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Beat .•.

Glenn, Rhodes endorsed

Of the .Bend ·~, .
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l~v llt~h' HtH!Jlich

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By Unltejl Press International · workers would seriously affect
John Glenn was endorsed by his race against Cleveland
the Columbus Dispatch in the Republican Mayor Ralph Perk
state·•s U.S. Senatorial race in the Nov ember general
and form~r Go'v . James eleetion ,
Rhodes during the weekel)d
Rbo~s was endorsed in the
gubernatoiral race by the attacked his Democratic opCincinnati Enquirer during the ponent , Gov, John J . Gilligan,
weekend.
for tricking voters into ·a pprovTony Hall, the Democratic ing the state income tax .
candidate lor Secretary of
"The Dispatch is impressed
State, challenged his GOP with the approach to the
opponent, incumbent Ted W, multifacted problems by Mr.
Brown, to make good on Glenn who has backed, off no
complaints. the new campaign issue and undoubtedly has done
finance law is not strong his homework very well," the
Dispatch said in an editoriRI
enough .
Voters Do Well
Glenn, called a potential
"potent Ioree in Congress for
"We feel the voters would do
the good of Ohio and the well by sending Mr, Glenn to
nation" by the Dispatch, Washington," the Dispatch
Sunday said he did not think a said.
•'This man is much more
bogus check charge filed
against one of his campaign than a personality," said the

POMEROY - Mrs. Margare~ Ella Lewis, head of the Meigs
County Community School at Rutland, says the public Is invited
to ,visit the school any time to view the work that is being done
with the children enrolled.
The school, located in the Rutland Elementary School, gets
underway at 9:15a.m. with classes dismissed at 2:15 Monday
through Friday.

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Gary Duley, left, and Rep, Oakley C, Collins plan apprecia tion dinner.

Appreciation day
set for Collins
IRONTON - Plans are being Ohio Education Association.
made here lor an "Oakley C,
"We in Southern Ohio want to
Collins Appreciation Day" with show our appreciation to
a banqUet sclieduled lor 6 p,m, Oakley Collins for his outOct, 28 at the Holiday Inn, in standing work as a legislator
South Point
for the past 22 years," Duley, a
Planni'ng
Committee local educator, said. "We don't
Chainnan Gary Duley an- intend this to be a political ,
nounced the main speakers lor rally. There will be no speeches
the evening as Congressman by local candidates. We want
Tennyson Guyer and John all segments· of the public to
Hall, executive secretary of the turn out to enjoy the evening in
which we'll be recognizing the
accomplishments of an Ironton
man who has represented us
for
18 years in the Ohio Senate
If you're looking
and ·four years in the Ohio
for the best value in
House of Representatives."
Duley said Collins has
probably introduced more bills
in the legislature than any

other man. He said reser-

Second AY'tnlll

vations may be made by
calling 532-1760,
Collins, a lormer school
teacher and school administrator and owner of the
former Colllns Mining Co,, was
gerrymandered two years ago
out of his seat in the State
Senate at the close of his 18th
year in the senate. He won the
representative seat for the
1973-74 tenn and is, now making
a bid lor the new senate district
seat. He defeated incumbent
Harry Armstrong of Logan for
the Republican nomination last
Sprln~ and will lace Democrat
Grant McDonald, a Ross

Gallipolis,
Phone c~,-42'90

polls next month,

Insurance
you'll find it at State Farm
Givs me e call todsy, You'll

discoverwhars made State Farm
the number one homeowners insurer in the world.

CARROL K~ SNOWDEN
Park Cen1r•l
Hotel Bldg.

County Commissioner, at the

Like a goocl" 'gbh:
Slate Fum is there.
WISEcUP HOME
POMEROY - Al-e Keith
Wisecup has arrived home
from the Minot Air Force Base
in North Dakota for a two week
leave with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. James WisecUP, Union
Ave., Pomeroy, and other
relatives and friends.

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P7404

ANN RUPE, IN SOUTH AFRICA with her family writes
that Littering is also a problem there.
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Ann is familiar with the attempts of Beta Beta Preceptor's
efforts to get Pomeroy eleaned up and thought readers might be
interested in the litter cleanup program in Pietersburg.
. She points out that Pietersburg is a very clean town to start
with because there are no central heatlilg units needed lor heat
and very litUe smoke . However, People do Utter.
Students from seven primary schools and seven upper grade
schools took part in a litter walk. The students, all in unlfonn and
led by bands, moved through the city cleaning UP the Utter. Ann
was impressed with the bands and their marching and musical
ability. There was a ceremony with the mayor and his wife
taking part as well as other officials.
Pomeroy had a litter walk once sponSored by a garden club.
These things do lltlle good actually since people can't resist the
temptation to discard whatever they want, anywhere they want.
Only pride to fight the temptation can really help- and couldn't
we use more of it! ! It's ridiculous to have our towns so dirty
looking just because people pop down anything, anywhere. I once
thought the young people would take care of the problem in
demanding that all or us refrain from littering. I've given up on
that dream too .
HUNTERS ARE reminded that pennits for the 1974 Ohio
deer hunting season are now available at mast hunting license
agencies, Ohio deer hunters are required to have a deer permit in
addition to a valid 1974 Ohio hunting license. These deer permits
cost $10 plus a 5Q.cent writing lee.
The longbow season for any age or sex deer Is now open and
will be continued through Jan. 25. Longbow hunting will not he
permitted during the gun season, however. Deer gun season in
Southeastern Ohio is open from Dec. 2 through Dec. 7 for buck
only. The limit Is one deer per season per hunter regardless of the
method of taking.
Incidentally, limited numbers of special anllerless deer
hunting permits will· be issued in Meigs and G8nia Counties
among other areas. To apply for such a permit, a hunter must
complete the application fonn contained in the 1974 deer .hunting
digest which is provided hunters purchasing a regular deer
penni!. The applications must be returned to Anllerless Deer
Penni!,
Division
of
Wildlife,
Columbus,
Ohio
43224 before Nov. 1. Recipients are determined by drawing.
MISS PAT HOLCOMB, MISS TERESA CARR and Keith
Ashley are in Columbus this weekend attending the Ohio State
~r.ange convention. Keith, a student at Ohio University, Athens,,
IS Ill a dual role ~~ the convention. He is Meigs County's prince
candtdate and MISS Holcomb is the queen candidate. Keith will
be taking part in the state talent contest as a district winner on
the piano. Miss Carr with her halon twirling number will also he
representing the county in the talent competition , She too was a

district winner.

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ABSENTEE AND DISABLED VOTES for the Nov. 5 election
may be cast at the Meigs County Board of Elections untilU noon
Nov. 2, as a Jljlrt of the new laws which have been relaxed to
encourage voting. The board office, located in the Masonic
Temple, Pomeroy, is open from 1 to 4 p.m., Monday through
Saturday, for the convenience or these voters.
MRS. HA'ITIE RUSSELL, FORMER Pomeroy resident now
of Westminster, Calif., has been in Pomeroy and Meigs for the
past week or so seeing old frienJ!s . Hattie has been with Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Grinun, upriver, and with Truman Russell,
·
Pomeroy, durmg her stay.
Hattie loves Ca~ornU!living and enjoyed her long auto trip,
~e yet, from Cahforrua back to the Big Bend area. Hattie
bro'bght with her a Bible, printed in 1827 which belonged to her
great-grandmother, Mrs. Jane Bailey. She has turned the Bible
over to the Pomeroy Library and I believe plans are that it will
be presented to the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society.

CHUCK AND FRANCES ESKEW, W.

WAHAMA B~: :- A section of the award-winning
Wahama High SchoOl White F81con band Is shown above

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VOL. XXVI NO, 133

ca1en d,..ar::i.

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DR. ARTRIP

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former Phyllis Jean Hofl ,;of
Hamlin in 1949 and they hl!,ve

one son, Bill, a veteran of

the'

Vietnam War, now serving ~
Air National Guard of W'e&amp;t
Virginia and presenUy enroll~
in .pre-medicine at Marsh~!!
Umverslty, along with ' B
daughter, Kimberly, at home'.
Dr. Artrip was born and
reared on a farm and has llv~·
on a farm most of his life. · ~

Kroger, local at im
Employes Local5590~~a~n~d :~~~J~:
new talks were s'
About 2,500 members .
Local OOOhave been on str'ilio' i
a wage contract dispute
Sept. 30. Another strike, :
another union, has closed
other Kroger stores in
Kentucky and West
including stores at
and Gallipolis.

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Sa:\ le 25% On This Beautiful
Ope1n Stock Bed Room Furniture

AT THDROUGHL)' ENJOYABLE PRICES...

Substantial interest penalty if withdrawn before
maturity.

ALL DEPOSITS INSURED BY FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION TO 520,000.

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liD il®, ©IIDII''lt® -·-

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FRQM FYJREST

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&amp;&gt;ME DOG'S UFE- Hodgie, this Maltese pet, may be
leadin&amp; a dog's life but with a mistress lite Vicki Morrison,
that isn't bad. Hodgie does not approve of the traditional
walk; instead he is pushed .in his own stroller. Vicki is the
daughter of Mrs. Sabra Morrison and the late Larry
Morrison, Lincoln Hill Drive.

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By United Press International
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD leaves on his first
foreign trip today to join Mexican President Luis Echeverria at
the border lor a traditional show of friendship. Their talks will
cover trade, oU and migrant farm workers. Ford, accompanied
by Secretary of state Henry A. Kissinger, planned to attend
colorful cetemonles at the twip towns of Nogales and then hold
two·rounds of meetings ~one onea&lt;;h sl~ of the bo•der.
The two leaders agteed to exchange their first greetings at
the international boundary dividing Nogales, Ariz., from the
town with the same name in the Mexican state of Sono•a. From
there, Ford and Echeverrls planned to fly south by helicopter to
the town of Magdalena lor their initial talks and to cross ove. to
U.S. soil for a luncheon and second business meeting in Tubac,
Ariz.

LOS ANGELES - JACK BENNY WAS in "very good"
condition today after he was admitted to Cedars of Lebanon
Hospital for observation and teSts during the weekend. Benny,
80, who was to perform at the Neiman-Marcus Japanese Fo~t­
night,Ball in Dallas Saturday, flew here after a spokesman satd
he was found "in extreme pain" by a hotej employe who went to
the comedian's dressing room to tell him it WjiS time to go on
stage.
Benny was examined by two doctors at his hotel room and
'· orderedhospitallzed over his protests. They said he had suffered
a mlld stroke. However, doctors at Presbyterian Hospital in
Dallas, where Benny was taken in a private car, said Benny was
suffering from an unconfirmed illness, " definitely not·a stroke."

Interest..~

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1
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f

of The Meigs-Mason· Area
TEN CENTS

MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1974

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NEWBRITAIN,Conn. (UP!)
Detective Capt. George
- State police said today a Berescik said there were inbulletin has been issued de- dicatlons from the position of
scribing the suspects in the the bodies that the victims
Saturday night shooting deaths were lying down when they
of six persons in a New Britain were murdered.
bakery as a white man, a black
They were aU shot in the
head -Qne with a shotgun and
'man and a white woman.·
The woman was described as the others with one or more
about 30 years of age, about 5- . large caliber handguns, he
feet, 6-l.nches tall, alJ!lwearing said.
an orange pullover sweater
" It was something I would
and dungarees. There was no not want to see again," said
Police Chief Thomas P. Orrnsdescription of the men.
The getaway car was de- by .
"'
cribed as a white 1964 Grand
Killed were the owner of the
Prix Pontiac with a cardboard Donna Lee Bakery, John
rear license plate and a dented Salerni, 55, a clerk at the store,
left front lender.
Helen Giasanti, 59, of NewingSo gruesome was the car· ton,
Conn. , and
four
nage in the Donna Lee Bakery customers: Michael Kron, 47,
Saturday night that the priest of New Britain; Thomas
who administered last rites Dowling, 58, and his wile,
termed the perpetratora "bar· Anna, 57, both of New Britain;
baric animals," and police and WUIJam Donahue Jr., 22, of
likened ~file "'Sl!ene 'ttl' ''"tt"" Wfi!tt''tlii't'ttOtd'.~ -·.
slaughterhouse."
Police said $300 was taken
from the cash register and the
victims' wallets, but the mur:::::::::::::::-"::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;.-:::;::::::::;;:;:;::.

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EXTENDED OUTLOOK'
Wednesday through
Friday, a chance of rain
Wednesday and Thursday.
Clearing Friday. Highs from
the upper 50s to mid 60s.
Lows from the mld 30s to mid
40s.

Kroger's
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unions

to meet

derers missed $1,350 in Salerni's side pants pocket.
Police speculated the bandits
may have panicked and killed
one of the victims when

witnesses.
"It looks like a slaughter-

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house," one of the policemen
said Saturday night.
Rev . Augustine Glusani, who
was summoned from St. ,O.On's
Roman Catholic Church to give

the last rites, said, "the people
who did it are really ... the only
way I can describe them Is
being like anlm,als, that's all,
barbaric animals."

Food giveaway extortion probed

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Ofllcials are investigating
charges that two Black Muslims extorted nearly $100,000
from the food giveaway program demanded by Patricia
Hearst's kidnapers, the San
Francisco Chronicle reported
today.
Pollee and the district attorney's office said the two
suspects identified themselves
as business representatives of
a Muslim Temple in San
Francisco, the newspaper ·said
in today.'s editions.
The People in Need food
giveaway program was organized at the demand of the
Symbionese Liberation Army
as a condition lor th~ release of
Miss Hearst, who subsequently
said she had joined the SLA is
now sought as a fugitive.
The $2.3 million PIN
Clear and not as cold tonight.
program
distributed food to an
Low temperatures from the
mid 30s to low 40s, Mostly estimated 150,000 people
sunny and warmer Tuesday. between Feb. 22 and March 25.
The Chronicle sald the exHigh temperatures from the
tortion
investigation was based
mid 50s to low 60s,
on information from Lee T.
Ross, a friend of the Hearst
LOCAL TEMPS
family and an official in the
The temperature in down- PIN program and confirmed
town Pomeroy at 11 a .m. by A. Ludlow Kramer,
Monday was 37 degrees, under secretary
of state · in
sunny skies, Early Monday Wit.shington State who directed
morning the temperature stood
at 20 degrees, extremely cold
for local residents in midOctober ,

Weather

Years since

That jittering
no quake, just
a sonic boom

somebody made a move or
offered resistance, then killed
the others to eliminate any

Kent have

the program.
According to Ross, a check
for $99,600 was made out to the
temple after the suspects
threatened to wreck the program at the risk of Miss
Hearst's life.
Because riots had been
provoked on the first day of the
giveaway in San Francisco and
Oakland, Ross said, PIN ofllcials believed the Muslim

been had

representatives could carry a distribution day."
The Mustims said the $99,600
out the threat.
The money was supposedly was owed them by the PIN
to pay for food stored in a program because o! stolen food
Muslbn warehouse, but Ross and property damaged by the
said witnesses reported the rioters and held a news conwarehouse was empty.
ference to demand payment.
PIN officials and the Hearst
He said several witnesses
heard the suspects tell PIN family decided to give in and
officials, "If you don't cooper- pay the money because "We
ate with us, we'll upset the were so damned worried about
apple cart every tbne PIN has Patty," Ross said .

:;:;:::~~«:@?.:«?.:~:~-:?m.~:;::s~m.-x::;:;:me·?w(&amp;¥~.::::::m

For .nothing hut :revenge

3 .accidents

LONDON (UPI) - Britain's busie1t haqman laid In
memoirs published today he didn't think the hundreds of
executions he carried out deterred criminal•,
"Capital punishment achieved nothing bul revenge,"
said Albert Pierrepolnt, 88, who served Z5 years as Britain's
official executioner. •
He re1fgned ill 1956, seven months after executtag Ruth
Ellls, the last woman to be haD~ed ln this eountry.
"I do not now believe that any one of the hundreds of
executlons I carried out has In any way been a deterrent
against future murder," he wrote.

wzr.:s

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Sugar substitute
hit by Proxmire
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Food and ·D rug Adminstration
has approved sale of a new
sugar substitute despite evidence that it may cause brain
damage in chlldren, according
to Sen. WUIJam Proxmire.
Proxmire, D-Wis., accused
FDA Commissioner Dr. Alexander M. Schmidt of "misfeasance in office" for pennitting
the manufacture and sale of
Aspartame, an artificial
sweetener 180 times sweeter
than sugar.
"In view of the present
skyrocketing price of sugar,
the economic pressures on the
FDA to approve lt and the
potential profits from its use
are tremendous/' Proxmire
said in a statement.
"I charge Commissioner
' Schmidt with 'misfeasance' in
office, lor while he has
technically not broken the law,
what he has done Is wrongful
and potentially Injurious to
millions of children."
Schmidt called Proxmire's
charges "needless scare tac-

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~ WASHINGTON (UPII- ,.
·~ Tbe Supreme Court today :,
~ upbeld South Carollna'sl;j

en tine

.PITTSBURGH (UPI)
Officials of unions representing
Kroger Co. employes from
throughout the naUon will meet
here today with representatives of local unions now on
strike against the food chain to
PARKERSBURG, W. Va .
CLEVELAND (UPI)- One
discuss the possiblllty of (UPI) _ ,A strange shaking of of eight fanner Ohio National
PARIS - CANADIAN PRIME MINISTER Pierre Elliott
coordinating bargaining ef- the ground along a stretch of Gitardsmen charged In connecTrudeau arrived in Paris today lor talks with French President
forts.
theOhio River was reported by lion with the 1970 Kent State
Valery Glscard d'Estaing aimed at ending seven years of friction
The meeting Will be under hundreds of residents Sunday. shootings today described as
between their two countries.
.
the direction of Jack Boyd of The National Weather Service "hell" the Ia~ four years ·and
French officials said the two leaders hoped to close out a · Chicago, retail director o! the in Charleston said "our best fl_ve mon~s smce four students
troubled era begun with the late Frency President Charles de
International Union of Amal- guess is that it was a sonic • died and rune fell wounded ~ a
Gaulle's controversiall967 viSit to Quebec. Trudeau and his wife,
l:Hlecond barrage of gunfire.
gamated Meatcutters.
Margaret, arrived at 9:30a.m. in a military aircraft fro~ Lahr,
"I feel the public is going to
Clifton C. Caldwell, preslaent
Some
upriver
residents
in
West Germany, where they spent a quiet weekend restmg at a
finally
find out what really
or' Food Employes Local 000
Meigs
Couaty
repo~
"a
happened," said defendant
Canadian military base.
whose members have been on
sllghtlremor" ln the ReedsJames E. Pierce, 29, Amelia
strike against Kroger. lor lour
ville · area about 11 a.m.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD, FINALLY anIsland, Fla., as he entered
weeks, said several wage
Sunday, thought to be an federal court here .for trial. "It
swering a skeptical congresswoman, says is willing to make
contracts in otber states for
earthquake recorded at should have been done five
public tapeS of any conversations between himself and former
Kroger employes were due to
Parkerlburg, W. Va. There years ago or lour and a half
President Nixon. When Ford appeared before a congressional expire and that the status of
were no damages. The years ago."
subcommittee Oct. 17, Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman, D-N .Y., said
bargaining would be discussed.
county also experienced Its
there were suspicions of a deal,struck when' Nlxoit was pardoned.
Pierce said he had never
About 2,500 members of
Sunday.
first
snowfall
Ford imn)ediately denied it, saying "no deal, period."
been
through an experience
Local 590 are 'on strike and
such as this trial.
But Ms. Holtzman persevered:
have closed 56 Pittaburgh area
"To alleviate this suspicion once 'a nd lor all, wouljl you be
" I lost ·my job last weekend
stores. A similar walkout by boom."
willlng to tum o.v er to this subcommittee all tape recordings of members of Local 347, Food
TWOCAIL'!MADE
There were no earthquake or because o(this," said Pierce.
"
I've
got
to
be
away
so
much,
RACINE
- The Racine E-R
conversations between yourseH and Richard Nixon?" Ford
store Employes, has closed 52 blasting reports.
not
going
to
he
of
much
use
squad
answered
two calls over
·I'm
replied at that time that the tapes ''belong to Presiden\ N~n."
Kroge!"!ltores in West Virginia ··-A spokesman for the Wood
the . weekend, at' 7:15 p.m.
He was asked the same question Saturday night in ·'a relaxed and Ohio. About 2,000 workers County sheriff's office in to them ."
More than 100 persons WOI'e Saturday for Mina Lewis,
meeting with reporters aboard Air Force One. The ground ruleS are on strike.
Parkersburg said " Boy, it
of the interview prevented ' release untU Sunday.
,
Caldwell said the in- shook everything, must have called lor posslb~ selection to Racine, who had fallen, taken
"I'd be delighted to, assuming there is no problem with the ternational
has
called been one of those planes serve on the 12-member Jw1:. to the Holzer Medical Center,
spedal prosecutor," he said.
representatives of 42 local breaking the sound harrier." The trial was expected to taie and at 11 :45 a.m. Sunday, for
Ray HarUey, Racine, who was
unions to discuss 11 0ur , Reports of tlie tremors came about two months.
01 the eight defendants, five having difficulty breathing. He
· WASHINGTON - SPECIAL WATERGATE Prosecutor relationship with the Kroger from an area stretching from
Leon Jaworski said Sunday most of the story of Watergate has Co. and current strike situa- Ravenswood, W. Va ., to face a maximum sentenne of · was · taken to . Veterans
been told, but his office may soon seek new indictments. In a tions."
life , imprisonment if found Memorial Hospital.
Marietta, Ohio.
broadcllst interview,.·the special prosecutor, who has resigned
Chief issue in the Kroger
" It almost shook me out ol guilty.
·
effective Nov. 1, said:
They are: Pierce; La\V!'ence
walkout here. is a coat of living my rocking chair," ilaid a man
_ Former President Richard Nixon probably would have clause · while the Charleston ln the Ravenswood area.
CLOSE FRIDAY
A. Shaler, 29, Raveooa, Ohio;
pleaded the Fifth Amendment if he had been forced to testify dispute centers on employe
Schools of the counl)' will be
Reports ~aid the ground Ralph W. Zoller, Tl, Mantua,
before a grand ·jury.
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demands that the,ir wages be shook lor two or three seconds,· Ohio; James D. McGee, Tl, closed Friday due to a
-His office had infohnaUon about White House involvement . brought in line with those paid There was no indication of any Ravenna; and William E . southeastern Ohio teachers
meeting at Rio Grande.
Cohlin!led on page 8
Perkins, 28, Canton, Ohio.
in other cities.
dsmage ,

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Brief~

relative cahn in Boston but a groUP of National Guardsmen will
stay on alert as the city starts the sixth week of classes under a
court-ordered school desegregation plan. "I think that just the
very fact that the National Guard is there, that people know it's
there even though they are not on the street, has had an important effect on this city," Sargent said Sunday.
"I think the guard should remain on alert lor some period of
time," the governor said. "I can't say whether it would be a
matter of days or weeks ..Or even more than that. I think ' it's
bnportant to have a reserve Ioree there because ,the Boston
Pollee Department is stretched very thin and they're tired."

$1,000 CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT

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BOSTON~ GOV. FRANCIS W. SARGENT says there is

4 YEAR

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ReCipe for French Charm
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Two whites, black, nturder suspects

I· Socia I .JUNIORro,:~::..

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increase· during the Rhodes
years- from $100 million to
$500 million in state ap- :·.;five ~ year residence
propriations, in addition to $800 ~ requlrementlor candidates ,
for governor - thereby
million for capital conCharles
D.~
struction, nearly three times ~· denying
what all the previous gover- ;:f; RaVenel a place on the · ·
ballot.
.•.
nors of Ohio had spent," the ::::November
~
~·
firm,, the editorial. said.
con~lude, we believe , that · Enquirer said.
:;:; Ravenel
won
the ·1'
" But again we are most . James A. Rhndes is by far tbe
The Enquirer said Gilligan ::~Democratic primary but ·
impressed with Mr. Glenn's superior candidate for 1974," had also made-progress during ~~~ bas been kept off the ballot ·
grasp of the nation's problemS the editorial said.
his tenure as governor but :t; by an adverse decision of
South
Carolina
·and his studied recommendsThe Enquirer said it had Rhodes-the paper also listed ;:;:the
~;:Supreme
Court
based
on
lions," said the Dispatch.
•urveyed the "crucial field of industrial development under
"John Glenn also has proved to elementary and secondary the former governor -is $,hhe five-year provision ln
" more correctly attuned to ~tthe state coitstitution.
be his own man, refusing. to be education ."
Ohio's
needs and its people's ~:~::?..o».:~::::?.m.:::::::&amp;:!:*.:!~~~..,...~,wii
" The fact is that the Rhodes
maninulated on the ballot by
aspirations
.~~
_
political leaders for a position administration between 1963
Voters Not Swayed
New York City . He said
strictly advantageous to the and 1971 invested inore state
Glenn Sunday said he did not Quintero had not received any
political machine," said the operating money than all the
Dispatch.
governors from 1916 to 1963," think a serious number of money from the Glenn camvoters will be swayed by a paign, nor had he contributed
The Cincinnati newspaper said the paper.
said a comparison of Gilligan's
" Or consider the investment bogus check charge filed anything to it. "He apparently
Continued on pa ge 8
record and Rhodes' record in higher education-a fivefold against Louis Quintero, 55,

Devoted To The

nounced today.
Dr. Artrip was born July 16,
Dr. Artrip, a Point Pleasant 1924 in Clintwood, Virginia,one
dentist, will be seeking election of nine children of William J.
in the three-county lOth district · Artrip, Sr. and Lydia Rebecca
~ Mason, Jackson and Putnam
Childers Artrip.
COWl ties.
Educated in public schools of
Dickenson Co., Va. and attended college at V.P.I., Dr.
Artrip served in U.S.A.F. in
England and A.T.C. in North
Legion
Africa in World War 11. He
·:&amp;
~·
. Auxiliary, 6:30 p.m. at the graduated
from Medical
:x
Middleport hall of Feeney- College of Virginia, School of
~
Bennett Post 128.
Dentistry in 1951.
~
WENDFSDAY
Dr. Artrip has been a
, \'
AMERICAN Legion and the
resident
of West Virginia since
MONDAY · ,, ,
Auxlliary Feeney-Bennett
MIDDLEPORT Business Post 128, 'e:30 p.m., polluck 1951 and has lived on a !ann in
and Professwnal Women's dinner with meetings at 7:30 Mason Cdunty since 1960.
He is past president of
Club, 6:30 p. m. at JM.' Meigs p.m.
Madison Rotary Club, served
Inn with Mary Powell
coometology teacher at Meig~
POMEROY - Middleport as District Commissioner of
High School as the .,eaker Lions Club, noon at the Meigs Boy Scouts of America, is past
MIDDLEPoRT ElementarY Inn. All Lions urged to attend. . vice president of W""t Virginia
OHIO Valley Cornmandry 24, Historical Society and is now
PTA, 7:30 p. m. at the school.
Program will feature the Knights Templar' slated serving as President of the
Teachers Corps ~ Donald conclave, 7:30 p.m. at the Mason County Historical
Cole, Middleporl Ch;~~ of the ~omeroy Masonic Temple.
Society. He is also a member of
V.F.W. and American Legion.
Nazarene, will give devotiona.
Dr. Artrip married the
TilESDAY
THROUGH Friday,
Christian Witness workshop, 10
a.m. to 11 a.m., at Racine
.Veterans Memorial Hospital
United Methodist Church with
Robert
ADMITTED
the Rev. James Van Dtlrant In
BartoQ,
Pomeroy.
charge.
ti
DISCHARGED
Guy
DREW Webster Post 39,
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - No
Timothy
McDaniel,
Walker,
Amencan Legion Auxiliary,
further
negotiations have been
7:30 p:m. at , post home with Mary Pierce, John Johnston, scheduled in a three-week
Mrs. Robert Couch in charge of Rosella Martin, Danny Darst, strike which has closed 56
Earl Phillips.
program.
Kroger Co. supermarkets In
W..-tern Pennsylvania,
Eastern Ohio and Northern
the Pumpkin FliltlvaJ at Circleville. They attended for the
West Virginia.
second conaecutive ~. ~ night. Frances has the
John W. Marsh, Kroger vice
recipe for the huge ~ pie wbicb Is baked every year as a
president, said "absolutely no
part of the Circleville, ~~iwl. It welgha weD over 250 pounds.
progress
was made in
Anyone wishing to try ~t the recipe can call Frances.
negotiations" with Food

showes Rhodes is "by far th~
superior candidate for 1974."
Take The Measure
' "To survey both records, to
analyze the approaches of both
candidates to the basic issues
besetting Ohio, to take the
measure of both men, is to

at y

~.~..

'·

PT. PLEASANT
Dr.
William J . Artrip of Southside
has been named as a
Democratic candidate in the
lOth District House of
Delegates race, it was an-

Main, Pomeroy, lite

newspaper . " He is . a 2.3-year
veleran o! the U.S. Marine
Corps in which he attained the
rank of colonel, a space
scientist from an agricultural
district or the state and has
served as president of the
international brimch of a U.S. -

•

performing during halftime of Friday night's football gam~&lt;~
The band is directed by Charles Yeago and Tom Phi!Ups. .

Dentist in race for House

•

The Meigs Branch.

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

, ,
ti cs.
Proxmire said there was
scientific evidence that Aspar·
tame becomes toxic when
combined with monosodium
glutamate, a chemical used
widely to preserve and
enhance the flavor of
processed foods.
He quoted Dr. John W.
Olney, associate professOr of
psychiatry at Washington
University School of Medicine
in St. Louis, who told the FDA:
"If packages of Aspartame are
avallai.!e for free..f!owing use
in the home, infants and
children will have at their
finger-tips an instant brain
damagjng powder which tastes
like candy."
Schmidt said, "~I Is unfortunate that the senator would
resort to such needless scare
tactics on so sensitive a matter
of public health."
He said the FDA reviewed
·the safety of Aspartame for 16
months before approving it as
a safe food additive July 211 and
that Its approval does not
become effective for 30 days.

investigated
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's
Dept. investigated three accidents over the weekend.
At 5:50 p.m , Saturday, a
parked car at the Five Points ,
Grill owned by Robert F .
Sandy, 48, Parkersburg, W.
Va., was struck in lis left side
by a car allegedly driven by
Jennings L. Mollohan, 73,
Coolville. Medium damages
were incurred to Sandy's car,
Mollohan was to be charged
with driving while Intoxicated
and leaving the scene of an
accident.
At 2:50a.m. S\lllday on State
Route 7 three miles north of the
junction of Routes 33 and 7, a
car driven by Michael Glenn
Caton, 22, Vinton Route 1,
struck a slick spot in the road.
Caton lost contrpl, went
through a guard rail and struck
a utility pole, breaking it off.
Damages were medium.
At 8:30p.m. Sunday, a car
driven by Jeffery E. Proffitt,
19, Portland, headed west on
State Route 124 in Rutland,
went to the right when a front
tire blew out .nd· crossed the
centerline, going Into a ditch on
the left side of the road.
Medium damages were incurred to the car.

Gilligan workers
mansion guests

Mrs. Elaine Rouse, of Addison, southeast Ohio cOordinator for the Ohioans lor
Gilligan, and Mrs. Virginia
Blazewic-z, of Pomeroy, Meigs
County coordinator for the
GoVernor's reelection, were
guests at the Governor's
mansion in Columbwi SaturAGREEMENT NOTED
day.
WASHINGTON (UPI) . Prior to their visit to the
Striking machinists today
executive
mansion, Mrs. Rouse
reached tentative agreement
and Mrs. Blazewlcz attended a
on a new contract with
meeting~ cOWity and regional
National Airlines to end a !NIcoordinators engaged in local
day old walkout that has idled
·planning for the coming
more than 5,500 employes.
election.

•

. Marrla&amp;e Ueellles
Harry Schrader; 53, Little
Hocking Route 1, and Kathleen
Volk , 50, Little Hocking;
,WoodroW Wilson Engle, ~r ., Tl,
Middleport Route, I, and
Debora Louis Rp.thburn, 19,
Rutland Route L

FIRE RUN MADE
The Middleport Fire Dept.
answered a call at 4:31 p. m.
Sunday to an apartment over
the H. and R. Firestone Store.
A clothes dryer in the
residence of Brenda Jeffers ,
had caught .fire. 'f1tere was
light damage.

'

1\

'•

.....,..

~

�Tht.

n uh

St. nlmt 1 Muldlt J)(ll I mom 0 Mi. nd

1\ P

3- The Datly Sentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Oct 21 197~

•1 1 t -1

Hearings resumed in Silver Bridge
negligence issue by claims court
t HAiti I STON W Va
UPI l
rt!stunony was lo
rtsumt&gt; today tn two lest cases
~c '"~ heal d by the West
V1rg1111a f,ourl of Clalms to
c.k&gt;ternunt' 1f the stale was
nE" gh~enl m 1ts mamtenance of
thr Silver Brodge
The 1wo cases wh1ch began
on July woll detenmne the
'tate s role on the Dec IS 1967
rollapse of \he span onto the
Oh10 River at Pomt Pleasant
The accodent ktlled 46 persons
A full fove davs were sel
asode lhts week to contonue
direct testlmony on behalf of
the plamllffs A total of 56
claliDS seeking $6 5 mtllion on
damages have been foled
agamst the state for wrongful
death property damage and

~';

'

"I w1sh I could at least see the harbor'"

DR. LAMB

Weight loss for diabetic
By Law renee E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB- I would
hke to have more mfonnatlon
on safely losmg we1ghl a.s I am
a dtabe!tc and on a 1000 calorte
dtel At ftrslllost real fast and
lhese past two months I ve only
lost s1x pounds
My doctor was qwte per
lurbed wtlh me and saod You
are not sla)'lng on your diet I
really am Dr Lamb and I
know my doctor lhmks I m not
telhng hlm the truth
I take thyrotd polls water
pills hogh blood pressure
med1cme and oral med1cme for
my diabetes
My blood
pressure IS over 200 and I m
terrobly nervous
My l\etght was310and now 1\
is 270 I am 60 years old I
wanted the doctor to g1ve me
hormone shots but he said no
The doctor I used to go to
before he doed gave me
estrogen once a month and I
lost much faster and felt so
good too
DEAR READER - You are
domg fme As long as you
average a loss of a half pound a
week and keep at 11 you 11(111
eventually get rod Of your
excess fat If you try to IOiie tOO
fast you wtll feel bred and have
other problems It 1s common
to lose we1ght fast at the
hegtnmng and then settle down
to a slow
steady loss
thereafter
It works out that you are
losmg three quarters of a
pound a week That means
your body os usmg a total of
1350 calories a day countmg
the calones m the fat and the
caiones m your food Unless
you are reasonably actove that
may be all you can use
My s~geslwn would be for
you to mcrease your phys1cal
achv1ty You can do this
Without ratsmg your blood
pressure Just start laking
regular walks at a comlorlable

speed for you
It os n \
neressar} to do tl all at once
Break 11 up mto lwo three or
more short "alks 1f 1t tlrt&gt;s you
but do 1t everv da) ram &lt; r
shme If )OU can bwld up to
"alking an hour a day a
d1stance of about three m1les
you \!.Ill Increase your weight
loss over half a pound more
each week or about 30 more
pounds a year Of course that
asswnes you don t mcr~ase
your food mlake
Woth your present doel and
the exercise combmed you
should lose aboul 70 pounds of
fat m a year That 1s fast
enough You have along way to
go and t\
Just lake ltme
Hormones are another
matter ][ you are gettmg a
tablet rned1cme for lh1s 1l
should work JUst as well In
general 1f a woman 1s deficient
m female hormone to a
s1gmf1cant degree then It IS
probably best to provtde some
hormone replacement

'"II

Majorettes in
fiery routines
MaJOrettes of the Eastern
Hogh School band were
featured tn ftre routmes at the
Froday mght game As the
band played Smoke on the
Water the maJorette corps
twtrled fore balons and then
Jtunped a ftre rope
For the halfttme show the
band dtrected by Charles L
Wolls moved downf1eld on two
chevron formattons playmg a
march
French Nat10nal
Defile
The maJorettes
presented a dance routme as
the band executed a flashback
droll playong the pop tune I
Shall Song

personal UIJury
In opentng tesltmony last
summer Slate F.n~oneer Btll S
Hanshew Jr told the three
man court he dldn t know if a
mot e thoro~h mspec!ton of
the brldl(e could have revealed
structural damage prtor to tts
collapse
A small haorlme crack m the
span s C 13 I-bar wh1ch ts
beheved to have caused the
bridge s fatlure may not have
been Vtslble even tf a very
thorough mspectlon were
made he saJd
The two test swts were !tied
on behaH of Pomt Pleasant
both of whom perished m the
collapse They are being
represented by atlornevs
Harry A Shennan of Pitts
burgh and Chester Lovett of
Charleston
State Attorney General
ChaWtcey Browmng IS hand
ling the defense

Aaron pretty
sure he'll play
ATLANTA (UPI) - Henry
Aaron sa1d Sunday that all the
detaols haven t been worked
out yet but ol os 99 per cent
sore that he wtll play baseball
agam next season
I haven t made up my mmd
exactly what I m gomg to do
sa1d Aaron who bad been
expected to retire after the 1974
season
All those reports
(about hts plans) are Just
rumors nothmg more
They are not gomg to 1n
fluence my dec1s1on Nobody ts
gomg to make up Hank Aaron s
nund but Hank Aaron Aaron
saod he was d1sappomted m the
front offoce offer made hlm
by the Atlanta Braves for
whom he has played 21 years

lf the court fmds tbe state
neghgent m the two Initial
cases then the remaining 54
cla1ms w11l be hea,rd to
~C

•• ••••• •• ••••••

~..~~0 ... ~· "" •

• "

&gt; » - • •u • •oouo

l the thy after . •. ~

by at ester Tannehill
~
,,~
e"""atlve editor
:t,
Voters wt11 X" e1lher yes or no on Nov 5 a 2 75 tax levy for
operatton of 1ts existing commumty school for the mentally
retarded m Me1gs County Two mills of the totalts new the 75
according to Ertc Chambers, 1s renewal
Oh o
We suppose there ts never a good time to ask for more taxes
Edw n S Cozart
However November 1974 appears to be a untquely bad time
Cha rman
Too many folks have been adversely touched by soarmg prtces of
Dorothy M Johnston
all the things they have to buy to make if from one day to the
0 rector
next It s no secret that wages salanes and penstons have not Dated Oct 4 1974
been equally inflated In fact, that ts one of the first tbeorems
(10) 7 14 21 28 4tc
mastered In Econ I at about any old college that when prices
rtSe wages tend to fall behind It's the nature of the system
Plainly, the case wW have to be strong for the operation levy
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
for the Me1gs County Community School as the school and
EXCESS OF THE TEN
sheltered workshop for the mentally retarded are called if a
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE 1S hereby g ven that
maJortt)' of voters ts to X the yes
n pursuance of a Resolut on of
Chambers, mstructor m the workshop, made a strong case tn the
Counc I of the VIllage of
remarks to the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club Friday evenmg Rae ne Oh o passed on the 6th
of August 1974 there w11t
at Heath Umted Methodist Church His theme had two parts, day
be subm tted to a vote of the
peop e of sa d V111age at a
humarutartan, and economtc
l ELECTION to be held
The school as 1t works today ts the only way a commuruty Genera
ntheV ttageof Rae ne Oh oat
has of movmg the tramable mentally retarded (TMR) and the the regular place of vot ng
there n on Tuesday the 5th day
educable mentally retarded (EMR) away from bemg helpless of
November 1974 the Quest on
dependents on thetr familles and the communt!Y into productive of levying In excess of the ten
lim tafton for the benef t of
generally self-6ufflclent persons Tbe alternative to tralnmg m111
Rae ne VIllage tor the purpose
these handicapped persons - m that condition through no fault of Providing and mamta nmg
apparatus
app l ances
whataoever of lhetr own - ts hardship on lhetr parents and fire
bu td ngs or s tes therefor or
economtc dependency through welfare upon their communtties sources of water supply and
als therefor
or the
1 thmk laxpayers can argue with merit that the state and mater
establ shment and ma1ntenance
federal govertlment alone should support such schools from of lines of f1re alarm telegraph
the payment of permanent
general revenue funds However there ts thts chOice to make if or
part t me or volunteer firemen
support of the schools 1s to come from outStde the commumty or f re f1ght ng com pan e~ to
the same
thetr control also will be from outside The state and federal operate
Sa d tax be ng a renewal of
government already ptcks up much of the tab We have to answer an ex st ng tax of 2 0 m Its to run
the question Is tl worth 2 75mills to do lilts JOb our way (wtlhm tor t ve years at a rate not
exceed ng 2 0 m Its for each one
state standarda)"
dollar of valu~tlon
wh ch
It s easy to denounce local government betng superseded by amounts to twenty cents for
each one hundred dollars of
authorttortan stale and federal agencies But even a little local 11a uat on for Five year s
The Polls for sa1d Elect on
government has to cost somelhmg In our case m Metgs County
w 11 be open at 6 30 o cl ock A M
at this time and place, 2 75 mills
and rem a n open until 7 30
Chambers tn his Rotary remarks decimed to ask for a o c ock P M Eastern Standard
Time of satd day
resolution of approval even for indiVIdual commitments of
By order of the Board of
Elect ons of Me gs County
support .,
Oh o
Rather he pleaded for each person to onvesttgated for
Edw n S Cozllrt
himself the facts of the problems involved tn society doing what
Cha rman
should be done for tts mentally relarded, and then make a
Dorothy M Johnston
deCisiOn
D rector
That s faor enough
Dated Oct 4 1974

';;

