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2U - TheDail) Sentmel, Middleport Pomero) 0 Oct 31 1973

Cundiff pleads self defense
a statement
which Cundiff was alleged to
head and d1d not recall gomg have made lo Eugene and Jo
hack and hitting Harden afler Ann Atkms to lhe effect that he
1&gt;ould k1U Harden God
he ha d fallen
I '"as do\\ n there l ookmg forgtve hLm wtth h1s bare
hands tf Thelma left hJm '
for m } w1fe ' Cund1f£ sa1d
CIIIIdilf
sa1d that he was JUst
Continumg w1th the fatal
m or nm g a ctJ v ltJes Cundiff out of the hosp1lal when he sa•d
sa1d th e next thmg he Utose thmgs
He sa•d he had taken an
r emembered v.:as the Pomeroy
overdose
of sleep LOg and nerve
p ohceca r pulhng 10 front of h1s
veh1 Cie and an officer telhng ptlls m an attempt to comm1t
su1 c1de He testified that he and
lum to ge t out of h1s car
w1ld
QuestiOned op the testimony h1s Wife had a
argument
and
he
had
decided
or Deputy Shenff Steve Har
tenbach that he had heard to end 1t aU He said he was
CWldlff tell Mrs Cundiff early very nervous and mentally and
ln reference to

1CQntmued from Pagt' 1)
reca ll htttmg Harden m the

emotionally upset when

m the m ornmg after Harden s

he

made the comment about
killing Harden
I JUSt d1dn t know which

death wh1le at Ute county Jail
that Harden had got out on a
timb and !hat he (Cundiff) had
f1xed h1m thiS lime CIIIIdlff
sa1d that he meant that Harden
had put hunself out on a hmb
by shootmg at h1m (CWldlff )
CWldlff sa1d that he d1d not
know Harden had been mor
Ially wounded until he was

way to turn

he satd

Cundiff recalled for the tury
another t1me the Chnstmas
season last year when he
atte,mpted suiCide followmg an
argument between h1m and his
w1f~ He sa1d he tumped into
Maplewood Lake which he
owns after h1s w1fe sa1d she
was gong to leave h1m He sa1d
that he broke 1ce lumping n
and the col dness ol the water
brought hi m to h1s senses and
he broke out of the 1ce and

taken by a Pomeroy po1tceman

to where Harden s bod) lay
and lhe officer told h1m that
Harden was dead

Jlef Jeoover 6e
!JOUr RowseKeeper

s.wam back to shore
The defendant teshf 1ed that
any lime he lr'IQulred as to the
whereabouts of h1s w1fe and
ch1ldren an argument resulted
She gener-ally rephed
None of you G 0 bus1ness
he satd
Cund1ff stated th&lt;tt he began
pass1ng o1t the whereabouts of
hls fam ly m order to avoid the
arguments wh1ch always
came He stated that h1s w1fe
had not gone out w1th h1m and
has not left the house wtth h1m
since the summer of 1973
He test1f1ed that he Is now
llvmg w1th his w1fe and three
children
Durmg his long appearance
on the stand the defendant
test1f1ed that he d1d not know
Peggy Thomas had adv1sed
Mrs Cund ff on the n1ght of
Aug 28 that he was retu rn n~
home He sa1d absolutely not
when asked by Attorney Sheets
1f he had any g1rl fnends
Conclud1ng
his
mornmg
teshmony Cund1ff est1mated
distances between busmess on
East Ma1n St wh1ch he had
measured at the request of h1s
attorney
In the afternoon Cundiff sa1d
he dtd not know on Aug 29 that
the 22 caliber gun wh1ch
Harden had carried d1d not
function properly as has been
testified 1n court H1 s w1fe had
told h1m followmg a f1ght on
May 30 that Harden carried the
gun but she d1d not ment1on
the malfunction
Cund1ff
stated
About h1s w 1fe Cundiff said
that she never went where she
sa1d she was g01ng but that he
d d g1ve her money He sa1d h1s
w fe had a 22 ca liber gun
wh1ch she h1d about the house
It was some times m the gun
cab net 1n her pur se or under
the bed he sa1 d Mrs Cundiff
frequen tly took the gun with
her m her purse when she went
out
Cund1ff stated
He
d splayed th fs gun to the 1ury
and 1f was entered as a defense

exhibit

Cund1ff said that the f1 rst
t1me he heard the tape
recordmgs of telephone con
versat1on between h1s w1fe and
Harden wa s two weeks ago
w1th h1s attorneys at the
Cund1ff home H1s two brothers
had retneved the tape from the
re cording mach ne located
under the restaurant at
Maplewood after Harden s
death and had turned the
recordings over to Sam
Lop~nsky
one of the two
defense attorneys
Efforts were made to contact
a man at Ravenswood Cundiff
sa1d m reference to Mrs
Cundiff and Harden hav ing
made a trip there to ask the
man for help 1n klllmg Cund1ff
The man was subpoenaed
Cund1ff teshf1ed but 1f was
never made clear as to why he
has not appeared m the tr1al
Attorneys of Cundiff ac
companied h1m on one tnp 10
an attempt to locate the man
Cund1ff tesflf1ed Cundiff said

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Reserve District No 4
State No 223-X
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF

The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign aud Domestic Subsidiaries, a member of the
Federal Rese rve System, at the close of business on Oct 17, 1973, published In
accordance wlth a call made by Ute Federal Reserve Bank of this district
pursuant to Ute provisions of the Federal Reserve Act
ASSEI'S
$ 913,629 57
2 517,837 85

('-'Ish and due from hanks
U S Treasury securities

Obhgat1ons of oUter U S Government
agenci es and corpor.ations

•

•

281,379 67
927 700 35
21,000 00

•

Obligations of Slates and political subdiVISions
Other securilles

Federal funds sold and secunt1es purchased
under agreements to resell
Othe r loans
Bank prem1ses furmlure and fixtures, and

1,400,000 00
8,232,210 45
434 587 85
5,025 69
$14,733,371 43

other asset s representing bank premises
Other assets

TOTAL ASSETS
,

LIABILITIES

Demand depos1ts of md1V1duals partnerships
and corporations

• •

$3,091 437 76

w

Time and sav mgs depOSits of mdmduals

9 496,671 30
• 46 532 21
600 681 53
I 668 IS
102 616 51

partner shipS and corporations

Deposits of Umted States Government
Depos11s of States and poht~eal subdms10ns
Deposits of commercia l banks

Certified and off1cers checks etc $13,339,607 46
TOTAL DEPOSITS
$
31592,936 16
(a ) Total demand depos1ts
$ 9,746,671 30
(b) Total tune and savmgs depositS
460,812 26
Other babll•t•es
$13,800,419 72
TOTAL UABILITIES
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
$40,406 23
•
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings )
$40,406 23
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$892,545 48
EqUity Ca.J&lt;ltal Total
300,000 00
Common s1ock-total par value •
No shares authoriZed 12 000
No shares outstanding 12 000
400,000 00
Surplus
• •
192,545 48
Und1v1ded prohls
$892,545
48
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL UABILITIES RESERVES AND
$14,733,371 43
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar
$13,426,553 74
• • •
days ending wtth ca ll date •
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar
9 702,607 11
days ending w1th ca ll date -

that he d1d tatk to the mart on
one of the tnps
In conclus•on Cund11f stated
that he and h1s w1fe had talked
about divorce but that he had
never consul ted an attorney
H is wife had
about 1t
~owever He rece1ved a letter
from the attorney and went to
see h1m Cund1ft concluded
Our.ng
a
long
cross
ex.am1rtatlon by f'rosecutor
Bernard
Fultz
Cundrff
test f1ed to Hardens help at the
lake tust after the Cund1ffs took
over
the
operat100
of
Maplewood three years ago
After the f1rst month Cund1tf
sa1d he compla1ned that
Harden was spending too much
1 me at the lake both to
Harden and Mrs Cundiff
Harden contmued to help
however He d1d not help m
1972 nor m 1973 Cundiff said
Fultz
then
quest1oned
Cund1ff at leng th as to the
threats by Harden whiCh had
been passed on to h1m by
others and on how many
persons had told Cundiff that
Harden was vlsltmg the
Cund1ff home There were not
many who had passed on such
1nformat1on the answers of
Cund 1ff md1 ca ted
Go1ng to the recording
equ pmen t Fultz questioned
him about the tapes Cund1ff
sa 1d he had sec ured the
equ1pment from ElectroniCS
Spec1alt es m Huntington but
answered the quest1on on
where he bought the eqv1pment
on ly after c:onfern ng w1th h1s
attorney He expiamed to the
tury how the recordmg system
worked and sa1 d that he did all
of the mstallat1on h1mself No
one knew of the recordmg
system at all until he told two
of h1 s brothers who retneved
the tape from the recordmg
system placed under the
restaurant at Maplewood

Lake

In answer t o con tinued
quest1ons by Fultz Cundiff
sa1d that he expected to learn
through the sys tem to whom
his w1fe was talking on the
telephone He nd1cated that he
had susp1clons but could not
prove anyfh1ng
Your reason then was to
conf1rm?
Fultz asked
Yes Cund If repl1ed
Fultz asked then 1f Cundiff
drd not expect to prove to
whom Mrs Cund1ff was taikmg
on the phone but also what
about Cund 1ff aga1n replied 1n
the aff~rmat1ve
Respondrng
aga1n
to
quest10nmg on the recordings
Cundiff sa1d that he
was
sh ocked when I heard the
threats on my life He added
however that he was n.pt
really surpnsed to hear on ttl e..
dev1ce the plans of Mrs
Cundiff and Harden to get
together than evenmg Aug 28
When Fultz asked Cundiff If
the same even1ng that he
purchased the gun from Ta ylor
was the same day that he had
heard the f1rst audible tape on
the record ing machme Cund1ff
answered
Yes s1r
Cundiff again related that
3600 feet of tape had been run
through the mach1ne by
telephone calls on the f~rst
n1ght the recorder was put into
use Aug 27 but that the tape
was not good He told Fultz that
he began
nstalllng the
re co rder on Aug 25 and
fln1shed on the m.ornmg of Aug
27 He checked the Aug 27 tape
on the morn1ng of Aug 28 he
stated and found t not good
He added that his attorney had
listened to the f~rst 3600 feet of
tape and had condluded that It
wa s not of satisfactory qual1ty
The defendant s.:ud he got the
901 ng good
equ 1pment
before 5 p m and startecf track
two of the four track tape
Fultz again rev1ewed the
events of Memonal Da y
evenmg when Cund1ff returned
home unexpe ctedly and found
h1s w•fe and Harden In a
comprom1s1ng s1tuat1on Fultz
stressed that the only threats
that Cundiff had from Harden
were what he had heard on the

tape

The purchase of the 38
caliber r evolver from Taylor
arose m the cross exammaflon
and Cund1ff stated that he
loaded the gun with one hand
wh1ie travelmg on the flood
road gomg to Bouman s Run on
the n1ght of Aug 29 Cund1ff
demonstrated usmg the gun
anti bullets how he had
managed to load the gun w1th
one hand wh1l e dnvmg
Fultz asked Cundiff about the
urgency m buy1n9 the gun from
Taylor and Cundiff sa1d that he
had heard Harden talk about
h1nng a k1ller on the tape and
he did not 1ow but what
Harden had already done so
Asked about Mrs Cundiff s
tnps and hi s mqu1nes about
them to Mrs Cund1ff the
defendant agam sa1d that h1s

MEIGS THEATRE
Tomght &amp; Thursday
Oct 31 Nov 1

NOT OPEN
Fn Sat Sun
Nov 2 34
WHITE LIGHTNING
(Technlcolor)
Burt Reynolds
.Jenn1fer 811/mgsly
l PG)
Coforcartoons
3 Little Ptgs
Mtckey s Trailer
Bugged Bear
Show Starts 7 p m

questions generally started an
argument Fultz asked Cundiff
why he d•d not te~ke the tape
r-ecordUlg to the Shenff but
Cund1ff sa•d that he dtdn t have
t1me He wanted to get hts w•fe
and Harden tog~ther tor a talk
Cvndtff sa•d but added that he
would have- had the 38 caliber
revolve,. w1th h1m had he
gotten together w1th h1s wife
and Harden
for his own

protect•on

Retracmg Cund1ff through
hts return to the Cvnd1ff home

on Aug 29 Fultz pressed for

Cund1ff s reply to how close he
had been to the restaurant
where the recording equ•pment
was located O!_nd1ff replied
about 100 feet
Cundiff under questioning
Sc:ltd that he stopped In to check
the mach iDe as he left his home
late that f'ught after being on

the porch for somethmg like an
hour The recordmg mach ine
wasn t runmng Cundiff said
md1cat ng that no one was
ta lkmg on the/hone
Cund1ff sa1
that he d1d
back up
the mach1ne to
hsten to a small part of the
recorded matenal about two
feet of tape but that he listened
to only that much before gomg
to Pomeroy On the part to
wh1ch he l istened he stated
that he heard an adding
mach1ne operat1ng In the
background
What else d1d you hear'
You hear;,t:t the whole con
versat1on d1dn t you?
Fultz
asked
No
Cundiff repiJed He
sa1d that he d1d hear Harden

say that he had gone to the

hosp1tal to see 1f the defendant
was there
You m ean you tust stopped
the tape nght m the m1ddl ~ of
the con versation'? Fultz said
Yes
Cund1ff answered
Fultz askef 1f Cundiff had
heard on the dev1ce that the
downstairs door to the Western
and Southern Insurance Co
was locked Cundiff replied m
the negat1ve
You heard enough to know
your w1fe was at home and
wasn t go1ng to meet Harden
d1dn t Jou'? Fultz asked
t 1dn t hear I dldn t
listen Cundiff stated Cundiff

added that he had listened to

the recorder only momen
.taniy then went to h1s car at
""Bouman s Run and then drove
to Pomeroy and parked
Aga1n d1scuss109 Cundiff s
peri od on East Mam St early
on Aug 29 Fultz asked if he
had seen some youn~ people on
Main St Cundiff Indicated that
he had seen some young
people but he could not
Identify them He also sa1d that
he never test f~red the 38
caliber gun he had purchased
from Taylor on the evemng of

Aug

28

While In Pomeroy Cundrff
sa1d that he made no effort to
commun 1cate w1th Harden or
to call home He 1ndlcated that
he was not 1n1ured m the fight
with Harden and that the blood
on the s1dewal k and street
must have been Hardens
because he had no broken sk1n
Cund1ff sa1d he d1d not
remember gomg to the car or
put1mg the 38 caliber gun
under the seat after Harden

fell

As the &lt;;ross exammat1on by
Fultz cont1nued Cundiff sa1d
that he did not check the Don
Harden residence to see 1f the
Harden Cad1llac was there as
was
stated
10
earlier
test1mony He indicated that
Harden also had a blackjack
and he believed that his w1fe
and Harden had discussed the
black 1ack on the phone tape
when they talked about a
weapon w1thout nammg to
what they were referrtng
Cundiff agam stated that he
made no effort to h1de at any
t1me durmg h1s early morning
v1s1t to Pomeroy when Harden
was k1lled
Under red~rect quest1on1ng
by h1s attorney Sheets Cundiff
said that he only heard a small
part of the late evening taped
phone conversation between
Harden and Mrs Cund1ff and
that he had heard the entire
tape only two weeks ago w1th
h1s attorneys
Fmal w1tness for the defense
was Carl L Taylor Middleport
Route 1 who told of sell1ng the
38 cal1ber gun to Cundiff on the
mght of Aug 28 Taylor who Is
also an emP.Ioye of the Penn
Central Ra1lroad along with
Cundiff 1denf1fied that 38
caliber gun a state exhibit
Under cross exam1nation by

Fultz Taylor sa1d that the 38

he sold Cundiff was not test
f~red the n1ght he sold the gun

He adm1tted g1v1ng Cundiff

ammun1hon for the gun but d1d
not know how many rounds
Fultz asked Taylor why he d1d
not tell him a week ago about
the 38 when the prosecutor
had called him 1n reference to
one of the 22 caliber guns
involved m the tnal
You d1dn task me about the
38 Taylor replied

Taylor adm itted calling

Cund1ff and telling hi m about
the prosecutors mquiries
pertammg to one of the 22
caliber weapons
The defense rested when
Taylor was excused from the
w1tness stand
Tuesday morning follo~ing a
recess at about 10 30 a m the
playing of the taped telephone
conversations between Harden
Cundiff
were
and Mrs
resumed hav1ng already taken
up the first hour and a half of
the morning trial sess1on
During the conversat1on

Harden and Mrs

they knew he had nof qon_!_io

George H·a ll
AT THE ORGAN

1, Roger w Hysell, Cashier of the above-11amed bank do bereby declare
that thiS report of condition 1s true to the best of my knowledge and belief

10 TIL 2

Roger W Hysell

•

Tuesday, Wednesday and

we the unders•gned directors, attest the correctness of this report of
condition and declare that 11 has been exarmned by us and to the besl of our
knowledge and belief IS true and correct

Thursday Nights

MEIGS INN

Theodore T Reed, Jr
Thereon Johnson
- Directors
Fred W Crow, Jr,

Ph. 992-3629

I

PT

PLEASANT

Assurances

were

gtven

Tuesday mghl here Utat Mason
CoWl!y w1ll ' benehl well'
through Ieeder systems and
trWlk lines, w1Ut ISO m11lion to
be spent for the up-grading or
Stale Route 2, the maJOr artery

Meinhart
•
semces
announced
Services a.re announced for
Mrs Came T Memhart 75,
Locust St , Pomeroy who died
Tuesday at Holzer Med1cal
Center She was preceded In
death by ber parents Thomas
E and Hannah Wems Price,
her husband Max three
brothers, and two s1sters
Mrs Memhart IS survived by
a daughter, MaXIlle Parker,
Colwnbus, one son Charles J
Memhart, Tulsa Okla Utree
grandsons J1m Gumther,
Syracuse and Joseph and
Robert

Memhart,

Tulsa, a

granddaughter Robm Parker,
Columbus,
two
great·
granddaughters Lon and
Carne Gumther, Syracuse ,
three brotlters, floyd Pr1ce,
Cmcmnatt

Edward Pr1ce,

Naples Fla , and Arthur Price,
Pomeroy, and several meces

and nepbews
Mrs

Memhart

was

a

member of Tr1mty Church of
Pomeroy, the Past COW1CIIors
Club Th1rd Fnday Club,
Happy Harvesters McAbees
Lodge and the Daughters of
Ameraca
FWleral serv1ces w1ll be held
Thursday at 2 p m at the
Trimly Church With the Rev
Wilbur Perrm offlc1atmg
Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery Fnends may call at
Ewmg Funeral Home anytime
work at Nitro Mrs Cundiff
warned Harden to
watch
yourself darlmg
Indicating

that Cund1ff might be

took~ng

for him The call apparently
w1th Harden at h1s fTIOfher s
home and Mrs Cundiff at her
home closed w1th fmai con
1ectures on where Cund1ff was
and other warnmgs for Harden
to be careful
Mrs C1,md1ff again Indicated
that she couldn t l ive w1thout
him as she urged h1m to park
his car m front of the off1ce It
was agreed that Mrs Cund1ff
would lay on the couch and
wa1t for Harden to call her
The nex.t phone call ap
parently made after Harden
arnved at the Western and
Southern Insurance Co off1ce
In Pomeroy opened w1th more
concern as to where Cundiff
wt~s Harden told Mrs Cundiff
that he had checked the off1ce
of Dr Dav1s In Middleport and
the hosp1tai for Cundiff but
had not located h1m Harden
menhoned havmg picked up
some sandw1ches at Crow s
Steak House {Mrs Lois Harr1s
employed at the Steak House
testified earlier that Harden
had taken out two sandwiches
and a cup of coffee between 12
and 12 30 a m on Wednesday
Aug 29
The two con1ectured that
Cundiff had a g~rl fnend and
was with her Hiirden md1cated
that h1s car (the white
Mustang) was parked across
from Nelson s Drug Store on
the parkmg lot He also told
Mrs Cundiff that the down
stairs door to the msurance
office was locked
Harden and Mrs Cund1ff told
each other of their love and
then they d1scussed the in
surance accounts of Harden
An addmg mach1ne could be
heard operatmg m the off1ce

They aga1n discussed Cundiff

and where he m1ght be They
again professed love for each
other Harden sa1d he d1dn t
appreciate the s1tuat1on not
knowmg 1f Cundiff IS wat
chlng or havmg a hme for
h1mself

t d like to know what the
hell Is going on wllh that (7-&lt;j
(

) Harden sa1d
Mrs Cundiff sent her son
J1mmy to bed and after a
discussion on who would call
whom later that morning the
con versa lion between Mrs
Cundiff and Harden ended

along the Ohio River border dollars will be ror bridge
that will also mclude the long replacement and ~mprovemenl
sought by pass of Poml program
"One hundred thirty milliOn
Pleasant
dollars
ror compl,uon or the
PromiSes or these were made
by W1U1am S Ritchie Jr West Appalachian Highway System
'Fifty m~llion dollars for UP
V~rgima Department of H1gh
ways Corrumsswner as be gradmg sections or the 4,400
made a !1lm presentation and nules or trunk lme and feeder
addressed prormnent leaders systems
F•rty nuJiwn dollars lor upand others m a bt..partisan
public meeting m the Masodn gradmg west Virginia Route 2
, 18 enure length rrom
CoWlty Courtroom
Rtt c hte,
explatntng Chester to Ken9va near the
'Amendment No 2 Better Kentucky line
' One hundred m~llion dollars
Highways, sa1d if passed w1ll
make fWlds also available for lor ~mprovmg section of those
26 ,000 mdes of local serv1ce
relocatiOn of slide areas
In spelling out what the roads
Filly m1111on dollars lor
$500 000 000 bond 1ssue will be
construction
,
reconstruction
used lor, he said
' One hundred twenty mlll•on and 1mprovemenls to U S 52 '

Attorneys ask for
Cundiff's freedom
emo1ional as the defense at
torney s He sa 1d that he hoped
he represented lus.tlce and the
respect he hopes Ci ti zens have
for law and order
Fultz was heavily cnt1cal of
the Cun d tff d tdren be1ng
brought Into the cour troom to
hear the testimony At one f1me
ln h1s talk Lopmsky had the
three boys stand as he spoke of
them
He further criticized Cundiff
for not taking the three boys
away from
thiS" woman
meaning Mrs Cund1ff
He charged that bnnglng the
childre n 1nto court had been a
sympathy play and sa1 d 1f the
tu r y freed Cundiff if would be
sending h1m home w1th hiS 38
caliber revolver w1tli the samewoman whom they had heard
say would blow h1 s head oft
Judge Bacon delivered
detailed mstrucflon to the 1ury
which can br ing back a verd1ct
of gu1lty to f~r s t degree mur
der gu llty to second degree
murder - without premed
h1m
or a not gu lty
Fultz pomted out that he 1tation would not condone th e behav1or ve rdict All must agree
The alternate 1uror who has
of Harden and Mrs Cund1ff
and that he was not condomng been at all sess1ons of the tnal
Curtis Dalton Rutland
murder e1ther He sa1d 1f Harden d1d f~re his 22 p1stol Route 1 was d1Sm1ssed from
that n1ght lt was after Cundiff further duty by Judge Ba con
Members of the tury are
f~red at h1m because Harden
Reedsville
knew that h1 s revolver was l le en Swain
Kenneth Welch
Pomeroy
defect1ve
In h s closmg statements Route 4 Erw in Gloeckner
Sara Rup e M1d
later 1n rebut1al Fultz said he Rac1ne
wanted the 1ury to note that he dleport Route 1 Marc1a
Rutland
Rose
as prosecutor was not as Dem so n
Patterson Rutland Earl E
Shaffer Pomeroy Route 7
Jewell Jones Albany Route 3

wanted something down as
he planned to kill Harden He
charged that Cundiff had heard
all of the tape recordings
before he came to Pomeroy
that mornmg to kill Harden
H~ contended that Cundiff
had caught Harden ou t of the
Western and Southern off1ce
and had shot h1m from th e
steps leadmg to the offi ce of
Or John R 1dgway
The prose cu tor further
theonzed that Cundiff had
caught Harden there because
Harden had gone to the Duds
N Suds where he purchased
som e crackers
from
a
machine In hiS theory the
prosecutor was unable to tell
how Harden s gun was on the
scene He charged that Cundiff
may have tak en 1t from h1s
wife s purse and placed It at
the scene that he may have
taken 1t from th e second
Harden car
park ed
1n
Sy ra cuse or that perhaps
Harden did have the gun on

Issue supported

Ethel Rite Langsvil le Linda

The 'h rmll bood ISSue to
proVIde partial construction
funds for a school for Me1gs
County's mentally retarded
has been endorsed by the
Corrunum(y Mental Health and
Mental RetardatiOn Board,
Tr1-Coun(y 648, lbe chairman
of which IS G Wilson Bowers
M D pedlatr1C18n at the Holzer
Medical Center
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - William B
Plan is, Mrs James Wheeler,
Pomt Pleasant, Azalea Od
diSter, Pomeroy Mrs LewiS
Horrunes, Jackson 0 Dana
Durst Pomt Pleasant, Mrs
Edwm Hudson Eleanor
Randy Warner, Arbuckle
Mrs Charles Rogers Pomt
Pleasant, and David Mehl
Gallipolis, and Jamce Duncan
HOLD REVIVAL
ReV1valiS now m progress at
King Chapel With Ute Rev Earl
Hinkle as speaker Special
slngmg will be provided tonight
by Sharon Waugh, Thursday
by The L1tlle Family, Fr1day
by the Map1er Quartet from
Huntington, Saturday by the
Gospellghters, SWlday by the
Shaffer Family
MEETING SET
The Middleport Chamber or
Corrunerce and retail mer
chants association will meet
Thursday at 7 30' p.m at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. social rooms.

Morr 1s Rutland Florence
Wye rs Reedsville and Arthu r
Taylor of Middleport

Pomeroy

Cover·up
(Continued from Page I)
Democratic resolution was
Sen Sam J Ervin Jr ,
chamnan of the Watergate
comrmltee ' Somebody has got
to gel to lbe bottom of these
thmgs, Ervut SBid
The

Ervm

committee

resumeo public hearmgs today,
with Berl Bernhard, former
campa1gn director for Sen
Edmund S Musk1e the f1rst
Witness
Senate Major~ty Leader
Mike Mansfield !ned to get Ute
caucus of Senate Democrats to
formally recorrunend that the
life of the Ervin committee be
extended beyond next Feb 28
and that lis mandate be
broadened to mclude the Cox
firmg But tbe caucus took no
action on those prooosals

TIME CHANGED
Practice sesswn for Church
Women United, Tmnty
Church, Pomeroy, lor World
CommUrlity Day will be held
Thursday at 2 30 p m IJIS!ead
of 1 as was previOusly planned
due to fWleral serv1ces at Ute
church for Mrs Came T
Memhart
.

.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

BY BOB HOEFUCH

It was a tense emotional moment at 8 05 p m Wednesday
when James R Cundiff 35 Racme Route 1, was acquitted of a
first degree murder charge m the Me•gs County Common Pleas
Court
After deliberations that began all! 05 a m Wednesday and
continued through the afternoon and everu.ng, the seven women

and l1ve men wbo have romposed the JUry hearmg Ute ev1dence
in CIIIIdiff s tnal filed mto the Jury box and sent their verdiCl of
' umocent' to Judge John C Bacon who has presided over Ute
tr1althat began early last week
Olarged w1th murder m the f~rst degree m the shootmg death
or William M Harden, 34 Racme Route 1 111 the early mornmg of
Aug 29, CIIIIdill appeared almost stuMed when Judge Bacon
read the verdict Utat made hlffi a free man
The Jury was
giVen optiOns of returnmg a verdict of gu11ty to the f1rst degree
murder charge gUilty to a second degree murder charge or not
guilty (innocent) It was required that all 12 Jurors agree 111 the
lmding
Before readmg the verdict which was handed f1rst to Mrs
Lett1e Spencer, bailiff who then delivered II to tbe bench Judge

JUST ARRIJIED

DEVON SPORTSWEAR
For The 1973 Holidays
Select Tangerme, turquo1se or Camel m Shirts, Pullovers or
Cardigan Sweaters, Blazers, Vests, Jackets, Flare or A-line
Sk1rts, and stra1ght leg, flare or cuffed Pants. Sizes 8 to 18.
Ready-to-Wear Department, Second Floor

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
-

Bacon warned that he wanted no demonstratiOns m the
courlroom after the verdict was read or after the Jury was
dism1ssed
However m sp1te 01the judge's mstructwn, applause broke
out m the courtroom as the not guilty verdtct was read The

applause stopped when Judge Bacon rapped hiS gavel for order
Relatives of the defendant who had occup1ed front seals •t
one sLde of the courtroom durmg the l ong, tense tr1al, broke mta
tea rs Tbere were tears shed also by other observers who felt the
emotion Utat moved throogh the courtroom to climax the trial
wh1ch got Wlderway oo Tuesday, Oct 23 With the selectiOn of
Jurors

The JUdgedllmussed the jury and CWldilf was taken by one of
his attorneys Warren Sheets to shake hands w1th the Jurors who
had acqmlled hlffi CWldlfl was then besieged by relatives and
other well w1shers
H1s w1!e Thelma CWldlff who had adrmttedly had a long
love alfa1r w1th Harden threw her arms around her husband
sobbmg Cundiff who had appeared tired and haggard durmg Ute
tr1al was calm and senous following the emotwnal outburst
At 2 30 p m Wednesday, the crowded courtroom where
conversation hummed hushed expectantly when a knock was

heard on the JW"Y room door
The bailiff Mrs Spencer, entered the jury room It appeared
that a verdict m1ght be lorthcommg
However, Mrs Maxme Pr1ce court stenographer, was
swnmoned to the chambers of Judge Bacon as were attorneys
At 3 p m , the JUry filed mto the Jury box and Judge Bacon an·
noiiiiced that the Jury had flied a wntten request lor the
repetition of some of the testimony
It was the cross exanunat10n of Cundiff as to the defendant s

Partly cloudy and cooler
tonight low 35 to 40 ~nday
mostly cloudy Wllh a chance o£
ram h1gh m 50s north to 60s
south

The Jury returned from supper at 6 40 p m and resumed
dehherallon fllmg mto the Jury box at B 05 p m to deliver 11s
verdict

TIME DRAGGED
Time dragged as Cund1ff and h1s lanuly and the full court
room Of people Walled the long hours for the Jury to come U1
Cundiff chatted w1Ut members of his fanuly from tune to llffie as
well as w1th fnends

retW11 to his home on the rught before Harden s death, his

distance from the telephone conversatiOn recordmg eqwpment
and bow much of Ute recording he heard before dnvmg to
Pomeroy where he confronted Harden
Mrs Price read Ute testunony and the JUry returned to the
JUry room
At 5 19 p m the JUry was called back to the Jury box by
Judge Bacon who asked tf It was near reachmg a deciSIOn The
foreman Erwm Gloeckner Racme sa1d a dec1s10n d1d not aJ&gt;pear to be near The JUry was d1sm1ssed for an hour and a half to
have supper at the Me1gs Inn They were accomparued by the
bailiff, Mrs Spencer who also had accomparued them to the Inn
for the1r noon meal

•

Weather

His two smaller sons, Larry 11, and DaV1d, B were at his s1de
much of Ute lime durmg the long walt often huggmg hun and
demonstratmg other Signs Of affeCtiOn Larry had gone On the
wtlness stand durutg the tr1al mhiS IaUter s defense
The f1rst degree murder 1r1al for Cundiff was the first held m
the Me1gs County Common Pleas Court for a number of years
Addmg to tis unusual nature were tape recordmgs of telephone
conversatiOns between the w1fe of the defendant and Harden
These tapes made by the defendant were entered as evidence 111
open court by agreement of the attorneys Sheets and Sam
Lopmsky Charleston for the defense and Prosecutor Bernard
Fultz

•

r

Now You Know
Brazil s only producmg oil
f1e ld IS at All Samt s Bay on
the eastern coast

Devoted To The Intere&amp;ts Of The Meig5-MUM)n Area
POMEROY MIDDLEPORT OHIO

VOL XXV NO 141

WASHINGTON ( UPI ) Sen William B Saxbe R.Qhlo
who suggested last December
that President N1xon had
' taken leave of his senses for
ordering the bombmg of Hano1,
was chpsen by the President
!OOay to be hiS new attorney
general
Saxbe, a 57 year-&lt;&gt;ld f1rst
term senator who annoW!ced
recently he would not run lor
re-election next year was the
nommee to succeed Elliot I

Richardson, who res1gned Oct
20 alter refusmg an order by
NIXon to f~re Arch•hald Cox as
spec1al Watergate prosecutor
Saxbe " a lawyer and a
former state attorney general
of Ohio where he had mtended
to return to h1s cattle farm
alter hiS current term expll"es
N1xon went to Ute White
House press center to per
sonally
announce
th e

nomutalwn while Saxbe stood

fJX~;,~.-. inc'iJ~iejs;:
WASHINGTON - LEON JAWORSKI a Houston !rial lawyer
who served as president of the American Bar Assoc1at1on and
adVIser to former President Lyndon B JohnSIJn scheduled a new
conference m Houston today apparently to announce he Will
replace Archibald Cox as special Watergate prosecutor If he
lakes the JOb 1t would be With 'unfettered independence he
said
Although Jaworski 68 d1d not flatly confirm he had been
appoutted, he SBid m an mterv1e11 Wednesday rught he had
discussed 11 With Actmg Attorney General Robert H Bork and
the man expected w succeed hlffi as head of the Justice
Department, Sen W1lliam B Saxbe R.Ohio Jaworsk• sa•d he
was 111 WashingU&gt;n Wednesday and had been called back alter
returning to Houston But he sa1d early today he had to remam at
home because of a preV1ous comrmtment m Austm He sa1d he
would be 111 Washmgton by next Monday
WASHINGTON - AN INVESTIGATION of v1ce pres1denl
normnee Gerald R Ford conducted by 350 FBI agents m 33 paris
or the country and mcluding I 000 intemews, has ra1sed some
questiOns wh1ch the Senate Rules Comm11tee w1ll ra1se w1th
Ford
But this so far appeared w be only a small cloud on Ford s
bor!Zon as Congress today begms the process of cons1dermg
Whether to approve hlm for VICe president under the 25th
amendment, never before used There were mdical10ns he would
wm congressbonal ronfll"mation as the nation s 4oth vice
president by the end of Ut1s monUt
WASHINGTON - THE WATERGATE COMMITTEE staff
says more than 25 pa1d agents fmanced by $110 000 m NIXon
campaign funds, played dirty tr1cks on Democrats m the 1972
eloctlon campa1gns
•
Mark Lalmtz, a comrrutlee lawyer SBid durmg hearmgs
Wednesday that tbose funds d1d notmclude an est~mated $250 000
used for the Watergate break-Ill and related actiVIiles, or an
estunated $400,000 spent to pay lawyers fees and other expenses
of Watergate defendants Lakrltz later told reporters the total
figure lor NIXon campaign expenditures on such activities m 1972
'will just about each the'$! million mark when totaled up ' But
be did not g1ve a breakdown of that f1gure
SAIGON - PRESIDENT NGUYEN VAN THIEU sa1d !OOay
(Continued on Page 2)

Boyles to speak
at banquet here

SHOP THURSDAY 9:30 to 5 PM
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 to 9 PM

IJ

•

By United Presslnterna1tlonai

Cundiff

conhnued their conjectures of
where Cundiff (rught be as

•

Upgrading of Rt. 2 planned

Guest speaker lor the Me1gs
Soil and Water Conservation
District's Annual meeting and
banquet Nov 12 at Salisbury
Elementary School w•ll be
Charles Boyles farm manager
lor the Eastern Oh1o Resource
Development Center Boyles
has been manager or the ~
acre rann for eight yean, from
ill begmhing where they raise
cattle, sheep apples, grapes
and peaches
Tbey also are domg cost
study data on agr~culture,
having developed Ute 12 month
grazmg system lor beef cattle
USing all grass
Prior to his employment w11h
the Center he was farm
manager lor W•t Virginia
Unlvenlly 12 JWI.

by his s•de sm1ling
NIXOn Said Saxbe IS an
md1v1dual who wanls to take
th1s pos1t1on to do everythmg
he poss1bly can to serve the
naUon as the f1rst lawyer of the
nation ''

Saxhe has been a frequent
NlX.on cr1tlc on some tssues

mcludmg Watergate and was
quoted as saymg lhe President
must have taken leave of his
senses ' when he ordered the
bombmg of Hanoi at OlriSt
mast~me last year
While blWltly opposmg some
NIXon actions - on Watergate

Gasoline
up-up-up
United Press lnlernallonal
The Cost of LIVIng Council
Wednesday dec1ded lo allow
once-a month mcreases m the

cosl of gasolme The change
from the earher freeze on
pn ces was made after a

months long campaign by gas
station

Operators who com

plamed that theirs was Ute only
Industry m the COIIIItry thaI
was forced to absorb mcreases

1n wholesale cos ts without
bemg able to pass them on to
the conswner

John T DUIIIop d1rector of
the COWlCII sa1d the pnce h1kes
would only be permitted to
pass on mcreases m the prtce

or production The move ap
plies to all segmenls of the
petroleum mdustry
The a1rlme mduslry wh1ch
buys about 10 billion gallons of
Jet fuel a year s1ad Thursday
Utat 1t will try to cut more Utan
100 000 flights a year from 1ts
schedules 10 an effort to con
serve fuel The cuts scattered
throughout the alf route
system, would total about 300
da1ly from Ute current 14 OfJO..a
day schedule

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Temperatures averagmg
below normal with highs In
upper 40s and 50s Lows at
rught in 30s and lowe• 40s
Chance of showers during
the period

he once sa1d Ute Pres1dent IS
like the man who plays p1ano 111
a house of ill repute and says he
doesn t know what s gomg on
upstairs Saxbe has supported
tlie administration slrongly on
other tssues

He defended NIXon s unsuccessful efforts to name G
Harrold Carswell to the
Supreme Court m 1970
After meetmg With NIXon
Wednesday to d1scuss the
poss1b1hty of h1s appomtmenl,
Saxhe sa~d he had offered
himself for the job warts and
I have been aroWld here
!1ve years, b1tchmg about what
I would do 11 I had the opporturuly All at once, they giVe
me the hall Should I throw 11
away' II s not something you
JUSt walk away from

Housing
•
prOJect
reviewed
Fmal plans for a subdiVISion
housmg prOJect at Salem
Center were reviewed Tuesday

mght by the Me1gs CoWlly
Regwnal Planmng CommtsslOn at The Farmers Bank

and Savmgs Co
No action was taken on the

plans subm11led to the comm•sswn by the American
Electric Power Co because
they d1d not mclude a surety
liond nor plans for a sewage
disposal lac1lity Approval IS
pendmg on these phases bemg
submitted by the AEP through
1ts engmeermg flfm of Burgess
and N1ple, Cleveland James
Roush Meigs County Ad
m1mstrator of sub dlviston

regulatwns , met w1th the
COWlCII to diSCUSS Ute fmal
plans
Phase I under study now, IS
a pilot program wh1ch mcludes
27 homes If the market lor
homes m the subdtVISton area
proves good, then more homes

w1ll he constructed, Roush
sa1d
Once regulations are com.

The banquet at the Salisbury
School w1JI start at 7 30 p m
Two

chaLrlllan

for

the

DistriCt w1ll be elected and the
B1g Bend Mmstrels w1ll
provide enterlamment
T•ckets should be reserved
before Nov 5 They are
available at the SCS Ofl•ce, the
ASC Office, and the..Extens1on
Olf1ce or may he oblamed
from Donald Mora, Wallace
Bradford , V1rgil King, Roy
Miller
DaVId Koblenlz,

Karr elected to
post of director
NELSONVILLE - Horace
Karr, prormnent Me~gs County
conlractor and busmess man,
owner or the Royal Oaks Park
near Pomeroy, was elected a

Thereon Johnson, Haro1d
Carnahan, Andrew Cross,

Lauren Hoffman Robert
Mattox, Tom TheiSS George
Carper, Orwn Roush, Clarence
Pr1ce, Rex Sbenel•eld, Gene
Yost or Tom Sayre
CHARW BOYLES

•

all

plied w1th and Ute project IS
approved by the Regwnal
Planmng CommiSSIOn ap.
proval of the proJect by the
county commiSSioners will
become routme, Roush sa1d
Pres1dmg over the meeting
was Thereon Johnson, Racme,

supervisors

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992 2156

THURSDAY NOVEMBER 1, 1973

du-ector here recently by the
Southeastern Ohio Polled
Hereford Association on the
occasion of 1ts annual banquet
at the Hockmg Valley Motor
Lodge
Guest speaker was George
Hamnck county agent of
Pickaway Coun ly

DURING HER VISIT mille Meigs County Area, Mrs John
Grlligan made a tr1p to Veterans Memorull Hosp1tal Here
she and Ken Morgan, left, director of SEOEMS chat With
Don D1ener hosp1tal administrator

100 attend celebration
Ram and wmd knocked out
the parade and cut attendance
at the Halloween celebratwn
planned Wednesday evemng
for Ute first tune by the Me1gs
County Heart Assoctat10n

Approximately 100 persons
attended 50 bemg masked
children
Rece1vmg pnzes of $5 each m
the pr ettiest ughest and
funmest categones respec
lively ages 2-7 were L1sa
Ferrell Shane Ingles and John
McGraw
B 11
Tammy
Eichinger Jeff Moore and

Firemen asking
for good used
saleable items
The Pomeroy F1re Dept and
E R squad 1s conductmg a
dr1ve to obtam used clothmg
and old or used furmture and
appliances that can be made
ready for sale at a future date
to be set
The f~rel•ghters or squadmen
Will be happy to pick up the
1tems for th1s sale by calling
Ute Pomeroy V1llage Hall at
( 992 2246) lea vmg name
telephone nwnber' type or
dona lion (clothmg, appliances,
or

furmture )

and

arrangements w1ll he made to
p1ck the •terns up at the donor s
convemence

Firemen sa1d this 1s an easy
way to r1d the house of some
good used but IJIIneeded •tems
for fall cleanmg
All proceeds from the sale
will be placed m the bmldmg
fWld

Veterans Memorial Hospital
AdmiSSIOns
Freda
Manuel
Racme
Judith
Stemmetz Pomeroy Richard
Wmebrenner, Syracuse Betty
Roush Monroe M1ch Floyd
Barnhouse Pomeroy
Discharges - Sharon Sm1th,
Thomas W1lhams Adnan
French Benny Spears, Warren
Reeves

....
Mrs. Gilligan
tours hospital

Vangu Hart 12 17 Jamce
Young Sherry Colmer and
Debbie Lawrence

The F1rst Lady of Ohw '
Mrs John J Gilligan who
Wmmng door pnzes were Inspected facilities of the
Tammy Schneider L1lhan Southeast OhiO Emergency
Pierce Jack1e Hutton and Med1cal ServiCe (SEOEMS) m
Galha and Me1gs CoWlties
Phyll•s Skmner
Mrs James (Susie) Soulsby Wednesday ended her VISit m
and Ralph Werry
co a tour or Veterans Memonal
chairpersons for the mght s Hospllal m Pomeroy
Mrs G1ll1gan sa1d the
aciiVIbes thanked the many
persons who helped w1th plans SEOEMS IS 'pretty great
really marvelous She added
and donati ons

The wife of OhiO Governor
John J G1ll1gan she also sa•d,
It IS certamly obvwus that
there 1s much cooperatiOn
among Ule seven counties m

Ute SEOEMS reg1on '
Mrs G1lhgan alter tourmg
SEOEMS fac1htles and Holzer
Med1cal Cenrer m Gallipolis,
~Continued on Page 2)

Precinct officials listed
OffiCials lor Me1gs County s
40 votmg precmcls at next
Tuesday s election have been
named by the Me1gs County
Board of Elecllon
The group mcludes w1th the
first named the pres1dmg
JUdge, the next three JUdges
and the next two clerks m each
mstance
East Bedtord - Mr s Sylv1a
M 1dk1ff Mr s Mildred F
Betz 1ng Mrs Ruby C Mar
shall Herman A Grueser
Mrs Ann Lambert Mrs Eva
L Kmg
West Bedford Vern C
We ll Mrs Conn e .J Qu1vey
Mrs Lou1 se Harr~son Cec 1l 0

BIG CUTS
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Standard Oil Co of Ohio
(SOHIO) today reduced by
25 per cent diesel ~nd Jelluel

Toban Mrs Kl mberly R
Jones Mrs V~rgm1a D Sm1th
North Chester - Mrs Mary
Joyce Mora Mrs Bertha F.

