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..

Rhodes,

16-The DaUy.Se~tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov . 13, 1974

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3~0,00.0

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Ohioans face layoffs

Pi-eoi

By LEE LEONARD

:Fines levied on
: ·5 defendants

c

Kim
Blazer. Rear-Coach Patsy Flejds, Vlcllle Stroud, Mary
Rolllns, Lee Hammood, Sarati Drummond, Shirley Clay and

Debbie Gardner, BCOI'akeeper.

Sex bar broken
.

Ordinance disapproyed
NEW HAVEN - A question Parsons, Key Club president.
by New Haven Mayor Charles Parsons' request to o~serve
Smith to council members Key Club Week in, New Haven
TUesday night, " H an or- from Nov. 17-24 was granted.
dinance probhltlng bumIn the matter of the' town
lng
of
trash
should water pump, a motion was
be drawn up" was answer approved to have Larry
ed
with
a
unaidmous Ramsey start work on it "as
·· · .. ·· · . ···· soon as possible." It wa~ also
" no" by ail councilmen o verified that the county health
present.
nurse will be in New Haven the
Routine . matters otherwise third Tuesday of each Jrtonth.
were discussed on last night's
Larry Rouslf was instructed

'

••4

ag~~~:~nt

Bernard by c·ouncii to repair the city
pickup truck. A traDer permit
Lieving, William Gibbs, Neil was granted to George
Haymaker, Charles Roush, Goodnite and two building
Tom Grinstead, Shelby Dun- permits granted to G. 0 . Roush
water superintendent, and Joe

News, Notes

'«iY~~

Mrs . Mabel Hetzer is at
Hampton, Va., taking care of
her great-granddaughters
while her granddaughter, Mrs.
Frederick Smith, is a patient at
a hospital there .
Mrs . Bladys Baughman,
Frank and Jack Gale and Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Gale were
recent visitors of Mrs. Rose
Thomas.
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Hauber attended the Pumpkin
Show at Circleville.
Mrs. Gladys Baughman of
Gahanna, Mrs. Rose Thomas,
Mrs. Opal Randolph, and Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel recenUy visited
at Cool Spring, Weston, and
Thomas, W. Va. They also
visited the smallest church in
46states at Horse Shoe Run, W.

\

30 Mo. Tmn ·

Nl,..ety &lt;ley inttrut penalty
If · withdrawn
before

• maturity dele.

INGELS FURNITURE ·.
Gin
PRICE
ONLY

$699

SHOP AND COMPARE

Ingels Furnitur_e
'

By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Tom O'Neil and
family, Mrs. Evelyn Ingram of
Columbus ahd Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Orr of Chester visited
with Ralph Lee and l\(1'. and
·Mrs. Robert Lee arld family on
Sunday.
·
··
Mr. and ·Mrs.'Gene"Hudson,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson of
Racine and Mr. and Mrs.
Shelby Pickens and chUdren of
Po111eroy spent Sunday with
Mr · an·d Mrs. Allan Taylor'
· Roy Johnson-of Racine calied
on Mr . and Mrs. Arthur
Johnson, Pat, Sheryl LeAnn ,.

1,000 Minimum

.

Carmel News,

and Betty Van Meier on
Sunday . . ·
.
,
Myrtle Wal.ker and · J;:unie
Brinker spent Sunday ·afternoon in . Belpre and other
,
places.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of
New Haven were at the home
of Ml!l'Y Circle. o~ Sunday.
Mr ,. and Mrs. William
Carleton of Racine called In the
colJlriiunity 'recently.

·:: . ••..;_. !fZ:W.~).~K&amp;;

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday lbroagh SUnday, It
will be cloudy Friday with a
chance of raiD or snOw
Saturday and Sunday. Highs
will he in the tOs and lows
Friday mornlog wiD be In !lie
upper 20s. Overnight lows
wlll be in the upper '30s by
Sunday inornlog.

&lt;

Va :

WHITE CHRISTMAS

1

Water
superintendent
Young, upon request, was
· granted permission to purchase rain coats for the town
garbage employees.

Reedsville

Give Yourself A

On Cellificales
Of Depclsjt

were

can, recorder ; Joe Young , and sons.

THIS YEAR

. INTEREST

Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. D.
C. Riebel were Mr. and Mrs.
John Riebel and family,
Pomeroy Rd., and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Morton and family
of Belpre Rd.
Dawn Sorden, Jodi Proto and
Kay Balderson attended a
slumber party at the home of
Susan Hannum at Long Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. D. C, Riebel
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Thomas and family at
Cheshire.
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Casto
visited with Mrs. Dawayne
Casto at Portiand.
Mrs. ·Carolyn Ruth · of
Parkersburg, W. Va., visited
with Mrs.. Helen Archer
recentiy.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Starcher of
Hannibal, visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Mundry and Lori.
-Mrs. L. Balderson

SUPPER lS FRIDAY
SYRACUSE -A soup supper
will be held at the Syracuse
Asbur y! United Methodist
Church Friday beginning ~~
4:30 p.m. instead of Thursday

...@.
The Athens Co•nfY
2" Second St.

Pomeroy, Olll:a ·

,I

•
'I

l•

1,

.Men's Double Knit

DREss·. SLACKS

EARLSOUGHT
WNDON (UP!) - Scotiand
Yard has launched a world·
wide
search
for
the
mustachioed seventh Earl of
LUcan,· a playboy nobleman

.

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'
·\ ·sizes 29 to 4~ &amp; e·xtra large sizes 44 to 50.
Solid color!. ; plaids - neat patterns. This
sale InCludes our· entire stock of mens
double knit dress slacks.

wanted for the beating death of
his children's 'nurse and the
attempted murder o( his
·
e~tranged wife.

.SA~E PRICES .

..

.

PT. PLEASANT - Can·
vassing of votes in the Nov. 5
General Election began by the
Mason County Court which sits
as a. board of canvassers
Tuesday wii!J Precincts 2 and 3
considered. The canvass began
with No. 5 today and is expected to continue until the
county's 40 precincts have been
canvassed: Court officials
expect to complete this work in
uK! latter part of thla week. No
reco..,ts have Peen requested.

Elbelfe ds In Pomeroy

BQYS F~ION JEANS.AND SLACKS
Little . ~·· Slzos, 3 1o· 7,

·regular boys ~lzes 8 to 11 · .lL
slims. regulars I. huskies. Solid ·· 7Z
colors and "-'"ns.
'

\

.

.

PRICE
-

'

Mens &amp; Bo,s Department ~st Flocii- .
' '

· ELBERFE

· MIDD~PORT

R~EOUNTUNDERWAY

-L-

'

'

I'. ...
'

:

·

Theodo~e M. _
Gray, R.Qllumbus. "He's
gotten along with them before. He used.
to' PQse 'l!lth them witt\ shovels (at
ground-breaking ceremonies),"
uwe didn't always agree," s,atd
House Speaker A. G. Lanclone, Dllellaire, "but we compromised on
many lasues and got· aloog, and I don't
see any reason to' change now. ll's a
two-way street, and Mr. Rhodes Is a
practical politician."
But Lailclone warned that Democrats
are "not going to undo . all the
progressive things we've done In the
last four years for education, workmen's compensation, unemployment
compensation ape! campaign financing."
And Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBournevllle, chairman of the House
Finance Committee, said Rhodes
probsblywon't be able to pare the state
·
budget much.
. ''H he thinks he's going to cut stste
spending, he's barking up the wrong
tree, because a lot of that Is built Into
the law," Shoemaker said. "He'll find
out it's a different ball game With a
Democratic legislature. He used to tell
10 or 12 Republicans to go jump In the
lake, but he won't be able to do that any

OHIO'S APPRb~TEI;.Y10,000 UNITED MINE Workers
today were preparing to' vo~ on ratification of a new contract to
end a nationwide strike against the soft coal industry.
Ratification of the contract also would bring back to work the
state's 3,000 nonunion miners who had joined the UMW ln
walklng off the job at midnight Monday.
",
It was expected to take between 10 days and two weeks to
. , ratify the pending settlement, reached Wednesday night ln
Wlllhlngton. "We are extremely gratified that the strike, as
" · reported, is settled," said Public Utilities Corrimlaslon of Ohio
.. · Chairman Edmund Turk. "We've been ln the mld.st of a lot cf
:.: contingency planning, and hopefully all the plans that were put
, Into effect for pending emergency wlll be alleviated."
'"

WASHINGTON -NELSON A. ROCKEFELLER adrnlia he
· ' Is humllated and embarrassed by his Involvement with a book
critical of his f()!'llier political opponent, Arthur Goldberg. But be
. strongly objected Wedneadsy . to a Democratic senator's
suggestion the Incident was comparable to "the dirty tricks of
the Nlmn era."
' The former New York governor rellims from the Senate
Rules Coounlttee's televised hearings oo his vice presidential
nomination today. He will be followed by Goldberg, the former
Supreme Court justice wbo was Rockefeller's 1970 gubernatorial
opponent -"d the subjectof the unfavorable biography by conservative author VIctor Lasky.
·
Also scheduled to telllfy was Laurance Rockefeller, who put
up $60,000 to finance the book on Nelson Rockefeller's recam.mendation.

,I

Talll To Leglllaton
,. How will Rhodes work? He'D talk to ·
th~ legislators.
.~'I'm glad we finally have somebody
doWnstairs that we can talk to," said
me Democrat.
"I could call down there to Rhodes'
office," ilald a Democrat speaking of
the 1960s, "and they'd get me In betWeen his appolr!tments. This ·(expletive) guy, yotl call down there and it
may be three days ilr a week before
you'll get Jn. You have to go through
two secretaries to get to his leglslstive
aide, and then he's on another phone
and has to call you back."
"He'll make a good governor,"
agreed Senate Minority Leader Anthopy 0 . Calabrese, D-Cleveland. "The
other guy would never talk to you. He'd
just call you names."
"Rhodes Is a wheeler-dealer," said
Rep. Phale D. Hale, O:COlumbus, a
black legislator starting liiS fifth term.
"He knows just where to apply the
preSBIII'e. He'll operate the state on the
money we gave him, and when It comes
time to raise taxes, he'll put it all on the
little people and,p1ake us like it."
Rhodes asks the legislators "what do
Continued on page 2

MEET REDS PRESIDENT, PLYAERS - Mrs. 0 , 0 .
Mcintyre, of Gatewood on State St. In Gallipolis, third from
left, a longtime Cincinnati Reds baseball fan, met Reds
President and General Manager Robert L. Howsam, second
left, and two of his players, Tom Spencer and Jack

•

at y
VOL XXVI

NO. 151

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Coal negotiators Wednesday night
reached agreement on pey and benefits expected to bring 120,000
striking miners back to work· within two weeks -before a coal
shortage staggers the economy.
Higher· prices for cost are certain to follow.
The United Mine Workers of A!jlerica 's 38-member bargslnlng
councU was summoned to WashiJigton to vote whether to submit
the agreement to the rank.and-flle for railflcation. The
ratification process Is expected to 'lake 10 days, and the miners,
who traditionally refuse to work without a contract, will stay out
during that time.
"It's a very -good contract," 'uMW President Arnold Miller
said. "It's one I can sell to the membership."
Some union members, bowever, said .they were prepared to
vote no if the agreemerit does oot iileet their needs.
Louis Antal, president of Pittsburgh-based UMW District 5,
said he did not belleve the bargalnlng council would approve the

*'~ ·

·-•·ed

FIRE PROBED
RUTLAND - The Rutiand
Fire Dept. answered a call at
1l:ZO a. m. Wedn&lt;isday to the
mobile hoine of Wayne Cleland
Langavllle. The home and
cootents ~ destroyed by the
bill... Losse• were set af
$1.~. Cause of the fire is being
investigated by the state fire
marl!hall's office.
'
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near

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1974

contract solely on Miller's say.-so,
"We're not going to ratify anything we think the men wouldn't
accept," he declared.
Guy Farmer, chief negotiator for the Bituminous Coal Operators Association, called it a "very good agreement."
Since negotiations began Sept. 3, he and Miller and their
delegations had rewritten the contract "from the beginning to
Ute very end."
It provides for $2 billion In contributions to the miners' health
and welfare fund and an iilcrease ln monthly pensions from '150
to $250 over the three years of the pact.
It contains a one-time $80 Inflation catch-up bonus, pay Increases of 9 percent In the first year and 3 percent in the second
and third years, and cost of Uvlng adjustments -one cent an
hour for each 0.4 rise In the government's Consumer Price Index.
It gives miners for the first time five days paid sick leave and
pensions for widows. It provides for helpers on compUcated

-~- ~

.

By .HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
•LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) President Ford today unlocked
the U.S. Treasury to fight
inflation for the first time since
last week's elections and
ordered $300 million used to
help finance mortgages on
existing houses.
In a speech prepared for
deUvery to a meeling of the
National Association of Real·
tOrs, Ford said the money will
come from $3 billion earmarked
until now by the Home
Purchase Assistance Act only
for buying mortgages on new,
singte.farnily homes.
And, answering criticism
.irom Detroit auto makers and
. other businessmen that his antiInflation calla dampened the
·pubUc's buying habits, the
.President called on Americans
to buy.
. , "Instead of curtaiUng pur.:chases, 1 say to consumers
simply : Buy wisely. shop
sharper."
Ford also warned "In the
weeks and months ~ad, 1 wlll
call on the American people and I underline people - to

3 judges nanied .

EXTENDED FORECAST
• Saturday through Monday,
sbowen Saturday, becoming
,,..... wllb mow Rnrrles
before ending Saturday
: nl1llt. Fair Sunday and
(. Monday. Hllb&amp; Saturday will
, i.e in lbe 40s, warming to the
.,JG• by Monday. Overnight
·., Jow.• will generaHy be In the
318.
WJK\ m;;,;e ,:..ut:rm ... .

en tine

·~-

,.

.

Man dies $300 million subsidy
at ferry :g iven home mortgages

m.

....... .

Weather

in talent show

sacrifice for the national good ."
He siad federal spending must
be cut and tax revenues upped.
But, declaring he is no
"prophet of doom," the President said :
"Inflation will be cooled.
Despite some economic weakness - recession - business
fallback -call it what you will
-there will be an upturn in the
nation's economic patterns. In
fact, here In Las Vegas where
it's legql, I'll even bet on it. "
Ford did not predicl when the
economy will make the improvement.
Ford flew from Washington to
Las Vegas for an economic
sp~ch to the realtors. Later he
was flying to Phoenix, Ariz., for
a news conference with the
Society Of.Professional JournalIsis (Sig!!IB Delta Chi) before
flying hom~ late tonight.
To the realtors mustered at
the Hilton Hotel he talked about
the economic ills affecting the
nation's housing industry. "The
housing industry is suffering
the effects of inflation more
Intensely than most oiller
industries," he said. He said he
was doing this :

- Turning 10 per cent of the
Home Purchase Assistance Act
to used housing . He said this
will help buyer and seller.
- Asking Congress to follow
his suggeslion and appropriate
money not only for one-family
house buying but also to make
it easier to finance rental
housing and condominiwns.
- Asking Congress to pass a
proposed Financial Institutions
Act. It would steady credit in
house buying and, he · said, let
banks and savings and loan
institutions "compete more
effectively during periods of
high interest rates," thus aiding
home~buyers

and earning more

money for savers.
He said he "shortly" will tell
Congress how federal spending
must be cut to fight inflation.
"Uncle Sam must slim down to
what I consider fighting trim
for the battle ahead of us,"
Ford said.

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy today at llll.m. was
42 degrees under rainy skies.

Strong, W eddie in pageant

'
Miss Diane Strong and Miss
Cookie Weddle a~ the latest
entries In the 1975 Southeast
SYRACUSE- Judges have , Ohio Junior Miss Pageant.set
been selected for the Vartetylr. for Nov. 23.
T8Ient Show to be held this l
1\!las Strong is the daughter
Friday night at the Syracuse&gt;· of Mrs. Althea Strong and the
Elementary School under late· Harley Strong, Wilkes• sponsorship of the Syracuse . vllle. Miss Weddle is the
LOTI'ERY WINNERS
Volunteer Fire ·Department. daughter of Mrs. Audrey
SPRINGFIELD,
Ohio
They are Jocelyn liaer of the Weddle and the late Mr.
(UPI) - ·- Heu are Ibis l'ilelgs · High faculty ; Janet . Weddle, Racine.
week's 'lllnlllng ·numbers In . Korn ·of WJEH Radio, and
Miss Strong, a senior at
lbe Oblo lottery:
Kathryn ·Crow, . longtime Vinton County High School, Ia a
Number 77Z (&amp;even Ieven president of ·.the Big Bend member of the National Honor
two) In auy box on ticket -Minstrel Association and Daily Society alld is a cheerleader.
wins $20.
Sentinel reporter.
· ' ShewasaBuckeyeGirla' State
Nnmben 049 (zero f ' Emce&lt;; for the contest WID be delegate last ·year and was a
Dlne) and m (..... ·oeven wilt Cundiff. ·
'
sophomore class officet. She Is
There
is
a
'youth.
category
of
serving
is'a senior class officer
two) In greea and blne wins
.
. .
$1111. '~- --·
·'
competition ln whjch top prize . and is a member of the Pep
Nnmben Mt aDd 1'1% In wlll be a $Z5 cash award; . .Club,
Business
Office
blne boxes wflll $1,MO. . ·• iecond place; $15~ .alld
Education ciub and Is a former
Namben Mt and 0'12 in place, '10. Winners in the adult . member of the Junior Classical
greeii 1ioxe1 ellgl)lle or . division will get 8 top priZe of. League. She was Miss Vinton
$380,001 . dra wlag a lid $50, second !'lace $25 and thin:f, County_of 1973 and is 'featured
aatomatleally wiDs '15,1181. $15.
in "Who's Who in American

Cloudy, cold tonight and
Friday, chance of · snow
tonight. Lows tonight in the
mid and upper ZOs and highs
Friday in the middle or upper
30s. Probability of preclptation
:;o per clmt tonight, 20 per cent
Friday.

TEN CENTS

Friday night

third';..

High School Students, 1973-741'. Concert and Marching Band,
She plans to become an airline the school paper staff and has
stewardess. She is sponsored participated in the annual
bytheWilkesvillebranchofthe vareity show.
Vinton County National Bank.
Miss Weddle plans a career
Miss Weddle, a senior at in secretarial work. She is
Southern High School; is a sponsored by the Racine Home
memberofthechoir,gleeclub, National Bank.
the -Future Homemakers of The pageant wlll be stsged 1
America, Southern Spirits, the Nov . 23.
y~arbook staff, the Pep,
"r-1!1818~1!¥«1~AI

W6."'"'?'?1'~~»'~.m''"W¥X««"?m.

Dri"ver n'o t s'uspende'd
.
,
Vrflll XIIII, pl'tlldent of lbe Melp Lcieal School

~~

-~

Board, l!lld Gearc• llllrpaves, oaperlnteudeat of Melfi• ~
Lacal
Scboolllllalle
tbe lollowlnC llatemeat toneernlng
lbe Seatillel'1
1report of tbe Nov. u, .li'IC, boud meetfl!g:
''Mn. Allee GIObollar, IJas driver,.,.. DOt ialpeaded ~
,from Iter Job, The report of tbe. !IIO"IiiiC gave ~be lm-~
'
pnaloll tbal Jolrt. Glollobr WBIIIIIP" :1e4. Sbe .,11 DOt.
"The bGenl.,.. admlnlltntloD expect good dllclpllne
the._
ad •apport tbe busdrlvenlnlu!vlnglt."
011
:::&lt;
""

machinery In underground mines and heavy mschln'lfY on
surface mines. The miners also wlll get more time off, Improved
safety measures, modernized grievance machinery and more
health. security for their widows.
The strike, Involving union miners who dig 70 per cent of the
nation's coal, began at 1Z:01a.rn. Tuesday. While the full thrust
of a prolonged national coal strike has not been felt, layoffa were
announced or planned In ralla, steel, and utilities Industries.
A Tennessee Valley Authorl!y official Bald Wednesday that
even with a quick end to the walkout, TVA OOil.IUJiler8 would still
need to conserve energy to avoid electricity shOI'Iages.
Nicholas T. Camicia, president of the BCOA, said the
agreement hammered out ln a constantly guarded second floor
room of the Hay Adams Hotel here will "certainly affect the
price of coal."
Camicia said he hoped the tenns of the cootract will spur
productivity which willpelp offset the coslf of tile settleujent. .
The br,eak In the bargillnlng erune lata Tuescley,-houn after' the
st(ike began, when the company Side gave COlllllderable ground
with a new package propo~~~l. Spokesmen said the BOOA
delegation ''went more than half way."
Finally, after a full day of bargslnlng Wednesday, the two
delegations filed out of the conference room, dismissed the guard
at the door, turned the llghls out and left as silent sentinel a still
warm coffee urn and untouched pastries.
Within an hour, Miller walked out to the sidewalk and announced the agreement had been reached.

More laid off
DETROIT (UP! ) - Plummeting new car sales and
sagging profits have touched
off yet another round of layoffs
in the nation's reeling auto
industry.
The industry's plight led
Michigan Gov. William G.
Milliken to call on conswners
to start buying cars again.
But as Milliken Issued the
call Wednesday, the nation's
four largesl automakers
reported a more than 38 per
cent drOP in new car sales for
the first 10 days of November.
General Motors . Corp. also
said it would close three small
car assembly planLs at Van
Nuys, Calif ., Willow Run,
Mich., and Tarrytown, N. Y.,
for a week starling Monday,
temporarily idling 7,175 blue
collar workers and bringing to
76,450 the number of auto
workers idled by production
cutbacks .
American Motors Corp. the smallest of · the nation 's

automakers - issued its report
for the 1974 financial year and
said profits.feU f17 mllllon, or
71 cenLs a share, from the
previous year despite record
sales of $2 bUUon.
GM, Ford Motor Co. and
AMC said they sold 138,921 new
cars during the Nov. 1-10
period, a drop of 38.4 per cent
from the 250,178 sold durli!g the
same period of 1973.
The 10-day sales report
(ollowed an October sales
performance that showed sales
down 'l1 percent, the poorest
new model start in a decade.

Rotary banquet
tickets to last
until Saturday ·

Persons wishing to attend the
annual Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club football banquet
at Meigs High School are
reminded lhst tickets must be
purchased no later than
Saturday.
The tickeLs are $3.50 each
~obe and may be obtained at New
.1. ·
York Clothing House, Swisher
and
Lohse, Nelson's Drug
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
Store,
Citizen's National Bank,
C. Hartenbach, members of his
department and Herman Dutton Drug Store, Western
Henry of the BCI are in- Auto, the Rutland Departm;]nt
veatigating a breaking and Store, Meigs High SchOol and ·
entering of the Charles Meigs Junlor High School.
Speaker for the event, which
Williams
residence
at
begins at 7 p. m. in the high
Burlingham.
The Sheriff's Dept . was school cafeteria, is Bob
Johnson, offensive center and
notified of the B&amp;E at 3:53p.m. captain of the Cincinnati
Wednesday. The incident was
Bengals.
·
discovered whe!l Mr. and Mrs.
Williams returned home from
work. BedroOms were ransacked and a CB radio with two
'II
22 1 ha nd gun, a
SQUAD RUNS
ffil ~s, a . ca .
The Middleport . ~enej .
.20-gauge shotgun, two
was called to the Pete
Squad
diamond , rings, one pin,
Mccumber
· home on ·Bailey .
diamond earrings, 50 rolls of
pennies, $18 in halves and Run at 12':06 a.m. 'fllund81 fal:
' pennies and numerous old Nellie Boring who wu ID. 1111
coins, were missing. Entry was ":as taken to . Veteraaa ·
·gained throngh a back window. Memorial Hospital.

Robbery is
under P

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Agreement reached on coal package

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Billingham, right, during Wednesday's Fifth Annual Reds
Banquet at Oscar's. On left is Mrs. Robert L. Howsam. Mrs.
Mcintyre Is the widow of 0 . 0 (Odd) Mcintyre, one of the
first nationally syndicated New York columnists who died ln
1936. See Page 4 story.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

, WNG BEAg1 1 CALif_. - ,Rl~ moN., .~~ by
.·
illll,: en~ . 23 . days of
.bbspltallzation today. I&gt;oCt&lt;X-s salil he ctiuld llii liome 10 San
'Clemente to await the Watergate court's medical examiners.
'The former president's physician, Dr. John Lungren, warned
that Nixon's bloOd preasure sl!oots up under even minor stress,
·such as friendly conversation.
'
Lungren scheduled a news conference today at Long Beach
Memorial Hospital. Nixon was scheduled to be released from the
RAVENSWOOD, W. Va .
.hospital at an undisclosed time and return to his oceanside
(UP!)
- A Ravenswood
·estate, 60 mUea to the south.
businessman
was kliled
In Wlllhlngton, U. S. District Court Judge John J. Slrlca
named a team of spectallsts, "three cf the outstanding men in the "-Thursday when his car ran off
a city street and plunged into
oountry,"toexamlne NIJ:ooandreportby Nov. 29on whether the
the Ohio River here . .
81-year-old former president Ia phyalcally capable of traveling to
Firemen recovered the body
testify at the Watergate cover-&lt;Jp trial, or giving a depooltion ln
of
Kenneth E. Finley, 53, about
California.
five hours after the accident on
WASHINGTON- THE U.S. RAILWAY ASSN. has,signaled River Street, which leads onto
the ferry loading ramp.
Northeastern and Midwestern ststea they face the loss of
A passenger in the car, Daisy
thousands of miles of !Diprofitable railroad branch linea unless
Casto,
escaped Injury when she
they prepare to subsidize or purchase them. The agency ln
jumped from the car before It
cha1'ge cf forming a new railroad system from bankrupt Eastern
entered
the water, police said.
railroads did not say how many lines It would declare unFinley
owned a pool hallprofitable ln Its preliminary syStem plan in February.
restaurant
here, the Jackson
But Its flrat report Wendesday contained a clear warning to
,Jiate goverrun~ts to plan major subsidy programs. The USRA County Amusement Co. and
aa1d the new railroad system would be Ofl1y marginally profitable was a local livestock dealer.
Ravenswood Chief of Police
8t beat and could not survive unless ,states, IOCIII governments
and even industries imderwrlte unprofitable operations. H un- Edward Speece said the matter
is still under investigation and
~Dtable lines are nece8181'Y, it said, their deficits "must be
that an autopsy ha• been or,
iBBWned by a wider sodalbue;•not by the railroad alone".
dered
on the body of the vicilm
...,_ ,,.,_.,
to determine the cause of
A POWERFUL SNQ.WSTOJ;!M - "l''lE FIRST OF THE
death.
The body was reeovered
SEASON - dumped heavy SlOWS acrosa the mldlan~ Wedabout
9
a. m. The ferry, which
rielday ni&amp;llland earJitooay, glazing hlgbways lind touching off
: a Ourry of accidents. At least three persons died ln weather- does not run during night time
hours, was parked at the ramp,
related trsfllc mlahapa.
but was not damaged in the
EugeDe Holmes, 48, of Maywood, m., wu-ldlled Wednesday
accident.
when his truck collided with an auto on Icy piJvement near Sl
O!arles,
An 18-year-old Iowa youth was killed w~n he lost
control of his car on a SIIOW-ellcked highway ln nort11western .
.-.Iowa and struck a truck. A Cahunet Cl!y, m., youth also was
iimed in a: t:l!reKill' accident late TUeadsy in the early.holll'8 of
the 'stOnn lri Chicago's southeast suburbs.
· !Duchy • blood preoh,;e , ljnd other.

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BY UIJHed l'ftu Jntmwloaal

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BIDS AWARDED
PT. PLEASANT- Two bids
were awarded to Upton Construction
Company
for
buildings In New Haven and
Leon by the Mason County
Court Tuesday. The bid was
awarded for a metal building to
be used by the Fire Depart:
ment in New Haven; In Leon
for a matching building to
adjoin the present fire station,
but to be used as a Youth
Center
or
Community
Building.

•

give-take

Brief~

Hubert Stage, Nelaonv!Ue coal
operation, wh9 has been a civic
leader especially in.the area of
recreation ; Brandon T.
Grover, Sr., former basketball
coach and athletic Director at
Ohio Universi!y; A. J. Stockmoister, Jackson plumbing
contractor and owner of Art's
MushrOoms; -Edward S. Levi,
who was ·Instrumental in the
development of the industrial
park at Portsmouth; Paul
Wagner, radio station owner
and past president of the
Gallipolis · Chamber and actively engaged in the
'promotion of Gallipolis and
southeastern Ohio; Uoyd Gill,
lifetime resident of McArthur,
for his efforts In education and
fire service throughout
southeastern Ohio and Undsay
.Ratliff, Piketon, for promotion
of vocational education and
economic development.
Davis said the meeting wlll ·
begin with a hospitality hour at
5:30 p.m. and the banquet at
6:30 p.m. Tickets may be
purcha_sedfrom E. E. Davis, S.
R. Cline, Charles Gaskill, ,
Jackson Chamber of Commerce, Portsmouth Chamber
of Commerce, Gallipolis
Chamber of Commerce,
Bernard
Fultz,
Athens
Chamber of Commerce, Logan .
Trade Club, Rhod Mills and the
Nelsonville Board of Trade.

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,. Savings &amp; Loin c,. ·

An
Ironton
newspaperwoman, Min W. Grimes,
will be the first female to
receive
the
annual
Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council award for outstanding
service and contributions to the
citiZens of Ironton and
Lawrence County;
E. E. Davis, President of the
SEORC said Mrs. Grimes,
associated with the Ironton
Tribune many yel:\rs , was
chosen by the Ironton committee to receive this year's
award at the annual SEORC
awards dinner at the Ohio
University Inn in Athens on
Thursday, Nov . Zl.
Eleven outstanding persons
from throughout southeastern
Ohio will be honored and given
recognition by the Council
membership, Davis said.
One award wlll be made
posthumously . John Zerkle,
former mayor of Middleport,
who died recently, was
selected for his endeavors in
industrial development,
planning and public service to
the citizens of Meigs County.
The SEORC, the oldest
development organization in
Ohio,"datlng back to the early
40s, has promoted economic
development In southeastern
Ohio by assisting and coordinating efforts of individual
members, both private and
public. It has also been a
staunch
supporter
of
regionalism.
. Outslandlng leaders to be
honored are Raymond 0 . Mast,
editor of the Perry County
Tribune ; Don M. Russell,
Logan. community leader and
manager of the General
Hocking Brick Company ;

STOP SLAUGHTER
CHICAGO (UPI} .l.. The
as was previously annoWlced.
National Farm Organization
bas asked farmers to stop
the protest slaughtering of
livestock until Congress aets
PICKUPSET
i
on
a $2 bUUon program to
Pickup on all of the Uncoln·
Hill area · by Scientlflcl feed the world's bungry with
Sanitation wiD be esch Friday, surplus Ameriean food. ·
NFO President Oren Lee
in the future. The area includes '
Staley at a Tuesday news
Uncoin Heights.
conference, acknowledged
that lbe slaugbter and burial
SERVICES SET··
' . of calves In Wlscousln and
RACINE
Graveside ! Minnesota _ to protest blgh
1
services for Mrs. Rosella prodncllon costs and low
Spencer, 71, who died Monday ' market prices _ brought
at her Rt. I, Racine, home will ' bad publicity to farmers.
be at 1 p.m. Friday at the
"NFO . agrees !bat this
Letart Falls Cemetery. Mrs. should not bappen," Staley
Spencer was preceded in death said. "Our members do not
by her parents, Crockett and want to destroy food wben
. Sylvania Collins Whitt and her : people 1n the world are
husband, William. The Ewing starving."
Funeral home is in charge.
~'lo'I"W:!IIWIII!Mlllll~li!UJif'iii~IWIIIMPI&gt;'I;.Io'l.':lll·

HE .WON'T QUIT .
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - House
Speake• A...G. Lancione, Ji).
llellaire, stoutly denied today'
he is withdrawing fr.om his
contest for re-eiection to Jhe
top leadership spot in the,
House: Lancione said; in fact,
..
that if he is defeated , by ·
Speaker
Pro Tempore Venial .
· Nothing increases a olao's
G.
Riffe
Jr.,
D-New Boston, he
appetite mor.e than his wife
·.:.
watohi!)8 the ·meat dish to see wlll run for re-election from the'
ifthere'wnt be enough left for 99th house District in 1976 and
hash. ·.
run fo~llll'l!" again,.
.

Meigs C'A ·Branch

"

o.et....;..
... t1nt ..,.,lift
• rflllt: o. • n "•·
Katrina Drutrunond,
lllcu, Wanda Saxon, B1llle Joe

MEIGS
. THEATRE

RUSHIN PARIS
PARIS (UP!) - Kenneth
Rush, former deputy U. S.
Secretary of State, flew into
Paris today to assume his post
as new U. S. ambassador to
France.

•

any doubts that Gov ..elect James A.
Rhodes can get along with a General
Aaaembly controlled by Democrats,
and vice-versa, forget them.
Those who knnw best - legislators
from both parties who have previously
served with Rhodes .ln the governor's
office -believe leglslative.executive
relations wlll warm up cooslderably
during the next four years.
Even Democrats, who wlll control the
House 59-40 and the Senate Zl-12, say·
they can work more easily with Rhodes
than with Democratic Gov. John J.
Gllllgan.
They say Rhodes wlll talk with them,
his door will be open and he wlll ''wheel
and deal" until both part!~ get some of
· what they want. Some refer to Gllllgan
with unprintable language.
"We're not going to have any
problems," said the Incoming
Republican governor Immediately
after his election last week. And most
lawmakers seem i.o agree.
BoxTIIemiD
· "The Democrats wlll either get along
with him, or he'll box them ln," said
Senate President Pro Tempore

Jntel'lllltiollal

Board to probe

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UPI Slatebo•e Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - H there were

layoffs immediately.
the loss .of jobs for as many "" Youngstown would be cut.
A spokesman for the €bessie
Jones &amp;Laughlin Steel Co. In
: More than 30C),OOO Ol)loans , 356,000 Ohioans, officials said.
System,
also hea!(quartered ln
Cleveland said the firm hod a
face layo~ ~ a result of a · Conserve Energy
Cleveland,
said layoffs were
David C. Sweet, Ohio Energy modest stockpile of coal and
nationwide coal Itllne_rs strike
• which has shill aU 52 union coal Emergency Commi ssion would not he affected immedj- not expected for several days
mines liJ the state and alrl"'dY chainnan, said Ohioans should ately from a .production stand- altbough the firm had posted
· forced u.s. Steel Corp: to begin immediately to tal&lt;" . point. The company plans no notices of possible layoffs last
· announce nationwide layoffs steps to conserve all forms of layoffs unless the strike last for week.
The strike did not immedia.tely
energy, but warned &gt;tlgslnst more than three weeks.
for 13,700 employes.
the Norfolk &amp; Western
affect
Negotiators for the United panic.
Railroad,
thoi nation 's largest
Sweet' said Ohio Industries
Mine Workers Union and the
Wheeling-PittsbUrgh Steel,
coal .'operators continued ef. using steel and electricity, of with several plants In Ohio, coal carrier with lines ln
forts in Wlllhlngton to' hammer which coal is a primary said it would be_gin considering esstern Ohio.
production element, wlll have
our a neW contract.·
•Meanwhile, the natloo's coal to increase layoffs lf the strike
miners, including, 13,000 in lasts for more than 30 days.
Despite the announced cureoutheastern and eastern Ohio,
· itayed away from the mines tailment of operations by U.S.
' Continued from page 1
!Or the second day f~Uowlng Steel, Sweet said the steel
The machine, also usable as a ~losed circuit unit, was
' the O&gt;'piration of their contract Industry has sufficient supplies
· with the Bituminous Coal to last the 10days to two weeks demonstrated by teacher Gary Walker who ststed that only
Operators AssoCiation at It would take to ratify a new persons trained in Its operation will be permitted to use it.
agreement.
The board unenimously voted to donate $700 toward the
midnight Monday. ·
Ohio's
steel
Industry
empayment on the machine.
u.s. Steel Board Chairman
Board member Snowden, ln respon'!" to what he termed
Edgar B. Speer said nine blast ployes approximately 179,000
lunaces were banked Tuesday, Ohioans, mostly in thz Canton, suggestions that he apologize for statements he made concerning
meaning they are kept warm Cleveland, Youngstown and the coaching ability of several members of the high school and
but are ..not used for steel Warren areas.
junior high football staffs, ststed :
Art Hehns, UMW District 6
"I wlllapologize for the way I handled It, but not that I ststed
· production. The · firm also
announced · operations at its vice president, which Incorpo- it." (SeeSnowdenststement on another matter on Page 2.)
In roullne business, the board approved attendance of
Youngstown furnaces would rates most of Ohio's UMW
members,
said
the
stste's
3,000
Betty Horky and Janis Schmoll at a Teachers Corps meeting,
be reduced and eight more
· blastfpmaceswouldbe banked non-union miners had joined John Redovlan at a Teachers Corps meeting, John RedoYian,
the work stoppage along with Bonnie Fisher and Jeanne Bowen at a Teacher Corps meeting,
at the end of the week.
John Blaettnar at a state 'leadership conference · of the
Ohio faces · a daUy loss of the 10,000 UMW members.
No violence connected with Distributive Education Clubs of America, Margaret Goodman at
more than $4 niUilon of coal
productibn per day aS long as the strike was reported In Ohio a regional meeting for Occupational Work Experience coor·
the strike continues .. The during the first day of the dlnators, Donald Dixon and Ed Bartels at OEA and OACT conventions In Columbus, James Diehl at a North Central
miner's strike coul&lt;! fOilll)t in wallrout.
A bureau of mines Association Review Committee meeting at ChllUcothe, and
spokesman ln St. Clairsville Charles Chancey at a state athletic directors meeting in
· said production of about 14e,OOO Columbus.
.
·
In
further
business,
the
following
appointments
were ap'.tons .of ~ per day at all
'
:
surface mine!! and some 77,000 proved: Mary Jones "" a subStitute cook, Elrelyn Davis as a ·
tons per day at all underground · substitute custodian, Sue Smith and Gertrude Woods as sub·mines in Ohio, based on 1973 stitute bus drivers, Kenneth Uttle and Robert Jeffrey Hysell as
. Five defendants were lined, figures, had been halted by the substitute custodians, Mary Jane Deeley as girls' basketball
:.: two forfeited bonds and one walkout.
coach, Robert OUver as freshmsn basketball coach, Jo Ann
: was assessed CO!;ts only in the Face Layoffs
Whit•, Amy Hauser and Cherie Thornton as substitu_te teachers,
; court of Middlepor.t Mayor
Sweet warned that should the Barbara Plotkin as a substitute Adult Basic Education teacher,
:; Fred Hoffman Tuesday night. strike last for more than 60 Adeline Snowden as a kindergarten aide at Rutiand and
. Fined $150 and . costs each· days, as many as 356,000 Harrisonville, and Everette Holcomb as a teacher of the adult
· . and given three day• jail sen- Ohioans would face layoffs. He
agriculture program.
tences on charges of driving said persons employed ln the
The board also estsbllshed the position of vocational
:. · while intoxicated were L. J. stone, cia~ and glass, paper financial record keeper and secretary, appointing Beverly Gaul
.-· Dixon, 49, Loughoff, S. C.; and allied products, chemicals to ·that post, and accepted the resignation of John Raub as a
. · Ronald W, Harrison, 21, and allled products and pricustodian, effective Nov. 1.
· Middleport; and Jerry Lee mary met81s Industries would
TUition rates or' $16.88 per month for Ohio residents and $69
Parsons, '1:7, Vinton.
bs affected.
per month for out-of-&lt;!late residents were approved,and a
Others fined were Robert W.
The Energy Commission resolution to cooi&gt;erate as a participating agency In the
· Moodlspaugh, 21, Middleport, chairman said that as many as Southeastern Ohio Regional Education Service Agency was
spinning tires, $20 and costs, 250,000 workers In the stste
approved .
and Michael A. Bolin, 19, could-be afffected by a strike of
A resolution to revise the special education plan to change
Mi4dleport, excessive speed. 3D days or longer duration .
the fiscal agent for a Vision Impaired class from the GaiUa JVS
Forfeiting bonds were Tom
He did say, however, there to the Meigs County Board, approving the proposed contract with
Burnside, 29, no address listed, were sufficient supplies of coal the Meigs County Board of Education to serve as the fiscal agent
$30, . posted on a charge of In sectors of Ohio's economy to for the Vision Impaired class and the arrangement of the transdisturbing thepeace, ·81)d Betty survive a short-term strike portation of chUdren In the Vision Imapired class were all apArcher, Middleport, $Z5, posted without serious damage to the proved.
on a charge of passing a school economy.
A new policy on attendance at professional meetings was
bus. PaulL. McDaniel, Jr.; l9,
11
ln the short tenn," Sweet
adopted, and the transfer of ownership from the J;&gt;oard to Orion
Middleport, was assessed costs said, ''Ohio is well prepared. and Oris Roush of a water well, pump and water line on Roushs'
· only when he· appeared on a As the strike extends, we have property was approved. Also, the board voted to send a
charge of !!Pinning tires.
varying capabilities to resolution to the Roushes eJq&gt;resslng its gratitude for the use of
respond.
.
their land and water for many years .
The
nation's
second
largest
The payment of hall the cost of new front stsge curtains and
•
steel
producer,
Republic
Steel
valance
at Salem Center School was approved. as was
.
.
· 'l'onight·and Thursday
COrp., headquartered in Cleve- the participation In a proposed program for gifted and talented·
NOV; !J-14
land, does not at this time plan children under the Southeastern Ohio Regional Education SerNOT OPEN
· any large layoffs.
vices Agency.
Elli!cts Minimal
Phyllis Hackett and Earl Young were approved as the
Fri •."Sat •• Sun.
,
A
spoke8man
for
Republic
board'srepresentativesln the above program, and the establishNovembir 15'·16-17
·Steel
said
effects
of
the
strike
ment
of an adult education program in every area where there is
THE J;,HINESE_ ''
had been minbnal and layoffs . adequate interest to support a program was approved.
PROFESSII)NALS
(R)
'
In "veri smsll" numbers so
MILK PRICE RAISED
'· far
. The spokesman · said,
Milk prices were raised from 5 cents to 6_cents for students
THE SCALA WAYS
however, coking operations ln and from 10 cents to 11 cents for adults, while It was agreed to
!G&gt;
Cleveland, Massillon and pay Zl'• hours overtime to the cooks at the high school.
Show Starts 7 .m.
An agre"'l\enl was also reached with respect to
hoapitallzation iilsurance payments for husbands and wives who
are both employees of the hoard,
Finally, a resolution to advertise for two school buses was
approved.
Attending the meeting were superintendent Hargraves,
board members Robert Snowden, Caroll Pierce, Wendell
Hoover, Joe Sayre, president Virgil King, clerk L. W. McComas,
representatives of the Rutiand PTA, Steve Walburn and Gene
Blankenship of the high school student council, Fenton Taylor,
Don Dixon, Charles Downie, Sam Crow, and ·Joy Bentley of the
high school, Frank Seth, Charlie HamUton and numerous
members of the boosters club, several parents concerned with
bus driver changes, Mr. and Mrs. John Blake, and Robert
Bowen, county superintendent of the Meigs County Schools.
' By Utilled

Assemhly~ to

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3-:-file DaUy Sentinel, Mlddlell"rl-~omeroy, 0 ., Th~ay, Nov. 14, 197•

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Pro Sta11dings

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Nov . H, 1974

Etsel Buck of
Belpre is dead

UN debate pall·s
peace in ntideast

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UNITED NATIONS (UPI) The inflexibility of Arab guerrilla leader Yasser Arafat and
Israeli Ambassador 'Y05ef Te·
koah hampered U.N . diplomats
today in the tortuoll5 search for
a Middle East peace.
The two men hurled epithets
Wednesday afternoon at the
·dramatic opening of the
historic U .N. debate on
Palestine, disturbing behind·
the-scenes moves to end the
four-war .

quarter-century

conflict.
Diplomats \ said

neither

Arafat nor Tekoah budged an
inch from

their

pre vious

positions. Several had hoped
the Invitation to Arafat would
lead the PLO and Israel to
soften their stands.
Lebanese

President

Suleiman Franjleh, speaking
on behaH of the Arab world,
was scheduled to address the
General Assembly this afternoon In a crucial speech
expected to reveal whether the
Arabs would back Arafat all
the way.
Arab sources said Franjieh
would likely suggest a moder·
ate resolution calling for a
Palestinian state, but Arafat's
speech raised the possibility of
a tough motion, possibly even
to oust Israel from the current
assembly session.
Arafat was expected to leave
for Cuba after . Franjieh's
speech.
The guerrilla chief received
a standing ovation from most
of the delegates after leading
off the debate by calling for the
creation of a Palestinian nation
in which Arab, Jew and
Christian could live at peace.
Diplomats In at least 35
delegations walked out as
· Tekoah took the rostrum to
describe the proposal as a call
for the destruction of Israel.
Arafat, guarded by the
heaviest security the world
body

has

ever

known,

declared , "I am a rebel and
freedom is my cause."

living in Israel or in Israelioccupied land.
But Tekoah denounced the
Two leading American exArafat-led
Palestine perts on the Middle East said
Liberation Organization as Arafat's speech hurt the
"murderers" seeking " to chances of peace In the wardestroy the Jewish state .''
torn region, polarizing the
Arafat's tough speech cited positions of the belligerents.
the possibility of Israel's ouster
Columbia University Prof. J .
from the current assembly C. Hurwitz said a new war is
session similar to the suspen-. likely if the aSsembly adopts
sion of South Africa earlier this Arafat's proposals. John C.
week .
campbell, senior research felHe accused Israel of ' 'prac- low at the CouncU on Foreign
ticing racial discrimination Relations, cited a "50-50"
more extensively than the chance of war.
racists of South Africa'' and
Tekoah said the U.N. Invitawarned Israel " to keep In tion to Arafat amounted to
mind" the assembly's suspen- hanging out a sign that
sion of the white supremacist •'murderers of children are
government.
welcome here. "
The Israeli delegation
"The PLO will not he forced
boycotted Arafat's speech, but on the Palestinian Arabs,"
aU other active U.N. members Tekoah said. " It wUl not he
attended. All Arab diplomats, tolerated by the Jews of
the Soviet Union, China and Israel."
many African nations walked
Some 1,000 U.S., U.N. and
out on Takoah's speech.
New York City security agents
Arafat received standing were deployed In a paramilibefore and after his tary operation to guard Arafat
vations
0
speech7 although the U.S. from his arrival Wednesday
delegates remained seated. At morning at Kennedy Airport In
the end he clasped his hands New York on a flight from
over his head like a triumphant Algeria.
boxer as applause echoed
Police sharpshooters wataround the cav'ernous cham- ched from rooftops. Coast
ber.
Guard boats patrolled the East
"I have come bearing an River. Marksmen spread out
olive branch and a freedom along the shore opposite the
fighter's gun," he said In a 9(). towering
38-floor
glass
minute speech Interrupted 10 skyscraper housing U.N.
times by applause. "llo not let headquarters.
the olive branch drop from my
The Jewish Defense League
hand."
had vowed to assassinate
The pudgy guerrilla leader's Arafat but the only incidents
usual heard was gone, but he reported were two bomb
wore his customary black and hoaxes and scuffles outside the
white checked Arab headdress. Waldorf Astoria Hotel where
He wore on his hip what a(&gt;- the PLO delegates were
peared to be a holster, although staying.
a PLO aide said he was
Arafat waa the second reunanned .
presentative of a non-U.N.
Arafat said the PLO wanted member nation to appear
sell-determination for some 1.5 before the assembly. Pope
mtlllon Palestinians left home- Paul VI addressed the body in
less by the birth of Israel in 1965.
1948 and an equal number

Waldnig; back row, Mrs , Connie Andrews, instructor, Debbie
Holsinger, Brenda Lawrence, Bobbl Chapman, Shelly Ward,
Jennifer Mugrage, Lee Ord, Rhonda West, Vickie Roush and
Ailsa Harris, statistician.

SENIOR VARSITY VOLLEY BALL team ended its first
· season of competition with a 3-3 record . Southern High School
senior members are front row,!..-, Nancy Roy, Cindy Roush,
Dreama Jenkins, Juli Gooch, Lisa Allen, Becky Sayre, Mel

Katie E. Blake
of Racine dies
RACINE - Mrs. Katie E .
Blake, 76, died Wednesday at
ber Rt. 2, Racine, residence.
Mrs. Blake was born Sept. 2,
1898, a daughter of the late Bill
and Lucille Beegle. She was
preceded In death by her
husband, Bill Blake; two
daughters, Audrey Van Meter
and Wanda Ross, and a halfsister, Inez Cleland.

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Contrary to expectations of
an easing of inflation, the
wholesale price index jumped
2.3 per cent in October, the
government said today. The
higher wholesale prices mean

easing. Prices for food, autos,
chemitals and machinery led
the surge last month, the
Bureau , of Labor Statistics
said.

higher prices for COf!sumers,

WASHING TON - Senate
Republican Whip Robert P.
Griffin interrupted Nelson A.
Rockefeller's confirmation
hearing. today to charge that
Democ~ats had been "dillydallying" because they feared
Rockefeller would be "too good
a vice president." The
Michigan
senator
said
Rockefeller had "made a
mistake or two in his public
life" and had willingly admitted it.
Committee Chairman
'Howard W. Cannon, D-Nev.,
abandoning his usual mild

the UPI said.
The surge in wholesale
prices came at a time when
pressure has increased on the

Ford adlninistration to direct
the government attack more
directly at recession instead of
inflation.
The October rise was more

than double the September
increase of 1 per cent, a modest

rise

that

led

some

ad-

ministration officials to ex-

press the belief that inflationary

pressures were

manner, replied that he
resented Griffin's "implication
that this committee had not
been diligent" in acting on the
nomination. Cannon said the

FBI's final
report on
Rockefeller was not received
until Nov. 4 and Rockefeller's
report on his political contributions of $15.5 million was
not received until Monday.
PITTSBURGH Local
leaders and rank-and-file
members of the United Mine
Workers were cautiously but

.markedly pleased today with a
tentative contract agreement,

and steel companies took the
first steps toward canceling
cutbacks triggered by the coal
miners strike.

TilE JUNIOR VARSITY VOLLEY BALL TEAM of Southern High School, in Its first year
of competition, ended the season with a 1-1 record. Team mebers are, front, 1..-, Joy Neigler,
llnda Fisher, Loretta Holsinger, Jean Ritchhart,.Myra Woods, Jerrenea Dill; back row, Mrs.
Connie Andrews, physical education instructor, Sharon Evans, Connie Patterson, Teresa
Ferrell, Denise Roberts, Launa Greer and Patty Robinson.

