J The sta te
coun c alor s proJect of sa vm g
Be tty Cr ocker coupons to be
redeemed for a washer for the
hom e m Taffm was noted
Fnendshlp mght wa s an-

noun ced for Nov 12 at Belpre

Willi am s

Mrs

the

Pomeroy

Na za r e ne

Church
The party £or the ch1ldren of
the kindergarten, primary and
Junior classes w1ll be held al
the church Oct 26 from 2 to 4
p m while the semor h1gh class
will have a party at the hom• of
Rev and Mrs Clyde Hen
derson at a hme to be se t The
evenmg of Oct 26 the Adul t
Class w1 1l ha ve a costume
par t} At a ll d the pa rties

Evelyn Lan

nmg assistan t ca shrer

Far

me• s Bank &amp; Savmgs Co
Pomeroy an d Don La nnmg

and Mrs

Maxin e Gnfflth

pnzes Will be awarded £or
w1ll be served
Fred Pulhns pres1ded at the
meetmg w1th Glen McClung
g1vmg the prayer An offermg
was taken an d there was a
hymn smg Pullins gave thanks
be for e r efreshments
At
tendmg were Rev Henderson
McClun g Mr and Mrs Eslie
Mossman , Mr and Mrs Fred
Pullins Sheila_ and Shelly,
De bbi e Schae fer, Bar bara
Colmer Mam1e Stephenson
Paulette Leach Davy J am1e,
J m1 Farley and J oey

loa n

offi cer

Ba nk

Bartlett

c hairwoman

Mrs Mar]Orle Crenn ell, v1ce
pr es ide nt
Wa rr en Bank
Warren Mtch a nd reg10na l

ta bl e se rv1 ce Th e Deputy
Club s Chn stmas party was set
for 2 p m Dec 1 at the
Ramada Inn Marietta It was

noted that Mrs Edna Re1bel
deput) of Theodorus Coun cil
17 Pomeroy

wa s unable to

a ltend due to Illness Others
attendmg were Mrs Nellie
Hayes Theodorus Mrs Essa

Varn er deputy of Belle Pra m e
Coun c1l Mrs Edna V1ckers,
Belle Pram e Council, and a
gues t Mr s Betty Re ibel
1 heodoru s

as

of Cambridge Cambridge as
treasw-er
The National Assoc iation of

Bank Women
organt zatwn

Inc
for

1s an
women

holdmg executive and offiCial
posrtrons m banks

savmgs

banks and trust compames

ATTEND CONCERT
Mr and Mr s Charl es
Gnff1th were m Columbus
Sund ay where they attended a
concert of the Oh10 State
Unrvers1ty Marchmg Band m

front of the State House and
v1ewed th e Columbu s Day
Parade led by the OSU Mar
chm g Band Their da ughter
Karen rs a m ember of th1s all

brass band one of the lwo m
the Umled States

BPW MARKS WEEK
Busmess and

Professional

Me1gs H1gh
pr og ram

at

will present a
on

p er s onal

development

PARTY SLAtED
Th e
annual
Pomer oy
Elementary School Halloween
party has been se t for Satur
day,Oc t 26 at6 JOpm A hobo
th eme w1ll be earned out £or
th e party headed by Mrs Ke1th
R1ggs A poster contest Will be
held for the children

Apple Grove women give shewer

so n s

Juha Norris, Dolhe

Wolfe Luc1lle Rhodes, Joyce
Wh1t e Dor othy Roseberry
Donn a H1ll , J a n Nom s
Florence Smith E1lee n Buck,
Fior ella Barton
Sharon
Roseberry Helen Heaton
Rose Youn g, Bernice Rou'!h
Dee Spencer and Lmtla Youn~

ISSUE Z

Amende 1 Se n ate J om t Resolution
No 261
J 01N1 RESOLUT I ON
Proposing to repaal Mctlon 12 of
Ar ticle VIU of the Conllliullon
of the St a le ql Ohio req\lhlng- a
supu lnJendent of publl c w ork s to
be appointed by ibe G :lvarnor for
a o n e year lerm
Be tt reJ;olved by the Gcn e r 11 As
se nbly o f t h~ State of Ohio three
fifU s of the n~ r ben; e lected to
e a&lt;;h ho use co n&lt;;urrtng 'here in th a t
t h e e sha ll be s bmltted to t he
elet:tors of the sUi te m t h e man ner
pres cnbed by Jaw at th e genera l
e e c o n to be htdd on t he first
Tu~sda.y after t h ~ fir st Mon day In
Noven ber
][17&lt;1
a
pro posa l to
an "nd th e Const1 t u hon of t h e Sta te
of O h to b't repeahnll s e c tion 12 of
Arl 1clc VIII thereof

E FFEC ri VE DATE AND RE P EA L

If ad op ted b y a majon t y of the
e l ec~ors vot mg on this amendme n t
the .ame ndment shal l take lmmedi
a l e e ffect a nd ex isl mg JSe~.: tt on 13
of Article VIII .!!hall be repea led
from s uc h ellec ive d~ le

U N I TE D STATES OF AMERICA
EFFECTI VE DATE A ND R EP EAL
STATE OF OHIO
If adopted by a majo r ity o f the
OF F ICE OF T HE SECRET ARY
electors \C lin g on thi s a m endm e n t
OF ST ATE
th e an c ndment shall ta k e lmm cd i
1 TED W BRO WN Secre t ary of
ate e ffec t a nd secti o n 12 of Art1cle
VIII o r th e Co nstitution o f Oh to Str~h'! do hereby cer tify t h at t hes ha I be repealed f rom s uch e l!ec fo rc l(oinp: IS a true copy o f House
Jomt Resolut on No 59 Amen d ed
, , ~ d Jte
Se• ate Join t Resolution No 26 a nd
Amended Senate Joint R e.!lolutlon
ISSUE 3
No 22 proposing to amend the
IA rn endert Sen ate Jomt R e!:iu lut on Co ls lllut o n or O ~ io togeth er wit]\
t h e b tllot language and expla na tion
N o 2 2)
!or e a ~ h cer ttned to me b)' t he Ohio
B
l!ot B.;la rd
J OINT RESOLUT ION
IN 1 ES1 IMONY WH EREOf'
I
Proposlnll' io amand sacUcm 13 ol
Al'llc:J, VIII of the CanllilluUon h tl \ e he reunto subscnbed my n a m e
of the State of Obio t o expend nnd nmxect mv om c ~a l sea l at Co
lha pu.rr'" for whleh pv.bUC h mba ~; t ht;; 1st day of September
l ndudrla
development r e ve aue Hm
TE D W BROW N
boDdt may be laau.ed lo lnc hula
SN retary of State
pnMrvallon ot axlstlng Jobll and
Sc
II
nmo•al of &amp;Jl eldallDg d tnl•l ot

p..,

'
I

"'

Ho£f assistant trust officer
The C1l1zens Natwnal Bank
Man etta, as secretary and

co sm e tolog y Instruc tor

APPLE GROVE - Women
o£ the Apple Grove Umted
Method ist Church entertamed
Monday mght w1th a ) ayette
s howe r hononn g Veneda
Youn g Cake coffee, PUI\Ch,
nuts and mmts wer e served
Attendmg \\ ere Bess Par-

&lt;: O L .... I ION

v1ce

Women s Week w1ll be ob
served Oct 20-26 by the M1d
dleport Club A dmner will be
held Monday mght at the Me1gs
Inn at 6 30 p m w1th the
program to be presented by
Mrs Mary Bacon Mrs Molly
H1ll and Mrs Unda Stobart
Mrs
Mary
Powell

VISIT AUNT
Mr and Mrs Vern Barnhill
Sandu sky and Mr s Mar)
McKibben Caledoma, visited
Fnd ay w1lh the1r aunt Mrs
Alma Young Rt 3, Pomeroy

JO IN I I

c l lc 1 I'

Mtss Judy A

Mrs Dorothy Ma1er: assistant

Na ti onal Association of Bank

ll uc~cJo Jll

v1lle a s chairwoma n Mrs N
ass1s t a nt
J ea n Bowma n
secretary and trea sw-er and
loan office r Bartle tt Farmers

cash1er F1rst NatiOnal Bank

Women Inc held at Burr Oak
Lodge Glouster Oct 12

I"'S 'JE I

and

Bank and Charles Gr1ff1th
attended the fall mee tmg of the
Soulheaslern OhiO Group of the

PARTY HELD
RACINE - A surpriSe b1rth
day party was held Saturday
even mg at the home of Mr and
MEETING CHANGED
RACINE - A meehng of th e Mrs Robert Waldm g Racme
Amer•can Legwn Aux1hary of for their son Rob G1fts were
Racme Post 602 scheduled for presented to him and r efresh
Oct 22 ha s been changed to m en ts were served Guests
Oct 29 beca use of confl~etmg were Nancy Roy Lori TheisS
mee tmgs m the commun1ty Eddie Sm1lh Melan1a Waldmg
Members are to take a g1ft for J eff M1ller, Cmdy and Sha ron
a Sil e nt au ctiO n for t he Roush, Ed Huff , Chns and
Judy Sm1th Grove C1ty, and
meeti ng
J oe Holman

cos tumes and r e fre s hm e nts

to the g1oup and mslall ed the
follov.rn g orf1 ce rs fo r th e
cornm g year Mrs Don s M

cas ht e l , Pomeroy Nation a l

with a covered dish dmner
Members are to ta ke the1r own

Hallaween parties s!ated
Halloween parties for the
Sunday school classes were
pl ann ed dunng a re ce nt
meeting of lhe Adult Class of

Kenn eth

Mc E lhinn ey Mr s Joa nn e
Wtlhams assistant cashaer
Fa1mers Bank &amp; Savmgs Co
P om e r o)
a nd
M1 c key

FUll TEXT OF THE RESOlUTIONS
PROPOSING EACH AMENDMENT

presrden t of the La ke
Regron m a de her offtc1a l VIsit

\ICC

Powell

I

WATE R AND THERMAL

t he

church Re\ George Glaze had
gr ~H e
I he Halloween mot af
wa s ea r ne d out m t he
de&lt; m atm ns prepa red bv Mrs
Ravmon d
Ba ker
Mrs
l .o:m renlc Ste\\ar t an d Mrs
De nver R1ce MI s •E' wrn a nd
M1 s Rua c h han dl ed t he
rese rvations for the dmner
The program cons1sted of a
smg a lon g wrth Mrs Erwm at
Uae p ran o Mr s Gr ueser read
1 he Watchmen
Forgave
and My Gr eatest Love a nd
Mrs BlUll gardner and M1 s
Peggy Brrckl es presented a

3'

FOL L UT ION

(

Mrs Denver R1ce Mr
Mrs Bud Wilson Mr and
Osby Marlin Mr and
Harold Lohse Mr and
Wilham Grueser Mr and

Wrlson v.ho ta lked on how the
cla ss must depend on donahons
fr om o ther s m the c hurch as
drmk exposed to ger ms dirt and msects and downtov.n pollutiOn
mall sorts o£weather Still there are mothers 1\ho do lh1s to the1r ~ \\e ll as mdiVId uals of the
co m mu mt y t o s uppor t t he
very own tiny mfants When baby cn es a b1t he gets a dry rubber
m onthly vasat
rupple stuck mto h1s mouth To me lhiS IS the worsl pollution
the• e IS _ MRS 5
1he dmner " as ~ervect bv the

wtth tee cream and coffee

Mrs Lula Hampton was the

II {
s IJ
!\ill N JM J N l

I

Mrs Chester Erwm to Walson
out go m g pr esrd e nt Den ve r
Rrce and Mr s Bumgard ner

CHESTE R - Mrs Dorothy
Ritchie Chester Council 323
was elected secretary for the
Deputy Club of D1stnct 13
Daughters of Amer1ca, Sunday
at the home ot Mr s Faye
Hoselto n Belpre d1 s tnct
deputy
Other officers elected were
Mr s
Hoselton
Belpre

for

S

EXPL AN ATI O N Of" ISSU E N O

Mrs George Glaze Mr and

nataonale chapeau, Mrs Leha

members of the E1ght and
Forty have collected 138 dues

I

NO

one G1fts we• c presented by

Deputy club selects officers

discussed mtttatwn of four
partners It was noted that

f

I J

sk1l

to take a 25-cent arllcle m a
sack for a p1g m a poke sale
A recepllon for the new

Hunt m Lansin g M1ch Oct
22 2 to 5 p m w11l be attended
by Mrs Martm, Mrs Rhoda
Hackett Mrs Myrtle Walker
and Mrs Eun1e Brmker
Mrs Jul1a Hysell w1ll host
the Nov 6 m eetm g and the
annual Chnstmas dmner party
will be at the Red Carpet Inn
Dec 4 A $5 donation was made
to lhe Oh10 Departemental for
pouvtor expenses Mrs Iva
Powell, m1llatory chairwoman

J

\f S

trea surer
Recog mzed ror perfect at
te ndan ce
v. e re
Willi a m
Grueser, 25 years Mrs Roach
11 and Mrs Wrlham Grueser

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve IS w1th mothers who carry
uncovered baby bottles m public We do not ca rry our food and

ONE YEAR OLD - Sbane
Sullivan Circle, son of Mr
and Mrs Larry Circle, Fort
Lauderdale, Flo , celebrated
his f~rst birthday Sept 29 "'

1

•

of Ch n st was held Tuesday

Cash 1ers J anet Duffy Olga

I he t)(Juths £Jre to be sd up
(i &lt;.t l {, !0 p OJ ;.mtJ Will
'pen rt 1 ~Op 11 1 lhc evenmg 1 f
tir e bdldcti
Anothe r hm d n s ml-! prOJCL l
of the Cutholu.' Women s ( lub IS
a 1 wn m~Jgc sale sd fo r De c 4
md 5 tn the dmrch base men t
N v

Homebuilders mark
35th servtce year

Chadwell
Coffee Kate Welsh Roberta

Polly 's Pointers

Invited

REVIVAL Serv1ce a t F1rst
Bapllst Church
Ra c me,
Thursday 7 30 p m The Rev
Frank Snare Will use the top1c
You(th) On the Run Spec1al

gone up, too "

'

wives

wives welcome

nation to the cleaners

.,

their

Potluck w1ll be served F1lms
will be ohown by Pat Potentate
of
Aladdm
Temple
Prospecllve c andidates and

4 loaves

RC OOLA
8 pack

Super Shef..

Els1e

THURSDAY
RACINE Twm C1ty Shrme
Club Thursday, 7 p m at
Racme Club House All nobles

THURSDAY
VEGETABLE and be a n
soup p1e also at Bethany
Church annex 4 30 to 6 30

Kauper IS the nation 's top cop m charge of the Justice
Department'santitrust diVISion, and he uses the slory of hiS wife
to illustrate hls opmwn that millions of Amertcans are today
bemg tsken to the cleaners because of large and small pncefixing schemes
The trouble IS, many Amertcans don't know 11, and many
others don't care about 11, and thus m sp1te of the recent
presidential assurance of a ''return to VIgorous enforcement of
antitrust laws," very little can be unmediately done to set thls
most undemocratic matter strmght
Pr1ce fixing IS an ep1denuc m the nation, Kauper Insists, but
inflatiOn makes 11 hard to tell When the economy IS stable,
dealers who conspire to hike prices stick out like warts on a long
neck But durmg mflationary periods such as now, wben
everythmg riSeS every day, antitrust activ1ty is mcely
camouflaged by Cll'Cumslances
So 11 IS that Kauper's office estunates the American consumer is likely to be overcharged some _, blllion !hill year for
goods and serv1ces purchased m a marketplace that IS 111creasingly uncompetillve Much of th1s money waste will go for
perfectly legal monopolisl1c serv1ces, such as regulated public
utility concerns, but a good part will be forfeited to illegal
busmess pract1ces, 1 e those that get together to set mutually
beneficial pr1ces
Thes1tuat10n •s downright unAmerican Worse, smce it hides
m the inflation it helps promote Yet, unhappily, and agam
desp1te President Ford's wrath, there are no qwck solutions The
laws agamst price fixing, for one thing, are totally ineffective
when facmg large industry Six months ago the Justice Department filed mdictments against mght major dye making firms,
charging they had conspired to jack prtces by 10 per cent or $300
m!Uion, If they are convicted tbe maxunwn judgment against
them would be $50,000 each - "almost worth 1!," as one lawyer
grumps, "agamst the $300 million "
As for the small fry price fixers, they can be hurt in court but
seldom are Kauper's staff, limited in size, concentrates on ~
80 cases a year, moslly b1g, the Uttle crooks, then, which
collectively are as dangerous as the b1g, break laws and bank
accounts with lrnpuruty
Preswnably, consumers could help drag the small consprrators to justice But there are risks In citizens acting as cops,
one bemg that provmg antitrust is much m'&gt;re difficult than
suspecmt antlll'ilst
"Suppose you have two gas stati0118across from each other,"
says a trust busting attorney, "and one day they both raise thetr
jrlces 5 cents a g~~Uon If one guy says he r81Sed fnt, and the
other says he followed ID protect hbnself, that's legal You may
linow damn well they got togeth!!l' and decided to hike prices, but
unless you can prove it m court -which ahnosl meana getting an
admission of gullt from both -you have no case to try at aU "
Aild even If tile legaHtlea of prosecution were aunpler,
Kauper and hls people feel the pnce fixing epldenllc would still
flourish "This is probably not ihe kind of thing I'm suppo8\!d to
say," Kauper has confinded, "but I have always had a Utile
doubt about how commtttell tbe general pubHc really is to the
notion of competition "
Evidence is that fewer and fewer people show outrage with
jrlce fixing, fewer and fewer olficlala are reluclant to grant
antitrust exemptions ID requesting Industries - and hardly
anyone anpnore even grumblas at the continuing growth of
competltion-ldll1ng multinltlonal cot poratioils
It's hard to figure the public attitude here But perhaps It's
simple resignation At a time when a man, following Hobbes'
theory, IS beginning to be wolf to man, people may have become
too busy trying to SW"Vlve in the market ID worry whether It's still
free

Mary M011 ow

mold Mrs Jan e Tea ford,
Mrs JaniCe Lawsonand Wanda
Teaford
hos tess es
All
welcome
'MAN WHERE Are You ' IS
the top1c of message by the
Rev Frank Snare at Racme
First Baptist Church, 7 30 p m
Special mus1c by Mrs Manuel
Gheen and Larry Fisher

Taking a

By Tom Tiede
WASJDNGTON- (NEA)- Thomas Kauper tells the story
of hls wife gomg to the laundry and learmng that the price of dry
cleaning had; overmght, gone up steeply Well, she told the
operator, "then I'll go someplace else "Won't do any good, the
owner replied confidently, "because all the other laundries have

an d

scheduled to meet Nov 6 at 10
am and Thursda) No\ 7 at
9 30 a m are

Slt11

for calor and contame r s for

2 lb.

FAVORITE
BREAD

To

Race the Wmd
by Harold
Krentz Roll call comment on
the program
SYRACUSE Third Wed
nesday Homemakers Club 10
a m at Mumc1pal bwldmg
Covered d1sh at noon ProJect
IS makmg- candles Bnng
parawax old candles lipstiCk

and

GROUND BEEF

and Mrs

Bernard Fultz to rev1ew

SA 1. 9 to 8::m

lb.

M1tch

11

Paul a Good Ann ( ol l&gt;uf n J tn&lt;
Beegle ~md J ant Mli ll t'
M HI y
Kun ze lnw n Rt :-.r
Sasson and Anna Blu k\-\- oorl
wall ha ve ( h a r ~e of th r
waitresses who a1e to be Hl the
chW'rh e~t G m p m No\ 6 to
se t the t 1bles an d ba zaa r d ..:t \1
at 4 p m

cha irwomen of the katchen
Othe r s on t he co mm1tt ec

Folll od

Mrs Harold Sauer to re view
Ahce - Andes Surv1vor s by

MARI&lt;ET

SAUSAGE

cece li a

!l us h

Hanrllev fo Itil l' m t

MIDDLE PORT Lite ra r y Emm a Brode r1 ck
Ka h e
Club Wednesda\ 7 30 p m at Gruese r Mary Jane Goebel
the home of Mrs Nan Muore

SMOKED

HEAD CHEESE &amp;
SOUSE

Dr ew

Webster Post 39 7 30 p m
Wednesday al the home of Mrs

BOLOGNA $1 29

OLD FASHION

Ca Iend ar·,
Auxallary

Shu! ~ \

"cud s MHidmt Kum \-1 IItlt n

DOJ:oth y Gloec kn er a s co
'

Leg aon

Funeral serv~ces will be
Friday at 2 p m at the BlgonyJordan Funeral Home, Albany,
With Rev Paul W1lllams of.
flclatlng Burial will be m the
School Lot Cemetery, Carpenter Friends may call at the
funeral home anytune after 2
pm Thursday

SLICED

Casc 1

WEDNESDAY
PAST Presidents Amenca n

115 MAIN ST., POMEROY

BROUGHTON'S 2%

the Sac1ed Hea1 t C c~th o lt (.
Women s Club

Dmnet Will be served ft om
" 4 !0 to 7 p m "'th Gemma

SOC I'aI

(Alma)

MON.-THURS. 9 to 7, FRI. 9 to 8 PM,

Ballot language, explanaltons, and resolutiOns
for Proposed Jlmendments to the Ohro Conslttution
to be submitted to the voters at the
General Electron, November 5, 1974

Sacred Heart bazaar Committees named

CompreheOSlve Employment
and !l'ralning Act of urn This
program ls to be Implemented
Jan I, 1975 The next regul!U"
meeting was scheduled for
Nov 7, at 7 30 p m in the
Cheshire Community Center

Nina C. Chase dies in Michigan

SIMONIS

observance from house to

FULL COLOR
PORTRAIT OFFER

Add•l•onal Children
In Family
1 99

CHESHIRE - An outreach
food stamp program may be
approved ,
Galha-Meigs
Commumty Acllon Agency
Execullve Board learned at 1ts
monthly meeting last Thurs
day at the Cheshire Comlmimty Center
Program reports were given
and the board was updated on
current leglslat10n affecting
Community Action Agencies
and the Office of EconoJruc
Opportunity
Outreach
workers Grace Thomas and
Letha Proffitt were granted
salary mcreases effective Nov
I, 1974
The Board was informed of a
corporallon for Ohio Ap palachian Development grant
for ' Foodstamp Outreach' If
approved, Gallia-Me1gs CAA,
as a member agency, would
rece1ve money to unplement
the program
Approval was g1ven for the
employment of Marcia Hen-

Racine children

8x10

•

-Outreach food plan poss~le

Tuesday's triangular match
honors on the Logan golf
course wtth a 161 total, just
edgmg out the host Ch•eftams
who fmished w1th 162 The
Marauders had a 172 total
Medalist was M1ke McBroom
of Logan w1th a 33
For the Marauders, Jeff
Warner Jrred a 40, Chuck
Follrod a 43 Bruce Blackston a
44, M1ke Nesselroad a 45 and
John Thomas a 47
The Marauders f1mshed
fourth m the sectional tournament a week and a half ago
wh1le the Jayvee squad
f1mshed 1ts season w1th a 5-{)
slate

Sears

e

'

Sacrificial Altar

house m the town Anyone
wishing to donate money for
the party is asked to g1ve 11 to
the village clerk Mrs Mae
Cleland, or to any council
member

_ __

f

I~

lr

�.. ..... ...... .............

'

!

9- The Da•lySentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Wednesday Oct 16 1'1 74

8- The Dally Sent mel M1ddlenort Pomeroy 0 , Wednesday, Ocl 16 1974

Meigs golfers end at 14-11
The Me1gs Marauder Golf
Team concluded its first fall
season w1th a successful 14-11
record Tuesday night, although
the swmgers of Ron Logan
went down to defeat m the1r
!mal match of the year
Nelsonville-York captured

'

Man cited after
Tuesday accident
Arthur Sm1th 75 Pomt
Pleasant was charged w1th
failure to stop w1thm the

assured

clear

distan ce

followmg an acc1dent at 1 50
p m Tuesday on Rt 35, two
nules east of Gallipolis
City police sa1d the Smith
veh1cl e struck the rear end of a
car operated by Gary Self 19
of Patnot There was moderate
damage
A smgle car m1shap occurred
at 6 50 a m Tuesday on Rt 160
f1ve tenths of a m1le south of
Rt 35 were Weltha Clagg, 45
Gallipolis, swerved her car to
avOid two deer which entered
the h1ghway
Mrs Clagg lost control of her
car wh1ch slid off the highway
LONG ILLNESS ENDS
Michael Fernando husband
of former Meigs County
res1dent, Ruby Young Fer
nando, died Monday at the
Marshall Community Hospital,
Moundsville, W Va , followmg
a hngenng illness Funeral
services wtU be held at the
Wells Funeral Home m New
Martinsville where Mr and
Mrs Fernando resided, at 11
a m Thursday The body will
be brought to the Pine Grove
Cemetery m Me1gs County for
graveside services at 2 p m
Thursday, w1th Rev Roller!
Bwngarner off1c1atmg Mrs
Young surviVes her husband

Refonn
Con tmued from page I
functlonanes of Congress and
m a Justice Department that
sunply had no appetite for
election law prosecutwns
There was a distlllCt unprovement after the 1971 law
put pres1dent1al campa1gn
finance enforcement under the
General Accounting Office,
and the creation of a new
agency to take over that function along w1th policmg of
congresSional campmgns could
become the most effect1ve
refonn of all

to have party
RACINE - " ilulloween
party for children of Racme
sponsored by Racme Village
Council w1ll be held Wed
nesday Oct 30, from 7 to 9
pm
Children 12 and under are
mv1ted to the event at the new
addi lion of the f1re house
Prizes will be awarded to the
prettiest ugliest funmest,
most ongmal and the youngest
masked There w1ll be games
and refreshments and each
child w1ll be given a sack treat
There will be no tr1ck or treat

DISSOLUTION ASKED
F1ling for a dissolution of
marnage m Me1gs County
Common Pleas Court are Jean
F Dalley and Elson R Dalley,
Portland
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature m down
town Pomeroy at 11 a m
Wednesday was 53 degrees
under cloudy but apparently
clearmg skies

Ford tells
Con tmued from oage 1

ners and the retU"ed,

restrtc~

tmg conswner credit, taxing
excess prof1ts, and creating a
program of jobs £or people out
of work
' The nation 1s m an
econom1c emergency," said
Mansfield

1 DAY ONLY
SATURDAY
OCTOBER 19

¢

YOUR CHOICE
1st Print

No Hllfldhng
Charge

9:30 to 4:30 PM

e

Age L•mil 12 yean and Under
or Senior Catizens

or 2 Children

1 DAY ONLYy
SAJURDA
OCJiOBER 19

Posep Together
2 49
• Addit1onll pr~nts and
re orders at reasonable prices

Set•sfactlon Guerenteed or Your Money

SHOP AT SEAlS
AND SAVE

.,

•

Back

~ 220E.MAIN
~ POMEROY, 0.

I

dr1cks as part-time secretary
until Dec 31,1974 for the Head
Start Program
In other business, the board
discussed
the
proposed
Manpower Program to be
funded under Title I of the

CARPENTER - Nlrla C
Chase, 81, a long-time res1dent
of this community, passed
away Tuesday afternoon 10
Hillsdale, M1ch
Mrs Chase was born April
30, 1883, the daughter of the
late Mr and Mrs William
Nicholson She was also
preceded m death by her
husband, Marvm Chase who
died in 1970, a daughter, three
SISters and a brother
A member of the Carpenter
BaptiatChurch, she IS surv1ved
by a daughter, Mrs G Harold

Co mimtt €"es haH• b ee n
named for th e Nov 7 bazaar of

~
.

Hem, Hillsdale, Mich ,
a sister, Mrs Alice Epple,
Rutland , a brother, Seth
Nicholson, Rutland, four
grandchildren and one greatgrandchild

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharged, Ocl. 15)
Jeffrey Black, Flossie
Burble, James R Burns, Jr
Courtney Caudill, Kathy Clark,
Deborah
Clary,
Sharon
Durham Dorothy Edmundson
Elalyn
Eubanks,
Alice
Featherolf Bula Hale, Emory
Hart, Dora Hersko, Mary C
Hughes , Carl Hysell Cynthia
lgleheart Mrs Junwr Jeffers
and daughter Jean Johnson
Ruban Johnson, Nicholas King,
John Uoyd, Kathy Martm,
FlOSSie Mattox, Unda Moore,
Kenneth Newsome, Mrs Cec1l
Queen, Sr , and daughter
BOOSTERS MEET
Twenty persons attended
Tuesday s Blue Dev1l Boosters
meeting at Oscar's F1hns of
the GAHS Jackson game were
shown by Coach C L (Johnny)
Ecker Members discussed
VariOUS club prOjeCts

TOM TIEDE

MILK

Earl Morris wins Foote promotion
NEW HAVEN, W Va John Wolfe, plant manager of
the Graham Plant, Foote
Mmeral Co , New Haven, W
Va , announced the promotion
of Earl B Morris to general
foreman 10 the productiOn
deparbnent, effective Oct 1
Morris started h1s employment with Foote Mineral

Co, June 26, 1952 m the
production deparbnent where
he worked at var1ous-posttions
He was promoted to assistant
foreman on Jan 23, 1956 On
Oct 1, 1972, he was promoted to
foreman in the product1on
deparbnent, a pos1lion which
he has held until hls recent
promotion
Morr~s
graduated from
Racme
High
School m 1943 He
Edgar Rutherford Lloyd
Sears Sr , Mrs Gary Sunpson and his w1fe, Opal res1de wtth
and son Grace Snyder, !herr daughter at Rt 1, Racme
Margaret Sullivan, Sandra
Vetth , Kathryn Walsh, Mary
TRICK· TREAT
Wamsley, Ruth Weaver ,
RUTLAND -Trick or Treat
Fremont W1lson
N1ght wtU be observed. this
(Births)
year in Rutland V1Uage, Mayor
Mr and Mrs Rudiger Eugene Thompson announced
Brons!, a daughter, GaU1pohs , today The observance IS for
Mr and Mrs Paul Chesser, children of the community only
Jr , a daughter, Oak Hill, Mr and w1U be from 7 to 7 30p m,
and Mrs Dale Edmonds, a Oct 30 The town s1ren will
daughter Glenwood, W Va mark the openmg and closmg
of actiVIties The event is for
youngsters 12 and under

Mary Martm

Piers Paul Reed

79~
'100

mustc by g irls'

triO

a nd

Wilham Beegle
MEIGS Museum
open
Tuesday
and
Thurs day
evemngs, 7 30 p m th1s week
and next week and Sunday, 2 to
5 p m for v~ewmg the display
of photography work of Walter

99~
With Coupon Exp1res Sat.