DEAR DR LAMB - Wlwt "
vour opm10n of faktn~ c r tl
v1tarmn B 12 for p~rntcuus
REVIVAL OPENS
anenua., I \\as ~ettmg mh
A rev1val wtll begon lhts
temporary benefit from mm evenmg at 7 30 and continue
tn)echons plus B 12 M\ doclor through Oct 27 at the Ftrst
started gtvlng me hqwd tr&lt; n Southern Baptost Church on
\\htch seems to ra1se and Pomeroy Cltfford Coleman
stab1hze m\ blood counl If I formerly of Middleport woll be
TO MEET TUESDAY
can absorb hqwd Iron v. hv not evangelist Special music w1ll
The
Frtendly Neighbors Club
oral 8 12"
be a featlU'e each evenmg
DEAR READER - Y&lt; u Bradley Spencer pastor tn wtll meet at 7 30 p m Tuesday
mght at the home of Mrs Leon
have to have a substance viles thf&gt; pubhc
McKnoght
formed m the stomarh railed
mtrmstc factor to enable you to
absorb B-12 Iron ts Important
m th~ process too If }OU are
deflcienl m the mtrmsic factor
'ou can 1 get B-12 mto the
m1ttee Chainnan Mary Lowse or the events surrounding It
COLUMBUS Oh1o {UP!) bloodstream except by tn
S.mth
saJd here Saturday I were fatal, she SBld, and I
Prestdent
Fords
campa1gn
Jechon So you can absorb Iron
from the dtgesltve \rae\ but or appearancesutsupportofGK&gt;P think he s bemg well rece1ved don'tlhink they re fatal now I
candtdates around the country and yes frankly I thmk tt s think we re domg well tn a lot
VG.U have permc10us anemm
of the parts of the country I
ts a 'real plus for the party m very helpful
vou cannot absorb B 12
the
November
elecitons
ac
chamnan
addressed
the
lhmk we're domg well here m
The
I d hke to add \hal normal
people can swallow B-12 and cordmg to the chatnnan of the annual conference of the Olno Oh1o and I thmk the outcome ts
Republican CounCil, the state gomg to be much better than
use 11 because they have a Republtcan National Comnut
party's black awnliary here people are predicting '
normal amo\Ult or mtrmstc tee
Saturday
I think people are amaous
Makeup of the present Ohto
factor "hile pahents wt\h
to see lhe Prestdent com
'I am glad to see hun (Ford) congressional
delegation,
perniCIOUS anemia do not
out she sa1d It s a thing he dommated by Republicans
ltkes to do and does well It s a more than 2 to I, will remain
real plus
much the same after the
The party s chances m the electton
predtcted
the
Nov 5 electiOns are much chatrman
better nattonwtde than some
I have great hope for Ohto I
have predicted the chaiTllllln think we're gomg to have a
saJd
governorship here, and I think
I
never
tho~ht Watergate
the Senate race ts gomg well,'
altogether bleak
vahon
Imperative
and
she satd
Utilities In llllnots Utah, asked the governor for a
West Virginia, New York, curtailment of store hours
Clh10 Kentucky Georgia, electrical s1gns and displays
Alabama Florida and Penn
and sports and cultural events
sylvama sa1d they had
U S Steel sa1d steel produc
anywhere from 4S to 90 days lion would be cut m half wtthm
supply of stockpiled coal
two weeks of a strike, and
Local Tn County ComTheir spokesmen said they Bethlehem said a coal mmers
mumty Concert offlctals
thought -wtlh the help of some strike would slow 1ts operations
receiVed word from Portscustomer restramt -they Wllhm three days
mouth today that the Nov 11
could weather a UMWA strike,
A strike of any duration
George Sherlng Concert m
now threatened for Nov 12
would shut down the steel m
Porlsmoulh is sold out and
'lbe Tennessee Valley Au- dustry
WASHINGTON (UPI) said Bethlehem
that no out-of town vtsttors wtll
thority however, depends on Pres1dent Fredenck W West PreSident Ford says his talks be admitted
coal for about 80 per cent of the Jr
wtth hard-nosed Republican
Tile local spokesman pointed
electne~ty It generates
Quinn Morton of the professionals have convinced out however, that any member
About 75 per cent of its Kanawha Coal Operators him that his party s chances in wishing to attend a George
suppbes come from UMW
Association m West Vorglnla next month 8 elections are less Sbermg Concert may do so this
contract mines to serve all of concurred adding, It would dismal than the polls mdicate
Wednesday begmning at 8 15
Tennessee and parts of VIr
In an Interview Sunday, Ford p m at Lancaster in the
close down the coal Industry gmta North Carolin•, Georgu~
period'
defended hta decision to devote Lancaster
High
School
Alabama, Mlssisalppl and Kenmuch of ht8 time to campatgrt
auditoroum Rl 37, North
tucky
Two major West Vorglnta mg for Republicans
In anticipation of a miners utiltltes, Appalachtan Power
I think I spend enough time
PARTY PLANNED
strike, the TVA has been Co and Monongahela Power m the Oval Office to get the
Tile Twin City Sltrlnettes will
warmng tts customers for a Co , satd lf there is a prolonged work done " be said 'I have
year to begm conserving, even strike, they wtll ask customers enough time to decide what's meet at 7 30 p m Thursday for
a Halloween Party at the home
right and what's wrong "
asking for a 15 to 1lJ per cent to curtail fuel use
Tom Duncan, president of
vo!Wltary reduction in fuel use
He also shrugged off the of Mrs James Clatworlhy In
Lately, the meoaages have the Kentucky Coal Assoclatton suggestton that his own influ- Middleport
SBld Kentucky s electric In- ence and polittcal prestige wtll
gotten stronger
Officials say that a strike this dustry ts "as well off as any m wane lf the GOP takes a
year the length of the 1971 the country and wtll be less beating Nov 5
GOP could lose another 40 or 50
affected"
'If I don't do anything and seats In the Houae and seven or
strike ---45 days -would ex
But he Satd "lbere ts only we lose," be mUsed, ''Republi- •eight Senate seats
haust most of the stockpiles of
so
much you can stockpile and cans in the House would say,
1ts coal-fired plants Some
In that event, lite President
plants, like the one at Bull Run, you can only ke!!P so much on He didn t even try '"
said, big spenders will be Jn.
A relaxed, shirt-sleeved control of govertlment '''lbe
Tenn , only have an IIJ.day hand without deterioration
And !ben there s the questton if President, drink In hand, key to the Treasury will be
stockpile
you could move stockpiles cruising 1lome at 25,000 feet thrown away and the money
TV A Chalnnan Aulrey J
and 600 miles an hour abOard will be pourmg out "
If voluntary during a strike '
Wagner said
Two southern Illlnols ftrmS, Air Force One talked with
(energy-saving) efforts do not
Democrats expect to make
provide suffic1ent savings, the seeking to guarantee a coal reporters Saturday night; wt gains but not by such large
only alternattve wtll be more supply for electttclly, asked for ground rules for the tntervlew margins as Ford mentioned.
strmgent mea•ures
in- a .450,000 loan fro,n the prohibited publlcatton until Some see a ptckup of 20 or 30
cluding rationing or man- National Rural Electric Utili Sunday
Houae seats and perhaps two or
ties Association and the Rural
He was on his way home three in the Senate
datory allocation of power "
In Pennsylvania, the llliila- Electrification Administration from a 16-ltour day of cam
Ford told reporters his
delplua Electtlc Co SBld its ~ to buy a draglme to connect pa1gnlng for Republicans conversations with reliable
day stockpile of coal could them to str1p numng opera lacmg uphill odds m South and Republican leaders he cllltsldNorth Carolina and in Ken- ers realists convinced him that
carry tl through a strike, but hons
tucky
the Pennsylvania Electric As
llllnBS are "not as pessimistic
soclation and the two steel
Louisvtlle
where as some of the polla would lead
At
The Alabama Power Co
giants, u s Steel and Beth earlier thts year contracted for Republicans patd $15 to eat you to believe "
lehem Steel told another story 100 000 tons of Australian coal cold chicken and roast beef
What sort of net gains or
PEA satd a coal stroke would and IS now negotiatmg for sandwtches from clirdbOard ldsses t1oes he anticipate •
boxes, Ford acknowledged the
make enforced energy conser more a spokesman satd
I II tell you better in a
posslbtllty extsted that the week be satd

Ohio GOP likes Ford help

Berrys World

I

Prestdent fOrd has asked me to tell you to
wasta lass - EAT THAT ALL UPI

,

Shering concert
is a sellout

Chances
not had
--Ford

1101 7 14 21

NOTICE OF

Steelers take
over top spot
PITTSBURGH (UPI)
Tradtlton and a gutty performance by Roy Gerela
helped us coach Chuck Noll
satd m assessmg the Pittsburgh Steelers v1ctory over
the Cleveland Browns
It s traditional for our
defense to sel up scores he
sa1d
Gerela was m pam
becatrJe of a muscle LDJury m
his rightthogh but hts two loeld
goals and two conversiOns
made the difference
The Steelers edged the
Browns 20-16 man AFL Central
DiVIston game Sunday to raose
theor record to 4-11 and bolster
theor hopes for a dtVIston
playoff
Too many people underrate
the Browns because of the1r
record Noll satd Remem
ber they lost to three other
teams whose combined record
shows only two defeats
I figured before the game
we better get to the Browns
qmck or the crowd wouldn t be
wtth us
Fumbled A Pass
- ThOsteelers responded by
scormg woth only 4 07 gone
Safety Mike Wagner pounced
on the ball after Hugh
McKinnts fumbled a pass from
Mtke Phipps and ran 15 yards
to set the stage for Preston
Pearson s six yard scormg
sweep f1ve plays later
Pittsburgh mcreased its ad
vantage to 14-0 m the second
perood after the defense throt
tied the Browns deep tn thetr
own terntory Tackle Joe
Greene sacked Ph1pps for a s1x
yard loss down to the Browns
SIX yard !me and after Hugh

McKinms was tossed for a two
yard loss Cleveland was
forced to punt
Rookte Lynn Swann returned
the punt 17 yards to the
Cleveland 28 and on the mnth
play Franco Harrts barged
over from the one and Gerela
added hts second converswn
Gerela who InJUred hts nght
leg m the pr~ame wannup
saod when he lrted for his forst
f1eld goal he satd to hlmself
It s only 31 yards away I
gotta get the hall up m the atr
As soon as I ktcked pains shot
through my leg It hurt when I
kicked the conversiOns and
that second fteld goal
Contamed 10 their own
terrttory until 2 22 remammg
m the first half Cleveland
surged for two scores
Begmnmg
at
m1dheld
Cleveland moved to P1tts
burgh s 18 after the Steelers
were penalized five yards for
holdmg and then 15 for
roughmg lhe passer Unable to
pass Phipps scrambled for the
f1rst Browns score
March for Score
The Browns marched 61
yards lor a score set up by
defenstve end Ntck Roman s
recovery of Harr1s s ftunble
On the next play MIX Ph1pps
hurled to Milt Moron for a
touchdown
Greenwood
blocked Don Cockroft s con
verston attempt to deny the
Browns a chance to tie the
score at 14-14 wtth sox seconds
left m the balf
I barely lipped the ball woth
my lmger Greenwood satd
The Browns !mal score came
early m the fourlh pertod on

Es1•te

of

Deceased

Earl

Sport Parade

28 4tc

Case No 21323

V

Gorham

COUNTY

MANNING D WEBSTER
JUDGE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBA'"'TE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
10 11 He

By MILfON RICHMAN
UPI Sport. Edllor

MEIGS

Not rce Is hereby gwen that
PUBLIC NOTICE
Thomas Heyman of Syracuse
The follow ng documents
Oh o has been duly appointed
Administrator of tl'le Estate of were received or prepared by
Ohio
Environmental
Earl V Gorl'lam deceased late the
Protection Agency during the
of Meigs County Ohio
week
Anyone
Creditors are reQuired to file previous
their clarms w th sad frduclary aggneved or adversely affected
by issurence or renewal of any
wrthtn four months
11cense(s)
or
Dated this 17th day of October permlt(s)
var lllnce(s) may request an
1974
adlud 1cat on hearmg by written
Mannmg 0 Webster request pursuant to Oh o
Revised Code Sect on 3745 07
Judge w
th n th1rty (30) days of the
(10) 21 28 (11) .4 Jtc
d rectors proposed action to
Issue or deny such documents
That statute does not prov de
NOTICE OF ELECTION
for hear ng requests to the
ON TAX LEVY IN
OEPA
on
applications
EXCESS OF THE TEN
revocations
modifications
MILL LIMITATION
complaints
ver1f ed com
NOTICE rs hereby grven that plamts certif cat1ons leases
or final act 1ons
In pursuance of a Resolutron of orders
Within
JO days of pubtlcat on
the Board of County Com
m ssioners of the County of of this not1ce any person may
(1) Subm 1 wntten
Meios Pomeroy Ohio passed also
on the 30th day of August 1974 comments relating to act1ons
th ere w II be subm ltfed to a vote proposed actions complaints
(2)
of the people of said County at a or ver1fled compia nts
Request
a
publ
c
meetmg
Genera l ELECTION to be held
n the County of Meigs Oh o at regard ng proposed actions
the reg ular places of voting and or (3) Request notice of
there1n on Tuesday the 5th day further actions on proceedings
Requests for hearings on f nal
of November 197.4 the question
act
ons to 1ssue deny modify
Of levying In excess of the ten
m II lim ltatlon for the benefit of revoke or renew perm 1ts
Meigs r.:ounty for the purpose of licenses or variances that are
the ma ntenance and operation not preceded by proposed ac
of schools
training centers tons and so ldent1t ed m th1S
workshops and c1rnics for notice should be sent to the
Env!ronm ental
Board
of
menta ll '( retarded persons
Sa d tax being a renewal of a Review Suite 505 33 North H gh
tax of 0 75 mills and an Increase Street Columbus Ohio 43215
Atl other requests for ad
Of 2 0 mIlls to constitute a tl!lx of ludlcat
on hearings and other
2 75 mi ll s to run for Five years
communlcat
ons concerning
at a rate not exceeding 2 75
hearings
pub l c
m Us for each one do ll ar of publ c
ad1Ud cat ons
valUation Wh ch amounts to meetings
Twenty seven and one ha1f hear ngs compla nts of any
cents for each one hundred kind and regulations shou l d be
do11ars of valuation tor Five addressed to the Lega l Records
Sect1on Ohio EPA P 0 Box
years
Ohio 43216
The Polls for said E l ection 1049 Columbus
(614) 466 6037
Wil l be open at 6 JO o clock A M
Unless otherw1se stlllted n
and remain open unt I 7 30
all other
o clock P M Eastern Standard particular nohces
communications
nciudmg
Time of said day
By order of the Board of comments on proposed act1ons
and
requests
for
publ c
El ectrons
of Me gs County
meetings should be addresse(f
Oh o
Edwin S Cozart either to the New Source A r ol'
NPDES Perm1t Records Sec
Cha rmllln
lion wh lch ever Is appropr1l11te
Dorothy M Johnsto.n at The Ohio EPA P 0 Box
D rector 1049 Columbus Ohio 43216
Apptlcat on for var ance from
Dated October 4 1974
sewer connect1on ban
Tuppers Pla1ns Volunteer
(10) 7 14 21 28 4tc
F re Dept and Tuppers Pia ns
Comm
St Rt 681 - Orange Twp
Tuppers PIBIOS Ohio
IN THE
United Method st Church
COMMON PLEAS COURT
St Rt 7 - Orange Twp
PROBATE DIVISION
Tuppers Ptams Oh o
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
Issuance of N PDEA Perm1t
V 11age of Pomeroy
IN THE MATTER OF SET
NW I ntersection Main &amp;
TLEMENT 01-' ACCOUNTS
PROBAl E COURT ME I GS Spring St
COUNTY OHIO
Pomeroy Oh 10
Recelv no waters Ohio River
Permit No BSJ2 AD
Accounts and vouchers of the
following named f!ductar es
( 101 21 ltc
have been flied n the Probate
Court Me1gs County Ohio for
approval and settlement
CASE NO 21 122 First and
F nal Account of Clyde F sher
Exe ... utor ot the Estate of Lorna
o owens Deceased
CASE NO 21 23J First and
Final Account of Carr1e E
Grueser Admin stratrlx of the
Estlllte of K
A
Grueser
Qeceased
Unless exceptions are flied
thereto said accounts w II be
for hear ng before sa1d Court on
ttre 19th day of November 1974
at WhiCh t me sad accounts will
be considered and contmued
from day to day unt1t f.nally
disposed of
Any person Interested may
f le wr tten excephons to sa1d
lllccounts or to matlers per
taln1ng to the execution of the
trust not less than five days
pr or to the dlllte set for heo}rlng

NEW YORK (UPI) - Charlie Finley belteves m the direct
approach If he likes you he can be generous to the poml of
completely overwheimutg you If he doesn t ltke you look out
Subtle he s not
Now tl so happens he tsn t parllcularly crazy about Bowte
Kuhn
The truth ts he doesn t cotton to hlm a\ all and tf he could
posstbly swmg tt he d like to see Kubn out as Baseball Com
missioner
This hardly comes as btg news to Kuhn He has known how
Finley feels about him for some time now and m case he nee~ed
any further remmder he was gtven what he had to constder an
lmperlinent one m Oakland htst Thursday rught after the A s had
nailed down lhetr thord stratght world champwnshop
As owner and bosa of the trtumphant A s Charlie Finley was
the logiCal man to accept the world champiOnship trophy from
the commiSSioner but he flatly refused
He wanted nothing at all to do wtlh Bowte Kuhn
Finley s resentment of certam actions taken agamst him by
Kubn dates all the way hack even more than two years ago when
Kubn fmed hlm $2,500 for paying mcenhve bonuses to Joe Rudi
Gene Tenace and Mike Hegan Last year Kuhn hit Fmley agam
lhls time with a $7 000 plaster for a seroes of three mlracitons the
most costly tunung out to be the Mike Andrews' affaor
Charlie Fmley can he rockform when he chooses
Elated as he was over hts club s thord consecullve lttle no
amount of persuaswn could get hlm to stand up there on the same
platfonn wtth Kuhn m the As clubhouse and accepl the award
from him Thursday rught When you stop to cons1der that Charlie
knew the ceremony would be carroed over national teleViBton
and It 1sn t his nature exactly to run away and h1de from
publicity you begin to get some tdea of how warmly he feels
toward the commtsStoner
Three of the A s Sal Bando Regg1e Jackson and Campy
Campanerts, got up on tbe platfonn With Bowte Kuhn, and
Bando, the club s classy captam.third baseman accepted the
trophy on behalf of Charlie Finley and all the As making an
excellent ltttle speech
Then Reggte Jackson was asked to say a few words
You may remember Kuhn had reprlm80ded Jackson the day
before for his run-111 wtlh a sports wrtter He also threatened
Jackson wtth suspenston if there was any repetition of the
episode, and that burned up Finley also
Jackson said a few words for the beneftl of all those millions of
oolookers out there m the great beyond and then he suddenly
produced an open bottle of champagne and poured some of the
contents over Kubn's head
Tile commtSSioner trted to duck but couldn t get out of the
way Jackson was rtght on the money and Kuhn got soaked The
commissioner laughed but he wasn t what ,you would call
terribly overJOyed
It s okay,' said one of hts securoty men standtn• ne•r the
plalfqrm It s 8 wash-and wear swt anyway
Bowie Kuhn s seven-year contract, calling for $150,000 a year
plus expenses, expores In February ol1976 A vote will be taken
sometime before then to detenmne whether to tender him a new
contract or lind a new commlsstoner
There was a strong anU-Kubn bloc not that long ago a vocal
group that included Finley, Mike Burke Jerry Hoffberger
Ewlpg Kauffman and Bob Short among others GUSSie Busch and
Buzzle Bavasi cant exactly be descrobed as btg boosters of
Kuhn s either, and Tom Yawkey generally goes along whtchever
way the majority does
When 1t comes time to say yea or nay 1! wtll take nine votea m
each league to extend Kuhn's contract Or lookmg altt another
way four no 8 in both leagues lB alltt would take to unseat him
In Kubn's favor at the moment Is the fact Burke and Short no
longer are in baseball and Holfberger seemmgly ts lookmg to get
out Moreover, there doesn t seem to be any real new outstanding
candldllte for the COIIllll1S0100ershlp in the wings
This won't stop Charlie Finley from feeling !lie way he does
about l!owle Kuhn, though, and from conlinuing to try g~neratong
some steam for a new colJl1111Mloner He gets an idea in htB mmd
and he Maya with II
Ask llltk Willlalns A.It V1da BlUe Ask Sowle Kltlu'l

I

I

Cockroft s 21 yard fteld goal
whoch brought Cleveland to
witlun one pomt of the Steelers
17 16lead
Coach Ntck Skonch whose
team won tls opener then
dropped t\s next four games
lamented the breaks that went
agamst hts team
We had too many bad
breaks he sa1d I know 11 s
tough when you re behmd 1-6m
the conference but we would
have to rely on Pittsburgh and
Cmcmnatl losmg some games
and us wmnmg some from now
on
Gave Ball Away
We hurt ourselves when we
gave the ball away Bull found
some sallsfactlon - Phipps
played his best game of the
season and our pass rush was
much lmproved
Skonch had no comment
about h1s status Last week
owner Art Modell parned
queshon on Skoroch s future
He satd a dectston would be
made -even If the Browns
lost- m a nonnal dehberate
way and wtth dogn1ty
Phtpps sa1d he thought there
was sttll a chance to WID when
he moved the team to the
Steelers 17 wtth a little more
than two mmutes left tn the
game
But tl doesn t take many
m1stakes to hurt you and my
btggest was when Glenn Ed
wards mtercepted a pass
Edwards returned the mter
cept10n 59 yards to the
Cleveland 31 endmg the
Browns hope for a comeback
VIctory

College Scores

APPOINTMENT

I~

I

»

.."'='!,oY..o:O;,o "o"o' ........
'&gt; X~

~"oY..Yo!o

.:w:w.&lt;.t»;;n::•v•••'VW'oWNo"•"_..., .,-;o.-.., .,•...,

Steelmakers fear coal
lacking in long strike
By BROOKE W KROEGER
United Press lntematiooal
Ali but a few utihty compa
nles lhmk they have ample coal
suppltes to withstand both a
cold turn-up-the.l!eat wmter
and a threatened United Mine
Workers strike but a walkout
could ahut down the steel in
dustry
Some less secure utiltties
expectmg the worst have
asked state govertlments to put
mandatory fuel....,vmg meas
ures mto effect according to a
UPI survey showed
For steel and coat compames the outlook was

determine the amount of
damages to be awarded If the
court finds lor the state, the
other suits wt11 be dismtssed

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON T'AX LE;VY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTI CE s hereby g1ven that
n pursuance of a ResQiutlon ot
th e Council of the '&lt;flllage of
Syracuse Oh o passed on the
lst day of AuguSt 1974 there
will be subm tted to a vote of the
peop e ot sa 1d V llage at a
General ELECTION to be held
in the v 1 age of Syracuse Oh o
at lhe regular place of vot ng
therein on Tuesday the 5th day
of November 1974 the quest on
of evy ng n excess of the ten
m 11 m tat on for the benefit of
Syracuse V1llage for the pur
pose of Current Exp~nses
Sa d tax being a renewal of
an ex1s11ng tax of 30m 11s to run
for f ve years at a rate not
exceeding 30m I s tor each one
doll&amp;r of valuat1on
wh ch
amounts to Th rty Cents fo r
each one hundred dollars Of
valuat on tor F ve- years
The Polls for sa d Elect on
w 11 be ooen at 6 30 o clock A M
and rema n open unt I 7 30
o clock P M Eastern Standard
T me ot sa d day
By order of the Board of
Elect ons
of Me gs County

I

•

I(

By United Press International
East
Attghny 26 wash a. Jeff 0
Amherst 27 Rochester U 0
Boston U 14 Buckne11 10
Brdgwtr Mass 13 Bates 9
Coast Guard 48 Tufts 28
Dartmouth 7 Brown 6
Delaware 14 Leh gh 7
Harvard 39 Cornell 27
Hofstra 21 Fordham 21
Howard 48 W Va State 0
Ithaca 24 W 1kes 14
Ma ne 7 Conn 0
Mass 17 R
7
M am F a 21 w va 20
N H 38 vermont 21
Northeastern 52 Sp f d 30
Norw ch 21 Boston .$ 1 l6
Penn 37 lafayelle 7
Penn Sf 30 Syracuse 1-l
Ptsbgh 35 Boston Cot I 11
Pr nceton 33 Colgate 24
Stppry Rock 41 Waynesbg 3
Temple 56 Holy Cross 0
Tr n 1ty Conn l7 Colby 0
wsn M ch 20 M&amp;rshalt 17
w 11 ams 10 Bowdon 6
Ya e 42 Co um b a 2
South
A l abama 28 Tenn 6
A l abama A&amp;M 22 F sk 12
Auburn 31 Ga Tech 22
Clemson 17 Cuke l3
Drake 38 LOUISVIlle 35
E Tenn St 24 Furman 13
F1sk 22 Al a A&amp;M 12
Fla 24 Fla St 14
Ga 38 Vanderb1ll Jl
Gram bl ng 20M ss Vly 14
Ky 20 LSU 1J
La Tech 34 NW LOUISiana 0
Md 47 Wall.e Forest 0
M1n St 29 Memph S Sf 28
N C 33 North Car Sf 14
S C 10M ss 7
southern :n Jackson St 19
Sou MISS IS VM 14
Tulane 30 C tadel 3
Tuskegee 48 Morehouse u
va 28 va Tech 27
Wm &amp; Mary 28 Rutgers 15
Midwest
Drake 38 Lou sv lie 35
Ill n01s 21M ch St 21
Iowa St 23 Kensas St 18
Mar etta 21 wooster 13
M 1am1 0 34 Bwtn9 Green 10
M1Ch gan 24 Wlsconsm 20
Mmnesota 23 iowa 17
Nebraska 56 Kansas 0
N 0 31 N D Sf 20
No Ill 17 So Ill 1
Notre Dame A8 Army 0
Oh o St 49 tnd ana 9
Oh o u 49 Morehead St 10
Otterbein 28 MuSk ngum 10
Purdue 31 Northwestern 26
S 0 20 S D St 6
Toledo 38 Dayton 27
Utah St 27 Kent St 24
wsn M ch 20 Marsh ell 17
Southwest
Ab 1lene Chrstn 31 E lex Sf 13
Houston JS Vi ll anova 0
Lamar 10 Arkansas St 6
N Tex St 24 N Mex St 19
Oklahoma St 31 Mo 7
s F Aust n 12 sw Te•as 7
SMU 19 R ce 14
Texas 38 Ar.kansas 7
Texas A&amp;M l7 TCU 0
Texas Tech 17 Arizona 8
Tulsa 17 W T ... •as St 14

•

Pro Standings
NFL Stand ngs
Bv Un ted Pr ess Intern at anal
A mer c;an Confcrc nc:c
Eo1st
w I 1 pe t pi pa
Nf'W Eng
5 I 0 83 3 76 9
Buffalo
Mam
NY Jets
Ba 1 more

S I 0
4 ' 0
I

S 0

833
667
167
/)]

137 105

113 I I I

88 111 I

N HL

Stand ngs

Bv Un1ted Pre ss Internal onal
D v so n

I I ~Is

w

NY sln d r S
3 I
Ph a
3 '1
Alanta
3 '1
NV Rangers
2 ?
D1v sto n 2

1

''
';

I

pts

l 2

8

3 l 0
2 'l 1

6

w

I

St. Louis only team zn
NFL with perfect mark

5 17 and 2 yards as the carries w1th 40 for 156 yards
By FRED DOWN
Cowboys snapped \heor four
UPI Sports Wnter
and one touchdown while Bert
w 1 1 pel
pi pa
'i
game
losmg
s
treak
and
the
Jun
Hart
s
ch1ef
claun
to
Jone s ran for two scores and
750 131 99 M nn
P ttsburgh 4 1
I 3
3
0 5o 0
0 fame after e1ght pro seasons
Kan C ty
Eagles four game wmmng passed for another lt was the
C nc nnat
0 VISIOn 3
4 ' 0 M7 160 01
Cleveland
s 0 61 98 63
w I t ph was that he once thre" the streak The Cowboys scored Colts first \ ct ory m stx
9 longest non scormg pass m the wmrung touchdown when
Los Ang
3 o 3
games
Hou ston
67 79 46 Detro f
I S 0
4 I 0
quHrterback
Roger
Staubach
Naltonal
Football
League
hos
West
5
Broncos 27 Chargers 7
Montrea
1 2 3
4 tory
P tt sbur gh
2 2 0
sneaked over from the one w1th
Floyd Little 1an six yards for
w 1 t per
pf pa wash ngton
3
1 4
Today
he
ts
the
quarterback
9
44
left
on
the
game
5 1 0 833 148 89
Oak and
one
touchdown and 72 to set up
0 v s on 4
W I t pi S of the only unbeaten team m
Redsklns 2~ Gtants 3
another for the Broncos now 3
Denver
3 2 I 583 125 120 Buffa o
3 2
7
Sonny Jurgensen ra1sed his 2 1 after three stra1ght wms
Kan C ty
2 4 0 3ll 89 110 Toronto
2 1 3
7 the leag ue and the guy the St
SanD ego
1 5 0 167 7~ 120 ca t
1 4 2
&lt;1
Loms Cardmals hope can lead career total of touchdown
!'he Broncos look a i7-1! half
Nat anal conferen ce
Boston
2 2 1
5
passes
to
201
as
he
led
the
them
to
all
that
moola
and
East
time
lead and never were
Saturday s Results
w 1 t pet pi pa
Ph adelph a 6 P ttsburgh 3
exc1tement leading up to Super Red skins to thetr easy wm wtth s enous l ~ threaten ed
6 0 0 1 000 149 84
St Lou s
N Y Rangers 4 N Y
s an
three payoff pttches The hrst
Bowl gold
ders ')
Ph a
4 2 o 667 118 72
Hart who threw a 98-yard followed a blocked New York
Montrea 5 Ca torn a 1
wash ngton 4 2 0 667 14 78
Vancouver 5 Toron o 4
non scor mg pass to Bobby punt by Moke Holl tho second
Dalla s
2 4 0 333 10 104
Oetro t 6 Wash-Ington 4
167
61
1')0
NVG ants 1 50
Wes l
Moore agatnst the Los Angeles an mtercept10n by Bng Owens
Ch cago 3 St Lou s I
Central
Ar zo a S 32 Ut ah 0
Buffalo 2 M nnesola 1
and
th
e
last
a
pockoff
by
Chrts
Dec
10
1972
to
set
the
Rams
w 1 t pet pf pa
A r F o ce 9 Na v y 6
Los Angeles 3 Kansas C v 0
s
0 833 140 8 1
Hamburger
M nn
Br ghm Yn q J5 Tex El Paso 2
dub1ous record threw touch
Sundays Re su lt s
Va n couver I NV Rangers 0
Rams
37
49ers
14
Green Bay 3 2 0 600 82 97
Montreal 2 Ph adelph a 2 I e down passes of six and 40 yards
Ch cago
James Harrts threw three
2 l 0 400 79 66
At ant a 5 P H sbu rgh
to wide recetver Earl1homas
Detro t
2 4 0 333 B4 90
Toronto 5 Buffa o 5 I e
touchdown passes mcluding
92
seconds
apart
m
the
second
West
N y Is anders 5 Wash ngton
w 1 t pet pf pa o
penod Sunday to lead the two to Lawrence McCutcheon
4 2 0 667 I 4 74
Los Ang
Bos on 5 Ca torn a 0
Cardinals to a 31 27 trtumph and also ran for a TO hftmg
0t1 caga 6 M nnesota &lt;I
Atlanta
2 &lt;1 0 333 53 84
the Rams to thell' fourth VlC
over the Houston Otlers
Mondays Games
New Or!
2 &lt;1 0 333 67 11&lt;1 1No games sc hedu l ed
tory m s1x games
It
was
the
SIXth
slraoght
San Fran
2 4 0 333 72 132
Sundays Results
Saints 13 Falcons 3
VIctory
for
th
e
Cardinals
who
WHA Stand1ngs
Bat more 35 NY Jets 20
By Un1ted Press 1nternat1onal
Bobby Scotts 36-yard pass to
became
the
only
unbeaten
P ttsburgh 20 C evetand 16
East
Paul
Seal wtth I 52 left 1n the
New Or eans 13 At ant a 3
w I f piS team m the league when the
wash ngton 24 NY Gants l
3
1
0
Cleve and
Stale Farm has a pol q• espec ally
Buffalo B1lls shaded the New first half produced the only
Buffalo 30 New England 28
2
1 I 0
Ch cage
de~ gned lo
ente ~ The cost s
touchdown
of
the
game
The
St Lou s 31 Houston 27
England
Patnots
30-28
and
1 0
New England
ow the serv ce s grl'!at ,t,nd with
Detro t 20M nnesota 16
0 the Detrott Lions defeated the
0 3 0
our lnfl at on Cove aRe you p ond anapo s
Fakons who gamed only 64
Dallas 31 Ph Iadet ph a 24
tection can a ways star ul)-lo date
West
yards
rotshmg
and
110
passmg
La'S Angeles 37 San Franc sea
automat cal y Just what you d
w I I piS Monnesota V1kmgs 20 16
l'!xpec:t I om the worlds Jl 1 home
14
5
Phoen x
2 0 I
on
a
47
yard
f1eld
scored
ftrst
In
other
games
Dalla
s
nsure
Ca lor dela s
M am 9 Kansa s C ty 3
2
San D ego
I 1 0
goal
by
N1ck
Mike
Mayer
but
Denver 27 San 0 ego 7
defeated
Pholadelphoa
31
24
2
M ch gan
1 2 0
STEVE
Oak. and 30 C nc nnat 27
2 Washmgton whipped the New
Houslon
1 2 0
then were stopped cold
Mondays Game
0
M nnesota
0 1 0
SNOWDEN
Dolphins 9 Chlels 3
Green Bay at Ch cago n ght
York Goants 24-3 Los Angeles
Canad1an
Sunday s Games
SSl
Russel St
w 1 f pis npped San Franc1sco 37 14
The Dolphms pulled ~ut the
Balf more at M am
6
(Gravel H II)
Toronto
J 0 0
VIctory when Larry Csonka
Denver at Cleve and
4 New Orleans upset Atlanta 13W nn peg
2 0 0
M ddl eport
Los Angeles al NY Jets
2 3 MlaiTII pulled out a 9-3 VIC
Quebec
1 0 0
plunged over from the one wtlh
Oh o
Houston at C ncmna
2
Vanco uv er
1 3 0
17
seconds
left
m
the
game
Jan
tory
over
Kansas
Ctty
Ch cago at Buffa o
0
'
•
•
h
''"
e
992 71 55
Edmonton
0
0
oa tas at NY Gants
CJtt • ,.. iiiiJiJji;
Satu..-dav s Results
stenerud ktcked a 21 yard f1eld
Baltunore
htunlltated
the
Jets
Green Bay at Detro I
New Eng and 2M ch gan 1
Ph tladelph a at New Orleans
3S 20 Oakland rallted for a 30- goal for the Chiefs
C eve and 3M nnesota 1
wash ngton at Sf L ou s
san o ego 6 Houston 2
Colts 3S Jets 20
27
wm over Cmcmnall Pttls
New England at M nnesota
sunday s Results
The Colts vtrtually rushed
burgh
beat
Cleveland
20-16
Kansas C ty at San D ego
Vancouver 3 Ch c ago
Oak and at San Franc sea
Toronlo 4 M ch gan 3
and Denver topped San Doego Joe Namath off the foeld as
Mondays Game
Quebec 4 tnd anapol s 1
they dealt the Jets theor ftflh
Atlanta at P ttsbur gh n ght
27 7
Cleveland 4 Phoen x 4 ol
Monday s Games
The Green Bay Packers play loss m s1x games I ydeU p 7409
N BA Standings
1No games schedu ed
the ChiCago Bears m Chicago Motchell set an NFL record for
By un ted Press Internal anal
Eastern conlerent:e
m the Monday mght teleVIsiOn
All ant c D1v s on
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
game
wlpctgb
FOOTBALL RESULTS
2
01000
Ph Ia
Hart s two touchdown passes
Bv Un ted Press tnternattonal
1
I
500
New York
c
e East 0 C e East Tech 0 I e
came after recovered fwnbles
1 500
Buffalo
Cle Chane
23 C e Centra l
1
1 500
Boston
and enabled the Cardmals to
Ca ho c 6
Central 01v1s on
Berksh re 33 C e Lutheran East overt'Ome a 10-7 Houston lead
w I pet 9 b
Wash ngton
1 0 1 000
14 Hart wound up passmg for 134
va l ey
Pym a tun ng
At an fa
1
500
2
Ledgemont 0
yards w1th 14 completions m 20
Houston
1
500
Shaker He ghts 35 Eu c l d 20
Cleveland
0 3 000
2 1 C e Granv e 24 C e John Hay 6 attempts Dan Pastor1m compNew Or I
0
3 000
2
Tuscarawas
Va Icy
32 leted 26 of 40 for 354 yards for
weste..-n conference
Stra sburg 0
M dwest 0 V SIOn
Ca th ot c
52 the Oilers
b
Tu scarawas
w 1 pet •
Malvern 0
The Btlls handed the Patrwts
Ch cago
2 0 1 000
Whee n g W Va l Central 26
Detro t
2 0 1 000
their
f1rst loss m s1x games as
Be a r e 0
KC Omaha
2 0 1 000
Jeff er son Un on 29 Warwood Joe Ferguson threw touchdown
M lwa uk.ee
0 2 000 2
W Va) 12
passes two to Paul Seymour
Pac f c D1v son
w I pet • b 0Pennsboro {W Va 16 Front er
People trust us to handle their savings
Allie Taylor s second touch
Los Ang
1 1 500
Cos Watterson 42 Cos OeSales
Portland
500
down of the game 3 47 mto the
Phoen x
500
Cos St Charles 44 C n Me
fourth
penod rallied the Lions
G dn State
1 1 500
N chota::. 6
Se&amp;tt e
1
2 333
to
theor
triumph over the
7
Bedford Chane I 23 C e Catha c 6
What makes us a different
Saturdays Results
Ak ron Ellet 8 Akron Buchtel 3 V1kmgs
Bill
Munson com
KC Omaha 94 Phoen x 91
BnlliU
kind of loan company
Un Sc hoo 21 Buffa o Nicholas 8
Boston 113 B uffa lo 95
To Df'V tb ss 21 Day Roosevetl pleted 22 of 32 passes 10 of
better
kind
of
makes
us
a
Ph adelph a 99 New York 86
14
them to Ron Jessoe for the
Atlanta 118 Hous ton 112
loan company
To Centra 28 Tot Scott 12
wash ngton 110 New Orleans M dd etown Fenw ck 22 Lakota Lions who won only theor
92
19
second game in stx starts
Ch c:ago 87 M !waukee 70
War WR 27 Sf V ncent St Mary
Go den State
13 C eve and 0
Cowboys 31 Eagles 24
12" r= Mam St • 992 2171
110
K sk
8 Western
R ese rve
Calvm Htll scored on runs of
Detro t122 Portland 99

s 0

75 169

Central

3

V(lln couver
Ch cago
Sl Lou s

•

&gt;~ente~sc

rnoue 1n with
State Fartm

'

--·-

TRUST US

TO HANDLE
A LOAN OF

"

$500.

'

sundays Results
KC Omaha 105 Los Ange es 95
Sealtte 100 Cleveland 93
Monday s Games
(No games scheduled)

ABA Stand ngs
By Un1t1'!d Press International
EASt
w 1 pet g b
2 01000
Kentucky
1 0 1 000
V rg.n a
1 1 500
I
Memph s
1
1 1 500
Sf LOU S
1 2 333
New York
1 '
West
w 1 pet g b
San Anton o
2 0 l 000
1
SanDego
1 01000
1 '
Oenver
0 I 000
2
tnd1ana
0 2 000
2
Utah
0 3 000
Saturday s Resulls
Denver 111 New York 103
San Anton o 114 Memph s 94
V rg n a 96 Utah 94
Sunday s Games
Kentucky 101 lnd &amp;na 92
Sl Lou s 116 Utah 109
San D ego 116 New York 110
Monday s Games
(No games schedu l ed l

crrYWAN
&amp;SAVINGS

Academy 0
F eld 12 Cr estwood 7
Canton T m ken 40 G lmour
Academy 20
Newark Catha c 29 Johnstown 11
Harr son 17 Taylor 7

Can ! e d 32 Warren Kennedy 6
Easl
L verpoo
14
N es
McK nley 13
McDona d 34 Lowellv lie 6
Rhodes 15 L ncoln West 8
F nd ay 11 Man sf el d Sen 1or 6
Norwalk St
Pau
7 Coli ns
Reserve 6
Ashta Harbor 17 Ashta 5 1 Johns
•
Huron 15 Sandusky Sf Mary 7
Cle st Joe 18 C e Calh Lat n
16
Parma Sen or 32 Cte Shaw 0
Padua 21 Cle Hoy Name 8
E l yr a west 16 Margaretta 12
Spr ngf eld Local 14 Ber.l n
Reserve 0
Ash l and Crestview 14 Lex ngton

"
In 1917 the US Army s 1st
Divlswn became the ftrst
Amerocan ftghting untl to see
•ction m World War I

.*
. .•

TUESDAY NIGHT IS
FAMILY FUN NIGHT
AT BURGER CHEF!
1'-l:'oFI..._
rhat H huw much

!NCREDIBURG!BLE!

So how do )O U put
'II til

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Thursd1y S1rlkers
Oct 17 197•
Team
W
L
M1tchell s Jr o
60
4
Shaktee G rls
34 30
H Frank s G r1s
33 31
Simon s Pick a Pair
24 40
Tun No 6
23 41
Team No 4
18 46
Team Series M ttc he11 s
Tno 1529 Shaklee G rrs 1389
H Franks Girls 1365
Team Game M tchell s
Trto 533 end 528 r~lkiee Girls

COllege d1p]0111a

1way

a buffer that

m sure )OUr ch1ld has a chance at

c Jllcgc? S mple US Savmgs Honds
Uuy t hem through the Payroll Savmgs
Plan where you work
lf}ou startnow you ll have aheftv
stockp1leor Bonds to draw on by th~
t1me you r chtld s ready for school
And the day he graduates yuu II fed
pretty proud Of yourself

California 17 Oregon St l4
Haw 28 Cal St Long Bch 21
Idaho 35 Mont 35 t e
Montana St 14 Idaho St 0
New Mex co 32 Wyorn ng 21
Oklahoma 49 Colorado 14
Stanford 34 Wash ngton l7
UCLA 17 Washington St 13
USC 16 Oregon 7

l.ooal Bowling

U

can &lt;::ost the se days And 1t " a pretty
heavy commt lment for a parent to fac

Spacial Family Meal Prices
4 p.m. to closing
FOR ADULTS

Big Shet•

!

