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Pomeroy still wants old

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C~un.~il. under emerge~cy · .Lo $2,70;
Office Clerk whom It was asked why the
mea,II\Jfes, gave three readings bookkeeper P96 to $430 per· senior citizens rate was In·

By KATIE CROW
needs.
.
; Pomeroy Cowacll Monday
Council' agreed that.it would .
night agreed · to continue bt! better to try to secure the
earlier efforta to obtain the old older structure, but they had no
" Pcmeroy. Senior High School Intentions of paying $114,000 as
! building from the Meigs Local ·was quoted bY the school
~ School Board.
board. Snouffer contended that
~ William Snouffer asked council should · have an
afellow councilmen wha~ their alternate plan, to which
, wlahea were, to pursue early members agree!l. Council
, effortS or tO take up another indicated they would seek legal
course to obtain a new city advice on the matter.
bi111.01ftft
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In other business, cQUilcll
•
AIUifJio
,
agreed
to a request by the
SnOuffer said council might
be letting a "white elephant", . Board of ElectiO!IS, tl)at the
~ that the blilldlng w"' badly In village of Pomeroy . be ·
i need of repair and asked if they redistricted to combine voting
; had considered Its upkeep precincts and eliminate
possibly two wards.

to an 'ordinance that will 'fix
salaries and wages of employes of the water and sewage

depar~nt.

The tncre8ae In wages Is as
follows: supel'intendent from
$3. 18 to $3.50 per hour;
assistant plant supt., $2.50 to $3
per hour;· utility trainee and
operator In training, lesa than
three montha service, $2 to
$2.20; thre~ to nine months
service n,15 to $2.35; nine to 12
th servi · .., 25 to .., 50
mon · s
ce, ....
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after 12 mont" service, $2.45
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inonth; clerk of board of public .. creased more tJuln the others.
affali's $25 to $27.50 per month; It was pointed out that no other
assistant office clerk book· utility. gas water. electric, etc.
keeper $150 to $185 per month; gives a special rate to senior
secretary to mayor, $200 to $235 · citizens; also it costs just as
per month. .
much to service them as it does
COuncil also approved the a regular customer. They also
second reading of an ordinance· pointed out that they never
that will InCrease. cable TV charge for a service call and
rates. Regular customers will they definitely were not trying
be Increased $5.50 to $6,. to pick on -so to speak - the
disabled $4 to $4.50, senior senior ci~ens. They just felt it
.citizens, $3.50 to $4.50.
was a fair and just Increase.
·: ·Three representatives of Council then gave the or·
dina
its
nd
din
cable TV. met with council of
nee
seco rea g.

~enior

Council announced that
radar will be In use In the
village In the near future and
speed limits will be'' enforced.
Meeting with council was
Charles Legar who recommended, after opening bids for
fire apparatus and special
equipment, the following bids:
Allegheny Fire Equipment,
Huntington, a bid which Includes a 75011allon single stage
·front mount pump In the
amount of $21,127, and the bid
of Neil Johnson, Columbus, for
special equipment In the
amount of $2,834. Council

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agreed.
Police Chief Jed Webster's
report for the month of October
read by Mayor Dale &amp;nith
showed the department made
38 arrests, investigated 18
accidents, cllllected $3,193
from parking meters, iSsued
1,880 parking tickets and drove
5,285 miles.
The mayor's report for
October showed receipts of
$2,852.50.
It was announced that the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce wants the village to
obtain the Christmas tree from

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Deooted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1974

WASHINGn:~~~PPINE national

~beldhilcountry's•mwssadorandanothermanboetagetntheir
r,~ss~f~~u.na~~~~~~
~early tQday In relum for baviDI Ida 1$-year-oJ# son Down from

VOL XXVI NO. 1'54

'.n

By. HELEN THOMAS

States Is bringing nuclear
weapons Into Japan.
Mlnobe, elected twice to his
post with Communist and
Socialist support, said hll tried
to raise the quf(lltlon during an
afternoon courtesy call on
Ford.
"President Ford told nie he
had already talked over the
Issue with Prime Minister
Tanaka In the mornln·g ,"
Mlnobe told a news conf\!rence.
"He uld the issue was a type to
be dlscuued between govern.
meat leaders "
The mee~ with Mlnobe
was Ford's only scheduled
contact during his five-day
stay In Japan with the country's increasingly powerful left
wing opposition parties.
Seoretary ~ State Henry
Kissinger told rePorters that
Ford was pleswd HlrOhlto had
been able ·to accept the lnvitatlcln for. a U.S. visit.
'lbe Invitation was Issued
Initially when the emperor
made a ·refueling atop In
Alaska In SepteJnber of 1871
Formally clad .Sec,_.. ~ · and wu weleomed there by
11111'4 IJIITOUilded For~ and RlCihard M. Nil:.-..
belicopterl hOvered
the
Tanaka, flghtinl charges
motorca4! route.
that ·he amaued a lar1e pef•
The ohly dlutdent note sonal fo~ while! In public
sternming directly· from the office, met for two hours with
day 'a oJflcial activities was a Ford aftel' the Prelldent .
complaint by Tokyo's left wing returned to the Gelhlnkan from
governor, Ryokichl Mlnobe, his first vlsl\ to the Imperial
that Ford had refused to Ptllace.
dlseuu with him the touchy
Later Ford went to the prime
question of whether the United miliister's of'lcial residence

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JSRAELI, TROOPS STORMED INTO AN APARTMENT ·

~and

ld1led four ·Arab' perri1las who selled the 'structure.
'. 'Security farce~~ haw;sureeedlfd In wiping out the terrorist ring
and aU four have·b llb ldDed," the llraelinational radio said •.
t, The military """""net In Tel Aviv said one woman was
:.killed and wveaal tenantll of the hdklh~ wounded In the lnltlal
;:attack. It said liD additlaaal tenant·wia aJaln when the soldiers
··lltGlnlled tbe bulldlnl. Jn 8eb'ut, the PCJIIII)I!r Democratic Frcnt
'.... the I..ibefaUon of PaleltiDe took resPoPsiblllty f« the
, perrll1a raid but refused to discuss any detalll.

:WASHINGTON- WITH 11JE·NATIONWIDE COAL strike a

week old, The bargailllng cauncll of the United Mine Workers
today, resumes dellberatialll ;011 wbltblr to IUbmlt a tentatiVe
contract to rant..d.ale members far ratlfklatlon/lbe contract
review' whlch has gone slowtl'
anticipated, was unexpectedly delayed three days· after nnilll!l were lllllpellded fn
....., ol a UMW oftlcialldlled Friday.
Saamutl UttJefteld, 12,~ .. Alablma council repr•entative, .
was fa~ lbot wben he lDterrapted a holdup a~ In a motel
.room lbort1y alta" a council meetinl broke up. 'l1le l'8lll8lnine rr
council meinbefs attellded UUlefleld'•· funeral'· ·
~ lllUit approte the pact before It eail
be
.....:~bersbtP. tbe unupected delays
tile· , -:~-by U&amp;,oao, mlneN WID go' 'Into r,

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'· · CiUCAOO, ,... :ALDERMAN '1110MAS KEANE, Mayor
~ .J.)laleyis ~ 1J18i1 and pnerally nprded is
the No. J palltical power In tbe dfr, has been 11nteaced fiVe
yeara ill prilbD
$fi,Ooo for c:cnspb'aey and mall fraud.

_.tined Thomas

Keane was simply greed," u.
.8. _J;)IItrlct Colli'\ Judie Berllard Decker told a packed courtroom
MGodaj befare "'"n1 the l!llltence. "I do not expect that any
sen~ ~ today wiJI rehabWtate the defendant ... Mr.
·KMDe ill• ,.an ol4~8QCI his peraonallty ill pretty well formed,"
·~frailty nhlbtied

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Clar tell~ why Bengals are Winners

• ....'If any benefit Is to ccme.ol this ~. It will be to show
tbat
violation of public trust wiJI carry with It more than
pabUc dl.tll:lce aDd lola ol polition." Keane, who has -:"eee 29
yeara in tbe Cblcalo City Council and was coasldered the mOlt
powcilful pollt&amp;c:lan In O!ic:aP next to Dal,ey, was corivlc:tMby a ,
lederal court jury last IDOilth. He had been a~ Of secretly
t.ayq up lim dlllnquent Iouth Side ~ lntJuenciJII the aty
Council to~Nft&amp;fl~~-.wementaCIII theprilpeatles, then
...ntng tbe land~ eltJ ~at p-eat profit.
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. - WASHING'I'ON . _ 'I'REI SENATE RtJIES OOMMI'ITEE
p1af!1 to Mad NeJsPp ..._ Roe!refelJer'l nomlJI!Itlm as vice
pr 1d:deat to the full Sel!lte this ~ ~ ~ members
are ltill not 11tlsfled with the aplaliatloii'fl fU mllllon In gifts
.~De~ 1oan1 to public olflclali. aailrmaD Howad Cannon, D-Nev.,
llld·tbe pc!plll'lttee ,rO\Ild meet W~ for ,what was exjeeted to be uuni!!IC!IJI appro9al ol Rockefelkir. "I expect to
· for tbe IMII!Instion," Cannon tald a~rs. •
,
, 'lbe ~ Mnmlttee vote wiJI ~bq, ccme Tlmsday or
frkky, but It Will be next·Tueaday lilt-. the cMurdttee's final
~ill ready, aDd there may not be time far a Senate vote on .
Rocbfelllr llefcJft TbanlnilfviJII. Senate Democratic Leader
MQre Mandeld has bidlcatecl the Senate could tate acdoai on
Rockefeller before the 'lblnksglviJII rece11 bellnl Thurlday .if ·
committee •pproves tbe nomlnatian this week.

a.wiDflll

By DenDy, Fobes
Monday was long day for
Wayne Clark.
The backup quarterback of
the Cincinnati Bengals started
it by fiylng to Ohsrleston where
he addressed· a , dinner, f91'
businessmen, replacing the
injured tight end Bob Trumpy.
Monday evening, the 27-yearold sig~l C1Jller ·filled in . for
another mjured tiger, this time c
speaking · ,at ' the . Meigs
Marauder football banquet for
' Injured offensive center and
captain Bob Johnson.
Both Johnson and Trumpy
were causualtles of · the
Bengals' 20-3loss Sunday to the
Oilers in the Astrodome.
And Clark gave a refreshing
twist to the usual long, drawn
out. banquet presentati!)n by
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD has asked, telling a few jokes ("I don't
AmerleaDI to cut their normil sugar Intake In balf • a means ot know )\ow I got here, or even
w.here I am,".) and then began
.....tlul riiiDc ..... p&amp;W.
.
Jn a IUtement lnued In Washlnlton Monday Ford, whO was his taik by opening up the fioor
·
~tilll Ja~. lncreiwd.the lmpcrl quota - the mulnium for questions.
And the questions poured In,
IIDIUit ol ~ tbat can·be llpDy Imported Into the United
· 8tatal - tO 7 mU!Jm l!bort tGIII.In 11175. 'l1le quota this year was ranging from what Bengal
1.7 m!llm tGIII. FOrd coupled Ida plan for COiliUIIIII' reltnilnt head coach · and general
witb a c,..clllcated foniln trade acUon aimed at~~ · manager Paul BrOWn is really
, ~ at home and oPenlnl tbe lucrati.ve U. S. m.aatet to like to whom he thinks Is the
toughest team In the NFL.
8lmoat aD 111111' aportera, not juat a favored few,
·
Here are a few of Clark's
'
observations in answer to
questions he was asked:

a.e

··Vehicles collide
=.~::.~r~. ::~~~lnj:~:u: Holiday
O..ter Tonlblp on ,SR 7.

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cla~Da,e to both vehicles.
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·What
brought
about
Houston's turnaround - "We
lefthem get away with murder
up here and they started
~lie~ they could win. A new
ctefenllve wrinkle has helped,
a)ong with the acquisition of
Curly Culp. They're riding a
ho~ streak now. We Peaked last
week ...
The Bengals - "What I find
really fascinating about the
Bengal team is the belief It has
1n its own ability."
Paul Brown - "He's not an
emotional man per se,
only If a player Isn't
giving It his all . Tries
to deal squarely with his
ball players. A tremendous
organizer. A good judge of
talent. His record speaks for
Itself. .Brown does most of his
coac.!Jing
through
his
assiKtants. Calls very few
plays."
Isaac Curtis - Ii he stays
healthy, he'll be. one 'or the
premier receivers, In the NFL.
Good football sense. There are
lots of fast receivers, but many
don't have that football sense
and the great' hands that Isaac
has."
:c
World FootbaJl League - "I
hope It makes · It, a players'
market. I think they're raping

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the.public by some of the things physicians; Shorty Hackett,
· they try to pass off on the Don Wilson and Bill Childs of
public and call professional the camera crew; Rev. Wilbur
football." ··Perrin who decorates the
Ken Anderson - "One of the Marauder Stadiilm field, and
finest quarterbacks .In the Bob Roberts and George
game, both as a person and as Nesseiroad who ol&gt;erate the
a quarterback."
scoreboard at home games.
NFL players• strike - · "It
Chancey then lntrod!JCed the
~d a dramatic effect on our varsity cheerleaders, Demaris
team. But we have great Ash, Merri Ault, Del&gt;l Bailey,
rapport. It's pretty much Sandy Curtis, April Fraser and
forgot~n."
·.
Diana Smith; the reserve
· Clark, married and the cheerleaders, Mary. Blaettnar,
father Of two children, is a Jenl Grate, Jayne Hutchison,
graduate of United States Pam North, Melanie Simmons,
International University In San Becky Thomas; the 'varsity
Diego, and was an eighth round coaching staff consisting of
draft choice of the San Diego · Fenton Taylor, Don Dixon,
Chargers In 1970.
John Bentley and Mike Barr,
Clai'k, who came to the freshman coich Roger, Brauer,
Bengals last year In a trade for assistant freshman cciach for
Virgil Carter, added that he Sam Crow and John Arnott and
thought Pittsburgh and John Krawsczyn, coaches of
Washington were two of the the seventh and eighth grade
toughest teams In the NFL.
teams .
Clark's talk was follo\ved by
Chancey then Introduced the
Marauder head coach Charley freshman and varsity football
Chahcey's Introduction, of the squads.
cheerleaders, ·coaching staffs
Nolan Swac~r again
and varsity and reserve served as the master of
football teams. .
ceremonies, With the Rev.
Coach Chancey also ex- Stave Skaggs giving the In·
pressed his thanks to several vocation and the Rev. Robert
people, Including Dr. Rankin Kuhn the benediction . .
R. Pickens and Dr. Roger
Robert Bumgar'ner,
Daniels, the Meigs team

president of the Mlddlepart •
Pomeroy RoW'&gt;' Club which
sponsored the banquet,
welccxned everyone and the
dinner music was provided by
Mrs. Christine Guthrie on the
'
organ.
(Continued on pqe 3)

for a luncheon.
Kissinger said Tanaka and
Ford had an extensive discussion of the energy crisis, an
important topic to Japan
because that nation must
Import vlrtually all of its oil.
He said Japanese officials
Viewed with "sympathy" the
problems confronting the oilCOIIIIllninl nations and that
Tanaka 1191Dted out Japan's
&amp;pedal problems In view of Its
heavy dependence on oil for
industrial purpoaes.
Ford, he said, stressed that
U.S. plans for reducing oil
imports were "not Intended to
lead to a confrontation with the
producers, but rather to lead to
a dialogue with consumers."

Jeffers awaits
sentencing by
Meigs coUrt
· John RoiSert Jeffers, . who
p•ded guilty In Common
Pleas Court Nov. 14 to unlawful
tnspau on to the property of
Ruth
Ellen
Story at
Burlingham, is free on his own
recogljlzance pending sentencing, according to the
Sheriff's Dept.
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach said his department
and Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms officers of the
Federal Government arrested
Jeffers, 22, of 122 Butternut '
Ave., Pomeroy on Nov. 6 and
charged him under Section
2911.13 of the ORC, following a
b!Jl"glaey of the Story home
Dec. 27, 1973, when a couple
thousand dollars of furniture
and antiques were stolen. · A
pre-eentence Investigation is
being made, pel}dlng sentence.

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prornotif!n ·will begin
Monday wi~h parade in Pomero

'l'lmotby GIWM, 17. Olester.
truck, were
on 7. 'l'be a.;k
VeteraaMemertalHoepltal
ftldcle wu between tlie
ADMITI'ED - Stacy 0'111,
, ll:bealilb6c:h car and Gillian's PorUand; Reva J&gt;atterson,
track.
Rutland; Debbie Pridemore,
Alllle Ebalbodl car went to Rutlalld.
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.... llftCilloa..,.....,otCIIIthe
,DISCHARGED - Jack
berm, Ollhn aUemptecl to Sinlth, Sarah Dunn, John
~
&lt;lark Maya, AHce Jolntoa, Irene
...., ..... dae to tbe
Runell, Marvin Doddrtn, lAJla
. teiJiele
was
lillable
•to
ace
t1le
·
Robins
...,. ~ on tile Ebenbaeh
on, Lee H......_
""""' Kim 1
ear._and Ida lradteol'llcled with liolter.
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,clrblna 11, p6ckvp

TEN CENTS

UPI White Rouse Reporter
TOKYO (UPI) - Emperor
Hirobito formally welcomed
President Ford to Japan today
In colorful ceremonies unspoUed by protest demonstrations, and accepted frcxn Ford
an llivltation to visit the United
States next year.
Ford drove with Hlrohito
through streets lined with
politely cheering crowds to the
centurieHld Imperial Palace,
then spent two hours
dlsc1o.ulng the energy crisis
with politically troubled Prime
Minister Kakuel Tanaka before
returnlnl to the palace for a
banquet given by the emperor.
WideSpread traniport strikes
protesting Ford'• visvi affected some 7.8 mllliQn
travelers across Japan.
But other threatened mass
demonstrations failed to
materialize, and Ford did not
see a single protester during
his first 24 hours In Japari.
. Some 15,000 security IIWlls
protected the two leaders.

~:bulldlnlln the northern Jaoaell town ol Belt Shean early Tuesday

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Hirohito .will visit U. S. next.: year

._,.land;
....,.m.

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E. E. Follrod, Naylo!'ll Run.
The mayor also reported that
payments on boat docks are not'
being made; only three persons on the list of boat , dock
users have made ·payments.
Council said to send them
statements for the amount due.
Attending were Mayor
Smith, Ralph Werry, Lou·
. Osborne , Snouffer , Harry
Davis, Phil Globokar, and John
Manley, council members;
Jane Walton, clerk; Phyllis
Hennessy, tl'ea surer;
representatives of cable TV,
Chief Webster and Legar.

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Maalla to the Unltell States. Napoleon I.echoeo, desperate to
;bring' the last of Ida seven cblldren to tbe Unitecl'States, seized
1Amhlln'Mklr ' f,duardo z. RDmUaldez, M, and another man
Monday aftlnoan.
He beJd tbem In the embr"'"'~'s oftlce until he was assured
lby Prellclont Fnhumd Marcos tbat Ids son would be put on a 5
i:a.m. EST fU&amp;bt In llan!la today .. He threw Ida pistol out a wtn.
~dow at about 2 am. aDd releued the tWo holtages, whjj were
tdelerlbed as -lbaken but.unhurt. .
'lbe FBI Ida ested Lecboco, a law clerk acUve In civic affairs
•In
·and saki federal cbarges were being prepared
him, altboop tbe Pbl1lpplne 1overnment said It would
•not proeecute. An arraltplment was planiled later In the momtn1.
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Pomeroy will olflda11y welcome the holiday season with a .pronlotion ww bello with the parade and end Dec. 24.
,
Clrlstmas parade !leU Monday, Nov. 25 at 7 p.m. MOlt stol'es
'lbeflratfourdrawlnpwiJI be Nov. 30, Dec. 7, 14 and a! at 1
Will remain open until tbat haur.
'
p.m., eadl worth $25, but aeparated Into • certificates from five
BID Ander1011, cbaJrman ol theOirlstntas Coounlttee, of the . clfferent at«es.
Pomeroy Olamber ol CGmmerce laid 21 merchants (so far) are
'lbe grand prile, a COIIIOie CGior TV, drawing will be held
particlpatlnc In the annual Gelid Star OJriitmas Give-away. Dec. 2ht 1 p.m. Each pmiclpatlnc merchant will receive 500

Merdumtl have 111!t11 DOOI! '11lunday to join.ln tbe pJ'OII'am,
Anderaan tald the chamber foUowinlitB noon hulcheon at the
MelplmMonday.Ail~tlnlmerchantslntheChristmas
promot!m lllUit.be ..........._ ol the chamber;
__,....."' to persoJW 13 years of age and
• Tlc:kets- will be clltrtbuted
older. ' No ~ , Is neceuary to feeelve a ticket. The

tleketslnitlallyandasmanymoreasneededfcrt$per1,000.
BIG'CATal..-c&gt;R IJm.E GUY- Four-year.Gid 9eGWe
'lbe nlerc:h!ant In• i tn1111~ pays f• town decoraUons, hirlnl
Wllllaml,lon ol Mr. and Mra. Robert Williams, RarrlsanvlDe
Santa and cmlstmn candy, $400wortb ol advertising, Window
Clrdl, prizes .00 the lniUaliOO Ueketl. No person will be per- · area, landed a 4~,t lb. large mouth bnl at a pond located on
m!ttecl to win more than
orie_ .,.
-'••.
Owners and .managers of
.·the family farm. Scottie doeen •t depend on Dad to get his .
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1
bait, he dip his own worms.
(Continued on .pqe 12)

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2- The DaUY Sentinel, Mi,ddleport-Pomeror, 0 ., Tuesday ; Nov. 19, 1974

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AU.t9 industry in .Crisis
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By RICHARD ·HUGHES
ments :
UPI Buslnea1 Writer
- The stock market suffered
As autos .go so gQe&amp; t,he U.S. Its worst one-day loss In 11
economy. And Ute auto . in- montlls. The Dow Jones indusdustry Is on Ute verge of a trial average plunged 22.89 to
1930s-type del!J;esslon, .. ac- 624.92 on the New York Stock
cording to top · company and • ~xchange.
union executives and · the
- U.S. Chamber of Com·
mayor of beleagured Detroit. merce president Arch Booth .
The warning came following said In Cincinnati tbat inflation
a meeting Monday between Is "beginning to weaken a little
Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lynn bit" but recession is "likely to
Townsend United Auto Work- grow slowly and steadily worse
ers President Leonard Wood- until Ute middle of next year,
cock and Detroit; Mayor
Coleman A. YOUI!g.
They agreed at . a news
conference tllat only -action .
from WaJihlngton coulil stem
layoffs nearing depression era By BRUCE W. MUNN
levela in Ute auto industry.
UNITED NATIONS (UPI)"Washington has forgotten Arab nations moved to Une up
how critical this industry is In General Assembly support
Ute U.S. economy," WOOdcock today for twin resolutlons
·urging
repatriation
of
said.
"What happens to this indus- Palestinian refugees and
try in Detroit ill going to permanent representation of
happen to thi! rest .·of the Ute region's leading guerrilla
economy If It ill not stopped," group.
said Young.
. Diplomatic sources
The M;otor Vehicle Associa· predicted passage of both
tion estimates the jobs of one measures by overwhelming
out of every six persons in Ute margins this week before the
country Is directly or indirectly assembly winds up Its historic
related to ~ auto industry.
debate on Palestine.
Thousands~! workers, from
'J:i;gypt, baclied by all 20 Arab
rubber ' workers to new ' car delegatlcins, was expecied to
salesmen ~ have heen thrown Introduce the main resolution
out of work in Ute wake of the . today, calling .on Ute assembly
worst new-au selling period in to affirm Ute right of Palestlnl·
a decade or more.
ans, !o self-determination.
Young and Woodcock met
Egyptian Foreign Affairs
wltll Townsend. to discuss th!! Secretary Anwar . San! was
impact of a furtller reduction in scheduled to go before Ute
Chrysler's production to allow as8enibly with the elght.polnt
car dealers to move a four· measure, which also calls for
montll backlog of pnsold 1975 the immediate repatriation of
cars.
'
Palestinian refugees displaced
Townsend said there will be by Ute creation of Israel.
"substantial-plant closlngs't to
'Diplomatic sources said the
trim 50,000 cars ·from fourth-- Arab resolution would give Ute
quarter production. Howe.ver, Pal~na ,.Juthority "to athe said, the finn would not shut lain tlleir rlglita by all means at
down completely for Ute month tllelr disposal" In accordance
of December, as was specula- witll U.N. principles,
The sources said Ute second
ted.
The Big Three automakers resolution, urging permanent
have nearly 100,000 workers on obaerver status for the Pales-.
temporary · or Indefinite tine Liberation Organization,
layoffs.
would have a . far--reaching
Gerieral Motors and Ford impact on other regions of Ute
Motor Co., as well as Chrysler, world.
anticipate idling thousands
They said Ute resolution,
more in Ute next few weeks, expecied to be Introduced later
The Industry has a record 116- in the week, would give Ute
dily · supply of unsold cars. PLO the right to parUdpate in
Chrysler has twice tllat.
all U.N. debates and conferenln other economic develop- ces.

Berrys World

.

maybe longer."
in Zurich and $190.50 in Lon- Federal Trade Com- dOn. At Ute Same time, Ute U.S.
missioner Mayo J . Thompson doll;n- fell. to a new low In
told a Cl)ngressionalc;op~mittee Zurich and slumped elsewhere.
that price-fixing adds UO
- Housing starts in Oclnber
billion a year to the price of of of 1.124 mJIIlon units were
conswner goods. He said Ute the lowest since January, 1970,
FTC should concenlcate on Ute Census Bureau said. And
rolling back some of these an economist· for the housing
"Illegally Inflated prices."
Industry said unemployment in
-The price of gold hit record , Ute building lcades, now 12.2
levels in Europe, reaching per cent, wiU rise to about 16
$19:;.03an ounee in Paris, 190.75 per cent by January.

i.

'

UN in·d~ath struggle
Although the motlon only
Ute PLO, diplomatic
dlsc'/S&amp;ions Indicated It would
apply to all llberatlon movements around the world.
The move would open Ute
door for guerrilla groups from
Africa, Asia and Latin
America to gain a permanent
voice against the arguments of
establlahed govemmeniB.
"Its passage would raise a
serious questlon whether Ute
men~ons

United Nations would last
through the 1970s," one delegate from a developing nation
remarked cynically in private
conversatlon.
Assembly President Abdelaziz Boutefllka of Algeria
has set a Thursday night
deadline for ·ending the
Palestinian debate. Twentynine nations have already
spoken, but 55 were still to he
heard.

UtesamedayHunt .llndtlle~

•

of Ute "Watergate Seven" went
on trial for the crime: '

COLUMBUS ( UPI)-State
Rep. Norman A. MurdOck, Ranclnnati, said Monday he
would recommend formation of
a joint legislative committee to
determine whetller Ohio nursing homes shOuld be granted an
!!\&lt;tension of Ute Jan. 1 deadline
for lnsta!Ung sprinkler systems.
~ At Ute same Ume, Murdock
said, his proposed committee
'·would serve as .a "watchdog"
bver state agencies involved, to
Utat nurshing homes
'C&lt;mply as rapidly as possible.
Murdock, who sponsored the
1972legislation requiring sprinkler systems in nur.sing hOmes,
said · he was "horrified" to
discover more tllan half Ute
lnatitUtlons have taken no
action to comply.
The Cincinnati lawmaker
presided over a meeting of
representatlv.es of nursing
home ·associations, Ute state
Healtll Depariment, Ute sprln:
kler Industry and the state fire
marshall's office.
. "There's no doubt In my
mind tllat we really have a
crisis on our luinds In regard to
eoo~pllance witll this law,"
Mii'aifck aald, pointing out Utat
the nurshing homes were given
two years to get ·sprinkler
eystems in operation.
"I for one am not of a mind
to relax these standards," he
said.
G.T. Dalton, president of the
Ohio Healtll Care Assoclatloii,

represnUng some 200 nursing
homes, said .between 350 and
400 of Ohio's 1,100 !lnmes would
be in compliance by Jan. 1.
Dalton said . the CO!Jt 01
Sprinkler systems, "light
money" and just plain procrastination caused the lack of
compliance.
"Are you saying Utere were
nursing homes which had no
intention of complying Witll the
law?.-' asked Murdock.
"In my oplnjon, yes,'' answered Dalton.
'
"Do they expect Ute government to turn its back, or do
IIley expect IIley will have to
close down?' ' asked the lawmaker.
"They are ·going to close
down," replied Dalton.
"Where will the elderly
people go who are In need of
care?"
"Probably to county homes
and places !Ike this."
•
"Can the · c&lt;iullty homes
handle Ute extra lond?"
"No, and tllat's what scares
us," said Dalton.
There were suggestions tllat provlslonallicensee be granted
to nursing homes which show
Intentions of. c&lt;mplylng but
cannot make Ute · Jan. 1
deadline.
If you are lonely and want
some neighbors to call, just
start to take a bath.

Program proposed by NFO
to .buy surplus food, send
to hungry.people of·world

8"'
bm
blu
lo
!fl~
-!!8

lv
5".U

on

~Clark

ll

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Will having a Qhort. . i~g, causing ·
you please explain "Lum- abnormal
posture
and
bago?" Many people seem to · muscular strain, , to a
suffer from It and II&gt; become protruding (sUpped) disk.
involved in all ' sorts of un- Degeneration of Ute spine witll
necessary and futile efforts at new abnormal bone growtll. or
diagnosis and treaiment. .
spur formation may CBUR
DEAR READER ' ::.. , Llim· pressure or nerves resulting in
bago is not a m'edlcal term. It is pain.
·. used tolabelpainln the 'lumbar
There is no way to te)l'what
spine or muscular region. The. Ute. cause Is Wltllout a searchlumbar spine Ia Utat small ing examination. Then Ute next
section of tlu! spine between Ute step Is .to correct ihe un.bottom of Ute chest and the derlylng cauae. You can get
pelvis. It is the "small 9( ' the· inunedlate relief In some cases
back/'
wiUt heat' ·and medicines to
Pain in this a;ea is usually ' relax muscle spasm, but·this is .
from cramped or · con)l',c~ only temporary. Unless tile
muscles. Thts can be ·frj)ffi a underlying cause Is determuscular "strain" or from an niined and step8 'taken to
abnormality In Ute spine Itself. correct It, Ute problem ill apt to
A careful examination has to. OC&lt;;Ul' again .
be don~ to find out why tllere Is · l'd~ike to men lion Utat not all
pain.. Thill cao · vary from ~ack pain Is from Ute muscles'

'

'

•
I

.•
enable pregna;•cy when she Is
first born. It Is said tllat Ute
assume that back ,pain means older the cells the more likely
"lumbago."
tbere will be a problem.
DEAR OR. ~- I am 36
However, many women have
and have been married for babies even at the menopause
several years. We don'-t have . age, and Ute babies are perany children but would love to. fecUynormal. So there Is no set
I'm .over-weight but am trying rule.
desperately to lose. What. I
·A woman does have more
-want to know Is, am I too old to difficulty tOo with a pregnancy
·have my first child? If not, as she gets older ..There is no
what is Ute oldest age you hard and fast rule on tllat
wouldsuggestforhavlngafirst eitller. One woman may be in
child?
·better health 'than Ute next so
DEAR READER - No, you• that has to be determined inare not too olci. i have known dividWilly.
.
wotnen who had Uteir first
You should find out If you are
child when they were paat olll. able to get pregnant by letting
It's true that there Is sQme your doctnr l!l[amine· you ·and
increase in cbancei of having a perhaps run some, tests. But, If
baby witll some ·Problems as you and your huilband are able.
. you get older. A woman has all to ha-'e a child you cer~lnly
the cells Uta! will 'form ova and . are not too .old. Good luck. or U,lesplne. EvenspasUc colon
can calllle back pain ..Don't just

Chiefs

'

VOURS:
·
-.
SHOT
,

,. l

'•\

'.~

;~!~U:.
.
~~coau:~
what upset Bo Schembechier

last year," Stolz said. "He
,
·• 4&gt;·Utought he could go to the Rose
- Bowl on a tie."
Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes probably doesn't have to
worry about such possibllitles
tills year, because-· his team
needs to win.
Get an ln-Sink-Erator
"tt's no secret what this
disposer. The strong,
game means," Hayea said.
The Ohio State coach, almost
silent type.
In a serene mood, . said his
71
3U
333-SS
Buckeyes are "on· the upswing" from their loss to
Michigan State, but he ex·
pressed rare respect for
Michigan.
Elsewhere Monday, ~e
Coacli Alex Agase learned that
· starling guard Tom Gibson will
miss the 81111UBI season-ending
game witll Indiana because of
• a lmee ailment. Iowa Coach
BobCommlngs gaye his team a
day off following .a dismal
Injury report from -Saturday's
. 112-d . . .
...tleiuuv..,, 'If. Vo.
36-10 loss to Ohio State.

ii

SAYRE :
HARDWARE

\

'

•

DENVER (UP!) - Kansas
City Coach Hank Stram
Utought he was ·reliving the
psst Monday night.
"The way things happened In
Utat game, you would hav'l
Utought It was the days of the
old American Football LA!&amp;·
gue," said Stram, who has
coached Ute Chiefs since Ute
AFL began play In 1960 and the
team vias known as the Dallas
Texans.
CLARK .TELLS INSIDE STORY - Wayne Clark, for·
Things happened the way
merly of the San Diego Olargers; backup quarterback with
Stram wanted Utem to as his
Ute Cincinnati Bengals, fielded questions from fans and
team knocked off Denver, 42players Monday night ai the al)llll81 Rotary Club football
34, scoring 16 points in Ute first
banquet at Meigs High. At left Is Mary Chancey, wife of Head
· five minutes of Ute second half
Football Coach Charles Chancey .
to turn a 21-17 Denver halftime
lead into ll 33-:n Chiefs lead.
· "It was really wild, just !Ike
Ute old days," Stram said,
Starcher, George Carper, Ken remembering the days when
Randy George, Rick George, .Wyant, Mick Davenport, Mitch hili team' beat the BroiiCOil by
Skip Imboden, Dan Buffington ,
Olapman, Bill Stewart, Bob such scores as 5Z-21, 49-39 and
Jim Howard, Brenlen Seth, :wmtamson,
Bru·ce Reed , 311-24.
John Blake, Rick Johnson, Dan
Phil
Denver buUt a 21·17 halftime
~rrison, Steve Pickens, Dave ·orrion Blanchard,
Ohlinger
and
Mike
Owens.
lead
as roolde Jon Keyworth,
M1ller, Jlm Clark: G~ry
·
:Managers
Butch
Roush
·
startlng
his first game, bulled
George, Wayne ~otter~ll, M1ke
his way over from a yard out
Haley, Ray Willford . Stan :ai'd Jeff Reuter.
for touchdowns twice In the
...
first half and Charley Johnson,
who came within two yards of
Denver's single gillne record
by hitting :IIH!f-42 paases for
•
•
•• 4
446 yards, threw 11 yards to
'
BiUy Van Heusen for a touchdown.
Kansas aty scored in Ute
first quarter on a Utree-yard
Len Dawson to Ed Podolak
pass, a two-yard run by
J\1jN ARBOR, Mjch. (UPI) eyes; 1971 and 1969, tllelr Podolak in the second period
--: The general "e~tlon has triumph . and perfect season and a 41-yard Jan Stenerud
lieen over for •two weeks but was spolled by a loss in Ute field goal.
Then came the change of
Coach Bo Scileffibed!ler of Rose Bowl.
"We've got to win this game events.
Michigan Is still worried about
becauseltmeanseverything to
Denver's Oliver Ross
votes.
.
fumbled the second-half
The votes lie's concerned us," Schembechler said.
Last year's match wound up kickoff on his own 12 and the
about wiU be cast Sunday-the
day after Michigan plays Ohio 1n the celebrated 1()-10 tie that Chiefs' Cleo Miller recovered.
State-to see which team goes sent Ohio State to the West Two plays later, Woody Green
Coast for the second straight fumbled and Denver's Bill
to Ute Rose Bowl.
"I'm nat looking forward to year-on the basill of a vote by Laskey recovered at the one.
On Denver's first play,
this coming to a vote," Ute Big Ten Alhletic directoc-s.
The declslon made Schem· Johnson threw long and lncomSchembechler said Monday at
· his weeklY press luncheon. "I bechler furious and his fury plete. On Ute next play, eightflgurewe'\le got to win or tle to brought one minor change in year veteran Wlllle Lanier
Ute way Ute vote Is conducted caught Denver'• Otis Armgo to Ute Rose Bowl."
"I would prefer some sort of but which could work in his · ' strong in Ute end Zone for a
setup before Ute game is favor should the Buckeyes win. safety.
. · Kansu Qty took the ensuing
played . where , a vote Isn't a close gallll!.
The Wolverines are 7~ in Ute free kick and zipped 49 yards,
possible," he said. "I've said
conference to Ute 6-llog of Ute witllDawson tlr~wlnl36yards
tllat before."
Mlchigim, Z.Z-1 against Ohio Buckeyes but Ohio State baa to Otis Taylor for a touchdown.
State alnce Schembechler took gone to Paaadena., Calif., two After the Chlefa held Denver on
Utree downs, Podolak returned
over, has cllncbed at least a straight years.
A dislocated shoulder to . a Van Heusen punt 54 yards to
share of Ita fifth ·straishi Big
Ten crqwn and goes into this quarterback Dermis Franklin, Ute Denver 17. On Ute first play
game undefeated for Ute fifth Schembechler felt, influenced from ·scrimmage·, Green
Ute voting last year and hla scored.
time in a row. ,
senior
.signal caller w an
The Chlefa added a 36-yard
But the two tlmJ!s the
Wolverines defeated the Buck· Injury ·to take Into Ibis year'•

Must Win
to
.
go We~t--Bo

g&amp;!De.

~

Hun,ry KUla?

Don't .4.-,ue

Fast Family Snaclls Here .
lt's ·lrierdiy and oconomicol; 1111ick

and divenilled - OI\OU9h to satisfy
..,.erybod'('s mood and appetite. See ,
our g'lorlous menu .

NOW OPEN
Sundly-10 A.M. lv ll P.M.
MoD lllru Thun.-o A.M. lv11 P.M.
Fri . &amp; Sot_, A.M. lv I A.M.

,

..

By GENE CAD DES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) It's hard to imagine Ohio State
Coach Woody Hayes cutting
cake arxl serving It In newsmen
Ute week of the Michigan
game, or, for that matter, any
week.
But, t!lere he was Monday,
old unpredictable Woody cutting the cake and passing It on
In Ute assembled press.
"Boys, that's good cake,"
said Hayes as he licked Ute
frosting from his fingers .
"Here, pass Ulis down."
After devouring his portion,
Hayes got to Ute meat of Ute
meeting -Saturday's battle
witll Michigan for the Blg Ten
title, Rose Bowl trip arxl a
possible national championship.
"It's no secret what this
game means,'' Hayes said, and
. he was right.
If Ute Buckeyes win, It means
IIley gain a share of the Big Ten
title with Michigan . It would
also force Ute conference's
athletic directors lo make a
tough decision on who would
get the Rose Bowl bid, and·
certainly propel the Buckeyes
back lntn the middle of the
battle for Ute nati01J8l cham·
plonshlp.
A Michigan win would give
Ute Wolverines a sp~~~"kllng 11~
recard, the outright conference

tes.
"We played a great second
half at Iowa," Hayes said. "I
Utlnk we're on our way back
after a couple of do-im weeks."
·For one thing, Ute offense got
going against the Hawkeyes
wheri 11-4, 252-pound senior
tackle Kurt Schumacher entered Ute game.
· Schumacher, an all-Blg Ten
selection last year and a
potenUal all-American, sat out
Ute Michigan State game with

Capt. Johnson
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The officials said late Monday Utat
Bengals are battered.
x-rays sllll had been lnconAnotller Cincinnati starter elusive.
has been lost for Ute season and
The future of running back
a handful of oUter players are Doug Dressler also was in
nursing painful injuries.
doubt. Dressler suffered a
The latest casualty is center bruised Utlgh early In Ute game
and offensive captain Bob and was unable to return.
Johnson - lost for the rest of
"I lcied to play after I got
Ute season with a fractured left it," recalled Dressler. "But at
ankle.
·•
one point I started to get dizzy
'Johnson, the first player 'ever and sick' In my stomach. The
drafted by the Bengals In 1968, blood was all rushing to my leg
had never been seriously and the bruise was hemorrlnjured until Sunday's game at haglng."
Houston.
Noted Brown, 11 DOW we've
The former all-American at lost two fullbacks. " Dressler
Tennessee was hurt when Ire had been starting in place of
was clipped on a punt return Bobble aark, who wa! lost for
play in the Oilers' 20-3 victory: Ute season two weeks ago witll
Before the extent of John· a broken hand.
son's Injury was known, coach
Also Sunday, cornerback
Paul Brown had said, " If Bob's Lemar Parrish suffered a
ankle Is broken, we 're in severely bruised shoulder.
"They were dropping like
trouble."
Johnson will be replaced at flies out Utere," sighed Brown.
center by Howard Fest.
The Bengals, who a montll
Several oUter Bengals came · ago boasted a 4-1 record, have
back battered from Sunday's now lost Utree of Ute last five
lackluster performance.
games and their playoff
Receiver Bob Trumpy got chances are up In the alr. Road
cracked in the mouth and games remain wltll Miami and
although it was feared hts jaw Pittsburgh.
Cincinnati tries to Improve on
may have been broken Bengals
'
its 11-4 mark against Kansas
city here Sunday.

field goal late In Ute tl1lrd
quarter and another touchdown in Ute final period on a
one-yard Wendell Hayes run.
Sandwiched around Hayes'
run were Denver scores on
Keyworth's third one-yard
plunge with two seconds gone.
in the fourtll quarter and a
four-yard pass from Johnson to
Otto Stowe witll 7:50 to play.
"The safety was the key,"
said Stram, "because It gave
us the point combination \bat
forced Denver to go after two

scores/'

The win gave Kansas Qty a
4-6 record and dropped Denver .
to 4+1, ellmlnatlng Ute Broncos' ·hopes for a wUd card
be rUt.
Kansas City's ~yards total
offense marked the first time
in the last four games Ute
Chlefa have had less Utan 400
yards but only Ute second time
IIley have won.
'

.

For Your Dining
and Listening
.
Pleasure .••

GE·O . HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS
\'

TONIGHT 8:00 TO 12:30

.The MEIGS, INN
. Ph. 992-3629

championship, a sure trip to
Ute Rose Bowl and a mighty
good chan~ . In claim that
national title.
Hayes thinks Michigan,
coached by former OSU assistant Bo Schembechler, is an
improving team.
"It would appear they are
getting better," Hayes said of
Ute Wolverines. "They have
run up pretty big scores in two
of Ute last Utree games."
But, Ute Buckeye·coach also
said he felt hls team was ready ·
to go "on the upswing" after a
couple less tllan spectacular
performances, one of which
resulted in a 16-13 loss at
MichigGn State .
Against Iowa Saturday, Ute
Buckeyes struggled to a 14--10
halftime margin, but came
back _, slrong witll tllree tnuchdowns in Ute second half and
also got a good defensive
performance the last 30 minu-

Bengals lose

-

Franklin waa sub-par Utree
weeks in 8 row witll a sprained
left ankle and he reinjured It in
Ute third quarter o( Mlchlgan'l
51~ srnallhing of Purdue Ialit
Saturday after appearing
nearly 100 per cent In Ute first
balf.
SChembechler said Franklin
was okay but would play "lf be
only had one leg" anyway. ·
Middle llneba~ker Steve
Stril*o suffered a lmee injury
against Ute Boilermakers but
was also expected I!) be ready.
Saturday.
Both "would have been b8ck
in there If the game was cloee
and the oukome In doubt," tbe.
coach said,

•

,.

outla.s t

CHICAGO
(UP!)
tllird place behind Ute SpSrtans
Michigan Coach Bo Schem- witll another defeat. .
bechler thinks hls secondBut a Buckeye vlptory would
ranked Wolverines will have to Utrow Utlngs·· into 11\e same
beat, •or at least tie third- turmoil as last year.
ranked Ohio State In SaturThere wiU bo a vote regar·
day's Blg Ten tltle showdown If dless, ·the athletic directors
IIley want to go to tiMi Rose decided In a joint telephone
•Bowl.
conve~Q&amp;!lon Monday. They
Even if the Wolverines lose, · sidd thilt'if Mlcl!lgan defeats or
they still will share the title ties Ohio State, the vote will he
wiUt· the Buckeyes but Schem- made by telephone to
bechle~
expressed skep- Columbus after Ute game-an
. tici8m Monday over prospects indication that Michigan
. of - lnotller vote by Big Ten almost would be conceded Ute
, athleUc directors on which Rose Bowl bid.
. team geiB Ute Rose Bowl bid. In
If Ohio State wins, the vote
1973, after his team matched will he made at a meeting in
Ohio-State 1()-10 in Ann Arbor, Chicago next Sunday, and
"Nkb.,_to.leave·the teams In a Michigan State, 5-1-1, also
·utle tle, the athletic director~ could come into Ute picture.
voted 8--4 to send Ohio State to . Both Schembechler and Mltlle Rose Bowl.
chigan State Coach Denny
"rm not looking forward to Stolz disapproved of the
tills coming vote," aid Schem· . metllod, saylng·Ute criteria for
bechler. The Michigan coach determining the Rose Bowl
became so enraged after last representative should be
year's vote Uta! reports clr- hammered out before Ute game
Jrulated Monday which said he to avoid controversy.
since has been serving a two"I would prefer some sort of
year probation.
setup before the game where~
"I figure we!.ve got to win or vote Isn't possible," Sch~- tie to go to Ute Rose Bowl," bechlersaid . "l'vesaldtllatfor
SChembechler said.
some time. The procedure
A victory or a tie would should be decided before Ute
assure undefeated Michigan game."
sole possessiOn of Ute Big Ten · Stolz said, "They could take
title. Ohio State, .6-1 in Big-Ten a vote a week before Ute game
play.afterlts jarring-upset loss and say, 'If Ohio State wlna,
to Michigan State .two weeks this happens; if Michigan wlna,
ago, is in jeopardy of•falling to IIlla happens; if tllere's a tle,
· • • " · tills liappens."
.-----~--.--.:-'1
...
. If nothing else, he said, this

..,

;\rea gridders honored

Broncos

.·

.

au,

'Lumbago: is a mhscle pain

MARAUDER SENIORS- Dining for the last time at an annual Rotary Football banquet
were Utese MeigsHighsenlorgrlddersMondaynlght, left to right, as in one row, John Thomas,
Dan Harrison, Jack Oller, Mike Haley, Perk Ault, Orrion Blanchard, Lonnie Costs, Gary
George, Terry Wh!Uatch, and PhU OhUnger. Whitlatch, tailback, set a new school rushing
record during Ute 2--8 season. Wayne Clark, backup quarterback wltll the Cincinnati Bengals,
was Ute speaker, substituting for offensive Bengal center Bob Johnson, injured In the Clnclnnall·Holl!!lon game Sunday Nolan Swackhamer was· emcee.

'' Buckeye triumph will
cause another turmoil

"Oh goody! It's twins!"

