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                  <text>_20 - Tile Daily~ Sentinel, Middlepo~t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Nov. 5,~1~97;;5~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i1

Floyd Noiris
died Tuesday
•
RACIN E - Floy d Peter
Norris, 73, Rt. 2, Racine, died
Tuesday evening at Holzer
Medical Center. Mr. Norris
was preceded in death by his
parents, Samuel and Armintla Pounds Norris ; a son,
Fritz; two brothers, Franklin
and Fay, and -a sister, Freda
Evans.
Mr. Norris was a member
of the Letart Falls United
Methodist Church where he
taught Sunday school for 30
years. A member of Racine
Masonic bodies, he was .a
carpen~r all hi s lire.
He is survived by his wife,
Pearl Edwards Norris; one

Trustee
(Continued from page I)
76. Alma E. S111ith, unopposed
for clerk, received 191 voles.
Denver G. Hysell received
1,109 vo~s to win the trustee
post In Salisbury Township.
Second was Donald L. Moore
wl th 400 and third was David
A. Slater with 370. Richard
Bailey defeated Donald 'L.
Hunnel for the clerk's post,
963-921.
Winner of the trustee post
i~ Scipio Township was
Eugene Phillips with 131.
Herman Joseph McMurray
received 58, Allen Douglas
Bishop, 56; Joseph Carsey,
44; Andrew I... Sylvia, 13, and
Otha Milard, 51. Unopposed
clerk candidate, Glenn E.
Jewell recei'ved 178 votes.
Delbert A. Smith won the
trustee post In .Sutton
Township by a wide margin.
He received 682 votes. The
vo~s of other candidates in
the five-way race were Jack
I... Wolfe, 180; Oris A. Hub·
bard, 155; Richard Duck·
worth, 88, and Larry R.
Hubbard, 80. William F.
Harris, unopposed, received
732 votes for clerk.
·

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE THRU THURS.

NOV. 5·6
NOT OPEN

FRI.· SUN.
NOV. 7-9

Herb Jaffe's
THE WIND AND
THE LION
(Ttchnlcolor)

Wc: Hold Thc:sc: Truths ...

son, Hershel Norns, Racine;

A Chronicle of Amcric1

a daught er, Vera Craig
Lester, in Alabama; two
brothers, the Rev. Freeland
Norris and Fern Norris,
Racine; three sisters, Flossie
Church, Radnor, Ohio;
Florence Adams, Racine, and
Frances Cady, Westerville ;
four grandsons, one granddaughter, aild one greatgranddaughter.
Funeral services wilt" be
held Friday at 1 p.m. at
Ewing Chapel. Burial wiiJ be
in Letart Falls Ceme~ry .
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening. Masonic services
will be conduc~ Thursday
at 8 p.m.

November 7, 7775:
His !i've-ship el!ort to burn Hampton frustrated by a
barricade of sunken ships and ily the marksmanship of
Culpeper riflemen who pick oil members o! the British
landing parties, VIrginia's Royal Governor John Murray
Dunmore establishes a base at Norfolk and begins recruiting a Loyalist army. Today he declares Virginia to
be in rebellion, proclaims
martial law, end !rees the
slaves. But he does not make
the proc lamations public un·
til the 16th, a day alter
emerging victorious in a
skirmish at Kemp's Landing. He urges all those
capable or bearing arms to
rally to his banner. And he
declares freedom to "all indentured servants, Negroes
or others [belonging) to the
rebels, [II they will) join lor
reducing the colony to a
,proper sense of duty."

Revised •••
(Continued from page 1)
existing laws."
Celeste and Riffe declined
to label Tuesday's smashing
defeat of Rhodes' bond issues
as a personal defeat for the
governor himself.
"!think a lot of it had to do
with the fact that people don't
want any more taxes," said
Riffe.
Celeste agreed lbe outcome
was not entirely an anti·
Rhodes vote, but he was
slightly lesa gentle.
" It was more important
than a stunning defeat for the
governor," he said. "It was a
statement from the voters
that they are going to reject
bloa~ promises and hidden
price tags."
·

- By

Ross Macken zit &amp; Jefl MecNelly/e 1975, United Feature Syndicate.

News
•• in Briefs
(Continued from page·ty

city from default say they'll need eight to 10 days to win some
converts through an "educational procesa.''
·
By that time, the city could be on the verge of default.
Officials have said that by mid-November tbey may no longer
be able to pay off debts as they become dae.
Mayor Abraham Beame came to plea his case today
before the same National Press Club audience that last week
heard President Ford charge New York officials were trying to
dump their problem "on the front doorstep of tbe federal
government- unwan~ and abandoned by Its real parents."
SPAIN HAS ORDERED TROOPS MANNING its desert
defense line in disputed Spanish Sahara to throw back this
week's "suicidal" march by 350,000Moroccan volunteers. "We
told the Moroccans we won't let the marchers one yard past
that defense line," a Spanish government said In Madrid. "We
mean business."
Spanish news agencies said tbe trooj)J, planting mines and
rolling out barbed wire, have deployed along a defense line 25
miles outside the Saharan-Moroccan frontier: But Morocco
W
'went ahead with preparations for the mass march, tentatively
scheduled to begin Thursday, Into the mineral-rich, North
(Continued from page I)
Mrlcan territory.
Smith, 733. The fourth canThe final contingents of volunteers pulled into the
didate was Robert G. Davis Moroccan border town of Tarfaya Tuesday, completing the full
who received 575 vo~s.
civilian army of 350,000, UPI correspondent Jacques Clafin
On the Meigs County reported from the frontier
Board, there were two
candidates to fill two seals,
CHARLESTON, W. VA. - SIX PERSONS, including four
both were lncumblmts. They executives of the McJunkin Corp., were killed Tuesday when a
are Harold G_ Roush who Ught plane crashed in a wooded area shortly after taking off
received 3,501 votes and from Kanawha Airport.
Gordon H. Collins, who
Witnesses said the plane lost power on the short runway,
received 3,171 votes.
Upped an earthen barrier, slammed into the hillside and
erupted into names. The victims were Identified as Dexler
POSTTOMEf:T
Conrad, 36, the pilot, Dunbar; Davi~ G. Huffman, 52, vice
RACINE
Racine · )resident of the company, Otarleston; Zack T. Nlcholaa, 46, a
American Legion Post No. marketing director, Charleston; WU1iam C. HaiBiead Jr., 35,
502 will meet Thursday, Nov. anolher marketing director, Otarlellon; James B. Chwonlng
s, at 6 p.m. Oyster stew will Jr., 45, anclnnali Dlvlaion manager of the company and CO·

Ne People

::::::::::.~be::.:se:r;ved::;_.-----~pilo:·:t~S(:ep:he:n~D~-~Poe:·~36~,~o:.;fSt. Albans.

-APPRECIATION .SALE-

. SUIT FILED
A suit for partition of real
estate bas been filed in Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Court,
Lloyd · Sellards,
East
Liverpool, and Edgar
Sellards, Rt. 1, Dover, ask ·
partition of property located
in Rutland. Floyd Sellards, et
al,addresses unknown, are
defendants. Steve Lane was
granted a divorce from
Loretta ·Lane on charges of
gross neglect of duly and
extreme cruelty,

D&amp;D MEATS
POMEROY, OHIO

830 E. MAIN,

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
Open Monday thru Saturday 8-5

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., NOV. 8

Whole Port Loin ... ,............... ~!i.~~-~~:.~!:~?.... lb. $1.39
Loin Pork Qlops ........................................
lb. $1.59
'
Rib Pork Chops ......................................... lb. $1A9
Country Style Spare Ribs ............................ lb. '1.55
Pork Rib Roast ..................................... ,... lb. 11.45
Pork Loin Roast ................ :........................ lb. •1.55
Ground Beef (Fresh~ Made). ......................... lb. 7'1
Pen Sausage (Fresh~ Made)....................... lb. $1J9
llxie Margarine (QirS.) ................................. lb; 4'1
Hath Canned Hams .................... , ........ 8 lb. 111.99
Kraft Prepared Mustard .......... :....&lt;.~~~-~~1.,.!1.~·..... 25'
Casino 'French' Salad Dressing ...... ~ .....8..~~: .......... '1!1

MRS. BATES DIES
Mrs. Everett (Eleanor)
Bates, formerly of Pomeroy,
died Monday night at Nash·
ville, Tenn. after suffering a
heart attack.

'

ADMIRAL .
STEREO

·SALE
aAKIR

PURNITURI

White Swan Shortening ................ ,.... ~..1~·..~" '1.49
Superior Brand Polish Sausage......... :......~ .... lb. 85'
Fresh~ Made "Cube Steaks~~ ...................... lb. $1.69
U.S.DA a.oice Blade Cut
Chuck Roast ........................................ lb. 89'
U.S.DA Choice Boneless
Oluck Roast...................................... lb. $1.Q9
Boneless Beef Stew.................................... lb. $1.39
U.S.DA Olcice Oluck Steaks .......:.............. lb.·'1.19 .
(FRESH OYSTERS 'N STOCK} .
Lunch Meats- Wide Variely
. Of Cheese-Wide Variety of Hams,
Bacon, and Smoked Meats
•'

...

.. .,.._.__

Nine State
issues' fates
at a glance
COLUMBUS IUPI) Results at a glance of
Tuesday's balloting on the
nine statewide Issues (99 per
cent of the slate's 13,064
polling places reporting) :
Issues 2, 3, 4 and 5 - Gov.
James A. Rhodes' econbmlc
recovery proposals :

ISSUE 2- Tax abalement
for Industry:
, ,,
YES - .567,986 or 21 per cent
N0-2, 130,299 or 79 per cent

:::::::::w~~~:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::,;:;::,;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:,::?:&lt;:·

Dorcas
News
Not.eS
·

l!y Edna Knopp
Mrs. Nina 1.1astern . of
Lebanon and her sister Shela
ISSUE 3 - Transportation Haltom and daughter Amy of
bond Issue:
YEs- 438.811 or 16 per cent Springborrow spent Tuesday
N0-2,268,cl52 or U per cent evening with Mrs. Laura
Byers, Tanners Run Road.
ISSUE 4--Houslng finance :
Dick and Lois Sterrett and
YES- 858,920 or 32 per cent
N0-1,854,936 or 68 per cent sons Mike ·and Max," of
Gallipolis spent Saturday
ISSUE 5-Publlc lm· with Otis and Edna Knopp.
provemenls bond Issue:
Bob and Martha Lou
YES-484,463 or 18 per cent
N0-2,166,126 or 82 per cent ·Beegle visited recently with
State Issues, f. 6, 7, 8 and 9: Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson
ISSUE 1- Tax breaks for of Vincent.
recreational land:
Tommy Beegle and Aaron
YES- 1,033,010 or 40 per cent Wolfe..
~!tended
tbe
N0-1,516,574 or 60 per cent
World Series games In CinISSUE 6--Ballot rotation: cinnati on Tuesday and
YES- 1,592,007 or 64 per cent Wednesday.
N0-904,177 or 36 per cent
Aunt Parmie Marie
ISSUE 7- Delegate Brumfield and Katie Sprow,
selection:
of Gallipolis visited with
YES- 1.627,857 or 64 per cent Sherry and . Aaron Knopp,
NO- 898,723 or 36 per cent
Tanners Run Road.
ISSUE 8- Rail financing :
Bill Beegle, a teacher, at
YES- 860,682 or 35 per cent South Point and his fiancee,
NO - 1.604,589 or 65 per cent
Debbie Wood, a nurse at
ISSUE 9-Chartly bingo: Holzer, visited over the
YE5- 1,381,240 or 64 per weekend with Bob and
cent
NO - 1.193,547 or 46 per Martha Lou Beegle.
cenf
Rev . Ray Beegle of
Wilmington , is 1recovering
having surgery on
Taxable earirlngs after
Friday at the Clinton
Memorial Hospllal.
up to $15,300
Chuck and June Baker and
children,
Cathy and Steve
on social security
spentlheweekendtouringthe
In 1976 the maximum Skyline Drive, visited
amount of earnings that Thomas Jefferson Home at
count for Social SeCurity will Montecello, Hawks Nest,
automatically increase to Guly Brudge and Chlll'lol$15,300, up from this year's tesvUie, Va.
·
maximum of $14,100. The 1976
Valerie Johnson and friend
wage base was announced Bruce Kinlock, Bernard
officially In the Oct. 30, 1975 LaValley Jr., Emma JohnFederal Register. Also In son, Bernard and Bernice
1976, the maximum amount LaValley Sr., attended ,, the
that a beneficiary can earn races at Hidden Hills,
and still get all his Social Gallipolis, On Sunday. The
Security benefits will in· LaValley's son, Steve placed
crease to $2, 7s0 undertr the first of eight in the 250 B.
sall)e automa lie increase Class on his Cam Am Bike.
provisions. The 1975 figure is He also was awarded the
$2,520.
Silver Cup for high points
People who earn above the winner in the 250 B Class for
exempt amount can get a full the year.
benefit Social Security check
Patsy Cornell is making
for any l]lOnth in 1976 in which her home with Bea and Bill
they do not earn more than Cornell while her hwtband,
S230 in wages and do' not Bill Jr., is In Alaska with the
perform substantial services . Anny Air Bourne.
in self-employment, no
Patty Tarr and children,
matter how much they have Shawn and Beth Ann of
earned for the entire year. Cuyahoga Falls visited over
The 1975 figure is $210, For the weekend with her
more information call the grandmother, Vashti Grimm,
Athens Social security office Letart. Max and Sherry
at 592-4440.
Knopp and son Aaron,
Tanners Run Road.
,
. THREE FINED
Freda and Jim CunThree persons were fined in
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman's Court Tuesday
night, They were Buddy
McKi11ney, 58, Middleport,
fined $10 and costa, dlaor·
derly manner; Timothy
Sklorenko, 82, Margot,. Fla.,
'10 and cOB Is, failure to ~ld ,
and Larry J. Heas, 21, New
Haven, '2&amp; and costs,
speeding.

HOSPITAIJ NEWS
Edwards; Shacle Franklin,
Mrs. Rlchard Gilkey· and
daughter, Mrs. Harold
Gilmore and daughter, Sara
Gordin, Mrs. Rlcbard Green
and son, Delcie· Hartsook,
Mrs. Terry Hill and daughter,
Wal~r Howard, Sr., l..arry
Hudson, George Kimbrel,
Beulah Knapp, Gary Owens,
Mrs. Jack Parsons and aon;·
Lola Peck, Lisa Pethtel,
Henry Varney, Weldo!J
Woods.
(Births, Nov. 4)
Mr.
and Mrs. Uoyd D.
. Holzer Medical CeaU!r
Moore, daughter, SyraCU!e;
(Discharges, Nov. 4J
Joseph Adams, Si' ., Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. George ltager,
Herbert Biggs and daugh~r, daugh~r, Middleport; Mr.
Jerry Cunningham, Larry and Mrs. Steve R. Strback,
Davis, Ella Eads, Clenna daugh~r, Gallipolis.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::%::::;,:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::

FESTIVAL SET
LETART FALLS - A
fall festival wlli be held
here Salunlay Nov. 8 at the
&lt;chool. Aturkey dlnller will
IJe served beglnlllng al 5
p.m. There wUI be games,
enterlalnmen~ ~rownlng of

a king and queen, aad. door
prl2es.
=:=:=:=:::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::=:;:::;:::::::;:;:=:=:;:;:&gt;,=:=:&gt;.=:::=:=:;

ningham of· Glenmore spent
the weekend with her mother,
Emma Johnson, sister
Bernice LaValley and family
and brother, Jerry Johnson
and family.
Larry Morarity of Lan·
caster visited his brother,
Marty Morarlty and family
and enjQ)'ed squirrel hunting.
- Char~t!ll and Bonnie Thless,
Chuch and Gene Alkire spent
the weekend in Nashville,
Tennessee.
.Brian and Donna Bradford
and son, Barry, of WoosU!r,
visited over the weekend with
Brian's mother, Lottie
Bradford. Barry, who has
~n quite ill is much improved.
The Quarterly Conference
of the Syracuee Charge of the
Unl~ Methodist Church was
held at the Bethany Church
' on Sunday afternoon. Pastor
Steve Wilaon, and SUperinlendent · ~esley Clarke were
in charge of meeting. Mr.
Clarke spoke at the morning
worship service.
Paul and Joaephlne Smith
vlsi~ Sunday afternoon with
her brother, Ross Hoback,
Gallipolia.
Spendlng two weekB with
Clarence and Hazel Wickline,
. and dalll!hter , Delores, and
Hazel's. mother, Laura Sayre
was Hazel's aunt, Ada Sayre
of Springfield.
Rose Mary and. Clyde
Evans and daughter,
Margaret, Sarah, and Nancy
of Rlo Grande, spent the
weekend with Rose's mother,
Emma Saller.
Visiting with Kenneth and
'Bernice Theiss over the

Evangelist
•

team oommg
The
"Operation
Evangelize" team will be at
the Pomeroy Church or
Christ, 212 W. Main St.,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
with services at 7:30 each
. evening and at 9:30 a.m. on
Sunday.
In January, 1970, the
"Opera lion Evangelize" ·
~am began its travels and
since that lime Dave Lucas, ·
Rick and Steve Ranson,
George Draper, Sam Batten
and Vickie Warren , have
preached and sung the ·
1
' Jesus Story" in many
locations. Ali six members
have attended or are
presently attending Kentucky
Christian College at Grayson,
Ky.
The Pomeroy Church of
Christ extends an Invitation
to the public to atU!nd the
services.
weekend were Kenny and
Debbie Theiss of Lancaster
and Donna and Dan Sayre,
Qllumbwt.
Joy Kay gave a party In
honor of her hwtband, Marly
Morarily's birthday, at their
home following the foot ball
game Saturday n~~.
Carmen arid Sam l'rfce of
Lincoln, Nebraska, have
returned home after a visit
with their parents, Enna
Salser and .Carolyn and
Hubert Price. They both have
their Masters Degree ln
Education, but prefer the
food business. They operate a
"Mr. Steak" Reslaurant In
Uncoln. There are 270 ~~
restaurants in the nation. In
sales they ranked fourth In ·
tbe top thirty. They have :
seventy employees who help .
with the bustneas. The Price'•
also love life In the cOW} try.
They have bought a farm In
Nebraska.

~·

l

W~ther
..

COATS
BRITISH TAN
OLIVE GREEN
BLACK

Reg. 39.95

'

''

FRI. &amp;SAT,
8:30-2:00

,....;ns &amp; Boys Dept:•

First Floor

. The ~IGS ,INN
992-3629

Main Store. Annex1nd W1rlllouse()pen. Thurldly,:30to5p.m.
'

Best In
L.lve Entertainment

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

I

HUNl'INGTON, W. Va. . Herbert L. Eiselslein, a
• native of Pomeroy, assistant
. vice preslden I and research
. and development manager at
Huntington Alloys, Inc., has
• been elected a Fellow of the
· American Society for Metals
(ASM). He is a member of the
" organization's West Virginia
" Chapter.
: Eiselstetn is one of 41 of the
, ASM's 40,000 members who
will be honored al the
. Society's annual meeting and
Materials Science Sym·
posium in Cincinnati, Nov. 11·
13.
The Fellow distinction,
which is the Society's highest
honor,
recognized
Elselsteln 's distinguished
contributions in the fields of
:metals and materials. ·
. Eiselslein has been
assistant vice president and
r~arch and development
.manager at Huntington
,Alloys since 1971. He
previously held the post of
product development
I'Q.I!II!IIIIIr, lp wlll~h he,..wu
· ~ tesponslble for coonliilating
the development or new
products and improving

existing one~ . He Is the
author of numerous technical
papers and holds 25 Uni~
Slates and foreign alloy
patents.
He began his Huntington
Alloys career in 1937 as a
copperative student from the
University of Uncinnati. He
received his bachelor 's
degree
in
chemical
engineering there in 1941, In
1970, he was one of 12
engineering graduates of the
Universlly of Cincinnati
College of Engineering to
receive the Distinguished
Engineering Alumnus
Award.
Mr. and Mrs. Eisclstein,
.the former Maryellen Wise,
live In Huntington. They have·
three children.
The West Virginia Chapter
of The American Society for
Metals has 115 members
representing such Industries
as Huntington Alloy«, Inc.,
Union Carbide, and Kaiser
Aluminum and Chemical Co.
Mr. Eiselstein Is the first
me!llbel&gt; vf lhe-.West Vlfl!ttla-Chapter to receive the Fellow
award.

p~~-'l':W::::;:;&gt;&gt;::::~::~:::::;:::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

.ews. • .in BriefsJ
By Ualted PressiDterutleaal
OOI..UMBUS - TilE STAFF OF OHIO Attorney General
WUJiam J. Brown ls drafting a bill to 111'1 the ground rules for
charitable bingo which was approved by Ohio voters on
Tuesday. Jam~ Gravelle, a spokesman for Brown, said the
attorney general'sstaff would meet With Democratic majority
leaders In the leglalature 11010etime In the next few weekB to
diaclll8 the leglslation.
"We are drafting leglslation which baslt:ally wlll define
who can play and operate a bingo game, under what cir·
cumstances, how the game Is played and how the proceeds can
.be used," Gravelle 1111id. Richard Ffelffer, e1ecuUve aide to
House Speaker Vernal Riffe, O.New Boston, said It would
probably be quite a eomplex matter deciding who can operate
bingo games.
·
"If It Is run by a church 100 per cent for its own operation
we bave no problem," Gravelle said.

· MADRID- · ··sp~::OHKAUSSIMO
Franciaco
Franco's aoctciro ¥umtttell today that they were unable to stem
the lddney fallure, uremic poisoning and blood clots pushing
him ctoser to death. They booked the 82-year-old general to a
lddney machine but his condition remained grave.
· Separate morning and tioonlime · communiques said
Franco spent the night resting but ''the' development of his
poll-operative condition continues as outlined In the last
bulletin.'' The previous bulletin, ill!ued Wednesday night, said
the lddney failure, the blood poisoning and the clots in hla left
thigh bad progresaed further .

With zip-out lining and
water repellent finish.
Sizes 36 to 46 In shorts,
regulars and longs.

GEO. HALL
TUES.· THURS.
8:30-1:00

:. Eiselstein made
_Society Fellow

PASADENA, CALIF. - SCIENTISTS HAVE saved part of
a '1 billion expedition to search for Ule on Mars by sendlng
radio commanda 15.5 million miles Into space to activate a
backup battery charger aboard VIking 2.
• Electricity produced by two nuclear generators flowed
Into the first of four storage batteries aboard the landing
section of the second of two Vlldngs heading toward landings
on the red planet next 911111111er. The successful radio commands were sent from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory Wed·
nesday after engineers here and at the Denver factory where
the spacecraft was buill worked around the clock to correct the
)I"Oblem.

TUESDAY THRU sATURDAY
.

HERBERT EISEI..'!TEIN

this weekend

and Sale!

.Mens All

By CJ.:A Y F. RICHARDS

'

Special Purchase

I..aurel Cliff
By Bertha Parlier
Sabbath school attendance
November 2 at the Free
·Methodist Church' was 110.
Attendance of the worship
aervlce was 58.
The people of thla commwlity was very sorry to ,
hear of the death of Miss '
Margarette Leifheit a life
long resident.
Mr. Edward Dalley,
Wilkavllle, visited recently
With Mr. and Mrs. Harmon
Fox.
:·
Mr. Vern Story, his mother
Mrs.
Mildred
Story,
Colwnbbs spent the weekend
withMP&amp;, Story and son John.

Rocky pulled out
of party·fussing

Vetera111 Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED '- Evelyn
Campbell, Pomeroy; Ollie
Tyree, Middleport; Jessie
Reeves, Albany; Charles
Frazier, Middleport, andy
Richards, Pomeroy ; Golda
Hendren, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Kim·
berly Baley, Lori Engle,
Gary Holler, Donna lm·
boden, Juanita Chapman,
D?n.na Vance, Henry
Mtlliron, Rogin HalL

ELBERFELI)S.. IN POMEROY

PLAYING NmLY

.

EXTENDEDOUTLOOK .
Friday through Sunday, ,
mild, w.lth 11\Ue If any
preelpllaUon, through the
period. Highs !"Ill be In the
60s to the low 71ls Friday
and lows will be In lbe 50s,
cooling to blghs In the
upper 50s to the 80s and
lows In the 40s by Sunday.

• WASHINGTON - AFL-CIO PRESIDENT George Meany
said today a $100 bllllon bill to provide health Insurance for
everyone would cost no more than II being llpelll to buy health
care for only some people. Meany endorsed a national health
lecurlty bW that would provide universal coverage without
acludlng any services or requiring lndlviduala to make ad·
tlllonal paymenll. It would be financed out of payroll \axes
matched by general government revenues.
; The labor leader achknowledged that a $100 billion price
iag on the WI ten til to frighten people. But he said the price tag
''Ia ·both Its biggest drawback and the major source of the
Ji"ogram's strength. "If health security were enacted
~~~morrow, Its COlt would not be $100 billion In addition to the
'100 billion now being spent-aa110111e of Ill opponents would
like you to believe," Meany said. "Its cost would be the same
ttoo billion that l! now being spent.
·
' Meany said, "The difference between all natlondl health
inaurance proposals Ia how the pie is divided up."

Barry Goldwater at the 1964
GOP national convention.
Whe·-. asked what squabbles he was referring to, he
said, "I think they're obvious
to everybpdy." ·
Rockefeller said he rame to
Washington "to serve the
country I love and to help in
solving the problems that we
face: But I didn't come down
to be caught up in party
squabbles that make it more
difficult for the President at a
time when the problems of
the country require" his
closest attention.
Rockefeller said the differences of opinion he had with

WASHlNGT()N (UP!). Vice President Nelson A.
Rockefeller said today he
decided not to be President
Ford's running-mate in 1976
because. he had come to
Washington ")o serve the
country. I love ... I didn't
come down to be caught up in
party squabbles.''
an
Rockefeller,
at
nationally broadcast news
conference three days after
he announced his surprise
decision not to run again,
referred inunediately in an
opening statement to the
conilervatlve-liberal split that
has wracked the party for
more than a decade.
Rockefeller said that "a
Cloudy tonight and Friday,
minority of a minority" of chance of showers. Lows
conservative Republicans op· tonight in mid, 50s, highs
posed his place on a ticket. Friday to the low 70s.
Rockefeller has been a sore Probability of rain 20 per cent
point with the party's right today , 50 per cent tonight and
wing since be opposed Sen. Friday.

Weather

over federal aid to
finaneially strapped New
York City had nothing to do
with his decision. He said
Ford had not written off New
York stale in 1976 by his
refusal to help New York.
But asked whether be
thought Ford's stand would
hurt tile party In the state,
Rockefeller replied, "! do."
Asked what his role wiii be
in the future, Rockefeller
said, "I have no role, I'm not
a candidate. I have said aU
along that the President after
his nomination should select
his running mate. People
didn 'I seem to believe that
but I took care of that by
writing the letter" to . Ford
announcing his decision.
"Because people didn't be·
lieve what I was saying so the
only way I could make them
believe was to write the letter
and take it out of being an
issue," he said.

•

I.

~·ord

•

"

.

. OPEN FOR BUSINESS - The Pomeroy branch of the Quality Print Shop of Middleport
officially opened for business Wednesday. Shown at the new quarters located in the south
side of the former Weed Wholesale Co., W. Second St. and Butternut, are Freddie
Houdashelt, long time employe, and Vernon Weber, owner. Weber said personnel from the
Middleport office will alternate working at the new office in Pomeroy. He said also car tags
are still being sold at the Middleport office. Hours at the Pomeroy office are 10 to 5 except
Thursday and Saturday when they will close at noon. Middleport office hours are 8 to 5,
closed all day on Thursday, and at noon Saturday.

at y

e

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f~
• -

en tine

Devoted To The Interests of Tlie Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXVII

NO. 145

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE 15'

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1975

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

•

October's ·wholesale prices
•ID h~ggest increase of year
WASHINGTON 1UPI J Increases In the costs of steel
and new cars drove up
overall wholesale prise&amp; by .
1.8 p.- celitin Octolier, the
biggest monthly increase in a
year, the Labor Department
said today.
The increase in government 's Wholesale . Price
Index, which transla!es Into a
double-diget annual rate of
21.6 per cent, SQOD wiiJ be fe.lt
by consumers In the retail
prices they pay for goods and
services.
,
For the past three months
combined, priceti have increased at a compounded

annual rate of 13.5 per cent.
The increase last month was
the biggest since October,
1974, when wholesale prices
jumped 2.9 per cent.
The prices of industrial
commodities, which make up
70 per cent of aU the items
measured, were up a substantial1.2 per cent-also the
biggest Increase In a year.
This was caused primarily by
price increases for steel and
other metals, textile goods
and the 1976 model
automobiles.
Although prices paid to
farmers fell in October, tbe
costs of farm products and

Dirty air isn't
being eliminated
By EDWARD K. DeLONG

WASHINGTON (UPI) _
Utile bas been done to rid
America's cities of dangerous
auto pollution and unless
major changes are made, the
problem may never be
brought' under. control, an
Environmental Protection
Agency official said today.
Deputy EPA chief John
Q,~arles noted that 1975 was
the year when, under the
Environmental Protection
· Act of 1970, ": merica was
supposed to have clean air."
But, he said, "the bard
truth is !hat things are not
much better. ... (and) the,air
over our major c. ies is still
not sale to !reathe. Unless
some major changes are
made auto pollution may
neve~ be brought under
control in this country."
In a speech prepared for a
Boston public transportation
conference and released in

foods jumped 1.7 per cent, led
by increases In the prices of
leave tobacco fluid milk live
poultry and ~etahles. tbe
department said.
'
The Wholesale Price Index
stood atl78.9ln October, a 5.1
per cent Increase over last
year. Thjs means the 8811le
commodlties that sold for
$100 in 1967, now sell for
$178.90.
The sharp increase In Octo·
ber indicated that In·
flationary pressures on
consumers may Intensify In
the months ahead. Increases
in wholesale food prk-es are
passed along quickly to the

Arson charge Glenn finds
will he filed deep concem

Charges of arson will be
Washington, Quarles said the filed against Robert L.
nation missed its clean air Ri!Oe, 21, Chesler Road, by
. deadline primarily because Pomeroy• Fire Chief
U.S. dependence on the Charles Legar in conautomobile dld not slacken. necllon with a fire that
His harshest criticism w~s destroyed the one story
reserved. for y .S. circutt frame home of Robert
court rulmgs m San Fran· Young at 11 :0% p.m.
cisco, the Dtstrict of Tuesday.
Qllumbia and Richmond,
Rillle Is the step-son of
Va., that said the EPA lacks Young, I..egar indicated.
authority to make states set The
Pomeroy
fire
up and operate pollution Department was called to
control programs.
the scene but the house had
"Emission controls on ne~ burned to the ground when
automobiles are not enough,
they arrived.
Quarles said. "To achieve the
primary (anti-pollution)
standards, we must cut ba~k
on our use of the automobtle virtual standstill"."
Quarles said that in 1972,
itself."
"We have made some pro- EPA was required by federal
gress, but not a great deal," courts to hurriedly create
he said. "But now, even the mandatory anti-pollution
to
reduce
little progress which has been programs
automobile
use
In
states
made is in jeopardy. A series
which
had
failed
to
develop
of circuit court rulings ...
may Iring these efforts to a their own plans.

Industry needing gas

CHARLESTON, W.VA.
(UPI) - Robert S. Ryan,
director of the Ohio Energy
and Resource Development
Auncy, said today natural
gas curtailment in· Ohio
would severely affect the
ability of industry to continue
to operate In the Buckeye
state.
Ryan made the statement
in remarks prepared for
delivery to a meeting of t~
National Petroleum Society
WASHINGTON - CIA DIRECI'OR WILUAM Colby here.
Ryan said the slate would
(Continued on page 10.)

work to increase the level of
Ohio production by providing
incentives to drill 3,500 new·
wells per year.
"The state agencies have
been working .all summer to
encoiarge manufacturers to
convert their energy sources
from natural gas to oil and
coal,'' said Ryan . •'The use of
Interstate pipelines for intrastate gas remains a very
important part of any
)rogram to use Ohio's . gas
supply.
"Ther.e is a wide variety of

consumer, while industrial
prices are fell much later .
Industrial prices, which
tended to level off earlier this
year, have been increaaing
by steadily bigger per·
centages since last May. This
Is a more ominous sign than
the rise in traditionally
volatile food prices.
The overall 1.8 per cent
lncr~se In wholesale prices
look ·seasmal factors Into
account. On an unadjusted
basis, wholesale prices ~se
0.7 per cent based on mcreases of 0.1 per cent In food
and farm products and O.S per
cent in industrial commodities.

research and development
projects that must be pursued
such as the development of
natural gas from shale, coal
~aslficatlon
and solar
t;nergy," said Ryan .
Federal aid has been'
requested by Gov . James A.
Rhodes, though no action has
been taken.
"We'd love to have
assistance from the federal
level in the form of a national
ener~y policy that would
generate additional energy
supplies," said Ryan .

abOUt economy
WASHINGTON (UP! ) _
Defeat of Gov, James A.
Rhodes' four bond proposals
reflects "deep concern at
every level of the electorate
toward government spending
and ·the economy, America's
leading domestic crisis,"
Sen. John Glenn, Mhio, said
Wednesday.
"The single most important
issue in Ohioans' minds when
they voted was the New York
example," said Glenn.
"Voters simply refused to be
pushed over the !rink into 30
years of mu!Ubllllon-dollar
debt that would haodcuff
future generations.
"Tr1ing to win Ohio appro\1111 of $4.5 billion tn bonds
after the New Yark disaster
was like a travel agent
hawking tickets for the
secOnd voyage of the Titanic.
"They obviously weren \
buying what the 1:.-ochures
said," Glenn stated, "and I
agree with them."

Lawrel)ce, Athens
approve levies
Lawrence and Athens
County voters Tuesday ap·
proved levies for the
operation of the Southeast
Ohio Emergency Medical
Ser.vlce. Levies in Jackson
. and Gallia counties failed .
The Athens County vote of
8,360 and 3,241 against will
allow the emergency medical
service to operate in the
county for the next five years.
Lawrence Countians favored
the ambulance service, 10,245
to 8,261.
According to Interim
project director Rick Abel
levies in Gallia and Jackson
Counties were one of several
Ialternatives available to the
county comm issioners for
continued funding of the
system.
. II will . ultimately be the
responstbthly of the commissioners in Gailia and

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through Monday,
unseasonably warm over the
weekend with a chance of
showers Saturday but fulr
Sanday and Monday. Highs
will be in Ule mid to upper 60s
and lows will be In the 40s to
the lower 50s .

Jackson counties to determine any future fundlng of
their emergency medical .
systems.
The. four counties where
levies were presen~ are
among seven in the national
demonstration emergency
medical services project.
In other area election
results, two of three members backed by the fired
teachers of the South Point
School District were elec~
in a lO-man race .
Bernard Kinder and
Vernon Mills wete elec~ on
a pledge to resolve the firedteacher situation. One of the
holdover board members
opposed the firings .
Don Fitzpatrick, boa rd
president, was the only incumbent returned to office.
Tuesday's election gives the
teachers a 3-2 split board.

350,000 Moroccans on
Spanish Sahara lands
TARFAYA, Morocco IUPI )
- A human tide of 350,000
cheering unarmed civilians
waving patriotic banners and
the Koran flowed across the
border today in to Spanish
Sahara lo claim the territory
for Morocco.
Mor occa n government
official s in Agadir, the
seaside resort city serving as
King Hassan ll's command
post for the march, said the
marchers, ignoring a United
Nations appeal to halt, entered Soanish territory

without resistence.
The government-owned
Moroccan Press Agency said
that on crossing he frontier
the marchers "stopped for a
moment lo pray to the allpowerful for ha ving per·
milled them to touch the soil
or their ancestors after more
than 90 years of separa tion ."
In Agadir, a Moroccan
official told UP! , "The
marchers so far have met
with no resista nce. They are
penetrating further into
Spanish territory."

Haste ma(le waste

McARTHUR, Ohio (UP!)
- The rural Vinton County
couple heard the commotion
at the door, but the elderly
man and wife weren 't about
to open up for a screaming
naked man at 5:30a.m.
In frenzied haste, Larry
Baker hadn 'I bothered to gel
dressed when 'he rushed from
COFCTO MEET
the fire at his home WednesThe Pomeroy Chamber of day. His friend, Rlck Dozer,
Commerce will meet Monday was burning to death.
at noon at the Meigs Inn .
Baker's fran!ic search for

help brought only a complaint
to Sheriff Delno McClure that
a man in the nude was
cr~aling a disturbance and
Dozer, 23, Albany, Ohio, died
in the blaze.
·'Baker apparently had run
from the burning home to get
help," McClure said, "but the
folks were afraid to answer
their door when they saw he
had no clothes on."
McClure said his office
(Continued on page 10)

~

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. 6, 1975

2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 1'hursday, Nov. 8, 1975

Prep ratings champs still in doubt

Miners' hearings set
CHARLESTON , W. Va .
(UPI) - After ·two delays,
the United Mine Workers
union says It's "all systems
go" for specisi hearings nell
week on miners' complaints
about working conditions In
troubled District 17.
Regardless of whether any
Industry officials show, the
UMW said Wednesday It
would conduct the public
hearings.
Labor turmoil led to a
monUi-long strike last August
that eventually idled a
sizeable portion of the
nation's bltumlnOUll miners.
In the latter days of the
wildcat, the Bltumlnow! Coal
Operators Asaoclation and
UMW decided to look into the
Its root causes with a special
joint lndustry-iabor commlssion.
But now, two months later,
the UMW lias acCu.N the
BCOA of dragging Its feet.
Three key miners In
District 17, where the unrest
bl011110med In late Slllllller,
claimed that two planned
meetings by the commilalon
already have been caUed off.
Stanley
Hunter,
representing Local 3t0,
Joseph Tumler of Local 2W
and Herbert Hooever of Local
9619, all members of the
district's own grievance
Investigating committee,
said the comm1811lon would
definitely hold Its ftnt session
next week.
Hearings have been set for
Monday and Tuesday, running from 9 a.m. WlW 5 pm.
at the Charleston Civic
Center.
Representing the UMW wiU
be Its sea-etary-treaaurer,
Harry Patrick, and Iaternal!onal Executive Board
members Gene MltcheU and
Nick DeVInce.
Original plans called for

tne HWA to be represenled
The BCOA also was
by Its president, Joaeph criticized for Insisting that

terrogatlng them to gather
~vidence lor the commission .
Breman, and two of his the news media be barred- a
The BCOA has also obexecutives.
condition the three District 17 jected to the number of obAbout 30 miners are to offidaluald wouldn't be kept servers requested for the
appear as witn_. • the because the hearings ,are to hearings, since miners have
special cmunillllon begins be open to the public.
called for two each from all97
Ustenlng to job complaints.
The three quoted a BCOA locals In the district.
A ilCOA official who representative as saying the
According to the UMW
declined to be Identified operators wanted to keep the spokesmen, individual coal
disputed the clalm of tar- ml!dla out to prevent a cir- companies, some of whifh
diness In getting the com- cua-like atmosphere.
they lauded for cooperating
-mission's work started, . F,;vet since Striking miners In their Investigation, will be
mying the organization had rtturned to their jobs after Invited to send represendone aU It could to cooperate the August strike, district tatives to the hearings. ·
with the union.
officials havP been in-

OOLuMBUS (UP!) - The
PubUc UtUitlea Comrn1811on
of Ohio put into effect today a
)l'ocedure ded(pled to speed
the
emergency relief
]I'Ovlalons II ISI!I forth In Its
Oct. 31 order approving a gu
curtailment
plan
for
Columbia Gas of Ohio. ·
The plan ns npected to
cut red !ape and reduce the
possibilities of Industrial customer llbutdowna In the Co·
lumbta pu service area.
The special emergency
relief procedure 'IIIU be in
effect ilnW Dec. 31.
The PUCO llid II expects
the procedure to reduce tbe
time between llllng far relief
and a declllon from mm
than six weeks to about 48
hOurs.
"To protect the vital
process, feedltoct and pilot
On thll day In hiatory;
Jn 1810, Abraham Uncoln
-elected the leth ]l'elident
ol the UDilld StaiN.
In 111111, Ill the firlt formal

lntereoll4Ciate football game,
Rutgers beat Prlnctton, &amp;-4.

obll&amp;atlon.

"Had they told ua when the
feed WIS reclllled, perhajll
we could have prevented
10111e other farmn from
lllin&amp;ll," he Ald.
1be two worlillra made the
statements
in
aworn
depositions
flied
In
Mlaaauiee Co1111ty Circuli
Court, according to the
Michigan Farm.. , a farm
maaalline owned by Harvell
Publlllrlng &lt;». of aeveland,
&lt;lllo.
Grea Sheffield, spokesman
for Flllin Bureau Servicea,
said the finn had no comment.
Bali aald the Department of
Agriculture bllll "at.alutely
no lnkllns" thai workers In
the feed proceq plafll
may hive been aware rt1. the
feed mllup.
The state learned of widespread problems amons
Uveatoct In the fall« tm but
was not able to establtJh the
source of the difficulty until
May, IV74.

gas needed by industry in
Ohio, the PUC liad ordered
mly a 10 per cent curtailment
of gu supplies used for these
putposes," the commission
~d.
- '"'bla action wiU provide a
mechanism for quick
emergency relief," the
conunlaaloners said. "The
commlaslon will not aUow
lndustrlea to be shut down,
putting Ohioans out of work,
If the llltuatlon can he avoided
In 'BIIy manner."
Industrial customers
facing severe cutbacks in gas
supplies can apply to the
PUOO for emergency relief
under criteria set out in the'
Cmunlallon's Oct. 31 order.
Relief can be granted If the
PUCO finds the applicant
does not have immediate
alternate fuel capabilities;
that alternate fuels are not

available ·in sufficient
quantities; that the applicant
has made an effort to conserve fuels; and , that If relief
Is granted, the effect on other
customers will not be adverse.
The PUCO said that relief
until Dec. 31 will he limited to
up to 90 per cent of anticipated curtailment levels.
Anticipated levels of gas
which customers in the
Category II of the curtailment plan expected to
receive were about 55 per
cent of the base allocations.
PUCO relief may provide up
to 50 per cent of the liase
allocations.
Category II is large industrial and commercial
customers using more than
one million cubic feet of gas
per month, but not industrial
boiler load.

Chessie will buy
bankrupt tracks
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The Ch-ale System has
~greed to purchase large
portlona of bankrupt northeulern raUroads, but at a
price about $8 mllUon !eBB
than dlleu8sed earlier with
the U.S. RaUway Association
and with lubatantlal numbers
of ·locomottvea and rail cars
thrown ln.
The' Oleule offer Wedneadsy, If USRA agrees and
aptclal legislation clears
Congress, aaures removes a
major potentlal stumbling
block to full Implementation
of USRA's Final System Plan
for the Northeast.
That plan calla for most of
the linea of the bankrupts to
be clllsolldated into one raU
iyltem caUed ConRail, but
with Chessle ·purchasing
major portlona in the East in
order to carry out Congress'
order to preeerve competiti111
In the rt~lon.
Oleule, In a letter to
USRA, lk'ove a hard bargain,
but sow-cea close to USRA
aald
the
government
probably would have to accept lt..
,.,
In previous discussions,
Olesale hllll agreed to purell- major portions of the
banllrupl Reading; the Erie
Lackawanna and one Penn

Central line into Charleston,
W. Va., for $82.5 million f22.J million in cash and the
remainder in Baltimore &amp;
Ohio bonds. B&amp;O is a Olessie
System railroad.
However, Chessie vice
presldent~aw OWen Clarke
!fald in 11\e letter to USRA that
after a more detailed study of
the condition of the rail lines
and pro!ections of traffic,
Chessle would pay $54.5
mUllan In cash.
In addition, Olessie said
USRA must designate to
Olessle 52 addltlonallocomolives and 1,786 freight cars as
part of the bargain.
Chessle also would be
allowed to withhold $11
million of th~ purchase price
to pay for employe vacations
earned before ihe transfer to
Olessle hut taken afterward.
The bankrupt estates also
would be responsible for all
pension obligations.
Various other conditions
were Imposed including
Olessle access to certain
switching yards and areas.
Legislation will be required
to aUow USRA to accept the
Olessleplan, but sources said
talks already had been progresstng with congressipnal
staff aides to expedite the
necessary leglslatlor .

DR. LAMB
I

Who's on first for nutrition?
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
interested In getting enough
fiber In my diet, but I am
most confused. I find It difficult to reconcile calories to
nutrition to fats to proteins to
carbohydrates to amino acids
to enzymes, etc. In other
words, who's on first? It was
complicated enough before,
now along comes this
nutrition thing, and I don't
know how to relate It to all
the other stuff.
I Wlderstand that candy,
sweets, alcohol are "empty"
calories tho t provide no
nutrition, but then I bog
down. Must one be sure he
eats .nutritious calories?
DEAR READER - It II
confusing. There has been a
lot of loose appllcatlm of the
word nutrition . Nutrition
means simply the entire
process of taking In and
ullllzlng food, to "nourlah"
yourself. Calories ~ part of
nulri U111 and there Ia no such
thl,ng as a non-nutritious
calorie. That II Uke havtng
non-fat Ia!.
(

v

..
"
"

AM

PUCO plan ordered

to continue since 1973
LANSING, Mich. (UPI) State Agriculture Director B.
Dale Ball says Michigan
Farm Bureau Services Inc.
had a ''moral obllgat1111" to
disclose a feed mixup that
has so fa~ forced the
destruction or 1.5 mUllon
chickens and 36,000 ~ttle.
swine and sheep.
Fann Bureau Servl*, a
subsidiary of the Michigan
fann Bureau, should have
Informed state authorities
that the toxic £Ire retardanl
polybromlnated biphenyl
(PBB) was accidentally
mixed In with feed when It
was first dlacovered, BaH
said Wedneeday.
Ball's remarks were made
In response to tlllcloaures
that two workers Ill the Farm
Bureau Services Battle Q-eek
feed processing plant were
aware of the feed llilxup in
1973, but were told by
supel'iors to keep quiet.
''They had no legal
obligation to tell ua befnre,"
Ball said. "They had a moral

,,

"

Feed inixup pernrltted
By WILLIAM J. HOLBI'EIN

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sporta Wrker
COLUMBUS (UPI) -With
only one week remaining In
the United Press Jnlernstional Ohio High School
Board of COaches football
ratings, the .No. I spots In aU
three cla88lflcatlons are stiU
very much In doubt.
Akron_St. Vincent-St. Mary
has regained the top ·spot In
Class AA thla week .after a
couple week's absence, while
the other two leaders Lakewood St. Edward In
and ·
Canal Winchester In A
managed to hold on.
'
But, with only one week
remaining In the. voting, only
seven teams appear to be In

Try to think of nutrition not

as who Lion flnt but whit you
need for the whole process.

Yow- body Is like an engine,
and ' the combustlon stage
requires both ' gu in the
engine and spark ]iJugs. So
you need calories, the.f\lel or
enei'IIY, and the means to.
process It, the vitamlna.
Firat, you need enough
calories hut not too many, for
growth, proper body weight
and dally energy.
Second, you need all the
right vitamins and minerals
to process the fOCid to rellue
the calories and to pro¥ida
parts tw the body eucl\ as
calcium fer bol1es and Iron
for blood.
Tblrd, you need protelll,
because It contains amino
acids that are used to build
body ·structures, such a•
muscles, and even to build
enaymea, llormonea and·
other vital bGdy lllbltanca.
What proleln you don •t 1111
for hulldlng or replacement
building can be Uied u !lei
or calories to provide energy
or 81111'e eJII!l'IY 1111 fat. 11 can

aiao be wied to form carbohydrate fuel for the S;Bme
purpose, EJ:cess protein is
not helpful in any way except
to provide fuel.
Fourth, think of how all
theae
calories
(carbo!aydralea, fat, proteil) and
even alcohol) are packaged.
They are dUuted, if you will,
With water and 11tdlgestible
material or bulk and fiber.
. Your calories need to be
diluted with enough of these
to give you diet satisfacUon
lr~ bulk amount without
getting too many. calories.
And the bulk provides enough
volume for normal intestinal
actions. You c~ get your
bulk lrom any whole cereals,
particularly wheat and oats.
You can use any of the
shredded wheat products,
bran produclJI (AU Bran, tO
per eent Bran Flakes, GrapeNul Flakes), cooked oat meal
bill )'OU WOII 'I get much fiber
lrom rice.
Sweets, candy, white or
refined flour provides
caltriei or fuel and that is
pari rt1. nutrition, but they

...

II

Players have new
lease on careers

r

the Rio Grande campus in celebration of the school's 100th •'

'
RIO C-C DESIGNATED BICENTENNIAL INSTITUTION - Rio Grande College-Rio Grande CommWiity College has been officially designated a bicentennial institution by the U.S. Bicentennial Commission.
State Representative Ron James, right, ·recently
presented the American Revolution Bicentenntal Flag to
Dr. Paul D. Hines, left, President of Rio Grande commemorating the event. Rio Grande College will celebrate
its centennial year the same lime the nation celebra)es its
bicentennial. Special events will be conducted all year on

Rio grad

will offer
workshop
RIO GRANDE - Dr. Carl
Benner, a Rio Grande College
graduate who Is chairman of
Ihe Mathematics Department
at Wright State University in
Dayton, will present a
workshop ali the Rio Grande
campus Saturday, November
8.

The one-day workshop,
designed for Rio Grande
alumni who have entered
leaching, will be on
"Cuisenaire Rods and the
Metric System."
The day wiil begin at 9 a.m.
and' continue through 3:30
p.m. with a break from II : 30
a.m. to I p.m. for IWich. Due
to space limitations the
workshop has been restricted
ro alumni from Mason, Pike,
Ross, Jackson, Gallia, Meigs,
Vinton, Lawrence, and Scioto
counties.
A native of Lucasville, Dr.
Benner received )lis M.A.
Degree in Mathematics from
the University of Northern
Iowa, his M.S. Degree in
Ma thematics at Purdue
Universi!y, his Ed. S. from
Bowling
Green
State
University, and his Ph. D. in
Mathematics Education from
!he Ohio Slate Unlveflllty.
He is a member of Phi
Delta Kappa, the National
Council of Teachers of
Mathematics', the
Mathematical Association ol
America, and the Association
for
Supervision
and
Curriculum Development. He
has been listed in "Men of
Achievement," a British
publication distributed
throughout the world, and in
the Dictionary of International . Biography
Leaders in Education. Dr.
Benner and his family live In
Xenia.

may lack vitamins, minerals
and certainly cer~al fiber SINGER GIVES BIRnl
unless artificially added. So,
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
use whole wheat products Singer Diana Ross and her
·such as whole wheat bread new daughter were reported
and avoid sweets unless you doing well today at Cedars of
need to increase your fuel Lebanon Hospllal.
(calotj~) in(4ke.
•.
For the latest summary of
the needed amounts of
calories, protein, viljlmins
DE voTE o TO THE
INTERESTOF
and mIneraIS send 50 cents
MI!.IGS·MASON AREA
for The Health Letter number CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
~. Balanced diet, Re~orn- · ROBE~;."~'cf:hlcH
mended Dally Dietarl
P~blls~~~ E:~l1~ except
Allowances (RDA). Ad~ss - Salurday by Tho Ohio Volley
'
·-..
f PubtiShl"g company, 111
your reques t Io me 1n care o ~ Court st ., Pomeroy, Oh io
this newspaper ' Radio City "-1169. Busineu Otflct Phone
.
N ' y k NY t92.2156. Editorial Phone 992S181100,
ew or ,
2157.
.
10019 Be sure to enclose a
Second class postage pold
·
•• Pomeroy, Ohio.
long,
stamped, ..selfNational advertising
••
represen!allve
Ward ·
ddr
I
a esse d enve ope for Griffith company , Inc ..
mailing
'
BOitlnelll &amp; Gallagher OIV ..
'
1S1 Third Ave., New York,
Beyond these aspects of a N .v. IOOW
.t
ddth
Subs~-rlpllon
roles:
balancedd 1e
you can a
e Delivered bY carrier where
measures of limiting fat and available. 15 conts por week.
aaturaledfatto preventfatty- ~trrf:~lor s:r0v"r~'• wh~~1
cholesterol deposits and available,
By mall In one
Ohiomont~,.
end w .13.25.
Yo ..
sweeta plus fats to limit
ne Yur, 122.00 ; Six
onlhs, S11.50 ; Three
I or any modlfl catIons
caIores
on!hs. 57.00. E!atiNhore
!hat may be required to
?6.00 year ; Slxhmonlhs
•
13.50; threo mo"l s. 11.50.
1
medtca reasons.
ubscrlptron price inclUdes
~!!_day Timcs _s_
en_ti_n. ~
•'~·--,!

J,

anniverssry. The theme for Rio Grande College's centennial promotion is "Hand in Hand with America ... A
Proud Heritage." This theme was chosen to associate the
college's centennial celebration with the nation's
bicentennial celebration. Dr. Hines expressed his appreciation to Rep. James for his efforts in securing the ,
Bicentennial Flag for the college. He said it is through "
cooperation like this that the college's centennial and the
nation's bicentennial celebration will be a huge success.

.Deer blamed
Meigs
Property in collision

Zo class off
for Nags Head
RIO GRANDE -Members

ot the Rio Grande College-Rio

Transfers

..
"

"

LETART,W. Va.- Adeaf,.
tha 1 darted across Rl. 33 i~ .
Letart caused two vehicles lit;
collide Tuesday at 7:30a.m.,
according to Deputy N. E..,
Benson of the Mason County,
Sheriff's Department.
,;
Dr1 vers of the vehicle~,
were Robert R. Rollins, 23la,
Monroe Aye., Point Pleasant.,
and Drewy M. Gore ot;
Rutland, Ohio.
The deer ran in front of the
Rollins vehicle, then in to"
Gore's causing both to..
sideswipe each other and ..
death to the deer.
,,
Repairs to Gore's vehicle,
was estimated to cost $525, to
Rollins', $95. ,

Grande Community College
Invertebrate Zoology clasS
will leave Thursday, Nov. 6
Robert E. Sanders, Nina J .
on a four-day field trip to Sanders to Gary L. Whited,
Nags Head, N.C. to study Teri L. Whited, 10 A., Olive .
marine organisms.
James F. Arnold, Ruth B.
The 12 students will he Arnold to Bernard V. Fultz,
accompanied by Tom Parcels, Pomeroy.
Osborne, Assistant Professor
John R. Sellers to Willlam
of Biology; Bob Humphreys, E. Sellers, Parcels, Lebanon.
Instructor of Biology, and Dr.
Helen L. Ebersbach, Helen
Uoyd G. Carr, Professor of L. Hintoo, formerly, Frank
Biology. The group will study Ebersbach to Roger A. Eblin,
Entomology, Invertebrate
Judith L. Eblin, 3 A.,
Zoology, and · Vertebrate Rutland.
Zoology aspects of marine
James R. Thomas to
life at the Sea Shore National Patricia A. Thomas, 15.16 A.,
Park near Nags Head.
Chester.
This · is the first science
Estella Riley, Edna Mae
field trip of the class but Riley, Mary Mayes, Undsey
plans are to make II a yearly Mayes to Richard . L.
-~
event. Each year, however, Haggerty, Lo!, Middleport.
!he class will visit a different
Earl P. Cross, Geraldine
coastal region. The RGC- Cross to Gary Paul Norris,
CC Class primarily inDonna Marie Norris, 1.09 A., • RIO GRANDE - Carl R.
volved wllh the trip is Biology Sutton.
Salmons of Huntington, W'.u
235, Invertebrate Zoology.
Leroy J. Kennedy to Leroy Va., instructor of art courses~
J. Kennedy, VIvian K. in basic water color at Rlq~
Grande College-Rio Grande ·
McMAHON FLEES FIRE Kennedy, Parcels, Olive.
John T. WoHe, Joan Wolfe Community College this"
LOS ANGELES (UP!) . ''
As Ed McMahon, Johnny to Ronald E. Grate, Regina quarter, has a new exlnbltlon
in HWitlngton ..
Caraon's televlalon sidekick, Grate, .18 A., Rutland.
From
no)V
through
was taking a shower in his
November 30, Salmons has
Marina del Rey OOndomlnlum CARDINAL S rRICKEN
Wednesday, the unit below
LONDON (UP!) - Car- assemblages, graphics, and
caught fire and the flames dinal John Heenan, 70, ceramics on exhibit at the
spread to his apartment.
Roman Catholic Archbillhop Huntington Galleries .
McMahon escaped, but the of Westminster, was ad- Salmons received both his
fil-e heavily damaged his mitted to Westminster B.A. Degree and M.A. Degree'·
~rtment, destroying trea- hospital Wednesday after In Art from Marshall:
Sured antiques and boota, an suffering a mUd heart attack, University. For ·the past twO..
NBC spokesman s8id. No one a church spokesman aald.
years he has been a graudate;
. was Injured but the fire did
assistant
in the DeparlmenJ,
The Archbishop, leader of
$115,000 damage to the Britain's Roman Catholics, · of Art at Marshall, and Is '
building, the fire department was in a hospital early last currently on the staff at the
said.
year for treatment of asthma. HWitmgton Art Galleries. .:.

Instructor has

·new exhibition:

..

...

Six die in murder spree
FARMINGTON, N.M. about $-f() times per year,
( UPI) - Barbara Shern and not always the same one, but
her three children were
malting plana for picnics and
Bible reading, A mile away,
her ex-husband calmly
lettled his bUB!neu affairseven remembering to cancel
a newspaper subecrlptlon and wrote three notes
deacrlbing the angulSles of
clvorce.
Then Roger Shern, a
churcJ;gotng man so qui~t
that his neighbors did not
knowhlaname,beganaspree
of murder.
He slashed and bludgeooed
hl8 girl friend and tliree
chU!hn to death, lhot and
kiUed his wife and then
comrilllted suicide Tueadsy
night.
Allt!Jorltlea said to~ay
Shern, :10, cal(nly canceled a
neWI]llper .Ublcrlptton and

an ldvertilement

ror· 'bla

chU~en, apparently with bta'.'

ex-wife's permission, &amp;hortly
usually It's a Christian before the slaylngs, police.
deoomlnation,:• Shern said. said.
,..
"I was true to my wife
" The ~eatha (of the~
before marriage and In children) were short, Instant marriage ... "
and by Sll'pl'lse," Shem said•.;
. Shern'sbodyandthatofhls In one of the notes foWid n~
former wife, Barbara, 28, the scene. "I'm sorry It "
were foWid in the home they couldn't end some other way .. ~
111ce shared, both dead from hut Barb would never let me
wounda inflicted by Shern's see the ltlds."
·.uo bolt-acUon sho\gWI.
Authorities aald a note wu' '
At the hOIIle of'Shern 's girl found on the kitchen
In
· friend, school teacher"Ml!rle , Mrs. Sbem's home 8181gnlng
Sonnier, officers round four the children to their turns to.':
bodies. Miss . Sonnier lead the. famUy prayers-~ ;
Shern's three children, "stay up late with Mama."·'
Michelle, 7, Sheryl, 5, and
The note, apparently·:
Dooald Arvle, 4.. They had posted by Mrs. Shern, allo'~
been bludgeoned with a said "Monday: famHy home- ,
crowbar and the throats of evening. Once a month go, out' ~
Ms. Sonnier and one of the to dinner. Once a week go 111; ~
chll~en were cut with a a picnic. Everyday rel(!l Ia ; ;
butcher knife.
the children. Everyday read • •
Shern had picked up the the Bible."
' ~

w

u

home maintenance ' and
window cleaning bualneu
Tueadsy and left the notes
deacrlblng hii8JIIUilh over a
week.oJd clvorce settlement
~mder which he aald he could
~~~- 'l'illt hla dllllten aaatn.
One of the mtee wu a
letter the Fll'll1inllcln O.Uy
Tlmee received Wednuday.
"I am Roaer Shern, aae :10.
I have never lllld .. alcobollc
beverage or drug In my llfe.l
don't smoke. I don't 1181! foul
language. I attend church