Only

Funburger'"

~~~~~~:rr:s $115 ~~~~ho~:~~s
Large Oronk

!6O",.

FOR KIDS

&amp; Lollopop

Only

"'ake

.stoCk.
m_Nnenca.

Join the Payroll Savmgs Plan.

512

lnd victual Series - Wanda
Teaford 560 SlJe Hald 491
Donna McFerUmd 41!;5
lnd VIdUal Game - Wand•
teafor d 208 and HIS Cohl'lle
CH.a~rna" 190

~~

I

•

�Tht.

n uh

St. nlmt 1 Muldlt J)(ll I mom 0 Mi. nd

1\ P

3- The Datly Sentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Oct 21 197~

•1 1 t -1

Hearings resumed in Silver Bridge
negligence issue by claims court
t HAiti I STON W Va
UPI l
rt!stunony was lo
rtsumt&gt; today tn two lest cases
~c '"~ heal d by the West
V1rg1111a f,ourl of Clalms to
c.k&gt;ternunt' 1f the stale was
nE" gh~enl m 1ts mamtenance of
thr Silver Brodge
The 1wo cases wh1ch began
on July woll detenmne the
'tate s role on the Dec IS 1967
rollapse of \he span onto the
Oh10 River at Pomt Pleasant
The accodent ktlled 46 persons
A full fove davs were sel
asode lhts week to contonue
direct testlmony on behalf of
the plamllffs A total of 56
claliDS seeking $6 5 mtllion on
damages have been foled
agamst the state for wrongful
death property damage and

~';

'

"I w1sh I could at least see the harbor'"

DR. LAMB

Weight loss for diabetic
By Law renee E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB- I would
hke to have more mfonnatlon
on safely losmg we1ghl a.s I am
a dtabe!tc and on a 1000 calorte
dtel At ftrslllost real fast and
lhese past two months I ve only
lost s1x pounds
My doctor was qwte per
lurbed wtlh me and saod You
are not sla)'lng on your diet I
really am Dr Lamb and I
know my doctor lhmks I m not
telhng hlm the truth
I take thyrotd polls water
pills hogh blood pressure
med1cme and oral med1cme for
my diabetes
My blood
pressure IS over 200 and I m
terrobly nervous
My l\etght was310and now 1\
is 270 I am 60 years old I
wanted the doctor to g1ve me
hormone shots but he said no
The doctor I used to go to
before he doed gave me
estrogen once a month and I
lost much faster and felt so
good too
DEAR READER - You are
domg fme As long as you
average a loss of a half pound a
week and keep at 11 you 11(111
eventually get rod Of your
excess fat If you try to IOiie tOO
fast you wtll feel bred and have
other problems It 1s common
to lose we1ght fast at the
hegtnmng and then settle down
to a slow
steady loss
thereafter
It works out that you are
losmg three quarters of a
pound a week That means
your body os usmg a total of
1350 calories a day countmg
the calones m the fat and the
caiones m your food Unless
you are reasonably actove that
may be all you can use
My s~geslwn would be for
you to mcrease your phys1cal
achv1ty You can do this
Without ratsmg your blood
pressure Just start laking
regular walks at a comlorlable

speed for you
It os n \
neressar} to do tl all at once
Break 11 up mto lwo three or
more short "alks 1f 1t tlrt&gt;s you
but do 1t everv da) ram &lt; r
shme If )OU can bwld up to
"alking an hour a day a
d1stance of about three m1les
you \!.Ill Increase your weight
loss over half a pound more
each week or about 30 more
pounds a year Of course that
asswnes you don t mcr~ase
your food mlake
Woth your present doel and
the exercise combmed you
should lose aboul 70 pounds of
fat m a year That 1s fast
enough You have along way to
go and t\
Just lake ltme
Hormones are another
matter ][ you are gettmg a
tablet rned1cme for lh1s 1l
should work JUst as well In
general 1f a woman 1s deficient
m female hormone to a
s1gmf1cant degree then It IS
probably best to provtde some
hormone replacement

'"II

Majorettes in
fiery routines
MaJOrettes of the Eastern
Hogh School band were
featured tn ftre routmes at the
Froday mght game As the
band played Smoke on the
Water the maJorette corps
twtrled fore balons and then
Jtunped a ftre rope
For the halfttme show the
band dtrected by Charles L
Wolls moved downf1eld on two
chevron formattons playmg a
march
French Nat10nal
Defile
The maJorettes
presented a dance routme as
the band executed a flashback
droll playong the pop tune I
Shall Song

personal UIJury
In opentng tesltmony last
summer Slate F.n~oneer Btll S
Hanshew Jr told the three
man court he dldn t know if a
mot e thoro~h mspec!ton of
the brldl(e could have revealed
structural damage prtor to tts
collapse
A small haorlme crack m the
span s C 13 I-bar wh1ch ts
beheved to have caused the
bridge s fatlure may not have
been Vtslble even tf a very
thorough mspectlon were
made he saJd
The two test swts were !tied
on behaH of Pomt Pleasant
both of whom perished m the
collapse They are being
represented by atlornevs
Harry A Shennan of Pitts
burgh and Chester Lovett of
Charleston
State Attorney General
ChaWtcey Browmng IS hand
ling the defense

Aaron pretty
sure he'll play
ATLANTA (UPI) - Henry
Aaron sa1d Sunday that all the
detaols haven t been worked
out yet but ol os 99 per cent
sore that he wtll play baseball
agam next season
I haven t made up my mmd
exactly what I m gomg to do
sa1d Aaron who bad been
expected to retire after the 1974
season
All those reports
(about hts plans) are Just
rumors nothmg more
They are not gomg to 1n
fluence my dec1s1on Nobody ts
gomg to make up Hank Aaron s
nund but Hank Aaron Aaron
saod he was d1sappomted m the
front offoce offer made hlm
by the Atlanta Braves for
whom he has played 21 years

lf the court fmds tbe state
neghgent m the two Initial
cases then the remaining 54
cla1ms w11l be hea,rd to
~C

•• ••••• •• ••••••

~..~~0 ... ~· "" •

• "

&gt; » - • •u • •oouo

l the thy after . •. ~

by at ester Tannehill
~
,,~
e"""atlve editor
:t,
Voters wt11 X" e1lher yes or no on Nov 5 a 2 75 tax levy for
operatton of 1ts existing commumty school for the mentally
retarded m Me1gs County Two mills of the totalts new the 75
according to Ertc Chambers, 1s renewal
Oh o
We suppose there ts never a good time to ask for more taxes
Edw n S Cozart
However November 1974 appears to be a untquely bad time
Cha rman
Too many folks have been adversely touched by soarmg prtces of
Dorothy M Johnston
all the things they have to buy to make if from one day to the
0 rector
next It s no secret that wages salanes and penstons have not Dated Oct 4 1974
been equally inflated In fact, that ts one of the first tbeorems
(10) 7 14 21 28 4tc
mastered In Econ I at about any old college that when prices
rtSe wages tend to fall behind It's the nature of the system
Plainly, the case wW have to be strong for the operation levy
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
for the Me1gs County Community School as the school and
EXCESS OF THE TEN
sheltered workshop for the mentally retarded are called if a
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE 1S hereby g ven that
maJortt)' of voters ts to X the yes
n pursuance of a Resolut on of
Chambers, mstructor m the workshop, made a strong case tn the
Counc I of the VIllage of
remarks to the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club Friday evenmg Rae ne Oh o passed on the 6th
of August 1974 there w11t
at Heath Umted Methodist Church His theme had two parts, day
be subm tted to a vote of the
peop e of sa d V111age at a
humarutartan, and economtc
l ELECTION to be held
The school as 1t works today ts the only way a commuruty Genera
ntheV ttageof Rae ne Oh oat
has of movmg the tramable mentally retarded (TMR) and the the regular place of vot ng
there n on Tuesday the 5th day
educable mentally retarded (EMR) away from bemg helpless of
November 1974 the Quest on
dependents on thetr familles and the communt!Y into productive of levying In excess of the ten
lim tafton for the benef t of
generally self-6ufflclent persons Tbe alternative to tralnmg m111
Rae ne VIllage tor the purpose
these handicapped persons - m that condition through no fault of Providing and mamta nmg
apparatus
app l ances
whataoever of lhetr own - ts hardship on lhetr parents and fire
bu td ngs or s tes therefor or
economtc dependency through welfare upon their communtties sources of water supply and
als therefor
or the
1 thmk laxpayers can argue with merit that the state and mater
establ shment and ma1ntenance
federal govertlment alone should support such schools from of lines of f1re alarm telegraph
the payment of permanent
general revenue funds However there ts thts chOice to make if or
part t me or volunteer firemen
support of the schools 1s to come from outStde the commumty or f re f1ght ng com pan e~ to
the same
thetr control also will be from outside The state and federal operate
Sa d tax be ng a renewal of
government already ptcks up much of the tab We have to answer an ex st ng tax of 2 0 m Its to run
the question Is tl worth 2 75mills to do lilts JOb our way (wtlhm tor t ve years at a rate not
exceed ng 2 0 m Its for each one
state standarda)"
dollar of valu~tlon
wh ch
It s easy to denounce local government betng superseded by amounts to twenty cents for
each one hundred dollars of
authorttortan stale and federal agencies But even a little local 11a uat on for Five year s
The Polls for sa1d Elect on
government has to cost somelhmg In our case m Metgs County
w 11 be open at 6 30 o cl ock A M
at this time and place, 2 75 mills
and rem a n open until 7 30
Chambers tn his Rotary remarks decimed to ask for a o c ock P M Eastern Standard
Time of satd day
resolution of approval even for indiVIdual commitments of
By order of the Board of
Elect ons of Me gs County
support .,
Oh o
Rather he pleaded for each person to onvesttgated for
Edw n S Cozllrt
himself the facts of the problems involved tn society doing what
Cha rman
should be done for tts mentally relarded, and then make a
Dorothy M Johnston
deCisiOn
D rector
That s faor enough
Dated Oct 4 1974

';;

DEAR DR LAMB - Wlwt "
vour opm10n of faktn~ c r tl
v1tarmn B 12 for p~rntcuus
REVIVAL OPENS
anenua., I \\as ~ettmg mh
A rev1val wtll begon lhts
temporary benefit from mm evenmg at 7 30 and continue
tn)echons plus B 12 M\ doclor through Oct 27 at the Ftrst
started gtvlng me hqwd tr&lt; n Southern Baptost Church on
\\htch seems to ra1se and Pomeroy Cltfford Coleman
stab1hze m\ blood counl If I formerly of Middleport woll be
TO MEET TUESDAY
can absorb hqwd Iron v. hv not evangelist Special music w1ll
The
Frtendly Neighbors Club
oral 8 12"
be a featlU'e each evenmg
DEAR READER - Y&lt; u Bradley Spencer pastor tn wtll meet at 7 30 p m Tuesday
mght at the home of Mrs Leon
have to have a substance viles thf&gt; pubhc
McKnoght
formed m the stomarh railed
mtrmstc factor to enable you to
absorb B-12 Iron ts Important
m th~ process too If }OU are
deflcienl m the mtrmsic factor
'ou can 1 get B-12 mto the
m1ttee Chainnan Mary Lowse or the events surrounding It
COLUMBUS Oh1o {UP!) bloodstream except by tn
S.mth
saJd here Saturday I were fatal, she SBld, and I
Prestdent
Fords
campa1gn
Jechon So you can absorb Iron
from the dtgesltve \rae\ but or appearancesutsupportofGK&gt;P think he s bemg well rece1ved don'tlhink they re fatal now I
candtdates around the country and yes frankly I thmk tt s think we re domg well tn a lot
VG.U have permc10us anemm
of the parts of the country I
ts a 'real plus for the party m very helpful
vou cannot absorb B 12
the
November
elecitons
ac
chamnan
addressed
the
lhmk we're domg well here m
The
I d hke to add \hal normal
people can swallow B-12 and cordmg to the chatnnan of the annual conference of the Olno Oh1o and I thmk the outcome ts
Republican CounCil, the state gomg to be much better than
use 11 because they have a Republtcan National Comnut
party's black awnliary here people are predicting '
normal amo\Ult or mtrmstc tee
Saturday
I think people are amaous
Makeup of the present Ohto
factor "hile pahents wt\h
to see lhe Prestdent com
'I am glad to see hun (Ford) congressional
delegation,
perniCIOUS anemia do not
out she sa1d It s a thing he dommated by Republicans
ltkes to do and does well It s a more than 2 to I, will remain
real plus
much the same after the
The party s chances m the electton
predtcted
the
Nov 5 electiOns are much chatrman
better nattonwtde than some
I have great hope for Ohto I
have predicted the chaiTllllln think we're gomg to have a
saJd
governorship here, and I think
I
never
tho~ht Watergate
the Senate race ts gomg well,'
altogether bleak
vahon
Imperative
and
she satd
Utilities In llllnots Utah, asked the governor for a
West Virginia, New York, curtailment of store hours
Clh10 Kentucky Georgia, electrical s1gns and displays
Alabama Florida and Penn
and sports and cultural events
sylvama sa1d they had
U S Steel sa1d steel produc
anywhere from 4S to 90 days lion would be cut m half wtthm
supply of stockpiled coal
two weeks of a strike, and
Local Tn County ComTheir spokesmen said they Bethlehem said a coal mmers
mumty Concert offlctals
thought -wtlh the help of some strike would slow 1ts operations
receiVed word from Portscustomer restramt -they Wllhm three days
mouth today that the Nov 11
could weather a UMWA strike,
A strike of any duration
George Sherlng Concert m
now threatened for Nov 12
would shut down the steel m
Porlsmoulh is sold out and
'lbe Tennessee Valley Au- dustry
WASHINGTON (UPI) said Bethlehem
that no out-of town vtsttors wtll
thority however, depends on Pres1dent Fredenck W West PreSident Ford says his talks be admitted
coal for about 80 per cent of the Jr
wtth hard-nosed Republican
Tile local spokesman pointed
electne~ty It generates
Quinn Morton of the professionals have convinced out however, that any member
About 75 per cent of its Kanawha Coal Operators him that his party s chances in wishing to attend a George
suppbes come from UMW
Association m West Vorglnla next month 8 elections are less Sbermg Concert may do so this
contract mines to serve all of concurred adding, It would dismal than the polls mdicate
Wednesday begmning at 8 15
Tennessee and parts of VIr
In an Interview Sunday, Ford p m at Lancaster in the
close down the coal Industry gmta North Carolin•, Georgu~
period'
defended hta decision to devote Lancaster
High
School
Alabama, Mlssisalppl and Kenmuch of ht8 time to campatgrt
auditoroum Rl 37, North
tucky
Two major West Vorglnta mg for Republicans
In anticipation of a miners utiltltes, Appalachtan Power
I think I spend enough time
PARTY PLANNED
strike, the TVA has been Co and Monongahela Power m the Oval Office to get the
Tile Twin City Sltrlnettes will
warmng tts customers for a Co , satd lf there is a prolonged work done " be said 'I have
year to begm conserving, even strike, they wtll ask customers enough time to decide what's meet at 7 30 p m Thursday for
a Halloween Party at the home
right and what's wrong "
asking for a 15 to 1lJ per cent to curtail fuel use
Tom Duncan, president of
vo!Wltary reduction in fuel use
He also shrugged off the of Mrs James Clatworlhy In
Lately, the meoaages have the Kentucky Coal Assoclatton suggestton that his own influ- Middleport
SBld Kentucky s electric In- ence and polittcal prestige wtll
gotten stronger
Officials say that a strike this dustry ts "as well off as any m wane lf the GOP takes a
year the length of the 1971 the country and wtll be less beating Nov 5
GOP could lose another 40 or 50
affected"
'If I don't do anything and seats In the Houae and seven or
strike ---45 days -would ex
But he Satd "lbere ts only we lose," be mUsed, ''Republi- •eight Senate seats
haust most of the stockpiles of
so
much you can stockpile and cans in the House would say,
1ts coal-fired plants Some
In that event, lite President
plants, like the one at Bull Run, you can only ke!!P so much on He didn t even try '"
said, big spenders will be Jn.
A relaxed, shirt-sleeved control of govertlment '''lbe
Tenn , only have an IIJ.day hand without deterioration
And !ben there s the questton if President, drink In hand, key to the Treasury will be
stockpile
you could move stockpiles cruising 1lome at 25,000 feet thrown away and the money
TV A Chalnnan Aulrey J
and 600 miles an hour abOard will be pourmg out "
If voluntary during a strike '
Wagner said
Two southern Illlnols ftrmS, Air Force One talked with
(energy-saving) efforts do not
Democrats expect to make
provide suffic1ent savings, the seeking to guarantee a coal reporters Saturday night; wt gains but not by such large
only alternattve wtll be more supply for electttclly, asked for ground rules for the tntervlew margins as Ford mentioned.
strmgent mea•ures
in- a .450,000 loan fro,n the prohibited publlcatton until Some see a ptckup of 20 or 30
cluding rationing or man- National Rural Electric Utili Sunday
Houae seats and perhaps two or
ties Association and the Rural
He was on his way home three in the Senate
datory allocation of power "
In Pennsylvania, the llliila- Electrification Administration from a 16-ltour day of cam
Ford told reporters his
delplua Electtlc Co SBld its ~ to buy a draglme to connect pa1gnlng for Republicans conversations with reliable
day stockpile of coal could them to str1p numng opera lacmg uphill odds m South and Republican leaders he cllltsldNorth Carolina and in Ken- ers realists convinced him that
carry tl through a strike, but hons
tucky
the Pennsylvania Electric As
llllnBS are "not as pessimistic
soclation and the two steel
Louisvtlle
where as some of the polla would lead
At
The Alabama Power Co
giants, u s Steel and Beth earlier thts year contracted for Republicans patd $15 to eat you to believe "
lehem Steel told another story 100 000 tons of Australian coal cold chicken and roast beef
What sort of net gains or
PEA satd a coal stroke would and IS now negotiatmg for sandwtches from clirdbOard ldsses t1oes he anticipate •
boxes, Ford acknowledged the
make enforced energy conser more a spokesman satd
I II tell you better in a
posslbtllty extsted that the week be satd

Ohio GOP likes Ford help

Berrys World

I

Prestdent fOrd has asked me to tell you to
wasta lass - EAT THAT ALL UPI

,

Shering concert
is a sellout

Chances
not had
--Ford

1101 7 14 21

NOTICE OF

Steelers take
over top spot
PITTSBURGH (UPI)
Tradtlton and a gutty performance by Roy Gerela
helped us coach Chuck Noll
satd m assessmg the Pittsburgh Steelers v1ctory over
the Cleveland Browns
It s traditional for our
defense to sel up scores he
sa1d
Gerela was m pam
becatrJe of a muscle LDJury m
his rightthogh but hts two loeld
goals and two conversiOns
made the difference
The Steelers edged the
Browns 20-16 man AFL Central
DiVIston game Sunday to raose
theor record to 4-11 and bolster
theor hopes for a dtVIston
playoff
Too many people underrate
the Browns because of the1r
record Noll satd Remem
ber they lost to three other
teams whose combined record
shows only two defeats
I figured before the game
we better get to the Browns
qmck or the crowd wouldn t be
wtth us
Fumbled A Pass
- ThOsteelers responded by
scormg woth only 4 07 gone
Safety Mike Wagner pounced
on the ball after Hugh
McKinnts fumbled a pass from
Mtke Phipps and ran 15 yards
to set the stage for Preston
Pearson s six yard scormg
sweep f1ve plays later
Pittsburgh mcreased its ad
vantage to 14-0 m the second
perood after the defense throt
tied the Browns deep tn thetr
own terntory Tackle Joe
Greene sacked Ph1pps for a s1x
yard loss down to the Browns
SIX yard !me and after Hugh

McKinms was tossed for a two
yard loss Cleveland was
forced to punt
Rookte Lynn Swann returned
the punt 17 yards to the
Cleveland 28 and on the mnth
play Franco Harrts barged
over from the one and Gerela
added hts second converswn
Gerela who InJUred hts nght
leg m the pr~ame wannup
saod when he lrted for his forst
f1eld goal he satd to hlmself
It s only 31 yards away I
gotta get the hall up m the atr
As soon as I ktcked pains shot
through my leg It hurt when I
kicked the conversiOns and
that second fteld goal
Contamed 10 their own
terrttory until 2 22 remammg
m the first half Cleveland
surged for two scores
Begmnmg
at
m1dheld
Cleveland moved to P1tts
burgh s 18 after the Steelers
were penalized five yards for
holdmg and then 15 for
roughmg lhe passer Unable to
pass Phipps scrambled for the
f1rst Browns score
March for Score
The Browns marched 61
yards lor a score set up by
defenstve end Ntck Roman s
recovery of Harr1s s ftunble
On the next play MIX Ph1pps
hurled to Milt Moron for a
touchdown
Greenwood
blocked Don Cockroft s con
verston attempt to deny the
Browns a chance to tie the
score at 14-14 wtth sox seconds
left m the balf
I barely lipped the ball woth
my lmger Greenwood satd
The Browns !mal score came
early m the fourlh pertod on

Es1•te

of

Deceased

Earl

Sport Parade

28 4tc

Case No 21323

V

Gorham

COUNTY

MANNING D WEBSTER
JUDGE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBA'"'TE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
10 11 He

By MILfON RICHMAN
UPI Sport. Edllor

MEIGS

Not rce Is hereby gwen that
PUBLIC NOTICE
Thomas Heyman of Syracuse
The follow ng documents
Oh o has been duly appointed
Administrator of tl'le Estate of were received or prepared by
Ohio
Environmental
Earl V Gorl'lam deceased late the
Protection Agency during the
of Meigs County Ohio
week
Anyone
Creditors are reQuired to file previous
their clarms w th sad frduclary aggneved or adversely affected
by issurence or renewal of any
wrthtn four months
11cense(s)
or
Dated this 17th day of October permlt(s)
var lllnce(s) may request an
1974
adlud 1cat on hearmg by written
Mannmg 0 Webster request pursuant to Oh o
Revised Code Sect on 3745 07
Judge w
th n th1rty (30) days of the
(10) 21 28 (11) .4 Jtc
d rectors proposed action to
Issue or deny such documents
That statute does not prov de
NOTICE OF ELECTION
for hear ng requests to the
ON TAX LEVY IN
OEPA
on
applications
EXCESS OF THE TEN
revocations
modifications
MILL LIMITATION
complaints
ver1f ed com
NOTICE rs hereby grven that plamts certif cat1ons leases
or final act 1ons
In pursuance of a Resolutron of orders
Within
JO days of pubtlcat on
the Board of County Com
m ssioners of the County of of this not1ce any person may
(1) Subm 1 wntten
Meios Pomeroy Ohio passed also
on the 30th day of August 1974 comments relating to act1ons
th ere w II be subm ltfed to a vote proposed actions complaints
(2)
of the people of said County at a or ver1fled compia nts
Request
a
publ
c
meetmg
Genera l ELECTION to be held
n the County of Meigs Oh o at regard ng proposed actions
the reg ular places of voting and or (3) Request notice of
there1n on Tuesday the 5th day further actions on proceedings
Requests for hearings on f nal
of November 197.4 the question
act
ons to 1ssue deny modify
Of levying In excess of the ten
m II lim ltatlon for the benefit of revoke or renew perm 1ts
Meigs r.:ounty for the purpose of licenses or variances that are
the ma ntenance and operation not preceded by proposed ac
of schools
training centers tons and so ldent1t ed m th1S
workshops and c1rnics for notice should be sent to the
Env!ronm ental
Board
of
menta ll '( retarded persons
Sa d tax being a renewal of a Review Suite 505 33 North H gh
tax of 0 75 mills and an Increase Street Columbus Ohio 43215
Atl other requests for ad
Of 2 0 mIlls to constitute a tl!lx of ludlcat
on hearings and other
2 75 mi ll s to run for Five years
communlcat
ons concerning
at a rate not exceeding 2 75
hearings
pub l c
m Us for each one do ll ar of publ c
ad1Ud cat ons
valUation Wh ch amounts to meetings
Twenty seven and one ha1f hear ngs compla nts of any
cents for each one hundred kind and regulations shou l d be
do11ars of valuation tor Five addressed to the Lega l Records
Sect1on Ohio EPA P 0 Box
years
Ohio 43216
The Polls for said E l ection 1049 Columbus
(614) 466 6037
Wil l be open at 6 JO o clock A M
Unless otherw1se stlllted n
and remain open unt I 7 30
all other
o clock P M Eastern Standard particular nohces
communications
nciudmg
Time of said day
By order of the Board of comments on proposed act1ons
and
requests
for
publ c
El ectrons
of Me gs County
meetings should be addresse(f
Oh o
Edwin S Cozart either to the New Source A r ol'
NPDES Perm1t Records Sec
Cha rmllln
lion wh lch ever Is appropr1l11te
Dorothy M Johnsto.n at The Ohio EPA P 0 Box
D rector 1049 Columbus Ohio 43216
Apptlcat on for var ance from
Dated October 4 1974
sewer connect1on ban
Tuppers Pla1ns Volunteer
(10) 7 14 21 28 4tc
F re Dept and Tuppers Pia ns
Comm
St Rt 681 - Orange Twp
Tuppers PIBIOS Ohio
IN THE
United Method st Church
COMMON PLEAS COURT
St Rt 7 - Orange Twp
PROBATE DIVISION
Tuppers Ptams Oh o
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
Issuance of N PDEA Perm1t
V 11age of Pomeroy
IN THE MATTER OF SET
NW I ntersection Main &amp;
TLEMENT 01-' ACCOUNTS
PROBAl E COURT ME I GS Spring St
COUNTY OHIO
Pomeroy Oh 10
Recelv no waters Ohio River
Permit No BSJ2 AD
Accounts and vouchers of the
following named f!ductar es
( 101 21 ltc
have been flied n the Probate
Court Me1gs County Ohio for
approval and settlement
CASE NO 21 122 First and
F nal Account of Clyde F sher
Exe ... utor ot the Estate of Lorna
o owens Deceased
CASE NO 21 23J First and
Final Account of Carr1e E
Grueser Admin stratrlx of the
Estlllte of K
A
Grueser
Qeceased
Unless exceptions are flied
thereto said accounts w II be
for hear ng before sa1d Court on
ttre 19th day of November 1974
at WhiCh t me sad accounts will
be considered and contmued
from day to day unt1t f.nally
disposed of
Any person Interested may
f le wr tten excephons to sa1d
lllccounts or to matlers per
taln1ng to the execution of the
trust not less than five days
pr or to the dlllte set for heo}rlng

NEW YORK (UPI) - Charlie Finley belteves m the direct
approach If he likes you he can be generous to the poml of
completely overwheimutg you If he doesn t ltke you look out
Subtle he s not
Now tl so happens he tsn t parllcularly crazy about Bowte
Kuhn
The truth ts he doesn t cotton to hlm a\ all and tf he could
posstbly swmg tt he d like to see Kubn out as Baseball Com
missioner
This hardly comes as btg news to Kuhn He has known how
Finley feels about him for some time now and m case he nee~ed
any further remmder he was gtven what he had to constder an
lmperlinent one m Oakland htst Thursday rught after the A s had
nailed down lhetr thord stratght world champwnshop
As owner and bosa of the trtumphant A s Charlie Finley was
the logiCal man to accept the world champiOnship trophy from
the commiSSioner but he flatly refused
He wanted nothing at all to do wtlh Bowte Kuhn
Finley s resentment of certam actions taken agamst him by
Kubn dates all the way hack even more than two years ago when
Kubn fmed hlm $2,500 for paying mcenhve bonuses to Joe Rudi
Gene Tenace and Mike Hegan Last year Kuhn hit Fmley agam
lhls time with a $7 000 plaster for a seroes of three mlracitons the
most costly tunung out to be the Mike Andrews' affaor
Charlie Fmley can he rockform when he chooses
Elated as he was over hts club s thord consecullve lttle no
amount of persuaswn could get hlm to stand up there on the same
platfonn wtth Kuhn m the As clubhouse and accepl the award
from him Thursday rught When you stop to cons1der that Charlie
knew the ceremony would be carroed over national teleViBton
and It 1sn t his nature exactly to run away and h1de from
publicity you begin to get some tdea of how warmly he feels
toward the commtsStoner
Three of the A s Sal Bando Regg1e Jackson and Campy
Campanerts, got up on tbe platfonn With Bowte Kuhn, and
Bando, the club s classy captam.third baseman accepted the
trophy on behalf of Charlie Finley and all the As making an
excellent ltttle speech
Then Reggte Jackson was asked to say a few words
You may remember Kuhn had reprlm80ded Jackson the day
before for his run-111 wtlh a sports wrtter He also threatened
Jackson wtth suspenston if there was any repetition of the
episode, and that burned up Finley also
Jackson said a few words for the beneftl of all those millions of
oolookers out there m the great beyond and then he suddenly
produced an open bottle of champagne and poured some of the
contents over Kubn's head
Tile commtSSioner trted to duck but couldn t get out of the
way Jackson was rtght on the money and Kuhn got soaked The
commissioner laughed but he wasn t what ,you would call
terribly overJOyed
It s okay,' said one of hts securoty men standtn• ne•r the
plalfqrm It s 8 wash-and wear swt anyway
Bowie Kuhn s seven-year contract, calling for $150,000 a year
plus expenses, expores In February ol1976 A vote will be taken
sometime before then to detenmne whether to tender him a new
contract or lind a new commlsstoner
There was a strong anU-Kubn bloc not that long ago a vocal
group that included Finley, Mike Burke Jerry Hoffberger
Ewlpg Kauffman and Bob Short among others GUSSie Busch and
Buzzle Bavasi cant exactly be descrobed as btg boosters of
Kuhn s either, and Tom Yawkey generally goes along whtchever
way the majority does
When 1t comes time to say yea or nay 1! wtll take nine votea m
each league to extend Kuhn's contract Or lookmg altt another
way four no 8 in both leagues lB alltt would take to unseat him
In Kubn's favor at the moment Is the fact Burke and Short no
longer are in baseball and Holfberger seemmgly ts lookmg to get
out Moreover, there doesn t seem to be any real new outstanding
candldllte for the COIIllll1S0100ershlp in the wings
This won't stop Charlie Finley from feeling !lie way he does
about l!owle Kuhn, though, and from conlinuing to try g~neratong
some steam for a new colJl1111Mloner He gets an idea in htB mmd
and he Maya with II
Ask llltk Willlalns A.It V1da BlUe Ask Sowle Kltlu'l

I

I

Cockroft s 21 yard fteld goal
whoch brought Cleveland to
witlun one pomt of the Steelers
17 16lead
Coach Ntck Skonch whose
team won tls opener then
dropped t\s next four games
lamented the breaks that went
agamst hts team
We had too many bad
breaks he sa1d I know 11 s
tough when you re behmd 1-6m
the conference but we would
have to rely on Pittsburgh and
Cmcmnatl losmg some games
and us wmnmg some from now
on
Gave Ball Away
We hurt ourselves when we
gave the ball away Bull found
some sallsfactlon - Phipps
played his best game of the
season and our pass rush was
much lmproved
Skonch had no comment
about h1s status Last week
owner Art Modell parned
queshon on Skoroch s future
He satd a dectston would be
made -even If the Browns
lost- m a nonnal dehberate
way and wtth dogn1ty
Phtpps sa1d he thought there
was sttll a chance to WID when
he moved the team to the
Steelers 17 wtth a little more
than two mmutes left tn the
game
But tl doesn t take many
m1stakes to hurt you and my
btggest was when Glenn Ed
wards mtercepted a pass
Edwards returned the mter
cept10n 59 yards to the
Cleveland 31 endmg the
Browns hope for a comeback
VIctory

College Scores

APPOINTMENT

I~

I

»

.."'='!,oY..o:O;,o "o"o' ........
'&gt; X~

~"oY..Yo!o

.:w:w.&lt;.t»;;n::•v•••'VW'oWNo"•"_..., .,-;o.-.., .,•...,

Steelmakers fear coal
lacking in long strike
By BROOKE W KROEGER
United Press lntematiooal
Ali but a few utihty compa
nles lhmk they have ample coal
suppltes to withstand both a
cold turn-up-the.l!eat wmter
and a threatened United Mine
Workers strike but a walkout
could ahut down the steel in
dustry
Some less secure utiltties
expectmg the worst have
asked state govertlments to put
mandatory fuel....,vmg meas
ures mto effect according to a
UPI survey showed
For steel and coat compames the outlook was

determine the amount of
damages to be awarded If the
court finds lor the state, the
other suits wt11 be dismtssed

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON T'AX LE;VY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTI CE s hereby g1ven that
n pursuance of a ResQiutlon ot
th e Council of the '&lt;flllage of
Syracuse Oh o passed on the
lst day of AuguSt 1974 there
will be subm tted to a vote of the
peop e ot sa 1d V llage at a
General ELECTION to be held
in the v 1 age of Syracuse Oh o
at lhe regular place of vot ng
therein on Tuesday the 5th day
of November 1974 the quest on
of evy ng n excess of the ten
m 11 m tat on for the benefit of
Syracuse V1llage for the pur
pose of Current Exp~nses
Sa d tax being a renewal of
an ex1s11ng tax of 30m 11s to run
for f ve years at a rate not
exceeding 30m I s tor each one
doll&amp;r of valuat1on
wh ch
amounts to Th rty Cents fo r
each one hundred dollars Of
valuat on tor F ve- years
The Polls for sa d Elect on
w 11 be ooen at 6 30 o clock A M
and rema n open unt I 7 30
o clock P M Eastern Standard
T me ot sa d day
By order of the Board of
Elect ons
of Me gs County

I

•

I(

By United Press International
East
Attghny 26 wash a. Jeff 0
Amherst 27 Rochester U 0
Boston U 14 Buckne11 10
Brdgwtr Mass 13 Bates 9
Coast Guard 48 Tufts 28
Dartmouth 7 Brown 6
Delaware 14 Leh gh 7
Harvard 39 Cornell 27
Hofstra 21 Fordham 21
Howard 48 W Va State 0
Ithaca 24 W 1kes 14
Ma ne 7 Conn 0
Mass 17 R
7
M am F a 21 w va 20
N H 38 vermont 21
Northeastern 52 Sp f d 30
Norw ch 21 Boston .$ 1 l6
Penn 37 lafayelle 7
Penn Sf 30 Syracuse 1-l
Ptsbgh 35 Boston Cot I 11
Pr nceton 33 Colgate 24
Stppry Rock 41 Waynesbg 3
Temple 56 Holy Cross 0
Tr n 1ty Conn l7 Colby 0
wsn M ch 20 M&amp;rshalt 17
w 11 ams 10 Bowdon 6
Ya e 42 Co um b a 2
South
A l abama 28 Tenn 6
A l abama A&amp;M 22 F sk 12
Auburn 31 Ga Tech 22
Clemson 17 Cuke l3
Drake 38 LOUISVIlle 35
E Tenn St 24 Furman 13
F1sk 22 Al a A&amp;M 12
Fla 24 Fla St 14
Ga 38 Vanderb1ll Jl
Gram bl ng 20M ss Vly 14
Ky 20 LSU 1J
La Tech 34 NW LOUISiana 0
Md 47 Wall.e Forest 0
M1n St 29 Memph S Sf 28
N C 33 North Car Sf 14
S C 10M ss 7
southern :n Jackson St 19
Sou MISS IS VM 14
Tulane 30 C tadel 3
Tuskegee 48 Morehouse u
va 28 va Tech 27
Wm &amp; Mary 28 Rutgers 15
Midwest
Drake 38 Lou sv lie 35
Ill n01s 21M ch St 21
Iowa St 23 Kensas St 18
Mar etta 21 wooster 13
M 1am1 0 34 Bwtn9 Green 10
M1Ch gan 24 Wlsconsm 20
Mmnesota 23 iowa 17
Nebraska 56 Kansas 0
N 0 31 N D Sf 20
No Ill 17 So Ill 1
Notre Dame A8 Army 0
Oh o St 49 tnd ana 9
Oh o u 49 Morehead St 10
Otterbein 28 MuSk ngum 10
Purdue 31 Northwestern 26
S 0 20 S D St 6
Toledo 38 Dayton 27
Utah St 27 Kent St 24
wsn M ch 20 Marsh ell 17
Southwest
Ab 1lene Chrstn 31 E lex Sf 13
Houston JS Vi ll anova 0
Lamar 10 Arkansas St 6
N Tex St 24 N Mex St 19
Oklahoma St 31 Mo 7
s F Aust n 12 sw Te•as 7
SMU 19 R ce 14
Texas 38 Ar.kansas 7
Texas A&amp;M l7 TCU 0
Texas Tech 17 Arizona 8
Tulsa 17 W T ... •as St 14

•

Pro Standings
NFL Stand ngs
Bv Un ted Pr ess Intern at anal
A mer c;an Confcrc nc:c
Eo1st
w I 1 pe t pi pa
Nf'W Eng
5 I 0 83 3 76 9
Buffalo
Mam
NY Jets
Ba 1 more

S I 0
4 ' 0
I

S 0

833
667
167
/)]

137 105

113 I I I

88 111 I

N HL

Stand ngs

Bv Un1ted Pre ss Internal onal
D v so n

I I ~Is

w

NY sln d r S
3 I
Ph a
3 '1
Alanta
3 '1
NV Rangers
2 ?
D1v sto n 2

1

''
';

I

pts

l 2

8

3 l 0
2 'l 1

6

w

I

St. Louis only team zn
NFL with perfect mark

5 17 and 2 yards as the carries w1th 40 for 156 yards
By FRED DOWN
Cowboys snapped \heor four
UPI Sports Wnter
and one touchdown while Bert
w 1 1 pel
pi pa
'i
game
losmg
s
treak
and
the
Jun
Hart
s
ch1ef
claun
to
Jone s ran for two scores and
750 131 99 M nn
P ttsburgh 4 1
I 3
3
0 5o 0
0 fame after e1ght pro seasons
Kan C ty
Eagles four game wmmng passed for another lt was the
C nc nnat
0 VISIOn 3
4 ' 0 M7 160 01
Cleveland
s 0 61 98 63
w I t ph was that he once thre" the streak The Cowboys scored Colts first \ ct ory m stx
9 longest non scormg pass m the wmrung touchdown when
Los Ang
3 o 3
games
Hou ston
67 79 46 Detro f
I S 0
4 I 0
quHrterback
Roger
Staubach
Naltonal
Football
League
hos
West
5
Broncos 27 Chargers 7
Montrea
1 2 3
4 tory
P tt sbur gh
2 2 0
sneaked over from the one w1th
Floyd Little 1an six yards for
w 1 t per
pf pa wash ngton
3
1 4
Today
he
ts
the
quarterback
9
44
left
on
the
game
5 1 0 833 148 89
Oak and
one
touchdown and 72 to set up
0 v s on 4
W I t pi S of the only unbeaten team m
Redsklns 2~ Gtants 3
another for the Broncos now 3
Denver
3 2 I 583 125 120 Buffa o
3 2
7
Sonny Jurgensen ra1sed his 2 1 after three stra1ght wms
Kan C ty
2 4 0 3ll 89 110 Toronto
2 1 3
7 the leag ue and the guy the St
SanD ego
1 5 0 167 7~ 120 ca t
1 4 2
&lt;1
Loms Cardmals hope can lead career total of touchdown
!'he Broncos look a i7-1! half
Nat anal conferen ce
Boston
2 2 1
5
passes
to
201
as
he
led
the
them
to
all
that
moola
and
East
time
lead and never were
Saturday s Results
w 1 t pet pi pa
Ph adelph a 6 P ttsburgh 3
exc1tement leading up to Super Red skins to thetr easy wm wtth s enous l ~ threaten ed
6 0 0 1 000 149 84
St Lou s
N Y Rangers 4 N Y
s an
three payoff pttches The hrst
Bowl gold
ders ')
Ph a
4 2 o 667 118 72
Hart who threw a 98-yard followed a blocked New York
Montrea 5 Ca torn a 1
wash ngton 4 2 0 667 14 78
Vancouver 5 Toron o 4
non scor mg pass to Bobby punt by Moke Holl tho second
Dalla s
2 4 0 333 10 104
Oetro t 6 Wash-Ington 4
167
61
1')0
NVG ants 1 50
Wes l
Moore agatnst the Los Angeles an mtercept10n by Bng Owens
Ch cago 3 St Lou s I
Central
Ar zo a S 32 Ut ah 0
Buffalo 2 M nnesola 1
and
th
e
last
a
pockoff
by
Chrts
Dec
10
1972
to
set
the
Rams
w 1 t pet pf pa
A r F o ce 9 Na v y 6
Los Angeles 3 Kansas C v 0
s
0 833 140 8 1
Hamburger
M nn
Br ghm Yn q J5 Tex El Paso 2
dub1ous record threw touch
Sundays Re su lt s
Va n couver I NV Rangers 0
Rams
37
49ers
14
Green Bay 3 2 0 600 82 97
Montreal 2 Ph adelph a 2 I e down passes of six and 40 yards
Ch cago
James Harrts threw three
2 l 0 400 79 66
At ant a 5 P H sbu rgh
to wide recetver Earl1homas
Detro t
2 4 0 333 B4 90
Toronto 5 Buffa o 5 I e
touchdown passes mcluding
92
seconds
apart
m
the
second
West
N y Is anders 5 Wash ngton
w 1 t pet pf pa o
penod Sunday to lead the two to Lawrence McCutcheon
4 2 0 667 I 4 74
Los Ang
Bos on 5 Ca torn a 0
Cardinals to a 31 27 trtumph and also ran for a TO hftmg
0t1 caga 6 M nnesota &lt;I
Atlanta
2 &lt;1 0 333 53 84
the Rams to thell' fourth VlC
over the Houston Otlers
Mondays Games
New Or!
2 &lt;1 0 333 67 11&lt;1 1No games sc hedu l ed
tory m s1x games
It
was
the
SIXth
slraoght
San Fran
2 4 0 333 72 132
Sundays Results
Saints 13 Falcons 3
VIctory
for
th
e
Cardinals
who
WHA Stand1ngs
Bat more 35 NY Jets 20
By Un1ted Press 1nternat1onal
Bobby Scotts 36-yard pass to
became
the
only
unbeaten
P ttsburgh 20 C evetand 16
East
Paul
Seal wtth I 52 left 1n the
New Or eans 13 At ant a 3
w I f piS team m the league when the
wash ngton 24 NY Gants l
3
1
0
Cleve and
Stale Farm has a pol q• espec ally
Buffalo B1lls shaded the New first half produced the only
Buffalo 30 New England 28
2
1 I 0
Ch cage
de~ gned lo
ente ~ The cost s
touchdown
of
the
game
The
St Lou s 31 Houston 27
England
Patnots
30-28
and
1 0
New England
ow the serv ce s grl'!at ,t,nd with
Detro t 20M nnesota 16
0 the Detrott Lions defeated the
0 3 0
our lnfl at on Cove aRe you p ond anapo s
Fakons who gamed only 64
Dallas 31 Ph Iadet ph a 24
tection can a ways star ul)-lo date
West
yards
rotshmg
and
110
passmg
La'S Angeles 37 San Franc sea
automat cal y Just what you d
w I I piS Monnesota V1kmgs 20 16
l'!xpec:t I om the worlds Jl 1 home
14
5
Phoen x
2 0 I
on
a
47
yard
f1eld
scored
ftrst
In
other
games
Dalla
s
nsure
Ca lor dela s
M am 9 Kansa s C ty 3
2
San D ego
I 1 0
goal
by
N1ck
Mike
Mayer
but
Denver 27 San 0 ego 7
defeated
Pholadelphoa
31
24
2
M ch gan
1 2 0
STEVE
Oak. and 30 C nc nnat 27
2 Washmgton whipped the New
Houslon
1 2 0
then were stopped cold
Mondays Game
0
M nnesota
0 1 0
SNOWDEN
Dolphins 9 Chlels 3
Green Bay at Ch cago n ght
York Goants 24-3 Los Angeles
Canad1an
Sunday s Games
SSl
Russel St
w 1 f pis npped San Franc1sco 37 14
The Dolphms pulled ~ut the
Balf more at M am
6
(Gravel H II)
Toronto
J 0 0
VIctory when Larry Csonka
Denver at Cleve and
4 New Orleans upset Atlanta 13W nn peg
2 0 0
M ddl eport
Los Angeles al NY Jets
2 3 MlaiTII pulled out a 9-3 VIC
Quebec
1 0 0
plunged over from the one wtlh
Oh o
Houston at C ncmna
2
Vanco uv er
1 3 0
17
seconds
left
m
the
game
Jan
tory
over
Kansas
Ctty
Ch cago at Buffa o
0
'
•
•
h
''"
e
992 71 55
Edmonton
0
0
oa tas at NY Gants
CJtt • ,.. iiiiJiJji;
Satu..-dav s Results
stenerud ktcked a 21 yard f1eld
Baltunore
htunlltated
the
Jets
Green Bay at Detro I
New Eng and 2M ch gan 1
Ph tladelph a at New Orleans
3S 20 Oakland rallted for a 30- goal for the Chiefs
C eve and 3M nnesota 1
wash ngton at Sf L ou s
san o ego 6 Houston 2
Colts 3S Jets 20
27
wm over Cmcmnall Pttls
New England at M nnesota
sunday s Results
The Colts vtrtually rushed
burgh
beat
Cleveland
20-16
Kansas C ty at San D ego
Vancouver 3 Ch c ago
Oak and at San Franc sea
Toronlo 4 M ch gan 3
and Denver topped San Doego Joe Namath off the foeld as
Mondays Game
Quebec 4 tnd anapol s 1
they dealt the Jets theor ftflh
Atlanta at P ttsbur gh n ght
27 7
Cleveland 4 Phoen x 4 ol
Monday s Games
The Green Bay Packers play loss m s1x games I ydeU p 7409
N BA Standings
1No games schedu ed
the ChiCago Bears m Chicago Motchell set an NFL record for
By un ted Press Internal anal
Eastern conlerent:e
m the Monday mght teleVIsiOn
All ant c D1v s on
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
game
wlpctgb
FOOTBALL RESULTS
2
01000
Ph Ia
Hart s two touchdown passes
Bv Un ted Press tnternattonal
1
I
500
New York
c
e East 0 C e East Tech 0 I e
came after recovered fwnbles
1 500
Buffalo
Cle Chane
23 C e Centra l
1
1 500
Boston
and enabled the Cardmals to
Ca ho c 6
Central 01v1s on
Berksh re 33 C e Lutheran East overt'Ome a 10-7 Houston lead
w I pet 9 b
Wash ngton
1 0 1 000
14 Hart wound up passmg for 134
va l ey
Pym a tun ng
At an fa
1
500
2
Ledgemont 0
yards w1th 14 completions m 20
Houston
1
500
Shaker He ghts 35 Eu c l d 20
Cleveland
0 3 000
2 1 C e Granv e 24 C e John Hay 6 attempts Dan Pastor1m compNew Or I
0
3 000
2
Tuscarawas
Va Icy
32 leted 26 of 40 for 354 yards for
weste..-n conference
Stra sburg 0
M dwest 0 V SIOn
Ca th ot c
52 the Oilers
b
Tu scarawas
w 1 pet •
Malvern 0
The Btlls handed the Patrwts
Ch cago
2 0 1 000
Whee n g W Va l Central 26
Detro t
2 0 1 000
their
f1rst loss m s1x games as
Be a r e 0
KC Omaha
2 0 1 000
Jeff er son Un on 29 Warwood Joe Ferguson threw touchdown
M lwa uk.ee
0 2 000 2
W Va) 12
passes two to Paul Seymour
Pac f c D1v son
w I pet • b 0Pennsboro {W Va 16 Front er
People trust us to handle their savings
Allie Taylor s second touch
Los Ang
1 1 500
Cos Watterson 42 Cos OeSales
Portland
500
down of the game 3 47 mto the
Phoen x
500
Cos St Charles 44 C n Me
fourth
penod rallied the Lions
G dn State
1 1 500
N chota::. 6
Se&amp;tt e
1
2 333
to
theor
triumph over the
7
Bedford Chane I 23 C e Catha c 6
What makes us a different
Saturdays Results
Ak ron Ellet 8 Akron Buchtel 3 V1kmgs
Bill
Munson com
KC Omaha 94 Phoen x 91
BnlliU
kind of loan company
Un Sc hoo 21 Buffa o Nicholas 8
Boston 113 B uffa lo 95
To Df'V tb ss 21 Day Roosevetl pleted 22 of 32 passes 10 of
better
kind
of
makes
us
a
Ph adelph a 99 New York 86
14
them to Ron Jessoe for the
Atlanta 118 Hous ton 112
loan company
To Centra 28 Tot Scott 12
wash ngton 110 New Orleans M dd etown Fenw ck 22 Lakota Lions who won only theor
92
19
second game in stx starts
Ch c:ago 87 M !waukee 70
War WR 27 Sf V ncent St Mary
Go den State
13 C eve and 0
Cowboys 31 Eagles 24
12" r= Mam St • 992 2171
110
K sk
8 Western
R ese rve
Calvm Htll scored on runs of
Detro t122 Portland 99

s 0

75 169

Central

3

V(lln couver
Ch cago
Sl Lou s

•

&gt;~ente~sc

rnoue 1n with
State Fartm

'

--·-

TRUST US

TO HANDLE
A LOAN OF

"

$500.

'

sundays Results
KC Omaha 105 Los Ange es 95
Sealtte 100 Cleveland 93
Monday s Games
(No games scheduled)

ABA Stand ngs
By Un1t1'!d Press International
EASt
w 1 pet g b
2 01000
Kentucky
1 0 1 000
V rg.n a
1 1 500
I
Memph s
1
1 1 500
Sf LOU S
1 2 333
New York
1 '
West
w 1 pet g b
San Anton o
2 0 l 000
1
SanDego
1 01000
1 '
Oenver
0 I 000
2
tnd1ana
0 2 000
2
Utah
0 3 000
Saturday s Resulls
Denver 111 New York 103
San Anton o 114 Memph s 94
V rg n a 96 Utah 94
Sunday s Games
Kentucky 101 lnd &amp;na 92
Sl Lou s 116 Utah 109
San D ego 116 New York 110
Monday s Games
(No games schedu l ed l

crrYWAN
&amp;SAVINGS

Academy 0
F eld 12 Cr estwood 7
Canton T m ken 40 G lmour
Academy 20
Newark Catha c 29 Johnstown 11
Harr son 17 Taylor 7

Can ! e d 32 Warren Kennedy 6
Easl
L verpoo
14
N es
McK nley 13
McDona d 34 Lowellv lie 6
Rhodes 15 L ncoln West 8
F nd ay 11 Man sf el d Sen 1or 6
Norwalk St
Pau
7 Coli ns
Reserve 6
Ashta Harbor 17 Ashta 5 1 Johns
•
Huron 15 Sandusky Sf Mary 7
Cle st Joe 18 C e Calh Lat n
16
Parma Sen or 32 Cte Shaw 0
Padua 21 Cle Hoy Name 8
E l yr a west 16 Margaretta 12
Spr ngf eld Local 14 Ber.l n
Reserve 0
Ash l and Crestview 14 Lex ngton

"
In 1917 the US Army s 1st
Divlswn became the ftrst
Amerocan ftghting untl to see
•ction m World War I

.*
. .•

TUESDAY NIGHT IS
FAMILY FUN NIGHT
AT BURGER CHEF!
1'-l:'oFI..._
rhat H huw much

!NCREDIBURG!BLE!

So how do )O U put
'II til

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Thursd1y S1rlkers
Oct 17 197•
Team
W
L
M1tchell s Jr o
60
4
Shaktee G rls
34 30
H Frank s G r1s
33 31
Simon s Pick a Pair
24 40
Tun No 6
23 41
Team No 4
18 46
Team Series M ttc he11 s
Tno 1529 Shaklee G rrs 1389
H Franks Girls 1365
Team Game M tchell s
Trto 533 end 528 r~lkiee Girls

COllege d1p]0111a

1way

a buffer that

m sure )OUr ch1ld has a chance at

c Jllcgc? S mple US Savmgs Honds
Uuy t hem through the Payroll Savmgs
Plan where you work
lf}ou startnow you ll have aheftv
stockp1leor Bonds to draw on by th~
t1me you r chtld s ready for school
And the day he graduates yuu II fed
pretty proud Of yourself

California 17 Oregon St l4
Haw 28 Cal St Long Bch 21
Idaho 35 Mont 35 t e
Montana St 14 Idaho St 0
New Mex co 32 Wyorn ng 21
Oklahoma 49 Colorado 14
Stanford 34 Wash ngton l7
UCLA 17 Washington St 13
USC 16 Oregon 7

l.ooal Bowling

U

can &lt;::ost the se days And 1t " a pretty
heavy commt lment for a parent to fac

Spacial Family Meal Prices
4 p.m. to closing
FOR ADULTS

Big Shet•

!

Only

Funburger'"