'

teUs ·why

Continued from psge 1
Mark O'Dell, George Gwn,
Meigs
Local
School
District
Peckham, Kevin
' •· Board of Education members Steve
Mci.Jjughlln, Jimmer Soulsby,
- present and introduced by Mike Wayland, Paul Rupe,
,. Swackhamer were pres,ldent Randy Marshall, Charlie Hall,
Virgil King and members Joe Buddy Dugan, Martin Shuler
J, Sayre and Wendell Hoover.
and Blaine Qualls.
::.: Football players honored
Varsity- Lonnie Coats, Jim
Anderson, Mike Magnotta,
-;-; were :
•·· Freshmen - Tim Rawlings, Allen Stewart, Perk Ault, Steve
Brent
Arnold, · Dave Randolph, Tim Thomas, Terry
Williamson, Brent Stanley, Qualls, Charlie Marshall, Jack
Mark Mitch, Carl Wilson, Greg Oiler, Rod Balley, John '
Witte, Kelly Winebrenner, Thomas, Terry Whitlatch,

DJ{. LAMB'-·

,l

Boys, thai's a
good cake--Woody,

.

rest as they get to a point contract offering "subslanUal Greyhound -broke off when
where IIley can stop," said Salt improvements in boUt wages Ute strike began.
Lake Oty Terminal Manager and benefits."
Federal mectlatoc- Guy Parent
Bob Lindberg. He said It was
NegoUations between Grey. said he wOuld· try to get talks
impossible for supervisors to hound and Ute Amalgamated resumed when productive
ke~p Ute bus service going.
Council of Greyhound Divisions negotiations 11ee111 expectable,
·wandering In Ute Detroit -which represents 30 unions but Utat ''poilslbly It could be
terminal was a young Amish wi Ill members working for days" before that occurs.
couple, particularly hard hit by
•,
Ute strike. The tenets of their
religion, which prizes simplicl ty, forbid them In travel by
·auto or airplane, but bus travel
is acceptable.
·
Raymond Byler, 20, and his
wife were on tlleir way from
Randolph, N.Y. to a farm near
Grand Rapids, Mich.
"Tell me, how long does a
strike last?" asked Byler,
whose religion tries to stay out
of contact with the modern
world.
"This isn't just a matter of
being late getUng someplace
CHICAGO - ·President Oren permit exceu U. S. HWIIIOck. · magaZine and other media:
for me," complained a Marine
·Lee
Staley of the Natlmal and milk proclucta to be con- have widely eontralted scenes
in Los Angeles. "If I'm not
Farmers
Organization an· vei'tad into food for atarvlnc of starving people in
down in San Diego in a few
l!anpdellb, Africa, and other
hours, I'm AWOL. This could nounced Tuesday · that' NFO people In foreign Ianda.
really cause me a lot of will press for a $2 billion . "As the l'eiUit of IIOille NFO ·· areas of the world with the
autllorlzation to be passed by members ahootlng calvel; TV lbootlng and burial of the
trouble."
Another paSsenger stuck in Congress quickly Utis montll to n ~ tworts, Newsweek uneconomical ca!YBS In Ute
Los Angeles, a lnurist from
Britain, said he had only
enough money for a bus ticket
·"Hunt's is a simple case,'' lmo\VIedge of clemency offers to New York -to meet the
Nixon assured Colson, ao old and has aald the payments to group he Is supposed to be
friend of Hunt's. "I mean, uh, Ute burglars were purely for flying back to London witll, and·
after.
the man's .:wife is hwnanltarlan reasons;
If he could not get Ute bus, he
dead, was kllled; he's got one
But In his March 22'chat with would miss the plane and he
child tllat lias...'' •.
Haldeman, he merely listened stranded halfway around the
"Brain damage from an · tlloughtfully when hi!! chief of world from home.
antomobile accident," In- staff explained how cash was
Long lines formzd for seats
terjected Colson.
slipped to Ute buggfug team on buses of Continental Trall· ''That's right ...," Nixon con- whenever It seemed one ''was ways, the only other major ·
tinued. "We'll build Utat son- gonna blow."
transcontinental bus line.
of-a-bitch up like noIn a Mardi 20 meeting with
''We are really ·overcrowded
body's
business .
We'll Haldeman, Nixon said 1t would right now," said an employe at
h11ve Buckley write a be ''pretty~ bid" if · Continental's headquarters In
colwnn and say, you know, Investigators traced Watergate Dallas.
that he, that he should have to his former·attorney general
Continental did not give an
clemency .. , that's,. that's it." and campaign manager John estimate of the percentage
Nixon apparenUy was refer· N. Mitchell, whom Haldeman increase in Its business.
ring to conservative columnist described as "clearly aware
Amtrak, the national passenWUllam F. Buckley Jr., an old and fuDy aware" of Plans Utat ger train network, said It would ..
Hunt friend and a !roUter of led to Watergate and who Is honor Greyhound tickets on its
Sen. James Buckley, R-N.Y.
now among the cover-up trains, and its express service
·, The real problem IJO!Ied by defendants.
would be available to shippers
Hunt apparently was his
Nixon vowed not to let his .·who· had relied. on Greyhound
.participation In lhe White aides teitlfy at the upcoming . package delivery. Amtrak
House-eponsored bn!ak-ln at Senate Watergate hearings. warned tllat reservations are
Ute offiCII of Daniel Eilaberg's ·
"We're not going to allow It needed for m;rny train seats.
psychiatrlit in '11171.. In mid- mainly because we just can't,
Greyhound President James
Marc.h of. 1973, HWII demanjled can't allow that 1191'1 of thing to L. Kerriglll' called the strike
·be,tter than $120,000 lest he come olit (unintelligible)," "IU)_fortunateandunnecessary,"
h!Vilal ''seamy things" be had Nixon said. "But then wha.t you sa)'lng Greyhound employes are
'clOne f~r the White House, and have to do is to -you gotta already the highest paid in the ·
·Nixon on March 21 approved ao light It through the goddamned bus industry, higher than other
·emergency cash payment. - - -courts (Qiil.ntelllgible) for a members of the 8ame unlons,
In all.his public statements longUme.You'vegottllestory received regular cost of liVIng
Ql1 Watergate, the former
of co\oer-up, that's what's In- increases to keep pace with
pt'esldent has disavowed any volved." .
inflat_ion and had rejected a .

llunt h-a d to be shut up
WASHINGTON . (UP!) Getting Howard Hunt to shut
up, It seems, was Richlil'd
Nlion 's major problem In
containing the Watergate
scandal. The answer was
simple : Cold cash . and
prombes of clemency. ·
;Hunt got both and until this .
mon!IJ, when he testified at Ute
cover-up trial; kept his pari of
· the b&amp;rgain by oqnceaUng the
si01'y behind the bugging of
Democratlc party ~eadquar·
. ters. ,
.
.
· I!lil&lt;on's near-&lt;1bsession. with
keeping Hunt quiet, which has
been evolvlag throughout the
.seven-week-old -trial, was
spelled out star_kly Monday in
White House tapelf. never
before ·made public.
More Nixtm .tapes were to be
played
today as
the
prosecutlon nearsan end to the
conspiracy case against five
former Nixon aides aCCIISe!l of
bushing up the sea~!. · .
Nixon himself , raised th!!
qu011tion of cle~~~~Hunt'
~rie of the niae~ids of ·
the bugging ·operait.oo· ....U. .a
White House convenlilion with
Charles W. Colson Jan..a, 1973,

"What wine goes best with a bowl of cereal?"

Bus passengers left hanging out
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP1) Greyhound bus drivers and
oUter workers went on strike
Monday, stranding passengers
tllrotighout the United States
and jamming Ute buses of the
Une's principal compeiltor.
Negotiations broke off and It
appeared the strike would last
for at least several days, or
longer.
,
The strike against Greyhound, the maJor nationwide
bus Une, left passengers stranded from Ute AUanUc In the
Pacific and the Canadian
border to Mexico. The passengers, from a bewildered Amish
farm couple in Detroit In an
angry Marine' In Los Angeles,
tried to find alternatives.
As Ute strike began late
Monday morning and Monday
afternoon, drivers began pulling
in to Ute nearest terminals to
drop off passengers, th!&gt;ir
journeys abruptly halted. Terminal, maintenance and office
workers locked up .Ute depots.
" The buses are coming to a

N11:r sing homes
ask extension

an injured knee.

It had been hoped In rest him
against Iowa, but he was
pressed into service when
Utings got a little sticky and
came through Ute test with no
ill effects.
Hayes was ~ed for an
assessment of this year's
Michigan team.
"Michigan always hlis a fine
football team," he said, ualng
Ute word "Michigan" Instead
of "that team up north," the
way he usually refers to Ute
Wolverines.
Before anybody could get
around In asking the questlon,
Hayes said "yes, we wiU close
the stadium this week." He did
agree to meet with Ute press
each night after practice.
Two of Hayes' assistants,
Ralph Staub and Esco Sarkkinen, gave reports on the
Michigan defense and offense, ·•
respectively .
Staub called Ute Michigan
defense "Ute best we will face
all year."
"I don't think we can expect
In stand up and slug It out with
them," he said. "We've got to
mix up our attack and take Ute
game In them."
It was noted · tllat quarterback Cornelius Greene
threw only twice agalnrrt Iowa.
"We're willing to put Ute ball
In the air and Intend to mix up
our attack," Staub quickly
countered.
Sarkldnen, who has been
involved In 31 previous Ohio
State--Michigan games, 28 as a
coach arxl Utree as an all·
American erxl, said the Wolverine offense has "a lot of gifted
·athletes."
He called quarterback
Dennis FrankUn "the most
gifted" and referred to he
senior from MaasWon, Ohio, as
"Ute optlon deluxe."
"His passing is more· accu·
rate tills year and It has turned
their offense around," he said
of FrankUn.
·
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�-

.....
2- The DaUY Sentinel, Mi,ddleport-Pomeror, 0 ., Tuesday ; Nov. 19, 1974

•

AU.t9 industry in .Crisis
.

.. .
1 •-

•••

. ~~
.
By RICHARD ·HUGHES
ments :
UPI Buslnea1 Writer
- The stock market suffered
As autos .go so gQe&amp; t,he U.S. Its worst one-day loss In 11
economy. And Ute auto . in- montlls. The Dow Jones indusdustry Is on Ute verge of a trial average plunged 22.89 to
1930s-type del!J;esslon, .. ac- 624.92 on the New York Stock
cording to top · company and • ~xchange.
union executives and · the
- U.S. Chamber of Com·
mayor of beleagured Detroit. merce president Arch Booth .
The warning came following said In Cincinnati tbat inflation
a meeting Monday between Is "beginning to weaken a little
Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lynn bit" but recession is "likely to
Townsend United Auto Work- grow slowly and steadily worse
ers President Leonard Wood- until Ute middle of next year,
cock and Detroit; Mayor
Coleman A. YOUI!g.
They agreed at . a news
conference tllat only -action .
from WaJihlngton coulil stem
layoffs nearing depression era By BRUCE W. MUNN
levela in Ute auto industry.
UNITED NATIONS (UPI)"Washington has forgotten Arab nations moved to Une up
how critical this industry is In General Assembly support
Ute U.S. economy," WOOdcock today for twin resolutlons
·urging
repatriation
of
said.
"What happens to this indus- Palestinian refugees and
try in Detroit ill going to permanent representation of
happen to thi! rest .·of the Ute region's leading guerrilla
economy If It ill not stopped," group.
said Young.
. Diplomatic sources
The M;otor Vehicle Associa· predicted passage of both
tion estimates the jobs of one measures by overwhelming
out of every six persons in Ute margins this week before the
country Is directly or indirectly assembly winds up Its historic
related to ~ auto industry.
debate on Palestine.
Thousands~! workers, from
'J:i;gypt, baclied by all 20 Arab
rubber ' workers to new ' car delegatlcins, was expecied to
salesmen ~ have heen thrown Introduce the main resolution
out of work in Ute wake of the . today, calling .on Ute assembly
worst new-au selling period in to affirm Ute right of Palestlnl·
a decade or more.
ans, !o self-determination.
Young and Woodcock met
Egyptian Foreign Affairs
wltll Townsend. to discuss th!! Secretary Anwar . San! was
impact of a furtller reduction in scheduled to go before Ute
Chrysler's production to allow as8enibly with the elght.polnt
car dealers to move a four· measure, which also calls for
montll backlog of pnsold 1975 the immediate repatriation of
cars.
'
Palestinian refugees displaced
Townsend said there will be by Ute creation of Israel.
"substantial-plant closlngs't to
'Diplomatic sources said the
trim 50,000 cars ·from fourth-- Arab resolution would give Ute
quarter production. Howe.ver, Pal~na ,.Juthority "to athe said, the finn would not shut lain tlleir rlglita by all means at
down completely for Ute month tllelr disposal" In accordance
of December, as was specula- witll U.N. principles,
The sources said Ute second
ted.
The Big Three automakers resolution, urging permanent
have nearly 100,000 workers on obaerver status for the Pales-.
temporary · or Indefinite tine Liberation Organization,
layoffs.
would have a . far--reaching
Gerieral Motors and Ford impact on other regions of Ute
Motor Co., as well as Chrysler, world.
anticipate idling thousands
They said Ute resolution,
more in Ute next few weeks, expecied to be Introduced later
The Industry has a record 116- in the week, would give Ute
dily · supply of unsold cars. PLO the right to parUdpate in
Chrysler has twice tllat.
all U.N. debates and conferenln other economic develop- ces.

Berrys World

.

maybe longer."
in Zurich and $190.50 in Lon- Federal Trade Com- dOn. At Ute Same time, Ute U.S.
missioner Mayo J . Thompson doll;n- fell. to a new low In
told a Cl)ngressionalc;op~mittee Zurich and slumped elsewhere.
that price-fixing adds UO
- Housing starts in Oclnber
billion a year to the price of of of 1.124 mJIIlon units were
conswner goods. He said Ute the lowest since January, 1970,
FTC should concenlcate on Ute Census Bureau said. And
rolling back some of these an economist· for the housing
"Illegally Inflated prices."
Industry said unemployment in
-The price of gold hit record , Ute building lcades, now 12.2
levels in Europe, reaching per cent, wiU rise to about 16
$19:;.03an ounee in Paris, 190.75 per cent by January.

i.

'

UN in·d~ath struggle
Although the motlon only
Ute PLO, diplomatic
dlsc'/S&amp;ions Indicated It would
apply to all llberatlon movements around the world.
The move would open Ute
door for guerrilla groups from
Africa, Asia and Latin
America to gain a permanent
voice against the arguments of
establlahed govemmeniB.
"Its passage would raise a
serious questlon whether Ute
men~ons

United Nations would last
through the 1970s," one delegate from a developing nation
remarked cynically in private
conversatlon.
Assembly President Abdelaziz Boutefllka of Algeria
has set a Thursday night
deadline for ·ending the
Palestinian debate. Twentynine nations have already
spoken, but 55 were still to he
heard.

UtesamedayHunt .llndtlle~

•

of Ute "Watergate Seven" went
on trial for the crime: '

COLUMBUS ( UPI)-State
Rep. Norman A. MurdOck, Ranclnnati, said Monday he
would recommend formation of
a joint legislative committee to
determine whetller Ohio nursing homes shOuld be granted an
!!\&lt;tension of Ute Jan. 1 deadline
for lnsta!Ung sprinkler systems.
~ At Ute same Ume, Murdock
said, his proposed committee
'·would serve as .a "watchdog"
bver state agencies involved, to
Utat nurshing homes
'C&lt;mply as rapidly as possible.
Murdock, who sponsored the
1972legislation requiring sprinkler systems in nur.sing hOmes,
said · he was "horrified" to
discover more tllan half Ute
lnatitUtlons have taken no
action to comply.
The Cincinnati lawmaker
presided over a meeting of
representatlv.es of nursing
home ·associations, Ute state
Healtll Depariment, Ute sprln:
kler Industry and the state fire
marshall's office.
. "There's no doubt In my
mind tllat we really have a
crisis on our luinds In regard to
eoo~pllance witll this law,"
Mii'aifck aald, pointing out Utat
the nurshing homes were given
two years to get ·sprinkler
eystems in operation.
"I for one am not of a mind
to relax these standards," he
said.
G.T. Dalton, president of the
Ohio Healtll Care Assoclatloii,

represnUng some 200 nursing
homes, said .between 350 and
400 of Ohio's 1,100 !lnmes would
be in compliance by Jan. 1.
Dalton said . the CO!Jt 01
Sprinkler systems, "light
money" and just plain procrastination caused the lack of
compliance.
"Are you saying Utere were
nursing homes which had no
intention of complying Witll the
law?.-' asked Murdock.
"In my oplnjon, yes,'' answered Dalton.
'
"Do they expect Ute government to turn its back, or do
IIley expect IIley will have to
close down?' ' asked the lawmaker.
"They are ·going to close
down," replied Dalton.
"Where will the elderly
people go who are In need of
care?"
"Probably to county homes
and places !Ike this."
•
"Can the · c&lt;iullty homes
handle Ute extra lond?"
"No, and tllat's what scares
us," said Dalton.
There were suggestions tllat provlslonallicensee be granted
to nursing homes which show
Intentions of. c&lt;mplylng but
cannot make Ute · Jan. 1
deadline.
If you are lonely and want
some neighbors to call, just
start to take a bath.

Program proposed by NFO
to .buy surplus food, send
to hungry.people of·world

8"'
bm
blu
lo
!fl~
-!!8

lv
5".U

on

~Clark

ll

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Will having a Qhort. . i~g, causing ·
you please explain "Lum- abnormal
posture
and
bago?" Many people seem to · muscular strain, , to a
suffer from It and II&gt; become protruding (sUpped) disk.
involved in all ' sorts of un- Degeneration of Ute spine witll
necessary and futile efforts at new abnormal bone growtll. or
diagnosis and treaiment. .
spur formation may CBUR
DEAR READER ' ::.. , Llim· pressure or nerves resulting in
bago is not a m'edlcal term. It is pain.
·. used tolabelpainln the 'lumbar
There is no way to te)l'what
spine or muscular region. The. Ute. cause Is Wltllout a searchlumbar spine Ia Utat small ing examination. Then Ute next
section of tlu! spine between Ute step Is .to correct ihe un.bottom of Ute chest and the derlylng cauae. You can get
pelvis. It is the "small 9( ' the· inunedlate relief In some cases
back/'
wiUt heat' ·and medicines to
Pain in this a;ea is usually ' relax muscle spasm, but·this is .
from cramped or · con)l',c~ only temporary. Unless tile
muscles. Thts can be ·frj)ffi a underlying cause Is determuscular "strain" or from an niined and step8 'taken to
abnormality In Ute spine Itself. correct It, Ute problem ill apt to
A careful examination has to. OC&lt;;Ul' again .
be don~ to find out why tllere Is · l'd~ike to men lion Utat not all
pain.. Thill cao · vary from ~ack pain Is from Ute muscles'

'

'

•
I

.•
enable pregna;•cy when she Is
first born. It Is said tllat Ute
assume that back ,pain means older the cells the more likely
"lumbago."
tbere will be a problem.
DEAR OR. ~- I am 36
However, many women have
and have been married for babies even at the menopause
several years. We don'-t have . age, and Ute babies are perany children but would love to. fecUynormal. So there Is no set
I'm .over-weight but am trying rule.
desperately to lose. What. I
·A woman does have more
-want to know Is, am I too old to difficulty tOo with a pregnancy
·have my first child? If not, as she gets older ..There is no
what is Ute oldest age you hard and fast rule on tllat
wouldsuggestforhavlngafirst eitller. One woman may be in
child?
·better health 'than Ute next so
DEAR READER - No, you• that has to be determined inare not too olci. i have known dividWilly.
.
wotnen who had Uteir first
You should find out If you are
child when they were paat olll. able to get pregnant by letting
It's true that there Is sQme your doctnr l!l[amine· you ·and
increase in cbancei of having a perhaps run some, tests. But, If
baby witll some ·Problems as you and your huilband are able.
. you get older. A woman has all to ha-'e a child you cer~lnly
the cells Uta! will 'form ova and . are not too .old. Good luck. or U,lesplne. EvenspasUc colon
can calllle back pain ..Don't just

Chiefs

'

VOURS:
·
-.
SHOT
,

,. l

'•\

'.~

;~!~U:.
.
~~coau:~
what upset Bo Schembechier

last year," Stolz said. "He
,
·• 4&gt;·Utought he could go to the Rose
- Bowl on a tie."
Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes probably doesn't have to
worry about such possibllitles
tills year, because-· his team
needs to win.
Get an ln-Sink-Erator
"tt's no secret what this
disposer. The strong,
game means," Hayea said.
The Ohio State coach, almost
silent type.
In a serene mood, . said his
71
3U
333-SS
Buckeyes are "on· the upswing" from their loss to
Michigan State, but he ex·
pressed rare respect for
Michigan.
Elsewhere Monday, ~e
Coacli Alex Agase learned that
· starling guard Tom Gibson will
miss the 81111UBI season-ending
game witll Indiana because of
• a lmee ailment. Iowa Coach
BobCommlngs gaye his team a
day off following .a dismal
Injury report from -Saturday's
. 112-d . . .
...tleiuuv..,, 'If. Vo.
36-10 loss to Ohio State.

ii

SAYRE :
HARDWARE

\

'

•

DENVER (UP!) - Kansas
City Coach Hank Stram
Utought he was ·reliving the
psst Monday night.
"The way things happened In
Utat game, you would hav'l
Utought It was the days of the
old American Football LA!&amp;·
gue," said Stram, who has
coached Ute Chiefs since Ute
AFL began play In 1960 and the
team vias known as the Dallas
Texans.
CLARK .TELLS INSIDE STORY - Wayne Clark, for·
Things happened the way
merly of the San Diego Olargers; backup quarterback with
Stram wanted Utem to as his
Ute Cincinnati Bengals, fielded questions from fans and
team knocked off Denver, 42players Monday night ai the al)llll81 Rotary Club football
34, scoring 16 points in Ute first
banquet at Meigs High. At left Is Mary Chancey, wife of Head
· five minutes of Ute second half
Football Coach Charles Chancey .
to turn a 21-17 Denver halftime
lead into ll 33-:n Chiefs lead.
· "It was really wild, just !Ike
Ute old days," Stram said,
Starcher, George Carper, Ken remembering the days when
Randy George, Rick George, .Wyant, Mick Davenport, Mitch hili team' beat the BroiiCOil by
Skip Imboden, Dan Buffington ,
Olapman, Bill Stewart, Bob such scores as 5Z-21, 49-39 and
Jim Howard, Brenlen Seth, :wmtamson,
Bru·ce Reed , 311-24.
John Blake, Rick Johnson, Dan
Phil
Denver buUt a 21·17 halftime
~rrison, Steve Pickens, Dave ·orrion Blanchard,
Ohlinger
and
Mike
Owens.
lead
as roolde Jon Keyworth,
M1ller, Jlm Clark: G~ry
·
:Managers
Butch
Roush
·
startlng
his first game, bulled
George, Wayne ~otter~ll, M1ke
his way over from a yard out
Haley, Ray Willford . Stan :ai'd Jeff Reuter.
for touchdowns twice In the
...
first half and Charley Johnson,
who came within two yards of
Denver's single gillne record
by hitting :IIH!f-42 paases for
•
•
•• 4
446 yards, threw 11 yards to
'
BiUy Van Heusen for a touchdown.
Kansas aty scored in Ute
first quarter on a Utree-yard
Len Dawson to Ed Podolak
pass, a two-yard run by
J\1jN ARBOR, Mjch. (UPI) eyes; 1971 and 1969, tllelr Podolak in the second period
--: The general "e~tlon has triumph . and perfect season and a 41-yard Jan Stenerud
lieen over for •two weeks but was spolled by a loss in Ute field goal.
Then came the change of
Coach Bo Scileffibed!ler of Rose Bowl.
"We've got to win this game events.
Michigan Is still worried about
becauseltmeanseverything to
Denver's Oliver Ross
votes.
.
fumbled the second-half
The votes lie's concerned us," Schembechler said.
Last year's match wound up kickoff on his own 12 and the
about wiU be cast Sunday-the
day after Michigan plays Ohio 1n the celebrated 1()-10 tie that Chiefs' Cleo Miller recovered.
State-to see which team goes sent Ohio State to the West Two plays later, Woody Green
Coast for the second straight fumbled and Denver's Bill
to Ute Rose Bowl.
"I'm nat looking forward to year-on the basill of a vote by Laskey recovered at the one.
On Denver's first play,
this coming to a vote," Ute Big Ten Alhletic directoc-s.
The declslon made Schem· Johnson threw long and lncomSchembechler said Monday at
· his weeklY press luncheon. "I bechler furious and his fury plete. On Ute next play, eightflgurewe'\le got to win or tle to brought one minor change in year veteran Wlllle Lanier
Ute way Ute vote Is conducted caught Denver'• Otis Armgo to Ute Rose Bowl."
"I would prefer some sort of but which could work in his · ' strong in Ute end Zone for a
setup before Ute game is favor should the Buckeyes win. safety.
. · Kansu Qty took the ensuing
played . where , a vote Isn't a close gallll!.
The Wolverines are 7~ in Ute free kick and zipped 49 yards,
possible," he said. "I've said
conference to Ute 6-llog of Ute witllDawson tlr~wlnl36yards
tllat before."
Mlchigim, Z.Z-1 against Ohio Buckeyes but Ohio State baa to Otis Taylor for a touchdown.
State alnce Schembechler took gone to Paaadena., Calif., two After the Chlefa held Denver on
Utree downs, Podolak returned
over, has cllncbed at least a straight years.
A dislocated shoulder to . a Van Heusen punt 54 yards to
share of Ita fifth ·straishi Big
Ten crqwn and goes into this quarterback Dermis Franklin, Ute Denver 17. On Ute first play
game undefeated for Ute fifth Schembechler felt, influenced from ·scrimmage·, Green
Ute voting last year and hla scored.
time in a row. ,
senior
.signal caller w an
The Chlefa added a 36-yard
But the two tlmJ!s the
Wolverines defeated the Buck· Injury ·to take Into Ibis year'•

Must Win
to
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go We~t--Bo

g&amp;!De.

~

Hun,ry KUla?

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lt's ·lrierdiy and oconomicol; 1111ick

and divenilled - OI\OU9h to satisfy
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Sundly-10 A.M. lv ll P.M.
MoD lllru Thun.-o A.M. lv11 P.M.
Fri . &amp; Sot_, A.M. lv I A.M.

,

..

By GENE CAD DES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) It's hard to imagine Ohio State
Coach Woody Hayes cutting
cake arxl serving It In newsmen
Ute week of the Michigan
game, or, for that matter, any
week.
But, t!lere he was Monday,
old unpredictable Woody cutting the cake and passing It on
In Ute assembled press.
"Boys, that's good cake,"
said Hayes as he licked Ute
frosting from his fingers .
"Here, pass Ulis down."
After devouring his portion,
Hayes got to Ute meat of Ute
meeting -Saturday's battle
witll Michigan for the Blg Ten
title, Rose Bowl trip arxl a
possible national championship.
"It's no secret what this
game means,'' Hayes said, and
. he was right.
If Ute Buckeyes win, It means
IIley gain a share of the Big Ten
title with Michigan . It would
also force Ute conference's
athletic directors lo make a
tough decision on who would
get the Rose Bowl bid, and·
certainly propel the Buckeyes
back lntn the middle of the
battle for Ute nati01J8l cham·
plonshlp.
A Michigan win would give
Ute Wolverines a sp~~~"kllng 11~
recard, the outright conference

tes.
"We played a great second
half at Iowa," Hayes said. "I
Utlnk we're on our way back
after a couple of do-im weeks."
·For one thing, Ute offense got
going against the Hawkeyes
wheri 11-4, 252-pound senior
tackle Kurt Schumacher entered Ute game.
· Schumacher, an all-Blg Ten
selection last year and a
potenUal all-American, sat out
Ute Michigan State game with

Capt. Johnson
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The officials said late Monday Utat
Bengals are battered.
x-rays sllll had been lnconAnotller Cincinnati starter elusive.
has been lost for Ute season and
The future of running back
a handful of oUter players are Doug Dressler also was in
nursing painful injuries.
doubt. Dressler suffered a
The latest casualty is center bruised Utlgh early In Ute game
and offensive captain Bob and was unable to return.
Johnson - lost for the rest of
"I lcied to play after I got
Ute season with a fractured left it," recalled Dressler. "But at
ankle.
·•
one point I started to get dizzy
'Johnson, the first player 'ever and sick' In my stomach. The
drafted by the Bengals In 1968, blood was all rushing to my leg
had never been seriously and the bruise was hemorrlnjured until Sunday's game at haglng."
Houston.
Noted Brown, 11 DOW we've
The former all-American at lost two fullbacks. " Dressler
Tennessee was hurt when Ire had been starting in place of
was clipped on a punt return Bobble aark, who wa! lost for
play in the Oilers' 20-3 victory: Ute season two weeks ago witll
Before the extent of John· a broken hand.
son's Injury was known, coach
Also Sunday, cornerback
Paul Brown had said, " If Bob's Lemar Parrish suffered a
ankle Is broken, we 're in severely bruised shoulder.
"They were dropping like
trouble."
Johnson will be replaced at flies out Utere," sighed Brown.
center by Howard Fest.
The Bengals, who a montll
Several oUter Bengals came · ago boasted a 4-1 record, have
back battered from Sunday's now lost Utree of Ute last five
lackluster performance.
games and their playoff
Receiver Bob Trumpy got chances are up In the alr. Road
cracked in the mouth and games remain wltll Miami and
although it was feared hts jaw Pittsburgh.
Cincinnati tries to Improve on
may have been broken Bengals
'
its 11-4 mark against Kansas
city here Sunday.

field goal late In Ute tl1lrd
quarter and another touchdown in Ute final period on a
one-yard Wendell Hayes run.
Sandwiched around Hayes'
run were Denver scores on
Keyworth's third one-yard
plunge with two seconds gone.
in the fourtll quarter and a
four-yard pass from Johnson to
Otto Stowe witll 7:50 to play.
"The safety was the key,"
said Stram, "because It gave
us the point combination \bat
forced Denver to go after two

scores/'

The win gave Kansas Qty a
4-6 record and dropped Denver .
to 4+1, ellmlnatlng Ute Broncos' ·hopes for a wUd card
be rUt.
Kansas City's ~yards total
offense marked the first time
in the last four games Ute
Chlefa have had less Utan 400
yards but only Ute second time
IIley have won.
'

.

For Your Dining
and Listening
.
Pleasure .••

GE·O . HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS
\'

TONIGHT 8:00 TO 12:30

.The MEIGS, INN
. Ph. 992-3629

championship, a sure trip to
Ute Rose Bowl and a mighty
good chan~ . In claim that
national title.
Hayes thinks Michigan,
coached by former OSU assistant Bo Schembechler, is an
improving team.
"It would appear they are
getting better," Hayes said of
Ute Wolverines. "They have
run up pretty big scores in two
of Ute last Utree games."
But, Ute Buckeye·coach also
said he felt hls team was ready ·
to go "on the upswing" after a
couple less tllan spectacular
performances, one of which
resulted in a 16-13 loss at
MichigGn State .
Against Iowa Saturday, Ute
Buckeyes struggled to a 14--10
halftime margin, but came
back _, slrong witll tllree tnuchdowns in Ute second half and
also got a good defensive
performance the last 30 minu-

Bengals lose

-

Franklin waa sub-par Utree
weeks in 8 row witll a sprained
left ankle and he reinjured It in
Ute third quarter o( Mlchlgan'l
51~ srnallhing of Purdue Ialit
Saturday after appearing
nearly 100 per cent In Ute first
balf.
SChembechler said Franklin
was okay but would play "lf be
only had one leg" anyway. ·
Middle llneba~ker Steve
Stril*o suffered a lmee injury
against Ute Boilermakers but
was also expected I!) be ready.
Saturday.
Both "would have been b8ck
in there If the game was cloee
and the oukome In doubt," tbe.
coach said,

•

,.

outla.s t

CHICAGO
(UP!)
tllird place behind Ute SpSrtans
Michigan Coach Bo Schem- witll another defeat. .
bechler thinks hls secondBut a Buckeye vlptory would
ranked Wolverines will have to Utrow Utlngs·· into 11\e same
beat, •or at least tie third- turmoil as last year.
ranked Ohio State In SaturThere wiU bo a vote regar·
day's Blg Ten tltle showdown If dless, ·the athletic directors
IIley want to go to tiMi Rose decided In a joint telephone
•Bowl.
conve~Q&amp;!lon Monday. They
Even if the Wolverines lose, · sidd thilt'if Mlcl!lgan defeats or
they still will share the title ties Ohio State, the vote will he
wiUt· the Buckeyes but Schem- made by telephone to
bechle~
expressed skep- Columbus after Ute game-an
. tici8m Monday over prospects indication that Michigan
. of - lnotller vote by Big Ten almost would be conceded Ute
, athleUc directors on which Rose Bowl bid.
. team geiB Ute Rose Bowl bid. In
If Ohio State wins, the vote
1973, after his team matched will he made at a meeting in
Ohio-State 1()-10 in Ann Arbor, Chicago next Sunday, and
"Nkb.,_to.leave·the teams In a Michigan State, 5-1-1, also
·utle tle, the athletic director~ could come into Ute picture.
voted 8--4 to send Ohio State to . Both Schembechler and Mltlle Rose Bowl.
chigan State Coach Denny
"rm not looking forward to Stolz disapproved of the
tills coming vote," aid Schem· . metllod, saylng·Ute criteria for
bechler. The Michigan coach determining the Rose Bowl
became so enraged after last representative should be
year's vote Uta! reports clr- hammered out before Ute game
Jrulated Monday which said he to avoid controversy.
since has been serving a two"I would prefer some sort of
year probation.
setup before the game where~
"I figure we!.ve got to win or vote Isn't possible," Sch~- tie to go to Ute Rose Bowl," bechlersaid . "l'vesaldtllatfor
SChembechler said.
some time. The procedure
A victory or a tie would should be decided before Ute
assure undefeated Michigan game."
sole possessiOn of Ute Big Ten · Stolz said, "They could take
title. Ohio State, .6-1 in Big-Ten a vote a week before Ute game
play.afterlts jarring-upset loss and say, 'If Ohio State wlna,
to Michigan State .two weeks this happens; if Michigan wlna,
ago, is in jeopardy of•falling to IIlla happens; if tllere's a tle,
· • • " · tills liappens."
.-----~--.--.:-'1
...
. If nothing else, he said, this

..,

;\rea gridders honored

Broncos

.·

.

au,

'Lumbago: is a mhscle pain

MARAUDER SENIORS- Dining for the last time at an annual Rotary Football banquet
were Utese MeigsHighsenlorgrlddersMondaynlght, left to right, as in one row, John Thomas,
Dan Harrison, Jack Oller, Mike Haley, Perk Ault, Orrion Blanchard, Lonnie Costs, Gary
George, Terry Wh!Uatch, and PhU OhUnger. Whitlatch, tailback, set a new school rushing
record during Ute 2--8 season. Wayne Clark, backup quarterback wltll the Cincinnati Bengals,
was Ute speaker, substituting for offensive Bengal center Bob Johnson, injured In the Clnclnnall·Holl!!lon game Sunday Nolan Swackhamer was· emcee.

'' Buckeye triumph will
cause another turmoil

"Oh goody! It's twins!"

'

teUs ·why

Continued from psge 1
Mark O'Dell, George Gwn,
Meigs
Local
School
District
Peckham, Kevin
' •· Board of Education members Steve
Mci.Jjughlln, Jimmer Soulsby,
- present and introduced by Mike Wayland, Paul Rupe,
,. Swackhamer were pres,ldent Randy Marshall, Charlie Hall,
Virgil King and members Joe Buddy Dugan, Martin Shuler
J, Sayre and Wendell Hoover.
and Blaine Qualls.
::.: Football players honored
Varsity- Lonnie Coats, Jim
Anderson, Mike Magnotta,
-;-; were :
•·· Freshmen - Tim Rawlings, Allen Stewart, Perk Ault, Steve
Brent
Arnold, · Dave Randolph, Tim Thomas, Terry
Williamson, Brent Stanley, Qualls, Charlie Marshall, Jack
Mark Mitch, Carl Wilson, Greg Oiler, Rod Balley, John '
Witte, Kelly Winebrenner, Thomas, Terry Whitlatch,

DJ{. LAMB'-·

,l

Boys, thai's a
good cake--Woody,

.

rest as they get to a point contract offering "subslanUal Greyhound -broke off when
where IIley can stop," said Salt improvements in boUt wages Ute strike began.
Lake Oty Terminal Manager and benefits."
Federal mectlatoc- Guy Parent
Bob Lindberg. He said It was
NegoUations between Grey. said he wOuld· try to get talks
impossible for supervisors to hound and Ute Amalgamated resumed when productive
ke~p Ute bus service going.
Council of Greyhound Divisions negotiations 11ee111 expectable,
·wandering In Ute Detroit -which represents 30 unions but Utat ''poilslbly It could be
terminal was a young Amish wi Ill members working for days" before that occurs.
couple, particularly hard hit by
•,
Ute strike. The tenets of their
religion, which prizes simplicl ty, forbid them In travel by
·auto or airplane, but bus travel
is acceptable.
·
Raymond Byler, 20, and his
wife were on tlleir way from
Randolph, N.Y. to a farm near
Grand Rapids, Mich.
"Tell me, how long does a
strike last?" asked Byler,
whose religion tries to stay out
of contact with the modern
world.
"This isn't just a matter of
being late getUng someplace
CHICAGO - ·President Oren permit exceu U. S. HWIIIOck. · magaZine and other media:
for me," complained a Marine
·Lee
Staley of the Natlmal and milk proclucta to be con- have widely eontralted scenes
in Los Angeles. "If I'm not
Farmers
Organization an· vei'tad into food for atarvlnc of starving people in
down in San Diego in a few
l!anpdellb, Africa, and other
hours, I'm AWOL. This could nounced Tuesday · that' NFO people In foreign Ianda.
really cause me a lot of will press for a $2 billion . "As the l'eiUit of IIOille NFO ·· areas of the world with the
autllorlzation to be passed by members ahootlng calvel; TV lbootlng and burial of the
trouble."
Another paSsenger stuck in Congress quickly Utis montll to n ~ tworts, Newsweek uneconomical ca!YBS In Ute
Los Angeles, a lnurist from
Britain, said he had only
enough money for a bus ticket
·"Hunt's is a simple case,'' lmo\VIedge of clemency offers to New York -to meet the
Nixon assured Colson, ao old and has aald the payments to group he Is supposed to be
friend of Hunt's. "I mean, uh, Ute burglars were purely for flying back to London witll, and·
after.
the man's .:wife is hwnanltarlan reasons;
If he could not get Ute bus, he
dead, was kllled; he's got one
But In his March 22'chat with would miss the plane and he
child tllat lias...'' •.
Haldeman, he merely listened stranded halfway around the
"Brain damage from an · tlloughtfully when hi!! chief of world from home.
antomobile accident," In- staff explained how cash was
Long lines formzd for seats
terjected Colson.
slipped to Ute buggfug team on buses of Continental Trall· ''That's right ...," Nixon con- whenever It seemed one ''was ways, the only other major ·
tinued. "We'll build Utat son- gonna blow."
transcontinental bus line.
of-a-bitch up like noIn a Mardi 20 meeting with
''We are really ·overcrowded
body's
business .
We'll Haldeman, Nixon said 1t would right now," said an employe at
h11ve Buckley write a be ''pretty~ bid" if · Continental's headquarters In
colwnn and say, you know, Investigators traced Watergate Dallas.
that he, that he should have to his former·attorney general
Continental did not give an
clemency .. , that's,. that's it." and campaign manager John estimate of the percentage
Nixon apparenUy was refer· N. Mitchell, whom Haldeman increase in Its business.
ring to conservative columnist described as "clearly aware
Amtrak, the national passenWUllam F. Buckley Jr., an old and fuDy aware" of Plans Utat ger train network, said It would ..
Hunt friend and a !roUter of led to Watergate and who Is honor Greyhound tickets on its
Sen. James Buckley, R-N.Y.
now among the cover-up trains, and its express service
·, The real problem IJO!Ied by defendants.
would be available to shippers
Hunt apparently was his
Nixon vowed not to let his .·who· had relied. on Greyhound
.participation In lhe White aides teitlfy at the upcoming . package delivery. Amtrak
House-eponsored bn!ak-ln at Senate Watergate hearings. warned tllat reservations are
Ute offiCII of Daniel Eilaberg's ·
"We're not going to allow It needed for m;rny train seats.
psychiatrlit in '11171.. In mid- mainly because we just can't,
Greyhound President James
Marc.h of. 1973, HWII demanjled can't allow that 1191'1 of thing to L. Kerriglll' called the strike
·be,tter than $120,000 lest he come olit (unintelligible)," "IU)_fortunateandunnecessary,"
h!Vilal ''seamy things" be had Nixon said. "But then wha.t you sa)'lng Greyhound employes are
'clOne f~r the White House, and have to do is to -you gotta already the highest paid in the ·
·Nixon on March 21 approved ao light It through the goddamned bus industry, higher than other
·emergency cash payment. - - -courts (Qiil.ntelllgible) for a members of the 8ame unlons,
In all.his public statements longUme.You'vegottllestory received regular cost of liVIng
Ql1 Watergate, the former
of co\oer-up, that's what's In- increases to keep pace with
pt'esldent has disavowed any volved." .
inflat_ion and had rejected a .

llunt h-a d to be shut up
WASHINGTON . (UP!) Getting Howard Hunt to shut
up, It seems, was Richlil'd
Nlion 's major problem In
containing the Watergate
scandal. The answer was
simple : Cold cash . and
prombes of clemency. ·
;Hunt got both and until this .
mon!IJ, when he testified at Ute
cover-up trial; kept his pari of
· the b&amp;rgain by oqnceaUng the
si01'y behind the bugging of
Democratlc party ~eadquar·
. ters. ,
.
.
· I!lil&lt;on's near-&lt;1bsession. with
keeping Hunt quiet, which has
been evolvlag throughout the
.seven-week-old -trial, was
spelled out star_kly Monday in
White House tapelf. never
before ·made public.
More Nixtm .tapes were to be
played
today as
the
prosecutlon nearsan end to the
conspiracy case against five
former Nixon aides aCCIISe!l of
bushing up the sea~!. · .
Nixon himself , raised th!!
qu011tion of cle~~~~Hunt'
~rie of the niae~ids of ·
the bugging ·operait.oo· ....U. .a
White House convenlilion with
Charles W. Colson Jan..a, 1973,

"What wine goes best with a bowl of cereal?"

Bus passengers left hanging out
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP1) Greyhound bus drivers and
oUter workers went on strike
Monday, stranding passengers
tllrotighout the United States
and jamming Ute buses of the
Une's principal compeiltor.
Negotiations broke off and It
appeared the strike would last
for at least several days, or
longer.
,
The strike against Greyhound, the maJor nationwide
bus Une, left passengers stranded from Ute AUanUc In the
Pacific and the Canadian
border to Mexico. The passengers, from a bewildered Amish
farm couple in Detroit In an
angry Marine' In Los Angeles,
tried to find alternatives.
As Ute strike began late
Monday morning and Monday
afternoon, drivers began pulling
in to Ute nearest terminals to
drop off passengers, th!&gt;ir
journeys abruptly halted. Terminal, maintenance and office
workers locked up .Ute depots.
" The buses are coming to a

N11:r sing homes
ask extension

an injured knee.

It had been hoped In rest him
against Iowa, but he was
pressed into service when
Utings got a little sticky and
came through Ute test with no
ill effects.
Hayes was ~ed for an
assessment of this year's
Michigan team.
"Michigan always hlis a fine
football team," he said, ualng
Ute word "Michigan" Instead
of "that team up north," the
way he usually refers to Ute
Wolverines.
Before anybody could get
around In asking the questlon,
Hayes said "yes, we wiU close
the stadium this week." He did
agree to meet with Ute press
each night after practice.
Two of Hayes' assistants,
Ralph Staub and Esco Sarkkinen, gave reports on the
Michigan defense and offense, ·•
respectively .
Staub called Ute Michigan
defense "Ute best we will face
all year."
"I don't think we can expect
In stand up and slug It out with
them," he said. "We've got to
mix up our attack and take Ute
game In them."
It was noted · tllat quarterback Cornelius Greene
threw only twice agalnrrt Iowa.
"We're willing to put Ute ball
In the air and Intend to mix up
our attack," Staub quickly
countered.
Sarkldnen, who has been
involved In 31 previous Ohio
State--Michigan games, 28 as a
coach arxl Utree as an all·
American erxl, said the Wolverine offense has "a lot of gifted
·athletes."
He called quarterback
Dennis FrankUn "the most
gifted" and referred to he
senior from MaasWon, Ohio, as
"Ute optlon deluxe."
"His passing is more· accu·
rate tills year and It has turned
their offense around," he said
of FrankUn.
·
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I

4- The Daily ~ntinel, MiddiPlJ(lrt·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1974

Alabama retains
top spot in poll
'

News, Notes
Ralph Carl, supt. 'of the
Carleton Church, presented
pins for ' perfect attendance to
Brett. Carl for eight years,
Randy Carl, seven years,
Danny Carl, four years !llld
Melodl Carl, three years,
Audra Hoildashelt, three years
and Floyd !llld Edith Rosa, 11
.years. ·
·
Mrs. Hazel Arnold had as
recent visitors, Mr. and Mrs.
John DeVere Of Charleston imd
Mrs. Linda Grate of ' HtDJ·
llngton and Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Arnold and SOils, Billy
and Bobble, Columbus.
Mr. Albert (Bud) Beilem of

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Middleport, 0.

.

NFL Standings
By United PresS International
American Conference
f:: ;n t·

Miami

Bflp
New Eng
NV' Jets

w. I. t.

s

2

pet . gf ga

.

..; ..... ••• ••• • ,.••;.:.:.:.:. ...

V'

•

, X"?

···u···· ···· ··

·

~-

11!10

=~:

·
Grades
4 5 6

'

~

.