11

C'li.i

f~~

,,j
lh .,

The .Martin ReStaurant
21 Shrimp in a Basket
21 Strip Clams in a Basket
French Fri~s - Salad -

Hot· Rolls
'

.
~,,.

IRI. &amp; SAT. MfNU

t275 .'
"

MUSIC ' '

ARMOND AT TH! ORGAN
HOURS 9 TIL 2
I

J

the running for the three
mythical championships, St.
Edward and Moeller in ClaSB
AAA, St. Vincent, Cleveland
Holy Name and Wyoming In
AA and Canal Winchester and
Newark Catholic In Class A.
St. Vincent, taking advantage of a 26-14 victory
over Barberton Friday night,
overhauled Wyoming in Class
AA .
The Irish collected only one
first place vote but amassed
165 points, four more than
runnerup Holy Name and
eight more than Wyoming's
157 as the Cowboys feU all the
way to third.
The AAA race between St.
Edward and Moeller Is even

'·

By JOHN KNUDSEN
ST. PAUL. Minn. (UPI) Players from the now defunct
World Football League have
won a new lease on their
careers.
.
U.S. District Court Judge
Edward J. Devitt laaued a
preliminary Injunction
Wednesday · allowing all
former WFL players who are
not Wider contract to sign
with National Football
League,
Devitt said his ruling would
stand until a hearing "on
merits" of the lnjWictlon
~der Is held Nov. 26.
The NFL gave Its teams
only a couple of days to sign
players after the WFL folded
last month before Com·
missioner Pete Rozelle halted
the practice. He ruled NFL
teams could not sign any
WFL players the rest of the
season. ·
•Devitt called that "a
concerted boycott against
former WFL players and a
deprivation of the plaintiffs'
rights of freedom to sign
contracts."
"He aald WFL players would
"suffer Irreparable harm"
and "the court's capacity to
do justice would be hindered"
If they were not allowed extra
tqne to negotiate and sign
cantracts with NFL teams.
.The judge expanded a
previous order to a class
aetion for all former WFL
players not under contractual
of!ligationa. He had Issued a
t.qnporary restraining order
~ Friday which applied

..

only to nine former menbers
of the Hawaiians who had
flied a complaint.
Rozelle testified Wednesday that hl8 ruling last
month ·was "reasonable"
because It was comparable to
trade deadlines In other
sports.
"The league doesn 'I want
major changes late in the
,sea8011so one team could buy
a championship," Rozelle
said. "It could affect a
championship !'liCe which had
orlglnaUy been eatabUshed
within the lea'gue rules."
Edward Glennon, an attorney for the nine original
plaintiffs, ar1ued, "NFL
teams can aequlre players on
waivers up to the Ia!! week of
the season ... AU we want Ls
the right for our players to
negotiate with NFL teams."

Grid s~tistics • • •

'·

TEAM

~~'l:'t~tls
ttonton

Jackson

L011an
t,\Oigs
Waverly
Wellston

TEAM
Athens
Gallipolis
Ironton
Jackson
L011an
Meigs
Waverly
O,Vellston

TEAM STATISTICS (6 GAMES)
FIRST DOWNS PASS SCR. PLAYS
- T Ave. OP. A~g . ·Cm.p-AII I T OP.
70 11.7 57 9.5 22-66 s :no 30;
80 13.3 57
9:5 34-11~ I 323 308
59 9.3 58 9.7 t7 ·31 0 276 279
9A 15.7 17 t2.8 32·58 2 3~ 320
79 13.2 68 11.3 32-60 9 339 340
so 8.3 78 13.0 19·72 5 290 329
43 7.2 79 13.2 2~-91 5 290 287
71 11.8 62 10.3 13·38 6 291 29'1
l. ~USH T. PASS NET OFF. NETDEF.
Yda. Avg. Yell. Avg. Ydt. Ayt. Ydt. Avg.
1061 176.8 423 70.5 1&lt;484 207.3 106~ 177.3
938 156.3 ~74 79.0 W2 235.3 1296 216.0
898 149.7 319 53.2 1211 m .8 9&gt;16 167.7
1283 213.8 466 71.7 17~9 291.5 1511 251 .8
• 1166 19~.3 407 67.8 t573 262.2 1316 219.3
575 95.8 304 50.7 719 1~4.5 1513 252.2
379 63.2 315 52.2 694 115.7 1633 272.2
1210 201.7 2« 40.7 1~4 242.3 1082 180.3

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Rushing
Yds. Cor. Avg.
Davis, J
719 147 4.9
Peppers, L
629 91 6.4
I WeII
Pe opes,
57t 85 6.7
Pennell, A
475 95 5.0
·~~~~~r tiii'P:Arl5
Johnson, G 34·64 8 474 7
Conroy, J
32·58 2 466 4
Smtih, L
30-54 8 373 2
Thompson, Wav.
24·90 4 325 I
Cnonko, A 22-66 5 423 --~
- PunllntJ ·
(llormorel
Yd. · 'No· Avn · .•
..,
·
l&lt;rl e&amp;ef,'
756 21 36.0
M. Dalley, W,a 762 24 31.8
Patton, We
757 24 31 .6
Greer, A
572 20 28.6
(only ones)
jtectiYIIlf
No. Yds. TD
~bbard,JL
22 Jll 2
..,.borne,
16 323 t
Wilson, G
t6 ~tO 5
S. Thomas, Wa
15 t69 1
Saunden, G
14 188 2
KO Returns
Yds. No. TO
Davis J
293 8 2
peoples wet
263 14 o
PepperS L '
217 10 0
' M
l9&amp; 9 O
Ma gno tta,
Mlrik, G
ISCI • ,a 0
P!Jnl Rtlurns
Yds. No. TD
i\fagnotta, M
148 12 0
Wilson G
70 7 1
u1.bba;d L
60 10 o
""
'
43 8 0
S. Thomas, 1
C!ockrell, I
3'1 2 0
ttitr.
No. Yds. TD
Cl'awtord, J
5 12 0
Y.lltson, G
~ 66
0
o.venport, M
2, 39 ~
Ctockrall I
2 23 0
"-ppers L
2 18 0
r•
•
RIIPert,We!.
2 ~ 0
Sfi'wart, M
'2 2 0

tyfs. f6

-r
Nlmt, T
•

The releaae of this
week's Oblo High School
Athletic Anociallon's
Computerized Football
Rating&amp; Is being delayed
because of programlag
problema arlslag with the
firm which prepares the .
ratings. They are expeeted
to be ready sometime
Thunday. The final week' a
rating•, which will decide
the 12 semlflnaU.II for this
year's football playoffs,
will be relealed Moaday
m?ming, Nov. 10.

.
OVERALL SCORING

OJviS. J,
~

TO Pat Pis Avg
20 10 130 14.4

Gliders, Alex 12 19 100 11.1
Sullivan, N.y 12 4 76 9.5
Preston , KC 13 0 78 8.7
7 31 76 8.4
lucos, KC
Peoples. well 10 13 73 8.1
Dorsey , Mill 12 o 72 a.o
EchS!~nkomperlOTr~ 69 7.7
Peppers. L
11 o 66 7.3
Logon . NG
9 4 sa 6.4
Name!~OALloc~::~?s Avg.
Davis, J
13 8 86 10
Peppers, L
7 o 42 1.0
wilson, G
6 4 40 6.7
PeQt&gt;l 0s, Well 5 6 l6 6.0
Pennoii,A
S 0 lO 5.0
Grey, Woll
s 0 30 5.0
Conroy J
4 • 28 4.7
Chonko A
4 o 24 4.0
Kriebel: 1
• o 24 4.0
Howard, !
4 0 24 4 0
Morrow, J
3 6 24 4.0
SVAC SCORING tFinoll
Name, T TD Pat Pts Awg.
r~~~t~nK~c . I~ 2~
1!:~
Eichinger, Eo &amp;I 4 8 35 . 5.8
aoso. So"th .
5 4 34 5.7
Lew is. sw
5 4 34 5.7
sm llh, KC
5 o 30 5.0
Logon . NG
5 o 30 5.0
McClure, Easl. 4 2 26 4.3
Spe~cer , NG
3 6 24 4.0
Kuhn, Eosl.
3 6 24 4.0
Thel,., NG
3 6 24 4.0
THIS WEEK 'S
SCHI OUL E
FRIDAY
SEDAL
Athens at Waverly
Wellston at Gallipolis
Logan at Ironton
Meigs at Jackson
TVC
N els on v II 1e . y or k
o1
Alexander
Belpre el Warren Local
Others
Federal Hocking II Trimble
Falrlond at VInton County
Soulhern ol Coldwell
Hannan. w. va . ar Symmes
valley

:t

Miller at Pelnt Valley
WlhllmiJ II Sistersville

S" TUR DAY

Enlern al Fronller

t

hOtter with only two pomts
separating the two unbeaten
teams, 33e-336. Findlay and
Newark, also both·!,1-0, are a
distant third and fourth with
274 and 256 points.
Canal Winchester, which
has been the Class A leader
for five weeks, holds a 187-178
margin
over · Newark
Catholic, the runnerup every
week of the ratings so far.
Last week the Indians led by
10 points.
Canton McKiilley, which
dropped Its first game of the
season to Youngstown
Cardinal Mooney but has
since won eight In a row,
made the biggest jump In
AAA foliowing Its 12-7 win
over Warren Harding, going
from lith to fifth.
East Liverpool, which
dropped Its first game of the
season Friday night, fell to
slsth, and was followed by
Zanesville, a loser to Newark,
Colerain, and newcomers
Kettering Alter and North
Canton Hoover.
New Lexington remairied
fourth In Class AA, but the
rest of the top underwent a

shakeup.
London jumped a notch to
fifth, ex.changing places with
Ironton, Wheelersburg
moved up to seventh, Bellaire
went up to eighth, Uma
Catholic took ninth and
Circleville fell three places to
tenth.
Loudonville, ~. held tllird
In Class A, followed by
Arlington, Burton Berkshire,
Ridgemont and Middletown
Fenwick In a lie for sixth,
Carey eighth, Bluffton ninth
and Rockford Park, which
suffered Its first loss, in tenth.
This weekend's schedule ts
highlighted by the annual
Canton McKinley-Massillon
struggle.
Games Involving the top
teamS find Moeller and Elder
meeting at Riverfront
Stadium, St. Edward hosting
Youngstown Ursuline, St.
VIncent meeting Akron
Hoban, Wyoming going
against Sycamore, Newark
Catholic playing Heath and
Canal Winchester closing out
against Uberty Union. Holy
Name completed Its season
with an ~ mart.

COLUMBU S (UPIJ - The

(15 1 (9 -0J

By United Preas · ID·
teruational
A National Basketball Assoclatlon record crowd of
28,511. filed into the New
Orleans Superdome Wed'
nesday night to see the
league's most surprising
team- the New Orleans
Jazz- take on the Los

•

338

2. Cinc ln . Moellerl11 ) (9
01
336
3. Flndley{5J (9 -01
274
4. Newark (31 (9 OJ
256
S. Canton McKinley (21 (8 .

I) '
6. East Liverpool {8 1J
1 Zannvllle (7 . 1 1)

138
120
C12

8 Coleroln til (9.01

88

9. KelferlngAit er 180 1J
67
10 . N . Canton Hoover ( 1J {9 ·

4 N e w L e:&lt; in g ton 19-0 )

11 6

5 London ( 1I 19-0l
6 IronTon ( I} (8 11
7 Wheeler sburg ( 9 Ol

109
87
54

8 B c l la Jr e &lt;l l (8 -11

Lima

9

49

Cat h l1 c ( 7 1 l)

47

10 C ir c le \lllte \8 -1)

43

Seconq l en : 11. M ade1ra 19 .
12 R idge wo od Il l 27 ; 13 (!t el
Swanton ( 1) an d De lla (1), 23
each , 15 Pola n d 22 ; 16

Ob erl in

ft i eJ

and Genoa , 20
ec~~ c h .
18
Clev el a n d
Bened ic t in e 17 . 19. Cadi z 15 ,
20 St. Marys Me mor 1al 12
Oth er s with ten o r more
points . Sunbury Big Wa lnut 1
and St Par 1s Grah am
(1 )

Class A
Team
Points
1 Canal Winche st er ( 11) (9

181
59 01
2. Newark Catholi c ( I J (9
11e
01 .
3. Loudonv ille {21 19·01
I ~~
4. A rlln gton (1 ) (8 0 1)

01

Second ten : 1L Princeton
46 ; 12 . (ti e l Gahanna Lin coln
and W11rr~n Harding , 27
each ;
14 .
(tiel
Upper
Arl ington and Ketter i ng
FIJ irmont West ( 11 26 ea ch ;
16 Lakewood 20 ; 17 Fremonr
Ross 15 ; 18 . Greensburg
Green.... 14 , 19 Middlet own 13 ;
20 Ole) Center'v' ll le and
Co l umbus North l and , 12
each
~
Others with ten or mor e
points : Massillon and Niles
M c Kinley
Class AA
Team
Paints
1. Akron St Vincent (1 l 18

1)
2 Cl eve Holy Name (7)
0I
3. Wyoming !7 1 19.0 1

Jazz stop Kareem,
'
Pro Baakett.U Roundup 1

Sport Parade

UPI grid ratings
w e ekly Unit e d Pre~ s In
ternat iona l Ohio H igh School
Boar d of Coaches football
rat~ngs (with first place votes
and won lost r e cords in
paren rneses)
Clau AAA
Team
Poults
1 Lakewood St . Edward

(8

165
161
151

5 Burton Berk sh ir e ( 2) (9

01

~~

8Carey !1II B1 1

69

1)

63

6. (tiel Ridgemon t (7 o 1)
6 (ti e l M iddl et own
F enWICk {3 ) ( 6 .J)

71

9 Bl uff ton { 1) (8 . 1 )
68
10 . Ro c kfo r d Parkway f 7· 1·

Second ten 11 Tu sc arawas
CathOli C {1 I 60 . 12 Le i psic
51 . 13 . A lbany Alex and er 4 1;
1.4 Sali neville Sou thern 32 .
IS . L ISbon Anderson (1} 19,
16 . Ottawa H1 II S ( 1) 18 , 17.
Williamsburg 15 , 18 ( tie )
Buckeye
Central ,
Monroe'v'ille and Pla 1n City
Jonathan Al der , 11 each

win 113-110

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - There are signs relations between the
Cuba and the United Slates may be resumed, perhaps Inside
the next year or six months. When and if they are , baseball
probably will be the vehicle to bring the two COWitries back
together in much the same way ping-pong was the instrument
lor improving relations between the U.S and the People's
Republic of China .
Aplan has been in the works lor some time now calling for a
group of major leaguers to visit Havana next spring and play a
Cohan team, with,the contest to be carried on television in the
U.S. t .1d Cuba . One of the forerunners of the plan was the
permission granted by the Cuban government for Luis Tiant's
paren!B to leave Cuba so they could visit him m Boston this
past swruner.
·
Since all details haven'\ :been worked out yet and are supposed to be so hush-llush because you never can tell when
Cast~o may change his mind and call the whole thing off,
BoWie Kuhn refuses to talk about the trip. But Henry Kissinger
has talked about it with Castro already.
Fidel Castro used to be a pretty fair pitcher with the
University of Havana. He enjoys basebaU and followed the
recent World Series between those Yankee dogs, the Cincinnati
Reds and Boston Red Sox, demonstrating the normal
nationalistic pride when Louis Tiant won two games for the
Red Sox and Tony Perez, another Cuban, hit those home runs
for the Reds.
Castro likes ballplayers and has always enjoyed being
aroWid them.
Harry Simmons, another Bowie Kuhn aide who was
associated with the International League 25 years, remembers
Castro attending the 1959 JWiior World Series between
Minneapolis and Havana. Gene Mauch was managing Minneapolis and Preston Gomez Havana, and after each club won ·
one game In Minneapolis, the weather grew so cold there, it
was decided to play the remaining contests In Havana.
~. "Before the first game we played there, a service gate in the
lett field•fence opened and Fidel came In surrounded by a
"'oup of men wearing long hair and carrying machine guns,"
Simmons recalls. "There were twenty seven, twenty eight
thousand people in the stands and they all got up, waved
handkerchiefs and began screaming, 'Fidel, Fidel, Fidel! •
"He walked across the diamond, stopped at the pitcher's
mound and warmed up with one of his henchmen, a fellow by
the name of Fernandez, who used to be a catcher In the Pacific
Coast League."
Later, Castro sat in the stands behind home plate and
Havana won that game . He did the same thing the following
night, and the Sugar Kings won again. For the fifth game,
Castro sat In the bleachers and they lost.
"The next night he decided to sit In the Sugar Kings'
dugout," says Simmons. "One umpire said to the other one, 'he
can't sit there, get him out.' The second umpire said 'you get
him out yourself."'
'
Castro sal in the dugout the whole game and the Sugar Kings
lost, but they won the seventh game to take the Series. Castro
then went to both clubhouses to shake hands with the players.

Angeles Lskers, a team that the NBA Central Division trouble and sat out much of.
the second period. Moore.
thinks It's good enough to win with a 8-1 mark.
the championship.
"I don't do any extra wound up with 16 points in1
The fans weren't disap- jumping up or down or get help!ng to neutralize Abdulpointed.
excited," said Moore . "I Jabber.
"Pistol" Pete Maravlch,
The Jazz, with the suddenly remember one year In
rejuvenated Otto Moore Detroit we started outlil-1. In who had to he escorted by
balding hts own against the a few weeks, we were 13-10." pollee from suburban
more celebrated Kareem
The Lakers, 4-4, jumped to Metairie, La ., to the
Abdul-Jabbar, stopped the an early 13-point lead but Super dome after rising
Lskers 113-110 to stay atop then Abdul.Jabbar got In foul waters flooded his home,
scored 30 points to power the
surprising Jazz to their sixth .
win In a row.
In O\her NBA games
We d n e s day n i g h I ,
Philadelphls routed Chicago
115-82,
Boston bested Buffalo
day's game and charged at appropriate University of
105-95
and Detroit ripped
one point that the league Michigan authorities, under
operates under different my authority to take interim Seattle IU-107.
In the American Basketball
rules for "two coaches," an action,. that repetition of his
Association,
the New York
apparent reference to Hayes unsportsmanlike conduct
Nets
pasted
Indiana
119-102,
and Schembechler, coaches would result In referral to the
I ndianapolis
4 1 0
8
·
San
Antonio
put
away
Utah
of the league kingpins.
conference compliance
W. L. T. Pts
Schembechler had been committee for Imposition of 121-117, Denver halted St.
Houston
5 4 0 10
Louis
111-98 and San Diego
Phoen 1x
5 6 0 10
parUcul,arly criUcal of pass increased penalties in acI
I M innesota
4 s 1
9
lXIDlshed
Virginia
118-104.
Interference calla which cordance with conference
San Diego
3 4 2
a
78ers 115, Bulls 8%
Denver
3 5 1
7
aided Minnesota touchdown procedures."
Canadian
Coniel
Norman
scored
20
drives. The game was tied 21The "sportsmanlike conW. L. T. Pis
National Basketball Association
Winnipeg
8 3 0 16
21 unW the Wolverines drove duct code" Includes a points while Billy CunStandings
Quebe c
B 5 0 16
Press International
for the winning touchdown ]I'Ovlslon which states, "Acts ningham, George McGinnis By United
Edmon ton
5 7 2 12
Eastern Conference
Calgar y ·
s 6 1 11
with less than seven minutes of Wllj)OI'tsmanlike conduct and Doug Collins aU finished
Afl~ntic Division
2 S 1
s
In
double
figures
to
lead
W. L. Pet. G.B . Toronto
remaining.
·
shall Include but not be
Wednesday ' s Results
Boston
4
1
.BOO
"I have notified coach limited to: any person who Philadelphia to its im- Buffalo
4 2 .667
112 Ca l gar y 4 Quebec 2
Ph
iladelphia
4
2
.667
ln Houston 6 Minnesota ,.
pressive
win
over
the
Bulls.
Schembechler of the penalty publicly Ia unduly critical of
Thur5day's Games
Ntw
York
3
.4 .429 2
Quebec at Den ver
which has been assessed any game official, conference Rowland Garrett had 22 for
Central Oivls1on
W. L .. Pel. G . B. Cin cinnati at New England
against him and of his right to personnel, another member the losers.
New Or leM S
6 1 857
Celtics
105,
Braves
95
Nat1onal Hockey
appeal to the conference Institution, or Its personnel."
w ashington
3 1 .750 11 ':~
Lugue Standings
Paul Silas scored 13 of 15 Atlanta
2 2 .500 2 lf:~
compliance committee If he
8't' United Pren ln1ernillional
ton
2 3 .400 3
points In the third quarter. Hous
Patrick Division
desires to do so," Duke
Cl ev eland
1 4 .200 4
W. L. T. Pts
and
added
seven
rebounds,
Western
Ccnferenr:e
said.
Philadelphia
9 1 3 21
Midwest
Divh.ion
enabling the Celtics to take
7 2 4 18
"Further, I have informed
W.. L .. PC!. G. B. NY Islanders
NY Ran gers
5 7 1 11
over
first
place
from
the
Oe
trolt
4
3
.571
coach Schembechler and
A tlan ta
4 7 I
9
o
3 4 .429 1
Braves In the NBA Atlantic Chicag
Sm(fhe Division
Kansas City
2 3 .400 1
W. L. T. Pfs
Division by a half-game. M ilwaukee
· 1 s .1 67 21':z
Chi cago
7 4 3 17
Pacific
Division
ATLANTA (UPI)
Buffalo's Bob McAdoo led all
A 5 3 11
W. L. Pel. G . B. St Louis
Atlanta Flames President scorers with 25.
Kansas Ci ty
,. 1 1
9
. THISTLEDOWNS
Golden State
3 2 .600 Van cower
3 8 3
9
Los
Angel
es
4
4
500
111
John
Wilcox
Jr.
announced
Pistons 1!4, SuperSonics lt7 PhoeniK
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
3 8 0
6
2 2 500 · 112 M innes ota
Norris Division
Bob Lanier and AI seallle
3 4 .419 1
(UPI) - Dobi's Knight his resignation as head of the
W. L. T, Pts
Por tland
1 s .167 212
three-year-old
NHL
team
Eberhard
scored
22
each
In
scored any easy victory over
Montre al
9 2 2 20
Wednesday ' s Results
Los Angeles
10 .4 0 20
Fleet Hall Wednesday In the Wednesday, saying he wants helping Detroit whip Seattle Bgslon 105 Buffalo 95
Pllfsburgh
5 4 1 11
troit 124 Sealtle 107
featured ninth race at to devote more tline to . and move Into first in the· De
Oe tro il
2 9 l
7
PhJiadelph ia 115 Chicago 8 2
2 11 1
5
New OrieBns 113 Los Angeles Wi'IShington
Thlatledown, running the five running Atlanta 's Indoor NBA Midwest.
Adams Div i sion ,
110
"'
..
sports
arena,
the
Omnl.
ABA
and one-balf furlmgs in 1:06.
W. L~ T. Pts
Thursday 's Games
Flames General Manager Nets !17, Pacers 94
Buffalo
10 2 1 21
The 4-year-old, ridden by
New York at Golden State
Tor onto
7 4 1 l5
Sea
t
He
at
wash
in
gron
Cliff
Fletcher
was
appointed
Julius
Erving
scored
10
of
Gary Cooper, paid $14.?Jl,
Bo ston
s S 2 12
Clev eland at A tl an ta
acting president of the club: his game high 36 points in the
Ca liforn ia
3 9 2
8
~. 20and p , Prince Valentine
Wednesdav's Results
Amencan
Basketball
He
said
he
will
run
the
team
final
six
minutes
to
pace
the
was third.
Buffalo 4 Boston 0
Association Standmgs
Toron to 7 Oeiroit 3
The 1-7-6 IOIIH'ace trlfecta for the rest of the season, then Nets to victory. BiUy Keller
By United Press lnternattonal M on ~ r e a l 3 Atl an ta 1
East
of Cagey &amp;le, Justa Twist and meet with the Flames' had 31 for Indiana.
st Lou is .t Mm nesO ta 1
W l. Pet. G. B. Ph i
1a 4 Chicago 4
CaUota provided the day's management to decide Salls 118, Squires 104
Ke ntu cky
o4
1 .800
3 We sh ington I
Bob Warren scored 20 New Yor k
5 2 .1 14 largest payoff, f87Ul. The 7- whether he can continue his
3 Ca l ifornia 2
1'2
Sl.
Louis
.5
3
625
NY Islanders 6
1 dally double of Happy dual responsibilities of points as the Sails spoiled the Vi r q in1a
1 7 125 .4 17
Tli"'~,j,;;.; Games
general
manager
aD(I
club
debut
of
Mac
Calvin,
who
West
Money and Lark of the Irish
I
I i
W L. Pet. G. B.
president.
replaced fired AI Bianchi as In diana
returned $39.80.
4 2 .607
interim Squires ' pilot Denv er
4 2 66 7
an Anton io
· 4 3 57 1
'2
Tuesday. Virginia's Ticky SSan
Diego
3 5 37 5 2
Burden led all scorers with Utah
I
6 . 143 3 1 1
. Wedn esday's Results
Tire Prices
40.
New York 119 Indi an a 102
Spurs 121, Stars 117
San An ton io 121 Utah 117
Denver 111 Sl . Louls 98
In the Area
Mike
Gale
and
James
Silas
the Benga~, who are &amp;-1.
Sa n Diego 118 VIrg inia 104
80 yards in 10 plays- eight of
hit
a
pair
of
free
throws
each
Thursday's Game
. Joining Current on the them on the ground- and
Denv er at Utah
It's
sidelines this week are scored a touchdown to take a In the flnal10 seconds to save
running back Otis Arm- 17-7lead. Current returned on San Antonio's win over Utah. World H 0 C k e y ASSOCiation
strong, cornerback Calvin the
Standings
next
poasesslon, Nuggell 111, Spiriis 98
By United Pren International
Dan lase! scored 33 points
Jones, defensive tackle however.
East
Barney
Chavous
and · "Marv Is a proven veteran to put the Nuggets (4-2) Into a
W. L. T. Pts
6 3 0 12
Cinc innati
first
place
tie
In
the
ABA
west
linebacker Ray May.
and has shown us that he Is
773-5881
5 4 I
II
New Eng land
Muon , w. Y•.
with
Indiana.
Ralph
Simpson
Joe Rizzo, a second-year recovered," said Ralston.
4 l 1
9
Clev eland
man from the Merchant "He Is an exceptional blocker had 25 points from Denver
Marine Academy, wiU start and along with his size he has which broke a five-game
DR~
Spirits' winning streak.
at May's outside linebacker excellent speed."

Duke reprimands .Bo
CHICAGO ( UPI)
Michigan football Coach Bo
Schembechler was unhappy.
"There was Incompetence
all around us out there
today~nd I'm not talking
about
the
players,"
Schembechler told sportswrl ters Saturday after his
Wolverine!! edged Minnesota
28-21.
The broadside at the
game's officiating made Big
Ten Commlasloner Wayne
Duke unhappy.
Duke Wednesday night
publicly reprimanded
Schembechler. under the
conference's "sportsmanlike
conduct" code for castigating
the officials.
Under the code, If Schembechler Is reprimanded a
second tlme.he wiU be subject'
to a one-f!ame suspension. .
It was Duke's third public'
reprimand since the code wa8
adopted a year ago to curtail
what Duke caUed "a series of
Isolated incidents and trends
which have been reflected
unfavorably throughout
lntercoUeglate athletics." '
Both Ohio State Coach
WOQdy Hayes and 1llllnola
Coach Bob Blackman were
reprimanded last year. ·'
"If the basic tenets of soWld
sportsmanship embodied IQ
this code al-e to be achieved,
the ·code must be ad·
ministered and accepted by
aU parties," Duke said In
reprimanding Schembeehler.
Mlnn~ta Coach Cal Stoll
had demanded that Schf11!·
bechler he reprimanded for
hl8 comments about Satur:

Today's

r------------,
I Pro I
!Standin~s

!

-

Injuries· hit Bronco camp
By I'RACY RINOOLBBY

UPI Sports Wrker
DENVER &lt;UPI) - Marv
Montgomery, who missed
last season with a broken leg
and knee Injury, wW start at
right tackle for the · Denver
Bronc011 in Sunday's game
against Cincinnati, Bronco
coach John Ralston Bllld
Wednesday.
Mike Curr,mt, who has
started 105 consecutive
P'l\!!S,for Denver, suffered a
knf!11 Injury In last week's 4217 to Oakland and was to go
Into the hospital today. If
surgery Is needed It wiU be
performed at that tllile.
"And Hwe lose Mike for the
season you can bet we'U have
sOmebody elae In camp by
Friday," aald Ralaton. "We
can't afford many more
holes."
The Broncos, 3-4, have flve
players on Injured rejl8rve.
Five members of thF fS..
man r011ter also are ~ged
up rule! unable to play against

BEND
nRE CENTER

spot.

CL.EANING
SPECIAL

.

Montgomery broke hl8 leg
In Denver's win at Plttaburgh

in 1973 and Wlderwent a bone
graft. He did not play until
the middle of last season and,
shortly after hl8 return, the 88, 25$-)loWlder from Southern
California suffered a knee
injury and had a cartilage
operation.
Montgomery got , his ,first
test this year when Current
got hurt on the opening
poiaesslon of the second half
against Oakland. With
Montgomery provlllng key
blocks, the Broocos marched
lj

REMODEUNG
NEEDS

With 4 lbs. of

DRY CLEANING

-fUU LINE-

VALLEY
LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CO.
Middleport
Ohio

USE ONE TOP LOAD
WASHER

FREE

NOV. 5 thru 7

KING'S LAUNDROMAT
2nd St.

Ph. 773-5611

Mason, W. Va.

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. 6, 1975

2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 1'hursday, Nov. 8, 1975

Prep ratings champs still in doubt

Miners' hearings set
CHARLESTON , W. Va .
(UPI) - After ·two delays,
the United Mine Workers
union says It's "all systems
go" for specisi hearings nell
week on miners' complaints
about working conditions In
troubled District 17.
Regardless of whether any
Industry officials show, the
UMW said Wednesday It
would conduct the public
hearings.
Labor turmoil led to a
monUi-long strike last August
that eventually idled a
sizeable portion of the
nation's bltumlnOUll miners.
In the latter days of the
wildcat, the Bltumlnow! Coal
Operators Asaoclation and
UMW decided to look into the
Its root causes with a special
joint lndustry-iabor commlssion.
But now, two months later,
the UMW lias acCu.N the
BCOA of dragging Its feet.
Three key miners In
District 17, where the unrest
bl011110med In late Slllllller,
claimed that two planned
meetings by the commilalon
already have been caUed off.
Stanley
Hunter,
representing Local 3t0,
Joseph Tumler of Local 2W
and Herbert Hooever of Local
9619, all members of the
district's own grievance
Investigating committee,
said the comm1811lon would
definitely hold Its ftnt session
next week.
Hearings have been set for
Monday and Tuesday, running from 9 a.m. WlW 5 pm.
at the Charleston Civic
Center.
Representing the UMW wiU
be Its sea-etary-treaaurer,
Harry Patrick, and Iaternal!onal Executive Board
members Gene MltcheU and
Nick DeVInce.
Original plans called for

tne HWA to be represenled
The BCOA also was
by Its president, Joaeph criticized for Insisting that

terrogatlng them to gather
~vidence lor the commission .
Breman, and two of his the news media be barred- a
The BCOA has also obexecutives.
condition the three District 17 jected to the number of obAbout 30 miners are to offidaluald wouldn't be kept servers requested for the
appear as witn_. • the because the hearings ,are to hearings, since miners have
special cmunillllon begins be open to the public.
called for two each from all97
Ustenlng to job complaints.
The three quoted a BCOA locals In the district.
A ilCOA official who representative as saying the
According to the UMW
declined to be Identified operators wanted to keep the spokesmen, individual coal
disputed the clalm of tar- ml!dla out to prevent a cir- companies, some of whifh
diness In getting the com- cua-like atmosphere.
they lauded for cooperating
-mission's work started, . F,;vet since Striking miners In their Investigation, will be
mying the organization had rtturned to their jobs after Invited to send represendone aU It could to cooperate the August strike, district tatives to the hearings. ·
with the union.
officials havP been in-

OOLuMBUS (UP!) - The
PubUc UtUitlea Comrn1811on
of Ohio put into effect today a
)l'ocedure ded(pled to speed
the
emergency relief
]I'Ovlalons II ISI!I forth In Its
Oct. 31 order approving a gu
curtailment
plan
for
Columbia Gas of Ohio. ·
The plan ns npected to
cut red !ape and reduce the
possibilities of Industrial customer llbutdowna In the Co·
lumbta pu service area.
The special emergency
relief procedure 'IIIU be in
effect ilnW Dec. 31.
The PUCO llid II expects
the procedure to reduce tbe
time between llllng far relief
and a declllon from mm
than six weeks to about 48
hOurs.
"To protect the vital
process, feedltoct and pilot
On thll day In hiatory;
Jn 1810, Abraham Uncoln
-elected the leth ]l'elident
ol the UDilld StaiN.
In 111111, Ill the firlt formal

lntereoll4Ciate football game,
Rutgers beat Prlnctton, &amp;-4.

obll&amp;atlon.

"Had they told ua when the
feed WIS reclllled, perhajll
we could have prevented
10111e other farmn from
lllin&amp;ll," he Ald.
1be two worlillra made the
statements
in
aworn
depositions
flied
In
Mlaaauiee Co1111ty Circuli
Court, according to the
Michigan Farm.. , a farm
maaalline owned by Harvell
Publlllrlng &lt;». of aeveland,
&lt;lllo.
Grea Sheffield, spokesman
for Flllin Bureau Servicea,
said the finn had no comment.
Bali aald the Department of
Agriculture bllll "at.alutely
no lnkllns" thai workers In
the feed proceq plafll
may hive been aware rt1. the
feed mllup.
The state learned of widespread problems amons
Uveatoct In the fall« tm but
was not able to establtJh the
source of the difficulty until
May, IV74.

gas needed by industry in
Ohio, the PUC liad ordered
mly a 10 per cent curtailment
of gu supplies used for these
putposes," the commission
~d.
- '"'bla action wiU provide a
mechanism for quick
emergency relief," the
conunlaaloners said. "The
commlaslon will not aUow
lndustrlea to be shut down,
putting Ohioans out of work,
If the llltuatlon can he avoided
In 'BIIy manner."
Industrial customers
facing severe cutbacks in gas
supplies can apply to the
PUOO for emergency relief
under criteria set out in the'
Cmunlallon's Oct. 31 order.
Relief can be granted If the
PUCO finds the applicant
does not have immediate
alternate fuel capabilities;
that alternate fuels are not

available ·in sufficient
quantities; that the applicant
has made an effort to conserve fuels; and , that If relief
Is granted, the effect on other
customers will not be adverse.
The PUCO said that relief
until Dec. 31 will he limited to
up to 90 per cent of anticipated curtailment levels.
Anticipated levels of gas
which customers in the
Category II of the curtailment plan expected to
receive were about 55 per
cent of the base allocations.
PUCO relief may provide up
to 50 per cent of the liase
allocations.
Category II is large industrial and commercial
customers using more than
one million cubic feet of gas
per month, but not industrial
boiler load.

Chessie will buy
bankrupt tracks
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The Ch-ale System has
~greed to purchase large
portlona of bankrupt northeulern raUroads, but at a
price about $8 mllUon !eBB
than dlleu8sed earlier with
the U.S. RaUway Association
and with lubatantlal numbers
of ·locomottvea and rail cars
thrown ln.
The' Oleule offer Wedneadsy, If USRA agrees and
aptclal legislation clears
Congress, aaures removes a
major potentlal stumbling
block to full Implementation
of USRA's Final System Plan
for the Northeast.
That plan calla for most of
the linea of the bankrupts to
be clllsolldated into one raU
iyltem caUed ConRail, but
with Chessle ·purchasing
major portlona in the East in
order to carry out Congress'
order to preeerve competiti111
In the rt~lon.
Oleule, In a letter to
USRA, lk'ove a hard bargain,
but sow-cea close to USRA
aald
the
government
probably would have to accept lt..
,.,
In previous discussions,
Olesale hllll agreed to purell- major portions of the
banllrupl Reading; the Erie
Lackawanna and one Penn

Central line into Charleston,
W. Va., for $82.5 million f22.J million in cash and the
remainder in Baltimore &amp;
Ohio bonds. B&amp;O is a Olessie
System railroad.
However, Chessie vice
presldent~aw OWen Clarke
!fald in 11\e letter to USRA that
after a more detailed study of
the condition of the rail lines
and pro!ections of traffic,
Chessle would pay $54.5
mUllan In cash.
In addition, Olessie said
USRA must designate to
Olessle 52 addltlonallocomolives and 1,786 freight cars as
part of the bargain.
Chessle also would be
allowed to withhold $11
million of th~ purchase price
to pay for employe vacations
earned before ihe transfer to
Olessle hut taken afterward.
The bankrupt estates also
would be responsible for all
pension obligations.
Various other conditions
were Imposed including
Olessle access to certain
switching yards and areas.
Legislation will be required
to aUow USRA to accept the
Olessleplan, but sources said
talks already had been progresstng with congressipnal
staff aides to expedite the
necessary leglslatlor .

DR. LAMB
I

Who's on first for nutrition?
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
interested In getting enough
fiber In my diet, but I am
most confused. I find It difficult to reconcile calories to
nutrition to fats to proteins to
carbohydrates to amino acids
to enzymes, etc. In other
words, who's on first? It was
complicated enough before,
now along comes this
nutrition thing, and I don't
know how to relate It to all
the other stuff.
I Wlderstand that candy,
sweets, alcohol are "empty"
calories tho t provide no
nutrition, but then I bog
down. Must one be sure he
eats .nutritious calories?
DEAR READER - It II
confusing. There has been a
lot of loose appllcatlm of the
word nutrition . Nutrition
means simply the entire
process of taking In and
ullllzlng food, to "nourlah"
yourself. Calories ~ part of
nulri U111 and there Ia no such
thl,ng as a non-nutritious
calorie. That II Uke havtng
non-fat Ia!.
(

v

..
"
"

AM

PUCO plan ordered

to continue since 1973
LANSING, Mich. (UPI) State Agriculture Director B.
Dale Ball says Michigan
Farm Bureau Services Inc.
had a ''moral obllgat1111" to
disclose a feed mixup that
has so fa~ forced the
destruction or 1.5 mUllon
chickens and 36,000 ~ttle.
swine and sheep.
Fann Bureau Servl*, a
subsidiary of the Michigan
fann Bureau, should have
Informed state authorities
that the toxic £Ire retardanl
polybromlnated biphenyl
(PBB) was accidentally
mixed In with feed when It
was first dlacovered, BaH
said Wedneeday.
Ball's remarks were made
In response to tlllcloaures
that two workers Ill the Farm
Bureau Services Battle Q-eek
feed processing plant were
aware of the feed llilxup in
1973, but were told by
supel'iors to keep quiet.
''They had no legal
obligation to tell ua befnre,"
Ball said. "They had a moral

,,

"

Feed inixup pernrltted
By WILLIAM J. HOLBI'EIN

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sporta Wrker
COLUMBUS (UPI) -With
only one week remaining In
the United Press Jnlernstional Ohio High School
Board of COaches football
ratings, the .No. I spots In aU
three cla88lflcatlons are stiU
very much In doubt.
Akron_St. Vincent-St. Mary
has regained the top ·spot In
Class AA thla week .after a
couple week's absence, while
the other two leaders Lakewood St. Edward In
and ·
Canal Winchester In A
managed to hold on.
'
But, with only one week
remaining In the. voting, only
seven teams appear to be In

Try to think of nutrition not

as who Lion flnt but whit you
need for the whole process.