Sm lth Mrs Dorothy L Myers

Mrs Mary J Hunter Mrs
Norma J Sexson Mrs Marc1 a

L Keller

South Chester - John Hayes
Mrs M1ll 1e Irene McGrath
Mrs Thelma M Wh1te Mrs
Lucille
R1denour
Mrs !
Patricia L Wolf Mrs Helen
M Boatr ght
Columbia - Mrs Lou1se Z
Ell1s Mrs Lucy E Thomas
Mrs Jacqual1ne T Gillogly
Mrs V1v1an R Gaston Mrs
Martha C
Mays
Mrs
Ei1zabeth Jordan
Dyesv1ile Harvey E

Starkey
Walsh

Mrs

Mrs

Ellzabelh E

Grace

Turner

Lieutenant
E
W
Wigglesworth
Galha-Melgs
Post Commander announced
deliveries to bus lines,
that enforcement of a new
trucking compallles, airlines
motor vehicle bwnper he1ght
and ra1lroads as compared
law (House B1ll 173, Seetion
wlth deliveries of a year ago
4513 021 of the Oh1o Revised
A ~10 spokesman said
Code ) became effective today
no d lslop had been made
The new lay prohiblls Ute
on w ther borne beating oil
followmg two CIJ"cumstances
customers would receive
(I ) Drivmg a mowr vehicle
less oil, but wholesale buyers
Without
bwnpers when they
of beating oil were told to
expect similar cutbacks In were or1gmally standard
eqwpment on the veh1cle
deliveries
( 2 ) Mod1fymg a motor
)
vehicle's body or suspension
system so that Ute height or any
TONIGHT'S GRID SLATE
bwnper on the "'hicle vanes
Me1gs Freshmen vs R1pley more than three mches from
at Me1gs JW110r H1gh
the ongmal manufactured
Eastern 7th and 8th Graders bumper he1ght
vs Southern 7th and Bth
'It IS our hope that com
Graders at Reedsville
pliance w thiS new law Will

.........

Robert S Turner
Mrs
Geraidme F Fauber Mrs
Loretta R Stansbury
Great R1ver - Mrs Carol E
Rhodes Mrs Landa L Pat
terson Mrs Vu:k1 K Proff1tt
Mrs Jean L Sayre Mrs Ann
L Boso Mrs Juanita M

Sayre

Portland - Mrs Donna V
Larkins Mrs Lmda Ward
Mrs
Nell
M1ddleswart
Charles A Hilton Mrs Ger
trude E Lehew Mrs Ada M
Van Meter
East Letart - Mrs E1teen
Roush Mrs Foc1e L Hayman
/lArs Belva F F lsher Mrs
Euia .J Wolfe Mrs Janet S
Manuel Mrs Evelyn Manuel
Letart - Elmer L Pickens
Mrs Clara J Powell Mrs

(Continued on Page 5)

New law effective today

. ....

,,

I

It seems to be a very effiCient

system '

'

decrease Ute level of damage
and mjury caused by rrussmg
or miSmatched bwnpers m
front and rear end collistons

Lt Wigglesworth said

ONE FINED
One defendant was fmed and
another forfeited bond m
Pomeroy Mayor Donald
Collins court Wednesday
mght Jerry Hubbard" 19
Syracuse was fmed $16 a.~d
costs, recllless operation and
John R1ce H, Zanesville,
forfeited a $200 bond on
charges of dr~vm g while m
toxiCated
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature 111 down
town Pomeroy at 11 a m !OOay
was 57 degrees under sunny
skies

•

�now meet was decorated for the Halloween observance and the 31 children and adults were ·
seated attables for refreshments of ice cream, cookies in the shape of pwnpkins and kool-aid.
CCL members assisting at the party were Mrs. Louis Osborne, Mrs. Walter Morris, and Mrs.
John. Blaker, who got the pinata on a summer trip to San Antonio, Texas. The Middleport CCL
supports the .5 miU bond issue for a mentally retarded school and will be assisting with a
telephone promotion campaign.

Mrs. Neta Wiggins
died on Tuesday .
Mrs. Neta Wiggins, 61, MI.
Vernon, died Tuesday at the
Martin Memorial Hospital, MI.
Vernon. She was preceded in
death by her parents, Norman
and Fanny Gasper. She was
also preceded in death by her
husband, Max Wiggins.

Is.raeli Prime Minister Golda
Meir was in Washington to seek
· "answers and clarifications"
about U.S. policy in meetings
today with President Nixon
and Secretary .of State Henry
A. Kissinger .
She was expected to · seek
U.S. support for a prisoner of
war exchange before Israeli
troops pull back to the lines
they held at the Oct. 22 start of
the on-again, off-again cease~
fire.
·
In Beirut, guerrilla sources
reported the main Palestinian
organizations on the verge of a

commando groups, notably the
Marxist Popular Front for the
. Uberation of Palestine, have
refused to discuss a compromise settlement to the conflict.

Mrs. Meir told reporters on
arrival in Washington Wednesday there was a "real and
basic friendship" between
Israel and the United States.
But she said, ~~naturally, from
time to time problems and
questions arise.about which we
seek
answers
and
clarifications.:•
Nixon met Wednesday with
Egyptian
Foreign Minister Ismajor internal split over
whether to accept the cease- mail Fahmi, who reportedly

Mrs. Wiggins was born Dec.

26, 1911 in Poll\eroy and
graduated from Pomeroy High
School. She was a member of
Southern Baptist Church and
. Eastern Stars.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at the North
Funeral Home, MI. Vernon
with the Rev . Paul Large
offiCiating. Burial will be in MI.
Vernon Memorial Gardens.
Friends are being received at
the funeral home Thursday
from 7 to 9 p.m.

THE W!'£CH, SHE CAME - Whether it was the Wicked
Witch of the West from the Land of o~. as some of the
children thought, or just a PTA mother adding a tittle excitement to Halloween, boys and girls at the Pomeroy and
Middleport Elemeptary Schools were delighted. at the Witch's surprise visit Wednesday. You guessed it right, it was a
PTA mother, the attractive Beverly Long.

Mrs. Richardson dies Thursday
NEW HAVEN - Mabel E.
Richardson, 72, New · Haven,
died this morning at ·Riverside
Methodist Hospital, Colwnbus.
Sh.e was born Dec. 17, 1900, in
Logan, W. Va., the daughter of
the· late lsom and Martha
Elkins Elkins. Her husband,
Hiram A. Richardson .died in
1!140.

Mrs. Richa~dson was a
member of the New Haven
United Methodist Church.
She is survived by three sons,
·Delbert, of Minersville; Hiram
A. Richardson, Jr., Gahanna,
and David, of New Haven; four
daughters, Mrs. 0. J. (Sylvia)
Richards, Marietta; Mrs .
Lester •(Goldie) Love, Wor!hington ; Mrs. Ula Ashton,

"

McConnelsville, and Mrs. ·
James (Martha ) Hart, .Letart,
W. Va. RD; one brother,
Luther Elkins, Chapmansville,
W. Va.; three sisters, Mrs. Leo
(Ollie )" Bledsoe, . Chapmansville ; Mrs. Everett
(Delma) Raye, Logan, W.Va.,
and Mrs. Mary Anderson, in
Kentucky; 21 grandchildren,
and 14 great-grandchildren.
· Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 11 a.m. at the New.
Haven United Methodi.st
Church wiU1 the Rev. William
DeMoss officiating. Burial will
be in Spring Hill Cemetery,
Huntington. Friends may ct&gt;ll
at the Foglesong · Funeral
Home anytime after 3 p. ni. on
Friday.

.,

·Battle coming

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
recent disclosure by former
special prosecutor Archibald
Cox that President Nixon had
ordered former Attorney
General Rl'chard Klem' dl'enst to
drop antitrust proceedings
a g. a ins t Intern at ion a I
Telephone and Telegraph
Corp. sparked a partisan battle
on Capitol Hill Wednesday.
Holzer Medical Center
At the same time, Klein(Discharged)
dienst denied he had comPansy Albert, Gladys Brown, milled perjury before the
Diane Burdette, John talan- Senate Judiciary Committee at
dros, Austin Corn, Clifford his confirmation hearings last
Deckard, Daniel Ewing, Molly . year and said he forced the
Fisher, Ralph Foster, Mrs. President to reconsider his
James Fraley 'jgd son, Avice position by threatening to
Frecker, Sharon Hayes, Mary resign.
Cox was testifying .on a
Houck, Loretta Hughes,
· Ji!osemary Kearns, Betsy . Senate proposal to create a
Lynn, Philip Meinhart, Clifford . special prosecutor's office
Miller, Margaret Mitchell under court control when he
Ruth Murray, Ruth Musser: was criticized by Sens. Strom
Andrew. Ondera, William Orr, Th)lfmond, R-S.C., and EdRuby Osborne, Lezah Preston, ward Gurney, R-Fl!l., for
Madge Russell, Terry Russell, telling t.wo other members of
Raymond Smith, Nellie Starr, thecornmitteedetailsofan ITT
Hazel Taylor, Dorothy Vince, case in April, 1971. .
Mrs . Chuckle Walker and
Klemdienst at the tune was
daughter Pauline Wayne • deputy attorney general and
Coell W~therholt, Maxweli pressing for reversal of a lower
Wilson.
court ruling allowmg ITT to
acquire the Grinnell Corp. At
his confimation bearings, he
said
no one at the White House
BANDS TO BATTLE
The Pt . Pleasant Jaycees · attem.pted to influence the ITT
will sponsor
a Battle of. the case.
J
On Aprill9, 1971, Kleindienst
Bands, Thursday, Nov. 8, at the
in a statement
confirmed
National Guard Armory.
Prizes awarded will be $50 for · Wednesday, Nixon ordered
first place and $25 for second. him not to appeal the case.
Any band interested in par- Kleindienst said he lthen
ticipating should contact Buck ·threatened to resign, won an
extension of time to appeal and
King at 675-1353.
'

1\.lSSlnger, ·

Wlll,.l

Wtl~

----~

---- ...,. · ··---·----

.

.

.

-

-

scheduled to leave Monday for of 87. White, an apostle of exercise arid a simple diet, died of
a . tour of Arab capitals to complications from two strokes at Massachusetts General
discuss a Middle East peace, · Hospital, where he began his merucal career in 1913. His wife,
briefed the Senate Foreign Ina' was at his bedside.
In Washington, President Nixon said, . " in the annals pf
Relations Committee Wedmedicine,
Dr . Paul Dudley White will be re.membered as a man
nesday on his efforts.
"We believe we are making wbo not only revolutioni~ed the treatment of heart disease lxi
progress he told newsmen. also educated-millions of Americans on how to prevent heart
"We have identified two prob- attacks'' White was born June 6, 1886, a descendant of Joseph
lems. One is to establish the Dudley, a colonial governor in Massachusetts. His father was a
cease-fire firmly. The second is family physician. ·
to move from tbe cease-fire to
· a durable peace settlement."
FISH ON FRIDAY
MEETING SET
Egyptian President Anwar
A fish fry will be held
The regular meeting of Drew
Sadat told a news conference in
Saturday
beginning at I p. m.
Cairo Wednesday his 3rd Army Webster Post 39 of the for as long as the supply i)lsts
would wipe out· Israeli troops American Legion will be held at the Middleport Fire Dept.
Tuesday evening at the post
on the west bank of the Suez
headquarters. · Homema.de
Canal if the Israelis refuse .to home.
candy will also be sold.
pull back to the Oct. 22
BAZAAR SET
positions.
The annual bazaar of the
Egyptian officials said such
Sacred
Heart Catholic Church
DINNER SET
a withdrawal would r~HJpen the
A potluck dinner will be held
Cairo-Suez City highway and ·will be held Thursday, Nov . 6.
. end the encirclement of some Dinner will be served begin- at noon Sunday at the Mid20,000 Egyptian soldiers on the ning at 4 p. m. There will be dleport Churcli of Christ. Those
games and notions. The public a !tending are · to bring a
east bank of the waterway.
covered dish and table service.
A military spokesman in Tel is invited.
Aviv, however, reiterated
1"

eventually convinced the
President the appeal was
necessary.
As it turned out, Kleindienst
said, the appeal paved the way
f
ttl
t f tbe
Israel has an agreement with
or a se emen o
case Egypt to exchange wounded
favorable to the government, POWs without any troop withwith ITT agreeing to relinquish · drawals.
Grinnell but allowed to acquire
On the outskirts of Egypt's
the Hartford Insurance Co.
Suez City at the southern end of ·
Kleindienst said Wednesday the canal, UPI reporter
that according to "a fair and Thomas Cheatham said the
objective reading of the . confrontation between Israeli
transcripts of my testimony ,.. ! and Egyptl\in troops manning
did not perjure myself or give . the truce lines oniy 20 yards
false information." He said his apart "has taken on the apstatement was in regard to the pearance of a tragicomic zoo."
ultimate settlement and not 'Inside looking out, Cheatham
r.elated to previous litigation. said, were an estimated IO,OOO
During Cox's testimony' Sen. sullen Egyptian troops trapped
Birch Bayh, D-Ind., accused with little food or water.
Thurmond of "browbeating" Outside looking in, he said,
Cox.
were "clowning Israeli soldiers
with water and food to spare." .
.. - • · _ _...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"'

Thursday's Games
San Diego at Memphis ·
(Only game scheduled)
NBA standings

5
6
5

g. b .
3 .625 -

4 .600 4 · .556. 1-2
' .222 3'h

g.b.
2
2';,
3'1&gt;

1 · 2 .ns
7 4 .636

Chicago
Detroit

.t

KC ·Omaha

8

4

0 16 50 34

New Englnd 7

3

6

1

1 15 36
2 14 33
1 11 36
3 7 36
2 ·6 24

·Chicago
Toronto
New York

4
2 7
2 .7
West
w • . I.
Edmonton 6 1
Houston
4 3
MinnesOta 4 4
Winnipeg
4 5
Los Angeles 3 7

Remove hardness from all
your household water

'

•

5

-

26
22

31
&lt;15
44

(Only game$ scheduled l

I

Thursday's Games
No games scheduled
I

I

\.-t:"lll..l" ~l · VtHIJUlU.:,

ollt.

Region 7
I. Ironton, 275.20; 2.
Steubenville · Catholic,
230.08; 3. Wheelersburg,
194.20; 4. McConnelsville
Morgan, 1~0.20 ~ 5. New
Lexington,
187.92;
6. ·
Toronto, 175.76; 7. Pomeroy
Meigs, 163.60; 8. Gallipolis,
157.84; 9. Licking Valley,
155.72; 10. Tuscarawas
Valley, 142.60.
Region8
Reading, 328.
Class A
Regton9
McDonald, 204.28.
Region 10
Montpelier, 193.40.
Region 11
1. Newark Catholic, 170.32;
2. Fredericktown, 147.32; 3,
Woodsfield, 124.84; 4. Coal
Grove, 118.08; 5. Berne
. Union, IIi; 6. ·Proctorville
·Fairland, 99.60; 7. GranvUie,
94.68; 8. Centerburg, 82.32; 9.
Indian Valley North, \'9.60;
10. Shadyside, 68.96.
Region 12
Middletown Fenwick, 208.64.

HOUSE
PAINT

9:00P.M. to 2:00A.M.
.

I

The .Charley -UIIy Band
'I'
' .

At The

I

'· ~~.

KINGS ARMS NITE CLUB
\

.,

Sale

$590

Gallon

Valley LUmber &amp;Supply Co. ·

3 Miles South of Middleport
On Sl Rl7

. tiCKle tne peopte or

~e

wunu

are.
"I'll be glad when I retire."
Ali talked non-stop for close ·
to 45 minutes Wednesday as he
denied the story earlier in the
week that said he had reinjured
.
'

New York Clothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

DONT WAIT!

Ebenbach Has ...

BUY NOW!

TERS
~llftlle

Amorlcon GIS

Assoeiltion for
w with naturir.
m~nuf•cturwd,
LP.; lnd

11\iudp-

r

FIVE SIZES Of
Cuslltll DtiUit
Radiant Clrcul..trl ·
Prktd as lewn

'T .BUY
..PA

t. ph gf ga

0 12 ·33 19
1 9 29 20
1 · 9 21 29
1 9 34 34
0 6 2~ 36
Vancouver 3 8 0 6 33 54
Wedntsday•s Results
Cleveland 6 Wi nnipeg 4
Quebec s Vancouver 1

MIDOilPORT, 0.

L.lllut

Now App~ Nightly

East

'

BAKER

~'"
5

w. I. t. pts gf U

AUTQMATIC WATER SOFTENERS

Middleport, o.

1v,

By United Press International

Quebec

The top team with points
totals of each of the 12 regions
are (Regions 7 and 11 involve ·
area teams);
ClassAAA
. Region 1
Warren Western Reserve
496.56.

Some said Gabriel had a bad arm, but the Rams didn't take
anything off for that rumor. They turned Gabriel over to the
Eagles last June 8 for Harold Jackson, the league's leading
receiver last season, running back Tony Baker and two future
first round draft choices.
Roman Gabriel couldn't have been happier.·
"Some people asked me how I could feel good coming from a
team like the Rams to one like the Eagles," be says. "When I
first came to Philadelphia and met Mr. Tose and Mike McConnack, I felt Iliad made the right decision. Mr. Tose was
honest and sincere with me. The same with Mike McCormack.
"They didn't try to jock 'me arowtd. They said they'd like to
.
have me as their quarterblick and I knew they wanted me. They
made me feel rlgbt at home."
ROman Gabriel doesn't miss lAs· Angeles.
"There are some people out there I play with I miss, fellows
like Kenny Iman, Merlin Olsen, David Ray and some others, but
this Philadelphia organization I'm with now is first class from
.
top to bottom. Nobody can ever say anythmgtomeabout the fans
in Philadelphia. I've never seen.football fans so involved with
their football team. Mike McCormack? He reminds me a great
deal of the guy I played for in high school back in Wilmington, He
coaches from the heart. You enjoy playing for a man llke !bat."

Wednesday's Results
eos1on 128 Cleveland 110
New Vorl&lt; 102 Houston 91
Detroit 114 Seattle 107
(Only games scheduled&gt;
Thursday's Games
No games scheduled
WHA StandingS

Cleveland

McCLURE'S

g . b.

l l ·:l~~

~~~~~~~x

prompt service - at sensible
prices.

1•;,

2
5 '"

6 ..tOO

Pacific Division
w . I. pet.
Los Angeles
7 J .700
Golden state
4
3 .571
Portland
5 &lt; .556

'

Mooney totaled 368.96 points,
Garfield 368.56 and Massillon's
Tigers 368 .
The other three Class AAA
regions remained unchanged,
although Upper 'Arlington,
thanks to a win over previously
unbeaten Zanesville, moved
into ·a challenging third
position in Region 2 behind
Bowling Green and Lima
Shawnee.
Warren Western .Reserve,
the defending playoff champion, remained first in Region I
and also had the highest point
total among all the schools in
the state, and Cincinnati
Moeller increased its lead · in
Region 4 with Cincinnati St.
Xavier moving into the run~
nerup spot.

The price was high.

. Western Conference
Midwest Division
·
w. 1. pet. • ·• ·
Milw5ukee
9
1 .900

Bring the lam ity lor good food,

992-5248

Denver 107 New York 104
San An1oflio 101 C~rplina 99
Kentucky 146 san Diego lOS
!Only games scheduled )

Phliodeiphla 2
· · Central !'.'·:~'·;ct.
Atlanta
6 4 .600
CBpltal
3 5 .375
Houston
4 1 .364
Cleveland
2 7 .222 .

GOOD FOOD

ICOU.]

\v,

Boston

_;,. :l·- -

u::nu OIH,Y l.\1 Cl :SJAII"" ;:,c;n,:,oc CliiU

: ! :m "''

BufiaiO
New York

l

~IJt;:

1

e:;~=~~i;~,~~~i:~e
w. 1. pet.

for

Wen~ WiUI~

meant no sacrilege."
·
When Gabriel said he..}"anted to be traded last year after. Los
Angeles went out and got quarterback John Had! from San
Diego, the Rams let it be known he wasn't goi1tg to he given away
for nothing. Their asking price was high.
Meanwhile, the Eagles, who had had just come off a wretched
2-11-1 season, released their entire coaching staff and oWner
Leonard Tose was in something of a quandary. He had paid more
. than $16 million for the team in i969 and outside of realizing a .
lifelong dream with the purchase, he had little to show for it.
Theiirst thing he did was hire 43-year-old Mike McCormack, a
former all-pro offensive lineman-with the Cleveland Browns and
later an offensive line coach with the Washington Redskins.
ABA Standings
In the past, To.se had liked to become ' involved" wlth the '
Bv United Pr~s!s~nternational nmni.ng of the Eagles. When he named McCormack as hls head .·
w . 1. Pet. g . b. coach though, he promised him a ufree hand." ·
·
Kentucky
McCormack knew one thing. · Nobody wins without a good
Carol ina
New York
4
5 .444
4
experienced quarterl&gt;llck. All the Eagles had were John Reaves,
Memphis
; ~ : ~~g ~'" with only a year's experience, and Pete Liske, who had.bounced
VIrginia
West
around with a nwnberofclubsbutstarredfornone.
w · I. Pet. g . b.
"Listen, Leo. nard," McCormack sald to Tose, 11 the only way we
Denver
5 4 .556
Ind iana
• 4 .500
•; , can possibly be competitive next year is with a good established
~~~hAntonio
~ ~ : :~~
quarterback. Somebody like Roman Gabriel. I know the price
san Diego
3 6 .333
2
will be high, but if he cando the job-and !think he can-be'llbe
·
Wednesday's Results
worth lt. u

By United Preu International

DRIVE IN

4th &amp; Locust

'UUtt people!

- --- - .. - r - - --,.- - ·-- •· - - - - -.. -

revealed it instllSd in a .letter
he wr&lt;ite to Finley last Friday.
The commissioner also sent a
copy of the letter to Joe Cronin
.... and Charles "Cbub" Feeney,
the two league presidents; all
the major league owners and
presidents and all tbe general
managers.
"The Oakland club is hereby
to remit the sum of $7,000, its
check to be received here no

992-2709

S. 3rd Ave.
(I

Middleport,
o...
'

'

1 l"!lt new adVance i~ wi~ter
home comfort-WARM MORNING's ex•
" h t 11 1
elusive "Carpet of Comf ort ea ow or
warm floer heltinJ. The powerful, quiet
runninc blower draws heated air dow~
bttwee~ the fro~t and tear sections of
'the heat chamber llld pushes it out along
· the ~abinet front-spreading a . wide car·
pet of warmth over your floors.

H•re Is

"The "Carpet of Comfort" blower Suttem
1&gt;~
Is completely automatic.,. turning o~
wlltt~ the hut starts 'ftowinJ, tur~ing off .
when the heat stops flowina. A selector
switc:li aives you the choice of fast, medium or slow speeds. By simply turning
the blower control from automatic to
man1111, you can l"J)trate the blower SY$"
ttm fllr summertime air cin;ulltio~.

"TOP·O·MATtc• Coiltnl•
TOP.Q-MATIC CONTROLS, tocatoct

lnd TOP af heater lfl
,.., to rnch and "'' It 011 ...
"rovide .you with fullr automotic
or semi-automatic oporotiono!tlll
"CorpototComfort"blowonrs...,.
ltouttful New "Picture
Pram•• Styling
sets a new high for beauty. Each
WARM MORNING ~" lllator II
like an attractive p•ece ot tuml·
turt that will improve tht appur.
anct of anr room.
LOW ORIGINAL COSTLOW OPIRATING cOST
at rear

WARM MORNING's """"""..,

price and fuel savlnJporformonce
assure you tow ori&amp;n•ot cost tnd
low operatinl cost. Ne•r blfott
so much· volut in a &amp;at Noter.

RUHUI
GIIIAT NEW JIIATEIS SOON ••• TERMS TO SUIT·. YOUR IUDGit
'
. .
.

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
110 W. MAIN

POMEROY

992-2811

I

�now meet was decorated for the Halloween observance and the 31 children and adults were ·
seated attables for refreshments of ice cream, cookies in the shape of pwnpkins and kool-aid.
CCL members assisting at the party were Mrs. Louis Osborne, Mrs. Walter Morris, and Mrs.
John. Blaker, who got the pinata on a summer trip to San Antonio, Texas. The Middleport CCL
supports the .5 miU bond issue for a mentally retarded school and will be assisting with a
telephone promotion campaign.

Mrs. Neta Wiggins
died on Tuesday .
Mrs. Neta Wiggins, 61, MI.
Vernon, died Tuesday at the
Martin Memorial Hospital, MI.
Vernon. She was preceded in
death by her parents, Norman
and Fanny Gasper. She was
also preceded in death by her
husband, Max Wiggins.

Is.raeli Prime Minister Golda
Meir was in Washington to seek
· "answers and clarifications"
about U.S. policy in meetings
today with President Nixon
and Secretary .of State Henry
A. Kissinger .
She was expected to · seek
U.S. support for a prisoner of
war exchange before Israeli
troops pull back to the lines
they held at the Oct. 22 start of
the on-again, off-again cease~
fire.
·
In Beirut, guerrilla sources
reported the main Palestinian
organizations on the verge of a

commando groups, notably the
Marxist Popular Front for the
. Uberation of Palestine, have
refused to discuss a compromise settlement to the conflict.

Mrs. Meir told reporters on
arrival in Washington Wednesday there was a "real and
basic friendship" between
Israel and the United States.
But she said, ~~naturally, from
time to time problems and
questions arise.about which we
seek
answers
and
clarifications.:•
Nixon met Wednesday with
Egyptian
Foreign Minister Ismajor internal split over
whether to accept the cease- mail Fahmi, who reportedly

Mrs. Wiggins was born Dec.

26, 1911 in Poll\eroy and
graduated from Pomeroy High
School. She was a member of
Southern Baptist Church and
. Eastern Stars.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at the North
Funeral Home, MI. Vernon
with the Rev . Paul Large
offiCiating. Burial will be in MI.
Vernon Memorial Gardens.
Friends are being received at
the funeral home Thursday
from 7 to 9 p.m.

THE W!'£CH, SHE CAME - Whether it was the Wicked
Witch of the West from the Land of o~. as some of the
children thought, or just a PTA mother adding a tittle excitement to Halloween, boys and girls at the Pomeroy and
Middleport Elemeptary Schools were delighted. at the Witch's surprise visit Wednesday. You guessed it right, it was a
PTA mother, the attractive Beverly Long.

Mrs. Richardson dies Thursday
NEW HAVEN - Mabel E.
Richardson, 72, New · Haven,
died this morning at ·Riverside
Methodist Hospital, Colwnbus.
Sh.e was born Dec. 17, 1900, in
Logan, W. Va., the daughter of
the· late lsom and Martha
Elkins Elkins. Her husband,
Hiram A. Richardson .died in
1!140.

Mrs. Richa~dson was a
member of the New Haven
United Methodist Church.
She is survived by three sons,
·Delbert, of Minersville; Hiram
A. Richardson, Jr., Gahanna,
and David, of New Haven; four
daughters, Mrs. 0. J. (Sylvia)
Richards, Marietta; Mrs .
Lester •(Goldie) Love, Wor!hington ; Mrs. Ula Ashton,

"

McConnelsville, and Mrs. ·
James (Martha ) Hart, .Letart,
W. Va. RD; one brother,
Luther Elkins, Chapmansville,
W. Va.; three sisters, Mrs. Leo
(Ollie )" Bledsoe, . Chapmansville ; Mrs. Everett
(Delma) Raye, Logan, W.Va.,
and Mrs. Mary Anderson, in
Kentucky; 21 grandchildren,
and 14 great-grandchildren.
· Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 11 a.m. at the New.
Haven United Methodi.st
Church wiU1 the Rev. William
DeMoss officiating. Burial will
be in Spring Hill Cemetery,
Huntington. Friends may ct&gt;ll
at the Foglesong · Funeral
Home anytime after 3 p. ni. on
Friday.

.,

·Battle coming

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
recent disclosure by former
special prosecutor Archibald
Cox that President Nixon had
ordered former Attorney
General Rl'chard Klem' dl'enst to
drop antitrust proceedings
a g. a ins t Intern at ion a I
Telephone and Telegraph
Corp. sparked a partisan battle
on Capitol Hill Wednesday.
Holzer Medical Center
At the same time, Klein(Discharged)
dienst denied he had comPansy Albert, Gladys Brown, milled perjury before the
Diane Burdette, John talan- Senate Judiciary Committee at
dros, Austin Corn, Clifford his confirmation hearings last
Deckard, Daniel Ewing, Molly . year and said he forced the
Fisher, Ralph Foster, Mrs. President to reconsider his
James Fraley 'jgd son, Avice position by threatening to
Frecker, Sharon Hayes, Mary resign.
Cox was testifying .on a
Houck, Loretta Hughes,
· Ji!osemary Kearns, Betsy . Senate proposal to create a
Lynn, Philip Meinhart, Clifford . special prosecutor's office
Miller, Margaret Mitchell under court control when he
Ruth Murray, Ruth Musser: was criticized by Sens. Strom
Andrew. Ondera, William Orr, Th)lfmond, R-S.C., and EdRuby Osborne, Lezah Preston, ward Gurney, R-Fl!l., for
Madge Russell, Terry Russell, telling t.wo other members of
Raymond Smith, Nellie Starr, thecornmitteedetailsofan ITT
Hazel Taylor, Dorothy Vince, case in April, 1971. .
Mrs . Chuckle Walker and
Klemdienst at the tune was
daughter Pauline Wayne • deputy attorney general and
Coell W~therholt, Maxweli pressing for reversal of a lower
Wilson.
court ruling allowmg ITT to
acquire the Grinnell Corp. At
his confimation bearings, he
said
no one at the White House
BANDS TO BATTLE
The Pt . Pleasant Jaycees · attem.pted to influence the ITT
will sponsor
a Battle of. the case.
J
On Aprill9, 1971, Kleindienst
Bands, Thursday, Nov. 8, at the
in a statement
confirmed
National Guard Armory.
Prizes awarded will be $50 for · Wednesday, Nixon ordered
first place and $25 for second. him not to appeal the case.
Any band interested in par- Kleindienst said he lthen
ticipating should contact Buck ·threatened to resign, won an
extension of time to appeal and
King at 675-1353.
'

1\.lSSlnger, ·

Wlll,.l

Wtl~

----~

---- ...,. · ··---·----

.

.

.

-

-

scheduled to leave Monday for of 87. White, an apostle of exercise arid a simple diet, died of
a . tour of Arab capitals to complications from two strokes at Massachusetts General
discuss a Middle East peace, · Hospital, where he began his merucal career in 1913. His wife,
briefed the Senate Foreign Ina' was at his bedside.
In Washington, President Nixon said, . " in the annals pf
Relations Committee Wedmedicine,
Dr . Paul Dudley White will be re.membered as a man
nesday on his efforts.
"We believe we are making wbo not only revolutioni~ed the treatment of heart disease lxi
progress he told newsmen. also educated-millions of Americans on how to prevent heart
"We have identified two prob- attacks'' White was born June 6, 1886, a descendant of Joseph
lems. One is to establish the Dudley, a colonial governor in Massachusetts. His father was a
cease-fire firmly. The second is family physician. ·
to move from tbe cease-fire to
· a durable peace settlement."
FISH ON FRIDAY
MEETING SET
Egyptian President Anwar
A fish fry will be held
The regular meeting of Drew
Sadat told a news conference in
Saturday
beginning at I p. m.
Cairo Wednesday his 3rd Army Webster Post 39 of the for as long as the supply i)lsts
would wipe out· Israeli troops American Legion will be held at the Middleport Fire Dept.
Tuesday evening at the post
on the west bank of the Suez
headquarters. · Homema.de
Canal if the Israelis refuse .to home.
candy will also be sold.
pull back to the Oct. 22
BAZAAR SET
positions.
The annual bazaar of the
Egyptian officials said such
Sacred
Heart Catholic Church
DINNER SET
a withdrawal would r~HJpen the
A potluck dinner will be held
Cairo-Suez City highway and ·will be held Thursday, Nov . 6.
. end the encirclement of some Dinner will be served begin- at noon Sunday at the Mid20,000 Egyptian soldiers on the ning at 4 p. m. There will be dleport Churcli of Christ. Those
games and notions. The public a !tending are · to bring a
east bank of the waterway.
covered dish and table service.
A military spokesman in Tel is invited.
Aviv, however, reiterated
1"

eventually convinced the
President the appeal was
necessary.
As it turned out, Kleindienst
said, the appeal paved the way
f
ttl
t f tbe
Israel has an agreement with
or a se emen o
case Egypt to exchange wounded
favorable to the government, POWs without any troop withwith ITT agreeing to relinquish · drawals.
Grinnell but allowed to acquire
On the outskirts of Egypt's
the Hartford Insurance Co.
Suez City at the southern end of ·
Kleindienst said Wednesday the canal, UPI reporter
that according to "a fair and Thomas Cheatham said the
objective reading of the . confrontation between Israeli
transcripts of my testimony ,.. ! and Egyptl\in troops manning
did not perjure myself or give . the truce lines oniy 20 yards
false information." He said his apart "has taken on the apstatement was in regard to the pearance of a tragicomic zoo."
ultimate settlement and not 'Inside looking out, Cheatham
r.elated to previous litigation. said, were an estimated IO,OOO
During Cox's testimony' Sen. sullen Egyptian troops trapped
Birch Bayh, D-Ind., accused with little food or water.
Thurmond of "browbeating" Outside looking in, he said,
Cox.
were "clowning Israeli soldiers
with water and food to spare." .
.. - • · _ _...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"'

Thursday's Games
San Diego at Memphis ·
(Only game scheduled)
NBA standings

5
6
5

g. b .
3 .625 -

4 .600 4 · .556. 1-2
' .222 3'h

g.b.
2
2';,
3'1&gt;

1 · 2 .ns
7 4 .636

Chicago
Detroit

.t

KC ·Omaha

8

4

0 16 50 34

New Englnd 7

3

6

1

1 15 36
2 14 33
1 11 36
3 7 36
2 ·6 24

·Chicago
Toronto
New York

4
2 7
2 .7
West
w • . I.
Edmonton 6 1
Houston
4 3
MinnesOta 4 4
Winnipeg
4 5
Los Angeles 3 7

Remove hardness from all
your household water

'

•

5

-

26
22

31
&lt;15
44

(Only game$ scheduled l

I

Thursday's Games
No games scheduled
I

I

\.-t:"lll..l" ~l · VtHIJUlU.:,

ollt.

Region 7
I. Ironton, 275.20; 2.
Steubenville · Catholic,
230.08; 3. Wheelersburg,
194.20; 4. McConnelsville
Morgan, 1~0.20 ~ 5. New
Lexington,
187.92;
6. ·
Toronto, 175.76; 7. Pomeroy
Meigs, 163.60; 8. Gallipolis,
157.84; 9. Licking Valley,
155.72; 10. Tuscarawas
Valley, 142.60.
Region8
Reading, 328.
Class A
Regton9
McDonald, 204.28.
Region 10
Montpelier, 193.40.
Region 11
1. Newark Catholic, 170.32;
2. Fredericktown, 147.32; 3,
Woodsfield, 124.84; 4. Coal
Grove, 118.08; 5. Berne
. Union, IIi; 6. ·Proctorville
·Fairland, 99.60; 7. GranvUie,
94.68; 8. Centerburg, 82.32; 9.
Indian Valley North, \'9.60;
10. Shadyside, 68.96.
Region 12
Middletown Fenwick, 208.64.

HOUSE
PAINT

9:00P.M. to 2:00A.M.
.

I

The .Charley -UIIy Band
'I'
' .

At The

I

'· ~~.

KINGS ARMS NITE CLUB
\

.,

Sale

$590

Gallon

Valley LUmber &amp;Supply Co. ·

3 Miles South of Middleport
On Sl Rl7

. tiCKle tne peopte or

~e

wunu

are.
"I'll be glad when I retire."
Ali talked non-stop for close ·
to 45 minutes Wednesday as he
denied the story earlier in the
week that said he had reinjured
.
'

New York Clothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

DONT WAIT!

Ebenbach Has ...

BUY NOW!

TERS
~llftlle

Amorlcon GIS

Assoeiltion for
w with naturir.
m~nuf•cturwd,
LP.; lnd

11\iudp-

r

FIVE SIZES Of
Cuslltll DtiUit
Radiant Clrcul..trl ·
Prktd as lewn

'T .BUY
..PA

t. ph gf ga

0 12 ·33 19
1 9 29 20
1 · 9 21 29
1 9 34 34
0 6 2~ 36
Vancouver 3 8 0 6 33 54
Wedntsday•s Results
Cleveland 6 Wi nnipeg 4
Quebec s Vancouver 1

MIDOilPORT, 0.

L.lllut

Now App~ Nightly

East

'

BAKER

~'"
5

w. I. t. pts gf U

AUTQMATIC WATER SOFTENERS

Middleport, o.

1v,

By United Press International

Quebec

The top team with points
totals of each of the 12 regions
are (Regions 7 and 11 involve ·
area teams);
ClassAAA
. Region 1
Warren Western Reserve
496.56.

Some said Gabriel had a bad arm, but the Rams didn't take
anything off for that rumor. They turned Gabriel over to the
Eagles last June 8 for Harold Jackson, the league's leading
receiver last season, running back Tony Baker and two future
first round draft choices.
Roman Gabriel couldn't have been happier.·
"Some people asked me how I could feel good coming from a
team like the Rams to one like the Eagles," be says. "When I
first came to Philadelphia and met Mr. Tose and Mike McConnack, I felt Iliad made the right decision. Mr. Tose was
honest and sincere with me. The same with Mike McCormack.
"They didn't try to jock 'me arowtd. They said they'd like to
.
have me as their quarterblick and I knew they wanted me. They
made me feel rlgbt at home."
ROman Gabriel doesn't miss lAs· Angeles.
"There are some people out there I play with I miss, fellows
like Kenny Iman, Merlin Olsen, David Ray and some others, but
this Philadelphia organization I'm with now is first class from
.
top to bottom. Nobody can ever say anythmgtomeabout the fans
in Philadelphia. I've never seen.football fans so involved with
their football team. Mike McCormack? He reminds me a great
deal of the guy I played for in high school back in Wilmington, He
coaches from the heart. You enjoy playing for a man llke !bat."

Wednesday's Results
eos1on 128 Cleveland 110
New Vorl&lt; 102 Houston 91
Detroit 114 Seattle 107
(Only games scheduled&gt;
Thursday's Games
No games scheduled
WHA StandingS

Cleveland

McCLURE'S

g . b.

l l ·:l~~

~~~~~~~x

prompt service - at sensible
prices.

1•;,

2
5 '"

6 ..tOO

Pacific Division
w . I. pet.
Los Angeles
7 J .700
Golden state
4
3 .571
Portland
5 &lt; .556

'

Mooney totaled 368.96 points,
Garfield 368.56 and Massillon's
Tigers 368 .
The other three Class AAA
regions remained unchanged,
although Upper 'Arlington,
thanks to a win over previously
unbeaten Zanesville, moved
into ·a challenging third
position in Region 2 behind
Bowling Green and Lima
Shawnee.
Warren Western .Reserve,
the defending playoff champion, remained first in Region I
and also had the highest point
total among all the schools in
the state, and Cincinnati
Moeller increased its lead · in
Region 4 with Cincinnati St.
Xavier moving into the run~
nerup spot.

The price was high.

. Western Conference
Midwest Division
·
w. 1. pet. • ·• ·
Milw5ukee
9
1 .900

Bring the lam ity lor good food,

992-5248

Denver 107 New York 104
San An1oflio 101 C~rplina 99
Kentucky 146 san Diego lOS
!Only games scheduled )

Phliodeiphla 2
· · Central !'.'·:~'·;ct.
Atlanta
6 4 .600
CBpltal
3 5 .375
Houston
4 1 .364
Cleveland
2 7 .222 .

GOOD FOOD

ICOU.]

\v,

Boston

_;,. :l·- -

u::nu OIH,Y l.\1 Cl :SJAII"" ;:,c;n,:,oc CliiU

: ! :m "''

BufiaiO
New York

l

~IJt;:

1

e:;~=~~i;~,~~~i:~e
w. 1. pet.

for

Wen~ WiUI~

meant no sacrilege."
·
When Gabriel said he..}"anted to be traded last year after. Los
Angeles went out and got quarterback John Had! from San
Diego, the Rams let it be known he wasn't goi1tg to he given away
for nothing. Their asking price was high.
Meanwhile, the Eagles, who had had just come off a wretched
2-11-1 season, released their entire coaching staff and oWner
Leonard Tose was in something of a quandary. He had paid more
. than $16 million for the team in i969 and outside of realizing a .
lifelong dream with the purchase, he had little to show for it.
Theiirst thing he did was hire 43-year-old Mike McCormack, a
former all-pro offensive lineman-with the Cleveland Browns and
later an offensive line coach with the Washington Redskins.
ABA Standings
In the past, To.se had liked to become ' involved" wlth the '
Bv United Pr~s!s~nternational nmni.ng of the Eagles. When he named McCormack as hls head .·
w . 1. Pet. g . b. coach though, he promised him a ufree hand." ·
·
Kentucky
McCormack knew one thing. · Nobody wins without a good
Carol ina
New York
4
5 .444
4
experienced quarterl&gt;llck. All the Eagles had were John Reaves,
Memphis
; ~ : ~~g ~'" with only a year's experience, and Pete Liske, who had.bounced
VIrginia
West
around with a nwnberofclubsbutstarredfornone.
w · I. Pet. g . b.
"Listen, Leo. nard," McCormack sald to Tose, 11 the only way we
Denver
5 4 .556
Ind iana
• 4 .500
•; , can possibly be competitive next year is with a good established
~~~hAntonio
~ ~ : :~~
quarterback. Somebody like Roman Gabriel. I know the price
san Diego
3 6 .333
2
will be high, but if he cando the job-and !think he can-be'llbe
·
Wednesday's Results
worth lt. u

By United Preu International

DRIVE IN

4th &amp; Locust

'UUtt people!