~~~~~~:rr:s $115 ~~~~ho~:~~s
Large Oronk

!6O",.

FOR KIDS

&amp; Lollopop

Only

"'ake

.stoCk.
m_Nnenca.

Join the Payroll Savmgs Plan.

512

lnd victual Series - Wanda
Teaford 560 SlJe Hald 491
Donna McFerUmd 41!;5
lnd VIdUal Game - Wand•
teafor d 208 and HIS Cohl'lle
CH.a~rna" 190

~~

I

•

�'
I

t

\

Denver Broncos in the AFC
West. The Bengais, meanwhile
fell to 4-2 and out of first place
in the AFC Central.

QUEEN CANDIDATES - Students at Kyger Creek High School will select their
~mecoming queen this w~k prior to Thursday's game against Symmes Valley. Queen candidates are seated, left to right, Pam Jarrell, Marie Grose and Sheila Tucker. The court consiais of second row, left to right, Kay Roush, Becky Polcyn and Cindy Price.

KC Hig~ will crQwn· queen
CHESHIRE - Homecoming
festivities will be held at Kyger
Creek High School Thursday
night during the Kyger CreekSymmes Valley football game.
Festivities will begin at 6 p.
m . with a parade in Cheshire.
Numerous units from the high
school and surrdunding area
will march.
Pre-game ceremonies will
commence at 7:30p.m. at the
Kyger Creek Stadium. The 1974
homecoming queen will be

selected during the pre-game
ceremonies.
Queen candidates are Marie
Grose, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Grose; Pam Jarrell,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice Jarrell , and Sheila
Tucker, daughter of Mr: and
Mrs. Dale Tucker, ail of
Cheshire.
The court consists of Kay
Roush, daughter of. Mr. and
Mrs. John Roush! · Addison ,
freshman attendant; Becky

Polcyn, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Polcyn of Rt. 1,

Gallipolis, sophomore attendant , and Cindy Price,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. c.
William Price, Cheshire, junior
attendant.
The Kyger Creek Marching
Band will provide a musical
background and take
a
position of honor while the
queen is chosen from the three
candidates. C. Comer Bradbury, Gallia County School
Superintendent, wjli crown
her
A.danceopentoKygerCreek
students and alumni will follow
the game. Students outside the
high school will be admitted
provided arrangements have
been made in advance with the
school administration.
COLUMBUS(UPI)-Darrly
h1
.Homecoming activities are
P 1 chipped in with 116-111- 167,
d
th d '
f
· br"
un er
e ll'ection o Todd
Spellch an d the Mokr15
~ giving the Eagles tbree of the M
!hers, Paul and Phil, sparked top nine finishers among the
ayes.
. Warren Kennedy to win the AA players.
Fairhorn Baker's winning
AT u u,TA
state high school Class AA golf
tournament Saturday. Fair- AAA effort was paced by Tim
lY'
rtW.Ui\J.'Iii!
born Baker edged Lancaster O'Neal who was runnerup to
FACTS
by one shot to take the Class Hammarik as the big school
AAA title. Ottawa Hills cap- medalist with 79-7~157. Ken
·;
lured the Class A honors.
McDonald was Baker's next
Medalist for the tournament, best scorer with 83-80--163.
thefirsteverto be played in the
Dave Glenn and Jeff
fall of the yesr, was Doug COleman paced Ottawa Hilis,Hanzel of Cleveland Orange, Glenn with an 89-IID-169 and
who had a two-day score of 7(;. COleman with 88-82-170.
7~153onthe7,042-yard,par72
Findlay, with 607, finished
Ohio State University Scarlet third in the AAA chase, three
layout.
shots off the winning pace of
John Hammarik of Youngs- Fairborn Baker.
Next came Youngstown Cars orne 102 , 204,968 ,000
town Cardinal Mooney was the
AA
dallst 'th
me
WI
a 77-77-154. dina! Mooney with 674, defend- gallons of motor fuel was
Ben Lowenthal of Cincinnati ing champion Upper Arlington consumed by the 125 156 876
Country Day edged Dave at 674, followed by Sylvania automobiles , buse's and
Cobosco of Ashtabula St. John 691, Walsh Jesuit 694 , Kent trucks registered in the
on the first hole of a sudden Roosevelt 697 Indian Hills 702 United States durmg 1973.
death Pia Off t tak th Class
•
• The gross motor fuel tax col·
Y
O
e e
Canton Glenwood 724, Beaver- iected in 1973 was $8 352 186 .
A honors. Both gollers had creek 728 and CUyahoga Fails 000 including taxes ~ec~ived
finished the 36 holes with 167 738.
.
- on 3,739,55:f,OOO gallons of
scores, LDwenthal on an 19-78
Lima Bath, with 668 finished non-highway motor fuel, The
and Cobosco with an 81-$. 14shots behind Kennedy in AA, World Almanac notes. State
LDwenthal won with a par followed by Coshocton ( 874 ) gasohne taxes ranged from 5
when Cobosco double bogeyed Lorain Catholic (690), 'Shelby :~ 7 ~0 cents a gallon during
the extra hole .
(699), Orange (699), LDuiaville
INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
Warren Kennedy's 654 total St. Thomas Aquinas (700),
was 10 shots better Uian th~ Hambilton Badin ( 707) GrandPROBE PROMISED
winning score of Fairborn viewHeighis (717), Springfield
MONTPEIJER, Ohio (UP!)
Baker in AAA. Ottawa Hills Shawnee ( 717) and New
- The state fire marshal's
fmished with 893. Ashtabubo St. Lexington ( 718).
office today was to investigate
John, runnerup among the
Colonel Crawford finiahed a fire which killed three persmall schoobo, totaled 704.
third in Class A with 706
sons Sunday at a local apart.'~
Spelich led Kennedy with a · followed
by
Columbu~ ment house . Killed were Fred
steady 711-78-158under the less Academy (713) Sugarcreek
Holstein,1 58, and Dennis
than ideal conditions, while Garaway (714), 'COuntry Day
Holstein, 26, both of MontPauiMokrishad 78-81-160and (721) and Waynesville (745).
pelier, and Connie Smethurst,
18, Bryan .
San Diego past New York.
Despite 37 point.s from Julius
Erving, the Nets dropped their
second game in three outings
this year.

warren K ennedy

Kings J•O}l LA
•. tel 105-95
qum

Thinking about a
new car?
1. Pick out the
model.
2. Line up your
deal.
3. Then ...

.

IOSll to New England and kept
them I I&gt; games in front of the

.

By United Preoo lnlemalloaal
Bill Shatman could not resist
thinking back a few years.
"When we had Jerry West
and Wilt Chamberlain," the
Los Angeles Laker coach said
after a 105-95 loss to Kanaas
City0maha Sunday night, "We
could win our share even when
we had bad nights.
''Now when we play bad,
we're going to lose to almost
everybody·"
The Lakers lost Chamberlain
after the 19'12-73 season but still
managed to win the Pacific
Division title with an ailing
West last season. West announced his retirement last
month.
,~ter beating Golden State in
lhell' season opener Friday, the
Lakers were flat against the
Kings, who finished last in the
Midwest
Division
last
season.
The Lakers battled back
from a 55-38 halltime deficit to
tie the game at 76-all with 11
minutes remaining . Then
guard Jimmy Walker, who
paced the Kings with 'rt points,
went to work, scoring l2 polnis
in the final period,
In the night's only other NBA
contest, Fred Brown and newly
acquired Archie Clark paced
the Seattle Supersonics to a

ldeae invited on $10
millio~ building plans

Joh" Madden was emotionally drained by the
last minute heroics, Bengals Coach Paul Brown
was his usual calm self.
Brown, though, didn 't care to
answer questions after the
game although he was as polite
as he could be.
"Gentlemen," he said, "all I
have to say ia I told my team
they played a great glllne
against a great team and they
have nothing to apologize for. "
The Bengals had scored on a
three-yard smash by Doug
Dressler, hia second of the
game, with 6:43left for a 27-23
lead and then stopped a Raider
drive deep in their own end.
They took possession with 3:05
left after Ray Guy had punted
out on the Cincinnati eight.
• Cincinnati ran off six plays
but tbree Oakland time outs
kept the clock from running
out . Finally, the Bengals
surrendered the ball on a punt
with 1:26 remaining . As things
turned out that was eight
seconds more than Oakland
needed.
"'Ye st~yed after them,
~dn t we? Madde~ sa.•d later.
Let me say this, Cmcmnati is
a fine team and they have
come a long way in a short
time. Thiawas as tough a game
as we have played in a long
time.

100.93 win over the Cleveland
. Cavaliers
In the American Basketball
Association, Kentucky beat
Indiana 101-92, St. Louis
whipped Utah 116-109 and san
Diego downed New York l16110.
SuperSOOies teo Cavallen 93
Clark traded to SeatUe from
Baltim~re in the off-&lt;ll!ason
teamed with Brown to scar~
the Sanies' last 14 points and
IJI'eserve the win. Brown ended
with 31 poinis and Clark had.21
Colooebo 101 Pacen ez
·
Louie Dampier poured in 10
of hia I&amp; poinis in the last
quarter, including his team's
first three-point bomb to lead
Kentucky over Indi~. Dan
Issei's 24 points paced the
unbeaten Colonels to their
second win of the season.
Splrlta 116 Stan 109
Steve Jooes, Fly WUiiams,
and Gus Gerard combined for
88 points to lead the Splriis of
St. Louis past Utah for their
first ABA victory . Williams hit
24, including 16 In the final
quarter, Jones had 23 and
Gerard 21. Utah's Moses
Malone, who opened his pro
career at age 19 by scoring 19
and 20 points in his first two
games, waa held to four points
and spent about hall the game
on the bench.
Q's 111 Nell liD
. TraVIs Grant pumped in 44
points and Caldwell Jones
added another 22 to go along
with his 26 rebounds to spark

,.

'· '

AA golf
Champ

lHQRLD

·C

Green Thumb

'

Residents of the consolidated
Gallia CountY Local School
District will be asked to
provide imput for a possible
building program during the
second week of November.
George Walter, a native
Gallia Countian, retained as
~~Chool architect earlier this
year, outlined progress on a
proposed 10 million dollar
building program during
Saturday's regular meeting of
lbe Gallia Local Board of
Education.
A survey will be conducted to
allow parents, students, and
interested persons voice their
opinions on what buildings
should be constructed and the
basic building needs in the
county. Walter reported that at
Ute present time, no valuation
of the new school district has
been establish. "We have
contacted the Galiia COunty
Auditor's Office, State Auditor,
Ohio Public utilities Commission, Ohio Power Company
and the American Electric
Company but to date, exact
figures on total valuation of the
district have not been set,"
Walter stated. He said that
conflicting figures had been
obtained.
Walter presented a projected
building program based on
population, state minimum
reQuirements, needs,
enrollment and building costs.
Walter's initial package
consists of the replacing of four
elementary buildings, Vinton,
Bidwell, Centerville and
Cadmus and remodeling of the
existing
Hannan
Trace
Elementary School.
In addition, the architect
proposed to repair and update
all existing structures. The $10
million building program also

includes room for expansion
and inflationary costs. He said,
"II the hoard decides to modify
!he package it could do it." The
buildings would be financed
through bond ' issues which
would cost 5I&gt; mills in 1976 and
be reduced to 21&gt; mills in 1977
on a 20 year bond issue.

Notes • •••

No decision has been made
on the number of high schools
but under an old projection
survey conducted two years
ago, it was suggested that
there be 'two high schoobo, one
for North Gaiiia and Kyger
Creek and the other for Southwestern and Hannan Trace.

Of the people,

By the people,
Rwthe people,
Froio the people.

..

::::::::::::~~.30"!:!:!~~!:::::-;

REALLY SHOOK
SAN ANTONIO, Tex.
(UP!) - Rookie Terry Diehl
sat in the elabhouse shaking
bls bead. "I can't believe it 1
can't believe it. I'm justin a
state of awe," he said. "This
Is beyond my wildest expectations." In probably the
biggest , overnight success
story of the 1974 goU season,
Diehl bad jusl pocketed
$25,000 fo,r, lirsl place in the
Texas Open, an event he
considered avoiding because
of a dismal first season as a
professional goller.

That's what th&lt;J United Way is all about.
People. People with problems. Young
people: People hit by disasters. People
without homes. People out of work. And
peo.ple willing t? help. People who care the
Umted Way. Its the world's
greatest _program of people helping
people. People just like you.

©The un~~ec~ way 11r•
,.. FIM::

~ ~Thil ,.,..,._.. n.~Co.A:Im

•

STOP

•.• CALLyour
Nationwide agent
for detalll on
auto tlnan.c ing.

HAMMON'S HULLERS
00 PER
ARE PAYING .
• . 100 LBS.

ss

vice Ia also available
. to finance your boat.
camper, or almost any
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for elltha deta111

After hulling on Hammons Huller. No charge
for hulling. There's a crop under your trees
just for the pjcking. CASH IN ·... take your
walnuts to your nearest Hammons Huller..

P. J. PAULEY
307 Sprl"' Ave., Pomeroy

PH. 992-2318

MIDWAY MARKET

~~~~
U ·--,- --"•oe•a~•d wn~

IIIMIOIIWI~ Mvlvll lnturtnee Com11 t nr
WorM ofllet COol~mbv t O~lo

By Ellzabelh J. Burke«,
Middleport Amateur Gardeners
Peat of various 'kinds is. purchased each year in huge
quantities by amateur gardeners and landscape men for incorporating with the soil to improve its quality.
Wherever new homes are built and lawns are to be made
whe&gt;·ever the planting of trees, shrubs and evergreens is to b~
undertaken, peat products may he employed. They may also be
considered for use wherever new flower borders are to be
prepared or old ones refurbished, vegetable gardens imiJI'oved,
rock gardens and wild gardens conditioned, or wherever seeds
are to be sown in pais or flats or cold frames, and wherever
. mulching is to be practiced. Whether or not a peat product is
actually used may depend upon comparative costs and other
circumstances.
Leaf mold and other decayed vegetation play an important
role in enriching the soil. Under natural, uncultivated conditions,
they are returned to the earth by the plants that spring from it.
Under ,garden conditions, however they are mostly removed in
the form of crops, or in the various tidying up and hygienic
· IJI'OCOSses that go with gardening. Pest is a good replacement for
.these valuable materials, and in its various forms (these will be
discussed shortly) affords an easy and effective means of adding
.to the soil the bulky organic matter it needs.

Needs of Garden Soli
Most garden soils require periodic additions of organic
matter (humus or humus forming materials) to maintain them
,in reasonably fertile conditions. Ordinary fertilizers do not
supply organic matter in sufficient amounts to bring about
significant improvement in the pbysical condition of the soil.
Fertilizers add plant nutrients (nitrogen: phosphorus,'
,potassium and other elements necessary for plant growth) and
.because of this are valuable and needed aids to good gardening.
By themselves, however, they are rarely enough.
To imiJI'ove garden soils and to maintain them in a high state
of fertility, it is important to add to them periodically hath plant
nutrients and bulk organic matter. Organic matter is particularly important in improving soil structure - in maintaining
a desirable physical condition.
It is true that ail bulk organic matter contains some nutrient
,elements, which, as the material decays, are gradually made
•available to the plants. Likewise, all fertilizers of organic origin
(but not those of synthetic or mineral origin) add some humus to
the soil.
But organic fertilizers, such as dried blood, tankage, and
cottonseed meal, are IISed primarily for their nutrient content;
the small amount of humus they add ia of little importance. On
the other hand, many bulky organic materials such as compost,
.leaf mold, commercial humus, peat moss and green cover crops
:are valued chiefly for the very considerable amounts of humus or
,humus.forming material they provide.
,
In a simpler horticultural age the gardener and farmer
'l!pplied their soils with both bulk organic material and liberal
'!ffi0unl.9 of nutrient.s by the generous use of animal manure
mixed with straw or ot~r bedding materials. This was
:8ometfmes supplemented with bone meal or superphosphate, to
-"make up for the phosphorus deficiency of most animal manures.
Most twentieth century gardeners cimnot obtain manure in
amounts sufficient to maintain the humus content of their soils at
'• desired levebo, and many, even if they could, would prefer to use
--other forms of bulk organic matter. There are several of these
:.fairly commonly ava~able; among the most popular and essily
" IJI'OCUfable are the various kinds of peat. Because peats (inucluding peat moss) vary greatly, it ia essential to be able to
purchase them advantageously.

when

·a

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Ponation is approved

Keep America
~utjf~, bJ1t keep

Amertca alive! · · ·
.,

A eompleta f1nanclno ser-

PEAT : IT ENRICHES THE SOIL

BUYlNG PEAT
Peat ia marketed in bulk and in bales, cartons and bags. Bulk
peat ia often nearly saturated with water, but packaged and
" baled samples normally contain little moisture, and most
, frequently its percentage is not stated. Wet bulk peat is com,, monly sold by the cubic yard rather than weight. If of good
.,quaUty, a cubic yard is likely to contain about 450 pounds of
::organic matter. Dried and shredded peat is much lighter,
Weighing usually about 8 pounds per bushel when loose. Bales of
" peat vary considerably in size and this the buyer must take into
•.account
oomparing prices. Their compressed volume may
wbe from five to sometimes more'thain eight bushels (considerably
, ~.of course, when the peat is opened and loosened up) .
_.. Some poinis to remember: In the United States, because of
the Federal Trade COmmission's regulations, you are sure to get
fairly good' product if you buy peat or peat moss under brand
names or from reputable dealers.
~ . Remember, however, that the value of these products, as
•• '!'easured by the actual weight of organic matter contained in a
.. given quantity, may'vary considerably within the Federal Trade
Commission's specifications. Yet a really tiptop peat moss
• cOntains 96-99 per cent organic matter and a first..-ate.Sedge and
, Reed peat~ per cent organic matter. Peat is especially good
f9r heavy, clayey soils.

We must·not saCrifice one resource for
the other.

Convenient and confidential servtce ...
Lowest possible rates
. .. terms to fit your
budget '

A weekly feature of Me1gs
Count)' Garden Club members.

"

But, therO:s another tremendously valuable na.turai resource ovo;r the horizon along
the Atlantic Coast. Energy. Energy that is
needed to
our riation 's worsening energy crisis.

And we needn't. Mode rn techniques for
under-water drilling a.nd delivery of fuel have
eliminated the danger of p~ rmanent ·
environmental damage . An olfshore ariiii,;g
rig won't even he seen from the shore.
And offshore production will reduce the
need for increased tanker traffic.
Ail domestic sources of en.ergy must ' be
developed to meet our growing n'a lional
fuel needs. "I:he potential of the t•tl~ntic outer
continental shelf is great and can be realized .
in an environmentally safe manner. The
Atlantic coast are~s depend on a prosperous
America . And u proSperous America
depends dn ;e'nergy.

'" 'ltACINE- A contribution to
the ''Give to the Yanks Who
Gave" prog'ram of the
American Leglon.was made by
the P4s! Officers Club of
RaCine' Chapter, Order of the
Eaatern Star, at the Thursday
meeting held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb,
Mrs. Webb IJI'esided at the
meeting and apPointed Mrs.
Ruih Barnltz and Mrs. Bernice
carPenter to work with her on
the nominating committee
which will . report at the
December IJ!eeting.
Plans for the December 12
meeting were made with the
of the• meeting to be
announced later. There will be
rid Mr
s.
a lilft ·exchange a
Bam\IZ will present the Christ•
11181 program.
Cards were signed ·· 'for .
members who are ill. Mrs.
Webb gave devotions using
d
IICI'iplure from Hebrews 13 an
a Jesson from The Daily Bread
using the title "Somebocly
Forget.s." She concluded with a
IJI'ayer by Edgar A. Guest.
The traveling prize donated
by Clifford Morrbo was awarded to Mra. Webb. Mrs. Lelhs
Morrbo ~n!ed the program
. wblch included the story of
Jolinny Appleseed and the

_pla.ee

Since 1968,
Columbia Gas has
been participating in
costly geophysical surveys
off the Atlantic Coast. The tests
range from North Carolina to Nova
Scalia. We've also joined a 25 million .
dollar drilling exploralion
program off Canada's east coast,
a promi ~ ing sourCe of ch~an, natural
gas' to help ease the energy crisis.

'

~M
..U\'G AS
Pure

Gas Is precious,

enetV • •• pH N wllely,

200th anniversary account of
the battle of Point Plessant.
Readings included "I Am the
United states" by Mrs. Bernice
Carpenter, and "Did It Ever
Occur tQ You?" by Mrs. Laura ·
Circle.

Club makes tour
to three points
PORTLAND_ The Lebanon
Golden Age Club of Portland
for their October meeting
toured the Marietta Museum,
the Fenton Glass Co. at
•
Williamstown, W. Va., and the
Grand . ·Central . Mall at
Parkeraburli.
.
Making the trip were' Mr. and
·Mra. Darrell Taylor Mary

'

1ma

Circle' Eunle Brinker' Ve
Taylor, Dessie Patterson, COra
Hilton, Hallie Starcher' ani!
Ethel John.ton. Next meeting
will be 00 N"ov. 8 at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hilton
and aU senior citizeils are
invited to join.
A ti1QUght for the day:
American author Albert Payson
Terhune said, " Win without
boasting, lose without excuse."

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Committee for
the levy .meets

'f . ...

Spme of America's most beautiful resor.t areas lie along the Atlantic Coast. And no
one wants to mar their beauty. It's much too valuable a natural resource.

)'

. , ...

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~ -;: The Daily :ientinel,MiddlePort-Pomeroy,O., Monday , 0~1. 21,1974

Bengals zn
30-27 loss
at Oakland
OAKLAND (UP!) - For a
guy with a hamstring pull,
Charlie Smith showed the
Cincinnati Bengals a lot of
speed.
The
veteran
Oakland
Raiders running back needed
every bit of It, too, as he took
the ball from quarterback
Ken Stabler, outran the
Bengal defense to the right
corner of the endzone with only
eight seconds left to play
Sunday for the touchdown that
gave Oakland a 30-27 victory.
Smith got in for only one
other play throughout the
game and that was back in the
second quarter when he ran
three yards on a draw.
On the winning score, Smith
said he had made up his mind
to run for the flag and If he
couldn't make it in, then go
out.side to stop the clock. The
clock was a factor ·in the
winning Raiders drive because
Oakland had no time ouis left,
having used three of them in
the final minutes to stop the
Bengais from running time out
on them without having to
surrender the ball.
The Raiders started their
final drive on their own 48 and
Stabler took them upfield
quickly by hltting tight end Bob
Moore three times and wide
receiver Mike Siani once to set
up at the one. Marv Hubbard cracked the middle but
was stopped and after· Stabler
threw long and incomplete to
stop the clock, Smith came on
for his winning run.
The victory was the Raiders'
fifth straight since an opening

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 21, 197•

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Reports on finance projects
and program promotions were
presented at the second
meeting of the publicity and
finance committee for the
promotion of lhe 2.75 mill
operating levy for the school
for the mentally retarded. The
meeting was held last Monday
night at the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church.
Fact sheets prepared by
Probate Court Judge M•nning
Webster were distributed by
the judge and Ed Kennedy .
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner said about
$85 was made on the bake sale .
Others reporting were Mrs.
Nora Rice, candy sale; Mrs.
Ruth Karr, square dance
plans; Mrs. Rea Roush, Mrs. ·
Jessie Might, Mrs. Skinner and
Mrs. Rice, rummage sale.
Program promotion reports
were given by Mrs. Maxine
Whitehead
on
bumper
stickers; Mrs. Margaret Ella
Lewis and Mrs. Whitehead. on

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Window displays; Mrs. Wilma
Parker, '
pictures
for
newspapers ; Mrs . Larry
Wolfe, Mrs . Fay Sauer,
posters, and Eric Chambers,
speakers' bureau and radio
program.
Plans were made to organize
a "Youth for the Mentally
Retarded" lo conduct door4odoor
d1stribution
of
promotional materials.
Mrs. Sauer spoke on the levy
at the Meigs County Teachers
Association meeting Thursday
night and Mrs. Parker will
speak tonight at the Chester
PTA meeting.
Next meeting w11l be held
Oct. 23 at the Pomeroy Bsptist
Church al which lime plans
Will be completed for the
square dance and materials for
flyers will be presepted. At tending the session were 13
committee members and
Board of Mental Retardation
members and Mrs. Lewts.

convene at 10:30 a.m. At noon
the women of the Presbyterian
Church will serve a luncheon.
The workshop is expected to
conclude around 2:30 p. m.
To I?• considered during the
day will be the resolution
passed by Church Women
United regarding the place of
the organization in meeting the
challenge of criminal offenders, especially youth and
females. Those attending the
workshop are asked to come
prepared to share information
on agencies in their respective
areas dealing with ali phases of
the offender - pre, past, and
during the trouble and punishment.
Counties expected to be
represented are Sctoto, pike,
Lawrence, Jackson , Ga11ia,
Meigs, Vinton, Athens, Perry~
Morgan, and Washington. Mrs.
Moore, to chatr the meeting,
has invited all women of the
Meigs-Gailia community to
altend.

Carmel News,

By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
and family of Worthington,
Ohio and Mrs. George Circle,
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of
New Haven, W. Va. spent
Sunday with Mrs. Mary Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby Pickens
and family of Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Hudson and
Toni of Racine, Mr . and Mrs.
George Hudson of Racine spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Allan Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Brinker
of Toledo, 0. spent Tuesday
and Wednesday nighis with
Mrs. Dean Brinker. Others
calling at the Brinker home
were Mr •. and Mrs. ciarence
Foor of Pataskala, 0 ., Mr. and
Mrs . Bernard Gainer of
Barberton, Ohio, Mr. and Mra.
Hayman Barnitz of Pomeroy.
Margaret Ann Johnson and
Sheryl and Betty Van ~etcr,
Racine R.D.

·

law and sister, Mr. and llirs.
Kenneth Crabtree in McArthur
on Saturday evening.
Several from this area enjoyed the achvities at the Bob
Evans Farm Festival recently.
Columbia Grange members
and guests who were at the
lOOth anniversary of Laurel
Grange on Sunday afternoon
were Bertha Crippen, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Starkey and Mrs.
Roy Wiseman, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur

Crabtree,

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Pomeroy Bend
pe-rsonal notes
By Polly Cramer

Carpenter News, Event
Mrs. Herman Cordray,
Athens Rt., spent a day with
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers and
Mrs. Lester Cordray.
Sunday callers at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were Mr. and Mrs. James
Arbaugh of New Philadelphia.
Family members who joined
Mrs. Lucy Thomas and her
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Kalb, Minneapolis, Minnesota
for a dinner included Mrs.
Willeen Smith and sons,
Clayton and Elliot, Hamilton,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. John
Kimes and Paula, and Amy
Caldwell of COlumbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. Asa Jordan, Middleport;
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Leist, Rosemary and Lorraine,
Gaithersburg, Maryland .
The Busy Bee Society of the
Carpenter Baptist Church met
with Mrs. Joe McWhorter for
their Oclober meeting. Freda
Smith was program leader. A
silent auction was held. Others
present were Vivian Gaston,
Hester Peck, Ida Cheadle and
Metta Fisher.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
and Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine
Jordan, Bryan, Keith and Sara
Faye visited their brother-in-

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Church women
plan workshop
Meeting the challenge of
criminal offenders will be
among the topics discussed at
the fall workshop of Area H,
Church Women United in Ohio,
at
the
First
United
Presbyterian Church in
Middleport Wednesday.
Expected up participate in
the workshop are Mrs. Georgia
Snyder,
Canton,
state
president, and Celia Davies,
Jeromesville, vice president
tor unit cultivation, and other
members of the executive
board of Church Women
United.
Another featuve of the
meeting will be a report on the
Ecumenical Assembly Oct. I013in Memphis, Tenn.,attended
by Mrs. Jean L. Moore of
Middleport, Area H chairwoman.
At the Wednesday meeting,
the goals of Church Women
Uruted will be defined .
The coffee hour will begin at
10 a . m. and the meeting will

.

-:-:-•••-;;,:....· }:·

Walter

Jordan and Mr. and Mrs.
Mendal Jordan.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck
and family received a
telephone call from their
daughter, the former Helen
Peck, now Mrs . Robert
Kuykendall, who with her
husband is stationed at Yokota
Air Force Base in Japan .
Lucy Thomas was hostess to
members of the Temple United
Methodist Women's group for
their
October
meeting.
Elizabeth Jordan led devotions
using the theme, The Cross and
the Crown and stressed the
idea that one should look for
beauty and good around and be
thankful. Refreshments in
keeping with the season were
served to Westina Crabtree,
Betty Mattox, Pauline Comer,
Murl Galaway, Rose Mary
Miller, Debbie and Laura
Miller, Leah Crabtree, Hazel
Culwell, Goldie Gillogly,
Elizabeth Jordan .and the
hostess.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Wayne" Peck and
daughters were Mr. and Mrs .
Jack Quinn and daughter, Mrs.
Doris Campbell and Hazel
Peck, Springfield, and Edwin
Peck, Albany.

MONDAY
REGULAR meeting, Me1gs
Order of DeMoiay, 7:30 p.m.,
at Middleport Masonic Temple. All officers and members
asked to attend . Mothers of
members will meet at same
Ume in basement of temple for
house wares party.
MIDDLEPORT

Business

and Professional Women 's

Club, 6:30 p. m. at the Meigs
Inn with Mary Powell,
cosmetology teacher at Meigs
High School, as the speaker.
MIDDLEPORT Elementary
PTA, 7:30p. m. at the school.
Program will feature the
Teachers Corps. Rev. Donald
Cole, Middleport Church of the
Nazarene, will give devotions.
TUESDAY
THROUGH Friday ,
Christian Witness workshop, 10
a.m. to 11 a.m., at Racine
United Methodist Church with
the Rev. James Van Durant in
charge.
DREW Webster Post 39,
American Legion Auxiliary ,
7:30 p.m. at post home with
Mrs . Robert Couch in charge of
program.
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7:30 Tuesday at the home
of Mrs. Thelma Dill with Mrs.
COnstance Shields as hosle'lS.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, 6:30 p.m. at the
Middleport hall of FeeneyBennett Post 128 .
WENDESDAY
AMERICAN Legion and the
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30 p.m., potluck
dinner with meetings at 7:30
p.m.
'
POMEROY • Middleport
Lions Club, noon at the Meigs
Inn. All Lions urged to attend.
OHIO Valley COmmandry 24,
Knights Tempiar, stated
conclave, 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

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Family reunited

Mr s .

Ali ce

Wtlliams,

Minersville, ha s returned from
Bakersfi eld, Calif. , where she
spen t the past mon th visiting
her son and daughter-m-law ,
Mr
and Mrs . Mtchael
Williams.
Mr . an d Mrs Richard
Williams and two children or
St. Mary's, Ohto, were here
over the wee kend to visit hts
mother , Mrs . Ahce Williams
Mrs. Ceha Davies o£
Jeromesv ille, 0 ., wi ll be the
houseguest of Mrs. Jean L.
Moore Tuesday and remam for
the Church Women United
meeting on Wednesday
Mrs Lillian Weese, Mrs.
Robert Wood , Mr. and Mrs
James Roush and Mr . and Mrs.
Ralph W£bb a tte nded the
grand visitation and reception
for Howard Shull, grand
sentinel, and Mary Sh ull,
grand representative, held
Saturd'ay mght at the
Alexander High School.
Mr . and Mr s. Goerge
Moseley of Dexter C1ty were
weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs . Ralph Webb, Racine.

jacket trim
had better days
POLLY 'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I hope someone has a suggestion for
cleamng the whtte trim (50 per ce nt acryhc, 25 per cent cotton
and 25 per cen t hnen) on a red wool winter jacket. Dry cleamng
does not help the wh1te. lt comes home matted and dingy-lookmg.
This coa t can not be washed and the trim includes collar cu ffs
pock ets and a ndge around the bottom . - DEBRA .
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DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve IS that the make rs of
_women's pW'ses use the wrong side for any decorations. We are
told and know lhat to prevent pickpockets from gettmg mto our
purses we should carry them so the open mg s1de of the ca tch IS
next to the person. When this is done the pretty side of the purse
is hidden - NAOMI
DEAR POLLY - I am answermg Dorothy who is perplexed
about sendmg mvitations to her son 's wedding . She did not know
how many names to include on the invitatton hst for her son's
side of the family. The bride 's family decide on the over-all
number of guests to be mvited and her mother tells his mother
approxlDlateiy how many guests should be on their hst. II may
be, as in this case, the bridegroom has more persons he feels
should be invited but the bnde's mother is the one to take that
into consideration . - CLAffiE.
DEAR POLLY - and Dorothy - The engaged couple's
mothers have to decide how far to go with the mvitations sent to
one family and how many children they are to include . It all
depends on how large an affair this is to be. if mamed children
live away from home their invitations would be separate as well
as those al mllege or working out of town - any with a different
address from the family home. If several children at home are to
be invited the outer envelope could have the names of the parents
only and then the inner envelope could have others mvtted hsted
under "Mr. and Blank" at the top. The outer envelope would
have only the family heads - Mr. and Mrs. James Blank and the
address. - UNSIGNED.
•
DEAR DOROTHY- Do not forget to count those additional
names on the inner envelopes. They are part of the nwnber
allolled you. Not lo do so would put you off on the wrong foot with
the bride's moth er befor~ the wedding got of! the ground. POU.Y.
c
DEAR POLLY - Regardless of the many t omments agamst
them I would never use anything but venetian blmds at my
windows . After 33 years of cleanmg them the hard way 1 have
discovered an easy one. Use that household cleaning powder that
needs no rmsing in a pail of water. Wear a pair of cotton gloves.
Pass a dry cloth over blinds to remove dust. Then with a wet
gloved hand rub one slat a tlDle back and forth a couple of times.
Wipe dry with dry glove and see them shine. i clean both sides of
a blind in about 12 minutes. If blinds are very dirty they can be
rinsed with glove dipped in clear water . - LUCILLE P.
·
Vuu will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homemaking idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or Holulion to a
problem . Write Polly in care of this newspaper.

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
The 16th bJrthday of Jane
Whitehead, student at Ohio
Untverstt y , was observed
Sunday with a dinner at the
Re edsville home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Ernest
Whitehead . Attend i ng were
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Frydman,
Co lumbus ; Mr . and Mrs.
Warren Pickens and niece,
Kay Balderson, Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Weber, David and
Mark , Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Sauer, Mary Ruth a nd Joy , and
Juii Whitehead.

School projects planned

CARPENTER - Family
members who gathered at the
TUPPERS PLAINS
home of Mr . and Mrs. Wayne
Several school projects were
Peck for a reunion included
discussed at the October
Mr. and Mrs. Mike White and
meeting of the Tuppers Plains
daughter, Zanesville; Mr. and
School Boosters held at the
Mr.s , ))urw.ood. Neff and school.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mrs. Pat Striver presided
Locke, and Mrs. Pam and a committee was apDa lrymple and daughters ,
pointed to attend the next
Crooksville; Mr. and Mrs.
regular school board meeting
Clayton Durbin, Mrs. Mabel to discuss the possible purCarney, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
chase of school material.
Reynolds and son, Mr. and
It was decided not to have a
Mrs . Ben Gorday and
Halloween party this year and
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
instead to assist with trick or
Joe Zalenko and daughter,
treat. Representatives of the
Akron .
Orange
Township
Fire
Also, Mrs. Phyllis Emley, Department agreed to help and
Mt. Vernon; . Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Peck and Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Davis and children,
Nelsonville; Mrs. Hazel Feil
and Mr. and Mrs . Lewis
Holmes, Bens Run , W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sole,
Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mrs.
Lulu Williamson, Mrs. Wayne
Ervin and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs . Mike McVay and
daughter and Greg Haning,
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
""
Williamson and children, and "1 sot into trouble at school for
the host family, Mr. and Mrs. ICIIIIethinS I didn't do ... my
Wayne Peck, Alice and Wanda, homework."
local.
HOMECOMING SliT
The annual homecoming of
The Almanac
the Columbia Chapel Church at
By United Press International Point Rock , will be held
Today is Monday, Oct. 21, the Saturday, Oct. 26. Serving will
294th day of 1974 with 71 to begin at 5 p.m. Everyone ia
follow .
welcome to attend.
The moon is approaching its
first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Ssturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born this dale are
unde~ the &amp;ign of Libra.
Alfred Nobel, Swedish inventor and founder of the Nobel
Prize, was born Oct. 21, 1833.
On this day in history:
In 1879, after 14 months of
experiments, Thomas F;dlson
invented a workable electric
Incandescent lamp.

··-·---- ·---

the date was set for Oct. 30
from 6:30 to 8 p. m.
Room count was won by Mrs.
Bea Douglas ' s ixth grade .
Refreshments were served by
Ihe sixth g rade-room mothers. ··
Nexl meetmg will be held
Monday, Nov . 11 at 7::l0 p.m .
Precedlilg the meeting a film
on scouting was shown. There
was also an officers ' meeting
With Mrs. Shriver, president,
Joe Sayer, vice president; Mrs.
Mary J.ongenette, secretary;
Mrs.
Dorothy Ca laway,
treasurer ; Mrs. Joyce Ritchie,
news reporter, and Mrs.
Douglas, principal, attending.

Play it safe and sure.

It may b e time to
have your present
policy updated.

l.ltf's .Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER
INS. AGENCY
102 W. Main

992· 2143

Pomeroy

I GROUP
WOMENS

HANDBAGS

Men Only .
Suede &amp; Leather
Linen gloves were found in
the tomb of Egyptian King
Tutankhamen 04th century
B.C.). Worn only by men,
gloves became fashiOnable
for women · when first worn
by Catherine de Medicis1
Yaur Thorn .MeAn Store
queen consort of Henry II ot
'---M_iikl_leport, o~.
France, in the 16t~ century.

moFF

heritage house
_

_J

N. W. OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON,
0.
D
•.
. .
OFFICE HOURS 9:.JO' TO 12,2 TO SJC'LOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT ST ..
POMEROY.
'

• '..

(;

'

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I

t

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Denver Broncos in the AFC
West. The Bengais, meanwhile
fell to 4-2 and out of first place
in the AFC Central.

QUEEN CANDIDATES - Students at Kyger Creek High School will select their
~mecoming queen this w~k prior to Thursday's game against Symmes Valley. Queen candidates are seated, left to right, Pam Jarrell, Marie Grose and Sheila Tucker. The court consiais of second row, left to right, Kay Roush, Becky Polcyn and Cindy Price.

KC Hig~ will crQwn· queen
CHESHIRE - Homecoming
festivities will be held at Kyger
Creek High School Thursday
night during the Kyger CreekSymmes Valley football game.
Festivities will begin at 6 p.
m . with a parade in Cheshire.
Numerous units from the high
school and surrdunding area
will march.
Pre-game ceremonies will
commence at 7:30p.m. at the
Kyger Creek Stadium. The 1974
homecoming queen will be

selected during the pre-game
ceremonies.
Queen candidates are Marie
Grose, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Grose; Pam Jarrell,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice Jarrell , and Sheila
Tucker, daughter of Mr: and
Mrs. Dale Tucker, ail of
Cheshire.
The court consists of Kay
Roush, daughter of. Mr. and
Mrs. John Roush! · Addison ,
freshman attendant; Becky

Polcyn, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Polcyn of Rt. 1,

Gallipolis, sophomore attendant , and Cindy Price,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. c.
William Price, Cheshire, junior
attendant.
The Kyger Creek Marching
Band will provide a musical
background and take
a
position of honor while the
queen is chosen from the three
candidates. C. Comer Bradbury, Gallia County School
Superintendent, wjli crown
her
A.danceopentoKygerCreek
students and alumni will follow
the game. Students outside the
high school will be admitted
provided arrangements have
been made in advance with the
school administration.
COLUMBUS(UPI)-Darrly
h1
.Homecoming activities are
P 1 chipped in with 116-111- 167,
d
th d '
f
· br"
un er
e ll'ection o Todd
Spellch an d the Mokr15
~ giving the Eagles tbree of the M
!hers, Paul and Phil, sparked top nine finishers among the
ayes.
. Warren Kennedy to win the AA players.
Fairhorn Baker's winning
AT u u,TA
state high school Class AA golf
tournament Saturday. Fair- AAA effort was paced by Tim
lY'
rtW.Ui\J.'Iii!
born Baker edged Lancaster O'Neal who was runnerup to
FACTS
by one shot to take the Class Hammarik as the big school
AAA title. Ottawa Hills cap- medalist with 79-7~157. Ken
·;
lured the Class A honors.
McDonald was Baker's next
Medalist for the tournament, best scorer with 83-80--163.
thefirsteverto be played in the
Dave Glenn and Jeff
fall of the yesr, was Doug COleman paced Ottawa Hilis,Hanzel of Cleveland Orange, Glenn with an 89-IID-169 and
who had a two-day score of 7(;. COleman with 88-82-170.
7~153onthe7,042-yard,par72
Findlay, with 607, finished
Ohio State University Scarlet third in the AAA chase, three
layout.
shots off the winning pace of
John Hammarik of Youngs- Fairborn Baker.
Next came Youngstown Cars orne 102 , 204,968 ,000
town Cardinal Mooney was the
AA
dallst 'th
me
WI
a 77-77-154. dina! Mooney with 674, defend- gallons of motor fuel was
Ben Lowenthal of Cincinnati ing champion Upper Arlington consumed by the 125 156 876
Country Day edged Dave at 674, followed by Sylvania automobiles , buse's and
Cobosco of Ashtabula St. John 691, Walsh Jesuit 694 , Kent trucks registered in the
on the first hole of a sudden Roosevelt 697 Indian Hills 702 United States durmg 1973.
death Pia Off t tak th Class
•
• The gross motor fuel tax col·
Y
O
e e
Canton Glenwood 724, Beaver- iected in 1973 was $8 352 186 .
A honors. Both gollers had creek 728 and CUyahoga Fails 000 including taxes ~ec~ived
finished the 36 holes with 167 738.
.
- on 3,739,55:f,OOO gallons of
scores, LDwenthal on an 19-78
Lima Bath, with 668 finished non-highway motor fuel, The
and Cobosco with an 81-$. 14shots behind Kennedy in AA, World Almanac notes. State
LDwenthal won with a par followed by Coshocton ( 874 ) gasohne taxes ranged from 5
when Cobosco double bogeyed Lorain Catholic (690), 'Shelby :~ 7 ~0 cents a gallon during
the extra hole .
(699), Orange (699), LDuiaville
INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
Warren Kennedy's 654 total St. Thomas Aquinas (700),
was 10 shots better Uian th~ Hambilton Badin ( 707) GrandPROBE PROMISED
winning score of Fairborn viewHeighis (717), Springfield
MONTPEIJER, Ohio (UP!)
Baker in AAA. Ottawa Hills Shawnee ( 717) and New
- The state fire marshal's
fmished with 893. Ashtabubo St. Lexington ( 718).
office today was to investigate
John, runnerup among the
Colonel Crawford finiahed a fire which killed three persmall schoobo, totaled 704.
third in Class A with 706
sons Sunday at a local apart.'~
Spelich led Kennedy with a · followed
by
Columbu~ ment house . Killed were Fred
steady 711-78-158under the less Academy (713) Sugarcreek
Holstein,1 58, and Dennis
than ideal conditions, while Garaway (714), 'COuntry Day
Holstein, 26, both of MontPauiMokrishad 78-81-160and (721) and Waynesville (745).
pelier, and Connie Smethurst,
18, Bryan .
San Diego past New York.
Despite 37 point.s from Julius
Erving, the Nets dropped their
second game in three outings
this year.

warren K ennedy

Kings J•O}l LA
•. tel 105-95
qum

Thinking about a
new car?
1. Pick out the
model.
2. Line up your
deal.
3. Then ...

.

IOSll to New England and kept
them I I&gt; games in front of the

.

By United Preoo lnlemalloaal
Bill Shatman could not resist
thinking back a few years.
"When we had Jerry West
and Wilt Chamberlain," the
Los Angeles Laker coach said
after a 105-95 loss to Kanaas
City0maha Sunday night, "We
could win our share even when
we had bad nights.
''Now when we play bad,
we're going to lose to almost
everybody·"
The Lakers lost Chamberlain
after the 19'12-73 season but still
managed to win the Pacific
Division title with an ailing
West last season. West announced his retirement last
month.
,~ter beating Golden State in
lhell' season opener Friday, the
Lakers were flat against the
Kings, who finished last in the
Midwest
Division
last
season.
The Lakers battled back
from a 55-38 halltime deficit to
tie the game at 76-all with 11
minutes remaining . Then
guard Jimmy Walker, who
paced the Kings with 'rt points,
went to work, scoring l2 polnis
in the final period,
In the night's only other NBA
contest, Fred Brown and newly
acquired Archie Clark paced
the Seattle Supersonics to a

ldeae invited on $10
millio~ building plans

Joh" Madden was emotionally drained by the
last minute heroics, Bengals Coach Paul Brown
was his usual calm self.
Brown, though, didn 't care to
answer questions after the
game although he was as polite
as he could be.
"Gentlemen," he said, "all I
have to say ia I told my team
they played a great glllne
against a great team and they
have nothing to apologize for. "
The Bengals had scored on a
three-yard smash by Doug
Dressler, hia second of the
game, with 6:43left for a 27-23
lead and then stopped a Raider
drive deep in their own end.
They took possession with 3:05
left after Ray Guy had punted
out on the Cincinnati eight.
• Cincinnati ran off six plays
but tbree Oakland time outs
kept the clock from running
out . Finally, the Bengals
surrendered the ball on a punt
with 1:26 remaining . As things
turned out that was eight
seconds more than Oakland
needed.
"'Ye st~yed after them,
~dn t we? Madde~ sa.•d later.
Let me say this, Cmcmnati is
a fine team and they have
come a long way in a short
time. Thiawas as tough a game
as we have played in a long
time.

100.93 win over the Cleveland
. Cavaliers
In the American Basketball
Association, Kentucky beat
Indiana 101-92, St. Louis
whipped Utah 116-109 and san
Diego downed New York l16110.
SuperSOOies teo Cavallen 93
Clark traded to SeatUe from
Baltim~re in the off-&lt;ll!ason
teamed with Brown to scar~
the Sanies' last 14 points and
IJI'eserve the win. Brown ended
with 31 poinis and Clark had.21
Colooebo 101 Pacen ez
·
Louie Dampier poured in 10
of hia I&amp; poinis in the last
quarter, including his team's
first three-point bomb to lead
Kentucky over Indi~. Dan
Issei's 24 points paced the
unbeaten Colonels to their
second win of the season.
Splrlta 116 Stan 109
Steve Jooes, Fly WUiiams,
and Gus Gerard combined for
88 points to lead the Splriis of
St. Louis past Utah for their
first ABA victory . Williams hit
24, including 16 In the final
quarter, Jones had 23 and
Gerard 21. Utah's Moses
Malone, who opened his pro
career at age 19 by scoring 19
and 20 points in his first two
games, waa held to four points
and spent about hall the game
on the bench.
Q's 111 Nell liD
. TraVIs Grant pumped in 44
points and Caldwell Jones
added another 22 to go along
with his 26 rebounds to spark

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AA golf
Champ

lHQRLD

·C

Green Thumb

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Residents of the consolidated
Gallia CountY Local School
District will be asked to
provide imput for a possible
building program during the
second week of November.
George Walter, a native
Gallia Countian, retained as
~~Chool architect earlier this
year, outlined progress on a
proposed 10 million dollar
building program during
Saturday's regular meeting of
lbe Gallia Local Board of
Education.
A survey will be conducted to
allow parents, students, and
interested persons voice their
opinions on what buildings
should be constructed and the
basic building needs in the
county. Walter reported that at
Ute present time, no valuation
of the new school district has
been establish. "We have
contacted the Galiia COunty
Auditor's Office, State Auditor,
Ohio Public utilities Commission, Ohio Power Company
and the American Electric
Company but to date, exact
figures on total valuation of the
district have not been set,"
Walter stated. He said that
conflicting figures had been
obtained.
Walter presented a projected
building program based on
population, state minimum
reQuirements, needs,
enrollment and building costs.
Walter's initial package
consists of the replacing of four
elementary buildings, Vinton,
Bidwell, Centerville and
Cadmus and remodeling of the
existing
Hannan
Trace
Elementary School.
In addition, the architect
proposed to repair and update
all existing structures. The $10
million building program also

includes room for expansion
and inflationary costs. He said,
"II the hoard decides to modify
!he package it could do it." The
buildings would be financed
through bond ' issues which
would cost 5I&gt; mills in 1976 and
be reduced to 21&gt; mills in 1977
on a 20 year bond issue.

Notes • •••

No decision has been made
on the number of high schools
but under an old projection
survey conducted two years
ago, it was suggested that
there be 'two high schoobo, one
for North Gaiiia and Kyger
Creek and the other for Southwestern and Hannan Trace.

Of the people,

By the people,
Rwthe people,
Froio the people.

..

::::::::::::~~.30"!:!:!~~!:::::-;

REALLY SHOOK
SAN ANTONIO, Tex.
(UP!) - Rookie Terry Diehl
sat in the elabhouse shaking
bls bead. "I can't believe it 1
can't believe it. I'm justin a
state of awe," he said. "This
Is beyond my wildest expectations." In probably the
biggest , overnight success
story of the 1974 goU season,
Diehl bad jusl pocketed
$25,000 fo,r, lirsl place in the
Texas Open, an event he
considered avoiding because
of a dismal first season as a
professional goller.

That's what th&lt;J United Way is all about.
People. People with problems. Young
people: People hit by disasters. People
without homes. People out of work. And
peo.ple willing t? help. People who care the
Umted Way. Its the world's
greatest _program of people helping
people. People just like you.

©The un~~ec~ way 11r•
,.. FIM::

~ ~Thil ,.,..,._.. n.~Co.A:Im

•

STOP

•.• CALLyour
Nationwide agent
for detalll on
auto tlnan.c ing.

HAMMON'S HULLERS
00 PER
ARE PAYING .
• . 100 LBS.

ss

vice Ia also available
. to finance your boat.
camper, or almost any
consumttr pure/lase Call
for elltha deta111

After hulling on Hammons Huller. No charge
for hulling. There's a crop under your trees
just for the pjcking. CASH IN ·... take your
walnuts to your nearest Hammons Huller..

P. J. PAULEY
307 Sprl"' Ave., Pomeroy

PH. 992-2318

MIDWAY MARKET