Semshe1mer, Cincmnab

pm
take contamers for
carryout service sponsored by

Dorcas Women s Fellowship
SENIOR C11lzens hshmg

~

derby across from Semor

Cillzens Center 8 a m to 4
p m for everyone 55 or over
Pr1zes of $10 and $5 for £~rst and
second largest respectively
and $3 for most caughl
FRIDAY
I HAVE a Date w1ll be
presented by Rev Frank Snare
at Racm e F1rst Baptist
Church, 7 30 p m , w1th spec1al
muSic by the Manuel Trw
SATIJRDAY
CHESTER PTA J1tney
Supper and Halloween carmval
at Chester Elementary School
Servmg at 5 p m carmval at 7
p m W1de var1ety of food to be
offered
SQUARE DANCE at Shade
School !rom 9 p m to 12
lllldmght Mus1c by Frog Stack
and The Greenhorns Sponsored by Shade PTA
FALL Fesllval at Portland
School at 6 30 p m Pr1zes £or

at

Big Shef®

2/$1.25

2/$1.00
Save38¢

Save45¢

v.-1th th•s coupon

wHh thla coupon
Our llnquet on a Bun! Two
open flame broiled bttf·
burg.,. topped wllh molted

Th•s •s the BIG one A full

'• pound pally of cho•ce
ground beef brot led aver

open flames served on a
toast,ed bun with lettuce

Kralt Chllat our apeclal

..uct and 'Chopped lettuce

tomato and sweet Bermuda
onion
Oct 25

Coupon good until
It BIJRGI:R CHEF,

costummg

Coupon i.ood until Oct 2&lt;
at BURGI:R CHEF,

1503 Eaatern Avenue ,&lt;liiUpo)il!

1503 Ellllern Av•nue GIIHpolla

Sta

CheesebUrger

2/994

4/994

Save31¢

Seve41¢

with thla coupon

With thll I:OUpon
100% frtah ground bttf
broiled over o"n fl1m11
topped with melted Kraft
chHH on a touted bun

A hot heapfn' htlpln
country flavored ham all
melted over. Wlth .. vary
Sw•le chetH ~d our tpe-

clal ••uce on a touted bun

25

'

•
'•

2/994

-

Save31¢
wilh thlt coupon

Two full ••zt paffin of openfie,. bro•led ground beef..
1nCI a topping of melltd
Krall chH• on 1 toatt.d
bun

••
••

Mtfl ttl 1 coupon
14 tatty flth tllltt topped
with melted Krall chttlt
chopped lettuce and our
apeclal tartar 81uct

•
••

•

...
"

•

"

t

I

•

Suthetla nd

Aml a

Jacobs

Hilda Ha rns

Katie

B1ron Barbara M 1~le n Helena
BJ ickl es Bec ky Brode n c k ,
G1rola m•

Rosemary Gagnon

I I

~jlOW( h. n

Kovalchi k All ee F 1ee m a n
Julie Hamm R1 ta Hamm
Sharon Machael Sus1e Stewart

Chrtstme Gr ueser Philom ena

V1d1 a

I, \

The1 arc Phvlbs Hackett
Ph) Ill s
Kno pp
Sa ndy

Tma Duffy

Ros1e Colburn

V1cky Blankenship Ma ureen
Hennessy Mar} Kay Hen
nessy Jo Ellen Ro ush Di ane

Isa be l

Wehrun g Hedw1g Cremeans

(

----·

I_

Free

en

tertamment Games and door
pnzes Refreshments w1ll be
sold Sponsored by PTO
CHICKEN DINNER at St
Paul s Umted MethodiSt
Church annex, 4 to 7 p m
complete dmners
SUNDAY
REVIVAL, 7 30each evemng
through 'Sunday at the Racme
Apostolic Church w1th Elder
Daymond Adams, Manetta
speaking
GUEST preacher at Grace
Episcopal Church at 10 30 a m
w1ll be Rev James Trapp
newly appointed youth o£f1cer
for the Ep1scopal Church m the
Dwcese o£ Southern Oh10
Youth of the pansh begmmng
at junior h1gh level and youth
leaders wtll meet personally
with Rev Trapp durmg a
luncheon at 12 noon followmg
the church service and coffee
hour
REVIVALnow m progress at
Rutland Community Church
through Sunday ServiCes are
7 30 p m Evangelist IS Rev
Russell Harper, Fremont
Brother Eugene Roush IS
pastor The pubhc IS mv1ted to
attend
HOMECOMING at Mornmg
Star Church Mormng worship
at 9 30 a m S1111day School at
10 30 basket dmner IS 12 30
p m Afternoon songfest at 1 30
w1th Rev Larry Poling , pastor ,
m charge Everyone welcome

.'
I

• I

H 1

l s

\1 11 \

( 1 t -;s

S li t Ill

\ lt h. 111 ~h
I'~ !II M ~ K11q.:, ! !
H1t 1 ( 1St 1 h l 1 ( 1s 11 md It m
"b it s
or ht 1 \ \ ~• k• , s r , tht h \l': ;i d l
It
t tkt
sl1n d
Yer 1
Bm h :&amp;n u• Bt 11) Oh lmgt: l &lt;md
P~1t Mt Kr 1gli t
I&lt; ~1n n W1 1 k Ca 1ol Mt
Cu llou g h V1kk u~ Gl &lt;)(r kne l
md Y\ unne I ulz
Re h g aJu s a 1 t l l h s Hh oda
Ha ckett I ll C'tta Bll gle a nd
BC'I na dm e Mt 1e1
Pa rl e! post P hylh::; H("n
nessv J cm e F1 ymye r tnd

Manlyn F:pple
Fash [}On d George Kor n
Sa ndv Korn i:jnd Jane l Korn
Pop
Jo \nn e I a tte r so n
Ha1 ba• a Sm1th a nd Ka th y

~

ht 11m :-.lt ul z! n g Hu II r d
n d M 11 11\ n P1 ulm M u k md
N il( \ ( l l!i.str Mr liHI M rs

t

P ul l l tt l ls ( fr uits md " " "

{ Ill! s II Ill ~
WI! sir Dt n nr s
S ~l.'ll.' n s

&lt;Hid

cHid Ann :i
1nd Cf.l l la
Ro bc at &lt;.~nd

M u In Mt ll.' r

1 he
ba~r qu l.'t

!5t h
.rn nl\ e r s a 1 )
of the Hom eburld er s

Cl1ss of the Middlepor t Ch w ch

Dmlev and Br onw} n Da lley

of Chri st v.1lh eledwn of new
offi{ers and r ecogmllon of
those \.u th per fec I atte ndance
The new offt cers we re Mrs
Bum ga rd ne r
S h 1r le}
prcsrden t Bud Wrlson vace
pres 1d~ nl
Mrs Coleen Vo-m
Meter secreta ry Mrs Mary
Hysell assrst£Jn t secre tary

P 1e ro tt1

P earl Poulin a nd

Eli za beth Horak
Cle f:l n up

Norbe rt

a nd

By Polly Cramt r

Bleach leaches
hardwood floor
POLLY SPROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Not knowmg there was a leak m the bottle I
put my bleach on my hardwood floor and now have a "hlle nng J
would apprectate any suggestwns a s to how l can tak e ca re of
thiS and restore my floor to Its ongmal conditiOn - ISABELLE

n&lt;ghl al lhe Middleport Ch urch

a nd Mr s

Doro lh)

Roac h

Several fr1ends Jomed the

family for hom•made •ce
cream and cake Shane 's
grandparents are Mr and
Mrs Douglas Circle, Racine
and Mr and Mrs James
Cundiff, Columbus

Salon 710
has meeting

-

a n eedy
fam1ly wtth a food basket and
sendmg b1rthday cards w1th
d•mes to the NatiOnal Jew1 sh
R emembenn g

Hospital m Denver v. ere ta ken

on as November proj ects by
the Me1gs County Salon 710
E1ght and Forty at a meetmg
Monday mght at the home of
Mrs Mary Martm chapeau
It was reported durmg the
meetmg that the salon had pa1d
$36 for new lenses for Sheme
Marshall a cyst1c f1bros1s
child m the county A proJect
for nurses scholarship was

earned out by Mrs Mary
Roush w1th $22 25 bem g
collected from the members
Next month everyone

IS

asked

the Amen c an

Legw n

Amuhary
Fmance

proJects

were

outlined by Mrs Pearl Knapp
and these mclude a candy sale

the sale of Christmas cards
date books Jewelry kmves
candles and bells Another
rwnmage sale was set for Nov
2 3 and 4 with the place to be

announced
It was reported that Mrs
Gladys Mowery IS not well
The birthdays o£ Mrs
Catherine Welsh and Mrs
Knapp were observed w1th a
decorated cake bemg served
actmg l'awnomer and closed

the meetmg w1th Helen Siemer
R1ce s poem, So Sw1ft the
Day ~ Short the Way '

GRANDCHILD BORN
,Mrs Carl Wellman, Fort
G'!Y W Va
formerly of
Pomeroy has a new grand
daughter The e1gh,t.pound g1rl
Beth Mar1e, was ~n Oct 8 to
Mr and Mn; J1mmte Sutton

Pritchard W Va

NAI

\
XII S I I
:t
TO PER MI T L AWS REDUCI NG
REA L ES T A T E T A X ES O N T H E

H OM ESTE A OS Of' P E RM A NENTLY
f. N O T O TAL L Y D I SAB L ED
RES ID E N TS
If aUop lcd lh e t1 m ~nd m t! n l r. hall
l'alre e Hec 1 Ja n u a ry I 197.\
1

I

v

fIt~

I

I'
s

I \1 I
F.
I JS I: f)
"I \I! I NU:\ 11 ~ 1
I ~ J\ t I I
)

P hlla t hea

Women

of

teachers for the past year A
h1 stury of the cla ss was read
Mrs Her man Km ca rd

b~

If Sl f)
A 11

Art

eJ~

NS I
&gt;'~ ~

1

J I II
:-.; r

~I\

Section 13

V II

TO IN CL:JDr: THE FOLLOW JN C
AMONG TI-lE P URPOSES F O R
WHI CH P UBLIC I N D U STRI A L
DEVEL OP M E N T REV E N UE
BO N DS MAY BE ISSUED A ND
LOAN G U ARANTEE PRO G RA M S
UNDER T A K E N W IT HOUT
OBLIG ATJNC OR PLE DGI N G
MO N EYS RA I SED B Y TA X ATION
l

THE PRESE RVA T ION OF
EX IST IN G J OBS

2

THE CO NTROL O f' A IR

J

n -E

4

T HE CO N S TR UCT I O N OF
ELECTR IC AN D CAS
t, ri LI TY SER V ICE
f'AC L l fiE :. FOR POL L U
TION CON TROL OR SO LID
VIAS T E DIS POSA L

D SPOSAL OF SOLID
WAS T E AND

I

I

I

'

I

l~

1r
II

''uo I

I \

r

he

)

rn
f

r

1 ase; r~g

S\ 1! 11/E

I !JPSf.U
\ i\ F.:\1 / lM Nr
Rf \DO! 1 f.IJ

2

I ()J J&lt;.; l } C C ;\!'-' II U I I J N A
\:\1 1 :-./ 0\ 11 N I

EXP L ANAT I O N OF I SS U E NO

3

TO R E PEA L S EC TION ll Of'
ART ICL E VIII Of' T HE OH I O
CON STI T UTION W HI CH RE
O i.J IRES r u E G OV EH N O R T O
APPOI NT A S UP ER INTENDENT
O f' I l rn.IC W O RKS FOR 1\
om:: YEAn TE RM
lc

Attend mg were Mr a nd Mrs

Lawrence Stewart

Mr

and
I

and
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs

1 I

I H

O:: EC I I ON DE
F: I E \lHJ

Leonard Van Meter Mr and

Work at lhe Athens Mental
Heall h Cen ter was rev1ewed by

Mrs Chester Er\\m , Mr and
Mrs Herman Km ca1d Mr a nd

Mr s

Russe ll M1ll cr

Raymond Ba ker

Mrs

Mrs

Carl

Roach Mrs Eliza beth Sm1lh
Mr s

I

01

r a rn e Ne ff

Bum ga rdner

Mrs

a nd

Mr s

Bn ckles

DEAR POLLY - W T wa nted mformatwn a bout the ca re of
Damsh lea ther charrs We bought leather -covered dtmn g chatrs

when we were m Denmark The clerk told us s1mpl) wipe them
from tame to tame w1th a cloth that has som e pet roleum Jelly o n
1t This cleans and prevents crackmg I then Wipe ll off w1th a dry

cloth Our cha1rs look hk e new after 10 years of use a nd suc h
treatment _ M w
DEAR GIRLS _ Real leather IS a££ecled by heal excessive
dr;ness and dampness Keep leather-covered pteces away from
radiators and open \\indows during damp weather Saddle soap
can be used, according tu d1rectwns , or leather can be washed

wllh m1ld suds and a very little b1t of water Follow such washing
wllh a leather dressmg Daily clcamng w1Lh a soft, dry cloth
and an uccasmnal wiping with a damp one should keep a piece m
good shape U leather has become stiff from neglect soften with a
hghl applicatum of oil, such as neat's foot oil but do not use IOO

much Rub m well and lhen w1pe off w1th a dry cloth -POLlY
DEAR POLLY - Children have a habit of turmng the water
faucet on full when washmg thelf hands brushmg Lhe1r t eet~ or
gelling a dnnk of water To conse rve water reduce the wa ter bill
and elumnate spla shmg locate the water valve under or nea r

your wash basm m the bathroom a nd turn the pressure down JAN
DEAR POLLY - I had some lmen napkins yellowmg w1th
age m a drawer I use the fme quality paper dmner napk1ns to
save laundry Fmally Iilad the 1dea of sewmg enough of the lme n
ones together to make a table cloth for our dmmg table Lmmg up
the edges of the nepk1ns on a na t firm surface I wh1pped them
together usmg !men thread and fme e ven stllches I ha\ e had
many compliments on this and a fnend th ought such a cl oth
would be sinking sewed together w1 th gold Silver or colored
thread - AGNES

Bankers attend meeting
Mrs Rose Reynolds vacc
pr e s ad e nt
a nd
d1 r el to r
C1t1ze n s Nat aon al
Ba nk
M1ddl epo1t
a nd l
E
Re vno lds
Mrs
I oas
McElhmney assistant cashier
CJl! zens
Na ti o na l
Bank

ass istant ca sJuer Th e C1t1zens

M1ddle po1t

Na tw na l Bank McCo nnel s

a nd

SON BORN
Mr and Mrs Gar y Lee
S1mpson 329% North Th1rd
Ave Middleport a re an
noun cmg the birth of the1r f~rst
child a son Oct 10 at the
Holzer Medical Center The 6
lbs 1 ozs baby has been
named Kyle Arthur Grand
parents are Mr and Mrs Paul
A Simpson
Rose H•ll
Pomeroy and Mrs

Marjone

Grogan Wigal Middleport and
the late Lawrence Grogan
Mr and Mrs Ernest Wells
Th1rd Ave Middleport are
great grandparents

prestdent and Mrs Marga re t

Stacy Belpre Scnpture £rom
Mark 14 was read by Mrs
Stacy w1th a m edtlatlon fr om
The Upper Room and prayer
g1ven by Mrs Hoselton
Mr s
Stacy
natw n a l
represe ntatl\e gave a report
on the nat aonal sessiOn a t

Atlanll c C1ty N J The sta te
coun c alor s proJect of sa vm g
Be tty Cr ocker coupons to be
redeemed for a washer for the
hom e m Taffm was noted
Fnendshlp mght wa s an-

noun ced for Nov 12 at Belpre

Willi am s

Mrs

the

Pomeroy

Na za r e ne

Church
The party £or the ch1ldren of
the kindergarten, primary and
Junior classes w1ll be held al
the church Oct 26 from 2 to 4
p m while the semor h1gh class
will have a party at the hom• of
Rev and Mrs Clyde Hen
derson at a hme to be se t The
evenmg of Oct 26 the Adul t
Class w1 1l ha ve a costume
par t} At a ll d the pa rties

Evelyn Lan

nmg assistan t ca shrer

Far

me• s Bank &amp; Savmgs Co
Pomeroy an d Don La nnmg

and Mrs

Maxin e Gnfflth

pnzes Will be awarded £or
w1ll be served
Fred Pulhns pres1ded at the
meetmg w1th Glen McClung
g1vmg the prayer An offermg
was taken an d there was a
hymn smg Pullins gave thanks
be for e r efreshments
At
tendmg were Rev Henderson
McClun g Mr and Mrs Eslie
Mossman , Mr and Mrs Fred
Pullins Sheila_ and Shelly,
De bbi e Schae fer, Bar bara
Colmer Mam1e Stephenson
Paulette Leach Davy J am1e,
J m1 Farley and J oey

loa n

offi cer

Ba nk

Bartlett

c hairwoman

Mrs Mar]Orle Crenn ell, v1ce
pr es ide nt
Wa rr en Bank
Warren Mtch a nd reg10na l

ta bl e se rv1 ce Th e Deputy
Club s Chn stmas party was set
for 2 p m Dec 1 at the
Ramada Inn Marietta It was

noted that Mrs Edna Re1bel
deput) of Theodorus Coun cil
17 Pomeroy

wa s unable to

a ltend due to Illness Others
attendmg were Mrs Nellie
Hayes Theodorus Mrs Essa

Varn er deputy of Belle Pra m e
Coun c1l Mrs Edna V1ckers,
Belle Pram e Council, and a
gues t Mr s Betty Re ibel
1 heodoru s

as

of Cambridge Cambridge as
treasw-er
The National Assoc iation of

Bank Women
organt zatwn

Inc
for

1s an
women

holdmg executive and offiCial
posrtrons m banks

savmgs

banks and trust compames

ATTEND CONCERT
Mr and Mr s Charl es
Gnff1th were m Columbus
Sund ay where they attended a
concert of the Oh10 State
Unrvers1ty Marchmg Band m

front of the State House and
v1ewed th e Columbu s Day
Parade led by the OSU Mar
chm g Band Their da ughter
Karen rs a m ember of th1s all

brass band one of the lwo m
the Umled States

BPW MARKS WEEK
Busmess and

Professional

Me1gs H1gh
pr og ram

at

will present a
on

p er s onal

development

PARTY SLAtED
Th e
annual
Pomer oy
Elementary School Halloween
party has been se t for Satur
day,Oc t 26 at6 JOpm A hobo
th eme w1ll be earned out £or
th e party headed by Mrs Ke1th
R1ggs A poster contest Will be
held for the children

Apple Grove women give shewer

so n s

Juha Norris, Dolhe

Wolfe Luc1lle Rhodes, Joyce
Wh1t e Dor othy Roseberry
Donn a H1ll , J a n Nom s
Florence Smith E1lee n Buck,
Fior ella Barton
Sharon
Roseberry Helen Heaton
Rose Youn g, Bernice Rou'!h
Dee Spencer and Lmtla Youn~

ISSUE Z

Amende 1 Se n ate J om t Resolution
No 261
J 01N1 RESOLUT I ON
Proposing to repaal Mctlon 12 of
Ar ticle VIU of the Conllliullon
of the St a le ql Ohio req\lhlng- a
supu lnJendent of publl c w ork s to
be appointed by ibe G :lvarnor for
a o n e year lerm
Be tt reJ;olved by the Gcn e r 11 As
se nbly o f t h~ State of Ohio three
fifU s of the n~ r ben; e lected to
e a&lt;;h ho use co n&lt;;urrtng 'here in th a t
t h e e sha ll be s bmltted to t he
elet:tors of the sUi te m t h e man ner
pres cnbed by Jaw at th e genera l
e e c o n to be htdd on t he first
Tu~sda.y after t h ~ fir st Mon day In
Noven ber
][17&lt;1
a
pro posa l to
an "nd th e Const1 t u hon of t h e Sta te
of O h to b't repeahnll s e c tion 12 of
Arl 1clc VIII thereof

E FFEC ri VE DATE AND RE P EA L

If ad op ted b y a majon t y of the
e l ec~ors vot mg on this amendme n t
the .ame ndment shal l take lmmedi
a l e e ffect a nd ex isl mg JSe~.: tt on 13
of Article VIII .!!hall be repea led
from s uc h ellec ive d~ le

U N I TE D STATES OF AMERICA
EFFECTI VE DATE A ND R EP EAL
STATE OF OHIO
If adopted by a majo r ity o f the
OF F ICE OF T HE SECRET ARY
electors \C lin g on thi s a m endm e n t
OF ST ATE
th e an c ndment shall ta k e lmm cd i
1 TED W BRO WN Secre t ary of
ate e ffec t a nd secti o n 12 of Art1cle
VIII o r th e Co nstitution o f Oh to Str~h'! do hereby cer tify t h at t hes ha I be repealed f rom s uch e l!ec fo rc l(oinp: IS a true copy o f House
Jomt Resolut on No 59 Amen d ed
, , ~ d Jte
Se• ate Join t Resolution No 26 a nd
Amended Senate Joint R e.!lolutlon
ISSUE 3
No 22 proposing to amend the
IA rn endert Sen ate Jomt R e!:iu lut on Co ls lllut o n or O ~ io togeth er wit]\
t h e b tllot language and expla na tion
N o 2 2)
!or e a ~ h cer ttned to me b)' t he Ohio
B
l!ot B.;la rd
J OINT RESOLUT ION
IN 1 ES1 IMONY WH EREOf'
I
Proposlnll' io amand sacUcm 13 ol
Al'llc:J, VIII of the CanllilluUon h tl \ e he reunto subscnbed my n a m e
of the State of Obio t o expend nnd nmxect mv om c ~a l sea l at Co
lha pu.rr'" for whleh pv.bUC h mba ~; t ht;; 1st day of September
l ndudrla
development r e ve aue Hm
TE D W BROW N
boDdt may be laau.ed lo lnc hula
SN retary of State
pnMrvallon ot axlstlng Jobll and
Sc
II
nmo•al of &amp;Jl eldallDg d tnl•l ot

p..,

'
I

"'

Ho£f assistant trust officer
The C1l1zens Natwnal Bank
Man etta, as secretary and

co sm e tolog y Instruc tor

APPLE GROVE - Women
o£ the Apple Grove Umted
Method ist Church entertamed
Monday mght w1th a ) ayette
s howe r hononn g Veneda
Youn g Cake coffee, PUI\Ch,
nuts and mmts wer e served
Attendmg \\ ere Bess Par-

&lt;: O L .... I ION

v1ce

Women s Week w1ll be ob
served Oct 20-26 by the M1d
dleport Club A dmner will be
held Monday mght at the Me1gs
Inn at 6 30 p m w1th the
program to be presented by
Mrs Mary Bacon Mrs Molly
H1ll and Mrs Unda Stobart
Mrs
Mary
Powell

VISIT AUNT
Mr and Mrs Vern Barnhill
Sandu sky and Mr s Mar)
McKibben Caledoma, visited
Fnd ay w1lh the1r aunt Mrs
Alma Young Rt 3, Pomeroy

JO IN I I

c l lc 1 I'

Mtss Judy A

Mrs Dorothy Ma1er: assistant

Na ti onal Association of Bank

ll uc~cJo Jll

v1lle a s chairwoma n Mrs N
ass1s t a nt
J ea n Bowma n
secretary and trea sw-er and
loan office r Bartle tt Farmers

cash1er F1rst NatiOnal Bank

Women Inc held at Burr Oak
Lodge Glouster Oct 12

I"'S 'JE I

and

Bank and Charles Gr1ff1th
attended the fall mee tmg of the
Soulheaslern OhiO Group of the

PARTY HELD
RACINE - A surpriSe b1rth
day party was held Saturday
even mg at the home of Mr and
MEETING CHANGED
RACINE - A meehng of th e Mrs Robert Waldm g Racme
Amer•can Legwn Aux1hary of for their son Rob G1fts were
Racme Post 602 scheduled for presented to him and r efresh
Oct 22 ha s been changed to m en ts were served Guests
Oct 29 beca use of confl~etmg were Nancy Roy Lori TheisS
mee tmgs m the commun1ty Eddie Sm1lh Melan1a Waldmg
Members are to take a g1ft for J eff M1ller, Cmdy and Sha ron
a Sil e nt au ctiO n for t he Roush, Ed Huff , Chns and
Judy Sm1th Grove C1ty, and
meeti ng
J oe Holman

cos tumes and r e fre s hm e nts

to the g1oup and mslall ed the
follov.rn g orf1 ce rs fo r th e
cornm g year Mrs Don s M

cas ht e l , Pomeroy Nation a l

with a covered dish dmner
Members are to ta ke the1r own

Hallaween parties s!ated
Halloween parties for the
Sunday school classes were
pl ann ed dunng a re ce nt
meeting of lhe Adult Class of

Kenn eth

Mc E lhinn ey Mr s Joa nn e
Wtlhams assistant cashaer
Fa1mers Bank &amp; Savmgs Co
P om e r o)
a nd
M1 c key

FUll TEXT OF THE RESOlUTIONS
PROPOSING EACH AMENDMENT

presrden t of the La ke
Regron m a de her offtc1a l VIsit

\ICC

Powell

I

WATE R AND THERMAL

t he

church Re\ George Glaze had
gr ~H e
I he Halloween mot af
wa s ea r ne d out m t he
de&lt; m atm ns prepa red bv Mrs
Ravmon d
Ba ker
Mrs
l .o:m renlc Ste\\ar t an d Mrs
De nver R1ce MI s •E' wrn a nd
M1 s Rua c h han dl ed t he
rese rvations for the dmner
The program cons1sted of a
smg a lon g wrth Mrs Erwm at
Uae p ran o Mr s Gr ueser read
1 he Watchmen
Forgave
and My Gr eatest Love a nd
Mrs BlUll gardner and M1 s
Peggy Brrckl es presented a

3'

FOL L UT ION

(

Mrs Denver R1ce Mr
Mrs Bud Wilson Mr and
Osby Marlin Mr and
Harold Lohse Mr and
Wilham Grueser Mr and

Wrlson v.ho ta lked on how the
cla ss must depend on donahons
fr om o ther s m the c hurch as
drmk exposed to ger ms dirt and msects and downtov.n pollutiOn
mall sorts o£weather Still there are mothers 1\ho do lh1s to the1r ~ \\e ll as mdiVId uals of the
co m mu mt y t o s uppor t t he
very own tiny mfants When baby cn es a b1t he gets a dry rubber
m onthly vasat
rupple stuck mto h1s mouth To me lhiS IS the worsl pollution
the• e IS _ MRS 5
1he dmner " as ~ervect bv the

wtth tee cream and coffee

Mrs Lula Hampton was the

II {
s IJ
!\ill N JM J N l

I

Mrs Chester Erwm to Walson
out go m g pr esrd e nt Den ve r
Rrce and Mr s Bumgard ner

CHESTE R - Mrs Dorothy
Ritchie Chester Council 323
was elected secretary for the
Deputy Club of D1stnct 13
Daughters of Amer1ca, Sunday
at the home ot Mr s Faye
Hoselto n Belpre d1 s tnct
deputy
Other officers elected were
Mr s
Hoselton
Belpre

for

S

EXPL AN ATI O N Of" ISSU E N O

Mrs George Glaze Mr and

nataonale chapeau, Mrs Leha

members of the E1ght and
Forty have collected 138 dues

I

NO

one G1fts we• c presented by

Deputy club selects officers

discussed mtttatwn of four
partners It was noted that

f

I J

sk1l

to take a 25-cent arllcle m a
sack for a p1g m a poke sale
A recepllon for the new

Hunt m Lansin g M1ch Oct
22 2 to 5 p m w11l be attended
by Mrs Martm, Mrs Rhoda
Hackett Mrs Myrtle Walker
and Mrs Eun1e Brmker
Mrs Jul1a Hysell w1ll host
the Nov 6 m eetm g and the
annual Chnstmas dmner party
will be at the Red Carpet Inn
Dec 4 A $5 donation was made
to lhe Oh10 Departemental for
pouvtor expenses Mrs Iva
Powell, m1llatory chairwoman

J

\f S

trea surer
Recog mzed ror perfect at
te ndan ce
v. e re
Willi a m
Grueser, 25 years Mrs Roach
11 and Mrs Wrlham Grueser

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve IS w1th mothers who carry
uncovered baby bottles m public We do not ca rry our food and

ONE YEAR OLD - Sbane
Sullivan Circle, son of Mr
and Mrs Larry Circle, Fort
Lauderdale, Flo , celebrated
his f~rst birthday Sept 29 "'

1

•

of Ch n st was held Tuesday

Cash 1ers J anet Duffy Olga

I he t)(Juths £Jre to be sd up
(i &lt;.t l {, !0 p OJ ;.mtJ Will
'pen rt 1 ~Op 11 1 lhc evenmg 1 f
tir e bdldcti
Anothe r hm d n s ml-! prOJCL l
of the Cutholu.' Women s ( lub IS
a 1 wn m~Jgc sale sd fo r De c 4
md 5 tn the dmrch base men t
N v

Homebuilders mark
35th servtce year

Chadwell
Coffee Kate Welsh Roberta

Polly 's Pointers

Invited

REVIVAL Serv1ce a t F1rst
Bapllst Church
Ra c me,
Thursday 7 30 p m The Rev
Frank Snare Will use the top1c
You(th) On the Run Spec1al

gone up, too "

'

wives

wives welcome

nation to the cleaners

.,

their

Potluck w1ll be served F1lms
will be ohown by Pat Potentate
of
Aladdm
Temple
Prospecllve c andidates and

4 loaves

RC OOLA
8 pack

Super Shef..

Els1e

THURSDAY
RACINE Twm C1ty Shrme
Club Thursday, 7 p m at
Racme Club House All nobles

THURSDAY
VEGETABLE and be a n
soup p1e also at Bethany
Church annex 4 30 to 6 30

Kauper IS the nation 's top cop m charge of the Justice
Department'santitrust diVISion, and he uses the slory of hiS wife
to illustrate hls opmwn that millions of Amertcans are today
bemg tsken to the cleaners because of large and small pncefixing schemes
The trouble IS, many Amertcans don't know 11, and many
others don't care about 11, and thus m sp1te of the recent
presidential assurance of a ''return to VIgorous enforcement of
antitrust laws," very little can be unmediately done to set thls
most undemocratic matter strmght
Pr1ce fixing IS an ep1denuc m the nation, Kauper Insists, but
inflatiOn makes 11 hard to tell When the economy IS stable,
dealers who conspire to hike prices stick out like warts on a long
neck But durmg mflationary periods such as now, wben
everythmg riSeS every day, antitrust activ1ty is mcely
camouflaged by Cll'Cumslances
So 11 IS that Kauper's office estunates the American consumer is likely to be overcharged some _, blllion !hill year for
goods and serv1ces purchased m a marketplace that IS 111creasingly uncompetillve Much of th1s money waste will go for
perfectly legal monopolisl1c serv1ces, such as regulated public
utility concerns, but a good part will be forfeited to illegal
busmess pract1ces, 1 e those that get together to set mutually
beneficial pr1ces
Thes1tuat10n •s downright unAmerican Worse, smce it hides
m the inflation it helps promote Yet, unhappily, and agam
desp1te President Ford's wrath, there are no qwck solutions The
laws agamst price fixing, for one thing, are totally ineffective
when facmg large industry Six months ago the Justice Department filed mdictments against mght major dye making firms,
charging they had conspired to jack prtces by 10 per cent or $300
m!Uion, If they are convicted tbe maxunwn judgment against
them would be $50,000 each - "almost worth 1!," as one lawyer
grumps, "agamst the $300 million "
As for the small fry price fixers, they can be hurt in court but
seldom are Kauper's staff, limited in size, concentrates on ~
80 cases a year, moslly b1g, the Uttle crooks, then, which
collectively are as dangerous as the b1g, break laws and bank
accounts with lrnpuruty
Preswnably, consumers could help drag the small consprrators to justice But there are risks In citizens acting as cops,
one bemg that provmg antitrust is much m'&gt;re difficult than
suspecmt antlll'ilst
"Suppose you have two gas stati0118across from each other,"
says a trust busting attorney, "and one day they both raise thetr
jrlces 5 cents a g~~Uon If one guy says he r81Sed fnt, and the
other says he followed ID protect hbnself, that's legal You may
linow damn well they got togeth!!l' and decided to hike prices, but
unless you can prove it m court -which ahnosl meana getting an
admission of gullt from both -you have no case to try at aU "
Aild even If tile legaHtlea of prosecution were aunpler,
Kauper and hls people feel the pnce fixing epldenllc would still
flourish "This is probably not ihe kind of thing I'm suppo8\!d to
say," Kauper has confinded, "but I have always had a Utile
doubt about how commtttell tbe general pubHc really is to the
notion of competition "
Evidence is that fewer and fewer people show outrage with
jrlce fixing, fewer and fewer olficlala are reluclant to grant
antitrust exemptions ID requesting Industries - and hardly
anyone anpnore even grumblas at the continuing growth of
competltion-ldll1ng multinltlonal cot poratioils
It's hard to figure the public attitude here But perhaps It's
simple resignation At a time when a man, following Hobbes'
theory, IS beginning to be wolf to man, people may have become
too busy trying to SW"Vlve in the market ID worry whether It's still
free

Mary M011 ow

mold Mrs Jan e Tea ford,
Mrs JaniCe Lawsonand Wanda
Teaford
hos tess es
All
welcome
'MAN WHERE Are You ' IS
the top1c of message by the
Rev Frank Snare at Racme
First Baptist Church, 7 30 p m
Special mus1c by Mrs Manuel
Gheen and Larry Fisher

Taking a

By Tom Tiede
WASJDNGTON- (NEA)- Thomas Kauper tells the story
of hls wife gomg to the laundry and learmng that the price of dry
cleaning had; overmght, gone up steeply Well, she told the
operator, "then I'll go someplace else "Won't do any good, the
owner replied confidently, "because all the other laundries have

an d

scheduled to meet Nov 6 at 10
am and Thursda) No\ 7 at
9 30 a m are

Slt11

for calor and contame r s for

2 lb.

FAVORITE
BREAD

To

Race the Wmd
by Harold
Krentz Roll call comment on
the program
SYRACUSE Third Wed
nesday Homemakers Club 10
a m at Mumc1pal bwldmg
Covered d1sh at noon ProJect
IS makmg- candles Bnng
parawax old candles lipstiCk

and

GROUND BEEF

and Mrs

Bernard Fultz to rev1ew

SA 1. 9 to 8::m

lb.

M1tch

11

Paul a Good Ann ( ol l&gt;uf n J tn&lt;
Beegle ~md J ant Mli ll t'
M HI y
Kun ze lnw n Rt :-.r
Sasson and Anna Blu k\-\- oorl
wall ha ve ( h a r ~e of th r
waitresses who a1e to be Hl the
chW'rh e~t G m p m No\ 6 to
se t the t 1bles an d ba zaa r d ..:t \1
at 4 p m

cha irwomen of the katchen
Othe r s on t he co mm1tt ec

Folll od

Mrs Harold Sauer to re view
Ahce - Andes Surv1vor s by

MARI&lt;ET

SAUSAGE

cece li a

!l us h

Hanrllev fo Itil l' m t

MIDDLE PORT Lite ra r y Emm a Brode r1 ck
Ka h e
Club Wednesda\ 7 30 p m at Gruese r Mary Jane Goebel
the home of Mrs Nan Muore

SMOKED

HEAD CHEESE &amp;
SOUSE

Dr ew

Webster Post 39 7 30 p m
Wednesday al the home of Mrs

BOLOGNA $1 29

OLD FASHION

Ca Iend ar·,
Auxallary

Shu! ~ \

"cud s MHidmt Kum \-1 IItlt n

DOJ:oth y Gloec kn er a s co
'

Leg aon

Funeral serv~ces will be
Friday at 2 p m at the BlgonyJordan Funeral Home, Albany,
With Rev Paul W1lllams of.
flclatlng Burial will be m the
School Lot Cemetery, Carpenter Friends may call at the
funeral home anytune after 2
pm Thursday

SLICED

Casc 1

WEDNESDAY
PAST Presidents Amenca n

115 MAIN ST., POMEROY

BROUGHTON'S 2%

the Sac1ed Hea1 t C c~th o lt (.
Women s Club

Dmnet Will be served ft om
" 4 !0 to 7 p m "'th Gemma

SOC I'aI

(Alma)

MON.-THURS. 9 to 7, FRI. 9 to 8 PM,

Ballot language, explanaltons, and resolutiOns
for Proposed Jlmendments to the Ohro Conslttution
to be submitted to the voters at the
General Electron, November 5, 1974

Sacred Heart bazaar Committees named

CompreheOSlve Employment
and !l'ralning Act of urn This
program ls to be Implemented
Jan I, 1975 The next regul!U"
meeting was scheduled for
Nov 7, at 7 30 p m in the
Cheshire Community Center

Nina C. Chase dies in Michigan

SIMONIS

observance from house to

FULL COLOR
PORTRAIT OFFER

Add•l•onal Children
In Family
1 99

CHESHIRE - An outreach
food stamp program may be
approved ,
Galha-Meigs
Commumty Acllon Agency
Execullve Board learned at 1ts
monthly meeting last Thurs
day at the Cheshire Comlmimty Center
Program reports were given
and the board was updated on
current leglslat10n affecting
Community Action Agencies
and the Office of EconoJruc
Opportunity
Outreach
workers Grace Thomas and
Letha Proffitt were granted
salary mcreases effective Nov
I, 1974
The Board was informed of a
corporallon for Ohio Ap palachian Development grant
for ' Foodstamp Outreach' If
approved, Gallia-Me1gs CAA,
as a member agency, would
rece1ve money to unplement
the program
Approval was g1ven for the
employment of Marcia Hen-

Racine children

8x10

•

-Outreach food plan poss~le

Tuesday's triangular match
honors on the Logan golf
course wtth a 161 total, just
edgmg out the host Ch•eftams
who fmished w1th 162 The
Marauders had a 172 total
Medalist was M1ke McBroom
of Logan w1th a 33
For the Marauders, Jeff
Warner Jrred a 40, Chuck
Follrod a 43 Bruce Blackston a
44, M1ke Nesselroad a 45 and
John Thomas a 47
The Marauders f1mshed
fourth m the sectional tournament a week and a half ago
wh1le the Jayvee squad
f1mshed 1ts season w1th a 5-{)
slate

Sears

e

'

Sacrificial Altar

house m the town Anyone
wishing to donate money for
the party is asked to g1ve 11 to
the village clerk Mrs Mae
Cleland, or to any council
member

_ __

f

I~

lr

�~ '"

-·

.,

...

,

"\;.:_,, • ••• L

d., ,

"•

r.• ..._ , ... ,~ ~·

Jl.

iJ

1.

I

•,

~,~ ......... ..._.,.

••

~·

""

'T

'

·

''

'

'

·.. .

·•

•
11 - Thr Dailv Sentinel, M.iddleporl-Pomeroy, 0., W&lt;'&lt;lnosday ,,\ kl . W. I!IH

.

,.

·'Longwall stripping' tested

COMMUNITY
ME,RCHANTS

, By KA\' CHRISTENSEN
• CHARLESTON, W. Va :
, l UPI) - A new method or coal
~ mining, aimed at · increasing
. production while preserving
~ the envirorunenf, will be tested
as part or a $2 million venture
·in Boone County, it was an; nounced Tuesday. ·

.. Gov. Arch Moore, at a news

ELECTRIC
HEATER

Automati c

temperature

thermostat gives instant heat
with

Racine Plu-inbing &amp; Heating

conlerence, said lhe demon_slralion project of "longwall
, stripping" should begining the
, community of Julian in February, 1975.
Using conventional underground longwall machinery on
areas l"hich normally would be
, strip mined, the · method is
hoped lo boost productivity of
; the black fuel while main~ taning an ecological balance,
; according to Moore.

fan . forced air . Wide

ribbon elements produce fast

FOR COMPLETE............................. ..
HEATING AND PLUMBING
NEEDS

warm up. 1500 Watts (599)

General
Deluxe
Instant
radiant
heat - 960 watts
with
automatic

temperature

.

thermostat.

Sculptured

'

cabinet front
cabinet Hnished in

This
super - le e ric,
automatic. fan-forced heater
is U. L . listed. Featuring
ribbon elements for instant
heat. Safe, tip-over, switch
turns off electric current if
tipped over. 1320 watts.

