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w~.ather
'

14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov.l2, 1975

~entine

'

Infant born with .rare
heart disorder survives
By ELLEN L. SLIYJ'T

PHILADELPIIIA ( UPI) Christopher Wall Jr. doesn't
know it yet, but he has made
medica l history.
Of 64 cases recorded ln the
pas! 300 years, Christopher is
the first infunt to nave llved
more than two days with
. ectopia (.'Ordjs - his heart
developed outside his ch(lBt.
Ch!'\stopber was three
mon hs old Monday . Hls
heart, wt1irh at birth sal on
top of his chest fully exposed,
has been covered with skin
and gradually is receding into
his chest.
Dr. Naresh C.V. Saxena,
head of an eight-member
surgical tea.m at Children's
Hospiwl, says Christopher's
chances fo r survival are
"pretty good."

MEIGS THEATRE
TON tiE
THU R.. .NOV . 13
NOT OPEN

FrL thru Sunday

NOV. 14-16'
SM ILE

(Technl colorl
Show sta rls at 1: Oo p.m.

Publicity surrounding the
Infa nt's rare condition
resulted in several job in·
tervlews. for his father,
Christopher WaU Sr., 23, who
was unemployed at the time.
Wall, of Berlin, N.J., is now
an investigator for the.
Camden, N.J. district attor·
ney's o!llce. .
' Christopher'~ 26-year-old
mother, Teresa, gave birth
Aug. 10 at Garden State
Community Hospi tal in
Marlton, N.J. Doctors kept
the infant alive by placing a
salt and water solution on his
heart to keep it moist.
When Christopher arrived
at Children's Ho spital ,
Saxena, unfamiliar with such
a rare case, went to the
hospital library in the hope of
finding some guidance In
performing the operation .
The library was closed.
The Infant had only a short
time to live, si:&gt; the doctors
went ahead with the surgery.
Four times they tried to cover
the heart with skin, but were
WlSUcceSSful.
"On the fifth go around, "
Saxena said. "We grabbed
the skin and wrapped it
around.
"We opened up the pleural
cavities on both sides to see if
we could place the heart In
one or the other. l3ut there