~~~~
U ·--,- --"•oe•a~•d wn~

IIIMIOIIWI~ Mvlvll lnturtnee Com11 t nr
WorM ofllet COol~mbv t O~lo

By Ellzabelh J. Burke«,
Middleport Amateur Gardeners
Peat of various 'kinds is. purchased each year in huge
quantities by amateur gardeners and landscape men for incorporating with the soil to improve its quality.
Wherever new homes are built and lawns are to be made
whe&gt;·ever the planting of trees, shrubs and evergreens is to b~
undertaken, peat products may he employed. They may also be
considered for use wherever new flower borders are to be
prepared or old ones refurbished, vegetable gardens imiJI'oved,
rock gardens and wild gardens conditioned, or wherever seeds
are to be sown in pais or flats or cold frames, and wherever
. mulching is to be practiced. Whether or not a peat product is
actually used may depend upon comparative costs and other
circumstances.
Leaf mold and other decayed vegetation play an important
role in enriching the soil. Under natural, uncultivated conditions,
they are returned to the earth by the plants that spring from it.
Under ,garden conditions, however they are mostly removed in
the form of crops, or in the various tidying up and hygienic
· IJI'OCOSses that go with gardening. Pest is a good replacement for
.these valuable materials, and in its various forms (these will be
discussed shortly) affords an easy and effective means of adding
.to the soil the bulky organic matter it needs.

Needs of Garden Soli
Most garden soils require periodic additions of organic
matter (humus or humus forming materials) to maintain them
,in reasonably fertile conditions. Ordinary fertilizers do not
supply organic matter in sufficient amounts to bring about
significant improvement in the pbysical condition of the soil.
Fertilizers add plant nutrients (nitrogen: phosphorus,'
,potassium and other elements necessary for plant growth) and
.because of this are valuable and needed aids to good gardening.
By themselves, however, they are rarely enough.
To imiJI'ove garden soils and to maintain them in a high state
of fertility, it is important to add to them periodically hath plant
nutrients and bulk organic matter. Organic matter is particularly important in improving soil structure - in maintaining
a desirable physical condition.
It is true that ail bulk organic matter contains some nutrient
,elements, which, as the material decays, are gradually made
•available to the plants. Likewise, all fertilizers of organic origin
(but not those of synthetic or mineral origin) add some humus to
the soil.
But organic fertilizers, such as dried blood, tankage, and
cottonseed meal, are IISed primarily for their nutrient content;
the small amount of humus they add ia of little importance. On
the other hand, many bulky organic materials such as compost,
.leaf mold, commercial humus, peat moss and green cover crops
:are valued chiefly for the very considerable amounts of humus or
,humus.forming material they provide.
,
In a simpler horticultural age the gardener and farmer
'l!pplied their soils with both bulk organic material and liberal
'!ffi0unl.9 of nutrient.s by the generous use of animal manure
mixed with straw or ot~r bedding materials. This was
:8ometfmes supplemented with bone meal or superphosphate, to
-"make up for the phosphorus deficiency of most animal manures.
Most twentieth century gardeners cimnot obtain manure in
amounts sufficient to maintain the humus content of their soils at
'• desired levebo, and many, even if they could, would prefer to use
--other forms of bulk organic matter. There are several of these
:.fairly commonly ava~able; among the most popular and essily
" IJI'OCUfable are the various kinds of peat. Because peats (inucluding peat moss) vary greatly, it ia essential to be able to
purchase them advantageously.

when

·a

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Ponation is approved

Keep America
~utjf~, bJ1t keep

Amertca alive! · · ·
.,

A eompleta f1nanclno ser-

PEAT : IT ENRICHES THE SOIL

BUYlNG PEAT
Peat ia marketed in bulk and in bales, cartons and bags. Bulk
peat ia often nearly saturated with water, but packaged and
" baled samples normally contain little moisture, and most
, frequently its percentage is not stated. Wet bulk peat is com,, monly sold by the cubic yard rather than weight. If of good
.,quaUty, a cubic yard is likely to contain about 450 pounds of
::organic matter. Dried and shredded peat is much lighter,
Weighing usually about 8 pounds per bushel when loose. Bales of
" peat vary considerably in size and this the buyer must take into
•.account
oomparing prices. Their compressed volume may
wbe from five to sometimes more'thain eight bushels (considerably
, ~.of course, when the peat is opened and loosened up) .
_.. Some poinis to remember: In the United States, because of
the Federal Trade COmmission's regulations, you are sure to get
fairly good' product if you buy peat or peat moss under brand
names or from reputable dealers.
~ . Remember, however, that the value of these products, as
•• '!'easured by the actual weight of organic matter contained in a
.. given quantity, may'vary considerably within the Federal Trade
Commission's specifications. Yet a really tiptop peat moss
• cOntains 96-99 per cent organic matter and a first..-ate.Sedge and
, Reed peat~ per cent organic matter. Peat is especially good
f9r heavy, clayey soils.

We must·not saCrifice one resource for
the other.

Convenient and confidential servtce ...
Lowest possible rates
. .. terms to fit your
budget '

A weekly feature of Me1gs
Count)' Garden Club members.

"

But, therO:s another tremendously valuable na.turai resource ovo;r the horizon along
the Atlantic Coast. Energy. Energy that is
needed to
our riation 's worsening energy crisis.

And we needn't. Mode rn techniques for
under-water drilling a.nd delivery of fuel have
eliminated the danger of p~ rmanent ·
environmental damage . An olfshore ariiii,;g
rig won't even he seen from the shore.
And offshore production will reduce the
need for increased tanker traffic.
Ail domestic sources of en.ergy must ' be
developed to meet our growing n'a lional
fuel needs. "I:he potential of the t•tl~ntic outer
continental shelf is great and can be realized .
in an environmentally safe manner. The
Atlantic coast are~s depend on a prosperous
America . And u proSperous America
depends dn ;e'nergy.

'" 'ltACINE- A contribution to
the ''Give to the Yanks Who
Gave" prog'ram of the
American Leglon.was made by
the P4s! Officers Club of
RaCine' Chapter, Order of the
Eaatern Star, at the Thursday
meeting held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb,
Mrs. Webb IJI'esided at the
meeting and apPointed Mrs.
Ruih Barnltz and Mrs. Bernice
carPenter to work with her on
the nominating committee
which will . report at the
December IJ!eeting.
Plans for the December 12
meeting were made with the
of the• meeting to be
announced later. There will be
rid Mr
s.
a lilft ·exchange a
Bam\IZ will present the Christ•
11181 program.
Cards were signed ·· 'for .
members who are ill. Mrs.
Webb gave devotions using
d
IICI'iplure from Hebrews 13 an
a Jesson from The Daily Bread
using the title "Somebocly
Forget.s." She concluded with a
IJI'ayer by Edgar A. Guest.
The traveling prize donated
by Clifford Morrbo was awarded to Mra. Webb. Mrs. Lelhs
Morrbo ~n!ed the program
. wblch included the story of
Jolinny Appleseed and the

_pla.ee

Since 1968,
Columbia Gas has
been participating in
costly geophysical surveys
off the Atlantic Coast. The tests
range from North Carolina to Nova
Scalia. We've also joined a 25 million .
dollar drilling exploralion
program off Canada's east coast,
a promi ~ ing sourCe of ch~an, natural
gas' to help ease the energy crisis.

'

~M
..U\'G AS
Pure

Gas Is precious,

enetV • •• pH N wllely,

200th anniversary account of
the battle of Point Plessant.
Readings included "I Am the
United states" by Mrs. Bernice
Carpenter, and "Did It Ever
Occur tQ You?" by Mrs. Laura ·
Circle.

Club makes tour
to three points
PORTLAND_ The Lebanon
Golden Age Club of Portland
for their October meeting
toured the Marietta Museum,
the Fenton Glass Co. at
•
Williamstown, W. Va., and the
Grand . ·Central . Mall at
Parkeraburli.
.
Making the trip were' Mr. and
·Mra. Darrell Taylor Mary

'

1ma

Circle' Eunle Brinker' Ve
Taylor, Dessie Patterson, COra
Hilton, Hallie Starcher' ani!
Ethel John.ton. Next meeting
will be 00 N"ov. 8 at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hilton
and aU senior citizeils are
invited to join.
A ti1QUght for the day:
American author Albert Payson
Terhune said, " Win without
boasting, lose without excuse."

'·

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Committee for
the levy .meets

'f . ...

Spme of America's most beautiful resor.t areas lie along the Atlantic Coast. And no
one wants to mar their beauty. It's much too valuable a natural resource.

)'

. , ...

.

~ -;: The Daily :ientinel,MiddlePort-Pomeroy,O., Monday , 0~1. 21,1974

Bengals zn
30-27 loss
at Oakland
OAKLAND (UP!) - For a
guy with a hamstring pull,
Charlie Smith showed the
Cincinnati Bengals a lot of
speed.
The
veteran
Oakland
Raiders running back needed
every bit of It, too, as he took
the ball from quarterback
Ken Stabler, outran the
Bengal defense to the right
corner of the endzone with only
eight seconds left to play
Sunday for the touchdown that
gave Oakland a 30-27 victory.
Smith got in for only one
other play throughout the
game and that was back in the
second quarter when he ran
three yards on a draw.
On the winning score, Smith
said he had made up his mind
to run for the flag and If he
couldn't make it in, then go
out.side to stop the clock. The
clock was a factor ·in the
winning Raiders drive because
Oakland had no time ouis left,
having used three of them in
the final minutes to stop the
Bengais from running time out
on them without having to
surrender the ball.
The Raiders started their
final drive on their own 48 and
Stabler took them upfield
quickly by hltting tight end Bob
Moore three times and wide
receiver Mike Siani once to set
up at the one. Marv Hubbard cracked the middle but
was stopped and after· Stabler
threw long and incomplete to
stop the clock, Smith came on
for his winning run.
The victory was the Raiders'
fifth straight since an opening

'

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 21, 197•

•

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Reports on finance projects
and program promotions were
presented at the second
meeting of the publicity and
finance committee for the
promotion of lhe 2.75 mill
operating levy for the school
for the mentally retarded. The
meeting was held last Monday
night at the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church.
Fact sheets prepared by
Probate Court Judge M•nning
Webster were distributed by
the judge and Ed Kennedy .
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner said about
$85 was made on the bake sale .
Others reporting were Mrs.
Nora Rice, candy sale; Mrs.
Ruth Karr, square dance
plans; Mrs. Rea Roush, Mrs. ·
Jessie Might, Mrs. Skinner and
Mrs. Rice, rummage sale.
Program promotion reports
were given by Mrs. Maxine
Whitehead
on
bumper
stickers; Mrs. Margaret Ella
Lewis and Mrs. Whitehead. on

• -=:::

Window displays; Mrs. Wilma
Parker, '
pictures
for
newspapers ; Mrs . Larry
Wolfe, Mrs . Fay Sauer,
posters, and Eric Chambers,
speakers' bureau and radio
program.
Plans were made to organize
a "Youth for the Mentally
Retarded" lo conduct door4odoor
d1stribution
of
promotional materials.
Mrs. Sauer spoke on the levy
at the Meigs County Teachers
Association meeting Thursday
night and Mrs. Parker will
speak tonight at the Chester
PTA meeting.
Next meeting w11l be held
Oct. 23 at the Pomeroy Bsptist
Church al which lime plans
Will be completed for the
square dance and materials for
flyers will be presepted. At tending the session were 13
committee members and
Board of Mental Retardation
members and Mrs. Lewts.

convene at 10:30 a.m. At noon
the women of the Presbyterian
Church will serve a luncheon.
The workshop is expected to
conclude around 2:30 p. m.
To I?• considered during the
day will be the resolution
passed by Church Women
United regarding the place of
the organization in meeting the
challenge of criminal offenders, especially youth and
females. Those attending the
workshop are asked to come
prepared to share information
on agencies in their respective
areas dealing with ali phases of
the offender - pre, past, and
during the trouble and punishment.
Counties expected to be
represented are Sctoto, pike,
Lawrence, Jackson , Ga11ia,
Meigs, Vinton, Athens, Perry~
Morgan, and Washington. Mrs.
Moore, to chatr the meeting,
has invited all women of the
Meigs-Gailia community to
altend.

Carmel News,

By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle
and family of Worthington,
Ohio and Mrs. George Circle,
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of
New Haven, W. Va. spent
Sunday with Mrs. Mary Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Shelby Pickens
and family of Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Hudson and
Toni of Racine, Mr . and Mrs.
George Hudson of Racine spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Allan Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Brinker
of Toledo, 0. spent Tuesday
and Wednesday nighis with
Mrs. Dean Brinker. Others
calling at the Brinker home
were Mr •. and Mrs. ciarence
Foor of Pataskala, 0 ., Mr. and
Mrs . Bernard Gainer of
Barberton, Ohio, Mr. and Mra.
Hayman Barnitz of Pomeroy.
Margaret Ann Johnson and
Sheryl and Betty Van ~etcr,
Racine R.D.

·

law and sister, Mr. and llirs.
Kenneth Crabtree in McArthur
on Saturday evening.
Several from this area enjoyed the achvities at the Bob
Evans Farm Festival recently.
Columbia Grange members
and guests who were at the
lOOth anniversary of Laurel
Grange on Sunday afternoon
were Bertha Crippen, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Starkey and Mrs.
Roy Wiseman, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur

Crabtree,

..

·.v..·

::::::·=:·.

Pomeroy Bend
pe-rsonal notes
By Polly Cramer

Carpenter News, Event
Mrs. Herman Cordray,
Athens Rt., spent a day with
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers and
Mrs. Lester Cordray.
Sunday callers at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were Mr. and Mrs. James
Arbaugh of New Philadelphia.
Family members who joined
Mrs. Lucy Thomas and her
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Kalb, Minneapolis, Minnesota
for a dinner included Mrs.
Willeen Smith and sons,
Clayton and Elliot, Hamilton,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. John
Kimes and Paula, and Amy
Caldwell of COlumbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. Asa Jordan, Middleport;
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Leist, Rosemary and Lorraine,
Gaithersburg, Maryland .
The Busy Bee Society of the
Carpenter Baptist Church met
with Mrs. Joe McWhorter for
their Oclober meeting. Freda
Smith was program leader. A
silent auction was held. Others
present were Vivian Gaston,
Hester Peck, Ida Cheadle and
Metta Fisher.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
and Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine
Jordan, Bryan, Keith and Sara
Faye visited their brother-in-

.

..

Church women
plan workshop
Meeting the challenge of
criminal offenders will be
among the topics discussed at
the fall workshop of Area H,
Church Women United in Ohio,
at
the
First
United
Presbyterian Church in
Middleport Wednesday.
Expected up participate in
the workshop are Mrs. Georgia
Snyder,
Canton,
state
president, and Celia Davies,
Jeromesville, vice president
tor unit cultivation, and other
members of the executive
board of Church Women
United.
Another featuve of the
meeting will be a report on the
Ecumenical Assembly Oct. I013in Memphis, Tenn.,attended
by Mrs. Jean L. Moore of
Middleport, Area H chairwoman.
At the Wednesday meeting,
the goals of Church Women
Uruted will be defined .
The coffee hour will begin at
10 a . m. and the meeting will

.

-:-:-•••-;;,:....· }:·

Walter

Jordan and Mr. and Mrs.
Mendal Jordan.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck
and family received a
telephone call from their
daughter, the former Helen
Peck, now Mrs . Robert
Kuykendall, who with her
husband is stationed at Yokota
Air Force Base in Japan .
Lucy Thomas was hostess to
members of the Temple United
Methodist Women's group for
their
October
meeting.
Elizabeth Jordan led devotions
using the theme, The Cross and
the Crown and stressed the
idea that one should look for
beauty and good around and be
thankful. Refreshments in
keeping with the season were
served to Westina Crabtree,
Betty Mattox, Pauline Comer,
Murl Galaway, Rose Mary
Miller, Debbie and Laura
Miller, Leah Crabtree, Hazel
Culwell, Goldie Gillogly,
Elizabeth Jordan .and the
hostess.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Wayne" Peck and
daughters were Mr. and Mrs .
Jack Quinn and daughter, Mrs.
Doris Campbell and Hazel
Peck, Springfield, and Edwin
Peck, Albany.

MONDAY
REGULAR meeting, Me1gs
Order of DeMoiay, 7:30 p.m.,
at Middleport Masonic Temple. All officers and members
asked to attend . Mothers of
members will meet at same
Ume in basement of temple for
house wares party.
MIDDLEPORT

Business

and Professional Women 's

Club, 6:30 p. m. at the Meigs
Inn with Mary Powell,
cosmetology teacher at Meigs
High School, as the speaker.
MIDDLEPORT Elementary
PTA, 7:30p. m. at the school.
Program will feature the
Teachers Corps. Rev. Donald
Cole, Middleport Church of the
Nazarene, will give devotions.
TUESDAY
THROUGH Friday ,
Christian Witness workshop, 10
a.m. to 11 a.m., at Racine
United Methodist Church with
the Rev. James Van Durant in
charge.
DREW Webster Post 39,
American Legion Auxiliary ,
7:30 p.m. at post home with
Mrs . Robert Couch in charge of
program.
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7:30 Tuesday at the home
of Mrs. Thelma Dill with Mrs.
COnstance Shields as hosle'lS.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, 6:30 p.m. at the
Middleport hall of FeeneyBennett Post 128 .
WENDESDAY
AMERICAN Legion and the
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30 p.m., potluck
dinner with meetings at 7:30
p.m.
'
POMEROY • Middleport
Lions Club, noon at the Meigs
Inn. All Lions urged to attend.
OHIO Valley COmmandry 24,
Knights Tempiar, stated
conclave, 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

'

Family reunited

Mr s .

Ali ce

Wtlliams,

Minersville, ha s returned from
Bakersfi eld, Calif. , where she
spen t the past mon th visiting
her son and daughter-m-law ,
Mr
and Mrs . Mtchael
Williams.
Mr . an d Mrs Richard
Williams and two children or
St. Mary's, Ohto, were here
over the wee kend to visit hts
mother , Mrs . Ahce Williams
Mrs. Ceha Davies o£
Jeromesv ille, 0 ., wi ll be the
houseguest of Mrs. Jean L.
Moore Tuesday and remam for
the Church Women United
meeting on Wednesday
Mrs Lillian Weese, Mrs.
Robert Wood , Mr. and Mrs
James Roush and Mr . and Mrs.
Ralph W£bb a tte nded the
grand visitation and reception
for Howard Shull, grand
sentinel, and Mary Sh ull,
grand representative, held
Saturd'ay mght at the
Alexander High School.
Mr . and Mr s. Goerge
Moseley of Dexter C1ty were
weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs . Ralph Webb, Racine.

jacket trim
had better days
POLLY 'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I hope someone has a suggestion for
cleamng the whtte trim (50 per ce nt acryhc, 25 per cent cotton
and 25 per cen t hnen) on a red wool winter jacket. Dry cleamng
does not help the wh1te. lt comes home matted and dingy-lookmg.
This coa t can not be washed and the trim includes collar cu ffs
pock ets and a ndge around the bottom . - DEBRA .
'
'
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve IS that the make rs of
_women's pW'ses use the wrong side for any decorations. We are
told and know lhat to prevent pickpockets from gettmg mto our
purses we should carry them so the open mg s1de of the ca tch IS
next to the person. When this is done the pretty side of the purse
is hidden - NAOMI
DEAR POLLY - I am answermg Dorothy who is perplexed
about sendmg mvitations to her son 's wedding . She did not know
how many names to include on the invitatton hst for her son's
side of the family. The bride 's family decide on the over-all
number of guests to be mvited and her mother tells his mother
approxlDlateiy how many guests should be on their hst. II may
be, as in this case, the bridegroom has more persons he feels
should be invited but the bnde's mother is the one to take that
into consideration . - CLAffiE.
DEAR POLLY - and Dorothy - The engaged couple's
mothers have to decide how far to go with the mvitations sent to
one family and how many children they are to include . It all
depends on how large an affair this is to be. if mamed children
live away from home their invitations would be separate as well
as those al mllege or working out of town - any with a different
address from the family home. If several children at home are to
be invited the outer envelope could have the names of the parents
only and then the inner envelope could have others mvtted hsted
under "Mr. and Blank" at the top. The outer envelope would
have only the family heads - Mr. and Mrs. James Blank and the
address. - UNSIGNED.
•
DEAR DOROTHY- Do not forget to count those additional
names on the inner envelopes. They are part of the nwnber
allolled you. Not lo do so would put you off on the wrong foot with
the bride's moth er befor~ the wedding got of! the ground. POU.Y.
c
DEAR POLLY - Regardless of the many t omments agamst
them I would never use anything but venetian blmds at my
windows . After 33 years of cleanmg them the hard way 1 have
discovered an easy one. Use that household cleaning powder that
needs no rmsing in a pail of water. Wear a pair of cotton gloves.
Pass a dry cloth over blinds to remove dust. Then with a wet
gloved hand rub one slat a tlDle back and forth a couple of times.
Wipe dry with dry glove and see them shine. i clean both sides of
a blind in about 12 minutes. If blinds are very dirty they can be
rinsed with glove dipped in clear water . - LUCILLE P.
·
Vuu will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homemaking idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or Holulion to a
problem . Write Polly in care of this newspaper.

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
The 16th bJrthday of Jane
Whitehead, student at Ohio
Untverstt y , was observed
Sunday with a dinner at the
Re edsville home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Ernest
Whitehead . Attend i ng were
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Frydman,
Co lumbus ; Mr . and Mrs.
Warren Pickens and niece,
Kay Balderson, Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Weber, David and
Mark , Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Sauer, Mary Ruth a nd Joy , and
Juii Whitehead.

School projects planned

CARPENTER - Family
members who gathered at the
TUPPERS PLAINS
home of Mr . and Mrs. Wayne
Several school projects were
Peck for a reunion included
discussed at the October
Mr. and Mrs. Mike White and
meeting of the Tuppers Plains
daughter, Zanesville; Mr. and
School Boosters held at the
Mr.s , ))urw.ood. Neff and school.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mrs. Pat Striver presided
Locke, and Mrs. Pam and a committee was apDa lrymple and daughters ,
pointed to attend the next
Crooksville; Mr. and Mrs.
regular school board meeting
Clayton Durbin, Mrs. Mabel to discuss the possible purCarney, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
chase of school material.
Reynolds and son, Mr. and
It was decided not to have a
Mrs . Ben Gorday and
Halloween party this year and
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
instead to assist with trick or
Joe Zalenko and daughter,
treat. Representatives of the
Akron .
Orange
Township
Fire
Also, Mrs. Phyllis Emley, Department agreed to help and
Mt. Vernon; . Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Peck and Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Davis and children,
Nelsonville; Mrs. Hazel Feil
and Mr. and Mrs . Lewis
Holmes, Bens Run , W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sole,
Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mrs.
Lulu Williamson, Mrs. Wayne
Ervin and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs . Mike McVay and
daughter and Greg Haning,
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
""
Williamson and children, and "1 sot into trouble at school for
the host family, Mr. and Mrs. ICIIIIethinS I didn't do ... my
Wayne Peck, Alice and Wanda, homework."
local.
HOMECOMING SliT
The annual homecoming of
The Almanac
the Columbia Chapel Church at
By United Press International Point Rock , will be held
Today is Monday, Oct. 21, the Saturday, Oct. 26. Serving will
294th day of 1974 with 71 to begin at 5 p.m. Everyone ia
follow .
welcome to attend.
The moon is approaching its
first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Ssturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born this dale are
unde~ the &amp;ign of Libra.
Alfred Nobel, Swedish inventor and founder of the Nobel
Prize, was born Oct. 21, 1833.
On this day in history:
In 1879, after 14 months of
experiments, Thomas F;dlson
invented a workable electric
Incandescent lamp.

··-·---- ·---

the date was set for Oct. 30
from 6:30 to 8 p. m.
Room count was won by Mrs.
Bea Douglas ' s ixth grade .
Refreshments were served by
Ihe sixth g rade-room mothers. ··
Nexl meetmg will be held
Monday, Nov . 11 at 7::l0 p.m .
Precedlilg the meeting a film
on scouting was shown. There
was also an officers ' meeting
With Mrs. Shriver, president,
Joe Sayer, vice president; Mrs.
Mary J.ongenette, secretary;
Mrs.
Dorothy Ca laway,
treasurer ; Mrs. Joyce Ritchie,
news reporter, and Mrs.
Douglas, principal, attending.

Play it safe and sure.

It may b e time to
have your present
policy updated.

l.ltf's .Talk Soon

DALE C. WARNER
INS. AGENCY
102 W. Main

992· 2143

Pomeroy

I GROUP
WOMENS

HANDBAGS

Men Only .
Suede &amp; Leather
Linen gloves were found in
the tomb of Egyptian King
Tutankhamen 04th century
B.C.). Worn only by men,
gloves became fashiOnable
for women · when first worn
by Catherine de Medicis1
Yaur Thorn .MeAn Store
queen consort of Henry II ot
'---M_iikl_leport, o~.
France, in the 16t~ century.

moFF

heritage house
_

_J

N. W. OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON,
0.
D
•.
. .
OFFICE HOURS 9:.JO' TO 12,2 TO SJC'LOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT ST ..
POMEROY.
'

• '..

(;

'

�6-

'~'"• na1ly Sent mel, Middleport

Pome• ••

o , Monday

7- The Thnlv ~ntmel,M•ddlonQrt-Por--·ov 0 Monday , Oct 21, 1974
Oct 21 1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
t;ard of Thanks

NOTICE OF ELE-CTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
IN ap pr ec •af on for th e se rv• ces
MILL LIMITATION
rende r ed b y Me1 gs County
N OT I CE s h er eb y g v en that
H ghw a y
Garage
M e gs
•n pur suan ce of a Resolut1on of
County Far Board Sheriffs
the Board of Trustees o f t he
Departmen t
Ra c 1ne
Town sh p ot Ch ester
Oh o
1:: merg en cv Sq u ad we thank
pa ssed on th e J i st day of
you Tha nks to the MER
Augus t
1974 there wilt be
CHANT S that sponsored th e
subm 11ted t o a vo te o f th e peo pl e
trac tor p ull s thank yo u to
of Sl'Hd Town sh p at a Gen era l
those that par t Cl pated tn
ELE CTION t o be held n th e
them Th an k you p ublic w h o
Town ship of Ch est er
M e gs
su pported us wtlh your a t
County Oh o at th e regu l ar
tendance Hope to see you a ll
places of v otm g th ere n on
nex
t year SOUTHEA STERN
Tu es d a y
the 5th d a y of
OH IO T 9i!A C T0R PUL L ERS
November 1974 the quest 1on of
10 '2 1 ltc
tevymg 1n exce ss of the ten m 11
llmltat.on for the bene.f t of
Ches f er Townsh•p tor t he
purpos e of prov d ng an d
ma1nta•n•ng f re apparatu s
appliances build ngs or s 1t es
ther efor or sources of wat er
supply and mat er.a ts t her efor
or the es tabt sh m ent and
ma1ntenan c e of t.ne s of t~r e
at arm telegraph or th e paym ent
of
rermanent
p ar t lime
volunteer f1r e m en or f re
f ght ng compan. es to operate
the same
East Mam St .
Sa1d lax be ng a renewal of
an ex st1ng tax of 1 m II fo run
Pomeroy, 0
for t ve y ear s af a rate not
ex ceedmg ' mil l for eit ch one
dollitr of IJa t uat on
wh c h
New Hours
amounts to F v e Cen ts fo r each
7am 1o10pm
one
h undr e d
dol l ar s
of
'olaluat on tor F tve years
Except
Sun 12 to 6
The Poll s for sad Electton
w II be open at 6 30 o c loc k AM
and re m a n open until 7 30
o clo c;: k PM Ea stern Standard
SPECIAL XMA S Aucll on Sale
T1me of sad day
A ll new toys and gtlt terns
By ord er of the Board of
Sat O c t 26 7 p m at Mason
Elect on s of Me1gs County
Auct on
OhtO
10 20 6tc
E dw n S Cozart
Cha1rman AUCTION
Thursday
and
Saturday n1ght 7 p m
at
Dorothy M Johnston
Mason Auct•on Hor t on St m
D•rector
Mason W Va Consignments
Date d Octob er 4 1974
welc.ome Phone (304 ) 77 3
5471
( 10 1 7 14 21 28 4tc
10 3 He

Notice

LOW·BAll GAS

•

11otSJ&lt;"

Bill lOllS

o~'?.._~,_

Wanted To Rent

Yard Sales

Edwm S Cozart
Cha1rman
Dorothy M Johnston
Drrector
Dated October 4 1974
(10) 7 14 21

28 4tc

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS C.oi&gt;~UNTY OHIO

THE PARMER£ BANK &amp;
SAVINGS COMPANY
Pia nt ff

vs

DANNYM BARBER
ET AL
Defendant!.

For Rent or Lease

SMALL bus1ness butldmg on
s R 33 7 and 124 S75 per
month
Also apartment 4
rooms and bath $65 per
month also 12 room house
Can be two apartments S150
per month Call 992 5786
10 9 26tc

Lost
SMAL..l MALE black and brown
dog wearing a collar lo!.t •n
Hy$ell Run Rd area Phone
992 ~356 or 742 5001
10 21 6tc
SMALL
one eyed
Beagle
blac:k tan and wh•te Lost on
Co Rd 19 ( Peach Fork Rd l
wearing couar Phone 992

AJIJjiJAliURt(£1

Fnnou~

ANACIN

we e k ly

A L KA SEl TZ ER
TUM S o.:tc

BAVER

~

securt~d

o wn bt

~ me n

"TIRED
OF '
Dry Red, Itchy SkinRed Smelly
Hard Water-

-1 New Monogram
Wood Burmng Stove

OR I STAN

a ccoun ts

Br•ntwood

Mn.sour~

GOOD U SED trumpet like new
Call 949 387J after 4 p m
10 17 6tp
600 EGG steel alf .ncuba t or
hlc.e new Phone Larry Bak er
R eedSIJ tie 378 6257
10 20 6tp

63144

NEW Idea corn pt c k er 2 row
pull type
Phon e 667 J374
Tupper s Pta ns
10 20 3tp

Auto Sales

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

VA CUUM c leaners Brand new
ta nk type models
wtlh 5
attac hments Or,t l y S24 40 casn
or terms ava labte New
uPnght models S29 90 cash or
t erms ava table
Trade ms
accepted Phone 992 7755
10 20 lfc
ZIG ZAG
SEWING
MACHINES left n layaway
All bu111 m lo buttonhole do
!.!retch !.ewmg and fancy
sttlch1ng Pay 1ust $48 75 cash
or term s ava table Trade ms
accepted Phone 992 7755
10 20 lfc

1914

1970 CHEVROLET2 TON

$2995

Cab &amp; Chassls 108 cab to a&gt;C.Ie V 8 350 engme 15 000 lb
2 speed R ax le good 8251&lt;20 tires so lid cab

1973 CHEVROLET CK10

$3495

8 Pickup 4 wheel drive locking frt hubs V 8 engine 4
speed trans power sleertng &amp; brakes radio chrome
front &amp; rear bumpers

1972 CHEVROLET C 20,, T

$2395

8 Fleetside V 8 engme 4 speed trans

H duty 15

tires

solid cab radio

HONDA 750 perfect cond ltton
S1 200 Phone 965 3826
10 16 3tc

HOUSE 3 rooms and bath on
R t 7 south of M 1ddleport
Prefer young or m •ddle a9ed
couple wlih no children Ca ll
992 7577.

