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DaUvSentlnei.Middleport-PIImeroy, 0., Monday, Nov. 4, 1974'

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Suspect
sought in
.shooting

POLLY BURGER, GALLIPOUS, queen of !he Ohio
Valley Horse Show Assoclatioo, is pictured with the stage fuU

Riding club
Continued from page 1

Ralph Weaver

Kenneth Paul Bradley , 18,
Gallipolis, is listed in "stable
but guarded condition" in the
.intensive care unit at the
Holzer Medical Center where
he was admitted at 2:30 a . m.
SWlday with a bullet wolUld in
his chest.
Acting Gallia CoWlty Sheriff
Lt. Robert Shaw said Bradley
was shot with a small caliber
pistol between 1:30 and 1:58 a.
m. SWlday in the parking lot at
the Green Gables Nite Club.
Following the incident,
Bradley ran from the parking
area to the rear of the bar
where he fell down a hill.
A warrant has been issued
for a suspect in the shooting,
but the name was withheld by
sheriff's deputies .

of Letart is dead

Henson Will

' of trophies awarded to members at Saturday night's dinner
in Tuppers Plains for outstanding accomplishment during
the past season.

,

Berrys World

Lewis, Jr. Kennedy, Rich
Deems, William Greer, Fr·ank
Petrie, Judy Kennedy, Tanda
Hauffman, Cindy Daniels,
Sherry Indestead, Richard
Franklin, Mike Jones, Beth
Cochran, Kammy Sayre ,
Tammy Kennedy, David
Darst, Jr., Randy Shobe, Lori
Darst, David Darst, Cindy
Gooch, Sam Beckner, Timmy
Logan, Harvey Hawkins,
Sevilla· Ohlinger, Jane EUen,
Wood, Debbie White, Debbie
Jones, Pat Rose · Betty

LETART. W. VA. - Funeral
serv ices will be held at I :30 p .
m. at the roglesong FWleral
Home in Mason with burial to
the
Graham
follow in
Cemetery for Ralph G.
Weaver , 60 , who died in
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Visitation hours will be after
7 p. m. today ,at the fWleral

home. Mr: Weaver was born
August 30, 1914 in New Haven,
a son of the late . Mark and
Arletta PoWlds Weaver. He is
survived by his wife , Madge
Leary Weaver; one daughter,
Vicky, and a son, Rick, both at
hom e; one brother, Roy
Weaver , New Haven ; a
s tepdaug hter, Mrs . Sunda
Thurman, Detroit; two half
sisters , Mrs . Thelma Capehart,
New Haven ,·and Mrs. Garnette
Widenrod , Elgin, Ill.
Mr . Weaver, an electrician,
was a member of IBEW No .
317, World War 2 veterans, a
member of the Smith Capehart
Post 140, American Legion,
New Haven and of Clifton
Lodge No. 23.

Harrison , M. J . Tennant,
"Jackie Bennett, Terri Short
· and Dan Nelson.

Offices to close
PT. PLEASANT - Several
offices will be closed Tuesday,
including most of the courthouse offices. However ,
Howard Schultz, circuit court
clerk, will be in his office to
assist poll workers if needed
and to assist in arrangements
for persons planning to vlsit the
social security representative.
State government offices will
be closed . as will state liquor
stores . The Mason County
Bank is also to close.

©

197J by NEA ,

Inc~~

"Here's a suggestion from a former Johnson
aide - 'Why don 't you go around the White
House and turn out lights, like LBJ used to
do?'"

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

The peanut got its name
because the plant, when
growing, resembles a pea
vine with light green leaves.

MEIGS ntEATRE
Tonight lhru Thursday
NOV. 5-6·7
NOT OPEN
FRI.·SAT.-SUN.
NOV. e.;-10
BUTCH CASSIDY AND
THE SUNDANCE KID
ITochnlcolor)

Paul Newman
Color cartoons:
Expert Explor•f
P110ce Pipe .

, ShoWSIIirts7p.m.

Q.IP ntiS
AD ••• AND

SOUP TOMORROW
RACINE - The auxiliary of
the Racine Fire Dept. will
sponsor a soup dinner Tuesday,
Election day, at the fire
station. Serving will begin at II
a.m. In addition to soup there
will be sandwiches and pie.
IN HOSPITAL
Tony Vaughan, 20, Pomeroy,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport emergency squad
Saturday._ afternoon when he
was Injured while riding a
· motorcycle near Bone Hollow.
He was admitted for treatment.

•

Save 50$
ON :ANY OF ·
KAY'S BEAUn
SERVICES.
Offer~

T.UES. &amp;WED.
· ONLY

KAY'S
, B~SALON
Middleport, Ohio
992-2725

so~
OFF

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Sybil Greene, ' Hartford;
Wilma Anderson. Long Bottom; Gertrude Drake, Vinton ;
Hollie Green, Pomeroy; Tony
Vaughan, Pomeroy; Thomas
Klein, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Ruby Jones, James Smith,
Jack Landers, Donald Payne,
Shirley Bishop, Barbara
Grueser, Clarence King, JWle

Yost,

Charles

I s Chicago th e "'Windy
C ity"? - According to 1972
Nat10nal Clima t ic Ce nt ~r
data, the a verage true ·value
wind velocity was 12.9 m .p.h.
in Boston : 12.4 Ill Buffalo; 11 .8
in Cape Hatte ra s; N.C.; 11.3 in
Kev We st. Fla. ; 11.0 in
Gaiveston. Tex .; 10.9 in Ciev e·land and Omaha; 10 .7 1n
. Bismark, N.D .. 10.6 in Min·
'"llea polis: 10.5 in San Fran·
ciscO; and 10.4 m .p .h. in
Chicago, The World Almanac

!{essinger,

William Evans, Ralph Brewer,
Carol Pickens.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS 'William Wells,
Tuppers
Plains ; Aaron Turner, Racine;
Debbie Greathouse, Racine;
Karlen Grate, Rutland; Anne
Marchen, Parkersburg .
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Thomas
Drake , Christy
Hansen, Rodney Grueser,
Myrtle
Holter,
Robert
Lawrence.

•

QUEEN

CASUALS

f~r girl, who !.now the name af lhe game
'

•

•
· Tweed Knits ... smashing Holiday classics by Queen Casuals
You II lOok coo l, calm, perfectly turned out sou th now, no rth' later in
these beau tifu lly tailo red Queen Co.suol coordinates. All done in
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red, white and blue tweedy texture to mix o r match with coo rdinate

lon g -sleeved turtleneck, blazer, Straight-l eg pant,
cu ffed plac~et shirt, shirl jacket.

SHOP WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5:00 P.M.

•.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Now In The Mail
Christmas Club
CHECKS FOR

$75,000.00
l

START YOUR
CHRISTMAS .
SAVINGS .CLUB.

needs. Being
members of, HWI. we ·

catalllj1 over 35'.000 Items
for just that purpose. JUST
ANOTHER
GbOD
REASON FOR SHOPPINI;;
WITH THE "FRIE-NDLY

49 PROMPT W.EEKLY PA· ~MENTS, THE
BANK WII.L MAKE THE:50TH PAYMENT
'·

Citizens ·National Bank
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
,,.

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THE FRIENDLY BANK
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Ohio University. His father,
Howard, is a retired teacher
and school administrator. His
mother is a retired teacher.
For the past two montha,
Knight has been associated in
the law office of Bernard Fultz
and will continue the practice
of law . there since passing the
bar examination.
Knight said he "is dellghted
to be back in Meigs County."
He hopes to help Meigs ColUlty
develop economically over !he
next 20 years so that young
people leaving the county to
receive professional training
can return to the county to
work in their profession.
Knight's wife, Barbara, who
holds a bachelor's degree in
communications, travels to
Columbus where she stays for
three days each week in the
study of law at Capital
University . .she is a second
year law stude~t. The couple
resides at Pomeroy· Route 3.

should have to pay for it
again/' he said.
Reed showed a copy of a
statute which in part read that
if the board of education
decides to dispose of such real
property it may sell · and '
convey the same to ~ny
municipal corporation, county, '
township, etc. for a "nominal
swn.u
Reed contended that the
building legally can be secured

Bottle up day ·is Saturday

.

'

Businessman-lawyer Knight
opens practice in Fomeroy

for the sum of $1. He pointed rates would be increased 8.41
out that when the building ls no cents per 1,000 cubic feet ef·
longer used ij would, naturally, fecUve Dec. I.
go back to the Board of.
In accepting _a bid from the
Education.
Meigs Equipment Co., for a
Reed pledged his full support , truck for the Board of Public
and ttu.t of the ,chamber to · Affairs COWlcil had stated that
village officials and added that they expected delivery in 90
the sentiment of Pomeroy days. A letter was read from
people is to obtain !he building. Meigs Equipment in regard to
He ·said the public is iQ full this statement.
suppott of what Pomeroy
Meigs Equipment said that it
Council is trying to ac- expected delivery by the first
complish.
of the year but were disturbed
OTHER BUSINESS
by the !Kkiay delivery .
Council ·members agreed
In' Other business colUlcil
. The Meigs Athletic Bqosters, pick up will go on all day agre.e d to issue · two taxi that tile reason this statement
assisted -by the athletes of the Saturday, and residents may licenses to the Middleport Cab was made was because of th~
school, will sponsor a " Bottle . leave tbeir contributions on · Co., to service Pomeroy. !twas ,long delay in receiving the last
Up for - Boosters" day on their froni. porches : in noted that the present service cruiser purchased . However,
Saturday. Everyone wishing to Pomeroy. ·Middleport and ' 15
, d ow n ·
there lin
is no
.
th inteotion
kfr ofM not
.
d&lt;inate pop bo\tles or bottle Rutland .. ThOS!! having con·
Jane Walton, clerk, read a . accep g e true om eJ.gS
caps should take 'them to the lrlbutions should call 992-2087 letter from the Columbia Gas .Eqwpment.
.'
R.C. plant in Middleport. The Cl" 992-291~ .
of
'Ohlo,
which
stated
that
gas
·
Omtinued
on
page
B
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............

The · measure of a good .
lumber· store Is having
most , thl~gs that t~e

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sale of a property to a
municipalily (under circumstances apparently applying here 1 for a nominal
swn, that is, $1.
"We want to back up the
mayor's stand that the people
of Pomeroy, because they paid
for the building in the first
place with their taxes, should
be able to get it back for $!,"
Reed said.
In the chamber 's business
meeting Monday Reed said
prospects do not look good in
restoring bus service from
Pomeroy to Athens . He
disclosed, however , the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio is
making an inquiry of the
GreyholUld. Bus system.
It was also approved,
following Reed's suggestion, to
write to Larry Powell of
Powell's Super Value, a letter
thanking him for the recent
Halloween party.
The chamber also went on
record endorsing Issue 3 which
allows corporations to sell
revenue bonds for purpose of

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pollution control.
Bill Anderson, chairman of
the Chri stmas Committee,
reported on its recent meeting.
Making up the committee are
Anderson, Ken McCullough,
Ada Nease and Larry Powell.
Anderson sa id there are 43
paid chamber members and
only they will participate in the
chamber,s annual Christmas
promotion.
'
Anderson suggested, and the
chamber agreed, to give
one big merchandise gift
and a number of gift
certificates. He also reported that the tickets used
last year for the Gold Star
drawings were most confusing.
He suggested tickets be issued
that are self-explanatory. To

'·

TEN CENTS

which members agreed . He
reported at the present time
the re is $527 in the Christmas
fWld ,
Anderson suggested that
drawings for gift certificates
will be held weekly and the
drawing for big prize the day
before Christmas.
Last year 22 husinesses
participated in the annual
Christmas promotlon. There
were 10 contributors.
The budget for this year's
promotion remains to be
determjned . The Christmas
committee will arrange
decorations and advertising ,
Anderson suggested that the
fire department be contacted,
for a fee, to .. wash down " all
streets. Reed agreed to contact

JOhio would cooperate ,.,IJ.
Iin Ravenswood bridge J
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COLUMBUS - Governor
John J . Gilligan has pledged in
a letter to West Virginia
GOvernor Arch A. Moore
Ohio's cooperation in solving
financial
problems
now
blocking construction of three
badly needed bridges across
the Ohio River.
Gilligan said his letter should
clariry Ohio's position on
financing three proposed
structures at Steubenville,
MolUldsville and Ravenswood.
He also expressed hope that
West Virginia not consider
making the Steubenville bridge

a toll facility . The Ravenswood
structure eventually would
bypass U. S. Rt. 3 1rOWld
Pomeroy, Ohio and Mason and
New Haven, W. Va.
Gilligan said Ohio's current
position on funding construrtion would be thrOugh
utilization of Federal high,way
allocations.
Governor Gilligan's letter
said he reviewed plans for the
bridges with State Trans·
portation Director J. ~hillip
Richley, and reached the
following conclusions following
a series of discussions with
Steubenville Mayor William
Crabb and West Virginia of.
ficials ,
That Ohio stand ready,
willing and able to cooperate
with the State of Wesl Virginia
to pursue any legal means
available that will assist in the
construction of the proposed
bridges at Steubenville ,
Moundsville and Ravenswood .
With respect to the proposed
.new bridge at Steubenville,
CHARLESTON, W. Va. - A Ohio will agree to program
U.S. District Court grand jury with federal fWlds, the consitting here Thursday indicted
two Ohio Power Co. employes
and two local firms for mail
fraud.
Fred R. Carman, 527 Maple
Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio, former
chief en~lneer for Ohio Power,
and Meryl A. Dooley, purchasing agent for the power
AKRON (UPI) - B. F.
company, West Virginia Goodrich Co. said today it
Electric Supply Co. and the would spend about $42 million
Ohio River Wholesale Supply in the next three to four years
Co. were named in a seven- to reduce vinyl chloride excount indictment chafging posure in its plants " to the
them with scheming·to defraud loWest level attainable with
American Electric Power currently feasible technology,"
System of New York and its
Goodrich's
program
subsidiary , Ohio ~ower of corresponds with the Oc·
Canton, Ohio, ·through use of cupatlonal Safety and Health
lhe postal system.
Administration 's standards
The fraud reportedly is in req!Jiring vinyl chloride and
connection with operations at polyvinyl chloride producers
the Gen . James M. Gavin and fabricators to institute
· Power Plant at Cheshire, Ohio, feasible engineering and work
and at the Mitchell' Power practice controls effective Jan ..
Plant in Northern West I, 1975,
Virginia .
Producers and fabricators
. The indictment was returned are tO reduc• exposure Wlttl it
Thursday by the federal grand is , at or below one part per
jury meeting in Charleston, but million over any eight-hour
was ordered sealed for 24 period and 5 parts pl,r million
"hours. It was opened at 5 p.m. averaged over any per!od not
Monday.
exceeding 15 minutes.

Exposure to
be reduced

SCHOOL ROBBED
HARTFORD,. W. Va. - A
breaking and enlering of Hartford School is under investigation by the Mason
ColUlty Sheriff's Dept. , with
some $50 in cash reported
missing . Sgt. George R. Plants
said a window in the ki1chen
was pried open. The kitchen
area was ra.risacked and gUiss
was broken in an office door to
gain entrance from where
about $50 in PTO money was
taken from a metal filing
cabinel which was forced open.
CONDUCT BUSINESS
, The Meigs County Com'
ml·ssl'oners conducied routine
business ·when they met
Monday at !heir office in the
Meigs County Courthouse.

i

Fire Chief Charles Legar ,
though a wag inquired ,
"What'swrongwitha broom?"
Anderson 's suggestion that a
Retail Merchants Association
be organized of c hamber
members was approved.
Also atte nding Monday's
meeting was Pomeroy COWl·
cilman Harry Davis who asked
for the cooperatlon of the
chamber in regard to
solicitation by various groups
throughout the COWl ty . Davis
said for the council, ~~we have
run out of days ." It was agreed
to cooperate with colUlcil in
solving the problem .
Mrs . Millard VanMeter
suggested that new Christmas
decorations be purchased and
Continued on page 8

Y'"''~''''"'"',,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,*'"'"'"'::::,:"''''"~.!&lt;:::;::.;:•~m:c;;;:;:::;~m:&lt;::w;;$;:;z;o;:;:::::,:*:$;:~&lt;~=:~:::::::::1,,-;:;:,:,:::::::;:,::&lt;:'&lt;'.:::~:~,::&gt;.!!'&lt;':'*'''"*J

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PHONE 992-2156

Carman
indicted
by jury

. CHARLES KNIGHT .
BYKATIECROW
Ted Reed, president of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Com·
merce, told Pomeroy Council
Monday night that the
. chamber was in fulf support of
the village action to purchase
!he o)d Pomeroy Senior High
School.
Reed said !he buildin_g w~s
built in 1914 and paid for by the
citizens of Pomeroy once. '
"They do not believe they

FOR EAGH CLUB MEMBER WHO MAKES
puts the taP:e

"

GOVERNMENT AND BANKING EXPERTS SAY A
!n'RlKE by the nation's coal miners would severely curtail key
industries and could put as many as I million persons out of
work. "Steel, railroads and electric utilities would be the first
sectors to feel the Impact but the effects could spread beyond
these Industries if tbe strike were to be an extended one," Chase
Manhattan Jlank economists reported Monday.
Albert ltees, bead of President Ford's Council on Wages and
Stability, said a long strike could have "a very serious Impact."
The United Mine Workers union, representing 120,000 miners
who produce 70 per cent of the nation's coal, has threatened a
national strike on Nov. 12.

BERTHA INGLES
MASON, W.Va.- Bertha
Jeane Ingles, 15-year-oid
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James R. Ingles, Third St.,
Mason, is missing, according
to her parents.
Mason police said she was
last seen Saturday wearing a
light blue blouse, high
waisted levis, and brown
suede shoes. She is five feet,
two Inches tal~ weighs lU
pounds, hao blonde hair and
blue eyes. Persons knowing
her whereabouts or having
seen this teenager are asked
to contact the Mason Police
Dept. at 773-5291 or the West
Virginia Slate Police at 675llOl immediately.

Public opinion in Pomeroy is
that th~ old - now unused senior high building on East
Main St. should be "sold" to
the village for $1.
That was the message Ted
Reed, president of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Com.
merce, took to Pomeroy
COWlcil Monday night following
a· noon luncheon - business
meeting of the Chamber In the
Meigs Inn. The action was in
support of the position taken
recently by the administration
of Mayor Dale Smith which has
been trying to buy the building
for that swn for use as a town
hall,.
Negotiations by the town
with District Supt. of Schools
George Hargraves for the
building have bogged down.
The Meigs Local School board
bas asked Sll4,000 for the
structure and grounds ,
Reed took with him to the
coWlcil meethig a copy of an
Ohio law whioh stipulates that
a school district 11 maf'- but
not necessarily -negotiate the

Statute permits $1 sale of school

OUR GIFT T0 .1975 CLUB MEMBERS

He

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The lowest temperature ever
recorded wa s minus 126.9
degrees Fahrenheit, measured
a t the Soviet Antarctic station
Vostok on Aug . 24, 1960.

Chamber ·supports town's hid
of $1 for old school huildi.tlg

I.DNG BEACH, CAIJF.- FORMER PRESIDENT Rlchan! ·
Nixon Monday took his first stepe since his cloae brush with death
The newest addition to Meigs
almost a week ago. Doctors said the few assisted steps around
County's legal profession is
the hospital room were an IndicatiOn of gradual improvements Charles H. Knight of the
from Nixon's lapse Into shock after tbe operation to implant a
Chesler area.
clip to block·a blood clot from moving from his leg to his lungs.
Knight, the son of Mr. and
Dr. John Lungren, Nixon's personal physician, said there Mrs, Howard Knight of near
was sttU some danger of complications arising, but the former
Chester, graduated from
president's condition was being carefully monitored. Nixon was
Eastern High School in 1966. He
encouraged to cough and breathe deeply to help break up a
received his bachelor's degree
deposit of fluid In his lungs.
in business education in 1969
and taught mathematics and
general business at the Meigs
CHINH TAM , SOUTH VIETNAM- THE BODY of the 19. JlUlior High School during the
year-old boy, carefully wrapped In white sheets, lay on a table m
I
1969-70 school year.
the center of Chinh Tam's village square. "Blood will be repa1d
He became a member of the
In blood," says a hand-&lt;ICI'awled sign nearby.
National Guard, and al Ohio
Nguyen Van Cuong was one of 3,000 villagers gathered in
State enrolled in the graduate
front of Chinh Tam's Roman Catholic churcb three days ago to
school of business at Ohio State
protest goverrunent land deals with wealthy businessmen In the
and at the same time began
area. Witneasing said pollee ordered tbe demonstrators to go
studying for his degree in law.
home and tben fired directly into the crowd with M16 rifles. The
He received his master 's
soldiers also fired tracer bullets at nearby homes, setting 10
degree in business in 1974 and
buildings ablaze. The teenaged victim was shot in the bead. A'
his law degree in 1974 . Last
woman was also killed. Two other persons were wounded, a
week he was notified he passed
YOI!D&amp; girl critically.
·
the Ohio bar examination given
The village priest, Hoang Kim Olen, lined up a collection of
last July .
rifle shells by Duong's body to "prove it was all pollee fire. We
Knight is vice president'...of
have no arms at all."
Phi Delta Theta Alumni Club of

NEW a.us STAittS NOVEMBER .Snt

m8n

ROME - AGRICULTURE EXPERTS FROM 100 nations
gathered today for an. International food conference aimed at
searching for a solution to the growing worldwide threat of
famine. U. N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim was scheduled
to open the Worfd Foo.d Conference !\lis morning, but an af·
ternoon address by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger was
likely to be the day's highlight.
Kissinger was expected to call for the creation of new international agency to oversee food aid, trade, production an~
reserves. Addeke H. Boerma, chairman of the U. N. Food and
Agricultural Organization, was expected to propose such a
group, but with ties to the FAO.
Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz, head of the American
delegation at the talks, said MQnday night he supported the
creation of a new body, but would insist on the Soviet Union and
the all nations sharing tbe cost.

Now You Know

enttne

Devoted To Fhe Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1974

By United Pre88lntematlonal
WASHINGTON -PRESIDENT FORD, who campaigned for
Republican candidates in 20 states, seems prepared for some
losses at the polls today, but not a debacle .
"The general feeling at the White House is that It is not going
to be as had as some of the predictions make it out," Press
Secretary Ro!! Nessen said.
He added that no matter what the outcome of today's electidns, Ford "fe,els he must work with the new Congress." Nessen
reflected the views of both the President and his political advisers as they assessed party chances.

a

red or bl ue solids. Sizes·B to 20. Tab-detail ed skirt,

JOIN NOW

around the heart, not the
head".

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ignored highways and drove industry out of the state.
Gilligan , 53, contends that in four years he has lifted Ohio from
50th in the nation in state services, and made major stries in
mental health care, pollution control, equitable taxation and
ethics in government. ·
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_
In the last couple of weeks of the campaign, Gilligan hit hard
on " honesty and integrity ," bringing up five-year-old charges
that Rhodes paid back taxes 'and penalties, and converted
ca mpaign funds to personal use.
Rhodes, a veteran of 31 years of public employment, has made
school finan ce a major issue, claiming tile enactment of a state
income tax has not eliminated the need for local tax hikes, as
advertised by Gilligan in 1971.
Gilligan, a former Cincinnati city councilman and congressman, has pointed out his administration hiked aid to primary and
secondary schools by 51 per ce?t and reduced property taxes by
$477 million.
A third candidate, Nancy B. Lazar, 23, of the Socialist Workers
party, advocates a government run by working people and
recommends free tuition at aU state universities.
Contin ued on page a

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.

"When God measures a

Republicans, giving Democrats the governor's office, major in the Ohio House which they already dominate , 58-•11.
state elected posts, a couple of extra congressional seats and
Up For Election
control of the state Senate for the.first time in 14 years.
All 23 U House seats were up for election, with Republicans
Former astronaut John H. Glenn Jr., stressing hi~ background holding a i5-Badvantage. All99 Ohio House seats were at stake,
as a non-politician, took on Cleveland's Republican Mayor Ralph as well as 18 of the state Senate seats.
J. Perk, who emphasi2ed his proven record in guiding one of the
Republicans needed to win 10 of the 18 senate races to ma intain
country's~ largest cities for two terms.
their 17-16 control of the Senate. Democrats needed only to take
Pollsters predicted Glenn would capture a ,s izeable number of nine seats to gain a majority for the first lime since 1960.
Republican votes, perhape leading the Democratic ticke t and·
Also on the statewide ballot were three proposed constitutional
becoming a strong candidate for president or vice president in amendments. One called for the use of industrial revenue bonds
1976.
to finance jobsaving and pollution control projects.
Gilligan was trying to become the first Deq10cratic governor ~ Another proposed elimination of an outdated provision for U1e
re-elected to a four-year term. Rhodes sought to be Ohio's first appointment of a director of public works, while the third was to
three--term governol'. He was the only former governor in the extend .real estate tax relief to disabled homeowners .
nation in a general election this year, and wan seen as a major
Countless other local contests, issues and tax levies, including
hope for Republicans.
237 school operating levies and 58 bond issues, rounded out
Democrats hoped a strong Gilligan-Glenn showing would give ballots across Ohio.
them at least four out of five other major statewide offices and
Rhodes, 65, has used a series of la st~min ute airplane stops and
two of the three state Supreme Court seats up for election.
a barrage of television and radio advertisements to put across
They also banked on two or three additional seats in the U.S. his message that Gilligan wasted income tax mooney, failed to
House, control of the 33-member Ohio Senate and a wider margin support Ohio schools, built a bureaucracy, overspent on welfare,

y

VOL XXVI NQ. 144

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Ira
Hurt, Bidwell; Mrs . Grover
Neville, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Dave
Hinkle,
Hartford;
Campbell Stevens, Apple
Grove; Mrs. Stanley Watson ,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Grover Long,
Gallipolis; Delford Jividen,
Grimms Landing; Floyd
Reynolds, New Haven; Mrs.
James McLean, St. Albans;
Mrs. Floyd Rayburn, Point
Pleasant; · George Dewitt,
Henderson ;
Mrs.
VIrgil
Harper , Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Zola Hesson , Glenwood ; Mrs.
Paula Leach, Point 'Pleasant ;
Mrs . Homer Chandler, Milton ;
William Brooks, Letart; Mrs .
Eunice Hunt, McArthur;
Almanda Hawley, .Middleport;
Mrs. G. E. Emerick, Point
Pleasant, and Norman Foss,
Pt. Pleasant.

SALE SET
A rummage sale wiU be held
at the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Wednesday and Thursday.

COLUMBUS (UP!)- E thics and taxes were the watchwords
of todsy 's general election a.S Ohioans chose a governor, U.S.
Senator, major state officials, judges, congressmen and -state
legislators.
Political observers were keeping an eye on the turnout at the
polls to see if Ohioans, disturbed by events in Washington since
1972, would stay home.
Secretary of State Ted W. Brown predicted a record turnout of
3,650,000 -some 374,000 higher than the 1970 gubernatorial
election although there were forecasts it would be somewhat
less.
A heated battle for the governorship was expected to help
dissipate apathy. Gov. John J. Gilligan, stressing his administration's ethics, "openness and honesty," soug~t a ~e~ond
term against former Gov. James A. Rhodes, who said G11l1gan
wasted taxpayers' money and who promised to cut taxes.
Democrats unleashed one of the most formidable campaign
org&amp;nizations in recent memory, and outspent their GOP foes by
almost 3-1.
Hurt Republicans
Observers felt apathy and poor weather might hurt

Cloudy and colder tonight
and Wednesday with snow
flurries likely in northern
portions . Lows tonight will be
in the 30s, Highs Wednesday up
to 45,

Mr . and Mrs. Herman
Warner, Pomeroy, received
word of the dealh of Henson
Will of Akron, brother of
Dayton Will, Bradenton, Fla.
Mr. ·Henson Will, who died in
his sleep, was buried Nov. 2.
His brother, Dayton, who
survives, was Wlable to attend
the fWleral services due to his
wife, Emma, having undergone surgery recently.
Dayton Will 's address is .5720
13th St. East, Bradenton, Fla.
33507.

NOW YOU KNOW
Without wise leadership, a
nation is ·in trouble , but with
good colUlselors there is safety.

Ethics, taxes worrying Ohio voters

Weather

of Florida dies

not es.

VARIAN.CE GRANTED
Frank · W. Porter, Jr., attorney, has received word !com
the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency that an
application for connection ban
variance has been granted for
the combined commWlity hall
and
fire
department
headquarters building in
Tuppers Plains. The variance
will permit sewage for the new
building.

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struction costs for the approaches and the portion of the
structure that will lie within
the State of Ohio, provided
West Virginia will do likewise
for the portions in West
Virginia and further agree that
the new bridge will be free of
any tolls.
The Gilligan letter warned,
however, that if the State of ·
Wesl Virginia does not see fit to
finance its share of the costs
with federal fWlds, and wishes
instead to imnose tolls, Ohio
would then have to review the
limits to which it would participate.

Old grads
•
may reVIve
turkey tilt
The traditional Thanksgiving
Day football game between the
Middleport Yellow Jackets and
the Pomeroy Pan !hers - a
sports extravaganza unwitnessed for about 15 years may be revived this year by
some of the original cast of
athleles.
That's what the Meigs Unit of
the American Cancer Society
hopes to do witi1 plans now
underway. The game would
benefit tbe Cancer fight cause.
John Reece of Pomeroy said
a meeting will be held Thurs·
day, ·Nov. 7 at 7, p.m. at the
cafeteria of the Meigs Local
Junior High in Middleport (old
Middleport High School) of all
athletes williog to participate.
Eligible to play are graduates
,of Middleport, Pomeroy and
Rutland High ~hools , and if
needed to fill out the two
rosters, Meigs Local grads.
Equipment of&lt;Meigs Local
High School will be used.' The
game will be played. on the old
, Middleport field on Thursday,
Nov. 28, at an hour to be
determined.
All athletes desiring to play
should attend the meeting . .

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Nov. 5,1974

. 3 - Th"e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesd,oy, Nov 5, 1974

Missionaries for\the green thumb
l~~~~;m;~;~~;~;re:ma~~~~:~~~~;~~~;1:~;l;~=~=~=~:~;:;:;:~~=~=~=§m:~=~~=~;:m:;:;:~~=l=:~ .

J

j
ZUELEUA SMI'l1l

Baptists honor
Mrs. W Smith
Mrs . W1lham (Z ueleha )
Sn11th was honored at the
recent Oh10 Bapllst General
Ass'n meetmg m Columbus for
ha vmg served 25 years as
supervisor of the Oh10 Baptist
Gulld in the Prov1dence
Assoc1at10n
The leather encased certificate s1gned by E Agg1e
Woodard Randolph, state
superviSOr of the gUild work,
was presented by Mrs Dorothy
Thomas, Bidwell, d1str1ct
superviSOr. Mrs. Sm1tll's work
has been m 28 chUTches of the
Hockmg, Galha, Ironton and
Piketon DIStncts and has mvolved between 300 and 400
gu-ls.
A member of the Forest Run
Baptist Church, Mrs. Smith
has been church clerk for 39
years, and served as vtce
president of the MISSIOnary
Soc1ety, along w1th holdmg
other offices m the church
durmg her many years of
active membership.
She 1s aff1llated w1tll the
Pomeroy Women's Chr!Sllan
Temperance Union,
the
American Leg10n Aux1hary,
Lewis Manley Post 263, and the
Meigs Salon 710, E1ght and
Forty.
One of 12 children, Mrs.
Smith spent her younger years
m Dayton where she worked
for several years at General
Motors. Mrs. Smith and her
husband, deceased smce 1955,
came to Meigs County m 1933.
While they had no children of
their own, they took a ruece,
W1lla Marie, to rear .
Since the death of her
husband, Mrs. Smith has
worked m the Jield of private
practical nursmg and child
care She retired three years
ago to take care of her sister,
Azalea Odi,ster, Dayton. Mrs.
- - Smith brought her s1ster here
and cared for her until recently
when she was moved to a
nursing home at Portsmouth.
For many years, Mrs. Smith
has resided on West Mam St ,
Pomeroy. In 1968 the home she
lived in was torn down and a
new mobile home put m 1ts
place .. Just a year ago she
made the final payment on her
home.
Mrs. Sm1th fmds joy in her
church work, the var1ous
orgamzations she's act1ve in,
domg for others, and lending a
hand whenever possible to one
of her numerous rueces or
nephews She describes her life
as bemg very busy but abundantly blessed.