- --- - .. - r - - --,.- - ·-- •· - - - - -.. -

revealed it instllSd in a .letter
he wr&lt;ite to Finley last Friday.
The commissioner also sent a
copy of the letter to Joe Cronin
.... and Charles "Cbub" Feeney,
the two league presidents; all
the major league owners and
presidents and all tbe general
managers.
"The Oakland club is hereby
to remit the sum of $7,000, its
check to be received here no

992-2709

S. 3rd Ave.
(I

Middleport,
o...
'

'

1 l"!lt new adVance i~ wi~ter
home comfort-WARM MORNING's ex•
" h t 11 1
elusive "Carpet of Comf ort ea ow or
warm floer heltinJ. The powerful, quiet
runninc blower draws heated air dow~
bttwee~ the fro~t and tear sections of
'the heat chamber llld pushes it out along
· the ~abinet front-spreading a . wide car·
pet of warmth over your floors.

H•re Is

"The "Carpet of Comfort" blower Suttem
1&gt;~
Is completely automatic.,. turning o~
wlltt~ the hut starts 'ftowinJ, tur~ing off .
when the heat stops flowina. A selector
switc:li aives you the choice of fast, medium or slow speeds. By simply turning
the blower control from automatic to
man1111, you can l"J)trate the blower SY$"
ttm fllr summertime air cin;ulltio~.

"TOP·O·MATtc• Coiltnl•
TOP.Q-MATIC CONTROLS, tocatoct

lnd TOP af heater lfl
,.., to rnch and "'' It 011 ...
"rovide .you with fullr automotic
or semi-automatic oporotiono!tlll
"CorpototComfort"blowonrs...,.
ltouttful New "Picture
Pram•• Styling
sets a new high for beauty. Each
WARM MORNING ~" lllator II
like an attractive p•ece ot tuml·
turt that will improve tht appur.
anct of anr room.
LOW ORIGINAL COSTLOW OPIRATING cOST
at rear

WARM MORNING's """"""..,

price and fuel savlnJporformonce
assure you tow ori&amp;n•ot cost tnd
low operatinl cost. Ne•r blfott
so much· volut in a &amp;at Noter.

RUHUI
GIIIAT NEW JIIATEIS SOON ••• TERMS TO SUIT·. YOUR IUDGit
'
. .
.

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
110 W. MAIN

POMEROY

992-2811

I

�•

•

a- The. Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Nov . 1, 1973

'awesome Buck~ye' gridders
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Name, T
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Unl ted Prt" lnl"""'t l&lt;m~l
All the old «Jylng ~oes , It
WY..t1l vne \.11 know one Wilt
(....'h~mberl.aln

knew a great

ctnter whtn he saw one
w...J,.sday ni~ht
" I weta ver)' , vt r y, very,
impre/Sstd w1th t.he ColoneL'i
~nd t.'8pet1ally AttJs GJlmvr~, ''

sc h

F.i lrlnnd r1 1 Kyger Creek
M il ler "' Coal Grove
Pr.rkcn~ bu~g at Poin t Ph:asant
Wlll lttms town at WBhama

BV

N Hl S1and 1ng s

Un f 1 ~t1

SATURDAY

DAVIS 1\Et,EA S f~D
POil'l'I,IIND. Ore (UPI ) 'l11c Portland Trail Blazers of
the Nntlonnl B•skcthall A.•·
sodlatton onnounced Wed·
nesday U1e 1·elease of Charllo
Davis, n 6-foot-21!uard plnylng
his U1lrd
as • pro.

BOYS &amp; GIRI.S
PAJAMAS
9 MO. 10 6 YRS.

REG. '4.50 -'6.00

s3.75
GOWNS
9 MO. TU SIZE 4
REG. '3.50 &amp;'4.50

Pr ou Inte rn ati on a l

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15 51 2e

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Monlre(ll

7

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HONEY HUGGERS

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MaryLa.lrl and ,.., ent.ll-&lt;'anl&lt;ed
l..oJ.!,2am St.a ~ 1.!- rated ooe-

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M-ONLY t;ACK MO~AO X i'l
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EDITORS : Tbls!Jl lbe Ialii In a series of d!Jlpatcbe s prepared by
United Press loteroaUooal' detailing the cool&lt;!ols of the lour
constitutional questions appearing on the Nov. 6 ballollo Ohio.

' wti l QI'1 l1n. Con ta in 'I
no diAQ ~ro u' d Ht'' 1 n d will
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rour li fe , . . tfu t tod• v .
MONA DE JIC co1U U . fiO for I 20
dn wpply and H .OO tor rwlu
th ~ .. ttl(ltJrlf LOJ.* Ull't f• t or
vour mr.mt v wlll bt re f un d ed

Kentucky , T•xa s ta ckle"
&amp;Juthfm Methr.idJJ!t , Ntl.. a•k•
meets Colorado, Holl'lt&lt;m fa ct!l
Fl~nd a St&lt;~le, T-.a ~ TeciJ

w1tt1 no

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMB US (UP!)- The Ohio electorate will vote Tuesday on
ccnstitutional amendments to remove the $3,000 ceiling on family
exemptions from the personal income tax, and to inerge
m_unicipal and common pleas courts, permitting mumc1pal
judges to receive in..term pay raises.
State Issue 2, if approved, would allow the General Assembly
to write new arxi presumably more generous exemptions mto the
state income lax law. The constitutional ceiling is $3,000 per
family, and the Jaw allows six at $&gt;00 apiece.
State Issue 3 is basically a judicial reorganization amendment,
permitting the legislature to place aU courts of record under a
single system administered by the Ohio Supreme Court. The inl&lt;!rm pay hike for municipal judges is a related issue resulting
from an oversight in 1968.
The $3,1100 limit on Income tax exemptions was written in 1912,
when Ohio had no income tax. In enacting the income tax m 1971,
the lawmakers had to adhere to the ceiling although it penalized
farnilies witll more than six members.
Expanding the number and amount of exemptions would cost
the state an estunated $2 million to $3 million a year m los!
revenues, according to legislators.
Opponents of State Issue 2 say it would open the door to a
variety of other exemptions from the income tax. They also
ccntend removal or the $3,1100 figure from the Constitution might
enable future legislators to lower the number and amount of
exemptions, instead or raising them.

••kt d by :
SWI!ihtr' &amp; LOh\111 Dr ug, 112 E .
&lt;Matn. fl~mftrrJy • O u l1o n Dr ug
~tOf'll , Mteldl t porf . M•ll Ord•n

plays R1 r e , Auburn meds

qultltl i on~.

F tll111d
- Pd AdV

Florida , and Mid Arnericotn

v, nome pi&gt; 1&lt;

Lt was a trade whk'b closely

yeGsi ," S&lt;JLd P~~ . wi'YJ was ]r,..
13. "Yoo d!JI'l 1t tradt" aw&lt;;~y ont

(A your ti'Jp pit.chen fr1r a
Pf.ayer wtw hw:~ rwt }X'rJV t-n
h.nn~U ."

Jf.ii: Brown, Ptratts' gerer&lt;ll

T'h.at was the pnce we
were l'illin g w pay w get

resembled the Pirates' swap of
'"""'nd baseman Dave Cash [or
Brett Cash was a someumesspectacular glove man whose
reputaltoo as a clutch hitter
was short-live&lt;! last season His
asset.s and liabilities ffil!Tored
those of hi.S successor, ReMie
Stenneu, rut Steru!eu had one
rnore thing going for himyouth
Sanguillen never rerovered
his catching form after returnl!lg from right field but the
Buc-s are bar~l:l!lg on him once

N Y Rngr s 3
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LOS Angeles 3

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~am bec.cmlllll

tbe SatiOOBI
League East's answer to
Johnny Bench. So May , ..00 rut
_21J.j t.n 101 games, '!l'as ex·
pendable.
Although Pirate Manager
Danny Munaugh SBld at the
time of the Brett-Cash trade
the Bucs desperal&lt;!ly needed
lefthanders , Brown :says
qlllllity was the rought-aft.er
commodity and ·'the fact !hat
the) are left.handers is just an
extra plus ."
Pirate pitchers finished ..-vmth out of 12 teams 111 earned
run averages last year w1th
3.73. Theu- only left-handed
starter of note was Luke
Wall&lt; e.- , and the no!&lt;! was sour
Ask for a ,.-ecise reason for
the nosedive fr om the U72
Eastern Division t•tle year,
when the Sues had a 2 73
combmed ERA, and the brass
w;ll tell you it was SU!ve
Blass's spu-al.
Blass was 19-8 on 1972 and
gave up an aver age of 2 48 runs
per game. Last year opposong
teBmS could ccunl on about
rune when Blass was on the
mowxi. He won only three and
lost nme
Nellie Br iles was the closest
th ing to a "stopper" that
Pittsbw-gh had. He was 14-13
w1th a 2 84 ERA.
"Had Blass had a good year
we possibly cculd ha ve turned
11 ar ound ," satd Pirate
pubhc1st B1ll Guilfoyle .
Without pitching tbe Pu-al&lt;!s
fimshed two games under !iOO
and third in the d1vis10n.
In Reuss, Pittsburgh now has
a strikeo.ut pllcher . He finished
f1fth last year With 177.
"Joe (Brown ) feels potenttaUy we have perhaps the
strongest pitchmg staff in
either league," GUilfoyle said.
"Of course, that's what we
thought last year al th1s time
too ."

However , both Gilmore and
overtime deciSion to the San
McCarthy
were im pr essed
Antonio Spurs. The Denver
Rockets overcarnt a 17-pomt w1t.h the play of San Diego's
defit1t w ntp the New York rook•e Caldwell Jones , l' ho has
1\ct.s 107-104 in the only other the maltings or a rme pro
center. Pla)'Uig w1th a mask to
ABA gam•.
Gilmure, who pulled down 2J prote c t a b r oken nose
rehouncL• and W&gt;red 17 points, sustall\ed last week, the 7-foot
expressed
great
dJ sap· Jo nes came close W outplaymg
pointment that C'hamherlain L' Gilmore in the first hall and
being relegat.d w coachtng wound up with 12 pomts and 14
duties by a court order ob- rebounds .
"Truthfull y, I ' ve neve r
tained by tile Los Angeles
heard of him before, " Gilmore
[.llkers of the NBA
smd
. "What's his ftrst name?
"I'd love to see h1m out
there,"' the ColoneL•' 7-fool-2 He IS tough From now on I'll
center said " The r e's a lot I know abOut hLm. "
lh runrung up thetr highest
could learn from playing
scor
e of the seaso n, th e
aga uurt hm1."
"There's no doubt about Jt, " Colonels set a flock of team
chimed in Kent ucky Coach records and t1ed the ABA
&amp;be McCarthy "The fans are record for mos t defens tv e
really bemg cheated by not rebounds m one game--60.
gettmg a chance to see two Gilmore had 16
James S1las popped in a IS-great centcrr:; !Jkc ArtiS and
foot
JUmp shot with four
Wilt go aga•rt•t each other ."
seconds left lil overtime to gtve
San Antonio its victory over
Carolma Silas scored Sill of his
total 15 pomts in the overtune
period after Carolina 's Jlm
Chones !led the game at 91 w1th
high schools, aU wi th substan- a free throw al the end or
tial black enrollments, have regulatiOn play
been orphar1 ed by the dedsion
Rich Jones was the top
of the other seven schools in the scorer for Sao ,Antonio with 22
Lake Erie League to join new and Joe Hamilton added 21
conferences 1n 1975--76
while Billy Cunningham had 30
Jackson asked the LeglSia- points and Joe Caldwell hit 21
ti ve Service Corrumssion, the
for Carolina.
research arm of the General
San D1ego Coach Tom NisA'3semb1y to detenmne who salke was ejecl&lt;!d from the
has juri.'Kiwtwn over such sJtugame for two technical fouls
atioml and what r ecour~ the and a fight broke out between
isolated schools have. He said
San Antonio 's Jerry Chambers
he would sponsor corret1jW
and Carolma's Denrus Wuycik
legtslat10n , 1f necessar y.
that brought both teams onto
the court.
CHUCK SMrtH NAMED
E1ght points by rookie Mike
NEW YORK (UP!) - Chuck
Green m the final four minutes
Smith of Yankton (S.D.) , who
sparked Denver's comeback
rushed for more than 200 yards
wm over New York. His final
for the second consecutive basket provided the wirming
game, has been selected as points with 51 seconds left.
UPI's NatiOnal AsliOciation of
Denver was led in scoring by
Inter collegiate Athl ellcs Marvm Roberts with 22 points
(NATA ) Back-of·the-Week.
and Dave Robisch, with 18, '
Lineman honors went to Ken
ABA scoring leader Julius
Hutcherson, a llnehacker from Erving took game honors with
Uvingston (Ala.)
38 pomts for the Nets .

"

TU//Y

Tussy Cream , Stick
Ro ll On Deodoranls
and A n11 - Pe r s p~ran1 s S a1 •slact•on .
or yo u r mon ey back
tor less mon ey

by the editor
For the first time 1rt 33 years, since leaving college and gomg
off to war, my two week vacation concluded Sunday was well·
spent in leisurely travel that included visits to places important
m our American heritage and to others of unsw-passed beauty.
There were highlights worth remembering :
Gettysburg. Ow- guide employed to ride w1th my party or
three around the once-bloodied slopes of Utile Roundtop and
Cemetery Ridge where General Robert E . Lee made the only
militaFy error of his star-filled career, was 91-year-&lt;Jid George
Wolfe, Surprisingly spry for his age, the old fellow allowed as
how he no doubt was related to the Wolfe (or Wolf) families of
Meigs County, Ohio. "You see ," he said, "both my mother and
my father were named Wolfe, though of no blood relation."
Born in a httle town 13 miles east of Gettysburg , Wolfe sa1d
his father heard the cacaphony of guns when Pickett's 5,000 men
were repulsed by Meade.
We were lucky to have Wolfe as our private guide, because,
at his age, he accepted no more than one tour per day. He never
stopped talking other !han to answer questions wedged in when
he paused to regain his breath. Much of his ccmmentary was out
of a book, or ccurse; his pithy remarks about the comparative
military skills of the combatting generals in the woods and on the
hills just east of, the village of Geltysburg , were straight out of
Douglas Southall Freeman's monumental triology on the Civil
War.
·
But Wolfe, with roots so close to the roar of the guns 110 years
ago IJis\July 1-2-:1; gave them unexpected authenticity. HIS fee of
$7 was modest, meriting my unsolicited and unexpected $3 tip.
One noticeable variation from the standard history (though
Freeman allows for the possibility of it happening ) came when
Wolfe made a special point of mentioning the exact place where
President Linccln framed his historic Gettysburg Address. When
we drove past the ancient but well kept .hotel in mid..town Gettysburg where Lincoln stayed the mght before he upstaged
Edward Everett Hale (though few thought so at the time ), Wolfe
pomted to the second floor window from which a flag draped
denoting the room the President used :
"There's where Uncoln wrote his speech," said Wolfe. "Not
on the train riding here." And he was so authoritative about it
there was little point in opening a debate. Besides, there was too
much e!Jle to see ar1d bear to waste time on a point that historians
may never settle.

.

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Sunday 10:30 · 11 : 30 •nd 5 to 9 p.m.

PH. 992-29$$

PRESCRIPTIONS
Friendly Service

112 E. MAIN

REG. '23.98

---

POMEROY,O.

Wolfe properly placed the major blame in the Confederate
defeat on the sunple military fact that Meade was operating
from interior lines of communication for supplies and
replacement troops, both of which he had in plenty, arid that just
the converse was true of the Rebs' forces .
Lee, spreading his 10en around the outside of a perimiter,
bad enough firepower to breach the Union lines but he could not
hold them. He had no reserves; and his cavalry never got there In
time for the batUe.
No battle is lost upon a single misfire. There were many
reasons for the North's victory , Among them were:
-The queer dilatory behavior of Gen. Longstreet whose
ccrps attacked three hours late and failed, after Union commanders were able to get defenders on Utile Roundtop.
-The total absence of Lee's eyes, Jeb Stewart's cavalry,
which had cricled north toward Gettysburg from the eastern side
of the Blue Ridge Mountains and never let Lee know where he
was.
-Lee's own miscalculation that the Southern soldier was
~mbeatable, no matter the odds.
-Lee agre~lng to flght at all at Gettysburg where the terrain

MORE FUN
THANA
PILLOW
FIGHT
1

STILL
I~

PROGRESS

1.99

Chord Organ Ensemble ,
37 tre-ble

k~ys,

12 chord

button s Des1gner oq~an
s tand
plus
matct'ltng
hi!I S'ioOCk ben c h Wi th deep

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Music Book Model 668-P ·

Only

39"

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1

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I RACINE - Floyd Ray Hill, Addie Hill.
II , 79, Racine, Rt I, d•ed Wed- Mr . Hill

II
I

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•• •

~L.

''V{,.•

1
1
1

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l

Urges 'no ' vote on l ss ue 3
Dear Sir:
"Issue 3" wh1ch will be submitted to the electors on
November 6th, relates to the Courts of Ohlo. This issue, among
other thmgs grants permiSSIOn toorgamze Common Pleas Courts
into districts.
·
1n other words such means that Me1gs County could become
a part of a distnct of two or more Counties, with Me1gs County
having the least population .
Under our present law each County now has the right to a
Common Pleas Court With a judge who IS a resident or the
County.
.
Passage oj "Issue 3" could eliminate tbe right of Me•gs
County, (or any other thinly populated County ) from havmg a
judge who IS a resident of their own ccunty. ThiS would be the
natural result of an election where the majority of voters res1de
In another County within such district.
· .'
This would be detrimental to the adminiStration of law m this
County and we urge you to vote "No" on ''Issue 3" .
,
Meigs County Bar Association, Manning D. Webster, President;
John C. Bacon, Judge, Common Pleas Court, and Fred W. Crow,
III, secretary, Meigs County Bar Association.

NEXT · THE PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH HEX ..
'"·

Precinct officials

Mr s. Vmlet L. Caudi ll , Mrs.
Reva N. Beach.
Pomeroy First - Mrs . An n1e
L. Moon, Mrs Audrey Young,
M iss Sharon Buffington, Mrs
Gold ie Ha wk, Mrs Sharon Y
Mattox, M rs. Jean Wtl 1.
Pomer oy 2n d
Mrs.
Patncia A . McKn tg ht, M rs .
Genevieve M ei nhart, M rs . Ell a
E Sm 1th, M rs Ved a E Dav1s,
Mrs Mildred E Ohlinger , Mrs
El eanor Werr y
Pomer oy 3 A - M rs Mar
tone E Reut er , Mrs Conn te I
Hyse lL Mr s
Ca r o l y n J
Thoma s, Mrs Nancy J Reed,
Mrs. Sharon l Manley, Mrs
Rose S1sson
Pomeroy J. B - Mrs Hazel
P E1 chinger, Mrs . Mar tha W
Str uble, Mrs Ber nad tne S.
M eie r ,
Mr s.
Peggy
M.
Hou da shel t, Mr s L eah J
Etc htnger , Mrs. Marie Wat son
Mrs Flo
Pomeroy J C Stnck l and, M rs. Pandora E.
Coll i ns, Mrs Ruth A . Ebers

Geneva Wells , M rs Adra H
Swi ck, Mr s. Jessie M Might
Mr s
M iddleport F1r st Lena M. M c Ktnley , Mr s
Glady s R Vr oman , Mr s
Juan1ta D. Gerard, Mr s Lelah
Weatherby, Mrs. Martha E . bach, Mrs Martha F HottHaggerty, M rs. Mabel Cli ne. m an, Mrs Evely n E. Gilm ore,
M 1ddl eport 2n d M r s. Mrs Sandra L Phali n
Pomeroy 4th - M rs . Ma xin e
ldred
L
.
Karr
,
M
rs
Cl
yda
L.
M
i
Wells
Owens, Mrs Jean Z1rkl e, M rs.
Al
len
sworth
,
Mrs
Loretta
Sue
Olivedate - Mrs. Darlen e
Imboden, Mr s Lett te C Roush , Esther Fugate, Mrs. Amber
Guthrt e, Mrs. Mildred V
Mrs.
l Faye Wal la ce, Mrs Lohn, Mrs. DeHa M . Norton,
Brook s, Mrs Mary 8 DuvalL
Mr s Eli zabeth I Oh !mger
Lennt
e
E Haptonsta ll
Mr s. Carr oll J Dodderer, Mrs
Middleport Pet · - Mr s
Middleport
Jrd
Mrs
Cathy
Jo Ann Franci s, M rs Betty l
Kathryn
L . Eva n s, Mr s
G Erwi n, Mrs Judtfh G.
Osbor n
Phyll is E M orri s. M rs Evelyn
Fra
ser
.
Mr
s.
Elo
tse
B
W1
lson,
Reed sv ill e Eld e n R
A Murray, Mrs Vel sia Roush ,
Stake, Mrs. Enka H. Bor i ng , Mrs. El izabet h Roush, Mrs. Mrs Car olyn J. Satterfield ,
Susan M . Ba er , Mi ss Martha
Mrs. Mary A Bt se, Charles E
Mrs Bernt ce R. Jeffers.
Hail . Mrs . Thelma J Smith , Howell
Pomer oy Pet - Mr s Lot s
4th
Mrs
Mary
M
i
ddleport
Mrs. Mt!dred 0. Harrts
M Thompson , Mrs . Mane
M
Brewer
,
Mrs.
Vto!et
M
.
Alfred - Edgar J Pullms,
Ha r t i nger , Mrs . Mary E Curd, Mrs. Don s J Bu ckl ey,
Mrs. Mary U Robtnson, Mrs
Searl
es, Mr s. lrt s A Pa'yn e, Esti t G. Col! rns. Mrs Betty J.
Charlotte F VanMeter , C L.,
Mr
s
Eul ah L. Fran c1s, Mrs Btggs, M rs . Wanda L. Eblin
Henderson , Mrs N ina H
Rock Spn ngs - M rs Agn es
Edwtna Scott.
Robinson , Mr s Evelyn Well
D1xon. M 1ss Esther E; . DilL
Ftfth
Mrs
M
tddlepor
t
Tuppers Pia tns - Creston 0
Mr s Jane Stmp so n , Mr s
Newland . Mrs . Utah W Swan , Thelma Coll tns, Mrs Margaret Emma
'Brodert c k ,
Mr s
J
Jones,
Mrs
Dorothy
L.
Mrs. Evelrn E. Summerf 1eld,
Dorothy
L.
Smith
,
Mrs
Jen McGuffm , Mrs. B~ ut a h Roush,
Mrs. Ethe M Arbaugh . Mrs
Ina B Massar , Mrs Dons A
Koenig
Mr s.
Rutland VIllage Mane B1rchf1eld, Mrs Adeline
Snowden, Mrs
Bern~ee
H.
Nelson , Mrs .
Donna
J.
Williamson , Mr s Kathleen
Ftnk , Mrs Thelma A Hysell.
East Rutland
Mrs
Virgin i a B Michael , Mrs
Myrtle M . Cl ark, Mrs Pearl E
Little, Mrs Jessie G Molden,
Passage of Issue 3 could result in
Mrs. Carne F Moore, Mrs.
Dolores E Ba1!ey .
Meigs County not having a resident
West Rutland - Mrs. Rose
judge.
Ellen
Carson ,
Seth
F
Nicholson , Mrs . Betty J
Oliver, Mrs Helena l R1ggs ,
This would greatly hinder the prompt
Mrs Maqone L Rtce, Mrs.
Dena F . Hoffman .
and effective administration of your
Dexter Mrs . Avan e l
Holliday, Mrs . Pauline H
courts.
Perry, Mrs Dorothy M . Bolen ,
Mrs. Ethel Rife , Mrs. Frances
C. Minor, Mrs
Esther F
Anderson .
Salem Mrs Nellie M .
Pd. Pol. Adv . . .
Myers, Mrs Mary E. Lathey.
Mrs. Martha R. H1cks, Mrs.

(Continued from Page I )

Marte Boyd, Mrs. Catherine Y
Wolfe, Mr s Bonnte S Miller ,
Mrs. Paultn e Wolfe
Long Bottom - Mrs Er nestine Hayman , Harry L
Coleman , Joseph E. Bissell ,
Dana C McCa in, Mrs Phylli s
M Lark tns, Mrs. Dtana K.

ntfer Wa r th
Har nsonvtlle - M rs Connte
Kay Chapman , Mrs Susan J
Kmg , M r s Eltz:a E PowelL
Mrs Betty Jean Bishop. Mrs .
Frances Young , M rs . Conn ie F
Gr ounds .
Pagevtlle - Mrs Grac1e L
Wtl son. Mr s. Bett y M . Stout .
Mrs Patncta A Bennett . M rs
Doris E Fox, M rs. M ildred D
Lee, M rs. V1olet L Di llon.
Racine V tlla ge Mrs
Erline E. Wolfe, Mrs. Dor othy
E. M c Kenzie. Mr s. Erl a E
Chns topherson, Kenneth W tlt,
M rs . Mae Cl e l a n d, ~ Mrs
All eyne F. Rees
Syra cuse V1ll age Mr s
Jane V Tea ford, Mrs Mildred
J Pi erce, Rtehard E. Duck
wor t h, M rs Esther E Harden,
Mr s Anna E Hllldore, Mrs.
Wanda J . Gui nther .
Mmer svtl te - Mrs Suste M
Fi scher, George D. Baer , Mrs
Pau t me Colli ns, Mt ss Maud
Gru eser , Mrs E1leen Cla rk,
M rs Betty Lou Johnson .
Ra ci ne Pel. - Mrs Rut h
Ann Hilt, M rs. Mattie F .
Beegl e, Mrs M yrtle L. Walker ,
Mrs. Martha Lou Beegl e, Mr s.
Esther L West , M r s Oll1e Mae
Cozart.

nesday mormng at the Beaver
Rest Home, Waverly. He was
preceded 1n death by his
parents, Chapman and Myrta
Kirwood Hill; three brothers,
Herman and Charles, and a
brotherininfancy , rour sisters,
Mrs . Thurman . ( Laura )
Martin, Mrs. Raymond (Pearl )
Ervin, Miss Ora Hill and Miss

--survived by a
s1ster, Mrs. Freda Deeter,
Columbus, and 31 nieces and
nephews.
Funeral serv1ces will be held
F'nday al 2 p.m. at the Faith
Gospel MISSion with the Rev.
Roy Deeter officiating. Burial
will be In Carmel Cemel&lt;!ry.
Fnends may call a! Ewing
Funeral Home anytime.
IS

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Cislunar space is a term
that designates the area of
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moon.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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1
To The Meigs County VoteiS
I

I. Vote (NO) oN ·Issue 3

II
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Meigs County Bar Association

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I
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water clean·U P

ANew Band
APPEARING

'

From Your Pharmacist
Here's an announcement that will be of

FRI., NOV. 2
10:30

special interest to the,ladies ..• our pharmacy

-

1:30

now features o Beouty Bar, devoted espe·
dolly to your feminine needs and offering
o complete selection of the
most famous names in cos·

nSound Investment"
Featuring John Lisle, lead singer, Bill
Francis, Pete Simpson &amp; George Norris.

metics, toiletries and other
beauty items. We invite you to
•
visit it todoyl

The Meigs Inn
'

992-3629

Pomeroy

• Washes eas1ly, wears beauttfully,
tough to scuH
• bc1tmg range ol colors to match or

• Tllere"s nothmg cleaner, easier, qulcktf
lor beaut1ful white ceilings
• No mess
doesn 't dnp hke
other lead.ng pa1nh.
• Goes on smoothl y h1des m1nor
surface defects
• Dr1es to 11elvet lm1sh tn
30 mtnutes, water clean up

accent w1th LUCilE Wall Pamt
• Goes on fast. dries even l aster to lovel1
medt.llm gloss
• Looks as lar;tast1c on woodl'. ork and
.,.ails as 11 does m your mmd

DUnON'S
Prescriptions 'Are Our Main Business

•
;

taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Floyd Ray Hill dies Wednesday

.At The Meigs

One of the hotte.\t new so urce s for natural gas is the frozen north.
America badly needs supplies of the clean gas energy available there
to help solve the energy crisis.
Columbia has gone 1
1o the Arctic to
Natural sas pipelines from the Arctic
will be built With proper reprd for
get this gas:
the area they crOss. A study a:roup in
- we·re financing drilling programs in
whictl Columbia parcicipates has
operated complex test sites and
Alaska and Canada. including
conducted lenathy field studies to
on the far islands of the high Arctic.
uamine the impact of a gas line on
- we've gotten the rights to purchase
the land and W:tterways and the
wildlife that inhabit them.
substantial gas reserves already
These studies are providing the
discovered on Alaska's North Slope.
data necessary to meet srowina
Once the Alaskan oiJ pipeline gets
c~rgy nc~ds with minimum
disturbnnce
of the environment
started, a natural gas line can also be
built from the North Slope. We can·t
produce :::e gas until oil production is
underway.
- WI''re participating in COstly
environmental and engineering
studies on how to bui\d gas lines from
the frozen north to consumers in
Columbia's service area .
.,
There'S much work yet to do, but gas from
the far north will be coming along.
Columbia Ga• is working hard today to
meet your energy needs tomorrow .

SOCKER
HOPPERS,....

I
1
1

laid against him, and before he had a superior for ce.
- And many more, which our guide, 91-year-&lt;Jid George
Wolfe, enlarged upon as he relived in his imagination-and mspired ours to feel- the crunch of shell and death of so many
thousands of brave men in three fateful days a h!tle over 110
years ago.

for gas.

SPECIAL

STRETCHER
SALE

the day after . . . l:\

lbllll 300 words long (or be subjo&lt;t to red uction by lbe

I editor ) aud must be signed with the signee's oddress.
Il Namej may be withheld upon publication. How.ever , on
1 request, names will be d!Jlclosed. Letteno should be In good

State Issue 3 would enable the legiSlature to make mumc1pal
and county courts divisions of common pleas courts and would
allow two or more counties to form a smgle common pleas court
district -an advantage to counties with small caseloads.
Judges and the Ohio State Bar Association believe the
amendment would improve the efficiency of the court system.
Issue 3 also would forbid a judge to hold another olhce or
rece•ve fees and gratuities m addition to his salary
It also would allow municipal court judges lo receive !he same
m-lerm pay raises available to judges of other cow-ts.
These pay raises would have to be enacted by the General
Assembly, wh1ch sets salaries for judges. Under the current
constitutional provisions, municipal judges may not rec,eLve a
salary boost during their terms of office, wh1ch last for six years.
Proponents of Jssne 2 point out qualified jurists may give up
their positions on the bench if they a re Wtable to receive a pay
raise until four or five years after they a re entitled to 1t.
The General Assembly origina lly intended !he in-U!rm pay
raise provision to apply to mumcipal judges when it adopted the
Modern Cow-ts Amendment of 1968,later approved by the voters.
The Ohio Supreme Court ruled !he proviSion did not apply to
municipal judges, but not before some of them already had
received pay increases. State Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson attempted to recover back pay from them in amounts of up to
$15,1100, but the legislature has since prohibited such recovery.
Meanwhile, the voters last May rejected by 31,403 votes out of
1.3 m1llion cast a constitutional amendment wh1ch would have
authorized the interm pay raises for munic1pal judges.
Supporl&lt;!rs of the judges decided to combine the proposal with
the court reorganization amendment on the November ballot m
hopes or selling it to the pubhc.

new source

Wedf) Cs day •s R es ult '

In 1950, two Puerto Hlcan
nallonalists tried to force their
way Into lllalr Houoe in
Washington in an all•nnpl to
assassi nule President Harry
Trwmm.

I

Hot

SPECIALS

6 17 12
6 14 l'

SURGERY FOR 2 CUBS
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Chicago
Cub regulars Glenn Beckert
and Jose Cardenal had successful surgery performed on
them Wednesday, lt was announced by club physician Dr.
Jaccb Suker.
Beckert had a spur removed
from hls left heel, and Suker
sald if progress was normal, he
oould begin wor~jng out in
about six weeks. Cardenal had
surgery to remove a rectal
cyst.

~~::::!::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::=:=:=:=:=:~..::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=s~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:;:-:::;~~:&gt;$

1

8 74
B 20 15
6 2Z 35

Plttsbur gh 1 Mo n t ~eal I
Bos lon 5 M lt1t1 eso ta 0
Bu ff alo 3 Ca llfof nia 2
(On ly gam e's !!.Chedu led)
Thursday's Game s
Toronto al NY Island ers
NY Rangers at Los Ange les
Chi cago a t Philadelph ia
Cal i fornia at Atlan ta
{OnJ.v games Schedul ed)

the gUaranteed
deOdorants!

h•t
I

.00

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

t:1

ti::f-ot.ard fa.""orn..e! ...ub lCtth,r il nk'1t:i s,~tJ t!u~ rn
&amp;.lil&lt;orT11io are all JKObl hili w
~t:tr.. :~i!~ ran:l.t-d
.~ l .aba tnll
over
Ute~:h ,
me-e~ 1ng ~-h.S.! 1S1 ! ppl State. Ja vr1r 1\.U
:J:,.f1l..nr,U,ol ~ !aang Wee slungtnn .ctnd L ~hftJrni.a ,
•
J-:.wa S.Ui'i. € 1 fa rtb· an.ktd resptell.,.ly.
Elsewh.,.e,
r.,oosplay•
!.II~' ~ agall'&amp; !r,
oinJ&gt; lill!l nf'.Ma!W&lt;l Sotn , Georg,.., MiMouri g""" againlll
Y.an= SUI&lt;!, Tul&gt; ne OPP"'*"'
Dame tatthr..£ ~i\~

1.htw

Reu!s, a voLatile raoiio tall:
P..t:'USS, -a'brJ has nt"';er t.e::en sh&lt;,w 00.0. in the off r&lt;Jun, who
rAt-en lr.YJk on tt-.e Hoo.swn
llf .J tu,wy '"'' 'th Ht.IU..9hn wr: .-~.· r..r , fi;aj S 'the As1J(tS pt:l ld WJ m:an.agerl'l:t!Ot, says May 1.! a
" top prOSIJ""1 " ,.'ho'll piEy
tu .;h " r.nu ffJr !Iii. y
'f.Kll)' D"ctYt H()tA!r"LS ·~;r1n r,;gularly '01th Hoostvn , ·'rut I
rr.tlf'f! garnt5 than mt: Uus ha\•e Jroven my.self .n
~ngutllffi L&lt;.d

• Ia t•IOn
00 Is ' ISO

COLUMBUS IUPI) - A
C1 cvel a nd -~ r ca state senator
Gr.lllpolls al At hen!l
Wc'dnesday l'l!lll'd lor an onl ronfon a l Wellston
vcstlg::ttlfJn into what he term·
Jn c k ~o n nl ~vg~n
Waverl y .!I t Meigs
ed " appar ent racia l i84Jlatwn"
TRI .VALLEY
whteh haB left three C.1eveland
Ft·d{lrJ;;I Hocking a t Warren
area high schools outside of
VInton County at
Nelsonv il le York two ncwl y..formed suburba n
SVAC
r"oothall leagueR .
N•)rt h Gall la at Ea s- ter n
Stale sen M. Mom s JackS yrllm l! 'o V~ ll cy at Hannan
""" , D-Ocvcland, said East
1ro w
~ou t hcrn at Southwestern
Clevela nd Shaw, Shaker
Others
Height• and (.1evcla nd Heights
At exa m.Jer al Belpre

.. J.utd~o ilJ BED

L"nvto •..e n ond trJ ;..-r~ :Jl:~'lj
S'...a!k F:fAtui~ •Jfi d f/,,J

lr.f!!ng
dele::~S~a cap-

Colonels impress Wilt

T HI S W EE K'S SCH E DUL E
F RIDAY
SEOAL

SALE

(~ ,.,~

}fr,..t; t.t

an .. m

•

9 "i
7~

Hud!iOrl , KC
Walt er, KC

tr~)

'f(t'KJ~

(~tr.-h er

Btll Vi rdrJn
nc1body coul d fill

C.'hamberlain said aher Ken·
tucky had blitzed his &amp;m Diego
7 4 c,,, qu iB tad ors
146-IOo .
N;u nt! , T
T O PAT Pt s Av; "Gllrnort: means everything to
P , R ldg•,, J
10 8 68 13.6 that team on defense and on the
C;,r t~r, 1
P.
0 413 9.6 board•
fo/\a Ut:y. 1
5 1~ 48 19 .6
Dan l&amp;oel led the C&lt;&gt;loneis
W1.:l l11., WfJ v
S 0 30 6 0
Th ornp-.on , J
A
4 78 s 6 with 2!J polntJ! and tettrnmale
Krt'b~. L
1 'l ?O 4 o Mike Gale had a career-h1gh of
H 1 J t '~n . Wt•ll
1 ? ?0 4 0 2.'.l
Wolh,,
M
J
18 J6
l6 .. 'Ill c ''·
I I hea~,~~:n
•·· Just
Rr:t':i.G
:.1
o0 l.P.
vJOne11,
B•:rr l dg~.:. G
J
o 18 1 6 - on ce (n nJne J&lt;arnes this seaqon,
SVA C ti,CORIN G
widened the1r l€!ad over second
Na m .:, T
TO PAl Pu. Avg
,
Near-c . S' thn
? BO l b o place Carolma m ~~ Arne nc&lt;~n
11
LOQan. NG
~
1 YJ- 11 1 Basketball ARst-,clatwn's EastTnbor, KC
10 6 66 11 0 (!rfl DIVL!iion to 1'1:! gamCH ali
Smllh. NG
5 ? 3? 6'
Lt:w lri, .S' thtn
~ 'J 31 6.4 the Coug:ars loKt &lt;l Wl-99
KC

t!.u'il ;, r!:

t6 !J"J K.a'l
y~ar! -.e

i:

Pt P l f~ljt;~t nl
We H•,tr)r'l

2~3 · r ~ J

~&amp;.x~atJ
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then --m anag~r

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'""""gtr , will c-hallenge that
wh&lt;: n Reuss gel.'&lt; w Piusl.urgh
" 11 wasn 't &lt;ln easy trade to
rnal&lt;e," he s;nd Wednesda y
ru.ght "We g.ave up a man WhfJ
can l'P-a;me an rJLrt.standlilg

Ptlt~df 1~tlli

t.-tay , 23, w d-8 &lt;:t 8\..artjng
CdU:her with P'itt.sbw-.. ~ last
71 l i: J P. '}
!5-''
91. ( 'f J 10 7 hWntner untiJ JU~ l!J, whtn

Loq.,n

•/,

rcltd

1.,wer Mloull of Ohio playa
••rrt Mlc:hl •an.
W' ~
~'
~

Pirates -trade May for Reuss

~ ~

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sw 1 £1glll.h·nnktd Anwna
5\.aU, runth·ntoiled UCLA aud

Issues 2 and 3, if approved,
would affect courts and taxes

I,

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MIDDLEPORT, O.

..

~-~~~--~~--------~------------------------~------------~----------~~~~~---'_l

Hours : 7 a.m. to S: JO p.m .
17!-SISJ

,

O~uty

MASON, W. VA .

7 a.m. to a p.m. Friday &amp; Saturday

____________________________._____~~----~li~-~---,----~~----------~----~

\

�•

•

a- The. Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Nov . 1, 1973

'awesome Buck~ye' gridders
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~nd t.'8pet1ally AttJs GJlmvr~, ''

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SATURDAY

DAVIS 1\Et,EA S f~D
POil'l'I,IIND. Ore (UPI ) 'l11c Portland Trail Blazers of
the Nntlonnl B•skcthall A.•·
sodlatton onnounced Wed·
nesday U1e 1·elease of Charllo
Davis, n 6-foot-21!uard plnylng
his U1lrd
as • pro.

BOYS &amp; GIRI.S
PAJAMAS
9 MO. 10 6 YRS.

REG. '4.50 -'6.00

s3.75
GOWNS
9 MO. TU SIZE 4
REG. '3.50 &amp;'4.50

Pr ou Inte rn ati on a l

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15 51 2e

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EDITORS : Tbls!Jl lbe Ialii In a series of d!Jlpatcbe s prepared by
United Press loteroaUooal' detailing the cool&lt;!ols of the lour
constitutional questions appearing on the Nov. 6 ballollo Ohio.

' wti l QI'1 l1n. Con ta in 'I
no diAQ ~ro u' d Ht'' 1 n d will
( 1 t lu•

nfJt

m•k t-

you

ntrvou• .

No

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rour li fe , . . tfu t tod• v .
MONA DE JIC co1U U . fiO for I 20
dn wpply and H .OO tor rwlu
th ~ .. ttl(ltJrlf LOJ.* Ull't f• t or
vour mr.mt v wlll bt re f un d ed

Kentucky , T•xa s ta ckle"
&amp;Juthfm Methr.idJJ!t , Ntl.. a•k•
meets Colorado, Holl'lt&lt;m fa ct!l
Fl~nd a St&lt;~le, T-.a ~ TeciJ

w1tt1 no

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMB US (UP!)- The Ohio electorate will vote Tuesday on
ccnstitutional amendments to remove the $3,000 ceiling on family
exemptions from the personal income tax, and to inerge
m_unicipal and common pleas courts, permitting mumc1pal
judges to receive in..term pay raises.
State Issue 2, if approved, would allow the General Assembly
to write new arxi presumably more generous exemptions mto the
state income lax law. The constitutional ceiling is $3,000 per
family, and the Jaw allows six at $&gt;00 apiece.
State Issue 3 is basically a judicial reorganization amendment,
permitting the legislature to place aU courts of record under a
single system administered by the Ohio Supreme Court. The inl&lt;!rm pay hike for municipal judges is a related issue resulting
from an oversight in 1968.
The $3,1100 limit on Income tax exemptions was written in 1912,
when Ohio had no income tax. In enacting the income tax m 1971,
the lawmakers had to adhere to the ceiling although it penalized
farnilies witll more than six members.
Expanding the number and amount of exemptions would cost
the state an estunated $2 million to $3 million a year m los!
revenues, according to legislators.
Opponents of State Issue 2 say it would open the door to a
variety of other exemptions from the income tax. They also
ccntend removal or the $3,1100 figure from the Constitution might
enable future legislators to lower the number and amount of
exemptions, instead or raising them.

