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The J.)aOy !Ientine!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thtll'sda~. Oct.17, 1974

·Teacher

Elbertelds In Pomeroy i:

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PROM CAMPAIGN- Juniors of Wahama High School are selling 1975 calendpr towels to
raise funds for their arinual spring prom. Class: members will be in New Haven on Wed~fsday
. and in Mason on Thursday next week to sell the calendars. Displaying towels which feature
different pictures are the class officers, I tor, Cindy Grinstead, president; Scott Keber, vice
president, and Sue Lieving, secretary-treasurer. Richard Nease, faculty member, is class
advisor.

Road, bridge need disclosed
COLUMBUS ·(UP!) - A
national study organization
estimated Wednesday that
47,022 miles of Ohio's country

Ohio Contractors Association,
who is also a spokesman for the
program, said the poor condition of the country roads and
roads need . improvement and the old bridges are slowing the
5,910 bridges thould be flow of farm goods to market in
repaired or repla
.
.
Ohio.
The Road Infor ation ProTRIP is based in Washington
gram (TRIP) said it would cost D.C. and says it Is a non-profit
Ohioans $3.9 billion to upgrade educational oganization that
the roads to a suitable con· researches, evaluates and disdition.
tributes information conJ{arl L. Rothermund of the cerning road transport:ltion
issues. The group is sponsored
by road builders, construction
equipment manufacturers and
suppliers and other businesses
Cuntinued fr om page 1
involved in highway enquestions relating to the gineering , construction and
pardon of former President financing . .
Nixon. ·
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The Ohio Department of
"I am convinced that the Transportation and local road
Issue of the pardon will not be agencies are making a major
behind us until the record of the eff~rt to upgrade rural roads,
but are hampered by a lack of
pardon is complete.''
Ford pardoned Nixon Sept. 8 funds, Rothermund said.
"We need to fix roads and
amid reports that the tormer
bridges,
not the blame," said
president
was
deeply
depressed and severely ill Rothermuund . "Road bndgets
following his resignation. are not keeping pace·with .the
Nixon, named as an unindicted combined problems of inflation
co-conspirator
in
the and rural growth."

Ford ·

Ruts, extensive patching,
lack of paving, narrowness Or
dangerous curves are the
major
improvements
necessary on the 47 ,022 miles of
country roads, TRI? said.
Most of the 5,910 bridges
needing repair. or replacement
are 16 feet or less in width and
are incapable of carrying loads
of more than five tons, said
TRIP.
"Every time city shoppers
pass a supermarket checkout
stand, they pay in part for
slow, costly farm-t&lt;H!larket

trucking,'' said Rothermund,
noting that in some cases,
improvement of .rural roads
and bridges would enable
farmers to use larger trucks.
The report also said that 700
million more pounds of soy-

beans, cattle and corn are
being shippped to market by
truck in 1972 than in 1968.
. More than 56 per cent of

Ohio's country roads are
unable to accomodate modem
500-to-800 bushel grain, feed
and livestoclis trucks, the
report said.

:~t=~~~~~:e~~u~ w~!~t~~ ~f::!!!:!:~~8:8!:::!::~!::::=!:!:::::::~:::::::~:::--:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::=:::::::=:~:::::~:::.~:::~:.=:~-:;::::~:~::;.w:~1':
that_U:ial, thus was freed from f-.:1.
Bigfoot S tracks a JOke?
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PT. PLEASANT - No action
was taken on scheduled
auxiliary and school service
personnel pay increases under
House Bill 212 Tuesday night
by the Mason Coonty Board of
Education agenda.
SUpt. Charles Withers said
the pay scales and other
materials pertaining. to their
salaries were not ready,
alth0ugh the increases were
high on the agenda, because of
heavy work loads in the county
office and delay by death in the
family of Mrs. Reba Fox. Mrs.
Fox is budget director.
Among further actions the
board:
- Approved the school
calendar revisions through
ratification pertaining to inservice ansi records day .
- Took under study a request
to supplement certain school
secretaries' salaries for the
1974-75 school year from tile
school hot lunch funds.
-Granted Audrey Huffman
use of Letart Elementary for
the first Wednesday evening of
each month beginning in
January for the Letart
Homemakers Club.
- Granted
Bette
Jean
Krawsczyn,
Head Start
teacher, the use of the New
Haven Elementary School
playground between the hours
of 1 and 2 p.m. or when it Is not
being used by the New Haven
Grade School· for 15 head start
children supervised by two
teachers.
- Employed five substitute
teachers, Charistine Garst,
secondary; Janet Maggied,
elementary; Jon Rothgeb,
secondary; Mildred Hart,
elementary, and Ellen Riffle,
secondary. ·
- Employed Mildred Gibbs
as teacher in Adillt Basic for
Hartford
and
Richard
Haycraft, teacher in Adult
Basic, at Mt. Olive at $5.75 per
hour .
-Made a change of status at
West Columbia relative to
custodian work .
-Granted the request of
Virginia Gibbs, cook at New
Haven, to return from leave of
absence, and
employed
Patricia Ball as a substitute
custodian at Letart.

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Warehouse.

Save 30°/o

- . Jeans - Pants - Coordinates - Jackets Daytime Dresses - Unifor,m s- Maternity Wear
and Toddlers Clothing - Girls Playwear- Mens
and Boys Shirts - Neckwear - Pajamas Hosiery - Work Uniforms - Coats - Jackets
Underwear - Jeans - Dress
Socks - Sweaters •
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Sewing Notions - Yarns - Luggage.- Records Tapes - Music Accessories - Pianos.

Women's role in business stressed
Middleport's new mayor,
That wOrking women
Fred Hoffman, signed an of- constitute 26 million of the
flc/-.111 proclamation decljlriJlg nation's working force, and are
the week of Oct. 2().26, as constantly striving to serve
NatiOnal Business Women's their communities, their states
and their nation in civic and
Week.
National Business Women 's cultural programs.
Week invites attention to these
- And that major goals of
business and professional
facts:

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Jewelry· Scarfs- Knit Goods • Handkerchiefs Belts - Handbags • Billfolds - Gloves • Pan-

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tyhose - Stockings - Slippers - Slips - Panties -

you

Girdles· B.l ankets- Spreads- Pillows- Sheets.
Mats - Mattress ~ds - Dresser Scarfs -

.Domestics - Notions - Stationery - Cosmetics Cards - Gift Wrap, - Fi!m - ~a .meras • Projec-

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Coverings - Area .Rugs-

Curtain~ ·_

Pictures

Cushions

Draperies •

Mirr9r,s

Decorations - Small Appliances
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Kitchen

Gadgets - Home Cleaning Supplies • Bedroom

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Furniture - Mattresses - Dining Room Fur-

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niture • Chairs - Livi~g Room· .F urniture ·Tables - Dinettes - Toys - Games • ~porting
Goods - Bicycles.

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Glassware - Cookware - Paint
. "' - Brushes
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Home Repair Kits

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C_locks

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WASHERS • DRYERS • RANGES
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DISIMASHERS • ~EFRIGERAlORS

R~'DIOS

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STEREOS • TAPE PlAYERS • PORTABLE AND·

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SHOP AND SAVE
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY 9:30 .to 8 PM
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·Eiberfellls ·In Ponleroy
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By United Press International
.
WASiilNGTON- THE PRESIDENT OF THE United States
interrupted the first-tenn congresswoman from Brooklyn as she
talked about suspicions that a d&lt;ia! was involved in his pardon of
Richard M. Nixon. "May I comment there," said Gerald R.
Ford, making history as he sat at the witness table of a House
subcommittee. He looked directly at Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman;
D-~ .Y.

the menbers of t:ongress, and the American people that there
was no deal, period. Under no circumstances."
It was an unusual show of emotion in Ford's frank, relaxed
appearance. "He got a little indignant on Holtzman's question,"
said Rep. Peter W. Rodino, chairman of the House Judiciary
Committee, whose subcommittee on criminal justice was
examining Ford.
It was perhaps the first time a president in office appeared
as a formal witness before a congressional panel. Complimented
again and again for bls willing appearance · and assured that
Congress would not consider it a precedent, Ford was not
required to swear that he would tell the. truth, but he forcefully,
dlrectly,givlng the impression that he had nothing to hide.

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Regulations governing
disabled and absentee voting
have been relaxed by the
legislature to encourage more
participation in the Nov. 5
election.
Disabled persons may call
the Meigs County Board of
Elections office or send a letter
to the office in Pomeroy to
apply. No doctor's statement
or notsry is required now for
processing disabled voters
ballots.
HoweVer, poll workers will
not be permitted to leave the
polling places to vote disabled
voters iii their autos on Nov. 5
as they have in the past.
Disabled and absentee votes
may be cast In the office of the
election board _until 12 noon on
Dec. 2.
The board office is located in
the Masonic Temple building
at Pomeroy. The board office Is
open from 1 to 4 p.m., Monday
through Saturday, until the
deadline for the convenience of
voters.
Also, ele&lt;JUon board officials
are reminding voters that on
Nov. 5 polls will be open one
hour longer. The polls lor this
election will open at 6:30a .m.
and close. at 7:30p.m.

" We couldn't stand an 80-day
strike and expect to go the next
day but we are in a better
pos ition than some other
utilities ," sa id J ones.
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
said it had a 71-day coal
reserve. The utility burns
a bout five million tons a year, a
spokesman said .
The Dayton Power and Light
Co., which burns about 20,000
tons a day and .s erve customers
in all or parts of 24 counties in
cen tral and west central Ohio,
has about 8il days in reserve .
'' We are fixed fairly good,"
sa id Dal Foreman of the
Dayton utility"s public relations staff. "I think most
ut ilities have been e xpecting
lhis for some time. I know we
have and we ha ve been buying
more coal for some time now ,"
Toledo Edison which burns
about 6,000 tons a day and
covers 2,500 square miles of
northwestern Ohio, has about
an 65-day supply on hand.
going to glve it (tax money ) to
" The reason we have this
the schools, he should cut the much coal is we were con
income tax and give it back to cerned with the possibility of a7
the taxpayers,'' Rhodes said.
coal strike and put in a good
Rhodes said school closings, supply," sa id Don Terrell of
increased welfare program s the utility's public relations
and park closings are among department.
the reasons for turning Giligan
out of office.
''Thepresent governor said in
1971 : 'If I can't improve the
quality of life in four years, I
Five Meigs Countians won
don't deserve to be here, '"
places
in the Ohio University
Rhodes told his cheering
audience: " Thal's too much for Marc hing Band of 1974-75
following auditions.
a billboard ."
Selected are Keith Ashley,
''We'll pay for it, " shouted
son
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D.
someone in the crowd.
Sen. Robert Taft Jr. , R-Ohio, Ashle y, Racine Route 2,
made a strong pitch for the baritone horn , a se nior ;
election of Cleveland Mayor Nathan Robinette , son of Mr.
Ralph J . Perk to the U.S. and Mrs. David Robine tte,
Senate .
Pome roy, tuba, a junior ;
"Sure, Ralph Perk is an David Weber, son of Mr. and
underdog, but he's a fighter, Mrs. Denver Weber, Reedsand a realistic underdog," Taft ville , trombone, a freshman ;
said. "There'll be no holds Martin R. Osborne, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald E. Osborne,
barred from now on.
" Ralph Perk is an excellent Long Bottom Route 1, baritone
candidate," added Taft. "Our horn and choreographer , in his
problem is getting the word out fifth year at O.U. , and Thomas
to the people, and you are the Gumpf, son of Mrs. Grace
Gumpf, Chester, trumpet, also
ones who can do it. "

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Recession,
or waffling
By LEONARD CURRY
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON WPO - The Commerce
Department says inflation is increasing at a rate of
11.5 per cent and the nation's output of goods and
serv1ces 1s m 1ts lon gest decline in 14 years.
In a statement Thursday, the department said
the Gross National Product, the sum of goods and
serv1~es produced in the nation, declined 2.9 per
cent m real terms for the third quarter of 1974
because of inflation. This plus a drop of 7 per cent in
the hrst quarter and I .6 per cent in the second
quarter constituted the longest economic slump
smce 1960.
The figures announced added
to the debate on whether the
country is in a recession .
Arthur Burns, chairman of
the Federal Reserve Board
this week said it was indeed ~
recession, but Commerce Secretary Frederick B. Dent Thursday disagreed, saying : " What
we have is sideways waffling."
A recession generally is
viewed as "a temporary falloff
of business activity :•
Dent said the country is not
in a recession because the
slwnp is not a "general
business decline .''
It was largely confined to the
auto industry in the first
quarter. In the second quarter
the decline was caused by a
sharp price increaSe for imported oiL
lfl the third quarter figures
released Thursday, the Commerce Department said the
decline resulted from housing ,
down 30.5 per cent; exports,
.down 13.9 per cent, and

business inventories, for which
perce ntages were not available,
down $5 billion ,
When "the effects · of inflation
are included, the GNP increase d $27.8 billion to $1.412
trillion . But inflatio'n at an·
annual rate of U.S per cent in
the July-september quarter,
sent the real GNP into decline
by 2.9 per ce nt.
The 11.5 per cent inflation
rate compared with 12.3 per
cent in the first quarter of 1974
and 9.3 per cent in the second
quarter.
The GNP figures released for
the thlrd quarter ThW&gt;sday
actually were based on data for
only July and August Dent said
the resul Is ma y differ when
September is included.
One part of the September
figure is already ln. In a
separate report, the Commerce
Department Thursday said
housing starts that month were
unchanged from August .

5 Meigs musicians in hand

WASmNGTON - A WEEK OVERDUE, CONGRESS finally
has gone home tQ face the voters. When the. Senate and House
gather ~ain, Nov. 18, it will be .for a post-election session that
promises to run into January. Congress recessed Thursday after
besting President Ford in a week-long brawl over U. ~· R)llltary
aid to Turkey .
Despite the most strenuous objections of President Ford and .
A chance of snow flurries
SecretarY of State Henry Kissinger and · two vetoes, Congress
north• toolghi. Low tonight
voted to cut· off military aia to Turkey. The 'only con~on It
upper 20s to mid 30s south. · ~· ·;'e~t.-;..;or'jlil
granted was that the embargo is suspended qntil Dec. 10 as long
Mostly cloudy and cool
as Turkey maintains the cease-fire and U.S. aid that can "kill,
Saturday, higha in the lower
wound or destroy" Is not transhipped from Turkey to Cyprus . .
50s.
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After Dec. 10, aid can he resumed If Ford certifies that
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"subatantlal progress" has been made toward a settlement and
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
that U. s. mllltarY supplies are being used only for seH-defense Sunday through Tuesday,
tantamount to requiring turkey to withdraw from Cyprus. The
expect a warmlllg tread aad
coinpromise on aid ended a confrontation .between Ford and the
Congress which had held up funding of government departments
li«Je . or uo precipitation. ·
High Sunday 1u the upper 40s
including Labor, Agriculture and Health , Education and
to mid 50s. High Moaday lu
Welfare.
The Senate passed it by voice vote Thursday. The House
the 60s. LoW. ill tlie Iipper 20•
THE .MIDDLEPORT MARINA LOOKED like this Thursday morning after vandals broke
to lower 30s suiulay morning
adopted It 191 to 33.
· into a building overnight to steal toilet tissue which they used to "decorate" the trees and litter
•lid 1D the 40s Tuesday
the grounds. Maintenance SUpervisor Harold Chase ·indicated that the mar ina may have to be
LONDON - ACTOR RICHA_RD ,BURTON, once again the
Dionllng.
if such acts continue.
closed
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mFr'i&gt;':!im?&lt;aw.hiii . ;::~ni':
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COLUMBUS (UP!) - Former Gov. James A. Rhodes told
the Ohio Republican Convention
Thursday night that Gov . John
J . Gilligan will have to double
the state income tax to fulfill
promises made during the last
30 days.
"It's going to be double or
nothing," Rhodes told a cheering crowd of about 2,000. " He's
going to make us pay double
our income tax and double our
property tax."
"He must double the income
tax to perform what he's
promised in the last 30 days, "
Rhodes shouted at the conclusion of a 20-minute speech. "We
can only stop that if you elect
me as the next governor of this
state."
Rhodes, Gilligan's opponent
in November's election, said
much . of the additional tax
money will go ror "a new
weHare program that he's
going to trot out after the
election.''
The former governor has
pledged to operate state gov·
ernment with current revenue
sources. "If he (Gilligan) is not

Cleveland Electric, which
serves most of the greater
Cleveland metropolitian area ,
said it expects by Nov. I to
have 65 days worth of coal
stockpiled.
Roger D. Curfman, fuel
agent for the utility, said CEI
burns about ei gl-Jt million tons
of coal a year.
" Right now we are buying
more coal out of state than w~
normaly do , but we are not
buying indiscriminately," said
Curfman. ur see no reason for
panicking. "
Bob Jones , public relations
director for Columbus and
Southern Electric Co., said the
utility , which serves 25
counties in central and
southern Ohio, has about an 80
day reserve .

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WASIDNGTON- RICHARD NIXON'S LAWYERS report
the former president's health Is so much improved he may be
able to provide sworn testimony for the Watergate cover-up trial
of five former aides as soon as next month. But th!'y also have
filed suit against the Ford administration, seeking to bl?Ck"allY
release of Nixon administration tapes and documenW.except
those under subpoena.
They also want to permit Nixon to review all materials
subpoenaed in the future. A hearing on a companion request for a
temporary injunction was scheduled for Monday morning before
U. S. District Juctge Charles R. Richey.
Abandoning their stand that Nixon Is too ill to testify at the
cover-up trial, the former President's lawyers reported Thursday \hat now "the prognosis is very good" he will be well enough
to undergo questioning -at least in writing - within three or
four weeks.

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"I want to assure you, the members of this subcommittee,

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tors - Flash Cubes - Candy - Lar;nps • Floor

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women are to help create
better conditions for business
women through tile study of
social , educatio'nal, economic
and political problems; to help
them be of greater service to
their community ; to further
friendship
with
women
throughout the world.

ews~. in BriefS~ Changes

Pillow Cases - Towels ·- Table Cov"rs - Bath

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THE MAYOR SIGNS - Mayor Fred Hoffman, flanked by officers of the Middleport
Business and Professional Women's Club, signs a proclamation establishing National Business
Women's Week. Standing, from left , are Freddie Houdashelt, president ; Mary Martin, vice
presidenti Ann Bailey, secretary, and Eloise Wilson, treasurer.

Sweatshirts - Knit Shirts - Piece Goods •

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United Press International
Ohio Power companies
which burn about 15,000 tons of
coal a day, have reserves to
last 66 to 85 .days in the event of
a nationwide strike when the
United Mine Workers contract
expires Nov ) 12. Several said
they have been stockPiling
over the last several months.
The Canton-based Ohio
Power Co ., which ser.ves
customers in 53 counties a nd
burns 15 million tons of· coal a
year , sa id it had enough coal in
reserve to last about ~6 days .
"We are trying to maintain
that reserve and improve it if
we can,'' sai(l Jack Corns, head
of the firm's public relations
department. "We burn about 15
million tons a year. Some of the
plants burn more, some less."

• 'G irls Coats - Dresses - Sportswear - Infants

AND THE HALLMARKS

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Womens Blouses- Sweaters- $hir:ts- Knit Tops

GEO. HALL

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Coal reserves
are at 66 days

10 1111
IllS II
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Ph. 992-3629

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DRESSES AND PANTSUITS.

Save 25°/o

TEN CENTS

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1975

MISSES - JUNIORS - HAlf SIZE

MEIGS THEATRE

.

GOING FISHING - Marjorie and John Brewer, Reedsville, fishing enthusiasts, were among the senior citizens
taking part in a fishing derby held along the Ohio River
across from the Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy Thursa
day. Mr . and Mrs. Brewer had caught nine fish altogether ,
and here were intent upon increasing their catch .

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MISSES • JUNIORS • PRETEEN OOATS -

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'WIN' b UttOllS
$}
COSt

The MEIGS INN

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en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVI NO. 132

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'"'''"'''"""',_,m...

TONIGHT 9:30 . to 2

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Devoted .To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

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Toy Store and Mechanic Street

Robes - Gowns - Dusters : Pamamas • Bras •

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house and win a U.S. Senate
seat-but only if they get out
the full GOP vote across the
state on election day Nov . 5.

On All Three Floors-

Department

T earn to canvaSs

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out," Bliss toid the audience of
about 2,000. "We can't win this
one sitting ori our haunches.
We 've got to start tonight and
organize our communities .
This is no time for the weak or
fainthearted ."
Perk, the mayor of Cleveland, told the delegates they
must get out and work for him
Continued on page )0

Bliss reca)led 1960, when
·" every pai&gt;er and political
pundit was predicting a sweeping defeat for the Republicans .
IM it started right here at this
meeting with people like you .
We voted our full vote and
carried the state for Richard
Nixon.
''There are jUst too manY
Republicans Sitting tlils one

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That was the common warn ~
ing sounded Thursday at . the
Ohio Republican Convention by
Sen. Robert Taft Jr ., R.()hio;
former Gov . James A. Rhodes;
U.S. Senate nominee Ralph J .
Perk;illld Ray C. Bliss, former
state party chairman and
1
CUrrently vice chairman of the
Republican National Commit-'
tee.

.m convention
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We've R'e duced Prices In Every
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the prospects of being tried
d " for Booster unit
himself for crimes in office.
t:;
THE DALLES, Ore. (UP!) - "Not again," sal
~:
Rep. Henry p . Smith Ill of ~; .veterau Sasquatch hunter Peter Byrne when told Wed· ~
~;: nesday that an expedition had found what It believes·are ~
RACINE _ Plans for a
New York, ranking sub- · ·:·: Big!
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committee Republican, told ;;:;
oot tracks 1u the Lewis River area of southwest · ;;:1 membership drive Saturday
;,;, Washington.
~- with boys of the football ~am
Ford in his opening statement
Byrne, who had worked closely with members of the 1;j
that he hoped the appearance .,.,
,., canvassing the area were
before the committee would ;:~ American Yeti Expedition lu this area last summer, said, ;~ made by the Southern Athletic
not establish a precedent.
~~ " It was growing ridiculous. Morgan (exl"'dltlon .leader ~~ Boosters Monday at the Racine
· "But, on the other hand, it Is ~;: Robert W. Morgan) was claiming new IIndo at !he !'lite .of ~ High School.
:::: one a week "
:·:·
an example of a splendid ·' ''
•
•:&lt;
The football banquet was set
cooperation between the
Byrne, operator of the Bigfoot eddblt here, said, :~; for Nov. 23 providing that,lt
executive and legislative ~:;
years can go by without any advance In our knowledge of
does not conflict with any other
branches of our government, ~ Sasquatch. He said he and Morgau had ended their @ school activity. Pat White was
which I trust may be followed fu: cooperative efforts.
r,.&lt; - named chairperson and Unda
many times in the future by :1;1
The Amerlcaa Yeti Expedition headed by Morgan ~ Diddle, . co-chairperson. The
«
reported fludlng 161 manllke tracks made by a creature !:! next meeting was set for Oct
th
h
afte
as0 ~r';st~:O~Y ~m~e u"nf~~
believed to be eight feet tall. Morgau said the traeko were ;::;: 29 Those at ten din were Ro e~
States of .America _ the ;::: those of the legendary Bigfoot or Sasquatch
many
Adams, Martha Judding,
world's toughest job."
:;!; believe Inhabits western forest&amp;.
;~i Brown, John Dudding, Linda
•k .,u.w,•=~'*'o'·:·:w·~ KJ' • '· ~ x% · · m ~·~~--,.,.,,,~Nm&gt;&lt;
Rep. Peter W. Rodino, D,...,,..~,.,'
~~w= yc,,,___ Diddle, Dave Hill, Danny
N.J., chairman of the full
Brown, Winnie Waldnig, Carl
Judiciary Committee, and
Wolfe, Pal White, Bill Jewell
Rep. Edward Hutchinson of
and Marvin Hill.
Michigan,
its
ranking
PITTSBURGH (UP!) bulk they cost about 75 cents
Republican, confined their Things are tough in the apiece.
"The increase in sheet steel
PleuaatValleyHospltal
opening remarks to welcoming political button business, says
Ford.
Richard Trimllle, who makes to make buttons has gone up
DISCHARGES _ Roxanne
them . It's so tough that the 140per cent in the past year or Dauglasa, Leon; Robert Cook,
"WIN" antiinflation numbers so.
Gallipolis Ferry; Robert Cook,
are · selling at $1 each .
"We have about 100,000 WIN Jr., Apple Grove; Deanna .
The day after President Ford buttons ordered· and expect to Cook, Apple Grove; Mrs.
made
his economy address to a haveabout~,OOO of them in the Lawrence Burns and daughter,
Tonight, October 17
joint
session
of Congress Oct. 8 next day or so. The buttons will
NOT OPEN
.
bea.b outl"•m'-•esandwillsell Apple Grove; Mrs. Donald
, bl h
Tr un
e, ead of the A. G.
"' ..,,
Roush, Syracuse; flolils
Trimble Co., put his· enlployes for about $25 for 1;000, about 40 Farley, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Fri., SaL Sun.
'to work turning out WIN cents each."
October 18-20
buttons on a hand press.
.Trimble said he has received Abe Thornton, Point Pleasant;
MAGNUM FORCE
One dollar each Is lnfla- varied reports on the life ex-' Mrs. Ray Smith, GaWpolls
·(Technicolor)
d 'tt d
pectancy of the WIN button. · Ferry; . Debra Campbell,
.
T · bl
t
Clint Eastwood
10nary, nm e a m1 e ,
d
M
"B t that
f
·
''One jobber said 1't would be · re ~. · a.; rs. ayne
Hal· Holbrook
Kin ld p 01 t PI
t Mrs
.u
was or a Single
CARTOON
button. We were trying to
all over in about two weeks and
ca '
n
easan ;
·
Show Starts 1 p.m.
·satisfy a few rush orders until
another fellow said It would ' George
Crump;
Point
we could get the pins In volume outdo the 'smiley' button," Pleasant ; Arthur McCoy •
from manufacturers. Selling In Trimble said, "Outside of Henderson; Pearl Snyder, ·
political buttons the 'smjley' · El"lngton.
· has been the biggest seller of
all time."
PROMOTION MADE
For Your Dining and Listening
The "I Uke Ike" button was
CHARLESTON, W.. Va.
another winner, Trimble said. (UP!) - W. W. Ferrell,
Pleasure ••.
He said it was his father, Ar- president of Columbia Gas
thur G., now :94.' who originated Transmisslon Corp., will
· the slogan that became famous succeed J. G. McKee as board
in 1951.
chalnnan and chief executive
"I drew the first design and of the company· here Nov. ,,1.
my Dad suggested the slogan,"
Trirrible said. "You can fmd 50
persons who will ·try to take
NOWYOU~NOW
credit for coining the 'I
Lake Nicaragua in Central
Ike' slogan but we •have been America is •one of the world's
authenticated as the origina- few fresh ,water lakes that hold
tors.
man-eating sharks.
• 1
"The American Political
.
.
Items Collectors ran a kind Of
.
.·contest to t'&lt;une· up ·with the notarized material to proye
Pomeroy .
originator and 'we won. You Qriginated' the idea, and we
had to produce authenticated, did ."

§! ".

.

UP! Slatehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP1 ) ·- Ohio
Republicans have been t9ld
. they can recapture the State-

Storewide Inflation Fighter Sail.

delayed
·'.

.

'

Ohio, IF!'

GOP

·'

..

in his fifth year at O.U.
Special appearances this fall
by the band, ·in addition to its
regular five hom e-game
schedule, were at Kent State
University on Sept . 21,
regionally televised on ABCTV ; an upcomin g indoor

concert at the Ohio Theatre in
Columbus on Oct. 31, and the
nationally televised · (CBS )
performance ·at the halftime of
the Cleveland Browns - Cincinnati Bengals game in
Cleveland on Oct. 13.

Four upcoming events in
religious activities were announced when the Meigs
County Ministerial Associati on
met at Mt. Hermon U. B.
Church Oct. 14 presided over
by president Rev . Carl Hicks.
Rev. Robert Shook, host
pastor, read and meditated on
Psalm 150 for devotions. The
events:
Oct. 14-20, Revival, Racine
First Baptist Church .
Oct. 21-27, crusade at The
Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church sponsored
by the Southern Cluster United
Methodist Churches.
Oct. 23, 10 a .m.-2:30 p.m.,
Church
Women
United
Workshop,
Middleport
Presbyterian Church.
Nov. l , 2 p.m., World
Community Day at !&gt;omeroy
Lutheran Church, sponsored
by women of Meigs County.
A calendar of events of the
churches of the association is
to he published monthly in The

Daily Sentinel. The calendar is
to include Volunteer Hospital
Chaplains and those who are to
have radio devotions Monday
through Wednesday .
Reports by c ommittee
chairmen included :
Rev. Harold Deeth on the
chaplaincy
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital who asked
for volunteers to fill vacancies ;
Rev. Skaggs on the volunteer
chaplain cy program at Holzer
Hospital where volunteers also
are needed (Rev. Arthur Lund,
full time chaplain at Holzer, is
to be asked by the program
committee, to speak to the
association some time in the
future ); Rev. Robert Kuhn, on
his c hap laincy work Ill
Gallipolis State Institute, and
by Rev. Dwight Zavitz on the
Southeas tern Ohio S!fategy
Caucus at The Meigs Inn Sept.
13 ,
The
Meig s
County
Ministerial Assn. wa5asked by
Continued on page 10

F our re1•IgiOUS·
•
events noted

Tree seedlings are free
Four hundred tree seedlings, grOw to .maturity, and can be
free of charge, 19 be planted harvested as timber products.
next spring, are available to Trees are not to be used for
Meigs County 4-H members. shade, ornamental, or winda
Orders must be in the County break purposes. Trees should
Extension Office by November also be protected from fire and
1. The seedlings are provided livestock. You must also
by the Ohio Department of permit a representative of the
Natural Resources and the Division of Preserves to inWest Virginia Pulp and Paper spect the tree planting upon
company.
request.
'
' available
Requirements for ordering
Spec1es
are
tree seedlings are that you Austrian Pine, 1\ed Pine, Red
must be kn enrolled 4-H Oak, and Black Locust. Orders
member, you must plant the may lie called in by calling 992trees on .land where they can 3895.
1'
I
'

•,I '

�l

•
'

3- The Dally Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy' 0 ., Friday' Oo! 18, 1974

r

WHA Standmgs
By Un•ted Press tnternatronal
East
w l " t pls. _gl , .
Ch tca g o
0 o 0 0 0 0

N BA Standmg s

By Un1ted Press lnternattonal

Adult-Ed interest

survey--~eigs

By Ray ~odman
We are-Planning to start Adult Education Clases at Meigs High School and we need your
help. Our thmking IS that s1nce your tax doUars went mto the schools, you should be able lo
derive benefit from them Therefore, we plan to offer mght classes for adults starting in
January. Our problem IS, we need to know where your interests lie m order to effectively
plan the classes and get qualified mstructors. In order to offer a class we will need· IO to !5
people who want to upgrade their skill or take a course of interest . The cost for courses w11l
be between $15 and $30 dollars for a 15 week course. The courses will meet from one to f1ve ~
times weekly dependmg on need and interest. You cWJ help us get the program off the
ground by filling out the form below. Please place a check mark by each course you are
"interested" in and two check marks by each course you are REALLY interested m takmg.
Your hel)l IS greatly appreciated, Wld you are not obligated in any way by completing
the form
- INCOME TAX PREPARATION
- AVIATION GROUND SCHOOL
- FARM MANAGEMENT
- AUTOMOBILE MECHANICS (MEN)
- AUTOMOBILE MECHANICS (WOMEN) - AGRICULTURE COURSE
- BAKING
- COSMETOLOGY
- CARPENTRY
- BIBLE STUDY
- APPUANCE REPAIR
- GENERAL OFFICE TRAINING
- DRAWING FOR BEGINNERS
- CASHIER TRAINING
- RETAIL SELLING (CLERKS)
- BEGINNING TYPING
- ADVANCED ART
- ADVANCED TYPING
- PHYSICAL FITNESS (MEN)
-SHORTHAND
-COMMUNITY CHOIR
- PHYSICAL FITNESS (WOMEN)
- KARATE-KUNG FU
- CURRENT SOCIAL PROBLEMS
- HEATING AND REFRIGERATION
- ADULT BASKETBALL
-ORGANIC GARDENING
- PLUMBING
- SMALL ENGINE REPAIR
- PIPE WELDING
-TRACTOR MAINTENANCE
- GENERAL WELDING
-CANDY MAKING
- FARM WELDING
- SCULPTURE
- OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING
- READING COURSES
- TIG &amp; MIG WELDING
-BASIC MATH (SHOP)
- PHOTOGRAPHY &amp; PROCESSING
-HOUSEHOLD WIRING
- HOME REMODEUNG
- MINE SAFETY COURSES
- SEWING
-HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA (G.E.D.)
- KNITTING &amp; CROCHETING
-FIRST AID (RED CROSS)
- DRIVER EDUCATION
OTHER (WRITE IN)
-AUTO BODY WORK
- ENGUSH REFRESHER COURSE
NOTE: Compames contact us if you want to start a particular class for your employees.

'

AKRON , Ohio (UP!) - A
contrast in pohtical campaigning styles and rehtortc was
evident Thursday night as U S
Senatorial candidates John
Glenn and Ralph Perk debated
at the Uruversity of Akron
here
Billed as a debate on
"science, technology, and our

federal government," the
event turned mto a session of
pohtical barbs as Republican
Perk, mayor of Cleveland,
attacked Glenn 's new wealth
and pomted to the need to cut
federal tax loopholes and
shelters, balance the federal
budget and give the nation
legiSlators w1th expertence.
Perk has 22 years 1n
government, wh1le Glenn has
none.
Democrat Glem, who gained
famed as a astronaut, stressed
the need of the nation to focus
attenhon on food and fuel
shortages and the inflation
spiral. He also noted no one m
the Senate currently has the
sc1ence and technology experlise to deal With the nation's
problems
Asked how they would
recommend solvmg
the
energy-dollar drain in a truly
effective program before the
natton goes broke, Perk
suggested following President

PLEASE RETURN THIS SURVEY TO : Ray Goodman -Vocational Drrector, Meigs
H1gh School, Route 3, Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769.
'YOUR NAME
YOUR ADDRESS

ZIP

YOUR PHONE NUMBER

ARE YOU OVER !8?

Cancer
all
gone
....

We need the above information for future mailings to you. Additional copies can be
obtained at the high school.

Restaurant sugar guarded
from quick fingered diners
By United Press loternatlooal

the sugar now , Then the
Sugar and spice and such waitress gives them what they
things nice are bemg taken off want. That way, we don 't have
restaurant tables for fear that people helping themselves and
customers caught up m the taking the stuff home.
inflation pmch will steal all
"We even have people stealthat's available.
mg the salt and pepper,
"Our customers will take all shakers and all, If we don't
the free sugar they can get," keep W1 eye on them. Now our
said a waitress for Chicago's customers have to ask for the
Cambridge
House salt and pepper before it's put
restaurant.
on the table."
"We still keep sugar packets
The high price of sugar -up
on the table, but we keep an eye from 69 cents to more than $2
on it to make sure it's bemg for five pounds, has made
used on our coffee of tea or fortune hunters of many a
whatever. A lot of people come restaurant patron.
in and order milk or ju1ce, then
Some restaurants have used
pack their pockets full of our health warrungs to keep !herr
sugar."
customers off the sweet stuff.
Other restaurants, espectally
"We are trying to encourage
the low-priced establishments, the use of sugar substitutes
are not as generous.
that we put on the tables
"Sugar is as expensive for us anyway," said a spokesmim
as for anybody else," said a for the Hollywood Holiday 'Inn
spokesman for a northwest In California.
Indiana restaurant chain.
"It hasn't made a dent yet.
"We just let people ask us for I've heard of people pilfering 1t
0

up and warned, "We have a

cancer - within -close to the
presidency.... "
Dean testified at the Senate
Watergate heartngs that
during the March 17 meeting
he and Nixon discussed the use
of executive privilege as a
means of avoiding testifying
before a Senate conunittee.
"He opined that he did not
think the Senate would be
dumb enough to go for the ball
he had given them but he was
hopeful they might," Dean said
then.
As the tape of Nixon 's Sept.
15, 1972, conversation with
Dean and White House chief of
staff H.R. Haldeman was
played, every person in the
silent courtroom -the jury,
presiding Judge John J. Sirica,
the five defendants , their
lawyers, reporters and the 100
persons in the audience -wore
large earphones.
The jury and reporters had
transcripts to follow the conversalton more easily.

Margaretta

off tables back east Wld In the
Midwest, but we haven't gotten
to that point yet."
But many restaurants and
hotels in Pittsburgh are not
provtding packets of sugar
unless specifically asked for it,
and others refuse to put sugar
m bowls on customers' tables
for fear It will be stolen.
Restaurants in Atlanta also
have waitresses offering
sugar packet at a time to
sweet-toothed customers.
RestaurWJts In PhUadelphia,
Houston and Detroit said they
continue to place sugar on the
tables, though In reduced
quantities In some cases, and
find they are using more sugar
than usual.
Harry Maroni, who works at
the Corona Cafe In Chicago,
says he hasn 'I seen anyone
taking sugar yet, but ''if I see
anybody doing it, I'll tell the
waiter to put It on the check -

a

25 cents."

The
House
Judiciary
Committee during its impeachment inquiry and the
Nixon White House previOusly
had released transcripts of the
conversatior), so little new of
substance was learned. But the
tapes provided impressions.
Dean, who has testified he
had spoken with Nixon
previous to that day ooly at a
half-dozen or so ceremonial
occasions, seemed to grow In
confidence and spoke much
more frequently as the 49min u t e
t1
pr gr ssed conversa on

~al:~. the

White House
chief of staff with a reputation
fQr being all business, laughed
frequently 00 the tape. Nixon
clearly was 1n charge.
The recorded conversation ,
took place 00 the afternoon
following the first series of
indictments in the burglary of
Democratic National Committee headquarters.

Request for secrecy denied
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - A
request by former Gov. James
A. Rhodes to keep secret a
deposition from him concerning the 1970 Kent State
University shootings until after
the November elections was
denied here Thursday by U.S.
Dtstrlct Judge Donald Young.
Yu11111 ruled the testimooy
fllven by Rhodes be made part
of the record In a suit flied by
parents of four saln studenfs
a,ainlt the former governor
and the Ohio Natiooal Guard.
Rhodes was govern..- when

f.

"'

National Guard troops opened
fire on students during an antiwar rally on the Kent State
campus May 4, 1970. Four
students died and nine others
were injured.
Rhodes gave the deposition
in Cleveland Oct. 3 and 4 and
filed a request in Toledo
District Court Oct. 7 that the
deposition be kept secret,
presumably because the
~imony could affect the Ohio
gubernatorial race in which
Rhodes opposes Democratic
Gov. John J Gilligan.

Following the court ruling,
however, Rhodes said the
decision to make the teBtlmony
publlc was :'persolll\IIY plealling" to him.
"!have, from the beginning,
advised my council that I did
not want the testimony
sealed,"
said
Rhodes.
"However, I was advised that
botb.the special counsel fCII' the
Ohio' attorney general and
other counsel Involved 1n the
case wanted all testimony
sealed.
·
4"! therefore yielded lo the

'
..

Ford's recommendation to
grow more food, waste less,
and move people from
automobiles to mass transportation.
Glenn noted warnmgs about
the energy problem have been
sounded in Congress smce 1939,
but there haven't been legislators able to do anything about
the problems
He sa1d that today, one year
after the crisis came to a head,
there IS no plan yet to attack
the nation's fuel and energy
problems.
"The whole standard of life
in th1s country - jobs, business
and mdustry - have been
predicated on the fact that we

Members of the Trinity
Church In Pomeroy are givmg
fmancial, aid to hurricane
VIctims 1n Honduras, 1t was
reported today.
Gustave Kuether, born in
Pomeroy, the son of the Rev.
Ralph L. Kuether, former
pastor of the Pomeroy church
and now in Ossoo, Wis., is
servmg in the ministry in
Honduras.
In a letter to Pomeroy
frtends , the semor Rev. Mr.
Ruether wrote recently:
"Gus was called upon by the
government to set up a short
wave radio commumcation

"Gentlemen, you're not
gomg to believe what I have to
tell you Happy has just had a
rad1cal mastectomy of the left
breast."
Rockefeller declined to
speculate on how the surgery
would affect his pohtlcal
future, telling a questioner: "I
think at thiS time, perhaps all
of us should think about
Happy's future, which IS the
one concern 1 have.,
Urban said a biopsy performed Thursday morning
revaled a carcinoma less than
two centimeters in diameter
and two smaller modules that
were found to be cWJcerous.
fJ. He and two other surgeons,
Drs.Ed'?'dJ.BeattieJr. and
Roy Ashikarl, then performed
the mastec~my ·
Urgan sa1d be informed Mrs.
Rockefeller after the surgery
was complete that the ~ancer
had no~ .~pread. He S8ld sh~
replled. 0, thank goodness.
Asked whether he felt a full
mastectomy was necessary,
Urban said he believed it was
and he would continue to
perflJrm such operations "until
we get more information on
this subject."

advice of counsel and in
deference to the wishes of
others Involved. In the most
recent reply memorandum to
the court, by my counsel, it is
stated that, 'Frankly, this
counsel and this defendant are
pel'80nally indifferent 8.!1 to the
ultimate disposition of this
motion,"' Rbodes said.

some tax loopholes savmg
millionarles WJd big businessmen some $8 million a year
that are bemg taken away from
the average working man and
bemg saved by big busmess,"
Perk added . " All the tax
loopholes
and
shelters
designed for the rtch .. . have
got to stop. The question of tax
shelters must be debated and
the public must be allowed to
determine ... whether those
kind of loopholes can contmue"

Some mdustries," Glenn
replied, ''may need that kind of
spec1al tax help to offset the
cost of environmental equipment if we expect those mdustries to help put out.
"We have to take' this on an
mdustry.!Jy-mdustry basiS,"
Glenn added. "I haven't seen
any evidence that we need a
direct subisidy for big business
11

to meet our enVlrorunentaJ
standards.''

center at the airport m La
Lima while 1t was still under
water. As he was flown out in a
light plane, he surveyed the
situation Wld found 1t most
devastating.
"While 90 percent of San
Pedro Sula, a c1ty of 150,000
people, is under high water,
evidently our mission property
(the United Church of Christ)
1s on higher ground and
refugees are being cared for
there . Sue (Mrs. Kuether)
repD~"ts it increasingly hard to
fmd food to ·feed those who
come to the mission for help.

We have had no word on the
fate of congregations m the
low-lying area
"With each new report
coming out of Honduras the
situatwn seems more black
The last reports md1eate the
death toll could reach 10 to 12
thousand people. Bodies are
being burned when found to
prevent the spread of disease.
"Many of our Umted
Churches of Chr1st are suffering great loss among their
membership. One of our
pastors arrtved at Gus and
Sue's door With h1s wife and
child, owning nothing except

the clothing they wore and two
blankets . They had been
warned barely m time to
escape death. Like many
others they wtll have to slart
over w1th only the love of God
and the compassion of
CbristiWJ frtends to rely on."
The Rev Ralph Keuther was
pastor of the Pomeroy church
from 1937 to 1947 The cross
was placed on Lincoln Hill and
the church organ was saved
from the 1937 flood by bemg
carrted p1ece by piece to h1gher
ground durmg h1s stay m
Pomeroy.

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a
middle-aged woman and have
b1la teral polycystic renal
disease. I am being treated by
a very competent nephrologist.
I have had several s1de effects,
such as anenua, gout, diabetic
symptoms, swelling of the feet,
itchy skin, leg cramps and
nausea with vormting. I rmght
say thiS IS an Inherited condition as several in my family
have had the same complaint.
At the present time I am on a

salt-free d1et~ and taking,
among other thmgs, four
sodium bicarbonate tablets
druly, Zylopnm to control the
gout, plus iron and liver for my
blood.
Over a period of time I have
lost over 80 pounds (from over
200 pounds down to about 120
pounds.) I am getting along
quite well at the moment, but
can you explain to me why the
salt-free diet and limited
potassium and protein and the
sodium bicarbonate?

Carnival, jitney
supper announced
CHESTER - There will be a
carnival and jitney supper
Saturday mght at the Chester
Grade School.
The jitney supper will be
served between 5 and 7 p.m.
with the menu to include ham
and baked steak, green WJd
baked beans, mashed and
baked potatoes, homemade
noodles, tossed salad, cole
slaw, hotdogs, rolls, pie, soft
drinks and coffee. Items will be
pnced individually.
The carmval will begin at
7:30 p.m. There will be a
var1ety of games, a sweet shop,
country store, and door prtzes.
Committees named for the
various activities are Chloris
Gaul, pocket lady ; Helen
Boatright and Sharon Loucks,
duck pond; Judy Eichinger,
Pat Thomas, Selma Call, and
Judy Guinther, fish ponds; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry HudSon, dart
throw; Mrs. Alvin Tripp, apple
bobbing; Max Eichinger,
Larry Hudson, Bob Elberfelt,
spook house; Hazelee Riebel,
tickets; Mr~. Richard Heln and
Mrs. Jim Hollon, milk can
toss; Mr. and Mrs . Nick
Leonard, spW the milk; Mrs.
Torn Mankin and Mrs. Harold

Norton, Hdown the hill";
Cecilia ~ll~lley and Linda
Flinner, shoot-a-hoot; Glenna
Riebel, Betty Newell, and
Betty Gaul, hat, balloon and
jewelry sale; Mr. and ~s.
Darrell Hawthorne, Linda
Ben~, Linda Edwards, and
Jean Sexson, card games;
Rosemary Keller, sweet shop;
Jackie Starcher, Jo Ann
McLaughlin, and Pat Wilson,
country store.
Mrs. Bob Elberfeld, Beckie
Pullins, Gladys Spencer, Grace
Stout, Doris Grueser, Joyce
Venoy, Nan White, Susan
clearly to required decliioos of
the time. I am content that It
will be so judged If tile people
are, in fact , given tha opportunity to see It In full con-

text."

Ohver and Hazelee Riebel,
kitchen workers. The carnival
tickets will be sold by Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Parker, Mrs.
Eleanor Knight, and Mrs.
Betty Roush.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Pauline Cornell tO Jack L.
Cornell, Parcels, Lebanon.
Ernest Nicholson, Ethel
Nichol!!on to Celestine Corder,
Lot, Rutland VWage.
Vincent J. Dabo, Emma
Jean Dabo to George C. Holter,
Margaret Holter, ' Lot 111,
Palmer's Add., Middleport.
Ru\h Lewis~Leonard w.
Lewis, Ruby Miller, Lewis
Miller,
Wayland
Marr,
Virginfa K. Marr, Paul Marr,
Susan Marr, Beulah Nelgler,
George Nelgler to Thomas
Clifford Hill, Sally Roush Hill,
Lots, Sutton.
Jean Dailey to Elson Ray
Dailey, Parcela, LebWlon.
James W. John8on, Zorra F.
Johnson to Carl E. Mitch, Lila
S. Mitch, !;ots 23, 24, Carman's
Sub., Pomeroy.
John P. Raub, Susanna Raub
to Sybil Ebersbach, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Sybil Ebersbach to John p.
Raub, Susanna Raub, Lot,
Pomeroy.

DEAR READER - For the bad also.
benef1t of our other readers,
One of the mam functwns of
polyscystic kidney disease is a
the kidneys IS to eliminate
defect that a person is born urea, hence the name W"me.
with. There are many (poly)
Urea · Is formed from the
cysts formed m the kidney ammonia
or
nitrog~n­
causing it to be enlarged, and containing part of amino acids
sometimes affecting Its func- Protem consists of comtion. How much of the normal binatwns of amino acids. If you
kidney tissue is replaced with eat a lot of excess protein, your
cysts determines how well the kidneys have to eliminate more
kidneys function.
urea. Whep your kidneys are
Three main complicaltons of not "up-to-snuff" you need to
polycystic kidney disease are elimmate th1s problem to
bleeding, high blood pressure prevent the accumulation of
and kidney failure. Most of urea m the blood. In large
your treatment is directed amoun Is in can lead to " uremic
toward the latter. Smce your poisoning.''
kidneys are not working In an
The kidneys also play a role
~timal fashion your doctor is
in balancmg the c~rmstry of
wisely helping them.
your body, between being too
VVhen the kidneys are ac1d or too alkaline. This 1s
damaged they may not be able very unportant for normal
to eliminate salt normally. In function. I presume that the
that case salt has to be sodium bicarbonate is part of
eliminated from the diet to this general p1cture m your
prevent the accumulation of particular case
salt in the body which would
So, all that is being done for
cause accumulation of water you is qu1te logical and
Wld lead to many severe necessary. Keep in mind·that 1f
problems.
. you reach a point where kidney
The same applies to function is completely unpotassium. The kidneys nor- satisfactory you can get help
mally eliminate any potassium from artifical kidney devices,
your body doesn 'I need. When and Jinally, in proper ctrthey are unable to do this, the cumstances, k1dney transexcess accumulation of plants have proved to be
potassium can upset the body rather successful.
chemistry Wld even affect the
Send your questions to Dr.
heart. So, I am not surprised Lamb, in care of lh1s
that your potassllilll and the newspaper , P . 0. Box 1551,
foods rich in potassium are Radio City Station, New York,
limited. Individuals taking N.Y. 10019. For a copy of Dr.
water pills have the opposite Lamb's booklet on h1atal
problems. The flushing out of hernia, send 50 cents to the
water often washes out too same address and ask for the
much potassium which can be "Hiatal Hernia" booklet.

in Knicks' victory
Monroe scored 14 of the
Kn1cks' 19 points in a 7 I&gt;·
mmute stretch to put the game
out of reach . Pete Maravtch led
the Jazz with 15 points. New
York's · John Gianelli had a
career.lugh 18 rebounds and
added 11 pomts.
" It's a good way to start the
season," Monroe said. "We
came m with a little less
confidence than in past years.
This boosts our ego. The New
Orleans Jazz are one of the best
expanston teams in recent
years .
" We can't expect to lose !ley
players and come back to wtn
an NBA title We have to
inaugurate three or four of the
new guys mto our system."
In the only other game on
opemng mght, Charley Scott
scored 32 points to lead the
Phoenix Suns to a 114-97 romp
over the Seattle SuperSonics.
The 6-foot-li guard, playing
w1th a metal plate in his arm
thiS season, also had SIX assists
for the Suns, who took the lead
for good less than two minutes
into the game.
Dick Van Arsdale had 21
pomts and Dennis Awtrey 18
for PhoeniX and Curtis Perry
was the top rebounder with 12.
Archie Clark led Seattle with 27
pomts and Fred Brown added
24. Seven.foot-four rookie Tom
Burleson was the only other
Sonic in double ftgures with 14
as star Spencer Haywood was
held to eight points.
Scott suffered a compound
fracture
of the left arm late
-~oval Crown
Bohung Lompany last season and will play this
entrre season with the metal
..,_ plate in the arm.

By United Press Intenatlonal
Earl Monroe 1s expected to
play a key role for the New
York Kmcks this sea'Son and he
got off to a good star! Thursday
night.
W1th four players- Willis
Reed, Dave DeBusschere,
Jerry Lucas and Dean
Memmger - gone through
retirement or trade, Monroe
and Walt Frazier are expected
to carry the offensive load for
New York this season.
Frazier was out wtth the flu
for Thursday mght's season
opener but Monroe scored 20
points to lead the Kn1cks to an
89-74 wm over New Orleans
that spo1led the Jazz' NBA
debut.

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Red Rose Dog Food

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...
~

''After that Pan Am pilot tried tc talk to Senator
Proxmlre wtt/1~ he was jogging, a lot of other
lobbyiSts got the same /ileal"

Sport Parade
By MILTON JUl'JIMAN
UP! Sports I::d1!nr
OAKLAND (UP!) -If you go back down through the years,
you will discover every smgle World Sertes generally 1s
remembered for one particular indivtdual.
In 1926, it was Grover Cleveland Alexander . He was a 39-yearold retread at the trrne, and after beating the New York Yankees
in the second and stxth games, he shuffled m from the bullpen m
the final contest to strike out Tony "Push 'em up" Lazzeri w1th
the bases full and wrap It all up for the St . Louis Cardinals.
Similarly, tbe 1931 Series is remembered for wild-numing
Pepper Martin, who stole five bases and hit .500 for the Cardinals
against the Philadelphia A's; the 1941 class1c is associated w1th
Mickey Owen's miSsed third strike; the 1956 Sertes belonged to
Don uPerfect Game" Larsen, and more recently, the late
Roberto Clemente made a one-man show of the 1971 Sertes by
burying Baltunore With h1s .414 battmg average.
Rol11e Fmgers, the mdefatiguable Oakland reliever with the
waxed moustache and stitches in L e "'- '· of hiS head, was the
MVP for the World Series just ended. There "' 1.0 question about
him deserving the new car that goes w1th the award, but he will
not be the man th1s Series necessarily will be remembered for.
If this Series IS remembered for anything, or anybody at all, 1t
most hkely will be for either Chatlie Finley or Bill Buckner.
One of the A's, asked whom he'd vote for as MVP, didn't have
to thmk a second .
" Olarlie," he said. "We've won three World Series and he has
dominated them all ."
Ou the other side of the com, there IS young Buckner, who
really didn't set out to do it that way, but did wind up helping the
Los Angeles Dodgers get beat w1th his legs and with his mouth.
When he should've been content with two bases, he foolishly
tried for three 1eadmg off the eighth mnmg of Thursday night's
finale . The result was he was thrown out and the Dodgers were
fmished
So much for the dsmage he d1d with hiS legs.
With h1s mouth, he said the A'shad only three real standouts Sal Banda, Joe RUdJ and Reggie Jackson -and added that if the
Dodgers played the A's 162 times durmg the regular sea59n, they
would beat the A's In IOOof those games.
Finley read Buckner's quotes to the A's before Wednesday
rught's contest, got them a little more fired up than they were
already, and they went on to win whl(t most of them considered
the biggest game of all f1ve.
"! said nothing agamst theii- ball club," Buckner tried explammg after Thursday mght 's loss. "Someone asked me what I
thought about thetr ballplayers and I just trted to evaluate them
as Individuals, that's all ."
..
Buckner, rumlng on his own; couldn't see where he d1d
anything so wrong gomg for tbree bases when center fielder Bill
North let his smash get by him leading off the etghlh.
" That's the way I always play," he S8ld.
Walt Alston refused to second.guess him either.
" He's aggressive," said the Dodgers' manager. "He'd knock
down a brick wall.''
t'
Perhaps, but he was unable to knock down Sal Bando, who Is
huilt along the general lines of the Rock of Gibraltar and was
right there waiting for him when Buckner came tearmg into third
head first.
Second baseman Dick Green, middle man m the relay from
Jackson to Banda, wasn't especially surprtsed by Buckner's
decision to go for three.
"I kind of expected hrrn to try," S8ld Green "Why? Because
that 's the way they play."
That particular style of play Is known as· "National League
baseball ." Usually it's good enough to win, or at least it had been
until the Oakland A's came along.
The A's aren't a typical American League team. In fact, they
don't really typify anything, unless maybe they do their owner, ·
who Is one of a kind and actually isn't typical of anybody you
know at all.