., Masan.County New~ Notes 1.parents·meet
~
By Alma Marshall
~ in workshop

•

7 3 0 .700 2.19 19S
6 Q4 0 .600 251 176
3 7 0 .300 170 224
2 8 0 .200119234
Central
w. 1. t_. pet .. pg pa
7 'l 1 .750 719 149

·
of students in grades
MASON
- ~ersons lnter...ted In .the development of the 4, Parents
5 an&lt;! 6 met with Mrs.
Virgil~· Lewis property (former Ed Roush) pr.operty on Brown Doro"'" Chaney Thursday
Bt~lt
_,,
Street jn Mason, are requested to attend a.meeting on Friday,
NEW YORK (li'PII The
1974 Un i ted Press International
BEijEA, Ohio 1UPI)
November 22, at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Landon (Catherine)
evening · at th.e Salisbury
Board of Coaches top 20 malor Pltsbgh
Cleveland Browns' quarterback Smith M8son. The Mason County Court recently purchased this
lillementary building for an
college football rating s with
won -lost record s and first -place Cine I
.
evening workshop In which
6 4 0 .600 '125 179 Bri~n Sipe and scatback Greg historlchometobeusedbyMasonCountyclilzens.
votes in parentheses :
Houston
5 5 0 .soo 181 201 Pruit~ today were h~ted as . • At a recent meeting held In Mason, Mrs. Landon Srillth, was
subject
matter and class
Team
Points
1. Alabama (23) ( 10 -0)
335 Cleve
que~tionable
for
Sund~y
s
game
appointed
chairman
and
others
representing
'Various
routine
were
discusSed. This
3 7 0 .300 193 260
2. Ml c l'l igan ( 121 &lt; 10-0l
321
w
"''t
the
Buffa!~
Btlls.
.
organlzatlona
Include,'
Mason
Mothers
Club,
Mrs.
Joeeph
Llsh,
•
was
the
filth
in
such a. series.
agamst
3. Ohio St. (9 -1)
266
w . I. t. pel . pf pa
4 . Notre Dame (9 l l
20.4 Oaklnd
Sipe, who probably wtll be Mrs. Josetta Noble;" Ubrary, Mrs. Rsy Proffitt; Helping Hand
Discussion centered prln9 .I 0 .900 .264 i5J
5 . Nebraska (8 -2)
188
by
Mtke
.
Phtpps,
Extension
Homemakers,
·Mrs.
Charlotte
Jenks,
.Mrs.
Bessie
cipaily
'around the new First
replaced
186 Denver
6. Auburn (9 -1 1
4 5 1 .450 214 2 19
RONAW IIOFFMAIII'
173 Kan City
7. Southern Cal 0 -1-ll
of
~
Ingels;
Mason
Extensi&lt;iol
Homemakers,
Mrs
.
.
J.
Marshall,
Mrs.
Aid
course
being taught in the
suffered
a
severe
brwse
.4 6 0 .400 192 205
Airman
· Ronald L
B. Te:xas A&amp;M (8 -21
87 San Diego
3 7 o .300 153 203 right pelvic brim and exte!'l"" Catherine Smith. Mason United 'Methodist CJwioch Mrs. lools
fifth and ·sixth grade . Health
9 . Penn St.lfl -21
52
National Conference
man,
son
of Mr. aud
10. N .C . Sl . (9 -2)
30
oblique muscles in Sunday's. 2S- TetiteandMrs. Myrtle McCloud. Alllntereltedperso~s are asked cla'!5. This course is through
east
Perry
F.
HoHman of
11. Maryland (7 . J)
25
w . 1. t . pet . pf pa 16 loss to Pittsburgh. Pruitt, the to attend.
. ,
the Southeastern Ohio Medical
12 . Miami (0 .1 19 -0-·lJ
18 St .Louis
• 2 0 .eo•J"223 "' Browns' .big-play man, jammed
Service. MrS. Chaney stressed
13 . Houston 18 -2 1
11
Locust St., .~ld~e~~~~
been assignOd to
14. Texas 0 -31
9 Wash
7 3 0 .700206148 his lower back in the same
MASON_
The
Mason
Chapter
No.
157
Order
of
Eastern
Star
that
the
course
Is
an
Jn.
15. Pittsburgh ( 7 -3)
7 Dalla s
5 5 0. .500 199 168
AFB, Wasb.,.as cook
16. Baylor (6 -Jl
6
game.
!shaving their Grand Visitation at Wahama High School Gym on dividuhlized program in which
completing Air Force
17 . (Tie) Mich . St . (5 -3 -11
2 Phil a
4 6 0 .400 151 153
''He would have been in the~ . Saturday, November 23. The dinner wlll be serVed at 5:30p.m. students progress at•their own
17 . (Tie) UCLA (6 -2-2)
2 NY Giants
2 8 0 .200 140 21.4
tralalng. Airman Hoflma
17 . (Tiel Tulsa (7 -31
2
if he had npt hurt hts back, and lhe price is $5. Reservations (RSVP) sholild be sent to Ann rate. They also must demonCentral
a 1974 graduate of
20 . San Diego St . (7 -2)
I
w. 1. t. pc1'. pi pa bead coach Nick Skorich said. Blake, Clifton, w. Va. by November 21.
strate the different procedures
Nofe : By ~greemen1 wifh fhe Minn
7 3 I .700 .206 f4 1
Hlfh School.
American Football Coaches,
"We didn 't have the btg play
A reception for Grand Ruth Wanda Gabritsch will follow
in giving first aid.
.
feams on probation by the . Grn Bay
5 5 0 .500 153 153 man in there against Pitts- the £'teeting.
'
'
·
Attending the Thursday
NCAA •re ineligible tor top 20 Detroit
5 5 0 .soo 155 175 burgh. Greg's inability to come
evening workshop were
and national championship con· Chicago.
3 7 0 .300 98 162
slderation by the U PI Board of
We't
back
hurt
us."
·
NEW
HAVEN
_
The
New
·Haven
Grade
Sohoolis
collecting
Lucretia Smith, Nancy Morris,
Cnches. Those tn'"s currently
on probation 'are: Oklahory~a,
At
his
weekly
Monday
news
Call)pben
soup
and
besn
labels
for
the
pltrpose
of
obtaining
audio
Eva
King, Judith Carl, Ann land, Ohio.
w. I . 1. pet . pf pa
SMU, California. Long Beach Los Ang
7 3 0.700 .177 120 conference, · Skorich said he vlswil equipment for the schjJol.
,
Br&lt;iwnlng,
Marlel!e Harrison, · In 1919, the U.S.
State and Southwestern Louisiana .
Anyone having these to contribute are asked to send them to Nancy
Jeffers,
Donna rejected the Treaty of
New Orlns
4 6 0 .-400 11 5 171 would use more of his younger
San F ran
3 7 0 .300 157 202 players in the game against the · the school, or call, and someone wlll pick them up.
.
.
Ohilnger,
linda
Pullins,
Carol sailles di-awn up by the
Alia
2 8 0 ·. 200 84 188
Bills,
for
which
there
are
still
Kennedy,
Sharon
Swindell,
Monday's Result
peace conference at the end
Ephrata , Wash ., and Mrs.
Kan City .42 Denver 3-4
more
than
15,000
tickets
availaMASON_
The
Sunshine
Class
of
Msson
United.
Methodist
Sharon
Welker.
'
World War I.
Neva King who has been caring
Sunday's Games
ble~
Church
will
meet
Thursday,
November
21,
for
a
poUuck
dlnne!:.at
The
next
wor~shop
is
Atlanta
at
San
Fran
'f9r her sister .in Reynoldshll'g
Bufflllo at Cleveland
"We plan to use (wide Gp.m.Atthisdlnnermeetingthegroupwlllpn!pare·thelrannual scheduled for grades 4, 5, .Ji.
A thought for the
spent a week visiting with Mr. Chicago
at Detroit
receiver)
Dave Sullivan and ThanksgivlDg remembrance trays for distribu.tion.
with John Arnott on Nov. 25. President Woodrow Wilson
and Mrs. Virgil King, David Dallas at Houston
(center-guard). Tom lleLeone
Denver a\ Oakland
and Helen.
the U.S. Senate, "There
Kansas c tv at Cine·t
more
than in the past," Skorich
MASON- Th\!'Sath wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. B.
Mrs. John Walter Dean and Miami at NY Jets
be bot a balance of power but
said. "But as far as who will F. Board was observed m Sunday at Msson United Methodist
at Los Angs
son, John, visited her grand· Minnesota
community
of power ...
""ew Eng at Balllmore
The Almanac
start at quarterback, we won't Church when flowers were placed on the altar by their daUghter,
Phlla
at'Washington
organized
·rivalries,
but
mothers , Mrs. Ada Slack at St . LOUIS at NY G iants
By Ualled Presslntematlonal
know until later in the week." Mrs. Mary Berry.
.
1
Syracuse, and .Mr. and Mrs. san Diego at Green say _
Today is Tuesday', ~ov . 19, organized common peace.''
~~ the Browns' performance
Monday's Game
Mr. and Mrs. Board were married on November 19, 1916 In
Hobart Smalley at Chester.
the 323rd day of 1974, with 42 to
against the Sleelers, Skorlch the Eckard Chapel Church by the Revereqd Alander: t ,
Pithbgh at New Orlns, nigl'lt
Mrs. Neva King, Mr. Albert
follow.
"
praised his defensive team al)d
' Mr, and Mrs; Board have operated a store lit Mason for many
Bellem and Mrs . Virgil King
moon
is
approaching
Its
The
said be felt the offense did well years, and at ~ presel)t time the Boards and their daughter,
WHA Standings
visited Mr. Richard Hellman at
By United P.ren International
first
quarter.
except for a fumble and an
East
Mary Berry, operate tile B &amp; B market In Mason. Mr. Board In '
Hemlock Grove.
The morning stars are
w. 1:- t. pts gf ga interception of a Sipe pass,
Mrs. Rowland Dais visited New Eng
9 4 o· 18 s2 36 whichca&amp;t Cleveland t,he game. the past. ~ been active In clyic' affalrs. He also oper'!.les a used · MerClD'y, Mars Bl'd Saturn.
5 A 1 11 26 19
furniture store·in the old Mason Grade Scl1ool.
with her brother, Clair Burson Clevelnd
The evening stars are Venu8
lndpls
4 11 0 8 32· 57
at O'Bieness Hospital in Chicago
2 10 0
• 27 48
and Jupiter.
' AND ABOUT PERSONS, Mr. and Mrs. Edwali:l Ryan spent
West
Athens.
Those born on this date are
w .•. 1. pis gl ••
several days on a vacation. Two days they vlsifed with Mr. and under the sign of Scorpio.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo King and Houston
9 6 0 18 70 50
8 . 6 0 16 45 53
Mrs. Pat Ryan and chlldreot, Mark and Patrick Joseph n at
Mr. and Mrs. Michael King and San Diego
Ameri!'Bn explorer George
Roanoke, and two days with J'!ffii'S Ryan at Bristol, Tenn. Mr . . Rogers Clark was born Nov. 19,
daughter, Tina, of Columbus Phoenix
5 1 , " ,, 54
S 7 0 10 53 57
and Mrs. William Sirunk of Princeton,' N. J. are visiting her 1752.
visited · Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Minn
Mleh
3 12 0 6 39 ]1
mother; Mrs. Enuna Ryan In Mason. Mrs. Leona Dudding ol
King, David and Helen.
On !lois day in history:
canadian
w
.
I.
I
.
ph
gf
ga
Nitro, visited Jut week -.!th Mr. and Mrs. BU1 Wllllsma. Mr. and
Rodney Carl who has been Toronto
In 1863, President Abraham
11 5 0 22 7A 51
Mrs. Ted lljley ol.t:;llftm, visited their, dau$Jrter and ilon4n.Jaw, Uncoln
sick is somewhat better at this Quebec
9 4 0 18 59 -4 ?
delivered· the GettysWinnipg
8 " 1 17 64 36
time.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) Mr. a'l!f ~- BID Lee at Dater, 'Oblo, Mrs. }:bner VanMeter of burg Address on .u.., Civil War
Mr. and Mrs . Harold White
Edmntn
7 2 0 f14 34 27 - It will take $750,000 to keep Clifton, visited a week with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer VanMeter It and, battlefield in Pennsylvania . ·
Since you purchased
Vncuv'r
4
7 1 9 35 47
had as recent guests, Mr. and
the Birmingham Americans In family at Lesage, W. Va. Mrs. Landon Slnlth baa returned to her
In
1874,
.
Williani
~
Marcy
Monday's Result
life
insurance, wages
Mrs . James Roush, Mrs.
Edmonton 5 Winnipeg 3
this city for the World FootbaU home In Ma110111 after several days visit with her sister and Tweed, leader of New York's cost at living have prcoball&gt;lll;
Tuesday's G•mes
Janeth Beal, Mrs. Neva King
League's second season, club husband, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bailey at San Antonio, and with her Tammany Hall, was' sentenced gohe up and this means
Houston at Indianapolis
.brother and family, Mr. and Mrs. Charles King a't WolffGI'th,
and Bud Bellem.
Toron to at Cleveland
It wQUid take more mOI&gt;ey •
owner Bill Putnam said Mon·
New
England
at
Ch·lcagO
Texas, and Miss Lorena Weiss, Mason, Is a patient at Pleasant to 12 year~ in prison for r)"'lake up fOij financial
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
day.
defrauding the city of $12 your family If sonnell&gt;!o
Van cou v er at san Diego
Mrs. John Dean were Mr. and
Putnam said the $750,000, VaUey 119sPltal where she was taken by MaBon Emejgeney million.
happeJ&gt;ed to you. Let us
Mrs . Kenneth Markins of
NH L standings
needed by next Thursday, Squad on Wedneld&amp;y evening. she Is reported to be improving.
·Also in 1874, the National you protect your family . _
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
By United Pren lnlernolionao WO\lld enable the team to pay
ATTENTION : Clubs, schools and. other organizations:
Women's Christian Temperance
Division 1
ha •100 000 · ba k
Smalley Jr. and famil)';,- Judy,
t,J,nion -was orgaulzed In Cleve·
w. o. 1. ph • 9 o 9 a more t n •
•
m
c
The Ne'if Haven rJ'A Is now taking entries for. the Winter
Susan, Dale and Hoble, of Philo
12 4 3 21 63 42 taxes to the stS'te, the county f'"'tival parade on Saturday, Dec. 7.
.
·
'
REUTER- .
Wierton, W. va: , Mr. and Mrs. Atlanta ·
9 7 -4 22 ,56 SJ imd the. clly and pay · ti)e
The theme this year isi'Chrlstmas 17781o 1974." Prize for the
University
Hospital
at
1 6 4 18 63 48
Gar old GHkey, Cindy and NY Rngrs
best float Is $251 second place Is $IS, and third place Is $10. Horses
NY llndr~
7 1 · 3 17 59 49 salaries of the player,s, npw
BROGAN
Columbus
over
the
weekend.
Tammy and Ja.On of Athens,
Division 2
four
-weeks
in
arrears.
·
and
bicycles
are
welco~
to
enter.
~
Mrs. :Mayme . Watson
gf ga
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Paynter of , v~cuvr w. 111. ..t. J pts
He said It would also all.W
Ifyourclubororganlzationisinter...tedinenterlng""a~flll"i&gt;aTh
""'
25 65 45
celebrated her 97th birthday at .
Carpenter and John, Anita and Chicago
872185941 the team to ·reach a level, of the parade, call the preSident of PTA, Jenny Carpenter, at 1182-.
the Elmwood Nursing Home on ·
son, John.
St . Louis
wlll judge the floats.
. SUnday, Nov. 10 with a son and
6 7 3 IS 54 57 solvency where public stoc;k . 2820. Mr.
Mrs. Olen Harrison is. Minn
107 svcalnore
5 10 3 1J 48 73 sales could be started.
daughter visitir)g her:
spending some time in Kan Cloy
3 12 1 7 43 ' 72
"I've
got
to
get
this
temDivision 3 ·
ColtDDbus visiting her son, Mr.
w. 1. t. pts gf ga porary financing one way or
Los Ani
10 2 6 26 sa 31 another," Putnam sald. ''H we
and Mrs. Phlllp Harrison and Montreal
Follrod and family and spent
9 5 6 ' 248561
son, Rodney'.
Pltlsbgh
7 7 2 16 69· 58 don'tdolhat,there'snowayto
the aftem~ and evenirig with
Detroit
6 8 2 14 .49 70 have a stock sale. A stock sale
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl Wash
them. Their son, ·Stephen·, of
1 15 2 4 34 91
visited her father, Clyde
would finance us thtough nat
Division ill
Ohio State University was also
A GREAT TIME FOR THE GOOD TIME:
Harrison of Middleport ~uffalo w. 1. t . pts . gf ga season and pay off ln.excess of
Stmday School attendance on home for the weekend and the
13 4 2 28 85 63 $1 million.';
";.
recenUy.
.
·
Nov. 10 was 38, offering $19:89. holiday on Monday. · ,
•
Di
Cl
d
Sh
Boston
8
5
5
11
80
58
Ml~
He
said
the
team,
among
the
ss ana · ay ~
,er- Toronto
Worstup
services were held at · Mr. and Mrs. Chas. D. Woode
5 8 3 13 58 68
man White""~:.\, married
·.
most financially sound in the ll .a. m . with the Rev. Meece took dinner )Vith his sister,
Saturday evening Several --Coi&lt;t
3 12 • 10 42 90 league, 'took In "a ·nttie over speaking from John 9:S:.ll,
Carrie .BUrson, 'a t Ahens,
·
·_ •
, ...._
Monday's Results
Give the gilt he or lhe will appreciate ~ .Keep
$2.3 million at the ·gate" this "KIJD,V(ing How Much We Need Tuesday.
from here attended.
· Montreal 9 Minnesota 4
them on ·tlme lri the,fln1181.fiiii)IOII wllll • ·po,al•lan
'Mr.· an d Mrs . RO·be r t · PittsbghTuesdoy's
Gomes
season and "prelimlli8ry ·fig· to Depend on Others." Atet NY Islanders
Mi: and Mrs. William Carr
Jeweled,
quality-made C.rwvetle Wlltdt.
ures show a loss of only $300,000 tendance was 25, offerj ng recently made a trip to
California at Washington
St. Louis at vancouver
. S.. our g,..t.MlectiQn of
wltchei.'Weliliv. lie
from the time we began put.ting · $20.75; Pledges, $20.00.
Cleveland Clinic for Mrs.
neweet
ltylee,
the
lateet
felturn.
Cer•vell• bJ
this together last December."
The County Council on Carr's routine chl!(!kUp.
ZENITH
Bulova.
Eltpeneive
wlltchn
II
lnex....,._
IHICeL
"If the money com'"' from Ministries held its regular
Mrs. Ruth Brooks- recently
Swearlngton of Dayton visited Birmingham, we'!) stay here,"
From
110.95.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Nev White and he said, "But If the money monthly meeting 'a t Alfred underwent e'!f surgery In a
COLOR TV · Mrs.
and
Jennie Hollie recenUy. comes from people in Tim- Church Monday evening, N9v. Columbus hospital
11.
recovering
nicely.
/
'J'he, Carleton Ch~h has a buktu who want the. team In
Paul· Buckley Is a patient in Mr. al\d Mrs. Clarence
guest speaker for Sunday Timbuktu, then we'll move
the
Unhrersity Hospital at Henderson and •Mr. and Mrs.
.BLACK &amp;
morning worship services, there."
·
He is t eported .David Williwns and ~on
Columbus.
Marshall and Sanda Ruth;
Putnam, who threatened to better at this time. ·
spent last StDJday with her
missionaries here from Korea. move the team from Blrmlng.
WHITE TV
.Mr. and Mrs. Chas. D. Woode sister, Bertha Wright ·In
ham before the se8son began if attended the special hymn sing Zanesville in celebration of ·the
he · did not get support frolil at the North Bethel Church Hendersons' wedding aneSTER EO
local sourves, said a group of Saturday evening.
,
niversary.
REVIVAL OPENS
lnv...tors In New York had
Clara
Follrod
and
Nina
·Mr. and Mrs. Richard
POINT ROCK - A revival expressed an Interest In buying
RObinson
were
Stmday
dinner
Buckley
and Teresa Buckley
will be held N.ov. 24-30, the Americans.
gue~ts
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ciair
E.
visited their father In the
beginning at 7:30 each evening ·
at the Point Rock Nazarene
HERMAN GRATE
Church on Rou!e 889, between
'77:1-5592
MASON, W. VA,.
Albany and ·Wilkesville, With

NEW YORK (UPI) -Michigan continued to trail Alabama
for No. !In this week's United
Press International Board of
Coach'"'' ·football ratings, rut
the Wolverines' more immedl·
ate concern Is thir&lt;kanked
Oblo State.
Alabama ret&amp;ined aU 23 of its
first-place votes from last
week to top Michigan, 33S-321.
Michigan, however, picked
up the other 12 flrsti&gt;lace votes
and would streilgthen its bid·
for the top ranlllng con·
slderably with a victory over
the iluckey'"' aLColwnbus.
Michigan can lock up the Big
Ten's Rolle Bowl berth with a
victory, while Ohio State could
throw the matter to another
vote this year by besting the
Wolverln....
Notre Dame remslned a
solid No. 4, while Nebraska
edged pait AuWrn, 188-188, for
fifth place.
Southern California, seeking
to wrap up Its own spot In the
Rose Bowl against UCLA
Saturday, was again seventh.
Teua AloM replaced Florida
as No. 8 after the Gators lost
their seclllld straight. game to
drop out of the ratings.
Moving up one spot each,
Penn Stale was ninth and
NGI'th Carolina State loth.

Ki~sbury

Sipe and
Pruitt are
o .aoo ns t.s:l
injured

Pro Standings
.

........ ~W:-.·~· ·

~m----:-·;··~--·=·-·=-",

:::~···· •

College

ratill!(S

SUPERIORS SEMI-BONELESS. ·

lb.

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b y Thursday ·

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lb. *1 49

SALAD

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BUYS

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Grade A Large

CHOICE GOLDEN RIPE

sarr LAD

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8 lbs. •1 00

69~

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gge

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24 OZ. CARTON

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BANANAS

5peclafsl

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Cartoon

Alfred
Social Notes

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Car.aveUe~ by

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MASON FURNitURE

-~~~~~~------------------•

John Elswick as

evan~elliot.

SAYRE HARDWARE ,
W.VA.

Inheritance facts used in con act

'
COLUMBUS
( UPI) - II'he
state. Commerte DeparbJtent
ts· investigating a 'Pair of
·, fraudulent schemes by .out of
state firms which purport to
locate abandoned property and
ihheriiances for Ohi&lt;ians for a
fee.
' ·
Commerce Dlrec!« Dennis
Shaul said the two firms in
Freeport, N. Y., and Conoga
Park, Calif., contact Ohio
COilSIIllers by mall and report
that 80111eGne with the same
last nar.1e has left unclaimed
property. ,
. For a fee, the company wiU
provide tl\e .consumer -with .

Interesting and
profitable career
for
men
and
women · selling
Sarah Coventry, 18.
and over. "For, information write
Fay Westfall, Box
24, Long BoHom,
Ohio.
!

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Easy Terms!

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Superiors Polish Sausagtl ...................... lb. 79~
Superiors Bologna, by the ,piece.... ,..,.. lb. 70~
Superlo~s Wieners,.~ .... ;.. ;......... 12 oz. pkg.
69'
Superiors All Beef Wieners. .... 12 oz. pkg. 79c
Ground Beef, any am~unt ..................... lb. , 79~
Ground Chuck; fresh; lean.................... : lb. •1 09
-·- . ·. d..
I
'11•
Ground Roun , extra ean ..................... lb.
Bacon Endi &amp; Pieces ........ :....................... lb. 79~

,• .....

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BREAD

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Court St.

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16 ounce

for
•

FABRIC

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• Sews buttonholes, sews on ~
buttons~ ov~·

REG. 51 .,~95 edaes, mono· , 01110
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srams, mends ...
carryong
ail without
or cabi~t •~tra attachments
• Built·in blind•hein stitch
•lixtr~·wide zis·zac capabilj
• Fabric setting dial
• ·3 needle P&lt;&gt;sitions

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I

4- The Daily ~ntinel, MiddiPlJ(lrt·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1974

Alabama retains
top spot in poll
'

News, Notes
Ralph Carl, supt. 'of the
Carleton Church, presented
pins for ' perfect attendance to
Brett. Carl for eight years,
Randy Carl, seven years,
Danny Carl, four years !llld
Melodl Carl, three years,
Audra Hoildashelt, three years
and Floyd !llld Edith Rosa, 11
.years. ·
·
Mrs. Hazel Arnold had as
recent visitors, Mr. and Mrs.
John DeVere Of Charleston imd
Mrs. Linda Grate of ' HtDJ·
llngton and Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Arnold and SOils, Billy
and Bobble, Columbus.
Mr. Albert (Bud) Beilem of

ARTIFICIAL
CEMmRY
DEOORAnONS
,

Monument Markers
"'
and
BASKETS
n
Beautiful FaU-C:!'lors
From '11.95 . ..,

DudWs Florist
59 Second $t.
Middleport, 0.

.

NFL Standings
By United PresS International
American Conference
f:: ;n t·

Miami

Bflp
New Eng
NV' Jets

w. I. t.

s

2

pet . gf ga

.

..; ..... ••• ••• • ,.••;.:.:.:.:. ...

V'

•

, X"?

···u···· ···· ··

·

~-

11!10

=~:

·
Grades
4 5 6

'

~

.

., Masan.County New~ Notes 1.parents·meet
~
By Alma Marshall
~ in workshop

•

7 3 0 .700 2.19 19S
6 Q4 0 .600 251 176
3 7 0 .300 170 224
2 8 0 .200119234
Central
w. 1. t_. pet .. pg pa
7 'l 1 .750 719 149

·
of students in grades
MASON
- ~ersons lnter...ted In .the development of the 4, Parents
5 an&lt;! 6 met with Mrs.
Virgil~· Lewis property (former Ed Roush) pr.operty on Brown Doro"'" Chaney Thursday
Bt~lt
_,,
Street jn Mason, are requested to attend a.meeting on Friday,
NEW YORK (li'PII The
1974 Un i ted Press International
BEijEA, Ohio 1UPI)
November 22, at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Landon (Catherine)
evening · at th.e Salisbury
Board of Coaches top 20 malor Pltsbgh
Cleveland Browns' quarterback Smith M8son. The Mason County Court recently purchased this
lillementary building for an
college football rating s with
won -lost record s and first -place Cine I
.
evening workshop In which
6 4 0 .600 '125 179 Bri~n Sipe and scatback Greg historlchometobeusedbyMasonCountyclilzens.
votes in parentheses :
Houston
5 5 0 .soo 181 201 Pruit~ today were h~ted as . • At a recent meeting held In Mason, Mrs. Landon Srillth, was
subject
matter and class
Team
Points
1. Alabama (23) ( 10 -0)
335 Cleve
que~tionable
for
Sund~y
s
game
appointed
chairman
and
others
representing
'Various
routine
were
discusSed. This
3 7 0 .300 193 260
2. Ml c l'l igan ( 121 &lt; 10-0l
321
w
"''t
the
Buffa!~
Btlls.
.
organlzatlona
Include,'
Mason
Mothers
Club,
Mrs.
Joeeph
Llsh,
•
was
the
filth
in
such a. series.
agamst
3. Ohio St. (9 -1)
266
w . I. t. pel . pf pa
4 . Notre Dame (9 l l
20.4 Oaklnd
Sipe, who probably wtll be Mrs. Josetta Noble;" Ubrary, Mrs. Rsy Proffitt; Helping Hand
Discussion centered prln9 .I 0 .900 .264 i5J
5 . Nebraska (8 -2)
188
by
Mtke
.
Phtpps,
Extension
Homemakers,
·Mrs.
Charlotte
Jenks,
.Mrs.
Bessie
cipaily
'around the new First
replaced
186 Denver
6. Auburn (9 -1 1
4 5 1 .450 214 2 19
RONAW IIOFFMAIII'
173 Kan City
7. Southern Cal 0 -1-ll
of
~
Ingels;
Mason
Extensi&lt;iol
Homemakers,
Mrs
.
.
J.
Marshall,
Mrs.
Aid
course
being taught in the
suffered
a
severe
brwse
.4 6 0 .400 192 205
Airman
· Ronald L
B. Te:xas A&amp;M (8 -21
87 San Diego
3 7 o .300 153 203 right pelvic brim and exte!'l"" Catherine Smith. Mason United 'Methodist CJwioch Mrs. lools
fifth and ·sixth grade . Health
9 . Penn St.lfl -21
52
National Conference
man,
son
of Mr. aud
10. N .C . Sl . (9 -2)
30
oblique muscles in Sunday's. 2S- TetiteandMrs. Myrtle McCloud. Alllntereltedperso~s are asked cla'!5. This course is through
east
Perry
F.
HoHman of
11. Maryland (7 . J)
25
w . 1. t . pet . pf pa 16 loss to Pittsburgh. Pruitt, the to attend.
. ,
the Southeastern Ohio Medical
12 . Miami (0 .1 19 -0-·lJ
18 St .Louis
• 2 0 .eo•J"223 "' Browns' .big-play man, jammed
Service. MrS. Chaney stressed
13 . Houston 18 -2 1
11
Locust St., .~ld~e~~~~
been assignOd to
14. Texas 0 -31
9 Wash
7 3 0 .700206148 his lower back in the same
MASON_
The
Mason
Chapter
No.
157
Order
of
Eastern
Star
that
the
course
Is
an
Jn.
15. Pittsburgh ( 7 -3)
7 Dalla s
5 5 0. .500 199 168
AFB, Wasb.,.as cook
16. Baylor (6 -Jl
6
game.
!shaving their Grand Visitation at Wahama High School Gym on dividuhlized program in which
completing Air Force
17 . (Tie) Mich . St . (5 -3 -11
2 Phil a
4 6 0 .400 151 153
''He would have been in the~ . Saturday, November 23. The dinner wlll be serVed at 5:30p.m. students progress at•their own
17 . (Tie) UCLA (6 -2-2)
2 NY Giants
2 8 0 .200 140 21.4
tralalng. Airman Hoflma
17 . (Tiel Tulsa (7 -31
2
if he had npt hurt hts back, and lhe price is $5. Reservations (RSVP) sholild be sent to Ann rate. They also must demonCentral
a 1974 graduate of
20 . San Diego St . (7 -2)
I
w. 1. t. pc1'. pi pa bead coach Nick Skorich said. Blake, Clifton, w. Va. by November 21.
strate the different procedures
Nofe : By ~greemen1 wifh fhe Minn
7 3 I .700 .206 f4 1
Hlfh School.
American Football Coaches,
"We didn 't have the btg play
A reception for Grand Ruth Wanda Gabritsch will follow
in giving first aid.
.
feams on probation by the . Grn Bay
5 5 0 .500 153 153 man in there against Pitts- the £'teeting.
'
'
·
Attending the Thursday
NCAA •re ineligible tor top 20 Detroit
5 5 0 .soo 155 175 burgh. Greg's inability to come
evening workshop were
and national championship con· Chicago.
3 7 0 .300 98 162
slderation by the U PI Board of
We't
back
hurt
us."
·
NEW
HAVEN
_
The
New
·Haven
Grade
Sohoolis
collecting
Lucretia Smith, Nancy Morris,
Cnches. Those tn'"s currently
on probation 'are: Oklahory~a,
At
his
weekly
Monday
news
Call)pben
soup
and
besn
labels
for
the
pltrpose
of
obtaining
audio
Eva
King, Judith Carl, Ann land, Ohio.
w. I . 1. pet . pf pa
SMU, California. Long Beach Los Ang
7 3 0.700 .177 120 conference, · Skorich said he vlswil equipment for the schjJol.
,
Br&lt;iwnlng,
Marlel!e Harrison, · In 1919, the U.S.
State and Southwestern Louisiana .
Anyone having these to contribute are asked to send them to Nancy
Jeffers,
Donna rejected the Treaty of
New Orlns
4 6 0 .-400 11 5 171 would use more of his younger
San F ran
3 7 0 .300 157 202 players in the game against the · the school, or call, and someone wlll pick them up.
.
.
Ohilnger,
linda
Pullins,
Carol sailles di-awn up by the
Alia
2 8 0 ·. 200 84 188
Bills,
for
which
there
are
still
Kennedy,
Sharon
Swindell,
Monday's Result
peace conference at the end
Ephrata , Wash ., and Mrs.
Kan City .42 Denver 3-4
more
than
15,000
tickets
availaMASON_
The
Sunshine
Class
of
Msson
United.
Methodist
Sharon
Welker.
'
World War I.
Neva King who has been caring
Sunday's Games
ble~
Church
will
meet
Thursday,
November
21,
for
a
poUuck
dlnne!:.at
The
next
wor~shop
is
Atlanta
at
San
Fran
'f9r her sister .in Reynoldshll'g
Bufflllo at Cleveland
"We plan to use (wide Gp.m.Atthisdlnnermeetingthegroupwlllpn!pare·thelrannual scheduled for grades 4, 5, .Ji.
A thought for the
spent a week visiting with Mr. Chicago
at Detroit
receiver)
Dave Sullivan and ThanksgivlDg remembrance trays for distribu.tion.
with John Arnott on Nov. 25. President Woodrow Wilson
and Mrs. Virgil King, David Dallas at Houston
(center-guard). Tom lleLeone
Denver a\ Oakland
and Helen.
the U.S. Senate, "There
Kansas c tv at Cine·t
more
than in the past," Skorich
MASON- Th\!'Sath wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. B.
Mrs. John Walter Dean and Miami at NY Jets
be bot a balance of power but
said. "But as far as who will F. Board was observed m Sunday at Msson United Methodist
at Los Angs
son, John, visited her grand· Minnesota
community
of power ...
""ew Eng at Balllmore
The Almanac
start at quarterback, we won't Church when flowers were placed on the altar by their daUghter,
Phlla
at'Washington
organized
·rivalries,
but
mothers , Mrs. Ada Slack at St . LOUIS at NY G iants
By Ualled Presslntematlonal
know until later in the week." Mrs. Mary Berry.
.
1
Syracuse, and .Mr. and Mrs. san Diego at Green say _
Today is Tuesday', ~ov . 19, organized common peace.''
~~ the Browns' performance
Monday's Game
Mr. and Mrs. Board were married on November 19, 1916 In
Hobart Smalley at Chester.
the 323rd day of 1974, with 42 to
against the Sleelers, Skorlch the Eckard Chapel Church by the Revereqd Alander: t ,
Pithbgh at New Orlns, nigl'lt
Mrs. Neva King, Mr. Albert
follow.
"
praised his defensive team al)d
' Mr, and Mrs; Board have operated a store lit Mason for many
Bellem and Mrs . Virgil King
moon
is
approaching
Its
The
said be felt the offense did well years, and at ~ presel)t time the Boards and their daughter,
WHA Standings
visited Mr. Richard Hellman at
By United P.ren International
first
quarter.
except for a fumble and an
East
Mary Berry, operate tile B &amp; B market In Mason. Mr. Board In '
Hemlock Grove.
The morning stars are
w. 1:- t. pts gf ga interception of a Sipe pass,
Mrs. Rowland Dais visited New Eng
9 4 o· 18 s2 36 whichca&amp;t Cleveland t,he game. the past. ~ been active In clyic' affalrs. He also oper'!.les a used · MerClD'y, Mars Bl'd Saturn.
5 A 1 11 26 19
furniture store·in the old Mason Grade Scl1ool.
with her brother, Clair Burson Clevelnd
The evening stars are Venu8
lndpls
4 11 0 8 32· 57
at O'Bieness Hospital in Chicago
2 10 0
• 27 48
and Jupiter.
' AND ABOUT PERSONS, Mr. and Mrs. Edwali:l Ryan spent
West
Athens.
Those born on this date are
w .•. 1. pis gl ••
several days on a vacation. Two days they vlsifed with Mr. and under the sign of Scorpio.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo King and Houston
9 6 0 18 70 50
8 . 6 0 16 45 53
Mrs. Pat Ryan and chlldreot, Mark and Patrick Joseph n at
Mr. and Mrs. Michael King and San Diego
Ameri!'Bn explorer George
Roanoke, and two days with J'!ffii'S Ryan at Bristol, Tenn. Mr . . Rogers Clark was born Nov. 19,
daughter, Tina, of Columbus Phoenix
5 1 , " ,, 54
S 7 0 10 53 57
and Mrs. William Sirunk of Princeton,' N. J. are visiting her 1752.
visited · Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Minn
Mleh
3 12 0 6 39 ]1
mother; Mrs. Enuna Ryan In Mason. Mrs. Leona Dudding ol
King, David and Helen.
On !lois day in history:
canadian
w
.
I.
I
.
ph
gf
ga
Nitro, visited Jut week -.!th Mr. and Mrs. BU1 Wllllsma. Mr. and
Rodney Carl who has been Toronto
In 1863, President Abraham
11 5 0 22 7A 51
Mrs. Ted lljley ol.t:;llftm, visited their, dau$Jrter and ilon4n.Jaw, Uncoln
sick is somewhat better at this Quebec
9 4 0 18 59 -4 ?
delivered· the GettysWinnipg
8 " 1 17 64 36
time.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) Mr. a'l!f ~- BID Lee at Dater, 'Oblo, Mrs. }:bner VanMeter of burg Address on .u.., Civil War
Mr. and Mrs . Harold White
Edmntn
7 2 0 f14 34 27 - It will take $750,000 to keep Clifton, visited a week with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer VanMeter It and, battlefield in Pennsylvania . ·
Since you purchased
Vncuv'r
4
7 1 9 35 47
had as recent guests, Mr. and
the Birmingham Americans In family at Lesage, W. Va. Mrs. Landon Slnlth baa returned to her
In
1874,
.
Williani
~
Marcy
Monday's Result
life
insurance, wages
Mrs . James Roush, Mrs.
Edmonton 5 Winnipeg 3
this city for the World FootbaU home In Ma110111 after several days visit with her sister and Tweed, leader of New York's cost at living have prcoball&gt;lll;
Tuesday's G•mes
Janeth Beal, Mrs. Neva King
League's second season, club husband, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bailey at San Antonio, and with her Tammany Hall, was' sentenced gohe up and this means
Houston at Indianapolis
.brother and family, Mr. and Mrs. Charles King a't WolffGI'th,
and Bud Bellem.
Toron to at Cleveland
It wQUid take more mOI&gt;ey •
owner Bill Putnam said Mon·
New
England
at
Ch·lcagO
Texas, and Miss Lorena Weiss, Mason, Is a patient at Pleasant to 12 year~ in prison for r)"'lake up fOij financial
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
day.
defrauding the city of $12 your family If sonnell&gt;!o
Van cou v er at san Diego
Mrs. John Dean were Mr. and
Putnam said the $750,000, VaUey 119sPltal where she was taken by MaBon Emejgeney million.
happeJ&gt;ed to you. Let us
Mrs . Kenneth Markins of
NH L standings
needed by next Thursday, Squad on Wedneld&amp;y evening. she Is reported to be improving.
·Also in 1874, the National you protect your family . _
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
By United Pren lnlernolionao WO\lld enable the team to pay
ATTENTION : Clubs, schools and. other organizations:
Women's Christian Temperance
Division 1
ha •100 000 · ba k
Smalley Jr. and famil)';,- Judy,
t,J,nion -was orgaulzed In Cleve·
w. o. 1. ph • 9 o 9 a more t n •
•
m
c
The Ne'if Haven rJ'A Is now taking entries for. the Winter
Susan, Dale and Hoble, of Philo
12 4 3 21 63 42 taxes to the stS'te, the county f'"'tival parade on Saturday, Dec. 7.
.
·
'
REUTER- .
Wierton, W. va: , Mr. and Mrs. Atlanta ·
9 7 -4 22 ,56 SJ imd the. clly and pay · ti)e
The theme this year isi'Chrlstmas 17781o 1974." Prize for the
University
Hospital
at
1 6 4 18 63 48
Gar old GHkey, Cindy and NY Rngrs
best float Is $251 second place Is $IS, and third place Is $10. Horses
NY llndr~
7 1 · 3 17 59 49 salaries of the player,s, npw
BROGAN
Columbus
over
the
weekend.
Tammy and Ja.On of Athens,
Division 2
four
-weeks
in
arrears.
·
and
bicycles
are
welco~
to
enter.
~
Mrs. :Mayme . Watson
gf ga
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Paynter of , v~cuvr w. 111. ..t. J pts
He said It would also all.W
Ifyourclubororganlzationisinter...tedinenterlng""a~flll"i&gt;aTh
""'
25 65 45
celebrated her 97th birthday at .
Carpenter and John, Anita and Chicago
872185941 the team to ·reach a level, of the parade, call the preSident of PTA, Jenny Carpenter, at 1182-.
the Elmwood Nursing Home on ·
son, John.
St . Louis
wlll judge the floats.
. SUnday, Nov. 10 with a son and
6 7 3 IS 54 57 solvency where public stoc;k . 2820. Mr.
Mrs. Olen Harrison is. Minn
107 svcalnore
5 10 3 1J 48 73 sales could be started.
daughter visitir)g her:
spending some time in Kan Cloy
3 12 1 7 43 ' 72
"I've
got
to
get
this
temDivision 3 ·
ColtDDbus visiting her son, Mr.
w. 1. t. pts gf ga porary financing one way or
Los Ani
10 2 6 26 sa 31 another," Putnam sald. ''H we
and Mrs. Phlllp Harrison and Montreal
Follrod and family and spent
9 5 6 ' 248561
son, Rodney'.
Pltlsbgh
7 7 2 16 69· 58 don'tdolhat,there'snowayto
the aftem~ and evenirig with
Detroit
6 8 2 14 .49 70 have a stock sale. A stock sale
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl Wash
them. Their son, ·Stephen·, of
1 15 2 4 34 91
visited her father, Clyde
would finance us thtough nat
Division ill
Ohio State University was also
A GREAT TIME FOR THE GOOD TIME:
Harrison of Middleport ~uffalo w. 1. t . pts . gf ga season and pay off ln.excess of
Stmday School attendance on home for the weekend and the
13 4 2 28 85 63 $1 million.';
";.
recenUy.
.
·
Nov. 10 was 38, offering $19:89. holiday on Monday. · ,
•
Di
Cl
d
Sh
Boston
8
5
5
11
80
58
Ml~
He
said
the
team,
among
the
ss ana · ay ~
,er- Toronto
Worstup
services were held at · Mr. and Mrs. Chas. D. Woode
5 8 3 13 58 68
man White""~:.\, married
·.
most financially sound in the ll .a. m . with the Rev. Meece took dinner )Vith his sister,
Saturday evening Several --Coi&lt;t
3 12 • 10 42 90 league, 'took In "a ·nttie over speaking from John 9:S:.ll,
Carrie .BUrson, 'a t Ahens,
·
·_ •
, ...._
Monday's Results
Give the gilt he or lhe will appreciate ~ .Keep
$2.3 million at the ·gate" this "KIJD,V(ing How Much We Need Tuesday.
from here attended.
· Montreal 9 Minnesota 4
them on ·tlme lri the,fln1181.fiiii)IOII wllll • ·po,al•lan
'Mr.· an d Mrs . RO·be r t · PittsbghTuesdoy's
Gomes
season and "prelimlli8ry ·fig· to Depend on Others." Atet NY Islanders
Mi: and Mrs. William Carr
Jeweled,
quality-made C.rwvetle Wlltdt.
ures show a loss of only $300,000 tendance was 25, offerj ng recently made a trip to
California at Washington
St. Louis at vancouver
. S.. our g,..t.MlectiQn of
wltchei.'Weliliv. lie
from the time we began put.ting · $20.75; Pledges, $20.00.
Cleveland Clinic for Mrs.
neweet
ltylee,
the
lateet
felturn.
Cer•vell• bJ
this together last December."
The County Council on Carr's routine chl!(!kUp.
ZENITH
Bulova.
Eltpeneive
wlltchn
II
lnex....,._
IHICeL
"If the money com'"' from Ministries held its regular
Mrs. Ruth Brooks- recently
Swearlngton of Dayton visited Birmingham, we'!) stay here,"
From
110.95.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Nev White and he said, "But If the money monthly meeting 'a t Alfred underwent e'!f surgery In a
COLOR TV · Mrs.
and
Jennie Hollie recenUy. comes from people in Tim- Church Monday evening, N9v. Columbus hospital
11.
recovering
nicely.
/
'J'he, Carleton Ch~h has a buktu who want the. team In
Paul· Buckley Is a patient in Mr. al\d Mrs. Clarence
guest speaker for Sunday Timbuktu, then we'll move
the
Unhrersity Hospital at Henderson and •Mr. and Mrs.
.BLACK &amp;
morning worship services, there."
·
He is t eported .David Williwns and ~on
Columbus.
Marshall and Sanda Ruth;
Putnam, who threatened to better at this time. ·
spent last StDJday with her
missionaries here from Korea. move the team from Blrmlng.
WHITE TV
.Mr. and Mrs. Chas. D. Woode sister, Bertha Wright ·In
ham before the se8son began if attended the special hymn sing Zanesville in celebration of ·the
he · did not get support frolil at the North Bethel Church Hendersons' wedding aneSTER EO
local sourves, said a group of Saturday evening.
,
niversary.
REVIVAL OPENS
lnv...tors In New York had
Clara
Follrod
and
Nina
·Mr. and Mrs. Richard
POINT ROCK - A revival expressed an Interest In buying
RObinson
were
Stmday
dinner
Buckley
and Teresa Buckley
will be held N.ov. 24-30, the Americans.
gue~ts
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ciair
E.
visited their father In the
beginning at 7:30 each evening ·
at the Point Rock Nazarene
HERMAN GRATE
Church on Rou!e 889, between
'77:1-5592
MASON, W. VA,.
Albany and ·Wilkesville, With

NEW YORK (UPI) -Michigan continued to trail Alabama
for No. !In this week's United
Press International Board of
Coach'"'' ·football ratings, rut
the Wolverines' more immedl·
ate concern Is thir&lt;kanked
Oblo State.
Alabama ret&amp;ined aU 23 of its
first-place votes from last
week to top Michigan, 33S-321.
Michigan, however, picked
up the other 12 flrsti&gt;lace votes
and would streilgthen its bid·
for the top ranlllng con·
slderably with a victory over
the iluckey'"' aLColwnbus.
Michigan can lock up the Big
Ten's Rolle Bowl berth with a
victory, while Ohio State could
throw the matter to another
vote this year by besting the
Wolverln....
Notre Dame remslned a
solid No. 4, while Nebraska
edged pait AuWrn, 188-188, for
fifth place.
Southern California, seeking
to wrap up Its own spot In the
Rose Bowl against UCLA
Saturday, was again seventh.
Teua AloM replaced Florida
as No. 8 after the Gators lost
their seclllld straight. game to
drop out of the ratings.
Moving up one spot each,
Penn Stale was ninth and
NGI'th Carolina State loth.

Ki~sbury

Sipe and
Pruitt are
o .aoo ns t.s:l
injured

Pro Standings
.

........ ~W:-.·~· ·

~m----:-·;··~--·=·-·=-",

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College

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John Elswick as

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SAYRE HARDWARE ,
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Inheritance facts used in con act

'
COLUMBUS
( UPI) - II'he
state. Commerte DeparbJtent
ts· investigating a 'Pair of
·, fraudulent schemes by .out of
state firms which purport to
locate abandoned property and
ihheriiances for Ohi&lt;ians for a
fee.
' ·
Commerce Dlrec!« Dennis
Shaul said the two firms in
Freeport, N. Y., and Conoga
Park, Calif., contact Ohio
COilSIIllers by mall and report
that 80111eGne with the same
last nar.1e has left unclaimed
property. ,
. For a fee, the company wiU
provide tl\e .consumer -with .

Interesting and
profitable career
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and
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Sarah Coventry, 18.
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Superlo~s Wieners,.~ .... ;.. ;......... 12 oz. pkg.
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Superiors All Beef Wieners. .... 12 oz. pkg. 79c
Ground Beef, any am~unt ..................... lb. , 79~
Ground Chuck; fresh; lean.................... : lb. •1 09
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DR NEW .DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR RJEE~

Poeiiet•Y
Ph.9ft-22tl
- . , . . . . to
~llone Fram Now!