By WARREN NELSON
WASHINGTON (UP!) -

than

A

22. '.~

" The

precise

number

of

.,long-suppressed investigation of Vietnamese killed cannot be
the My Lai massacre shows determined, but wa~ at least
men participated in covering up report said.

the killing of between 175 and
400 civilians in the Vietnamese
village.
Portions of the investigation
headed by Lt. Gen. William R.
Peers were released Wednes-

day by the Army , more than
4112 years after it was finished
and marked secret on grounds

it might have prejudiced the

" The massacre resulted
primarily from the nature of
the orders issued by persons in

the chain of command within
Task Force Barker," headed qy
Lt. Col Frank A. Barker, the
report concluded.
" The task force commanders'
order and the associated
intelligence estimate issued

courts-martial of soliders ac.: prior to the opera lion were
cused in the massacre and embellished as they .were
cover-up.
disseminated through each

Only 14 officers were publicly lower level of command and
charged in the cover-up. Of ultimately presented to the
those , only one, Lt. Col. Oran individual soldier a false and
K. Henderson , ever reached misleading picture of the ...
court--martial ,

and

he

was area as an armed enemy camp

acquitted.
largely devoid of civilian
Former Lt. William L. Calley inhabitants."
Jr., the only man convicted of
It said Barker, field comthe massac re itself, was origi- mander of the My Lai operation
nally accused ol killing 107 who was killed in combat three
Vietnamese and eventually months later, "planned, orconvicted of murdering "no less dered and actively directed the

of

an

unlawful

operation." The report said

Maj. Charles C. Calhoun, Capt.
Eugene M. Kotouc and Capt.
Ernest L. Medina joined in the
planning.
But the report also blamed
higher officers, up to and
developing dilated veins including a two-star general,
around , the
rectum
or Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster,
hemorrhoids. Your diet and
bowel habits are important

Hemorrhoid victim seeks relief
By Lawrence E . Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Would
you give me some information

about Ingrown piles? Can
ingrown piles be operated on or

can they be cured In other
ways?

DEAR READER - Judging
from the nwnerous ads about
hemorrhoid preparations you

would think all you needed to
do was use Qne of them. lt isn't
that simple.
There are

two types of

hemorrhoids, the external type

and the internal type. Those
outside the musuclar sphincter
can be seen and touched . Those
inside the sphincter can be
seen and readily.
Hemorrhoids are nothing
rnore .than varicose veins of the
rectum . When one of the
dilated veins get a clot. in it and
is obstructed .then you have a
"thrombosed hemorrhoid.''

Rhodes,

If the obstructed vein is
outside the sphincter if feels
like a small ball and Is uncomfortable. The term piles
comes from the Latin word

"pila" meaning ball. You have
the discomfort because this
area is abundantly supplied
with sensitive nerve fibers.

Hemorrhoids
sphincter

often

inside

the

cause

no

discomfort. There are no
sensitive pain fibers

U1ere .

They do bleed and painless
bleeding of bright red blood
may be caused by internal
hemorrhoids . The word
hemorrhoid comes from a

Greek word meaning the flow
of blood.
Sometimes the internal
hemorrhoid· extends Into external hemorrhoids. The right
treatment is based on a careful
examination
and determination of the extent of the

asse~bly

Cdntinuerl from page 1
you need?" ana expects favors in
return.

Two Voleo Short
"l'lf never forget the first year I was
here and he needed the Ohio Bond
Conunisslon fast and he was two votes
short," relAtes House Majority Leader
Barney Quilter, D-Toledo.
"I was leaving the Statehouse about
me o'clock one mornlng.'and I felt this
arm go around my shoulders, and a

hemorrhoids.

Uncomplicated

internal hemorrhoids can he
injecied and scarred down to
nothing in some cases . Ex-

ternal hemorrhoids with an
obstructed vein sometimes

need to be opened by a minor
office surgical procedure.
Otherwise
they
usually
respond to local treabnent.
Residual itchy tags are
sometimes removed . Surgery
is also done to remove extensive internal, plus external,

hemorrhoids.
If you want more information on hemorrhoids
write to me at P. 0. Box 155,1,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019 and ask for the
booklet on hemorrhoids. Send
50 cents to cover costs.
You can do a lot to prevent or
relieve hemorrhoid problems
by using good bowel habits.
Constipation and straining at
the stool contribute to

\

•

only useful for external application to relieve discomfort. ·

They will not do anything for
internal hemorrhoids, And, the
supposi tortes placed in the
rectum won't do anything for
the external hemorrhoids. This
isn ' t the worst feature of these
medicines you .can buy .

Sometimes hemorrhoids are a
symptom, of something more
serious. That som~thing can be
cancer of the rectum . I finnly
believe anyone

with

new

bleeding from the rectwn niust
haye an examination . ,Self..
treatment
is
d 'a ngerous

because it may delay prompt
attention to a more serious

problem.

Cincinnati, a leading black legislator.
"We have more and more )'olllll! and
energetic legislators who want to get a
job done and see programs through and
aren't so concerned about reelection."
"Maybe' this Is the best thing that
ever happened for the people of Ohio, ,
who knows?" said Rep. George D.
Tablack, D-Youngstown. "Now lliere
will be a ' balance . between the two
parties and the two branches of
goVI!rnment."

~;·, ~
I

preventive measures .
In any case, the popuarly
advertised medications are

will get along

voice said 'Hi, Bam.' I looked around
and It waa Gov. lUlcides and he 'sa!d
'Barn, I ned a favor' and he told me
what It waa. I explained to hbn that I
couldn't vote for that, thatl had to go
with the party, and whoosh, 1 he was
gone, Into the night. No pressure, but he
knows how to talk to you."
But the Democrats are not about to be
pushed around. "We want to set the
p-lorities outselves, and I think we can
do it," said Rep. William L. Mallory, D-

daughter, Jo Ann

Crisp,

Waynesville; two brothers,
carl, Eagleville, Tenn., and
Rush, East Sparta, and several
nieces and nephews.

Mrs. Blake attended the
Dorcas United Methodist
Church.
be at 2
Funeral services
p. m . Saturday at the D&lt;Jrcas
Church with Rev. Freeland
Norris officiating. Burial will
be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at
for failing to "insure that the the residence at anytime. The
plan .. . included provisions for Ewing Funeral Home is in
the handling, screening and charge of arrangements.
lreatment of the.noncombatant'•
inhabitants" during March 16,
1968, sweep of My Lai.
Koster was never tried, the
Army said, because there was
Insufficient evidence. But the
Army did demote , Koster,
PT. PLEASNAT - Christreprimand him and rescind an
mas
shouid be a time of joy, but
award lie received in 'Vietnam. ·
unless
the response to the
Two chaplains were also
Firemen's
toy project Inimplicated. The report said
capt. ·Carl E. Creswell reported creases considerably In the
what he knew to Lt. Col. next few weeks, there will be
Francis R. Lewis but that he many sad.youngsters in Mason
failed to report it as well County.
Point Pleasant Volunteer
through military channels.
Firemen
are hoping to
Lewis was accused of limiting
his action to "informal discus- dislribute toys and baskets of
sions with various staff of- food on Chrisbnas Eve, but at
this time have . little to work
ficers ."
with.
Army Secretary Howard H.
There is dire need for good
Callaway said two of the
used
and new toys, as well as
report's four folumes are still
for
canned
goods and cash
secret because they contain
investigatory material ''many donations to purchase fresh
of them quite inflammatory; foods for the baskets.
A spokesman said there are
many of them without backstill
a few dolls at the station
up."
needing to he dressed. Persons
desiring to make clothing for
Cable addition
these may pick them up at the
station. Those with items to
made in Oak Hill contribute
may call 675-2313.
A major cable addition for
growth and service Improvement has been placed in
service in the Oak Hill area,
Pleasant Valley Hospital
General Telephone Co. of Ohio
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Roy
announced today.
Herdnian, Mason; Miles
Reese E. Lloyd, Jackson Carpenter, Jr., Vinton; Ronnie
cu.stomer service manager, Steele, Aahton; Hollis Klnsatd the $74,100 expansion will niard, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
provide for future growth in the Max Heslep, Point Pleasant·
area. Portions of the new cable Patricia Stover', Ashton; Mrs'.
will replace existing facilities Greg Reynolds, son, GallipoUa·
for maintenance reasons . lionel R. Triplett, Galli~olis;
Where possible the cable was Mrs. Roy Smith, Gallipolis
buried. The new faciUtles will Ferry; Tammy Hamrick, New
serve the eastern section of the Haven:
Oscar
Tucker,.
exchange. The exchange Robertsburg; Mrs. .Dana
serves 1,941 telephones in a Chapman, Point Pleasant.
91. 7-square-mile-area of

will

My Lai ·coverup story out

execution

DR. LAMB

grand-

Racine; a great-grandson,
Allen Crisp, Racine; a son-inlaw~ Buck VanMeter, Racine ;
a sister , Lena Hudson,

that 26 officers and two enlisted 175 and may exceed 400," the

Wholesale price jump

Surviving are a

Mrs. Shank of
Coolville dies

COOLVILLE - Mrs. Luada
G. Shanks, 82, Coolville, ·died
Wednesday evening at the
Marietta Memorial Hospital,
following a brief illness.
Mrs. Shanks, born in Athens
Councy, was a daughter of the
late Isaac and Eva l!rookhart
Gibbs. She was a resident of
Coolville most of her life where
she was a member of The
Coolville United Methodist
Church, The United Methodist
Women, the Helen McCloud
Service Gulld , the Fidelity
Rebekah Lodge 880, and a
former member of Troy
Grange .
Surviving are two nieces,
Mrs. Mary Becker,. Marietta,
and· Mrs. Lucy Deeter,
Coolville, and two nephews,
Harry Gibbs , Coolville, and
,Dale, Torc)l. She was preceded
in death in 1968 by her husband,
~wo brothers ·and a sister.
Funeral services will be at 1
.P· m . Saturday at the White
Funeral Home, Coolville, with
Rev. Wesley Thatcher . and
Rev. Roy Deeter officiating.
Fidelity Rebekah Lodge will
conduct services at the funeral
'home at 7:30 p. m. · Friday.
Burial 'will be in the Coolville
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home .
f

Firemen need

more responSeS

Jackson

and

Lawrence

·cbunties.

Ent

w

1 1 pet. pt pa
13 6 0 .684 391 256

~.

BELPRE - Eisel D.
67, 2117 Lockland Ave., Bel1pre,
died Wednesday at the
Genera! Hospital, M~~::=:
following a lingering
Mr. · Buck, born in
County, W.Va., March 18,1907,
spent his early life there. He
had lived in the Parkersburg.
Belpre area the past 40 years.
He was formerly employed by
the Kroger Grocery Co., at
Vienna, W. Va., and attended
the Vienna Wesleyan United
Methodist Church. He was a
member of Parkersburg Lodge
169, F and AM, a member of
the Grand Lodge of West
Virginia F and AM, and had
gone through ail of the levels
from the Scottish Rite to the
Shrine. He was a veteran of
World War II having served in
the U. S. Navy. He was a
member of the Order of
National Travelers.

·~ ..

~ .... x-Detrolt

w 1 t pc1 .
13 6

. . Hwellans

9 11
7 12

· ~ Portlnd

.,

Wednesday's Results

"IIi"'

· than a year ago, just because
we've got more deer," DeVoe

Takes Several Forms
The "anyUdng" he spoke
about takes several forms; ;.ll
directed towards after-the-fact
law enforcement. The main

. ,.

NBA S1andings

·~, By United Press International

Eastern Conlerence

o
1

s .1:11 5
6 .soo

3
.t

Washing t on
Houston

Cleveland

Atlanta

6

w . I. pet. g .b.

10
7

2
5

s

1

6

5

B33
583

.s4s

.417

NewOrleans
1 12 .on
'.
Western Conference

3
3 ,12

s

9 1h

Midwest Division

.Detroit
Kc .omaha

~ · ~ ~5~\ g.b.
6

1

462

, ,/"

" Ch icago
6
7 .462
11
Milwaukee
1 12 .077 6 1~
,.
Pacific Division
., Golden st .
1~· 13 ~~~ g.b.
Seattle
8
4 .667
1112
" Phoenix
6 6 .500 31h
.-Portland
6 8 .429 4ln

LosAnoeles

4

7

.364

Moeller, which tangles with
once-beaten apd third-ranked
Warren Harding Saturday in

.s

Oetrolt 98 Milwaukee 91
Phoenix 105 Phlla 100
Seattle 108 Los Ang 103
Thursday's Games
Buffalo vs . Boston
at Prov iden ce
Cleveland at New York
- Chicago at Houston
~ Atlanta at Portland

FT. LAUDERDALE, Fla. - '
Mrs. Mabel M. Lax, 71, for.
merly of Meigs County, died
Wednesday at the Broward
Hospital, Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.
A daughter of the late Clara
L. and Sullivan Moore Circle,
she was preceded in death by a

record.

No. 1.

thesemi-flnaisofthestatehlgh

washr;;~~g~~~=k~ .~~~~~ 81

Mabel l\'1. Lax
dies in Florida

margin over runnerup Upper

the

1112

Philadelphia
s
7 411
Central Divis i on

.. New York
.r

8

fir t 1
ot
t this
k
s pace v es cas
wee
by the AAA coaches and
amasSed 317 poll point:;.
The Crusaders of Coach
Gerry Faust who were .second
last week, rolled up 8 78-point

United Press International
Ohio High School Board of
Coaches as the top football
teams in the state.
Moeller, which finished. a 10-0
regular season last Friday
· h
1
fr
behind
rug t W th a come- om24-20 victory over previously
unbeaten Cincinnati Elder,
dominated the final week's
ClaSB AAA ratings, thanks to
Massillon's upset Sat\U'day of
1
Canton McKinley , former y

Atlantic: Division
.. .
w . 1. pet . g.b.
.. Suffolo
9
3 .750

·· Boston

Dayton Jefferson (I~) fin·
Arlington, which finished with
239 points and moved up from ished in third In AA, followed
by Columbus WattersOn (8-1-1)
fourth a week ago.
The Golden Bears will also in fourth and Wyoming In fifth.
Fenwick, under coach Jerry
he in this weekend's playoffs,
going against seventh-&lt;anked Harkrader, made a season
New Philadelphia (9-G-1) in the ciimb to the top, claiming the
1
opener of the big doubleheader. ' No. 1 position for the first time
Ev~n Less Trouble
1ast week.
The Falcons, who flriished
St. Vincent, which finished a
rugged schedule with a 9-1 their demanding schedule with
record, had even less trouble a 9-G-1 record, barely edged out
than Moeller In taking the AA canal Winchester ( 1~) and
Bluffton (10-0) for tthe small
poll crown.
The Irish, coached by John school title.
Received Four Firsts
Cistone, led the AA ratings
most of the year while the Fenwick, which won the
battle for the No. 2 spot Class A playoff championship a
provided most of the ex· year ago, finished with 170
points, three more than Win·
citement.
St. Vincent, which taugles chester and seven more than
with sixth ranked Norwalk (9- 'Bluffton, which received four
1) Saturday night in Akron in firsts.
The only blotch on an
the playoff semi-finals, got 10
first place votes and 234 poll . otherwise perfect record for
points. Toronto, which finally Fenwick was a ~ tie with
tough Trenton Edgewood. St.
locked up the No. 2 spot,
Vincent's
lone loss of the
received five first place votes
and 123 points. The Red
Knights finished with a I~

COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Cincinnati Moeller, Akron St.
v·
d
mcent an
Mt'ddl etown
Fenwick have been selected by

"'

school playoffs at Ohio Stadiurn, grabbed off 20 of the 34

come back aWard

ABA Standings
By United Press tnrernational
East
·
w . I.1 .917
pet . -g . b .
, Kentucky
11
New York
9
6 .600
J li2
St . Louis
6 9 .400
6'h
Memphis
4 10 .286 a
' Virginia
3 9 .250 1112
'West
w . I. pet . g.b.

sister,

Stella R. Gaskins. Surviving
are three brothers, Garrett and
G. Douglas Circle, Racine, and
John C., Columbus; a sister,
Florence I. Circle, Racine, and
several nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Lax was a former
school teacher and hairdresser. She belonged to the St.
Andrews United Methodist
Church and the Daughters of
America in Fort Lauderdale.
Funeral services wUI be at 2
p. m. Sunday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with Rev. Steve
Wilson officiating . Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 9 a. m. Saturday.

r:~'A"n'tonlo 'J ;

r:;

52•;,

San Diego
5 8 .385
Indiana
4
7 .364 5112
Utah
s 9 .357 6
Wednesday's Results
Ky. 132 N.Y . 129, 2 ots
St . LOUIS 97 MemphiS 92
Utah 114 Indiana 103
Denver 132 San Diego 108
Thursday's Games
St . Louis vs. Virginia
at Hampton
New York at Memphis
Kentucky at San Antonio
NHL standings

By Uni1ed Press International

Division 1
w. I. t . p1S
12 3 2 26
Phil a
9 •6 3 21
At Ia
7 5 3 17
NY tlndrs

gf ga

58 35
54 47
54 40

NY Rngrs

6 6 3 15 49 44
Division 2
w . 1. t. pts gf ga
Vncuvr
10 4 2 22 58 41
7 7 2 16 57 40
Chicago
5 7 3 13 49 54
St.Louis
483113858
Mlnn
211153867
K'an City
Division 3
w. I. t. pts gf ga
10 1 5 25 55 27
LOS Ang
7 5 5 19 68 52
Montreal
5 7 2 12 42 62
Detroit
5 7 2 12 55 57
Plttsbgh

Laurel Oif£
News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance ,
Nov. 10 at the Free.Methodist
Church was 100. Sunday, Nov.
17 will be recognition day for ,
Senior Citizens.
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Johnny llouglas, Guys- :
ville.
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook ;
and Bertha Parker called on :
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Ball Run. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Higgenbothom, Columbus, ~
spent the weekend with Rev .
and Mrs. Shook.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alkire,
Kimberlee and Kevin and Miss
Cleo Parker, Columbus, spent
the weekend with Bertha
Parker.
Mr. Edward Dailey, Wilkesville, called on Mr. and Mrs . .
Harmon Fox.
Mrs. Florence Stahl, Stock- •
dale, recenUy visited with Mr. ,
and Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Curtis
quietly celebrated their 64th
wedding anniversary at their
home.
The County Holiness raliy 1
will be held at the local church
Nov. 26, 7:30p.m.

4
1 13 2
Division 4
w. 1. t . pts
11 J 2 24
6 4 5 17
"' 7 3 11

wash

33 77

gf ga
71 53
67 47
51 60
calif
3 10 4 10 39 75
Wednesday's Results
Phila 3 NY Rangers 2
Pittsburgh a NV ISindrs 2
Atlanta 4 Washington 3
Buffalo 8 Montreal &amp;
Ml.nnesota 7 Detroit" 4
Kansas City S St. Louis 3
LOS Angeles 4 Toronto 0
California 2 Chicago 0
Thursday's Games
Montreal at Boston
Minnesota at Buffalo
Bflo
Boston
Toronto

,Haymaker moved
to area hospital

JOBLESS GROW
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The ,
Center for Business and
VeleraDS Memorial Hospital
Econom)c Research ·at Ohio
ADMITTED - Priscella
State
University reported
Schuler, Rutland; Lee Hobbs,
today
that
employment.,ln Ohio •
.Mason: Ktu:.e_'!_l;l_olter, ~cine; .
continued
to decline !n Sep- '1:
Darrell Stone, Jr., Leon, W.
MEETING SET
!ember, dropping by 1 per cent r
Va.; Terena Russell, Pomeroy.
A , county-wide prayer for the third consecutive
DISFHARGED Mary
...
month.
BosUc, Hollie Green, Luther mee\ing will be held Sunday,
Bartow, &amp; ., Zally Medors, Nov . 17 at the Hobson Christian
,."I
Union
Church
at
2
p.m
.
Glenn
Betty Brown.
MOHICAN BEST
II
Bissell is class leader.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The &gt;II
"
Ohio Parks and Recreation '"
Association has selected ,} I
"'
Mohican State Park Lodge as .ll
the state's oullttandlng new . ·
William D'. Krawsczyn, son recognizes outstanding
park
faciUty, It was announced • i
of Mr. and Mrs. John scholars in the · college who
Wednellday.
• ::
maintained
high
'Krawsczyn of Middleport, was have
The $7 million lodge has 96 • ~
honored ·recently by The O)llo scholastic achievement in all
rooms
and opened last April. :::
State University , College ·' of courses undertaken at the
Agricult~re
and
Home University. There were 285
Economics students as ati Agriculture, Home Economics
.
PTO TO"MEET
ii
.
rlAClNE
- The Racine PTO
Honors Scholar at the annual • and NatW"al Resources Honars
~I
·Honors Banquet for students Program students, ' and · 138 · will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday .' !
' and their parents.
students eligible to enter the at the grade schoo. Babysitting
The
Honors•. Program special ,program honored .
service will be provided.

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - Jiff
Haymaker, freshman at West
Virginia Wesleyan and kicker
for the varsity football team,
was Injured Saturday In the
final game of the season at
Beaver Falls, Pa.
Haymaker .after sustaining
two fractures in the lower left
leg (his kicking leg) Sunday
was lransferred from Beaver
Falls Medical Center to Holzer
Medical Center in the New
HaVl!ll E-R squad ambulance.
A son of Mr. and Mrs. Nell
Haymaker, New Haven, he is a
1974 graduate of Wahama High
School where he was a kicker
and punter on the White Falcon
football team. His room
number Is 304.

t
uoes
0
e.

e nkl.RS

JT

dedly brought the Texas
By BILL MADDEN
Rangers back to respectabllty
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Tire- with 2li victories this past
less Ferguson Jenkins, a season, has been named the
Chicago Cub cast-off a year 1974 Major League Comeback
ago, who almost singlehan- Plsyer of the Year by United
Press International.
Jenkins, who rallied from a
14-16 season with the Cubs In
WHA 5tandmgs
By United Press International '73 to a 25-12 log with the
East
Rangers in ' 74, polled nine
w 1 t pts pf pa
7 3 o· 14 36 27 votes ' from the' 'UP! baseball
New Eng
4 9 0 8 31 50 correspondents across the
lndpl s
3 4 1 7 19 25
Cleve
28042338 country to easily outdistance
Ch icago
West
southpaw . Jim Kaat of the
w 1 1 pts pgf ga
850166144 Chicago 'White Sox who had
Houston
7 4 0 14 36 38 four.
San Diego
&lt;I 6 1
9 41 49
Phoeni)(
Jenkins' 25 victories tied him
4 7 0 8 46 56
Minna
2 10 0 4 31 59 with Jim Hunter of the Oakland
Mic h
canadian
w 1 t pts . gf ga A's as the top winner in the
10 4 0 . 20 67 45 major leagues this aeason. In
Toronto
8 3 0 16 54 32
Quebec
addition,
the '
Texas
7 2
15 55 28 righthander pitched 328 InWlnipg
9 35 47
Vncuvr
' 7
nings, struck out 225 batters
• Edmntn
4 2 0 a 22 19 and posted an earnebhrun
Wednesday's Results
average of 2.83. Jenkins also
Houston 8 Minn'esola 5
Quebec 10 Indianapolis 3
had 29 complete games to lead
Toronto 5 Vancouver 3
the majors in that department.
Edmonton 5 Winnipeg 3 ·
Thursday's Games
It was oo secret that, despite
Chicago at Mic h igan
career-high
performances
Cleveland at Phoeni)(
New England at San Diego
from many of. the other Texas
players under new Manager
Billy Martin, Jenkins was the
key to the Rangers' dramatic
rise from one of the worst
POMEROY DOWLING
teams In baseball in '73 (57-106)
LANES
to within five games of the
MORNING GLORIES
Nov . 5,1974
world champion Oakland A'sln
Standings
the American League west
Team
GibbS Grocery
50 with an M-76 mark.
Excelsior Oil Co .
49
After ~ix straight 211-win
G. &amp; J . Auto Parts
46
Newell Sunoco
42 seasons with the Cubs, Jenkins
W.M P .O.
28
Spencer's Market
25 slumped to 14-161n '7a and was
High Ind. Game
Ellen promptly unloaded in one of the
Rough 19S, Ann Radford 192.
High Series - Ellen Rough more senB~~tional off...ason
526, Ann Radford 520.
deals last winter. To get him,
Team
High
Game
the Rangers surrendered hard- ,
W.M P 0 . 791 .
Team High Series - Newell hitting young third baseman
Sunoco 2266 .
Bill Madlock and another
youngster, second baseman
A. L.A.
Vic Harris.
Nov . 8,1974
Standings
"I hated to part with
w. L. Madlock," Martin said later,
Team
50 22
Jr . Gutter ousters
38 34 '\hut' once I knew that Jenkins'
602 Rocketts
Feeney -Bennett Fil ers 36 36
34 38 arm waa sound, I knew I
12a Sr . Strikeouts
30
42 wanted hbn."
467 Slow Pokes
211 44
128 Sr . Hot Shots
Kaat, Jenkina'closest com·
Gerry
High Ind . Gi.!me
Kess ii1ger lll9, Etten Tucker petitor, also had quite a ·
157 .
Ger ry
High
Ser ies
Kessinger 431, Pearl Russell
402 .
602
Team High Ga.me
Rocketts 421 .
Team H i g~ Series - 602
Rocketts 1184 .

••we have two single engine
airplanes flVailable to us , one
based here and another in

preview Friday

Hideaway

.~
·l

DeVoe said . Some find their
way into Ohio's largest cities of
Columbus, Cleveland and Cln·
clnnati, taken there by experienced

members

of

esta blished poachin g rings .
DeVoe a dmitted such rings
have largely eluded efforts to
break them until now.

STEVE
SNOWbEN
553 Ru s se l 51.
(Gravel Hill)
Middleport
Ohio

Phone 992.7155;,----,
fike a good
neighbor.
Srate Fa rm
IS

th ere

SUI{ URII loi ~ I UAl ~U I OUOI I H IUUUNCI
CO WP l U • "0 1111 Qfi i C( l lOO IIIIII~ lO I . Il l

•

shining the fields ," he added .
&lt;~We catch quite a few this
way."
DeVoe said there are other

methods used to apprehend
possible poachers.
D&lt;Jn't Llke SpoiUghts
"We have quite a few Ian.-·

downers (farmers) In this area
who just don't like spotlights
shining on their property and
houses at night. If a man has a
gun, he could accidentally
shoot someone sitting in a
house , so the fanners call us

Pheasant
and
RABBIT
SEASON

when they see someone with a

flashlight after dark ."
Once a suspect's car is
stopped, the trunk is checked
for blood, hair or any other sign
that a deer may have been
carried thi!re. And since state
law says it is illegal to shine a
light after 10 p.m., or while In
possession of a firearm, DeVoe
said his field men can make
arrests on these Infractions
alone, with or without clues of
deer kills.

Pearson will
miss contest

OPENS
NOVEMBER 15
Our complete line of hunting supplies and
equipment is here ready lor selection. Made
by world-known manufacturers and in a large
range of prices.

AMMUNITION OF ALL KINDS

with Browns

WESTERN • REMINGTON

PITTSBURGH (UPI) -The
Pittsburgh Steelers said
Wednesday running back Preston Pearson would not play
against the Cleveland Browns
Sunday.
Pearson suffered a pulled leg
muscle in the loss to Cincinnati
last Sunday and has been
unable to practice all week.
Running back Rock~ Bleier,'
hobbled by a sprained ankle, Is
listed as questionable for the
game before a sellout crowd at
Cleveland's Municipal
stadium.
The Steelers (8-2-1) are In
first place In the Central
Division of the American
Conference, one-half game
ahead of Cincinnati (IN).
Cleveland ( U) is in last
place In the Central Division.
The Steelers defeated the
Browns earller In the season
2().16 in Pittsburgh.

SHOTGUNS &amp; RIFLES
Remington - Winchester- Ithaca
Harrison &amp; Richardson - Mossberg Browning Gun Cleaning Kits - Gun
Oil - Recoil Pads - Game Bags Shell Vests - Gun Cases - Hunting
Accessories Hunters Jackets &amp; .
Caps- Hunting Pants &amp; Caps - Rifle
Sling Straps - Steel Trap~.

LICENSED GUN DEALER

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
110 W. MA!f\! .

PQMERpY

We Issue HunTing License

8:30and in the nightcap at 9:15,
Athens will battle Columbus
Northland.
Admission is $1.50 for adults
and 75 cents for students.
This

evening,

Southern

Valley Athletic Conference
Coaches will draw for the
annual SVAC cage preview, to .
be held Friday, Nov . 22, at Rio
Grande College's Lyne Center.
The SVAC event was
originally slated for Nov . 15,
but was rescheduled.

SAVE MONEY

I'

SAVE HEAT

"SHOP
NOW
FOR THE
BEST

Li~tening

ITATI U . IM

P7 1· 108

For
Christmas

compiling a 21-13 record with a
2.96 ERA after a 1~13 mark ,
with a 4.38 ERA the previouS
year.

Pomeroy

deer near the roads.
" Then we ' U have several
game protectors in radio
equipped cars ready to move in
on any white lights we see

prevents
eve n
greater
poaching activity, he said .
Poache d deer are e ither used
for home meat supplie s or sold,

is the time
to call me for the best
car insurance value anywhere.

Now-·

SELECTION."

INSULATE
YOUR HOME
BEFORE COLD
WEATHER
TRUCK LOAD SA.VINGS

15" &amp;. 23" WIDTHS
21Jz" • 31Jz" • 6" THICK
'

Val1~y":. Lu.mber

&amp; Supply Co.

HOURS: MON. T.HRU FRI. 7 AM TIL 5 PM
SATURDAY: 7 AM TIL 12:00 NOON ~

The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992-3629

McDonald wound up fourth
In Class A, well off the pace of
the top three teams. Windham
finished 5th, followed by Plain
City Jonathan Alder in sixth,
defending
poll . champ
Covington in seventh, Newark
Catholic, New Washington
Buckeye Central and Rockford
Parkway.

Athens cage

TONIGHT 9:30 TO 2:00

1

Minerva .

"

~

:t

Louisville St. Thomas Aquinas,
Wellington, New Lexington and

COLUMBU S IUPil The
II . Well ington 13 10-01
76
final weekly Un it ed Pre ss 9. New Lexington ( l O· Ol
7j1
In tern a tional Ohio Hig h Sc hool 10. Minerva (9 .1)
69
Board of Coaches' football
Second 10 : 11 She lby 611 ; 12.
ratings (with first pla ce vot es Wh ee lers burg 60 , 13 Ironton
and won .lo s t re cord s in 11 ) 54 ; 14 . Mar iemont (11 39:
par e nthese s J .
15 Oak Harbor 26, 16 Bellair e
CLASS AAA
11 1 24 . H . Lima Bath (1 1 23, 18 .
Team
Points Bridgeport 19; 19. Columbu s
1. Cin e . N oel ler (20 10-0l
317 Mifflin 18 . 20 . wauseon ( I I 17 .
2. Up . Arimgton (3 10-0J
239
Other s with 10 or more
3 War Harding (2 9 -ll
212 points : Springf iel d Sha wn ee,
4. CantonMcK {19 -1J
193 Gall ipoli s (1 ), Wellsvi lle and
5. Cin e . Elder (9.1)
166 Medina H1ghla nd.
6 War . West . Res (9 . J l
132
CLASS A
7. New Phila . (2 9-0·ll
120 Team
Points
a. Fremont Ross {2 9-0·1) 110
1. Midd letown Fen (5 9 0 1)
9' Ket Fairmo nt Wes t (2 10-0l
170
62
2 Cana l Win chester 16 lO ·Ol
10. Lakewood St. Edw (9 1) 51
167
Second 10 : 11 Young sfown
3. Bluffton 14 10-0 l
1113
Chaney (1l 43; 12 . Young stown
4 Mc Donald 12 10 OJ
121
Cardinal Mooney 29 ; l3 Dover
5. Wind ha m (9.0-1J
11 4
24 , 14 . (t1e l Will oughby South
6. J onathan Alder 19· ll
83
a nd Oregon Clay ( ll 17 each ;
7. Cov ington 19 -ll
. -82.
16. Columbus Waln ut Ridge 16,
8. NewarkCatholi c (l 9-l l 74
17 (tie ) Parma Padua and
9. Bu c keye Central (4 9-01 68
Columbus Northland 14 ea ch ; 10. Rockford Parkway ( 1 9 11
Barberton II ; 20 . Findlay 10
55
CLASS AA
Second HI : 11 . L1be rt y
Team
Points Benton 52; 1'2 . Fremont St .
' . Ak . St . Vincent ( 10 9 I J 234 Joseph 48 , 13. Indian Valley
,2 Toronto (5 10-0}
123 North (2) 37; 14 . Marion
3. Dayton Jefferson {IO.OI 118
Ca th olic I l l 35 ; 15. Montpe lier
4. Cols . Watterson (18 -f 1l 98 29 , 16. Arlington 18 ; 17 . Mar ion
5. Wyom ing {1 91 )
97 Local 16 , 18. Ashland Mapleton
6 . Norwalk ( 1 9.1l
91
11 , 19 CoryR.awson 10 : 20.
7. LouisvilleAgu inas (1 8·0 2)
Tuscaraw as Catho lic 9.

AND . THEI .HALLMARKS

,,

ten consisted of Norwalk,

Final UPI grid ratings

GEO• .HALL

'j

Columbus. We'll put one plane
over a poaching hotspot at
night, looking for flashes of
light as poachers try to shine

Finishing behind Moeller,
Arlington and Harding In AAA
were canton McKinley, Cine in·
nati Elder, Warren Western
Reserve, New Philadelphia,
Fremont Ross, Kettering Fair·
mont West and Lakewood St.
Edward.
In Class AA , Columbus
Watterson finished fourth, followed ooe point behind by
Wyoming. The rest of the top

The lOth annual Athens
Shrine Cage Preview will be
held in the Athens High School
gymn , The Plains, starting at 7
p. m. Friday.
Four 16 minute contests are
scheduled as the 1974-75
campaign gets underway.
First game pits Belpre
against Trimble at 7 p. m.
Second outing pits Federal·
Hocking against Nelsonville·
York at 7:45. Third outing finds
Alexander taking on Logan at

areas with law enforcement

"U deer are taken at night, personnel. Just the mere
the poacher has to use some presence of so many state men

Warren Western Reserve, 27-0.

Pleasure •••

,.

ing poachers' activity.

season ca[\le at the hands of

"boomerang"· season in '74:,

For Your Dining and

To combat the Increase In
overcoming the element in poaching during this time of
which most deer are poached : the Year, DeVoe said game
the dark of night.
protectors from aU over Ohio
In some ways, however, converg e on District Four
darkness is a help in pinpoint· counties to aid In saturating the
problem, DeVoe admitted, was

kind of artificial light, and
that's how we usually spot
him," DeVoe said.

Middletown Fenwick A winner

Florida at Southern Cal

Geraldine Enoch, Vienna .
Three brothers preceded him
in death.
Funeral services will be at 11
a. m. Saturday at the Spencer
Funeral Home, Belpre, where
frierids may· call at anytime.

·'

1 .375 264 42 6

it." .

Akron. St. Vincent AA champ;

:. Hawaiians 23 Portland 0
~Thursday's Gam e

DIVORCE GRANTED
In M~igs County Common
Pleas Court George W. Miller,
Middleport, was granted , a
divorce from Jane Miller,
Middleport, on charges of
extreme cruelty.

'

pa

"But that doesn't mean we
won't be doing anything about

lamented recently.

, Blrm ingham 40 Shr evepor t 7
"'- Memphis 28 Charlotte 22

W. Va., and a sister, Mrs.

Krawsczyn honored by OSU

pt

o .684 462 3 14
o 450 41 3 422

AJid, he says, ·this portendg a
siml'l" Increase In deer poachin(~l' his district.
predictable that we'll
have more poaching this year

""' Shrevept
7 12 1 375 240 415
"'· x -team dhbanded
•
Y· tllnched division title

Enlow,

a

1 13 0 .071 209 358

Y·SouCal

6,000 from a year ago.

7 12 0 .368 446 600

West

G

says it's only just begun. '
DeVoe, lalf ~ ,enforcement·
supervisor for I Pistrict Four
( southeastern·1:ohio), says
Ohio's deer h~rd numbers
about 75,000 animals, . tip by

ByDAVEBOWRING
10 10 o 500 467 JSO
WriUen for UP!
8 11 o .421 491 413
ATHENS, Ohio -Seventy
• 10 · o .286 258 358 suspected and confirmed cases
c,:."t'f 1oct. R' •• of poaching have already been
11 3 o·.aso 629 365 , recorded in Ohio's deer zone 4
15 5 o .750 soo 394 this year, and Merle DeVoe

N '

Newport; a stepdaughter, Mrs.
Ona Haught, New Martinsville,

brother, Grant, and

x.Jxnvl

. c:~ Y·Mmphls
•.. : Brmnghm
1 •• Chicago

Surviving are his wife, Edna,
Bruce

Chrlte

' "-~ P'hita

formerly of Meigs County; a

stepson,

Deer 'p oaching up in Zone Four

WFL Standings

By United Press International

Ties: pr,ints, stripes, solids'.

. ""'

923 S. 3rd Ave.

992-2709

.,

Mlddl,Gi:)Ort, Ohio

..

•
.1

.'

' •

~

�,.
3-:-file DaUy Sentinel, Mlddlell"rl-~omeroy, 0 ., Th~ay, Nov. 14, 197•

..

'·

Pro Sta11dings

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Nov . H, 1974

Etsel Buck of
Belpre is dead

UN debate pall·s
peace in ntideast

''

I

UNITED NATIONS (UPI) The inflexibility of Arab guerrilla leader Yasser Arafat and
Israeli Ambassador 'Y05ef Te·
koah hampered U.N . diplomats
today in the tortuoll5 search for
a Middle East peace.
The two men hurled epithets
Wednesday afternoon at the
·dramatic opening of the
historic U .N. debate on
Palestine, disturbing behind·
the-scenes moves to end the
four-war .

quarter-century

conflict.
Diplomats \ said

neither

Arafat nor Tekoah budged an
inch from

their

pre vious

positions. Several had hoped
the Invitation to Arafat would
lead the PLO and Israel to
soften their stands.
Lebanese

President

Suleiman Franjleh, speaking
on behaH of the Arab world,
was scheduled to address the
General Assembly this afternoon In a crucial speech
expected to reveal whether the
Arabs would back Arafat all
the way.
Arab sources said Franjieh
would likely suggest a moder·
ate resolution calling for a
Palestinian state, but Arafat's
speech raised the possibility of
a tough motion, possibly even
to oust Israel from the current
assembly session.
Arafat was expected to leave
for Cuba after . Franjieh's
speech.
The guerrilla chief received
a standing ovation from most
of the delegates after leading
off the debate by calling for the
creation of a Palestinian nation
in which Arab, Jew and
Christian could live at peace.
Diplomats In at least 35
delegations walked out as
· Tekoah took the rostrum to
describe the proposal as a call
for the destruction of Israel.
Arafat, guarded by the
heaviest security the world
body

has

ever

known,

declared , "I am a rebel and
freedom is my cause."

living in Israel or in Israelioccupied land.
But Tekoah denounced the
Two leading American exArafat-led
Palestine perts on the Middle East said
Liberation Organization as Arafat's speech hurt the
"murderers" seeking " to chances of peace In the wardestroy the Jewish state .''
torn region, polarizing the
Arafat's tough speech cited positions of the belligerents.
the possibility of Israel's ouster
Columbia University Prof. J .
from the current assembly C. Hurwitz said a new war is
session similar to the suspen-. likely if the aSsembly adopts
sion of South Africa earlier this Arafat's proposals. John C.
week .
campbell, senior research felHe accused Israel of ' 'prac- low at the CouncU on Foreign
ticing racial discrimination Relations, cited a "50-50"
more extensively than the chance of war.
racists of South Africa'' and
Tekoah said the U.N. Invitawarned Israel " to keep In tion to Arafat amounted to
mind" the assembly's suspen- hanging out a sign that
sion of the white supremacist •'murderers of children are
government.
welcome here. "
The Israeli delegation
"The PLO will not he forced
boycotted Arafat's speech, but on the Palestinian Arabs,"
aU other active U.N. members Tekoah said. " It wUl not he
attended. All Arab diplomats, tolerated by the Jews of
the Soviet Union, China and Israel."
many African nations walked
Some 1,000 U.S., U.N. and
out on Takoah's speech.
New York City security agents
Arafat received standing were deployed In a paramilibefore and after his tary operation to guard Arafat
vations
0
speech7 although the U.S. from his arrival Wednesday
delegates remained seated. At morning at Kennedy Airport In
the end he clasped his hands New York on a flight from
over his head like a triumphant Algeria.
boxer as applause echoed
Police sharpshooters wataround the cav'ernous cham- ched from rooftops. Coast
ber.
Guard boats patrolled the East
"I have come bearing an River. Marksmen spread out
olive branch and a freedom along the shore opposite the
fighter's gun," he said In a 9(). towering
38-floor
glass
minute speech Interrupted 10 skyscraper housing U.N.
times by applause. "llo not let headquarters.
the olive branch drop from my
The Jewish Defense League
hand."
had vowed to assassinate
The pudgy guerrilla leader's Arafat but the only incidents
usual heard was gone, but he reported were two bomb
wore his customary black and hoaxes and scuffles outside the
white checked Arab headdress. Waldorf Astoria Hotel where
He wore on his hip what a(&gt;- the PLO delegates were
peared to be a holster, although staying.
a PLO aide said he was
Arafat waa the second reunanned .
presentative of a non-U.N.
Arafat said the PLO wanted member nation to appear
sell-determination for some 1.5 before the assembly. Pope
mtlllon Palestinians left home- Paul VI addressed the body in
less by the birth of Israel in 1965.
1948 and an equal number

Waldnig; back row, Mrs , Connie Andrews, instructor, Debbie
Holsinger, Brenda Lawrence, Bobbl Chapman, Shelly Ward,
Jennifer Mugrage, Lee Ord, Rhonda West, Vickie Roush and
Ailsa Harris, statistician.

SENIOR VARSITY VOLLEY BALL team ended its first
· season of competition with a 3-3 record . Southern High School
senior members are front row,!..-, Nancy Roy, Cindy Roush,
Dreama Jenkins, Juli Gooch, Lisa Allen, Becky Sayre, Mel

Katie E. Blake
of Racine dies
RACINE - Mrs. Katie E .
Blake, 76, died Wednesday at
ber Rt. 2, Racine, residence.
Mrs. Blake was born Sept. 2,
1898, a daughter of the late Bill
and Lucille Beegle. She was
preceded In death by her
husband, Bill Blake; two
daughters, Audrey Van Meter
and Wanda Ross, and a halfsister, Inez Cleland.

I•
I ;

Contrary to expectations of
an easing of inflation, the
wholesale price index jumped
2.3 per cent in October, the
government said today. The
higher wholesale prices mean

easing. Prices for food, autos,
chemitals and machinery led
the surge last month, the
Bureau , of Labor Statistics
said.

higher prices for COf!sumers,

WASHING TON - Senate
Republican Whip Robert P.
Griffin interrupted Nelson A.
Rockefeller's confirmation
hearing. today to charge that
Democ~ats had been "dillydallying" because they feared
Rockefeller would be "too good
a vice president." The
Michigan
senator
said
Rockefeller had "made a
mistake or two in his public
life" and had willingly admitted it.
Committee Chairman
'Howard W. Cannon, D-Nev.,
abandoning his usual mild

the UPI said.
The surge in wholesale
prices came at a time when
pressure has increased on the

Ford adlninistration to direct
the government attack more
directly at recession instead of
inflation.
The October rise was more

than double the September
increase of 1 per cent, a modest

rise

that

led

some

ad-

ministration officials to ex-

press the belief that inflationary

pressures were

manner, replied that he
resented Griffin's "implication
that this committee had not
been diligent" in acting on the
nomination. Cannon said the

FBI's final
report on
Rockefeller was not received
until Nov. 4 and Rockefeller's
report on his political contributions of $15.5 million was
not received until Monday.
PITTSBURGH Local
leaders and rank-and-file
members of the United Mine
Workers were cautiously but

.markedly pleased today with a
tentative contract agreement,

and steel companies took the
first steps toward canceling
cutbacks triggered by the coal
miners strike.

TilE JUNIOR VARSITY VOLLEY BALL TEAM of Southern High School, in Its first year
of competition, ended the season with a 1-1 record. Team mebers are, front, 1..-, Joy Neigler,
llnda Fisher, Loretta Holsinger, Jean Ritchhart,.Myra Woods, Jerrenea Dill; back row, Mrs.
Connie Andrews, physical education instructor, Sharon Evans, Connie Patterson, Teresa
Ferrell, Denise Roberts, Launa Greer and Patty Robinson.

By WARREN NELSON
WASHINGTON (UP!) -

than

A

22. '.~

" The

precise

number

of

.,long-suppressed investigation of Vietnamese killed cannot be
the My Lai massacre shows determined, but wa~ at least
men participated in covering up report said.

the killing of between 175 and
400 civilians in the Vietnamese
village.
Portions of the investigation
headed by Lt. Gen. William R.
Peers were released Wednes-

day by the Army , more than
4112 years after it was finished
and marked secret on grounds

it might have prejudiced the

" The massacre resulted
primarily from the nature of
the orders issued by persons in

the chain of command within
Task Force Barker," headed qy
Lt. Col Frank A. Barker, the
report concluded.
" The task force commanders'
order and the associated
intelligence estimate issued

courts-martial of soliders ac.: prior to the opera lion were
cused in the massacre and embellished as they .were
cover-up.
disseminated through each

Only 14 officers were publicly lower level of command and
charged in the cover-up. Of ultimately presented to the
those , only one, Lt. Col. Oran individual soldier a false and
K. Henderson , ever reached misleading picture of the ...
court--martial ,

and

he

was area as an armed enemy camp

acquitted.
largely devoid of civilian
Former Lt. William L. Calley inhabitants."
Jr., the only man convicted of
It said Barker, field comthe massac re itself, was origi- mander of the My Lai operation
nally accused ol killing 107 who was killed in combat three
Vietnamese and eventually months later, "planned, orconvicted of murdering "no less dered and actively directed the

of

an

unlawful

operation." The report said

Maj. Charles C. Calhoun, Capt.
Eugene M. Kotouc and Capt.
Ernest L. Medina joined in the
planning.
But the report also blamed
higher officers, up to and
developing dilated veins including a two-star general,
around , the
rectum
or Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster,
hemorrhoids. Your diet and
bowel habits are important

Hemorrhoid victim seeks relief
By Lawrence E . Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Would
you give me some information

about Ingrown piles? Can
ingrown piles be operated on or

can they be cured In other
ways?

DEAR READER - Judging
from the nwnerous ads about
hemorrhoid preparations you

would think all you needed to
do was use Qne of them. lt isn't
that simple.
There are

two types of

hemorrhoids, the external type

and the internal type. Those
outside the musuclar sphincter
can be seen and touched . Those
inside the sphincter can be
seen and readily.
Hemorrhoids are nothing
rnore .than varicose veins of the
rectum . When one of the
dilated veins get a clot. in it and
is obstructed .then you have a
"thrombosed hemorrhoid.''

Rhodes,

If the obstructed vein is
outside the sphincter if feels
like a small ball and Is uncomfortable. The term piles
comes from the Latin word

"pila" meaning ball. You have
the discomfort because this
area is abundantly supplied
with sensitive nerve fibers.

Hemorrhoids
sphincter

often

inside

the

cause

no

discomfort. There are no
sensitive pain fibers

U1ere .

They do bleed and painless
bleeding of bright red blood
may be caused by internal
hemorrhoids . The word
hemorrhoid comes from a

Greek word meaning the flow
of blood.
Sometimes the internal
hemorrhoid· extends Into external hemorrhoids. The right
treatment is based on a careful
examination
and determination of the extent of the

asse~bly

Cdntinuerl from page 1
you need?" ana expects favors in
return.

Two Voleo Short
"l'lf never forget the first year I was
here and he needed the Ohio Bond
Conunisslon fast and he was two votes
short," relAtes House Majority Leader
Barney Quilter, D-Toledo.
"I was leaving the Statehouse about
me o'clock one mornlng.'and I felt this
arm go around my shoulders, and a

hemorrhoids.

Uncomplicated

internal hemorrhoids can he
injecied and scarred down to
nothing in some cases . Ex-

ternal hemorrhoids with an
obstructed vein sometimes

need to be opened by a minor
office surgical procedure.
Otherwise
they
usually
respond to local treabnent.
Residual itchy tags are
sometimes removed . Surgery
is also done to remove extensive internal, plus external,

hemorrhoids.
If you want more information on hemorrhoids
write to me at P. 0. Box 155,1,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019 and ask for the
booklet on hemorrhoids. Send
50 cents to cover costs.
You can do a lot to prevent or
relieve hemorrhoid problems
by using good bowel habits.
Constipation and straining at
the stool contribute to

\

•

only useful for external application to relieve discomfort. ·

They will not do anything for
internal hemorrhoids, And, the
supposi tortes placed in the
rectum won't do anything for
the external hemorrhoids. This
isn ' t the worst feature of these
medicines you .can buy .

Sometimes hemorrhoids are a
symptom, of something more
serious. That som~thing can be
cancer of the rectum . I finnly
believe anyone

with

new

bleeding from the rectwn niust
haye an examination . ,Self..
treatment
is
d 'a ngerous

because it may delay prompt
attention to a more serious

problem.

Cincinnati, a leading black legislator.
"We have more and more )'olllll! and
energetic legislators who want to get a
job done and see programs through and
aren't so concerned about reelection."
"Maybe' this Is the best thing that
ever happened for the people of Ohio, ,
who knows?" said Rep. George D.
Tablack, D-Youngstown. "Now lliere
will be a ' balance . between the two
parties and the two branches of
goVI!rnment."

~;·, ~
I

preventive measures .
In any case, the popuarly
advertised medications are

will get along

voice said 'Hi, Bam.' I looked around
and It waa Gov. lUlcides and he 'sa!d
'Barn, I ned a favor' and he told me
what It waa. I explained to hbn that I
couldn't vote for that, thatl had to go
with the party, and whoosh, 1 he was
gone, Into the night. No pressure, but he
knows how to talk to you."
But the Democrats are not about to be
pushed around. "We want to set the
p-lorities outselves, and I think we can
do it," said Rep. William L. Mallory, D-

daughter, Jo Ann

Crisp,

Waynesville; two brothers,
carl, Eagleville, Tenn., and
Rush, East Sparta, and several
nieces and nephews.