Gun Metal Gray.
(59 A)

(63)

OTHER SIZES

CONTACT FRANK IMBODEN
OR BILL RIGHTHOUSE

q-··

.

··Increased mining activity
must be done in an environmentally sound manner," the
governor said. "Th is new
mining method may )l'ell be the
answer to resolve both of these
objectives ."
The project is ftmded twothirds by the Environmental
Protection Agency, with the
remaining cosl picked up by
lhe Wesl Virginia Surlaoe
Mining and Reclamation Associ3tion. The demonstration
will occur on property owned
by lhe American Electric
Power Co.
Jack Hubband of the EPA
said
lhe
new
method

represented a cross between
convention surface and deep
mining methods.
Under the process, strip cut

RACINE PLANING MILL

992~995

EMERGENCY

Racine Plumbing &amp; Heating
3rd ST.

Supplies

•••
.....
GOLQ SEAL

RACINE HOME NA.TIONAL BANK

24 oz.

BROUGHTON
__..........·COTTAGE CHEESE

••
••

GAS
OIL-LUBRICATION

•

"WE AIM TO PLEASE"

•
•
•

••
i•
•

lt!s Carpet
GET .YOUR NEW CARPET NOW AT THESE
SPECIAL PRICES

) CLASSIC

ARTS

RACINE

7.89

·GOLDEN ·ISLE
BISCUITS 8 ~

WORKS"IN A DRAWER.,
23" CONSOLE
diagonal COLOR TV

'

ePUSHBUlTON

•

TUNING
•MOTOROLA'

Plug-in Circuit
Pushbu tton
,

Modu les,
I

200 co"nt 3/$1~

ePWG-IN
CIRCUIT
MODELS

TICKETS ON ' SALE
HERE
NOW

..

- '·

'

.

'

'

'

'

:

1
,,j

•

.

'•

•I.

Ohio, 8 Democrats, 15
Republicans .
Democrats for : Ashley, Carney , Luken, Se iberling, James
Stanton, Vanik .

Democrats not voting : Hays,

CLUB TO MEET
The Rock Springs Better
Health Club will meel al I : 15
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Mrs. Betty Conkle . The names

of secret sisters will be
revealed.

'

Family ministry presentation
set at New Haven UM church
NEW

HAVEN

-

The

Cagno's, who make their home

Transfers

Florence M. Mickey, Cert. of
trans., Salisbury.
Robert Frank Leifheit,
dec'd. aka Robert Leifheit,
Jec'd. to Linnie Leifheit, Cert.
of Trans., Bedford .
Fern T. Gilmore, dec. to
Joan A. Parsons, Nancy G.
Bobb,
Ce rt.
of lrans .,
Salisbury.
Mallie J. Sprouse lo Nellie
Hysell, Lawrence A. Hysell, .45
Acre, Rutland.
Sybil Ebersbach, Comm.,
Harriet S. Neigler, dec'd. lo
Guy H. Neigler, Mary H. Cleek,
Lol, Racine.
Samuel N. Arnold, Ruth
Arnold, Car l D. Arnold, Alice
Arnold to, Karl A. Kehler, Jr.,
Mary C. Kehler, Lots,
Pomeroy .
Albert Hill, Jr., Ora E. Hill
and John F. Dudding, Martha
M. Dudding, Ease., Sutton.
Ronald L. Williams, Wanda
Williams lo Larry Cleland,
Bonnie Cleland , .50 Acre,
Salem.

MACKEREL

can

sponsored
by
Child
Evangelism Fellowship of
Grand Rapids, Mich., but the
puppets also appear daily on
educational television such as
"Around The Bend," produced
in Charleston, W. Va., by the
Appalachia Educa tiona!
Laboratory and broadcast in
&lt;Ner 13 Southern States.
Cagno is a former writer and
producer
with
Ch ild
Evangelism and while on their
staff produced a national
Christmas special featuring
The Gospel Marionettes that
was seen on over 150 stations in
1970 and 1971.
Their present ministry in·

Bruce Ergood, professor of
sociology al Ohio University,
discussed characteristics. of
people ol Appalachia, at the
Friday meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs ,Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revol~tion, at the home of Mrs.
Daniel Thomas, Middleport.
In his talk he referred to a
survey taken in Columbia and
Scipio Twps. and displayed
charts and graphs indicating
the residents' answers to
questions pertaining to their
way of life. He said that the
survey indicated local views to
be traditional In regarding to

planning for the future, of a
thrifty nature , pride in self and
community, and classified this
as opposite the i'lormal view of
mounU.tn people. Mrs. Thereon
Johnson
introduced
the
speaker.
Miss Lucille Smith presided
at the meeting which opened In
ritualistic .form with Mrs .
Margaret Parsons, chaplain,
leading. in a moment of silent
prayer in memory of Mrs.
Donald Spicer, pasl president
general of the National Society.
Mrs . George Skinner gave
the national defense report
citing the danger of the United
States allowing too many
PATIENT MOVED
imlnigrants Into the county.
Aaron Zalll, Pomeroy, was She spoke of the Illegal entries
removed from . intensive care and the increase in nwnbers of
Monday at the Holzer Medical these, and of the need for some
Center, and Is now in Room 425. restrictions so that the United
Here to spend the week with States will not become overher parents is Mrs. Leo Smith, crowded .
Berian Springs, Mich.
Mrs. Grace Crow Eich was

USDA

lb.

CHOICE

L

•

,I

.

lb.$] 09

~~!i1r .........................•...

ENGLISH ·

lb.$] 05

ROAS.T•.... ~ ........................ .

· Halves

.!~~~ . . . . . . . . 2

lb..•

,39

SLICED
.
21b.$]. 29
BOLOGNA ......... .

Reg. 7!1
22 oz.

Phebe's Garden Patch

.8 PAK

·5·

lb. . 79~

GOLDEN

CARROTS lb.

19~
I,

\'I

1,

99~

A~M

GRAPEFRUIT

I

welcomed into the chapter
membership transferring from
a Canton Chapter. Constitution
Week observance was noted by
Miss Smith who thanked the
committee. She announced
that the Ohio DAR has chartered the Delta Queen for a
river tour in 1976. Reservations
for lhe Lour may be made with
the regent.
!l was noted that Mrs. J. E.
Foster, Mrs.-Patrick Lochary,
Mrs. A. R. Knight and Miss
Smith attended the district
meeting recently in Granville.
A report was given on the
marking of the grave of Mrs.
Harriet Neigler.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs . T.h omas, Mrs. Nancy
Reed, Mrs. Nan Moore and
Mrs. Irving Karr, Mtss Smith
presided at the silver service.
An arrangement of mums
centered the 1table . A salad
course was served:

Featuring French City Brand

U. S. GOVERNMENT
INSPECTED

. FU)RIDA

'

eludes the use of visualized
songs and slide stories along
with lheir puppets and they are
able to adapt their materials to
any type of program and
service. Included in their
equipment ,is a large' trailer
stage that they use outdoors or
in shopping centers and this
has expanded their work far
beyond the basic services of
the churches into a program
they label
"Comm unity
Outreach.''
Jan Cagno is a kindergarten
teacher as well as an accomplished writer, storyteller
and gospel singer, Dick is an
Educaliooat Development
Specialist" in the areas of
Communications and Early
ChiddhOOd Education and has
been involved in all phases of
film, radio and television
production.

CHUCK
ROAST

4 oz.
pkgs.

'

Sl 29·

such as "The Treehouse Club,"

IN

cans
15 oz.

contributing wi t,h specia l
music.
The television puppets of The
Cagno Family not only appear
weekly on religious programs

DAR hears sociologist

18 oz.
•
J3r

TOMATO SOUP

\

j

..·.

Republicar, ...

EATWELL PACIFIC

2% MILK
TWIN PACK GALlO,N

'

L-----------~--~1 ·

.I

•

I.

' .· '

'

93

VALLEY BELL .

~

PUPPETS WITH A MESSAGE- is a family ministry involving Dick and Jan Cagno and
their five sons. Their presentation will be made Oct. 20 at 7,30 p.m. allhe New Haven United
Methodist Cburch .

in Dunbar, W. Va. have been
active in children's ministries
Among those mandating pay- for over 12 years and have
ments are courts in Ohio,
ministered
through
the
Mississippi, Nebraska, Texas,
Eastern
United
States
Massachusetts, New Hamp.
(traveling in over 14 states).
shire and Connecticut. Federal
During that time lhey have
courts in Florida, New Jersey
ministered to thousands under
and Georgia have held lhal the
the names of The Gospel
rights are optional.
Marionettes,
The Fence
Puppets and The Cagno
Family. Through their work 'in
television that number has
been exp8,1lded inlo millions
who have seen their ministry
and work .
The family consists of Dick
Freda Wippel Fruth, Carl W. and Jan a nd their five sons,
Fruth lo Carl W. Fruth, Freda ages 8, 9, 11, 12, and 13. The
Wippel
Fruth,
Parcels, entire family has an activnole
in their program by operating
Chesler.
James W. Carnahan, Nancy the puppets, doing the voices,
E . Carnahan to David Diles, working lhe lights, sound
16.61 Acres, 3.39 Acres, Sulton. eQuipment and projectors and
Helen M. Rea, der . to Robert
E . Peoples, Edythe F. Ford,

•

;

PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY TH~il SATu~DAY
· \"'e Reserve i&lt;ighl ''10 llml( Quantity.
·
'

'''
j,

9nl7
Mon. thru sat.

'

RACINE, OHIO·

.,

·o pen

and

No. 1

PEACHES
JOY LIQUID
DETERGENT

Monday Thili friday
9:00 to 7:00.
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

·

Iowa and Virginia for weHare
payments
during
lheir
pregna' :es. The slates ap.
pealed to lhe Supreme Court
afler lhe U.S. 8lh and 4th
Circuit Courts of Appeal ordered payments.
HEW could not make the
benelits for unborn children
optional wilhaul violating their
rights to equal protection of the
law, said the appellate cour.ts.
Congress intended lo permit
unborn children to be eligible
for welfare benefits, the courts
also said.
Congress intended the cover-.
age to be optional, argued the
slates, saying thai by making it
mandatory the courts had
U1realened the delicate structure of . federal and state
cooperation
in applying
welfare benefits.

or Slices

'

Piices Effective Oct. 16-23

4 tubes) .

949-3151

'

.

-~ts

CAMPBELL'S

:' HUNrS

welfare alter giving birth sued

Property

L Jrl.•--

PUDDING

, -

solid state chassis (except

cess.

MY-T-FINE

Right Reserv~ to Limit Quantiti~s .
We Gladij Accept Fed. Food Stamps .

.KLEENEX TISSUES

UHF Tun ing,

JOHNSON'S TV
'

99e

100 count .

with Energy Saver Switch.

•

l

'

Instant Picture and Sound

,,

BRIGHT
PICJURE
TUBE·
eiNSTA-MATIC
COLOR TUNING

'

5th and PEARL sts., RACINE
"The .Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"

lnsta-Mat lc Color ·Tuning,

UHF

vassed the locale door lo door.
All meters had to be shut off,
all lines regassed, meters in all
homes turned on and all ap.
pliances in the homes
relighted.
East Ohio personnel were
working around lhe clock to
complete the restoration pro-

GR'APE JELLY

LIPTON TEA BAGS

10¢

Crisp, clean picture! With

\

PH, 949-9552

site . Traditional methods
would produce only i70,000
tons , he estimated.

evening as 200 customer serIn similar cases, other
vice representatives can- federal courts have disagreed.

KRAFT

SMOKED PICNIC PURE PORK
HAM
SAU"SAGE
lb. ·s9~
lb. &amp;9e
Quasa.:H

·)

OIUO

MEATS

'

,.

fracture su llered two weeks·
ago in a fall during the auction
at the Senior Citizens Center.
For many years Mrs. Bearhs
has been an active volunteer
with the Veterans Memorial
Hospital Auxiliary.

'

••

SING-A-LONG

3tcl ST•

EBER'S GULF

••
••
••

mediately whal caused the
severe drop in press\U'e.
Partial service to the area
was restored later in the

Stokes.
Republicans lor : Ashbrook,
FIRST CHILD BORN
Clancy, Miller, Mosher, WhaCOLUMBUS- Mr. and Mrs. len , Wylie.
Republicans against' Brown,
Kevin Archer, Columbus, are
announcing the birth of thei
Devine, Guyer, Harsha , Latta,
first child, a son., Oct. 9 at the - Mmshall, Powell, J . W.
MI.
Carmel
ospital
Slanlon . .
Columbus. The in!
w · ed
Republicans nol voting ,
7 lbs. , 12 ozs., and has been Regula.
named Drake Allen. GrandVeterans Memorial Hospital
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
ADMITI'ED - Danny Darst,
Charles D. Kennedy, Pomeroy,
Rulland;
George John son,
and Mr. and Mrs. William
Archer, Columbus. Mrs. Ar- Mason, W.Va.; Leah Rhodes ,
cher is lhe former Pat Kennedy Middleport; June Roush,
Racine;
Dorothy
Will,
of Rulland.
Pomeroy; Earl Phillips,
Porlland; Paul Kent, Addison;
Odister. Pomeroy; Guy
Azalea
WOMAN CONF!l\IED
Walker,
Tuppers Plains;
Mrs .
Louise
Bearhs,
Romey
McDonald,
Dexter.
Pomeroy, remains confined to
DISCHARGED - Harry
~ve~rans Memorial Hospital
Stahl,
George Logan .
for treatment o'! a tell hip

"~"\l o~'~ . -MARGARINE

ft' NYJ 'ID P•f tAI--

DURABLE
(SHORT SHAG)
lWO-TONE
REG. 10.67 le

WASHINGTON iUPI) Here is the 223-135 · vole by
which lhe House Tuesday
sustained President Ford's
veto to cul off military aid to
Turkey.
Voting for were 164 Democrats and 59 Republicans.
Voting against were 42

EBER'S ·GULF

0~ ot\r,

'

tliC'thods will be used lo

minr coal from the bottom

How they voted on veto

PHONE 992:3978

I

(THICK PLUSH PILE)
REG. 10.48 S31e 7.69

lhe area. The officials w~re
unable lo determine im-

RACINE, OHIO

. . II

AMER. HOUSE

no danger of fire or explosion in

27 Yrs. Continuous 'Service

R.D. 1

:m~er

WASHINGTON tUP!) - The c:•twn and Welfare (HEW)
Supreme Courl said Tue"!!ay it regulations in effect since 1941
will decide whether states are have given states the option of
required to make welfare making or not making aii:t to
payments to pregnant women dependent children payments
for their unborn childre~.
for unborn children.
The high court agreed to
Eighteen stales and the
hand down a written~ opinion District of Columbia provide
ta ler tpis term after it hears the payments, said HEW.
oral arguments on lowj:!r court Thirty-four stales and Puerto
decisions forcing welfare pay. Rico do not .
ments by Iowa .
Pregnant women whose inDepartment of Health, Edu- comes would enti tle them to

Company officials, following
lhe disruption of service Tuesday aflernoon, said there was

AWMINUM STORM WINDOWS

8UY here

Paul Marlinka of the Ameri- .
t"an Electric Power Co . said the
nrw method should a llow the
rreovcry of 475,000 tons of lowI'C'l'i:tilllt'&lt;i . Thf'n conventional . su lphur coal from the Julian

High court to decide welfare issue

operations.

Custom Millwork

•

\1Vt'l'lHII'ti1..'11 .

- Mter the coal is extracted,
•I~&lt;• t•ar th will shifl to fill tho
void anrl the top bench will be

St' :llll .

RAVENNA, Ohio (UP!) Full service for more than 5,000
customers of the East Ohio Gas
Co., in this area was expected
lo be restored by late tonight
after company officials were
forced lu shut down a transmission line due to a sudden
pressure drop during regassing

Builders

RACINE, OHIO

the

get service by tonight .

Kitchens

''LET US SERVE YOU"

tu tlw hothMII lJL•neh \\'HUid hi:'
made fo ll11Wing n ."ntova l of
Liffiber frum the mining: site. A
coni inu()US 111ining machinr
will be t~mployed to dig coa l
from the top seam, with roof
supports inslalled lo hold up

5,000 gas customers to

Custom

949-5961

AVAILABLE

J

'

.

I

·,

-.

'·
. '·.

..

."-'·

�~ '"

-·

.,

...

,

"\;.:_,, • ••• L

d., ,

"•

r.• ..._ , ... ,~ ~·

Jl.

iJ

1.

I

•,

~,~ ......... ..._.,.

••

~·

""

'T

'

·

''

'

'

·.. .

·•

•
11 - Thr Dailv Sentinel, M.iddleporl-Pomeroy, 0., W&lt;'&lt;lnosday ,,\ kl . W. I!IH

.

,.

·'Longwall stripping' tested

COMMUNITY
ME,RCHANTS

, By KA\' CHRISTENSEN
• CHARLESTON, W. Va :
, l UPI) - A new method or coal
~ mining, aimed at · increasing
. production while preserving
~ the envirorunenf, will be tested
as part or a $2 million venture
·in Boone County, it was an; nounced Tuesday. ·

.. Gov. Arch Moore, at a news

ELECTRIC
HEATER

Automati c

temperature

thermostat gives instant heat
with

Racine Plu-inbing &amp; Heating

conlerence, said lhe demon_slralion project of "longwall
, stripping" should begining the
, community of Julian in February, 1975.
Using conventional underground longwall machinery on
areas l"hich normally would be
, strip mined, the · method is
hoped lo boost productivity of
; the black fuel while main~ taning an ecological balance,
; according to Moore.

fan . forced air . Wide

ribbon elements produce fast

FOR COMPLETE............................. ..
HEATING AND PLUMBING
NEEDS

warm up. 1500 Watts (599)

General
Deluxe
Instant
radiant
heat - 960 watts
with
automatic

temperature

.

thermostat.

Sculptured

'

cabinet front
cabinet Hnished in

This
super - le e ric,
automatic. fan-forced heater
is U. L . listed. Featuring
ribbon elements for instant
heat. Safe, tip-over, switch
turns off electric current if
tipped over. 1320 watts.

Gun Metal Gray.
(59 A)

(63)

OTHER SIZES

CONTACT FRANK IMBODEN
OR BILL RIGHTHOUSE

q-··

.

··Increased mining activity
must be done in an environmentally sound manner," the
governor said. "Th is new
mining method may )l'ell be the
answer to resolve both of these
objectives ."
The project is ftmded twothirds by the Environmental
Protection Agency, with the
remaining cosl picked up by
lhe Wesl Virginia Surlaoe
Mining and Reclamation Associ3tion. The demonstration
will occur on property owned
by lhe American Electric
Power Co.
Jack Hubband of the EPA
said
lhe
new
method

represented a cross between
convention surface and deep
mining methods.
Under the process, strip cut

RACINE PLANING MILL

992~995

EMERGENCY

Racine Plumbing &amp; Heating
3rd ST.

Supplies

•••
.....
GOLQ SEAL

RACINE HOME NA.TIONAL BANK

24 oz.

BROUGHTON
__..........·COTTAGE CHEESE

••
••

GAS
OIL-LUBRICATION

•

"WE AIM TO PLEASE"

•
•
•

••
i•
•

lt!s Carpet
GET .YOUR NEW CARPET NOW AT THESE
SPECIAL PRICES

) CLASSIC

ARTS

RACINE

7.89

·GOLDEN ·ISLE
BISCUITS 8 ~

WORKS"IN A DRAWER.,
23" CONSOLE
diagonal COLOR TV

'

ePUSHBUlTON

•

TUNING
•MOTOROLA'

Plug-in Circuit
Pushbu tton
,

Modu les,
I

200 co"nt 3/$1~

ePWG-IN
CIRCUIT
MODELS

TICKETS ON ' SALE
HERE
NOW

..

- '·

'

.

'

'

'

'

:

1
,,j

•

.

'•

•I.

Ohio, 8 Democrats, 15
Republicans .
Democrats for : Ashley, Carney , Luken, Se iberling, James
Stanton, Vanik .

Democrats not voting : Hays,

CLUB TO MEET
The Rock Springs Better
Health Club will meel al I : 15
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Mrs. Betty Conkle . The names

of secret sisters will be
revealed.

'

Family ministry presentation
set at New Haven UM church
NEW

HAVEN

-

The

Cagno's, who make their home

Transfers

Florence M. Mickey, Cert. of
trans., Salisbury.
Robert Frank Leifheit,
dec'd. aka Robert Leifheit,
Jec'd. to Linnie Leifheit, Cert.
of Trans., Bedford .
Fern T. Gilmore, dec. to
Joan A. Parsons, Nancy G.
Bobb,
Ce rt.
of lrans .,
Salisbury.
Mallie J. Sprouse lo Nellie
Hysell, Lawrence A. Hysell, .45
Acre, Rutland.
Sybil Ebersbach, Comm.,
Harriet S. Neigler, dec'd. lo
Guy H. Neigler, Mary H. Cleek,
Lol, Racine.
Samuel N. Arnold, Ruth
Arnold, Car l D. Arnold, Alice
Arnold to, Karl A. Kehler, Jr.,
Mary C. Kehler, Lots,
Pomeroy .
Albert Hill, Jr., Ora E. Hill
and John F. Dudding, Martha
M. Dudding, Ease., Sutton.
Ronald L. Williams, Wanda
Williams lo Larry Cleland,
Bonnie Cleland , .50 Acre,
Salem.

MACKEREL

can

sponsored
by
Child
Evangelism Fellowship of
Grand Rapids, Mich., but the
puppets also appear daily on
educational television such as
"Around The Bend," produced
in Charleston, W. Va., by the
Appalachia Educa tiona!
Laboratory and broadcast in
&lt;Ner 13 Southern States.
Cagno is a former writer and
producer
with
Ch ild
Evangelism and while on their
staff produced a national
Christmas special featuring
The Gospel Marionettes that
was seen on over 150 stations in
1970 and 1971.
Their present ministry in·

Bruce Ergood, professor of
sociology al Ohio University,
discussed characteristics. of
people ol Appalachia, at the
Friday meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs ,Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revol~tion, at the home of Mrs.
Daniel Thomas, Middleport.
In his talk he referred to a
survey taken in Columbia and
Scipio Twps. and displayed
charts and graphs indicating
the residents' answers to
questions pertaining to their
way of life. He said that the
survey indicated local views to
be traditional In regarding to

planning for the future, of a
thrifty nature , pride in self and
community, and classified this
as opposite the i'lormal view of
mounU.tn people. Mrs. Thereon
Johnson
introduced
the
speaker.
Miss Lucille Smith presided
at the meeting which opened In
ritualistic .form with Mrs .
Margaret Parsons, chaplain,
leading. in a moment of silent
prayer in memory of Mrs.
Donald Spicer, pasl president
general of the National Society.
Mrs . George Skinner gave
the national defense report
citing the danger of the United
States allowing too many
PATIENT MOVED
imlnigrants Into the county.
Aaron Zalll, Pomeroy, was She spoke of the Illegal entries
removed from . intensive care and the increase in nwnbers of
Monday at the Holzer Medical these, and of the need for some
Center, and Is now in Room 425. restrictions so that the United
Here to spend the week with States will not become overher parents is Mrs. Leo Smith, crowded .
Berian Springs, Mich.
Mrs. Grace Crow Eich was

USDA

lb.

CHOICE

L

•

,I

.

lb.$] 09

~~!i1r .........................•...

ENGLISH ·

lb.$] 05

ROAS.T•.... ~ ........................ .

· Halves

.!~~~ . . . . . . . . 2

lb..•

,39

SLICED
.
21b.$]. 29
BOLOGNA ......... .

Reg. 7!1
22 oz.

Phebe's Garden Patch

.8 PAK

·5·

lb. . 79~

GOLDEN

CARROTS lb.

19~
I,

\'I

1,

99~

A~M

GRAPEFRUIT

I

welcomed into the chapter
membership transferring from
a Canton Chapter. Constitution
Week observance was noted by
Miss Smith who thanked the
committee. She announced
that the Ohio DAR has chartered the Delta Queen for a
river tour in 1976. Reservations
for lhe Lour may be made with
the regent.
!l was noted that Mrs. J. E.
Foster, Mrs.-Patrick Lochary,
Mrs. A. R. Knight and Miss
Smith attended the district
meeting recently in Granville.
A report was given on the
marking of the grave of Mrs.
Harriet Neigler.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs . T.h omas, Mrs. Nancy
Reed, Mrs. Nan Moore and
Mrs. Irving Karr, Mtss Smith
presided at the silver service.
An arrangement of mums
centered the 1table . A salad
course was served:

Featuring French City Brand

U. S. GOVERNMENT
INSPECTED

. FU)RIDA

'

eludes the use of visualized
songs and slide stories along
with lheir puppets and they are
able to adapt their materials to
any type of program and
service. Included in their
equipment ,is a large' trailer
stage that they use outdoors or
in shopping centers and this
has expanded their work far
beyond the basic services of
the churches into a program
they label
"Comm unity
Outreach.''
Jan Cagno is a kindergarten
teacher as well as an accomplished writer, storyteller
and gospel singer, Dick is an
Educaliooat Development
Specialist" in the areas of
Communications and Early
ChiddhOOd Education and has
been involved in all phases of
film, radio and television
production.

CHUCK
ROAST

4 oz.
pkgs.

'

Sl 29·

such as "The Treehouse Club,"

IN

cans
15 oz.

contributing wi t,h specia l
music.
The television puppets of The
Cagno Family not only appear
weekly on religious programs

DAR hears sociologist

18 oz.
•
J3r

TOMATO SOUP

\

j

..·.

Republicar, ...

EATWELL PACIFIC

2% MILK
TWIN PACK GALlO,N

'

L-----------~--~1 ·

.I

•

I.

' .· '

'

93

VALLEY BELL .

~

PUPPETS WITH A MESSAGE- is a family ministry involving Dick and Jan Cagno and
their five sons. Their presentation will be made Oct. 20 at 7,30 p.m. allhe New Haven United
Methodist Cburch .

in Dunbar, W. Va. have been
active in children's ministries
Among those mandating pay- for over 12 years and have
ments are courts in Ohio,
ministered
through
the
Mississippi, Nebraska, Texas,
Eastern
United
States
Massachusetts, New Hamp.
(traveling in over 14 states).
shire and Connecticut. Federal
During that time lhey have
courts in Florida, New Jersey
ministered to thousands under
and Georgia have held lhal the
the names of The Gospel
rights are optional.
Marionettes,
The Fence
Puppets and The Cagno
Family. Through their work 'in
television that number has
been exp8,1lded inlo millions
who have seen their ministry
and work .
The family consists of Dick
Freda Wippel Fruth, Carl W. and Jan a nd their five sons,
Fruth lo Carl W. Fruth, Freda ages 8, 9, 11, 12, and 13. The
Wippel
Fruth,
Parcels, entire family has an activnole
in their program by operating
Chesler.
James W. Carnahan, Nancy the puppets, doing the voices,
E . Carnahan to David Diles, working lhe lights, sound
16.61 Acres, 3.39 Acres, Sulton. eQuipment and projectors and
Helen M. Rea, der . to Robert
E . Peoples, Edythe F. Ford,

•

;

PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY TH~il SATu~DAY
· \"'e Reserve i&lt;ighl ''10 llml( Quantity.
·
'

'''
j,

9nl7
Mon. thru sat.

'

RACINE, OHIO·

.,

·o pen

and

No. 1

PEACHES
JOY LIQUID
DETERGENT

Monday Thili friday
9:00 to 7:00.
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

·

Iowa and Virginia for weHare
payments
during
lheir
pregna' :es. The slates ap.
pealed to lhe Supreme Court
afler lhe U.S. 8lh and 4th
Circuit Courts of Appeal ordered payments.
HEW could not make the
benelits for unborn children
optional wilhaul violating their
rights to equal protection of the
law, said the appellate cour.ts.
Congress intended lo permit
unborn children to be eligible
for welfare benefits, the courts
also said.
Congress intended the cover-.
age to be optional, argued the
slates, saying thai by making it
mandatory the courts had
U1realened the delicate structure of . federal and state
cooperation
in applying
welfare benefits.

or Slices

'

Piices Effective Oct. 16-23

4 tubes) .

949-3151

'

.

-~ts

CAMPBELL'S

:' HUNrS

welfare alter giving birth sued

Property

L Jrl.•--

PUDDING

, -

solid state chassis (except

cess.

MY-T-FINE

Right Reserv~ to Limit Quantiti~s .
We Gladij Accept Fed. Food Stamps .

.KLEENEX TISSUES

UHF Tun ing,

JOHNSON'S TV
'

99e

100 count .

with Energy Saver Switch.

•

l

'

Instant Picture and Sound

,,

BRIGHT
PICJURE
TUBE·
eiNSTA-MATIC
COLOR TUNING

'

5th and PEARL sts., RACINE
"The .Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"

lnsta-Mat lc Color ·Tuning,

UHF

vassed the locale door lo door.
All meters had to be shut off,
all lines regassed, meters in all
homes turned on and all ap.
pliances in the homes
relighted.
East Ohio personnel were
working around lhe clock to
complete the restoration pro-

GR'APE JELLY

LIPTON TEA BAGS

10¢

Crisp, clean picture! With

\

PH, 949-9552

site . Traditional methods
would produce only i70,000
tons , he estimated.

evening as 200 customer serIn similar cases, other
vice representatives can- federal courts have disagreed.

KRAFT

SMOKED PICNIC PURE PORK
HAM
SAU"SAGE
lb. ·s9~
lb. &amp;9e
Quasa.:H

·)

OIUO

MEATS

'

,.

fracture su llered two weeks·
ago in a fall during the auction
at the Senior Citizens Center.
For many years Mrs. Bearhs
has been an active volunteer
with the Veterans Memorial
Hospital Auxiliary.

'

••

SING-A-LONG

3tcl ST•

EBER'S GULF

••
••
••

mediately whal caused the
severe drop in press\U'e.
Partial service to the area
was restored later in the

Stokes.
Republicans lor : Ashbrook,
FIRST CHILD BORN
Clancy, Miller, Mosher, WhaCOLUMBUS- Mr. and Mrs. len , Wylie.
Republicans against' Brown,
Kevin Archer, Columbus, are
announcing the birth of thei
Devine, Guyer, Harsha , Latta,
first child, a son., Oct. 9 at the - Mmshall, Powell, J . W.
MI.
Carmel
ospital
Slanlon . .
Columbus. The in!
w · ed
Republicans nol voting ,
7 lbs. , 12 ozs., and has been Regula.
named Drake Allen. GrandVeterans Memorial Hospital
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
ADMITI'ED - Danny Darst,
Charles D. Kennedy, Pomeroy,
Rulland;
George John son,
and Mr. and Mrs. William
Archer, Columbus. Mrs. Ar- Mason, W.Va.; Leah Rhodes ,
cher is lhe former Pat Kennedy Middleport; June Roush,
Racine;
Dorothy
Will,
of Rulland.
Pomeroy; Earl Phillips,
Porlland; Paul Kent, Addison;
Odister. Pomeroy; Guy
Azalea
WOMAN CONF!l\IED
Walker,
Tuppers Plains;
Mrs .
Louise
Bearhs,
Romey
McDonald,
Dexter.
Pomeroy, remains confined to
DISCHARGED - Harry
~ve~rans Memorial Hospital
Stahl,
George Logan .
for treatment o'! a tell hip

"~"\l o~'~ . -MARGARINE

ft' NYJ 'ID P•f tAI--

DURABLE
(SHORT SHAG)
lWO-TONE
REG. 10.67 le

WASHINGTON iUPI) Here is the 223-135 · vole by
which lhe House Tuesday
sustained President Ford's
veto to cul off military aid to
Turkey.
Voting for were 164 Democrats and 59 Republicans.
Voting against were 42

EBER'S ·GULF

0~ ot\r,

'

tliC'thods will be used lo

minr coal from the bottom

How they voted on veto

PHONE 992:3978

I

(THICK PLUSH PILE)
REG. 10.48 S31e 7.69

lhe area. The officials w~re
unable lo determine im-

RACINE, OHIO

. . II

AMER. HOUSE

no danger of fire or explosion in

27 Yrs. Continuous 'Service

R.D. 1

:m~er

WASHINGTON tUP!) - The c:•twn and Welfare (HEW)
Supreme Courl said Tue"!!ay it regulations in effect since 1941
will decide whether states are have given states the option of
required to make welfare making or not making aii:t to
payments to pregnant women dependent children payments
for their unborn childre~.
for unborn children.
The high court agreed to
Eighteen stales and the
hand down a written~ opinion District of Columbia provide
ta ler tpis term after it hears the payments, said HEW.
oral arguments on lowj:!r court Thirty-four stales and Puerto
decisions forcing welfare pay. Rico do not .
ments by Iowa .
Pregnant women whose inDepartment of Health, Edu- comes would enti tle them to

Company officials, following
lhe disruption of service Tuesday aflernoon, said there was

AWMINUM STORM WINDOWS

8UY here

Paul Marlinka of the Ameri- .
t"an Electric Power Co . said the
nrw method should a llow the
rreovcry of 475,000 tons of lowI'C'l'i:tilllt'&lt;i . Thf'n conventional . su lphur coal from the Julian

High court to decide welfare issue

operations.

Custom Millwork

•

\1Vt'l'lHII'ti1..'11 .

- Mter the coal is extracted,
•I~&lt;• t•ar th will shifl to fill tho
void anrl the top bench will be

St' :llll .

RAVENNA, Ohio (UP!) Full service for more than 5,000
customers of the East Ohio Gas
Co., in this area was expected
lo be restored by late tonight
after company officials were
forced lu shut down a transmission line due to a sudden
pressure drop during regassing

Builders

RACINE, OHIO

the

get service by tonight .

Kitchens

''LET US SERVE YOU"

tu tlw hothMII lJL•neh \\'HUid hi:'
made fo ll11Wing n ."ntova l of
Liffiber frum the mining: site. A
coni inu()US 111ining machinr
will be t~mployed to dig coa l
from the top seam, with roof
supports inslalled lo hold up

5,000 gas customers to

Custom

949-5961

AVAILABLE

J

'

.

I

·,

-.

'·
. '·.

..

."-'·

�'.

..

'

"II."' ••

.

Senlinel. Middleoort-Pomt.&gt;rov, 0 .. Wednesday,,Od . Hi, 1!)74

.

.'it!cun• other quarturs t,y rental
or ol·herwisc Jor ·the l'Untinucd

.Supporting statement made

upcraliun of the sl'hool. IN
l'ilhcr eVent, it will be
nLT1~ ss~1ry tu have th 2.75 tnill

.

for 2.75 mill school levy
Tlu• Mt·i~s t 'ounly BoHnl of
Rl'lilrdcllion hax issued &lt;1

Taking over command will \&gt;e First Lieutenant William Hockenberry of Point Pleasant .
Colonel Richard Tattersi&gt;n, center·, is commander of the llllh Engineer Group. 1Picture by A.
K. Boonsue).

.
Lt. Hockenberry comrmmding Ordnance Co mpany

..

PT. PLEASANT - A change
of command took place Sunday
at the National Guard Armory
as First Lieutenant William
Hockenberry of Orchard Hill,
Point Pleasant, asswned the
command of th e 3664th
Main tenance Company
recently vacated by Captai n
William McCormick.