Yow- body Is like an engine,
and ' the combustlon stage
requires both ' gu in the
engine and spark ]iJugs. So
you need calories, the.f\lel or
enei'IIY, and the means to.
process It, the vitamlna.
Firat, you need enough
calories hut not too many, for
growth, proper body weight
and dally energy.
Second, you need all the
right vitamins and minerals
to process the fOCid to rellue
the calories and to pro¥ida
parts tw the body eucl\ as
calcium fer bol1es and Iron
for blood.
Tblrd, you need protelll,
because It contains amino
acids that are used to build
body ·structures, such a•
muscles, and even to build
enaymea, llormonea and·
other vital bGdy lllbltanca.
What proleln you don •t 1111
for hulldlng or replacement
building can be Uied u !lei
or calories to provide energy
or 81111'e eJII!l'IY 1111 fat. 11 can

aiao be wied to form carbohydrate fuel for the S;Bme
purpose, EJ:cess protein is
not helpful in any way except
to provide fuel.
Fourth, think of how all
theae
calories
(carbo!aydralea, fat, proteil) and
even alcohol) are packaged.
They are dUuted, if you will,
With water and 11tdlgestible
material or bulk and fiber.
. Your calories need to be
diluted with enough of these
to give you diet satisfacUon
lr~ bulk amount without
getting too many. calories.
And the bulk provides enough
volume for normal intestinal
actions. You c~ get your
bulk lrom any whole cereals,
particularly wheat and oats.
You can use any of the
shredded wheat products,
bran produclJI (AU Bran, tO
per eent Bran Flakes, GrapeNul Flakes), cooked oat meal
bill )'OU WOII 'I get much fiber
lrom rice.
Sweets, candy, white or
refined flour provides
caltriei or fuel and that is
pari rt1. nutrition, but they

...

II

Players have new
lease on careers

r

the Rio Grande campus in celebration of the school's 100th •'

'
RIO C-C DESIGNATED BICENTENNIAL INSTITUTION - Rio Grande College-Rio Grande CommWiity College has been officially designated a bicentennial institution by the U.S. Bicentennial Commission.
State Representative Ron James, right, ·recently
presented the American Revolution Bicentenntal Flag to
Dr. Paul D. Hines, left, President of Rio Grande commemorating the event. Rio Grande College will celebrate
its centennial year the same lime the nation celebra)es its
bicentennial. Special events will be conducted all year on

Rio grad

will offer
workshop
RIO GRANDE - Dr. Carl
Benner, a Rio Grande College
graduate who Is chairman of
Ihe Mathematics Department
at Wright State University in
Dayton, will present a
workshop ali the Rio Grande
campus Saturday, November
8.

The one-day workshop,
designed for Rio Grande
alumni who have entered
leaching, will be on
"Cuisenaire Rods and the
Metric System."
The day wiil begin at 9 a.m.
and' continue through 3:30
p.m. with a break from II : 30
a.m. to I p.m. for IWich. Due
to space limitations the
workshop has been restricted
ro alumni from Mason, Pike,
Ross, Jackson, Gallia, Meigs,
Vinton, Lawrence, and Scioto
counties.
A native of Lucasville, Dr.
Benner received )lis M.A.
Degree in Mathematics from
the University of Northern
Iowa, his M.S. Degree in
Ma thematics at Purdue
Universi!y, his Ed. S. from
Bowling
Green
State
University, and his Ph. D. in
Mathematics Education from
!he Ohio Slate Unlveflllty.
He is a member of Phi
Delta Kappa, the National
Council of Teachers of
Mathematics', the
Mathematical Association ol
America, and the Association
for
Supervision
and
Curriculum Development. He
has been listed in "Men of
Achievement," a British
publication distributed
throughout the world, and in
the Dictionary of International . Biography
Leaders in Education. Dr.
Benner and his family live In
Xenia.

may lack vitamins, minerals
and certainly cer~al fiber SINGER GIVES BIRnl
unless artificially added. So,
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
use whole wheat products Singer Diana Ross and her
·such as whole wheat bread new daughter were reported
and avoid sweets unless you doing well today at Cedars of
need to increase your fuel Lebanon Hospllal.
(calotj~) in(4ke.
•.
For the latest summary of
the needed amounts of
calories, protein, viljlmins
DE voTE o TO THE
INTERESTOF
and mIneraIS send 50 cents
MI!.IGS·MASON AREA
for The Health Letter number CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
~. Balanced diet, Re~orn- · ROBE~;."~'cf:hlcH
mended Dally Dietarl
P~blls~~~ E:~l1~ except
Allowances (RDA). Ad~ss - Salurday by Tho Ohio Volley
'
·-..
f PubtiShl"g company, 111
your reques t Io me 1n care o ~ Court st ., Pomeroy, Oh io
this newspaper ' Radio City "-1169. Busineu Otflct Phone
.
N ' y k NY t92.2156. Editorial Phone 992S181100,
ew or ,
2157.
.
10019 Be sure to enclose a
Second class postage pold
·
•• Pomeroy, Ohio.
long,
stamped, ..selfNational advertising
••
represen!allve
Ward ·
ddr
I
a esse d enve ope for Griffith company , Inc ..
mailing
'
BOitlnelll &amp; Gallagher OIV ..
'
1S1 Third Ave., New York,
Beyond these aspects of a N .v. IOOW
.t
ddth
Subs~-rlpllon
roles:
balancedd 1e
you can a
e Delivered bY carrier where
measures of limiting fat and available. 15 conts por week.
aaturaledfatto preventfatty- ~trrf:~lor s:r0v"r~'• wh~~1
cholesterol deposits and available,
By mall In one
Ohiomont~,.
end w .13.25.
Yo ..
sweeta plus fats to limit
ne Yur, 122.00 ; Six
onlhs, S11.50 ; Three
I or any modlfl catIons
caIores
on!hs. 57.00. E!atiNhore
!hat may be required to
?6.00 year ; Slxhmonlhs
•
13.50; threo mo"l s. 11.50.
1
medtca reasons.
ubscrlptron price inclUdes
~!!_day Timcs _s_
en_ti_n. ~
•'~·--,!

J,

anniverssry. The theme for Rio Grande College's centennial promotion is "Hand in Hand with America ... A
Proud Heritage." This theme was chosen to associate the
college's centennial celebration with the nation's
bicentennial celebration. Dr. Hines expressed his appreciation to Rep. James for his efforts in securing the ,
Bicentennial Flag for the college. He said it is through "
cooperation like this that the college's centennial and the
nation's bicentennial celebration will be a huge success.

.Deer blamed
Meigs
Property in collision

Zo class off
for Nags Head
RIO GRANDE -Members

ot the Rio Grande College-Rio

Transfers

..
"

"

LETART,W. Va.- Adeaf,.
tha 1 darted across Rl. 33 i~ .
Letart caused two vehicles lit;
collide Tuesday at 7:30a.m.,
according to Deputy N. E..,
Benson of the Mason County,
Sheriff's Department.
,;
Dr1 vers of the vehicle~,
were Robert R. Rollins, 23la,
Monroe Aye., Point Pleasant.,
and Drewy M. Gore ot;
Rutland, Ohio.
The deer ran in front of the
Rollins vehicle, then in to"
Gore's causing both to..
sideswipe each other and ..
death to the deer.
,,
Repairs to Gore's vehicle,
was estimated to cost $525, to
Rollins', $95. ,

Grande Community College
Invertebrate Zoology clasS
will leave Thursday, Nov. 6
Robert E. Sanders, Nina J .
on a four-day field trip to Sanders to Gary L. Whited,
Nags Head, N.C. to study Teri L. Whited, 10 A., Olive .
marine organisms.
James F. Arnold, Ruth B.
The 12 students will he Arnold to Bernard V. Fultz,
accompanied by Tom Parcels, Pomeroy.
Osborne, Assistant Professor
John R. Sellers to Willlam
of Biology; Bob Humphreys, E. Sellers, Parcels, Lebanon.
Instructor of Biology, and Dr.
Helen L. Ebersbach, Helen
Uoyd G. Carr, Professor of L. Hintoo, formerly, Frank
Biology. The group will study Ebersbach to Roger A. Eblin,
Entomology, Invertebrate
Judith L. Eblin, 3 A.,
Zoology, and · Vertebrate Rutland.
Zoology aspects of marine
James R. Thomas to
life at the Sea Shore National Patricia A. Thomas, 15.16 A.,
Park near Nags Head.
Chester.
This · is the first science
Estella Riley, Edna Mae
field trip of the class but Riley, Mary Mayes, Undsey
plans are to make II a yearly Mayes to Richard . L.
-~
event. Each year, however, Haggerty, Lo!, Middleport.
!he class will visit a different
Earl P. Cross, Geraldine
coastal region. The RGC- Cross to Gary Paul Norris,
CC Class primarily inDonna Marie Norris, 1.09 A., • RIO GRANDE - Carl R.
volved wllh the trip is Biology Sutton.
Salmons of Huntington, W'.u
235, Invertebrate Zoology.
Leroy J. Kennedy to Leroy Va., instructor of art courses~
J. Kennedy, VIvian K. in basic water color at Rlq~
Grande College-Rio Grande ·
McMAHON FLEES FIRE Kennedy, Parcels, Olive.
John T. WoHe, Joan Wolfe Community College this"
LOS ANGELES (UP!) . ''
As Ed McMahon, Johnny to Ronald E. Grate, Regina quarter, has a new exlnbltlon
in HWitlngton ..
Caraon's televlalon sidekick, Grate, .18 A., Rutland.
From
no)V
through
was taking a shower in his
November 30, Salmons has
Marina del Rey OOndomlnlum CARDINAL S rRICKEN
Wednesday, the unit below
LONDON (UP!) - Car- assemblages, graphics, and
caught fire and the flames dinal John Heenan, 70, ceramics on exhibit at the
spread to his apartment.
Roman Catholic Archbillhop Huntington Galleries .
McMahon escaped, but the of Westminster, was ad- Salmons received both his
fil-e heavily damaged his mitted to Westminster B.A. Degree and M.A. Degree'·
~rtment, destroying trea- hospital Wednesday after In Art from Marshall:
Sured antiques and boota, an suffering a mUd heart attack, University. For ·the past twO..
NBC spokesman s8id. No one a church spokesman aald.
years he has been a graudate;
. was Injured but the fire did
assistant
in the DeparlmenJ,
The Archbishop, leader of
$115,000 damage to the Britain's Roman Catholics, · of Art at Marshall, and Is '
building, the fire department was in a hospital early last currently on the staff at the
said.
year for treatment of asthma. HWitmgton Art Galleries. .:.

Instructor has

·new exhibition:

..

...

Six die in murder spree
FARMINGTON, N.M. about $-f() times per year,
( UPI) - Barbara Shern and not always the same one, but
her three children were
malting plana for picnics and
Bible reading, A mile away,
her ex-husband calmly
lettled his bUB!neu affairseven remembering to cancel
a newspaper subecrlptlon and wrote three notes
deacrlbing the angulSles of
clvorce.
Then Roger Shern, a
churcJ;gotng man so qui~t
that his neighbors did not
knowhlaname,beganaspree
of murder.
He slashed and bludgeooed
hl8 girl friend and tliree
chU!hn to death, lhot and
kiUed his wife and then
comrilllted suicide Tueadsy
night.
Allt!Jorltlea said to~ay
Shern, :10, cal(nly canceled a
neWI]llper .Ublcrlptton and

an ldvertilement

ror· 'bla

chU~en, apparently with bta'.'

ex-wife's permission, &amp;hortly
usually It's a Christian before the slaylngs, police.
deoomlnation,:• Shern said. said.
,..
"I was true to my wife
" The ~eatha (of the~
before marriage and In children) were short, Instant marriage ... "
and by Sll'pl'lse," Shem said•.;
. Shern'sbodyandthatofhls In one of the notes foWid n~
former wife, Barbara, 28, the scene. "I'm sorry It "
were foWid in the home they couldn't end some other way .. ~
111ce shared, both dead from hut Barb would never let me
wounda inflicted by Shern's see the ltlds."
·.uo bolt-acUon sho\gWI.
Authorities aald a note wu' '
At the hOIIle of'Shern 's girl found on the kitchen
In
· friend, school teacher"Ml!rle , Mrs. Sbem's home 8181gnlng
Sonnier, officers round four the children to their turns to.':
bodies. Miss . Sonnier lead the. famUy prayers-~ ;
Shern's three children, "stay up late with Mama."·'
Michelle, 7, Sheryl, 5, and
The note, apparently·:
Dooald Arvle, 4.. They had posted by Mrs. Shern, allo'~
been bludgeoned with a said "Monday: famHy home- ,
crowbar and the throats of evening. Once a month go, out' ~
Ms. Sonnier and one of the to dinner. Once a week go 111; ~
chll~en were cut with a a picnic. Everyday rel(!l Ia ; ;
butcher knife.
the children. Everyday read • •
Shern had picked up the the Bible."
' ~