••kt d by :
SWI!ihtr' &amp; LOh\111 Dr ug, 112 E .
&lt;Matn. fl~mftrrJy • O u l1o n Dr ug
~tOf'll , Mteldl t porf . M•ll Ord•n

plays R1 r e , Auburn meds

qultltl i on~.

F tll111d
- Pd AdV

Florida , and Mid Arnericotn

v, nome pi&gt; 1&lt;

Lt was a trade whk'b closely

yeGsi ," S&lt;JLd P~~ . wi'YJ was ]r,..
13. "Yoo d!JI'l 1t tradt" aw&lt;;~y ont

(A your ti'Jp pit.chen fr1r a
Pf.ayer wtw hw:~ rwt }X'rJV t-n
h.nn~U ."

Jf.ii: Brown, Ptratts' gerer&lt;ll

T'h.at was the pnce we
were l'illin g w pay w get

resembled the Pirates' swap of
'"""'nd baseman Dave Cash [or
Brett Cash was a someumesspectacular glove man whose
reputaltoo as a clutch hitter
was short-live&lt;! last season His
asset.s and liabilities ffil!Tored
those of hi.S successor, ReMie
Stenneu, rut Steru!eu had one
rnore thing going for himyouth
Sanguillen never rerovered
his catching form after returnl!lg from right field but the
Buc-s are bar~l:l!lg on him once

N Y Rngr s 3
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LOS Angeles 3

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S

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~am bec.cmlllll

tbe SatiOOBI
League East's answer to
Johnny Bench. So May , ..00 rut
_21J.j t.n 101 games, '!l'as ex·
pendable.
Although Pirate Manager
Danny Munaugh SBld at the
time of the Brett-Cash trade
the Bucs desperal&lt;!ly needed
lefthanders , Brown :says
qlllllity was the rought-aft.er
commodity and ·'the fact !hat
the) are left.handers is just an
extra plus ."
Pirate pitchers finished ..-vmth out of 12 teams 111 earned
run averages last year w1th
3.73. Theu- only left-handed
starter of note was Luke
Wall&lt; e.- , and the no!&lt;! was sour
Ask for a ,.-ecise reason for
the nosedive fr om the U72
Eastern Division t•tle year,
when the Sues had a 2 73
combmed ERA, and the brass
w;ll tell you it was SU!ve
Blass's spu-al.
Blass was 19-8 on 1972 and
gave up an aver age of 2 48 runs
per game. Last year opposong
teBmS could ccunl on about
rune when Blass was on the
mowxi. He won only three and
lost nme
Nellie Br iles was the closest
th ing to a "stopper" that
Pittsbw-gh had. He was 14-13
w1th a 2 84 ERA.
"Had Blass had a good year
we possibly cculd ha ve turned
11 ar ound ," satd Pirate
pubhc1st B1ll Guilfoyle .
Without pitching tbe Pu-al&lt;!s
fimshed two games under !iOO
and third in the d1vis10n.
In Reuss, Pittsburgh now has
a strikeo.ut pllcher . He finished
f1fth last year With 177.
"Joe (Brown ) feels potenttaUy we have perhaps the
strongest pitchmg staff in
either league," GUilfoyle said.
"Of course, that's what we
thought last year al th1s time
too ."

However , both Gilmore and
overtime deciSion to the San
McCarthy
were im pr essed
Antonio Spurs. The Denver
Rockets overcarnt a 17-pomt w1t.h the play of San Diego's
defit1t w ntp the New York rook•e Caldwell Jones , l' ho has
1\ct.s 107-104 in the only other the maltings or a rme pro
center. Pla)'Uig w1th a mask to
ABA gam•.
Gilmure, who pulled down 2J prote c t a b r oken nose
rehouncL• and W&gt;red 17 points, sustall\ed last week, the 7-foot
expressed
great
dJ sap· Jo nes came close W outplaymg
pointment that C'hamherlain L' Gilmore in the first hall and
being relegat.d w coachtng wound up with 12 pomts and 14
duties by a court order ob- rebounds .
"Truthfull y, I ' ve neve r
tained by tile Los Angeles
heard of him before, " Gilmore
[.llkers of the NBA
smd
. "What's his ftrst name?
"I'd love to see h1m out
there,"' the ColoneL•' 7-fool-2 He IS tough From now on I'll
center said " The r e's a lot I know abOut hLm. "
lh runrung up thetr highest
could learn from playing
scor
e of the seaso n, th e
aga uurt hm1."
"There's no doubt about Jt, " Colonels set a flock of team
chimed in Kent ucky Coach records and t1ed the ABA
&amp;be McCarthy "The fans are record for mos t defens tv e
really bemg cheated by not rebounds m one game--60.
gettmg a chance to see two Gilmore had 16
James S1las popped in a IS-great centcrr:; !Jkc ArtiS and
foot
JUmp shot with four
Wilt go aga•rt•t each other ."
seconds left lil overtime to gtve
San Antonio its victory over
Carolma Silas scored Sill of his
total 15 pomts in the overtune
period after Carolina 's Jlm
Chones !led the game at 91 w1th
high schools, aU wi th substan- a free throw al the end or
tial black enrollments, have regulatiOn play
been orphar1 ed by the dedsion
Rich Jones was the top
of the other seven schools in the scorer for Sao ,Antonio with 22
Lake Erie League to join new and Joe Hamilton added 21
conferences 1n 1975--76
while Billy Cunningham had 30
Jackson asked the LeglSia- points and Joe Caldwell hit 21
ti ve Service Corrumssion, the
for Carolina.
research arm of the General
San D1ego Coach Tom NisA'3semb1y to detenmne who salke was ejecl&lt;!d from the
has juri.'Kiwtwn over such sJtugame for two technical fouls
atioml and what r ecour~ the and a fight broke out between
isolated schools have. He said
San Antonio 's Jerry Chambers
he would sponsor corret1jW
and Carolma's Denrus Wuycik
legtslat10n , 1f necessar y.
that brought both teams onto
the court.
CHUCK SMrtH NAMED
E1ght points by rookie Mike
NEW YORK (UP!) - Chuck
Green m the final four minutes
Smith of Yankton (S.D.) , who
sparked Denver's comeback
rushed for more than 200 yards
wm over New York. His final
for the second consecutive basket provided the wirming
game, has been selected as points with 51 seconds left.
UPI's NatiOnal AsliOciation of
Denver was led in scoring by
Inter collegiate Athl ellcs Marvm Roberts with 22 points
(NATA ) Back-of·the-Week.
and Dave Robisch, with 18, '
Lineman honors went to Ken
ABA scoring leader Julius
Hutcherson, a llnehacker from Erving took game honors with
Uvingston (Ala.)
38 pomts for the Nets .

"

TU//Y

Tussy Cream , Stick
Ro ll On Deodoranls
and A n11 - Pe r s p~ran1 s S a1 •slact•on .
or yo u r mon ey back
tor less mon ey

by the editor
For the first time 1rt 33 years, since leaving college and gomg
off to war, my two week vacation concluded Sunday was well·
spent in leisurely travel that included visits to places important
m our American heritage and to others of unsw-passed beauty.
There were highlights worth remembering :
Gettysburg. Ow- guide employed to ride w1th my party or
three around the once-bloodied slopes of Utile Roundtop and
Cemetery Ridge where General Robert E . Lee made the only
militaFy error of his star-filled career, was 91-year-&lt;Jid George
Wolfe, Surprisingly spry for his age, the old fellow allowed as
how he no doubt was related to the Wolfe (or Wolf) families of
Meigs County, Ohio. "You see ," he said, "both my mother and
my father were named Wolfe, though of no blood relation."
Born in a httle town 13 miles east of Gettysburg , Wolfe sa1d
his father heard the cacaphony of guns when Pickett's 5,000 men
were repulsed by Meade.
We were lucky to have Wolfe as our private guide, because,
at his age, he accepted no more than one tour per day. He never
stopped talking other !han to answer questions wedged in when
he paused to regain his breath. Much of his ccmmentary was out
of a book, or ccurse; his pithy remarks about the comparative
military skills of the combatting generals in the woods and on the
hills just east of, the village of Geltysburg , were straight out of
Douglas Southall Freeman's monumental triology on the Civil
War.
·
But Wolfe, with roots so close to the roar of the guns 110 years
ago IJis\July 1-2-:1; gave them unexpected authenticity. HIS fee of
$7 was modest, meriting my unsolicited and unexpected $3 tip.
One noticeable variation from the standard history (though
Freeman allows for the possibility of it happening ) came when
Wolfe made a special point of mentioning the exact place where
President Linccln framed his historic Gettysburg Address. When
we drove past the ancient but well kept .hotel in mid..town Gettysburg where Lincoln stayed the mght before he upstaged
Edward Everett Hale (though few thought so at the time ), Wolfe
pomted to the second floor window from which a flag draped
denoting the room the President used :
"There's where Uncoln wrote his speech," said Wolfe. "Not
on the train riding here." And he was so authoritative about it
there was little point in opening a debate. Besides, there was too
much e!Jle to see ar1d bear to waste time on a point that historians
may never settle.

.

ONLY

2 oz. Cream 59~
take home a
6-pack $3 54
2-1 / 8 OZ STICK

59~

1·3 / 4 OZ ROLL ·O N

594;

7 OZ SPRAY DE ODOR AN f

79t;

13 OZ DR Y AN TI-PER S PIRANT
SPRAY

$1.59

Kenneth McCullolfQih. R. Ph.

Chartes Riffle, R. Pt1

O,.n Dally 1:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.
Sunday 10:30 · 11 : 30 •nd 5 to 9 p.m.

PH. 992-29$$

PRESCRIPTIONS
Friendly Service

112 E. MAIN

REG. '23.98

---

POMEROY,O.

Wolfe properly placed the major blame in the Confederate
defeat on the sunple military fact that Meade was operating
from interior lines of communication for supplies and
replacement troops, both of which he had in plenty, arid that just
the converse was true of the Rebs' forces .
Lee, spreading his 10en around the outside of a perimiter,
bad enough firepower to breach the Union lines but he could not
hold them. He had no reserves; and his cavalry never got there In
time for the batUe.
No battle is lost upon a single misfire. There were many
reasons for the North's victory , Among them were:
-The queer dilatory behavior of Gen. Longstreet whose
ccrps attacked three hours late and failed, after Union commanders were able to get defenders on Utile Roundtop.
-The total absence of Lee's eyes, Jeb Stewart's cavalry,
which had cricled north toward Gettysburg from the eastern side
of the Blue Ridge Mountains and never let Lee know where he
was.
-Lee's own miscalculation that the Southern soldier was
~mbeatable, no matter the odds.
-Lee agre~lng to flght at all at Gettysburg where the terrain

MORE FUN
THANA
PILLOW
FIGHT
1

STILL
I~

PROGRESS

1.99

Chord Organ Ensemble ,
37 tre-ble

k~ys,

12 chord

button s Des1gner oq~an
s tand
plus
matct'ltng
hi!I S'ioOCk ben c h Wi th deep

loam cvs h oon Mo&amp;gn us
Music Book Model 668-P ·

Only

39"

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1

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I RACINE - Floyd Ray Hill, Addie Hill.
II , 79, Racine, Rt I, d•ed Wed- Mr . Hill

II
I

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''V{,.•

1
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1

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Urges 'no ' vote on l ss ue 3
Dear Sir:
"Issue 3" wh1ch will be submitted to the electors on
November 6th, relates to the Courts of Ohlo. This issue, among
other thmgs grants permiSSIOn toorgamze Common Pleas Courts
into districts.
·
1n other words such means that Me1gs County could become
a part of a distnct of two or more Counties, with Me1gs County
having the least population .
Under our present law each County now has the right to a
Common Pleas Court With a judge who IS a resident or the
County.
.
Passage oj "Issue 3" could eliminate tbe right of Me•gs
County, (or any other thinly populated County ) from havmg a
judge who IS a resident of their own ccunty. ThiS would be the
natural result of an election where the majority of voters res1de
In another County within such district.
· .'
This would be detrimental to the adminiStration of law m this
County and we urge you to vote "No" on ''Issue 3" .
,
Meigs County Bar Association, Manning D. Webster, President;
John C. Bacon, Judge, Common Pleas Court, and Fred W. Crow,
III, secretary, Meigs County Bar Association.

NEXT · THE PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH HEX ..
'"·

Precinct officials

Mr s. Vmlet L. Caudi ll , Mrs.
Reva N. Beach.
Pomeroy First - Mrs . An n1e
L. Moon, Mrs Audrey Young,
M iss Sharon Buffington, Mrs
Gold ie Ha wk, Mrs Sharon Y
Mattox, M rs. Jean Wtl 1.
Pomer oy 2n d
Mrs.
Patncia A . McKn tg ht, M rs .
Genevieve M ei nhart, M rs . Ell a
E Sm 1th, M rs Ved a E Dav1s,
Mrs Mildred E Ohlinger , Mrs
El eanor Werr y
Pomer oy 3 A - M rs Mar
tone E Reut er , Mrs Conn te I
Hyse lL Mr s
Ca r o l y n J
Thoma s, Mrs Nancy J Reed,
Mrs. Sharon l Manley, Mrs
Rose S1sson
Pomeroy J. B - Mrs Hazel
P E1 chinger, Mrs . Mar tha W
Str uble, Mrs Ber nad tne S.
M eie r ,
Mr s.
Peggy
M.
Hou da shel t, Mr s L eah J
Etc htnger , Mrs. Marie Wat son
Mrs Flo
Pomeroy J C Stnck l and, M rs. Pandora E.
Coll i ns, Mrs Ruth A . Ebers

Geneva Wells , M rs Adra H
Swi ck, Mr s. Jessie M Might
Mr s
M iddleport F1r st Lena M. M c Ktnley , Mr s
Glady s R Vr oman , Mr s
Juan1ta D. Gerard, Mr s Lelah
Weatherby, Mrs. Martha E . bach, Mrs Martha F HottHaggerty, M rs. Mabel Cli ne. m an, Mrs Evely n E. Gilm ore,
M 1ddl eport 2n d M r s. Mrs Sandra L Phali n
Pomeroy 4th - M rs . Ma xin e
ldred
L
.
Karr
,
M
rs
Cl
yda
L.
M
i
Wells
Owens, Mrs Jean Z1rkl e, M rs.
Al
len
sworth
,
Mrs
Loretta
Sue
Olivedate - Mrs. Darlen e
Imboden, Mr s Lett te C Roush , Esther Fugate, Mrs. Amber
Guthrt e, Mrs. Mildred V
Mrs.
l Faye Wal la ce, Mrs Lohn, Mrs. DeHa M . Norton,
Brook s, Mrs Mary 8 DuvalL
Mr s Eli zabeth I Oh !mger
Lennt
e
E Haptonsta ll
Mr s. Carr oll J Dodderer, Mrs
Middleport Pet · - Mr s
Middleport
Jrd
Mrs
Cathy
Jo Ann Franci s, M rs Betty l
Kathryn
L . Eva n s, Mr s
G Erwi n, Mrs Judtfh G.
Osbor n
Phyll is E M orri s. M rs Evelyn
Fra
ser
.
Mr
s.
Elo
tse
B
W1
lson,
Reed sv ill e Eld e n R
A Murray, Mrs Vel sia Roush ,
Stake, Mrs. Enka H. Bor i ng , Mrs. El izabet h Roush, Mrs. Mrs Car olyn J. Satterfield ,
Susan M . Ba er , Mi ss Martha
Mrs. Mary A Bt se, Charles E
Mrs Bernt ce R. Jeffers.
Hail . Mrs . Thelma J Smith , Howell
Pomer oy Pet - Mr s Lot s
4th
Mrs
Mary
M
i
ddleport
Mrs. Mt!dred 0. Harrts
M Thompson , Mrs . Mane
M
Brewer
,
Mrs.
Vto!et
M
.
Alfred - Edgar J Pullms,
Ha r t i nger , Mrs . Mary E Curd, Mrs. Don s J Bu ckl ey,
Mrs. Mary U Robtnson, Mrs
Searl
es, Mr s. lrt s A Pa'yn e, Esti t G. Col! rns. Mrs Betty J.
Charlotte F VanMeter , C L.,
Mr
s
Eul ah L. Fran c1s, Mrs Btggs, M rs . Wanda L. Eblin
Henderson , Mrs N ina H
Rock Spn ngs - M rs Agn es
Edwtna Scott.
Robinson , Mr s Evelyn Well
D1xon. M 1ss Esther E; . DilL
Ftfth
Mrs
M
tddlepor
t
Tuppers Pia tns - Creston 0
Mr s Jane Stmp so n , Mr s
Newland . Mrs . Utah W Swan , Thelma Coll tns, Mrs Margaret Emma
'Brodert c k ,
Mr s
J
Jones,
Mrs
Dorothy
L.
Mrs. Evelrn E. Summerf 1eld,
Dorothy
L.
Smith
,
Mrs
Jen McGuffm , Mrs. B~ ut a h Roush,
Mrs. Ethe M Arbaugh . Mrs
Ina B Massar , Mrs Dons A
Koenig
Mr s.
Rutland VIllage Mane B1rchf1eld, Mrs Adeline
Snowden, Mrs
Bern~ee
H.
Nelson , Mrs .
Donna
J.
Williamson , Mr s Kathleen
Ftnk , Mrs Thelma A Hysell.
East Rutland
Mrs
Virgin i a B Michael , Mrs
Myrtle M . Cl ark, Mrs Pearl E
Little, Mrs Jessie G Molden,
Passage of Issue 3 could result in
Mrs. Carne F Moore, Mrs.
Dolores E Ba1!ey .
Meigs County not having a resident
West Rutland - Mrs. Rose
judge.
Ellen
Carson ,
Seth
F
Nicholson , Mrs . Betty J
Oliver, Mrs Helena l R1ggs ,
This would greatly hinder the prompt
Mrs Maqone L Rtce, Mrs.
Dena F . Hoffman .
and effective administration of your
Dexter Mrs . Avan e l
Holliday, Mrs . Pauline H
courts.
Perry, Mrs Dorothy M . Bolen ,
Mrs. Ethel Rife , Mrs. Frances
C. Minor, Mrs
Esther F
Anderson .
Salem Mrs Nellie M .
Pd. Pol. Adv . . .
Myers, Mrs Mary E. Lathey.
Mrs. Martha R. H1cks, Mrs.

(Continued from Page I )

Marte Boyd, Mrs. Catherine Y
Wolfe, Mr s Bonnte S Miller ,
Mrs. Paultn e Wolfe
Long Bottom - Mrs Er nestine Hayman , Harry L
Coleman , Joseph E. Bissell ,
Dana C McCa in, Mrs Phylli s
M Lark tns, Mrs. Dtana K.

ntfer Wa r th
Har nsonvtlle - M rs Connte
Kay Chapman , Mrs Susan J
Kmg , M r s Eltz:a E PowelL
Mrs Betty Jean Bishop. Mrs .
Frances Young , M rs . Conn ie F
Gr ounds .
Pagevtlle - Mrs Grac1e L
Wtl son. Mr s. Bett y M . Stout .
Mrs Patncta A Bennett . M rs
Doris E Fox, M rs. M ildred D
Lee, M rs. V1olet L Di llon.
Racine V tlla ge Mrs
Erline E. Wolfe, Mrs. Dor othy
E. M c Kenzie. Mr s. Erl a E
Chns topherson, Kenneth W tlt,
M rs . Mae Cl e l a n d, ~ Mrs
All eyne F. Rees
Syra cuse V1ll age Mr s
Jane V Tea ford, Mrs Mildred
J Pi erce, Rtehard E. Duck
wor t h, M rs Esther E Harden,
Mr s Anna E Hllldore, Mrs.
Wanda J . Gui nther .
Mmer svtl te - Mrs Suste M
Fi scher, George D. Baer , Mrs
Pau t me Colli ns, Mt ss Maud
Gru eser , Mrs E1leen Cla rk,
M rs Betty Lou Johnson .
Ra ci ne Pel. - Mrs Rut h
Ann Hilt, M rs. Mattie F .
Beegl e, Mrs M yrtle L. Walker ,
Mrs. Martha Lou Beegl e, Mr s.
Esther L West , M r s Oll1e Mae
Cozart.

nesday mormng at the Beaver
Rest Home, Waverly. He was
preceded 1n death by his
parents, Chapman and Myrta
Kirwood Hill; three brothers,
Herman and Charles, and a
brotherininfancy , rour sisters,
Mrs . Thurman . ( Laura )
Martin, Mrs. Raymond (Pearl )
Ervin, Miss Ora Hill and Miss

--survived by a
s1ster, Mrs. Freda Deeter,
Columbus, and 31 nieces and
nephews.
Funeral serv1ces will be held
F'nday al 2 p.m. at the Faith
Gospel MISSion with the Rev.
Roy Deeter officiating. Burial
will be In Carmel Cemel&lt;!ry.
Fnends may call a! Ewing
Funeral Home anytime.
IS

-

NURSE -MATES®

'

$1399
Featuring Remarkably flexible, Slip-resistant

SQUEE-GEE-ACTION SOLES
Designed fo r women wh o are apt to work on slippery
floors, Th e am az tng squee-gee·act ton sole helps prevent
shpprng or sl1d 1ng. EnJOY youthful style and sure -footed
comfort m Nu{se Mates- serv1ce shoes designed for
bu sy, workmg feet .
. a delightful new feel 1n hght,
fle x1ble serv ice footwear

heritage house
Your THOM MeAN Store

Cislunar space is a term
that designates the area of
space between earth and the
moon.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.---------------~
1
To The Meigs County VoteiS
I

I. Vote (NO) oN ·Issue 3

II
II
I
I
I

.

I
I
I
I
I
I
1

Meigs County Bar Association

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

I
LUCITE is !he wa ll paont that makes
1t ea sy t o put that 1magmed color on
the wa lis. It never needs stirring,
doesn't dnp l ike other leadmg pamts.
LUCITE goes on fast. dnes even
faster, and ha s exc el lent covering
power You have an exc!t 1ng range
of col ors to choose. from that lets
you patnt what you thmk Soap and
water clean·U P

ANew Band
APPEARING

'

From Your Pharmacist
Here's an announcement that will be of

FRI., NOV. 2
10:30

special interest to the,ladies ..• our pharmacy

-

1:30

now features o Beouty Bar, devoted espe·
dolly to your feminine needs and offering
o complete selection of the
most famous names in cos·

nSound Investment"
Featuring John Lisle, lead singer, Bill
Francis, Pete Simpson &amp; George Norris.

metics, toiletries and other
beauty items. We invite you to
•
visit it todoyl

The Meigs Inn
'

992-3629

Pomeroy

• Washes eas1ly, wears beauttfully,
tough to scuH
• bc1tmg range ol colors to match or

• Tllere"s nothmg cleaner, easier, qulcktf
lor beaut1ful white ceilings
• No mess
doesn 't dnp hke
other lead.ng pa1nh.
• Goes on smoothl y h1des m1nor
surface defects
• Dr1es to 11elvet lm1sh tn
30 mtnutes, water clean up

accent w1th LUCilE Wall Pamt
• Goes on fast. dries even l aster to lovel1
medt.llm gloss
• Looks as lar;tast1c on woodl'. ork and
.,.ails as 11 does m your mmd

DUnON'S
Prescriptions 'Are Our Main Business

•
;

taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Floyd Ray Hill dies Wednesday

.At The Meigs

One of the hotte.\t new so urce s for natural gas is the frozen north.
America badly needs supplies of the clean gas energy available there
to help solve the energy crisis.
Columbia has gone 1
1o the Arctic to
Natural sas pipelines from the Arctic
will be built With proper reprd for
get this gas:
the area they crOss. A study a:roup in
- we·re financing drilling programs in
whictl Columbia parcicipates has
operated complex test sites and
Alaska and Canada. including
conducted lenathy field studies to
on the far islands of the high Arctic.
uamine the impact of a gas line on
- we've gotten the rights to purchase
the land and W:tterways and the
wildlife that inhabit them.
substantial gas reserves already
These studies are providing the
discovered on Alaska's North Slope.
data necessary to meet srowina
Once the Alaskan oiJ pipeline gets
c~rgy nc~ds with minimum
disturbnnce
of the environment
started, a natural gas line can also be
built from the North Slope. We can·t
produce :::e gas until oil production is
underway.
- WI''re participating in COstly
environmental and engineering
studies on how to bui\d gas lines from
the frozen north to consumers in
Columbia's service area .
.,
There'S much work yet to do, but gas from
the far north will be coming along.
Columbia Ga• is working hard today to
meet your energy needs tomorrow .

SOCKER
HOPPERS,....

I
1
1

laid against him, and before he had a superior for ce.
- And many more, which our guide, 91-year-&lt;Jid George
Wolfe, enlarged upon as he relived in his imagination-and mspired ours to feel- the crunch of shell and death of so many
thousands of brave men in three fateful days a h!tle over 110
years ago.

for gas.

SPECIAL

STRETCHER
SALE

the day after . . . l:\

lbllll 300 words long (or be subjo&lt;t to red uction by lbe

I editor ) aud must be signed with the signee's oddress.
Il Namej may be withheld upon publication. How.ever , on
1 request, names will be d!Jlclosed. Letteno should be In good

State Issue 3 would enable the legiSlature to make mumc1pal
and county courts divisions of common pleas courts and would
allow two or more counties to form a smgle common pleas court
district -an advantage to counties with small caseloads.
Judges and the Ohio State Bar Association believe the
amendment would improve the efficiency of the court system.
Issue 3 also would forbid a judge to hold another olhce or
rece•ve fees and gratuities m addition to his salary
It also would allow municipal court judges lo receive !he same
m-lerm pay raises available to judges of other cow-ts.
These pay raises would have to be enacted by the General
Assembly, wh1ch sets salaries for judges. Under the current
constitutional provisions, municipal judges may not rec,eLve a
salary boost during their terms of office, wh1ch last for six years.
Proponents of Jssne 2 point out qualified jurists may give up
their positions on the bench if they a re Wtable to receive a pay
raise until four or five years after they a re entitled to 1t.
The General Assembly origina lly intended !he in-U!rm pay
raise provision to apply to mumcipal judges when it adopted the
Modern Cow-ts Amendment of 1968,later approved by the voters.
The Ohio Supreme Court ruled !he proviSion did not apply to
municipal judges, but not before some of them already had
received pay increases. State Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson attempted to recover back pay from them in amounts of up to
$15,1100, but the legislature has since prohibited such recovery.
Meanwhile, the voters last May rejected by 31,403 votes out of
1.3 m1llion cast a constitutional amendment wh1ch would have
authorized the interm pay raises for munic1pal judges.
Supporl&lt;!rs of the judges decided to combine the proposal with
the court reorganization amendment on the November ballot m
hopes or selling it to the pubhc.

new source

Wedf) Cs day •s R es ult '

In 1950, two Puerto Hlcan
nallonalists tried to force their
way Into lllalr Houoe in
Washington in an all•nnpl to
assassi nule President Harry
Trwmm.

I

Hot

SPECIALS

6 17 12
6 14 l'

SURGERY FOR 2 CUBS
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Chicago
Cub regulars Glenn Beckert
and Jose Cardenal had successful surgery performed on
them Wednesday, lt was announced by club physician Dr.
Jaccb Suker.
Beckert had a spur removed
from hls left heel, and Suker
sald if progress was normal, he
oould begin wor~jng out in
about six weeks. Cardenal had
surgery to remove a rectal
cyst.

~~::::!::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::=:=:=:=:=:~..::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=s~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:;:-:::;~~:&gt;$

1

8 74
B 20 15
6 2Z 35

Plttsbur gh 1 Mo n t ~eal I
Bos lon 5 M lt1t1 eso ta 0
Bu ff alo 3 Ca llfof nia 2
(On ly gam e's !!.Chedu led)
Thursday's Game s
Toronto al NY Island ers
NY Rangers at Los Ange les
Chi cago a t Philadelph ia
Cal i fornia at Atlan ta
{OnJ.v games Schedul ed)

the gUaranteed
deOdorants!

h•t
I

.00

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

t:1

ti::f-ot.ard fa.""orn..e! ...ub lCtth,r il nk'1t:i s,~tJ t!u~ rn
&amp;.lil&lt;orT11io are all JKObl hili w
~t:tr.. :~i!~ ran:l.t-d
.~ l .aba tnll
over
Ute~:h ,
me-e~ 1ng ~-h.S.! 1S1 ! ppl State. Ja vr1r 1\.U
:J:,.f1l..nr,U,ol ~ !aang Wee slungtnn .ctnd L ~hftJrni.a ,
•
J-:.wa S.Ui'i. € 1 fa rtb· an.ktd resptell.,.ly.
Elsewh.,.e,
r.,oosplay•
!.II~' ~ agall'&amp; !r,
oinJ&gt; lill!l nf'.Ma!W&lt;l Sotn , Georg,.., MiMouri g""" againlll
Y.an= SUI&lt;!, Tul&gt; ne OPP"'*"'
Dame tatthr..£ ~i\~

1.htw

Reu!s, a voLatile raoiio tall:
P..t:'USS, -a'brJ has nt"';er t.e::en sh&lt;,w 00.0. in the off r&lt;Jun, who
rAt-en lr.YJk on tt-.e Hoo.swn
llf .J tu,wy '"'' 'th Ht.IU..9hn wr: .-~.· r..r , fi;aj S 'the As1J(tS pt:l ld WJ m:an.agerl'l:t!Ot, says May 1.! a
" top prOSIJ""1 " ,.'ho'll piEy
tu .;h " r.nu ffJr !Iii. y
'f.Kll)' D"ctYt H()tA!r"LS ·~;r1n r,;gularly '01th Hoostvn , ·'rut I
rr.tlf'f! garnt5 than mt: Uus ha\•e Jroven my.self .n
~ngutllffi L&lt;.d

• Ia t•IOn
00 Is ' ISO

COLUMBUS IUPI) - A
C1 cvel a nd -~ r ca state senator
Gr.lllpolls al At hen!l
Wc'dnesday l'l!lll'd lor an onl ronfon a l Wellston
vcstlg::ttlfJn into what he term·
Jn c k ~o n nl ~vg~n
Waverl y .!I t Meigs
ed " appar ent racia l i84Jlatwn"
TRI .VALLEY
whteh haB left three C.1eveland
Ft·d{lrJ;;I Hocking a t Warren
area high schools outside of
VInton County at
Nelsonv il le York two ncwl y..formed suburba n
SVAC
r"oothall leagueR .
N•)rt h Gall la at Ea s- ter n
Stale sen M. Mom s JackS yrllm l! 'o V~ ll cy at Hannan
""" , D-Ocvcland, said East
1ro w
~ou t hcrn at Southwestern
Clevela nd Shaw, Shaker
Others
Height• and (.1evcla nd Heights
At exa m.Jer al Belpre

.. J.utd~o ilJ BED

L"nvto •..e n ond trJ ;..-r~ :Jl:~'lj
S'...a!k F:fAtui~ •Jfi d f/,,J

lr.f!!ng
dele::~S~a cap-

Colonels impress Wilt

T HI S W EE K'S SCH E DUL E
F RIDAY
SEOAL

SALE

(~ ,.,~

}fr,..t; t.t

an .. m

•

9 "i
7~

Hud!iOrl , KC
Walt er, KC

tr~)

'f(t'KJ~

(~tr.-h er

Btll Vi rdrJn
nc1body coul d fill

C.'hamberlain said aher Ken·
tucky had blitzed his &amp;m Diego
7 4 c,,, qu iB tad ors
146-IOo .
N;u nt! , T
T O PAT Pt s Av; "Gllrnort: means everything to
P , R ldg•,, J
10 8 68 13.6 that team on defense and on the
C;,r t~r, 1
P.
0 413 9.6 board•
fo/\a Ut:y. 1
5 1~ 48 19 .6
Dan l&amp;oel led the C&lt;&gt;loneis
W1.:l l11., WfJ v
S 0 30 6 0
Th ornp-.on , J
A
4 78 s 6 with 2!J polntJ! and tettrnmale
Krt'b~. L
1 'l ?O 4 o Mike Gale had a career-h1gh of
H 1 J t '~n . Wt•ll
1 ? ?0 4 0 2.'.l
Wolh,,
M
J
18 J6
l6 .. 'Ill c ''·
I I hea~,~~:n
•·· Just
Rr:t':i.G
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vJOne11,
B•:rr l dg~.:. G
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o 18 1 6 - on ce (n nJne J&lt;arnes this seaqon,
SVA C ti,CORIN G
widened the1r l€!ad over second
Na m .:, T
TO PAl Pu. Avg
,
Near-c . S' thn
? BO l b o place Carolma m ~~ Arne nc&lt;~n
11
LOQan. NG
~
1 YJ- 11 1 Basketball ARst-,clatwn's EastTnbor, KC
10 6 66 11 0 (!rfl DIVL!iion to 1'1:! gamCH ali
Smllh. NG
5 ? 3? 6'
Lt:w lri, .S' thtn
~ 'J 31 6.4 the Coug:ars loKt &lt;l Wl-99
KC

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'""""gtr , will c-hallenge that
wh&lt;: n Reuss gel.'&lt; w Piusl.urgh
" 11 wasn 't &lt;ln easy trade to
rnal&lt;e," he s;nd Wednesda y
ru.ght "We g.ave up a man WhfJ
can l'P-a;me an rJLrt.standlilg

Ptlt~df 1~tlli

t.-tay , 23, w d-8 &lt;:t 8\..artjng
CdU:her with P'itt.sbw-.. ~ last
71 l i: J P. '}
!5-''
91. ( 'f J 10 7 hWntner untiJ JU~ l!J, whtn

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Issues 2 and 3, if approved,
would affect courts and taxes

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MIDDLEPORT, O.

..

~-~~~--~~--------~------------------------~------------~----------~~~~~---'_l

Hours : 7 a.m. to S: JO p.m .
17!-SISJ

,

O~uty

MASON, W. VA .

7 a.m. to a p.m. Friday &amp; Saturday

____________________________._____~~----~li~-~---,----~~----------~----~

\

�•

t
6- The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov .1, 1973

Cemetery becomes garden club project

Party fetes Mrs. Hysell
.

tCorner
~:

SUCH A NICE 83rd birthday Miss Marcia Karr of Syracuse
had!
The anniversary was really Saturday but the celebrations
began last Thursday when she was one of several senior citizens
honored at the monthly party at the Senior Citizens Center . Then
her cousin, Eleanor Crow, took her on a scenic trip through
Washington and Athens Counties stopping in Belpre for refreshments.
On Saturday a do&gt;en red roses beautifully arranged came
from Millard and Vera Van Meter and their grandson, Tony,
neighbors came with gifts, and the mailbox bulged with cards
and letters.
·
Probably the highlight of the celebration came when the
Eagles Class of the Asbury United Methodist Church of which
Miss Karr is teacher ,• gave her a FM·AM tab1e radio. Then on
Monday evening she joined the class for a buffet at the home of
Mrs. Mary Lisle.
HAVE YOU noticed the beautiful handmade quilt - the
presidential wreath in red and white - on display at the New
York Clothing House?
The quilt is one to be awarded by the Meigs County Human e
Society at their holiday bazaar on Dec. 1 at Trinity Church .
Drawing for the quilt will take place that day at 2p. m.
For the past couple of weeks the quilt has been displayed at
the New York Clothing House, but tomorrow will be moved to
Barr Clothiers in Middleport. Donations are being accepted by

any member of the Hwnane Society and for further information,
Mrs. Clinton Fisher may be contacted.
TiiE CANDLE Replica s made from a washcloth and a bar of
soap by the junior auxiliary members of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, S;re quite attractive.
The girJs, under the direction of their capable l ea~er, Veda
Davis, have made up a munber of these to be sent to Miller
Cottage for Women at the Veterans Hospital in Dayton.
They are made by placing a bar of soap in the center of a
washcloth and then pulling the washcloth up around it and
through a foil-covered cardboard center roll from toilet tissue. A
,pipe cleaner is inserted into the side of the roll to make the
handle. To made it more attractive the girls of the auxiliary
placed small artificial flow ers at the base. ·

Jr. Auxiliary meets
Proje cts of servi ce to
veterans Were planned during
a meeting of the Junior
American Legion Auxiliary of
Middleport Feeney-Bennett
Post 126 Tuesday night at the
hall.
The unlt will serve a dinner
to the personnel on the Forty
and Eight Roundup Train wh.en
it comes to Middleport Nov. 11 .
They will decorate the tables
for the annual Veterans Day
dinner and will serve the
dinner. Plans were also made
to make nutcups for the Nov. 6
veU!rans party at the Athens
Mental Health CenU!r, and lo
make candle replicas from
soap and . washcloths for the

female patients at the Miller's
Co ttage at the Veterans
Hospital in Dayton.
It was voted to contribute $10
to · the James Waggonselle r
campaign for national commander. Clothing was dona ted
to the Middleport firemen for a
rummage sale and a gift of
fruit was prepared for Max
Blake, a handicapped child
remembered by. the group ..
A potluck supper preced the
meeting presided · over by
Becky Roush. The prayer was
given by .Chery_! Barnhart,
chaplain·. A door prize brought
by Sandra Might was won by
Miss .B arnh.a rt.

The 80th btrthday t~n· Ashley ; Mr.s . Suz1e ~eler and
niversary of Mrs. Lydia Hy~ll. h. ian, Chestt:r; Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy . was observed Charles Hysell, Jeremy and
SU!lday with a party at the Hyan. Pomeroy; Mrs. Ronnie
Second Ward Firehouse.
Mt~rtin, Kimberly and Ronnie,
Hosting the affair were her Letart, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs.
children, Har old Hysell, Charles Kapteina, Pomeroy ;
Ashley ;
Ethel
Grues er, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Martin,
Monessen, Pa. ; Mrs. Eileen Jr., Jeffrey and Jan, Belpre ;
Martin, Chester; Mrs. Beutah Mrs. Pauline Deenfeger, Paul
Autherson, Racine; Mrs. Helen and Terry, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Vandall, Delaware ; and Mrs . Mrs. Ed Autherson, Billy, and
Margaret_ Wyatt, Letart, W. Brenda Potter, Minerva;
Va .
Diana Talbert, New Haven, W.
Mrs . Aaron (Grace) Hysell Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
gave. grace preceding the Hysell, Vicky, Timmy, Tracy,
dinner. Gifts including two Penny and Toby, Pomer&lt;&gt;y;
cakes were presented to Mrs . Pete McCwnber, Mr. and Mrs.
Hysell.
Clifford Wyatt, Pomeroy; A. L.
Attending were Elizabeth Bobo, Mr. and Mrs . Rex Darst,
Hyre, Powell; Mrs. Helen Middleport; Mrs. Richard
Vandall and David, Eddie. Johnson, Tony and Michelle,
Sherry. Pearlene, Nan cy, ·Belpre ; Wilmer Cornell,
Pau1a and Melissa, Delaware; . H.acine; Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Mr . •and Mrs. Robert Sparks, McAngus and Buddy, Mrs.
Delaware; Mr . and Mrs. Margaret Sherldan, Pomeroy;
Charles Wyatt, Jane, Dora and Mrs. Beulah Autherson and
Brei, Letart, W.Va.; Mr .. and Bea Jay, Racine; Peggy
Mrs. Albert Martin and Mike, Staats, Mr. and Mrs. John
Chester; Mr . .and Mrs. Ollie Harrison, Pomeroy.
Grueser, Monessen, Pa . ;
On Saturday, Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Mauck, Julie Waytivik, Allan McCumber, Delaware,
Monessen,· Pa.; Mr . and Mrs. brother of Mrs. Hysell, came
John Hysell, Troy, Kim and for the day and took her and
Tami, Mr. and Mrs. Harold her sister , Mrs. Hyre, to dinHysell, Mr. and Mrs. George ner. They visited another
Eland, Mrs . Pat Siders, Alan sister, Mrs. Jess Morris, in the
and Davis, Har old Hysell, afternoon.
Ethel May Hysell , all of

Plan fall festival
RACINE - A soup supper ,
band concert and fall festival
will be held at the Ra cine
aud itorium by the Racine PTA
Saturday night.
The soup supper will begin at
5 p.m. and at 6 p. m . a concert
will .be given by the Southern
band.
Parents are asked to have
their donations at the school by
3 p. m. Game booths should be
se t up at 1 p. m. Committees
are as follows :
Delores Wolfe, membership'
Mary Hill, Kay Warden, Jean
Alkire, tickets; Darlene Justis,
J o Ann Crisp, fortune telling :
Linda and Ronnie Holter, Mr.
and Mrs . Roy Van Meter, Mr.
and Mrs . William Cundiff,
Betty Bell, Mae J ones, J oyce
Sisson, Dreama Hudson, fish
pond.
Leanne Beegle, Betty Carpenter, Kay Hill, Darlene
Ritchie, bean bag; Blondena
Hud son 1 Cora lee Cumins,
Donna Gheen, Libby Fisher,
Mrs. Paul Cordane, Dorothy
Bentz, Grace Roberts, country
store.

Lillian Weese, pocke t lady;
Anna Shu ler, Ruth Frank ,
Helen Hill, Vickie Proffitt,
cane toss ; Jack and Gene
Lyons, Earl and Jean Cleland,
hat stand; Jack F ollrod, Jim
Werry, Linda Hubbard , Lois
Wolfe, milk can toss; Romaine
Frederick, Margaret Johnson,
Pam Riffle, Janice Glenn,
make-up; Irene Rhodes, Leota
Wolfe, silhouettes; Mr . and
Mrs. Ted Trotter, Mrs. Ronald
Haidee, Violetta Ranett, dart
game ; Kathleen Morris,
Geraldine Varney, Martha
Lee, group games.
Nancy Ervin, Pauline Bostic,
· Rita Hill, Phyllis McMillan,
Mrs. Delbert Smith, Mrs.
James Rees, Dorothy Johnson,
Sue Follrod, Patty Pape, Linda
Hill, Margaret West, Grace
Huffman, Mrs . Dennis Manuel,
Mrs . Helen Bickers, Mrs.
Robert Hart, Ann Boso, Carah
Roush and Ruby Brinegar,
kitchen.
Donna Cross, Doris Fisher,
Jennie Spurlock, spook house;
and Edna Price and Florence
Circle, kitchen cashiers.

Manna to perform Guiding Star Council meets
SYRACUSE - The Oct. 25
meeting · of Guiding Star
Council No. 124:, Daughters of
America waS opened in
ritualistic' form with Councilor
Edith Hood in the chair.
Emma
Ha yma n
wa s
.·reported returne d fr om 'a
hospital and improving and
In 1918, the Hapsburg monHoward Largent home from a
archy of Austria-Hungary was
dissolved. Vienna became the
capitalm A~stria and Budapest
the capital of Hungary.
·

M.ASON - The "Manna"
. group of Huntington will appear at the Mason UniU!d
Methodist Church Sunday
evening at 7:30p.m.
The performers ·are well
known in the area, having
assisted with music in revivals
and youth programs in recent
months. Rick Campbell, Dave
Perry, John Rappold, the Rev.
and Mrs. Thorn HunU!r and
Vicki' Hinzman . Pullins are

'

c

featured .
"Manna " is the first record
made by the group. The public
is invited.