The ceremony C'onsisted of
Co lon e l Richard Tattersou,
commander of the 111lh
F:ngineer Group passing the
company colors from Captain
McCormick to First Lieutenant
Hoc kenberry.
I ,t. Hockenberry is a parttime guardsman. His full time
job is that of a Pharmacy
Manager for Rile Aid Phar·

macy of Point Pleasant.
He has lived i1 · Poinl
Pleaso:ml since 1%:!. and hets
~n with the Guard s ince 1!165.
As eomma nd er of lh(' :lfi64th,
he assumes cummand over· 200
guardsmen. fiO uf whom &lt;-~rt'
from Htmtingtt.m. Ht.• and his
wife , Glenn&lt;-&amp; h.ave three
children, By ron . G. Anne 4. and
Jeb. I.

will · not ht&gt; ;~blt· to
Conumu1itv S('llool. Till' l&lt;'V\' o pt•ralt• with sw·h lir;liled
will be vol;•d upon ;tl the N'ov . ':; S)lilt't' , This loss of S JlCI('t' is due
rrll•ction .
to lilt ' t•spansion of prugrams in
Thr :o; I&lt;Jienwnl :
t)w Meigs Sdwol Distrid to !.hl'
" This is for 2.7:&gt; m ills. :md exlt•nt thai lht'y nl'ed :meh
this indudt•s :1 l'('llt'W&lt;il of .75 of sp;u·t• for !lwir own oppration .
a mill whil'h expired un
"'This lllt.'O inS lhct l Wt' will
De&lt;·~?mbcr :n. l!t74 . Thi s l'Quals
h; t\'t' lo have o lil t'l' l.J lWrh• t·s.
$2.75 f(ll' ro tch $1,000 of ta xa bh' Wt• will !ht.• n have to bear the
properl y tmd. an Ul l' I'&lt;'H~l' of 2 ("ns f of upkt•t•p. ulilitit&gt;s , school
mills ovt•r the past h.•vy .
lun&lt;"h along with Llw operating
"This iiii..Tt'&lt;ISt' is rlt't't'SS;Iry I'XfH'rl.St'S from IJUI' own fw1tls.
bec(tuse of two prinl·ipal
"OlU· int·uuu~ is dt•t·ivcd fr om
rC'asuns :
st.•vera l SCillrl"t'S : From the
"Fir!olt, is the in cn•ase in &lt;'Ost State of Ohio. $450 fur ca~·h~
of openttion dut~ to iuflation. t•nnJ I!t•t• under 21 years. und
"St'l'tmc1, &lt;tnd probably most $(100 for l'aeh en rollee over 21
important rt'i.I SO U is that Wl' years; fmm S(' hool di striets.
musl now havt• imrl: op('l'&lt;-llt• ~~ the sc ho ol tuition that is
sehoul fa&lt;'i !H y st•parall· from reecivcd by them for each
the public se houl sysle111 . Prior· t•n rollee. the i-lllticipctled into thi s yea r we have bl'Cn come fmm suc h soi.trees is
flu·nished three rooms by Lht' $:HJ,41i8. The bt:~lance of money
Meigs Local School District at neecSSi:lry to operate suc h
the Rutland
P.lementary school is from &lt;.'Ounty fWlds,
school. The utili t ies, heat. and in this eow1ty :1 11 county
j.rmitor servit't•, sc hool lunch
and upkeep were all furni shed
without c h ar~e to us. ·n1is yci:lr
we were cut down to two
rh,. t

0

.

:§

*':·~
i*

::=:-

:.~;

~

••

~t
..
~~
~::

i:l

:::~
:~;:
§.{

S::

~::..::,:

£rom ?," you are asking, about the new
mail-a~book service which lets people in
Meigs county borrow books through the
mail. It 's a good question to ask about
any new project, because knowing the
source of funding tells you a lot a_bout
who is behind the proJ"ect, what their
motives ~or itare ·and_what they want to
accompliSh through 11 .
Mail-a-book is being paid for by the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries (OVAL)
with state funds . The cost to get it
runn~ -~oothly in the ten coUnties
whereittsmusehasbeenabout$50,000.
Both the Pomeroy and MiddlPport
~

libraries are among the 13 libraries

substantial attraction for blLSincss and

coope rating in
and they are glad
to be able to provide Meigs with thts
service which they could not a fford to
give on their own.

tpo
o
recrealion and educat ion , but are a lso
an .rtssel Lo business when it can locate
vital informat ion for local companies
and industry. Giving every person in
Ohio an e qual cha nce to get information
through library services is one of the
sta te's goals .
Mail-a-book will continue at least
through 1975. :;o that it can be eva lu ated
as to how well it does serve its purpose
of making information and recreational
reading available.
''Where is the money coming
from?" From the state, which is a ll of
us. "Wh)•''" To serve us!

Ohio is willing to fund OVA!. and a
·
vanely
of ot her cooperative libr'![y
activities across the state because it
knows the value of good library service.
Like a ll the other states, Ohio puts aside
money oul of its general · revenues
specifically for the purpose of imprpving libraries and library service
for ils residenUl. The state government
rea lizes that an efficient, informative
library, which gives a ~variety of serviCes, leads to raising the standard of
living of the peop 1e in its area and is a

WI'

_:] _:j..

::::
}

!:.::.

)
::::
:.::.:

t

:;::

~;~

:;:;
:;:;

:;~;:

varies. A late bloomer may
still be growing in the early 20s.
However, for abnormally short
people one shou ldri't wail
ocyond the age of 16 to see if
they need some growth hormone .
Adequate amounts of thyroid
hormon e are essential to
growth . Thyroid hormone and
growth hormone work together
to do this. And, iodine is
essential to normal thyroid
function. However, I must
honeslly tell you that unless
your son had an iodin e
defidency , which I doubt, J
suspect that he would have
grown to six-feet-three without
the iodine tablets.
One of the bi ~gest problems
people have in their thinking is
the apparent failure to apply
simple principles of logic . Just
because two eve nts occur
simultaneously does not mean
one event caused the other.
How often people make that
mistake . Doctors do it, too. A
~uod example is the treatment
of a · common cold . Penicillin
has no effect at all on viruses,
but if · the doctor ~ives the
patient a shot of penicillin and
the patient's cold ends soon,

McCLURE'S
NOW HAS
HOT
DELICIOUS

'PIZZA
'STILL FEATURING NOON SPECIALS'
Everyda.Y low prices on F'r ench Fries. Hot
Dogs, Milk Shakes &amp; Dairy Isle Specials.

•
•••
••
••

HEADQUARTERS
FOR

•
•

..•••

BAKER bFURNITURE

•.ot ·.,

. . . . , ...,I

BOLOGNA .....~~-.. 75¢

AGAR
'
CANNED

•
•
•

. LONGHORN

HAM

••
•

••
•••

•

CUBE STEAK ........•..L~•• ~] 49

•

3 lb.

i

••

$389

DINNER BELL

H

Prodm:l' Huy

Frozen Food

RED GRAPES

•
•

...

FRENCH FRIES

lb .

1·LB. PKG. 89e
·
.
ERS
.
lEN
W
••••••••••••••••••••••

••
"
••

•

••"

&amp;9e
BOLOGNA................... .
ARMOUR

:•

pkg.

·.

:

r-------~-~-~~~
FRANKS
•=
DEL MONTE

2

99¢

·

CATSUP
22 oz.
BLACK
4 oz .
9~ ~
~~~~~~~B-tls~-~~~~P~E~P~P~E~R?----ca-n~~~~ ~

=~~PMIX 2~~~~-85¢ ~~;~INE ~~~·

"

.

..

'

'

~-

'

....

J·

... ""

'

.

..

...

-~·

'

. . ··

1-LB. PKG.

STOKELY

PEACHES

9! ~

~~~~--~~~----~~
~•
DUNCAN HINES
ARMERS
CO.RN BEEF

BROWNIE
MIX
Box

TS.·S oz . .

Can

·

69~

JIF-Creamy

89¢

32 oz.

PEANUT
BUTTER

'

29

•'
•
••
••
••

oz.

COUPO N

HIKING

MILKY WAY
or
3 MUSKETEERS
CANDY BARS

BOOTS
Sizes: lntimt thru
Adults
In Suede and Leather

heritage house

16 oz.

Your Thorn MeAn Stor~
Middl~port, 0 .

bag

INSTANT $}lg
COFFEE
.
6 oz. Jar

BOUNTY
·
TOWELS •••••• ~............

~

I

.·

ST~RTS

/ENDS

2

JUM~·

ROLLS

.
89
.

CAMPBELL'S
~

:J.o~~:C:s .................7
.

J FRIDAY

MAG.IC

..
•

. .

.

.;~ -i-llilln ~ •ill$ Wup far 0n~m.a.:.. ~~~Wail
J
'
'
~- lll!ioiU ~Don, .... - . ,._
.
\
'
;
.

- ..

...

'

'

·..

.

.

.

.

.

, LOWIST PRICI
·IN S liARS
Ot4 .l!lolUIWIN
PIANOS
I
·
I
••
.
• •-

' ~ "

'

••

•
•

"

!'
•·

'-"'· \

' '

.

I..

.'

PKG.

•

•

.

. .

'!fM~

FlOUR

POWELL'S SUPER"VALU

Fmal Touch
Fabric Softener
·

..

. ·. .

33

·.

.
•

oz.

. with coupon .~

VOID. AFTER lO·l

·. '
~\:

•

BAG

•

I

LB.

TOKAY . _

. A·c H· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
GAL. 49e
BL.E
BORD.EN'S
. .
~- ·oR PIM. 12 oz.
'
7
.
9
e
SINGLES QIEESE:. ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••• ' . · . ·
•

. . ·· ,

·~
. ''

.v

I

\

I

.' .

oz.

2
·
9~·
RED GRA·PES ......•.

4 oz.

..

'GOL.D
MEDAL. 5 LB.

1

.

10%

.

.

'IIIII k 1 l4or . . oilj. ,..,.. ... f'lllltr ,_ 12 - DontiJIIIIIIII Pl l.f!ltltl. lllii IIi!'
WI!.j, "f!!!l.t lw ._ .
iotl - opt I . wi!O'wiol. 1• ,.. I I I I I - of

_,. .,-., ~t,' dj.; •

.

'

.

•

. ,'q t_lt;I.A !IAi U VINGI

,

$

TOMATO
SOUP.....

&gt;.. .

A.T NOON THURSDAY
FRIDAY AT
p~

9ioo

9 9.~~

ICE CREAM ..........•..

With Coupon

•

% GAL

BORDEN'S ELSIE

Good at : Rutland Dept . Store
Expires: 10-19-74 .

SALE

.·.

..

.

'.

Oct.llth.i "l8tb

..

...

MOTOR
QT.
OIL

..

•

THURSDAY

'.

..

VALVOLINE

SPECIA~ '1

"

~

'

LB•

,_.2 DAY

?

,.

...

•••
••
••

•
••
•
••

.

" · _, •'

.,.

PRICES GOOD THRU 10-19-74

. /MUSIC CENTER

. . .,

''-

•••

. .. .
..
QI~LPER'S

. . ..

. .. .

•••
..

r~·

,

'

GROUND
CHUCK

••

-----~-

RUTLANQ, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU OCT. 19
I

CHEESE ....... .tb•.~} 19 ·

..•

H.

RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STORE

BY PIECE

••
,.•

..-·

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
--------

742-5543

.

construction, no receipts, no

..

-"•••···_,

OPEN 8 AM - 10 PM MON.-SAT.
10 A.M. - 10 P.M. SUNDAYS

,.
•
••

,

Village funds
are standing .
at $232,252

I

'

QUANTITY RIGHTS ARE RESERVED

STORE HOURS

disbw:sements, $11.99.
Total indebtedness of the ·
community, $1,531,668.75, or
$550.17 per e~1pifa .

,.

·-•

NO SALES TO DE.Alf.RS

2 lb.

ARENTIOI

/'

~.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

•
•

'.',:·.:,

GET

All Middleport Village funds
as of Sept. 30 totaled $232,252.45
according · to the report pf
Middleport Village ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate.
Expenaitures during the
month of September totaled
$68,009.76 while receipts
totaled $45,070.23.
The receipts and disbursements, respectively, from
each fund and the balance of
each
include:
general,
$8,453.91, $26,3:;2.66, $28,047.22;
cemetery, $169."39, $603.60,
$1,263.04 ; fire equipment, $100,
$105.11, $2.58; swimming pool,
$206 .59, $1,345 .38. $581.04;
planning commission.. no
receipts , $136.40, $329.10; street
maintenance, $18,875 :29,
$21,266.83, $1,181.69; sanitary
sewer, $4,381.55, $3,505.08,
$36,078 .31; w·aler, $7,300.81 .
$7,052:67, $24,204.98; water ·
meter deposit trusts, $300, $137.
$6,501.91; sanitary : sewer
escrow, $1,064.73, no disbursements, $104,055.09; federal
revenue sharing; no receipts, .
$7,393.70, $2,043.35; fire house !

~~

USl'd .''

.----MEAT SPECIALS:----.

The
Mtddleport
Fire
Department answered et total
of 25 calls during September
according to the monthly
report of F;re Chief Bob E.
Byer.
or the total, 2:1 were
ernei-gency sq uad runs including J:l in town and 10 out or
town with two being accidents
involving motor vehicles. The
two fire ca lls were of a minor
riature. The total man hours on
fires only Were 9.5 while the
first aid calls totaled ~J7.4 man .
hours. The average men per
calls on fires on ly was l:J.

f' {• ...

~ I I II \ 1\ I I \ I I I \ I \ I I I I ft II /1 ti ill 1/ ( 1/fbj

••

:;:;·

ve s tigalion . Tht;y
provt.•
nuthin)..! .
This same problem uf fa ih u·t•
tn use good logi&lt;" alsu t·auscs
probl ems in many aspects of
our daily lives. You can 'I
&lt;Jssrnne that because there wa.s.
a hurril.'&lt;Jne in Florida and a
the patient, and sometimes the power failure in New York that
doctor. thmks the penicillin did the hurricane blew out the
the trick. The truth is the lights. Whe n people learn to
patient would have gotten well &lt;~ppreriatc this fa ct uf lug it:
anyway.
' they. will be less lik ely to be
We see this over and uver . A victimized by a host of nearperson takes a vitamin pill for . fraudulent health fads and by
some illness and recovers. He many other wild &lt;:letims made
credits the vitamin. The illness in all sectors uf uur modern
may, by its own nature , have life . Don't be gullible, be
been limited to a three- or four- logica l.
day illness. Many long term
disorder s · like wi se hHve
remi ss ions. You could be
laking flour pills and have a
remission and that wouJd be
wrongly interpreted by faulty
logic as proving that the illness ·
is helped by flour pills. And so,
we hear of arthritis being
cw·ed, when we know it is not,
by vitamins. This is why
testimonials in medicine are
just plain worthless. Th e best
they do is to s uggest an area for
· use ful
and
propel'
in -

I'

0., Wednesday, Oct.'.l6,1974'

prospceto; of a new school
building as approved by the
electors last year, but we wiah
tu emphasize that this 2.75 mill
leVy i~' n.eP.~:sary to operate ct
school, regafdless of. where it is
lutated and the fa~ilities •

YOUR .

tlwre will be an inerea se ;.tbout
Fl71i in the 1.cltaltax. v&lt;~luatiun of
:til pmper'l.y due to the new coal
mirw . If this incrc&lt;Jse ta kes
pl:-u 'I~, then it is our ·underst&lt;Jncling that the 2.75 mill
levv would be reduced, in
pro.p'ort ion to the vuluc increased, so thj-11 the same
amount. of money \'-lOUJd be
eollccted CJS was colle cted
before such increa se.
"We hope that the new
bui lding that was authorized to
be constructed by the 'IOters in
Novembet· 197:1, will. be completed and ready for occupancy
for the coming school year . [fit
then we
have to

_,

25 runs made

I

a spcdal

funds .
· '{ hu· board undcr·sl&lt;:tnds thcll

Tenth Oi s trirt Congressman
Clarence Miller · returns to
Suut hN1 stcrn OhiC, this week
for £1 bu~y sc hedule of CJrea
;:~divilics thmugh the curren t
( 'uhgrcssional recess.
Hi s
itinerary
includes
Fridety. Oelober 25, Pumcroy,
to ron duet an open door
session in the juvenile court
mom of Mt•i)..!s Count y Courthouse ffom 11 a .,n1. to noon.
That afternoon, he will hold a
sim iletr st•ss i&lt;in in Gallipolis in
the Commissiuners Office at
the {;allia .('ounly Co urthouse
·frnm 2 p .m. to :{ p.m. On the
ew• ning of Thursday, Oct . :n.
he will bl' in Gallia County to
meet local rl's idents.

Son was a late bloomer
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
your column about tampering
with height. Our son was short
as a youngster. We are both
tall. AI 18 or so he look some
" iodine" pills, and in a year he
grew two· inches and later two
inches more. tie was six-feetthree ai maturity. What do you
say about this?
·
DEAR READER - Not
much . I grew more than three
inches after I was 17, without
iodine pills or any other
lnedicine. Yow- son must not
have been below the normal ;
range in height all8 if he' gl'l!w
fow- more inches and ended up
at six feet thr&lt;&gt;e. There are a lot
of normal people who never
pass the five-foot-nine leveL
Growth usually slops, or
nearly so, when the long bones
in the legs calcify. There is a
zone of cartilage near the end
of the bon es which grows and
grows until then . When the
usual endocrine sequence
occurs and male or female
hormone is formed 'in sufficient
amowtts, or extra amoWlts are
given artificially, these areas
calcify and growth stops.
The age that this occurs

fro111

twice to river

~i;;::~:~:::::~:::~:::~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;::::;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::~:::~::::::::::::::ii;i: .

DR. L-AMB

('Ullll'

either locittiun.
· "We are appred.ative' of the

lt•vv .
..:l'ht• l'stimatcd annUal t'oSl
or opt' l'&lt;ll ion uf th~ sehool is
$148.m5. This mc;ms th&lt;:~l about
$i IH ,OOO must be raised · by
specict l levy and would require
2.75 mills to raise the needed

Miller coming

~~::;;-;::;:~"-,
:1
:·~·: ~~:;:y-~id:~ :0~:yrar~~ing
J:~
OVAL,
~~~u~~yy ;~~~~ ~~~·~:=~~ ~~~~~~i~~~ ,t_:~
&gt;
By Susan Fleshman

OUI:

untlt.•rsland
that m·xl yt'a r our spat't' will
:tgain lw t·ul down lolhL' t•xt~·itL

on its n'QlH'SI for
p.&lt;tSSilgl' uf a 2.75 ll.lill Ia~ h•vy
fur lht• otll'ralion t;f tht• Ml'i~s

CHANGE OF COMMAND - Captain William McCormick, left, is leavin~ his 1••st ""

{'t"tlW!It•t\

n)H'I'ill i~'" . Wt~ n o w

x l:~lt•n w nt

comma~der ~~ the _3664th Maintenance Company of the National Guard at Point Plcas.1111

Whieh

l'll!IIIIX,

1"t111ds

levy in order tu operate .in

'' '

.

.. .

'

'·
.

•./
' i

••

..

.

�'.

..

'

"II."' ••

.

Senlinel. Middleoort-Pomt.&gt;rov, 0 .. Wednesday,,Od . Hi, 1!)74

.

.'it!cun• other quarturs t,y rental
or ol·herwisc Jor ·the l'Untinucd

.Supporting statement made

upcraliun of the sl'hool. IN
l'ilhcr eVent, it will be
nLT1~ ss~1ry tu have th 2.75 tnill

.

for 2.75 mill school levy
Tlu• Mt·i~s t 'ounly BoHnl of
Rl'lilrdcllion hax issued &lt;1

Taking over command will \&gt;e First Lieutenant William Hockenberry of Point Pleasant .
Colonel Richard Tattersi&gt;n, center·, is commander of the llllh Engineer Group. 1Picture by A.
K. Boonsue).

.
Lt. Hockenberry comrmmding Ordnance Co mpany

..

PT. PLEASANT - A change
of command took place Sunday
at the National Guard Armory
as First Lieutenant William
Hockenberry of Orchard Hill,
Point Pleasant, asswned the
command of th e 3664th
Main tenance Company
recently vacated by Captai n
William McCormick.

The ceremony C'onsisted of
Co lon e l Richard Tattersou,
commander of the 111lh
F:ngineer Group passing the
company colors from Captain
McCormick to First Lieutenant
Hoc kenberry.
I ,t. Hockenberry is a parttime guardsman. His full time
job is that of a Pharmacy
Manager for Rile Aid Phar·

macy of Point Pleasant.
He has lived i1 · Poinl
Pleaso:ml since 1%:!. and hets
~n with the Guard s ince 1!165.
As eomma nd er of lh(' :lfi64th,
he assumes cummand over· 200
guardsmen. fiO uf whom &lt;-~rt'
from Htmtingtt.m. Ht.• and his
wife , Glenn&lt;-&amp; h.ave three
children, By ron . G. Anne 4. and
Jeb. I.

will · not ht&gt; ;~blt· to
Conumu1itv S('llool. Till' l&lt;'V\' o pt•ralt• with sw·h lir;liled
will be vol;•d upon ;tl the N'ov . ':; S)lilt't' , This loss of S JlCI('t' is due
rrll•ction .
to lilt ' t•spansion of prugrams in
Thr :o; I&lt;Jienwnl :
t)w Meigs Sdwol Distrid to !.hl'
" This is for 2.7:&gt; m ills. :md exlt•nt thai lht'y nl'ed :meh
this indudt•s :1 l'('llt'W&lt;il of .75 of sp;u·t• for !lwir own oppration .
a mill whil'h expired un
"'This lllt.'O inS lhct l Wt' will
De&lt;·~?mbcr :n. l!t74 . Thi s l'Quals
h; t\'t' lo have o lil t'l' l.J lWrh• t·s.
$2.75 f(ll' ro tch $1,000 of ta xa bh' Wt• will !ht.• n have to bear the
properl y tmd. an Ul l' I'&lt;'H~l' of 2 ("ns f of upkt•t•p. ulilitit&gt;s , school
mills ovt•r the past h.•vy .
lun&lt;"h along with Llw operating
"This iiii..Tt'&lt;ISt' is rlt't't'SS;Iry I'XfH'rl.St'S from IJUI' own fw1tls.
bec(tuse of two prinl·ipal
"OlU· int·uuu~ is dt•t·ivcd fr om
rC'asuns :
st.•vera l SCillrl"t'S : From the
"Fir!olt, is the in cn•ase in &lt;'Ost State of Ohio. $450 fur ca~·h~
of openttion dut~ to iuflation. t•nnJ I!t•t• under 21 years. und
"St'l'tmc1, &lt;tnd probably most $(100 for l'aeh en rollee over 21
important rt'i.I SO U is that Wl' years; fmm S(' hool di striets.
musl now havt• imrl: op('l'&lt;-llt• ~~ the sc ho ol tuition that is
sehoul fa&lt;'i !H y st•parall· from reecivcd by them for each
the public se houl sysle111 . Prior· t•n rollee. the i-lllticipctled into thi s yea r we have bl'Cn come fmm suc h soi.trees is
flu·nished three rooms by Lht' $:HJ,41i8. The bt:~lance of money
Meigs Local School District at neecSSi:lry to operate suc h
the Rutland
P.lementary school is from &lt;.'Ounty fWlds,
school. The utili t ies, heat. and in this eow1ty :1 11 county
j.rmitor servit't•, sc hool lunch
and upkeep were all furni shed
without c h ar~e to us. ·n1is yci:lr
we were cut down to two
rh,. t

0

.

:§

*':·~
i*

::=:-

:.~;

~

••

~t
..
~~
~::

i:l

:::~
:~;:
§.{

S::

~::..::,:

£rom ?," you are asking, about the new
mail-a~book service which lets people in
Meigs county borrow books through the
mail. It 's a good question to ask about
any new project, because knowing the
source of funding tells you a lot a_bout
who is behind the proJ"ect, what their
motives ~or itare ·and_what they want to
accompliSh through 11 .
Mail-a-book is being paid for by the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries (OVAL)
with state funds . The cost to get it
runn~ -~oothly in the ten coUnties
whereittsmusehasbeenabout$50,000.
Both the Pomeroy and MiddlPport
~

libraries are among the 13 libraries

substantial attraction for blLSincss and

coope rating in
and they are glad
to be able to provide Meigs with thts
service which they could not a fford to
give on their own.

tpo
o
recrealion and educat ion , but are a lso
an .rtssel Lo business when it can locate
vital informat ion for local companies
and industry. Giving every person in
Ohio an e qual cha nce to get information
through library services is one of the
sta te's goals .
Mail-a-book will continue at least
through 1975. :;o that it can be eva lu ated
as to how well it does serve its purpose
of making information and recreational
reading available.
''Where is the money coming
from?" From the state, which is a ll of
us. "Wh)•''" To serve us!

Ohio is willing to fund OVA!. and a
·
vanely
of ot her cooperative libr'![y
activities across the state because it
knows the value of good library service.
Like a ll the other states, Ohio puts aside
money oul of its general · revenues
specifically for the purpose of imprpving libraries and library service
for ils residenUl. The state government
rea lizes that an efficient, informative
library, which gives a ~variety of serviCes, leads to raising the standard of
living of the peop 1e in its area and is a

WI'

_:] _:j..

::::
}

!:.::.

)
::::
:.::.:

t

:;::

~;~

:;:;
:;:;

:;~;:

varies. A late bloomer may
still be growing in the early 20s.
However, for abnormally short
people one shou ldri't wail
ocyond the age of 16 to see if
they need some growth hormone .
Adequate amounts of thyroid
hormon e are essential to
growth . Thyroid hormone and
growth hormone work together
to do this. And, iodine is
essential to normal thyroid
function. However, I must
honeslly tell you that unless
your son had an iodin e
defidency , which I doubt, J
suspect that he would have
grown to six-feet-three without
the iodine tablets.
One of the bi ~gest problems
people have in their thinking is
the apparent failure to apply
simple principles of logic . Just
because two eve nts occur
simultaneously does not mean
one event caused the other.
How often people make that
mistake . Doctors do it, too. A
~uod example is the treatment
of a · common cold . Penicillin
has no effect at all on viruses,
but if · the doctor ~ives the
patient a shot of penicillin and
the patient's cold ends soon,

McCLURE'S
NOW HAS
HOT
DELICIOUS

'PIZZA
'STILL FEATURING NOON SPECIALS'
Everyda.Y low prices on F'r ench Fries. Hot
Dogs, Milk Shakes &amp; Dairy Isle Specials.

•
•••
••
••

HEADQUARTERS
FOR

•
•

..•••

BAKER bFURNITURE

•.ot ·.,

. . . . , ...,I

BOLOGNA .....~~-.. 75¢

AGAR
'
CANNED

•
•
•

. LONGHORN

HAM

••
•

••
•••

•

CUBE STEAK ........•..L~•• ~] 49

•

3 lb.

i

••

$389

DINNER BELL

H

Prodm:l' Huy

Frozen Food

RED GRAPES

•
•

...

FRENCH FRIES

lb .

1·LB. PKG. 89e
·
.
ERS
.
lEN
W
••••••••••••••••••••••

••
"
••

•

••"

&amp;9e
BOLOGNA................... .
ARMOUR

:•

pkg.

·.

:

r-------~-~-~~~
FRANKS
•=
DEL MONTE

2

99¢

·

CATSUP
22 oz.
BLACK
4 oz .
9~ ~
~~~~~~~B-tls~-~~~~P~E~P~P~E~R?----ca-n~~~~ ~

=~~PMIX 2~~~~-85¢ ~~;~INE ~~~·

"

.

..

'

'

~-

'

....

J·

... ""

'

.

..

...

-~·

'

. . ··

1-LB. PKG.

STOKELY

PEACHES

9! ~

~~~~--~~~----~~
~•
DUNCAN HINES
ARMERS
CO.RN BEEF

BROWNIE
MIX
Box

TS.·S oz . .

Can

·

69~

JIF-Creamy

89¢

32 oz.

PEANUT
BUTTER

'

29

•'
•
••
••
••

oz.

COUPO N

HIKING

MILKY WAY
or
3 MUSKETEERS
CANDY BARS

BOOTS
Sizes: lntimt thru
Adults
In Suede and Leather

heritage house

16 oz.

Your Thorn MeAn Stor~
Middl~port, 0 .

bag

INSTANT $}lg
COFFEE
.
6 oz. Jar

BOUNTY
·
TOWELS •••••• ~............

~

I

.·

ST~RTS

/ENDS

2

JUM~·

ROLLS

.
89
.

CAMPBELL'S
~

:J.o~~:C:s .................7
.

J FRIDAY

MAG.IC

..
•

. .

.

.;~ -i-llilln ~ •ill$ Wup far 0n~m.a.:.. ~~~Wail
J
'
'
~- lll!ioiU ~Don, .... - . ,._
.
\
'
;
.

- ..

...

'

'

·..

.

.

.

.

.

, LOWIST PRICI
·IN S liARS
Ot4 .l!lolUIWIN
PIANOS
I
·
I
••
.
• •-

' ~ "

'

••

•
•

"

!'
•·

'-"'· \

' '

.

I..

.'

PKG.

•

•

.

. .

'!fM~

FlOUR

POWELL'S SUPER"VALU

Fmal Touch
Fabric Softener
·

..

. ·. .

33

·.

.
•

oz.

. with coupon .~

VOID. AFTER lO·l

·. '
~\:

•

BAG

•

I

LB.

TOKAY . _

. A·c H· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
GAL. 49e
BL.E
BORD.EN'S
. .
~- ·oR PIM. 12 oz.
'
7
.
9
e
SINGLES QIEESE:. ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••• ' . · . ·
•

. . ·· ,

·~
. ''

.v

I

\

I

.' .

oz.

2
·
9~·
RED GRA·PES ......•.

4 oz.

..

'GOL.D
MEDAL. 5 LB.

1

.

10%

.

.

'IIIII k 1 l4or . . oilj. ,..,.. ... f'lllltr ,_ 12 - DontiJIIIIIIII Pl l.f!ltltl. lllii IIi!'
WI!.j, "f!!!l.t lw ._ .
iotl - opt I . wi!O'wiol. 1• ,.. I I I I I - of

_,. .,-., ~t,' dj.; •

.

'

.

•

. ,'q t_lt;I.A !IAi U VINGI

,

$

TOMATO
SOUP.....

&gt;.. .

A.T NOON THURSDAY
FRIDAY AT
p~

9ioo

9 9.~~

ICE CREAM ..........•..

With Coupon

•

% GAL

BORDEN'S ELSIE

Good at : Rutland Dept . Store
Expires: 10-19-74 .

SALE

.·.

..

.

'.

Oct.llth.i "l8tb

..

...

MOTOR
QT.
OIL

..

•

THURSDAY

'.

..

VALVOLINE

SPECIA~ '1

"

~

'

LB•

,_.2 DAY

?

,.

...

•••
••
••

•
••
•
••

.

" · _, •'

.,.

PRICES GOOD THRU 10-19-74

. /MUSIC CENTER

. . .,

''-

•••

. .. .
..
QI~LPER'S

. . ..

. .. .

•••
..

r~·

,

'

GROUND
CHUCK

••

-----~-

RUTLANQ, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU OCT. 19
I

CHEESE ....... .tb•.~} 19 ·

..•

H.

RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STORE

BY PIECE

••
,.•

..-·

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
--------

742-5543

.

construction, no receipts, no

..

-"•••···_,

OPEN 8 AM - 10 PM MON.-SAT.
10 A.M. - 10 P.M. SUNDAYS

,.
•
••

,

Village funds
are standing .
at $232,252

I

'

QUANTITY RIGHTS ARE RESERVED

STORE HOURS

disbw:sements, $11.99.
Total indebtedness of the ·
community, $1,531,668.75, or
$550.17 per e~1pifa .

,.

·-•

NO SALES TO DE.Alf.RS

2 lb.

ARENTIOI

/'

~.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

•
•

'.',:·.:,

GET

All Middleport Village funds
as of Sept. 30 totaled $232,252.45
according · to the report pf
Middleport Village ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate.
Expenaitures during the
month of September totaled
$68,009.76 while receipts
totaled $45,070.23.
The receipts and disbursements, respectively, from
each fund and the balance of
each
include:
general,
$8,453.91, $26,3:;2.66, $28,047.22;
cemetery, $169."39, $603.60,
$1,263.04 ; fire equipment, $100,
$105.11, $2.58; swimming pool,
$206 .59, $1,345 .38. $581.04;
planning commission.. no
receipts , $136.40, $329.10; street
maintenance, $18,875 :29,
$21,266.83, $1,181.69; sanitary
sewer, $4,381.55, $3,505.08,
$36,078 .31; w·aler, $7,300.81 .
$7,052:67, $24,204.98; water ·
meter deposit trusts, $300, $137.
$6,501.91; sanitary : sewer
escrow, $1,064.73, no disbursements, $104,055.09; federal
revenue sharing; no receipts, .
$7,393.70, $2,043.35; fire house !

~~

USl'd .''

.----MEAT SPECIALS:----.

The
Mtddleport
Fire
Department answered et total
of 25 calls during September
according to the monthly
report of F;re Chief Bob E.
Byer.
or the total, 2:1 were
ernei-gency sq uad runs including J:l in town and 10 out or
town with two being accidents
involving motor vehicles. The
two fire ca lls were of a minor
riature. The total man hours on
fires only Were 9.5 while the
first aid calls totaled ~J7.4 man .
hours. The average men per
calls on fires on ly was l:J.

f' {• ...

~ I I II \ 1\ I I \ I I I \ I \ I I I I ft II /1 ti ill 1/ ( 1/fbj

••

:;:;·

ve s tigalion . Tht;y
provt.•
nuthin)..! .
This same problem uf fa ih u·t•
tn use good logi&lt;" alsu t·auscs
probl ems in many aspects of
our daily lives. You can 'I
&lt;Jssrnne that because there wa.s.
a hurril.'&lt;Jne in Florida and a
the patient, and sometimes the power failure in New York that
doctor. thmks the penicillin did the hurricane blew out the
the trick. The truth is the lights. Whe n people learn to
patient would have gotten well &lt;~ppreriatc this fa ct uf lug it:
anyway.
' they. will be less lik ely to be
We see this over and uver . A victimized by a host of nearperson takes a vitamin pill for . fraudulent health fads and by
some illness and recovers. He many other wild &lt;:letims made
credits the vitamin. The illness in all sectors uf uur modern
may, by its own nature , have life . Don't be gullible, be
been limited to a three- or four- logica l.
day illness. Many long term
disorder s · like wi se hHve
remi ss ions. You could be
laking flour pills and have a
remission and that wouJd be
wrongly interpreted by faulty
logic as proving that the illness ·
is helped by flour pills. And so,
we hear of arthritis being
cw·ed, when we know it is not,
by vitamins. This is why
testimonials in medicine are
just plain worthless. Th e best
they do is to s uggest an area for
· use ful
and
propel'
in -

I'

0., Wednesday, Oct.'.l6,1974'

prospceto; of a new school
building as approved by the
electors last year, but we wiah
tu emphasize that this 2.75 mill
leVy i~' n.eP.~:sary to operate ct
school, regafdless of. where it is
lutated and the fa~ilities •

YOUR .

tlwre will be an inerea se ;.tbout
Fl71i in the 1.cltaltax. v&lt;~luatiun of
:til pmper'l.y due to the new coal
mirw . If this incrc&lt;Jse ta kes
pl:-u 'I~, then it is our ·underst&lt;Jncling that the 2.75 mill
levv would be reduced, in
pro.p'ort ion to the vuluc increased, so thj-11 the same
amount. of money \'-lOUJd be
eollccted CJS was colle cted
before such increa se.
"We hope that the new
bui lding that was authorized to
be constructed by the 'IOters in
Novembet· 197:1, will. be completed and ready for occupancy
for the coming school year . [fit
then we
have to

_,

25 runs made

I

a spcdal

funds .
· '{ hu· board undcr·sl&lt;:tnds thcll

Tenth Oi s trirt Congressman
Clarence Miller · returns to
Suut hN1 stcrn OhiC, this week
for £1 bu~y sc hedule of CJrea
;:~divilics thmugh the curren t
( 'uhgrcssional recess.
Hi s
itinerary
includes
Fridety. Oelober 25, Pumcroy,
to ron duet an open door
session in the juvenile court
mom of Mt•i)..!s Count y Courthouse ffom 11 a .,n1. to noon.
That afternoon, he will hold a
sim iletr st•ss i&lt;in in Gallipolis in
the Commissiuners Office at
the {;allia .('ounly Co urthouse
·frnm 2 p .m. to :{ p.m. On the
ew• ning of Thursday, Oct . :n.
he will bl' in Gallia County to
meet local rl's idents.

Son was a late bloomer
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
your column about tampering
with height. Our son was short
as a youngster. We are both
tall. AI 18 or so he look some
" iodine" pills, and in a year he
grew two· inches and later two
inches more. tie was six-feetthree ai maturity. What do you
say about this?
·
DEAR READER - Not
much . I grew more than three
inches after I was 17, without
iodine pills or any other
lnedicine. Yow- son must not
have been below the normal ;
range in height all8 if he' gl'l!w
fow- more inches and ended up
at six feet thr&lt;&gt;e. There are a lot
of normal people who never
pass the five-foot-nine leveL
Growth usually slops, or
nearly so, when the long bones
in the legs calcify. There is a
zone of cartilage near the end
of the bon es which grows and
grows until then . When the
usual endocrine sequence
occurs and male or female
hormone is formed 'in sufficient
amowtts, or extra amoWlts are
given artificially, these areas
calcify and growth stops.
The age that this occurs

fro111

twice to river

~i;;::~:~:::::~:::~:::~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;::::;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::~:::~::::::::::::::ii;i: .

DR. L-AMB

('Ullll'

either locittiun.
· "We are appred.ative' of the

lt•vv .
..:l'ht• l'stimatcd annUal t'oSl
or opt' l'&lt;ll ion uf th~ sehool is
$148.m5. This mc;ms th&lt;:~l about
$i IH ,OOO must be raised · by
specict l levy and would require
2.75 mills to raise the needed

Miller coming

~~::;;-;::;:~"-,
:1
:·~·: ~~:;:y-~id:~ :0~:yrar~~ing
J:~
OVAL,
~~~u~~yy ;~~~~ ~~~·~:=~~ ~~~~~~i~~~ ,t_:~
&gt;
By Susan Fleshman

OUI:

untlt.•rsland
that m·xl yt'a r our spat't' will
:tgain lw t·ul down lolhL' t•xt~·itL

on its n'QlH'SI for
p.&lt;tSSilgl' uf a 2.75 ll.lill Ia~ h•vy
fur lht• otll'ralion t;f tht• Ml'i~s

CHANGE OF COMMAND - Captain William McCormick, left, is leavin~ his 1••st ""

{'t"tlW!It•t\

n)H'I'ill i~'" . Wt~ n o w

x l:~lt•n w nt

comma~der ~~ the _3664th Maintenance Company of the National Guard at Point Plcas.1111

Whieh

l'll!IIIIX,

1"t111ds

levy in order tu operate .in

'' '

.