8
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$

Ill

.

lt

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. 16 OZ. ,

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$)39

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meet Saturday

Anniversary celebrated
LETART, W.Va. - Mr. and
Mrs. Rufus Hill, Letart, W.
Va., wer-e surprised on their
golden wedding anniversary'
Sunday, No~. 6 at their home
by their daughters , Mrs . Mary
Hoffman, Letart, and Mrs'.
Ralph (Erma) Rottgen, New
Haven. Mrs. Hill, the former
Margaret Herdman, and Rufus
Hill were married Nov. 7, 1924
at the home of Rev. Tripp
McCollins, Leon, W. Va., uncle
of Mr. Hill.
An
anniversary
cake
decorated in gold and white
and flowers were presented to
the honorees.
In addl !ion to their two
daughters, the Hills have seven ·
grandchildren aild four greatgrandchildren.

Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Hill

.-:-;-:-:-:-:-:-:-·-:-.·.·.·:-·---.·.· ss; n

Polly.'s Pointers
By Polly Cramer

What shampoos
work on shags?
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Our long shag rug needs cleaning and I
wonder if there Is a saUsfactory way other than steam cleaning. I
have asked about shampoos but no one can tell me much about
them. I know there ate shampoo machines on the market but I
would like to know if anyone knows of a powerful regular rug
shampoo. Steam cleaning is so terribly expensive. - MARILYN.
DEAR POLLY -My Pet Peeve is with shirt manufacturers
who use pins that rust to hold the shirts In place. I have had to use
pliers to pull some out and the pins left rust spols on the shirts. TIIELMA.
DEAR POLLY- I want to tell the lady who always gets her
sweater on backwards that I had the same problem with my
under shirts
I had my wife put a few 811tches ol red thread
inside the back of each shirt neck. Now It is easy to get them on
right. - ALFRED.
'
DEAR POLLY - I have always enjoyed the back rubs thst
nurses give at night but recentlY mine was an added pleasure as
il was a WARM hack rub. The nUI'lle rubbed the lotion between
_ her palms to remove thio c!illl. A few nights later another nurse
did the ssme and seemed surprised that all nurses did not do this.
Mine is a tip for nurses to give patients extra pleasure which will
really be appreciated. - ALICE.
,
DEAR POLLY- The mlnisture bulletin board In my car has
JX'Oven to be a !!Aver of gasoline, tbne and money. I use small
strong magnets to hold coupons, Ust of things to be purchased
and things to do. Many are lhlngs that can be postponed until I
am In the neighborhood on urgent business but this way they are
not forgotten. I have·a constant reminder In front of me and do
not have to make extra. trips for things I have forgotten . JEAN.
DEAR POLLY - Help a chlld accept wearing glasses by
letting him wear EMPTY frames from a pair of chlld's sun ·
glasses around the house to get used to the Idea. When the real
ones arrive the child will be used to -.ring glasses.
··
Attach a pocket to ' the corner of yoiar beach towel, sew a
zlpj:ler to ltstopandlt will hold all those little things needed at the
beach such as oll, lotion, a little money, etc.
My last ts' really a peeve with those who do not vote but are
always complaining about the way the country is run. -MRS. R.

until

L.

You will receive a dOijar If Polly - • your favorite bomemaklog Idea, Pet Peeve,· Polly'• Problem or solatloa to a
problem. ~rite Polly In care of Ibis oewspaper.

~i

;·~;;:}~

Social ~~
ICalendadl
TUESDAY
CHESTER Council :!23,
Daughters of America, 7:30
p.m. at the hall. Members to
wear white for initiatory work.
WOMEN'S Au:tlliary,
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
cafeteria, 7:30 p.m . meeting .
White elephant sale.
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 p.m.,
Columbllll and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. Cultural report by
Debbie Buck on "All Together
Now," and a· film on planned
parenthood. Sandi Sargent and
Karen Stanley, ·hostesses.
REVIVAL now in progress at
Rutland Church of God through
Nov. 23. Rev . Chester Estep,
Chillicothe, evangelist, 7 p.m.
Everyone welcome .
RACINE Lodge 461. F&amp;AM
special meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Work in EA degree.
CHESTER Council 323, D of
A, 7:30 p.m., · initiation. All
members asked to attend and
wear white.
SOUTHERN
Athletic
Boosters, 7:30 p.m., high
school, Racine . Everyone
invited.
GROUP II, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
Thanksgiving dinner at
Oscar's, Gallipolis. · Memben
to meet at the home .of Mrs.
Dorothy Morris, 6: 15 to go ·to
Gallipolis, and tl)en will return
there for buSiness. 'meeting.
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
Area Branch of the American
Association of University
Wo~en , 7:30p.m. at the Meigs
High School Library , (one
week earlier than regular
meeting date). Program to be
presented by Mrs. Sharron
Helen, AAUW secretary, and
the Athens Branch program
chairwoman. Plans to be· made
for annual Christmas brunch.
Refreshments.

~ Special singing for the
honorees wa s presented by the ·
children of Mr . and Mrs. Don
Elders . The song wr.itten by the
Elders' daughter, contained
lyrics as follows : "Together
we·'ve been , Together we'll
stay, Together we 've sung,
Together we've prayed,
Together we 've found that,
Jesus is the way, On our 50th
Anniversary Day.' '
Attending were the honorees,
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Mar.
cinko, Donnie and Kelly, Mr'. '
and Mrs. Kenneth Roush , Mr ..· ·
and Mrs. Lee Layne, Mrs. Don
Elders, Sonia, Diana, Sheila
and Harry, Robert Stewart,
Mrs. Mary Hoffman, Connie
WELtoMED-- Five riew members were welcomed Into.,
and Debbie, Mr. and Mrs.
' the Middleport Business and Protession&amp;i Women•s 'C!ub at .a
Ralph Rottgen.

dividuals and organizations Bill Hanlin, a successful coach ·
asked to attend meeting with at NAJA Glenville College,
George Jenkins, Belmont, guest ~peaker . Public is . Jn. .
coordinator of Ohio health vited. There will be $1 dopa'tion
fairs . Event would be a com• l!t door . Parents of football
munity developed , week-long players and cheerleaders who
health education program.
were not notified what to bring
THIRD
We dne sd a y · are
asked
to
prepare
Homemakers Club, 10 .a.m., - vegetable., dessert or salad.
Syracuse Municipal Building.
ROCK Springs Better Health
Potluck at noon; afternoon Club, 1:15 p.m ., home of
program
on
Christmas Frances J'olmer. Betty Conkle
decorations · with Esther in charge of. JX'Ogram.
Harden leader. Take medium
MIDDLEPORT
Child
sized styrofoam ball, sequins, Conservation League, 7:30
gUtter, small pieces ric rae, p.m., Columbia Gas Co. office,
four long pipe cleaners.
cooking demonstration by
mi.JRSDAY
Betty Newton. Everione to
FOOTBALL Banquet at t.ake a guest.
Eastern High School, &amp;:30 p.m.

"

,.

~~W.~~i~r:sTOit!

SELECTED
Miss.
Collllie Dailey, daughter of
·.. ~
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dailey,
-Long Botton, and a senior at
•
Eastern High , School, has
_ , been named Eastern Future
:',:";;' Homemakers of America
-·
"Girl of llie Monlb" for
• November. Mils Dailey has
been In FHA for three years

'· ," r

.

.

'

.'
"
meeting Mciiday night at the Colunibla Gaa CO. ofttce. They
are, left to right; Louise Davis, Mary Jane Scaggs, Gene
Lyons, Louise Skaggs and Joan Vaughan.
'
.,._

.

.;""

'

'

'

.. . QOAT ~~NCHED
Romim F. Wartl)ke; Kenneth
H. Light; Patricia P . Light to
JEFFERSONviLLE, Ind.
James E. ~aley, Joycellne C. (UPI)
A'D ultra
Haley, .28 Acre, Rutland.
mOde'rn
$17
million
Buster Barrett, Gladys sternwheel steamboat Is tO be
Barrett to Howard Searles, 3 launched Into the Ohio River at
Acres, Rutland.
the Jeffboat Co. plant here
Mildre&lt;l nile, Gdn., Louise Nov. 30.
Bryan to Charles.·E. Stevens,
'lbe boat ordered by the
Peggy A. Stevens, Lots, Delta Queeq Steamboat Co. Q8t1
Middleport.
·" ·
been under Cl!nstructlon ; at
, Romle Fox, Doris Fo;t to JeffbOat fog llllll'e thai\ a year.
·Leona Oberholzer, 5 Acres,.
,A ccmpany spokeaman at
Scipio.
.. ,
Cincinnati said the ve18el
Carl E. Mitch, LilB. C. Mitch would be' named at a
to Jerry. W. Colmer, Barbara chrlatenlns ceremony nezt
M. Colmer, .52 Acre, Pomeroy.

Pr;ope~y

Transfers
Pauline Gallagher, . dec. to
Charles Patrick Gallagher,
Cert. of trans., Middleport.
C. P . Gallagher, Charles D.
Gallagher, Opal Gallagher to
Charles Dennis Gallagher,
Opal Gallagher, Wiota 117, 118,
Palmers Add., Middleport.
John R. Reece, Wilma M.
Reece to Larry C. Powell, Jean

••
·::;,
• ,.,.

,.

s; Powell, .If• .Acre, ·Pom~roy.

.....

and Is · current .president.
Collllie was elected to the
office because of her deep
Interest In FHA affairs, her -.
. gooct Ideas and the ac-

~.:,:· compllshments
she has
·· reached, club members
· ::;:;, report.
_, .
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__ ..,...1 • •,our

phone wi 11 j in1hl
~ ·::;: I u cath rtault• "• too. •h•nl

1

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plan an action ••ntl
1,.u
Ad. You can .. u furniture
1

lappl hneu, el othu ••• do; I
unuatd but I
JUitful .lt•••l '
I

l••n• of ·other

~

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.

WEDNESDAY
10 AM
. Plan To Be Hilt

AREN'T YQU GLAD
THERE'S A
SHOPPERS MART .
TO FIGHT
RISING PRICES?

CHOCOLATE·
COVERED
CHERRIES

MEN'S VINH

'

DRESS
' GL'OVJS

,MUG

3 COLORS

HOLDS 4 MUGS

$}44 '

69c
.
~,t.lUE

SIZE S To XL
$4.98 VALUE
MADE
IN U.S.A.

TREE

· 42~

' 39~

,P R.

-.
AM-FM

.1

LIST PRICE "9.9S

$

WRAP

119.95 UST
com.. tft .......,.n.
u•• · Werb ••
b•"•ry

trldfy,

.SO Sq . INf of PIPif or 10
aq. l ett of roll. So!i6t or

SIZE-BOYS or MEN'S

SI.OOVALUE _

•

•oo•~• .,,,.. w"m"'

wlthcNt welltlt for llu!Qrs
or wwtd. . outdoors.

7

$ 99·

0uterMB
for l11ristmaS

MEN'S ·INSULATED
ALL RUBBER
.SIZES 1 To 12

~,,.,,,. ,;. ;

·

:1 ~ --1~s-··-..
·--~ '"'""'"'"'"•"""• $288 '·I~·:• ~;·.~,.
·
_..,

11 • u le price . 4 d/f.
lerent pttfernt.

: I~

PR.

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--,..-----·· ..
--· --· -- ·

g .

R •

Regular S7 •.,

100 TO SELL EACH STOREI

$1 00

HAIR SPRAY

7 PIECE AWMINUM

COOKWARE SO
WITH CLASSIC WHITE T.E.FLON

2

CLAIROL "CRAZY CURL"
""m'"'"a'~

controlled . H•• llftty
light 1nd eurl reltut

STEAM STYLING WAND
L'ST $23.95
r

·CONSOLE SET

clip. $Wh111 Cord .

TWIRL
A CURL

$16

MINIATURE
MIRRORoild SHELF
ANTIQUE !iOLD
' FINISH .

::SECONDS

· WOMEN'S
PANTY,HOSE

POT .DRAINER

1ST QUALITY- SEAMLESS
3 Popular Colors!

SET OF 35

MINIATURE TREE LIGHTS

CHROME
FINISH
Mllln If
remoYe

THI~AL

Everyday 51.47

Peda! Design

frOM p.lfl

VERY SP!CIALI JUST IN TIME

INSULA rED

ALUMINUM WARE
SALE
THIS CHRISTMAS
.
.

AMERICAN
MADE-FULL
6- Ft.
. - · - ·--'
.....

SCOTQI PINE
. CHRISTMAS
TREE ·

Select From Quilted,
or Fl-rece ~tytes,Short or -:=~r Lengt'hs

.

MIN'S PARI' WOOL
Our Reaular

80,_?! !eCKS

16.n

All Rubber
~t.es

BOOT LENGTH

To 1i'

REGULAR $1.17

7.·7,~.~11.

Pll.

to
w•••r
wllttoul

I ~ _1
-

so~

.._ t Inch Fry P~n

·

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r----. .;;:4;:,.

lothtl foeod .

SHIRTS
OR DRAWERS

gg~·

N•tural faust gr..n. W1ttl
'\ tf.o raeli box, · 11f.tf Yllue.

-

FI·NAL
' NET
LIMIT

THIS BIG 12 DAY SALE
.STARtS WEDNESDAY • 10 A.M.

1

·, IIMr&amp;IIIIM
~

CLAIROL'5--8 OZ.

12.25 VALUE ,

PLAN TO •BE HERE!

OR ,

Uke A Hat Box.

:

::~~~::::::::R $J44

. PR.

Blue or Asst. Colors

Typ~

UTILITY RACK

UNDERW~AR .

66~

3 STRIPE
TOP

Red -Gold-Green

$11

light wt lght. Hat ternper1ture
Hledor for qulcl1 , IHt ttrrlne .

AU ,MmL.12.98 VALliE , :

MEN'S INSUlATED

Boys Size Fits 8 to 11
Mens Size Fits 9 to u

GLASS ORNAMENTS

ToiHCoptc:

HAIR
DRYER

REGULAR TO 94c

n:

lellt. Will bt v.rwo uMful tor ttlt
man~ cDHint dlorfl.

PROFES$IONAL STYLE

Profess;onol
Bonnet Stores

•

DUPONT DACRON! QUILTED

SOCKS .
Regular 87c-Box 'of ' 12 .

elft·

antenM .

:yuaE . :

prints.

or

, -_....,

"HOOVER" - A126.95 VALUE

KEROSENE
LAMPS

PIUOW CASES

PORTABU:
·RADIO

CLEO QUALITY-$1 059 VALUE

GIFT

, $599

6 INCH

'
BOXED EMBROIDERED

'

1$ ROll

J

4 _0Z. BOX

SHIRTS

8'7~p

STEAMER
'
BASKET

li-

VISIT SHOPPER'S MA.RT

CAN.DY,;

;r

JEMNEITE GLASS 18 PC.

• 3 pc. Range Set
e 3 qt. CoYi'r ed Pan

PUNCH BOWL SET

• Set N' Take• Pie Pan
• 2 piece slucf Pan Set
• 3 qt. Covered Sa liet Pot
• Set N' Take· Pie P1n

1

Urge Bowi, Lldlt, I CuPs
Cup Hqoko- A 14... VI lUI

'I~ I

· VALUES TO $1,.8t

FOR ·~ ~
THANKSOW....,

.

nus atiiiSTIIAS SWON PROVE TO YOURSELF
lHAT SIIIPPERS MMT SAVES YOU
MillEY - aiMPME PRICE MD QUMJTY••• ·

:•c.LEO"-A

ORIENTAL

79c Vah..

A. P.2f''VALU•I

3 ROLL -PACK
GIFT WRAP

'• WU'I'Z.LilietH

WONliWI .

40 SQUARE FEET
.

NYlON

o0 SolO -ndoy-10 A.M.

more

RED

FRUIT BOWl

brins

IIOXEDI

recmos

GqWNI
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--·--

INDIAN aLAIS

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HEN •
· ON NIST

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Voloo

1,[ 1
1

'

View, fourth.
The following county contact
chairwoman reported : Mrs.
Mizicko, Athens, with H9
members, do beautification
work and garden therapy
work, and for the first year in
some time are holding a
Christmas Flower Show, Dec.
I, from 1-8 p.m.• at the County
Health Building at the Athens
County Fairgrounds. Mrs. Bert
Grimm, Meigs County, told of
the three yearly flower shows
held by the 205 members of the
county association, all award
winning productions; the
Green Thumb columns, and
various other actlvltles. The
annual Christmas Show, this
year tilled, "Christmas In The

Air", was announced for Dec. 7
and 8 at Pomeroy Elementary
School, with several innovative
displays. Mrs. Howard Nunnemaker of Vinton county told
of the efforts there with a
Junior 4-H Garden Club, radio
programs, and work with
people in rest homes and senior
citizens.
Mrs .
Kappes ,
Washington County, reported a
new club, the Pioneer Garden

Club, organized by Hill and
.Dale. The county has five
accredited judges of their 180
mem!Jers and perennfally wins
awards for their county fair
show, this year having 517
entries. A program with Mrs.
Floyd Ruble on weathered
wood was also well accepted
there.
An executi ve commi ttee
composed of presidents of local
garden clubs present met to
select the nominating committee to chose a candidate for
regional director, to be elected
at the spring meeting. The
committee is composed of Joe
Bolin, chairman, Mrs. Howard
Samples and Mrs. Gilbert
Cullen.
Following lunch, served by
the women of the Grace
Methodist
Church,
the
program was presented by
Mrs. Edward Ray, Lancaster,
noted lecturer, author, judge
,and photographer, ,who showed
a great variety of wreaths,
novel decorations and artistic
arrangements for the holiday
season . A guitar, decorated
with red horns and apples on
greenery , was especially

appealing, as was a broom
rake decorated with a Scan·
dinavian sheaf of wheat and
ribbon . One simple decoration
was a star formed on five bent
coat hangers, covered with
tinsel and centered· with a
floral piece . A madonna and
poinsettias in front of jagged
pieces of red stained glass,
behind which candles burned,
was especially effective .
Several Advent candle rings
and trees were demonstrated
and Mrs . Ray gave basic in·
struction ~· · fo r constructing
many of the items demon·
strated.
Announced was an open
meeting of Ye o:d Village
Garden Club, Thursday, April
24, 1975, at 7:30p .m. at Grace
United Methodist Church in
Gallipolis, with James Caldwell, floriculturalisl at Ohio
State University, to speak on
"Planning for Succession of
Bloom in Flowers and Shrubs".
The public Is cordially Invited
to attend .
The spring meeting was
announced for April 19, in
Marietta.

Ia
fi
h
J' J
P. ns or 0 tt,ua 11s

n J~ 'Ia h
r f.lt t ea

'J

Several holiday activities
were planned during the
Thursday night meetlng 'of the
Philethea Society at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
The group will serve a
Christmas brunch Dec. 7 for
Dells Kappa Gamtna, and a
· dinner Dec. 13 for the women of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church. Plans were also made
to serve a holiday dinner Dec.
29 for the youth retreat at the
Ohio
Valley
Christian
Assembly camp.
It was voted to contribute $10
to the parties at the Athens

Mental Health Center staged
monthly by the Homebuilders
Class, and to send $3 for
Christmas seals .
The Phllathea song and
prayer by Mrs. George Glaze
opened the meeting. Devotions
were given by Mrs. Chester
Erwin who read Psalm 100,
with Mrs. Ira Butcher reading
a poem, " Be Ye Thankful."
Peter Marshall's prayer of
thanksgiving was read by Mrs.
Erwin to close the devotions .
It was reported tha~ Mrs .
Mary Meinhart remains a

patient at University Hospital.
The Meigs County Women's
Fellowship will meet at the
Middleport Church Dec. 5.
The program by Mrs.
Martha Childs carried out the
Thanksgiving theme. She read
a poem, "Thanksgiving Day,"
the group sang "Count Your
Blessings, " and the meditation
theme was "Give Thanks and
Rejoice."
Refreshlnents were served
by Mrs. Erwin, Mrs. Butcher,
Mrs . Harold Lohse, with Mrs.
Ella Reuter as a contributing
hostess. ·

I IIICtl diameter bltll:el wlllltflnd UD

TURTLE NECK
"I I

REGULAR $1.17

Exactly

MEN'S

KNIT
TOBOGGANS

28" WALL
, .CLOCK .

E~·

,I

COTTON RIB KNIT

more.

. '

-··

·: ~·

Meigs

POINT PLEASANT
- . MASON
'
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

a'

'

r

10 A. M. 7- ALL 3 STORES

~y Charlene Hoeflich . sc~~~~~cin~nit

,,

••

STARTS WEDNESDAY

SOUTHERN Local Band
Boosters, 7:30 p .m., high

of Drew
:'o&lt; • Webster Post 39, American
"'
Legion, meets 7 p.m . at the
'
For gift Items as well as ornaments be sure to visit the .home of Mrs. Harry Davis.
holiday bazaar at the Senior citizanl! Center Thursday ·and
THANKSGIViNG Dinner'
Friday.
·
Drew Webster Post 39,
Everything Will be displayed In the auditorium and the staff Pomeroy, 7. p.m. Members
~t the center extends the Invitation to rome In and browse,
urged to be oli time.
Allltema are himllmade by tlie ~l)lor citizens and the money
SAIJSBURY PTA ·7:30 p.m.
received, with the exception oi a small percent, goes . to .lhe at school. On .program
person making them . .Afghans, costUmed dolll and doll clothes, vocallits Andy Hoover, Phll
stocking stuffers, .tree ornaments and other household Ohlinger and Gene Shiveley.
decorations, crocheted pieces, quilts ·and novelty Items are Refreshments.
. among the hundreds Of thinflB to be on sale.
HARRISONVILLE Golden
Doors for the sale Will be open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. so do Circle Club Tuesday at
plan to take In the bazaar. .
~
Harrl,!onvlle School, 7 p.m.,
'Mr. and Mrs. Dartell.Taylor on
ALSO _on 'lbursday the annpal "Holiday Happening; ' will JX'Ogl'am. Refr!tahments.
take place at the St. Paul's Lutheian Clurch, Pcmeroy.
I
. WEDNESDAY
This event Is ~ed by the ¥elgs .C9imty Extension ·
WILDWOOP Gljl'den Club:
-Service. and that program combli!es wilb local groups and Jn. home of Mrs. Ed Bartels,
dlvlduals to bring new 11nd exciting Ideas for ·the Clrl9tmas Minersville, 7:30 p.m. Each
season.,
member to make and take
There will be demonstrations on candletn8kJns, holiday Christmas arrangement for the
de&lt;;dratlng on a illldllet, gift wrapping, fd sifts and a variety ll( Athe1111 Mental Health Center.
other topics, along wilb ~ colorful ezhiblts.
PAST PRESIDENTS,
Thil year for lbe ftnit tin)e the program will be presented In American Legion Auxiliary,
two seaslona, the ftnit from 10 a.m. to ~ p.m. wtth a holiday Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30 "'
·potluck at noon, and the.seconclfrom 7p.m. tot p.m.
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
. There wl!l be a 75 cent fee to help off-eel the cost Involved. . Isabelle Couch with Mrs. Ellen
Everyone Is welcome for all ol"any part ~. the ~gram,
Couch as CO'hostess ..
'.
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
IN MIDDLEPORT Monday the holiday decorations were Beta Sigma Phl Sorority, 7:30
golnsup.
',
'
.
'
p.m., ColiDllbus and Southern
1.- .far u "" kncnr, Middleport Is .lbe . only ccmmunlcy Ohio Eleetrtc eo., with ·Mr9,
Jl)annlns. a home clel!oratlns ~teet. 'l,'he Middleport Garden Joan
Lancaster,
home
Club and the Ainateurs 11!\'oUgh the ~ars have luid the contest to
economist,. as · speaker.
encourage resldelitiJ to lnlke the 1o1m
festive fer the
Mothers of members to · be
holiday ..aon. Last year due to lbe _
eni!ri!Y crllll, the contest
guests. Mrs. 'Ruth Riffle and ·
was cancelled but this year II being i'evlved. However, Judlling
Mrs. Beverly Long to present ·
.will take a little dlftemt.alant ... It 'I creativity, they'll be looking cultural report.
for, rather than Jarse eWxnte dllplays. But
on that later
AREA Volunteer Fire and
Amerseney All'n. 7:30p.m. at
· Oranp TOW!Uip Fire Dept.,
TmES TESTED
Firestone has 8nnouncW It will Tu~ Plalna. Films Will be
shown.
1
·
out ~ lllmllar tire.
AK~ON ( Ufi) '- Good;
t11e IIOft4!r rubber Is s8id to
PRELIMINARY plaming ·
year
.fs
test-market- IP'IP lee helter and
or s ion for a Metp County
ing in
four · · arias a polllibly eUmJnata the Deec! for he8ith 'fair, 7:30 p.m. at the
radial wb)ter tire m8de , Of a · ·metal atudl, which have been . Presbyterian Chutcll, Fouitb
more flexible .rubber, and banned 1n some ar~.
Ave., Middleport. All In,
'
'
~,
i
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.

Presentation of numerous tree sale ti)is year, but one is growingvegetablesforuse and
Public b ea utilication
awards and a ' demonstration planned to coincide with the sale, and an awards program . chairwoman, Mrs. R. H.
by Mrs. Edward Ray, Lan· nation's bicentennial in 1976, held Meigs and Gallia coun· Kappes, spoke on the 1840
caster, noted lecturer, author, with s~veral surprises in s tore . ty cfubs work with them on plantings done by the OAGC at
judge and photographer, Nature··calllp, the week of June · garden therapy projeds and Ohio Village at the Historical
highlighted the Reion 11, rohio 16, will be held at Oak Harbor, Mrs. Phillips read a tribute to Center in Co lumbus . .New
Association of Garden Clubs, and _Wahkeena , may now be the late Mrs. Helen Galloway, . nature and conserva tion
fall meeting at Grace· United visited on an open gate policy Gallipolis, for her unstinting chairwoman, Mrs. John Reese,
Methodist Cpurch, Gallipolis, with nt&gt; reservations needed. efforts and extra time and care was introduced and announced
Saturday.
Mrs. Elder reminded clubs to given to this work.
plans for a reg,ional tour next
Garden «;:tub members from send her their entries lor · the
Junior club members, Maria year. Also reporting was Mrs.
Athens, Gallla, Meigs, Vinton, Victor Ries Outstanding , Legar and Shari Mitch, of the Kenneth Caldwell, horticulture
Washington and Hocking Garden Club Award, now a two Sunbonnet Girls, Pomeroy , chairwoman.
Counties were welcomed to the year project, and .urged more re ce ived t&amp;e Junior Sears
Mrs .
Gilbert
Cullen,
fall meeting by Mrs. G. Ran- work with Junior · qarden Community
Improvement exhibitors and judges school
dolph Hand, chairwoman or the Clubs, especially in the SCIP Award of . $45 fo.r their chairwoman, announced that
day and president of the and Red Bird Contes\8. ·
beautification work at a School Three will be May 21
hostess club, the Gallipolis
Mrs. Kelton presented flower cemetery, with Mrs. Kenneth and 22 at Scotts Inn, Columbus,
Garden-Club. Devotions on the show awards to the Rutland Frazier,
r egio nill
SCIP and encouraged attendance by
Thanksgiving theme, by Mrs. Garden Club for its Christmas chairwoman, also presenting those not interested in
Kenneth · Frazier,
were Sh!J-w last year,' and an awards to Bend 0' The River, becoming judges to become
followed by ~ report of the honorable mention in the state Meigs County, first, $50, (work better informed.
reglnio.nal . director, Mrs. ,for the Meigs CoUilty Fair at
Letart
Cemetery);
State news media chair·
Aaron Kelton, Poemroy, who Flower Show,
Regional Richland, $45, for second, woman, Mrs . James Cartold of the many meetings and Publici!)&lt; Book Awards went to ( planting at city park , penler , asked for bett~r
activities during her past year Gallipolis Garden. ClUb, first;
Athens): and Winding Trail, communications between all
of office.
Hill and Dale, second, and third, $35'(planting at Pomeroy levels of the OAGC and noted
ffre department) . Regional that due to attempts to keep
. Special guests recognized Rutlan.d Friendly, third.
included Mrs. Dwight DeVoss,'
Mrs. Edward Mizicko projects were judged by Mrs. dues at the presentlevel, pages
Harrisburg , State OAGC reported on Garden Therapy Joe Bolin, Mrs . Kelton and of the Garden Path are being
president; Mrs. Quentin Elder, work with the Good Luck Mrs . Frazier.
cut down.
Warsaw, state first vice- ~. Gar.den Club at the Athens
Mrs. Edward Mizicko, Slide
This results in the need to
president ljnd regional ad· Mental Health Center by Contest Chairwoman, again promote upcoming ·activities,
visor; Mrs. James Carpenter, Athens and Meigs County . this year won num erous with less emphasis on "has·
Reedsville, state news media clubs, which won first in the awards in the state contest, been" news. In working with
chair,woman, and past regional state for monthly garden and urged others to take pic- the media, either broadcast or
directors , Mrs. CHarles Lewis, therapy work.
lures and enter, as the slides printed Mrs Carpenter urged
Middleport, Mrs. John Reese,
Mrs.
Gomer
Phillips are used to update sets that are bethatofthelnitenfroe~smtatotiothen
' pregseennetedral
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Joe Bolin, reported on work With Nature's rented for programs.
Rutland.
'
Qarden Club at the Gallipolis
' Miss Ruby Diehl read the public, not just to garden club ·
Mrs. DeVoss congratulated State Institute on the low cost report of Mrs. Virgil Atkins, members, as much as possible.
the area clubs for their fine humanization program which state and county fair chairProgram book awards went
work and the awards won on concentrated on the residents woman, about activities In to Winding Trail, Pomeroy,
special projects . She ·an· there beautifying til• area · Meigs, Athens, Gallia and first; Marietta, second;
nounced that there will be n!J around their living quarters,
Washington counties.
Richland, third, and Valley

.

..·c:GMPME AT '29.951

·--·-

7FT.
SCOtCH PINE
TREE
.

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WIND
CHIMES.
ALL METAL
PA!iODA
STYLE,REG. 74c:

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Homemakers enjoy tour
MASON, W. Va. - Mason
Homemakers Extenslonto.Club
and guests recently went"'&gt;n a
lour of Fenton' Art Glass
Company at Williamstown, W.
Va.
The group enjoyed the tour
and watching the various
phases In turning out, this
colorful glass. The various
colors exhibited included
amber, blue, green and orange.
Fenton Is reportedly the only
major hand glass company
which uses pure coin gold to
obtain gold ruby glass.
Mter the tour, the group
went to the Wilmar for dinner.
Those going on · the tour,
shopping spree and dinner
Included Mrs . Lawrence
Roush, Mrs. J . Marshall, Mrs.
Beverly Gregory and Lelgha,
Mrs. George Carson, Mrs.
Cecil Spilth, Mrs. John Roach,

Mrs. Elmer .VanMeter, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs. Evelyn
Stewart, Mrs. Alburtice
Young, Mrs. Stanley Harbour,
Mrs. Lloyd Williams, Mrs.

Laura Johnson, Mrs. Richard
Gilkey, Mrs. George Hudson ,
Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs.
Dorothy Queen and ' Mrs.
Ceclla Harris.

Mrs. Curtis honored
A gift was presented to Mrs. She read from Judges 5, gave a
Della Curtis on her 64th meditation on the "Bread of
wedding anniversary during · Life" and led in U~e Lord's
the Thursday night meeting of Prayer. Other readings on the
the Laurel Cliff Better Health Thanksgiving theme were
Club at the home of Mrs. "Thanksglvlns Each Day" by
Madeline Chaffin.
Mrs. Mildred Bowen; "The
Plans were made for a First Thanksgiving" by Mrs.
Christmas dinner at the home Chaffin; "The Pilgrims Came"
of Mrs. Mildred Jacobs. The by Mrs . Donna Gilmore;
dinner wiU be potluck with the "Landing of the Pilgrim
turkey to be furnished by lbe . Fathers" by Mrs. Bertha
club.
Parker, and " Al alener's
Devotions by Mrs. Jean Wedding" by ~rs. Nellie
Wright opened the meeting. Tracy. Games were conducted
by Ti'acy and refreshments
were served by the hostess.

Collection underway

APPLE GROVE, Ohio- The residents can leave their points
United Methodist Women of the with Mrs. Betty Shiveley at the
Apple Grove United Methodist United Methodist parsonage or
Church are conducting a fund with Mrs. Dorothy Johnson,
drive - but they don't want across from the parsonage on
money.
Fourth St.' In Racine. Anyone
.The women are collecting wishing to give the product
bonus pointS, both pink extras ·"bOnus points may alao contact
and blue, found on numeroUs Mrs. Florence Smith, chair·
products. The .pOints will be man of the project, or any
turned In on a new plano and member of the Apple Grove
for funds with which to make Church.
church · repairs .
Racine
'

\

Jolly Bunch has me;eting ,
The Jolly Bunch Sewing
Bunch met rece!ltly at the
home of Ml&lt;s. Peggy Kerns
with Mrs. Mary Jean Harrls9n
as c~ostess .
Games were played with
Mrs. Margaret Belle Weber
winning the prize, and Mrs.
Gerlrll\!e Miller received the
door prize. Sandwiches and
punch were served following a
short bllliness meeting.
Others attending were Mrs.
Marjorie' Mllhoan, Mrs. Edith
Jividen, Mrs . Evelyn Grueser,
Mrs. Jane Gullkey, Mrs. Nora
· Millll, Mrs. UIUan Smith~ Mrs.
Bea Robson, Mrs , Rhoda

Hackett, Miss ·Mae Weber,
Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Gr!let;
Johllllon, Mrs. Helen Reynoldli
and Mrs. Frieda Mitch.

Friday club
has election
New officers were eiected at
the Friday night meeting of the
Third Friday Club at the home ·
of Mrs. Eva Dessauer with ·
Mrs. Gertrude Bass as hostess.
Elected were Mrs. Bass,
president; Mrs. Dessauer, vice
president; and Mrs. Genevieve
Meinhart,
secretary
treasurer. Mrs. Freda Duffy
was named chairwoman of the ·
flower committee. · ·
Mrs. Mabel Wolfe presided
at the meeting whlc~ opened
with prayer ' 8/ld a poem,
"Faithful" by Mrs. Dessauer.
Mrs. Edna Reibel was
welcomed back after a recent

llln~ss.

DON POWELL ILL

Don
Powell,
son of
Genevieve and Herb Powell,
formerly of Letart Falll and
now of Babrlco, Fla., Is
seriously iU at the Tampa
General Hospital In Tampa,
Fla.
He
Is
currently
hospitalized and has been
hospitalized off and on Iince
May. He has undergO!le t\VO
operations. Mr ..Powellls also a
former resident of Letart Falll.
and now resides In Brandon,
· Fla. Cards may be sent to the
The Tampo General Hospital.

The annual Chrlslmss dinner '
was set fOr Dec. 20 at Craw's
Steak House and will be
followed by a party and $1 gift
exchange at the home of Miss
Sybil Ebenbilch.
'Hostess gifts were pre!lented
to Mrs. Bass. Games were , •
played with prize&amp; going 10 '
Mrs. Ella Smith, Miss EI'I1U!
Smith ilnd Mrs. Freda Duffy.
Sandwiches, salad, cake and
coffee were served. Favors
were pink and green fiOWJ1r
baskets filled with mints and
nuts.

SING SLATED
. PT. PLEASANT Muon Cpunty g01pel sing will
be held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday ~------------:-at the First Church of God, I Classified Ads ' ll
SHOWERPLANNED
'
Jefferson Ave., Point Pleasant; '
HEMLOCK GROVE - A
by the Mason County Gospel
brln~ you
I miscellaneous
shower
Singers Ass'n. Featured .
•
I honoring Mr. and Mrs. l'lck
singerswlllincludetheGospel
extra . cash
Sargent will be held at7:30 • •
, Me!IBengers, the David Trio, 1
f
I p:m . S.turday at the Hemlock ,
0r
·the Harvest Time Singers and I
1. Grove Grilnge.Hall at Hemlock ,'
others. All gospel singers' ~nd I .shopp Ina: sprees
1 G~ove . Friends and neighbors
the public a.re Invited.
I
I
· 'ted
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4.! '
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meet Saturday

Anniversary celebrated
LETART, W.Va. - Mr. and
Mrs. Rufus Hill, Letart, W.
Va., wer-e surprised on their
golden wedding anniversary'
Sunday, No~. 6 at their home
by their daughters , Mrs . Mary
Hoffman, Letart, and Mrs'.
Ralph (Erma) Rottgen, New
Haven. Mrs. Hill, the former
Margaret Herdman, and Rufus
Hill were married Nov. 7, 1924
at the home of Rev. Tripp
McCollins, Leon, W. Va., uncle
of Mr. Hill.
An
anniversary
cake
decorated in gold and white
and flowers were presented to
the honorees.
In addl !ion to their two
daughters, the Hills have seven ·
grandchildren aild four greatgrandchildren.

Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Hill

.-:-;-:-:-:-:-:-:-·-:-.·.·.·:-·---.·.· ss; n

Polly.'s Pointers
By Polly Cramer

What shampoos
work on shags?
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Our long shag rug needs cleaning and I
wonder if there Is a saUsfactory way other than steam cleaning. I
have asked about shampoos but no one can tell me much about
them. I know there ate shampoo machines on the market but I
would like to know if anyone knows of a powerful regular rug
shampoo. Steam cleaning is so terribly expensive. - MARILYN.
DEAR POLLY -My Pet Peeve is with shirt manufacturers
who use pins that rust to hold the shirts In place. I have had to use
pliers to pull some out and the pins left rust spols on the shirts. TIIELMA.
DEAR POLLY- I want to tell the lady who always gets her
sweater on backwards that I had the same problem with my
under shirts
I had my wife put a few 811tches ol red thread
inside the back of each shirt neck. Now It is easy to get them on
right. - ALFRED.
'
DEAR POLLY - I have always enjoyed the back rubs thst
nurses give at night but recentlY mine was an added pleasure as
il was a WARM hack rub. The nUI'lle rubbed the lotion between
_ her palms to remove thio c!illl. A few nights later another nurse
did the ssme and seemed surprised that all nurses did not do this.
Mine is a tip for nurses to give patients extra pleasure which will
really be appreciated. - ALICE.
,
DEAR POLLY- The mlnisture bulletin board In my car has
JX'Oven to be a !!Aver of gasoline, tbne and money. I use small
strong magnets to hold coupons, Ust of things to be purchased
and things to do. Many are lhlngs that can be postponed until I
am In the neighborhood on urgent business but this way they are
not forgotten. I have·a constant reminder In front of me and do
not have to make extra. trips for things I have forgotten . JEAN.
DEAR POLLY - Help a chlld accept wearing glasses by
letting him wear EMPTY frames from a pair of chlld's sun ·
glasses around the house to get used to the Idea. When the real
ones arrive the child will be used to -.ring glasses.
··
Attach a pocket to ' the corner of yoiar beach towel, sew a
zlpj:ler to ltstopandlt will hold all those little things needed at the
beach such as oll, lotion, a little money, etc.
My last ts' really a peeve with those who do not vote but are
always complaining about the way the country is run. -MRS. R.

until

L.

You will receive a dOijar If Polly - • your favorite bomemaklog Idea, Pet Peeve,· Polly'• Problem or solatloa to a
problem. ~rite Polly In care of Ibis oewspaper.

~i

;·~;;:}~

Social ~~
ICalendadl
TUESDAY
CHESTER Council :!23,
Daughters of America, 7:30
p.m. at the hall. Members to
wear white for initiatory work.
WOMEN'S Au:tlliary,
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
cafeteria, 7:30 p.m . meeting .
White elephant sale.
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 p.m.,
Columbllll and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. Cultural report by
Debbie Buck on "All Together
Now," and a· film on planned
parenthood. Sandi Sargent and
Karen Stanley, ·hostesses.
REVIVAL now in progress at
Rutland Church of God through
Nov. 23. Rev . Chester Estep,
Chillicothe, evangelist, 7 p.m.
Everyone welcome .
RACINE Lodge 461. F&amp;AM
special meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Work in EA degree.
CHESTER Council 323, D of
A, 7:30 p.m., · initiation. All
members asked to attend and
wear white.
SOUTHERN
Athletic
Boosters, 7:30 p.m., high
school, Racine . Everyone
invited.
GROUP II, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church,
Thanksgiving dinner at
Oscar's, Gallipolis. · Memben
to meet at the home .of Mrs.
Dorothy Morris, 6: 15 to go ·to
Gallipolis, and tl)en will return
there for buSiness. 'meeting.
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
Area Branch of the American
Association of University
Wo~en , 7:30p.m. at the Meigs
High School Library , (one
week earlier than regular
meeting date). Program to be
presented by Mrs. Sharron
Helen, AAUW secretary, and
the Athens Branch program
chairwoman. Plans to be· made
for annual Christmas brunch.
Refreshments.

~ Special singing for the
honorees wa s presented by the ·
children of Mr . and Mrs. Don
Elders . The song wr.itten by the
Elders' daughter, contained
lyrics as follows : "Together
we·'ve been , Together we'll
stay, Together we 've sung,
Together we've prayed,
Together we 've found that,
Jesus is the way, On our 50th
Anniversary Day.' '
Attending were the honorees,
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Mar.
cinko, Donnie and Kelly, Mr'. '
and Mrs. Kenneth Roush , Mr ..· ·
and Mrs. Lee Layne, Mrs. Don
Elders, Sonia, Diana, Sheila
and Harry, Robert Stewart,
Mrs. Mary Hoffman, Connie
WELtoMED-- Five riew members were welcomed Into.,
and Debbie, Mr. and Mrs.
' the Middleport Business and Protession&amp;i Women•s 'C!ub at .a
Ralph Rottgen.

dividuals and organizations Bill Hanlin, a successful coach ·
asked to attend meeting with at NAJA Glenville College,
George Jenkins, Belmont, guest ~peaker . Public is . Jn. .
coordinator of Ohio health vited. There will be $1 dopa'tion
fairs . Event would be a com• l!t door . Parents of football
munity developed , week-long players and cheerleaders who
health education program.
were not notified what to bring
THIRD
We dne sd a y · are
asked
to
prepare
Homemakers Club, 10 .a.m., - vegetable., dessert or salad.
Syracuse Municipal Building.
ROCK Springs Better Health
Potluck at noon; afternoon Club, 1:15 p.m ., home of
program
on
Christmas Frances J'olmer. Betty Conkle
decorations · with Esther in charge of. JX'Ogram.
Harden leader. Take medium
MIDDLEPORT
Child
sized styrofoam ball, sequins, Conservation League, 7:30
gUtter, small pieces ric rae, p.m., Columbia Gas Co. office,
four long pipe cleaners.
cooking demonstration by
mi.JRSDAY
Betty Newton. Everione to
FOOTBALL Banquet at t.ake a guest.
Eastern High School, &amp;:30 p.m.

"

,.

~~W.~~i~r:sTOit!

SELECTED
Miss.
Collllie Dailey, daughter of
·.. ~
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dailey,
-Long Botton, and a senior at
•
Eastern High , School, has
_ , been named Eastern Future
:',:";;' Homemakers of America
-·
"Girl of llie Monlb" for
• November. Mils Dailey has
been In FHA for three years

'· ," r

.

.

'

.'
"
meeting Mciiday night at the Colunibla Gaa CO. ofttce. They
are, left to right; Louise Davis, Mary Jane Scaggs, Gene
Lyons, Louise Skaggs and Joan Vaughan.
'
.,._

.

.;""

'

'

'

.. . QOAT ~~NCHED
Romim F. Wartl)ke; Kenneth
H. Light; Patricia P . Light to
JEFFERSONviLLE, Ind.
James E. ~aley, Joycellne C. (UPI)
A'D ultra
Haley, .28 Acre, Rutland.
mOde'rn
$17
million
Buster Barrett, Gladys sternwheel steamboat Is tO be
Barrett to Howard Searles, 3 launched Into the Ohio River at
Acres, Rutland.
the Jeffboat Co. plant here
Mildre&lt;l nile, Gdn., Louise Nov. 30.
Bryan to Charles.·E. Stevens,
'lbe boat ordered by the
Peggy A. Stevens, Lots, Delta Queeq Steamboat Co. Q8t1
Middleport.
·" ·
been under Cl!nstructlon ; at
, Romle Fox, Doris Fo;t to JeffbOat fog llllll'e thai\ a year.
·Leona Oberholzer, 5 Acres,.
,A ccmpany spokeaman at
Scipio.
.. ,
Cincinnati said the ve18el
Carl E. Mitch, LilB. C. Mitch would be' named at a
to Jerry. W. Colmer, Barbara chrlatenlns ceremony nezt
M. Colmer, .52 Acre, Pomeroy.

Pr;ope~y

Transfers
Pauline Gallagher, . dec. to
Charles Patrick Gallagher,
Cert. of trans., Middleport.
C. P . Gallagher, Charles D.
Gallagher, Opal Gallagher to
Charles Dennis Gallagher,
Opal Gallagher, Wiota 117, 118,
Palmers Add., Middleport.
John R. Reece, Wilma M.
Reece to Larry C. Powell, Jean

••
·::;,
• ,.,.

,.

s; Powell, .If• .Acre, ·Pom~roy.

.....

and Is · current .president.
Collllie was elected to the
office because of her deep
Interest In FHA affairs, her -.
. gooct Ideas and the ac-

~.:,:· compllshments
she has
·· reached, club members
· ::;:;, report.
_, .
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phone wi 11 j in1hl
~ ·::;: I u cath rtault• "• too. •h•nl

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plan an action ••ntl
1,.u
Ad. You can .. u furniture
1

lappl hneu, el othu ••• do; I
unuatd but I
JUitful .lt•••l '
I

l••n• of ·other

~

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.

WEDNESDAY
10 AM
. Plan To Be Hilt

AREN'T YQU GLAD
THERE'S A
SHOPPERS MART .
TO FIGHT
RISING PRICES?

CHOCOLATE·
COVERED
CHERRIES

MEN'S VINH

'

DRESS
' GL'OVJS

,MUG

3 COLORS

HOLDS 4 MUGS

$}44 '

69c
.
~,t.lUE

SIZE S To XL
$4.98 VALUE
MADE
IN U.S.A.

TREE

· 42~

' 39~

,P R.

-.
AM-FM

.1

LIST PRICE "9.9S

$

WRAP

119.95 UST
com.. tft .......,.n.
u•• · Werb ••
b•"•ry

trldfy,

.SO Sq . INf of PIPif or 10
aq. l ett of roll. So!i6t or

SIZE-BOYS or MEN'S

SI.OOVALUE _

•

•oo•~• .,,,.. w"m"'

wlthcNt welltlt for llu!Qrs
or wwtd. . outdoors.

7

$ 99·

0uterMB
for l11ristmaS

MEN'S ·INSULATED
ALL RUBBER
.SIZES 1 To 12

~,,.,,,. ,;. ;

·

:1 ~ --1~s-··-..
·--~ '"'""'"'"'"•"""• $288 '·I~·:• ~;·.~,.
·
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11 • u le price . 4 d/f.
lerent pttfernt.

: I~

PR.

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--· --· -- ·

g .

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Regular S7 •.,

100 TO SELL EACH STOREI

$1 00

HAIR SPRAY

7 PIECE AWMINUM

COOKWARE SO
WITH CLASSIC WHITE T.E.FLON

2

CLAIROL "CRAZY CURL"
""m'"'"a'~

controlled . H•• llftty
light 1nd eurl reltut

STEAM STYLING WAND
L'ST $23.95
r

·CONSOLE SET

clip. $Wh111 Cord .