Sturdy, Rock- Tough

hlppewa·

was no room," Saxena said,
explaining Christopher's
lungs had Inflated to take up
'
the room left by heart.
Christopher has been on a
respirator
since
the
operation. Saxena said his
''heart ls stuck to the skin and
he is unable to breathe on bla
own for more than a couple of
days.
"The heart is lesil ,
prominent now than on the
first day of the operation," he
said. "As he grows there wiU
he more space for the heart to
go ln. He's doing much better
these days."
Christopher had
pneumonia but recovered
from It. However, he can't be
kept on the respirator much
longer because lt has a
tendency to produce dlse8$es
in the lungs. The child also
was born without a sternum .
- the breastbone of cartilage
REAC!nNG Otrr - Presldeni Gerald R. Fard follows Weal Virginia
Wesleyan CoUege student from Point Pl1!11118nt. He is the son of former
connecting a person's ribs Gov. Arch A. Moore, Jr. through a crowd of people after the $100-a.plate
Point Pleasant Mayor and Mrs. D. B. Morgan. Several other Mason
~o he cannot breathe nordinner Tuesday night In Charleston civic center. ft!!aching out to slwlke
Countlans attended the event including Point Pleasant Mayor and Mason
maUy.
the hand of President Ford here is Damon Morgan, a ·West VIrginia
County GOP Chairman John C. Musgrave.
~
Dr. Robert G. Kettrlck, an
anesthesJologlst, said until
~
Christopher can lx'eathe on
his own, "we haven't done a
whole lot for him."
PLEASANT VALLEY
Kettrick said a stablltty Veterans Memorial Hospital
reontlnued from page ti and sip ealllomta rose win!i
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
ADMITTED - Linda
operation will be performed
some
weeks on final lanliuage with him was energy - an&lt;!
when Christopher's six-pound Hoffman, Middleport ; William Baird, Mrs. Leo
Five defendants were fined of an energy bill but have particularly the 3 trillion toni!
birth weight doubles. He Bernice Bowen, Ro~kford, Rainey, Mrs. Jo~ Wright, and two others forfeited
weighs aboul81&gt; jX)unds now. Ill.; Nellie Fredei-lck, Usa Stover, aU of Gallipolis bonds in the court of Mia· · been deadlocked ' in recent of coal he say8 Ue beneath tb8
Bone will be placed above Racine; Sampson Hall, Ferry; Kathy Hudnall, Point dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman days searching for a price rugged West Virginia mourlj
decontrol formula that woul!l talns.
'· •
and below Christopher's Syracuse; Mary Jane Roush, Pleasant; John Monroe, Tuesday night .'
avert
Ford's
threatened
veto.
But
he
did
not
neglect
hl,l
George
Wamsley,
Mrs.
John
heart and attached to either Pomeroy; Dixie Flowers,
Fined ' were Millard R.
Ford's main thrust to 1,500 pollUcs. With the specter of~
Gillispie, Jr., Diana Fielder, Diu-st, 19, Cheshire, $30 and
side of his rib cage. Then a Letart, W. Va.
party
faithful wbo paid ~00 Ronald Reagan challenge
DISCHARGED - Michael all of Henderson; Leslie costs, speeding; Steven 'L.
sternum will be built to
apiece
to eat rock cornish hen looming larger, Ford told hij
protect the heart, which has . Taylor, umeda Varney, Eva Marcum, Kenova, and Mrs. Ellison, 19, Windham, Ohi'o,
politely applauding audlenel!
no protective cover at this Dailey, William Dye, John ·(.,'harles Divers, New Haven. $10 and costs, driving on an
in
the cavernous civic center.
time.
Davis , Evelyn Campbell, Nov. 12, a daughter to Mr. expired .driver's license;
ice rink that he can lead the •
· Both Saxena and Kettrick Eunice Christy.
and Mrs. t'hristopher Hud· Sammy Little , 39, Mid·
Republicans to glory til '
son, Alexandria, Va.
are optimistic Christopher
dleport, $10 and costs,
REVIVAL OPENS
1976.
will pull through the
Holzer Medical Center
disorderly manner; Roy E.
Revival services begin this
Perhaps his most enoperations and live a normal
(Discharges, Nov. 11)
.Yerian , 47, Middleport, $!5 evening at the MiddlejX)rt thusiastic welcome came '
life.
&lt;-1arence Adkins, Willlam
and costs, intoxication, and Church of the Nazarene and after the speech In another ',
If he does, he'U make Anderson, Mrs . Dors.ey
BODY FOUND
Oral H. Bowen, 58, Goshen, will run through Nov. IS with room in the buUdlng to briefly :
medical history again.
Campbell and . daughter,
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio Ind., $10 and costs, failure to the Rev. Clyde Bartlett, address about 1,000 Cub :
Virgb\ia Chandler, Robert (UP!) - 'Former Slrulhers yield the right .of way.
former pastor of the Mid- Scouis.
Cornwell, Mitchell Costilow, City Coun~ll President
Arnold,E. Snowden, Jr., 41, dleport church from 1959 to , Eagle Scout Ford recalled :
Herbert Duhl, Jr., Mrs . Robert F. Riddle, who had . Middleport, forfeited a $:!00 1967, the evangelist. Services his trying days as a Ten- •
(Continued from page 1)
Anderson, said the Fitzgerald Donnie Gilbert and daughter, been reported missing for a bond posted ·on a charge of will be at 7:30 each evening derfoot, and revealed to thell
reported by radio that It was Ace Gordon, Mrs. Larry week, was found dead driving while intoxicated, and at 10:30 a.m. Sunday cheers that he still k~pe hli ·
taldng on some water and two Grimm and daughter, Mrs. Tuesday night jX)llce said and Robert D. Peck, 22, . morning. The public ls In· Boy Seoul merit badges ln IN!
top dresaer drawer.
hatch covers had blown off. Michael Johnson and today. Pollee said Riddle's Nelsonville, forfeited a $30 vi ted.
The mes.sage asked the daughter, Emma Kapp, Mrs. body was found In his truck bond posted on a charge of
Marshall
and parked behind a restaurant In squealing tires.
Anderson to ~lay close, but Cletus
daughter,
DOuglas
Morrison,
Austintown TcWnsblp. A hose
contained no special note of
Eva
Nickels,
Rose
Porter,
connected
to the exhaust and
alarm, they said.
Joan
Roe
,
Lawrence
Saun·
running
throUgh
a window
PNEUMONIA SEEN
"Suddenly," Anderson
ders,
Diana
Sharp,
Barbara
Into
the
vehicle
was
also
MAD
RIC, Spain ( UPI ) skipper Jessie Cooper said
Mens and Bows
Smith,
Bonnie
Stutes,
Jesta
found.
Generalissimo Francisco
later, "she disappeared from
Franco showed signs of
our radar screen. It was so Swisher, Beth Thomas,
.DeJ13rlment
&lt;-'hester Wells, Jr., Ruby
developing pneumonia today,
quickly."
Wilds.
the first serious complication
The only crewmen IdenVISA DENIED
First
1
Births,
Nov.
11)
i~
his comeback from
tified by the Oglebay-Norton
MOSCOW (UPI) - Suviet
Mr. and Mrs. Terry (,1egg,
Co . of Cleveland, which
authorities today refused stomach surgery four days ·
Floor
daughter,
Jackson;
Mr.
and
leased the ship, were skipper
dissident physicist Andrei D. ago, a medical bulletin said.
Ernest McSorley, 62, of Mrs . C.1ifford Nance, son, Sakharov permission to His medical team earlier had ·
Toledo, Ohio, and chief Willow Wood ; Mr. and Mrs. receive the 1975 Nobel Peace expressed hopes for fuli
engineer George Hell of Jimmie Older, daughter, Prize In Oslo Dec. 10. recovery.
Racine.
Cabot, Pa.
Sakharov, who helped the
Soviets develop the hydrogen
FREDA SMITH HOME
bomb, said he was denied an
Freda M. Smith ls
exit visa on the grounds he
possessed state secrets. He recuperating at her home on
has not worked In the nuclear West Maln ' St., Pomeroy,
from a fall on Nov. 4at which
program ln seven years.
·time she broke her left ankle ·
and sprained the other ankle,

.

i

HOSPITAL NEWS .

Five ~ed by

West Virginians

Mayor Hoffman

.29lost

Also
In Stock
Chippewa

Waterproof
Insulated
BOOT
Insulated · Neoprene Crepe Sole

8" Heig hl. rul l Groin Brown Oi l Tanned uppers. Moc"Toe
with ~ axi ng . Ce llulose Cushioo Insole. Pull tab. Ta s lo~
lace. Stee l Shonk. Genuine Goodyear Welt. Neoprene
oil prul cushion crepe ouhole. losi No. 24

Chapman's Shoes
MAIN ST.

POMEROY

· Elberfelds In

Po~eroy

INGELS ANNUAL NOVEMBER SALES EVENTI

Dollar-Stretching Sale

WANT TO END IT
Violet Woodyard and
James Henry Woodyard and
Hubert W. Taylor and Mary
W. Taylor have filed for
dissolution of marriage in
Meigs Common Pleas Court.

TURLEY ILL
,
The Middleport E·R squad
answered a call to Front St.
Monday for Brady Turley
who had suffered a possible
heart attack. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

News .. in Briefs .
(Continued from page 1)
the U.N.-epoOsored Decade Action to Cambat Racism and •
Racial DlscrlminaUon.
'

for

CHARLFSl'ON, W.VA.- GOV.ARCHMOORE, Inslstlng
he has "spelledWerythlng out, chapter and verse," dlacounts
a claim that he failed to llign verbal promises made in hopes ol
obtaining a federally,amtracted coal gaslf!caUon plant for
West Vlrglnla. Moore said he waa "as confident aa ever" that
West Vlrgloilwu a fnlntrunner among states vying for the .
~ million Coalcon faelllty, despite a chjlrge by G. V.
Mehallc, treasurer of the Monongalia County Development
Authority.