REVIVAL SET
The Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church w11l hold a
reviVal begmnmg Nov. 8 w1th
Rev Matthew Harden and
special smgmg ~rv1ces begm
7 30 p m O'Dell Manley 1s the
pastor and everyone ts

welcome

~~~~

TUESDAY
XI GAMMA MU, Be~' Sogm.,
Phi Soronty, 7·30 Tuesd"&gt;
home of Mrs Martha McPhail
"tth Mrs Caro l Adams,
hostess. Carol McCullough to
prese nt "Good L1le " for
cultural program
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
0 E S , 7 45 p m Tuesday at
the Pomeroy Masomc Temple
ONE YEAR OLD Malinda
Sue
Carson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ten·) Carson, Pomeroy,
observed her hrst birthday
recently woth a party at the
home of her parents. Attending were Jack Seelig,
Sue Seehg. Marty and
Bobbie Sechg, June Carson.
Mrs. Mike Young and Stac),
Mrs. B1ll Clark and April,
Mrs Alva Clark, Terra and
Beth, and Mrs. Fred Clark.

Grange appoints
Meigs deputies
Mr and Mrs Mendel Jordan
have been appomted new
deputy master and matron
lor
Me1gs
CoWlty,
1t
was
announced
in
a
commumcallon from James

Ross, state master, at the
Fnday mght meetmg of
Pomona Grange
The appomtment was made
following the resignation of
Mrs. Paulme Atkms. Durmg
the meetmg at the Rock
Sprmgs Grange hall, presided
over by Norman W11l, Mrs.
Atkms was natned "Granger of
the Year "She was presented a
cake by her daughter, Mrs
Robert Jewell, and a rad1o by
Master Norman Will, a gift
from the subordmate granges
of Me1gs County.
It was also announced durmg
the meetmg that Ke1th Ashley
of Racme Grange was the third
runner-up at the state grange
prince contest.
The annual county officers'
conference was set for Fr1day,
8 p.m., Nov. 29 w1th a potluck
dinner at 7 p.m.
Earl Starkey mstalled the
new officers Wltll Mrs. Atkms
as marshall and Mr. and Mrs.
~ordan as regalia and emble~
bearers. Installed were Wiq,

master; Jordan, overseer;
Mrs Jordan, lecturer; Robert
Holliday, steward; Mrs. Leo
Story, chap lam, Leo Story,
treasurer; Mrs Fred Goeglem,
secretary, Amos Leonard,
gatekeeper; Mrs. Robert
Jewell, Pomona, Mrs. Robert
Holhday, Flora, and Homer
i!adford, executive committee.
The HarriSOnville Grange
served refreshments. Host for
the January meeting will be
Columbia Grange.

joins husband

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BASEMENT SALE, Enterprose UM Church, Rt 33,
north of Pomeroy, 9 a m. to 4

p m
REGULAR meetong.
Southeastern Ohw Gospel
Mus1c Ass'n , potluck, 6 p m .
meetmg follows at 7 30 p m
Sprongheld Grange Hall . SR
160 north of Galhpohs
ELECTION Day, polls open
from6a on to7 30p m Get out
and vote
FOREST
Run
Umted
Methodost Cliurch Ladles host
a soup dmner at the chw-ch
Menu mcludes soup, sandWiches , p1e and cake
OHIO ETA Pho Chapter.
Beta S1gma Ph1 Soronty, 7 30
p m , Columbus and Southern
Ohw Electnc Co , off•ce
Pledge traomng Mrs Dottle
Musser and Lmda Sauvage,
hostesses, cultural report by
Janet Pickens and Barbara
Logan
POMEROY
Unoted
Method1st Church Women's
annual Elechon Day dmner,
servmg, 11 am to 3 pm
Sandwiches, soup, salads, p1e
Bazaar table Soup available
b} the quart

..'&lt;:&lt;.-:
mv

By Polly Cramer

&amp;:&lt; ~ ·

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My daughter, I%, decided to share her
m1lk Wlth several of my house plants. Now they have a sour m1lk
smell and mold on the so1l. Is there any way to get nd of this odor
\lllhout havmg to repot tne plants• - MRS M. R.
DEAR POLLY - I hope manufacturers of electric blankets
w11l note my Pet Peeve When I want to change the dial on my
blanket dur mg the mght I fmd I cannot see the numbers without
turnmg the hght on or at least puttmg on my glasses W1tll all the
present day know.!Jow 1t seems someone could come up w1tll an
answer for th1s. Here's hopmg - ELEANOR
DEAR POLLY - I have some 1deas for Nora who has
all those alummum fml pans. Glue deep bottle caps
&lt;such as come on catsup) around the edges of such a pan. Place.,.
con tamer for water m the center. Put pamt m the cups and the
asp1rmg artist has palette
Cut the bottom bars from a couple of w~re coat hangers,
leavmg an mch on each end Punch holes near the ends of fml
cake pans and msert the cut Wires on the hangers Add feed, hang
on tree branches and your birds have feeders
To make a picture frame pamt a div1ded foli TV dmner tray
any des~re color and then mount small p1ctures m the sechons
- KATHY
DEAR POLLY- When rewmdmg yarn to use for crocheting
an afghan I woWld It on an empty cardboard tube such as g1ft
paper comes on I then placed th1s tube over the handle on a
plumber's fr1end ( plunger) and the suctwn held 1t to the floor
Th1s prevents the yarn from becoming tangled and from rollmg
out of each as a ball often does -INA.
DEAR POLLY - I have three chlidren Wider the age of
seven and am well aware of the frequency of mmor knee lDJUries
that befall th1s age group Unlll recently I was plagued w1th the
imposs1ble task of protectmg these mJurles so they could heal
properly Now I save mate less socks or worn out ones. I fmd they ·
make wonderful flex1ble stay-&lt;&gt;n knee pads, p1 ov1dmg the heels
are mtact Cut the toe off a sock and pull the heel of the sock over
the ch1ld's bandaged knee He can play unrestramed and mother
1s assured that the wound 1s properly covered - LILLIAN
You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homemakmg 1dea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution to a
problem. Write Polly m care of this newspaper.

PTA council to
meet at Rutland
You Brought That Up"
Dr Robert Lucas, f~rst v1ce
president of the Ohw PTA, m
h1s addtess before the conventwn, ctted sev~n goals to
gu1de PTA achons These, to be
cons1dered at the Thursday
noght meeting are·
Increased on PTA membership - An mcrease of Oh10
PTA membership of at least !5
pet or 66,533 addlhonal
members, w1th each local PTA
un1t to exceed the school
enrollment by 25 pet.
Increase m the number of
PTA un1ts - An mcrease of 10
pet m the number of new umts
m each counc1l and d1stnct
PTA scholarships - an increase of 10 pet m the number
of colleges and vocahonaltechnical scholarships offered
to students th1s year
PTA leg1slahve program - a~
thoroughly knowledgeable and
actiVe leg•slat10n chairman m
every COWlcll and Wllt m Ohw
w1th a well-&lt;&gt;rgani"'ed campaign m every regwn, counctl
and un1t to promote the Ohw
PTA leg1slahon program and
posot10ns

The Pomeroy Forst Baptist
Church w11l hold a rwnrno 6 e
sale from 9 am. t" 4 pm
Wednesday and '!'nursday at
the churrh

Dehnquency preventionA
delinquency
prevenhon
program m every PTA unit m
Ohoo that mvolves parents,
Students',
teachers,
ad·
mtmstrators and law enforcement officials
School relahonsh1ps - A
closer workmg relatwnsh1p
w1th teachers and administrators.
PTA
must ma~e sure there IS
commumca hon and more
mvolvement
w1th
the
professional staff of the school.
Health program - promote
comprehens1ve
health
educatiOn m every school m the
state Th1s mcludes all areas
related to health, nutr~hon,
safety, fam1ly life, human
development and mental
health

Hermon U B. Church 7 30 p m.
Everyone welcome
ANNUAL Fall Bazaar of the
Sacret
Heart
Church,
Pomeroy; ham or creamed
ch1ckeii dmners begmmng at
4 30 p.m Wltil 7 p m ; various
games, baked goods, and
nwnerous articles for sale
Pubhc inv1ted.

ElECTION
NIGHT'74

MEIGS County Counc1l,
Parents and Teachers, 7 30
p.m , Rutland Elementary
School
CITY COUNCIL of Beta
Sigma Ph1 w11l hold mstallat10n
of off1cers at 7 30 p m at
Columbus and Southern Ohw
Electr1c Co

r::;;;;~~i;:::-~ZE~N~IT;H1 ,,--:--n.;· -~-.-Sentinel

COble
.ChannelS

U,EV&lt;m:DTOTIIE
INTERI!ZI'OP'

COLOR TV

•

r

eBLACK &amp;

I

WHITE TV

'

10=30'PM
SPONSORED BY

SMITH PLUMBING PEOP~ES BANK.
FRUTH PHARMACY PT PLEASANT RECAPPING
RC BOTTLING CO ANO ElBERFELDS

Rev W H Pernn was
surpnsed Sunday night when
approximately 150 members of
Trm1ty Church and fnends
gathered at the church to honor
h1m on his I Oth anm versary as
their pastor
The occaswn open~d w1th a
potluck dmner at 5 p m. w1th
Lawrence Stewart givmg tbe
blessing Followmg dmner tbe
group assembled in l]]e Sunday
School aud1tor1Um for a
program of fellowsh1p and fun.
Mrs Nancy Jo Clatworthy was
at the p1ano for group smgmg
of "Steppmg m the Light" Roy
Mayer, supermterident of the
school, had prayer and the
congregahon sang "In T1mes
Uke These' '
There was a p1ano solo by
Fa1th Perrm, a vocal trw, "He
Touched Me" by Mrs Don
Thomas and daught,rs, Lisa
and Becky; a plano solo by Lori
Ann Wood, and a vocal, " Tell
Me Why" by Mrs Joe Struble,
Mrs John Terrell and Mrs
Rose Gmtller.
M1ss Susan Fleshman,
Pomeroy hbranan, played two
selechons, "The Coventry
Carol," and an old folk song,
"My Love Arbertus" on her
tepor recorder Under the
ditecllon of Mrs Ahce Nease,
the Happy Harvesters Chorus
sang 11 How Great Thou Art •"
"Ivory Palaces" and ' 4The
Church in the Wlidwood." In
the group were Mrs Terr,ell,
Mrs Gmther, Mrs. Genev1eve
Memhart, Mrs Struble, Mrs.
Neva Sevfned. Mrs Stella
' INSTALLATION SET
POMEROY - The c1ty
council of Beta Sigma Phi will
hold mstallatwn of offiCers
Thursday, Nov. 7, at 7:30p.m.
at the Columbus and Southern
OhiO Electnc Co.
SING SET
There will be a hymn smg at
the Hazel Commumty Church,
off SR 124 between Long
Bottom and Portland at 7·30
p.m ,
Saturday.
The
Chorala1res, Parkersburg, will
be the Singers.

Kloes, Mcs Carolyn Thomas
and Frances Bearhs
Roy Mayer read an arhcle on
the mstallatwn of Rev Perrm
as pastor of Tr1mty Church
wh1ch appeared m The Dally
Sentmel, Nov 29, 1964 He then
presented the rrunl!lter w1th a
g1ft on behalf of the
congregallon. Mayer comment,d on the progress of the
church under the leadership of
Rev Pemn Robert Buck,
president of the church COWlCli,
also expressed h1s apprec1atoon
on behalf of the COWlCli and the
congregatwn
Mrs Nease sang "My Task,"
and there was a spec1al
number, by Rev and Mrs
Perrm , Mr
and Mrs
Lawrence Stewart, lvlrs Dav1d
Russell, Mrs. Ben Neutzhng
and Fa1th Perrin . The rmn!Ster
gave the closmg prayer and the
congregallon sang "God Be
With You" to conclude the
program
M1ss Erma Sm1th and Mr.
and Mrs Roy Mayer were co.
chairpersons
for
the
celebrahon
The
table
decoratwns earned out a fall
moll!

Now they've written a
sophisllcated sequel to indoor
p!antmg called "Growmg Wlth
Your Plants the Mother Earth
Hassle-free Way" (J .P .·
Tarcher, Inc., Los Angeles).
On a visit to New york, the
Rapps diSCUSsed the "plant
fever sweepmg the land" not
only brmgmg more greenery
mto the home but mto stores,
offices, banks, and anywhere
else there IS the new mterest m
plant culture.
Mrs Rapp called plants
great for the tensJon set-"for
the woman who gets hives 1f
she can't get to Gucc1."
Recently they met With the
president of a woman's
clothing store cham for what
were to be diSCUSSIOns about
the Rapps opemng plant
concesSions in its outlets
"And all he wanted to talk
about was why h1s philoden- ·
dron was dymg," sa1d Rapp
Rapp told hun 1t probably was
from the cardinal sin of plant
care- "overmdulgence "
"People tend to overwater,
overfeed, just the way they
tend to overbldulge themselves
Wlth too much smoking and
drmking; " he said.
"But no one really has a
brown thumb. Moderation is
the rule for care.
"Buy plants from a
reputable flml, and buy the
nght plants for the right

Bucks
•
retazn
top spot
NEW YORK (UP!) - Woody
Hayes' Ohio State gr~dders
remamed the No. 1 chmce of
the coaches on the Umted
Press International MaJor
College Football Ratings
Board, but a logjam developed
right behmd them.
Mich1gan, wh1ch has been
trailing along r1ght behmd the
Buckeyes, now has company m
second place as Alabama
received an equal number of
votes with the Wolvermes.
On Saturday Michigan
defeated Indiana by the modest
score of 21-7, while Alabama
shut out previOusly 15th-ranked
MissiSSippi State, 35-0. Going
mto tlie game Wlth the Crimson
Tide, the Bulldogs had been the
SEC leader in total offense, but
Alabama pernutted them only
167 yards.
The Buckeyes, meanwh1le,
rolled up seven touchdowns
while disposing of Illinms, 4~7.
and received 34 of the 35 forst
place votes and 349 pomts, one
shy of a perfect score.
F1orlda 's wm over Auburn
and Southern California's 15-15
tie w1th Califorma helped to
rearrange the rest of the top 10.
Auburn, which lost to the
Gators 25-14, dropped from
fourth to ninth, while Florida
Jumped from lOth to seventh.
The Trojans, meanwhile,
probably feel that a tie IS worse
than "kissmg your sister" as
the non-win dropped them from
SIXth to lith.
Notre Dame, which needed
two fourth-quarter TDs to get
past Navy ,1~, remained fifth,
but Texas A&amp;M, which doubled
the score against Arkansas 2().
10, climbed from seventh to
fourth. Penn Siate, toppmg
Maryland 24-17, climbed from
e1ghth to sixth, Nebraska, a 3115 winner over Colorado,
moved up one notch to eighth
and Texas edged USC for the
lOth spot by two pomts after
rompmg past SMU, 35-15.
As the season draws near to
completion, the better teams
become more apparent-at
least to the Coaches Board-as
only 15 teams received votes
thiS week. Behind Southern Cal
were Miami of Ohio, up two
positions; Houston, up four
places; Pittsburgh, a new
entrant mto the top 20; and
Maryland, which dropped from
12th to 15th.
Losses by Texas Tech,
Arizona State, M1ssiss1ppi
Stale and UCLA dropped them
out of the top 20. Oklahoma
State, despite beating Kansas
24-13, also disappeared from
the ratings.

places."
Although they got mto plants
to get out of show business, the
new enterprlSC may take them
right back . Rapp's father,
Philip, wrote scripts for many
famous performers mcludmg
the late Eddie Cantor and
Fanny Brice.
Now, Lynn and Joel Rapp
have been asked to do a
situatlon comedy "pilot" for
teleVISIOn and also fibn a
commercial on lawn care.
All will help to get the backto-greenery message across,
they hope
Sa1d Mrs Rapp, "I look
forward to the day when they
take out parking lots and put m
gardens."

For Your Dining and Listening
Pleasure ...
•

GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 9:30 to 2
The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992-3629

Pomeroy

/

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DON'T
GET
STUCK
with high prices on winter tlras!
GET GOING WITH

J'trestone ~~6Zil.-~3

WINTER R~TREADS

poaa., ,-M! •t Pomeroy, I

I
National advertjaiq repruent.IU~t ,
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I

Woody's team going behind
closed doors for practice
closed Wolverine practice sessiOns two weeks prtor to tile
annual Oh1o State-Michigan
game. Hayes• action comes
three week.s before the No 23
game between the current two
top teams in the nation.
"I'm really sorry to have to
do it," Hayes told a packed
house at the weekly luncheon,
mcludmg at least one wr1ter
from Detroit.
"But this is the tune of
season when teams do add
certain things to their offense
NEW YORK (U PI ) The and all you have to do lS let one
1974 Untied Press lnternattonal
Board of Coaches top 20 ma1or fellow in who knows what he's
co llege football rattngs Wtfh lookmg for and you prejudice
won lost records and ftrst place
your chances of winning."
votes '" parentheses
Team
Po•nts
Hayes said all-Amer1can
1 Ohto State (341 (8 Ill
349
tailback
Archie Griffin,
2 {Tre) Mtchtgan (8 0)
295
(Ttel Alabama (11 (8 OJ
295 quarterback Cornelius Greene
4 Texas A&amp;M (7 1 l
192
and others had been more and
5 Notre Dame (7 1)
166
6 Penn State (7 11
158 more in demand for mterv1ews
7 Flor1da (7 1 )
155 and meetings.
a Nebraska (6 21
120
9 Auburn (7 1 I
"It takes !hell' mind off of
73
10 Texas (6 2)
53 football," said Hayes.
11 So uthern Cal &lt;5 1 1J
51
12 Mtamt (O h tO) (7 0 lJ
"I really hate to do 1t because
8
13 Houston (6 21
7 all of you are good friends,"
14 Ptttsburgh ( 6 21
2
Hayes said apologetically,
15 Maryland { 53)
I
(Only teams rece tv tng votes
"but I'm sure you want to see
th ts week 1
Note· By agreement with the us win."
Amencan Football Co.aches,
Hayes said the Buckeyes
teams on probation by the
came
through saturday's 4~7
NCAA are Ineligible for top 20
and nattonal champtonshtp con
win over Dlinols, their eighth of
stderahon by the U PI Board of
Coaches Those teams currently the year without a loss, with
on probation are Oklahoma. "relatively few injuries."
SMU, California. t.ong Beach
The one exception is Greene,
State and Southwestern Lou•s•a
na
who suffered a brulaed hand
and will be kept out of workouts
a COtJPie of days.
Hayes, who many times has
talked about the possibility at
one of his stars getting hurt
when the outcome of a game
COLUMBUS, Oh10 (UPI) There will be three weeks of
peace and qUite for Ohio
State's No. 1 ranked football
team.
Coach
Woody
Hayes,
perhaps trymg to go one up on
M1Ch1gan coach Bo Schembechler, announced Monday
that all Buckeye practices the
rest of the season would be
closed.
A year ago, Schembechler

College Ratings

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score."
As thmgs turned out, Greene,
after a nine-yard gain, had his
hand slammed agamst a head
gear and fumbled with the
Illlnl recovering on the
Buckeye 26.
Qllar!erback coach George
Chaump, reporting on the
defense of Michsgan State, the
Buckeyes' opponent this week
at East Lansing, said the
Spartans have been known for
their tough defense and "this
year IS no exception."
Chaump said Michigan State
is weU coached, but that more
Importantly
"they
are
physically tough."
The Spartan offense is led by
quarterback Charley Baggett,
called by OSU defensive coordinator George Holl "a truly
great qlhack."
"We ha "e faced better
passers th
Baggett," Hill
said, "but 1 he can dO more
things to fOU. He's a little
different tYI!" of quarterback."
Hill also !lad wor!ls of praise
for fullback Levi Jackson, who
beat out the veteran Clarence
Bullock for the job.

I

pas.'ed the 49ers w1thm range
for Bruce Gossett to kock a 31yard f~eld goal w1th three
mmutes left m the th1rd
quarter and then connected
w1tll Washmgton on a 3~yard
scormg pass w1th 6·53 to go to
put the 49ers m pos1t1on for a
b1g upset
HarriS, who completed 12-of20 passes for !50 yards, took the
Rams SO yards m 15 plays, w1th
Tony Baker crashmg over
from the one on the first
quarter Then, early m the
second penod, he h1t tight end

A's dominate
UPI dream team
NEW YORK (UPI) - As if
they · needed further proof of
the1r supenority, the Oakland
A's have named four players to
the 1974 United Press International Amencan League AllStar squad.
The A':s, winners of three
consecullve World Series,
placed shortstop Bert Campanerls, outfielders Joe Rudi
and Regg1e Jack.son and pitcher Jim "CatfiSh" Hunter on
the squad which was selected
by sports wnters and
correspondents from the
league's 12 cities.
No other team had more Ulan
two players selected to the
squad Texas, Detroit and
Baltunore each placed two
while Ch1cago and Mmnesota
named one each.
Outfielder Jeff Burroughs
and pitcher Ferguson Jenkins
were chosen from the Texas
Rangers, catcher Bill Freehan
and relief pitcher John Hiller
were named from the Detroit
Tigers and th1rd baseman
Brooks
Robinson
and
des1gnated h1tter Tommy
Davis were selected from the
Baltunore Orioles.
Roundmg out the team were
first baseman Dick Allen of the
Ch1cago White Sox and second
baseman Rod Carew of the
Mmnesota Twms.
Allen, although he "retired"
before the season ended, was
an easy winner In the voting for
fll'st base. The controversial
slugger grabbed 13 of the 17
votes cast for the position, even
though he skipped the last
three weeks of the campa1gn.
Allen batted .301,led the league
with 32 home runs and drove in
88 runs
Carew also had no trouble
winning the race for second
base. Carew, who led the
majors with a .364 average,
received 16 votes while CampanerlS, who enjoyed his best
year in the majors, won the
ballotmg for shortstop over
Texas' Toby Harrah bv a vote

Br Un1ted Press 1nternat1onal

M•d·Amencan conference
Conference
Overall
WLTWLT
7 0 1
5 J o
5 J D
A .4 0
6 J o
3 6 o

M1am I
A 0 0
Toledo
3 1 0
Oh iO Un1v
J 2 0
Bowlmg Green
2 3 0
Kent State
1 2 0
West M•chlgan
o 5 o
Oh10 Conference
Red DIVISIOn

Conference
Baldwm Walla ce .4 0
Otterbein
3 1
Mar•etra
2 2
Muskmgum

Overall
0 7 10
0 5 J 0
o s 3o

2 2 0

.4 4 0

Freehan, who made a dramatic comeback, beat out New
York's Thurman Munson in the
voting for catcher. Freehan,
enjoying his best season smce
1971, hlt .296 w1th I&amp; homers
and 60 rbi's and received e~ght

wesleyan
Den 1son

x Oberlin
x Kenvon

~.h'"'''

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As ammals go, man Is
long li ved Only some k1nds
of torto1ses or land turtles
live longer than man An
elephant l1ves to be around
60 years of age, a parrot so
years As large as a whale
IS, he reaches full matunty
the age of 12 years and
approximately
ve•1rs . A housefly only l•ves
few months A marigold
I nt IS old In three or four
s. wh1le some plants
to be hundreds of
The tree family
shame, as some of

;sPI'Cil" live to be thousa,nd•
old, such as
California trees
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votes to four for Munson, who · - - - - - - - - - '
batted .261 Wllh 13 homers and
60 rb1's.
Davis was an easy winner in
the voting for designated
hitter. The 35-year-&lt;&gt;ld veteran
collected mne votes to beat out
Kansas City's Hal McRae, who
was second ·with three Davis '
hit .289 and drove in 84 runs
while helping the Orioles to the
AL East Division title.
In the balloting for pitchers
each voter was asked to select
two starters and one reliever.
Hunter, Jenkms and H1Uer
eas1ly emerged as the top votegetters. Hunter, the AL Cy
Young Award winner, received
16 votes and Jenkins collected
14 while Hiller led lhe relievers
•
with seven votes.
Hunter posted a 25-12 record
Wlth a 2.49 earned rWl average
while Jenkins was also 25-12
Wlth a 2.83 era. Hiller posted a
17-14 record with a 2 64 era.

"Can I afford
an independent
Insurance expert
to figure out
what's best for me?"

x Oh lo Northern )( x x 2 6 0
x not competing for ft t le
Btg Ten

Conference

Overall

WLTWLT
OhtoState
50 0 8 0 0
Mtchtgan
5 0 0 8 0 0
Mtch1gan St
3 1 I 4 3 0
ll ltOOtS
2 2 I 4 3 I
W tsconsm
2 3 0 4 4 0
Purdue
2 J 0 3 4 1
Iowa
2J o 35o
Mmnesota
I A 0 3 5 0
lndtana
1 4 0 1 7 o
Northwestern
1 A 0 2 6 0
Others

Youngstown State
John Carro l l
W•lmlngton
Ashlantl

W•tfenberg
Cap ital
Oh10

({((

I

'995

rbt's.

Defiance
Akron
Bluffton

Mount Un 1on

.

MALIBU
4 DR.

Central Sta te

201 512
210530
210 620
120440
0 J 1 2 5 1
)()()( 530
XXX
251

....,,..

'69 CHEVELLE

Heidelberg
l J 0 4 4o
0 4 0 2 50
Wooster
Blue Division
Conference
Overall

WLTWLT

Bob Klem on a 23-yard throw
for a 12-0 lead
Dav1d Ray tned to run over
for the extra pomt after the
first TD, followmg a low snap
from center, and was nmled
short of the end zone After the
second TD, he s1mply muffed
the k1ck Those two m1sses
could have proved d1sasterous,
but Ray k1cked a 211-yard f1eld
goal m the f~rst mmute of the
fmal quarter and that proved to
be the winner
In defense of the Ram offense, Harr1s sald he d1dn 't see
any reason for an apology.
"We played well enough to
wm," hesatd. ~~That's all we're
trymg to do- win the game We
expected a tough game from
the 49ers and they gave us
one."
The Rams play Atlanta on
Sunday and the 49ers meet
Dallas

of 11~ Campaneris hit 290
wh1le Harrah h1t 260 with 21
homers and 74 rb1's
The closest ballotmg was in ,__________,
the race for third base where 1
This Week's Spec1al
the 37-year-&lt;&gt;ld Robinson edged
Oakland's sal Banda by two
votes, nine 'n seven. Robinson
VALUE
RATED
enJoyed his best year at the
plate by hitting .288 Bando hlt
only .243 but belted 22 homers
USED CARS
and drove m 103 runs .
Burroughs was the top votegetter among the outfielders
Wlth 15 votes. The 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld
slugger led the league m runs
batted in w1th 118 and also hit '
25 home runs and batted .301.
Rud1 and Jackson each
collected 14 votes. Rud1 batted
307 V 8 motor , auto trans ,
P S, radio
.293, hit 22 homers and drove in
99 runs while Jackson batted
.289 with 29 homers and 93

Ohio grid standings
Oh•o College Football
Records

WID

Cmclnn~tl

WLT

6
6
4
5

'5
5
4

Fmdlay
H1ram
Case Wntern
Dayton

3
3
2
2
2

0
0
0
3 0
3 0
4 0
1

2
2

0
0
I

''4

0

6
5
6
7

I
0
0

Sure.
An independent~~--~
agent makes
no extr.1
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his services.
As mdependent agcots, we represent several strong msurance
"Omp.LnJes We are free to select the nght kmd of msurance
f or your ca r home, or busmess , and we make no ex.tra
charge tor thi s ~e rv1ce
A one-company salesman, or'l the other hand, must neces•,mly tn to sell yo11 t he rollo h1" comr'\·•m otfers
A li mJcpcndcnt msur.•ncc .tgcn ls, we otrer you I he B•g
D1tfercnce m msur.mce- uur con tmumiZ. oersonal anenllon
Call us

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Downing-Childs Agency, Inc.
Middleport, Ohoo

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6

New-Management

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Dance fo Music by "Red and the Ambassadors," Thursday, Friday
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Pomeroy

•

,
'

has already been decided and
how &lt;~crazy" 1t lS to leave them
m, said "our biggest miStake
saturday was leavmg Cornelius in the game one play too
long
"We JUSt wanted to get our
Red II (second offensive) unit
better field position before
puttmg them in. We certainly
weren't trymg to run up the

bnll
" I saw Gene between the
lmebacker (Robertson) and
the defensive back/' Snead
smd of hos mterceptwn "I tr1ed
to lob the ball over them but I
got hlt and knocked off
balance I knew I threw a dymg
qua1l the moment I let 1t go "
Still, had 1t not been for
Snead, p1cked up a bttle more
Ulan a week ago from the New
York Glants, the 49ers wouldn't
have been as close as they were
m the fmal minutes.
The veteran of 14 pro seasons

Un~er

}'

'\

""" 42 w1th a llttle more than
four rnmutes remaintng. All
they needed to do \\as move the
ball 30 vards for a wuuung held
goal try but on the f1rst play
from scrunmage, a runnmg
plav , the 49ers were caught
holding
W1th the ball back on the 32,
Snead, who had taken over for
rook1e Tom Owen at the start of
the second half, was forced to
pass, and the Los Angeles
defense was set for hun. They
put on a b1g rush as Robertson
faded back w1th w1de rece1ver
Gene Washmgton
Forced out of the pocket,
Snead burned his throw and
Robertson grabbed 1t m front of
Washmgton The 49ers never
agam got their hands on the

COLUMBUS, Ohw (UP!)- class by hunself as a quarterIn h1s last four games,
Oh1o State assistant coach back."
agumst W1sconsm, Ind1ana,
George Chaump adrruts he
Rex Kern, who led Oh10 State Northwestern and Illinois,
may be bl8Sed in hls glowmg to a 27-2 three-year record Greene has h1t on 26 of 35 for
pra1se of the Buckeyes' junoor durmg the 1968, 1969 and 1970 496 yards and seven touchquarterback Cornehus Greene. seasons, has been considered downs
After all, Chaump is the by many as the Buckeyes' best
Why the big unprovement?
quarterback coach and has all-time quarterback
"Hard
work
and
seen Greene mature from a
But Greene, w1th three pre[l'lration, not takmg any
crude freshman mto possibly games to go, is only 222 yards game lightly," says Greene,
the best quarterback m Ohio short of breaking Kern's Single who stayed in Columbus last
State history m just two years . season total offense record of summer and worked out
Last Saturday, m the Buck- 1,585 yards.
abnost dally.
eyes' 4~7 rout of lllin01s,
"I wouldn't trade hun for any
Credits Coofideoce
Greene ran for 127 yards 1n 25 other quarterback in the
Greene credits the con·
carnes, mchfflmg a 15-yard country," srud Chaump. "He fldence gained by winnmg the
touchdown run, and completed has a strong arm, a good MVP m the Rose Bowl for his
8 of 12 passes for another 127 release and the awareness to success thiS season.
yards and two more TDs
do the nght thing at the right
"That was really the start of
The performance earned the time He IS like Kern m that he It," he satd. 11 When we came
6-foot, 170-pounder from Wa- has the ability to brul you out back in the spring, I knew I
shington, D.C. the honor of w1th the broken play. He is the could do 1t."
Umted Press International ,prem1er quarterback m the
Playing m the same backM1dwest offenstve Player of country "
field w1th all-American Arch1e
the Week.
Hard To Believe
CrO.:"•" Greene knows he faces
"When he first came here, he
The
Improvement
1n an uph ... '&gt;~ttle to make allhad no concept of dlsclplined Greene's passmg stat1stics Amertca."
football," sa1d Chaump, "and from a year ago to th1s season
"I would love to make it," he
when he threw a pass, I used to are hard to beheve.
says, "but if I don't, I guess
hold my breath. But he has
Last season, as the regular there 1s probably a reason."
matured mto a great, great quarterback, he hlt only 20 of 48
Greene says, however, "l
quarterback.,.
( 434 per cent) pass attempts enjoy playing on this type of
Might Be Prejudiced
for 343 yards and two touch- team. I'm glad when Arch or
While Chaump might be downs and had seven mtercep- Brian (Baschnaggel) have a
prejudiced, lllino!S coach Bob ted
good day. Just so we wm.
Blackman Isn't and he spoke of
'Ilus season, m seven games,
"I knew about Oh1o State's
Greene in glowmg terms he has h1t on 43 of 64, a per- wmmng teams and about the
following Saturday's game.
centagge of .671, for 725 yards Rex Kern teams and thought
~~Greene tS the one who
and nme touchdowns He also maybe we could do as well, but
compounds thingS for them, has 638 yards rushing m 106 it was JUSt a dream -a dream
11
Blackman said. "He is in a carr1es and bas scored eight wh1ch has more or less come
TDs.
true."

TRUST US

-1

to go. "We made all the b1g
plays when we needed them the
most."
IJnebacker Is1ah Robertson
made perhaps the b1ggest one
of all when he spoiled Norm
Snead's San Francosco debut
by picking off a pass "ith
mmutes left to play.
The Los Angeles offense,
starting on the San Francisco
49, did a fme JOb of eatmg up
the clock the rest of the way
and was on the verge of
another score when lime
fmally ran out.
Robertson did a good JOb of
"reading" Snead on his b1g
pass intercepllon.
The 49ers, trailing by only
two pomts, recovered a fumble

Greene UPI's 'Back-of-Week'

SALE POSTPONED
A rummage sale planned by
the Middleport Busmess and
Professwnal Women's Club at
the Fry bwldmg m Middleport
Nov 8 and 9 has been postponed Wltil Nov. 15-16.

France 1s tradlllonally consodered the greatest wmeproducmg country '" the
world Its annual output. of
nearly two b1lhon gallons aceounts for about 25 per cent
of the world's wmes

that had lost hve m a row ~nd
was hav1ng quarterback pro().
Iems
But James HarriS, now the
No - 1 quarterback w1tll the
trade of John Hadl, proved
good enough for the second
week tn a row, domg exactly as
h1s coach dictated wh1le
gUldmg the Rams to tlle1r
fourth straight v1ctory.
It also was Los Angeles's
runth m a row over San
FranciSco and 1t snapped a
Monday mght JinX that had
seen the hbme team win or tie
for 21 consecullve weeks gomg
back through the 1973 season
"It was as fme a team effort
as I have seen," sa1d Chuck
Knox m adm1ra twn of his
Rams, who now lead the NFC

.
West by three games "1lh s1x

by Larry McCu tchE"fln " ... ,.._,.,r

~~·••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Clll'Edll«

'*'" ""' '"''"

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Church fetes pastor

PublllhoddoU,._SI_by,..
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They
" We wanted a busmess of owown," sa1d Rapp, whose godfa\ tller was the late Edd1e Cantor.
What spurred them even
more was sqmething the Rapps
say 1s bas1c in all of us"Gettmg back to the earth We
are of the earth People need
nature."
But because urbanization 1s
crowdmg us out of that need,
we're turnmg mcreasmgly to
mdoor plants, sa1d the Rapps.
And that 1s the d1recllon to
wh1ch the couple turned-he
after 15 years as a televlSlon
wr~ter and she after runnmg a

modelmg school and producmg
teleVISIOn shows
Neither had any formal
trammg m horllculture although "we are plant freak.s,"
as Rapp put 1t W1th an lnltlal
mvestment of $1,500 they
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ur .ears later, they'd
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de to the whole arrade
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eir "Mother Earth"
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Offia! Phone lfWl:il Ed.l~l fbon,e-

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get out of show bu:smess, they

MEIG8-MABON AREA
m&amp;91'ERL. TANNBIIJL!,,
ERe )!d •
ROBERT BOD'UCJI

I

SAN FRANCISCO (UP! J _
How good are the Los Angeles
Ran'"?
It's hard to tell because their
offense is spotty, but there 1s
nothmg wrong w1th the Rams'
defense, and that's where you
wm ball games.
Monday rught, the Rams dld
everythmg nearly letter
perfect and while the1r offense
generated only 303 yards, the
defense held the San FranciSco
49ers to 266 for a 15-13 victory
ln the Natwnal Football
League's nahonally teleVIsed
game of the week
True the Rams weo: mto the
game as 14-pmnt avor1tes
whtch in retrospect was a~
outrageous overlay, even
agamst a San FranciSco team

::!·:-:·

Tot uses ·m ilk 11~.~~ ~.:u:;:"r~~f ~ppp1 ~ec•dv:;eton
.=::$ 1
to water plants I, ~~.~~:.;~~~~er~w•tch.

WEEK Rev1val begmmng at
old Dexter Church ServiCes
7 30 p m Everyone welcome
ELECTION Day dmner by
women of the Chester Umted
Method1st Church at the
Chester Masomc Hall Pia te
lunch , ham or steak, sandwiches,
soup,
dessert ,
begmmng II a m Tuesday
ELECTION Day Dmner
11 30a m., Syracuse Mumc1pal
buolding by Syracuse F~rs t
Umted Presbyterian Church
Full d1nners. also bazaar
featurmg depressiOn glass ,
baked goods sale, handmade
artiCles and homemade soup
Meogs County Councli of
by quart; evemng meals also Parents and Teachers w1ll
served
meet Thursday at 7 30 p m at
SOUP Dmner at Forest Run the Rutland Elementary
Church election day Servmg School
all day Soup, sandwiches, p1e, . At that meetong reports w1ll
cake and coffee
be g1ven on the state conCHESTER
Council , ventwn of the OhooPTA, and
Daughters of Amenca , 7:30 there w1ll be a sk1t, " I'm Glad
p.m at the hall
OFFICERS TO MEET
ELECTION Day d1nner,
Pomeroy Umted Methodist
Dostnct officers of Umted
Church, servmg from 11 a m Method1st Women w11l meet at
to 3 p.m. Soup to take out, brong the Middleport Heath umi;,d
con tamers
Metllodost Church Thursday
WEDNESDAY
from 1 to 3 30 p m to conduct a
MIDDLEPORT F1remen's workshop OffiCers of the
i\ux1hary, 7 30 p m at the Umted MethodiSt Women and
fire house. Mrs Allee Mliler all other women of the church
Mrs Donna Russell, Mrs' are mv1ted to attend
Roberta Dalley, hostesses
HOSPITALIZED
POMEROY Lodge
164
Leo
Searls, Middleport, os
F&amp;AM, 7 30 p m All master
confmed
to the Pleasant Valley
masons mv1ted
Hosp1tal. H1s room number 1s
SYRACUSE Cub Scout Pak
167
242 Wlll meet every Wednesday
unmed1ately after school at the
school
PLAN SALE

Kathy Durst Phahn left last
Wednesday from Columbus v1a
plane for England to JOin her
husband at the Welford Air
Force Base where he is
stalloned.
Mrs
Phahn was accompanied to Columbus by her
mother, Mrs Mary Durst,
Pomeroy; her brother, Mr and
Mrs Edd1e Durst and sons,
EIGHT and Forty, Me1gs
Tim and J1mmy, of near County Salon 710, home of Mrs
Bradbury, and her s1ster, Kay Jul1a Hysell Members to take
Rogers and son, Dav1d Shuler, food for a Than'tsgivlng basket
St. Albans, W Va Mrs Phahn, and bottle caps for redemption
after a layover m Boston, Demonstration on makeup will
arr1ved m London Thursday be given
morning, and telephoned her
· THURSDAY
mother that she had reached · EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
England. Mrs Phahn, who was 0 E S 7 30 p m at the Midmarried Aug 17, has been dleport Masomc Temple
working recently at Murphy's Members are remmded that
Shoppmg Plaza Store near dues are payable now
Galhpohs.
CATHOLIC Sacred Heart
Church, annual bazaar, dmner
" 4 30 to 7 p m. Games, bootllS
and fancy work stands
MIDDLEPORT Merchants
Assoc1ahon luncheon meeting
12: 15 to I 15 at Martin
Restaurant
TWIN City Shrine Club
spec1al meetmg 7:30 p.m. All
nobles urged to attend Meet at
Racme Shrme Park Refreshments.
REVIVAL all week at Mt.

.Complete
Returns

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1t:~~l~
olty . ,. Poznters tt~\\

Rams defense shines inl5-l3

Indo(Jr plants basic with
Mother Earih operation

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Nov. 5,1974

. 3 - Th"e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesd,oy, Nov 5, 1974

Missionaries for\the green thumb
l~~~~;m;~;~~;~;re:ma~~~~:~~~~;~~~;1:~;l;~=~=~=~:~;:;:;:~~=~=~=§m:~=~~=~;:m:;:;:~~=l=:~ .

J

j
ZUELEUA SMI'l1l

Baptists honor
Mrs. W Smith
Mrs . W1lham (Z ueleha )
Sn11th was honored at the
recent Oh10 Bapllst General
Ass'n meetmg m Columbus for
ha vmg served 25 years as
supervisor of the Oh10 Baptist
Gulld in the Prov1dence
Assoc1at10n
The leather encased certificate s1gned by E Agg1e
Woodard Randolph, state
superviSOr of the gUild work,
was presented by Mrs Dorothy
Thomas, Bidwell, d1str1ct
superviSOr. Mrs. Sm1tll's work
has been m 28 chUTches of the
Hockmg, Galha, Ironton and
Piketon DIStncts and has mvolved between 300 and 400
gu-ls.
A member of the Forest Run
Baptist Church, Mrs. Smith
has been church clerk for 39
years, and served as vtce
president of the MISSIOnary
Soc1ety, along w1th holdmg
other offices m the church
durmg her many years of
active membership.
She 1s aff1llated w1tll the
Pomeroy Women's Chr!Sllan
Temperance Union,
the
American Leg10n Aux1hary,
Lewis Manley Post 263, and the
Meigs Salon 710, E1ght and
Forty.
One of 12 children, Mrs.
Smith spent her younger years
m Dayton where she worked
for several years at General
Motors. Mrs. Smith and her
husband, deceased smce 1955,
came to Meigs County m 1933.
While they had no children of
their own, they took a ruece,
W1lla Marie, to rear .
Since the death of her
husband, Mrs. Smith has
worked m the Jield of private
practical nursmg and child
care She retired three years
ago to take care of her sister,
Azalea Odi,ster, Dayton. Mrs.
- - Smith brought her s1ster here
and cared for her until recently
when she was moved to a
nursing home at Portsmouth.
For many years, Mrs. Smith
has resided on West Mam St ,
Pomeroy. In 1968 the home she
lived in was torn down and a
new mobile home put m 1ts
place .. Just a year ago she
made the final payment on her
home.
Mrs. Sm1th fmds joy in her
church work, the var1ous
orgamzations she's act1ve in,
domg for others, and lending a
hand whenever possible to one
of her numerous rueces or
nephews She describes her life
as bemg very busy but abundantly blessed.

REVIVAL SET
The Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church w11l hold a
reviVal begmnmg Nov. 8 w1th
Rev Matthew Harden and
special smgmg ~rv1ces begm
7 30 p m O'Dell Manley 1s the
pastor and everyone ts

welcome

~~~~

TUESDAY
XI GAMMA MU, Be~' Sogm.,
Phi Soronty, 7·30 Tuesd"&gt;
home of Mrs Martha McPhail
"tth Mrs Caro l Adams,
hostess. Carol McCullough to
prese nt "Good L1le " for
cultural program
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
0 E S , 7 45 p m Tuesday at
the Pomeroy Masomc Temple
ONE YEAR OLD Malinda
Sue
Carson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ten·) Carson, Pomeroy,
observed her hrst birthday
recently woth a party at the
home of her parents. Attending were Jack Seelig,
Sue Seehg. Marty and
Bobbie Sechg, June Carson.
Mrs. Mike Young and Stac),
Mrs. B1ll Clark and April,
Mrs Alva Clark, Terra and
Beth, and Mrs. Fred Clark.