.. .

'

'·
.

•./
' i

••

..

.

�.14 -Tht•D.ul\ St.&gt;ntlnt.~l M•ddlrpmi-Puml'toV 0

\\,,ltt "'tli\ th

\h 111 4

Sentinel' Classifieds Get R esl.Jlts!
Auto Sales

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Co1sl' No 2 121 3

Estate of JOSEPH V WILSON

Deceased
Not tce

s hereby q vtn 111"1
M Ph ill ps of 101 StMe
Str eet Pomeroy Ohto has bC'l"n
Ovl" etppomted E&gt;.en tr )(of n e
Estate of Jose ph v
w l so n
deceased tate a t M e ,qs County
Ohio
Ma~~;tn e

Credtlors are reQutred to f ll
therr etla ms wdh sad fldu c ary
w~thm four months
Dated th ts 17th day of Sep
tember 197J

'

Mann ng 0

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

@) QU~IY

1969 CHEV BISCAYNE 4 OR

V a eng me automat1c trans

IJ 10

$2095
tran s
r ad•o green fm sh

ct1al k

CREE HOME ESTIMATES
SUPER lOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

S995

P steering vmyt 1ntenor

(.l ll Collect' 592 S.,44
Athen s Ohto

of
TLOW Deceased

Not tce is hereby gtven that

Gtoru• Partlow of J'l2 w Ma n
Street Pomeroy OhtO ha s been
Cluly appotnt ed adm tntslrator of
th~ Estate
decta~ed

of Roger w Partlow
lat e of Me1gs County

Oh10
Cred 1tors are requ1red to tile
lhtlr c1a1ms w th sa1d f1duc1ary
Wifh10 tour months
Dated th1s 27 th day of Sep
t•mber 1974
Mann1ng D Webster
Probate Judge
of sad County
(101 2 9 26 3tc

Reedsville
News,

8.00

POMEROY, OHIO

Card of

Thanks

Mr and Mrs Joseph Sm1th
ol Laurelville were afternoon
callers of Mrs Bess Larkms
A1ao VIal ling w1th Mrs Larkins
was Mrs Ella Hannwn of Long

Bottom
Guests at the home of Mr
1111&lt;1 Mrs Lawrence Ross to
celebrate the birthday of Carl
Buckley mcluded Mrs Ahce
Foully and Mr and Mrs Rome
Sandy of Parkersburg, W Va ,
Mr. and Mrs Garrett Reed of
Coolville, Mr and Mrs Ernest
Ruth, and Mr and Mrs Car1
Buckley Also v1s1tmg at the
8CI98 home were Mr and Mrs
Robert Yost of New Gahlee,

Pa
Mrs Mabel Hetzer has
returned home after VISiting
with her son and h1s farrul} ,
Mr and Mrs fulwle1gh Hetzer
ol Akron
Mr and Mrs Dawayne Durst
ol Corapohs, Pa are spendmg
the week at the1r home here
Visiting with Mr and Mrs
Edward Chevaher Sunday
were Mr and Mrs Roy Reed
.,d daughters, of Tuppers
Plains, and Mr and Mrs
ZenlUt Chevalter and son of
Belpre Rd
-Mrs L Balderson

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET

w 1s H to

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

Lost

Yard Sales

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

BASEMENT Sa l e 572 South
Th trd Avenue Middleport 5
ttres and wheels mounted
radtator
baby
stroller
e le ct rt c m1xer clo th .ng of all
ktn ds F1 ll grocery sack for
$1 Wednesday Thursday
and Sa turda y 10 until dark
10 15 31c

a caucus
Cllrlatmu.

Wanted To Buy

for

WANTED old uprtgh( p•anos
any cond 1t10n
Paytng SlO
eac h F •rst floor only Wr~te to
and g1ve d recltons to W1tten
Ptano Co
Box 18 8 SardtS
Oh o 43946
10 l56tp

Slnule As mdestructtble as
Halloween candy corn
Ally more, it seems that
tile only serious offense IS to
1e1 ea..,hl committing a no·

no.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN f

The.Almanac
By United Press International
Today ls Wednesday, Oct 16,
the 219Ut day of 1973 with 76 to
follow
Tbe moon 1s between 1ts new
pbue and ftrst quarter
The morning stars are Venus,
and Saturn
Tbe evening stars are Mercury and Jup1ter
Those born on this day are
llllder the sign of Ubra
American playwright Eugene
O'Neill was born Oct 16, 1888
011 this day in htstory
'
In lHO, antic1patmg a Japabuildup lor war, the
United State banned all shipmenta of steel and scrap tron to

.-a

-.r11J1811.

In 1959, U s Army Ch1ef of

118ft George Marshall d1ed
In 191111, the New York Mets,
111 apanslon team fonned in
1112, defeated Baltimore to wm
lllelr first world baseball

dllmpionsbip
In 1m, a light plane carryillg
" - Democratic Leader Hale
IIGIII ol Louisiana and three
elber men was reported mlss1111 In Alub. The plane was
..... fOWid.

A thought for the day
f'laywrl1ht Eugene O'Neill
aid, "Our lives are merely
*1111• dark interludes m the
dsplay of God the

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

PRIVATE meet1ng room for
~ny organ1zat •on
phone 992
3975
3 11 ttc

CoUNTR v- Mob;!e- Ho;;-Pa7k
R t 33 ten m lies north of
Pomeroy
Large lots w1th
concrete pat10S Sidewalks
• unners
and off
street
parkmg
Also
spa ces for
small trailers Phone 992 7479
7 21 tfc

-2 -------------BEDROOM house to rent

Phone 992 3975 or 992 2571
1011tfc
NICE 3 room apt and bath
all electric tn Pomeroy ~
Tabletop range, walt oven
n tcest apt
around Phone
Gallipolis
446 7699
or
evenings 446 9539
8 23 tfc

----------- - -Mobtle :~omes For Sale

CAS H ssss tor 1unk cars com 1970 VALIANT 65x12 3 bedroom
p lete Frye s Truck and Auto
fully carpeted L P gas heat
Parts Rut la nd Ohto Phone
Phone 992 7751
742 6094
a 2s ttc
10 1626tc
TRAILER for sale at Hy sel l
EARN extra cash the easy way'
Run 2 bedrooms Phone 992
Pr1ces are great for your
3975 or 992 2571
sc rap ron sheet •ron cop per
10 11 ttc
brass
alumnum
IBM
Papers s t am less stee l auto 8x45 2 BED ROOM mob le home
battenes auto rad1ators Sell
Phone 992 3324
t o one of th e largest recycltng
10 ll 6tc
compan1es m lh 1s part of the
state The Rosenberg Com
1972 WINCHESTER Mobile
pany Athens Oh1o
Home 60 &gt;e 12 '2 bedrooms ,
10 9 ttc
completely furntshed car
peted gas heat central a1r
JUNK autos
com plete and
Phone 992 5254 or {304) 882
delivered to our yard We p1ck
'2277
up all k tn ds of scrap metals
10 15 6tp
and 1ron R tders Sa lvage St
Rt 1'24 Rt 4 Pomeroy O,h!o
1972 WINCHESTER Mob 11e
Call 992 5468
home 60x l2 2 bedrooms l lf,
10 11 261p
baths central a1r furna ce and
carpeted Phone 992 5254 or
CAt:.H pr.ud tor all makes a~
( 30J) 882 2277
models ot mob i le homes
9 29 lfc
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc
2 BEDROOM mobile Home m
--- ----- - -- -~-OLD FURNITURE oak tables
town S4 SOO Call 992 3975 or
992 2571
clocks 1ce boxes brass beds
dishes desks or complete
9 13 ffc
hous~holds
Wrtte M
o ----" -------~--Miller Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh10
call 992 7760
5 13 tfc

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

-------------For Sale

--------------NO 1 copper 45c rad1ators,

Real Estate For Sale

FALL BARGAIN

WILL TRADE - FINANCING
ARRANGE D
WITH
MINIMUM
DOWN
Will
co nstder trade for older
ho me tra ler or land on th 1!S.
n ew 3 bedroom 2 bath home
w1th 2 car garage
l arge
fam Jly room a1r :o nd1fl0n 1ng
Move 1n 1mmed1atelv Call
now 992 5976
9 24 tic

Help Wanted

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992 2181

Employment Wal)ted

REDUCTION of grown AKC toy
poodles $50 each pups $65
S1am ese k i ttens SIS Phone 1
'256 6247
10 l 26 t c

--------------FREEZER Beef 1 000 corn fed

-

Hereford steer's extra nice
Will
deliver
to
your
procen1ng plant Call 843 2111
even mg1s
10 J6 12tp

-----------

7 ROOM house w1t~ bat;h full
basement
garage
and
garden space on VIne St tn
R:ac tne Call 949 2054 after 5

pm

'

10 16 6tc

'

a

If so, Call us Now for a

POMEROY AREA - 5 room

Free Est1mate

frame bath J B R porches
ntc e
kitchen
storage
buildmg natural gas heat
plenty of ground the pnce IS
nght
POMEROY - l floor plan 2
bath
na tural gas
B R
furnace
H W
floors
basement wtth utility large
lot Just $10 000 00

SYRACUSE -

Buy of !he

week double lot w1th charn
fen Ce
3 bedroom frame
basement N G forced arr
furnace
porches
storage

bldQ
WE'
HAVE
OTHER
LISTINGS
HOUSES
LOTS ,
FARMS,
AND
COMMERCIAL COME IN
OR CALL

Water, Electric, Gas, Sewer
Lrnes,
1nsta lied
Work
guaranteed
Doter, Backhoe, Trucks
L1mestone &amp; F1ll D1rt
Commerc1ai-Res1dent1a I
Construction &amp; Remodel

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY
777 Pearl Street
Moddleport, Ohoo
Phone 992-5367 or 992 3861

Vlt(llll-\ fo·,)loJJd
•I

1\' "~ .. '
'o/lo ·t h 1 rll t '&gt;'

f'ortu 'uy , Oh10

• ·I

'~'

de n Bath dmrng room por
ches basement ca rport and
workshop henhouse, and pony
barn

VET

CLINIC LOCATION -

Idea l also for cut rate store
a n tique sh op
etc
Br1ck
bus1ness bu1ldrng only a few
years old A real buy for you
S ACRES - 2 bedroom· home
w1th full basement
In the
counfrv $6 500 00

ALL

CARPETED

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

On Sale Now qualttv Oe'lloe
Brtght Wh1te Latex House
Pamt'" '2 gallqn can:s Only
56 49 per gallon
Brand name Roof Patnt 10
pet oft whtle they last
Take advantage of these
gr ea t buys wh1le they are
Sf1ll m sloc:k
ALL WEATHER
HARDWARE
137 North Seco nd Ave
M 1ddleport Oh10
'92 2SSO

RACINE - Modern 3 bedroom
home Extra large lrvrng bath
ut1l 1ty 7 n1ce large closets w11h
storage
shelves
galore
Basemen1 garden shop and
garage An excellent buy

Open Mon

SAM &amp;PM

''TIRED

OF '
Dry Red Itchy SkrnRed, Smelly
Hard WaferThen call us for a FREE
Water Analysrs

Roghl Now AI

CULLIGAN
WATER
CONDITIONING
593 6366

Raci!Je, 0.

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELIN.G

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

ECONOMY IS STANDARD
but so is luxuty, and performance,
and so are great looks and styling.

~5-News

Sesa me St

13

Deat M
If the old blue number f1ts \\ ell, why not hiJack 1! (when your
husband 15 not mstde ), take 1t to a good men's store, and ask the
clerk to fmd smts w1th stmtlar measurements"' Pack the one you
prefer , and fetch at home wtth a flourash
A man \\ho hates trymg on clothes \\Ill be easy to please -

13

9 .-s--chuck Whole Reports 10
9 ~o-Nol For Women Only 3 HazelS Talllelales 10
Jokers

W1ld

8 10

Name

Hf: 3o-Gamblt 8 10
lPOQ-Password 13

That

T une

Ph1l Donahue 4, Wmn1ng Streak 3 4,15
Now You See It 8 10 H1gh Rollers 3 4 IS

12•DO-Jackpol 3 15

News 13
12 JD-Celebnty Sweepstakes 3 15 Spl1t Second 6
Tomorrow 8, 10 , Afternoon w1th DJ 13
1? 45-Eiec Co 33

merchandtzlng

1 OQ-News 3, All My Children 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
Ph1l Donahue 8 Young &amp; Restless 10 Not For Wome n Only

15
1 30-Jeopardy ' 15

YOU buy does NOT onclude

_

l

CARPETING
501 NYLON

$] 95

Sq Yd
•
and up
Prrce mcludes rnstallation
and free padding Talk to
Wendell
Grate
carpet
consultant
- We have hundreds of
carpet values Your 10b can
be comple1ed rn 1 to 2 weeks
No long waiting period

SPECIA_U
Candy S!l'ipe Carpel with
rubber back
Reg $6

99 sq yd

Now $4.99 Sq. Yd.
Nice tor bedrooms
kitchens, etc

742 4211

Rutland, 0

16
NORTH
• S3
• 7 52
+ AQt0962
... 52
EAST
WEST
• Q542
• J 10 9 7
• J 10 3
• Q964
+ K4
+ J 53
... KJ84
... Q6
SOUTH 101
• AK6

maple
530, maple
mcludes dbl dresser
m1rror. 4 dr chest &amp; book
mattresses

rt

Oct t 7 1974
Muct r fCJ~:If" &lt;-&lt;:. r J D l ma de
lhl .c. y1tH mrl m1J8 ldnl gcul'&gt;
c 1n IH 1tt ltltfld d yn u rJon 1m 1
hU S I r '&gt; &gt; Will i (llf i:J SUr! ll !hf
wr nn J I m ( ~ 8 r sr r1ou , whr n
(Jf IVIIY 1". r t ll f rJ lrH

~ ..""r

f you lei 1oo mary sell d oubls

1p m lhey w 11ha ve 011 erod ng
e ff ect You II perform tar less
C ltl~tmlly than you are c at:J,l
ll e ol ac t mg

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

&lt;t lrt end as \h ts
p 5 m w a~ w \h you Hc1 I ee l
mg s wll be hurt bu l she won 1
s how 11

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Yemen s
cap1tal
5 Withstand
II Expectant
12 Inunediately
(2 wds 1
13 Stocks and
Bones play
wnght
14 One o!
·The Maga''
15 Babyloman
god
16 Encountered
17 Hockey
great
18 Enrruty
20 Distance
measure
21 Perched
22 Prmc1ple
23 Be delinous
24 Electrtcal
umt
2S Temperate
26 Taro root
'EI Egyptian
god
28 Strengthen
(2 wds )
31 Half a
Kenyan
terrortst
32 Destroy
33 Monkly t1tle
34 Acnmon-

23

Dec 21) Even thougt you
kn ow be ll t! r you re go ng to
g et your l1ngers burned b y
gomy along w H1 a p 11 s sug
geS IIOOS deSpl\ e YO l 1 own
JUdgment
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan
t 9) Don 1 ask a lilvor o l some
one II you have a ltu11ch you 11
.... .__ turned down II w II ca use
embarrassment lor both par

GEMINI (May 21 -June 201
You II no\ be as producl•ve to
day as you should be f he lo::;s
of momflntum w1 I be due 10 OJ
d•v ts on of you r o:~ lt en l on be
1ween p leasu re and resnons
b I ty
CANCEF' 'June 21 July 22)
If you futd yourse I n th e corn
!)any o t one who dtspleases
you don t sho w 11 m a manner
th at w111spa I the tun lor o thers

11 €8

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb
19) Th1 s can be a succ e ss fu
qay prov1ded you don t de
pend on anolher to do so me
lh1ng for you lhal you shou ld
do lor your self
PISCES (Feb 20 March 201
You are a b 1 too sens1 t1ve w th
people yo u 1k e I h1s cou ld
lea d you 10 bel eve yo u re
be mg treated un,ustl y

LEO (July 23 Aug 221 Put
on a conv nc ng counte 1a 1ce
e ven thou gh you may !eel ve ry
do u btful about a p os t11 0 n
yo u ve tak en on an ssue an
o the r 1:;; ca lling you on

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 221

tr JOU choose the nght tlrne for the lry..on -

when he
1sn 1 ttred, busy, or upset , and preferably when he s alread)
undressed - and tell him how great he looks m this special
selechon - H

espectally

Dear Helen
What does an author say to frtends and dastant relattves who
thmk h e shouldg1ve them all free books ? - WRITER

Dear Wrtter
Let them know an author does NOT get an unltm1ted supply
oflree books, and add, If you cant !md It allhe book store, I II
g1ve you the name and address o! my publisher - who b11ls me
lor any book I order, alter my ten free cop1es " - H

West

'

J

I [

~MED

SOONE

[]

[l j

I
I

/\

'
u"

..

~

? it u

QUIT I= OFTI=N THE
LAST L INE: OF
COMMUNICATION

!RITAUN±

I K 1J

!CAGNEY!

\

NAZQZ

I I

Now arrana:e the c1rcled letters
to form the turprlse anawer, as

tUIIUted by the above cartoon

IAKliXIXIXXJ
Jumblr• VALUE EVENT PAlMED DEFILE
l'r•'rrd•y"•

One letter simply atand1 for another In this sample A i1
used for the three L s, X for the two 0 s ete Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are dtfterent

CRYPTOQUOTES

\ An1wr.r To gel o rotlfe lrylhllt- A LEVr:R

GR

MYNAGMC

RY

EM

ZXJOENZX

TEM,

Gl

KYJ

CZN

Yll

NAZ

NAEN

AZ

LER

NAGMC

ZXJOENZX
GM -LGVV
QYCZQR
Yesterday's Cryploquote: IT IS DIFFICULT TO GET A MAN
TO UNDERSTAND SOMETHING WHEN HIS SALARY
DEPENDS UPON HIS NOT UNDERSTANDING IT. - UPTO~
SINCLAIR

AND--

South

GASOLINE ALLEY

e. LAZE? 'IOU RE
AN A6E:NT FO.IZ tl.

Pass

01'

TE'LEV1.,
~
0"'

Two

C.OMPAf.JVZ

loads a
month,

;;;

pa1d 1n
advance•

THE RADIATOR BOILE[j
0\ EQ WE HAD lWO FLATB
!HE BATTERY WEI\t'T
DEAD 1HE MUFFLEr?

ponds one heart or one spade

WHAT5 WE MA.TTER.

~OJ

MOM '2 YOU SOU"iD

Kl:ml IQ\Il I FtB.. NlOJT SIGI&gt;Ll w.,,
lDVCAAOvJ I

l))t~61&lt;~f0!«&lt;;1 I'&gt;()UJ

0/.SAPPOINTEO'

~T ~OU lD ~TUR!J "VEI'N ()!(€
OF 1\10$ f'li;IJGit.S 10 'SGHCCI.. 1

FELLO ~ F

if East WIOS With hiS kmg
you w11l wmd up makmg at
least -10 trtcks if East ducks
as he should, you w11l lead
your last d1amond At th1s
pomt 1t IS up to West to make
the obhgatory falsecard of
the ]ack of d1amonds If you
are the seventh son 9f a seventh son, you w11l play dum·
my's ace [f you are an ordmary brtdge player, you w11l
play the queen and dummy s
mce diamond su1t w1il have
disappeared mto hmbo

Open 9 7 Wed thru Sun.
(Closed Mon &amp; Tues 1
Tuppers Pla~ns

Mayta~

•

•

•

•'

~"'-"
• •

Alii Y OOP
I DIDN'T: AN
HOW DIP

YO'GIT
TH' ..JOB
AS A

LORD.
M ILORD? -

WANTE'P EN6L.AND

FROM e:ooe:Rr

ANCESIOR
DIDTHE; FIRST'

TI-E €-THICALPLANT'f3P
HALJ= A H:::JR""E -

-IN EGBERT'$ BED
SO S'GB6F&lt;''f l OOK
THE NEXT CRUSADe

HA~D

'YOKUM-

HAROLD THE'
PAL:.E -

lt:R;l;~ IXY:hAt{!l
The btddmg has been

West
North
East
"'
1+
Pass
Pass
2 NT
Pass
Pass
3 NT
Pass
You South hold

16

South
1•
34
"

.A K 8 4 3 'r A 2 +Q 4 +K Q S 7
What do you do now?
A-Just bid six notrump

take

the sure pront
TODAY'S QUESTION

or

Instead
reb1dd1ng two
notrump your partner has ra1sed
you to two spades What do you do

riow.,

•

l

rtde

(

IT 'P EARS LIKE OL BULLETS
OUTGROWED HIS 5LEEPIN'
BOX , PAW

'

I
j

RNJUGX

ER

NEW 8ATTF:RY.,

STUFFED IN CARHE99~'1'
WHL Hf WAS IN ,t1N AWFUL
~otUtllY HO OOUBT HE
WAS PLFNiY IC'ATHED AT
TilE 1'1"1E' ~--,--,,...-'!

14
2 NT.

km's
cry

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

\

J'I'OT lCIO&lt;ED J U5T
S NUT PAPfRS

you wont know 'I' hat to rebid
In any event 1L doesn't mat·
ter th1s t1me what you open
You should wmd up pla~mg
three notrump and get a Jack
of spades lead
It doesn t make much d1f
ference whether you grab the
ftrst spade or duck 1! You are
gomg to wm a spade, lead the
e 1ght of d1amonds and let 1t

Bargain Center

-Runand

I ,

REPAIR, MOTOR
~M "' M

a worthless doubleton
The reason to open 1t one
notrump IS that 1fyou do open
one club'"' and partner res-

KUHL'S

RUTLAND FURNITURE

111he e1 no
re1ponw to 11 1
I ll Wl'

avOld nolrump openmgs w1th

reserv1or 1n one end for
floral
arrangement
&amp;
pullout candle board lh
other - a real unique ftnd'
Dk maple finish on knotty
pine trestle table a great
P.iece, tf ¥OU ltke Early Am
decor you can see
yourself 1n this table top'

Corvlra

l nst."ramhlf' tht !'iC four Jumhles
one lettt"r to each ,;quart to
form four ordinary "'ords

...... .... ... !i\t\Lr

There are two good reasons

!able. LT. wolh melalllned

Rtd Carpet

East

29 Arch
angel
30 'Sky
p1Iot '
32 Snarl
35 Wurttemherg
measure
36 Lamb·

36 - Manon
37 One kmd of
crackers
38 Maple
genus
39 Be
pensioned

for opemng the South hand
one club rather than one
notrump One IS that w1th 18
hig h-card pmnts and a f1ve·
card suo! headed by A-10 9
•nd f1ve qmck trocks, thiS 18
pomt hand 1s too strong The
other 1s that you should try to

currently shown 1n ladles'
mags for upwards of 5169)
and 1t's signed mahogaf'ly
mahogany knee hole desk
bow end, leather topped
wrth f1le drawer
occas

MAYTAG

Johnny Carson 3 4,15 Movres I
Everythmg' 10
12 3Q-Wide World Spectal 13 Soul Trarn 6
1 00- Tomorrow 3.4 Take F i ve for L1fe 15
2 DO-News 4,13

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

end lable $35 tlhe kind

We Specialize In

North

Pass I+
Pas.s
Pass 3 NT
Pass
Pass
Opemng lcad-J •

alsoavaJiable, Queen Anne

Halo of Hut
Dryers
Surround
clothes
with gentle, even
heat No hot 1spots,
no overdrylng Fine
Meilh, Lint Flltar

19 Glossy
black
20 C1v1l War
general
22 Btrd talk
23 Lettuce
vanety
25 As1at1c
deer
28 Reveille
mstrument

Bolh \ ulnerabie

tables, LT cocktail !able

Maytag

Yesterday's Answer

+

(1

Automat1cs
:eo speed orerlltion
C::holce o
waur
~emps Auto water
level control Lint
F liter or Power FIn
Agitator ...
Perma.Preu

spouse
2 Guam's
cap1tal
3 Pos11tve!y
(4wds)
4 R1pen
5 Went
berserk
6State (Fr 1
7 Mantime
• call
8 Actually
(4wds)
9 Red
10 Rmg lor
rems
16 Measurmg
deVIce

... Al0973

chests &amp; dressers, 4 china
cabrnefs. 1 lg maple finiSh
pme hutch good selection
wall to wall carpet (In
larger sizes) &amp; rugs
bedr'm suites. nite stands
beds baby items rnd oak
fable
dtnettes
desks
bookcases several sm
metal wall hung cabtnets,
utlldy 8. kitchen cup
boards str &amp; OS cha1rs,
only 1 used sofa many odd
1ables For the discerning
furniture
buyer
pr
leather topped slep end

Rt

40 Tamansk
salt tree
DOWN
1 Abraham's

• AK8
87

Big CapaCity

,742-4211

t1nq n

s

o;..w nt ve wtU

Janaki 33
Land Rarders. a
Best of

Grlllgan's Is 13

Only seventh son will make it

2

10 modern,
Early Am or Spanish from
S175
velvet, Herculon,
v1nyl recliners"''·""

dens,

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

y0 11 ll II r

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 221

TAURUS (Aplll 20 May 201
You are no t go mg 1o b~ as co

11 oo-News 6 10 13 ABC News 33
11 3D-MISSIOn Impossible 6 Untouchables 13

WIN AT BRIDGE

coppertone
Frtgrdarre
549 95)
011
coal wood
h~atrng
stoves
now
ava1lable

_,___...,,

9 OQ-Streets of San Francrsco 6 13 lnternat1onal Performance
20,33 Mov1es Nevada Sm1th" 9 'Sunshme' 10
10 oo-Journey to Japan 33 M ov10' On 3 4,15 Harry 0 6 13
News 20
10 30- Day at Nrght 33 Your Future IS Now 20

llelales 8, Sesame Sl 33 Gollogan's Isle 6 $10,000 Pyramod
13, Bonanza 4, Movie "Stella' 10
4 JD-Jackpo1 4 Bonanza 15, Mod Squad 6

pc liv1ng rooms

dryers $35

Leis Make A Deal &amp;,13 As lhe World

Turns 8, 10
2 3D-Doctors 3 415 Edae of N1oht A 10
3 ClO-Another World 3,4 15
Pnce IS Rrq_ht a 10 General
Hospital 6 13 Lri1as Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3D-How To Surveve a Marriage 3,15 Match Game 9 10 One
Ltfe to Leve 13 Lass1e 6 Your Future Is Now 20
lTV
Utrlrzat1on 33
4 QO-Mr Cartoon &amp; the Banana Spirts 3 Somerset 15 Tat

a mark up for somebody
else 's credd somebody
else s free delrvery or for
the
salaries of high
pressure salesmen t And
ALL used appliances carry
30 day ,
moneyback
guarantees
So
our
customers are satrsf1ed
price wise &amp; quality w1se 1
That s why we have so
many sat1sf1ed customers
Try us you II see when
you get a good deal you'll
be back for more I

NEW FURNISHINGS

Search for

12 55-NBC News 3 15

srmple a
mama papa
store
wrth
cash
n
carry prtc1ng Thrs means
that the cost of the rtems

bunk

Password &amp; Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4

~ News 8,10

USED
FURNITURE
BARGAINS M&lt;&gt;re !han' 25

M1ddleport.-Pomerov

I•H

tous
Bonanza 15 Bew1tched 3 Lucy Show 8
5 00- Merv Gnffln 4 M1ster Rogers 20 33 FBI 3 Andy Gnffrth
8 lronsrde 13
5 3().----Eiec Co 33, Hodgepodge Lodge 20 News 6 Trails West
15 Beverly Htllb1ll1es 9
6 00- News 3 4 6 810,13 15
Elec
Co
20
D1agnostrc &amp;
Prescnpttve Teachmg of Readtng 33
6 3().----NBC News 3 4,15 CBS News 810 Bewtlched 6 Gomer
Pyle 13, Zoom 20, Paul Nuch1ms 33
7 00- News 10 What s My L10e 8 Bo wling for Dollars 6 Beat
the Clock 4 , Let's Make a Deal 13 Sports Desk 15 Truth or
Cons 3 4 Burglar Proof1ng 20
7 30- Hollywood Squares 3 4 Let s Make A Deal 6 W1ld
Krngdom 10 To T e ll th Truth 13 Sprrng 4 New Pnc e ts
R1ght 8 Get Smart 15 Collector's Corner 20 Brography 33
8 DO- The Waltons a10 Odd Couple 6,13 Baseball 3 415 The
Way It Was 20 Men Who Made the Movtes 33
8 30- Paper Moon 6 13 What Now Amenca 20

ll~ 3D-Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 13 Love of L 1fe
"' 8 lO. Lucy Show 6 Commun1ty of L1v1ng Thmgs 33
11 ~ 55-CBS News 8 Dan lmel's World 10

$30, elect

WMPO.fM
'

S'

3 15

back
guarantees)
Refrigerators from S19 95
elect or gas ranges from

STEREO
92.1

SOMETHING TO BELIEVE IN

PomeriJy, o.

N ews 6 81ble Answers 8
Pat terns for Liv1ng 13

1Q!()(}-Company 6

foam

GREAT
COUNTRY

Now 1s the time to move up to a Buick.
See Ceward Calvert, Smilin' Art Argyr1es
or B1ll Nelson

992-2174

---,---~---- --,.--===-9 17 32tp

$19 95
USED
APPLIANCES
!ALL wolh 30 day money

Can Be YoutS-Economically Priced

Mam St.

Dear Helen
What do you do wtth a husband who reruses to take tlme f01
shoppmg 1 He has one R-avv-blue sUit that you can almost see your
face m tt 's so shmy
Tins tsn't a matter of money We can afford clothes He's not
hghl , bul he's got a thmg aboul trymg on and gettmg filled . and
smce he's very hard to fit I don t have any luck brmgmg sutts
home
He keeps saytng, I don t need anythmg
He s lhe most
unclotheS...('OOSCIOUS man I ve ever known Suggestions? MZG

9 10Q-AM 3 Paul D1xon 4 Ph 1l Donahue 15 M1 ster Rogers 33
Bullwrnkle 8 Wild Wrld West 6 Btography 33 Movie The
G1rl Who Knew T oo Much 13

case hdbd bed $132 50 30"

Fully Insured

And A 1974 Buick Apollo
and Buick Opel

500 E

8

Spanish !able

FREE ESTIMATE

Face It, A Buick Is A Buick Is A Buick

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.

1 mean overwhelm tlus woman w1th ta lk about vour hre,
what your friends are domg \OUr upcotmng proJects )OW
chaldren almost an~ thmg JUSt so 1l s saf€ and somewha t dull
She 11 soon be wtngmg back to ht'r ps'rchtatrlst You II see
H

Summer Semester 10

8 oo-Capt Kangaroo 8 New Zoo Revue 13
Popeye 10 Jeff s Collie 6
8 25-Jack LaLan ne 13 Capt Kangaroo 10
8 30-Brady Bunch 6

pholosophy a! KURL'S
BARGAIN CENTER os

.