TWIRL
A CURL

$16

MINIATURE
MIRRORoild SHELF
ANTIQUE !iOLD
' FINISH .

::SECONDS

· WOMEN'S
PANTY,HOSE

POT .DRAINER

1ST QUALITY- SEAMLESS
3 Popular Colors!

SET OF 35

MINIATURE TREE LIGHTS

CHROME
FINISH
Mllln If
remoYe

THI~AL

Everyday 51.47

Peda! Design

frOM p.lfl

VERY SP!CIALI JUST IN TIME

INSULA rED

ALUMINUM WARE
SALE
THIS CHRISTMAS
.
.

AMERICAN
MADE-FULL
6- Ft.
. - · - ·--'
.....

SCOTQI PINE
. CHRISTMAS
TREE ·

Select From Quilted,
or Fl-rece ~tytes,Short or -:=~r Lengt'hs

.

MIN'S PARI' WOOL
Our Reaular

80,_?! !eCKS

16.n

All Rubber
~t.es

BOOT LENGTH

To 1i'

REGULAR $1.17

7.·7,~.~11.

Pll.

to
w•••r
wllttoul

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-

so~

.._ t Inch Fry P~n

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lothtl foeod .

SHIRTS
OR DRAWERS

gg~·

N•tural faust gr..n. W1ttl
'\ tf.o raeli box, · 11f.tf Yllue.

-

FI·NAL
' NET
LIMIT

THIS BIG 12 DAY SALE
.STARtS WEDNESDAY • 10 A.M.

1

·, IIMr&amp;IIIIM
~

CLAIROL'5--8 OZ.

12.25 VALUE ,

PLAN TO •BE HERE!

OR ,

Uke A Hat Box.

:

::~~~::::::::R $J44

. PR.

Blue or Asst. Colors

Typ~

UTILITY RACK

UNDERW~AR .

66~

3 STRIPE
TOP

Red -Gold-Green

$11

light wt lght. Hat ternper1ture
Hledor for qulcl1 , IHt ttrrlne .

AU ,MmL.12.98 VALliE , :

MEN'S INSUlATED

Boys Size Fits 8 to 11
Mens Size Fits 9 to u

GLASS ORNAMENTS

ToiHCoptc:

HAIR
DRYER

REGULAR TO 94c

n:

lellt. Will bt v.rwo uMful tor ttlt
man~ cDHint dlorfl.

PROFES$IONAL STYLE

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DUPONT DACRON! QUILTED

SOCKS .
Regular 87c-Box 'of ' 12 .

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GIFT

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6 INCH

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SHIRTS

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• 2 piece slucf Pan Set
• 3 qt. Covered Sa liet Pot
• Set N' Take· Pie P1n

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Urge Bowi, Lldlt, I CuPs
Cup Hqoko- A 14... VI lUI

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FOR ·~ ~
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nus atiiiSTIIAS SWON PROVE TO YOURSELF
lHAT SIIIPPERS MMT SAVES YOU
MillEY - aiMPME PRICE MD QUMJTY••• ·

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40 SQUARE FEET
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View, fourth.
The following county contact
chairwoman reported : Mrs.
Mizicko, Athens, with H9
members, do beautification
work and garden therapy
work, and for the first year in
some time are holding a
Christmas Flower Show, Dec.
I, from 1-8 p.m.• at the County
Health Building at the Athens
County Fairgrounds. Mrs. Bert
Grimm, Meigs County, told of
the three yearly flower shows
held by the 205 members of the
county association, all award
winning productions; the
Green Thumb columns, and
various other actlvltles. The
annual Christmas Show, this
year tilled, "Christmas In The

Air", was announced for Dec. 7
and 8 at Pomeroy Elementary
School, with several innovative
displays. Mrs. Howard Nunnemaker of Vinton county told
of the efforts there with a
Junior 4-H Garden Club, radio
programs, and work with
people in rest homes and senior
citizens.
Mrs .
Kappes ,
Washington County, reported a
new club, the Pioneer Garden

Club, organized by Hill and
.Dale. The county has five
accredited judges of their 180
mem!Jers and perennfally wins
awards for their county fair
show, this year having 517
entries. A program with Mrs.
Floyd Ruble on weathered
wood was also well accepted
there.
An executi ve commi ttee
composed of presidents of local
garden clubs present met to
select the nominating committee to chose a candidate for
regional director, to be elected
at the spring meeting. The
committee is composed of Joe
Bolin, chairman, Mrs. Howard
Samples and Mrs. Gilbert
Cullen.
Following lunch, served by
the women of the Grace
Methodist
Church,
the
program was presented by
Mrs. Edward Ray, Lancaster,
noted lecturer, author, judge
,and photographer, ,who showed
a great variety of wreaths,
novel decorations and artistic
arrangements for the holiday
season . A guitar, decorated
with red horns and apples on
greenery , was especially

appealing, as was a broom
rake decorated with a Scan·
dinavian sheaf of wheat and
ribbon . One simple decoration
was a star formed on five bent
coat hangers, covered with
tinsel and centered· with a
floral piece . A madonna and
poinsettias in front of jagged
pieces of red stained glass,
behind which candles burned,
was especially effective .
Several Advent candle rings
and trees were demonstrated
and Mrs . Ray gave basic in·
struction ~· · fo r constructing
many of the items demon·
strated.
Announced was an open
meeting of Ye o:d Village
Garden Club, Thursday, April
24, 1975, at 7:30p .m. at Grace
United Methodist Church in
Gallipolis, with James Caldwell, floriculturalisl at Ohio
State University, to speak on
"Planning for Succession of
Bloom in Flowers and Shrubs".
The public Is cordially Invited
to attend .
The spring meeting was
announced for April 19, in
Marietta.

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Several holiday activities
were planned during the
Thursday night meetlng 'of the
Philethea Society at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
The group will serve a
Christmas brunch Dec. 7 for
Dells Kappa Gamtna, and a
· dinner Dec. 13 for the women of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church. Plans were also made
to serve a holiday dinner Dec.
29 for the youth retreat at the
Ohio
Valley
Christian
Assembly camp.
It was voted to contribute $10
to the parties at the Athens

Mental Health Center staged
monthly by the Homebuilders
Class, and to send $3 for
Christmas seals .
The Phllathea song and
prayer by Mrs. George Glaze
opened the meeting. Devotions
were given by Mrs. Chester
Erwin who read Psalm 100,
with Mrs. Ira Butcher reading
a poem, " Be Ye Thankful."
Peter Marshall's prayer of
thanksgiving was read by Mrs.
Erwin to close the devotions .
It was reported tha~ Mrs .
Mary Meinhart remains a

patient at University Hospital.
The Meigs County Women's
Fellowship will meet at the
Middleport Church Dec. 5.
The program by Mrs.
Martha Childs carried out the
Thanksgiving theme. She read
a poem, "Thanksgiving Day,"
the group sang "Count Your
Blessings, " and the meditation
theme was "Give Thanks and
Rejoice."
Refreshlnents were served
by Mrs. Erwin, Mrs. Butcher,
Mrs . Harold Lohse, with Mrs.
Ella Reuter as a contributing
hostess. ·

I IIICtl diameter bltll:el wlllltflnd UD

TURTLE NECK
"I I

REGULAR $1.17

Exactly

MEN'S

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TOBOGGANS

28" WALL
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E~·

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more.

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Meigs

POINT PLEASANT
- . MASON
'
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

a'

'

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10 A. M. 7- ALL 3 STORES

~y Charlene Hoeflich . sc~~~~~cin~nit

,,

••

STARTS WEDNESDAY

SOUTHERN Local Band
Boosters, 7:30 p .m., high

of Drew
:'o&lt; • Webster Post 39, American
"'
Legion, meets 7 p.m . at the
'
For gift Items as well as ornaments be sure to visit the .home of Mrs. Harry Davis.
holiday bazaar at the Senior citizanl! Center Thursday ·and
THANKSGIViNG Dinner'
Friday.
·
Drew Webster Post 39,
Everything Will be displayed In the auditorium and the staff Pomeroy, 7. p.m. Members
~t the center extends the Invitation to rome In and browse,
urged to be oli time.
Allltema are himllmade by tlie ~l)lor citizens and the money
SAIJSBURY PTA ·7:30 p.m.
received, with the exception oi a small percent, goes . to .lhe at school. On .program
person making them . .Afghans, costUmed dolll and doll clothes, vocallits Andy Hoover, Phll
stocking stuffers, .tree ornaments and other household Ohlinger and Gene Shiveley.
decorations, crocheted pieces, quilts ·and novelty Items are Refreshments.
. among the hundreds Of thinflB to be on sale.
HARRISONVILLE Golden
Doors for the sale Will be open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. so do Circle Club Tuesday at
plan to take In the bazaar. .
~
Harrl,!onvlle School, 7 p.m.,
'Mr. and Mrs. Dartell.Taylor on
ALSO _on 'lbursday the annpal "Holiday Happening; ' will JX'Ogl'am. Refr!tahments.
take place at the St. Paul's Lutheian Clurch, Pcmeroy.
I
. WEDNESDAY
This event Is ~ed by the ¥elgs .C9imty Extension ·
WILDWOOP Gljl'den Club:
-Service. and that program combli!es wilb local groups and Jn. home of Mrs. Ed Bartels,
dlvlduals to bring new 11nd exciting Ideas for ·the Clrl9tmas Minersville, 7:30 p.m. Each
season.,
member to make and take
There will be demonstrations on candletn8kJns, holiday Christmas arrangement for the
de&lt;;dratlng on a illldllet, gift wrapping, fd sifts and a variety ll( Athe1111 Mental Health Center.
other topics, along wilb ~ colorful ezhiblts.
PAST PRESIDENTS,
Thil year for lbe ftnit tin)e the program will be presented In American Legion Auxiliary,
two seaslona, the ftnit from 10 a.m. to ~ p.m. wtth a holiday Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30 "'
·potluck at noon, and the.seconclfrom 7p.m. tot p.m.
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
. There wl!l be a 75 cent fee to help off-eel the cost Involved. . Isabelle Couch with Mrs. Ellen
Everyone Is welcome for all ol"any part ~. the ~gram,
Couch as CO'hostess ..
'.
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
IN MIDDLEPORT Monday the holiday decorations were Beta Sigma Phl Sorority, 7:30
golnsup.
',
'
.
'
p.m., ColiDllbus and Southern
1.- .far u "" kncnr, Middleport Is .lbe . only ccmmunlcy Ohio Eleetrtc eo., with ·Mr9,
Jl)annlns. a home clel!oratlns ~teet. 'l,'he Middleport Garden Joan
Lancaster,
home
Club and the Ainateurs 11!\'oUgh the ~ars have luid the contest to
economist,. as · speaker.
encourage resldelitiJ to lnlke the 1o1m
festive fer the
Mothers of members to · be
holiday ..aon. Last year due to lbe _
eni!ri!Y crllll, the contest
guests. Mrs. 'Ruth Riffle and ·
was cancelled but this year II being i'evlved. However, Judlling
Mrs. Beverly Long to present ·
.will take a little dlftemt.alant ... It 'I creativity, they'll be looking cultural report.
for, rather than Jarse eWxnte dllplays. But
on that later
AREA Volunteer Fire and
Amerseney All'n. 7:30p.m. at
· Oranp TOW!Uip Fire Dept.,
TmES TESTED
Firestone has 8nnouncW It will Tu~ Plalna. Films Will be
shown.
1
·
out ~ lllmllar tire.
AK~ON ( Ufi) '- Good;
t11e IIOft4!r rubber Is s8id to
PRELIMINARY plaming ·
year
.fs
test-market- IP'IP lee helter and
or s ion for a Metp County
ing in
four · · arias a polllibly eUmJnata the Deec! for he8ith 'fair, 7:30 p.m. at the
radial wb)ter tire m8de , Of a · ·metal atudl, which have been . Presbyterian Chutcll, Fouitb
more flexible .rubber, and banned 1n some ar~.
Ave., Middleport. All In,
'
'
~,
i
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Presentation of numerous tree sale ti)is year, but one is growingvegetablesforuse and
Public b ea utilication
awards and a ' demonstration planned to coincide with the sale, and an awards program . chairwoman, Mrs. R. H.
by Mrs. Edward Ray, Lan· nation's bicentennial in 1976, held Meigs and Gallia coun· Kappes, spoke on the 1840
caster, noted lecturer, author, with s~veral surprises in s tore . ty cfubs work with them on plantings done by the OAGC at
judge and photographer, Nature··calllp, the week of June · garden therapy projeds and Ohio Village at the Historical
highlighted the Reion 11, rohio 16, will be held at Oak Harbor, Mrs. Phillips read a tribute to Center in Co lumbus . .New
Association of Garden Clubs, and _Wahkeena , may now be the late Mrs. Helen Galloway, . nature and conserva tion
fall meeting at Grace· United visited on an open gate policy Gallipolis, for her unstinting chairwoman, Mrs. John Reese,
Methodist Cpurch, Gallipolis, with nt&gt; reservations needed. efforts and extra time and care was introduced and announced
Saturday.
Mrs. Elder reminded clubs to given to this work.
plans for a reg,ional tour next
Garden «;:tub members from send her their entries lor · the
Junior club members, Maria year. Also reporting was Mrs.
Athens, Gallla, Meigs, Vinton, Victor Ries Outstanding , Legar and Shari Mitch, of the Kenneth Caldwell, horticulture
Washington and Hocking Garden Club Award, now a two Sunbonnet Girls, Pomeroy , chairwoman.
Counties were welcomed to the year project, and .urged more re ce ived t&amp;e Junior Sears
Mrs .
Gilbert
Cullen,
fall meeting by Mrs. G. Ran- work with Junior · qarden Community
Improvement exhibitors and judges school
dolph Hand, chairwoman or the Clubs, especially in the SCIP Award of . $45 fo.r their chairwoman, announced that
day and president of the and Red Bird Contes\8. ·
beautification work at a School Three will be May 21
hostess club, the Gallipolis
Mrs. Kelton presented flower cemetery, with Mrs. Kenneth and 22 at Scotts Inn, Columbus,
Garden-Club. Devotions on the show awards to the Rutland Frazier,
r egio nill
SCIP and encouraged attendance by
Thanksgiving theme, by Mrs. Garden Club for its Christmas chairwoman, also presenting those not interested in
Kenneth · Frazier,
were Sh!J-w last year,' and an awards to Bend 0' The River, becoming judges to become
followed by ~ report of the honorable mention in the state Meigs County, first, $50, (work better informed.
reglnio.nal . director, Mrs. ,for the Meigs CoUilty Fair at
Letart
Cemetery);
State news media chair·
Aaron Kelton, Poemroy, who Flower Show,
Regional Richland, $45, for second, woman, Mrs . James Cartold of the many meetings and Publici!)&lt; Book Awards went to ( planting at city park , penler , asked for bett~r
activities during her past year Gallipolis Garden. ClUb, first;
Athens): and Winding Trail, communications between all
of office.
Hill and Dale, second, and third, $35'(planting at Pomeroy levels of the OAGC and noted
ffre department) . Regional that due to attempts to keep
. Special guests recognized Rutlan.d Friendly, third.
included Mrs. Dwight DeVoss,'
Mrs. Edward Mizicko projects were judged by Mrs. dues at the presentlevel, pages
Harrisburg , State OAGC reported on Garden Therapy Joe Bolin, Mrs . Kelton and of the Garden Path are being
president; Mrs. Quentin Elder, work with the Good Luck Mrs . Frazier.
cut down.
Warsaw, state first vice- ~. Gar.den Club at the Athens
Mrs. Edward Mizicko, Slide
This results in the need to
president ljnd regional ad· Mental Health Center by Contest Chairwoman, again promote upcoming ·activities,
visor; Mrs. James Carpenter, Athens and Meigs County . this year won num erous with less emphasis on "has·
Reedsville, state news media clubs, which won first in the awards in the state contest, been" news. In working with
chair,woman, and past regional state for monthly garden and urged others to take pic- the media, either broadcast or
directors , Mrs. CHarles Lewis, therapy work.
lures and enter, as the slides printed Mrs Carpenter urged
Middleport, Mrs. John Reese,
Mrs.
Gomer
Phillips are used to update sets that are bethatofthelnitenfroe~smtatotiothen
' pregseennetedral
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Joe Bolin, reported on work With Nature's rented for programs.
Rutland.
'
Qarden Club at the Gallipolis
' Miss Ruby Diehl read the public, not just to garden club ·
Mrs. DeVoss congratulated State Institute on the low cost report of Mrs. Virgil Atkins, members, as much as possible.
the area clubs for their fine humanization program which state and county fair chairProgram book awards went
work and the awards won on concentrated on the residents woman, about activities In to Winding Trail, Pomeroy,
special projects . She ·an· there beautifying til• area · Meigs, Athens, Gallia and first; Marietta, second;
nounced that there will be n!J around their living quarters,
Washington counties.
Richland, third, and Valley

.

..·c:GMPME AT '29.951

·--·-

7FT.
SCOtCH PINE
TREE
.

I

WIND
CHIMES.
ALL METAL
PA!iODA
STYLE,REG. 74c:

5o~:

Homemakers enjoy tour
MASON, W. Va. - Mason
Homemakers Extenslonto.Club
and guests recently went"'&gt;n a
lour of Fenton' Art Glass
Company at Williamstown, W.
Va.
The group enjoyed the tour
and watching the various
phases In turning out, this
colorful glass. The various
colors exhibited included
amber, blue, green and orange.
Fenton Is reportedly the only
major hand glass company
which uses pure coin gold to
obtain gold ruby glass.
Mter the tour, the group
went to the Wilmar for dinner.
Those going on · the tour,
shopping spree and dinner
Included Mrs . Lawrence
Roush, Mrs. J . Marshall, Mrs.
Beverly Gregory and Lelgha,
Mrs. George Carson, Mrs.
Cecil Spilth, Mrs. John Roach,

Mrs. Elmer .VanMeter, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs. Evelyn
Stewart, Mrs. Alburtice
Young, Mrs. Stanley Harbour,
Mrs. Lloyd Williams, Mrs.

Laura Johnson, Mrs. Richard
Gilkey, Mrs. George Hudson ,
Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs.
Dorothy Queen and ' Mrs.
Ceclla Harris.

Mrs. Curtis honored
A gift was presented to Mrs. She read from Judges 5, gave a
Della Curtis on her 64th meditation on the "Bread of
wedding anniversary during · Life" and led in U~e Lord's
the Thursday night meeting of Prayer. Other readings on the
the Laurel Cliff Better Health Thanksgiving theme were
Club at the home of Mrs. "Thanksglvlns Each Day" by
Madeline Chaffin.
Mrs. Mildred Bowen; "The
Plans were made for a First Thanksgiving" by Mrs.
Christmas dinner at the home Chaffin; "The Pilgrims Came"
of Mrs. Mildred Jacobs. The by Mrs . Donna Gilmore;
dinner wiU be potluck with the "Landing of the Pilgrim
turkey to be furnished by lbe . Fathers" by Mrs. Bertha
club.
Parker, and " Al alener's
Devotions by Mrs. Jean Wedding" by ~rs. Nellie
Wright opened the meeting. Tracy. Games were conducted
by Ti'acy and refreshments
were served by the hostess.

Collection underway

APPLE GROVE, Ohio- The residents can leave their points
United Methodist Women of the with Mrs. Betty Shiveley at the
Apple Grove United Methodist United Methodist parsonage or
Church are conducting a fund with Mrs. Dorothy Johnson,
drive - but they don't want across from the parsonage on
money.
Fourth St.' In Racine. Anyone
.The women are collecting wishing to give the product
bonus pointS, both pink extras ·"bOnus points may alao contact
and blue, found on numeroUs Mrs. Florence Smith, chair·
products. The .pOints will be man of the project, or any
turned In on a new plano and member of the Apple Grove
for funds with which to make Church.
church · repairs .
Racine
'

\

Jolly Bunch has me;eting ,
The Jolly Bunch Sewing
Bunch met rece!ltly at the
home of Ml&lt;s. Peggy Kerns
with Mrs. Mary Jean Harrls9n
as c~ostess .
Games were played with
Mrs. Margaret Belle Weber
winning the prize, and Mrs.
Gerlrll\!e Miller received the
door prize. Sandwiches and
punch were served following a
short bllliness meeting.
Others attending were Mrs.
Marjorie' Mllhoan, Mrs. Edith
Jividen, Mrs . Evelyn Grueser,
Mrs. Jane Gullkey, Mrs. Nora
· Millll, Mrs. UIUan Smith~ Mrs.
Bea Robson, Mrs , Rhoda

Hackett, Miss ·Mae Weber,
Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Gr!let;
Johllllon, Mrs. Helen Reynoldli
and Mrs. Frieda Mitch.

Friday club
has election
New officers were eiected at
the Friday night meeting of the
Third Friday Club at the home ·
of Mrs. Eva Dessauer with ·
Mrs. Gertrude Bass as hostess.
Elected were Mrs. Bass,
president; Mrs. Dessauer, vice
president; and Mrs. Genevieve
Meinhart,
secretary
treasurer. Mrs. Freda Duffy
was named chairwoman of the ·
flower committee. · ·
Mrs. Mabel Wolfe presided
at the meeting whlc~ opened
with prayer ' 8/ld a poem,
"Faithful" by Mrs. Dessauer.
Mrs. Edna Reibel was
welcomed back after a recent

llln~ss.

DON POWELL ILL

Don
Powell,
son of
Genevieve and Herb Powell,
formerly of Letart Falll and
now of Babrlco, Fla., Is
seriously iU at the Tampa
General Hospital In Tampa,
Fla.
He
Is
currently
hospitalized and has been
hospitalized off and on Iince
May. He has undergO!le t\VO
operations. Mr ..Powellls also a
former resident of Letart Falll.
and now resides In Brandon,
· Fla. Cards may be sent to the
The Tampo General Hospital.

The annual Chrlslmss dinner '
was set fOr Dec. 20 at Craw's
Steak House and will be
followed by a party and $1 gift
exchange at the home of Miss
Sybil Ebenbilch.
'Hostess gifts were pre!lented
to Mrs. Bass. Games were , •
played with prize&amp; going 10 '
Mrs. Ella Smith, Miss EI'I1U!
Smith ilnd Mrs. Freda Duffy.
Sandwiches, salad, cake and
coffee were served. Favors
were pink and green fiOWJ1r
baskets filled with mints and
nuts.

SING SLATED
. PT. PLEASANT Muon Cpunty g01pel sing will
be held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday ~------------:-at the First Church of God, I Classified Ads ' ll
SHOWERPLANNED
'
Jefferson Ave., Point Pleasant; '
HEMLOCK GROVE - A
by the Mason County Gospel
brln~ you
I miscellaneous
shower
Singers Ass'n. Featured .
•
I honoring Mr. and Mrs. l'lck
singerswlllincludetheGospel
extra . cash
Sargent will be held at7:30 • •
, Me!IBengers, the David Trio, 1
f
I p:m . S.turday at the Hemlock ,
0r
·the Harvest Time Singers and I
1. Grove Grilnge.Hall at Hemlock ,'
others. All gospel singers' ~nd I .shopp Ina: sprees
1 G~ove . Friends and neighbors
the public a.re Invited.
I
I
· 'ted
--.-----..,~•--are .mll .
4.! '
w
••

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/

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8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 1~, 1974

·'•

•

I .

KurfeSs promises strong leadership
' .

By LEE LEoNARD
UPI Slaleb0111e Reporter ·
COLUMBUS (UPI) - House
Minority I.,eadei- Charles F.
Kurfess ," ,R-Bowling Green,
ele&lt;:~ for the fifth straight
Ume to head the GOP'caucus,
plans to exercise firm control
over the direction of his

Thrifty Santas lAY-AWAY -NOW! .
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Ch oice o l gray. blue $ 51 . 50

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Each
a. Casserole, 1'12 qt.
pYrexliner
23.00
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25.00
c. Chip 'n Dip Dish,
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High Ind . Game Patti

Williams 192, Donna Mc Farland 189, Connie Chapman
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Early Sunday Mixed

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~

Tom 's Carry Out
58
30
Eagles Club
54
34
Pullins Excavating
.. 6
42
Swlsher -Lohse Phar .
36
52
Mayer &amp; Hill Barbers
36
52
Friendly Tavern
34
54
High Ind . Game
Bill
Wilford 215, John Tyree 209 t
Women·: Ma xi ne Dugan 21S,
Sonia Wayland 200.
High Series - Bi ll Wilford
553, Claren ce Boyles · 539 ;
Women : Maxine Dugan 55$,
Becky Smilh 536.
Team High Game - Toni's
Carry Out 753 .
Team High Series - Eagles

Early Sunday Mix ed

November 10. 1Cf74

won Lost
66
30

Eagles Club

60

36

Pullins Excavating
52
44
SwiSher-Lohse Phar .
38
58
Friendly Tavern
36
60
Mayer &amp; Hill Barbers 36
60
Hloh Ind. Game Gary
Wayl and 203 . Jr . Phelps 201.
Women : Mary Voss 195, Mary
Voss 186.
H igh Series - Gary Wayland
544, Larry Dugan 533 ; Women ;
Mary voss 541. Helen Ph , lps
500.
Team High Game and Series
- Tom 's Carry Out, 724 and

2014.

___

,

extremely serlo1111 hazard to
the safety of the mine and the
miners; that each condition
was the result of a policy and
practice that.stenuned from an
attitude of knowing Indifference and reckleu
disregard for compliance
amounting to grou negligence
:ll1 the part of the operator; and
that the operator faUed to
demonstrate. good faith In
achieving rapid compliance
after notice of violations,"

____:______

Kuhn in England
USAF Sgt. David W. Kuhn is
serving as a law enforcement
specialist with a ooit of the U.
S. Air Forces In Europe at
Greeoham Common Royal Air
Force Station, England. The
son of Rev. and Mrs. Robert W.
Kuhn, 285 Mulberr~ Ave.,
Pomeroy, )le previously served
at Rickenbacker AFB, Ohio.
He Is a 1967 graduate of Lucas,
Ohio, High School. His wife,
Cynthia,ls the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James H. Tisdale, 23
R oc kl an d Dr Ive, F a Ir born,
Ohjo.

"White" and ''Eina" ..

spend-1•

·

, M,lddleport,
Ohio.
·
.
.·

·

IS HOUSE GUEST

I

=;

, .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .a...
·•:

q§ your water

just as moder11. as th~
Wcisft.ing inachi~?
It ts if vou re still using on:J inary

tap water• And, '' YOU are.' no
wondor you have spot&amp;.oo your
dtshe1.' still , gray taunorv: t!Chy
M~m tunny-tasting co rtce. arld
dull, liletesa hll•r Its the tnvt5ibla solids ·and POIIutanrs In
your water that are Cfh.ts•no
, . vour trouble! Go moderr'l Qtll
m:l or tho POllutant s
1!91 11
Mit~c l•' Weter Waf•• Retln11r,

YOU CAN HAVE MODERN
:.0 '""'' AIFINED WA.TEA IN YOUR
HOME AND YOU CAN SAYE
MOAE THAN IT COSTS!