'

•

1174 byo NEA Inc:

and Bando made th e b1g
defensive play that cut down
Buckner and eventually the
Dodgers .
"It 's not that difficult
managmg a team hke th1s,"
smd Alvm Dark, who as of the
moment doesn't know if he will
be back next year. " I've said it
100 tunes before and I say 11
agam, managers don't win
baseball games, they only lose
them. These fellows played
perfect baseball in thts Series
and that 's why they are
champ1ons ''
Fmgers picked up h1s second
save of this Sertes m Thursday's game and h1s s1xth over
the last three years That's a
record and his four appearances thiS year gave him 16

Stiversville News Notes

••

Berrys World

did most of the talkmg for the
Dodgers when he sa1d if they
played Oakland 162 trrnes his
team would wm 100.
"If you are gomg to talk like
that," said A's shortstop Bert
CampanerlS, ' 'you better wm."
The A's used brilliant pitchIng and defense to throttle the
Dodgers. Thursday 's wrapup
game was a perfect example.
Sal Bando hit a sacrifice fly
for the A's first run, generated
by North 's speed and a
throwmg error by catcher
Steve Yeager, WJd Ray Fosse
and Rudi, not noted for thetr
power, hit homers.
V1da Blue, who went 7 2-3
lMmgs, John Odom and Roll1e
Fingers took care of the pitching and Jackson, D1ck Green

•

"w

PleuantVaUey Hoepltill
DISCHARGED - Raymond
Atkins, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Joseph Rice and son, Leon;
Mrs. Larry Workman, Glenwood, Infant Klein, Minersville; Pamela FISher, Spencer;
Don Thompson, l-etart.

Dodgers
"This was the sweetest one of
all," said team star Reggie
Jackson, " because we d1d 1t m
five. Last year and the year
before, It took us seven ~mes
to beat the Reds and Mets.
Maybe now people Will giVe us
cred1t for bemg a great team,
because we are ."
There aren't many who w1ll
challenge that statement and
certamly not the Dodgers, who
made costly mistakes on the
field and did most of the talkmg
off 1t
" If they are smart," said Joe
Rud1, whose seventh IIUlmg '
homer off Mike Marshall won
Thursday's game, "they w11l
learn something from this .
Sure, we fight a lot among
ourselves, but we leave all that
stuff m the clubhouse where 1t
belongs. On the field, we play
baseball"
" I think we learned a lot
watchmg them," said Dodger
Manager Walter Alston.
"There's a certain part of this
game you can't get from
ta !king . There are a few thmgs
you 1!ave to get on the playmg
field that nothmg but expertence will give you. The A's
showed us that. "
Bill Buckner, who turned out
to be the goat m the final game
when he was cut down trymg to
make an extra base m the
eighth lMtng, was the man who

Monroe sharp

Special diet for kidney disease

'Qle testlnlony, however, will
become avaUable only when
the deposlt,lona are flied In Ute
Toledo DislOc~ CO!Irt. No date
for the flUag of the deposition
,..as dlsC!osed.
Rho&lt;!es, added, however,
that the testimony "speaks

Political barbs mark session
billed as debate on science
technology, federal government

DR. LAMB

••Happy"

Rockefeller's cancerous left
breast and rated her chances
for survival as excellent. The
wife of v1ce presidentdesignate Nelson Rockefeller
had found the malignWJcy by
herself two weeks ago.
Doctors operated on her for
four-and-a-half hours at SloanKettermg Institute Thursday,
performmg
what
was
described as a "modified
radical mastectomy."
The attendmg surgeon, Dr
Jerome A. Urban , told a news
conference
that
Mrs .
Rockefeller's "chances are
excellent for a full recovery over 90 per cent in 10 years."
He added: "The cancer had
not spread to the lymph nndes.
I feel I got all of it, I really do."
Urgan described the 48-yearold Mrs. Rockefeller as " a
sturdy, wonderful woman." He
said there appeared to be no
cornplicallons and said she was
in excellent condihon
The former New York
governor looked tired and
depressed as he told reporters
earlier in the day:

have energy to run them, WJd I
say we are playing Russian
roulette with the future of our
whole nation and our stadard of
living, not only for us but for
the other nations arouund the
word, if we do not s1t down and
plan out the energy needs for
the future of this country,
which we have not done yet,"
Glenn said.
Perk told the debate audience, " We cannot subsidize b1g
business at the expense of
m1ddle America, and anyone
who campaigns on that platform must be defeated completely"
"At the moment, we have a
Cong&lt;I!SS which has adopted

OAKLAND(UP!) - Three m
row IS as good as you can get,
perfect, m fact, and that 's
precisely the type ball Oakland 's battlmg A's played m
the World Sertes to lay the
cornerstore for baseball's newest dynasty
When the New York Yankees
won four consecutive world
titles from 1936 through 1939,
everybody considered them the
most powerful baseball
dynasty m h1story, and 1t was
up to that pomt
Then, a later generation of
Yankees s tamped out ftve
world lltles m a row from 1949
through 1953 m almost assembly lme fashion
Now, along come the A's, a
team of outspoken players who
battle among themselves m the
clubhouse
and
pubhcly
cnllcize thetr owner and
manager, to challenge that
record, and there are those
who thmk they can equal, if not
break 1t .
Thursday , as they had m the
four previous games, the A's
played baseball the way 1t
should be, makmg all the plays
perfectly and professiOnally to
beat the proud Los Angeles
Dodgers 3-2 and wm the 1974
World Sertes in five games
Centerfielder Bill North d1d
make one error m the e1ghth
innmg but the A's turned 1t mto
a plus -one which hmshed the

Help going to victims of hurricane

NEW YORK (UP!) Surgeons have removed

Nixon wanted Ford to help
WASHINGTON (UP!)- An
earphone-&lt;!quipped audience m
a silent courtoom listened
Thursday as the tape.,.ecorded
voice of former President
Richard Nixon talked to John
W. Dean UI on the day of the
original · Watergate
Indictments.
He said "Jerry has got to
lead" -fneaning that House
Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford should try to head off a
House investtgation.
Chief trial prosecutor James
F . Neal said that today, the
13th day of the Watergate
cover-up trial, he would play
tapes of Nixon's conversations
with Dean qn March 17 and 21,
1972 -about the time the
Watergate cover-up began to
unravel.
During the March 21
meeting, the young Wh1te
House counsel gave Nixon the
detalla of the Watergate cover-

A's prove they're the best

Perk, Glenn spar with words
iD University of

High School

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Conta1ns Vitamin A Palmitate, V1tamins E, 02,
R1boflavln, N1ac1n, condensed f1sh solubles, meat meal,

plus other high quality Ingredients. And your dogs· will

love 1ts crunchy meal form that gives their gums and

teeth exerc1se Try the dOg fOOd that's been favored by
breeders and kennels for decades .. . Red Rose, the . ,_,
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Miss Loretta Middleswart,
~!laughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Middleswart, has returned to
the University of Cincinnati,
where she will resume studies
towards her doctorate degree.
Mrs. Fannie Talbott, Barberton, Is' visiting her sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hilton.
She was a guest of the Portland
Senior Citizens Club on their
trill to Marietta and Parkersburg on Wednesday.
Mrs. Evelyn Rose and Kevin,
Racine, Missy Van Meter,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Mike
EvWJS, Alicia, Cindy Wld RyWJ,
local, were weekend callers at
the home of Mrs. Ada Van

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- Gibson - HardWick - Kitchen Aid - Litton (Micro.
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Propane Serv1ce.

Rose Feeds, it's backed up by more than 130 years of

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SUGAR RUN MILLS
992.?115
Pomeroy
Mulberry Ave.
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Phone 985-3307~
Chester, Ohio

.

Meter.
Mr. Wld Mrs. Joe Klpps and
Mr Wld Mrs. Lawrence Lippa
and family of Vincent spent
.Sunday with Clint Birch and
Leota .
Mr . . and Mrs. Delbert
Lawson and family, Minersville, Were recent visitors of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Lawson.
Mrs. Nell Middleswart, Mrs.
Charles H1lton and Mrs .
Fannie Talbott were among
those attending the Bob Evans
Farm Festival at Gallipolis on
Saturday.
Mrs. David Bryant and
Marshall Bryant, Charleston,
W. Va., visited Mr. and Mrs.
Bill BryWJI Wld family on
Sunday morning, enroute to
Cambridge.
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Ables,
Hayward Bissell, Mrs. Ada
Van Meter, Cindy Evans and
Missy Van Meter called on Mr.
WJd Mrs. Louis DeLuz, during
the past week.
Mrs. FWJnie Durst spent
Thursday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Wells at Portland.
Lloyd Hoffman, Chester,
drllle'd a water well for Mr. and

overall for another record
That won Fm ger s , the
mus tach10ed reliever, the
Series MVP award made by a
national magazine, but there
were a lot of people who
thought the award should have
gone to Green . Among them
were most of the A's.
Green sel Sertes f1elding
records by parhctpatmg m stx
doubleplays m f1ve games and
three m one . But 11 was his
relay m the eighth innmg
Thursday that was the b1ggest
play of all
Rudl's homer came m the
seventh and gave the A's a 3-2
edge Buckner led off the
etghth w1th a smgle and when
North let 1t get away from h1m
for an error, Buckner tried to
go all the way to thrrd . But
Jackson , backmg up on the
play in rtght center, threw a
chest-high strike to Green, who
ftred a bullet to Banda at third
to cut down Buckner and fm1sh
off the Dodgers.

Johnson

Alvin in
dark on
future
OAKLAND (UP!) - Now
that Alvm Dark has managed a
World Senes wmner, 1t's time
for hun to turn hts attentton to
other matters .
Like where he'll be workmg
next year .
The only man who knows the
answer to that one nght now is
not saymg.
"I have been too busy to
thmk about tt," says owner
Charlie Finley of the Oakland
A's, when he's asked if he'll
offer Dark a new contract.
Pressed as to when he'll have
tune to think about 1t, Finley
bnstled .
"When I'm ready," he said
" Maybe tomorrow , maybe
next week , maybe next
month "

Dark hopes to know what's
gomg to happen before ne
leaves for h1s Florida horne
next week but there's never
Wly guarantee with Charhe 0
It took Finley almost until
the start of sprmg training this
year to hire Dark in the first
place, even though he knew
CINCINNATI (UP!) - CmW1lhams dec1ded he had had
cinnatl Bengals' runnmg back
enough of Fmley's front office
Essex Johnson should find out
meddlmg and announced he
Sunday agamst the Oakland
was qmtting in the middle of
Ra1ders JUst how much he IS
the A's second Sertes triumph.
gomg to contnbute to the
This year, Dark worked on
Bengals' drive for the Amerionly a one-year contract.
can Conference Central DiVI"I'm thankful to Mr. Finley
sion lttle thiS year
for g1vmg me the chance," said
Coach Paul Brown has used
Dark, who managed the San
Lenv1l Elhott and rook1e
Francisco G1ants in a losing
Olarlie DaviS since Johnson 's
World Series m 1962. "It has
knee mjury m W1 exhib1tlon
been a wonderful year "
game this sunnmer and bOth
But Dark was asked, what
have been impressive at times, happens next?
forcmg Brown to cons1der
11
l'm not going to worry
usmg Johnson for spot duty.
about WJythmg before 1t hap"I've always wanted to spot
pens," he said.
Essex," satd Brown. "He
Although there has been no
always thought he could carry letup at all in Finley's aclive
the brunt. But I'm not so sure running of the team from the
he cm1 ."
owner's chall', Dark never
"Obviously, if you CWl play
obJected to such interference
you want to play, you want to
the way Williams did.
start," satd Johnson. "H you're
In fact, Dark frequently .was
doing a good job you don 't wWJt
qu1ck to defend Finley, pomto be a spot player "
tmg out that Fmley is his own
Johnson said the "real
general manager, "and I think
disappointment and frustraevery
manager should consult
tion'' for him came when 1 ' ]
With his general manager,"
realized I wasn't gomg to be
Dark said.
able to start th1s season as I
The players, who almost to a
had hoped
man
dislike Finley, are sympa11
But when you're winning as
thetic to Dark's pUgh!. Even
we were and guys were doing a
Gene Tenace, the hard-hitting
good job In your place, all I
first baseman who was benwomed about was getting my
ched by Dark, apparently on
knee back where l could run
Fmley 's orders, for the last two
agam, ' ' said Johnson.
games of the Series, has no
quarrel with the manager.
"The man was good to me
Tonight's games and I'm not mad at him,"
Tenace satd. "Besides, the
SEOAL
Ironton at Athens
mWJager on this team has little
Logan at Gallipolis
to say about who plays. The
Jackson at Waverly
owner
makes all those deciWellston at Meigs

says he

is ready

TRI·YALLEY
Nelsonville York at Belpre
V1nton County at Federal
· Hock1ng

SVAC
Hannan Trace at North Gall1a
Symmes Valley at Southern
Others
Kyger Creek at Alexander
Fort Frye at Warren local
Tnmble at Eastern
Green Twp at Southwester
M1ller at New Albany
Point Pleasant at R1pley
Calhoun at Wahama

Mrs . Paul EvWJs, last week.
Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Debra
and Dave, visited Mr and Mrs.
Dan Talbott and farmly on
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Belt Jr.,
Harrisburg, Pa., have moved
their mobile home to h1s
father's property on Smith
Ridge .
Mr. Wld Mrs. David Wolfe
and Mr. WJd Mrs. Terry Wolfe
and son, Racine, were visiting
Mr. Wld Mrs. Gene Wolfe and
ftichard, recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeLuz,
Mrs. Ethel Mundry and Lori, S .
W. Durst, Paul Evans and Paul
Dean, Mrs. Ruby Bryant and
Debra, ponnette Talbott, Mrs.
Ada Van Meter, Cindy Evans,
Michele Van Meter, Frllflk
Connors, Mr and Mrs. C. W.
Crow, Rudy Durst Wld Gary
Griffith were recent guests of
. the E. H. Carpenter family.
The name ·orange" dates
back to 300 A.D. and the Arabian "naranj" and Pers1an
"narang" names for the
c1trus fru1t. Philosopher
Albertus Magus of Bavaria
(1193-1280) referred to sour
oranr431c a~ "arangus."

Eastern Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
w I pet g b
N ew Yor
1 0 1 000
Bos ton
0
0 000
Buff al o
0 6 000
P hd a
0 0 000
Central DPJ1S1on
w 1 pet g .b
Wa St1 1ngt on
0 0 000
At la nt a
o o ooo
Cleve land
0
0 000
Ho u s ton
0 0 000
Western Confe rence
MidWeSt DIVISIOn
w
I pet g b

Milwaukee

0

0

000

D e tr o 1t
Ch 1c:ago
KC Omah a
New Gr i n s
Pi1CihC

o
0
0

o
0
0

ooo
000

0

1

000
000

Cleve lan d
l n dnpl s

0 0 0 0 0 0
0 1 0024

New Eng

0 1 0 0 2 6
West
W I t pts gf g•

Hou s ton
M tCti iQd n

0 0 2 6 0
0 0 2 4 2

Ph oe n tx
M1nn esota
San Otego

1 0 0 2 8 2

0 0 0 0 0 0
0 1 002 8
Canad1an
w 1 t ph gf ga
1 0 0 2 6 2

Toron to
'h

DIVI SIOn
w
I pet

g b
Phoen1 x
1 0 1 000
Los Ange les
0 0 000
v,
G ldn Stat e
0
0 000
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v,
Portl an d
0
0 000
Seattl e
0
1 000 1
Thur sday s Resulls
N ew Yo rk 89 N ew Or l eans 74
Pn oe n tx 114 Seatl le 9 7
Fnday ' s Games
B uffalo a t Bos ton
New O r lean s at Phllade lphta
A tl ant a a t Ch1 c ago
H ouston a l Milw a uk ee
Go lden St ate at Los An g eles
Cleve la nd at Portla n d
D etr o1t a t Seattl e

'

W 1nn 1p eg
E d monlon

0 0 0 0 0 0

Qu ebec

0 0 0 0 0 0

1 0 0 2 6 2

Va n cou ve r

0 2 0 0 2 12
'Thursday ' s Result
M 1Ctl 1gan 4 lnd 1a napol 1s 2
Fnday ' s Game s
ln d tanapolts a t Toronto
Edmo nton at Wlnntpeg
Ho us ton at Ptloen l)c
Ch1 c ago at Van c ou ver

N H L Standtng s
By Un•l ed Press lnternattonal
DIVISIOn I

w I I ph gf ga
2 0 1 5 17 10
2 2 0 4 13 12

NY ts!ndrs
Phtl a

N Y Rang er s
l 1 1
Atl a n Ia
1 2 1
DIVISIOn 1
w 1 t
51 LOUIS
2 1 1

Rio to host

Van couv er
Mmnesota

sectionals
Saturday

1 3
o J
DIVISIOn
w. I
L os Ang eles
2 0
D etro II
P1tt sburgh

15
13

pts gf ga
5 16 15

2 4 13
1 3 9

Ch tcag o
K an Ctt y

ApproXImately 142 runners
Will be parltc1patmg m the
Sectwnal Cross-Country Meet
for Class A and AA h1gh schools
at Rw Grande Saturday.
Nine Class A schools, mcludlng last year's wmner Ross
Southeastern , are entered
They are Frankfurt-Adena ,
Bloom (South Webster ),
Chesapeake, Clay, Crooksville,
Peebles, Symmes Valley, West
Union Wld Southeastern
Federal Hocking, last year's
Class A rwmer.up, has moved
Into the Class AA category.
where they JOin Ironton,
Jackson, Rock Hill, ShertdWl,
Warren and Wheelersburg .
Rock Hill placed first last year
w1th 56 points, ahead of
Shendan 's second place 57
A coaphas meeting will be
held In l,.yne Center at 10 :15 a .
m "A" rwmers will run at 11
Wld "AA" at 11:30 Trophies
will be presented 1mmed1ately
after the meet.

3 1A
3 9

13

s

0 2 11 10
0 o 6 15
3
t ph gf ga
3 7 15 10

3 l 0 6 15 13
2 00 4 114

Wash 1n g ton

1 2 1 3

Montreal

0 2 2 2 14 18

Toronto
Buffalo

Calif

B 16

Divis.on 4
w 1. t. pts gf ga
2 o 2 6 16 8
22 041716
1 2 2 4 16 22

Boston
1 2 1 3 11
Thursday's Results
Boston 4 Philadelphia 1
Wash i ngton 4 Chi cago 3
Buffa l o 6 Ca lt forn•a 1
St L ouis 3 Montreal 2
Friday's G•mes
Kansas City at A t lanta

16

Preelous Beans
Coffee was cultivated by
the Arabs who would not
allow the exportation of the
seed The ftrst coffee beans to
leave the Arab lands were
smuggled to lnd1a In 1660,
Holland rece1ved thetr first
coffee plants in the same
manner Braz1l, now famous
for grow1ng coffee beans, d1d
not acquire plants untll1727 .

INTEREST

On Celtifates
Of Deposit
s1,000 Minimum
30 Mo. Term
Ninety d•y Interest ptneftr
If
withdrawn
boforo
maturity dale

Meip Co. Bla11Ch
The ftrst prtson reform
soc1ety tn ttie Umted States to
m1tiate changes tn pnson ad·
mm1stration was tbe Ph1la·
delphia Society ror Allev1at·
mg the M1senes of Public
Pnsons, The World Almanac
notes. The soc1ety was
formed by Phlladelph1a
Quakers m 1787

_.@·
The At"•"' County

snlngl&amp; Loan Co
2f6 Second St.
Pomeroy, DIUO

INI!:WSPAPER ENTt:KPHISE ASSN I

sions."

Hot Stuff
Only 1/2,000,000,000 or the
sun's radiant energy reaches
earth. Yet m three days as
much solar energy falls on
earth as would be produced 1f
all the planet's coal, 01!, and
woori were burned at once

•

25%

·The Dlilr - - SenliMII

off

....
••

-.'

Scotts Lawn Products
at Year-End Savings!
WAS

BOOSTER

CABLE
Snarl Proof
Reg. $4.69

985-'3301

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST .

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO u, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURSJ- EA.ST COURT ST..
POMEROY.

5 96
II 21
I &lt;; 7 1

1.99
3.74
5.24

Shady Area ' " Seed
1,000 sq fl box
2,500 sq fl box

4.4 6
10 46

1.49
3.49

3 19
5 96

1.06
1.99

retailer

authorized

"•

·"

Turf Builder e
'.000 ' 4 ft bag
I 0 .000 sq It bag
15 .000 sq ft bag

2500 sq rt bag
5,000 sq fl bag

Chester, 0.

••

NOW SAVE

Starter fertilizer

'3.86
BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE STORE
ONLY

'[

~ ...MODERN
399 WEST MAIN ST.

SUPPLY

992-2164

POMEROY, OHIO

~~~~/lO~A~!~~~~i~~D~:~~~F ~~gt;~~LL

.

'

�l

•
'

3- The Dally Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy' 0 ., Friday' Oo! 18, 1974

r

WHA Standmgs
By Un•ted Press tnternatronal
East
w l " t pls. _gl , .
Ch tca g o
0 o 0 0 0 0

N BA Standmg s

By Un1ted Press lnternattonal

Adult-Ed interest

survey--~eigs

By Ray ~odman
We are-Planning to start Adult Education Clases at Meigs High School and we need your
help. Our thmking IS that s1nce your tax doUars went mto the schools, you should be able lo
derive benefit from them Therefore, we plan to offer mght classes for adults starting in
January. Our problem IS, we need to know where your interests lie m order to effectively
plan the classes and get qualified mstructors. In order to offer a class we will need· IO to !5
people who want to upgrade their skill or take a course of interest . The cost for courses w11l
be between $15 and $30 dollars for a 15 week course. The courses will meet from one to f1ve ~
times weekly dependmg on need and interest. You cWJ help us get the program off the
ground by filling out the form below. Please place a check mark by each course you are
"interested" in and two check marks by each course you are REALLY interested m takmg.
Your hel)l IS greatly appreciated, Wld you are not obligated in any way by completing
the form
- INCOME TAX PREPARATION
- AVIATION GROUND SCHOOL
- FARM MANAGEMENT
- AUTOMOBILE MECHANICS (MEN)
- AUTOMOBILE MECHANICS (WOMEN) - AGRICULTURE COURSE
- BAKING
- COSMETOLOGY
- CARPENTRY
- BIBLE STUDY
- APPUANCE REPAIR
- GENERAL OFFICE TRAINING
- DRAWING FOR BEGINNERS
- CASHIER TRAINING
- RETAIL SELLING (CLERKS)
- BEGINNING TYPING
- ADVANCED ART
- ADVANCED TYPING
- PHYSICAL FITNESS (MEN)
-SHORTHAND
-COMMUNITY CHOIR
- PHYSICAL FITNESS (WOMEN)
- KARATE-KUNG FU
- CURRENT SOCIAL PROBLEMS
- HEATING AND REFRIGERATION
- ADULT BASKETBALL
-ORGANIC GARDENING
- PLUMBING
- SMALL ENGINE REPAIR
- PIPE WELDING
-TRACTOR MAINTENANCE
- GENERAL WELDING
-CANDY MAKING
- FARM WELDING
- SCULPTURE
- OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING
- READING COURSES
- TIG &amp; MIG WELDING
-BASIC MATH (SHOP)
- PHOTOGRAPHY &amp; PROCESSING
-HOUSEHOLD WIRING
- HOME REMODEUNG
- MINE SAFETY COURSES
- SEWING
-HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA (G.E.D.)
- KNITTING &amp; CROCHETING
-FIRST AID (RED CROSS)
- DRIVER EDUCATION
OTHER (WRITE IN)
-AUTO BODY WORK
- ENGUSH REFRESHER COURSE
NOTE: Compames contact us if you want to start a particular class for your employees.

'

AKRON , Ohio (UP!) - A
contrast in pohtical campaigning styles and rehtortc was
evident Thursday night as U S
Senatorial candidates John
Glenn and Ralph Perk debated
at the Uruversity of Akron
here
Billed as a debate on
"science, technology, and our

federal government," the
event turned mto a session of
pohtical barbs as Republican
Perk, mayor of Cleveland,
attacked Glenn 's new wealth
and pomted to the need to cut
federal tax loopholes and
shelters, balance the federal
budget and give the nation
legiSlators w1th expertence.
Perk has 22 years 1n
government, wh1le Glenn has
none.
Democrat Glem, who gained
famed as a astronaut, stressed
the need of the nation to focus
attenhon on food and fuel
shortages and the inflation
spiral. He also noted no one m
the Senate currently has the
sc1ence and technology experlise to deal With the nation's
problems
Asked how they would
recommend solvmg
the
energy-dollar drain in a truly
effective program before the
natton goes broke, Perk
suggested following President

PLEASE RETURN THIS SURVEY TO : Ray Goodman -Vocational Drrector, Meigs
H1gh School, Route 3, Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769.
'YOUR NAME
YOUR ADDRESS

ZIP

YOUR PHONE NUMBER

ARE YOU OVER !8?

Cancer
all
gone
....

We need the above information for future mailings to you. Additional copies can be
obtained at the high school.

Restaurant sugar guarded
from quick fingered diners
By United Press loternatlooal

the sugar now , Then the
Sugar and spice and such waitress gives them what they
things nice are bemg taken off want. That way, we don 't have
restaurant tables for fear that people helping themselves and
customers caught up m the taking the stuff home.
inflation pmch will steal all
"We even have people stealthat's available.
mg the salt and pepper,
"Our customers will take all shakers and all, If we don't
the free sugar they can get," keep W1 eye on them. Now our
said a waitress for Chicago's customers have to ask for the
Cambridge
House salt and pepper before it's put
restaurant.
on the table."
"We still keep sugar packets
The high price of sugar -up
on the table, but we keep an eye from 69 cents to more than $2
on it to make sure it's bemg for five pounds, has made
used on our coffee of tea or fortune hunters of many a
whatever. A lot of people come restaurant patron.
in and order milk or ju1ce, then
Some restaurants have used
pack their pockets full of our health warrungs to keep !herr
sugar."
customers off the sweet stuff.
Other restaurants, espectally
"We are trying to encourage
the low-priced establishments, the use of sugar substitutes
are not as generous.
that we put on the tables
"Sugar is as expensive for us anyway," said a spokesmim
as for anybody else," said a for the Hollywood Holiday 'Inn
spokesman for a northwest In California.
Indiana restaurant chain.
"It hasn't made a dent yet.
"We just let people ask us for I've heard of people pilfering 1t
0

up and warned, "We have a

cancer - within -close to the
presidency.... "
Dean testified at the Senate
Watergate heartngs that
during the March 17 meeting
he and Nixon discussed the use
of executive privilege as a
means of avoiding testifying
before a Senate conunittee.
"He opined that he did not
think the Senate would be
dumb enough to go for the ball
he had given them but he was
hopeful they might," Dean said
then.
As the tape of Nixon 's Sept.
15, 1972, conversation with
Dean and White House chief of
staff H.R. Haldeman was
played, every person in the
silent courtroom -the jury,
presiding Judge John J. Sirica,
the five defendants , their
lawyers, reporters and the 100
persons in the audience -wore
large earphones.
The jury and reporters had
transcripts to follow the conversalton more easily.

Margaretta

off tables back east Wld In the
Midwest, but we haven't gotten
to that point yet."
But many restaurants and
hotels in Pittsburgh are not
provtding packets of sugar
unless specifically asked for it,
and others refuse to put sugar
m bowls on customers' tables
for fear It will be stolen.
Restaurants in Atlanta also
have waitresses offering
sugar packet at a time to
sweet-toothed customers.
RestaurWJts In PhUadelphia,
Houston and Detroit said they
continue to place sugar on the
tables, though In reduced
quantities In some cases, and
find they are using more sugar
than usual.
Harry Maroni, who works at
the Corona Cafe In Chicago,
says he hasn 'I seen anyone
taking sugar yet, but ''if I see
anybody doing it, I'll tell the
waiter to put It on the check -

a

25 cents."

The
House
Judiciary
Committee during its impeachment inquiry and the
Nixon White House previOusly
had released transcripts of the
conversatior), so little new of
substance was learned. But the
tapes provided impressions.
Dean, who has testified he
had spoken with Nixon
previous to that day ooly at a
half-dozen or so ceremonial
occasions, seemed to grow In
confidence and spoke much
more frequently as the 49min u t e
t1
pr gr ssed conversa on

~al:~. the

White House
chief of staff with a reputation
fQr being all business, laughed
frequently 00 the tape. Nixon
clearly was 1n charge.
The recorded conversation ,
took place 00 the afternoon
following the first series of
indictments in the burglary of
Democratic National Committee headquarters.

Request for secrecy denied
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - A
request by former Gov. James
A. Rhodes to keep secret a
deposition from him concerning the 1970 Kent State
University shootings until after
the November elections was
denied here Thursday by U.S.
Dtstrlct Judge Donald Young.
Yu11111 ruled the testimooy
fllven by Rhodes be made part
of the record In a suit flied by
parents of four saln studenfs
a,ainlt the former governor
and the Ohio Natiooal Guard.
Rhodes was govern..- when

f.

"'

National Guard troops opened
fire on students during an antiwar rally on the Kent State
campus May 4, 1970. Four
students died and nine others
were injured.
Rhodes gave the deposition
in Cleveland Oct. 3 and 4 and
filed a request in Toledo
District Court Oct. 7 that the
deposition be kept secret,
presumably because the
~imony could affect the Ohio
gubernatorial race in which
Rhodes opposes Democratic
Gov. John J Gilligan.

Following the court ruling,
however, Rhodes said the
decision to make the teBtlmony
publlc was :'persolll\IIY plealling" to him.
"!have, from the beginning,
advised my council that I did
not want the testimony
sealed,"
said
Rhodes.
"However, I was advised that
botb.the special counsel fCII' the
Ohio' attorney general and
other counsel Involved 1n the
case wanted all testimony
sealed.
·
4"! therefore yielded lo the

'
..

Ford's recommendation to
grow more food, waste less,
and move people from
automobiles to mass transportation.
Glenn noted warnmgs about
the energy problem have been
sounded in Congress smce 1939,
but there haven't been legislators able to do anything about
the problems
He sa1d that today, one year
after the crisis came to a head,
there IS no plan yet to attack
the nation's fuel and energy
problems.
"The whole standard of life
in th1s country - jobs, business
and mdustry - have been
predicated on the fact that we

Members of the Trinity
Church In Pomeroy are givmg
fmancial, aid to hurricane
VIctims 1n Honduras, 1t was
reported today.
Gustave Kuether, born in
Pomeroy, the son of the Rev.
Ralph L. Kuether, former
pastor of the Pomeroy church
and now in Ossoo, Wis., is
servmg in the ministry in
Honduras.
In a letter to Pomeroy
frtends , the semor Rev. Mr.
Ruether wrote recently:
"Gus was called upon by the
government to set up a short
wave radio commumcation

"Gentlemen, you're not
gomg to believe what I have to
tell you Happy has just had a
rad1cal mastectomy of the left
breast."
Rockefeller declined to
speculate on how the surgery
would affect his pohtlcal
future, telling a questioner: "I
think at thiS time, perhaps all
of us should think about
Happy's future, which IS the
one concern 1 have.,
Urban said a biopsy performed Thursday morning
revaled a carcinoma less than
two centimeters in diameter
and two smaller modules that
were found to be cWJcerous.
fJ. He and two other surgeons,
Drs.Ed'?'dJ.BeattieJr. and
Roy Ashikarl, then performed
the mastec~my ·
Urgan sa1d be informed Mrs.
Rockefeller after the surgery
was complete that the ~ancer
had no~ .~pread. He S8ld sh~
replled. 0, thank goodness.
Asked whether he felt a full
mastectomy was necessary,
Urban said he believed it was
and he would continue to
perflJrm such operations "until
we get more information on
this subject."

advice of counsel and in
deference to the wishes of
others Involved. In the most
recent reply memorandum to
the court, by my counsel, it is
stated that, 'Frankly, this
counsel and this defendant are
pel'80nally indifferent 8.!1 to the
ultimate disposition of this
motion,"' Rbodes said.

some tax loopholes savmg
millionarles WJd big businessmen some $8 million a year
that are bemg taken away from
the average working man and
bemg saved by big busmess,"
Perk added . " All the tax
loopholes
and
shelters
designed for the rtch .. . have
got to stop. The question of tax
shelters must be debated and
the public must be allowed to
determine ... whether those
kind of loopholes can contmue"

Some mdustries," Glenn
replied, ''may need that kind of
spec1al tax help to offset the
cost of environmental equipment if we expect those mdustries to help put out.
"We have to take' this on an
mdustry.!Jy-mdustry basiS,"
Glenn added. "I haven't seen
any evidence that we need a
direct subisidy for big business
11

to meet our enVlrorunentaJ
standards.''

center at the airport m La
Lima while 1t was still under
water. As he was flown out in a
light plane, he surveyed the
situation Wld found 1t most
devastating.
"While 90 percent of San
Pedro Sula, a c1ty of 150,000
people, is under high water,
evidently our mission property
(the United Church of Christ)
1s on higher ground and
refugees are being cared for
there . Sue (Mrs. Kuether)
repD~"ts it increasingly hard to
fmd food to ·feed those who
come to the mission for help.

We have had no word on the
fate of congregations m the
low-lying area
"With each new report
coming out of Honduras the
situatwn seems more black
The last reports md1eate the
death toll could reach 10 to 12
thousand people. Bodies are
being burned when found to
prevent the spread of disease.
"Many of our Umted
Churches of Chr1st are suffering great loss among their
membership. One of our
pastors arrtved at Gus and
Sue's door With h1s wife and
child, owning nothing except

the clothing they wore and two
blankets . They had been
warned barely m time to
escape death. Like many
others they wtll have to slart
over w1th only the love of God
and the compassion of
CbristiWJ frtends to rely on."
The Rev Ralph Keuther was
pastor of the Pomeroy church
from 1937 to 1947 The cross
was placed on Lincoln Hill and
the church organ was saved
from the 1937 flood by bemg
carrted p1ece by piece to h1gher
ground durmg h1s stay m
Pomeroy.

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a
middle-aged woman and have
b1la teral polycystic renal
disease. I am being treated by
a very competent nephrologist.
I have had several s1de effects,
such as anenua, gout, diabetic
symptoms, swelling of the feet,
itchy skin, leg cramps and
nausea with vormting. I rmght
say thiS IS an Inherited condition as several in my family
have had the same complaint.
At the present time I am on a

salt-free d1et~ and taking,
among other thmgs, four
sodium bicarbonate tablets
druly, Zylopnm to control the
gout, plus iron and liver for my
blood.
Over a period of time I have
lost over 80 pounds (from over
200 pounds down to about 120
pounds.) I am getting along
quite well at the moment, but
can you explain to me why the
salt-free diet and limited
potassium and protein and the
sodium bicarbonate?

Carnival, jitney
supper announced
CHESTER - There will be a
carnival and jitney supper
Saturday mght at the Chester
Grade School.
The jitney supper will be
served between 5 and 7 p.m.
with the menu to include ham
and baked steak, green WJd
baked beans, mashed and
baked potatoes, homemade
noodles, tossed salad, cole
slaw, hotdogs, rolls, pie, soft
drinks and coffee. Items will be
pnced individually.
The carmval will begin at
7:30 p.m. There will be a
var1ety of games, a sweet shop,
country store, and door prtzes.
Committees named for the
various activities are Chloris
Gaul, pocket lady ; Helen
Boatright and Sharon Loucks,
duck pond; Judy Eichinger,
Pat Thomas, Selma Call, and
Judy Guinther, fish ponds; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry HudSon, dart
throw; Mrs. Alvin Tripp, apple
bobbing; Max Eichinger,
Larry Hudson, Bob Elberfelt,
spook house; Hazelee Riebel,
tickets; Mr~. Richard Heln and
Mrs. Jim Hollon, milk can
toss; Mr. and Mrs . Nick
Leonard, spW the milk; Mrs.
Torn Mankin and Mrs. Harold

Norton, Hdown the hill";
Cecilia ~ll~lley and Linda
Flinner, shoot-a-hoot; Glenna
Riebel, Betty Newell, and
Betty Gaul, hat, balloon and
jewelry sale; Mr. and ~s.
Darrell Hawthorne, Linda
Ben~, Linda Edwards, and
Jean Sexson, card games;
Rosemary Keller, sweet shop;
Jackie Starcher, Jo Ann
McLaughlin, and Pat Wilson,
country store.
Mrs. Bob Elberfeld, Beckie
Pullins, Gladys Spencer, Grace
Stout, Doris Grueser, Joyce
Venoy, Nan White, Susan
clearly to required decliioos of
the time. I am content that It
will be so judged If tile people
are, in fact , given tha opportunity to see It In full con-

text."

Ohver and Hazelee Riebel,
kitchen workers. The carnival
tickets will be sold by Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Parker, Mrs.
Eleanor Knight, and Mrs.
Betty Roush.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Pauline Cornell tO Jack L.
Cornell, Parcels, Lebanon.
Ernest Nicholson, Ethel
Nichol!!on to Celestine Corder,
Lot, Rutland VWage.
Vincent J. Dabo, Emma
Jean Dabo to George C. Holter,
Margaret Holter, ' Lot 111,
Palmer's Add., Middleport.
Ru\h Lewis~Leonard w.
Lewis, Ruby Miller, Lewis
Miller,
Wayland
Marr,
Virginfa K. Marr, Paul Marr,
Susan Marr, Beulah Nelgler,
George Nelgler to Thomas
Clifford Hill, Sally Roush Hill,
Lots, Sutton.
Jean Dailey to Elson Ray
Dailey, Parcela, LebWlon.
James W. John8on, Zorra F.
Johnson to Carl E. Mitch, Lila
S. Mitch, !;ots 23, 24, Carman's
Sub., Pomeroy.
John P. Raub, Susanna Raub
to Sybil Ebersbach, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Sybil Ebersbach to John p.
Raub, Susanna Raub, Lot,
Pomeroy.

DEAR READER - For the bad also.
benef1t of our other readers,
One of the mam functwns of
polyscystic kidney disease is a
the kidneys IS to eliminate
defect that a person is born urea, hence the name W"me.
with. There are many (poly)
Urea · Is formed from the
cysts formed m the kidney ammonia
or
nitrog~n­
causing it to be enlarged, and containing part of amino acids
sometimes affecting Its func- Protem consists of comtion. How much of the normal binatwns of amino acids. If you
kidney tissue is replaced with eat a lot of excess protein, your
cysts determines how well the kidneys have to eliminate more
kidneys function.
urea. Whep your kidneys are
Three main complicaltons of not "up-to-snuff" you need to
polycystic kidney disease are elimmate th1s problem to
bleeding, high blood pressure prevent the accumulation of
and kidney failure. Most of urea m the blood. In large
your treatment is directed amoun Is in can lead to " uremic
toward the latter. Smce your poisoning.''
kidneys are not working In an
The kidneys also play a role
~timal fashion your doctor is
in balancmg the c~rmstry of
wisely helping them.
your body, between being too
VVhen the kidneys are ac1d or too alkaline. This 1s
damaged they may not be able very unportant for normal
to eliminate salt normally. In function. I presume that the
that case salt has to be sodium bicarbonate is part of
eliminated from the diet to this general p1cture m your
prevent the accumulation of particular case
salt in the body which would
So, all that is being done for
cause accumulation of water you is qu1te logical and
Wld lead to many severe necessary. Keep in mind·that 1f
problems.
. you reach a point where kidney
The same applies to function is completely unpotassium. The kidneys nor- satisfactory you can get help
mally eliminate any potassium from artifical kidney devices,
your body doesn 'I need. When and Jinally, in proper ctrthey are unable to do this, the cumstances, k1dney transexcess accumulation of plants have proved to be
potassium can upset the body rather successful.
chemistry Wld even affect the
Send your questions to Dr.
heart. So, I am not surprised Lamb, in care of lh1s
that your potassllilll and the newspaper , P . 0. Box 1551,
foods rich in potassium are Radio City Station, New York,
limited. Individuals taking N.Y. 10019. For a copy of Dr.
water pills have the opposite Lamb's booklet on h1atal
problems. The flushing out of hernia, send 50 cents to the
water often washes out too same address and ask for the
much potassium which can be "Hiatal Hernia" booklet.

in Knicks' victory
Monroe scored 14 of the
Kn1cks' 19 points in a 7 I&gt;·
mmute stretch to put the game
out of reach . Pete Maravtch led
the Jazz with 15 points. New
York's · John Gianelli had a
career.lugh 18 rebounds and
added 11 pomts.
" It's a good way to start the
season," Monroe said. "We
came m with a little less
confidence than in past years.
This boosts our ego. The New
Orleans Jazz are one of the best
expanston teams in recent
years .
" We can't expect to lose !ley
players and come back to wtn
an NBA title We have to
inaugurate three or four of the
new guys mto our system."
In the only other game on
opemng mght, Charley Scott
scored 32 points to lead the
Phoenix Suns to a 114-97 romp
over the Seattle SuperSonics.
The 6-foot-li guard, playing
w1th a metal plate in his arm
thiS season, also had SIX assists
for the Suns, who took the lead
for good less than two minutes
into the game.
Dick Van Arsdale had 21
pomts and Dennis Awtrey 18
for PhoeniX and Curtis Perry
was the top rebounder with 12.
Archie Clark led Seattle with 27
pomts and Fred Brown added
24. Seven.foot-four rookie Tom
Burleson was the only other
Sonic in double ftgures with 14
as star Spencer Haywood was
held to eight points.
Scott suffered a compound
fracture
of the left arm late
-~oval Crown
Bohung Lompany last season and will play this
entrre season with the metal
..,_ plate in the arm.

By United Press Intenatlonal
Earl Monroe 1s expected to
play a key role for the New
York Kmcks this sea'Son and he
got off to a good star! Thursday
night.
W1th four players- Willis
Reed, Dave DeBusschere,
Jerry Lucas and Dean
Memmger - gone through
retirement or trade, Monroe
and Walt Frazier are expected
to carry the offensive load for
New York this season.
Frazier was out wtth the flu
for Thursday mght's season
opener but Monroe scored 20
points to lead the Kn1cks to an
89-74 wm over New Orleans
that spo1led the Jazz' NBA
debut.

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Red Rose Dog Food

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...
~

''After that Pan Am pilot tried tc talk to Senator
Proxmlre wtt/1~ he was jogging, a lot of other
lobbyiSts got the same /ileal"

Sport Parade
By MILTON JUl'JIMAN
UP! Sports I::d1!nr
OAKLAND (UP!) -If you go back down through the years,
you will discover every smgle World Sertes generally 1s
remembered for one particular indivtdual.
In 1926, it was Grover Cleveland Alexander . He was a 39-yearold retread at the trrne, and after beating the New York Yankees
in the second and stxth games, he shuffled m from the bullpen m
the final contest to strike out Tony "Push 'em up" Lazzeri w1th
the bases full and wrap It all up for the St . Louis Cardinals.
Similarly, tbe 1931 Series is remembered for wild-numing
Pepper Martin, who stole five bases and hit .500 for the Cardinals
against the Philadelphia A's; the 1941 class1c is associated w1th
Mickey Owen's miSsed third strike; the 1956 Sertes belonged to
Don uPerfect Game" Larsen, and more recently, the late
Roberto Clemente made a one-man show of the 1971 Sertes by
burying Baltunore With h1s .414 battmg average.
Rol11e Fmgers, the mdefatiguable Oakland reliever with the
waxed moustache and stitches in L e "'- '· of hiS head, was the
MVP for the World Series just ended. There "' 1.0 question about
him deserving the new car that goes w1th the award, but he will
not be the man th1s Series necessarily will be remembered for.
If this Series IS remembered for anything, or anybody at all, 1t
most hkely will be for either Chatlie Finley or Bill Buckner.
One of the A's, asked whom he'd vote for as MVP, didn't have
to thmk a second .
" Olarlie," he said. "We've won three World Series and he has
dominated them all ."
Ou the other side of the com, there IS young Buckner, who
really didn't set out to do it that way, but did wind up helping the
Los Angeles Dodgers get beat w1th his legs and with his mouth.
When he should've been content with two bases, he foolishly
tried for three 1eadmg off the eighth mnmg of Thursday night's
finale . The result was he was thrown out and the Dodgers were
fmished
So much for the dsmage he d1d with hiS legs.
With h1s mouth, he said the A'shad only three real standouts Sal Banda, Joe RUdJ and Reggie Jackson -and added that if the
Dodgers played the A's 162 times durmg the regular sea59n, they
would beat the A's In IOOof those games.
Finley read Buckner's quotes to the A's before Wednesday
rught's contest, got them a little more fired up than they were
already, and they went on to win whl(t most of them considered
the biggest game of all f1ve.
"! said nothing agamst theii- ball club," Buckner tried explammg after Thursday mght 's loss. "Someone asked me what I
thought about thetr ballplayers and I just trted to evaluate them
as Individuals, that's all ."
..
Buckner, rumlng on his own; couldn't see where he d1d
anything so wrong gomg for tbree bases when center fielder Bill
North let his smash get by him leading off the etghlh.
" That's the way I always play," he S8ld.
Walt Alston refused to second.guess him either.
" He's aggressive," said the Dodgers' manager. "He'd knock
down a brick wall.''
t'
Perhaps, but he was unable to knock down Sal Bando, who Is
huilt along the general lines of the Rock of Gibraltar and was
right there waiting for him when Buckner came tearmg into third
head first.
Second baseman Dick Green, middle man m the relay from
Jackson to Banda, wasn't especially surprtsed by Buckner's
decision to go for three.
"I kind of expected hrrn to try," S8ld Green "Why? Because
that 's the way they play."
That particular style of play Is known as· "National League
baseball ." Usually it's good enough to win, or at least it had been
until the Oakland A's came along.
The A's aren't a typical American League team. In fact, they
don't really typify anything, unless maybe they do their owner, ·
who Is one of a kind and actually isn't typical of anybody you
know at all.

'

•

1174 byo NEA Inc:

and Bando made th e b1g
defensive play that cut down
Buckner and eventually the
Dodgers .
"It 's not that difficult
managmg a team hke th1s,"
smd Alvm Dark, who as of the
moment doesn't know if he will
be back next year. " I've said it
100 tunes before and I say 11
agam, managers don't win
baseball games, they only lose
them. These fellows played
perfect baseball in thts Series
and that 's why they are
champ1ons ''
Fmgers picked up h1s second
save of this Sertes m Thursday's game and h1s s1xth over
the last three years That's a
record and his four appearances thiS year gave him 16

Stiversville News Notes

••

Berrys World

did most of the talkmg for the
Dodgers when he sa1d if they
played Oakland 162 trrnes his
team would wm 100.
"If you are gomg to talk like
that," said A's shortstop Bert
CampanerlS, ' 'you better wm."
The A's used brilliant pitchIng and defense to throttle the
Dodgers. Thursday 's wrapup
game was a perfect example.
Sal Bando hit a sacrifice fly
for the A's first run, generated
by North 's speed and a
throwmg error by catcher
Steve Yeager, WJd Ray Fosse
and Rudi, not noted for thetr
power, hit homers.
V1da Blue, who went 7 2-3
lMmgs, John Odom and Roll1e
Fingers took care of the pitching and Jackson, D1ck Green

•

"w

PleuantVaUey Hoepltill
DISCHARGED - Raymond
Atkins, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Joseph Rice and son, Leon;
Mrs. Larry Workman, Glenwood, Infant Klein, Minersville; Pamela FISher, Spencer;
Don Thompson, l-etart.

Dodgers
"This was the sweetest one of
all," said team star Reggie
Jackson, " because we d1d 1t m
five. Last year and the year
before, It took us seven ~mes
to beat the Reds and Mets.
Maybe now people Will giVe us
cred1t for bemg a great team,
because we are ."
There aren't many who w1ll
challenge that statement and
certamly not the Dodgers, who
made costly mistakes on the
field and did most of the talkmg
off 1t
" If they are smart," said Joe
Rud1, whose seventh IIUlmg '
homer off Mike Marshall won
Thursday's game, "they w11l
learn something from this .
Sure, we fight a lot among
ourselves, but we leave all that
stuff m the clubhouse where 1t
belongs. On the field, we play
baseball"
" I think we learned a lot
watchmg them," said Dodger
Manager Walter Alston.
"There's a certain part of this
game you can't get from
ta !king . There are a few thmgs
you 1!ave to get on the playmg
field that nothmg but expertence will give you. The A's
showed us that. "
Bill Buckner, who turned out
to be the goat m the final game
when he was cut down trymg to
make an extra base m the
eighth lMtng, was the man who

Monroe sharp

Special diet for kidney disease

'Qle testlnlony, however, will
become avaUable only when
the deposlt,lona are flied In Ute
Toledo DislOc~ CO!Irt. No date
for the flUag of the deposition
,..as dlsC!osed.
Rho&lt;!es, added, however,
that the testimony "speaks

Political barbs mark session
billed as debate on science
technology, federal government

DR. LAMB

••Happy"

Rockefeller's cancerous left
breast and rated her chances
for survival as excellent. The
wife of v1ce presidentdesignate Nelson Rockefeller
had found the malignWJcy by
herself two weeks ago.
Doctors operated on her for
four-and-a-half hours at SloanKettermg Institute Thursday,
performmg
what
was
described as a "modified
radical mastectomy."
The attendmg surgeon, Dr
Jerome A. Urban , told a news
conference
that
Mrs .
Rockefeller's "chances are
excellent for a full recovery over 90 per cent in 10 years."
He added: "The cancer had
not spread to the lymph nndes.
I feel I got all of it, I really do."
Urgan described the 48-yearold Mrs. Rockefeller as " a
sturdy, wonderful woman." He
said there appeared to be no
cornplicallons and said she was
in excellent condihon
The former New York
governor looked tired and
depressed as he told reporters
earlier in the day:

have energy to run them, WJd I
say we are playing Russian
roulette with the future of our
whole nation and our stadard of
living, not only for us but for
the other nations arouund the
word, if we do not s1t down and
plan out the energy needs for
the future of this country,
which we have not done yet,"
Glenn said.
Perk told the debate audience, " We cannot subsidize b1g
business at the expense of
m1ddle America, and anyone
who campaigns on that platform must be defeated completely"
"At the moment, we have a
Cong&lt;I!SS which has adopted

OAKLAND(UP!) - Three m
row IS as good as you can get,
perfect, m fact, and that 's
precisely the type ball Oakland 's battlmg A's played m
the World Sertes to lay the
cornerstore for baseball's newest dynasty
When the New York Yankees
won four consecutive world
titles from 1936 through 1939,
everybody considered them the
most powerful baseball
dynasty m h1story, and 1t was
up to that pomt
Then, a later generation of
Yankees s tamped out ftve
world lltles m a row from 1949
through 1953 m almost assembly lme fashion
Now, along come the A's, a
team of outspoken players who
battle among themselves m the
clubhouse
and
pubhcly
cnllcize thetr owner and
manager, to challenge that
record, and there are those
who thmk they can equal, if not
break 1t .
Thursday , as they had m the
four previous games, the A's
played baseball the way 1t
should be, makmg all the plays
perfectly and professiOnally to
beat the proud Los Angeles
Dodgers 3-2 and wm the 1974
World Sertes in five games
Centerfielder Bill North d1d
make one error m the e1ghth
innmg but the A's turned 1t mto
a plus -one which hmshed the

Help going to victims of hurricane

NEW YORK (UP!) Surgeons have removed

Nixon wanted Ford to help
WASHINGTON (UP!)- An
earphone-&lt;!quipped audience m
a silent courtoom listened
Thursday as the tape.,.ecorded
voice of former President
Richard Nixon talked to John
W. Dean UI on the day of the
original · Watergate
Indictments.
He said "Jerry has got to
lead" -fneaning that House
Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford should try to head off a
House investtgation.
Chief trial prosecutor James
F . Neal said that today, the
13th day of the Watergate
cover-up trial, he would play
tapes of Nixon's conversations
with Dean qn March 17 and 21,
1972 -about the time the
Watergate cover-up began to
unravel.
During the March 21
meeting, the young Wh1te
House counsel gave Nixon the
detalla of the Watergate cover-

A's prove they're the best

Perk, Glenn spar with words
iD University of

High School

...-..
._
u

•

...

Conta1ns Vitamin A Palmitate, V1tamins E, 02,
R1boflavln, N1ac1n, condensed f1sh solubles, meat meal,

plus other high quality Ingredients. And your dogs· will

love 1ts crunchy meal form that gives their gums and

teeth exerc1se Try the dOg fOOd that's been favored by
breeders and kennels for decades .. . Red Rose, the . ,_,
all·pro dog fOod The price Is right too Uke all Red

Miss Loretta Middleswart,
~!laughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Middleswart, has returned to
the University of Cincinnati,
where she will resume studies
towards her doctorate degree.
Mrs. Fannie Talbott, Barberton, Is' visiting her sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hilton.
She was a guest of the Portland
Senior Citizens Club on their
trill to Marietta and Parkersburg on Wednesday.
Mrs. Evelyn Rose and Kevin,
Racine, Missy Van Meter,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Mike
EvWJS, Alicia, Cindy Wld RyWJ,
local, were weekend callers at
the home of Mrs. Ada Van

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- Gibson - HardWick - Kitchen Aid - Litton (Micro.
wave Oven). Also Ooxol
Propane Serv1ce.

Rose Feeds, it's backed up by more than 130 years of

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SUGAR RUN MILLS
992.?115
Pomeroy
Mulberry Ave.
'

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Ridenour's
T. V. &amp; Appliance ·

1•

'.Gas Senice
Phone 985-3307~
Chester, Ohio

.

Meter.
Mr. Wld Mrs. Joe Klpps and
Mr Wld Mrs. Lawrence Lippa
and family of Vincent spent
.Sunday with Clint Birch and
Leota .
Mr . . and Mrs. Delbert
Lawson and family, Minersville, Were recent visitors of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Lawson.
Mrs. Nell Middleswart, Mrs.
Charles H1lton and Mrs .
Fannie Talbott were among
those attending the Bob Evans
Farm Festival at Gallipolis on
Saturday.
Mrs. David Bryant and
Marshall Bryant, Charleston,
W. Va., visited Mr. and Mrs.
Bill BryWJI Wld family on
Sunday morning, enroute to
Cambridge.
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Ables,
Hayward Bissell, Mrs. Ada
Van Meter, Cindy Evans and
Missy Van Meter called on Mr.
WJd Mrs. Louis DeLuz, during
the past week.
Mrs. FWJnie Durst spent
Thursday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Wells at Portland.
Lloyd Hoffman, Chester,
drllle'd a water well for Mr. and

overall for another record
That won Fm ger s , the
mus tach10ed reliever, the
Series MVP award made by a
national magazine, but there
were a lot of people who
thought the award should have
gone to Green . Among them
were most of the A's.
Green sel Sertes f1elding
records by parhctpatmg m stx
doubleplays m f1ve games and
three m one . But 11 was his
relay m the eighth innmg
Thursday that was the b1ggest
play of all
Rudl's homer came m the
seventh and gave the A's a 3-2
edge Buckner led off the
etghth w1th a smgle and when
North let 1t get away from h1m
for an error, Buckner tried to
go all the way to thrrd . But
Jackson , backmg up on the
play in rtght center, threw a
chest-high strike to Green, who
ftred a bullet to Banda at third
to cut down Buckner and fm1sh
off the Dodgers.

Johnson

Alvin in
dark on
future
OAKLAND (UP!) - Now
that Alvm Dark has managed a
World Senes wmner, 1t's time
for hun to turn hts attentton to
other matters .
Like where he'll be workmg
next year .
The only man who knows the
answer to that one nght now is
not saymg.
"I have been too busy to
thmk about tt," says owner
Charlie Finley of the Oakland
A's, when he's asked if he'll
offer Dark a new contract.
Pressed as to when he'll have
tune to think about 1t, Finley
bnstled .
"When I'm ready," he said
" Maybe tomorrow , maybe
next week , maybe next
month "

Dark hopes to know what's
gomg to happen before ne
leaves for h1s Florida horne
next week but there's never
Wly guarantee with Charhe 0
It took Finley almost until
the start of sprmg training this
year to hire Dark in the first
place, even though he knew
CINCINNATI (UP!) - CmW1lhams dec1ded he had had
cinnatl Bengals' runnmg back
enough of Fmley's front office
Essex Johnson should find out
meddlmg and announced he
Sunday agamst the Oakland
was qmtting in the middle of
Ra1ders JUst how much he IS
the A's second Sertes triumph.
gomg to contnbute to the
This year, Dark worked on
Bengals' drive for the Amerionly a one-year contract.
can Conference Central DiVI"I'm thankful to Mr. Finley
sion lttle thiS year
for g1vmg me the chance," said
Coach Paul Brown has used
Dark, who managed the San
Lenv1l Elhott and rook1e
Francisco G1ants in a losing
Olarlie DaviS since Johnson 's
World Series m 1962. "It has
knee mjury m W1 exhib1tlon
been a wonderful year "
game this sunnmer and bOth
But Dark was asked, what
have been impressive at times, happens next?
forcmg Brown to cons1der
11
l'm not going to worry
usmg Johnson for spot duty.
about WJythmg before 1t hap"I've always wanted to spot
pens," he said.
Essex," satd Brown. "He
Although there has been no
always thought he could carry letup at all in Finley's aclive
the brunt. But I'm not so sure running of the team from the
he cm1 ."
owner's chall', Dark never
"Obviously, if you CWl play
obJected to such interference
you want to play, you want to
the way Williams did.
start," satd Johnson. "H you're
In fact, Dark frequently .was
doing a good job you don 't wWJt
qu1ck to defend Finley, pomto be a spot player "
tmg out that Fmley is his own
Johnson said the "real
general manager, "and I think
disappointment and frustraevery
manager should consult
tion'' for him came when 1 ' ]
With his general manager,"
realized I wasn't gomg to be
Dark said.
able to start th1s season as I
The players, who almost to a
had hoped
man
dislike Finley, are sympa11
But when you're winning as
thetic to Dark's pUgh!. Even
we were and guys were doing a
Gene Tenace, the hard-hitting
good job In your place, all I
first baseman who was benwomed about was getting my
ched by Dark, apparently on
knee back where l could run
Fmley 's orders, for the last two
agam, ' ' said Johnson.
games of the Series, has no
quarrel with the manager.
"The man was good to me
Tonight's games and I'm not mad at him,"
Tenace satd. "Besides, the
SEOAL
Ironton at Athens
mWJager on this team has little
Logan at Gallipolis
to say about who plays. The
Jackson at Waverly
owner
makes all those deciWellston at Meigs

says he

is ready

TRI·YALLEY
Nelsonville York at Belpre
V1nton County at Federal
· Hock1ng

SVAC
Hannan Trace at North Gall1a
Symmes Valley at Southern
Others
Kyger Creek at Alexander
Fort Frye at Warren local
Tnmble at Eastern
Green Twp at Southwester
M1ller at New Albany
Point Pleasant at R1pley
Calhoun at Wahama

Mrs . Paul EvWJs, last week.
Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Debra
and Dave, visited Mr and Mrs.
Dan Talbott and farmly on
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Belt Jr.,
Harrisburg, Pa., have moved
their mobile home to h1s
father's property on Smith
Ridge .
Mr. Wld Mrs. David Wolfe
and Mr. WJd Mrs. Terry Wolfe
and son, Racine, were visiting
Mr. Wld Mrs. Gene Wolfe and
ftichard, recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeLuz,
Mrs. Ethel Mundry and Lori, S .
W. Durst, Paul Evans and Paul
Dean, Mrs. Ruby Bryant and
Debra, ponnette Talbott, Mrs.
Ada Van Meter, Cindy Evans,
Michele Van Meter, Frllflk
Connors, Mr and Mrs. C. W.
Crow, Rudy Durst Wld Gary
Griffith were recent guests of
. the E. H. Carpenter family.
The name ·orange" dates
back to 300 A.D. and the Arabian "naranj" and Pers1an
"narang" names for the
c1trus fru1t. Philosopher
Albertus Magus of Bavaria
(1193-1280) referred to sour
oranr431c a~ "arangus."

Eastern Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
w I pet g b
N ew Yor
1 0 1 000
Bos ton
0
0 000
Buff al o
0 6 000
P hd a
0 0 000
Central DPJ1S1on
w 1 pet g .b
Wa St1 1ngt on
0 0 000
At la nt a
o o ooo
Cleve land
0
0 000
Ho u s ton
0 0 000
Western Confe rence
MidWeSt DIVISIOn
w
I pet g b

Milwaukee

0

0

000

D e tr o 1t
Ch 1c:ago
KC Omah a
New Gr i n s
Pi1CihC

o
0
0

o
0
0

ooo
000

0

1

000
000

Cleve lan d
l n dnpl s

0 0 0 0 0 0
0 1 0024

New Eng

0 1 0 0 2 6
West
W I t pts gf g•

Hou s ton
M tCti iQd n

0 0 2 6 0
0 0 2 4 2

Ph oe n tx
M1nn esota
San Otego

1 0 0 2 8 2

0 0 0 0 0 0
0 1 002 8
Canad1an
w 1 t ph gf ga
1 0 0 2 6 2

Toron to
'h

DIVI SIOn
w
I pet

g b
Phoen1 x
1 0 1 000
Los Ange les
0 0 000
v,
G ldn Stat e
0
0 000
'
v,
Portl an d
0
0 000
Seattl e
0
1 000 1
Thur sday s Resulls
N ew Yo rk 89 N ew Or l eans 74
Pn oe n tx 114 Seatl le 9 7
Fnday ' s Games
B uffalo a t Bos ton
New O r lean s at Phllade lphta
A tl ant a a t Ch1 c ago
H ouston a l Milw a uk ee
Go lden St ate at Los An g eles
Cleve la nd at Portla n d
D etr o1t a t Seattl e

'

W 1nn 1p eg
E d monlon

0 0 0 0 0 0

Qu ebec

0 0 0 0 0 0

1 0 0 2 6 2

Va n cou ve r

0 2 0 0 2 12
'Thursday ' s Result
M 1Ctl 1gan 4 lnd 1a napol 1s 2
Fnday ' s Game s
ln d tanapolts a t Toronto
Edmo nton at Wlnntpeg
Ho us ton at Ptloen l)c
Ch1 c ago at Van c ou ver

N H L Standtng s
By Un•l ed Press lnternattonal
DIVISIOn I

w I I ph gf ga
2 0 1 5 17 10
2 2 0 4 13 12

NY ts!ndrs
Phtl a

N Y Rang er s
l 1 1
Atl a n Ia
1 2 1
DIVISIOn 1
w 1 t
51 LOUIS
2 1 1

Rio to host

Van couv er
Mmnesota

sectionals
Saturday

1 3
o J
DIVISIOn
w. I
L os Ang eles
2 0
D etro II
P1tt sburgh

15
13

pts gf ga
5 16 15

2 4 13
1 3 9

Ch tcag o
K an Ctt y

ApproXImately 142 runners
Will be parltc1patmg m the
Sectwnal Cross-Country Meet
for Class A and AA h1gh schools
at Rw Grande Saturday.
Nine Class A schools, mcludlng last year's wmner Ross
Southeastern , are entered
They are Frankfurt-Adena ,
Bloom (South Webster ),
Chesapeake, Clay, Crooksville,
Peebles, Symmes Valley, West
Union Wld Southeastern
Federal Hocking, last year's
Class A rwmer.up, has moved
Into the Class AA category.
where they JOin Ironton,
Jackson, Rock Hill, ShertdWl,
Warren and Wheelersburg .
Rock Hill placed first last year
w1th 56 points, ahead of
Shendan 's second place 57
A coaphas meeting will be
held In l,.yne Center at 10 :15 a .
m "A" rwmers will run at 11
Wld "AA" at 11:30 Trophies
will be presented 1mmed1ately
after the meet.

3 1A
3 9

13

s

0 2 11 10
0 o 6 15
3
t ph gf ga
3 7 15 10

3 l 0 6 15 13
2 00 4 114

Wash 1n g ton

1 2 1 3

Montreal

0 2 2 2 14 18

Toronto
Buffalo

Calif

B 16

Divis.on 4
w 1. t. pts gf ga
2 o 2 6 16 8
22 041716
1 2 2 4 16 22

Boston
1 2 1 3 11
Thursday's Results
Boston 4 Philadelphia 1
Wash i ngton 4 Chi cago 3
Buffa l o 6 Ca lt forn•a 1
St L ouis 3 Montreal 2
Friday's G•mes
Kansas City at A t lanta

16

Preelous Beans
Coffee was cultivated by
the Arabs who would not
allow the exportation of the
seed The ftrst coffee beans to
leave the Arab lands were
smuggled to lnd1a In 1660,
Holland rece1ved thetr first
coffee plants in the same
manner Braz1l, now famous
for grow1ng coffee beans, d1d
not acquire plants untll1727 .

INTEREST

On Celtifates
Of Deposit
s1,000 Minimum
30 Mo. Term
Ninety d•y Interest ptneftr
If
withdrawn
boforo
maturity dale

Meip Co. Bla11Ch
The ftrst prtson reform
soc1ety tn ttie Umted States to
m1tiate changes tn pnson ad·
mm1stration was tbe Ph1la·
delphia Society ror Allev1at·
mg the M1senes of Public
Pnsons, The World Almanac
notes. The soc1ety was
formed by Phlladelph1a
Quakers m 1787

_.@·
The At"•"' County

snlngl&amp; Loan Co
2f6 Second St.
Pomeroy, DIUO

INI!:WSPAPER ENTt:KPHISE ASSN I

sions."

Hot Stuff
Only 1/2,000,000,000 or the
sun's radiant energy reaches
earth. Yet m three days as
much solar energy falls on
earth as would be produced 1f
all the planet's coal, 01!, and
woori were burned at once

•

25%

·The Dlilr - - SenliMII

off

....
••

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Scotts Lawn Products
at Year-End Savings!
WAS

BOOSTER

CABLE
Snarl Proof
Reg. $4.69

985-'3301

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETRIST .

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO u, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURSJ- EA.ST COURT ST..
POMEROY.

5 96
II 21
I &lt;; 7 1

1.99
3.74
5.24

Shady Area ' " Seed
1,000 sq fl box
2,500 sq fl box

4.4 6
10 46

1.49
3.49

3 19
5 96

1.06
1.99

retailer

authorized

"•

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Turf Builder e
'.000 ' 4 ft bag
I 0 .000 sq It bag
15 .000 sq ft bag

2500 sq rt bag
5,000 sq fl bag

Chester, 0.

••

NOW SAVE

Starter fertilizer

'3.86
BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE STORE
ONLY

'[

~ ...MODERN
399 WEST MAIN ST.

SUPPLY

992-2164

POMEROY, OHIO