PHONE
949 3S32 or 843 2667

~---------oo!o--------------·

Slop hsten111g

6 35- Columbus Today 4
6 45- Mornmg Report 3 Farmtrme 10
7 00- Today 3 4 15 CBS News a 10 Farmers Daughter 13
Make A Wrsh 6
7 3D-New Zoo Revue 6 Tennessee Tuxedo 13

EXCAVATING dozer lOader
and backh-oe work
septic
tanks 1nstalled dump trucks
and l o boys for h re w1ll haul
fill d~rt top soil 11mes1one &amp;
graver Cllll Bob or Rog er
Jeffers day phone 992 7089,
n tght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc
PTANo -tu n~ngand-repair
Phone Charles Scott 992 3718

The

CONSTRUCTION

DOZER work land clearing by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator wltn over
20 years expenence Pullms
Excavatmg, Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tfc

Dear I 1stener

9

6 JD-F1ve Mmufes to L1ve By 4
School Scene 10

enough

How can I get her orr Il l \ lxlt:k Without hunng her feehngs &gt;

6 25--Farm Ret\orl 13

BARGAINS ARE
OUR MIDDLE NAME'

Sat

949-3295

SEWING MACHINES Repatr
serv1ce all makes 992 2213;.4
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Author1zed Smger Sates and
Serv1ce We Sharpen Sc1ssors
3 29 tfc

~ 00- Sunnse Semmar 4

949-5961, Racme, 0.

tsn t

I ISTENI;:R

THURSDAY,OCTOBER17 ln&lt;

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechamcal Work

GHEEN'S PAINTING

shelf to a house
Pa1nt1ng ; s1d1ng, roaftng,
paper hang1ng, kttchen
cab•nets, etc

he

• $10,000 Pyramod 6

D&amp;D

From a

RACINE PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Rutland

GREAT PAINT VALUES AT
ALL WEATHER
HARD ·
WARE

Only $12 500 00

DOZER or ba c khoe work
Phone 446 3981 or 446 3459
9 8 tfc

Known &amp;
Reliable Service

On State Rt 124 V2 m1 from
Route 7 by pass towards

- Neal

Busmess ServiCes

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

out-tlf-lmo\11 ftlt'nd \\homllvH but who t:; h.avmg
problems\\ Jth her husb&lt;tnd f \l'rV hme t h{'\ h.IVt' &lt;1 fight sht
hops on o1 planE' and &lt;mms 'o s('t us I hen sht- takes rtw w~' h
vtstt telhng me her pr obkms
I knov. It sa cdlharsl s fnr her but Il sa ternble drmn on m e,
and 1 don t havl•lhe !nm• She g(lCS to a psvdnatnst but I guess

13

13 Janakr 33 Mov1es The Adventures of D1ck Carter
'The Long Voyage Home' 10
12 30- Wild Wild West 6 W1de World Spec1al 13
1 OQ-Tomorrow 3 4 Take F1ve for L1fe 15
2 DO- News 4,13

Emergency Phone 992
3995 or 992-7582.

All Small Appliances
Lawn Mowers

older home of 3 bedrooms
bath natural gas heat fru1t
cellar And n1ce lot 1n town

ALL
THE
ABOVE
PROPERTIES ARE VERY
GOOO BUYS MAKE YOUR
INVESTMENT TODAY FOR
TOMORROW MAY BE TOO
LATE, SOMEONE ELSE
MIGHT HAVE
E SO

All-WEATHER

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

LI'HI N•r. 70 acres on
Route 33 North
Excellent
spring and good township road
All m1nerals
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
bungalow near Route 7 Half
acre lot near M iddleport Want

on ly $5 500 00
SYRACUSE - ' bedrooms and

All that 1s needed for a free
estimate n a phone call
Please Phone

BOWERS
REPAIR

992 2259 or 992 2568

TEAFORD

Don t forget the roof of your
home Have a beautiful new
,oat m sta lled by All Weatht.:r
Roof1ng Co

• •

Dear Helen
I have ;.~n

11 00- News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC N ews 33
11 Jo-Johnny Carson,J MISSIOn lmposs1ble 6 Untouchables

Us for your
Plumbmg and Heat1ng
Needs

By Hdt·n Buttf•l

ARIES (March 21 Apnl 191
Nothmg w 1ll b e g tlnPd I you
1t1ro w co lf1 wc1 ter on someth ng
y o ur II liC IS Ct lhli SI C!S II l
::~.hm 1 even 1f you don i ... ~to
.._,y e lo eye on the fSsuc

T .tlk Ht r Ra&lt; k Hnml''

• 13
10 3D-Day at Noght 33 News 20

See

tJ

IIF SI lh1 I II ~( Wh Ill VIr ti
n 1111 lo q r 11tfy y01 1 IH USt f I
Whllll S
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) fJt
c nr1 lttl 1011r yen~ ros•lv •sn 1
t .ICpi Q ttt cJ hy o n ~ who s n rnur t1
111 llior l ~ker than a y 1vur I ~ Jilt
1 genteel relt S&lt;'l l ready n case
yo u rc !lUI upon

For Thursday Oct 17 1974

Us.

9 00- Cannon 8 10
Great Performances 20
Masterptece
Theafer•JJ
10 oo-Petrocellt 3 4 15 Man H u nter 8 10 Reasoner Report

•

Middleport, Ohro
992 3509

'

J

•

-

I

REDECORATING?

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

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

Pets For Sale

2 story frame some
J B R d1n1ng R 3
IJ(lrch es some oufbulldmgs
&amp; garage gas well Pnced to
se ll

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

DAY NUR SER Y 8 to 6 any age
NO MONEY DOWN - Monthly
payments accord1ng to 1n
c hild
reasonab l e rates
70 000 BTU f 1 1
'
rei a b le people w 1th med 1ca.L.
ue 01 stove $125 i'
come New 3 bedroom home
tra•nmg
Phone 992 1608
Phone (3041 773 5428
w1th wall to wall carpettng on
before 5 p m phone 742 4902 - - - - - -10 10 6tp
I acre landscaped lots Call
after 5 p m
- -- - - -- today for more mformat10n
1973 HONDA 350 C":B t good
992 5976
10 3 12tc
cond1tlon S600 Phone 992
10 13 tfc
7605
~ ~
10 16 3tp -

Coolmg Refng
Plumbmg
Electncal
Appliance
All
work
guaranteed
Descount to
Senror C1f1zens

acres

I ca rpelrng

10 6 f.fc

Register For Pr11es1
Shop for Barga1nsl
You're Invited I

WAITRESS wanted apply m
person at Crow•s Stea k
House
10 8 10tc

Part~

2

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

•WILL TRADE ..- FINANCING
ARRANGED
WITH
MINIMUM DOWN
WILL
cons1der t'ra de for older
home trailer or land on the
new 3 bedroom 2 bath home
Wtth 2 car garage
large
lam1ly room a~r cond1t10nmg
Move m 1m med1ate 1y can
99 2 5976 now
10 13 1ft

P&amp;J

6 co-News 3 4 8, 10 15 ABC News 13 N ews 6 Elec Co 20
r
D1agnostrc &amp; Prescnpftve Teachtng of Readtng 33
6 JO- News 3 4 8 10 IS Bewrtched 6 Gomer Pyle 13 Zoom 20
Your Future Is Now 33
7 00- News lO What s My Lme 8 Truth or Cons J 4 Celeb
Sweepstakes 3
Zoom 22 , I Spy 15 Bowlmg tor Dol lars 6
Zee Cook1ng Schools 20 KnowYour Schools 33
7 J.Q-Let s Make A Deal6 Mel Ttll1 s8 Pollee Surgeon 3 Name
Thai Tune 4 Eptsode Action 33 The Judge 10 T o Tell the
Truth 13 Book Beat 20 Ep1sode Act1on 33
8 00- That s My Mama 6 13 Sons &amp; Daughters 10 Baseball
3 4 15 Tracmgs 33 Columbus Town Meetmas 10
30--Movres M1ster Jerrcho 6
All My DarMng Daughters

Heatmg

Free Est1m•tes, M1ddteport.01

NEAR LANGSVILLE -

l

&lt;&gt;

yqu like c . He a t o b 114 11 rm

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16 1974

215N SecondS!

992-7129

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

BONANZA

Service

Interior, b ..dM
Decorating and
Remoaenng
VINYL SIDING PH 992-7454 or

CONCRETE
NO MONEY DOWN Month ly CREMEANS
del1vered Monday through
pa.yments accordmg t o m
Saturday
and
even1ngs
come New J bedroom home
Phone 446 1142
Wtth wall to wall ca rpetmg on
o DELL Allnement tocatdd
1 acre landscaped lots Call
6 13 ttc
behind Rutland Grade Scho01
today for more mformat1on
complete front end SeP11c:-e
992 5976
brakes and tuneups wheels
AUTOMOBILE tnsurance been
I} 14 He
balanced electronically Open
cancelled 7
Lost
your
8 to 8 da1ly Call 742 3232 on
operators l1cense Call 992
Sunday tor appt
7428
AF TER 3 months of renew tng
7 16 lfc
6 15 tfc
and redecorat1ng 1ns1d e and
out th 1S attract111e f ve room
CONCRETE
one floor plan hom e 1s readv LAST BID Home Improvement READY MIX
carpentry work
roof1ng
dell'llered rtght to your
t o move tnto tomorr ow
pamt1ng carpet tnstallatton
pro1ect Fast and e11sy Free
Ltvtng room
d1n•ng room
fr ee estimates
All work
estimates Phone 992 3284
ntce uttltty butldmg kttchen
gua ranteed Phone 74'2 5081
Goeglem Ready Mtx Co
two b edroom s
bath
all
Middleport Oh10
9 22 ttc
com fortable
SI Ze
New
6 30 ttc
Luxa re furnace system
C BRADFORD AuctiOneer
hardwood f l oors new k1tchen
SEPTIC 1 AN~cleaned­
Complete Servtce
and bath I de floors love ly
reasonabte rates
Ph
446
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
woods you can t even buy
4782, Gallipolis John Russell
Racme Oh10
today Reasonably pr~ced tor
owner and operlltor
Cntt Bradford
today s hous1ng
market
5 1 tfc
5 12 tfc
Charlene Hoet l ch 992 5292
10 14 lie
AROBIC
FOR FRI;E estimates, on SEF"T!C TANKS
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
alumtnum
replacement
7 ROOM house w•th 2 ba th s m
CLEANED
REPAIRED
wmdows siding storm doors
Pomeroy Phone 992 3478
MILLER
SANITATION
and wmdows Railing Phone
10 lS 26 tc
STEWART OHIO PH 662
Charles Lisle Syracuse Oh10
3035
Carl
Jacob
Sales
TWO bedroom hou se for sale at
Representative
v
v
10 4 tfc
550 South Th rd Avenue
Johnson and Son Inc
M ddleport Phone 992 7074 or
4 30 tfc
992 3465
EXCEI!.SIOR Salt Works E
10 15 5tc - ~---------- -- Maln,.St Pomeroy All kinds)
of salt water pellets water
SEP TIC
TANKS
cleaned
NEW H OME In Mason With
nuggets block salt and own
Modern Sa nttat on 992 3954 or
garage
Good location
3
Ohio R1ver Salt Phone 992 1
992 7~49
bedrooms fully ca rpeted
3891
9 18 tfc
Phone \304) 773 5468
6 5 tfc
10 l46tc
cement
dr tve
Rt 124 50x60
near
BU
S INE SS
butld1ng
Rutland Phone 742 5052
8 21 lfc

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACI'ING CO.

POMEROY. 0

pm

OCT 7THRU OCT 19

serv1ces.,

-

SMA L L Hou se and lot on
Condor Stre et
Phone 992
7 126
10 3 lfc

BUILDING lot SOft trontagex
165ft The second lot on left on
R1verv1ew Drtve
L1ncotn
Hill Pomeroy Oh10 If In '
teres ted call 992 3'230 after 5

Something For Everyone I

2Sc
brass
25c
battenes
$1 30 Gtn-seng $60
yellow
roo t 54
tops Sl 50
May
Apple 70c M A Hall Reeds
Vtlle Ohto Phone 378 62J9
10 4 tfc

•
Does
your
home
requ1re any of these

ALL-WEATHER

CLELAND
608 E
REALTY
MAIN

For Rent

Notice

BACK porch sale 228 6th Ave
Middleport Couch and chatr
e lectrt c roaster w th stand
co ff ee table
lamps many
hou sehold
tems
9 to 5
Frt d ay Oct HI
10 15 Jtc

:P.IIw."

B YEAR old P alorntnO
ueld ng 2 r cQ stered sorre
quartert1orse mares
Phone
~ ' '1&lt;tn c' 7 17 1 1 1 &lt;tl' ('r ~om
I" ~~l or ' 7 "~"''
10 1) 6tc

extend our heart
1971
PONT I/I(
Ci! tal n1
felt thanks and apprect&amp;t1on
~rougham
blii Ck w h wh t(
dur1ng th e death of Wilham
•n'er or p s p b
" r to n
197J HONDA 1~0 w th otras
Thomas Jr tor a ll the acts of
d1t onmq Am B 'rilck &lt;;tC'rC'o
Sl 850 A lso ta " Cob•a boat
ktndness
messages
of
bu It tn 19 000 m les Phon e
175 h p John son trailer and
s ympathy and beauttful floral
7 11 206]
ca n vas S2 550 F all prtr~&gt;s
and food offerings rece1ved
10 1) 6 1 C
on l y Contact Doug Enoch
from neighbors r e lat ves and
992 3078
after 5 p m
or
the many fr ends
Also
anyt me on weekends
thank ng Wilcoxen Funeral
10 16 3tc
Home tor everyth ng he d1d
Doctors
and
nurses
at
NEW wh tskey barrel tor sale
Pleasant Valley Hospttal the
0 E Bailey Suc cess Roa d
Rev
Jesse M1nner fo r ht S SMALL bus ness bu ld •nq on
S R 33 7 and 12J S.75 per
Phone 667 6]44
c onsoltng wor ds and h s w1fe
month
Also apartment
1
for the VISd to our home In
rooms
and bath
~6~
pN
our sad bereavement of a
month also 12 room hou~c
lov ng la ther and son Mr and
:-:. EwiNG Ma c h tnes brand new
Can be two apartm en t s s ~0
Mrs William Jones Sr and
z, q Zag n nt ce walnut tabl e
per
n
onlh
Cal
992
5786
Fam ly daughter Patty
ln ort g .na1 carto'\s
Never
10 9 161c
10 16 1tc
used
Clearance on
74
Models
lOn l y
a
few
available)
S43 40 c ash or
term s available Phone 992
7755
10 15 lfc
F ILE cabtnets wanted
pref
2 BEDROOMS phone 992 2760
lega l S1ze Call 992 51347 9 am
or 992 3432
8
amfm
to J p m or 992 31333 a fte r 5
tO 16 He STEREO RADIO
1ra c k. tape combmat.on
4
pm
10 13 6tc
spE."a ker
so und
system
4 ROOM house unfurn tsh ed on
16 50 Lm co ln H e ghts Phon e
Ba an ce S108 72 or easy
terms Ca ll 99 1 3965
992 387 4
AUCTIO N
Thursday
and
10 15 ttc
1o a •fc
Satur day ntght 7 p m
at
Mason Auct on Horton St m
furntShed rooms phone K NAPP s ho es
soc ks and
Mason w Va Cons1gnments TWO
992 ]429
1ack.ets 11 s tvle s on sa l e
/ We c.ome
Phone (30J) 773
101 ]6 11)
Phone 992 5321
5471
10 1 li e
l 0 3 tfc
4 ROOM furn shed apt Close to
Powells Super Valu phon('
GROCERY b usmess tor sale
PIANO lunmg Lan e Dantels
992 3658
Build1ng ror sa l e or lease
992 2082
D1sco unt to pen
10 13 11C
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
stoners
to 10 p m tor appomtment
10 6 121p THREE furn 1shed rooms on
3 20 tfc
East Mam St adults only No
pet s Phone 992 23B 1
SWAP SELL - BUY Flea
10 15 3tc A F EW new band •ns tru me nts
Market
Spr1n g Avenue
Contac l Ren ee Stone 992 7567
Pomero.y Ohto Sa turday and
9 4 tfc
Sunday AUCT ION SUNDAY
12JI.60 2 BEDROOM mOb l e
5 00 CO N S I GNME~T 15 Pet
home
country
l oca tton
APPLES F1 tzpatrt ck. Orchard
10171fc
pub l tc
wa te r
&lt;; vs tem
State Route 689
Phone
References reQutred Ca I 919
W lkesvllle 669 3785
7461 after 5 p m
9 25 26 tc
10 13 6tc
SMALL black. mtn ature poodle
KOSCOT
KOSMET!CS
B.
FURNISHED
apartment
around Syracuse
Rewar d
WIGS {The M tnk Otl BasP
adults only n Mtddleport
Phone 992 3792
Cosmet1csJ
Phone
Phone 992 3874
10 11 61p
BROWN S 992 5113
5 12 tfc
8 20 tfc
TWO 4 room and bath apts m
M ddleport For mformaflon
POTATOES phone 992 7407
call 992 2550 or 742 6551
10 II 6tp
THREE family yard sale
7 3 tfc
Thur sday and Fr~day fr om 9
POTATOE S
Ke n nebec
cob
to 5 F1rst road to t he l ett after 3 AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
bier w II del ver Phone Tom
pass•ng WMPO rad1o sta t•on
unfurnished
apar tme nt s
Sayre 843 2491
Lots of child r en s t hmgs
Phone 992 5434
10 II 6tp
10 15 Jtp
4 12 tfc
WE

V1tamm C IS good for you
That's why we mart1n1
clrmkers mana~e to stay
healthy - chewmg on the
lemon rmd
Sead your favorite senator

*lrlcal

19/0 DODGE Spo rt Co~p(' ow
mtleage Excellent con d 1 0"
Phone Dor. BE."tt 2J7 1o:n
' 0 I , 31&lt;

For Rent or Lease

No~es

clo.£k

NI\TURAL oas turnacc 1 ~0 000
1\TU 1\rm s tron q to rced a r
w th control s $RO
10 Qi'l on
tnlur&lt;~l QCIS wat er h cNtcr \30
Phon e 171'1 679!
Rf'edsv lie
10 1) 61p

POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
OPEN EVES
P.M

I I'"" I p I 11 II /
d! &lt;Hi t nd ~
n1 o pr ope rty
two 1'lkC''&gt;
roll no hill s de c; bl 1ut tul
1r u c;
u&lt;; t ,or l h ol ~ 1lcm
&lt;""" • ,
r w tlt 1 r &lt;, Rc'l lly Oo x
11 1 ."Jo rlhtnt)lon Oht o 430 f!',
Phon e (0141 1:18!1 189:1 Seller
w 11 tm an cc
IU b 6tc

6t c

Produ ced trom 1 speeta l
v1nyt co mpound mad e by B
F Goodr ch and Monsanto 5
'mes th cker th an meta l
&lt;; d nq w I not dent ChiP
cra c k.
peet
r ot
rus t or

Sl995

Business Services

1lfm

SOLID

wh1te f in1sh gMd t1res

Case No 21313
ROGER W
PAR

~

l t l l t•y

1

9 19 71'1)/

350 V 8 au tomett1c P steenng &amp; brakes dark blue f1n1sh
blue 1ntenor blue vmyl roof factory a1r condtlloned hke
new w w t1res rad1o M~ny other extra s

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

A13

Television Log

tsttlte For Sale

F O L L E'Il H 1ntord bu l l pl on e

new w w t1res

1970 CHEV MONTE CARLO

Court of Cornman Pl eas
ProbateD vrs on
{10 ) 2 9 16 Jtc

19 5
10 3 12tc

PllonC'

J j ".l "'L S OI"'G

1972 VEGA \.T
Hatchback low mileage by 1 owner
ferred from new car 4 speed trans
b la ck v ny l fntenor deluxe tr m

J~dq ~

EJt.. te

1 . ro'1ATO t "

- 2 SIGNS

Websler

For Sale

~Pi!

11

I LL 6Ril.lb '/OJ ALL
1111; R;;NGIL:S 'iOU ~
~i&lt;DIIA

WSJRK I

�.14 -Tht•D.ul\ St.&gt;ntlnt.~l M•ddlrpmi-Puml'toV 0

\\,,ltt "'tli\ th

\h 111 4

Sentinel' Classifieds Get R esl.Jlts!
Auto Sales

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Co1sl' No 2 121 3

Estate of JOSEPH V WILSON

Deceased
Not tce

s hereby q vtn 111"1
M Ph ill ps of 101 StMe
Str eet Pomeroy Ohto has bC'l"n
Ovl" etppomted E&gt;.en tr )(of n e
Estate of Jose ph v
w l so n
deceased tate a t M e ,qs County
Ohio
Ma~~;tn e

Credtlors are reQutred to f ll
therr etla ms wdh sad fldu c ary
w~thm four months
Dated th ts 17th day of Sep
tember 197J

'

Mann ng 0

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

@) QU~IY

1969 CHEV BISCAYNE 4 OR

V a eng me automat1c trans

IJ 10

$2095
tran s
r ad•o green fm sh

ct1al k

CREE HOME ESTIMATES
SUPER lOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

S995

P steering vmyt 1ntenor

(.l ll Collect' 592 S.,44
Athen s Ohto

of
TLOW Deceased

Not tce is hereby gtven that

Gtoru• Partlow of J'l2 w Ma n
Street Pomeroy OhtO ha s been
Cluly appotnt ed adm tntslrator of
th~ Estate
decta~ed

of Roger w Partlow
lat e of Me1gs County

Oh10
Cred 1tors are requ1red to tile
lhtlr c1a1ms w th sa1d f1duc1ary
Wifh10 tour months
Dated th1s 27 th day of Sep
t•mber 1974
Mann1ng D Webster
Probate Judge
of sad County
(101 2 9 26 3tc

Reedsville
News,

8.00

POMEROY, OHIO

Card of

Thanks

Mr and Mrs Joseph Sm1th
ol Laurelville were afternoon
callers of Mrs Bess Larkms
A1ao VIal ling w1th Mrs Larkins
was Mrs Ella Hannwn of Long

Bottom
Guests at the home of Mr
1111&lt;1 Mrs Lawrence Ross to
celebrate the birthday of Carl
Buckley mcluded Mrs Ahce
Foully and Mr and Mrs Rome
Sandy of Parkersburg, W Va ,
Mr. and Mrs Garrett Reed of
Coolville, Mr and Mrs Ernest
Ruth, and Mr and Mrs Car1
Buckley Also v1s1tmg at the
8CI98 home were Mr and Mrs
Robert Yost of New Gahlee,

Pa
Mrs Mabel Hetzer has
returned home after VISiting
with her son and h1s farrul} ,
Mr and Mrs fulwle1gh Hetzer
ol Akron
Mr and Mrs Dawayne Durst
ol Corapohs, Pa are spendmg
the week at the1r home here
Visiting with Mr and Mrs
Edward Chevaher Sunday
were Mr and Mrs Roy Reed
.,d daughters, of Tuppers
Plains, and Mr and Mrs
ZenlUt Chevalter and son of
Belpre Rd
-Mrs L Balderson

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET

w 1s H to

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

Lost

Yard Sales

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

BASEMENT Sa l e 572 South
Th trd Avenue Middleport 5
ttres and wheels mounted
radtator
baby
stroller
e le ct rt c m1xer clo th .ng of all
ktn ds F1 ll grocery sack for
$1 Wednesday Thursday
and Sa turda y 10 until dark
10 15 31c

a caucus
Cllrlatmu.

Wanted To Buy

for

WANTED old uprtgh( p•anos
any cond 1t10n
Paytng SlO
eac h F •rst floor only Wr~te to
and g1ve d recltons to W1tten
Ptano Co
Box 18 8 SardtS
Oh o 43946
10 l56tp

Slnule As mdestructtble as
Halloween candy corn
Ally more, it seems that
tile only serious offense IS to
1e1 ea..,hl committing a no·

no.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN f

The.Almanac
By United Press International
Today ls Wednesday, Oct 16,
the 219Ut day of 1973 with 76 to
follow
Tbe moon 1s between 1ts new
pbue and ftrst quarter
The morning stars are Venus,
and Saturn
Tbe evening stars are Mercury and Jup1ter
Those born on this day are
llllder the sign of Ubra
American playwright Eugene
O'Neill was born Oct 16, 1888
011 this day in htstory
'
In lHO, antic1patmg a Japabuildup lor war, the
United State banned all shipmenta of steel and scrap tron to

.-a

-.r11J1811.

In 1959, U s Army Ch1ef of

118ft George Marshall d1ed
In 191111, the New York Mets,
111 apanslon team fonned in
1112, defeated Baltimore to wm
lllelr first world baseball

dllmpionsbip
In 1m, a light plane carryillg
" - Democratic Leader Hale
IIGIII ol Louisiana and three
elber men was reported mlss1111 In Alub. The plane was
..... fOWid.

A thought for the day
f'laywrl1ht Eugene O'Neill
aid, "Our lives are merely
*1111• dark interludes m the
dsplay of God the

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

PRIVATE meet1ng room for
~ny organ1zat •on
phone 992
3975
3 11 ttc

CoUNTR v- Mob;!e- Ho;;-Pa7k
R t 33 ten m lies north of
Pomeroy
Large lots w1th
concrete pat10S Sidewalks
• unners
and off
street
parkmg
Also
spa ces for
small trailers Phone 992 7479
7 21 tfc

-2 -------------BEDROOM house to rent

Phone 992 3975 or 992 2571
1011tfc
NICE 3 room apt and bath
all electric tn Pomeroy ~
Tabletop range, walt oven
n tcest apt
around Phone
Gallipolis
446 7699
or
evenings 446 9539
8 23 tfc

----------- - -Mobtle :~omes For Sale

CAS H ssss tor 1unk cars com 1970 VALIANT 65x12 3 bedroom
p lete Frye s Truck and Auto
fully carpeted L P gas heat
Parts Rut la nd Ohto Phone
Phone 992 7751
742 6094
a 2s ttc
10 1626tc
TRAILER for sale at Hy sel l
EARN extra cash the easy way'
Run 2 bedrooms Phone 992
Pr1ces are great for your
3975 or 992 2571
sc rap ron sheet •ron cop per
10 11 ttc
brass
alumnum
IBM
Papers s t am less stee l auto 8x45 2 BED ROOM mob le home
battenes auto rad1ators Sell
Phone 992 3324
t o one of th e largest recycltng
10 ll 6tc
compan1es m lh 1s part of the
state The Rosenberg Com
1972 WINCHESTER Mobile
pany Athens Oh1o
Home 60 &gt;e 12 '2 bedrooms ,
10 9 ttc
completely furntshed car
peted gas heat central a1r
JUNK autos
com plete and
Phone 992 5254 or {304) 882
delivered to our yard We p1ck
'2277
up all k tn ds of scrap metals
10 15 6tp
and 1ron R tders Sa lvage St
Rt 1'24 Rt 4 Pomeroy O,h!o
1972 WINCHESTER Mob 11e
Call 992 5468
home 60x l2 2 bedrooms l lf,
10 11 261p
baths central a1r furna ce and
carpeted Phone 992 5254 or
CAt:.H pr.ud tor all makes a~
( 30J) 882 2277
models ot mob i le homes
9 29 lfc
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc
2 BEDROOM mobile Home m
--- ----- - -- -~-OLD FURNITURE oak tables
town S4 SOO Call 992 3975 or
992 2571
clocks 1ce boxes brass beds
dishes desks or complete
9 13 ffc
hous~holds
Wrtte M
o ----" -------~--Miller Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh10
call 992 7760
5 13 tfc

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

-------------For Sale

--------------NO 1 copper 45c rad1ators,

Real Estate For Sale

FALL BARGAIN

WILL TRADE - FINANCING
ARRANGE D
WITH
MINIMUM
DOWN
Will
co nstder trade for older
ho me tra ler or land on th 1!S.
n ew 3 bedroom 2 bath home
w1th 2 car garage
l arge
fam Jly room a1r :o nd1fl0n 1ng
Move 1n 1mmed1atelv Call
now 992 5976
9 24 tic

Help Wanted

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992 2181

Employment Wal)ted

REDUCTION of grown AKC toy
poodles $50 each pups $65
S1am ese k i ttens SIS Phone 1
'256 6247
10 l 26 t c

--------------FREEZER Beef 1 000 corn fed

-

Hereford steer's extra nice
Will
deliver
to
your
procen1ng plant Call 843 2111
even mg1s
10 J6 12tp

-----------

7 ROOM house w1t~ bat;h full
basement
garage
and
garden space on VIne St tn
R:ac tne Call 949 2054 after 5

pm

'

10 16 6tc

'

a

If so, Call us Now for a

POMEROY AREA - 5 room

Free Est1mate

frame bath J B R porches
ntc e
kitchen
storage
buildmg natural gas heat
plenty of ground the pnce IS
nght
POMEROY - l floor plan 2
bath
na tural gas
B R
furnace
H W
floors
basement wtth utility large
lot Just $10 000 00

SYRACUSE -

Buy of !he

week double lot w1th charn
fen Ce
3 bedroom frame
basement N G forced arr
furnace
porches
storage

bldQ
WE'
HAVE
OTHER
LISTINGS
HOUSES
LOTS ,
FARMS,
AND
COMMERCIAL COME IN
OR CALL

Water, Electric, Gas, Sewer
Lrnes,
1nsta lied
Work
guaranteed
Doter, Backhoe, Trucks
L1mestone &amp; F1ll D1rt
Commerc1ai-Res1dent1a I
Construction &amp; Remodel

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY
777 Pearl Street
Moddleport, Ohoo
Phone 992-5367 or 992 3861

Vlt(llll-\ fo·,)loJJd
•I

1\' "~ .. '
'o/lo ·t h 1 rll t '&gt;'

f'ortu 'uy , Oh10

• ·I

'~'

de n Bath dmrng room por
ches basement ca rport and
workshop henhouse, and pony
barn

VET

CLINIC LOCATION -

Idea l also for cut rate store
a n tique sh op
etc
Br1ck
bus1ness bu1ldrng only a few
years old A real buy for you
S ACRES - 2 bedroom· home
w1th full basement
In the
counfrv $6 500 00

ALL

CARPETED

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

On Sale Now qualttv Oe'lloe
Brtght Wh1te Latex House
Pamt'" '2 gallqn can:s Only
56 49 per gallon
Brand name Roof Patnt 10
pet oft whtle they last
Take advantage of these
gr ea t buys wh1le they are
Sf1ll m sloc:k
ALL WEATHER
HARDWARE
137 North Seco nd Ave
M 1ddleport Oh10
'92 2SSO

RACINE - Modern 3 bedroom
home Extra large lrvrng bath
ut1l 1ty 7 n1ce large closets w11h
storage
shelves
galore
Basemen1 garden shop and
garage An excellent buy

Open Mon

SAM &amp;PM

''TIRED

OF '
Dry Red Itchy SkrnRed, Smelly
Hard WaferThen call us for a FREE
Water Analysrs

Roghl Now AI

CULLIGAN
WATER
CONDITIONING
593 6366

Raci!Je, 0.

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELIN.G

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

ECONOMY IS STANDARD
but so is luxuty, and performance,
and so are great looks and styling.

~5-News

Sesa me St

13

Deat M
If the old blue number f1ts \\ ell, why not hiJack 1! (when your
husband 15 not mstde ), take 1t to a good men's store, and ask the
clerk to fmd smts w1th stmtlar measurements"' Pack the one you
prefer , and fetch at home wtth a flourash
A man \\ho hates trymg on clothes \\Ill be easy to please -

13

9 .-s--chuck Whole Reports 10
9 ~o-Nol For Women Only 3 HazelS Talllelales 10
Jokers

W1ld

8 10

Name

Hf: 3o-Gamblt 8 10
lPOQ-Password 13

That

T une

Ph1l Donahue 4, Wmn1ng Streak 3 4,15
Now You See It 8 10 H1gh Rollers 3 4 IS

12•DO-Jackpol 3 15

News 13
12 JD-Celebnty Sweepstakes 3 15 Spl1t Second 6
Tomorrow 8, 10 , Afternoon w1th DJ 13
1? 45-Eiec Co 33

merchandtzlng

1 OQ-News 3, All My Children 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
Ph1l Donahue 8 Young &amp; Restless 10 Not For Wome n Only

15
1 30-Jeopardy ' 15

YOU buy does NOT onclude

_

l

CARPETING
501 NYLON

$] 95

Sq Yd
•
and up
Prrce mcludes rnstallation
and free padding Talk to
Wendell
Grate
carpet
consultant
- We have hundreds of
carpet values Your 10b can
be comple1ed rn 1 to 2 weeks
No long waiting period

SPECIA_U
Candy S!l'ipe Carpel with
rubber back
Reg $6

99 sq yd

Now $4.99 Sq. Yd.
Nice tor bedrooms
kitchens, etc

742 4211

Rutland, 0

16
NORTH
• S3
• 7 52
+ AQt0962
... 52
EAST
WEST
• Q542
• J 10 9 7
• J 10 3
• Q964
+ K4
+ J 53
... KJ84
... Q6
SOUTH 101
• AK6

maple
530, maple
mcludes dbl dresser
m1rror. 4 dr chest &amp; book
mattresses

rt

Oct t 7 1974
Muct r fCJ~:If" &lt;-&lt;:. r J D l ma de
lhl .c. y1tH mrl m1J8 ldnl gcul'&gt;
c 1n IH 1tt ltltfld d yn u rJon 1m 1
hU S I r '&gt; &gt; Will i (llf i:J SUr! ll !hf
wr nn J I m ( ~ 8 r sr r1ou , whr n
(Jf IVIIY 1". r t ll f rJ lrH

~ ..""r

f you lei 1oo mary sell d oubls

1p m lhey w 11ha ve 011 erod ng
e ff ect You II perform tar less
C ltl~tmlly than you are c at:J,l
ll e ol ac t mg

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

&lt;t lrt end as \h ts
p 5 m w a~ w \h you Hc1 I ee l
mg s wll be hurt bu l she won 1
s how 11

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Yemen s
cap1tal
5 Withstand
II Expectant
12 Inunediately
(2 wds 1
13 Stocks and
Bones play
wnght
14 One o!
·The Maga''
15 Babyloman
god
16 Encountered
17 Hockey
great
18 Enrruty
20 Distance
measure
21 Perched
22 Prmc1ple
23 Be delinous
24 Electrtcal
umt
2S Temperate
26 Taro root
'EI Egyptian
god
28 Strengthen
(2 wds )
31 Half a
Kenyan
terrortst
32 Destroy
33 Monkly t1tle
34 Acnmon-

23

Dec 21) Even thougt you
kn ow be ll t! r you re go ng to
g et your l1ngers burned b y
gomy along w H1 a p 11 s sug
geS IIOOS deSpl\ e YO l 1 own
JUdgment
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan
t 9) Don 1 ask a lilvor o l some
one II you have a ltu11ch you 11
.... .__ turned down II w II ca use
embarrassment lor both par

GEMINI (May 21 -June 201
You II no\ be as producl•ve to
day as you should be f he lo::;s
of momflntum w1 I be due 10 OJ
d•v ts on of you r o:~ lt en l on be
1ween p leasu re and resnons
b I ty
CANCEF' 'June 21 July 22)
If you futd yourse I n th e corn
!)any o t one who dtspleases
you don t sho w 11 m a manner
th at w111spa I the tun lor o thers

11 €8

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb
19) Th1 s can be a succ e ss fu
qay prov1ded you don t de
pend on anolher to do so me
lh1ng for you lhal you shou ld
do lor your self
PISCES (Feb 20 March 201
You are a b 1 too sens1 t1ve w th
people yo u 1k e I h1s cou ld
lea d you 10 bel eve yo u re
be mg treated un,ustl y

LEO (July 23 Aug 221 Put
on a conv nc ng counte 1a 1ce
e ven thou gh you may !eel ve ry
do u btful about a p os t11 0 n
yo u ve tak en on an ssue an
o the r 1:;; ca lling you on

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 221

tr JOU choose the nght tlrne for the lry..on -

when he
1sn 1 ttred, busy, or upset , and preferably when he s alread)
undressed - and tell him how great he looks m this special
selechon - H

espectally

Dear Helen
What does an author say to frtends and dastant relattves who
thmk h e shouldg1ve them all free books ? - WRITER

Dear Wrtter
Let them know an author does NOT get an unltm1ted supply
oflree books, and add, If you cant !md It allhe book store, I II
g1ve you the name and address o! my publisher - who b11ls me
lor any book I order, alter my ten free cop1es " - H

West

'

J

I [

~MED

SOONE

[]

[l j

I
I

/\

'
u"

..