SAYRE HARDWARE
882-2525

AUTOMATIC .MINI-SIZE SAW-

~~~~~~~~~:

&lt;

'

·~,J

·
p
o.
M
EROY
HOME
·&amp;
AUTO
.SMITH IHONDA·SALE$,
.YOUR -COMPLETE
({ENTER
Of11C) .

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

..

.

'

-

\

"fl.

. · KANAUG,A,

' (
'

.........

'

I•

TIR~ .'- ·-

.· · POMEROY. 0.

'

I

. ·. ·,

M,erchCIIItl ·

On friday '

'

•,

'

.

We Feature
'

'

'

I

Sugardale
Pre Pacllqed

.

Luncheon Meats

&amp;-;,.. '

andWieDers

.n..-

. ~eAUrOMATif OIUNG
•''ALL-BEARING"-ENGINE
·•EXTRA QUIET- M.--·UFFLER
eAND MANY OTHER
. TOP QUAUTY FEADIRES.

•

.
Del.IV8I1I!S

,•

.

.

·_Quallty

I

/

MerchanCIJ•

BARNUM'S COUNTRY .PROCESSING
· Box 91 - Gro,es Avenue
't~arletta,. Ohio 45~50 ·

and··
..
a·. ,.aln.l .Gollte!
;
..
'

'

'

'

I

Phone 373-5699 ·

.Go With The ·BEST-Go •

'

..

BARNU~'S

, 125 E. Main St. • 992·2171

"
';·

l

.... .. .

.' .

'.

,, .

;

New Haven

CLEAN MODERN .STATE INSP. PlAN·~

Sh'op Ow
Mo..i·. -wn
.

.-THE REAL NUMBER ·1
VALUE IN AN .

.

I

:

Miss
Beulah
Nu !
Buchannan, W. Va., Is
•'
guest of Miss Erma Smith.
.
, ,

REtAIL MEATS

.

.

.

L016

(

d:
2·

•·

Custom Slaught~r &amp; Pr0ce..h1g
WHOLESALE SUPPLIER$:--RESTAURANTS-STORES
.
.
,

jj
1:

COUNTRY .PROCESSING .
FREEZER MEATS

'"
-•l

-priming the pump.
;
"This would only be a ~l
term remedy and would
,
infl.ation incredibly Worse." l ! ~
Booth said Inflation must ~ :
"cured at its source " ~' 'The absolute st~t of
' ;
tlonwas when congress sta
:
spending more money than It•:
took In -&lt;!elicit spending," bet :
said. "That's where we should;
begin to solve the problem.1:
Congress should reduce
lng so we go from a deficit to a :
sw-plus In our budget."
, :

CLEVELAND ( UPI) ....: The
strike by members ' of the
Newspaper Guild against the
Cleveland Plain De!der, Ohio's
largest newpaper, Is beginning
to take its ·taU on area department stores and local realty
!inns.
.
Herbert Brownell, president ·
of Higbee's, called newspaper
advertlslng"our most important media . .We'd !Ike to see
It (the strike') settled."
'
Meanwhile, executives at
other department stores said
they have been forced to beef
up other fonns of advertising
such as radio, TV, direct
maltints to charge customers
and neighborhood newspapers.
"No question about It, the
Cleveland newspaper strike
hurts," said Joseph Aveni of
Hilltop ~ty; a leading firm
· In the apartment rental field in
northeast Ohio.

Club 2067.

Tom's CarrYout

Old Ben Coal Corp. Mine No. 24
WASHI NGTON t UP! ) at
Benton, Ill. The company Is
A $70,000 fin e was imamong
the top 10 coal
posed against Standard Oil
Co. of Ohio's coal mining producing !Inns In the nation.
The fine ' grew out of a
subsidiary for safety vio!Jl.tlons
hearing
conducted 11 months .
that a government official
ago
In
connection wltl1 acsaid reflected "knowing Indifference • and reckless cumulations of loose, dry coal,
disregard," the Interior coal dust and float coal dust.
Seven violations were deterDepartment has said.
I
The fin e was imposed by a mined and the administrative
department {\dmini strative . law Judge ' tmpoeed a '10,000
law judge In connection with fine for each.
The official determined ''the
mining salety_vlolations at the
condiUons found presented an
___:_

bit panicky and Institute antirecession measures like expanding the economy rapidly

by lack of
newspaper ads

POMEROY LANES 1

•

economic won, but he complained the president "has not
sufficiently explained them to
the American people."
''The first thing the president
should do Is say to the
television and r~dlo netowrlrs,
'look, gentlemen,' I need 30
minutes for several evenings to
explain tbe facls.'
"I think the American people
are ready, willing and able to
support the leadership of Mr.
Ford If they Wlderstand the
economic problems and his
proposals."
Booth warned against trying
to end recession without
considering what- the effects
might be on Inflation.
'"11le greatest danger we
face In Washington Ia for
members of congress to get a

life country is In for at least
several months of recession.
"Recession Is quite likely to
grow slowly and steadily worse
Wltil the middle of next year,
maybe longer," he said.
Booth had predicted last
March there would be no
recession but admitted at a
news conference here he had
been forced to eat his words.
· "Since then conditions have
steadily worsened and we are
In a recession," said Booth,
who as president of the
chamber Is head of the world's
largest voluntary organization
of business and professional
people.
Booth said · the chamber
supports president Gerald
Ford's 31 point legislative
propoSal to ease the nation's

BARN.UM'S

The,. Se)Ning c;entttr

SERVING MEIGS. GALLIA &amp; MASON ~NTIE~
JACK W. CARSEY. ~.GR. ,
992-218J

.

..

s~~on~~

1

.OPEN MON.. TUES., WED. NIGHlS 6:30-8:30

.POMEROY [AWDMARK

Here's Honda's new·
one for the kids ... or
anyooe in the. family·
who enj_o ys .having a .
lot of fun. It's strictly
an
off-the-road
machine. ·F.eaturas·an
. automatic c!utch and
just two· speeds, so
it's a cinch · to 11lde1 .,
There is a lot of torque
in the lower speed,''
too . 'makes those
. mountain trails a
snap to climb. The
rugged little. knobby
tires will roll over
al.most any kind of
terrain .

r·- ~

serl.s'"_,_

1Pick A Pair 1523. Mitche ll 's

'

, Lay One Aw.~Y tor . Ulrisrmas , lllo," 'l .

40

..

'

HQI500

.MASON

l1ie tltn ' Ql I~• . _

48

Thursday Strikers
November 14, 1974
1
won Lost
: Mitchell 's Trio
85
11
, Shakellee Girls
SCI
46
1H. Frank'sGirls
48
.48
;Simon's Pick A Pair
48
48
! Ward 's Rollettees
32 64

tHE MAQIINE' WITH.THE UTIUTY'"STIJQIES ... ~ BASIC ZIGZAG, 3
STITCH ZIGZAG, fJLIND. stiTCH OR iDG,.ING sJITQI
_. WITH
. .
MORE THAN 20 DIFFERENT USES, INCLUDING·STRETCH·SEWING.

SAVE '50
REG. S268·

PICK_
ENS .HA_
RDWARE CO.

,

w~~ L~fJ

ing the incoming freshmen as
11
full partners."
Murdock, 41, a graduate &lt;A.
Xavier University 8nd the
University of Cincinnati Law
School, has been a member &lt;A
the House since 1967.
,"
So has Norris, 38, who ..,..:;,
Westerville prosecut~
. ,
following his graduaUon lliiiq :
otterbein College and ·N
•
York University Law SchooL i

. Business hurt

'

November 3 ~ 1974

~ Shaklee Girls
A4
.u
t Simon's P·lck A Pair
, 40 · 4S
1 Ward's Rollettees
30
sa
t Team 6
24
64
: High Team Series and Game
, - Shaklee Girls 1396 .lind 49'9;
H. Frank's Girls 13U and 495 ;
r Mitchell's Trio 1375 .and 492 .
' Hi gh Ind . Series - sue Haid
: sn ; wa,da Teaford 509;
, Donn-a McFarland 454.
~
High Ind . Game - Sue Hald
1 202 ; Wanda Teaford 1S3 ; Sue
~ Hald 1S1.

I

.

-

reformer.''
Kurfess, 44, who has served
nine two-year tenns in the
House, told the caucus he plans
to try to expand staff and
services for the lawmakers. He
tirged Republicans to make
"constructive leglslaUve ef.
forts."
"We have the makings of a
very strong bipartisan legislature," Kurfess said, welcom-

~

•

''

·

' H . Frank's Girls

Now! The
Utmost In
Sewing Machines!

lotus ~~ =Special,

LANE s •· ·

Thursdllf Strikers
November7 , 197C

1

Lay It Away

COMPACTOR

'I•

NLESS STEEL BACKS;
UNBREAKABLE
MAINSPRING AND
SHOCK RESISTANT
THERE'S A TIMEX
WATCH FOR EVERYONE.

llical Bowling

••
•

the House.
Rep, Waldo B. Rose, R·Lima,
nominated Kurfess as a man
typifying "responsible
problem solving and leglslaUve
initiative, " adding Kurfess
was a "natlonallead,er among
legislators." Rose characterized the minority leader as
an "Innovator, _lmptover and

StandRrd Oil ~panked by$70,()()() fine

'

•

Middleport

Reduces ·household trash to less
tt\an
of its original volume In
less than a minute. Designed for
free-standing or unde~counter use
· fits same space as any 15" base
cabinet . ·Only 15" wide, 34 1-16"
high (can be adjusted higher with
leveling legs), 24" deep to front of
drawer .

TIMEX · FEATURING ·.

.

1 Te~~h6 Team

T~ASH

Q

' .

will inclu~e exhibi Is and
demOnstrations on gifts from
the kitchen, gift wrapping,
Christmas cookery. crafts for
Christmas ,
holida y
arrangements and more .

will

KING. BUILDERS ·SUPPLY
.

The "Happening" program

~ : Marine Sgt. Karl R. Russell
Attending the graduation also visited Interesting points.
l was commissioned a second were his wife, Unda ; his
Lt. Russell accompanied his
: lieutenant when he gr aduated parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth family home. Mrs. Russell and
. : Nov. 7 from Officers candidate Russell, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. .children, Melissa and Kenneth
•Schopl at Quaniico, Va.
Floyd T. Chapman and Roy, have spent the past three
: Lt. Russell gradua~ third daughters, Shelley and KJm. months at the home of . her
:in his platoon and 13th In his berly of Columbus. .M rs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy 0 .
:class of 127. The c!8ss liad 250 •• Chapman Is the fi!nner Kepda Smith, Pomeroy, Route 3. Lt.
: candidates with 127 completing Russell, sister of l.t. Rilssell. Russell and his family
• the class and being comFollowing graduation, · the returned to the Quantico hase
:mlssloned to tjte rank of second Russells and the Chapmans on Nov. 1~ and will be stationed
: lieutenant. Lt. Russell
now loured the . QUantico:' Marine there un Ul he graduates from
: attend six montlls of basic l;!ase and then went to the basic school after which he
; .Chlioling at QUantico.
Washington, D. C., where they will be assigned to duty
•
elaewhere,

from
'

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) -U.S.
Chamber of Commerce President Arch Booth said Monday
that Inflation is slightly weakening but recession is likely to
worsen at least through the
middle of next year.
Inflation is beginning to
weaken a little bit," said
Booth. "Some prices are
coming down. Not much, but a
little. , ,..
"Gasoline and certain food
items have decreased. Beyond
that there's also a decrease in
prices of some 'underlypng'
products like copper, tin,
rubber and hides. Cotton and
wool prices are down which
means clothing prices should
be coming down."
However, .Booth predicted

.

.

'\

·).

Church in Pomeroy.
rwo sessions are scheduled,
one from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
(featuring a J!OUuck luncheon),
and one from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
(featuring exhibits and two
demonstrations) .

.
.: Russell wins commission in U.S. Marines

ht.

16.50

ELDWOOD PANELING

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

T I ME X .WIDE SELECTION

Christmas

Compote,

4'1~"

DOlIT WITH

PO MElROY

. NEW

For

8.00

--·

from ,

1

latch

g.

.

'

1

Perfect

7.112" .

The Meigs County Extension
:.Service, in cooperation with
: local Individuals and • jlroups,
•will present . "A Holiday
~ Happening" on Thursday, NW.
• 21 at St. Paul's Lutheran
••

'REMODELING'
FOR CHRISTMAS?

AMERICAN
10-SPEED
STANDARD
3 SPEED
MEN'S ·&amp;WOMEN'S
Every Bike Reduced!

GIFT

Bon Bon. dia.

POMEROY

HUFFY

The

Each
f.

recently elected to her 11th

e&lt;msecuUve two-year tenn In

Inflation is slow~g up says Booth

1aoliday
happening
set
•

Goessler's. Jewelry. ·

POMEROY

I

••

.

R-Cincinnati, and Alan E.
Norris, R-Westervllle, were
d!osen assistant minority leader and whip, respeetlvely, for
the second time. All votes were
by acclamation, and there was
a minimwn of speech-making.
The reorganization meeting
was presided over by the
party's senior member, Rep,
Ethel G. Swanbeck, R-Huron,

.•1

as

•

ENTFRTANMENT

CUT s40

atRISTMAS

~

.

'

'

.. FIFTH GENERATION-~ ' D. Osborne makes
• another fifth generation famlly In M¢gs County,
:, Represents lives of the famlly pictured are seated, Ito r, Mrs.
• Kathy Dill Osborne,' Lone's mother; Mrs. Nancy JJill
' Wallter, Lorre's great-geati!J'andmother, holdlllg Lorre;
back row,I to r, Gary R. Dill, Lorre's grandfather, and Earl
H. Dill, Lorre's gre&amp;\1Jl'lllldfather.

her:itage
house
.

MEASURES 24 1/8 IN.
WIDE, 26\4 IN. DE(P,
5ti IN. HIGH AT
FRONT. 3$ IN. AT
BACK. CAN BE
f:ONVERTED TO
UNDER COUNTER.

BUY YOUR WIFE

'MOORE'S
LAY-A-WAY
BICYCLES

'·

An excellent gift idea, too.

Ebersbach
Hardware
POMEROY

POMEROY

group's "loyal opposition"
·d11rlng the llllh General
Assembly, which convenes in
1anuary.
Kl,ll'fess, chosen . again at a
party caucus Monday, announced he Is creating a
special steerlns committee of
five pennanetJt members to
"give clear direction for
dlscuaalons In our caucus
meetings."
The minority leader emphasized the steering commitee
will not make party policy. But
he said he would be the
chalrman and Indicated he
wants no more disputes about
the direction the Republican
cauClis Is taking on policy
matters.
During his last term
speaker In 1971-72, Kurfess lost
support from a minority of the
caucus for his policies and
decisions. During the last two
years, there were dlssentirig

views Hbout how to handle
prowsa ls of ihe ma jority
Democrats.
'
Republccans; who lost one ~
House seat and will take a 59-40
disadvantage Into the new
session in January, carried off
their reorganization meeting
without a whisper of dissent
Monday .
Reps. Norman A. Murdock,

'·

..

, ,.

.

�-·
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"

Sentinel eiassifieds Get. ~esults_!
IN

MEMORY of AUDREY
L OU I SE VAN METER wt10
pa ss ed away November 19,

l

@)

1957

The world mny ctiange from
year to year ,
An d f r i ends from day to day .
But nev er will the one we love
From rn emory pass away
Sa d ly mis sed by husband .
Buc k , and daught er . JoAnn
11 19 11p

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to express our Sin
ce re thanks ilnd apprecrcHron
10 all for th err thoughtfulnes s
.1nd s ympathy rn the loss of
our loved one. Katre E Blak.e
The l ovely f l ow e rs , food.
spec ra l
thank s
to
Rev
F reel and No r ri s and Rev .

W ilson ,

the

2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co~

1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA

can't e)(press our
apprecra llon to those who
were so krnd durrng th e dea t h
of our loved one . Walter John
Re rbe l Many thanks to the
Veterans Memorial Hosp ital ,
Dr Boonsue. Nursmg staff
Fou~d
and
th e volunteers of
emergency s quad _ Also. the .FOU ND on fl ood road , half
gro~n ma le, dark gray ca t
nerg hbor s a nd tr rends who
'ca ll l 992 2756
helpe d so much and the ones
who sent flower~. cards and
'" I
11 19 3t c
food Al so. Rev Wr lbur H ---;--- ---------Per r rn to r hr s co nso l rn g
,•-',.
word s, and the Ewrng
F un er a l Home fo r !h err ef
f rcre nt . sert'tCe
Your
thoughtfulness INill neve r be AlJC ION , Thursday and
for golten
.~a~day nrQh l, 7 p m at
Brothers and Srs ters
Mas n Auction , Ho rton St tn
111 91tP.
Ma s n, W Va Consrgnments
-------------- t - ·_)\lelcbme Ph one (304) 773
- ~ 471

NOTICE OF FILING ·
.._ L .. 1--·
10·3 tfc
AUTHENTICATED COPY &gt;&lt;
- l -:----- - - - -----01 Lette rs of
.,,(\) s.~o--r
K o s MET 1 c s
Appomtmentof · ~ iRe e mber ChriStmas rs
Non·Restdenf E)(ecutr 1x
com no.. •We have many new
Esta te of
·
,.. pro u ct~ that wrll make n1 ce
Non-Resident
gi ft s~ Phon e BROWN 'S, 992
·
1
Esta t e
af
MELVIN
M i~ ,·:p\
ll .Jtfc
·~"'ri:
' ·McKENZ I E No . ~ 134 '11 _:.,·. " iiJ~---- - --Oeceased
,.,,~ .. ""'L,.,.,,~•~
,

steer ing .

VACUUM Cleaners new 1974
model Complete with all
cleanmg tools Sma ll parnf
damage in s hipp ing Will tak e
\27 cash or budget plan
avarlab le Phon e 99 2 7755
11 19 lfc
----------------S INGER
A utomatr
Zag
Sewmg Mac
hines. cIn Zrg
sewi
ng

'"'

1973 OLDS Cutlass S Excellent
-condrtron 350 e ngrne with
p s , p b and air , Call 992 39 1&lt;1
a Her 5 p m
11 196t p

417 4

1119 3tp

S.HQ(&lt;JJ N.(L Match , Sunday ,

,.i. ' I~.6 Vt57.1) r p_m Mile Htii"Rc'J ,
#la(lfoq choked guns only , 6

·~ a:9~h

'Turkey w rll be grven
by the
R
F
D
1
t
1
, ~ ~c .ne tr e epar men
·._;·
11 -19 5tc
sale-:- w;dn;;day
anct Th'ursday, 994 Pearl Sf ,
Middleport 10 a m to 4 p .m
c
111911
~:1.;......,~ - - - -- - - ' - -,.....

·BAse:MENT-

AirTeN TION
FAR MER S ,
Lumber for sa le Rough
lymber for farm use Contac t
Pomeroy For est Produ cts. P
0 Bo)( 726, Pom eroy, Ohio .
,, Phon,e- 992 5965
11 7 12tc

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

''

Dat ed this 2nd day of Novem
ber. 1974

' ~

)

I'

,

Business Opportunities

Manning Webs ter
JUDGE
Com man Pleas Cour t,
Probate Drvrsron
Mergs Count y, OhiO
(ll ) 5,

't

:~''jfl: S PONS I B t.i
&gt;~t,

,'t ',• \;

PERSON
·
Wanted to own and operate
.f

12. 19, Jtc

confec tr on vend rng
r ou te .
Pomeroy
and
surrounding area Pleasan t
busrness H rgh profit items
tZ:Mf"'! tert/art lime ;.&gt; fWe or
-e)(J:Itflenc
not' 'important
'R,.eQuires ta r and $1J95 to
S479s:tcash Investm ent, For
Jie~faJt~ write and
rn'clude
vour, phone number .
beparftnent BVV
3938 Meadowbrook Rd Mrnneapolis, M'N 55426
ca ndy &amp;

Call

.
ll -146tp
---.......--------.--- '

s, p b.
air , goo d condr ti on, 5800
Phon e 949 .32 11
ll 17 3tp
' .
1969 UUUUI:: Uart ~wr nger 340,
4 .. S~eed , bright red with bla ck
h0cfd _ Phpn e 9.49 37 54
1968 ciLDS hardtop , p

11 13 6tp

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

For Rent
TRAILER , 2 bedroom , Brown 's
Trailer Park P hon e 992 3324.
_l_ ____ _______ll_-8 lf c

-------------GRO CERY business for sale

Bu1ldtng for sale or lease
Phon e 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to tO p m for appointment.
3 20 -tfc

TRAILER space, 2 miles from
Pomeroy. Rt . 143. PHone 992
5858
10 27 tfc

Harrisonville
Society News

·•

FRI;!Ei.,ESTIMA
TE, ·
'

mE DEPENDAiE
,·_;. : t

OONTRACTING 00.
•

',

'

'

"'

''

'~

"·

.,

HElL , ,.'
RACINE
PWMBING
,
&amp; HEATING .,.

.

" '

"

O!n\plete" plum~ing ~.

"Frw

heating service,
Estimates.

I

f.l;

?92-399.5 :t
"'''"* 99!1-5700· '• ...

•.J~l'IIHIHJl' ,'fl}

'

. i.~:~~:~-~RS

:

' '·' ,t

By day or hciu'r . ros&amp;nabia .
rate0, reliable people with
medical tralnlnll.

f•

~-

~

lailt" Mowers
., t
..

' - '"'

~

Next to l;li~way
Garage 11n ,Route 7 ~
Pomeroy Route 3

·Ph. 992-760fDelore 5p.m .
, or 742-49021fter 5 p .m .

,.

-------------1970
TON Chevrolet tru ck,
1

dual wheels , va, 4 speed
Looks and runs good. Harold
Brewer, Long Bottom ,' Ohio .
Phone 985 3554
11 -17 -tfc

-

&gt;

-

-'-' "

1!

hea tl ng and r e made 1 mg .
work guaranteed Phone 992
2409

~
L
t;1 - ~12tp
· ~~----------- -

, .,

fo

I

'

' -~

;

w~~=c~~f!:.L,r:v'a.. . Saven~~e~

Theltf'eu

I

The CGrrvpfOrl."
'
'
WEDNESDAY,NOY.H,1974
: ''00- SunriM Semin1r 4; Summer s.m.ter 10.

: ';.:,30 p.m . .:.._The Under-lei "Target:

' 6•25 - Farm R - ' 13.
·
: ':'30- Five Mlnufft 10 Uvo By 4: Newo6; llble Anlwen I; The
, Story 13; Scllool s..,. 10.
Columbus
: 6:45- Marnlng R
3.
' 7: 00- Today 3, .. 1 : CBS News 8, 10; H. R. Pufnstuf 6: Far·
'
mer's Daughter 13.
':7.!311- New ZOO Revue 61 Lldlvilll 13.
;-1:00- New ZOO RtvUI 13; C..pt. l&lt;engeroo II Joff'l Collie 6:
: Sneme St. 33; PaDevo 10.
• 1:25- Jack Lal.annit 13; C..pt. I&lt;Migaroo 10.
• t;,30 - Bredy Bunch e.
: • : u - ·Newo 1J.
'
• f :!IO-Pitul Dixon 4: AM 3; Phil DoMhue IS; Wild Wild w.t I
:
Bullwln~le 81 Movie
, 9 : 30- Not For Women0nly31 Hltzell; Tatttate. . IO.
'.IG· oo- Joker's Wild a, 101 Compeny ' '
Tlllt
3, IS.
:Mr30-Gitmblte,10:WinnlngStrMk3,.,l&amp;...,~vl ~ .It..,"- 10 .
H 'IOO- PaiiWtll'd 13; High Rollenl 3, IS; , _ ou •
: " 110,11110 Pyramid 6.
'
, __ ~ L"'U : 30- Hollywood Squareo 3, 4, IS; Bracly Bunch 13; ~·"' ,,.

e.

W'atitecl

Name

8, 10,

12·.30--Search for T-row a, 10; 511111 sec.ld •I Celebrity
' Sweepot•l&lt;• 3, 15; Aft.,_. with OJ 13: Elac. Co. 33.
.
1
13: Not for
IS;
'
Phil Donahue 8; VOUltll and RHf1111 10.
: 1:311-AstheWOrldTurtill, IOIJOO!N'rdy3,~ 15: IAI'oMikeA
': 2:00-Dil,"oiOUJ'U-3,.,1J,Guldlfll
Deal6, 13.
• .
L""'t
~.....:...
.,....• , 10;.....,,,
_

;'tg:.= ~~ ~y ~i,i.kt~en6,

'Je omes

:,.;oo- -her World 3, 4, 15; ~allfolpltal6, 13;

KINGSBURY
MOHILE HOMES

1

·'

'-~~-:-,~'-''"--:-:--'
,1

'

'

(

I

Rip:

....unc

Aftlr
~ 1ett1r In ~ columll, the seventh grade at
tberrirDda8cllaol,Mvlllea Hllii,N. J., felt a real concern for 11).
,..... 'l'IIIIID7 CopeJmt wbo Ia paralysed from a fall and has

. . . ~lor lliDOiltba.

'
ll:lch llllllarl&amp; In - clMa plaqa 1o wrilll lo Timmy at least
-ftw,two-a,IIIIIDOtatopwrltJnc until he is well.

.... Wllllld 1011 to lmw tbet- your letter bad results. Nli* . .,ad, Pnrlldlm, Snenth Qrade CluB.

jlqon

hero

11 Scrutinized
lJ Clndld
Z1 Empty

a

ta1ll

Transmit

1

LOCUST posts, 22 Rem rngton Rt.7 . Cantralheatandalr, 2900
and 1 72 acre lot . Phone 742 Sq. Ft. of floor space. L.&lt;;:.
3656.

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

';:~~~~i~~!~~~~~~~;·

&lt;

•

SALJ:I

FENCE~ POsTs'
(Preuure 'Trea'' f..O...I)

,.,,, -zH"eitv--;;.,7.-;--~-ew

ZZDoln
mdlatld

21

Zt Uvely old

dlnce

21 VIYIClly

·ZI Hourp. .

lncredlent

" It just hasn't worked out."'

fl Conlrived
Zl Aanud to

"I do" It

(2 wdl.)
11Ega
u~

clrculltlan
• Theater

box

YGD'ie lerrllle I 'D1ulll from Timmy and from
HIIJtN AND SUE

r1 Go plec:ea
• Kal1AI

us. -

city

+++

It Some

NOTE: Far J'Dlll' ~of What II a Crush - What Is a First
I.Gftl. 'Wbllt II Gettina to Know Yaunelf," aend a STAMPED,

a,
a.

I.

WIN AT BRIDGE

DAILY CBYPTOQUOTE- Here'•

]

CAlLE CHANNEL FIVE
ebllloliirii
lo ~ tloltble 7:30p.m • ..: Counlry 1ttc1 w.tem u.S.A.
' 1:30 p.m. - Supenter n.atre.
Wbaldt :rw dD .w!

t
I IJ

the clre'-lltUon

I

l.:it.l ( I l I I I I I

I

]AT THE( I

I)

(AMwerl tHMWNW)

J....In• FRAUD PANSY WALRUS OAIETY

YnteNar'• "--"

Lim&amp; OIIPIWf,_ANIIJI: ' ' .-

I , ,.

lO~.:!._fC

I

to work ll:

CRYP'l'OQVOTB

I ( X±) I I :::;::.u..br-::-.:-...:.~
N-......,.
GAFJNC

how

AX\'DLBAAll:R
Ill LONOFBLLOW
Oao ltttter ....,., IIIIIU for IIIIOtber. ·la tblo umple A II
iiHd for tile tllrle L'e. X fer tile two O'a1 at&lt;:. SiaJle !etten.
1poelnl...., the ...._ _. •-•Uon or tho words are Ill
hlntl. Eiell ilal' tile ctdt !etlan an dlft'onnL

rATELA

Silence is mu~ic to his ears

WJa~ tllere'• no MH to complain G6out tilt

prier of a tral• tlck&lt;t-ITS ALWAYS PARI

K

JYCI

NBQCI

OKLPV
J YCI

IYV

IYOVPUD
IYV

BCIPZ

VYAL;

DYZVC

TPBTUP

DYZVC
K

SYZU

AYSKZ
NBQCI
OKLPV

VYAL.-OKZN

UYCCUP
YillleniiJ'I~I=I NO

'1110ROUGIJLY OCCUPIED
VERY MISERABIE.- 1.E'l'I'I1A

MAN WAS
LANDON

DICK TRACY

LIITTio . . . . . . . . ..

CAR!

we'111•

IN
LUCK•

p. . . .

'

Oawal• • J1- .I!IC~

'I,,

I

r

•

,
399.95

•

' .

1 A-rocodo G...,., W1obor- 1 HIM(tlt Gold Drve'r .,.- 2
lliflitt Drrers.
·'
'
·
(Check ~h. nowprlcelndsoftonfhel4i USED MODELS.
·- ~ - ~

'

r

'

•

Green G11,,1~~ubuo cleonl
3 monlhoolcl 1"·"
. , Rlflll
'

.. ·.

c-~~
, "":"::
~ CKRISTMAS SPECIAL~--......,
Just arrived, Nov. 11, 1974,
"
·

of lamps ••_. !
~

t..

$3,000,00 worth
.

f-..

•

'

, .·,,• AI~
. . •.P5 ln ..s.k,
, . 20%
. OFF. .
•·)

.

'

. , 42" ~~.~~~~ ~liiJ'Y. ~~tfl't, like now""-----,.-'!!'~"

'

l·'~ver•l Bedroom Suites
Betty' 5-Dritwer Cltest &amp; Rollo

..

~4~,

lt,t5 up

'-,-.------~IPr,cociiO Sell

1
. L- .:
.

·-~"·lolly Bid, ~l;'lele.__ _ _ _ _ _ 24.~
1-s-llii'ff' Round Ctirle Citrner wllh

l

5Uft•ll,-;-~---~---...e:_:._. H.t5
2-Campo11ont SMmo tar 51- Home
l

,. .'.

' . \!&lt;i

-

t

\

•

~ntor:totnmeniOutflt-;-'"__.;..
' -:--~----....:It

~Baoll:caiM

t

'
A'll' TH' MOMMA BEAR SAID- I

.'IE SHOULDA

..

seEN

OUTLANDISH HRT SAIRV
WORE TO TH'QOILTIIII' ·
BEE --- IT IIIIUZ ENIJFF
ADOG
TO
LAFFII

4"-6 dlam;.ter 6•. lo~. '·"

•2.34 'e ach

The

bugle

M Recline

statement

.3 GrHn Rtlrlger•ton,2 copperottcl IS ~t ..
•--·49.95 up ,

'

..

') P,Ij'

lly Skto Rofr~i• .;;;;.,njy6mo.

20 cu. fl. Gold'S iclt
okl
( '

ON YOUR DIAL

In lot of 100

- --::-; - - - 1 . - _ _ _ _ _

,,.I

home or
bed
35 Yellow

21 Formal

30.k DrosMn, I Red~le DtJoltit.-.t• W•Inflt·CIIeots, I'
SolldMIJ;IeCitost.Miny;othero,tlt ·~•from . 2U5up
12-i Piece Uvln' ~oom Sulles '"' '' 11' ~·I "
49 f5 up

W... _falk to

. _______1o·~·'fc

?l' 'W

I

'like. a persor..

forecaat
Z6 Sensibly
21 Temptreu
29 Golf ICOI'e
30 Word with

Sl "Rolcoe"
self-addreaaed,loog envelope to Helen and Sue Hottel, BOJ: 230117, :14 Withdraw
Sacramenlo, C8llf., 115823.
from

:

II

clrlnll

I Tnmblt
t FIUtd
with .....
7 Soelal
a-t
11 Uaidalllllble

Z1 Kind of
clip

o.r lnelb Gnide at Mullica Hilll:

U

Yeo1erday'o Alllwer
24 Weather

chaU.
11 illusory
(Z wdl.) (II.) u u.s.
4 Knil'bl'l
naval

28 Jujube

Pr...,.

co.

IS Locate
14 Chant
15 Chinese
pagoda

~

a SeftMiela

Contact Renee Stone 992 .7567.
_ ____ _ ______9__4 ttc BUSINESS BUILDING -

-=~:.._

---,'"]----------

. . wbo'a IGiJIII to do JMI18IICI! with a double dole of heavy
qllll&amp;lau ..t w.k? - &amp;le Bottel, that's who! Signed, Her
lifoiJ.' - HEU!:N

( comp. wd.)

before
17 Bllt:lnl
part
u Trifled

see eye-to--eye regarding the
larger lasues . Dlaagreements
over trivialities '\N 111 cause
some ahgry words.

VIRGO (Aug. 2~ - A•nt 221
Your wOit&lt; wlllsufter 1oday because ol your carelessness
and Impatience. Coworkers
won't find you much fun to team
with .
LIBRA (Bop!. 23-0ct. 231
Outside pressures and the
urgency to gel things done
quickly will lead you 10 take
some chances that you nor~
molly wouldn'l Be careful.
SCORPIO !Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
If members of vour family do

problem

A FEW new band Instruments.

s~r.~.~~!~r7irr~~!~-r~-ri~;;,

~.

a..

7·10- News 10; Whafo My Line 8; Trulh or Cons. 3; Celebrity
"f:rpolak• 3; :&amp;iam 33; I Spy 15; Eloc. Co. 20 ; Bowling for
len I; Big Red Mlclllno A.
1
7:30- LM'e Mike A 0..1 6: Mel Tillis I; Pollee Surgeon 3;
,.,.i~ :,.·~~~ ~.!:i ·st. 33: Tatttate• I; Somti'HI
Nameflllt Tunu: Antlque,20; Episode Action 33 . .
: 15; Gllll1111n'o Ia. 6; tiO.OOO Pyremld 13; ....,.. 4; Movie
a: liD-Little HoUM on Prairie 3, 4, 15; That's Mv Mama 6, 13;
"The Proud Onn" 10.
.
.
Tile 0omo1• 10: FM!lng Good 20; Jack the Ripper 31.
, 4:30 - Bonanza 15; BewltChecl 3: ABC A,.,.......aal !j.-..1 •· , 1:30- Mot&gt;le•"Panlc an 1M 5:22" 13; "If TomLorrowL Comedo•"~~
f:IO- Clnrion 101 Lucas TaMil' 3, 4, 15; lie of 1011ar .....
13: Lucy S'- I.
·'
Grlffllhl
••s·oo-Nlr
ROIIII'I20. 33; Mer¥ Griffin~; Filii AndY
·
.
• VInci 201 Melterploce ThNtra 33. ·
~30- Elec.
33; lladgopad. . l.odga20: Newt'' Tr•H•.W.t
10:
Ctrl•tle Love 6, 13; Min Hunter 8, 10; Las. Vegas
· • • 15: Jack O'LMiwn 13,
·
. '
M!llllllt Awardl 3, 4, 15.
~
~·OO-New13 4,1,lO,IS; ABCNewtl31 S.....St. 20:Newl I
10:30- News 10; Llg•cy 33.
11:10-Newl3,4,6,1,10,13, 15; ABC Nowo33.
.. ; . Dlagnoetlc
Pr11Cf'1fr.ve TNC~; ~~ilehed
11
'f.;30- News 3, .. I, 10, 5: Jaurney
pen I
11:30 - Johtony Canon 3; Million lmpoplble 6; Wide World
_,. Gomer pYle 13.
My.... y U: Movlel "The Scrumlng Woman" 8; "'Boll of
Fire" 101 "-lllkl 33.
12:30- Wild Wild w.t 6.
1:10- T-row 3, 4.
2:00 - 4, 13.

•

For Rent
-~~~-·

...,

ltlladl~

Wbl'atben?

lake
• Peraona1

1t Night

• Rght I, 10.
How._
: 3:30- Otto Life 10 Llw13: Mlltdl GMie I, 10; La""- I;
"'

..y

;WMP0/-139~

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

0...!1..-.:

I U.S.S.R.

p. .
Oplftlng load- +5

Sale

Li~~

+++

(made do)

mother
5 Health
reaort

P. .

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

'"I:.__:.....J·:.

...-..m1a

• - out

ACROIIII
1 Buddha's

.KQIOU
8oth vulner•ble
Non• Eul a.t11
·t+
p. . %6
2N.T.
P. . 3&lt;t

·

.·.;•J,.::,&gt;:4K¢

at ibe rflk Gil r.w boOI I'll c:onlrlbule a few:
A blpmilt II .n llellan foe.
Oar1duct Ia wbat tbe crook did when tbe cop started shooUng.
'raou.cbe ecm. before tlneth ache.
Deodonnt Ia lllllch " ' - than de yoUnier ant.
what you put on elblrt wblle lroninllOiq, wbenJOVIIGp jp'GUiinC, bow about ae~ us a few of
YOUR baallt:nodt-bocb Cl' puna, readers? - SUE

loy THC&gt;NiAS JOIIPH

fAJ
· +J

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

Pe..,J.Or Sale

~nOnly

PUNGENT:
A PUn a , be tbe ~form of lmnor, but I love them. So

: a: :r-~i 3, 4, 15: Eclte of Night a, 10; Girl In My_ Life~"..•

. ,.

UNFrURNI SHED house, 4
room s and bath . 1650 Lin coln
t-teigh ts Phone 992 3874
_ ____ _______'2_:!_4_11 c

B

.

il· 55-CBS News I; Din !mel'• W0t"lcl10.
U;OO- Jackpot 3, 15; PMmonl 6; lob Braun's 511-50 Oul:&gt; 61
: News a, 101 Mr. Roaen 33t Newt 13.
,
•

DepreMilw..tdepantaptatdecleaners."

Gat~~~Jmonlmoet-tnoca,,Rap?Oryour readers?- PUNGENT

~

10\1'111

.

ted

r-

, ·~ whitT"

1074
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprtl 1g1
Don't use anyt~lng belonging
to fr iends wlthou1 their permission Harsh wprda will resul1 II
wtlat you borrbw IS misused or
broken.
··
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 201
You're likely to press a bit too
herd 1oday In trying 10 make
your points with others If you
do preas too hard It w•ll allen·
ate a pal
GEMINI (Moy 21 - June 201
Try not to be overly critical ol
persons whj) are performing
work or services for you Sug·
oesUons should be constructive and tactlul.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 221
If you poke your nose too
deeply Into another's affairs to~
day don'1 be surprised If you're
told to mtnd your own busi ness.
LEO (July 23•Aug. 221 ll's
likely you and your mate wtll

• AKI76

cis

Wan

.

Ill tbe • • - _,played lbeil -like ''Knock-lmocll:." Or was
- - -~,
playing it ,._ olh
;balbef.,.tbe
'1111? Altyway,my folkil were
.... er
'Pt IIIII ben'i iome tbey Clllle up with:
''XIIodi~"
,._,, ,..__ .,
....- 1 """"'1
''Deprw."

For Wedn•d•y, Nov. 20,

3

~-+.;----- ---- ----

'2789.

!F,f•·

'''35-

~·a G[lll 'IIGIIrlp, aci wilY don't we bring bacl1: .8011'1e

TOOT•'

1 1 - 1~ - lfc

Phon e
992··JP-' r s onn e l.des1red
adults
only.

•

D-..

·-

By Helen and Sue Bottel
' TllllelorJI'allllldGemea
.
,

Nuw.~0.1874

You 'll make many c~. onla
yolr In order 10 tldvonco your
Mlf-lnlo,..la. They will dl..lop foV'orably, provided you
give them a chance tn work

CHill',

- ----------

•· ~reference

'

.

thongs lo displease you tOday
you're llkely 10 come down
wtth too heavy a hand M1nd
yourtllf11P.8r.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Doc:. 211 Keep an eye on your
own apetdomeler, bul use tho
olhar eye 10 watch what olher
dr.vera are doing.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22•Jin.
101 Hard leellngs could reeull
over money because one ot
you wm th'nk y.ou've been
taken ad•anlage ol. Pick up
your own tab.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-FH.
1 gl You'll be doing yourself aa
much a disservice as you wiH
the other pert y when you
refuse, out of oplte, to do
somethlnQ requested ot you .
PISCES IFH. 20, Morch 201
You'll know just tho right thing
to say to get tl(lOther'o goat.
However, to employ such tactics won't benefit you In the
lea at.

THATit

FU'RNISHED apt Adults onlv,
1\:' \dd te port Phone 992 3874.

2 BEDRO OM turn cottage at
· RPck ~pr rngs , rd ea l for school

·

7:30p.m."The
Partlel Md the I _...
•
• 1:30 p.m .-The Gunsllngen, "'The w.terners.." "Z.nt c;r.y
'

AUT"OMoBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator 's license. Cefl 992'1428. k
6·15·tfc

double wide
mobile hom e In Syracuse No
c hrldren or pets , deposit
required Phone 992 2441 after
6 P m.
10 29 tfc

~

Adler..,

11:==~7~:-y3,

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

- ~

20:

'&lt;

--------...._.,:-_~-~-=:' 'I

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

St.

' 'i,

I

_
, f'ltone 949-5961
•. ~~gQiet'Dency

·~REPAIR .&gt;
ANY AGE CH IL~ , ·,~:. ; lil :'$maJI/~Iianc:eii

&lt;

iiNYL,SIOING
PH. 9~-7454 or

·•..

Mot\.· Sit.

· IA.M! ·.6 P.M.

IJo6 P.M. ' _: •.. "

Interior. Exterior
DecoratlnSJ:R.ta
Remodeling:;

· 10-18 26tp water. Excellent location for ll'
business.
"
11 3-tfc •GRAVEL , sand , Muon sand, SYRACUSE
Nice
4·
___ ....._________ _ _ _
lrmestone , Prt Run by the ton bedrooms, bath, Nat. gas F.A
FURNISHED apartrryent,
Delivered Phone 446-1142.
furnace. Basement, 2 porches
·;
•
11 -10-Utp
utilltres furnished. surtabte
10 18 tfc and 2 car carport.
-;::- ------ --~---~-~
for two working men or ood
..-IANO tunmg, ana repair.
r et ired couple. Living room.
- - - -- ----;---BUSINESS- A g
grocery
Phone Charles Scott, 992-3718.
db
th
o
FIR
Ewooo,
·~•
length
Call
on
State
Rt
.
All
stock,
and
. -9•17·32tp
kitc hen , shower an
a - n
992 5422 or 992-3312 .
·
- - - -- - -- Lancaster .were Tuesday - af- '•
main highway , Mason , W. Vii .
11 . 10 _26 tp some fixtures. This Is your
5; ; fo;-~ n ;cars ~om
Phon.
7
73-5147
1
1
S8
000
00
te rnoon VlSttors of the Epples.
plete. Frye 's Truck a n d Auto
10·27 ·ttc - - - -- - - -- - - - - chance or on y • . •
DOZER or b_ackh0f' work .
Robert Alkire attended the
Parts , Ru t.land , OhiO. Phone - - - - - - - - - - - -- Phone, 4.46 .3981 or' A46 -J~59 . ·
LOWERY organ with ac . NEW LISTING - Large 11
742·609-C
~ •
9-8-tfc.
beautiful
Christ1ooms, 2 apartments, 2 bathS.
2
BEDROOM
trailer
in cessortes.
mas ,.,gj ft , Amust
be seen
10
rr
Eugene Wyatt sale Satw-day
'
10· 16 wc
-----;;--.----=;-~
Syr
acuse,
close
to
school
No
apprel:iate
.
May
be
seen
at
Good
place
for
antiques,
or
flea
and reported a large crowd . - -- - -- - - - - - - -'\
ch
rldr
e n. Phone
or pet
s . 2441
Deposit
249 unron Avenue or call 992 - market. Plenty of parking.
8
requ
rred
992
.,fter
Pearl Uttle had a stand there c~~:~~ltJ 0 ~orm ~6,rea~e;maens~
5617
6 30 p m
Asking 512,500.00.
,•
with her usual good eats.
Phone area code 614 423-9531
10 18.ttc ____ _ _ _ _ _ _ '2.~..2 2 'c HOME SITE- Nearly an ac~· ~~ i-:-- ---.---"-:--r-~
Mrs . Ava Lutz of· Lancaster -------~---~:!_3....'.1 c
------------CLOSE OUT on new Zig -Zag lot on T.P. water, In good su$,
Will.
v1s1ted Jane Gilkey Tuesday
T
r
Sewing Machines . For sewing division.
) :.,
Jta.
~-M0bI H
rDr
stretch fabrics. butlonholes , MANY
BARGAINS
TO .
afternoon and while here called
•0. UJ
fancy designS; etc .. Paint CHOOSE FROM. SHOULD
1970 VAL 1ANT 65:x 12, 3bedroorrl
her nieces, Lola Clark and JUNK .·.uta!, comp iE: te and
slightly
. Cholco of YOU WANT TO DISPOSE OF
fully carpeted , L.P gas heat .
carryingblemished
ca~e or: sewing
F rances Alkire . She w3s here . delivered to our yard. Wr!
Phone 992-7751.
stand
.
549.80
cash
or torms ANY PROPERTY, SEE US.
pick up auto bodi es and buy
8-25-tfc
due to the death of her cousin,
at 1 kinds of scrap meta ls and
I. "
available. Phone 992.7Hss .tfc WE WILL HELP YOU, OR Nq
' '
F lossie BnciUes.
Iron Rider's Salvage, St . Rt. TRADE in - iike new , 1972
J
j
- -- -- - - - - - - - - · CHARGE.
124, · Rt '4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
F
reedom
12
)(
~0.
3
door,
STEREO - radio. em -fm, I
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark , Co li 992·5&lt;68. ·
c arpeted
throughout , 2
track tape combination, 4
-1
and two c hildren of Chester ----'-L-------~~.:.'_tc
bedroom , many
luxury
spurker
sound
svst•m.
features, save 40 pet. of · Balance Sl09. 56 or easy
,,
· were guests 'of Mr . and Mrs .
original sale price . Buy with
terms Call 9P2-3965. ·
Rober t Clark SlUlday.
~·~ ,
or without furniture . Can be
ll ·S·tfC
seen at King s burY Home
Mr. and Mrs. Clinlon"Giikey POO;;E grooming, ss Coli
Sa
les
lot
,
1100
E.
Main
St.,
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
'lk · f . 667' f 5 . Coolville .
we
,' .
Pomeroy , Oh io , or call 992 ·
0f Alb any, Karen G I ey- 0
." welc ,e 'your bus iness.
model. Complete with ell
- ·~ .
- ' L
7034.,
cleenlng attachments and
Athens and ,Ray . Alkire ~ere _-L..l ~::....: ___ _:_o·~~~ -6tp
11 -13-5tc
uses paper bags . Sllghtlv use'd
supper gue~ts of 'Ava Gtlkey SJ&gt;.~ NT1Bernord, pups .' •100. 3
· but cleans and looks llke new.
-~-----------Sunday night. '. ·
:&gt; IJI'!I"IIl;, old Phon• · 843·2438.
Will sell
for S37 .25
cash 992or tret••lloo""MII••--~---11111!!11! 101•~·-~
terms
available
Phone
,~Q i1'1Htc
At)lmig those "'om here .. ,,.1'.
l.. lh. 'rolling hills of
7155 .
FOR
calli ni{•at, Holzer '' Medical
molt , toy 'poodles . · Southern Ohio In your own
·,
Center to see J'un-lor Payne .~ .WoutCI ,'maketi'ii'•c:e Christmas "~- 3 BR, all eleclrlc mobile
. ·
gifts See at Carl Ralrden's
ltomt
ln
SoUthern
Ohlo'
.
s
Sunday were Freda Carsey,
residence , Hartford , w va .
newost mobile homo pork.
Kathy Payne and Mr. and Mrs.
11 ·17 ·6tc
15 · min. from Athens or
used
Clearance on '74
·
.; ,
\, ~ ,.,
Robert Alkire, Mrs. Sue Pa yne ,
· Pomeroy. Price reduced to
7 t · 1
Models .
(Only
a
few
Mr. a nd Mrs. _Roose velt
get this mobife home park
ovalloble), $43 .40 cosh or
~
~r.
terms eva llable. Pt~one 992~
_
stlrted. Set up &amp; roady lo
Branham and · Mr. and Mrs.
f UR,i:(.ISH,i;~ apartment. 4 · move Into . For further
11
Jesse Carroll.
f.OOii'ls an.d bath . 10.. . Spring
detoils contact ...
Avf!:,
Pamer~.
992
-5908.
'
• Mrs. Wilda Wiseman has
NO DOWN PAYMENT
REPLALt: those tired sagging
~~ ... .,.. '' ···.
,.
ll -17-6tc
1 • '
' ~
•
1
been a fib sufferer and missed
TO VETERANS
CUShions
With new
foam
' solo
cut to
size , only
S10 95
at
3:;"u.. _RNisHEo ;oo 111 ~~ -east
several days work . ..,_ .
Jack ' s
Furniture
and
·
1
:· ~a it\' St Phone 99).2381 •
•
Mrs. Cha~. Sheets is off wook
' ',· 11 -17-Jtc
.•
•
Uphotste~y
~upplles,
236 E .
Maon 51 " Pomeroy . Phone
I
.... ... .. •
this -week caring fo r,. 11~ • t!-louse for rent, 1h m ile below
992 ·390J
' '
'
,
' ,~ •
1·.~•{
8rand'son while his parents,
East•rn High Sc hool For
H -6 12t c
a.:.:~
•s"~~
ln 11ervlew, call 985 -351 6.
Mr. and Mrs, John Mussenare ·
.
11 17 - 31~
- - - - - - - - - - - ,.......__ _
' I
vacationing in Hawai,i. '
·
,
hi ·
·u ..
1100 E. Main Pomeroy,
0.
ILakewood
ACker air traction
.shocks,"""·
hooker
TRAILER
space
on
pr
ivate
lot,
• " ' , Dwight· · Seiple of Dayton'
CB11992-7034
-headers. with 3" collectors lor
·
J mil es from l="omerov Phone
~67 7743
Open Dolly 1,110 7.
\1Sited Mr. and Mrs . ,Gene
small block . Cot I 992·3496
,
,
after 6 p , m . BEST OFF&lt;ER
1
11 173tc
YolUlg i¥t week.
,, . 1 ,, - ·--"-·- -~ -t- ---"- -

.

Opon

DAY,.NURSERY

'1/1

s-...

: , , 30.:....NIIC Newl3, .. 15: CBS News 1,10; llewltchecl6; Geimer
~ Pyle13. ·
.
~ Trutti or ~ 3, 41 Bowling For Dollan
: What'• My ~? 1: NNo 101 Wild Klngdorri 15: Anllquta 20;
'
Art Of FaOtbitll 33.
1· 311- Hoi I , - Sauar• 3,4; Wild, Wild World of Animals 6I
· 125,11110 pYramid i: Price I• Rlallt 10; To Tell the Truth 131
:
TBA 15; MireD Sport! itt 33; Rf D 20.
'
, '
, t.oo ·- Adam-12 3, 4, 15: Happy Dip 6, 13; Gaod Tlma a. 101
• .. America 33, 20; Pilgrim Journey 4.
30- MovlH "VIrglnfl Hill" 3, .. IS; "It Cauldn't ........ To A
: •Nicer ~.YY" 6, 13; M-A-S-H I, lO; Evtnlltll at SYJ~'jlhony ~· ·
; ~oo- ~pjoy AnniYWNry &amp; Goodbye I, 10•
.
:
4•. u; Marc.. Welby6, 13; BlirnabyJ:
1, 10: " - ' 20; Sauttclatqe 33.
, 10:30- Your Future II Now 20.
' 11:00- Newo3, 4, '·'· 10,13,15, 33. •
:n:30 - · Johnny ear- 3,., .151 Million lm~lble 6; , ~
, · • world My~ 13: J-kl 33: Movlos •: In Cold BloOCI I;
-- "Sionl of ThrM
10.
-1: oo- Tomorrow 3, 4. .
·
2:00 - News 4, 13.

G~ e-RAL-r!palr,-plu;,blng. 2 ·BEDROOM

'Alien·\ ~Help Wanted

'

All Mechanical Work ··

i~

I'

••

Ph. 992-5682 or ,-n-712f ~

cabinets, etc.

~

,

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

JOHN DEERE dozer ,
hydraulic blade and winch
5.4 ,000 Phon e 985 -3594
11 17 7tp

11 19 3tc

,.

.

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

440

2 BEDROOM apt . upstarrs , all
utdttres patd SB5 per month,
no pets Phone 99 2-3030 be fore

I,

fowlrjfs

,·

1950 FERGU SO N ' front end
loader , $1 ,500 Phone 985-3594
11 17 7tp

HOUSE . partlv fur ntshed , 3
bedrooms, n rce ya rd Phone
992 2780 or 992 3432 .
11 -19tfc

Routt 7 bV·PISI
Rutllnd,

SEPfiC J TAN ,K S 'cle.ane·d, Jie Aci·/i1: 1'x
·g Nc'R eTe sEwiNG · ~AcHI~ e~. ""P~;~.
reasonable rates Ph. 446·
dellve_rod
1: r/~1\J.-.:J Q.&gt; ,~,rl
,llrVI04,,[lltt ,t!lakes, 992· 22111.·
.4782 , Gallipolis. Jol'rn, Russell,
prolect . .ll_.,St.'anu "!:'-Si/. :.F:f
• 'lheJ Plbrlc ShOPr , Pomer.oy.,
owner and operator. '
· e'tlmates : F.;'llon~. 9f,2-!2 .4. '
Authorized Singer sateS au
5-12-ttc'
Goegleln ·~ R:eal:tv -Mix · Co . ,
Servlte. We sharpen ScJ11otl.
'
Midd-leport, Ohio.
3-29. tfc
CATTLE- A I. Service : Ph'one
6·30·11&lt;
L Parker, 992 2264, Pomerov,
or 667-3251, Coolville station . ·~c:-;;~DFORO,Au~tl0~ .
lt -17-13tc
Complete Service
Phone 94'.41~1~r- 949-3}61 f
EXCELSIOR Soli Works, E .
Ra'Cine:vh lo
Mal,-. St .• Pomeroy. All ,klnds
Crllt Bradford,
of salt water pellets, water
~
~:'
·' -5 -1-tfC
nuggets,· block salt and own
Ohio River Salt. Phone 992-'
3891.
_
6 -~- tfc

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

___________ _

-~

:!

~·

Ott Stole Rt. 124, V. mi . from

. PHONE
949-3e32 or N:t-2667
• All .l)r.pes of
I BUILDING
and REMODELING
From • l!h'elf 10 1 hotae.
Peintlng, siding, roofing,
poper hinging, llltchon

~ ·I
,~ft ._.

" q h,

,, '

,.

'

Iii lUI .

'

:~

GARAGE'··

CONSTRUCTION
·.

lnt~ .~.&amp; '.'.'.'

ru&amp;. •
UlerJCI

RQGER HYSEl.I!S·~

D&amp;D.

~~~cine,~'O~ J.

a.

News 3, :.. •· 10, u, 15;
CounMIIIII Tecllnk;uolt 33. .

'

·Generation Rap

Lov•:•

-

949~295

i ,,oo-

~ to Inf)l~menf Wanted

Mr. arid Mrs . Robert
and two children of zanesville '•HOW T(l EARN . MONEY :AT
' ts fth M
HOME-· MA'ILING CCI'fll ·
were week en d gues o e W!~SJON 'c iRCUL:rAR S •
A Epples.
_,...,
L t E.N T · P R o F 1 r
n&lt;
~,'J;
NT
ER d
F
d
Gob
Mr. •an Mrs . re
S y .,.. ··
LS tAL
'25c &amp;O FF
STAMPED
zanesville spent a night with , , ·
SSED ENVELOPE
theM. A. Epples recently. J\:Jr .,'
~G~ Pt.R 1~2t1i23 ';~.CLAIR .,
and Mrs . Dale Williams ·wlf~ · :
':
, 11 10 261p
Sunday afternoon callers .. ''· 4~ , ·~ ~,~~-J- ----..---Mrs Imogene Brown spent'·•
To Buy
Tuesday with the Epples.
OLD furniture , Ice bo)(es, bra ss
Mrs. Earl Foit and daughter~
beds , or complete households
'
, . f C I b
Write M. D Mrller. Rt 4 , ·
m·law, Vada I' 01t o o tun us
~P~roy , Oh io Call 992 7760 .
and Mrs. Louella Hani.tlg of · .~ .
10 1 74

,f ,('

••

Piclr'llll dolly In Pomeroy}
Middleport.
Al'l .• wor
gulrlntetcl. Pltorte 949... 1, . I

Syracuse, Ohi~

Free E·stimateS, f'ltlddii!POrt, 0 .