Grange appoints
Meigs deputies
Mr and Mrs Mendel Jordan
have been appomted new
deputy master and matron
lor
Me1gs
CoWlty,
1t
was
announced
in
a
commumcallon from James

Ross, state master, at the
Fnday mght meetmg of
Pomona Grange
The appomtment was made
following the resignation of
Mrs. Paulme Atkms. Durmg
the meetmg at the Rock
Sprmgs Grange hall, presided
over by Norman W11l, Mrs.
Atkms was natned "Granger of
the Year "She was presented a
cake by her daughter, Mrs
Robert Jewell, and a rad1o by
Master Norman Will, a gift
from the subordmate granges
of Me1gs County.
It was also announced durmg
the meetmg that Ke1th Ashley
of Racme Grange was the third
runner-up at the state grange
prince contest.
The annual county officers'
conference was set for Fr1day,
8 p.m., Nov. 29 w1th a potluck
dinner at 7 p.m.
Earl Starkey mstalled the
new officers Wltll Mrs. Atkms
as marshall and Mr. and Mrs.
~ordan as regalia and emble~
bearers. Installed were Wiq,

master; Jordan, overseer;
Mrs Jordan, lecturer; Robert
Holliday, steward; Mrs. Leo
Story, chap lam, Leo Story,
treasurer; Mrs Fred Goeglem,
secretary, Amos Leonard,
gatekeeper; Mrs. Robert
Jewell, Pomona, Mrs. Robert
Holhday, Flora, and Homer
i!adford, executive committee.
The HarriSOnville Grange
served refreshments. Host for
the January meeting will be
Columbia Grange.

joins husband

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BASEMENT SALE, Enterprose UM Church, Rt 33,
north of Pomeroy, 9 a m. to 4

p m
REGULAR meetong.
Southeastern Ohw Gospel
Mus1c Ass'n , potluck, 6 p m .
meetmg follows at 7 30 p m
Sprongheld Grange Hall . SR
160 north of Galhpohs
ELECTION Day, polls open
from6a on to7 30p m Get out
and vote
FOREST
Run
Umted
Methodost Cliurch Ladles host
a soup dmner at the chw-ch
Menu mcludes soup, sandWiches , p1e and cake
OHIO ETA Pho Chapter.
Beta S1gma Ph1 Soronty, 7 30
p m , Columbus and Southern
Ohw Electnc Co , off•ce
Pledge traomng Mrs Dottle
Musser and Lmda Sauvage,
hostesses, cultural report by
Janet Pickens and Barbara
Logan
POMEROY
Unoted
Method1st Church Women's
annual Elechon Day dmner,
servmg, 11 am to 3 pm
Sandwiches, soup, salads, p1e
Bazaar table Soup available
b} the quart

..'&lt;:&lt;.-:
mv

By Polly Cramer

&amp;:&lt; ~ ·

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My daughter, I%, decided to share her
m1lk Wlth several of my house plants. Now they have a sour m1lk
smell and mold on the so1l. Is there any way to get nd of this odor
\lllhout havmg to repot tne plants• - MRS M. R.
DEAR POLLY - I hope manufacturers of electric blankets
w11l note my Pet Peeve When I want to change the dial on my
blanket dur mg the mght I fmd I cannot see the numbers without
turnmg the hght on or at least puttmg on my glasses W1tll all the
present day know.!Jow 1t seems someone could come up w1tll an
answer for th1s. Here's hopmg - ELEANOR
DEAR POLLY - I have some 1deas for Nora who has
all those alummum fml pans. Glue deep bottle caps
&lt;such as come on catsup) around the edges of such a pan. Place.,.
con tamer for water m the center. Put pamt m the cups and the
asp1rmg artist has palette
Cut the bottom bars from a couple of w~re coat hangers,
leavmg an mch on each end Punch holes near the ends of fml
cake pans and msert the cut Wires on the hangers Add feed, hang
on tree branches and your birds have feeders
To make a picture frame pamt a div1ded foli TV dmner tray
any des~re color and then mount small p1ctures m the sechons
- KATHY
DEAR POLLY- When rewmdmg yarn to use for crocheting
an afghan I woWld It on an empty cardboard tube such as g1ft
paper comes on I then placed th1s tube over the handle on a
plumber's fr1end ( plunger) and the suctwn held 1t to the floor
Th1s prevents the yarn from becoming tangled and from rollmg
out of each as a ball often does -INA.
DEAR POLLY - I have three chlidren Wider the age of
seven and am well aware of the frequency of mmor knee lDJUries
that befall th1s age group Unlll recently I was plagued w1th the
imposs1ble task of protectmg these mJurles so they could heal
properly Now I save mate less socks or worn out ones. I fmd they ·
make wonderful flex1ble stay-&lt;&gt;n knee pads, p1 ov1dmg the heels
are mtact Cut the toe off a sock and pull the heel of the sock over
the ch1ld's bandaged knee He can play unrestramed and mother
1s assured that the wound 1s properly covered - LILLIAN
You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homemakmg 1dea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution to a
problem. Write Polly m care of this newspaper.

PTA council to
meet at Rutland
You Brought That Up"
Dr Robert Lucas, f~rst v1ce
president of the Ohw PTA, m
h1s addtess before the conventwn, ctted sev~n goals to
gu1de PTA achons These, to be
cons1dered at the Thursday
noght meeting are·
Increased on PTA membership - An mcrease of Oh10
PTA membership of at least !5
pet or 66,533 addlhonal
members, w1th each local PTA
un1t to exceed the school
enrollment by 25 pet.
Increase m the number of
PTA un1ts - An mcrease of 10
pet m the number of new umts
m each counc1l and d1stnct
PTA scholarships - an increase of 10 pet m the number
of colleges and vocahonaltechnical scholarships offered
to students th1s year
PTA leg1slahve program - a~
thoroughly knowledgeable and
actiVe leg•slat10n chairman m
every COWlcll and Wllt m Ohw
w1th a well-&lt;&gt;rgani"'ed campaign m every regwn, counctl
and un1t to promote the Ohw
PTA leg1slahon program and
posot10ns

The Pomeroy Forst Baptist
Church w11l hold a rwnrno 6 e
sale from 9 am. t" 4 pm
Wednesday and '!'nursday at
the churrh

Dehnquency preventionA
delinquency
prevenhon
program m every PTA unit m
Ohoo that mvolves parents,
Students',
teachers,
ad·
mtmstrators and law enforcement officials
School relahonsh1ps - A
closer workmg relatwnsh1p
w1th teachers and administrators.
PTA
must ma~e sure there IS
commumca hon and more
mvolvement
w1th
the
professional staff of the school.
Health program - promote
comprehens1ve
health
educatiOn m every school m the
state Th1s mcludes all areas
related to health, nutr~hon,
safety, fam1ly life, human
development and mental
health

Hermon U B. Church 7 30 p m.
Everyone welcome
ANNUAL Fall Bazaar of the
Sacret
Heart
Church,
Pomeroy; ham or creamed
ch1ckeii dmners begmmng at
4 30 p.m Wltil 7 p m ; various
games, baked goods, and
nwnerous articles for sale
Pubhc inv1ted.

ElECTION
NIGHT'74

MEIGS County Counc1l,
Parents and Teachers, 7 30
p.m , Rutland Elementary
School
CITY COUNCIL of Beta
Sigma Ph1 w11l hold mstallat10n
of off1cers at 7 30 p m at
Columbus and Southern Ohw
Electr1c Co

r::;;;;~~i;:::-~ZE~N~IT;H1 ,,--:--n.;· -~-.-Sentinel

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U,EV&lt;m:DTOTIIE
INTERI!ZI'OP'

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10=30'PM
SPONSORED BY

SMITH PLUMBING PEOP~ES BANK.
FRUTH PHARMACY PT PLEASANT RECAPPING
RC BOTTLING CO ANO ElBERFELDS

Rev W H Pernn was
surpnsed Sunday night when
approximately 150 members of
Trm1ty Church and fnends
gathered at the church to honor
h1m on his I Oth anm versary as
their pastor
The occaswn open~d w1th a
potluck dmner at 5 p m. w1th
Lawrence Stewart givmg tbe
blessing Followmg dmner tbe
group assembled in l]]e Sunday
School aud1tor1Um for a
program of fellowsh1p and fun.
Mrs Nancy Jo Clatworthy was
at the p1ano for group smgmg
of "Steppmg m the Light" Roy
Mayer, supermterident of the
school, had prayer and the
congregahon sang "In T1mes
Uke These' '
There was a p1ano solo by
Fa1th Perrm, a vocal trw, "He
Touched Me" by Mrs Don
Thomas and daught,rs, Lisa
and Becky; a plano solo by Lori
Ann Wood, and a vocal, " Tell
Me Why" by Mrs Joe Struble,
Mrs John Terrell and Mrs
Rose Gmtller.
M1ss Susan Fleshman,
Pomeroy hbranan, played two
selechons, "The Coventry
Carol," and an old folk song,
"My Love Arbertus" on her
tepor recorder Under the
ditecllon of Mrs Ahce Nease,
the Happy Harvesters Chorus
sang 11 How Great Thou Art •"
"Ivory Palaces" and ' 4The
Church in the Wlidwood." In
the group were Mrs Terr,ell,
Mrs Gmther, Mrs. Genev1eve
Memhart, Mrs Struble, Mrs.
Neva Sevfned. Mrs Stella
' INSTALLATION SET
POMEROY - The c1ty
council of Beta Sigma Phi will
hold mstallatwn of offiCers
Thursday, Nov. 7, at 7:30p.m.
at the Columbus and Southern
OhiO Electnc Co.
SING SET
There will be a hymn smg at
the Hazel Commumty Church,
off SR 124 between Long
Bottom and Portland at 7·30
p.m ,
Saturday.
The
Chorala1res, Parkersburg, will
be the Singers.

Kloes, Mcs Carolyn Thomas
and Frances Bearhs
Roy Mayer read an arhcle on
the mstallatwn of Rev Perrm
as pastor of Tr1mty Church
wh1ch appeared m The Dally
Sentmel, Nov 29, 1964 He then
presented the rrunl!lter w1th a
g1ft on behalf of the
congregallon. Mayer comment,d on the progress of the
church under the leadership of
Rev Pemn Robert Buck,
president of the church COWlCli,
also expressed h1s apprec1atoon
on behalf of the COWlCli and the
congregatwn
Mrs Nease sang "My Task,"
and there was a spec1al
number, by Rev and Mrs
Perrm , Mr
and Mrs
Lawrence Stewart, lvlrs Dav1d
Russell, Mrs. Ben Neutzhng
and Fa1th Perrin . The rmn!Ster
gave the closmg prayer and the
congregallon sang "God Be
With You" to conclude the
program
M1ss Erma Sm1th and Mr.
and Mrs Roy Mayer were co.
chairpersons
for
the
celebrahon
The
table
decoratwns earned out a fall
moll!

Now they've written a
sophisllcated sequel to indoor
p!antmg called "Growmg Wlth
Your Plants the Mother Earth
Hassle-free Way" (J .P .·
Tarcher, Inc., Los Angeles).
On a visit to New york, the
Rapps diSCUSsed the "plant
fever sweepmg the land" not
only brmgmg more greenery
mto the home but mto stores,
offices, banks, and anywhere
else there IS the new mterest m
plant culture.
Mrs Rapp called plants
great for the tensJon set-"for
the woman who gets hives 1f
she can't get to Gucc1."
Recently they met With the
president of a woman's
clothing store cham for what
were to be diSCUSSIOns about
the Rapps opemng plant
concesSions in its outlets
"And all he wanted to talk
about was why h1s philoden- ·
dron was dymg," sa1d Rapp
Rapp told hun 1t probably was
from the cardinal sin of plant
care- "overmdulgence "
"People tend to overwater,
overfeed, just the way they
tend to overbldulge themselves
Wlth too much smoking and
drmking; " he said.
"But no one really has a
brown thumb. Moderation is
the rule for care.
"Buy plants from a
reputable flml, and buy the
nght plants for the right

Bucks
•
retazn
top spot
NEW YORK (UP!) - Woody
Hayes' Ohio State gr~dders
remamed the No. 1 chmce of
the coaches on the Umted
Press International MaJor
College Football Ratings
Board, but a logjam developed
right behmd them.
Mich1gan, wh1ch has been
trailing along r1ght behmd the
Buckeyes, now has company m
second place as Alabama
received an equal number of
votes with the Wolvermes.
On Saturday Michigan
defeated Indiana by the modest
score of 21-7, while Alabama
shut out previOusly 15th-ranked
MissiSSippi State, 35-0. Going
mto tlie game Wlth the Crimson
Tide, the Bulldogs had been the
SEC leader in total offense, but
Alabama pernutted them only
167 yards.
The Buckeyes, meanwh1le,
rolled up seven touchdowns
while disposing of Illinms, 4~7.
and received 34 of the 35 forst
place votes and 349 pomts, one
shy of a perfect score.
F1orlda 's wm over Auburn
and Southern California's 15-15
tie w1th Califorma helped to
rearrange the rest of the top 10.
Auburn, which lost to the
Gators 25-14, dropped from
fourth to ninth, while Florida
Jumped from lOth to seventh.
The Trojans, meanwhile,
probably feel that a tie IS worse
than "kissmg your sister" as
the non-win dropped them from
SIXth to lith.
Notre Dame, which needed
two fourth-quarter TDs to get
past Navy ,1~, remained fifth,
but Texas A&amp;M, which doubled
the score against Arkansas 2().
10, climbed from seventh to
fourth. Penn Siate, toppmg
Maryland 24-17, climbed from
e1ghth to sixth, Nebraska, a 3115 winner over Colorado,
moved up one notch to eighth
and Texas edged USC for the
lOth spot by two pomts after
rompmg past SMU, 35-15.
As the season draws near to
completion, the better teams
become more apparent-at
least to the Coaches Board-as
only 15 teams received votes
thiS week. Behind Southern Cal
were Miami of Ohio, up two
positions; Houston, up four
places; Pittsburgh, a new
entrant mto the top 20; and
Maryland, which dropped from
12th to 15th.
Losses by Texas Tech,
Arizona State, M1ssiss1ppi
Stale and UCLA dropped them
out of the top 20. Oklahoma
State, despite beating Kansas
24-13, also disappeared from
the ratings.

places."
Although they got mto plants
to get out of show business, the
new enterprlSC may take them
right back . Rapp's father,
Philip, wrote scripts for many
famous performers mcludmg
the late Eddie Cantor and
Fanny Brice.
Now, Lynn and Joel Rapp
have been asked to do a
situatlon comedy "pilot" for
teleVISIOn and also fibn a
commercial on lawn care.
All will help to get the backto-greenery message across,
they hope
Sa1d Mrs Rapp, "I look
forward to the day when they
take out parking lots and put m
gardens."

For Your Dining and Listening
Pleasure ...
•

GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 9:30 to 2
The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992-3629

Pomeroy

/

.

DON'T
GET
STUCK
with high prices on winter tlras!
GET GOING WITH

J'trestone ~~6Zil.-~3

WINTER R~TREADS

poaa., ,-M! •t Pomeroy, I

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BottineiH.c.Ilagber o Inc o lJ EMl 4bf St , I
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I

Woody's team going behind
closed doors for practice
closed Wolverine practice sessiOns two weeks prtor to tile
annual Oh1o State-Michigan
game. Hayes• action comes
three week.s before the No 23
game between the current two
top teams in the nation.
"I'm really sorry to have to
do it," Hayes told a packed
house at the weekly luncheon,
mcludmg at least one wr1ter
from Detroit.
"But this is the tune of
season when teams do add
certain things to their offense
NEW YORK (U PI ) The and all you have to do lS let one
1974 Untied Press lnternattonal
Board of Coaches top 20 ma1or fellow in who knows what he's
co llege football rattngs Wtfh lookmg for and you prejudice
won lost records and ftrst place
your chances of winning."
votes '" parentheses
Team
Po•nts
Hayes said all-Amer1can
1 Ohto State (341 (8 Ill
349
tailback
Archie Griffin,
2 {Tre) Mtchtgan (8 0)
295
(Ttel Alabama (11 (8 OJ
295 quarterback Cornelius Greene
4 Texas A&amp;M (7 1 l
192
and others had been more and
5 Notre Dame (7 1)
166
6 Penn State (7 11
158 more in demand for mterv1ews
7 Flor1da (7 1 )
155 and meetings.
a Nebraska (6 21
120
9 Auburn (7 1 I
"It takes !hell' mind off of
73
10 Texas (6 2)
53 football," said Hayes.
11 So uthern Cal &lt;5 1 1J
51
12 Mtamt (O h tO) (7 0 lJ
"I really hate to do 1t because
8
13 Houston (6 21
7 all of you are good friends,"
14 Ptttsburgh ( 6 21
2
Hayes said apologetically,
15 Maryland { 53)
I
(Only teams rece tv tng votes
"but I'm sure you want to see
th ts week 1
Note· By agreement with the us win."
Amencan Football Co.aches,
Hayes said the Buckeyes
teams on probation by the
came
through saturday's 4~7
NCAA are Ineligible for top 20
and nattonal champtonshtp con
win over Dlinols, their eighth of
stderahon by the U PI Board of
Coaches Those teams currently the year without a loss, with
on probation are Oklahoma. "relatively few injuries."
SMU, California. t.ong Beach
The one exception is Greene,
State and Southwestern Lou•s•a
na
who suffered a brulaed hand
and will be kept out of workouts
a COtJPie of days.
Hayes, who many times has
talked about the possibility at
one of his stars getting hurt
when the outcome of a game
COLUMBUS, Oh10 (UPI) There will be three weeks of
peace and qUite for Ohio
State's No. 1 ranked football
team.
Coach
Woody
Hayes,
perhaps trymg to go one up on
M1Ch1gan coach Bo Schembechler, announced Monday
that all Buckeye practices the
rest of the season would be
closed.
A year ago, Schembechler

College Ratings

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score."
As thmgs turned out, Greene,
after a nine-yard gain, had his
hand slammed agamst a head
gear and fumbled with the
Illlnl recovering on the
Buckeye 26.
Qllar!erback coach George
Chaump, reporting on the
defense of Michsgan State, the
Buckeyes' opponent this week
at East Lansing, said the
Spartans have been known for
their tough defense and "this
year IS no exception."
Chaump said Michigan State
is weU coached, but that more
Importantly
"they
are
physically tough."
The Spartan offense is led by
quarterback Charley Baggett,
called by OSU defensive coordinator George Holl "a truly
great qlhack."
"We ha "e faced better
passers th
Baggett," Hill
said, "but 1 he can dO more
things to fOU. He's a little
different tYI!" of quarterback."
Hill also !lad wor!ls of praise
for fullback Levi Jackson, who
beat out the veteran Clarence
Bullock for the job.

I

pas.'ed the 49ers w1thm range
for Bruce Gossett to kock a 31yard f~eld goal w1th three
mmutes left m the th1rd
quarter and then connected
w1tll Washmgton on a 3~yard
scormg pass w1th 6·53 to go to
put the 49ers m pos1t1on for a
b1g upset
HarriS, who completed 12-of20 passes for !50 yards, took the
Rams SO yards m 15 plays, w1th
Tony Baker crashmg over
from the one on the first
quarter Then, early m the
second penod, he h1t tight end

A's dominate
UPI dream team
NEW YORK (UPI) - As if
they · needed further proof of
the1r supenority, the Oakland
A's have named four players to
the 1974 United Press International Amencan League AllStar squad.
The A':s, winners of three
consecullve World Series,
placed shortstop Bert Campanerls, outfielders Joe Rudi
and Regg1e Jack.son and pitcher Jim "CatfiSh" Hunter on
the squad which was selected
by sports wnters and
correspondents from the
league's 12 cities.
No other team had more Ulan
two players selected to the
squad Texas, Detroit and
Baltunore each placed two
while Ch1cago and Mmnesota
named one each.
Outfielder Jeff Burroughs
and pitcher Ferguson Jenkins
were chosen from the Texas
Rangers, catcher Bill Freehan
and relief pitcher John Hiller
were named from the Detroit
Tigers and th1rd baseman
Brooks
Robinson
and
des1gnated h1tter Tommy
Davis were selected from the
Baltunore Orioles.
Roundmg out the team were
first baseman Dick Allen of the
Ch1cago White Sox and second
baseman Rod Carew of the
Mmnesota Twms.
Allen, although he "retired"
before the season ended, was
an easy winner In the voting for
fll'st base. The controversial
slugger grabbed 13 of the 17
votes cast for the position, even
though he skipped the last
three weeks of the campa1gn.
Allen batted .301,led the league
with 32 home runs and drove in
88 runs
Carew also had no trouble
winning the race for second
base. Carew, who led the
majors with a .364 average,
received 16 votes while CampanerlS, who enjoyed his best
year in the majors, won the
ballotmg for shortstop over
Texas' Toby Harrah bv a vote

Br Un1ted Press 1nternat1onal

M•d·Amencan conference
Conference
Overall
WLTWLT
7 0 1
5 J o
5 J D
A .4 0
6 J o
3 6 o

M1am I
A 0 0
Toledo
3 1 0
Oh iO Un1v
J 2 0
Bowlmg Green
2 3 0
Kent State
1 2 0
West M•chlgan
o 5 o
Oh10 Conference
Red DIVISIOn

Conference
Baldwm Walla ce .4 0
Otterbein
3 1
Mar•etra
2 2
Muskmgum

Overall
0 7 10
0 5 J 0
o s 3o

2 2 0

.4 4 0

Freehan, who made a dramatic comeback, beat out New
York's Thurman Munson in the
voting for catcher. Freehan,
enjoying his best season smce
1971, hlt .296 w1th I&amp; homers
and 60 rbi's and received e~ght

wesleyan
Den 1son

x Oberlin
x Kenvon

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As ammals go, man Is
long li ved Only some k1nds
of torto1ses or land turtles
live longer than man An
elephant l1ves to be around
60 years of age, a parrot so
years As large as a whale
IS, he reaches full matunty
the age of 12 years and
approximately
ve•1rs . A housefly only l•ves
few months A marigold
I nt IS old In three or four
s. wh1le some plants
to be hundreds of
The tree family
shame, as some of

;sPI'Cil" live to be thousa,nd•
old, such as
California trees
-, Vn ... water
your
fl xtures,

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al
your

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and perform
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Ref
water and a small amount
soap are all that •s needed
your household m
shape
A Miracle
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Your home will always look
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votes to four for Munson, who · - - - - - - - - - '
batted .261 Wllh 13 homers and
60 rb1's.
Davis was an easy winner in
the voting for designated
hitter. The 35-year-&lt;&gt;ld veteran
collected mne votes to beat out
Kansas City's Hal McRae, who
was second ·with three Davis '
hit .289 and drove in 84 runs
while helping the Orioles to the
AL East Division title.
In the balloting for pitchers
each voter was asked to select
two starters and one reliever.
Hunter, Jenkms and H1Uer
eas1ly emerged as the top votegetters. Hunter, the AL Cy
Young Award winner, received
16 votes and Jenkins collected
14 while Hiller led lhe relievers
•
with seven votes.
Hunter posted a 25-12 record
Wlth a 2.49 earned rWl average
while Jenkins was also 25-12
Wlth a 2.83 era. Hiller posted a
17-14 record with a 2 64 era.

"Can I afford
an independent
Insurance expert
to figure out
what's best for me?"

x Oh lo Northern )( x x 2 6 0
x not competing for ft t le
Btg Ten

Conference

Overall

WLTWLT
OhtoState
50 0 8 0 0
Mtchtgan
5 0 0 8 0 0
Mtch1gan St
3 1 I 4 3 0
ll ltOOtS
2 2 I 4 3 I
W tsconsm
2 3 0 4 4 0
Purdue
2 J 0 3 4 1
Iowa
2J o 35o
Mmnesota
I A 0 3 5 0
lndtana
1 4 0 1 7 o
Northwestern
1 A 0 2 6 0
Others

Youngstown State
John Carro l l
W•lmlngton
Ashlantl

W•tfenberg
Cap ital
Oh10

({((

I

'995

rbt's.

Defiance
Akron
Bluffton

Mount Un 1on

.

MALIBU
4 DR.

Central Sta te

201 512
210530
210 620
120440
0 J 1 2 5 1
)()()( 530
XXX
251

....,,..

'69 CHEVELLE

Heidelberg
l J 0 4 4o
0 4 0 2 50
Wooster
Blue Division
Conference
Overall

WLTWLT

Bob Klem on a 23-yard throw
for a 12-0 lead
Dav1d Ray tned to run over
for the extra pomt after the
first TD, followmg a low snap
from center, and was nmled
short of the end zone After the
second TD, he s1mply muffed
the k1ck Those two m1sses
could have proved d1sasterous,
but Ray k1cked a 211-yard f1eld
goal m the f~rst mmute of the
fmal quarter and that proved to
be the winner
In defense of the Ram offense, Harr1s sald he d1dn 't see
any reason for an apology.
"We played well enough to
wm," hesatd. ~~That's all we're
trymg to do- win the game We
expected a tough game from
the 49ers and they gave us
one."
The Rams play Atlanta on
Sunday and the 49ers meet
Dallas

of 11~ Campaneris hit 290
wh1le Harrah h1t 260 with 21
homers and 74 rb1's
The closest ballotmg was in ,__________,
the race for third base where 1
This Week's Spec1al
the 37-year-&lt;&gt;ld Robinson edged
Oakland's sal Banda by two
votes, nine 'n seven. Robinson
VALUE
RATED
enJoyed his best year at the
plate by hitting .288 Bando hlt
only .243 but belted 22 homers
USED CARS
and drove m 103 runs .
Burroughs was the top votegetter among the outfielders
Wlth 15 votes. The 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld
slugger led the league m runs
batted in w1th 118 and also hit '
25 home runs and batted .301.
Rud1 and Jackson each
collected 14 votes. Rud1 batted
307 V 8 motor , auto trans ,
P S, radio
.293, hit 22 homers and drove in
99 runs while Jackson batted
.289 with 29 homers and 93

Ohio grid standings
Oh•o College Football
Records

WID

Cmclnn~tl

WLT

6
6
4
5

'5
5
4

Fmdlay
H1ram
Case Wntern
Dayton

3
3
2
2
2

0
0
0
3 0
3 0
4 0
1

2
2

0
0
I

''4

0

6
5
6
7

I
0
0

Sure.
An independent~~--~
agent makes
no extr.1
charge f&lt;h
his services.
As mdependent agcots, we represent several strong msurance
"Omp.LnJes We are free to select the nght kmd of msurance
f or your ca r home, or busmess , and we make no ex.tra
charge tor thi s ~e rv1ce
A one-company salesman, or'l the other hand, must neces•,mly tn to sell yo11 t he rollo h1" comr'\·•m otfers
A li mJcpcndcnt msur.•ncc .tgcn ls, we otrer you I he B•g
D1tfercnce m msur.mce- uur con tmumiZ. oersonal anenllon
Call us

Wolliam D. Cholds

Downing-Childs Agency, Inc.
Middleport, Ohoo

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6

New-Management

KING'S ARMS NITE CLUB
Dance fo Music by "Red and the Ambassadors," Thursday, Friday
&amp; Saturday Evenings, Nov. 7, 8,9-9 p.m. to 2 a.m.

cnYWAN
&amp;SA.VINGS
BST.I!IIl

Your Patronage

Appreciated!!

125 E. Main St • 992-2171

Pomeroy

•

,
'

has already been decided and
how &lt;~crazy" 1t lS to leave them
m, said "our biggest miStake
saturday was leavmg Cornelius in the game one play too
long
"We JUSt wanted to get our
Red II (second offensive) unit
better field position before
puttmg them in. We certainly
weren't trymg to run up the

bnll
" I saw Gene between the
lmebacker (Robertson) and
the defensive back/' Snead
smd of hos mterceptwn "I tr1ed
to lob the ball over them but I
got hlt and knocked off
balance I knew I threw a dymg
qua1l the moment I let 1t go "
Still, had 1t not been for
Snead, p1cked up a bttle more
Ulan a week ago from the New
York Glants, the 49ers wouldn't
have been as close as they were
m the fmal minutes.
The veteran of 14 pro seasons

Un~er

}'

'\

""" 42 w1th a llttle more than
four rnmutes remaintng. All
they needed to do \\as move the
ball 30 vards for a wuuung held
goal try but on the f1rst play
from scrunmage, a runnmg
plav , the 49ers were caught
holding
W1th the ball back on the 32,
Snead, who had taken over for
rook1e Tom Owen at the start of
the second half, was forced to
pass, and the Los Angeles
defense was set for hun. They
put on a b1g rush as Robertson
faded back w1th w1de rece1ver
Gene Washmgton
Forced out of the pocket,
Snead burned his throw and
Robertson grabbed 1t m front of
Washmgton The 49ers never
agam got their hands on the

COLUMBUS, Ohw (UP!)- class by hunself as a quarterIn h1s last four games,
Oh1o State assistant coach back."
agumst W1sconsm, Ind1ana,
George Chaump adrruts he
Rex Kern, who led Oh10 State Northwestern and Illinois,
may be bl8Sed in hls glowmg to a 27-2 three-year record Greene has h1t on 26 of 35 for
pra1se of the Buckeyes' junoor durmg the 1968, 1969 and 1970 496 yards and seven touchquarterback Cornehus Greene. seasons, has been considered downs
After all, Chaump is the by many as the Buckeyes' best
Why the big unprovement?
quarterback coach and has all-time quarterback
"Hard
work
and
seen Greene mature from a
But Greene, w1th three pre[l'lration, not takmg any
crude freshman mto possibly games to go, is only 222 yards game lightly," says Greene,
the best quarterback m Ohio short of breaking Kern's Single who stayed in Columbus last
State history m just two years . season total offense record of summer and worked out
Last Saturday, m the Buck- 1,585 yards.
abnost dally.
eyes' 4~7 rout of lllin01s,
"I wouldn't trade hun for any
Credits Coofideoce
Greene ran for 127 yards 1n 25 other quarterback in the
Greene credits the con·
carnes, mchfflmg a 15-yard country," srud Chaump. "He fldence gained by winnmg the
touchdown run, and completed has a strong arm, a good MVP m the Rose Bowl for his
8 of 12 passes for another 127 release and the awareness to success thiS season.
yards and two more TDs
do the nght thing at the right
"That was really the start of
The performance earned the time He IS like Kern m that he It," he satd. 11 When we came
6-foot, 170-pounder from Wa- has the ability to brul you out back in the spring, I knew I
shington, D.C. the honor of w1th the broken play. He is the could do 1t."
Umted Press International ,prem1er quarterback m the
Playing m the same backM1dwest offenstve Player of country "
field w1th all-American Arch1e
the Week.
Hard To Believe
CrO.:"•" Greene knows he faces
"When he first came here, he
The
Improvement
1n an uph ... '&gt;~ttle to make allhad no concept of dlsclplined Greene's passmg stat1stics Amertca."
football," sa1d Chaump, "and from a year ago to th1s season
"I would love to make it," he
when he threw a pass, I used to are hard to beheve.
says, "but if I don't, I guess
hold my breath. But he has
Last season, as the regular there 1s probably a reason."
matured mto a great, great quarterback, he hlt only 20 of 48
Greene says, however, "l
quarterback.,.
( 434 per cent) pass attempts enjoy playing on this type of
Might Be Prejudiced
for 343 yards and two touch- team. I'm glad when Arch or
While Chaump might be downs and had seven mtercep- Brian (Baschnaggel) have a
prejudiced, lllino!S coach Bob ted
good day. Just so we wm.
Blackman Isn't and he spoke of
'Ilus season, m seven games,
"I knew about Oh1o State's
Greene in glowmg terms he has h1t on 43 of 64, a per- wmmng teams and about the
following Saturday's game.
centagge of .671, for 725 yards Rex Kern teams and thought
~~Greene tS the one who
and nme touchdowns He also maybe we could do as well, but
compounds thingS for them, has 638 yards rushing m 106 it was JUSt a dream -a dream
11
Blackman said. "He is in a carr1es and bas scored eight wh1ch has more or less come
TDs.
true."

TRUST US

-1

to go. "We made all the b1g
plays when we needed them the
most."
IJnebacker Is1ah Robertson
made perhaps the b1ggest one
of all when he spoiled Norm
Snead's San Francosco debut
by picking off a pass "ith
mmutes left to play.
The Los Angeles offense,
starting on the San Francisco
49, did a fme JOb of eatmg up
the clock the rest of the way
and was on the verge of
another score when lime
fmally ran out.
Robertson did a good JOb of
"reading" Snead on his b1g
pass intercepllon.
The 49ers, trailing by only
two pomts, recovered a fumble

Greene UPI's 'Back-of-Week'

SALE POSTPONED
A rummage sale planned by
the Middleport Busmess and
Professwnal Women's Club at
the Fry bwldmg m Middleport
Nov 8 and 9 has been postponed Wltil Nov. 15-16.

France 1s tradlllonally consodered the greatest wmeproducmg country '" the
world Its annual output. of
nearly two b1lhon gallons aceounts for about 25 per cent
of the world's wmes

that had lost hve m a row ~nd
was hav1ng quarterback pro().
Iems
But James HarriS, now the
No - 1 quarterback w1tll the
trade of John Hadl, proved
good enough for the second
week tn a row, domg exactly as
h1s coach dictated wh1le
gUldmg the Rams to tlle1r
fourth straight v1ctory.
It also was Los Angeles's
runth m a row over San
FranciSco and 1t snapped a
Monday mght JinX that had
seen the hbme team win or tie
for 21 consecullve weeks gomg
back through the 1973 season
"It was as fme a team effort
as I have seen," sa1d Chuck
Knox m adm1ra twn of his
Rams, who now lead the NFC

.
West by three games "1lh s1x

by Larry McCu tchE"fln " ... ,.._,.,r

~~·••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Clll'Edll«

'*'" ""' '"''"

~

Church fetes pastor

PublllhoddoU,._SI_by,..
CowtSl,
_ Publllhinot
_ _ __ · lllt
ValleY
21$7.
Second c1au

I
MASON FURNITURE

They
" We wanted a busmess of owown," sa1d Rapp, whose godfa\ tller was the late Edd1e Cantor.
What spurred them even
more was sqmething the Rapps
say 1s bas1c in all of us"Gettmg back to the earth We
are of the earth People need
nature."
But because urbanization 1s
crowdmg us out of that need,
we're turnmg mcreasmgly to
mdoor plants, sa1d the Rapps.
And that 1s the d1recllon to
wh1ch the couple turned-he
after 15 years as a televlSlon
wr~ter and she after runnmg a

modelmg school and producmg
teleVISIOn shows
Neither had any formal
trammg m horllculture although "we are plant freak.s,"
as Rapp put 1t W1th an lnltlal
mvestment of $1,500 they
opened a plant boutique m a
West Hollywood, Calif, shoppmg arcade.
ur .ears later, they'd
ex
de to the whole arrade
Wlth
eir "Mother Earth"
operatiOn.
The next step was to record,
m 1973, their mistakes and
successes m a bouk called
"Mother Earth's Hassle-free
Indoor Plant Book", a bas1c
gmde to growing. It has sold
better than half a rrulilon
cop1es, they srud.

1

Offia! Phone lfWl:il Ed.l~l fbon,e-

~STEREO

get out of show bu:smess, they

MEIG8-MABON AREA
m&amp;91'ERL. TANNBIIJL!,,
ERe )!d •
ROBERT BOD'UCJI

I

SAN FRANCISCO (UP! J _
How good are the Los Angeles
Ran'"?
It's hard to tell because their
offense is spotty, but there 1s
nothmg wrong w1th the Rams'
defense, and that's where you
wm ball games.
Monday rught, the Rams dld
everythmg nearly letter
perfect and while the1r offense
generated only 303 yards, the
defense held the San FranciSco
49ers to 266 for a 15-13 victory
ln the Natwnal Football
League's nahonally teleVIsed
game of the week
True the Rams weo: mto the
game as 14-pmnt avor1tes
whtch in retrospect was a~
outrageous overlay, even
agamst a San FranciSco team

::!·:-:·

Tot uses ·m ilk 11~.~~ ~.:u:;:"r~~f ~ppp1 ~ec•dv:;eton
.=::$ 1
to water plants I, ~~.~~:.;~~~~er~w•tch.