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Cove rs Color TV and Stereo .

HOSTS CLASS
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Janice
Lawson, teacher, was hostess
at her home when the Teenage
· Class of the Syracuse
Presbyterian Church had a
Halloween party. The evening
was spent playing games and
watching television . The
hostess served pi~a. chips and'
coke to llobbi Chapman, Bruce
Cottrill , Lori Chapman, -Kim
Winebrenner, Debbie ·Harden
and Carter Smith . They were
joined later by David Lawson
and Jean Hall.

.

orange mums and tapers
Participation in the Sears will he represented at both should be removed and cut- centered the ,table for refreshCivic Improvement Program meetings. Mrs. Bert Grimm, tings should he taken from ments served by Mrs. West.
through further beautification president, announced the annuals.
at the Letart Falls Cemetery Chrstmas flower show sponby
the
county
was taken on as a 1973-74 sored
organization
noting
that
it will
project of the Bend 0 ' the
River Garden Club meeting be Dec. 1 and 2 in the Pomeroy
Monday night at the home of Elementary School
auditorium . Mrs. Margaret
Mrs. Glen West.
To assist in buying more Ella Lewis is the show
shrubbery for the cemewry the chairwoman.
club planned a Christmas
Program books for the new
bazaar for early December. At year were distributed. Heading
that time s mall living committees are · Mrs. Clifford
Christmas arrangements will · Morris, pr:ogrami Mrs. Simp..
be sold. Members were asked son, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
to
take materials for Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz and Mrs.
arrangements
to
the Andrew Cross, civic com~
November meeting at the mittee; Mrs . Carpenter. Green
home of Mrs. Edward Simp- Thwnb ; Mrs. Robert Kuhn,
therapy; Mrs. Ralph Webb,
son, Nov. 26.
During the meeting several tours, and Mrs. Ernest
corsages were made by Winj!ett, horticulture.
Devotions by Mrs. Edward
members for use in installing
new members of a local Simpson were taken from St.
organization.
Mark 14 with readings
Deeds
and
The county meeting to be at "Beautjful
the Pomeroy Baptist Church Atabaster Boxes". The club
tonight at 7:30 p. m . was an- prayer was led by Mrs. Cross
nounced, as well as the and Mrs. Carpenter gave the
regional meeting Nov. 10 at club . poem. For roll call
Eastern High School. The club members responded with
things to be done in October.
Members
viewed
the
wrraced garden at the West
home where impatience and
geraniwns were s till blooming.
The patio decorations included
pumpkins, black cats and
SYRACUSE - The Sunshine
shocks of (odder.
If diamonds are a girl 's best friend, befriend her. And kee·p
Makers Class of the Syracuse
Mrs. Cros5 · presented the
her
timely too . For a mere $25.50. Give her a p"rettily sculpUnited Presbyterian Church
program using October gar·
tured , precisi on-made, 17 jewel watch, hlghllght~d with twin
met recently in the church
dlarnonds. The Sweet Briar "G " . Caravella by Bulova. An
dening hints. A general
annex for their- October
expensive watch at an Inexpensive price.
discussion was held on what
meeting conducted by the vice
each planned to ready her
president , Janice Lawson.
garden for winter . Mrs. Cross
Devotio ns'c; were given by
stressed the importance of
Margaret Cottrill and a poem,
cleaning flower beds, yards
·''October," was read.
and corners and suggested that
All reports were read and
leaves be used for compost.
approved. A lengthy discussion
Spring flowering bulbs should
was held on the need of a new
be planted, she said, in sunny
refri ge rator in the annex .
dry ar.e as . Dead branches
Delicious refreshments were
served by the hostesses, Linda
Hubbard and Margaret Cottrill, to Pauline Morarity,
Thelma Grueser, "' Mildred
Pierce, Agnes White , Charlotte
Nease, Beatric Blake, Janice .
Lawson and guests, Tina
Pierce, David . Lawson and
11
Donna Hubbard.

for .$ .50

Give Her Diamonds

Church class
met in annex

Caravelle®by Bulova.

ADEPOSIT WILL HOLD YOUR CHOICE

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

COURT ST.

POMEROY

·AGGRESSIVE, PROGRESSIVE, INTERESTED &amp; QUALIFIED

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(DENNY)

For

LODGE TO MEET
HARRISONVILLE - The
regu1ar
meeting
~f
Harrisonville Lodge No. 11 will
be held Saturday at 7; 30 p.m.
Annual election of officers will
be held and refreshments
served.

Southern .· Local
Board of Education
Vietnam Veteran - Southern High Graduate

Pd. Pol. Adv.

.

hospital but ~ince has returned
to it.
~ special dispensation was
received from the state
councila;r to change the
meeting dates to the fourth ·
Thursday of each month ..
Greetings _wer~ r~ad from
Faye Hoselton, diStrict deputy.
The fellowship meeting wa s
announced for November 2 at
the Lions Club Building in
Belpre with . a .covered dish
dinner at 6:15 p.m . and
meeting and initiation to follow
at 7;30.
A letter was read from the
national councilor about an
insurance plan and the
requirements and status for
elderly members going to the
national home in Tiffin.
Birthdays of Sadie Thuener
and Eileen Clark were
celebrated when they served
hamburgers, chips and pop to
Edith Hood, Margaret Cottrill,
Esther Harden, Myla Hudson,
Ada Slack, Pauline Morarity,
Margaret Eichinger and
deputy, Jean Hall.

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Soc I. aI u!y'X'~~E d..!~::~n·;i~ ~u~~lo~h~r~;:~;s· ~~:es ~~:
'·.I c
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THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Garden
Club'Assoclatlon,'7:30 p.m. at

the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church. Planning session for
the Christmas flower show. All
clubs asked to be represented
along with other interested
individuals.
MEIGS County Council of
p.m.,
Parents af
andtheTeaebers,
Middleport
7;30
Elementary School. Program
will be on parliamentary
procedure with C. E. Blakeslee
and Miss Marta Guilkey, extension agents of Meigs
County, to be the speakers.
CATiiOLIC Women's Club, 8
p.m., following- the All Saints
Day 7 p.m . Mass.
RIVERVIEW Garden C)ub
members dinner at the Wilmar
Restaurant, Parkersburg, W.
Va.
FRIDAY
REACH Out for Life at
Pomeroy Seventh-day Ad·
ventistChurch, 7:15p.m. youth
night. Philip Follett's topic
"Wben Is il Right to be
Wrong". Special music by a
youth group irom Mt. Vernon.
Public Invited.
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange, 8 p.m. at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. Star
Grange to be host.
SATURDAY
RACINE PTA Is sponsoring
a soup supper and carnival
Nov. 3, beginning at 5 p.m. The
carnival begins at 6 p.m.
·Everyone Is welcome. Soup,
sandwiches, cakes, fun and
games will be enjoyed.

witcbes and pumpkinii, a jacko-lanU!rn and a muhile tree
with pumpkins and owls, was
the scene of the Halloween
party for the Primary class of
the
Syracuse
United
PresbyU!rian Church, given by
th · •· he M J
H II
etr Kac r , rs. ean a .
Eleven children atU!nded the
masquerade party when
Juanita Guinther won the Prize
for the prettiest and her
b th M 1 1m G · th f
ro er, · a cp
um er, or
the ugliest.
Refreshments were served

. ...

Racine UMW has meeting Oil~
RACINE - The United
The next meeting will be
Methodist Women of the Moriday, Nov. 26, at 7:30p.m.
Racine Wesleyan Methodist at the church annex. All
Church met at the annex women are asked to par.
.
led
Monday night with president, ticJpate m a p ge program
Alice Wolfe, presiding. Martha which will be presented.
Dudding, chairwoman, Clara Refreshments were served and
Mae Sargent and Ruth Ann Hill enjoyed by aU.
of the nom'tnating conuru·ttee ,..
gave their report. The former
officers will serve again the
coming year. The UMW is
Fl
selling cloth picture calendars
Religious gures
and planner books. Following
There is no .c entral figure
in Hinduism occupymg .a
the business meeting Betty place comparable to that of
Sh' 1 led th g
.
B'bl
Jesus ,· n Christianity or GauIve Y
e roup'" a 1 e tam a Buddha in Buddhism .

I
Halloween theme. Smal
baskets filled with candy corn
were used for favors. Pop, ice
cream, pumpkin !ace cookiesd
and . chips were serve

by the hostess, Mrs. Hall, to
Kr tal w· b
D'
ys
me renner,
Iana
Nease, Malcolm Guinther,
Brian Connolly, Gregory
Nease, Juanita Guinther,
Penny Wolfe, Donna Hubbard,
D 'd La
Edd' w0If
T avt
wson,
Ie
e,
ina Pierce and the judge of
the costumes, Mrs. Myla

Auxiliary will
serve dinner
election day
SYRACUSE- The Syracuse
Ladles Auxiliary of the
Volunteer Fire ·Department
met Ocl 22 with the president,
Janice Lawson, presiding.
Psalm 123 was read for
devoUons by Myla HudSon.
Twelve members answered
roU call with a Halloween
verse. All reports were read
and approved.
On election day a dinner will
be. served at the municipal
building. The menu will be
fried
chicken,
mashed
potatoes, noodles, dressing,
. green beans, rolls, ~~ee or
tea, for Sl.50. Pie wiU be served
for 25 cents extra.
The next meeting will be
Nov,J.2wlth a 6:30p.m. potluck
dinner preceding the meeting
In observance of Thanksgiving.
Everyone Is tQ bring a covered
dish. Meat will be furnished.
Members attending were
Elva Dalley, AgneS White,
Myla Hudson, Mildred Pierce,
Nancy Neutzllng, Charlotte
Nease, Thelma Grueser,
Elizabeth Rice, Ada Slack,
Clara Lavender, Marie Rizer
and Janice Lawson.

Founded by Royalty
William and Mary Collegt
11 t Williamsburg, Va., was
founded through a charter
and funds granted by King
W'll!am 11 and Queen Mary

II Of England.

Honor Mrs. ·Hansher

up this year
COLUMBUS (UPI)-G. LY·
man Dawe, director of the
state oil and gas division, says
oil well drilling in Ohio during
the first nine months of 1973 increased 50 per cent over the
same period of time last year.
D
'd
.·
awe sa1 the growmg na·
tiona! oil shortage may be the
reason for 1,275 new wells drill,
ed in the state the first nine
months of this year - 456 more·
th
·
an m 1972 ·
He also said prices for Ohio
crude are up as much as 20 per

Ijlil~ta=bl=e~d~e~cor:;:a~ted~w~i~th~a=-~=~•IJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~~~~~o~n~th~e~b~o~ok~of~M~a~tth~e~w~.===~=================

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Mrs. Gertrude Ditlmire,
daughwr of Mrs. Hansher, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Morris,
Akron; Mr. · and Mrs. Earle
Wood, Lou and Jo McKinney'
and Patti Well . Afternoon
callers were the Rev. and Mrs.
George Oiler, Toni Pope, and
the Kasper children. A cake
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by the grandchildren.

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MILK OF MAGNESIA

Mr . and Mrs. Burdell
McKinney , Middleport,
honored Mrs . Jenny Hansher
on her 69th birthday, Sunday,
Oct. 21.
A buffet luncheon was served
to Mrs. Ann Goff, ZanesvilJe;

VANQUISH

REACH Out for Life ai
Pomeroy Adventist Church,
7:15 p.m., tapic "A Day to
Remember." Special music.
Everyone invited.
OLD FASHIONED hymn
sing, 7:30 p.m ., Freedom
Gospel Mission, ·Bald Knob.
Public invited. ·
SUNDAY
REVIVAL NOW in progress
through Sunday at First
Baptist Church, Mason,_nightly
at 7:30. C. E. Gene Burdette,
Dunbar, evangelist. Special
singing each evening. WaiU!r
'Cloud, pastor. Public invited.
. "REACH Out for Life"
Adventist Church Pomeroy,
7: 15 p.m . Evangelist Philip
Follett. Topic "The Psychic
World and Jeane Dixon. "
Special .music. Public Invited.
1\EVIVAL at Faith noernacle Church, Baily Run Road,
7:30 p .m ., · Friday through
Sunday, Nov. II. Everyone
welcome. Emmett Rawson,
pastor.

ATrEND REUMON
RAVENSWOOD -;- The
Ankrwn family reunion on
Sunday, Oct. 7 at ~ Pop
EUlngton Houae at the Kaiser
Corp. recreatloll area near
bere WBI attended by Mr. and
Mrs. · Click
Woodard,
Ga!Upoll.l; Mrs. Fern Boyles
and J. M. Ball, Pl. Pleasant,
and Mr. .and Mn. o,m.
Smith, Pomeroy.

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6- The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Nov .1, 1973

Cemetery becomes garden club project

Party fetes Mrs. Hysell
.

tCorner
~:

SUCH A NICE 83rd birthday Miss Marcia Karr of Syracuse
had!
The anniversary was really Saturday but the celebrations
began last Thursday when she was one of several senior citizens
honored at the monthly party at the Senior Citizens Center . Then
her cousin, Eleanor Crow, took her on a scenic trip through
Washington and Athens Counties stopping in Belpre for refreshments.
On Saturday a do&gt;en red roses beautifully arranged came
from Millard and Vera Van Meter and their grandson, Tony,
neighbors came with gifts, and the mailbox bulged with cards
and letters.
·
Probably the highlight of the celebration came when the
Eagles Class of the Asbury United Methodist Church of which
Miss Karr is teacher ,• gave her a FM·AM tab1e radio. Then on
Monday evening she joined the class for a buffet at the home of
Mrs. Mary Lisle.
HAVE YOU noticed the beautiful handmade quilt - the
presidential wreath in red and white - on display at the New
York Clothing House?
The quilt is one to be awarded by the Meigs County Human e
Society at their holiday bazaar on Dec. 1 at Trinity Church .
Drawing for the quilt will take place that day at 2p. m.
For the past couple of weeks the quilt has been displayed at
the New York Clothing House, but tomorrow will be moved to
Barr Clothiers in Middleport. Donations are being accepted by

any member of the Hwnane Society and for further information,
Mrs. Clinton Fisher may be contacted.
TiiE CANDLE Replica s made from a washcloth and a bar of
soap by the junior auxiliary members of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, S;re quite attractive.
The girJs, under the direction of their capable l ea~er, Veda
Davis, have made up a munber of these to be sent to Miller
Cottage for Women at the Veterans Hospital in Dayton.
They are made by placing a bar of soap in the center of a
washcloth and then pulling the washcloth up around it and
through a foil-covered cardboard center roll from toilet tissue. A
,pipe cleaner is inserted into the side of the roll to make the
handle. To made it more attractive the girls of the auxiliary
placed small artificial flow ers at the base. ·

Jr. Auxiliary meets
Proje cts of servi ce to
veterans Were planned during
a meeting of the Junior
American Legion Auxiliary of
Middleport Feeney-Bennett
Post 126 Tuesday night at the
hall.
The unlt will serve a dinner
to the personnel on the Forty
and Eight Roundup Train wh.en
it comes to Middleport Nov. 11 .
They will decorate the tables
for the annual Veterans Day
dinner and will serve the
dinner. Plans were also made
to make nutcups for the Nov. 6
veU!rans party at the Athens
Mental Health CenU!r, and lo
make candle replicas from
soap and . washcloths for the

female patients at the Miller's
Co ttage at the Veterans
Hospital in Dayton.
It was voted to contribute $10
to · the James Waggonselle r
campaign for national commander. Clothing was dona ted
to the Middleport firemen for a
rummage sale and a gift of
fruit was prepared for Max
Blake, a handicapped child
remembered by. the group ..
A potluck supper preced the
meeting presided · over by
Becky Roush. The prayer was
given by .Chery_! Barnhart,
chaplain·. A door prize brought
by Sandra Might was won by
Miss .B arnh.a rt.

The 80th btrthday t~n· Ashley ; Mr.s . Suz1e ~eler and
niversary of Mrs. Lydia Hy~ll. h. ian, Chestt:r; Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy . was observed Charles Hysell, Jeremy and
SU!lday with a party at the Hyan. Pomeroy; Mrs. Ronnie
Second Ward Firehouse.
Mt~rtin, Kimberly and Ronnie,
Hosting the affair were her Letart, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs.
children, Har old Hysell, Charles Kapteina, Pomeroy ;
Ashley ;
Ethel
Grues er, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Martin,
Monessen, Pa. ; Mrs. Eileen Jr., Jeffrey and Jan, Belpre ;
Martin, Chester; Mrs. Beutah Mrs. Pauline Deenfeger, Paul
Autherson, Racine; Mrs. Helen and Terry, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Vandall, Delaware ; and Mrs . Mrs. Ed Autherson, Billy, and
Margaret_ Wyatt, Letart, W. Brenda Potter, Minerva;
Va .
Diana Talbert, New Haven, W.
Mrs . Aaron (Grace) Hysell Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
gave. grace preceding the Hysell, Vicky, Timmy, Tracy,
dinner. Gifts including two Penny and Toby, Pomer&lt;&gt;y;
cakes were presented to Mrs . Pete McCwnber, Mr. and Mrs.
Hysell.
Clifford Wyatt, Pomeroy; A. L.
Attending were Elizabeth Bobo, Mr. and Mrs . Rex Darst,
Hyre, Powell; Mrs. Helen Middleport; Mrs. Richard
Vandall and David, Eddie. Johnson, Tony and Michelle,
Sherry. Pearlene, Nan cy, ·Belpre ; Wilmer Cornell,
Pau1a and Melissa, Delaware; . H.acine; Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Mr . •and Mrs. Robert Sparks, McAngus and Buddy, Mrs.
Delaware; Mr . and Mrs. Margaret Sherldan, Pomeroy;
Charles Wyatt, Jane, Dora and Mrs. Beulah Autherson and
Brei, Letart, W.Va.; Mr .. and Bea Jay, Racine; Peggy
Mrs. Albert Martin and Mike, Staats, Mr. and Mrs. John
Chester; Mr . .and Mrs. Ollie Harrison, Pomeroy.
Grueser, Monessen, Pa . ;
On Saturday, Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Mauck, Julie Waytivik, Allan McCumber, Delaware,
Monessen,· Pa.; Mr . and Mrs. brother of Mrs. Hysell, came
John Hysell, Troy, Kim and for the day and took her and
Tami, Mr. and Mrs. Harold her sister , Mrs. Hyre, to dinHysell, Mr. and Mrs. George ner. They visited another
Eland, Mrs . Pat Siders, Alan sister, Mrs. Jess Morris, in the
and Davis, Har old Hysell, afternoon.
Ethel May Hysell , all of

Plan fall festival
RACINE - A soup supper ,
band concert and fall festival
will be held at the Ra cine
aud itorium by the Racine PTA
Saturday night.
The soup supper will begin at
5 p.m. and at 6 p. m . a concert
will .be given by the Southern
band.
Parents are asked to have
their donations at the school by
3 p. m. Game booths should be
se t up at 1 p. m. Committees
are as follows :
Delores Wolfe, membership'
Mary Hill, Kay Warden, Jean
Alkire, tickets; Darlene Justis,
J o Ann Crisp, fortune telling :
Linda and Ronnie Holter, Mr.
and Mrs . Roy Van Meter, Mr.
and Mrs . William Cundiff,
Betty Bell, Mae J ones, J oyce
Sisson, Dreama Hudson, fish
pond.
Leanne Beegle, Betty Carpenter, Kay Hill, Darlene
Ritchie, bean bag; Blondena
Hud son 1 Cora lee Cumins,
Donna Gheen, Libby Fisher,
Mrs. Paul Cordane, Dorothy
Bentz, Grace Roberts, country
store.

Lillian Weese, pocke t lady;
Anna Shu ler, Ruth Frank ,
Helen Hill, Vickie Proffitt,
cane toss ; Jack and Gene
Lyons, Earl and Jean Cleland,
hat stand; Jack F ollrod, Jim
Werry, Linda Hubbard , Lois
Wolfe, milk can toss; Romaine
Frederick, Margaret Johnson,
Pam Riffle, Janice Glenn,
make-up; Irene Rhodes, Leota
Wolfe, silhouettes; Mr . and
Mrs. Ted Trotter, Mrs. Ronald
Haidee, Violetta Ranett, dart
game ; Kathleen Morris,
Geraldine Varney, Martha
Lee, group games.
Nancy Ervin, Pauline Bostic,
· Rita Hill, Phyllis McMillan,
Mrs. Delbert Smith, Mrs.
James Rees, Dorothy Johnson,
Sue Follrod, Patty Pape, Linda
Hill, Margaret West, Grace
Huffman, Mrs . Dennis Manuel,
Mrs . Helen Bickers, Mrs.
Robert Hart, Ann Boso, Carah
Roush and Ruby Brinegar,
kitchen.
Donna Cross, Doris Fisher,
Jennie Spurlock, spook house;
and Edna Price and Florence
Circle, kitchen cashiers.

Manna to perform Guiding Star Council meets
SYRACUSE - The Oct. 25
meeting · of Guiding Star
Council No. 124:, Daughters of
America waS opened in
ritualistic' form with Councilor
Edith Hood in the chair.
Emma
Ha yma n
wa s
.·reported returne d fr om 'a
hospital and improving and
In 1918, the Hapsburg monHoward Largent home from a
archy of Austria-Hungary was
dissolved. Vienna became the
capitalm A~stria and Budapest
the capital of Hungary.
·

M.ASON - The "Manna"
. group of Huntington will appear at the Mason UniU!d
Methodist Church Sunday
evening at 7:30p.m.
The performers ·are well
known in the area, having
assisted with music in revivals
and youth programs in recent
months. Rick Campbell, Dave
Perry, John Rappold, the Rev.
and Mrs. Thorn HunU!r and
Vicki' Hinzman . Pullins are

'

c

featured .
"Manna " is the first record
made by the group. The public
is invited.

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"For two years after delivery,
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Cove rs Color TV and Stereo .

HOSTS CLASS
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Janice
Lawson, teacher, was hostess
at her home when the Teenage
· Class of the Syracuse
Presbyterian Church had a
Halloween party. The evening
was spent playing games and
watching television . The
hostess served pi~a. chips and'
coke to llobbi Chapman, Bruce
Cottrill , Lori Chapman, -Kim
Winebrenner, Debbie ·Harden
and Carter Smith . They were
joined later by David Lawson
and Jean Hall.

.

orange mums and tapers
Participation in the Sears will he represented at both should be removed and cut- centered the ,table for refreshCivic Improvement Program meetings. Mrs. Bert Grimm, tings should he taken from ments served by Mrs. West.
through further beautification president, announced the annuals.
at the Letart Falls Cemetery Chrstmas flower show sponby
the
county
was taken on as a 1973-74 sored
organization
noting
that
it will
project of the Bend 0 ' the
River Garden Club meeting be Dec. 1 and 2 in the Pomeroy
Monday night at the home of Elementary School
auditorium . Mrs. Margaret
Mrs. Glen West.
To assist in buying more Ella Lewis is the show
shrubbery for the cemewry the chairwoman.
club planned a Christmas
Program books for the new
bazaar for early December. At year were distributed. Heading
that time s mall living committees are · Mrs. Clifford
Christmas arrangements will · Morris, pr:ogrami Mrs. Simp..
be sold. Members were asked son, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
to
take materials for Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz and Mrs.
arrangements
to
the Andrew Cross, civic com~
November meeting at the mittee; Mrs . Carpenter. Green
home of Mrs. Edward Simp- Thwnb ; Mrs. Robert Kuhn,
therapy; Mrs. Ralph Webb,
son, Nov. 26.
During the meeting several tours, and Mrs. Ernest
corsages were made by Winj!ett, horticulture.
Devotions by Mrs. Edward
members for use in installing
new members of a local Simpson were taken from St.
organization.
Mark 14 with readings
Deeds
and
The county meeting to be at "Beautjful
the Pomeroy Baptist Church Atabaster Boxes". The club
tonight at 7:30 p. m . was an- prayer was led by Mrs. Cross
nounced, as well as the and Mrs. Carpenter gave the
regional meeting Nov. 10 at club . poem. For roll call
Eastern High School. The club members responded with
things to be done in October.
Members
viewed
the
wrraced garden at the West
home where impatience and
geraniwns were s till blooming.
The patio decorations included
pumpkins, black cats and
SYRACUSE - The Sunshine
shocks of (odder.
If diamonds are a girl 's best friend, befriend her. And kee·p
Makers Class of the Syracuse
Mrs. Cros5 · presented the
her
timely too . For a mere $25.50. Give her a p"rettily sculpUnited Presbyterian Church
program using October gar·
tured , precisi on-made, 17 jewel watch, hlghllght~d with twin
met recently in the church
dlarnonds. The Sweet Briar "G " . Caravella by Bulova. An
dening hints. A general
annex for their- October
expensive watch at an Inexpensive price.
discussion was held on what
meeting conducted by the vice
each planned to ready her
president , Janice Lawson.
garden for winter . Mrs. Cross
Devotio ns'c; were given by
stressed the importance of
Margaret Cottrill and a poem,
cleaning flower beds, yards
·''October," was read.
and corners and suggested that
All reports were read and
leaves be used for compost.
approved. A lengthy discussion
Spring flowering bulbs should
was held on the need of a new
be planted, she said, in sunny
refri ge rator in the annex .
dry ar.e as . Dead branches
Delicious refreshments were
served by the hostesses, Linda
Hubbard and Margaret Cottrill, to Pauline Morarity,
Thelma Grueser, "' Mildred
Pierce, Agnes White , Charlotte
Nease, Beatric Blake, Janice .
Lawson and guests, Tina
Pierce, David . Lawson and
11
Donna Hubbard.

for .$ .50

Give Her Diamonds

Church class
met in annex

Caravelle®by Bulova.

ADEPOSIT WILL HOLD YOUR CHOICE

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

COURT ST.

POMEROY

·AGGRESSIVE, PROGRESSIVE, INTERESTED &amp; QUALIFIED

Vote For ·

GARY DENNI.S " EVANS
(DENNY)

For

LODGE TO MEET
HARRISONVILLE - The
regu1ar
meeting
~f
Harrisonville Lodge No. 11 will
be held Saturday at 7; 30 p.m.
Annual election of officers will
be held and refreshments
served.

Southern .· Local
Board of Education
Vietnam Veteran - Southern High Graduate

Pd. Pol. Adv.

.

hospital but ~ince has returned
to it.
~ special dispensation was
received from the state
councila;r to change the
meeting dates to the fourth ·
Thursday of each month ..
Greetings _wer~ r~ad from
Faye Hoselton, diStrict deputy.
The fellowship meeting wa s
announced for November 2 at
the Lions Club Building in
Belpre with . a .covered dish
dinner at 6:15 p.m . and
meeting and initiation to follow
at 7;30.
A letter was read from the
national councilor about an
insurance plan and the
requirements and status for
elderly members going to the
national home in Tiffin.
Birthdays of Sadie Thuener
and Eileen Clark were
celebrated when they served
hamburgers, chips and pop to
Edith Hood, Margaret Cottrill,
Esther Harden, Myla Hudson,
Ada Slack, Pauline Morarity,
Margaret Eichinger and
deputy, Jean Hall.

Central Operating Company's
Philip Sporn Plant·
New

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Soc I. aI u!y'X'~~E d..!~::~n·;i~ ~u~~lo~h~r~;:~;s· ~~:es ~~:
'·.I c
I
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.
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·
a
en
a
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•
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THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Garden
Club'Assoclatlon,'7:30 p.m. at

the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church. Planning session for
the Christmas flower show. All
clubs asked to be represented
along with other interested
individuals.
MEIGS County Council of
p.m.,
Parents af
andtheTeaebers,
Middleport
7;30
Elementary School. Program
will be on parliamentary
procedure with C. E. Blakeslee
and Miss Marta Guilkey, extension agents of Meigs
County, to be the speakers.
CATiiOLIC Women's Club, 8
p.m., following- the All Saints
Day 7 p.m . Mass.
RIVERVIEW Garden C)ub
members dinner at the Wilmar
Restaurant, Parkersburg, W.
Va.
FRIDAY
REACH Out for Life at
Pomeroy Seventh-day Ad·
ventistChurch, 7:15p.m. youth
night. Philip Follett's topic
"Wben Is il Right to be
Wrong". Special music by a
youth group irom Mt. Vernon.
Public Invited.
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange, 8 p.m. at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. Star
Grange to be host.
SATURDAY
RACINE PTA Is sponsoring
a soup supper and carnival
Nov. 3, beginning at 5 p.m. The
carnival begins at 6 p.m.
·Everyone Is welcome. Soup,
sandwiches, cakes, fun and
games will be enjoyed.

witcbes and pumpkinii, a jacko-lanU!rn and a muhile tree
with pumpkins and owls, was
the scene of the Halloween
party for the Primary class of
the
Syracuse
United
PresbyU!rian Church, given by
th · •· he M J
H II
etr Kac r , rs. ean a .
Eleven children atU!nded the
masquerade party when
Juanita Guinther won the Prize
for the prettiest and her
b th M 1 1m G · th f
ro er, · a cp
um er, or
the ugliest.
Refreshments were served

. ...

Racine UMW has meeting Oil~
RACINE - The United
The next meeting will be
Methodist Women of the Moriday, Nov. 26, at 7:30p.m.
Racine Wesleyan Methodist at the church annex. All
Church met at the annex women are asked to par.
.
led
Monday night with president, ticJpate m a p ge program
Alice Wolfe, presiding. Martha which will be presented.
Dudding, chairwoman, Clara Refreshments were served and
Mae Sargent and Ruth Ann Hill enjoyed by aU.
of the nom'tnating conuru·ttee ,..
gave their report. The former
officers will serve again the
coming year. The UMW is
Fl
selling cloth picture calendars
Religious gures
and planner books. Following
There is no .c entral figure
in Hinduism occupymg .a
the business meeting Betty place comparable to that of
Sh' 1 led th g
.
B'bl
Jesus ,· n Christianity or GauIve Y
e roup'" a 1 e tam a Buddha in Buddhism .

I
Halloween theme. Smal
baskets filled with candy corn
were used for favors. Pop, ice
cream, pumpkin !ace cookiesd
and . chips were serve

by the hostess, Mrs. Hall, to
Kr tal w· b
D'
ys
me renner,
Iana
Nease, Malcolm Guinther,
Brian Connolly, Gregory
Nease, Juanita Guinther,
Penny Wolfe, Donna Hubbard,
D 'd La
Edd' w0If
T avt
wson,
Ie
e,
ina Pierce and the judge of
the costumes, Mrs. Myla

Auxiliary will
serve dinner
election day
SYRACUSE- The Syracuse
Ladles Auxiliary of the
Volunteer Fire ·Department
met Ocl 22 with the president,
Janice Lawson, presiding.
Psalm 123 was read for
devoUons by Myla HudSon.
Twelve members answered
roU call with a Halloween
verse. All reports were read
and approved.
On election day a dinner will
be. served at the municipal
building. The menu will be
fried
chicken,
mashed
potatoes, noodles, dressing,
. green beans, rolls, ~~ee or
tea, for Sl.50. Pie wiU be served
for 25 cents extra.
The next meeting will be
Nov,J.2wlth a 6:30p.m. potluck
dinner preceding the meeting
In observance of Thanksgiving.
Everyone Is tQ bring a covered
dish. Meat will be furnished.
Members attending were
Elva Dalley, AgneS White,
Myla Hudson, Mildred Pierce,
Nancy Neutzllng, Charlotte
Nease, Thelma Grueser,
Elizabeth Rice, Ada Slack,
Clara Lavender, Marie Rizer
and Janice Lawson.

Founded by Royalty
William and Mary Collegt
11 t Williamsburg, Va., was
founded through a charter
and funds granted by King
W'll!am 11 and Queen Mary

II Of England.

Honor Mrs. ·Hansher

up this year
COLUMBUS (UPI)-G. LY·
man Dawe, director of the
state oil and gas division, says
oil well drilling in Ohio during
the first nine months of 1973 increased 50 per cent over the
same period of time last year.
D
'd
.·
awe sa1 the growmg na·
tiona! oil shortage may be the
reason for 1,275 new wells drill,
ed in the state the first nine
months of this year - 456 more·
th
·
an m 1972 ·
He also said prices for Ohio
crude are up as much as 20 per

Ijlil~ta=bl=e~d~e~cor:;:a~ted~w~i~th~a=-~=~•IJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~~~~~o~n~th~e~b~o~ok~of~M~a~tth~e~w~.===~=================

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MAXI
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The latest contract prices for
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$5.95 a barrel, abOut $1 over the

Mrs. Gertrude Ditlmire,
daughwr of Mrs. Hansher, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Morris,
Akron; Mr. · and Mrs. Earle
Wood, Lou and Jo McKinney'
and Patti Well . Afternoon
callers were the Rev. and Mrs.
George Oiler, Toni Pope, and
the Kasper children. A cake
was presented to Mrs. Hansher
by the grandchildren.

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MILK OF MAGNESIA

Mr . and Mrs. Burdell
McKinney , Middleport,
honored Mrs . Jenny Hansher
on her 69th birthday, Sunday,
Oct. 21.
A buffet luncheon was served
to Mrs. Ann Goff, ZanesvilJe;

VANQUISH

REACH Out for Life ai
Pomeroy Adventist Church,
7:15 p.m., tapic "A Day to
Remember." Special music.
Everyone invited.
OLD FASHIONED hymn
sing, 7:30 p.m ., Freedom
Gospel Mission, ·Bald Knob.
Public invited. ·
SUNDAY
REVIVAL NOW in progress
through Sunday at First
Baptist Church, Mason,_nightly
at 7:30. C. E. Gene Burdette,
Dunbar, evangelist. Special
singing each evening. WaiU!r
'Cloud, pastor. Public invited.
. "REACH Out for Life"
Adventist Church Pomeroy,
7: 15 p.m . Evangelist Philip
Follett. Topic "The Psychic
World and Jeane Dixon. "
Special .music. Public Invited.
1\EVIVAL at Faith noernacle Church, Baily Run Road,
7:30 p .m ., · Friday through
Sunday, Nov. II. Everyone
welcome. Emmett Rawson,
pastor.

ATrEND REUMON
RAVENSWOOD -;- The
Ankrwn family reunion on
Sunday, Oct. 7 at ~ Pop
EUlngton Houae at the Kaiser
Corp. recreatloll area near
bere WBI attended by Mr. and
Mrs. · Click
Woodard,
Ga!Upoll.l; Mrs. Fern Boyles
and J. M. Ball, Pl. Pleasant,
and Mr. .and Mn. o,m.
Smith, Pomeroy.

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9- The Dally Sentmel Mlddleport-Pomero), 0 , Nov 1, 1973

nh St nttm t '\luhllq~.u t Pvtll('ft.l; 0 Nov l , 1973

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEAD LI NES
5 P M Day Before Pub! cat on
Monday Dead I ne 9 a m
CancPifat on
Corr e,fton s
wHt be acct'pfNf unf•l 9 a m tor
Day o t Pubhc af•on
REGULAT IONS
The Pu b' sher reserves t~E&gt;
r •ght to ed •t or retect any ad s
deern ~d
obtcctlot1al
The
PUbl 5her w dl no! be respon
s ble for more than one tn
corre ct nsert on
RA TES
For Want Ad Serv •c;e
5 cents per Woro one nsert1or
M ntmurn Chrtrq(' $1 00
14 c~nts per word thrfte
consecut vt&gt; nse 11ons
26 cen t s per word SIX con
secul ve nsert o 1s
2S Pe r Cent D scount on pad
ads and ads pa d w t hm 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 fo r So word rn n
mun
Each add 1 anal word

2 SIGNS
OF

QuAUTY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1971C HEVROLETBLAZER

II f 610

J whec.l dr ve V 8 lockmg front hubs automatiC trans
m ss 011 power st eermg &amp; brakes rad10 good trres

~antPd

IIC" htcle of m!}ny uses cus tom tr1m whi l e lop over bl ue A
shctrp 1 owner trade
1911 FORD TORINO SOD
~199S
Cou pe 1 owner car less than JJ 000 miles brown firus.h
wtfh ma l c hmg v nyl roof anct v1 nyl mter~er 302 V 8
eng1ne standard transrn.1s~10n power sl eenng o1nd
brakes rad o feally sha rp

11 1 1tc

Card of Thanks
I

W I SH IO thank the mi;)ny
l r ends and r P at v es who
phone d and v Sti Cd rne dunn g
my SI Jy &lt;~I thr&gt; Ho zcr
Hosp ital Also for th e manv
'ar d s and prayer s offered
th ~ staff of On and Nur se&lt;;
tor t he r elf ce nt se rv 1ces
M rs Gene va Leona rd
II I

lp

Market Repmi
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
SALES REPORT OF
Oh10 Valle&gt; Livestock Co
Oct 27, 1973
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs 40 to
42 50 220 to 250 lbs 41 75 to
42 76 I 1ght 34 50 to 37 75 Fat
Sows 37 00 to 39 75 Stags 33
Do" n Board 30 to 35 P1gs 8 50
to 18, Sh!Jllts 1750 to 28
CA TILE - Steels 36 50 to
44 25 , He1fers 33 to 42 50 Bab)
Beef 45 to 58 75 Fat Co ws 30 to
35 50 , Canners 25 50 to 36 Bulls
35 50 to 41 25 Milk Cows 285 to
550
\E~L CALVES- Tops 65 50
to 67 Seconds 58 50 to 62
Medllun 45 50 to 57 60 Co m &amp;
Hvs 50 to 61 Culls 50 Down
BABY CALVES - 35 to 95
PT PLEASANT
Ll\ ES lOCK S.U ES CO
PT PLEASANT , W VA
Saturday Ocl 27 1913
!lOGS - 175 to 220 41 10 to
43 75 Heav1es 40 50 to 42 75
L1ghts 37 to 43 Fat Sows 37 50
to 40 Boars 32 to 13 P1gs 16 to
33 Stock Shoats 40 to H
CATTLE - Steers 35 to
41 50 Heifers 33 80 to 39 50
Fat Cows 32 to 34 80 Ca nners
29 50 to 32 Bulls 37 80 to 38 70
Stock Cows and Calves 420 to
570 Stock Steers 42 to 51 Stock
Heifers 36 to 44 Stock Steer
Calves 49 to 58, Stock He1fe1
Calves 40 to 4i 75
VEAL CALVES - 1ops 66
Seconds 63 75 Medmm 55 to
59 50 Common &amp; Heav1es 52 to
59 Culls 46 50 to 51

10 30 .JI-.

w tL L do paper ha ng ng and
pamtmg Call Arthur Musser
74? 5223

Local Bowling

FU RNI SHED
two
ro.om
apartment on Spr ng Avenue
Calt 992 3429
10 31 6tp

Oct

"i

2~

SHOOTING Match F orked Run
Sportsn an Club noon Su n
day
Fac tory chok ed gun s
only
11 1 Jfc

SHOOTING
Mat c h
Corn
Hollow Gu n Club turn f 1r st
r gh l alter Miles Ce metery
R u llu nd
Fac tory c hoked
guns only Su n day N ovembe r
t 1 p m
11 1 Jtc

YARD SALE wu1t er dr esses
sk 1rts and sweat ers 75 cents
la d1es coats $1 00
mens
w ntc r
clo thing
che ap
Kemco gas heal ng stove
record payer and r ecords
lots of d shes and oth e r odds
and
ends
F r day
and
Sa t urday L ark ns St r eet
Rutland
11 1 2tc
I W I LL Not b e respons bl e lor

deb ts contracted by anyone
e l se o t her than m yse I
S1g n cd I van Ca rman Rl 2
Pam eroy
111 31p

SH OO T N G Match Horner H II
Gun Cl ub R I 143 Su nday
November 4 12 noon Fac tory
choked guns only
11 1 31c

RUMMAGE Sa le Fr•day and
Saturday at D &amp; D M eats !1 30
E Ma n
lO 31 3t c
RUMMAGE Sale
Novemb er
lsi
2nd
3rd
Hughes
Bu ld ng
Sou t h
Th rd
M ddf epor t
10 31 3t c
WOULD the woman dr v ng the
truck or h e r lady passenger
'"V!IO h I my Wl11 te Ford l TO
and lUmp ed th e c urb on
S.u ndav Oc tobe r 78 a t 12 15 at
I he Jones Boys pl ease call and
mak e arrangeme nt s tor
repa r I have your ltcense
number ca ll by T hursday or 1
w II turn l h s matter over to
th e pol ce Call 992 27 B9
10 30 Jtc
KOSCOT
KOSMET ICS
&amp;
W I GS Many sp ec afs du r ng
t he mon th o f Oct
Phon e
H e en Jan e Br own 99 2 5 113
lO:J. II c
IN N E ED o f a VACUUM
CL EANER a nd a home wor k
shop all bu fl nto one? For
free demonst r at on call 992
7020 or 992 5468
10 26 6tp

T RIPLe- A Dr~;,..-;E""d~i;sses
Will beg m Monday N ov 5
F or
nform at on ca ll Ben
Slawter 99'1 5628
10 31 31c

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

SH OOT ING Match Rae n e Gun
Club Sunday Oct 14 1 p m
Ass ort ed me at s
factory
choked guns only
~
10 31 31c

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

F LEA Market El:VIO&gt;ry Su nday at
Ad d so n Oh o ra n or sh ne
Dealers w el come Al l types of
me r ch andise and guns W il l
se l l or tr ade
10 31 4tc

197 3

Roush s Land ng

W

L

43

29

40

32

38
J.1

3.-t
38

Raw l ngs Auto Part s
31 41
Ber t ha s Grocery
30 .:1 2
Tea m H gh Game - Hel en s
Beauty Shop 903
Te am H gh Ser1es - H el en s
Beauty St oo 2:&lt;1 16
nd 1-1 gh Ga 11c
Max 1nc
Dugan 232 Mary Voss 205
nd H gh Se r es
Mary
Vo ss 559 Maxm e DuQan 549
Tu esday trtternoon L eagu e
Oct 23 l'H3
Sta nd ng s
Team
w L
No 6
27 JJ
No 3- Fo r est R un B ock 27 13
No 5
2-4 16
No 4
4 1.2
No 1

18

2'1

No 2
Tea m H gh Gam"'

6 34
No 6

46B

Team H gh Se r es
Forest
Run Block 1374
l nd H 1gh Game - Fran k e
Hunnel 185 Belly Smt tt 179
l nd
H gh Se res
Pal
Carson &lt;18'1 Bet ty Sm tth 481

Me1g s Inn

DANCE

- -------------meeting room for

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

l 975

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

liighllghted

AND~ ROO M furn1s.h~-...end
unf urn she d
apartments
Phone 992 5434
4 12 tfc

Fn &amp; Sat Night
From 101112
MUSIC By

n M

Phone 992 7797

... .