~~~~/lO~A~!~~~~i~~D~:~~~F ~~gt;~~LL

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4- The Datly Sen\ mel, Mtddleporl-Pomcroy, 0 , ~ nday, 0&lt;·1 18, 1!174

Falco.n s out 'to end
Miami's win string
By United Press International
Bowlmg Green State Uruverstty football coach Don Nehlen
says "Mtamtlooks like a super
football team" to htm He
won'tget much of an argument
from other coaches m the Mid-

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10 the league last year and he
has to be better lhts year "
Kent State Umverslty, which
dropped a 26-10 dectSlon to
Bowling Green Saturday ,
leaves
confere nce play
Saturday to host Utah State
State.
Utah State's only loss m lour
game was a 72-3 wallop10g at
th e hands of Oklahoma.
Utah State coach Phil Krueger IS different than most
college coaches to say the
least, and spends the game 10
the press box mstead of on the
stdehnes
Krueger ts still shell shocked
from that Oklahoma game and
says ''1f they had scored only 90
pomts they would have been

Browns'

ls!;ue settled

defense

by statement .

juiced up

more of a pass rush from our

defense lhts w~ek aga msl
Toledo "
The one th10g the Flyers
don 'l want to do IS g1ve Toledo
quarterback Gene Swtck too
much l!IDe Swtck has completed 82ol 130 passes for 942 yards
and ftve touchdowns as th e
Rockets have won lhetr last
three games and are now 3-2
However, Toledo coach Jack
Murphy ts afratd the Rockets
may be looking past Day ton to
Mtamt m a game that could
dectde the MAC champtonshtp
''Our job lhts week ts to ket&gt;p
our heads on stra tghl ," he satd.
"We barely beat Dayton a year
ago. Our kids must remember
that We want to keep our
momentum gomg a nd we can
only do that wtlh a good sohd
effort aga inst Dayton Other-

BERF:A, Oh to (UP!) - More
spectal allenllon was gtven to
the Cleveland Browns' defense
clunng today 's wor kout as
~.:oach N1rk Skon ch con tmued
lookmg for some formula to put
h1s learn back m the wm

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:;:·

RACINE _ The Seven
~- Ntghts lor Chnst Commtttees
met Monday mght to accept
::;.
;:; last mmute reports before the
Sunday
crusade to be held at the
HOMECOMING at Mormng Racme Wesleyan Unt ied
Star Church Mornmg worshtp Methodist Oct 21-27 All
at 9 30 a.m , Sunday School at commtttees reported plans
10 30, basket dmner ts 12·30 were completed
Servtces wtll begm each
p m Aftern oon songfest at l 30
mght
at 7 30 p m Three prayer
wtth Rev Larry Pobng, pastor,
m charge Everyone welcome. breakfasts wtll be held , the
HOMECOMING of Dexter ftrst, for men Oct 19 at 8 a m ,
Church of Chnst. Bible School, the second, for women , on
9 30 a. m , worshtp servtce,
10 30 a. m., basket dmner,
12.30 Afternoon servtce, 2 p
m wtth spea ker Orval Morgan,
former pas tor , special mus1c;
AITENDS FORUM
pubhc mvtted
Rachael Downie, advtsor of
MONDAY
the Metgs 4-H Pleasure Riders,
MIDDLEPORT Busmess attended the NatiOnal Leaders
and Professwnal Women's Forum at the Natwnal 4-H
Club, 6 30 p. m at the Metgs Center m Washmgton, D C,
Inn wtth Mary Powell, Oct. 6 to 12 Over 200 advtsors
cosme tology teacher at Metgs attended from all over the
Htgh School, as the speaker. Umted States Forty-five of the
MIDDLEPORT Elementary 200 were Ohto 4-H club adPTA, 7.30 p. m at the school vtsors The forum mcluded
Program wtll feature th e tours, speakers, and datly tdea
Teachers Corps. Rev. Donald sharmg sesswns Sponsormg
Cole, Mtddleport Church of the the trtp was the Metgs County
Nazarene, wtll gtve devotions. 4-H Ad vtsory Commt ttee

of the govemor r Calendar~:'
Metgs County Audtlor J•mes
F. Roush today released a self
explanatory letter from Gov
John J Gtlhgan
Rou sh sa td that mtsmformatwn has been gtven the

public 1n co nn ec ti on w1th

Primaries
have party

Wednesday,. Oct. 23 at 8.45
a m and thtrd! lor men and
women, Saturday, Oct 26 at a
a m Teenagers and youth are
also mvtted to attend
There wtll also be a Christ1an
wttnessmg workshop Tuesday
lhrough Frtday, Oct. 22-25,
from 10 to 11 a.m.
' Sunday School teachers and
!hose on shtft work at ntght
espectally may attend these
meelmgs. Youth ntght wtll be
Wednesday, and there Will be
spectal mustc each night The
Semor Ct!t;oens Chotr wtll stng
Fnday mght. The pubbc ts
mvtted to ail servtces Rev
Howard Shively is pastor

Hoosiers believe upset

Group II
has meeting

FLOWERS

MINERSVILLE - Mrs. Olan I
Genheimer entertatned the
United Methodtst Women of the
Forst Run Umted Methodtst
Chllfch at her home Tuesday
evening. The meetmg opened
wtth the song, "My Jesus I
Love Thee" followed by the
Lord's Prayer by the group
Mrs. Harry Wyatt was
devotwnal leader, her !optc
bemg "Love Your Enemies. "
Mrs . Wyatt closed the
devottons wtth prayer.
Mrs. Edtth S1sson, program
chairwoman, chose the
"Emergmg Ltfe Styles of

•

992-2039

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the new Caravelle®
w
h
0 ig itaI ate
by BuIova

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ISears I JftJRg:

FULL COLOR PORTRAIT

8 X 10 °~ 99C N•c:;,:~""'

Middleport, 0.

PLANS
FINAliZED
·FOR NEW CHURCH COMPLEX

YOUR

two new arenas

Utah has done the most in the
way of player~hanges . The
utes have added centers

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Now

$398

Yd.

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Table Decorations
Center Pieces. Favors.
NapkJns. Cards Etc.

MII)QLEPORT

Mil St.

·,

~K STORE
_ Middleport,

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Remember Your Favor•te G1rl On - -

••

SWEETEST DAY

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OCTOBER 19TH
With A Beautiful Cut Crystal

VASE OF FLOWERS
AND POUND BOX OF

WHITMAN CANDY
FOR ONLY

*1000

'
Dudley's Florist

59 N. Si!cond St.

Middleport,

o.

CHESTER PTA Jttney
Supper and Halloween carmval
at Chester Elementary School
Servmg at 5 p m. carmval at 7
p.m. Wtde vartety of food to be
offered.
SQUARE DANCE at Shade
School from 9 p.m to 12
nudmght MUSIC by Frog Stack
and The Greenhorns Sponsored by Shade PTA.
FALL Fesltval at Portland
School at 6 30 p m Prtzes for
costummg
Free
en
terta10ment. Games and door
pnzes. Refreshments wtll be
sold Sponsored by PTO
CHICKEN DINNER at Sl
Paul's United Methodt st
Church annex, 4 to 7 p m ;
complete dmners.
SUNDAY
RACINE Band Boosters
Road Rally at the school
beginnmg at 4:30 p.m For
mformatlon call 949-2789.
REVIVAL, 7 30 each evenmg
through Sunday at the Racme
Apostolic Church wtth Elder
Daymond Adams, Martella,
speaking .
GUEST preacher at Grace
Eptscopal Church at 10:30a m.
wtll be Rev. James Trapp,
newly appoillted youth offtcer
for the Episcopal Church m the
Dwcese of Southern Ohto
Youth of the partsh beginnmg
at juntor htgh level and youth
lea&lt;lers wtll meet personally
w1th Rev Trapp durmg a
luncheon at 12 noon following
the church service and coffee
hour
REVIVAL now tn progress at
Rutland Community Church
through Sunday. Serv1ces are
7:30 p.m Evangeltst 1s Rev.
Russell Harper , Fremont
Brother Eugene Roush Is
pastor. The public ts mvlted to
attend. ·
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STEAMBOAT INN

HEADOUARTE

''FAMILY DINING AT ITS BEST"

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SUNDAY MENU

ftl\~\t)l\\\\t
~,,\.\~~~lS
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FOR

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Members of the Meigs
~~ County Juntor Leader Club
meeting Oct. 9 at the Columbus
and Southern Ohto Electrtc
I Company m Middleport jolroed
I m a "shoe mixer " to open the
meehng. A recruttment
I hayride was scheduled Nov 9.
I Commtttees formed were,
I Refreshment, Lester Jeffers,
Virgmta Jordan, Janel Maue
and Marco Jeffers; Invitation,
Mary Mora, Tammy Pitzer,
Tammy Fitch, Rachel Hunter,
Debbte Windon, Mandte Rose,
and Niese! Duvall; Recreatwn,
Glen Kemedy, Carl Gheen,
Pam Holcomb, Beverly
1 Bishop, and Randy Keller.
I Refreshments were served by
Martha Gullkey and Patty
~ Kelly, advisors

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II have shoe mixer

KNITS
ON SALE

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ALSO 1 TABLE
QUALITY

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ON SALE

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Quasar

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Prep whiz Malone opening
for Utah Stars in New York

l

60" Reg. $4.98

l.l

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by "Heller"

SATURDAY
MEN'S PRAYER breakfast,
8 a. m. at Racme Wesleyan
United Methodtst Church to
kickoff the Seven Ntghts lor
Christ Crusade, Oct. 21-27

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Proposed building to be built soon for Auditorium and Educational
uses. Why .not visit our going and growing Church this week .
Sunday School 10:00 a.m., Morning Servlce 11:00 a.m., Evening
Service 7:30p.m., Wednesday Service 7:30p.m. ,

MEATS

VE GETABL
hn

"'

BAKER FURNITURE

SALADS

DESSERTS
J

'

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ES

CHEF SALAD (TOSSED)
COLE SLAW
COTTAGE CHEESE
7 UP SALAD
BAKED STEAK
DINNER HAM
ROAST BEEF
FLOUNDER FISH
GREEN BEANS
MACARONI &amp; CHEESE
NOODLES
POTATOES (SWEET MASHEDI
PIE (HOMEMADEI
ICE CREAM (CHERRY, VAN., CHOC.)
FRUIT

.PH. 949-3551

Charlene

Announcement of several new appomtments were made

durmg the Wednesday meeting of the Btg Bend Netghborhood
servtce un1t olthe Black Dtamond Gtrl Scout Connell.
Mrs Isabelle Foster, fteld dtrector and Mrs Pal Thoma,
servtce umt dtrector, met wtth leaders, asststanl leaders, and
other volunteers m scoulmg Wednesday at the Columbus and
Southern OhiO Electric Co.
Announced were the appoinlments of Mrs Donna Ohlinger,
camp consultant; Mrs Suste Soulsby, supply director, Mrs.
Max10e Hart, radio and televtslDn ; Mrs Charlene Hoefhch,
publtctty dll'ector , Mrs. Murl Johnson, Rutland school advtsor,
Mrs Johnson and daughter, Mona Johnson, delegates to the
Black Diamond Counctl, wtth Mrs Hart as alternate.
Appomted as scout adVISOrs lor the Middleport Elementary
School were Mrs Arnold Snowden and Mrs. Vtckt Houchms; for
the Bradbury School, Mrs Jane Hess and Mrs Pat Ktlchen, and
lor the Pomeroy School, Mrs Ehzabeth Lane
POMEROY BROWNIE TROOP 76
A get-acquamted session lor the second and third grade
Brownies at the Pomeroy Elementary School was held Tuesday
from 3 to 4 p.m. m the audttormm The chtldren enjoyed games
and had a smg-a-long
Mrs . Gertrude Casto ts the troop leader wtth Mrs. Suste
Long, Mrs Pal Thoma, Mrs Ehzabeth Lane,Mrs Patty Michael
and Mrs Carolyn Reeves makmg up the troop comnuttee
Chtldren m the troop are Jaye Roberts, Tammy Capehart,
Shawnee Salser, Debra Werry, Anna Sisson, Debra Bormg,
Rhoda Prtce, Crystal Lane, Suste Thoma , Ltsa Baxter, Kim
Ebhn, Patty Neutzlmg, Judy Prtce, Carolyn Casto, Robill Venoy,
Cathy Delong, Ann Reece, Lon Pullins, Dtxle Eblm, and Trma
Reeves.
RUTLAND JUNIOR TROOP 129Z
Ofltcers elected for the Rutland jumor troop at a recent
meetmg were Tammt Haley, scrtbe; Teresa Fetty, treasurer,
and Mary Smtih and Debbte MorriSOn, patrol leaders The troop
meets in the old Rutland gymnast om from 4 to 5 p m , Tuesdays
RUTLAND BROWNIES 1293
Mrs. Jacob Johnson ts the leader of the newly orgaruzed
Rutland Browme Troop. At the Tuesday after-school meetmg, 25
Browmes attended a get.,.cqua10ted party wtth games and
refreshments The gtrls learned the Browme Promtse and some
scout songs They wtll present these at a program of the Metgs
County Women's Fellowshtp next Thursday mght. Membershtp
10 the troop is stlll open, Mrs Johnson reports.
SALISBURY TROOP 100
Flower bulbs were planted in a plantmg area at the SaliSbury
Elementary School Thursday by members of Gtrl Scout Troop
100. Addttional bulbs will be put out at the meeting next week.
Carol Moms prestded at the meet,ng whtch opened wtth the
pledge to the flag and the Gtrl Scout Promtse Reports were
gtven by Gma Welker, the scnbe, and CamtUe Swmdell, the
treasurer

ChriSimas plans were diScussed and the scouts will make
gifts fo r thetr mothers, and wtll also make ChriStmas tree ornaments Refreshments were served and games were played
At last week 's meeting the Sahsbury Juntor Troop played a
baseball game wtth the Middleport Jumor Troop 39 at the Middleport Communtty Park It was reported that the Salisbury
ream wen. 35 tn ?Jl

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Polly 's Pointers
By Polly Cramer

Rubbed smudge
won 't go away
DEAR POLLY - Thank you so much for the help you gtve us
wtth our problems Now I would appreCiate knowmg how to
remove a smudge from my lovely drum top table. I spilled nat!
polish on Its htghly pohshed and waxed surface, unmediately
wiped tt off wtth tiSSue and sponged 11 wtth cold water but was left
with a smudge How can I remove 11 and restore the ortgmal
luster to the table top' - MRS. L K.

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the philoSophy of Ohro 's Future
Hom emak ers of Ame rJ ca
1FHA 1 as they embark on a
fund-nu~mg
proJec t for

Clul&lt;Jren's Hosprtal lor the
fotU""t h stra1ght year

FHA chapters an d affthaled
ft ome Eeo nom tcs Related
Occupalrons 1HF.RO ) chapters
1n htgh schools throughout the
sta te have selected th e
Hosp1taJ's 'Penny

ProJect '~

the tr

chantable

only

as

moneymaking campaign ror
the 1974-75 school year

prev1ous years was the result
of lhe "concern and a wareness

of FHA members throughout
the stale lor the he•lth care
needs of the thousands of
youngsters who are se rved hy

Chtldren's Hospttal "
He sh eo)sed the Importan ce

or

actJVitle!i hke the ''Pen ny

Project" 1n 'helpmg FilA
members
to
become
tomorrow' s
homema kers,
parent s Hnd commumty
leaders
Myers, who W3 S recently
made un hono r ary FHA

member, sa1d an effor t wtll be
They
be calhng on fellow made by the I'HA orgamzat(on
.students to donate a penny for to gatn the parttctpahon of
eac h year of age , pound or chapters m schools wh1ch have

"'II

we1gh t, mch of wa ts thnc, 01
other ur11t of measure For

exa mpl e,

an

11-year-o ld

studen t could give 11 cents, or,

1! wetght ts the standard, 98
cents 1! he wetghs 98 pounds
Durmg the ftrsl three years
of the "Penny ProJect," FHA
chapters earned more than
$22,000 lor Chtldren's Hospttal
Norman Myers, assoc1ate
director of development fo r the
hospital, satd he was "very
pleased that the FHA has
dectded to take on Chtldren's
•s tls sole prOJect lor the
year''

Myers sa td the "remarkable
su cceSs'~ of the program m 1ts

the1r care

Sm~e

Chtldren's Hosprtal opened :m
1894, no youn gster has ever
been turned away because :Or
mab thty to pay for treatment
Durmg 1973, chtldren from 'l!6
of Ohro's 88 ooun hes recetvW
care at Chtldren 's Hosptlal
Nearly 175,000 palrents were
trea ted and those whose
parents were not able to meet

the cost were provtded nearly
$1 3 mtlhon m care
A total of 1,045,000 chtldren
have ret:e1ved treatment at the
hospttal smce 1967, wt!h $7 2

mtlhon provtded smce that
ttme for those who were Wlable

to pay

not previously partiCipated m

Mrs. Sauer gives review
Phil Swl nrl ell

" Altve - Andes Survtvors ",
descnbed as the survlal story
of the century, was revtewed
by Mrs Harold Sauer at the
Wednesday mght meeltng of
the Middleport Ltterary Club
held at the home of Mrs Nan
Moore
In her rev1ew, Mrs. Sauer
told of how the 16 out of 45
survtved m the Andes after
their plane crashed whtle
enroute from Uruguay to Chth,

and of lhe1r dec tston to use the
bodtes of lhetr dead compamons for food when laced
wtth starvalton The 16 were
rescued after 70 days on the
moun tam whtch was 12,000 feet
htgh,
The second book revtewed
was " To Ra ce the Wmd ", the

hfe story of Harold Krents
Mrs . Bernard Fultz gave
Krents' hwnorous account

or

how he learned to cope wtth hts
bhndness and the resultant
loneliness, hwnthahon, rears

and lrustraltons whtch he
laced as a chtld A cum laude
graduate of Harvard Law
School, Krents' hfe was the
msptralton for the Broadway

Auxiliary
has meet

h1t, " Butterfhes are Free",

Mrs Mary Marhn entertamed the Past Presidents
of the Amertcan Legw n
Amultary, Drew Webster Post
39, Wednesday ntght Mrs
Pearl Knapp was co-hostess
Mrs Veda Davts opened the
meelmg wJth the Lord 's
Prayer bemg gtven m unison
followed by stlent prayer and
the pledge For devotions, Mrs
Faye Wtldermuth gave Helen
Stemer Rtce's "So Swtfl the
Way, So Short the Day".
Sympathy cards were sent to
Mrs. Grace Pratt, a get-well
card to Mrs Gladys Mowery,
and a btrthday card to a
veteran at the Arcadta Rest
Home. A Halloween theme was
carried out m the decoralwns
of the Martin home Freddte
Houdashelt was a guest, and
others at the meetmg were
Mrs Rhoda Hackett, Mrs Iva
Powell, Mrs Edtth Sauer and
Mrs J~sste Houdashelt

Mrs. F ultz reported
Mrs Sauer prestded at the
meebng and accepted with
regret was the restgnallon
from membershtp of Mrs
James Euler. Candy was
served by the hostess

Area Representat ive

•

POOR HEARING
causes man v per son s to
- Shun public meet1ngs It
churc h
- Avo1d full part1C 1pat10n m
family gathenngs
,
- F ee l unsure of lh em se lvu
'
Does your loss or heanng
l 1ml l an d embarass you-?
Why not tel Diles Hear1ng
A 1d Cen ter s help you? Afte r
thorough testi ng and ap
propr , ate med1cal or c lin1c8l
referra l , you ca n purchase a
n ew hea r•no a1d for less th an
SlS 00 per mon th th rough
regular
bank f lnancmg
plans Ca ll t h e off 1ce nearest
you to r an appomtmen t m
e1 ther your home or one of
our off Ices

DILES
Hearing Aid Centers
Athens

444 w. Union St
Parkersburg , W Va
I 029 Market 51

Chollrcolhe
249 5 Parnl St.

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FALL FABRICS
EXCELLENT SELECTION

THE FABRIC SHOP

~269

EVANGELIST JOSEPH HOSKINS
CONGREGAtiONAL SINGIN~
EVERY.ONE WELCOME

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the proJect Approxtmalely 200
chapters collected more than
$9,400 for Ouldren's Hospttal
durtng the 1973 campatgn
Ideas for other lund-ralSlng
proJects wtll be provtded by the
Ho sp tta l 's develo pm ent
department to FHA and HERO
chapters whtch choose not to
par h c1 pate 1n the " Penny
Project" but winch wtsh to
support Chtldren's Hosptlal
Money ratsed through the
"Penny PrOJect" goes to the
Hosptlal 's Pahent A1d Fund to
help pay the medtcal expenses
of children whose parents' are
tmable to P"Y part or all of the

C!OME AND HIOAR
HIE GOSPEL MESSAGE PRESENTED
IN ITS SIMPLICITY BY

RACINE, OHIO

cost of

DEAR POlLY - My Pet Peeve IS wtth men's work boots
that have only a thm ptece of matertal covermg the steelm the
Start Christmas
toes. When that cloth wears away socks rub the steel and conIN HOSPITAL
tmually make holes which mean constant darnmg - PAT
Sewing Now!
P
R
Randolph.
wtdely
DEAR POlLY - Ltke Mrs C B S I was once an urnmWhen you sew If yourself,
portant cash customer m stores where I shopped all the !!IDe. I known Reedsville restdent, Is a
you
save up to one-half.
had to estabhsh credit EVERY tune I made a btg purchase that I medical patient at the St
Start now for the holidays
planned to pay for m 60 or 90 days. I finally got smart and Joseph Hospttal in Parkersburg . Cards may be sent to
established charge accounts at the big stores that offer them
APPROVED SINGER DEALER
room
208
Now I buy what I need and charge 11. When the bill comes I pay m
full (to avotd finance charges) so I am still a cash customer in
my own mind plus a values charge customer and my credtt
The ftrsl ed1llon of the Enratmg Is exceDent. Of course, thiS can only work if you keep m cyclopaedia Brttanmca was
mind that you are going to pay m full when the bill comes and are pubhshed m 1771, 111 Edm·
115 W. Second
992-2284
Pomeroy
careful not to over-&lt;~pend just because you have a charge card It burgh The thtstle, nattonal
Me
Calls
&amp;
Simplicily
Patterns
flower of Scotland, remams
also keeps aU but pm money m a checking account and one wrttes
the
emblem of that pubhca- ~&gt;G&gt;G&gt;-&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;G&gt;G&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;-&lt;:&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;=--&lt;::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;&gt;...:::&gt;O
as few checks as possible. - MRS. F .A.L
!ton, honormg its origins
DEAR POlLY - Oour ohildren put !herr stereo eqwpment
m an area in the recreation room that the' former owners had
used as a closet and they wanted a bead curiam to cover the
openillg. After pricmg beads !bey found thetr budgets could not
stand the cost so they coUected small medlcme vtals from
everyone they knew and drllled a hole m tbe bottom of each one.
The plasttc vtals were then painted', elft clear or had designs put
on them Salvaged yam was then strung through each vtal and
knots made along the length to hold them in place. These turned
out to be very charming "bead" curtams as the vtals were
carefully alternated according to sizes and lengths and .
staggered on the vartous lengths of yarn - 'MARY ANN.
You will receive a dollar U PoUy uses your favorite homemaking ldea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution lo a
problem. Write Polly In care of thls newspaper.

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1'

'Pen mes

rnc~ke dollars " contmues to be

EACH EVENING AT ~30

SUNDAY,, Ocr. 20

3RD ST.

CO LUM BUS -

J.
§~

Gospel Meeting
Success
Church of Christ
October 20-25

SERVED UNTIL 2 PM

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

State FHA starts project

Girl Scout I
Diary By Hoefl~h !

I Social I
ICalendar II
FRIDAY
" I HAVE a Date" wtll be
presented by Rev. Frank Snare
at Rac me Ftrst Bapllsl
Church, 7 30 p.m., wt!h spcctal
music by the Manuel Trio
DANCE IN gym followmg
Southern football game. Mus• c
by "Zerpha", lOp m unltl! a.
m , sponsored by Southern
S4)mor Class.

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There were 22 stck and shut'" calls made by the group the
past month A get-well card
was s1gned by all lor Mrs
Ltlhan Henderson, a member,
who has been til. The bazaar
Nov. 15 and 16 was announced
The treasurer's report was
read and the meetmg adJOurned
Three members of the
soctety had October btrlhdays
and Mrs . Alfred Yeauger
baked the birthday cake and
tce cream was lurmshed by
Mrs Olan Genehimer and Mrs
Erma Roush , to Mrs Edtson
Hollon, Mrs. Hanson Holter,
Mrs Denver Holter, Mrs
Vernon Nease, Mrs. Uswin
Nease, Mrs. Kerns Rbush , Mrs.
Fred Nease, Mrs Henry
Salser, Mrs. John Scott, Mrs
Edtlh Stsson, Mrs Ru ss
Watson, Mrs. Harry Wyatt,
Mrs Richard Jarv1s, Mrs
Alfred Yeauger and one guest,
Mrs Clell Woods
: c~e : o: : ~ "~.::::~:-:·:· ·:;~

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women m

''Freedom Is''

I
II junior leaders

KNITS

or

(

rehgwn, mthtary, pohllcs and
other em ployment wel'c
discussed by the group The
program concludetl wtlh
prayer by the leader Mrs
Kerns Roush had the "spectal"
for the program ttlled

Arrangements were made to
purchase blankets for the
Lutheran World Relief Plans
were 'Completed for making
handmade symbobc Christmas
ornaments to-decorate the tree
1n the sanctuary.
For the devotional part of the
program, members gave
selected inspirational readmgs
and members parltctpated m
group dtscusston . Pastor
William Mtddleswarth was not
present to conduct the Btble
study due to other comnutrnents. The readings were
"Lesson m the Orchard" by
Mrs Eichinger ; 11 Broken
Heart," " A New Wmdow m the
World" and "My Bible and I"
by Mrs. Blaettnar, "Each m
His Own Tongue" by Helen
Holt who also read "To a
Waterfowl," and a reading
from " Portals of Prayer" of
one of St. Paul's letters to the
church m Cormth and his
admonition to the church
members by Mrs. Helen
Dtener
Others attendmg the meeting
were Mrs. Frances Warner,
Mrs Wilma Mees, Mrs Lilhan
Moore, Mtss Erna Jesse, Mrs.
Lots CleUand and Mrs. Jean
Braun

f-MENswEiil

:*
j,

WERNER
Radio &amp; T.V.

A Christmas bazaar wtll be
held Nov. 21 at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church feUowshtp
hall, Pomeroy, and plans were
completed at a recent meetmg
of the American Lutheran
Church Women at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davts
Mrs. Margaret Balettnar ts
chairwoman for the bazaar and
named committees mcludmg
Mrs. Davts, kitchen; Mrs
Rachel Dowme, sweet shop;
Mrs. Eva Schre~ber , sewmg;
Mrs. Judy Eichinger and Mrs
Barbara Fry, dmmg room.
Homemade soup, sandwtches
and dessert will be served
through the lunch and dmner
hours with the servmg to begm
at 10 a.m
It was announced that St
Paul's Church wtll be host for
the World Communtty Day
observance of Church Women
Umted of Meigs County
Frtday, Nov. I, at 2 p m The
ALCW members have been
asked to provide cookies for the
refreshments

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rhangmg role

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Birthday
observed

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Women" from the program
book "A Call to the Churches."
The purpose was to use the
n ches recetved from God so
that poten hal lor a fuller ltfe
ca n be rea lized a nd to
recogmze and understand the
variety of emergmg life styles
of women and the resultmg
IIDpact upon soctety. Vtgnettes
of Btbhcal women who have
mfluenced htstory were
presented by vanous members
of the group The senpture,
taken from Proverbs 31, was
read by Mrs. Russ Watson
Dtllerenl aspec ts of the

Group plans bazaar

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I tochDangleGtoiTROn
'j_.l,

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UM women have meeting

meet

abo hshm g ce rtam elected
American
con f e r e n ce,
offices and lurnmg them mto
espectally Oh10 Umverstty's
appomhve potnts
column
Btll Hess
Roush observed that the
Tile Rrowns, who have lost
Mtamt, unbeate n tn l7
three m a row and are 1-4 on tim letter lays to rest the questton
games, hosts the Falcons m the
season so far, stayed ahve tn of combining of county offices
top game m the MAC Saturday
last Sunday's game agamst and brmgs the facts concermng
and Nehlen may be nght when
Cmcmnall unlll the Defense the total stluahon to the pubhc
he says "they don 't appear to
The letter stressed
co llap sed and allowed th e
have any weaknesses "
"In the past several seeks,
Bengals to Ulke It 34-24
Mtamt, the delendmg MAC
th
ere have been some
Both the delenstve hne and
champwn , clubbed OU 31-J last
the secondary went through published reports that have
week and Hess stzed the
mtsrepresented my post !tOn on
extra drtlls Thursday
Redskins up thts way
The defense, unhke the of- th e recommendatwn that
For All Decisions
"Mtarm has a better offense, has not been htl by certam county elected offtces
fensive team last year and kind "
We Wire Flowers
stgmlicant tnjurtes Three ol- be abohshed or turned mto
Everywhere
thetr defense ts as good."
James, whose Golden
lenstve players are expected to appomhve offices I'd hke to
He may be understat10g the Flashes were ptcked to wm the
mtss Sunday 's game m Pitts- take thts opportumty to correct
case lor the defense somewhat MAC, says Kent State ISO 't
burgh They are wtde recetvers any false tmpresston these
as Mtamt leads the na twn 10 about to roll over and play dead Wise we'll get beat "
Steve
Holden and Jubtlee reports may have Jell
In other games
scor10g defense, allowing only for anybody desptte loSing two
" I a m opposed to the
Dunbar
and guard Chuck
Morehead State •s at Oh10
20 po10ts m ftve games
Pomeroy Flower Sh9p
of tts last three games
Hutchmson
propostbon
that any elected
Urnversity, Youngstown SUite
So Nehlen, whose Falcons
"We're goillg to go out and at Ball State, Cmcmatl at
Hutclunson rested a gram co unty olftce - a ud1 tor ,
Mrs. Mrtlard Van Meter ·
are 2-1 m the MAC and one of play every game one at a !!IDe
Ph. 992 2030
Ph . 992-57"1
pull
unhl
the
Oakland
game
treasurer,
eng
meer
or
the league's surprtse teams with as much determination Wtch tta Stale, Fatrmont Stale two weeks ago, then went tn recorder - be made an apafter bemg ptcked for the and enthusiasm as we can,' ' he at Ashland, Deftance at Bluff- and re-mJUred tl. He had pomtive olltce I beheve that
cellar, knows what he's gettmg satd "We're gomg out to ton, Joh n Carroll at Case replaced second-yea r man any such proposal seeks to take
Westtern and Federal City
r...::::''W-"'"''~ ~4·:; &amp;;:;.;:;&amp;.&lt;g&lt;·~:·::::=:::::::::::~~&lt;:~:?;&lt;~
mto at Oxford Saturday
wm "
Pete Adams , whom the away from the people the
(DC.)
at
Central
State.
"Miamt looks hke a super
The Umventy of Dayton wtll
Also , Hanover at Fmdlay, coaches hope to use Sunday power to choose thetr own
football team to me," satd host Toledo m a Homecomtmg
smce his wrenched knee 1s on leaders, Ill VIOla tion Of
Nehlen . "They don 't appear to ga me Saturday and Flyer Htram at Thtel, Manchester the mend
everythmg I have stood lor 111
have any weaknesses Thetr coach Ron Marcuuak has one lnd at Wilmm gton, Baldwm"The
most
frustratmg
thmg
my pohltcal career
w
Wallace at
Hetdelberg,
offensive line IS as btg as Kent btg problem.
1
s
that
I
pracllced
for
two
"The
recommendahon
that
Wooster
at
Manetta,
and much more expertenced.
~estern Kentucky defeated
Muskingum
at
Otterbem
, weeks With no pam, ' Hutchm- lhese offt ces be changed or ' Teachers of the prtmary ij
':No one has solved thetr the Flyers 32-15 Saturday and
son said. " It wasn 't even sore
abohshed came from the Local
departmof
ent the
or the
defense because the offense the Dayton secondary gave up Cap1tal at Mount Umon, Then I got out and hurt tl all Government Services Com- School
Mtddleport ..•. .'
Wtttenberg
at
Denrnson,
Oh10
controls the football and the 281 yards passmg and three
Wesleyan a t Wash in gton over aga m I'm convmced it nussuin, whtch I appomted Church of Chrtst entertamed i&lt;
game," Nehlen s&amp;d "Their touchdowns through the atr
Universtty, Kenyon '\l Oberhn was stttmg around and getlmg But the fact that the Com- Fnday mghlwtth a ptzza party .
nuddle guard, Brad Cousmo,
"We gave Western too much and Ohto Northern at Westmm- cold after warmmg up that dtd mtssto n made the r ecom- lor the children enrolled.
was the best defenstve player ltme to throw the ball," satd
lt
mendahon does not change my
ster
Hoslmg the affair were Mrs ~-_;i
Marcmtak " We'D have to get
"It 's a depress10g thmg, own position m opposition to Nora Rtce, Mrs Kathry Erwm, ..
commg to pracllce every day, these changes "
Mrs Betty McKmley, Mrs. j}
gettmg treatment, watchmg
Phylhs Baker, Mrs . Lorraine &gt;~
;,
ftlms, but not be10g able to
Neff, Mrs Dorothy Roach and "'
Neve r m~nd whal the b1g and
pJ ay," he sa id "Thmgs can 't
Mrs. Debbte Gerlach Con- i::
little hands have to say
be bad forever, though There
The Caravetle D1g1tron watch •
trtbutmg lor the party were .·-~_i,.· _l
COLUMBUS (UP!) - There team m the country than Ohio
has
to be a turn lor the better
says 11all w1th the greatest
even head the hst before his
Mrs Jane Hess and Mrs Bea- .
will be two wmnmg streaks on State, but somebody is gomg to Jumor season Is over
of ease And that's how you
somet tme ''
tnce Stewart, and attendmg :;::
the line Saturday when the top- beat them -&lt;Inbody IS lnVInCl·
read 11 The clearly ev1d en t
Gnffm has a total of 3,175
besides the children were ;:::
ranked Buckeyes of Ohio State ble, " Corso predicts,.
....
t1m
e panels tell the hour,
yards rushmg m just two and
Joyce Glaze and Mike Gerlach ·:·:
entertam netghboring Btg Ten
m1nute
and second at a
"There ts only one ballm the one-half !easons Ohs Arm:
The seventh btrthday anChtldren at the party were
gla
nce
W1th 17 rewel
rtval Indiana Umversity.
game and they can't gtve us all
ntversary of Darm Roach was Jenmfer McKinley, Matthew ~j
prec1s1on And 1t's a watch
The Buckeyes have reeled off those guys at one !!IDe," he strong of Purdue holds the allobserved Saturday wtlh a Baker, Tara Gerlach, Aaron ;;:
worth look1ng at w1th
five consecutive vtctortes this adds. " If they have a weak- time record Wlth 3,315 yards,
...
party at the home of hts Sheets, Jared Sheets, Kathy :~
shield -s haped case
but
wtth
670
carries
compared
season with relattve ease. ness, we 'll explott 11.
parents, Mr and Mrs Carl Thomas, Kelly Neff, Patty :·:·
sta1n less steel l1nk
to Grtffin's 511
~~
lndtana, however, perhaps just
ba nd and handsome
Sl!ll doubtful starters for
Roach
,
Wn
ght
St
Games
were
Also still ahead of Griffin ts
Mrs Ruth Zavttz, Mrs Faye
Ward, Amy Erwin, Scott ~-::
began a Willnmg streak of its Ohto State are outstandillg
me
tall iC bl ue d1al Go
played wtth prtzes gomg to
modern; wea r a
own last Saturday wtth a 34-3 defensiVe tackle Pete Custck Wtsconsm's Alan Ameche wtlh Wallace and Mrs Dorothy Beth Wolfe, Usa Baxter, Brett McKmley, Aaron Wolfe, Dann
3,212 yards m 673 c1 rrtes
Morns were appomted to the
Roach, Shawn Baker, Danny ::;:
Ca ravelle D1g1tron
crusher over Minnesota
and cornerback Ttm Fox .
Korn and Parker Long
Griffin
also
has
16
consecunommatmg
commtltee
at
the
and
keep up w1th
Thomas,
Allen
Spauldmg
,
The Hoosiers had lost 11 Defensive coordinator George
Others attendmg were Lee Cheryl Riffle, Cindy Rtlfle, =~
the
changing
t1mes
llve
games
of
100
yards
or
Tuesday
mght
meetmg
of
straight games pnor to the Hill wtll go with sophomore
Powell, Brent and Bnan Korn , TDimmy MRtller, BMeth Wo!Arfe,
$45 00
more
rushmg
and
ts
only
one
Group
II
Mtddleport
Ftrst
victory over Millnesota, but Ntck Buonamtcl if Custck •sn 'l
Todd Adams, Steve Tracy,
ame 0e eece, e1an 1e
- ,.,
head coach Lee Corso thmks ready and Doug Plank would shy of the NCAA record of 17 Umted Presbytenan Church, Darm Wolfe, Scott McKinley,
set
by
Steve
Owens
of
at
the
home
of
Mrs
Wallace
nold,
John
Arnold
and
Terrt
~:~
hiS team has a solid chance start in place of Fox.
Laura McCullough , Patty Sprouse
Oklahoman
.
Included
111 GrtfThe
comm
tltee
wtll
present
a
against Ohio State, despite the
The Buckeyes' star runrung
Ward, Dantelle Reece , Usa
Buckeyes' near flawless back, Hetsman Trophy candi- fin 's 16 strrught, however, is sla le of office rs a t the Baxt&lt;:r, Trey Glaze, Cmdy
performance in a 52-7 wm over date Archte Griffin, is closing last January 's Rose Bowl November meehng
TOPS MEETS
game, which ts not counted m
Plans were completed for Soulsby, Stephanie and Sam
Wlsconsm last Saturday.
in on the Big Ten aU-t!IDe NCAA records.
Nov.
5was
set as hobby mght
,'
servmg a dmner at the diStrtct Letlheit, Chrts- Shank, Chns
"There can't be a better career riiShing record and may
Use
Our
Christmas
Lay
Away
Plan!
wtth
Freda
Davts
to
have
Kennedy,
Brtan
Houdashelt,
meetmg of Church Women
::::
Untied Wednesday at the Carma, Tracy , Eugenia, and charge of the program when
Mtddleport Ftrst Umted Ronme Mtller Also at the the TOPS Club met Tuesday
party were Darin's brother, mght at the Amertcan Legion
Presbytertan Church Mrs
Jean Moore, c ha~rwoman, Raymond, hts grandmothers, hall m Mtddleport Queen lor ~
reported on her lnp wtth Mrs Gertrude Miller and Mrs. the week was Mrs. Helen Hill
Church Women Untied to Marte Frances, and Mr and wt!h Mrs. Phyllis McMtlhon as
runner-up Seventeen memMemphts, Tenn , last week Mrs Ronald Mtller.
By United Press IDternatlooal pubhclzed rookie since Julius
bers
attended. Co-leader Helen
Theme of the meeting was "A
Moses Malone, the most Ervmg, will be the center of Randy Denton and J!ID Eakms, Journey to Wholeness "
Spears read devotins followmg
acqmred forwards Bobby
the TOPS pledge and song.
attracl!on tomght when the Warren, Johnny Neumam and
Devoltons by Mrs. Moore
:D¥ .
American Basketball Assocta- Rick Mount and guards Walt were taken from "Good News
llon opens llS eighth season
Jones, Larry MiUer, AI Smtih lor Modern Man " Nme chased the Virgmta Squtres
Portable
Malone, a 6-foot-11 center and rookte Clyde Dickey The members attended.
from Earl Foreman; superwho ts comillg to the pros rtght only returnees ate forwards
Color TV
market magnate James Collier
out of high school, will be m Wtlbe Wtse, Gerald Govan and
bought out Bill Damels to take
umform for the defendtng Bruce Seals and guard Ron
over
the ownershtp of Utah;
·
· OCTOBER 19
Western Dlvtswn champion Boone Wise and Boone were
MacKinnon
at
St
Louts
and
and
the
St. Lollis franchise ts
Utah Stars when they meet the Utah's top two scorers last
Alex Groza, general manager now held by four New Yorkers
ABA champton New York Nets season.
of
San Diego, who ts actmg as headed by Ozzie and Dan Silna.
at Umondale, N.Y., m one of
Gone are center Zelmo temporary Q'~ coach in place
Top rookies in the leagne are
four opening season games.
Beaty, who jumped to the NBA of the rettred Wtlt Cham- St. LoUis ' Marvtn Barnes,
San Antomo, the most suc- Los Angeles Lakers, and AIIMaurtce Lucas, Gus Gerard
cessful team in preseason play ABA guard Jimmy Jones, who berlain.
e Age Ltmtt 12 and U'Zor Semor Ctllzens
and
James "Fly" Williams;
Teams
wtth
new
mcknames
e Addrtronal Children (under 121 m Famrty $1 99
wtth an 11-ll record, meets In- ts a holdout
are the Sptrits of st Louts, who Bobby Jones, Donald Washmgor 2 Children Posed Together
$2 49
diana ill Indianapolis, MemThe stars also have a new wer~ the Carolina Cougars last ton and Jan van Breda Kolff at
• Modular Solid Sta le
e Addrtoonal Pnnts .and Reorders Available
phiS
plays
at
st.
Louis
and
Chass1s (except 4 chass•s
coach ill Bucky Buckwplter,
at Reasonable Pnr('S
Denver ; Len Elmore and BiUy
Kentucky hosts Denver in the who comes from the Seattle season, the Memphis Soundstu bes )
Choose From F1mshed Portrait Not Proofs
formerly Tams and the Denver Knight at Indtana , David
other ftrst night games.
• Rep laceab le plug -m
organization. Buckwalter re- Nuggets,
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Yo~r Monev Back
Vaughn,
Darrell
Elston,
and
formerly
the
The 19-year-old Malone, who places 'Joe Mullaney, who has
c •rc u1 1 modules
Rockets.
9:30 to 4:30 P.M.
AulCie Perry at Vtrgmta ; San
was supposed to attend the taken the head coaching JOb at
• 8r1ght P1cture Tube
Four new groups of owners Diego's Greg Lee; and AI
220
N
Universtty of Maryland this Memphis.
• 70 detent c hck UHF
Skinner
tn
New
York.
have
plunged
thetr
monies
ill
to
fall but decided instead to turn
tuner
OHIO
Other coaching changes in the 10-team ABA. At Memphis,
•
pro,
is
not
expected
to
start
for
• Instan t P1 ct ure and Sound
the league mclude former former ABA commtsswner
the stars but he played weD Carolina Coach Larry Brown
• En ergy. Saver Sw1 tch
I
during
the pre-&lt;leason games at Denver, ex-Milwaukee Mtke Storen leads a group
(Model WP5012LW)
whtch
replaced
Oakland
A's
and wiD see plenty of action . Bucks' asststant Hubte Brown
Walnut gra1n fl msh on
The ABA has undergone a at Kentucky, former Buffalo owner Charles 0. Finley; a
htgh 1mpact plasti c cab mel
group of busillessmen from the
major overhaul this season Braves'
'
asststant
Bob Tidewater, Va , area pur'
wtth 30player changes, six new
coaches, four new owners ,
three new team nicknames and