Mrs. Blake attended the
Dorcas United Methodist
Church.
be at 2
Funeral services
p. m . Saturday at the D&lt;Jrcas
Church with Rev. Freeland
Norris officiating. Burial will
be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at
for failing to "insure that the the residence at anytime. The
plan .. . included provisions for Ewing Funeral Home is in
the handling, screening and charge of arrangements.
lreatment of the.noncombatant'•
inhabitants" during March 16,
1968, sweep of My Lai.
Koster was never tried, the
Army said, because there was
Insufficient evidence. But the
Army did demote , Koster,
PT. PLEASNAT - Christreprimand him and rescind an
mas
shouid be a time of joy, but
award lie received in 'Vietnam. ·
unless
the response to the
Two chaplains were also
Firemen's
toy project Inimplicated. The report said
capt. ·Carl E. Creswell reported creases considerably In the
what he knew to Lt. Col. next few weeks, there will be
Francis R. Lewis but that he many sad.youngsters in Mason
failed to report it as well County.
Point Pleasant Volunteer
through military channels.
Firemen
are hoping to
Lewis was accused of limiting
his action to "informal discus- dislribute toys and baskets of
sions with various staff of- food on Chrisbnas Eve, but at
this time have . little to work
ficers ."
with.
Army Secretary Howard H.
There is dire need for good
Callaway said two of the
used
and new toys, as well as
report's four folumes are still
for
canned
goods and cash
secret because they contain
investigatory material ''many donations to purchase fresh
of them quite inflammatory; foods for the baskets.
A spokesman said there are
many of them without backstill
a few dolls at the station
up."
needing to he dressed. Persons
desiring to make clothing for
Cable addition
these may pick them up at the
station. Those with items to
made in Oak Hill contribute
may call 675-2313.
A major cable addition for
growth and service Improvement has been placed in
service in the Oak Hill area,
Pleasant Valley Hospital
General Telephone Co. of Ohio
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Roy
announced today.
Herdnian, Mason; Miles
Reese E. Lloyd, Jackson Carpenter, Jr., Vinton; Ronnie
cu.stomer service manager, Steele, Aahton; Hollis Klnsatd the $74,100 expansion will niard, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
provide for future growth in the Max Heslep, Point Pleasant·
area. Portions of the new cable Patricia Stover', Ashton; Mrs'.
will replace existing facilities Greg Reynolds, son, GallipoUa·
for maintenance reasons . lionel R. Triplett, Galli~olis;
Where possible the cable was Mrs. Roy Smith, Gallipolis
buried. The new faciUtles will Ferry; Tammy Hamrick, New
serve the eastern section of the Haven:
Oscar
Tucker,.
exchange. The exchange Robertsburg; Mrs. .Dana
serves 1,941 telephones in a Chapman, Point Pleasant.
91. 7-square-mile-area of

will

My Lai ·coverup story out

execution

DR. LAMB

grand-

Racine; a great-grandson,
Allen Crisp, Racine; a son-inlaw~ Buck VanMeter, Racine ;
a sister , Lena Hudson,

that 26 officers and two enlisted 175 and may exceed 400," the

Wholesale price jump

Surviving are a

Mrs. Shank of
Coolville dies

COOLVILLE - Mrs. Luada
G. Shanks, 82, Coolville, ·died
Wednesday evening at the
Marietta Memorial Hospital,
following a brief illness.
Mrs. Shanks, born in Athens
Councy, was a daughter of the
late Isaac and Eva l!rookhart
Gibbs. She was a resident of
Coolville most of her life where
she was a member of The
Coolville United Methodist
Church, The United Methodist
Women, the Helen McCloud
Service Gulld , the Fidelity
Rebekah Lodge 880, and a
former member of Troy
Grange .
Surviving are two nieces,
Mrs. Mary Becker,. Marietta,
and· Mrs. Lucy Deeter,
Coolville, and two nephews,
Harry Gibbs , Coolville, and
,Dale, Torc)l. She was preceded
in death in 1968 by her husband,
~wo brothers ·and a sister.
Funeral services will be at 1
.P· m . Saturday at the White
Funeral Home, Coolville, with
Rev. Wesley Thatcher . and
Rev. Roy Deeter officiating.
Fidelity Rebekah Lodge will
conduct services at the funeral
'home at 7:30 p. m. · Friday.
Burial 'will be in the Coolville
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home .
f

Firemen need

more responSeS

Jackson

and

Lawrence

·cbunties.

Ent

w

1 1 pet. pt pa
13 6 0 .684 391 256

~.

BELPRE - Eisel D.
67, 2117 Lockland Ave., Bel1pre,
died Wednesday at the
Genera! Hospital, M~~::=:
following a lingering
Mr. · Buck, born in
County, W.Va., March 18,1907,
spent his early life there. He
had lived in the Parkersburg.
Belpre area the past 40 years.
He was formerly employed by
the Kroger Grocery Co., at
Vienna, W. Va., and attended
the Vienna Wesleyan United
Methodist Church. He was a
member of Parkersburg Lodge
169, F and AM, a member of
the Grand Lodge of West
Virginia F and AM, and had
gone through ail of the levels
from the Scottish Rite to the
Shrine. He was a veteran of
World War II having served in
the U. S. Navy. He was a
member of the Order of
National Travelers.

·~ ..

~ .... x-Detrolt

w 1 t pc1 .
13 6

. . Hwellans

9 11
7 12

· ~ Portlnd

.,

Wednesday's Results

"IIi"'

· than a year ago, just because
we've got more deer," DeVoe

Takes Several Forms
The "anyUdng" he spoke
about takes several forms; ;.ll
directed towards after-the-fact
law enforcement. The main

. ,.

NBA S1andings

·~, By United Press International

Eastern Conlerence

o
1

s .1:11 5
6 .soo

3
.t

Washing t on
Houston

Cleveland

Atlanta

6

w . I. pet. g .b.

10
7

2
5

s

1

6

5

B33
583

.s4s

.417

NewOrleans
1 12 .on
'.
Western Conference

3
3 ,12

s

9 1h

Midwest Division

.Detroit
Kc .omaha

~ · ~ ~5~\ g.b.
6

1

462

, ,/"

" Ch icago
6
7 .462
11
Milwaukee
1 12 .077 6 1~
,.
Pacific Division
., Golden st .
1~· 13 ~~~ g.b.
Seattle
8
4 .667
1112
" Phoenix
6 6 .500 31h
.-Portland
6 8 .429 4ln

LosAnoeles

4

7

.364

Moeller, which tangles with
once-beaten apd third-ranked
Warren Harding Saturday in

.s

Oetrolt 98 Milwaukee 91
Phoenix 105 Phlla 100
Seattle 108 Los Ang 103
Thursday's Games
Buffalo vs . Boston
at Prov iden ce
Cleveland at New York
- Chicago at Houston
~ Atlanta at Portland

FT. LAUDERDALE, Fla. - '
Mrs. Mabel M. Lax, 71, for.
merly of Meigs County, died
Wednesday at the Broward
Hospital, Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.
A daughter of the late Clara
L. and Sullivan Moore Circle,
she was preceded in death by a

record.

No. 1.

thesemi-flnaisofthestatehlgh

washr;;~~g~~~=k~ .~~~~~ 81

Mabel l\'1. Lax
dies in Florida

margin over runnerup Upper

the

1112

Philadelphia
s
7 411
Central Divis i on

.. New York
.r

8

fir t 1
ot
t this
k
s pace v es cas
wee
by the AAA coaches and
amasSed 317 poll point:;.
The Crusaders of Coach
Gerry Faust who were .second
last week, rolled up 8 78-point

United Press International
Ohio High School Board of
Coaches as the top football
teams in the state.
Moeller, which finished. a 10-0
regular season last Friday
· h
1
fr
behind
rug t W th a come- om24-20 victory over previously
unbeaten Cincinnati Elder,
dominated the final week's
ClaSB AAA ratings, thanks to
Massillon's upset Sat\U'day of
1
Canton McKinley , former y

Atlantic: Division
.. .
w . 1. pet . g.b.
.. Suffolo
9
3 .750

·· Boston

Dayton Jefferson (I~) fin·
Arlington, which finished with
239 points and moved up from ished in third In AA, followed
by Columbus WattersOn (8-1-1)
fourth a week ago.
The Golden Bears will also in fourth and Wyoming In fifth.
Fenwick, under coach Jerry
he in this weekend's playoffs,
going against seventh-&lt;anked Harkrader, made a season
New Philadelphia (9-G-1) in the ciimb to the top, claiming the
1
opener of the big doubleheader. ' No. 1 position for the first time
Ev~n Less Trouble
1ast week.
The Falcons, who flriished
St. Vincent, which finished a
rugged schedule with a 9-1 their demanding schedule with
record, had even less trouble a 9-G-1 record, barely edged out
than Moeller In taking the AA canal Winchester ( 1~) and
Bluffton (10-0) for tthe small
poll crown.
The Irish, coached by John school title.
Received Four Firsts
Cistone, led the AA ratings
most of the year while the Fenwick, which won the
battle for the No. 2 spot Class A playoff championship a
provided most of the ex· year ago, finished with 170
points, three more than Win·
citement.
St. Vincent, which taugles chester and seven more than
with sixth ranked Norwalk (9- 'Bluffton, which received four
1) Saturday night in Akron in firsts.
The only blotch on an
the playoff semi-finals, got 10
first place votes and 234 poll . otherwise perfect record for
points. Toronto, which finally Fenwick was a ~ tie with
tough Trenton Edgewood. St.
locked up the No. 2 spot,
Vincent's
lone loss of the
received five first place votes
and 123 points. The Red
Knights finished with a I~

COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Cincinnati Moeller, Akron St.
v·
d
mcent an
Mt'ddl etown
Fenwick have been selected by

"'

school playoffs at Ohio Stadiurn, grabbed off 20 of the 34

come back aWard

ABA Standings
By United Press tnrernational
East
·
w . I.1 .917
pet . -g . b .
, Kentucky
11
New York
9
6 .600
J li2
St . Louis
6 9 .400
6'h
Memphis
4 10 .286 a
' Virginia
3 9 .250 1112
'West
w . I. pet . g.b.

sister,

Stella R. Gaskins. Surviving
are three brothers, Garrett and
G. Douglas Circle, Racine, and
John C., Columbus; a sister,
Florence I. Circle, Racine, and
several nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Lax was a former
school teacher and hairdresser. She belonged to the St.
Andrews United Methodist
Church and the Daughters of
America in Fort Lauderdale.
Funeral services wUI be at 2
p. m. Sunday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with Rev. Steve
Wilson officiating . Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 9 a. m. Saturday.

r:~'A"n'tonlo 'J ;

r:;

52•;,

San Diego
5 8 .385
Indiana
4
7 .364 5112
Utah
s 9 .357 6
Wednesday's Results
Ky. 132 N.Y . 129, 2 ots
St . LOUIS 97 MemphiS 92
Utah 114 Indiana 103
Denver 132 San Diego 108
Thursday's Games
St . Louis vs. Virginia
at Hampton
New York at Memphis
Kentucky at San Antonio
NHL standings

By Uni1ed Press International

Division 1
w. I. t . p1S
12 3 2 26
Phil a
9 •6 3 21
At Ia
7 5 3 17
NY tlndrs

gf ga

58 35
54 47
54 40

NY Rngrs

6 6 3 15 49 44
Division 2
w . 1. t. pts gf ga
Vncuvr
10 4 2 22 58 41
7 7 2 16 57 40
Chicago
5 7 3 13 49 54
St.Louis
483113858
Mlnn
211153867
K'an City
Division 3
w. I. t. pts gf ga
10 1 5 25 55 27
LOS Ang
7 5 5 19 68 52
Montreal
5 7 2 12 42 62
Detroit
5 7 2 12 55 57
Plttsbgh

Laurel Oif£
News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance ,
Nov. 10 at the Free.Methodist
Church was 100. Sunday, Nov.
17 will be recognition day for ,
Senior Citizens.
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Johnny llouglas, Guys- :
ville.
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook ;
and Bertha Parker called on :
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Ball Run. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Higgenbothom, Columbus, ~
spent the weekend with Rev .
and Mrs. Shook.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alkire,
Kimberlee and Kevin and Miss
Cleo Parker, Columbus, spent
the weekend with Bertha
Parker.
Mr. Edward Dailey, Wilkesville, called on Mr. and Mrs . .
Harmon Fox.
Mrs. Florence Stahl, Stock- •
dale, recenUy visited with Mr. ,
and Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Curtis
quietly celebrated their 64th
wedding anniversary at their
home.
The County Holiness raliy 1
will be held at the local church
Nov. 26, 7:30p.m.

4
1 13 2
Division 4
w. 1. t . pts
11 J 2 24
6 4 5 17
"' 7 3 11

wash

33 77

gf ga
71 53
67 47
51 60
calif
3 10 4 10 39 75
Wednesday's Results
Phila 3 NY Rangers 2
Pittsburgh a NV ISindrs 2
Atlanta 4 Washington 3
Buffalo 8 Montreal &amp;
Ml.nnesota 7 Detroit" 4
Kansas City S St. Louis 3
LOS Angeles 4 Toronto 0
California 2 Chicago 0
Thursday's Games
Montreal at Boston
Minnesota at Buffalo
Bflo
Boston
Toronto

,Haymaker moved
to area hospital

JOBLESS GROW
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The ,
Center for Business and
VeleraDS Memorial Hospital
Econom)c Research ·at Ohio
ADMITTED - Priscella
State
University reported
Schuler, Rutland; Lee Hobbs,
today
that
employment.,ln Ohio •
.Mason: Ktu:.e_'!_l;l_olter, ~cine; .
continued
to decline !n Sep- '1:
Darrell Stone, Jr., Leon, W.
MEETING SET
!ember, dropping by 1 per cent r
Va.; Terena Russell, Pomeroy.
A , county-wide prayer for the third consecutive
DISFHARGED Mary
...
month.
BosUc, Hollie Green, Luther mee\ing will be held Sunday,
Bartow, &amp; ., Zally Medors, Nov . 17 at the Hobson Christian
,."I
Union
Church
at
2
p.m
.
Glenn
Betty Brown.
MOHICAN BEST
II
Bissell is class leader.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The &gt;II
"
Ohio Parks and Recreation '"
Association has selected ,} I
"'
Mohican State Park Lodge as .ll
the state's oullttandlng new . ·
William D'. Krawsczyn, son recognizes outstanding
park
faciUty, It was announced • i
of Mr. and Mrs. John scholars in the · college who
Wednellday.
• ::
maintained
high
'Krawsczyn of Middleport, was have
The $7 million lodge has 96 • ~
honored ·recently by The O)llo scholastic achievement in all
rooms
and opened last April. :::
State University , College ·' of courses undertaken at the
Agricult~re
and
Home University. There were 285
Economics students as ati Agriculture, Home Economics
.
PTO TO"MEET
ii
.
rlAClNE
- The Racine PTO
Honors Scholar at the annual • and NatW"al Resources Honars
~I
·Honors Banquet for students Program students, ' and · 138 · will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday .' !
' and their parents.
students eligible to enter the at the grade schoo. Babysitting
The
Honors•. Program special ,program honored .
service will be provided.

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - Jiff
Haymaker, freshman at West
Virginia Wesleyan and kicker
for the varsity football team,
was Injured Saturday In the
final game of the season at
Beaver Falls, Pa.
Haymaker .after sustaining
two fractures in the lower left
leg (his kicking leg) Sunday
was lransferred from Beaver
Falls Medical Center to Holzer
Medical Center in the New
HaVl!ll E-R squad ambulance.
A son of Mr. and Mrs. Nell
Haymaker, New Haven, he is a
1974 graduate of Wahama High
School where he was a kicker
and punter on the White Falcon
football team. His room
number Is 304.

t
uoes
0
e.

e nkl.RS

JT

dedly brought the Texas
By BILL MADDEN
Rangers back to respectabllty
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Tire- with 2li victories this past
less Ferguson Jenkins, a season, has been named the
Chicago Cub cast-off a year 1974 Major League Comeback
ago, who almost singlehan- Plsyer of the Year by United
Press International.
Jenkins, who rallied from a
14-16 season with the Cubs In
WHA 5tandmgs
By United Press International '73 to a 25-12 log with the
East
Rangers in ' 74, polled nine
w 1 t pts pf pa
7 3 o· 14 36 27 votes ' from the' 'UP! baseball
New Eng
4 9 0 8 31 50 correspondents across the
lndpl s
3 4 1 7 19 25
Cleve
28042338 country to easily outdistance
Ch icago
West
southpaw . Jim Kaat of the
w 1 1 pts pgf ga
850166144 Chicago 'White Sox who had
Houston
7 4 0 14 36 38 four.
San Diego
&lt;I 6 1
9 41 49
Phoeni)(
Jenkins' 25 victories tied him
4 7 0 8 46 56
Minna
2 10 0 4 31 59 with Jim Hunter of the Oakland
Mic h
canadian
w 1 t pts . gf ga A's as the top winner in the
10 4 0 . 20 67 45 major leagues this aeason. In
Toronto
8 3 0 16 54 32
Quebec
addition,
the '
Texas
7 2
15 55 28 righthander pitched 328 InWlnipg
9 35 47
Vncuvr
' 7
nings, struck out 225 batters
• Edmntn
4 2 0 a 22 19 and posted an earnebhrun
Wednesday's Results
average of 2.83. Jenkins also
Houston 8 Minn'esola 5
Quebec 10 Indianapolis 3
had 29 complete games to lead
Toronto 5 Vancouver 3
the majors in that department.
Edmonton 5 Winnipeg 3 ·
Thursday's Games
It was oo secret that, despite
Chicago at Mic h igan
career-high
performances
Cleveland at Phoeni)(
New England at San Diego
from many of. the other Texas
players under new Manager
Billy Martin, Jenkins was the
key to the Rangers' dramatic
rise from one of the worst
POMEROY DOWLING
teams In baseball in '73 (57-106)
LANES
to within five games of the
MORNING GLORIES
Nov . 5,1974
world champion Oakland A'sln
Standings
the American League west
Team
GibbS Grocery
50 with an M-76 mark.
Excelsior Oil Co .
49
After ~ix straight 211-win
G. &amp; J . Auto Parts
46
Newell Sunoco
42 seasons with the Cubs, Jenkins
W.M P .O.
28
Spencer's Market
25 slumped to 14-161n '7a and was
High Ind. Game
Ellen promptly unloaded in one of the
Rough 19S, Ann Radford 192.
High Series - Ellen Rough more senB~~tional off...ason
526, Ann Radford 520.
deals last winter. To get him,
Team
High
Game
the Rangers surrendered hard- ,
W.M P 0 . 791 .
Team High Series - Newell hitting young third baseman
Sunoco 2266 .
Bill Madlock and another
youngster, second baseman
A. L.A.
Vic Harris.
Nov . 8,1974
Standings
"I hated to part with
w. L. Madlock," Martin said later,
Team
50 22
Jr . Gutter ousters
38 34 '\hut' once I knew that Jenkins'
602 Rocketts
Feeney -Bennett Fil ers 36 36
34 38 arm waa sound, I knew I
12a Sr . Strikeouts
30
42 wanted hbn."
467 Slow Pokes
211 44
128 Sr . Hot Shots
Kaat, Jenkina'closest com·
Gerry
High Ind . Gi.!me
Kess ii1ger lll9, Etten Tucker petitor, also had quite a ·
157 .
Ger ry
High
Ser ies
Kessinger 431, Pearl Russell
402 .
602
Team High Ga.me
Rocketts 421 .
Team H i g~ Series - 602
Rocketts 1184 .

••we have two single engine
airplanes flVailable to us , one
based here and another in

preview Friday

Hideaway

.~
·l

DeVoe said . Some find their
way into Ohio's largest cities of
Columbus, Cleveland and Cln·
clnnati, taken there by experienced

members

of

esta blished poachin g rings .
DeVoe a dmitted such rings
have largely eluded efforts to
break them until now.

STEVE
SNOWbEN
553 Ru s se l 51.
(Gravel Hill)
Middleport
Ohio

Phone 992.7155;,----,
fike a good
neighbor.
Srate Fa rm
IS

th ere

SUI{ URII loi ~ I UAl ~U I OUOI I H IUUUNCI
CO WP l U • "0 1111 Qfi i C( l lOO IIIIII~ lO I . Il l

•

shining the fields ," he added .
&lt;~We catch quite a few this
way."
DeVoe said there are other

methods used to apprehend
possible poachers.
D&lt;Jn't Llke SpoiUghts
"We have quite a few Ian.-·

downers (farmers) In this area
who just don't like spotlights
shining on their property and
houses at night. If a man has a
gun, he could accidentally
shoot someone sitting in a
house , so the fanners call us

Pheasant
and
RABBIT
SEASON

when they see someone with a

flashlight after dark ."
Once a suspect's car is
stopped, the trunk is checked
for blood, hair or any other sign
that a deer may have been
carried thi!re. And since state
law says it is illegal to shine a
light after 10 p.m., or while In
possession of a firearm, DeVoe
said his field men can make
arrests on these Infractions
alone, with or without clues of
deer kills.

Pearson will
miss contest

OPENS
NOVEMBER 15
Our complete line of hunting supplies and
equipment is here ready lor selection. Made
by world-known manufacturers and in a large
range of prices.

AMMUNITION OF ALL KINDS

with Browns

WESTERN • REMINGTON

PITTSBURGH (UPI) -The
Pittsburgh Steelers said
Wednesday running back Preston Pearson would not play
against the Cleveland Browns
Sunday.
Pearson suffered a pulled leg
muscle in the loss to Cincinnati
last Sunday and has been
unable to practice all week.
Running back Rock~ Bleier,'
hobbled by a sprained ankle, Is
listed as questionable for the
game before a sellout crowd at
Cleveland's Municipal
stadium.
The Steelers (8-2-1) are In
first place In the Central
Division of the American
Conference, one-half game
ahead of Cincinnati (IN).
Cleveland ( U) is in last
place In the Central Division.
The Steelers defeated the
Browns earller In the season
2().16 in Pittsburgh.

SHOTGUNS &amp; RIFLES
Remington - Winchester- Ithaca
Harrison &amp; Richardson - Mossberg Browning Gun Cleaning Kits - Gun
Oil - Recoil Pads - Game Bags Shell Vests - Gun Cases - Hunting
Accessories Hunters Jackets &amp; .
Caps- Hunting Pants &amp; Caps - Rifle
Sling Straps - Steel Trap~.

LICENSED GUN DEALER

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
110 W. MA!f\! .

PQMERpY

We Issue HunTing License

8:30and in the nightcap at 9:15,
Athens will battle Columbus
Northland.
Admission is $1.50 for adults
and 75 cents for students.
This

evening,

Southern

Valley Athletic Conference
Coaches will draw for the
annual SVAC cage preview, to .
be held Friday, Nov . 22, at Rio
Grande College's Lyne Center.
The SVAC event was
originally slated for Nov . 15,
but was rescheduled.

SAVE MONEY

I'

SAVE HEAT

"SHOP
NOW
FOR THE
BEST

Li~tening

ITATI U . IM

P7 1· 108

For
Christmas

compiling a 21-13 record with a
2.96 ERA after a 1~13 mark ,
with a 4.38 ERA the previouS
year.

Pomeroy

deer near the roads.
" Then we ' U have several
game protectors in radio
equipped cars ready to move in
on any white lights we see

prevents
eve n
greater
poaching activity, he said .
Poache d deer are e ither used
for home meat supplie s or sold,

is the time
to call me for the best
car insurance value anywhere.

Now-·

SELECTION."

INSULATE
YOUR HOME
BEFORE COLD
WEATHER
TRUCK LOAD SA.VINGS

15" &amp;. 23" WIDTHS
21Jz" • 31Jz" • 6" THICK
'

Val1~y":. Lu.mber

&amp; Supply Co.

HOURS: MON. T.HRU FRI. 7 AM TIL 5 PM
SATURDAY: 7 AM TIL 12:00 NOON ~

The MEIGS INN
Ph. 992-3629

McDonald wound up fourth
In Class A, well off the pace of
the top three teams. Windham
finished 5th, followed by Plain
City Jonathan Alder in sixth,
defending
poll . champ
Covington in seventh, Newark
Catholic, New Washington
Buckeye Central and Rockford
Parkway.

Athens cage

TONIGHT 9:30 TO 2:00

1

Minerva .

"

~

:t

Louisville St. Thomas Aquinas,
Wellington, New Lexington and

COLUMBU S IUPil The
II . Well ington 13 10-01
76
final weekly Un it ed Pre ss 9. New Lexington ( l O· Ol
7j1
In tern a tional Ohio Hig h Sc hool 10. Minerva (9 .1)
69
Board of Coaches' football
Second 10 : 11 She lby 611 ; 12.
ratings (with first pla ce vot es Wh ee lers burg 60 , 13 Ironton
and won .lo s t re cord s in 11 ) 54 ; 14 . Mar iemont (11 39:
par e nthese s J .
15 Oak Harbor 26, 16 Bellair e
CLASS AAA
11 1 24 . H . Lima Bath (1 1 23, 18 .
Team
Points Bridgeport 19; 19. Columbu s
1. Cin e . N oel ler (20 10-0l
317 Mifflin 18 . 20 . wauseon ( I I 17 .
2. Up . Arimgton (3 10-0J
239
Other s with 10 or more
3 War Harding (2 9 -ll
212 points : Springf iel d Sha wn ee,
4. CantonMcK {19 -1J
193 Gall ipoli s (1 ), Wellsvi lle and
5. Cin e . Elder (9.1)
166 Medina H1ghla nd.
6 War . West . Res (9 . J l
132
CLASS A
7. New Phila . (2 9-0·ll
120 Team
Points
a. Fremont Ross {2 9-0·1) 110
1. Midd letown Fen (5 9 0 1)
9' Ket Fairmo nt Wes t (2 10-0l
170
62
2 Cana l Win chester 16 lO ·Ol
10. Lakewood St. Edw (9 1) 51
167
Second 10 : 11 Young sfown
3. Bluffton 14 10-0 l
1113
Chaney (1l 43; 12 . Young stown
4 Mc Donald 12 10 OJ
121
Cardinal Mooney 29 ; l3 Dover
5. Wind ha m (9.0-1J
11 4
24 , 14 . (t1e l Will oughby South
6. J onathan Alder 19· ll
83
a nd Oregon Clay ( ll 17 each ;
7. Cov ington 19 -ll
. -82.
16. Columbus Waln ut Ridge 16,
8. NewarkCatholi c (l 9-l l 74
17 (tie ) Parma Padua and
9. Bu c keye Central (4 9-01 68
Columbus Northland 14 ea ch ; 10. Rockford Parkway ( 1 9 11
Barberton II ; 20 . Findlay 10
55
CLASS AA
Second HI : 11 . L1be rt y
Team
Points Benton 52; 1'2 . Fremont St .
' . Ak . St . Vincent ( 10 9 I J 234 Joseph 48 , 13. Indian Valley
,2 Toronto (5 10-0}
123 North (2) 37; 14 . Marion
3. Dayton Jefferson {IO.OI 118
Ca th olic I l l 35 ; 15. Montpe lier
4. Cols . Watterson (18 -f 1l 98 29 , 16. Arlington 18 ; 17 . Mar ion
5. Wyom ing {1 91 )
97 Local 16 , 18. Ashland Mapleton
6 . Norwalk ( 1 9.1l
91
11 , 19 CoryR.awson 10 : 20.
7. LouisvilleAgu inas (1 8·0 2)
Tuscaraw as Catho lic 9.

AND . THEI .HALLMARKS

,,

ten consisted of Norwalk,

Final UPI grid ratings

GEO• .HALL

'j

Columbus. We'll put one plane
over a poaching hotspot at
night, looking for flashes of
light as poachers try to shine

Finishing behind Moeller,
Arlington and Harding In AAA
were canton McKinley, Cine in·
nati Elder, Warren Western
Reserve, New Philadelphia,
Fremont Ross, Kettering Fair·
mont West and Lakewood St.
Edward.
In Class AA , Columbus
Watterson finished fourth, followed ooe point behind by
Wyoming. The rest of the top

The lOth annual Athens
Shrine Cage Preview will be
held in the Athens High School
gymn , The Plains, starting at 7
p. m. Friday.
Four 16 minute contests are
scheduled as the 1974-75
campaign gets underway.
First game pits Belpre
against Trimble at 7 p. m.
Second outing pits Federal·
Hocking against Nelsonville·
York at 7:45. Third outing finds
Alexander taking on Logan at

areas with law enforcement

"U deer are taken at night, personnel. Just the mere
the poacher has to use some presence of so many state men

Warren Western Reserve, 27-0.

Pleasure •••

,.

ing poachers' activity.

season ca[\le at the hands of

"boomerang"· season in '74:,

For Your Dining and

To combat the Increase In
overcoming the element in poaching during this time of
which most deer are poached : the Year, DeVoe said game
the dark of night.
protectors from aU over Ohio
In some ways, however, converg e on District Four
darkness is a help in pinpoint· counties to aid In saturating the
problem, DeVoe admitted, was

kind of artificial light, and
that's how we usually spot
him," DeVoe said.

Middletown Fenwick A winner

Florida at Southern Cal

Geraldine Enoch, Vienna .
Three brothers preceded him
in death.
Funeral services will be at 11
a. m. Saturday at the Spencer
Funeral Home, Belpre, where
frierids may· call at anytime.

·'

1 .375 264 42 6

it." .

Akron. St. Vincent AA champ;

:. Hawaiians 23 Portland 0
~Thursday's Gam e

DIVORCE GRANTED
In M~igs County Common
Pleas Court George W. Miller,
Middleport, was granted , a
divorce from Jane Miller,
Middleport, on charges of
extreme cruelty.

'

pa

"But that doesn't mean we
won't be doing anything about

lamented recently.

, Blrm ingham 40 Shr evepor t 7
"'- Memphis 28 Charlotte 22

W. Va., and a sister, Mrs.

Krawsczyn honored by OSU

pt

o .684 462 3 14
o 450 41 3 422

AJid, he says, ·this portendg a
siml'l" Increase In deer poachin(~l' his district.
predictable that we'll
have more poaching this year

""' Shrevept
7 12 1 375 240 415
"'· x -team dhbanded
•
Y· tllnched division title

Enlow,

a

1 13 0 .071 209 358

Y·SouCal

6,000 from a year ago.

7 12 0 .368 446 600

West

G

says it's only just begun. '
DeVoe, lalf ~ ,enforcement·
supervisor for I Pistrict Four
( southeastern·1:ohio), says
Ohio's deer h~rd numbers
about 75,000 animals, . tip by

ByDAVEBOWRING
10 10 o 500 467 JSO
WriUen for UP!
8 11 o .421 491 413
ATHENS, Ohio -Seventy
• 10 · o .286 258 358 suspected and confirmed cases
c,:."t'f 1oct. R' •• of poaching have already been
11 3 o·.aso 629 365 , recorded in Ohio's deer zone 4
15 5 o .750 soo 394 this year, and Merle DeVoe

N '

Newport; a stepdaughter, Mrs.
Ona Haught, New Martinsville,

brother, Grant, and

x.Jxnvl

. c:~ Y·Mmphls
•.. : Brmnghm
1 •• Chicago

Surviving are his wife, Edna,
Bruce

Chrlte

' "-~ P'hita

formerly of Meigs County; a

stepson,

Deer 'p oaching up in Zone Four

WFL Standings

By United Press International

Ties: pr,ints, stripes, solids'.

. ""'

923 S. 3rd Ave.

992-2709

.,

Mlddl,Gi:)Ort, Ohio

..

•
.1

.'

' •

~

�..
5.:-_'l'IM! Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 14, YJ74

4- TheDaUy Sentinel, Middleport-':'omeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Noil.14, 1974

Howsant.likes· Reds. in '75
By Dale Rothgeb
"Plan for the future and not
wish for it."
With that statement, Robert
L. Howsam , president of the
Cincinnati Reds and 1973
''Major League Executive of
the Year" opened his address
·Wednesday night at the Fifth
Annual Cincinnati Reds Appreciation Banquet sponsored
by Radio Station WJEH.

Howsam, twice voted the
Minor League Executive of the
Year, helped mold the St. Louis
Cardinals into champions prior
to coming to Cincinnati in
February of 1967. Earlier.
How$lam was one of the five
founding fathers of the old
American Football League and
formerly was president of the
Denver Broncos of the AFL.

Over the past two seasons,
the Cincinnati Reds have
drawn over 2 million fans each

year.
The Reds president continued, " We deal with things
that open up the Reds
organization . It is so important

to have men such as scouts Jim
Vennari ( Pomeroy) and Gene
Bennett working for us. We
have ·the normal number of
clubs in our minor league
system (five) and all our
managers are different in the
way they run their clubs.
"I think we've got an ex-

ceUent ball club. I was extremely disappointed when \ve
did not win the Western
Division and represent the
National League in the World
Series. We feel we have a
championship-type
organization, but we must be
better than the Dodgers next
year .
'' In order to win, we must do
it in ,three ways.
"Do you trade to improve ?
There aren't that many good
players available.
••no we slay with our team
and hope experience will put
them on top ?
''Or can we rely on our
farm system?
" The young players in our
organ ization must come or age.
lt has taken us eight years to
get where we are tonight."
Howsam admitted the Reds
are looking ror a third
baseman. "I doubt if we can
trade for one," he said. " We
have acquired John Vukovich
from the Brewers and have two
others, Ray Knight and Art
DeFreites in the minor
leagues. All three are now
working hard in the in;.
structionalleague. Vukovich is
getting special hitting instruction from Ted Kluszewski.
We will certainly made a deal
if we can."
It was pointed out that the

interleague trading period is
now through Dec. 6. Howsam
also said, "The Reds are
looking for another pitcher
only for what we are trying to
accomplish. We will not
sacrifice this ball club for one
year and forget about the team
for the next five to 10 years.,
" We have four or five of the
finest young pitchers in
baseball in our farm system in
Tom Carroll. Will McEnaney,
Rawy Eastwick and Pat
Darcy. My thinking is that we
don't want to disturb our young
pitchers.
" We must also remember
that Gary Nolan is trying a
comeback and right now we
have no reason to believe that
he will not be able to make it."
Commenting on a question
that if Walter Alston or Danny
Murtaugh had been managing
the Reds this summer, Cincinnati would have won its
division, Howsam said : "I
don't know what Alston would
have done any better than
Sparky. I don 't know if Danny
Murtaugh could have done any
better either. I know both those
men and I respect their ability
as managers, but I think
Sparky is a fine manager and

man."

·

Continuing, Howsam stated,
" ! think the Reds face
something that is very im-

nounced that ·It has decided
cllach and players to really
.
leave
offensive tackle
the season's first major snow, appreciate the astroturf,"
Pietrlni,
wbo subbed last
portant next season. We have a · peel him to bounce hack," the it was practice as usual Iowa coach Bob Commings.
at Michigan State for
job to do and we had better Reds president noted.
Wednesday for Purdue, Iowa
"We were able to practice as if
Kurt Schumacl)er, at horne
When asked what the Reds and Northwestern. · But oold . it never snowed at all."
take stock of ourselves and
week because of an lnhll"V.
come up with what is organization has against long ·weather shortened Minnesota's
But at Minnesota, the Go1
The Spartans, m:~:~
necessary to win."
hair and beards Howsam said, workout.
phers were forced to curtail
were
trying to avoid a
eoi.ch John Pont ·ignored an field activities because of cold
In a question and answer "We believe our players must
after
tbeir
111-13 upset over
session, Howsam discussed the be ~eds players, young and afternoon snowfall and his 47th weather and move into the field
Buckeyes
last
Sa.t urday.
chances of Tom Spencer, aggressive and look the part of birthday and sent the Wildcats bouse where tiM!y concentrated
don't look at the · won-loS!
·
Gallipolis native and Most a big league player . Our through a full workouut in on rushing.
Indiana added freshman record," co8ch Denny
Valuable Player on the 1974 . organization is ·made up of preparation for Saturday's
Indianapolis Indians, making pride in the manager, coaches; game against Wisconsin.
tight end George Edgar to its said. " We look to perfonnance
Northwestern is in good lineup Wednesday, giving the and Indiana has moved the
the Reds ball club this spring. players and front office. We
. very, very weU. We've got to
'''rhis was the. year that Tom want our rans to come to see shape physically, with flanker Hoosier&amp; five freshmen on the
down there and be tough."
Spencer proved to the whole players who look the part. We Bill stevens the only regUlar on t.eam, and Ohio State anReds organization that he want players who are above the injured list. He has a knee
belongs on the Reds. It will be the normal run of individuals . injury.
Purdue went thought a 9().
up to Tom to make the club," We want to appeal to "the
minute
worj&lt;out under snow
young,
middle
aged
and
old
Howsam said.
honor and remember, · on
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) and reported guard An annual golf tournament international scale, those
flurries
Howsam said that trades are alike."
not as easily made as people
Howsam also discussed the Mark Gorgal as a "doubtful" with prize money of between
golfers who have come to~~:~:
tllink. "Sure, we would like to use of video replay cameras. In starter in tiM! Saturday game $200,000 and $250,000 to each more and more to the
have Mike Schmidt of the future maybe a device will against Michigan, and Iowa year honor an aU-time golfing the further we've advanced?"
Philadelphia, but the Phillies be made to help umpires in players ignored three inches of great will be IM!Id at Jack
Also enthusiastic about the
aren't going to part with him. their close calls, he said. He snow to workout.
Nicklaus' Muirfield Village tournament and the fact it
"It takes a day like this for a
·Every player on my ball club is cited the incident at Houston
Golf Club beginning in 1976, it going to be held •on the
available for trade, but for this fall when Joe Morgan was •
was announced Wednesday. Muirfield course was Prc&gt;felh:•
some it will lake half of the called out in a close play at the
A different player from the sional Golfers
other team's entire roster to plate. The replay showed Gillingham's Drug Store in past will be selected for Commissioner Deane Beaman:::·
Morgan was safe.
get them," he emphasized.
Gallipolis , spoke briefly and tournament honors each year,
" I find tiM! idea of honorint~:
At the conclusion of the answered questions.
One of the most sought out
past
golf greats ever year
said Nicklaus. The initial
players this winter on the Reds banquet, Mrs. Ilene Wagner
Guests introduced Were Jim Memorial Tournament will be appealing," Beaman said.
is outfielder Merv Rettenmund presented Howsam , Reds Vennari o£ Pomeroy and Gene beld over the Memorial Day have seen tbe course, and I can
acquired last year from righthander Jack Billingham, Bennett of Wheelersburg, both weekend in 1976.
attest that it will prove to be a
Spencer and Bill Gray, WJEH Cir:tcinnati Reds scouts, and
Baltimore.
didn't want just another rea l challenge for aU OUJ:
" Because Merv had a bad sports director, wlth French Mel Clark of West Columbia, tour event," said Nicklaus.
professions Is."
'
year, apparently the other berets.
W. Va., a Phillies scout .
· " We wanted to do something
The $3 million course opened~
Billingham and Spencer who
clubs feel we want to give him
"'"
Rev. John Bryant of the unique and different. What May 27.
a war. We do not feel that he is were at autograph sessions North Gallia Charge, gave the . would be more fitting than to
that easy to acquire. Mervis a Wednesday at Carter's Men- invocation for the banquet held
great competitor and we ex- swear in Point Pleasant and at Oscar's.
·
CHICAGO (UP!) - Despite

Columbus will host tournament .'~

uwe

Memphis unbeaten at home, favored in playoffs
By Uolled Pross lllteraatlonal

The Memphis Southmen
ended. their first World Football League season undefeated
at home and became tbe team
to beat In the playoffs which
begin next week.
"This team has a healthy
frame of mind," Coach John
McVay said after the Southmen ended their regular
season Willi a 28-22 win over the
Charlotte Hornets· and a 17-3
record Wednesday night.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Sybil Ebersbach, com.,
Frank Krautter, Jr., dec. to
Bormle Krautter, Frank Andrew
Krautter,
Jackie
.Krautter, Timmy Krautter,
Tommy Krautter, Debra
Krautter, parcels, Pomeroy.
Sybil Ebersbach, Com.,
Frank Krautter, Jr., dec., to
Bormle Krautter, Frank Andrew
Krautter,
Jackie
Krautter, Timmy Krautter,
Tommy Krautter, Debra
Krautter, Int. Pomeroy.
Freda Krautter to Jackle .
Krautter, lot, Pomeroy.
Sbyll Ebersbach, Comm.,
Florence L. ~en, dec., to
Harold Quillen, Russell
Qullleil, 100 acre lot, Letart

FaiiB.
Harold W. Qulllen, Ila
~en;Russell~en, Velma
Quillen to Russell Qulllen,
Velma Qlllllen, lots, Letart
FaDs. ·
John M. Fuller, Judy C.
Fuller to Franklin Real Estate
Co., 40.40, Salem.
Woodrow Fortney, Virginia
Fortney to Grover C. White,
Jr., Elsie Marie White, deed of
Clirrectlon, Chester.

"We're awfully crippled up but
we'll be ready-at least as
ready as we can be."
Ed Marshall, who caught
touchdown passes of seven and
'rl yards from backup quarterback Danny White, said the
Soutlunen's really big batUes
are yet to come.

"U we let down, we knew we
were going to get our heads
beat ofr, '' Marshall said. ''That
was Incentive enough to be
ready. But now we don't need
incentive. We're going for the
big thing-the World Bowl."
Memphis will host the
Hawaiians In a nationally
televised game next Thursday

night. Charlotte, now 1~10; will
play Florida in Orlando
Wednesday night in the
playoffs. A Memphis win will
put the Southmen's secootlround game at home and
anotber victory will place the
World Bowl at Memphis
Memorial Stadium Dec. 5.
Birmingham
hosts
Philadelphia In the other
game.
"I just bope now that we can
stretch our winning streak at
borne to 13 games, running
back J .J. Jennings said. "This
Is really a new season. It's
really just beginnlng ·now."
The Southmen were never

Averitt sparks Colonels
to double overtime win
By UDiled Press lllteraatiooal
Bird Averitt should do his act

somewhere else, as far as the
·New York Nets are concerned.
They've seen it enough.
Averitt came off the bench
Wednesday night to spark the
Kentucky Colonels to a 132-129
double overtime victory over
the Nets. It was the second
· straight lime Averitt has
blitzed the Nets. In a meeting
of the one-two teams In the
Annericiln Basketball Association E;ast Saturday night,
Averitt also came off the bench
to lead Kentucky to victory.
Averitt hit 12 of his 'r/ points
In the two overtime periods as
the Colonels ran their record to
11-1, beat In the league. New:
York, which got 44 points !rom
Julius Erving, 17 of them In
overtime, riow Is 9-6.
The Nets led all the way up
into the final period, woon
Louis Dampier, who led the
Colonels with 32 points, pulled
Kentucky Into a tie. Larry
Kenon added 30 for the Nets
and Billy Paultz had 24.

In otiM!r ABA games, St.
Louis beat Memphis, 97-92,
Utah edged Indiana, 114-103,
and Denver clubbed San Diego,
132-108. .
Spirits 97, Sounds 9Z:
Rookie Marvin Barnes had 31
points and 24 rebounds to lead
St. Louis over Memphis. Rick
Mount led the Sounds with 24
points.
stars 114, Pacen 103:
Roo Boone's career-high 39
points lifted Utah past Indiana.
Boone bad 21 points in the first
half as the Stars rallied from
an eight-point deficit. Moses
Malone added 21 points and 17
rebounds for Utah while Kevin
Joyce had 28 points and George
McGinnish25 for the Pacers.
Nuggets 132, Q's 108:
Mack Calvin scored 29 points
and Byron ~k 28 to lead
Denver over San Diego. It was
the Nuggets'. third straight win
over the Q's this year and lith
overall against three losses.
Travis Grant had 35 points for
the Q's.

Ford must face

lVIinisters ·to make yul~tide gifts .

.~now fails to stop Big 10 team~

able to take charge against the
In the otiM!r finals Wedthe Hawaiians made the
Hornets, even !bough they nesday night, Birmingham playoffs with a 23-0 shutout of
jumped to an early HI lead crushed Shreveport, 40-7, and the Portland Storm. Chicago
wiM!n David Tbomas returned
canceled its game with Phtlaa punt 70 yards and John
delphla and F1orida is at
Harvey ran five yards for the Ohio College Football Records
Southern California ionight for
opening td.
By United Press International
the regular season finale.
Mid-American Conference
Don Highsmith ran four
Americans 40, steamer 7:
Conference Overall
yards to tie the game but
W . L.T W . L . T
Linebacker Warren Capone
-Miam i
S 0 0
8 0 1
(l!arlotte feU behind at the half xToledo
·
3 I 0
6 3 0 ran 29 yards with an Intercepwhen Memphis recovered a Ohio Univ . J 2 0
5 4 0 tion for one score and set up
Grn 2 3 0
5 4 0
fumbled punt and scored on a Bowling
Kent State
1 3 0
6 4 0 two other scores with returns
'rl-yard pass from John Huarte West . Mich . 0 5 0
3 7 0 of a blocked punt and a fumble
x -clinched t it le
to Gary Shirk.
as
Birmingham
routed
Ohio Conference
White hit Marshall with his
Red Division
Shreveport. TIM! Americans
Final
first scoring pass early in the
Conference Overall finished at 1~. ·
second half and a 'r/-yard bullet
W. L.T . W. L.T
Hawallans %3, storm 0:
Baldwin -Walla ce 5 0. 0
8 1 0
by White in the final quarter. Otterbein
Randy Johnson threw a 124 1 o
6 j '0
Marietta
3 2 o
6 3 o yard TD pass to John IsenMuskingum
2 3 0
4 5 0
Heidelberg
1 4 o
4 5 o barger and Clayton Heath ran
wooster
o so 2 6 o 24 yards for another score to
Blue Division
FRIDAY NITE
Conferenc e Over.a ll carry the Hawaiians past
OWL LEAGUE
W. L.T W. L.T Portland and into the playoffs.
Nov . I , 1974
3 0 1
6 12
Team
Pts. W i ttenberg
Mount Union
3 I 0
7 2, 0 Norris Weese threw 20 yards to
No : 5
~
Capital
2
2
0
5 4- 0 Grady 'Rlchardson on the last .
No.6
47
I 3 0
4 50
No . 1
44 ' Ohio Wesleyan
Den ison
0 3 1
3 5 1 play of the game for another

..

No .3
No .2
No .4

36
35

32

High

Ind . Games

-

Judy Pocktington 146.
High Series Pleas Ellis
476, Ray Manley 434. ( Women)

Ma!lley · 401.

Pock I i ngton 396.
Nov . 8,1974
Team

No . 6

No .5

Judy
Pf$.
55
48

No . 1

46

No .3

44

No .2
41
No .4
32
High Ind . Games Ken
Mohler 171. Clyde Sayre and
Bob Pockllngton 166. (Women )
Donna McFarland 116, Cheryl

Fry 153.
High Series - Ken Mohler
494, Clyde Sayre 459. (Women)

Donna McFarland 41!i, Judy
Pocklington 400 .

TD.

BLANKET LINED

OVERALL
JACKETS
SI~E 38 thru 46

COATS SiZE 38 thru 50

'1295
'13

PARTS
AND
LABO R

180
W L T
7 1 0
7 2 0

Youngstown State
John Carroll
Cincinnati
Wilmington
Akron
Ashland

OPEN 9-8 FRI. -9to9 SATURDAY .
MILL ST.
MI'DDLEPORT, 0.

WAR

' 3 0

5 ' 0

"For two years after delivery,

5 ' 0

Defiance

5 ' 0

Central State
Bluffton
Findlay
Case Western
Oayton

5
3
3
2

5
5
7
7

0
1
0
0

we'll fix anything that's our fault."

2 8 0

If she's
"the one"
... give her the
watch that
says so
.'

Bulova
Accutron®

up to decisions

•·

Sof~y cur~ed

case. '

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SOUP SUPPER at Syracuse
Asbury United Methodist
(burch beginning at 4:30p.m.
Bring containers for carryout.
REVIVAL at Rutland Free
Will Baptist Church through
Sunday, 7:30 p.m., Roger
Turner, evangelist; special
singing each evening.
FRIENDSHIP
Night,
District 13, Daughters of
America, Uon Club building,
Belpre, 6 p.m. Covered dish
dinner, take own table service.
Chester Council members
contact Mrs. Erma Cleland for
transportation.

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-~ .FOREMAN &amp; ABBOrt
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SQUARE DANCE, 8 p. m.
until midnight with ljlUSic by
the Hilltoppers; sponsored by
the Harrisonville Senior
Citizens Club.

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JEW:ELRY ·
In 1973, Britain's Princess
Anne married commoner cap.
lain Mark PhilliP'I. •

-1'.;1

POINT Pleasant Mission
Choir, 7: 30 p.m., at the
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church under direction of
Kathleen Sargent. Everyone
welcome.

SATURDAY
REVIVAL now.in progress at
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
(burch with Rev. Mathew
Harden as guest speaker.
Services at 7:30p.m . Everyone
welcome.

says terHor8t
STILLWATER, Okla. (UP!)
- ~esident Ford must decide
1M! is not just a member of
Congress and begin per,
forming like a President, his
former ' news secretary said
Tuesday night.
"He's going to have to seize
the reins of gayernment even
though he has a natural inclination not to step forward
and talle· cbarge," Jerald F.
terHorst sai&lt;i? · . ,
"Congress iS waiting· to be
led - despite all the ruin• .
blings- and is going to need to ·
be, If problems racing this
country 81"1: to be worked out."
TerHorst described Ford as
a "decent and honest in ..
divldual who Is not stupid. If he
has a problem It is In the area
of judgment only."

:'REVIVAL n~w in progress at
F:irst Church of God, Syracuse.
IJ.e v. Orville Cunningham
&lt;:fangellst. Friday. slides or
Holy Land will be shown.
Rublic is invited. Services
dighUy 7:3(1.
: LAUREL CLIFF Health
GJub home of Madolyn Chafin,
IIJulberry Ave., 7:-30p.m.
.
• SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
i&amp;AM, at temple at 7:30 p.m.
••LAURF;L Cliff Better Health
&lt;i'ub; 7:30p.m ., home of Mrs.
llladeline Chaffin.
;I'
.
•
•ROCK Springs Grange, 7:30
thursday at the hall.
;MEIGS County Humane

~
FRIDAY
f!OUDAY bazaar today and
s.,_turday at the Dale C. Warner
Ineurance Agency, Pomeroy,
b)!; the Forest Run Church .
Bake sale in conjunction with
the bazaar. Featured items
wiil be two antique china dolls,
afGhans, calico flowers, rag
rugs, homemaqe breads and
candies. ·
I;'AST Matrons, Evangeline
Chapter 172, OES, home of
Mrs. James Buchanan, 7:30
p .m. with Mrs. Marie Hawkins,
co-hostess.

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THURSDAY
},LEANOR Circle, Heath
United Methodist Church, 7
p.m., at the Columbus and
Sbuthern Ohio Electric Co. for
holiday
demon.stration.
Members are to take guests.

••

AM.ERICMS G))o
·FIRST! L6

540
4 4 I
450"
351
3 60
36 0

ICalendarl

ffiUSlC.