Mehallc said It was hla undentanding the governor hadn't
followed through on vergal Clllllm!tmentll-by pladng theqt in
· writing. The Morgantown relident said he bild been Informed
that Mononplla was beet lUlled llllOt\i! sites propoaed by six
stallil, incluclinB Pennl)'lvllia and Ohio, for the pilnt. ·
'''

·PLAYING NITEL Y

you like .il shirt that moves
with you as if i t were part of
your body, you will enjoy this
new idea in sportswear from
Campus. One size fits all! The
secret is a special ribbed knit
of 100% Dure ne cotton. You
s·een shirts of t his type
for twice the price. A harvest
of color, is sure to please the
most dis c'ri minating man.
•

TUESDAY 1HRU SATURDAY

GEO. HALL
TUE$.-THURS.

FRI.&amp; SAT.
, , J0-2; 00

' 1: 30-1:00 ,

'.

'

INGELS FURNITURE
2·2635

11

November Sale Time"

Middleport

Be sure to see all the other sty lei'sweaters _for men and boys,
siiPIYtrs, shawls, ~ardlgans and
vests.
·

The .MElGS INN.
' 992-3629

Best ·1,.

Uvt Entertainment

'

:Elberfelds In

i.

Chance of snOw nurries
'' tonight and Friday, lows
toilight20 to 25. Highs Friday
In the 30s. Probability of
preclpltatlon 70 per cent
" today, 40 per cent tonight, 30
per cent Friday.
·

..'.

Devotetl 1'o '/'he

VOL XXVII NO. 150

lntere.&lt;~ts

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Now You Know
Justi ce William 0. Douglas
served longer than any other
person on the U.S. Supreme
Courtm 36% years.

of'1'he Meigs-Mason Area

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1975
PRICE 15'
-- -- -'--~----'-'-------------------

- -

'

Kidnapers release bOy,
take $150,000 ransom
DETROIT (UP!) - Kid·
napers ofthe son of a General
Motors Corp. executive
released the 13-year-old boy
at · a hospital Wednesday
night, tile FBI said today,
A ranaom of ·$150,000 was
paid for the return of the boy,
who was atilj1J(ited Monday in
.,his suburban hometown, the
FBI said.
Tbe youth, Timothy
Stempel, the son of Robert C.
Stempel, the director of

the news media but the media
agreed, at the request of the
authorities, to withhold the
story to protect the boy'sllle.
Stempel, who was appointed
director
of
engineering at Chevrolet last
month, said his son, a student
at Bloomfield Township
Junior High School, went out
to play Monday afternoon and
faUed to come home.
The lamUy, Stempel said,
· received a telephone call
Monday night demanding a
ransom of $150,000, but was
warned by the ceUer "don't
call the pollee or the press."
The news blackout was not
ix'oken until authorities announced the youth was safe.
A second ranaom demand
was made by telephone Tuesday morning and Stempel
was asked, "Do you tiave the
money? 11
Stempel answered he
wanted some assurance his
son was unhanned. He told
pollee the kidnaper told him,
'You'll have to trust me.'
The · father then told the
kidnaper banks were closed
Tuesday - Veteran's Day and Stempel said the ab-·
ductor told him that was his
problem.
Before hanging up, Stempel
said the abductor told him
he'd get back to him.
On Wedr!esday, police said
Stempel went to a 'drop site'
$5
with '150,000 in cash, but the
abductor
never appeared
(See list of lost crew on page 2)
after he walled three hours.
A second drop was
BITanged and made at 8:25
p.m. Wednesday, pollee said.
When authofltles arrived at
the Jocatioo somewhere in
Wayne County an hour later,
the money was goDe.
Stempel returned home,
By WILLIAM J. HOLSTEIN rary hillt to rescue efforts. It was unlikely bodies would
Meanwhile, a Canadian- be recovered from that depth. where he received the tele·
SAULT STE. MARIE,
phone call from his son.
Mich. (UPI) ·- Fresh gales American oil pollution strike
"It's not unusual that
aSIIaulted Lake Superior force stood by with special
tllday, lx'lnglng a new threat equipment In the event 75,000 bodies are never recovered,"
to lhlp)ing three days after galloris of diesel fuel trapped a Coast Guard conunander
. ilurrlcane-force winds and ZS.. Inside the sunken ore carrier said. "Oiflelally, of cow-se,
we have not given up tbe
foot waves sank the Edmwld begins to escape.
Thick bubbles of oil sur· search, it's just that we must
· Fitzgerald In the worst
marine diAsterln 17yeara on faced 60 mUes northwest of think about the obvious."
Sault Ste . Marie and formed a
The certainty that loved
the Great Lakea.
sllek, but Coast Guard of· ones had been lost spread
,
With
wlnda
forecaai
up
to
50
1
1111018 accompanied by snow flclals said lt had dissipated also among relatives of the
•
crewmen, who came from
· IIQUalla, the Coast Guard said by Wednesday night. .
Speculation
grew
that
the
many of the towns that have
it would continue to search
729-foot "Fltz," down bound produced Great Lakes sailors
for survivors.
Moat officials conceded from Superior, Wis., with a for decades.
Three Eastern High School
Robert Rafferty , cblef senior girls are the latest
lhey believe the seareh Ia now load of taconite peUets,l:l-oke
quickly sank in 520 steward on the Fitzgerald, entries ln the 1976 Southeast
.lilpelesa, and bad weather in baH
feet
of
water.
Searchers said had written to his wife in
Wednesday i:l"oll8hl a temp()·
Ohio Junior Miss Sc!lolarshlp
Toledo that he might be home Contest.
Nov. 8. "However," the card
They are Katrina Batey ,
said, "nothing is sure."
daughter
of Mr . and Mrs.
Rafferty's family said
Wednesday he had taken Andrew Batey; Peggy
special pride in serving on the Trussell, daughter of Mr. and
Fitzgerald, for years the Mrs. Ralph Trussell, and
By Ulllted Prea•Internadonal
largest ore carrier plying the Avis Bissell, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Hayward Bissell, all
MADRID, SPAIN - GENERALISSIMO FRANCISCO Great Lakes.
"He always said tl!at the of Rt. l, Long Bottom.
,.franco suffered cootplete kidney collapse and renewed and
Miss Baley is a member of
lleady internal bleeding today, making him totaUy dependent Fitzgerald was the king of the
the
Art ·Club, band,
Lakes,"
said
his
sister,
Mabel
.,II) machinery to keep his wasted body alive.
cheerleading
squad, chorus,
Sebwann.
"It
bad
the
blggeat
" "He Is sinking," a medical consultant said. "The bleeding
language
kitchen
he
had
ever
had
and
club,
pep club,
'\a not aa serious as previous bouts, but he is no longer strong the ship was 10 big, he said
vQlleyballleam,
Fall
Follies,
,..,enough to come out of II."
they 'd never have any junior class play and was a
trouble."
class officer. She ls sponsored
NEW YORK - A FLOCK OF BffiDS SUCKED into an
The Olgebay-Norton Co. of by the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy.
engine cauted a DCIO jet to erupt in names during takeoff at aeveland, which leased the
. j{ennedy Airport Wednesday, but the airplane skidded to a ship from Its Milwaukee ow· For her talent, she wUI do a
~ wiihoutaerlous injury to lhe 139 persons aboard. Officials ners , released the Fit· dance routine.
Miss Trussell is a member
said 83 peraons moatly rescue workers, were treated for minor zgerald's list of crewmemof the cheerleading squad,
Injuries.
bers Wednesday. Fourteen
Tbe Overaeaa National Airways jet's right engine scooped were from Ohio, eight from volleyball team, pep club,
.up the lllrdajuataa the plane reached Its takeoff speed of more Wisconsin, two each from junior and senior class plays,
tlian !50 miles per hour. The engine caught fire and fell from Michigan, Minnesota and chorus and on the school
the plane's wing momentll after the huge craft left the ground, Florida and one from Penn- newspaper staff.
She is sponsored by
-bout 200 yarda from the end of the runway which points sylvania.
One of them, Russell G. Ridenour's Hardware,
lqward Jamaica Bay. Reacting within seconds, the pilot threw
h!&amp; engines Into reverse, slammed on the brakes and managed Haskell of Millbury, Ohio, Chester. For her ialent, she
!0 bring the jet to a screeching halt in the mud at the end of the had often taken his family on will present a vocal splo,
board during cruises.
accompanying herself on the
runway.
"I don't know if I could ever guitar.
Miss Bissell is a member of
NEWYORK - GOV.HUGHCAREYHAS a new plan, said go on another ship now," his
tp have hlgh~evel support In Washington, to save the nation's wife, Mrs. EvelYn HaskeU, the cheerleading squad, art
club, volleyball team, pep
larlletll city the alate's fourth largest city and four state said Wednesday.
enctes
~~
Imminent
default.
"He
never,
worried
about
club, junior and senior class
11
Ca
Ued a -lalsesalon of the state le"'•'ature today . the weather' Mrs. Haskell play , school newspaper ,
rey ca
"""'
"""
said "but I used to worry
to unveil a $8 billion plan, which he said has strong backing ln abo~t It a lot. 1 watebed the annual staff and class
Walhlnlllon.lt Involves federal guaran~a to avert default by weather and looked for the photographer. For her talent
she wlll do a dramatic
New York aty, the City of Yonkers and four state agencies. Btorma on the map.
·
reading , She ls sponsored by
·
"I tmed to worry myself
SAUSBURY,N.C. - SEN.ROBERTDOLE,R·Kan.,says sick . Then it just growed on the Racine Home National
he pla111 to marry Federal Trade Corrl!nlsalon member Mary me that he was a sailor, and I Bank .
The finals of the Southeast
Ellubeth Hanford IOI!letlme in ,December. Miss Hanford's didn't worry about it. Maybe
Ohio Junior Miss will be held
family declined to·&amp;Mounce the date or location.
I should have."
Mlaa Hanford, 38, waa named to the FTC in late 1973 after
The Coast Guard an- Nov . 23 at !he Meigs Junior
.-vtng as sn administrative usiatant !0 conaumer affairs nounced It will convene a , High School ln MiddlejX)rt,
c1nc10r Vlrllinla Knauer. She Ia a graduate of Duke University special court of Inquiry In beginning at 3:15 p. m.
iild earned her law degree at Harvard. Dote, 53, is divorced Cleveland Monday to in· Tickets are being sold by \he
.inc! baa one dall8hter, Robin, 21.
·
vestigate the sinking.
contestants.