Sunday &gt;?~

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5,:-- The Datly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Friday, Oc • 18, 1974

l=soc~T~&lt;·:&lt;·:~' Committees

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4- The Datly Sen\ mel, Mtddleporl-Pomcroy, 0 , ~ nday, 0&lt;·1 18, 1!174

Falco.n s out 'to end
Miami's win string
By United Press International
Bowlmg Green State Uruverstty football coach Don Nehlen
says "Mtamtlooks like a super
football team" to htm He
won'tget much of an argument
from other coaches m the Mid-

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10 the league last year and he
has to be better lhts year "
Kent State Umverslty, which
dropped a 26-10 dectSlon to
Bowling Green Saturday ,
leaves
confere nce play
Saturday to host Utah State
State.
Utah State's only loss m lour
game was a 72-3 wallop10g at
th e hands of Oklahoma.
Utah State coach Phil Krueger IS different than most
college coaches to say the
least, and spends the game 10
the press box mstead of on the
stdehnes
Krueger ts still shell shocked
from that Oklahoma game and
says ''1f they had scored only 90
pomts they would have been

Browns'

ls!;ue settled

defense

by statement .

juiced up

more of a pass rush from our

defense lhts w~ek aga msl
Toledo "
The one th10g the Flyers
don 'l want to do IS g1ve Toledo
quarterback Gene Swtck too
much l!IDe Swtck has completed 82ol 130 passes for 942 yards
and ftve touchdowns as th e
Rockets have won lhetr last
three games and are now 3-2
However, Toledo coach Jack
Murphy ts afratd the Rockets
may be looking past Day ton to
Mtamt m a game that could
dectde the MAC champtonshtp
''Our job lhts week ts to ket&gt;p
our heads on stra tghl ," he satd.
"We barely beat Dayton a year
ago. Our kids must remember
that We want to keep our
momentum gomg a nd we can
only do that wtlh a good sohd
effort aga inst Dayton Other-

BERF:A, Oh to (UP!) - More
spectal allenllon was gtven to
the Cleveland Browns' defense
clunng today 's wor kout as
~.:oach N1rk Skon ch con tmued
lookmg for some formula to put
h1s learn back m the wm

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:;:·

RACINE _ The Seven
~- Ntghts lor Chnst Commtttees
met Monday mght to accept
::;.
;:; last mmute reports before the
Sunday
crusade to be held at the
HOMECOMING at Mormng Racme Wesleyan Unt ied
Star Church Mornmg worshtp Methodist Oct 21-27 All
at 9 30 a.m , Sunday School at commtttees reported plans
10 30, basket dmner ts 12·30 were completed
Servtces wtll begm each
p m Aftern oon songfest at l 30
mght
at 7 30 p m Three prayer
wtth Rev Larry Pobng, pastor,
m charge Everyone welcome. breakfasts wtll be held , the
HOMECOMING of Dexter ftrst, for men Oct 19 at 8 a m ,
Church of Chnst. Bible School, the second, for women , on
9 30 a. m , worshtp servtce,
10 30 a. m., basket dmner,
12.30 Afternoon servtce, 2 p
m wtth spea ker Orval Morgan,
former pas tor , special mus1c;
AITENDS FORUM
pubhc mvtted
Rachael Downie, advtsor of
MONDAY
the Metgs 4-H Pleasure Riders,
MIDDLEPORT Busmess attended the NatiOnal Leaders
and Professwnal Women's Forum at the Natwnal 4-H
Club, 6 30 p. m at the Metgs Center m Washmgton, D C,
Inn wtth Mary Powell, Oct. 6 to 12 Over 200 advtsors
cosme tology teacher at Metgs attended from all over the
Htgh School, as the speaker. Umted States Forty-five of the
MIDDLEPORT Elementary 200 were Ohto 4-H club adPTA, 7.30 p. m at the school vtsors The forum mcluded
Program wtll feature th e tours, speakers, and datly tdea
Teachers Corps. Rev. Donald sharmg sesswns Sponsormg
Cole, Mtddleport Church of the the trtp was the Metgs County
Nazarene, wtll gtve devotions. 4-H Ad vtsory Commt ttee

of the govemor r Calendar~:'
Metgs County Audtlor J•mes
F. Roush today released a self
explanatory letter from Gov
John J Gtlhgan
Rou sh sa td that mtsmformatwn has been gtven the

public 1n co nn ec ti on w1th

Primaries
have party

Wednesday,. Oct. 23 at 8.45
a m and thtrd! lor men and
women, Saturday, Oct 26 at a
a m Teenagers and youth are
also mvtted to attend
There wtll also be a Christ1an
wttnessmg workshop Tuesday
lhrough Frtday, Oct. 22-25,
from 10 to 11 a.m.
' Sunday School teachers and
!hose on shtft work at ntght
espectally may attend these
meelmgs. Youth ntght wtll be
Wednesday, and there Will be
spectal mustc each night The
Semor Ct!t;oens Chotr wtll stng
Fnday mght. The pubbc ts
mvtted to ail servtces Rev
Howard Shively is pastor

Hoosiers believe upset

Group II
has meeting

FLOWERS

MINERSVILLE - Mrs. Olan I
Genheimer entertatned the
United Methodtst Women of the
Forst Run Umted Methodtst
Chllfch at her home Tuesday
evening. The meetmg opened
wtth the song, "My Jesus I
Love Thee" followed by the
Lord's Prayer by the group
Mrs. Harry Wyatt was
devotwnal leader, her !optc
bemg "Love Your Enemies. "
Mrs . Wyatt closed the
devottons wtth prayer.
Mrs. Edtth S1sson, program
chairwoman, chose the
"Emergmg Ltfe Styles of

•

992-2039

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the new Caravelle®
w
h
0 ig itaI ate
by BuIova

I

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ISears I JftJRg:

FULL COLOR PORTRAIT

8 X 10 °~ 99C N•c:;,:~""'

Middleport, 0.

PLANS
FINAliZED
·FOR NEW CHURCH COMPLEX

YOUR

two new arenas

Utah has done the most in the
way of player~hanges . The
utes have added centers

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Now

$398

Yd.

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Table Decorations
Center Pieces. Favors.
NapkJns. Cards Etc.

MII)QLEPORT

Mil St.

·,

~K STORE
_ Middleport,

..~

"

Remember Your Favor•te G1rl On - -

••

SWEETEST DAY

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OCTOBER 19TH
With A Beautiful Cut Crystal

VASE OF FLOWERS
AND POUND BOX OF

WHITMAN CANDY
FOR ONLY

*1000

'
Dudley's Florist

59 N. Si!cond St.

Middleport,

o.

CHESTER PTA Jttney
Supper and Halloween carmval
at Chester Elementary School
Servmg at 5 p m. carmval at 7
p.m. Wtde vartety of food to be
offered.
SQUARE DANCE at Shade
School from 9 p.m to 12
nudmght MUSIC by Frog Stack
and The Greenhorns Sponsored by Shade PTA.
FALL Fesltval at Portland
School at 6 30 p m Prtzes for
costummg
Free
en
terta10ment. Games and door
pnzes. Refreshments wtll be
sold Sponsored by PTO
CHICKEN DINNER at Sl
Paul's United Methodt st
Church annex, 4 to 7 p m ;
complete dmners.
SUNDAY
RACINE Band Boosters
Road Rally at the school
beginnmg at 4:30 p.m For
mformatlon call 949-2789.
REVIVAL, 7 30 each evenmg
through Sunday at the Racme
Apostolic Church wtth Elder
Daymond Adams, Martella,
speaking .
GUEST preacher at Grace
Eptscopal Church at 10:30a m.
wtll be Rev. James Trapp,
newly appoillted youth offtcer
for the Episcopal Church m the
Dwcese of Southern Ohto
Youth of the partsh beginnmg
at juntor htgh level and youth
lea&lt;lers wtll meet personally
w1th Rev Trapp durmg a
luncheon at 12 noon following
the church service and coffee
hour
REVIVAL now tn progress at
Rutland Community Church
through Sunday. Serv1ces are
7:30 p.m Evangeltst 1s Rev.
Russell Harper , Fremont
Brother Eugene Roush Is
pastor. The public ts mvlted to
attend. ·
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STEAMBOAT INN

HEADOUARTE

''FAMILY DINING AT ITS BEST"

•

SUNDAY MENU

ftl\~\t)l\\\\t
~,,\.\~~~lS
=_,

.. .

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.....,_r:
•. L________

FOR

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(;e"'er

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Members of the Meigs
~~ County Juntor Leader Club
meeting Oct. 9 at the Columbus
and Southern Ohto Electrtc
I Company m Middleport jolroed
I m a "shoe mixer " to open the
meehng. A recruttment
I hayride was scheduled Nov 9.
I Commtttees formed were,
I Refreshment, Lester Jeffers,
Virgmta Jordan, Janel Maue
and Marco Jeffers; Invitation,
Mary Mora, Tammy Pitzer,
Tammy Fitch, Rachel Hunter,
Debbte Windon, Mandte Rose,
and Niese! Duvall; Recreatwn,
Glen Kemedy, Carl Gheen,
Pam Holcomb, Beverly
1 Bishop, and Randy Keller.
I Refreshments were served by
Martha Gullkey and Patty
~ Kelly, advisors

1
1

t1l.e ~.JI'

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II have shoe mixer

KNITS
ON SALE

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ALSO 1 TABLE
QUALITY

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ON SALE

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Quasar

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Prep whiz Malone opening
for Utah Stars in New York

l

60" Reg. $4.98

l.l

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by "Heller"

SATURDAY
MEN'S PRAYER breakfast,
8 a. m. at Racme Wesleyan
United Methodtst Church to
kickoff the Seven Ntghts lor
Christ Crusade, Oct. 21-27

"'
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Proposed building to be built soon for Auditorium and Educational
uses. Why .not visit our going and growing Church this week .
Sunday School 10:00 a.m., Morning Servlce 11:00 a.m., Evening
Service 7:30p.m., Wednesday Service 7:30p.m. ,

MEATS

VE GETABL
hn

"'

BAKER FURNITURE

SALADS

DESSERTS
J

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ES

CHEF SALAD (TOSSED)
COLE SLAW
COTTAGE CHEESE
7 UP SALAD
BAKED STEAK
DINNER HAM
ROAST BEEF
FLOUNDER FISH
GREEN BEANS
MACARONI &amp; CHEESE
NOODLES
POTATOES (SWEET MASHEDI
PIE (HOMEMADEI
ICE CREAM (CHERRY, VAN., CHOC.)
FRUIT

.PH. 949-3551

Charlene

Announcement of several new appomtments were made

durmg the Wednesday meeting of the Btg Bend Netghborhood
servtce un1t olthe Black Dtamond Gtrl Scout Connell.
Mrs Isabelle Foster, fteld dtrector and Mrs Pal Thoma,
servtce umt dtrector, met wtth leaders, asststanl leaders, and
other volunteers m scoulmg Wednesday at the Columbus and
Southern OhiO Electric Co.
Announced were the appoinlments of Mrs Donna Ohlinger,
camp consultant; Mrs Suste Soulsby, supply director, Mrs.
Max10e Hart, radio and televtslDn ; Mrs Charlene Hoefhch,
publtctty dll'ector , Mrs. Murl Johnson, Rutland school advtsor,
Mrs Johnson and daughter, Mona Johnson, delegates to the
Black Diamond Counctl, wtth Mrs Hart as alternate.
Appomted as scout adVISOrs lor the Middleport Elementary
School were Mrs Arnold Snowden and Mrs. Vtckt Houchms; for
the Bradbury School, Mrs Jane Hess and Mrs Pat Ktlchen, and
lor the Pomeroy School, Mrs Ehzabeth Lane
POMEROY BROWNIE TROOP 76
A get-acquamted session lor the second and third grade
Brownies at the Pomeroy Elementary School was held Tuesday
from 3 to 4 p.m. m the audttormm The chtldren enjoyed games
and had a smg-a-long
Mrs . Gertrude Casto ts the troop leader wtth Mrs. Suste
Long, Mrs Pal Thoma, Mrs Ehzabeth Lane,Mrs Patty Michael
and Mrs Carolyn Reeves makmg up the troop comnuttee
Chtldren m the troop are Jaye Roberts, Tammy Capehart,
Shawnee Salser, Debra Werry, Anna Sisson, Debra Bormg,
Rhoda Prtce, Crystal Lane, Suste Thoma , Ltsa Baxter, Kim
Ebhn, Patty Neutzlmg, Judy Prtce, Carolyn Casto, Robill Venoy,
Cathy Delong, Ann Reece, Lon Pullins, Dtxle Eblm, and Trma
Reeves.
RUTLAND JUNIOR TROOP 129Z
Ofltcers elected for the Rutland jumor troop at a recent
meetmg were Tammt Haley, scrtbe; Teresa Fetty, treasurer,
and Mary Smtih and Debbte MorriSOn, patrol leaders The troop
meets in the old Rutland gymnast om from 4 to 5 p m , Tuesdays
RUTLAND BROWNIES 1293
Mrs. Jacob Johnson ts the leader of the newly orgaruzed
Rutland Browme Troop. At the Tuesday after-school meetmg, 25
Browmes attended a get.,.cqua10ted party wtth games and
refreshments The gtrls learned the Browme Promtse and some
scout songs They wtll present these at a program of the Metgs
County Women's Fellowshtp next Thursday mght. Membershtp
10 the troop is stlll open, Mrs Johnson reports.
SALISBURY TROOP 100
Flower bulbs were planted in a plantmg area at the SaliSbury
Elementary School Thursday by members of Gtrl Scout Troop
100. Addttional bulbs will be put out at the meeting next week.
Carol Moms prestded at the meet,ng whtch opened wtth the
pledge to the flag and the Gtrl Scout Promtse Reports were
gtven by Gma Welker, the scnbe, and CamtUe Swmdell, the
treasurer

ChriSimas plans were diScussed and the scouts will make
gifts fo r thetr mothers, and wtll also make ChriStmas tree ornaments Refreshments were served and games were played
At last week 's meeting the Sahsbury Juntor Troop played a
baseball game wtth the Middleport Jumor Troop 39 at the Middleport Communtty Park It was reported that the Salisbury
ream wen. 35 tn ?Jl

~

Polly 's Pointers
By Polly Cramer

Rubbed smudge
won 't go away
DEAR POLLY - Thank you so much for the help you gtve us
wtth our problems Now I would appreCiate knowmg how to
remove a smudge from my lovely drum top table. I spilled nat!
polish on Its htghly pohshed and waxed surface, unmediately
wiped tt off wtth tiSSue and sponged 11 wtth cold water but was left
with a smudge How can I remove 11 and restore the ortgmal
luster to the table top' - MRS. L K.

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the philoSophy of Ohro 's Future
Hom emak ers of Ame rJ ca
1FHA 1 as they embark on a
fund-nu~mg
proJec t for

Clul&lt;Jren's Hosprtal lor the
fotU""t h stra1ght year

FHA chapters an d affthaled
ft ome Eeo nom tcs Related
Occupalrons 1HF.RO ) chapters
1n htgh schools throughout the
sta te have selected th e
Hosp1taJ's 'Penny

ProJect '~

the tr

chantable

only

as

moneymaking campaign ror
the 1974-75 school year

prev1ous years was the result
of lhe "concern and a wareness

of FHA members throughout
the stale lor the he•lth care
needs of the thousands of
youngsters who are se rved hy

Chtldren's Hospttal "
He sh eo)sed the Importan ce

or

actJVitle!i hke the ''Pen ny

Project" 1n 'helpmg FilA
members
to
become
tomorrow' s
homema kers,
parent s Hnd commumty
leaders
Myers, who W3 S recently
made un hono r ary FHA

member, sa1d an effor t wtll be
They
be calhng on fellow made by the I'HA orgamzat(on
.students to donate a penny for to gatn the parttctpahon of
eac h year of age , pound or chapters m schools wh1ch have

"'II

we1gh t, mch of wa ts thnc, 01
other ur11t of measure For

exa mpl e,

an

11-year-o ld

studen t could give 11 cents, or,

1! wetght ts the standard, 98
cents 1! he wetghs 98 pounds
Durmg the ftrsl three years
of the "Penny ProJect," FHA
chapters earned more than
$22,000 lor Chtldren's Hospttal
Norman Myers, assoc1ate
director of development fo r the
hospital, satd he was "very
pleased that the FHA has
dectded to take on Chtldren's
•s tls sole prOJect lor the
year''

Myers sa td the "remarkable
su cceSs'~ of the program m 1ts

the1r care

Sm~e

Chtldren's Hosprtal opened :m
1894, no youn gster has ever
been turned away because :Or
mab thty to pay for treatment
Durmg 1973, chtldren from 'l!6
of Ohro's 88 ooun hes recetvW
care at Chtldren 's Hosptlal
Nearly 175,000 palrents were
trea ted and those whose
parents were not able to meet

the cost were provtded nearly
$1 3 mtlhon m care
A total of 1,045,000 chtldren
have ret:e1ved treatment at the
hospttal smce 1967, wt!h $7 2

mtlhon provtded smce that
ttme for those who were Wlable

to pay

not previously partiCipated m

Mrs. Sauer gives review
Phil Swl nrl ell

" Altve - Andes Survtvors ",
descnbed as the survlal story
of the century, was revtewed
by Mrs Harold Sauer at the
Wednesday mght meeltng of
the Middleport Ltterary Club
held at the home of Mrs Nan
Moore
In her rev1ew, Mrs. Sauer
told of how the 16 out of 45
survtved m the Andes after
their plane crashed whtle
enroute from Uruguay to Chth,

and of lhe1r dec tston to use the
bodtes of lhetr dead compamons for food when laced
wtth starvalton The 16 were
rescued after 70 days on the
moun tam whtch was 12,000 feet
htgh,
The second book revtewed
was " To Ra ce the Wmd ", the

hfe story of Harold Krents
Mrs . Bernard Fultz gave
Krents' hwnorous account

or

how he learned to cope wtth hts
bhndness and the resultant
loneliness, hwnthahon, rears

and lrustraltons whtch he
laced as a chtld A cum laude
graduate of Harvard Law
School, Krents' hfe was the
msptralton for the Broadway

Auxiliary
has meet

h1t, " Butterfhes are Free",

Mrs Mary Marhn entertamed the Past Presidents
of the Amertcan Legw n
Amultary, Drew Webster Post
39, Wednesday ntght Mrs
Pearl Knapp was co-hostess
Mrs Veda Davts opened the
meelmg wJth the Lord 's
Prayer bemg gtven m unison
followed by stlent prayer and
the pledge For devotions, Mrs
Faye Wtldermuth gave Helen
Stemer Rtce's "So Swtfl the
Way, So Short the Day".
Sympathy cards were sent to
Mrs. Grace Pratt, a get-well
card to Mrs Gladys Mowery,
and a btrthday card to a
veteran at the Arcadta Rest
Home. A Halloween theme was
carried out m the decoralwns
of the Martin home Freddte
Houdashelt was a guest, and
others at the meetmg were
Mrs Rhoda Hackett, Mrs Iva
Powell, Mrs Edtth Sauer and
Mrs J~sste Houdashelt

Mrs. F ultz reported
Mrs Sauer prestded at the
meebng and accepted with
regret was the restgnallon
from membershtp of Mrs
James Euler. Candy was
served by the hostess

Area Representat ive

•

POOR HEARING
causes man v per son s to
- Shun public meet1ngs It
churc h
- Avo1d full part1C 1pat10n m
family gathenngs
,
- F ee l unsure of lh em se lvu
'
Does your loss or heanng
l 1ml l an d embarass you-?
Why not tel Diles Hear1ng
A 1d Cen ter s help you? Afte r
thorough testi ng and ap
propr , ate med1cal or c lin1c8l
referra l , you ca n purchase a
n ew hea r•no a1d for less th an
SlS 00 per mon th th rough
regular
bank f lnancmg
plans Ca ll t h e off 1ce nearest
you to r an appomtmen t m
e1 ther your home or one of
our off Ices

DILES
Hearing Aid Centers
Athens

444 w. Union St
Parkersburg , W Va
I 029 Market 51

Chollrcolhe
249 5 Parnl St.

'-----·------~

FALL FABRICS
EXCELLENT SELECTION

THE FABRIC SHOP

~269

EVANGELIST JOSEPH HOSKINS
CONGREGAtiONAL SINGIN~
EVERY.ONE WELCOME

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the proJect Approxtmalely 200
chapters collected more than
$9,400 for Ouldren's Hospttal
durtng the 1973 campatgn
Ideas for other lund-ralSlng
proJects wtll be provtded by the
Ho sp tta l 's develo pm ent
department to FHA and HERO
chapters whtch choose not to
par h c1 pate 1n the " Penny
Project" but winch wtsh to
support Chtldren's Hosptlal
Money ratsed through the
"Penny PrOJect" goes to the
Hosptlal 's Pahent A1d Fund to
help pay the medtcal expenses
of children whose parents' are
tmable to P"Y part or all of the

C!OME AND HIOAR
HIE GOSPEL MESSAGE PRESENTED
IN ITS SIMPLICITY BY

RACINE, OHIO

cost of

DEAR POlLY - My Pet Peeve IS wtth men's work boots
that have only a thm ptece of matertal covermg the steelm the
Start Christmas
toes. When that cloth wears away socks rub the steel and conIN HOSPITAL
tmually make holes which mean constant darnmg - PAT
Sewing Now!
P
R
Randolph.
wtdely
DEAR POlLY - Ltke Mrs C B S I was once an urnmWhen you sew If yourself,
portant cash customer m stores where I shopped all the !!IDe. I known Reedsville restdent, Is a
you
save up to one-half.
had to estabhsh credit EVERY tune I made a btg purchase that I medical patient at the St
Start now for the holidays
planned to pay for m 60 or 90 days. I finally got smart and Joseph Hospttal in Parkersburg . Cards may be sent to
established charge accounts at the big stores that offer them
APPROVED SINGER DEALER
room
208
Now I buy what I need and charge 11. When the bill comes I pay m
full (to avotd finance charges) so I am still a cash customer in
my own mind plus a values charge customer and my credtt
The ftrsl ed1llon of the Enratmg Is exceDent. Of course, thiS can only work if you keep m cyclopaedia Brttanmca was
mind that you are going to pay m full when the bill comes and are pubhshed m 1771, 111 Edm·
115 W. Second
992-2284
Pomeroy
careful not to over-&lt;~pend just because you have a charge card It burgh The thtstle, nattonal
Me
Calls
&amp;
Simplicily
Patterns
flower of Scotland, remams
also keeps aU but pm money m a checking account and one wrttes
the
emblem of that pubhca- ~&gt;G&gt;G&gt;-&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;G&gt;G&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;-&lt;:&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;=--&lt;::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;&gt;...:::&gt;O
as few checks as possible. - MRS. F .A.L
!ton, honormg its origins
DEAR POlLY - Oour ohildren put !herr stereo eqwpment
m an area in the recreation room that the' former owners had
used as a closet and they wanted a bead curiam to cover the
openillg. After pricmg beads !bey found thetr budgets could not
stand the cost so they coUected small medlcme vtals from
everyone they knew and drllled a hole m tbe bottom of each one.
The plasttc vtals were then painted', elft clear or had designs put
on them Salvaged yam was then strung through each vtal and
knots made along the length to hold them in place. These turned
out to be very charming "bead" curtams as the vtals were
carefully alternated according to sizes and lengths and .
staggered on the vartous lengths of yarn - 'MARY ANN.
You will receive a dollar U PoUy uses your favorite homemaking ldea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution lo a
problem. Write Polly In care of thls newspaper.

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'Pen mes

rnc~ke dollars " contmues to be

EACH EVENING AT ~30

SUNDAY,, Ocr. 20

3RD ST.

CO LUM BUS -

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Gospel Meeting
Success
Church of Christ
October 20-25

SERVED UNTIL 2 PM

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

State FHA starts project

Girl Scout I
Diary By Hoefl~h !

I Social I
ICalendar II
FRIDAY
" I HAVE a Date" wtll be
presented by Rev. Frank Snare
at Rac me Ftrst Bapllsl
Church, 7 30 p.m., wt!h spcctal
music by the Manuel Trio
DANCE IN gym followmg
Southern football game. Mus• c
by "Zerpha", lOp m unltl! a.
m , sponsored by Southern
S4)mor Class.

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There were 22 stck and shut'" calls made by the group the
past month A get-well card
was s1gned by all lor Mrs
Ltlhan Henderson, a member,
who has been til. The bazaar
Nov. 15 and 16 was announced
The treasurer's report was
read and the meetmg adJOurned
Three members of the
soctety had October btrlhdays
and Mrs . Alfred Yeauger
baked the birthday cake and
tce cream was lurmshed by
Mrs Olan Genehimer and Mrs
Erma Roush , to Mrs Edtson
Hollon, Mrs. Hanson Holter,
Mrs Denver Holter, Mrs
Vernon Nease, Mrs. Uswin
Nease, Mrs. Kerns Rbush , Mrs.
Fred Nease, Mrs Henry
Salser, Mrs. John Scott, Mrs
Edtlh Stsson, Mrs Ru ss
Watson, Mrs. Harry Wyatt,
Mrs Richard Jarv1s, Mrs
Alfred Yeauger and one guest,
Mrs Clell Woods
: c~e : o: : ~ "~.::::~:-:·:· ·:;~

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women m

''Freedom Is''

I
II junior leaders

KNITS

or

(

rehgwn, mthtary, pohllcs and
other em ployment wel'c
discussed by the group The
program concludetl wtlh
prayer by the leader Mrs
Kerns Roush had the "spectal"
for the program ttlled

Arrangements were made to
purchase blankets for the
Lutheran World Relief Plans
were 'Completed for making
handmade symbobc Christmas
ornaments to-decorate the tree
1n the sanctuary.
For the devotional part of the
program, members gave
selected inspirational readmgs
and members parltctpated m
group dtscusston . Pastor
William Mtddleswarth was not
present to conduct the Btble
study due to other comnutrnents. The readings were
"Lesson m the Orchard" by
Mrs Eichinger ; 11 Broken
Heart," " A New Wmdow m the
World" and "My Bible and I"
by Mrs. Blaettnar, "Each m
His Own Tongue" by Helen
Holt who also read "To a
Waterfowl," and a reading
from " Portals of Prayer" of
one of St. Paul's letters to the
church m Cormth and his
admonition to the church
members by Mrs. Helen
Dtener
Others attendmg the meeting
were Mrs. Frances Warner,
Mrs Wilma Mees, Mrs Lilhan
Moore, Mtss Erna Jesse, Mrs.
Lots CleUand and Mrs. Jean
Braun

f-MENswEiil

:*
j,

WERNER
Radio &amp; T.V.

A Christmas bazaar wtll be
held Nov. 21 at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church feUowshtp
hall, Pomeroy, and plans were
completed at a recent meetmg
of the American Lutheran
Church Women at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davts
Mrs. Margaret Balettnar ts
chairwoman for the bazaar and
named committees mcludmg
Mrs. Davts, kitchen; Mrs
Rachel Dowme, sweet shop;
Mrs. Eva Schre~ber , sewmg;
Mrs. Judy Eichinger and Mrs
Barbara Fry, dmmg room.
Homemade soup, sandwtches
and dessert will be served
through the lunch and dmner
hours with the servmg to begm
at 10 a.m
It was announced that St
Paul's Church wtll be host for
the World Communtty Day
observance of Church Women
Umted of Meigs County
Frtday, Nov. I, at 2 p m The
ALCW members have been
asked to provide cookies for the
refreshments

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rhangmg role

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Birthday
observed

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Women" from the program
book "A Call to the Churches."
The purpose was to use the
n ches recetved from God so
that poten hal lor a fuller ltfe
ca n be rea lized a nd to
recogmze and understand the
variety of emergmg life styles
of women and the resultmg
IIDpact upon soctety. Vtgnettes
of Btbhcal women who have
mfluenced htstory were
presented by vanous members
of the group The senpture,
taken from Proverbs 31, was
read by Mrs. Russ Watson
Dtllerenl aspec ts of the

Group plans bazaar

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I tochDangleGtoiTROn
'j_.l,

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UM women have meeting

meet

abo hshm g ce rtam elected
American
con f e r e n ce,
offices and lurnmg them mto
espectally Oh10 Umverstty's
appomhve potnts
column
Btll Hess
Roush observed that the
Tile Rrowns, who have lost
Mtamt, unbeate n tn l7
three m a row and are 1-4 on tim letter lays to rest the questton
games, hosts the Falcons m the
season so far, stayed ahve tn of combining of county offices
top game m the MAC Saturday
last Sunday's game agamst and brmgs the facts concermng
and Nehlen may be nght when
Cmcmnall unlll the Defense the total stluahon to the pubhc
he says "they don 't appear to
The letter stressed
co llap sed and allowed th e
have any weaknesses "
"In the past several seeks,
Bengals to Ulke It 34-24
Mtamt, the delendmg MAC
th
ere have been some
Both the delenstve hne and
champwn , clubbed OU 31-J last
the secondary went through published reports that have
week and Hess stzed the
mtsrepresented my post !tOn on
extra drtlls Thursday
Redskins up thts way
The defense, unhke the of- th e recommendatwn that
For All Decisions
"Mtarm has a better offense, has not been htl by certam county elected offtces
fensive team last year and kind "
We Wire Flowers
stgmlicant tnjurtes Three ol- be abohshed or turned mto
Everywhere
thetr defense ts as good."
James, whose Golden
lenstve players are expected to appomhve offices I'd hke to
He may be understat10g the Flashes were ptcked to wm the
mtss Sunday 's game m Pitts- take thts opportumty to correct
case lor the defense somewhat MAC, says Kent State ISO 't
burgh They are wtde recetvers any false tmpresston these
as Mtamt leads the na twn 10 about to roll over and play dead Wise we'll get beat "
Steve
Holden and Jubtlee reports may have Jell
In other games
scor10g defense, allowing only for anybody desptte loSing two
" I a m opposed to the
Dunbar
and guard Chuck
Morehead State •s at Oh10
20 po10ts m ftve games
Pomeroy Flower Sh9p
of tts last three games
Hutchmson
propostbon
that any elected
Urnversity, Youngstown SUite
So Nehlen, whose Falcons
"We're goillg to go out and at Ball State, Cmcmatl at
Hutclunson rested a gram co unty olftce - a ud1 tor ,
Mrs. Mrtlard Van Meter ·
are 2-1 m the MAC and one of play every game one at a !!IDe
Ph. 992 2030
Ph . 992-57"1
pull
unhl
the
Oakland
game
treasurer,
eng
meer
or
the league's surprtse teams with as much determination Wtch tta Stale, Fatrmont Stale two weeks ago, then went tn recorder - be made an apafter bemg ptcked for the and enthusiasm as we can,' ' he at Ashland, Deftance at Bluff- and re-mJUred tl. He had pomtive olltce I beheve that
cellar, knows what he's gettmg satd "We're gomg out to ton, Joh n Carroll at Case replaced second-yea r man any such proposal seeks to take
Westtern and Federal City
r...::::''W-"'"''~ ~4·:; &amp;;:;.;:;&amp;.&lt;g&lt;·~:·::::=:::::::::::~~&lt;:~:?;&lt;~
mto at Oxford Saturday
wm "
Pete Adams , whom the away from the people the
(DC.)
at
Central
State.
"Miamt looks hke a super
The Umventy of Dayton wtll
Also , Hanover at Fmdlay, coaches hope to use Sunday power to choose thetr own
football team to me," satd host Toledo m a Homecomtmg
smce his wrenched knee 1s on leaders, Ill VIOla tion Of
Nehlen . "They don 't appear to ga me Saturday and Flyer Htram at Thtel, Manchester the mend
everythmg I have stood lor 111
have any weaknesses Thetr coach Ron Marcuuak has one lnd at Wilmm gton, Baldwm"The
most
frustratmg
thmg
my pohltcal career
w
Wallace at
Hetdelberg,
offensive line IS as btg as Kent btg problem.
1
s
that
I
pracllced
for
two
"The
recommendahon
that
Wooster
at
Manetta,
and much more expertenced.
~estern Kentucky defeated
Muskingum
at
Otterbem
, weeks With no pam, ' Hutchm- lhese offt ces be changed or ' Teachers of the prtmary ij
':No one has solved thetr the Flyers 32-15 Saturday and
son said. " It wasn 't even sore
abohshed came from the Local
departmof
ent the
or the
defense because the offense the Dayton secondary gave up Cap1tal at Mount Umon, Then I got out and hurt tl all Government Services Com- School
Mtddleport ..•. .'
Wtttenberg
at
Denrnson,
Oh10
controls the football and the 281 yards passmg and three
Wesleyan a t Wash in gton over aga m I'm convmced it nussuin, whtch I appomted Church of Chrtst entertamed i&lt;
game," Nehlen s&amp;d "Their touchdowns through the atr
Universtty, Kenyon '\l Oberhn was stttmg around and getlmg But the fact that the Com- Fnday mghlwtth a ptzza party .
nuddle guard, Brad Cousmo,
"We gave Western too much and Ohto Northern at Westmm- cold after warmmg up that dtd mtssto n made the r ecom- lor the children enrolled.
was the best defenstve player ltme to throw the ball," satd
lt
mendahon does not change my
ster
Hoslmg the affair were Mrs ~-_;i
Marcmtak " We'D have to get
"It 's a depress10g thmg, own position m opposition to Nora Rtce, Mrs Kathry Erwm, ..
commg to pracllce every day, these changes "
Mrs Betty McKmley, Mrs. j}
gettmg treatment, watchmg
Phylhs Baker, Mrs . Lorraine &gt;~
;,
ftlms, but not be10g able to
Neff, Mrs Dorothy Roach and "'
Neve r m~nd whal the b1g and
pJ ay," he sa id "Thmgs can 't
Mrs. Debbte Gerlach Con- i::
little hands have to say
be bad forever, though There
The Caravetle D1g1tron watch •
trtbutmg lor the party were .·-~_i,.· _l
COLUMBUS (UP!) - There team m the country than Ohio
has
to be a turn lor the better
says 11all w1th the greatest
even head the hst before his
Mrs Jane Hess and Mrs Bea- .
will be two wmnmg streaks on State, but somebody is gomg to Jumor season Is over
of ease And that's how you
somet tme ''
tnce Stewart, and attendmg :;::
the line Saturday when the top- beat them -&lt;Inbody IS lnVInCl·
read 11 The clearly ev1d en t
Gnffm has a total of 3,175
besides the children were ;:::
ranked Buckeyes of Ohio State ble, " Corso predicts,.
....
t1m
e panels tell the hour,
yards rushmg m just two and
Joyce Glaze and Mike Gerlach ·:·:
entertam netghboring Btg Ten
m1nute
and second at a
"There ts only one ballm the one-half !easons Ohs Arm:
The seventh btrthday anChtldren at the party were
gla
nce
W1th 17 rewel
rtval Indiana Umversity.
game and they can't gtve us all
ntversary of Darm Roach was Jenmfer McKinley, Matthew ~j
prec1s1on And 1t's a watch
The Buckeyes have reeled off those guys at one !!IDe," he strong of Purdue holds the allobserved Saturday wtlh a Baker, Tara Gerlach, Aaron ;;:
worth look1ng at w1th
five consecutive vtctortes this adds. " If they have a weak- time record Wlth 3,315 yards,
...
party at the home of hts Sheets, Jared Sheets, Kathy :~
shield -s haped case
but
wtth
670
carries
compared
season with relattve ease. ness, we 'll explott 11.
parents, Mr and Mrs Carl Thomas, Kelly Neff, Patty :·:·
sta1n less steel l1nk
to Grtffin's 511
~~
lndtana, however, perhaps just
ba nd and handsome
Sl!ll doubtful starters for
Roach
,
Wn
ght
St
Games
were
Also still ahead of Griffin ts
Mrs Ruth Zavttz, Mrs Faye
Ward, Amy Erwin, Scott ~-::
began a Willnmg streak of its Ohto State are outstandillg
me
tall iC bl ue d1al Go
played wtth prtzes gomg to
modern; wea r a
own last Saturday wtth a 34-3 defensiVe tackle Pete Custck Wtsconsm's Alan Ameche wtlh Wallace and Mrs Dorothy Beth Wolfe, Usa Baxter, Brett McKmley, Aaron Wolfe, Dann
3,212 yards m 673 c1 rrtes
Morns were appomted to the
Roach, Shawn Baker, Danny ::;:
Ca ravelle D1g1tron
crusher over Minnesota
and cornerback Ttm Fox .
Korn and Parker Long
Griffin
also
has
16
consecunommatmg
commtltee
at
the
and
keep up w1th
Thomas,
Allen
Spauldmg
,
The Hoosiers had lost 11 Defensive coordinator George
Others attendmg were Lee Cheryl Riffle, Cindy Rtlfle, =~
the
changing
t1mes
llve
games
of
100
yards
or
Tuesday
mght
meetmg
of
straight games pnor to the Hill wtll go with sophomore
Powell, Brent and Bnan Korn , TDimmy MRtller, BMeth Wo!Arfe,
$45 00
more
rushmg
and
ts
only
one
Group
II
Mtddleport
Ftrst
victory over Millnesota, but Ntck Buonamtcl if Custck •sn 'l
Todd Adams, Steve Tracy,
ame 0e eece, e1an 1e
- ,.,
head coach Lee Corso thmks ready and Doug Plank would shy of the NCAA record of 17 Umted Presbytenan Church, Darm Wolfe, Scott McKinley,
set
by
Steve
Owens
of
at
the
home
of
Mrs
Wallace
nold,
John
Arnold
and
Terrt
~:~
hiS team has a solid chance start in place of Fox.
Laura McCullough , Patty Sprouse
Oklahoman
.
Included
111 GrtfThe
comm
tltee
wtll
present
a
against Ohio State, despite the
The Buckeyes' star runrung
Ward, Dantelle Reece , Usa
Buckeyes' near flawless back, Hetsman Trophy candi- fin 's 16 strrught, however, is sla le of office rs a t the Baxt&lt;:r, Trey Glaze, Cmdy
performance in a 52-7 wm over date Archte Griffin, is closing last January 's Rose Bowl November meehng
TOPS MEETS
game, which ts not counted m
Plans were completed for Soulsby, Stephanie and Sam
Wlsconsm last Saturday.
in on the Big Ten aU-t!IDe NCAA records.
Nov.
5was
set as hobby mght
,'
servmg a dmner at the diStrtct Letlheit, Chrts- Shank, Chns
"There can't be a better career riiShing record and may
Use
Our
Christmas
Lay
Away
Plan!
wtth
Freda
Davts
to
have
Kennedy,
Brtan
Houdashelt,
meetmg of Church Women
::::
Untied Wednesday at the Carma, Tracy , Eugenia, and charge of the program when
Mtddleport Ftrst Umted Ronme Mtller Also at the the TOPS Club met Tuesday
party were Darin's brother, mght at the Amertcan Legion
Presbytertan Church Mrs
Jean Moore, c ha~rwoman, Raymond, hts grandmothers, hall m Mtddleport Queen lor ~
reported on her lnp wtth Mrs Gertrude Miller and Mrs. the week was Mrs. Helen Hill
Church Women Untied to Marte Frances, and Mr and wt!h Mrs. Phyllis McMtlhon as
runner-up Seventeen memMemphts, Tenn , last week Mrs Ronald Mtller.
By United Press IDternatlooal pubhclzed rookie since Julius
bers
attended. Co-leader Helen
Theme of the meeting was "A
Moses Malone, the most Ervmg, will be the center of Randy Denton and J!ID Eakms, Journey to Wholeness "
Spears read devotins followmg
acqmred forwards Bobby
the TOPS pledge and song.
attracl!on tomght when the Warren, Johnny Neumam and
Devoltons by Mrs. Moore
:D¥ .
American Basketball Assocta- Rick Mount and guards Walt were taken from "Good News
llon opens llS eighth season
Jones, Larry MiUer, AI Smtih lor Modern Man " Nme chased the Virgmta Squtres
Portable
Malone, a 6-foot-11 center and rookte Clyde Dickey The members attended.
from Earl Foreman; superwho ts comillg to the pros rtght only returnees ate forwards
Color TV
market magnate James Collier
out of high school, will be m Wtlbe Wtse, Gerald Govan and
bought out Bill Damels to take
umform for the defendtng Bruce Seals and guard Ron
over
the ownershtp of Utah;
·
· OCTOBER 19
Western Dlvtswn champion Boone Wise and Boone were
MacKinnon
at
St
Louts
and
and
the
St. Lollis franchise ts
Utah Stars when they meet the Utah's top two scorers last
Alex Groza, general manager now held by four New Yorkers
ABA champton New York Nets season.
of
San Diego, who ts actmg as headed by Ozzie and Dan Silna.
at Umondale, N.Y., m one of
Gone are center Zelmo temporary Q'~ coach in place
Top rookies in the leagne are
four opening season games.
Beaty, who jumped to the NBA of the rettred Wtlt Cham- St. LoUis ' Marvtn Barnes,
San Antomo, the most suc- Los Angeles Lakers, and AIIMaurtce Lucas, Gus Gerard
cessful team in preseason play ABA guard Jimmy Jones, who berlain.
e Age Ltmtt 12 and U'Zor Semor Ctllzens
and
James "Fly" Williams;
Teams
wtth
new
mcknames
e Addrtronal Children (under 121 m Famrty $1 99
wtth an 11-ll record, meets In- ts a holdout
are the Sptrits of st Louts, who Bobby Jones, Donald Washmgor 2 Children Posed Together
$2 49
diana ill Indianapolis, MemThe stars also have a new wer~ the Carolina Cougars last ton and Jan van Breda Kolff at
• Modular Solid Sta le
e Addrtoonal Pnnts .and Reorders Available
phiS
plays
at
st.
Louis
and
Chass1s (except 4 chass•s
coach ill Bucky Buckwplter,
at Reasonable Pnr('S
Denver ; Len Elmore and BiUy
Kentucky hosts Denver in the who comes from the Seattle season, the Memphis Soundstu bes )
Choose From F1mshed Portrait Not Proofs
formerly Tams and the Denver Knight at Indtana , David
other ftrst night games.
• Rep laceab le plug -m
organization. Buckwalter re- Nuggets,
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Yo~r Monev Back
Vaughn,
Darrell
Elston,
and
formerly
the
The 19-year-old Malone, who places 'Joe Mullaney, who has
c •rc u1 1 modules
Rockets.
9:30 to 4:30 P.M.
AulCie Perry at Vtrgmta ; San
was supposed to attend the taken the head coaching JOb at
• 8r1ght P1cture Tube
Four new groups of owners Diego's Greg Lee; and AI
220
N
Universtty of Maryland this Memphis.
• 70 detent c hck UHF
Skinner
tn
New
York.
have
plunged
thetr
monies
ill
to
fall but decided instead to turn
tuner
OHIO
Other coaching changes in the 10-team ABA. At Memphis,
•
pro,
is
not
expected
to
start
for
• Instan t P1 ct ure and Sound
the league mclude former former ABA commtsswner
the stars but he played weD Carolina Coach Larry Brown
• En ergy. Saver Sw1 tch
I
during
the pre-&lt;leason games at Denver, ex-Milwaukee Mtke Storen leads a group
(Model WP5012LW)
whtch
replaced
Oakland
A's
and wiD see plenty of action . Bucks' asststant Hubte Brown
Walnut gra1n fl msh on
The ABA has undergone a at Kentucky, former Buffalo owner Charles 0. Finley; a
htgh 1mpact plasti c cab mel
group of busillessmen from the
major overhaul this season Braves'
'
asststant
Bob Tidewater, Va , area pur'
wtth 30player changes, six new
coaches, four new owners ,
three new team nicknames and

Sunday &gt;?~

•'
••'

5,:-- The Datly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Friday, Oc • 18, 1974

l=soc~T~&lt;·:&lt;·:~' Committees

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•
•

..