95

I

900
810
5 3 1

I Social~£.(

iiPVited.
.
- ~OUTH Revival , ilrlidford
(burch of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
toillght and continuing through
Slj_turday night. Bill Harris,
eVp~gellst, and (l!rist in Youth
CJ:llsade, Tulsa, Okla., special

BLANKET LINED
OVERALL

Conference Overall
W. L.T W . L.T

Mi c h igan
600
Ohio State
510
Michigan State
4 1 1
Wisconsin
330
Illinoi s
2 3 1
Minnesora
2 -40
Purdue
240
Iowa
240
Northwestern
240
Indiana
150
Others

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Big Ten

Ken

Mohler 175 , Ray Man ley 168 .
(Women) Selby Manley 147-,

Selby

· X-Oberlin
X X X
5 4 0
li.-Kenyon
x x x
2 6 1
)( -Ohio Northern x x x
2 7 0
x -No t competing for title

MEN'S SPECIAL

··· The
Meigs
County
-~nisterial Ass'n. voted to give
gift ,certificates to be used by
ne!!dy families for Christmas
.baskets whpn the gr9up met
•Monday at the Middleport
-First Baptlst'Church. •
., Each church will be asked to
.donate $10"towards the cost or
the certificates for the underprivileged and donations
are to be mailed io Rev .
Howard Shively, treasurer,
Box 338, Racine, or taken to the
next meeting. Host pastor,
Rev. Steve Skaggs conducted
the opening devotional period.
Speaker for the meeting was
Mrs. Mary Skinner of the
Mental Health Center in
Pomeroy who outlined aspects
of the Personal Advocacy

CHRISTMAS bazaar at Our
Lady of Loretta Catholic
(burch, Tuppers Plains from 5
to 11 p.m. All sorts of items
available.
SQUARE
dance
at
Harrisonviile Elementary
· School from 8 to 12. Music by
Hilltoppers. Admission $1 for
adulta, so·cents for children.
Sponsored by Senior ;;mzens.
SUNDAY
REVIVAL at Bethlehem
Baptist Ch\lfch junction of SR
124 and 338 in Great Bend
Sunday through Qec. I. Rev.
Bud Hatfield; evangelist. Earl
Shull't", pastor. Public invi,od.
FAL~~en · house for
prospective stude'lts and their
parents, Holzer Medical Center
School of Nin-sing, First Ave .,
Gallipolis, 2 p.m.

.,

Program being carried out in
Meigs County as a pilot
project. She stated that
volunteers are needed to be
advocates for ~andicapped
persons in the county on a one~
tO-One basis. AnyOne interested
in this program may contact
her through the center which is
loca led in Meigs General
Hospital. Mrs. Skinner conducted a question and answer
session to conclude her
presentation .
The association voted to take
the responsibility of leading the
annual Preachers Conference
at Rio Grande College in early
spring. The executive committee is to receive details and
take appropriate action.
During the meeting, presided
over by Rev . William Middleswarth, it was annomtced
that tags for volunteer
chaplains are · on file at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and must be worn by the
c haplain on duty . Rev . Arthur
Lund. chaplain at Holzer
Medical Center, and Robert
Bowen,
Meigs
County
Superintedent of Schools, will
be contacted as future
speakers for the association.

Pledge service held

The schedule for chaplains at Thanksgiving F.ve servire at
St. Paui Lutheran Church,
the hospital includes:
Pomeroy.
Nov. 111-24, · Rev. William
Nov. 27, 7:30 p . m.,
Middlesworth; Nov. 25-Dec. 1.
Rev . Robert Bumgarner ; Dec. Thanksgiving Eve service for
2-3, Rev. Steve Skaggs; Dec. 9- Middleport Churches at Heath
15, Rev : Harold Deeth; Dec. 111- United Methodist Church. Rev .
22, Rev. William Mid· Steve Skaggs, speaker .
Nov. '1:1, 7:30 p. m., Comdleswarth;
De c.
23·29,
munity
Thank sgiving Eve
Unassigned: Dec. 30-Jan. 5,
Rev. Robert Shook; Jan. 11-12, · service at The Racine Baptist
Rev. Uoyd Grimm, Jr.: Jan . Church.
Jan . 20,1975.6 :30 p.m ., Rev.
13-19, Rev. carl Hicks ; Jan . 2().
26, Rev. Howard Shiveley ; Jan . Charles Whittle. U. M. General
27-Feb. 2, Rev . Howard Black ; Board of Evangelism, NashFeb. J-9, Rev . Dan Ayers; Feb. ville, at Syracuse Asbury U.M.
10-16, Rev. Walter Bikacsan ; Church. Topic: " How to Use
Feb . l7-23, Rev. Dwight l',avitz; the Bible in Evangelism."
Jan. 27-29, Pastor 's Con~
Feb. 24-Mar. 2, Unassigned;
March 2-9, Rev . Floyd Shook. vocation in Columbus.
The meeting was adjourned
Announcements for up·
coming church events were with prayer by Rev. Midgiven and inciU&lt;\e :Nov. 17,5:29 dleswarth. Members present
p. m., Pre-Thanksgiving were Revs. Carl Hicks, Middinner and service at Chester dleswarth, Howard Shiveley,
Steve
Skaggs,
Walter
United Methodist Church.
Nov. 20, 7:30p.m., Plartning Bickacson, Floyd Shook,
meeting for Annual Health Robert Shook, Dan Ayers ,
Fair at the Middleport Robert Bumgarner, Dwight
Zavi tz, Harold Deeth and
Presbyterian Church.
Nov. 24, 5:29 p. m., Pre- Howard Black.
The next meeting will be
Thanksgiving dinner and
service at the Pomeroy United Dec. 9 at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Rev. Carl
Methodist Church.
Nov . 27, 7:30 p . m ., Hicks , host.

Polly 's Pointer
By Polly Cramer

Scorched food
still enfgma

DEAR POLLY -I wish someone would tell me a n easy way
to remove scorched or burned food from white porcelain-looking
cookware. I am very careful but am constantly scorching or
burning something and then have to scour and scour the cookware. I once read that putting baking soda on such burns and
letting it stand would work but it did not for me.
. I find my window sills are much easier to dust if I wax them
with floor wax ever so often. - SANDRA.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve concerns the fact that men
cannot eat in restaurants unless they have coats on. Everything
is so casual today that I resent lhis , especially at noon or lunch
time. Isn't this discrimination? -M.E.R.
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. A.B.C. should add a piece of peeled
raw potato to the hot oil in her fondue pot. This will reduce the
popping and spraying of oil to a minimum. I use about ~. to 'h
potato depending on its size and the amount of oil in the pot. ALICE.
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. A.B.C.'s problem with the popping of
oil In her fondue pot may be caused by cold or wet food being put
in il. Meat, etc., should be at room temperature and have no
moisture on it since this will cause popping. We use an electric
fondue pot and peanut oil with great success. - MRS. R. McC.
DEAR POLLY - When having a party or needing a lot of
cold canned drinks a nd space in the refrigerator cannot be
spared fill your washing machine half full of water and ice cubes
forward to having many high and then add the drinks . A word of caution -first be sure the
school students join us for this machine is unplugged so it cannot accidentally be turned on.
special afternoon. As ex- When through using the macl)jne as a cooler let the ice cubes
pressed recently in a report to melt, plug In and complete your draining cycle. -MRS. R.B.
DEAR POLLY - I shop for groceries only once a week and
the National League of Nursing
by the team surveying the always make out my list at home and write opposite each item
school for accreditation, "The the approximate price. I then have an idea about what they will
interest of the faculty in add up to. I take a clothespin or two with me to the store and use
developing a quality program them to clip my list to the smaller innerhasket of the cart so my
of nursing education and the hands are free for pushing the card or picking up needed
muiual trust, respect and products. I coock the list when I think I am finished to be sure
loyally evident between nothing was forgotten.
I make out my check (and stub ) at home allowing three to
students and faculty are two
outstanding strengths of the five dollars leeway and have a shorter stay a t the cashier's
Holzer Medical Center School counter and no error in my stubs a thorne. - HELEN.
of Nursing.' "
Fa cui ty members will be
available for interviews by the
been set for Nov. 21 and the
guests during the open house
TWO DATES SET
and tea. TOO) include Miss
The annual Eastern High senior play for Nov . 23, Supt.
Skehan , Mrs. Betty Jo Bar· School football banquet has John Riebel ·said today .
sotti, Mrs. Norma Glenn and
Mrs . Barbara McKinley .

" The Sea of Giving" was the
theme of the annual pledge
service conducted by Mrs .
E lizabeth Hibbs at the Monday
night meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the
Middl epor t Health United
Method ist Church.
Mrs. Hibbs read the purpose
of the UMW and then compared the sea with the life of
Chr ist ian people. She explained the part which the sea
played in Biblical limes, and
the part which it plays in the
life of people today . She said
that the great expansion of the
sea is an outlet and an inlet for
a ll people compa ring it to the
quotation, "T here is a
wideness in God's mercy as the
wideness of the sea''. Mrs.
Hibbs spoke of the necessity of
giving to fulfill the commission
to spread the word of Ch rist
around the world .
Participating in the pledge
service with articles about
people from different countries
where Mrs. Jane Gilke~·. Mrs .

School plans fall open house
GALLIPOLIS - The annual
fall open house and tea for
prospective students of Holzer
Medical Center School of
Nursing will be at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 17, I974 in Davis
Hall, 514 First Ave., Galli~olis.
High school seniors from the
area who have expressed an
interest in the School of Nursing have been invited. All
students who may be considering
a career ln
professional nursing are also
welcome.
Seniors in the School of

A

Nursing will act as hostesses
for the afternoon, headed by
Connie Radford, Middleport,
president of the Senior Class.
Committee members include
Nancy Tippens, Belpre, Karen
Smith, Chillicothe, Susan
Sheets, Parma, Jo Ellen
Burnett and Margi Ehman,
both from Gallipolis, and Susan
Budd and Janet Woodard ,
Beverly.
Miss Berenice Skehan.
Director of the School of
Nursing, said "We are looking

• d•
d
rrangtng tscusse

CHESTER - The basics of
Members answered roll call
flower
arranging
were with a comment on how nature
discussed at the Wednesday affirms the existence of God.
night meeting of the Chester Mrs. Eva Walker had
Garden Club hosted by Mrs. devotions using Romans 12,
Pearl Mora, Mrs. Earl Ingels, .poems, and concluding with all
Jr ., and Mrs . Donald Mora at repeating the Lord's Prayer.
the Mora home on Chester
The bylaws were read and
Road.
several changes proposed.
Mrs. Leonard Erwin served These will be voted on at a later
The Laurel Cliff Free
as lecturer while Mrs. Roy meeting. The Meigs County Methodist Church Missionary
Holter demonstrated flower Christmas flower show, Society meeting Tuesday night
arranging. As Mrs. Erwin gave " Christmas in the Air", Dec. 7 at the home of Mrs. Amber
a brief description . of each and 8 was discussed.
Lohn voted to send a donation
traditional design, Mrs. Holter
The annual Christmas dinner to Rev. H. T. Rasche for his
made the arrangement using wassetfor Dec. 4 at Seddons in work at the Olive Branch
dried scotch broom and Parkersburg. Notes were Mission in New York.
Plans were made during the
chrysanthemums for a hogarth read from the Beta Sigma Phi
curve, fresh scotch broom and Sorority t~nking members for meeting conducted by Mrs.
chrysanthemums
for
a arrangements for the home Uoyd Wright to join with the
crescent, bittersw.eet and tour and from the Athens Hysell Run Church for a ·
artichoke
for
a
line Mental Health Center asking missionary program Nov. 19.
arrangement, firethorne and for table arraagements and
program , will feature a
· missionary speaker.
bittersweet for a triangle and girts for the patients.
Refreshments in keeping
juniper, fruit , candles and
Mrs. Lohn gave devotions
flowers
for
a
table with the Thanksgiving season using Psalm I and a poem, "In
were served by the hostesses. the Morning". Prayer was by
arrangement.
Mrs. Donna Gihpore. The
program presented by Mrs. Iva
Powell was titled "A Banquet
of Praise" with each of the
members giving a reading .
Mrs. Doris Shook distributed
A reception honoring ~s . Gallipolis, and Mrs. Bernice the new reading books. Mrs.
Mary Hughes, material ob- Winn, and a sympathy card Tina Jacobs and Mrs. Gilmore
jectives chairwoman, was held was sent to Mr. and Mrs. Er· served refreshments. Attending besides those named
Friday night following the nest Wingett.
regular meeting of Mary
A Christmas party will be were Mrs. Della Curtis, Mrs.
Shrine 37, Order of the White held at the December meeling Marguerite Leifheit, · Mrs.
Shrine of Jerusalem, at the with each member to donate $1 Carman Evans, Mrs. Bernice
to the tre~sury in lieu of a gift Jeffers and Mrs . Sharon
IOOF hall , Pomeroy.
Folmer.
On behalf of members of exchange.
Mary Shrine, Midgie Abbott,
A potluck dinner followed the
wortlly
high
priestess, meeting with a cake decorated
presented Mrs. Hughes with a with the emblems of the Shrine
gift. Mrs. Abbott and Allen in the colors of yellow and
Hughes,
watchman
of white brought by Mrs. Erma
shepherds, were the presiding Yoho being featured in the
~' SUPPLIES
officers at the meeting. table decorations.
Presented were Mrs. Hughes
.Fer Large &amp; Siliall Animals
who gave a report on material
objectives, and Jesse Brinker,
598LAIDOFF
deputy supreme watchman of
WARREN,
Ohio (UP!)
shepherds. Past worthy high
prieste.aseS presented were Packard Electric Co., a
Mrs. Marie Hawkins, Mrs . . division of General Motors
Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Fern Cor'p., laid off 598 employes
Cheesebrew, Mrs. Barbara Wednesday because of the Jag
Dugan, Mrs. Pearl. Reynolds in new car sales. The company
and Mrs. Naomi Brinker. Also said it anticipated another
presented was Allen HugiM!s, 1,000 workers would be laid off
past watchman of shepherds. Dec. 2.
An invitation from Lafayette
.
Shrine 44 to · attend a
cer~monial Tuesday night at
ATTEND CONFERENCE
Gallipolis was read. Round·
Ask check our
Maxine Griffith, Joanne
robin cards were signed for
Williams and Evelyn Lanning
"MERCK VETERINARY
Mrs .
Elizabeth
Lear,
.
.
'
attending the Fall Conference
MANUAL"
· of the . Ohio Group of the
Natipnal Association of .Bank
Women Inc., at Salt Fork
,
Lodge, n"'!'" Cambridge, Nov. 9
.~1'fEND CONFERENCE
and
10.
SteVe and Sharon Snowden of
.Middleport attended a regional
conference for outstanding
state Farm Insurance agents
TO ORGANIZE
at the Pittsburgh Hilton Hotel
There
will
be
an
in Pittsbu•gh Oct; 111-19 when
organlzatipnal meeting of the
' o50 agents and agency
soutoorn Local Girls Athletic
managers, accompanied by Boosters at 7:30p.m. Monday·
their wives frOIJl throughoui a! the high school. All parents
Ohio were briefed on company aild . interesterl persons are
plans and industry developinvited.
ments.

Nan Moore, Mrs. Edith Jividen
and Mrs. Mae Lambert.
A report on the district
meeting at Heath Church last
week was given by Mrs:
Euvetta
Bechtle .
She
presented charts show ing how
the money given by Methodist
women is spent, noting that
money is given by 1,500,000
women into 35,000 loca l
treasuries, then sent to the 600
district treasuries of the 75
confere nces where it is divided
equa ll y among the World
Mission, the National Mission
and a fund which goes for
ed ucation, programs and
employes in the organization ...'
at
the
Acknowledged
meeting were the receipt of
checks from Lena Mae Lynch
and Wayne Gibbons in memory
of his wife, Esther. Thank you
notes will be sent.
Insta llation of the 1975 officers will take place at the
December meeting . Mrs. Julia
McComas and Mrs. Mary
Rinehart served refreshments.

Spring Into Comfort
NAlURALIZER®
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SOLE

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Marguerite's Shoes
BErrY OHLINGER
MAIN Sl

POMEROY

Missionary
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Home Improvement

'f'he

Shrine hosts reception

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FOR ANIMALS

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5.:-_'l'IM! Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 14, YJ74

4- TheDaUy Sentinel, Middleport-':'omeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Noil.14, 1974

Howsant.likes· Reds. in '75
By Dale Rothgeb
"Plan for the future and not
wish for it."
With that statement, Robert
L. Howsam , president of the
Cincinnati Reds and 1973
''Major League Executive of
the Year" opened his address
·Wednesday night at the Fifth
Annual Cincinnati Reds Appreciation Banquet sponsored
by Radio Station WJEH.

Howsam, twice voted the
Minor League Executive of the
Year, helped mold the St. Louis
Cardinals into champions prior
to coming to Cincinnati in
February of 1967. Earlier.
How$lam was one of the five
founding fathers of the old
American Football League and
formerly was president of the
Denver Broncos of the AFL.

Over the past two seasons,
the Cincinnati Reds have
drawn over 2 million fans each

year.
The Reds president continued, " We deal with things
that open up the Reds
organization . It is so important

to have men such as scouts Jim
Vennari ( Pomeroy) and Gene
Bennett working for us. We
have ·the normal number of
clubs in our minor league
system (five) and all our
managers are different in the
way they run their clubs.
"I think we've got an ex-

ceUent ball club. I was extremely disappointed when \ve
did not win the Western
Division and represent the
National League in the World
Series. We feel we have a
championship-type
organization, but we must be
better than the Dodgers next
year .
'' In order to win, we must do
it in ,three ways.
"Do you trade to improve ?
There aren't that many good
players available.
••no we slay with our team
and hope experience will put
them on top ?
''Or can we rely on our
farm system?
" The young players in our
organ ization must come or age.
lt has taken us eight years to
get where we are tonight."
Howsam admitted the Reds
are looking ror a third
baseman. "I doubt if we can
trade for one," he said. " We
have acquired John Vukovich
from the Brewers and have two
others, Ray Knight and Art
DeFreites in the minor
leagues. All three are now
working hard in the in;.
structionalleague. Vukovich is
getting special hitting instruction from Ted Kluszewski.
We will certainly made a deal
if we can."
It was pointed out that the

interleague trading period is
now through Dec. 6. Howsam
also said, "The Reds are
looking for another pitcher
only for what we are trying to
accomplish. We will not
sacrifice this ball club for one
year and forget about the team
for the next five to 10 years.,
" We have four or five of the
finest young pitchers in
baseball in our farm system in
Tom Carroll. Will McEnaney,
Rawy Eastwick and Pat
Darcy. My thinking is that we
don't want to disturb our young
pitchers.
" We must also remember
that Gary Nolan is trying a
comeback and right now we
have no reason to believe that
he will not be able to make it."
Commenting on a question
that if Walter Alston or Danny
Murtaugh had been managing
the Reds this summer, Cincinnati would have won its
division, Howsam said : "I
don't know what Alston would
have done any better than
Sparky. I don 't know if Danny
Murtaugh could have done any
better either. I know both those
men and I respect their ability
as managers, but I think
Sparky is a fine manager and

man."

·

Continuing, Howsam stated,
" ! think the Reds face
something that is very im-

nounced that ·It has decided
cllach and players to really
.
leave
offensive tackle
the season's first major snow, appreciate the astroturf,"
Pietrlni,
wbo subbed last
portant next season. We have a · peel him to bounce hack," the it was practice as usual Iowa coach Bob Commings.
at Michigan State for
job to do and we had better Reds president noted.
Wednesday for Purdue, Iowa
"We were able to practice as if
Kurt Schumacl)er, at horne
When asked what the Reds and Northwestern. · But oold . it never snowed at all."
take stock of ourselves and
week because of an lnhll"V.
come up with what is organization has against long ·weather shortened Minnesota's
But at Minnesota, the Go1
The Spartans, m:~:~
necessary to win."
hair and beards Howsam said, workout.
phers were forced to curtail
were
trying to avoid a
eoi.ch John Pont ·ignored an field activities because of cold
In a question and answer "We believe our players must
after
tbeir
111-13 upset over
session, Howsam discussed the be ~eds players, young and afternoon snowfall and his 47th weather and move into the field
Buckeyes
last
Sa.t urday.
chances of Tom Spencer, aggressive and look the part of birthday and sent the Wildcats bouse where tiM!y concentrated
don't look at the · won-loS!
·
Gallipolis native and Most a big league player . Our through a full workouut in on rushing.
Indiana added freshman record," co8ch Denny
Valuable Player on the 1974 . organization is ·made up of preparation for Saturday's
Indianapolis Indians, making pride in the manager, coaches; game against Wisconsin.
tight end George Edgar to its said. " We look to perfonnance
Northwestern is in good lineup Wednesday, giving the and Indiana has moved the
the Reds ball club this spring. players and front office. We
. very, very weU. We've got to
'''rhis was the. year that Tom want our rans to come to see shape physically, with flanker Hoosier&amp; five freshmen on the
down there and be tough."
Spencer proved to the whole players who look the part. We Bill stevens the only regUlar on t.eam, and Ohio State anReds organization that he want players who are above the injured list. He has a knee
belongs on the Reds. It will be the normal run of individuals . injury.
Purdue went thought a 9().
up to Tom to make the club," We want to appeal to "the
minute
worj&lt;out under snow
young,
middle
aged
and
old
Howsam said.
honor and remember, · on
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) and reported guard An annual golf tournament international scale, those
flurries
Howsam said that trades are alike."
not as easily made as people
Howsam also discussed the Mark Gorgal as a "doubtful" with prize money of between
golfers who have come to~~:~:
tllink. "Sure, we would like to use of video replay cameras. In starter in tiM! Saturday game $200,000 and $250,000 to each more and more to the
have Mike Schmidt of the future maybe a device will against Michigan, and Iowa year honor an aU-time golfing the further we've advanced?"
Philadelphia, but the Phillies be made to help umpires in players ignored three inches of great will be IM!Id at Jack
Also enthusiastic about the
aren't going to part with him. their close calls, he said. He snow to workout.
Nicklaus' Muirfield Village tournament and the fact it
"It takes a day like this for a
·Every player on my ball club is cited the incident at Houston
Golf Club beginning in 1976, it going to be held •on the
available for trade, but for this fall when Joe Morgan was •
was announced Wednesday. Muirfield course was Prc&gt;felh:•
some it will lake half of the called out in a close play at the
A different player from the sional Golfers
other team's entire roster to plate. The replay showed Gillingham's Drug Store in past will be selected for Commissioner Deane Beaman:::·
Morgan was safe.
get them," he emphasized.
Gallipolis , spoke briefly and tournament honors each year,
" I find tiM! idea of honorint~:
At the conclusion of the answered questions.
One of the most sought out
past
golf greats ever year
said Nicklaus. The initial
players this winter on the Reds banquet, Mrs. Ilene Wagner
Guests introduced Were Jim Memorial Tournament will be appealing," Beaman said.
is outfielder Merv Rettenmund presented Howsam , Reds Vennari o£ Pomeroy and Gene beld over the Memorial Day have seen tbe course, and I can
acquired last year from righthander Jack Billingham, Bennett of Wheelersburg, both weekend in 1976.
attest that it will prove to be a
Spencer and Bill Gray, WJEH Cir:tcinnati Reds scouts, and
Baltimore.
didn't want just another rea l challenge for aU OUJ:
" Because Merv had a bad sports director, wlth French Mel Clark of West Columbia, tour event," said Nicklaus.
professions Is."
'
year, apparently the other berets.
W. Va., a Phillies scout .
· " We wanted to do something
The $3 million course opened~
Billingham and Spencer who
clubs feel we want to give him
"'"
Rev. John Bryant of the unique and different. What May 27.
a war. We do not feel that he is were at autograph sessions North Gallia Charge, gave the . would be more fitting than to
that easy to acquire. Mervis a Wednesday at Carter's Men- invocation for the banquet held
great competitor and we ex- swear in Point Pleasant and at Oscar's.
·
CHICAGO (UP!) - Despite

Columbus will host tournament .'~

uwe

Memphis unbeaten at home, favored in playoffs
By Uolled Pross lllteraatlonal

The Memphis Southmen
ended. their first World Football League season undefeated
at home and became tbe team
to beat In the playoffs which
begin next week.
"This team has a healthy
frame of mind," Coach John
McVay said after the Southmen ended their regular
season Willi a 28-22 win over the
Charlotte Hornets· and a 17-3
record Wednesday night.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Sybil Ebersbach, com.,
Frank Krautter, Jr., dec. to
Bormle Krautter, Frank Andrew
Krautter,
Jackie
.Krautter, Timmy Krautter,
Tommy Krautter, Debra
Krautter, parcels, Pomeroy.
Sybil Ebersbach, Com.,
Frank Krautter, Jr., dec., to
Bormle Krautter, Frank Andrew
Krautter,
Jackie
Krautter, Timmy Krautter,
Tommy Krautter, Debra
Krautter, Int. Pomeroy.
Freda Krautter to Jackle .
Krautter, lot, Pomeroy.
Sbyll Ebersbach, Comm.,
Florence L. ~en, dec., to
Harold Quillen, Russell
Qullleil, 100 acre lot, Letart

FaiiB.
Harold W. Qulllen, Ila
~en;Russell~en, Velma
Quillen to Russell Qulllen,
Velma Qlllllen, lots, Letart
FaDs. ·
John M. Fuller, Judy C.
Fuller to Franklin Real Estate
Co., 40.40, Salem.
Woodrow Fortney, Virginia
Fortney to Grover C. White,
Jr., Elsie Marie White, deed of
Clirrectlon, Chester.

"We're awfully crippled up but
we'll be ready-at least as
ready as we can be."
Ed Marshall, who caught
touchdown passes of seven and
'rl yards from backup quarterback Danny White, said the
Soutlunen's really big batUes
are yet to come.

"U we let down, we knew we
were going to get our heads
beat ofr, '' Marshall said. ''That
was Incentive enough to be
ready. But now we don't need
incentive. We're going for the
big thing-the World Bowl."
Memphis will host the
Hawaiians In a nationally
televised game next Thursday

night. Charlotte, now 1~10; will
play Florida in Orlando
Wednesday night in the
playoffs. A Memphis win will
put the Southmen's secootlround game at home and
anotber victory will place the
World Bowl at Memphis
Memorial Stadium Dec. 5.
Birmingham
hosts
Philadelphia In the other
game.
"I just bope now that we can
stretch our winning streak at
borne to 13 games, running
back J .J. Jennings said. "This
Is really a new season. It's
really just beginnlng ·now."
The Southmen were never

Averitt sparks Colonels
to double overtime win
By UDiled Press lllteraatiooal
Bird Averitt should do his act

somewhere else, as far as the
·New York Nets are concerned.
They've seen it enough.
Averitt came off the bench
Wednesday night to spark the
Kentucky Colonels to a 132-129
double overtime victory over
the Nets. It was the second
· straight lime Averitt has
blitzed the Nets. In a meeting
of the one-two teams In the
Annericiln Basketball Association E;ast Saturday night,
Averitt also came off the bench
to lead Kentucky to victory.
Averitt hit 12 of his 'r/ points
In the two overtime periods as
the Colonels ran their record to
11-1, beat In the league. New:
York, which got 44 points !rom
Julius Erving, 17 of them In
overtime, riow Is 9-6.
The Nets led all the way up
into the final period, woon
Louis Dampier, who led the
Colonels with 32 points, pulled
Kentucky Into a tie. Larry
Kenon added 30 for the Nets
and Billy Paultz had 24.

In otiM!r ABA games, St.
Louis beat Memphis, 97-92,
Utah edged Indiana, 114-103,
and Denver clubbed San Diego,
132-108. .
Spirits 97, Sounds 9Z:
Rookie Marvin Barnes had 31
points and 24 rebounds to lead
St. Louis over Memphis. Rick
Mount led the Sounds with 24
points.
stars 114, Pacen 103:
Roo Boone's career-high 39
points lifted Utah past Indiana.
Boone bad 21 points in the first
half as the Stars rallied from
an eight-point deficit. Moses
Malone added 21 points and 17
rebounds for Utah while Kevin
Joyce had 28 points and George
McGinnish25 for the Pacers.
Nuggets 132, Q's 108:
Mack Calvin scored 29 points
and Byron ~k 28 to lead
Denver over San Diego. It was
the Nuggets'. third straight win
over the Q's this year and lith
overall against three losses.
Travis Grant had 35 points for
the Q's.

Ford must face

lVIinisters ·to make yul~tide gifts .

.~now fails to stop Big 10 team~

able to take charge against the
In the otiM!r finals Wedthe Hawaiians made the
Hornets, even !bough they nesday night, Birmingham playoffs with a 23-0 shutout of
jumped to an early HI lead crushed Shreveport, 40-7, and the Portland Storm. Chicago
wiM!n David Tbomas returned
canceled its game with Phtlaa punt 70 yards and John
delphla and F1orida is at
Harvey ran five yards for the Ohio College Football Records
Southern California ionight for
opening td.
By United Press International
the regular season finale.
Mid-American Conference
Don Highsmith ran four
Americans 40, steamer 7:
Conference Overall
yards to tie the game but
W . L.T W . L . T
Linebacker Warren Capone
-Miam i
S 0 0
8 0 1
(l!arlotte feU behind at the half xToledo
·
3 I 0
6 3 0 ran 29 yards with an Intercepwhen Memphis recovered a Ohio Univ . J 2 0
5 4 0 tion for one score and set up
Grn 2 3 0
5 4 0
fumbled punt and scored on a Bowling
Kent State
1 3 0
6 4 0 two other scores with returns
'rl-yard pass from John Huarte West . Mich . 0 5 0
3 7 0 of a blocked punt and a fumble
x -clinched t it le
to Gary Shirk.
as
Birmingham
routed
Ohio Conference
White hit Marshall with his
Red Division
Shreveport. TIM! Americans
Final
first scoring pass early in the
Conference Overall finished at 1~. ·
second half and a 'r/-yard bullet
W. L.T . W. L.T
Hawallans %3, storm 0:
Baldwin -Walla ce 5 0. 0
8 1 0
by White in the final quarter. Otterbein
Randy Johnson threw a 124 1 o
6 j '0
Marietta
3 2 o
6 3 o yard TD pass to John IsenMuskingum
2 3 0
4 5 0
Heidelberg
1 4 o
4 5 o barger and Clayton Heath ran
wooster
o so 2 6 o 24 yards for another score to
Blue Division
FRIDAY NITE
Conferenc e Over.a ll carry the Hawaiians past
OWL LEAGUE
W. L.T W. L.T Portland and into the playoffs.
Nov . I , 1974
3 0 1
6 12
Team
Pts. W i ttenberg
Mount Union
3 I 0
7 2, 0 Norris Weese threw 20 yards to
No : 5
~
Capital
2
2
0
5 4- 0 Grady 'Rlchardson on the last .
No.6
47
I 3 0
4 50
No . 1
44 ' Ohio Wesleyan
Den ison
0 3 1
3 5 1 play of the game for another

..

No .3
No .2
No .4

36
35

32

High

Ind . Games

-

Judy Pocktington 146.
High Series Pleas Ellis
476, Ray Manley 434. ( Women)

Ma!lley · 401.

Pock I i ngton 396.
Nov . 8,1974
Team

No . 6

No .5

Judy
Pf$.
55
48

No . 1

46

No .3

44

No .2
41
No .4
32
High Ind . Games Ken
Mohler 171. Clyde Sayre and
Bob Pockllngton 166. (Women )
Donna McFarland 116, Cheryl

Fry 153.
High Series - Ken Mohler
494, Clyde Sayre 459. (Women)

Donna McFarland 41!i, Judy
Pocklington 400 .

TD.

BLANKET LINED

OVERALL
JACKETS
SI~E 38 thru 46

COATS SiZE 38 thru 50

'1295
'13

PARTS
AND
LABO R

180
W L T
7 1 0
7 2 0

Youngstown State
John Carroll
Cincinnati
Wilmington
Akron
Ashland

OPEN 9-8 FRI. -9to9 SATURDAY .
MILL ST.
MI'DDLEPORT, 0.

WAR

' 3 0

5 ' 0

"For two years after delivery,

5 ' 0

Defiance

5 ' 0

Central State
Bluffton
Findlay
Case Western
Oayton

5
3
3
2

5
5
7
7

0
1
0
0

we'll fix anything that's our fault."

2 8 0

If she's
"the one"
... give her the
watch that
says so
.'

Bulova
Accutron®

up to decisions

•·

Sof~y cur~ed

case. '

dtslgn In bright end

, satinton• finish. $1!1

.ltUagr .
.Jlyarmatg
.,... CIM1al Of
IIAIOUt•• llllUG '"nici_.

ftlale trt 51St
271tU . . . .

Model C2511EMA. Early Am erican . Finished to match Plank Maple.

-:

...

SOUP SUPPER at Syracuse
Asbury United Methodist
(burch beginning at 4:30p.m.
Bring containers for carryout.
REVIVAL at Rutland Free
Will Baptist Church through
Sunday, 7:30 p.m., Roger
Turner, evangelist; special
singing each evening.
FRIENDSHIP
Night,
District 13, Daughters of
America, Uon Club building,
Belpre, 6 p.m. Covered dish
dinner, take own table service.
Chester Council members
contact Mrs. Erma Cleland for
transportation.

PHlLCOMATICTM III COLOR TV .
with"Hands·Off" Automatic Tuning

·u· p.ll't.,.,...
....::...

•

USE OUR
LAY ,._WAY PLAN

Goessler
Court St., ·Pomeroy

Truly automatic! '" Hands-o\t" tuning locks in
ali.5 vital elem ents of a good color pictu recolor, tint, brightness, contrast and automatlp
fine tuning .
•100% solid state chassfs with 14 replaceable
plug- in ·modules, 8 'integrated Circuits
• Supe r Black Matrix pictu re tube
• Philco" Picture Guard System
• 70-position '"Channel-Set"' UHF selector
• 75-ohm coaxial'cable TV antenna jack

.
25

11

·

·
diagonal picture
·

ONLY
WITH TRADE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO '

'.

· ·

$650
-~ .FOREMAN &amp; ABBOrt
.,

SQUARE DANCE, 8 p. m.
until midnight with ljlUSic by
the Hilltoppers; sponsored by
the Harrisonville Senior
Citizens Club.

..

'

Out tuning fork movement will
realiy put her In tune with you
when you· fasten a stunning
Accutron watch . around her
pretty wrist. Every · style Is
accurate to within a minute a
month. And no bother .with
winding ... ever! ·
Guarantee Is for one . year'.

JEW:ELRY ·
In 1973, Britain's Princess
Anne married commoner cap.
lain Mark PhilliP'I. •

-1'.;1

POINT Pleasant Mission
Choir, 7: 30 p.m., at the
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church under direction of
Kathleen Sargent. Everyone
welcome.

SATURDAY
REVIVAL now.in progress at
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
(burch with Rev. Mathew
Harden as guest speaker.
Services at 7:30p.m . Everyone
welcome.

says terHor8t
STILLWATER, Okla. (UP!)
- ~esident Ford must decide
1M! is not just a member of
Congress and begin per,
forming like a President, his
former ' news secretary said
Tuesday night.
"He's going to have to seize
the reins of gayernment even
though he has a natural inclination not to step forward
and talle· cbarge," Jerald F.
terHorst sai&lt;i? · . ,
"Congress iS waiting· to be
led - despite all the ruin• .
blings- and is going to need to ·
be, If problems racing this
country 81"1: to be worked out."
TerHorst described Ford as
a "decent and honest in ..
divldual who Is not stupid. If he
has a problem It is In the area
of judgment only."

:'REVIVAL n~w in progress at
F:irst Church of God, Syracuse.
IJ.e v. Orville Cunningham
&lt;:fangellst. Friday. slides or
Holy Land will be shown.
Rublic is invited. Services
dighUy 7:3(1.
: LAUREL CLIFF Health
GJub home of Madolyn Chafin,
IIJulberry Ave., 7:-30p.m.
.
• SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
i&amp;AM, at temple at 7:30 p.m.
••LAURF;L Cliff Better Health
&lt;i'ub; 7:30p.m ., home of Mrs.
llladeline Chaffin.
;I'
.
•
•ROCK Springs Grange, 7:30
thursday at the hall.
;MEIGS County Humane

~
FRIDAY
f!OUDAY bazaar today and
s.,_turday at the Dale C. Warner
Ineurance Agency, Pomeroy,
b)!; the Forest Run Church .
Bake sale in conjunction with
the bazaar. Featured items
wiil be two antique china dolls,
afGhans, calico flowers, rag
rugs, homemaqe breads and
candies. ·
I;'AST Matrons, Evangeline
Chapter 172, OES, home of
Mrs. James Buchanan, 7:30
p .m. with Mrs. Marie Hawkins,
co-hostess.

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE

•
ON 100% SOLID STATE PHILCO® COLOR TV CONSOLE.

5 3 0

THURSDAY
},LEANOR Circle, Heath
United Methodist Church, 7
p.m., at the Columbus and
Sbuthern Ohio Electric Co. for
holiday
demon.stration.
Members are to take guests.

••

AM.ERICMS G))o
·FIRST! L6

540
4 4 I
450"
351
3 60
36 0

ICalendarl

ffiUSlC.

95

I

900
810
5 3 1

I Social~£.(

iiPVited.
.
- ~OUTH Revival , ilrlidford
(burch of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
toillght and continuing through
Slj_turday night. Bill Harris,
eVp~gellst, and (l!rist in Youth
CJ:llsade, Tulsa, Okla., special

BLANKET LINED
OVERALL

Conference Overall
W. L.T W . L.T

Mi c h igan
600
Ohio State
510
Michigan State
4 1 1
Wisconsin
330
Illinoi s
2 3 1
Minnesora
2 -40
Purdue
240
Iowa
240
Northwestern
240
Indiana
150
Others

:-:·.·=· ·=··-:-:· ·:·.·.·:·.·:·.·. . .· ••. ••,.,. .

:~~· ~~gt~~ll~~p~:1~

Big Ten

Ken

Mohler 175 , Ray Man ley 168 .
(Women) Selby Manley 147-,

Selby

· X-Oberlin
X X X
5 4 0
li.-Kenyon
x x x
2 6 1
)( -Ohio Northern x x x
2 7 0
x -No t competing for title

MEN'S SPECIAL

··· The
Meigs
County
-~nisterial Ass'n. voted to give
gift ,certificates to be used by
ne!!dy families for Christmas
.baskets whpn the gr9up met
•Monday at the Middleport
-First Baptlst'Church. •
., Each church will be asked to
.donate $10"towards the cost or
the certificates for the underprivileged and donations
are to be mailed io Rev .
Howard Shively, treasurer,
Box 338, Racine, or taken to the
next meeting. Host pastor,
Rev. Steve Skaggs conducted
the opening devotional period.
Speaker for the meeting was
Mrs. Mary Skinner of the
Mental Health Center in
Pomeroy who outlined aspects
of the Personal Advocacy

CHRISTMAS bazaar at Our
Lady of Loretta Catholic
(burch, Tuppers Plains from 5
to 11 p.m. All sorts of items
available.
SQUARE
dance
at
Harrisonviile Elementary
· School from 8 to 12. Music by
Hilltoppers. Admission $1 for
adulta, so·cents for children.
Sponsored by Senior ;;mzens.
SUNDAY
REVIVAL at Bethlehem
Baptist Ch\lfch junction of SR
124 and 338 in Great Bend
Sunday through Qec. I. Rev.
Bud Hatfield; evangelist. Earl
Shull't", pastor. Public invi,od.
FAL~~en · house for
prospective stude'lts and their
parents, Holzer Medical Center
School of Nin-sing, First Ave .,
Gallipolis, 2 p.m.

.,

Program being carried out in
Meigs County as a pilot
project. She stated that
volunteers are needed to be
advocates for ~andicapped
persons in the county on a one~
tO-One basis. AnyOne interested
in this program may contact
her through the center which is
loca led in Meigs General
Hospital. Mrs. Skinner conducted a question and answer
session to conclude her
presentation .
The association voted to take
the responsibility of leading the
annual Preachers Conference
at Rio Grande College in early
spring. The executive committee is to receive details and
take appropriate action.
During the meeting, presided
over by Rev . William Middleswarth, it was annomtced
that tags for volunteer
chaplains are · on file at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and must be worn by the
c haplain on duty . Rev . Arthur
Lund. chaplain at Holzer
Medical Center, and Robert
Bowen,
Meigs
County
Superintedent of Schools, will
be contacted as future
speakers for the association.

Pledge service held

The schedule for chaplains at Thanksgiving F.ve servire at
St. Paui Lutheran Church,
the hospital includes:
Pomeroy.
Nov. 111-24, · Rev. William
Nov. 27, 7:30 p . m.,
Middlesworth; Nov. 25-Dec. 1.
Rev . Robert Bumgarner ; Dec. Thanksgiving Eve service for
2-3, Rev. Steve Skaggs; Dec. 9- Middleport Churches at Heath
15, Rev : Harold Deeth; Dec. 111- United Methodist Church. Rev .
22, Rev. William Mid· Steve Skaggs, speaker .
Nov. '1:1, 7:30 p. m., Comdleswarth;
De c.
23·29,
munity
Thank sgiving Eve
Unassigned: Dec. 30-Jan. 5,
Rev. Robert Shook; Jan. 11-12, · service at The Racine Baptist
Rev. Uoyd Grimm, Jr.: Jan . Church.
Jan . 20,1975.6 :30 p.m ., Rev.
13-19, Rev. carl Hicks ; Jan . 2().
26, Rev. Howard Shiveley ; Jan . Charles Whittle. U. M. General
27-Feb. 2, Rev . Howard Black ; Board of Evangelism, NashFeb. J-9, Rev . Dan Ayers; Feb. ville, at Syracuse Asbury U.M.
10-16, Rev. Walter Bikacsan ; Church. Topic: " How to Use
Feb . l7-23, Rev. Dwight l',avitz; the Bible in Evangelism."
Jan. 27-29, Pastor 's Con~
Feb. 24-Mar. 2, Unassigned;
March 2-9, Rev . Floyd Shook. vocation in Columbus.
The meeting was adjourned
Announcements for up·
coming church events were with prayer by Rev. Midgiven and inciU&lt;\e :Nov. 17,5:29 dleswarth. Members present
p. m., Pre-Thanksgiving were Revs. Carl Hicks, Middinner and service at Chester dleswarth, Howard Shiveley,
Steve
Skaggs,
Walter
United Methodist Church.
Nov. 20, 7:30p.m., Plartning Bickacson, Floyd Shook,
meeting for Annual Health Robert Shook, Dan Ayers ,
Fair at the Middleport Robert Bumgarner, Dwight
Zavi tz, Harold Deeth and
Presbyterian Church.
Nov. 24, 5:29 p. m., Pre- Howard Black.
The next meeting will be
Thanksgiving dinner and
service at the Pomeroy United Dec. 9 at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Rev. Carl
Methodist Church.
Nov . 27, 7:30 p . m ., Hicks , host.

Polly 's Pointer
By Polly Cramer

Scorched food
still enfgma

DEAR POLLY -I wish someone would tell me a n easy way
to remove scorched or burned food from white porcelain-looking
cookware. I am very careful but am constantly scorching or
burning something and then have to scour and scour the cookware. I once read that putting baking soda on such burns and
letting it stand would work but it did not for me.
. I find my window sills are much easier to dust if I wax them
with floor wax ever so often. - SANDRA.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve concerns the fact that men
cannot eat in restaurants unless they have coats on. Everything
is so casual today that I resent lhis , especially at noon or lunch
time. Isn't this discrimination? -M.E.R.
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. A.B.C. should add a piece of peeled
raw potato to the hot oil in her fondue pot. This will reduce the
popping and spraying of oil to a minimum. I use about ~. to 'h
potato depending on its size and the amount of oil in the pot. ALICE.
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. A.B.C.'s problem with the popping of
oil In her fondue pot may be caused by cold or wet food being put
in il. Meat, etc., should be at room temperature and have no
moisture on it since this will cause popping. We use an electric
fondue pot and peanut oil with great success. - MRS. R. McC.
DEAR POLLY - When having a party or needing a lot of
cold canned drinks a nd space in the refrigerator cannot be
spared fill your washing machine half full of water and ice cubes
forward to having many high and then add the drinks . A word of caution -first be sure the
school students join us for this machine is unplugged so it cannot accidentally be turned on.
special afternoon. As ex- When through using the macl)jne as a cooler let the ice cubes
pressed recently in a report to melt, plug In and complete your draining cycle. -MRS. R.B.
DEAR POLLY - I shop for groceries only once a week and
the National League of Nursing
by the team surveying the always make out my list at home and write opposite each item
school for accreditation, "The the approximate price. I then have an idea about what they will
interest of the faculty in add up to. I take a clothespin or two with me to the store and use
developing a quality program them to clip my list to the smaller innerhasket of the cart so my
of nursing education and the hands are free for pushing the card or picking up needed
muiual trust, respect and products. I coock the list when I think I am finished to be sure
loyally evident between nothing was forgotten.
I make out my check (and stub ) at home allowing three to
students and faculty are two
outstanding strengths of the five dollars leeway and have a shorter stay a t the cashier's
Holzer Medical Center School counter and no error in my stubs a thorne. - HELEN.
of Nursing.' "
Fa cui ty members will be
available for interviews by the
been set for Nov. 21 and the
guests during the open house
TWO DATES SET
and tea. TOO) include Miss
The annual Eastern High senior play for Nov . 23, Supt.
Skehan , Mrs. Betty Jo Bar· School football banquet has John Riebel ·said today .
sotti, Mrs. Norma Glenn and
Mrs . Barbara McKinley .

" The Sea of Giving" was the
theme of the annual pledge
service conducted by Mrs .
E lizabeth Hibbs at the Monday
night meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the
Middl epor t Health United
Method ist Church.
Mrs. Hibbs read the purpose
of the UMW and then compared the sea with the life of
Chr ist ian people. She explained the part which the sea
played in Biblical limes, and
the part which it plays in the
life of people today . She said
that the great expansion of the
sea is an outlet and an inlet for
a ll people compa ring it to the
quotation, "T here is a
wideness in God's mercy as the
wideness of the sea''. Mrs.
Hibbs spoke of the necessity of
giving to fulfill the commission
to spread the word of Ch rist
around the world .
Participating in the pledge
service with articles about
people from different countries
where Mrs. Jane Gilke~·. Mrs .

School plans fall open house
GALLIPOLIS - The annual
fall open house and tea for
prospective students of Holzer
Medical Center School of
Nursing will be at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 17, I974 in Davis
Hall, 514 First Ave., Galli~olis.
High school seniors from the
area who have expressed an
interest in the School of Nursing have been invited. All
students who may be considering
a career ln
professional nursing are also
welcome.
Seniors in the School of

A

Nursing will act as hostesses
for the afternoon, headed by
Connie Radford, Middleport,
president of the Senior Class.
Committee members include
Nancy Tippens, Belpre, Karen
Smith, Chillicothe, Susan
Sheets, Parma, Jo Ellen
Burnett and Margi Ehman,
both from Gallipolis, and Susan
Budd and Janet Woodard ,
Beverly.
Miss Berenice Skehan.
Director of the School of
Nursing, said "We are looking

• d•
d
rrangtng tscusse

CHESTER - The basics of
Members answered roll call
flower
arranging
were with a comment on how nature
discussed at the Wednesday affirms the existence of God.
night meeting of the Chester Mrs. Eva Walker had
Garden Club hosted by Mrs. devotions using Romans 12,
Pearl Mora, Mrs. Earl Ingels, .poems, and concluding with all
Jr ., and Mrs . Donald Mora at repeating the Lord's Prayer.
the Mora home on Chester
The bylaws were read and
Road.
several changes proposed.
Mrs. Leonard Erwin served These will be voted on at a later
The Laurel Cliff Free
as lecturer while Mrs. Roy meeting. The Meigs County Methodist Church Missionary
Holter demonstrated flower Christmas flower show, Society meeting Tuesday night
arranging. As Mrs. Erwin gave " Christmas in the Air", Dec. 7 at the home of Mrs. Amber
a brief description . of each and 8 was discussed.
Lohn voted to send a donation
traditional design, Mrs. Holter
The annual Christmas dinner to Rev. H. T. Rasche for his
made the arrangement using wassetfor Dec. 4 at Seddons in work at the Olive Branch
dried scotch broom and Parkersburg. Notes were Mission in New York.
Plans were made during the
chrysanthemums for a hogarth read from the Beta Sigma Phi
curve, fresh scotch broom and Sorority t~nking members for meeting conducted by Mrs.
chrysanthemums
for
a arrangements for the home Uoyd Wright to join with the
crescent, bittersw.eet and tour and from the Athens Hysell Run Church for a ·
artichoke
for
a
line Mental Health Center asking missionary program Nov. 19.
arrangement, firethorne and for table arraagements and
program , will feature a
· missionary speaker.
bittersweet for a triangle and girts for the patients.
Refreshments in keeping
juniper, fruit , candles and
Mrs. Lohn gave devotions
flowers
for
a
table with the Thanksgiving season using Psalm I and a poem, "In
were served by the hostesses. the Morning". Prayer was by
arrangement.
Mrs. Donna Gihpore. The
program presented by Mrs. Iva
Powell was titled "A Banquet
of Praise" with each of the
members giving a reading .
Mrs. Doris Shook distributed
A reception honoring ~s . Gallipolis, and Mrs. Bernice the new reading books. Mrs.
Mary Hughes, material ob- Winn, and a sympathy card Tina Jacobs and Mrs. Gilmore
jectives chairwoman, was held was sent to Mr. and Mrs. Er· served refreshments. Attending besides those named
Friday night following the nest Wingett.
regular meeting of Mary
A Christmas party will be were Mrs. Della Curtis, Mrs.
Shrine 37, Order of the White held at the December meeling Marguerite Leifheit, · Mrs.
Shrine of Jerusalem, at the with each member to donate $1 Carman Evans, Mrs. Bernice
to the tre~sury in lieu of a gift Jeffers and Mrs . Sharon
IOOF hall , Pomeroy.
Folmer.
On behalf of members of exchange.
Mary Shrine, Midgie Abbott,
A potluck dinner followed the
wortlly
high
priestess, meeting with a cake decorated
presented Mrs. Hughes with a with the emblems of the Shrine
gift. Mrs. Abbott and Allen in the colors of yellow and
Hughes,
watchman
of white brought by Mrs. Erma
shepherds, were the presiding Yoho being featured in the
~' SUPPLIES
officers at the meeting. table decorations.
Presented were Mrs. Hughes
.Fer Large &amp; Siliall Animals
who gave a report on material
objectives, and Jesse Brinker,
598LAIDOFF
deputy supreme watchman of
WARREN,
Ohio (UP!)
shepherds. Past worthy high
prieste.aseS presented were Packard Electric Co., a
Mrs. Marie Hawkins, Mrs . . division of General Motors
Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Fern Cor'p., laid off 598 employes
Cheesebrew, Mrs. Barbara Wednesday because of the Jag
Dugan, Mrs. Pearl. Reynolds in new car sales. The company
and Mrs. Naomi Brinker. Also said it anticipated another
presented was Allen HugiM!s, 1,000 workers would be laid off
past watchman of shepherds. Dec. 2.
An invitation from Lafayette
.
Shrine 44 to · attend a
cer~monial Tuesday night at
ATTEND CONFERENCE
Gallipolis was read. Round·
Ask check our
Maxine Griffith, Joanne
robin cards were signed for
Williams and Evelyn Lanning
"MERCK VETERINARY
Mrs .
Elizabeth
Lear,
.
.
'
attending the Fall Conference
MANUAL"
· of the . Ohio Group of the
Natipnal Association of .Bank
Women Inc., at Salt Fork
,
Lodge, n"'!'" Cambridge, Nov. 9
.~1'fEND CONFERENCE
and
10.
SteVe and Sharon Snowden of
.Middleport attended a regional
conference for outstanding
state Farm Insurance agents
TO ORGANIZE
at the Pittsburgh Hilton Hotel
There
will
be
an
in Pittsbu•gh Oct; 111-19 when
organlzatipnal meeting of the
' o50 agents and agency
soutoorn Local Girls Athletic
managers, accompanied by Boosters at 7:30p.m. Monday·
their wives frOIJl throughoui a! the high school. All parents
Ohio were briefed on company aild . interesterl persons are
plans and industry developinvited.
ments.