WEEK Rev1val begmmng at
old Dexter Church ServiCes
7 30 p m Everyone welcome
ELECTION Day dmner by
women of the Chester Umted
Method1st Church at the
Chester Masomc Hall Pia te
lunch , ham or steak, sandwiches,
soup,
dessert ,
begmmng II a m Tuesday
ELECTION Day Dmner
11 30a m., Syracuse Mumc1pal
buolding by Syracuse F~rs t
Umted Presbyterian Church
Full d1nners. also bazaar
featurmg depressiOn glass ,
baked goods sale, handmade
artiCles and homemade soup
Meogs County Councli of
by quart; evemng meals also Parents and Teachers w1ll
served
meet Thursday at 7 30 p m at
SOUP Dmner at Forest Run the Rutland Elementary
Church election day Servmg School
all day Soup, sandwiches, p1e, . At that meetong reports w1ll
cake and coffee
be g1ven on the state conCHESTER
Council , ventwn of the OhooPTA, and
Daughters of Amenca , 7:30 there w1ll be a sk1t, " I'm Glad
p.m at the hall
OFFICERS TO MEET
ELECTION Day d1nner,
Pomeroy Umted Methodist
Dostnct officers of Umted
Church, servmg from 11 a m Method1st Women w11l meet at
to 3 p.m. Soup to take out, brong the Middleport Heath umi;,d
con tamers
Metllodost Church Thursday
WEDNESDAY
from 1 to 3 30 p m to conduct a
MIDDLEPORT F1remen's workshop OffiCers of the
i\ux1hary, 7 30 p m at the Umted MethodiSt Women and
fire house. Mrs Allee Mliler all other women of the church
Mrs Donna Russell, Mrs' are mv1ted to attend
Roberta Dalley, hostesses
HOSPITALIZED
POMEROY Lodge
164
Leo
Searls, Middleport, os
F&amp;AM, 7 30 p m All master
confmed
to the Pleasant Valley
masons mv1ted
Hosp1tal. H1s room number 1s
SYRACUSE Cub Scout Pak
167
242 Wlll meet every Wednesday
unmed1ately after school at the
school
PLAN SALE

Kathy Durst Phahn left last
Wednesday from Columbus v1a
plane for England to JOin her
husband at the Welford Air
Force Base where he is
stalloned.
Mrs
Phahn was accompanied to Columbus by her
mother, Mrs Mary Durst,
Pomeroy; her brother, Mr and
Mrs Edd1e Durst and sons,
EIGHT and Forty, Me1gs
Tim and J1mmy, of near County Salon 710, home of Mrs
Bradbury, and her s1ster, Kay Jul1a Hysell Members to take
Rogers and son, Dav1d Shuler, food for a Than'tsgivlng basket
St. Albans, W Va Mrs Phahn, and bottle caps for redemption
after a layover m Boston, Demonstration on makeup will
arr1ved m London Thursday be given
morning, and telephoned her
· THURSDAY
mother that she had reached · EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
England. Mrs Phahn, who was 0 E S 7 30 p m at the Midmarried Aug 17, has been dleport Masomc Temple
working recently at Murphy's Members are remmded that
Shoppmg Plaza Store near dues are payable now
Galhpohs.
CATHOLIC Sacred Heart
Church, annual bazaar, dmner
" 4 30 to 7 p m. Games, bootllS
and fancy work stands
MIDDLEPORT Merchants
Assoc1ahon luncheon meeting
12: 15 to I 15 at Martin
Restaurant
TWIN City Shrine Club
spec1al meetmg 7:30 p.m. All
nobles urged to attend Meet at
Racme Shrme Park Refreshments.
REVIVAL all week at Mt.

.Complete
Returns

R , ,
.
1t:~~l~
olty . ,. Poznters tt~\\

Rams defense shines inl5-l3

Indo(Jr plants basic with
Mother Earih operation

•

i

'
1

I

········~··············~···········
'

.,.

I

~

'

I.

'

�ft

''

4'- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tue~da)' , Nov. 5, 1974

.• .

• • • I

'

I--------------------------~
' !;etters of oplnlon are wel&lt;·nm,·d. They should "be lou ' I

I I • t

' •'

....

I I • '

~ '

....

I1

DR. LAMB

~ ~ o I

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Too much bunk about lecithm

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8)' Lawrenre E. Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR LAMB - What
are we supposed to believe any
more • For several years I
have diligently watched my
Intake of certain foods. Except
for foods such as cakes, cookies
and pancakes, I
h ave
specifically avoided eggs,
cheeses, butter, and whole

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Now, I read in the attached
newspaper · article that these
are some of the very foods that
1\;ould help to 'control
chol•sterol because of th e
lecithin in the egg yolks . Wha t
gives• What is lecithin ?
Is it any wonder that the
public is all mixed up where
diets are concerned? One
~octor advises to 11 Count

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falories." Another says to
~· avoid carbohydrates."
Another counsels "drinking
eight glasses of water a day ."

Pro Standings

Dr. Lamb, what are w~ supposed to believe any mOre ?

DEAR READER -

blood. Nn le that it Wit s injedrd
into the b!()od . not sw;tl!m..•ecL
In fa t· l. our own b&lt;&gt;dy
rnanufacturt~ s leci thin to put
irllo the bloodstream for these
ptu·poscs. It is manufactured
from · different basic food

Thoro

are many commercial in-

terests in the heailh fie ld.
There a re a lso a lot of eom-

pietely unqualified people and
plain quacks pouri.ng out a
steady

stream

of

bl ueks.

N""

misin-

formation to the public . I agree
the public has ample reason to
be confused.
The best I can tell you is to
look , to
the
person's
qua lifications
or
the

from

llmt is far different'
s wallowing

thing s .

Lecithin that is swallowed, not
injected into the bloodstream ,
is digested and never absorbed

qualifications of the source he
quotes . As a case in poin t, the

in to the body , let alone i11to the
bloodstrea m as lecithin.
Meanwhile, untold nwnbers of
people read the kind of thing

article advising lecithin you

you sen t me and waste their

sent is based on ignorance. It is
true , however , that cakes and
cookies can be a source of fat

money on pills that could be
better spe nt on good,
wholesome food,
• The limitation of fat.
cholesterol, and calories to

and cholesteroL Years ago it
was shown that you could inject lecithin into the bloodstream and it helped to dear
the fats and cholesterol in the

avoid obesity is the recom.

rnendation of a broad group of

Tension building up

NFL Standings
ev United Press International
American Conference
· Big Ten Football RoUDdup
· East
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
w . 1. t. pet . pf pa
tension
is building already for
Bu.ffai 7
1' 0 .885 181 139
New Eng
llle Big Ten football showdown
6
2 0 . 750 22 1

.7 50 182 g~
7
0 . 125 123 188
7 0 ' 125 96 210
central
w . I . t. pet.
pf
PI
P i tiS h 6
1
1 .813 183 116

' M ia mi 6
PtY Jl s 1
Belt e 1

•

2

'Cinc i 5
t-toustn 3
tteve 2

w.

!

W11sh n 5
Dallas •
Phllll 4
NY Giants
2

•

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Minn

pf
pa
.875 212 130

0

3 o
• · o
4 0

151 107
158 126
128 113

.625

.500
.500

0 .25 0
Central
w . 1. t. pet.
6
2 0
.750
4

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LsAng : ·
New Orlns

101

6

Detroit -4
Chlcag 3
Grn By 3

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I.

1

Oenvr 3 4
1 .08 163 171
Kn c1v 3 5 o
375 140 15 7
San Og 2 6 o .250 129 179
National Conference
East
w . I . t . pet . pf pa
St . LOS 7
I
0
. 875 186 121

I

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3 0 ,625 205 149
5 . 0 .375 140 189
6 0 .250 156 220
West

Oaklnd 7
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pa
98

.soo 122 121

g

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pi

171

168

west

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P~;O 1~~ 1~~

95 ,. 3
o .. 37~
Atl.ant 3
2 65 o
250
77 150
Sn Frn 2 6 o . 250 109 182
Monday's Result
L . Ana 15 s. Fran 13
Sundoy•s Gomu
Atlanta
Los Ang
Ch i. vs . at
Green
Bay
·
al Milwaukee
Cleve
al
New
Eng
Denver at Bait

,..... ..' .'
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Delrolt at Oakland
Houslon
Buffalo
Mlam
1 atatNew
Orlns

'

NY Jets at NY Gnls
SPillS
. OgoatatCine
K. ICty

._

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••

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San Fra al Dallas
Wash at Phi Ia
Mondoy•s Game
M inn at Sl . Louis
NHL Standings
. By United Preu lnternafionat
- Division 1
w . I. t. pts gf ga
Phlla ·
8 3 1
17 40 27
NY IS'Indrs
7 2
2
16 -45 22
Atlanta
6 5 2
14 41 37

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12 37

34

Chicago
Yancouvr
St . Louis
Mlnnesot
Kan City

7
6
3
2
1

3
3
5
6
8

2
2
3
3
1

16
14
9
7
·3

SJ
42
35
20
25

29
30
40
40
47

\.OS Ang
Montreal
Detroit
Pitts
Wash

7

1

4

5

4

4

18
14

19
36
47
37
44

37

Division 2
w. r. t. pts gf ga

Division 3
w. 1. t. pts gf ga

5

5

1

2

5

2

1

9

1

40
43
11 32
6 31
3 21

Division 4
w . r. t. pts gf ga

Buffalo

7

3

1

15 41

l.

Boston
Toronto

4
3

3

4

12 -48 34
9 39 45

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'. . .'

WHA St~ndings
By United Preu International East
w. 1. t . pts gf ga
NewEng 6
1 o
12 30 17-

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Winnipeg 6

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lndnapls

3
5

1
0

16 20
4 17 22

5

Can~dian

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2
2

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C·leve
Chicago

7 0
2 . 14
West
w . I . t • pts 9t·
San Diego 5 1 0
10 25
Houston 5 · 4 0
10 34
Mlnn
3 4 o
6 23
flhoenlx 2 5 1
5 30
Mich
2 7 0
4 24

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2 7 4
8 32 60
Monday's Results
Montreal 6 Mlnn 1
Tuesday 's Games
Buffalo at Boston
f=ihlla at NY lslndrs
fl' l tts at Ken City
Los Ang at St . Louis
PtV Rngrs at Vncvr

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Calli

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NY Rngrss

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ga
18
30
31'
37
-43

pf.S Of ga
12 -43 16

tans have beaten Ohio State in
two of their last three games
and "we always play well when
we have our ba cks to the wall."
between No. 1.,.anked Ohio
Mirmesota Coach Cal Stoll
State and No. 2-ranked Michl- · surprised his Gophers and
gan-1!ven though the game is gave them a day off to recover
three weeks away.
from bruises suffered in a 21-13
Ohio State Coach Woody upset loss to Northwestern.
Hayes announced Monday that Stoll said linebacker Paul
Buckeye practices will be Glanton rein jured his knee and
closed to the public and press will miss Saturday's ga me at
for the remainder of the Purdue.
season .
Indiana Coach Lee Corso
"This is the time of season said his team 's chief concern
when teams do add certain with Saturday's opponent,
lllings to llleir offense," said Northwestern, is the passing of
Hayes, whose Buckeyes play quarterback Mitch Anderson.
upset-minded Michigan State But he a dded , '~we can't
Saturday. " And all you have to overplay our defense to stop
do is let one fellow in who him because the running game
knows what he's looking for would kill us ."
and you prejudice your
chances of winning."
Traditionally, Hayes has
closed practices the week of
the annual, season-ending
game with Michigan. He said
some · people may ask if he
might be overdoing . it by
locking things up so early.
"Not when you have as much
Nineteen parents attended a
first grade workshop Thursday
at stake as we do," Hayes said.
W
h
t te
"
eveni ng at the Salisbury
" e can ave a grea
am.
Elementary School with Mrs.
At _Michigan, Coach Bo
Schembechler was talking
Wendell Hoover 1 the teacher in
char ge.
about post-Beason play.
Schembechlersaidheistired
The several subject areas
taught in the first grade were
of llle agreement between the
Big Ten and Pacific Eight
explained with special emconferences which permits
phasis on reading and Math.
only one team from each
Helpful sugges tions were made
league to see post-Beason acon ways parents might help at
tlon -In •"~
R
Bo I
home .
""' ose W ·
His statement was no adThe workshops are being
vance alibi for the Nov. 23 conducted at the Salisbury
game in Columbus, Ohio, building in order to help
because the Wolves figure to be parents understand better the
after revenge. Last year, the school subjects and the routine
two powers played to a 1().10 of the school.
Attending were, Mrs. Eddraw but Ohio State was given
llle Rose Bowl nod.
ward LeMaster, Mr. and Mrs.
Michigan State, with a 3-1-1 Ray Pullins , Mrs. Thelma
league record, still has faint
Banks, Mr. and Mrs. David M.
hopes of winning or sharing the Brickles, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
title . Ohio State scouts said W. Wa rth , Brenda Cunllley saw "no apparent weak- ningham , Sue Cunningham,
nesses"ln the Spartans. Michi- Marlene Harrison, Sue Floyd,
gan State Coach Denny Stolz Naomi Floyd, Mr. and Mrs.
was remindful that the Spar- Dan Arnold, Mrs. Darelene
Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sloan and Mrs. Leon Sauters.
The next workshop is for the
second grade today, Nov. 5, at
Toron to 6 4 o
12
Quebec
5 2 o
t o ;; ;~ 7:30p.m.

w• •ll · t'l' l 'U /..:n izcd sci en tis ts,
including ph ysiciu ns and
nulrilinnist s . Their recomrnt•ndc-tl ions should be l'Onsiftcr·ed dS from the best
aviiilable source , as opposed to
sorne untntined individual 's
tmscient ifie opinion .
We ha ve no method to con trol

lhe kind of material printed
and available to the public, as
we do in the control of
produc ts, such as foods and
drugs . That is the problem.
Within the medical profession
and associated disciplines , we

have scientific . journals. To

publish some thing in these the
article must be reviewed by a

competent editorial board.
For this reason you will not
read in these journals on
nutrition or biochemistry or
cir culation .any statement like

you sent to me. The board will
recogni1~ at once the errors in
such stat ements , and it will be
rejected . Unfortunate ly, we
have no way of doing this

You may be interested to
kn o.. that those people who
have popularized n o car-

bohydrates or eight glasses of
water a day, or swallowing
lecithin pills have never been
able to do work of st~ffi cien t
quality to be suitable for
publicatio n in a sc ientifi c

journal.

Al~..t..7~=~-

I

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I
I

1-'nfperty tux not ji1ir

Kings

&amp;

Dudley's Aorist
59 N. Second St.

Middleport, 0 .

'
O.H lO COLLEGE
FOOTBALLSCHEOULE
8y United Press International
Ohio State at "M ich . St.
Kent St. at M iami
Ot!io Univ. at Cin ..
Marshall at Toledo (n l
Arkansas St. at Bowl . Green
Youngstown St . at Central Sr .
Akron at West. Ill .
·
lv•nsvllle (Ind . ) at Ashland
Wflmlngton at •Biuffton
tase Western at Hir-am
louisville at DaYton
f:lndlav at Geor8erown (Ky .)
John Carroll at berlin
Woost,r at Baldwin -Walla ce
btterbeln at Heidelberg
M·a rletta at Musklngum
pltal ·lt. Wittenberg
nlson at -.Wash. ~ lee (V.a .)
lo Wesleyan at Mt . Union .
Clfntre ( K v. J. a't K,enyon
~~ma '(Micl) .) at Ohio North .

E

ARE YOU A

I

YOU CAN BE

'

. ./

BOOTS
By
Thorn MeAn

..

Offer Good

USDA Choice Ground Beef Sale

Middleport, 0.

'-------------~

Middleport, Ohio
992-2725

''
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.~~~:~

GROUND
BEEF

GROUND
CHUCK

GROUND
ROUND

lb.

79e

lb.

'1 09

lb.

WIENERS
12 oz. pkg.

$119

USDA.

¢

•

•r
•' '
''

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

WIENERS

POLISH
SAUSAGE

j' '

Off

!,

I '

'I

',

•r

\

~-

12 oz.
pkg.

lb.

SUPERIORS

ALL MEAT
BOLOGNA

79¢

lb.

79¢

OLD FASHIONED

HOME MADE

HAM
SALAD

LONGHORN
CHEESE
lb.

'

,$}19

lb.

SCOT LAD

ARMOUR VIENNA

SAUSAGE

SCOT PRIDE

3

ICE
MILK

cans

$100

TREET
12 oz.
79e

3 rolls $1 00 -

•

TRAIL BLAZER

DOG .fOOD

TRASH BAGs·

BARS

REGUlAR

151 SIZE

.,

FOUR AAVORS

Choice Morsels

CANDY

89e

box

•

25 lb.

MARS

Reg. 11.09

•

bag

GlAD

EGGS

~

3 QUART BOTTLES

can

' .

ALUM. FOIL:.

PEPSI COLA
AND
DR. PEPPER

ARMOUR

gallon

99¢

5 boxes

6
FOR

-'100~
•
•
•

~

MODERN DAIRY

•

MILK

•"
•

-.

twin pack
The " Fuel Cost Adjustment " is

and the whole world of fuel

serve well over the years are

that devilish little line on your

and energy was turned upside

mad at us about something

electric bill that annoyingly

down.

that is beyond our control.

RED

spotlights your rising costs.
Coal costs exploded.

increases in the cost of fuel.
It's not new.

GRAPES --~

3 lbs. for

When will it go away?

PRODUCE

-- -

VALUES

TATER TOTS

And starts using our own nat-

ON COR

So, thanks in large part to

ural resources to the fullest

the Arabs, you have a whop-

America has half the world's

SALISBURY STEAK &amp;
BEEF CHOP SUEY SUPPERS

ea.

ping big "Fuel Cost Adjust-

known supply of coal. But it's

ment" charge on each bill.

not worth a "tinker's dam" until

NICKERSON OCEAN

l-Ib.

That's an increase of more
than 200%.

It's been part of our approved

When this country stops being

RED· ROME
·BEAUTY
'

,.. .

we get it out of the g·rqund.

.

~

years. But because fuel costs

thingwe hope you understand:

If we in America dig enough,

FROZEN

Not one cent ... not a single.~·

the price of coal will come
down .

FISH-&amp; FRIES

for fuel adjustment is retained

If we can save on the cost of a

FROZEN·

by
,, us ..It goes directly to our
fuel suppliers .

ton of coal, you'll save on your
electric bill.

year or so ago, along came

We're caught in the middle.

Because the "Fuel Cost

our " friends" in the Middle

And .many of our friends and

East with their oil embargo

neighbors who we've tried ta

Adjustment" works both ways
you know.

Back in '68, coal cost from
$4.25 to $5.25 a ton. Then, a

penny of the money you pay

lb~

. I

i'

MILK

lb.

bx.

1~~49e

· Purchase

1

Modern Dairy
Homogenized
gallon

BREA.D

DAD'S·ROOT.BEER

lb.
. I

'"· tn.s1» '

..

'139
2

::
pak

Everyday Price - .8 'P ak '1.39

OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREE).

Ohio ·Power Company
'

e
99

1 !!oo

1

YELLOW

A MESSAGE FROM THE PEOPLE·OF .

107-swan:.,.. ..... P.•oro,. o..

8

bxs.

.STRAWBERRIES

ONIONS

Aga.lcy

3 '1

CATF~I~
S_
H________
P~_
· ____

IQcidentally, !here is some-

necessary to use the

16 oz.

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

rate tariff for many, many
were stable, it was rarely

RC COLA

ORE IDA

so dependent on foreign fuel.

Today, it's over $16.00 a ton.

pass on to its customers

I

f.

EXTRA LEAN

gallon

CALL NOW FOil TH£ MOST COMPETiTIVt
HOMEOWNERS AND AUTOMOilL£ RATES IN TOWN

••.t.-:~~·u,..

FRESH AND. LEAN

·cHOICE

HAPPY HARRY
Reuter 1Mural1(8

SUPERIORS
ALL BEEF

FRESH AND LEAN

ANY
AMOUNT

'

so~

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

OHIO LOTTERY TICKETS HERE

heritage house

l

TUES. &amp; WED.
ONLY

CUBE STEAK,b.

MIDDLEPORT. 0'

fu Limit Quantities"

5" &amp; 8" High

DIAL SOAP

'

·;

We Accept Federal Food S(;,mp.~
PHONE : 992-3480

DOZ.

adjustment clause.

ARE YOU SPENDING TOO MUCH
FOR YOUR INSURANCE?

Morning Glories l eague
Oct. 22, 1974
Standings
Team
Pts .
EHels ior Oi l Co.
-43
Gibbs Grocery
-42
G . &amp; J . Au t o P ar t s
34
N ewell Sunoco
26
W
M
P . O
24
Spen cer's Market
23
H igh individual game M arg ar et Follrod 189. .
Second h ig h ind . game Marlene Wilson 179.
High ser ies Margar et

USDA CHOICE BEEF

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10

BOYS
LEATHER WORK

50~

ON ANY.OF
KAY'S BEAUTY
SERVICES.

COMPARE

at is it?
ere did it cOme m?
en will it go away?

things) normal fuel costs, to

$595 up

1889 .

Team
W. L
No 2
38 3.4
Fearsome Four
38 3-4
No I
38 34
Go Go
36 36
Ja ck's Club .
34 38
No . 6
32 40
H igh ind ivi dual game - Bill
Hatfie l d 132; Opa l Hupp 174 .
Second high ind . Game Ray Roach 230 ; Donna Mc Farland 169.
High series - Bill H atfi el d
59 1; Opa l H upp .43 1.
Second high series Ray
Roach 551 ; Donna McFar l and

This week's
eollege games

Quee ns

Od . 22 , 1974
srandin gs

''HAPPY BIRTHDAY'

"A gift that will last."
From

415'.
Team high game J- No .2 651.
Team h igh se r ies No . 2

Pomeroy Bowling Lan es

are based on (among other

TERRARIUM

I
I

Save

SAY

LOVELY GREEN

Wednesdav Late
Mixed League
o c t . 23, 1974
Standings
Tea m
.
Rose nbaum -Meadow s
Fvlfz . Bentlev
Rawlings -HOI ter .
Moore ·Morrow
I Owen -Corder
I Hov t -Thoma s
High i nd ividua l game
Me n , Ri chard Raw l ings 217;
women Virg inia Hoyt 165.
Second high ind . game Men John Bentley 215;
Hemlock Grove, Ohio women , Virg
in ia Hout 159.
Hig h series Men . Joh n
November 1,1974
Bentley 5-44; women, V irginia
Hout 441.

·CLIP THIS
AD ... AND

It allows a utility whose rates

International Hockey
·
league Standings
Bv United Press International
North
w. I . t. pts gf ga
Flint
7 2 1 15 -4 5 25
Mu sk egon 5 3 1 11 39 30
S.!glnaw
5 3 1 11 34 · 32
Port Huron 3 5 1
7 36 35
Lansing
1 3 1 3 14 31
Kalamazoo o 5 0
0 10 28
South
w. 1. t. pts gt ga
Da yton
6 2 0 12 34 25
Columbus 4 3 o
8 25 21
Des ·Molnes 4 A 0
8 24 30
Toledo·
-4 6 0
8 37 32
Fort Wayne I 4 I
3 17 26
Monday's Results .
No games scheduled
Tonight's Games
No games schedule~

1
I

•

1974

Try Us!

ELCOST

first grade

With A

I
I

Dear Sir:
Is the property tax fair?
high ser ies Men,
Who paid to build Veterans Memorial Hospital? Where do second
Richard Rawl ings 532; women,
school taxes, cemetery taxes (if applicable in your district), Rio Mary M orrow 434 .
. Team hig h game Fu ltz ·
Grande O&gt;mmunity O&gt;iiege, general funds for villages, town- Beri
fl ey 659 .
ships, and counties, TB levies (when needed for the County
Team Hig h Ser ies - Fu ltz ·
Ben tl ey 1814.
Hea lth Department) determine their income?
These balances are derived from personal property taxes.
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Everyone benefits from these services, every wage earner ,.,
· oct. 2S. 1974
A. L . A . league
received public schooling, not just property owners; so why
Standings
sho uldn 't everyone be taxed?
Team
W.
L
44 12
The people who pay rent will say these property owners can Jr . G~;~tter Ou sters
raise the price of our rent to pay these taxes. If he did this he
would then have to pay federal and state income tax on the rent
increase as well as the regular balance.
How many property owners have obtained their land for
rental purpose only? Very few.
-Name Withheld on request

To do so would involve a form
of ce nsorhip that might be

19 parents at
workshop for

Vncvr
3 4 o
6 20 28
Edmntn 2 2 0
4 13 15
Monday's Results
Quebec 5 Toronto 3
Tuesday's Games
Toronto at Mi ch igan
Phoen ix at lndnapl s
S.Oie Qo at Hou ston
Vncvr at Chicago
Minn at Winnipeg

0

outside our scientific journals.

worse.

II

than 300 words long (or be subjrr t to' reduction by the
editor) and must be signed with the s!gnee's acldn!ls.
Names may be withheld upon publication. However, on
request, names will be disrlosed. Letters should be In good
taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Nov.

Fe:eney . Bennett F 11ers
30 26
128 sr. Hot Shots
211 lo
128 Sr . St r ikeouts
26 JO
602 Rocketts
24 32
,.67 Slow Pokes
18 38
H igh ind ividua l game Pear l Russell 190; second hi gh
ind . game Leta Wiseman
185.
H igh series - Pearl Russell
462 ; second high series - Leta
w iseman d55 .
Team hiOh game
602 .
Pts . . Rockefls 462.
Team high series
52
602
. •a Rockells 12 ~0 .
42
26
24
24

Foll rod 474 .
Se cond
high
ser i es
Martene Wil son 449.
Team high game ce lsior O il Co . 197 .
Ex
Team high series
eels/or Oil Co . 2287.

-

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·a.··

16 0...

btls.

•

$}29

'

16 ounce
•

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,,

1 .

' i

I '

''

4 ~' for '1

Favorite

'

'

'

.

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'

.

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''

4'- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tue~da)' , Nov. 5, 1974

.• .

• • • I

'

I--------------------------~
' !;etters of oplnlon are wel&lt;·nm,·d. They should "be lou ' I

I I • t

' •'

....

I I • '

~ '

....

I1

DR. LAMB

~ ~ o I

"~

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1l l •
\

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Too much bunk about lecithm

.

\ • • f

I
I

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l •••

~~:

8)' Lawrenre E. Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR LAMB - What
are we supposed to believe any
more • For several years I
have diligently watched my
Intake of certain foods. Except
for foods such as cakes, cookies
and pancakes, I
h ave
specifically avoided eggs,
cheeses, butter, and whole

.. ..
' ''

..• .•
....
..
"'

'

'

'
'

'

.. ..

miik ,

Now, I read in the attached
newspaper · article that these
are some of the very foods that
1\;ould help to 'control
chol•sterol because of th e
lecithin in the egg yolks . Wha t
gives• What is lecithin ?
Is it any wonder that the
public is all mixed up where
diets are concerned? One
~octor advises to 11 Count

'

'

falories." Another says to
~· avoid carbohydrates."
Another counsels "drinking
eight glasses of water a day ."

Pro Standings

Dr. Lamb, what are w~ supposed to believe any mOre ?

DEAR READER -

blood. Nn le that it Wit s injedrd
into the b!()od . not sw;tl!m..•ecL
In fa t· l. our own b&lt;&gt;dy
rnanufacturt~ s leci thin to put
irllo the bloodstream for these
ptu·poscs. It is manufactured
from · different basic food

Thoro

are many commercial in-

terests in the heailh fie ld.
There a re a lso a lot of eom-

pietely unqualified people and
plain quacks pouri.ng out a
steady

stream

of

bl ueks.

N""

misin-

formation to the public . I agree
the public has ample reason to
be confused.
The best I can tell you is to
look , to
the
person's
qua lifications
or
the

from

llmt is far different'
s wallowing

thing s .

Lecithin that is swallowed, not
injected into the bloodstream ,
is digested and never absorbed

qualifications of the source he
quotes . As a case in poin t, the

in to the body , let alone i11to the
bloodstrea m as lecithin.
Meanwhile, untold nwnbers of
people read the kind of thing

article advising lecithin you

you sen t me and waste their

sent is based on ignorance. It is
true , however , that cakes and
cookies can be a source of fat

money on pills that could be
better spe nt on good,
wholesome food,
• The limitation of fat.
cholesterol, and calories to

and cholesteroL Years ago it
was shown that you could inject lecithin into the bloodstream and it helped to dear
the fats and cholesterol in the

avoid obesity is the recom.

rnendation of a broad group of

Tension building up

NFL Standings
ev United Press International
American Conference
· Big Ten Football RoUDdup
· East
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
w . 1. t. pet . pf pa
tension
is building already for
Bu.ffai 7
1' 0 .885 181 139
New Eng
llle Big Ten football showdown
6
2 0 . 750 22 1

.7 50 182 g~
7
0 . 125 123 188
7 0 ' 125 96 210
central
w . I . t. pet.
pf
PI
P i tiS h 6
1
1 .813 183 116

' M ia mi 6
PtY Jl s 1
Belt e 1

•

2

'Cinc i 5
t-toustn 3
tteve 2

w.

!

W11sh n 5
Dallas •
Phllll 4
NY Giants
2

•

•

Minn

pf
pa
.875 212 130

0

3 o
• · o
4 0

151 107
158 126
128 113

.625

.500
.500

0 .25 0
Central
w . 1. t. pet.
6
2 0
.750
4

~
.

LsAng : ·
New Orlns

101

6

Detroit -4
Chlcag 3
Grn By 3

.

'

t . pet.

I.

1

Oenvr 3 4
1 .08 163 171
Kn c1v 3 5 o
375 140 15 7
San Og 2 6 o .250 129 179
National Conference
East
w . I . t . pet . pf pa
St . LOS 7
I
0
. 875 186 121

I

"

0

3 0 ,625 205 149
5 . 0 .375 140 189
6 0 .250 156 220
West

Oaklnd 7
'~

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pa
98

.soo 122 121

g

r ~-

pi

171

168

west

:m 1 ~~

:~~

P~;O 1~~ 1~~

95 ,. 3
o .. 37~
Atl.ant 3
2 65 o
250
77 150
Sn Frn 2 6 o . 250 109 182
Monday's Result
L . Ana 15 s. Fran 13
Sundoy•s Gomu
Atlanta
Los Ang
Ch i. vs . at
Green
Bay
·
al Milwaukee
Cleve
al
New
Eng
Denver at Bait

,..... ..' .'
."'''

Delrolt at Oakland
Houslon
Buffalo
Mlam
1 atatNew
Orlns

'

NY Jets at NY Gnls
SPillS
. OgoatatCine
K. ICty

._

.
••

.
'

San Fra al Dallas
Wash at Phi Ia
Mondoy•s Game
M inn at Sl . Louis
NHL Standings
. By United Preu lnternafionat
- Division 1
w . I. t. pts gf ga
Phlla ·
8 3 1
17 40 27
NY IS'Indrs
7 2
2
16 -45 22
Atlanta
6 5 2
14 41 37

..'

·

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r "-~ -

..

. .. ..
H

.,.,

12 37

34

Chicago
Yancouvr
St . Louis
Mlnnesot
Kan City

7
6
3
2
1

3
3
5
6
8

2
2
3
3
1

16
14
9
7
·3

SJ
42
35
20
25

29
30
40
40
47

\.OS Ang
Montreal
Detroit
Pitts
Wash

7

1

4

5

4

4

18
14

19
36
47
37
44

37

Division 2
w. r. t. pts gf ga

Division 3
w. 1. t. pts gf ga

5

5

1

2

5

2

1

9

1

40
43
11 32
6 31
3 21

Division 4
w . r. t. pts gf ga

Buffalo

7

3

1

15 41

l.

Boston
Toronto

4
3

3

4

12 -48 34
9 39 45

..

I ·;' .

'....

.
...
••
••

.,
'. . .'

WHA St~ndings
By United Preu International East
w. 1. t . pts gf ga
NewEng 6
1 o
12 30 17-

\

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. \.11 - ' ~
~ • .l t '

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•••

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•

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"'r·.
• • ••
••
•
•
•• •

..
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•••

•

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Winnipeg 6

•:

•••

lndnapls

3
5

1
0

16 20
4 17 22

5

Can~dian

.,
.,

li

2
2

w.

••
l,
••
••

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C·leve
Chicago

7 0
2 . 14
West
w . I . t • pts 9t·
San Diego 5 1 0
10 25
Houston 5 · 4 0
10 34
Mlnn
3 4 o
6 23
flhoenlx 2 5 1
5 30
Mich
2 7 0
4 24

.... .. w 1

••

3

2 7 4
8 32 60
Monday's Results
Montreal 6 Mlnn 1
Tuesday 's Games
Buffalo at Boston
f=ihlla at NY lslndrs
fl' l tts at Ken City
Los Ang at St . Louis
PtV Rngrs at Vncvr

••

~.-

5

Calli

. ~

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....

2

"
••

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' '.

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NY Rngrss

• •

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1 ~

'32
ga
18
30
31'
37
-43

pf.S Of ga
12 -43 16

tans have beaten Ohio State in
two of their last three games
and "we always play well when
we have our ba cks to the wall."
between No. 1.,.anked Ohio
Mirmesota Coach Cal Stoll
State and No. 2-ranked Michl- · surprised his Gophers and
gan-1!ven though the game is gave them a day off to recover
three weeks away.
from bruises suffered in a 21-13
Ohio State Coach Woody upset loss to Northwestern.
Hayes announced Monday that Stoll said linebacker Paul
Buckeye practices will be Glanton rein jured his knee and
closed to the public and press will miss Saturday's ga me at
for the remainder of the Purdue.
season .
Indiana Coach Lee Corso
"This is the time of season said his team 's chief concern
when teams do add certain with Saturday's opponent,
lllings to llleir offense," said Northwestern, is the passing of
Hayes, whose Buckeyes play quarterback Mitch Anderson.
upset-minded Michigan State But he a dded , '~we can't
Saturday. " And all you have to overplay our defense to stop
do is let one fellow in who him because the running game
knows what he's looking for would kill us ."
and you prejudice your
chances of winning."
Traditionally, Hayes has
closed practices the week of
the annual, season-ending
game with Michigan. He said
some · people may ask if he
might be overdoing . it by
locking things up so early.
"Not when you have as much
Nineteen parents attended a
first grade workshop Thursday
at stake as we do," Hayes said.
W
h
t te
"
eveni ng at the Salisbury
" e can ave a grea
am.
Elementary School with Mrs.
At _Michigan, Coach Bo
Schembechler was talking
Wendell Hoover 1 the teacher in
char ge.
about post-Beason play.
Schembechlersaidheistired
The several subject areas
taught in the first grade were
of llle agreement between the
Big Ten and Pacific Eight
explained with special emconferences which permits
phasis on reading and Math.
only one team from each
Helpful sugges tions were made
league to see post-Beason acon ways parents might help at
tlon -In •"~
R
Bo I
home .
""' ose W ·
His statement was no adThe workshops are being
vance alibi for the Nov. 23 conducted at the Salisbury
game in Columbus, Ohio, building in order to help
because the Wolves figure to be parents understand better the
after revenge. Last year, the school subjects and the routine
two powers played to a 1().10 of the school.
Attending were, Mrs. Eddraw but Ohio State was given
llle Rose Bowl nod.
ward LeMaster, Mr. and Mrs.
Michigan State, with a 3-1-1 Ray Pullins , Mrs. Thelma
league record, still has faint
Banks, Mr. and Mrs. David M.
hopes of winning or sharing the Brickles, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
title . Ohio State scouts said W. Wa rth , Brenda Cunllley saw "no apparent weak- ningham , Sue Cunningham,
nesses"ln the Spartans. Michi- Marlene Harrison, Sue Floyd,
gan State Coach Denny Stolz Naomi Floyd, Mr. and Mrs.
was remindful that the Spar- Dan Arnold, Mrs. Darelene
Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sloan and Mrs. Leon Sauters.
The next workshop is for the
second grade today, Nov. 5, at
Toron to 6 4 o
12
Quebec
5 2 o
t o ;; ;~ 7:30p.m.

w• •ll · t'l' l 'U /..:n izcd sci en tis ts,
including ph ysiciu ns and
nulrilinnist s . Their recomrnt•ndc-tl ions should be l'Onsiftcr·ed dS from the best
aviiilable source , as opposed to
sorne untntined individual 's
tmscient ifie opinion .
We ha ve no method to con trol

lhe kind of material printed
and available to the public, as
we do in the control of
produc ts, such as foods and
drugs . That is the problem.
Within the medical profession
and associated disciplines , we

have scientific . journals. To

publish some thing in these the
article must be reviewed by a

competent editorial board.
For this reason you will not
read in these journals on
nutrition or biochemistry or
cir culation .any statement like

you sent to me. The board will
recogni1~ at once the errors in
such stat ements , and it will be
rejected . Unfortunate ly, we
have no way of doing this

You may be interested to
kn o.. that those people who
have popularized n o car-

bohydrates or eight glasses of
water a day, or swallowing
lecithin pills have never been
able to do work of st~ffi cien t
quality to be suitable for
publicatio n in a sc ientifi c

journal.