Ail

11 I 3tp

--------------APARTM ENT m downtown

THE AM BASSAOORS

Pomeroy Unfurn shed or
furn shed Call 992 1789
1......___
J 1 1l c
2

LADY to help care wtth elderly
~dy l1ve
n or by th e day
Phone 992 5585
10 30 31c

_____________

RELIABLE lady to l1ve m home
w th elderl y couple Ass1s t n
lt ghl housekeep ng
so me
c ook ng and care of nval d
husba nd 1 day and 1 n ght off
per week Call 992 52 93
10 28 tfc
LOCAL compa ny has
m
med ale ope n ng for an ex
per enced t elep hone nstalfer
and repa rman Must be able
to tro uble shoot w thout
s uperv son K no w l edge of
sc h ema ! cs and work ng
e t.ectr 1cal pr1nts essent1a l
Excellent wages and good
frtnge benefJIS Send br et
res um e of work e)(per1 ence
and educa t on to Box 729 S n
c are of Th e Daly Sent nel
Pomeroy Oh 10 45769
10 28 5t c
EXPERIENCED machm 1st for
tool and dye repa r
Com
p eltt ve wages good fr~nges
Apply Robb1ns Myers
Bob
M cCorm ck Road Gall 1pol s
dh tO Box 502 45631 Wr~te or
call (co ll ectJ 446 40 12
10 26 ?tc

------------ -Auto Sales

1964 4W HEEL dr ve pt c kup
run s good r ough i res Call
Haro d Brewer 985 3554 after
6 p m
10 3 \lfc
--~------- -

1968 MER CU RY Cyc lone V8
automa t c
390
eng ne
S500 Ca t 742 3422
10 30 SIC

BE 0 ROOM upsta 1rs
fur
n1$hed ap"ar1ment m oden S7S
per month
No pets
Call
Robert H1ll R"c1ne 949::381\
11} ..._._
25 9tp

Wanted To

YOUR BUILDING
D-0-L-L·A·R
Wtfh Sk1lled
Craftsmanship

D. L.
MOORE &amp; SONS

Buy

GRAI N drtll
Br:yan Harr 1s
Reedsv11te Oh o 667 3652
10 ......,
30 !He

___________

RUSSELL'S
992-2839

---------

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

_____________

Co Road 5

COMPLETE
INTERIOR
REPAIR

1968 CO UGAR 302 3 speed Ca ll
992 7009
10 30 6t c
~--- ---- --- ---

1965 IMP AL A Chevrole t Phone
667 3652
10 30 3tp
973 PLYMOUTH DU STER 340
w a r stereo tape deck w1th
FM rad10
Fen on s lotted
wheels 2 BOO m les Call 992
7070 or 992 5488
·10 28 6fp

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

1969 FORD P1ckup newt res J
quarter ton
lo ng
bed
automatiC
$1250 00
Ca ll
even mg s 992 3829
11 1 3tc

For Sal e
8 WEEK
OL D
Doberman
P nche r pup
Call 992 7291
affer4pm
10 31 ft c

PUREBRED
Sale
W est
V rg n a Polle d H e r efo r d
Assoc at on w 1l hold a n nual - - - - - - - --,...-- -FA L L Sale November 9th at
6 30 p m
J ac k so n County
Fa .rg r oun ds
near
Co t
ta gev li e Se llmg 10 b Ull s and
31" t erfer s Fo r n formal on
wr t e Rt 2 Box 115 Spencer
W Va or call 92 7 2104
10 29 Sic .... an,d be nformed of the fun c
----- --~---- - - - - - ' - - -- - - - ; 1 ons of ~our gov ern men! are
rembOd i ed n public not ces In
that sel f government cha rges
B1ll Wade, Auct1oneer
a ll c t zcns to b e m to rmed
th s n ew spap er ur ges ev ery
c
1t zen to read and study these
Are You Movmg?
no t-,.: es We strongly Bdv 1se
Cons1denng
those c 1t ze ns seek ng fvrfh er
ntormalton lo exerc se the 1r
An AuctiOn?
r gh l of access to pubIc
records and publ c mee hng s

---------

TUPPERS PLAINS - FOR
A TIRED FAT HER - The
perfec t slfuat1on for a
famllyman A 3 bedroom l
bath Ranch type located on 1
acre on a dead end st reet
All E lect ri c N1ce k 1tchen for
mom Easy to dust hardwood
floors
Garage
and
Breezeway
All th1s for
$19 500 00
About $4 000 00
down

POMEROY - JUST OUT
OF TOWN - I 36 Acres 4
large bedroom s bath some
paneling til e and carpetmg
No energy problem here as
you have a good coa l fur
nace 1 mile to Elem Jli"'"
mile to H1 School $9 500 00

RUTLAND -

remodeled JUST $8 500 00
SYRACUSE - 2 YEARS
OLD - 3 bedrooms Bath
Utlltty room lovely 1&lt;1tchen
cabmets range dm1ng area
all electnc
Carport &amp;
Storage Lot lOOxlOO Hard
wood floor s some carpet1ng
All
drapes
go
About
$4 000 00 down

WE
HAVE
A
NICE
SELECTION
OF
PROPERTIES DROP IN
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259

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

PUBLIC NOTICES

If no answer 992 2568

Your Rtght to Know

B&amp; G AuctiOn Athens 0
w il l pay cash f or you r enhr e
house h old or any good
m sce l l aneous 1tem s or will
hold an a uct1on for you at
you r restdence reasonable

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Adm1n1strator W1th
the W1il Annexed
Estate of Harry M Cross,
Deceased
Not ce s h ereby g1ven that
Paul S Sma rt whose Post
You II like our competent
Off1 ce Address 1s 44 Lmcoln
depe ndable service
Street Middleport Dh1o 45 760"
has been duly appo nted as
Call Athens Ohto
Adm n1s t rator w1th the W1ll
593 5035 Co llecl
anne:-:ed of t he Estate of Harry
L------~'--~--1 M Cross late of Me gs County
Oh 10 de ce ased
Dated th1s 31st day of Oc
The fmd had touched off an Iobe r 1973Manning D Webster
unsuccessful search through
Judge of the Probate Court
Me1gs County Oh o
lhe county for the rest of the
(11) 1 8 15 3tc

CONCRETE BLOCK
NOW AVAILABLE

Allied Block &amp; Supply, Inc.

--------------Your
Favor1te
Country
MusiC:: Stars. VISit On

4:30 TO 5:30

NEW HAVEN, W. VA.

On

WMPO-FM .,.
stEREO. 92.1
'

Middleport-Pomeroy_

FOR SALE

- New Magi c Chef 30 !:fee
Range avocado
New Early Amertcan
L1vlng Room Sutte
Enttre L.:ofJ $600

{Dealers Cost)
Or Sold Separately

THI S WEEK only 20 perce nt off
on all upholstery fabriC and
unt n1 shed furn11ur e chests
corner cabinets n iQh tstands
de$kS deacon s ben ch Boston
rockers. and Capt am s chars
Pomero.y Recovery 622 East
Ma•n Street Pomeroy Phone
992 7554
..-........_........ .....
10 26 6tc

_ _______ _

STA R
ktlls rats QUICkly
sure 21 ~ lbs Sl 69 Ebersbach
Hdw e
sugar Run Mills
P1 cke ns Hdwe Mason

10 9 JOtp

===~=--------

EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
Main st Pomeroy A' kinds
of salt water pellets w•ter
nuggets block $lit and own
Ohio R lver S•tt f'hone: 491
3891

__

1971 FORD hatr ton p1 ck up
23 500 m lies 1966 Ford 7 x 10
dump fa1r concess1on stand
at Me1gs Athens JacksQn
ville Falr Phone eventngs
992 3954 or see John Tucker
Hysell Run
10 28 6tc

'fc:

,,
--~ ......... --------~

Near

33 NEW LISTING
RT 33 - One acre 6 room
house

and tra1ler spot

$5 000 00
OVER t ACRE house
rental

bath

Only

7 room

and 1 bedroom

Real Estate For Sale

o;,

~~~2~!..+--~~ 30tc

All work guaranteed

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

Roof1 ng ,
Spoul1 ng,
Porch Repa1r, Com
plete
Home
Remodeling

OfFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE

For Free Esttmale

Slop ' In and See Our
Floor D1~lay:

Y«llD TRUSSES

From ihe laroest T-. ,;:;;
Bulldoze r Rad1ator to
~ malte st Hearer Lore
Nathan B1gg s
Rad1ator Spec•alt st

Bu111 to Your '$pees
Delivered to Job Sit.

HOGG &amp; ZIJSPAN
773 5554

OPEN
Roger
Hy sell s
Garage near Cr oss ro ads o n
St R t 124 a l l mechan iCa l
work 1n clu d ng automatic
tran sm ss1on s Monday thru
Sat 8 30 a m to 6 p m Phone
992 568 2 garage or 992 712 1
res den ce
10 26 26tc
OPEN for bu s ness Mr Clean
Body Shop and Detatl Serv 1ce
808 W Ma n S!reet Pomeroy
Oh o

----

10 30 7tc

----------

TU N E UP SPECIAL Ge t ready
fo r w nler
save mone y
spec a! star ts Oct 31 to Nov
17 Roberts Garage Horton
St r ee t Mason w va Phone
1 (304) 773 542 1
10 30 6tp

-------------P 8. J Heat1ng
Coolmg Gas or
&amp;

Fue t Oil - We have many
furn ace parts and plumbmg
parts lor 10 pe t above cos t
21S N Second Mtddleport
992 3509
10 31 30tc
MOBILE home repa r
Elec
tr1 cat plumb ng and heatmg
Phone 992 5858
7 15 He

Mobile Homes For Sale
CASH p cud for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc

Ma!Win W VI

DOZER and back hoe work.
ponds and septu:· tanks d1t
ct11ng service top soli fill
dtrf
l 1mestone
B&amp;K
Escavallng Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861

--------------HARRI SO N S TV serv1ce and

1220 Wa sh1ngton Blvd

413 7S11

BELPRE 0

DELL WHEEL Alignment
located at Crossroads Rt 124
now back to work Complet~
front end se rv 1ce tune up and
brake
serv1ce
Wheels
balanced electronically All
work g uaranteed Reasonable
rat es Phone H:2 3232
2 18 tfc

RON SHE P A RD Floor Wall
Remodeling Ceramic tile
baths Box 280 Rutland 742
3664
6 'l6 ttc

Mach nes
S~ rvlce on all
makes Reasonab1e rates
The s ew i ng Center
Mid
dleport Ohio
11 16 tfc
R EADY- MI)(- -(O NCR ETE
deilvered r1ght to your
protect Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 3284
Goegleln Ready M ix Co
M 1ddl epor1 Oh10
6 30 tfc
REASONABLE rates Ph 446
.4782 Getii1POI1S John Russell
Owner and Operator
5 12 ttc

a

a
8

9

10 30- Baffle3

IS SiOOOOPyram1d8 10 M1 keDouglas6

4

11 oo- Gamb1t 8 lO Password 13 W1 za rd of Odds 3 4 15
11 JQ- Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bun ch 13 Bowlmg 6
Love o f L1fe
10 Sesame Street 33
11 S5 - CBS N ews8 Dan lmel sWorld10
12 00 - Jeopardy J IS Bob Braun s 50 50 Clu b 4 News 8 13 10
Password 6
12 30 - 3 W s Game 3 15 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Spl1 t
Second 6
12 45 - Electn &lt;: Company 33

a

1
2
2

3

New Perry Mason" and • Calucct's Dept" seem doomed, come
1974 As I've noted before, Calucct 1sn tall that bad, but I can't
get the tear ducts pump111g over the poss1ble derruse of Perry
ABC, whichdidn'tmakemany changes, e1ther, finds \hat the
ones they did make are near-diSasters " Bob &amp; Carol &amp; Ted &amp;
Abce" are notmakmgtt, and ''Toma' tsbemg wtped out by "The
Waltons' and Fhp W1lson Il may men! a change of ttme spots to
gtve 1\ a better chance Two of the network's old favorites are
lirnpmg, too and 'Love, Amencan Style" and "Owen Marshall'
may not make 11 to the sprmg thaw

NBC News 3 15

N ews 3 All My Ch ildren 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
What s My L1ne 10 Concentration 8
J0 - 30nA Match3 4 15 TheWorldTurns8 10 Le t sMak.e
a Deal 6 13
00 - Days of Our Llves 3 4 15 Newlywed Ga m e 6 13
Gu 1dmg L 1ght 8 10
30 - DoctorsJ 415 EdgeofNtght8 10 G1rltnMyltfe6 lJ
00 - Another World 3 .t 15 General Hos pttal6 13 Pnce Is

R1ghl 8 10 OhiO This Week 20

3 30 4

4

5
5
5
6
6

Retur n to Peyton Pla ce 3 15 One L1fe t o L1ve 13 Secret
St or m 10 Match Ga me 8 Ph11 D onahu e 4 Flmtstones 6 Off
th e Record 20
00 - M r Ca rtoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesa m e St 33 20 Love
Amencan Style 13 Speed Ra cer 6 Lu cy Show 8 Mov1e
L 1ttle Boy Lost 10
30 - Green Acres 3 Jeopardy 4 Haze iB G1lltgali s I sland 13
I Love Lu cy 6 Bonanza 15
00 - M 1ster Rogers 20 33 Bonan za J M e r v Gnffm 4 Andy
Gn ff1th 8 I Dream of Jeannie 13 M1sslon lmposs1ble 6
30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Hodgepodge L odge 20
Beverly H1llblll1es 8 Tra i ls We st 15
55 - Earl N lg ht1nga1 e 15
00 - News 3 4 8 10 13 15 6 Sesa m e 51 20 Adlenan
Counseltng Techntques 33
30 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 15 Hogan s Heroes 13

7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 6 Beat the Clock 4 New s 10
7
8
8

9
9
10

WIN AT BRIDGE

Artful falsecards are
NORTH
• Q 10 5

10
11
11

a tflck

Instead of r espondmg one heart
yoUt parLner r esponds on e spade
and b1ds Lhree hearts over your
three clubs What do you do now 1

• 6 4

+Q I 10 7

SI:: WING MACHINES R:~pa l r
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Authonzed Smger Sales and
Se rv ic e We Sharpen Sc1ssors
3 29 tfc
tJI. lP.. ~-;~ ~-~;z-;r-;-;;ro•

arnd small
Be c khoes and
loaders on track and t1res
Dump truck Lo boy str
v1ce Sept1c tanks nstalled
George (8 II) Pullms phone
992 2478 or 992 740:2
2 9 lfc

-----------McCOY s AucnoN sER'Vice
For a real au c tion call the
real McCoy
I 0
Mac •
M cCoy Chester Ohio
10 3 tfc

s

--------------EXCAVATING dozer loader

and backhoe work
septic
tanks tnsfalled dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re will haul
fdl dirt 1op soli limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n1ght phone 992 3525 or W2
!:2J2
2 11 tfc

----.=-----------....
FOR FREE estitnates On

alum mum S1d/ng
Storm
Doors and Windows
Car
ports Marquees and Railing
Phone
Charles
Lisle
Syracuse Ohio Carl Jacob
Sates Representative v v
Johnson and Son Inc

6 22 tic

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

~

Generation Rap

""f.

Bv 1-lc·lc·n aucl ~Ill' Bollt·l

1
2
3

Wh.:;~t s

My Lme8 W1ld Kingdom 13 Elec Co 20 I Spy 15 Course of
Our T1mes 33
30 - Beat the Clock 13 Porter Wagon er 3 To Tell the Truth 6
Hollywood Squa r es 4 Concentration 8 New T r easu r e Hunt
10 Wall Street Week 20 How D o Your Ch•ldren Grow 33
00 - Washmgton Week tn R ev 1ew 20 Sa nford &amp; Son 3 4 15
Brady Bunch6 13 Calucc t s Dept 8 10 lnterface33
30 - Odd Coup l e 13 Gt r l w 1th So methmg Extra 3 4 15 Oz
z1e s Gtrls 6 Rol l Ou t I 8 10 French Chef 20 Marshall N ews.
M eet1ng JJ
00 - Masterp1ece Theater 33 Needles and Pms 3 4 Barbra
Str e1sa nd and Other Mus1cal Instruments 8 10 Room 222 6
13 Wrtnkles B1rthdays and Other Fables 20
30 - Bnan Ketth 3 415 Adams R1b6 13
00 - Love Amen can Sty le 6 13 News 20 Dean Mart1n 3 4
15 Washmgton Week m Re v1ew 33 Lily 8 10
30 - Wall Street Week 33
00 - N ews Weather Sport s6 8 10 13 15 4 3 Janak1JJ
30 ~ Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Don Ktrshner s Roc k Co ncert 6
Mov1es Spmout a The P1t and the Pe ndulum 10
The
Female Trap 13
00 - Mtdn1ght Speclal3 4 OJCk Cavett 15
15 - Mov1 e Dr Goldfoot and the G 1rl Bombs 10
30 - Focus on Columbu s 4 N ews 13
00 - News 4

'

Lad Worned about H1s 41 Past''

Rap

My mother respects my pnvacy What to do about " hun"• JULIE
Juhe
If your mother e&lt;~n't teach her husband that a gtrl needs
prtvacy there'ssomethmg wrong w1th her - or hun Tell her how
unportant this 1s to you - SUE
Dea1 Hulle
And msist that 1f your stepfather e&lt;tn't learn to knock, you
need a lock for your door - HELEN

When I was ahnos\ 13 I did a stupid thing I started shop
lifting, JUSt to get m good w1\h a bunch of k1Cis Be1ng dumb as
well as stupid, 1 gol caught They look my name and called my
parents and gave me a b1g warmng but I wasn't sent to Juvemle
by THOMAS
hall
What wornesme now that I've reformed IS w1ll my past be
ACROSS
1
Hehacal
held agamst me• Can I work m supermarkets or department
6
Rose
stores? Is lt down on your workmg papers that you were a thtef ?
essence
- DUMB AT 13 (NOW 16)
11 Venerate
l2 Woody
v1ne
Dear Dumb
One shoplifting bust at 13 won't prevent a reformed 16-year 13 Get out of
( 3 wds )
old from getting a JOb
15 Clty of
Those records probably went no farther than the store
Manasseh
manager's office, and no doubt have already been destroyed
16 Nebraska
nvcr
But to be doubly sure why don't you ask the manager• He
19
Enclosure
mtght be so impressed With.Your concern that he s offe1 you
22 Okla
work - HELEN AND SUE
homan
Helen and Sue
23 Approxt
Is a so-&lt;:alled vtrgm who IS raped forcea bly sb ll cons1dered a
mately
24 Heaven
vtrgm? - CURIOUS
(2 wds )
Z6 So that s
Cunous
•t' (2 wds )
Psychologtcally, I'd say - Yes' " - SUE
27 Extm
gu1shed
Dear Curwus
,
ZS
Thrice
And really, IS there a ny other way to vtew so.;;alled vll'guuty
(mus)
other than psychologically - except perhaps m a physiCal
29 Helms
exammation ? - HELEN
mans
P S It's how a gll'l accepts herself that counts, nght• - H
llld
30 JndJan
andS

JOSEPH
8 Sa1lor
9 FormiC
actd
source

10 Bolger
14 lnau g u
rate

16 Equantm

1ty
17 Sohtary

fellow
18 Angel

19

20

21

m

France
Btg game
ammal
Hard
red wheat
Tobacco

(colloq )
22 Vaudeville
sketch
23 Wmd
dr1ven

Ye~terday's

25 Furmture

style
29 Cere

33 Dav1d's
ch1ef

officer
34 Er1ch -

memes

Strohe1m

30 Small

35 St s1gn

amount
31 SWISS

(abbr )
36 Man's

rJVCT

m ckname

32 Pagoda

clouds

Answer

ornament

37 Foxy

groom

Rap
My stepfather (for two years now ) says hepmd for this house
so he has a r1ght to every room He's always bu\tmg mto rny
personal life and bargmg mto my room at mghl or any other
tune
I'm not always dressed and sometunes I m very undressed,
so !Ius IS embarrassmg for a 15-year-&lt;lld gu-1 A little fnghtemng

too

31 Haphaz

ardly
(2 wds )
38 Eagles
nest

39 New

40 Harvests
41 Opponent

DOWN

~t!11~!1~®1k.J-UJ.-J ~

I Droop
2. French

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ord1nary words.

3 Mauna -

hy HENRI ARNOLD .uHl BOULEt

I EPS/0
.

I ROALS

0

4 -

director
5 Kmdred
6 Tmy

.... . . .

• "'~;.:,o.'::.\~:~-

b

kmg

Abce

play·
wright
1. Pmafore

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's bow to work It:

II

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter s1mply stands for another In tDis sample A is
used for the three L s X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters,
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all

!DAMTLE~
[)

hmts Each day the code letters are d1fferent

CRYPTOQUOTES

WHXJYTOR!
[

Now arrantrelhe circled letters
the surpnse answer, u
~;:&lt;:~~~~~~;;~~==~suggested by the above cartoon.

I I I

to form

rL...!...=·~SIII~fliiiS!~·=NSWili~Mrl~\ ax JcxnJ

(AJuwer• tomorrow)

Jumble• CHIDE " USURY

EXClSI

NORMAL

An1wer May be taken from home w 1lh
pleasure - AN IX&lt;:URSION

FM YMP FXEXYF MY

MYX PDIJYQ

MN PNLGP PM MYKI MYX NXGMLNTX,
DMZXSXN ENXXJHYXYP -OC KPCGCN
QNCTHC Y
Yesterdays Cryptoquote WOMEN HAVE A WONDERFUL
SENSE OF RIGHT AND WRONG BUT LITTLE SENSE OF
RIGHT AND LEFT -DON HEROLD
(@ 1973 Kmg Featuru Synd1cate, Inc)

.. A 54 3

WEST

EAST
.8743
• 7 32

• K2

• J 10 9 8 5
+64

SEE HOW THE PAPER
BENEATH THE TllUMEI·
TACK'S HEAO
IS MUCH LIGHTJ:R?

·ANO FOR
A

LONG

PERIOD

+A93Z

.. K 1087
.. QJ
SOUTH 101 '
• AJ 96

'IAKQ

+

K 85
.. 9 62
Both vu lnerabl e
West

North

East

South

Pass

!NT
Pass

--= -~-=-- -----

Pass

3 NT

P.ass
Opemng lead-'IJ
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
There may be some br1dge
player somewhere who never
fal se.cards We haven't met
him yet but he must be there
On the other hand there are
pl e nty of players who
fal sec ard as a matter of
hab1l They -don t recogmze
that there IS a re al art 1n false
ca rdmg
Now look at the South
hand West opens the Jack of
hearts East follows w1th the
deuce The automatic
falsecarder WillS w1th the
ace The nonfa lsecarder wms
w1th the queen The artful
fal sec arder wills w1lh the
kmg two thirds of the lime
and w1\h the queen the other
third He never considers
playmg the ace 1
Let s see why He leads a
d1amond to dummy s queen
at tnck two East takes hts
ace and cons1ders what smt
to return He knows from the
Jack lead that h1s partner
do es n t hold the queen
Therefore the automatic
falsecard er who played the i
ace 1s now marked wtth both
kmg and queen and a heart
return 1s hopeless He slaps
down h1s queen of clubs and 11
Will be a hot day Ill January
before South makes h1s three
notrump
He m1ghl sh1ft to a club tf
South had won w1lh the kmg
or queen or he m1ght return
a heart on the theory that hiS
partner had led from A J·IO

A little
1

(

THE BORN LOSER

®lHANKS FOR !;11CI&lt;IN0 UP FOR ME 1
~ANIE I COULDNT ~EAR10PART
WllH THIS BABY RIOHT NOW

NOT AFTER WHAT I'VE BEE:N

FIND N6 lHE MBY
IN1HE6ARDEN
WA&amp; LIKE A A
GIFT FroM
HEAVeN.

6tJr l'D P!&lt;fi:F(;f&lt;. 10

6UT 'lOJ HAVE 1D FACE

\ I/

AUEPT FA-rn~ fLN.!AhAN~

lHE FOSS BILI1Y lHAT

1\l~, -mAT

00 &lt;5\k:H

111M

~

I

/&gt;.S A

!

eo/ I

THROU6:H~~~~ftr

!

•

_ _JL.::::&gt;::Jll.li!£1._~

ALLEY OOP
Ai3E

DREW A
WONDIFUL
PITCHE..R
0 .JOHN

WA'/NE

NATC!-iEP.\..."i AH LOJES AN'

RESPECI&lt;S ,JOHN WA'/N E SI&gt;ME
AS &amp;.V'JW RED BLOODED
AM J'RICAN, ON ACCOUt.lT HE

SAVEO TH COlJNTR:'I
IN EV R{ WAR'.'"

ON1'H

BACK-

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•

living

stock

7

--------------SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

Wild land old

Lock

6

10 2• 30tp

buildtngs All mlnerals $150 00
per acre
quarters
barrel

a Sacred Heart 10
Consumer s World 10
Farm Report 13
25 - Paul Harvey 13
30 - Columbus Today 4 B1ble Answers 8 Blue R tdge Quartet
13 News 6
45 - Cor ncob Report J Farmt1 me 10
00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Fllntstones 13 Romper
Room6
.30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle 13 New Zoo Revu e 6
00 - Capt Kangaroo
10 Sesame St 33 Lass1e 6 New Zoo
Rev ue 13
30 - Huck &amp; Yog16 Dick Va n Oyke13
55 - News 13
00 - Paul D1xon 4 Phtl Donahue 15 Fnendly Junct1on 10
AM 3 Brady Bunch 6 Abbott &amp; Costello 8 Movle Th e
Ang r y Breed 13
JO - ToTelltheTruth3 M ichae l s&amp; Co 6 SecretStormB
15 20 -

-------------ELNA and Whlfe Sewing

furnace $1150000

And

6
6
6
6

TOOAY S QUESTION

t ACRE PLUS - 2 bedroom
home bath good F A gas
tOO ACRES -

"Longstreet" )
Maybe so, but Mr Frane1scus IS a polished, e&lt;tpable actor,
and 111 hts new role of a doctor praciJC111g rural medicine m the
West, be IS lighting only two other new entries 111 h1s tune slot
(' KoJak" and "Love Story" ai!O, Wednesdays )
I trussed the f1rst show, and regret 1t I'll certa111ly try to
catch the next one Ht\s haven't been abundant, to be kind about
lt
The other smash 1s somethmg called "MGM Family
Theatre," which opened With an early-everung showmg on 145
stations which bought the ser1es wtthout benefit of network, and
showed 1\ 111 a non-prune-tune per1od Even so, 11 garnered 40
mtlllon vlewers
Three of those vtewers were at my house, because the
openmg entry was the gentle film class1c, The Yearlmg, made
m!946 My wife, who was 111 her early teens shen she saw 1\ at a
theatre, practically ordered our daughters to watch 1t They dtd
and loved 1\
Otbel"Wlse, Broadcastmg reports, there are massiVe changes
m the rrull for January
CBS,1\'s reported, had ahnosl a stand-pat lineup, and IS glad,
s1nce the new shows are turnmg out to be dtsasters Only • The

6 oo-Su nr lse Se mmar

2 9 He

-----------

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

show as one of lesser calibre than star James Franc1scus' earher
TV sertes (as a teacher m 'Mr Novak'' and .as an mvesbgator m

FRIDAY, NOV 2, 1973

se rv 1ce calls Phone 992 2522

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

·r----~------.

W1th fmgernail-b1ting at the networks reach111g almost
ep1dem1c proportions, along comes ' Doc E lliot," ongtnally
designed as a once-a-month replacement for 'Owen Marshall'
on ABC
Broadcast111g Magazme says 1t's almost a sure-fire substitute for some of the weak s1sters come January, and 1t got
generally excellent revtews although some cnlies v1ewed the

9 00 - Folk 1970 33 011 the Record 20 lrons1de 3 4 15 Kung
Fu 6 13 Mov ies Bui,.Utt 10
Blue Hawaii 8
9 30 - Ohi o Th1s Week 20
•
10 00 - News 20 Street s of San Fran cisco 6 13 What s the Btg
Idea 33 NB C Follies 3 4 15
11 00 - N ews3 4 6 13 15 Janak1 33
11 15 - News B 10
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D1ck Cavett 6 Mov1e Escape
from Zahra1n 13
11 45 - Mov1e Then Came Bronson 8 The Law and The
Lady 10

9 1 1fc

1&gt;

them tSn't even a network show

15

1 00 -

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

Com pl ete mobile home
Se r VI Ce plus g iQCHil C
d1 spla y of moUrile homes
always available at

3 4

12 55 -

1968 WINDSOR
60x12
2
b edrooms
very good con
d1t on Ca ll 992 3511
WIL L-~;;:;-o-;:- --;; ut-tree~ and
11 1 7t c
shrubbery Also clean out
basements att1cs etc Call
949 322 1 or 742 -4-441
12X60 GARDNER mob le home
10 10 30tc
for sale on rented lot In
Pom e r oy two bedrooms all
AUTOMOBILE Insurance bee.
electnc WJth 27 X 10 Expando
cancelled?
Lost
your
Central
a~r
carpet
operators
ltcenS'e
Call
992
throughout
Plumbed for
7428
washer and dryer
also
•
6 \5 tff
c arport
m~tal
build1ng
porch and underpmnmg Wdl
C BR AOFOR 0 Auctioneer
sell with or Without turn1ture
Complete Service
Pf1ced for QUICk sate Phone
Phone 949 3821
992 7451
Racine Oh10
10 30 6tc
Cntt Bradford
1 tfc

Arr Condthoners
Awmngs
Underpmmng

Football 33

7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 W1ld Ktngdom 10 .. Beat the Clock
13 Looking Ahead 33 Sale or the Century 4 To Tell the Truth
6 Ozz1e s G1rls 8 Johnny Manns Stand Up &amp; Cheer 15
Handsful of Ashes ZO
8 00 - Walton s 8 10 Tom a 6 13 Advoca tes 20 33 Flip Wilson

MATERIALS CO

Pomeroy

Just when 1\ looked as if the new TV season would be a year
w1thouta hit - whtch would be like a ChriStmas Without presents
- a couple of poss1ble winners hav~ popped to !be surface
They're nqt conflrmed, and therr excellence IS unproven, but
they're the best of what's come along And, amaz111gly, one of

9
9 S5 - Chuck Wh1te Reports 10
10 00 - D 1nah Shore 3 15 Joker s W1ld 8 10

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATEO

Radia

7

&lt;'"" ...........

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Hogans Heroes 13 Your future is t-fow JJ
00 - Truth or Conseq 3 6 , Beat the C/Gck 4 What s My Lme
8 Elec Co 20 Let s MakeADeal13 News lO LeeTre-vmos
Golf tor Swmgers IS Vtnce Lombardi Sc1ence &amp; Art of

7
8

$15 000 00

GROCERY -

-------------t•

PLUS -

Pomeroy 1ust off Routes 7 and

BUILDING LOT - Out of
am fm 8
track tape combmat1on tour
town
Water
available
speak~r
sound
system "" $2 000 00
balance Is S114 44 Use our
FOR TRADE - 2 bedroom
budgtt terrns Call 992 3965
_..._--.10 28 6tc
home bath gas furnace or

YOU CAN still beat the
'!kvrock:etn'lg cost of new
' BRUSH HOGS (1(5 ft ~~· GQ:.nstructlon Wtlh th1S lovely
oltter t'jql)"'e bemg offered f. r
992 5858
__.
aaJe .. by
owner
n
1 15-IJc
Pomerfh
Recently
re
rflodtleH, the home has 3
1973 STE REO RadiO ~om
betJrooma bath larg~ fam rly
bJtHitton w th 8 track bU111 m
style
k1tchen and a sep5rate
take over payments of S7 55
d nmg or family room New
per month or pay: S10l 50 Call
alumlnllm S1d1ng exter1or
992 533 1
wtth outs 1de entrance to
10 21 tfc
basement A sellmg pnce of
$15 ~ oon includes compi'Wtt
GROCERY buslnen for r.=satot
~lilhlilao lor this hort'!o
BultcllnQ fC)r ,..,. ot )it~
, o.w~~ ;.ry' htl~ fln•nce Coli
Phone 773 5611 ft~ijl 8 30:
:$,v3 56t7 fAtnens) Shown by
to 10 p m tor appoln
t
';lltpo1nlm.Ot on I y
J

2 ACRES

STEREO.~AOIO

_________

CALL 992-7777

stc

__ ____________

Monday thru FndiiY

PH. 882-2148

10 30

New 14 c u ft Hotpomt
Frost Free Refrtgerator,
avocado

'/Hcp111 T1 ,lford. Sr.
Grok•'l
I ifl Ml'&lt;.hdlliL St~.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·15iti9-&gt;-..

196'1 dONOA \..L ... _.o
flOnri
.conditiOn $32$ Phone 949

-------------Jo.....:::.
- .....

.

TEAFORD

10 30 3tc

6 }tfc

THE RALPH
EMERY SHOW '

WANT TO

RETIRE? 2 bedrooms
bath natural ga s furnace
large block garage and
work shop (almost new)
Storm door s &amp; wmdows
garden
plot
recently

------

3261

B 4 JO Dally 8 n Sat
Q H RawlingS SOn$
B11ldtng
Middleport, 0
94'1 2101

'H

FO R your n ew house contacl
Roush
Co nstruct on
Syracuse Oh o Phone 99 2
5039
10 17 14 1c

POMEROY

10 21 tfc

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

Area s Most
Reol sonable Prtces

'"

E MAIN~---~ ·

KE NNI:" LS Of C&amp;lhOun ...-. t!O:y
poodle pupp1es S60 to $~5 tOT S of chrysanth em ums for
sale f1eld grown We only
S amese kttten s $15 Phone
have one color - yellow 10
25 6 62-47
buncheS: for ss we have some
10 7 301c
out 1n full bloom some tust
budd1ng Reynolds Flower
AKC pood l e pupp es
small
Shop Mason w va Call 773
mm1ature bli!!Ck or whtfe
5147
shots and wormed $75 Phone
9 26 tfc
Coolville 667 62)4
10 30 12tp
ELI;CTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model
Complete w th all
ctean~n'il ahachments and
uses pape.r bags Sl ghtly used
but cleens and looks l1ke new
W1ll sell for S37 25 cash or
~fe r. ttrs. q~~alta ble
Phone 992
2984 ,:;;
\
...~J~&lt;t .
10 30 6tc
--~--~------ ClOSE b:U:t on new Zig Zag
Sewmg-Machlnes For sewtng
stretch fabr 1cs buttonho les
fancy des1gns etc Pamt
1973 ZIG ZAG sewmg machme
slightly blem,shed Cho •c e of
ThJS mach ine darns
em
~arry1ng
case or sew1ng
br0 1ders
overcasts
a.nd
stand $4~ 80 cash or terms
monograms all Without at
avallabte Phone 992 2984
tachments Pay balance ol
10 30 6tc
S41 so or pay $6 a month can
992 5331

11 1 tfc

Pamling A Spectalty

----------

--------J"------

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

Lmcoln H1tl Pomeroy 0

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

_ ___________ _

------ -

or we will

Makeot Right

6 ROOM S and bath m town
......
$1 1000 Ca ll 992 3975 or 992 -!:&gt; EPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
2571
Mod ern San1tat 1on 992 3954 or
9 28 lf c
992 73&gt;!9
- - -J023 ff c
2 BEDROOM house 3 years old
DEAD SlOCK - W II remove
carpeting b g k tchen w th
at a reasonable c t1arge Cal l
lots of cab nets '2 acre of
245
5514
ground Rac1ne Oh o Call
8 23 90tc
949 4998
9 12 lf c
S- €PTfCTANK S
AROBIC
SE WAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
S ANITATION
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3.035
10 4 lfc

--------..-----1967 INTERNAtiONAL Scout Pets For Sale ,,
BOO 4 wheel dr 1ve pas t ve
tr act on good sha p e Phone
77 3 52SO Mason
10 30 3tp

Ph 992 5271

Ph '992 :2174

CLELAND
608
REALTY

Speclalost
Wheel
11 Must

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Real Estate For Siile

_____

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

Bradbury

THURSDAY, OCT 27 t91l

Be Roght

AUTO TRIM

POMEROY
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2181

WANTED
for
auct10n
household goods Tools most
anyth1ng of value. Wlll b~V or
se ll on comm ISs1on W1ll haul 40 BU SHEl old corn ~ 2 bu shel
Ru sse t! F ndl 1ng Phone 985
Call 992 335-t or 992 2792
3531
H&amp;ym an s
7 "25 tfc
10 31 'Jt p
OLD furniture oak tabtts
cloc ks 1ce boxes brass bE!d$ WOW 1 WHAT A SALE Adm ra l
15 cu U Auto Defrost Refr g
dtshes
or
c omplete
- $96 1 ~ Cu F t Fr Q1da1re
household s
Write M
0
Auto Defro st Sl50 N ce gas
Mtller Rt 4 Pomeroy bh10
range With chrome top and
call 99 2 627 1
center grJ/ 1 $48 Mat ch1ng G
5 13 lf C
E Washer and dry er from
wANTEoO~-up~ghiP~~~
local home S100 for t he pa1r
Any cond1t on
paytng 510
70 000 8 TU gas ci rculator
eac h Wr te g1ve d rect1ons
sso other heaters $1 so and
to Wttlen P ano Company
up TV s $30 and up 6 p c
Box 188 SardtS Oh10 43946
Dinette set n1ce $2S L1vmg
.......... 61P.
10 'l6
room su-1tes $2 0 and up Stop
by and see Man ly n at P &amp; J
Odds &amp; Ends Sh op 215 N
/'10 1 Copper 70c radll!•kirs.
Middleport
Second Street
33c brass 85c battenes 90&lt;:
OPEN
DAILY
9
to
5 ~
clean dry G mseng roots $58
103141c
..._. _______
_
l b yel low root S5 may apple
60c M A Hall ReedSville
THIRTEEN beegle s
e1gh t
Phone 378 6249
trained f ve eight months to
9 23 tfc
eleven month s reg tstered
and unreg1stered all runnmg
CORNER cupboards
wall
Phone 742 381 0
cupboards chests old guns
_._
10 31 41p
any cond tton
Also blf!e
decorated stoneware Wr'"lte RINGN ECK phea san ts Phone
P 0 Box 44 Martms.burg
742 3456
Oh lo 43935 or call l 48.4 444Q
10 31 3tp
after 7 p m
ELEVEN 8 week o ld p1gs S25
each 3 fat sows Call 992 6279
after &amp;p:m
10 31 3tc

Body Shop

&amp; THINGS

6 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 l.S Sesame St 20 Lilias Yoga &amp; You
33 ~BC News 13
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 Pi ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10

Atignmtnt

PH 992 6675

gold

UPHOLSTER your own fur
nttur e We have all t he sup
pi es
)'Ou
w ill
need
Upholstery Fa bn cs a very
larg e Selec tion of nylons
velvets Her culon Vtny ls - m
cotto n l)nnts also remnants
Foam for c u sh1ons and
paddmg But lap cten1 m s
c ambric foam g l ue Zipper s
spr ng.s and cli p s ch p!::loards
l egs sew mg thread dacron
tacks webDing
welt cord
cotton SW1ve1 ba ses and all
oth er sup pl es you w II need
New furn ture a t low tow
pr ces
Pomero y Recovery
622 E M a m 992 7554
_____
10 5 JOtc

___________

Help Wanted

w1th

Gene's

S-T-R-E-T-C-H

anodt2ed alum1num to bl end
w1fh the fmest fur n1 shmgs
A S1ze For Every Home
Pnces Start At S'l10

--------------7 ROOM HOUSE
ddleport

REO STEWART AND

'-IM f

Smart
decorator des 1gn
wa lnut gra1ned
or
riCh
frudwood
v1nyl c lad
cab1ne_is are handsomely

phone 992
J 1J tfc

-3

Monday tt'tru Saturday
Mam Pom eroy 0

New t-4-'ven W Va

MONOGRAM
OIL HEATERS

$1.8 up

Pomeroy

PRIVATE
any orgamzat1on

Open 8 Til S

Save Up to 40 Pet
On Fuel B•lls

7 12 tfc

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

BEAR LOST PAW
CLEVELAND (UP!) - An
anthropoligisl at the Cleveland
Museum has Identi fied the
badl y decomposed human
hand ' found ncar MogaUorc m
Portage County Oct 20 as th e
nghl fr ont pa" of an American
black bear
human body

P.O. BOX 652

BEDROOM toti!!lly
tra.ter furntShed on 3 acres of
l and
near
Oe)Cter
n
HarnsonYtHe Pllone 742 37-44
Call alter -4 p m
......,.
JO 24 12tp

________ ____ _

Standr ng s
Team
H elen s Beau ty Sho p
Slew art Hardware
Ben Torn Co r p

-----------etectr1C
......

ROOMS by the week

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

GUNS buy sale trade Have
new R l!'m ngton 1100 s 87 s
Itha ca 37 s All tn 12 gauge
w 1th tull ( hoke No seconds
have handgun s all kuld S I
ha ve a lot of m JSC 11em s to
trade al'ld w tll trade for
almost anythmg Bee n sa me
to catton 21 years Fife !a
M ddteport
back of Speed
Queen Laundry Mat
10 28 SIC

For Rent

i"lu tomat c power sleermg radJo A honey o f a bvy

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

Pom eroy Bowl1n9 Lanes
Wednesday Early
B rd L eague

882 2817

10 21 10tp

V 8 eng 1n e

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE

Ph.one

$169S

4 door gold fm 1sh spotless clea n u;tenor

---------

wanted

On Most Amencall Cars

It 's

To Do

H OUSE WORK
992 7562

Wheel Alignment
•5.55

m the Area

Ma~n

S2895 -

1970C HEVELLE MALIBU

-

00 bC.Oio.kcCplnQ 1n my

home Wrtlt' Aow. 576

EXPERT

For the Lowest
T1re Pnces

EmploYment Wanted
WILL

No!Jce

LOV IN G memory of Dad
and M om
Denn e K arr
No vembe r 26 1965
Lelotf
Karr Nov ember 2 1966 Ttl ro
ch il dr en and fa miltes

Call 111
II I Jtp

BLIND A-DS
Add II on a t 7Sc Charge per
Advert semen!
OFFI CE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Da ly
6 30 am
to 12 00 Noon
Sat urd ay

IN

POOd le

Run area

6815

3c

In Memory

rntntafure-

Business Services
--

1965 BELAIR Chevro le t W1l1
also trade tor tru ck topper
Calf H1 7196
\0 'l6 6T C

F.und
8LA{I\
H ysPII

Television Log

for Sale

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

e:f•.-x-.-.&gt;

and

BLACK &amp;

1 FAMILY HOUSE - On
corner level lot $13 500 00
1 BEDROOMS - Gas furnace
and bath Out $4 000 00
WE HAVE 19 LOTS J FARMS
5 BUSINESS PROPERTIES
AND OVER 30 HOUSES FOR
SALE COME IN AND LETS

•

StEREO

The b1ddmg has been

West

East

North

Pass
1•
Pass
Pass
3•
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
5+
Pass
You Soulh hold
• A2'1&amp;+ AQJ87 ... AKJ65
What do you do now?
A-U you have conftdence In

4•

your partner

HOW DO 'IE LIKE M'l
r&lt;IEWl'WO !N-ONE
IRON SKillET,
LOWEEZ'I?

'

IT'S MOllT LAST NIGHT

DID THE GREAT SQUASH
eVER SHOW UP 1

TAATS

PUMPKIN!!!

(I ;)

bid seven clubs

His bidding sho11ld have guaran•

T

MASON FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
713 5592
MASON, W VA.

-

or

teed the act!!
hearts either
rour clubs to the queen or rive
small clUbs and second rou•d
diamond control and general Ia·
t~rr.cd: Jn the J(rand slam

•
\

•

�•
8

Tht D

9- The Dally Sentmel Mlddleport-Pomero), 0 , Nov 1, 1973

nh St nttm t '\luhllq~.u t Pvtll('ft.l; 0 Nov l , 1973

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEAD LI NES
5 P M Day Before Pub! cat on
Monday Dead I ne 9 a m
CancPifat on
Corr e,fton s
wHt be acct'pfNf unf•l 9 a m tor
Day o t Pubhc af•on
REGULAT IONS
The Pu b' sher reserves t~E&gt;
r •ght to ed •t or retect any ad s
deern ~d
obtcctlot1al
The
PUbl 5her w dl no! be respon
s ble for more than one tn
corre ct nsert on
RA TES
For Want Ad Serv •c;e
5 cents per Woro one nsert1or
M ntmurn Chrtrq(' $1 00
14 c~nts per word thrfte
consecut vt&gt; nse 11ons
26 cen t s per word SIX con
secul ve nsert o 1s
2S Pe r Cent D scount on pad
ads and ads pa d w t hm 10
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 fo r So word rn n
mun
Each add 1 anal word

2 SIGNS
OF

QuAUTY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1971C HEVROLETBLAZER

II f 610

J whec.l dr ve V 8 lockmg front hubs automatiC trans
m ss 011 power st eermg &amp; brakes rad10 good trres

~antPd

IIC" htcle of m!}ny uses cus tom tr1m whi l e lop over bl ue A
shctrp 1 owner trade
1911 FORD TORINO SOD
~199S
Cou pe 1 owner car less than JJ 000 miles brown firus.h
wtfh ma l c hmg v nyl roof anct v1 nyl mter~er 302 V 8
eng1ne standard transrn.1s~10n power sl eenng o1nd
brakes rad o feally sha rp

11 1 1tc

Card of Thanks
I

W I SH IO thank the mi;)ny
l r ends and r P at v es who
phone d and v Sti Cd rne dunn g
my SI Jy &lt;~I thr&gt; Ho zcr
Hosp ital Also for th e manv
'ar d s and prayer s offered
th ~ staff of On and Nur se&lt;;
tor t he r elf ce nt se rv 1ces
M rs Gene va Leona rd
II I

lp

Market Repmi
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
SALES REPORT OF
Oh10 Valle&gt; Livestock Co
Oct 27, 1973
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs 40 to
42 50 220 to 250 lbs 41 75 to
42 76 I 1ght 34 50 to 37 75 Fat
Sows 37 00 to 39 75 Stags 33
Do" n Board 30 to 35 P1gs 8 50
to 18, Sh!Jllts 1750 to 28
CA TILE - Steels 36 50 to
44 25 , He1fers 33 to 42 50 Bab)
Beef 45 to 58 75 Fat Co ws 30 to
35 50 , Canners 25 50 to 36 Bulls
35 50 to 41 25 Milk Cows 285 to
550
\E~L CALVES- Tops 65 50
to 67 Seconds 58 50 to 62
Medllun 45 50 to 57 60 Co m &amp;
Hvs 50 to 61 Culls 50 Down
BABY CALVES - 35 to 95
PT PLEASANT
Ll\ ES lOCK S.U ES CO
PT PLEASANT , W VA
Saturday Ocl 27 1913
!lOGS - 175 to 220 41 10 to
43 75 Heav1es 40 50 to 42 75
L1ghts 37 to 43 Fat Sows 37 50
to 40 Boars 32 to 13 P1gs 16 to
33 Stock Shoats 40 to H
CATTLE - Steers 35 to
41 50 Heifers 33 80 to 39 50
Fat Cows 32 to 34 80 Ca nners
29 50 to 32 Bulls 37 80 to 38 70
Stock Cows and Calves 420 to
570 Stock Steers 42 to 51 Stock
Heifers 36 to 44 Stock Steer
Calves 49 to 58, Stock He1fe1
Calves 40 to 4i 75
VEAL CALVES - 1ops 66
Seconds 63 75 Medmm 55 to
59 50 Common &amp; Heav1es 52 to
59 Culls 46 50 to 51

10 30 .JI-.

w tL L do paper ha ng ng and
pamtmg Call Arthur Musser
74? 5223

Local Bowling

FU RNI SHED
two
ro.om
apartment on Spr ng Avenue
Calt 992 3429
10 31 6tp

Oct

"i

2~

SHOOTING Match F orked Run
Sportsn an Club noon Su n
day
Fac tory chok ed gun s
only
11 1 Jfc

SHOOTING
Mat c h
Corn
Hollow Gu n Club turn f 1r st
r gh l alter Miles Ce metery
R u llu nd
Fac tory c hoked
guns only Su n day N ovembe r
t 1 p m
11 1 Jtc

YARD SALE wu1t er dr esses
sk 1rts and sweat ers 75 cents
la d1es coats $1 00
mens
w ntc r
clo thing
che ap
Kemco gas heal ng stove
record payer and r ecords
lots of d shes and oth e r odds
and
ends
F r day
and
Sa t urday L ark ns St r eet
Rutland
11 1 2tc
I W I LL Not b e respons bl e lor

deb ts contracted by anyone
e l se o t her than m yse I
S1g n cd I van Ca rman Rl 2
Pam eroy
111 31p

SH OO T N G Match Horner H II
Gun Cl ub R I 143 Su nday
November 4 12 noon Fac tory
choked guns only
11 1 31c

RUMMAGE Sa le Fr•day and
Saturday at D &amp; D M eats !1 30
E Ma n
lO 31 3t c
RUMMAGE Sale
Novemb er
lsi
2nd
3rd
Hughes
Bu ld ng
Sou t h
Th rd
M ddf epor t
10 31 3t c
WOULD the woman dr v ng the
truck or h e r lady passenger
'"V!IO h I my Wl11 te Ford l TO
and lUmp ed th e c urb on
S.u ndav Oc tobe r 78 a t 12 15 at
I he Jones Boys pl ease call and
mak e arrangeme nt s tor
repa r I have your ltcense
number ca ll by T hursday or 1
w II turn l h s matter over to
th e pol ce Call 992 27 B9
10 30 Jtc
KOSCOT
KOSMET ICS
&amp;
W I GS Many sp ec afs du r ng
t he mon th o f Oct
Phon e
H e en Jan e Br own 99 2 5 113
lO:J. II c
IN N E ED o f a VACUUM
CL EANER a nd a home wor k
shop all bu fl nto one? For
free demonst r at on call 992
7020 or 992 5468
10 26 6tp

T RIPLe- A Dr~;,..-;E""d~i;sses
Will beg m Monday N ov 5
F or
nform at on ca ll Ben
Slawter 99'1 5628
10 31 31c

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

SH OOT ING Match Rae n e Gun
Club Sunday Oct 14 1 p m
Ass ort ed me at s
factory
choked guns only
~
10 31 31c

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

F LEA Market El:VIO&gt;ry Su nday at
Ad d so n Oh o ra n or sh ne
Dealers w el come Al l types of
me r ch andise and guns W il l
se l l or tr ade
10 31 4tc

197 3

Roush s Land ng

W

L

43

29

40

32

38
J.1

3.-t
38

Raw l ngs Auto Part s
31 41
Ber t ha s Grocery
30 .:1 2
Tea m H gh Game - Hel en s
Beauty Shop 903
Te am H gh Ser1es - H el en s
Beauty St oo 2:&lt;1 16
nd 1-1 gh Ga 11c
Max 1nc
Dugan 232 Mary Voss 205
nd H gh Se r es
Mary
Vo ss 559 Maxm e DuQan 549
Tu esday trtternoon L eagu e
Oct 23 l'H3
Sta nd ng s
Team
w L
No 6
27 JJ
No 3- Fo r est R un B ock 27 13
No 5
2-4 16
No 4
4 1.2
No 1

18

2'1

No 2
Tea m H gh Gam"'

6 34
No 6

46B

Team H gh Se r es
Forest
Run Block 1374
l nd H 1gh Game - Fran k e
Hunnel 185 Belly Smt tt 179
l nd
H gh Se res
Pal
Carson &lt;18'1 Bet ty Sm tth 481

Me1g s Inn

DANCE

- -------------meeting room for

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

l 975

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

liighllghted

AND~ ROO M furn1s.h~-...end
unf urn she d
apartments
Phone 992 5434
4 12 tfc

Fn &amp; Sat Night
From 101112
MUSIC By

n M

Phone 992 7797

... .

Ail

11 I 3tp

--------------APARTM ENT m downtown

THE AM BASSAOORS

Pomeroy Unfurn shed or
furn shed Call 992 1789
1......___
J 1 1l c
2

LADY to help care wtth elderly
~dy l1ve
n or by th e day
Phone 992 5585
10 30 31c

_____________

RELIABLE lady to l1ve m home
w th elderl y couple Ass1s t n
lt ghl housekeep ng
so me
c ook ng and care of nval d
husba nd 1 day and 1 n ght off
per week Call 992 52 93
10 28 tfc
LOCAL compa ny has
m
med ale ope n ng for an ex
per enced t elep hone nstalfer
and repa rman Must be able
to tro uble shoot w thout
s uperv son K no w l edge of
sc h ema ! cs and work ng
e t.ectr 1cal pr1nts essent1a l
Excellent wages and good
frtnge benefJIS Send br et
res um e of work e)(per1 ence
and educa t on to Box 729 S n
c are of Th e Daly Sent nel
Pomeroy Oh 10 45769
10 28 5t c
EXPERIENCED machm 1st for
tool and dye repa r
Com
p eltt ve wages good fr~nges
Apply Robb1ns Myers
Bob
M cCorm ck Road Gall 1pol s
dh tO Box 502 45631 Wr~te or
call (co ll ectJ 446 40 12
10 26 ?tc

------------ -Auto Sales

1964 4W HEEL dr ve pt c kup
run s good r ough i res Call
Haro d Brewer 985 3554 after
6 p m
10 3 \lfc
--~------- -

1968 MER CU RY Cyc lone V8
automa t c
390
eng ne
S500 Ca t 742 3422
10 30 SIC

BE 0 ROOM upsta 1rs
fur
n1$hed ap"ar1ment m oden S7S
per month
No pets
Call
Robert H1ll R"c1ne 949::381\
11} ..._._
25 9tp

Wanted To

YOUR BUILDING
D-0-L-L·A·R
Wtfh Sk1lled
Craftsmanship

D. L.
MOORE &amp; SONS

Buy

GRAI N drtll
Br:yan Harr 1s
Reedsv11te Oh o 667 3652
10 ......,
30 !He

___________

RUSSELL'S
992-2839

---------

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

_____________

Co Road 5

COMPLETE
INTERIOR
REPAIR

1968 CO UGAR 302 3 speed Ca ll
992 7009
10 30 6t c
~--- ---- --- ---

1965 IMP AL A Chevrole t Phone
667 3652
10 30 3tp
973 PLYMOUTH DU STER 340
w a r stereo tape deck w1th
FM rad10
Fen on s lotted
wheels 2 BOO m les Call 992
7070 or 992 5488
·10 28 6fp

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

1969 FORD P1ckup newt res J
quarter ton
lo ng
bed
automatiC
$1250 00
Ca ll
even mg s 992 3829
11 1 3tc

For Sal e
8 WEEK
OL D
Doberman
P nche r pup
Call 992 7291
affer4pm
10 31 ft c

PUREBRED
Sale
W est
V rg n a Polle d H e r efo r d
Assoc at on w 1l hold a n nual - - - - - - - --,...-- -FA L L Sale November 9th at
6 30 p m
J ac k so n County
Fa .rg r oun ds
near
Co t
ta gev li e Se llmg 10 b Ull s and
31" t erfer s Fo r n formal on
wr t e Rt 2 Box 115 Spencer
W Va or call 92 7 2104
10 29 Sic .... an,d be nformed of the fun c
----- --~---- - - - - - ' - - -- - - - ; 1 ons of ~our gov ern men! are
rembOd i ed n public not ces In
that sel f government cha rges
B1ll Wade, Auct1oneer
a ll c t zcns to b e m to rmed
th s n ew spap er ur ges ev ery
c
1t zen to read and study these
Are You Movmg?
no t-,.: es We strongly Bdv 1se
Cons1denng
those c 1t ze ns seek ng fvrfh er
ntormalton lo exerc se the 1r
An AuctiOn?
r gh l of access to pubIc
records and publ c mee hng s

---------

TUPPERS PLAINS - FOR
A TIRED FAT HER - The
perfec t slfuat1on for a
famllyman A 3 bedroom l
bath Ranch type located on 1
acre on a dead end st reet
All E lect ri c N1ce k 1tchen for
mom Easy to dust hardwood
floors
Garage
and
Breezeway
All th1s for
$19 500 00
About $4 000 00
down

POMEROY - JUST OUT
OF TOWN - I 36 Acres 4
large bedroom s bath some
paneling til e and carpetmg
No energy problem here as
you have a good coa l fur
nace 1 mile to Elem Jli"'"
mile to H1 School $9 500 00

RUTLAND -

remodeled JUST $8 500 00
SYRACUSE - 2 YEARS
OLD - 3 bedrooms Bath
Utlltty room lovely 1&lt;1tchen
cabmets range dm1ng area
all electnc
Carport &amp;
Storage Lot lOOxlOO Hard
wood floor s some carpet1ng
All
drapes
go
About
$4 000 00 down

WE
HAVE
A
NICE
SELECTION
OF
PROPERTIES DROP IN
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259

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

PUBLIC NOTICES

If no answer 992 2568

Your Rtght to Know

B&amp; G AuctiOn Athens 0
w il l pay cash f or you r enhr e
house h old or any good
m sce l l aneous 1tem s or will
hold an a uct1on for you at
you r restdence reasonable

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Adm1n1strator W1th
the W1il Annexed
Estate of Harry M Cross,
Deceased
Not ce s h ereby g1ven that
Paul S Sma rt whose Post
You II like our competent
Off1 ce Address 1s 44 Lmcoln
depe ndable service
Street Middleport Dh1o 45 760"
has been duly appo nted as
Call Athens Ohto
Adm n1s t rator w1th the W1ll
593 5035 Co llecl
anne:-:ed of t he Estate of Harry
L------~'--~--1 M Cross late of Me gs County
Oh 10 de ce ased
Dated th1s 31st day of Oc
The fmd had touched off an Iobe r 1973Manning D Webster
unsuccessful search through
Judge of the Probate Court
Me1gs County Oh o
lhe county for the rest of the
(11) 1 8 15 3tc

CONCRETE BLOCK
NOW AVAILABLE

Allied Block &amp; Supply, Inc.

--------------Your
Favor1te
Country
MusiC:: Stars. VISit On

4:30 TO 5:30

NEW HAVEN, W. VA.

On

WMPO-FM .,.
stEREO. 92.1
'

Middleport-Pomeroy_

FOR SALE

- New Magi c Chef 30 !:fee
Range avocado
New Early Amertcan
L1vlng Room Sutte
Enttre L.:ofJ $600

{Dealers Cost)
Or Sold Separately

THI S WEEK only 20 perce nt off
on all upholstery fabriC and
unt n1 shed furn11ur e chests
corner cabinets n iQh tstands
de$kS deacon s ben ch Boston
rockers. and Capt am s chars
Pomero.y Recovery 622 East
Ma•n Street Pomeroy Phone
992 7554
..-........_........ .....
10 26 6tc

_ _______ _

STA R
ktlls rats QUICkly
sure 21 ~ lbs Sl 69 Ebersbach
Hdw e
sugar Run Mills
P1 cke ns Hdwe Mason

10 9 JOtp

===~=--------

EXCELSIOR Salt Works E
Main st Pomeroy A' kinds
of salt water pellets w•ter
nuggets block $lit and own
Ohio R lver S•tt f'hone: 491
3891

__

1971 FORD hatr ton p1 ck up
23 500 m lies 1966 Ford 7 x 10
dump fa1r concess1on stand
at Me1gs Athens JacksQn
ville Falr Phone eventngs
992 3954 or see John Tucker
Hysell Run
10 28 6tc

'fc:

,,
--~ ......... --------~

Near

33 NEW LISTING
RT 33 - One acre 6 room
house

and tra1ler spot

$5 000 00
OVER t ACRE house
rental

bath

Only

7 room

and 1 bedroom

Real Estate For Sale

o;,