Nan Moore, Mrs. Edith Jividen
and Mrs. Mae Lambert.
A report on the district
meeting at Heath Church last
week was given by Mrs:
Euvetta
Bechtle .
She
presented charts show ing how
the money given by Methodist
women is spent, noting that
money is given by 1,500,000
women into 35,000 loca l
treasuries, then sent to the 600
district treasuries of the 75
confere nces where it is divided
equa ll y among the World
Mission, the National Mission
and a fund which goes for
ed ucation, programs and
employes in the organization ...'
at
the
Acknowledged
meeting were the receipt of
checks from Lena Mae Lynch
and Wayne Gibbons in memory
of his wife, Esther. Thank you
notes will be sent.
Insta llation of the 1975 officers will take place at the
December meeting . Mrs. Julia
McComas and Mrs. Mary
Rinehart served refreshments.

Spring Into Comfort
NAlURALIZER®
SOFT .
CREPE
SOLE

CANDY

CAMEL AND NAVY

Marguerite's Shoes
BErrY OHLINGER
MAIN Sl

POMEROY

Missionary
ladies meet

Home Improvement

'f'he

Shrine hosts reception

r0 •

ALL KINDS OF
MEDICAL
SUPPLIES.&amp;
ANTIBIOTtCS
.·
.
FOR ANIMALS

'

to

..

.,
. ·'

...

r

. -1
' ·.

�6- The Dally Sentlnel,Mlddleport-PUDefOy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov.J.. l974

. 7-Thl! Dally Sentinei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov.14,1974

·I

Birthday observed
The birthday anniversary of
Mrs. Sallie Byers was observed
recently at. her Pomeroy RD
home. Guests were Jesse and
Sandy Rodman and children,
and Tree, Sugar and Noah

Moore. Cake, ice cream,
punch, potato chips and
cookies were served . Ca rds

NEW ARRIV AU!
Dr . and Mrs.. 'Norm,,
Lanier, )11edlna, an,nounee ihe
bir.th of a daughter, Elltabe~
Jean , to be called Beth, Oet. f!i.
She is weleome,d at home by a
brother, John · MattheMaternal grandparents ,,;
Mr
. and Mrs . Lawrence
roughly $71 million."
Basliani,
GallipoliS. Materna~
Rockefeller had earlier
·placed his net worth at $62 gr~at-grandmother is M~s.
million and said the joint Dwight Tulley, Cambridge .
report had overestim~ted the Paternal grandparents are Mr
value of his art collection, real and Mrs. Garland Lanier,
estate in Latin A.Iherica and Grande . Paternal grea·t.
future earnings on his trusts. grandmother is Mrs. Lawrence
Cannon said the revised Hartinger, Middleport.
esUmate increased the value 'of
Rockefeller art, real estate and
In 1940, Gennan planes
trust holdings. He said the new bombed Coventry, in southem
net worth of the nominee and England, destroying or damag.
his immediate family totals ing 69,000 of the 75,000 buildings
$226, million, most of it in !rust. in the city.

So what's the' rumble?,

and gifts· were presented to
Mrs. Byers.
.. Other recent visitors of Mrs.
Byers have been Robert and
WASHINGTON I UP!) - The
Frieda Woods and children,
chairman
of the Senate Rules
Mich'ael and Crystal, and Paul
Toops and Mabel, niece and Committee said today a new
congressional report indicates
nephew of Mrs. Byer.
vice presidential nomhiee
Nelson A. Rockefeller is worth
' about $9 million more than
originally estimated.
Sen. Howard Cannon, !).
Nev., told reJ1orters a joint
•
report on Rockefeller's
finances prepared by the IRS
who observed their 64th and Congress' Joint Committee
wedding anniversary this on Internal Revenue Taxation
week.
figured his total net worth "a l

only $9 million, or so

ru;

Club enjoys glass tour
A tour of the Fenton Glass
Co. at Williamstown, W. Va.
was taken Tuesday by members of Uie Laurel Cliff Better
Health Club. After touring
Fenton, the group had lunch at
a Marietta Cafeteria and tben
went shopping.
Making the trip were Mrs.
Jean Wright, Mrs. Georgia
Diehl, Mrs. Bertha Parker,
Mrs. Beulah Oehler, Mrs. Iva
Powell, Mrs. Mildred Jacobs,
Mrs. Joan Clark, Mrs. Vicki
Hanson, Mrs. Doris Shook,
Mrs. Mildred Bowen, and Mrs.
Donna Gilmore . Members
brought a gift from Fenton for
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Curtis,

BURN MORTGAGE - 1be congregation of the Pomeroy Wesleyan Hollne88 Church will
burn the mortgage against the church in special services Sunday, Nov 17, at 2 p.m. Pictured is
part of the congregation as they left church services last Sunday. The public is invited.
t

Thrifty Santas LAY-AWAY NOW!
.ASHER-PRICE
..
, •

I_OEAL .
PARKER BROS.
PLAYSKOOI.
TONKA
CHILD GUIDANCE
DAISY

I·

.

.

BRAND NAME
TOYS

'
•'
•"

'•.

PETITS FOURS GLACES
Cut crosswise in 21 slices, about l'• inches thick a 6x4'hx3
inch commercial pound cake (about one pound).
Prepare a butter cream filling by combining in the top of a
double boiler and beating till blended Iii cup sugar, ! egg white, 2
tablespoons water, and a pinch of cream of tartar.
Place over boiling water and continue beating till stiff peaks
.

stir in l'• teaspoon vanilla, remove from water and cool
slightly.
Beat one-third cup butter till creamy and then beat it into the
egg white mixture.
Spread over each of the 14 slices of cake I tablespoon of this
butter cream filling.
Sandwich together in twos- filing side up. Top each stack
with one of the remaining plain slides. Trbn off crusts and cut
each stack into five fingers -about 2% inches x% inches.
CHOCOLATE GLAZE
Combine and stir till blended and smooth 3 cups of sifted
confectioners' sugar, l'c cup hot water, 2 envelopes (2 ounces)
Nestle's Choco-bake, I tablespoon corn syrup, 1 teaspoon vanilla
and l'c teaspoon salt. (Thin glaze with a little hot water, if
necessary).
.
Spread over tops and sides of the cut cakes and then chill
, until the glaze is set.
The recipe makes about 35 Petits Fours.

Bayer Aspirin

)

.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Tillman
of•Charleston and Mr. and Mrs .
Bill Fouch and family of
Huntin gton were we ekend
VtSitors ,of Mr .. and Mrs. Jack
El;&lt;m ahd family and Mr. and
Mts . W. A. Elarn.
Mr . .Dale Russell . of
Columbus . was Sunday visitor
ol Mr . . and Mrs. Lincoln
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs . Charley
Sargent of Hot Springs, Ark.,
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith of
Kanauga and Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Knapp and children
were Tuesday evening visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
Kail, Kevin and Charles
Knapp were weekend visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.

100 TABLETS
Reg. 51.25
ONLY

held in the picture by his greal'i!reat-grandmother, Mrs.
Roxie Oiler, makes another five generation family in Meigs
County. From the left, standing, are Mrs. Violet Batey,
great-grandmother; Mrs. linda Siders, grandmother, and
Mark's mother, Mrs. Mila Corder.

Stan losi119 weight today pr money
IMck. MONADEX is a tiny tablet
and easy to take. MONAOEX will
htllp curb your dftire for excess
, food, Eat less -weigh IHI. Contains
no dangerous drugs and will not
make you narvouL

No strenuous

exercise. Cha~ your life ... start

today , MONAD EX cost $3.00 for
a 20 day supply, Large economy
size il$5.00. Also try AQUA TABS:

they work gently to halp you lote
\wattr·bloat. ACUATABS - a "water
pill" that works - $3.00. Both
guaranteed and sold by:

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy, 112
E. Main, Pomeroy &amp; DuHon
Drug Store, Middleport. Mail

Orders Filled.

SM·l
- Adv.

..

ZENITH
COlOR TV

•
•BLACK &amp;
WHITE TV

POMEROY

'.•

9:30
,.,
•
'•

•

'.

Friendly Service

ge

Reg.

2~50

~:;

I

.:
'' I

ONLY

.

~
•

..
'
•'

;

..•

4oz.
Reg. 52.50
ONLY

..'•.
...
,,•
•"
•
•

,,'

High Potency Yltamin

"
"
•

.Formula With Minerals

April ShQwers

•
•
"

30 FREE WITH 100

2 oz. SPRAY OOLOGNE
OR
5 oz. DU5nNG POWDER
Reg. sl.2~CH

"'

MASON FURNinJRE

Easy Terms!
Ftee Delivery!

HERMAlil GRATE
773-5592
MASON, W. VA.

·Expreua Plastic Point P e ns
.
4 forSJ.OO
Bakers Secret Baking P1na
ValuestoSI.69 SaleS1.00ea.
Fifth Avenue Super · Stretch
Panty Hose
' Reg, 67c pr.
Sale 3 prs . S1.00
Majesty Surkle Yarns
·

Riaht to Limit
Bulbs .
5aleSI. OO

70- Sticks Wrigley's Gum, reg . 69c Sa I.e 61c

pkg ,

-

Fashion Earrings, reg. 59c Sale 2 prs . Sl.OO
W~men•s Plush Scuffs,. reg. Sl .59 Sate S1.37
Children's Animal Slippers, reg. 52.29 Sale

$1.f8

.

. Magnetic Photo Album, reg. 2.99 Sale 52.00
Metal Pho:to Fram es, reg . 1.49
S'a le 51.27
· A:unt LYdia ' s Soft Spun Rug Yarn ·
. ""R-&amp;g . _. 59~
.
Sale 37c Skeln
. Tays Galore! Values to 1.29'
Sale 88c ea .
Westmark earn Papper, GE Mixer, GE
Can Opener, West~en·d .f! rcatatar·, values
tol2.99
· · .,..~ ~~ $8 . 81"ea_ .

·---........,

Spartus Electric ClockJ., values to
511.99
SaleS7.77
Fire~ IC ing O.v enware
S1.00 ea .
Gtassw•re Specials! reg. 69c Sale 2 or SI.OO ·
Decorator Furniture Throws, 70X90 in .
Cha ir SJze, 7Gx120 in. Sata Siu.
Reg . S10.77, 57.77- ~eg. 1,14,99-$9.77
Caill'ton Sheet Blanket, reg. 54.99 Sale u.as
Fl~ted Cake _Pan, reg. S:Z.2.9 Sale S1 .57 n .
lh27- in . Door Mats, reg. 51.19
Sale $1.00

ea.

·

24x60-in . Rug Runners, reg . 52 ,79 -Sale 52.00

•••
Reversible Chair Pads, reg. 51.49 Sale SI.OO

ea.

.

Pawermaster Tool Specials, values to
Sl .59

Sale Sl.OD ea.

Tylenol
Safe, Fast Pain Relief
•.•Without Aspirin

~::~~ONLY ·47~.

'

SOLID STATE
BLENDER 8 SPEEDS

CON-VERSE ALL-STAR TENNIS
SHOES, \ PUMAS~ ADDIDAS
BRAND NAMES SUCH AS
WILSON, RAWLINGS, SPALDING,
VOlT.

Fro m just $4.00

Goessler's Jewelry
MEASURES 24 1/8 IN.

BUY YOUR WIFE
ALADY

..

Vicks-Formula 44
Cough Mixture

PeptlfBismol·.

FOR

curs40

80l

$}29

-·~:,67e

.

COLORED MODELS
'5 MORE
' .

Sears Catalog Merchant Store
POMEROY

JS~.~R.~~~ .

King ~uild~rs Supply
Middleport

I

. l'
Specza.

NI:W ••• THE MOST EFF!CTtVE
WAY TO CLEAN DENTURES

Broxodent

Now! The
Utmost In
Sewing Machines!

MORE THAN 20 DIFFERENT USES. INCWDING STRETCH SEWING.
"White" and "Eina"

The Sewing Center

K&amp;C JEWElERS

Middleport. Ohio

~--------~~.;~EROY

Tim-'s
'Wa.s tin'

MOOIIIIDD

SON=\C•

$1239

,, .

WASH({~_ &amp; DRYER PAIR
LAY·A·WAY
·
FOR CHRISTMAS

.
E ., 50
SA v

•

Gift Idea
For Christmas

Regular
'19,95 . ..

$1295
I

·

,

Pomeroy landmark

.

. Gift.Jdea For Th'e
R iKht Pers~n. · .

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

..._--~--:---

.

v

~I

;/

.

-

.

.

.

•
'

• ••

Hurry
Dow.n How

. . . .,a..-...

DINTUitE CLIAMI .. IYIYIM.

SERVING MEIGS, GALLIA &amp; MASON" COUNTIES
JAci W.
, MGR. , ·
992·2181
'•

NYLON 66: Structural nyh';ln and ·ordiMnc:i 1fftf';
CQmblrw- to alve ttw moat •ccurete, dapafld•bla ·22
eufo.la.dlng rifle aver. Holds u · tong rite. car

&gt;

4

-~:~

~un.

11.00: Flv• .lhot eutomatlc:
GIYft
. up· to " ~reilnt leu rtcoll' .:. up to wv.n tlmel
, kinCift llfl.
. .
·MOtltiL'.il:l: 22 cotlbor bolt oclkln, lul&gt;ulor re~or
llo~·I mast _.rtul bolt ....,.dnlgned fon
~

""'"

.

Pickens Hardware-Co.

I.

Selection!

',.

..

·, .

While
There's.A ·

GllEAt·

h""llng rtflo. A!Mzlno occvrory. Porfwct

.,

..
'

-··
-A ,.

"

Introducing SONAC ... ·
rh e Sy stem tho r combines
an energized bath unit
ar~d 1Pecia l so lution ro
cl!kln dentures easier; fos ter
ond mo re ef fectively.

'.

STITCH ZIGZAG, BLIND STITCH OR EDGING STITCH - WITH

"

ELECTRIC
TOOTH BRUSH

-.

THE MACHINE WITH THE UTILITY STITCHES - BASIC ZIGZAG, 3

THi TRULY VIC£PTIOIIAL &amp;Iff
A perfect diamond reflects full beauty and brillian~e
and Keepsake guarantees a perfect _cen~er d1 amond m
writing (or replacement a:!;Su~ed). W1th your ~eep­
sake Diamon~ Ring ,_ you rece1ve ~rmfl,nent ,reg1st,ra·
tion , protecuon agamst loss_ of. di~monds fr?,n t?e
seuing Jor one full yea:. and hfeume trade·m pnvilege. For the perfect gift . .. forev&lt;r . .. chooS&lt; a
KEEPSAKE .DIAMOND RING.

ACRYLIC GLASS FOR DOOR REPLACEMENT

.

$24

WHITE WAS
1289.95

lotus ~!pl =Special,

eSpre.d Satin Paints
eGiass
elnsulation-FiberalassStyrofoam • Zonlite
ePaneling • Prefinished Ceiling

· .· LIQUID .

FRONT, 38 IN. AT
BACK. CAN BE
CONVERTED TO
UNDER COUNTER.

Lay It Away

MANY
GIFT
ITEMS!

eCurvform Tops

56 IN. HIGH AT

CHRISTMAS

HRS.: MON·WE. 9:30·5:00
JHU_RS. 9:30-12:0Cr
FRI. &amp; SAT. 9:30-8:00
E. MAIN
992-8051

POMEROY .

WIDE, 26~ IN. DEEP,

KENMORE

N&amp;N SPORTSHOP

Eber5bach Hardware

eFormlca
ePiumbing Supplies
. •Eiettrltc:d Supplies

REG.
s18.95 ONLY

Clip this o ne o ut - a nifty bi ll c lip with a lol of s ides to lts
personal ity bes ides money! LikP. a handsome leather covering . ,. and a fold·out nail file ... and a concealed po~ket
knife. (These days , you just never know!) The Pnnce
Gardner Bill Clip - it 's worth putting your money Into!

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

.GRIU s29'1'J

•Light Fixtures
· eKitchen Cabinets

ONLY

&amp;oz.
· Reg. s~.19
· ONLY

ATHLETIC SUPPLIES

$25, $15, $10 GIFT CERTIFICATES
DRAWING
7:30 SATURDAY
.

WAFFLE BAKER

$31 99

FUU INE OF

•

Reg. 57.89

74¢

$33

29

•

Theragran M

.$139

9 CUP
FUU.Y AUTOMATIC
OOFFEE POTS
from S}499

OOOKER.fRYER

I

COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF
TUBE SOCKS.
SCHOOL AND ORGANIZATIO
TRADE WELCOME.

.

1 GAL

Roman Brio
AFTER SHAVE
LOTION

Sunbeam Appliances

.

-------_..__..__

-

·'·-·----·---------.-J._.._..--~-·----

MIDDLEPORT

0

7ge

ONLY

heritage house

•

DISPOSABLE
BUTANE LIGHTER

$~2~Reg. sug

5

SIZES
lnfants-5'-h • 8 '9.99
Boys 8'-h . 3 •11.99
31/z • 6 '13.99

"•.

!'''

. POME~OY, 0.

. 112 E. MAIN

Ohio

PRINCE

GRAND
FRIDAY, NOV. 15

PH. 992-2fS5

PRESCRIPTIONS

INGELS FURNITURE

Middleport

,,''

eSTER EO

Reg . $1.39
Sale Sl.OO
Big Mama Panty Hose
Reg. S1 .9P
Sate 2 prs . u :OO
1 pc. t.oottware set, Reg .
11t.n
.
Sale S14 .8B

Pk~ .

5

LOSE UGLY FAY.

A Christmas diruier Party
was set for Dec. 10 at the Meigs
Inn when the White Rose
Lodge met Wednesday at the
American Legion Hall in
Middleport .
The buffet dinner will be
served at 6:30 p. m. with each
member to share in the cost.
There will also be a $1 gift
exchange following a brief
business meeting. Reservations are to be made with
Mrs. Barbara Fry, 992-$19, no
later than Dec. 5.

..

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

'

KenMtll McCullo ..... , R. fill. Charloo·RIHie, R. Ph.
Open Dally I:Dh.m. lo t:.Jt p.111.
Sunday 1D:JOto 12: JO•ntUiotD.m.

! 3 Cubes/ 12 Rashes

I For Color Prints
1Reg. 1.50
9
I .ONLY

Dinner party slated

JUST AFEW 'MORE DAYS
AT POMEROY .BEN FRANKLIN STORE

P~g. of 6· NDrelco

Pharmacy

69~

~126-12 FILM

FIVE GENERA'nONS - Mark Alien Corder, Jr., being

her parents.
The children of the community enjoyed trick or treat
night recently.
Mr. and 'Mrs. Ralph Ballard
and children spent the weekend
. with her sister and brother-inlaw, Mr : and Mrs. Paul Baker
and family of Killbuck.
The fire department was
called three times in the past
two weeks to fight brush fires.
Luther Friend fell while at
work on a boat and was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
with an arm injury.
Peggy Sue and Stevie
Trussell attended a Halloween
party in Racine recently, at the
Racine Methodist Church.

Reg. Sl .49

s7'1'J up

OPENING

r-KOdatiiiOrjM~Wbe$1- CriCket

'

lJashan
News
Mrs. Ruby Jones was a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospitallastweek due to a fall .
Stanley Trussell caught his
hand in the corn picker on
Friday and was taken to
Veterans Memorial' Hospital .
He had some fingers on his left
hand broken, cui and one
dl~located. He was treatea in
the emerge~cy room and.
released. ·Calling to see hbn
over the weekend were Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Trussell ~nd'
Dawn of MI. Vernon, Mr. and
Mrs.' Albert Hill of Racine,
Mrs. Richard !&lt;ems of Belpre,
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Hysell,
Mr. and Mrs. Roonie Cowdery
and Larry of Long Bottom.
Gary Holter has e!I1Pioyment
at Duncanvllle, Pa. His wife,
Judy and children are spending
•orne time there with him and

STAINLESS STEEL unv''"·
UNBREAKABLE
MAINSPRING AND
SHOCK RESISTANT.
THERE'S A TIMEX
WATCH FOR EVERYONE.

..'

SWISHER · LOHSE

5 Grains Each

~

W 0 lfi}Je fi
N ews, Notes

GIFT
Plrftct
lltcll

•

These will be the holidays when you'll probably be baking
less and enjoying it more, what with the price of sugar and
shortening.
So, it would seem, the key to this year's holiday happin088 in
the cookie jar or on the cake plate is to be selective but go ahead
and bake the (amlly favorites.
. To be sure, whether it comes off the super market shell or out
of the oven, "goodies" this holiday season will cost more.
A perennlel favorite with many families are petit fours, but if
you've checked the fruit and food mail catalogs or your candy
store, you've probably backed off ... just too expensive. But they
can be made at home and since they do dress up a tray of holiday
cookies, you might make petit fo urs you experbnental "goodie"
for the season and then stick to the ''tried and true recipes" so
that theere's no waste of ingredients~
A recipe for Petits Fours Glaces was brought to our attention
the other day, and we share it with you.

fOITil .

TIMEX · FEATURING

Chrlsllnls

------

..

By Charlene Hoeflich

The

For

MOORE'S AMERICAN
HARDWARE
POMEROY
- ..

·,

'

WIDE SELECTION

CRAFTMASTER • SKILCRAFT

'

SPECIALS

TIMEX

HASBRO
GOLDBERGER DOLLS

,.

.

.

SHOP
.MOORE'S
FOR

MATIEL

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNOAY

Inflation
Fighter
'

«"'

AURORA

NEW

,,,
',

.....

.I

.

.

I

'•

'

�6- The Dally Sentlnel,Mlddleport-PUDefOy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov.J.. l974

. 7-Thl! Dally Sentinei,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov.14,1974

·I

Birthday observed
The birthday anniversary of
Mrs. Sallie Byers was observed
recently at. her Pomeroy RD
home. Guests were Jesse and
Sandy Rodman and children,
and Tree, Sugar and Noah

Moore. Cake, ice cream,
punch, potato chips and
cookies were served . Ca rds

NEW ARRIV AU!
Dr . and Mrs.. 'Norm,,
Lanier, )11edlna, an,nounee ihe
bir.th of a daughter, Elltabe~
Jean , to be called Beth, Oet. f!i.
She is weleome,d at home by a
brother, John · MattheMaternal grandparents ,,;
Mr
. and Mrs . Lawrence
roughly $71 million."
Basliani,
GallipoliS. Materna~
Rockefeller had earlier
·placed his net worth at $62 gr~at-grandmother is M~s.
million and said the joint Dwight Tulley, Cambridge .
report had overestim~ted the Paternal grandparents are Mr
value of his art collection, real and Mrs. Garland Lanier,
estate in Latin A.Iherica and Grande . Paternal grea·t.
future earnings on his trusts. grandmother is Mrs. Lawrence
Cannon said the revised Hartinger, Middleport.
esUmate increased the value 'of
Rockefeller art, real estate and
In 1940, Gennan planes
trust holdings. He said the new bombed Coventry, in southem
net worth of the nominee and England, destroying or damag.
his immediate family totals ing 69,000 of the 75,000 buildings
$226, million, most of it in !rust. in the city.

So what's the' rumble?,

and gifts· were presented to
Mrs. Byers.
.. Other recent visitors of Mrs.
Byers have been Robert and
WASHINGTON I UP!) - The
Frieda Woods and children,
chairman
of the Senate Rules
Mich'ael and Crystal, and Paul
Toops and Mabel, niece and Committee said today a new
congressional report indicates
nephew of Mrs. Byer.
vice presidential nomhiee
Nelson A. Rockefeller is worth
' about $9 million more than
originally estimated.
Sen. Howard Cannon, !).
Nev., told reJ1orters a joint
•
report on Rockefeller's
finances prepared by the IRS
who observed their 64th and Congress' Joint Committee
wedding anniversary this on Internal Revenue Taxation
week.
figured his total net worth "a l

only $9 million, or so

ru;

Club enjoys glass tour
A tour of the Fenton Glass
Co. at Williamstown, W. Va.
was taken Tuesday by members of Uie Laurel Cliff Better
Health Club. After touring
Fenton, the group had lunch at
a Marietta Cafeteria and tben
went shopping.
Making the trip were Mrs.
Jean Wright, Mrs. Georgia
Diehl, Mrs. Bertha Parker,
Mrs. Beulah Oehler, Mrs. Iva
Powell, Mrs. Mildred Jacobs,
Mrs. Joan Clark, Mrs. Vicki
Hanson, Mrs. Doris Shook,
Mrs. Mildred Bowen, and Mrs.
Donna Gilmore . Members
brought a gift from Fenton for
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Curtis,

BURN MORTGAGE - 1be congregation of the Pomeroy Wesleyan Hollne88 Church will
burn the mortgage against the church in special services Sunday, Nov 17, at 2 p.m. Pictured is
part of the congregation as they left church services last Sunday. The public is invited.
t

Thrifty Santas LAY-AWAY NOW!
.ASHER-PRICE
..
, •

I_OEAL .
PARKER BROS.
PLAYSKOOI.
TONKA
CHILD GUIDANCE
DAISY

I·

.

.

BRAND NAME
TOYS

'
•'
•"

'•.

PETITS FOURS GLACES
Cut crosswise in 21 slices, about l'• inches thick a 6x4'hx3
inch commercial pound cake (about one pound).
Prepare a butter cream filling by combining in the top of a
double boiler and beating till blended Iii cup sugar, ! egg white, 2
tablespoons water, and a pinch of cream of tartar.
Place over boiling water and continue beating till stiff peaks
.

stir in l'• teaspoon vanilla, remove from water and cool
slightly.
Beat one-third cup butter till creamy and then beat it into the
egg white mixture.
Spread over each of the 14 slices of cake I tablespoon of this
butter cream filling.
Sandwich together in twos- filing side up. Top each stack
with one of the remaining plain slides. Trbn off crusts and cut
each stack into five fingers -about 2% inches x% inches.
CHOCOLATE GLAZE
Combine and stir till blended and smooth 3 cups of sifted
confectioners' sugar, l'c cup hot water, 2 envelopes (2 ounces)
Nestle's Choco-bake, I tablespoon corn syrup, 1 teaspoon vanilla
and l'c teaspoon salt. (Thin glaze with a little hot water, if
necessary).
.
Spread over tops and sides of the cut cakes and then chill
, until the glaze is set.
The recipe makes about 35 Petits Fours.

Bayer Aspirin

)

.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Tillman
of•Charleston and Mr. and Mrs .
Bill Fouch and family of
Huntin gton were we ekend
VtSitors ,of Mr .. and Mrs. Jack
El;&lt;m ahd family and Mr. and
Mts . W. A. Elarn.
Mr . .Dale Russell . of
Columbus . was Sunday visitor
ol Mr . . and Mrs. Lincoln
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs . Charley
Sargent of Hot Springs, Ark.,
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith of
Kanauga and Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Knapp and children
were Tuesday evening visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
Kail, Kevin and Charles
Knapp were weekend visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.

100 TABLETS
Reg. 51.25
ONLY

held in the picture by his greal'i!reat-grandmother, Mrs.
Roxie Oiler, makes another five generation family in Meigs
County. From the left, standing, are Mrs. Violet Batey,
great-grandmother; Mrs. linda Siders, grandmother, and
Mark's mother, Mrs. Mila Corder.

Stan losi119 weight today pr money
IMck. MONADEX is a tiny tablet
and easy to take. MONAOEX will
htllp curb your dftire for excess
, food, Eat less -weigh IHI. Contains
no dangerous drugs and will not
make you narvouL

No strenuous

exercise. Cha~ your life ... start

today , MONAD EX cost $3.00 for
a 20 day supply, Large economy
size il$5.00. Also try AQUA TABS:

they work gently to halp you lote
\wattr·bloat. ACUATABS - a "water
pill" that works - $3.00. Both
guaranteed and sold by:

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy, 112
E. Main, Pomeroy &amp; DuHon
Drug Store, Middleport. Mail

Orders Filled.

SM·l
- Adv.

..

ZENITH
COlOR TV

•
•BLACK &amp;
WHITE TV

POMEROY

'.•

9:30
,.,
•
'•

•

'.

Friendly Service

ge

Reg.

2~50

~:;

I

.:
'' I

ONLY

.

~
•

..
'
•'

;

..•

4oz.
Reg. 52.50
ONLY

..'•.
...
,,•
•"
•
•

,,'

High Potency Yltamin

"
"
•

.Formula With Minerals

April ShQwers

•
•
"

30 FREE WITH 100

2 oz. SPRAY OOLOGNE
OR
5 oz. DU5nNG POWDER
Reg. sl.2~CH

"'

MASON FURNinJRE

Easy Terms!
Ftee Delivery!

HERMAlil GRATE
773-5592
MASON, W. VA.

·Expreua Plastic Point P e ns
.
4 forSJ.OO
Bakers Secret Baking P1na
ValuestoSI.69 SaleS1.00ea.
Fifth Avenue Super · Stretch
Panty Hose
' Reg, 67c pr.
Sale 3 prs . S1.00
Majesty Surkle Yarns
·

Riaht to Limit
Bulbs .
5aleSI. OO

70- Sticks Wrigley's Gum, reg . 69c Sa I.e 61c

pkg ,

-

Fashion Earrings, reg. 59c Sale 2 prs . Sl.OO
W~men•s Plush Scuffs,. reg. Sl .59 Sate S1.37
Children's Animal Slippers, reg. 52.29 Sale

$1.f8

.

. Magnetic Photo Album, reg. 2.99 Sale 52.00
Metal Pho:to Fram es, reg . 1.49
S'a le 51.27
· A:unt LYdia ' s Soft Spun Rug Yarn ·
. ""R-&amp;g . _. 59~
.
Sale 37c Skeln
. Tays Galore! Values to 1.29'
Sale 88c ea .
Westmark earn Papper, GE Mixer, GE
Can Opener, West~en·d .f! rcatatar·, values
tol2.99
· · .,..~ ~~ $8 . 81"ea_ .

·---........,

Spartus Electric ClockJ., values to
511.99
SaleS7.77
Fire~ IC ing O.v enware
S1.00 ea .
Gtassw•re Specials! reg. 69c Sale 2 or SI.OO ·
Decorator Furniture Throws, 70X90 in .
Cha ir SJze, 7Gx120 in. Sata Siu.
Reg . S10.77, 57.77- ~eg. 1,14,99-$9.77
Caill'ton Sheet Blanket, reg. 54.99 Sale u.as
Fl~ted Cake _Pan, reg. S:Z.2.9 Sale S1 .57 n .
lh27- in . Door Mats, reg. 51.19
Sale $1.00

ea.

·

24x60-in . Rug Runners, reg . 52 ,79 -Sale 52.00

•••
Reversible Chair Pads, reg. 51.49 Sale SI.OO

ea.

.

Pawermaster Tool Specials, values to
Sl .59

Sale Sl.OD ea.

Tylenol
Safe, Fast Pain Relief
•.•Without Aspirin

~::~~ONLY ·47~.

'

SOLID STATE
BLENDER 8 SPEEDS

CON-VERSE ALL-STAR TENNIS
SHOES, \ PUMAS~ ADDIDAS
BRAND NAMES SUCH AS
WILSON, RAWLINGS, SPALDING,
VOlT.

Fro m just $4.00

Goessler's Jewelry
MEASURES 24 1/8 IN.

BUY YOUR WIFE
ALADY

..

Vicks-Formula 44
Cough Mixture

PeptlfBismol·.

FOR

curs40

80l

$}29

-·~:,67e

.

COLORED MODELS
'5 MORE
' .

Sears Catalog Merchant Store
POMEROY

JS~.~R.~~~ .

King ~uild~rs Supply
Middleport

I

. l'
Specza.

NI:W ••• THE MOST EFF!CTtVE
WAY TO CLEAN DENTURES

Broxodent

Now! The
Utmost In
Sewing Machines!

MORE THAN 20 DIFFERENT USES. INCWDING STRETCH SEWING.
"White" and "Eina"

The Sewing Center

K&amp;C JEWElERS

Middleport. Ohio

~--------~~.;~EROY

Tim-'s
'Wa.s tin'

MOOIIIIDD

SON=\C•

$1239

,, .

WASH({~_ &amp; DRYER PAIR
LAY·A·WAY
·
FOR CHRISTMAS

.
E ., 50
SA v

•

Gift Idea
For Christmas

Regular
'19,95 . ..

$1295
I

·

,

Pomeroy landmark

.

. Gift.Jdea For Th'e
R iKht Pers~n. · .

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

..._--~--:---

.

v

~I

;/

.

-

.

.

.

•
'

• ••

Hurry
Dow.n How

. . . .,a..-...

DINTUitE CLIAMI .. IYIYIM.

SERVING MEIGS, GALLIA &amp; MASON" COUNTIES
JAci W.
, MGR. , ·
992·2181
'•

NYLON 66: Structural nyh';ln and ·ordiMnc:i 1fftf';
CQmblrw- to alve ttw moat •ccurete, dapafld•bla ·22
eufo.la.dlng rifle aver. Holds u · tong rite. car

&gt;

4

-~:~

~un.

11.00: Flv• .lhot eutomatlc:
GIYft
. up· to " ~reilnt leu rtcoll' .:. up to wv.n tlmel
, kinCift llfl.
. .
·MOtltiL'.il:l: 22 cotlbor bolt oclkln, lul&gt;ulor re~or
llo~·I mast _.rtul bolt ....,.dnlgned fon
~

""'"

.

Pickens Hardware-Co.

I.

Selection!

',.

..

·, .

While
There's.A ·

GllEAt·

h""llng rtflo. A!Mzlno occvrory. Porfwct

.,

..
'

-··
-A ,.

"

Introducing SONAC ... ·
rh e Sy stem tho r combines
an energized bath unit
ar~d 1Pecia l so lution ro
cl!kln dentures easier; fos ter
ond mo re ef fectively.

'.

STITCH ZIGZAG, BLIND STITCH OR EDGING STITCH - WITH

"

ELECTRIC
TOOTH BRUSH

-.

THE MACHINE WITH THE UTILITY STITCHES - BASIC ZIGZAG, 3

THi TRULY VIC£PTIOIIAL &amp;Iff
A perfect diamond reflects full beauty and brillian~e
and Keepsake guarantees a perfect _cen~er d1 amond m
writing (or replacement a:!;Su~ed). W1th your ~eep­
sake Diamon~ Ring ,_ you rece1ve ~rmfl,nent ,reg1st,ra·
tion , protecuon agamst loss_ of. di~monds fr?,n t?e
seuing Jor one full yea:. and hfeume trade·m pnvilege. For the perfect gift . .. forev&lt;r . .. chooS&lt; a
KEEPSAKE .DIAMOND RING.

ACRYLIC GLASS FOR DOOR REPLACEMENT

.

$24

WHITE WAS
1289.95

lotus ~!pl =Special,

eSpre.d Satin Paints
eGiass
elnsulation-FiberalassStyrofoam • Zonlite
ePaneling • Prefinished Ceiling

· .· LIQUID .

FRONT, 38 IN. AT
BACK. CAN BE
CONVERTED TO
UNDER COUNTER.

Lay It Away

MANY
GIFT
ITEMS!

eCurvform Tops

56 IN. HIGH AT

CHRISTMAS

HRS.: MON·WE. 9:30·5:00
JHU_RS. 9:30-12:0Cr
FRI. &amp; SAT. 9:30-8:00
E. MAIN
992-8051

POMEROY .

WIDE, 26~ IN. DEEP,

KENMORE

N&amp;N SPORTSHOP

Eber5bach Hardware

eFormlca
ePiumbing Supplies
. •Eiettrltc:d Supplies

REG.
s18.95 ONLY

Clip this o ne o ut - a nifty bi ll c lip with a lol of s ides to lts
personal ity bes ides money! LikP. a handsome leather covering . ,. and a fold·out nail file ... and a concealed po~ket
knife. (These days , you just never know!) The Pnnce
Gardner Bill Clip - it 's worth putting your money Into!

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

.GRIU s29'1'J

•Light Fixtures
· eKitchen Cabinets

ONLY

&amp;oz.
· Reg. s~.19
· ONLY

ATHLETIC SUPPLIES

$25, $15, $10 GIFT CERTIFICATES
DRAWING
7:30 SATURDAY
.

WAFFLE BAKER

$31 99

FUU INE OF

•

Reg. 57.89

74¢

$33

29

•

Theragran M

.$139

9 CUP
FUU.Y AUTOMATIC
OOFFEE POTS
from S}499

OOOKER.fRYER

I

COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF
TUBE SOCKS.
SCHOOL AND ORGANIZATIO
TRADE WELCOME.

.

1 GAL

Roman Brio
AFTER SHAVE
LOTION

Sunbeam Appliances

.

-------_..__..__

-

·'·-·----·---------.-J._.._..--~-·----

MIDDLEPORT

0

7ge

ONLY

heritage house

•

DISPOSABLE
BUTANE LIGHTER

$~2~Reg. sug

5

SIZES
lnfants-5'-h • 8 '9.99
Boys 8'-h . 3 •11.99
31/z • 6 '13.99

"•.

!'''

. POME~OY, 0.

. 112 E. MAIN

Ohio

PRINCE

GRAND
FRIDAY, NOV. 15

PH. 992-2fS5

PRESCRIPTIONS

INGELS FURNITURE

Middleport

,,''

eSTER EO

Reg . $1.39
Sale Sl.OO
Big Mama Panty Hose
Reg. S1 .9P
Sate 2 prs . u :OO
1 pc. t.oottware set, Reg .
11t.n
.
Sale S14 .8B

Pk~ .

5

LOSE UGLY FAY.

A Christmas diruier Party
was set for Dec. 10 at the Meigs
Inn when the White Rose
Lodge met Wednesday at the
American Legion Hall in
Middleport .
The buffet dinner will be
served at 6:30 p. m. with each
member to share in the cost.
There will also be a $1 gift
exchange following a brief
business meeting. Reservations are to be made with
Mrs. Barbara Fry, 992-$19, no
later than Dec. 5.

..

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

'

KenMtll McCullo ..... , R. fill. Charloo·RIHie, R. Ph.
Open Dally I:Dh.m. lo t:.Jt p.111.
Sunday 1D:JOto 12: JO•ntUiotD.m.

! 3 Cubes/ 12 Rashes

I For Color Prints
1Reg. 1.50
9
I .ONLY

Dinner party slated

JUST AFEW 'MORE DAYS
AT POMEROY .BEN FRANKLIN STORE

P~g. of 6· NDrelco

Pharmacy

69~

~126-12 FILM

FIVE GENERA'nONS - Mark Alien Corder, Jr., being

her parents.
The children of the community enjoyed trick or treat
night recently.
Mr. and 'Mrs. Ralph Ballard
and children spent the weekend
. with her sister and brother-inlaw, Mr : and Mrs. Paul Baker
and family of Killbuck.
The fire department was
called three times in the past
two weeks to fight brush fires.
Luther Friend fell while at
work on a boat and was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
with an arm injury.
Peggy Sue and Stevie
Trussell attended a Halloween
party in Racine recently, at the
Racine Methodist Church.

Reg. Sl .49

s7'1'J up

OPENING

r-KOdatiiiOrjM~Wbe$1- CriCket

'

lJashan
News
Mrs. Ruby Jones was a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospitallastweek due to a fall .
Stanley Trussell caught his
hand in the corn picker on
Friday and was taken to
Veterans Memorial' Hospital .
He had some fingers on his left
hand broken, cui and one
dl~located. He was treatea in
the emerge~cy room and.
released. ·Calling to see hbn
over the weekend were Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Trussell ~nd'
Dawn of MI. Vernon, Mr. and
Mrs.' Albert Hill of Racine,
Mrs. Richard !&lt;ems of Belpre,
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Hysell,
Mr. and Mrs. Roonie Cowdery
and Larry of Long Bottom.
Gary Holter has e!I1Pioyment
at Duncanvllle, Pa. His wife,
Judy and children are spending
•orne time there with him and

STAINLESS STEEL unv''"·
UNBREAKABLE
MAINSPRING AND
SHOCK RESISTANT.
THERE'S A TIMEX
WATCH FOR EVERYONE.

..'

SWISHER · LOHSE

5 Grains Each

~

W 0 lfi}Je fi
N ews, Notes

GIFT
Plrftct
lltcll

•

These will be the holidays when you'll probably be baking
less and enjoying it more, what with the price of sugar and
shortening.
So, it would seem, the key to this year's holiday happin088 in
the cookie jar or on the cake plate is to be selective but go ahead
and bake the (amlly favorites.
. To be sure, whether it comes off the super market shell or out
of the oven, "goodies" this holiday season will cost more.
A perennlel favorite with many families are petit fours, but if
you've checked the fruit and food mail catalogs or your candy
store, you've probably backed off ... just too expensive. But they
can be made at home and since they do dress up a tray of holiday
cookies, you might make petit fo urs you experbnental "goodie"
for the season and then stick to the ''tried and true recipes" so
that theere's no waste of ingredients~
A recipe for Petits Fours Glaces was brought to our attention
the other day, and we share it with you.

fOITil .

TIMEX · FEATURING

Chrlsllnls

------

..

By Charlene Hoeflich

The

For

MOORE'S AMERICAN
HARDWARE
POMEROY
- ..

·,

'

WIDE SELECTION

CRAFTMASTER • SKILCRAFT

'

SPECIALS

TIMEX

HASBRO
GOLDBERGER DOLLS

,.

.

.

SHOP
.MOORE'S
FOR

MATIEL

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNOAY

Inflation
Fighter
'

«"'

AURORA

NEW

,,,
',

.....

.I

.

.

I

'•

'

�1.::-'I'he DailySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Thursday, Nov. l4, 1974
8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Thursday, Nov .14, 1974

will provide entertainment.
Mrs . ·Delores
Frank,
chainnan of the tilembershlp
drive,
announced thai the drive
The Eastern High School Wills, will march in ·Uie annual
wiU begin soon and that letters
Band, directed by Charles Chrisbnas kickoff parade in
· wlll be mailed concerning
Pomeroy on Nov. 25.
$:
insurance fees. Mrs. Rose
This was among the anCarr,
chalnnan, iB recruiting
w
0~
noun!'&lt;'ments Tuesday night
w
·when · th'e Eastern Band · workets to sell popcorn at•
basketball
games.
The
Boosters met in regular session
THREAT MADE
Christmas
concert
was
anMASON, W. Va . - A bomb with Mrs. Mary K. Rose, nounced for Dec. 19 at the high
~
~
·:m;::~..;o-«;-=::~-:=x::;:;;::~-:;:::~!::~:~:!:?.•:~:m~~~~:::?.!~!:;:;:~:?.::.~::s::==*::::::!:;:i threat at Wahama High School president; in charge .
Plans were made to serve the school.
as the leader of the original s tantly e xtended PLO in- · early Wednesday resulted in
Others attending the meeting
evacuation of the school and a annual Meigs Soil and Water were Mrs. Betty Newell, Mrs.
and s till the largest - guerrilla flue nee in the Arab world.
organization, AI Fatah . The
At times he has even acted as search of premises by Mason 's · Conservation District banquet Nadine Goebel , Mrs. Jane
nam e is an acr onym for mediator .in Ar~ b disputes , Volunteer Firemen and Mason at the high school on Nov. 19. Fick, Mrs . Betty Dean, Mrs.
" Pal es tine Lib e r a ti o n most recenUy a£ter an Iraq- Police . The threat came before Some of the band members and Margaret Brown and Mrs.
Movement."
Kuwait border clash in March classes had sl&lt;lrted and those students from the vocal class Marilyn Hannum.
AI Fa tah announ ce~ its first 1973. He has managed to arriving early were directed to
guerrilla operation J an. 1, 1965 ma inta in good personal the school gymnasium."After a
- a sabotage attack inside relation s with such disparate search and no bomb. was
Israel led by Aralat. Until alter Arab regimes as Saudi Arabia loimd, classes took up .
the Arab - Israeli war of Jtme and Iraq, as well as with the
SUI'I'SFILED
1967, AI Fatah ran into hostili ty curre ntly hostile leaders of
.
P'I'. PLEASANT - Holzer
fr om Arab governments, who Egypt and Libya. .
He even has referred to the Medical Center and Clinic of
feared its operations would
provoke Israeli a ttacks. Jews as " our brothers " and Gallipolis Tuesday entered two
Because of his ac tivities , urge d non-Zionis ts a mong _civil actions in Mason County
Arafat spent 51 days in a them to 11 be partners with U.s " Circuit Court. Entered by
Syrian jail.
in the building of a new attorney Michael Shaw, one
was against Vernon Pratt of
But after the Arab deteat in Palestine.
1967 , AI Fatah won its "second
Althoug h the " Black Sep- Patriot Star Route, Gallipolis,
laWlching" as the sole active tember " organization which in which $1,461.05 pius interest
defender of the Arab cause . In ca rr·ied out some of the most and costs is asked in judgment
March 1968, combined J or- s hocking g uerrilla terror is t and the other against David A. ·
danian and Palestinian forces acts is reputed to be an offshoot Nolan , in which judgment of
.defeated attacking Is raeli of AI Fatah , Arafat ha s $1,628.50plus interest and costs
troops at Karameh in Jordan fr e qu e n ll y
c ondemned is asked .
and Arafat was established as hijacking and other forms of
an Arab .world hero.
violence . against civilians as
Interesting
and
In February 1969, the harmful to the cause .
Palestine
Liberation
Ara fat also re~udiates such . profitable
career
•
Organization, the umbrella slogans a s "driving the . Jews
for
inen
and
guerrilla ore:anization, elected into the sea. " In one of his
women
selling
Arafat as its chairman. He has many recent interviews, he
Sarah Coventry, 18
retained the post ever since. said : "We are not trying to
As PLO chairman Arafat, kick anyone into the sea. Our
and over. 'For inCIRCULATION 12,276
who is a pudgy five-foot~even, ultimate , strategic aim is to
'
formation write
seldom shaves and lacks create a united, democratic
Fay Westfall, Box .
Read By More MGM housf!holds
personal glamor., has main- ·Palestine in which Christians,
24,
Long
Bottom,
tained his grip on rival Jews and Moslems can live
Ohio.
guerrilla factions and con- toge ther on terms of equality. "
than any other newspaper

Mild mannered, 1
skilled diplomat '
:x ,.

~

By United Press International
Vasser Arafat habitually
affect.. the checkered headdress , dark glasses and combat
latigue uniform of a lirebrand
guerrilla leader.
But in fact he is a mild·
mannered man. His rise to
prominence has been based
mainly on his diplomatic

talent.. that have welded the
constantly wrangling !actions
of the Palestinian resistance
movement into a cohesive
political Ioree.
Arafat, born in Jerusalem in
1939 as one of 10 children, is
said to be lanatical about only
one thing - the recovery of
Palestine .
On&lt;e, standing on a hlll In

Jordan overlooklng Jerusalem,
he told his aides: " That is my
beloved Jerusalem. I stand
here to smell tbe air that keeps

me alive."
Stili a bachelor at 45, Arafat
is wont to say, uMy wife is
Palestine.' '
Arafat,
who
studied
engineering,
at
Cairo

University, rose to prominence

Federal court pins costs
of lost suits on officials
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
U. S. Sixth Circuit Court of
Appeals, in a precedent-setting
decision , ruled today that while
a county may not be forced to
pay attorney fees after losing a
court case, a county official
can he held liable.
The court ruled in an Allen
squabble
about
County
•whether the sheriff and county
could be assessed attorney fees
following a suit brought by jail
Inmates.
Although the .fee in question

totaled only $2,000, the Appeals
Court judges issued a long 12page opinion and stated :
" Because of the increasing
frequency of cases such as this,
we feel it necessary to treat
these issues fully , so as to
resolve confusion and set forth
the proper considerations for
district court.. to take into
account in deciding whether
and In what manner to assess
attorney fees against local ·
defeodant.o; in suits to enforce

civil rights .. . "

The ruling stemmed from a
1972case in which Lima County
Jail inmates complained "our
conditions are unbearable to
the point of oot surviving,"
A federal district court ordered certain conditions improved and said $2,000 claimed
by the "advocates for basic
legal equality" - the group
that represented the inmates should be assessed " against
both Sheriff Edward Fair as an
Individual and Allen County."

Tire. business holding up

1•

AKRON, Oh1o (UP!)- Two
of the tire giants here have
-been affected very little by the
layoffs in the auto industry,
and one claims to have the
secret of success.
While B. F. Goodrich Co, and
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
have been forced to cutback in
production of conventional
auto tires, Firestone Tire and
Rubber Co. repOrted a steady
work load.
"We are making selective
reductions in productions,"
according to a Goodrich
spokesman. "There have been
minor layoffs at scattered
plants throughout our system."
He said he could not Indicate
what the result would he if the
cutbacks in Detroit became
·
drastic.
Cutbacks in the rubher industry haven't heeri as grave
as might be expected.
A B. F. Goodrich. spokesman
said, "The nwnber of replacement tires sold is three Urnes
the number of tires sent to
Detroit for new car use."
He added, however, that
there has been "a general
slump In replacement tire
saleawhlch are not as strong as
they uaed to he."
'!'bat can he attributed to the
slower speed limits and less
driving by motorists, he said.
"Who drives the car, how
faat, how far and under what
road conditions all contribute
to the life expectancy of a
llre;" he said.
·
There have been cutbacks In
workweeks at Goodyear plants

In Akron; Los Angeles;
Topeka, Kan.; Jackson, Mich.;
·and
Gadsden,
Ala.
A
spokesman said the workweeks
have been shortened to three
days at some plants and four
days at others. .
" It will he that way for the
balance of the year," the
Goodyear spokesman said.
However, production has
~en curtsiled on conventional
Ures only·
"We are the only supplier of
radial tires to the Detroit
area," he said.. "ACtually only
about 10 per cent of our
business at Goodyear Is
direclly related to the auto
Industries in Detroit.
"The cutbacks have resulted
from a reduced demand for
tires," he said, addlng t1uit the
worker who has been placed on
a short workweek is not really
suffering too much.
In all, there have been only
about 20 jobs temporarily
eilminated at Goodyear. For
the others who are affected by
the red11ced workweek, their
pay is virtually the same.
"These workers come under
a supplemental unemployment
plan,"
the
Goodyear
spokesman said. "They get
about 85percentof their wages
m the days they don't work, so
there's
no
slibstantlal
economic problem for the
employes now.
"We.have juat been forced to
balance production of cmven!tonal auto tires with demand,"
he said.
·
While auto tire production

/ron workers on strike
PT. PLEASANT - Ap- living,
pri&gt;ximately 234 employes of
However, workers voted 2 to
West Virginia Malleable Iron I against the proposal on
Company here walked olf their grounds it was not' enough.
jobs at midnight Tuesday when
Tony Vitantonio, plant
contracts expired.
manager said : "We felt we
The walkout came after a offered them a good package
week ()f contract negotiations deal." Vitantonio said he hopes
that failed to produce a new the strike "will not last too
three-year contract between long." But he added, "I am not
company and Local 3041 of the optimistic either way."
United Steel Workers.
Some ol the workers on
AC(!Oi'dlng to Robert Rim- picket lines at the gate en- mey 1 president of the local, a trance to the plant said they
contract was offered for an would not commit any acts of
Increase in wages and cost of violenCe.