Al~..t..7~=~-

I

: ... Z'/t. uuu.rc,:
I
I

1-'nfperty tux not ji1ir

Kings

&amp;

Dudley's Aorist
59 N. Second St.

Middleport, 0 .

'
O.H lO COLLEGE
FOOTBALLSCHEOULE
8y United Press International
Ohio State at "M ich . St.
Kent St. at M iami
Ot!io Univ. at Cin ..
Marshall at Toledo (n l
Arkansas St. at Bowl . Green
Youngstown St . at Central Sr .
Akron at West. Ill .
·
lv•nsvllle (Ind . ) at Ashland
Wflmlngton at •Biuffton
tase Western at Hir-am
louisville at DaYton
f:lndlav at Geor8erown (Ky .)
John Carroll at berlin
Woost,r at Baldwin -Walla ce
btterbeln at Heidelberg
M·a rletta at Musklngum
pltal ·lt. Wittenberg
nlson at -.Wash. ~ lee (V.a .)
lo Wesleyan at Mt . Union .
Clfntre ( K v. J. a't K,enyon
~~ma '(Micl) .) at Ohio North .

E

ARE YOU A

I

YOU CAN BE

'

. ./

BOOTS
By
Thorn MeAn

..

Offer Good

USDA Choice Ground Beef Sale

Middleport, 0.

'-------------~

Middleport, Ohio
992-2725

''
·· ' '

.

'

'
.,

'
~

T

.~~~:~

GROUND
BEEF

GROUND
CHUCK

GROUND
ROUND

lb.

79e

lb.

'1 09

lb.

WIENERS
12 oz. pkg.

$119

USDA.

¢

•

•r
•' '
''

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

WIENERS

POLISH
SAUSAGE

j' '

Off

!,

I '

'I

',

•r

\

~-

12 oz.
pkg.

lb.

SUPERIORS

ALL MEAT
BOLOGNA

79¢

lb.

79¢

OLD FASHIONED

HOME MADE

HAM
SALAD

LONGHORN
CHEESE
lb.

'

,$}19

lb.

SCOT LAD

ARMOUR VIENNA

SAUSAGE

SCOT PRIDE

3

ICE
MILK

cans

$100

TREET
12 oz.
79e

3 rolls $1 00 -

•

TRAIL BLAZER

DOG .fOOD

TRASH BAGs·

BARS

REGUlAR

151 SIZE

.,

FOUR AAVORS

Choice Morsels

CANDY

89e

box

•

25 lb.

MARS

Reg. 11.09

•

bag

GlAD

EGGS

~

3 QUART BOTTLES

can

' .

ALUM. FOIL:.

PEPSI COLA
AND
DR. PEPPER

ARMOUR

gallon

99¢

5 boxes

6
FOR

-'100~
•
•
•

~

MODERN DAIRY

•

MILK

•"
•

-.

twin pack
The " Fuel Cost Adjustment " is

and the whole world of fuel

serve well over the years are

that devilish little line on your

and energy was turned upside

mad at us about something

electric bill that annoyingly

down.

that is beyond our control.

RED

spotlights your rising costs.
Coal costs exploded.

increases in the cost of fuel.
It's not new.

GRAPES --~

3 lbs. for

When will it go away?

PRODUCE

-- -

VALUES

TATER TOTS

And starts using our own nat-

ON COR

So, thanks in large part to

ural resources to the fullest

the Arabs, you have a whop-

America has half the world's

SALISBURY STEAK &amp;
BEEF CHOP SUEY SUPPERS

ea.

ping big "Fuel Cost Adjust-

known supply of coal. But it's

ment" charge on each bill.

not worth a "tinker's dam" until

NICKERSON OCEAN

l-Ib.

That's an increase of more
than 200%.

It's been part of our approved

When this country stops being

RED· ROME
·BEAUTY
'

,.. .

we get it out of the g·rqund.

.

~

years. But because fuel costs

thingwe hope you understand:

If we in America dig enough,

FROZEN

Not one cent ... not a single.~·

the price of coal will come
down .

FISH-&amp; FRIES

for fuel adjustment is retained

If we can save on the cost of a

FROZEN·

by
,, us ..It goes directly to our
fuel suppliers .

ton of coal, you'll save on your
electric bill.

year or so ago, along came

We're caught in the middle.

Because the "Fuel Cost

our " friends" in the Middle

And .many of our friends and

East with their oil embargo

neighbors who we've tried ta

Adjustment" works both ways
you know.

Back in '68, coal cost from
$4.25 to $5.25 a ton. Then, a

penny of the money you pay

lb~

. I

i'

MILK

lb.

bx.

1~~49e

· Purchase

1

Modern Dairy
Homogenized
gallon

BREA.D

DAD'S·ROOT.BEER

lb.
. I

'"· tn.s1» '

..

'139
2

::
pak

Everyday Price - .8 'P ak '1.39

OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREE).

Ohio ·Power Company
'

e
99

1 !!oo

1

YELLOW

A MESSAGE FROM THE PEOPLE·OF .

107-swan:.,.. ..... P.•oro,. o..

8

bxs.

.STRAWBERRIES

ONIONS

Aga.lcy

3 '1

CATF~I~
S_
H________
P~_
· ____

IQcidentally, !here is some-

necessary to use the

16 oz.

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

rate tariff for many, many
were stable, it was rarely

RC COLA

ORE IDA

so dependent on foreign fuel.

Today, it's over $16.00 a ton.

pass on to its customers

I

f.

EXTRA LEAN

gallon

CALL NOW FOil TH£ MOST COMPETiTIVt
HOMEOWNERS AND AUTOMOilL£ RATES IN TOWN

••.t.-:~~·u,..

FRESH AND. LEAN

·cHOICE

HAPPY HARRY
Reuter 1Mural1(8

SUPERIORS
ALL BEEF

FRESH AND LEAN

ANY
AMOUNT

'

so~

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

OHIO LOTTERY TICKETS HERE

heritage house

l

TUES. &amp; WED.
ONLY

CUBE STEAK,b.

MIDDLEPORT. 0'

fu Limit Quantities"

5" &amp; 8" High

DIAL SOAP

'

·;

We Accept Federal Food S(;,mp.~
PHONE : 992-3480

DOZ.

adjustment clause.

ARE YOU SPENDING TOO MUCH
FOR YOUR INSURANCE?

Morning Glories l eague
Oct. 22, 1974
Standings
Team
Pts .
EHels ior Oi l Co.
-43
Gibbs Grocery
-42
G . &amp; J . Au t o P ar t s
34
N ewell Sunoco
26
W
M
P . O
24
Spen cer's Market
23
H igh individual game M arg ar et Follrod 189. .
Second h ig h ind . game Marlene Wilson 179.
High ser ies Margar et

USDA CHOICE BEEF

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10

BOYS
LEATHER WORK

50~

ON ANY.OF
KAY'S BEAUTY
SERVICES.

COMPARE

at is it?
ere did it cOme m?
en will it go away?

things) normal fuel costs, to

$595 up

1889 .

Team
W. L
No 2
38 3.4
Fearsome Four
38 3-4
No I
38 34
Go Go
36 36
Ja ck's Club .
34 38
No . 6
32 40
H igh ind ivi dual game - Bill
Hatfie l d 132; Opa l Hupp 174 .
Second high ind . Game Ray Roach 230 ; Donna Mc Farland 169.
High series - Bill H atfi el d
59 1; Opa l H upp .43 1.
Second high series Ray
Roach 551 ; Donna McFar l and

This week's
eollege games

Quee ns

Od . 22 , 1974
srandin gs

''HAPPY BIRTHDAY'

"A gift that will last."
From

415'.
Team high game J- No .2 651.
Team h igh se r ies No . 2

Pomeroy Bowling Lan es

are based on (among other

TERRARIUM

I
I

Save

SAY

LOVELY GREEN

Wednesdav Late
Mixed League
o c t . 23, 1974
Standings
Tea m
.
Rose nbaum -Meadow s
Fvlfz . Bentlev
Rawlings -HOI ter .
Moore ·Morrow
I Owen -Corder
I Hov t -Thoma s
High i nd ividua l game
Me n , Ri chard Raw l ings 217;
women Virg inia Hoyt 165.
Second high ind . game Men John Bentley 215;
Hemlock Grove, Ohio women , Virg
in ia Hout 159.
Hig h series Men . Joh n
November 1,1974
Bentley 5-44; women, V irginia
Hout 441.

·CLIP THIS
AD ... AND

It allows a utility whose rates

International Hockey
·
league Standings
Bv United Press International
North
w. I . t. pts gf ga
Flint
7 2 1 15 -4 5 25
Mu sk egon 5 3 1 11 39 30
S.!glnaw
5 3 1 11 34 · 32
Port Huron 3 5 1
7 36 35
Lansing
1 3 1 3 14 31
Kalamazoo o 5 0
0 10 28
South
w. 1. t. pts gt ga
Da yton
6 2 0 12 34 25
Columbus 4 3 o
8 25 21
Des ·Molnes 4 A 0
8 24 30
Toledo·
-4 6 0
8 37 32
Fort Wayne I 4 I
3 17 26
Monday's Results .
No games scheduled
Tonight's Games
No games schedule~

1
I

•

1974

Try Us!

ELCOST

first grade

With A

I
I

Dear Sir:
Is the property tax fair?
high ser ies Men,
Who paid to build Veterans Memorial Hospital? Where do second
Richard Rawl ings 532; women,
school taxes, cemetery taxes (if applicable in your district), Rio Mary M orrow 434 .
. Team hig h game Fu ltz ·
Grande O&gt;mmunity O&gt;iiege, general funds for villages, town- Beri
fl ey 659 .
ships, and counties, TB levies (when needed for the County
Team Hig h Ser ies - Fu ltz ·
Ben tl ey 1814.
Hea lth Department) determine their income?
These balances are derived from personal property taxes.
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Everyone benefits from these services, every wage earner ,.,
· oct. 2S. 1974
A. L . A . league
received public schooling, not just property owners; so why
Standings
sho uldn 't everyone be taxed?
Team
W.
L
44 12
The people who pay rent will say these property owners can Jr . G~;~tter Ou sters
raise the price of our rent to pay these taxes. If he did this he
would then have to pay federal and state income tax on the rent
increase as well as the regular balance.
How many property owners have obtained their land for
rental purpose only? Very few.
-Name Withheld on request

To do so would involve a form
of ce nsorhip that might be

19 parents at
workshop for

Vncvr
3 4 o
6 20 28
Edmntn 2 2 0
4 13 15
Monday's Results
Quebec 5 Toronto 3
Tuesday's Games
Toronto at Mi ch igan
Phoen ix at lndnapl s
S.Oie Qo at Hou ston
Vncvr at Chicago
Minn at Winnipeg

0

outside our scientific journals.

worse.

II

than 300 words long (or be subjrr t to' reduction by the
editor) and must be signed with the s!gnee's acldn!ls.
Names may be withheld upon publication. However, on
request, names will be disrlosed. Letters should be In good
taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Nov.

Fe:eney . Bennett F 11ers
30 26
128 sr. Hot Shots
211 lo
128 Sr . St r ikeouts
26 JO
602 Rocketts
24 32
,.67 Slow Pokes
18 38
H igh ind ividua l game Pear l Russell 190; second hi gh
ind . game Leta Wiseman
185.
H igh series - Pearl Russell
462 ; second high series - Leta
w iseman d55 .
Team hiOh game
602 .
Pts . . Rockefls 462.
Team high series
52
602
. •a Rockells 12 ~0 .
42
26
24
24

Foll rod 474 .
Se cond
high
ser i es
Martene Wil son 449.
Team high game ce lsior O il Co . 197 .
Ex
Team high series
eels/or Oil Co . 2287.

-

••

·a.··

16 0...

btls.

•

$}29

'

16 ounce
•

; , l'

,,

1 .

' i

I '

''

4 ~' for '1

Favorite

'

'

'

.

\

\

'

.

�7 - The Daily Sentinel, M1ddlepo1 !-Pomeroy, Tuesday, Nov. 5,1974

8- The Dally Sentmel, Mtddleport-PI'mt·ru~, 0 , Tuesdii), Nuv. 5, 1~174

For Fast Results UseSentinel Classifieds
Auto Sales

I
'

FRENCH CITY
MEATS

GRocERY bus mess fo r sa le
ln Qu• r c ill k' lll CJ s fi rm s
Bv dcl •ng tor sal£" or lease
:.Mu r(1,1y .1 n d Mo nday , ? to 1
Phone 77J S618 from 8 3 0 p m
I 1 3 Jt p
to 10 p m lor appo tnlm ent
J :m tfr
HPW 1o ,.,,1rn up to S200 weekly
' ldelrj"&gt;';• no ..,h, H1nq mt11 l10q
I'll \II lop ,~c;
'.r' n d 'l~c c.nd
t,1n•p t&gt; d i'ld drf'!&gt;Sed e nvelop e
lu l\(1 E NT ERP RI SES AOX
19 lloeOY Il l 1&gt;7791
Real Estate For Sale

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

OF
QUALITY

1970 CHEV MONTE CARLO
$1995
350 V 8, automa tic, P steering &amp; brakes , dark blue ftnt sh,
blue mtertor, b lue viny l roo t, factory a 1r cond 1f1oned, li ke
new w w t tres, radtos Many othe r ex tras.

French Citv
Meats, Inc.

t

EX P[ I.: I l N l l D llClr w.1 1l rts':i

2 SIGNS

Custom Slaughtering
By Appointment Only
Phone: 446-3472

11 1

REDU~T I O N

of q rown AKC toy
poodles ~50 eac t1 pups $65.
S•am ese k•llens , Sl 5 Phone 1
1'i6 6'2·17
10 I 261C

NOTICE
Ohto Power Company on September 3 1974 formally reQuested lhe
Publtc UUIItres Commtssron o t
Oh•o , p:.~rauant to Ohto Revrsed Code
Section 4909 16 to suspend tis e11.rst
mg rates durmg the: pend ency o f
PUC 0 Case No 74-484-Y wh tc h re
qutttl a permanent rate mcreaso of
S85 000.000 per year, and to authorIze ttle Company commencmg wtl h
billa rendered on or after Oc tober 1
1874 to all customers served under the
Company s Tardfs I t led wrlh the

PUC 0 , to tmpose a surcharge o f
17 5~ before any fuel clause adjust ment and to con tmue such surcharge
in effect untll a ftnal determmatron

1970 CHEVROLET 2 TON
$2995
Cab &amp; chassts, 108" cab to axle, V 8, 350 eng me, 15,000 lo,
2 speed R axle , good 825x20 t1res, solid cab

bul lS Ruda Durst , Por tlan d ,
Oh 10 Phon e 84) 2293
11 4 Jtc

1969 FOR D Galax 1e 302 eng1nc
good gas mtleage extra
con d1f10n Phone ( 1) 667 3685
In Memorv
after 5 p m or ca ll 985 3836
11 1 6tc
IN MEMORY ot Edward C
Hawl ey who passed away one 1969 C HEVROLET Cap r1ce
yea r ago Nov A Sad I Y
SBOO ex cond1 t10n , p b , p s
m 1ssed by W1fe . son. and
Phone 992 7876 alter 6 p m
daugh te r
10 30 6tp
11 5 11c
l96B OL OS 4 dr hardtop p s ,
p b. at r , low mileage S850
Pt1on e 949 32 11
11 3 3tp

Wanted To Buy

Nobce

PLAYER p1ano ro lls
742 5625

SHIRLEY KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

saturn.
lost
The evening star Is Jupiter.
rt dbone coonhound lost
Those born on this date are MALE
•n Rutland
Harrtsonvdle

area Reward offered Phone
742 4447 or 742 5329
11 3 Jtc

American historian William
Durant was born Nov. 5, 1885. - - ~------~--- · h"
LO ST one red Durham cow With
On this d ay m istory:
white on the flan ks, 4 year old
In 1733, · German-born about n ,ooo Jbs Last see n on
10 ( 16) 74 on Bear Wallow
bllsher John P e t er Ze nger
pu
Rodge Rd , ' ' seen or !ound.

began

printing the newspaper
ca ll 696 1292 or 992 5977
.. The New York Weekly ____ _ :_ ______ .!.,~ 6tc

11 5 6tc

LAND WA NTED
Wooded
acres or farm •n your area
Have client un. ted Farm ,
1183 N ColumiJus St , Lan
caster , Oh10 45130
11 5 IIC
UTILITY
tra tle r .
pr e ferred, 4xll or
Phone 949 5913

co .... er
larger
11 5 Jtc

----- - --- - -NEEDED 1966 Plymouth trans

mr Ss 1on , automat1c , on th e
colum n Phone992 2546 af te r 5
pm
11 5 3t c

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

SMALL stat 1on wagon wtfh
good gas m ll eage Phone 992
5786
10 30 tfc

Holiday Special!

SCRAP ALUMINUM
(free of Steel)

11'
per pound

The Rosenberg Co.
79 Depot Street

511 3

Notice IS hereby gi¥en tha t
11 l ff c
Dorothy
L
McKenz 1e,
Executrix of th e Estate of HANDPA INTED
har dboard
Mtlvln M McKenzte, late of
nur se ry a n •ma l poste rs Make
San
Bernardtno
County ,
1dea 1 Chr1stmas g1ftS Var1ety
Callforn1a, deceased, on the 2nd
of patt e rns Ca ll 992 5147 after
day of November , 1974, filed m
5 p m
the Probate . Court of Me1g s
11 3 6tp
County , Oh•.~ , an authenticated
copy of the Letters of Ap
announced
pointment. of sa1d Estate Sk ate A Way
Hallowee n Part v F rtday .
granted •n Superior Court of th e
State of Calltornta , for the
Ocr 25 , Ra ces, pr 1zes. ba l
loons , available for pn..,ate
County of San BernardinO , and
part1es , Mond,ay, Tuesday,
that the cla1m or claims of any
Thursday, ntghts. Sa t or Sun
creditor or creditors of said
afternoon
Ope n
Wed ,
decedent shall be presented to
Friday , and Sat 7 30 10 30
this Court Wlthm SIX months
Phone 985 3929, 985 4141 or
after tfledate of said fili ng or be
985 9996
forever barred as a poss•b le I ten
upon the Oh to ~real estate of sa 1d
10 24 12tc
decedent
Thu rsday
and
Dated th1s 2nd day of No¥em AUCTION
Saturday n1gh t, 7 p m at
ber , 1974
Mason Au c t1on, Horton St m
Maso n , W Va Consq;;~nments
Mann1ng Webster
welc.ome Phon e (304) 773
JUDGE
5471
Common Pleas Court.
10-3 tfc
Probate DIVISIOn
Metgs County, Oh1o ------- -~-----SWAP ~ SELL - BUY F lea
( 111 s, 12, 19, 3t c
Market , Sp ring Avenue,
Pomeroy. Ohto Saturday and
Sunday AUCTION SUNDAY ,
5 00 CONSIGNMENT, 15 Pet
The Almanac
10 11 tfc
By Uolted Press lntemattonal - - -- - - - -s- - -d- -H
·
POMEROY
ac r e
ear 1
TodaylS'l\aesday,Nov.5,the
Church Fa ll Fest•v al Bazaar
30Qth day of 1974 with 56 to
woll be Thursday , Nov 7, 1974
D•nners - Cr eamed ba ked
follow.
ch• cke n and ham , games and
Tbe moon is approaching tts fancy .stands , dmner starts
•--t
1e
4 30 p m Adults, $3, Ch ildren
.... quar r .
s1 so
10 30 Blc
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and

Phone

Athens, Ohio
JuNK a utos , complete and
de ltvered to our yard We
p1 c k up auto bodies and buy
all k1nds of scrap metals and
•ron R 1de r 's Salvage, St Rt
124. Rt 4, Pomeroy , Oh10
Call 992 5468
10 17 ffc

WILl Tk AlJE.
I IN ANCING
ARRA N GE D
WITH
MINIMUM
DOWN
W1ll
conS1der lr a de for o ld e r
ho me tr aile r or land on lt11S
n e-w J bedroom , '}ba th home
w1th 2 car garage , large
lam d y room a• r cond1t 1o n.ng
Move tn lmmed •al e ly Ca ll
now 992 5976
11 5 lt c
MONEY DOWN - Mon thly
payments acco rd1n9 to 1n
come New J bedr oom home
w1 lh wal l to wa ll ca rp e tmg on
' .. ac r e land sca ped lo ts Cal l
today fo r mo r e 1nformaf10n.
9n 5976
11 5 lt c

NO

~ JVE pur ebred polled Hereford

1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lakewood trac t 10n bars. h1
Ja cke r a1r s ho cks, hook e r
headers , w1lh 3" collector s. tor
small block Ca ll 992 3496
after 6 p m BE ST OFFER
10 17 lfc

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

c1n be made m Case Ho 74-484-V
The Company alleges thai w1th
oul prompl approval of a surcharge
that Will y1eld an add1honal
~g 388 000 annual revenue 11 Will be
unable to conhnue construction of the
faclhl••• necessary to prov1de serv1ce
to new customers or to prov1de 8Kpandet1 serv1ce or to mamta1n the current rehaule semce to 1ts present
customers The Company proposes
to refund to 1ts customers an •mount
by wh•ch Ihe $49.388 000 1 eques!ed
uceeda the fmal amol1nt to be colle&lt;::led from the cuslomers affected
hereby lound JUSt and reasonable m
Case No 74-484-Y
The 17 59% surcharge app hed
before any luet clause ad1ustment
would have resulled on September
PERM SPECIAL
1974 bills, in overall Increases after Reg. $17 SO
NOW $15.00
applicatiOn of the fuel clause adReg
$15
00
NOW$12.50
/Uitment, of approx1mately 15 4% to
BLOW
CUT
restelenttal customers, and s1m1 lar InThurs. Eventng Appt' s.
creases to the other classes of cusOperators
tomers
Grace Johnson
On November 19 1974 at 9 30
Marcta Carr
AM local lime at the offtce of The
Publ1c Utthtles Comm1ss•on of Oh1o
Sandy lannarelll
111 North Htgh Street Columbus
Ph . 992·3557
Pomeroy, 0 .
Ohto 43215 a hearmg wtll be held
on the proposed surcharge Further
informatton may be obtamed from AUCTIO N and Rummage Sale
The Public U111111es Comm1ss•on of
Nov 9, 11 a m at t he Racm e
Oruo or lhe Company
Sh r 10e Park Sponsore d by
Twm C•IY Shr•ne Club
Merchandise sold on con
Ohto Power Company
Stgnment , brmg what you
By F N 81en
have to sell or call 949 2491
Execut1ve V1ce PreSident
F or p 1ckup All nob les are
(10) 24, 29 (ll l 5, 3tc
requested to brtng an 1tem to
se ll Publtc tnv•l ed to lake
part Brmg anythmg you want
to
se ll
Lunch served bv
NOTICE OF FILING
Shr
1ners
W1ves
Come entOY
AUTHENTICATED COPY
the dav . Not responSib le for
Of Letters of
a cc1 dents
Appointment of
J I I 7tc
Non-Restdent Executnx
~~-------- -- -Estate of
Non- R estdent
KOSCO T
KO S M E TIC S
Remember Chr1stmas IS
l!st1t1
of
MELVIN
M
commg we ha ve many new
McKENZIE
No. '21341
products that will make n 1ce
DeceiStd
Q1fts Phone BROWN 'S 99 2

under the sign of Scorpio.

For Sale

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

EFF ICI E NCY hovse m M1d
d lepor t •d ea l for co uple or 2
workmg men Phon e 992 77 91
11 5 3tc

E F LAT Sa;.;, very reasonabl e NEW
b1 level
home
3
Phone 99 2 7685
bed room s, budt •n ktl c he n,
11 1 61p
basem e nt wllh one c ar
garage Pt1one 742 361 5 or see
Milo Hut chiSOn
I= IR EWOOO to r sa te, cut yo ur
11 1 tf c
own s•ze or p•ece Phon e 992
5717
11 3 ffc 7 R OOM hou se wllh 2 ba th s 1n
Pomeroy Phone 992 3478
O N E good Smger El ectriC
10 15 26 1c
sewmg machm e, S55, Norge
dr~·""r
w1th hook up box
VEN room , lbedroom hou se
e lectriC S15. Modern hv 1ng SEw1th
ba t h comp lete mode rn
room sofa and cha •r. S IS.
k1 I chen w tth bar , pan ell mg .
Zen1th Black and wh 1t e T V
tots of cu pboards and ca r
SIS , wor ks,
2 p la tf orm
pe tmg gas hot water he at
rockers usable S20, phone
F ull baseme nt. pnced and
99 2 7310
seen by appom tment Cal! 992
11 3 3fp
2020
---- ------- - - - - 10 30 61p
FLOOR furnace , heats 4 or 5
rooms, S25 747 Ol1ver St , 97
ACRES,
wooded
and
Middleport , Oh10, phon e 992
secluded Idea l for summer ,
7875
t1ome , recrea 11on , or campm g
11 J 31p
W1thrn 5 miles of propo sed
Ra ve nswood br td ge Call 614
FIREWO OD for ftrepla ce or
843 2256
stove Cut to leng t t1 Pt1one
992 7644
11 3 3t c
--

11 3 26f c

--- -

--------

NEWLY de cora ted 5 room
frame hou se w.th ba t h ,
NEW Corn. S3 bushel phone
Palmer Stree t, Middleport ,
742 3656
Pr1 ced r easonable Phone 992
11 5 6t p
3896 aft er 5 p m
- - - --- - - - - - - - - 11 3 3tp
CLO SE OUT on new Ztg Zag ~- -------~ - ---Se wing Ma ch 1nes For sewrng
st re tch fa bncs , buttonhol es,
fan c y des •g ns. etc Pamt
Sl tghfty bl emiShed ChOICe Of
ca rrym g case or sew 1n g
stand S.49 80 cash or term s
available Phone f/9 2 7755
11 5 tfc
STEREO
rad10 amfm , 8
track ta pe comb rna l!on, 4
speaker
s ound
system
Balance $109 56 or eas y
term s Call 992 3965
11 5 tfc
ELECTROLUX Swee per de luxe
model Complete Wtlh a ll
c lean1ng aftachment s and
uses paper bags Slightly used
bu t c lean s and looks like new
Will ' sel l for S37 25 cash or
terms ava11abte Ph one 992
7755 ,

11

5 tf c

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

LOSE We igh t Wi th New Shape
Tablets and Hydrex Water
P1lls at Dutton Drug , M1d
dlepor t, and Nelson Drug
11 5 Jt p

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

pa1d tor all makes and
models of mob1le homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13-ttc

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

--------------OLD FURNITURE , oak tables ,

o.

RUTLAND - Close In - 45
acres, fenced, s~ocked pond,
minerals, 12 ac:res timber, 10
acres lr llable JUST Sll ,OOO
MIDDLEPORT - Busrness
room w1th lovely 3 B. R.
apartment over H W. floors
&lt;;arpeted Dining room
Central
H. W
heal
$20.000 .00.
POMEROY - 1 story frame,
3 B R , bath, lots of kitchen
cabrnels, paneling, tile, lots
of ground. $7.~00 .00 .
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES, CALL FOR
YOUR NEEDS TODAY.
99'1-2259 or 992-2568

"

POMEROY LANDMARK!
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
Phone 99'2-2181

unfurnished
apartments
Phone 992 5434
4 12 tfc

3 11 tfc

r-----------------

E

FLA T Saxophone ,
reasonable 992 7685

very

11 1 6tp

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

FURNISHED apt 5 rooms and GRAVEL sand , Mason sand ,
bath w•th enclosed back
lrmestone, P 1f Run by th e ton
porch Also, furnt shed apt , 3
Deltvered Phone 446 11 42
rms and bat h, ftrst floor
10 18 tfc
Phone 992 2937
11 5 4t c FIREWOOD for s ate Call 742
- - - - - -- - - - - - -4831
10 29 26tc
TRAILER space, 2 miles from
Pom eroy, Rt 143 Phone 992
5858
A FEW new band •nstrument s
Contact Renee Stone 992 7567
10 27 ft c
9 4 tfc
2 BEDROOM tra 11er at Hyse ll
Run Phone 992 3975 or 992 SEWING Machines, brand new
2571
Zig Zag i'h niCe walnvt t ab le.
In anginal cartons Never
10-27 tfc
used
Clearance on ' 74
Models
(O nly
a
tew
4 ROOM furn•shed apt Close to
available). S43 40 cash or
Powell's Super Vatu , phone
terms available Phone 992
992 3658
7155
10 13 tfc
10 15 ffc
---- - ~-------2 BEDROOM cottage at Rock -~ ------ -- --- Springs 1dea1 for sc hool LOCU ST post s, 22 Rem10gton
and 1 72 acre lot Phone 742
personnel,
adults
only ,
3656
referen-ce des1red Phon e 992
10 18 26tp
2789
11 3 tfc

Journal."
, In 1911, Galbra•th Rogers Yard Sales
TRAILER space on pnvate lot,
1les from Pomeroy Phone
completed the first transconti- GARAGE Sale •• Ray Young's , 3367m,7743

_________ ____ _

Employment Wanted

17 years of foreign occupation. WILL do bab ys•tt•ng In mv

---......---------2 BEDROOM double wide
mob•le home in Syracuse No
c hildren or pets , deposit
requ~red Phone 992 2441 after

hom e day or night Phone 992
s 14 2,
10 JO 6tc

A thought for the day : British
writer Willlam McFee said,
6 p m
"Re&amp;pOOS!bility's like a strmg WILL DO babysitt ing in my
10 29 tfc
that we can see only the middle
home Phone 992 7126
TRAILER , 2 bedrooms , Adults
10 27 ttc
of. Both ends are out of sight. "
only Phone 992 3324
10 18 ttc

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

·--------------I

1 Classified Ads
I

I

1

bring you

1

extra cash

I

1970 VAL IANf65x 12, 3bedro0m
fully carpeted , L·P gas heat
Phone 992 7751
8 25 tfc

I Wanted To Buy

I
I CASH SSSS for JUnk cars co m
plete Frye's Trock and A.uto
I
Parts. Rutland , Oh 10 Phone
1 742
6094

for
I
I___.shopping
__________
sprees ,
...;

Mobile Homes f~ Sale

10 16 26tc

2

BEDROOM
trailer
1n
Syracuse , close to school No
c hildren or pets Depos1t
requ~red Phone 992 2441 after
6 30 p m
10 18 tfc

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
· Pomeroy Route 3

FREE ESTIMATE
Fully Insured
" TIRED
OF : "
Dry Red, llchy Sktn Red , Smelly
Hard WaterThen cal l us for a FREE
Waler Analysts
Rtghl Now At ,

CULLIGAN
WATER
CONDITIONING

NEW LISTINGS - This new
home Is ready for you . 3
bedrooms with closets, oak
trim, and kitchen, plus garage.
Lot 100 by 400 Only $20,000.00,
near T . P
RUTLAND Large older
home in Rutland, 4 bedrooms,
bath, garage, and barn. All for
only $12,000.00
49 ACRES - On good gravel
road, water tap and old house
with garage
LAUREL CLIFF - 6 rooms,
bath, electric heal, level lot
and garage. Needs paint but
will sell for only $7500.00.
HUNTING LAND Lots of
young limber (90 ·Acres!
maybe, gas well for heat, and
old house.
BUY A HOME AND SAVE
YOUR MONEY. PAYMENTS
WILL SOON PAY FOR YOUR
ESTATE .

D&amp;D
OONSTRUCTION

./

Known &amp;
Reliable Service

PHONE
949·3832 or 843·2667

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

THE DEPENDABLE
OONTRACTING CO.
Interior, Exterior
Decorating an'd

REMODELING?

Remodeling
IINYL SIDING

Keep out the cold and cut the ~ost of heating!
Dress your home up warm for cold days
ahead. Siding: Insulates, adds beauty, is
durable, adds value, is colorful. Siding can be
installed anytime. Ask us about Soffit, Fascia,
Gutters and Downspouts, too.
FREE ESTIMATE

JOHNSON
MASONRY
992-7608
Rt. 7 &amp; Union Ave.

Pomeroy,

PH. 992-7454 or
992-7129

Free Esftmates, Middleport, Q.·:
Water, Electric, Gas, Sewer
ltnes,
installed.
Work
guaranteed.
Dozer,Backhoe,Trucks
Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
CommerciaiJResidential
Construction &amp; Remodel

o.

S.K EXCAVATING

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

COMPANY
777 Pearl Street
Middleport. Ohio
Phone 992.5367 or 992·3861

FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup and Delivery

On State Rt . 124, 112 m1 . from
Route 7 by -pass towards
Rutland

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanical Work

GREAT

·COUNTRY

992-5162

Open Mon . · Sat.
8A M.- 6 P. M.

Syracuse, Ohio

C BRADFORD, Auctioneer

STEREO.

:) EPTIC

Complete Ser¥1ce

FOR FREE e st 1mates on
alum1nllm
replacement
w•ndows, s •d lng. storm doors
and wmdows, Ra •llng Phone
Cl1a'rles L1ste , Syra cuse, Ohio
Carl
Jacob ,
Sales
Representative.
V
V
Johnson and Son, In c
4 30 tfc

TAN KS
c lea n ed
Modern Sa nitation, 99 2 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 tf c

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

92.1
WMPQ.FM

PIAN O tun 1ng and r epa1r
Phone Charles sco tt , 992·37 18
Midd ,lepor~- Pomerov
_ _________ _ _9_':_32tp ·,~..~:.,..---,=:-:-,..,..,-,..=cr-...U.

30
30
30
30

7
8
9
10

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
p m ~ Wash mgton Debates for the 70s
p m - The Gunslingers
·
- The Underworld
- Loc:a l Elect1on Retu rns

CHANNEL FIVE PROGRAMS NOT SEEN IN GALLIPOLI S
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1974
6 00 - Sunnse Sem tnar 4, Summer Se mester 10.
6 25 - Farm Report 13.
6 30- F1ve Mmutes to Ltve By 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8 , The
Story 13 ; School Scene 10
6 · 35 - Columbus Today 4
6· 45 - Morning Report 3, Farmtime 10.
7 00- Toda y 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10 , Farmer's Daughter 13;
Yogt' s Gang 6
7 30 - New Zoo Revue 6. Ltdsville 13
a· 00 - New Zoo Revue 13, Capt Kanga roo 8, 10 ; Jeff 's Collie 6.
Sesame St. 33
8:25- Jack LaLanne 13 , Capt Kangaroo 10.
a· 30 - Brad y Bunc h 6
B· 55- News 13
·
9 00 - Paul Dr xon 4, AM 3. Phil Donahue 15, Wrld Wrld West 6;
Bullwink le 8; Movie " F1ve Week s tn a Balloon " 13, Cover to
Cover 33.
9:25 - Chuck Whrle Reports 10
9, 30 - Not For Wom en Only 3, HazelS , Tattletales 10
10. 00 - Joker's Wrld 8, 10; Company 6. Name Thai Tune 3, IS
10 30 - Gamb1t 8, 10 , Winning Streak 3, 4, 15 , Ph1l Donahu e 4
11:00 - Password 13 . High Rollers 3, 15, Now You See It 8, 10 ;
•
$10.000 Pyramid 6
11 ' 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15, Brady Bunch 13. Lu cy Show
6; Lov~ of L•fe 8, 10 , Sesame St 33
11 · 55 - CBS News 8 , Don !mel's World 10.
12: 00 - Jackpot 3 , 15, Password6 , News 8, 10 ,. Bob Braun's 50 50
Club 4
12:30 - Searctl for Tomorrow 8, 10 , Split Second 6 ; Ce lebnty
Sweepstakes 3, 15 , Afternoon w1th DJ 13
12:55- NBC News 3, 15.
'
1: 00 - News 3, All My Chrldren 6, 13, Not For Women Only 15,
Phrl Donahue 8, Young &amp; Reslless 10.
•
1: 15 - Let's All Srng 33.
1: 30 - As the Wocld Turns 8, 10, Jeopardy 3, 4, 15 , Let 's Make A
Deal 6, 13
2: 00- Days of Our Lr ves 3, 4, 15 , Guiding Llghl8, 10 , Newlywed
Game 6, 13 .
2' 30 - Doctors 3, 4, 15 , Edge ol Nights , 10 ; Girl In My Life 6, 13.
3·00 - Another World 3. 4, IS . General Hospital 6, 13, Price is
Rrghl 8, 10 ; RFD 20.
3:30- One Life to L tve 13, Match Game 8, 10, Lassie 6 , How to
Survive a Marriage 3, .4, 15 , Antiques 20, lTV Utilization 33
4. 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Sesame St 33, Tattletales 8; Somerset
15, Gilligan's Is 6, $10,000 Pyramtd 13, Bonanza 4 ; MovJe
'' Fun tn Acapulco" 10
4: 30 - Bonanza 15 , Bewrlched 3, Lucy Show 8, ABC Aflerschool
Specral 6. 13.
5:00- Mr. Rogers 20, 33, Merv Gnff ln 4 , FBI3 , Andy Griffith 8
5. 30- Elec Co. 33 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20, News 6 , Tratl s Wesl
15 , Beverly Hillbillies 8, I Dream of Jeannte 13
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, ABC News 13 , News 6 ; Elec. Co 20;
D1agnosttc &amp; Prescnpltve Teachtng of Reading 33.
6:30 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, IS. Bew itc hed 6; Gomer Pyle 13; Zoom
20, Your Future Is Now 33.
7:00 - News 10, What's My Line 8 , Truth or Cons 3, 4; Celeb
Sweepstakes3 ; Zoom 22 ; I Spy 15, Bowling for Dollars 6 , Zee
Cookmg Schools 20, Know Your Schools 33
7 30 - Let's Make A Deal 6; Mel Til Ir s 8, Polrce Surgeon 3;
Name That Tune 4; Episode Action 33 , The Judge 10 . To Tell
the Truth 13 ; Book Beal20 ; Epis ode Action 33.