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.J /

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Middleport Pomeroy 0
GRAHAM

0

UNITED

METHODIST
P e-ac ng
9 30 a m
t s and second
Sundays of each month
h d
and fou h Sundays each
mon h wo sh p se v ce a
30
p m Wednesday e11en ngs at
7 30 P ave and R be S udy

POMEROY
POMEROY TRIN TV Rev W H Pe
n pa s o Roy

a m Confess ons Sa ur'day 7
7 30 p m
POMEROY F RST 8AP
TIST
Robe
Kuhn pasta
W I am Wason Sunday schoo
sup Sunday schoo 9 30 a m
BYF
6 p m
B be s Udy
Wednesday 1 p m
cho r
p acl ce we nesday 8 30 p m

Maye
Su nday schoo sup
Ch ul'ch schoo
9 5 a m
wo sh p se v ce
0 2
am

You h cho
ehea sa
M on
day 3 30 p m unde d ec on

sen o c ho
o Ma v Sk nne
ehea sa
30 p m Thu sda'V
w h M s
Pau
Nease
d ectO

POMERO'

HOL

Ha

POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE
Corne
Un on and Mu be y
Rev
C yde V Hende son paso
Sunday schoo 9 30 a m G en
McC ung
supt
mo n ng
wo sh p
0 30 a m
even ng
serv ce
30 m d week se
v ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EP SCOPAL
The
Rev
Hare d Dee h
ec o
Cl'lu ch se v ces
0 30 a m
Ho V commun on f rst Sunday
Of mon h chu ch schoo
0 30
a m to nu sery hrouqh 2
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST- Ferre G on noe
paso 8 be schoo 9 30 am
worsh P
0 30 a m
adu
wo Sh P serv ce and young
peop e s m ee ng 7 30 p m
Comb ned 8 be s udy and
P aye
meet ng Wednesday
7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY
E
nvoy Ray W W n ng off ce
n charge Sunday
0 a m
Ho ness mee no
0 30 am
Sunday Schoo Yaung Peop e s
Leg on 7 p m Thursday
o 3
P m Lades Home League
P m Prep c asses
ST
PAUL
LUTHERAN
CHURCH Co ne of Svc amo e
and SecondS s Pome oy The
Rev
W II am M dd eswa h
Pas o
Sunday Schoo a 9 45
a m a d Chu ch Se v ces

om

Slturday even ng Mass

p m

P

Sunda.y Mass

7 JO

8 and

o

sonv

e

WESLEYAN
CHURCH

Rev

0 De

Paso
Hen y Eb n
Schoo Supt Sunday
9 30 a m
Even ng
7 30 p m
P ave and

a se se v e

Thu sday

JO

pm
SYRACUSE
F RST
HURCH OF GOD
R ev
Geo ge 0 e
pas o
Sunday

s hoo

9 45

a m

m o n ng

peachng
t
a
evange s c se v e
0 P m
P
e n g Thu day

POMEROY
WESTSIDE
CHURCH OF CHR ST 200 W
Ma n s 0 en T s ephens
e
vange s
phone 992 7856
Conse vat ve
on
ns umen a Sunday wa sh p
0 a m
B ble s udy
a m
wo sh p 6 p m
Wednesday
B b e study
p m
M DWAY
COMMUN TY
C H U R c H
n o n
d
enom nat ona
Langsv le
DeKle Road he Rev Wo ey
Ha ey pas or Sunday school
o a m even ng wo sh p 7 30
p m
Praye
mee ng
Tuesday
7 30 p m
you h
g oup Fr day
30 p m
R U T LAND
F REEW LL
RAPT ST
Rev BenD ad
pas o
Roge
Tu ne
ass s an
pas or
Sunday
schoo
0 a m
Sunday
even ng se v e
30
Wed
nesday B b e s udv
30 p m

•

SACRED HEART
Rev
Father
John
Nadum
pastor
Phone
992 2825

NESS

Maney
Sunday
Schoo
wo sh p

OLO
DEXTER
B BLE
CHR STIAN CHURCH
Rev
Ron Te ry
pas o
Sunday
s hoo
0 a m
M s Wo ey
F an
s
supe n enden
Mo n ng wo sh p
am
Sunday even ng serv ce
JO

the Sermonette
TEX;I' I PETER 5 7
Let him have all your wornes and cares for he IS always
thinking about you and watching everythmg that concerns you
(L B P ) or K J verswn Castmg all your cares upon hun for
he careth for you
In these days most of us expenence cares
concerns
and 'worries These result in frustrations from the many and
varoed experiences of life The way n which we handle our
frustration 1s unportant ThiS we need to discover for ourselves
To say Godwillhelpme maybe true bulltlsnotatways easy
to experience
In the news on T V 1! was shown thiS week how some people
are trying to reheve therr frustrations They were shoutmg at
!herr own sons playing ie&lt;l hockey to get hun
kill him or
whatever Also one program talked about people fmdmg some
release m provokmg dogs and other anunals to f1ght until one or
more died
It may seem to be an oversunplificat1on of the matter to say
Take yoW" burden to the Lord and leave them there But how
are we going to get 'relief without hurtmg a fellow human
bemg• We all needsomemeansof rehef a scapegoat Perhaps a
real and live one on which to take It out may appear to be the
most expedient way
But God sshouldersare the broadest of all He too IS alive
l'!lychologocally secure Basically sound
Try Him you may be surpriSed what happens -Robert T
Bumgarner pastor Heath Umted Methodist Church

Dorcas

Social Notes
Mr and Mrs Paul Smith
spent a recent Sunday w1th hiS
Sister and brother m law Mr
and Mrs Orvy Gamer at
Hebron
Mrs Emma Salser spent a
weekend with her daughter and
family Mr and Mrs Clyde
Evans Rio Grande
Th- calling on Mr and
Mrs Paul Smith ree&lt;lntiy were
Mr and Mrs Robert Lewis
Mr and Mrs Herbert Sayre
Mr and Mrs Haze McMurry
and Mr and Mrs Henry Er
Ylne

Emma Salser called on Kat1e
Blake on Froday
Mr and Mrs Dan Sayre
spent the weekend With her
parents Mr and Mrs Kenneth
Theiss
Mr and Mrs Lester Grunm
Dos Palos Cahf spent two
days w1th Mr and Mrs Paul
Smith
Mrs Bertha Marlow of
Syracuse VISited her brother
Ike Baker and family
Mrs LaiU"a Circle Mr and
Mrs Milford Fredenck and
family Mr and Mrs Jack
Bootie and fanuly and Forest
Van Meter and daughter Joan
Crisp attended the funeral of
Clyde Johnson on Sunday
Mr and Mrs Paul Smith
were hosts to a dmner on
Sunday honoring the brrthdays
of !herr son Dan and three
grandchildren Fa1th Don and
Ted Th- present were Mr
and Mrs Dan Smith Bonme
Tim Tammy and Ted Mr and
Mrs Don Smith and Jerry and
Mr and Mrs Terry Varney
and Jenny
Lawrence DBlley of East
Uvetpoolspent a week with hiS
parents Omar and Winnie
Dailey and brother Uoyd and
family He enjoyed sqwrrel
lllnting while here
Carrie and Cecil Bolin of
Albaily and Howard Dalley of
Reedsv111e visited recently
With Jess and Lesta Pickens
Li!la Sterrett and sons Matt
Mjb and Max visited her
p.venta Edna and Otis Knopp
lblday Dick Sterrett )Vas
•!lending. a sem1nar for
J.cbolt ProducQon at Cam
If•
t'

'

7 Tl &lt; Da

brodge
Rev and Mrs Ray Beegle of
W1lmmgton v1s1ted over the
weekend w1th friends and
relat1ves and were houseguests
of LaiU"a Corcle
David TheiSS and Randy
Warner who love country life
and campmg spent a week
back pack ng on the Ap
palachian Trail m V1rgm1a
They carried their supplies on
theor backs and slept tn
sleepmg hags They are both
freshmen at Oh1o State
Umvers1ty
John and Jam1e G&lt;Jrby and
children He d1 and John of
East Liverpool VISited Sunday
w1th Emma Johnson
On Oct 6 Emma Johnson
Bern C&lt;l and Debbie Lavalley
Ray Frank Crystal Sunpson
Bernard Lavalley Jr attended
the personal appearance of
ElviS Presley at the Umvers1ty
of Dayton Arena at Dayton
V1s1hng w th Steve and
Rhonda Dalley Saturday
evemng were Max and Sherry
Knopp of Gallipolts and Undo
and Jun D•ddle
Mrs Margaret TheiSS of
Pataskala VISited recently With
her s1ster and brothers-in law
Charles and Bonme and Blythe
and N na TheiSS Spendmg
Thursday evemng with Esther
West and' brother John
Longsworth were Andy and
Nora Cross Edna Knopp and
Mary Kay Yost
Proud grandmother Mrs
Emma Johnson has purchased
a camper wh1ch is used to
fo!low her grandson young
Evli Kne1val Steve Lavalley
of Dorcas Attending the races
Sunday at the Apple City Motor
Club In Wellston were Emma
Johnson Bernice Lavalley
Jamie Gorby and Ruth
Gnndstalf The men Bernard
Lavalley Dave Grindstaff Bill
Roberts John G&lt;lrby and Steve
Lavalley spent SatW"day night
at the club In the camper They
were joined by the ladles on
Sunday for the rae&lt;ls Steve has
received 16 trophies from 18

races

A thought for the day
Amencan poet Joaquin ~ller
sa1d That man who lives for
self alone lives for the meanest
mortal known

SEVENTH

DAY

F RST SOUTHERN BAP
T ST
282 Mu be y A e
Pome ov
a
1 a ed
w h
S B C
he Rev
F ed H
paso
ov zw ng sun

Sunda

dar

schoo

9 JO am

0

mee

0

mo n ng wo sh p
Su nday evange s

ng
JO p m
mee
g Wed esda

P

av

JO p m

MIDDLEPORT
MT MORIAH BAPT ST
Corne
Fou h and Ma n
M dd epa t Rev Hen y Key
J
paso Sunday Schot~ 9 JO
a m M s Erv n Saumgard
ne
sup
Mo n ng wo sh p
0 45 am
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES
Larry Carnahan p es d ng
m n ste
Sunday B be ec
ture 9 30 a m
Walch owe
s udy 10 JO a m
Tuesday
B be study 1 JO p m
Thu s
day
m n s y schoo
30
p m
se v ce m ee no 8 30

pm

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
Christ n Ch s1 an Un on
Law ence Man ev
pas o
Mrs Russe
Young Sunday
School Sup
Sunday Schoo
Even ng wo sh p
9 30 a m
7 30
Wednesday
p aye
mee ng 7 JO p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Rae ne Rou e 2 the
Rev James M Muncv pas or
Sunday Schoo
9 45 a m
morn ng wo sh p
&amp; m
even no wo sh p
7 30 p m
Prayer meet ng Tuesday
JO
p m Young peop e s mee ng
7 30 D m ThV sday
DDLEPORT
F RST
BAPT ST
Co ne S xth a d
Pa me
he
Rev
S eve
Skaggs
paso
Danny
Thompson Sunday schoo sup
WMPO
ado prog am
45
a m Sunday schoo 9 5 a m
morn ng wo Sh p
0 5 a m
You h ac v es and fe owsh p
fo
un o
and sen o
h gh
s uden s 6 p m B be s udv
7 30 p m
M d week p ayer
serv ce Wednesday
30 p m
M

CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
M dd epo t 5th and Ma n
George
G ne
m n ste
James Shee s supe n enden
B b e SChOO
9 30 a m
mo n ng WDrsh p
0 30 a 1"1
even ng wa sh p 7 30 p m
prayer serv ce 1 p m Wed
nesdav
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Rev
Don Co e
pas o
F oyd
Ca son Sunday S hOo sup
Sund~y Schoo
9 30 a m
mo n ng wo sh p
0 30 a m
Sunday vange s c mee ng
7 30 p m
p aye
mee ng
Wednesday
30 p m

THE
UNITED
PRES
BYTERIAN
MINISTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY Ow ght
L Zav II Pas or D rec or
HARRISONVILLE
Sunday Church Schoo
9 30
a m Mrs Home Lee S~pt
Morn ng WorshiP
30 am
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday
Church School 9 30 a m John
F
Fu tz
SURf
Ma n nQ
Worshp 030am
SYRACUSE
Mo n ng
Worsh p
9 a m
Sunday
Church Schoo
0 a m
M s
Sampson Ha
Supt

o

RUTLAND CHURCH OF
GOD- Ph
p Wh ey pas a
Sunday schao
0 a m
wo sh p se v ce
7 p m
Praye meet ng Wednesday
7 30 p m

HAZEL
COMMUN TV
CHURCH
Nea Long Bo
tom Estll Hart pas or Rov
Brown
us s an
pasta
Sunday schoo
0 a m Church
7 30
p m
each
Sunday
even ng p ayer meet ng 7 30
P m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT
PEN
TECOSTAL- Th dAve the
Rev W I am Kn te pas or
Rona d Dugan Sunday Schoo
Supt C asses for a
ages
even ng se v ce 7 30 p m
B be study Wednesday
30
p m
youth serv ces Fr day
730pm
FREEWILL BAPTIST
Corner Ash and p urn M d
d epa
Noe
He man
pasta
Sa urday even ng
serv ce 7 p m Sunday schoo
10 a m
Sunday even ng
wasl'lp7pm

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE
PARISH

THE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert T Bumgarner
Dl ector
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev CarlE H cks
Rtv D Wm Sydenstr cker
CHESTER
Worship 9 5
a m
Church Schoo 10 a m
ENTERPR SE- Worsh p 9
a m
Church Schoo
0 a m
FLATWOODS
Wa Sh p
a m
Church Schoo 10 a m
POMEROY
Worsh p
0 30 a m Chu ch Schoo 9 5
am
UMYF 6 30 p m
ROCK SPRINGS
Worsh p
10 a m Church Schoo 9 a m
UMYF 6 30 p m

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER

Rev RDber1 Bumg•rner
HEATH Worship 10 30
a m Church Schoo 9 30 a m
UMYF 7 p m
RUTLAND
Worsh p 9 15
a m
Church Schoo 10 a m
UMYF 7 p m
SALEM CENTER War
sh p 9 a m
Church Schoo 10
am
UMYF Thursday, 7 p m

SYRACUSE CLUSTER
•ev R chard E Jnvls
ASBURY Worsh p 11
a m Church Schoo 9 50 a m
WSCS 1st Tuesday
FOREST RUN - Worsh p 9
1 m
Church Schoo 0 a m
wscs 3rd Wednesday 7 30

pm

MINERSVILLE - Worsh p
10 a m Church Schoo 9 a m
wscs 3rd Monday 1 30 p m
SYRACUSE
Church
School 9 30 a m
worsh p
servl~. 7 30 p m

SO"IITHERN

C~U$TER

Rev Steven W lson
Rev Larry Poling
Rev Howard Shiveley
BeTHANY
(Doren)
Worsh p 9 30 • m
Church
Schoo 10 30 a m
CARMEL Worsh p
11
1 m
st and 3rd Sundays
Church School 10 a m
APPLE GROVE
Sunday
schoo
9 JO a m
worsh p
f rst and th rd Sunday 7 30
Pm
prayer meet ng Wed
nesday 7 30 p m Fe owsh p
!~pper t r.st Saturday 6 p m
"' M W second Tuesday 7 30

pm

EAST LETART
Sunday
schoo
9 30 a m
worsh p
second and fourth Sunday 7 30
Pm
p ayer meetl.ng Wed

I

UMW
30 D m

nc

R il

• m
b e s udv
p m
ho
sday 8 p m

" n
h

e

0

s

U M W

AD

VENTIST
Mu be y
He gh s
Pomeroy
Paso
G a d Se on Sabba h sc hoo
e e y Sa u day a 1 p m a nd
wo Sh p se ce o ow nq a
3 15
p m
Open
B b e
d scuss on 7 30 p m a
he
chu ch each Thursday

school sup

pm

GREAT~END
WOShp
a n
2nd and 4 h Sundays
Chu ch Schoo
oa m
LETART FALLS
Wo Sh p
0 a m Chu ch s hoo 9 a m
B be s udy
JO p m every
Tuesday
MORNING STAR
Wo sh p
9 30 a m
Chu ch School a 30
a m
M d Week
Se v ce
Wednesday 8 p m
MORSE CHAPEL
Wo
Sh p
a m
s and 3 d
Sundays
Chu h S hoo
0
am
PORTLAND
Wa sh p
30
P m
Chu ch Schoo 9 30 a m
SUTTON
Wo Sh p
a m
2nd and 4 h Sundays Chu c h
S hoo 0 a m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Robe t Meece
Rev Stanley Brandum
JOPPA
Wo sh p 0 am
Chu ch S hoo 9 a m
P aye
Mee ng Wednesday 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM
Chu ch
se v ces
9 a m
Sunday
Schoo 9 45 a m B b e S udy
eve y Thu sday
30 p m
NORTH BETHEL
Wo
sh p
a m Chu ch Schoo 0
am
ALFRED
Sunday SChOo
9 45 a m
ea h Sunda y
P each ng a
am
each
Sunday P aye mee ng 7 45
P m Wednesday WSCS 8 p m
on h d Tuesday each mon h
REEDSV LLE Sunday
schoo
9 30 p each ng
30
p m Sunday p aye mee ng
1 30 p m Tuesday WSCS 7 30
f s Thu sdav each man h
SLVERRDGE
Woshp
0 a m
Church Schoo 9 a m
TUPPERS
PLANS
Wo sh p 9 a m
Chu ch
Schoo
0 a m
KENO
CHURCH
OF
CHR ST
Geo ge F ede ck
sup Se v ce week y 9 30 a m
on Sunday P each ng f s and
h d Sundays o mon h by
C fiord Sm h 9 30 a m
HOBSON
CHR STIAN
UNION Da e
Dodd
paso
Sunday Schoo
9 30
a m
Leona d G mo e f s
e de
even ng se v ce 7 30
p m
Wednesday
prayer
mee ng 1 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD
Rae ne Rou e 2 The
Rev Cha es Hand pastor
Sunday Schoo
9 45 a m
morn ng wo sh p
1 a m
Even ng serv ces Tuesday and
F day 7 30
BEARWALLOW
R OGE
CHURCH OF CHR ST
B be
Study
9 30 a m
mo n ng
worsh p
0 30 a m
even ng
wo sh 1p 6 30 p m Wednesday
B b e 51 udy
30 p m
MT
O'rfVE CHURCH
Long Bo f.m Sunday Schoo
0 a m
h w ard P go t
supt Ev nge s c message
each Sund y even ng
30 p m
by
E de
Russe
c ne
m n s e o he Apos o c Fa h
B b e S udy Wednesday 7 30
pm
STIVERSV LLE
COM
MUN TY CHURCH
Sunday
schoa se v ce 0 a m P ave
meet ng Thu sdav 1 p m
Sunday even ng se v ce 7 p m
ZION CHURCH OF CHRI-ST
Pome oy
Ha sonv e
Road R k Mo
son pas o
Sunday s hoo sup
S even
San ey S nday schoo
9 30
a m
mo n ng wo sh p and
co mmun on
0 30
a m
Sunday
e en ng
you h
Ch s an Ende o 6 30 p m
wo sh p se
e Sunday
30
p m
Wednesday even ng
P ave
m ee ng and B b e
30 p m
s udv
ST
JOHN
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
P ne G o e The
Re
W
am M dd eswa h
Pas or Chu ch Se v ces 9 30
a m Sun day Schoo 0 30 a m
~MADBURY CHURCH OF
CHR ST B be Schoo
9 30
a m
morn ng worsh p
0 30
a m Sunday even ng Wo sh p
Se rv ce
7 30 p m
cho
practce Sunday and Wed
nesday 7 p m p ave mee ng
and B ble S udy Wednesday
7 30 p m
ANT QUITY BAPT ST
Rev Free and No
s pas o
Sunday schoo 0 a m Chu ch
serv ce
p m
Wednesday
BbeSudy
pm
RACINE FIRST CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
Morn ng Wo sh p
0 30 a m
Even ng Wo sh p 7 30 p m
Wednesday M d Week Se v ce
Sunday Schoo Super n enden
Ge ad We s
Paso
Rev
Mor s M Wolfe
RACINE fiiRST BAPT ST
Wa er P B kacsan pas or
Ronne Sa ser s s Sup
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
Morn ng Wo sh p 0 45 a m
Sunday even ng wo sh p
30
p m Wednesda';' even ng B b e
Study 8 p m
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rev Leon G asure paste
Sunday School 9 30 a m
youth and lun o you h se v ce
6 -45 p m
even ng wo sh p
7 30 p m
p ayer and p a se
Wednesday 7 30 o m
S LVER
RUN
FREE
BAPTIST
Rev Ra ph Dean
pasto( Sunday Schoo
0a m
Leon M er
sup
Even ng
se v ce
30 p m
P aye
mee ng Thu sday 7 JO p m
Clf'ESTER t'HURCH OF
GOD
Rev
James Sa
terf e d pastor Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
wo Sh p serv ce
a m
even ng serv ce
7
praye
se v ce and vouth
Serv ce Wedhesday 7 m
LANGSVILLE CHR STIAN
CHURCH- Rober E Musser
pas or Sunday Schoo
9 30
a m
Roy s gman sup
morn ng
worsh p
10 30
Sunday even ng serv ce 7 30
M d week serv ce Wednesday
7 30_p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Rev
Howa d C B ack paso
Bob
Moore Sunday Schoo Sup
Sunday SchaD c asses for a
ages 9' 30 a m
mo n ng
worsh p o 45 NYPS Sunday
6 30 p m evange s c se v ce
Sunday 1 30 p m M d week
p aye mee ng Wednesday
7 30pm Mssona vmee ng
second Wednesda';' 7 30 p m
UNITED
~AITH
NON
DENOMINATIONAL
Rev
Robert Sm th pastor sunday
Schoo 9 30 a m c ass eader
Leo HI
worsh p serv ce
0 30 a m
church 7 30 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETH
REN IN qtRIST- Eden R
B eke f;las or Sunday Schoo
10 a
m
Howard McCoy
supt
Mo n ng !!termon 11 a
m
Sunday n ght se v ces
Chr stan Endeaver 7 30 p
m
Song se v ce 8 p m
Preach ng 8 30 p m
M d
week Prayer meet ng Wed
nesday 7 p m
Ray Adams
av leader

r

CHURCH

OF

JESUS

CHRIST
Located at Ru and
an New L ma Road neK to
Forest Ac e Perk Rev Ray
Rouse pas or Robert Musser
Sunday Schoo supt Sunday
schoo
0 30 a m
worshiP
7 30 p m B b e study Wed .
nescJay 7 30 p m
Saturday
n ght prave service 7 30 p m

HEMLOCK

GROVE

CHRISTIAN- Rogef Watson
pastor
Ray Wha e'f sup
Monng woshp 930 am
church schoo
10 30 a m
young peop e s mee ng 6 30
P m
even ng worsh p 7 30
P m 9 be study Wednesday

7 30 p m
MT
UNU"'N BAPTIST
Rev Cec CoK pas or Sunday
Schoo
sup
oe ,..S a v e
Sunday schoo
9 45 a m
Sunday even ng wo sh p 7 30
Wednesday p aver and B b e
study 7 30 p m
TU P P E\R S
PLA N S
CHRISTIAJ-1
CHURCH
Eugene: Unde wood
paslo
Howa d Ca dwe
J
Sunday
Sct:1 oo Sup
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
Mo n ng Se mon
0 30 a m
Sun da v even ng
serv ce 7 p m
LETART FALLS UN TED
BRETHREN
Rev Free and
No s pas 0
F OVd No s
supl Sunday schoo 9 30 a m
mo n ng se mon
0 30 am
P aye
se v ce
Wedne sday
7 30 p m
CHESH RE CHURCH OF
GOD OF PROPHECV
G P
Sm h pas o
Sunday Schoo
0 a m A hur Henson Sup
Mo n ng wo sh p
a m
Young Peop e s se v ce
P m
Even ng se v ce
30
p m
Wednesday M d Week
P aye
Se v ce
30 p m
You h mee ng
6 30 p m
Even ng worsh 1p 1 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Rev
He be
G ate paso
Wo
sh p serv ce I a m and
30
p m Sunday Sondav Schoo
9 30 a m
R cha d Barton
supt P aye mee ng Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST
C ffo d. Sm h
Sunday Schoo 9 30
m n s e
a m
mo n ng chu ch
0 30
a m Sunday even ng serv ce
7 30 p m Wednesday se v ce 8

&amp; t nei M ddlepor Po leroy 0

SE\tu

In Memo!}

Brie

Sunday
K ngs

99 3
Monday

Ml::MUHY

Tende
memo es s so
v
ouched bo h days and o ng
hough s w
neve
ade
away because we
a m ss
you ve y mu h ea h d av as
hey pass by
W fe Lu
e Son ack S
and G andsons
ack
T no hV Ku ss Sean and
ames B a ey
0 8 c

Ma hew
1.4'1233

Tue day
Roman
9 5
Wedne day
ohn

641 57
Th day
Heb

Yard Sales
o

Home
M
B a ev who had h s b hday
0
4 9 2 and was a ed
home Oc
8 9 2

N

I I 6
F day
Ephe on

MOTOCROSS 0
20 p
1 30 Race
p m 2
pas Bes Pho o on Co
B ms one Raceway
Coo v e Oh o

00 52
Sa u day

ac ce
m es
Rd 56
Pa k

lu~•

12 32 48

and

a

0 3 fc

My ne ghbor Marty
ass.stant scoutmaster

SOUTHERN

pm
MASON

ASSEMBLY

773 5133

HARTFORD

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST n Chrl11i11n Un onThe Rev W am Campbel
pastor Sunday Schoo
9 3D
• m
James Hughes sup
even ng serv ce
7 JO p m
Wednesday even ng prayer
meet ng
7 30 p m
Yoyth
prayer serv ce each TUesday
FAIRVIEW
BilLE
CHURCH Letart W Va Rt
l
Rev
George Hoschar
pastOr
Sunday Schoo 9 30
a m Prayer and B be study
7 30 p m
Cottage Prayer
Serv ce Tuesd•y
10 a m
Worsh p Serv ce
Thursday
7 30 p m

w Main
/&lt;ALl

970VAL ANf65K 2 3Dedraam
fu ly ca peed LP gas hea
Phone 992 775

Sa c a
S a che
Oh o

a 2s

Hf.RE 1

Q.ELAND
608 E
REALTY
MAIN

~
•• • o

NEAR LANGSVILLE

HONDA 150 pe fe
cond on
s 200 PhOne 985 J826
0 ' 3

0 56 p

9 7 W NCHESTER Mob e
home 60x 2 2 bed ooms
ba hs cen ra a r u nace and
ca pe ed Phone 992 5254 o
30 4 882 22

Cv c

also

Assoc a1 on

EARN ex
P
es a e g ea
fo
you
s ap on shee ron coppe
bass
a um num
IBM
Papers s an ess s ee au o
ba er es au o ad a o s Se
a one o he a ges ecyc ng
com pan es n h s pa I of he
s a e The Rosenbe g Com
pany A hens Oh o
10.

SCRAP ALUMINUM

Hard

(free of Steel)

ng

f ne wall to set off lhat palo he put

I ke

Marty-the ready w

II ng

15~

The

are f rst to recogn ze the r sp ntual needs Nor are 1hey ashamed

who

the r most mportant

bu lcJ ng

rather than Saturday

How about

when they

do
$975

Db

fX

Phone

968 FORD LTD sa on wagon
p s
p b
ape p aye
a
.weond on ng S 00 Phone 992
3 8

ty

W th the hope t w II m some measure foster and help susta n that
wh1ch s good n lam ly and commun ty hfe th s feature s sponsored by
the bus ness f1rms and organ zat1ons whose names appear below

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E Man

Da99220

RACINE FOOD MARKET
The Sto
Rae ne

ew

th A Heart
Phone 949 3342

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
D a 992 3284

M dd epo I

PUBL C NOT CE
The annua e ec on of he
Me gs Coun y Ag cu u a
Soc e y Dl ec o s w I be he d
Thu sday Novembe
9 4 a
" he off ce of he Me gs Coun y
:t:omm ss one s n he Cou
J,ouse at Pome oy Oh o f om 5
lfo 9 p m
• Qua f ca ons o
d rec o s
~ re
ha
they mus
be a
~ ual I ed vo e o Me gs Coun y
lll!l nd mus have a membe sh p
If eke
n sa d so e y o 9 4
• Cand da es pe
ons m us be
!i ed w h he Sec e a y no ate
;than 5 p m Wednesday Oc
lobe 30 197.4 Only pe so ns
t.o d ng membe sh p eke s a
thecoseo he 9 4Coun yFar
Ur a eas
5 ca enda days
l:ieto e he da e of e ec on a e
41ua
ed a vo e
'" The
Me gs
Ag cu u a
S'oc e y By M s Ma v n K ng
S.ec e a y

HEINERS BAKERY
Bakers of Good Bread
Hunt ng on W Va

Pome oy

INGLES ASHLAND SERVICE
M no Repa rs &amp; Tune up
Beech &amp; Locust
M ddlepo t
Ph 992 2366

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

soo

Buck Pont ac Opel G M C Dealer
E Man 51
Ph 992 2 74

Ph 949 959

By PHIL PASTORET
• Obviously you meant the
Jetter - so why s gn t s n
cereiy ?
Another thmg that s n1ce
about your newspaper You
can t stuff a cour,fle TVs 1nto
wet shoes to he p dry them
out

Ph 992 2550

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION
Rae ne

M ddleporl

BARBS

•

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO
337 N 2nd

8 25 3 c

~ 10

M dd epo I Oh o

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

Bakers of Gay 90 s Bread

Ph 992 3030

M dd eporl

0

lc

CA~H

pa d fa a
makes and
mode s of mob e homes
Phone a ea code 6 4 423 9531
4 3 fc

OLD FURN TURE oak ab es
c ocks ce boxes brass beds
d shes desks o
camp ete
households
w te M D
M ler R 4 Pome oy Oh o
cal 992 7760

Lou

220 E Ma n

GAUL'S MARKET
Chesler Oh o

Help Wanted
WA TRESS waned app y n
C ow s S eak
pe son a
House

Me gs County Branch

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO
296 W Second

Pomeroy

Ph 992 3863

WAID CROSS SONS STORE
Groceries &amp; General Merchandise

Rae

ne

Ph 949 5712

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE INC.
100 E

The Finest n Mob le Homes

Ma n

Pomeroy

F

A I Doctors Presc

Keepsake 0 amond R ngs

51

Pomeroy

pt ons
Pomeroy

@j)~
TWO LOCATIONS
59 N Second 51
M ddleporl 0
46 Court St
Gall pols 0

P J PAULEY AGENT
Nat onw de fnsurance Co of Columbus 0
307 Spr ng Ave
Pomeroy

Dam 2318

POWELL S SUPER VALU
The F end y Folks
Pomeroy Oh o

Ph 992 7034

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E Ma n

If you re a REAL old llmer
you can recall when pumpkm
spes were numerous n the
cap tal m... HISS)
A slip of the tongue can be
more disastrous than falling
downstatrs

SWISHER &amp; WHSE PHARMACY
We

Ph 992 3785

TUPPERS PLAINS HARDWARE
Pa nt P vmb ng &amp; E edrlca Suppl es
Tuppers P a ns
Ph 667 3963

I

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Devoted I~{IAe gs Mason Area
Pomeroy 0

Ph 742 395

Tbe Alinanac
By United Press International
Today IS Friday Oct 18 the
~Jst day of 1974 with 74 to
follow
The moon IS approaching •ts
f1rst quarter
/fhe morning stars are Venus
Mars and SatW"n
:i'he evemng stars are Mer
cury and Jupiter
Th- born on this day are
under the s•gn of Libra
American Academy Award
winning actor George C Scott
was born Oct 18 1927
On thiS date m history
In 1776 the boundary between
Maryland and Pennsyivan a
wa"s f1nally settled later to he
knliwn as The Mason Dixon
'
Line
In 1673 the forst rules
governing mtercotiegtate football were drawn up by
representatives of Yale Prtn
ceton Rutgers and Columb a
unl~ers1ties

HALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

In 1959 Russia claimed to
have taken the first plctures of
the far s1de of the moon
IJi 1969 Amerocan sp1Jnters
Toliunle Smith and John Carlos
we[!! suspended by the U S
Ol~pic conumttee for making
black p,ower gestures at the
~es tn Mexoco C ty

Middleport Oh a

RACINE PLANING MILL
Salem St

;i81

Build ng Supples&amp; Custom Millwork
Ph 992 3978

•

I

C B
gnod
Phone ljl9 2

FREEZER Beef
fed Hereto d steers
n ce W
de ver
p ocess ng p an Ca
even ngs
KNAPP shoes
acke s
s
Phone 992 5324

BLACK fema e
Phone 742 .4465

h huahua

so ks

and

y es on sa e

9 .4 HONDA 750 w h
s 850 A so 8 f Cab
2S h p Johnson
a
canvas 52 550 Fa
on y Con ac Doug
992 3078
af er 5 p
any me on weekends

ex as
a boa
er and
p ces
Enoch

m

o

c

6 J

SEW NG Mach nes b and new
Z g Zag n n ce wa nu tab e
n o g na ca ons Neve
used
Ctea ance on
74
Mode s
On y
a few
ava abe
$43 40 cash or
te ms ava abe Phone 992
7755

0 15 fc

957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lakewood
act on ba s h
acke
a
shocks
hooker
headers w th 3 co ectars for
sma
bock
Ca
992 3496
a er 6 p m BEST OFFER
0 7 c

o 8 3c
- -- --- --- ------------

o

6 fc

TWO 4 room and ba h ap s n
M dd epor
For nfo ma on
ca 992 2550 o 742 655
7 3 fc
FURN SHED
aparlmen
adu s on y n M dd epor
Phone 992 3874

0 83 c

o

73c

BABY CALVES
Hereto d
Ho s e n 6 ave ab e n neK
s x weeks Make an offer on
one o a
Phone 985 3831
0 73 p

GOOD USED t umpet ke new
Ca 9.49 3813 after 4 p m
0 76 p
197
HARLEY
Dav dson
mo orcvc e 51900 f m
ahn
P ckens Rt
Sm th R dge
Par and Oh o
0 17 3 c
3 WARM MORN NG hea ers
one 00 b
wo 50 bs John
P ckens R
Sm h R dge
Par l!lnd Oh o
10 11 3 c

8 YEAR o d Pa am no
ge d ng 2 eg s e ed sorre
qua terl'larse mares Phone
Ru and 742 42 I afler 5 p m
742 550 or 742 6863
0 36 c

8 tfc

- -- -~

BEDROOM
ra er
In
Sv acuse c ose o schoo No
ch dren o
pe s Depos
equ ed Phone 992 2U at e
6 30 p m

0 36 p

4 ROOM u n shed apt C ose o
Powell s Super Valu phone
992 3658
10 13 tc

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

SMALL
Condo

26

House
s ee

and
0
Phone

on
992

PR VATE mee lng oom for
any o gan za on phone 992
3975
3 1 fc
COUNTRY Mob It Home Park
R
33 ten m es horth of
Pome oy
Large ots w th
concrete pat os
s dewa ks
unners and off
street
park ng
A so
spaces for
sma tra ers Phone 992 7479
7 21 fc
2JC60 2 BEDROOM mob e
home
coun ry
oca on
pub lc
water
sYs em
References requ ed Ca 949
246 af e 5 p m

On Sa e Now qua v Devoe
8 ght Wh te LateK House
Pa nt n 2 ga ton cans On y
$649/e gaon
B an
name Root Pant
0
pet off wh e hev ast
Take advantage o
these
g eat buvs wl'l e hey a e
n
ock

- ----- ------------- ' - ROOM housew h 1 bahs n
Pomeroy Phone 992 34 8
0 5 26 c
TWO- bed oom-;,ou-,-.-- -0 , -. e a
sso Sou h Th d A en e
Mddepo
Phone9927074o

992 3&lt;65

Route 33 No th Exce en
sp ng and good town sh p oad
A m nera s

NEW LISTING -

SYRACUSE
4 bedrooms and
den Ba h d n ng oom po
ches basemen carpo t and
workshop henhouse and pony

ba n
VET

sn

A FEW new band ns ruments
Con ac Renee S one 992 7567
9 A fc
APPLES F tzpatr ck Orcha d
s a e Route 689
Phone
W lkesv e 669 3785
92526C

KOSCOT 70SMETI~S

&amp;

WIGS (The M nk 0
Bne
Cosmet cs
Phone
BROWN S 992 51 3
8 :20 tfc

Does
your
home
requ1re any of these
services?

ALL•WtATHtK

-·

CARPETED

Mode n 3 bedroom

home EK a a ge v ng bath
u
y 7nce a gecosets wth
sto age
shelves
ga ore
Basemen
ga den shop and
ga age An exce en buy
ALL
THE
ABOVE
PROPERTIES ARE VERY

773 5468

r992-2550

MACH N ES Rep a
makes 992 2284
The Fab
Shop P.om eroy
Au ho zed S nge Sa es and
Se v ce We sharpen Sc sso s
3 29 ltc
DOZER wo k and c ea ng by
he ac e hou y o cont ac
a m ponds oads e c La ge
doze end ope a o w h ove
20 years expe ence Pu ns
Excava ng Pome oy Qh o
Phone 992 2478
2 9 fc

'

0 DELL A nemen
located
beh nd R u and G a de School
com p e e
on end serv ce
b akes and uneups whee s
ba anced e ec on ca y Open
8 o 8 dl!l y Ca
42 3232 on
Sunday fo app
7 16 lfc
READY M X
CONCRETE
de ve ed
gh
to you
p ojec Fast and easy Free
es m a es Phone 992 3284
Goeg en Ready M x Co
M dd epo
Oh o

On State Rt 124
m from
Route 7 by pass towards
Rut and

Open Mon

BAM

Sat

6PM

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE
949 3132 or 843 2667

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a sh,f

Pa nllng

sd

to a house
ng

paper hang ng
cabinets etc

roof ng
k tchen

C BRADFORD Ave onee
Camp e e Se v ce
Phone 949 3821 o 949 3 6
Rae ne Oh o
c B ad o d

1

II\ DOI.II'On 0

"" A¥

If so Call us Now for a
Free Estimate

FOR FREE es mQieS o n
ll um num
ep ace men
w ndows s d ng s o m doo s
lind w ndows Ra 1 ng Phone
Cha es L s e Sy acuse Oh o
Ca
acob
Sa es
Rep esen a ve
V
V
Johnson and Son n
' 30

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

"'

THE DEPENI»BI F
CONTRACtiNG CO.
raterlet, lal ..tlpr
Decorating .,...
ReitUJtfi1111'1g

BARGAIN DAYS
AT KUHL S
A great way to f ght

flat ion &amp; stretch your
furn sh ng appl ance s s
to shop at KUHL

VINYL SIDING

PH 992 7454 or
992 7129

BARGAIN CENTER

SE PT C
lANKS
easonab e
a es
Ph
446
4782 Ga 1 po s John Russe
owne and ape a o
2 fc

s

SEP'T C

Strout Realty

6 5 fc

3 bed ooms
lu
basement a
elect c
home SlB .500

ALL

E~ECTRIC

new home

3 bed ooms carpeted ange
andarcond1onng $7500

50 ACRES

W lh house and

some t mbe
$ 7 500

4 ACRES bed oom s
garage

RUTLAND

DOZER or ba khoe wo k
Phone 446 398 o 446 3459
9 8 fc
CREMEANS
CONCRET~
de vered Monday lhrough
Sa u day
and
even ngs
Phone 446 42
6 3 fc

Alf ed area

ca
Rl

33

3

basemen

B ck ode

5
ooms and
home 4 bedrooms carpo t
ba h a comfo abe s ze a
ac e of g ound $ 4 000
20.5 Sp ng Ave
Pom e ov
Th s we a anged one oo
pan home has been com
115 ACRES Bottom &amp;
p
e
edecara ed ns de
h lis de w h ba n Chesle
and ou
We
bu I
bu
area
nexpens ve ha dwood f oo s
new Luxa e gas
u n.!lce
307 Spnng Avenue
sys em new A ms ong
te
992 2298
Pomeroy
k chen and ba h oom f oo s "'
Good u I ty bu d ng Phone
992 5292
CONTACT
o a fc
Los Pauley
Branch Manager
W LL TRADE
F NANC NG
ARRANGED
W
TH
M N MUM DOWN
W LL
cons de
rade for o der
home
a e o
and on he
new 3 bed oom 2 ba h home
w h 2 car ga age
a ge PIANO u'n ng and epa
tam y oom a r cond an ng
Phone Cha es Sea
992 3 ll
Move n mmed a ey Ca
9
32 p
992 5976 now

e v

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

LAST B D Home mp ovemen
ca pen y wo k
oo ng
pa n g ca pe
ns a a on
1 ee es ma es
A
wo k
gua an eed Phone 42 508
9 22 c

6 15 fc

EXCAVAT NG dozer loade
and backhoe wo k
sept c
anks ns a ed dump I UJ:ks
and to boys o h e w
hau
d 1 op so
mes one &amp;
g ave
ca Bob or Roge
efte s day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 352.5 a 992
5232
2
fc

GRE T
CO.UNTRY

S11REO
92.1

·WMPO.fM

-

W LL TRADE
FINANC NG
ARRANGED
WITH
M N MUM
DOWN
W
cons de
ade
o
o de~
home
a e o and on h s
new 3 bed oom 2 bath home
w h 2 co::~
ga age
a ge
lam ly oom a cond on ng
Move n mmeda ey Ca
now 992 5976
9 24 fc

B g Capacity
May fag
Au1oma11cs
'i speed or•rat 0
'lho ce o
watifl'
:temps Au a wate
leve cant o
L n
Filter o Power F
Ag tator
Perml Press
Maytag
HI IDOl Hn1
D yen
Surround
c othes
with gent e even
heat No hot spots
no overdry no F ne
"Melt). L n
F ter
We Spec at ze n
MAYTAG
Red Cflrpet
• Serv ce

RUMND FURNITURE
Ai"notd Grate

----·-

II

TANK S
AROB C
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPA REO
M LLER
SA NITAT ON
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
3035
o 4 fc

CARPETING
501 NYLON

$7 95

-Nutland

Sq Yd

•
and up
Price ncludes n stallat on
and free padd ng Talk to
Wendell
G ate
carpet
consu tant
We have hund eds of
ca pet va ues Your job can
be camp eted n 1 to 2 weeks
No ong wa1t ng per od

SPECIALI
Candy Slrlpe
rubber back
Reg $6

carpel with

99 sq

yd

Now $4 99 Sq Yd
N ce for bedrooms
k tchens etc

dens

RUTLAND
FltJRNITURE
742 4211

0 66c

742 4211

you
992

SEP T C
TANK S c e.aned
Mode n San a on 992 3954 o
992 349

Bustness Semces

NO MONEY DOWN Month V
paymen s accord ng o n
come New 3 bed oom home
w h wa o wat~ carpe ng on
acre andscapect o s Ca 1
oday fo mo e nfo ma on
992 5976
9 2-4 fc

M

o a 26 c

pm

NEW qua y v ng oom su es
These su es have so d oak
f ames
ha
a e dowe ed
g ued and doub e
o ne
backed
Manv sly es and
fllbr cs
a choose
om
s a ng as ow as S 29 95
A so 3 pc Ea v A me can
abe se s 534 95 We a sa
have
bedd ng
bed oom
su es amps d ne ese sand
h de a beds ack s Fun u e
and Upho s e y Supp es 236
E Ma n St Pame ov Phone
992 3903
0 18 6 c

GARAGE

5

m

Nea

o de home of 3 bed ooms
bath na u a gas heat f u
ce a
And n ce lot n lown
On y $ 2 500 00

ROGER HYSELL'S

-----

CLINIC LOCATION -

BU LO NG Of 80 I fran age x
65 fl The second 10 on ef on
R ve v ew D ve L nco n
"H
Pome oy Oh o
f
n
e es ed ca 992 3230 af e 5

pm

GROCERY bus ness to sate
Build ng for sa e or ease
Phone 773 56 8 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo ntment
3 20 tfc

593 6366

Fully Insured

1 ROOM hou~e w 1'1 bah fu
basemen
garage
and
ga den space on V ne S
n
Rae ne Ca 949 2054 .!If e 5

C•ll Collect I
SS44
AlhetiS Ohio

CULLIGAN
WATER
CONDITIONING

FREE ESTIMATE

Ideal a so fo cut ra e sto e
ant que shop
etc
B ck
bus ness bv d ng only a ew
yea s o d A r ea buy for you
S ACRES
2 bed oom home
w h fu
basement
n the
count v $6 500 00

Known &amp;
R elmble Service

R ghl Now AI

lntenor &amp;
Extenor Work

2 bed oom

FREE HOME ESTIMATES
SUPERIOR

Hard WaterThen ca
u s fo a FREE
Water Ana ys s

Racine, 0.

bunga ow nea Rou e 7 .J=k1 f
ac e ot near M dd epa t W'an

GOOD BUYS MAKE YOUR
NVESTMENT TODAY FOR
NEW HOME n Mason w h TOMORROW MAY BE TOO
SOMEONE
ELSE
~u~rage
Good oca on
3
btdrt'I)MS fu v a pe ed
HAVE DONE SO
Phone (30.4

Dry Red llchy Sk n
Red Smelly

949-3295

- 10 acres on

337 N 2 Middleport
992 2550

Ph 992 5682 or 992 7121
All Meehan cat Work

OF

GHEEN'S PAINTING

c RACINE

---- -:c- -~-:------ --'
NO MONEY DOWN
Moo h y
paymen s ac-cord no a n
come New 3 bed oom home
w h wa to wa ca pe ng an
ac e andscaped o s Ca
today fa mare nfarma on
992 59 6

Produced frQ.I'D a spec a
v ny compound made by B
F Good ch and Monsanto 5
than me a
t mes th eke
s d ng W
nat dent ch p
crack pee
o
rust o
chalk

VINYL PRODUCTS
3 AND 4 ROOM fu n shed and
unfurn shed
apa tments
Phonf 992 5434
-4 2 lfc

TIRED

ALL WEATHER
HARDWARE
337 No h Second Ave
M ddtepo t on o

RUTLAND

10
phone 992 2780

GREAT PA NT VALUES AT
ALL WEATHER
HARD
WARE

991 15SO

ALL

Real Estate For Sale

0 86c

For Rent

Next to H1ghway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

on y $550000

fc

0

REDUCT ONofg ownAKC oy
pood es SSO each pups S65
S amese k ens S 5 Phone
256 6247
0 I 26 c

2

---~-----·---- -, --~--

----SEVERAL u
ab n e s o h e an ques and
b ass beds Open weekdays
and Sunday
M s
Ha o d
Ba nha
Tuppe s Pans
Oh o

8

Pets For Sale

TE STED and app oved by
m
ons o homemake s B ue
us e a pe
eane s ops
Bake Fu n u e Co
o a3c

o a

For Rent or Lease
SMALL bus ness bu ld ng on
s R 33 1 and 124 S75 pe
man h
A so apa ment 4
ooms and ba h $65 per
man h a so
2 oom house
Can be wo apa men s S 50
pe mon h Ca 992 S 86
0 9 26 c

NEW oam o Ill he U$h ons n
you
v ng oom su e as ow
as S 0 95 tor bo h sofa and
cha
We a so cu and sew
new cush on covers See us fo
you upha s ery needs Jack s
Fu n u e and Upho s e y
Supp es 236 E Ma n S
Pome oy Phone 99 3903
0 8 3903

GRAVEL sand Muon sand
mes one P Run by he on
De ve ed Phone .446 42

fc

4 ROOM house unfu n shed on
650 L nco n He gh s Phone
992 387-4

M dd epo I Oh o

992 2955

Reg ster For Pr1r.es
Shop for &amp;arga1nst
You re Invited!

973 HONDA 350
cond on $600
7605

Emergency Phone 992
3995 or 992 7582

992 1259 or 992 2561

NEW wh skev ba e fa sa e
0 E Ba ev Sue ess Road
Phone 667 6344

2 BEDROOMS
o 992 H32

MARK V STORE

s W Osborne
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2 78

19

0

----- -- -----~c-- ----

SEARS CATALOGUE MERCHANT

WE
HAVE
OTHER
L ST NGS
HOUSES
LOTS
FARMS
AND
COMMERC AL COME N
OR CALL

NATURAL gas u nace 50 000
BTU A ms ong fo ced a
w h con o s sao 30 ga on
na u a gas wa er hea e 530
Phone 378 6291
Reedsv e
0 3 6 p

UNK auos
compee and
de vered o ou
va d We
p ck up au o bod es and buy
a k nds o s ap me as and
on R de s Sa vage S R
24 R
4 Pome ov Oh o
Ca 992 5468

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

GAS

BOWERS
REPAIR

Buy of lhe

b do

FALL BARGAIN

-----------

Cpgh9K

he Am

Co.

Athens Oh•o

10 n ng them at church t me?

8

55 000

Phone 992

79 Depot Street

to admit the r dependence on God-and H s Church You It hoar Marty
and h s w fe g ve cred I lo lhe rei g ous bel efs for the slrength of the r
mamage and for I he deals that nsp re lhe r lam ly l fe
In fact its Sunday morn ng

R~berg

Someth ng For Everyone!

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey Mgr

per pound

and able ones-

For Sale

All WEATHER

Phone 992 5367 or 992 3861

RACINE PLUMBING
All Small Appliances
AND HEATING
Lawn Mowers
949 5961 Racme 0

week daub e o w th cha n
3 bed oom
arne
fence
basement N G fa ced a r
furnace
porches
s or age

u new

'177 Pearl Street
M ddleport Oh o

sel
POMEROY AREA
5 oom
f arne ba h 3 B R po ches
n ce
k tchen
s o age
bu d ng na v a gas hea t
pen y o g ound he p ce s
ghl
POMEROY
f oo pan 2
B R
bath
natu a
gas
fu nace
H W
oo s

a ge

Don
home Ha e a beau
sao ns a ed by A
Roo ng Co

A I thai s needed fo a free
est mate s a phone ca 1
Pease Phone

See Us for your
Plumbmg and Heatmg
Needs

SYRACUSE

- - -- ·-

OCT 7 THRU OCT

2

REDECORATI NG7

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

ac es 2 s o y f arne som e
ca pe ng 4 B R d n ng R 3
po ches some ou bu ld ng s
&amp; ga age gas well P ced o

basement w h ut ty
ot Just S 0 000 00

BONANZA

Holulay Specwl'

an

2 BEDROOM mob e home n
own S4 500 Ca 992 39 s o
992 2571
9 3 fc

Wa1er Electr c Gas Sewer
L nes
nsta lied
Work
guaranteed
Doze Backhoe Trucks
..;L mestone &amp; F II 0 rt
"tommerc al Res dental
Construct on &amp; Remodel

Parts

2 S N Second St
Mddepo t Oho
991: 3$09

POMEROY 0

Our a1m 1s to please
our customers

9 2 W NCHESTER Mob 1':
Home 60 x 2 2 bed ooms
omp e e y turn shed
a
pe ed gas hea
en a a
Phone 992 5254 o
304 882

"

1~

P&amp;J

Heat ng
Cool ng Refr g
Plumb ng
Electr ca I
Appl ance
A t
wo k
gua an teed
D scount to
Sen or C t zens

Pomeroy

Sweet C•der
Apples
Pumpkins
lnd•an Corn

c

x 41 E::XCE:LLENT c ond on
a ge v ng oom k chen
bed oom S ove e ge a o
bed S2 450 Phone 378 62 6

Wanted To Buy

Serv1ce

Shulefs Market

0

1

c

II s usually the folks

OF

GOD - Second St Mason w
Va Ches er Tennant pastor
Sunday schoo
o a m
morning worsh p
11 11 m
evangelist c !lervlce 1 30 p m
B be study and prayer se v ce
Wednesday 7 30 p m Phone

R

You d th nk lhat a man so capable ond versatle wouldn 1 feel
dependent on anybody or anyth ng Not so

BAP

TIST - Corner of Second and
Anderson
Mason
Pastor
We ter C oud Sunday schoa
9 45 a m
warsh p serv ce 11
a m
and 7 30 p m
Week y
B b e study Wednesday 7 30

And treasurer of the

He s

n last summer

George Casto pastor Sunday
Schoo 9 30 even nq wo Sh o
7 30 Thu sday even ng prayer
sevce730pm

FIRST

a cert fed publ c accountant

br cklayer He can bu ld a m ghly

MASON COU,NTY
THE HILAND CHAPEL

OF

s

worker for local chart es And-oh yes-Marty s a Saturday marn

LONG
BOTTOM
CHRISTIAN
M
Robe
Wyat pas o
Sunday Schoo
sup
Rona d Osbo ne B b e
Schoo 9 30 a m
preach ng
0 4S a m
Even ng se v ces
30 p m

CHURCH

Ga age

Busigess Services

• 29

REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRIST
OF
LATTER DAY SAINTS
Po I and
Rae ne Road
W I am RDush pastor Denny
Evans
Sunday
Schoor
0 rec o Sunday Schoo 9 30
a m
Morn ng wo sh p
0 30
a m Sunday even ng serv ce 7
p m
Wednesday
even ng
D ayer se v ces 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPT ST
Rev
Ea
Shu e
paso
Wo Sh p se v ce 9 30 a m
Sunday schoo
0 30 a m
Sunday even ng se v ces
30
P m B be s udy and p aye
se
ce Thu sday
30 p m
K ngsbury
Road
Sunday
Schoo 9 30 a m
Ra ph Ca
sup
Wo sh p se v ce
0 30
a m and 30 p m a e na e V
Praye mee ng Wednesday
7 30 p m
Rev
Jay S es
paso
OLD
DEXTER
CON
GREGATIONAL CHURCH
M s Wo ev F anc s Sunday
schoo sup
Sunday s hoo
0
am

MASON

TRA LER o sa e a
Hyse
Run 2 bed ooms Phone 992
39 s 0 99'1 25

- - - - - -- -

4

WANTED o d up
any cond on
Pay ng s 0
ea h F s oo on y W e o
and g e d ec ons o W en
P ano Co
Bo x 88 sa d s
Oh o 43946

Danes
o pen

CHRIST P 0 BOK 487 M er
St
Mason w va
Sunday
B be Study 0 a m
Wo sh p
11 am and 7 p m Bib e Study
Wednesday 7 p m
Voca
mus c

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

0 ' •

DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Cha es Russe
S
m n s e
Norm an C W
sup
Sunday schoo
9 30
a m
wo sh p se v ce
0 30
a m
B be s udy Tuesday
7 30 p m

Second and Pomeroy Sts Stan
Cra g pastor Sunday schoo
9 45 am
worship se v ce 11
a m
tra n no union 6 30
p m even ng worshiP serv ce
7 30 p m
M d week prayer
serv ce Wednesday 7 30 p m

YARD SA LE new and used
me c hand se a Sma ev s
G I Shop
Hoba
Sm a ey
es dence Ches e
Oh o
F day and Sa u day
0111 9
un
da k
2
0

Nottce

0 3.