.. The

engineering at Chevrolet ,
called his father from Wayne
County General Hospital,
where he was taken by his
abductors, pollee said.
Lt. Donald Zlnunerman of
the Bloomfield Township
Pollee .Department said FBI
agents and state pollee
rushed to the hospital in the
suburb of Wayne shorUy after
the youlh's telephone call at
11:35p.m. and found Timothy
uninjured.

Police said they had no idea
where the boy was kept
during the tWo days he was
held by the unlqlown abduelers. Pollee had no
suspects.
"Timothy sounded fatigued
but he was alert," Zim·
merman said. The boy was
given a medical e~amlnation
and was "in the process of
being united with his family.
Tbecaseolthekidnapingof
the Stempel boy was known to

million ore boat, ,Edmund Fitzgerald

re '-'·s-hipping rocked

Eastern

has three

zn contest

and

I

'1!/ '

EDUCATION WEEK - In cooperation with ll)e Meigs
l.ocal Scbool District and Drew Webater Post 39,
American Legion Auxiliary and the Junior Auxiliary,
mayors of Pomeroy, Rutland and Middleport signed a
pr"oclamation ID'ging observance of National Education
Week, Nov. 111-22. The units urge that patrons vial! the
schools during the week. Pict\D'ed are front row, I tor,
Pomeroy Mayor Dale E. Smith, Rutland Mayor Eugene
Thompson, and Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman; back

row,! tor, Pam Powers, Eighth District Junior Auxiliary
President; Mrs. Grace Pratt, president ol the Drew
Webster Post Auxiliary, imd Paula Kloes, president of the ·
Drew Webster Post JW\Ior Auxiliary unit. Drew Webster
Post and Its awdllary Wlits are In Pooteroy. Mrs. Walter
R. Couch is auxiliary education and scholarship chair·
person. She wiU have a window display at Elberfelda
Department Store. Open houses will be observed at Meigs
I.ocal Scbool District schools, a schedule of which appean
in today's Sentinel.