GOT An Eye for A Buyl
Motorola T V floor sam pte
Sate Al l 1lems musl go no
reasonable offer refused'
Brand new color Qua!.ar and
Quasar II T V s featurmg
the .nstamat•c control all
cabmet styles Some un ts
st ghtly scratched See them
al Ridenour TV and Ap
pt.ances
Phone 985 3307
Chester Oh o
ro 16 6tc

ONE bedroom furn•!.hed apt
Call 992 5436
10 20 61C

LOCUST post 30 30 W •n chester
and 1 82 acre lot Phone 742
3656
10 18 261p

FURNISHED
apartment.
adult$ only In Middleport
Phone 992 387ol
5 12 tfc

55 000
GAS
heater
with
CJutomatlc c:on trol and blower
Maytag wr .ng er washer
Phone 992 3139
10 18 3tp

OPEN EVES 8:00PM
POMEROY, OHIO
.

1970 DODGE Sporo coupe low

m teage Excellent c:ond1t on
Phone Don Bell 247 2022
10 20 Jtc

1967 CHEVY Convertible 396
automat c chrome reverse
wheels body and mtenor
rough 517 5 See Bob Young
Co Rd 46bes•de water tower
10 20 3tp
1966 DART Phone 949 3023
10 18 6tc

Mobile :iomes For Sale
TRAILER for sa te at Hysell
Run 2 bedrooms Phone 992
3975 or ~92 2571
10 11 tfc

For Rent

TWO 4 room and bath apts In
Middleport For mformalton
call 992 2550 or H2 6551
7 3 tfc

1970VAL1ANT 65x12 3 bedroom
fully carpeted L P gas heat
Phone 992 1751
8 25 tfC:

TRAILER space on pn-,ate tot
3m les from Pomeroy Phone
367 7743
10 18 3tr

12x40 EXCELLENT cond ton
large hv ng room k•t chen 1
bedroom Stove refr tgerator
bed S2 450 Phone 378 6276
10 18 6fc

TRAILER 2 bedrooms
only Phone 992 3324

2" BEDROOM mobile home In

town S4 500 Call 992 3975 or
992 2571
9 13 tfc
1972 WINCHESTER Mobi l e
home 60xl2 2 bedrooms 112
baths central a ~r furnace and
carpeted Phone 992 5254 or
( 304) 882 2277
9 29 tfc
1972 WINCHESTER Mobile
Home 60 x 12 2 bedrooms
completely furn ished car
peted ges heat central air
Phone 992 5254 or &lt;304) 882
2277
10 15 6tp
ONE 12x60 tra •l er 3 bedrooms
down payments lake O'oler
payments Phone 992 7116
10 20 Jtp

Wanted To Buy

-- --------. Holiday Special!

(Free of Steel)

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

FREEZER Beef 1000 lb corn
led Hereford steer s extra
n1ce W II deliver to your
processmg plant Call 843 2111
ev en ngs
10 16 12tp

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

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Adults
10 18 tfc

2

BEDROOM
traller
1n
Syracuse close to school No
ch ldren or pets Depostt
reQutred Phone 992 2441 after
6 30 p m
10 18 ffc

Racine, 0.

WALNUTS hullmg dally from 9
M i dway
a m
10 7 p m
Market
W
Ma1n
St
Pomeroy Phone 992 2562
10 18 Jtc

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

R1ght Now At

FREE ESTIMATE

593 6366

Fully Insured

Baker Furn1lure Co

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurn !shed
apartments
Phone 992 5AJA
4 12 lfc
PRIVATE meeting room for
any organ1ZBt1on phone 992
3975
3 11 tfc

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

.4 ROOM turn•shed apt Close to
Powells Super Vatu phone
992 3658
10. 13 tfc;:

SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

Rou1e 7
Rutland '

by pass

Ph

992 5682 or 992 7121
All Mechamcal Work
Open Mon Sat
8A.M. 6P M

2 BEDROOMS
or 992 3A32

For Sale

Interior, late_( ..,
Decorating tme1
Remod•nng

ANTIQUE cherry bed and
dresser Phone 949 3221
10 18 3tc
KNAPP shoes
socks and
lackels 11 styles on sate
Phone 992 5324
10 1 lfc
NEW whiskey barrel for saie
o E Bailey Success Road
Phone 667 6344
10 16 12fp

"""---------

GROCERY business fbr sate
Building for sale or lease"
Phone 773 5611 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appointment
3 20 ttc

POMEROY room

dining

home

--

3

JJ7 N

Water, Electnc, Gas, Sewer
L1nes,
ansta lied
Work
guaranteed
Dozer, Backhoe Trucks
Ltmes1one &amp; Fill Dirt
Commercial Restdential
Construction &amp; Remodel

bath dining room, hardwood
floors, some carpeting full
basement with rec room
utility space concrete patio

roofed, storage bldg about 2
acres In qule1 neighborhood

$29000 DO
CARPENTER -

2 story

frame 4 bedrooms, 11f~
baths, dining room, cement

----------.---- &amp;
KOSCOT
KOSMETICS

block storage bldg , porches
recently painted Inside &amp;
out Porches, 2 garages

_ ___ __ ______

$10,000 DO
NEAR LANGSVILLE -

WIGS (The Mink 0!1 Base
Cosmetics)
Phone
BROWN S 992 5113
8 20 tfc
..........

APPLES Fitzpatrick Orchard
State Route 619
~hone
Wilkesville 669 3785
A FEW new band Instruments
Contact Renee Stone 992 7S67
9 4 tfc
1957 CHEVY parts
Nc.vV
Lakewood traction bars hi
lacker air shocks hooker
headeq. with 3 coUectors for
small block
Call 992 3&lt;196
alter 6 p m BEST OFFER
10 17 tfc

about 2 acres, can help
finance to right party

2

acres 2 story frame, some
carpeting, .4 b-edrooms
dining room, some out

buildings, garage gas well
Pl:lced to sell
m 2259 or m 2!168
7 ROOM house with 2 baths In
Pomeroy Phone 992 3478
10 15 26tc

------------78 ACRES Meigs County Salem

Tgwnshlp Rd 625 deadends
Into property two lakes
rolling hillsides beaut•ful
tree:s lust north of Salem
Center Walter's Realty Box
32• Worthington, Ohlo 43085
Phone (6U) 888 1e-, Seller
Will finance
10 IS 6tc

10 15 IIC

8-K EXCAVATING

- . . --t-------'-- -

Brady Bunch 6

OOMPANY
777 PearJ.Iitreet
Middleport, Ohoo
Phone 992 5367 or 992 3861

Real Estate "or
Sale
r•

12x60 MOBILE HOME 3
bedrooms central air and
heat washer dryer w1th utility

COUNTRY

Over 30

Genera l

HOME

4

bedrooms bath automatic
heat porch, carport and nice
garden large yard Only

$16 SOD DO
BUSINESS BUILDING -

~

3

rooms down and 3 rooms up
Good locatloh for office

2~

,.v

MICCI ff'OtT 0

Serv1ce

1 .

1155-CBSNews8 DanlmelsWorld10
Password 6 News 8 10 13 Bob Brauns
SO Club 4
:
Mr Rogers 33 Jackpot! 3 15
112 30 - Afternoon with OJ 13 Celebrtty Sweepstakes 3 15
Electric Co 33 Split Second 6 Search For Tomorrow 8, 10

·

12 ss- News 3 1s
1 00 - News 3 All My Choldren 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
'
Phil Donahue 8 Young and Restless 10
l 25 -

Chuck White RePOrts 10
Jeopardy 3 4 15 Let s Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
World Turns 8 10
2 00 Days Of Our L1ves 3 4 15 Guiding light 8 10
'
Newlywed Game 6 13

1 30 -

2 30 - Girl in My Lofe6 13 Edge of Night 8 10 Doctors 3

All Small Appliances
Lawn Mowers

General Hospital 6 13 Price Is Right 8 10 Another
World 3 4 15
3 30 - One Life to Ltve 13 How To Survive A Marriage J 4 15
1.Lass1e 6
-4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Tattletales
8 Gilligan s Island 6 SlO 000 Pyramid 1J Bonanza 4 Movie
Love Nest 10
4 30 - Bonanza 15 Mod Squad 6 Gilligan s Island 13 Bewitch

Appliance

10 15 ABC News 6, 13
6 30-NewsB 10 NBCNews3 4 15 FrenchChef33 Bew1tch
ed 6 Gomer Pyle 13
&gt; DO - WharsMy LineS Elec Co 20 Truth or Conseq 3 Paul

to

Nuchims 33

Bowling for Dollars 6

News 10

Name ...That

Tune 13 TBA 15 Electric Company 20 Artol Football33
7 30 - RFD 20 Hollywood Squares 4 Civil Center Here and
There 3 Wlld Wild World of Animals 6 525 000 Pyram1d 8

215 N Second 51

M1ddfeport, Ohio
992 3509

DOZER work land clearrng by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc: Large
dozer and operator with over
20 years experience Pullins
EKcavatlng Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 2478
1219tfc

FOR FREE estimates
aluminum
replac
wtndows siding storm
and wlrtdows Railing Phcone
Charles LISle Syracuse
Carl
Jacob
Representative,
V
John!on and Son Inc
,
4 30 tfc
SePrlc- -TANKS- Cieaned
reasonable rates
Ph
446
4782 Gallipolis John Russell,
owner and operator
5 12 tfc

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

4

0 DELL Allnement locat-d
behind Rutland Grade SchoOl
complete front end service
brake!. and luneups, wheels
balanced electroniCally Open
8 to 8 dally Call 742 3232 on
Sunday for appt
7 16 tfc
EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
septic
tanks tnstalled dump truQks
end lo boys for hire will haul
fill dirt top soil limestone &amp;
graver Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 )1 tfc;:

GRE
I

•

Your resllessness at thiS hme

provoke you to start lh~ngs
you won t lmtsh Set your m1nd
upon one course Sttck to 1t
Will

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)
Usually you re QUite good at

keep1ng secrets Today 1n a f1t
For Tue•d•~· Oct 22, 1974

ARIES (March 21 -Aprll t 91

of talkattveness you re gou10
to say much more than you
should

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23Dec 21) II you gO ShOpjlong

Take 1nto cons•derat1on the
feehngs ol those you deal w1th
or else you II lose any chance
of their co operating w1th you
at thiS time

today leave your c heckbook
home Just spend the afternoon
wmdow watch1ng or else you II
make some unwtse purchases

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

19) You Wlll create dissension
among your assoc1ates 1f you
espouse an unpopular cause
and try to ramrod 1deas through
selfishly

You re presently sadd l1n g
yourself w1th some unworkable
theones They should be diS
carded Don t be so stubborn
about changmg your mmd

GEMINI (May 2t·Juno 20)
Belore you miJOI~Je yourselt
too deeply w1th another m a
JOint mterest analyze all ol 1ls
ram11tcat1ons Know what
you re getting Into

CANCER (Juno 21-July 221

Brace yoursell for a httle tur
bulence around the house to
day or unexpected d1srupt1ons
w111 get everyone on edge un
necessanly

LEO (July 23·Aug

22)

Thtngs you do 1n haste today
w111 probably ha~Je to be done
over later Pace yourself so
that what you do you do well

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopt 221
Normally you re rather censer
vallve and cautious where
money IS concerned Today
you are l1kely to take f1nanc1al
nsks you shouldn t

LIBRA (Sept 23·0Ct 231

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon

AQUARIUS (Jon

20·Fob

19) Its go1ng to be up to you
to p1ck up the loose threads
that others ha~Je raveled Try to
create some order tram chaos

PISCES (Fob 20·Morch 201
If not careful regarding aseoc1
allons you re gomg to lind
yourselt mvolved 1n a complt
cated s1tuatton not ol your
mak1ng

·~
Oct 22 1874

You w11l have qu1te a few op
portumttes th1s year to make
some 1mportant baste changes
that w1U affect your lifestyle
Don 1 put too many .rona 1n the
fire at once

~1Yd1!J1®u..t=::!t!.-J
Unscramble these four Jumbltt,
one letter to each aquare, to
form four ordmary words

I serve raw vegetablea inltead Oil eracken for lnldal, and
witll dips I serve natural c~ and 1111811'et!taed lrult JW(which replace soft drinks In tile refrigerator ) I read l.lbell81111
buy tile foods tbat areu near naturalu pnealble And Iladlq
cblldren tile joy Oil cooking by letting them help -HAPPY AND

IlEALmY &lt;X&gt;OK

~~Mr1Dtr
by THOMAS JOSEPH
-40 Roman
ACROSS
I Ukrame
highway
DOWN
legiSlature
5 Jethro's
1 Weatllerpartner
man's a1d
10 Start of an 2 Maltreat
mcantatlon 3 All dolled
II "Clair -"
up (3 wda )
( 2 wds )
4 Indian
1% Affall' of
mulberry
honor
5 Hangman's
13 Crop up
rope
~ tleseecn
14 Dolt
1 Viva torero 1 18 Of yore
15 Flavorless 7 Words of
19 Glove ·
repast
wammg
material
18 Annular die ( 3 wda.)
2! Prevalent
17 Vacation
8 Overeat
Z3 Quarantine
91&gt;0!
I More
M IraniAn
19 California
slender
Turk
Indlan
II One of tile
Z6 Vernon or
20 King of
Four Horsemen
McKinley
Israel
h Compulsion
:1% Ughtheaded
Z4 Undergroun&lt;i b-+--1--1-condult
Z5 Noble

phrase

10 00- Marcus Welby 6 13

10

r

J

Janak! 33

I I

Kj

LA1t:&gt; t'OWN IN
WA-&amp;HING&gt;"TON

TANKS
cleaned
Modern San •I at ion 992 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 tfc

----CREMEANS
--- ------CONCRET~

TRACED~
V
. h

I

Now .....,..the circled letltn
to fonn the ourprloe
u
ounoatecl br theaboveeoiloon.

"""".0',
I
Cl~l'lilt~..~l~-~-~~~~~-t~l ( l XH I l )

12 30- Wide World Mystery 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4
2 00- News &lt;1 13

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7 30 p m - Washington Debates for the $.eventles
8 30 - The Gunslingers

(Aaawen w-rra•)

CHANNEL FIVE PROGRAMS NOT SF""' '"'GALLI POl

... -•

I~

CPTOB

HNT

ZCR

OBNZPV

\ Antw\"r Reve1111e" IWHIUJhen J10U gellhh- EVEN

UJ.t.:K J. HAt:Y

::ASOUNE ALLEY

Pass
Pass
2 NT
Pass
4•
Pass
Openmg lead - K•

2•

'

B:y Oswald &amp;

James Jacoby
j)swald "Greed IS a tem
ble thmg at the br1dge table
At least, the wrong kmd of

a.oSEour
74 MODEL

SAVINGS
3 bedroom, all electric,
completely furmshed.
See At

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOME
SAlES

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

Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Open Dally lf-7
Big Copo~Jiy
Maytog

Au1olltatlcs
2 1apHCI •r•r•tton
·ChoIce o
weUr
'lttmps Auto water
1tvet control Lint
Fitter or Power Fin
Aglt•tor ..
Perma.P,..lil
Maytag
H•to ol Htlt

7126

-

•

•

Dryers

Surround
ctotht1
With g-.,tlt, ey'"
heat No hot tpota,
1no ovtrdrylng Fine
Me- Lln1 F liter
We lp•c1tt11e 1a

"'

Al'nold titate

ollVI
...lt-::1
na

'

'
' ·~ ,.

.-

.

........

· .............:
~-.....,~~--

.,· ,

~aid 'The r1ght kmd ol
grel!d w1ll tell South to play
safe He w1ll rJSe w1th the
kmlt of trumps, cash the ace
and'_go after diamonds Eventually the defense w11l collect
two• trumps and a d1amond
but :South will be home With
gaoh&gt; and rubber "
JUm "Thls partlcular
truf6p safety play would have
costoSouth a tr1ck agamst a
3-3 :trump break and two
ttlcks 1f East had held the
que4n of trumps But m rub
ber bridge you play for your
contract and only go after
ove~V1cks when the contract
•• safely home "

u:B;I :11!f:F'iU

The boddJng has been
21
West
North East South
1•
Pass '
You South, hold
•A K 84 •K 2 +Q54 .AQ5 4
What do you b1d'
A-Two clubll You could alao
bid three eluba, one or two
.,.del or three notrurnp - •I

MAW "CPIN l:
SORRY FIFTY
C.ENT TO 61T
IN TH' CARD
GAME&gt;

WHV DO YE AllwAYS I
WANT TO BORRY
MY HARD·EARNT

MONEY, PAW&gt;

WHY DON'T VE
TRY EARNIN 1 IT

PULL UP Ill C.HAIR,
HONEY POT

YORESELF FER

AND IF '100 SCRATCH
WITH 'IOU~ STUPID 1

A C.HANGE?

11ll.: POUNO

lllouch we conoider that l11t bid
• bad one
TOD.\ Y'S QUESTION
you do b1d two clubs and your

MAYTAG
111001 Corpot
'•rvlct

b RUTlAND FURNITURE

lS"

' '.

n

partner reblds two notrump
What do you do now1
Answer Tomorrow

LV

ON

YLXCR

QPANT

PV

PRE

P

JNZZNR

QLXC

LR -

FCHHCTVNR

HEROES, FOR ONE TRUE VISION. - 'lBllUCAU

North-south vulnerable

Mlddl,.nnrf Pomeroy

o\XYDLB.\AXB
LONGFELLOW

OF THE WORW, AND ALL THE DI:I:DS OJI ALL

tK9852

J1m "South takes the f1rst
trl~k w1th dummy s ace of
hearts and leads the )ack of
trllmps East plays the s•x
split If South has the wrong
foOn of greed, he w1ll let the
Jaek r1de for a f1nesse If 1t
w&lt;A-ks South w1ll expect to
.m21ke two overtrtcks, but rt IS
goDJg to fa•l West w1lllead a
se&lt;l!Jnd heart South Will have
losl hiS t1mmg and h1s con
trllJ't "

title

Yenerday1~: 1 WOULD GIVE ALL THE WIW..TH

Jumble• ANNUL FAMED JUGGL£ INVEST
S•turrl-y•

OBC

•Ks

greed

monkey
N Indian

CRYPTOQUOTES_

"2

92.1
iNMPO.fM

SE~TIC

city
:15 Capuchin

One letter 11mply atandl for another In lhla l&amp;lllpla A Ia
used for the three L'a, X for the lwo 0 • eto Sinllo letttn,
•r,ootrophea, the lencth and formation of the worda are oil
h nts Eaoh day the code !etten ore cWierent

SOUTH ID)
• AKL075

$nato

3%ItaliiD

lr..-+-+---1-

to

News 20 Mountain Scene 33 CBS

Reports 8, 10
10 30- Your Future Is Now 20 Day At Nlght33
11 DO-News3,4 6 810 13,15 NewsForTheDeaf33
11 30 - Johnny Corson 3 4, 15 Mlsllon Impossible 6 Un
touchables 13 Movie Partners In Crime 8; Movie ' Story
on Page One

1

+

T

touch, ....
30 Athlnt

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

Q64
.Q1086

East

or

(2 wds )
31 Wapiti
SZ Place
13 Grassland
34 Sultana, e g
31 Torch37 Finally
(2 wds)
38 Ploy
39 Sand novel

"10653

North

~

Ibllian
family
Zl Upper NUe
tribesman
'l1 "High -"
Zl Threatener's

EAST

J92

29Tute

Price is Right 10, To Tell the Truth 13 Marco Sporlllte33

B DO - Good T1mes 8 Adam 12 • 15 Movie Trapped Beneath
The Sea" 6, 13, America 20 33 Mental Health 10
8 30 - Evening At Symphony 33 MASH 8 10, Movie The
Law' 3 4, 15
9 DO - Hawaii s.O 8 10
9 30 - Woman 20 33

)

I

--.---

either

• 86

CQUNTaY

6 15 tfc

•742-421t

Dear TOL
Young or old, a man who cheats on his wife isn't overly
concerned wttll honesty And a woman who hunts only mamed
men shouldn't expect it
She who another's husband dates, wBIIs and wa1ts and waits
and WAITS' - H

- - - - - ' - --

I converted my farnlly by no longer alocldng 1117 Jlhel* with
modern nnxea, etc. which are really very expenllw. J edlleated
myself In the art of baking breads, slow.root!•'I beaDI81111.....,
maklnt! my own sauces And I don't spend .n day In tbe ldlcllen

2•

742~

READY MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
prolect Fast and eny Free
estimates Phone 992 328_.
Goegleln Ready Mix Co
Mlddleporl, Ohio
6 30 He

+++

Dear Helen
1 don' t mmd Ron bemg mamed, but he's driving me wild
wtth hiS lies He says he'll be over I walt all everung He doesn't
show
He promises to take me on a Sunday p1cn1c to tile mountaiiiS
On Monday he calls to say his wife planned a faDUly get.together
Sometimes It's tile kids who change hiS plans, but I think
sometunes he JUSI lies out of habit
We're botll 27 He says he loves me, but I'm begmrung to
tll1nk I should have an older, more mature man who wouldn't
always put his wife fll'st
Whatshould1tbe,love or honesty' - TIRED OF UES

"

10 4 tfc

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been 1
cancelled')
Lost
your
operators 11cense Call 992

EXCELSIOR Salt Works ~
Maln St Pomeroy All klndSf
of salt water pellets- water
nuggets block salt and own
Ohio River Salt Phone 992
3891
6 5 tfc

Dear Ready
Heavens no" Nancy DUghl take you up on 11 - and then
you'd be stuck as a PERMANENT servant
Plan a greaf vacation -for one- and start learrung tile joys
of real bachelorhood - H

satisfying quali=ties
= - -- , - --

9 30 p m - The Underworld

Good greed wins out over bad

SEP"TIC TANKS, AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SANITATION
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035

SMALL Muu"'o;: an .. lot O'n
Condor Street
Phone 992

10 14 61C

6 DO - Sesame St 20 News 3 4 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33 News 8

work

C BRADFORD Auctionee-r
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Racine Ohio
Crttt Bradford
s 1 ttC

_____________

P m

All

SEWING MACHINES Repair
SeriJICe all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Authorized S109er Sale! and
Ser'oltce We !harpen Scissors
3 29 tfc

Tne$e su.te!. have solid oak
frames !hal are doweled
glued and double corner
blocked Many styles and
fabrics to choose from
starting a! tow as $129 95
Also 3 pc Early Amerlun
table sets S34 95 We ai!O
have
bedding
bedroom
su•tes l&amp;mps d.nelle sets and
h1de a beds Jacks Furniture
and Upholstery Supplies 236
E Mo!!ln St Pomeroy Phone
992 3903
10 ..._
18 6tc

~u $976 now

15

WIN AT BRIDGE

su.te~

:~s~~~~~~use ;~;~goearh ;~~

B Ironside 13
~ 30 - Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 10 News~ Tra1ls West

'

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

------------NEW quality l1v ng room

ATTRACTIVE 5 rooms and
bath all comfortable size at
205 Sprm~ Ave
Pomeroy
This well arranged one floor
plan home has been com
plelely redecorated 1nslde
and out
Well built but
mexpenslve hardwood floorS
new LuKaire gas furnace
system new Armstrong tile
kitchen and bathroom floors
Good utility bulldln\1 Phone
992 5292
10 18 ttc

eel 3 Lucy Show 8
5 DO - Mr Rogers 20, 33 Merv Griffin 4 F Bl 3 Andy Griffith

Electrrcal

guaranteed
Discount
Sen1or Clttzens

4 IS

3 00 -

Cooling Rofrlg

Plumb1ng

so

112 00 -

P&amp;J Parts

Heatong

7 ROOM hoyse on Lincoln Hill
newly decorated new car WILL trim or cut trees and
shrubbery
also clean out
peted throughout large lot
basements and o!lttlcs Phone
garage reasonably pr1c:ed
949 3221 or 742 4441
Phone 992 2679
10 18 26tc:
10 18 3tc

.....

beautiful new

Known &amp;
Reliable Service ·

DOZER or bac.khoe work
Phone 4&lt;16 3981 or 446 3459
9 8 tfc

_.~

a

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

10\lflloiQ-

~

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

_

9 30- Not For Women Only 3 Hazel6 Tattletales 10
, 10 00- Compa,y 6 Name That Tune 3 lS Magzlne 8 10
lD. 30- Wmnlng Streak 3 15 Ph1l Donahue4
11 00- Password 13 Now You See It 8 10 H1gh Rollers 3 1S
$10 000 Pyramid 6
11 30- Brady Bunch 13 Hollywood Squares 3, 4 15, Love Of

Alt that ts needed for a free
esttma1e 1s a phone call.

t&amp;t

delivered Monday through
Saturday
and
evenmgs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 tfc

............ _..._.

9 00- Paul Dixon 4 AM 3 Phil Donahue 15 Wild Wild West 6
Bullwlnkle 8 Mov1e The Rookie 13

Llle 8 10 Lucy Show 6

BOWERS
REPAIR

~j~ ~ :e~~~ "'ga~a~aeth ~:~:
\0 20 tic

Daughter 13

7 30- New Zoo Revue6 H R Pufnstul13
8 00- Capt Kangaroo 8 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Jeff's Coll1e 6 Popeye 10
8 25- Jack Lalanne 13 Capt Kangaroo 10

iOOf Installed by All Wyther
Roofing Co
.,

If so, Call us Now for a
Free Est1mate.

10 3 tfc
SEWING Machines brand new
--- -~ Zlo i:ag 1n nice walnut table
BUfLUING lot 80ft frontage X
In original certons Never
165ft The second lot on left on
used
Clearance on
7A
R1verv1ew Drive L.lncoln
Models
(Only
a
few
Hill Pomeroy, Ohio If 1n
avallablel
s•J AO cash or WILL TRADE- FINANCING
teres ted call 992 3230 after 5
terms •vall•blt Phone 992
ARRANGED
WITH
pm
7755
MINIMUM
DOWN
Will
10 15 ttc
consider trade for oldu "
10 17 lfC:
home( trallel'l or land on thiS - -- - - - - - -- - - -STEREO RADIO em fm, 8
7
0
track tape combination
4
s~eaker
sound
system
feml1y room air tondltlohlng
garden s~ace qn Vlhe St ln I
Balance $108 72 or f!asy
Move In Immediately ce ll
Ractne Call 94? 2054 aftet 5

torm• call 992 3945

TUESDAY OCTOBER22, 1914

Rev Cleophus Robinson 13 Concerns and Comments 10
Columbus Today 4
6 45- Morning Report 3 Farmt lme 10
7 00- Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Osmonds 6 Farmers

e

bath,

3 bedrooms

Superstar Theatre

6 00- Sunrise Sem1nar 4 Summer Semester 10
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30- Bible Answers 8 News 6 Five Minutes to Live By 4

Doo't forget the roof of your

r ~92-255&amp;:]
......

basement, 2 utilities storm
doors &amp; windows, porch

Lovely home

me

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
High School Football Meigs Homecoming

.!

All·WEAlliER

bedrooms,

Going at $8,900 DO
POMEROY - Lincoln Hts

930pm -

Dear Helen
Every tune I ask my woman to marry me, she says she
doesn't want to be stuck witll one man permanenUy She's 31, I'm
40 She has two children by her fll'sl husband, and I get tllem off
to school every day, make thelt lunch and take care of tllem until
she comes borne from work I always have dinner ready for us,
too, because I work nights
I buy the food, clean house, and do most of the shoppmg
I'm tllere, but after f1ve years of this,
Whenever tlley need
Nancy won't even tell me when she won't be home for supper
When she's home, she e1tller gr1pes or 1gnores me
She takes off on w""kends and leaves
wltll the kids I got
my vacation to coincide with hers, and last night she asked if I'd
stay home wltll tile children while she went to see her SIBier m
California, as she can't take tilem out of school that long
When I suggest gomg out she always has an excuse, but from
tile tunes she stays out aU everung, 1t ISII't because she's a
homebody Yet I love her, and I've got five years mvested
The vacation thing was JUSt about tile last straw Should I
demand marnage or else • - READY TO MOVE

me:

, 6 35 -

Please Phone

VINYL SIDING
PH. 992-74541..
992-712;
Free Estimates, Miclcllettort,

AMractlve 6

room,

"IDOpm -

REDECORATING? .

ALl-'NE .~ THER

Po:MeRov... o.

GRAVEL sand Mason sand
limestone Pit Run by lhe ton
Delivered Phone 4.46 11&lt;12
10 18 tfc

B

2 00- News 4

Emergency Phone 992·
3995 or 992-7582.

home Have

GOOD
PROPERTY
IS
SCARCE AND EXPENSIVE
BUT WE HAVE A NICE
SELECT ION PICTURES OF
EACH ONE AT THE OFFICE

608 E.&lt;
MAIN

11 30- Johnny Carson J 4 15 Movie She Cried Murder'
" Movie Warlock 10 Janak1 33
i'2 DO- News 6 13
l 12 30- Mission Impossible 6 Untouchables 13
1 00-TomorrowJ 4 TakeFiveForlltelS
1 30 - News 13

949 5961, Rac1ne. 0

Does
your
home
requ1re any of these
services?

lliE DEPENI»fll E
OONTRACTING CO.

Will sell at a bargain

10 16 tfc

Turning Points 33
11 DO- News3 4 6 B 10 13,15

8 30 -

good busmess with good stock

phone 992 2780

•

18 30 -

r 8 55- News 13

INVESTMENT -

Real Estate For Sale

house

RACINE PWMBING
AND HEATING

ALL WEATHER
HARDWARE
337 North Second Ave
Mtddleport Oh1o
992 2SSO
I

L __:_A::th:::e:n::s:.,O=h'::0 _ __,,--J , store on State Route doing

2 BEDROOM hOuse to rent COURTS! CabCo 3cab! and4
licenses
Doing very good
Phone 992 3975 or 992 2571
bustness Call 992 7116
101lttc
10 20 3tp
A ROOM house unfurniShed on
1650 L ncoln Heights Phone
992 3874
10 8 ffC

33

1

See
Us
for
your
Plumbmg and Heatmg
Needs

4'

1owards

acres 3 bedrooms nice k1t
chen electric heat city water
l&gt;ath and small stream

Call Collect 1 592 5544

10 00- Medical Centert 10 News 20 Washington Straight Talk

cabinets, etc

On Sale Now quality Devoe
Bnght Wh1te Latex Ho.pse
Paint •n 2 gallon cans Only
$6
per gallon
Brand name Roof Pa1nt 10
pet oft whtle they tasl
Take advantage of these
great buys wh1le they are
st111 m stock

On State R1 124 112 m1 from

building
NEW LISTING -

FREE HOME ESTIMATES

fa •

33

Pa1nflng, siding, roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen

GREAT PAINT VAL,UES AT
ALL WEATHER
HARD·
WARE

SOLID
VINYL SIDING
Produced frqm a special
vinyl &lt;Om pound made by B
F Goodrich and Monsanto 5
times th1cker than metal
!tdlng Will not dent Chip
c:rack peel
rot rust or
chalk

From a shelf

What Servant Problem•

10 00- Medical Center8 10 News 20 Washington Straight =Falk

.

10 16 3tc
COUNTRY Mobllt Home Park
R:t 33 ten m•les north of
Pomeroy
Large tots w1th
concrete pat10S sidewalks
runners and off
street
parktng
Also
space! tor
sma ll trailers Phone 992 747f
7 21 tfc

PHONE
949 3832 or 843-2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

'

NEW foam lo t111 the cush •ons n PIANO tun1ng and repa r
your hv ng room surte as low
Phone Charles Scott 992 3718
as $10 95 for both sofa and
9 17 32tp
cha r We at so cut and sew
new cushion covers See us lor
your upholstery needs Jacks LAST BID Home Improvement
F urnllure and Upho l stery
c arpentry work
roof1ng
SupplieS 236 E Mam St
pa1n t mg carpet 1nstallat on
Pomeroy Phone 992 3903
free esttmates A ll work
10 16 3903
guaranteed Phone 742 5081
9 22 lfc
TESTED and approved by
- - - - - - -- - - - - - mrlllonsot homemakers Blue

Lusore cupet cleaner os tops

-

CULLIGAN
WATER
CONDITIONING

then wr te toctay and nclude phone numbe r t o

712 Hanley Industrial Court

That uood Ole Nashville Music 3 Buck Owens 8
Episode Action 33 Help Thy Neighbor 4 Pollee Surgeon 6
Municipal Court 10 To Tell the Truth 13 Mountwood Park
Mountain Song 20
8 DO-Gunsmoke8, 10 Rookles6 13 Movie The Cay 3 4 15
Drink, Drank Drunk 20
9 DO- Maude 8 10 NFL Football6 13 Movie The Candidate
3 4 15 Alcohollsm One Family s Story 20 33
9 30-Rhoda8 10 CaughtlnTheAct20 33

OONSTRUCTION

~49-3295

'11us IS for "FruStrated Cook" who feels tbat grandma's
&lt;:ooking wouldR'I sell too well as our taste buds have been dulled
by processed and packaged food
Eating bablts are a matter of education or re-education AI
first, people may feel tbat ''real" food is too up front (honeatly
coarse, tart, chewy, etc ) as compared 'll'tth the bland quickie
jUnk But give tllem lime and a subtle approach and you'll have
tllem enjoying good natural foods In no lime Then, tile qwckle
foods will suddenly have no taste, no texture and above aU, no

Helen Help
By Helen Bottel
Us. • •

,..,

r--i 30 -

D&amp;D

GHEEN'S PAINTING

Then call ua for a FREE
Water Analysts

POMEROY LANDMARK/
9. ~ Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2:181
1_.-.

,w,
~TRANS WORLD INDUSTRIES INC
\ "1.,. MARMIETING DIRECTOR DEPT 101

MUNDAY, Oct 21,1974

,

Pnced For Ou1ck Sale

'

App11c1nt ihou ld have car m1n1lll1.1m of 'tpue tHI weekly
rei UDte and el 91ble to auume buuno s s respon i btl tlu w th
n 3 0 d ay s If y o u meet these reou.rementt haYe ttle
n ec eu .~ry t; .U h
nv u\ment a n d, ncerely want to own yo1.1r

The Rosenberg Co.

)

~ ,,''

.IJIJt..

NO INITIAl Sill lNG' INCOMI STARTS IMMIDIATII Y1
COMPANY FURNISHED ACCOUNTS'
MINIMUM CASH INVISTMINT $2395 OD-$4640 DO

SCRAP ALUMINUM

For Sale

AS~IRIN

Ruto c k C ompany

~ No 15 S02
PUBLIC NOTICE
5980
Pursuant to an Order of Sale
10 21 3tc COOP c:orn snapper must be m
IS!ued by the Court Of Common
good cond1flon Phone 843
P leas of Me gs County Oh10 I - - - - - - - - - - - - - '2353
MALE DOG Ch thuahua and
Will offer tor sal e at publiC
10 20 3tc
rat terrier mixed Lost Friday
auctton on the 9th C:ay of
on Mason Ctty park•ng lol
November 197 A at 10 00 A M
has one brown spot located WANTED old uprlg.ht p1anos
at the Co4rt House Steps tn the
any cond1t1on
Paying SlO
over each s1de of the eye
VI ll age of Pomeroy County of
each Ftrstflooron ly wr.te to
Reward If found Phone 304
Me1gs
State of Ohio
the
and 01ve dtrectrons to W1tten
77J 5872 William Jacobs
followmg descrtbe(:l real estate
Plano Co
Box 188 Sardis
Zuspan Trailer Court
The foltowmg real estate
Oh o 43946
10 21 3tc
situate m the Townsh p of 01 ve
10 15 6tp
County of Me tgs and State of
OhiO
Bemg a part of Lot No 138
Town No 3 Sect on No 24 and THREE ROOM furnished apt
Range No
11 of the Oh10
w th bath first floor Phone
Company s Purchase
begin
992 2937
n ng on the north side of the
10 21 3tc:
road teadmg from Long Bo.ttom
Oh10 to Pomeroy Oh 10 on a
line between lots 138 and 139
thence west along sa1d road 8
TWO HOTPOJNT a1r c:on
rods
thence north 20 rods
15~
d1t oners 2.4 000 B T U 5100
thence east 6 rods to dtVId ng
each Phone 992 9975
line of Lots 138 and 139 thence
10 21 6fp
per pound
south 20 rods to the place of
beglnnmg contam ,ng one acre
more or tess
A lso the followmg prem•ses m
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Olive Township Meigs County
ON TAX LEVY IN
Oh10 and be ng n Range No 11
79 Depot Street
EXCESS OF 1'HE TEN
Town No 3 Sectton No 24 and
MILL
LIMITATION
Athens, Oh1o
10 100 Acre Lot No 139 of t he
NOTICE Is hereby gi~Jen that
Ohio Company s Purchase and
bounded and descr bed as 1n pursuo!lnce of a Resotut1on of
follows Begmn ng 21 rods west the Board of Trustees of the CA!&gt;H pa1d tor a ll makes and
models of mobile homes
of the line between 100 Acre TOWNSHIP OF SCIPIO Oh10
Phone area code 614 A23 9~31
passed on the Sth day of July
Lots 138 and 1J9 m the nor
4 13 tfc
thellst corner of a 5 06 acre lot 1974 there will be subm•tted to
belongmg to Mary A Chambers a vote of the people of sa 1d ----------~
at
a
General OLD FURNITURE, oak tables
and at the southeast corner of a TownShiP
clocks In boxes brass beds
ELECTION to be held In the
one acre tot betong1ng to Flora
dishes desks or comp lete
E Smtth In public road lead1ng Township of Sclp1o Oh10 at the
households Write M
D
frbm Long Bottom Ohio to regular places of voting therein
Miller Rl 4 Pomeroy Ohio
Tuppers Platns Oh•O thence on Tuesday the 5th day of
call 992 7760
north 20 rods 10 a stake at the No-,ember 197-1 the question of
s 13 tfc
southeast corner of a lol now levylno In excess of the ten m 111
limitation for the benefit of
owned by Grant Stalnaker
thence eMf 12 rods to a stake Sc1p10 Township for the pur JUNK au u~ comp1eu: c1111u
delivered to our yard we
Situate 9 rods west of the lme pose of Providing and main
p1c:k up auto bodies and buy
between 100 Acre Lots 138 and tainlng fire apparatus ap
all kinds of scrap metals and
139 thence south 18 rods more pllances buildings or sites
Iron Rider's Salvage St Rt
or le!S to the center of sa 1d therefor or sources of water
124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohio
public: r.oad
thence a little supply and materials therefor
Call 992 5A68
south ol westerly along lhe or the establis hment and
10 17 tfc
center of said ra,ad to the place maintenance of lines of fire
of beg•nnlng 1 containing 1 &lt;1 alarm telegraph or the payment
permanent
part t i me NO 1 Copper 4Sc radiators
acres being the same more or of
volunteer firemen or fire
le!.s
25c
brass 2S"c
batteries
E)(ceptlng all coat under sa d flghttng companies to perate
$1 30 Ginseng 558 Yellow
land described In the last pieCe the same
root n so tops 51 50 May
Said tax being a renewal of
which the coal IS e)(pressly
Apple i'Oc
M
A
Hall
reserved by Clinton A Roberts an existing tax of 1 mIll to run
Reedsville, Otilo Phone 378
6249
together with all the pnv•leges for 5 years at a rate not ex
of mm 1ng and removing and ceedtng 1 0 mill fbr each one
10 A tfc
Wh•ch
also of mtnmg coal from other dollar of valuation
amounts to Ten Cents for each
property
one
hundred
dollars
of
E~&lt;cepllng a parcel of land
CASH SIS$ for iunk cars com
recorded In Vol 228 Page 823 ~Jatuatlon for Five years
ptete Frye s truck and Auto
The Polls for said Election
Deed Records of Meigs County
Parts, Rutland Ohio Phone
will be open at 6 30 o clock A M
Ohio
7A2 609A
and remau'l open until 7 30
Reference Deed
Vol
254
10 16 261C
Page 861,.. Deed Records M e 1gs o clock P M Eastern Standard
Time of satd day
County Ohio
1
By order of the Board of\
Terms j of sate Cash for not
EARN e&gt;C.tra cash the euy way'
Electtons of Meigs county
less thari' two thirds of the ap
Prices are great for your
pra1!ed value end subject 10 Ohio
scrap
•ron sheet Iron copper
the lien lor real estate taxes for
brass
aluminum
IBM
Edwin S Cozut
1974
Papers stainless steel auto
Properly
appraised
at
Cha•rman
batter1es, auto radiators , Sell
$9 120 DO
to one ol the largest •recycllng
Dorothy M Johnston
comp&amp;nles
In lh •s pari of the
Director
Robert C Hartenbach
state The Rosen~et:o c;:om
Sheriff of O&amp;ted October &lt;1 1974
pany Alben! Ohio
Meigs County Ohio
10 'I tfc
1101 7 U )I 2! 4tc
!lU I 7 1.4 21 28 (11) 4 Stc

For Rent

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

MJo or wom an t o dtstrltlute pre sold ad.,erUsed World

FORMERLY
B&amp;R DISCOUNT

SWAP - SELL - BUY F lea
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Market
Spr1ng Avenue
ON TAX LEVY IN
Pomeroy Oh•o Saturday and
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Sunday AUCTION SUNDAY
MILL LIMITATION
5 00 CON SIGNMENT 15 Pet
NOTICE Is hereby g i ven that
•
10 17 lfc;:
ln pursuance of a ResolutiOn of
the Board of Trustee!. of th e
Townsh p of O r ange Ohio
PUREBRED SALE
W Va
passed on t he 1st day of J uly
Polled Hereford Assoc al ron
197tf there w II be submrfled to
w•ll hold 4th annual Fall Sale
a vote of the people of sa d
Saturday November 2 1974
Townsh rp
at
a
General
at Jackson County L11Jestock
ELECTION to be held m the
Market near R: ptey Offermg
TownshiP of Orange Oh o at
w II conSISt of 15 bull s mostly
the regular place!. of vot•ng
breed1ng age 30 hetfers and 6
!herem on T uesday the 5th day
cows w tn calves Wri t e J m
of November 1974 the quest1on
Westfa ll
R: t
2 Box 11 5
of tevy 1ng tn excess of the- ten
Spen ce r w va or call 992
mrllltm•tat on for the benef•l of
2104
Orange Townsh •P for the
10 21 5t c
purpose of Providing and
ma•nta1n1ng f.re appct~ratus
apptifmces build ngs or s•les
therefor or sources of water
supply and matenals therefor
or the estabtrshment and FURNISHED house for mature
couple
n
Middleport
maintenance of lines of frre
Pomeroy
or
nearby
alarm telegraph or the payment
P'ermanent
ret ab l e
Of l permanent
part trme
references Phone 992 7466
volunteer f i remen or f re
10 18 Jt c
f•ghtmg compan.es to operate
the same
So!!ld tax be 1ng a renewal of a
tax of 12 mIll and an mcrease of
1f2 m II to const1tute a ta x of 1
m111 to run for f1ve years at a 4 FAMILY Garage Sale at
George
R
S!archer
rate not exceedtng 1 0 mill for
res dence Chester Oh o
each one dollar of valuat on
Fol l ow s1gns at Sunoco
WhiCh amounts to Ten Cen t s for
Stat1on
Co
Rd
25 past
each one hundred dollars of
Chester Cemetery 2 mtles
valuatton for F11Je years
red and white brick house
1 he Poll s for sad Elec t1on
Oct 24 25 26 and 27 from 9
will be open at 6 30 o clo ck A M
a m 1111 4 30 p m Ch ldren
and remain open until 7 30
m~'&gt;n s and women s clothing
o ClOCK P M Eastern Standard
Also household 1tems
T 1me of sa d day
10 18 6t c
By order of the Board of
Electtons of Me1gs County
OhtO

n

II 000 110 INVENTORY RllllllttS 12 70111111
EXCELLENT PAR1 OR FULL TIME INCOME
NO IXPERIINCI NIC£SSARY

'

Dear Helen

Television Log

Business Services

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

~

DISTRIBUTOR Nl£0£0 EXCLUSIVE OPPORTUNITY

~

For Sale

vou I

TBr

�6-

'~'"• na1ly Sent mel, Middleport

Pome• ••

o , Monday

7- The Thnlv ~ntmel,M•ddlonQrt-Por--·ov 0 Monday , Oct 21, 1974
Oct 21 1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
t;ard of Thanks

NOTICE OF ELE-CTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
IN ap pr ec •af on for th e se rv• ces
MILL LIMITATION
rende r ed b y Me1 gs County
N OT I CE s h er eb y g v en that
H ghw a y
Garage
M e gs
•n pur suan ce of a Resolut1on of
County Far Board Sheriffs
the Board of Trustees o f t he
Departmen t
Ra c 1ne
Town sh p ot Ch ester
Oh o
1:: merg en cv Sq u ad we thank
pa ssed on th e J i st day of
you Tha nks to the MER
Augus t
1974 there wilt be
CHANT S that sponsored th e
subm 11ted t o a vo te o f th e peo pl e
trac tor p ull s thank yo u to
of Sl'Hd Town sh p at a Gen era l
those that par t Cl pated tn
ELE CTION t o be held n th e
them Th an k you p ublic w h o
Town ship of Ch est er
M e gs
su pported us wtlh your a t
County Oh o at th e regu l ar
tendance Hope to see you a ll
places of v otm g th ere n on
nex
t year SOUTHEA STERN
Tu es d a y
the 5th d a y of
OH IO T 9i!A C T0R PUL L ERS
November 1974 the quest 1on of
10 '2 1 ltc
tevymg 1n exce ss of the ten m 11
llmltat.on for the bene.f t of
Ches f er Townsh•p tor t he
purpos e of prov d ng an d
ma1nta•n•ng f re apparatu s
appliances build ngs or s 1t es
ther efor or sources of wat er
supply and mat er.a ts t her efor
or the es tabt sh m ent and
ma1ntenan c e of t.ne s of t~r e
at arm telegraph or th e paym ent
of
rermanent
p ar t lime
volunteer f1r e m en or f re
f ght ng compan. es to operate
the same
East Mam St .
Sa1d lax be ng a renewal of
an ex st1ng tax of 1 m II fo run
Pomeroy, 0
for t ve y ear s af a rate not
ex ceedmg ' mil l for eit ch one
dollitr of IJa t uat on
wh c h
New Hours
amounts to F v e Cen ts fo r each
7am 1o10pm
one
h undr e d
dol l ar s
of
'olaluat on tor F tve years
Except
Sun 12 to 6
The Poll s for sad Electton
w II be open at 6 30 o c loc k AM
and re m a n open until 7 30
o clo c;: k PM Ea stern Standard
SPECIAL XMA S Aucll on Sale
T1me of sad day
A ll new toys and gtlt terns
By ord er of the Board of
Sat O c t 26 7 p m at Mason
Elect on s of Me1gs County
Auct on
OhtO
10 20 6tc
E dw n S Cozart
Cha1rman AUCTION
Thursday
and
Saturday n1ght 7 p m
at
Dorothy M Johnston
Mason Auct•on Hor t on St m
D•rector
Mason W Va Consignments
Date d Octob er 4 1974
welc.ome Phone (304 ) 77 3
5471
( 10 1 7 14 21 28 4tc
10 3 He

Notice

LOW·BAll GAS

•

11otSJ&lt;"

Bill lOllS

o~'?.._~,_

Wanted To Rent

Yard Sales

Edwm S Cozart
Cha1rman
Dorothy M Johnston
Drrector
Dated October 4 1974
(10) 7 14 21

28 4tc

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS C.oi&gt;~UNTY OHIO

THE PARMER£ BANK &amp;
SAVINGS COMPANY
Pia nt ff

vs

DANNYM BARBER
ET AL
Defendant!.