~~~2~!..+--~~ 30tc

All work guaranteed

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

992 2094
606 E Mam Pomeroy

Roof1 ng ,
Spoul1 ng,
Porch Repa1r, Com
plete
Home
Remodeling

OfFICE SUPPLIES
and

FURNITURE

For Free Esttmale

Slop ' In and See Our
Floor D1~lay:

Y«llD TRUSSES

From ihe laroest T-. ,;:;;
Bulldoze r Rad1ator to
~ malte st Hearer Lore
Nathan B1gg s
Rad1ator Spec•alt st

Bu111 to Your '$pees
Delivered to Job Sit.

HOGG &amp; ZIJSPAN
773 5554

OPEN
Roger
Hy sell s
Garage near Cr oss ro ads o n
St R t 124 a l l mechan iCa l
work 1n clu d ng automatic
tran sm ss1on s Monday thru
Sat 8 30 a m to 6 p m Phone
992 568 2 garage or 992 712 1
res den ce
10 26 26tc
OPEN for bu s ness Mr Clean
Body Shop and Detatl Serv 1ce
808 W Ma n S!reet Pomeroy
Oh o

----

10 30 7tc

----------

TU N E UP SPECIAL Ge t ready
fo r w nler
save mone y
spec a! star ts Oct 31 to Nov
17 Roberts Garage Horton
St r ee t Mason w va Phone
1 (304) 773 542 1
10 30 6tp

-------------P 8. J Heat1ng
Coolmg Gas or
&amp;

Fue t Oil - We have many
furn ace parts and plumbmg
parts lor 10 pe t above cos t
21S N Second Mtddleport
992 3509
10 31 30tc
MOBILE home repa r
Elec
tr1 cat plumb ng and heatmg
Phone 992 5858
7 15 He

Mobile Homes For Sale
CASH p cud for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 tfc

Ma!Win W VI

DOZER and back hoe work.
ponds and septu:· tanks d1t
ct11ng service top soli fill
dtrf
l 1mestone
B&amp;K
Escavallng Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861

--------------HARRI SO N S TV serv1ce and

1220 Wa sh1ngton Blvd

413 7S11

BELPRE 0

DELL WHEEL Alignment
located at Crossroads Rt 124
now back to work Complet~
front end se rv 1ce tune up and
brake
serv1ce
Wheels
balanced electronically All
work g uaranteed Reasonable
rat es Phone H:2 3232
2 18 tfc

RON SHE P A RD Floor Wall
Remodeling Ceramic tile
baths Box 280 Rutland 742
3664
6 'l6 ttc

Mach nes
S~ rvlce on all
makes Reasonab1e rates
The s ew i ng Center
Mid
dleport Ohio
11 16 tfc
R EADY- MI)(- -(O NCR ETE
deilvered r1ght to your
protect Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 3284
Goegleln Ready M ix Co
M 1ddl epor1 Oh10
6 30 tfc
REASONABLE rates Ph 446
.4782 Getii1POI1S John Russell
Owner and Operator
5 12 ttc

a

a
8

9

10 30- Baffle3

IS SiOOOOPyram1d8 10 M1 keDouglas6

4

11 oo- Gamb1t 8 lO Password 13 W1 za rd of Odds 3 4 15
11 JQ- Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bun ch 13 Bowlmg 6
Love o f L1fe
10 Sesame Street 33
11 S5 - CBS N ews8 Dan lmel sWorld10
12 00 - Jeopardy J IS Bob Braun s 50 50 Clu b 4 News 8 13 10
Password 6
12 30 - 3 W s Game 3 15 Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Spl1 t
Second 6
12 45 - Electn &lt;: Company 33

a

1
2
2

3

New Perry Mason" and • Calucct's Dept" seem doomed, come
1974 As I've noted before, Calucct 1sn tall that bad, but I can't
get the tear ducts pump111g over the poss1ble derruse of Perry
ABC, whichdidn'tmakemany changes, e1ther, finds \hat the
ones they did make are near-diSasters " Bob &amp; Carol &amp; Ted &amp;
Abce" are notmakmgtt, and ''Toma' tsbemg wtped out by "The
Waltons' and Fhp W1lson Il may men! a change of ttme spots to
gtve 1\ a better chance Two of the network's old favorites are
lirnpmg, too and 'Love, Amencan Style" and "Owen Marshall'
may not make 11 to the sprmg thaw

NBC News 3 15

N ews 3 All My Ch ildren 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
What s My L1ne 10 Concentration 8
J0 - 30nA Match3 4 15 TheWorldTurns8 10 Le t sMak.e
a Deal 6 13
00 - Days of Our Llves 3 4 15 Newlywed Ga m e 6 13
Gu 1dmg L 1ght 8 10
30 - DoctorsJ 415 EdgeofNtght8 10 G1rltnMyltfe6 lJ
00 - Another World 3 .t 15 General Hos pttal6 13 Pnce Is

R1ghl 8 10 OhiO This Week 20

3 30 4

4

5
5
5
6
6

Retur n to Peyton Pla ce 3 15 One L1fe t o L1ve 13 Secret
St or m 10 Match Ga me 8 Ph11 D onahu e 4 Flmtstones 6 Off
th e Record 20
00 - M r Ca rtoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesa m e St 33 20 Love
Amencan Style 13 Speed Ra cer 6 Lu cy Show 8 Mov1e
L 1ttle Boy Lost 10
30 - Green Acres 3 Jeopardy 4 Haze iB G1lltgali s I sland 13
I Love Lu cy 6 Bonanza 15
00 - M 1ster Rogers 20 33 Bonan za J M e r v Gnffm 4 Andy
Gn ff1th 8 I Dream of Jeannie 13 M1sslon lmposs1ble 6
30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Hodgepodge L odge 20
Beverly H1llblll1es 8 Tra i ls We st 15
55 - Earl N lg ht1nga1 e 15
00 - News 3 4 8 10 13 15 6 Sesa m e 51 20 Adlenan
Counseltng Techntques 33
30 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 15 Hogan s Heroes 13

7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 6 Beat the Clock 4 New s 10
7
8
8

9
9
10

WIN AT BRIDGE

Artful falsecards are
NORTH
• Q 10 5

10
11
11

a tflck

Instead of r espondmg one heart
yoUt parLner r esponds on e spade
and b1ds Lhree hearts over your
three clubs What do you do now 1

• 6 4

+Q I 10 7

SI:: WING MACHINES R:~pa l r
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Authonzed Smger Sales and
Se rv ic e We Sharpen Sc1ssors
3 29 tfc
tJI. lP.. ~-;~ ~-~;z-;r-;-;;ro•

arnd small
Be c khoes and
loaders on track and t1res
Dump truck Lo boy str
v1ce Sept1c tanks nstalled
George (8 II) Pullms phone
992 2478 or 992 740:2
2 9 lfc

-----------McCOY s AucnoN sER'Vice
For a real au c tion call the
real McCoy
I 0
Mac •
M cCoy Chester Ohio
10 3 tfc

s

--------------EXCAVATING dozer loader

and backhoe work
septic
tanks tnsfalled dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re will haul
fdl dirt 1op soli limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n1ght phone 992 3525 or W2
!:2J2
2 11 tfc

----.=-----------....
FOR FREE estitnates On

alum mum S1d/ng
Storm
Doors and Windows
Car
ports Marquees and Railing
Phone
Charles
Lisle
Syracuse Ohio Carl Jacob
Sates Representative v v
Johnson and Son Inc

6 22 tic

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

~

Generation Rap

""f.

Bv 1-lc·lc·n aucl ~Ill' Bollt·l

1
2
3

Wh.:;~t s

My Lme8 W1ld Kingdom 13 Elec Co 20 I Spy 15 Course of
Our T1mes 33
30 - Beat the Clock 13 Porter Wagon er 3 To Tell the Truth 6
Hollywood Squa r es 4 Concentration 8 New T r easu r e Hunt
10 Wall Street Week 20 How D o Your Ch•ldren Grow 33
00 - Washmgton Week tn R ev 1ew 20 Sa nford &amp; Son 3 4 15
Brady Bunch6 13 Calucc t s Dept 8 10 lnterface33
30 - Odd Coup l e 13 Gt r l w 1th So methmg Extra 3 4 15 Oz
z1e s Gtrls 6 Rol l Ou t I 8 10 French Chef 20 Marshall N ews.
M eet1ng JJ
00 - Masterp1ece Theater 33 Needles and Pms 3 4 Barbra
Str e1sa nd and Other Mus1cal Instruments 8 10 Room 222 6
13 Wrtnkles B1rthdays and Other Fables 20
30 - Bnan Ketth 3 415 Adams R1b6 13
00 - Love Amen can Sty le 6 13 News 20 Dean Mart1n 3 4
15 Washmgton Week m Re v1ew 33 Lily 8 10
30 - Wall Street Week 33
00 - N ews Weather Sport s6 8 10 13 15 4 3 Janak1JJ
30 ~ Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Don Ktrshner s Roc k Co ncert 6
Mov1es Spmout a The P1t and the Pe ndulum 10
The
Female Trap 13
00 - Mtdn1ght Speclal3 4 OJCk Cavett 15
15 - Mov1 e Dr Goldfoot and the G 1rl Bombs 10
30 - Focus on Columbu s 4 N ews 13
00 - News 4

'

Lad Worned about H1s 41 Past''

Rap

My mother respects my pnvacy What to do about " hun"• JULIE
Juhe
If your mother e&lt;~n't teach her husband that a gtrl needs
prtvacy there'ssomethmg wrong w1th her - or hun Tell her how
unportant this 1s to you - SUE
Dea1 Hulle
And msist that 1f your stepfather e&lt;tn't learn to knock, you
need a lock for your door - HELEN

When I was ahnos\ 13 I did a stupid thing I started shop
lifting, JUSt to get m good w1\h a bunch of k1Cis Be1ng dumb as
well as stupid, 1 gol caught They look my name and called my
parents and gave me a b1g warmng but I wasn't sent to Juvemle
by THOMAS
hall
What wornesme now that I've reformed IS w1ll my past be
ACROSS
1
Hehacal
held agamst me• Can I work m supermarkets or department
6
Rose
stores? Is lt down on your workmg papers that you were a thtef ?
essence
- DUMB AT 13 (NOW 16)
11 Venerate
l2 Woody
v1ne
Dear Dumb
One shoplifting bust at 13 won't prevent a reformed 16-year 13 Get out of
( 3 wds )
old from getting a JOb
15 Clty of
Those records probably went no farther than the store
Manasseh
manager's office, and no doubt have already been destroyed
16 Nebraska
nvcr
But to be doubly sure why don't you ask the manager• He
19
Enclosure
mtght be so impressed With.Your concern that he s offe1 you
22 Okla
work - HELEN AND SUE
homan
Helen and Sue
23 Approxt
Is a so-&lt;:alled vtrgm who IS raped forcea bly sb ll cons1dered a
mately
24 Heaven
vtrgm? - CURIOUS
(2 wds )
Z6 So that s
Cunous
•t' (2 wds )
Psychologtcally, I'd say - Yes' " - SUE
27 Extm
gu1shed
Dear Curwus
,
ZS
Thrice
And really, IS there a ny other way to vtew so.;;alled vll'guuty
(mus)
other than psychologically - except perhaps m a physiCal
29 Helms
exammation ? - HELEN
mans
P S It's how a gll'l accepts herself that counts, nght• - H
llld
30 JndJan
andS

JOSEPH
8 Sa1lor
9 FormiC
actd
source

10 Bolger
14 lnau g u
rate

16 Equantm

1ty
17 Sohtary

fellow
18 Angel

19

20

21

m

France
Btg game
ammal
Hard
red wheat
Tobacco

(colloq )
22 Vaudeville
sketch
23 Wmd
dr1ven

Ye~terday's

25 Furmture

style
29 Cere

33 Dav1d's
ch1ef

officer
34 Er1ch -

memes

Strohe1m

30 Small

35 St s1gn

amount
31 SWISS

(abbr )
36 Man's

rJVCT

m ckname

32 Pagoda

clouds

Answer

ornament

37 Foxy

groom

Rap
My stepfather (for two years now ) says hepmd for this house
so he has a r1ght to every room He's always bu\tmg mto rny
personal life and bargmg mto my room at mghl or any other
tune
I'm not always dressed and sometunes I m very undressed,
so !Ius IS embarrassmg for a 15-year-&lt;lld gu-1 A little fnghtemng

too

31 Haphaz

ardly
(2 wds )
38 Eagles
nest

39 New

40 Harvests
41 Opponent

DOWN

~t!11~!1~®1k.J-UJ.-J ~

I Droop
2. French

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ord1nary words.

3 Mauna -

hy HENRI ARNOLD .uHl BOULEt

I EPS/0
.

I ROALS

0

4 -

director
5 Kmdred
6 Tmy

.... . . .

• "'~;.:,o.'::.\~:~-

b

kmg

Abce

play·
wright
1. Pmafore

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's bow to work It:

II

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter s1mply stands for another In tDis sample A is
used for the three L s X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters,
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all

!DAMTLE~
[)

hmts Each day the code letters are d1fferent

CRYPTOQUOTES

WHXJYTOR!
[

Now arrantrelhe circled letters
the surpnse answer, u
~;:&lt;:~~~~~~;;~~==~suggested by the above cartoon.

I I I

to form

rL...!...=·~SIII~fliiiS!~·=NSWili~Mrl~\ ax JcxnJ

(AJuwer• tomorrow)

Jumble• CHIDE " USURY

EXClSI

NORMAL

An1wer May be taken from home w 1lh
pleasure - AN IX&lt;:URSION

FM YMP FXEXYF MY

MYX PDIJYQ

MN PNLGP PM MYKI MYX NXGMLNTX,
DMZXSXN ENXXJHYXYP -OC KPCGCN
QNCTHC Y
Yesterdays Cryptoquote WOMEN HAVE A WONDERFUL
SENSE OF RIGHT AND WRONG BUT LITTLE SENSE OF
RIGHT AND LEFT -DON HEROLD
(@ 1973 Kmg Featuru Synd1cate, Inc)

.. A 54 3

WEST

EAST
.8743
• 7 32

• K2

• J 10 9 8 5
+64

SEE HOW THE PAPER
BENEATH THE TllUMEI·
TACK'S HEAO
IS MUCH LIGHTJ:R?

·ANO FOR
A

LONG

PERIOD

+A93Z

.. K 1087
.. QJ
SOUTH 101 '
• AJ 96

'IAKQ

+

K 85
.. 9 62
Both vu lnerabl e
West

North

East

South

Pass

!NT
Pass

--= -~-=-- -----

Pass

3 NT

P.ass
Opemng lead-'IJ
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
There may be some br1dge
player somewhere who never
fal se.cards We haven't met
him yet but he must be there
On the other hand there are
pl e nty of players who
fal sec ard as a matter of
hab1l They -don t recogmze
that there IS a re al art 1n false
ca rdmg
Now look at the South
hand West opens the Jack of
hearts East follows w1th the
deuce The automatic
falsecarder WillS w1th the
ace The nonfa lsecarder wms
w1th the queen The artful
fal sec arder wills w1lh the
kmg two thirds of the lime
and w1\h the queen the other
third He never considers
playmg the ace 1
Let s see why He leads a
d1amond to dummy s queen
at tnck two East takes hts
ace and cons1ders what smt
to return He knows from the
Jack lead that h1s partner
do es n t hold the queen
Therefore the automatic
falsecard er who played the i
ace 1s now marked wtth both
kmg and queen and a heart
return 1s hopeless He slaps
down h1s queen of clubs and 11
Will be a hot day Ill January
before South makes h1s three
notrump
He m1ghl sh1ft to a club tf
South had won w1lh the kmg
or queen or he m1ght return
a heart on the theory that hiS
partner had led from A J·IO

A little
1

(

THE BORN LOSER

®lHANKS FOR !;11CI&lt;IN0 UP FOR ME 1
~ANIE I COULDNT ~EAR10PART
WllH THIS BABY RIOHT NOW

NOT AFTER WHAT I'VE BEE:N

FIND N6 lHE MBY
IN1HE6ARDEN
WA&amp; LIKE A A
GIFT FroM
HEAVeN.

6tJr l'D P!&lt;fi:F(;f&lt;. 10

6UT 'lOJ HAVE 1D FACE

\ I/

AUEPT FA-rn~ fLN.!AhAN~

lHE FOSS BILI1Y lHAT

1\l~, -mAT

00 &lt;5\k:H

111M

~

I

/&gt;.S A

!

eo/ I

THROU6:H~~~~ftr

!

•

_ _JL.::::&gt;::Jll.li!£1._~

ALLEY OOP
Ai3E

DREW A
WONDIFUL
PITCHE..R
0 .JOHN

WA'/NE

NATC!-iEP.\..."i AH LOJES AN'

RESPECI&lt;S ,JOHN WA'/N E SI&gt;ME
AS &amp;.V'JW RED BLOODED
AM J'RICAN, ON ACCOUt.lT HE

SAVEO TH COlJNTR:'I
IN EV R{ WAR'.'"

ON1'H

BACK-

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

ZENITH
COLOR TV

•

living

stock

7

--------------SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

Wild land old

Lock

6

10 2• 30tp

buildtngs All mlnerals $150 00
per acre
quarters
barrel

a Sacred Heart 10
Consumer s World 10
Farm Report 13
25 - Paul Harvey 13
30 - Columbus Today 4 B1ble Answers 8 Blue R tdge Quartet
13 News 6
45 - Cor ncob Report J Farmt1 me 10
00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Fllntstones 13 Romper
Room6
.30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle 13 New Zoo Revu e 6
00 - Capt Kangaroo
10 Sesame St 33 Lass1e 6 New Zoo
Rev ue 13
30 - Huck &amp; Yog16 Dick Va n Oyke13
55 - News 13
00 - Paul D1xon 4 Phtl Donahue 15 Fnendly Junct1on 10
AM 3 Brady Bunch 6 Abbott &amp; Costello 8 Movle Th e
Ang r y Breed 13
JO - ToTelltheTruth3 M ichae l s&amp; Co 6 SecretStormB
15 20 -

-------------ELNA and Whlfe Sewing

furnace $1150000

And

6
6
6
6

TOOAY S QUESTION

t ACRE PLUS - 2 bedroom
home bath good F A gas
tOO ACRES -

"Longstreet" )
Maybe so, but Mr Frane1scus IS a polished, e&lt;tpable actor,
and 111 hts new role of a doctor praciJC111g rural medicine m the
West, be IS lighting only two other new entries 111 h1s tune slot
(' KoJak" and "Love Story" ai!O, Wednesdays )
I trussed the f1rst show, and regret 1t I'll certa111ly try to
catch the next one Ht\s haven't been abundant, to be kind about
lt
The other smash 1s somethmg called "MGM Family
Theatre," which opened With an early-everung showmg on 145
stations which bought the ser1es wtthout benefit of network, and
showed 1\ 111 a non-prune-tune per1od Even so, 11 garnered 40
mtlllon vlewers
Three of those vtewers were at my house, because the
openmg entry was the gentle film class1c, The Yearlmg, made
m!946 My wife, who was 111 her early teens shen she saw 1\ at a
theatre, practically ordered our daughters to watch 1t They dtd
and loved 1\
Otbel"Wlse, Broadcastmg reports, there are massiVe changes
m the rrull for January
CBS,1\'s reported, had ahnosl a stand-pat lineup, and IS glad,
s1nce the new shows are turnmg out to be dtsasters Only • The

6 oo-Su nr lse Se mmar

2 9 He

-----------

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

show as one of lesser calibre than star James Franc1scus' earher
TV sertes (as a teacher m 'Mr Novak'' and .as an mvesbgator m

FRIDAY, NOV 2, 1973

se rv 1ce calls Phone 992 2522

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

·r----~------.

W1th fmgernail-b1ting at the networks reach111g almost
ep1dem1c proportions, along comes ' Doc E lliot," ongtnally
designed as a once-a-month replacement for 'Owen Marshall'
on ABC
Broadcast111g Magazme says 1t's almost a sure-fire substitute for some of the weak s1sters come January, and 1t got
generally excellent revtews although some cnlies v1ewed the

9 00 - Folk 1970 33 011 the Record 20 lrons1de 3 4 15 Kung
Fu 6 13 Mov ies Bui,.Utt 10
Blue Hawaii 8
9 30 - Ohi o Th1s Week 20
•
10 00 - News 20 Street s of San Fran cisco 6 13 What s the Btg
Idea 33 NB C Follies 3 4 15
11 00 - N ews3 4 6 13 15 Janak1 33
11 15 - News B 10
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 D1ck Cavett 6 Mov1e Escape
from Zahra1n 13
11 45 - Mov1e Then Came Bronson 8 The Law and The
Lady 10

9 1 1fc

1&gt;

them tSn't even a network show

15

1 00 -

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

Com pl ete mobile home
Se r VI Ce plus g iQCHil C
d1 spla y of moUrile homes
always available at

3 4

12 55 -

1968 WINDSOR
60x12
2
b edrooms
very good con
d1t on Ca ll 992 3511
WIL L-~;;:;-o-;:- --;; ut-tree~ and
11 1 7t c
shrubbery Also clean out
basements att1cs etc Call
949 322 1 or 742 -4-441
12X60 GARDNER mob le home
10 10 30tc
for sale on rented lot In
Pom e r oy two bedrooms all
AUTOMOBILE Insurance bee.
electnc WJth 27 X 10 Expando
cancelled?
Lost
your
Central
a~r
carpet
operators
ltcenS'e
Call
992
throughout
Plumbed for
7428
washer and dryer
also
•
6 \5 tff
c arport
m~tal
build1ng
porch and underpmnmg Wdl
C BR AOFOR 0 Auctioneer
sell with or Without turn1ture
Complete Service
Pf1ced for QUICk sate Phone
Phone 949 3821
992 7451
Racine Oh10
10 30 6tc
Cntt Bradford
1 tfc

Arr Condthoners
Awmngs
Underpmmng

Football 33

7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 W1ld Ktngdom 10 .. Beat the Clock
13 Looking Ahead 33 Sale or the Century 4 To Tell the Truth
6 Ozz1e s G1rls 8 Johnny Manns Stand Up &amp; Cheer 15
Handsful of Ashes ZO
8 00 - Walton s 8 10 Tom a 6 13 Advoca tes 20 33 Flip Wilson

MATERIALS CO

Pomeroy

Just when 1\ looked as if the new TV season would be a year
w1thouta hit - whtch would be like a ChriStmas Without presents
- a couple of poss1ble winners hav~ popped to !be surface
They're nqt conflrmed, and therr excellence IS unproven, but
they're the best of what's come along And, amaz111gly, one of

9
9 S5 - Chuck Wh1te Reports 10
10 00 - D 1nah Shore 3 15 Joker s W1ld 8 10

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATEO

Radia

7

&lt;'"" ...........

BY PAUL CRABTREE

Hogans Heroes 13 Your future is t-fow JJ
00 - Truth or Conseq 3 6 , Beat the C/Gck 4 What s My Lme
8 Elec Co 20 Let s MakeADeal13 News lO LeeTre-vmos
Golf tor Swmgers IS Vtnce Lombardi Sc1ence &amp; Art of

7
8

$15 000 00

GROCERY -

-------------t•

PLUS -

Pomeroy 1ust off Routes 7 and

BUILDING LOT - Out of
am fm 8
track tape combmat1on tour
town
Water
available
speak~r
sound
system "" $2 000 00
balance Is S114 44 Use our
FOR TRADE - 2 bedroom
budgtt terrns Call 992 3965
_..._--.10 28 6tc
home bath gas furnace or

YOU CAN still beat the
'!kvrock:etn'lg cost of new
' BRUSH HOGS (1(5 ft ~~· GQ:.nstructlon Wtlh th1S lovely
oltter t'jql)"'e bemg offered f. r
992 5858
__.
aaJe .. by
owner
n
1 15-IJc
Pomerfh
Recently
re
rflodtleH, the home has 3
1973 STE REO RadiO ~om
betJrooma bath larg~ fam rly
bJtHitton w th 8 track bU111 m
style
k1tchen and a sep5rate
take over payments of S7 55
d nmg or family room New
per month or pay: S10l 50 Call
alumlnllm S1d1ng exter1or
992 533 1
wtth outs 1de entrance to
10 21 tfc
basement A sellmg pnce of
$15 ~ oon includes compi'Wtt
GROCERY buslnen for r.=satot
~lilhlilao lor this hort'!o
BultcllnQ fC)r ,..,. ot )it~
, o.w~~ ;.ry' htl~ fln•nce Coli
Phone 773 5611 ft~ijl 8 30:
:$,v3 56t7 fAtnens) Shown by
to 10 p m tor appoln
t
';lltpo1nlm.Ot on I y
J

2 ACRES

STEREO.~AOIO

_________

CALL 992-7777

stc

__ ____________

Monday thru FndiiY

PH. 882-2148

10 30

New 14 c u ft Hotpomt
Frost Free Refrtgerator,
avocado

'/Hcp111 T1 ,lford. Sr.
Grok•'l
I ifl Ml'&lt;.hdlliL St~.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·15iti9-&gt;-..

196'1 dONOA \..L ... _.o
flOnri
.conditiOn $32$ Phone 949

-------------Jo.....:::.
- .....

.