Nine schools take part in visitation program
Nine Meigs Local School Parents and Teachers, Nov.l8, 9a.m. to 2 p. m. Nov.
Meigs JW\ior Hig~ , Nov. 19,
District
schools
are National Education 21,2p. m. fiim.
9 a. m. to 2 p .m.
cooperating in a visitation Association, and U. S. Office
Middleport Elemeniary,
Meigs High School,-Nov. 20,
schedule the week of of Education.
Nov . l8, 9a. m. to2p.m.
9 a. m. to 2 p. m.
November 16 to November 22
The following schedule is
Pomeroy Elementary,
The staff and ad·
proclaimed by President for special designated days of Nov.l8, 9a. m. to 2p.m ..
ministration of the Meigs
Gerald R. Ford as American visitation in the Meigs Local
Rutland Elementary, Nov. Local Schools encourage all
Education Week.
Sehools:
18, 9 a. m. to 2 p. m.
interested persons to visit the
An.annual event since 1921,
Bradbury Elementary,
Salem Center Elementary, schools, especially dw-ing the
American Education Week ls Nov. l7,8a.m.to2p.m.
Nov. l8,9a.m.to3p. m.
designated days of American
sponsored by the American
Harrisonville Elementary,
Salisbury Elementary , Education Week.
Legion , National Congress of
Nov.l8, 9a .!ll. to 2p.m.
::i:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::::
,.... .........
.
"'!!:"l(o;
.. st..
•
,. .......
' .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
Monday, HUle or no perclpltatlon. Highs Saturday
will be In the upper 38s to
the low 48s, warmiug to the
50s by Monday.
Two cars were heavily
Lows wiD be In the upper '
damaged and one of the 20s to the 38s Saturday and
drivers was elted to Mid· in the 38s to the low fOs
dleport mayor's court as the Sunday and Monday.
result of a traffic accident at
the intersection of South
Second Ave. and Uncoln St.
By JAMES A. KIDNEY
term after suffering a stroke
at 6:09 Wednesday night,
WASHINGTON (UP!)
last New Year's Eve,
Police said a car driven by
William Orville Douglas, his Douglas wrote that he
Ernest Hlll, Hemlock Grove,
77-year-old body drained by realized "lt would be inad·
came from Lincoln across
"incessant and demanding vlsable for me to carry on the
Second St. and struck the side
pain" with lttUe prospect for duties required of a member
Norbert Compton rejX)rted recovery, has retired from of the court."
of a northbound car driven by
on
the sight committee's the Supreme COurt, where he
Harry D. Garnes, Pomeroy .
In his letter he indicated he
work
when
the
Pomeroy.
The Middleport E;-R squad
served longer than any other had little hope of recovering .
came but no one was hurt. Middleport Lions Club met man in history.
"I have been bothered with
Hill was cited for running a for a noon 1W1cheon Wed·
Douglas' illness ac- incessant and demanding
nesday at the Meigs Inn.
stop sign.
compllsbed the longtime goal . pain which depletes my
The club now has requests of many of his enemies, who energy to the extent that I
At 9:33p.m. the E·R squad
was called to the Kenneth for providing eyeglasses for at one time included have been unable to shoulder
Imboden residence on five persons and two were President Ford, who received my fuU share of the burden,"
Palmer St. for Loretta Jm. approved at Wednesday 's Douglas' retirement letter he wrote.
"Therefore ... I , hereby
boden, who was taken to meeting. The Rev. WiUiam Wednesday.
Although he had hoped to retire at the close of this day
Veterans Memorial .Hospi\81 Middleswart, president, was
(COntinued on page 10)
where she was treated arid in charge of the meeting carry on his work for a 37th
discharged. Earlier Wed· explaining club business ·and
nesday, the squad was called announcing a zone I meeting
to Leading (,'reek Road for in Athens . Future programs
Belly Lemley, who was ill. were discussed. Tom SkinShe was taken to Pleasant ner, Gallipolis, was a guest of
member, Jim Danner.
Valley Hospital.

Cars in
collision

Constant pain
forces Douglas
to leave court

Compton gives
sight report

Nixon thinking
dominates court

DIVORCE GRANTED
SQUAD TO MEET
Linda K. Rogers was
RACINE - The Racine Egranted a divor ce fr om R squad wiU hold a special
Charles E. Rogers and meeting Monday Nov. J7, at 8
restored to her former name, p.m. at the fire house. Of.
Lnda K. Shuler, Wednesday ·firers will be nominated. All
in Common Pleas Court.
members are urged·to attend.
'

Rep. :lames impressed
by Gavin plant safety
Slate Representative Ron
James ( D·Proctorville ),
recently toured the General
James M. Gavin Power Plant
loeated in Cheshire, and the
Meigs No. 2 Coal Mine which
supplies the plant with much
of the coat lt requries to
operate.
James, a guest of the Ohio
Electric Company which
built and ·operates the plant,
said, "I was very impressed
.with the safety precautions
that are present at the plant.
The s~fety record compiled
over the last two year-s has

been exceptional."
The tour of the Meigs No. 2
Mine was the first such visit
by James. ''This being my
first visit to a coal mine, I
was very surprised at the
modern methods being used,
while strict safety standards
are maintained," he said.
James is a member of the
House Energy and En·
vlronment Committee. The
tour was part of his desire to
learn about the operations of
souther.n Ohio utilities and
the quality of ·service
provided consumers.

WASHINGTON (UPJ) Justice William 0 . Douglas'
retirement leaves a Supreme
Court controlled by Nixonappointed conservative thin·
kers.
Tbe "Uberal bloc" of which
he was a member during the
• time of the late Chief Justice
Earl Warren has now 'been
reduced to two - Justices
William J. Brennan Jr. and
Thurgood Marshall.
Since Chief Justice Warren
E. Burger took office in 1969,
Douglas , Brennan and
MarshaU frequently has been
a vocal minority in individual
Uberties cases.
The appointees of former
President Richard M. Nixon
frequently vote together at
such times. They are Burger
and Justices Harry A. Blackmun, Lewis F. Powe~ Jr. and
William H. Rehnquist. They
often draw into their group
either Justice Byron R. White
or Justice Potter Stewart, or
both.
They tend to leave touchy
questions to legislators and

are more wary than was the
Warren court of according
rights to criminal defendants.
All the members ol the
court are 60 years old or over
except for White, who Is $8,
and Rehnqulst ,,51.
·
Since Douglas seldom
asked questions during
argwnents, his absence will
not mean a change of at·
mosphere. But his former
colleagues will miss the
stream of opinions constanUy
flowing from his chambers.
He probably has the Supreme
Court record for the nwnber
of dissents, concurrences and
separate opinions, speaking
his own mind.
The court has accepted a
number of important cases
for review and has held over
from last term an attack on
capital punishment. luuea
include the right of black
children to attend private
schools and abortion matters.
These are likely to be put
aside lllltil Douglas' successor arrives.