.

Oren M. Wogan, 89, formerly
of Pomeroy, 427 Bettie St. ,
Akron, died Tuesday evening
at the St. Thomas Hospital
there following a brief illness.
Mr. Wogan, born in Barboursville, W. Va., had spent
most of his life In Pomeroy,
movillg to Akron four years
ago to make his home with a
daughter , Mrs. Ida Olive
Frazier.
Surviving besides Mrs.
Frazier are three other
daughters, · Mrs. Thelma
Cremens, Marysville, Ohio;
Mrs. Mary Walker, Huntington, W. Va., and Mrs.
Dorothea Lambright, Courtland; two sons, John and
Delmar, both of Columbus; 20
grandchildren, and a number
of great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be. held
at 10 a.m. Friday at the DunnQuigley and Ciriello Funer8t
Home, 811 Grant St., Akron
with the Rev. Wayne Jones
officiating. Burial will be In the
Middleport Hill Cemetery
where graveside services will
he held at 3:30 p.m. Friday.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Energy, food, development,
resource scarcity, population
- the wor.ld seems bulfeted by
an increasingly tangled web of
crises.
Rarely, however, were the
crises ever approached interdependently. Even now, politicians tend to treat · 'such
phenom~na as the world food
· shor~ge and rising oil prices
as isolated unrelated problems
capable of separate solutions.
Two y;ears ago, however, the
publicatioo of a Utile paperback book drUy enlilled " The
Limits to Growth" shattered
man~ of the assumptions
commonly held about world
development .and Its impact on
the future'.

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· GUARANTRD.·

:PtiOttE COLLECT

As your St~te 54!nator Elec.t . I look f~rward ro -king wftti y•u 11 1 .
!"'rs.ona! fr1end and your legislator. Please know your confidence Is 1 real
1nsp1rat1on a.nd I wel,come the opportunity to be of service to you at the
State level m Columbus.
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You are hereby notified that
yOu have been named defen .
dants In a legal action entitled
Adalene Smith Ftechtner,
Plaintiff, vs . Lucille WITHEM,
ET AL., Defendants. Th"is ac .
tion has been assigned Case No .
15,622 In the Court of Common ·
Pleas of Meigs County, Onlo .
The oblect of the Complaint is
to reform the deed recorded In
Volume 111. - Page 154, Meigs
County · Deed Records, to In ·
elude the entire interest in the
said real estate and to quiet the
title of the. Plalntlff as against
all of the Defendants in .the
following desCribed re·al estate :
Situate in the Village of
Middleport. County of Meigs
and State of Ohio, being the
following descr!bed pieces or
parcels of land and the buidllng
situated thereon :
A part of Town Lot Number
Sixty.Seven 167) In Jones Plat
of Middleport and described as
follows : Commencing - at the
southwest corner
of
Lot
Number
Slxty . seven
167)
runn ing northerly on the .north
and south line of said lot
aforesaid · twenty -three feet and
four Inches-; thence in an
easterly direction and parallel
With the east and west line of
said lot fifty "feet ; thence south
and parallel With the north and
south line of said lot eight 18)
feet ; thence easterly and
parallel with the line of said lot
to the east line of said Lot
Number 67 ; thence to the
southeast corner of said lot;
thence westerly on the south
line of said Lot Number 67, to
the southwest corner of said Lot
Number 67 and being the place
o\ beginning .
'
·
Also the following described
real estate situated In the ·
Vfllage of Middleport; Meigs
County. Stllte of Ohio , bounded
and described as follows: A
strip of Lot Number 66, in Jones
Plat of Middleport, being eight
tnches wide and one hundred
and thirteen feet tong off of the
north side of said Lot No . 66.
Also the following real estat_
e
described as follows : Com ·
menclng Twenty ·~lx,(26) -feet .I n,,
a southerly· direCtion fro'm the
northeast corner of ·t.:ot Nb ."
Si x ty -seven (67) Jn•· Jones
Survey of Middleport, Ohio;
thence westerly' s) xty -thr~e 163)
feet, more or less, to the Bank
Building occupied by E . C. Fox .
·a nd now owned by Dee Ward;
thence southerly seven and one·
half (7112) feet to the line of the
lot owned . by T . R . Sm lth ;
thence easterly on the line of
said T . R . Smith lot sixty -three
(63) feet tO:··the alley; ' thence
northerly seven and one.-half
0 1h l feet to , the place of
beginning.
. Together with the privilege of
Ingress and egress to the
owners of the . riOrth and south
portions of said brick building,
to their heirs lind assigns, and to
their agents, tenants and em ·
ptoy&amp;es, in the iolnt use of the
hati"Wavs leading to First.
Second and Third stories of the
building on said premises.
.'
Being tfie same premises
bequeathed In the Last Will and
Testament of Cornelia Adeline
Smith to Frances H . Smith and
A . Glenn Smith, and thereafter
conveyed by A . Glenn Sm lth to
Frances H. Smith by deed
recorded In . Volume 151 , Page
-492. Of the Meigs County Deed
Records .
Reference Deed : Volume 252,
Page 623, Meigs County Deed
REcords.
.
You. are required to answer
the COmf?l&amp;lnt Within 28 diVI
•fter the last publication of thiS
notice. wh!Cb will be published
once each week for six sOc ·
cesslve iYtl'eks . The
last
publication will be 01ade on
December 19, 197~ . and the 28
days tor answer wlll commence
on that date.
In case · of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond as
required by the Ohio Rules of,
Civil Procedures, judgment bY
default will be rendered against
· you for the relief demand•f In
this ComPlaint .

,.

.

·.

~~-·- . .

.

·Pd. Poi.. Adv.

. .

. AIMt taC!It

I

'',•

Larry E . speOc,er •
Clerk of court ,
Meigs county ,
Pomeroy , Ohio

. 1111 14, ll . 28 (121

.'

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'·

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CHERAOOL
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But to move in the direction
of a recognition of global
economic and ecologlcallnterdependence requires political
and social decisions politicia ns
seem loathe to confront. Thus,
during last year's oil boycott,
both sides ~cted with alterna ling petulance and beligerency ,
rather than with an eye on the
long term effects.
"Mankind at the Turning
Point," certain to be deba ted
as widely as " Limits to
Growth ," argues nations can
no longer afford to do that.

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has issued a new report, a
more sophisticated
and
ela borate study using a much
. more complicated computer
program than did "The Limits
"to Growth. "
And it comes up with- some
startling differences from the
earlier work, although they are
not • differences that allow
anyone, especially in the
developed world , to sit back

NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
TO : Lucille Withem, whose
last known place of residence
was Glouster , Ohio , and . whoSe
address is unknow~;~ and cannot
with reasonable dfligence be
as certa"lned ; ·
TO : Minnie D. Smith , Whose
last known place of residence
was Tecumseh , Oklahoma, and
whose address Is unknown and
cannot
with
reasonable
diligence be ascertained ;
TO : Birdie Leona Meyer ,
whose last known .. place of
residence was Tecumseh ,
Oklahoma. and whose address
is unknown and cannot with
reasonable
diligence
be
ascerta ined ;
TO: The unknown heirs and
devisees of Thomas R . Smlfh;
TO : The unknown heirs and
devise~ :of Laura Handley ;
TO : The unknown heirs and
devisees of · Lawrence D . Mc Master ;
TO : T.he unknown heirs and
dev!sees of Thomes D. Smith ;
TO: The unknown heirs and
devisees of Minnie D . Smith ;
TO : The unknown heirs and
devisees of B i rdie Leona
Meyer; and
TO : The unknown heirs and
devisees• of Grace McMaster
Harding.; ,

....... .. ... o ••••• 5 ...
I ...
• 1'111111 ... • ... " " " " : " " . 5 ~
• . . ...... • " . " " ·" " " .... 5 . .
2S ....
~
,
. .,.
....

lars, scientists, economis ts,
industrialists and theologians,
both ' _
op the ~ubstance of jits
arguflt~nl!; and on it.. rflethod~ -the uae of CCJ!D·
pule~ -projections to delel'IJlll1e
longrange world developments .
·
The
Club ·of
Rome,
sometimes called the "hidden
college" because of the Informal nature of membership, ,

MYlANTA
ANTACID

LOOK WHAT YOU GET

LBS.

done for Club of Rome -a n
international, independent,
nongovernmental group of
experta in global economics
and developments -&lt;trged an
inunediate slowdown In world
economic growth, suggesting
that to continue growth at
present levels was to Invite
g!Q)lal catastrophe.
That book sparked an international debate among scho-

to make that investment In the
less developed countries, it
warns, 11 there will be a
thousand desperadoes terrorizing those. who are now 'rich,'
and eventually nuclear blackmail and terror will paralyze
further orderly development.
uTen or 20 years from today
it will probably be too late, and
then even a hundred Kissingers, constantly criss-crossing
the globe on peace ,missions ,
could not prevent the world
from faUlng into the abyss of a
nuclear holocaust."

"Umits to Growth," a report

THE SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

GRAND OPENING!

'

argues . that: the present " undifferentiated growth is
assuming truly cancerous
qualities in some parts of the
world" while '.'the very
existence of man is threatened
daily in some other part by
lack of growth ... "
As me example, it said Its
computer projections suggest
the need for as much as $250
billim worth of lnvesbnent In
the less developed world if lite
planet is to stave off economic
and political upheaval.
H the developed world faiiB

based on computer projection

BY

200!.$1071.......

FOR YOUR OONTINUED
SUPPORT AND SUPPORT ON
NOVEMBER 5TH

'

BEST

BEEF SU)ES

THANKS

.

By DAVID E. ANDERSON

.

MY SINCERE

T

COVERED ·

&lt;lren M.. Wogan
(lies in Akron

'

.
•

A Dlli,...Dt Kind of Growth ·

will continue to he slow during
the Detroit cutbacks the truck
and fann tire hu~ Jlave
been booming for Goodyear
and Firestooe.
"We're at peak production in
the truck and farm tire
production " the Goodyear
spokesman' said.
"With
agriculture booming the
demand for tractor fu.es · is
abnormally high."
In fact he said in this area
of tire b~ess 'supply can't
meet demand. '
Firestone on the other hand
isworklngtisemployeson a~
hour workweek in all its 16
passenger and truck tire
plants.
·"At this time we don't
foresee any cutbacks " a
spokesman said.
'
Why?
"Like one of our vice
presidents said last week,
'well, we work a little harder
and a Utile smarter "' the
Firestone spokesman ~id.
·

and let things go on as they are.
The }lew study, entitled
" Mankind ' at the Turni ng
Point" (E.P. Dutton) argues
that instead of the no-growth
policy suggested by the earlier
book, humankind needs to
develop a kind of uorganic"
economic growth, that is,
controlled 'growth much like
the growth of the human body.
"Growth for growth's sake in
the sense of ever increasing
numbers and large size ·
simply
cannot -continue
1
fore '"r,"
....,: -+., "qid . J1.

Economic growth, has inherent evil

p, .
l.
i Band to plt!-y in parade
ersona zty · 1
s· pot~
l. h t:
~
~
Yasser Arafat I

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�1.::-'I'he DailySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Thursday, Nov. l4, 1974
8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Thursday, Nov .14, 1974

will provide entertainment.
Mrs . ·Delores
Frank,
chainnan of the tilembershlp
drive,
announced thai the drive
The Eastern High School Wills, will march in ·Uie annual
wiU begin soon and that letters
Band, directed by Charles Chrisbnas kickoff parade in
· wlll be mailed concerning
Pomeroy on Nov. 25.
$:
insurance fees. Mrs. Rose
This was among the anCarr,
chalnnan, iB recruiting
w
0~
noun!'&lt;'ments Tuesday night
w
·when · th'e Eastern Band · workets to sell popcorn at•
basketball
games.
The
Boosters met in regular session
THREAT MADE
Christmas
concert
was
anMASON, W. Va . - A bomb with Mrs. Mary K. Rose, nounced for Dec. 19 at the high
~
~
·:m;::~..;o-«;-=::~-:=x::;:;;::~-:;:::~!::~:~:!:?.•:~:m~~~~:::?.!~!:;:;:~:?.::.~::s::==*::::::!:;:i threat at Wahama High School president; in charge .
Plans were made to serve the school.
as the leader of the original s tantly e xtended PLO in- · early Wednesday resulted in
Others attending the meeting
evacuation of the school and a annual Meigs Soil and Water were Mrs. Betty Newell, Mrs.
and s till the largest - guerrilla flue nee in the Arab world.
organization, AI Fatah . The
At times he has even acted as search of premises by Mason 's · Conservation District banquet Nadine Goebel , Mrs. Jane
nam e is an acr onym for mediator .in Ar~ b disputes , Volunteer Firemen and Mason at the high school on Nov. 19. Fick, Mrs . Betty Dean, Mrs.
" Pal es tine Lib e r a ti o n most recenUy a£ter an Iraq- Police . The threat came before Some of the band members and Margaret Brown and Mrs.
Movement."
Kuwait border clash in March classes had sl&lt;lrted and those students from the vocal class Marilyn Hannum.
AI Fa tah announ ce~ its first 1973. He has managed to arriving early were directed to
guerrilla operation J an. 1, 1965 ma inta in good personal the school gymnasium."After a
- a sabotage attack inside relation s with such disparate search and no bomb. was
Israel led by Aralat. Until alter Arab regimes as Saudi Arabia loimd, classes took up .
the Arab - Israeli war of Jtme and Iraq, as well as with the
SUI'I'SFILED
1967, AI Fatah ran into hostili ty curre ntly hostile leaders of
.
P'I'. PLEASANT - Holzer
fr om Arab governments, who Egypt and Libya. .
He even has referred to the Medical Center and Clinic of
feared its operations would
provoke Israeli a ttacks. Jews as " our brothers " and Gallipolis Tuesday entered two
Because of his ac tivities , urge d non-Zionis ts a mong _civil actions in Mason County
Arafat spent 51 days in a them to 11 be partners with U.s " Circuit Court. Entered by
Syrian jail.
in the building of a new attorney Michael Shaw, one
was against Vernon Pratt of
But after the Arab deteat in Palestine.
1967 , AI Fatah won its "second
Althoug h the " Black Sep- Patriot Star Route, Gallipolis,
laWlching" as the sole active tember " organization which in which $1,461.05 pius interest
defender of the Arab cause . In ca rr·ied out some of the most and costs is asked in judgment
March 1968, combined J or- s hocking g uerrilla terror is t and the other against David A. ·
danian and Palestinian forces acts is reputed to be an offshoot Nolan , in which judgment of
.defeated attacking Is raeli of AI Fatah , Arafat ha s $1,628.50plus interest and costs
troops at Karameh in Jordan fr e qu e n ll y
c ondemned is asked .
and Arafat was established as hijacking and other forms of
an Arab .world hero.
violence . against civilians as
Interesting
and
In February 1969, the harmful to the cause .
Palestine
Liberation
Ara fat also re~udiates such . profitable
career
•
Organization, the umbrella slogans a s "driving the . Jews
for
inen
and
guerrilla ore:anization, elected into the sea. " In one of his
women
selling
Arafat as its chairman. He has many recent interviews, he
Sarah Coventry, 18
retained the post ever since. said : "We are not trying to
As PLO chairman Arafat, kick anyone into the sea. Our
and over. 'For inCIRCULATION 12,276
who is a pudgy five-foot~even, ultimate , strategic aim is to
'
formation write
seldom shaves and lacks create a united, democratic
Fay Westfall, Box .
Read By More MGM housf!holds
personal glamor., has main- ·Palestine in which Christians,
24,
Long
Bottom,
tained his grip on rival Jews and Moslems can live
Ohio.
guerrilla factions and con- toge ther on terms of equality. "
than any other newspaper

Mild mannered, 1
skilled diplomat '
:x ,.

~

By United Press International
Vasser Arafat habitually
affect.. the checkered headdress , dark glasses and combat
latigue uniform of a lirebrand
guerrilla leader.
But in fact he is a mild·
mannered man. His rise to
prominence has been based
mainly on his diplomatic

talent.. that have welded the
constantly wrangling !actions
of the Palestinian resistance
movement into a cohesive
political Ioree.
Arafat, born in Jerusalem in
1939 as one of 10 children, is
said to be lanatical about only
one thing - the recovery of
Palestine .
On&lt;e, standing on a hlll In

Jordan overlooklng Jerusalem,
he told his aides: " That is my
beloved Jerusalem. I stand
here to smell tbe air that keeps

me alive."
Stili a bachelor at 45, Arafat
is wont to say, uMy wife is
Palestine.' '
Arafat,
who
studied
engineering,
at
Cairo

University, rose to prominence

Federal court pins costs
of lost suits on officials
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
U. S. Sixth Circuit Court of
Appeals, in a precedent-setting
decision , ruled today that while
a county may not be forced to
pay attorney fees after losing a
court case, a county official
can he held liable.
The court ruled in an Allen
squabble
about
County
•whether the sheriff and county
could be assessed attorney fees
following a suit brought by jail
Inmates.
Although the .fee in question

totaled only $2,000, the Appeals
Court judges issued a long 12page opinion and stated :
" Because of the increasing
frequency of cases such as this,
we feel it necessary to treat
these issues fully , so as to
resolve confusion and set forth
the proper considerations for
district court.. to take into
account in deciding whether
and In what manner to assess
attorney fees against local ·
defeodant.o; in suits to enforce

civil rights .. . "

The ruling stemmed from a
1972case in which Lima County
Jail inmates complained "our
conditions are unbearable to
the point of oot surviving,"
A federal district court ordered certain conditions improved and said $2,000 claimed
by the "advocates for basic
legal equality" - the group
that represented the inmates should be assessed " against
both Sheriff Edward Fair as an
Individual and Allen County."

Tire. business holding up

1•

AKRON, Oh1o (UP!)- Two
of the tire giants here have
-been affected very little by the
layoffs in the auto industry,
and one claims to have the
secret of success.
While B. F. Goodrich Co, and
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
have been forced to cutback in
production of conventional
auto tires, Firestone Tire and
Rubber Co. repOrted a steady
work load.
"We are making selective
reductions in productions,"
according to a Goodrich
spokesman. "There have been
minor layoffs at scattered
plants throughout our system."
He said he could not Indicate
what the result would he if the
cutbacks in Detroit became
·
drastic.
Cutbacks in the rubher industry haven't heeri as grave
as might be expected.
A B. F. Goodrich. spokesman
said, "The nwnber of replacement tires sold is three Urnes
the number of tires sent to
Detroit for new car use."
He added, however, that
there has been "a general
slump In replacement tire
saleawhlch are not as strong as
they uaed to he."
'!'bat can he attributed to the
slower speed limits and less
driving by motorists, he said.
"Who drives the car, how
faat, how far and under what
road conditions all contribute
to the life expectancy of a
llre;" he said.
·
There have been cutbacks In
workweeks at Goodyear plants

In Akron; Los Angeles;
Topeka, Kan.; Jackson, Mich.;
·and
Gadsden,
Ala.
A
spokesman said the workweeks
have been shortened to three
days at some plants and four
days at others. .
" It will he that way for the
balance of the year," the
Goodyear spokesman said.
However, production has
~en curtsiled on conventional
Ures only·
"We are the only supplier of
radial tires to the Detroit
area," he said.. "ACtually only
about 10 per cent of our
business at Goodyear Is
direclly related to the auto
Industries in Detroit.
"The cutbacks have resulted
from a reduced demand for
tires," he said, addlng t1uit the
worker who has been placed on
a short workweek is not really
suffering too much.
In all, there have been only
about 20 jobs temporarily
eilminated at Goodyear. For
the others who are affected by
the red11ced workweek, their
pay is virtually the same.
"These workers come under
a supplemental unemployment
plan,"
the
Goodyear
spokesman said. "They get
about 85percentof their wages
m the days they don't work, so
there's
no
slibstantlal
economic problem for the
employes now.
"We.have juat been forced to
balance production of cmven!tonal auto tires with demand,"
he said.
·
While auto tire production

/ron workers on strike
PT. PLEASANT - Ap- living,
pri&gt;ximately 234 employes of
However, workers voted 2 to
West Virginia Malleable Iron I against the proposal on
Company here walked olf their grounds it was not' enough.
jobs at midnight Tuesday when
Tony Vitantonio, plant
contracts expired.
manager said : "We felt we
The walkout came after a offered them a good package
week ()f contract negotiations deal." Vitantonio said he hopes
that failed to produce a new the strike "will not last too
three-year contract between long." But he added, "I am not
company and Local 3041 of the optimistic either way."
United Steel Workers.
Some ol the workers on
AC(!Oi'dlng to Robert Rim- picket lines at the gate en- mey 1 president of the local, a trance to the plant said they
contract was offered for an would not commit any acts of
Increase in wages and cost of violenCe.

.

Oren M. Wogan, 89, formerly
of Pomeroy, 427 Bettie St. ,
Akron, died Tuesday evening
at the St. Thomas Hospital
there following a brief illness.
Mr. Wogan, born in Barboursville, W. Va., had spent
most of his life In Pomeroy,
movillg to Akron four years
ago to make his home with a
daughter , Mrs. Ida Olive
Frazier.
Surviving besides Mrs.
Frazier are three other
daughters, · Mrs. Thelma
Cremens, Marysville, Ohio;
Mrs. Mary Walker, Huntington, W. Va., and Mrs.
Dorothea Lambright, Courtland; two sons, John and
Delmar, both of Columbus; 20
grandchildren, and a number
of great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be. held
at 10 a.m. Friday at the DunnQuigley and Ciriello Funer8t
Home, 811 Grant St., Akron
with the Rev. Wayne Jones
officiating. Burial will be In the
Middleport Hill Cemetery
where graveside services will
he held at 3:30 p.m. Friday.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Energy, food, development,
resource scarcity, population
- the wor.ld seems bulfeted by
an increasingly tangled web of
crises.
Rarely, however, were the
crises ever approached interdependently. Even now, politicians tend to treat · 'such
phenom~na as the world food
· shor~ge and rising oil prices
as isolated unrelated problems
capable of separate solutions.
Two y;ears ago, however, the
publicatioo of a Utile paperback book drUy enlilled " The
Limits to Growth" shattered
man~ of the assumptions
commonly held about world
development .and Its impact on
the future'.

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· GUARANTRD.·

:PtiOttE COLLECT

As your St~te 54!nator Elec.t . I look f~rward ro -king wftti y•u 11 1 .
!"'rs.ona! fr1end and your legislator. Please know your confidence Is 1 real
1nsp1rat1on a.nd I wel,come the opportunity to be of service to you at the
State level m Columbus.
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You are hereby notified that
yOu have been named defen .
dants In a legal action entitled
Adalene Smith Ftechtner,
Plaintiff, vs . Lucille WITHEM,
ET AL., Defendants. Th"is ac .
tion has been assigned Case No .
15,622 In the Court of Common ·
Pleas of Meigs County, Onlo .
The oblect of the Complaint is
to reform the deed recorded In
Volume 111. - Page 154, Meigs
County · Deed Records, to In ·
elude the entire interest in the
said real estate and to quiet the
title of the. Plalntlff as against
all of the Defendants in .the
following desCribed re·al estate :
Situate in the Village of
Middleport. County of Meigs
and State of Ohio, being the
following descr!bed pieces or
parcels of land and the buidllng
situated thereon :
A part of Town Lot Number
Sixty.Seven 167) In Jones Plat
of Middleport and described as
follows : Commencing - at the
southwest corner
of
Lot
Number
Slxty . seven
167)
runn ing northerly on the .north
and south line of said lot
aforesaid · twenty -three feet and
four Inches-; thence in an
easterly direction and parallel
With the east and west line of
said lot fifty "feet ; thence south
and parallel With the north and
south line of said lot eight 18)
feet ; thence easterly and
parallel with the line of said lot
to the east line of said Lot
Number 67 ; thence to the
southeast corner of said lot;
thence westerly on the south
line of said Lot Number 67, to
the southwest corner of said Lot
Number 67 and being the place
o\ beginning .
'
·
Also the following described
real estate situated In the ·
Vfllage of Middleport; Meigs
County. Stllte of Ohio , bounded
and described as follows: A
strip of Lot Number 66, in Jones
Plat of Middleport, being eight
tnches wide and one hundred
and thirteen feet tong off of the
north side of said Lot No . 66.
Also the following real estat_
e
described as follows : Com ·
menclng Twenty ·~lx,(26) -feet .I n,,
a southerly· direCtion fro'm the
northeast corner of ·t.:ot Nb ."
Si x ty -seven (67) Jn•· Jones
Survey of Middleport, Ohio;
thence westerly' s) xty -thr~e 163)
feet, more or less, to the Bank
Building occupied by E . C. Fox .
·a nd now owned by Dee Ward;
thence southerly seven and one·
half (7112) feet to the line of the
lot owned . by T . R . Sm lth ;
thence easterly on the line of
said T . R . Smith lot sixty -three
(63) feet tO:··the alley; ' thence
northerly seven and one.-half
0 1h l feet to , the place of
beginning.
. Together with the privilege of
Ingress and egress to the
owners of the . riOrth and south
portions of said brick building,
to their heirs lind assigns, and to
their agents, tenants and em ·
ptoy&amp;es, in the iolnt use of the
hati"Wavs leading to First.
Second and Third stories of the
building on said premises.
.'
Being tfie same premises
bequeathed In the Last Will and
Testament of Cornelia Adeline
Smith to Frances H . Smith and
A . Glenn Smith, and thereafter
conveyed by A . Glenn Sm lth to
Frances H. Smith by deed
recorded In . Volume 151 , Page
-492. Of the Meigs County Deed
Records .
Reference Deed : Volume 252,
Page 623, Meigs County Deed
REcords.
.
You. are required to answer
the COmf?l&amp;lnt Within 28 diVI
•fter the last publication of thiS
notice. wh!Cb will be published
once each week for six sOc ·
cesslve iYtl'eks . The
last
publication will be 01ade on
December 19, 197~ . and the 28
days tor answer wlll commence
on that date.
In case · of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond as
required by the Ohio Rules of,
Civil Procedures, judgment bY
default will be rendered against
· you for the relief demand•f In
this ComPlaint .

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·Pd. Poi.. Adv.

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. AIMt taC!It

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'',•

Larry E . speOc,er •
Clerk of court ,
Meigs county ,
Pomeroy , Ohio

. 1111 14, ll . 28 (121

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CHERAOOL
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But to move in the direction
of a recognition of global
economic and ecologlcallnterdependence requires political
and social decisions politicia ns
seem loathe to confront. Thus,
during last year's oil boycott,
both sides ~cted with alterna ling petulance and beligerency ,
rather than with an eye on the
long term effects.
"Mankind at the Turning
Point," certain to be deba ted
as widely as " Limits to
Growth ," argues nations can
no longer afford to do that.

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has issued a new report, a
more sophisticated
and
ela borate study using a much
. more complicated computer
program than did "The Limits
"to Growth. "
And it comes up with- some
startling differences from the
earlier work, although they are
not • differences that allow
anyone, especially in the
developed world , to sit back

NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
TO : Lucille Withem, whose
last known place of residence
was Glouster , Ohio , and . whoSe
address is unknow~;~ and cannot
with reasonable dfligence be
as certa"lned ; ·
TO : Minnie D. Smith , Whose
last known place of residence
was Tecumseh , Oklahoma, and
whose address Is unknown and
cannot
with
reasonable
diligence be ascertained ;
TO : Birdie Leona Meyer ,
whose last known .. place of
residence was Tecumseh ,
Oklahoma. and whose address
is unknown and cannot with
reasonable
diligence
be
ascerta ined ;
TO: The unknown heirs and
devisees of Thomas R . Smlfh;
TO : The unknown heirs and
devise~ :of Laura Handley ;
TO : The unknown heirs and
devisees of · Lawrence D . Mc Master ;
TO : T.he unknown heirs and
dev!sees of Thomes D. Smith ;
TO: The unknown heirs and
devisees of Minnie D . Smith ;
TO : The unknown heirs and
devisees of B i rdie Leona
Meyer; and
TO : The unknown heirs and
devisees• of Grace McMaster
Harding.; ,

....... .. ... o ••••• 5 ...
I ...
• 1'111111 ... • ... " " " " : " " . 5 ~
• . . ...... • " . " " ·" " " .... 5 . .
2S ....
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....

lars, scientists, economis ts,
industrialists and theologians,
both ' _
op the ~ubstance of jits
arguflt~nl!; and on it.. rflethod~ -the uae of CCJ!D·
pule~ -projections to delel'IJlll1e
longrange world developments .
·
The
Club ·of
Rome,
sometimes called the "hidden
college" because of the Informal nature of membership, ,

MYlANTA
ANTACID

LOOK WHAT YOU GET

LBS.

done for Club of Rome -a n
international, independent,
nongovernmental group of
experta in global economics
and developments -&lt;trged an
inunediate slowdown In world
economic growth, suggesting
that to continue growth at
present levels was to Invite
g!Q)lal catastrophe.
That book sparked an international debate among scho-

to make that investment In the
less developed countries, it
warns, 11 there will be a
thousand desperadoes terrorizing those. who are now 'rich,'
and eventually nuclear blackmail and terror will paralyze
further orderly development.
uTen or 20 years from today
it will probably be too late, and
then even a hundred Kissingers, constantly criss-crossing
the globe on peace ,missions ,
could not prevent the world
from faUlng into the abyss of a
nuclear holocaust."

"Umits to Growth," a report

THE SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

GRAND OPENING!

'

argues . that: the present " undifferentiated growth is
assuming truly cancerous
qualities in some parts of the
world" while '.'the very
existence of man is threatened
daily in some other part by
lack of growth ... "
As me example, it said Its
computer projections suggest
the need for as much as $250
billim worth of lnvesbnent In
the less developed world if lite
planet is to stave off economic
and political upheaval.
H the developed world faiiB

based on computer projection

BY

200!.$1071.......

FOR YOUR OONTINUED
SUPPORT AND SUPPORT ON
NOVEMBER 5TH

'

BEST

BEEF SU)ES

THANKS

.

By DAVID E. ANDERSON

.

MY SINCERE

T

COVERED ·

&lt;lren M.. Wogan
(lies in Akron

'

.
•

A Dlli,...Dt Kind of Growth ·

will continue to he slow during
the Detroit cutbacks the truck
and fann tire hu~ Jlave
been booming for Goodyear
and Firestooe.
"We're at peak production in
the truck and farm tire
production " the Goodyear
spokesman' said.
"With
agriculture booming the
demand for tractor fu.es · is
abnormally high."
In fact he said in this area
of tire b~ess 'supply can't
meet demand. '
Firestone on the other hand
isworklngtisemployeson a~
hour workweek in all its 16
passenger and truck tire
plants.
·"At this time we don't
foresee any cutbacks " a
spokesman said.
'
Why?
"Like one of our vice
presidents said last week,
'well, we work a little harder
and a Utile smarter "' the
Firestone spokesman ~id.
·

and let things go on as they are.
The }lew study, entitled
" Mankind ' at the Turni ng
Point" (E.P. Dutton) argues
that instead of the no-growth
policy suggested by the earlier
book, humankind needs to
develop a kind of uorganic"
economic growth, that is,
controlled 'growth much like
the growth of the human body.
"Growth for growth's sake in
the sense of ever increasing
numbers and large size ·
simply
cannot -continue
1
fore '"r,"
....,: -+., "qid . J1.

Economic growth, has inherent evil

p, .
l.
i Band to plt!-y in parade
ersona zty · 1
s· pot~
l. h t:
~
~
Yasser Arafat I

~:w:;:~ffi:$!!::::~:::::::::-:::~*:::::::::~:::!:~:::::=:::~::~~~~=:~'S!:.~~=~=~:::::;:::;:.::~-:=:::::::::;:;:m;:~

l

' 'i
I

, .

"•

i

'

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. 14,1974.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Pets For Sale

Notice
TURKEY MATCH . Corn HOllOW

G un C lub . turn right alter
Mil es Ceme tery . Rutland
Factory c hoked guns only
Sundl!ly , Nov 17 , 1 p m
11 14 Jtc

CHRi S TMASs ciie~6p-m-~sat .
N ov
16
Res er ved seat s
avatlable . Ma son Auctton
Horton St . Mason . W Va
Phon e ( 3041 773 5&lt;121 or 773
5471
11 13 Jtc
OUR HOU SE rs " runnmg over "

so we'll hold a big sale at our
Canaday WaKworks Buildtng ,
140 Butternut Ave. Pom eroy ,
10

am

to 4 p m

Thursday ,

Fri day , and Satu rday
An
tlq ues. , collectrbles , kitchen
uten sr iS, children's and
adultS ' c lothing Ya all come
Delmar and Bertha Canaday
11 13 J tc
SHOOTING Match , R:acme Gun
C lu~ . Sunday , Nov 17, 1 p m

. ll13 4tc

~\

Fireplace Construction
Old Fireplace Rebuilding
Complete residential con struction
service.
Ex perienced in ali phases of
remodeling and new con struction

Don, 492-5741 or
Jesse, 992-5980
AUCTION ,

Thursdav
and
night , 1 p m . at
Masoh Auction ; Horton St m
MaSQn , W Va ConS i gnments
welcome . Phone 004' 773 ·
5-471 .
10 3-tfc
sarur~ay

2 SIGNS

POODLE g r oommg, S5 Call
6tH 3915
Coolville
We
welcome your busin ess
11 13 61p

OF

QUALITY

Wanted To Buy
nn

CAS H
for lunk cars com
plete F rye 's Truck and Auto
Parts, Rutland , Ohio Phone
7 42 6094

"72 DODGE DART CUSTOM

GE NER AL repair , plumbmg ,
heattng i'lnd remodelm g
work guaranteed Phon e 992
2409
11 7 12tp
WILL keep preschool ch itdren
1n my home, 2 to 6 years o ld. 5
days per week Phone 992

S098

Sl995

Hatchback.low mliE::age bv 1 owner, tiew w -w tires transferred from new ca r , .4 speed trans ., radio, green finish ,
black vinyl Interior, deluxe trim

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES.B:OO P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

10 17 lfc

WILL
DO
bab ysit tmg
or
hou!lecle&lt;'lnmg Pho ne 992
'2403
11 14 61p

S2495

1972 VEGA GT

CA:,l-l pai d tor all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 61.4 -423 9531
-4 13 tf c

Employment Wanted

S2895

.4 Door . locall owner car, 318 V -8 engine, automatic trans ..
power steering, air conditioned, vinyl trim, vinyl top .
Autumn gold finish, w -w t ires , like new. radio .

10 1 14

JuNK autos , c:omplete and
delivered to our yard We
P•Ck up auto bodtes and buy
all kinds of scra p metals and
iron . Rider ' s Salvage. St Rt
124. Rt 4. Pomeroy , Oh 1o
Call 992 5468

Pomeroy .
Motor Co.

2 Door, orange finish , blk vinyl interior , bucket seats. less
than 5,000 miles &amp; 3 mo old. Radio, deluxe bumpers .

OLD turr1•ture , tee bo)(es, brass
bed s, or complete households
Wr i te M D Miller , Rt 4,
Pomero y, Oh•o Ca ll 992 7760

2 BEDROOM turn cottage at
Rock Sp r~ngs , 1d ear for sc hool
perso nn el.
adult s
only ,
r e fer enc e de s1red Phone 992
2789
11 3 tf c
FURNISHED apt Ad ults only
M i ddleport Phone 992 3874
11 14 tt c
UNFURNISHED
house ,
A
r oom s and bat h , 1660 L 1n co1n
Heigh Is Phone 992 387-4
11 14tfc

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE

TRADE 1n
like n ew. 19 71
r r eedom 12 K 60, 3 door
ca rp ete d
1h roughout,
2
be droom ,
many
luKury
fea tur es. save 40 pet
of
on g1nal sale pri ce Buy w1th .
or w1thout furniture Can be
see n at K1 ng s bury Home
Sa l e~ tot , 1100 E
Ma in Sl ,
Pomeroy . Oh10, or call 992
703 4
11 13 5t c

On State Rt . 124,
Route

1963 CHEVROLET c onvertible
11ew ti r es, runs good
1972
1•2
Chevrolet
ton p1ckup
truck , ClO cab. low mileage
Phone 742 4461
11 14 31c
1966 GMC handy va n , good
runn1ng and good body Phone
992 7889 or 992 5320
11 14 ltc
1969 uouu 1::: L)art Sw1nger 3-40
4 speed , bright r ed Wtth bla ck
hood Phon e 949 37 54
I
11136tp

7

112

by-pass

mi. from
towards

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

970 VALIANT 65x 12, 3bedroorri
fully carpeted, LP gas h eat,
Phone 992 7751
8 25 tfc

Open Mon .• sat.

&amp;A.M. · 6 P.M.

Real Estate For Scile

-

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS
FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup and Delivery

Television Log

8-6 P.M.
ANY AGE CHILD

NEW
b f l e\le l
hom e.
3
bed room s. built in kitc hen.
basement w1th
one ca r
ga r age Phone 742 36 15 or see
MilO Hut ChtSOn
11 1 ttc

By day or hour, reasonable
rates, reliable people with
medical training.
Ph . 992-7608 before 5 p.m.
or 742-4902 after 5 p .m.

NO MONEY DOWN - Monthly
p .. yments according to in
come New 3 bedroom home
wtth wa ll to wall ca rpet~ng on
, ] acre landscaped rots c art
tod ay for mor e mformallon ,
992 5976
1114ltc

BOWERs · GHEE"'S PAINTING
949-3295
REPAIR .
Raclf!e, 0.

-All Small Appliance$

Lawn Mowers

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

FREE ESTIMATE

I : 00 -

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

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

•

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

•

Business SeiYices.

====c

-------------::-

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

We. talk to VOU

--

like. a i»erson.

LOCUST posts, 22 Remington
and 1.72 acre lot . Phone 742

36S6.

TIRE
772-58111

Mason, W. 9a . '

"'10

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

1L2 PRICE

AND

PANT SUITS 7~

Gl'i
AIIEIIIOI
FIREWOOD for sale, cut your
own size or piece . Phone 992
5717
11 3 tfc

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

.'

•

.'
•

'

.'
'
'•

.I

,_
I-

PUBLIC
AUCTION AND
'
. ·

STEREO . radio, am -fm . 8
track tape combination. 4
speaker
sound
system .
Balance $109 .56 or easy
terms . Call 992-3965 .
11 5 tfc
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model
Complete with all
cleaning attachments and
uses paper bags . Slightly used
but cleans and looks like new .
Will sell for S37 . 2.5 cash or
terms available . Phone 992-

1755.

'
11 -5-tfc

-------------SEWIN GMacnmes, 'brand new '
Zig Zag In n1ce walnut table .
In orig inal cartons
Never
used . Clearance oh '74
Models
(On•ly
a
few
available) , S43 .40 cash or
terms available Phone 992
7755
10-15 lfC
....-- ;- -- -~------ -

.

RUMMAGE SALE
RACINE SHRINE PARK

hems To Be Solei- New eleclrlc dishwasher, gas &amp;
electric cook stoves - refrigerator - furniture • antiques ·
books . bottles • eler;trlc clothes dryer • set of en-

cyclopedias . 12 fl. aluminum boat . desk · kitchen sink ·
,
lois of odds &amp; ends.
Refreshments sarv.cl. .
Not responsible for lccidents.
All Nobles Requested To AHend

Mad :
Of course, your Dad should apologize- but so should you!
And does it really matter who's first, so long as you start talking
again?
For Pete's sake tell him you're sorry you yelled. Ten to one
he'll let you know he's sorry he accused you without checking though he may not say It outright. (Some men have a terrible
time admitting they were wrong, but they make it up In actionslike doing something loveable for you.) - HELEN AND SUE

+++

NOTE : Copies of "What Is a Crush- What Is a First Love What Is Getting to Know Yourself" are still available. Send a
STAMPED, self.addressed, LONG enevelope to Helen and &amp;!e
Bottel, Box 23057, Sacramento, Calif., 95823.

DOWN

ACROSS
1 - au lalt
5 Cease
11 Askew

I Turn In
the chips
2 Eskimo
!%Show
Indian
U Wllhered
3 Temporarily
14 Adviser
(3 wds.)
IS Lean-to
4 Netherlands
16 Not him
commWle
11 Vandal
Yesterday's Answer
5 Humiliate
18 Menace
6 Overthrow
22 Bacteriol25 Artifice
%0 Generat!Qn
7 Misdeed
oglst's wire 27 Tranquil
21 Deserve
8 Temporarily 23 One - ( indl- 29 Revolving
ZZ Hebrew dry
(3 wds.)
vldually)
part
measure
9 Polished
( 3 wds.)
30 Candle
za One kind ol 10 lbreefold
Z4 Role for
M Pup poUsber
18 Present
Richard
:Ia N.Z. tribe
%5 FraU,
19 Chest sound
Boone
'II
%1 Vetch seed
Z7 Elam's
capital
Zl Brewery

creation

2tlle
Indignant
at

n Chlneae
pagoda.!
3Z Mining
find
33 Make lace

35 Fonn a

JltYMill~®~!::::~ -.Jc:
Unacn.mble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each aquare, to

A word
about

form four ordinary words.

thought
37Meerachaum, e.g.

ss Famous
Engllsh

tho

pottery

39 Augury
to Whole

u

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

rJ n

News 20; Video VIsionaries 33; Dean Martin 3, 4, 15 ,

Saucy

II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLO, W

Nlghl Stalker 6, 13 .
10: 30 - Ohio: This Week 20; Dayal Night 33.
11 · 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15; Avlaffon Weather 20, ABC News
33.

One letter simply atandJ for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X lor the two O'a, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hlnll. Each day tho code !etten are dlllerent.

11:30- Mission Impossible 6; Untouchables 13; Johnny Carson
3, 4, 15; Janakl33; Movies "Beware of the Blob" 8 ; " Godzella

CRYPI'OQUOTES

vs . the Smog Monster" 10.
12:30- Don Kfrshner's Rock Concert 6.
1:00- Midnight Speclal3. 4; Take Five For llveil5
1: 30 - Movie "Shock Treatment" 10.
2:30- Movie "Fluffy" 4.
4: 00 -

Movie "Amazons of Rome" 4.

5: 30 -

Movie "The Golden Treasure" 4.

7:30 p.m. -

Now arranre the elreled !etten
to form the 1urpri1e aMwer, u
IU(Ielted by the above cartoon.

DSM
SM

ZMGG-FVMCCMF
ZSICM

UGIDSMC

'NIDRUM - Z.

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
The Champions (Cf "All Star.wrestllng";

"Cowtown, Rodeo."

PIJ

CIEMVCMD

4t

s•

s•

East

•

"'

'"

AT BILL GOODWIN'S, ALBANY, 0.

l'e•u:rd•r••

9:30 p.m. -Operation Gangbuster, "Burke's Law" starring
Gene Barry.

I

Jumbl••~ JOLLY BATCH AVOWAL WALLOP
A-.w~r :

Could be a big

o~~uccep

Yesterday'a Cryptoquote: THE END OF WISOOM IS TO
DREAM ffiGH ENOUGH TO LOSE THE DREAM IN THE
SEEKING OF IT.- W1WAM FAULKNER

either

UNJy-A "WOW" (''wrM'')
-+
...

10 18'16 Xlnr l'oatu._ 8Jndl..to,lne.)

DICK IRACY

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

-

..... .....

CAPTAIN EASY

I.
I.
4 N.T.
5 NT.

6.

THANI(oS TO YOU TWO AtJP ALL.
HIE PUBLICITY'· MY " YUt.S TftO~P
VAMPIRe" 5-HOW'-5- BOUND TO

came
to see
the

GETA TOP VIE WE~

RATir.Jd~

I sinkhole,

did
110u?

ulled trumps with three
and led a low club to
dummy's jack and East's
queen. East led back a heart;
S(luth cashed his high hearts
to d1scard one club from
dummy: played ace and another club and saw the hand
collapse on account of the 4·1
club break.
"Could I have made the

hand?" he asked.
"Yes you could," replied
· the Professor. You over-.
looked the simplest way. You
should have cashed your high
cards in the side suits and
wind up with a crossrulf. A .
6-2 heart break would beat ~:;~-...
you but that is just about all." 1
Let's check this cross ruff
out. South cashes three
hearts wh1le d1scardmg a
club from dummy: takes the

r •M READY ~01? A

IT CONTAINS

LONG~IN

A HOT

~E

rue.

••• AND FOR SPl5£D, 'TillS
EiVE&gt;1 ~ EA'TING

"'--UT'll!NTS

VOUR B00V Will.
REG)Uii!E UN11L

UNDER '1\\E GOlDEN
ARC~ES!

'TilE MORNING
MEAL!

minor suit aces and gives

away a club tnck. he will
have fine tricks in and be

I

sure of seven more on the

.·I

cross ruff.
Suppose a trump was
opened. Then the 4-1 club
break would doom South.

'

u:a:!:n,MJ.ttri
..

The bidding has been·
East
North
West

•

Pass
2•
Pass
Pass
Pass
4•
You, South, hold:
• 43 •AQ7tKJ43.A954

I.

14
South
Pass
Dble

.,

What do you do now?

WOod

A-Pass. Your· partner
bid over two spaclel.
- Five ~labs ,looks very doubtful.

Antiques: ·Horse collar, harness. Did
planes, old .bottles, milk cans, quilt, scales,
alcohol h'eater, two wood beds. And
miscellaneous articles.

eoukln't

I'LL BE BACK IN
TWO SHAKES OF
A SHEEP'S TAIL,

I'M GQIN'OUTTO
TH' 60991P FENCe
AN' CHITCHAT.
WIF EL.VINEV
FER A$PEU.,

HONEVPOT

p(JMJ

TODAY'S QUESTION
.,u
1

ELJB.SLE

(Aalwen I01bOITOW)

"""
.. v'"' - "'&lt;

South

' "1

Instead of passing, your
partner has btd thr~ clubs over

West's two spades. What do you
do now'!' ',

I

I '

I.

(

RC

WMOMV

C~ads

..."'·'

SUNDAY, NOV. 17 AT 12:00 NOON .

ELW

dummy's ace of hearts'

,.,

' .

19) You II tare be tter 1! you

and said If I opened my mouth It would be two weeks .
Ever since then I haven't said a word to him - because he
was wrong and he won't admit it. My Mom says he's lovable but
stubbo~J~, and she's right!
Shouldn't he apologize? - MAD

Million Dollar Man 6, 13 ; Movie "The Stalking Moon" 8; "G I
Blues" 10; Evening at Symphony 33 .

'! .

I

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

'

"

a.--...;,;.;----.......---.......~-----------.....~
""
•
•

~M!W'Dtut'

Qy Oswald &amp; Jame• Jacoby
: The student went up with

FRIDAY NIGHT,6 P.M.-NOV. 16
I
Merch1ndlse sold on consignment. If y:ou have anything to
sell bring it ot call 949-2491 for pickup.

23-

Dee 21) You Will be ab le to
move more mdependently to day and tomorrow and get 1m·
po rlant th1ng s accomp i•Shed ol
personal 1nleresl

oow

'

...............-.;.-....... :;,

Selling from storage building; paint, chain
saws, tab I.e saws, hand .saws, · belt pulleys,
assorted belt~, electric : motors, wire cable, ·
_many hand tools, colters for plows, chains,
tires, baling twine and man,y other articles.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

fhe next few days you II do
your bes l work 1! you re 1n·
\/O i ved 111 crea t1 ve proJects Try
to l1nd th 11w s to do that te"''

~ ~

I : Openmg lead - n

.;::

'

I+

Rass
Pass
Pass

'"

AUCTION

now You re i1kely to fare bet
ter than most 1n S1 lu a\10ns
where c ompe lill on IS Involved

SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 221
Somelh1ng you ve been want mg w111 be com1ng your way
short I')' under very unusual c1 r·
cumsl ances

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

9· 00- Masterpiece Theater 20; Rockford Flies 3, 4, 15; S1x

SOUTH &lt;Dl
• AKJ9
'KQB
+s
"'A7653
North

'
~ass

,.,

--.~

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

EAST
• 53
'6 53
+ KJ94
"'KQ 92

North-South vulnerable

Ifest

'"

SAT., NOV. 16 AT 12:00 NOON

FIR'EWOOO for sale. Phone
• 992 -5835 after 3 p .m .
11 -126tp

ALL

DRESSES

WMP0/1390

10 18 -26tp

.....

'--

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Be more assured o l yourself

Nov . 15, 1974
You II do well lor yourself f1·
nanc1ally \h1s year w1th c rea ·
l1ve proJec l s you hope to turn a
pro l1\ on Put your 1magmat1on
to work for yourself begmn1ng

l4

'J

"•

Selling out of buildings Thursday,
Nov. 14, and. Friday, Nov. 15,
10&amp;00 to 5&amp;00.
Miscellaneous cirtlcles,
at BllfG'Oodwln's,..ATban , o.

1 9) You lunct 10n very well
where there are groups m·
vol\led Vo lunteer for a com·
m•ttee at your c lub You d do a
fme JOb

Don 1 neglect any matters at
thiS lime that reQu1re com munacatiOn Open up the c han·
nets You II ger some news m
re lu rn

Bemg he lpful to others may not
pay the 1mme d1 a te reward
you re look mg lor At a later
date you II be compensa te d
fa !fly
GEMINI(May 21-June 20) II
wou ld do you good to ge t out
and do some thmg lun soc 1ally
P1ck a perky parlner who
wou ld also fl k e to escape to·
days rout me

Masquerade Parly 4; Candid Camera 6; Pop Goes To The
Counlry 8; Treasure Hunt 10 ; To Tell the Truth 13.
8: 00 - Washington Review 20, 33; Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4, 15; Planet
of the Apes 8, 10; His land 6; Kung Fu 13
8· 30- Wall Slreet Week 20, 33; Chico and the Man 3, 4. 15.

10:00 -

AQUARIUS (Jon . 20 · Feb

• Q 108 7

'A4
+A Ql02
•
"'J84
WEST
• 642
10972
+ 87 53

.
..