MASON FIRST BAPTIST-

Mobile Homes For Sale

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

&amp;w

LAUREL CL FF FREE
METHODIST
Rev F oyd
F
Shook
pas o
L oyd
W gh
Sunday schoo sup
Sund ay ~chao
9 30 a m
mo n ng wo Sh p
0 0 a m
even ng wo sh p
30 p m
Wednesday Ch s an You h
C usade 6 JO p m
Cho
p ac ce Thu sday
p m

FREEDOM
GOSPEL
M SSI.ON
Bad Knobs Rev
L R G uesencamp pasta
Roger W tred
Sr
Sunday
Schoo Supt Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
Sunday even ng
worsh p 7 30 Prayer mee ng
Tuesday
7 30 p m
E nes
Oeete
c ass leader You h
mee ng Wednesday 1 30
p m
Ernes Dee e
eade
MT HERMON CHURCH OF
THE UN TED BRETHREN N
CH R ST Robe I Shook
pasto
Sunday schao
9 30
am
Russe
Spence
sup
wo sh p serv ce
0 45 a m
even ng worsh p ate na ng
w h C E al 7 30 p m on
Sunday Pr&amp;ye mee ng 1 30
p m Wednesday A f ed Wa fe
ay eade
WHITES
CHAPEL
Coo v e RD Rev Roy Dee e
pastor Sunday Schoo
9 30
a m
worsh p se v ce 10 30
a m B be s udy and prayer
serv ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHR ST
Rod Kas e pastor
V.. H Bra ey Sunday schoo
supt Sunday schoo 9 30 a m
wo Sh p se v ce and
om
m un on
0 30 a m
you h
mee ng
6 p m
Sunday
even ng se v e
egu ar
board mee ng h rd Satu day
pm
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m Worsh 'p se v ce
a m
Wednesday praye
meet ng
7 30 p m
Sunday
nghfworsh1p 730pm
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE
Rev
Lloyd 0 Gr mm
r
pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morn ng worsh p
0 30 a m
Young peop e s serv ce 6 45
p m
evange st c se v ce
7 30 p m Wednesday even ng
serv ce 7 30 p m

!k 11 19 ;

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

pm

HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Pau Nev e paso
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
Morn ng se v ce
0 30 a m
you h se v ce
6 AS p m
E ange s c se
ce 30 p m
P aye mee ng Thu sday
7 30 p m

~ u

Rutland 0

KUHL'S

Bargaan Center
Rt 7 Tuppers Pta

ns

Phone U7 3858

Auction Sale
AT BILl GOOIMINS
SAT., OCT. 19-STARTING AT 12:00
6 m1 from W1lkesv•lle tust off Rt 689 7 m•

from Albany
Miscellaneous art1cles and most all k nd of
tools Tractor accessor es such as belt pull es
power take off shafts two bars stay bars
Ford fenders hood transm•ss on housmg
Some tr-actor tires new truck and auto t res
used tores two old trucks (one with dump bed
one w th heavy dJJty w nch) Farm all M
tractor w1th high lift Jacks two homemade
t~ ucl!,,campers M lk cans lanterns plus too
man¥ 1tems to hst All terns are sub1ect to
sale before date of auct on

�(

•
Middleport Pomeroy 0
GRAHAM

0

UNITED

METHODIST
P e-ac ng
9 30 a m
t s and second
Sundays of each month
h d
and fou h Sundays each
mon h wo sh p se v ce a
30
p m Wednesday e11en ngs at
7 30 P ave and R be S udy

POMEROY
POMEROY TRIN TV Rev W H Pe
n pa s o Roy

a m Confess ons Sa ur'day 7
7 30 p m
POMEROY F RST 8AP
TIST
Robe
Kuhn pasta
W I am Wason Sunday schoo
sup Sunday schoo 9 30 a m
BYF
6 p m
B be s Udy
Wednesday 1 p m
cho r
p acl ce we nesday 8 30 p m

Maye
Su nday schoo sup
Ch ul'ch schoo
9 5 a m
wo sh p se v ce
0 2
am

You h cho
ehea sa
M on
day 3 30 p m unde d ec on

sen o c ho
o Ma v Sk nne
ehea sa
30 p m Thu sda'V
w h M s
Pau
Nease
d ectO

POMERO'

HOL

Ha

POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE
Corne
Un on and Mu be y
Rev
C yde V Hende son paso
Sunday schoo 9 30 a m G en
McC ung
supt
mo n ng
wo sh p
0 30 a m
even ng
serv ce
30 m d week se
v ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EP SCOPAL
The
Rev
Hare d Dee h
ec o
Cl'lu ch se v ces
0 30 a m
Ho V commun on f rst Sunday
Of mon h chu ch schoo
0 30
a m to nu sery hrouqh 2
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST- Ferre G on noe
paso 8 be schoo 9 30 am
worsh P
0 30 a m
adu
wo Sh P serv ce and young
peop e s m ee ng 7 30 p m
Comb ned 8 be s udy and
P aye
meet ng Wednesday
7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY
E
nvoy Ray W W n ng off ce
n charge Sunday
0 a m
Ho ness mee no
0 30 am
Sunday Schoo Yaung Peop e s
Leg on 7 p m Thursday
o 3
P m Lades Home League
P m Prep c asses
ST
PAUL
LUTHERAN
CHURCH Co ne of Svc amo e
and SecondS s Pome oy The
Rev
W II am M dd eswa h
Pas o
Sunday Schoo a 9 45
a m a d Chu ch Se v ces

om

Slturday even ng Mass

p m

P

Sunda.y Mass

7 JO

8 and

o

sonv

e

WESLEYAN
CHURCH

Rev

0 De

Paso
Hen y Eb n
Schoo Supt Sunday
9 30 a m
Even ng
7 30 p m
P ave and

a se se v e

Thu sday

JO

pm
SYRACUSE
F RST
HURCH OF GOD
R ev
Geo ge 0 e
pas o
Sunday

s hoo

9 45

a m

m o n ng

peachng
t
a
evange s c se v e
0 P m
P
e n g Thu day

POMEROY
WESTSIDE
CHURCH OF CHR ST 200 W
Ma n s 0 en T s ephens
e
vange s
phone 992 7856
Conse vat ve
on
ns umen a Sunday wa sh p
0 a m
B ble s udy
a m
wo sh p 6 p m
Wednesday
B b e study
p m
M DWAY
COMMUN TY
C H U R c H
n o n
d
enom nat ona
Langsv le
DeKle Road he Rev Wo ey
Ha ey pas or Sunday school
o a m even ng wo sh p 7 30
p m
Praye
mee ng
Tuesday
7 30 p m
you h
g oup Fr day
30 p m
R U T LAND
F REEW LL
RAPT ST
Rev BenD ad
pas o
Roge
Tu ne
ass s an
pas or
Sunday
schoo
0 a m
Sunday
even ng se v e
30
Wed
nesday B b e s udv
30 p m

•

SACRED HEART
Rev
Father
John
Nadum
pastor
Phone
992 2825

NESS

Maney
Sunday
Schoo
wo sh p

OLO
DEXTER
B BLE
CHR STIAN CHURCH
Rev
Ron Te ry
pas o
Sunday
s hoo
0 a m
M s Wo ey
F an
s
supe n enden
Mo n ng wo sh p
am
Sunday even ng serv ce
JO

the Sermonette
TEX;I' I PETER 5 7
Let him have all your wornes and cares for he IS always
thinking about you and watching everythmg that concerns you
(L B P ) or K J verswn Castmg all your cares upon hun for
he careth for you
In these days most of us expenence cares
concerns
and 'worries These result in frustrations from the many and
varoed experiences of life The way n which we handle our
frustration 1s unportant ThiS we need to discover for ourselves
To say Godwillhelpme maybe true bulltlsnotatways easy
to experience
In the news on T V 1! was shown thiS week how some people
are trying to reheve therr frustrations They were shoutmg at
!herr own sons playing ie&lt;l hockey to get hun
kill him or
whatever Also one program talked about people fmdmg some
release m provokmg dogs and other anunals to f1ght until one or
more died
It may seem to be an oversunplificat1on of the matter to say
Take yoW" burden to the Lord and leave them there But how
are we going to get 'relief without hurtmg a fellow human
bemg• We all needsomemeansof rehef a scapegoat Perhaps a
real and live one on which to take It out may appear to be the
most expedient way
But God sshouldersare the broadest of all He too IS alive
l'!lychologocally secure Basically sound
Try Him you may be surpriSed what happens -Robert T
Bumgarner pastor Heath Umted Methodist Church

Dorcas

Social Notes
Mr and Mrs Paul Smith
spent a recent Sunday w1th hiS
Sister and brother m law Mr
and Mrs Orvy Gamer at
Hebron
Mrs Emma Salser spent a
weekend with her daughter and
family Mr and Mrs Clyde
Evans Rio Grande
Th- calling on Mr and
Mrs Paul Smith ree&lt;lntiy were
Mr and Mrs Robert Lewis
Mr and Mrs Herbert Sayre
Mr and Mrs Haze McMurry
and Mr and Mrs Henry Er
Ylne

Emma Salser called on Kat1e
Blake on Froday
Mr and Mrs Dan Sayre
spent the weekend With her
parents Mr and Mrs Kenneth
Theiss
Mr and Mrs Lester Grunm
Dos Palos Cahf spent two
days w1th Mr and Mrs Paul
Smith
Mrs Bertha Marlow of
Syracuse VISited her brother
Ike Baker and family
Mrs LaiU"a Circle Mr and
Mrs Milford Fredenck and
family Mr and Mrs Jack
Bootie and fanuly and Forest
Van Meter and daughter Joan
Crisp attended the funeral of
Clyde Johnson on Sunday
Mr and Mrs Paul Smith
were hosts to a dmner on
Sunday honoring the brrthdays
of !herr son Dan and three
grandchildren Fa1th Don and
Ted Th- present were Mr
and Mrs Dan Smith Bonme
Tim Tammy and Ted Mr and
Mrs Don Smith and Jerry and
Mr and Mrs Terry Varney
and Jenny
Lawrence DBlley of East
Uvetpoolspent a week with hiS
parents Omar and Winnie
Dailey and brother Uoyd and
family He enjoyed sqwrrel
lllnting while here
Carrie and Cecil Bolin of
Albaily and Howard Dalley of
Reedsv111e visited recently
With Jess and Lesta Pickens
Li!la Sterrett and sons Matt
Mjb and Max visited her
p.venta Edna and Otis Knopp
lblday Dick Sterrett )Vas
•!lending. a sem1nar for
J.cbolt ProducQon at Cam
If•
t'

'

7 Tl &lt; Da

brodge
Rev and Mrs Ray Beegle of
W1lmmgton v1s1ted over the
weekend w1th friends and
relat1ves and were houseguests
of LaiU"a Corcle
David TheiSS and Randy
Warner who love country life
and campmg spent a week
back pack ng on the Ap
palachian Trail m V1rgm1a
They carried their supplies on
theor backs and slept tn
sleepmg hags They are both
freshmen at Oh1o State
Umvers1ty
John and Jam1e G&lt;Jrby and
children He d1 and John of
East Liverpool VISited Sunday
w1th Emma Johnson
On Oct 6 Emma Johnson
Bern C&lt;l and Debbie Lavalley
Ray Frank Crystal Sunpson
Bernard Lavalley Jr attended
the personal appearance of
ElviS Presley at the Umvers1ty
of Dayton Arena at Dayton
V1s1hng w th Steve and
Rhonda Dalley Saturday
evemng were Max and Sherry
Knopp of Gallipolts and Undo
and Jun D•ddle
Mrs Margaret TheiSS of
Pataskala VISited recently With
her s1ster and brothers-in law
Charles and Bonme and Blythe
and N na TheiSS Spendmg
Thursday evemng with Esther
West and' brother John
Longsworth were Andy and
Nora Cross Edna Knopp and
Mary Kay Yost
Proud grandmother Mrs
Emma Johnson has purchased
a camper wh1ch is used to
fo!low her grandson young
Evli Kne1val Steve Lavalley
of Dorcas Attending the races
Sunday at the Apple City Motor
Club In Wellston were Emma
Johnson Bernice Lavalley
Jamie Gorby and Ruth
Gnndstalf The men Bernard
Lavalley Dave Grindstaff Bill
Roberts John G&lt;lrby and Steve
Lavalley spent SatW"day night
at the club In the camper They
were joined by the ladles on
Sunday for the rae&lt;ls Steve has
received 16 trophies from 18

races

A thought for the day
Amencan poet Joaquin ~ller
sa1d That man who lives for
self alone lives for the meanest
mortal known

SEVENTH

DAY

F RST SOUTHERN BAP
T ST
282 Mu be y A e
Pome ov
a
1 a ed
w h
S B C
he Rev
F ed H
paso
ov zw ng sun

Sunda

dar

schoo

9 JO am

0

mee

0

mo n ng wo sh p
Su nday evange s

ng
JO p m
mee
g Wed esda

P

av

JO p m

MIDDLEPORT
MT MORIAH BAPT ST
Corne
Fou h and Ma n
M dd epa t Rev Hen y Key
J
paso Sunday Schot~ 9 JO
a m M s Erv n Saumgard
ne
sup
Mo n ng wo sh p
0 45 am
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES
Larry Carnahan p es d ng
m n ste
Sunday B be ec
ture 9 30 a m
Walch owe
s udy 10 JO a m
Tuesday
B be study 1 JO p m
Thu s
day
m n s y schoo
30
p m
se v ce m ee no 8 30

pm

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
Christ n Ch s1 an Un on
Law ence Man ev
pas o
Mrs Russe
Young Sunday
School Sup
Sunday Schoo
Even ng wo sh p
9 30 a m
7 30
Wednesday
p aye
mee ng 7 JO p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD - Rae ne Rou e 2 the
Rev James M Muncv pas or
Sunday Schoo
9 45 a m
morn ng wo sh p
&amp; m
even no wo sh p
7 30 p m
Prayer meet ng Tuesday
JO
p m Young peop e s mee ng
7 30 D m ThV sday
DDLEPORT
F RST
BAPT ST
Co ne S xth a d
Pa me
he
Rev
S eve
Skaggs
paso
Danny
Thompson Sunday schoo sup
WMPO
ado prog am
45
a m Sunday schoo 9 5 a m
morn ng wo Sh p
0 5 a m
You h ac v es and fe owsh p
fo
un o
and sen o
h gh
s uden s 6 p m B be s udv
7 30 p m
M d week p ayer
serv ce Wednesday
30 p m
M

CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
M dd epo t 5th and Ma n
George
G ne
m n ste
James Shee s supe n enden
B b e SChOO
9 30 a m
mo n ng WDrsh p
0 30 a 1"1
even ng wa sh p 7 30 p m
prayer serv ce 1 p m Wed
nesdav
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Rev
Don Co e
pas o
F oyd
Ca son Sunday S hOo sup
Sund~y Schoo
9 30 a m
mo n ng wo sh p
0 30 a m
Sunday vange s c mee ng
7 30 p m
p aye
mee ng
Wednesday
30 p m

THE
UNITED
PRES
BYTERIAN
MINISTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY Ow ght
L Zav II Pas or D rec or
HARRISONVILLE
Sunday Church Schoo
9 30
a m Mrs Home Lee S~pt
Morn ng WorshiP
30 am
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday
Church School 9 30 a m John
F
Fu tz
SURf
Ma n nQ
Worshp 030am
SYRACUSE
Mo n ng
Worsh p
9 a m
Sunday
Church Schoo
0 a m
M s
Sampson Ha
Supt

o

RUTLAND CHURCH OF
GOD- Ph
p Wh ey pas a
Sunday schao
0 a m
wo sh p se v ce
7 p m
Praye meet ng Wednesday
7 30 p m

HAZEL
COMMUN TV
CHURCH
Nea Long Bo
tom Estll Hart pas or Rov
Brown
us s an
pasta
Sunday schoo
0 a m Church
7 30
p m
each
Sunday
even ng p ayer meet ng 7 30
P m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT
PEN
TECOSTAL- Th dAve the
Rev W I am Kn te pas or
Rona d Dugan Sunday Schoo
Supt C asses for a
ages
even ng se v ce 7 30 p m
B be study Wednesday
30
p m
youth serv ces Fr day
730pm
FREEWILL BAPTIST
Corner Ash and p urn M d
d epa
Noe
He man
pasta
Sa urday even ng
serv ce 7 p m Sunday schoo
10 a m
Sunday even ng
wasl'lp7pm

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE
PARISH

THE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert T Bumgarner
Dl ector
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev CarlE H cks
Rtv D Wm Sydenstr cker
CHESTER
Worship 9 5
a m
Church Schoo 10 a m
ENTERPR SE- Worsh p 9
a m
Church Schoo
0 a m
FLATWOODS
Wa Sh p
a m
Church Schoo 10 a m
POMEROY
Worsh p
0 30 a m Chu ch Schoo 9 5
am
UMYF 6 30 p m
ROCK SPRINGS
Worsh p
10 a m Church Schoo 9 a m
UMYF 6 30 p m

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER

Rev RDber1 Bumg•rner
HEATH Worship 10 30
a m Church Schoo 9 30 a m
UMYF 7 p m
RUTLAND
Worsh p 9 15
a m
Church Schoo 10 a m
UMYF 7 p m
SALEM CENTER War
sh p 9 a m
Church Schoo 10
am
UMYF Thursday, 7 p m

SYRACUSE CLUSTER
•ev R chard E Jnvls
ASBURY Worsh p 11
a m Church Schoo 9 50 a m
WSCS 1st Tuesday
FOREST RUN - Worsh p 9
1 m
Church Schoo 0 a m
wscs 3rd Wednesday 7 30

pm

MINERSVILLE - Worsh p
10 a m Church Schoo 9 a m
wscs 3rd Monday 1 30 p m
SYRACUSE
Church
School 9 30 a m
worsh p
servl~. 7 30 p m

SO"IITHERN

C~U$TER

Rev Steven W lson
Rev Larry Poling
Rev Howard Shiveley
BeTHANY
(Doren)
Worsh p 9 30 • m
Church
Schoo 10 30 a m
CARMEL Worsh p
11
1 m
st and 3rd Sundays
Church School 10 a m
APPLE GROVE
Sunday
schoo
9 JO a m
worsh p
f rst and th rd Sunday 7 30
Pm
prayer meet ng Wed
nesday 7 30 p m Fe owsh p
!~pper t r.st Saturday 6 p m
"' M W second Tuesday 7 30

pm

EAST LETART
Sunday
schoo
9 30 a m
worsh p
second and fourth Sunday 7 30
Pm
p ayer meetl.ng Wed

I

UMW
30 D m

nc

R il

• m
b e s udv
p m
ho
sday 8 p m

" n
h

e

0

s

U M W

AD

VENTIST
Mu be y
He gh s
Pomeroy
Paso
G a d Se on Sabba h sc hoo
e e y Sa u day a 1 p m a nd
wo Sh p se ce o ow nq a
3 15
p m
Open
B b e
d scuss on 7 30 p m a
he
chu ch each Thursday

school sup

pm

GREAT~END
WOShp
a n
2nd and 4 h Sundays
Chu ch Schoo
oa m
LETART FALLS
Wo Sh p
0 a m Chu ch s hoo 9 a m
B be s udy
JO p m every
Tuesday
MORNING STAR
Wo sh p
9 30 a m
Chu ch School a 30
a m
M d Week
Se v ce
Wednesday 8 p m
MORSE CHAPEL
Wo
Sh p
a m
s and 3 d
Sundays
Chu h S hoo
0
am
PORTLAND
Wa sh p
30
P m
Chu ch Schoo 9 30 a m
SUTTON
Wo Sh p
a m
2nd and 4 h Sundays Chu c h
S hoo 0 a m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Robe t Meece
Rev Stanley Brandum
JOPPA
Wo sh p 0 am
Chu ch S hoo 9 a m
P aye
Mee ng Wednesday 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM
Chu ch
se v ces
9 a m
Sunday
Schoo 9 45 a m B b e S udy
eve y Thu sday
30 p m
NORTH BETHEL
Wo
sh p
a m Chu ch Schoo 0
am
ALFRED
Sunday SChOo
9 45 a m
ea h Sunda y
P each ng a
am
each
Sunday P aye mee ng 7 45
P m Wednesday WSCS 8 p m
on h d Tuesday each mon h
REEDSV LLE Sunday
schoo
9 30 p each ng
30
p m Sunday p aye mee ng
1 30 p m Tuesday WSCS 7 30
f s Thu sdav each man h
SLVERRDGE
Woshp
0 a m
Church Schoo 9 a m
TUPPERS
PLANS
Wo sh p 9 a m
Chu ch
Schoo
0 a m
KENO
CHURCH
OF
CHR ST
Geo ge F ede ck
sup Se v ce week y 9 30 a m
on Sunday P each ng f s and
h d Sundays o mon h by
C fiord Sm h 9 30 a m
HOBSON
CHR STIAN
UNION Da e
Dodd
paso
Sunday Schoo
9 30
a m
Leona d G mo e f s
e de
even ng se v ce 7 30
p m
Wednesday
prayer
mee ng 1 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD
Rae ne Rou e 2 The
Rev Cha es Hand pastor
Sunday Schoo
9 45 a m
morn ng wo sh p
1 a m
Even ng serv ces Tuesday and
F day 7 30
BEARWALLOW
R OGE
CHURCH OF CHR ST
B be
Study
9 30 a m
mo n ng
worsh p
0 30 a m
even ng
wo sh 1p 6 30 p m Wednesday
B b e 51 udy
30 p m
MT
O'rfVE CHURCH
Long Bo f.m Sunday Schoo
0 a m
h w ard P go t
supt Ev nge s c message
each Sund y even ng
30 p m
by
E de
Russe
c ne
m n s e o he Apos o c Fa h
B b e S udy Wednesday 7 30
pm
STIVERSV LLE
COM
MUN TY CHURCH
Sunday
schoa se v ce 0 a m P ave
meet ng Thu sdav 1 p m
Sunday even ng se v ce 7 p m
ZION CHURCH OF CHRI-ST
Pome oy
Ha sonv e
Road R k Mo
son pas o
Sunday s hoo sup
S even
San ey S nday schoo
9 30
a m
mo n ng wo sh p and
co mmun on
0 30
a m
Sunday
e en ng
you h
Ch s an Ende o 6 30 p m
wo sh p se
e Sunday
30
p m
Wednesday even ng
P ave
m ee ng and B b e
30 p m
s udv
ST
JOHN
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
P ne G o e The
Re
W
am M dd eswa h
Pas or Chu ch Se v ces 9 30
a m Sun day Schoo 0 30 a m
~MADBURY CHURCH OF
CHR ST B be Schoo
9 30
a m
morn ng worsh p
0 30
a m Sunday even ng Wo sh p
Se rv ce
7 30 p m
cho
practce Sunday and Wed
nesday 7 p m p ave mee ng
and B ble S udy Wednesday
7 30 p m
ANT QUITY BAPT ST
Rev Free and No
s pas o
Sunday schoo 0 a m Chu ch
serv ce
p m
Wednesday
BbeSudy
pm
RACINE FIRST CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
Morn ng Wo sh p
0 30 a m
Even ng Wo sh p 7 30 p m
Wednesday M d Week Se v ce
Sunday Schoo Super n enden
Ge ad We s
Paso
Rev
Mor s M Wolfe
RACINE fiiRST BAPT ST
Wa er P B kacsan pas or
Ronne Sa ser s s Sup
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
Morn ng Wo sh p 0 45 a m
Sunday even ng wo sh p
30
p m Wednesda';' even ng B b e
Study 8 p m
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rev Leon G asure paste
Sunday School 9 30 a m
youth and lun o you h se v ce
6 -45 p m
even ng wo sh p
7 30 p m
p ayer and p a se
Wednesday 7 30 o m
S LVER
RUN
FREE
BAPTIST
Rev Ra ph Dean
pasto( Sunday Schoo
0a m
Leon M er
sup
Even ng
se v ce
30 p m
P aye
mee ng Thu sday 7 JO p m
Clf'ESTER t'HURCH OF
GOD
Rev
James Sa
terf e d pastor Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
wo Sh p serv ce
a m
even ng serv ce
7
praye
se v ce and vouth
Serv ce Wedhesday 7 m
LANGSVILLE CHR STIAN
CHURCH- Rober E Musser
pas or Sunday Schoo
9 30
a m
Roy s gman sup
morn ng
worsh p
10 30
Sunday even ng serv ce 7 30
M d week serv ce Wednesday
7 30_p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Rev
Howa d C B ack paso
Bob
Moore Sunday Schoo Sup
Sunday SchaD c asses for a
ages 9' 30 a m
mo n ng
worsh p o 45 NYPS Sunday
6 30 p m evange s c se v ce
Sunday 1 30 p m M d week
p aye mee ng Wednesday
7 30pm Mssona vmee ng
second Wednesda';' 7 30 p m
UNITED
~AITH
NON
DENOMINATIONAL
Rev
Robert Sm th pastor sunday
Schoo 9 30 a m c ass eader
Leo HI
worsh p serv ce
0 30 a m
church 7 30 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETH
REN IN qtRIST- Eden R
B eke f;las or Sunday Schoo
10 a
m
Howard McCoy
supt
Mo n ng !!termon 11 a
m
Sunday n ght se v ces
Chr stan Endeaver 7 30 p
m
Song se v ce 8 p m
Preach ng 8 30 p m
M d
week Prayer meet ng Wed
nesday 7 p m
Ray Adams
av leader

r

CHURCH

OF

JESUS

CHRIST
Located at Ru and
an New L ma Road neK to
Forest Ac e Perk Rev Ray
Rouse pas or Robert Musser
Sunday Schoo supt Sunday
schoo
0 30 a m
worshiP
7 30 p m B b e study Wed .
nescJay 7 30 p m
Saturday
n ght prave service 7 30 p m

HEMLOCK

GROVE

CHRISTIAN- Rogef Watson
pastor
Ray Wha e'f sup
Monng woshp 930 am
church schoo
10 30 a m
young peop e s mee ng 6 30
P m
even ng worsh p 7 30
P m 9 be study Wednesday

7 30 p m
MT
UNU"'N BAPTIST
Rev Cec CoK pas or Sunday
Schoo
sup
oe ,..S a v e
Sunday schoo
9 45 a m
Sunday even ng wo sh p 7 30
Wednesday p aver and B b e
study 7 30 p m
TU P P E\R S
PLA N S
CHRISTIAJ-1
CHURCH
Eugene: Unde wood
paslo
Howa d Ca dwe
J
Sunday
Sct:1 oo Sup
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
Mo n ng Se mon
0 30 a m
Sun da v even ng
serv ce 7 p m
LETART FALLS UN TED
BRETHREN
Rev Free and
No s pas 0
F OVd No s
supl Sunday schoo 9 30 a m
mo n ng se mon
0 30 am
P aye
se v ce
Wedne sday
7 30 p m
CHESH RE CHURCH OF
GOD OF PROPHECV
G P
Sm h pas o
Sunday Schoo
0 a m A hur Henson Sup
Mo n ng wo sh p
a m
Young Peop e s se v ce
P m
Even ng se v ce
30
p m
Wednesday M d Week
P aye
Se v ce
30 p m
You h mee ng
6 30 p m
Even ng worsh 1p 1 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Rev
He be
G ate paso
Wo
sh p serv ce I a m and
30
p m Sunday Sondav Schoo
9 30 a m
R cha d Barton
supt P aye mee ng Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CHRIST
C ffo d. Sm h
Sunday Schoo 9 30
m n s e
a m
mo n ng chu ch
0 30
a m Sunday even ng serv ce
7 30 p m Wednesday se v ce 8

&amp; t nei M ddlepor Po leroy 0

SE\tu

In Memo!}

Brie

Sunday
K ngs

99 3
Monday

Ml::MUHY

Tende
memo es s so
v
ouched bo h days and o ng
hough s w
neve
ade
away because we
a m ss
you ve y mu h ea h d av as
hey pass by
W fe Lu
e Son ack S
and G andsons
ack
T no hV Ku ss Sean and
ames B a ey
0 8 c

Ma hew
1.4'1233

Tue day
Roman
9 5
Wedne day
ohn

641 57
Th day
Heb

Yard Sales
o

Home
M
B a ev who had h s b hday
0
4 9 2 and was a ed
home Oc
8 9 2

N

I I 6
F day
Ephe on

MOTOCROSS 0
20 p
1 30 Race
p m 2
pas Bes Pho o on Co
B ms one Raceway
Coo v e Oh o

00 52
Sa u day

ac ce
m es
Rd 56
Pa k

lu~•

12 32 48

and

a

0 3 fc

My ne ghbor Marty
ass.stant scoutmaster

SOUTHERN

pm
MASON

ASSEMBLY

773 5133

HARTFORD

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST n Chrl11i11n Un onThe Rev W am Campbel
pastor Sunday Schoo
9 3D
• m
James Hughes sup
even ng serv ce
7 JO p m
Wednesday even ng prayer
meet ng
7 30 p m
Yoyth
prayer serv ce each TUesday
FAIRVIEW
BilLE
CHURCH Letart W Va Rt
l
Rev
George Hoschar
pastOr
Sunday Schoo 9 30
a m Prayer and B be study
7 30 p m
Cottage Prayer
Serv ce Tuesd•y
10 a m
Worsh p Serv ce
Thursday
7 30 p m

w Main
/&lt;ALl

970VAL ANf65K 2 3Dedraam
fu ly ca peed LP gas hea
Phone 992 775

Sa c a
S a che
Oh o

a 2s

Hf.RE 1

Q.ELAND
608 E
REALTY
MAIN

~
•• • o

NEAR LANGSVILLE

HONDA 150 pe fe
cond on
s 200 PhOne 985 J826
0 ' 3

0 56 p

9 7 W NCHESTER Mob e
home 60x 2 2 bed ooms
ba hs cen ra a r u nace and
ca pe ed Phone 992 5254 o
30 4 882 22

Cv c

also

Assoc a1 on

EARN ex
P
es a e g ea
fo
you
s ap on shee ron coppe
bass
a um num
IBM
Papers s an ess s ee au o
ba er es au o ad a o s Se
a one o he a ges ecyc ng
com pan es n h s pa I of he
s a e The Rosenbe g Com
pany A hens Oh o
10.

SCRAP ALUMINUM

Hard

(free of Steel)

ng

f ne wall to set off lhat palo he put

I ke

Marty-the ready w

II ng

15~

The

are f rst to recogn ze the r sp ntual needs Nor are 1hey ashamed

who

the r most mportant

bu lcJ ng

rather than Saturday

How about

when they

do
$975

Db

fX

Phone

968 FORD LTD sa on wagon
p s
p b
ape p aye
a
.weond on ng S 00 Phone 992
3 8

ty

W th the hope t w II m some measure foster and help susta n that
wh1ch s good n lam ly and commun ty hfe th s feature s sponsored by
the bus ness f1rms and organ zat1ons whose names appear below

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E Man

Da99220

RACINE FOOD MARKET
The Sto
Rae ne

ew

th A Heart
Phone 949 3342

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
D a 992 3284

M dd epo I

PUBL C NOT CE
The annua e ec on of he
Me gs Coun y Ag cu u a
Soc e y Dl ec o s w I be he d
Thu sday Novembe
9 4 a
" he off ce of he Me gs Coun y
:t:omm ss one s n he Cou
J,ouse at Pome oy Oh o f om 5
lfo 9 p m
• Qua f ca ons o
d rec o s
~ re
ha
they mus
be a
~ ual I ed vo e o Me gs Coun y
lll!l nd mus have a membe sh p
If eke
n sa d so e y o 9 4
• Cand da es pe
ons m us be
!i ed w h he Sec e a y no ate
;than 5 p m Wednesday Oc
lobe 30 197.4 Only pe so ns
t.o d ng membe sh p eke s a
thecoseo he 9 4Coun yFar
Ur a eas
5 ca enda days
l:ieto e he da e of e ec on a e
41ua
ed a vo e
'" The
Me gs
Ag cu u a
S'oc e y By M s Ma v n K ng
S.ec e a y

HEINERS BAKERY
Bakers of Good Bread
Hunt ng on W Va

Pome oy

INGLES ASHLAND SERVICE
M no Repa rs &amp; Tune up
Beech &amp; Locust
M ddlepo t
Ph 992 2366

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

soo

Buck Pont ac Opel G M C Dealer
E Man 51
Ph 992 2 74

Ph 949 959

By PHIL PASTORET
• Obviously you meant the
Jetter - so why s gn t s n
cereiy ?
Another thmg that s n1ce
about your newspaper You
can t stuff a cour,fle TVs 1nto
wet shoes to he p dry them
out

Ph 992 2550

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION
Rae ne

M ddleporl

BARBS

•

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO
337 N 2nd

8 25 3 c

~ 10

M dd epo I Oh o

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

Bakers of Gay 90 s Bread

Ph 992 3030

M dd eporl

0

lc

CA~H

pa d fa a
makes and
mode s of mob e homes
Phone a ea code 6 4 423 9531
4 3 fc

OLD FURN TURE oak ab es
c ocks ce boxes brass beds
d shes desks o
camp ete
households
w te M D
M ler R 4 Pome oy Oh o
cal 992 7760

Lou

220 E Ma n

GAUL'S MARKET
Chesler Oh o

Help Wanted
WA TRESS waned app y n
C ow s S eak
pe son a
House

Me gs County Branch

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO
296 W Second

Pomeroy

Ph 992 3863

WAID CROSS SONS STORE
Groceries &amp; General Merchandise

Rae

ne

Ph 949 5712

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE INC.
100 E

The Finest n Mob le Homes

Ma n

Pomeroy

F

A I Doctors Presc

Keepsake 0 amond R ngs

51

Pomeroy

pt ons
Pomeroy

@j)~
TWO LOCATIONS
59 N Second 51
M ddleporl 0
46 Court St
Gall pols 0

P J PAULEY AGENT
Nat onw de fnsurance Co of Columbus 0
307 Spr ng Ave
Pomeroy

Dam 2318

POWELL S SUPER VALU
The F end y Folks
Pomeroy Oh o

Ph 992 7034

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E Ma n

If you re a REAL old llmer
you can recall when pumpkm
spes were numerous n the
cap tal m... HISS)
A slip of the tongue can be
more disastrous than falling
downstatrs

SWISHER &amp; WHSE PHARMACY
We

Ph 992 3785

TUPPERS PLAINS HARDWARE
Pa nt P vmb ng &amp; E edrlca Suppl es
Tuppers P a ns
Ph 667 3963

I

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Devoted I~{IAe gs Mason Area
Pomeroy 0

Ph 742 395

Tbe Alinanac
By United Press International
Today IS Friday Oct 18 the
~Jst day of 1974 with 74 to
follow
The moon IS approaching •ts
f1rst quarter
/fhe morning stars are Venus
Mars and SatW"n
:i'he evemng stars are Mer
cury and Jupiter
Th- born on this day are
under the s•gn of Libra
American Academy Award
winning actor George C Scott
was born Oct 18 1927
On thiS date m history
In 1776 the boundary between
Maryland and Pennsyivan a
wa"s f1nally settled later to he
knliwn as The Mason Dixon
'
Line
In 1673 the forst rules
governing mtercotiegtate football were drawn up by
representatives of Yale Prtn
ceton Rutgers and Columb a
unl~ers1ties

HALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

In 1959 Russia claimed to
have taken the first plctures of
the far s1de of the moon
IJi 1969 Amerocan sp1Jnters
Toliunle Smith and John Carlos
we[!! suspended by the U S
Ol~pic conumttee for making
black p,ower gestures at the
~es tn Mexoco C ty

Middleport Oh a

RACINE PLANING MILL
Salem St

;i81

Build ng Supples&amp; Custom Millwork
Ph 992 3978

•

I

C B
gnod
Phone ljl9 2

FREEZER Beef
fed Hereto d steers
n ce W
de ver
p ocess ng p an Ca
even ngs
KNAPP shoes
acke s
s
Phone 992 5324

BLACK fema e
Phone 742 .4465

h huahua

so ks

and

y es on sa e

9 .4 HONDA 750 w h
s 850 A so 8 f Cab
2S h p Johnson
a
canvas 52 550 Fa
on y Con ac Doug
992 3078
af er 5 p
any me on weekends

ex as
a boa
er and
p ces
Enoch

m

o

c

6 J

SEW NG Mach nes b and new
Z g Zag n n ce wa nu tab e
n o g na ca ons Neve
used
Ctea ance on
74
Mode s
On y
a few
ava abe
$43 40 cash or
te ms ava abe Phone 992
7755

0 15 fc

957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lakewood
act on ba s h
acke
a
shocks
hooker
headers w th 3 co ectars for
sma
bock
Ca
992 3496
a er 6 p m BEST OFFER
0 7 c

o 8 3c
- -- --- --- ------------

o

6 fc

TWO 4 room and ba h ap s n
M dd epor
For nfo ma on
ca 992 2550 o 742 655
7 3 fc
FURN SHED
aparlmen
adu s on y n M dd epor
Phone 992 3874

0 83 c

o

73c

BABY CALVES
Hereto d
Ho s e n 6 ave ab e n neK
s x weeks Make an offer on
one o a
Phone 985 3831
0 73 p

GOOD USED t umpet ke new
Ca 9.49 3813 after 4 p m
0 76 p
197
HARLEY
Dav dson
mo orcvc e 51900 f m
ahn
P ckens Rt
Sm th R dge
Par and Oh o
0 17 3 c
3 WARM MORN NG hea ers
one 00 b
wo 50 bs John
P ckens R
Sm h R dge
Par l!lnd Oh o
10 11 3 c

8 YEAR o d Pa am no
ge d ng 2 eg s e ed sorre
qua terl'larse mares Phone
Ru and 742 42 I afler 5 p m
742 550 or 742 6863
0 36 c

8 tfc

- -- -~

BEDROOM
ra er
In
Sv acuse c ose o schoo No
ch dren o
pe s Depos
equ ed Phone 992 2U at e
6 30 p m

0 36 p

4 ROOM u n shed apt C ose o
Powell s Super Valu phone
992 3658
10 13 tc

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

SMALL
Condo

26

House
s ee

and
0
Phone

on
992

PR VATE mee lng oom for
any o gan za on phone 992
3975
3 1 fc
COUNTRY Mob It Home Park
R
33 ten m es horth of
Pome oy
Large ots w th
concrete pat os
s dewa ks
unners and off
street
park ng
A so
spaces for
sma tra ers Phone 992 7479
7 21 fc
2JC60 2 BEDROOM mob e
home
coun ry
oca on
pub lc
water
sYs em
References requ ed Ca 949
246 af e 5 p m

On Sa e Now qua v Devoe
8 ght Wh te LateK House
Pa nt n 2 ga ton cans On y
$649/e gaon
B an
name Root Pant
0
pet off wh e hev ast
Take advantage o
these
g eat buvs wl'l e hey a e
n
ock

- ----- ------------- ' - ROOM housew h 1 bahs n
Pomeroy Phone 992 34 8
0 5 26 c
TWO- bed oom-;,ou-,-.-- -0 , -. e a
sso Sou h Th d A en e
Mddepo
Phone9927074o

992 3&lt;65

Route 33 No th Exce en
sp ng and good town sh p oad
A m nera s

NEW LISTING -

SYRACUSE
4 bedrooms and
den Ba h d n ng oom po
ches basemen carpo t and
workshop henhouse and pony

ba n
VET

sn

A FEW new band ns ruments
Con ac Renee S one 992 7567
9 A fc
APPLES F tzpatr ck Orcha d
s a e Route 689
Phone
W lkesv e 669 3785
92526C

KOSCOT 70SMETI~S

&amp;

WIGS (The M nk 0
Bne
Cosmet cs
Phone
BROWN S 992 51 3
8 :20 tfc

Does
your
home
requ1re any of these
services?

ALL•WtATHtK

-·

CARPETED

Mode n 3 bedroom

home EK a a ge v ng bath
u
y 7nce a gecosets wth
sto age
shelves
ga ore
Basemen
ga den shop and
ga age An exce en buy
ALL
THE
ABOVE
PROPERTIES ARE VERY

773 5468

r992-2550

MACH N ES Rep a
makes 992 2284
The Fab
Shop P.om eroy
Au ho zed S nge Sa es and
Se v ce We sharpen Sc sso s
3 29 ltc
DOZER wo k and c ea ng by
he ac e hou y o cont ac
a m ponds oads e c La ge
doze end ope a o w h ove
20 years expe ence Pu ns
Excava ng Pome oy Qh o
Phone 992 2478
2 9 fc

'

0 DELL A nemen
located
beh nd R u and G a de School
com p e e
on end serv ce
b akes and uneups whee s
ba anced e ec on ca y Open
8 o 8 dl!l y Ca
42 3232 on
Sunday fo app
7 16 lfc
READY M X
CONCRETE
de ve ed
gh
to you
p ojec Fast and easy Free
es m a es Phone 992 3284
Goeg en Ready M x Co
M dd epo
Oh o

On State Rt 124
m from
Route 7 by pass towards
Rut and

Open Mon

BAM

Sat

6PM

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE
949 3132 or 843 2667

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a sh,f

Pa nllng

sd

to a house
ng

paper hang ng
cabinets etc

roof ng
k tchen

C BRADFORD Ave onee
Camp e e Se v ce
Phone 949 3821 o 949 3 6
Rae ne Oh o
c B ad o d

1

II\ DOI.II'On 0

"" A¥

If so Call us Now for a
Free Estimate

FOR FREE es mQieS o n
ll um num
ep ace men
w ndows s d ng s o m doo s
lind w ndows Ra 1 ng Phone
Cha es L s e Sy acuse Oh o
Ca
acob
Sa es
Rep esen a ve
V
V
Johnson and Son n
' 30

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

"'

THE DEPENI»BI F
CONTRACtiNG CO.
raterlet, lal ..tlpr
Decorating .,...
ReitUJtfi1111'1g

BARGAIN DAYS
AT KUHL S
A great way to f ght

flat ion &amp; stretch your
furn sh ng appl ance s s
to shop at KUHL

VINYL SIDING

PH 992 7454 or
992 7129

BARGAIN CENTER

SE PT C
lANKS
easonab e
a es
Ph
446
4782 Ga 1 po s John Russe
owne and ape a o
2 fc

s

SEP'T C

Strout Realty

6 5 fc

3 bed ooms
lu
basement a
elect c
home SlB .500

ALL

E~ECTRIC

new home

3 bed ooms carpeted ange
andarcond1onng $7500

50 ACRES

W lh house and

some t mbe
$ 7 500

4 ACRES bed oom s
garage

RUTLAND

DOZER or ba khoe wo k
Phone 446 398 o 446 3459
9 8 fc
CREMEANS
CONCRET~
de vered Monday lhrough
Sa u day
and
even ngs
Phone 446 42
6 3 fc

Alf ed area

ca
Rl

33

3

basemen

B ck ode

5
ooms and
home 4 bedrooms carpo t
ba h a comfo abe s ze a
ac e of g ound $ 4 000
20.5 Sp ng Ave
Pom e ov
Th s we a anged one oo
pan home has been com
115 ACRES Bottom &amp;
p
e
edecara ed ns de
h lis de w h ba n Chesle
and ou
We
bu I
bu
area
nexpens ve ha dwood f oo s
new Luxa e gas
u n.!lce
307 Spnng Avenue
sys em new A ms ong
te
992 2298
Pomeroy
k chen and ba h oom f oo s "'
Good u I ty bu d ng Phone
992 5292
CONTACT
o a fc
Los Pauley
Branch Manager
W LL TRADE
F NANC NG
ARRANGED
W
TH
M N MUM DOWN
W LL
cons de
rade for o der
home
a e o
and on he
new 3 bed oom 2 ba h home
w h 2 car ga age
a ge PIANO u'n ng and epa
tam y oom a r cond an ng
Phone Cha es Sea
992 3 ll
Move n mmed a ey Ca
9
32 p
992 5976 now

e v

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

LAST B D Home mp ovemen
ca pen y wo k
oo ng
pa n g ca pe
ns a a on
1 ee es ma es
A
wo k
gua an eed Phone 42 508
9 22 c

6 15 fc

EXCAVAT NG dozer loade
and backhoe wo k
sept c
anks ns a ed dump I UJ:ks
and to boys o h e w
hau
d 1 op so
mes one &amp;
g ave
ca Bob or Roge
efte s day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 352.5 a 992
5232
2
fc

GRE T
CO.UNTRY

S11REO
92.1

·WMPO.fM

-

W LL TRADE
FINANC NG
ARRANGED
WITH
M N MUM
DOWN
W
cons de
ade
o
o de~
home
a e o and on h s
new 3 bed oom 2 bath home
w h 2 co::~
ga age
a ge
lam ly oom a cond on ng
Move n mmeda ey Ca
now 992 5976
9 24 fc

B g Capacity
May fag
Au1oma11cs
'i speed or•rat 0
'lho ce o
watifl'
:temps Au a wate
leve cant o
L n
Filter o Power F
Ag tator
Perml Press
Maytag
HI IDOl Hn1
D yen
Surround
c othes
with gent e even
heat No hot spots
no overdry no F ne
"Melt). L n
F ter
We Spec at ze n
MAYTAG
Red Cflrpet
• Serv ce

RUMND FURNITURE
Ai"notd Grate

----·-

II

TANK S
AROB C
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPA REO
M LLER
SA NITAT ON
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
3035
o 4 fc

CARPETING
501 NYLON

$7 95

-Nutland

Sq Yd

•
and up
Price ncludes n stallat on
and free padd ng Talk to
Wendell
G ate
carpet
consu tant
We have hund eds of
ca pet va ues Your job can
be camp eted n 1 to 2 weeks
No ong wa1t ng per od

SPECIALI
Candy Slrlpe
rubber back
Reg $6

carpel with

99 sq

yd

Now $4 99 Sq Yd
N ce for bedrooms
k tchens etc

dens

RUTLAND
FltJRNITURE
742 4211

0 66c

742 4211

you
992

SEP T C
TANK S c e.aned
Mode n San a on 992 3954 o
992 349

Bustness Semces

NO MONEY DOWN Month V
paymen s accord ng o n
come New 3 bed oom home
w h wa o wat~ carpe ng on
acre andscapect o s Ca 1
oday fo mo e nfo ma on
992 5976
9 2-4 fc

M

o a 26 c

pm

NEW qua y v ng oom su es
These su es have so d oak
f ames
ha
a e dowe ed
g ued and doub e
o ne
backed
Manv sly es and
fllbr cs
a choose
om
s a ng as ow as S 29 95
A so 3 pc Ea v A me can
abe se s 534 95 We a sa
have
bedd ng
bed oom
su es amps d ne ese sand
h de a beds ack s Fun u e
and Upho s e y Supp es 236
E Ma n St Pame ov Phone
992 3903
0 18 6 c

GARAGE

5

m

Nea

o de home of 3 bed ooms
bath na u a gas heat f u
ce a
And n ce lot n lown
On y $ 2 500 00

ROGER HYSELL'S

-----

CLINIC LOCATION -

BU LO NG Of 80 I fran age x
65 fl The second 10 on ef on
R ve v ew D ve L nco n
"H
Pome oy Oh o
f
n
e es ed ca 992 3230 af e 5

pm

GROCERY bus ness to sate
Build ng for sa e or ease
Phone 773 56 8 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo ntment
3 20 tfc

593 6366

Fully Insured

1 ROOM hou~e w 1'1 bah fu
basemen
garage
and
ga den space on V ne S
n
Rae ne Ca 949 2054 .!If e 5

C•ll Collect I
SS44
AlhetiS Ohio

CULLIGAN
WATER
CONDITIONING

FREE ESTIMATE

Ideal a so fo cut ra e sto e
ant que shop
etc
B ck
bus ness bv d ng only a ew
yea s o d A r ea buy for you
S ACRES
2 bed oom home
w h fu
basement
n the
count v $6 500 00

Known &amp;
R elmble Service

R ghl Now AI

lntenor &amp;
Extenor Work

2 bed oom

FREE HOME ESTIMATES
SUPERIOR

Hard WaterThen ca
u s fo a FREE
Water Ana ys s

Racine, 0.

bunga ow nea Rou e 7 .J=k1 f
ac e ot near M dd epa t W'an

GOOD BUYS MAKE YOUR
NVESTMENT TODAY FOR
NEW HOME n Mason w h TOMORROW MAY BE TOO
SOMEONE
ELSE
~u~rage
Good oca on
3
btdrt'I)MS fu v a pe ed
HAVE DONE SO
Phone (30.4

Dry Red llchy Sk n
Red Smelly

949-3295

- 10 acres on

337 N 2 Middleport
992 2550

Ph 992 5682 or 992 7121
All Meehan cat Work

OF

GHEEN'S PAINTING

c RACINE

---- -:c- -~-:------ --'
NO MONEY DOWN
Moo h y
paymen s ac-cord no a n
come New 3 bed oom home
w h wa to wa ca pe ng an
ac e andscaped o s Ca
today fa mare nfarma on
992 59 6

Produced frQ.I'D a spec a
v ny compound made by B
F Good ch and Monsanto 5
than me a
t mes th eke
s d ng W
nat dent ch p
crack pee
o
rust o
chalk

VINYL PRODUCTS
3 AND 4 ROOM fu n shed and
unfurn shed
apa tments
Phonf 992 5434
-4 2 lfc

TIRED

ALL WEATHER
HARDWARE
337 No h Second Ave
M ddtepo t on o

RUTLAND

10
phone 992 2780

GREAT PA NT VALUES AT
ALL WEATHER
HARD
WARE

991 15SO

ALL

Real Estate For Sale

0 86c

For Rent

Next to H1ghway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

on y $550000

fc

0

REDUCT ONofg ownAKC oy
pood es SSO each pups S65
S amese k ens S 5 Phone
256 6247
0 I 26 c

2

---~-----·---- -, --~--

----SEVERAL u
ab n e s o h e an ques and
b ass beds Open weekdays
and Sunday
M s
Ha o d
Ba nha
Tuppe s Pans
Oh o

8

Pets For Sale

TE STED and app oved by
m
ons o homemake s B ue
us e a pe
eane s ops
Bake Fu n u e Co
o a3c

o a

For Rent or Lease
SMALL bus ness bu ld ng on
s R 33 1 and 124 S75 pe
man h
A so apa ment 4
ooms and ba h $65 per
man h a so
2 oom house
Can be wo apa men s S 50
pe mon h Ca 992 S 86
0 9 26 c

NEW oam o Ill he U$h ons n
you
v ng oom su e as ow
as S 0 95 tor bo h sofa and
cha
We a so cu and sew
new cush on covers See us fo
you upha s ery needs Jack s
Fu n u e and Upho s e y
Supp es 236 E Ma n S
Pome oy Phone 99 3903
0 8 3903

GRAVEL sand Muon sand
mes one P Run by he on
De ve ed Phone .446 42

fc

4 ROOM house unfu n shed on
650 L nco n He gh s Phone
992 387-4

M dd epo I Oh o

992 2955

Reg ster For Pr1r.es
Shop for &amp;arga1nst
You re Invited!

973 HONDA 350
cond on $600
7605

Emergency Phone 992
3995 or 992 7582

992 1259 or 992 2561

NEW wh skev ba e fa sa e
0 E Ba ev Sue ess Road
Phone 667 6344

2 BEDROOMS
o 992 H32

MARK V STORE

s W Osborne
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2 78

19

0

----- -- -----~c-- ----

SEARS CATALOGUE MERCHANT

WE
HAVE
OTHER
L ST NGS
HOUSES
LOTS
FARMS
AND
COMMERC AL COME N
OR CALL

NATURAL gas u nace 50 000
BTU A ms ong fo ced a
w h con o s sao 30 ga on
na u a gas wa er hea e 530
Phone 378 6291
Reedsv e
0 3 6 p

UNK auos
compee and
de vered o ou
va d We
p ck up au o bod es and buy
a k nds o s ap me as and
on R de s Sa vage S R
24 R
4 Pome ov Oh o
Ca 992 5468

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

GAS

BOWERS
REPAIR

Buy of lhe

b do

FALL BARGAIN

-----------

Cpgh9K

he Am

Co.

Athens Oh•o

10 n ng them at church t me?

8

55 000

Phone 992

79 Depot Street

to admit the r dependence on God-and H s Church You It hoar Marty
and h s w fe g ve cred I lo lhe rei g ous bel efs for the slrength of the r
mamage and for I he deals that nsp re lhe r lam ly l fe
In fact its Sunday morn ng

R~berg

Someth ng For Everyone!

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W Carsey Mgr

per pound

and able ones-

For Sale

All WEATHER

Phone 992 5367 or 992 3861

RACINE PLUMBING
All Small Appliances
AND HEATING
Lawn Mowers
949 5961 Racme 0

week daub e o w th cha n
3 bed oom
arne
fence
basement N G fa ced a r
furnace
porches
s or age

u new

'177 Pearl Street
M ddleport Oh o

sel
POMEROY AREA
5 oom
f arne ba h 3 B R po ches
n ce
k tchen
s o age
bu d ng na v a gas hea t
pen y o g ound he p ce s
ghl
POMEROY
f oo pan 2
B R
bath
natu a
gas
fu nace
H W
oo s

a ge

Don
home Ha e a beau
sao ns a ed by A
Roo ng Co

A I thai s needed fo a free
est mate s a phone ca 1
Pease Phone

See Us for your
Plumbmg and Heatmg
Needs

SYRACUSE

- - -- ·-

OCT 7 THRU OCT

2

REDECORATI NG7

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

ac es 2 s o y f arne som e
ca pe ng 4 B R d n ng R 3
po ches some ou bu ld ng s
&amp; ga age gas well P ced o

basement w h ut ty
ot Just S 0 000 00

BONANZA

Holulay Specwl'

an

2 BEDROOM mob e home n
own S4 500 Ca 992 39 s o
992 2571
9 3 fc

Wa1er Electr c Gas Sewer
L nes
nsta lied
Work
guaranteed
Doze Backhoe Trucks
..;L mestone &amp; F II 0 rt
"tommerc al Res dental
Construct on &amp; Remodel

Parts

2 S N Second St
Mddepo t Oho
991: 3$09

POMEROY 0

Our a1m 1s to please
our customers

9 2 W NCHESTER Mob 1':
Home 60 x 2 2 bed ooms
omp e e y turn shed
a
pe ed gas hea
en a a
Phone 992 5254 o
304 882

"

1~

P&amp;J

Heat ng
Cool ng Refr g
Plumb ng
Electr ca I
Appl ance
A t
wo k
gua an teed
D scount to
Sen or C t zens

Pomeroy

Sweet C•der
Apples
Pumpkins
lnd•an Corn

c

x 41 E::XCE:LLENT c ond on
a ge v ng oom k chen
bed oom S ove e ge a o
bed S2 450 Phone 378 62 6

Wanted To Buy

Serv1ce

Shulefs Market

0

1

c

II s usually the folks

OF

GOD - Second St Mason w
Va Ches er Tennant pastor
Sunday schoo
o a m
morning worsh p
11 11 m
evangelist c !lervlce 1 30 p m
B be study and prayer se v ce
Wednesday 7 30 p m Phone

R

You d th nk lhat a man so capable ond versatle wouldn 1 feel
dependent on anybody or anyth ng Not so

BAP

TIST - Corner of Second and
Anderson
Mason
Pastor
We ter C oud Sunday schoa
9 45 a m
warsh p serv ce 11
a m
and 7 30 p m
Week y
B b e study Wednesday 7 30

And treasurer of the

He s

n last summer

George Casto pastor Sunday
Schoo 9 30 even nq wo Sh o
7 30 Thu sday even ng prayer
sevce730pm

FIRST

a cert fed publ c accountant

br cklayer He can bu ld a m ghly

MASON COU,NTY
THE HILAND CHAPEL

OF

s

worker for local chart es And-oh yes-Marty s a Saturday marn

LONG
BOTTOM
CHRISTIAN
M
Robe
Wyat pas o
Sunday Schoo
sup
Rona d Osbo ne B b e
Schoo 9 30 a m
preach ng
0 4S a m
Even ng se v ces
30 p m

CHURCH

Ga age

Busigess Services

• 29

REORGANIZED CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRIST
OF
LATTER DAY SAINTS
Po I and
Rae ne Road
W I am RDush pastor Denny
Evans
Sunday
Schoor
0 rec o Sunday Schoo 9 30
a m
Morn ng wo sh p
0 30
a m Sunday even ng serv ce 7
p m
Wednesday
even ng
D ayer se v ces 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPT ST
Rev
Ea
Shu e
paso
Wo Sh p se v ce 9 30 a m
Sunday schoo
0 30 a m
Sunday even ng se v ces
30
P m B be s udy and p aye
se
ce Thu sday
30 p m
K ngsbury
Road
Sunday
Schoo 9 30 a m
Ra ph Ca
sup
Wo sh p se v ce
0 30
a m and 30 p m a e na e V
Praye mee ng Wednesday
7 30 p m
Rev
Jay S es
paso
OLD
DEXTER
CON
GREGATIONAL CHURCH
M s Wo ev F anc s Sunday
schoo sup
Sunday s hoo
0
am

MASON

TRA LER o sa e a
Hyse
Run 2 bed ooms Phone 992
39 s 0 99'1 25

- - - - - -- -

4

WANTED o d up
any cond on
Pay ng s 0
ea h F s oo on y W e o
and g e d ec ons o W en
P ano Co
Bo x 88 sa d s
Oh o 43946

Danes
o pen

CHRIST P 0 BOK 487 M er
St
Mason w va
Sunday
B be Study 0 a m
Wo sh p
11 am and 7 p m Bib e Study
Wednesday 7 p m
Voca
mus c

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale

0 ' •

DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Cha es Russe
S
m n s e
Norm an C W
sup
Sunday schoo
9 30
a m
wo sh p se v ce
0 30
a m
B be s udy Tuesday
7 30 p m

Second and Pomeroy Sts Stan
Cra g pastor Sunday schoo
9 45 am
worship se v ce 11
a m
tra n no union 6 30
p m even ng worshiP serv ce
7 30 p m
M d week prayer
serv ce Wednesday 7 30 p m

YARD SA LE new and used
me c hand se a Sma ev s
G I Shop
Hoba
Sm a ey
es dence Ches e
Oh o
F day and Sa u day
0111 9
un
da k
2
0

Nottce

0 3.

MASON FIRST BAPTIST-

Mobile Homes For Sale

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

&amp;w

LAUREL CL FF FREE
METHODIST
Rev F oyd
F
Shook
pas o
L oyd
W gh
Sunday schoo sup
Sund ay ~chao
9 30 a m
mo n ng wo Sh p
0 0 a m
even ng wo sh p
30 p m
Wednesday Ch s an You h
C usade 6 JO p m
Cho
p ac ce Thu sday
p m

FREEDOM
GOSPEL
M SSI.ON
Bad Knobs Rev
L R G uesencamp pasta
Roger W tred
Sr
Sunday
Schoo Supt Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
Sunday even ng
worsh p 7 30 Prayer mee ng
Tuesday
7 30 p m
E nes
Oeete
c ass leader You h
mee ng Wednesday 1 30
p m
Ernes Dee e
eade
MT HERMON CHURCH OF
THE UN TED BRETHREN N
CH R ST Robe I Shook
pasto
Sunday schao
9 30
am
Russe
Spence
sup
wo sh p serv ce
0 45 a m
even ng worsh p ate na ng
w h C E al 7 30 p m on
Sunday Pr&amp;ye mee ng 1 30
p m Wednesday A f ed Wa fe
ay eade
WHITES
CHAPEL
Coo v e RD Rev Roy Dee e
pastor Sunday Schoo
9 30
a m
worsh p se v ce 10 30
a m B be s udy and prayer
serv ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
CHR ST
Rod Kas e pastor
V.. H Bra ey Sunday schoo
supt Sunday schoo 9 30 a m
wo Sh p se v ce and
om
m un on
0 30 a m
you h
mee ng
6 p m
Sunday
even ng se v e
egu ar
board mee ng h rd Satu day
pm
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m Worsh 'p se v ce
a m
Wednesday praye
meet ng
7 30 p m
Sunday
nghfworsh1p 730pm
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE
Rev
Lloyd 0 Gr mm
r
pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morn ng worsh p
0 30 a m
Young peop e s serv ce 6 45
p m
evange st c se v ce
7 30 p m Wednesday even ng
serv ce 7 30 p m

!k 11 19 ;

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

pm

HYSELL
RUN
FREE
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Pau Nev e paso
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
Morn ng se v ce
0 30 a m
you h se v ce
6 AS p m
E ange s c se
ce 30 p m
P aye mee ng Thu sday
7 30 p m

~ u

Rutland 0

KUHL'S

Bargaan Center
Rt 7 Tuppers Pta

ns

Phone U7 3858

Auction Sale
AT BILl GOOIMINS
SAT., OCT. 19-STARTING AT 12:00
6 m1 from W1lkesv•lle tust off Rt 689 7 m•

from Albany
Miscellaneous art1cles and most all k nd of
tools Tractor accessor es such as belt pull es
power take off shafts two bars stay bars
Ford fenders hood transm•ss on housmg
Some tr-actor tires new truck and auto t res
used tores two old trucks (one with dump bed
one w th heavy dJJty w nch) Farm all M
tractor w1th high lift Jacks two homemade
t~ ucl!,,campers M lk cans lanterns plus too
man¥ 1tems to hst All terns are sub1ect to
sale before date of auct on

�... ..