�2- The Dally Sentinel, Mldclleport·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 13, 1975

Wallace fighting lefties

Collective bargaining
vote ·stands
.
lly LEE LEONARD
llJ'I ,.,.... arr lllfarln
COLUMBUS (UPI) • Lesillatton . Httlnl . up
collective bar1alnlng
p-ocediiN!I lor public employeslpplfelltly II dead lor
Ule r•r ~d perhap. lor the
hellnceoltlle lllth -'on of
Ule Ohio General Allembly,
'll'hlch
runs
through
December, 1878. ·
The collectlve ~
bill, IDII&amp;ht by public employe
gro.- far a daelde IIIII
puJhed llpedaJit bird by
maJority Democnta thla
year, liVe I Jut 811p
Wedneldly u tlie Houae
Democrata feD four votel
short of overrldlnl Gov.
J._ A. Rhoclel' veto of tile

ampanlee.
Houee Overrldea Veto
And the dwnber voted 83
to 9 to override Rhodes' veto
of a bill glvlna tile Jeglalat~e
power to approve or In·
validate lltllte agency rules.
1be Smale will not take up
the veto until January, when
It Ia expected to be
overridden,
bemocratlc leaders, In·
eluding the autbor of Ule
collective bargaining
lltjlllltlon, were peulmiltlc
that any qreement can be
reeched on the controverl!ial
bill nnt year In the face of
lining Rlpubllcin oppo!litlon
to the rlgilt of ,public em·
plo,.. to lllrlke.
'01e limited rjght to lltrlke
' •• a key reiture ·~n the
lllfllll'e.
Acllan came u the Holile Democntlc bill and one of
put the fln1IIWW toudlel to the !1181n reuons Rhodes
Ule lt'll 'II'Wkl!w illlllon and
doled liP llhop fOr tha Yllf.