~

? it u

QUIT I= OFTI=N THE
LAST L INE: OF
COMMUNICATION

!RITAUN±

I K 1J

!CAGNEY!

\

NAZQZ

I I

Now arrana:e the c1rcled letters
to form the turprlse anawer, as

tUIIUted by the above cartoon

IAKliXIXIXXJ
Jumblr• VALUE EVENT PAlMED DEFILE
l'r•'rrd•y"•

One letter simply atand1 for another In this sample A i1
used for the three L s, X for the two 0 s ete Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are dtfterent

CRYPTOQUOTES

\ An1wr.r To gel o rotlfe lrylhllt- A LEVr:R

GR

MYNAGMC

RY

EM

ZXJOENZX

TEM,

Gl

KYJ

CZN

Yll

NAZ

NAEN

AZ

LER

NAGMC

ZXJOENZX
GM -LGVV
QYCZQR
Yesterday's Cryploquote: IT IS DIFFICULT TO GET A MAN
TO UNDERSTAND SOMETHING WHEN HIS SALARY
DEPENDS UPON HIS NOT UNDERSTANDING IT. - UPTO~
SINCLAIR

AND--

South

GASOLINE ALLEY

e. LAZE? 'IOU RE
AN A6E:NT FO.IZ tl.

Pass

01'

TE'LEV1.,
~
0"'

Two

C.OMPAf.JVZ

loads a
month,

;;;

pa1d 1n
advance•

THE RADIATOR BOILE[j
0\ EQ WE HAD lWO FLATB
!HE BATTERY WEI\t'T
DEAD 1HE MUFFLEr?

ponds one heart or one spade

WHAT5 WE MA.TTER.

~OJ

MOM '2 YOU SOU"iD

Kl:ml IQ\Il I FtB.. NlOJT SIGI&gt;Ll w.,,
lDVCAAOvJ I

l))t~61&lt;~f0!«&lt;;1 I'&gt;()UJ

0/.SAPPOINTEO'

~T ~OU lD ~TUR!J "VEI'N ()!(€
OF 1\10$ f'li;IJGit.S 10 'SGHCCI.. 1

FELLO ~ F

if East WIOS With hiS kmg
you w11l wmd up makmg at
least -10 trtcks if East ducks
as he should, you w11l lead
your last d1amond At th1s
pomt 1t IS up to West to make
the obhgatory falsecard of
the ]ack of d1amonds If you
are the seventh son 9f a seventh son, you w11l play dum·
my's ace [f you are an ordmary brtdge player, you w11l
play the queen and dummy s
mce diamond su1t w1il have
disappeared mto hmbo

Open 9 7 Wed thru Sun.
(Closed Mon &amp; Tues 1
Tuppers Pla~ns

Mayta~

•

•

•

•'

~"'-"
• •

Alii Y OOP
I DIDN'T: AN
HOW DIP

YO'GIT
TH' ..JOB
AS A

LORD.
M ILORD? -

WANTE'P EN6L.AND

FROM e:ooe:Rr

ANCESIOR
DIDTHE; FIRST'

TI-E €-THICALPLANT'f3P
HALJ= A H:::JR""E -

-IN EGBERT'$ BED
SO S'GB6F&lt;''f l OOK
THE NEXT CRUSADe

HA~D

'YOKUM-

HAROLD THE'
PAL:.E -

lt:R;l;~ IXY:hAt{!l
The btddmg has been

West
North
East
"'
1+
Pass
Pass
2 NT
Pass
Pass
3 NT
Pass
You South hold

16

South
1•
34
"

.A K 8 4 3 'r A 2 +Q 4 +K Q S 7
What do you do now?
A-Just bid six notrump

take

the sure pront
TODAY'S QUESTION

or

Instead
reb1dd1ng two
notrump your partner has ra1sed
you to two spades What do you do

riow.,

•

l

rtde

(

IT 'P EARS LIKE OL BULLETS
OUTGROWED HIS 5LEEPIN'
BOX , PAW

'

I
j

RNJUGX

ER

NEW 8ATTF:RY.,

STUFFED IN CARHE99~'1'
WHL Hf WAS IN ,t1N AWFUL
~otUtllY HO OOUBT HE
WAS PLFNiY IC'ATHED AT
TilE 1'1"1E' ~--,--,,...-'!

14
2 NT.

km's
cry

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

\

J'I'OT lCIO&lt;ED J U5T
S NUT PAPfRS

you wont know 'I' hat to rebid
In any event 1L doesn't mat·
ter th1s t1me what you open
You should wmd up pla~mg
three notrump and get a Jack
of spades lead
It doesn t make much d1f
ference whether you grab the
ftrst spade or duck 1! You are
gomg to wm a spade, lead the
e 1ght of d1amonds and let 1t

Bargain Center

-Runand

I ,

REPAIR, MOTOR
~M "' M

a worthless doubleton
The reason to open 1t one
notrump IS that 1fyou do open
one club'"' and partner res-

KUHL'S

RUTLAND FURNITURE

111he e1 no
re1ponw to 11 1
I ll Wl'

avOld nolrump openmgs w1th

reserv1or 1n one end for
floral
arrangement
&amp;
pullout candle board lh
other - a real unique ftnd'
Dk maple finish on knotty
pine trestle table a great
P.iece, tf ¥OU ltke Early Am
decor you can see
yourself 1n this table top'

Corvlra

l nst."ramhlf' tht !'iC four Jumhles
one lettt"r to each ,;quart to
form four ordinary "'ords

...... .... ... !i\t\Lr

There are two good reasons

!able. LT. wolh melalllned

Rtd Carpet

East

29 Arch
angel
30 'Sky
p1Iot '
32 Snarl
35 Wurttemherg
measure
36 Lamb·

36 - Manon
37 One kmd of
crackers
38 Maple
genus
39 Be
pensioned

for opemng the South hand
one club rather than one
notrump One IS that w1th 18
hig h-card pmnts and a f1ve·
card suo! headed by A-10 9
•nd f1ve qmck trocks, thiS 18
pomt hand 1s too strong The
other 1s that you should try to

currently shown 1n ladles'
mags for upwards of 5169)
and 1t's signed mahogaf'ly
mahogany knee hole desk
bow end, leather topped
wrth f1le drawer
occas

MAYTAG

Johnny Carson 3 4,15 Movres I
Everythmg' 10
12 3Q-Wide World Spectal 13 Soul Trarn 6
1 00- Tomorrow 3.4 Take F i ve for L1fe 15
2 DO-News 4,13

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

end lable $35 tlhe kind

We Specialize In

North

Pass I+
Pas.s
Pass 3 NT
Pass
Pass
Opemng lcad-J •

alsoavaJiable, Queen Anne

Halo of Hut
Dryers
Surround
clothes
with gentle, even
heat No hot 1spots,
no overdrylng Fine
Meilh, Lint Flltar

19 Glossy
black
20 C1v1l War
general
22 Btrd talk
23 Lettuce
vanety
25 As1at1c
deer
28 Reveille
mstrument

Bolh \ ulnerabie

tables, LT cocktail !able

Maytag

Yesterday's Answer

+

(1

Automat1cs
:eo speed orerlltion
C::holce o
waur
~emps Auto water
level control Lint
F liter or Power FIn
Agitator ...
Perma.Preu

spouse
2 Guam's
cap1tal
3 Pos11tve!y
(4wds)
4 R1pen
5 Went
berserk
6State (Fr 1
7 Mantime
• call
8 Actually
(4wds)
9 Red
10 Rmg lor
rems
16 Measurmg
deVIce

... Al0973

chests &amp; dressers, 4 china
cabrnefs. 1 lg maple finiSh
pme hutch good selection
wall to wall carpet (In
larger sizes) &amp; rugs
bedr'm suites. nite stands
beds baby items rnd oak
fable
dtnettes
desks
bookcases several sm
metal wall hung cabtnets,
utlldy 8. kitchen cup
boards str &amp; OS cha1rs,
only 1 used sofa many odd
1ables For the discerning
furniture
buyer
pr
leather topped slep end

Rt

40 Tamansk
salt tree
DOWN
1 Abraham's

• AK8
87

Big CapaCity

,742-4211

t1nq n

s

o;..w nt ve wtU

Janaki 33
Land Rarders. a
Best of

Grlllgan's Is 13

Only seventh son will make it

2

10 modern,
Early Am or Spanish from
S175
velvet, Herculon,
v1nyl recliners"''·""

dens,

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

y0 11 ll II r

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 221

TAURUS (Aplll 20 May 201
You are no t go mg 1o b~ as co

11 oo-News 6 10 13 ABC News 33
11 3D-MISSIOn Impossible 6 Untouchables 13

WIN AT BRIDGE

coppertone
Frtgrdarre
549 95)
011
coal wood
h~atrng
stoves
now
ava1lable

_,___...,,

9 OQ-Streets of San Francrsco 6 13 lnternat1onal Performance
20,33 Mov1es Nevada Sm1th" 9 'Sunshme' 10
10 oo-Journey to Japan 33 M ov10' On 3 4,15 Harry 0 6 13
News 20
10 30- Day at Nrght 33 Your Future IS Now 20

llelales 8, Sesame Sl 33 Gollogan's Isle 6 $10,000 Pyramod
13, Bonanza 4, Movie "Stella' 10
4 JD-Jackpo1 4 Bonanza 15, Mod Squad 6

pc liv1ng rooms

dryers $35

Leis Make A Deal &amp;,13 As lhe World

Turns 8, 10
2 3D-Doctors 3 415 Edae of N1oht A 10
3 ClO-Another World 3,4 15
Pnce IS Rrq_ht a 10 General
Hospital 6 13 Lri1as Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3D-How To Surveve a Marriage 3,15 Match Game 9 10 One
Ltfe to Leve 13 Lass1e 6 Your Future Is Now 20
lTV
Utrlrzat1on 33
4 QO-Mr Cartoon &amp; the Banana Spirts 3 Somerset 15 Tat

a mark up for somebody
else 's credd somebody
else s free delrvery or for
the
salaries of high
pressure salesmen t And
ALL used appliances carry
30 day ,
moneyback
guarantees
So
our
customers are satrsf1ed
price wise &amp; quality w1se 1
That s why we have so
many sat1sf1ed customers
Try us you II see when
you get a good deal you'll
be back for more I

NEW FURNISHINGS

Search for

12 55-NBC News 3 15

srmple a
mama papa
store
wrth
cash
n
carry prtc1ng Thrs means
that the cost of the rtems

bunk

Password &amp; Bob Brauns 50 50 Club 4

~ News 8,10

USED
FURNITURE
BARGAINS M&lt;&gt;re !han' 25

M1ddleport.-Pomerov

I•H

tous
Bonanza 15 Bew1tched 3 Lucy Show 8
5 00- Merv Gnffln 4 M1ster Rogers 20 33 FBI 3 Andy Gnffrth
8 lronsrde 13
5 3().----Eiec Co 33, Hodgepodge Lodge 20 News 6 Trails West
15 Beverly Htllb1ll1es 9
6 00- News 3 4 6 810,13 15
Elec
Co
20
D1agnostrc &amp;
Prescnpttve Teachmg of Readtng 33
6 3().----NBC News 3 4,15 CBS News 810 Bewtlched 6 Gomer
Pyle 13, Zoom 20, Paul Nuch1ms 33
7 00- News 10 What s My L10e 8 Bo wling for Dollars 6 Beat
the Clock 4 , Let's Make a Deal 13 Sports Desk 15 Truth or
Cons 3 4 Burglar Proof1ng 20
7 30- Hollywood Squares 3 4 Let s Make A Deal 6 W1ld
Krngdom 10 To T e ll th Truth 13 Sprrng 4 New Pnc e ts
R1ght 8 Get Smart 15 Collector's Corner 20 Brography 33
8 DO- The Waltons a10 Odd Couple 6,13 Baseball 3 415 The
Way It Was 20 Men Who Made the Movtes 33
8 30- Paper Moon 6 13 What Now Amenca 20

ll~ 3D-Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 13 Love of L 1fe
"' 8 lO. Lucy Show 6 Commun1ty of L1v1ng Thmgs 33
11 ~ 55-CBS News 8 Dan lmel's World 10

$30, elect

WMPO.fM
'

S'

3 15

back
guarantees)
Refrigerators from S19 95
elect or gas ranges from

STEREO
92.1

SOMETHING TO BELIEVE IN

PomeriJy, o.

N ews 6 81ble Answers 8
Pat terns for Liv1ng 13

1Q!()(}-Company 6

foam

GREAT
COUNTRY

Now 1s the time to move up to a Buick.
See Ceward Calvert, Smilin' Art Argyr1es
or B1ll Nelson

992-2174

---,---~---- --,.--===-9 17 32tp

$19 95
USED
APPLIANCES
!ALL wolh 30 day money

Can Be YoutS-Economically Priced

Mam St.

Dear Helen
What do you do wtth a husband who reruses to take tlme f01
shoppmg 1 He has one R-avv-blue sUit that you can almost see your
face m tt 's so shmy
Tins tsn't a matter of money We can afford clothes He's not
hghl , bul he's got a thmg aboul trymg on and gettmg filled . and
smce he's very hard to fit I don t have any luck brmgmg sutts
home
He keeps saytng, I don t need anythmg
He s lhe most
unclotheS...('OOSCIOUS man I ve ever known Suggestions? MZG

9 10Q-AM 3 Paul D1xon 4 Ph 1l Donahue 15 M1 ster Rogers 33
Bullwrnkle 8 Wild Wrld West 6 Btography 33 Movie The
G1rl Who Knew T oo Much 13

case hdbd bed $132 50 30"

Fully Insured

And A 1974 Buick Apollo
and Buick Opel

500 E

8

Spanish !able

FREE ESTIMATE

Face It, A Buick Is A Buick Is A Buick

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.

1 mean overwhelm tlus woman w1th ta lk about vour hre,
what your friends are domg \OUr upcotmng proJects )OW
chaldren almost an~ thmg JUSt so 1l s saf€ and somewha t dull
She 11 soon be wtngmg back to ht'r ps'rchtatrlst You II see
H

Summer Semester 10

8 oo-Capt Kangaroo 8 New Zoo Revue 13
Popeye 10 Jeff s Collie 6
8 25-Jack LaLan ne 13 Capt Kangaroo 10
8 30-Brady Bunch 6

pholosophy a! KURL'S
BARGAIN CENTER os

.

PHONE
949 3S32 or 843 2667

~---------oo!o--------------·

Slop hsten111g

6 35- Columbus Today 4
6 45- Mornmg Report 3 Farmtrme 10
7 00- Today 3 4 15 CBS News a 10 Farmers Daughter 13
Make A Wrsh 6
7 3D-New Zoo Revue 6 Tennessee Tuxedo 13

EXCAVATING dozer lOader
and backh-oe work
septic
tanks 1nstalled dump trucks
and l o boys for h re w1ll haul
fill d~rt top soil 11mes1one &amp;
graver Cllll Bob or Rog er
Jeffers day phone 992 7089,
n tght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc
PTANo -tu n~ngand-repair
Phone Charles Scott 992 3718

The

CONSTRUCTION

DOZER work land clearing by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator wltn over
20 years expenence Pullms
Excavatmg, Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tfc

Dear I 1stener

9

6 JD-F1ve Mmufes to L1ve By 4
School Scene 10

enough

How can I get her orr Il l \ lxlt:k Without hunng her feehngs &gt;

6 25--Farm Ret\orl 13

BARGAINS ARE
OUR MIDDLE NAME'

Sat

949-3295

SEWING MACHINES Repatr
serv1ce all makes 992 2213;.4
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Author1zed Smger Sates and
Serv1ce We Sharpen Sc1ssors
3 29 tfc

~ 00- Sunnse Semmar 4

949-5961, Racme, 0.

tsn t

I ISTENI;:R

THURSDAY,OCTOBER17 ln&lt;

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechamcal Work

GHEEN'S PAINTING

shelf to a house
Pa1nt1ng ; s1d1ng, roaftng,
paper hang1ng, kttchen
cab•nets, etc

he

• $10,000 Pyramod 6

D&amp;D

From a

RACINE PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Rutland

GREAT PAINT VALUES AT
ALL WEATHER
HARD ·
WARE

Only $12 500 00

DOZER or ba c khoe work
Phone 446 3981 or 446 3459
9 8 tfc

Known &amp;
Reliable Service

On State Rt 124 V2 m1 from
Route 7 by pass towards

- Neal

Busmess ServiCes

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

out-tlf-lmo\11 ftlt'nd \\homllvH but who t:; h.avmg
problems\\ Jth her husb&lt;tnd f \l'rV hme t h{'\ h.IVt' &lt;1 fight sht
hops on o1 planE' and &lt;mms 'o s('t us I hen sht- takes rtw w~' h
vtstt telhng me her pr obkms
I knov. It sa cdlharsl s fnr her but Il sa ternble drmn on m e,
and 1 don t havl•lhe !nm• She g(lCS to a psvdnatnst but I guess

13

13 Janakr 33 Mov1es The Adventures of D1ck Carter
'The Long Voyage Home' 10
12 30- Wild Wild West 6 W1de World Spec1al 13
1 OQ-Tomorrow 3 4 Take F1ve for L1fe 15
2 DO- News 4,13

Emergency Phone 992
3995 or 992-7582.

All Small Appliances
Lawn Mowers

older home of 3 bedrooms
bath natural gas heat fru1t
cellar And n1ce lot 1n town

ALL
THE
ABOVE
PROPERTIES ARE VERY
GOOO BUYS MAKE YOUR
INVESTMENT TODAY FOR
TOMORROW MAY BE TOO
LATE, SOMEONE ELSE
MIGHT HAVE
E SO

All-WEATHER

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

LI'HI N•r. 70 acres on
Route 33 North
Excellent
spring and good township road
All m1nerals
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
bungalow near Route 7 Half
acre lot near M iddleport Want

on ly $5 500 00
SYRACUSE - ' bedrooms and

All that 1s needed for a free
estimate n a phone call
Please Phone

BOWERS
REPAIR

992 2259 or 992 2568

TEAFORD

Don t forget the roof of your
home Have a beautiful new
,oat m sta lled by All Weatht.:r
Roof1ng Co

• •

Dear Helen
I have ;.~n

11 00- News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC N ews 33
11 Jo-Johnny Carson,J MISSIOn lmposs1ble 6 Untouchables

Us for your
Plumbmg and Heat1ng
Needs

By Hdt·n Buttf•l

ARIES (March 21 Apnl 191
Nothmg w 1ll b e g tlnPd I you
1t1ro w co lf1 wc1 ter on someth ng
y o ur II liC IS Ct lhli SI C!S II l
::~.hm 1 even 1f you don i ... ~to
.._,y e lo eye on the fSsuc

T .tlk Ht r Ra&lt; k Hnml''

• 13
10 3D-Day at Noght 33 News 20

See

tJ

IIF SI lh1 I II ~( Wh Ill VIr ti
n 1111 lo q r 11tfy y01 1 IH USt f I
Whllll S
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) fJt
c nr1 lttl 1011r yen~ ros•lv •sn 1
t .ICpi Q ttt cJ hy o n ~ who s n rnur t1
111 llior l ~ker than a y 1vur I ~ Jilt
1 genteel relt S&lt;'l l ready n case
yo u rc !lUI upon

For Thursday Oct 17 1974

Us.

9 00- Cannon 8 10
Great Performances 20
Masterptece
Theafer•JJ
10 oo-Petrocellt 3 4 15 Man H u nter 8 10 Reasoner Report

•

Middleport, Ohro
992 3509

'

J

•

-

I

REDECORATING?

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

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

Pets For Sale

2 story frame some
J B R d1n1ng R 3
IJ(lrch es some oufbulldmgs
&amp; garage gas well Pnced to
se ll

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

DAY NUR SER Y 8 to 6 any age
NO MONEY DOWN - Monthly
payments accord1ng to 1n
c hild
reasonab l e rates
70 000 BTU f 1 1
'
rei a b le people w 1th med 1ca.L.
ue 01 stove $125 i'
come New 3 bedroom home
tra•nmg
Phone 992 1608
Phone (3041 773 5428
w1th wall to wall carpettng on
before 5 p m phone 742 4902 - - - - - -10 10 6tp
I acre landscaped lots Call
after 5 p m
- -- - - -- today for more mformat10n
1973 HONDA 350 C":B t good
992 5976
10 3 12tc
cond1tlon S600 Phone 992
10 13 tfc
7605
~ ~
10 16 3tp -

Coolmg Refng
Plumbmg
Electncal
Appliance
All
work
guaranteed
Descount to
Senror C1f1zens

acres

I ca rpelrng

10 6 f.fc

Register For Pr11es1
Shop for Barga1nsl
You're Invited I

WAITRESS wanted apply m
person at Crow•s Stea k
House
10 8 10tc

Part~

2

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

•WILL TRADE ..- FINANCING
ARRANGED
WITH
MINIMUM DOWN
WILL
cons1der t'ra de for older
home trailer or land on the
new 3 bedroom 2 bath home
Wtth 2 car garage
large
lam1ly room a~r cond1t10nmg
Move m 1m med1ate 1y can
99 2 5976 now
10 13 1ft

P&amp;J

6 co-News 3 4 8, 10 15 ABC News 13 N ews 6 Elec Co 20
r
D1agnostrc &amp; Prescnpftve Teachtng of Readtng 33
6 JO- News 3 4 8 10 IS Bewrtched 6 Gomer Pyle 13 Zoom 20
Your Future Is Now 33
7 00- News lO What s My Lme 8 Truth or Cons J 4 Celeb
Sweepstakes 3
Zoom 22 , I Spy 15 Bowlmg tor Dol lars 6
Zee Cook1ng Schools 20 KnowYour Schools 33
7 J.Q-Let s Make A Deal6 Mel Ttll1 s8 Pollee Surgeon 3 Name
Thai Tune 4 Eptsode Action 33 The Judge 10 T o Tell the
Truth 13 Book Beat 20 Ep1sode Act1on 33
8 00- That s My Mama 6 13 Sons &amp; Daughters 10 Baseball
3 4 15 Tracmgs 33 Columbus Town Meetmas 10
30--Movres M1ster Jerrcho 6
All My DarMng Daughters

Heatmg

Free Est1m•tes, M1ddteport.01

NEAR LANGSVILLE -

l

&lt;&gt;

yqu like c . He a t o b 114 11 rm

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16 1974

215N SecondS!

992-7129

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

BONANZA

Service

Interior, b ..dM
Decorating and
Remoaenng
VINYL SIDING PH 992-7454 or

CONCRETE
NO MONEY DOWN Month ly CREMEANS
del1vered Monday through
pa.yments accordmg t o m
Saturday
and
even1ngs
come New J bedroom home
Phone 446 1142
Wtth wall to wall ca rpetmg on
o DELL Allnement tocatdd
1 acre landscaped lots Call
6 13 ttc
behind Rutland Grade Scho01
today for more mformat1on
complete front end SeP11c:-e
992 5976
brakes and tuneups wheels
AUTOMOBILE tnsurance been
I} 14 He
balanced electronically Open
cancelled 7
Lost
your
8 to 8 da1ly Call 742 3232 on
operators l1cense Call 992
Sunday tor appt
7428
AF TER 3 months of renew tng
7 16 lfc
6 15 tfc
and redecorat1ng 1ns1d e and
out th 1S attract111e f ve room
CONCRETE
one floor plan hom e 1s readv LAST BID Home Improvement READY MIX
carpentry work
roof1ng
dell'llered rtght to your
t o move tnto tomorr ow
pamt1ng carpet tnstallatton
pro1ect Fast and e11sy Free
Ltvtng room
d1n•ng room
fr ee estimates
All work
estimates Phone 992 3284
ntce uttltty butldmg kttchen
gua ranteed Phone 74'2 5081
Goeglem Ready Mtx Co
two b edroom s
bath
all
Middleport Oh10
9 22 ttc
com fortable
SI Ze
New
6 30 ttc
Luxa re furnace system
C BRADFORD AuctiOneer
hardwood f l oors new k1tchen
SEPTIC 1 AN~cleaned­
Complete Servtce
and bath I de floors love ly
reasonabte rates
Ph
446
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
woods you can t even buy
4782, Gallipolis John Russell
Racme Oh10
today Reasonably pr~ced tor
owner and operlltor
Cntt Bradford
today s hous1ng
market
5 1 tfc
5 12 tfc
Charlene Hoet l ch 992 5292
10 14 lie
AROBIC
FOR FRI;E estimates, on SEF"T!C TANKS
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
alumtnum
replacement
7 ROOM house w•th 2 ba th s m
CLEANED
REPAIRED
wmdows siding storm doors
Pomeroy Phone 992 3478
MILLER
SANITATION
and wmdows Railing Phone
10 lS 26 tc
STEWART OHIO PH 662
Charles Lisle Syracuse Oh10
3035
Carl
Jacob
Sales
TWO bedroom hou se for sale at
Representative
v
v
10 4 tfc
550 South Th rd Avenue
Johnson and Son Inc
M ddleport Phone 992 7074 or
4 30 tfc
992 3465
EXCEI!.SIOR Salt Works E
10 15 5tc - ~---------- -- Maln,.St Pomeroy All kinds)
of salt water pellets water
SEP TIC
TANKS
cleaned
NEW H OME In Mason With
nuggets block salt and own
Modern Sa nttat on 992 3954 or
garage
Good location
3
Ohio R1ver Salt Phone 992 1
992 7~49
bedrooms fully ca rpeted
3891
9 18 tfc
Phone \304) 773 5468
6 5 tfc
10 l46tc
cement
dr tve
Rt 124 50x60
near
BU
S INE SS
butld1ng
Rutland Phone 742 5052
8 21 lfc

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACI'ING CO.

POMEROY. 0

pm

OCT 7THRU OCT 19

serv1ces.,

-

SMA L L Hou se and lot on
Condor Stre et
Phone 992
7 126
10 3 lfc

BUILDING lot SOft trontagex
165ft The second lot on left on
R1verv1ew Drtve
L1ncotn
Hill Pomeroy Oh10 If In '
teres ted call 992 3'230 after 5

Something For Everyone I

2Sc
brass
25c
battenes
$1 30 Gtn-seng $60
yellow
roo t 54
tops Sl 50
May
Apple 70c M A Hall Reeds
Vtlle Ohto Phone 378 62J9
10 4 tfc

•
Does
your
home
requ1re any of these

ALL-WEATHER

CLELAND
608 E
REALTY
MAIN

For Rent

Notice

BACK porch sale 228 6th Ave
Middleport Couch and chatr
e lectrt c roaster w th stand
co ff ee table
lamps many
hou sehold
tems
9 to 5
Frt d ay Oct HI
10 15 Jtc

:P.IIw."

B YEAR old P alorntnO
ueld ng 2 r cQ stered sorre
quartert1orse mares
Phone
~ ' '1&lt;tn c' 7 17 1 1 1 &lt;tl' ('r ~om
I" ~~l or ' 7 "~"''
10 1) 6tc

extend our heart
1971
PONT I/I(
Ci! tal n1
felt thanks and apprect&amp;t1on
~rougham
blii Ck w h wh t(
dur1ng th e death of Wilham
•n'er or p s p b
" r to n
197J HONDA 1~0 w th otras
Thomas Jr tor a ll the acts of
d1t onmq Am B 'rilck &lt;;tC'rC'o
Sl 850 A lso ta " Cob•a boat
ktndness
messages
of
bu It tn 19 000 m les Phon e
175 h p John son trailer and
s ympathy and beauttful floral
7 11 206]
ca n vas S2 550 F all prtr~&gt;s
and food offerings rece1ved
10 1) 6 1 C
on l y Contact Doug Enoch
from neighbors r e lat ves and
992 3078
after 5 p m
or
the many fr ends
Also
anyt me on weekends
thank ng Wilcoxen Funeral
10 16 3tc
Home tor everyth ng he d1d
Doctors
and
nurses
at
NEW wh tskey barrel tor sale
Pleasant Valley Hospttal the
0 E Bailey Suc cess Roa d
Rev
Jesse M1nner fo r ht S SMALL bus ness bu ld •nq on
S R 33 7 and 12J S.75 per
Phone 667 6]44
c onsoltng wor ds and h s w1fe
month
Also apartment
1
for the VISd to our home In
rooms
and bath
~6~
pN
our sad bereavement of a
month also 12 room hou~c
lov ng la ther and son Mr and
:-:. EwiNG Ma c h tnes brand new
Can be two apartm en t s s ~0
Mrs William Jones Sr and
z, q Zag n nt ce walnut tabl e
per
n
onlh
Cal
992
5786
Fam ly daughter Patty
ln ort g .na1 carto'\s
Never
10 9 161c
10 16 1tc
used
Clearance on
74
Models
lOn l y
a
few
available)
S43 40 c ash or
term s available Phone 992
7755
10 15 lfc
F ILE cabtnets wanted
pref
2 BEDROOMS phone 992 2760
lega l S1ze Call 992 51347 9 am
or 992 3432
8
amfm
to J p m or 992 31333 a fte r 5
tO 16 He STEREO RADIO
1ra c k. tape combmat.on
4
pm
10 13 6tc
spE."a ker
so und
system
4 ROOM house unfurn tsh ed on
16 50 Lm co ln H e ghts Phon e
Ba an ce S108 72 or easy
terms Ca ll 99 1 3965
992 387 4
AUCTIO N
Thursday
and
10 15 ttc
1o a •fc
Satur day ntght 7 p m
at
Mason Auct on Horton St m
furntShed rooms phone K NAPP s ho es
soc ks and
Mason w Va Cons1gnments TWO
992 ]429
1ack.ets 11 s tvle s on sa l e
/ We c.ome
Phone (30J) 773
101 ]6 11)
Phone 992 5321
5471
10 1 li e
l 0 3 tfc
4 ROOM furn shed apt Close to
Powells Super Valu phon('
GROCERY b usmess tor sale
PIANO lunmg Lan e Dantels
992 3658
Build1ng ror sa l e or lease
992 2082
D1sco unt to pen
10 13 11C
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
stoners
to 10 p m tor appomtment
10 6 121p THREE furn 1shed rooms on
3 20 tfc
East Mam St adults only No
pet s Phone 992 23B 1
SWAP SELL - BUY Flea
10 15 3tc A F EW new band •ns tru me nts
Market
Spr1n g Avenue
Contac l Ren ee Stone 992 7567
Pomero.y Ohto Sa turday and
9 4 tfc
Sunday AUCT ION SUNDAY
12JI.60 2 BEDROOM mOb l e
5 00 CO N S I GNME~T 15 Pet
home
country
l oca tton
APPLES F1 tzpatrt ck. Orchard
10171fc
pub l tc
wa te r
&lt;; vs tem
State Route 689
Phone
References reQutred Ca I 919
W lkesvllle 669 3785
7461 after 5 p m
9 25 26 tc
10 13 6tc
SMALL black. mtn ature poodle
KOSCOT
KOSMET!CS
B.
FURNISHED
apartment
around Syracuse
Rewar d
WIGS {The M tnk Otl BasP
adults only n Mtddleport
Phone 992 3792
Cosmet1csJ
Phone
Phone 992 3874
10 11 61p
BROWN S 992 5113
5 12 tfc
8 20 tfc
TWO 4 room and bath apts m
M ddleport For mformaflon
POTATOES phone 992 7407
call 992 2550 or 742 6551
10 II 6tp
THREE family yard sale
7 3 tfc
Thur sday and Fr~day fr om 9
POTATOE S
Ke n nebec
cob
to 5 F1rst road to t he l ett after 3 AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
bier w II del ver Phone Tom
pass•ng WMPO rad1o sta t•on
unfurnished
apar tme nt s
Sayre 843 2491
Lots of child r en s t hmgs
Phone 992 5434
10 II 6tp
10 15 Jtp
4 12 tfc
WE

V1tamm C IS good for you
That's why we mart1n1
clrmkers mana~e to stay
healthy - chewmg on the
lemon rmd
Sead your favorite senator

*lrlcal

19/0 DODGE Spo rt Co~p(' ow
mtleage Excellent con d 1 0"
Phone Dor. BE."tt 2J7 1o:n
' 0 I , 31&lt;

For Rent or Lease

No~es

clo.£k

NI\TURAL oas turnacc 1 ~0 000
1\TU 1\rm s tron q to rced a r
w th control s $RO
10 Qi'l on
tnlur&lt;~l QCIS wat er h cNtcr \30
Phon e 171'1 679!
Rf'edsv lie
10 1) 61p

POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
OPEN EVES
P.M

I I'"" I p I 11 II /
d! &lt;Hi t nd ~
n1 o pr ope rty
two 1'lkC''&gt;
roll no hill s de c; bl 1ut tul
1r u c;
u&lt;; t ,or l h ol ~ 1lcm
&lt;""" • ,
r w tlt 1 r &lt;, Rc'l lly Oo x
11 1 ."Jo rlhtnt)lon Oht o 430 f!',
Phon e (0141 1:18!1 189:1 Seller
w 11 tm an cc
IU b 6tc

6t c

Produ ced trom 1 speeta l
v1nyt co mpound mad e by B
F Goodr ch and Monsanto 5
'mes th cker th an meta l
&lt;; d nq w I not dent ChiP
cra c k.
peet
r ot
rus t or

Sl995

Business Services

1lfm

SOLID

wh1te f in1sh gMd t1res

Case No 21313
ROGER W
PAR

~

l t l l t•y

1

9 19 71'1)/

350 V 8 au tomett1c P steenng &amp; brakes dark blue f1n1sh
blue 1ntenor blue vmyl roof factory a1r condtlloned hke
new w w t1res rad1o M~ny other extra s

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

A13

Television Log

tsttlte For Sale

F O L L E'Il H 1ntord bu l l pl on e

new w w t1res

1970 CHEV MONTE CARLO

Court of Cornman Pl eas
ProbateD vrs on
{10 ) 2 9 16 Jtc

19 5
10 3 12tc

PllonC'

J j ".l "'L S OI"'G

1972 VEGA \.T
Hatchback low mileage by 1 owner
ferred from new car 4 speed trans
b la ck v ny l fntenor deluxe tr m

J~dq ~

EJt.. te

1 . ro'1ATO t "

- 2 SIGNS

Websler

For Sale

~Pi!

11

I LL 6Ril.lb '/OJ ALL
1111; R;;NGIL:S 'iOU ~
~i&lt;DIIA

WSJRK I

�-

)

--.
.

..

..

.,

•

..

I.

.
.

,.

~

~6-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wedne~y . Oct 16,1974

Berrys World

Ehrlichman t:orns against
ex-~hief
.
WASHINGTON (UP!) John D. Ehrlichman 's stone
wall loyalty to Richard Nixon
has collapsed, with Ehrlichman· charging that the
President he served so long
lied and cheated to "save his
own neck " in the Watergate
scandals.
Battling to stave off a second
criminal conviction for actions
taken While in Nixon's service,
Ehrlictunan had his lawyers
turn on the former President
Tuesday With a vengeance lumping him With John W.
Dean III as chief villians in the
plot to cover up th&amp; bugging.
"In simple terms, Mr. Ehrlichman has been had by his
boss - who happened to be
President of the United States ... ," Ehrlichman's attorney,
WilliamS. Frates, told the jury
on the lith day of the cover-up
triaL
"John Ehrlichman didn't
know that Dean and the
President of the United States
Were so deeply involved."
Dean, once White House
counsel and now Nixon 's chief

accuser. was

to be the

prosecution's lead-uff witness
when testimony begins today
at the conclusion of 'lrpening
arguments by the defense. He
was expected to be on ihe stand
at least a week.
Whether Nixon -named an
Wiindicted c&lt;H:Onsplrator in
the case but pardoned by
President Ford - would be
compelled to testify remained
Wiresolved. He is trying to get
excused on grounds of ill
health. U.S. District Judge
John J. Sirica set a hearing on
the issue for Thursday.