AUToMOBILE •nsuran ce been
ca ncelled ?
Lost
your
operator 's license. Call 992
7478
6 15 tfc

.,

·I ·

~~

SEP riC
TANK S cleaned ,
reasonable r ates Ph 446
4782, Gal11polls John Russell,
owner and operator
_
51~ffc

'

Real Estate For Sale

LINCOLN HILL

Older lO·room frame, 4 bedroom
house, modern kitchen, formal dining
room·, 2·.full baths, new wiring and
plumbing, carpetetr·' throughout, 3
years ago. Nice yard.

FOR APPOINTMENT

CALL M2-7684
Business Services

BU I LOING lot, 80ft . frontage x
165ft. The second lot on left on
R rwervlew Drlvt. L'" co ln CHARlES R Hatfield , mini
HilL Pomeroy , Ohio If in backhoe and dozer, water
terested , call 992 3230 after 5
lines. drams , footers, brush
P m.
c;: lean1ng Rt. 1, Rutland , Oh10
Phone 742 6092
10 17 tfc
11 3 25tc

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

ELECTRIC RANGES
1 Avocado Green Elec. - 1 Copper Elec - 4 While
E lectrics. Prtced $69 .95 and up.
GAS RANGES
2 Avocado Green- 1 Harvest Gold- Several white gas
ranges to choose from. Priced 139.95 and uu.

----SPECIAL OF WEEK---...,

BABY BED,
COMPLETE

.

NOW
ONLY

$2495

MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASHERS
1 Avocado Green Washer - 1 Wh tte Washar- 1 Harvest
Gold Dryer - 1 White Dryer. '
(Check the new prtce and save on lhese USED MODELS.

------------'
o•oe:.LL Al•nement , tacat~d

Several Bedroom Suites
Good Selection Breakfast Sets
Wringer Washers - ~ - ·

beh ind Rutland Grade Schocl1,
comp le te front end serv1ce.
brakes and tuneups, wheel s
balanced e lectronically Open
a to 8 Clatly. can 742 3232 on
Sunday for appt
7 16 tfc

2 USED FREEZERS

IN STOCK

-

89 .95 up
20.00 up
39.95 up

2 Just Sold!
2 Just Arrived!

26 Chests &amp; DresserS ~ - - - - - - ~ •
19.95 up
Coppertono Utility tablnet - - - • . •
- 79.95
Old Dining Room Suite, good shape • - • . 169.95
Several Livong Room Suites &amp; Sofas • . - • . 39.95 up
Loads at Odd Chairs - Rockers, Recliners, and Easy
Chairs
10.00 up
Mahovany ~sk, 44"x22", and Chair - - - - - 79.95

.

,..__......__,SPECIAL THIS WEEK---......,

___________ _

110 lb. Set Of

.......

Veterans· s2o down will put
you rn this homel

love!
And if you were really ready for !be convent, would it worry
you that hlsk!Sses are no longer sexy• -HELEN

+++

SNA :

Maybe you should contemplate a while longer before you
decide to take the veil. Discuss your doubts with a priest - and
think of all the good you can do lor the church right in your own
community.
Only the special few are right for convent life. Are you one of
them?- SUE

+++
Dear Rap:
l didn't Uke the school so I started cutting. When my father
found out he called me filthy names that made me hate myself.
Then l got a job, but he kept following me, making sure l was
working. His spying made me feel Uke a crlmnal, so l started to
be one : I stole something.
The boss lound out, 541! ran away, but got caught a week
later and served time in the detention center. Two weeks!
When l got back, the whole world had turned against me : no
friends, no job, no chance of being trusted again. l am about to
qu1t high school, as l can't face walking down !be halls where
kids laugh and make smart remarks. ! just nm out and hide in an
alley and cry.
I even trtell to kill myself, but the m ... of pills weren't
enough. H l can't find my way back soon, I know how many pills
to take this time! Please help before l take that route.- NAME

WITHHELD

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Try not to let Jealousy ga tn the

upper hand when someone
you 're fond of seems to be
paytng more attention to another than he IS to you
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You 're apt to overreact when a
member of your famtly doesn't
show ttle proper apprec 1atton
for somethmg you ve gone out
of your way to do
GEMINI (May 21-June 20111
wlll prove annoymg for both
parttes 1f you do a servtce tor
another but let h1m know your
heart Isn't 1n ~~
CANCER (June 21 - July 22)
It won I work out as you hope tf
you leak to appease one
you'}Ci angered wtth a gift or
mater~at peaceRolfenng Try a
Sincere . Simple apology
LEO IJuly 23·Aug. 22) You
tencfto be overly protecl t'le Qf
those who are '" your chargri
The measures you 11 use w111
not be understood or well received
VIRGO (Aug. 23 - !l~nt 22)

the line? The world won't "turn agamst you" for one mistake, il
you hold up your head, smile, and let the kids know all that is
behind you.
Knock off the gwlt and tears, and hang m there! - SUE

'

+++

DearN.W.:
You didn't like school, so you cut; you d1dn ' t Uke your
lather's interference, so you stole; you couldn't lace your boss,
so you ran away; you can't face yoW' schoolmates, so you try
pills. For Pete's sake, stop running !
Hasn't anyone ever told you it takes guts to get through life?
Where's YOW'S? - HELEN
For your copy of " What Is a Crush ? ·What Is a First Love?·
What Is Getting to Know Yourself•" Send a WNG , selfadl!ressed STAMPED envelope to Helen and Sue Bottel, P . 0 .
Box 23057, Sacramento, Calif., 95823.

Jltt11MID!1rn®&amp;al ···-"J ..-~ ,_
t&gt;v ~H 1'\1111 AIINOlll '""'Ill Ill I r l

Unseramble these four Jumbles,

Dear Name Withheld :
Now look here: You aren't the only gir1 whO ever hit trouble,
and your troubles aren't as black as they -m. So you got caught
stealing and did time. Since when Is two weeks in Juvy the end of

one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

o 00 -

That's My Mama 6, 13, Sons &amp; Daughters 10 ; Little
House oo the Prairie 3, 4, 15, Men Who Made the Movies 20,
Jack the Ripper 33
8 30 Movie "The Great Ice RIP"Off" 13 ; Movie " The
Forgotten Man " 6
•
9 00 - Cannoo8, 10; Masterpiece Theater 33; Lucas Tanner 3, 4,
15.
9· 30 - David Castle In Concert 20.
10 oo-Pelrocelll3, 4, 15 ; Man Hunter 10 ; Get Christie Love 13;
Words and Music 6, 8, 15 ; News 20 , Burglar. Prooflng 33
10 30- News 20 , Legacy 33.
11 00 - News,a, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3; Mlssloo Impossible 6, Untouchables
13 ; Janakl33; Movie " Cry Rape" 8; MDvle "Shane" 10.
,
12· 30 - Wild Wild 6; Wide World Speclal13
1. 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4.
2. 00- News 4, 13

7 30 p .m -

&amp;: 30 p.m . -

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
Country and Western U.S.A. (C)
Superstar Theatre (2 Hrs.)

I

l

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Soft dnnk
I Spy in
5 Arrange
Canaan
m lots
2 Popeye's
11 Descended
Oyl
12 Carl or Rob
3 Hurnedly
13 Go lor
(colloq ,
14 Stanza of
4 wds.)
e1ght lines
4 Had
15 "All About
dinner
5 C1rca
6 Religtous
16 Kook
body
17 Grassland
Rest
7
18 Famous
8 G reatly
Boston
( 4wds )
street
9 Daydream
20 Tradmg
10 Handled
place
16 Ibsen
21 Fat
hero me
22' Pennsyl19 Junto
vania c1ty
23 Dame
Nellie
25 Carried on
26 Seaweed
21 Droop
28 Whirl
29 Zoroas-

Yesterday's Answer "

20 CIVil
War
Umon
hero
23 Italian
sweet
wme
24 "- Rtgby"
25 Undulate
27 Totter

30 Cake
Without flour
31 Zeal
33 "Picmc"

author
36 Order ol
anunals
( suff.)
37 Gown's
partner

· tnamsm's
good book
32 Perc hed
33 - de

France
34 Constella-

tion' s mam
s tar
35 Consecrate
37 Kmd ol

file
38 Loaf
39 Counterte nor
40 More
ChiChi
41 Equal

DYNAD

I

One letter s1mply stands for another. In this sample A Is

used for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc Smgle lett ers.
apostrophes, the len gth nnd formation of the words are aU
hmts Each dny the code lett ers are different

I I

IUNTJUBt
I I J

CRYPTOQUOTES

"
T

0

JUG\ WHAT WAS THE
WP::ITEiR:' :&gt; POiN'T'?

I

I
arranre the circled !etten
v
"'i
to (onn
I
L'::::::~~~;.A~~~~~~~=·u~r~r~e:•:~~bytheabovec~n.
Lr_--...:,.=:::•::..:ll=•:..::a=IIISWIII==-.:.__-1 D [ XX)
INTJEF

Now

the IUrpriH anJWff,

MU · WB!BYMENBA

YOAVBI

YOE

QXM

NEVIMHDWBA

lNVZ

FZ

EM

NEV IMHDWVNM E

VBRRNEP

ZMD

0

NA

0

WBRBF·

XB

EBBHA

U

(Aiuwerw lomorruw)

I

Jumbln: ACRID ELATE MEMBER BOTHER
Aluwrr• Sufplies irun in Ru11ia- RED MEAT

EAST

-

AMDIWB

DEGEMQE
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: HE WHO KNOWS OTHERS IS WISE,
· HE WHO KNOWS HIMSELF IS ENLIGHTENED -CHINESE
WISDOM
(@ 191' Kine Featurea Syndicate, lnc:.)

"GROOVY, MEET US
'YAWL.-DRIVE.AND
NC. ONE OF OUR
TV C.AMERAS!'

IF'
GIRL.
I=RIENO OlD LEAVE
1-lER CAR THERE, IT
WILL SOON HAVE A
TV BUG.

•
0 If ...... ,.,.,. ,

"o'"'" ""''•"Ur

,o , l).., ,(:
'tV

North

East

South

2.

Redbie

2+

4•

Pass

Pass
Pass

Bar Bells, all metal
Baby 5·Drew&amp;r Chest &amp; Robe
Combination - - - - - . .
Priced to Sell
- • 29.95 up
22 Sets of Tables • - - · · 2 Mayleg Portable Washers and
1 Dryer • • • • • . - • . - · - . • • Priced to Sell
Refrigerators, grHn, gold, copper and white
49.95 up

We illso buy households of furnlh.rre at TOP
PRICES.
',

Rutland Furniture

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOMES

747 4211
Set~

1100 E'tMain
Pomeroy, 0.
' Call992-7034
Open Daily tl to 7

Rutland,O.
Herb, Dave

or Mike G.ra.te

I.

~U'O

CIU•I~ J

CAPTAIN EASY

Pass

VAMPIRe " .sHow WIL-L &amp;f
SliHSATIO"-'Al! .. AND

Open mg lead - K•

By

O~wald

·'

1HAIJt&lt; YOU 1 L.ORO VLJU,; J
l'M 5-UJt!! OI)Jl' "YU&amp;.IHI-IO~P

HER'eW YOJJR' f'501000!

,,

&amp; James\Jacoby

One of the worst hab1ts a
br1dge player can acqutre IS
that of makmg one btd too
many. West's takeout double
of one s pade was reasonable.
The hand m1ght belong to his
s1de. But after North' s redouble, ot should have been ap·
parent that South was going

w

.what tlQU
plannin' t' build
a ten· stor1.1
bUIIdin' on

top of!

~·WINiiiiiiiNiiiiEii.itWINiiiiiKiiiLEiiil,.....-.:;""';;:;;:rr.:-~r.refiiiiiE5.rrHiii:Pi~-nr.
~~ffii£i~~~~~)Yi~~~~f,
5f31oe5 IT HoL~
I CAN'T uNDER·

• spade
to
md
up playing
contract.
Hence, some
there 1
was no reason for West to b)d
two hearts.
West's kmg of clubs was
allowed to hold the f1rst trick.
He could have beaten the
hand by an 1mmed1ate shin
to a low heart, but no one
could figure that one out.
West ~h iTted to the kmg or
diamonds
South grabbed that one;
drew trumps; cashed the ace
of clubs, r 11ITed dumm)''s. last
club and threw West m with ,
the queen of diamonds
Now West l;;d a low heart to
his partner's queen, but South
knew exactly what to do.
West was marked with live
hearts so South JUSt let East
hold the trtck. East had to
lead a club or a d1amond and
whatever he led would allow
South to rulf in dummy and
discard his 10 of hearts.
South m1ght well have
worked out this same play if
West had not made that one
unnecessary bid. He m1ght
have, but we w1ll never know.

KILL TIME.WHAT
HAVE I 00T

" '/ -..,

10 LOBE'?

w"·'= ·. l &amp;TANDWHY

1&gt;&lt;05E ll&lt;REE

~L.5w'ii'Lr.- WE

'TUilNOVEIL
E5PEC1ALLY /WDI'¥3
OU~ CIIEA'nVE

,.4"'""
';

'
AIJLE¥' OOP

'

'

.

FRANKlY.·50 IS
AH '!!'- TH' RJN

50INa'ON
WIONT" OUT'A tr-

HA$

I'M aas~NG THE Fl5H AND CHIP
,JOINT. 1}6 r-tew LADY '&gt;0/&lt;LIA\

TI-lE weALtHY

F~

~TwANr

TRADE ·

l
'

'

n:e.n :1•!&amp;8i!l
The brdd mg has been

West

5

Pass

North
1'
3•

East
Pass
Pass

South
2•
3•

Pass

44

Pa~

?

1HE IMPI'RlAciST,C~TALIST
WEST~ HAYING PIIC6CEM5

WE NEVER f.IAVE HARD
11MES IN 'THE SCMET U/iiON

You, South, hold
•AK84 'K2 +Q54.AQ54
What do you do now"'
A -The right bid is just live

clubs, but we would not criticize
a jump to six. ,
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of btdding three clubS
your partner has JUmped to three
hearts over you r two clubs Wh~t
do you do now?
)

\

(

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

5

West
Dble

DOZER work , land clearing by
the acre hourly or contract,
farm ponds, roads , etc Large
dozer and operator with over
20 yeers experten ce Pull 1ns
Exca¥atlng , Pomeroy, Ohto
Phone 992 241B
12 19 tfc ,

Live in the rolling hills of
Southern Ohio In your own 3
BR., all electric mobile
hOme in Southern Ohio's
newe!st rnoblte home park. 15
rnin.
from 4,.. Athens or
Pomeroy. Price reduced to
get this mobile home per~
sl•rted. Set up &amp; ready to
move Into. For further
det•ll~ contact. . • '

Show me the lellow who can "cope" with his girlfriend's idea
of becommg a nun, and I'll show you a young man who lsn 't 1n

1974

'

NOrth-South vulnera'ble

sEwi-NG MACHINES Repa ir
service , all make s, 992 2284
The F abric Shop. Pomeroy
Authorized S•nger Sales and
Service We sharpen Scissors
3-29 tfc

_.~.....

SNA :

For Wedneaday, Nov. 6,

.J2

' EXCAVATING , dozer , loader
an4 ~ backhoe
work, septic
tanl::s mstalled , dump trucks
and lo boys for h ire , will haul
ftll dtrt , top soil , limestone &amp;
gravel. can Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089,
night phone 992 3525 or 992 5232
2 11 tfc

e:

Helen and Sue:
I'm a 17-year.(lld girl who has been contemplating entering
the convent. I made the mistake of telling my lriends and now
whenever I'm around, they act as if I'm a saltlt.
Their language changes, they don't laugh as loud, they seem
WJComlortable and they make me !eel so lonely .
My boyfnencl, 19, is ljfrald to touch me for fear I'll proclaun
him a sinner. We used to pet a lot, but now he doesn't even kiss
ml!'in that special sexy way. We've been datingfoW' months ~nd
our relationship Is crumbling. He can't cope with the idea of me
bemg a nun . What to do? - STILL NEEDS AFFECTION

+J 3

tfc

EXC&amp;:LSIOR S::ol;:t::::W::::or-ks, .
Main St , Pomeroy All kinds.
of salt water pellets , wa ter
nuggets, block salt and own
Oh•o River Salt , Phone 992
3891
6 5 lfc

NllD? But !be Louely Hearl

Now. 6 , 1974

Thts year you w111 be shoOting
tor several ma10r goals AI·
though tl 1s n I likely all w1ll be
a1ta1ned Important gams w111
be made lha1 w111 be most
beneftclal

,KJ954
,Q
+ KQB
+ , 1097642
.KQI09
.86 53
SOUTH (D)
• KQJ974
• A 106

SEI'ti' IC TANKS . AROBIC.
SEWAGE
SYS TEMS
CLEANED.
REPAIRED
MILLER SA NITATION ,
STEWART. OHIO PH 662

-- --

~

• 86

• 2

---4T-------.-------

REAI:&gt;V .MlX
CONCRETE
delivered r ight to your
prolect Fast and easy Free
estimates. Phone 992 3284
Goegl'eln ~ Ready . Mtx Co ,
Middleport. Oh1o
6·30-tfc

By H'i~len and Sue Bottel

I

Cl' 'PRor-a•u• NOT SEEN IN GALLIPOLIS
NORTH
• A 10 53
• 87 32
+AS
.A74
WEST

One you care a great deal
about has done somethmg lha t
has hurt you Bnng 1t out'" the
open The other party ts com
ptetely unaware
LIBRA (Sept. 23- 0ct. 23) Be
careful of the type of outs1de
tnterests you tnvol ve· yourself
1n atlhts ltme You could g et •n
O'ler your purse
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
If you re not wtlltng to share the
ltmehght no w w1th others who
co-ope ra l e m your ac ~
compl1shments hard fee11ngs
wtll result
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·
Dec. 21) You re go1ng to se~
cret ly resent havmg Ia do
somethtng for another you fee t
1s tmpostng on you unfairly but
you s t1t1 wont ment ion 11
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan
19) S hould you be tnvolved •n
some form ot romant tc 1ntngue
1t's not ltke lv the secret w111 go
undetected
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb.
1 QJ You re ltkety to get the
short end of any agreements
you enter 1nto today Don t say
"yes to someth•ng Without
thlnktng 1n order to be a n1ce
guy
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Don t work on th1ngs that you
don t smcerely enjoy dotng
You II be far more product1ve
d01ng those tasks when your
mood changes

fi:l:l'
:1:1'

Y rtl.erd•f•

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

4

'j!lb'ol"b'olr :e:~: :~:~: -G-~e~~~~~n-ue.,W~l l l~-tlilli~~~~~~~c
:
"""''~~:,~i;~'lli.I;Sl~-,liillllllll':~:~""~l

WIN AT BRIDGE

One too many hurts -opponents

-· .....- ---

I

337 N. 2, Middl~port
992-2550

From a shelf to a house.
Painttn~lt stding , roofing,
paper hang1ng, kitchen
cabinets, etc .

593·6366

--.---...r

WILL trim or cut tr,es · and
shrubbery, also c lean out
FURNI S HED
apartment, NICE f1'1e room and bath O!'le
basem e nts and attics Phone
floor plan at ~05 Spr1ng Ave ,
utilit 1es furi)IShed , su1tabte
949 3221 or 742 4441 ,
'
Pomeroy
Redone
and
tor two working men or
,
. 10 18 26tc
red~corated
msrde
and
out
r e l•red c ouple Liv ing room ,
New Lu xa .re fUrna ce system
kitchen, s howe r' and battl On
Reasonably priced Phon e PIANO lunmg and repatring,
matn h1ghway , Mason, w Va ~ 992
Lane Dan 1e1s, Phone .99~ 2082
5292
Pt1on e 773 -5147
Ref e rence Elberfe ld s
10·27
tfc
1021 tfc
10 25 12t p
•,

ALL·WEAntER

--------- -=-----,

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

nental fltght. It took bini 49
Success Road Ph one 667 3462 .
11 3 Jtc
days to fly from New York City __ ________ __ .!.,'_3 6tp
to Pasadena, Calif., with YARD Sa le, Wednesday, Thurs -rwo 4 room and bath apts In
Middleport For Information,
day and Frtday at 63 Rutlan d
frequent stops.
call 992-2550 or 742 6551.
St , M1dd lepor t .
....,
In !!Ito, President Franklin
7 3 lfc
11 s 3tc
D. Roosevelt was r&lt;Hllected to - - - - -- -- - - -- - YARD Sale on Rt 7 at eno of ~OUNTRY Mobile Home Park :'
.n unprecedented third term. Forest Run Rd , Wednesday R t 33 , ten m lies north of
Pomeroy Large lots w1th
'""tria opene d th e
If ram. Ttwrsd ay
In 1-•
....,, ,...
concrete patios, s!Ciewalks,
11 5 1tp
,·unners and off street
reconstructed Vienna State - -- - - - - - - - - - - parking. Also, spaces for
Opera House and formally
small t;rallers Phone ~92 7479
celelrated Its liberation from
7 2l ·lfc

All that ts needed for a free
estimate IS a phone call.
Ple ase Phone :

CREMEAN-S · CON c~ ETE'
dtpUv e red Monday through
Saturday a nd evenmgs
Phone 446-1142
6 13 ttc

Wood Burning Stove

J AND 4 ROOM furn1shed and

3~75

Exterior Work

10

-1 New Monogram

For Rent

Lawn Mowers

Don ' t forget the roof of your
home Have a beautiful new
,oof rn sta lled by AII · We,ather
Roofing Co

TUESDAY , NOVEMBER 5, 1974
6:00 - News 3, 4, B, tO, 15 , ABC News 13, Sesame St 20; News 6 ,
Diagnost iC &amp; Prescr 1pt1ve Tea c hmg of Readtng 3J
6 . 30 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, Journey to Jap,an JJ. Bewitched 6 ,
Gomer Pyle 13
7 · 00 - Elec Co 20, Bowlmg for Dollars 6 Electton Ntght
Coverage 3, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15
7 30 - Wild. Wild World of An1mals 6 , RFD 20, Mar co Sportl 1te
33.
8. 00 - Election Coverage 6 . Amen ca 20, 33
8 30- Eventng at Symphony 33, Elec tton Coverage 20.
10 00 - Mountain Scene 33
10 30 - Mele Hawaii 33 1
11 00 - News 3. 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
1· 30 - Janaki 33

3035

Priced For Quick Sale

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

REDEOORATING?

All Small Appliances

Interior &amp;

1

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

cl ocks, 1ce boxes, brass beds ,
d tShes, desks, or complete
households Write M
o
Miller, Rt 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
ca ll 992 7760
5 13 lfc

any organ•zatlon , phone 992

Racine, 0.

Phone 949 3821 or 9.49 3161
Q.ELAND
Racme , Oh10
Cr1tt Bradford
608 E.
REALTV _____________s ttc

MAIN . . . . . . .~..~~
POM.E ROY~.

BOWERS
REPAIR

949-3295

5 RM HOUSE bath and lot 1n
F IR EWOOD for sale Phone
Le 1 ar t Falls Call 247 '1581
992 3363 or 99 2 3312
after4pm
10 24 12 tp
11 5 6tp

C.A~H

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

GHEEN'S PAINTING

~l p

Pets For Sale

1970 FORO MAVERICK
"295
Local 1 owner, good w s w ttres, deluxe tn t tnm , wheel
c:over s. rad1o, 6 cy l , rea l economy w1th sfd trans , blue
fin , n1ce

Gallipolis, o.

For Sale

Help Wan'ed

Business Service_s

Television Log

•

•

•I

I'

' I

_;,~.....,-

I

�7 - The Daily Sentinel, M1ddlepo1 !-Pomeroy, Tuesday, Nov. 5,1974

8- The Dally Sentmel, Mtddleport-PI'mt·ru~, 0 , Tuesdii), Nuv. 5, 1~174

For Fast Results UseSentinel Classifieds
Auto Sales

I
'

FRENCH CITY
MEATS

GRocERY bus mess fo r sa le
ln Qu• r c ill k' lll CJ s fi rm s
Bv dcl •ng tor sal£" or lease
:.Mu r(1,1y .1 n d Mo nday , ? to 1
Phone 77J S618 from 8 3 0 p m
I 1 3 Jt p
to 10 p m lor appo tnlm ent
J :m tfr
HPW 1o ,.,,1rn up to S200 weekly
' ldelrj"&gt;';• no ..,h, H1nq mt11 l10q
I'll \II lop ,~c;
'.r' n d 'l~c c.nd
t,1n•p t&gt; d i'ld drf'!&gt;Sed e nvelop e
lu l\(1 E NT ERP RI SES AOX
19 lloeOY Il l 1&gt;7791
Real Estate For Sale

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

OF
QUALITY

1970 CHEV MONTE CARLO
$1995
350 V 8, automa tic, P steering &amp; brakes , dark blue ftnt sh,
blue mtertor, b lue viny l roo t, factory a 1r cond 1f1oned, li ke
new w w t tres, radtos Many othe r ex tras.

French Citv
Meats, Inc.

t

EX P[ I.: I l N l l D llClr w.1 1l rts':i

2 SIGNS

Custom Slaughtering
By Appointment Only
Phone: 446-3472

11 1

REDU~T I O N

of q rown AKC toy
poodles ~50 eac t1 pups $65.
S•am ese k•llens , Sl 5 Phone 1
1'i6 6'2·17
10 I 261C

NOTICE
Ohto Power Company on September 3 1974 formally reQuested lhe
Publtc UUIItres Commtssron o t
Oh•o , p:.~rauant to Ohto Revrsed Code
Section 4909 16 to suspend tis e11.rst
mg rates durmg the: pend ency o f
PUC 0 Case No 74-484-Y wh tc h re
qutttl a permanent rate mcreaso of
S85 000.000 per year, and to authorIze ttle Company commencmg wtl h
billa rendered on or after Oc tober 1
1874 to all customers served under the
Company s Tardfs I t led wrlh the

PUC 0 , to tmpose a surcharge o f
17 5~ before any fuel clause adjust ment and to con tmue such surcharge
in effect untll a ftnal determmatron

1970 CHEVROLET 2 TON
$2995
Cab &amp; chassts, 108" cab to axle, V 8, 350 eng me, 15,000 lo,
2 speed R axle , good 825x20 t1res, solid cab

bul lS Ruda Durst , Por tlan d ,
Oh 10 Phon e 84) 2293
11 4 Jtc

1969 FOR D Galax 1e 302 eng1nc
good gas mtleage extra
con d1f10n Phone ( 1) 667 3685
In Memorv
after 5 p m or ca ll 985 3836
11 1 6tc
IN MEMORY ot Edward C
Hawl ey who passed away one 1969 C HEVROLET Cap r1ce
yea r ago Nov A Sad I Y
SBOO ex cond1 t10n , p b , p s
m 1ssed by W1fe . son. and
Phone 992 7876 alter 6 p m
daugh te r
10 30 6tp
11 5 11c
l96B OL OS 4 dr hardtop p s ,
p b. at r , low mileage S850
Pt1on e 949 32 11
11 3 3tp

Wanted To Buy

Nobce

PLAYER p1ano ro lls
742 5625

SHIRLEY KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

saturn.
lost
The evening star Is Jupiter.
rt dbone coonhound lost
Those born on this date are MALE
•n Rutland
Harrtsonvdle

area Reward offered Phone
742 4447 or 742 5329
11 3 Jtc

American historian William
Durant was born Nov. 5, 1885. - - ~------~--- · h"
LO ST one red Durham cow With
On this d ay m istory:
white on the flan ks, 4 year old
In 1733, · German-born about n ,ooo Jbs Last see n on
10 ( 16) 74 on Bear Wallow
bllsher John P e t er Ze nger
pu
Rodge Rd , ' ' seen or !ound.

began

printing the newspaper
ca ll 696 1292 or 992 5977
.. The New York Weekly ____ _ :_ ______ .!.,~ 6tc

11 5 6tc

LAND WA NTED
Wooded
acres or farm •n your area
Have client un. ted Farm ,
1183 N ColumiJus St , Lan
caster , Oh10 45130
11 5 IIC
UTILITY
tra tle r .
pr e ferred, 4xll or
Phone 949 5913

co .... er
larger
11 5 Jtc

----- - --- - -NEEDED 1966 Plymouth trans

mr Ss 1on , automat1c , on th e
colum n Phone992 2546 af te r 5
pm
11 5 3t c

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

SMALL stat 1on wagon wtfh
good gas m ll eage Phone 992
5786
10 30 tfc

Holiday Special!

SCRAP ALUMINUM
(free of Steel)

11'
per pound

The Rosenberg Co.
79 Depot Street

511 3

Notice IS hereby gi¥en tha t
11 l ff c
Dorothy
L
McKenz 1e,
Executrix of th e Estate of HANDPA INTED
har dboard
Mtlvln M McKenzte, late of
nur se ry a n •ma l poste rs Make
San
Bernardtno
County ,
1dea 1 Chr1stmas g1ftS Var1ety
Callforn1a, deceased, on the 2nd
of patt e rns Ca ll 992 5147 after
day of November , 1974, filed m
5 p m
the Probate . Court of Me1g s
11 3 6tp
County , Oh•.~ , an authenticated
copy of the Letters of Ap
announced
pointment. of sa1d Estate Sk ate A Way
Hallowee n Part v F rtday .
granted •n Superior Court of th e
State of Calltornta , for the
Ocr 25 , Ra ces, pr 1zes. ba l
loons , available for pn..,ate
County of San BernardinO , and
part1es , Mond,ay, Tuesday,
that the cla1m or claims of any
Thursday, ntghts. Sa t or Sun
creditor or creditors of said
afternoon
Ope n
Wed ,
decedent shall be presented to
Friday , and Sat 7 30 10 30
this Court Wlthm SIX months
Phone 985 3929, 985 4141 or
after tfledate of said fili ng or be
985 9996
forever barred as a poss•b le I ten
upon the Oh to ~real estate of sa 1d
10 24 12tc
decedent
Thu rsday
and
Dated th1s 2nd day of No¥em AUCTION
Saturday n1gh t, 7 p m at
ber , 1974
Mason Au c t1on, Horton St m
Maso n , W Va Consq;;~nments
Mann1ng Webster
welc.ome Phon e (304) 773
JUDGE
5471
Common Pleas Court.
10-3 tfc
Probate DIVISIOn
Metgs County, Oh1o ------- -~-----SWAP ~ SELL - BUY F lea
( 111 s, 12, 19, 3t c
Market , Sp ring Avenue,
Pomeroy. Ohto Saturday and
Sunday AUCTION SUNDAY ,
5 00 CONSIGNMENT, 15 Pet
The Almanac
10 11 tfc
By Uolted Press lntemattonal - - -- - - - -s- - -d- -H
·
POMEROY
ac r e
ear 1
TodaylS'l\aesday,Nov.5,the
Church Fa ll Fest•v al Bazaar
30Qth day of 1974 with 56 to
woll be Thursday , Nov 7, 1974
D•nners - Cr eamed ba ked
follow.
ch• cke n and ham , games and
Tbe moon is approaching tts fancy .stands , dmner starts
•--t
1e
4 30 p m Adults, $3, Ch ildren
.... quar r .
s1 so
10 30 Blc
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and

Phone

Athens, Ohio
JuNK a utos , complete and
de ltvered to our yard We
p1 c k up auto bodies and buy
all k1nds of scrap metals and
•ron R 1de r 's Salvage, St Rt
124. Rt 4, Pomeroy , Oh10
Call 992 5468
10 17 ffc

WILl Tk AlJE.
I IN ANCING
ARRA N GE D
WITH
MINIMUM
DOWN
W1ll
conS1der lr a de for o ld e r
ho me tr aile r or land on lt11S
n e-w J bedroom , '}ba th home
w1th 2 car garage , large
lam d y room a• r cond1t 1o n.ng
Move tn lmmed •al e ly Ca ll
now 992 5976
11 5 lt c
MONEY DOWN - Mon thly
payments acco rd1n9 to 1n
come New J bedr oom home
w1 lh wal l to wa ll ca rp e tmg on
' .. ac r e land sca ped lo ts Cal l
today fo r mo r e 1nformaf10n.
9n 5976
11 5 lt c

NO

~ JVE pur ebred polled Hereford

1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lakewood trac t 10n bars. h1
Ja cke r a1r s ho cks, hook e r
headers , w1lh 3" collector s. tor
small block Ca ll 992 3496
after 6 p m BE ST OFFER
10 17 lfc

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

c1n be made m Case Ho 74-484-V
The Company alleges thai w1th
oul prompl approval of a surcharge
that Will y1eld an add1honal
~g 388 000 annual revenue 11 Will be
unable to conhnue construction of the
faclhl••• necessary to prov1de serv1ce
to new customers or to prov1de 8Kpandet1 serv1ce or to mamta1n the current rehaule semce to 1ts present
customers The Company proposes
to refund to 1ts customers an •mount
by wh•ch Ihe $49.388 000 1 eques!ed
uceeda the fmal amol1nt to be colle&lt;::led from the cuslomers affected
hereby lound JUSt and reasonable m
Case No 74-484-Y
The 17 59% surcharge app hed
before any luet clause ad1ustment
would have resulled on September
PERM SPECIAL
1974 bills, in overall Increases after Reg. $17 SO
NOW $15.00
applicatiOn of the fuel clause adReg
$15
00
NOW$12.50
/Uitment, of approx1mately 15 4% to
BLOW
CUT
restelenttal customers, and s1m1 lar InThurs. Eventng Appt' s.
creases to the other classes of cusOperators
tomers
Grace Johnson
On November 19 1974 at 9 30
Marcta Carr
AM local lime at the offtce of The
Publ1c Utthtles Comm1ss•on of Oh1o
Sandy lannarelll
111 North Htgh Street Columbus
Ph . 992·3557
Pomeroy, 0 .
Ohto 43215 a hearmg wtll be held
on the proposed surcharge Further
informatton may be obtamed from AUCTIO N and Rummage Sale
The Public U111111es Comm1ss•on of
Nov 9, 11 a m at t he Racm e
Oruo or lhe Company
Sh r 10e Park Sponsore d by
Twm C•IY Shr•ne Club
Merchandise sold on con
Ohto Power Company
Stgnment , brmg what you
By F N 81en
have to sell or call 949 2491
Execut1ve V1ce PreSident
F or p 1ckup All nob les are
(10) 24, 29 (ll l 5, 3tc
requested to brtng an 1tem to
se ll Publtc tnv•l ed to lake
part Brmg anythmg you want
to
se ll
Lunch served bv
NOTICE OF FILING
Shr
1ners
W1ves
Come entOY
AUTHENTICATED COPY
the dav . Not responSib le for
Of Letters of
a cc1 dents
Appointment of
J I I 7tc
Non-Restdent Executnx
~~-------- -- -Estate of
Non- R estdent
KOSCO T
KO S M E TIC S
Remember Chr1stmas IS
l!st1t1
of
MELVIN
M
commg we ha ve many new
McKENZIE
No. '21341
products that will make n 1ce
DeceiStd
Q1fts Phone BROWN 'S 99 2

under the sign of Scorpio.