w

u

home maintenance ' and
window cleaning bualneu
Tueadsy and left the notes
deacrlblng hii8JIIUilh over a
week.oJd clvorce settlement
~mder which he aald he could
~~~- 'l'illt hla dllllten aaatn.
One of the mtee wu a
letter the Fll'll1inllcln O.Uy
Tlmee received Wednuday.
"I am Roaer Shern, aae :10.
I have never lllld .. alcobollc
beverage or drug In my llfe.l
don't smoke. I don't 1181! foul
language. I attend church

11

C'li.i

f~~

,,j
lh .,

The .Martin ReStaurant
21 Shrimp in a Basket
21 Strip Clams in a Basket
French Fri~s - Salad -

Hot· Rolls
'

.
~,,.

IRI. &amp; SAT. MfNU

t275 .'
"

MUSIC ' '

ARMOND AT TH! ORGAN
HOURS 9 TIL 2
I

J

the running for the three
mythical championships, St.
Edward and Moeller in ClaSB
AAA, St. Vincent, Cleveland
Holy Name and Wyoming In
AA and Canal Winchester and
Newark Catholic In Class A.
St. Vincent, taking advantage of a 26-14 victory
over Barberton Friday night,
overhauled Wyoming in Class
AA .
The Irish collected only one
first place vote but amassed
165 points, four more than
runnerup Holy Name and
eight more than Wyoming's
157 as the Cowboys feU all the
way to third.
The AAA race between St.
Edward and Moeller Is even

'·

By JOHN KNUDSEN
ST. PAUL. Minn. (UPI) Players from the now defunct
World Football League have
won a new lease on their
careers.
.
U.S. District Court Judge
Edward J. Devitt laaued a
preliminary Injunction
Wednesday · allowing all
former WFL players who are
not Wider contract to sign
with National Football
League,
Devitt said his ruling would
stand until a hearing "on
merits" of the lnjWictlon
~der Is held Nov. 26.
The NFL gave Its teams
only a couple of days to sign
players after the WFL folded
last month before Com·
missioner Pete Rozelle halted
the practice. He ruled NFL
teams could not sign any
WFL players the rest of the
season. ·
•Devitt called that "a
concerted boycott against
former WFL players and a
deprivation of the plaintiffs'
rights of freedom to sign
contracts."
"He aald WFL players would
"suffer Irreparable harm"
and "the court's capacity to
do justice would be hindered"
If they were not allowed extra
tqne to negotiate and sign
cantracts with NFL teams.
.The judge expanded a
previous order to a class
aetion for all former WFL
players not under contractual
of!ligationa. He had Issued a
t.qnporary restraining order
~ Friday which applied

..

only to nine former menbers
of the Hawaiians who had
flied a complaint.
Rozelle testified Wednesday that hl8 ruling last
month ·was "reasonable"
because It was comparable to
trade deadlines In other
sports.
"The league doesn 'I want
major changes late in the
,sea8011so one team could buy
a championship," Rozelle
said. "It could affect a
championship !'liCe which had
orlglnaUy been eatabUshed
within the lea'gue rules."
Edward Glennon, an attorney for the nine original
plaintiffs, ar1ued, "NFL
teams can aequlre players on
waivers up to the Ia!! week of
the season ... AU we want Ls
the right for our players to
negotiate with NFL teams."

Grid s~tistics • • •

'·

TEAM

~~'l:'t~tls
ttonton

Jackson

L011an
t,\Oigs
Waverly
Wellston

TEAM
Athens
Gallipolis
Ironton
Jackson
L011an
Meigs
Waverly
O,Vellston

TEAM STATISTICS (6 GAMES)
FIRST DOWNS PASS SCR. PLAYS
- T Ave. OP. A~g . ·Cm.p-AII I T OP.
70 11.7 57 9.5 22-66 s :no 30;
80 13.3 57
9:5 34-11~ I 323 308
59 9.3 58 9.7 t7 ·31 0 276 279
9A 15.7 17 t2.8 32·58 2 3~ 320
79 13.2 68 11.3 32-60 9 339 340
so 8.3 78 13.0 19·72 5 290 329
43 7.2 79 13.2 2~-91 5 290 287
71 11.8 62 10.3 13·38 6 291 29'1
l. ~USH T. PASS NET OFF. NETDEF.
Yda. Avg. Yell. Avg. Ydt. Ayt. Ydt. Avg.
1061 176.8 423 70.5 1&lt;484 207.3 106~ 177.3
938 156.3 ~74 79.0 W2 235.3 1296 216.0
898 149.7 319 53.2 1211 m .8 9&gt;16 167.7
1283 213.8 466 71.7 17~9 291.5 1511 251 .8
• 1166 19~.3 407 67.8 t573 262.2 1316 219.3
575 95.8 304 50.7 719 1~4.5 1513 252.2
379 63.2 315 52.2 694 115.7 1633 272.2
1210 201.7 2« 40.7 1~4 242.3 1082 180.3

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Rushing
Yds. Cor. Avg.
Davis, J
719 147 4.9
Peppers, L
629 91 6.4
I WeII
Pe opes,
57t 85 6.7
Pennell, A
475 95 5.0
·~~~~~r tiii'P:Arl5
Johnson, G 34·64 8 474 7
Conroy, J
32·58 2 466 4
Smtih, L
30-54 8 373 2
Thompson, Wav.
24·90 4 325 I
Cnonko, A 22-66 5 423 --~
- PunllntJ ·
(llormorel
Yd. · 'No· Avn · .•
..,
·
l&lt;rl e&amp;ef,'
756 21 36.0
M. Dalley, W,a 762 24 31.8
Patton, We
757 24 31 .6
Greer, A
572 20 28.6
(only ones)
jtectiYIIlf
No. Yds. TD
~bbard,JL
22 Jll 2
..,.borne,
16 323 t
Wilson, G
t6 ~tO 5
S. Thomas, Wa
15 t69 1
Saunden, G
14 188 2
KO Returns
Yds. No. TO
Davis J
293 8 2
peoples wet
263 14 o
PepperS L '
217 10 0
' M
l9&amp; 9 O
Ma gno tta,
Mlrik, G
ISCI • ,a 0
P!Jnl Rtlurns
Yds. No. TD
i\fagnotta, M
148 12 0
Wilson G
70 7 1
u1.bba;d L
60 10 o
""
'
43 8 0
S. Thomas, 1
C!ockrell, I
3'1 2 0
ttitr.
No. Yds. TD
Cl'awtord, J
5 12 0
Y.lltson, G
~ 66
0
o.venport, M
2, 39 ~
Ctockrall I
2 23 0
"-ppers L
2 18 0
r•
•
RIIPert,We!.
2 ~ 0
Sfi'wart, M
'2 2 0

tyfs. f6

-r
Nlmt, T
•

The releaae of this
week's Oblo High School
Athletic Anociallon's
Computerized Football
Rating&amp; Is being delayed
because of programlag
problema arlslag with the
firm which prepares the .
ratings. They are expeeted
to be ready sometime
Thunday. The final week' a
rating•, which will decide
the 12 semlflnaU.II for this
year's football playoffs,
will be relealed Moaday
m?ming, Nov. 10.

.
OVERALL SCORING

OJviS. J,
~

TO Pat Pis Avg
20 10 130 14.4

Gliders, Alex 12 19 100 11.1
Sullivan, N.y 12 4 76 9.5
Preston , KC 13 0 78 8.7
7 31 76 8.4
lucos, KC
Peoples. well 10 13 73 8.1
Dorsey , Mill 12 o 72 a.o
EchS!~nkomperlOTr~ 69 7.7
Peppers. L
11 o 66 7.3
Logon . NG
9 4 sa 6.4
Name!~OALloc~::~?s Avg.
Davis, J
13 8 86 10
Peppers, L
7 o 42 1.0
wilson, G
6 4 40 6.7
PeQt&gt;l 0s, Well 5 6 l6 6.0
Pennoii,A
S 0 lO 5.0
Grey, Woll
s 0 30 5.0
Conroy J
4 • 28 4.7
Chonko A
4 o 24 4.0
Kriebel: 1
• o 24 4.0
Howard, !
4 0 24 4 0
Morrow, J
3 6 24 4.0
SVAC SCORING tFinoll
Name, T TD Pat Pts Awg.
r~~~t~nK~c . I~ 2~
1!:~
Eichinger, Eo &amp;I 4 8 35 . 5.8
aoso. So"th .
5 4 34 5.7
Lew is. sw
5 4 34 5.7
sm llh, KC
5 o 30 5.0
Logon . NG
5 o 30 5.0
McClure, Easl. 4 2 26 4.3
Spe~cer , NG
3 6 24 4.0
Kuhn, Eosl.
3 6 24 4.0
Thel,., NG
3 6 24 4.0
THIS WEEK 'S
SCHI OUL E
FRIDAY
SEDAL
Athens at Waverly
Wellston at Gallipolis
Logan at Ironton
Meigs at Jackson
TVC
N els on v II 1e . y or k
o1
Alexander
Belpre el Warren Local
Others
Federal Hocking II Trimble
Falrlond at VInton County
Soulhern ol Coldwell
Hannan. w. va . ar Symmes
valley

:t

Miller at Pelnt Valley
WlhllmiJ II Sistersville

S" TUR DAY

Enlern al Fronller

t

hOtter with only two pomts
separating the two unbeaten
teams, 33e-336. Findlay and
Newark, also both·!,1-0, are a
distant third and fourth with
274 and 256 points.
Canal Winchester, which
has been the Class A leader
for five weeks, holds a 187-178
margin
over · Newark
Catholic, the runnerup every
week of the ratings so far.
Last week the Indians led by
10 points.
Canton McKiilley, which
dropped Its first game of the
season to Youngstown
Cardinal Mooney but has
since won eight In a row,
made the biggest jump In
AAA foliowing Its 12-7 win
over Warren Harding, going
from lith to fifth.
East Liverpool, which
dropped Its first game of the
season Friday night, fell to
slsth, and was followed by
Zanesville, a loser to Newark,
Colerain, and newcomers
Kettering Alter and North
Canton Hoover.
New Lexington remairied
fourth In Class AA, but the
rest of the top underwent a

shakeup.
London jumped a notch to
fifth, ex.changing places with
Ironton, Wheelersburg
moved up to seventh, Bellaire
went up to eighth, Uma
Catholic took ninth and
Circleville fell three places to
tenth.
Loudonville, ~. held tllird
In Class A, followed by
Arlington, Burton Berkshire,
Ridgemont and Middletown
Fenwick In a lie for sixth,
Carey eighth, Bluffton ninth
and Rockford Park, which
suffered Its first loss, in tenth.
This weekend's schedule ts
highlighted by the annual
Canton McKinley-Massillon
struggle.
Games Involving the top
teamS find Moeller and Elder
meeting at Riverfront
Stadium, St. Edward hosting
Youngstown Ursuline, St.
VIncent meeting Akron
Hoban, Wyoming going
against Sycamore, Newark
Catholic playing Heath and
Canal Winchester closing out
against Uberty Union. Holy
Name completed Its season
with an ~ mart.

COLUMBU S (UPIJ - The

(15 1 (9 -0J

By United Preas · ID·
teruational
A National Basketball Assoclatlon record crowd of
28,511. filed into the New
Orleans Superdome Wed'
nesday night to see the
league's most surprising
team- the New Orleans
Jazz- take on the Los

•

338

2. Cinc ln . Moellerl11 ) (9
01
336
3. Flndley{5J (9 -01
274
4. Newark (31 (9 OJ
256
S. Canton McKinley (21 (8 .

I) '
6. East Liverpool {8 1J
1 Zannvllle (7 . 1 1)

138
120
C12

8 Coleroln til (9.01

88

9. KelferlngAit er 180 1J
67
10 . N . Canton Hoover ( 1J {9 ·

4 N e w L e:&lt; in g ton 19-0 )

11 6

5 London ( 1I 19-0l
6 IronTon ( I} (8 11
7 Wheeler sburg ( 9 Ol

109
87
54

8 B c l la Jr e &lt;l l (8 -11

Lima

9

49

Cat h l1 c ( 7 1 l)

47

10 C ir c le \lllte \8 -1)

43

Seconq l en : 11. M ade1ra 19 .
12 R idge wo od Il l 27 ; 13 (!t el
Swanton ( 1) an d De lla (1), 23
each , 15 Pola n d 22 ; 16

Ob erl in

ft i eJ

and Genoa , 20
ec~~ c h .
18
Clev el a n d
Bened ic t in e 17 . 19. Cadi z 15 ,
20 St. Marys Me mor 1al 12
Oth er s with ten o r more
points . Sunbury Big Wa lnut 1
and St Par 1s Grah am
(1 )

Class A
Team
Points
1 Canal Winche st er ( 11) (9

181
59 01
2. Newark Catholi c ( I J (9
11e
01 .
3. Loudonv ille {21 19·01
I ~~
4. A rlln gton (1 ) (8 0 1)

01

Second ten : 1L Princeton
46 ; 12 . (ti e l Gahanna Lin coln
and W11rr~n Harding , 27
each ;
14 .
(tiel
Upper
Arl ington and Ketter i ng
FIJ irmont West ( 11 26 ea ch ;
16 Lakewood 20 ; 17 Fremonr
Ross 15 ; 18 . Greensburg
Green.... 14 , 19 Middlet own 13 ;
20 Ole) Center'v' ll le and
Co l umbus North l and , 12
each
~
Others with ten or mor e
points : Massillon and Niles
M c Kinley
Class AA
Team
Paints
1. Akron St Vincent (1 l 18

1)
2 Cl eve Holy Name (7)
0I
3. Wyoming !7 1 19.0 1

Jazz stop Kareem,
'
Pro Baakett.U Roundup 1

Sport Parade

UPI grid ratings
w e ekly Unit e d Pre~ s In
ternat iona l Ohio H igh School
Boar d of Coaches football
rat~ngs (with first place votes
and won lost r e cords in
paren rneses)
Clau AAA
Team
Poults
1 Lakewood St . Edward

(8

165
161
151

5 Burton Berk sh ir e ( 2) (9

01

~~

8Carey !1II B1 1

69

1)

63

6. (tiel Ridgemon t (7 o 1)
6 (ti e l M iddl et own
F enWICk {3 ) ( 6 .J)

71

9 Bl uff ton { 1) (8 . 1 )
68
10 . Ro c kfo r d Parkway f 7· 1·

Second ten 11 Tu sc arawas
CathOli C {1 I 60 . 12 Le i psic
51 . 13 . A lbany Alex and er 4 1;
1.4 Sali neville Sou thern 32 .
IS . L ISbon Anderson (1} 19,
16 . Ottawa H1 II S ( 1) 18 , 17.
Williamsburg 15 , 18 ( tie )
Buckeye
Central ,
Monroe'v'ille and Pla 1n City
Jonathan Al der , 11 each

win 113-110

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - There are signs relations between the
Cuba and the United Slates may be resumed, perhaps Inside
the next year or six months. When and if they are , baseball
probably will be the vehicle to bring the two COWitries back
together in much the same way ping-pong was the instrument
lor improving relations between the U.S and the People's
Republic of China .
Aplan has been in the works lor some time now calling for a
group of major leaguers to visit Havana next spring and play a
Cohan team, with,the contest to be carried on television in the
U.S. t .1d Cuba . One of the forerunners of the plan was the
permission granted by the Cuban government for Luis Tiant's
paren!B to leave Cuba so they could visit him m Boston this
past swruner.
·
Since all details haven'\ :been worked out yet and are supposed to be so hush-llush because you never can tell when
Cast~o may change his mind and call the whole thing off,
BoWie Kuhn refuses to talk about the trip. But Henry Kissinger
has talked about it with Castro already.
Fidel Castro used to be a pretty fair pitcher with the
University of Havana. He enjoys basebaU and followed the
recent World Series between those Yankee dogs, the Cincinnati
Reds and Boston Red Sox, demonstrating the normal
nationalistic pride when Louis Tiant won two games for the
Red Sox and Tony Perez, another Cuban, hit those home runs
for the Reds.
Castro likes ballplayers and has always enjoyed being
aroWid them.
Harry Simmons, another Bowie Kuhn aide who was
associated with the International League 25 years, remembers
Castro attending the 1959 JWiior World Series between
Minneapolis and Havana. Gene Mauch was managing Minneapolis and Preston Gomez Havana, and after each club won ·
one game In Minneapolis, the weather grew so cold there, it
was decided to play the remaining contests In Havana.
~. "Before the first game we played there, a service gate in the
lett field•fence opened and Fidel came In surrounded by a
"'oup of men wearing long hair and carrying machine guns,"
Simmons recalls. "There were twenty seven, twenty eight
thousand people in the stands and they all got up, waved
handkerchiefs and began screaming, 'Fidel, Fidel, Fidel! •
"He walked across the diamond, stopped at the pitcher's
mound and warmed up with one of his henchmen, a fellow by
the name of Fernandez, who used to be a catcher In the Pacific
Coast League."
Later, Castro sat in the stands behind home plate and
Havana won that game . He did the same thing the following
night, and the Sugar Kings won again. For the fifth game,
Castro sat In the bleachers and they lost.
"The next night he decided to sit In the Sugar Kings'
dugout," says Simmons. "One umpire said to the other one, 'he
can't sit there, get him out.' The second umpire said 'you get
him out yourself."'
'
Castro sal in the dugout the whole game and the Sugar Kings
lost, but they won the seventh game to take the Series. Castro
then went to both clubhouses to shake hands with the players.

Angeles Lskers, a team that the NBA Central Division trouble and sat out much of.
the second period. Moore.
thinks It's good enough to win with a 8-1 mark.
the championship.
"I don't do any extra wound up with 16 points in1
The fans weren't disap- jumping up or down or get help!ng to neutralize Abdulpointed.
excited," said Moore . "I Jabber.
"Pistol" Pete Maravlch,
The Jazz, with the suddenly remember one year In
rejuvenated Otto Moore Detroit we started outlil-1. In who had to he escorted by
balding hts own against the a few weeks, we were 13-10." pollee from suburban
more celebrated Kareem
The Lakers, 4-4, jumped to Metairie, La ., to the
Abdul-Jabbar, stopped the an early 13-point lead but Super dome after rising
Lskers 113-110 to stay atop then Abdul.Jabbar got In foul waters flooded his home,
scored 30 points to power the
surprising Jazz to their sixth .
win In a row.
In O\her NBA games
We d n e s day n i g h I ,
Philadelphls routed Chicago
115-82,
Boston bested Buffalo
day's game and charged at appropriate University of
105-95
and Detroit ripped
one point that the league Michigan authorities, under
operates under different my authority to take interim Seattle IU-107.
In the American Basketball
rules for "two coaches," an action,. that repetition of his
Association,
the New York
apparent reference to Hayes unsportsmanlike conduct
Nets
pasted
Indiana
119-102,
and Schembechler, coaches would result In referral to the
I ndianapolis
4 1 0
8
·
San
Antonio
put
away
Utah
of the league kingpins.
conference compliance
W. L. T. Pts
Schembechler had been committee for Imposition of 121-117, Denver halted St.
Houston
5 4 0 10
Louis
111-98 and San Diego
Phoen 1x
5 6 0 10
parUcul,arly criUcal of pass increased penalties in acI
I M innesota
4 s 1
9
lXIDlshed
Virginia
118-104.
Interference calla which cordance with conference
San Diego
3 4 2
a
78ers 115, Bulls 8%
Denver
3 5 1
7
aided Minnesota touchdown procedures."
Canadian
Coniel
Norman
scored
20
drives. The game was tied 21The "sportsmanlike conW. L. T. Pis
National Basketball Association
Winnipeg
8 3 0 16
21 unW the Wolverines drove duct code" Includes a points while Billy CunStandings
Quebe c
B 5 0 16
Press International
for the winning touchdown ]I'Ovlslon which states, "Acts ningham, George McGinnis By United
Edmon ton
5 7 2 12
Eastern Conference
Calgar y ·
s 6 1 11
with less than seven minutes of Wllj)OI'tsmanlike conduct and Doug Collins aU finished
Afl~ntic Division
2 S 1
s
In
double
figures
to
lead
W. L. Pet. G.B . Toronto
remaining.
·
shall Include but not be
Wednesday ' s Results
Boston
4
1
.BOO
"I have notified coach limited to: any person who Philadelphia to its im- Buffalo
4 2 .667
112 Ca l gar y 4 Quebec 2
Ph
iladelphia
4
2
.667
ln Houston 6 Minnesota ,.
pressive
win
over
the
Bulls.
Schembechler of the penalty publicly Ia unduly critical of
Thur5day's Games
Ntw
York
3
.4 .429 2
Quebec at Den ver
which has been assessed any game official, conference Rowland Garrett had 22 for
Central Oivls1on
W. L .. Pel. G . B. Cin cinnati at New England
against him and of his right to personnel, another member the losers.
New Or leM S
6 1 857
Celtics
105,
Braves
95
Nat1onal Hockey
appeal to the conference Institution, or Its personnel."
w ashington
3 1 .750 11 ':~
Lugue Standings
Paul Silas scored 13 of 15 Atlanta
2 2 .500 2 lf:~
compliance committee If he
8't' United Pren ln1ernillional
ton
2 3 .400 3
points In the third quarter. Hous
Patrick Division
desires to do so," Duke
Cl ev eland
1 4 .200 4
W. L. T. Pts
and
added
seven
rebounds,
Western
Ccnferenr:e
said.
Philadelphia
9 1 3 21
Midwest
Divh.ion
enabling the Celtics to take
7 2 4 18
"Further, I have informed
W.. L .. PC!. G. B. NY Islanders
NY Ran gers
5 7 1 11
over
first
place
from
the
Oe
trolt
4
3
.571
coach Schembechler and
A tlan ta
4 7 I
9
o
3 4 .429 1
Braves In the NBA Atlantic Chicag
Sm(fhe Division
Kansas City
2 3 .400 1
W. L. T. Pfs
Division by a half-game. M ilwaukee
· 1 s .1 67 21':z
Chi cago
7 4 3 17
Pacific
Division
ATLANTA (UPI)
Buffalo's Bob McAdoo led all
A 5 3 11
W. L. Pel. G . B. St Louis
Atlanta Flames President scorers with 25.
Kansas Ci ty
,. 1 1
9
. THISTLEDOWNS
Golden State
3 2 .600 Van cower
3 8 3
9
Los
Angel
es
4
4
500
111
John
Wilcox
Jr.
announced
Pistons 1!4, SuperSonics lt7 PhoeniK
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
3 8 0
6
2 2 500 · 112 M innes ota
Norris Division
Bob Lanier and AI seallle
3 4 .419 1
(UPI) - Dobi's Knight his resignation as head of the
W. L. T, Pts
Por tland
1 s .167 212
three-year-old
NHL
team
Eberhard
scored
22
each
In
scored any easy victory over
Montre al
9 2 2 20
Wednesday ' s Results
Los Angeles
10 .4 0 20
Fleet Hall Wednesday In the Wednesday, saying he wants helping Detroit whip Seattle Bgslon 105 Buffalo 95
Pllfsburgh
5 4 1 11
troit 124 Sealtle 107
featured ninth race at to devote more tline to . and move Into first in the· De
Oe tro il
2 9 l
7
PhJiadelph ia 115 Chicago 8 2
2 11 1
5
New OrieBns 113 Los Angeles Wi'IShington
Thlatledown, running the five running Atlanta 's Indoor NBA Midwest.
Adams Div i sion ,
110
"'
..
sports
arena,
the
Omnl.
ABA
and one-balf furlmgs in 1:06.
W. L~ T. Pts
Thursday 's Games
Flames General Manager Nets !17, Pacers 94
Buffalo
10 2 1 21
The 4-year-old, ridden by
New York at Golden State
Tor onto
7 4 1 l5
Sea
t
He
at
wash
in
gron
Cliff
Fletcher
was
appointed
Julius
Erving
scored
10
of
Gary Cooper, paid $14.?Jl,
Bo ston
s S 2 12
Clev eland at A tl an ta
acting president of the club: his game high 36 points in the
Ca liforn ia
3 9 2
8
~. 20and p , Prince Valentine
Wednesdav's Results
Amencan
Basketball
He
said
he
will
run
the
team
final
six
minutes
to
pace
the
was third.
Buffalo 4 Boston 0
Association Standmgs
Toron to 7 Oeiroit 3
The 1-7-6 IOIIH'ace trlfecta for the rest of the season, then Nets to victory. BiUy Keller
By United Press lnternattonal M on ~ r e a l 3 Atl an ta 1
East
of Cagey &amp;le, Justa Twist and meet with the Flames' had 31 for Indiana.
st Lou is .t Mm nesO ta 1
W l. Pet. G. B. Ph i
1a 4 Chicago 4
CaUota provided the day's management to decide Salls 118, Squires 104
Ke ntu cky
o4
1 .800
3 We sh ington I
Bob Warren scored 20 New Yor k
5 2 .1 14 largest payoff, f87Ul. The 7- whether he can continue his
3 Ca l ifornia 2
1'2
Sl.
Louis
.5
3
625
NY Islanders 6
1 dally double of Happy dual responsibilities of points as the Sails spoiled the Vi r q in1a
1 7 125 .4 17
Tli"'~,j,;;.; Games
general
manager
aD(I
club
debut
of
Mac
Calvin,
who
West
Money and Lark of the Irish
I
I i
W L. Pet. G. B.
president.
replaced fired AI Bianchi as In diana
returned $39.80.
4 2 .607
interim Squires ' pilot Denv er
4 2 66 7
an Anton io
· 4 3 57 1
'2
Tuesday. Virginia's Ticky SSan
Diego
3 5 37 5 2
Burden led all scorers with Utah
I
6 . 143 3 1 1
. Wedn esday's Results
Tire Prices
40.
New York 119 Indi an a 102
Spurs 121, Stars 117
San An ton io 121 Utah 117
Denver 111 Sl . Louls 98
In the Area
Mike
Gale
and
James
Silas
the Benga~, who are &amp;-1.
Sa n Diego 118 VIrg inia 104
80 yards in 10 plays- eight of
hit
a
pair
of
free
throws
each
Thursday's Game
. Joining Current on the them on the ground- and
Denv er at Utah
It's
sidelines this week are scored a touchdown to take a In the flnal10 seconds to save
running back Otis Arm- 17-7lead. Current returned on San Antonio's win over Utah. World H 0 C k e y ASSOCiation
strong, cornerback Calvin the
Standings
next
poasesslon, Nuggell 111, Spiriis 98
By United Pren International
Dan lase! scored 33 points
Jones, defensive tackle however.
East
Barney
Chavous
and · "Marv Is a proven veteran to put the Nuggets (4-2) Into a
W. L. T. Pts
6 3 0 12
Cinc innati
first
place
tie
In
the
ABA
west
linebacker Ray May.
and has shown us that he Is
773-5881
5 4 I
II
New Eng land
Muon , w. Y•.
with
Indiana.
Ralph
Simpson
Joe Rizzo, a second-year recovered," said Ralston.
4 l 1
9
Clev eland
man from the Merchant "He Is an exceptional blocker had 25 points from Denver
Marine Academy, wiU start and along with his size he has which broke a five-game
DR~
Spirits' winning streak.
at May's outside linebacker excellent speed."

Duke reprimands .Bo
CHICAGO ( UPI)
Michigan football Coach Bo
Schembechler was unhappy.
"There was Incompetence
all around us out there
today~nd I'm not talking
about
the
players,"
Schembechler told sportswrl ters Saturday after his
Wolverine!! edged Minnesota
28-21.
The broadside at the
game's officiating made Big
Ten Commlasloner Wayne
Duke unhappy.
Duke Wednesday night
publicly reprimanded
Schembechler. under the
conference's "sportsmanlike
conduct" code for castigating
the officials.
Under the code, If Schembechler Is reprimanded a
second tlme.he wiU be subject'
to a one-f!ame suspension. .
It was Duke's third public'
reprimand since the code wa8
adopted a year ago to curtail
what Duke caUed "a series of
Isolated incidents and trends
which have been reflected
unfavorably throughout
lntercoUeglate athletics." '
Both Ohio State Coach
WOQdy Hayes and 1llllnola
Coach Bob Blackman were
reprimanded last year. ·'
"If the basic tenets of soWld
sportsmanship embodied IQ
this code al-e to be achieved,
the ·code must be ad·
ministered and accepted by
aU parties," Duke said In
reprimanding Schembeehler.
Mlnn~ta Coach Cal Stoll
had demanded that Schf11!·
bechler he reprimanded for
hl8 comments about Satur:

Today's

r------------,
I Pro I
!Standin~s

!

-

Injuries· hit Bronco camp
By I'RACY RINOOLBBY

UPI Sports Wrker
DENVER &lt;UPI) - Marv
Montgomery, who missed
last season with a broken leg
and knee Injury, wW start at
right tackle for the · Denver
Bronc011 in Sunday's game
against Cincinnati, Bronco
coach John Ralston Bllld
Wednesday.
Mike Curr,mt, who has
started 105 consecutive
P'l\!!S,for Denver, suffered a
knf!11 Injury In last week's 4217 to Oakland and was to go
Into the hospital today. If
surgery Is needed It wiU be
performed at that tllile.
"And Hwe lose Mike for the
season you can bet we'U have
sOmebody elae In camp by
Friday," aald Ralaton. "We
can't afford many more
holes."
The Broncos, 3-4, have flve
players on Injured rejl8rve.
Five members of thF fS..
man r011ter also are ~ged
up rule! unable to play against

BEND
nRE CENTER

spot.

CL.EANING
SPECIAL

.

Montgomery broke hl8 leg
In Denver's win at Plttaburgh

in 1973 and Wlderwent a bone
graft. He did not play until
the middle of last season and,
shortly after hl8 return, the 88, 25$-)loWlder from Southern
California suffered a knee
injury and had a cartilage
operation.
Montgomery got , his ,first
test this year when Current
got hurt on the opening
poiaesslon of the second half
against Oakland. With
Montgomery provlllng key
blocks, the Broocos marched
lj

REMODEUNG
NEEDS

With 4 lbs. of

DRY CLEANING

-fUU LINE-

VALLEY
LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CO.
Middleport
Ohio

USE ONE TOP LOAD
WASHER

FREE

NOV. 5 thru 7

KING'S LAUNDROMAT
2nd St.

Ph. 773-5611

Mason, W. Va.

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,Thursday, Nov. 6, 1975

4 ""':" The Da.ilYSentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 6, 1p75

:i~:~:~;~:~:~i:;;i;~;~if~~~j~il~~~~~l~:~:~:~:~;~1~~i1~~i=~=~:i:;:i;~;~:~;i:;:~:i:~:~:i:r~~;~=~t=~=~;~;~:~~~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~~~:~:I:~;~:~:~:~:~:~=~=i

Boos for Rockefeller kept
up until he quit for good

WASHINGtON (UPI) The president of the National
Education Association
warned today a recent rash.of
160 teachers' strikes was only
the beginning of teacher
unrest unless Congress gives
public employes the right to
stri.ke.
John Ryor, in testimony

coming in gas hi11ings

Braves will line up in '76. He
and general manager Eddie
Robinson are looking for
some trades- although he
notes "too many people want
to give you a bluejay for a
turkey." And be wants to look
at farmhands Robinson insists are "good prospects but
lllat doesn't mean any of
those kids are ready to step
into a Braves uniform next
season.''
Bristol's former players
generaIIY agree that he is a
sound baseball mariager • one
who knows the game and
knows how to get the most out
of his players.
The Georgia native who
raises quarter horses in
North Carolina in the off
season, started managing
when he was only 24 years old
and had nine years of minor
league managln« experience
when he took over at Cincinnati In mid-l966.
He took the Reds from
seventh In '66 to third Iii ,69
(the year the Braves won the
National League West), but
was dumped in favor of
Sparky Anderaon.
Bri~tol toot that firing
pretty hard because he
believed, and was hiler
proven correct, that the Reds
were about to become one of
the dominant teams In
baseball. But he had no time
to brood because he almost
Immediately was named
manager
at
SeattleMilwaukee.
The Brewers finished fifth·
si~ their first two sea50ns
and were sixth (last) again in
1970 when Bristol was
replaced by Del Crandall
after SO games. (The Brewers
were llfth lbiJ past season ·
and Crandall got the axe.)
Bristol, a coach the past
three seasono at Montreal,
said he really wanted to get
back into managing ''after a
three year sabbatical."
"Being a Southern boy, the
Idee of managing Atlanta
really intrigued me," he aald.
"Eddie and I talked It over
just before the ~orld Series
got started.
"U I didn't think I could
turn the Club around, 1
wouldn'tbave taken the job. I
just hope that Eddie won't be
standing up here next year
Iii troducog
I someone else."

L

ot tove eague
•·
k
Start S thIS wee

By RICK VAN SANr
CINCINNATI ( UPI)
Baseball's "Hot Stove
l.Mp"-the cold weather
jawing about the hot weather
IPOI't--ieta off 10 a roaring
start thls weekend.
Several hlmdred of the
lllOIIt fanailc type of fanscollectors of bueball cards
and other memorabilia - are
upected from aroWKI the
country for Cincinnati's
annual "sporta collectors"
convention.
"We'U have more !ban 1
mllllon baaebaU cards aftd
IGnl of other baaebaU~elated
ltuff," says ClndnnaU Reds
publlclat Bob Rathgeber, the
convention organlm- and an
avid card collector.
;•we apeJ:I about 7i or Ill
major dealtr-collectora who
will Bet up booths and another
b 'hard core' collectors. We
aiao weiCIIIIle the general
publJc to Cllllle In and talk •
Utile bueiNIU. We had 1,000
lilt ,_,. and' upect more
IIIia year."
Bill 1M public should be
aware
many
dealer·
I

.r

'

collectors take their hobby
very seriously and. some
baseball cards are considered worth hundreds of
dollars.
"And the famous Honus
.Wagner cllrd l.s probably
worth more than ,1,000,"
adds Rathgeber. "It was one
of 523 In a set Issued by a

Energy conservation will
be encouraged by special
messages printed on bills
sent to residential and small,
non-curtailed commercial
customers this winter, including a notice advising
customers who use more gas
this year than they did during
the ilame period last year,
Colwnbia Gas Inc.
The notice, which will begin
appearing on customer bills
about mid-November, will
say: "Current Usage is
greater than same period last
year. Please conserve ' "
J. M. Koebel, manager for
Colwnbia Gas In the GalliaMelgs area, said customers
tobacco company in 1910. But
Wagner didn't like being
as50clated with tobacco and
his card was taken out of
circulation.
"There's probably only
about 2S or 30 of those cards
in existence and they've got
to be worth at least $1,000
each."
Past conventions have
• prompted big deals over the
little cardboard cards that
started out as novelties
Issued by tobacco and gum
manufacturers.
"There have been people
slttlilg in hotel hallways at 4
a.m. hammering out trades,"
says Rathgeber. " Maybe
they 'll start talking up a deal
Friday night, but won't agree
unlll SWiday ·"
Rathgeber seys be knows of
one conventioneer who will be
trying to find an elusive
program from the lilfamous
~!~~~~~Series "Black Sox
That was when Shoeless
Joe "Say it ain't so, Joe"
Jackson and seven of his
Chicago White Sox teammates were banned from
baseball after being accused
of throwing the series 141 the
Cincinnati Reds.
"The Wbtte Sox edition
from that World Series has
'not shown up," reports
Rathgeber, "and It's considered a hot item."
Dan Dlschley, a New York
City cop and an ambitious
collector, will be here hoplilg
to reach his goal-get a
picture of every Cincinnati
Reds player that ever appeared in a game.
That's thousands of
players, but Dan has pictures
of almost every one.
"Although Dan lives In New
York he's probably one of the
biggest ' Reds
fans
anywhere," says Rathgeber.
"He must have the largest
collection
of
Reds
memorabilia. You name It, If

Its got 'Reds' on it, he's got

lt.~d,of~urse,FrankNagy

will be here from Detroit.
Frank has more Ulan 1
million cardll- believed to be
the
largest
personal
collection Iii the world.
"He's
also
highly
respected," says Rathgeber,
pointing out that quality Is
often more bnportant than
quantity,
The convention at the
Hilton Inn · In suburban
Sharonville Is open from 3
p.m. to. midnight Friday, 9
a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday and
9 a.m. to 3:30p.m. Sunday.

PLAYING NITELY

-

TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY

GEO•.HALL
TUES.-THURS.
8: J0-1:00

prepared for a !louse .subcommittee, ca lled on
Congress to place public
employes and employers
under the {0-year-i!ld
National Labor Relations
Act, which established
union
procedures for
organizing and contra ct
negotiations in the private

Conservation messages

Players must do
the job--Bristol

'H · s

Congress warned teachers want strike rights

FRI . &amp;SAT.
1:30·2: 00

The MEIGS INN
Best In
Live Entertainment

whose usage is not greater
than last year will also
receive

a

conserv ation
message on their bills. It will

read, "Save gas. Save jobs.
Please turn your thermostat
down to 67 degrees."
Koebel said printing
messages on customer bills is
a continuation of Colwnbia's
campaign to promote energy
co nservation
by
its
residential and small commercial customers and
thereby make additional gas
available for large industrial
and commercial customers
that are facing severe curtailment this winter.
" We
believe
that
residential and small c.ommercial customers should
hear some of the burden of
the growing natural gas
supply shortage to help ease
the
curtailment
load
currently being shouldered
by he large volwne industrial
and commercial customers
Koebel said. "By saving gas,
they can help save job,s."
"Columbia has numerous
gas development programs
underway, but all are far
behind schedule because of
regulatory
and
environmental delays. Until
Ihese ' new supplies become
available, conservation will
enable us all to get the
maximum benefit from
present, limited natural gas
supplies," he added.
1 ''

sector.
"Public employers can't
have it both ways. They can't
... refuse to bargain and then
impale public employes because they strike after being
goaded Into extreme action ,"
Ryor said .
He ~•ked for machinery to
resolve impasses ·between
public employers and employes, including mediation,
fact-finding, a union option
for binding fact..finding and
the right to' strike. ·A .trike,

he said, could be enjoined by
a federal court where it
threatened public health. or
safety.
Ryor said recent teachers
strikes and other public employe disputes were caused
by local ano state governments who have "have
turned deaf ears to employe
concerns."
"What we have seen
recently in strikes · and
slowdowns by public em-

More input is wanted
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. The town of New Haven will
hold its . second public
mee ting on Community
Development at I p.m.
Saturday in the City Building.
Mayor Charles Slnith invites New Haven citizens tO
attend to learn what the
Council proposes to submit to
the Department of Housing
and Urban Development.
An application has been
prepared, based on the
results of last week's meeting
that will be reviewed before it
is submitted. Citizens will
have the opportunity to
recommend changes.
The followin g activities
may be undertaken to aid in
the prevention or elimination
of slwns or blight or to meet
urgen t community
dev elo pment needs :
Acquisition of real property
for public community
development purposes;
acquisition, construction or
installation of public works,
facilities, and site or other
improvemen ts; code enforcement in deteriQrated or
deteriorating areas;
Clearance, demolition ,
removal, and rehabilitation
of buildi'ngs and improvements; special projects
\O facilitate mobility and
accessibility of elderly and
handicapped
persons;
relocation payments and

The M-G-M Dtslnct, Boy an one to i· k h
Scouts of America needs B/ S
a e c arge of a
·adult volunteers
'
Y cou1 Troop when the
• "Cub Seoul p~ k dB . boys progress from the Cub
Scout Troops thr~u~~~ut t~~ prog;a~ . 11~eadership is not secure a lroop leader have
M-G-M District need adult a~al a e, 1 ese Cub Scouts been unsuccessful so these
leadership, whether it be as wtll .:,~. faclfngh the strong boys may not be able to enjoy
an assistant or as the ' poss:. 11 Y 0 avm~ thetr the cam ping and hiking that
leader " sal'd R H
scou mg program cut short," goes with socuting
. . '
oy orn, . be said.
·
·
district executive in Mason
Horn
stressed
th at
1n another area, there are volunteers also are needed
Gallia and Me;•s Count!' '
to
..,
es.
"We have areas where we
have been unable to find

Local BOwling

Ryor ~aid a federal Su1&gt;1&gt;ort l,;l!llter
collective bargaining law
might curtail many, but not
'" NEW HOURS
all, strikes. "The right to .
.....
~"8
; 30io8 :3 0 Daily
bargain is .much more than
1J: 00 lp 4: 00 Sunday
merely the right to strike,"
. "'
he said. "With the right to
bargain goes .IJ1e responThebes~ place ,to look
slbtlity to exercise good faith,
for. it is at DUTTONS,
restraint and reason."
wl1ere you always
feel at home with low
Pet clinic will
prices.

Oct. :u , 197 5
Standings
Team
Fa rm ers Bank

46

Ben-Tom
Royal Crown

.45
38

Ha ley 's Ceramics
33
Ev elyn 's Groceries
32
King Bu i lders
22
High Ind . Ga me - Marlene

Wilson , 201, Flossie Ma&gt;eson
179 .

High Se ri es Flossie
Maxson 53.4, Marlene Wilson
50 I.
Team High GarTie - Ben

Tom 919 .

Team High Seri es Tom 2644 .

Ben

WED. EARLY BIRD
Oct. 29, lt75
Stand ings
Team
Farmers Ba nk

52
Ben-Tom
47
Roval Crown
.:14
Evelyn 's Grocerv
38
Hal ey's Ceram lcs
35
Kings Builders
24
H lg h Ind . Game
Mary
Voss 188, Floss ie Ma xson 188.
High Series - Mary voss
542 , Ellen Rough! 502 .
T eam Hig h Geme
Farme rs Bank 932 .

Team High Se rie s
Farme r s Bank 2668 .

DUTTON
Drug Co.
"Your
Prescription
Druq Ston~"

992-31Uti
Middleport, U.

MUSK COLOGNE:

TRY

MUSK AFfER SHAVE.

Musk Cologne for Men
from English Leather is so
fie rcely masculine It's
called the missing li nk
between animal and man .
So beta% you use It,
maybe you want something
a little less pri mitive. So
we suggest you tir$1 try
their Musk After Shave.

.'

'

Also fiercely masculine,
Passionate, Sensuous.
But you can splash on a
few drops each morning
without awakening the
entire animal.
Justenoughtotetouta
little grrr.
AFTER SHAVE

~urgeons, and the Armed
forces Society of Military
Ophthalmologists. He is also
a Fellow in the American
Academy of Ophthabnology
and Otolaryngology.
Dr. Sheridan , his wife
Barbara and their six
children have moved to the
Gallipolis area.

Etather,

2 oz.

$2.75

Or, IF YOU 'RE READY .. .

MUSK COLOGNE
FOR MEN
oz. $3.50

. ..

TONIGHT
THURS., NOV. 6

lltE O.U. KARATE

a.ua

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charlts RIHlt, R. Ph.
Open Daily I:DOa.. in.to9:30 p.ni.
Sundty tO : lD to 12: JOandSto9 p.m.

Will pres~nl 1 FREE
demonstrational the M.lgs
Jr. High Building (Middleport) beginning at 7:00

PRESCRIPTIONS .
PH. 992-2955 l
Friendly Service
)

j

!2. !:~~.·~- -~.---..!~!~:2:J •:

p.m. '

Public Invited

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT. STORE
TERRY DISH
nMELS

BASKETMJ. SHOES Meigs Marauder
••
Sweat
Shirts
Gold, Blue
Black

Reg .
$5.95

BAGS

Blue, Ton,

Green .

.'3.99

.Permanent
Press
. .

TERRY TRAiNING
PANTS

OUting Rannel

While or
Pastels

45 Inches Wldt

Rtt. 11.19

. 2 Pi-.
'1.00

Sale 11.22
PRINTI;D

STONESWEAR FOR GIRLS ·
'

SlACK SETS

Sills 7-14
SlACKS '5A9
... ..

......

2T-t'r '3.98 •',,49
'4.95 - 18.95
TOPS '3.98

.•.•,

Mike Pomeroy Your Shopping Center·
200-202 ,EIIt Main St. ·

POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURD~&lt;Y NIGHTS

Count-v, Pomero-v.

•

DENIM SHOULDER

Fall Bu lbs 'For
Spring Blooms

····-·-

· We Accept
BankAmericard

.

Junior Big Tops ·
'7.95 . '9.95

*

f'lOTICE OF
PUBLICATION
To : George Deem , Jr .•
'whose lut known reSidence
was East LiverpooL ·Ohio
.4~920; Franklin O' Neil , whose
last known residence was Old
Pittsburgh Road, Rochester,
Pennsylvania 15074 ; Hobert
Icenhower, whose last known
residence was 116 Pacolot
•Dr ive , Gaffney, S. c. 293AO;
William lcen"ower , whose
last known residence was R
F . D., Wendy Dr ive. Baltic '
Conn . 06330 ; Jerry Icenhower:
Whose last known resid ence
was· 5430 Cloverly Avenue.
Temple Clly , Colltorn lo 91780;
'JO . Ann Conard, whose lest
known residence WIS Route l ,
Croton, Ohio 43013 ; Mory Jo
· Mock, whose last known
' res idence wu 10535 Rose
'Avenue, Apt. 11, Los Angeles.
California ; · end the unknown
heirs and dev isees of Martha
O'NeiL clecnsed:
'. You are hereby notified thai
you have been named
defendants In a legal action
entitled Garnet E. Johnson , et
al ., plaintiffs, VI . Edna
Stlroads, et at ., defendants
Th is action hu been ass igned
Cue Number 15,687 , and Is
P-:encUng In the Court of
Common
Pleu ,
Me igs

WORK YOUR WAY UP
TO Inglish leather

Continues
Storewide

Christmas Cards
On Sale
Box &amp; Bulk

1

said.

POMEROY BOWLING
LANES
WED. EARLY BIRD

Assorted Prints.

Many Items On
Sale for
DlrislmE!

AND SURGICAL

PT. PLEASANT - The
Mason County · Humane
Society and all 4-H Clubs In
Mason County will sponsor a
pet vaccination and birih
control clinic Saturday at the
Point Pleasant High School.
William E. Johnson,
D.V.M: will conduct the
· clinic. Special requests have
been made that all pet owners
have their pels on leashes or
under pet control. The hours
will be from 9 a.m. to II a.m.

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT SfORE

.'

Ohio

School tax issues were 39.2 at bat
COLUMRUS

OPEN FRIDAY AND SAlURDAY nL 8:00

(101.16. 23. )0 (1116. 13. 20. 61t
II

~nvirunmt!nl.

UPI -

The sc hool con stru ction bond and Lorain 6.2 mills. In
Youngstown, vo~ers okayed a
issues on the ballot.
f&gt;
In
perrrHwenl
im- .7 renewal after rejecting a

assistan I ~ and som'e rheetlngs
have had to be postponed
when a den mother was ill.
Most seoul ing programs
are based on a one-a-week
mee ting. These meetings are
usually two hours or less ·in

wuuld like tu invest a couple
of hours a week to help mold a
young boy's life, call Horn
collect at Poinl Pleasant, 6753581. He will be happy to meet
anyone a.! any lime or place.

,,,.,

. FREE' ;.·,, .• .

........~

IN EVElY ,'
lAG

'If&gt;

per cent , one of the lowes t on
record.
The OEA said only 23.1 per
cent of the requesb for addit iona l operating millage
were approved; voters apcent of the

provement le vi es, voter s similar proposal in June.
approved :14.3 per cent of the Vot ers in the Yol\flgstow n
issues whi le all 46 renewals of suburb of Campbell turned
existing millage for schOol down an additional 5.9 mill

operations were passed.
Some of the large levy
losses included Toledo, 7.5
mills ; Cleveland Height sUniversity Heights, 6.9 mills

PALMOLIVE
.
..

JIF
PEANUT
B\mER

TIDE

LIQUID

49 oz.

t Gal.

tax request.
The Campbell Board of
Education had requested a
slate audit to see If schools
would close this year.

For
Automatic
Dishwashers

22 oz .

35 oz.

40 oz.
2 lb- Bag

H769

Thoobtecl of lhe Complaint Is
. to partition the following
described real estate, to ·wlt:
.. Situate In Lebanon Town - 1
Ship , Melgl County. Ohio ,
being a part of · Fraction A, 1
Section 14, Town 3, Range 11 ,
Ohio Company's Purchase,
bou.nded and described as
follows : Beginning at the
aouthwnt tOI\.ner of said
s,ec11on ; thence "orth on uld
,sec lion line 88 rods to a rock
from which 1 chestnut oak 20
Inches bears south 74 lfJ
ttegree1 east 15 h feet ; thence
,asl , 69 rods and 23 links ;
tllente soulh 88 rods ro soulh
line of seld section ; thence
wostlo the plate of beginning,
containing 381fJ acres, more or
leu .
AIIO lhe following real
estate situated In lhe town .
ship, county and state abO~e
mentioned , 1nd In Fraction A,
Secllon 14, Town 3, Renge 11 ,
Lp t 166, Ohio Company '•
1P.urchase, end described as
follotfs : ·Beginning a• 1 polnl
01' the soulh llne of sold lol , 58
1rl6 rods west of the southeast
corner of said lot ; thence weat
on south line of said lot to the
sou theul corner of land
htretofore deeded to ThomJiS
.Gorrell by R. o. Mlddleswarl ;
thenct north to Slid Gorrell's
I')Ortheast corner ; thence east
to a polnl Sl1 ·16 rod&amp; wut of
the east line of said lot; thtnce
SOU1n IO Ihe DIICt Of bt~lnn lng
end containing 3 ecres, more
'!" leu.
.
- ~, Also the following real
estate situated In the town ~
ship, county , state and
fr-acllon . section. town. range
•tnd lot abO~t mentlontd , and
In Ohio Corrtp8ny's Purchase.
end described as follows :
.eeglnnlng al 1 polnl on lhe
rtouth line of said Lot 166, .. 3
·rods and 12 links west of the
southeasl corner of said lot at
a stone: thence west U rods
and 13 7-11 links to a stone;
thence north 18 rods; thence
east u rods end 13 7-1111nkl lo
·• · stont : thence south 8B rods
lo th~ place of beginning,
•containing 8 acres, and Joining
land heretofore deeded to
lhom as Gorrell by R. C.
Mlddleswart and wlft and
recorded December 2-4, 189-C In
Detd Book 71. Pagn SIS and
!86.
' AI!.O the following real
'Hille situated In tt,e town ·
ship. county and state above
.mentioned, and bounded as
•follows : Beginning at lh~
$0Uiheast corner of Lot 166 :
thence wnt to Thomas
Gorrell's east line ; I hence
north with 11id Thomas
Gorrell's east line to a nne
qmn lng west from Henderaon
P,rlce's northwesl corner ;
lhence east to said Henderson
Price 's northwesl corner :
thence south along line of said
Lot 166 to the pllct of
beginning . 8e lng In Sec lion lot,
Range 11 , Town J , and belno a
part of Fraction A, and con ·
'talnlng 24 ecres, more or less.
Also the following dtlcrlbed
real 11tete 'situated In the
'Township of Lebtnon. County
of Mtlgs and Slate of Oh io.
&lt;btlng In Section 13, Town 3,
R1noo 11. Lor 166, of lho Ohio
Comptnv's Purcheu , and
mort tully dttcrlbtd as
.follows : Commencing at A. H .
Prlc~·· and R. W. Connell'•
southeast corner , runn ing
west 10 feet ; thence north tnt
20 teet to tht north and south
lint of R . w. Connell '• farm;
thence south 20 teet to the
pltce ot btOinntng, c01"1!nlng
one rod of ground, more or
lets . The 1ame to be an outlet
between two ptrcels of lend
owned by the uld Thomas
Gorrell .
· Al10 lht following de•cr lbtd
real tslat 0 , lltUIIed ln lhe
Townsntp, CoUiliY , 1nd Stote'
above
mentioned . end
boundod and dt1crlbod n
follows: Being In Lots 142 and
U3, Stctlonll4and 15, Town 3,
lillnOt 11, of lho Ohio Com ·
p1ny'1 Purchue. Beginning
1t Richard" Haddox 's soulh ·
WHt corner , thtnce north
about 1 rods; thence west to
.lohn W. Haddo"' 'I corner ;
'1htnctaouth with road abOut 7
roda; thenc~ •o lht place of
btQtnnlng 1 contalnlno 2 acru ,
more or 1111.
·
h You are requlrtd 10 ensw11r
wllhln 21 day&amp; 11ter tnt tu•
' public IliOn ot noll co, wto lch
will be publllntd onct each
Wtfk for SIX IUCCaUIV. W~tkl,
' bflllnnlng Thurlldly. Oclobtr
h 16, 1975, Tnt lUI puDI ICallon
will bt madt on November 20,
1975. and •lhe 21 days tor In ·
1wtr will commence on that
dele . In cell of your failure.
' or otherwise. to - resDOnd 11
requited by lht OhiO Rule&amp; of
Civil Procodure. tudgmtnl bY
dtfault wlll be renderod
191lnst vou for the relief
demtnded In tnt claim.
LtrfY Sptnctl
Cltrk of Court1
Meigs Counly
Con,mon Pitas Court.

(

lwalttzy, ti1aractcr building

Mcmy "f the Ohio Education Association
'
.
scou ls lurn out 1.(1 be the
said Tuesday that Ohio voters
e~ough interested boys of Boy be aclivc in !he Cub &amp;uu1
SCou t a~e who want to start a program generally. Many comm unity leaders &lt;IS they ,approved only 89 school tax,
new troop. But attempts to · den mothers do nol have grow older.
issues out of 227 on the ballot
If men and women here for ~n approval mark of 39 .2

PRESCRIPTION

run Saturday

assistance and financing of
related activities; provisions
of public services not
otherwise available in areas
in which other community
development activities are to
be undertake ; and other
related planning , developmen!, and administrative
activities.

Second ophthalmQlogist'
comes to .hospital staff
A second ophthalmolo~lst, During this ·period, he
Edward J. Sheridan, M.D., completed the Ophthalmic
has been appointed to the Pathology Course at the Air
Holzer Clinic.
Force
Hospital
in
A native of Iron Mountain, Washington, D. C.
Mich., Dr. Sheridan comes to
For two years, Dr .
the clinic fr om Wrigh t- Sheridan was Chief of
Patterson Air Force Base, Aerospace Medicine, Chief
Dayton, where he was Chief Public Health Officer, and
of the Ophthalmology Service Chief Occupational Health
Section 'since August, 1972. Officer at Sembach Air Force
Clinic Administrator Base in Germany.
Robert E. Daniel said Dr. · He is certified by the
Sheridan received his American
Board
of
bachelor's degree from the Ophthalmology, and is a
College of Wooster in Ohio, member of the American
and his M.D. degree from the Medical Association, the
School of Medicine at the American Academy of
University of Rochester in Ophthalmology
and
Rochester, N. Y. He com- Otolaryngology, the Air
pleted his Internship and Force Society of Clinical
residency in general surgery
at Rochester 's Genesee
Hospital.
In 1965, Dr . Sheridan
GOODTURNOUT
completed a primary course
GRAEAGLE, Calif. (UPI)
in Aerospace Medicine at - Residents of this Sierra
Brooks Air Force Base in 1 Nevada community can boast
Texas. From 1967-71, he did •·of a 100 per cent voter turnresidency and research in out. All eight voters went to
ophthalmology at the Strong the polls Tuesday, and apMemprlal Hospital and proved a $1 maximum tax
University of Rochester.' rate on a S-3 tally.

ployes is only a hirlt of what
m.ay well . happen unless
access to eqUity is provided to
these employes by law," he

durnlinn and offer 1he !Joys a

MGM .Scouting needs adult help

. '

By CLAY F. RICHARDS
WASH~GfON tUPII - . Vice President Nelson
R«H!keltller wal dwllped from the 1'76 Republltan tltket,
not by PrtlldeDI Ford directly, but by the same elemepll
In the GOP that booed him off the stage In the 11184 national
conveatlon.
,
R«H!kefeller'• decllloo. was entirely his own, close
lrleod1 slid, but II came at a lime when he realized that
100oer or later he very well might be asked by Ford to
step 11lde lor the good of the President's chances In 19'11.
In addllloo 141 political realities - the hatred
R«H!kefeller Inspired among ~noervatlvea - personal
reuon1. 1110 C81De Into play.
A yo11111er R«H!kefeller never would have given up 10
eallly, aeveral frleadll aald. But at 87, with his life-long
dream of bec~mlog president gone, Rockefeller aat down,
analyaed the plusea aad minuses and concluded: "Who
need• II?"

ATLANTA (UPI) - Dave
Bristol believes in telllilg it
like It II.
No beating aroWid the bush
for lhe new manager of the
Atlanta Bravea. No looking
· for an easy out when the
questlona get tough.
Brlltol knows he has an
a1moat lnaurmoWitable task
In trying to turn lfOWid a
baeebaU team that flnla.hed to
games behind last aeaaon.
And,~ knows that no matter
how hard he works at It, It's
ltill the players th~lves
who must get the job done.
With this ln. miOO, the
Braves better . prepare
themMlves for 110me long,
hard sessl9ns when they
report to camp in the spring.
"I'm goln« to harp on being
In llhlpe," aald Brlltol who
looka, at 42, better than a lot
of blaeblll players 10-15
· Ytlll bla jWIIor. "We'll come
home with 25 men who want
to play."
Brlatol, who previously
managed at Cincinnati (11186ft) and Mllwiiakee (18'10-72),
Mid the line oo the Braves
thls put seaaon, while he was
coaching at Montreal, was:
"We felt If we could get
ahead .of Atlanta we could
beat ihem because they
didn't aeem to nave the drive
they had abown in the past."
Thll Ia the one thin« that
bothera Brlatol moet about
his new team.
"You see Pete Rose
making blmaelf I 1150,000
player with husUe. I can't
underatand why others can't
do that."
Dave Brlatol was a Roletype hustler but he spent
all 11 of his 'yeara u a
player In the minora.
But Brlatolls talldng aboul
playera with major-league
talent who don't live up to
their potential and he pinpointed
Braves
third
blaemari Darrell Evans.
Evans haa been conllldered
me of Atlanta's moat 1118tllng
playera, but he led the Braves
in errora taal season and
batted only .243.
"Who knows?" ' asked
Brlatol. "If Darrell Evano
gets into abape, he might be a
better ball player than he was
taal year. No one can do his
job as well with a 15-poWid
Ure around his middle."
Brl.stol bas no idea how the

•

LUDEN'S

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
Adds, subtracts, multiplies and
divides instantly. Percent key
allows easy calculation of taxes,
discounts , m1rk-ups and ratios

expressed

as

.ELITE

CHOCOlATE COVERED

percentiges.

CHERRIES

Automatic constant in all five
funtllons . Easy - to - r~ad , 8-digil
dlsplly shows negative sign, all
numerals and calculllion overflow
Indication. · Easy. ta.aperate .
Operates from 9 volt battery (not
lncludad) . Solid slate components.

NELSON'S

REG. PRICE

10 oz.

19.95
ASK ABOUT OUR LAYAWAY PLAN
1

••

LlnLE MAC

DAISY
, BY
BISSEll

Hamilton Beach Little Mac
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The only fast cooker that
flips its grid. Cooks round
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NELSON'S REG.
PRICE 119.95

77

$

NELSON'S

$ 95

REG. PRICE

YAWAY NOWI
CHILTON

30 CUP BANOUD

COFFEEMAKER

TUCO
TRIPL·THICK PUZZLES

89~

~cups of dellicloiu

party or buffet. Choose from poppy
oranae. parsley green, or lemon yellow.

'VL APPIOVID
· NElSON'S
REG.
PRI.C I 515.99
. .

$1241
'

BUTTER UP

BEAR AND SQUIRREL
BANKS

CORN POPPER
hum•r.•d
• Makr' hut

pnpc:nrn a1

49~

DOMINO

h 11 ft1 c

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Or:~njt\' , l,ar\1\-~ Gn.·"·n_
nr ll'nllln Vl.' llu\\

VL AIPIOVID

.,

DOOBLE 6's
REG. 11.95

$.

169

77~ ·

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,Thursday, Nov. 6, 1975

4 ""':" The Da.ilYSentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 6, 1p75

:i~:~:~;~:~:~i:;;i;~;~if~~~j~il~~~~~l~:~:~:~:~;~1~~i1~~i=~=~:i:;:i;~;~:~;i:;:~:i:~:~:i:r~~;~=~t=~=~;~;~:~~~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~~~:~:I:~;~:~:~:~:~:~=~=i

Boos for Rockefeller kept
up until he quit for good

WASHINGtON (UPI) The president of the National
Education Association
warned today a recent rash.of
160 teachers' strikes was only
the beginning of teacher
unrest unless Congress gives
public employes the right to
stri.ke.
John Ryor, in testimony

coming in gas hi11ings

Braves will line up in '76. He
and general manager Eddie
Robinson are looking for
some trades- although he
notes "too many people want
to give you a bluejay for a
turkey." And be wants to look
at farmhands Robinson insists are "good prospects but
lllat doesn't mean any of
those kids are ready to step
into a Braves uniform next
season.''
Bristol's former players
generaIIY agree that he is a
sound baseball mariager • one
who knows the game and
knows how to get the most out
of his players.
The Georgia native who
raises quarter horses in
North Carolina in the off
season, started managing
when he was only 24 years old
and had nine years of minor
league managln« experience
when he took over at Cincinnati In mid-l966.
He took the Reds from
seventh In '66 to third Iii ,69
(the year the Braves won the
National League West), but
was dumped in favor of
Sparky Anderaon.
Bri~tol toot that firing
pretty hard because he
believed, and was hiler
proven correct, that the Reds
were about to become one of
the dominant teams In
baseball. But he had no time
to brood because he almost
Immediately was named
manager
at
SeattleMilwaukee.
The Brewers finished fifth·
si~ their first two sea50ns
and were sixth (last) again in
1970 when Bristol was
replaced by Del Crandall
after SO games. (The Brewers
were llfth lbiJ past season ·
and Crandall got the axe.)
Bristol, a coach the past
three seasono at Montreal,
said he really wanted to get
back into managing ''after a
three year sabbatical."
"Being a Southern boy, the
Idee of managing Atlanta
really intrigued me," he aald.
"Eddie and I talked It over
just before the ~orld Series
got started.
"U I didn't think I could
turn the Club around, 1
wouldn'tbave taken the job. I
just hope that Eddie won't be
standing up here next year
Iii troducog
I someone else."

L

ot tove eague
•·
k
Start S thIS wee

By RICK VAN SANr
CINCINNATI ( UPI)
Baseball's "Hot Stove
l.Mp"-the cold weather
jawing about the hot weather
IPOI't--ieta off 10 a roaring
start thls weekend.
Several hlmdred of the
lllOIIt fanailc type of fanscollectors of bueball cards
and other memorabilia - are
upected from aroWKI the
country for Cincinnati's
annual "sporta collectors"
convention.
"We'U have more !ban 1
mllllon baaebaU cards aftd
IGnl of other baaebaU~elated
ltuff," says ClndnnaU Reds
publlclat Bob Rathgeber, the
convention organlm- and an
avid card collector.
;•we apeJ:I about 7i or Ill
major dealtr-collectora who
will Bet up booths and another
b 'hard core' collectors. We
aiao weiCIIIIle the general
publJc to Cllllle In and talk •
Utile bueiNIU. We had 1,000
lilt ,_,. and' upect more
IIIia year."
Bill 1M public should be
aware
many
dealer·
I

.r

'

collectors take their hobby
very seriously and. some
baseball cards are considered worth hundreds of
dollars.
"And the famous Honus
.Wagner cllrd l.s probably
worth more than ,1,000,"
adds Rathgeber. "It was one
of 523 In a set Issued by a

Energy conservation will
be encouraged by special
messages printed on bills
sent to residential and small,
non-curtailed commercial
customers this winter, including a notice advising
customers who use more gas
this year than they did during
the ilame period last year,
Colwnbia Gas Inc.
The notice, which will begin
appearing on customer bills
about mid-November, will
say: "Current Usage is
greater than same period last
year. Please conserve ' "
J. M. Koebel, manager for
Colwnbia Gas In the GalliaMelgs area, said customers
tobacco company in 1910. But
Wagner didn't like being
as50clated with tobacco and
his card was taken out of
circulation.
"There's probably only
about 2S or 30 of those cards
in existence and they've got
to be worth at least $1,000
each."
Past conventions have
• prompted big deals over the
little cardboard cards that
started out as novelties
Issued by tobacco and gum
manufacturers.
"There have been people
slttlilg in hotel hallways at 4
a.m. hammering out trades,"
says Rathgeber. " Maybe
they 'll start talking up a deal
Friday night, but won't agree
unlll SWiday ·"
Rathgeber seys be knows of
one conventioneer who will be
trying to find an elusive
program from the lilfamous
~!~~~~~Series "Black Sox
That was when Shoeless
Joe "Say it ain't so, Joe"
Jackson and seven of his
Chicago White Sox teammates were banned from
baseball after being accused
of throwing the series 141 the
Cincinnati Reds.
"The Wbtte Sox edition
from that World Series has
'not shown up," reports
Rathgeber, "and It's considered a hot item."
Dan Dlschley, a New York
City cop and an ambitious
collector, will be here hoplilg
to reach his goal-get a
picture of every Cincinnati
Reds player that ever appeared in a game.
That's thousands of
players, but Dan has pictures
of almost every one.
"Although Dan lives In New
York he's probably one of the
biggest ' Reds
fans
anywhere," says Rathgeber.
"He must have the largest
collection
of
Reds
memorabilia. You name It, If

Its got 'Reds' on it, he's got

lt.~d,of~urse,FrankNagy

will be here from Detroit.
Frank has more Ulan 1
million cardll- believed to be
the
largest
personal
collection Iii the world.
"He's
also
highly
respected," says Rathgeber,
pointing out that quality Is
often more bnportant than
quantity,
The convention at the
Hilton Inn · In suburban
Sharonville Is open from 3
p.m. to. midnight Friday, 9
a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday and
9 a.m. to 3:30p.m. Sunday.

PLAYING NITELY

-

TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY

GEO•.HALL
TUES.-THURS.
8: J0-1:00

prepared for a !louse .subcommittee, ca lled on
Congress to place public
employes and employers
under the {0-year-i!ld
National Labor Relations
Act, which established
union
procedures for
organizing and contra ct
negotiations in the private

Conservation messages

Players must do
the job--Bristol

'H · s

Congress warned teachers want strike rights

FRI . &amp;SAT.
1:30·2: 00

The MEIGS INN
Best In
Live Entertainment

whose usage is not greater
than last year will also
receive

a

conserv ation
message on their bills. It will

read, "Save gas. Save jobs.
Please turn your thermostat
down to 67 degrees."
Koebel said printing
messages on customer bills is
a continuation of Colwnbia's
campaign to promote energy
co nservation
by
its
residential and small commercial customers and
thereby make additional gas
available for large industrial
and commercial customers
that are facing severe curtailment this winter.
" We
believe
that
residential and small c.ommercial customers should
hear some of the burden of
the growing natural gas
supply shortage to help ease
the
curtailment
load
currently being shouldered
by he large volwne industrial
and commercial customers
Koebel said. "By saving gas,
they can help save job,s."
"Columbia has numerous
gas development programs
underway, but all are far
behind schedule because of
regulatory
and
environmental delays. Until
Ihese ' new supplies become
available, conservation will
enable us all to get the
maximum benefit from
present, limited natural gas
supplies," he added.
1 ''

sector.
"Public employers can't
have it both ways. They can't
... refuse to bargain and then
impale public employes because they strike after being
goaded Into extreme action ,"
Ryor said .
He ~•ked for machinery to
resolve impasses ·between
public employers and employes, including mediation,
fact-finding, a union option
for binding fact..finding and
the right to' strike. ·A .trike,

he said, could be enjoined by
a federal court where it
threatened public health. or
safety.
Ryor said recent teachers
strikes and other public employe disputes were caused
by local ano state governments who have "have
turned deaf ears to employe
concerns."
"What we have seen
recently in strikes · and
slowdowns by public em-

More input is wanted
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. The town of New Haven will
hold its . second public
mee ting on Community
Development at I p.m.
Saturday in the City Building.
Mayor Charles Slnith invites New Haven citizens tO
attend to learn what the
Council proposes to submit to
the Department of Housing
and Urban Development.
An application has been
prepared, based on the
results of last week's meeting
that will be reviewed before it
is submitted. Citizens will
have the opportunity to
recommend changes.
The followin g activities
may be undertaken to aid in
the prevention or elimination
of slwns or blight or to meet
urgen t community
dev elo pment needs :
Acquisition of real property
for public community
development purposes;
acquisition, construction or
installation of public works,
facilities, and site or other
improvemen ts; code enforcement in deteriQrated or
deteriorating areas;
Clearance, demolition ,
removal, and rehabilitation
of buildi'ngs and improvements; special projects
\O facilitate mobility and
accessibility of elderly and
handicapped
persons;
relocation payments and

The M-G-M Dtslnct, Boy an one to i· k h
Scouts of America needs B/ S
a e c arge of a
·adult volunteers
'
Y cou1 Troop when the
• "Cub Seoul p~ k dB . boys progress from the Cub
Scout Troops thr~u~~~ut t~~ prog;a~ . 11~eadership is not secure a lroop leader have
M-G-M District need adult a~al a e, 1 ese Cub Scouts been unsuccessful so these
leadership, whether it be as wtll .:,~. faclfngh the strong boys may not be able to enjoy
an assistant or as the ' poss:. 11 Y 0 avm~ thetr the cam ping and hiking that
leader " sal'd R H
scou mg program cut short," goes with socuting
. . '
oy orn, . be said.
·
·
district executive in Mason
Horn
stressed
th at
1n another area, there are volunteers also are needed
Gallia and Me;•s Count!' '
to
..,
es.
"We have areas where we
have been unable to find

Local BOwling

Ryor ~aid a federal Su1&gt;1&gt;ort l,;l!llter
collective bargaining law
might curtail many, but not
'" NEW HOURS
all, strikes. "The right to .
.....
~"8
; 30io8 :3 0 Daily
bargain is .much more than
1J: 00 lp 4: 00 Sunday
merely the right to strike,"
. "'
he said. "With the right to
bargain goes .IJ1e responThebes~ place ,to look
slbtlity to exercise good faith,
for. it is at DUTTONS,
restraint and reason."
wl1ere you always
feel at home with low
Pet clinic will
prices.

Oct. :u , 197 5
Standings
Team
Fa rm ers Bank

46

Ben-Tom
Royal Crown

.45
38

Ha ley 's Ceramics
33
Ev elyn 's Groceries
32
King Bu i lders
22
High Ind . Ga me - Marlene

Wilson , 201, Flossie Ma&gt;eson
179 .

High Se ri es Flossie
Maxson 53.4, Marlene Wilson
50 I.
Team High GarTie - Ben

Tom 919 .

Team High Seri es Tom 2644 .

Ben

WED. EARLY BIRD
Oct. 29, lt75
Stand ings
Team
Farmers Ba nk

52
Ben-Tom
47
Roval Crown
.:14
Evelyn 's Grocerv
38
Hal ey's Ceram lcs
35
Kings Builders
24
H lg h Ind . Game
Mary
Voss 188, Floss ie Ma xson 188.
High Series - Mary voss
542 , Ellen Rough! 502 .
T eam Hig h Geme
Farme rs Bank 932 .

Team High Se rie s
Farme r s Bank 2668 .

DUTTON
Drug Co.
"Your
Prescription
Druq Ston~"

992-31Uti
Middleport, U.

MUSK COLOGNE:

TRY

MUSK AFfER SHAVE.

Musk Cologne for Men
from English Leather is so
fie rcely masculine It's
called the missing li nk
between animal and man .
So beta% you use It,
maybe you want something
a little less pri mitive. So
we suggest you tir$1 try
their Musk After Shave.

.'

'

Also fiercely masculine,
Passionate, Sensuous.
But you can splash on a
few drops each morning
without awakening the
entire animal.
Justenoughtotetouta
little grrr.
AFTER SHAVE

~urgeons, and the Armed
forces Society of Military
Ophthalmologists. He is also
a Fellow in the American
Academy of Ophthabnology
and Otolaryngology.
Dr. Sheridan , his wife
Barbara and their six
children have moved to the
Gallipolis area.

Etather,

2 oz.

$2.75

Or, IF YOU 'RE READY .. .

MUSK COLOGNE
FOR MEN
oz. $3.50

. ..

TONIGHT
THURS., NOV. 6

lltE O.U. KARATE

a.ua

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charlts RIHlt, R. Ph.
Open Daily I:DOa.. in.to9:30 p.ni.
Sundty tO : lD to 12: JOandSto9 p.m.

Will pres~nl 1 FREE
demonstrational the M.lgs
Jr. High Building (Middleport) beginning at 7:00

PRESCRIPTIONS .
PH. 992-2955 l
Friendly Service
)

j

!2. !:~~.·~- -~.---..!~!~:2:J •:

p.m. '

Public Invited

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT. STORE
TERRY DISH
nMELS

BASKETMJ. SHOES Meigs Marauder
••
Sweat
Shirts
Gold, Blue
Black

Reg .
$5.95

BAGS

Blue, Ton,

Green .

.'3.99

.Permanent
Press
. .

TERRY TRAiNING
PANTS

OUting Rannel

While or
Pastels

45 Inches Wldt

Rtt. 11.19

. 2 Pi-.
'1.00

Sale 11.22
PRINTI;D

STONESWEAR FOR GIRLS ·
'

SlACK SETS

Sills 7-14
SlACKS '5A9
... ..

......

2T-t'r '3.98 •',,49
'4.95 - 18.95
TOPS '3.98

.•.•,

Mike Pomeroy Your Shopping Center·
200-202 ,EIIt Main St. ·

POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURD~&lt;Y NIGHTS

Count-v, Pomero-v.

•

DENIM SHOULDER

Fall Bu lbs 'For
Spring Blooms

····-·-

· We Accept
BankAmericard

.

Junior Big Tops ·
'7.95 . '9.95

*

f'lOTICE OF
PUBLICATION
To : George Deem , Jr .•
'whose lut known reSidence
was East LiverpooL ·Ohio
.4~920; Franklin O' Neil , whose
last known residence was Old
Pittsburgh Road, Rochester,
Pennsylvania 15074 ; Hobert
Icenhower, whose last known
residence was 116 Pacolot
•Dr ive , Gaffney, S. c. 293AO;
William lcen"ower , whose
last known residence was R
F . D., Wendy Dr ive. Baltic '
Conn . 06330 ; Jerry Icenhower:
Whose last known resid ence
was· 5430 Cloverly Avenue.
Temple Clly , Colltorn lo 91780;
'JO . Ann Conard, whose lest
known residence WIS Route l ,
Croton, Ohio 43013 ; Mory Jo
· Mock, whose last known
' res idence wu 10535 Rose
'Avenue, Apt. 11, Los Angeles.
California ; · end the unknown
heirs and dev isees of Martha
O'NeiL clecnsed:
'. You are hereby notified thai
you have been named
defendants In a legal action
entitled Garnet E. Johnson , et
al ., plaintiffs, VI . Edna
Stlroads, et at ., defendants
Th is action hu been ass igned
Cue Number 15,687 , and Is
P-:encUng In the Court of
Common
Pleu ,
Me igs

WORK YOUR WAY UP
TO Inglish leather

Continues
Storewide

Christmas Cards
On Sale
Box &amp; Bulk

1

said.

POMEROY BOWLING
LANES
WED. EARLY BIRD

Assorted Prints.

Many Items On
Sale for
DlrislmE!

AND SURGICAL

PT. PLEASANT - The
Mason County · Humane
Society and all 4-H Clubs In
Mason County will sponsor a
pet vaccination and birih
control clinic Saturday at the
Point Pleasant High School.
William E. Johnson,
D.V.M: will conduct the
· clinic. Special requests have
been made that all pet owners
have their pels on leashes or
under pet control. The hours
will be from 9 a.m. to II a.m.

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT SfORE

.'

Ohio

School tax issues were 39.2 at bat
COLUMRUS

OPEN FRIDAY AND SAlURDAY nL 8:00

(101.16. 23. )0 (1116. 13. 20. 61t
II

~nvirunmt!nl.

UPI -

The sc hool con stru ction bond and Lorain 6.2 mills. In
Youngstown, vo~ers okayed a
issues on the ballot.
f&gt;
In
perrrHwenl
im- .7 renewal after rejecting a

assistan I ~ and som'e rheetlngs
have had to be postponed
when a den mother was ill.
Most seoul ing programs
are based on a one-a-week
mee ting. These meetings are
usually two hours or less ·in

wuuld like tu invest a couple
of hours a week to help mold a
young boy's life, call Horn
collect at Poinl Pleasant, 6753581. He will be happy to meet
anyone a.! any lime or place.

,,,.,

. FREE' ;.·,, .• .

........~

IN EVElY ,'
lAG

'If&gt;

per cent , one of the lowes t on
record.
The OEA said only 23.1 per
cent of the requesb for addit iona l operating millage
were approved; voters apcent of the

provement le vi es, voter s similar proposal in June.
approved :14.3 per cent of the Vot ers in the Yol\flgstow n
issues whi le all 46 renewals of suburb of Campbell turned
existing millage for schOol down an additional 5.9 mill

operations were passed.
Some of the large levy
losses included Toledo, 7.5
mills ; Cleveland Height sUniversity Heights, 6.9 mills

PALMOLIVE
.
..

JIF
PEANUT
B\mER

TIDE

LIQUID

49 oz.

t Gal.

tax request.
The Campbell Board of
Education had requested a
slate audit to see If schools
would close this year.

For
Automatic
Dishwashers

22 oz .

35 oz.

40 oz.
2 lb- Bag

H769

Thoobtecl of lhe Complaint Is
. to partition the following
described real estate, to ·wlt:
.. Situate In Lebanon Town - 1
Ship , Melgl County. Ohio ,
being a part of · Fraction A, 1
Section 14, Town 3, Range 11 ,
Ohio Company's Purchase,
bou.nded and described as
follows : Beginning at the
aouthwnt tOI\.ner of said
s,ec11on ; thence "orth on uld
,sec lion line 88 rods to a rock
from which 1 chestnut oak 20
Inches bears south 74 lfJ
ttegree1 east 15 h feet ; thence
,asl , 69 rods and 23 links ;
tllente soulh 88 rods ro soulh
line of seld section ; thence
wostlo the plate of beginning,
containing 381fJ acres, more or
leu .
AIIO lhe following real
estate situated In lhe town .
ship, county and state abO~e
mentioned , 1nd In Fraction A,
Secllon 14, Town 3, Renge 11 ,
Lp t 166, Ohio Company '•
1P.urchase, end described as
follotfs : ·Beginning a• 1 polnl
01' the soulh llne of sold lol , 58
1rl6 rods west of the southeast
corner of said lot ; thence weat
on south line of said lot to the
sou theul corner of land
htretofore deeded to ThomJiS
.Gorrell by R. o. Mlddleswarl ;
thenct north to Slid Gorrell's
I')Ortheast corner ; thence east
to a polnl Sl1 ·16 rod&amp; wut of
the east line of said lot; thtnce
SOU1n IO Ihe DIICt Of bt~lnn lng
end containing 3 ecres, more
'!" leu.
.
- ~, Also the following real
estate situated In the town ~
ship, county , state and
fr-acllon . section. town. range
•tnd lot abO~t mentlontd , and
In Ohio Corrtp8ny's Purchase.
end described as follows :
.eeglnnlng al 1 polnl on lhe
rtouth line of said Lot 166, .. 3
·rods and 12 links west of the
southeasl corner of said lot at
a stone: thence west U rods
and 13 7-11 links to a stone;
thence north 18 rods; thence
east u rods end 13 7-1111nkl lo
·• · stont : thence south 8B rods
lo th~ place of beginning,
•containing 8 acres, and Joining
land heretofore deeded to
lhom as Gorrell by R. C.
Mlddleswart and wlft and
recorded December 2-4, 189-C In
Detd Book 71. Pagn SIS and
!86.
' AI!.O the following real
'Hille situated In tt,e town ·
ship. county and state above
.mentioned, and bounded as
•follows : Beginning at lh~
$0Uiheast corner of Lot 166 :
thence wnt to Thomas
Gorrell's east line ; I hence
north with 11id Thomas
Gorrell's east line to a nne
qmn lng west from Henderaon
P,rlce's northwesl corner ;
lhence east to said Henderson
Price 's northwesl corner :
thence south along line of said
Lot 166 to the pllct of
beginning . 8e lng In Sec lion lot,
Range 11 , Town J , and belno a
part of Fraction A, and con ·
'talnlng 24 ecres, more or less.
Also the following dtlcrlbed
real 11tete 'situated In the
'Township of Lebtnon. County
of Mtlgs and Slate of Oh io.
&lt;btlng In Section 13, Town 3,
R1noo 11. Lor 166, of lho Ohio
Comptnv's Purcheu , and
mort tully dttcrlbtd as
.follows : Commencing at A. H .
Prlc~·· and R. W. Connell'•
southeast corner , runn ing
west 10 feet ; thence north tnt
20 teet to tht north and south
lint of R . w. Connell '• farm;
thence south 20 teet to the
pltce ot btOinntng, c01"1!nlng
one rod of ground, more or
lets . The 1ame to be an outlet
between two ptrcels of lend
owned by the uld Thomas
Gorrell .
· Al10 lht following de•cr lbtd
real tslat 0 , lltUIIed ln lhe
Townsntp, CoUiliY , 1nd Stote'
above
mentioned . end
boundod and dt1crlbod n
follows: Being In Lots 142 and
U3, Stctlonll4and 15, Town 3,
lillnOt 11, of lho Ohio Com ·
p1ny'1 Purchue. Beginning
1t Richard" Haddox 's soulh ·
WHt corner , thtnce north
about 1 rods; thence west to
.lohn W. Haddo"' 'I corner ;
'1htnctaouth with road abOut 7
roda; thenc~ •o lht place of
btQtnnlng 1 contalnlno 2 acru ,
more or 1111.
·
h You are requlrtd 10 ensw11r
wllhln 21 day&amp; 11ter tnt tu•
' public IliOn ot noll co, wto lch
will be publllntd onct each
Wtfk for SIX IUCCaUIV. W~tkl,
' bflllnnlng Thurlldly. Oclobtr
h 16, 1975, Tnt lUI puDI ICallon
will bt madt on November 20,
1975. and •lhe 21 days tor In ·
1wtr will commence on that
dele . In cell of your failure.
' or otherwise. to - resDOnd 11
requited by lht OhiO Rule&amp; of
Civil Procodure. tudgmtnl bY
dtfault wlll be renderod
191lnst vou for the relief
demtnded In tnt claim.
LtrfY Sptnctl
Cltrk of Court1
Meigs Counly
Con,mon Pitas Court.

(

lwalttzy, ti1aractcr building

Mcmy "f the Ohio Education Association
'
.
scou ls lurn out 1.(1 be the
said Tuesday that Ohio voters
e~ough interested boys of Boy be aclivc in !he Cub &amp;uu1
SCou t a~e who want to start a program generally. Many comm unity leaders &lt;IS they ,approved only 89 school tax,
new troop. But attempts to · den mothers do nol have grow older.
issues out of 227 on the ballot
If men and women here for ~n approval mark of 39 .2

PRESCRIPTION

run Saturday

assistance and financing of
related activities; provisions
of public services not
otherwise available in areas
in which other community
development activities are to
be undertake ; and other
related planning , developmen!, and administrative
activities.

Second ophthalmQlogist'
comes to .hospital staff
A second ophthalmolo~lst, During this ·period, he
Edward J. Sheridan, M.D., completed the Ophthalmic
has been appointed to the Pathology Course at the Air
Holzer Clinic.
Force
Hospital
in
A native of Iron Mountain, Washington, D. C.
Mich., Dr. Sheridan comes to
For two years, Dr .
the clinic fr om Wrigh t- Sheridan was Chief of
Patterson Air Force Base, Aerospace Medicine, Chief
Dayton, where he was Chief Public Health Officer, and
of the Ophthalmology Service Chief Occupational Health
Section 'since August, 1972. Officer at Sembach Air Force
Clinic Administrator Base in Germany.
Robert E. Daniel said Dr. · He is certified by the
Sheridan received his American
Board
of
bachelor's degree from the Ophthalmology, and is a
College of Wooster in Ohio, member of the American
and his M.D. degree from the Medical Association, the
School of Medicine at the American Academy of
University of Rochester in Ophthalmology
and
Rochester, N. Y. He com- Otolaryngology, the Air
pleted his Internship and Force Society of Clinical
residency in general surgery
at Rochester 's Genesee
Hospital.
In 1965, Dr . Sheridan
GOODTURNOUT
completed a primary course
GRAEAGLE, Calif. (UPI)
in Aerospace Medicine at - Residents of this Sierra
Brooks Air Force Base in 1 Nevada community can boast
Texas. From 1967-71, he did •·of a 100 per cent voter turnresidency and research in out. All eight voters went to
ophthalmology at the Strong the polls Tuesday, and apMemprlal Hospital and proved a $1 maximum tax
University of Rochester.' rate on a S-3 tally.

ployes is only a hirlt of what
m.ay well . happen unless
access to eqUity is provided to
these employes by law," he

durnlinn and offer 1he !Joys a

MGM .Scouting needs adult help

. '

By CLAY F. RICHARDS
WASH~GfON tUPII - . Vice President Nelson
R«H!keltller wal dwllped from the 1'76 Republltan tltket,
not by PrtlldeDI Ford directly, but by the same elemepll
In the GOP that booed him off the stage In the 11184 national
conveatlon.
,
R«H!kefeller'• decllloo. was entirely his own, close
lrleod1 slid, but II came at a lime when he realized that
100oer or later he very well might be asked by Ford to
step 11lde lor the good of the President's chances In 19'11.
In addllloo 141 political realities - the hatred
R«H!kefeller Inspired among ~noervatlvea - personal
reuon1. 1110 C81De Into play.
A yo11111er R«H!kefeller never would have given up 10
eallly, aeveral frleadll aald. But at 87, with his life-long
dream of bec~mlog president gone, Rockefeller aat down,
analyaed the plusea aad minuses and concluded: "Who
need• II?"

ATLANTA (UPI) - Dave
Bristol believes in telllilg it
like It II.
No beating aroWid the bush
for lhe new manager of the
Atlanta Bravea. No looking
· for an easy out when the
questlona get tough.
Brlltol knows he has an
a1moat lnaurmoWitable task
In trying to turn lfOWid a
baeebaU team that flnla.hed to
games behind last aeaaon.
And,~ knows that no matter
how hard he works at It, It's
ltill the players th~lves
who must get the job done.
With this ln. miOO, the
Braves better . prepare
themMlves for 110me long,
hard sessl9ns when they
report to camp in the spring.
"I'm goln« to harp on being
In llhlpe," aald Brlltol who
looka, at 42, better than a lot
of blaeblll players 10-15
· Ytlll bla jWIIor. "We'll come
home with 25 men who want
to play."
Brlatol, who previously
managed at Cincinnati (11186ft) and Mllwiiakee (18'10-72),
Mid the line oo the Braves
thls put seaaon, while he was
coaching at Montreal, was:
"We felt If we could get
ahead .of Atlanta we could
beat ihem because they
didn't aeem to nave the drive
they had abown in the past."
Thll Ia the one thin« that
bothera Brlatol moet about
his new team.
"You see Pete Rose
making blmaelf I 1150,000
player with husUe. I can't
underatand why others can't
do that."
Dave Brlatol was a Roletype hustler but he spent
all 11 of his 'yeara u a
player In the minora.
But Brlatolls talldng aboul
playera with major-league
talent who don't live up to
their potential and he pinpointed
Braves
third
blaemari Darrell Evans.
Evans haa been conllldered
me of Atlanta's moat 1118tllng
playera, but he led the Braves
in errora taal season and
batted only .243.
"Who knows?" ' asked
Brlatol. "If Darrell Evano
gets into abape, he might be a
better ball player than he was
taal year. No one can do his
job as well with a 15-poWid
Ure around his middle."
Brl.stol bas no idea how the

•

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1

••

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77

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89~

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�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 " l'hursday, Nov. 6, 1975

6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. 6, 1975

Fun With Food

OES members receive pins

~~

Twenty-five and 40-year
By Charlene Hoeflich
pins
were ·presented al the
~ Tuesday
night meeling of
If deaserts 'are your downfall, then dearie, you better turn · Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order
on over to "Helen Help Us" and study her tips on hoW to hold a o[ the Eastern Star, held at
the Pomeroy Masonic
huaband with a trim, slim figure or somethin'.
Temple.
This cake - and how good it Is - Is not for weight watMrs. Ella Smith, on behalf
chers.
of
the chapter, presented 40We tasted It at a garden club party hosted by Mrs. Walter
year
pins to Mrs. Beulah
Q-ooks. 1'be cake was baked by Grace Pratt and it is abEwing and Mrs . Annette
aolutely delicious. She shares the recipe with us.
Knight. Mrs. Dorinda Nardei
l'fALIAN CREAM CAKE
accepted
a 40-year pin for her
~ cup butter, I&gt; cup shortening, 2 cups sugar, five egg
mother,
Mrs.
Norma Wilson,
yolks, 2lips. vanilla, I cup buttermilk, 2cups all-purpose flour,
who
was
un~ble
to attend.
I tap. baking soda, 2cups coconut, and I cup nuis.
Presented 25-year pins
Cream, the butter, llhortenlng and sugar. Ad&lt;I the egg
were
Ralph and Nell Graves,
yolks, one at a time. Stir the vanilla and soda Into the butMrs.
Shlriey Custer, Mrs.
termilk and mix alternately the fioiU' and buttermilk mixture
Rachael
Downie, Mrs. LA! on a
Into the creamed shortening and sugar. Stir In the coconut and
Smith,
Mrs.
Ann Rope, Mrs.
null ,
Margaret
Lallance,
Mrs.
Beat the ll.ve egg whites and then fold them into the batter.
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. U1a
Bake iii a bundt or tube panat350degreesforone hour.
Once cool, tee the cake with a mixture of ¥, cup butter, t Matlack, &lt;;larence Struble,
large creAm cheese, I tap. vanilla and powdered sugar, about a Mrs. Helen Neutzllng, Mrs.
Dorothy Downie, Mrs. Myrtle
pound box, to the desired consistency.
Sisson and Miss Freda
Q-ock-pot cookery la popular and our mall on this Grueser. Pins were accepted
by Mrs. Neutdlng for Mrs.
.relatively new method of cooking Is Increasing.
Iii fact, just reading about all the marvelous qualities of Gladys Wilkins, Mrs. Downie
the crock pot has created some Indecisiveness about the for Mrs. Virginia Edwards,
OuiJtmaa list. What do we feally want, a bu!ldt pan or a crock Mrs. Sisson for Joseph
Sisson, and Miss Freda
pot! Decisions, decisions. ·
Anyways, we're told that one of the amazing aspects of the Grueser for Miss Maude
alow cooking technique Is that fresh vegetables take longer to Grue~er .
Honored masons lticook than the meats. One recommendation la for using frozen
ftgetables becaUJe the blanching done In processing frozen troduced were Ralph Graves,
ftgetables cuta down on the cooking tbne required and insures
1 proper degree of tenderness. With stews or roasts, the frozen
vegetables will then cook in the same time as the meats. The
vegetables should, of course, be bhawed before using In a

_crock pOt.

.

.

Our latest mall brings a recipe for Crock-Pot Stew and we
share It with you.
CROCX·POf STEW
I package (24 ounces) frozen stewed vegetables, thawed; ~ !
pound lean atewlng !leef cut into II&gt; Inch cubes, 1 can con•
densed tomato aoup, I&gt; cup.water, 2 tablespoons dried onion
Oakes, I tap. salt, '4 tap. pepper,! bay leaf.
Place wgeta'?'es on the bottom of a crock-pot. Add meat.
In separate bowl, m1s remaining Ingredients and pour over
meat and wgetables. Cover and cook over low setting for 10-14
ooun. On high setting for 3-4 oours. Enough for four servings.

RIO GRANDE - Four
Rio Grande College;
Rio Grande Community·
College students, as· well as
members of the faculty and
staff, recently attended a
Career Workshop on the
college campus organized by
the Office of Alumni
Relations and the Office of
Career Development and
Placement. The \Wo-day
workshop featured speakers
representing Education,
Social Sel'VIces, Institutional
Services, Health Services,
Mental Health Services,
Women and ·Minority Services, and Banking.
. Most of the speakers were
Rio Grande College alumni.
Emily I..A!edy: Director of
POU.Y'SPROBLEM
occupy baby. He wtll enjoy women 's Services fOI' the
DEAR POLLy - When 1 puhlng objects In It and then Slate of Ohio Department of
married recently 1 received taking them out of the Unemployment Services
11 glfta two fiannelette sheets · pockets leaving Mother free emphasized that all jobs are
and a white bedspread. I to do her housework.
open to all people and that the
would like to know how to get
I remove and wash the relevance of current college
the lint off of them. 1 have filters In my air conditioner courses is often not evident
wuhecUhem and hung them with baking soda and a brush. until the college student
' on the line on a windy day, Such a periodic cleaning -enters the wOI'ld of work and
and also lulve put them In the results In more efficient uile , calls upon his education in
dryer alone, but the lint of electrlctty for cooling an'd order to function successfully
"mains. I would appreciate also the air Is cleaner.
In his work ..
some suggestions on how to
To make seams IIi heavy
Dick Lusetti: Director .of
remove this.
fabric, lay fabric fiat and dry the Juvenile Court Planning
My Pet Peeve ts with the press after you have steam . and Funding , Newark,
way hems are now put In pressed them. The steam pointed out the many opmany readymade dresses. used first will break down the portunltles for employment
Nine out of ten times they are flher 's resistance and the In Social Services for not only
111wn in with that fish line pressureofthelronwlllmake the Social Work major, but
thread. After one or two the seams lay fiat. Once they also for many other college
washings the hems start to are fiat remove the moisture majors and minors.
come out and then we have to with the dry pressing to
Bill McDonald: Superspend all that time rehem- · harden the fibers a'galn. vising Principal of Jackson
mlng them. - LAVERNE. MABEL.
Elementary Schools: former
DEAR LAVERNE -You
DEAR POLLY - I am OEA president; and now
do bave a problem. About all answering David who Is representative to NEA;
I can sanest Is to keep having trouble removing Ink stressed
that
every
bruthlq wllb a whisk broom stains from a used desk. prospective teacher be
wbea your llaty lbtap are oa When 1 went to parochial certified In both elementary
tile llae. Abo riiiBIDI with a school, at the end of each and secondary education· so
Iabrie softener helps •ome. 1 ·school term each child had ,to that he may be quallfled for
_am aure tbat If any readen · clean hlsorherowndeskand any teaching vacancy. He
uve loUDd more successful also the fioor with a stalk of also emphasized the need for
methcll we wiD be bearing raw rhubarb. David might solidarity, unity of· purpose,
lnm them.'- POLLY.
try this as It surely worked and professionalism within
for us. Just rub the cut end on the teaching profession.
DEAR POLLY - Hang a the Ink spot as yo~ would an
Jim Croye: Manager of the
shoe bag on the playpen to eraser. - MRS. R. 0 .
Geriatric Center, Toledo
DEAR POLLY - Famll(es Mental Health Center,
with c,llildren who wear eye Toledo, discussed several
. Ho~makers
glassel( will doubtless have employable areas ll!lthtn a
several glasses cases around mental health center, as well
lndrawersandsoon.lknowl as the possibility of
have. My daughter had developing a college codiscarded a pretty green operative education program
EAST MEIGS - October cowhide case and now I keep with the Toledo Mental
meeting of the Eastern It Inside my purse with Health Center.
Kurt Williams: Director of
Homemakers was held In the ballpoln t pens In it. It stands
home of Mrs . Gaynelle up and Is most convenient .Education at the Southern
McAbee of West Columbia, since I do not have to fish .· Ohio Correction Institute ,
around in my purse to find a Lucasville, outlined various
W. Va.
Plans for members and pen. A nail file could also he teaching and non-teaching
their husbands to attend kept In the case. - MRS. employment opp&lt;irtunltles
and' showed slides ot
dinner at Seddon 1s on the A.C.S.
DEAR
READERS
This
educational
facilities, as well
Mall on Dec. 13 were made.
Attending were Judith would be a great Idea lor mea as other facilities.
Dr. Harry Chovnlc:
Starcher, ·hostess, Joan who carry pens illlbetr shirt
Smith, Sue Dye, Lois Deem pockets and then Jlel Ink spota Director of the Athens Mentsl
on their ahlrtl. - POLLY.
··Hospital discussed careers In
and Pam !lager.
hun~red

Polly's. Pointers
Keep on brushing
to remove lint

plan dinner

REGULAR TREAD
.RECAPS ,
0.
2 for
.

,
23

Start losing weight todty or
. monty bltk. MONADE)( is 1
tiny tablet ond usy to take.

' will help curb
vour deslrt for excess tood.

MONADEX

I at Ins · wtllh ltn. Contains

no d1ngerous drugs and will

not make you n.ervous.. No

' strr11nuous uirciia. Change

rodly.
lor 1 20
d1y supply. L1r1e economy
Sill

II

U .OO .

A Iso

try

AOUATAIS : thy work gently
to fl•lp lou 101• w1ter-bloar.
AOUAT II -1 uwlltr pill"

tho' ....h suo. loth
ooraoteed lftd IOif Dy:

l

wlstltr
IU 1:.
Dolton
dlo,orf.

· I'

&amp; Lotlst Pharm•cy,
Mlln, Pomero~ &amp;

1

I

'

'

I

j Ij

~

I
'

'

I
I

I

~

\

,'

Party is enjoyed

J

Now

Window Display
Sale

-.. -!ic9l ~~:_"

~

..• ·

HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Joyce Richards of
Lancaster, the former Joyce
Wtl~lamson of Pomeroy, Is a
patient at the Mount Cannel
Hospital In Columbus .. Mrs.
Richards was scheduled for
surgery this mol-ning to
remove a mass on the brain.
She was confined to the
Lancaster Hospital for
several days before being
transferred to Mount Carmel
about a week ago.

RACINE - A Halloween
party was held last week at
the Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church annex for
the Junior United Methodist
Youth Fellowship.
.
The annex was decorated
for the party and prizes were
awarded to the best costumed
of the 24 children attending.
Games were played. Hot
chocolate, cookies and Ice
cream. were served. The
A thought for lbe day:
pArty was hosted by Mary Abraham Llncolil said, "The
Spencer and Ruth Wolfe, ballot Ia stronger than the
assisted by Ri Ia Jo Hill.
bullet.''

. NAs thewhighlight of St~dent
· Cur.se
1 M eek in Gallipolis,
tCCIhe arie Harris, a j'unior
a 1 e Holzer Medical Center
Scho.ol of Nursing, was
honored at the Annual
Banquet o[ the Student Nurse
Association of District 14 as
"St d
u ent Nurse of 1975-76."
Cecile is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard W.
H
.Marrish of Ashland, Ky. In
•re arc 1ofDll976
t · ,1 she , 'will
presen
s
rtc 14 1n the
"St d
u ent Nurse
of Ohio"
,
Contest,
held
as
a
part
of the
st d
u ent Nurse Association of
~~~tsc~~~~~!~~~!~ at the