.,

. .'

,

.

-

...

'

•

'

'.

8 - Tl1e Daily Sentinel , Midctl~port-Pomeroy. o.. Friday. 0&lt;:1. 18, 1!174

Televisio.n. Log

,·= = i=~i&amp;'iii-~-j~- :=== = =H;'i=p=======~~=;;,~= = ====J.

uS

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18,1914
6:oo-News 3.4.15,8,10 ; Sesame St. 20; ABC News 6,13; Per
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Development 33.

.

6:3D-NBC News 3,4,15 ; CBS News 8,10 ; Bewotc hed 6 ; Gomer
Pvlfl' 11 : Zoom 20.
7: oo-News 10 ; Wild Kingdom 13 ; I

Spy

· ·•
15 ; Bowlin? for Dollars

:Z;

selves . r hey'l l be ol material 0 1
. l• nanc 1al va lu e to you and you r
tam1l.y .
.

LIBRA ·(Sept. 2J. Ocl. 23)
Peopl e you'll have commerc1al ·
contac l w1!h today will do you
l•ltle fav o rs they wouldn'l do
lor o the rs because o f the way
you 'l l treat lhem .

"'

By Helen Bnttcl
e

e

~

::C

e

·:·:

6 ; Truth or Cons . 3,4 ; WC HS Report 8; Jimmy Dean 13 ;

For Saturday , Oct. 19, 1974

ARIES I M
-arch

21-A"rii ..19J

Certa m mat er ia l thi ngs you
want Will come to you with
surpns1ng ease over the next
lew day s . K eep all channels
open _

Grea ter harmony w1!1 result m a
relat .onstnp that is linr,Jor;,. • to

. Dear Helen :
TAURUS (April 20- May 201
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23 ·
Soend as much lime today as
Five years ago I. met this guy and fell in love . We wanted lo
Dec . 21 J Don 't turn down an
ible do mg things that ·1 ou
Country 8; Treasure Hun t 10 : To Tell the Truth 13.
inv1lalion !his evenmg where
get married but my mother said I was too young , so I ra n away . poss
feel offer rewards. even though
8:0G-Washington Review 20,33 ; Sanford &amp; Son 3 3, 4, 15; Pl anet
you m1ght have an opportuOily
with him .
another doesn'·t und ers l and
of the Apes 8, 10 ; Movie "Guns of Navarone " 6, 13.
to m.e et new peopl e . A p leas ·
wh at ca n be p ersonal ly
When we came back, she made us break up . I haven 't seen or
ant encounter 15 1n store .
a·Jo-Wall Street Week 20,33; 'Flip W i lson 3,4, 15.
derived.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
heard rrom him since - the n suddenly this month he shows up
9; oo-Masterpiece Theater 20 ; Rockford F i les 3,.4, 15; M ovie
GEMINI (May 21-June 201
19) Have faith in others tha i
" Do Not Disturb" 10 ; " F er -de-lan ce" 8.
here . I understand he is married, has one child, and wants a
fak e advanta ge now ol any
you dea l with today and they
9 : JO--=. Rockford Files
divorce.
soc1al oop ortumty that perm1ts
wi11 treal you m the same man ·
10:oo-News 20 : Video Vi sinonari es 33.
you to m1x with the boss or con e r you treat th em _ Be
I am married to a man· I care about but don 't love . We have
worlc;ers away from w ork .
10 : 3D-Day at NiQht 33.
generous and charitable .
lwo children. I don 't wa nt to hurt him or them, but I love the
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
11 :oo--News 3,4,6,9, 10, 13, 15; Aviation Weather 20 ; ABC News
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
other guy .
You re l•k ety to be qu1te busy
19) Fnends and conlac ts will
33.
today domg th•ng s for others
l don 't know how he f.els about me . Should I call him and ask
be more meanmglul than usual
tha i affo rd them JOY You 'll get
for you over the next few days .
ll : 3Q--Mission Impossible 6 ; Unt ou chabl,~s 13.~ Johnny Ca ~s o~
- and risk breaking up two marriages'' -- srn ,LIN LOVE
as mu ch fun from 11 as they wtll.
Throug
h oth ers , advantag es
:1,4, 15 ; Janat(.i 33 ; Movies " The Patsy 8; Astro -Zomb1es
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Be a
wil l be off ered
10.
Dear S.I.L.:
good listener ea rl y in the day .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
12 : 3o--Oon Kirshners Rock Concert 6 ; W iide World Special13 ;
You ·re liable to be let tn on a
Concentra te today and tamar·
You
're
in
love
with
a
romanticized
memory.
In
person
,
this
Mov ie "Kung Fu" 10 .
sec ret that will later be o f
row on •ssues you deem the
"teenage dream " may lose his glamour fast.
substantia l benefil to you
most importanl 1n your lite at
Loose ends can make life pretty tangled, so I'd tie them up by
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sepl. 22)
2: 00- News 13.
lh1s tim e St r1des can now be
Over !he next lew days unusumade •f you apply yourse ll.
2:Jo-Take Five .for Life 15.; Mov 1e "A Pistol for Ringo" 4.
"
seeing him ... not to reswne an affair , but to prove what I'm
al cond1t1 ons will pre sent them 4:QO-Movie " The Second Best Agent In the Whol e Wide World
•
almost sure will happen : you'll discover you made the right
4.
choice in the, man you married .
.
nonexistent or not enough.
5: 3Q---Movie " Silver Spoon Set" 4.
Let me know whether or not my crystal ball is a dud. - H.
If two people pay into .i nsurance (which could become an
\
+++
for college education if the marriage works out), then
annuity
Cable Channel Five
7: 30 p.m . The Champions {() " All Star -W restling "; _ Dear Helen:
.neither is stuck lor complete child support if they break up. Nor
I am a single man of 60. I lend money to a sweet married . is the second spouse called u[ion to contribute.
"Cowtown, Rodeo"
9 : 30 p.m . - Operation Gangbuster " Bu r ke's Law" starring
lady and a single woman in my apartment building. They always
I think on the day the first child is born a couple should be
Gene Berry .
pay me back . With money!
compelled by law to take out marriage insurance. Maybe it could
That isn'tthe way it's supposed to work. From what I've be worked out with Social Security and payroll deductions. What
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1974
6:30 - Ky . Afield 13 ; Treehouse Club 10
read, women pay their bills by making men forget they owe do you think '! - LOOKING AHEAD
7:00- Treehouse Club 8; In Touch 13 ; M.an from COSI 10 ;
them . l keep wailing but all I get is cash. What do I do wrong? Saturday Report 3; Aware 6
D.O'M.
Dear L.A.:
7: 30 - Sesame St . 20; Farm Front 4; Jabberwocky 3; Eddie
Saunders6 ; Abbott &amp; Costello 8 ; Big Blue Marble 10 : Lassie' s
I think the premiums would either be too high for the average
Rescue Rangers 13
Dear D.O'M.:
worker
or the insurer would go broke paying off, what with one
8:00 - Popeye 10 ; Addams Family 3, 4, 15 ; Jabberwocky 6 ;
,
Your
approach
is
about
as
realistic
as
the
James
Bond
books
marriage
in three aimed for failure these days.
Yogi ' s Gang 13 ; Speed Buggy 8.
you probably read. Stop fantasizing and join a singles dance club
8: 30 - Mister Rogers 20 ; Wheelie and Chopper Bunch 3, 4. 15;
And if the insurer were the government (Social Security),
Bugs Bunny 13 ; Speedracer 6;· Scooby-Doo 8 .
- where women outnwnber men about two to one,. (You may look who would bail it out - us taxpayers! Uh-uh!!! - H.
9: 00 - Emergency Plus 3, 4, 15 ; Sesame St . 20 ; Hong Hong
make only friendships here, but at least you won't have to BUY .
Phooey 6, 13; Jeannie 8, 10
them.) - H.
9 : 30 ~ Run , JOe, Run 3, 4, 15 ; Gilligan6, 13; Partr idge Family 8,
10
Uud
4c._LJ.J ,_J
+++
by HENRI A R N O lD and DOD LEE
10:00- Elec. Co. 20 ; Land of the Lost3, 4, IS; Devlin 6, 13; Valley
Dear
Helen:
Beef _:_ ~nop
of the Dinosaurs 8, 10.
l'nscramhic lh€'Sl' (our Jumbles,
I've read a little about marriage insurance and I like what I
10: 30 - Zoom 20 ; Sigmund 3, 4, 15 ; Korg 6, 13 ; Shazam 8, 10 .
''up'
one leltu to each square, to
11 : 00 - Sesame St. 20 ; Pink Panther 3, 4, 15; Super Friends 6, 13 ;
read! If life is important enough to insure, then so is marriage,
form rour ordinary word s.
Globetrotters 8, 10
for when a couple with children breaks up, it's often the same as
11 : 30- Star Trek 3, 15; Hudson Br others 8. 10; Zoom 20
losing a parent through death - support money is either
12: 30 - Elec . Co. 20 ; Jack Lengyel Football3; College Football6.
. ' . '" .
0.\'l iffB
13 ; Go 4, 15 ; Fal Albert 8, 10
7:30-Bia ck Perspective on the News 33 ; Porter Wag oner 3:
MasqUerade Party 4; Candid Camera 6 : Pop Goes to the

By PHIL

JJWJ~ffilb~ ®

~

t''j '" ·'I

•

~Nt'wfe~by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Word with 1 Reporter's
up or down, coup
5 Minimal
2 John Wayne
10 Word with
movie
ice or nose 3 Secret
11 Seville
agent
artisan
( 2 wds.)
12 Wavy (her.) 4 Pagoda
13 City in
ornament
India
5 Actress
14 Poem
Hope
15 School
6 Shrewsubj.
mouse
16 By way of 7 On high
17 Transporta- ( 3 wds.)
tion charge · 8 An:anged in
19 Consume
a series
20 Instance
9 Picked qp
21 Speck of
the ch•ck
dust
22 lllcllned
24 Punished
in a way
25 Storm
26 Fire27 Unlock

I: 30 - NFL Football 4.
2:00 - NFL Football 3; TBA 15; CBS Sports Spectacular 8;
Popeye 10 ; ~-\ovle TBA 4
·

2: 30- Thrillseekers 3; Movie. " little Norse Prince" 10
3:00- Green Acres 3; Viewpoint 8
3:30 - Wagon Train 3; Arthur Sm ith 8.
4: 00 - TBA 13, 6 ; Wrestling 8: Movie " A Time for Every
Season" 10
5: 00- Bonanza 3; Wide World of Sports 6. 13; VIrginia 4 ;
What's My Line? 8.
5:30 - Course of our Times 33 ; News 8; Spring Street 15.
6: 00 - News 3, 4, 10; Lawrence Welk 8; Film 15; Villa Allegre

I I

$25,000 Pyram id 10 ; Lilias , Yoga and You 33.
7: 30 - Jeopardy 3; An ima l World 10 ; Catch 33 , 33 ; Bobby
Goldsboro 13.
8: 00 - Emergency 3; New Land 6, 13: All in the Family B, 10;

I'H/UT

D

Book Beat 33.

8: 30- Friends and Lovers 8, 10 ; Caught in the Act 33.
9: 00- Kung Fu 6, 13 ; Mary Tyler Moore 8, 10 ; Movie , " The
Mech;m ic" 3, 4, lS; Unto the Hills 33 .
9: 30 - Bob Newhart 8, 10 ; Mountain Scene33.
10:00 - Nakia 6, 13; CBS Reports 8, 10; Biography 33.
10: 30- Barenbolm on Beethoven 33
11 : 00- News 4, 6, 8, 10, 13 ; Janaki 33
11:15
- News 13 ; Midnight Special 15 ; Movie " Curse of the
33.
Vampire" 6.
6:30- News 3, 4, 15; News 6 ; Reasoner Report 13,· Zoom 33:
11 : 30- Movie, "Journey to the Far Side of the Sun" 3; Political
CBS News 10.
Talk 4; WoodY. Hayes Show 10; Movie " Crimson Cult" 13
7:00 - Hee Haw 6, 8; Lawrence Welk .4, 15; Treasure Hunt 3;
11 : 35 - Movie, ' Mister Moses' 1 .4
12 : 00 - Movie, " North br. Northwest" 10
1: 00 - Speakeasy 6; Move ''Masque of the Red Death'' 13
WIN AT BRIDGE
2:00- Movie, "Sands of the Kalahar i" 4; Movie, "Beloved
:nfidel" 10
2:30 - News 13
over your five notrump to show 4: 00 - Movie, "The .Fan" 10
.4:15- Movie, "Savage Innocents" 4
two kings. What do you do now?

fiJe better we \Odl'-·
Yesterday's AmlBw'er····

INFLATION FIGHTER SALE

11 Spree

26 Heliacal
15 Alleviate
28 Bogged
18 Polynesian
down
29 Slight
forest
god
admixture
21 "The Last -" 30 Stranger
22 Objection
35 "- Got the
23 Italian
World ... "
port
36 Tango
24 Disappear
nwnber

Most.of our Used Cars , and some of our New Cars can be bought
at rnces lower than pre-inflation prices . We invite comparison
anywhere - Better Prices . Higher Trade-in
"The closer vou look- The bet1er we look"

'

Sow arranl'e the circled letten
to form the surprise answer, as
surrested by the above· cartoon.

lfle=SIII:::,::PRISI~AIISWIII=::.:bere::::.....JI

L'..:..::Prin:.::.:l

rxxI I I

J

(An....,.-r, lomorrowJ

Jumlolr• • SKULK

EATEN

PARADE

MINGLE

l'r ~lr r ol•~·~

.

18

\ . \n11...,rr1 ( 'o11Jd IN · r111 lll'tut!l &lt;' nl(/1 - A PEEL

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

+92

rH E

·

IA

WG J

ZJJZT

lA

YMM

• 1098
.953
+ 864
.QI098

~brin~ \} dr . Sedan, 318 V-8 engine,
l~w mileage . Clean .

'

..

!~72 Ford Country Squire Sta. Wagon .......... 2995
'
Almost like the day it was so ld. A ir conditioned , fully equipped.

WGJ

-

YMM
GJSIJT,

WGJ

•

6 117 Stepside, 6 c yl. eng ., radio, low mileage by local
owner, good tire s.

NEW 1974 MODELS

ILJ
WSQJ
EKTKIL.-WGISJYQ
Yesterday's Cryptoqaole: SELF.SACRIFlCE WinCH DENIES
OOMMON SENSE IS NOT A VIRTUE, IT'S A SPIRITUAL
DISSIPATION.- MARGARET DELAND
.
:
.,

KINGS MILL, Ohio (UP!) -

re;~~·;~~;l~;;~~ for radio and

!I

licensing will result
better progranuning in the
' the president of the
~a~~:~~ Association of Broad'"
said here Thursday.
Vincent Wasilewski praised
ln1&gt;endir1g legislation that will
a station 's license from
Federal Communications
bmnmiissio&gt;n (FCC) from three
to five years.
"The public will benefit by
lr::;~~:g better progranuning
[b
the broadcaster can
devote more time and
to better operation of his
&lt;lotinon" said Wasilewski.
'There will be less time taken
by preparation of applica -

South should still play low,
but will he? Thirty points is 30
points and he just may play
the ace or ki~g and wind up
in the ash can.

&gt;r::.~~a~~~,~~ industry, ad-

lr

HaP~!+.~ ~111-1 ~~!

WATER -

~

'i•

,.,..

.."
••
...
..
y

I t ·.

.·AlLEY OOP
! CAN'T

I DON'T HAVE TIME 10
00 JNlO JT ~. DEAR.

WAIT 'TO

TELL JAN I ~!

""

....•

CU881.E GOT U5 OI'F

ROADWAY WHeN
'THAT 'HONKV' WAS
-r&gt;lE

ItL TELL 'IOU
TONIGHT_

~

...
.,.
~·

i!SARING DOWN ON

West

North

East

...•'.

U•

~~~~~~~~~ J~~fj

•••

I+
Pass a
Pass
26
P~ss
4 N.T.
Pass
5'P
Pass 5 N.T.
Pass
6+
Pass ?
You, South, ~old:
•AK843 \OA2 +Q4.KQB7
What do you do li.ow?
A.-JUit bid six spades. Your
partaer JUy Jaave lh! right
eardslor ~even but J~ ii unlikely.
ToDA\"8 QUESTION
Instead or showing one king
. your ().ll,rtner ha.s bid six hearts

....

"·_

""-·'-""'

,-

LEETLE SUSPRISE
FER 'IE IN TH'
HOUSE, MAW

Sales Mgr.

...." -

PHONE 992-7777

~·

POMEROY

~­

TATER'S, GOT A

Frank Gheen,

i. ~.

18
South

LARRY'S
MOBilE
HOMES

~·

US, DIDN'T 1-\E?

t;:e;J :~ ~"&amp;~t3!l
The bidding has been:

the opening session of
joint convention of the Ohio
of Broadcasters
the Indiana Broadcasters
at Kings Island.
The Houses of Representalast spring passed legislato make the license good
five years and just last
the Senate passed a

'P.i!Jb ~, bET B\CK IIJ l'HI::RI;; ptJD

.

FURRY

BLESS HIS
HEART!!

...

HOURS:

:;

DAILY
9 AM-8 PM

''·
·~
"-t..:.

. I'LL HAVE TO

GIVE HIM A
LEETLE PAT
ONTH'HEAD

.." . .

..
...' .
•-.
.·~-.

'~
,•

r:,:

••
I

I

'.

-·
---

.j•

'I

'

'

.

..

'

I•·,

.. ,

• r

.·.

v.s

on air predicted

Wasilewski , a lobpyist for the

CR~ru~es-

NEW 1974 G30 CHEVY VAN ........14395

Better programs

.'

CAIN'r ee

speed tran s., H. duty 15'' tires,

AIS

(((!) 1174 Kinl' Features S7ndicat.e, lne.)

HAIRL.EE6S .jOG
loJ.J' l.ONeGQW::
POt..IECAT!"f- Ml.l5r
SE ni' DRJNKIN'

.t

1972 CHEV~OLET C-10 PICKUP. .. ~2295

BJYMWG ..

matcrial.''

WAS TJPPGD

8' Fleetside, V·8 engine,
solid cab, radio .

2 Dr . hardtop, 289 V-8 engine, power steering, power brakes,

VULEf W·W·WAKE LJP.,tR:!
MAY 8E DIFFICUl.T TO
&amp;SPORe MIDNI6HT!

INTO THE TH/I.ME6
RJV6R E&lt;-1 A
COU~E:' OF

1972 CHEVROLET C-20 %L .......12395

1968 Mercury V8 Montego ....................... ,1795

.

THE BUS AHEAD

302 V-8, standard, long w ide bed.

68 FORD 6 CYL ..................... 11095
Auto ., long wide bed .

--TRACTOR--..
56 Case wide front end, 3 point hitch with
front end loader in good shape.

~----•995----~

72 BUICK LeSABRE.. ................12195
4 Dr .. H .T ., fa ct . air , P.S., P. B., vinyl r oof .

CAPTAIN EASY

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
No series of articles on
obligatory falsecard plays
would be complete wtthout
today's hand. In one form or
another, this hand has been
appearing in bridge columns
for 50 years or more.
South wins the spade openin~ and leads a club. He is not
gomg to make his slam if
East holds all four missing
clubs, but West follows and
now the slam is cold.
A hal?py-go-lucky South
would nse with the king of
clubs on the theory that
queens always dropped; a
slightly more careful South
would play dummy's jack to
be sure of his contract
against any 3-1 or 2-2 break
and to make seven if West
had started wftii three to the
queen. A very careful South
would play low from dummy.
This would give up any play
for seven but would insure
success of the slam against
the presence of all four cards
in the West hand.
So, you a~e West You know
South-is a careful player. You
know that if you play the
eight, nine or 10 he will duck
in dummy and pick up the
suit the next time around.
You play your queen.

,

auto. trans. Extra n ice for model.

YLZ
WGJ

8' Pickup, 4 wheel drlv ~. locking frt . hubs, V·B engine, 4
speed trans., power steering &amp; brakes, rad io, chr om e
front &amp; rear bumpers .

Station WBgon, small V-8, fully eq uipped with ai·r cond., E!'tc.

""

Opening lead-10 •

1973 CK10 ............................. 13495

1970 Chevrolet Brookwood ...................... 11295

Neither vulnerable

2 N.T.
PaSs

$2995

72 FORD
RANGER XLT.............. $2495
.·

1

YMM

SUNDAYS.
1 ' PM~ .PM ·
•

.., . .

.

72 CHEV. IMPALA .......... ;......... $2195
.4 Dr . H .T ., fac. air, P.S., P. B., vi nyl roof .

2 Dr . H.T ., 6 cyL , auto., P.S. ,

NEW 1974 CHEV. WV ............... $3295

,68 BUICK SPECIAL :.~;; ............. 1895
73 DATSON .............................$1695
1200 Series, 2 . Dr ., 4 cyl. , 4 sp. _

66
CHEV. IMPALA ........~ ............ $295
4 Dr. H.T., runs good.
65 FORD WAGON ......................$295
Good Selection Cheaper Cars

"WE RUN A VERY SIMPLE BUSINESS"
We Sell &amp; Service Chevrolet Cars &amp; Trucks

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4100

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til8
Pomeroy, Oh'

Ohio tourism guides available
MARlETTA - ~though the
busiest part of the tourism and
vacation season is over in Ohio
many 11 Weekend getaways"
and family outings can still be
planned if one uses the
directory or travel attractions,
" Beautiful Ohio, "
being
distributed on a limited basis
by the Ohio Department of
Transportation.
According to District Ten

William 1'. Harris, Mary Hensley, Patricia Lambert, Joseph
Lane, Goldie Livingston, Inez
Monroe, David Munch , Evie
Nickels, Rachel Parsons, Betty
Peters, Martha Phillips,
Michelle Preston, Lottie
Sheets, Connie Scaggs, Fred
Scaggs, Lawrence Soisson
Eules Turner, Diana White'
Mettice White, Charles Wolle'
. '
J r.

Veterans Memorial Hosllftal
Admitted - Emma Joh~son,
Racine ; Wilma Riggs, Racine;
, Kathryn Weaver, Pomeroy;
Jesse Bush, Long Bottom.
Discharged - Ruth Carr,
Clarence Curtis. an(\ Herbert
Rose.
·

Ford Cus. 500 4 dr. Sed., pow. air..... !1495.
Pontiac Cat. HT Cpe., Power, air ... _.. _. 12895
Ford Gal. 500 4 dr., V-roof, air ........ ."'1795
Volkswagen 411 4 Door, auto.......... .'1695

70 Olds 88 HT Sed., v-roof, air ............. .'1395
70 Olds 98 Hoi. Sed., power, air............ '149!i
70 Ford Gal. 500 2 Dr., V8, 3 speed....... !1 095
69 Ford LTD HT. Cpe., V roof, air ........... '995
69 Chev. Mal. 4 Dr., V-8 auto., P.S.......... '995
69 Pontiac Bonn., 2 Dr. H.T., v-roof, air ____ '595
6B Pontiac Bonneville H.T.r Sedan, power, air'595
68 Chev. Mal. Wagon, V-8 auto., P.S........ '995
68 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, power, air....... '1095
6B Chev. BA 4 Dr., V-B, auto., P.S........... '995
67 Cadillac H.T. Sedan, full power, air ....... .'995
66 Pontiac Cat. 4 Dr., V8, auto, P.S......... 1495
64 Ford Falcon 2 Door....................... .'250
63 Olds 88 Hardtop Sedan .................. .'150

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doi_~ Bu~ iness "
Y92-5342
GMC FINANCING
r'OMEROY
Open Evenings Unlil6:01}- Til S p .m. Sat .

1
70
PONTIAC
4
DR
....................
1295
P. S., P. B., locally owned.

On All New '74 Chevy
Models In Stock.

992 -2126

72
72
71
71

71 MERCURY MONTEGO ............ $1695

1
72
VEGA
4
CYL
.......................
1295
4 sp. Hatchback .

Year-End Deals

"
'

2 Dr . H.T. , fac. a ir. P.S., P .B., viny l roo f, sha rp .

71
FORD MAVERICK................ ..S1495
2 Dr ., 6 cyl ., auto .

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Ce~ter
IBirths, Oct.l6)
Mr , and Mrs . Michael
Campbell, a son, Bidwell; Mr .
and Mrs. John E . Hill, a
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. William L. Morgan, a son,
Oak Hill.
(Births, Ocl.l7)
Mr. and Mrs. Homer E.
Johnson,
a
daughter ,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Smith, a son, Wellston ; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Vann Meier, a
•
daughter, Letart.
(Discharged, Oct, 17)
Ge rald Allen, Esther Altieri ,
Kan Bahr, Hershel Bartels,
Elner Belue, Gladys Boslic,
Mrs. Stephen Carmichael 11nd
son, James H~ rold Davis ,
Kathy Davis, Sylvia Denney,
Lon Dillon, Brenda Glassburn ,

72 PLYMOUTH FURY 111.. .......... 12195

1 Ton,
engine, 3 speed std. trans., Side &amp; Rear door
glass, power steering &amp; brakes, H. duty tires, H. duty
springs &amp; shocks, radio . Save.

Pickup, radio , real economy .

similar bill, although small
differences in the measures
still must be worked out by a
joint conference committee. In
order to renew a license-and
therefore protect a broadcasting channel from competitors, station owners must
prove to the FCC they have
been OP.erating in "the public
interest .''
Wasilewski admitted the new
legislation means there will be
less opportunity for competitors, but said t he quality of
broadcasting will not be affected.
"This does not protect the
poorly run station or cutoff
challenges to it," he said.
"Such stations will continuue
to be vunerable every five
years. "
Wasilewski also praised the
defeat in the Senate of an effort
to require radio stal_ions to pay
royalty fees to recording arlisl-'l for playing their records
on the air.
"By and large, it's been the
broadcaster that has made the
perfQrmer popular,''
he
argued . " A royalty fee would
eat up all the profits of smaller
stations."
Wasilewski contended thai
recording artists should
continue to r eCeive royalties
from their record company,
but never from radio and
television stations.

73 Olds 98 LS Sedan, full power, air....... '4595
73 Olds Cut. S. Cpe., stereo tape, air ........'36 95
73 Olds Cut. Sup. HT Cpe., power, air ...... .'3295
73 Buick Elec. H.T. Sed., power, air, sharp,. '4595
73 Dodge Pol. 4 Dr. HT., v-roof, air ......... '3095

72 Chev. Imp Cpe., V-8 auto., P.S.......... 12495

74 CHEV. Cl0 .........................13295

Cab &amp; chassis , 108" cab · to axle, V-8, 350 engine,
15,000 lb., 2 speed R. axle, good 825x20 tires, solid
cab.

{\lr coriditloned , DOwer steering , power brakes. Cruisematic,
extra sharp.

Nice.

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

72 Olds 98 HT Sed., Hoof, air .............. '3495
72 Chevelle Mal. HT Cpe., HOOf, air, stereo.!2995

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
1970 CHEVROLEl2 TON

1972 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedan .....................12795

~·l

Pass

LATE

350. V·8, auto., . P.S., P.B., long w ide bed , heavy duty
sprmgs, w -topper .

'

.,

6 N.T.

power steer ing , au to . tran s.,

I

• AK7
• AKJ2
+ AK75
.63

Pass
Pass

Pomeroy, 0.

-TRUCKS:t--

~lan·t 6 cyl. , power steering, auto. tranS.-ShowS very be sf of care.

..

South

Phone 992-2174

SERVICE WHEN YOU BUY FROM

:f971 Plymouth Sattelite ......................... 11B95

·--

East

OF EVERYTHING

-~

+QJIOJ

North

500 E. Main St.

QUALITY. PRICE, COURTEOUS

~971 Dodge "Demon" 2 Dr. Sedan ............. !1995

•

West

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.

Many Prices Reduced I

72 Olds Toronado Cpe., V-roof, pow., air .... '3695

I ,

I

.QJ652
.Ql076

SOUTH&lt;Ol

Dealership Hours Mon.-Fri. 8 AM-7 PM
Sat. 8 AM-5 PM
Service Hours Mon.-Fri. B AM-4:30 PM Sat. B AM-12 Noon

'

EAST

WEST

MORE

i1972 Ford VB FlOO Pickup ..................... 12795

DICK TRACY

• AKJ7542

1

: Very low m i leag e. Lik e new i ns ide and out . Air conditioned, '·
• fully eq uipped .

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

BISMZ,

Buy! ..

'

: 1973 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedan .................... 3495

city
31 Coal byproduct
32 - de France
33 Concealed b-+--11-+-34 New York
city
36 Conduce
37 Drool
38 Carry
on
38- down
(subdued)
40 European
river

RKEJ

We Are Always A Leader-Plus!

Opens in bac k like sta tion wagon, 4 cy l. economy at its best .
: Very low mileage .

1 Low rrlileage, ex tra sha rp truck. 360 V-8, power steering , power
: brakes , auto . tra ns., two gas tan ks.

BIQMZ

USED CARS

1974 Ford Pinto 3 Dr. Runabout ...............12695

28 caiifornla

K

Fri~ndliness

~ ·2 Dr . Hardtop, fully equipped , smallest V-8, one local owner.

CRYPTOQUOTES

THEY E5E LON6ED TO
THAT 'THEAT!:R C~OWD.

• Fimmcing

Cinnamon IS actually the
bark of an aromatic laurel
tree.

_)971 Dodge VB Special Edition ................. 11695

One letter simply stand• for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all .
hints. Each d'ay the code letters are dlfl'erent.

IO•tfl

elnsurance

Our secretary tak es
shorthand 120 word s a
minute - and 120 minutes a
word to fi gure out what she
SC I·ibbled.
We're on vacation - the
boss is away for a week.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how. to work It:

tj
rJ

·• Sales • Service

• Honesty

(poet.)

II

I I

Queen play could mislead South
NORTH
• 43
• 84

I

SOMETHING TO BEliEVE IN

t:T

e

~

1: 00 - Chilcdren's Film Festival 8, 10; Soul Train 3; World of
Survival 4 ; TBA 15

PA~TOH

Saturday 's the day you
waste worrying a bout Mon day coming up.
Underneath the falling
leaves is the snowshovel )IOU
left in the yard last spring.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

you . bec au se y our Vl t:w c, .He
now mor e liberal and lory 1v 1ng.

Is ..--lrst Lnvt• Rei! I'!

Aviation Weather 20,33 .

Oct. 19, 1974
You 'll do ex lreffie ly well this
year 1n your creat1ve or artiSitC
endeavors Increa sed earn ings
or p ro l•1s are also likely from,
work or serv1ces you perform.

Deputy Director Max R.
Farley, more . than 200 of the
booklel-'l have been mailed to
Ohioans and other persons
expressing an interest in
:'Traveling Ohio" since midJune. The effort was made ' in
conjunction with a Campaign
by the Governor's Council on
Travel and Tow-ism to prOmote
the attractions found in Ohio.
Despite a sharp decline of
requests for the booklet in
recent , months the district
deputy director noted that less
than 200 remain, Farley emphasized that the usefulness or
the directory is not limited to
swnmer activities. "The entire
b:ioklet is devoted to the year
around activities and pastimes
one can find in Ohio," he said.
Requests lor "Beautiful
Ohio" are to be made to the
Public Information Office,
Ohio Department of Transportation,
District
Ten,
Muskingwn Drive, Marietta,
Ohio 45750. Interested persons
are asked to limit their
requests to one booklet as
supplies are limited and offered only on a "first come,
firs l served'' basis.

located on St. Rt. 7

COLUMBUS I UP[) - Employm e nt
of
produc t ion
workers ~ nd other nonsupervisory employes declined
by one per cent during August
as compared with August , 1973,
and was alSo down by one per
cent for the fir st eight months
of 1974, the Center lor Business
and Economic Research at
Ohio State University reported
Thursday .
The -center said that in the
first eight month s uf 1974,
compared with the correspond-

ing period in 1973, thr ee areas
showing decli nes were Dayton Mon tgomery County , 5 per'
ce nt;
Columbu s- F ran klin
O mnty, 2 pe r cent a nd Ci ncinna ti-Hamilton , a frac ti on .
increases were recorded in
Ca nton-Stark Cou nty, 4 per
cent ; a eveland-Cuyahoga and
Youngstown-M a honing, 2 per
cent and Akron-Swnmit aP-1
Tol edo~Luca s, 1 per cent .
The Augu st-to-August comparison sho wed Col umbus.
Fr~nklin county down by 9 per

cent ; Dayton-Montgomery, 4
per cent a nd Ci ncin na ti Hamilton 1 per cent, the cen ter
said .
Ga in s wer e reported by
Akron-Summit and C1eve lan d·
Cuyahoga, 6 per cent ; Can tur1 ~
Stark, 3 per c.:ent and ToledoLucas and Young.sto\ovn-Mah oning, 2 per ce nt.

Experience, record claimed
in Celebrezze's campaign

Judge Frank D. Celebrezze,
elected to the Ohio Supreme
Court in 1972, is pointing to his
judicial experience and the
record he has estabhshed m hi+candidacy for reelection .
Judge Celebrezze is one ol
the only two Democrats on the
Ohio Supreme Court. He is ?lso
one of only three Jush~es
currenUy on the bench w1th
trial experience.
Prior to being elected to the
Common Pleas Court in 1964,
Judge Celebrezze had . extensive experience as a trial
lawyer representing both
plaintiffs and defendants in
civil and criminal . cases and
claimants
before
ad-.
ministrative agencies. _In _l962, ·
he represented a plamtiff m
recovering the highest jury
verdict rend~~ed in the
Cleveland Muntctpal Court to
that lime. ·
'
Judge Celebrezze • is the
oldest son ol the late Cleveland
Municipal Court Judge Frank
D. Celebrezze and the nephew
of the former Mayor ol
Cleveland,
Anthony
J·
.Celebrezze, who also served as
Secretary of Health, Education
John Mer:.ce r Lang sto n , and Welfare in the cabinet of
elected c lerk in 1855 of President John F. Kennedy.
Brownhelm township. Lorain
Judge Celebrezze has
County, Ohio, was .the first
~egro to , win elective office sponsored many judicial
1n the Umled States.
,
reforms, both as a Common

/

Chesler, 0.

Employment down

..

Pleas Judge as well as on the
Ohio Supreme Court. He is
currently working on a
proposal for the registration of
all practicing lawyers in the
State of Ohio. He feels that only
under this system will the
public be protected from those
engaged . in the illegal and
WlauthorizeO practice ~f law.
Judge Celebrezze is a
ve~ran of World War U,
having served as a paratrooper
in the !88th Parachute In:
fantry Regiment of the lllh
Airborne Division. He is a .
member of the American
Legion Catholic War Veterans
and pa~t president of the Joint
Veterans Commission of
Cuyahoga County.
His candidacy has been
endorsed by every labor
organization in Ohio, the major
Bar Associations, as well as the
Cleveland Plain Dealer and the
Cincinnati Enquirer to date.
He is a graduate of Baldwin Wallace College ( B.S. ). in
Bere~ , Ohio, and received his
Juris Doctor Degree from
Cleveland - Marshall Law
School of the Cleveland State
University. Judge Celebrezze
se!Ved.as a Stale Senator from
1956 to 1958 and as Special
Counsel to the Attorney
General of Ohio, authored 38 ·
opinions which ..-ere published

as law. He is married to the
fo rm er Mary , Ann Armstrong
and they have nine children two girls and seven boys - .
ranging in age from 23 years to
8 months.
He takes pride In his
reputation for being a competent jurist whose honesty
and integrity are unassa ilable.
In the May 1972 elec ti on. he
received more votes than any
other candidate on the ballot.

GET

ATrENTION

/. ---......
CLOSE OUT
74 MODEL

'.

"
''

..':
'

SAVINGS
3 bedroom , all etectric,
completely furnished.
See AI
.

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOME
SALES
JUDGE CELEB)\".ZZE

Main St .
Pomeroy , Ohio
Open Daily 11 -7

,.

�... ..

.,

. .'

,

.

-

...

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•

'

'.

8 - Tl1e Daily Sentinel , Midctl~port-Pomeroy. o.. Friday. 0&lt;:1. 18, 1!174

Televisio.n. Log

,·= = i=~i&amp;'iii-~-j~- :=== = =H;'i=p=======~~=;;,~= = ====J.

uS

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18,1914
6:oo-News 3.4.15,8,10 ; Sesame St. 20; ABC News 6,13; Per
sonallty &amp; Behavioral Development 33.

.

6:3D-NBC News 3,4,15 ; CBS News 8,10 ; Bewotc hed 6 ; Gomer
Pvlfl' 11 : Zoom 20.
7: oo-News 10 ; Wild Kingdom 13 ; I

Spy

· ·•
15 ; Bowlin? for Dollars

:Z;

selves . r hey'l l be ol material 0 1
. l• nanc 1al va lu e to you and you r
tam1l.y .
.

LIBRA ·(Sept. 2J. Ocl. 23)
Peopl e you'll have commerc1al ·
contac l w1!h today will do you
l•ltle fav o rs they wouldn'l do
lor o the rs because o f the way
you 'l l treat lhem .

"'

By Helen Bnttcl
e

e

~

::C

e

·:·:

6 ; Truth or Cons . 3,4 ; WC HS Report 8; Jimmy Dean 13 ;

For Saturday , Oct. 19, 1974

ARIES I M
-arch

21-A"rii ..19J

Certa m mat er ia l thi ngs you
want Will come to you with
surpns1ng ease over the next
lew day s . K eep all channels
open _

Grea ter harmony w1!1 result m a
relat .onstnp that is linr,Jor;,. • to

. Dear Helen :
TAURUS (April 20- May 201
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23 ·
Soend as much lime today as
Five years ago I. met this guy and fell in love . We wanted lo
Dec . 21 J Don 't turn down an
ible do mg things that ·1 ou
Country 8; Treasure Hun t 10 : To Tell the Truth 13.
inv1lalion !his evenmg where
get married but my mother said I was too young , so I ra n away . poss
feel offer rewards. even though
8:0G-Washington Review 20,33 ; Sanford &amp; Son 3 3, 4, 15; Pl anet
you m1ght have an opportuOily
with him .
another doesn'·t und ers l and
of the Apes 8, 10 ; Movie "Guns of Navarone " 6, 13.
to m.e et new peopl e . A p leas ·
wh at ca n be p ersonal ly
When we came back, she made us break up . I haven 't seen or
ant encounter 15 1n store .
a·Jo-Wall Street Week 20,33; 'Flip W i lson 3,4, 15.
derived.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
heard rrom him since - the n suddenly this month he shows up
9; oo-Masterpiece Theater 20 ; Rockford F i les 3,.4, 15; M ovie
GEMINI (May 21-June 201
19) Have faith in others tha i
" Do Not Disturb" 10 ; " F er -de-lan ce" 8.
here . I understand he is married, has one child, and wants a
fak e advanta ge now ol any
you dea l with today and they
9 : JO--=. Rockford Files
divorce.
soc1al oop ortumty that perm1ts
wi11 treal you m the same man ·
10:oo-News 20 : Video Vi sinonari es 33.
you to m1x with the boss or con e r you treat th em _ Be
I am married to a man· I care about but don 't love . We have
worlc;ers away from w ork .
10 : 3D-Day at NiQht 33.
generous and charitable .
lwo children. I don 't wa nt to hurt him or them, but I love the
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
11 :oo--News 3,4,6,9, 10, 13, 15; Aviation Weather 20 ; ABC News
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
other guy .
You re l•k ety to be qu1te busy
19) Fnends and conlac ts will
33.
today domg th•ng s for others
l don 't know how he f.els about me . Should I call him and ask
be more meanmglul than usual
tha i affo rd them JOY You 'll get
for you over the next few days .
ll : 3Q--Mission Impossible 6 ; Unt ou chabl,~s 13.~ Johnny Ca ~s o~
- and risk breaking up two marriages'' -- srn ,LIN LOVE
as mu ch fun from 11 as they wtll.
Throug
h oth ers , advantag es
:1,4, 15 ; Janat(.i 33 ; Movies " The Patsy 8; Astro -Zomb1es
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Be a
wil l be off ered
10.
Dear S.I.L.:
good listener ea rl y in the day .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
12 : 3o--Oon Kirshners Rock Concert 6 ; W iide World Special13 ;
You ·re liable to be let tn on a
Concentra te today and tamar·
You
're
in
love
with
a
romanticized
memory.
In
person
,
this
Mov ie "Kung Fu" 10 .
sec ret that will later be o f
row on •ssues you deem the
"teenage dream " may lose his glamour fast.
substantia l benefil to you
most importanl 1n your lite at
Loose ends can make life pretty tangled, so I'd tie them up by
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sepl. 22)
2: 00- News 13.
lh1s tim e St r1des can now be
Over !he next lew days unusumade •f you apply yourse ll.
2:Jo-Take Five .for Life 15.; Mov 1e "A Pistol for Ringo" 4.
"
seeing him ... not to reswne an affair , but to prove what I'm
al cond1t1 ons will pre sent them 4:QO-Movie " The Second Best Agent In the Whol e Wide World
•
almost sure will happen : you'll discover you made the right
4.
choice in the, man you married .
.
nonexistent or not enough.
5: 3Q---Movie " Silver Spoon Set" 4.
Let me know whether or not my crystal ball is a dud. - H.
If two people pay into .i nsurance (which could become an
\
+++
for college education if the marriage works out), then
annuity
Cable Channel Five
7: 30 p.m . The Champions {() " All Star -W restling "; _ Dear Helen:
.neither is stuck lor complete child support if they break up. Nor
I am a single man of 60. I lend money to a sweet married . is the second spouse called u[ion to contribute.
"Cowtown, Rodeo"
9 : 30 p.m . - Operation Gangbuster " Bu r ke's Law" starring
lady and a single woman in my apartment building. They always
I think on the day the first child is born a couple should be
Gene Berry .
pay me back . With money!
compelled by law to take out marriage insurance. Maybe it could
That isn'tthe way it's supposed to work. From what I've be worked out with Social Security and payroll deductions. What
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1974
6:30 - Ky . Afield 13 ; Treehouse Club 10
read, women pay their bills by making men forget they owe do you think '! - LOOKING AHEAD
7:00- Treehouse Club 8; In Touch 13 ; M.an from COSI 10 ;
them . l keep wailing but all I get is cash. What do I do wrong? Saturday Report 3; Aware 6
D.O'M.
Dear L.A.:
7: 30 - Sesame St . 20; Farm Front 4; Jabberwocky 3; Eddie
Saunders6 ; Abbott &amp; Costello 8 ; Big Blue Marble 10 : Lassie' s
I think the premiums would either be too high for the average
Rescue Rangers 13
Dear D.O'M.:
worker
or the insurer would go broke paying off, what with one
8:00 - Popeye 10 ; Addams Family 3, 4, 15 ; Jabberwocky 6 ;
,
Your
approach
is
about
as
realistic
as
the
James
Bond
books
marriage
in three aimed for failure these days.
Yogi ' s Gang 13 ; Speed Buggy 8.
you probably read. Stop fantasizing and join a singles dance club
8: 30 - Mister Rogers 20 ; Wheelie and Chopper Bunch 3, 4. 15;
And if the insurer were the government (Social Security),
Bugs Bunny 13 ; Speedracer 6;· Scooby-Doo 8 .
- where women outnwnber men about two to one,. (You may look who would bail it out - us taxpayers! Uh-uh!!! - H.
9: 00 - Emergency Plus 3, 4, 15 ; Sesame St . 20 ; Hong Hong
make only friendships here, but at least you won't have to BUY .
Phooey 6, 13; Jeannie 8, 10
them.) - H.
9 : 30 ~ Run , JOe, Run 3, 4, 15 ; Gilligan6, 13; Partr idge Family 8,
10
Uud
4c._LJ.J ,_J
+++
by HENRI A R N O lD and DOD LEE
10:00- Elec. Co. 20 ; Land of the Lost3, 4, IS; Devlin 6, 13; Valley
Dear
Helen:
Beef _:_ ~nop
of the Dinosaurs 8, 10.
l'nscramhic lh€'Sl' (our Jumbles,
I've read a little about marriage insurance and I like what I
10: 30 - Zoom 20 ; Sigmund 3, 4, 15 ; Korg 6, 13 ; Shazam 8, 10 .
''up'
one leltu to each square, to
11 : 00 - Sesame St. 20 ; Pink Panther 3, 4, 15; Super Friends 6, 13 ;
read! If life is important enough to insure, then so is marriage,
form rour ordinary word s.
Globetrotters 8, 10
for when a couple with children breaks up, it's often the same as
11 : 30- Star Trek 3, 15; Hudson Br others 8. 10; Zoom 20
losing a parent through death - support money is either
12: 30 - Elec . Co. 20 ; Jack Lengyel Football3; College Football6.
. ' . '" .
0.\'l iffB
13 ; Go 4, 15 ; Fal Albert 8, 10
7:30-Bia ck Perspective on the News 33 ; Porter Wag oner 3:
MasqUerade Party 4; Candid Camera 6 : Pop Goes to the

By PHIL

JJWJ~ffilb~ ®

~

t''j '" ·'I

•

~Nt'wfe~by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Word with 1 Reporter's
up or down, coup
5 Minimal
2 John Wayne
10 Word with
movie
ice or nose 3 Secret
11 Seville
agent
artisan
( 2 wds.)
12 Wavy (her.) 4 Pagoda
13 City in
ornament
India
5 Actress
14 Poem
Hope
15 School
6 Shrewsubj.
mouse
16 By way of 7 On high
17 Transporta- ( 3 wds.)
tion charge · 8 An:anged in
19 Consume
a series
20 Instance
9 Picked qp
21 Speck of
the ch•ck
dust
22 lllcllned
24 Punished
in a way
25 Storm
26 Fire27 Unlock

I: 30 - NFL Football 4.
2:00 - NFL Football 3; TBA 15; CBS Sports Spectacular 8;
Popeye 10 ; ~-\ovle TBA 4
·

2: 30- Thrillseekers 3; Movie. " little Norse Prince" 10
3:00- Green Acres 3; Viewpoint 8
3:30 - Wagon Train 3; Arthur Sm ith 8.
4: 00 - TBA 13, 6 ; Wrestling 8: Movie " A Time for Every
Season" 10
5: 00- Bonanza 3; Wide World of Sports 6. 13; VIrginia 4 ;
What's My Line? 8.
5:30 - Course of our Times 33 ; News 8; Spring Street 15.
6: 00 - News 3, 4, 10; Lawrence Welk 8; Film 15; Villa Allegre

I I

$25,000 Pyram id 10 ; Lilias , Yoga and You 33.
7: 30 - Jeopardy 3; An ima l World 10 ; Catch 33 , 33 ; Bobby
Goldsboro 13.
8: 00 - Emergency 3; New Land 6, 13: All in the Family B, 10;

I'H/UT

D

Book Beat 33.

8: 30- Friends and Lovers 8, 10 ; Caught in the Act 33.
9: 00- Kung Fu 6, 13 ; Mary Tyler Moore 8, 10 ; Movie , " The
Mech;m ic" 3, 4, lS; Unto the Hills 33 .
9: 30 - Bob Newhart 8, 10 ; Mountain Scene33.
10:00 - Nakia 6, 13; CBS Reports 8, 10; Biography 33.
10: 30- Barenbolm on Beethoven 33
11 : 00- News 4, 6, 8, 10, 13 ; Janaki 33
11:15
- News 13 ; Midnight Special 15 ; Movie " Curse of the
33.
Vampire" 6.
6:30- News 3, 4, 15; News 6 ; Reasoner Report 13,· Zoom 33:
11 : 30- Movie, "Journey to the Far Side of the Sun" 3; Political
CBS News 10.
Talk 4; WoodY. Hayes Show 10; Movie " Crimson Cult" 13
7:00 - Hee Haw 6, 8; Lawrence Welk .4, 15; Treasure Hunt 3;
11 : 35 - Movie, ' Mister Moses' 1 .4
12 : 00 - Movie, " North br. Northwest" 10
1: 00 - Speakeasy 6; Move ''Masque of the Red Death'' 13
WIN AT BRIDGE
2:00- Movie, "Sands of the Kalahar i" 4; Movie, "Beloved
:nfidel" 10
2:30 - News 13
over your five notrump to show 4: 00 - Movie, "The .Fan" 10
.4:15- Movie, "Savage Innocents" 4
two kings. What do you do now?

fiJe better we \Odl'-·
Yesterday's AmlBw'er····

INFLATION FIGHTER SALE

11 Spree

26 Heliacal
15 Alleviate
28 Bogged
18 Polynesian
down
29 Slight
forest
god
admixture
21 "The Last -" 30 Stranger
22 Objection
35 "- Got the
23 Italian
World ... "
port
36 Tango
24 Disappear
nwnber

Most.of our Used Cars , and some of our New Cars can be bought
at rnces lower than pre-inflation prices . We invite comparison
anywhere - Better Prices . Higher Trade-in
"The closer vou look- The bet1er we look"

'

Sow arranl'e the circled letten
to form the surprise answer, as
surrested by the above· cartoon.

lfle=SIII:::,::PRISI~AIISWIII=::.:bere::::.....JI

L'..:..::Prin:.::.:l

rxxI I I

J

(An....,.-r, lomorrowJ

Jumlolr• • SKULK

EATEN

PARADE

MINGLE

l'r ~lr r ol•~·~

.

18

\ . \n11...,rr1 ( 'o11Jd IN · r111 lll'tut!l &lt;' nl(/1 - A PEEL

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

+92

rH E

·

IA

WG J

ZJJZT

lA

YMM

• 1098
.953
+ 864
.QI098

~brin~ \} dr . Sedan, 318 V-8 engine,
l~w mileage . Clean .

'

..

!~72 Ford Country Squire Sta. Wagon .......... 2995
'
Almost like the day it was so ld. A ir conditioned , fully equipped.

WGJ

-

YMM
GJSIJT,

WGJ

•

6 117 Stepside, 6 c yl. eng ., radio, low mileage by local
owner, good tire s.

NEW 1974 MODELS

ILJ
WSQJ
EKTKIL.-WGISJYQ
Yesterday's Cryptoqaole: SELF.SACRIFlCE WinCH DENIES
OOMMON SENSE IS NOT A VIRTUE, IT'S A SPIRITUAL
DISSIPATION.- MARGARET DELAND
.
:
.,

KINGS MILL, Ohio (UP!) -

re;~~·;~~;l~;;~~ for radio and

!I

licensing will result
better progranuning in the
' the president of the
~a~~:~~ Association of Broad'"
said here Thursday.
Vincent Wasilewski praised
ln1&gt;endir1g legislation that will
a station 's license from
Federal Communications
bmnmiissio&gt;n (FCC) from three
to five years.
"The public will benefit by
lr::;~~:g better progranuning
[b
the broadcaster can
devote more time and
to better operation of his
&lt;lotinon" said Wasilewski.
'There will be less time taken
by preparation of applica -

South should still play low,
but will he? Thirty points is 30
points and he just may play
the ace or ki~g and wind up
in the ash can.

&gt;r::.~~a~~~,~~ industry, ad-

lr

HaP~!+.~ ~111-1 ~~!

WATER -

~

'i•

,.,..

.."
••
...
..
y

I t ·.

.·AlLEY OOP
! CAN'T

I DON'T HAVE TIME 10
00 JNlO JT ~. DEAR.

WAIT 'TO

TELL JAN I ~!

""

....•

CU881.E GOT U5 OI'F

ROADWAY WHeN
'THAT 'HONKV' WAS
-r&gt;lE

ItL TELL 'IOU
TONIGHT_

~

...
.,.
~·

i!SARING DOWN ON

West

North

East

...•'.

U•

~~~~~~~~~ J~~fj

•••

I+
Pass a
Pass
26
P~ss
4 N.T.
Pass
5'P
Pass 5 N.T.
Pass
6+
Pass ?
You, South, ~old:
•AK843 \OA2 +Q4.KQB7
What do you do li.ow?
A.-JUit bid six spades. Your
partaer JUy Jaave lh! right
eardslor ~even but J~ ii unlikely.
ToDA\"8 QUESTION
Instead or showing one king
. your ().ll,rtner ha.s bid six hearts

....

"·_

""-·'-""'

,-

LEETLE SUSPRISE
FER 'IE IN TH'
HOUSE, MAW

Sales Mgr.

...." -

PHONE 992-7777

~·

POMEROY

~­

TATER'S, GOT A

Frank Gheen,

i. ~.

18
South

LARRY'S
MOBilE
HOMES

~·

US, DIDN'T 1-\E?

t;:e;J :~ ~"&amp;~t3!l
The bidding has been:

the opening session of
joint convention of the Ohio
of Broadcasters
the Indiana Broadcasters
at Kings Island.
The Houses of Representalast spring passed legislato make the license good
five years and just last
the Senate passed a

'P.i!Jb ~, bET B\CK IIJ l'HI::RI;; ptJD

.

FURRY

BLESS HIS
HEART!!