GARAGE: SALE

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

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23)

sla y 1n the background a b1t
Keep '" lauc h w1t h events bul
dor1 t tr y I a read

'

P---------~------~ "

---- ----===------

Spe~iaJ

~

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

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

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

______ ___

Normall y you re the one w1th
all the b ngh t new 1deas II you
l1s ten care fully a fnend w111 lay
one on you lhat yQu ll l1nd QU it e
useful
1

7: 30- Black Perspective on the News JJ; Porter Wagoner 3,

AT BRIDGE
The ruff way is
the easy way
NORTH

For Frtday, Nov. 1 ;. 1974

ARIES (March 21·April 19)

Jimmy [lean 13; His Land 15.

Perfor111ance 33.

'

Conditi Ons lha t COI')Inbute to
your secu nly are startmg to
hrm up mo re However wha t s
occ unng won 1 be VISible for
awh1le yet

Dollars 6; Truth or Consequences 3, 4 ; WCHS Report 8 ,

WIN

.,"
..
.,

KINGSBURY
MOBIL£ HOMES

Pyle 13.
7:00 - News 10; Wild Kingdom 13 , Elec. Co. 20; Bowling for

:3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15; Price Is Right 8, 10; General
• Hospital 6, 13; Gret American Dream Machlnt 33.
3:30- How lo Survive A Marriage 3,15; Mafch Game B, 10; One
Life to Llve13; lassle6; Doll or Declslons20.
4:00- Mr. Cartoon and The Banana Splits 3; Somerset 15;
Tattletales 8; Sesame Street 33; Gilligan's Island 6; $10,000
Pyramid 13; Bonanza -4; Movie "True Story of Jesse James"
10.
4: 30- Jackpot 4; Bonanza 15; Mcd Squad 6; Gilligan's Island
13; Bonanza 15; Bewitched 3; lucy Show 8.
5:00- Merv Griffin 4; Mister Rogers 20, 33; Anything You Can
Do 13; FBI3; Andy Griffith B; Ironside 13.
5: 30- Elec. Co. 33; Hodgepodge Lodge20; News6; Trails West
. 15 .
6:00- News3, 4, 15; News 8, 10; Sesame Streel20; ABC News 6,
13; Adlerian Counseling Techniques 33.
6:30- NBC News 3,_ 4, ~1_5; CBS News B, 10; Bewllched 6; Gomer

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

sass

li) my dictionary, one deflniUon of bona fide is "without
deceit." Feel better? - HELEN
Puzzled : .
There's no law that says an ex.glrl can't sUIJ be a friend.
(Except the new girl's law.) Don 'I hassle it. -SUE
Rap:
The other day my dad blamed me for something and I said I
dldn 'I do It so he started yelling that I did, and I got mad and
yelled back and he said I was a brat and I said I don't like to be
called allar,and the fight ended wbenhe grounded me for a week

8, 10.

'

I

•

Dear Puz :

:11 : 55- CBS News8; Dan Imel's World 10.
,12:00- Jacpol 3, 15; Password 6; Bob Braun's S0.50 Club 4;
·
News 8. 10; Mr. Rogers 33; News 13.
:12:30- Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 4, 15; Split Second 6; Search
For Tomorrow 8, 10; Afternoon with DJ 13; Electric Co. 33.
'12: 55- NBC News 3, 15.
: 1:00- News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green Acres 10; Not For
Women Only 15; Making Things Grow 33; Phil Donahue 8;
: Young and Restless 10; Not For Women Only IS; Making
, Things Grow 33.
• 1: 30- Jeoperdy 4, 15 ; Let' s Mak~ A Oeal6, 13; As The World
:
Turns 8, 10; Dig It 33; T~ethon 3.
•2:00- Days Of Our Lives 3, 4, IS; Newlywed Game 13 ; Guiding
: Light a, 10; Insight 33.
•2:30- Docfors3, 4,15 ; Girl In My Life 13; Edgeot Night B, 10;

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

Wanted To Rent

My boyfriend Is sUIJ calling his ex-girl, and recenUy flew out
to see her while she was in the hospital. When I questioned him,
be said this was just a "bona fide" relationship.
In my book that means a "true" relationship. Yet he says he
loves only me. What gives? - PUZZLED

Neme That Tune 3, 15.

P'

,

NOTICE

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

Dear Rap :

: 10:30- Gambit a, 10; Winning Streak 3, 4, 15; Phil Donahue4.
1l: 00- Password 13; Now You See It 8, 10; Hl;h Rollers 3, 4, 15 ;
$10,000 Pyramid 6; Sesame Street 33.
' 1l: 30- Hollywood Squaros3, 4, 15; Brady Bunch 13; Love of life

§.

TONIGHT AT 7 P.M.

lost. - SUE

Bullwinkle 8; IIAovle "EI Grego" 13.

Real Estate For Sale

For Renr

Tl'le Gunslingers .

9: 30- Lucy Show B; Elec. Co. 20; Not For Women Only 3; Hazel
B; Tattletales 10.
0:00- Compeny 6; Lilias, Yoga and You 33; Joker's Wild 8. 10 ;

For Sale

RACINE GUN Q.UB

What's in store for me with a Mama's boy? - OVERPOWERED
Dear Overpowered :
More and more Mama! Since I don 'I read much love in your
letter, I think divorce is the best solution. - HELEN
O.P.:
I've a feeling the divorce won't hurt much but your pride and that won't hurt very long when you realize bow little you've

6: 25 - Fat m Report 13.
6:30- Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Good News 13; Public Affairs 10.
6:35- Columbus Today 4.
6: 45- Morning Report 3; Farmllme 10.
7: 00 - Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13 ;
Bugs Bunny 6.
7: 30- New Zoo Revue6; Elghly Days 13.
8: 00 - Capt. Kangaroo 8; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Popeye 10.
8: 25 '- Jack La La nne IJ; Captain Kangaroo 10.
8: 30 - Brady Bunch 6.
8: 55 - News 13.
9:00-AM3; Paul Dlxon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Mlstor Rogers33 ;

Fully Insured

RACINE GARAGE

r- -

13.

.FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, l974

For Sale

Yard Sales

On the way out, he whispered, "I' .. be back." I'm really not
him.
.

anxious to see

6 : 00- Sunrise Seminar .4; Summer Semester 10.

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

7 ROOM HOUSE
AND BATH

~.

News

B: 30 p .m . -

OOMPLETE
HElL
RADIATOR
RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

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

go home, son, I've got your dinner on ."

9:30 p.m. - The Underworld .

JOHNSON MASONRY

OPEN HOUSE

15 .

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7: 00 p.m. - Big Blacks Review
7: 30 p.m. - Country and Wesfern.

Keep out the cold and cut the cost of heating I
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

Help Wanted

ate forced him to leave me twice in a year, and now he's
gettlng a divorce-and she has the nerve to call up and rub it m .
(He's staying with her.)
Last night Tony came over and begged lor a new start. Then
Mama barged in and he followed meekly when she said, "Let's

Tomorrow3, 4; Take Five for Life 15.

2· 00 -

REMODELING?

CONSTRUCTION

·
ted
Ever since Tony and I got married, his mother has msul
me. She tells him I'm no good, and Interferes in our private and
financial situation. You can't believe how snoopy she is, and the
questions she asks.
I could stand this~ Tony were man enough to put her m her
place. But he "Yes Mama's" everything she says. He never
makes a decision without her.

' '12: 30- Wide World Special 13 ; Soul Train 6.

From a shelf to a house.
HOUSE f o r rent , furniShed or
Painting, siding, roofing,
unturn~shed at Lan gsvil le
paper
hanging , kitchen
.1970
FORO
3"
truck
,
V
8,
p
b
,
Call 742 5986
4 ACREs , overrook 1ng bea_ut iful
radio, 8 ply tires, 38,000 m 1ies
992-76,08
cabinets, etc.
K.OSCOT
KOSMETICS
11 1-4 -3tc
\11ew of nver. 2 bedrooms,
Set up to haul 3 tons Phone
Remember Christmas Is CAREER OPPORTUNITY ~r
Pomeroy, o.~
down
,
w,
up
,
ce
ram1c
tile
Rt.
7
&amp;
Union
Ave.
985 3831
Men or Women - Nationwide
coming We have many new
bath
bu1lt
·1n
k
1tchen
,
dry
BEDROOM apt pnvate en
11 -13 -Jtp
In surance offers earnmgs up
products that will make n ice
basement. firepla ce. lge ..
tran ce , bath and k1tchen
to Sl5 .000 ( this rs a salary, not
giftS . Phone BROWN 'S, 992
rock wall pallo , garage.
Water, Electric, Gas, Sewe~
Gentlem en plea se Call 992
1973 OLDS Cutlass S, like new ,
5113 ,
a draw ) to sell complete '"
complete pnva cy, 2 m1les
5508
Insi
de
and
out.
350
engine
,
Lines,
installed.
Work
surance protection . lite ,
1131fc
from
Pomerov
m
Mmers¥111e
ll -12 31C
p s , p b , air , and automatiC
health , auto. fire . com
guaranteed.
11 -1-4 -5f p
transm ISSio n , 24 ,000 actual
merc•al , auto finance , ~nd
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks
2 BEDROOM mobile home ,
m 11 es Ca ll 992 3914 after 5 25 ACRES in Olive Twp, 34
mutual funds No prior e~C.
limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Ul 1 ht 1~S pa id near Pomeroy
pm
perience Is necessary smce
acres '" Rutland Twp and 96
Large
varo
,
n1ce
area
No
Commerciai-Resldentlll
11
13
-4tp
we have one of the most
acres .n Ca rthage Twp ,
pets or c hildren Phon e 992
complete trainmg programs
Construction &amp; Remodel
Athens Co
Write 60)( 25,
7017
or
992
-7666
1963 MERCURY 4 dr sedan,
in the Industry If you are
Tuppers
Pla1ns
,
Oh10,
or
ca
ll
11 12 tfc
Complete plumbing &amp; .
good t 1r es , runs good , used
mterested in a Career Op
Pick up daily In Pomeroy &amp;
667 3131.
d a1 1y Phone 992 -3391
portun1ty in a reward1ng
11
143tc
heating
service. Free
Middleport.
All
work
11 13 3tp
business,
call
Stanley LOCATED at 1676 L 1ncoln
He ights, new 2 bedroom house
guaranteed. Phone 949-3611.
Estimates.
Ferguson
at
(6141
446
-4707
Attend our open house.
with bath , basement. gas 1968 FORD slat 1on wagon , S300
Collect, Monday thru Fr i day .
Sunday, Nov. 17, I to 5
fl oor furna ce, storm doors
FOR SALE
Phone 992 5301 .
8 a rrl . to 4 · 30 p m An Equal
Phone 949-5961
777 Pearl Street
and windows , easil y heated .
11 12 6tc
Opport.un lty Em player
p.m. Take an envelope
Cali Tracy Wha le y , 992 3054
Middleport, Ohio
Emergency 992-3995
111J3tc
11 12 6tc 1964 GMC 1h ton pickup truck. 6
from
our treasure
Phone 992·5367 or 992·386 I
or 992-5700
5th St.
Racine, C.
cyt standard , Phone,992 2875 .
HOW
TO
EARN
MONEY
AT
chest and receive free
11
10
Stp
'l
BEDROOM
trailer
m
HOME
MAILING
COM
gift of 10 to 50 Pet. off
Sy ra cuse, c lose to school No
MISSION
CIRCULARS 1
CARPET installation, $1.25 per
CONCRETE
ch i ldren or pet s Depos1t
EXCELLENT
PROFIT
yard Phone Richard West , READY MIX
purchases.
Novelty
delivered
right
to your
required Phone 992 2441 after
POTENTIAL
OFFER
2667
843
Garage
2 Lots. Newly
OLD 4 room house with 2 n1ce
. tp
pro(ect. Fast and easy. Free
6 10 p m
Fabric and Craft, 230
11 13 6
DETAILS 25c &amp; STAMPED
redecorated and carpeted .
lois '" Syracuse, $3,000 or
~ - ------------:-'estlm ales. Phone 992 328oi
10 18 ftc
ADDRESSED ENVELOPE
Washington
Blvd ..
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
Quiet neighborhood .
POSSible land contract Ph
C. BR:J,I.OFORD, Auctioneer
ANN CLARK.1223 LACLAIR ,
Middleport, Ohio .
992 5898
complete Service
PGH PA . 15218
Belpre, Ohio.
FURNISHED
apartmen t.
11 · 11 ·6tc
6·30·11&lt;
Phone949-382lor949 -3161
11 10 26tp
utll1tie s furniShed , suitable 197 0 YAMAHA motorcy c le ,
Reasona bl Y Pr .ICe d
~--- --------- -Raclne,Ohio
Craft Classes Every
for two working men or
good
runn1ng
condit ion
On Lincoln Drive
Crill Bradford
SEWING 1¥\ACHINE~ ." Repair •
Thursday Night
ret 1r ed couple L1v1ng room .
Ph one 992 7228 .
service, all ~akes, 992-228-i.
5• 1·tfc
kitchen , shower and bath On
11 12 6tp
ForAppointmentPh. 992~
7 p.m.
The Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .,
main highway , Mason , w Va
---~------2 FAMILY basement sale. 1671
2679
FoR-FREE-;;tim-;tes on~
Authorized Singer Sales and
Phone 773 5147
ELECTRIC
Eureka
floor
t.:::..:
_________
_.
•
I
·
aluminum
replacement·
L incoln Hgls .• Pomerov Lots
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
10 -27 tfc
poliSher with all purpose
of children 's wear , Thursday
windows . s1dlng, storm doors
3-29-tfc
brushes
and
buff1ng
pads
,
S25
FO R SALE by owner, pnce
lind Fr1 day 9 a m to 5 p m
and wirPdows, Railing. Phone
ATTENTION
FARMERS,
Phone 992 -5732
RCA·
TV
$15
for
sale
reduced
S2,000
Beaut
i
ful
Charles Lisle, Syracuse, Ohio . DOZER work , land cltlarlng by
Lumber for sale. Rough
11124tc
oiQer home, 3 bedroom , large
11 l3 3tc
Carl
Jacob ,
Sales
the acre hourly or contract;-;
lumber for fatm use Contact
~----- -----ba'lh, new Siding, storm
R epresentatlve,
V
V
farm ponds, roads, etc larg•
ONE two year old drafl, colt, one -Pomeroy Forest Products, P
1967
MUSTANG
289,
automatic
,
Windows and doors. complete
YARD SALE , -420 Spr1ng A¥e ,
Johnson and Son, Inc .
dozer and operator with over
black he ifer , two Holstein
0
Box 726, Pomeroy , Ohio
dual e~C.haust , One double
carpeted. fenced yard , two
Pomeroy. Friday. Sat and
• A-30-tfc
20 years experience. Pullinst"'
Phone 992 -5965
he !fe r:.s Phone 992 5795
p1ckup
e1ectr1c
gu1tar
n1ce
porches,
localed
con
Sunday
,
antique
glass
ware
,
Exca,vating, Pomeroy , Ohla. '
11 13 3tc
ll -7-12tc
Harmony
solid
body
electnc
venlenlly,
now
lust
$16,500
clothing and m ise Items
Phone 992-2478.
CLOSE TO MINE I. - Ph
"EXCAVATING. dozer , loader
bass gu1tar ; K1mberly flat
Must
sell
For
appomtment,
11 1-4 Jtc
12-19-tfc:
acres.
glazed
tile
building.
and
backhoe
work;
septic
topgultar. 2 speeker cabinets
ANTIQUE S p1e cabinet.
call 992 1210
tanks Installed. dump trucks --:::;::;-~-=--=-=---~--=---=---- 1
Good drilled well. Fuel oll
w1th two 12 Inch speakers per
11 10 -7tc
sewing
machme
,
{over
100
5 FAMILY Garage Sale,
and to -boys for hire, will haul 'EXCELSIOR Salt works, -~ ,
years old l Ice box Call 992
heat. Located at Dexter.
cabinet , Bell Tempo 150 P A. - - - - -- - - - - - - -Tuppers Plains . house in back
fill dirt. top soli, limestone &amp;
Main St.', Pomerov .. ~ll ki l
,
power unIt All above items 7 ROOM house with bath,
3198
or
742
6091.
$4,300.
of post office, Wed , Thurs.
oraveT;
Call
Bob
-oy
·
Roger
~
of
salt
water
pellets·
,
we,
•
There Will BE
are 1n very good condition
11 13 4tc
garage
,
garden
on
VineSt
1
n
LANGSVILLE - 2 acres, 7
day , Friday and Sat 9 to 4
Jeffers,
day
phone
992-7089
;
,
,
nuggets,
block
salt
and
~
:
A Special Meetint
Phone 9-49 3151 before 5 p , m.
Rae~ne . Call 9-i9 ·2 054 after 5
rooms, 4 BR, porches,
p m.
night phone 992 -3525 or 992Ohio River Salt. Phone
,1
or 949 3844 after 5 p m
pm
ELECTROLUX
vacuum
garage. Other buildings, gas
11 10 6tc
11 -14-3tc
11 10 6tc
5232
2-ll·tfl
489!.
6-Sjf :
cleaner. A -1 condition, uses
well. $7,000.
pap'!:r bags, has cordwmder 197-4 360 YAMAHA Enduro, low
--------,.---LANGSVILLE - 10 acres on
and many attac hments . Also.
CHARLES R Hatfield , m1m ·
mileage , like new cond1flon GRAVEL HILL , 5 room and
Leading
Creek.
Good
shampooer attachment '"
I
bath house , garage, and
backhoe and dozer, water:
Lots of extras Phone 247 -2245
blacktop
road
.
Ideal
for
eluded
(Only
4
avallablel
at
'
TRAILER , 2 bedroom. Brown 's
do~bie
outbuilding,
575
lines,
drains,
footers,
brush
11
14
3tc
Uve In !he rolling hills of
home or trailer . $5,800.
$37 70
cash
or
te rms
Trailer Park Phone 992-3324
Broadway,
M1ddleport
cleaning . Rt . 1, Rutland, Ohio .
Southern Ohio in your own
POMEROY- Lovely ranch
available . Phone 992-7755
11 -8tfc
Phone 992 -3333 or 992 -5546
Phon~ H2 6092 .
lype. 3 BR, house wife ap·
11 13 -tfc
3 BR, oil electric mobile
11 13 6tc
11 3-25tc
.proved kitdten.
Dining
-4 BEDROOM newly remodeled
home In southern Ohio's
All members ' asked to be
SIEGLER and
farm house and acreage NEW 1974 ZIG ZAG SE WING
room, full basement wltl'l
SEPTIC -,.AN KS cleaned, ntwost mobile home pork.
present tor election of of·
MACHINES
In
origmal
MONOGRAM
BUILDING lot, 80ft fronlaoe IC.
located
12
miles
from
reasonable rates . Ph . .... 6.
·r·ecreatlon room and ' utlllty
flees .
u min. from Athens or
factory carton New Z 1g -Zag
165ft . The second lot on left on
Pomeroy. Call (30-4) 773-5118
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
room,
central
heat
&amp;
air
Pomeroy. Price reduced to
to make buttonholes, sew on
Riverview Dr1ve , Lincoln
11 8 6tc
owner and operator .
condition. Hardwood floor,
buttons. mdnograms . and
Hill, Pomeroy, Ohio If in -,
gel
this mobile home pork
5-12-tfc
carpeting, lovely patio.
make fancy des i gns with just
terested, call 992 -3230 after 5
started.
Set up &amp; ready to
3 BEDROOM trailer for rent,
the twist of a single dill I Left
Wrought Iron and stone . Like
p m.
Au 1UMUt51Lt' msurance been
move
Into.
For further
water furnished , no pets
1n lay a way and never been
new.
10-17 tfc
cancelled?
Lost
your
Deposit required Phone 992
delolls
contact
...
used Will sell tor only $47
TUPPERS PLAINS - I
HOUSEfin country , in Meigs or
opera1or's license. Call 9925885
"
Priced For Quick Sale
NO
DOWN
PAYMENT
cash, or terms available
7428:
level acre, 2 BR. ' lovely
Gallla County . Have no
''
11 10 6tp
Phone
992
-7755
TO
VETERANS
children, phone 245 5293
kitchen and dining area.
6-15-tfc
1113tfc
-1 New Monogram
collect after 8 p m
Utility room, cen1ral heat,
TRAILER space, 2 miles from
z;;-EMEANS-CONdi.tfE'
11-13·3tc
h~dwood floor. $13,500.
Wood Burnina Stnve
Pbmeroy , Rt 1-43 Phone 992
delivered Monday through
GRAIN fed Angus beef Phone
Phone
992-2259
or
m-2568
Saturday
and
evenings .
985
3944
POMEROY LANDMARk
10 27 tfc
.
Phone 446-1142.
"
11 10 -6t p l9'.~ Jack W. Cusey, Mgr .
The Allnllllllc
6-13-tfc
........
~
Phone992-2181
HOUSE and trailer for rent 1n
By Ullited Press lnlernallonal
FIREWOOD for fireplace or
town, 2 bedrooms Phone 992
slove . Cut to length Phone
SEfilJC
TANKS
cleaned. YYILL tnrn or cut trees and
Today is Thuraday, Nov. 14, 3975 and 992 2571
FIREW-Ooo. any length Call NICE MODERN HOME - 3
shrubbery , also clean out
1100 E. Main Pomeroy, 0.
992 76-44 .
Modern Sanitation, 992 3954 or
11 6 tfc
basements and attics . Phone
992 -5-422 or 992 -3312.
the 318th day of 1974 with 47 to ------ --- ~---•
992 -73-49.
eaum.1o34
11 3 26tc
bedrooms
wltl'l
large
closets.
2
11 10 26tp
9.-9-3221 or 7-42 -AA-i1
____________ ..!_·~· tfc 1
Open Dally·n to 7
follow.
concrete
porches ,
dry
'J AND 4 ROOM furnished and GROCERY business for sale
10-18·26tc
GRAVEL. sand, Mason sand,
unfurnished
apartment!
basement. shop • garage and
'
The moon is between 1ts new
Building for sale or lease .
Phone 992-543-4 .
I 1mestone, P1t Run by the ton . garden. Only $23.500.00 OR PI A NO tuning ana'- repalr .
L - - - - , . - - - - - ''
Pnone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m .
Phone
Charles
Scott,
99'2-3718
.
phase and first quarter.
.
Del•vered Phone 4-46-1142
4-12 tfc
WILL
TALK.
lo 'iO p m for appointment.
9-17.J2tp
10
19
t-tc·
The morning stars are
3 20 tfc
PRIVATE meeting room for
Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
i957 - cHevy piriS~=-NEW
.
IN THE STICKS-2 bedrooms. REMODELING , plumbing, and
any organ izetion , phone 992·
FIREWOOD for sale . Call 742
Lakewood tract1on bars, h1
3975.
full basement, cistern, electric
heat1nQ, general repair Woi'k
The evening stars are Venw
4831
lacker air shocks. hooker
3-11 tfc
guaranteed Phone 992-2409
and five acres $6500.00.
and Jupiter.
headers , Wilh 3" collector s tor
10 29 26tc
11 10 12tp
small block
Call 992 3496
-- ---..,...----Those born on this dale are COUNTRY Mobil~ Ho"'~ r"drK,
after 6 p . m . BE ST OFFER.
INVESTMENT - 70 acres. on DOZER or ;.;ckhoe work .
Rt. 33. ten miles north of COAL. del ivered S20 per ton
mder the sign of Scorpio.
10-17 tfc
Call 7-42 6621
Pomeroy . Large lots with
new 33. T . P. water near. Ex ·
Phone 446-3981 or -4-46 -3459
11 10 6tc
concrete patios , sidewalks,
Robert Fulton, American
cellent spring.
9 8 tfc
REPLACE
those
tired
sagg1ng
and
off
street, - - - - - - - - - - - - - Inventor of the steamboat, was runners
so,a cushions with new foam
parking
Also, spaces for
CHEAP HOME - 2 bedrooms,
cut to S1 ze , only S10 95 at
small trailers . Phone 992-7479 .
born Nov. 14, 1765.
J ack's
Furniture
and
•H
living, utility, kitchen, and lot .
7-21 -tfc 1
·For the Lowest
On thts day In history:
Upholstery Supplies , 236 E
$5500.00. Will hackle.
-::: --------------:::...
1
Ma1n Sl, Pomeroy . Phone
In 1832, the first horse-drawn 2 BEDROOM double wide
992 -3903 .
mobile home in Syrecuse No
RUTL.AND-3 bedrooms, nal.
street car made Its appearance children
Tire Pric;e!
11 6 12tc
or pets, deposit 1
gas,
bath. and 2 acres.
In·New York City. It carried 30 required. Phone 992-24-4.1 after
•
'A FEW new band instrument!) .
6
p
.m
.
passengers.
Contact Renee Stone 992 7567. WE SPECIALIZE IN REAL
irfthe Area
10 29-lfc
EST P,TE SALES.
9--4 -tfc
111 26tc

12:~·- -News 3, 4, 8,

1

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221

HlsMolher,theBatracuda

Rap:

7:30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4; Lei's Make a Deal 6 · Wild
Kingdom
To Telllhe
Truth
13; Aging
New Price
Smart
15;10;
Festival
Films
33 ; On
20 . Is Right 'a; Get
8:00- The Wallons 8, 10; Sierra 3, 4, 15; The Way 11 Was 20 ,
Jacques Cousteau 6, 13; Soundstage 20.
8:30- Whal Now, America 20.
9:00- Streets ol,~an Francisco 6, 13; Jeann~ Wolf 20 ; Ironside
3, 4, 15; Movie Woman Times Seven" B; "Conquest of Planet
rof ttua An.•" 1n · -;.,.,"1 11
]0: 00-folovln' On 3, 4, 15; Harry Q.6,J.3 ; "'e.,.s20; Woman 33.
10: 30 - Your Furure Is Now 20; Proflle33.
··
, ll : oo- News6, 10, 13; ABC News 33; News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13 , 15 .
n · 30 - Mlssloo Impossible 6; Untouchables 13; Janak I 33 ,
Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; WFL Football 8; Movie "Tamahlne••

Free Estimltes, Mlddlepart,_O: t

You re mak1ng a much better
1mpress10n than you rea 11ze
Peop le you re meetmg now are
cons1denng you lo r the ir l ulure
guest I ISI S

By Helen and Sue Hottel

7: 00- News 10; Whal's My line B; Elec. Co. 20; Bowling for
Dollars 6; From Sea to Shining Sea 3; Beal the Clock 4; Let's
Ma.
33 ke A Deal 13; Sports Desk 15; Man Builds, Man Deslroys

.. INYL SIDING
PH. 992-7454 or
992-7129

992-5162
Syracuse. Ohio

D&amp;D

WI LL TRA DE - FI N A N CING
ARRANGED
WITH
MINIMUM
DOW N
Will
co ns1der trade fo r older
home trai ler , or land on thiS
new 3 bedroom. 2 bath home
w1th 2 car garage , large
tam dy room , a~r cond 1t1onmg
Mo¥e m immed ta t ety Cal l
now 992 597 6
11 14 -ltc

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING 00..

your 1magmal 1on

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)

Generation Rap

• THURSDIIV. NOVEMBER 14,1974
6: c:gyle~~.c Nows 3, ~.IS; \;~&gt; News 8, 10; Bewllched 6; Gomer

Interior, Exterior
Decorating a"d
Remodeling ·

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

DAY NURSERY

SMAL L hou se for sale 1n
Pomeroy Phon e 992 2696
11 12 -4tc

7 ROOM h ouse W•th 2 bathS m
Pomeroy Phone 992 3478
10 15 26tc

1957 CHEVROLE T , $400 Ca ll
992 5852
11 14 6tp

For Rent

338 at
Ca ll 141 220 1
11 lJ 3tp

Mobile Homes For Sale

1974 OPEL MANTA

10 16 76tc

Business Ser:vi~.~~.

T IR E and whee l o n Rl

Plant s Ohto

;- 11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov.14,1,~97~4-----•--•-~m=ill8lll!ll!ll88B!I_,

-.·

Auto Sales

E NG L I SH Shepherd p uppteS,
SlO 619 Page St Middleporl
Phone 99'2 3943
11 13 4tp

lost

,.

..

•

I

•

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. 14,1974.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Pets For Sale

Notice
TURKEY MATCH . Corn HOllOW

G un C lub . turn right alter
Mil es Ceme tery . Rutland
Factory c hoked guns only
Sundl!ly , Nov 17 , 1 p m
11 14 Jtc

CHRi S TMASs ciie~6p-m-~sat .
N ov
16
Res er ved seat s
avatlable . Ma son Auctton
Horton St . Mason . W Va
Phon e ( 3041 773 5&lt;121 or 773
5471
11 13 Jtc
OUR HOU SE rs " runnmg over "

so we'll hold a big sale at our
Canaday WaKworks Buildtng ,
140 Butternut Ave. Pom eroy ,
10

am

to 4 p m

Thursday ,

Fri day , and Satu rday
An
tlq ues. , collectrbles , kitchen
uten sr iS, children's and
adultS ' c lothing Ya all come
Delmar and Bertha Canaday
11 13 J tc
SHOOTING Match , R:acme Gun
C lu~ . Sunday , Nov 17, 1 p m

. ll13 4tc

~\

Fireplace Construction
Old Fireplace Rebuilding
Complete residential con struction
service.
Ex perienced in ali phases of
remodeling and new con struction

Don, 492-5741 or
Jesse, 992-5980
AUCTION ,

Thursdav
and
night , 1 p m . at
Masoh Auction ; Horton St m
MaSQn , W Va ConS i gnments
welcome . Phone 004' 773 ·
5-471 .
10 3-tfc
sarur~ay

2 SIGNS

POODLE g r oommg, S5 Call
6tH 3915
Coolville
We
welcome your busin ess
11 13 61p

OF

QUALITY

Wanted To Buy
nn

CAS H
for lunk cars com
plete F rye 's Truck and Auto
Parts, Rutland , Ohio Phone
7 42 6094

"72 DODGE DART CUSTOM

GE NER AL repair , plumbmg ,
heattng i'lnd remodelm g
work guaranteed Phon e 992
2409
11 7 12tp
WILL keep preschool ch itdren
1n my home, 2 to 6 years o ld. 5
days per week Phone 992

S098

Sl995

Hatchback.low mliE::age bv 1 owner, tiew w -w tires transferred from new ca r , .4 speed trans ., radio, green finish ,
black vinyl Interior, deluxe trim

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES.B:OO P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

10 17 lfc

WILL
DO
bab ysit tmg
or
hou!lecle&lt;'lnmg Pho ne 992
'2403
11 14 61p

S2495

1972 VEGA GT

CA:,l-l pai d tor all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 61.4 -423 9531
-4 13 tf c

Employment Wanted

S2895

.4 Door . locall owner car, 318 V -8 engine, automatic trans ..
power steering, air conditioned, vinyl trim, vinyl top .
Autumn gold finish, w -w t ires , like new. radio .

10 1 14

JuNK autos , c:omplete and
delivered to our yard We
P•Ck up auto bodtes and buy
all kinds of scra p metals and
iron . Rider ' s Salvage. St Rt
124. Rt 4. Pomeroy , Oh 1o
Call 992 5468

Pomeroy .
Motor Co.

2 Door, orange finish , blk vinyl interior , bucket seats. less
than 5,000 miles &amp; 3 mo old. Radio, deluxe bumpers .

OLD turr1•ture , tee bo)(es, brass
bed s, or complete households
Wr i te M D Miller , Rt 4,
Pomero y, Oh•o Ca ll 992 7760

2 BEDROOM turn cottage at
Rock Sp r~ngs , 1d ear for sc hool
perso nn el.
adult s
only ,
r e fer enc e de s1red Phone 992
2789
11 3 tf c
FURNISHED apt Ad ults only
M i ddleport Phone 992 3874
11 14 tt c
UNFURNISHED
house ,
A
r oom s and bat h , 1660 L 1n co1n
Heigh Is Phone 992 387-4
11 14tfc

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE

TRADE 1n
like n ew. 19 71
r r eedom 12 K 60, 3 door
ca rp ete d
1h roughout,
2
be droom ,
many
luKury
fea tur es. save 40 pet
of
on g1nal sale pri ce Buy w1th .
or w1thout furniture Can be
see n at K1 ng s bury Home
Sa l e~ tot , 1100 E
Ma in Sl ,
Pomeroy . Oh10, or call 992
703 4
11 13 5t c

On State Rt . 124,
Route

1963 CHEVROLET c onvertible
11ew ti r es, runs good
1972
1•2
Chevrolet
ton p1ckup
truck , ClO cab. low mileage
Phone 742 4461
11 14 31c
1966 GMC handy va n , good
runn1ng and good body Phone
992 7889 or 992 5320
11 14 ltc
1969 uouu 1::: L)art Sw1nger 3-40
4 speed , bright r ed Wtth bla ck
hood Phon e 949 37 54
I
11136tp

7

112

by-pass

mi. from
towards

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

970 VALIANT 65x 12, 3bedroorri
fully carpeted, LP gas h eat,
Phone 992 7751
8 25 tfc

Open Mon .• sat.

&amp;A.M. · 6 P.M.

Real Estate For Scile

-

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS
FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup and Delivery

Television Log

8-6 P.M.
ANY AGE CHILD

NEW
b f l e\le l
hom e.
3
bed room s. built in kitc hen.
basement w1th
one ca r
ga r age Phone 742 36 15 or see
MilO Hut ChtSOn
11 1 ttc

By day or hour, reasonable
rates, reliable people with
medical training.
Ph . 992-7608 before 5 p.m.
or 742-4902 after 5 p .m.

NO MONEY DOWN - Monthly
p .. yments according to in
come New 3 bedroom home
wtth wa ll to wall ca rpet~ng on
, ] acre landscaped rots c art
tod ay for mor e mformallon ,
992 5976
1114ltc

BOWERs · GHEE"'S PAINTING
949-3295
REPAIR .
Raclf!e, 0.

-All Small Appliance$

Lawn Mowers

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

FREE ESTIMATE

I : 00 -

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

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

•

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

•

Business SeiYices.

====c

-------------::-

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

We. talk to VOU

--

like. a i»erson.

LOCUST posts, 22 Remington
and 1.72 acre lot . Phone 742

36S6.

TIRE
772-58111

Mason, W. 9a . '

"'10

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

1L2 PRICE

AND

PANT SUITS 7~

Gl'i
AIIEIIIOI
FIREWOOD for sale, cut your
own size or piece . Phone 992
5717
11 3 tfc

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

.'

•

.'
•

'

.'
'
'•

.I

,_
I-

PUBLIC
AUCTION AND
'
. ·

STEREO . radio, am -fm . 8
track tape combination. 4
speaker
sound
system .
Balance $109 .56 or easy
terms . Call 992-3965 .
11 5 tfc
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
model
Complete with all
cleaning attachments and
uses paper bags . Slightly used
but cleans and looks like new .
Will sell for S37 . 2.5 cash or
terms available . Phone 992-

1755.

'
11 -5-tfc

-------------SEWIN GMacnmes, 'brand new '
Zig Zag In n1ce walnut table .
In orig inal cartons
Never
used . Clearance oh '74
Models
(On•ly
a
few
available) , S43 .40 cash or
terms available Phone 992
7755
10-15 lfC
....-- ;- -- -~------ -

.

RUMMAGE SALE
RACINE SHRINE PARK

hems To Be Solei- New eleclrlc dishwasher, gas &amp;
electric cook stoves - refrigerator - furniture • antiques ·
books . bottles • eler;trlc clothes dryer • set of en-

cyclopedias . 12 fl. aluminum boat . desk · kitchen sink ·
,
lois of odds &amp; ends.
Refreshments sarv.cl. .
Not responsible for lccidents.
All Nobles Requested To AHend

Mad :
Of course, your Dad should apologize- but so should you!
And does it really matter who's first, so long as you start talking
again?
For Pete's sake tell him you're sorry you yelled. Ten to one
he'll let you know he's sorry he accused you without checking though he may not say It outright. (Some men have a terrible
time admitting they were wrong, but they make it up In actionslike doing something loveable for you.) - HELEN AND SUE

+++

NOTE : Copies of "What Is a Crush- What Is a First Love What Is Getting to Know Yourself" are still available. Send a
STAMPED, self.addressed, LONG enevelope to Helen and &amp;!e
Bottel, Box 23057, Sacramento, Calif., 95823.

DOWN

ACROSS
1 - au lalt
5 Cease
11 Askew

I Turn In
the chips
2 Eskimo
!%Show
Indian
U Wllhered
3 Temporarily
14 Adviser
(3 wds.)
IS Lean-to
4 Netherlands
16 Not him
commWle
11 Vandal
Yesterday's Answer
5 Humiliate
18 Menace
6 Overthrow
22 Bacteriol25 Artifice
%0 Generat!Qn
7 Misdeed
oglst's wire 27 Tranquil
21 Deserve
8 Temporarily 23 One - ( indl- 29 Revolving
ZZ Hebrew dry
(3 wds.)
vldually)
part
measure
9 Polished
( 3 wds.)
30 Candle
za One kind ol 10 lbreefold
Z4 Role for
M Pup poUsber
18 Present
Richard
:Ia N.Z. tribe
%5 FraU,
19 Chest sound
Boone
'II
%1 Vetch seed
Z7 Elam's
capital
Zl Brewery

creation

2tlle
Indignant
at

n Chlneae
pagoda.!
3Z Mining
find
33 Make lace

35 Fonn a

JltYMill~®~!::::~ -.Jc:
Unacn.mble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each aquare, to

A word
about

form four ordinary words.

thought
37Meerachaum, e.g.

ss Famous
Engllsh

tho

pottery

39 Augury
to Whole

u

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

rJ n

News 20; Video VIsionaries 33; Dean Martin 3, 4, 15 ,

Saucy

II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLO, W

Nlghl Stalker 6, 13 .
10: 30 - Ohio: This Week 20; Dayal Night 33.
11 · 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15; Avlaffon Weather 20, ABC News
33.

One letter simply atandJ for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X lor the two O'a, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hlnll. Each day tho code !etten are dlllerent.

11:30- Mission Impossible 6; Untouchables 13; Johnny Carson
3, 4, 15; Janakl33; Movies "Beware of the Blob" 8 ; " Godzella

CRYPI'OQUOTES

vs . the Smog Monster" 10.
12:30- Don Kfrshner's Rock Concert 6.
1:00- Midnight Speclal3. 4; Take Five For llveil5
1: 30 - Movie "Shock Treatment" 10.
2:30- Movie "Fluffy" 4.
4: 00 -

Movie "Amazons of Rome" 4.

5: 30 -

Movie "The Golden Treasure" 4.

7:30 p.m. -

Now arranre the elreled !etten
to form the 1urpri1e aMwer, u
IU(Ielted by the above cartoon.

DSM
SM

ZMGG-FVMCCMF
ZSICM

UGIDSMC

'NIDRUM - Z.

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
The Champions (Cf "All Star.wrestllng";

"Cowtown, Rodeo."

PIJ

CIEMVCMD

4t

s•

s•

East

•

"'

'"

AT BILL GOODWIN'S, ALBANY, 0.

l'e•u:rd•r••

9:30 p.m. -Operation Gangbuster, "Burke's Law" starring
Gene Barry.

I

Jumbl••~ JOLLY BATCH AVOWAL WALLOP
A-.w~r :

Could be a big

o~~uccep

Yesterday'a Cryptoquote: THE END OF WISOOM IS TO
DREAM ffiGH ENOUGH TO LOSE THE DREAM IN THE
SEEKING OF IT.- W1WAM FAULKNER

either

UNJy-A "WOW" (''wrM'')
-+
...

10 18'16 Xlnr l'oatu._ 8Jndl..to,lne.)

DICK IRACY

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

-

..... .....

CAPTAIN EASY

I.
I.
4 N.T.
5 NT.

6.

THANI(oS TO YOU TWO AtJP ALL.
HIE PUBLICITY'· MY " YUt.S TftO~P
VAMPIRe" 5-HOW'-5- BOUND TO

came
to see
the

GETA TOP VIE WE~

RATir.Jd~

I sinkhole,

did
110u?

ulled trumps with three
and led a low club to
dummy's jack and East's
queen. East led back a heart;
S(luth cashed his high hearts
to d1scard one club from
dummy: played ace and another club and saw the hand
collapse on account of the 4·1
club break.
"Could I have made the

hand?" he asked.
"Yes you could," replied
· the Professor. You over-.
looked the simplest way. You
should have cashed your high
cards in the side suits and
wind up with a crossrulf. A .
6-2 heart break would beat ~:;~-...
you but that is just about all." 1
Let's check this cross ruff
out. South cashes three
hearts wh1le d1scardmg a
club from dummy: takes the

r •M READY ~01? A

IT CONTAINS

LONG~IN

A HOT

~E

rue.

••• AND FOR SPl5£D, 'TillS
EiVE&gt;1 ~ EA'TING

"'--UT'll!NTS

VOUR B00V Will.
REG)Uii!E UN11L

UNDER '1\\E GOlDEN
ARC~ES!

'TilE MORNING
MEAL!

minor suit aces and gives

away a club tnck. he will
have fine tricks in and be

I

sure of seven more on the

.·I

cross ruff.
Suppose a trump was
opened. Then the 4-1 club
break would doom South.

'

u:a:!:n,MJ.ttri
..

The bidding has been·
East
North
West

•

Pass
2•
Pass
Pass
Pass
4•
You, South, hold:
• 43 •AQ7tKJ43.A954

I.

14
South
Pass
Dble

.,

What do you do now?

WOod

A-Pass. Your· partner
bid over two spaclel.
- Five ~labs ,looks very doubtful.

Antiques: ·Horse collar, harness. Did
planes, old .bottles, milk cans, quilt, scales,
alcohol h'eater, two wood beds. And
miscellaneous articles.

eoukln't

I'LL BE BACK IN
TWO SHAKES OF
A SHEEP'S TAIL,

I'M GQIN'OUTTO
TH' 60991P FENCe
AN' CHITCHAT.
WIF EL.VINEV
FER A$PEU.,

HONEVPOT

p(JMJ

TODAY'S QUESTION
.,u
1

ELJB.SLE

(Aalwen I01bOITOW)

"""
.. v'"' - "'&lt;

South

' "1

Instead of passing, your
partner has btd thr~ clubs over

West's two spades. What do you
do now'!' ',

I

I '

I.

(

RC

WMOMV

C~ads

..."'·'

SUNDAY, NOV. 17 AT 12:00 NOON .

ELW

dummy's ace of hearts'

,.,

' .

19) You II tare be tter 1! you

and said If I opened my mouth It would be two weeks .
Ever since then I haven't said a word to him - because he
was wrong and he won't admit it. My Mom says he's lovable but
stubbo~J~, and she's right!
Shouldn't he apologize? - MAD

Million Dollar Man 6, 13 ; Movie "The Stalking Moon" 8; "G I
Blues" 10; Evening at Symphony 33 .

'! .

I

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

'

"

a.--...;,;.;----.......---.......~-----------.....~
""
•
•

~M!W'Dtut'

Qy Oswald &amp; Jame• Jacoby
: The student went up with

FRIDAY NIGHT,6 P.M.-NOV. 16
I
Merch1ndlse sold on consignment. If y:ou have anything to
sell bring it ot call 949-2491 for pickup.

23-

Dee 21) You Will be ab le to
move more mdependently to day and tomorrow and get 1m·
po rlant th1ng s accomp i•Shed ol
personal 1nleresl

oow

'

...............-.;.-....... :;,

Selling from storage building; paint, chain
saws, tab I.e saws, hand .saws, · belt pulleys,
assorted belt~, electric : motors, wire cable, ·
_many hand tools, colters for plows, chains,
tires, baling twine and man,y other articles.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

fhe next few days you II do
your bes l work 1! you re 1n·
\/O i ved 111 crea t1 ve proJects Try
to l1nd th 11w s to do that te"''

~ ~

I : Openmg lead - n

.;::

'

I+

Rass
Pass
Pass

'"

AUCTION

now You re i1kely to fare bet
ter than most 1n S1 lu a\10ns
where c ompe lill on IS Involved

SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 221
Somelh1ng you ve been want mg w111 be com1ng your way
short I')' under very unusual c1 r·
cumsl ances

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

9· 00- Masterpiece Theater 20; Rockford Flies 3, 4, 15; S1x

SOUTH &lt;Dl
• AKJ9
'KQB
+s
"'A7653
North

'
~ass

,.,

--.~

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

EAST
• 53
'6 53
+ KJ94
"'KQ 92

North-South vulnerable

Ifest

'"

SAT., NOV. 16 AT 12:00 NOON

FIR'EWOOO for sale. Phone
• 992 -5835 after 3 p .m .
11 -126tp

ALL

DRESSES

WMP0/1390

10 18 -26tp

.....

'--

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Be more assured o l yourself

Nov . 15, 1974
You II do well lor yourself f1·
nanc1ally \h1s year w1th c rea ·
l1ve proJec l s you hope to turn a
pro l1\ on Put your 1magmat1on
to work for yourself begmn1ng

l4

'J

"•

Selling out of buildings Thursday,
Nov. 14, and. Friday, Nov. 15,
10&amp;00 to 5&amp;00.
Miscellaneous cirtlcles,
at BllfG'Oodwln's,..ATban , o.

1 9) You lunct 10n very well
where there are groups m·
vol\led Vo lunteer for a com·
m•ttee at your c lub You d do a
fme JOb

Don 1 neglect any matters at
thiS lime that reQu1re com munacatiOn Open up the c han·
nets You II ger some news m
re lu rn

Bemg he lpful to others may not
pay the 1mme d1 a te reward
you re look mg lor At a later
date you II be compensa te d
fa !fly
GEMINI(May 21-June 20) II
wou ld do you good to ge t out
and do some thmg lun soc 1ally
P1ck a perky parlner who
wou ld also fl k e to escape to·
days rout me

Masquerade Parly 4; Candid Camera 6; Pop Goes To The
Counlry 8; Treasure Hunt 10 ; To Tell the Truth 13.
8: 00 - Washington Review 20, 33; Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4, 15; Planet
of the Apes 8, 10; His land 6; Kung Fu 13
8· 30- Wall Slreet Week 20, 33; Chico and the Man 3, 4. 15.

10:00 -

AQUARIUS (Jon . 20 · Feb

• Q 108 7

'A4
+A Ql02
•
"'J84
WEST
• 642
10972
+ 87 53

.
..

GARAGE: SALE

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

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23)

sla y 1n the background a b1t
Keep '" lauc h w1t h events bul
dor1 t tr y I a read

'

P---------~------~ "

---- ----===------

Spe~iaJ

~

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

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

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

______ ___

Normall y you re the one w1th
all the b ngh t new 1deas II you
l1s ten care fully a fnend w111 lay
one on you lhat yQu ll l1nd QU it e
useful
1

7: 30- Black Perspective on the News JJ; Porter Wagoner 3,

AT BRIDGE
The ruff way is
the easy way
NORTH

For Frtday, Nov. 1 ;. 1974

ARIES (March 21·April 19)

Jimmy [lean 13; His Land 15.

Perfor111ance 33.

'

Conditi Ons lha t COI')Inbute to
your secu nly are startmg to
hrm up mo re However wha t s
occ unng won 1 be VISible for
awh1le yet

Dollars 6; Truth or Consequences 3, 4 ; WCHS Report 8 ,

WIN

.,"
..
.,

KINGSBURY
MOBIL£ HOMES

Pyle 13.
7:00 - News 10; Wild Kingdom 13 , Elec. Co. 20; Bowling for

:3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15; Price Is Right 8, 10; General
• Hospital 6, 13; Gret American Dream Machlnt 33.
3:30- How lo Survive A Marriage 3,15; Mafch Game B, 10; One
Life to Llve13; lassle6; Doll or Declslons20.
4:00- Mr. Cartoon and The Banana Splits 3; Somerset 15;
Tattletales 8; Sesame Street 33; Gilligan's Island 6; $10,000
Pyramid 13; Bonanza -4; Movie "True Story of Jesse James"
10.
4: 30- Jackpot 4; Bonanza 15; Mcd Squad 6; Gilligan's Island
13; Bonanza 15; Bewitched 3; lucy Show 8.
5:00- Merv Griffin 4; Mister Rogers 20, 33; Anything You Can
Do 13; FBI3; Andy Griffith B; Ironside 13.
5: 30- Elec. Co. 33; Hodgepodge Lodge20; News6; Trails West
. 15 .
6:00- News3, 4, 15; News 8, 10; Sesame Streel20; ABC News 6,
13; Adlerian Counseling Techniques 33.
6:30- NBC News 3,_ 4, ~1_5; CBS News B, 10; Bewllched 6; Gomer

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

sass

li) my dictionary, one deflniUon of bona fide is "without
deceit." Feel better? - HELEN
Puzzled : .
There's no law that says an ex.glrl can't sUIJ be a friend.
(Except the new girl's law.) Don 'I hassle it. -SUE
Rap:
The other day my dad blamed me for something and I said I
dldn 'I do It so he started yelling that I did, and I got mad and
yelled back and he said I was a brat and I said I don't like to be
called allar,and the fight ended wbenhe grounded me for a week

8, 10.

'

I

•

Dear Puz :

:11 : 55- CBS News8; Dan Imel's World 10.
,12:00- Jacpol 3, 15; Password 6; Bob Braun's S0.50 Club 4;
·
News 8. 10; Mr. Rogers 33; News 13.
:12:30- Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 4, 15; Split Second 6; Search
For Tomorrow 8, 10; Afternoon with DJ 13; Electric Co. 33.
'12: 55- NBC News 3, 15.
: 1:00- News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green Acres 10; Not For
Women Only 15; Making Things Grow 33; Phil Donahue 8;
: Young and Restless 10; Not For Women Only IS; Making
, Things Grow 33.
• 1: 30- Jeoperdy 4, 15 ; Let' s Mak~ A Oeal6, 13; As The World
:
Turns 8, 10; Dig It 33; T~ethon 3.
•2:00- Days Of Our Lives 3, 4, IS; Newlywed Game 13 ; Guiding
: Light a, 10; Insight 33.
•2:30- Docfors3, 4,15 ; Girl In My Life 13; Edgeot Night B, 10;

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

Wanted To Rent

My boyfriend Is sUIJ calling his ex-girl, and recenUy flew out
to see her while she was in the hospital. When I questioned him,
be said this was just a "bona fide" relationship.
In my book that means a "true" relationship. Yet he says he
loves only me. What gives? - PUZZLED

Neme That Tune 3, 15.

P'

,

NOTICE

FUEL OIL
HEATERS

Dear Rap :

: 10:30- Gambit a, 10; Winning Streak 3, 4, 15; Phil Donahue4.
1l: 00- Password 13; Now You See It 8, 10; Hl;h Rollers 3, 4, 15 ;
$10,000 Pyramid 6; Sesame Street 33.
' 1l: 30- Hollywood Squaros3, 4, 15; Brady Bunch 13; Love of life

§.

TONIGHT AT 7 P.M.

lost. - SUE

Bullwinkle 8; IIAovle "EI Grego" 13.

Real Estate For Sale

For Renr

Tl'le Gunslingers .