w

Before entering Holzer
~ Medical Center sChool of
• Nursing, Cecile was active as
' acandystriperfora two-year
pertod, volunteering more
, than 800 hours. She served as
: both president and vice
: prestdent of the can• dystr~pers.
• h Wh:le, a student at .the
. OSP.t al s school of nursmg,
she has participated in the
~ Student Nurse Association of
~ Galhpohs, Student Gdvern' ment . and numerous class
, acllvt l1es. She has also
served as the secretary of her
• freshman class and presently
o

•
•'

By Helen and Sue Bottel

•
It's Not Her Job, Man!
•· Dear Rap:
'
When my mother died two years ago, 1 became ''mother...
to my then IS-year-old sister and comforter to my Dad. I was
very close to Mom and felt this was the way she would have
; wanted it.
.,
Rick and I were married last year and because I didn't
~ WWll to desert my family, we converted Dad's upstairs Into an
• apartment - bull use the kitchen downstairs.
~
Problems developed. My husband Is the original Mr.
Clean, and If everything isn't just so, he fusses. My sister and
Dad are pretty relaxed. While I keep our apartment spoUess
Rick lives part-time downstairs too, and even a couple oi
~- dishes in the sink freaks him out. I work, so can't care for this
:, whole place and, besides, my family wouldn't appreciate· my
: cleaning up after them.
This (and other small confilets) .Is making me a nervous
, wreck.! know my sister and Dad need me and our rent money,
: but Rick Isn't happy. I'm in the middle, trying to please
.. everyone and getting blamed Instead.
·
•
I've thought of us all chipping In lor a two-family house,
: but we can't afford it. Any solution? -GIVING UP .l
~

.."'

'

: ~rG .U. :

'
:
Yes! A separate apartment for you and Rick, far enough
~ from family so you can vlalt, but not intrude on one another.
~
Your sister and Dad are perfectly capable of fending for
: themselves. Their empty upstairs apartment? One ad In the
" newspaper
. will solve that little problem!
. - HELEN

+++

•••

NOTE FROM SUE: Mayhe It's lucky you can't afford that
two-family home. Seems to me you "Inherited" an overdose of
~ responsibility when your mother died.
Your sister, at 18, doesn't neecl ''mothering," and a
~ healthy man In his 54lll can certainly gel along without his
~ married daughter's ~mperlng.
.
•
Let them live thetr own lives and you'll be surprised bow
' well they manage,
••
+++
' Rap :
•
I've been dating John for about three months. We planned
: to live together when I joined him at college in Janua:')'.
~
Then last week he told me he would rather "just date" me
• because shacking up Is cheap WJd might lead to "other com=pllcattons."
~
What he means is, he wants a girl, but he wanta his
; freedom too (I think ). If he won't make a commitment,
"shouldn't I drop him?- D. D.
•
•D. :
" "Living together" isn't much of a commitment. I'd say, if
' you care about John, accept his terms. - SUE

m. at the hall. Meat and
beverqe furnished. Bring
COVered dish. Door prize,
TO,R•KEY DINNER
star\iha at 5 tJ. m. at I..A!tart
Fali : ,E~IIIent~ry School.
G@~ ,. tjirtertalnment;
~ll\li!ilnt. ot king and queen
and prizes.
BAZAAR . BY Ladles
Au:rtllary of Middleport
'· ~ntecostal ChiU'ch,
tOd:lly,and $alurday, 9 un. to
p,q,,·. at .warner Iilsurance
'102 W. Main St.,
Po1m.eirov:
new
and
for sale.

.

+++

NOTE FROM HELEN: Come February or. March, you
may be very glad you aren't shacked up. "Uvlng free" away
_:from family or "other complications" is one of the best parta of
• a new college life.

......
.,

~holds

. · , Edward J. Berkick,
evemng,
MD
. ., was Teresa Ch'1c hester,
F'Irs I v·1ce President
'
Qf the
local
Student
Nurse
Association,
Dr. Berkich spoke about
h
·
I e deve1opment of nursing
d
th
f'
d
an e 1rst awar of a pin to
graduate nurse back in New
York City at the famous
Bellevue Hosp1...
···) . H
' e emh
·
d
th
t
th
p as1ze . a e success ful
ru1ure' of the '# nursing
''
1
·
'II
d
pro esswn WI epend. upon
the ac t'tve InvoIvement of
· tuaI pat'1ent care,
nurses mac
and the personal contact with
the patient : the seeing,
touching and talking with
each other.
Invocation and benediction
for the banquet, held in .the
French Five Hundred Room
at Holzer Medical Center,
was given by the Rev. Arthur
Lund. Director of Chaplaincy
Services.

'

we'll go to anJ'
lengths to make
you fashionable

t5'' chain with 1
and 2 diamonds.
All others special
order. .
What's nr,v? Laced-up teolh• on a' 111rrow
wooden Wldge on 1 flexible rubber' solei
,y~·re I)Onna love lf)lndlng your fun tim•
lheH great lobkln', eny mowln'
·
· wldgn. Tltlt's what's new " lrom
IIIII Double buc:lcte in rust or l1tlt10
illther, Til In brown 01 Indian rtd
l)rlln lulhtr
•

!

I"

·heritage
house
MIDDlEPoRT, 0.

a new will
grandson.
:•·has
Councilors
meet atPast
the
~ home of Jean Sommerfield
~ Nov . 12, It was announced,
• with Mrs. Ada Morris to
' serve as co-hostess.
•· rresenl at t~e meeting ,
• were Mrs. Eileen Martin,
~ Mrs. Belly Roush, Mrs. Mary
~ K. Holter, Mrs. I..A!tha Wood,
• Mrs. Mae McPeek, Mrs. Ada
:·. Neulzling, Mrs. Mary Jo

••

Store
Hotln:

Mon.-Fri.
..•• S.t.
CtoMd Sunday
~

1n 11168, Rlchm!,Nixon waa
•elected 37th President of the
United States, defeating
.[)enlocr&amp;t Hubert HumphreY.

Pooler, Mrs. Jean Sum·
merfleld, Mrs. I..A!ona Hen·
sley, Mrs.• Ada Morris, Mrs.
Ulda Weber, Mrs. Ada Van
·
Meter,
Mrs. Ethe1 Orr, Mrs.
Ada Bissell, Mr~. Erma
·
Cleland, Mrs. Opal Ho11 on,
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, Mrs.
Sadie Trussell and Joe
Bissell.

'

Daily, Debbie Owens, Betsy
Riffie, Beth Headley, ·Debbie
Davis, Jo Ellen Lawrence,
Tamm'i Cozart, Roberta
Young , Mary Taylor, Kathy
America in an informal Lawrence, Vida Weber, Tam ·
ceremony held recently at the Bowers, Diana Evans, Pam
home of Mrs. Janice Ritchie, Bowers, Connie Jones, Judy
advisor.
Hol ter and Sarah Wells.
The new members are Jutly
Other members attending
Perry , Sharon Henderson, were Cheryl Benedum,
Sandy Hensley, Brenda
Sampson, Joetta Krider .
Nancy Chaffee, Cathy
Collins, Tammi Fortney,
Arlene Conalty, Dee Barber,
Valorie Jo Bontle, Debbie

HUNTINGTON - Noted
stage, screen, radio and
television actor Alexander
Scourby will give his
dramatic presentation of
"American I..A!gends and Tall
Tales", Monday, Nov. 10 as
part of the Forum Series of
the Marshall Artists Series.
Appearing at 8 p. m. in Old
Main Auditorium at Marshall
University, Scourby will
recreated the legendary
characters from our nation's
folklore, both fictitious and
historical, including Paul
Bunyan , lchabod Crane ,
Daniel Boore and many
others . Admission is by
season membership to the
Forum Series or by Marshall
University student activity
card.
•
Hailed by critics for his
distinguished performances

Pullins, Cindy Pitzer, Candy

CECILE MARIE HARRIS, of A£illand, Ky ., was
chosen "Student Nurse 1975-76" to represent District 141n
"Student Nurse of Ohio" Contest in March.

Bazaar plans
are complete

Holida y bazaar plans were
in "Crime and Punishment •"
completed
during a meeting
"~ Hamlet / ' "Richard II ",
of
the
Ohio
Eta
Phi Chapter of
'' Henry IV, Part I", "St.
Beta
Sigma
Phi
Sorority held
Joan ", HVivat!
Vi va t
Regina!", "Detective Story''
and "Darkness at Noon",
Scourby is considered a man
of all media.
His films include "Giant,"
''The SiJver Chalice ,'' ''Affair
in Trinidad," 11 Ransom ,"

"The Glory Brigade" and
"The Big Heat".
In addition , he has narrated
many NBC-TV specials such
as "He is Risen*\ "The

Corning of Christ" and "The
Law of the Prophets".
Scourby records extensively for the American
Foundation for the Blind and
has recorded the entire Bible
for .the American Bible
Society.

WESLEY CHOIR HERE
POMEROY - The Wesley
Choir, Ohio University,
Athens, will present the aftemoon program at the annua!Homecomlngservicesat
h
tMethodlEnterprise
t Ch h SUnited
d
e
s
urc
un ay,
Nov. 9, at 1:30. A carry-In
dhiner will be served at 12:15
following the mo,l'lllng
worship and Sunday School.
The public Is Invited to attend
all or any part of the day.

CONVERSE

Museum display
is of Indians
.

Also you ca n view a
Mastodon tooth, some antique tools, household items,
Ohio River boat pictures and
other pictures and items of
local interest. This display
will be continued through
November. Museum hours
are Tuesday, Thursday and
Friday, 10 to II , and 2 to ' 4,
and Sundays 2 to 4. Donations
of 25c for children and 50c for
adults are appreciated.
The December display wilt
depict an " Old Fashion
Christmas", and requests are
being made of the public for
loan of old fashion toys,
decorations, Christmas
pictures, cards , Christmas
tree candleholders, and other
tree decorations. Items may
be left at the museum on
weekdays. For further information, phone the Meigs
Museum, 992-3810, or 992·
2264, or 992-5877.

MIDDlfPORT, OHIO
I

'

SALE
BAKER
FURNITURE

,l_£!e!;!.!:!.,,!!!J!:!..!!:!;:!!~:!!!.!~-L

NO FUMES IN YOUR HOME
NO FLAME IN YOUR HOME

SAFE

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PH. 992-5321

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Let Your Appearance
Speak For You This
Holiday Season
With Sport Coats,
Suits and casual

Wear In A
Wide Range Of
Colors
and
Styles
Lay·Away
Now For

All The While!

Soft Glove
Leather
6"and 8''

A \

Marguerite's Shoes
102 E.

.
Main

Betty Ohlinger

Pomeroy

®

HEATS WITH GAS!

-INSTALLED OUTDOORSl-

..... .....
MIM!oport,O.

,4,,,,.

liNG UNIT.

Be In Style

r

THE SHOE BOX

with relatives and friends of
the couple invited to call. The
reception is being gi,ven by
the women 's Missionary
Council or'the Church.

REVOLUTIONARY

ChriJJtmas

CANVAS OXFORDS
•

COOL &amp; HEAT YOUR
HOME WITH THE

MASON - The Rev. and
Mrs. Chesler Tennant of the
Mason Assembly of God
Church, will observe their
silver wedding anniversary .
on Sunday at their home on
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va.
Open house and a reception
will be held from 2 to 4 p.m.

ADMIRAL
STEREO

NEW YORK (UPI)- Tbe
seventh game of the 1975
World Series hetween Cincinnati and Boston drew a
of Hattford Mayor Charles video audience of 75 million,
Black to fill the lone vacancy highest total for any televised
left on the Mason County sport program, the American
Development Authority, and I..A!ague reported Wednesday.
purchase of a new
The Minnesota-Pittsburgh
refrigerator for the residence Super Bowl game last
trailer at the Mason County 4- January had a television
H Campground.
audience of 71 million people.

Did you that that one time
large elephant type animals
called mastodons walked that
part of the earth we now know
as Meigs County? How abOut
the Indians that lived here ?
Old you ever wonder what
kind of tools they worked
with.
.
Remember the peace
pipes , arrowheads and
ceremonial ornaments in
American History books?
If any of this is of Interest to
you, the Meigs County
Museum on Butternut Ave. in
Pomeroy has as its present
display, INDIANS ! A
collection of various stone
artifacts made and used by
the Indians and pictures of
many ways the Indians lived.
The mini-theater, In staying
with the Indian theme, has as
its presentation,' "A Butterflies View of its
SIU'roundings."

Couple -to
honor 25th

at the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Mrs . Kathy Cummings
announced that \he bazaar
will be heid at Trinity Church
on Nov. 29 and that items to
In 1953, U .:i. Attorney
he sold will be on display a
General
Herbert Brownell
week preceding that time at
the Pomeroy National Bank . charged that President Harry
Mrs. Maurisha Nelson, Truman named Harry Dexter
social chairwoman , an. White bead of the Innounced that a trip to Fenton ternational Monetary Fund,
Glass at Williamstown, W. knowing White was a
Va. is planned for Tuesday, ~~Russian spy."
leaving the upper parking lot
in Pomeroy at 5:30p.m.
A candlelight ceremony
was held for Susan Lanning, a
new member . Mrs . Kathy
Fry and Mrs. Brenda Haggy
were hos lesses.

Mason facility closed
PT. PLEASANT' ~ Two
Mason County solid waste
disposal facilities are ordered
closed by the Slate Department of Health, effective
immediately, according to a
leIter read Tuesday evening
at the regular session of the
Mason County Commission.
They are landfills ownedby
George Carson of Mason and
A. 0. Powers or Sanitation
Services, Inc. of Glenwood.
Dr. N. H. Dyer, director of
the W. Va. Dept. of Mental
Health wrote they had failed
to obtain approval by the
state department for solid
waste disposal and that they
failed to dispose of solid
wastes in accordance with
Article t, Section 9 and Ar·
tlcle 9, Section 3 of the state
code of regulations.
Since both of these
sanitation services serve a
large portion of Mason
County the commission is
now hoping that the Point
Pleasant landfill will be able
to accommodate garbage
disposal previously handled
by the two firms .
·
Among the other motl~ns
acted upon was appointme~t

Deanna Baker, Pam Ka utz,
Teresa Longnetti , Tammi
Pitzer, Paula Hawk, Niese!
Duvall, Brenda Young, Susan
Henderson, Brenda Boyles,
Theresa Brown ing, Bonnie
Da iley and De bbie Windon .
Pizza was served following
the . initiation. Chapter
mother, Janie Headley, also
attended.

Spencer, Dawn Sorden, Terri

to give
dramatic presentation

lllll•••••llliilil•••••••••..

••

I,

EAST MEIGS - Thirty-two
Eastern High School students
were initiated into the
Eastern Chapter of the
Future Homemakers of

No~ed actor

~

Council 323
Tuesday meeting

,, CHESTER - Friendship
nightlo be held Friday at 6:30
: p.m. in Belpre was an·· nounced when Chester
~ Coun'cil 323, Daughters• of
:.America, met Tuesday night
,,.
11
" al the ha .
:. Mrs . Leona Hensley,
:::associate councllOI', presided
:,at the meeting. It was noted
::;that Mrs, 9 oldle Frederick

A&amp;~-~

Court St., Pomeroy

Eastern FHA initiates new
members in recent ceremony

~.Chester
•

diamonds-by-the-yard

Faohlon's neweat by-word:
dlamonda·by·the-yard.
Quality dlamondo aet In 14 Kt.
gold chains, ChooH the
length of chain . .. the number
and size or dlamoncla that
match your mood, bert! your
budgot. All diamond chalna
. . . or diamonds matched wllh
rubl.., emeralds, or eapphlrea.

1's the photography ed1'tor for
the school's yearbook.
In 1'975 she attended the
Regional Conference in
Dayton and in i975, the State
Convention in Cleveland of
I he
Student
Nurse
Assoc•'at1'on 'of Oht'o. On Nov.
7-ll,shewillgototheRI'glonal
Conference in Toledo .
' Cect' le 1's also an
Emergency Med 1'c al
Technician, certt' fl' ed 1·n
Kentucky.
Awards to Cecile ,·ncluded
$50 from ·the Future Nurses
Association of Gallipolis, a
memorial to Jan Davis,
presented by Stephanie Ross,
President of the FNA of
Gallia Academy High School;
$50 from SNA District 14
presented by Connie Me:
Carty, Treasurer of the SNA
. of Gallipolis, along with gi£1
certificates from Carl's Shoe
Store, the Uniform Center
and The Alcove.
Cecile speaking before the
group delivered her winning
essay ' entitled "The Past We
Inhe;il: Th~ Future We
Shape."
Welcoming the group,
announcing Cecile Harris'
selection and introducing the
featured speaker of the

Generation Rap

..

~v!iJk lltlinet, 7:3o p. .

JIMCROYE
EMILY LEEDY

SYRACUSJi; - Election of fleers reports were given, an
officers was held at the offering taken, and 24 shut-in ,
Tuesday night meeting ol the . c~lls reported. The birthdays·
,,.,
United Methodist Women o( of Mrs. EiChinger, Mrs. Lisle
THURSDAY
the Syracuse Asbury United and Mrs. Alice Capehart
MEIGS County Council of Methodist Church held at the were observed.
·
Parents and Teachers, 7:30 home of Mrs. Mary Lisle.
Mrs. Kloes conducted a
P·"!· at Eastern High School.
Elected were Mrs. Opal thank offering program with
Prqgt~ will be on drug Kloes, president; Mrs. Mary each member telling what
abuJ!i,
Lisle, vice president; Mrs. she is most thankful for . Mrs.~O ' flEART Church Bernice
Winebrenner, DorothyJarvls.wasprogram
ann~ bazaar, starting at secretary;
Mrs . Anna leader and assisting her were
4:30.pim·,wtth creaed ba~ed Hllldore, assistant secretary; Mrs. Eichinger, Mrs. Nora
chiclten and ~ dinners; Mrs. Ann Sauvage, treasurer, Houdashell, Mrs. Sauvage
games mid fancy stands.
and Mrs. Grace Weese, and
Mrs .
Dorothy
G~qJA COUNTY . Salon, assistant treas!lfer.
Winebrenner. Mrs. Helin
• •
Christmas projects were Teaford gave a prayer to
61 ••· •.:30 p.m. at the home of d'
. ·
· 1scussed wt. th. (llem bers c1ose the meetmg.
M
G~~ls.Mabel
Brown, deciding to get gifts for the
patients at the Syracuse.
R,AOIJIIE AMERICAN Nursing Home and for each
ugliil);• Post 602, 8 p. m. one to provide a toy for the
Oyj'!lf stew will be served. children
at
Veterans
.;.&gt;'!;· •
.
Sew
EV;UIGEUNE Chapter, Memorial Hospital. Mrs.
o.E!,s., 7:3op.m., Middleport Lisle and Mrs. Sauvage wiU
For
e-'~' T
1
buy the gifts for the nursing
M. ~uc
. empe.
..,,
home patients.
Christmas
MbN!J'HLY II;!EETING,
Mrs. Kloes gave the call
~etgli• Unit of the· American to worship using a poem, "I
Caltc;et•Society, 7:30p.m. at Thank Him Once Again" and
lhe Htlghes building, S. Third gave . ~ reading from the
Ave., 'Middleport: All board ~tesponse magazine . Mrs.
mem~rs asked to attend; Margaret Eichinger had
DOUBLE KNITS
public :tnvtted.'
d
·
Reg. $3.98 yd. Now
REVlvAL STARTING and . evohons using the 23rd
•Psalm and a meditation,
ruiJriln.S through Nov. 9 at "Gracious Invitation". Of- V
RWIW?SUV•
Filltlii Tabernacle Church on
. TABLE Of COITON
BaUI!f Riln Road, 7:30 each
evenJl!t w;fth Denver Rollins,
&amp; POLYESTER
Ccil)IIJibils; speaking. Em- Rev. R. G. Cook, Columbus,
metr1\aW8on, pastor, invites speaking. Services aiiO a.m.
followed by covered dish ·
the public.
dinner at noon. Afternoon
FRIDAY
~~L FUN Festival, today services beginning at 2 p.m.
and ';~tilrday, at the 11ew with special i~strumental and
Hav~., Grade School under vocal music; Rev. Cook will
s~antqr~hlp of the N~w speak at 7:30 evening serHav~ P'!IO. Friday kitchen ·vtces. Public Invited.
~:a,l5:30 p.m. with lots of
ANNUAL Homecoming
fbocl; :record hop Wld magic
slicii( at .7!30. p.m. Saturday services at the Enterprise
kl~~ ···~ at 3 p.m.; United Methodist Church.
. ou~de:games at I p.m. and Carry in dinner at 12:15
inside games at 4 11.m. Other followed by.afternoon service
activities both days Include featuriQg the Wesley Choir
spoo)t houae, corn dog stand, from Ohio University.
country , store, candy shop;
tr~.h~t, baseball toss,
ot•-·
. ¥Jiroes·
,, ··-' .
POMONA Gr~ge, 8 p.m.
at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall. Degree work. Ohio
Valley Grange will be host.
SATURDAY
1ID
PIJBUC SQUARE dance, 8
MIIID
p.m .. to 12 .midnight at Port,
· il!nd SChool 6ponsored by
Senftir ·Cltizena Golden Age
&lt;;tub; music by String
' Duster~; callers ·Gienn
Lambert, Cora Hilton, Robert
Pickli!t: Mreshments and
~~~i. c~lldreri und~ 12

·. · ~ij~R{ wooD~AN

•'

Goessler Jewelry Store

Drut Orders
Store, Filled
Mid ·. . ._ _ _ _1111111_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..
Mill

'

flexibility and adaptability
are the essential ingredients
of the college graduate In his
search ,for employment.
Further, shortage and surplus areas were discussed for
both teaching and nonteaching occupations, and
practical advice concerning
.college preparation for
.employable career areas was
given.
The two-day workshop was
W1 opportunity through which
Rio Grande College-Rio
Grande Community College
students could see a direct
and meaningful relationship
between their college courses
and many occupations which
make use of those courses.

Open Til 8 Friday-Close Sat. At s

GENERAL TIRE SALES
1\~

psychiatry, psychology, 'and
related fields.
·
Eleanor Strang : Director
of Nursing at Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis, discussed
careers In nursing, opportunities as ·X-Ray
tech~ician , radiologist,
physical therapy, n~clear
medicine, surgery, family
practice.
Larry Cayton : VicePresident of Security Central
National Bank, Portsmouth,
outlined many different
career possibilities in the
banking business (ex: personnel, accounting, computer
specialists.)
In addition, the speakers
emphasized the mobility,

.

PLUS RECAPPABLE CASINGS
FREE MOUNTING

' ' ' " lift ... start
MONADI! ,X cost 13.00

..

patron was held with Dale
Smith being elected t0 serv.e.
Mrs. Dorothy Will was the
judge for the election with
Mrs. Helen Neutzltng and
Mrs. Ebersbach as tellers.
Sympathy was extended to
Lorenzo Davis in the loss of
his sister. Memorial services
was conducted for Glen Dill
and the charter was draped In
his memory.
The chapter voted to
provide Christmas gifts for
residents of the Meigs County
Infirmary and shut-ins. -Installation was set for Dec. 2at
7:45 p.m. with the . worthy
arand· patron, Howard Shull,
to be the Installing grand
offictr. Mrs. Ella Smith,
associate matron, called
practices for Nov. 18 at 7:30
p.m. and Nov. 30 at 2 p.m.
Pin-ons were orange felt
squares
with . fruit
decorations complimenting
the fall decor of the refreshment tables. Pumpkin pie
and coffee were served. Hosts
were ·Mr. and Mrs. James
Soulsby, Mr. and Mrs : Alfred
Crow, Mrs. Uta Matlack,
Mrs.· Annette Knight and
Mrs. Norma Parker.

400 attend career workshop

.

lDSE UGLY FAT

Albert Wuud, Thuuws F.tlwartls, Ben F.wing, Dale
Smith and Clarence Struble .
Also recognized were two 50year members, Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell and Mrs. Clara
Thomas.
Mrs. Florence Well, worthy
matron, and Dale Smith,
worthy patron, presided with
Thomas Edwards pro tern as
associate patron, Mrs. Mabel
Moore as marshall, and
Albert Hemsley as sentinel.
Sally Ebersbach was sunshine page. One petition fOI'
membership by affiliation
was . read. Invitations to
several installations were
read and a donation was
made to the Southeast Ohio
Lung Association.
Mrs. Well and
Mrs.
OOI'othy Woodard reported on
their trip to the Grand
Session in Cleveland where
Mrs. Woodard served as
grand page to the 1975
deputy, Mrs. Donna Spring. It
was announced that the 1975
deputy grand matron Is
Loella Hayes, a member of
Mount Moriah Chapter at
Beverly.
Election for a worthy

Cecile Harris selected
:.Studen! Nurse of 1975-76

Women elect officers

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 " l'hursday, Nov. 6, 1975

6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. 6, 1975

Fun With Food

OES members receive pins

~~

Twenty-five and 40-year
By Charlene Hoeflich
pins
were ·presented al the
~ Tuesday
night meeling of
If deaserts 'are your downfall, then dearie, you better turn · Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order
on over to "Helen Help Us" and study her tips on hoW to hold a o[ the Eastern Star, held at
the Pomeroy Masonic
huaband with a trim, slim figure or somethin'.
Temple.
This cake - and how good it Is - Is not for weight watMrs. Ella Smith, on behalf
chers.
of
the chapter, presented 40We tasted It at a garden club party hosted by Mrs. Walter
year
pins to Mrs. Beulah
Q-ooks. 1'be cake was baked by Grace Pratt and it is abEwing and Mrs . Annette
aolutely delicious. She shares the recipe with us.
Knight. Mrs. Dorinda Nardei
l'fALIAN CREAM CAKE
accepted
a 40-year pin for her
~ cup butter, I&gt; cup shortening, 2 cups sugar, five egg
mother,
Mrs.
Norma Wilson,
yolks, 2lips. vanilla, I cup buttermilk, 2cups all-purpose flour,
who
was
un~ble
to attend.
I tap. baking soda, 2cups coconut, and I cup nuis.
Presented 25-year pins
Cream, the butter, llhortenlng and sugar. Ad&lt;I the egg
were
Ralph and Nell Graves,
yolks, one at a time. Stir the vanilla and soda Into the butMrs.
Shlriey Custer, Mrs.
termilk and mix alternately the fioiU' and buttermilk mixture
Rachael
Downie, Mrs. LA! on a
Into the creamed shortening and sugar. Stir In the coconut and
Smith,
Mrs.
Ann Rope, Mrs.
null ,
Margaret
Lallance,
Mrs.
Beat the ll.ve egg whites and then fold them into the batter.
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. U1a
Bake iii a bundt or tube panat350degreesforone hour.
Once cool, tee the cake with a mixture of ¥, cup butter, t Matlack, &lt;;larence Struble,
large creAm cheese, I tap. vanilla and powdered sugar, about a Mrs. Helen Neutzllng, Mrs.
Dorothy Downie, Mrs. Myrtle
pound box, to the desired consistency.
Sisson and Miss Freda
Q-ock-pot cookery la popular and our mall on this Grueser. Pins were accepted
by Mrs. Neutdlng for Mrs.
.relatively new method of cooking Is Increasing.
Iii fact, just reading about all the marvelous qualities of Gladys Wilkins, Mrs. Downie
the crock pot has created some Indecisiveness about the for Mrs. Virginia Edwards,
OuiJtmaa list. What do we feally want, a bu!ldt pan or a crock Mrs. Sisson for Joseph
Sisson, and Miss Freda
pot! Decisions, decisions. ·
Anyways, we're told that one of the amazing aspects of the Grueser for Miss Maude
alow cooking technique Is that fresh vegetables take longer to Grue~er .
Honored masons lticook than the meats. One recommendation la for using frozen
ftgetables becaUJe the blanching done In processing frozen troduced were Ralph Graves,
ftgetables cuta down on the cooking tbne required and insures
1 proper degree of tenderness. With stews or roasts, the frozen
vegetables will then cook in the same time as the meats. The
vegetables should, of course, be bhawed before using In a

_crock pOt.

.

.

Our latest mall brings a recipe for Crock-Pot Stew and we
share It with you.
CROCX·POf STEW
I package (24 ounces) frozen stewed vegetables, thawed; ~ !
pound lean atewlng !leef cut into II&gt; Inch cubes, 1 can con•
densed tomato aoup, I&gt; cup.water, 2 tablespoons dried onion
Oakes, I tap. salt, '4 tap. pepper,! bay leaf.
Place wgeta'?'es on the bottom of a crock-pot. Add meat.
In separate bowl, m1s remaining Ingredients and pour over
meat and wgetables. Cover and cook over low setting for 10-14
ooun. On high setting for 3-4 oours. Enough for four servings.

RIO GRANDE - Four
Rio Grande College;
Rio Grande Community·
College students, as· well as
members of the faculty and
staff, recently attended a
Career Workshop on the
college campus organized by
the Office of Alumni
Relations and the Office of
Career Development and
Placement. The \Wo-day
workshop featured speakers
representing Education,
Social Sel'VIces, Institutional
Services, Health Services,
Mental Health Services,
Women and ·Minority Services, and Banking.
. Most of the speakers were
Rio Grande College alumni.
Emily I..A!edy: Director of
POU.Y'SPROBLEM
occupy baby. He wtll enjoy women 's Services fOI' the
DEAR POLLy - When 1 puhlng objects In It and then Slate of Ohio Department of
married recently 1 received taking them out of the Unemployment Services
11 glfta two fiannelette sheets · pockets leaving Mother free emphasized that all jobs are
and a white bedspread. I to do her housework.
open to all people and that the
would like to know how to get
I remove and wash the relevance of current college
the lint off of them. 1 have filters In my air conditioner courses is often not evident
wuhecUhem and hung them with baking soda and a brush. until the college student
' on the line on a windy day, Such a periodic cleaning -enters the wOI'ld of work and
and also lulve put them In the results In more efficient uile , calls upon his education in
dryer alone, but the lint of electrlctty for cooling an'd order to function successfully
"mains. I would appreciate also the air Is cleaner.
In his work ..
some suggestions on how to
To make seams IIi heavy
Dick Lusetti: Director .of
remove this.
fabric, lay fabric fiat and dry the Juvenile Court Planning
My Pet Peeve ts with the press after you have steam . and Funding , Newark,
way hems are now put In pressed them. The steam pointed out the many opmany readymade dresses. used first will break down the portunltles for employment
Nine out of ten times they are flher 's resistance and the In Social Services for not only
111wn in with that fish line pressureofthelronwlllmake the Social Work major, but
thread. After one or two the seams lay fiat. Once they also for many other college
washings the hems start to are fiat remove the moisture majors and minors.
come out and then we have to with the dry pressing to
Bill McDonald: Superspend all that time rehem- · harden the fibers a'galn. vising Principal of Jackson
mlng them. - LAVERNE. MABEL.
Elementary Schools: former
DEAR LAVERNE -You
DEAR POLLY - I am OEA president; and now
do bave a problem. About all answering David who Is representative to NEA;
I can sanest Is to keep having trouble removing Ink stressed
that
every
bruthlq wllb a whisk broom stains from a used desk. prospective teacher be
wbea your llaty lbtap are oa When 1 went to parochial certified In both elementary
tile llae. Abo riiiBIDI with a school, at the end of each and secondary education· so
Iabrie softener helps •ome. 1 ·school term each child had ,to that he may be quallfled for
_am aure tbat If any readen · clean hlsorherowndeskand any teaching vacancy. He
uve loUDd more successful also the fioor with a stalk of also emphasized the need for
methcll we wiD be bearing raw rhubarb. David might solidarity, unity of· purpose,
lnm them.'- POLLY.
try this as It surely worked and professionalism within
for us. Just rub the cut end on the teaching profession.
DEAR POLLY - Hang a the Ink spot as yo~ would an
Jim Croye: Manager of the
shoe bag on the playpen to eraser. - MRS. R. 0 .
Geriatric Center, Toledo
DEAR POLLY - Famll(es Mental Health Center,
with c,llildren who wear eye Toledo, discussed several
. Ho~makers
glassel( will doubtless have employable areas ll!lthtn a
several glasses cases around mental health center, as well
lndrawersandsoon.lknowl as the possibility of
have. My daughter had developing a college codiscarded a pretty green operative education program
EAST MEIGS - October cowhide case and now I keep with the Toledo Mental
meeting of the Eastern It Inside my purse with Health Center.
Kurt Williams: Director of
Homemakers was held In the ballpoln t pens In it. It stands
home of Mrs . Gaynelle up and Is most convenient .Education at the Southern
McAbee of West Columbia, since I do not have to fish .· Ohio Correction Institute ,
around in my purse to find a Lucasville, outlined various
W. Va.
Plans for members and pen. A nail file could also he teaching and non-teaching
their husbands to attend kept In the case. - MRS. employment opp&lt;irtunltles
and' showed slides ot
dinner at Seddon 1s on the A.C.S.
DEAR
READERS
This
educational
facilities, as well
Mall on Dec. 13 were made.
Attending were Judith would be a great Idea lor mea as other facilities.
Dr. Harry Chovnlc:
Starcher, ·hostess, Joan who carry pens illlbetr shirt
Smith, Sue Dye, Lois Deem pockets and then Jlel Ink spota Director of the Athens Mentsl
on their ahlrtl. - POLLY.
··Hospital discussed careers In
and Pam !lager.
hun~red

Polly's. Pointers
Keep on brushing
to remove lint

plan dinner

REGULAR TREAD
.RECAPS ,
0.
2 for
.

,
23

Start losing weight todty or
. monty bltk. MONADE)( is 1
tiny tablet ond usy to take.

' will help curb
vour deslrt for excess tood.

MONADEX

I at Ins · wtllh ltn. Contains

no d1ngerous drugs and will

not make you n.ervous.. No

' strr11nuous uirciia. Change

rodly.
lor 1 20
d1y supply. L1r1e economy
Sill

II

U .OO .

A Iso

try

AOUATAIS : thy work gently
to fl•lp lou 101• w1ter-bloar.
AOUAT II -1 uwlltr pill"

tho' ....h suo. loth
ooraoteed lftd IOif Dy:

l

wlstltr
IU 1:.
Dolton
dlo,orf.

· I'

&amp; Lotlst Pharm•cy,
Mlln, Pomero~ &amp;

1

I

'

'

I

j Ij

~

I
'

'

I
I

I

~

\

,'

Party is enjoyed

J

Now

Window Display
Sale

-.. -!ic9l ~~:_"

~

..• ·

HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Joyce Richards of
Lancaster, the former Joyce
Wtl~lamson of Pomeroy, Is a
patient at the Mount Cannel
Hospital In Columbus .. Mrs.
Richards was scheduled for
surgery this mol-ning to
remove a mass on the brain.
She was confined to the
Lancaster Hospital for
several days before being
transferred to Mount Carmel
about a week ago.

RACINE - A Halloween
party was held last week at
the Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church annex for
the Junior United Methodist
Youth Fellowship.
.
The annex was decorated
for the party and prizes were
awarded to the best costumed
of the 24 children attending.
Games were played. Hot
chocolate, cookies and Ice
cream. were served. The
A thought for lbe day:
pArty was hosted by Mary Abraham Llncolil said, "The
Spencer and Ruth Wolfe, ballot Ia stronger than the
assisted by Ri Ia Jo Hill.
bullet.''

. NAs thewhighlight of St~dent
· Cur.se
1 M eek in Gallipolis,
tCCIhe arie Harris, a j'unior
a 1 e Holzer Medical Center
Scho.ol of Nursing, was
honored at the Annual
Banquet o[ the Student Nurse
Association of District 14 as
"St d
u ent Nurse of 1975-76."
Cecile is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard W.
H
.Marrish of Ashland, Ky. In
•re arc 1ofDll976
t · ,1 she , 'will
presen
s
rtc 14 1n the
"St d
u ent Nurse
of Ohio"
,
Contest,
held
as
a
part
of the
st d
u ent Nurse Association of
~~~tsc~~~~~!~~~!~ at the

w

Before entering Holzer
~ Medical Center sChool of
• Nursing, Cecile was active as
' acandystriperfora two-year
pertod, volunteering more
, than 800 hours. She served as
: both president and vice
: prestdent of the can• dystr~pers.
• h Wh:le, a student at .the
. OSP.t al s school of nursmg,
she has participated in the
~ Student Nurse Association of
~ Galhpohs, Student Gdvern' ment . and numerous class
, acllvt l1es. She has also
served as the secretary of her
• freshman class and presently
o

•
•'

By Helen and Sue Bottel

•
It's Not Her Job, Man!
•· Dear Rap:
'
When my mother died two years ago, 1 became ''mother...
to my then IS-year-old sister and comforter to my Dad. I was
very close to Mom and felt this was the way she would have
; wanted it.
.,
Rick and I were married last year and because I didn't
~ WWll to desert my family, we converted Dad's upstairs Into an
• apartment - bull use the kitchen downstairs.
~
Problems developed. My husband Is the original Mr.
Clean, and If everything isn't just so, he fusses. My sister and
Dad are pretty relaxed. While I keep our apartment spoUess
Rick lives part-time downstairs too, and even a couple oi
~- dishes in the sink freaks him out. I work, so can't care for this
:, whole place and, besides, my family wouldn't appreciate· my
: cleaning up after them.
This (and other small confilets) .Is making me a nervous
, wreck.! know my sister and Dad need me and our rent money,
: but Rick Isn't happy. I'm in the middle, trying to please
.. everyone and getting blamed Instead.
·
•
I've thought of us all chipping In lor a two-family house,
: but we can't afford it. Any solution? -GIVING UP .l
~

.."'

'

: ~rG .U. :

'
:
Yes! A separate apartment for you and Rick, far enough
~ from family so you can vlalt, but not intrude on one another.
~
Your sister and Dad are perfectly capable of fending for
: themselves. Their empty upstairs apartment? One ad In the
" newspaper
. will solve that little problem!
. - HELEN

+++

•••

NOTE FROM SUE: Mayhe It's lucky you can't afford that
two-family home. Seems to me you "Inherited" an overdose of
~ responsibility when your mother died.
Your sister, at 18, doesn't neecl ''mothering," and a
~ healthy man In his 54lll can certainly gel along without his
~ married daughter's ~mperlng.
.
•
Let them live thetr own lives and you'll be surprised bow
' well they manage,
••
+++
' Rap :
•
I've been dating John for about three months. We planned
: to live together when I joined him at college in Janua:')'.
~
Then last week he told me he would rather "just date" me
• because shacking up Is cheap WJd might lead to "other com=pllcattons."
~
What he means is, he wants a girl, but he wanta his
; freedom too (I think ). If he won't make a commitment,
"shouldn't I drop him?- D. D.
•
•D. :
" "Living together" isn't much of a commitment. I'd say, if
' you care about John, accept his terms. - SUE

m. at the hall. Meat and
beverqe furnished. Bring
COVered dish. Door prize,
TO,R•KEY DINNER
star\iha at 5 tJ. m. at I..A!tart
Fali : ,E~IIIent~ry School.
G@~ ,. tjirtertalnment;
~ll\li!ilnt. ot king and queen
and prizes.
BAZAAR . BY Ladles
Au:rtllary of Middleport
'· ~ntecostal ChiU'ch,
tOd:lly,and $alurday, 9 un. to
p,q,,·. at .warner Iilsurance
'102 W. Main St.,
Po1m.eirov:
new
and
for sale.

.

+++

NOTE FROM HELEN: Come February or. March, you
may be very glad you aren't shacked up. "Uvlng free" away
_:from family or "other complications" is one of the best parta of
• a new college life.