For Rent or Lease

SMALL bus1ness butldmg on
s R 33 7 and 124 S75 per
month
Also apartment 4
rooms and bath $65 per
month also 12 room house
Can be two apartments S150
per month Call 992 5786
10 9 26tc

Lost
SMAL..l MALE black and brown
dog wearing a collar lo!.t •n
Hy$ell Run Rd area Phone
992 ~356 or 742 5001
10 21 6tc
SMALL
one eyed
Beagle
blac:k tan and wh•te Lost on
Co Rd 19 ( Peach Fork Rd l
wearing couar Phone 992

AJIJjiJAliURt(£1

Fnnou~

ANACIN

we e k ly

A L KA SEl TZ ER
TUM S o.:tc

BAVER

~

securt~d

o wn bt

~ me n

"TIRED
OF '
Dry Red, Itchy SkinRed Smelly
Hard Water-

-1 New Monogram
Wood Burmng Stove

OR I STAN

a ccoun ts

Br•ntwood

Mn.sour~

GOOD U SED trumpet like new
Call 949 387J after 4 p m
10 17 6tp
600 EGG steel alf .ncuba t or
hlc.e new Phone Larry Bak er
R eedSIJ tie 378 6257
10 20 6tp

63144

NEW Idea corn pt c k er 2 row
pull type
Phon e 667 J374
Tupper s Pta ns
10 20 3tp

Auto Sales

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

VA CUUM c leaners Brand new
ta nk type models
wtlh 5
attac hments Or,t l y S24 40 casn
or terms ava labte New
uPnght models S29 90 cash or
t erms ava table
Trade ms
accepted Phone 992 7755
10 20 lfc
ZIG ZAG
SEWING
MACHINES left n layaway
All bu111 m lo buttonhole do
!.!retch !.ewmg and fancy
sttlch1ng Pay 1ust $48 75 cash
or term s ava table Trade ms
accepted Phone 992 7755
10 20 lfc

1914

1970 CHEVROLET2 TON

$2995

Cab &amp; Chassls 108 cab to a&gt;C.Ie V 8 350 engme 15 000 lb
2 speed R ax le good 8251&lt;20 tires so lid cab

1973 CHEVROLET CK10

$3495

8 Pickup 4 wheel drive locking frt hubs V 8 engine 4
speed trans power sleertng &amp; brakes radio chrome
front &amp; rear bumpers

1972 CHEVROLET C 20,, T

$2395

8 Fleetside V 8 engme 4 speed trans

H duty 15

tires

solid cab radio

HONDA 750 perfect cond ltton
S1 200 Phone 965 3826
10 16 3tc

HOUSE 3 rooms and bath on
R t 7 south of M 1ddleport
Prefer young or m •ddle a9ed
couple wlih no children Ca ll
992 7577.

GOT An Eye for A Buyl
Motorola T V floor sam pte
Sate Al l 1lems musl go no
reasonable offer refused'
Brand new color Qua!.ar and
Quasar II T V s featurmg
the .nstamat•c control all
cabmet styles Some un ts
st ghtly scratched See them
al Ridenour TV and Ap
pt.ances
Phone 985 3307
Chester Oh o
ro 16 6tc

ONE bedroom furn•!.hed apt
Call 992 5436
10 20 61C

LOCUST post 30 30 W •n chester
and 1 82 acre lot Phone 742
3656
10 18 261p

FURNISHED
apartment.
adult$ only In Middleport
Phone 992 387ol
5 12 tfc

55 000
GAS
heater
with
CJutomatlc c:on trol and blower
Maytag wr .ng er washer
Phone 992 3139
10 18 3tp

OPEN EVES 8:00PM
POMEROY, OHIO
.

1970 DODGE Sporo coupe low

m teage Excellent c:ond1t on
Phone Don Bell 247 2022
10 20 Jtc

1967 CHEVY Convertible 396
automat c chrome reverse
wheels body and mtenor
rough 517 5 See Bob Young
Co Rd 46bes•de water tower
10 20 3tp
1966 DART Phone 949 3023
10 18 6tc

Mobile :iomes For Sale
TRAILER for sa te at Hysell
Run 2 bedrooms Phone 992
3975 or ~92 2571
10 11 tfc

For Rent

TWO 4 room and bath apts In
Middleport For mformalton
call 992 2550 or H2 6551
7 3 tfc

1970VAL1ANT 65x12 3 bedroom
fully carpeted L P gas heat
Phone 992 1751
8 25 tfC:

TRAILER space on pn-,ate tot
3m les from Pomeroy Phone
367 7743
10 18 3tr

12x40 EXCELLENT cond ton
large hv ng room k•t chen 1
bedroom Stove refr tgerator
bed S2 450 Phone 378 6276
10 18 6fc

TRAILER 2 bedrooms
only Phone 992 3324

2" BEDROOM mobile home In

town S4 500 Call 992 3975 or
992 2571
9 13 tfc
1972 WINCHESTER Mobi l e
home 60xl2 2 bedrooms 112
baths central a ~r furnace and
carpeted Phone 992 5254 or
( 304) 882 2277
9 29 tfc
1972 WINCHESTER Mobile
Home 60 x 12 2 bedrooms
completely furn ished car
peted ges heat central air
Phone 992 5254 or &lt;304) 882
2277
10 15 6tp
ONE 12x60 tra •l er 3 bedrooms
down payments lake O'oler
payments Phone 992 7116
10 20 Jtp

Wanted To Buy

-- --------. Holiday Special!

(Free of Steel)

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

FREEZER Beef 1000 lb corn
led Hereford steer s extra
n1ce W II deliver to your
processmg plant Call 843 2111
ev en ngs
10 16 12tp

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

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Adults
10 18 tfc

2

BEDROOM
traller
1n
Syracuse close to school No
ch ldren or pets Depostt
reQutred Phone 992 2441 after
6 30 p m
10 18 ffc

Racine, 0.

WALNUTS hullmg dally from 9
M i dway
a m
10 7 p m
Market
W
Ma1n
St
Pomeroy Phone 992 2562
10 18 Jtc

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

R1ght Now At

FREE ESTIMATE

593 6366

Fully Insured

Baker Furn1lure Co

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurn !shed
apartments
Phone 992 5AJA
4 12 lfc
PRIVATE meeting room for
any organ1ZBt1on phone 992
3975
3 11 tfc

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

.4 ROOM turn•shed apt Close to
Powells Super Vatu phone
992 3658
10. 13 tfc;:

SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

Rou1e 7
Rutland '

by pass

Ph

992 5682 or 992 7121
All Mechamcal Work
Open Mon Sat
8A.M. 6P M

2 BEDROOMS
or 992 3A32

For Sale

Interior, late_( ..,
Decorating tme1
Remod•nng

ANTIQUE cherry bed and
dresser Phone 949 3221
10 18 3tc
KNAPP shoes
socks and
lackels 11 styles on sate
Phone 992 5324
10 1 lfc
NEW whiskey barrel for saie
o E Bailey Success Road
Phone 667 6344
10 16 12fp

"""---------

GROCERY business fbr sate
Building for sale or lease"
Phone 773 5611 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appointment
3 20 ttc

POMEROY room

dining

home

--

3

JJ7 N

Water, Electnc, Gas, Sewer
L1nes,
ansta lied
Work
guaranteed
Dozer, Backhoe Trucks
Ltmes1one &amp; Fill Dirt
Commercial Restdential
Construction &amp; Remodel

bath dining room, hardwood
floors, some carpeting full
basement with rec room
utility space concrete patio

roofed, storage bldg about 2
acres In qule1 neighborhood

$29000 DO
CARPENTER -

2 story

frame 4 bedrooms, 11f~
baths, dining room, cement

----------.---- &amp;
KOSCOT
KOSMETICS

block storage bldg , porches
recently painted Inside &amp;
out Porches, 2 garages

_ ___ __ ______

$10,000 DO
NEAR LANGSVILLE -

WIGS (The Mink 0!1 Base
Cosmetics)
Phone
BROWN S 992 5113
8 20 tfc
..........

APPLES Fitzpatrick Orchard
State Route 619
~hone
Wilkesville 669 3785
A FEW new band Instruments
Contact Renee Stone 992 7S67
9 4 tfc
1957 CHEVY parts
Nc.vV
Lakewood traction bars hi
lacker air shocks hooker
headeq. with 3 coUectors for
small block
Call 992 3&lt;196
alter 6 p m BEST OFFER
10 17 tfc

about 2 acres, can help
finance to right party

2

acres 2 story frame, some
carpeting, .4 b-edrooms
dining room, some out

buildings, garage gas well
Pl:lced to sell
m 2259 or m 2!168
7 ROOM house with 2 baths In
Pomeroy Phone 992 3478
10 15 26tc

------------78 ACRES Meigs County Salem

Tgwnshlp Rd 625 deadends
Into property two lakes
rolling hillsides beaut•ful
tree:s lust north of Salem
Center Walter's Realty Box
32• Worthington, Ohlo 43085
Phone (6U) 888 1e-, Seller
Will finance
10 IS 6tc

10 15 IIC

8-K EXCAVATING

- . . --t-------'-- -

Brady Bunch 6

OOMPANY
777 PearJ.Iitreet
Middleport, Ohoo
Phone 992 5367 or 992 3861

Real Estate "or
Sale
r•

12x60 MOBILE HOME 3
bedrooms central air and
heat washer dryer w1th utility

COUNTRY

Over 30

Genera l

HOME

4

bedrooms bath automatic
heat porch, carport and nice
garden large yard Only

$16 SOD DO
BUSINESS BUILDING -

~

3

rooms down and 3 rooms up
Good locatloh for office

2~

,.v

MICCI ff'OtT 0

Serv1ce

1 .

1155-CBSNews8 DanlmelsWorld10
Password 6 News 8 10 13 Bob Brauns
SO Club 4
:
Mr Rogers 33 Jackpot! 3 15
112 30 - Afternoon with OJ 13 Celebrtty Sweepstakes 3 15
Electric Co 33 Split Second 6 Search For Tomorrow 8, 10

·

12 ss- News 3 1s
1 00 - News 3 All My Choldren 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
'
Phil Donahue 8 Young and Restless 10
l 25 -

Chuck White RePOrts 10
Jeopardy 3 4 15 Let s Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
World Turns 8 10
2 00 Days Of Our L1ves 3 4 15 Guiding light 8 10
'
Newlywed Game 6 13

1 30 -

2 30 - Girl in My Lofe6 13 Edge of Night 8 10 Doctors 3

All Small Appliances
Lawn Mowers

General Hospital 6 13 Price Is Right 8 10 Another
World 3 4 15
3 30 - One Life to Ltve 13 How To Survive A Marriage J 4 15
1.Lass1e 6
-4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Tattletales
8 Gilligan s Island 6 SlO 000 Pyramid 1J Bonanza 4 Movie
Love Nest 10
4 30 - Bonanza 15 Mod Squad 6 Gilligan s Island 13 Bewitch

Appliance

10 15 ABC News 6, 13
6 30-NewsB 10 NBCNews3 4 15 FrenchChef33 Bew1tch
ed 6 Gomer Pyle 13
&gt; DO - WharsMy LineS Elec Co 20 Truth or Conseq 3 Paul

to

Nuchims 33

Bowling for Dollars 6

News 10

Name ...That

Tune 13 TBA 15 Electric Company 20 Artol Football33
7 30 - RFD 20 Hollywood Squares 4 Civil Center Here and
There 3 Wlld Wild World of Animals 6 525 000 Pyram1d 8

215 N Second 51

M1ddfeport, Ohio
992 3509

DOZER work land clearrng by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc: Large
dozer and operator with over
20 years experience Pullins
EKcavatlng Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 2478
1219tfc

FOR FREE estimates
aluminum
replac
wtndows siding storm
and wlrtdows Railing Phcone
Charles LISle Syracuse
Carl
Jacob
Representative,
V
John!on and Son Inc
,
4 30 tfc
SePrlc- -TANKS- Cieaned
reasonable rates
Ph
446
4782 Gallipolis John Russell,
owner and operator
5 12 tfc

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

4

0 DELL Allnement locat-d
behind Rutland Grade SchoOl
complete front end service
brake!. and luneups, wheels
balanced electroniCally Open
8 to 8 dally Call 742 3232 on
Sunday for appt
7 16 tfc
EXCAVATING dozer loader
and backhoe work
septic
tanks tnstalled dump truQks
end lo boys for hire will haul
fill dirt top soil limestone &amp;
graver Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 )1 tfc;:

GRE
I

•

Your resllessness at thiS hme

provoke you to start lh~ngs
you won t lmtsh Set your m1nd
upon one course Sttck to 1t
Will

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)
Usually you re QUite good at

keep1ng secrets Today 1n a f1t
For Tue•d•~· Oct 22, 1974

ARIES (March 21 -Aprll t 91

of talkattveness you re gou10
to say much more than you
should

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23Dec 21) II you gO ShOpjlong

Take 1nto cons•derat1on the
feehngs ol those you deal w1th
or else you II lose any chance
of their co operating w1th you
at thiS time

today leave your c heckbook
home Just spend the afternoon
wmdow watch1ng or else you II
make some unwtse purchases

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

19) You Wlll create dissension
among your assoc1ates 1f you
espouse an unpopular cause
and try to ramrod 1deas through
selfishly

You re presently sadd l1n g
yourself w1th some unworkable
theones They should be diS
carded Don t be so stubborn
about changmg your mmd

GEMINI (May 2t·Juno 20)
Belore you miJOI~Je yourselt
too deeply w1th another m a
JOint mterest analyze all ol 1ls
ram11tcat1ons Know what
you re getting Into

CANCER (Juno 21-July 221

Brace yoursell for a httle tur
bulence around the house to
day or unexpected d1srupt1ons
w111 get everyone on edge un
necessanly

LEO (July 23·Aug

22)

Thtngs you do 1n haste today
w111 probably ha~Je to be done
over later Pace yourself so
that what you do you do well

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopt 221
Normally you re rather censer
vallve and cautious where
money IS concerned Today
you are l1kely to take f1nanc1al
nsks you shouldn t

LIBRA (Sept 23·0Ct 231

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon

AQUARIUS (Jon

20·Fob

19) Its go1ng to be up to you
to p1ck up the loose threads
that others ha~Je raveled Try to
create some order tram chaos

PISCES (Fob 20·Morch 201
If not careful regarding aseoc1
allons you re gomg to lind
yourselt mvolved 1n a complt
cated s1tuatton not ol your
mak1ng

·~
Oct 22 1874

You w11l have qu1te a few op
portumttes th1s year to make
some 1mportant baste changes
that w1U affect your lifestyle
Don 1 put too many .rona 1n the
fire at once

~1Yd1!J1®u..t=::!t!.-J
Unscramble these four Jumbltt,
one letter to each aquare, to
form four ordmary words

I serve raw vegetablea inltead Oil eracken for lnldal, and
witll dips I serve natural c~ and 1111811'et!taed lrult JW(which replace soft drinks In tile refrigerator ) I read l.lbell81111
buy tile foods tbat areu near naturalu pnealble And Iladlq
cblldren tile joy Oil cooking by letting them help -HAPPY AND

IlEALmY &lt;X&gt;OK

~~Mr1Dtr
by THOMAS JOSEPH
-40 Roman
ACROSS
I Ukrame
highway
DOWN
legiSlature
5 Jethro's
1 Weatllerpartner
man's a1d
10 Start of an 2 Maltreat
mcantatlon 3 All dolled
II "Clair -"
up (3 wda )
( 2 wds )
4 Indian
1% Affall' of
mulberry
honor
5 Hangman's
13 Crop up
rope
~ tleseecn
14 Dolt
1 Viva torero 1 18 Of yore
15 Flavorless 7 Words of
19 Glove ·
repast
wammg
material
18 Annular die ( 3 wda.)
2! Prevalent
17 Vacation
8 Overeat
Z3 Quarantine
91&gt;0!
I More
M IraniAn
19 California
slender
Turk
Indlan
II One of tile
Z6 Vernon or
20 King of
Four Horsemen
McKinley
Israel
h Compulsion
:1% Ughtheaded
Z4 Undergroun&lt;i b-+--1--1-condult
Z5 Noble

phrase

10 00- Marcus Welby 6 13

10

r

J

Janak! 33

I I

Kj

LA1t:&gt; t'OWN IN
WA-&amp;HING&gt;"TON

TANKS
cleaned
Modern San •I at ion 992 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 tfc

----CREMEANS
--- ------CONCRET~

TRACED~
V
. h

I

Now .....,..the circled letltn
to fonn the ourprloe
u
ounoatecl br theaboveeoiloon.

"""".0',
I
Cl~l'lilt~..~l~-~-~~~~~-t~l ( l XH I l )

12 30- Wide World Mystery 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4
2 00- News &lt;1 13

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7 30 p m - Washington Debates for the $.eventles
8 30 - The Gunslingers

(Aaawen w-rra•)

CHANNEL FIVE PROGRAMS NOT SF""' '"'GALLI POl

... -•

I~

CPTOB

HNT

ZCR

OBNZPV

\ Antw\"r Reve1111e" IWHIUJhen J10U gellhh- EVEN

UJ.t.:K J. HAt:Y

::ASOUNE ALLEY

Pass
Pass
2 NT
Pass
4•
Pass
Openmg lead - K•

2•

'

B:y Oswald &amp;

James Jacoby
j)swald "Greed IS a tem
ble thmg at the br1dge table
At least, the wrong kmd of

a.oSEour
74 MODEL

SAVINGS
3 bedroom, all electric,
completely furmshed.
See At

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOME
SAlES

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

Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Open Dally lf-7
Big Copo~Jiy
Maytog

Au1olltatlcs
2 1apHCI •r•r•tton
·ChoIce o
weUr
'lttmps Auto water
1tvet control Lint
Fitter or Power Fin
Aglt•tor ..
Perma.P,..lil
Maytag
H•to ol Htlt

7126

-

•

•

Dryers

Surround
ctotht1
With g-.,tlt, ey'"
heat No hot tpota,
1no ovtrdrylng Fine
Me- Lln1 F liter
We lp•c1tt11e 1a

"'

Al'nold titate

ollVI
...lt-::1
na

'

'
' ·~ ,.

.-

.

........

· .............:
~-.....,~~--

.,· ,

~aid 'The r1ght kmd ol
grel!d w1ll tell South to play
safe He w1ll rJSe w1th the
kmlt of trumps, cash the ace
and'_go after diamonds Eventually the defense w11l collect
two• trumps and a d1amond
but :South will be home With
gaoh&gt; and rubber "
JUm "Thls partlcular
truf6p safety play would have
costoSouth a tr1ck agamst a
3-3 :trump break and two
ttlcks 1f East had held the
que4n of trumps But m rub
ber bridge you play for your
contract and only go after
ove~V1cks when the contract
•• safely home "

u:B;I :11!f:F'iU

The boddJng has been
21
West
North East South
1•
Pass '
You South, hold
•A K 84 •K 2 +Q54 .AQ5 4
What do you b1d'
A-Two clubll You could alao
bid three eluba, one or two
.,.del or three notrurnp - •I

MAW "CPIN l:
SORRY FIFTY
C.ENT TO 61T
IN TH' CARD
GAME&gt;

WHV DO YE AllwAYS I
WANT TO BORRY
MY HARD·EARNT

MONEY, PAW&gt;

WHY DON'T VE
TRY EARNIN 1 IT

PULL UP Ill C.HAIR,
HONEY POT

YORESELF FER

AND IF '100 SCRATCH
WITH 'IOU~ STUPID 1

A C.HANGE?

11ll.: POUNO

lllouch we conoider that l11t bid
• bad one
TOD.\ Y'S QUESTION
you do b1d two clubs and your

MAYTAG
111001 Corpot
'•rvlct

b RUTlAND FURNITURE

lS"

' '.

n

partner reblds two notrump
What do you do now1
Answer Tomorrow

LV

ON

YLXCR

QPANT

PV

PRE

P

JNZZNR

QLXC

LR -

FCHHCTVNR

HEROES, FOR ONE TRUE VISION. - 'lBllUCAU

North-south vulnerable

Mlddl,.nnrf Pomeroy

o\XYDLB.\AXB
LONGFELLOW

OF THE WORW, AND ALL THE DI:I:DS OJI ALL

tK9852

J1m "South takes the f1rst
trl~k w1th dummy s ace of
hearts and leads the )ack of
trllmps East plays the s•x
split If South has the wrong
foOn of greed, he w1ll let the
Jaek r1de for a f1nesse If 1t
w&lt;A-ks South w1ll expect to
.m21ke two overtrtcks, but rt IS
goDJg to fa•l West w1lllead a
se&lt;l!Jnd heart South Will have
losl hiS t1mmg and h1s con
trllJ't "

title

Yenerday1~: 1 WOULD GIVE ALL THE WIW..TH

Jumble• ANNUL FAMED JUGGL£ INVEST
S•turrl-y•

OBC

•Ks

greed

monkey
N Indian

CRYPTOQUOTES_

"2

92.1
iNMPO.fM

SE~TIC

city
:15 Capuchin

One letter 11mply atandl for another In lhla l&amp;lllpla A Ia
used for the three L'a, X for the lwo 0 • eto Sinllo letttn,
•r,ootrophea, the lencth and formation of the worda are oil
h nts Eaoh day the code !etten ore cWierent

SOUTH ID)
• AKL075

$nato

3%ItaliiD

lr..-+-+---1-

to

News 20 Mountain Scene 33 CBS

Reports 8, 10
10 30- Your Future Is Now 20 Day At Nlght33
11 DO-News3,4 6 810 13,15 NewsForTheDeaf33
11 30 - Johnny Corson 3 4, 15 Mlsllon Impossible 6 Un
touchables 13 Movie Partners In Crime 8; Movie ' Story
on Page One

1

+

T

touch, ....
30 Athlnt

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

Q64
.Q1086

East

or

(2 wds )
31 Wapiti
SZ Place
13 Grassland
34 Sultana, e g
31 Torch37 Finally
(2 wds)
38 Ploy
39 Sand novel

"10653

North

~

Ibllian
family
Zl Upper NUe
tribesman
'l1 "High -"
Zl Threatener's

EAST

J92

29Tute

Price is Right 10, To Tell the Truth 13 Marco Sporlllte33

B DO - Good T1mes 8 Adam 12 • 15 Movie Trapped Beneath
The Sea" 6, 13, America 20 33 Mental Health 10
8 30 - Evening At Symphony 33 MASH 8 10, Movie The
Law' 3 4, 15
9 DO - Hawaii s.O 8 10
9 30 - Woman 20 33

)

I

--.---

either

• 86

CQUNTaY

6 15 tfc

•742-421t

Dear TOL
Young or old, a man who cheats on his wife isn't overly
concerned wttll honesty And a woman who hunts only mamed
men shouldn't expect it
She who another's husband dates, wBIIs and wa1ts and waits
and WAITS' - H

- - - - - ' - --

I converted my farnlly by no longer alocldng 1117 Jlhel* with
modern nnxea, etc. which are really very expenllw. J edlleated
myself In the art of baking breads, slow.root!•'I beaDI81111.....,
maklnt! my own sauces And I don't spend .n day In tbe ldlcllen

2•

742~

READY MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
prolect Fast and eny Free
estimates Phone 992 328_.
Goegleln Ready Mix Co
Mlddleporl, Ohio
6 30 He

+++

Dear Helen
1 don' t mmd Ron bemg mamed, but he's driving me wild
wtth hiS lies He says he'll be over I walt all everung He doesn't
show
He promises to take me on a Sunday p1cn1c to tile mountaiiiS
On Monday he calls to say his wife planned a faDUly get.together
Sometimes It's tile kids who change hiS plans, but I think
sometunes he JUSI lies out of habit
We're botll 27 He says he loves me, but I'm begmrung to
tll1nk I should have an older, more mature man who wouldn't
always put his wife fll'st
Whatshould1tbe,love or honesty' - TIRED OF UES

"

10 4 tfc

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been 1
cancelled')
Lost
your
operators 11cense Call 992

EXCELSIOR Salt Works ~
Maln St Pomeroy All klndSf
of salt water pellets- water
nuggets block salt and own
Ohio River Salt Phone 992
3891
6 5 tfc

Dear Ready
Heavens no" Nancy DUghl take you up on 11 - and then
you'd be stuck as a PERMANENT servant
Plan a greaf vacation -for one- and start learrung tile joys
of real bachelorhood - H

satisfying quali=ties
= - -- , - --

9 30 p m - The Underworld

Good greed wins out over bad

SEP"TIC TANKS, AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SANITATION
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035

SMALL Muu"'o;: an .. lot O'n
Condor Street
Phone 992

10 14 61C

6 DO - Sesame St 20 News 3 4 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33 News 8

work

C BRADFORD Auctionee-r
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
Racine Ohio
Crttt Bradford
s 1 ttC

_____________

P m

All

SEWING MACHINES Repair
SeriJICe all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Authorized S109er Sale! and
Ser'oltce We !harpen Scissors
3 29 tfc

Tne$e su.te!. have solid oak
frames !hal are doweled
glued and double corner
blocked Many styles and
fabrics to choose from
starting a! tow as $129 95
Also 3 pc Early Amerlun
table sets S34 95 We ai!O
have
bedding
bedroom
su•tes l&amp;mps d.nelle sets and
h1de a beds Jacks Furniture
and Upholstery Supplies 236
E Mo!!ln St Pomeroy Phone
992 3903
10 ..._
18 6tc

~u $976 now

15

WIN AT BRIDGE

su.te~

:~s~~~~~~use ;~;~goearh ;~~

B Ironside 13
~ 30 - Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 10 News~ Tra1ls West

'

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

------------NEW quality l1v ng room

ATTRACTIVE 5 rooms and
bath all comfortable size at
205 Sprm~ Ave
Pomeroy
This well arranged one floor
plan home has been com
plelely redecorated 1nslde
and out
Well built but
mexpenslve hardwood floorS
new LuKaire gas furnace
system new Armstrong tile
kitchen and bathroom floors
Good utility bulldln\1 Phone
992 5292
10 18 ttc

eel 3 Lucy Show 8
5 DO - Mr Rogers 20, 33 Merv Griffin 4 F Bl 3 Andy Griffith

Electrrcal

guaranteed
Discount
Sen1or Clttzens

4 IS

3 00 -

Cooling Rofrlg

Plumb1ng

so

112 00 -

P&amp;J Parts

Heatong

7 ROOM hoyse on Lincoln Hill
newly decorated new car WILL trim or cut trees and
shrubbery
also clean out
peted throughout large lot
basements and o!lttlcs Phone
garage reasonably pr1c:ed
949 3221 or 742 4441
Phone 992 2679
10 18 26tc:
10 18 3tc

.....

beautiful new

Known &amp;
Reliable Service ·

DOZER or bac.khoe work
Phone 4&lt;16 3981 or 446 3459
9 8 tfc

_.~

a

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

10\lflloiQ-

~

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

_

9 30- Not For Women Only 3 Hazel6 Tattletales 10
, 10 00- Compa,y 6 Name That Tune 3 lS Magzlne 8 10
lD. 30- Wmnlng Streak 3 15 Ph1l Donahue4
11 00- Password 13 Now You See It 8 10 H1gh Rollers 3 1S
$10 000 Pyramid 6
11 30- Brady Bunch 13 Hollywood Squares 3, 4 15, Love Of

Alt that ts needed for a free
esttma1e 1s a phone call.

t&amp;t

delivered Monday through
Saturday
and
evenmgs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 tfc

............ _..._.

9 00- Paul Dixon 4 AM 3 Phil Donahue 15 Wild Wild West 6
Bullwlnkle 8 Mov1e The Rookie 13

Llle 8 10 Lucy Show 6

BOWERS
REPAIR

~j~ ~ :e~~~ "'ga~a~aeth ~:~:
\0 20 tic

Daughter 13

7 30- New Zoo Revue6 H R Pufnstul13
8 00- Capt Kangaroo 8 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Jeff's Coll1e 6 Popeye 10
8 25- Jack Lalanne 13 Capt Kangaroo 10

iOOf Installed by All Wyther
Roofing Co
.,

If so, Call us Now for a
Free Est1mate.

10 3 tfc
SEWING Machines brand new
--- -~ Zlo i:ag 1n nice walnut table
BUfLUING lot 80ft frontage X
In original certons Never
165ft The second lot on left on
used
Clearance on
7A
R1verv1ew Drive L.lncoln
Models
(Only
a
few
Hill Pomeroy, Ohio If 1n
avallablel
s•J AO cash or WILL TRADE- FINANCING
teres ted call 992 3230 after 5
terms •vall•blt Phone 992
ARRANGED
WITH
pm
7755
MINIMUM
DOWN
Will
10 15 ttc
consider trade for oldu "
10 17 lfC:
home( trallel'l or land on thiS - -- - - - - - -- - - -STEREO RADIO em fm, 8
7
0
track tape combination
4
s~eaker
sound
system
feml1y room air tondltlohlng
garden s~ace qn Vlhe St ln I
Balance $108 72 or f!asy
Move In Immediately ce ll
Ractne Call 94? 2054 aftet 5

torm• call 992 3945

TUESDAY OCTOBER22, 1914

Rev Cleophus Robinson 13 Concerns and Comments 10
Columbus Today 4
6 45- Morning Report 3 Farmt lme 10
7 00- Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Osmonds 6 Farmers

e

bath,

3 bedrooms

Superstar Theatre

6 00- Sunrise Sem1nar 4 Summer Semester 10
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30- Bible Answers 8 News 6 Five Minutes to Live By 4

Doo't forget the roof of your

r ~92-255&amp;:]
......

basement, 2 utilities storm
doors &amp; windows, porch

Lovely home

me

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
High School Football Meigs Homecoming

.!

All·WEAlliER

bedrooms,

Going at $8,900 DO
POMEROY - Lincoln Hts

930pm -

Dear Helen
Every tune I ask my woman to marry me, she says she
doesn't want to be stuck witll one man permanenUy She's 31, I'm
40 She has two children by her fll'sl husband, and I get tllem off
to school every day, make thelt lunch and take care of tllem until
she comes borne from work I always have dinner ready for us,
too, because I work nights
I buy the food, clean house, and do most of the shoppmg
I'm tllere, but after f1ve years of this,
Whenever tlley need
Nancy won't even tell me when she won't be home for supper
When she's home, she e1tller gr1pes or 1gnores me
She takes off on w""kends and leaves
wltll the kids I got
my vacation to coincide with hers, and last night she asked if I'd
stay home wltll tile children while she went to see her SIBier m
California, as she can't take tilem out of school that long
When I suggest gomg out she always has an excuse, but from
tile tunes she stays out aU everung, 1t ISII't because she's a
homebody Yet I love her, and I've got five years mvested
The vacation thing was JUSt about tile last straw Should I
demand marnage or else • - READY TO MOVE

me:

, 6 35 -

Please Phone

VINYL SIDING
PH. 992-74541..
992-712;
Free Estimates, Miclcllettort,

AMractlve 6

room,

"IDOpm -

REDECORATING? .

ALl-'NE .~ THER

Po:MeRov... o.

GRAVEL sand Mason sand
limestone Pit Run by lhe ton
Delivered Phone 4.46 11&lt;12
10 18 tfc

B

2 00- News 4

Emergency Phone 992·
3995 or 992-7582.

home Have

GOOD
PROPERTY
IS
SCARCE AND EXPENSIVE
BUT WE HAVE A NICE
SELECT ION PICTURES OF
EACH ONE AT THE OFFICE

608 E.&lt;
MAIN

11 30- Johnny Carson J 4 15 Movie She Cried Murder'
" Movie Warlock 10 Janak1 33
i'2 DO- News 6 13
l 12 30- Mission Impossible 6 Untouchables 13
1 00-TomorrowJ 4 TakeFiveForlltelS
1 30 - News 13

949 5961, Rac1ne. 0

Does
your
home
requ1re any of these
services?

lliE DEPENI»fll E
OONTRACTING CO.

Will sell at a bargain

10 16 tfc

Turning Points 33
11 DO- News3 4 6 B 10 13,15

8 30 -

good busmess with good stock

phone 992 2780

•

18 30 -

r 8 55- News 13

INVESTMENT -

Real Estate For Sale

house

RACINE PWMBING
AND HEATING

ALL WEATHER
HARDWARE
337 North Second Ave
Mtddleport Oh1o
992 2SSO
I

L __:_A::th:::e:n::s:.,O=h'::0 _ __,,--J , store on State Route doing

2 BEDROOM hOuse to rent COURTS! CabCo 3cab! and4
licenses
Doing very good
Phone 992 3975 or 992 2571
bustness Call 992 7116
101lttc
10 20 3tp
A ROOM house unfurniShed on
1650 L ncoln Heights Phone
992 3874
10 8 ffC

33

1

See
Us
for
your
Plumbmg and Heatmg
Needs

4'

1owards

acres 3 bedrooms nice k1t
chen electric heat city water
l&gt;ath and small stream

Call Collect 1 592 5544

10 00- Medical Centert 10 News 20 Washington Straight Talk

cabinets, etc

On Sale Now quality Devoe
Bnght Wh1te Latex Ho.pse
Paint •n 2 gallon cans Only
$6
per gallon
Brand name Roof Pa1nt 10
pet oft whtle they tasl
Take advantage of these
great buys wh1le they are
st111 m stock

On State R1 124 112 m1 from

building
NEW LISTING -

FREE HOME ESTIMATES

fa •

33

Pa1nflng, siding, roofing,
paper hanging, kitchen

GREAT PAINT VAL,UES AT
ALL WEATHER
HARD·
WARE

SOLID
VINYL SIDING
Produced frqm a special
vinyl &lt;Om pound made by B
F Goodrich and Monsanto 5
times th1cker than metal
!tdlng Will not dent Chip
c:rack peel
rot rust or
chalk

From a shelf

What Servant Problem•

10 00- Medical Center8 10 News 20 Washington Straight =Falk

.

10 16 3tc
COUNTRY Mobllt Home Park
R:t 33 ten m•les north of
Pomeroy
Large tots w1th
concrete pat10S sidewalks
runners and off
street
parktng
Also
space! tor
sma ll trailers Phone 992 747f
7 21 tfc

PHONE
949 3832 or 843-2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

'

NEW foam lo t111 the cush •ons n PIANO tun1ng and repa r
your hv ng room surte as low
Phone Charles Scott 992 3718
as $10 95 for both sofa and
9 17 32tp
cha r We at so cut and sew
new cushion covers See us lor
your upholstery needs Jacks LAST BID Home Improvement
F urnllure and Upho l stery
c arpentry work
roof1ng
SupplieS 236 E Mam St
pa1n t mg carpet 1nstallat on
Pomeroy Phone 992 3903
free esttmates A ll work
10 16 3903
guaranteed Phone 742 5081
9 22 lfc
TESTED and approved by
- - - - - - -- - - - - - mrlllonsot homemakers Blue

Lusore cupet cleaner os tops

-

CULLIGAN
WATER
CONDITIONING

then wr te toctay and nclude phone numbe r t o

712 Hanley Industrial Court

That uood Ole Nashville Music 3 Buck Owens 8
Episode Action 33 Help Thy Neighbor 4 Pollee Surgeon 6
Municipal Court 10 To Tell the Truth 13 Mountwood Park
Mountain Song 20
8 DO-Gunsmoke8, 10 Rookles6 13 Movie The Cay 3 4 15
Drink, Drank Drunk 20
9 DO- Maude 8 10 NFL Football6 13 Movie The Candidate
3 4 15 Alcohollsm One Family s Story 20 33
9 30-Rhoda8 10 CaughtlnTheAct20 33

OONSTRUCTION

~49-3295

'11us IS for "FruStrated Cook" who feels tbat grandma's
&lt;:ooking wouldR'I sell too well as our taste buds have been dulled
by processed and packaged food
Eating bablts are a matter of education or re-education AI
first, people may feel tbat ''real" food is too up front (honeatly
coarse, tart, chewy, etc ) as compared 'll'tth the bland quickie
jUnk But give tllem lime and a subtle approach and you'll have
tllem enjoying good natural foods In no lime Then, tile qwckle
foods will suddenly have no taste, no texture and above aU, no

Helen Help
By Helen Bottel
Us. • •

,..,

r--i 30 -

D&amp;D

GHEEN'S PAINTING

Then call ua for a FREE
Water Analysts

POMEROY LANDMARK/
9. ~ Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2:181
1_.-.

,w,
~TRANS WORLD INDUSTRIES INC
\ "1.,. MARMIETING DIRECTOR DEPT 101

MUNDAY, Oct 21,1974

,

Pnced For Ou1ck Sale

'

App11c1nt ihou ld have car m1n1lll1.1m of 'tpue tHI weekly
rei UDte and el 91ble to auume buuno s s respon i btl tlu w th
n 3 0 d ay s If y o u meet these reou.rementt haYe ttle
n ec eu .~ry t; .U h
nv u\ment a n d, ncerely want to own yo1.1r

The Rosenberg Co.

)

~ ,,''

.IJIJt..