PUBLIC NOTICE
J AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
Th e board of trustees t of
unfurn is hed "apartments.
Letart Tw p , Meigs County , Wrtl
Phone 992 ·543.C.
accept sealed b.jds until 1·:30
4-12-tfc BEAUT,IFUL AKC Sable and
P m Tuesday, .o ecember 3, 1974
wh ite Coll ie f'Upprr!S , 530 each
for the purchase of a n~w· or
PRIVATE meetrng room for
Phone 985 3809.
u5ed Tracto~ Loader Backhoe
any organization. phone 992
11 -Hitc
Trade -rn is to be one used F nrci
3975
4000 Tractor loader,
~~
3 11 ttc
ELECTROLUX
vacuum .
Speclflca fions Wtll be on tile
.----------------cleaner, · A-1 cond tlion , uses
at o!fice or clerk and can . be '--:------_;,--~-' CO-UNTRY Mobil(! Home Park,
papr!r bags, has cordwlnder
obta
Rt
33, ten
miles rots
northwith
of
, tned b Y ma 1I. Th e board of - l
Pomeroy
, Large
and many attachments . Al so,
right
concrete patios, sidewalks,
Shampooer attachment tn ·
eluded. (Only 4 availt!ble 1 at
·
v
runners and off s treet,
S37 .7 0
c ash
or
terms
H b
S'
- -.w~tt !...1t&gt;o · bcibys rtting or
par kmg Also, spaces for
er ert ay~e '- tJ:q,ui:~c)eanlng Phone 992
sma rr trailers . Phon e 992-7479,
avallabl-t. Phone 992 7755 .
2 4 0)~'
....
- i 'i
7-21 -tfc
Rt 2, Racine, OhiO
11 .13 tfc
1
( ll ) 19, Jtc ~ l erk, Leta rtT wp
_.
l 11 14 . 6tp - - - - -- - - - - - -- - -

~~~!~~e:n~e~~~;~~sb~::

'1

ttl-5162

GHEEN'S
PAINnNG
,
_

992~7129

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

HOUSE and tra der fo r rent tn
town , 2 bedrooms Phone 992
3975 and 992 2571
___._
11 6 tf c

5 p m

'

1

Pomeroy _ Phone 992 3478
I0 -1S .26tc
--- - - - - - - - -.------- 777 Pearl Street
HOUSE for sa le , 249 Union
Av e, All newly decorat ed
Mlcklleport, Ohio
rn s1de May be seen by ap
Phone 992-5367 or 992-3861
porntm ent Phone 11992
5617
, 1 •·~===========
-15
12tc•
______.__ _ _ _______ _

Phone 388 s
ING lot, 80ft frontage)(
11a4179 61 c BUILD
165 ff . The second lot on left on
Riverview Dr ive . Linco ln
DEER SLA YER - Slug guns rn
Hill, Pomeroy , Ohio. If in s tock , Rem rngton, Win
terested, call 992 3230 after S
p ,m
chester , Ithaca , deer slugs ,
S1 20 per bO)( , New 1100 and
10 ·17 -ttc
H870 Remlngtons , many other -- ---- --- ---~guns That's F rfe 's, Th ird St, A ACR ES-overlooklng beautiful
Middleport Phon e 992 749.4
view 01 rrver , '2 bedrooms
11 19 -6tc
down , 1'/ 2 up. ceramic tile
bath , buil t in kitchen, dry
FIR EWOOO for fir eplace or
basement , fireplace , rock
stove Cut to length Phon e
wall patro , garag e, complete
99'2 7644
privacy
2 mrles from
11 3 26tc
Pomeroy in Mine rsvitle 992 ~
5792
~
BABY- aedCOm ptete- E xce ltent
__ _________ _:~~5t,P
condrtron S25. Phon e 985-3988
11173tc
NEW
b t ·leve l
home ,
3
1953 FERGUSON wrth mower,
bedrooms , built rn kitChen.
51.400 Phon e 985 3594
ba semen ! with one ca r
garage _ Phone 742 3615 or see
11 17-7tp
Milo Hutchi son
11 1 tfc
F IREWO OD for sa le Cal l 742 4831
10 29-26tc

1969 350 PONTIAC Frrebi rd,
good condit ion Phone (JOdl
882 2497
I I 19 6tc

·;. a\vi(\y i Spo n sored

.

' . SYLVIA'S, · ·.
· UPHOLSTERING

8-K EXCAVAnNG
COMPANY

Sl a bale

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

N f.
o rce rs h ere b v g 1vei) Q~-.,l! t ..
Doro t hy
L
McK~n fe,
Executr r)( of the , Estate ll. oft
Me lv rn M McK enzre, 1a1e ,otr
San
Bernar drno
Co6n'ry ~
Ca lrfornia , deceased , on the 2nd
day of November , 1974, filed In
the Probate Court or Meigs
Count-,. , Ohro, an authenticated
copy of the Lette;s of Ap
porntme n t, of sa rd Esta te
granted in Supertor Court of the
State of Ca lifornia , far the
Co unty of San Bernardmo. and
that the ctarm or claims of any
credrtor or credrtors of sa rd
decedent sh a ll be presented to
thi s Court withrn Sf)( months
a fter the da te of sard f II ing'.or be
forev er barred as a possrble li en
upon t he Oh ro rea l es tate of sa1d
decedent

, . ':RADIA10R
·'
',,
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

. JOHNSON·MASONRY

-·----------~~9 "' -------- ------·~~ o1 c
1500 BALES of good mixed hay .

1964 GMC 1 ~ ton p rc kup truck . 6
cy l , s tandard Phone 992
2675
11 19 3tp

'

7 ROOM house w1th '2 baths In

table Ma' kes buttonhol es. GRAVEL HILL . 5 room and
sews on buttons, blind he ms,
bath house, garage, a nd
e tc Top notch condrtron Pay double outbuitdrng ,
575
S51 or terms ava ilabl e Ph one
Broadway , Mrdd: epo rt
992 7755
Phon e 992 3333 or 992-5546.

1967 CHEVY sta ndard , 327.
$100 Phone Gary R Orll , 985

1957 CHEVROLET , $.100
9'n 5852 -

nil

'Tel~!!!!2!.!1.&gt;g

:

.:r:oo

'' OOMP~ . ,

SEE US FOR YOUR
·MEEDS

WORDS

~ot~te

••

o.

S895

v.a, power

"

· REMODELING? · · '

Real Estate For S&lt;ile

Spt Cpe, red frntsh , blk . vinyl tap, spotless Interior. good

· tires . rad1o, autamatte trans. ,

,.

-

"

smgers

!~

\

HEATERS

1910 FORD MAVERICK
$1295
Local 1 owner. good w -s-w tires, deluxe Int. t ri m . wheel
covers, rad1o, 6 cy l , real economy wr th std trans. blue
flri , ni ce.

,1n d pal l bParcrs , tl'1 e Ew~ng
Funtral Home . and to anyone
who help ed 1n any way dur rng
this trm e of n ee d
THE FAMILY
11 19 l t p

FUEL OIL

\ Busjpe~. s,. SerYices

PAI NT DI\MAGE 197.1 ZIG
Zf'IG SE WIN G MACHINE S.
Keep out the cofd a cut the cost.of'heatlng f
S trll 1n or igrna l cartons No
Priced For Quick Sale I
attachmC"nts nee ded as our
Dress yo1.1r home up warm · for cold days '
contro ls arc burl! in Sews
ahead
. Sidi,ng:': lns~fates, ! adds • beauty, Is
wrth 1 or 'J needles. makes
-1 New Monogram
buttonholes , sews on buttons,
durable ; adds val,u e, iS coloHul. Siding ca!l be
monogrlllms , and bltnd hem
Wood Burning Stove
s lrtch Fu ll cash pr ice \38 50
installed anytime. Ask us abouf ·S OHit, Fascia, ·
•POMEROY LANDMARk
or budget plan avarlab le
Gutters and Downspouts, too. '
l9.: Jack W . Carsey , Mgr ,
Phone 992 77 55
11 19 ttc ~
Phone992 -21BJ
•
FRE.E ES:t:IMATE .
;·
~
: .
PIC KING up a prano tn your
area. loo king for a respon
sible pa rty to tak e over
FOR SAlE
payments Call collect Cred rt
.
·, m -7608
,,f!'·~~'~·
·"·
Th e Betty Cline real estate
Manager, 772 5669, or wrrte
Rt. 7 &amp; Union Ave.
•
Pomeroy,
Credil Ma nage r , 260 E Marn located at 224 Walnut Street,
St. Chillicothe , Oh ro 45601 Mrddl e port , Ohio, is being Of·
11196tc fered for sale Previous asking
I
pri ce $15,000 00 ; now w illing to
Water, Electric:, Gas,' Siwer .
EXTRA m ce prg s tor sa te sell property at 510,000 00. Sale
Lines, ' Installed.
Work
Sublect to the approval of the
f:JI;l,Q.tH~ 992 3169
guaranloed.
UPHOI,STE~IN~
Jtp
Probate
Court.
Meigs
&lt;;ounty,
11 19
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks
Ohro If rnlerested , Please
WALN-VT~;-r;o· ~d ~~~ -;; fm. c onta ct the unders ig ned \.....-p:::t...:...._,
Limes""'• a: Flli 1\)irl
FREJ;· ESTJMATE
Commerclai-Residenlial
8 tra ck tape comb inat ion
.., Fred w. Crow
Pickup
and
De.livery
Construction &amp; Remodel
BalanceSI07 45or term s Call
~ Pomeroy , Ohio
•,
'
992 3965
tfc
(
11
)
15,
17,
18
,
3tc
11 19

1970 CHEV . MONTE CARLO
$1995
350 V-a. automatrc, P s teer ing &amp; brakes. dark blue fmrsh ,
bfue inter1or, blue vinyl roof, factory a ir condltroned, like
new w w tires, ra d1o. Many other e)(tras

-·-~-- --------

Steve n

•,

~.::~

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

For Sale

Auto Sales

I

~-----7----~~----:_~--------~'~·~-~·~-·~;~~J~,1~~-~·~·~~~·~·~:~,f;~;~·~"T'·~~~~'------"1

For Sale

u-~~~l.~,o.,,.__,,~.ll.,m._4_________..____

u
"I"

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Nov . 19, 1974

In Memory

..

'

I

P2 24 ea•
' -

f,..lk

Burke-na~15-~
S""encer,
r
" y ..
,.,'. · .. '· .' ·
(304) 927-1250,
!!1'............~-

' ''

~.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

!

.

'

"

.

•

j

'

�-·
'

"

Sentinel eiassifieds Get. ~esults_!
IN

MEMORY of AUDREY
L OU I SE VAN METER wt10
pa ss ed away November 19,

l

@)

1957

The world mny ctiange from
year to year ,
An d f r i ends from day to day .
But nev er will the one we love
From rn emory pass away
Sa d ly mis sed by husband .
Buc k , and daught er . JoAnn
11 19 11p

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to express our Sin
ce re thanks ilnd apprecrcHron
10 all for th err thoughtfulnes s
.1nd s ympathy rn the loss of
our loved one. Katre E Blak.e
The l ovely f l ow e rs , food.
spec ra l
thank s
to
Rev
F reel and No r ri s and Rev .

W ilson ,

the

2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co~

1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA

can't e)(press our
apprecra llon to those who
were so krnd durrng th e dea t h
of our loved one . Walter John
Re rbe l Many thanks to the
Veterans Memorial Hosp ital ,
Dr Boonsue. Nursmg staff
Fou~d
and
th e volunteers of
emergency s quad _ Also. the .FOU ND on fl ood road , half
gro~n ma le, dark gray ca t
nerg hbor s a nd tr rends who
'ca ll l 992 2756
helpe d so much and the ones
who sent flower~. cards and
'" I
11 19 3t c
food Al so. Rev Wr lbur H ---;--- ---------Per r rn to r hr s co nso l rn g
,•-',.
word s, and the Ewrng
F un er a l Home fo r !h err ef
f rcre nt . sert'tCe
Your
thoughtfulness INill neve r be AlJC ION , Thursday and
for golten
.~a~day nrQh l, 7 p m at
Brothers and Srs ters
Mas n Auction , Ho rton St tn
111 91tP.
Ma s n, W Va Consrgnments
-------------- t - ·_)\lelcbme Ph one (304) 773
- ~ 471

NOTICE OF FILING ·
.._ L .. 1--·
10·3 tfc
AUTHENTICATED COPY &gt;&lt;
- l -:----- - - - -----01 Lette rs of
.,,(\) s.~o--r
K o s MET 1 c s
Appomtmentof · ~ iRe e mber ChriStmas rs
Non·Restdenf E)(ecutr 1x
com no.. •We have many new
Esta te of
·
,.. pro u ct~ that wrll make n1 ce
Non-Resident
gi ft s~ Phon e BROWN 'S, 992
·
1
Esta t e
af
MELVIN
M i~ ,·:p\
ll .Jtfc
·~"'ri:
' ·McKENZ I E No . ~ 134 '11 _:.,·. " iiJ~---- - --Oeceased
,.,,~ .. ""'L,.,.,,~•~
,

steer ing .

VACUUM Cleaners new 1974
model Complete with all
cleanmg tools Sma ll parnf
damage in s hipp ing Will tak e
\27 cash or budget plan
avarlab le Phon e 99 2 7755
11 19 lfc
----------------S INGER
A utomatr
Zag
Sewmg Mac
hines. cIn Zrg
sewi
ng

'"'

1973 OLDS Cutlass S Excellent
-condrtron 350 e ngrne with
p s , p b and air , Call 992 39 1&lt;1
a Her 5 p m
11 196t p

417 4

1119 3tp

S.HQ(&lt;JJ N.(L Match , Sunday ,

,.i. ' I~.6 Vt57.1) r p_m Mile Htii"Rc'J ,
#la(lfoq choked guns only , 6

·~ a:9~h

'Turkey w rll be grven
by the
R
F
D
1
t
1
, ~ ~c .ne tr e epar men
·._;·
11 -19 5tc
sale-:- w;dn;;day
anct Th'ursday, 994 Pearl Sf ,
Middleport 10 a m to 4 p .m
c
111911
~:1.;......,~ - - - -- - - ' - -,.....

·BAse:MENT-

AirTeN TION
FAR MER S ,
Lumber for sa le Rough
lymber for farm use Contac t
Pomeroy For est Produ cts. P
0 Bo)( 726, Pom eroy, Ohio .
,, Phon,e- 992 5965
11 7 12tc

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

''

Dat ed this 2nd day of Novem
ber. 1974

' ~

)

I'

,

Business Opportunities

Manning Webs ter
JUDGE
Com man Pleas Cour t,
Probate Drvrsron
Mergs Count y, OhiO
(ll ) 5,

't

:~''jfl: S PONS I B t.i
&gt;~t,

,'t ',• \;

PERSON
·
Wanted to own and operate
.f

12. 19, Jtc

confec tr on vend rng
r ou te .
Pomeroy
and
surrounding area Pleasan t
busrness H rgh profit items
tZ:Mf"'! tert/art lime ;.&gt; fWe or
-e)(J:Itflenc
not' 'important
'R,.eQuires ta r and $1J95 to
S479s:tcash Investm ent, For
Jie~faJt~ write and
rn'clude
vour, phone number .
beparftnent BVV
3938 Meadowbrook Rd Mrnneapolis, M'N 55426
ca ndy &amp;

Call

.
ll -146tp
---.......--------.--- '

s, p b.
air , goo d condr ti on, 5800
Phon e 949 .32 11
ll 17 3tp
' .
1969 UUUUI:: Uart ~wr nger 340,
4 .. S~eed , bright red with bla ck
h0cfd _ Phpn e 9.49 37 54
1968 ciLDS hardtop , p

11 13 6tp

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

For Rent
TRAILER , 2 bedroom , Brown 's
Trailer Park P hon e 992 3324.
_l_ ____ _______ll_-8 lf c

-------------GRO CERY business for sale

Bu1ldtng for sale or lease
Phon e 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to tO p m for appointment.
3 20 -tfc

TRAILER space, 2 miles from
Pomeroy. Rt . 143. PHone 992
5858
10 27 tfc

Harrisonville
Society News

·•

FRI;!Ei.,ESTIMA
TE, ·
'

mE DEPENDAiE
,·_;. : t

OONTRACTING 00.
•

',

'

'

"'

''

'~

"·

.,

HElL , ,.'
RACINE
PWMBING
,
&amp; HEATING .,.

.

" '

"

O!n\plete" plum~ing ~.

"Frw

heating service,
Estimates.

I

f.l;

?92-399.5 :t
"'''"* 99!1-5700· '• ...

•.J~l'IIHIHJl' ,'fl}

'

. i.~:~~:~-~RS

:

' '·' ,t

By day or hciu'r . ros&amp;nabia .
rate0, reliable people with
medical tralnlnll.

f•

~-

~

lailt" Mowers
., t
..

' - '"'

~

Next to l;li~way
Garage 11n ,Route 7 ~
Pomeroy Route 3

·Ph. 992-760fDelore 5p.m .
, or 742-49021fter 5 p .m .

,.

-------------1970
TON Chevrolet tru ck,
1

dual wheels , va, 4 speed
Looks and runs good. Harold
Brewer, Long Bottom ,' Ohio .
Phone 985 3554
11 -17 -tfc

-

&gt;

-

-'-' "

1!

hea tl ng and r e made 1 mg .
work guaranteed Phone 992
2409

~
L
t;1 - ~12tp
· ~~----------- -

, .,

fo

I

'

' -~

;

w~~=c~~f!:.L,r:v'a.. . Saven~~e~

Theltf'eu

I

The CGrrvpfOrl."
'
'
WEDNESDAY,NOY.H,1974
: ''00- SunriM Semin1r 4; Summer s.m.ter 10.

: ';.:,30 p.m . .:.._The Under-lei "Target:

' 6•25 - Farm R - ' 13.
·
: ':'30- Five Mlnufft 10 Uvo By 4: Newo6; llble Anlwen I; The
, Story 13; Scllool s..,. 10.
Columbus
: 6:45- Marnlng R
3.
' 7: 00- Today 3, .. 1 : CBS News 8, 10; H. R. Pufnstuf 6: Far·
'
mer's Daughter 13.
':7.!311- New ZOO Revue 61 Lldlvilll 13.
;-1:00- New ZOO RtvUI 13; C..pt. l&lt;engeroo II Joff'l Collie 6:
: Sneme St. 33; PaDevo 10.
• 1:25- Jack Lal.annit 13; C..pt. I&lt;Migaroo 10.
• t;,30 - Bredy Bunch e.
: • : u - ·Newo 1J.
'
• f :!IO-Pitul Dixon 4: AM 3; Phil DoMhue IS; Wild Wild w.t I
:
Bullwln~le 81 Movie
, 9 : 30- Not For Women0nly31 Hltzell; Tatttate. . IO.
'.IG· oo- Joker's Wild a, 101 Compeny ' '
Tlllt
3, IS.
:Mr30-Gitmblte,10:WinnlngStrMk3,.,l&amp;...,~vl ~ .It..,"- 10 .
H 'IOO- PaiiWtll'd 13; High Rollenl 3, IS; , _ ou •
: " 110,11110 Pyramid 6.
'
, __ ~ L"'U : 30- Hollywood Squareo 3, 4, IS; Bracly Bunch 13; ~·"' ,,.

e.

W'atitecl

Name

8, 10,

12·.30--Search for T-row a, 10; 511111 sec.ld •I Celebrity
' Sweepot•l&lt;• 3, 15; Aft.,_. with OJ 13: Elac. Co. 33.
.
1
13: Not for
IS;
'
Phil Donahue 8; VOUltll and RHf1111 10.
: 1:311-AstheWOrldTurtill, IOIJOO!N'rdy3,~ 15: IAI'oMikeA
': 2:00-Dil,"oiOUJ'U-3,.,1J,Guldlfll
Deal6, 13.
• .
L""'t
~.....:...
.,....• , 10;.....,,,
_

;'tg:.= ~~ ~y ~i,i.kt~en6,

'Je omes

:,.;oo- -her World 3, 4, 15; ~allfolpltal6, 13;

KINGSBURY
MOHILE HOMES

1

·'

'-~~-:-,~'-''"--:-:--'
,1

'

'

(

I

Rip:

....unc

Aftlr
~ 1ett1r In ~ columll, the seventh grade at
tberrirDda8cllaol,Mvlllea Hllii,N. J., felt a real concern for 11).
,..... 'l'IIIIID7 CopeJmt wbo Ia paralysed from a fall and has

. . . ~lor lliDOiltba.

'
ll:lch llllllarl&amp; In - clMa plaqa 1o wrilll lo Timmy at least
-ftw,two-a,IIIIIDOtatopwrltJnc until he is well.

.... Wllllld 1011 to lmw tbet- your letter bad results. Nli* . .,ad, Pnrlldlm, Snenth Qrade CluB.

jlqon

hero

11 Scrutinized
lJ Clndld
Z1 Empty

a

ta1ll

Transmit

1

LOCUST posts, 22 Rem rngton Rt.7 . Cantralheatandalr, 2900
and 1 72 acre lot . Phone 742 Sq. Ft. of floor space. L.&lt;;:.
3656.

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

';:~~~~i~~!~~~~~~~;·

&lt;

•

SALJ:I

FENCE~ POsTs'
(Preuure 'Trea'' f..O...I)

,.,,, -zH"eitv--;;.,7.-;--~-ew

ZZDoln
mdlatld

21

Zt Uvely old

dlnce

21 VIYIClly

·ZI Hourp. .

lncredlent

" It just hasn't worked out."'

fl Conlrived
Zl Aanud to

"I do" It

(2 wdl.)
11Ega
u~

clrculltlan
• Theater

box

YGD'ie lerrllle I 'D1ulll from Timmy and from
HIIJtN AND SUE

r1 Go plec:ea
• Kal1AI

us. -

city

+++

It Some

NOTE: Far J'Dlll' ~of What II a Crush - What Is a First
I.Gftl. 'Wbllt II Gettina to Know Yaunelf," aend a STAMPED,

a,
a.

I.

WIN AT BRIDGE

DAILY CBYPTOQUOTE- Here'•

]

CAlLE CHANNEL FIVE
ebllloliirii
lo ~ tloltble 7:30p.m • ..: Counlry 1ttc1 w.tem u.S.A.
' 1:30 p.m. - Supenter n.atre.
Wbaldt :rw dD .w!

t
I IJ

the clre'-lltUon

I

l.:it.l ( I l I I I I I

I

]AT THE( I

I)

(AMwerl tHMWNW)

J....In• FRAUD PANSY WALRUS OAIETY

YnteNar'• "--"

Lim&amp; OIIPIWf,_ANIIJI: ' ' .-

I , ,.

lO~.:!._fC

I

to work ll:

CRYP'l'OQVOTB

I ( X±) I I :::;::.u..br-::-.:-...:.~
N-......,.
GAFJNC

how

AX\'DLBAAll:R
Ill LONOFBLLOW
Oao ltttter ....,., IIIIIU for IIIIOtber. ·la tblo umple A II
iiHd for tile tllrle L'e. X fer tile two O'a1 at&lt;:. SiaJle !etten.
1poelnl...., the ...._ _. •-•Uon or tho words are Ill
hlntl. Eiell ilal' tile ctdt !etlan an dlft'onnL

rATELA

Silence is mu~ic to his ears

WJa~ tllere'• no MH to complain G6out tilt

prier of a tral• tlck&lt;t-ITS ALWAYS PARI

K

JYCI

NBQCI

OKLPV
J YCI

IYV

IYOVPUD
IYV

BCIPZ

VYAL;

DYZVC

TPBTUP

DYZVC
K

SYZU

AYSKZ
NBQCI
OKLPV

VYAL.-OKZN

UYCCUP
YillleniiJ'I~I=I NO

'1110ROUGIJLY OCCUPIED
VERY MISERABIE.- 1.E'l'I'I1A

MAN WAS
LANDON

DICK TRACY

LIITTio . . . . . . . . ..

CAR!

we'111•

IN
LUCK•

p. . . .

'

Oawal• • J1- .I!IC~

'I,,

I

r

•

,
399.95

•

' .

1 A-rocodo G...,., W1obor- 1 HIM(tlt Gold Drve'r .,.- 2
lliflitt Drrers.
·'
'
·
(Check ~h. nowprlcelndsoftonfhel4i USED MODELS.
·- ~ - ~

'

r

'

•

Green G11,,1~~ubuo cleonl
3 monlhoolcl 1"·"
. , Rlflll
'

.. ·.

c-~~
, "":"::
~ CKRISTMAS SPECIAL~--......,
Just arrived, Nov. 11, 1974,
"
·

of lamps ••_. !
~

t..

$3,000,00 worth
.

f-..

•

'

, .·,,• AI~
. . •.P5 ln ..s.k,
, . 20%
. OFF. .
•·)

.

'

. , 42" ~~.~~~~ ~liiJ'Y. ~~tfl't, like now""-----,.-'!!'~"

'

l·'~ver•l Bedroom Suites
Betty' 5-Dritwer Cltest &amp; Rollo

..

~4~,

lt,t5 up

'-,-.------~IPr,cociiO Sell

1
. L- .:
.

·-~"·lolly Bid, ~l;'lele.__ _ _ _ _ _ 24.~
1-s-llii'ff' Round Ctirle Citrner wllh

l

5Uft•ll,-;-~---~---...e:_:._. H.t5
2-Campo11ont SMmo tar 51- Home
l

,. .'.

' . \!&lt;i

-

t

\

•

~ntor:totnmeniOutflt-;-'"__.;..
' -:--~----....:It

~Baoll:caiM

t

'
A'll' TH' MOMMA BEAR SAID- I

.'IE SHOULDA

..

seEN

OUTLANDISH HRT SAIRV
WORE TO TH'QOILTIIII' ·
BEE --- IT IIIIUZ ENIJFF
ADOG
TO
LAFFII

4"-6 dlam;.ter 6•. lo~. '·"

•2.34 'e ach

The

bugle

M Recline

statement

.3 GrHn Rtlrlger•ton,2 copperottcl IS ~t ..
•--·49.95 up ,

'

..

') P,Ij'

lly Skto Rofr~i• .;;;;.,njy6mo.

20 cu. fl. Gold'S iclt
okl
( '

ON YOUR DIAL

In lot of 100

- --::-; - - - 1 . - _ _ _ _ _

,,.I

home or
bed
35 Yellow

21 Formal

30.k DrosMn, I Red~le DtJoltit.-.t• W•Inflt·CIIeots, I'
SolldMIJ;IeCitost.Miny;othero,tlt ·~•from . 2U5up
12-i Piece Uvln' ~oom Sulles '"' '' 11' ~·I "
49 f5 up

W... _falk to

. _______1o·~·'fc

?l' 'W

I

'like. a persor..

forecaat
Z6 Sensibly
21 Temptreu
29 Golf ICOI'e
30 Word with

Sl "Rolcoe"
self-addreaaed,loog envelope to Helen and Sue Hottel, BOJ: 230117, :14 Withdraw
Sacramenlo, C8llf., 115823.
from

:

II

clrlnll

I Tnmblt
t FIUtd
with .....
7 Soelal
a-t
11 Uaidalllllble

Z1 Kind of
clip

o.r lnelb Gnide at Mullica Hilll:

U

Yeo1erday'o Alllwer
24 Weather

chaU.
11 illusory
(Z wdl.) (II.) u u.s.
4 Knil'bl'l
naval

28 Jujube

Pr...,.

co.

IS Locate
14 Chant
15 Chinese
pagoda

~

a SeftMiela

Contact Renee Stone 992 .7567.
_ ____ _ ______9__4 ttc BUSINESS BUILDING -

-=~:.._

---,'"]----------

. . wbo'a IGiJIII to do JMI18IICI! with a double dole of heavy
qllll&amp;lau ..t w.k? - &amp;le Bottel, that's who! Signed, Her
lifoiJ.' - HEU!:N

( comp. wd.)

before
17 Bllt:lnl
part
u Trifled

see eye-to--eye regarding the
larger lasues . Dlaagreements
over trivialities '\N 111 cause
some ahgry words.

VIRGO (Aug. 2~ - A•nt 221
Your wOit&lt; wlllsufter 1oday because ol your carelessness
and Impatience. Coworkers
won't find you much fun to team
with .
LIBRA (Bop!. 23-0ct. 231
Outside pressures and the
urgency to gel things done
quickly will lead you 10 take
some chances that you nor~
molly wouldn'l Be careful.
SCORPIO !Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
If members of vour family do

problem

A FEW new band Instruments.

s~r.~.~~!~r7irr~~!~-r~-ri~;;,

~.

a..

7·10- News 10; Whafo My Line 8; Trulh or Cons. 3; Celebrity
"f:rpolak• 3; :&amp;iam 33; I Spy 15; Eloc. Co. 20 ; Bowling for
len I; Big Red Mlclllno A.
1
7:30- LM'e Mike A 0..1 6: Mel Tillis I; Pollee Surgeon 3;
,.,.i~ :,.·~~~ ~.!:i ·st. 33: Tatttate• I; Somti'HI
Nameflllt Tunu: Antlque,20; Episode Action 33 . .
: 15; Gllll1111n'o Ia. 6; tiO.OOO Pyremld 13; ....,.. 4; Movie
a: liD-Little HoUM on Prairie 3, 4, 15; That's Mv Mama 6, 13;
"The Proud Onn" 10.
.
.
Tile 0omo1• 10: FM!lng Good 20; Jack the Ripper 31.
, 4:30 - Bonanza 15; BewltChecl 3: ABC A,.,.......aal !j.-..1 •· , 1:30- Mot&gt;le•"Panlc an 1M 5:22" 13; "If TomLorrowL Comedo•"~~
f:IO- Clnrion 101 Lucas TaMil' 3, 4, 15; lie of 1011ar .....
13: Lucy S'- I.
·'
Grlffllhl
••s·oo-Nlr
ROIIII'I20. 33; Mer¥ Griffin~; Filii AndY
·
.
• VInci 201 Melterploce ThNtra 33. ·
~30- Elec.
33; lladgopad. . l.odga20: Newt'' Tr•H•.W.t
10:
Ctrl•tle Love 6, 13; Min Hunter 8, 10; Las. Vegas
· • • 15: Jack O'LMiwn 13,
·
. '
M!llllllt Awardl 3, 4, 15.
~
~·OO-New13 4,1,lO,IS; ABCNewtl31 S.....St. 20:Newl I
10:30- News 10; Llg•cy 33.
11:10-Newl3,4,6,1,10,13, 15; ABC Nowo33.
.. ; . Dlagnoetlc
Pr11Cf'1fr.ve TNC~; ~~ilehed
11
'f.;30- News 3, .. I, 10, 5: Jaurney
pen I
11:30 - Johtony Canon 3; Million lmpoplble 6; Wide World
_,. Gomer pYle 13.
My.... y U: Movlel "The Scrumlng Woman" 8; "'Boll of
Fire" 101 "-lllkl 33.
12:30- Wild Wild w.t 6.
1:10- T-row 3, 4.
2:00 - 4, 13.

•

For Rent
-~~~-·

...,

ltlladl~

Wbl'atben?

lake
• Peraona1

1t Night

• Rght I, 10.
How._
: 3:30- Otto Life 10 Llw13: Mlltdl GMie I, 10; La""- I;
"'

..y

;WMP0/-139~

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

0...!1..-.:

I U.S.S.R.

p. .
Oplftlng load- +5

Sale

Li~~

+++

(made do)

mother
5 Health
reaort

P. .

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

'"I:.__:.....J·:.

...-..m1a

• - out

ACROIIII
1 Buddha's

.KQIOU
8oth vulner•ble
Non• Eul a.t11
·t+
p. . %6
2N.T.
P. . 3&lt;t

·

.·.;•J,.::,&gt;:4K¢

at ibe rflk Gil r.w boOI I'll c:onlrlbule a few:
A blpmilt II .n llellan foe.
Oar1duct Ia wbat tbe crook did when tbe cop started shooUng.
'raou.cbe ecm. before tlneth ache.
Deodonnt Ia lllllch " ' - than de yoUnier ant.
what you put on elblrt wblle lroninllOiq, wbenJOVIIGp jp'GUiinC, bow about ae~ us a few of
YOUR baallt:nodt-bocb Cl' puna, readers? - SUE

loy THC&gt;NiAS JOIIPH

fAJ
· +J

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

Pe..,J.Or Sale

~nOnly

PUNGENT:
A PUn a , be tbe ~form of lmnor, but I love them. So

: a: :r-~i 3, 4, 15: Eclte of Night a, 10; Girl In My_ Life~"..•

. ,.

UNFrURNI SHED house, 4
room s and bath . 1650 Lin coln
t-teigh ts Phone 992 3874
_ ____ _______'2_:!_4_11 c

B

.

il· 55-CBS News I; Din !mel'• W0t"lcl10.
U;OO- Jackpot 3, 15; PMmonl 6; lob Braun's 511-50 Oul:&gt; 61
: News a, 101 Mr. Roaen 33t Newt 13.
,
•

DepreMilw..tdepantaptatdecleaners."

Gat~~~Jmonlmoet-tnoca,,Rap?Oryour readers?- PUNGENT

~

10\1'111

.

ted

r-

, ·~ whitT"

1074
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprtl 1g1
Don't use anyt~lng belonging
to fr iends wlthou1 their permission Harsh wprda will resul1 II
wtlat you borrbw IS misused or
broken.
··
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 201
You're likely to press a bit too
herd 1oday In trying 10 make
your points with others If you
do preas too hard It w•ll allen·
ate a pal
GEMINI (Moy 21 - June 201
Try not to be overly critical ol
persons whj) are performing
work or services for you Sug·
oesUons should be constructive and tactlul.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 221
If you poke your nose too
deeply Into another's affairs to~
day don'1 be surprised If you're
told to mtnd your own busi ness.
LEO (July 23•Aug. 221 ll's
likely you and your mate wtll

• AKI76

cis

Wan

.

Ill tbe • • - _,played lbeil -like ''Knock-lmocll:." Or was
- - -~,
playing it ,._ olh
;balbef.,.tbe
'1111? Altyway,my folkil were
.... er
'Pt IIIII ben'i iome tbey Clllle up with:
''XIIodi~"
,._,, ,..__ .,
....- 1 """"'1
''Deprw."

For Wedn•d•y, Nov. 20,

3

~-+.;----- ---- ----

'2789.

!F,f•·

'''35-

~·a G[lll 'IIGIIrlp, aci wilY don't we bring bacl1: .8011'1e

TOOT•'

1 1 - 1~ - lfc

Phon e
992··JP-' r s onn e l.des1red
adults
only.

•

D-..

·-

By Helen and Sue Bottel
' TllllelorJI'allllldGemea
.
,

Nuw.~0.1874

You 'll make many c~. onla
yolr In order 10 tldvonco your
Mlf-lnlo,..la. They will dl..lop foV'orably, provided you
give them a chance tn work

CHill',

- ----------

•· ~reference

'

.

thongs lo displease you tOday
you're llkely 10 come down
wtth too heavy a hand M1nd
yourtllf11P.8r.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Doc:. 211 Keep an eye on your
own apetdomeler, bul use tho
olhar eye 10 watch what olher
dr.vera are doing.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22•Jin.
101 Hard leellngs could reeull
over money because one ot
you wm th'nk y.ou've been
taken ad•anlage ol. Pick up
your own tab.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-FH.
1 gl You'll be doing yourself aa
much a disservice as you wiH
the other pert y when you
refuse, out of oplte, to do
somethlnQ requested ot you .
PISCES IFH. 20, Morch 201
You'll know just tho right thing
to say to get tl(lOther'o goat.
However, to employ such tactics won't benefit you In the
lea at.

THATit

FU'RNISHED apt Adults onlv,
1\:' \dd te port Phone 992 3874.

2 BEDRO OM turn cottage at
· RPck ~pr rngs , rd ea l for school

·

7:30p.m."The
Partlel Md the I _...
•
• 1:30 p.m .-The Gunsllngen, "'The w.terners.." "Z.nt c;r.y
'

AUT"OMoBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator 's license. Cefl 992'1428. k
6·15·tfc

double wide
mobile hom e In Syracuse No
c hrldren or pets , deposit
required Phone 992 2441 after
6 P m.
10 29 tfc

~

Adler..,

11:==~7~:-y3,

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

- ~

20:

'&lt;

--------...._.,:-_~-~-=:' 'I

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

St.

' 'i,

I

_
, f'ltone 949-5961
•. ~~gQiet'Dency

·~REPAIR .&gt;
ANY AGE CH IL~ , ·,~:. ; lil :'$maJI/~Iianc:eii

&lt;

iiNYL,SIOING
PH. 9~-7454 or

·•..

Mot\.· Sit.

· IA.M! ·.6 P.M.

IJo6 P.M. ' _: •.. "

Interior. Exterior
DecoratlnSJ:R.ta
Remodeling:;

· 10-18 26tp water. Excellent location for ll'
business.
"
11 3-tfc •GRAVEL , sand , Muon sand, SYRACUSE
Nice
4·
___ ....._________ _ _ _
lrmestone , Prt Run by the ton bedrooms, bath, Nat. gas F.A
FURNISHED apartrryent,
Delivered Phone 446-1142.
furnace. Basement, 2 porches
·;
•
11 -10-Utp
utilltres furnished. surtabte
10 18 tfc and 2 car carport.
-;::- ------ --~---~-~
for two working men or ood
..-IANO tunmg, ana repair.
r et ired couple. Living room.
- - - -- ----;---BUSINESS- A g
grocery
Phone Charles Scott, 992-3718.
db
th
o
FIR
Ewooo,
·~•
length
Call
on
State
Rt
.
All
stock,
and
. -9•17·32tp
kitc hen , shower an
a - n
992 5422 or 992-3312 .
·
- - - -- - -- Lancaster .were Tuesday - af- '•
main highway , Mason , W. Vii .
11 . 10 _26 tp some fixtures. This Is your
5; ; fo;-~ n ;cars ~om
Phon.
7
73-5147
1
1
S8
000
00
te rnoon VlSttors of the Epples.
plete. Frye 's Truck a n d Auto
10·27 ·ttc - - - -- - - -- - - - - chance or on y • . •
DOZER or b_ackh0f' work .
Robert Alkire attended the
Parts , Ru t.land , OhiO. Phone - - - - - - - - - - - -- Phone, 4.46 .3981 or' A46 -J~59 . ·
LOWERY organ with ac . NEW LISTING - Large 11
742·609-C
~ •
9-8-tfc.
beautiful
Christ1ooms, 2 apartments, 2 bathS.
2
BEDROOM
trailer
in cessortes.
mas ,.,gj ft , Amust
be seen
10
rr
Eugene Wyatt sale Satw-day
'
10· 16 wc
-----;;--.----=;-~
Syr
acuse,
close
to
school
No
apprel:iate
.
May
be
seen
at
Good
place
for
antiques,
or
flea
and reported a large crowd . - -- - -- - - - - - - -'\
ch
rldr
e n. Phone
or pet
s . 2441
Deposit
249 unron Avenue or call 992 - market. Plenty of parking.
8
requ
rred
992
.,fter
Pearl Uttle had a stand there c~~:~~ltJ 0 ~orm ~6,rea~e;maens~
5617
6 30 p m
Asking 512,500.00.
,•
with her usual good eats.
Phone area code 614 423-9531
10 18.ttc ____ _ _ _ _ _ _ '2.~..2 2 'c HOME SITE- Nearly an ac~· ~~ i-:-- ---.---"-:--r-~
Mrs . Ava Lutz of· Lancaster -------~---~:!_3....'.1 c
------------CLOSE OUT on new Zig -Zag lot on T.P. water, In good su$,
Will.
v1s1ted Jane Gilkey Tuesday
T
r
Sewing Machines . For sewing division.
) :.,
Jta.
~-M0bI H
rDr
stretch fabrics. butlonholes , MANY
BARGAINS
TO .
afternoon and while here called
•0. UJ
fancy designS; etc .. Paint CHOOSE FROM. SHOULD
1970 VAL 1ANT 65:x 12, 3bedroorrl
her nieces, Lola Clark and JUNK .·.uta!, comp iE: te and
slightly
. Cholco of YOU WANT TO DISPOSE OF
fully carpeted , L.P gas heat .
carryingblemished
ca~e or: sewing
F rances Alkire . She w3s here . delivered to our yard. Wr!
Phone 992-7751.
stand
.
549.80
cash
or torms ANY PROPERTY, SEE US.
pick up auto bodi es and buy
8-25-tfc
due to the death of her cousin,
at 1 kinds of scrap meta ls and
I. "
available. Phone 992.7Hss .tfc WE WILL HELP YOU, OR Nq
' '
F lossie BnciUes.
Iron Rider's Salvage, St . Rt. TRADE in - iike new , 1972
J
j
- -- -- - - - - - - - - · CHARGE.
124, · Rt '4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
F
reedom
12
)(
~0.
3
door,
STEREO - radio. em -fm, I
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark , Co li 992·5&lt;68. ·
c arpeted
throughout , 2
track tape combination, 4
-1
and two c hildren of Chester ----'-L-------~~.:.'_tc
bedroom , many
luxury
spurker
sound
svst•m.
features, save 40 pet. of · Balance Sl09. 56 or easy
,,
· were guests 'of Mr . and Mrs .
original sale price . Buy with
terms Call 9P2-3965. ·
Rober t Clark SlUlday.
~·~ ,
or without furniture . Can be
ll ·S·tfC
seen at King s burY Home
Mr. and Mrs. Clinlon"Giikey POO;;E grooming, ss Coli
Sa
les
lot
,
1100
E.
Main
St.,
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
'lk · f . 667' f 5 . Coolville .
we
,' .
Pomeroy , Oh io , or call 992 ·
0f Alb any, Karen G I ey- 0
." welc ,e 'your bus iness.
model. Complete with ell
- ·~ .
- ' L
7034.,
cleenlng attachments and
Athens and ,Ray . Alkire ~ere _-L..l ~::....: ___ _:_o·~~~ -6tp
11 -13-5tc
uses paper bags . Sllghtlv use'd
supper gue~ts of 'Ava Gtlkey SJ&gt;.~ NT1Bernord, pups .' •100. 3
· but cleans and looks llke new.
-~-----------Sunday night. '. ·
:&gt; IJI'!I"IIl;, old Phon• · 843·2438.
Will sell
for S37 .25
cash 992or tret••lloo""MII••--~---11111!!11! 101•~·-~
terms
available
Phone
,~Q i1'1Htc
At)lmig those "'om here .. ,,.1'.
l.. lh. 'rolling hills of
7155 .
FOR
calli ni{•at, Holzer '' Medical
molt , toy 'poodles . · Southern Ohio In your own
·,
Center to see J'un-lor Payne .~ .WoutCI ,'maketi'ii'•c:e Christmas "~- 3 BR, all eleclrlc mobile
. ·
gifts See at Carl Ralrden's
ltomt
ln
SoUthern
Ohlo'
.
s
Sunday were Freda Carsey,
residence , Hartford , w va .
newost mobile homo pork.
Kathy Payne and Mr. and Mrs.
11 ·17 ·6tc
15 · min. from Athens or
used
Clearance on '74
·
.; ,
\, ~ ,.,
Robert Alkire, Mrs. Sue Pa yne ,
· Pomeroy. Price reduced to
7 t · 1
Models .
(Only
a
few
Mr. a nd Mrs. _Roose velt
get this mobife home park
ovalloble), $43 .40 cosh or
~
~r.
terms eva llable. Pt~one 992~
_
stlrted. Set up &amp; roady lo
Branham and · Mr. and Mrs.
f UR,i:(.ISH,i;~ apartment. 4 · move Into . For further
11
Jesse Carroll.
f.OOii'ls an.d bath . 10.. . Spring
detoils contact ...
Avf!:,
Pamer~.
992
-5908.
'
• Mrs. Wilda Wiseman has
NO DOWN PAYMENT
REPLALt: those tired sagging
~~ ... .,.. '' ···.
,.
ll -17-6tc
1 • '
' ~
•
1
been a fib sufferer and missed
TO VETERANS
CUShions
With new
foam
' solo
cut to
size , only
S10 95
at
3:;"u.. _RNisHEo ;oo 111 ~~ -east
several days work . ..,_ .
Jack ' s
Furniture
and
·
1
:· ~a it\' St Phone 99).2381 •
•
Mrs. Cha~. Sheets is off wook
' ',· 11 -17-Jtc
.•
•
Uphotste~y
~upplles,
236 E .
Maon 51 " Pomeroy . Phone
I
.... ... .. •
this -week caring fo r,. 11~ • t!-louse for rent, 1h m ile below
992 ·390J
' '
'
,
' ,~ •
1·.~•{
8rand'son while his parents,
East•rn High Sc hool For
H -6 12t c
a.:.:~
•s"~~
ln 11ervlew, call 985 -351 6.
Mr. and Mrs, John Mussenare ·
.
11 17 - 31~
- - - - - - - - - - - ,.......__ _
' I
vacationing in Hawai,i. '
·
,
hi ·
·u ..
1100 E. Main Pomeroy,
0.
ILakewood
ACker air traction
.shocks,"""·
hooker
TRAILER
space
on
pr
ivate
lot,
• " ' , Dwight· · Seiple of Dayton'
CB11992-7034
-headers. with 3" collectors lor
·
J mil es from l="omerov Phone
~67 7743
Open Dolly 1,110 7.
\1Sited Mr. and Mrs . ,Gene
small block . Cot I 992·3496
,
,
after 6 p , m . BEST OFF&lt;ER
1
11 173tc
YolUlg i¥t week.
,, . 1 ,, - ·--"-·- -~ -t- ---"- -

.

Opon

DAY,.NURSERY

'1/1

s-...

: , , 30.:....NIIC Newl3, .. 15: CBS News 1,10; llewltchecl6; Geimer
~ Pyle13. ·
.
~ Trutti or ~ 3, 41 Bowling For Dollan
: What'• My ~? 1: NNo 101 Wild Klngdorri 15: Anllquta 20;
'
Art Of FaOtbitll 33.
1· 311- Hoi I , - Sauar• 3,4; Wild, Wild World of Animals 6I
· 125,11110 pYramid i: Price I• Rlallt 10; To Tell the Truth 131
:
TBA 15; MireD Sport! itt 33; Rf D 20.
'
, '
, t.oo ·- Adam-12 3, 4, 15: Happy Dip 6, 13; Gaod Tlma a. 101
• .. America 33, 20; Pilgrim Journey 4.
30- MovlH "VIrglnfl Hill" 3, .. IS; "It Cauldn't ........ To A
: •Nicer ~.YY" 6, 13; M-A-S-H I, lO; Evtnlltll at SYJ~'jlhony ~· ·
; ~oo- ~pjoy AnniYWNry &amp; Goodbye I, 10•
.
:
4•. u; Marc.. Welby6, 13; BlirnabyJ:
1, 10: " - ' 20; Sauttclatqe 33.
, 10:30- Your Future II Now 20.
' 11:00- Newo3, 4, '·'· 10,13,15, 33. •
:n:30 - · Johnny ear- 3,., .151 Million lm~lble 6; , ~
, · • world My~ 13: J-kl 33: Movlos •: In Cold BloOCI I;
-- "Sionl of ThrM
10.
-1: oo- Tomorrow 3, 4. .
·
2:00 - News 4, 13.

G~ e-RAL-r!palr,-plu;,blng. 2 ·BEDROOM

'Alien·\ ~Help Wanted

'

All Mechanical Work ··

i~

I'

••

Ph. 992-5682 or ,-n-712f ~

cabinets, etc.

~

,

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

JOHN DEERE dozer ,
hydraulic blade and winch
5.4 ,000 Phon e 985 -3594
11 17 7tp

11 19 3tc

,.

.

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

440

2 BEDROOM apt . upstarrs , all
utdttres patd SB5 per month,
no pets Phone 99 2-3030 be fore

I,

fowlrjfs

,·

1950 FERGU SO N ' front end
loader , $1 ,500 Phone 985-3594
11 17 7tp

HOUSE . partlv fur ntshed , 3
bedrooms, n rce ya rd Phone
992 2780 or 992 3432 .
11 -19tfc

Routt 7 bV·PISI
Rutllnd,

SEPfiC J TAN ,K S 'cle.ane·d, Jie Aci·/i1: 1'x
·g Nc'R eTe sEwiNG · ~AcHI~ e~. ""P~;~.
reasonable rates Ph. 446·
dellve_rod
1: r/~1\J.-.:J Q.&gt; ,~,rl
,llrVI04,,[lltt ,t!lakes, 992· 22111.·
.4782 , Gallipolis. Jol'rn, Russell,
prolect . .ll_.,St.'anu "!:'-Si/. :.F:f
• 'lheJ Plbrlc ShOPr , Pomer.oy.,
owner and operator. '
· e'tlmates : F.;'llon~. 9f,2-!2 .4. '
Authorized Singer sateS au
5-12-ttc'
Goegleln ·~ R:eal:tv -Mix · Co . ,
Servlte. We sharpen ScJ11otl.
'
Midd-leport, Ohio.
3-29. tfc
CATTLE- A I. Service : Ph'one
6·30·11&lt;
L Parker, 992 2264, Pomerov,
or 667-3251, Coolville station . ·~c:-;;~DFORO,Au~tl0~ .
lt -17-13tc
Complete Service
Phone 94'.41~1~r- 949-3}61 f
EXCELSIOR Soli Works, E .
Ra'Cine:vh lo
Mal,-. St .• Pomeroy. All ,klnds
Crllt Bradford,
of salt water pellets, water
~
~:'
·' -5 -1-tfC
nuggets,· block salt and own
Ohio River Salt. Phone 992-'
3891.
_
6 -~- tfc

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

___________ _

-~

:!

~·

Ott Stole Rt. 124, V. mi . from

. PHONE
949-3e32 or N:t-2667
• All .l)r.pes of
I BUILDING
and REMODELING
From • l!h'elf 10 1 hotae.
Peintlng, siding, roofing,
poper hinging, llltchon

~ ·I
,~ft ._.

" q h,

,, '

,.

'

Iii lUI .

'

:~

GARAGE'··

CONSTRUCTION
·.

lnt~ .~.&amp; '.'.'.'

ru&amp;. •
UlerJCI

RQGER HYSEl.I!S·~

D&amp;D.

~~~cine,~'O~ J.

a.

News 3, :.. •· 10, u, 15;
CounMIIIII Tecllnk;uolt 33. .

'

·Generation Rap

Lov•:•

-

949~295

i ,,oo-

~ to Inf)l~menf Wanted

Mr. arid Mrs . Robert
and two children of zanesville '•HOW T(l EARN . MONEY :AT
' ts fth M
HOME-· MA'ILING CCI'fll ·
were week en d gues o e W!~SJON 'c iRCUL:rAR S •
A Epples.
_,...,
L t E.N T · P R o F 1 r
n&lt;
~,'J;
NT
ER d
F
d
Gob
Mr. •an Mrs . re
S y .,.. ··
LS tAL
'25c &amp;O FF
STAMPED
zanesville spent a night with , , ·
SSED ENVELOPE
theM. A. Epples recently. J\:Jr .,'
~G~ Pt.R 1~2t1i23 ';~.CLAIR .,
and Mrs . Dale Williams ·wlf~ · :
':
, 11 10 261p
Sunday afternoon callers .. ''· 4~ , ·~ ~,~~-J- ----..---Mrs Imogene Brown spent'·•
To Buy
Tuesday with the Epples.
OLD furniture , Ice bo)(es, bra ss
Mrs. Earl Foit and daughter~
beds , or complete households
'
, . f C I b
Write M. D Mrller. Rt 4 , ·
m·law, Vada I' 01t o o tun us
~P~roy , Oh io Call 992 7760 .
and Mrs. Louella Hani.tlg of · .~ .
10 1 74

,f ,('

••

Piclr'llll dolly In Pomeroy}
Middleport.
Al'l .• wor
gulrlntetcl. Pltorte 949... 1, . I

Syracuse, Ohi~

Free E·stimateS, f'ltlddii!POrt, 0 .