......
.,

~holds

. · , Edward J. Berkick,
evemng,
MD
. ., was Teresa Ch'1c hester,
F'Irs I v·1ce President
'
Qf the
local
Student
Nurse
Association,
Dr. Berkich spoke about
h
·
I e deve1opment of nursing
d
th
f'
d
an e 1rst awar of a pin to
graduate nurse back in New
York City at the famous
Bellevue Hosp1...
···) . H
' e emh
·
d
th
t
th
p as1ze . a e success ful
ru1ure' of the '# nursing
''
1
·
'II
d
pro esswn WI epend. upon
the ac t'tve InvoIvement of
· tuaI pat'1ent care,
nurses mac
and the personal contact with
the patient : the seeing,
touching and talking with
each other.
Invocation and benediction
for the banquet, held in .the
French Five Hundred Room
at Holzer Medical Center,
was given by the Rev. Arthur
Lund. Director of Chaplaincy
Services.

'

we'll go to anJ'
lengths to make
you fashionable

t5'' chain with 1
and 2 diamonds.
All others special
order. .
What's nr,v? Laced-up teolh• on a' 111rrow
wooden Wldge on 1 flexible rubber' solei
,y~·re I)Onna love lf)lndlng your fun tim•
lheH great lobkln', eny mowln'
·
· wldgn. Tltlt's what's new " lrom
IIIII Double buc:lcte in rust or l1tlt10
illther, Til In brown 01 Indian rtd
l)rlln lulhtr
•

!

I"

·heritage
house
MIDDlEPoRT, 0.

a new will
grandson.
:•·has
Councilors
meet atPast
the
~ home of Jean Sommerfield
~ Nov . 12, It was announced,
• with Mrs. Ada Morris to
' serve as co-hostess.
•· rresenl at t~e meeting ,
• were Mrs. Eileen Martin,
~ Mrs. Belly Roush, Mrs. Mary
~ K. Holter, Mrs. I..A!tha Wood,
• Mrs. Mae McPeek, Mrs. Ada
:·. Neulzling, Mrs. Mary Jo

••

Store
Hotln:

Mon.-Fri.
..•• S.t.
CtoMd Sunday
~

1n 11168, Rlchm!,Nixon waa
•elected 37th President of the
United States, defeating
.[)enlocr&amp;t Hubert HumphreY.

Pooler, Mrs. Jean Sum·
merfleld, Mrs. I..A!ona Hen·
sley, Mrs.• Ada Morris, Mrs.
Ulda Weber, Mrs. Ada Van
·
Meter,
Mrs. Ethe1 Orr, Mrs.
Ada Bissell, Mr~. Erma
·
Cleland, Mrs. Opal Ho11 on,
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, Mrs.
Sadie Trussell and Joe
Bissell.

'

Daily, Debbie Owens, Betsy
Riffie, Beth Headley, ·Debbie
Davis, Jo Ellen Lawrence,
Tamm'i Cozart, Roberta
Young , Mary Taylor, Kathy
America in an informal Lawrence, Vida Weber, Tam ·
ceremony held recently at the Bowers, Diana Evans, Pam
home of Mrs. Janice Ritchie, Bowers, Connie Jones, Judy
advisor.
Hol ter and Sarah Wells.
The new members are Jutly
Other members attending
Perry , Sharon Henderson, were Cheryl Benedum,
Sandy Hensley, Brenda
Sampson, Joetta Krider .
Nancy Chaffee, Cathy
Collins, Tammi Fortney,
Arlene Conalty, Dee Barber,
Valorie Jo Bontle, Debbie

HUNTINGTON - Noted
stage, screen, radio and
television actor Alexander
Scourby will give his
dramatic presentation of
"American I..A!gends and Tall
Tales", Monday, Nov. 10 as
part of the Forum Series of
the Marshall Artists Series.
Appearing at 8 p. m. in Old
Main Auditorium at Marshall
University, Scourby will
recreated the legendary
characters from our nation's
folklore, both fictitious and
historical, including Paul
Bunyan , lchabod Crane ,
Daniel Boore and many
others . Admission is by
season membership to the
Forum Series or by Marshall
University student activity
card.
•
Hailed by critics for his
distinguished performances

Pullins, Cindy Pitzer, Candy

CECILE MARIE HARRIS, of A£illand, Ky ., was
chosen "Student Nurse 1975-76" to represent District 141n
"Student Nurse of Ohio" Contest in March.

Bazaar plans
are complete

Holida y bazaar plans were
in "Crime and Punishment •"
completed
during a meeting
"~ Hamlet / ' "Richard II ",
of
the
Ohio
Eta
Phi Chapter of
'' Henry IV, Part I", "St.
Beta
Sigma
Phi
Sorority held
Joan ", HVivat!
Vi va t
Regina!", "Detective Story''
and "Darkness at Noon",
Scourby is considered a man
of all media.
His films include "Giant,"
''The SiJver Chalice ,'' ''Affair
in Trinidad," 11 Ransom ,"

"The Glory Brigade" and
"The Big Heat".
In addition , he has narrated
many NBC-TV specials such
as "He is Risen*\ "The

Corning of Christ" and "The
Law of the Prophets".
Scourby records extensively for the American
Foundation for the Blind and
has recorded the entire Bible
for .the American Bible
Society.

WESLEY CHOIR HERE
POMEROY - The Wesley
Choir, Ohio University,
Athens, will present the aftemoon program at the annua!Homecomlngservicesat
h
tMethodlEnterprise
t Ch h SUnited
d
e
s
urc
un ay,
Nov. 9, at 1:30. A carry-In
dhiner will be served at 12:15
following the mo,l'lllng
worship and Sunday School.
The public Is Invited to attend
all or any part of the day.

CONVERSE

Museum display
is of Indians
.

Also you ca n view a
Mastodon tooth, some antique tools, household items,
Ohio River boat pictures and
other pictures and items of
local interest. This display
will be continued through
November. Museum hours
are Tuesday, Thursday and
Friday, 10 to II , and 2 to ' 4,
and Sundays 2 to 4. Donations
of 25c for children and 50c for
adults are appreciated.
The December display wilt
depict an " Old Fashion
Christmas", and requests are
being made of the public for
loan of old fashion toys,
decorations, Christmas
pictures, cards , Christmas
tree candleholders, and other
tree decorations. Items may
be left at the museum on
weekdays. For further information, phone the Meigs
Museum, 992-3810, or 992·
2264, or 992-5877.

MIDDlfPORT, OHIO
I

'

SALE
BAKER
FURNITURE

,l_£!e!;!.!:!.,,!!!J!:!..!!:!;:!!~:!!!.!~-L

NO FUMES IN YOUR HOME
NO FLAME IN YOUR HOME

SAFE

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PH. 992-5321

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Let Your Appearance
Speak For You This
Holiday Season
With Sport Coats,
Suits and casual

Wear In A
Wide Range Of
Colors
and
Styles
Lay·Away
Now For

All The While!

Soft Glove
Leather
6"and 8''

A \

Marguerite's Shoes
102 E.

.
Main

Betty Ohlinger

Pomeroy

®

HEATS WITH GAS!

-INSTALLED OUTDOORSl-

..... .....
MIM!oport,O.

,4,,,,.

liNG UNIT.

Be In Style

r

THE SHOE BOX

with relatives and friends of
the couple invited to call. The
reception is being gi,ven by
the women 's Missionary
Council or'the Church.

REVOLUTIONARY

ChriJJtmas

CANVAS OXFORDS
•

COOL &amp; HEAT YOUR
HOME WITH THE

MASON - The Rev. and
Mrs. Chesler Tennant of the
Mason Assembly of God
Church, will observe their
silver wedding anniversary .
on Sunday at their home on
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va.
Open house and a reception
will be held from 2 to 4 p.m.

ADMIRAL
STEREO

NEW YORK (UPI)- Tbe
seventh game of the 1975
World Series hetween Cincinnati and Boston drew a
of Hattford Mayor Charles video audience of 75 million,
Black to fill the lone vacancy highest total for any televised
left on the Mason County sport program, the American
Development Authority, and I..A!ague reported Wednesday.
purchase of a new
The Minnesota-Pittsburgh
refrigerator for the residence Super Bowl game last
trailer at the Mason County 4- January had a television
H Campground.
audience of 71 million people.

Did you that that one time
large elephant type animals
called mastodons walked that
part of the earth we now know
as Meigs County? How abOut
the Indians that lived here ?
Old you ever wonder what
kind of tools they worked
with.
.
Remember the peace
pipes , arrowheads and
ceremonial ornaments in
American History books?
If any of this is of Interest to
you, the Meigs County
Museum on Butternut Ave. in
Pomeroy has as its present
display, INDIANS ! A
collection of various stone
artifacts made and used by
the Indians and pictures of
many ways the Indians lived.
The mini-theater, In staying
with the Indian theme, has as
its presentation,' "A Butterflies View of its
SIU'roundings."

Couple -to
honor 25th

at the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Mrs . Kathy Cummings
announced that \he bazaar
will be heid at Trinity Church
on Nov. 29 and that items to
In 1953, U .:i. Attorney
he sold will be on display a
General
Herbert Brownell
week preceding that time at
the Pomeroy National Bank . charged that President Harry
Mrs. Maurisha Nelson, Truman named Harry Dexter
social chairwoman , an. White bead of the Innounced that a trip to Fenton ternational Monetary Fund,
Glass at Williamstown, W. knowing White was a
Va. is planned for Tuesday, ~~Russian spy."
leaving the upper parking lot
in Pomeroy at 5:30p.m.
A candlelight ceremony
was held for Susan Lanning, a
new member . Mrs . Kathy
Fry and Mrs. Brenda Haggy
were hos lesses.

Mason facility closed
PT. PLEASANT' ~ Two
Mason County solid waste
disposal facilities are ordered
closed by the Slate Department of Health, effective
immediately, according to a
leIter read Tuesday evening
at the regular session of the
Mason County Commission.
They are landfills ownedby
George Carson of Mason and
A. 0. Powers or Sanitation
Services, Inc. of Glenwood.
Dr. N. H. Dyer, director of
the W. Va. Dept. of Mental
Health wrote they had failed
to obtain approval by the
state department for solid
waste disposal and that they
failed to dispose of solid
wastes in accordance with
Article t, Section 9 and Ar·
tlcle 9, Section 3 of the state
code of regulations.
Since both of these
sanitation services serve a
large portion of Mason
County the commission is
now hoping that the Point
Pleasant landfill will be able
to accommodate garbage
disposal previously handled
by the two firms .
·
Among the other motl~ns
acted upon was appointme~t

Deanna Baker, Pam Ka utz,
Teresa Longnetti , Tammi
Pitzer, Paula Hawk, Niese!
Duvall, Brenda Young, Susan
Henderson, Brenda Boyles,
Theresa Brown ing, Bonnie
Da iley and De bbie Windon .
Pizza was served following
the . initiation. Chapter
mother, Janie Headley, also
attended.

Spencer, Dawn Sorden, Terri

to give
dramatic presentation

lllll•••••llliilil•••••••••..

••

I,

EAST MEIGS - Thirty-two
Eastern High School students
were initiated into the
Eastern Chapter of the
Future Homemakers of

No~ed actor

~

Council 323
Tuesday meeting

,, CHESTER - Friendship
nightlo be held Friday at 6:30
: p.m. in Belpre was an·· nounced when Chester
~ Coun'cil 323, Daughters• of
:.America, met Tuesday night
,,.
11
" al the ha .
:. Mrs . Leona Hensley,
:::associate councllOI', presided
:,at the meeting. It was noted
::;that Mrs, 9 oldle Frederick

A&amp;~-~

Court St., Pomeroy

Eastern FHA initiates new
members in recent ceremony

~.Chester
•

diamonds-by-the-yard

Faohlon's neweat by-word:
dlamonda·by·the-yard.
Quality dlamondo aet In 14 Kt.
gold chains, ChooH the
length of chain . .. the number
and size or dlamoncla that
match your mood, bert! your
budgot. All diamond chalna
. . . or diamonds matched wllh
rubl.., emeralds, or eapphlrea.

1's the photography ed1'tor for
the school's yearbook.
In 1'975 she attended the
Regional Conference in
Dayton and in i975, the State
Convention in Cleveland of
I he
Student
Nurse
Assoc•'at1'on 'of Oht'o. On Nov.
7-ll,shewillgototheRI'glonal
Conference in Toledo .
' Cect' le 1's also an
Emergency Med 1'c al
Technician, certt' fl' ed 1·n
Kentucky.
Awards to Cecile ,·ncluded
$50 from ·the Future Nurses
Association of Gallipolis, a
memorial to Jan Davis,
presented by Stephanie Ross,
President of the FNA of
Gallia Academy High School;
$50 from SNA District 14
presented by Connie Me:
Carty, Treasurer of the SNA
. of Gallipolis, along with gi£1
certificates from Carl's Shoe
Store, the Uniform Center
and The Alcove.
Cecile speaking before the
group delivered her winning
essay ' entitled "The Past We
Inhe;il: Th~ Future We
Shape."
Welcoming the group,
announcing Cecile Harris'
selection and introducing the
featured speaker of the

Generation Rap

..

~v!iJk lltlinet, 7:3o p. .

JIMCROYE
EMILY LEEDY

SYRACUSJi; - Election of fleers reports were given, an
officers was held at the offering taken, and 24 shut-in ,
Tuesday night meeting ol the . c~lls reported. The birthdays·
,,.,
United Methodist Women o( of Mrs. EiChinger, Mrs. Lisle
THURSDAY
the Syracuse Asbury United and Mrs. Alice Capehart
MEIGS County Council of Methodist Church held at the were observed.
·
Parents and Teachers, 7:30 home of Mrs. Mary Lisle.
Mrs. Kloes conducted a
P·"!· at Eastern High School.
Elected were Mrs. Opal thank offering program with
Prqgt~ will be on drug Kloes, president; Mrs. Mary each member telling what
abuJ!i,
Lisle, vice president; Mrs. she is most thankful for . Mrs.~O ' flEART Church Bernice
Winebrenner, DorothyJarvls.wasprogram
ann~ bazaar, starting at secretary;
Mrs . Anna leader and assisting her were
4:30.pim·,wtth creaed ba~ed Hllldore, assistant secretary; Mrs. Eichinger, Mrs. Nora
chiclten and ~ dinners; Mrs. Ann Sauvage, treasurer, Houdashell, Mrs. Sauvage
games mid fancy stands.
and Mrs. Grace Weese, and
Mrs .
Dorothy
G~qJA COUNTY . Salon, assistant treas!lfer.
Winebrenner. Mrs. Helin
• •
Christmas projects were Teaford gave a prayer to
61 ••· •.:30 p.m. at the home of d'
. ·
· 1scussed wt. th. (llem bers c1ose the meetmg.
M
G~~ls.Mabel
Brown, deciding to get gifts for the
patients at the Syracuse.
R,AOIJIIE AMERICAN Nursing Home and for each
ugliil);• Post 602, 8 p. m. one to provide a toy for the
Oyj'!lf stew will be served. children
at
Veterans
.;.&gt;'!;· •
.
Sew
EV;UIGEUNE Chapter, Memorial Hospital. Mrs.
o.E!,s., 7:3op.m., Middleport Lisle and Mrs. Sauvage wiU
For
e-'~' T
1
buy the gifts for the nursing
M. ~uc
. empe.
..,,
home patients.
Christmas
MbN!J'HLY II;!EETING,
Mrs. Kloes gave the call
~etgli• Unit of the· American to worship using a poem, "I
Caltc;et•Society, 7:30p.m. at Thank Him Once Again" and
lhe Htlghes building, S. Third gave . ~ reading from the
Ave., 'Middleport: All board ~tesponse magazine . Mrs.
mem~rs asked to attend; Margaret Eichinger had
DOUBLE KNITS
public :tnvtted.'
d
·
Reg. $3.98 yd. Now
REVlvAL STARTING and . evohons using the 23rd
•Psalm and a meditation,
ruiJriln.S through Nov. 9 at "Gracious Invitation". Of- V
RWIW?SUV•
Filltlii Tabernacle Church on
. TABLE Of COITON
BaUI!f Riln Road, 7:30 each
evenJl!t w;fth Denver Rollins,
&amp; POLYESTER
Ccil)IIJibils; speaking. Em- Rev. R. G. Cook, Columbus,
metr1\aW8on, pastor, invites speaking. Services aiiO a.m.
followed by covered dish ·
the public.
dinner at noon. Afternoon
FRIDAY
~~L FUN Festival, today services beginning at 2 p.m.
and ';~tilrday, at the 11ew with special i~strumental and
Hav~., Grade School under vocal music; Rev. Cook will
s~antqr~hlp of the N~w speak at 7:30 evening serHav~ P'!IO. Friday kitchen ·vtces. Public Invited.
~:a,l5:30 p.m. with lots of
ANNUAL Homecoming
fbocl; :record hop Wld magic
slicii( at .7!30. p.m. Saturday services at the Enterprise
kl~~ ···~ at 3 p.m.; United Methodist Church.
. ou~de:games at I p.m. and Carry in dinner at 12:15
inside games at 4 11.m. Other followed by.afternoon service
activities both days Include featuriQg the Wesley Choir
spoo)t houae, corn dog stand, from Ohio University.
country , store, candy shop;
tr~.h~t, baseball toss,
ot•-·
. ¥Jiroes·
,, ··-' .
POMONA Gr~ge, 8 p.m.
at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall. Degree work. Ohio
Valley Grange will be host.
SATURDAY
1ID
PIJBUC SQUARE dance, 8
MIIID
p.m .. to 12 .midnight at Port,
· il!nd SChool 6ponsored by
Senftir ·Cltizena Golden Age
&lt;;tub; music by String
' Duster~; callers ·Gienn
Lambert, Cora Hilton, Robert
Pickli!t: Mreshments and
~~~i. c~lldreri und~ 12

·. · ~ij~R{ wooD~AN

•'

Goessler Jewelry Store

Drut Orders
Store, Filled
Mid ·. . ._ _ _ _1111111_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..
Mill

'

flexibility and adaptability
are the essential ingredients
of the college graduate In his
search ,for employment.
Further, shortage and surplus areas were discussed for
both teaching and nonteaching occupations, and
practical advice concerning
.college preparation for
.employable career areas was
given.
The two-day workshop was
W1 opportunity through which
Rio Grande College-Rio
Grande Community College
students could see a direct
and meaningful relationship
between their college courses
and many occupations which
make use of those courses.

Open Til 8 Friday-Close Sat. At s

GENERAL TIRE SALES
1\~

psychiatry, psychology, 'and
related fields.
·
Eleanor Strang : Director
of Nursing at Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis, discussed
careers In nursing, opportunities as ·X-Ray
tech~ician , radiologist,
physical therapy, n~clear
medicine, surgery, family
practice.
Larry Cayton : VicePresident of Security Central
National Bank, Portsmouth,
outlined many different
career possibilities in the
banking business (ex: personnel, accounting, computer
specialists.)
In addition, the speakers
emphasized the mobility,

.

PLUS RECAPPABLE CASINGS
FREE MOUNTING

' ' ' " lift ... start
MONADI! ,X cost 13.00

..

patron was held with Dale
Smith being elected t0 serv.e.
Mrs. Dorothy Will was the
judge for the election with
Mrs. Helen Neutzltng and
Mrs. Ebersbach as tellers.
Sympathy was extended to
Lorenzo Davis in the loss of
his sister. Memorial services
was conducted for Glen Dill
and the charter was draped In
his memory.
The chapter voted to
provide Christmas gifts for
residents of the Meigs County
Infirmary and shut-ins. -Installation was set for Dec. 2at
7:45 p.m. with the . worthy
arand· patron, Howard Shull,
to be the Installing grand
offictr. Mrs. Ella Smith,
associate matron, called
practices for Nov. 18 at 7:30
p.m. and Nov. 30 at 2 p.m.
Pin-ons were orange felt
squares
with . fruit
decorations complimenting
the fall decor of the refreshment tables. Pumpkin pie
and coffee were served. Hosts
were ·Mr. and Mrs. James
Soulsby, Mr. and Mrs : Alfred
Crow, Mrs. Uta Matlack,
Mrs.· Annette Knight and
Mrs. Norma Parker.

400 attend career workshop

.

lDSE UGLY FAT

Albert Wuud, Thuuws F.tlwartls, Ben F.wing, Dale
Smith and Clarence Struble .
Also recognized were two 50year members, Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell and Mrs. Clara
Thomas.
Mrs. Florence Well, worthy
matron, and Dale Smith,
worthy patron, presided with
Thomas Edwards pro tern as
associate patron, Mrs. Mabel
Moore as marshall, and
Albert Hemsley as sentinel.
Sally Ebersbach was sunshine page. One petition fOI'
membership by affiliation
was . read. Invitations to
several installations were
read and a donation was
made to the Southeast Ohio
Lung Association.
Mrs. Well and
Mrs.
OOI'othy Woodard reported on
their trip to the Grand
Session in Cleveland where
Mrs. Woodard served as
grand page to the 1975
deputy, Mrs. Donna Spring. It
was announced that the 1975
deputy grand matron Is
Loella Hayes, a member of
Mount Moriah Chapter at
Beverly.
Election for a worthy

Cecile Harris selected
:.Studen! Nurse of 1975-76

Women elect officers

�•

8- The D8Uy Seritltiel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., '111ursday, Nov. 6, 1975

Fast Result Use ·The ::Sentinel .Classifieds 1

~lDW®~;-IMJ"-~IJ_,,_For
, ,

Unoenmbl•th..e four Jumbl..,.,
one ·l etter to .tach ~quart!. t_o

·

s

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLI NES

oav

P .M .

Before

I
I I I tJ

.

IFALCIE I

I [J I I I

I

I k.]

l

Jo ...lNoCRISS

A I&lt;IN6.

Now
the clrtltd letltn
to
the 1qrprloe anower,
, 1uw•tt&lt;l by thellbOVe cartqon.

BLIND ADS

Additional 2Sc Charge per
Advertisement .

wHit 1 b1d mtmoril

OFFICE HOURS

mi,M ll~t - NOTES "

8:30a .m . to 5:00pm . Dai ly ,
8 : 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 No on
Sa turday .

!•

NOTICE

Pursuant to Write of
EK&amp;cut lon Issued by the Court
of Common Pleas of Meigs
count !(, Ohio, I will offer for
sa l e, at public aUction , at the

front door of the Cllurthouse in
Pomeroy. Ohio, on Novemb er

12, 1975, at 10 :00 o'clock A. M .,

th e following described r ea l
estate, to -w it :
Si tuated
lh
Tow nship , Meigs

Ohio .

Bedford
Coun ty ,

Being inSectlon 16, Town .
ship 3, Range 13 , Ohio Com .
pany's Pur chase. Beginning
at the center of the westline o f
sa id Section 16 ; thence eut
116 roctato the westline o1land
now or formerly owned by C.

A. Hines ond ldo M. Hines ;
thence south 11VJ rods ; thence

eut 64 rods to the center line
of said uct Jon ; thence south
671/, r ods; thence wes t BO rods ;
thenc e north 42 rods ; thence
west 100 rod s to the west line
of said section ; thence north
on the west line of setd sec lion,
38 rods to the pla ce of
beg i nning , conta i ning 59
acres , more or less.
Excepting 1.6a cre conveyed
to Joseph Stanley, by deed
recorded In Volume 218, Page

7SS , ·Molgs County

De ed

Records.
Further excepti ng , 2.3 acres
conveyed to Herber t Gilkey ,
b ';' deed recorded In Volume

w.

Card of Thanks

Coins, Currency
and Supplies

S179S

nice car with good economy.

Buy, Sell or Trade

1971 MATADOR '
$1395
4-door, local car, a ir coodltloned, lull equ ipment.

Approlul service on
est•tes and collections.

R&amp;J OOINS

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE.
S1295
· Blk . vinyl roof,, grey finish, good tires, automatic.
power steering, radio.

.

fi'

I

POMEROY. OHIO

I

.

wlll'1
genuine
Ar te x
d ecorator paints. Discover
the fun bv creating b'eau'tlfut
hand -pelnted lin ens. Free
Instruction classes . Call
Allee s. Nease. (61A J 985 -

..._,

FUEL OIL

3942.

11 -l 81p

-------------WI·THOUT my permi ssion.

old Coonhound pups,
.·-r-a
,-. WEEK
125 . Phone (3041 882-2&lt;20.
AKC Doberman puppies, ma l e
and female , Champ ion blood
line . Phone {304) 882 -3268 ,
N.ew Haven, w . va .
11 -A-6tp

1975 14x70 T R A ILER , ex .
cellent condition, especially
built for offices . Low pric e
for quick sa le. Phone f3 0A J

1\-2.11p
- - - - - - - -- - - - - -

NO. I HEATING OIL
N0.2 HEATING OIL
Degree Dey Delivery
Budge! Poy Pion
POMEROY LANDMARK
....~_ack W. Carsey , Mgr.
Phone 992-2161

there will be no hunting or
tresp assing
my property .
Bob McGraw , Meagan
Farm , off low er Bowmt~n's
Run .
1l -A-26 tc

on

B

11 -2-Stc 30 rT . TRAVEL -EZZ trail er ,
good co nd ition , full bath .
-~----- --------'
Must see to appreciate .
Phone 949 -2174 .
1l -4-6tc

For Rent .

2 BE DR OOM trailer , rea l -·- ________ _:_______
nice . Phone 992-3324.
' t973 HOD AK A wa mbat !25

PETS

c.

mo bil e home for

10·11·301c
WALNUT stereo . console ,
AM -FM radio, 8 track tape
~om b l n atlo n .
Balenc e
.1102 .10 or term s. Call 992 -

,3965 .

11 ·5-lfc
SPEC IAL - BLACK SER ·
VICE OX FORD S ond

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

Wellington Boots, 6 Inch
farm sty le shoes , now S19.95 .
Dan's Shoe Repelr, Mid ·
dleport, Phone 9~2 - 3684 .
11 -5-6tc

1970
au 1c K R ivtero. full
pow er, air conditioning ,
very good con~ltlon with no
rust . 51.200. Al so. 30 Inch

d lr tblke , 2, 000 miles, good

elec . range used 3 months,

condition . r hone 992·2845.

S75. Phone 742 -2796 .

ll -.t -61c

11 ·S ·61 c

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

~~~-0~~~~~-;,;o;e-;;;-~·s; REAL- -;;;,ti;-h~~;-.;ith

161&lt;1 446-9539.

Misc . Se le

Nov . 8, 3 pc .
bedroom suite , c omplete
with mettress antt springs,
couch, cha'Jrs. ges eir e .
heeler , I&lt; It chen fable and
cha irs , typ eWriter . clothing ,
bedding, dish es. etc . George
Hacketl. 9j Seve nth Ave .,
Middleport , Oh io .

·'(NEW 1975 MODELS)
(I) CK20903 3/4 ton 4x4 Cust. Deluxe 350-4
auto., P.S., P. B., radio, HDS. R.S. B.
mirrors, 750x16 tube type on &amp; off tread
foam seat gauges, upper mldg . Green .

.o

'

George Harris

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

...,.......__

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy
ODin Eves- ·T ill

I~

Phone

th~

st.. Middleporl. Ohio . Phone

992 -

POMEROY - Large 2
story frame. 3 BR. bath !.
•;,, dining R.. TV Room, full
basemen! with 2 car
gorage, new N. gas forced ·
olr furnace, carpeting !.
paneling , New Alum .
siding. $18,500.
RUTLAND - Just off Rt.
124 - Ranch type, 3 BR ,
bath , dinette. modern
kitchen w.ronge &amp; ref..
storm doors &amp; windows, a
very large garage !.
workshop, carport. Home
has full basement &amp; own
water system plus E
tapR.
MAN Y
0 T H
FEATURES, $28,000.

FREE RENT AT
MANOR
IN

TOM ·RUE

~DIJ'T

TH~ ~Y.T 11~
Pll.K~D

8·27-tfc ,
- -- - - - - - - - -- - -

·•

.L~ ,. .

OIJ

He

~00

VJ~iOI.Joi~

I

e-X CAVAT ING', dOzer, l oader ~ :
and backh oe work; sept ic '
tanks
installed ; dUmP• 1
tru cks end lo boys for hire ; : :
will haul f i ll dirt. top soil. : 1
limestone and gravel,c Ca ll •
• Oob or Roger Jeffers·. day ; 1
phone R92 7089, night ph one ,:

902 3525 or 992 51J2 .

! Wli- ljOO

IT IDJU)IJ'T OCI
AIJ'f(:£{)0. ~

·~

couw 1-IU.

••a

'/()(),TOO\

·

2·11-lfc ,

- - - . '--- -. .-•-.' .

SEWI NG

'
I
MAC HIN E . •

~~~~

Repairs , service, all makes . :
992 2284 . The Fjlb r lc Shop,
Pomeroy . Au thor lzed ~i n ge r,
~~ ales and Se rvi ce . We
sh arpen Sc issors .
3 '29 lfC I
. . ' . ~ . ·'~E ·Aov · MtX.. CONCRET6
delivered r ig ht to your ·
prolect.rastandeasy . Free •
estimsfes . Phone 992 3284, ,
Goeglei n Read,Y Mix Co .)"·
Midd leport , Oh 1 o~
...... •

.

-

-

A South Carolinian wants to
know what we bid in response
to a one diamond opening
will!·
4 KQ76• A2 t J44 K9854.
We respond two clubs. With
a full openlfll bid opposite an
~ing bid we Intend to set to
game or hicher and want to bid
as naturally as possl~le .
Hence, we start Procete!iDP
by bidding our longest su1t.
(For a copy of JACOBY
MOD~RN, send $1 to: "W!n
ar sr ;dge ," c/o thrs
newsptiper, P. 0. Box. 48,9,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019)

630tfc .
--.

WOULD YOU BELIEVE;

Build an all steel building at ~
Pole Barn prices? Golden ,
Gia nt All -Ste el Buildings ~ ,.
Rt: 4, Bo x l AB, Waverly.-.. •

Ohi o. Phone 947 ·2296.

7-24-tfc

.

HENRY E. CLELAND

WILL trim or cut trees end
BROKER
shrubbery . Plione 949 - 25~~ :·
hon ff2
or 742 -3167 .
...
2
59
L _ _.:.P~.:.e~_-_1_ __ ,
10·8·261e

WE SPECIALIZE In mobile

Virgil B., S r .

I

'

home furnac e re pai r . Phone,.._::

___________ __
~2 :5158.

TEA FORD

,., ,.

D &amp; 0 T REE Trimming. 2D..
years ex perienct. In sured,

REAL lOR

i

~

Ire• est imates . Cell 992·3057
or (11 667 ·3041 , Coolville .
_...._
10·15 ·tfC

__ _____

~--

- 3 BR's, BEAUTIFY - you r h·ome w(th I •
Perme ·Stone. ~ew . homes ,
bath, full basfment, furnace,
as well as remodeling work . •,
and drilled well. Asking
Expert Installation . F r ee •
514,000.
estimates . Phon e• 74'2 · 2409! ' :
ONE all block riding horse, 13.85 ACRES - 4 B. Fl. brick,
, 10-l1 -26tc ,
, wh ite b la ze , very gentle . up to dale bath, F.A. furnace. - - - - - - - - - - -.- - I
Phone
.
day , or l42 ·
742 2211
SIGN PAINTING , lttte rlng, :
Nice
porch
.
Only
sao.ooo.
2245 night .
reasonable rates . Write Box ,
.s. tc RACINE - 3 B.R .'s,' nice
11
601. Pom eroy . ·
.1 • '
- - - -- - - - - - - - - -6
bath; new kit., dining , nat. gas
I! ·Z-61p
furnace, 2 porches and
'

New

yellow co.r n and 35 -A

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

spacious vard .

1 0 1 3 61
-.1...-------------

road, lf~ fenced, large pondb

Nina has
suddenltl taken

C. BRADFORD , Auctioneer.
Co mplete Se rv ice . Phone ,~
9.f9-'2.t87 or 949-2000 . Racine, 1
Oh io, Critt Bradford .
•
10·9-ffC ,.. 1 •
- - -- - - - - - - - - - -

Real Estate For Sale

a r&amp;herdim
view of TV!

I

'

CHRYSLER

..,' ,.
I

She'll qet ovet
it! lhe4

VILLAG ~

10 :DO--Pollce Story 3,4,15; Barnaby Jones 8,10; News
20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
10:30-Avlatlon Weother 20.
11 :(10-News 3.4,6.1,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Joltnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Specl•\,13;
Sammy and Company 6; Movie " The CIOIIH I;
"Movie "The Picture of Dorian Gray" 10; Jenekl

alw~4s do~

'

1 :~1clnlght Special 3.~.15; Wiele World Speclal6;

MID ·

100 Cherry Volley Rood ,
Newark , Ohio , &lt;JOSS. (61&lt;1
3«·2631.
11-6-Jtc

In Middleport.

VILLAGE

MANOR Is yours for one
bedroom
apartments
~-------------starHp_g,at $104 monthl~ plus
ADVANCE
Co mmi ssions
1
mailing ' c ir cul ars! I Co m - · • elet~ ~ pay for everything
etse . See the Manager et
plete beginners kit , Sl
Riverside Apartment1 or
(retundoblel. Send stOm ped
coil 992-3213. ThIs 'offer will
address!!d en v elo p e for
end soon, so move in now
In forma ti on :
Box
}B .
and save SSSS.
Rullond , Oh io 45775.

10·23 ·11C

11 .2.Jtp
-·------------.
. .!

BAIRD BROS. AUTO PARTS ··
COMI'LITI GARAR IDVICI .AUTOMATIC TftANI. A .PIICIALTY
NIIW &amp; U. . O PAftTI
•Ho~

ftADIATO~

ftiPAlft

ftOUT II 7
QALLIPOLI8; OHIO - 1
NIKT TO OLD .ILVIft 8ft\DCI.

"76 Are Here"

.

74 Dodge Chlroer s.E., 2
dr. H.T., power windows,
AM-FM rodlo, olr, console,
lad. oflicl,ol cor.

•3895

74 Plymouth Sotelllte, 9

pus. wagon, •lr, P.S.,
P.B., foct. Official car.

•3895

72 Clltv. Imp. Cuotom, 2 dr.
H. T., P. S., P.l., AM rodlo.

'2195 .

73 Plymouth Vlllont, 4 dr. 6
cyl,, lVIII., P.S., AM rodlo,
good economy.
II

'2695
Chev . 9 pusengtr

wogon, olr, P.S., P.B.
8

1095

70 VW, rod bug. A steal at

'995
DArt Swinger 2 dr.,

70
6
cyl., 1uto., P.S.. AM rodlo,.
new tires.
"

PHONE 446-4060

remodeling .

74 Mere. Comet, 6 cyl .. 4
dr., outo., P.S., AM r1dlo,
low miiNge, 1 local own1r,
powder blue, nol shorp.

'3195

'1595
Dodge Coronet
'495

Convt.

See Tom Rue,
or Ray Douglas
Ph. 992-259•

Movie " The Llttt. Shop o9f Horrors" 13; News 13.
2:»-Movle "Blindfold" ~·
4:»-Movle "Wings of Fire" 4.
UaRA (Bept. 23-0cL 23)
your generosity today
withoul though! of gain
recognition. Virtue should

AstraGraph

Rut lo nd

Sa lem

Phone 7&lt;2-2306

LISTEN

10 .. 9-ttc

I

Wall to wall carpeting ,
paneling,
n ew celltngsj
garbage disposal, etc .
Garage w i th storage area .
513,500. For appointment,

11 ·&lt;·12tc
batemtnt , nice back vard,

only suoo. w \th now fur .

nllure, only 110,300. Phone

"' .,

· Weeltdays 10:00 A. l,tiJ 2:00·A.M.
..
'...., ,
ON

coli 992·2022 .

on Lincoln Holghts , 2
bedr.m , lerC.e kitchen, full

WMPO FM mREO 92

11.2.6tc
3 BEDRM . mobile home ,
ponelllng, WIII ·IO·W'OII
carpeting. oaroge, Vllllty
build ing , thrn a~~ tour .•

'

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

.

Middleport . 58.000. Phone
"2·38&lt;3.
11 ·2·11C

'

'

\

111 1

.
IAAB

jl !

:::!

' I

,...j 'I

I

'j-,~
j

HAVE~E

I.I:'

6(JT ENNV

I' :.

TOOAY.
'l:DWEE1'1?

I '

'

Mn&lt;X:GQOD
1
' GOSSIP

THAR'S ONE MORE
' LEETLE SCAAF',
ELVINEY-- BUT IT'S

EXTRII, EXTRY

IF lftlU UVEo IIIlTH M
C()t(OTES LIKE 1M &amp;C01llfl(
SI'IICE,IQ/'0 PrOMI!I.If' Be

&lt;X&gt;NFIDENTIA L

OUT CHASIN6 MICE!

. iiERMAN GRAT

MASON, W.VA.

10·2t' 121c
-, -·---- .~

I

I

'

'

BAOmARIUI (Now. IS-Dec.
21) You still must be wary
regarding your fino"'* today.

You're going to be uncertain

aboul your deciSions today.
Though ybu lry to cemoullage
II. others will see through your

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22...,.,.,
11) Don't press lrlonds lor
favors today. If they haven't

TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20)

brave masquerade.

going · to have to work a lol

harder than usual. Don't dopond on someone elsa to pull

Alleviate the tension . Take her
out tor d inner and relaxation .

LIO (July 23-Aug. 12) You
W A I could be 4PSOI b!!Cause you
VFHPUPOD
PI
XA
loot that lhoss on the home
Iron! don 'l appreciate whal
XKF 'K E SA DF WA U K P I N UF
N P S A • you 're doing lor Ihem . Don't
worry, they &lt;now and they'll
IFU
WAI
XKF
KESA DFWAUKPINrepay youlnhearls.
VIRGO (Aug. 21-ltpl. 22)
\) F
N AU - J A T I E T B
J E T Q0 K
You're a very gOod salesman
Yesl tlaJ'• ~: I WOULD RA111ER THAT THE loday. so avoid se,lllng fr;ends
PEOPlE SHOIJLD WONDER WHY J WASN'T IJIESIDENT on something you re not sure
"" '""N p ,...,.....
of. They'll take you senously
THAN WHY I AM. - """""" · .........,
and could got burned .
fC, I 111111iia '""'""' lrodl•t•. Jn&lt; .)

::;,
'

CRYPTOQUOO"E

could lead to troubMI.

You1re likely to let someona off
th e hook who is undeserving of
your good Intentions.

One letter si.mply stand• for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three I.'s. X for the two O's. etc. Single letters. CANCER (J..,. 21-.luiJ 22)
lpostrophes, th e length nnd formati~ n of the II'Ords nre all Femlly pressures on your mate
have been extraordinary today.
hints. Each day the code lett en are d11ferent.

I I I) ! '1
i

sharp weather eye peeled tor
stoplighls. speed !raps and
people bahlnd you . Inattention

how to work It: getwhalyouwanlloday ,you 're

A X Y D L B A A :X R
), 0 N G F B L L 0 W

24--.

For Frldly, NDY. 7, 1175
ARIES (M"""' 11-Aprtl 11)

1......1..-L-~,;1 GEMINI (Moy 21-.lunt 2.0) To

"""'

tts own reward for you.

SCORPIO (Oct.
II) ~
you 're traveling today. keep 1

your chestnuts out of the fire.

',. ''
I '
I' I'
JV~ ~ u I
.._

Phone 773-5592
•
MASON PURNnuiJ

HOU SE In Porlllnd. take over
payments . .5 rooms and
belh , good well , 2 acres of
round. coal 1'1 eal , Phon e

-

CRYPTtv\UOTE-Here's
ll

~w &gt;#~

I

lenthsacres lot, A:l,lflaod St .{

...

,

.

Phon• 7&lt;2.2590.

- ··~· - ·

DAILY

. . ...·.

'----------------...1,.

6 ACRES with 5 room nouse,
f iniShed . basemen t, rural
water located on Rt . U3 .

--

1.6 48 Record

'
1J.6.26tc

r43 2292.

T."'+--1-+--l

mountain

WITH
JIM WILLIAMS

6 ROOM house with bot h In
Middleport on o SO • 110 lot.

HOUSE

1-+--+-1
=-4--1-+-1

~

9·23·11C

992-7618 .

37 Put 00
cargo
38 Fencing
moves
3t ThesaaJian

TO

..Great ·Country Stereo"

BEDIIM . home . lu1f
lin Ished, ramod1llng , Sa~t!.l'l
St., Ru tland . Phone 742-.lYi
alter~ p.m. or see Milo B.
Hutchison .

35 - tbe tide

Lot
be
or
bl

.. Bernice Becll 0101

Though you're truly cognizant
of the other fellow's interests In
your joint endeavors today. it
won 't come oft that way. You'll
push too hard .

(prefix)

St.,

a her 4 p: m . or see Milo 8 .
Hutchinson .

3

sz FJesperate

:a Pray

w'r ite, Shepard Contracllno.,.A:..;
Box 28A, Rutland, 4Sns ..._._.. .
Pllone 742-2409 .
·
~ ·rt ;.
10·31·26tc ' : ·

3 BR HOME, tust tlnlshtd

10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15.
11 :oo--Gamblt 8, 10.
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15; Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame Street 20,33.
11:5s-Take Kerr 8; cion Tmel's World 10.
12:DO--Showoffs 13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News
8,10.
M
12 :3G-Magnlflclent Marble Machine 3,15; All Y
Children 6,1 3; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
12:4s-Eiectr.lc Company 33.
12:5s-NBC News 3,15.
1:DO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young and the Restless 10; Not ForWomen Only 15.
1 , -Days 01 Our Lives 3.~.15; Let's Make A deal 13;
News 6; As the World Turns 8,10.
2:oo-i10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
2: 30-Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme and Reason 6,13 ; Edge of
Night 8,10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospllol 6,13;
Match Game 8,10; Say Brother 20.
.
3 : ~ Ute to Live 13; Max B. Nlble 6; Tattletales
8,10; Black Perspective on the News 20.
4:oo-Mtster Cartoon 3; Merv ·Grlffln 4; Somerstl15;
Mickey Mouse Club 6.8; Movie " Love Ma Tender"
10; Mister Rogers 20,33; Dinah! 13.
uo-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partrld!Je Famll'(
8; SeSllme Street 20,33; Get Smart 15.
5:0()-Bonanza 3; Family Affolr 8; Star Trek 15.
5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Electric Company 20,33; Adam-12 13.
6:(10-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Hodilepodge .
Lodge 20.
6:30-NBC News3,4,15; AJIC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Two-Woy Street 20.

9:30---Movle " Hey, I' m Alive," 6,13.

area code (219) 785 -2362 or ' ~
write A . E . Baltl!!y, New "
Ourhem Mall ,Estate, Lo~

Real Estate for Sale

NOVEMBER 7, 1975
6 ,oo-&lt;:olumbsuTOday 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6 : 1s-Folk Literature 3.
6:2s-Farm .Report 13.
6:30-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farmllme 10; Blue Ridge quartet 13.
6: 4~unce of Prevenllon 10.
6: cs-Mornlng Report 3.
6, 5s- Chuck While Reports 10; News 13.
o:oo-Tooay 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8:(10-Lucy Show 6; Caplaln Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
Street 33.
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:0()- A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Oouglos 10; Morning with D. J. 13.
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6; GlveN-Ta~e 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
10:oo-&lt;:elebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Dinah I 6; Price
Is Right 8.10; Mike Douglas 13.

a :oo--Sanford and Son 3.4.15; " The New. Orlglnll
Wonder Woman," 6,13 ; Big Eddie 1,10;
Washington Week In Review 20,33.
a :JO-Chlco and The Man 3,4, 15;M-A-S-H 8, 10; Wall
Street Week 20,33.
9:0()-Rockford Flies 3,4,15; Hawaii Flve-0 8,10;
Firing Line 20; Masterpiece Theatre 33.

3 BEORM . house In Racine.

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

33; Classic Theatre 20.
8:30- &lt;lasslc Theatre Preview 33.
9:(10-Sfrel!ls of San Francisco 6,13; Movie "Mr .
Maje ~lyk" 8; Classic Theall'f&gt; 33; Movie "Fathom"
10.
.
9: JG-Movle " The Silence" 3,4,15; Ref lections:· Paul
Ehrlich 20 .
10:oo-Harry 0 6,13; News 20.
ll :DO-- News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :JG-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mannix 13; FBI 6; Movie
"The Last Grenade" 8; Movie " Waterloo Bridge"
10; Janak! 33.
12:JG-Longstreel 13; Mennlx 6.
1:DO-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:30-Longstreet 6; News 13.

7:DO--Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Lawrencle Welk 8; Bowling for Dollar• 6; Avlallon
Weather 33; News 10; Don Adams Scr- Test 13;
Family Affair 15; Ohio Journal 20.
7:-Porter Wagoner 3; Bobroy VInton 4; .Candid
Camera 6; Evening Edition with M4rl)n Agronsky
20· $25 000 Pyramid 10; To Tell Tho Truth 13; Popl
~s The Country 15; Black' Perspective on the
News 33.

~ ...
..,......9-18.tfc
.........,..- .:·

' IF YOU WANT A GOOD BUY,
Hl. W~slvllle , lnd lan~X:
10-28-tfc DROP IN AND WE WILL
46391.
i
SPENO ALL THE TIME
10·J1 -12fC ' I
DEEP well pump , 40 go\lon NEEDED TO SEE OUR
- ------------\
!
tank , 357 Mag . pistol with PROPERTIES,
CUSTOM Homes , no down ' , ,
hol sters . Also, 1975 Fireb lrd .
. payment. VA Loan s, F HA - ., 1
Phone 742 ·2661 .
As tow as 3 perc en I down ." - r '
11 .2.6tc
Your plahs or ours. Ca ll or A ....:

MOTORS

1l -4-6tc

OLE PORT ! We are so sure
that vou will lov e our apart .
ments that we give you two
weeks RENT FREE . Just
pav your sec ur itY deposl!
and stav six months and the
first '2 weeks Is free . You will
en(oy monthly leases, atl
.e lect r ic living , carpet ing ,
range and refr igerator , free
trash pickup , cab le TV
(Opllonal l and laundry
fac llllles . Convenient to
"s hopp ing on Third and Mill

potential.
recession -proof
business. Would like to find
a working partner t,o
operate a fabric Sh op tn this
area . Com pl ete t rain i ng ,
turnkey operation . Must
have
$300 -16000 .
Now
avallt~ble to Invest lor one halt own ersh ip . For details .
write or cell Vallev Fabr ics.

•oov

BORN LOSER

- - l.,~

BACKHOe tor re nt , hour of~
contract. Reg . or
ex . •
ca vatlng type . Se ptJc tanks \
ins talled . Bill Pullins . Phone :
992 -2478.
·,

AIRCO welding machine.
nvw . elec . all accessor ies
InCl ud ed. Phone 992-3.. 10.

· · ,· .

FABRiC SH OP . Unlimited

-

-

- - - - - - - - - - future problems as South
NORTH ·
6 starts to take very. strong ac.QJIO&amp;t
tion with his very fine hand.
.IOU
11 North just raises to two
• Q J9~
hear~. South will simply con·
tract for the heart game.
WEST
EAST
A seventh son of a seventh
•985
6K32
son sitting West can open the
•JH
ace or diamonds and continue
.AIOU
t8
llle suit. East will ruffand If he
.AJ64
.KIOU832 leads back a club, the fourSO\lTH !Dl
heart contract will be sunk
.... 1
without a trace. Against nor• A K Q63
mal defense Soulll will make
.KH3
or five . Maybe, even six If
four
.Q1
a
spade
is opened and East
Neither vulnerable
makes Ule mistake of playing
his king after an honor IS
West Nortlt Eall Soalb
playtd from dummy.

11 ·2-&amp;!p

7889 .

-------------Business Opportunities

·

,,

tr ee LIKE NEW 60,000 BTU gos

Mai n Sl.. Po meroy. Oh io or

rc lud es washer, dr ye r and
. ca ble . In Middleport over
Sli m and Trim . Phone 992.

11 ·5·6tc

Used But Not Abused

See

9·16·tfc

SOMEON E for gutter repair . ' ·· ouNTRv Mo bil e Hom e:
Ca ll 742 -2847 .
Park , Rt. 33 , ten miles-north
11 ·6·41C
of Pomeroy . Large lot s with
- ------------concrete patios.· sidewalkS,
ae·A UTI C I AN
wanted,
runners and off str ee t,
Helen 's Beautv Shop, 860 E .
parking . "Phone 992 7479.
Maln 1 Pomeroy , Ohio .
12-Jt tfc

'6144.00

See
Dallas
Blevins

;.i--L------ - ~~-4_!' 1Phone 949 ·2.03 or 843·2230.
11 ·6-ltc

'

"Reliable Service After The Deal"

);

day , Monday thru Friday .

(2) CCI0903 '12 Ton Cust. Deluxe 350-2, std.
P.S., P. B., radio, foam seat, mirrors,
gauges, L78-15 tires. tan.
.
•3815.00
( 1) CK20906 Cust. Deluxe Suburban 350-4,
. auto., P.S., P.B., center seat, headliner.
mirrors, radio, fuel tank, shield, gauges.
H.O. shocks.

UJV PICkUPS IN STOCK &amp;1976 4x4

We welcome your visit to
see our Kosco! Cos m etics
bu siness fir st har;~d and ge t
acquainted with our com plete
co mp any .
Ann
Sauvage,
Inde pe ndent
Dist r i butor , Syracuse .

Phone 992 .3272 .

paid .

4 - 16 - lf.~
- -.~- -·-_

992 ·5122 or 992·5305 .11 4 121 NOW selling Fuller Brush 1973 Golden Empress, 14M6~ .
Phone 949-2611.
· · P Products . Phono 992-3410. trailer, drilled wall .
10 -S-26tc ,
ONE-;·;:;.-;;;td'rh~f;;~hbred
!0-6-tfc
MIDDLE
PORT
Com-·
- ------------I
79 ACRE farm With barn and
f illy . S4SO. Also. one yearli ng - - - - - - - - - -- - - fortable 9 room home, :t BR's, APPROXIMATELY
•
m 11 king parlor , 4 bedrm ,
2'1&gt;' 1,
hall -Thoro ughbred colt , 59" R'EG . POLd: O 1-ier.etord 5 closets, 111, baths, spacious
acres. 200ft . on State Route • •
house furnished , Portland
tall. SlSO . Phone 992.7583 . ~bulls, one 5 year old, two living, din ing, hot water
area. Phone 8.. 3·2804 days,
124, '2 00 loot river fron ta ge ~ ['
843 -2256 evenings .
1970 12 • 63 3 bedrm .. both - •
11 ·4-121c yearlings . EMceltent heall~,and70'M160' 1ot. Only
dispositions . Phone 992-5565
··•
end half mobil e home , 10 x .. :
11 -2-Stc - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - -or 992·2926.
$16,500.
.
10 storage shl!!d, 11 x 30 pa11o " 1 1
----------- ---.
with on e mobile home rental ¥tl'
A lOVELY furnished aport . 1- - - - - - - - - •
11 -2-7tp LOTS - Up to 3 acres for
!pa ce . SIS,OOO firm . Coli ·
- ------ --~---building or trailers .
·ment for coup l es onl y. ln.
2937 .

WILL DO hOusework by

•3846.00

Come In Look This One Over
New thev. Lark M.inl Home
By Travel Equip. Corp.

utilities

IN TE RESTED In working?

( 11 CC10903 l!z Ton, Cust. Deluu 350-2 std .•
P.S., H.D.. P.B.• radio. P.S.B. mirrors,
gauges. L78-15 tires, foarT) seat. H.D.S.
St11bli izer bar, moss gold &amp; white.

Bargain Hunters Start Here, Stay Here.
(21 1972 Chev. C&amp;C 102" C. A. 6 cyl. 2995.00
3095.00
(1l19731nt. C&amp;C 104" c.A. acyl.
3895.00
(I) 1961 Int. C&amp;C Tandum a cyi.
1295.00
(1) 1972 Chtv. 3/4 ton4 speed acyl.
2095.00
( 1)1974 Chtv. 3/4 ton 4x4 auto. a cy.l. 4495.00
(1)1974 Chtv. 112 ton std. 6 c 1.
3150.00

'l.tce

__

dining

McCullough Power Saw . BRICK - 3 B. Fl.'s, nice bltth,J
- ------------1200. Call 992-2803 after 5 Phone 742 -2359 .
10 ·29·121p living and dining panel~ .
MOBILE home, nice location ,
p.m .
large pa ti o. city gas , like
- - - - - - - - - -- - - Mod. kit. wllh dishwasher-and
new . Al ber t Hill , Racine,
11 -4-J!c
.
disposal. W. to W. corpetlng.
RIOMINGTON, . 1,100 auto , Wanl only $11,000. Before
- ·- - ------ - - - - - Ohio , phone 949 -226 1.
new 12 or 20 ge. S1 ?2.50. winter .
1J.2 ·61c ANT IQU ES , Cherry chest of
drawers
.
over
150
years
old
.
Middlepo
rf, 9M
_ ~
. · c . . ACRES OUT _ On hard
-------- -----~
Can be seen at 317 Locust · ~;Flle:h._
· ··
5
l RM S. AND ball'! , furnished ,

Help Wanted

(31 CCI0903 1!z Ton Cust. Deluxe 350.-2, auto.,
P.S.. HD, P.B .• radio, H.D.S. &amp; shocks. L78·
15 tires, R.S. ~- gauges loam seat. Mirrors.
red-green-tan.
•4039.00 .

frost

ca ll 992 -7034.
TRAILER
space
for 992
rent
in.
11-4-.S tc
M idd leport.
Phone
-5434
10·21 ·26tc 197~-HoNDAJSo~ fo-;;;--;nd
-eMtras . Phone 992 -3658
.
.t RM . furni shed apt .,-adults
11-4-6tc
only . Phone 992 -5908 before 2 _ ·--'-- - - - - - - - - - - p.m .
12F T. ALUMI NUM boat and
Jl .2.tfc
tra iler , J h . p. motor fo r

:. n.: D t urriltur e,
- bo xes, ·
brass beds, or cOm pl ete
househol ds. Write M . DN,
Miller , Rt. 4, Pomeroy , j
Ohio . Call 992-7760 .
10-7.74 I
---------- ---- I

1

double door

Phone 985 ·38,25 .
.
..:, ~ . - . - .

WIN AT BRIDGE
Simple raise begs no trouble

refrigerator and delu xe
hea t er with -automatic
elec . rang ~. ssoo for both or
controls. Phone 99'2 -7406.
sell separately . Can be see n
11 -5-4tp
at K lngsbury Sa les. 111 E . - - - - - - - -- - - - - -

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

Wanted To Buy

( 11 CK20903 '14 ton 4x4 Silverado 350-4, autci.,
P.S.. P. B.. mirrors. radio. deluxe paint;
chrome front bumper &amp; guards, Silverado
equip.
•5898.00

(I) CC31003 1 ton Stake 9', Custom deluxe
mirrors, H. D. S. &amp; shocks, H. D., P. B., P. S.,
radio, gauges, dual rear wheei:4J2d3.00

·

11-S-3tc
- - - -- -- - - - - - - -

. '5497.00

11·5·1fC

- - -- - - - -- - - - - T RA ILER space for rent. All
utiliti es . Phone 992 -5535.

YARD SA LE ,

LONG lASTING VALUES
.

..
'

Yard Sale

QUICK MOVING
PRICES

,

'

Sweepers , toa ster s,· ironS'!
all small t~ppliances . Lawn:
mower , next to State Hioh.1
.wav Gara ge on Ro ute 7" t

acre.

dl.eport .

rent . Phone 992 -35091o.J1-ttc
- - - -- -- - - S1.29 ; Brenneke slugs , S4.9S
saddle and br i dle , $275 .
11 -6-3tc
.j;U::i""NisHE:o.. aPa rt me nt
per box . all shot shells
Phone 843 -2061.
adults only in Middleport
wholesale . Black pow der,
11·5·31c
Ph one 992 -387 4.
S2 .90 lb. Lots of new and - - - - - - - - - - - - - J FA Mil Y Yard Sa l e at
3-25-tfc. used gun s, F; te's back Of KNAPP SHOES FEA TURING
Van Cooney home , 522 Gran t
Speed Queen Laundrymt~ t ,
21 sty I esln dress end casual.
St., Middleport, Thursday 7- ----------:-:-:--::-::-...=-.:.--.
AM . HOU SE In "!iv r acuse ,
Middleport. Phone 992 -7494.
Sstv lesofworn shoes , S3off.
and Frldav , No~t . 6 and 7, 10
Ohio . Basement, garage ,
we tra de for anything .
Now through Dec . 31, Can ts
tills . Lots of nice th ings lor
real nice hom e, must have
10-26-121p
Shoe Repair , Middleport.
ewerybody . In case of rai n ,
r eferences If Interested . Call - -- · - - - - - - - - - - - Phone- 992 -3684 .
ca ncelled .
(61.4)
446
-7699
,
eveni
ngs
,
NEW
HOT
POINT
14
cu
.
ft.
-_:.
__
___ .:_ _____ _2~-6tc
de
v
11 ·S·21C

10.26-llc

AKC Cocker Spaniel pupp ies .

· Phone 992-2264 .

0N1b;dr ~

10 -24-lfc

- - - - - - --

U.'S.A.'

8·00-Movle " Beyond the Bermuda Triangle 3,15;
· Paul Lynde 6,13; Waltons8,10; Romanllc Reballlon

Pom e_rOV

..

992 -2704 .

wou ld like to take orders,
fuO or spare lime In eit her
West Vir gi nia or Oh io.

Ph . 99.2-2 174

.

WHAT THIS IS ALL AIIOLITl

5.E P T I C T ANKS c l eaned ~
Modern Sanitation . 992 -39)4!
· 1j
or · 992 7349 .
9 18 tfc 1

GOO D used saxophone . Phon e

(614)992 -5113. or maybe you

Robert
Harten bach
Sheriff . M eigs County
!1, 23. 30; !111 6, l !c

10-30-lfc

Wanted To Buy

NO H·u N r "1NG ·or - trespassing
on my propertv without my
permi ssion . Ernest Ward , IF YOU'VE ever purc l ..tS~d
Koscol
cos metics
and
J r . off Langsville -Dexter
hav·en ' l been reservlced ,
Road .
phone Helen Jane Brown ,
11 -2-6tc
Distr ibutor ,
Independ ent

value : S2,SOO.OO .

675·1921 or 615 .5829 .

PO

••
tq
t'
ELWOOLl 60WERS l. cPA \R, ·,

RUTLAND - 2 BR. bath,
R., wash room ,
garage, N. gas heal , lot
WE HAVE shotgun shells , 50x100. GOING AT S8,l00.
ROUTE 143- Close In, 1'12
rifle shells, cleaning ac cessories, hunting clo thes.
acre, 2 BR. bath, utility R..
boots, black powder guns
garage, roofed patio, own
and accessories, relo~ding •
water system, Bot. gas
materia ls, scopes, mounts,
heai. $8,300.
knives. sleeping bags, boat
lackets
and
cushions.
ROUTE 681 - 135 acres,
holst er s. belts, r ifle straps
wooded, part minerals. clfy
an-d much ,' much more at
woter avolloble, close to
,9ii''H'IL.i:cR'Esr12;64-;-2 Indian Joe 's Sports and
recrealloo area . $123 per
CB's,
309
Page
51
,
Mid
·
bedroom , cen tra l air con .
dllloning , elec . kitch en with
doubl e eye l evel ovens .
F ully carpeted. g.as or oil
heal , cu s tom
sk ir ting ,
Sd,975. P hone ~ (61.d) 491 -2118.
10-31 -7tc

PODNE~'S WA~H TUIISS\ ...
~(ltJ MIIJD TE':~LING LIS

NELSQN
MOTORS, INC.

4-10 -1 mo

.~

I'M CAPTAIN E':AS:Y AIJP MY

SM~TH

2542 .

RE FRIGER AT OR . GOOD
CON DITION . Phon e (6!4l
985 ·3952.
!1 .6.Jip

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER6, 1975
• :30-Bewllched 3; Moo Squad 6; ·Pa rtridge Family 8;
· Sesame St. 20,33; Gel Smar.t 15.
5:(10-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3().:...Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Adom·12 13.
6:(10-News 3.~.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Joqy's Body Shop 33.
6:30-NBC Nws3:4,15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 9,10; Your Future Is Now 33; Classic
. Theatre Preview 20.
7·oo--Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
· Dollars 6i Space: 1999 8; News 10; Let's Make a
Deal 13; Family Affair 15; Romagnolls' Table 20;
F am lly at War 33.
7:30-HollywoOd Squares 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6;
Evening Edition wllh Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild
. Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music City

CAI;"l'AIN EASY

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

Ph. 992:3993

Mobile Homes For Sale

PUT SOME co lor In your life

' '

Svracuse:Ohio

_ _ _ _

--------------- Pets
Yes, we wi II BILLY GOAT and coll ie lo
a CCepf
neW give away . Phone 9j~ ~7itc
customers. . . _;.~. I=C'--------------

Television log for easy viewing

'•

. .;., , ...
"iiii&lt;lo•zeer largest Truck or
c
Radiator to th e
Heater( Core.

lARRY 1.8,VE8DER

1973 GALA X IE 500, A door . low
m i leage, aft power. Fac torv
eQuipment . Phone 949 -2774 .
11 -4-6tc

Notice

Rec ords .
•
Term• of Sa le : Cash. for not
less "than two -thirds of the
apprals'd value, payable upon
delivery of' deed. Apprelsed

Blown into'Walls &amp; Attics'
STORM , .
WINDOWS&amp; DOOR.S ·~
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SID ING,SOF F ITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

ANTI QUE pump organ. boby
crib ma11ress . Phon e 949 ·

Employment Wanted

·"

Blown
Insulation Services .

10·31 ·6!c

_ _ _ _ _

IS ~ U~

·MY ,NAMii 15 · UH ·15 ·
MY NAME??

~r

Real Estate. For· Sale

'j: Fcir Sale

-

IYant!d

AN D MY NAME

'fREE ESTIMATES ·

Phone 742-2331
Roger Wamsley- Rutland
· 10-15·1 mo.

~OME8QY~
MOTOR.CO•.' ~
·OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
M

deed re~orded In Volume 210.
poge 725 , Me igs County Oeed

m -2126

.

Notice

Pogo 283, Meigs Coun ty

'

1972 COMET2 DR'.

'

Business

I WOU LD l ike to thank our
.c~·wpaTd "for all m 8kes and
re le !lves , n eighbors and
models of mobile homes.
friends and a ll the area
Phone ar:ea code 614 -423 ·
churc hes for .the ir pray ers,
95i1 .
car ds, rl ower s and kindness
4-13-tfc
19 M FURY 11 auromatlc . Also,
show n us wn lie Suzan was a ROOM an d board fo senior __ __
two tw in bull calv es Phone
patient
at
Children 's
~~·~·3~~~: very n ;ce Phone
8dJ.2353.
Hospital. Columbus . suzan
11 -6-Atc
Thoma, ller parents , Pat
10-f2.tfc CA R ~E: NT RY,
pa ne l ing ,
and Ear l T ho ma , and - - - - - - - - - -- - - lloor i no and ce i ling . "Ph on e
19 70 GRA NO Tor ino Ford ,
brother Ke lly .
Garden Tra ctor Pull , Sunday ,
992 275 9,
$800 . Ph one 992 -3377 .
11 -il -llc
Nov . 9, 12 : 30 p . m . till dar k.
1,0-21 -30tc
ll -2-7tc
Rai n. date , Sunday Nov . 16, ~-- -- ~----------~ r
Gate $1.00 , under 10 free . "R'EMODELINC.,
Plumbing ,
One cylinder 12 inch wheel
heating and all ty pes of
STOP . - save monev at '
limit .
Wheel i e
wheels
general
repair .
Worl!:
Christmas auction sa l e.
r~quired .
Brimsto n e
gu ar anteed . 20· years ex. ONE two bedrm . and one 3
Fr iday , 7 p .m . Lots of new
bedrm. trailer locat ed in
Raceway Park , Coolville ,
perien ce. Phone 992 2409
tor.s and gifts as well !IS free
Clifton, W . Va . Construe I ion
Oh;o .
5·1·tfl
prizes . Mason Auction.
workers preferred . Phone
11 -6-Jtc
. ___ -: - -~ -~. -- - - - -- .,.
Mason , W . Va .
13041 773 -5873.
11 -5-3tc
l l -6-6tC

Deed Records.
The foregoing real esta te .
efter sates of ·portlons thereof .
IS all of the nat estate
remaining which was con ~teved to Sold Invest m ents, bv

(101 9,

,

&amp; Obityar y
S2 .00 for 50 word min i mum .
E!!! ':!'i addi tional word 3c .

'

TO

'•
Servi~es:
.
.·
L_.:.._:__ _ _
_____
.:....::!..__--:-J:: ',

6 cyl. std . trans., rodlo, \Ike new w-w tires. blue finish,

CARD OF THANKS

AWOKE IU1ANE NOUGAT

A.Mwr~ M'll:ef tomtont

,

For Wa nt Ad Service
Scen ts per 'Word one Insertion
Min i mum Charge $1.00
14 ce nts per word · three
consecutlye insertions.
16 ce:ht s per word six con
secut lwe insertions .
25 Per Ce ht D isco unt on paid
ads and ads paid w it hin 10
days .

(AMwen loaorn-.J

v.....,.,,,

REGULATIONS

The PUbliSher reserv es the

.

RATE S

.I formorranro
u
!=I~Pril~..~-~-~.~-~- :;1 rn cr 11
TRA[ RAJ T

Monday Deadlin e 9t~ . m .
Cancellallon • CorrecHons
1
Will be ae,cepled un til 9 a .m .
for Dav of Publication
1

righ t to edi t or refect any ads,
deemed obleclional. The .
pub l isher
will'
not
be ·
responsib le for more than one
Incorrec t Insertion .
·

'THI~ O~E- COUL.."
~E -&amp;UPERIOR 10

·:

·

•

..
lSIGNS.• Ppmeroy
OF
Motor Co•.
QUALITY.

@)
(#.

Pub ·

Jocat ;on

LUFEK

- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThW'sda~, Nov. 6, 1975

DICK TRACY

'

-

form rour ordinary words.

9

-

volunteered aid , It's because

they can't al lhls lime.
AQUARIUI (Jon. 10-,111, 1t)
Your chances of Juccesa 1re

ucellent today II you don't brIng too many people lnlo Ill
acl. Coniine what you're doing
to lhose directly Involved .
PISCES (Fib. 10-M!Inlll :10) 1
You have a tendoncy 10
oversell your woresloday. Slop
tho sales pitch the minute you
get your first :'y&amp;s.."

~Your
VBirthday
NO¥. 7, 1175
You will be interested in
furthering your career through

gaining &lt;nowledge.lhll coming
year. Tho lime Is ripe 10 Increase your earnings In thlt
manner .

�•

8- The D8Uy Seritltiel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., '111ursday, Nov. 6, 1975

Fast Result Use ·The ::Sentinel .Classifieds 1

~lDW®~;-IMJ"-~IJ_,,_For
, ,

Unoenmbl•th..e four Jumbl..,.,
one ·l etter to .tach ~quart!. t_o

·

s

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLI NES

oav

P .M .

Before

I
I I I tJ

.

IFALCIE I

I [J I I I

I

I k.]

l

Jo ...lNoCRISS

A I&lt;IN6.

Now
the clrtltd letltn
to
the 1qrprloe anower,
, 1uw•tt&lt;l by thellbOVe cartqon.

BLIND ADS

Additional 2Sc Charge per
Advertisement .

wHit 1 b1d mtmoril

OFFICE HOURS

mi,M ll~t - NOTES "

8:30a .m . to 5:00pm . Dai ly ,
8 : 30 a .m . to 12 : 00 No on
Sa turday .

!•

NOTICE

Pursuant to Write of
EK&amp;cut lon Issued by the Court
of Common Pleas of Meigs
count !(, Ohio, I will offer for
sa l e, at public aUction , at the

front door of the Cllurthouse in
Pomeroy. Ohio, on Novemb er

12, 1975, at 10 :00 o'clock A. M .,

th e following described r ea l
estate, to -w it :
Si tuated
lh
Tow nship , Meigs

Ohio .

Bedford
Coun ty ,

Being inSectlon 16, Town .
ship 3, Range 13 , Ohio Com .
pany's Pur chase. Beginning
at the center of the westline o f
sa id Section 16 ; thence eut
116 roctato the westline o1land
now or formerly owned by C.

A. Hines ond ldo M. Hines ;
thence south 11VJ rods ; thence

eut 64 rods to the center line
of said uct Jon ; thence south
671/, r ods; thence wes t BO rods ;
thenc e north 42 rods ; thence
west 100 rod s to the west line
of said section ; thence north
on the west line of setd sec lion,
38 rods to the pla ce of
beg i nning , conta i ning 59
acres , more or less.
Excepting 1.6a cre conveyed
to Joseph Stanley, by deed
recorded In Volume 218, Page

7SS , ·Molgs County

De ed

Records.
Further excepti ng , 2.3 acres
conveyed to Herber t Gilkey ,
b ';' deed recorded In Volume

w.

Card of Thanks

Coins, Currency
and Supplies

S179S

nice car with good economy.

Buy, Sell or Trade

1971 MATADOR '
$1395
4-door, local car, a ir coodltloned, lull equ ipment.

Approlul service on
est•tes and collections.

R&amp;J OOINS

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE.
S1295
· Blk . vinyl roof,, grey finish, good tires, automatic.
power steering, radio.

.

fi'

I

POMEROY. OHIO

I

.

wlll'1
genuine
Ar te x
d ecorator paints. Discover
the fun bv creating b'eau'tlfut
hand -pelnted lin ens. Free
Instruction classes . Call
Allee s. Nease. (61A J 985 -

..._,

FUEL OIL

3942.

11 -l 81p

-------------WI·THOUT my permi ssion.

old Coonhound pups,
.·-r-a
,-. WEEK
125 . Phone (3041 882-2&lt;20.
AKC Doberman puppies, ma l e
and female , Champ ion blood
line . Phone {304) 882 -3268 ,
N.ew Haven, w . va .
11 -A-6tp

1975 14x70 T R A ILER , ex .
cellent condition, especially
built for offices . Low pric e
for quick sa le. Phone f3 0A J

1\-2.11p
- - - - - - - -- - - - - -

NO. I HEATING OIL
N0.2 HEATING OIL
Degree Dey Delivery
Budge! Poy Pion
POMEROY LANDMARK
....~_ack W. Carsey , Mgr.
Phone 992-2161

there will be no hunting or
tresp assing
my property .
Bob McGraw , Meagan
Farm , off low er Bowmt~n's
Run .
1l -A-26 tc

on

B

11 -2-Stc 30 rT . TRAVEL -EZZ trail er ,
good co nd ition , full bath .
-~----- --------'
Must see to appreciate .
Phone 949 -2174 .
1l -4-6tc

For Rent .

2 BE DR OOM trailer , rea l -·- ________ _:_______
nice . Phone 992-3324.
' t973 HOD AK A wa mbat !25

PETS

c.

mo bil e home for

10·11·301c
WALNUT stereo . console ,
AM -FM radio, 8 track tape
~om b l n atlo n .
Balenc e
.1102 .10 or term s. Call 992 -

,3965 .

11 ·5-lfc
SPEC IAL - BLACK SER ·
VICE OX FORD S ond

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

Wellington Boots, 6 Inch
farm sty le shoes , now S19.95 .
Dan's Shoe Repelr, Mid ·
dleport, Phone 9~2 - 3684 .
11 -5-6tc

1970
au 1c K R ivtero. full
pow er, air conditioning ,
very good con~ltlon with no
rust . 51.200. Al so. 30 Inch

d lr tblke , 2, 000 miles, good

elec . range used 3 months,

condition . r hone 992·2845.

S75. Phone 742 -2796 .

ll -.t -61c

11 ·S ·61 c

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