For Sale

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

EFF ICI E NCY hovse m M1d
d lepor t •d ea l for co uple or 2
workmg men Phon e 992 77 91
11 5 3tc

E F LAT Sa;.;, very reasonabl e NEW
b1 level
home
3
Phone 99 2 7685
bed room s, budt •n ktl c he n,
11 1 61p
basem e nt wllh one c ar
garage Pt1one 742 361 5 or see
Milo Hut chiSOn
I= IR EWOOO to r sa te, cut yo ur
11 1 tf c
own s•ze or p•ece Phon e 992
5717
11 3 ffc 7 R OOM hou se wllh 2 ba th s 1n
Pomeroy Phone 992 3478
O N E good Smger El ectriC
10 15 26 1c
sewmg machm e, S55, Norge
dr~·""r
w1th hook up box
VEN room , lbedroom hou se
e lectriC S15. Modern hv 1ng SEw1th
ba t h comp lete mode rn
room sofa and cha •r. S IS.
k1 I chen w tth bar , pan ell mg .
Zen1th Black and wh 1t e T V
tots of cu pboards and ca r
SIS , wor ks,
2 p la tf orm
pe tmg gas hot water he at
rockers usable S20, phone
F ull baseme nt. pnced and
99 2 7310
seen by appom tment Cal! 992
11 3 3fp
2020
---- ------- - - - - 10 30 61p
FLOOR furnace , heats 4 or 5
rooms, S25 747 Ol1ver St , 97
ACRES,
wooded
and
Middleport , Oh10, phon e 992
secluded Idea l for summer ,
7875
t1ome , recrea 11on , or campm g
11 J 31p
W1thrn 5 miles of propo sed
Ra ve nswood br td ge Call 614
FIREWO OD for ftrepla ce or
843 2256
stove Cut to leng t t1 Pt1one
992 7644
11 3 3t c
--

11 3 26f c

--- -

--------

NEWLY de cora ted 5 room
frame hou se w.th ba t h ,
NEW Corn. S3 bushel phone
Palmer Stree t, Middleport ,
742 3656
Pr1 ced r easonable Phone 992
11 5 6t p
3896 aft er 5 p m
- - - --- - - - - - - - - 11 3 3tp
CLO SE OUT on new Ztg Zag ~- -------~ - ---Se wing Ma ch 1nes For sewrng
st re tch fa bncs , buttonhol es,
fan c y des •g ns. etc Pamt
Sl tghfty bl emiShed ChOICe Of
ca rrym g case or sew 1n g
stand S.49 80 cash or term s
available Phone f/9 2 7755
11 5 tfc
STEREO
rad10 amfm , 8
track ta pe comb rna l!on, 4
speaker
s ound
system
Balance $109 56 or eas y
term s Call 992 3965
11 5 tfc
ELECTROLUX Swee per de luxe
model Complete Wtlh a ll
c lean1ng aftachment s and
uses paper bags Slightly used
bu t c lean s and looks like new
Will ' sel l for S37 25 cash or
terms ava11abte Ph one 992
7755 ,

11

5 tf c

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

LOSE We igh t Wi th New Shape
Tablets and Hydrex Water
P1lls at Dutton Drug , M1d
dlepor t, and Nelson Drug
11 5 Jt p

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

pa1d tor all makes and
models of mob1le homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13-ttc

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

--------------OLD FURNITURE , oak tables ,

o.

RUTLAND - Close In - 45
acres, fenced, s~ocked pond,
minerals, 12 ac:res timber, 10
acres lr llable JUST Sll ,OOO
MIDDLEPORT - Busrness
room w1th lovely 3 B. R.
apartment over H W. floors
&lt;;arpeted Dining room
Central
H. W
heal
$20.000 .00.
POMEROY - 1 story frame,
3 B R , bath, lots of kitchen
cabrnels, paneling, tile, lots
of ground. $7.~00 .00 .
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES, CALL FOR
YOUR NEEDS TODAY.
99'1-2259 or 992-2568

"

POMEROY LANDMARK!
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
Phone 99'2-2181

unfurnished
apartments
Phone 992 5434
4 12 tfc

3 11 tfc

r-----------------

E

FLA T Saxophone ,
reasonable 992 7685

very

11 1 6tp

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

FURNISHED apt 5 rooms and GRAVEL sand , Mason sand ,
bath w•th enclosed back
lrmestone, P 1f Run by th e ton
porch Also, furnt shed apt , 3
Deltvered Phone 446 11 42
rms and bat h, ftrst floor
10 18 tfc
Phone 992 2937
11 5 4t c FIREWOOD for s ate Call 742
- - - - - -- - - - - - -4831
10 29 26tc
TRAILER space, 2 miles from
Pom eroy, Rt 143 Phone 992
5858
A FEW new band •nstrument s
Contact Renee Stone 992 7567
10 27 ft c
9 4 tfc
2 BEDROOM tra 11er at Hyse ll
Run Phone 992 3975 or 992 SEWING Machines, brand new
2571
Zig Zag i'h niCe walnvt t ab le.
In anginal cartons Never
10-27 tfc
used
Clearance on ' 74
Models
(O nly
a
tew
4 ROOM furn•shed apt Close to
available). S43 40 cash or
Powell's Super Vatu , phone
terms available Phone 992
992 3658
7155
10 13 tfc
10 15 ffc
---- - ~-------2 BEDROOM cottage at Rock -~ ------ -- --- Springs 1dea1 for sc hool LOCU ST post s, 22 Rem10gton
and 1 72 acre lot Phone 742
personnel,
adults
only ,
3656
referen-ce des1red Phon e 992
10 18 26tp
2789
11 3 tfc

Journal."
, In 1911, Galbra•th Rogers Yard Sales
TRAILER space on pnvate lot,
1les from Pomeroy Phone
completed the first transconti- GARAGE Sale •• Ray Young's , 3367m,7743

_________ ____ _

Employment Wanted

17 years of foreign occupation. WILL do bab ys•tt•ng In mv

---......---------2 BEDROOM double wide
mob•le home in Syracuse No
c hildren or pets , deposit
requ~red Phone 992 2441 after

hom e day or night Phone 992
s 14 2,
10 JO 6tc

A thought for the day : British
writer Willlam McFee said,
6 p m
"Re&amp;pOOS!bility's like a strmg WILL DO babysitt ing in my
10 29 tfc
that we can see only the middle
home Phone 992 7126
TRAILER , 2 bedrooms , Adults
10 27 ttc
of. Both ends are out of sight. "
only Phone 992 3324
10 18 ttc

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

·--------------I

1 Classified Ads
I

I

1

bring you

1

extra cash

I

1970 VAL IANf65x 12, 3bedro0m
fully carpeted , L·P gas heat
Phone 992 7751
8 25 tfc

I Wanted To Buy

I
I CASH SSSS for JUnk cars co m
plete Frye's Trock and A.uto
I
Parts. Rutland , Oh 10 Phone
1 742
6094

for
I
I___.shopping
__________
sprees ,
...;

Mobile Homes f~ Sale

10 16 26tc

2

BEDROOM
trailer
1n
Syracuse , close to school No
c hildren or pets Depos1t
requ~red Phone 992 2441 after
6 30 p m
10 18 tfc

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
· Pomeroy Route 3

FREE ESTIMATE
Fully Insured
" TIRED
OF : "
Dry Red, llchy Sktn Red , Smelly
Hard WaterThen cal l us for a FREE
Waler Analysts
Rtghl Now At ,

CULLIGAN
WATER
CONDITIONING

NEW LISTINGS - This new
home Is ready for you . 3
bedrooms with closets, oak
trim, and kitchen, plus garage.
Lot 100 by 400 Only $20,000.00,
near T . P
RUTLAND Large older
home in Rutland, 4 bedrooms,
bath, garage, and barn. All for
only $12,000.00
49 ACRES - On good gravel
road, water tap and old house
with garage
LAUREL CLIFF - 6 rooms,
bath, electric heal, level lot
and garage. Needs paint but
will sell for only $7500.00.
HUNTING LAND Lots of
young limber (90 ·Acres!
maybe, gas well for heat, and
old house.
BUY A HOME AND SAVE
YOUR MONEY. PAYMENTS
WILL SOON PAY FOR YOUR
ESTATE .

D&amp;D
OONSTRUCTION

./

Known &amp;
Reliable Service

PHONE
949·3832 or 843·2667

All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING

THE DEPENDABLE
OONTRACTING CO.
Interior, Exterior
Decorating an'd

REMODELING?

Remodeling
IINYL SIDING

Keep out the cold and cut the ~ost of heating!
Dress your home up warm for cold days
ahead. Siding: Insulates, adds beauty, is
durable, adds value, is colorful. Siding can be
installed anytime. Ask us about Soffit, Fascia,
Gutters and Downspouts, too.
FREE ESTIMATE

JOHNSON
MASONRY
992-7608
Rt. 7 &amp; Union Ave.

Pomeroy,

PH. 992-7454 or
992-7129

Free Esftmates, Middleport, Q.·:
Water, Electric, Gas, Sewer
ltnes,
installed.
Work
guaranteed.
Dozer,Backhoe,Trucks
Limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
CommerciaiJResidential
Construction &amp; Remodel

o.

S.K EXCAVATING

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

COMPANY
777 Pearl Street
Middleport. Ohio
Phone 992.5367 or 992·3861

FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup and Delivery

On State Rt . 124, 112 m1 . from
Route 7 by -pass towards
Rutland

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

Ph. 992-5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanical Work

GREAT

·COUNTRY

992-5162

Open Mon . · Sat.
8A M.- 6 P. M.

Syracuse, Ohio

C BRADFORD, Auctioneer

STEREO.

:) EPTIC

Complete Ser¥1ce

FOR FREE e st 1mates on
alum1nllm
replacement
w•ndows, s •d lng. storm doors
and wmdows, Ra •llng Phone
Cl1a'rles L1ste , Syra cuse, Ohio
Carl
Jacob ,
Sales
Representative.
V
V
Johnson and Son, In c
4 30 tfc

TAN KS
c lea n ed
Modern Sa nitation, 99 2 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 tf c

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

92.1
WMPQ.FM

PIAN O tun 1ng and r epa1r
Phone Charles sco tt , 992·37 18
Midd ,lepor~- Pomerov
_ _________ _ _9_':_32tp ·,~..~:.,..---,=:-:-,..,..,-,..=cr-...U.

30
30
30
30

7
8
9
10

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
p m ~ Wash mgton Debates for the 70s
p m - The Gunslingers
·
- The Underworld
- Loc:a l Elect1on Retu rns

CHANNEL FIVE PROGRAMS NOT SEEN IN GALLIPOLI S
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1974
6 00 - Sunnse Sem tnar 4, Summer Se mester 10.
6 25 - Farm Report 13.
6 30- F1ve Mmutes to Ltve By 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8 , The
Story 13 ; School Scene 10
6 · 35 - Columbus Today 4
6· 45 - Morning Report 3, Farmtime 10.
7 00- Toda y 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10 , Farmer's Daughter 13;
Yogt' s Gang 6
7 30 - New Zoo Revue 6. Ltdsville 13
a· 00 - New Zoo Revue 13, Capt Kanga roo 8, 10 ; Jeff 's Collie 6.
Sesame St. 33
8:25- Jack LaLanne 13 , Capt Kangaroo 10.
a· 30 - Brad y Bunc h 6
B· 55- News 13
·
9 00 - Paul Dr xon 4, AM 3. Phil Donahue 15, Wrld Wrld West 6;
Bullwink le 8; Movie " F1ve Week s tn a Balloon " 13, Cover to
Cover 33.
9:25 - Chuck Whrle Reports 10
9, 30 - Not For Wom en Only 3, HazelS , Tattletales 10
10. 00 - Joker's Wrld 8, 10; Company 6. Name Thai Tune 3, IS
10 30 - Gamb1t 8, 10 , Winning Streak 3, 4, 15 , Ph1l Donahu e 4
11:00 - Password 13 . High Rollers 3, 15, Now You See It 8, 10 ;
•
$10.000 Pyramid 6
11 ' 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15, Brady Bunch 13. Lu cy Show
6; Lov~ of L•fe 8, 10 , Sesame St 33
11 · 55 - CBS News 8 , Don !mel's World 10.
12: 00 - Jackpot 3 , 15, Password6 , News 8, 10 ,. Bob Braun's 50 50
Club 4
12:30 - Searctl for Tomorrow 8, 10 , Split Second 6 ; Ce lebnty
Sweepstakes 3, 15 , Afternoon w1th DJ 13
12:55- NBC News 3, 15.
'
1: 00 - News 3, All My Chrldren 6, 13, Not For Women Only 15,
Phrl Donahue 8, Young &amp; Reslless 10.
•
1: 15 - Let's All Srng 33.
1: 30 - As the Wocld Turns 8, 10, Jeopardy 3, 4, 15 , Let 's Make A
Deal 6, 13
2: 00- Days of Our Lr ves 3, 4, 15 , Guiding Llghl8, 10 , Newlywed
Game 6, 13 .
2' 30 - Doctors 3, 4, 15 , Edge ol Nights , 10 ; Girl In My Life 6, 13.
3·00 - Another World 3. 4, IS . General Hospital 6, 13, Price is
Rrghl 8, 10 ; RFD 20.
3:30- One Life to L tve 13, Match Game 8, 10, Lassie 6 , How to
Survive a Marriage 3, .4, 15 , Antiques 20, lTV Utilization 33
4. 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Sesame St 33, Tattletales 8; Somerset
15, Gilligan's Is 6, $10,000 Pyramtd 13, Bonanza 4 ; MovJe
'' Fun tn Acapulco" 10
4: 30 - Bonanza 15 , Bewrlched 3, Lucy Show 8, ABC Aflerschool
Specral 6. 13.
5:00- Mr. Rogers 20, 33, Merv Gnff ln 4 , FBI3 , Andy Griffith 8
5. 30- Elec Co. 33 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20, News 6 , Tratl s Wesl
15 , Beverly Hillbillies 8, I Dream of Jeannte 13
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, ABC News 13 , News 6 ; Elec. Co 20;
D1agnosttc &amp; Prescnpltve Teachtng of Reading 33.
6:30 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, IS. Bew itc hed 6; Gomer Pyle 13; Zoom
20, Your Future Is Now 33.
7:00 - News 10, What's My Line 8 , Truth or Cons 3, 4; Celeb
Sweepstakes3 ; Zoom 22 ; I Spy 15, Bowling for Dollars 6 , Zee
Cookmg Schools 20, Know Your Schools 33
7 30 - Let's Make A Deal 6; Mel Til Ir s 8, Polrce Surgeon 3;
Name That Tune 4; Episode Action 33 , The Judge 10 . To Tell
the Truth 13 ; Book Beal20 ; Epis ode Action 33.

AUToMOBILE •nsuran ce been
ca ncelled ?
Lost
your
operator 's license. Call 992
7478
6 15 tfc

.,

·I ·

~~

SEP riC
TANK S cleaned ,
reasonable r ates Ph 446
4782, Gal11polls John Russell,
owner and operator
_
51~ffc

'

Real Estate For Sale

LINCOLN HILL

Older lO·room frame, 4 bedroom
house, modern kitchen, formal dining
room·, 2·.full baths, new wiring and
plumbing, carpetetr·' throughout, 3
years ago. Nice yard.

FOR APPOINTMENT

CALL M2-7684
Business Services

BU I LOING lot, 80ft . frontage x
165ft. The second lot on left on
R rwervlew Drlvt. L'" co ln CHARlES R Hatfield , mini
HilL Pomeroy , Ohio If in backhoe and dozer, water
terested , call 992 3230 after 5
lines. drams , footers, brush
P m.
c;: lean1ng Rt. 1, Rutland , Oh10
Phone 742 6092
10 17 tfc
11 3 25tc

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

ELECTRIC RANGES
1 Avocado Green Elec. - 1 Copper Elec - 4 While
E lectrics. Prtced $69 .95 and up.
GAS RANGES
2 Avocado Green- 1 Harvest Gold- Several white gas
ranges to choose from. Priced 139.95 and uu.

----SPECIAL OF WEEK---...,

BABY BED,
COMPLETE

.

NOW
ONLY

$2495

MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASHERS
1 Avocado Green Washer - 1 Wh tte Washar- 1 Harvest
Gold Dryer - 1 White Dryer. '
(Check the new prtce and save on lhese USED MODELS.

------------'
o•oe:.LL Al•nement , tacat~d

Several Bedroom Suites
Good Selection Breakfast Sets
Wringer Washers - ~ - ·

beh ind Rutland Grade Schocl1,
comp le te front end serv1ce.
brakes and tuneups, wheel s
balanced e lectronically Open
a to 8 Clatly. can 742 3232 on
Sunday for appt
7 16 tfc

2 USED FREEZERS

IN STOCK

-

89 .95 up
20.00 up
39.95 up

2 Just Sold!
2 Just Arrived!

26 Chests &amp; DresserS ~ - - - - - - ~ •
19.95 up
Coppertono Utility tablnet - - - • . •
- 79.95
Old Dining Room Suite, good shape • - • . 169.95
Several Livong Room Suites &amp; Sofas • . - • . 39.95 up
Loads at Odd Chairs - Rockers, Recliners, and Easy
Chairs
10.00 up
Mahovany ~sk, 44"x22", and Chair - - - - - 79.95

.

,..__......__,SPECIAL THIS WEEK---......,

___________ _

110 lb. Set Of

.......

Veterans· s2o down will put
you rn this homel

love!
And if you were really ready for !be convent, would it worry
you that hlsk!Sses are no longer sexy• -HELEN

+++

SNA :

Maybe you should contemplate a while longer before you
decide to take the veil. Discuss your doubts with a priest - and
think of all the good you can do lor the church right in your own
community.
Only the special few are right for convent life. Are you one of
them?- SUE

+++
Dear Rap:
l didn't Uke the school so I started cutting. When my father
found out he called me filthy names that made me hate myself.
Then l got a job, but he kept following me, making sure l was
working. His spying made me feel Uke a crlmnal, so l started to
be one : I stole something.
The boss lound out, 541! ran away, but got caught a week
later and served time in the detention center. Two weeks!
When l got back, the whole world had turned against me : no
friends, no job, no chance of being trusted again. l am about to
qu1t high school, as l can't face walking down !be halls where
kids laugh and make smart remarks. ! just nm out and hide in an
alley and cry.
I even trtell to kill myself, but the m ... of pills weren't
enough. H l can't find my way back soon, I know how many pills
to take this time! Please help before l take that route.- NAME

WITHHELD

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Try not to let Jealousy ga tn the

upper hand when someone
you 're fond of seems to be
paytng more attention to another than he IS to you
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You 're apt to overreact when a
member of your famtly doesn't
show ttle proper apprec 1atton
for somethmg you ve gone out
of your way to do
GEMINI (May 21-June 20111
wlll prove annoymg for both
parttes 1f you do a servtce tor
another but let h1m know your
heart Isn't 1n ~~
CANCER (June 21 - July 22)
It won I work out as you hope tf
you leak to appease one
you'}Ci angered wtth a gift or
mater~at peaceRolfenng Try a
Sincere . Simple apology
LEO IJuly 23·Aug. 22) You
tencfto be overly protecl t'le Qf
those who are '" your chargri
The measures you 11 use w111
not be understood or well received
VIRGO (Aug. 23 - !l~nt 22)

the line? The world won't "turn agamst you" for one mistake, il
you hold up your head, smile, and let the kids know all that is
behind you.
Knock off the gwlt and tears, and hang m there! - SUE

'

+++

DearN.W.:
You didn't like school, so you cut; you d1dn ' t Uke your
lather's interference, so you stole; you couldn't lace your boss,
so you ran away; you can't face yoW' schoolmates, so you try
pills. For Pete's sake, stop running !
Hasn't anyone ever told you it takes guts to get through life?
Where's YOW'S? - HELEN
For your copy of " What Is a Crush ? ·What Is a First Love?·
What Is Getting to Know Yourself•" Send a WNG , selfadl!ressed STAMPED envelope to Helen and Sue Bottel, P . 0 .
Box 23057, Sacramento, Calif., 95823.

Jltt11MID!1rn®&amp;al ···-"J ..-~ ,_
t&gt;v ~H 1'\1111 AIINOlll '""'Ill Ill I r l

Unseramble these four Jumbles,

Dear Name Withheld :
Now look here: You aren't the only gir1 whO ever hit trouble,
and your troubles aren't as black as they -m. So you got caught
stealing and did time. Since when Is two weeks in Juvy the end of

one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

o 00 -

That's My Mama 6, 13, Sons &amp; Daughters 10 ; Little
House oo the Prairie 3, 4, 15, Men Who Made the Movies 20,
Jack the Ripper 33
8 30 Movie "The Great Ice RIP"Off" 13 ; Movie " The
Forgotten Man " 6
•
9 00 - Cannoo8, 10; Masterpiece Theater 33; Lucas Tanner 3, 4,
15.
9· 30 - David Castle In Concert 20.
10 oo-Pelrocelll3, 4, 15 ; Man Hunter 10 ; Get Christie Love 13;
Words and Music 6, 8, 15 ; News 20 , Burglar. Prooflng 33
10 30- News 20 , Legacy 33.
11 00 - News,a, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3; Mlssloo Impossible 6, Untouchables
13 ; Janakl33; Movie " Cry Rape" 8; MDvle "Shane" 10.
,
12· 30 - Wild Wild 6; Wide World Speclal13
1. 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4.
2. 00- News 4, 13

7 30 p .m -

&amp;: 30 p.m . -

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
Country and Western U.S.A. (C)
Superstar Theatre (2 Hrs.)

I

l

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Soft dnnk
I Spy in
5 Arrange
Canaan
m lots
2 Popeye's
11 Descended
Oyl
12 Carl or Rob
3 Hurnedly
13 Go lor
(colloq ,
14 Stanza of
4 wds.)
e1ght lines
4 Had
15 "All About
dinner
5 C1rca
6 Religtous
16 Kook
body
17 Grassland
Rest
7
18 Famous
8 G reatly
Boston
( 4wds )
street
9 Daydream
20 Tradmg
10 Handled
place
16 Ibsen
21 Fat
hero me
22' Pennsyl19 Junto
vania c1ty
23 Dame
Nellie
25 Carried on
26 Seaweed
21 Droop
28 Whirl
29 Zoroas-

Yesterday's Answer "

20 CIVil
War
Umon
hero
23 Italian
sweet
wme
24 "- Rtgby"
25 Undulate
27 Totter

30 Cake
Without flour
31 Zeal
33 "Picmc"

author
36 Order ol
anunals
( suff.)
37 Gown's
partner

· tnamsm's
good book
32 Perc hed
33 - de

France
34 Constella-

tion' s mam
s tar
35 Consecrate
37 Kmd ol

file
38 Loaf
39 Counterte nor
40 More
ChiChi
41 Equal

DYNAD

I

One letter s1mply stands for another. In this sample A Is

used for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc Smgle lett ers.
apostrophes, the len gth nnd formation of the words are aU
hmts Each dny the code lett ers are different

I I

IUNTJUBt
I I J

CRYPTOQUOTES

"
T

0

JUG\ WHAT WAS THE
WP::ITEiR:' :&gt; POiN'T'?

I

I
arranre the circled !etten
v
"'i
to (onn
I
L'::::::~~~;.A~~~~~~~=·u~r~r~e:•:~~bytheabovec~n.
Lr_--...:,.=:::•::..:ll=•:..::a=IIISWIII==-.:.__-1 D [ XX)
INTJEF

Now

the IUrpriH anJWff,

MU · WB!BYMENBA

YOAVBI

YOE

QXM

NEVIMHDWBA

lNVZ

FZ

EM

NEV IMHDWVNM E

VBRRNEP

ZMD

0

NA

0

WBRBF·

XB

EBBHA

U

(Aiuwerw lomorruw)

I

Jumbln: ACRID ELATE MEMBER BOTHER
Aluwrr• Sufplies irun in Ru11ia- RED MEAT

EAST

-

AMDIWB

DEGEMQE
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: HE WHO KNOWS OTHERS IS WISE,
· HE WHO KNOWS HIMSELF IS ENLIGHTENED -CHINESE
WISDOM
(@ 191' Kine Featurea Syndicate, lnc:.)

"GROOVY, MEET US
'YAWL.-DRIVE.AND
NC. ONE OF OUR
TV C.AMERAS!'

IF'
GIRL.
I=RIENO OlD LEAVE
1-lER CAR THERE, IT
WILL SOON HAVE A
TV BUG.

•
0 If ...... ,.,.,. ,

"o'"'" ""''•"Ur

,o , l).., ,(:
'tV

North

East

South

2.

Redbie

2+

4•

Pass

Pass
Pass

Bar Bells, all metal
Baby 5·Drew&amp;r Chest &amp; Robe
Combination - - - - - . .
Priced to Sell
- • 29.95 up
22 Sets of Tables • - - · · 2 Mayleg Portable Washers and
1 Dryer • • • • • . - • . - · - . • • Priced to Sell
Refrigerators, grHn, gold, copper and white
49.95 up

We illso buy households of furnlh.rre at TOP
PRICES.
',

Rutland Furniture

KINGSBURY
MOBILE HOMES

747 4211
Set~

1100 E'tMain
Pomeroy, 0.
' Call992-7034
Open Daily tl to 7

Rutland,O.
Herb, Dave

or Mike G.ra.te

I.

~U'O

CIU•I~ J

CAPTAIN EASY

Pass

VAMPIRe " .sHow WIL-L &amp;f
SliHSATIO"-'Al! .. AND

Open mg lead - K•

By

O~wald

·'

1HAIJt&lt; YOU 1 L.ORO VLJU,; J
l'M 5-UJt!! OI)Jl' "YU&amp;.IHI-IO~P

HER'eW YOJJR' f'501000!

,,

&amp; James\Jacoby

One of the worst hab1ts a
br1dge player can acqutre IS
that of makmg one btd too
many. West's takeout double
of one s pade was reasonable.
The hand m1ght belong to his
s1de. But after North' s redouble, ot should have been ap·
parent that South was going

w

.what tlQU
plannin' t' build
a ten· stor1.1
bUIIdin' on

top of!

~·WINiiiiiiiNiiiiEii.itWINiiiiiKiiiLEiiil,.....-.:;""';;:;;:rr.:-~r.refiiiiiE5.rrHiii:Pi~-nr.
~~ffii£i~~~~~)Yi~~~~f,
5f31oe5 IT HoL~
I CAN'T uNDER·

• spade
to
md
up playing
contract.
Hence, some
there 1
was no reason for West to b)d
two hearts.
West's kmg of clubs was
allowed to hold the f1rst trick.
He could have beaten the
hand by an 1mmed1ate shin
to a low heart, but no one
could figure that one out.
West ~h iTted to the kmg or
diamonds
South grabbed that one;
drew trumps; cashed the ace
of clubs, r 11ITed dumm)''s. last
club and threw West m with ,
the queen of diamonds
Now West l;;d a low heart to
his partner's queen, but South
knew exactly what to do.
West was marked with live
hearts so South JUSt let East
hold the trtck. East had to
lead a club or a d1amond and
whatever he led would allow
South to rulf in dummy and
discard his 10 of hearts.
South m1ght well have
worked out this same play if
West had not made that one
unnecessary bid. He m1ght
have, but we w1ll never know.

KILL TIME.WHAT
HAVE I 00T

" '/ -..,

10 LOBE'?

w"·'= ·. l &amp;TANDWHY

1&gt;&lt;05E ll&lt;REE

~L.5w'ii'Lr.- WE

'TUilNOVEIL
E5PEC1ALLY /WDI'¥3
OU~ CIIEA'nVE

,.4"'""
';

'
AIJLE¥' OOP

'

'

.

FRANKlY.·50 IS
AH '!!'- TH' RJN

50INa'ON
WIONT" OUT'A tr-

HA$

I'M aas~NG THE Fl5H AND CHIP
,JOINT. 1}6 r-tew LADY '&gt;0/&lt;LIA\

TI-lE weALtHY

F~

~TwANr

TRADE ·

l
'

'

n:e.n :1•!&amp;8i!l
The brdd mg has been

West

5

Pass

North
1'
3•

East
Pass
Pass

South
2•
3•

Pass

44

Pa~

?

1HE IMPI'RlAciST,C~TALIST
WEST~ HAYING PIIC6CEM5

WE NEVER f.IAVE HARD
11MES IN 'THE SCMET U/iiON

You, South, hold
•AK84 'K2 +Q54.AQ54
What do you do now"'
A -The right bid is just live

clubs, but we would not criticize
a jump to six. ,
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of btdding three clubS
your partner has JUmped to three
hearts over you r two clubs Wh~t
do you do now?
)

\

(

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

5

West
Dble

DOZER work , land clearing by
the acre hourly or contract,
farm ponds, roads , etc Large
dozer and operator with over
20 yeers experten ce Pull 1ns
Exca¥atlng , Pomeroy, Ohto
Phone 992 241B
12 19 tfc ,

Live in the rolling hills of
Southern Ohio In your own 3
BR., all electric mobile
hOme in Southern Ohio's
newe!st rnoblte home park. 15
rnin.
from 4,.. Athens or
Pomeroy. Price reduced to
get this mobile home per~
sl•rted. Set up &amp; ready to
move Into. For further
det•ll~ contact. . • '

Show me the lellow who can "cope" with his girlfriend's idea
of becommg a nun, and I'll show you a young man who lsn 't 1n

1974

'

NOrth-South vulnera'ble

sEwi-NG MACHINES Repa ir
service , all make s, 992 2284
The F abric Shop. Pomeroy
Authorized S•nger Sales and
Service We sharpen Scissors
3-29 tfc

_.~.....

SNA :

For Wedneaday, Nov. 6,

.J2

' EXCAVATING , dozer , loader
an4 ~ backhoe
work, septic
tanl::s mstalled , dump trucks
and lo boys for h ire , will haul
ftll dtrt , top soil , limestone &amp;
gravel. can Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089,
night phone 992 3525 or 992 5232
2 11 tfc

e:

Helen and Sue:
I'm a 17-year.(lld girl who has been contemplating entering
the convent. I made the mistake of telling my lriends and now
whenever I'm around, they act as if I'm a saltlt.
Their language changes, they don't laugh as loud, they seem
WJComlortable and they make me !eel so lonely .
My boyfnencl, 19, is ljfrald to touch me for fear I'll proclaun
him a sinner. We used to pet a lot, but now he doesn't even kiss
ml!'in that special sexy way. We've been datingfoW' months ~nd
our relationship Is crumbling. He can't cope with the idea of me
bemg a nun . What to do? - STILL NEEDS AFFECTION

+J 3

tfc

EXC&amp;:LSIOR S::ol;:t::::W::::or-ks, .
Main St , Pomeroy All kinds.
of salt water pellets , wa ter
nuggets, block salt and own
Oh•o River Salt , Phone 992
3891
6 5 lfc

NllD? But !be Louely Hearl

Now. 6 , 1974

Thts year you w111 be shoOting
tor several ma10r goals AI·
though tl 1s n I likely all w1ll be
a1ta1ned Important gams w111
be made lha1 w111 be most
beneftclal

,KJ954
,Q
+ KQB
+ , 1097642
.KQI09
.86 53
SOUTH (D)
• KQJ974
• A 106

SEI'ti' IC TANKS . AROBIC.
SEWAGE
SYS TEMS
CLEANED.
REPAIRED
MILLER SA NITATION ,
STEWART. OHIO PH 662

-- --

~

• 86

• 2

---4T-------.-------

REAI:&gt;V .MlX
CONCRETE
delivered r ight to your
prolect Fast and easy Free
estimates. Phone 992 3284
Goegl'eln ~ Ready . Mtx Co ,
Middleport. Oh1o
6·30-tfc

By H'i~len and Sue Bottel

I

Cl' 'PRor-a•u• NOT SEEN IN GALLIPOLIS
NORTH
• A 10 53
• 87 32
+AS
.A74
WEST

One you care a great deal
about has done somethmg lha t
has hurt you Bnng 1t out'" the
open The other party ts com
ptetely unaware
LIBRA (Sept. 23- 0ct. 23) Be
careful of the type of outs1de
tnterests you tnvol ve· yourself
1n atlhts ltme You could g et •n
O'ler your purse
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
If you re not wtlltng to share the
ltmehght no w w1th others who
co-ope ra l e m your ac ~
compl1shments hard fee11ngs
wtll result
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·
Dec. 21) You re go1ng to se~
cret ly resent havmg Ia do
somethtng for another you fee t
1s tmpostng on you unfairly but
you s t1t1 wont ment ion 11
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan
19) S hould you be tnvolved •n
some form ot romant tc 1ntngue
1t's not ltke lv the secret w111 go
undetected
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb.
1 QJ You re ltkety to get the
short end of any agreements
you enter 1nto today Don t say
"yes to someth•ng Without
thlnktng 1n order to be a n1ce
guy
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Don t work on th1ngs that you
don t smcerely enjoy dotng
You II be far more product1ve
d01ng those tasks when your
mood changes

fi:l:l'
:1:1'

Y rtl.erd•f•

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

4

'j!lb'ol"b'olr :e:~: :~:~: -G-~e~~~~~n-ue.,W~l l l~-tlilli~~~~~~~c
:
"""''~~:,~i;~'lli.I;Sl~-,liillllllll':~:~""~l

WIN AT BRIDGE

One too many hurts -opponents

-· .....- ---

I

337 N. 2, Middl~port
992-2550

From a shelf to a house.
Painttn~lt stding , roofing,
paper hang1ng, kitchen
cabinets, etc .

593·6366

--.---...r

WILL trim or cut tr,es · and
shrubbery, also c lean out
FURNI S HED
apartment, NICE f1'1e room and bath O!'le
basem e nts and attics Phone
floor plan at ~05 Spr1ng Ave ,
utilit 1es furi)IShed , su1tabte
949 3221 or 742 4441 ,
'
Pomeroy
Redone
and
tor two working men or
,
. 10 18 26tc
red~corated
msrde
and
out
r e l•red c ouple Liv ing room ,
New Lu xa .re fUrna ce system
kitchen, s howe r' and battl On
Reasonably priced Phon e PIANO lunmg and repatring,
matn h1ghway , Mason, w Va ~ 992
Lane Dan 1e1s, Phone .99~ 2082
5292
Pt1on e 773 -5147
Ref e rence Elberfe ld s
10·27
tfc
1021 tfc
10 25 12t p
•,

ALL·WEAntER

--------- -=-----,

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

nental fltght. It took bini 49
Success Road Ph one 667 3462 .
11 3 Jtc
days to fly from New York City __ ________ __ .!.,'_3 6tp
to Pasadena, Calif., with YARD Sa le, Wednesday, Thurs -rwo 4 room and bath apts In
Middleport For Information,
day and Frtday at 63 Rutlan d
frequent stops.
call 992-2550 or 742 6551.
St , M1dd lepor t .
....,
In !!Ito, President Franklin
7 3 lfc
11 s 3tc
D. Roosevelt was r&lt;Hllected to - - - - -- -- - - -- - YARD Sale on Rt 7 at eno of ~OUNTRY Mobile Home Park :'
.n unprecedented third term. Forest Run Rd , Wednesday R t 33 , ten m lies north of
Pomeroy Large lots w1th
'""tria opene d th e
If ram. Ttwrsd ay
In 1-•
....,, ,...
concrete patios, s!Ciewalks,
11 5 1tp
,·unners and off street
reconstructed Vienna State - -- - - - - - - - - - - parking. Also, spaces for
Opera House and formally
small t;rallers Phone ~92 7479
celelrated Its liberation from
7 2l ·lfc

All that ts needed for a free
estimate IS a phone call.
Ple ase Phone :

CREMEAN-S · CON c~ ETE'
dtpUv e red Monday through
Saturday a nd evenmgs
Phone 446-1142
6 13 ttc

Wood Burning Stove

J AND 4 ROOM furn1shed and

3~75

Exterior Work

10

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For Rent

Lawn Mowers

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Roofing Co

TUESDAY , NOVEMBER 5, 1974
6:00 - News 3, 4, B, tO, 15 , ABC News 13, Sesame St 20; News 6 ,
Diagnost iC &amp; Prescr 1pt1ve Tea c hmg of Readtng 3J
6 . 30 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, Journey to Jap,an JJ. Bewitched 6 ,
Gomer Pyle 13
7 · 00 - Elec Co 20, Bowlmg for Dollars 6 Electton Ntght
Coverage 3, 4, 8, 10, 13, 15
7 30 - Wild. Wild World of An1mals 6 , RFD 20, Mar co Sportl 1te
33.
8. 00 - Election Coverage 6 . Amen ca 20, 33
8 30- Eventng at Symphony 33, Elec tton Coverage 20.
10 00 - Mountain Scene 33
10 30 - Mele Hawaii 33 1
11 00 - News 3. 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
1· 30 - Janaki 33

3035

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

REDEOORATING?

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Interior &amp;

1

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

cl ocks, 1ce boxes, brass beds ,
d tShes, desks, or complete
households Write M
o
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ca ll 992 7760
5 13 lfc

any organ•zatlon , phone 992

Racine, 0.

Phone 949 3821 or 9.49 3161
Q.ELAND
Racme , Oh10
Cr1tt Bradford
608 E.
REALTV _____________s ttc

MAIN . . . . . . .~..~~
POM.E ROY~.

BOWERS
REPAIR

949-3295

5 RM HOUSE bath and lot 1n
F IR EWOOD for sale Phone
Le 1 ar t Falls Call 247 '1581
992 3363 or 99 2 3312
after4pm
10 24 12 tp
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1970 FORO MAVERICK
"295
Local 1 owner, good w s w ttres, deluxe tn t tnm , wheel
c:over s. rad1o, 6 cy l , rea l economy w1th sfd trans , blue
fin , n1ce

Gallipolis, o.

For Sale

Help Wan'ed

Business Service_s

Television Log

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8- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomero~, 0 , Tuc~d&lt;l), Nl•v 5, 1!1~:!::·:·:·:·:::-:·:·:·:-:·:·:.,.:·:·:::·:::::::::·..;.;:·.·:·:::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::;::;:;.;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::.