TEAFORD

10 30 3tc

6 }tfc

THE RALPH
EMERY SHOW '

WANT TO

RETIRE? 2 bedrooms
bath natural ga s furnace
large block garage and
work shop (almost new)
Storm door s &amp; wmdows
garden
plot
recently

------

3261

B 4 JO Dally 8 n Sat
Q H RawlingS SOn$
B11ldtng
Middleport, 0
94'1 2101

'H

FO R your n ew house contacl
Roush
Co nstruct on
Syracuse Oh o Phone 99 2
5039
10 17 14 1c

POMEROY

10 21 tfc

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

Area s Most
Reol sonable Prtces

'"

E MAIN~---~ ·

KE NNI:" LS Of C&amp;lhOun ...-. t!O:y
poodle pupp1es S60 to $~5 tOT S of chrysanth em ums for
sale f1eld grown We only
S amese kttten s $15 Phone
have one color - yellow 10
25 6 62-47
buncheS: for ss we have some
10 7 301c
out 1n full bloom some tust
budd1ng Reynolds Flower
AKC pood l e pupp es
small
Shop Mason w va Call 773
mm1ature bli!!Ck or whtfe
5147
shots and wormed $75 Phone
9 26 tfc
Coolville 667 62)4
10 30 12tp
ELI;CTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model
Complete w th all
ctean~n'il ahachments and
uses pape.r bags Sl ghtly used
but cleens and looks l1ke new
W1ll sell for S37 25 cash or
~fe r. ttrs. q~~alta ble
Phone 992
2984 ,:;;
\
...~J~&lt;t .
10 30 6tc
--~--~------ ClOSE b:U:t on new Zig Zag
Sewmg-Machlnes For sewtng
stretch fabr 1cs buttonho les
fancy des1gns etc Pamt
1973 ZIG ZAG sewmg machme
slightly blem,shed Cho •c e of
ThJS mach ine darns
em
~arry1ng
case or sew1ng
br0 1ders
overcasts
a.nd
stand $4~ 80 cash or terms
monograms all Without at
avallabte Phone 992 2984
tachments Pay balance ol
10 30 6tc
S41 so or pay $6 a month can
992 5331

11 1 tfc

Pamling A Spectalty

----------

--------J"------

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

Lmcoln H1tl Pomeroy 0

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

_ ___________ _

------ -

or we will

Makeot Right

6 ROOM S and bath m town
......
$1 1000 Ca ll 992 3975 or 992 -!:&gt; EPTIC
TANKS
cleaned
2571
Mod ern San1tat 1on 992 3954 or
9 28 lf c
992 73&gt;!9
- - -J023 ff c
2 BEDROOM house 3 years old
DEAD SlOCK - W II remove
carpeting b g k tchen w th
at a reasonable c t1arge Cal l
lots of cab nets '2 acre of
245
5514
ground Rac1ne Oh o Call
8 23 90tc
949 4998
9 12 lf c
S- €PTfCTANK S
AROBIC
SE WAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
S ANITATION
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3.035
10 4 lfc

--------..-----1967 INTERNAtiONAL Scout Pets For Sale ,,
BOO 4 wheel dr 1ve pas t ve
tr act on good sha p e Phone
77 3 52SO Mason
10 30 3tp

Ph 992 5271

Ph '992 :2174

CLELAND
608
REALTY

Speclalost
Wheel
11 Must

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Real Estate For Siile

_____

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

Bradbury

THURSDAY, OCT 27 t91l

Be Roght

AUTO TRIM

POMEROY
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2181

WANTED
for
auct10n
household goods Tools most
anyth1ng of value. Wlll b~V or
se ll on comm ISs1on W1ll haul 40 BU SHEl old corn ~ 2 bu shel
Ru sse t! F ndl 1ng Phone 985
Call 992 335-t or 992 2792
3531
H&amp;ym an s
7 "25 tfc
10 31 'Jt p
OLD furniture oak tabtts
cloc ks 1ce boxes brass bE!d$ WOW 1 WHAT A SALE Adm ra l
15 cu U Auto Defrost Refr g
dtshes
or
c omplete
- $96 1 ~ Cu F t Fr Q1da1re
household s
Write M
0
Auto Defro st Sl50 N ce gas
Mtller Rt 4 Pomeroy bh10
range With chrome top and
call 99 2 627 1
center grJ/ 1 $48 Mat ch1ng G
5 13 lf C
E Washer and dry er from
wANTEoO~-up~ghiP~~~
local home S100 for t he pa1r
Any cond1t on
paytng 510
70 000 8 TU gas ci rculator
eac h Wr te g1ve d rect1ons
sso other heaters $1 so and
to Wttlen P ano Company
up TV s $30 and up 6 p c
Box 188 SardtS Oh10 43946
Dinette set n1ce $2S L1vmg
.......... 61P.
10 'l6
room su-1tes $2 0 and up Stop
by and see Man ly n at P &amp; J
Odds &amp; Ends Sh op 215 N
/'10 1 Copper 70c radll!•kirs.
Middleport
Second Street
33c brass 85c battenes 90&lt;:
OPEN
DAILY
9
to
5 ~
clean dry G mseng roots $58
103141c
..._. _______
_
l b yel low root S5 may apple
60c M A Hall ReedSville
THIRTEEN beegle s
e1gh t
Phone 378 6249
trained f ve eight months to
9 23 tfc
eleven month s reg tstered
and unreg1stered all runnmg
CORNER cupboards
wall
Phone 742 381 0
cupboards chests old guns
_._
10 31 41p
any cond tton
Also blf!e
decorated stoneware Wr'"lte RINGN ECK phea san ts Phone
P 0 Box 44 Martms.burg
742 3456
Oh lo 43935 or call l 48.4 444Q
10 31 3tp
after 7 p m
ELEVEN 8 week o ld p1gs S25
each 3 fat sows Call 992 6279
after &amp;p:m
10 31 3tc

Body Shop

&amp; THINGS

6 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 l.S Sesame St 20 Lilias Yoga &amp; You
33 ~BC News 13
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 Pi ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10

Atignmtnt

PH 992 6675

gold

UPHOLSTER your own fur
nttur e We have all t he sup
pi es
)'Ou
w ill
need
Upholstery Fa bn cs a very
larg e Selec tion of nylons
velvets Her culon Vtny ls - m
cotto n l)nnts also remnants
Foam for c u sh1ons and
paddmg But lap cten1 m s
c ambric foam g l ue Zipper s
spr ng.s and cli p s ch p!::loards
l egs sew mg thread dacron
tacks webDing
welt cord
cotton SW1ve1 ba ses and all
oth er sup pl es you w II need
New furn ture a t low tow
pr ces
Pomero y Recovery
622 E M a m 992 7554
_____
10 5 JOtc

___________

Help Wanted

w1th

Gene's

S-T-R-E-T-C-H

anodt2ed alum1num to bl end
w1fh the fmest fur n1 shmgs
A S1ze For Every Home
Pnces Start At S'l10

--------------7 ROOM HOUSE
ddleport

REO STEWART AND

'-IM f

Smart
decorator des 1gn
wa lnut gra1ned
or
riCh
frudwood
v1nyl c lad
cab1ne_is are handsomely

phone 992
J 1J tfc

-3

Monday tt'tru Saturday
Mam Pom eroy 0

New t-4-'ven W Va

MONOGRAM
OIL HEATERS

$1.8 up

Pomeroy

PRIVATE
any orgamzat1on

Open 8 Til S

Save Up to 40 Pet
On Fuel B•lls

7 12 tfc

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

BEAR LOST PAW
CLEVELAND (UP!) - An
anthropoligisl at the Cleveland
Museum has Identi fied the
badl y decomposed human
hand ' found ncar MogaUorc m
Portage County Oct 20 as th e
nghl fr ont pa" of an American
black bear
human body

P.O. BOX 652

BEDROOM toti!!lly
tra.ter furntShed on 3 acres of
l and
near
Oe)Cter
n
HarnsonYtHe Pllone 742 37-44
Call alter -4 p m
......,.
JO 24 12tp

________ ____ _

Standr ng s
Team
H elen s Beau ty Sho p
Slew art Hardware
Ben Torn Co r p

-----------etectr1C
......

ROOMS by the week

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

GUNS buy sale trade Have
new R l!'m ngton 1100 s 87 s
Itha ca 37 s All tn 12 gauge
w 1th tull ( hoke No seconds
have handgun s all kuld S I
ha ve a lot of m JSC 11em s to
trade al'ld w tll trade for
almost anythmg Bee n sa me
to catton 21 years Fife !a
M ddteport
back of Speed
Queen Laundry Mat
10 28 SIC

For Rent

i"lu tomat c power sleermg radJo A honey o f a bvy

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

Pom eroy Bowl1n9 Lanes
Wednesday Early
B rd L eague

882 2817

10 21 10tp

V 8 eng 1n e

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE

Ph.one

$169S

4 door gold fm 1sh spotless clea n u;tenor

---------

wanted

On Most Amencall Cars

It 's

To Do

H OUSE WORK
992 7562

Wheel Alignment
•5.55

m the Area

Ma~n

S2895 -

1970C HEVELLE MALIBU

-

00 bC.Oio.kcCplnQ 1n my

home Wrtlt' Aow. 576

EXPERT

For the Lowest
T1re Pnces

EmploYment Wanted
WILL

No!Jce

LOV IN G memory of Dad
and M om
Denn e K arr
No vembe r 26 1965
Lelotf
Karr Nov ember 2 1966 Ttl ro
ch il dr en and fa miltes

Call 111
II I Jtp

BLIND A-DS
Add II on a t 7Sc Charge per
Advert semen!
OFFI CE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Da ly
6 30 am
to 12 00 Noon
Sat urd ay

IN

POOd le

Run area

6815

3c

In Memory

rntntafure-

Business Services
--

1965 BELAIR Chevro le t W1l1
also trade tor tru ck topper
Calf H1 7196
\0 'l6 6T C

F.und
8LA{I\
H ysPII

Television Log

for Sale

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

e:f•.-x-.-.&gt;

and

BLACK &amp;

1 FAMILY HOUSE - On
corner level lot $13 500 00
1 BEDROOMS - Gas furnace
and bath Out $4 000 00
WE HAVE 19 LOTS J FARMS
5 BUSINESS PROPERTIES
AND OVER 30 HOUSES FOR
SALE COME IN AND LETS

•

StEREO

The b1ddmg has been

West

East

North

Pass
1•
Pass
Pass
3•
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
5+
Pass
You Soulh hold
• A2'1&amp;+ AQJ87 ... AKJ65
What do you do now?
A-U you have conftdence In

4•

your partner

HOW DO 'IE LIKE M'l
r&lt;IEWl'WO !N-ONE
IRON SKillET,
LOWEEZ'I?

'

IT'S MOllT LAST NIGHT

DID THE GREAT SQUASH
eVER SHOW UP 1

TAATS

PUMPKIN!!!

(I ;)

bid seven clubs

His bidding sho11ld have guaran•

T

MASON FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
713 5592
MASON, W VA.

-

or

teed the act!!
hearts either
rour clubs to the queen or rive
small clUbs and second rou•d
diamond control and general Ia·
t~rr.cd: Jn the J(rand slam

•
\

•

�10 :.... The DaJiySentinel. Mi'cldle•potr~::;:,:~~~:-!~1~97~3~----------'!""'----------~---------------------~---------------------..,

New loan
·programs
are now
available

Su~vey

to settle
telephone question

•u, November 2 • 9:30 to 9 PM
November 3 ·• 9:30 to 9 PM
~The
farmers Home Ad. r-----~~~~~~----~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~r-~::~~~;;:;~----~~~------r-~liiR;~jH;F~~;A~~i];j-;~jpU0~;--11
ministration has received
1-----~-----"'1
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT 3rd FLOOR
,operating instructions and
BODYSHIRTS
regulations to implement new
SCREEN PRINTED
loan authorizations covered in
Big selection of colors
the Rural Development Act of
and fabrics..., in both
. 1972 reported local FHA
I
POLYESTER
TOPS
misses and womens
supervisor Vernon
Fr

Ju st received a shipment of maple and pine OineHe Sets.
S piece and 1 piece sets. A good selection of quality sets. Stop
in, see these new dinettes.

Also see th e 'lfW selection of table lamps, floor lamps,
boudoir lamps and the new lamp shades.

McN~ir .

sizes.

The new Bus iness and In·
dustry Guari.lnteed Loan
Program is intended to

Mens $11.50

Select while or dark colors
ba ckgroun d in sizes s mall ,
medium, larg e.

stimulate business and industrial development in rural
areas. Farmers Horne Ad-

BARGAIN
DAYS

ministration will "be guaranteeing loans made by private

sALE

lenders for business and industrial purposes in com-

munities of 50,000 population or
less. FHA will be issuing

l

to 90 pet . loss stated McNair.

Insured

loans

for

''CLOTHESLINE"
CUFFED
DENIM JEANS.

I

the

development of co mmun itY
facilities will also be available . .
An applicant may be either a
public body or a non.profit

organization. The purpose of

REG. '12.00

stimu1ate the economic and
social growth of rural comalso be eligible for grants to
promote the development of
Under the Farmer Loan
Program, rural youth may now
receive FHA loan assistance to

similar youth organ izations.

· Save over

McNair also repm·ted that the

r

on famous

Brand Coordinates

farm
real es tate
loan
au th orit ies ha ve been e x-

Bargain Days

DAYTIME DRESSES
Our entir e stoc k of womens sizes 10 to 20 and 14112
to 24'h cotton blend is included.

·SALE

Y2 PRICE

42.95 Panasonic Tape Recorder &amp; Player

1

SALE $32.00

1---....,.-·-,-M,~u~
s i.~c~D-•;..pa_r~tm_•_•,_t_·,'-"-d.-!l..
o-or..._ _ _ _ _-1

Bargain Days

CA~~ON ROYAL FAMILY

NO .IRON SHEETS.
Bed of Flowers Pattern in tw in, full and queen

sizes·.

MAGNALITE ROASTERS
REG . 32.50 ROASTERS
REG. 26.50 ROASTERS
REG. 21.50 ROASTERS

SALE 27.00
SALE 22.50
SALE 17.50

AM
ins tant play · powerful 2'1•" speaker
finger tip tuning contro ls . Buill-in antenna . carry
case ' battery and ear phone included.
·
Special Sale Price
Music Depa

.

'600

- 2nd floor.

~ov . 2-3 -4

WHITE LIGHTNING '•
{ Technicolor)
Burt ReynoldS
Jennifer Billingsly
( PG i
Co orcartoons :
3 Little Pigs
M ickey'.s Trailer ~
Bugqed Bear
Show ~tarts 7 p.m .

I

•

SWEAT SHIRTS
Long sleeves . 50 pel. Kodel polyester - 50 pet.
cotton. Warrn fleece lining. Big selection of solid
colors. Raglan shoulders . Small (34·36), medium
(38-40). large (42-44), extra large (46-48) .
Special Sale Price

·Elberfelds Camera Department
On The First Aoor
Featuring t he complete line .of Kodak Movie Came ras and
Still Came ras includinq the new Kodak Extra Sound M ovie
·, Camet:"a that takes sou hd movies· (8m m ).in existing ligh t plus
all th.e Kodak pocket .came ras - projec"fors and ca mer a
sup plies.
Plus the complete Polaroid line of ca mera s and camera
outfits,
also supplies. film and albums .
.

WASHINGTON - SEN. BARRY GOLDWATER, R-Ariz .,
saying President Nixon's credibility is at an all time low, has
suggested Nixon go before the Senate Watergate committee.
"I feel now more than ever that this may offer the only way
out," Goldwater said. He said Nixon's credibility has ~~reached·
an Qll time low froffi which it may never r:ecover." J\t the same
time, however, Goldwater. cautioned against judging Nixon until
U. S. District Judge John Sirica has had a chance to "armounce
his opinion of the mystery of the lost tapes.''

•3.29

SALE
PRICES

Special Sale

MEN'S $1.00 TUBE SOCKS
,~

Insulated all over . cushion lined. 75 pet . cotton ,
25 pet. nylon .
White with color tops of green , black , gold , red,
· blue, orarig_e, maroon . Fits sizes 9 through 15.
Sale Price

BLANKETS
pet. Poly~ster Virgin
Fib er s. Ma chi ne washab le
and dryable.
7:2x90
Therma l and so lid weaves .
100

,o

WASHINGTON - A PROVISION OF THE Constitution
prohibits Sen. William B. Saxbe, R.Qhio, from takiug the $10,000
a ye&lt;tr job as Attorney General he was nomina!A!d for Thursday.
But his aides say Saxbe, ifconfinned , will probably be able to
serve. Article I, Section 6, Clause 2 of the Constitution says that
no member of Congress shatl "during the time for which be was
elected be appointed to any civil office ... which shall have been
created, or the emoluments whereof shatl have been increased
during such time; ... ".
~~as a member of the Senate, which Feb . 4, 1969, voted
a pay .increase for Cabinet members from $35,000 to $60,000 a
year. "We are aware of the existence of the Constitutional
provision in question," Saxbe's office said Thursday. "We
believe there is precedent and we don't think this would bar the
senator from being attprney general."
The New York Times today quoted Solicitor General Robert
H. Bork, the acting head of the Justice Department, as saying,
"remedial legislation will be forwarded to the Congress with the
nomination."

'1.89
2lx36

•3.49

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC STREET

Red Heart "Wintuck"

CLANSMAN
SPORT.YARN
100 p et. o·r lor\ Acrylic
Fiber. 2 ply . n 4 . Machine .
washable and d rya bl e.
Regular 79c skein.
Friday and Saturday

2
Red Heart

WINTUK
YARN
100 pet. Orion - niachine
washable · and drYable
colors , sparkling co1or s.
heathers · and va riegated
colors .
Regular 51.39 skein

Special sale prices right now on room size rugs. 100 pcf..
.·Nylon 12,' wide .. Yo~ ' ll really save.

-

-Another shipment Rubber Back Carpet - special sale.
You can install it yourself . No padding required . Bring in
·
your measurements and save.
-

Save now on. Magic Chef Gii!S or Electric Ranges. Big
selection of styles in white ~nd fastlion colors.

-

Buy circulating heaters now featuring Perfection Make.
Lots of different sizes - all at sale prices.

..:..... Humidifiers- a new selection. Buy one and improve your
health. Reduce your heating bill.

ISRAEL AND EGYPT HARDENED THEIR DIPLOMATIC
positions on a settlement to the Middle East conflict Thursday,
but the two nations' soldiers. showed increasing cooperation
along the cease-lire lines despite sporadic flareups of fighting.
Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir mel with President Nixon for
80 minutes Thursday and later said she would not pull her forces
back to the lines at the start of the shaky Oct. 22 cease-fire, the
price Egypt is asking for a prisoner exchange.
Mrs. Meir told newsmen in Washington a new cease-lire line
· should be negotiated by Israel and Egypt to straighten out untenable positioiiB. "Israel feels there will have to be a
redistribution of forces on each sid~," Mrs . Meir said. In Cairo,
an influential newspaP.,r editor and close confidant of President
Anwar Sadat said "a return to the battlefield to continue the wat.
is more likely than our. going to a peace
conference."
.

Special ~ only Whirlpool S229 .9S Harvest . Gold Tfash
Compactor for S189.00.
1 Only Magic Chef Regular SJlO.OO Electric Range (slightly
damaged, not visible)
Sale $198.00

.-

s

PM.

Sale!
Super Sheen

EXTRA STRONG
QUILTING THREAD

Buy The Bucycles

Extra strong. Whit~ . 250
yd . spools.
Friday and Saturday

'BICYCLE

Big selection ot styles and
sizes in white . Also·.
Ballerinas in C&lt;;)lors.

Sizes ·29 to ·So w"alst . Select yOur correct length. s·o lld colors.

stripes . plaids.

You ' lll ike the big selection of blcycl"e styles for boys and girls
· women and men - featuring 10 speeds, 5 speeds, 3 speeds,
regular 26 Inch bicycles with ·coaster brake · 20 inch bikes
with tra ining wheels · 20 inc:h bikes with banana seat, hi -rise
handle bars. And you ' ll like the savings you make during this
bike sale - on many models as much as $22 .00 a bicy(:le. Stop
in the Toy Store - make your selection.
Elberfelds Toyl1nd is hOW open eVery day from 9:30AM. to 5
PM. Stop in ; look 1round- there's 1 fine line of toys for you to
set. select what you need 1nd for Christm1s. UH our convenient lay.awly pl1n to hold y.our toys 1 til December 25th.

·

·

Regular flare leg st"yles - cuffed bOttom flare leg styles and
reguli!lr styles knit slacks.
Hundreds of pairs in the selection. Here's how you .save
during this sale.
.

SALE

$6.49

LAMPSHADES

MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT
DRESS SLACKS

In The Middle Blbck

41x6'
Regular $10.89
Sale

· An unusual seleCtion of quality jig saw puzzles.
Buy for yourself or for Christmas. gifts.
Sale!- Your Choice

SPECIAL
~·
TWO .DAY SALEI

Elberfeld• Toy Store

THROW RUGS

REPLACEMENT

THE GOVERNMENT'S MANDATORY ALLOCATION of
beating oll for homes, jet fuel, kerosene, and diesel fuel werit into
effect Thursday as the coldest weather of tbe seasoq rolled
across tbe Rocky Mountains. Georgia officials said some schools
may have to close, a diesel shortage threatened the agriculture
industry in California, bus service in Washington may be stopped
for Jack of fuel, and the airline industry said it is canceling 300
flights a day . .
The energy crunch was not confined to the Uni!A!d States.
Western European nations, which Import SO pet. of tbeir fuel
from the Middle East, were told Arab oil-producing countries are
cutting back up to 26.5 pet . of the oil they have supplied. The
announcement was seen.as a move to pressure Western. natiom
toward or pro-Arab settlement of the Middle East conflict.

You Need Now at

Cleanup-! Group
100 oct. Aavon Viscose

Hallmark Jig .Saw Puzzles

9.95
10.95
11.95
12.95
13.95
14.95
15.95
16.95
17.95
18.95
19.95

Mens Dress Slacks
Mens Dress Slacks
Mens Dress Slacks
Mens Dress Slacks
Mens Dress Slacks
Mens Dress Slacks
- •
Mens Dress Slacks
•
Mens Dress Slacks
Mens Dress Slacks
Mens Dr~ss Slac.ks
&amp; 1.9.50 Mens Dress Slacks

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

• Salt
Sale

sale
• Sale
Sale
Sale

THE D!SOOVE:RY OF A ~EW KIND OF NUCLEAR reaction which may be able to produce "super clean" energy without
radiation hazards conunon to present. nuclear power plants was
disclosed by scientists of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
· · Thursday.
·
Physicist Thomas A. Weaver, who amounced the discovery
at a meeting of tbe American ~hysical Society in Philadelphia,
said it would require "major advances" in t!'Chnology to make it
practicalfor energy production, since it requires heat of 3 billion
degrees, but he said it would ~worth it to try.
.

'8.00.
8.50
9.00
10.00
10.50
11.00
12.00
12.50
13.50
14.00
15.00

COLUMBUS - A TOTAL OF ~0 NEW public school money
issues will appear On ballots throughout Ohio during next
Tuesday's general election, up from the 220 money. issues in the
1972 general election and below the 270 requests of two years ago,
the Ohio Education Association (OEA) reported.
The OEA; which blamed rising costs and incre!'5ed
enrollment for ihe additional money request.., said 96 bond issue
request.. for capital improvement projects, 150 additional
operating money issues and four combination levies will be
before voters.

DRIVE TO ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY AND SAVE THIS WEEKEND. FREE CUSTOMER PARKING ON SECOND STREET AND AT OUR MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE.

ELBERFELD$ IN
I

.

II

r

v.

::..

WASHINGTON--GERALD R fORD SAID he had nothing
to hide. He earnestly de~iled the cost of his son's orthodontistry
and how he came to afford a condominium at the sky resort of
Vail, Colo. on a congressman's salary.
The House Republican Leader's apparent eagerness to
answer all questions - and his pledge to serve as "ready conciliator and calm communicator" between a warring president
and C~ltgre.sS - helped Ford weather his first day Thursday of
congressional scrutiny on his .fitness to serve as vice president.
The q~estioning was mild and laced with compliments.

Green-Rose-Gold

171!2 x291J2 or 18x24

Regular $4.•00

Fri. -Sat .- Sun.

Mens Kodel and Cotton

Our entire stock of
shi ,t gowns, pajamas
and long gowns is
included.
Choose
brushed
tricot. challis or
flannel in sizes S-M· L,
X and XX .

3 SPOOLS 9!1

All That's New and Exciting

KEY BISCAYNE, FLA. - PRESIDENT NIXON, showing
signs of tension [rom the continuing Watergate crisis, left his
aides behi9d and abruptly flew bere Thursday for a weekend at
his vacation home.
Only Bryce N. Harlow, the veteran White House adviser who
was recently recalled from private life to help Nixon out of the
.
Watergate scandal, accompanied him.
Hls chief of staff, Alexander M. Haig Jr., a nd press
secretary, Ronald L. Ziegler, caught a later flight Thursday
night. Mrs. Nixon and other members of the First Family
remained in Washington . Nixon'S press office, which normally
ootifies newstnen in time for them to accompany the President
on such trips, did not spread the word until after Nixon's
departure.

'7.69

WINTER SLEEPWEAR

Pure Foam Rubber Anti Fatigue Mat. Marbelized
pattern . Wide range Of
· attractiVe decorator co lors
in sizes for eve-ry need.
Ski d proof - Tr ip p roof
bevelled edges.

Solid State Pocket Size

-;

Womens

Elberfelds WarehoUS!! is open every day 9:30 AM to
Friday and· Satu.rday open 'til 9 PM . .
Plenty of free pat.king.

TRANSISTOR RADIOS

By United Press International

Zipper front · lined with laminated polyurethane
foam and thermal cloth . Water repellent.
Small , medium , large and extra large sizes.
Solid colors.
Special Sale Price

DANDEE-TRED

Ju st Rec:e·ived

Tonight, Nov. I
N.OT OPEN

HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS

New Shipment

~~:~ates

MEIGS. THEATRE

Mens Thermal Lined

Regular Stock

pn battery or AC house currenl - ullra se nsi ti ve
buil t in conden ser mike . automatic adjusted record in g level ·
easy l ouse push button con trols . earphone monitor - all solid
state .
Buy now for yourself Or for gifts later on .

J UDGE DIES
' LIMA, Ohio (U P!) -Claude
W. Pettit, Ada , dean emeritu.S
of Ohio Northern University's
Pettit College of Law and re·
·tired judge, died here Tuesday
following a long illness. He was
82.
'
Following his retirell{e nt
from the Ohio Northern facUlty
in 1955, Pettit became Hardin
County probate and juvenile
judge, serving for 12 years. He ·
taught part-dme at the law college recently.

SALE •8.62

Selected from our

Casse t1 e r ecorder in solid color red . white . grey - yellow or

POLLUTION TRIAL
MT. GILEAD, Ohio (UP!) Donald Coleman, Elyria, is to
be tried in · Morrow County
Court here Nov. 7 on two counts
of violating state oil and gas
regulations.
Lyman Dawe, state OU and
Gas Division chief, said Coleman was cha rged with
polluting the ground and using
a leaking temporary storage
pit in Harmony TownShip,
Morrow County.

$4

lI SPORTSWEAR
%
1
l
j
l
l
!
~
l~:~~~~:~~J

ca rry . out income pr oducing
projects through 4-H, fF A, and

KELLY DEAD
COLUMBUS (UP! )
William L. Kelly, administrative , assista nt to
Senate Minority Leader Anthony L. Calabrese, D-Cieveland was found dead of unknown causes Tuesday in his
room at the Neil House Motor
. Hotel. Kelly was 58.
A native of YoungstoWn,
Kelly was a former House
cler~ an9 previously served cis
an aide to U.S. Rep. Charles J.
Carney, D-Youngstown, when
Carney was Democratic floor
leader in· the state Senate.

l

·r-----------1.
COORDINATE

private industry.

panded. FHA can now make
second mortgage farm real ·
estate loans up to $100,000. The
total indebtedness against the
farm cannot exceed $225,000.
FHA farm real estate' loans are
made in conjunction with local
Private .lender 's funds .
McNair reported that the
agency also has Rural Housing
Loans available for people who
areJ without a home of their
own . H ousing Joans may be.
made in communities of 10,000
population or less .
Applications and information
may be acquired by contacting
the local Farmers Home 'Administration offi ce serving
Gallia, Jackson, and Lawrence
countie s loca ted a t 95
Sycamore St., Gallip olis, 45631.

·!.

99
Il.___...........__.._..._...._.
·
NOW ONLY
___ ~
.

numities . Pubtic ' bodies may

MRS. CHARLES LEWIS, chairwoman of !be annual
Christmas flower show of the Meigs .County Garden Club
Association, displays one of the attractive Santa replica
.standups to be used to designate classes of tbe Holiday
Flower show Dec. 1 and 2 in the Pomeroy Elementary School
auditorium. See story on Page 5.

commission which advised it to explaining · the proposed plan
circulate a petition to secure and a stamped -self-addressed
100 names .asking extended card will be enclosed.
service. The corrunittee, after Residents wanting the ex·
obtaining the names. presented tended service and who wish to
them to the PUC which notified supp&lt;}rt the committee are to
the telephone company.
sign the card and drop it in the
11
Now," said Mrs. Griffith, mail.
"the telephone company comes
The Southeastern Telephone
back and informs the com- Company has agreed that if 70
mittee that we must secure 70 percent support is received it
percent support from all the will offer extendoo service.
Others on the committee that
residents serviced by the
company for the extended attended last night's meeting
service."
. were Harold Norton, Mrs. Jean
Extended service would Sheets, Vickie Carr and Olive
allow phone users of the 985 Weber. Jim Stout, manager of
exchanges to call Pomeroy- the Coolville office was also
Middleport, · Racine, Rutland present, as was Mrs. Griffith
and Arnold.
and Langsville toll free .
Residents will receive letters

lr,,~,,,,,,R,,;~p:~:rt;;;:::&gt;:::;:;;:;,i;i;;;;~r::::::::::&lt;:~:::~:lt

Be sure 't o see all the other mens jackets and
boys jackets at sale prices Friday and Saturday.

I

Junior sizes 5 to 15.

this program is to finance the
development of co mmunity
service facilities which will

Sizes small (34-36), mediu m (38-40), large (-42-44 ) and extra
large { 46 -48) . Zipper front - knit wris~s - warm ·nylon lining waist length .
Solid co lors black or navy blue.

PRICES

r----~~--~----1

guarantees to banks or other .
approved-lenders covering up

NYLON QUILTED JACKETS

Extended telephone service,
which would knit Meigs County
into a . toll-free uextended"
system with subscribers of the
Southeastern Ohio Telephone
. Company of Coolville, depends
upon a. forthcoming survey.
Sandra Sheets Griffith, Rt. I
Reedsville, chairman of the
Extended Area Service
Committee, said today the
committee met Thursday
evening w·ilh Glenn Arnold,
manager of the Southeastern
Ohio Telephone Company at
Coolville. The company serves
Coolville, Chester, Little
Hocking and Reedsville.
According to Mrs. Griffith,
the committee first met with
the Ohio Public Utilities

.

• f

.

.·.

'

." ..
•

•

DALLAS (UP!) - On the
rainy night of Oct. 12, United
Press International reporter
Doug Stanglin, covering an
annual celebration going on in
the streets, took refuge under

the protective awning of the
Adolphus Hotel in the center of
doWntown Dallas.
A police officer approached
stanglin and told him to move
on. As the reporter ' talked to

the officer and identified
himself as a newsman, another
policeman came from behind
stanglin, wresUed him to ~e
stdewalk, grabbed him by his
. (Continued on Page 2)

CULTURAL ARTS WlNNERS - Melissa AM !hie, II, right, a sixth grader at the Racine
Elemenlary School, and Jayne Lee Hoeflich, 9, a fifth gra~er at the Bradbury School, won third
place honors in the Ohid' PTA cultural arts competition.' 'l'hey were recognized at a meeting
Thursday night of the Meigs County Council of Parents and Teachers held at the Middleport
Elementary School. Melissa, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward !hie of Racine , received honors
in the water color painting division, and Jayne Lee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob HoeOich,
Pomeroy, won with her piano music composition, HMystic ." She is the piano student of Mrs.
Clara Lochary .

Devoted To The Interu,. Of The Meig1-Ma60n Area

VOL. XXV NO. 142

POMEROY·M IDDLEPORT, .OHIO

.:i::::::::::~:~=~:~=~==::::::::::::::::::=::;::=::;:~;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;::;::;:::::::::;:;:;:::::;:;::::;::;::::;;:;:::::::::::::::8{:~:::::::::::::::;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:::::;:::::::::;:::::;:;:~::::;:;:::::;:::::::;:;:;§.~8i:::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::=:=:=::;:;:;:;:;::::~:::::!:?.::i:::?.::::::::::::::~~:

;!;'
\.l,l.l, ·

Santa to parade in Middleport_.·.

Final plans for the annual
Christmas promotion by the
Middleport Retail Merchants
were completed Thursday
night by the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce and
retail merc hants at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company.
The kickoff of the Christmas
season will be on Nov. 26 with a
. parade, arrival of Santa Claus,

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 1973

N E W HA VEN , W . Va . -

;:;: ·Gabriel Lane Thompson, age 3,

for h im ·whe n he

was misse d .
One of them, with a neighbor,

l.r'~.·_\ ~~~i~;t·b;ast~!llef~~~~rs~:~
:~;~~i~~~n~:~~;~ea~~~
which was chained in the yard with the dog.
..·

. Apparently it was not
appear in The Daily Sentinel at the child'S home. .
enabling shoppers to take part.
Mason County Sheriff's unusual for !he boy to be
Coupons for participation will deputies, Rupert Rice and playing with the dog, so this
also be 'available at the various James Craddock, were sum- caused no alarm. But sooq it
stores taking part. Posters will monel! to the iamily home. . was realized the child was .
be on display · at · all par- They, said the · child was at- missing.
No purchase is reqUired for ticipating stores listing mer- ta cked by an English Setter, a
A New Haven emergency
participation, and coupons will chandise prizes .
bird dog, owned by the family squad ambulance was called
Persons need not be present that weighed between 45 and 55 · and transpor!A!d the child first
·to · win. However, at the· first pounds.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
According to police, the in Pomeroy and then to
three drawings, if a person is
present they will be awarded attack occurred approXimately ,, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Due to the circumstances,
an additional bonus of a $10 100 feet b~hind the house near a
barn where the dog · was the dog was killed and remains
certificate.
Drawings will be Nov. 30 and chained. It was just before of the head were turned over to
Dec . 7 in the afternoon, time to dark, when apparently the Sanitarian William E. Willis. ·
Willis took this to the State
be announced, and on Dec; 14 child was playing with the. dog
HOUSTON (UPI) -,- Newly before anything else.
Hygienic Laboratory at South
and 21 drawings will be held at alone.
RUTLAND- The Rutland appointed special Watergate
"I plan to go to the tapes 7:30p.m.
Some of Gabriel's older Charleston for testing .
Volunteer Fire Dept. again prosecutor Leon Jaworski, who matter first,'' Jaworski said
brothers
were reported. looking
Attending were George
will sponsor an annual say• he'll begin his investiga- Thursday. "! didn't even know Ingles, president; Mr. and
The child, affectionately
turkey dlmer on Thursday, tion where his predecessor until just now which particular Mrs. Manning Kloes, Mr. and
known as ''Gab," was beloved
Nov. ' 15 at Rutland Archibald Cox left off, plans to ones are missing. I tell you Mrs. John Werner, Jim RickPOLL SWITCHED
by those who knew him .
Elementary School cafeteria · look into the matter of the frankly that that wasn't dis- man , Edna Wilson and Lilly
The Meigs County Board of Because of the close-knit
with serving to begin at · 5 missing presidential tapes
Elections
ts announcing the family he was seen often in the
(Contlnued on Pa~e 2)
Stumbo.
p.m.
change In the voting location _ New Haven ·area when his
Tickets must be purchased
for voters of Pomeroy older brothers and other
in advance by adults lor '2:50
Precinct at Tuesday's
members of the family atelection.
and lor children, 'UO.
tended school ball games,
"ThemottoofLionismis 'We · clarence J. Struble of County in honor of Struble's
Tickets may be purchased
Voters of that precinct will
church and community events
only at the New York Serve' and Clarence Struble is. Pomeroy, who will be. honored being named Eminent Prior of cast ballots on . Tuesday at
there.
Clothing and Swisher and a livtng testimony · to that at a public reception on Nov. 17 the State oi Ohio.
the Johnson Masonry Co.
The New Haven ER squad
motto. Truly, he serves his at the Meigs High School.
Lohse Pharmaey, .POmeroy;
building at the corner of was summoned but the
fellow man."
The reception will open with
Struble has held all cluiirs in Union Ave. and the Route 7 mangled child was dead on
VIllage Pharmacy In MidThis
was
the
comment
of
a
dinner
to
be
served
at
6:30
the Pomeroy - Middleport bypass. The voters formerly
dleport, allhe Racine Home
arrival at Pleasant Valley
Wendell
Hoover,
president
of
p.m.
and
while
open
to
the
LioiiB
Club
and
now
holds
a
National 11ank In Racine,
voted at the Wagner building
Hospital. He was born Jan. 29.
the Pomeroy - Middleport public, the affair is heing somewhat perpetual job of club which was known as the . 1970 at Gallipolis.
~nd at Miller's Store in
Lions Club in reference to a staged by' the Knights of the secretary .. treasurer . ije is motorcycle club building.
Rutland.
charter member of the club, York Cross of Honor in Meigs also a club director.
He is survived by his
parents, Kenneth G. and Donna.
M. Dawkins Thompson; five
brothers, Joseph Michael,
Timothy Craig, Thomas Dale,
1. Mark · Preston and Matthew
Terrance;
the · paternal
By Geotge Hargraves, Supt.
show the following for males: college ·22.3, technical significant meaning. From this we will try to adapt grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. D.
Meigs Local School District
schooll0.7, contmuing education34.8, full-time work future curriculum changes to more nearly meet the J. Thompson, Branchland, W.
The guidance staff at Meigs High School has
39.6, military service 10.5, unemployed 13.7, and needs of o!lr students.
Va ., and several aunts and
completed its followup study of last spring's
mSITied, 5.4.
LAS!' WEEK WAS American Education Week . uncles. Mrs. Thompson, the
graduates. We now have this information for all
This year's males had a smaller per cent going to when we invited all parents to visit their schools. We child's m(ltber, was treated for
graduating classes for 1967-1973, This will be a brief
college or continuing their education elsewhere. ·A had 329 visitors.
shock at an area hospital
report on the 1973 class and not include all the
larger per cent of !be 1973 males went into full-lime
The breakdown was, Bradbury 29, Harrisonville following the tragedy.
·· previous classes in this col~. That gets tO be just
work. The per cent going into military service or 12, Middleport 41, Pomeroy 19, Rutland 10, Salem
too many numbers. I want to thank John Redovian,
being unemployed was about average this year. The Center 46, Salisbury 12, Junior High School 70 and
He was a member of the St.
Harold Sauer and Martha Yennari for their work in
per cent of boys being married was less than half the high school 90. We appreciate the effort made by
these
329
visitors
and
the
staff
members
who
met
Paul
Lutheran Church, New
gathering this information and preparing this report . . average.
Haven; attended Sunday
· What has happened to 'our 1973. male graduates?
The percentage averages ·for the seven classes with tbem.
The
annual
Foothall
Banquet
will
again
he
school
class of · which Mary
show the following for females : college 20.4, business
Here ls the answer in percentages: college 18.1,
technical school 5.7, business school 1.0, total con- · school 4.8, technical school 5.7, total continuing · sponsored ,by the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club Mae Roush was the teacher, ·
education 34.2, full-time work 28.7, unemployed 28.1, on Monday, Nov. 12, at 6:30p.m. at the high school and attended the story hour at
Speaking of Schools-No. 291
cafeteria. The price is $3 per ticket.
New Haven Lbrary.
.
and married, 22.7.
tinning education 24.8; full-time work 48.6, military
The deadline for purchasing a ticket is Nov. 9.
Funeral services will be held
This year's females had a smaller per cent going
service 10.4, unemployed 16.2, and married, 1.9.
be
purchased
at
Swisher
&amp;
Lohse
at
the St. Paul Lutheran
Tickets
may
.to college or continuing their education elsewhere.
What has happened to our 1973 fem8le
Business and technical school enrollment by' Pharmacy and the. New York Clothing !louse in Church Sunday at I p .m. with
graduates? College 18.0, nurses training 2.0; technical
graduates is down because they can get the training Pomeroy, tbe Citizens Bank, Western Auto, and the Rev. John Haberale ofschool 1.0, business school 3.0, total continuing
in high school, it appears. The per cent going right Dutton Drugs in Middleport, and .at the Rutland ficialing. Burial · will be in
education, 24.0; full-time work 39.0,military service
Woodmere Cemetery, Huninto work is up 10 points over the average, but the Department store.
2.0, unemployed 35.0, and married, 30.0.
unemployed
numher
is
up
aboul7
points
aiso.
The
per
The
banquet
speaker
will
be
Dave
Diles.
a
native
tington.
'The total figures -for all graduates: college 18.0, '·
Friends may call at the
cent of married females is 7.points above the seven · of Middleport, and now a natienal TV sports figw-e .
nurses training 1.0, technical school 3.4, business
He
is
co-host
of
the
Prudential
College
Football
.
Foglesong
.Funeral Hdn:e
year average.
school 2;0, total continuing education 24.3; full-time
The percentage averages fbr all graduates for the Scoreboard, ·seen each Saturday on the"l\\lC-TV Saturday from 7 to 9 and at..the
work 44.0, military service 6.3, unemployed 25.3, and
seven years .y.ow the following: college 21.2, con-. Network. be has made over 2,000speeches and public church one hour prior to sermarried, 15.6.
tinning education 34.4, full-time work 34.6, military appearances. He will be worth hearing. Get your vices .
Where did our graduates find jobs? Here in the
ticket early .
The family has requested in
service 6.1, unemployed 20.3, and married, 13.5.
Meigs County area or away from this area? Here are
NOTES
The
regular
November
meeting
of
the
lieu
of flowers to ·place a
This year's class is below average in cOllege and
the percentages i 86.3 o[ the. working males found
continuing education. They are higher than average Board of Education will be at 9 p.m. on Monday, contribution to a memorial
• work here and 13.7 are working away; 82.1 of the
in full-time work and unemployment. They are about November 12, instead of at 7:30 on that .same date. ·fundal the Mason County Bank
working females ·a re working bere and 17.9 are away .
even
with the average going into military service. the meeting will be in the junior high school building for which playground equipThe tot$1 working here is 83.3 and 16.7 is the total
in Middleport as usual - just 90 minutes later than ment may be purchased· f
The per cent married is above BV\'rage.
working away from here. ·
r
We
will
have
to
study
these
figures
to
dig
out
their
New Haven area .
usual, due to the foothall banquet.
The percentage averages for the seven classes

Firemen plan
anotherdinner

and a special moonlight sale.
Meters will be free from
Monday, Dec. 10 through Dec.
24. Merchants will be . open
evenings beginning Dec . 10;
however, they will close at 5
p.m. on Dec. 24 . .
There will be five mer-

chandise Prizes
each of the
drawings . At the
20 merchandise
awarded.

awarded at
first three
last drawing,
gifts will be

Missing .tapes
topping -agenda

Struble will be honored by' fellow Lions

Caree~s

.

"1•.•.

of '73 MHS graduates traced

'

. '

,'I;
.

'

I ..

l

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