~~~-0~~~~~-;,;o;e-;;;-~·s; REAL- -;;;,ti;-h~~;-.;ith

161&lt;1 446-9539.

Misc . Se le

Nov . 8, 3 pc .
bedroom suite , c omplete
with mettress antt springs,
couch, cha'Jrs. ges eir e .
heeler , I&lt; It chen fable and
cha irs , typ eWriter . clothing ,
bedding, dish es. etc . George
Hacketl. 9j Seve nth Ave .,
Middleport , Oh io .

·'(NEW 1975 MODELS)
(I) CK20903 3/4 ton 4x4 Cust. Deluxe 350-4
auto., P.S., P. B., radio, HDS. R.S. B.
mirrors, 750x16 tube type on &amp; off tread
foam seat gauges, upper mldg . Green .

.o

'

George Harris

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

...,.......__

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy
ODin Eves- ·T ill

I~

Phone

th~

st.. Middleporl. Ohio . Phone

992 -

POMEROY - Large 2
story frame. 3 BR. bath !.
•;,, dining R.. TV Room, full
basemen! with 2 car
gorage, new N. gas forced ·
olr furnace, carpeting !.
paneling , New Alum .
siding. $18,500.
RUTLAND - Just off Rt.
124 - Ranch type, 3 BR ,
bath , dinette. modern
kitchen w.ronge &amp; ref..
storm doors &amp; windows, a
very large garage !.
workshop, carport. Home
has full basement &amp; own
water system plus E
tapR.
MAN Y
0 T H
FEATURES, $28,000.

FREE RENT AT
MANOR
IN

TOM ·RUE

~DIJ'T

TH~ ~Y.T 11~
Pll.K~D

8·27-tfc ,
- -- - - - - - - - -- - -

·•

.L~ ,. .

OIJ

He

~00

VJ~iOI.Joi~

I

e-X CAVAT ING', dOzer, l oader ~ :
and backh oe work; sept ic '
tanks
installed ; dUmP• 1
tru cks end lo boys for hire ; : :
will haul f i ll dirt. top soil. : 1
limestone and gravel,c Ca ll •
• Oob or Roger Jeffers·. day ; 1
phone R92 7089, night ph one ,:

902 3525 or 992 51J2 .

! Wli- ljOO

IT IDJU)IJ'T OCI
AIJ'f(:£{)0. ~

·~

couw 1-IU.

••a

'/()(),TOO\

·

2·11-lfc ,

- - - . '--- -. .-•-.' .