NO INITIAl Sill lNG' INCOMI STARTS IMMIDIATII Y1
COMPANY FURNISHED ACCOUNTS'
MINIMUM CASH INVISTMINT $2395 OD-$4640 DO

SCRAP ALUMINUM

For Sale

AS~IRIN

Ruto c k C ompany

~ No 15 S02
PUBLIC NOTICE
5980
Pursuant to an Order of Sale
10 21 3tc COOP c:orn snapper must be m
IS!ued by the Court Of Common
good cond1flon Phone 843
P leas of Me gs County Oh10 I - - - - - - - - - - - - - '2353
MALE DOG Ch thuahua and
Will offer tor sal e at publiC
10 20 3tc
rat terrier mixed Lost Friday
auctton on the 9th C:ay of
on Mason Ctty park•ng lol
November 197 A at 10 00 A M
has one brown spot located WANTED old uprlg.ht p1anos
at the Co4rt House Steps tn the
any cond1t1on
Paying SlO
over each s1de of the eye
VI ll age of Pomeroy County of
each Ftrstflooron ly wr.te to
Reward If found Phone 304
Me1gs
State of Ohio
the
and 01ve dtrectrons to W1tten
77J 5872 William Jacobs
followmg descrtbe(:l real estate
Plano Co
Box 188 Sardis
Zuspan Trailer Court
The foltowmg real estate
Oh o 43946
10 21 3tc
situate m the Townsh p of 01 ve
10 15 6tp
County of Me tgs and State of
OhiO
Bemg a part of Lot No 138
Town No 3 Sect on No 24 and THREE ROOM furnished apt
Range No
11 of the Oh10
w th bath first floor Phone
Company s Purchase
begin
992 2937
n ng on the north side of the
10 21 3tc:
road teadmg from Long Bo.ttom
Oh10 to Pomeroy Oh 10 on a
line between lots 138 and 139
thence west along sa1d road 8
TWO HOTPOJNT a1r c:on
rods
thence north 20 rods
15~
d1t oners 2.4 000 B T U 5100
thence east 6 rods to dtVId ng
each Phone 992 9975
line of Lots 138 and 139 thence
10 21 6fp
per pound
south 20 rods to the place of
beglnnmg contam ,ng one acre
more or tess
A lso the followmg prem•ses m
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Olive Township Meigs County
ON TAX LEVY IN
Oh10 and be ng n Range No 11
79 Depot Street
EXCESS OF 1'HE TEN
Town No 3 Sectton No 24 and
MILL
LIMITATION
Athens, Oh1o
10 100 Acre Lot No 139 of t he
NOTICE Is hereby gi~Jen that
Ohio Company s Purchase and
bounded and descr bed as 1n pursuo!lnce of a Resotut1on of
follows Begmn ng 21 rods west the Board of Trustees of the CA!&gt;H pa1d tor a ll makes and
models of mobile homes
of the line between 100 Acre TOWNSHIP OF SCIPIO Oh10
Phone area code 614 A23 9~31
passed on the Sth day of July
Lots 138 and 1J9 m the nor
4 13 tfc
thellst corner of a 5 06 acre lot 1974 there will be subm•tted to
belongmg to Mary A Chambers a vote of the people of sa 1d ----------~
at
a
General OLD FURNITURE, oak tables
and at the southeast corner of a TownShiP
clocks In boxes brass beds
ELECTION to be held In the
one acre tot betong1ng to Flora
dishes desks or comp lete
E Smtth In public road lead1ng Township of Sclp1o Oh10 at the
households Write M
D
frbm Long Bottom Ohio to regular places of voting therein
Miller Rl 4 Pomeroy Ohio
Tuppers Platns Oh•O thence on Tuesday the 5th day of
call 992 7760
north 20 rods 10 a stake at the No-,ember 197-1 the question of
s 13 tfc
southeast corner of a lol now levylno In excess of the ten m 111
limitation for the benefit of
owned by Grant Stalnaker
thence eMf 12 rods to a stake Sc1p10 Township for the pur JUNK au u~ comp1eu: c1111u
delivered to our yard we
Situate 9 rods west of the lme pose of Providing and main
p1c:k up auto bodies and buy
between 100 Acre Lots 138 and tainlng fire apparatus ap
all kinds of scrap metals and
139 thence south 18 rods more pllances buildings or sites
Iron Rider's Salvage St Rt
or le!S to the center of sa 1d therefor or sources of water
124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohio
public: r.oad
thence a little supply and materials therefor
Call 992 5A68
south ol westerly along lhe or the establis hment and
10 17 tfc
center of said ra,ad to the place maintenance of lines of fire
of beg•nnlng 1 containing 1 &lt;1 alarm telegraph or the payment
permanent
part t i me NO 1 Copper 4Sc radiators
acres being the same more or of
volunteer firemen or fire
le!.s
25c
brass 2S"c
batteries
E)(ceptlng all coat under sa d flghttng companies to perate
$1 30 Ginseng 558 Yellow
land described In the last pieCe the same
root n so tops 51 50 May
Said tax being a renewal of
which the coal IS e)(pressly
Apple i'Oc
M
A
Hall
reserved by Clinton A Roberts an existing tax of 1 mIll to run
Reedsville, Otilo Phone 378
6249
together with all the pnv•leges for 5 years at a rate not ex
of mm 1ng and removing and ceedtng 1 0 mill fbr each one
10 A tfc
Wh•ch
also of mtnmg coal from other dollar of valuation
amounts to Ten Cents for each
property
one
hundred
dollars
of
E~&lt;cepllng a parcel of land
CASH SIS$ for iunk cars com
recorded In Vol 228 Page 823 ~Jatuatlon for Five years
ptete Frye s truck and Auto
The Polls for said Election
Deed Records of Meigs County
Parts, Rutland Ohio Phone
will be open at 6 30 o clock A M
Ohio
7A2 609A
and remau'l open until 7 30
Reference Deed
Vol
254
10 16 261C
Page 861,.. Deed Records M e 1gs o clock P M Eastern Standard
Time of satd day
County Ohio
1
By order of the Board of\
Terms j of sate Cash for not
EARN e&gt;C.tra cash the euy way'
Electtons of Meigs county
less thari' two thirds of the ap
Prices are great for your
pra1!ed value end subject 10 Ohio
scrap
•ron sheet Iron copper
the lien lor real estate taxes for
brass
aluminum
IBM
Edwin S Cozut
1974
Papers stainless steel auto
Properly
appraised
at
Cha•rman
batter1es, auto radiators , Sell
$9 120 DO
to one ol the largest •recycllng
Dorothy M Johnston
comp&amp;nles
In lh •s pari of the
Director
Robert C Hartenbach
state The Rosen~et:o c;:om
Sheriff of O&amp;ted October &lt;1 1974
pany Alben! Ohio
Meigs County Ohio
10 'I tfc
1101 7 U )I 2! 4tc
!lU I 7 1.4 21 28 (11) 4 Stc

For Rent

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

MJo or wom an t o dtstrltlute pre sold ad.,erUsed World

FORMERLY
B&amp;R DISCOUNT

SWAP - SELL - BUY F lea
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Market
Spr1ng Avenue
ON TAX LEVY IN
Pomeroy Oh•o Saturday and
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Sunday AUCTION SUNDAY
MILL LIMITATION
5 00 CON SIGNMENT 15 Pet
NOTICE Is hereby g i ven that
•
10 17 lfc;:
ln pursuance of a ResolutiOn of
the Board of Trustee!. of th e
Townsh p of O r ange Ohio
PUREBRED SALE
W Va
passed on t he 1st day of J uly
Polled Hereford Assoc al ron
197tf there w II be submrfled to
w•ll hold 4th annual Fall Sale
a vote of the people of sa d
Saturday November 2 1974
Townsh rp
at
a
General
at Jackson County L11Jestock
ELECTION to be held m the
Market near R: ptey Offermg
TownshiP of Orange Oh o at
w II conSISt of 15 bull s mostly
the regular place!. of vot•ng
breed1ng age 30 hetfers and 6
!herem on T uesday the 5th day
cows w tn calves Wri t e J m
of November 1974 the quest1on
Westfa ll
R: t
2 Box 11 5
of tevy 1ng tn excess of the- ten
Spen ce r w va or call 992
mrllltm•tat on for the benef•l of
2104
Orange Townsh •P for the
10 21 5t c
purpose of Providing and
ma•nta1n1ng f.re appct~ratus
apptifmces build ngs or s•les
therefor or sources of water
supply and matenals therefor
or the estabtrshment and FURNISHED house for mature
couple
n
Middleport
maintenance of lines of frre
Pomeroy
or
nearby
alarm telegraph or the payment
P'ermanent
ret ab l e
Of l permanent
part trme
references Phone 992 7466
volunteer f i remen or f re
10 18 Jt c
f•ghtmg compan.es to operate
the same
So!!ld tax be 1ng a renewal of a
tax of 12 mIll and an mcrease of
1f2 m II to const1tute a ta x of 1
m111 to run for f1ve years at a 4 FAMILY Garage Sale at
George
R
S!archer
rate not exceedtng 1 0 mill for
res dence Chester Oh o
each one dollar of valuat on
Fol l ow s1gns at Sunoco
WhiCh amounts to Ten Cen t s for
Stat1on
Co
Rd
25 past
each one hundred dollars of
Chester Cemetery 2 mtles
valuatton for F11Je years
red and white brick house
1 he Poll s for sad Elec t1on
Oct 24 25 26 and 27 from 9
will be open at 6 30 o clo ck A M
a m 1111 4 30 p m Ch ldren
and remain open until 7 30
m~'&gt;n s and women s clothing
o ClOCK P M Eastern Standard
Also household 1tems
T 1me of sa d day
10 18 6t c
By order of the Board of
Electtons of Me1gs County
OhtO

n

II 000 110 INVENTORY RllllllttS 12 70111111
EXCELLENT PAR1 OR FULL TIME INCOME
NO IXPERIINCI NIC£SSARY

'

Dear Helen

Television Log

Business Services

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

~

DISTRIBUTOR Nl£0£0 EXCLUSIVE OPPORTUNITY

~

For Sale

vou I

TBr

�,.

.
8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori -PoJl!eroy, 0., Monday, 0&lt;'1. 21, 1974

·-· · )

Grand·
openmg.

PI$ASANTVALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs, Ben
Belew and daughter , Hender sQn;
Mrs.
Lawrence
Mooney, Gallipolis; Mrs.
J ames Warner, Pomeroy;
Darien Mayes, Pointl'leasant;

..

Walter Douglas, Leon ; Asa
Atkins, Buffalo; Cla rence
Ebert, Southside; Albert
Gilles,
Mason ;
J ewell
Brumfield, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Albert Rhodes, Point Pleasant ;
John McDaniel, Clifton; Roger
Clark, Point Pleasant; James
R. Byus, Point Pleasant ; John
Van Meter, Middleport ; Mrs.
Raymond Atkins , Point
Pleasant; Mrs. James Smith,
Point Pleasant; Mrs . John
Barker , , Point Pleasant;
Merrill C. Clark, P oin t
Pleasant; Mrs. Rex Hurley,
Cheshire; Johnny Roush, New

•

Haven ; Mrs. Charles Hum-

phrey , New Haven ; Mrs .
Wayn e

Kincaid,

Point

Pleasant.
CLUB TO MEET
The
W e dne sda y
Homemakers Club will meet in
special session at 9 a. m.
Tuesda y at the Syracuse
Municipal Building for a
ca ndlemaking proj ec t . All

• •

We~ver .

SUNDAY ADMISSIONS .,Janet Marcum, Rutland;
Margaret McDaniel, Middleport; Steven Hudson,
Pomeroy; Danny Phelps,
Albany; Raymond Hartley,
Racine; Pauline Jeffers,
Winfield, W. Va., and Frances
Van Dyke, Rutland.
SUNDAY DISCHARGE
Carolyn Reeves.

Prince would eat even sheeps' eyes

"It takes two kinds of
people to make the world;
poets to write ab()ut the
glories of autumn and the

rest of us to rake them."
We only have one kind of

people at the POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK CO., and
those are the " F R I ENOL Y
ONES "
...
Peo ple
dedicated to finding th e
material s you need, when
you need them , and gett ing
them to the job as soon as

possi ble . JUST FRIEN~
DLY NEIGHBORS WHO
APPRECIATE YOUR
PATRONAGE.

·
'
Continued from page I
was using my name to run a
con game, if the charges are
proven true," Glenn said.
Police in Cleveland, Toledo
and Youngstown sought Quintero, after he was named in
warrants charging him with
passing bogus checks that may
have netted $60,000. He had
opened the Glenn for U. S.
Senate headquarters in Young~
stown, aimed at helping win
Glenn win votes among the
Spanish-epeaking populations,
officials said.
Glenn said he had expected
his
November
Republican opponent Cleveland
Mayor
Ralph
Perk , to critici~e him in
connection with the Quintero
elise. Perk charged Glenn with

a Watergate-type coverup.
We Expected Something
"We expected something of
this kind late in the campaign," Glenn said. "I gUess
this il. He's saying we're
getting all kinds of money from
oil sources or something like

that . .. These are scurrilous, vic ious, malicious
kind of lies and I challenge him
right now to prove it, or to
apoligize to the people of Ohio
for misleading them . He knows
he can't prove any of these
things he's putting out,"Glenn
added.
Rhodes, rwming for a third
term, said Sunday "property
taxes have . not been rolled
back; they have been rolled
up" during the Gilligan administration . ~
Rhodes, in a statement~ said
Ohioans "have been deceived"
by Gilligan and were "tricked
into voting for the Gilligan
income tax with the promise
that its money would be used to
make schools financially
sound."
"Now schools are preparing
to close," 'said Rhoda. "Now,
there are 300 real estate tax
levies up for renewal, new
taxes, or both in that many
districts on the November
ballot,
"There have been 63 such
issues on the ballot since May,
and there were 171 requests on
district allots last May,"
Rhodes said.

Youcanget
insurance against·the
''where-did·l-put-it?" blues
by using one of our

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday
Oct. 21-24
NOT OPEN

Safe Deposit
Boxes

I Rl

PLUS
CAPTAIN KRONOS'
VAMPIRE HUNTER

{Technicolor)
Horst Janson
( R)

· ShOw Starts 7 p.m.
The neares t thing on earth to tota l
Sec urity against lo s s by theft, mis placeme nt , fire· or other disaster is .
one of our safe de posit boxe s for
your important papers , keeps akes

l

LONDON (UP!) - Prince
Charles, heir to the British
throne, doesn't really like the
idea of eating sheep's eyes, but
he's willing to try anything
once. Singer carol Channing is so
fussy about eating she carries
her own food · wherever she
goes around the world. So does
actor Peter Sellers.
Lord Mount batten waxes eloquent about his own method of
cooking " vermicelli egg" and
actor David Niven goes "headfirst into a haddock."
But actor Dotiglas Fairbanks
Jr. doesn't care what he eats.
"My wife maintains that I
would eat stewed knitting if it
were put in front of me," he
says.
These tidbits come from
"Nobs and Nosh," a book
published today about the
eating habits of some of the
world's most famous persons.
" Nobs " is British slang for
prominent pesons. "Nosh" is
Yiddish for snack.
Allan Warren, a 24-year-old
photographer, spent three
years snapping pictures of
celebrities and collecting their
comments on food. His 104
subjects run 'the gamut from
actress Mae West to Prince
Philip, Queen Elizabeth's
husband.

All Deposits Guaranteed to $20,000.00
By The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
- ~ember Federal Reserve System

D£f'OSIT

INSURANC E

·c'[

Gallia County sheriff's
deputies this morning investigated the vandalism of 30
broken windows at BidwellPorter Elementary School.
The.incident was reported by
Charles Dowler, building
principal. Saturday, deputies
investigated a breaking and
entering at an A frame house
located on Ernest Piper Rd.
owned by Forrest Crawford of
Columbus. Missing was a lamp
and cabinet.
Entry was made by going
through a window.
· Deputies also investigated a
traffic accident on Spruce St.
Extension. Officers said
Charles E . Hill, 21, Rt. 1,
Thurman, parked his car on a
hillcrest and the car rolled 165
feet striking the mobile home
of Willlam Jess Davis. The
Davis family was not injured.

CORPOR ATION

table hoping to purloin a
delicacy on their plates."
In contrast, health food
addicts such as Gloria Swanson, Tony Perkins and Yehudi
Menuhin won 't try anything
unless it's
macrobiotic ,
vegetarian or organic.
"Food should be treated like
music,'' composer-conductor
Leonard Bernstein says. But
actor Paul Scofield says, " You
can talk with roast beef and
you can chat with chicken, but
fish demands totally selfish

News.

• •

silence."

Conductor Sir Georg Solti
refuses "to eat anything that
flies." But producer Otto
Preminger's response to food
is a blunt, "I am always too
fat."
"My wile and I became
engaged 20 years ago in a little
candlelit restaurant," British
comic Derek Nimmo says.
"After all these years, we still
go there once every week. She
goes on Wednesdays and I go
~:m Fridays."

in Briefs

Continued from page I
in areas other than the coverup. But he said this information
could not be revealed under the prosecutor's present jurisdiction
as set by Congress. Jaworski would not say whether he would
have prosecuted Nixon if President Ford had no\ pardoned him.
He said the issue was now moot, but repeated his belief !bat
Nixon's acceptance of the par.don amounted to an admission of
guilt.
.
SAIGON - COMMUNIST FORCES BLEW UP TWO major
bridges near Saigon today hours after police clashed in the
capital with protesters demanding the resignation of President
Nguyen Van Thieu. The Saigon military command said Communist bomb squads blew up a strategic bridge over the Dong
Hal River 13 miles northeast of Saigon and destroyed a vital
Highway 10 span five miles west of the capital.
The blasts came after about 1,000 demonstrators clashed
with police during a march Sunday on the National Assembly
building in downtown Saigon. The protesters, carrying signs
calling for observance of the 1973 truce agreement and Thieu's
resignation, swept aside barricades and burned a secret police
jeep.

~

at
VOL. XXVI NO. 134

l

$1 MILLION OR ELSE
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) An extortionist has threatened
to knock out electrical power to
the city unless he gets $1
million from the Bonneville
Power Administration. Don
Hodel, BPA administrator,
said the federal agency bas no
intentlon of paying. Eleven of .
Bonneville's electric power
line towers in northwest
Oregon liave ~n da!qaged by
mysterious dynamite blasts in
the P..st week, but no power
outages bave resulted.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

(N.J)}O . . . ) . •

ews•• ln

MEN'S

By United Press International
CLEVELAND - PRESIDENT GERALD FORD was to
tl'avel to Ohio today for a $S(IIHI.plate fund raising dinner to
provide flnanclal .and moral support for the state's Republican
candidates in the Nov, S general election.
The anticipated $150,000 in proceeds from the dinner were to
be shared by state and local GOP conunittees. Ford was to arrive
at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport at 5 p.m. EDT and
then travel by motorcade to a downtown hotel lor the dinner. He
was scheduled to speak about 20 minutes a~d then return to
·
Washington.

WRANGLER
WESTERN
JACKETS

.

Sizes 36 to 50 .
Unlined heavy 14
ounce blue denim,
true
western
styling. Mens and
boys
department
on . the 1st floor.

CHICAGO - OFFICERS PATROLED THE CITY'S Northwest Side Monday in hopes of capturing a fugitive kangaroo
whicli has eluded them for five .d ays.
· "He was hopping along Mango Avenue," Patrolman Edward
Brensberger said of his Sunday night glimpse of the mysterious.
mar$1plal. "He was headed south." The animal has not been
sighted since. There were reports that it !lad been foraging·
through garbage and dsmaged some garbage cans.

Jobn Glenn, Democratic
candidate for the U.S. Senate,
Monday reported total campaign
expenditures
of
$964,630.90, leaving a cash
balance of $7,222.93 as of Oct.
15.
Glenn's campaign committee, Citizens [or John
Glenn, said the report was filed
with the Ohio secretary of state
and tbe secretary of the Senate
in Washington.
"
The conunlttee said a significant portion of money raised in
the latest reporting period
came from union political
action funds , Included in the
contributions were $10,000
from the political action
conunlttee of the Retail Clerks
International Association and
$10,000from the political action
committee of the United Aut;o
Workers Union.
Glenn's Republican opponent
in the Senate Race, Cleveland
Mayor Ralph J . Perk, Monday
called on Glenn to withdraw

Also
a
g·ood
selection
of
Wrangler
blue
jeans. fl.a re . leg or
straight leg style.
Sizes 29 to 42 waist .

'

.

_,.

...\

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,.

·'·

,.

\
I'

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!···

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"

I

I

'l·

.,

before the people of Ohio, as I
have done, and answer their
questions," Gilligan told a
Trumbull County Democratic
dinner in Warren.
"U he will not come clean
with the people of Ohio,"
Gilligan concluded, "I say to
you that we dare not let this
man and his cohorts get back
into the highest office in this
state."
Create New Jobs
Rhodes told a Republican
rally In Alliance he would
11
Create thousands of needed
new jobs for Ohioans " if
elected in November.
He said Gilligan, his opponent in November, had

from the race because of
alleged irregularities in
Glenn's fund-raising operation.
Only Honorable Thing
Perk, referring to the weekend disclosure that a Glenn
aide had allegedly collected
some $65,000 in contributioi}S
for the campaign without
reporting it to Glenn headquarters, said "the only honorable
thing for Glenn to do is to withdraw from the race."
"This is a coverup,II Perk
charged. "Glenn should have
reported this to the police
immediately. Col. Glenn has
still not gone to the police with
all the facts on this scandal."
In the gubernatorial race,
Democratic Gov. John J.
Gilligan, SO!!king r!H!Iection
against Republican James A.
Rhodes, today called on the
former governor to give the
public a full disclosure of his
financial dealings.
"Let him spread out on the
table his income tax fonns, as I
bave done, and let h~ stand

en tine
TEN CENTS

T_UESDAY. OCTOBER 22, 1974

destroyed the industrial
development program built
during Rhodes' previous two
administrations.
"These people can tear down
overnight things that took
years to build up, because they
don't seem to understand the
needs of working people,"
Rhodes said,
"At a time when inflation,
taxes and growing unemployment are threatening the
economic well-being of thousands of Ohio working famllles,
we need leadership in Columbus that will work day and
night to make Ohio attractive
for business expansion," said
Continued on page 6

Truck ordered
.of local firm

Kroger target
of meatcutters
I

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The Kroger dispute.
Boyd said the Meatcutters
Kroger Co. apparently has
become the target of the recently negotiated cost-ofAmalgamated Meatcutters In- living clauses in contracts with
ternational Union to become major food chains in the
the pattern setter for cont.-acts Philadelphia, Baltimore and
covering major food chains. Washington areas.
"We have to at least keep our
About 75 representatives
from
42 local
unions people even. We don't want
representing Kroger employes negotiated increases eaten up
nationwide met here in a by rising costs," Boyd said.
daylong session Monday to
John Marsh, Kroger vice
coordinate contract president, said the company's
offer to employes was 11 in
bargaining.
Jack Boyd of Chicago, the keeping with the general trend
· union's national re!Bil director, · of contracts all around the
said in addition to two major country.
"We have made a most
strikes against Kroger in the
Pennsylvania-West generoUs otter for our people."
Western
'
Virginia-Ohio area, about eight
At
the
meeting
of the local
contraCts were due to expire
within the next two weeks in 1Uiion representatives, Edward
other major areas across the Steinmetz, president of Meatcutters LDcal 424 here, said
country.
Strikes by Food Employes union \!,lembers had voted to
Local 590 here and Local 347 in extend their contract with
Charleston, W. Va ., have Thorofare Markets, The conclosed 108 Kroger stores, in- tract, covering 450 meatcutters
cluding several In southeastern in 72 stores, was to have expired last Saturday.
Ohio.
Steinmetz said the Thorofare
"I can't figure out why
Kroger is a ·holdout," Boyd employes were guaranteed
said.
.
that whatever area wage
Cost-of-living protection was pattern is negotiated will be
listed as a chief Issue . in 1the . made retroactive .

Meeting in regular session
Monday night , Pomeroy
Village Council accepted the
low bid of $5,169.95 by the
Meigs Equipment Co. for the
purcliase of a new threequarter ton pickup truck for
the water department.
The only other bid submitted
was by the Pomeroy Motor Co.
CoWlcllmen agreed thai unless
the truck from the Meigs
Equipment Co. can be secured
in less than 90 days it will not
be accepted.
Council approved the first of
lhree required readings
granting a price increase in the
community for television cable
service. Representing PoinTView Cable were Carroll
Rollyson and Paul Gerard.
According to the ordinance, the
increase wlll be from $5.50 to $6
a month for regular customers
and from $3.50 to $4.50 for
senior citizens and disabled
persons. Customers paying by
the year will receive a 10 pet.
discount, while those paying
for six months ahead will
receive a five pet. discount.
It was agreed to provide a
leal pickup service during the
week of Oct. 28. Leaves must
be bagged, A schedule of
pickups will be announced.
Council approved, at the
request of Pollee Chief Jed
Webster, the attendance of the
basic police school at the
Hocking Valley Technical
Institute for meterman,
Ronald Randall Carpenter. He
will start training Nov. 11 and

.

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Jury
selection conUnued today in the
WASHINGTON - THE SUPREME COURT has rejected tax
trial of eight former Ohio
Continued on page 2
National Guardsmen charged
in the Kent State University
shootings May 4, 1970, in which
lour students were killed an&lt;l
nine wounded.
Two jurors were chosen
SYRACUSE - PlanS lor the to be offered, including prizes
Halloween Party Saturday for costuming in four . Monday, the opening day .
Chlel U.S . District Judge
night at the Syracuse . categories 01 ugliest, funniest,
prettiest
and
most
original.
F'rank J. Battisti predicted the
Municipal Building were
trial would' tak~ about · six
cornpletedMondsynlghtby the Each winper In the four
weeks and urged defense and
Syracuse Community categories will be given a
government attorneys to speed
silver dollar.
Amusement Conunlttee.
up.
.
The
party
begins
at
7;30p,m
.
.
Donations · of money and
Attending last night's session
"The entire Ohio National '
cookies an&lt;l help are needed,
the c&lt;mmltllee said. The party were Mrs. Nancy Neutzllng, Guard Is oot on trial here, just
Is lor a11· young people in Mrs. Cbarolette Nease, Mrs. certain members of It," Bat,
SyraCUJe and Ml!tersvllle who Mary Pickens, Mrs. Unda ' tisli said ·in rlicesalitg court
Monday . "The Kent State
attend schools In ·the Southern Parsons, Mrs. Mildred Pierce,
Mrs.
!';nimogene
Holstein
and
University student body Is not
Local Scliooi .District.
Mrs.
Katie
Cfow.
on
ll'illl. The legality of the
Treats wj]1 be . given each
Donations
.
may
be
sent
to
Vietnam war is not on trial.';
child . . There will be free
Earlier the judge had read
cookies and pop and prizes for . Mrs . Neutzling and· Mrs .
the
indictments . returned last
Nease.
winners in the various games

I

April by a federal gr•ml jury 1.0
the panel of prospective jurors
and .then cautioned them "the
indictment is not any evidence
whatever against the defendandants."
"The government bas the
burden of proof - tbal burden
never shifts to the defense,"
Battisti said. "Each defendant
is presumed innocent unW the
government proves it's case
beyond a reasonable doubt in
the mind of each juror."
Heading the government
team is Robert Mutphy, chief
of the criminal seciion of the ·
Civil- Rights Division of the
U.S. Justice Department. C.D.
Lambros represents four of the
defendants, Bernard Stuplinsld
tbree and E.K. Wright one.
Five defend~ts - William
E Perkins 28 Canton Ohio·

It was decided to lease a
radar system for the police
cruiser on a 90 day approval
plan. At the end of the 90 days,
the equipment can be returned
or purcliased. II purcliased, the
rental fee paid will be applied
to lye purebase price.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor .Smith, Clerk Jane
Walton, treasurer Phyllis
Hennessy, councilmen Bill
Snouffer, Lou Osborne, Harry
Davis, Ralph We.,...Y, John
Manley and Phil Globokar, and
Chief of Pollee Webster.

life under any circumstances?
He ~plied : "No; I am not."
Both jurors said they had
followed news accounts at the
time of the incident, but had
not followed it much in &lt;letall
since.

27, Mantua, Ohio; and James
D. McGee, 27, and Lawrence A.
Shafer, 29, both of Ravenna,
Ohio -face ma:a:imum sent,
ences of life imprlsonment if
convicted in the deaths of iour
students demonstrating
against the southeast Asla
War.
·
RUTLAND- The Rutland
Leon H. Smith, 27, Beach
Medical Service
Emergency
City, Ohio; Mathew J . McMa·
Unit
of
the
SE!)EMS,
going
nus, 29, West Salem, Ohio; and
operational
Monday
afBarry W. Morris, 29, Kent,
Is
localejlln
the
old
ternoon,
Ohio, could be sentenced to up
lire department building on
to one year imprisonment and
Larldns Sl
fined up to $1,000 if found
The unit Is operating on a
guUty.
volunteer basis with Mrs.
Mrs. Constance Hillson and
Joon
Stewart as station ·
~ph Rumsey were seated as
chief.
Residents·
may receive
jurors Monday afternoon
·
service
from
the
"unit by
following detailed questioning
calling toll free, 1-800-282by all four attorneys and by
.
7777,
The Rutland unit Is the
judge Battisti.
.
second
unit In Meigs County
Rumsey, from the Akron
J~mes E . Pie;ce 29 Arne~ area, Wfts asked by Lambros, to become operational.
:·:.;ox:·~~;·;·;o.;;;:--:-:· =-:·:-:-:·:·:·
.,.,_.,.--rr".'"~ .o:o. ~•.o.•.O::•:• .v.•;T. • · ~ .-.'' ' • • •
Island, Fla.; RalPh ,~Zoller, "Are you against the taking of 'h~·~~~y.-.·.~:·:-=~?

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OUTS!' ANDING WOMEN - The Woman of The Week
and The Woman of The Year were selected Monday night
when the Middleport Business and Professional Women 's
Club \leld a dinner at the Meigs Inn in observance of National
Business Women's Week. Mrs. Mary Bacon, Middleport, left,
was selected as Woman of The Week and Mrs. Nellie Vale ,
right, Woman of The Year. Both were presented gifts, Mrs.
Bacon and Mrs. Vale are employed in offices of Robert
Bowen, Meigs County Superintendent of Schools. Mrs. Bacon
is Work-Study Program Coordinator for Meigs and Gallla
Counties and Mrs. Vale is a Meigs County School Supervisor.

complete It in January.
Councll approved a $35 a
month salary increase lor Mrs.
Dorinda Nordei, secretary to
the mayor, and heard a
complaint on sanitation service
from Mrs, Orplia James, Union
Ave., who said she is charged a
higher rate than her neighbors.
It will be Investigated.
Councll approved the report
of Mayor Dale Smith for
September showing receipts of
$1,182.60 in flnes and fees. The
Pomeroy PTA was given
permission to sell light bulbs in
front of the New York Clothing
House Nov . 2 and the
Vocational and Industrial
Clubs of America, Meigs High
School Branch, was given
permission to hold a bake sale
at the Barbecue Pit on the
upper parking lot Nov. 2. Meigs
High School Junior Class
members were giVen permission to sell ads lor their
class play program Oct. 23-25.

Kent jury selection continues

Halloween party all set

I .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

./

By United Press International

,•

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ra tes.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

IV
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1400 petition
Greyhound for
busing service

The Constitution now allows such financing for industrial and
development, distribution and research, Creating
JObs and employment opportWlities and improving the economic
welfare of Ohioans.
New projects qualifying for the fina'ncing would be the
preservation of existing jobs ; cot"ttrol o( air, water and therma1
pollution ; and disposal of solid waste. ·
Also, the present Constitution forbids state revenue bond
financing for providing gas or utility service to the public. Under
the amendment, this section would be wa ived for construction of
gas and electric fa cilities for pollution control or waste disposal.
The' bonds for such projects would be financed through utility
.~mmer cial

Cost of Glenn campaign
near $1 ~nillion, so far

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
OcL 19,1974
Sales Report of
Ohio Valley Uveslock Co.
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 25 to
30; 300 to 400 lbs. 23.:)0 to 29.85;
400 to 500 lbs. 22 to 31; 500 to 600
lbs. 23.50 to 30; 600 to 700 lbs. 24
to 31.50; 700 lbs. and over 25 to
30.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
300 lbs. 22.50 to 30; 300 to 400
lbs. 21 to 29; 400 to 500 lbs. 22.50
to 28.75; 500 to 600 lbs. 24 to
27 .50; 600 to 700 lbs. 23 to 34; 700
lbs. and Over 27 to 33.50,
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By
The Head) -Stock Cows 150 to
210; Stock Cows and calves 185
to 380; Stock Bulls 150 to 245;.
Baby Calves 10 to 35; (By The
Pound) - Canners &amp; Cutters'
Cows 19 to 23; Holstein Cows 22
to 25.25; Commercial Bulls
( 1,000 lbs. and OVer) 24.50 to ·
28.50.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
lbs. tO 250 50 to 54.50; Medium
200 lbs . to 300 35 to 43.25; Culls
35' Down.
LAMBS- Tops 90 lbs. to 110
24.50to.30.50; Seconds 75lbs. to
80 20 to 23.50; Ughts 40 lbs. to
65 IS to 21.50; Stock Ewes By ·
the Head 10 to 15.
·
SHOATS- S to 9.

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The state legislature last year placed the Department of Public
Works under a new Department of Administrative Servives,
whose director is named by the governor subject to state Senate
confirmation.
Thus, the director of public works is no longer a cabinet officer
and does not need to be appointed by the governor.
State Issue 3 expands the list Dl purposes for which public ·industrial development revenue bonds and guaranteed loans may
be used. The bonds or loans would be paid off through operation
of the facilities or projects. No tax money could be used.

•

Petitions bearing over 1400 names requesting bus service between Pomeroy and Athens have been forwarded to the
Greyhound Bus Co. at Cleveland.
There is small prospect of any inunediate results, however,
Far down the road mini bus service between Athens and
Pomeroy is posaible, perhaps with government subsidy.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., president, disclosed the action and
discussed alternatives when the Pomeroy Chamber of Com·
merce met for a noon luncheon at the Meigs Inn Monday.
Reed said that Bob Ebersbach, formerly of Pomeroy,
learned from the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio it has no
jurisdiction in the matter aince Greyhound did not buy out the
lines of the Trailways Co. but merely took over a part of the
services of the Trallways Co. Reed said that he has been told the
run ·from Athens to Pomeroy has loa! money,
He said a mini bus on the run between Pomeroy and Athens,
through govermnent subsidy is a possibility.
Should mini service be pursued 'as an alternative, the
petitions with 1400narnes already filed with the Greyhound finn.
would be invaluable, it was indicated.
Reed also said that he will be in Marietta today to confer with
the State Highway Department Division Engineer Max Farley on
when the Pomeroy-Mason bridge will be closed to traffic. It was
announced earlier that the bridge will be closed several months
when a new floor is put on the bridge.
Reed said that two !S-car ferry boats have been located to go
into operation here when the bridge is closed. Operating the
ferries at a flood time, however, would be a problem.
PROBATE .nJDGE MANNING Webster addressed the
chamber on the 2.75 mll1 tax levy to be voted upon In Meigs
County on Nov. 5. !!'will provide funds for operating the Meigs
Community School for the county's retarded.
Judge Webster serves on the Meigs County Mental Retardstlon
Board which operates the school. Board members receive no
renumeratlon.
Judge Webster presented "the facts" and asked each
chamber member to make up his own mind.
Why The Levy?
Passage of the levy which would raise about $120,000 locally
at the current tax structure level is neCessary because of inflation and the fact that previously the Meigs Local School
District l)as provided the space, utilities and even lunches lor
stu~ •!tending ~ .Meigs ~mm,unlty _Sc~l.
· ..
· However, Judge Webster said ·ali'ea&lt;fY one classr()om at
Rutland had to be given up because the room was needed by the
Meigs Local District, Next year another room will have to be
given up reducing the community school to one classroom.
Whether a new community sc~lis built for the retarded or
an old sc~l strutlure is used in the future, the board next year
will have to bear the expense of utilities, meals,' building
maintenance and all expenses which go with operating a school,
Judge Webster said. He said that tbe board had asked the Meigs
Local Sc~l District Board of Education lor an unused building,
but has been told unused buildings are being held lor an influx of
students expected . because of the coal mining operations in
Western Meigs County.
Judge Webster stated tliat he had been informed by the Ohio
Board of Tax Appeals that should the evaluation of property in
Meigs County swing upwards, particularly with mining property
going onto the tax duplicate, that the 2.75 mll1 tax levy, if approved by voters, would be reduced.
Either the Meigs Community School must shut down or curtail
Its program if the tax measure doesn't pass on Nov. S, the board
member told the group. Of the total 2. 75 mills being sought two
Continued on page 6

.-· _,::._

JUDGMENT WON
The Family Savings and
Loan Go., bas been awarded
jU&lt;\gmenl in the · amount of
$899.61, due ·on a promissory
note in i~~cUon against Jame,s
Arthur Miller, Rt. 2, Pome~oy.
in Meigs · County Com111on
Pleas Court, An . action for
money 'On a promissory . note
filed by the Citizens National
!lank against James T. Ray,
Rt. 1, · Albany has be~n
dismissed.

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B-P school

TWO MORE DIE
BELFAST , (I) PI) A
gunman firing out of ~he rear
Window of a stolen car killed
two men in the Roman catholic
Falls Road area of Belfast
today. Police said the victims,
apparently · ·related , died
aln)ost instantly !I:om the 10
bullell! fired. at .them as they
\Valked ,to woji&lt;,

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - fiDfRAL

30 windows
broken at

BELGIAN ON TOP
GAINESVILLE, Ga. (UP!)
Motorcyclist
Roger ·
DeCoster of Belgium grabbed
we had one."
the points leadership in the·
"He won't enforce the one Traos-AMA motocross series
now on the books when it inwith a victory worth $3,500 'at
volves violations by him or his
Road Atlanta , Sunday, his
Republican _cronies."
second in the three motocross
events to date.

THE
BAKER
BOYS

POMEROY, OHIU

V(M!Hio:

Actor Cary Grant says
friends f"efer to him as " the
Scavenger" because "after
fmishing every morsel of my
own meal I look around the

effort to lead his own party tu a
tough, workable bill. As
always, he was more concerned with setting up obstacles than finding solutions." ·
Hall said Brown "wouldn't
know what to do with a really
tough campaign finance law if

IT'S FUN -TO
I)EALWITH

and Savings Co.

.

once. "

Hall said, "I put myself on
the line in the state Senate by
opposing the (campalgn finance) bill as inadequate," Hall
said. "! am still waitiing for
my opponent to make a
statement proposing any positive changes."
Hall criticized Brown for
lack of leadership while the bill
was pending before the Ohio
General ASsembly.
"For long months, we heard
the secretary of state tell us
why this or tbat could not be

aod other valuables .

The Farmers Bank

Comedienne Phyllis Diller
gave her recipe for "garbage
soup" - a stock in which
you throw any leftovers
remotely edible,
Prince Charles said he has
been forced to eat "very
strange food," such as raw
squid and octopos, on his royal
travels.
"! wouldn't like the idea ·of
sheep's eyes," he said. "Maybe
if I could swallow them in one
go. It is probably the tho!jght of
having to chew them tliat puts
me off. But I am Quite
prepared to try anything

done,'' Hall said .. ''He made no

FRI., SAT., SUN .
OCT. 25-26-27
FRANKENSTEIN -AND
THE MONSTER
FROM HELL
Peter Cushing

.

Market Report

(far right) Is a plaster,
metal and vinyl creation by
George Segal.

Glenn Rhodes endorsed

''
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by David Smith, graces the

State Issue 2 repeals a section of the Ohio Constitution
requiring the governor to appoint a superintendent of public
works as a cabinet member.

election issues

Holzer Medical Center
(Births)
Friday - Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Baker,son, Jackson. Mr.
and Mrs. Jotin Mccarty, son,
Vinton ..
Sunday - Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Buckley, son, Reedsville. Mr. and Mrs. Theron
Durham, daughter, Pomeroy.
Mr . and Mrs. James M.
O'Brien, son, Gallipolis. Mr.
and Mrs. Robert L. Wood, Jr.,
daughter, Patriot.

museum's 1.7 acre sunken
garden separated from a
plaza surrounding the
museum. "Bus Riders''

:::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::.-::::~~:::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::~:::t.::;~::::~:::~:::~::::::::;r.«:::~:;-::::~;:~~:;:;:;.;;~':=~.

Homestead exemptions-redUctions ill taxes on real estateare now available to residents 65 and older, earning $10,000 or
less per year.
·
The reductions, graduated according to income, can range as
. high as $5,000 on the property tax bill of a person earning less
than $2,000 a year.
For those earning between $8,000 and $10,000 a year, the
reduction is $2,000 or 40 per cent of tl!elr property valuation,
whichever is less.
to preserve jobs and improve the environment, and eliminate an
The state Taxation Department said that if a similar scale is
outdated provision in the state Constitution ..
enacted for disabled homeowners, it would cost the state about
State Issue I would allow the Ohio Genera! Assembly, after
$500,000 a year to reimburse local governments for the lost
next Jan. 1, to write· a law extending homestead exemptions to
revenue from th~ exemptions.
permanentiy and totally disabled homeowners.

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse RepOrter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Three 'statewide issues on the Nov. 5
ballot are designed to open the way for homestead exemptions
for the disabled, permit the sale of revenue bonds for programs

'.,

XU," a stainless steel piece

homemakers are invited.

Ohio .voters will decide three statewide issues

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATuRDAY DiSCHARGES
- Fred Hill, M)ortle Edison,
Clyde Ferrell, Ollie Tyree,
Dorothy Will, Mary Jones
Kathryn Lares, Kathryn

The Joseph H. Hlrshhorn
Museum and Sculpture
Garden,
housing
a
collection Including works
by Calder, Rodin, Matisse
and Moore, ofllelally
opened Its doors to the
public earlier this month.
The circular buil~lng
(left) , part of · the
Smithsonian Institution's
complex, is located on the
In
National
Mall
Washington D. C. Th~
collection contains 4,000 '
sculptures and 2,000
paintings all donated to the
United Slates In May, 1966
from Canadian uranium
king Joseph Hlrshhorn ,
originally from Brooklyn.
Among the many lm·
presstve objects on dlsplay,
some so large a helicopter
was required to position
them,
is
"The
Therapeutist" (lower left),
a bronze sculpture by Rene
Magritte. AI right, "Cubl

Susan Bush, Henderson;
Robert Crosswhite ., Kerr ;

I

HOSPITAL•NEWS

SPEAKER AND QUEEN - Mrs. Mary Powell, left, a
cosmetology instructor at Meigs High School, was guest
speaker at a dinner meeUng of tbe Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club Monday night at the Meigs Inn.
With Mrs. Powell also a guest, is Scherry Lane, queen of the
Vocational and Industrial Clubs of America (VICA), Meigs
High School Unit.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday,
variable
cloudiness Thursday through
Saturday with a chance ol
sho01ers Friday, Highs in the
80s. Lows from the middle
30s to the lower 40s early
Thursday and In the 40s
early Friday and Saturday,
w:~:::.&gt;.::::::::::::::~~;:Y..:-&amp;-».::WP;::x:::

Power pole hit
The
Pomeroy
Police
Department investigated a
sln~le car accident Monday at
6 p.m. on Nye Ave. Charles
Aeiker, Racine , was tcaveling
south on Nye, when he crossed
the double center line, went
across the sidewalk and struck
and broke off a power pole.
Aelker was taken to Vetersns
Me11141rial Hospital by the
Pomeroy E-R Squad for facial
lacerations. His car was
demolished. Charges will be
filed pending investigation.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Eric 's tover,
Racine ; Diana Hubbard,
Pomeroy ; Gladys Knotts,
Vinton ; Dallas · Edwards,
Letart, W. Va .
DISCHARGES
Ruby
Hysell.

Police make
7 arrests
The Middleport Pollee ·
Depar tment today reported
seven arrests, including three
juveniles, Monday night.
Names were withheld pending
court appearances.
One arrest was for taking a
stereo from a car parked on the
A&amp;P · parking lot. Three
juveniles were taken into
custody for throwing toilet
tiSsue and other acts of vandalism at the marina i two
persons were charged . with
stealing batteries from Tom
Rue's auto agency lot, and one
for driving while intoxicated
and leaving the scene of an
accident.
Middleport police warned
that any juvenile found .
throwing eggs or committing
acts of vandalism in the village
will be cited into court as will
his parents.
Fifteen persons have been
.cited into court for ,acts of
vandalism thus far this month.
Defendants will appear in
Mayor Fred Hoffman 's court
this evening. · Juveniles are
ordered to 4ppear in juvenile
COl lrf

~·

-~

'.

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