revolution at tiM! ballot box"
By FLOYD H. NORRIS
gaining powers and was 'the
· MONTGOMERY, Ala. against the ''ultraliberal left
only reasonable way to (UP!) - Gov. George C. who led us Into this mess we
ourselves
In,
prevent mass walkouts.
Wallace has begun his fourth find
Rep. Edward J. Or1ett, J). campaign for the presidency, domesticslly and foreign ."
DaytOn, said Ohio has ranked strongly criticizing the left
Wallace thus lought to
Ullrd in the nation In the ·'ll'ing of his own Democratic differentiate hlmaelf from the
number of poblic employe party and ignoring the other nine announced Demo. strikes during the pall Ulree · Republicans.
cratic hopefuls, most of
Wallace did not mention whom have aimed their fire
years despite a ~w on the
books which prolulits such President Focd or the GOP at Ford and blamed Ule
Wednesday In amOWlcing he nation's Ills on two terms of
strikes.
But Assistant House was seeking the Democratic Republican leadership.
The newest ·Candidate
MinoritY. Leader Norman ~­ nomination In 1976.
The Alabama governor hopes to win or finish well In a
MW'dDCk, R.-l'ill~mnat\. SSid
the bill would provoke public called for "a political series of primaries, begin·
·employe strikes In _wholesale
nlng In Massachusetts and
numbers. He sa1d Penn·
Florida, and to aarner blocks
sylvania, which has a similar
of delegates even In states he
ATrEND CONFERENCE
law, has public services In·
Mrs. Joanne Williams, loses, !banks to Ule party's
terrupled and local govern· assistant cashier of The ne'll' rules on proportional
menta bankrupted by em- Farmers Bank and Savings representaUon.
ploye demands.
Co., and Mrs. Maxine Grif·
The Sena!f had voted to lith, cashier of The Pomeroy
override the governor's vetO National Bank attended the Next-of·kin
of the collective baraalnlng
Fall Conference of the Ohio
bill lest month, 20 tO 11.
Group of the National
House members agreed
Association of Bank Women, of veterans fail
unanimously with Senate
Inc., at the Hilton Inn-North,
changes In the bill calling for
In Columbus, on Nov. 8 and 9. to take bonqs
Increased monitoring of fuel
cost surcharges and coal Nearly 100 women officers of
The Ohio Vietnam Veterans
procurement practices by banks throughout the state
·attended.
Bonus Commission has
eiec!ric uUliUes.
reported Sll next-of-kin
As written, the le&amp;lslatlon
survivors
have not applied
graduate
of
Rio
Grande,
was
requires the amount and
standing member of the
for
their
bonus.
an
outstanding
baseball
Increase of any fuel adteam. A native of south.
WEEKEND VISITORS
The deceased veteran did
eastern Ohio, (.1ark has spent player during his under- justment costs to he clet~rly
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Earl
Kelley
of
not
have to have been
the laet25 years In Franklin graduate day~. He was a stated on customers' electric
Lancaster
.
were
weekend
deceased in VIetnam;
teacher, administrator, an bills, ·with notification any
County.
Paul Lyne, President of Rio attorney, and a member of Ume the SW'charge Increases guests of Mr. and Mrs. anytime durins the VIetnam
Herbert Djxon, Enterprise. Era Conflict, AugustS, 1964 to
Grande Colleae from 1954· the Rio Grande College Board by 15 per cent or more in a
They
were joined for Sunday July I, 1973. However, any
1962, coeched the Redman of Trustees. He died in Six-month period.
Public Hearings Required dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Ray veteran, or survivor Is
Balketba11 Team from 1923- Columbus in )947.
Bob Wion attended Rio
The PUCO will be required Pullins, Scott and Usa, and eligible for benefits, if the
1929 and from 1932-1938. Lyne
served
in
Center was dedicated to him Grande College from 1949- mder the blll to hold a public Roger Dixon, a student at ve'teran
Marietta College.
Vietnam anytime from
In 1970. Durin&amp; his presidency 1951. During these years he hearing at least every six
February 28, 1961 to July I,
two new doml torles and an played baseba11, basketbal1 months on the fuel ad1973.
and
football.
~e
was
con.
justment costs of each of the
admlniatratlon building were
IN HOSPITAL
For further information,
sldered an excellent football electric companies In Ohio. If
conatrucled.
Mrs.
Wilma
Stobart,
please contact W. W. Am·
James Marshall attended player. Following his college an Increase ill unjU.Btlfied, the
Rio Grande Co11ege In 1964- work, Bob Wion has had an commieslon wlll be em· Pomeroy, Is a medical berger, Veterans Service
patient at the Holzer Medical Office, 114 Mulberry Avenue,
1965. He then entered the outstandlns career in powered to rescind lt.
Genter.
Her room number ill Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992The p-oposal also contains
service and returned to Rio in coaching.
533.
2820.
Harold Yinaer attended Rio Incentives for electric
1968-1970. In balketba11 he
companies
to
use
coal
more
was a tremendous jumper Grande College In 1938-1939,
· -e;·&amp;:.w~:Wh:~~::::::,S,::8'.::
and an excellent shooter. and was considered an out- efficiently, and requirements p~~~w.~.~-e;
Marshall now live§ in standing center on the for annual reports and audits
o
Redman Football Team. of the uUlities.
Columbus.
House Minority Leader
John Matthews, a 1917 During his college days he
was selected to the Cliarles F. Kurfess, ft.
By Helen and Sue Bottel
~:.
:$
Associated Press Ali-Ohlo Bowlin&amp; Green, made a
Football Team. He has had stamch defense of Rhodes'
an outstandlna career in veto of the bill permlttln&amp; the
Watched Pot Nev\ll' Riles
physical education of which legislature to Invalidate RAP:
he said : "Almost my entire agency rules.
Kurfese said tbe legislation
I'm oot fat, but I have a pot. My ltomach ellcks out unless 1
life has been devoted to
malte a lot of effort to hold it ln. I exerctae,!11111 I try to atand
Physical Education and would encouraae special stralaht, but I sU11 need some helpful hlntl on 'll'haf to do for a
Interest aroupelo peeler lhe _ POT BELLy
athletics."
failure to yield the ~t of
legislature constantly for . ror:
way l!lllO\llns an a~cldenl at
chanaes In rule&amp; set by stale
'!be ato 1111cb 1e11oa bu jut IIMa!t !he mNt elude
4:25p.m. Wednesday on Rt. 7
Hober Medical Center
boards and c~ons. •: m-leeohbe eallre body- IIIII t.bey're jut alMa!! die eulell
north of the Silver Memorial
(Dlscharses, Nov. I!)
"Besides," said Kurfe111, 10 foraet.
·
Bridge. The patrol said the
Kevin Burnette, Harlan "we can already overrule any You'll lind people wltb flat llomae• l!ave !raiDed tbemSkasas car pulled across Rt. C&amp;rmon, Oscar &lt;.1ark, Robert regulatlon or rule on the selva to "sack IIID" ao wellll!al ~bey do II nbellllldeall)',
7 In the path of an auto Coffey, Nellie Conger, Helen books."
\ wbelllerllley're IIIIIDI, ftandlnl, niiiiDI,ISIIal, wbatever.
operated by Ruth Ann Goody, Dennillon, Robert Durham,
"The heU we cen,'' retorted
IIHt exeerdlel bere II "llOIIIIIIJrt a - . " PlllltiiGM
35, Rt. 1, Gallipolis. There Ullle Gheen, Anaela Hale, Rep. Arthur R. Wilkowski, 0.. m•clee tipt allli keep IMm d&amp;JII -II ta11e1 almellao effort
were moderate damage.