No games. No g immicks

Just Highest

Interest Rates
In The Area

51f4%
ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
51/ 4 per cent year paid on

Regular Passbook Savings.
No Minimum. lnteres1 .
.from date of de posit to date
of withdrawal. Interest
compounded quarterly.

d.)MEIGS
1

~ B. RANCH

.

The Art11n1 County
S.vl"'s • L.olin Co.

296 Second St.
Pomeroy. Ohio
AU Accounts

Standing trial with Ehrlich- Haldeman, Nixon campaign
man --unce Nixon's No.2 aitle, official Robert C. Mardian and
who was convicted in July in ,. Kenneth Wells Parkinson, a
the Ells berg break-in case campaign lawyer : All are
are iormer Attorney General accused of conspiracy in the
John N. Mitchell, former White cover-up.
House Chief of Staff H.R.
Providing the first fireworks
_ff$111111111111--~Wl
. ~
. ~.=$-..

.

.~~:::...::~::::~::::~"'::::::::::

ews•• in Briefsl
By United Press International
MOSCOW- TREASURY SECRETARY WILIJAM E. Simon
flew home today, ending a five-day Russian visit marked by a
stinging Soviet attack against congressional attempts to link
trade and emigration. Soviet Communist leader Leonid L
Brezhnev said Tuesday night billions of dollars in RussianAmerican trade could be jeopardized by the "utterly irrelevant
and unacceptable" congressional campaign.
In comments to newsmen before his plane left for
Washington, Simon said he agreed with Brezhnev's bid to get
most-favored-nation (MFN ) trade status for the Soviet Union. He
said his talks with the Soviet leader were friendly~ "We did not
find it sutprising," he said of Brezhnev's speech.-"We share his
desire to get resolutions of MFN and trade ."

WASHINGTON- CRITICS OF CONTINUED U.S. military
aid to Turkey pledged today to continue their fight despite the
failure of the House to override President Ford's veto of a
measure that would have put an immediate halt to it. The House
Tuesday failed by 16 votes to override the veto in what was a
clear victory for Ford in his first major confrontation with
Congress.
But it left the departments of Agriculture ; Labor, and
Health, Education and WeHare in a touchy position. The "continuing resolution" to which CongreSs had attached the aid
cutoff, and which Ford vetoed in its entirety, also contained
temporary operating funds for those agencies until their regular
appropriations are enacted.
Unless Congress quickly passes a new resolution, acceptable
to Ford, they will soon run out of money.
WASHINGTON- "RIGHT NOW,IT LOOKS like it's going to
be a long, cold winter," the United Mine Workers Journal
readers were advised in issues dated today. Tbe union's newspaper quoted its Secretary-Treasurer Harry Patrick who
repeated again, "a long cold winter.''
The union paper was reporting on the progress of
negotiations on a contract to replace one that expires Nov. 12.
The Journal reported that UMWA President Arnold Miller had
said that company negotiators, represented thr0ugh the
Bituminous Coal Operators Association, apparently hoped to
force government intervention to keep mines going after the
contract expires.
·
· " BCOA negotiators may refrain from serious bargaining Witll
a strike has occurred," the Journal reported.
WAPELLO, IOWA - THE DffiECTOR OF the Albia
Community High School band had instructed his marchers not to
stop when they lost something, so when Deb Christy's pants fell
off, she kept right on marching . Seven hundred spectators and
1,500 members of other bands were looking on Saturday as the
school's Blue Demon band, in which Deb is a flutist, swung into
its contest routine for a marching band contest.
Then Deb's pants feU off, but she didn't panic. She had a pair
of cut-uff jeans on under ber band trousers. So she kept marching
even though she felt the snap at her waist give way and her black
uniform trousers descending to her ankles.
·
"Alii could think was, 'Don't let the band down," she said.
"So I kicked out of the pants and went right on marching ... "
She was congratulated by her fellow band members and·the
director, Leonard Bonker, who told her she had done the right
thing . "She !ella me now it will never happen again," Banker
said. ''She saidshe'susing suspenders from now on.''

Insured To

$20,000 by FSLIC.

SUIT FILED
William C. Stalder of the
William C. Stalder Demolition
Co., Athens, has filed a suit
'a gainst the Karr Construction
Co., Chester, and the Meigs
County
Commissioners.

For Your Dining and Listening
Pleasure •..

-GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 9:30 to 2-

The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992-3629

Pomeroy

Stalder charges that his
company has not been paid for
work done in the remodeling of
the Meigs County Jail. The
company is seeking $754.35
plus interest and costs.

of the two-week-uld · trial,
Frates boomed his accusations
against Nixon: that he "deceived, misled, lied to and

used"

Ehrlichman,

" deliberately withholding
information · from
hlm,
covering up to save his own
neck."
As for Dean, Frates charged
· that he masterminded the
cover-up and wben "it dawned
on him the house was falling in
on him," he went to the

prosecutors and accused .
others of criminal acts.
" Are you going to believe
John Dean or some other
witness?" FrateS asked the
jury. "His credibility is one of

the crucial iBsues in this case."
David G. Bress, Mardian's
lawyer, likewise pictured his
client as an innocent victim
who as-early as a month after
the June 17, 1972 bugging
"didn't like the whole smell of
it" and got himseH excused

By United Press International
Angry Wisconsin farmers
drove their trucks to a huge
trench at Curtiss, Wis., Tuesday, unloaded their calves,
then shot the young animals or
slit their throats to protest
skyrocketing feed costs and
low livestock prices.
The carcasses of more than
650 calves and IS pigs were left
to rot in the trench .
A spokesman for the Wisconsin chapter of the National
Farmers Organization said the
group had considered ·making
the meat available to packing
houses as donations for the
poor, but the packing houses
said tbey did not have time to
handle it.
In a similar action conducted
near Wisconsin RapidS, Wis.,
18 calves were slaughtered.
The actions came just hours
before President Ford, in an
address to the Future Farmers
of America at Kansas City,
reiterated his .Call for increased farm production and
reduced waste to combat inflation.
While farmers and ranchers
eisewhere -notably in Texas
and Oklahoma -llave threatP.ned similar mass cattle

By CLAY F. RICHARDs
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Nelson A. Rockefeller has
asked the Senate Rules
Committee to reopen hearings
so he can explain two subjects
that threaten his vice
presidential nomination.
A similar request to Peter W.
Rodino, D-N.J. of tbe House
Judiciary Col)lmittee was
turned down Tuesday. senate
Rules Chalrman oHoward W.
CaMon, D-Nev ., said he would
decide today if hearings would
reopen this week. .
Rodino
rejected
Rockefeller's request, saying
hearings could not be opened
Wltil the committee completes
its "thorough investigation" of
the nominee.
He said the House subcommittee report on Rockefeller

would not be complete until
Oct. 30.
Rockefeller complained he
was "being tried in the press"
because of disclosures be gave
$2 million in gifts and loans to
close associates and that his .
brother Laurance financed a
book derogatory to Arthur
Goldberg, the Democratic candidate for governor of New
York in 1970.
Neither of the two committees was !cheduled to hold
hearings until after election
day.
The four Republican membersof the Senate panel earlier
had · urged Camon to bold
hearings, but the recess-bound
Congress had problems fitting
it into its achedule.
"My nomination is being

student stabbed in the stomach
and a teaCher attacked.
Ford, however, denied the
request, saying federal troops
"should only be used as a last

resort."
Sargeht, In announcing
Ford's denial late Tuesday,
said "It is now quite clear that
the enforcement of the law and
the protection of the public
rests l!Olely on the city of
Boston and the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts."
The governor said he called
up the riot-trained Guard units
based on FBI reports "that we
have an extremely volatile
situation that could blow up at
any moment."
The move, however, left
Mayor Wbite and Pollee Com·
inlssioner RObert J. diGrazla
surprised and angered.
"The mayor did not request

city since classes began Sept.
12, said he could not conflnn
the FBI reports Sargent said he
received from Publi&lt;: Safety
Commissioner JOhn F . Keboe
that prompted tbe governor to
call out the guard.

"While there was one serioWI
inCident-. at Hyde Park High
School, the rest of the city was
-calm," diGraZia said.
"If there really is in-·"
formation of this magnitude, It
is unfortunate that It isn't being
transmitted to the Boston
pollee."
At Hyde Park Hlgb School, a
1li-year-old white student was
stabbed in the stomach · as
sporadic fighting broke out in
classrooms and corridors. He
was reported in stable con. dltion at Carney Hospital. ·
Six other white students and ·
a white teaeher suffered minor ,
injuries in fights at the achool,
which WaS 'Closed early.
. A white girl was arrested for
throwing rocks at a school bus
being boarded by blaclt students. Small bands of ·whites
roaming the neighborhood also
ston~ the buaes, and a few

MEIGS THEATRE

CARTOON
Show S1orts7 p.m :

l'.

.•

&lt;!l "" """'· '"'

~~

countries compete in the World Series!"

people were not 11 rev.engehil."
Ford volWiteered to appear
before the subcommittee to
answer a series of 14 questions
submitted to him about his
pardon . Ford said in answer to

Court from Helen D. Foster,
Rose Hill, Va., on the grounds
of. gross neglect of duty 31),d
extreme cruelty.

DIVORCE GRANTED
John G. Foster, Pomeroy,
has been granted a divorce in
Meigs County Common Pleas

of

,..

Congress,"

Rockefeller said. He said he
had been _denied the "opportunity to present all the
facts.
"This is being done on the
b&amp;sis of selective leaks from
my income tax returns and gift
tax returns, all of which were
submitted to the committees in

confidence."

\

·~•

t'i:.l

·

Rockefeller got a boost from
President Ford, who said he
had complete confidence in his
nominee, although he called
the book incident "regrettable."
Some committee meniberS
also want to call the Jli'I"SoDS
who received the Rockefeller
gifts,
and
Laurence
Rockefeller and others involved in the anti-Goldberg
book.
Byrd said the book incident
reminded him of the "dirty .
tricks" of the· Watergate
scandal. He said Senate action
'on the Rockefeller nomination
might be delayed until next
year.
Many of the gifts were
originally loans Rockefeller
made to aides, and forgave
when they left public semce.

...lee Union-Ails" have H!

You've got it with Lee Union AII~The best
1n looks, comfort and long wear. Keep
a pair in the car for emergency wear
.. .Lee Union-AII.s have it!
·
Complete selection of sizes 36 to 50 in ·shorts,
regulars and large. Mens and Boys Department, 1st Floor.

00 .

3 lb. GROUND. BEEF

2 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb .. MIXED PORK CHOPS

Sides Beef
98e ts. (541)
Hinds
. $111

. 3 lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb. RIB ·sTEAK

-,"', {

$

4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb. AS.S ORTED LUNCH MEAT
2 lb. MIXED PORK C.HOPS
. 3 lb. BOILING BEEF"

i.B.

Fronts

··as' LB.

Prices include
..,. cutting, ·. wrapping
&amp; freezing. , Beef
sold at hanging

'P hone.. .Us- ·

; Your Orclerl'
.992-3502

00

$

3 II. SIRLOIN STEAK ·.
: 2-FRESH FRYERS .
3 lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb. MIXED PORK CHOPS
4 lb, CHUCK ROAST
2 lb; BEEF STEW MEAT
3 lb. Rill STEAK

.

CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
-In a unique weigh-off staged
simultaneously in Circleville,
Ohio and San Mateo County,
Calif., a Circleville pumpkin
grower proved the central Ohio
community was entitled to be
known as the producer of the
largest pumpkins in the United
States.
The community of HaH Moon
Bay in San Mateo County had
issued a challenge to the
Circleville pumpkin growers'
claim of having the largest
pumpkins in the world.
Ralph Dresbach, the designated PumPkin grower from
Circleville, produced a ~
.po'!"ll monster lor the weigh. off with Half Moon ·BW grower

w·.

lt.i.

and criticism of the pardon on
Capitol Hili and throughout the
nation.
Rep . William L. HWigate, DMo., the subcommittee chairman, lauded Ford for offering
to appear but said, "We are not
here because of friendship, but
because of a responsibility our
governmental system of
checks and balances and
separation of powers places
upon us.
"l hope the American people
as well as the Congress ap.
preciate the importance of
President Ford's appearance,
as well as the need to ... resolve
once and for all, all of the
!Continued on Page 12)

e... ' .:.:r .

en tine
Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXVI

NO. 131

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

,,

::0 " , ~-~~ ....

».::i

PRIORITY PROJECTS- Rep. Clarence Miller recently met in Washington with the new
Chief Engineer of the U. S. Army Corps of Englr\eers Huntington office, Col. Scott Smith, to
discuss projects of importsnce to Southeastern Ohio. They reviewed the status of the delayed
Logan-Nelsonville flood control project, and the proposed stream bank erosion control program
for the shoreline of the Ohio River. Erosion problems affecting Pomeroy, Gallipolis, Middleport, Ironton, Belpre, -Marietta and several other commWiities along the OJlio were also
emphasized by Miller. Both men agreed that additional meetings would follow hoping to
continue cooperation between the Corps and Miller's office.

New E-R vehicle
•
gomg on display

The public, which con. tributed so generously to a fund
used to purchase the Middleport Fire Department's new
emergency vehicle ' will be
offered a close range look at
the new truck Saturday.
Firemen announced that
they will take the '.! ruck to four
areas for public inspection.
NEW YORK- SECRETARY OF STATE Henry Kissinger, . The new vehicle, which arrived
last Friday evening, will be at
speaking at the annual Alfred E . Smith memorial dinner, said
the Cheshire Post Office from
Wednesday America must revive iiseH from the after effects of
9:30
to 10:30 a. m.; in
Watergate and Vietnam. "For more thsn a decade we've been
torn by .war and then by constitutional crisis," Kissinger told , LangsV'ille from 11:15 to 11:45;
at the Rutland American
New York's ROman Catholic and political hierarchy. "But now
Legion Hall from 12 noon until!
the war Is over and tbe crisis reSolved, it is time we made peace
p. m. and on the streets of the
with ourselves.Middleport Business section .
"The bitterness that characterized the national debate for
mOll! of a decade no longer has reason or place." he said. _
"Governments, by their very nature, must make difficult chOiees
and''judgments wben facts are not clear, when trends are uncertain. This is difficult in the best of clrcunstances.lt may grow
dang&lt;,touBiy erratic in a pervasive climate of distrust and con-

from 1:30 to 3 p.m.
People are invited to the
locations to inspect the vehicle
which is one of the most
modern in the area. It will not
be pressed into use until the
public is given the opportunity
to look over the new truck .
The public contributed over
$13,000 towards the purchase
and firemen put $3,000 Into the
fWid for the new truck. Area
residents responded with the
$13,000 plus donations in a
matter of only six weeks last
February and March . The
truck was ordered during the
summer months.

Traffic .charge is filed

'

Dennis Boothe, 24, of Racine,·
BRYAN, OHIO- FORMER GOV. James
Rhodes asked
was
charged with driving left ·
participants at a Williams County fund-raising rally here .
of the center following a traffic
Wednesday to help him in his battle agailist the "double
accident
at 11 a . m. Wednesday
. taxatlop" and "management flillures" of Gov. John Gilligan's
on
Union
Ave. in Pomeroy.
adnUnUdratlon.
.
The
Gallia-Meigs
Post State
· Rhodes, the RepubUcan nominee for governor 1 told the rally
partlcipanls, "II you want IQ stop dou,ble taxation and a "100 per
AUTOSCOLLIDE ·
cent Increase in the pr"'!!OIt governor'~ income tax, start working .
The
Meigs County Sheriff's
right now for my election 1111 governor: .
' ·
.
Departme~orted
a lw!&gt;&lt;!ar
''I Need your help - the help of each and every one Of·you ·
rrilshap Wednesday at the
to win thla .battle·against the tax more&gt; spend more philosophy 01
junction of SR 7 and CR 24.
the present governor," Rhodes said. "We've ·got to prevent the
According to_ the department,
complete annihilation of the middle-Income working people."
·,
John E. Wise was southboWid
on SR 7 at about 10: Hi p.m.
SIOUX FAILS, S. D. - PRESIDENT ·FORD says he will
convene a meettrig at the White House within tiwo weeks to seek a &gt; when he stopped his auto to
lurn left. A following car,
oo1ution w the economic woes facing dairymen. He said the caH
driven
by Rooert Rupe,
Rt.
~in Wlscolisln this week was "shOcking and wasteful''.
1, Middleport, failed to stop,
In a statement released while campaigning here Wellnesday,striking the rear of the Wise
For!l ilald he reco~ "the frustration 'that jlroinpted the
vehicle , Neither driver wos
farmers to stage such a shocking and wasteful demonstration.
injw'e,d, however Rupe was
"But !heir action contributes nothing toward a solution to their
cited for failure ,to stop within
pr~blem or to the problem of Inflation which We all face;" he
an assured ·clear distanCe ..
said.

A:

n,

Highway Patrol said Boothe's
car going west skidded left of
the center, striking an auto
operated by Joseph-Lawrence,
73, 01 Roanoke, Va. There was
moderate damage to both cars.
Both drivers were chlirged
following an accident at 7 p.m.
Wednesday on the BulavillePorter Rd. one and seven
tentha miles north of Rt. 160.
The patrol said an auto
driven by Naomi Shaver, 43,
Rt. I, Gallipolis, stopped to tak
to the driver of another vehicle.
The Shaver car was struck in
the rear by a car driven by
Mary Kinzel, 'II, of ·Gallipolis.
Mrs. Kinzel was cited to
MWiiclpal Court for failure to
stop within the assured clear
distance while Mrs. Shaver
was cited for parking. on · the
roadway .

TOWERS BLASTED
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!)
- Two Bonneville Power
Administration transmission

J:owers were "crumpled" by
blaots Wednesday evening,
setting off a series ot small
fires as highpower lines fell
Into BPA right-of-way on Mt.

.

.. .• • It' ,

.,

' .·

•.

....

.:

J

].

·~.:

.

&gt;

TEN CENTS

More gifts bared
WASHINGTON (U,Pl) Nelson A. Rockefeller, his
confirmation as vice president
already -Wider attack because
of his generosity, now faces
new problems because of the
actions ol his brother
La\li"ance.
Chairman Howard Cannon,
D-Nev., said Wednesday
Laurance Rockefeller's $50,000
loan to a New York state
politician later convicted . of
.bribery was one of the
problems holding up the
Rockefeller nomination .
Cannon cited the in vestigation of the loan as one of
the reasor.s lor denying Nelson
Roc\&lt;efel\er's request for lm!Dediate public hearings.
. He said he would not object
' to Rockefeller's holding a press
conference to explain his $2
million in gifts to associates,
however.
''I regret that I won't have a
proper forum for at least
another month," Rockefeller
said in New York after learning of Cannon's decision.
The three disclosures involving Laurance Rockefeller were
that he:
-financed a derogatory
biography of Arthur Goldberg
when he was running against
Nelson for governor of New
York in 1970.
-wrote President Nixon
urging him to overturn a Civil
Aeronautics Board ruling that
prohibited Eastern Airlines
from buying a small airline in
Puerto Rico. Nixon, who had
received $250,000 in campaign
lnnds from the Rockefellers
that year, 1972, reversed the
CAB
decision.
The
Rockefellers own a substantial
amoWII of Eastern Airlines

stock, although Nelson personally owns none .
- loaned $50,000 in 1959 to L.
Judson Morhouse, who was
New York GOP chairman
when Nelson first ran for

governor.
Laurance Rockefeller issued
a statement through his New
York office Wednesday, saying
the loan to Morhouse was a
"perfectly proper and legal

transaction.''
He said that in December,
1959, he sold Morhouse "certain stock" and "took back his
personal note for the full
purchase price of f49,000."
He said that 18 months later,
ill May Ol , l~l . MorhOUllll ,UMd
part of1the same stock whic~
had increased considerably in
value to repay the loan plus
interest.
Laurance Rockefeller said
he made the loan to belp
Morhouse, and that the loan
was repaid four and a haH
years before Morhouse was
indicted in a liquor scandal.
"This is the only transaction
I had with Mr. Morhouse," he
said.
In addition Nelson Rockefeller forgave another $116,000 loan
to Morhouse, ·after he had been

WTTERY WINNERS
YOUNGSTOWN (UPI) Here are this week's winning
numbers in the Ohio lottery:
Number 252 (two-five-two)
In any box on ticket wins $l0.
Numbers 810 (elgh~one­
zero) aod 516 illve-one-slx)
In green and blue wins $500.
Numbers 810 and 516 In
blue boxeo wins $1,000.
Numbers 810 and 518 In
green boxes eligible for
$300,000
drawing
and
automatically wins $15,000.
~.s;~&amp;.::W.Wff$~

convicted. Rockefeller also
granted Morhouse clemency
after he contracted cancer and
Parkinson's disease while in
prison.
CaMon told newsmen he
would
reconvene
the
Rockefeller hearings after the
election recess, perhaps on
Nov. 13. He said he felt the
Senate could vote on the
nomination in late November
or early December.
"My own feeling is that

eventually he'U De confirmed,
but I must say I'm not as
certain as I was when we began
the hearings," CaMoo said.

Dean talk now ·
has more clout

conduct a hearing on whether
WASHINGTON (UP!) John W. Dean Ul is thinner and former President Richard M.
paler after his ordeal of weeks Nixon - whom Dean "once
in. prison. His story of the served ll!' White House COW!sel
Hood. There was no JnWatergate cover-up Is the and later llccu""" Of complicity
in the cover-up -must be
dlcallon of the cause of the
same, but this time it coWits.
blasts, but the FBI and
Avoiding the eyes of his five compelled to te5iify at tbe trial.
Nixon has been subpoenaed
Oregon State Pollee bomb
former colleagues on trial for
both
by the prosecution and the
experts quickly moved w the
conspiracy and looking SQIIBredefense,
but is pleading he is
scene near Brightwood, east
iy at the jury, Dean began
of here.
telling his story Wednesday in too sick to make tbe trip to
Washington.
a hushed federal court.
Slrica indicated be is weigh. The burden of his opening.(!ay
ing
whether to send three
testimony was that lead
' FILES FOR DIVORCE
defendants JOhn N. Mitchell, doctors to California to examDaniel Roush, Portland·, has
H. It Haldeman and John D. ine tbe former Pr""ident.
filed for a divorce in Meigs
Dean, now serving a one-toEhrlichman - within days of
The Gallia-Meigs Com- the June 17, 1972, bugging . four-year prison te'rm for his
CoWity Common Pleas Court
from
Patricia
Roush, munity Action . Agency has arrests -were all involved in · role in the cover-up, testified in
Roseville, on the grounds of announced thst questionnaires hushing up the incident.
the same monotonous baritone
gross neglect of duty and ex- have been mailed to many
Also on trial are Robert .c. that beld a television audience
parent... of Head Start children Mardian and Kenneth W. of millions enthralled for days
treme cruelty.
and to other persons who may Parkinson, former aides to during the 1973 Senate Waterbe interested in the Head Slart Nixon's 1972 re-election cam- gate hearings.
·
program.
His chic .blonde wife, Maupaign.
It is Widerstood that the
Dean · will be back on the reen, was in tbe front row for
Clear and cooler tonight, low
primary
purpose
of
the
survey
witness stand today and for at the afternoon session, seated
in the UPPI!r 30s to lower 40s.
is
to
collect
public
opinion
least
three days more as the next to Haldeman's wife, Jo.
Clear and cool Friday. High in
concerning
the
Head
Start
"I do, so help me God.'' Dean
government's
siar witness and
the upper sns to lower 60s.
program and to receive the man the defense is striving said firmly, his right hand on a ·
;:; 'C,;®;:;:n... ; F.: ; ! recommendations concerning to discredit.
Bible, as he took the stand and
the continuance of the
Later today, U.S. District was asked if he woUld swear to
EXTENDED OUTLooK
program.
Court
Judge John J. Sirica will tell the whole truth.
Saturilay through Monday,
Parents
completing
the
variable cloudiness, a
questionnaire will also be given
chance of rain Saturday.
the opportunity to approve a
Much cooler Saturday and
'
program
that would continue
Saturday nlgbt, followed by
longer than the present two
warming. Highs Saturday In
month summer Head Start
Para~• will hJcbllgbl the anaual homeellllling of
tbe.40s to lo~Ver 5es, warming
held in this area. At present,
Meigs High School.
I&lt;&gt; the 60s Monday. Lows
there are only three cOW! ties in
At 8 tblo eveniJic a parade will be held from the
Saturday morning and
Ohio
having
a
program
thst
is
Pomer'»' Junior Hlgb bulldlnc I&lt;&gt; Karr and Vau Zaudt
Sunday morning In tile zts I&lt;&gt;
less than11ine montha duration.
Molor Co.; at 1:30 tl· .m . from A. and P. w the Qllallty
lower 30s and by Monday
All those receiving a
Print Shop, aud at 7 from the Rlrtlaad Elementary Scbool
morning In the 30s.·
questionnaire are aSked to
I&lt;&gt; the bonfire, beblad the Ratlud llilh ScbCHPI. ·
:emf.!!! .Ol'U;; . ;.:;: :;;
COII)plete the form and lei
ParUclpatlng will be 'the poliCe vMicles In each
return
it
to
the
CommWiity
community, tile departmeat of SberHI Robert HarLOCAL TEMPS
Action
Agency
as
soon
as
teabacb,. the Meigs · Baad, 'Riggs Royal·KadeUes,
The temperature b\ beautiful
JlOSSible
in
order
that
the
cheerlellden,
bomecomlug queeu c~dldates aud comdownrown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
survey
may
be
completed
munity
fire
truckS;··
·
~ay was 54 degrees under
before Fri&lt;lj'Y· Oct. 25. '
sunny skies. ·
. .. .. . . . ~~.,.,~~'&lt;: ..~ ?~~"'ll~ml~

Survey on

head start

is launched

Weather

Parades mark homecoming

.

.'

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17. 1974

Tom Menaidis ~ Dresbach's
pumpkin was 40 inches long,
had a width of 36 I&gt; inches and
a circumference of 104 1&gt; inches.
Menaidis' pumpkin weigbed
in at 131 % pounds, a 25 inch
length, 28 inch width and a
circumference of 77 inches.
Circleville has received national and international attention for a number of years for
its annual Pumpkin Show, beld
Oct. 1&amp;-19 this year. The event,
which has been held since 1903,
draws some 3511,000 visitors to
view such displays as the
world's largest pumpkin pie,
seven parades and all the
pumpkin-flavored . delicacies
one can imagine.

,

MARAUDER MAJORETTES - They lead the Meigs Marauder marching band, usually,
but at homeco'!'mg Fri*y evening four of them will be among candidates for homecoming
queen . Left.tonght are Joyce Hutchinson, Kathy Werry, Pam Nicinsky , Jenny Chapman, Judy
OWen and f•eld Director Babs Witte. Queen candidates are Miss Hutchinson, Miss Witte, Miss
Chapman and Miss Owen.
,_

r

00

future .
"We would . needlessly be
diverted from meeting those
challenges if we as a people
were to remain sharply divided
over whether to indict, bring to
trial and punish a former
president, who already is
condemned to suffer long and
deeply in the shame and
disgrace brought upon the
office he held," he said.
"Surely, we are not a
revengeful people, we have
often
demonstrated
a
readiness to feel connpassion
and to act out. of mercy."
But Ford volunteered to
testify, expecting that it would
put an end to the questioning

11 ~ews .. in Briefsr

Diet."

~

,

...

'·

•w

2 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb. GROUND BEEF
.. 2-FRESH . FRYERS
l 3[b. PORK STEAK
· 2 lbl' LARGE FRANKS
2 lb. BEEF STEW MEAT
3 lb. SLICED LUNCH MEAT

any of his representatives had
discussed a possible pardon
with Nixon's chief of ·staff,
Alexander M. Haig, tbe week
before Nixon resigned the
presidency last Aug. 9, Ford
said "not to my knowledge.
"If any such discussions did
occur it could not have been a
factor in my decision to grant
the pardon when I did, because
I was nOt aware of them."
Nixon was pardoned Sept. 8
amid reports that he. was
depressed and seriously ill,
facing possibl~ indictment in
the Watergate cover-up. Nixon,
already named an unindicted

BOSTON - A COLD, DRIVING RAIN and tbe threat of
military force Wednesday kept demonstrators off the streets and
racial tension to a minimum in and around Boston achools. It was
one of the most peaceful days since classes began Sept. 12 under
a federal court-ordered busing plan.
· Three National Guard companies were ready for immediate
depl~yment and the 82nd Airborne Division was on alert in North
Carolina to fly to Boston if needed. Despite the calm, Gov.
Francis Sargent, who .mob~d the 450 gurardsmen Tuesday,
angrily denied Boston Mayor Kevin White's sugge;~tion that the
call-up was potentially disastrous. He said White's comments
were "absolutely irresponsible."

'ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

3 lb. SLICED PORK STEAK

In answer to another
question as to whether he or

By United Press lnternallonal
INDIANAPO!JS - PRESIDENT FORD used his prestige
Wednesday to raise money for Republican candidates in four
Midwestern states, some of whom face tough races. He puts that
prestige on the line today as he explains to a congressional
committee his pardon of former Pr~sident Nixon.
·
His spokesman, Ron Nessen, said Ford felt . today's ap.
pearance "will be the end of it as far as he is concerned." The
testimony will not change Ford's oft-&lt;rtated contention that no
prearranged deal was struck with Nixon, he said.
Aides said F~rd saw 40,000 people in two days of campaigning and raised nearly haH a million dollars for Republican
· candidates. While he admitted the polls were against many GOP
candidates in major races, Ford was optimistic, fighting against
a "veto-proof Congress" filled with Democrats.
H that hapPens, he said, "in effect, you will have a legislative
dictatorship."

FRESH MEAT SPECIAL
We custom cut fOr your
Freezer, All meat is fresh
cut &amp; wrapped.

answer is no."

co--conspirator in the cover-up
and still under subpoena to
testify in that trial, thus was
freed from tbe prospects of
being.tried for crimes in office.
Although historians disagree
about the circumstances under
which Abraham Lincoln and
George Washington aopeared
before Congress, they in dicated Ford was the first time
an American presiden~ ever to
submit to formal question by a
congressional committee.
Ford said tbe pardon, which
cost him some of his early
support in office, was intended
to turn the nation '8 attention
away from the problems of the
past to the challenges of the

top .p11n1 'kn

tried in tbe press and not
before the appropriate com-

mittees

the first on "whether I or my
representatives 'specific
knowledge of any former
criminal charges pending
against Richard M. Nixon ' the

Ohio·grows

IN POMEROY · 7
When you're lOOking
for top .

tegration, denied the riquest

/'

.'

I

"I think it's simply awful that we won't let other

and .toaed responslbiUty lHick
to -the 11\&amp;)'ql' and govl!!"llor.
'

,

bond pending appeal after 21
months behind- bar•.

Rocky wants more exposure

unnecessary and an over-reaction."
' 'To put on the streets lilywhite, IDltrained soldiers and
give them. a gun has all the
earmarks . of disaster -like cars. ·
Newark, · Watts and Kent
No other majOr incidents ·
·State," TIJIIlllll added.
were reported in the city as
DIGrazia; who has been In attendance hit 74.3 per eent.
poraoiial command of pollee
Sargent said the guardsmen
detachments throughout · the would remain IIi the armories
ilnd would be deployed only
after conSultation with Wbite
and d!Grazla.
When
racial
violence
esca)lited bist week With the
· TO..tghl&amp; Thurisd.r
' bo!ating of a black motorist by
October 16-17
whites in SOuth Boiii&lt;JII, the
NOT OPEN
mayor refuled to aat for the
Fri., .Sat.; SuR. ,
guard and lnatead requested at
October 18-20
least 125 federal manhals.
MAGNUM FORCE
U.$.' pistrlet Judge W. Ar·
(Technicalorl
thur
Garrity, who ordered
Clint Eastwood
busing to Implement . inHat Holbrook •.

.,

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford, the first chief
executive ever to submit to
formal questioning by a congressional committee, said
today be had no knowledge that
Richard M. Nixon was about to
face any criminal charges
when he pardoned the former
president.
Hr said he pardoned Nixon to
"shift our attention from the
pursuit of a fallen president" to
the nation's problems.
SltUng at a witness table
before some of the House
Judiciary Committee mem. bers who voted nearly three
months ago to impeach Nixon,
Ford said that the American

man" of Watergate, was
released from jail on $5,000

slaughters in symbolic retails- said. "It will cut their
lion for declining cattle prices,
production and if they want to
the Wisconsin stoclmien were do this to demonstrate that
the first to act.
farmers are taking serious
One by one, they drove losses, we think it is within
trucks up to the trench. Some their right to do ao."
shot the calves, which ranged
The kill at Curtiss ex"'''ded
in age from two days to two . the expectations of Steve
weeks, in tbe head. Otbers slit Pavich, president of the NFO's
the animals' throats, butcher . Wisconsin branch. He had
style.
· predicted as the slaughter
Some 300 farmers, newsmen . started that more than 500
and other onlookers watched animals might be sacrificed by
the slaughter.
nightfall.
Cattlemen at Gans, Okla.,
Pavich was asked if it would
voted to slaughter their lives- not be better to make the
lock if "all other solutions slaughtered animals available
fall ." Tbey said they would to packers for donation to the
also send a load of cattle to the poor.
White House to dramatize their
"Su. e, that would be better,"
plight.
he said, "but we talked to two
Another group of Oklahoma different packers and they
ranchers called a temporary told us they didn't have time to
halt to a planned cattle handle them. This is the next
slaughter and decided to take best thing."
their case to Washington inLaw enforcement omcials
stead.
said apparently no laws were
Oren Lee Staley, president of violated.
the NFO, said at the group's
The . Humane Society of the
national headquarters in Cor- United States ·protested "the
ning, Iowa, that the action at needless killing of calves for
Curtiss was a voluntary publicity purposes as well as
protest.
the resulting waste of protein
"It's up to individual mem- . in a world where starvation is
bers what Utey want to do," he rampant."

Air of .disaster in Boston
By JAMES R. DORSEY ·
BOSTON (UP!) - Gov.
Francis Sargent has mobilized
three National Guard military
police companies in case of
more fighting today over
courtordered busing, but an
aide to Mayor Kevin White said
the call-up "has all the earmarks of disaster."
Sargent placed 500 guards. men on alert Tuesday and
called on President Ford to
send federal troops to ensure
public "safety after classroom
violence at Hyde Park High
Scbool, where eight whites
were injured --including one

from Watergate..-elated legal
duties.
At one point, he described
Mardianas "pure as the driven
snow" and said Mardian had
believed Mitchell's protestations that the Nixon campaign
was not involved. .
Meanwhile, G. Gordon
Liddy, much-convicted "silent

Calves slain in protest

the governor's action," said
Frank TJvnan, Wbite's press
aecret4cy. "The action was·

\

Ford ignorant of Nixon
~riminality at pardon

'

.

I

•

'·

I .

I ..

,.'

.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="756">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11156">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38179">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38178">
              <text>October 16, 1974</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2514">
      <name>blaine</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="566">
      <name>carpenter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