Ethics, taxes
t 1111 t 1\ ! t\'d

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to(\l

p.tJ-.!l'

died on Tuesday

Miller goes home to bed

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The U. S. Senate contest ts for the seat now held by Sen.
Howard M. Metzenbaum, [){)hto Metzenbaum was named by
Gilhgan last December to an mterm1 term, repl.acmg Repubhcan
Wilham B. Saxbe, who restgned to become U. S. attorney
general.
Glenn, 53,first aspired to the Senate m 1964, two years after he
became the first American to orBit the earth in a spaceship Bu1
his campaign was short~irctnted by an mjury sust;uned m a
bathroom fall. He ran again m 1970, but was defeated m the
Democratic prtmary by Metzenbaum.
Thoroughly Grounded
Thts time, he has conducted a well-fmanced and wcll-orgaruzed
campatgn, and has thoroughly grounded himself on the issues.
He has taken advantage of his status as a non.politictan and
pointed out his background m sctence and technology could be
used in the Senate .
Perk, 60, has twtce been elected mayor and ts the btggest
Republtcan vote.geller m heavily Democrattc Cuyahoga County.
He has ctted hts record of balancing Cleveland's budget and
fight;ng crune, and he clauns Glenn lacks the experience of an
elected official.
Also on the Senate ballot are Richard B. Kay, 56, a Cleveland
attorney running as an Independent; Kathleen G. Harroff, 43,
Bedlord mdependent; and write-in candtdates John O'Netll and
Ronald E. Girkms.
Republican Lt. Gov. John W. Brown, 60, who has held the offtce
for 16 years, faces a stiff challenge from state Rep. Richard F.
Celeste, D-Cleveland, a fanner Rhodes scholar who rose to
leadership rank in only his second term tn the Ohio House.
Although the governor and heutenant governor are elected
separately, Celeste was handpicked by Gtlltgan to be i)is running
mate. Also on the ballot IS Hennan Kirsch of the SocialiSt
Workers party.
Democratic Attorney General William J. Brown, 34, is opposed
by Republtcan George C. Smith, 39, Franklin County prosecutor.
Feud Resumed
A Ferguson-Tracy feud for state audttor ts resumed with
Democratic deputy auditor Thomas E. Ferguson, 45, opposed by
Roger W. Tracy Jr ., a Republican attorney from Columbus.
Ferguson's father, auditor Joseph T. Ferguson, defeated the
:Jl;-year-old Tracy in 1970. He had previously defeated Tracy's
father and grandlather.
State Treasurer Gertrude W. Donahey, 65, a Democrat, IS
seeking a second term over Republican Richard H. Harris, a 42year-old legal aide from Wauseon who has never run for
statewide office.
Also making his debut on the statewide ballot is state Sen. Tony
P. Hall, D-Dayton, running agamst the veteran Ted W. Brown,
the secretary of state for 24 years.
Chief Justice C. William O'Neill of tbe Ohio Supreme Court, a
Republican is challenged by Judge Joseph E. O'Neill of the state
appeals court in Youngstown.
Justice Frank D. Celebrezze, Cleveland Democrat, faces
Republican Sheldon A. Taft, Columbus Republican. And Justice
Thomas M. Herbert, Columbus Republican, IS challenged by
Judge Clifford F . Brown, Norwalk, senior judge on the sixth
district court of appeals bench.

Mrs. Ruby Hysell

~

MR board,
trustees
will meet

Mrs. Ruby Hysell, 87, High
St., Mtddleport, died early
Tuesday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
A member of the Middleport
The Meigs County Board of
First Baptist Church, Mrs.
Mental Retardation tn a
Hysell was born Sept.·28, 1887,
in Middleport, the daughter of regular session Monday mght
the late William and Margaret acted to mvite the Carleton
(Dixie) Webb Braley. She was College Trustees to meet with
it soon.
preceded in death by her
Three board members'
husband, Harry, in 1971, and by
tenns
wlll expire and the
two brothers.
Meigs
County
Commissioners
Surviving is a diughter, Mrs.
Charles C. (Margaret Ella) wtll name replacements, it was
reported . Those whose terms
LewiS, Rt. 1, Middleport.
expire
are Ed Kennedy, lrts
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Thursday
at
the Karr and Grace Weber.
A letter will be sent to the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
trustees
of Carleton College
with Rev. Steve Skaggs and
asking
them
to meet with the
Rev. Robert Kuhn officiating.
Burial will be in the Gravel Hill board at the next regular
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends session. It has control of an
may call at the funeral home approved stte for the new
Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to community school.
In other business, Jeanette
9p.m.
Thomas' claim for back pay
was tabled and tt was dectded
that one of the students of the
Community School, David
Tonigh11hru Thursday
Karr, will be picked up by the
Nqv. 5-6·7
community bus.
NOT OPEN
Attending were Manntng
Webster, Rick Crow, Richard
FRI.-SAT.- SUN.
Chambers, Kennedy, Rev.
NOV. 8·9-10
Wtlbur Perrin, Grace Weber
BUTCH CASSIDY ANO
and Margaret Ella Lewts.
THE SUNDANCE KIO
&lt;Technicolor)
Paul Newman
LOCAL TEMJ'S
Calorcar1oons:
The temperature tn downExpert Explorer
town Pomeroy this mormng at
Peace Pipe
11
a.m. was 59 degrees under
Show S1arts 7 p.m.
cloudy skies.

MEIGS THEATRE

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watch with tuning fork accuracy

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WASHINGTON (UP!) .;_ t:oal talks detailed early
today, leaving the nataon on1y a week to brace for a
~; nationwide strike wtd labor and management confused
;:; about how it happened. The United Mine Workers

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expected
polls predicted that only 40 per
cent of the nation's 145 million
votmg age citizens would cast
ballots.
"If thts ts true, the Congress
with whtch I must work here in
Washmgton to , control the
inflatton, strengthen the economy and preserve peace in the
world could be elected by only
21 per cent of the voters," Ford
said.
" I don't think anyone wants
that kind of minority deciston.
So I ask you, my fellow
Americans, to make the time
... to go to the polls and vote for
candidates of your choice."
Not nearly so nonpartisan
were the two congressional
GOP leaders, Sen . Hugh Scott,
R-Pa ., and Rep. John Rhodes,
R-Ariz.
They took a full page advertisement in the New York
Times, openly appealing for
the
election
of
more
Republicans
to
end
Democrattc
control
of
Congress.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Democrats headed today for a
1974 election sweep that would
tighten thetr hold on Congress
and the natton's state houses.
Republicans pleaded for a big
GOP turnout to stem the tide.
President Ford, who had
traveled the country for more
than a month to help GOP
candidates, ISSUed an elect10n
eve appeal to citizens to vote.
His message was bipartisan in
content but Republican m
significance.
GOP strategists fear their
supporters are so turned off by
scandal and a sick economy
that many of them Will not vote
at all.
Democrats basked in the
glow of pubhc opinion polls thai
pointed only to a big win.
The !mal Gallup Poll showed
55 per cent of the voters expected to choose Democrats m
House races , with the figure
rising lo 60 per cent if the
undecideds spltt along the
same hnes.
At stake tn the nat10n's ftrst
post-Watergate election were
35 governorships, 34 Senate
seats and all 435 House seats.
Democrats already dominate
the state houses, 32-18, and
both houses of Congress, 58-42
and 243-187.
A UP! survey indicated
Democrats would gain five
governorships, five seats in the
Senate and at least 20 in the
House.
The consensus of many
predictions to come out during
the final weekend of the
campaign seemed to be that
Democrats would gain about
half a dozen gwernorships a~d
Senate seats and two dozen or
more House seats.
A large turnout has tended m
recent years to favor the
Democrats, because more
Americans identify themselves
with that party than with the
GOP. But this year Republican
leaders believe a low turnout
favors the Democrats.
They are convinced that
Republicans staying at home
cost them five of six recent
special elections for House
seats long held by tbe GOP.
So Ford's message was a get
out the vote appeal. He said

11

The Democrats have car-

tautly had ample time m which
to prove their ability, and
according to the people, they
have failed their test," the
GOP leaders said.
Speaker Carl Albert also took
a partisan line Monday. He
predicted a Democratic gain of
close to 40 seats and S81d that
would make prospects bright
next year for passage of strong
tax reform and national health
msurance legislation.

Ruth Brooks, 53, formerly of
Middleport, died Monday
morning at her residence on
Dana Ave.; Columbus.
Mrs . Brooks was the
daughter of Mrs. Esther Wolfe, '
Cleveland, and the late Purley
Wolfe.
She Is survived by her
husband, Richard, Columbus;
a son, Richard Jr., Grove City;
two daughters, Mary Mullens,
Columbus; Janet Howard,
Columbus; three grandchildren,
three
stepgrandchildren and sisters,
Mrs.
Margaret Aicher,
Columbus, and Mrs. F1orence
Hines, Cleveland, and her
mother,ln-law, Mrs. Bertha
Rice, Middleport.
Funeral services will be
Thursday at 10 a.m. at
Shoyer's Funeral Home on
West Broad St., in Columbus.
Burial will be in the Pleasant
Cemetery, Mt. Sterling.
Friends may call at the
• funeral home Tuesday and
Wednesday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.

( n11hrllled fr om page 1
placed throughout the town .
She announced she wtll hold an
open house at her Pomeroy
Flower Shop on Sunday, Dec. I.
Anderson said that in January
the chamber will work toward
obtaming new Chnstmas
decorations for Christmas,
1975.
Dwight Goins will be contacted by Carolyn Thomas,
SQUAD CALLED
secretary, in regard to the
RACINE - The Racine
annual Christmas parade.
Emergency Squad was called
Attendmg the meeting were for Christopher Allen at 12:30
Reed, Anderson, Mrs Van- p.m . Monday. Allen, who
Meter, Dale Warner, Fred suffered a possible broken leg,
Morrow, Bob Jacobs, E. F. · was taken to Veterans
Robinson, Davis, Ralph Memorial Hospital. On ~un­
Graves, Wenda!! Hoover, Mrs. day, at 10 a.m, the squad was
Thomas, Melissa Corise, called for Mattie Yost, Racine,
Beulah Jones, Ferman Moore who was taken to the Holzer
and Katie Crow.
Medical Center. ·

..

ne" contract by the' Food
Store Employes Union has
averted a strike by A&amp;P
employes in West Virginia
and parts of Ohio and
Kentucky.
"Everything is all right
now and there are no
problems," observed Robert
Allman, the Charleston-area
supervisor for the food
chain. Nearly 60 employes
are affected at 49 stores by
the new contract, but neltlu!r
side elaborated on ils terms.

to cycle rider

SV AC coaches

to meet Thursday
The Southern Valley Athletic
Conference football coaches
will meet at 7·30 p .m Thursday, Nov 14 at Kyger Creek
Htgh School to . ptck the allSV AC 1974 football team. All
nomtnees should be sent to Dan
Cornell, Hannan Trace High
School, Immediately.
Basketball coaches are
asked to bring copies of their
rosters for the annual cage
preview program and football
coaches or athletic dtrectors
wtll begm scheduling next
year's game All high school
pnncipals, athletic dtrectors ,
cwches and superintendents
are tnvtted to attend.

Autos sideswipe
The Meigs County Shenff's
Dept. investigated a two-ear
mishap Monday at 3:55p.m. in
Orange Twp. According to the
department, Lewis E. Pulver,
20, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and Nellie
M
Parkers, 61, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, were headed m
opposite directions when
ne1ther vehtcle could pass, with
the two vehtcles stdeswiping.
No Injuries were reported
and both vehicles suffered
moderate
damage .
No
cilations were Issued.

WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va.
- Head injurtes suffered in a
motorcycle accident early
Saturday has claimed the life
of Teddy Martin, 23, West
Columbia in St. Mary's
Hospital Huntington, Monday,
pushing 'Mason County's highway death toll to e1ght this
year.
Martin, a laborer engaged in
local construction was injured
when the motorcycle he was
drivmg ran off the road in a
curve on Union Road back of
New Haven at the Paul Randolph residence.
Born June 9, 1951, in Paintsville, Ky., he was a son of D.
and Myra Holbrook Martin,
Prestonburg, Ky .
Veterans Memorial Hoopltal
ADMISSIONS Nancy
Nelson, New Haven; Oscar
Imboden, Minersville ;
Margaret Blankenship,
Albany; Wllllam Richmond,
Middleport; Mary King,
Middleport ; Clara Phlllips,
Rutland; Christopher Allen,
Racine; Roy Sands berry,
Middleport; Mary Kau!f,
Pomeroy; Icy Dailey, Portland; Betty Roush, Racirie;
David Grindstafe, Racine;
Mary Lockbourne, Mason;
Judith Steinmetz, Albany.
DISCHARGES - Debbie
Greathouse, Daisy Ankron and
Marie Domigan.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Nov. 4)
Tim Betz, Mrs. Dewey
Burton and son, Sharon Doss,
Mrs. Robert Fetty and
daughter, Alpha Herdman,
Roy Hennann, Artha Horrutby,
Mary Hudson, Wllllam Des,
Melissa Nance, Mrs. Carl Reed
and
daughter,
Kenneth
Saunders, James Thomas,
Dorothy Vonkamecke.

council constder htring, by the
first of year. a safety director,
who would supervise all work
(Births)
being done within the village.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bock, a
Globokar observed that council daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
would actually be creating a Mrs. John Fox, a son, Coalton;
new job but with the right · Mr. and Mrs. Homer Mills, Jr .,
person the village will save a daughter, Syracuse.
money. Council wtll study the
proposal.
,
Pleasant Valley Hospllal
Salem Center PTA was gtven
DISCHARGED - Mrs. Don
permtsswn to solictt m
Btrchfield, Ashton; Mrs .
Pomeroy Nov. 14.
James
Burdette,
Point
Attending were Mayor
Pleasant;
Mrs.
Gunther
Weiss,
Smtth , Ralph Werry, Lou
Apple Grove; Miss Conme
Osborne, William Snouffer.,
Carte, Point Pleasa,nt; Mrs.
Davis, Globokar, Johrl Manley,
Uoyd Price, Galllpblis, and
Mrs. Walton, Chief Webster,
Harry
Davis, Point Pleasant.
Reed and Woolard .

1n addition to the parents, he
is survived by one daushter,
Marcte May Knapp Martin;
brotllers, Douglas,
four
Romeo, Gary and Randy
Marttn, all of Prestonburg; one
sister, Modell Martin, also of
Prestonburg; an aunt, Susan
Martin Payne, West Columbl~,
with whom he has made his·
home for several years.
Funeral services will be at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
Thursday at 1:30 p.m. with
Rev George Hoschara officiating and burial following in
Kirtland Memorial Gardens,
Point Pleasant.
Friends may call after 3 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral
home.

RUTLAND - A play entitled, "A Halloween We Will
Never Forget" was presented
to the pupils of the Rutland
Elementary School by the fifth
grade class.
·
The play was written by the
children and all 34 members
took part. The audience was
taken
to
a
"haunted
graveyard " , Dr. Jekyll's
laboratory, Dracula's castle,
and old man's cave.
Class members are Troy
Brooks, Phyllis Davis, Jay
Dewhurst, Frank Durham,
Troy Durham, Dreama Ebl!n,
Mike Edwards, Dawn Fish,
Usa Gardner, Betsy Herald,
Crystal Jacobs, Paul Michael,
Annette
Might,
Gary
Nakamoto , Cheryl Pierce ,
Laura Sigler, Kimberly Birchfield, Tommy Simmons, Lori
Snowden, Lisa Smith, Lynn
Smith, Mary Smith, Marty
Spangler, Cindy Spires, Becky
Tillis, Timmy Tillis, David
Vance, Ubby Watkins, Billy
Wtllis, Lester Wise, Patty
Wyatt, Ricky Cremeans, Dean
Whittington,
and
Billy
Graham.

LOCAL 18 TO MEET
Local
18
Operating
Engineers will hold Its regular
monthly meeting at the Elks
Lodge Hall, Athens, Thursday,
Nov. 7, at 7:30p.m. Visitor will
be business manager, John
Possehl. Refreshments will be
served.

IN OUR SEOOND FLOOR
JEWELRY DEPARTMENT
A super selection
of golden-tone
jewelry, just right
to high-light Foil's
tailored classics.
Select from ropes,
pendants, tassels,
"nothing" chains,
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(Also in Silver).

$138
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BEDS

Goessler's Jewelry·Store
Court st...Pomeroy

Wt rteommtnd aenulnt Aeeut(on power etlls.

Olntr etlll ftCit mtehnJ Aecutron sped fitltlons may cause 1 m~ttunctl on

.

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ews •• zn Briefs
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Ford w0n't bow out

I

' KING HUSSEIN HAS ANNOUNCED PLANS TO
overhaul the Jordanian constitution to give Palestinian
guerrillas, ooce his bitter enemies, the right to the fsraell·~~upled half of his divided kingdom.
Hussein said Tuesday he would Cl!ll both houses of
P,Brliament into special session to fulfill his pt'omise at last
week's Arab sUmmit conference to recognize guerrilla authority
over the West Bank region. PoBtical sources in Antman said
parliament would be dissolved after Saturday's session approves
11 new constitution excluding the West Bank from Jordanian
!JI&gt;Vereignty.

SHOP WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5 P.M.
FRIDAYS &amp; SATURDAYS 9:30 TO 8 P.M.

~!!~--------l~EFR~~~~!~~--

ELBERFELDS

'

BAKER FURNITURE, MIDDLEPORT
.,
IN 'POMEROY
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in politics, adniitted he had
conceded too early. "At 7:30
last -night I was a defeated
candidate," said Rhodes who
explained that two networks
had already declared Gilligan
the winner. But he also said one
called today to apologize.
For Glenn, the victory
culminated nearly 10 years of
campaigning for a U.S . Seriate
seat and his defeat of
Cleveland Mayor Ralph Perk
by almost a miilllon votes
pt'opelled him Into the national
political spotlight.
Glenn carried all 88 Ohio
counties including Perks' home
county of Ozyahoga to assume
the Senate seat now held by
Sen. Howard M. Meizenbawn
[){)hio whom he defeated In
the pt'imary election'.
=9.=SS:W: •:: w e::::.

·:r: .:.U~

MU.LER WINS BIG
A• of 11:21 a.m.

today,

with 713 ol 753 precillcts In,
Incumbent Iltb Dlstrlet
Coug. CjjlreD&lt;e E. MIUer
held a commanding 94,152 to
39,703 lead ' over Democrat
candidate Keut Bumpass.
:::::::i:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::")X:!o'..-t)."~::::~-m-N-h'$:

Losers are Roush,
Porter, Caldwell

page 10 day
~:l
Meigs Countians elected a new county court
=~t:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~o::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::~::::::::::::::~:::·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:O!·!·:·:~~ judge and a new county auditor when they went to

l:l:

Community school levy
goes ·down 4773 to 2623
Meigs County voters firmly
turned down a 2.75mill tax levy
Tuesday which would have
provided funds to operate a
school for the mentally
retarded.
A total4,773 voters said ~·no"
to the levy, two mills of which
were a new tax, compared to
2,623 who supported the
· measUre.
· However, voters tn ftve
subdtviswns passed tax levies,
most of them being renewals.
In Scipio Township, a one
mill levy for fire protection
was renewed , 169-148 In
Racine Village, voters ap,proved a two mill ftr e
proteclton renewal, 184-94. In
Chester Townshtp, a one-half

mtll renewal for fire protection
was approved 525-196 A three
null levy in Syracuse for
curre nt operat ing expenses
was approved 226-124. In
Orange township, where the
only new tax faced subdiviSton
residents, voters approved 260101 a one mtll levy for fire
protection. One-hal! of the levy
JS 'a new tax.
Here 's how Meigs Countians
voted on the constitutional
amendments:
Issue I for, 5,369; against,
1,119

Issue II · for 2,703; against,
2,479.
Issue II~ : for, 3,439; agamst,
1,962

Vote high in Gal1ia County
•

•

Rhodes' win here Nov. 14th
great upset

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Tourism boost

'1

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See complete tabulation of

Altbough Ford blamed Inflation u the No. 1 campaign
Issue, Press Secretary Ron Nessen lllid that ''we wouldn't
dlaagree that It was a referendum on Watergate."
Neuen told reporters that "no one CODSiders lite elecdon
a referendum on Ford and be doesn't believe that."

•
COLUMBUS- SECRETARY OF STATE Ted W. Brown, a
Republican who has held the office through truck and thin for 24
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Foryears, survived another heavy Democratic vote Tuesday night
mer Gov. James A. Rhodes
and won r..election.
. today scored a stunning upset
Brown, riding his well-known name an!! a popularlt~ among
victory over Gov. John J.
voters from both parties, defeated state Sen. Tony P. Hall, D- Gilligan while John Glenn, a
Dayton, who was a late entry on the endorsed Democratic
Democrat, won a U.S. Senate
statewide ticket last spring and barely survived the primary.
seat by a landslide, RepubllWith 97 ~ cent of Ohio's polling places reporting, Brown had
cans kept their 1s.3 edge in
1;4ll1,970 votes and Hall 1,272,170.
Congress and Democrats
gained c&lt;inlrol of the Ohio
'
' NEW YORK- THE SWEEP BY DEMOCRATIC candidates 1 Legislature.
was no. surprise to the financial conununity, which Is now
With all precincts reporting,
bracing for new demands for wage and price controls to fight
Rhodes, wbo ba,d conceded the
Inflation. "Evef)'one must have been anticipating a Democratic
election earner In the morning,
ylctory, of greater qr lesser proportions," said Saul Sn\erllng, a
led Gilligan by 1,415,9T1 votes to
veteran stock market analyst.
.
1,475,799 for Gilligan with a
·y! Sterling predicted Tuesday a Democratic landslide would be recount virtually certain.
,1,emporarlly unsettling but wouldn't "knock the spots off the
In the statewide races ,
market." He a1ao sal&lt;l the gains by Democrats In Congress, at
Democrat Ricliard Celeste deleast at the outset, could bring stronger demands for wage and
feated incumbent John Brown;
pCtce controis.
. Attorney Oeneral Wllllam J,.
' • That pt'ospect brought tittle favorable reaction. "The worst
Brown won r..electioo· over
thing would be U we had conlrols," said Lucien Hooper, a stook
Geo..ge Smith; incumbent
anal)'111 with 40 years on Wall Slreet.
·of 'state Ted
. But he said both parties "are more afraid of recession and
Brown defeated Tony, Hall and
_ depression" than inflation. Hooper said this could dlacourage
state Treasurer Gertrude Dopressure for wage and pt'ice controis.
·
nahey won over Richard
Harrlil.
.
PRESIDENT FORD SAYS inflation
• WASHINGTON
RhOdes, who won an unpioduced Tuesday's Dempa'atic landslide and he wll1 w~k pr-eCedented third four-year
''wllolehearteslly" with Ute new Congress to solve the nation's
term, said the win was ''the
economic problem. As a start, Ford arranged a ll)eeting today
greatest election victory of my
wjth Senate majority leader Mike Man~leld.
llfe."
.
,
( Con tmued on page 11 )
Rhodes, a veteran of 31 years

'
. ,,
•.,

~~

88id today.

WASHINGTON (UPII -President Ford doeo not view
Republican loues In Tuesday's elecdODI as "a referendum
on himself" and the ouicome will not affect hJs deefllon to
''probably" run for preSident In 1178, hJs cblef spokesman

secretiu'Y

I

:~;::;;::::::.::;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;:;::;;:;.;.;.:·:·:·:·:=::::::;:;::::::::::~::;:;~:::;;:.:-:·:=:::::-:·:::·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::·:·:~::::::::::::::::::::~;=.:
;::;
·~

Gallia County recorded the commisstoner i
Dorothy
highest percentage of voter · Condee, county audttor;
turnout m lhe htstory of the Ronald R Calhoun, common
county during Tuesday's pleas judge; Dtck Cremeens,
general election.
Fred Greenlee, Dale Rothgeb,
Winners in coWJty races Jr., Murray Church and James
were John Belville for county Mitchell, county school board.

~

.I

$199

COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown's offtce indicated today
it could take a month or longer
to dectde the ofrictal winner in
OhiO 's gubernatori~l contest if
a recoW1 t IS necessary.
James R Marsh , assistant
secretary of state, said the first
step wtU be to get an offtcial
canvass of the vote, whtch
showed former Gov. James A.
Rhodes , a Republican, winning
by
10 ,253
votes
over
Democraltc Gov. John J.
Gilligan.
Marsh said an official
canvass - a thorough check
for mistakes and a report
mailed to Brown's office by
each of the 86 county boards of
election - could take up to
three weeks.
At that point, recount
proceedings could be mstituted
if warranted , and might take
another week, Marsh said,
"depending on how many
(Continued on page 11 ) ·

....."1/l' .......~.....-:.-:~..:.»·.:.-~....o:.Y..:o~;o;o-,.··;o·o;.;.:.:.:...y........~ ..~.·

'I

wted earlier by absentee ballot.
· Although the former president was "terribly physically
weak," a hospital spokesman said Tuesday, he was Impatient to
leave the hospital. The spokesman also said Nixon auffered a
,CQllapse of a small area of his right lung last week, but it was not
considered important enoush to ''push the panic button."

I

~·

'

C'

LONG BEACH, CALIF. -RICHARD NIXON was too weak

I

•

•

Recount
in month
or more

•

.. :.:.A~ . .

James Rbodes upset Gilligan

Frank, Buck win local races

l9 watch the election returns on television Tuesday night, but he

I.
I

'

••

I

I

-------------~-----------4
DRAWER ·
I ADMIRAL
Special Values d(l all size ~dding'.

1·.

TEN CENTS

•

By United Press Intei'IU!tfooal

(

I

......

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1974

'

1

~

16 11 x48"

Use Our Christm.as Lay Away Plan!

-1

I

I

5 PC. DINETTE : 3 PC.
1 BR SUITES
•58
·-----------...J

. I

~lis,

I

I

I
I

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WATER BREAK- A water break lnfrontofKarr and VanZandt's Motor Sales had traffic
tied up most of the day Tuesday with residents from Dr. Brown's office to the old depot without
water. Working on the line Tuesday morning were, front, Wes Manley, baclt:, 1-r, Kevin Dailey '
and Reed Will. Water wasrestoredat4:30p.m.

I

I

$38

VOL. XXVI NO. 145

I

THE GOLD RUSH IS ON

enttne

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

I

I
I

shootings of 1970.
What made Rhodes wm? "I just had a steady campatgn," he
satd.
·
•
Rhodes cautioned that "nothing is final" u11til the official totals
are in and any recount dispdsed of. But he was jubilant as he
strode to his tnner offtce past pictures of himself wtth Presillent
Ford and Vice President designate Nelson A. Rockefeller.
Rhodes said a national television network called him at home
to apologtze for declaring Gilligan the winner "and tt takes
something for a btg organization to apologtze for something like
that. Anybody can make mistakes. It was made m the heat of the
battle and they probably were overanxious to be frrst wtth the
result."
Rhodes said he was "tn and out of bed stx times" before dawn
as his daughter , Mrs. Sharon Markham, fed him the latest
results.
The mood in Rhodes' office was in sharp contrast to the gloom
which settled over the governor's office in 1970 when Rhodes lost
a U.S. Senate primary to Robert Taft Jr.
!Continued on page II)

•

y

gives play

For Inexpensive Home Furnishings

•we will adjust to th•s tolefance, 11 necessal)l Gualanlee 1s for one year

ror another four .
; COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Former Governor James A.
Rhodes of Ohto, who turned from a sure loser into an unsteady
"It's probably the greatest election victory of my life."
· wmner in the space of four hours early today, wound up bemg as
Those VIctories have been many for the veteran of 31 years of
.gracious in the vlctory circle as he was in "defeat."
public office who worked htmsel! up from "mayor" elf the
!Utodes, the uno{fictal winner of an unprecedented third fouruntverstty community at Ohio State to become one of Ohio's most
year tenn as Ohio governor ln final returns from Tuesday's
famous governors.
general election, declined to gloat as he popped into his real
"At 7:30 last night I was a defeated candidate," said Rhodes,
estate deve~pment office on the dot of 8 a.m.
explaining that two networks had already declared Gilligan the
But he conceded it was "the greatest election victory of my , winner.
.
.life" hts stunning upset of Democratic Gov. John J. Gilligan m
Shortly after midmght, Gtlligan 's lead mounted to 72,000 votes
the face of a near Democratic sweep of the Buckeye State.
and Rhodes, prompted by news reports, issued a statement of
Wtth virtually 100 per cent of the returns in, Rhodes, the only
concession during which he congratulated Gilligan, hts wife and
staff for, their campatgn.
former Republican governor in the country to' win TUesday, led
·Gilligan by 1,485,860votes to 1,475,607 for Gl.lllgan. The margm of
Toward the end of the campaign, which lasted much of the
'less than one-half per cent assured a recount when the offtcial
summer and all fall, Gilligan had lashed out at Rhode's refusal to
. figures are ln.
debate and reveal his personal finances .
. "I'll just say it's a great thrill," sail! the 110-year-old Rhodes as
The gov,e rnor Injected a pair of four-year old tssues into the
his employes at James A. Rhodes and Associates greeted him
campaign -a Life Magazme article which claimed Rhodes paid
with hearty applause at the door of his office just 200 yards from
back taxes and converted campaign funds to personal use, and
the Statehouse he occupied for eight years and apparently will
the former GOP governor's handling of the Kent State University

Fifth grade

Visit Our Budget Shqp

I

.RhodeS zn 'greatest victory'

Injuries fatal

I 'HARI.ESTON, W. Va.
1UP I) - Ratification of a

r-·--·-·------------·------------------:----1

Former resident
died in Columbus

Chamber

d fJ'IIJil flage 1

fo1
the stree t
dcp,u·tment and cemetery
crew through the C.ii.P
program . Mrs . J esse Bnnker
smd that Carl J Brtghton will
start thts week. The second
man , name unKnown , wtll start
at a later date
The mayor reported arrests
made dunng October as
follow s: Police Chief Jed
Webster 6, George Htcks 3;
Randall Carpenter 5; Carl
Hysell 2; Tom Werry 4; David
Jeffers 4, and Henry Werry 2.
Harry Davis, councilman.
reported that he has been
recetvtng complalnts from
semor cttizens about the cable
TV rate increase of $1 per
month According to the ordmance other customers' rates
w1ll on ly increase 50 cents.
Counctl dectded last mght not
to gtve the ordtnance tis second
readtng unltl Paul Gerard
could meet with counctl and
answer the questlon on the
dtfference m the increase .
Counctl discussed at length
the merchant pohceman. At
the present hme Davtd
Woolard is worktng the post !ton
through the Leadtng Creek
Conservancy Dtslxtct.
Chtef Webster pomted out
that letters have been sen t to
merchants by hts department
and by the Chamber of Commerce wtth only about four
merchants respondmg saymg
they want the servtce of a
policeman .
Council members suggested
that Woolard and Webster
personally contact each
merchant and report thetr
fmdings at the next regular
meeting of counctl.
Davis also reported that he
attended the chamber meeting
Monday at noon at the Meigs
Inn and stated that the
chamber ts Willing to cooperate
with council in workmg out a
soluhon to sohcttations bemg
made in Pomeroy Davts sa1d
he told chamber members that
counctl was willing to listen to
any and all suggestions.
It was brought out last mght
that nothmg has taken place in
regard to repairing the wall on
the upper parking lot. Mayor
Smith said the money has been
appropriated. The cost to
repair the wall wtll run over
$50,000, it was noted.
Council suggested that a
le'tter be directed to the Corps
of Engineers, Huntington to see
tf some action could be taken
toward the repatr of the wall.
It was also suggested by Phil
Globokar . councilman, that

!;!; workmg

120,000 miners when the current contract expires at
midnight Nov. 12.
Arnold Miller president of the union, said "with this
contract proposal they've declared a strike ln the coal
fields. There's not sufficienrtime for ratiflcaUon and the
membership will not ratUy what they have given us."
Guy Farmer, chief negotialor for the Bltwninous Coal
Operators Association, said, "That's Incredible. I can't
conceive that they could say we gave them provocaUon
for a strike. I believe there Is a misunderstanding. We
gave them an offer that In my opinion has not been exceeded in any negotiations in any major Industry in total
scope."
"I'm going home and go to bell," Miller said on his
way out of the Washington hotel where negotiations
resumed at 9 p.m. Monday night at the urging of William
J. Usery Jr., director of the FedOra! Mediation and
Conciliation Service.

Swe~p

t ,,,~ . , P n •

M;1yur O.;Jlc Smtth an ·
:;:;
nonm:cd that two nlt'n wtll be

1

j;j

Statute

Me1gs County commumty
leaders and people involved in
the tourist industry will learn
ftrst-hand about the Buckeye
Travel-Tour Project, Thursday, Nov. 14, from its directors, Wayne and Barb~ra
Frederich.
Assisted \&gt;Y Herbert Shields,
Racme, Meigs' representative
on the project's advisory
committee, the Frederichs will
outline the goals of the project
and indicate how local communities will be able to
cooperate and share in the
benefits of the project.
There will be meetings with
community leaders and
representatives of the news
media and the Frederichs also
. will v}&amp;it the county's tourist
attraction and recreational
facilities.
Buckeye Travel-Tour
Project is a one year, federally
·funded , program to demonstrate that regional promotion
of. the tourism induslry can be
an.effective means to boost an
area 's general economy.
Meigs is one of 17
southeastern Ohio counties
included in the project.
National ' and state offtcials
will be looking at the project's
results as a means to determine if and how much
government SJlpport should be
given to tourism promotion .
Anyone mterested in meeting
and-or talking , to
the
1

the polls in Tuesday's general election.
Robert E. Buck, a newcomer to the political
scene, and making his first bid for a public office,
received an overwhelming vote of 4,273 in his race
for the Meigs C:mnty Judge position defeating
cumbent Frank W. Porter, Jr., who received 2,897
votes.

in-

Howard Frank. R., ln·
curnbent treasurer, seeking the
post
defeated
audtt or's
the Incumbent, James Roush m
a close race. Frank received
3,841 votes with Roush
receiving 3591. Roush has been
serving m the post by appomtrnent, succeeding Gordon
Caldwell, D:, who resigned the

succeed the late Ted Beegle,
was unopposed in Tuesday's
election and received a vote of
confidence or 5061 votes.
The county supported Ralph
Welker of Pomeroy in his bid to
return to the Ohio House of
Representatives giving him
~06 votes compared to 2752
given to the Democratic
posJtion.
candidate, Ronald H. James
In cu mbent Metgs County who did win in the district. The
CommissiOner Henry Wells, county supported Oakley
also serving on appointment, Colllns for dislrict Senator,
was elected to hts first term in 4177 wtth Grant McDonald, the
the post Wells, a Republican, Democrat, getting 3123 votes
received 4,264 votes to defeat
On the state level the county
Gordon Caldwell, Democrat, supported the Republican
with 3171.
candidates but gave John
Wesley Buehl, R., runmng Glenn strong support, 3981, in
for hts ftrst full term havmg hts election as U.S. Senator.
been appointed ongmally to Clarence Miller, R ., mthe county engineer 's post to cumbent, received strong
support locally gettl"g 5280
votes in his bid to return to
Congress with his Democratic
opponent, H. Kent Bumpass
receiving 2047.

Vote heavy
in off-year
A total of 7,730 Meigs
Counttans - a stgnt!ICant
increase over the comparable
year of 1970 - went to the polls
in Tuesday's election . In 1970,
6,429 voters cast ballots .
Here 's how the county voted.
on the Supreme Court: For
ch1ef justice C. Wtlltam
O'Netll , 3443, Joseph E.
O'Neill, 1882; for justice, tenn
beginmng Jan . I, 1975: Frank
D. Celebreeze, 2158, Sheldton
A. Taft, 3325; for justice,
supreme court, beginning Jan .
2, 1975 : Clifford F . Brown, 2504,
Thomas M. Herbert, 2750. For
judge of the court of appeals,
fourth district, Metgs Countiansgave 3229 votes to Earl E.
Stephenson and 1688 to
Franklin T Gerlach

HOWARD FRANK

Frederichs while they are in
Meigs County should call
Shtelds at 992-3687 to make
arrangements.
Buckeye - Travel - Tour
Project has offices m Cambndge .at 853 Wheeling Ave.,
and visttors are welcome.

Interest in
game high

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - JoJvl Pape,
Racine; Barbara Brown,
Pomeroy ; Phillip Donovan,
Syracuse ; Marcia Capehart,
Middleport; Louise Mtller,
Leon ; Barbar a Baer, Minersville; Valley Medors, Rutland ;
Betty Norman , Belpre ; Wtlbur
Smtih, Langsville; Bobby Roy,
Racme ; Charles Whaley ,
Shade ; Jessie Sellers, Shad~ ;
Dante! O'Dell, Mason .
' DISCHARGES - Frances
Parsons, Sybil G~eene, Luther
Friend, Wilham Young,
~artha ij.epp, Karen Grate,
Janet Marcum.
1

Interest was reported today
tn the proposed Thanksgiving
Day alumni football game between graduates of old Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland
High Schools, all now consolidated into Meigs High
School.
Wally Hatfield, Meigs
Cancer Crusade chairman the game wlll benefit the
Crusade - said the match will
be played on the Marauder
Stadium turf around midday on
Nov . 28. Meigs high equipment
will be used.
All athletes wllnting to play
are asked to attend a meeting
Thursday 'at 7 p.m. in the
. cafeteria oftlie Meigs LOcal Jr.
High in.Middleport. lf unable to
attend , Hatfield or John Reece
should be notified by phone.

ROBERT BUCK

HENRY WELLS

. ,_

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy this mornmg at
11 a.m. was 52 d~grees under
partly cloudy skies.

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