...

HOURS:

:;

DAILY
9 AM-8 PM

''·
·~
"-t..:.

. I'LL HAVE TO

GIVE HIM A
LEETLE PAT
ONTH'HEAD

.." . .

..
...' .
•-.
.·~-.

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,•

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---

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v.s

on air predicted

Wasilewski , a lobpyist for the

CR~ru~es-

NEW 1974 G30 CHEVY VAN ........14395

Better programs

.'

CAIN'r ee

speed tran s., H. duty 15'' tires,

AIS

(((!) 1174 Kinl' Features S7ndicat.e, lne.)

HAIRL.EE6S .jOG
loJ.J' l.ONeGQW::
POt..IECAT!"f- Ml.l5r
SE ni' DRJNKIN'

.t

1972 CHEV~OLET C-10 PICKUP. .. ~2295

BJYMWG ..

matcrial.''

WAS TJPPGD

8' Fleetside, V·8 engine,
solid cab, radio .

2 Dr . hardtop, 289 V-8 engine, power steering, power brakes,

VULEf W·W·WAKE LJP.,tR:!
MAY 8E DIFFICUl.T TO
&amp;SPORe MIDNI6HT!

INTO THE TH/I.ME6
RJV6R E&lt;-1 A
COU~E:' OF

1972 CHEVROLET C-20 %L .......12395

1968 Mercury V8 Montego ....................... ,1795

.

THE BUS AHEAD

302 V-8, standard, long w ide bed.

68 FORD 6 CYL ..................... 11095
Auto ., long wide bed .

--TRACTOR--..
56 Case wide front end, 3 point hitch with
front end loader in good shape.

~----•995----~

72 BUICK LeSABRE.. ................12195
4 Dr .. H .T ., fa ct . air , P.S., P. B., vinyl r oof .

CAPTAIN EASY

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
No series of articles on
obligatory falsecard plays
would be complete wtthout
today's hand. In one form or
another, this hand has been
appearing in bridge columns
for 50 years or more.
South wins the spade openin~ and leads a club. He is not
gomg to make his slam if
East holds all four missing
clubs, but West follows and
now the slam is cold.
A hal?py-go-lucky South
would nse with the king of
clubs on the theory that
queens always dropped; a
slightly more careful South
would play dummy's jack to
be sure of his contract
against any 3-1 or 2-2 break
and to make seven if West
had started wftii three to the
queen. A very careful South
would play low from dummy.
This would give up any play
for seven but would insure
success of the slam against
the presence of all four cards
in the West hand.
So, you a~e West You know
South-is a careful player. You
know that if you play the
eight, nine or 10 he will duck
in dummy and pick up the
suit the next time around.
You play your queen.

,

auto. trans. Extra n ice for model.

YLZ
WGJ

8' Pickup, 4 wheel drlv ~. locking frt . hubs, V·B engine, 4
speed trans., power steering &amp; brakes, rad io, chr om e
front &amp; rear bumpers .

Station WBgon, small V-8, fully eq uipped with ai·r cond., E!'tc.

""

Opening lead-10 •

1973 CK10 ............................. 13495

1970 Chevrolet Brookwood ...................... 11295

Neither vulnerable

2 N.T.
PaSs

$2995

72 FORD
RANGER XLT.............. $2495
.·

1

YMM

SUNDAYS.
1 ' PM~ .PM ·
•

.., . .

.

72 CHEV. IMPALA .......... ;......... $2195
.4 Dr . H .T ., fac. air, P.S., P. B., vi nyl roof .

2 Dr . H.T ., 6 cyL , auto., P.S. ,

NEW 1974 CHEV. WV ............... $3295

,68 BUICK SPECIAL :.~;; ............. 1895
73 DATSON .............................$1695
1200 Series, 2 . Dr ., 4 cyl. , 4 sp. _

66
CHEV. IMPALA ........~ ............ $295
4 Dr. H.T., runs good.
65 FORD WAGON ......................$295
Good Selection Cheaper Cars

"WE RUN A VERY SIMPLE BUSINESS"
We Sell &amp; Service Chevrolet Cars &amp; Trucks

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4100

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til8
Pomeroy, Oh'

Ohio tourism guides available
MARlETTA - ~though the
busiest part of the tourism and
vacation season is over in Ohio
many 11 Weekend getaways"
and family outings can still be
planned if one uses the
directory or travel attractions,
" Beautiful Ohio, "
being
distributed on a limited basis
by the Ohio Department of
Transportation.
According to District Ten

William 1'. Harris, Mary Hensley, Patricia Lambert, Joseph
Lane, Goldie Livingston, Inez
Monroe, David Munch , Evie
Nickels, Rachel Parsons, Betty
Peters, Martha Phillips,
Michelle Preston, Lottie
Sheets, Connie Scaggs, Fred
Scaggs, Lawrence Soisson
Eules Turner, Diana White'
Mettice White, Charles Wolle'
. '
J r.

Veterans Memorial Hosllftal
Admitted - Emma Joh~son,
Racine ; Wilma Riggs, Racine;
, Kathryn Weaver, Pomeroy;
Jesse Bush, Long Bottom.
Discharged - Ruth Carr,
Clarence Curtis. an(\ Herbert
Rose.
·

Ford Cus. 500 4 dr. Sed., pow. air..... !1495.
Pontiac Cat. HT Cpe., Power, air ... _.. _. 12895
Ford Gal. 500 4 dr., V-roof, air ........ ."'1795
Volkswagen 411 4 Door, auto.......... .'1695

70 Olds 88 HT Sed., v-roof, air ............. .'1395
70 Olds 98 Hoi. Sed., power, air............ '149!i
70 Ford Gal. 500 2 Dr., V8, 3 speed....... !1 095
69 Ford LTD HT. Cpe., V roof, air ........... '995
69 Chev. Mal. 4 Dr., V-8 auto., P.S.......... '995
69 Pontiac Bonn., 2 Dr. H.T., v-roof, air ____ '595
6B Pontiac Bonneville H.T.r Sedan, power, air'595
68 Chev. Mal. Wagon, V-8 auto., P.S........ '995
68 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, power, air....... '1095
6B Chev. BA 4 Dr., V-B, auto., P.S........... '995
67 Cadillac H.T. Sedan, full power, air ....... .'995
66 Pontiac Cat. 4 Dr., V8, auto, P.S......... 1495
64 Ford Falcon 2 Door....................... .'250
63 Olds 88 Hardtop Sedan .................. .'150

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doi_~ Bu~ iness "
Y92-5342
GMC FINANCING
r'OMEROY
Open Evenings Unlil6:01}- Til S p .m. Sat .

1
70
PONTIAC
4
DR
....................
1295
P. S., P. B., locally owned.

On All New '74 Chevy
Models In Stock.

992 -2126

72
72
71
71

71 MERCURY MONTEGO ............ $1695

1
72
VEGA
4
CYL
.......................
1295
4 sp. Hatchback .

Year-End Deals

"
'

2 Dr . H.T. , fac. a ir. P.S., P .B., viny l roo f, sha rp .

71
FORD MAVERICK................ ..S1495
2 Dr ., 6 cyl ., auto .

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Ce~ter
IBirths, Oct.l6)
Mr , and Mrs . Michael
Campbell, a son, Bidwell; Mr .
and Mrs. John E . Hill, a
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. William L. Morgan, a son,
Oak Hill.
(Births, Ocl.l7)
Mr. and Mrs. Homer E.
Johnson,
a
daughter ,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Smith, a son, Wellston ; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Vann Meier, a
•
daughter, Letart.
(Discharged, Oct, 17)
Ge rald Allen, Esther Altieri ,
Kan Bahr, Hershel Bartels,
Elner Belue, Gladys Boslic,
Mrs. Stephen Carmichael 11nd
son, James H~ rold Davis ,
Kathy Davis, Sylvia Denney,
Lon Dillon, Brenda Glassburn ,

72 PLYMOUTH FURY 111.. .......... 12195

1 Ton,
engine, 3 speed std. trans., Side &amp; Rear door
glass, power steering &amp; brakes, H. duty tires, H. duty
springs &amp; shocks, radio . Save.

Pickup, radio , real economy .

similar bill, although small
differences in the measures
still must be worked out by a
joint conference committee. In
order to renew a license-and
therefore protect a broadcasting channel from competitors, station owners must
prove to the FCC they have
been OP.erating in "the public
interest .''
Wasilewski admitted the new
legislation means there will be
less opportunity for competitors, but said t he quality of
broadcasting will not be affected.
"This does not protect the
poorly run station or cutoff
challenges to it," he said.
"Such stations will continuue
to be vunerable every five
years. "
Wasilewski also praised the
defeat in the Senate of an effort
to require radio stal_ions to pay
royalty fees to recording arlisl-'l for playing their records
on the air.
"By and large, it's been the
broadcaster that has made the
perfQrmer popular,''
he
argued . " A royalty fee would
eat up all the profits of smaller
stations."
Wasilewski contended thai
recording artists should
continue to r eCeive royalties
from their record company,
but never from radio and
television stations.

73 Olds 98 LS Sedan, full power, air....... '4595
73 Olds Cut. S. Cpe., stereo tape, air ........'36 95
73 Olds Cut. Sup. HT Cpe., power, air ...... .'3295
73 Buick Elec. H.T. Sed., power, air, sharp,. '4595
73 Dodge Pol. 4 Dr. HT., v-roof, air ......... '3095

72 Chev. Imp Cpe., V-8 auto., P.S.......... 12495

74 CHEV. Cl0 .........................13295

Cab &amp; chassis , 108" cab · to axle, V-8, 350 engine,
15,000 lb., 2 speed R. axle, good 825x20 tires, solid
cab.

{\lr coriditloned , DOwer steering , power brakes. Cruisematic,
extra sharp.

Nice.

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

72 Olds 98 HT Sed., Hoof, air .............. '3495
72 Chevelle Mal. HT Cpe., HOOf, air, stereo.!2995

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
1970 CHEVROLEl2 TON

1972 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedan .....................12795

~·l

Pass

LATE

350. V·8, auto., . P.S., P.B., long w ide bed , heavy duty
sprmgs, w -topper .

'

.,

6 N.T.

power steer ing , au to . tran s.,

I

• AK7
• AKJ2
+ AK75
.63

Pass
Pass

Pomeroy, 0.

-TRUCKS:t--

~lan·t 6 cyl. , power steering, auto. tranS.-ShowS very be sf of care.

..

South

Phone 992-2174

SERVICE WHEN YOU BUY FROM

:f971 Plymouth Sattelite ......................... 11B95

·--

East

OF EVERYTHING

-~

+QJIOJ

North

500 E. Main St.

QUALITY. PRICE, COURTEOUS

~971 Dodge "Demon" 2 Dr. Sedan ............. !1995

•

West

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.

Many Prices Reduced I

72 Olds Toronado Cpe., V-roof, pow., air .... '3695

I ,

I

.QJ652
.Ql076

SOUTH&lt;Ol

Dealership Hours Mon.-Fri. 8 AM-7 PM
Sat. 8 AM-5 PM
Service Hours Mon.-Fri. B AM-4:30 PM Sat. B AM-12 Noon

'

EAST

WEST

MORE

i1972 Ford VB FlOO Pickup ..................... 12795

DICK TRACY

• AKJ7542

1

: Very low m i leag e. Lik e new i ns ide and out . Air conditioned, '·
• fully eq uipped .

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

BISMZ,

Buy! ..

'

: 1973 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedan .................... 3495

city
31 Coal byproduct
32 - de France
33 Concealed b-+--11-+-34 New York
city
36 Conduce
37 Drool
38 Carry
on
38- down
(subdued)
40 European
river

RKEJ

We Are Always A Leader-Plus!

Opens in bac k like sta tion wagon, 4 cy l. economy at its best .
: Very low mileage .

1 Low rrlileage, ex tra sha rp truck. 360 V-8, power steering , power
: brakes , auto . tra ns., two gas tan ks.

BIQMZ

USED CARS

1974 Ford Pinto 3 Dr. Runabout ...............12695

28 caiifornla

K

Fri~ndliness

~ ·2 Dr . Hardtop, fully equipped , smallest V-8, one local owner.

CRYPTOQUOTES

THEY E5E LON6ED TO
THAT 'THEAT!:R C~OWD.

• Fimmcing

Cinnamon IS actually the
bark of an aromatic laurel
tree.

_)971 Dodge VB Special Edition ................. 11695

One letter simply stand• for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all .
hints. Each d'ay the code letters are dlfl'erent.

IO•tfl

elnsurance

Our secretary tak es
shorthand 120 word s a
minute - and 120 minutes a
word to fi gure out what she
SC I·ibbled.
We're on vacation - the
boss is away for a week.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how. to work It:

tj
rJ

·• Sales • Service

• Honesty

(poet.)

II

I I

Queen play could mislead South
NORTH
• 43
• 84

I

SOMETHING TO BEliEVE IN

t:T

e

~

1: 00 - Chilcdren's Film Festival 8, 10; Soul Train 3; World of
Survival 4 ; TBA 15

PA~TOH

Saturday 's the day you
waste worrying a bout Mon day coming up.
Underneath the falling
leaves is the snowshovel )IOU
left in the yard last spring.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

you . bec au se y our Vl t:w c, .He
now mor e liberal and lory 1v 1ng.

Is ..--lrst Lnvt• Rei! I'!

Aviation Weather 20,33 .

Oct. 19, 1974
You 'll do ex lreffie ly well this
year 1n your creat1ve or artiSitC
endeavors Increa sed earn ings
or p ro l•1s are also likely from,
work or serv1ces you perform.

Deputy Director Max R.
Farley, more . than 200 of the
booklel-'l have been mailed to
Ohioans and other persons
expressing an interest in
:'Traveling Ohio" since midJune. The effort was made ' in
conjunction with a Campaign
by the Governor's Council on
Travel and Tow-ism to prOmote
the attractions found in Ohio.
Despite a sharp decline of
requests for the booklet in
recent , months the district
deputy director noted that less
than 200 remain, Farley emphasized that the usefulness or
the directory is not limited to
swnmer activities. "The entire
b:ioklet is devoted to the year
around activities and pastimes
one can find in Ohio," he said.
Requests lor "Beautiful
Ohio" are to be made to the
Public Information Office,
Ohio Department of Transportation,
District
Ten,
Muskingwn Drive, Marietta,
Ohio 45750. Interested persons
are asked to limit their
requests to one booklet as
supplies are limited and offered only on a "first come,
firs l served'' basis.

located on St. Rt. 7

COLUMBUS I UP[) - Employm e nt
of
produc t ion
workers ~ nd other nonsupervisory employes declined
by one per cent during August
as compared with August , 1973,
and was alSo down by one per
cent for the fir st eight months
of 1974, the Center lor Business
and Economic Research at
Ohio State University reported
Thursday .
The -center said that in the
first eight month s uf 1974,
compared with the correspond-

ing period in 1973, thr ee areas
showing decli nes were Dayton Mon tgomery County , 5 per'
ce nt;
Columbu s- F ran klin
O mnty, 2 pe r cent a nd Ci ncinna ti-Hamilton , a frac ti on .
increases were recorded in
Ca nton-Stark Cou nty, 4 per
cent ; a eveland-Cuyahoga and
Youngstown-M a honing, 2 per
cent and Akron-Swnmit aP-1
Tol edo~Luca s, 1 per cent .
The Augu st-to-August comparison sho wed Col umbus.
Fr~nklin county down by 9 per

cent ; Dayton-Montgomery, 4
per cent a nd Ci ncin na ti Hamilton 1 per cent, the cen ter
said .
Ga in s wer e reported by
Akron-Summit and C1eve lan d·
Cuyahoga, 6 per cent ; Can tur1 ~
Stark, 3 per c.:ent and ToledoLucas and Young.sto\ovn-Mah oning, 2 per ce nt.

Experience, record claimed
in Celebrezze's campaign

Judge Frank D. Celebrezze,
elected to the Ohio Supreme
Court in 1972, is pointing to his
judicial experience and the
record he has estabhshed m hi+candidacy for reelection .
Judge Celebrezze is one ol
the only two Democrats on the
Ohio Supreme Court. He is ?lso
one of only three Jush~es
currenUy on the bench w1th
trial experience.
Prior to being elected to the
Common Pleas Court in 1964,
Judge Celebrezze had . extensive experience as a trial
lawyer representing both
plaintiffs and defendants in
civil and criminal . cases and
claimants
before
ad-.
ministrative agencies. _In _l962, ·
he represented a plamtiff m
recovering the highest jury
verdict rend~~ed in the
Cleveland Muntctpal Court to
that lime. ·
'
Judge Celebrezze • is the
oldest son ol the late Cleveland
Municipal Court Judge Frank
D. Celebrezze and the nephew
of the former Mayor ol
Cleveland,
Anthony
J·
.Celebrezze, who also served as
Secretary of Health, Education
John Mer:.ce r Lang sto n , and Welfare in the cabinet of
elected c lerk in 1855 of President John F. Kennedy.
Brownhelm township. Lorain
Judge Celebrezze has
County, Ohio, was .the first
~egro to , win elective office sponsored many judicial
1n the Umled States.
,
reforms, both as a Common

/

Chesler, 0.

Employment down

..

Pleas Judge as well as on the
Ohio Supreme Court. He is
currently working on a
proposal for the registration of
all practicing lawyers in the
State of Ohio. He feels that only
under this system will the
public be protected from those
engaged . in the illegal and
WlauthorizeO practice ~f law.
Judge Celebrezze is a
ve~ran of World War U,
having served as a paratrooper
in the !88th Parachute In:
fantry Regiment of the lllh
Airborne Division. He is a .
member of the American
Legion Catholic War Veterans
and pa~t president of the Joint
Veterans Commission of
Cuyahoga County.
His candidacy has been
endorsed by every labor
organization in Ohio, the major
Bar Associations, as well as the
Cleveland Plain Dealer and the
Cincinnati Enquirer to date.
He is a graduate of Baldwin Wallace College ( B.S. ). in
Bere~ , Ohio, and received his
Juris Doctor Degree from
Cleveland - Marshall Law
School of the Cleveland State
University. Judge Celebrezze
se!Ved.as a Stale Senator from
1956 to 1958 and as Special
Counsel to the Attorney
General of Ohio, authored 38 ·
opinions which ..-ere published

as law. He is married to the
fo rm er Mary , Ann Armstrong
and they have nine children two girls and seven boys - .
ranging in age from 23 years to
8 months.
He takes pride In his
reputation for being a competent jurist whose honesty
and integrity are unassa ilable.
In the May 1972 elec ti on. he
received more votes than any
other candidate on the ballot.

GET

ATrENTION

/. ---......
CLOSE OUT
74 MODEL

'.

"
''

..':
'

SAVINGS
3 bedroom , all etectric,
completely furnished.
See AI
.

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOME
SALES
JUDGE CELEB)\".ZZE

Main St .
Pomeroy , Ohio
Open Daily 11 -7

,.

�:.1

.,

•

..

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Oct. 18, 1974

I

Paul Raymond

Rhodes didn't grasp wor.ds
in orders on subduing Kent
TOLEDO, Ohio ( UP II· br eak up a nti-wa r demon:
Former governor Jarpes A. st rations at Kent State
Rhodes said he took no' action University in May 1970 in
after hearing former state Adj. 'which four students 'were shot
Gen. S. T. Del Corso threaten to to death by Guardsmen
do whatever necessary to because he did
not "grasp
those words, " at the time, it
was reported.
This was in a deposition
•-k
"' e n in a civil suit filed by the
estates
of the four slain
Tonight , Sat .• sUn.
students and parents of nine
October 18-20
other stude nts who were
wounded
. The suit was filed
MAGNUM FORCE
CTechnicolor)
against Rhodes, Del Corso a nd
Cli nt Eastwood
oth er g ua rd officers a nd
Ha l Holbrook ,,
enlisted men.
CARTOON
The Cleve la nd Plain Dealer
Show Starts 7 p.m .
said in a copyrighted article
today it had obtained the 225
pages of deposition Rhodes had

'.

MEIGS THEATRE

No
fairy
godmother?

Paul Edward Raymond, 60,
died Thursday at his Rl. 2,
Albany residence .
- Mr . Raymond had been

.

in auto wreck

Sf,
pomeroy
rutland

pomero)
national
bank

Mlltibel

FDIC

H(Jnor pupils

are announced

MAIN OFFICE

Mon. , Tues., Wed ., Thurs . 9 a .m .. J p .m .
Friday 9 a .m . to 7 p .m .
Sat urday 9 a .m . to 12 Noon

RUTL.AND BRANCH

Mon ., T ues ., Wed ., Sat ., 9 a .m .- 3 p .m.
Thur sday 9. ~ - m l to 12 Noon
Fr i day 9 a.m . to 7 p .m .

AUTO BANK HOURS

EPA proposes

FRIDAY 9 to 7-SATURDAY 9 to 12MONDAY-THURSDAY 9 to 3

sewage permit

.'

GEO. HALL
and
THE HALLMARKS
..

~

'

'.. J i l l l " " " t . . \

TONIGHT

.

~~-AND

The Meigs Inn
POMEROY

• •

in Briefs

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.Storewide Inflation Fighter Sale
Save 30% • 25% • 20% • 10%·

SATURDAY
9:30 to 2:00 '

PH. 992-3629

News.

to Middleport

bJr nextdoor nei~lbcw.

•

Religious

Market Report

the bank of
the cen tur y
established 1872

Continued from page 1
or he wil!' " lose to hi
Democratic opponent, John H
•
Glenn Jr.
"You Republicans have 6
duty to present my record to
the people," Perk said. "sUre,
we need the right-to-life vote
and the NRA (National Rifle
Association) vote and the
ethnic vote. We will get those
votes. But to wb), we need a
solid Republican vote. "
Taft made a pitch' for support
of Perk. "Sure, Ralph Perk is
an underdog, but he's a fighter,
and a realistic underdog," said
the senator. "Ralph Perk
excellent candidate. Our nrnh&gt;"
!em is getting the word out to
the people, and you are the
ones who can do it."
Rhodes said if Democratic
Gov. John J. Gilligan · is reelected, "he's going to make us
pay double our income tax and
double our property tax. "He
must double the income tax tO
perform what he's promised in
the last 30 ' days," Rhodes
shouted in the concluding
speech of the convention. "We
can only stop that if you elect
me as the next governor of this
state."
He said that a survey in Columbus showed only 63.5 per cent of
Republican voters favor him
for the Senate. Another 2li per
cent of Republicans are undecided, he said.
"This is not the year for just
a nice guy to get elected," said
Perk. "We need a man of experience and · integrity in the
Senate . This is not the year for
Republicans to spilt their
tickets.
11
Every paper in the state
says I'm running behind," said·
the mayor . "Well, I've run
behind before, but I haven't
been out of office in 22 years."
Perk emphasized his records
as mayor, claiming he has
balanced tbe budget of Oeveland, reduced crime and in·
creased services.
"Mr. GJenn says he will,"
added Perk. "I say I have ."
The Republican Senate hopeful said some 400,000 Republi•'
cans failed to vote in 1970
'
. the GOP control of the'
costmg
Statehouse.
''I challenge you to IUlite the
party as nev~r before," he
said. ~ 'It's up to you."
Rhodes said school closings,
Increased weHar:e programs
and park closings are among
the reasons lor turning Gilligan
out of office.
"The present governor said
in 1971: 'If I can't improve the
quality of life in four years, I

.
·
flied earher this tnonth in the
case which is being heard in
owner and operator of thC
federal court in Cleveland.
Accordmg to the deposi tion, Raymond Welding and Me~l ·
Steven A. Smdell, attorney for Cra ll Co. at Downington for the
the plaintiffs in the civil suit
past 20 years. He was a veteran
•
poi nted out that Del Corso had of World War II and was a
told a news conference prior to member of the Airline Church
of Christ, Albany.
the shootings:
Preceding him in death were
''I'll be right behind with the
his
fathe r , Clarence Raymond ,
National Guard to give our full
his
first wife, Pauline Ma ple
support, a nythin g that is
necessary like the Ohio law Raymond , and two brothers,
says, use any force that is Ralph and Ernest.
Surviving are his wife, Dena
necessar y even to the point of
Hannin
g
Raymond :
his
s hooting. We don't want to get
into that but the law says that mother, Mrs. Ethel Cady ,
Columbus : two sons, Charles,
we can if gecessary."
and Steve, Rt. 2,
Columbus,
According to the deposition,
two da ughters,
Rhodes admitted he heard Dei Albany:
Corso make the statement but Rosemary and Sue Ann
said " that things at the press Raymond , both of Columbus;
conference were moving fast two sisters, Evalee Thompson ,
and I don 'I think l grasped Columbus, and Marjorie
anything that I did hear, that 1 Cutlip, J ohnstown ; a brother,
Richard Cady, Columbus: an
grasped any of these words. "
At this point, according to the uncle, Fred Todd, Columbus,
deposition the Plain Dealer and several nieces and
said, Sindell asked, ''governor, nephews.
Funeral services will be at 2
don 't you think that your
failure to say anything at that p.m. Sunday a t the Ewing
point was tantamount to a tacit Funeral Home with Rev .
endorsement of the general's Charles Norris officiating.
remarks ?"
Burial will be in the Wells
"Sorry, eut there may be something worse than TAKING
Rhodes' lawyer , R. Brooke · Cemetery. Friends may call at
money!"
Alloway of Columbus, refused the funeral home at anytime .
to let Rhodes answer that
question , the deposition said
George Eastman
according to the Plain Dealer.
WCALTEMPS
79
TO
I
The Plain Deler said, acThe temperature In downdied on Thursday
WASHINGTON (UPI)
cording to th e deposition, that
town Pomeroy at 11 a .m .
The Political Action ComFriday was 53 degrees under
Rhodes did acknowledge
George Clarence· Eastman,
mittee
of
the
United
Mine
partially sunny skies.
saying at the news conference,
87, Harrisonville, died Thurs_
John
E.
Osborne,
31,
Rt.
2,
Workers has endorsed 79
" We are going to employ
day at the Elmwood Valley
Bidwell, had minor injuries in
Democrats
and
one
everything that we possibly
Nursing Home, Portsmouth .
a traffic accident at 6:45 a .m .
Republican in House races
can to protect the buildings
He was the son of the late
Thursday on Woods Mill Rd.
this fall through a screening
that are paid for by the taxJames and lsatJelle 'wallace
one and two tenths miles north
process the union says
payers of the state of Ohio."
Continued from page I
Eastman . Also preceding him
of
Rt . 554.
reflected the wishes of the
Sindell asked him "did you
in death were a brother ,
The Gallia-Meigs Post Stafe the Caucus to lead the annual
miners themselves.
have in mind providing the
Harvey , and his wife , Alta Rice
Highway Patrol said Osborne Preachers' Confe~ence to be
The lone Republican enNational Guard troops with
Eastman.
lost control of his car which ran beld at Rio Grande in April.
dorsed by the UMWA's Coal
loaded weapons as part of
Surviving are a nephew,
A letter was read and
off the right side of the highMiners' Political Action
everything that you possibly
Robert
J.
Ruth
,
Cleveland,
and
pamphlets
d-istributed from
way, striking a bridge railing.
could employ?"
Committee (COMPAC) for a
two cousins. Mr. Eastman was
Mental Health and Retardation
The car was demolished .
House race Is Joseph M.
Rhodes replied, "! just had
a
retired
farmer
.
asking
for ass istance in
Ernest Leedy, 64, Rt. 1,
McDade of the lOth district
my orders to Del Corso. l told
Funeral services will be held
beginning
a PersolUII AdHammondsville , Ohio , wa s
In Pennsylvania. •
him to do anything that he
at I p.m . Saturday at the
charged with failure to yield vocacy Program. Volunteers
th ought was the proper thing to
The 80 endorsed Include
Ewing Funeral Home with
the right of way following an are needed to be advocates or
only 37 incumbents.
do at Kent State ."
George Glaze officiating.
accident at 2:05p.m. Thursday friends to disabled persons.
Rhodes said in the deposition
Burial will be in the Carleton
at the junction of Rt. 33 and Rt. Mrs . Mary Skinner of that
he never ordered the guard to
Cemetery. Friends may call at
7, two tenths of a mile north of office is to be invited by the
break up peaceful de monthe fWleral home at anytime .
Pomeroy . The patrol said program committee to speak
strations of s tuden ts and said
Leedy's car pulled into the path at the next regular meeting.
he never called out the guard
The levy on the November
of an auto operated by Gerald
SALES REPORT
on any occasion without conballot
for The Meigs ComL. Anthony, 45, of Middleport.
Ohio Valley Uvesiock Co.
sulting John McElroy who was
There was moderate damage munity School was discussed.
LEAF PICKUPS SET
Gallipolis, Ohio
his chief legal aide. He said
The meeting concluded with
to both cars .
October
Leaf
pickup
for
Middleport
12,
1974
McElroy would contact law
a
film strip distributed by
STOCKER
CATTLE
residents will be conducted
enforcement officials and
C.R.O.P.
entitled, "Needs of
neX1 week.
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 22 to
make a recommendation to
Hunger In The World "
The street department wiD 29.50, 300 to 400 lbs. 21 to 29, 400
Rhodes.
I
presented
by Rev. Willi~
pick up leaves Monday In the to 500Ibs. 20 to 30, 500 to 600 lbs.
Rhod~s said he always
Middlesworth
and Rev. Harold
first ward, Tuesday In the 20 to 30.50, 600 to 700 lbs. 24 to
follow ed McElroy' s recomDeeth.
dOn't deserve to be here "'
second, Wednesday In the 26.50, 700 lbs. and over 23.50 to
mendations.
PORTLAND '-- The Portland
Present
were
Revs.
Steve
28.25.
Rhodes told the cheeri~g'
third, Thursday In the fourth
Elementary School Southern Skaggs, RObert Kuhn, William
audience . "That's too much for
TOUGHER JUDGES
HEIFER CALVES - 240 to Local District, honor roll for
and Friday In the fifth.
a bill board."
COLUMBUS (UP!) A
Residents are asked to have 300 lbs. 21 to 27, 300 to 400 lbs. 20 the first six weeks (Names in Middleswarth, Robert Shook
Carl
Hicks,
Robert
Bumgar:
"We'll pay for it," shouted~·
Justice De partment official
up
at
the
to
28,
400
to
500
lbs.
22
to
28.
75,
.
their leaves raked
capitals all A) :
ner,
Howard
Shiveley,
Dwight
voice
in the audience.
··
said today longer and more
curbings near their homes. 500 to 600 lbs. 20 to 27.50, 600 to
Grade 2 - Ray Lawrence, Zavitz, Harold Deeth, Howard
Secretary of State Ted W.
frequent jail sentences are
700 lbs. 22 to 28. 75, 700 lbs. and Kevin Teaford.
Black, and Walter Bikacsan. Brown said he expects the
over 19 to 28.
needed tO halt price fixing and
Grade 3 - Vicky Barber,
The next regular meeting · voter turnout to exceed the
other anti-trust law violations
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS Mini a Conger, CHRISTLE will be at The Middleport First
figure for 1970, and that
that President Ford helieves
(By the Head) Stock Cows 135 ' LAWRENCE, Troy Ward,
Baptist Church, Nov. 11, with slightly less than four million ·
are
adding
inflationary
to 1110, Stock Cows and Calves Danny Weddle.
Rev. Steve Skaggs the host.
Ohioans will vote.
pressure on the economy. Joe
170 to 285, Stock Bulls 155 to 215,
Grade 4 - Debra Bryant,
Baby Calves 15 to 35; (By the CINDY EVANS, BRUCE
Sims, of the anti-trust division ,
said the department is stepping
Pound) Canners &amp; CUtters JOHNSON ,
TAMMY
up enforcement as the
Cows 11.50 to 17, Holstein Cows
MEADOWS, DEBB'fE OC·
President asked in his recent
16.50 to 20, Commetcial Bulls TEAU, Paul Ours.
economic message to Congress
22.50 to 27.50 ( 1,000 lbs. and
Grade 5 - Sherry , Beegle,
over).
but can do nothing about light
Alicia Evans, Krista Johnson,
sentences that judges hand
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220 Kelly Pickens.
The Ohio Environmental
Continued from page 1
down.
Protection Agency announced lbs. to 250 42 to 44.50, Medium
Grade 6 - BONNIE BOSO, other man, wants to marry Pnncess Elizabeth of Yugoslavia ''as
Wednesday it proposes to issue 200 lbs. to 300 32 to 40, Culls 30 . Tina Cozart, Armintha Holter,
soon as is •practically possible." The princess, who is related to
water pollution control permits down , Shoats 5 to 12.
Joe Johnson , JANET MID- the_ BrUish royal family, says she feels "wonderful" about the .
to two applicants, specifying
DLESW~RT,
DANNY whirlwmd romance and plans to wed Burton.when ''my divorce ·
and limiting their discharge of
·
TALBOTT, Charlotte Pickens. gets through."
. pollutants into state waterTHREE FINED
It all came as a shock to Elizabeth's husband, Neil BaHour, a
ways. One is to the Middleport
Three defendants were fined
merchant ba?ker and politician. He was so stunned he offered to
sewage treatment plant.
and a fourth forfeited a bond
end hiS politt?al career. " We both hoped that this would have
ATTENDANCE UP
The decision to issue the Thursday night in the court of
pr?grcssed
wtthout this sudden explosion of publicity," Burton
BOSTON ( UPI) Atpermits will become final Dec. Pomeroy Mayor Dale E.
satd
Thursday
at his Hampstead mansion. "We both hope it will
9, 1974 unless an appeals Smith. Fined $5 and costs each tendance at Boston's racially not have repercussions on those we both love "
hearing is requested by the were Dennis Boothe, Racine, tense schools jumped to near 75
Princess E:lizabeth, who .was vialtfng the ~sion with her
per cent Thursday in the
applicant
or
interested left of center ; Willie Phelps,
13-year-old
daughter, catherine, said the couple fell In love three
second day of relative calm
citizens.
Pomeroy, running a red light,
~eeks
ago
at
an exhibition of Churchill memorabilia. "Goodness,
since the call-up of 450 national
Comments may be sent to the and
Barb'ara.
Leonard '
IS I~ only three weeks?" the 37-year-old princess said. "Of course,
Ohio EPA, NPDES Permits Chauncey, failure to yield the guardsmen .
we ve known eavh other a lot longer than that. We will marry as
Sec.lion, P. 0 . Box 1049, 361 E. right of way. Forfeiting a $30
soon as my dfYorce goes through. I feel wonderful."
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio bond posted on an Intoxication
43216. The Ohio EPA permit charge was Walter . King,
number and . the public notice Harrisonville.
·
number should be included on
the envelope and on each page
SQUAD SUMMONED
of submitted comments.
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad was called
toRt. 1, Long Bottom, at 9:20
PASS A LAW
p.m
. Thursday for Lowell Bush
MERIDEN, Conn. (UPI) Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff, D- who was experiencing difficulty breathing. He was taken
Conn., said today he will draft
to
Veterans
Memorial
legislation requiring American
Hospital
.
auto makers to pr,oduce cars
that provide no less than 20
miles per gallon of gasoline.
AUXILIARY TO MEET
Ribfcoff said. the car industry, ,
Dre~ Webster Post 39,
known "for its . ingenious Amertcan Legion· Auxiliary
'extras', certainly can meet a will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
20 miles'per gallon minimum." at the hall with Mrs. Robert
Couch m charge of the
program.

Injuries minor

Old car turning
into a pumpkin?
A low-cost Auto Lo&lt;1n
can work magic.
Quick. Efficient.
Come in today.
Your carriage awaits.

HIKING
BOOTS
Sizes: Infant thru
Adults
In Suede and Leather

heritage' house
.

SIS WISE CONFINED
Mrs. C. H. ( Sis) Wise
Middleport and Waverly, ~
confined to the Holzer Medical
Cen~r and was scheduled to
undergo surgery there this
morning.

Reduced Prices In Eve~ Departmept
On All Three Aoors - ·Toy Store and ·
Mechanic Street Warehouse
Sale Ends Saturday Night .8 P.M.
i

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H'oUse for sale ,,

1.:'

Your.Thom McAri Store ,
Middleport, 0 ..

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after they leave the high school buildings.
The board took under advisement
requesl'i for job descriptions for all personnel ; written board policies for school
operations, and that a fulltime, Ill-month
secretary be provided for each eleme ntary
building.
The board agreed to request that a
representative from the assoc iation be a
member . of the board's negotiation team
and that all principals who reported to
the ir respective buildings during the
recent teachers' stri ke be paid for eight
days work.
The board authorized its clerk, Noami
Beman, to pay the principals for their
eight days of work during the teachers'
strike.
Supplemental contracts were approved for club advisors, homeroom ad-

visors, chee rl ea der advi sor s, a nd
basketball coaches as follows :
At Southwestern Hi~h School, student
ro un~il •. Beta Club , ~uture Nurses
~ssoctatton, Pep Club , L1brary Club and
Science Club . Ad~ i s ors under sup plemental contracts are William Meeks ,
Jane Ann Slag le, Ope l Ltoy d, a nd J. Robert
Evans.
~t Kyger Creek, student council,
Na honal Honor Society, Fu tur e
Homemakers, ·Keyette, Pep, . and Industrtal Arts . Homeroom adv •sors a re
Mary Fulton, Oeryl We ll , Aileen Rutz,
Jame~ Sp~ague, Lloyd Danner and Miss
Cynt!ua Dmeen . .
At North yalha, Bet.~ Club, Future
Nurses, ~atwna l Honor Society, Library
Club, Sc1ence ctub and student council .
Hom eroom adv isors &lt;.~re Howard

Neekamp, James Oiler, Jim Burleson;

Loraine Johnson , Mary Walker and Jeff
Pope.
At Hannan Trace, student cowtcil,
Beta, Pep a nd Ubrary. Class sponsors are
David Owens, Sophia Campbell, Toin
Scarberry, Beverly Gettles a nd Pally
Ea ton.
·
YEARBOOK ADVISORS GIVEN
supplementar}' contracts were EleanqF
McKelvey , Kyger Creek; Patricia Eaton,
Hannan Trace; Opel !Joyd, Southwester.n
and Mary Walker , Nor th Gallia . Hig-h
school cheerlea der. advisors designated to
receive $200 were Maw-ice Mayes, Kyger:
Creek ; Joyce Boothe. North Ga lli a;
Shirley Allbright, Hannan Tr&amp;ce, and Lo(s
Sheets, Sou thwestern . Junior high
cheerleaders designated to receive $100 fOr
(Continued on page 2)

Your Invited Guest

tmts

Warmer today , highs in the
50s. Slight chance of rain . Fair
and cool Monday, cloudy by
night, lows in the low 40s .

R eaching More
Than 12,000
Valley

VOL. 9 NO. 38

n

+

Weather
•

hours for Gallia students

BY DALE ROTHGEB JR.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
consolidated local board of education
Saturday afternoon authorized tr ansportation director Frank A. Cremeans to
contact the Ohio Departme nt of
Education , Division of Transportation, to
conduct a survey of bus routes and
possible equalization of the school day for
elementary and secondary students.
This was one of six items sUbmitted for
board consid~ratlon by Charles Dowler,
designa ted representative of the Gallia
County Local Principals' Association.
According to Dowler there is a major
problem in the area of elementary
students spending longer hours in classr oom than secondary pupils.
The difference involves the changeover of buses at all elementary schools

JOHN GROTH, starlin~ Slllit end and cornerback and president of the GAHS
student body, after crowning Miss Joan Hannon 1974 Gallia Academy High School
homecoming queen during pre-game ceremonies on Memorial Field Friday night
'
is about to kiss her. See page 20.
-

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

•

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1974

Middleport-Pomeroy

Man, wife ·face

Familie.~

PRICE 20 CENJS

"

theft charges .
Taylors ' property. Capt. Clyde Beasley,
Athens Police Dept., members of the
Meigs and Athens County Sheriffs Oepts.,
and the federal agents, searched the
premises where stolen property that filled
Shortly after 8 a.m. Friday, county
two 12 ft . U Haul trucks was recovered.
Sheriff Robert j{artenbach, deputies ·
The following reports of thefts in
Manning Roush, Kenny Deckard and
Meigs County were solved upon finding the
Stephen Hartenbach, and three Alcohol
stolen items:
Tobacco and Fireafllls agents from the U.
Oenve~ Rice, cottage on Cherry Ridge .
S. Treasury ~t. took Donald R. !l'aylor,
Willis Anthony, cottage on Cherry
41, and hill wife; Diana Susan T!IYI.or, 37, of
Ridge .
Yore Ridge, Rt:' 2 Athens into custody.
.Ohio Valley Christian Youth Camp , old
Be4{ord School.
..
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They a!e cha!geq with t,ranspqr taticp&gt; of
stolen goods.
·
·
'
tiuth StorY:reslderice at Bqrlihgbli)il:
Taylnr was taken before the U. S.
Roland Eastman, near Alfred, two
Magistrate at Portsmouth by the federal
complaints.
agents and remailied Saturday In federal
Southern Ohio Coal Co. .
custody.
Ben Tom Corp., Pomeroy.
Mrs. Taylor, taken IQ the Athens
Sheriff Hartenbach said charges were
county j~il, was expected to be charged
filed Saturday morning against Taylor for
there.
burglary and grand theft. Deputies
A search warrant was obtained from
returned to Athens Saturday morning to
Judge Sheater of the Athens County
~heck the items further to see if more can
Municipal Court for . the search of the
be identified.
POMEROY - County and federal
officers here Friday took into custody a
man and wife of rural Athens County,
possibly solving eight separate robberies.

-

DOC?:"OJIS.!I,•\Y R._l'lllCENS, !,!ft..~!¢.~~ ~plel!l w)l_q Jlt~ Mar,!!lld,er
football games, are a ~leal team that draws aMual pmfse from head coach
Charles &lt;;hancey and his staff. Above, they were on the sidelines as usual Friday ·
night when Meigs' hoineeoming,hopes were·dampened 36-7 by Wellston.

Essex in Moscow to
open .study

t1

z~~*"~:::'.:::~::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::"(.-.::::::::::::::::::=:::::::

i12~year~ld lass
*!!~ dies under auto
·;;:
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~
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Tragedy ia

PT. PLEASANT !~struck a Point Pleasant fan;ily Friday !i!l
~::shortly after noon when thetr two year :':&lt;
§l: old daughter died from an accident at
!ili their home.
~;::
~ Cathy Jo Crump, daughter of f:!i
;::: Charles and Betty Lou Rayburn ?:l
:::; Crump of 10 Herman Drive, died in
*'the emergency room of Pleasant ;:g
:::; Valley Hospital.
:~::
;::;
State police Trooper Uoyd A. !&amp;
[::!Akers said the child apparently was :!:~
;*injured when the father backed a :;~
;~vehicle out of his driveway and ran :·:·
';i;
....&gt;~OV
er her.
·:·:
Cathy Jo was born October 3, 1972 ::::
;::: m Gailtpolts, 0 .
::::
:::;
In
addition
to
her
parents,
sur:;:;
,:::;vtvors
.,
.
:·:·
mclude a brother, Charles :ii
I:O::Howard Crump, who is four years old: :;:;
a sister, Carla .May Crump, who is!:!:
three, maternal grandmother, Mary .;:;;
: Rayburn of Route 1, Point Pleasant, .;~;
~~and the paternal grandparents, Mr. ;:;;
, and Mrs. Isaiah Crump of 108 :~&lt;;
·.; Highland Avenue, Point Pleasant.
)!::
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.tn . Sunday in the Stevens Funeral
Home with with John Steele of.
ficiating. Burial will be in Lone Oak @
Cemetery.
;$,

:r

t

COLUMBUS- Ohio Superintendent of
Public Instruction Martin W. Essex on his
arrival in Moscow today begins a top-level
government-to-government update on
educational developments in the Soviet
Union.
Essex, a native of Jackson County,
Ohio, began his career in school administration as superintendent of Mid·
dleport exempted schoojs in the depression
years of the 30s.
Heading the U.S. State Departmentselected 12-member team, Essex has been
requested to conduct an intensive investigation and observation of education in
Moscow and various Soviet states.
Essex was requested by the U. S. State
Department to lead the two-week mission
because of his previous experiences in
directing studies in the Soviet Union.
Pedagogical institutes and the
Academy of PE!ilagogical Science will be
studies to determine the status of teacher
preparation and educational research .
'
·&lt;
The U.S. delegation will also analyze ~ ~;::=:~:'-:=::::::::r..::::::m:::::::::::::~:::::::.:!~:?.?.;:::-:'.:~::~:::::::::::::::::::
educStion~l developments in nursery
schools, kindergartens, elementary and
secondary schools, vocational and
technical centers, evening schools and
Wliversi ties .
" Education in the U.S.S.R. Is a
powerful force, " Essex said, adding, " Its
GALLIPOLIS - The Red Cross
direction i~ of importance to the rest of the Bloodmobile will be in Gallipolis Thursworld, particularly to the United States." day, Oct. 24, ,at Grace United Methodist
Other foreign studies conducted ·b y Church from nooJl to 6 p.m.
Essex Include an around-the-world
Since Gallia County did not meet its
.assignment 10 consult with educators in quota the past two visits, it· is inJportant
the Free World countries and assignments that the quota be exceeded at thfs''Visit-in
to ·counsel the heads of the American order to keep the Gallia County Red Cross
schools in West Berlin and behind the Iron Blood program in good standing, officials.
Curtalri.
said.

h.

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Driver ordered into
jail for six months

'

thetr car·
. Meigs County Sheriff's Deputies
- ~er Althouse and Ray ~anley , cruising
on U. S. 33 near Darwm before ·dawn,
observed two ~n in 8 phone booth there
acting s~sptciously.
· ·
Tlte offf~rs cir,cled back, parked with
lights out to obserVe. The men left ,the

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POMEROY - Richard Swan, 18,
Middleport Route I, was sentenced to
county jail six months by Judge Frank W.
Porter in the· Meigs County Court Friday
for vehicular manslaughter . .
Swan pleaded guilty to being the
driver of a vehicle which went out of
control on Middleport Hill on Oct. 8 and
burned after crashing into a tree. Barbara
Lowe, 20, and Ellen Jackson, 20, Middleport Route 1, passengers in the car,
burned to death.
In the county court Friday one man
was fined and a second forfeited bond on
wildlife law violation charges. Calvin D.
Pickens, Racine Route 2, was fined $150
and costs, was denied hun ling privileges
for the remainder of 1974, and was denied a
deer licenSe for two years for possession of
deer out of season. Forfeiting a bond of
$259.55 posted on a charge of taking deer in
closed season was Hawthorne Murphy,
~

~ spokesman .;.id Saturday: ''The
Red Cross blood program will meet all 91
your blood needs if you give a pint of blood
eac h year.
"This one pint of blood will also enable
members of your family to have their
blood needs met. Gallia Countians are
urged to plan ahead and give the Red
Cross an opportunity to collect their blood
in order that oth~rs may be kept alive."

head .

south toward Pomeroy . Althouse and
Manley overtook them near the roadside
park, stopped them, observed a phone in
thevehicle,arrestedthem,andimpounded
the car·
They were .Ronald Wayne Milan 20
Rt. 1, UtUe Hocking, , and Dale E~en~
Rusaell, 19, Rt. I, Coolville. After conferri!ig ·wi.th Prosecuting: Attorney Bernard Fultz, both will be charged with attempted jail break from the Middle~!
jail.
· · ·· ·

-

RE:FE:JiJ!AL SYSI'EM PLANNED - These rtve people discussed the
possibility of more income for senior citizens and for setting up a referral system
to help get any type of help for senior citizens at a meeting in Pomeroy Thursday.
Seated are Mrs. Pearl Welker and Mrs. E:leanor Thomas, representing the Meigs
County Council on Aging ; back, I tor, are, Glenn P . Yore, assistant to the state
director, Southeast Ohio, American Association of Retired Persons: Los Paster,
Athens, representative of the Social Security Office, and Mike Abels of the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District.

Rutland Route I.
Others fined during Friday's court
was Arioch Steinbrook, Chillicothe, $12
and cos ts , speeding: James c. ijoselton,
Belpre, $10 and costs, speeding; Lawrence
R. Umpcornb, Hemiock Grove, $5 and
costs, lnsecur1eload; Willard Blankenship,
Gallipolis, $12 and costs, speeding; J on
Pierce, Pomeroy, $5 and costs, no brakes;
Dwight Ma~tin, Vinton Route 1, $5 and
costs, defective exhaust; David W. Haggy,
Middleport Route I, $10 and costs, failure
to yield the right of way; Nancy V. Cornell,
Rt. I PorUand, $10 and costs, no driver 's
license ; George M. Jenkins, Syracuse, $tO
and costs, speeding: Homer A. Powell, Rt.
1 Pomeroy, $5 and costs, obstructing
traffic; Robert Rope, Rt.l Middleport , $10
and costs, failure to stop within assured
clear distance ; Dale Eugene Russell, Rt. 1
Coolville, costs only, restitution and 10
days confinement, de s truction of
property; Ronald Milam, Rl. I Hocking ,
costs only, restitution ~ nd 10 days con. finement, destrUctiori of property.
Forfeiting bonds were Fulton Lowe,
Belpre, $2i50, speeding: Thomas Johnson,
Jr ., Morgantown, W. Va ., $27.50, speeding;
Fred Chapman , Rt. 1 Reedsville, $32.50,
speeding ; David L. Venoy , Wabash, Ind.,
$27.50, speeding; Chester Bailey, .West
Columbia, W. Va., failure to yield at a stop
sign, $27 .50; Rick Stewart, Rt. 2 Cheshire,
unsafe vehicle, $22.50; Thomas Kincade,
Pine Grove, W. Va.; William E. Frasher,
Houston, Tex.; William M. Chovan,
Marietta, Charles E-. Lucas, Middleport:
William E. Eakins; · Rt. 2 Racine, each
.
$27.50 posted for speeding.

'
·-I"""'
'"-';

POMEROY - A Vision Clinic will be
,held in Pomeroy on Tuesday, October 22
for children with serious eye problems
such as crossed eyes, drooped eye lids, or
any eye condition other than need for
glasses.
This clinic ;s made possible by the
Comprehensive Hearing and Vision
Program in the Meigs County Health
Department and the Ohio Depar!r1Jent of
Health.

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rules are changed

...

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·. ··~·

POMEROY - Supplemental security
income may be available to a number of
Meigs Countians who a re not rece iving the
federal aid .
This was stressed Thursday when
representatives from the Buckeye Hills .
Hocking Vall ey Regional Development
District, Inc., the Social Security office at
Athens and the Meigs County Council on
Aging discussed the problem at the Sen ior
Citizens Center in Pom~roy.
Senior citizens of Meigs county sig ned
up for the supplemental security income
on Feb. 22. Eligibility is determined by
several fa ctors, including income ,
property ownership, insurance and other
assets.
H~ever, changes have been made,
and residents denied the benefits earlier
may find it well to reapply.
Originally, a claim was denief if an
individual owned more than one acre of

land. Now the individual may ow~~~~
property with a market value of $25,oot·~
and ~till qualify for the benefits of t--•
maximum of $146 a month . OU1er factori..:i·
also enter into the qualifications, however;::::
other than the property owned.
·
Nevertheless, residents are being urged .
to reapply for the benefits if they thinlt :
they might qualify under the changes tha( ·
have been made. Les Paster, sociat :
security representative who attended tM :
meeting, is at the former coWlcil cham~ •
ber of MiddlepOrt Village Hall !rom 9:3Q :
a.m. to 12 :30 p.m. each Wednesday and :
will discuss with resldents ..their eligibility; :
Meantime, the Senior Citizens Cente( ·
as a part of an eighkounty program being- '·
conducted. by the Buckeye Hilts-Hockin~
Valley Regional Development District Ita&amp;
been designated a uclearing house" for·
senior citizens not only with questions onthe supplemental security iricome but any.
other problem.
,
The center has .been sel&lt;&gt;&lt;:ted as the ·
location for senior citizens to contact,
•
whatever be their problems.
, The staff of the Meigs County . Councll·
on Aging will listen to the problems and:
attempt to refer the senior citize!! to some: ·
GALUPOUS- Elza Reynolds, 47, of agency or group which can help solve·
Bidwell, was charged with failure to stop them. Any senior citizen having a problem.
within the assured clear distance following of any nature can telephone ·the center;
an accident at 10:31 p.m . Friday at the 992,7886 for help .
The Buckeye Hills organiZation is.:.
encouraging the establishment
a link;
between agencies and individuals and ia:·.
compiling information on how the law•, ·
•
Cordell, 18, of Bidwell. There was minor governing supplemental security incom•:
This clinic will be staffed by an op- damage . .
- whic~ is not social security - Is af-1.:
thalmologist and optometrist from Athens
A two car collision occurred Friday feeling residents.
and personnel from the local Health '. morning at the junction of Rt . 7 and the
. Mike
Abels r.epresented th e .. · ·
Department and the Ohio Department of exit ramp, to the Siive~ Memorial Bridge organization here Thursday. Mrs. Eleanot j·;
Health . Parents of any child not under a wherecarsdrivenbyWtlltamBurns, 20,of Thomas and Mrs . Pearl · Welket :
doctor's care for such conditions should Rio Grande, and Fern O'Neal of Pt. represented the Meigs County Councli oq; ·· .
conlact Doris Bailey, L.P.N. in the Meigs Pleasant, collided.
;
Agirig.
County Health Depar lmef!4 at 992-3723 or
A single car mishap occurred on Rt. 218,
Attending also was GleM P . Yore~;
the parents can come to the He~lth north ofRt 790 where Diane Fellure, 25, of Marietta, assistant t.o the state director of', ,-.:·
Qepartment on Monday preceding this Crown City, lost control o.f her car which Ohio (Southeast) of the American ..•
clinic.
ran off lhe htghway str iking a mailbox.
Association Or Retired Persons.
·:: .

Cars collide
at road junction

P~!~LE~~e'!o
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trymg for enough funds to contlnue their escape from Middleport jail,
were . 8 PPret'ended Friday morning near

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    <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>
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      <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="38185">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
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    <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>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38184">
              <text>October 18, 1974</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2623">
      <name>eastman</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