SEWI NG

'
I
MAC HIN E . •

~~~~

Repairs , service, all makes . :
992 2284 . The Fjlb r lc Shop,
Pomeroy . Au thor lzed ~i n ge r,
~~ ales and Se rvi ce . We
sh arpen Sc issors .
3 '29 lfC I
. . ' . ~ . ·'~E ·Aov · MtX.. CONCRET6
delivered r ig ht to your ·
prolect.rastandeasy . Free •
estimsfes . Phone 992 3284, ,
Goeglei n Read,Y Mix Co .)"·
Midd leport , Oh 1 o~
...... •

.

-

-

A South Carolinian wants to
know what we bid in response
to a one diamond opening
will!·
4 KQ76• A2 t J44 K9854.
We respond two clubs. With
a full openlfll bid opposite an
~ing bid we Intend to set to
game or hicher and want to bid
as naturally as possl~le .
Hence, we start Procete!iDP
by bidding our longest su1t.
(For a copy of JACOBY
MOD~RN, send $1 to: "W!n
ar sr ;dge ," c/o thrs
newsptiper, P. 0. Box. 48,9,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019)

630tfc .
--.

WOULD YOU BELIEVE;

Build an all steel building at ~
Pole Barn prices? Golden ,
Gia nt All -Ste el Buildings ~ ,.
Rt: 4, Bo x l AB, Waverly.-.. •

Ohi o. Phone 947 ·2296.

7-24-tfc

.

HENRY E. CLELAND

WILL trim or cut trees end
BROKER
shrubbery . Plione 949 - 25~~ :·
hon ff2
or 742 -3167 .
...
2
59
L _ _.:.P~.:.e~_-_1_ __ ,
10·8·261e

WE SPECIALIZE In mobile

Virgil B., S r .

I

'

home furnac e re pai r . Phone,.._::

___________ __
~2 :5158.

TEA FORD

,., ,.

D &amp; 0 T REE Trimming. 2D..
years ex perienct. In sured,

REAL lOR

i

~

Ire• est imates . Cell 992·3057
or (11 667 ·3041 , Coolville .
_...._
10·15 ·tfC

__ _____

~--

- 3 BR's, BEAUTIFY - you r h·ome w(th I •
Perme ·Stone. ~ew . homes ,
bath, full basfment, furnace,
as well as remodeling work . •,
and drilled well. Asking
Expert Installation . F r ee •
514,000.
estimates . Phon e• 74'2 · 2409! ' :
ONE all block riding horse, 13.85 ACRES - 4 B. Fl. brick,
, 10-l1 -26tc ,
, wh ite b la ze , very gentle . up to dale bath, F.A. furnace. - - - - - - - - - - -.- - I
Phone
.
day , or l42 ·
742 2211
SIGN PAINTING , lttte rlng, :
Nice
porch
.
Only
sao.ooo.
2245 night .
reasonable rates . Write Box ,
.s. tc RACINE - 3 B.R .'s,' nice
11
601. Pom eroy . ·
.1 • '
- - - -- - - - - - - - - -6
bath; new kit., dining , nat. gas
I! ·Z-61p
furnace, 2 porches and
'

New

yellow co.r n and 35 -A

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

spacious vard .

1 0 1 3 61
-.1...-------------

road, lf~ fenced, large pondb

Nina has
suddenltl taken

C. BRADFORD , Auctioneer.
Co mplete Se rv ice . Phone ,~
9.f9-'2.t87 or 949-2000 . Racine, 1
Oh io, Critt Bradford .
•
10·9-ffC ,.. 1 •
- - -- - - - - - - - - - -

Real Estate For Sale

a r&amp;herdim
view of TV!

I

'

CHRYSLER

..,' ,.
I

She'll qet ovet
it! lhe4

VILLAG ~

10 :DO--Pollce Story 3,4,15; Barnaby Jones 8,10; News
20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
10:30-Avlatlon Weother 20.
11 :(10-News 3.4,6.1,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Joltnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Specl•\,13;
Sammy and Company 6; Movie " The CIOIIH I;
"Movie "The Picture of Dorian Gray" 10; Jenekl

alw~4s do~

'

1 :~1clnlght Special 3.~.15; Wiele World Speclal6;

MID ·

100 Cherry Volley Rood ,
Newark , Ohio , &lt;JOSS. (61&lt;1
3«·2631.
11-6-Jtc

In Middleport.

VILLAGE

MANOR Is yours for one
bedroom
apartments
~-------------starHp_g,at $104 monthl~ plus
ADVANCE
Co mmi ssions
1
mailing ' c ir cul ars! I Co m - · • elet~ ~ pay for everything
etse . See the Manager et
plete beginners kit , Sl
Riverside Apartment1 or
(retundoblel. Send stOm ped
coil 992-3213. ThIs 'offer will
address!!d en v elo p e for
end soon, so move in now
In forma ti on :
Box
}B .
and save SSSS.
Rullond , Oh io 45775.

10·23 ·11C

11 .2.Jtp
-·------------.
. .!

BAIRD BROS. AUTO PARTS ··
COMI'LITI GARAR IDVICI .AUTOMATIC TftANI. A .PIICIALTY
NIIW &amp; U. . O PAftTI
•Ho~

ftADIATO~

ftiPAlft

ftOUT II 7
QALLIPOLI8; OHIO - 1
NIKT TO OLD .ILVIft 8ft\DCI.

"76 Are Here"

.

74 Dodge Chlroer s.E., 2
dr. H.T., power windows,
AM-FM rodlo, olr, console,
lad. oflicl,ol cor.

•3895

74 Plymouth Sotelllte, 9

pus. wagon, •lr, P.S.,
P.B., foct. Official car.

•3895

72 Clltv. Imp. Cuotom, 2 dr.
H. T., P. S., P.l., AM rodlo.

'2195 .

73 Plymouth Vlllont, 4 dr. 6
cyl,, lVIII., P.S., AM rodlo,
good economy.
II

'2695
Chev . 9 pusengtr

wogon, olr, P.S., P.B.
8

1095

70 VW, rod bug. A steal at

'995
DArt Swinger 2 dr.,

70
6
cyl., 1uto., P.S.. AM rodlo,.
new tires.
"

PHONE 446-4060

remodeling .

74 Mere. Comet, 6 cyl .. 4
dr., outo., P.S., AM r1dlo,
low miiNge, 1 local own1r,
powder blue, nol shorp.

'3195

'1595
Dodge Coronet
'495

Convt.

See Tom Rue,
or Ray Douglas
Ph. 992-259•

Movie " The Llttt. Shop o9f Horrors" 13; News 13.
2:»-Movle "Blindfold" ~·
4:»-Movle "Wings of Fire" 4.
UaRA (Bept. 23-0cL 23)
your generosity today
withoul though! of gain
recognition. Virtue should

AstraGraph

Rut lo nd

Sa lem

Phone 7&lt;2-2306

LISTEN

10 .. 9-ttc

I

Wall to wall carpeting ,
paneling,
n ew celltngsj
garbage disposal, etc .
Garage w i th storage area .
513,500. For appointment,

11 ·&lt;·12tc
batemtnt , nice back vard,

only suoo. w \th now fur .

nllure, only 110,300. Phone

"' .,

· Weeltdays 10:00 A. l,tiJ 2:00·A.M.
..
'...., ,
ON

coli 992·2022 .

on Lincoln Holghts , 2
bedr.m , lerC.e kitchen, full

WMPO FM mREO 92

11.2.6tc
3 BEDRM . mobile home ,
ponelllng, WIII ·IO·W'OII
carpeting. oaroge, Vllllty
build ing , thrn a~~ tour .•

'

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

.

Middleport . 58.000. Phone
"2·38&lt;3.
11 ·2·11C

'

'

\

111 1

.
IAAB

jl !

:::!

' I

,...j 'I

I

'j-,~
j

HAVE~E

I.I:'

6(JT ENNV

I' :.

TOOAY.
'l:DWEE1'1?

I '

'

Mn&lt;X:GQOD
1
' GOSSIP

THAR'S ONE MORE
' LEETLE SCAAF',
ELVINEY-- BUT IT'S

EXTRII, EXTRY

IF lftlU UVEo IIIlTH M
C()t(OTES LIKE 1M &amp;C01llfl(
SI'IICE,IQ/'0 PrOMI!I.If' Be

&lt;X&gt;NFIDENTIA L

OUT CHASIN6 MICE!

. iiERMAN GRAT

MASON, W.VA.

10·2t' 121c
-, -·---- .~

I

I

'

'

BAOmARIUI (Now. IS-Dec.
21) You still must be wary
regarding your fino"'* today.

You're going to be uncertain

aboul your deciSions today.
Though ybu lry to cemoullage
II. others will see through your

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22...,.,.,
11) Don't press lrlonds lor
favors today. If they haven't

TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20)

brave masquerade.

going · to have to work a lol

harder than usual. Don't dopond on someone elsa to pull

Alleviate the tension . Take her
out tor d inner and relaxation .

LIO (July 23-Aug. 12) You
W A I could be 4PSOI b!!Cause you
VFHPUPOD
PI
XA
loot that lhoss on the home
Iron! don 'l appreciate whal
XKF 'K E SA DF WA U K P I N UF
N P S A • you 're doing lor Ihem . Don't
worry, they &lt;now and they'll
IFU
WAI
XKF
KESA DFWAUKPINrepay youlnhearls.
VIRGO (Aug. 21-ltpl. 22)
\) F
N AU - J A T I E T B
J E T Q0 K
You're a very gOod salesman
Yesl tlaJ'• ~: I WOULD RA111ER THAT THE loday. so avoid se,lllng fr;ends
PEOPlE SHOIJLD WONDER WHY J WASN'T IJIESIDENT on something you re not sure
"" '""N p ,...,.....
of. They'll take you senously
THAN WHY I AM. - """""" · .........,
and could got burned .
fC, I 111111iia '""'""' lrodl•t•. Jn&lt; .)

::;,
'

CRYPTOQUOO"E

could lead to troubMI.

You1re likely to let someona off
th e hook who is undeserving of
your good Intentions.

One letter si.mply stand• for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three I.'s. X for the two O's. etc. Single letters. CANCER (J..,. 21-.luiJ 22)
lpostrophes, th e length nnd formati~ n of the II'Ords nre all Femlly pressures on your mate
have been extraordinary today.
hints. Each day the code lett en are d11ferent.

I I I) ! '1
i

sharp weather eye peeled tor
stoplighls. speed !raps and
people bahlnd you . Inattention

how to work It: getwhalyouwanlloday ,you 're

A X Y D L B A A :X R
), 0 N G F B L L 0 W

24--.

For Frldly, NDY. 7, 1175
ARIES (M"""' 11-Aprtl 11)

1......1..-L-~,;1 GEMINI (Moy 21-.lunt 2.0) To

"""'

tts own reward for you.

SCORPIO (Oct.
II) ~
you 're traveling today. keep 1

your chestnuts out of the fire.

',. ''
I '
I' I'
JV~ ~ u I
.._

Phone 773-5592
•
MASON PURNnuiJ

HOU SE In Porlllnd. take over
payments . .5 rooms and
belh , good well , 2 acres of
round. coal 1'1 eal , Phon e

-

CRYPTtv\UOTE-Here's
ll

~w &gt;#~

I

lenthsacres lot, A:l,lflaod St .{

...

,

.

Phon• 7&lt;2.2590.

- ··~· - ·

DAILY

. . ...·.

'----------------...1,.

6 ACRES with 5 room nouse,
f iniShed . basemen t, rural
water located on Rt . U3 .

--

1.6 48 Record

'
1J.6.26tc

r43 2292.

T."'+--1-+--l

mountain

WITH
JIM WILLIAMS

6 ROOM house with bot h In
Middleport on o SO • 110 lot.

HOUSE

1-+--+-1
=-4--1-+-1

~

9·23·11C

992-7618 .

37 Put 00
cargo
38 Fencing
moves
3t ThesaaJian

TO

..Great ·Country Stereo"

BEDIIM . home . lu1f
lin Ished, ramod1llng , Sa~t!.l'l
St., Ru tland . Phone 742-.lYi
alter~ p.m. or see Milo B.
Hutchison .

35 - tbe tide

Lot
be
or
bl

.. Bernice Becll 0101

Though you're truly cognizant
of the other fellow's interests In
your joint endeavors today. it
won 't come oft that way. You'll
push too hard .

(prefix)

St.,

a her 4 p: m . or see Milo 8 .
Hutchinson .

3

sz FJesperate

:a Pray

w'r ite, Shepard Contracllno.,.A:..;
Box 28A, Rutland, 4Sns ..._._.. .
Pllone 742-2409 .
·
~ ·rt ;.
10·31·26tc ' : ·

3 BR HOME, tust tlnlshtd

10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15.
11 :oo--Gamblt 8, 10.
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15; Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame Street 20,33.
11:5s-Take Kerr 8; cion Tmel's World 10.
12:DO--Showoffs 13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News
8,10.
M
12 :3G-Magnlflclent Marble Machine 3,15; All Y
Children 6,1 3; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
12:4s-Eiectr.lc Company 33.
12:5s-NBC News 3,15.
1:DO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young and the Restless 10; Not ForWomen Only 15.
1 , -Days 01 Our Lives 3.~.15; Let's Make A deal 13;
News 6; As the World Turns 8,10.
2:oo-i10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
2: 30-Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme and Reason 6,13 ; Edge of
Night 8,10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospllol 6,13;
Match Game 8,10; Say Brother 20.
.
3 : ~ Ute to Live 13; Max B. Nlble 6; Tattletales
8,10; Black Perspective on the News 20.
4:oo-Mtster Cartoon 3; Merv ·Grlffln 4; Somerstl15;
Mickey Mouse Club 6.8; Movie " Love Ma Tender"
10; Mister Rogers 20,33; Dinah! 13.
uo-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partrld!Je Famll'(
8; SeSllme Street 20,33; Get Smart 15.
5:0()-Bonanza 3; Family Affolr 8; Star Trek 15.
5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Electric Company 20,33; Adam-12 13.
6:(10-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Hodilepodge .
Lodge 20.
6:30-NBC News3,4,15; AJIC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Two-Woy Street 20.

9:30---Movle " Hey, I' m Alive," 6,13.

area code (219) 785 -2362 or ' ~
write A . E . Baltl!!y, New "
Ourhem Mall ,Estate, Lo~

Real Estate for Sale

NOVEMBER 7, 1975
6 ,oo-&lt;:olumbsuTOday 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6 : 1s-Folk Literature 3.
6:2s-Farm .Report 13.
6:30-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farmllme 10; Blue Ridge quartet 13.
6: 4~unce of Prevenllon 10.
6: cs-Mornlng Report 3.
6, 5s- Chuck While Reports 10; News 13.
o:oo-Tooay 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8:(10-Lucy Show 6; Caplaln Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
Street 33.
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:0()- A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Oouglos 10; Morning with D. J. 13.
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6; GlveN-Ta~e 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
10:oo-&lt;:elebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Dinah I 6; Price
Is Right 8.10; Mike Douglas 13.

a :oo--Sanford and Son 3.4.15; " The New. Orlglnll
Wonder Woman," 6,13 ; Big Eddie 1,10;
Washington Week In Review 20,33.
a :JO-Chlco and The Man 3,4, 15;M-A-S-H 8, 10; Wall
Street Week 20,33.
9:0()-Rockford Flies 3,4,15; Hawaii Flve-0 8,10;
Firing Line 20; Masterpiece Theatre 33.

3 BEORM . house In Racine.

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

33; Classic Theatre 20.
8:30- &lt;lasslc Theatre Preview 33.
9:(10-Sfrel!ls of San Francisco 6,13; Movie "Mr .
Maje ~lyk" 8; Classic Theall'f&gt; 33; Movie "Fathom"
10.
.
9: JG-Movle " The Silence" 3,4,15; Ref lections:· Paul
Ehrlich 20 .
10:oo-Harry 0 6,13; News 20.
ll :DO-- News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :JG-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mannix 13; FBI 6; Movie
"The Last Grenade" 8; Movie " Waterloo Bridge"
10; Janak! 33.
12:JG-Longstreel 13; Mennlx 6.
1:DO-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:30-Longstreet 6; News 13.

7:DO--Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Lawrencle Welk 8; Bowling for Dollar• 6; Avlallon
Weather 33; News 10; Don Adams Scr- Test 13;
Family Affair 15; Ohio Journal 20.
7:-Porter Wagoner 3; Bobroy VInton 4; .Candid
Camera 6; Evening Edition with M4rl)n Agronsky
20· $25 000 Pyramid 10; To Tell Tho Truth 13; Popl
~s The Country 15; Black' Perspective on the
News 33.

~ ...
..,......9-18.tfc
.........,..- .:·

' IF YOU WANT A GOOD BUY,
Hl. W~slvllle , lnd lan~X:
10-28-tfc DROP IN AND WE WILL
46391.
i
SPENO ALL THE TIME
10·J1 -12fC ' I
DEEP well pump , 40 go\lon NEEDED TO SEE OUR
- ------------\
!
tank , 357 Mag . pistol with PROPERTIES,
CUSTOM Homes , no down ' , ,
hol sters . Also, 1975 Fireb lrd .
. payment. VA Loan s, F HA - ., 1
Phone 742 ·2661 .
As tow as 3 perc en I down ." - r '
11 .2.6tc
Your plahs or ours. Ca ll or A ....:

MOTORS

1l -4-6tc

OLE PORT ! We are so sure
that vou will lov e our apart .
ments that we give you two
weeks RENT FREE . Just
pav your sec ur itY deposl!
and stav six months and the
first '2 weeks Is free . You will
en(oy monthly leases, atl
.e lect r ic living , carpet ing ,
range and refr igerator , free
trash pickup , cab le TV
(Opllonal l and laundry
fac llllles . Convenient to
"s hopp ing on Third and Mill

potential.
recession -proof
business. Would like to find
a working partner t,o
operate a fabric Sh op tn this
area . Com pl ete t rain i ng ,
turnkey operation . Must
have
$300 -16000 .
Now
avallt~ble to Invest lor one halt own ersh ip . For details .
write or cell Vallev Fabr ics.

•oov

BORN LOSER

- - l.,~

BACKHOe tor re nt , hour of~
contract. Reg . or
ex . •
ca vatlng type . Se ptJc tanks \
ins talled . Bill Pullins . Phone :
992 -2478.
·,

AIRCO welding machine.
nvw . elec . all accessor ies
InCl ud ed. Phone 992-3.. 10.

· · ,· .

FABRiC SH OP . Unlimited

-

-

- - - - - - - - - - future problems as South
NORTH ·
6 starts to take very. strong ac.QJIO&amp;t
tion with his very fine hand.
.IOU
11 North just raises to two
• Q J9~
hear~. South will simply con·
tract for the heart game.
WEST
EAST
A seventh son of a seventh
•985
6K32
son sitting West can open the
•JH
ace or diamonds and continue
.AIOU
t8
llle suit. East will ruffand If he
.AJ64
.KIOU832 leads back a club, the fourSO\lTH !Dl
heart contract will be sunk
.... 1
without a trace. Against nor• A K Q63
mal defense Soulll will make
.KH3
or five . Maybe, even six If
four
.Q1
a
spade
is opened and East
Neither vulnerable
makes Ule mistake of playing
his king after an honor IS
West Nortlt Eall Soalb
playtd from dummy.

11 ·2-&amp;!p

7889 .

-------------Business Opportunities

·

,,

tr ee LIKE NEW 60,000 BTU gos

Mai n Sl.. Po meroy. Oh io or

rc lud es washer, dr ye r and
. ca ble . In Middleport over
Sli m and Trim . Phone 992.

11 ·5·6tc

Used But Not Abused

See

9·16·tfc

SOMEON E for gutter repair . ' ·· ouNTRv Mo bil e Hom e:
Ca ll 742 -2847 .
Park , Rt. 33 , ten miles-north
11 ·6·41C
of Pomeroy . Large lot s with
- ------------concrete patios.· sidewalkS,
ae·A UTI C I AN
wanted,
runners and off str ee t,
Helen 's Beautv Shop, 860 E .
parking . "Phone 992 7479.
Maln 1 Pomeroy , Ohio .
12-Jt tfc

'6144.00

See
Dallas
Blevins

;.i--L------ - ~~-4_!' 1Phone 949 ·2.03 or 843·2230.
11 ·6-ltc

'

"Reliable Service After The Deal"

);

day , Monday thru Friday .

(2) CCI0903 '12 Ton Cust. Deluxe 350-2, std.
P.S., P. B., radio, foam seat, mirrors,
gauges, L78-15 tires. tan.
.
•3815.00
( 1) CK20906 Cust. Deluxe Suburban 350-4,
. auto., P.S., P.B., center seat, headliner.
mirrors, radio, fuel tank, shield, gauges.
H.O. shocks.

UJV PICkUPS IN STOCK &amp;1976 4x4

We welcome your visit to
see our Kosco! Cos m etics
bu siness fir st har;~d and ge t
acquainted with our com plete
co mp any .
Ann
Sauvage,
Inde pe ndent
Dist r i butor , Syracuse .

Phone 992 .3272 .

paid .

4 - 16 - lf.~
- -.~- -·-_

992 ·5122 or 992·5305 .11 4 121 NOW selling Fuller Brush 1973 Golden Empress, 14M6~ .
Phone 949-2611.
· · P Products . Phono 992-3410. trailer, drilled wall .
10 -S-26tc ,
ONE-;·;:;.-;;;td'rh~f;;~hbred
!0-6-tfc
MIDDLE
PORT
Com-·
- ------------I
79 ACRE farm With barn and
f illy . S4SO. Also. one yearli ng - - - - - - - - - -- - - fortable 9 room home, :t BR's, APPROXIMATELY
•
m 11 king parlor , 4 bedrm ,
2'1&gt;' 1,
hall -Thoro ughbred colt , 59" R'EG . POLd: O 1-ier.etord 5 closets, 111, baths, spacious
acres. 200ft . on State Route • •
house furnished , Portland
tall. SlSO . Phone 992.7583 . ~bulls, one 5 year old, two living, din ing, hot water
area. Phone 8.. 3·2804 days,
124, '2 00 loot river fron ta ge ~ ['
843 -2256 evenings .
1970 12 • 63 3 bedrm .. both - •
11 ·4-121c yearlings . EMceltent heall~,and70'M160' 1ot. Only
dispositions . Phone 992-5565
··•
end half mobil e home , 10 x .. :
11 -2-Stc - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - -or 992·2926.
$16,500.
.
10 storage shl!!d, 11 x 30 pa11o " 1 1
----------- ---.
with on e mobile home rental ¥tl'
A lOVELY furnished aport . 1- - - - - - - - - •
11 -2-7tp LOTS - Up to 3 acres for
!pa ce . SIS,OOO firm . Coli ·
- ------ --~---building or trailers .
·ment for coup l es onl y. ln.
2937 .

WILL DO hOusework by

•3846.00

Come In Look This One Over
New thev. Lark M.inl Home
By Travel Equip. Corp.

utilities

IN TE RESTED In working?

( 11 CC10903 l!z Ton, Cust. Deluu 350-2 std .•
P.S., H.D.. P.B.• radio. P.S.B. mirrors,
gauges. L78-15 tires, foarT) seat. H.D.S.
St11bli izer bar, moss gold &amp; white.

Bargain Hunters Start Here, Stay Here.
(21 1972 Chev. C&amp;C 102" C. A. 6 cyl. 2995.00
3095.00
(1l19731nt. C&amp;C 104" c.A. acyl.
3895.00
(I) 1961 Int. C&amp;C Tandum a cyi.
1295.00
(1) 1972 Chtv. 3/4 ton4 speed acyl.
2095.00
( 1)1974 Chtv. 3/4 ton 4x4 auto. a cy.l. 4495.00
(1)1974 Chtv. 112 ton std. 6 c 1.
3150.00

'l.tce

__

dining

McCullough Power Saw . BRICK - 3 B. Fl.'s, nice bltth,J
- ------------1200. Call 992-2803 after 5 Phone 742 -2359 .
10 ·29·121p living and dining panel~ .
MOBILE home, nice location ,
p.m .
large pa ti o. city gas , like
- - - - - - - - - -- - - Mod. kit. wllh dishwasher-and
new . Al ber t Hill , Racine,
11 -4-J!c
.
disposal. W. to W. corpetlng.
RIOMINGTON, . 1,100 auto , Wanl only $11,000. Before
- ·- - ------ - - - - - Ohio , phone 949 -226 1.
new 12 or 20 ge. S1 ?2.50. winter .
1J.2 ·61c ANT IQU ES , Cherry chest of
drawers
.
over
150
years
old
.
Middlepo
rf, 9M
_ ~
. · c . . ACRES OUT _ On hard
-------- -----~
Can be seen at 317 Locust · ~;Flle:h._
· ··
5
l RM S. AND ball'! , furnished ,

Help Wanted

(31 CCI0903 1!z Ton Cust. Deluxe 350.-2, auto.,
P.S.. HD, P.B .• radio, H.D.S. &amp; shocks. L78·
15 tires, R.S. ~- gauges loam seat. Mirrors.
red-green-tan.
•4039.00 .

frost

ca ll 992 -7034.
TRAILER
space
for 992
rent
in.
11-4-.S tc
M idd leport.
Phone
-5434
10·21 ·26tc 197~-HoNDAJSo~ fo-;;;--;nd
-eMtras . Phone 992 -3658
.
.t RM . furni shed apt .,-adults
11-4-6tc
only . Phone 992 -5908 before 2 _ ·--'-- - - - - - - - - - - p.m .
12F T. ALUMI NUM boat and
Jl .2.tfc
tra iler , J h . p. motor fo r

:. n.: D t urriltur e,
- bo xes, ·
brass beds, or cOm pl ete
househol ds. Write M . DN,
Miller , Rt. 4, Pomeroy , j
Ohio . Call 992-7760 .
10-7.74 I
---------- ---- I

1

double door

Phone 985 ·38,25 .
.
..:, ~ . - . - .

WIN AT BRIDGE
Simple raise begs no trouble

refrigerator and delu xe
hea t er with -automatic
elec . rang ~. ssoo for both or
controls. Phone 99'2 -7406.
sell separately . Can be see n
11 -5-4tp
at K lngsbury Sa les. 111 E . - - - - - - - -- - - - - -

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

Wanted To Buy

( 11 CK20903 '14 ton 4x4 Silverado 350-4, autci.,
P.S.. P. B.. mirrors. radio. deluxe paint;
chrome front bumper &amp; guards, Silverado
equip.
•5898.00

(I) CC31003 1 ton Stake 9', Custom deluxe
mirrors, H. D. S. &amp; shocks, H. D., P. B., P. S.,
radio, gauges, dual rear wheei:4J2d3.00

·

11-S-3tc
- - - -- -- - - - - - - -

. '5497.00

11·5·1fC

- - -- - - - -- - - - - T RA ILER space for rent. All
utiliti es . Phone 992 -5535.

YARD SA LE ,

LONG lASTING VALUES
.

..
'

Yard Sale

QUICK MOVING
PRICES

,

'

Sweepers , toa ster s,· ironS'!
all small t~ppliances . Lawn:
mower , next to State Hioh.1
.wav Gara ge on Ro ute 7" t

acre.

dl.eport .

rent . Phone 992 -35091o.J1-ttc
- - - -- -- - - S1.29 ; Brenneke slugs , S4.9S
saddle and br i dle , $275 .
11 -6-3tc
.j;U::i""NisHE:o.. aPa rt me nt
per box . all shot shells
Phone 843 -2061.
adults only in Middleport
wholesale . Black pow der,
11·5·31c
Ph one 992 -387 4.
S2 .90 lb. Lots of new and - - - - - - - - - - - - - J FA Mil Y Yard Sa l e at
3-25-tfc. used gun s, F; te's back Of KNAPP SHOES FEA TURING
Van Cooney home , 522 Gran t
Speed Queen Laundrymt~ t ,
21 sty I esln dress end casual.
St., Middleport, Thursday 7- ----------:-:-:--::-::-...=-.:.--.
AM . HOU SE In "!iv r acuse ,
Middleport. Phone 992 -7494.
Sstv lesofworn shoes , S3off.
and Frldav , No~t . 6 and 7, 10
Ohio . Basement, garage ,
we tra de for anything .
Now through Dec . 31, Can ts
tills . Lots of nice th ings lor
real nice hom e, must have
10-26-121p
Shoe Repair , Middleport.
ewerybody . In case of rai n ,
r eferences If Interested . Call - -- · - - - - - - - - - - - Phone- 992 -3684 .
ca ncelled .
(61.4)
446
-7699
,
eveni
ngs
,
NEW
HOT
POINT
14
cu
.
ft.
-_:.
__
___ .:_ _____ _2~-6tc
de
v
11 ·S·21C

10.26-llc

AKC Cocker Spaniel pupp ies .

· Phone 992-2264 .

0N1b;dr ~

10 -24-lfc

- - - - - - --

U.'S.A.'

8·00-Movle " Beyond the Bermuda Triangle 3,15;
· Paul Lynde 6,13; Waltons8,10; Romanllc Reballlon

Pom e_rOV

..

992 -2704 .

wou ld like to take orders,
fuO or spare lime In eit her
West Vir gi nia or Oh io.

Ph . 99.2-2 174

.

WHAT THIS IS ALL AIIOLITl

5.E P T I C T ANKS c l eaned ~
Modern Sanitation . 992 -39)4!
· 1j
or · 992 7349 .
9 18 tfc 1

GOO D used saxophone . Phon e

(614)992 -5113. or maybe you

Robert
Harten bach
Sheriff . M eigs County
!1, 23. 30; !111 6, l !c

10-30-lfc

Wanted To Buy

NO H·u N r "1NG ·or - trespassing
on my propertv without my
permi ssion . Ernest Ward , IF YOU'VE ever purc l ..tS~d
Koscol
cos metics
and
J r . off Langsville -Dexter
hav·en ' l been reservlced ,
Road .
phone Helen Jane Brown ,
11 -2-6tc
Distr ibutor ,
Independ ent

value : S2,SOO.OO .

675·1921 or 615 .5829 .

PO

••
tq
t'
ELWOOLl 60WERS l. cPA \R, ·,

RUTLAND - 2 BR. bath,
R., wash room ,
garage, N. gas heal , lot
WE HAVE shotgun shells , 50x100. GOING AT S8,l00.
ROUTE 143- Close In, 1'12
rifle shells, cleaning ac cessories, hunting clo thes.
acre, 2 BR. bath, utility R..
boots, black powder guns
garage, roofed patio, own
and accessories, relo~ding •
water system, Bot. gas
materia ls, scopes, mounts,
heai. $8,300.
knives. sleeping bags, boat
lackets
and
cushions.
ROUTE 681 - 135 acres,
holst er s. belts, r ifle straps
wooded, part minerals. clfy
an-d much ,' much more at
woter avolloble, close to
,9ii''H'IL.i:cR'Esr12;64-;-2 Indian Joe 's Sports and
recrealloo area . $123 per
CB's,
309
Page
51
,
Mid
·
bedroom , cen tra l air con .
dllloning , elec . kitch en with
doubl e eye l evel ovens .
F ully carpeted. g.as or oil
heal , cu s tom
sk ir ting ,
Sd,975. P hone ~ (61.d) 491 -2118.
10-31 -7tc

PODNE~'S WA~H TUIISS\ ...
~(ltJ MIIJD TE':~LING LIS

NELSQN
MOTORS, INC.

4-10 -1 mo

.~

I'M CAPTAIN E':AS:Y AIJP MY

SM~TH

2542 .

RE FRIGER AT OR . GOOD
CON DITION . Phon e (6!4l
985 ·3952.
!1 .6.Jip

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER6, 1975
• :30-Bewllched 3; Moo Squad 6; ·Pa rtridge Family 8;
· Sesame St. 20,33; Gel Smar.t 15.
5:(10-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3().:...Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Adom·12 13.
6:(10-News 3.~.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Joqy's Body Shop 33.
6:30-NBC Nws3:4,15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 9,10; Your Future Is Now 33; Classic
. Theatre Preview 20.
7·oo--Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
· Dollars 6i Space: 1999 8; News 10; Let's Make a
Deal 13; Family Affair 15; Romagnolls' Table 20;
F am lly at War 33.
7:30-HollywoOd Squares 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6;
Evening Edition wllh Marlin Agronsky 20; Wild
. Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Music City

CAI;"l'AIN EASY

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

Ph. 992:3993

Mobile Homes For Sale

PUT SOME co lor In your life

' '

Svracuse:Ohio

_ _ _ _

--------------- Pets
Yes, we wi II BILLY GOAT and coll ie lo
a CCepf
neW give away . Phone 9j~ ~7itc
customers. . . _;.~. I=C'--------------

Television log for easy viewing

'•

. .;., , ...
"iiii&lt;lo•zeer largest Truck or
c
Radiator to th e
Heater( Core.

lARRY 1.8,VE8DER

1973 GALA X IE 500, A door . low
m i leage, aft power. Fac torv
eQuipment . Phone 949 -2774 .
11 -4-6tc

Notice

Rec ords .
•
Term• of Sa le : Cash. for not
less "than two -thirds of the
apprals'd value, payable upon
delivery of' deed. Apprelsed

Blown into'Walls &amp; Attics'
STORM , .
WINDOWS&amp; DOOR.S ·~
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SID ING,SOF F ITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

ANTI QUE pump organ. boby
crib ma11ress . Phon e 949 ·

Employment Wanted

·"

Blown
Insulation Services .

10·31 ·6!c

_ _ _ _ _

IS ~ U~

·MY ,NAMii 15 · UH ·15 ·
MY NAME??

~r

Real Estate. For· Sale

'j: Fcir Sale

-

IYant!d

AN D MY NAME

'fREE ESTIMATES ·

Phone 742-2331
Roger Wamsley- Rutland
· 10-15·1 mo.

~OME8QY~
MOTOR.CO•.' ~
·OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
M

deed re~orded In Volume 210.
poge 725 , Me igs County Oeed

m -2126

.

Notice

Pogo 283, Meigs Coun ty

'

1972 COMET2 DR'.

'

Business

I WOU LD l ike to thank our
.c~·wpaTd "for all m 8kes and
re le !lves , n eighbors and
models of mobile homes.
friends and a ll the area
Phone ar:ea code 614 -423 ·
churc hes for .the ir pray ers,
95i1 .
car ds, rl ower s and kindness
4-13-tfc
19 M FURY 11 auromatlc . Also,
show n us wn lie Suzan was a ROOM an d board fo senior __ __
two tw in bull calv es Phone
patient
at
Children 's
~~·~·3~~~: very n ;ce Phone
8dJ.2353.
Hospital. Columbus . suzan
11 -6-Atc
Thoma, ller parents , Pat
10-f2.tfc CA R ~E: NT RY,
pa ne l ing ,
and Ear l T ho ma , and - - - - - - - - - -- - - lloor i no and ce i ling . "Ph on e
19 70 GRA NO Tor ino Ford ,
brother Ke lly .
Garden Tra ctor Pull , Sunday ,
992 275 9,
$800 . Ph one 992 -3377 .
11 -il -llc
Nov . 9, 12 : 30 p . m . till dar k.
1,0-21 -30tc
ll -2-7tc
Rai n. date , Sunday Nov . 16, ~-- -- ~----------~ r
Gate $1.00 , under 10 free . "R'EMODELINC.,
Plumbing ,
One cylinder 12 inch wheel
heating and all ty pes of
STOP . - save monev at '
limit .
Wheel i e
wheels
general
repair .
Worl!:
Christmas auction sa l e.
r~quired .
Brimsto n e
gu ar anteed . 20· years ex. ONE two bedrm . and one 3
Fr iday , 7 p .m . Lots of new
bedrm. trailer locat ed in
Raceway Park , Coolville ,
perien ce. Phone 992 2409
tor.s and gifts as well !IS free
Clifton, W . Va . Construe I ion
Oh;o .
5·1·tfl
prizes . Mason Auction.
workers preferred . Phone
11 -6-Jtc
. ___ -: - -~ -~. -- - - - -- .,.
Mason , W . Va .
13041 773 -5873.
11 -5-3tc
l l -6-6tC

Deed Records.
The foregoing real esta te .
efter sates of ·portlons thereof .
IS all of the nat estate
remaining which was con ~teved to Sold Invest m ents, bv

(101 9,

,

&amp; Obityar y
S2 .00 for 50 word min i mum .
E!!! ':!'i addi tional word 3c .

'

TO

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Servi~es:
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.:....::!..__--:-J:: ',

6 cyl. std . trans., rodlo, \Ike new w-w tires. blue finish,

CARD OF THANKS

AWOKE IU1ANE NOUGAT

A.Mwr~ M'll:ef tomtont

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For Wa nt Ad Service
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REGULATIONS

The PUbliSher reserv es the

.

RATE S

.I formorranro
u
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Monday Deadlin e 9t~ . m .
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1
Will be ae,cepled un til 9 a .m .
for Dav of Publication
1

righ t to edi t or refect any ads,
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·

'THI~ O~E- COUL.."
~E -&amp;UPERIOR 10

·:

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lSIGNS.• Ppmeroy
OF
Motor Co•.
QUALITY.

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Pub ·

Jocat ;on

LUFEK

- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThW'sda~, Nov. 6, 1975

DICK TRACY

'

-

form rour ordinary words.

9

-

volunteered aid , It's because

they can't al lhls lime.
AQUARIUI (Jon. 10-,111, 1t)
Your chances of Juccesa 1re

ucellent today II you don't brIng too many people lnlo Ill
acl. Coniine what you're doing
to lhose directly Involved .
PISCES (Fib. 10-M!Inlll :10) 1
You have a tendoncy 10
oversell your woresloday. Slop
tho sales pitch the minute you
get your first :'y&amp;s.."

~Your
VBirthday
NO¥. 7, 1175
You will be interested in
furthering your career through

gaining &lt;nowledge.lhll coming
year. Tho lime Is ripe 10 Increase your earnings In thlt
manner .

�10 ~. The Dally Sentinel, Middlepori-Pomeroy, 0 .. 'l'lmrsd~ty, Nuv. o, 1 ~75

The Collins Report.

News
•• in Briefs
(Continued from page
I)

resumed his shullle to Capil ol Hill today on a business-as-usual
basis after President Ford asked him to carry on with "full
authority" unlil his successor is. approved . The 55-year.()ld
intelligence veteran, fired by Ford in a .weekend shake-up,
agreed to Ford's request Wednesday that he stay on the job
wttil Ambassador George Bush returns from his post in Peking
and is confirmed as the new director by the Senate.
Since Bush is remaining in Peking for Ford's China visit
around the end of this month and no exact date has yet been set
for the confirmation hearings - which may be protracted Colby probably will continue running the agency through the
end of the year and perhaps beyond. Ford was believed to have
had second thoughts on his dismissal of Colby, leaving the
agency rudderless when Colby's knowledge is needed not o~ly
for day to day operations but to assist In congressional
hearings.
NEW YORK - ROBERT SARNOFF, IN A SURPRISE
move, has resigned as chairman and chief executive officer of
the RCA Corp., ending more than half century of Sarnoff
family involvement in the firm. There was speculation Sarnoff
may have been forced out ,although RCA said he stepped down
to pursue personal interests.
Shortly before the board convened Wednesday afternoon,
Sarnoff had scheduled an interview next week to discuss
restructuring of the corporation. "He went into the ooard
meeting In control of RCA- or so he th()ught - and when he
came out, he was no longer in control," said one unformed
source. "What happened in the meeting is not known." ·
WASHINGTON - THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
says food prices rose 14.5per cent in each of the past two years
and ahout9per cent solar this year.
As lor the final three months of this year, a department
report said, prices will "edge up slightly" from the JulySeptember levels, with increases for beef, poultry, fresh fruits
and potatoes, but will probably decline for pork, fish and dairy
products. But the report says food price inflation may slow to
an annual rate of 4 to 5 per cent next year. That would be the
lowest rate since 1972, when prices rose 4.5 per cent.

Haste

Four drivers

(Continued from page I )

are certified

received a compla~t about
5:30 a.m. from an elderly
cuuple who said a naked man
was creating a disturbance.
'Dozer had been visiting
Baker, 28, who suffered
second and third-degree
burns, said McClure. Baker,
a friend and possible relative
'of Dozer, was admitted to a
Colwnbus, Ohio, hospital.
Callile of the fire was ~lng
investigated by the state fire
. marshal's office.

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE, THURS.
NOV.6
NOT OPEN
FRI. -SUN.
, NOV. 7-1
Herb Jtlfe's
THE WIND AND
TWE LION
(Technlcolor I

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"

Bus driver certificates
were issued to Shlela Fields,
Earl Adams, James Guynn
and James Wllliams by the
Meigs County Board of
Educalion In regular session
Tuesday night.
The board approved a
reslilulion assuring compliance to the Title 9 program
In
re gard
lo
sex
discrimination and agreed to
correct any problems which
might exist. (\ttendlng were
Robert Bowen , county
superintendent of schools,
and members George Perry,
Gordon Collins, Bob Burdelle, Harold Lohse and
Harold Roush.

AUTO BURNS
The Middleport Fire Dept.
was called to Rutland S\. at
6:31p.m. Wednesday where a
car owned by James
Williams had caught fire .
There WI!S extensive damage
lo lhe wiring and carburetor,

• •

in Westerville

C:O!.UMBUS
State ull truinlally handkappcd i&lt;dlfHJI dlslricl,
Scnalnr Oakley C. Collins t R- yow•~slcrs and by rcnwvlng
'11te dependents of hanIronton 1 reports ' that a the concepl of "htability t~• dicapped persons are also
number of bills now before profil substantially from · affected by the parent or
the General Assembly will f~rther instruction ." The guard·ian's disability .
help provide the assistance SuperintendeD( of Public Existing statutes allow
and protection to enable Instruction would determine, scholarship aid for the
handi capped or disabled subject .to Board standards, children of a permanently
Ohioans to lead meaningful which children are eligible and totally disabled veteran
and productive lives.
for transfer to a' state ap- providing the veteran l)'as an
Two bills would make it proved program . The Ohio resident at the. tlll)e of
easier for the. physically Superintendent would &amp;JI!o be. entry into t~e Armed Forces;
handicapped to get around required
to ; es. tt\
\~lish and the chdd Is between 16
without having to ,confront proced!D'es for ap~Jf.~ ~ ahd 21 years of age, Ill
unnecessary obstaCles or parents of such nlli!chiliowtl wfinancial need, recommended
l!·avel greater distances to they objeci io the' .)r.ansfer. by the principal of his or her
circumvent them. H.B. 34,
While the placenii!ilt is In high school, and has lived in
now before the House Trans- effect attendance ~f at least Ohio for at least one year.
portation and Urban Mfairs· IOOdaysperyearby-thechild
Am. S.B. 270 grants
Committee, requires the and :rnual consultation he- ellgibility for war orphan
Registrar of Motor Vehicles tween; Jhe R!-ogram super- scholarships to children of
to design and issue free visor "~'&lt; ~ !l!l( appropriate deceased or disabled
parking cards bestowing princlpa! of the residence . veterans, regardless of
special parking privileges in school · district would be residence at time of entry
normally prohibited areas to mandatory. A mlnimwn age into the Armed Forces, and
persons with " walking limit o( three would be extends the residency
disabilities" (as defined in established for all physically, requirement for children of
the bill). Card holders could mentally or emotionally non-residents to 5 ye~~rs .
park up to 30 minutes in no qualified children . The
It furlher provides that the
standing, no stopping, and no present minimum age limits . number of scholarships shall
parking areas when they or _are 3 years lor physically be based on the available
their car diSplay the permit handicapped children and 5 funds provided by the
and are not creating a hazard · years for the mentally or LegiSlature . Such grants are
or impeding traffic.
emotionally handicapped.
made at the rate of one
Effective last August Am.
Special
education scholarshlpperi,OOOfuliUme
S.B. 85 requires all new and programs are mandated for stud~nts · enr_olled the
reconstructed curbs to have a all school districts, but not all prev1ous year m all state
built-In ramp at all have complied l!'ith Board supported ~ollege.s and
pedestrian crossings. Such standards. Sub. H.B. 455 umverslti~s m Oh1o . The
ramps must have a non-slip would allow for contracting scholarships - am_ount to
surface and be at least 40 with qualified private exemption from general and
Inches wide.
training programs · or at- .Instructional fees for up to
Sub. S.B. 162 has been tendance on a qjlalified four years.
termed a "Bill of Rig ills lo~.
the . lfandicapped" ' II! ; ,1~
\_
prohibits discrlminl,liqq,
YAY~J.
against the handicapped In
employment, use of public
accommodations or housing
practices, by insurance
companies In Issuing policies.
The bill requires provision for
special license plates and
parking locations near public
buildings where parldng is
. provided, driver's training
courses for the handicapped,
and obstruction-free voter
polling and registration
places:
The term handicapped (one
who Is without the use of one
or. both arms, legs, or combination thereof, who is blind
or deaf, or who Is so. dill8bled
as to require crutches or
wheelcha.it) would be added
to the Civil Rights Commission Law which now
prohibltis dls~rlmlnatlon
based on race, color, religion,
sex, national orlgl'n, and
ancestry.
Sub. S.D. 162 would not
require the handicapped to be
employed or trained where
the disabUlty significantly
increases occupational
"May I tell you what's fi.Tiplng me? Washington
hazards or legitimately
simply lsn I 1/stanlng/"
reduces job performance .
Further it would not require a - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - person selling or renting HOLDOUf.GOES HOME
NIXON CAW MAYOR
property to modify it for
TOKYO (UP!) - Hiroo
CLEVELAND (UPI)
handicapped tenants, nor to Orioda, tbe Japanese World Former President Richard
exercise greater than normal war 11 holdout who Nixon•Wednesday telephoned
care for ' handicapped emigrated to Brazil after hiJ congratulaUons to Mayor
tenants. Neither would It hiding. for 30 years In the Ralph J. Perk, who wm reexcuse handicapped persons Phllfppine jungle, arrived in election to . a third· tenn
from meeting all contractual . Tokyo Wednelday for a 1~ Tuelday.
obligations.
day stay. ;
"It was a cungratulatory
Under present law If a child
Onoda, 53, told reporters he call," Perk lllid. "n
the
is determined by State ll,oard · had not retiii'Jied to look for a flnt time I ha4 talked to him
of Education standarcl§}ll ,~ wife, but to dl.ecuaa royaltlea since he left oince.
" incapable of profitiq~ 'UI the book he wrote about his
"Hll' wlce 110unded clear
substantially from fur!Jier experlenc;e, "My ~year_ War and strong. He than~ed me
Instruction" In public On
L11banc
Mand," for the courtesies mended to
schools, the superintendent of publlahed In Japan.
members of hla family when
that school district must
A former lieutenant In the they have
been
In
place the child under the Imperial Japanese Army, Cleveland," added Perk, wbo
supervision of a vlsltlng Onoda emerged from the llid he had not yet heard
teacher·or attendance officer jungles of IJibflng laland in from President Ford. ·
as long as the child Is of March, 1874. Ha retll!'lled to
"I have an appoinbnent
compulsory school age.
Japan for a year before with .him !10011 and I'm sure
Am. Sub. H.B. 455 requires emigrating to' Brazil . to he'll congratulate me In
Identification and traliling of become a· cattle rancher.
per11011 then," added Perk,
who wilL be Inaugurated
,.._____________!"""~ Mmday at Clty HaD.

Berry's orld

-----=----------:------

WESTERViLLE - Alice
J~hnston
Sands,
94,
w'eslerville, died W!!dnesday.
She was the daughter ' of lhe
late Oscar Johnston~d Rilla
. JacObs Sands. She, was also
preceded in death by, her
husband, James Sands.
Mrs. Sands, born and
reared in Meigs County, was
a sister of the late Frank H.
Johnston of Pomeroy. _
She is survived • by a
daughter, Mrs. Jane Jones, .
704 Mrica Rd, Galena, Ohio;
.one stepson, Edward Sands,
Basil, Ohio, and two grandchildren.
.
Funeral services will be
held Saturday at 10 a.m. at
I~ Moreland Funeral Home,
Westerville. Burial will be In
Gfeenlawn Ceme·tery,
C~umbus. Friends may call
at the funeral home Thursday
and Friday from 2 to 4 and 7
to~9 p. m.
Vflerans Memorial Hospital
'j\DMITTED - Joseph
McElroy, Pomeroy; Steve
Ebltn·, Pomeroy; Michael
T~ylor, Jr.,• New Haven;
vililter Brown, Letart, W.
V11.; Doris Darst, Pomeroy.
;p!SCHARGED - Carol
Bwnem, Thomas Williams,
~ ndon McDaniels, Helen
Pllelps, Charles Burdette.
Plea118nl Valley
DISCHARGES - Lettie
oolittle, Jacquelene
I:f.()wers, Nancy Sayre,
Patrick Hlll, Mrs. Edgar
~Iarkey, Jr., sQn, all of Point
Pleasant; Mary Harris, New
Haven; Mrs. Kenneth
Martin, Buffalo ; Lewis
Martin, Robertsburg; Mrs.
Larry Laudermllt, Rutland;
Susan Windown, Henderson,
and Mrs. Ray VanMeter,
daughter, Clifton._

J

Holzer Medleal tenter
(~tc~rJes,Nov.5)

Mrs, Lorra)ne Aelker and
dalJiihter, Esther Anderson,
Kristen Batley, Sharon Bentz,
Laura Blume, Deena Brown,
Kimberly Brown, Ruth Ann
Brown, Maxine Callicoat,
Kathryn Chapman, Carol
Clarkson, Avonelle Cobb,
Mrs. James Donathan and
son, Nettie Faulkner, Denver
French, Brenda Halfield,
Louis Hochberg, George
Kearns, Carla Large,
Richard Mora, Frank
Murray, Christopher ~itz,
Stephen Noble, . Bessie
Reynolds, Mary Jo Salyers,
John Schilllng, Lottie Sheets,
Rita smith, Larry Speakman,
Billi,e Stewart, Sheryl
Tolliver, George Vance, Roy.
Whaley, Clyde White, Inez
Wilgus, Robin Zlnn.

Local news in briefs

Season.-

-

OPENS
NOV. 14

Our complete line of hunting supplies and
equipment is here ready for selection. Made
by world-known manufacturers and in a
large range of prices.

.

New Arrivals At Kerm's ·

SYRACUSE - Girl Scout · The Pomeroy Elementary)
Troop 1204, meeting TueSda~~~ll spon•or a fall ~
at the school. wasdfvlded lntO;&gt;!~ll\on;,Saturday at the
three patrols. Scout books •sclf!*JI f'l'orn!6'&lt;30 to 9:30p.m.,
Games and prizes wlll r
hlghltght the event which w111: ·
be open to the public.
•

Senices today

The· Middleport E-R squad:
was called to the Graymanor;
Apts. on Race St. at 2:30p.m.,
Wednesday for two-year-old
William Barlon who had run t.
his hand through a front doon
glass . He was taken to:·
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
where ·two stttches were·•
tAkO.p tq f105e the wound. ~

'

for Mr. Bryan
COLUMBUS - The fWleral
lor Joseph D. Bryan, 77, of 431
Clinton Heights"' Ave ., a
former secreta'ry an!l atlorney examinel"fdr' the•Ohlo
Boar&lt;l of Tax Apnealsi-'WDs&lt;2'
P·m· today at the ·Rutherford
Chapel, 23113 N. High St. He
died Monday at Riverside
' lethodist Hospllal. .
qe resided In Middleport
for a time In the late 1941!11..
He was a former general
d
·
counsel for Civil Defell8e an
the Ohio Adjutant Generals
Department and was a former staff counse Ifor the Ohio
Turnpike Commission aod
the Ohio Department of High·
ways.
A retired 1:1. S. Army
Jie·uten,nt colonel, Bryan
served
· on the U· S· Court of
Mllitary Appeals and the U.
S. Appeals Courts for the
Sixth and Seventh Clrculi.'l.
•-elude h'- wife,
Survivors "'
"'
Mary Campbell Bryan;
sisters,
Mrs .
James
(Doro thy) E. H·arley, of
Middleport, 0 .; and Mrs.
James !Kathryn) A. stock'man, of Kansas City, Mo.
Friends may make contributions to a preferred
charity,
Burial was to be In
A r I in g ton·· Na'II on al
Cemetery.

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f~9fnnfrl~ ~~r·.~tr~~~- ~~~'if).;

safurdey at the home of Bob;
Hill, corner of Elm and Fllthi
In Racine. Crltt Bradford will,
serve as auctioneer . In :
conjunction with the auction,!,
the church w111 hold a bake•
sale and will serve refresn -;
ments at the sale location .•
Proceeds wtll go to the new
roof fund:
:·
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EASTERN - he as 1ern·
Band Boo•ters wltl meer
Monday, Nov. 10. Instead of
Tuesday Ill• reported. They .
will meet In the band room .
All parents are urged to at-'
tend.
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A dissolution of marriage ·
and
two suits for divorce have '
been flied here. Filing for,,.
dlssolullon were Konr\eth'•
Lillie. Cheshire and Ruth,
Little; Middleport. Filing fol"
divorce were Rita J. Boggess ~
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, ogalns(.

AMMUNITION OF AU KINDS
WESTERN - REMINGTON
'

Johnson. Pomeroy, against
Carroll
W.
John•on ,
Pomeroy. each on charges ot
gro55 neglect ot duty encf;
extreme cruelly .
~

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11(\arrlage · licenses have
been Issued to Mark Andrew.
Still, 23, Pomeroy. end
Pamela Jane Lanham, 19,
Pom~roy; . Carl
Eugene.
Stewart, 26, Rt. I, ~ld
dleport, and Ellen Mae
Reynolds, 29, Middleport, en~
Harry Delbert Garnes, Jr.,
26, Middleport. and Vonda
Kay Johnson. 21 , Middleport,
RACtNE - The Souther~
Athletic Boosters wilt meet at
7:30p.m . Tuesday at ths high
ochool here. AI Interested
persons are asked to attend.

LONG BOTTOM - Word
has been received of the
unexpected death of Mn. '
Rose Shipman In Plltsb..-~.h,
Pa. Mn. Shipman Ia · 111•
mother of the Rty. Father
George Shipman, Paalor of
Our Lady of Lorello Catholl(
Church here for severtl
yean. About two WHkl ego
Mn. Shipman and her son
vlstled friends In this area ,

Sale! Men's

SHOTGUNS &amp; RIFLES
Remington - Winchester- Ithaca
Harrison · &amp; Richardson
Mossberg- Browning Gun Cleaning
Kits - Gun Oil - Recoil Pads Game Bags - Shell Vests - Gun
Cases - Hunting Accessories Hunters Jac~ets &amp; Caps - Hunting
Pants &amp; Caps- Rifle Sling StrapsSteel Traps.

Keep Warml

QUILTED
VEST
Insulated!

NyiW' ohtll ... polyester pil!._ _filling.
~ip-fron B slash
~ockets,

S, M, L, XL.

LICENSED GUN DEALER

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
IIOW.MAIN
POMEROY
We Issue Hunting Ucense

KERM'S KORNER

New York Cothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

Jeans and
Jeans Jackets.
·Men's Depjbntnt
}st.Floor
Thlssele Includes our entire stock of
mens blue denim leans - mens Prewashed denim leans - mens fashion
jeans· In corduroy - polyester end
cotlon''bMind&amp; • Lee Boot cuts · Patch
' PocRet' le~s. AI~ Includes ell of .our
western blue denim leckets by
' Wr'llngler and U!'e1 ·end f~hlon
· jackets that match many styles In
our fashion leans. Stop In this
wt~~kend - see our 'fine selection ·
buy what you need In leans end
leans lackets. You'll really save.

The Meigs County Commiuloners In cooperation
with Gallla-Melgs 'Com.
munlty Action Agency will
holtl a pubUc hearing Nov. 18
at 8 a.m. In the · corn, mlaaloner's ofllee to deterllllrM! )il'iorlty needzl of the
county for UBe of Title I
Community . Develop~ent .
llfant.
A project being conaldered
Ia a housing rehabllll«tion
program propDied by C.A.A.
:' ':!~ public Ill invited.
DEER !tiLLED
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. 181d a seven point buck
deer died Wednesday at 7: 3G
p.m. when It ·r ill in front of a
car. lravellna west on TR :14
driVen by Roger E. Wella, Rt.
I, Vinton.
, FHACLOSING
The Farmers Horne Admlnlatratlon County Office-In
Pomeroy wll1 be closed
~y. Nov. II due to an
out of town meeting.

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Optn Both· Friday end

Jobless level at
8.6% in October

'

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stalebouae , Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
three-term state legislator
·· from Mahonlng County, who
Sl!id he detects a "David and
Goliath .. attitude among the
voters, has declared he will ·
challenge Ohio Democratic
heavyweights next year for
the right to run against Sen.
Robert Taft Jr., R.{)hio.
,.Rep. George D. Tablack,
,D-Campbell, son of a
prominent Youngstown-area
pollticlan ofthe S(IIIle name,
made his announcement
ThiU'sday, saying · he .was
"upset" that speculation for
· the Democratic nomination
centers around former U.S.
Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum
of Cleveland and former ~v .
support to Stanton.
John J . Gilligan.
Tablack said that If U.S. Stanton has indicated he is
Rep. James V. Stanton, D- a firm candidate for the
Cleveland, moves into the Democratic nomination, but
!reach within two .weeks to Tabllick said if the Cleveland
contest Metzenbaum or congressman does not make
· Gilligan, he will withdraw a formal announcement
irom the race and throw his within two weeks, it will be

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Setu~d~y-~ N\lhYih~.tU' i.' '

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READY FOR TIIANKSGIVING - Jason Riggs,
three-year old sor of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Riggs of near
Tuppers Plains, is all but dwarfed by these pumpkins In a
fail display fronting the home of Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil
Windon, West Shade Road. One of the pumpkins weighs
1!10 pounds, the other ISO lbs. Both were raised by Dana
Fell, Washington(,;. H. formerly of Meigs County, an uncle
of Mrs. Windon. Mrs. Alvin Tripp, another niece of Fell,
tias a 140 pound pumpkin frqm her uncle on display at her
home. Picture by Bob Hoeflich .

too late to mount an effective
challenge.
Tablac~. 45, has been in the
Ohio House since 1970. Prior
to that, he was a supervisor In
the Ohio Department of
Taxation, where he worked
-(Continued on page 10)

•

at y

e

By SARA FRirZ
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The nation's unemployment
rate rose 0.3 per cent in
October to Its highest level in
four monlhs -11.6 per centprimarily because more
Americans were out looking
for work, the Labor Department said today.
The number of unemployed
persons rose by 230,000 to 8
million in October, the
department said. Total
employment remained
virtually unchanged at 85.4
million after rising steadily
between March and August.
The unexpected large increa~ in ·employment occurred mainly because of a
surge of persons looking for
jobs-the clvUian labor force
rose by 250,000 to 93.4 mlllion.
Some white women and farm
workers also lost their jobs in
October, contributing to the
increase.
The increase In the jobless
fig!D'es was the second ro\U\d
of gloomy economic news in
the past two days. A Labor
Department report Thursday

s.iowed that wholesale prices
jumped 1.8 per cent last
mohth -the biggest monthly
increase in a year.
Julius Shiskin, commissioner of the Bureau of
Labor Statistics, 'told
Congress last month the
unemployment picture has
improved since peaking 9.2
per cent of the labor force in
May and was expected to
continue unchanged for the
remainder of 1975.
However, there was a
decline in the number of
unemployed persons who
have been seeking a job for
six months or more and the
average length of unem ployment also dropped
significantly from 16.2 weeks
to 15.4 weeks.
The last time the unem.
ployment rate was as high as
October's figure was in June

when it also registered 8.6 per
cent.
Employment in mantifacturing, which has been rising
steadily in recent months,
jumped by another 110,000
workers in October-a sign
that factories are recalling
lald.()ff workers. Most of the
lnc~ases
were
~
manufacturing of nondurable
goods or electrical equipment. Employment in mining
also was up by 20,000.
Employment in contract
construction al.oo increased
by 30,000 and 110,000 working
persons were added to the
payrolls of state and local
govenunents, 35,000 of them
striking teachers who
returned to work.
Agricultural employment
dellned by 125,000 jobs, the
department said.

Feud ended
Hatfields, McCoys end
ancient clan battle in

•

enttne

reunion full of irony

Devoted 1'o The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXVII

NO. 146

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

r:;;;;·,:~, .,.,:,,, ,.,:,·i;,:-:-:,:·B;i:;i;r-_;.1 Woman
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BLACKBERRY FORK, Ky. &lt;UP!)- Guess
who's coming to dinner? None other than the
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1975
PRICE 15' Hatfields and the McCoys.
-----------------~--But don 't bolt the doors and hide in the cellar

swears she was::;;;' ~~~~~~;*~~~!~'
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By United Press International
WASHINGTON - VICE PRESIDENT NELSON
Rockefeller has refused to rule out a 1916 bld for tbe
presidency. The 67-year.())d Rockefeller told reporters Thursday he eXj&gt;ected President Ford would be nominated for a full
Mary Adams, 22, of Lan- July 10 and met Rope in
term next August. But he refused to say what be would do If
caster, Ohio , Thursday
Ford dld poorly In early primaries or dropped out of the race. provided an apparent alibi Nelsonville at II p.m. She
said they left the party
Asked at a news cunference If he still had presidential
for the Gerald Eugene Rupe together between 3 and 4a.m.
ambltlo118, Rockefeiler said : "Listen, I wouldn't have ac- of Rutland, .accused as an
cePted the vice preSidency If I wasn't wllllng to accept thf! accomplice in the armed She also .testified that on the
night or' the party Rupe told
presidency, if, God forbid, something happened to the
robbery of Jack Ambrose, her he was going to Florida.
President" He 118ld he had no plall8 to get involved in the 1976 manager of the Pomeroy
She stated she did not kn ow of
race. But his decision to withdraw from !he vice presidential · Kroger Store last July 10.
the robbery until they were
race cuts his ties with Ford sufficiently to mount a campaign If
The trial, Ohio versus arrested in Florida.
the PresldenCs should fall.
Rupe, went into its lhlrd day
The firsl person to take the
Thursday and was being sland in the case was the
COLUMBUS - A SPOKESMAN FOR Gov. James A. continued today in the Meigs
robbery victim , Am brose.
Rhodes Thursday said It is "likely" the governor would submit
County Common Pleas Court,
Ambrose was on his way to
a tax .Incentive program for Industry to the Ohio General
lhe Hon. John C. Bacon sit- the bank with receipts to put
Assembly next year. Themas Moyer, executive assistant to ling.
in a night depository. AmRhodes, said the program would be introduced before the
Miss Adams testified she brose had the money on the
Legislature goes into recess which Is expected some time next
was with Rupe at a party in seat of his car in a paper bag.
spring.
Nelsonville on July 10. She He said $11 ,251.91 was taken,
"It Is likely we will have a legislative proposal," said
slated
that she was am $5,000 in cash , $1,600 in food
Moyer, for tax abatement and the adm~lstratlon is studying
em ploye of the An chor slamps, and $4,651 .91 , in
Incentives offered by other states and has not yet started
drafting the bill. Moyer said the program Is needed to keep Hocking Glass Co . and checks.
worked the 2 to 10 (p.m.)
Ambrose testified he left
Industry in the Buckeye state.
·
shift.
lhc store with the money in a
She said she got off work on paper bag for his car wh ich
CINCINNATI - THE CINCINNATI POST, In an editorial,
says Ohio voters overwhelmingly turned down ~v . James A.
Rhodes' $4.5 bllllon economic bond Issues because of the
"slapped-together enormity" and blg price tag of tbe
propoll8!s.
"Defeat of the bond Issues does not mean that the people
are unconcerned about 'Jobs and Progress' In Ohio," the
Thursday editorial stated. "Voters rejected his plan because of
Ita slapped-together enormity and because its price tag was
Middlep ort 's fire
more than they cuuld accept.
hydrant:! will take on a welcome · in the holiday
"So now the problem Is to come up with workable alter- bicentennial look soon ac- season on Monday, Dec. 1.
natives. The people of Ohio now will be looking to their cording to plans made by the There will be a 6:30 p.m.
legislature ... to come up with a solution. But an important
parade feat uring Santa
Middleport Chamber of
. place \11 the picture still ·IS reservoid for Gov. Rhodes. He Is
followed ~Y a moonlight sa le .
Commerce at a qoon lun1111derstandably dl118ppointed about the defeat of his Grand
Plans were also made to
cheon Thursday at the Martin
purchase new street signs for
Plan. But he will still be governor for three more years and this
Restaurant.
Is no time for him to 'retire' in ant of pique."
lhe town in cases where the
Jack Slavin, art instructor , present signs are in un.
at Meigs High School, will be
COLUMBUS - SEPTEMBER SALES OF 'Ohio retailers
sa lisfactory condition, or are
in charge of the bicentennial missing.
were 6 per cent hlght{ than those of the corresponding month
art work on the hydrants.
last year, the Ohio State University Center for Business and
Don Wilson, president ,
Also, .a planting area at the
Economic Research said Thursday.
presided. Others present
"T" on North Second Ave.
Seventeen of 25 businesses surveyed showed September
were Mrs. Wilson, Mr. and
and Neill St . Is being congains. Automobile dealers !ed the way with ~­
Mrs. John Werner, Edison
slructed as a special
creased 118les of 29 per cent. Paint, glass and wallpaper stores'
Baker, Ferman Moore, Cash
bicentennial project by the
sales rose·16 per cent, household appllance stores' 12 per cent Middleport Garden Club.
Bahr, Carl Horky and Mike
Williams.
and hard atores' 6 per cent.
The chamber made plans to

Fire hydrants to
go bicentennial

WASHI!-iGTON - UNSWAYED BY FORMER Defense
Secretary James R. Schlesinger's warnings, the Senate Appropriations Committee has restored only a fraction of $11.1
\lllllon cuts made by the House In the administration's $120.9
billion defense blll.
Announcing the r~sull~ 9f the committee drafting session
(Contlnueu on page 10)

_Cross wins in Buckeye

'I

H

,1( 1/oj

1

PRICES

.

Voters
to have
.choice

:gr.~~.~-" ,8~g••~u'3r~d'

- MORA HOM!; NOW
Richard Mora, son of Mr.
and Mrs: Woodrow Mora, has
returned horne (Route 2,
Pomeroy J from the Holzer
Medical Center whare he wu
taken last Friday after being
injw-ed at Meigs High Sc:hool.
Mora, an Eaatern High
School student who attenda
vocational clallea at MeigJ
High School, suffered trac•
tures in an ann and leg when
equipment fell on hlm.
Friends are welcome to call
at the Mora home.

'

•

IAfter.. weeks of collecllng'
Items. Including antiques and
near antique (collectibles),
mem'bers of the Racine •
Weslet•n United Methodist:

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Public·hearing
planned Nov. 18

..•

The Gospel :r~nes w;ll be wereo-•dlstributed. Dal~ key :
featured at• he MI. Herrnan rings are being sold. ames '
revival service o FJ1ldar l'!"et:e .,p\a~, and refresh·
evening. The public Is hwlted menfs ~ved by Penny W?lfe
to attend.
and Shari Cogar.
.,
'
RAC INE - The Recine The Pomeroy E-R squad :
Masi&gt;nlc Lodge .loll will meet was called to the home ot ,
Tuesday, Nov. 11 , at 7: lO p.m. Margaret G~ns. L&amp;sley St., &amp;t
There wilt be election of ol· 3:05 p.m . Wednesday. She'
fleers. · All members are wa~ · t'ken to Veterans•
"'£i)'loriaJ ,Hospital.
;
urged to attend.

waa

Rabbit

f

Mrs. -Sands dies

Bill. Cross,
Racine
businessman, was a siK-diglt
winner in the Buckeye \000
drawing of the Ohio Lottery
Thursday night. ·
Cross wlll take his Ucket to
Marietta for certification and
wlll be Invited to attend the
drawing for prizes scheduled
to be held in Cleveland.
Winners of the Buckeye 1000
are assured of a prize of at
least ,1,000 and a chance to

win Ihe gran(l prize of ,1,000 a
month for life (guaranteed
minimum of $400,000). other
cash prizes range from $2,00o
to $50,000.
Cross sells lottery tickets at
the Wald Cross and Sons store
in Racine bul ran out this
week befor.e purchasing his
own llckets. As a result he
picked up tickets at Eber's
Gull Station and became a
big winner.

Y

was parked at the back of the
store. He opened his car door
and put the money on the
passenger side of the seat,
when he was accosted by a
man with a gun, and another
man, both with hooded faces.
They motioned for him to go
to a relalning wall (one man
held a piece of iron ). They
lold him not to turn around.
He did not turn around for
fear of being hil . But he said
he ran toward the store
whereupon the pipe was
thrown at him. It missed . He
went inlo store and called
police. Both men wore hoods.
Ambrose
said
he
recognized one or the men as
being Lonnie Black.
Black also testified that be
and Rope had discussed tbe
robbery the day before and
that he had taken the gun
from his parents' home and a
piece of pipe.
Black was sentenced
earlier on a bill of in·
formation :when he plead
guilty to charges of be~g an
accomplice in the robbery of
Ambrose and was sentenced
to 4 to 25 years. He had been
kept in Meigs County~ order
to testlly.
Jurors are Jerry Fields,
Michael Ihle, Peter Chase,
Eloise Connolly, Bernice
Lavalley, Kenneth Caldwell,
Mark Davis, Emerson
Pooler, Linda Damewood,
Rachel Downie, Dorothy
Myers, Pearl Edwards and
Alternate, llah Roush.
AHorney for the defendant
is William Conley, Bernard
Fultz, county prosecutor, Is
presented the attorney state's
case.

.

wtll be partly cloudy and
mild . with a chance of
showers and a little cooler
by Monday and Tuesday.'
Highs will be In the low or
mld 60s on Sunday,
dropping Into the upper 50s
by Tuesday. Lows during
the period will be In the 40s.
.......
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-~

done."

Mayor London and Police
Chief Millon Varian went on
record in expressing . their
apprecialion to the youth of
lhe village for their good
behavior
during
the
Halloween season.
Hubbard also met with
council In regard lo anot her
matt er. As chairman of il&lt;e
board of · truslees lor the
Church of the Nazarene,
Hubbard cited the danger of a
barbed wire fence that joins
Ihe church property . He
poin led oul that Ibis is
dangerous, especially to
children. Council poinled out
Ihal this was not Ihe problem
nf council . but Ihat of !he

property owner.
Councilman Ed Neutzllng
reported thai he had repaired
the children 's slide, placed·
concrete at the end of it, and
all poles to hold bird houses
but one are ready to put up.
Councilman Eber Pickens
said election booths have
been taken down and
reported progress on fitting
out Ihe new fire truck .
Council vofed to change Its
meeting time from 7:30 to 7
p.m. on the first Thursday of
each month.
Robert Wingett reported
lhat by December council
should be prepared lo ad·
verlise for bids for lhe new

Foronethlng,theldnfoltof
Randall McCoy plan to put up
an $8,000 granite mmument,
purchased from the Hatfield
Monument Co., whose owner
just happens to be Henry
Hatflelq, a grandson of Devis
Ahse, lbe feared patriarch of
his clan.
"We're all like brothers,"
the
grandson smiles.
"They 're all fine boys."
McCoy's desceridants want
to mark the site where five of
their forebearers are buried
in unattended ·graves, a grim
testimony to the bloodshed
that darkened both sides of
!he Tug River ~ Pike County,
Ky ., and M~go County,
W.Va.
Three of the five McCoys
buried at the site were tied to
· pawpaw trees and shot to
death by Hatfields to avenge
the fatal stabbing of Ellison
Hatfield during an election
day fracas.
In another poignant stroke,
the two families will dine on a
roast hog - symbolic of a
dispute over the ownership of
a pig that precipitated much
of the intense hatred between
the two clans.

R a dar on
the job
The Pomeroy Police Dept.
radar , back in operation,
produced 11 persons who
forfeited bonds or were 'fined
for speeding In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Dale E.
Smith Thursday night.
Forfei ling bonds were
Barbara Logan, Pomeroy,
$13.70, Sigle Chafin, Vinton,
$23. 70; Rebecca Kouns,
Syracuse, $13 .70; John
Powell, Racine , $18.70; Harry
Bailey, Pomeroy, $13.70;
James Housh, Hartford,
$23.10; Raymond Baity,
Pomeroy, $15.70 and Chester
Tannehill, $18, Middleport.
Fined were John Manuel,
Racine, $15 and costs; J ohn
Anderson , Lakewood, $10 and
costs, and Drexel Lambert,
Rutland, $10 and costs.
Others lined Thursday
night were William Evans,
Long Bottom, $125 and costs,
and three days in jail, driving
while intoxicated; Tim
Thomas, no address, $10 and
costs, littering the highway :
James Woodyard, no address, $10 and costs,
disturbing the peace ;
Dorothy White, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, intoxication ;
Monty Riffle, Pomeroy, $10
and cost:!, intoxication ; Roy
Boggs, Shade, $10 and costs,
-(Continued on page 10)

Syracuse board president resigns
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council Thursday
accepted·
the
night
resignalion of Betty Haye~· as
member and president of the
Syracuse Board of Publlc
Mlalrs.
Mrs. Hayes, .who submitled
her resignation lo Mayor
· Herman London effective
Nov. 6, gave as her reason
she will be moving from the
area. In a related move, Oris
Hubbard, maintenance
supervisor for the villsge and
water ooard, also resigned.
Council commended Hubbard
for hls "fin e work" and
lhanked him for " a job well

struggle that kept both sides of the Tug Rivet: on
edge for several decades.
It's to be a reunion fraught with irony.

swimming pool. Also
discussed was whether to use
asphalt or concrete on ·
proposed tennis courts .
Win ge tt suggested council
investigate both and consider
the matter further .
George Holman, treasurer,
volun leered his se.rvlce i~
helping to remove a tree. It
was suggested that since It
gets dark so early most of the
work done now wlll have to be
on Saturday. Attending were
Mayo r
London,
Troy
Zwilling, Eber Pickens, Bary
McCoy, and Ed Neutzllng
councilmen; Holman, Chief
Varian, and Kathryn Crow,
clerk.

Dedication
of
the '
monument is to be open to the
public, with invitatloos gohtg
out to the governors of both
West VIrginia and Kentucky.
On. tbe. monument will be an
inlcrlption written by Jimmy
Wolford, a bluegrass
musician hoping to record an
album for· po~ble use as a
soundtrack in a movie about
the feud.
Wolford, whose mother was
a McCoy, wrote:
'"There is no secret .why
they died so young. Pride
took control and youth's song
was never sung."
Hatfield felt the idea of a
monument was "a good
thing" when the McCoys .
approached him to place the
order at his rll1ll.
And, the idea of getting the
two families together here In
a month or so, and possibly
making it an annual thing,
al.oo caught the monument
firm owner's eye.
· Hatfield says it might
prove that after nearly a
century no hostilities linger
and could make things
"better for both families."

Legion will hold
service on lith
A public observance of
Veterans Day on the
traditional date of Nov. 11
will be conducted by Drew
Webster Post 39, ·American
Legion .
Meeting Tuesday night al
!he home, the Legion decided
that all members who can
lake part are to meet at the
courthouse at 10:45 a.m. on
Nov. II where the service will
lake place.
The Gift for the Yanks Who
Gave program was set for
Nov. 19 beginning at 6 p.m.
The program is designed to
raise funds fo r prov iding a
betier life for hospitalized
veterans.
The annual post Thanksgiving dinner will be held on
the preceding evening, Nov.
16, at the post home. In Ohio
last year , $92,000 was raised
for the Gilts for the Yanks
program. In the local
program, post members .
deliver loaves of bread to
homes throughout the
communi ty and receive
donallons to the program in
exchange.
During the meetin g
presided over by Clarence

\

Schmucker, Don Hunnel
repo rte d on membership
which nowslands at 31f/. ~al
for the year, by No·t. 9, is 323.
Charles Swatzel was given
permission to use the haU for
registration of young men.
Although the draft is no
longer in existence, young
men born in 1957 or earlier
must
register
upon•
their 18th birthday . The
regis tralion will take place on
March 31 at the post home
with a schedule to be announced laler.
Miss Virgie Hobstetter was
reported ill and a sympathy
card was sen t to Frank W.
Por ter who lost his mother by
death. Joe Struble was
commended
for
the
presenla tion of a program at
lhe Tuppers Plains School on
Ocl. 'lJ when a flag raising
ceremony was held.
The Thanks giving dinner
will be served at 7:30p.m. on
Nov . 18 preceding the
business session. Refreshments were served by second
vice ccommander, Charles
Hayes , foll owing Tuesday's
meeting.

.! •. ,

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