PUBLIC NOTICE
J AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
Th e board of trustees t of
unfurn is hed "apartments.
Letart Tw p , Meigs County , Wrtl
Phone 992 ·543.C.
accept sealed b.jds until 1·:30
4-12-tfc BEAUT,IFUL AKC Sable and
P m Tuesday, .o ecember 3, 1974
wh ite Coll ie f'Upprr!S , 530 each
for the purchase of a n~w· or
PRIVATE meetrng room for
Phone 985 3809.
u5ed Tracto~ Loader Backhoe
any organization. phone 992
11 -Hitc
Trade -rn is to be one used F nrci
3975
4000 Tractor loader,
~~
3 11 ttc
ELECTROLUX
vacuum .
Speclflca fions Wtll be on tile
.----------------cleaner, · A-1 cond tlion , uses
at o!fice or clerk and can . be '--:------_;,--~-' CO-UNTRY Mobil(! Home Park,
papr!r bags, has cordwlnder
obta
Rt
33, ten
miles rots
northwith
of
, tned b Y ma 1I. Th e board of - l
Pomeroy
, Large
and many attachments . Al so,
right
concrete patios, sidewalks,
Shampooer attachment tn ·
eluded. (Only 4 availt!ble 1 at
·
v
runners and off s treet,
S37 .7 0
c ash
or
terms
H b
S'
- -.w~tt !...1t&gt;o · bcibys rtting or
par kmg Also, spaces for
er ert ay~e '- tJ:q,ui:~c)eanlng Phone 992
sma rr trailers . Phon e 992-7479,
avallabl-t. Phone 992 7755 .
2 4 0)~'
....
- i 'i
7-21 -tfc
Rt 2, Racine, OhiO
11 .13 tfc
1
( ll ) 19, Jtc ~ l erk, Leta rtT wp
_.
l 11 14 . 6tp - - - - -- - - - - - -- - -

~~~!~~e:n~e~~~;~~sb~::

'1

ttl-5162

GHEEN'S
PAINnNG
,
_

992~7129

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

HOUSE and tra der fo r rent tn
town , 2 bedrooms Phone 992
3975 and 992 2571
___._
11 6 tf c

5 p m

'

1

Pomeroy _ Phone 992 3478
I0 -1S .26tc
--- - - - - - - - -.------- 777 Pearl Street
HOUSE for sa le , 249 Union
Av e, All newly decorat ed
Mlcklleport, Ohio
rn s1de May be seen by ap
Phone 992-5367 or 992-3861
porntm ent Phone 11992
5617
, 1 •·~===========
-15
12tc•
______.__ _ _ _______ _

Phone 388 s
ING lot, 80ft frontage)(
11a4179 61 c BUILD
165 ff . The second lot on left on
Riverview Dr ive . Linco ln
DEER SLA YER - Slug guns rn
Hill, Pomeroy , Ohio. If in s tock , Rem rngton, Win
terested, call 992 3230 after S
p ,m
chester , Ithaca , deer slugs ,
S1 20 per bO)( , New 1100 and
10 ·17 -ttc
H870 Remlngtons , many other -- ---- --- ---~guns That's F rfe 's, Th ird St, A ACR ES-overlooklng beautiful
Middleport Phon e 992 749.4
view 01 rrver , '2 bedrooms
11 19 -6tc
down , 1'/ 2 up. ceramic tile
bath , buil t in kitchen, dry
FIR EWOOO for fir eplace or
basement , fireplace , rock
stove Cut to length Phon e
wall patro , garag e, complete
99'2 7644
privacy
2 mrles from
11 3 26tc
Pomeroy in Mine rsvitle 992 ~
5792
~
BABY- aedCOm ptete- E xce ltent
__ _________ _:~~5t,P
condrtron S25. Phon e 985-3988
11173tc
NEW
b t ·leve l
home ,
3
1953 FERGUSON wrth mower,
bedrooms , built rn kitChen.
51.400 Phon e 985 3594
ba semen ! with one ca r
garage _ Phone 742 3615 or see
11 17-7tp
Milo Hutchi son
11 1 tfc
F IREWO OD for sa le Cal l 742 4831
10 29-26tc

1969 350 PONTIAC Frrebi rd,
good condit ion Phone (JOdl
882 2497
I I 19 6tc

·;. a\vi(\y i Spo n sored

.

' . SYLVIA'S, · ·.
· UPHOLSTERING

8-K EXCAVAnNG
COMPANY

Sl a bale

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

N f.
o rce rs h ere b v g 1vei) Q~-.,l! t ..
Doro t hy
L
McK~n fe,
Executr r)( of the , Estate ll. oft
Me lv rn M McK enzre, 1a1e ,otr
San
Bernar drno
Co6n'ry ~
Ca lrfornia , deceased , on the 2nd
day of November , 1974, filed In
the Probate Court or Meigs
Count-,. , Ohro, an authenticated
copy of the Lette;s of Ap
porntme n t, of sa rd Esta te
granted in Supertor Court of the
State of Ca lifornia , far the
Co unty of San Bernardmo. and
that the ctarm or claims of any
credrtor or credrtors of sa rd
decedent sh a ll be presented to
thi s Court withrn Sf)( months
a fter the da te of sard f II ing'.or be
forev er barred as a possrble li en
upon t he Oh ro rea l es tate of sa1d
decedent

, . ':RADIA10R
·'
',,
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

. JOHNSON·MASONRY

-·----------~~9 "' -------- ------·~~ o1 c
1500 BALES of good mixed hay .

1964 GMC 1 ~ ton p rc kup truck . 6
cy l , s tandard Phone 992
2675
11 19 3tp

'

7 ROOM house w1th '2 baths In

table Ma' kes buttonhol es. GRAVEL HILL . 5 room and
sews on buttons, blind he ms,
bath house, garage, a nd
e tc Top notch condrtron Pay double outbuitdrng ,
575
S51 or terms ava ilabl e Ph one
Broadway , Mrdd: epo rt
992 7755
Phon e 992 3333 or 992-5546.

1967 CHEVY sta ndard , 327.
$100 Phone Gary R Orll , 985

1957 CHEVROLET , $.100
9'n 5852 -

nil

'Tel~!!!!2!.!1.&gt;g

:

.:r:oo

'' OOMP~ . ,

SEE US FOR YOUR
·MEEDS

WORDS

~ot~te

••

o.

S895

v.a, power

"

· REMODELING? · · '

Real Estate For S&lt;ile

Spt Cpe, red frntsh , blk . vinyl tap, spotless Interior. good

· tires . rad1o, autamatte trans. ,

,.

-

"

smgers

!~

\

HEATERS

1910 FORD MAVERICK
$1295
Local 1 owner. good w -s-w tires, deluxe Int. t ri m . wheel
covers, rad1o, 6 cy l , real economy wr th std trans. blue
flri , ni ce.

,1n d pal l bParcrs , tl'1 e Ew~ng
Funtral Home . and to anyone
who help ed 1n any way dur rng
this trm e of n ee d
THE FAMILY
11 19 l t p

FUEL OIL

\ Busjpe~. s,. SerYices

PAI NT DI\MAGE 197.1 ZIG
Zf'IG SE WIN G MACHINE S.
Keep out the cofd a cut the cost.of'heatlng f
S trll 1n or igrna l cartons No
Priced For Quick Sale I
attachmC"nts nee ded as our
Dress yo1.1r home up warm · for cold days '
contro ls arc burl! in Sews
ahead
. Sidi,ng:': lns~fates, ! adds • beauty, Is
wrth 1 or 'J needles. makes
-1 New Monogram
buttonholes , sews on buttons,
durable ; adds val,u e, iS coloHul. Siding ca!l be
monogrlllms , and bltnd hem
Wood Burning Stove
s lrtch Fu ll cash pr ice \38 50
installed anytime. Ask us abouf ·S OHit, Fascia, ·
•POMEROY LANDMARk
or budget plan avarlab le
Gutters and Downspouts, too. '
l9.: Jack W . Carsey , Mgr ,
Phone 992 77 55
11 19 ttc ~
Phone992 -21BJ
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FRE.E ES:t:IMATE .
;·
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: .
PIC KING up a prano tn your
area. loo king for a respon
sible pa rty to tak e over
FOR SAlE
payments Call collect Cred rt
.
·, m -7608
,,f!'·~~'~·
·"·
Th e Betty Cline real estate
Manager, 772 5669, or wrrte
Rt. 7 &amp; Union Ave.
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Pomeroy,
Credil Ma nage r , 260 E Marn located at 224 Walnut Street,
St. Chillicothe , Oh ro 45601 Mrddl e port , Ohio, is being Of·
11196tc fered for sale Previous asking
I
pri ce $15,000 00 ; now w illing to
Water, Electric:, Gas,' Siwer .
EXTRA m ce prg s tor sa te sell property at 510,000 00. Sale
Lines, ' Installed.
Work
Sublect to the approval of the
f:JI;l,Q.tH~ 992 3169
guaranloed.
UPHOI,STE~IN~
Jtp
Probate
Court.
Meigs
&lt;;ounty,
11 19
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks
Ohro If rnlerested , Please
WALN-VT~;-r;o· ~d ~~~ -;; fm. c onta ct the unders ig ned \.....-p:::t...:...._,
Limes""'• a: Flli 1\)irl
FREJ;· ESTJMATE
Commerclai-Residenlial
8 tra ck tape comb inat ion
.., Fred w. Crow
Pickup
and
De.livery
Construction &amp; Remodel
BalanceSI07 45or term s Call
~ Pomeroy , Ohio
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992 3965
tfc
(
11
)
15,
17,
18
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3tc
11 19

1970 CHEV . MONTE CARLO
$1995
350 V-a. automatrc, P s teer ing &amp; brakes. dark blue fmrsh ,
bfue inter1or, blue vinyl roof, factory a ir condltroned, like
new w w tires, ra d1o. Many other e)(tras

-·-~-- --------

Steve n

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SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

For Sale

Auto Sales

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For Sale

u-~~~l.~,o.,,.__,,~.ll.,m._4_________..____

u
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10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Nov . 19, 1974

In Memory

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P2 24 ea•
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f,..lk

Burke-na~15-~
S""encer,
r
" y ..
,.,'. · .. '· .' ·
(304) 927-1250,
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- 12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tut'8day, Nov, 19, 1974
Pleasant Valley HospltaI
:&gt;,:;:::::::::-;;:::~:::::~::::::::~;;;s;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:,~:,~:;:;:;
t 'UJII T(II\-JJo:Jo:T
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" DISCHARGES - Mrs. Julius
KERR Witt Al'T
REEDSV 11 .1.1·:
Tht•
Cochran, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
. W.\SHINGTON lllPI) i{iverv it•w (ianlt•ll Cluh · will
Alvin Bowles, Grimms
Land.
Continued frlill'l page 1
The Kt'rr , Co.. whil-h has
~~~ ~~ ~at 7::111 p.lll . Thursday at
.
ing :· Victoria Sturgeon, Point
participating merchants 11re .,i·ncligible , hut employes will be
bt'en arrust'd of manufut~
th~ home · •·f Mrs. Ronald
Pleasant; Mrs. !.Orn Campbell,
·
turing faulty t•auaing lids;
Cowdery wilh Mr·s. Tum · eligible. '
son, Gallipolis; David O'Dell,
Mrs.
Carolyn
Thomas,
chamber
secretary, is in charge of tiH!
has told tht• govrrnment It . Spencer
as , (¢&lt;•stess .'
Mason ; Robert . Warren, , will rt'lmburst• h,ome caO.
parad€'.
She
said
four
blinds
definitely
will participate, Eastern,
Members arr tu bril!g gifts fur
Gallipolis; Mrs . George
Kyger Creek, Meigs and Southern, and possibly Wah8~. AlsO In
nt'rs " 'ho ·had . food . spoil
pallt•nrs at tht' Athe ns Mental
Greene, · llartford; Mrs. ·Elsie
the p11radc wiU be Re~tta Queens and of course, Slinta Claus.
becaust' of Its products.
Ht•alth Ccnlt•r. A • Chris lrnas
Rardin, Point Pleasant; Holley
The chamber agreed Monday to order 1,000 candy canes for
No one knows exactly how
workshop will ht• ht• ltl.
Sampson, Spencer. '
Silnta
to distribute t~ the children the evening of the parade.
many l'onsumers may have
.
The parade will form promptly at 6:45p.m . at the Pomeroy
lost foOd, but the Agrtculturl' ·
Junior- High School and will leave at 7,'Proceeding down Main St.,
Departml'nt, thl' Consumer
. SQUAD CAL~D
stopping at the parking lot of the· Farmer!; llank and Savings
Product . Safety Commission
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
The Pomeroy E-R squad
BOWLING
LEAGUE
Company. Everyone wishing to participate In the parade is asked
and Presldt&gt;nt Ford's conanswered a call 'to Meigs High
.
STANDINGS
to conqjct Mrs. Thomas. .
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sumer advlsl'r, Virginia
Week of November 14th:
School at 1:38 p.m . for l,fark
Tom Reed, president, announced that Dale Warner had
Knauer, all recl'ivt'd scores
Team
Won Lost
Pierce whO had suffered a
Young's Mob. Homrs
60 28
informed him that a person iS Interested in operating a b113
of
com.plaints
and
lettt'rs
lacerated finger . He was talten
Heiners Bakery
60 28
service between Pomeroy and Athens one day a week.
Team No. 4
54 34
to the Holzer Medfcal Center. about Kerr products.
Chamber members felt this would not be sufficient and
Comm . &amp; Savings
53 35
At 10:04 p.m. the squad was
Robbins &amp; Myers
52 36
suggested another contact be made with the Public UtiJ!ties
called to Mulberry Ave. for
Bob Evans Steak House 50 38 · Company to see if It could ge\ Greyhound or Trallways bils
Sturdl House
48 40
Mrs. Helena Mullen who was
TWO ENDED
systems to reconsider and resume the run from PomllfOY to
Peoples Bank
44 44
taken to the Holzer Medical
The marria ge of Jean Pt. Pleasant Register
·
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Athens.
38 50
Center whe~e she was treated ·Francis Dailey and Elson R. Johnsons Mkt.
24 64
Warner. indicated that if passengers warranted, the bus
for an illness and then returned Dailey h11s been dissolved Ferre tis Glass
23 .65
service
might be run more than just one day a week. Reed said
Team No. 10
20 68
to her home .
according to an en t,ry filed in
perhaps
as a last resort the service would be ~d.
This · week for Young 's
the Meigs County Coinmon Mobile ·Homes, Sharon Hayes
Reed said he had nothing new to report on the closing of !,he
Pleas Court. Filed in the court ·f:1owled a 193 -518 . Frankie
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. The lasf ll!IIOI't was that the bridge
Duncan (sub.) was high for
also was an applicated for the Helners Bakery with a 183-500.
would close' "sometime in February or March."
dissolution of the marriage of For Team No. 4, Jo Matthews
Tonight thru Thursday
Reed said he has a line on two ferries, eight cars each. There
NOV. 19-21
Paul Edward Smith to Sandra had 143-415 . High bowlt'r for
are two different finns that are Interested he said. Reed also
Commercial &amp; Savings Bank
NOT OPEN
Sue Smith.
reported that they had received a letter Informing the chamber
was Mev War.d with a 190-487 :
that the excursion boat the Chaperone would be available in May
Janet Donahue rolled a 161 -408
for Robbins &amp; Myers, For Bob . on a Wednesday or Thursday night. The chamber is going to try
FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
Evans, Jewell Gray bowled a
NOV. 22-23-24
-.,
175-462. Virginia Grover was . and get the boat during Regatta In June.
"MAME"
PRACTICE CALLED
Christmas decorations will not be erected across the streets
high for Sturdi House with 166(Technicolor)
RACINE - There will be a 463. For Peoples Bank, Teresa
this
year, ·only at each entrance to town. The chamber hopes to
Lucille Ball
practice at 2 p.,m . Sunday for Bll1zard had 156'-442. Karen
make
plans the first of the year for new decorations next year.
.
!PG)
Noll had high game, 134 and
Order
of
the
Racine
Chapter,
¥rs.
Mildred VanMeter said Middleport purchased new
Show Starts 7 p.m.
·Nancy Noll had high seri·es 366
Easlef Star, installation.
of Point l"leasant Register. For
decorations either last yellf or the year before and suggested the
Johnson's Market , · Vonda
chamber contact them and see where they purchased them.
Jordan· rolled a 156-377. Jan
Attending were Reed, Mrs. Thomas, Anderson, Earl ,fngels,
Jacobs bo\l(ted 110-319 for
Ferrell's Glass. For Team No.
Mrs. VanMeter, Melvin VanMeter, Richard Chambers, Virgil
10. Betty Sue Krebs had a 135Teaford,- Jack Kerr, Bill Grueser, Dale Warner, Bob Jacobs,
358.
Jack Carsey, Wendall Hoover: Mellssia Croise, Beulah Jqnes and
•
Heiners Bakery had high
Katie Crow.
team game this week of 566.

Holiday promotion -

.

reilideer was a jet black calf · private
born ·on

'NOW YOU KNOW
first native

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e AWEEK

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Shop Wednesday
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TA'BLE: CLOTH SALE ··
Our entire stock of cloth or vinyl tablecovers is included
in this one day sale.
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Solid Colors a·nd Patterns
'eSquareS

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Commercial &amp; Savings and
Heiners Bakery tied for high
team series of 1618.
Those· picking up splits were
Nancy Noll who picked up the
5-6, the 4-5, the 3-5-6 and the 2·4-.
5; Dottle ,Adams picked up the
3-8 and Mary Wa" d picked up
the 5-7.

POMERO~
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ElBERF'ELDS 'IN

MEIGS THEATRE

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North

In

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estate

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SAI:E
/ ·-·PRICES

eOblonpeOvals

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MAI.N ~RE • TOYlAND · WAREHoUSE OPEN W~NE~Y 9:30 TO··s-

.EbBERFELDS·· IN PGMJEROY

LOCAL TEMPS
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. was 60
Temperature •in downtown degrees under cloudy skies.

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Weather

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Now she has money to do her holi·
day ' .shopping. Do . yo~? If you
dido 't open a ·Christ~as Club last
year..•• don't make the same mis·
take this year. But d~ it now!
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FRAUD CHARGED
HARRISBURG (UPI)
B11~au of Consumer
Protection says an Ohio
company . ~ using fraud,
deception and scare tactics .
· In attempts to sell Its f/99
w•ter conditioners door-to- .
deor In Pittsburgh.
A bureau suit charges
General'Ionlcs, Inc., of Pittsburgh bas made falae health
·.c laims, misrepresented Its
competitors' produciil and
engaged In Illegal referral

The

AulD Teler W'11dow .ul
Wllk.UpWindqw ···

WHEN

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Open Frill¥ EVIIIiniS 5-a 7 P.M.

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YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

.lltaens ~a·tior\al
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....CINCINNA Tl

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selling.

MIDDLEPOR'J', OF~O •
Member Feder81 Depollt IDiuraac:e Corpo...tloa

YOuR FRIENDLY BANk
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Auto Sales
1960 w 1L L Y S Jeep, new motor,
new top, new 'Ires, in e.X·
c:ellerit condition. Phone 667 ~759 or 667 -3652 .
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Inflation is non-se.lective.

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CHAIR BED

:.SALE.1 13900
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Turn your bed in, now it's a
cliair. A greaf-looking comfor_table ·~hair. Victor Stanley's dual
purpose idea turn$ your living
room into a perfect guest
room. The chair, in gold, g'reen
or blue, extends to 26" W. x
. 76"" L.

opera~e

money we
. must borrowJlayft
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, all gone up-when Y.O~f~~-8 -·.;:. i '• ..

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like_ours.

You shudder a little each time

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your home or.yout

Probably a leap som~thirig

.

to us_to bby el~ttrlcltY y~J,.,

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find it has gone up, too;

you reach into your wallet.
You could u!ldoubtedly take a

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.pencil-and.jot dOW!) a long list

We hav~ a reputation for

of things. : .I!Re shOes for the

For you a loaf

lowering the cost of electric-

children, winter coats, "!eat

or bread is up

for dinner, even a Saturday,

60%. How would you like to

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decades before .we.got our.,

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tims of .galloping loflatlon. w~

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•for coal and payroll ~nd taxes
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hope lt.can b8 stopped, soon•

poles and wire and trucks, and

our plants has rocketed 200%.

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And
because. 01,1r costs for
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BUt now we, like you, are vic-

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increased 72%. Coal to run' ·

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fitst rate
Increase.
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togettier,

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any list of ours.

We're all in this inflation thing

Gasbl ine to run_your car has

'

In fact, we )YOr.kec:f for you for

. And that's just' the point.

thing as a day-old pole.

'

once in a while) ... to match

over100%?

Remember: there's no such

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ask any heigl')bor about that..

night
out (wl')ich we aH need
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· be buying wooden power

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ity.lf you're new in the area,

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poles which _have jumped
tf

and for interest rates on the

I

has to buy-excluding nobody.

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What does it cost, now, to

busi~ess comparedto
1971'1?
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It attacks everything anyone

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·and environmental,equipmeAt,
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rolled back. . ,
&lt;

· For ~oth our sakes.

.'"Showroom o.f ·fl(,lflng Furniture"

B4KIR FURNITURE

Middleport.Ohio .

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yourel

Sodowe.

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JOIN . TODAY ••

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WAR REGRETTED!
T 0KYO
(UPI)
1
Japallese Emperor Hlrohlto
called W!lrld War II
"regretta~e" Ia a toast to
President: Ford today and
thanked the United States for .
help extended Japan during
the 1%0 years of diplomatic
.relations between the two
colintries.
Hlrohlto offered his toast
during a state banquet In
bonor of Ford - the first
·u.s. President ever to visit
Japan - In the Imperial
Palace. Earlier the emperor
had accepted ; Ford's In·
.vltatlon to visit the United
States.

CLUB
ACCOUNT

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,A

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday
through
Saturday, · a chance of
showers Thursday and
Friday and generally fair
Saturday. Dally high temperatures In the 40s and low
50s. Overnight low~ mostly In
the 30s.

is all this little lady
saved -in her

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Lows tonight iq the low 40s.
Cloudy Wednesda~ . chance of
showers devel&lt;8ing north.
Highs Wednesd~y.. in
. the SO&amp;.

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12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'l'ul'&gt;day, Nuv. L!l , l!l74
Pleasant Va lie y Hospi ta I
:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::!:i:!:i:::::::::!:".::i:::::·
t '1.1 B TO MI •: I·:T
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Julius
Kt:IIR WILL 1\l'T
HEEilSV tl.l.l&lt;
Tlw
W:\SHINGTIIN iliPII Cochran,'·Point Pleasant; Mrs .
ltivt.•rvh•\\ (;;,n !~·n ('\nh will
Alvin Bowles. Grim111s L; md·
1'hl' Kt•rr Cu.. whkh lms
llWt&gt;l :11 l ::tu p.n:. Thm·!o;tl:l\' al
ing; Victoria Sturgeon, Poiut
hN•n ~u· t·u~t'tl uf m;.lnuf:.wll]l' llti!IH' •·f Mrs. u .. ;1: tld
Ple-asant ; Mrs. Lorn Campbell ,
turin~ faulty t•annin~ lidl'i.
Co\\'IIL•ry \\'·it h Mrs . T nm
son, Gallipolis : David OT&gt;t·ll.
lms t~•ld tht• gnwrmnt•nt u · Spi'IH' l'l'
• •~
c·• .f,.,s tess .
Mason :
Rubt&gt;rl
Warn•n .
will n•imhunw hnmt• ~ · anMt•mbt•rs art • to Iwing l!ifl s fnr
Gallipolis:
Mrs.
Geor~-:e
nrrs .whn had food stmil
p;lflt ' ll l:-) at !lw Afllt•u::; Mt·nt;tl
Greene, Hartrord : Mrs. Elsie
lit•ramw or its 11roduds.
I k :d ' I· ( ···rdt·r \ r '!wr .... : •: .; 1,..,
Rardin . Point Pleasanl : Holley
Nu ont• knn"·s t•xat•tly htl"
\\ lir k.' "''"P \\ rlf !w ' •·' 1!
Sampson. Sp{'nce r.
many t·unstunt·rs mu~· h"!\'1'
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy F&gt;R squad
answered a call to Meigs High
School at I ;38 p.m. for Mark
Pierce who had suffered a
lacerated ringer. He was taken
to the Holzer Medica l Center.
At 10:04 p.m . the squad was
called to Mulberry Ave . [or
Mrs . Helena Mullen who wa s
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center where she was trea ted
,for an illness and then returned
to her home .

MEIGS THEATRE

lost food , but tht• A~rkulhtn·
Dt•pllrlmt•IJI. tht• C••nsumt•r
Prodlu.·t Sah·t}' Cummissiun
and ~n·sidt•nt Fonfs t·unsumn ad\'isu . \'iq.!ini a
Knmn·r. all n•t·t'in•d S('Orl' !'
of romplaints and lt·ttt•n;
abn.nt Kt' rr prududs.

The

TWO ENDED
marria'-! e of

THURSDAY AFTERNOON
BOWL INC LE.ACUE
STANDINCS

J ea n

Franc is Diu lt&gt;y and Elsun H.

Dailey has been dissoh,ed
a ccording tu an en tr y filed in
llw Mt"igs County Common
Plea s Court . Fil('d in the c ourt

also wa s a n appli ci;iiCd ror the
dissolulion or the marriage of

Tonight thru Thursday
NOV. 19·21
NOT OPEN

Paul F.dward Smi th to Sandra
Sue Sinith.

FRL. -SAT.- SUN .
NOV. 22-23-24
"MAME "
(Technicolor)
Luc il le Bart

PRACTICE CALLED
RACINE - There will be a
practiee at 2 p.m. Sunday for
Lhe Racine Chapter. Order of
Eastern Star. installation.

I PC )
Show Starts 7 p.m .

~A

We-ek of Nov em ber 14th ;
Won Los1
Young ' s M ob ._1f'n ' ' '"
~0 7tl
Heiner.:, Bnker ·(
60 7A
Ten m N o . .1
'1 1 3-l
Com m &amp; Saving&lt;;
S~ JS
Robb in s &amp; My~r s
S7 36
Bob Evan s Stc .11&lt;. Ho1•::.1' SO 38
Slurcl i House
t8 .10
Pe opl~s Ban k
.1.: J4
Pt . Plo.o~asant R eq is l&lt;'r
38 50
Johnsons Mk I
7.1 6·1
Ferrel Is Glass
73 6S
Thl rn No ro
/0 68
Thi s week l orYou·,.q · s
M ob i le Hom es, Sh(1ron H(lyt:'s
bow l ed n 193 518 Fr- an k.• c
Duncn n (sub . ) was "hi gh for
Heiners Bakery w ith a 183 500.
For Tean1. No. 4, Jo Mntthews
had 14:1 "''" High bow iPr lor
Commer c ial &amp; Savings Bank
was Mev Ward with ~1 190 487 .
Janel Donahue roll ed a 161 -408
lor Robbin s &amp; My er s For Bob
Evans. Jewell Gray bowled n
175 "62. Virginia Gr over wa s
high tor Slurdi Hou se wi th 166
J63. For Peopl es Bank , Te r esa
BliHa rd had 156 442 . Kilren
Nott had high game . 134 and
Nancy NoH had h igh ser ies 366
of Point Pl ea Sdl')f Register . For
John son' s Market , Vonda
Jordan rolled a 156 377 . Jan
Jacobs bowled 110 31 9 for
Ferrell's Glass. F or Team No.
10, Betty Sue Krebs had a 135T~am

358 .
He iner s Bakery had . h i gh
team game this week of 566 .
Commercial &amp; Savings and
Heiners Bakery tied for h i gh
team series of 1618.
Those piCk ing up splits were
Nan cy Nott who p icked up the
5-6, the 4.· 5, the 3·5- 6 and the 2-45; Dottie Adams picked up the
3-8 and Mary Ward picked up
the 5-7.

WEEK

NOW YOU KNOW
firs t · native

Holiday promotion
("unhnul•d from p&lt;.~ge 1
prtrticlpating lnt..•rchanl... •• n• i'ul'l igihl£' . bul employes will be

.

re indeer was a jet black calf
born (m

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private estate
Beverly, Mass.

in

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Nort))

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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

elig ible.
Mrs. O•re~lyn Thomas. clwmber secretary ,is in charge or the
pnr;r df' Sht• sc.tid four l;;;rnds dt·finitcl) wiiJ po.trlicipiite, Ea~lern,
K~ ~l'l' t H'f'k. Mch.:s and Southern, .:md possibly Wr.thama. Also in
· ~ u· p;1 r~tdC' will be Rc~atlf-l Qu{'{'nS and of course, Santa Cl&lt;.~us.
Tht- ehamiK-r a !,'l"eed Monday to order 1,000 candy canes for
S;:tn!..t l ~o disT.ribute lo ·.ht&gt; children Lhe evening of the parade.
The par"de will form prompUy at 6:45p.m . al Lhe Pomeroy
.Tt1n ior Hi._gh School .and will leave at 7, proceeding 1l(iwn Main St.,
s~o pping &lt;it t he parkin~ lot of the Farmers Bank and Savings··
( 'mnprlny . Everyone wi~hing to p&lt;:tr ticipatr in the parad e b asked
1.0 conlctcl Mrs . Thomas .
Tom Reed, pres id ent, cm nounted that Dale W£:trner had
inforl:rt"&lt;l him thii t a person is interested in operating a bus
SE'rvire be tween Pomeroy and Athens one day .a week.
Chamber members relt' this would not be sufficient and
suggested another con tact be m'ade wi'.h the Public Utilities
Company to see if it coUld get Greyhound or Trailways bus
systems to rE"CCnsider and rC'Sume the run from Pomeroy to
Ath('n.s.
Warner indicated that if passengers warranted, the bus
servkt.• might be run more than just one day a week . Reed said
perhaps as a last r£&gt;sort the service would be used.
Reed said he had nothing n•w Lo report on the closing of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. The last report was Lhat the bridge
would close "sometime in February or March."
Reed said he has a line on two ferries, eight cars each. There
are two different firms that are interested he said . Reed also
reported that they had received a leiter informing the chamber
that the excursion boat the Chaperone would be available in May
on a Wednesday or Thursday night. The chamber is going LO try
and gel the boat during Regatta in June.
Chrisunas decorations will not be erected across the streel.s
this year. only at each entrantoe to town. The chamber hopes to
make plans the first of the year for new decorations next year.
Mrs. Mildred VanMeter said Middleport purchased new
decorations eilher last year or the year before and suggested the
chamber contact them and see where they purchased them .
Altending were Reed, Mrs. Thomas, Anderson, Earl Ingels,
Mrs. VanMeter, Melvin VanMeter, Richard Chambers, Virgil
Teaford, Jack Kerr, Bill Grueser, Dale Warner, Bob Jacobs,
Jack Carsey, Wendall Hoover, Melissia Croise, Beulah Jones and
Katie Crow. '
·

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason
. Are,., ·

&lt;\\,,

.

VOL XXVI

NO. 155

and Save!

TABLE CLOTH SALE
Our entire stock of cloth or vinyl tablecovers is included
in this one day .sale.

SALE
PRICES

MAIN STORE · TOYLAND • WAREHOUSE OPEN WEDNESDAY 9:30 TO 5

United States, Ford told
joint communique agreeing on the prime minister might be source said. "His rivals within
Hirohito the most important ,the need to prevent tbe spread forced wresign under fire very the LDP and in the opposition
lesson be had learned in his
of nuclear weapons-a clear shortly after he bids Ford a parties will go all out to drive
"memorable" trip to Japan
him out of office."
effort to appease Japanese final farewell Saturday.
was "the time has come when
Ford addressed the Japanese
Secretary of State Henry A.
sensitivities over recent
no nation may remain isolated reports that U.S. warships Kissinger said Ford's official people directly in his televised ·
and refuse to take part in the
bearing atomic weapons have discussions in Tokyo had speech from the press club,
"achieved the optimum of saying ''just as we can work
affairs of the rest of the
stopped in Japanese ports. ·
world."
The communique also ap- what he could have hoped for." together LO maintain today's
Ford began his day with a
A power struggle has been peace, we can work' together to
peared to signal Japan's
second round of talks with
willingness, after initial op- under way [or Tanaka's remo- solve tomorrow's problems."
Tanaka, then addressed a
"We intend · not only to
position, to aceept a Ford val from office since a
luncheon at the Japan Press
administration proposal for aU Japanese magazine published remain a trustworthy ally, but
Club, watched a demonstration
oil consuming nations to cut a lengthy accusation in Oc· a reliable trading parlner ,"
of martial arts and attended their petroleum imports by 10 Iober that Tanaka had used Ford said. "We will continue to
three cocktail parties prior to per cent.
various cabinet jobs LO enrich be suppliers of the goods you
the banquet. One party was for
But the agreements were himself, largely through land need. If shortages oecur, we
leaders of the American com· shadowed by predictions from deals.
will take special account of the
munity in Japan.
Tanaka, a 56-year-old mil- needs of our trading partners."
within Tanaka's own ruling
Tanaka and Ford isaued a Ubenl Democratic party tbat lionaire in the construction
The speech , which was
business, has acknowledged he translated simultaneously into
made money but denies he did Japanese, also contained
anything wrong. The accusa- Ford's first unquallfled alltions triggered the worst crisis mission that the United States
in Tanaka's :!&amp;-year career as a faces a recession.
conservative political figure.
Large crowds lined the
"Cslls for his resign11tion wiU streets during the President's
intensify after President Ford liHnin\lte drive to the press
leaves Japan Friday," one club. There was no cheering or

ELBERFELDS IN· POMEROY

LOCAL TEMPS
Pumeroy a l 11 a. m. was 60
Temperature in downtown degrees und er cloudy ski es.

•

Tax relief
nudged on

•

Weather
Lows tonight i~ 'he low 40s.
Cloudy WednesdaJ chance of ··
showers devei~.:.J~ng north .
Highs Wednesday in Lhe 50s.

Gallopi inflation
is inflating
your elec ·c.bill.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday
through
Saturday. a chanre or
showers Thursday and
Friday and generally . fair
Saturday. Daily high tem·
peratllres in the 40s and low
50s. Overnight lows mostly In
the 30s.

is all this little·-lady
·saved in her

" 6VA'R REGUTI'ED!

TPKYO . cUPii
Japanese Emperor Hlrohito
called World War II
"regrettable" in a toast to
President Ford today and
thanked the U nlted Stales for .
help extended Japan during
the 120 years of diplomatic
relations between the two
countries.
Hirohlto ollered his toast
during a state banquet In
honor of Ford - the first
U.S. President ever to visit
Japan - In the Imperial
Palace. Earlier the emperor
had accepted Ford's In·
vltatlon to visit the United
States.

CHRISTMAS CLUB
ACCOUNT
Now she has money to do her holi·
day shopping. Do you? If you
didn't open a Christmas Club last
year ... don't make the same mis·
take this year. But do it now!
JO.I N TODAY ••

FRAUD CHARGED
HAJ:tRISBURG (UPIJ
The Bureau of Consumer
Protection says an Ohio
company Is using fraud,
decepllon and scare tactics
In attempts to sell its $799
w~ter conditioners door-todoor In Pittsburgh.
A bureau suit charges
Generallonlcs, Inc., of Pittsburgh has made false health
claims, misrepresented its
eompelitors' products and
engag~d in Illegal referral
selling.

Auto Teller Window and
.'\fUl l
Walk-lip Window
\I INIC L
BANI&lt; 'Open Friclav Evenini!S 5 to 7 P.M.
.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

MIDDLEPORT, OEIIO
· Member Federal llepooll Insurance Corporatlom

1q60 W1LLY S Jeep, new motor.

new lop , new tires. in ex cellent condition. Phone 6673759 or 667 -3652 .
1l -19 ·61C

YOUR FRIENDLY 1JANK

What does it cost, now, to
operate your home or your

money we must borrow, have

It attacks everything anyone

business compared to 1971?

all gone up-when you come

has to buy-excluding nobody.

Probably a leap something

to us to buy electricity you

You shudder a I ittle each time

like ours.

find it has gone up, too.

You could undoubtedly take a

We wish it hadn't.

you reach into your wallet

--·-·- - - - - - ·---- -

For you a loaf of bread is up

We have a reputation for

~0%.

How would you like to

ity. If you're new in the area,
ask any neighbor about that.

night out (which we all need

be buying wooden power
poles which have jumped

once in a while) , .. to match

In fact, we·worked for you for

any list of ours.

decades before we got our

over100%?

CHAIR BED

The

SALE •139°

0

_Turn your bed in, now it's a
chair. A great-looking comfor·
table chair. Victor Stanley's dual
purpose idea turns your living
room into a p'e rfect guest
room . The chair, in gold, green ·
or blue, extends io 2~" W. x
76... L
.

Remember: there's no such
thing as a day-old pole.

' •

I

. J

,\"1--

hope it can be stopped, soon.

for coal and p~;~yroll and taxes

our plants has rocketed' 200% ~

and environmental equipment,

We even dream it might be

'

'

r •

'

.•

' '

Stoppage continues

-ree.

For both our sakes.

In

m

.'

·Ohio Power Company
•

ews.~ zn

Five fined
Br·~~"'*l·:=e·
. :W:S
. '*l by mayor
.+.
J • :~·;:

ao

rolled back.

. A MESSAGE FROM THE PEOPLE OF ·

.

~

tims of galloping inflation. We

increased 72%. Coal to run

Middleport,
Ohio

I

together.

poles and wire and trucks, and

•

I

But now we, like you, are vic-

Gasoline to run your car has

•

Conservation rewarded

Weather

We're all in this inflation thing

And because our costs for

"Showroom of Extitlng Furniture"

BAK.ER FURNITURE

first rate increase.

And that's just the point

hurting.

at intersection

lowering the cost of electric-

for dinner, even a Saturday

Lottery

Autos collide

pencil and jot down a long I ist
of things .. . like shoes for the

DONALD MORA, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, centet:, and Tom Hamm, right, Racine area, received
"Outstanding Farmer" Awards for 1974 for O\llstanding farm and conservation practices.
Thereon Johnson , lefl, chairman of the district board, made the presentation.

lli

.
and for interest rates on the

So do we.

HAROLD CARNAHAN, left, Rilcine, RD, was toast·
master. At right Is John -Stitzlein, Jackson, community
resource development agent, the speaker using a slide
presentation on "land use planning".

sTYLE

e hope it stops soon.
Inflation is non-selective.

flag-waving, as there had been
to some degree Tuesday, but
neither was a hostile face
visible.
Ford was guarded by the
heaviest security shield Japa·
nese police have ever mounted
for a foreign visitor, but the
mass demonstrations that had
been feared during his visit
failed to materialize.
"We consider the exchanges
Continued on page 8

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Tax state senators awaits it in the
relief for more than 38 million Senate.
If the biU should survive the
Americans and an immediate
House
and the Senate in the few
end to the granddaddy of aU
tax loopholes, the oil depletion weeks remaining in this
allowance, was approved Congress, all taxpayers who
Tuesday by the House Ways use the standard deduction an estimated 38.2 million and Means Committee.
Action on a chopped-down would get at least a small tax
tax bill came duting a break.
For those with Incomes of
sometimes dramatic session in
which softspoken Tennessee less than $15.~. the tax cilt for
IIP'W
SHoW -Fe&amp;lured at the Monday night meeUng of the Mldd1eport BPW was
Republican, ~ep. Jojm J . the 1975 tax year would
a lnmioroos style review which included Mrs. Mary Kunzehnan, attired in a ''card" dress; .
Duncan, broke ranks with aU average about ~' This woull\
Mi-a. Edith ~orrest .-volunteer fireJII!III, Miali,~jioudasheltin a ''wash" dre~and · his GOP colleagues to cast the be accomplished by increasing
decidlng margin in the 13-12 the rate for the standard
Mrs. Grace Pratt in a "bruatied wool,"left to right.
'·
vote to end the depJetion deduction from 15 per cent to 18
per cent of income, and raising
pieces or yarn.
allowance.
Mrs. Alwilda Werner wore a
Chairman Wilbur Mills, D- the maximum allowable
net outfit, Mary !;lacon, the Ark .,' said he hoped to get the deduction from $2,000 to $2,300.
drape, and Mrs. Eloise Wilson, bill to the floor Dec. 4 or 5, but The minimum deduction,
the sack, a dress of feed sacks. · I!VA'n if it passes the House, an which the poor would get no
Miss Houdashelt presided, almost certain filibuster by oil- matter what their income,
would be Increased from $1,300
welcoming members and
to $1,600 for individuals and
guests. Mrs. Vale introduced
$1,900 for joint returns.
TOMMYTIIEISS, center,.and his father, Charles Thew, right, of the Racine area recei~ed
Mrs. Wilson who talked on the
review presented earlier at the goals of BPW; Mrs. Forest,
Oil . companies were hit
.By Charlene HoeRicb
the Goodyear Award from Bob Adams, Goodyear representative, for outstandtng conservatiOn
especially hard. The 22 per
A humorous style review of district meeting of the BPW. who commented on why she
practices on their farm .
Mrs.
Mary
Kunzelman
wore
a
cent oil depletion allowaqce
costumes made from "throwjoined the club as a charter
would drop to 15 per cent
aways" highlighted the guest dress of playing cards, Edith member and has remained a
retroactive to last Jan. 1, and
night observance of the Mid· Forrest was costumed as a member through the years ,
volunteer
rireman,
Miss
would
end completely In six
dleport
Business
and
Continued on page 2
Freddie
Houdashelt
in
a
dress.
weeks,
on Jan. 1, 1975.
Professional Women's Club at
fashioned
of
soap
cartons,
and
WASHINGTON
(UP!)
A
temporary
excess profits
the Columbia Gas Co. Monday
Pratt
in
a
brushed
Mrs.
Grace
Ohio Lottery Commission tax -actually a graduated
evening.
_ .
.
cafeteria.
Entertainment,
wool
made
of
varied
colored
officials testified today that excise tax on crude oil pricesBy Bob Hoeflich
presented a plaque to Charles
Mrs. Nellie Vale mrrrated the
which
was
well
received, was
statements by U. S. Attorney would be imposed for five
Presentation of awards for Theiss and his son, Tommy, for
provided
by
vocal
students
General William B. Saxbe have years although a portion of the outstanding conservation and outstanding
conservation
accompanied by guitars played
caused a steady decline in tax could be '''plowed back" farm practices, election of a practices on their farm.
lottery ticket sales in Ohio into oil exploration and new director, and en· · Using slides, John Stitzlein, by Kim Batey, Denise Dean
and Peggy TrusselL Others of
Five defendants were fined which has created a loss of development beginning in 1976. tertainment by an outslandlng Jackson, community resource
These actions, plus a variety of Eastern High School vocal and development agent, presented the group were Karen Fick,
.
By United Preu lldemaliooal
and two others forfeited bonds revenue to the state.
Terri Bahr, Diana Massar,
Ohio Lottery ·Executive other smaller oil tax changes instrumental
students a detail study of land use
NAIROBI - A LUFTHANSA JUMBO jet lost power shortly in Middleport Mayor Fred
Kathy Pullins, Katrina Batey,
after takeoff from Nairobi Airport today aqdcraslted in flames a Hoffman's court Tuesday Director Johri E . Kirkland, would coat oil companies an highlighted the annual dinner planning.
Jan Wilson, Lola Walker, Nola
mile from the end of the runway, kUling scores of passengers and night.
· administrative assistant estimated $3.2 billion in 1975 meeting of the Meigs Soil and
Serving' as toasimaster was
Young, Betsy Amsbary,
· crew. It was the flr8t fatal crash of a Boeing 7~7 in the five ye!!fS
Fined were BIU Reeves, 49, Robert J. Cresente and legal and an estimated $15.9 billion Water Conservation District Harold Carnahan, Racine , and
Teresa Buckley, Lori Young,
Tuesday night at Eastern High Clarence McKnight introduced
the craft has been in service.
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, counsel Stephen T. Parisi over six years.
Paula Hawk and Julie
Alaskan North Slope oil and School.
a
five-page
the speaker and gave the in·
Although airport officials said earlier at least 152 of the 157 disorderly manner; Harold submitted
Whitehead. Students of Mrs.
ConUnued on page 8
pen10ns on board the plane were known dead, Kenyan Minister of Sammy Uttle, 38, Middleport, stateme~t to a hearing before
Elected to a three-year term vocation.
Jennifer Machir, the group
on the board of supervisors ·of
The Eas tern Band Boosters
Communications Omolo Okero said only 97 bodies hild been $15 and costs, lighting; Robert · the U.S. Senate Subcommittee
sang, "One Tin Soldi~r," " My
the district, succeeding David served the dinner in the school
recovered, moat of them burned beyond recognition. An airline w. Barton, 50, Middleport, $150 on Criminal Laws and
Sweet Lady" and "I Believe in
Procedures.
spoke11J180 in Frankfurt said between 50 and 60 person~ ba~ been and costs, three days conKoblentz, Chester, was David
Music ."
Lottery executives from 13
pulled hun the wreckage alive and taken to hospl~lis and linemen!, driving while inGloeckner of the Racine area.
A flute trio and a clarinet
IT'S OFFICIAL NOW
emergency medical facilities in this East African city s 001~~t toxicated; Wanda Landers, 37, states have testified or are
Other candidates were Joe
quartet compl eted the enTOKYO (UPI) - For the
Most of tile 1311 passengers and 18 crew members on F..,...
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, scheduled to testify before the
Bailey and James Meredith. At
tertainment. Clarinetists were
time
without
Pomeroy Police investigated the end of the "present" vote, first
340 were Wast Germans, the airline spokesman said. The plane leaving the scene · of an ac- twiKiays of hearings.
Kathy
Newell, Lori Young,
President
The Ohio lottery executives a three-car accident at 4:33 the three candidates stood in a qualification,
cident;. Daniel R. McCloud, 20,
was bound for Johannesburg.
Cheryl Griffin and Diana
Middleport, $5 and costs, ex· noted that Saxbe had warned Tuesday on West Main St. in Uoree way tie, broken by a few Ford said today America
Massar and the flutists were
COLUMBUS- THE LATEST REPORT OF official returns pired operator's license.
races recession.
that -although be was unsure, which no personal injuries absentee ballots on hand.
Barbara
Andrews, Louann
In a speech to the, Japan
from the Nov·. I eleCtion lssned by Ohio Secretary of State Ted,~.
Presenting the outstanding
Forfeiting bonds were federal criminal statues may were reported.
Newell
and
Crissy Morlan.
Press
Club
televised
Brown showed GoV•.elect James A. Rhodes hoosting his.margm Charles Whitt, Middleport, $30 apply to the states.
Pauline Mayer, Pomeroy, farmer awards to Donald
tbrougbout the country, tbe
of victorY over Gov. John J. Gilligan to 13,829 wtes.
"The aura of doubt has had was attempting to make a right Mora, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and
bond, assault and battery; Otto
President .s aid: "Like
Official rel:llrils from eight more counties Tuesday showe,d Johns~n. 70, Pomeroy, $30 an obvious, negative effect ·on hand turn off Main onto Thomas Hamm, Racine, for
ASKTOENDIT
others, we suffer from I~
GU!igan lost 178 votes and Rhodes 10 from the previous days bond, disorderly conduct.
public acceptance of the lot- ., Ebenezer when her car was outstanding farm and con·
Paul Edward Smith , Mid·
nation. Like others, we face
figures. Rhodes had 1,492,076 votes and GU!igan.1,~78,446 wtth 62
tery," the .officials said In their struck in . the rear by a car seryation practices was
dleport,
and Sandra Sue Smith,
recession."
statement. "Many citizens fear driven by Hichard Canterbury, Thereon Johnson , chairman of
of Ohio's 88 counties reporting final
official ~turns.
.
.
.
Pomeroy
, have filed for
;
they may be violating the law New Haven, W. Va. The Mayer the district's supervising
dissolution
of marria ge in
UNITED NATIONS- SECRETARY GE;NERAL Kurt Wald·
by buying a state lottery car in turn hit a parked car board . Bob Adams, Goodyear
Common Pleas Court. The
Cloudy and colder tonight ticket.
SQUAD CALLED
helm has called on lsraella and Araba to cooperate with U. N.
.
owned by Betty Wil~on, company representative .
The Pomeroy E·R Squad was marriage of Jean Fran_c is
peacekeeping e!!ortA! to prevent a new Middle East war. Arudous and Thursday, a chance of
"This is reflected by steadily Pomeroy.
·
called TueSday at 6 :53p.m. for Dailey and Elson Ray Dailey
about heightened teruolon In the area, Waldhelm appealed to "aU snow flurries. Low tonight In declining ticket sales in OhioCenterbury was cited for
Sharon Luikhart, age 3, a w.as dissolved by a court enlfy
the governments concerned" Tuesday to avoid tlllching off the the mid 30s. High Thursday in and in other states which hilve failure to maintain assured
possible pneumonia patient, today.
the ~Os .
fifth war in a quarter.(:elltury of crisla.
a longer sales history to clear distance. There was Two deer killed
who was taken to Pleasant
The call followed reporta that Syria is uncertain over letting
analyze," 'the statement said. heavy property damage.
the u. N. peacekeeping force remain on the &lt;¥an Helgbts for
Valley Hospital .
by autos Tuesday
FREE CLOTIUNG
SQUAD SUMMONED
another iJx months when the truce team's maitdllte exp~s Nov.
:-;y&amp;;:~~:~=~:-...:::~-::9,&gt;;:~~:~
RACINE - The Racine ~Z~8!lii!!81.:EZ!~::mm8!lll~ii8ji8.S!i8·i8···-uwA······,·::&amp;X··,·, .. ,, .. ,X:.•*&gt;%••••·
The
Gallia-Meigs ComDlp)omatle aourcei said Syria Is thinking about renewing the
The
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
munity
Action
Agency wiU hold
took
EXTENDED. FORECAST
~te for ·a ~onth period Instead of for slx montbs. The · ·Emergency Squad
Dept. investigated two ac·
a free clothing day for low
Friday .through Sunday,
uld llraells oppolled to anything abort of full renewal. Kathryn Holman, Rl. I,
cidents Tuesday in which two
cloudy Friday, increasing income families on Friday,
waldheimcaUed in Syrian officials to dii'Cltu the matter, but Racine, to the Holzer Medical
deer were killed. At 7:15p.m.
Nov . 22 from 9 a.m. unti13 p.in.
cloudiness Saturday, chance
diplomat. said there is no indication of the secretary general Center at 8:35 a.m. Wednesday
RAVENSWOOD- 'lbere 11110 11pJ1811!111let ap today ilia
In Olive Twp. on SR 124, a deer
at
the Cheshire Community
with a possible ankle fracture.
of raia on Sunday. Hlgbs will
· managing to get DamaiiCIIll to cba~e its mind ..
slrlke
at
tbe
K•l•
Alamlnj!m
Plat
near
Rave
..
wood
here
when
it
ran
in
front
was
killed
.
'
Center.
be Uoelower40s on Friday,
of car driven by Donald
that begaa 'l'llesday lllOI'IIIq.
rlslag to between 40 and 50 on
ISRAEL MOURNED rrs DEAD
THE ~ITER town
wortmo!D were d off their J•at 8 a.m., a eomjlp,y
Eugene Bartimus, 21, Rt. I,
Saturday
and Sunday .
NOW YOU KNOW
of Belt Shean todi,y and declared a ''war on terror to rid the
offldal 1akl. Plcteta .aptjeared Tuesday mondng ,at accea
Reedsville.
The
first shoe to be made in
Overnight
lo)Vs
in
l"e
305,
Middle EaSt of Ar~b guerrillas. In DaJIIaBCid, the Popular
Al9 p.m. in Lebanon Twp . on
l'Oildl. A company lpot0111111a, Jolm CaDabaa, said yaterLOCAL
TEMPS
exceptio tbe upper 20s early
America was manufactured in
FrUit for the liberation of Paleatlne took
TR 138 Eugene Guy Long, 39,
daY. the work lloJIPIISe appue~~tly steJ1UI !rom dllclpllaary
1628 by Thomas Beard, who ·
Friday.
·
esponslblljty for the Belt Shean raid . Q!ld vo~ to ' Temperature in downtown
Rt. I, Long Bottom, struck and
aetloo taken against an employe wbo refuled an -lgnment.
PomerO)'
today
at
II
a.m.
was
came
over in 'the Mayflower.
-',,strike at ttie enemy until the_l!bera.tlon~our land from Zionist
·.~~'$$!:! $; •• : •• •t ••• ~
killed a'deer.
53
degrees
under
sunny
skies.
.,
Continued on page 8 ·

Laughs featured
throwaway revue

children, winter coats, meat

Auto Sales

•

TEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1974

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
TOKYO (UP[) - Amid
predictions
the
ruling
JapMese government might
fall )Vithin the week, President
Ford agreed today with Prime
Minister Kakuei Tanaka on the
need to halt tbe spread of
nuclear weapons and pledged
closer ties between the two
countries.
Ford wound up his hectic
second full day in Tokyo at a
banquet for Emperor Hirohito
with a toast to "the governmenlo! Japan and mUiioris and
millions of Japanese."
Borrowing the words of the
flriot Japanese enwy to the

Shop Wednesday

Solid Colors and Patterns
•Squares
•Oblongs
•Ovals
•Rounds

entine

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IlelnoCratic ·

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.

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\'

'

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</item>