9: 30- Lucy Show B; Elec. Co. 20; Not For Women Only 3; Hazel
B; Tattletales 10.
0:00- Compeny 6; Lilias, Yoga and You 33; Joker's Wild 8. 10 ;

For Sale

RACINE GUN Q.UB

What's in store for me with a Mama's boy? - OVERPOWERED
Dear Overpowered :
More and more Mama! Since I don 'I read much love in your
letter, I think divorce is the best solution. - HELEN
O.P.:
I've a feeling the divorce won't hurt much but your pride and that won't hurt very long when you realize bow little you've

6: 25 - Fat m Report 13.
6:30- Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Good News 13; Public Affairs 10.
6:35- Columbus Today 4.
6: 45- Morning Report 3; Farmllme 10.
7: 00 - Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13 ;
Bugs Bunny 6.
7: 30- New Zoo Revue6; Elghly Days 13.
8: 00 - Capt. Kangaroo 8; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Popeye 10.
8: 25 '- Jack La La nne IJ; Captain Kangaroo 10.
8: 30 - Brady Bunch 6.
8: 55 - News 13.
9:00-AM3; Paul Dlxon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Mlstor Rogers33 ;

Fully Insured

RACINE GARAGE

r- -

13.

.FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, l974

For Sale

Yard Sales

On the way out, he whispered, "I' .. be back." I'm really not
him.
.

anxious to see

6 : 00- Sunrise Seminar .4; Summer Semester 10.

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

7 ROOM HOUSE
AND BATH

~.

News

B: 30 p .m . -

OOMPLETE
HElL
RADIATOR
RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

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

go home, son, I've got your dinner on ."

9:30 p.m. - The Underworld .

JOHNSON MASONRY

OPEN HOUSE

15 .

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7: 00 p.m. - Big Blacks Review
7: 30 p.m. - Country and Wesfern.

Keep out the cold and cut the cost of heating I
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

Help Wanted

ate forced him to leave me twice in a year, and now he's
gettlng a divorce-and she has the nerve to call up and rub it m .
(He's staying with her.)
Last night Tony came over and begged lor a new start. Then
Mama barged in and he followed meekly when she said, "Let's

Tomorrow3, 4; Take Five for Life 15.

2· 00 -

REMODELING?

CONSTRUCTION

·
ted
Ever since Tony and I got married, his mother has msul
me. She tells him I'm no good, and Interferes in our private and
financial situation. You can't believe how snoopy she is, and the
questions she asks.
I could stand this~ Tony were man enough to put her m her
place. But he "Yes Mama's" everything she says. He never
makes a decision without her.

' '12: 30- Wide World Special 13 ; Soul Train 6.

From a shelf to a house.
HOUSE f o r rent , furniShed or
Painting, siding, roofing,
unturn~shed at Lan gsvil le
paper
hanging , kitchen
.1970
FORO
3"
truck
,
V
8,
p
b
,
Call 742 5986
4 ACREs , overrook 1ng bea_ut iful
radio, 8 ply tires, 38,000 m 1ies
992-76,08
cabinets, etc.
K.OSCOT
KOSMETICS
11 1-4 -3tc
\11ew of nver. 2 bedrooms,
Set up to haul 3 tons Phone
Remember Christmas Is CAREER OPPORTUNITY ~r
Pomeroy, o.~
down
,
w,
up
,
ce
ram1c
tile
Rt.
7
&amp;
Union
Ave.
985 3831
Men or Women - Nationwide
coming We have many new
bath
bu1lt
·1n
k
1tchen
,
dry
BEDROOM apt pnvate en
11 -13 -Jtp
In surance offers earnmgs up
products that will make n ice
basement. firepla ce. lge ..
tran ce , bath and k1tchen
to Sl5 .000 ( this rs a salary, not
giftS . Phone BROWN 'S, 992
rock wall pallo , garage.
Water, Electric, Gas, Sewe~
Gentlem en plea se Call 992
1973 OLDS Cutlass S, like new ,
5113 ,
a draw ) to sell complete '"
complete pnva cy, 2 m1les
5508
Insi
de
and
out.
350
engine
,
Lines,
installed.
Work
surance protection . lite ,
1131fc
from
Pomerov
m
Mmers¥111e
ll -12 31C
p s , p b , air , and automatiC
health , auto. fire . com
guaranteed.
11 -1-4 -5f p
transm ISSio n , 24 ,000 actual
merc•al , auto finance , ~nd
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks
2 BEDROOM mobile home ,
m 11 es Ca ll 992 3914 after 5 25 ACRES in Olive Twp, 34
mutual funds No prior e~C.
limestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Ul 1 ht 1~S pa id near Pomeroy
pm
perience Is necessary smce
acres '" Rutland Twp and 96
Large
varo
,
n1ce
area
No
Commerciai-Resldentlll
11
13
-4tp
we have one of the most
acres .n Ca rthage Twp ,
pets or c hildren Phon e 992
complete trainmg programs
Construction &amp; Remodel
Athens Co
Write 60)( 25,
7017
or
992
-7666
1963 MERCURY 4 dr sedan,
in the Industry If you are
Tuppers
Pla1ns
,
Oh10,
or
ca
ll
11 12 tfc
Complete plumbing &amp; .
good t 1r es , runs good , used
mterested in a Career Op
Pick up daily In Pomeroy &amp;
667 3131.
d a1 1y Phone 992 -3391
portun1ty in a reward1ng
11
143tc
heating
service. Free
Middleport.
All
work
11 13 3tp
business,
call
Stanley LOCATED at 1676 L 1ncoln
He ights, new 2 bedroom house
guaranteed. Phone 949-3611.
Estimates.
Ferguson
at
(6141
446
-4707
Attend our open house.
with bath , basement. gas 1968 FORD slat 1on wagon , S300
Collect, Monday thru Fr i day .
Sunday, Nov. 17, I to 5
fl oor furna ce, storm doors
FOR SALE
Phone 992 5301 .
8 a rrl . to 4 · 30 p m An Equal
Phone 949-5961
777 Pearl Street
and windows , easil y heated .
11 12 6tc
Opport.un lty Em player
p.m. Take an envelope
Cali Tracy Wha le y , 992 3054
Middleport, Ohio
Emergency 992-3995
111J3tc
11 12 6tc 1964 GMC 1h ton pickup truck. 6
from
our treasure
Phone 992·5367 or 992·386 I
or 992-5700
5th St.
Racine, C.
cyt standard , Phone,992 2875 .
HOW
TO
EARN
MONEY
AT
chest and receive free
11
10
Stp
'l
BEDROOM
trailer
m
HOME
MAILING
COM
gift of 10 to 50 Pet. off
Sy ra cuse, c lose to school No
MISSION
CIRCULARS 1
CARPET installation, $1.25 per
CONCRETE
ch i ldren or pet s Depos1t
EXCELLENT
PROFIT
yard Phone Richard West , READY MIX
purchases.
Novelty
delivered
right
to your
required Phone 992 2441 after
POTENTIAL
OFFER
2667
843
Garage
2 Lots. Newly
OLD 4 room house with 2 n1ce
. tp
pro(ect. Fast and easy. Free
6 10 p m
Fabric and Craft, 230
11 13 6
DETAILS 25c &amp; STAMPED
redecorated and carpeted .
lois '" Syracuse, $3,000 or
~ - ------------:-'estlm ales. Phone 992 328oi
10 18 ftc
ADDRESSED ENVELOPE
Washington
Blvd ..
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
Quiet neighborhood .
POSSible land contract Ph
C. BR:J,I.OFORD, Auctioneer
ANN CLARK.1223 LACLAIR ,
Middleport, Ohio .
992 5898
complete Service
PGH PA . 15218
Belpre, Ohio.
FURNISHED
apartmen t.
11 · 11 ·6tc
6·30·11&lt;
Phone949-382lor949 -3161
11 10 26tp
utll1tie s furniShed , suitable 197 0 YAMAHA motorcy c le ,
Reasona bl Y Pr .ICe d
~--- --------- -Raclne,Ohio
Craft Classes Every
for two working men or
good
runn1ng
condit ion
On Lincoln Drive
Crill Bradford
SEWING 1¥\ACHINE~ ." Repair •
Thursday Night
ret 1r ed couple L1v1ng room .
Ph one 992 7228 .
service, all ~akes, 992-228-i.
5• 1·tfc
kitchen , shower and bath On
11 12 6tp
ForAppointmentPh. 992~
7 p.m.
The Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .,
main highway , Mason , w Va
---~------2 FAMILY basement sale. 1671
2679
FoR-FREE-;;tim-;tes on~
Authorized Singer Sales and
Phone 773 5147
ELECTRIC
Eureka
floor
t.:::..:
_________
_.
•
I
·
aluminum
replacement·
L incoln Hgls .• Pomerov Lots
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
10 -27 tfc
poliSher with all purpose
of children 's wear , Thursday
windows . s1dlng, storm doors
3-29-tfc
brushes
and
buff1ng
pads
,
S25
FO R SALE by owner, pnce
lind Fr1 day 9 a m to 5 p m
and wirPdows, Railing. Phone
ATTENTION
FARMERS,
Phone 992 -5732
RCA·
TV
$15
for
sale
reduced
S2,000
Beaut
i
ful
Charles Lisle, Syracuse, Ohio . DOZER work , land cltlarlng by
Lumber for sale. Rough
11124tc
oiQer home, 3 bedroom , large
11 l3 3tc
Carl
Jacob ,
Sales
the acre hourly or contract;-;
lumber for fatm use Contact
~----- -----ba'lh, new Siding, storm
R epresentatlve,
V
V
farm ponds, roads, etc larg•
ONE two year old drafl, colt, one -Pomeroy Forest Products, P
1967
MUSTANG
289,
automatic
,
Windows and doors. complete
YARD SALE , -420 Spr1ng A¥e ,
Johnson and Son, Inc .
dozer and operator with over
black he ifer , two Holstein
0
Box 726, Pomeroy , Ohio
dual e~C.haust , One double
carpeted. fenced yard , two
Pomeroy. Friday. Sat and
• A-30-tfc
20 years experience. Pullinst"'
Phone 992 -5965
he !fe r:.s Phone 992 5795
p1ckup
e1ectr1c
gu1tar
n1ce
porches,
localed
con
Sunday
,
antique
glass
ware
,
Exca,vating, Pomeroy , Ohla. '
11 13 3tc
ll -7-12tc
Harmony
solid
body
electnc
venlenlly,
now
lust
$16,500
clothing and m ise Items
Phone 992-2478.
CLOSE TO MINE I. - Ph
"EXCAVATING. dozer , loader
bass gu1tar ; K1mberly flat
Must
sell
For
appomtment,
11 1-4 Jtc
12-19-tfc:
acres.
glazed
tile
building.
and
backhoe
work;
septic
topgultar. 2 speeker cabinets
ANTIQUE S p1e cabinet.
call 992 1210
tanks Installed. dump trucks --:::;::;-~-=--=-=---~--=---=---- 1
Good drilled well. Fuel oll
w1th two 12 Inch speakers per
11 10 -7tc
sewing
machme
,
{over
100
5 FAMILY Garage Sale,
and to -boys for hire, will haul 'EXCELSIOR Salt works, -~ ,
years old l Ice box Call 992
heat. Located at Dexter.
cabinet , Bell Tempo 150 P A. - - - - -- - - - - - - -Tuppers Plains . house in back
fill dirt. top soli, limestone &amp;
Main St.', Pomerov .. ~ll ki l
,
power unIt All above items 7 ROOM house with bath,
3198
or
742
6091.
$4,300.
of post office, Wed , Thurs.
oraveT;
Call
Bob
-oy
·
Roger
~
of
salt
water
pellets·
,
we,
•
There Will BE
are 1n very good condition
11 13 4tc
garage
,
garden
on
VineSt
1
n
LANGSVILLE - 2 acres, 7
day , Friday and Sat 9 to 4
Jeffers,
day
phone
992-7089
;
,
,
nuggets,
block
salt
and
~
:
A Special Meetint
Phone 9-49 3151 before 5 p , m.
Rae~ne . Call 9-i9 ·2 054 after 5
rooms, 4 BR, porches,
p m.
night phone 992 -3525 or 992Ohio River Salt. Phone
,1
or 949 3844 after 5 p m
pm
ELECTROLUX
vacuum
garage. Other buildings, gas
11 10 6tc
11 -14-3tc
11 10 6tc
5232
2-ll·tfl
489!.
6-Sjf :
cleaner. A -1 condition, uses
well. $7,000.
pap'!:r bags, has cordwmder 197-4 360 YAMAHA Enduro, low
--------,.---LANGSVILLE - 10 acres on
and many attac hments . Also.
CHARLES R Hatfield , m1m ·
mileage , like new cond1flon GRAVEL HILL , 5 room and
Leading
Creek.
Good
shampooer attachment '"
I
bath house , garage, and
backhoe and dozer, water:
Lots of extras Phone 247 -2245
blacktop
road
.
Ideal
for
eluded
(Only
4
avallablel
at
'
TRAILER , 2 bedroom. Brown 's
do~bie
outbuilding,
575
lines,
drains,
footers,
brush
11
14
3tc
Uve In !he rolling hills of
home or trailer . $5,800.
$37 70
cash
or
te rms
Trailer Park Phone 992-3324
Broadway,
M1ddleport
cleaning . Rt . 1, Rutland, Ohio .
Southern Ohio in your own
POMEROY- Lovely ranch
available . Phone 992-7755
11 -8tfc
Phone 992 -3333 or 992 -5546
Phon~ H2 6092 .
lype. 3 BR, house wife ap·
11 13 -tfc
3 BR, oil electric mobile
11 13 6tc
11 3-25tc
.proved kitdten.
Dining
-4 BEDROOM newly remodeled
home In southern Ohio's
All members ' asked to be
SIEGLER and
farm house and acreage NEW 1974 ZIG ZAG SE WING
room, full basement wltl'l
SEPTIC -,.AN KS cleaned, ntwost mobile home pork.
present tor election of of·
MACHINES
In
origmal
MONOGRAM
BUILDING lot, 80ft fronlaoe IC.
located
12
miles
from
reasonable rates . Ph . .... 6.
·r·ecreatlon room and ' utlllty
flees .
u min. from Athens or
factory carton New Z 1g -Zag
165ft . The second lot on left on
Pomeroy. Call (30-4) 773-5118
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
room,
central
heat
&amp;
air
Pomeroy. Price reduced to
to make buttonholes, sew on
Riverview Dr1ve , Lincoln
11 8 6tc
owner and operator .
condition. Hardwood floor,
buttons. mdnograms . and
Hill, Pomeroy, Ohio If in -,
gel
this mobile home pork
5-12-tfc
carpeting, lovely patio.
make fancy des i gns with just
terested, call 992 -3230 after 5
started.
Set up &amp; ready to
3 BEDROOM trailer for rent,
the twist of a single dill I Left
Wrought Iron and stone . Like
p m.
Au 1UMUt51Lt' msurance been
move
Into.
For further
water furnished , no pets
1n lay a way and never been
new.
10-17 tfc
cancelled?
Lost
your
Deposit required Phone 992
delolls
contact
...
used Will sell tor only $47
TUPPERS PLAINS - I
HOUSEfin country , in Meigs or
opera1or's license. Call 9925885
"
Priced For Quick Sale
NO
DOWN
PAYMENT
cash, or terms available
7428:
level acre, 2 BR. ' lovely
Gallla County . Have no
''
11 10 6tp
Phone
992
-7755
TO
VETERANS
children, phone 245 5293
kitchen and dining area.
6-15-tfc
1113tfc
-1 New Monogram
collect after 8 p m
Utility room, cen1ral heat,
TRAILER space, 2 miles from
z;;-EMEANS-CONdi.tfE'
11-13·3tc
h~dwood floor. $13,500.
Wood Burnina Stnve
Pbmeroy , Rt 1-43 Phone 992
delivered Monday through
GRAIN fed Angus beef Phone
Phone
992-2259
or
m-2568
Saturday
and
evenings .
985
3944
POMEROY LANDMARk
10 27 tfc
.
Phone 446-1142.
"
11 10 -6t p l9'.~ Jack W. Cusey, Mgr .
The Allnllllllc
6-13-tfc
........
~
Phone992-2181
HOUSE and trailer for rent 1n
By Ullited Press lnlernallonal
FIREWOOD for fireplace or
town, 2 bedrooms Phone 992
slove . Cut to length Phone
SEfilJC
TANKS
cleaned. YYILL tnrn or cut trees and
Today is Thuraday, Nov. 14, 3975 and 992 2571
FIREW-Ooo. any length Call NICE MODERN HOME - 3
shrubbery , also clean out
1100 E. Main Pomeroy, 0.
992 76-44 .
Modern Sanitation, 992 3954 or
11 6 tfc
basements and attics . Phone
992 -5-422 or 992 -3312.
the 318th day of 1974 with 47 to ------ --- ~---•
992 -73-49.
eaum.1o34
11 3 26tc
bedrooms
wltl'l
large
closets.
2
11 10 26tp
9.-9-3221 or 7-42 -AA-i1
____________ ..!_·~· tfc 1
Open Dally·n to 7
follow.
concrete
porches ,
dry
'J AND 4 ROOM furnished and GROCERY business for sale
10-18·26tc
GRAVEL. sand, Mason sand,
unfurnished
apartment!
basement. shop • garage and
'
The moon is between 1ts new
Building for sale or lease .
Phone 992-543-4 .
I 1mestone, P1t Run by the ton . garden. Only $23.500.00 OR PI A NO tuning ana'- repalr .
L - - - - , . - - - - - ''
Pnone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m .
Phone
Charles
Scott,
99'2-3718
.
phase and first quarter.
.
Del•vered Phone 4-46-1142
4-12 tfc
WILL
TALK.
lo 'iO p m for appointment.
9-17.J2tp
10
19
t-tc·
The morning stars are
3 20 tfc
PRIVATE meeting room for
Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
i957 - cHevy piriS~=-NEW
.
IN THE STICKS-2 bedrooms. REMODELING , plumbing, and
any organ izetion , phone 992·
FIREWOOD for sale . Call 742
Lakewood tract1on bars, h1
3975.
full basement, cistern, electric
heat1nQ, general repair Woi'k
The evening stars are Venw
4831
lacker air shocks. hooker
3-11 tfc
guaranteed Phone 992-2409
and five acres $6500.00.
and Jupiter.
headers , Wilh 3" collector s tor
10 29 26tc
11 10 12tp
small block
Call 992 3496
-- ---..,...----Those born on this dale are COUNTRY Mobil~ Ho"'~ r"drK,
after 6 p . m . BE ST OFFER.
INVESTMENT - 70 acres. on DOZER or ;.;ckhoe work .
Rt. 33. ten miles north of COAL. del ivered S20 per ton
mder the sign of Scorpio.
10-17 tfc
Call 7-42 6621
Pomeroy . Large lots with
new 33. T . P. water near. Ex ·
Phone 446-3981 or -4-46 -3459
11 10 6tc
concrete patios , sidewalks,
Robert Fulton, American
cellent spring.
9 8 tfc
REPLACE
those
tired
sagg1ng
and
off
street, - - - - - - - - - - - - - Inventor of the steamboat, was runners
so,a cushions with new foam
parking
Also, spaces for
CHEAP HOME - 2 bedrooms,
cut to S1 ze , only S10 95 at
small trailers . Phone 992-7479 .
born Nov. 14, 1765.
J ack's
Furniture
and
•H
living, utility, kitchen, and lot .
7-21 -tfc 1
·For the Lowest
On thts day In history:
Upholstery Supplies , 236 E
$5500.00. Will hackle.
-::: --------------:::...
1
Ma1n Sl, Pomeroy . Phone
In 1832, the first horse-drawn 2 BEDROOM double wide
992 -3903 .
mobile home in Syrecuse No
RUTL.AND-3 bedrooms, nal.
street car made Its appearance children
Tire Pric;e!
11 6 12tc
or pets, deposit 1
gas,
bath. and 2 acres.
In·New York City. It carried 30 required. Phone 992-24-4.1 after
•
'A FEW new band instrument!) .
6
p
.m
.
passengers.
Contact Renee Stone 992 7567. WE SPECIALIZE IN REAL
irfthe Area
10 29-lfc
EST P,TE SALES.
9--4 -tfc
111 26tc

12:~·- -News 3, 4, 8,

1

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221

HlsMolher,theBatracuda

Rap:

7:30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4; Lei's Make a Deal 6 · Wild
Kingdom
To Telllhe
Truth
13; Aging
New Price
Smart
15;10;
Festival
Films
33 ; On
20 . Is Right 'a; Get
8:00- The Wallons 8, 10; Sierra 3, 4, 15; The Way 11 Was 20 ,
Jacques Cousteau 6, 13; Soundstage 20.
8:30- Whal Now, America 20.
9:00- Streets ol,~an Francisco 6, 13; Jeann~ Wolf 20 ; Ironside
3, 4, 15; Movie Woman Times Seven" B; "Conquest of Planet
rof ttua An.•" 1n · -;.,.,"1 11
]0: 00-folovln' On 3, 4, 15; Harry Q.6,J.3 ; "'e.,.s20; Woman 33.
10: 30 - Your Furure Is Now 20; Proflle33.
··
, ll : oo- News6, 10, 13; ABC News 33; News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13 , 15 .
n · 30 - Mlssloo Impossible 6; Untouchables 13; Janak I 33 ,
Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; WFL Football 8; Movie "Tamahlne••

Free Estimltes, Mlddlepart,_O: t

You re mak1ng a much better
1mpress10n than you rea 11ze
Peop le you re meetmg now are
cons1denng you lo r the ir l ulure
guest I ISI S

By Helen and Sue Hottel

7: 00- News 10; Whal's My line B; Elec. Co. 20; Bowling for
Dollars 6; From Sea to Shining Sea 3; Beal the Clock 4; Let's
Ma.
33 ke A Deal 13; Sports Desk 15; Man Builds, Man Deslroys

.. INYL SIDING
PH. 992-7454 or
992-7129

992-5162
Syracuse. Ohio

D&amp;D

WI LL TRA DE - FI N A N CING
ARRANGED
WITH
MINIMUM
DOW N
Will
co ns1der trade fo r older
home trai ler , or land on thiS
new 3 bedroom. 2 bath home
w1th 2 car garage , large
tam dy room , a~r cond 1t1onmg
Mo¥e m immed ta t ety Cal l
now 992 597 6
11 14 -ltc

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING 00..

your 1magmal 1on

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)

Generation Rap

• THURSDIIV. NOVEMBER 14,1974
6: c:gyle~~.c Nows 3, ~.IS; \;~&gt; News 8, 10; Bewllched 6; Gomer

Interior, Exterior
Decorating a"d
Remodeling ·

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

DAY NURSERY

SMAL L hou se for sale 1n
Pomeroy Phon e 992 2696
11 12 -4tc

7 ROOM h ouse W•th 2 bathS m
Pomeroy Phone 992 3478
10 15 26tc

1957 CHEVROLE T , $400 Ca ll
992 5852
11 14 6tp

For Rent

338 at
Ca ll 141 220 1
11 lJ 3tp

Mobile Homes For Sale

1974 OPEL MANTA

10 16 76tc

Business Ser:vi~.~~.

T IR E and whee l o n Rl

Plant s Ohto

;- 11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov.14,1,~97~4-----•--•-~m=ill8lll!ll!ll88B!I_,

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Auto Sales

E NG L I SH Shepherd p uppteS,
SlO 619 Page St Middleporl
Phone 99'2 3943
11 13 4tp

lost

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�12-The DaUy Septlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov.

Reading phonics,
Math emphasized
Reading phonics and Math
were emphasized In the
workshop for parents of third
grade pupils at the Salisbury .
School Tuesday evening with
Jennifer Butcher In charge.
Mrs. Cherrie Thornton was
introduced as she will be the
new third grade teacher
starting Monday, replacing
Mrs. Butcher who wiU be
taking leave of absence. This
was the fow-th in a series of
: . workshops being held at
' Salisbury School so that
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9:30 AM TO 8:00 PM
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Community-wide Thanks·
giving services will be held at
the Heath United Methodist
Chw-ch in Middleport, Wednesday evening, Nov. '1:1 al7:30
o'clock.
The Rev. Robert Bumgard·

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MEIGS 1HEATRE

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Tonight, Nov. 14
NOT OPEN

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Fri.-Sit.-Sun.
November 15-16-17
THE CHINESE
PROFESSIONALS

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and
"THE SCALAWAG
CTechnlcalarl

"

(G)

Show Starts 7 p.m.

MARK V
·

COrreCtion

~---------Tuesday,
New. 12 Ad

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ON THE 1ST FLOOR

such 'bridges on Michigan's
upper peninsula at HoughtOn
and the installation of the 500
ft. bridge crossing the
Missi~sippi
River . Mike
Williams was a guest of Jim
Dannfr for the meeting
presided over by Lou Osborn,
president.

';;Sizes 29'·to 50 waist · solid colors - plaids - neat
r~atterns.

CHAM·PION BLANKETS

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Mens
'• Mens
. Mens
· ..iMens
,,f Mens
': Mens
Mens

10.95 Knit
·11;95 Knit
12.95 Knit
13.95 ,Knit
14".95 ·• Knit
15.95 · Knit
16.95 Knit

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

Slacks
Slacks
Slacks
Slacks Slacks ·Slacks Slacks

Pocket size. Truly portable · four function • 8
digit electronic calculators. Slim case design •
operates on batteries or AC. (adapter included)
Friday and _Saturday
·

•1295 CARAVELLE
16 PIECE FLATWARE
SERVICE FOR 4
Matches Corelle dinnerware • stainless steel ·
dishwasher safe.

REGULAR
PRICES

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Frederich, directors of the
federally funded Buckeye
Travel-Tow- Project of which
· Meigs County is a part, visited
the COWlty Thursday to explain
the program and to see first
hand potential tourist at. tractions. ·
Meeting with several
members of the Meigs County
Planning

Corning Ware

· primarily, at the Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., Thw-sday, Mr. and Mrs. Frederich
pointed out that tourism is big

Includes 91n'c h pie plate- 2 qt. loaf dish - 8 Inch
square dish -11f• qt. baking dish. Freeze· cook or
serve In this fine quality CQrnlng Ware.

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5.95
6.95
7.95
. 8.95
9.?5
10.95
1(95
12.95
13.95
14.95
15.95
16.95

Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
~hirts

~hirts

Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts

- - - •
- - •
- - •
•.•
•.•
- - •.•
•.•
- - -

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

4.49
5.29
5.99

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6.79

7.49
IU9
8.99
9.79
10.49
11.29
11.99
12.79

~ys 2.95

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~li_tRtS .................. SALE

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,.,, . ·""' •.
' '"r

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Boys 3.95

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SHIRTS .................. SALE •3.29

Chairs ·

Boys 4.50

· lAY-A-WAY

SHIRTS ............... : .. SALE •3.79

SHIRTS .................. SALE •3.49 .
Boys 4.95

Boys 5.95

_

. SHIRtS ................. SALE •4A9
Boys 6.95

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health

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WINTER .JACKETS
Buy ' the jackets you need now
during this sale.
You'li really save.
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MAIN STORE- MECHANIC STREET WAJIEHOI,ISE AND TOY STORE OPEN FRIDAY .AND. SATURDAY UNTIL I
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to strengthen the economy and
Watergate is ended," he said.
Ford acknowledged the elec-

November · of 1948. I think
that's what we ought to do as

tion results mean the Democrats "do have some sort of a

OUtside of the hail where
Ford spoke, about 15 pickets
protested the Rockefeller

Republicans in 1976."

Grange wants
food labeled

returning

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p,.M,
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Best of all, the -200 senior citizen pnvateiy from $75 to
citizens who took part in the $100.
The program was conducted
program received the medical
through
the
screening services free. A Thursday
similar service lor the tests run cooper a lion . of the Ohio
during Thursday program Department of Health, the
would have cost each aenior Meigs County Department of
Health, Veterans Memorial
Hospital, the Meigs CoWlly
Home Health Services, personnel of the Senior Citizens .
Center in addition to numerous
volunteer workers who steered
the 200 persons undergoing
testing into the correct pat.
.
terns.
The Ohi~ Department of
Health furnished technical
assistance, laboratory
facilities and the necessary
health forms. The department
secw-ed the services of an
opthamoiog!~t- Dr . George
Toma of Columbus who tested
each of the 200 citizens· for
giaucom~ and other eye

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disorders.

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'iECHNICIANS OF VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL prepare to take a blood
specbnell !rom one of 200 senior citizens who took part in a multi.phasic health screenin ~
JX'Ogram held in Pomeroy Thlirsday.

M
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S;Creening"

program the . li!'st in Ohio,
which had not been staged by
uie Ohio Depariment of Health.
It also was significant because
of the cooperation of several
health-related groups.

. Mens and Boys

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phasic

SPECIAL SALE PRICESJ

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Another "first" was chalked
up in Meigs County Thw-sday
when the physical condition of
200 senior citizens was checked
at ttie Senior Citizens Center on
E. Main St., P9meroy.
Not ooly • wu this ''multi·

SHIRTS .................. SALE •6.79

Special prices on the complete line of
RCA XL-100 Color TeJevisiori • ·1975
models.
·

MIDO.,aPoRT~·. o. ·

will be available through the
program. Mr. and Mrs.
Frederi~h will visit each of the ·
20 participating counties from
time to time and will bring in a
final report at the end of the
first year. The uant was
provided by the Appalachian
Regional CoWlcii.
Mr. and Mrs. Frederich,

Democrats were successful in

mandate" but "they also have
an accountability." He said he nomination. The President
hoped he could work with the obviously disagreed, defending
time in Congress. It " would legislative branch, but remem. Rockefeller's gift-giving and
affe&lt;!t only 28 per cent of the bered that when Truman was saying "there 's no political
personal income taxpayers" President in 1946, "the Demo- chicanery involved at all."
11
whom, he suggested, might be crats took a worse beating ...
]
think he's the most
wiillPg to sacrifice a few cents
"Mr . Truman and the Demo- qualified person to be vice
a day to help whip inflation.
crats didn't abandon their president," said Ford. He said
The prospect of a face-off policies, they went out and he hoped Congress would act
with Congress came up again fought for them . They went out lJefore the year is out, even
and again. Ford said Congress and made an effort to sell suggesting that he would have
will have to act on the
been wiUing to postpone his
economy, has been dragging
its heels on the Nelson
Rockefeller nomination for the
vice presidency, hurt him by
objecting to aid to Turkey
during the Cyprus dispute, and
of the long period of
Democratic control he said,
" ... all of the evUthat you had,
· you cap blame on them, not on
us,"
Ford
analyzed
the
Democratic success in 1974
elections this way: "The By United Press International and health and safety im·
The United Mine Worker's provements.
Republican party was in the
The bargaining council must
White House at the time that 38-rnember bargaining council
we had 10 or 11 per cent in- wound up an eight-how- session accept the proposed contract
flation, where we had some early Friday without taking a before it can he ratified by the
softening of tlie economy, and vote on a proposed three year union membership. It will be
where we had the heritage of contract for 120,000 striking submitted to the district
miners.
Watergate."
confer~nce
in Pittsburgh
UMW President Arnold Monday, and if it meets their
He was clearly looking
forward to 1976, when he is Miller said the COWlcil would approval goes to the rank and
expected to be a candidate. resume consideration of the file for a ratification vote,
contract about 10 a.m. EST. expected to take about!O days.
Miller said he still felt the
, Only 90,000 of the 120,001:
contract was " a good one," and striking miners will actuaUy be
that the council had about 19 voting on tbe ntw contract
more items to go through because 30,000 are covered by
before taking a vote.
separate agreements with
"lt 's been a long session and comp•.nles that are not
we haven't come to any con- members of the Bituminous
clusion," Miller said after the Coal Operators Association.
meeting broke up.
Those companies follow terms
The contract was preseJjted of the BCOA contract,
in closed doOr sessions this to council members Thw-sday however.
week to consider more than 500 evening and they worked
Another 5,000 union memresolutions that will - form straight through . completing bers are covered.by a nationl\1
grange policy -for the year.
major economic Issues and co'a l ~· mine"' consirudian·
Among the resolutions some of the non-economic agreement that expired with
passed were:
items.
- A recommendation that
The new pact, reached
veterinary schools be ex- Wednesday, provides for wage
panded and pennit acceptance increases of 9 per cent the first
EXTENDED FORECAST
of more students from rural year and three per cent in each
There will be a chance of
backgrounds.
of the following years in ad- showers Sunday and Monday
-A criticism of violence, dillon to cost of living in- and then lair on Tuesday.
profanity and obscenity in creases. It also includes
Highs will be In the upper 40s
movies and television.
substantial pension increases
or the lower 50s. Overnight
-And a measure opposing of from $150 to $442.50 a month
lows will beiu the 30s.
"C&lt;HJducational donnitory liv- depending on length of service,
~~· · .·;··~:
ing on the same floor in all
'Colleges and universities.

Featured will be Joe Eddie the
mugician; Pepe, the high
diving dog, juggling by the
Riggs Family; Jargo, the
giraffe;v Samson, the gorilla
and Philippe, the clown.
Advance tickets are on sale
by the firemen who request
residents buy in ~dvance. A
department representative is
now making phone calls to
businesses of the area. Anyone
missed in purchasing a block of
tickets to aid the deparimenl is
asked to call 992-5198 or contact
a Middleport fireman .

200 senior citizens' health checked

Boys 1.95

ELBE.RF~LDS WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC STREn

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However, professional advice

them. And Mr. Truman and the

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Hearing and vision . tests
were conducted in the parish
house of Grace Episcopal
·' Chw-ch.
Blood samples were taken by

trip to the Far East until there
is a vice president .

"But I can't sit and twiddle
my UnunOO," he said. 11 TO sit
and wait 'til Congress acts on
this -I think they ought to act
a lot more quickly than they
have-[ think we'd be lost."
As · the hall · rang with
laughter, Ford, an Eagle
Scout, rejected a suggestion

that he shed his Boy Scout
image. "I'm not going to back
off from the five or six years
that I enjoyed being a Boy
Scout and doing the things that

are

good for America.'' he

said. "I wish there'd be a lot
more Boy Scouts.''

Miners' council
continue talking

SACRAMENTO, Calif.
-The National Grapge
(UPI)
By United Press lntematioual
mented, " You have beauty to
CHARLESTON W. VA. -MAKESHIFT SCHOOlS sprang
sell," ani,! gave statistics on the Thw-sday urged that imported
up lt( 0iitlymg Kan~wha ~iiJII?' viUagesJIIld.toWI15 todaY. !lllJi\1
dollars iliat'-come into an are-a , meat be labeled in stores.
A resolution passed at the
lecurity maintained to1avert further violence In the longby tow-isis.
108th
annual session of the
running textbook feud. Snow~aced rains and swarms of police
A car .stopping in the county
cars combined Wednesday to cool tempers that exploded into
once brings in about $3.50; ·Grange said "some consmners
roadside amblll!hes earlier in the week when more than 300 books
twice, $20 and from $50 to $70 prefer buying domestic produbbed obscene by protesters went back to classrooms .
on the third stop , the duced meat products."
The measw-e said the fraterDespite a steady cllm1&gt; in school attendance, Schools Supt.
Frederichs said. They stressed
nal
farm organization supports
Kenneth Underwood said past acts of violence would deter some
that the aim will not be to atparents from sending children to schools because "there's no
tempt to induce tourists to "legislation for clear and plain
way to combat fear." Student boycotts were maintained by
spend several days in Meigs labeling of aU imported meat
nearly onH!fth of th~: overaU enro!lrnent as. anti~e~tbook
CoWl ty, but to get them to and meat products."
"All food establishments
parents refused to call it quits. Private, Chnstian-oriented
come into the: county on side
serving
imported meats post
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schools were set up in buildings and chw-ches.
trips to see points of interest.
signs
to
that
effect," it added.
They spoke on the possibility
Delegates
from
38 states met
. WASHINGTON ...,'u . S. DISTRICT COURT JUDGE John J.
of making tow-ist attractions at
Slrlca Thursday ordered former CIA chief Richard Heims flown
old lock and dam sites along
to Washington to clear up disputed questions about the
the Ohio River. Meigs County
'watergate cover-up. Did the CIA try to steer t11e FBI away from
has two, at Portland and Apple
bot leads in the days immediately following the Watergate
Grove. They stressed the
bugging? If so, was it due to White House pressw-es or to some
importance ot exploiting the
"Santa's Workshop," a
real CIA interest in the case?
Ohio River for tow-ism.
magic
show which played to a
Helms now amba=:lor to Iran, may be the only man who
Local representative on the
standing
room audience last
really knQ~S. U. Gen. Vernon A. Walters, deputy CIA director, program's advisory council is
was called back to the witness stand today for cross- H. E. (Pete) Shields with each year, has been booked for Dec. ·
examination. Defense lawyers are ben! on proving the CIA did of the 20 counties to have 5 at the Meigs Junior High
have an interest in Watergate but not as part of any cover-up.
representatives in addition to School by the Middleport Fire
At issue is a secret memo written by Helms just 11 days after
other area persons who will Department.
Tom Darst, president of the
·the JWle 17, 1972, Watergate arrests. It reportedly instru~ed . serve on· the council.
Middleport
Fire Department
· Walters to ask the FBI to limit its probe to the bugging, steermg
Attending were C. E. Blakesclear of areas that ''may well eventually rWl afoul" of CIA lee, Bill Mayer, Shields, said that the show, a Joe Eddie
· operations abroad.
Theodore T. Reed, ·Jr., David production, is one of the major
Parry, Bill Mayer and James touring magic shows still
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DETROIT
- JAMES R. HOFFA, FORMER BOSS of the Roush. The Frederichs spent appearing on stage.
Magic acta, animal acts,
powerful Teamsters Wlion, has set the wheels in motion for .a the afternoon visiting possible
legal hattie that may return him to union leadership. Hoffa said to uris t attractions in the juggling, unicycle riding and
clowns will be featured.
Continued on ppge 10
county.

SHIRTS ................. SALE •5.29

ALE PRICES

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Through new federally
funded program - $79,000 for
the first year - a staff has

special sight.&lt;;eeing attraction.

"We're golng to solve the inflation problems, we're going

technicians

substanUal.''

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Under the new contract,
daily wages for experienced
miners wiU go from fSO to $65 a
day not COWlling overtime and
other benefits.
Less experienced miners will
make from $42 to $57 a day.

RACINE - Racine viUage
water subscribers will be billed
every three months beginning
Jan. I, 1975, to reduce the
administrative

expenses of

monthly bUiing. The billing for
January, February and March
will be made March 31.
Racine Village CouncU has

of

Veterans

USING EAR PHONES, Roxanne Groff, audiologist of the
Ohio Deparln)ent of Health, tests one of the 200 senior citizens for
hearing difficulties dW'ing the first health screening program
held Thursday in Pomeroy.

requiring that housetrailers be
underpinned and anchored'.
Any new trailers coming into
Racine must be issued a permit
by the mayor.
Billing for trash pickup wiU
be made every three months.as
of Jan. I. Those receiving the
service are to pay the charge to
the ·village clerk only. Anyone
receiving service and not

getting bills is asked to contact
Mae Cleland, clerk.

p
Veterans Memorial ~; .,· )Ita!
Admitted - Nellie Boring
Pamer~; Eugene Morrison:
Jr., Rutland:. Fred Roush,
Racine; Melvina Barnhart .
Middleport; Drexel Lambert'
Rutland; Henrietta Rut:
tencutter, Mason.
Discharged - Wllbw- Smith
Gregory Sellers, Margarei
Blankenship, Mary Gould
Johriny Gould.
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DR. GEORGE TOMA, OPTHAMOLOGIST of Ohio State
CHAMBER TO MEET
University, tested all 200 of the Meigs senior cltizena going
The Pomero~ Chamber of
through the health screening progrlll)l Thursday for glaucoma Commerce will · meet Monday
and other eye djseases. ·
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at noon at Tit• Meigs Inn.

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also passed an ordmance

Memorial Hospital and
through them the status of
same 12 body functions can be
determined. The testing of the
blood will be done by, the Ohio
Department of Health.
Personnel · of the Meigs
County Health Department
checked vision. They were
joined by an audiologist of
Logan who conducted hearing
tests. The blood pressw-e of
each of the 200 was taken and
the Meigs Home Health Service personnel, joined by state
personnel, counseled each at
the end of the testing,
discussing detected illnesses
and making referrals on fw-ther treatment as needed.
While Thursday's program,
which went on all day, was
considered highly successful, it
was anything but completed
dw-ing the day. The reports
from the state laboratory will
be retorned to the local Senior
Citizens Center and results of .
the tests will bO sent to tile
phlll!ician of each person .
(Continued on page 2)

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the UMW contract .
There was optimism in the
coal fields and elsewhere that
the miners would be back to
work before Thanksgiving.
Reports from mining coWltry
indicate that local leaders and
miners were pleased but
cautious about the tentative
agreement.
.
"I really believe we have a
good chance of getting it
ratified, said Dennis Scarford,
Secretary-Treasurer of UMW
District 31.
The
Chrysler
Corp.
rescinded plans for an indefinite layoff of 2,300 workers
at its plant in Fenton, Mo.
Republic Steel canceled a
planned SO per cent cutback in
coke operations, and a spokesman for the Chessie rail
system, a major coal hauler,
~~· the rai]J"oad had no plana
· for further layoffs unless the
miners rejected the contract .
Industrial leaders predicted
that prices of consumer goods
and electrical power would go
up in some areas as the result
of the new contract proposal.
F.G. Oenig Jr., president of
Alabama By-Products Co .,
said he could not say how much
the contract would increase the
price of a ton of coal but that he
believed the jump would be

Racine billing
goes quarterly
next January

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SHIRTS.'......... : ........ SALE •2,99

. HI&gt; and Hers Choirs. Solid colors and
' Rockers
.
patterns. All well known makes like Kroehler · Berkllne ·

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they were able to raise was
inadequate to create much
excitement.

promotion or .setting up a

bitenae

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A really fine selection ot quality chairs. Milke excellent
Chrlltmas gifts.
Recliners . Swivel
Rockers
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20 counties, including Meigs.
They traced earlier ex·
periments in 1967 when 13
counties attempted to get
together to promote tow-ism
b.ut foWld that the $9,000 which

been secured , an office' set
up in Cambridge, the
heart of the 20-county area, and
promotion campaigns have
been planned.
No money will be available to
any county for the special

exhibiting a consultant's report

Includes our entire stock of boys sport and
dr~ss shirts - boys knit shirts - boys western
sh)rts ' boys flannel shirts.
,..a ;, .•
Juvenile sizes 3 to 7. Boys sizes 8 to 20. An
excellent selection of solid colors and patterns.

Sale Price

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new program which will cover

business. One out of 20 persons

Sale! Boys' Shirts

s22.35 BAKER'S HELPERS SETS

Pontiac.

Commission ,

in the United States works in
tow-ism in the United States.
they said, as they outlined the

palgnlng spirit despite the
·defeat of many of the GOP
candidates he fought for in
October. He indicated that he
would pattern his actions after
the first president he ever met,
Harry S. Truman, and bold
Congress accountable for its
1974 mandate .
Most of the questions from
the regular White House
correspondents and the members of Sigma Delta Chi, the
professional journalists'
society, dealt with the
economy. Ford again rejected
a tax on gasoline and
repeatedly opposed wage and
price controls, caUing them
"just absolutely the wrong
approach to the solution of a
weakening economy."
Ford admitted one economic
indicator -unemployment will increase, but he said no
economist has indicated to him
that it wiU go above 7 per cent.
The way to solve the problems,
he said, is to pass his economic
proposals.
"I happen to.think we've got
two problems: a weakening
economy and inflation that's

Work~hop

RETURNSHOME
''
Criswell' 1-·--·-----·-·---·-~---+-,..,...~!~rrl
Mrs : James
returned home Tuesday after
l"'urniture Department
spending the past week in
3rd Floor
Morgantown, W. Va. with her
.·o·
'·
son-in'law and daughter, Mr.
and ~ ' Robert Custer1 their
son, Biu'l, and infant dalighter,
Jennifer Marie. James
CrisweU and Mrs. Carol McCuliough drov~ to Morgantown
for Mrs. Criswell.

FURNITURE

Meigs in tourism plan

SALE $899 SET

atRISTMAS

Q.
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7.99
8.79
9.59
10.39
10.99
11.99
12.99

combative, cam-

on attractions and possibilities
in the 20-county area, com-

Mens
- Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
·Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens

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H. E. (PETE) SlUELDS, right, Is the local representative on the new Buckeye TravelTour Project for 20 COWlties which is getting underway. Pictured with Shields are Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Frederich, directors of the program, who visited the county Thursday to outline
aspects of the new program and to personally view possible tow-ist attractions of the county.

17112.

Deluxe Big Wheel - - - - - - • - - - 13.99
Sit 'n Spin - - • - - - - - - • - 8.99
Monday Night Football - - - - - - - - - 7.99
Fisher Price Bowling Set - · - • - - - - - 5.99
Brunswick Air Hockey • - • - - - - - - 29.99
Sew Magic Sewing Center - - - - - - - • 10.99
(Includes Sewing Machine - Carrying Case
Electric Scissors anc! Sewing Material!

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ADMIRAl,/

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Includes our entire stock of mens
shirts. Knits - cut and sewn shirts flannels - westerns. A tremendous
selection. Sizes small through extra
large and dress shirt sizes 14'12 through

Twenty-two attended the
Dad and Lad Banquet of the
Ligh't and Life Men's
FeUowship of the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church held
Tuesday night at the Rock 1-~-·--,-·--·-·-,.-~-~~-·--·-·-·-· ~- ~
Spr!Pgs Grange ·Hall.
Housewares oi!piutment - 1st Floor

HEADQUARTERS
FOR

Good selection of
sizes,
styles
and
models for boys and
girls.

Men's Shirts

Sale!

BAKER

AT TOY STORE

Friday and Saturday Sale

ELECTRONIC CALCULATORS

)'

Where Shoes are
Sensibly Priced
Midd leporf, 0.

showed a

Sale! Vic Mini $49.95

'29"

HOSPITALIZAD
Mrs. Vincent Dabo has
received word of the
hoopitalization of her sister,
Mrs. Beulah Lee Hannan at
the St. Petersbw-g General
Hoopital, 6500 38th Ave., North,
St. PetersbUrg, Fla., 33713.
Mrs. Hannan wiU undergo
major sw-gery there Friday
morning.

Women
•

ON SALE!

. DRESS SLACKS

SALE POSTPONED
A rummage sale originally
scheduled for Nov. 15 and 16 by
the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club 1;.~---·-------,-·--·-~~~----~--j
has been postponed inSpecial Sale Prices
definitely. A new date for the
sale will be announced later.

A hollday bazaar and bake
sale wiU be held at the Mount
Moriah Baptist Church, Fourth
and Main, Middleport, Friday,
Nov. 22 from 10 a.m. to 2 p. m.
Soup and hot sndwicbes will be
for sale dw-ing the noon hour.
Mrs. Ann Moon Is chairwoman
of the holiday activity.

and

"

REGULAR •6.95

, ,;.

. BAZAARSLATED

Men

Slle 3.39
Silo 3.79
Slle 4.49
Slle 4.19
Slle 5.29

SALE ·PRICES ·~---·-------·--,--·-----~ Bicycles
'M-=N-s DOUBLE KNIT

The movie traced the history
of movable bridges from the
1SOO., showing the assembly of

ZZATl'END

----.------MARK V
Store, Middleport

Sale 2.99

Blouses
Blouses
Blouses
Blouses
BlouiH
Blouses

too high," Ford said. "The
proposals that I submitted -31
in number -try to meet both.
And at the moment I see no
justification for any major
revisions."
This included his "construelive proposal" of a 5 per cent
sw-tax for middle and upper
incomes, which faces a tough

PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI)
President Ford says inflation is
"starting to recede," that he
still supports his legislative
proposals for repairing the
economy, and he challenged
Congress to help do something
about it.
In a question-and-answer
session Thursday night, Ford

Special Sale Prices
.
I

Grade ASmall

doz. 49$

Knit. Tops and
Knit Tops and
Knit Tops and
Knit Tops and
··&gt;"'lti!J: 6.50 Knit Tops and
R"'.
.. 7.00 Knit Tops and
4.110
4.50
s.oo
6.00

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Inflation slowing down-Ford

KNIT TOPS AND BLOUSES - SOLID
OOLORS AND PRINTS
R19.
R19.
R19.
, Reg.

.. '.'
'

FRIDAY, NOVtMBf.R 15, 1974

SALE 5.99
SALE 6.79
SALE 7.49

.•

ELBERFELDS TOY STORE

EGGS

POMEROY-MmDlEPORT, OHIO

&gt;

We're cleaning our entire
stock of fall dresses to
make room for the holiday
dresses, pajama sets and
pant suits now arriving .

everyone in the town to share
this time of thanksgiving. The
Rev. Steve Skaggs of the
Middleport Baptist Chw-ch wiU
speak and a singing group from
the high school will present a
message in song.

MEETING SET
A meeting to organize a
Women's Missionary Union
will be at 7:30 p. m. Monday at
the Pomeroy First Southern
Baptist Church, 282 Mulberry
Ave. The meeting is open to aU
interested women.

(R)

~

REG. 1.00 PANTS
R'EG. 9.00 PANTS
REG. 10.00 PANTS

en tine

Th e Irish potato is in·
digenou s to Peru.

Devoted To 'Rte Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

Pants In Corduroy and Polyester. Solid colors, prints and
stripes.
REG . . '3.50 PANTS • - • •
SALE 2.59.
SALE 3.39
RE9. 4.50 PAt!TS
SALE 4.49
R~. 6.00 PANTS
.R. _. 7.00 PANTS
SALE 5.29
SALE S.59
RE • 7.50 PANTS

•MISSES
eJUNIORS
•HALF SIZES

Now You Know

at y

SIZES 7 TO 14

Fall Dresses

lions see film about bridges
;:
•·

'

GIRLS SPORTSWEAR

Clearance Sale

ner, host minister , invites

A film from the Meigs High
School Ubrary on movable
bridges was shown to 18
members and a guest by
Wendell Hoover when the
Pomeroy-Middleport Liops
Club met for a IWlcheon at the
Meigs Inn Wednesday.

·Saturday Sale

Partly cloudy and cold
tonight. Lows in the 20s. Mostly
cloudy and not as cold
Saturday 'with highs in the
upper 30s and the lower 40s.

'

parents may become more
familiar with subje~t matter
and school organization.
Attending -were Mrs. Judith
Cllrl, Mrs. Connie Quivey, Mrs.
Carolyn Sinclair, Mrs. Sharon
Swindell, Mrs. Jack King, Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Terry, Mrs.
Unda Pullins, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Coll&gt;urn, and Mrs. Carol
Kennedy.
The next workshop is for
Grades 4, 5, and 6, with Mrs.
Dorothy Chaney in charge,
Thursday evening, Nov . 14.

:•..Com~unity service set
:

F~day and

lberfelds In .Pomeroy

••

. Wt!Jlt~er

•·

I.

I

'1

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