Mrs. Richard Hinchman and Toledo, who receDed that tile onceyon're Into lllehablt,llllllfylllllaJwllblt an yo11lfe, we
A slnsle car mishap OC· son, Mary lnsels, Jean Senate had• buried ''under can almlllll pmanlee y111'U never have 1 pat - or for 11!11
curred at 1:15 a. m. on the Jarrell, Lola Jones, Everett heavy lobbying presaure" !Diller, 1 plllllan prvl!lem. -HELEN AND 8llE
+++
Ebenezer-Carmel Rd. six and Keels, Lily Kerr , Ethel legislation which would have
six tenthe miles west of Rt. Knotts, Richard Little, rescinded a Department of DEAR RAP:
I have a girlfriend (Doria) who can't set guyeon her own.
325, where Joseph L. Drema Marcum, Charlotte Natural Resources rule
pennlttlna
the
huntlna
of
I
share
mine wiUI her becauu there are ueually two or three
Gutherie, 51, Rt. 2, VInton, Miller, Anna Mink, Robert
mourning
doves.
•
banging
around. She's areal, but llby.
lost control of hill car which Neal, (.'ynthla Norton, Mason
Kurfese'
plea
sustain
the
I
asked
Mike II he'd take her out when I ctn't 110, and he's
10
ran off tile right -side of the Peck, Sandra Peyton, Mrs.
governor's
veto
fell
before
been
nice
about
it bectuae he r~~~lly Ulre1 her. But IIO'f he's
8
highway striking a tree James Phillips and son
boushl me a ring and wante lo go lltlldy. I'd nther not, for
I
'
Diana Pope, Eric Price, strona tide of legislative Doris' sake _ she Ulree blm 1 lot _ and a1ao becauee I dDn't
stump. Gutherie had vislbl;' Shirley Robinson, Mrs. Paul sentiment to recapture eome want to be tied down. But I don't want to'- Mike either.
inJuries but was not Im- Russ and daughter, Nellie control over the executive
Why ill It a girl hu to aive up all the other boye jllll
mediately treated.
Sayre, Robert Schoffler, !ranch.
because one lhe may Dire beat (but not BEST-beet) wanta. to
Afinal mishap occurred at Gladys Shaver, Mrs. Carl
"They don't have a put a hold on her? -JAN
7:35a.m. on County Road 12, Shockey and daughter, Mrs. poJIIIun's worth of power that DEAR JAN:
five tenthe of a mile east of Roger Smith and son, Donald we haven't Riven Ulem,"·said
Yoa dell'I -If 7111're firm 111rap Try It eta• IDee Mille
Johnson Rd., where David E. Specht, Annita Stevenson , Rep. William G. Batchelder, that he!IIIDI aro-.J wltb uvenlll'lllldlll betllr II!-. IolBI
R-Medlna, In eupport of the aro11111 with a11111dy wbo IIIIPIIIIke blm feel trapped, Gold
Moore, 'rl, Rt.l, Nortbup, lost Miriam Walter.
override. ''Oil what meat laek! - SUE
control or hls car on the wet
( B~, Nov. !%,
pavement. The vehicle lefl
+++
Mr. and Mrs. Michael haUl thil o~r caesar fed that
the highway strildns a fence. Langona , daughter , he hath gro'll'ft 10 mighty?" DEAR JAN:
In other action, the House:
ADd II 7011 c:u'l c•vlllee 111m, well, lbere'a alwaye Dvrfl.
Cheshire.
- Agreed with Senate Sbe'dpnltablyltveto.-pttbatrtac.-HELEN
P.S. D tbe tbetlllldeeea'l cblD J-.1!111be lt'l better tbal
amendmente and sent to
Rhodes a bill provldbc for W1l1 •
permanent hunUna and DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
trapping licen.&amp;eS to penona
Bob and I ehow our feellnge In weird waye. We can't seem
6S and older.
lo say 8l'l)'lhJng 10 111ch other withoul eeven1 cull. They start
out u ldddlns, but then they re~Uy begin to hurt.
-Gave final legislative apFor Instance, he never ccmpllments me_ ju.!t glveslitUe
p-oval, 88to S, to a measure dlgsUire, "You'vebeeneatqonlon pizza ap.ln! ;; when llries
increulng finance charges him. So I, of coune, come bacll wltb a slam too.
on 111!11111oane.
We can lhow we Dire each other when we're mekq out,
Spurs also occur In soft tissues, and it can cause
-Accepted
the
reeignalion
but
we
can never say lt. How come? - SUNK IN DISTRESS
degeneration of tile vertebrae pain in much of the foot. In of Rep. Jamea T. lA!Iren, J). DEAR SUNK:
from underlying arthritis. mOst cases the best approach
OndnniiU, effective Dec. I.
Sam- hal 10 aay II ftnC! 8IDee Boll '11'011'1, ny doa'l
Arthritia apurs are growths for small spurs is to provide Luken wu elected to Cln· •YOU? - HELEN
that develop where damaged proper support to the foot, clnnaU City Councll earlier
+++
or degenerated bone Is Including tile arch, to relieve this month.
NOTE JI'ROM SIJE: llaellmee pyallave alerrtble time
replaced.
the pressure on the ates:pr .... -11011, Let 111111-- 1111 -bart, .... perl!apl
On Ule heel there are two tachment of the tough fascia
J1ii~lj'1~
·
Bob wiD dllqe.
nialn locations. for spun, 011 to tile bone. Heat, Injections
the flal bottom aurface, and and various foot supports are
D~~?nDTNr
at the back 'll'here the achiUea help(ul. The Ideals to remove
M~!GS·MAUN AREA
tendon attaches to the heel the cauae of the irritation. CHESTIII
L. TANI'IIHILL
.• lxtc.ld.
bone.
When all other meuures fall,
ltOIIRT HOI,LICH
There Ia a tight, tough layer it may be neceiBiry to
··
C!lr !dllor
Publllhto aouy oxctpt
of ftbrous sheets or tissue remove the spur, and the Soturdoy
CINCINNATI (UPI) - mUin8 field aoale," IHitel
by The Oh'o VtUt
attached to tile bottom of the technique depends on Its sire. Pub!llhlno com,any, 11
Rule clu1n8• have led to the Brown. "Wilen you relum the
, Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio
heel bone. When you walk or In many cases the heelap~r 45769. eustnns Office Phone olftlll!lve expJooloo In the lootball to the line from
1'011 It tugs on Ita attachment does not need to be rmoved. 99'1-2156. Edltcwlol Phone "2· National Footall League, Ill· where II wu lrlc:bd (If
2157.
to the bone. With strain, and
class postaot paid
For Information on tf Second
urea Cincinnati Benaall beJund the -.,...s Una) wl!en
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
II Ia more likely If the bone osteowtbriUs send 10 cenla
N • !lanai
adYerllslno pneral manqer and head ll1e . . . . . a-d, ,w'rt
Wlrd baa a
tendency
lo for The HuiUI Letter nwnber rtpresentatlve
not U apt 10 IO for the field
Grlffllh Comptny, Inc ., coach Paul Brown.
depneratlon as in arthritia, a 4·10 , Osleoarthrllls : BottlntUI &amp; GtiiOOhtr Plv.,
IIDal
uoflen.
So far lhll .-on lbere
Thll'll Avt .. Now York,
sliver of bone Ia pulled off Deaeneratlon or Wear and 757
"By
Ule' ume token,"
have been 44 more touchdown
N.Y. 10017.
where the lucia Ia attached Tear Arthritis. Address your
SuttscriJttlon retes :
pwa than at lbla pint a added Brown, ''you put !Din
by cerrltr where
to lt. In tile repair proce111 tile letter to Dr. Lamb In, care of Delivered
Vlillblt7S Ctnlt per WMk .
year qo.
on gaq for loachpyramld.m:e bone ap1r Is thla newepaper, P. 0 . Boa IJ Motor Routt whtrt
dDwne
..._.
li reiJbc on
l!ro'll'ft
Ia
a
member
of
the
ltrvlct
~ot
hrllled. Tlte same can 1551, Radio City Station, Ne10 11'11~
~alit It, Ont mon!f!1.1U5.
)'VII'
ldcl!lr.
Tl!at'l
.., lhn
NFL 'a competition com·
lin Ohio and w. lit .. _mlttee that hal been a1teriDI . . mort IDI t ••n ,_..
haDPen ..... the achUiee Yen, NY 10019. Be 111ft to yntmo Yttr
122.00; Six
onlhs, Sli .SO; Thrtt ndN 10 open up tile pme,
"Anather _
.. tile ndl
teridon altachea at the back of enclollt along, stamped, self·
onths. 17 .00 . IEisewhtre
tile heel.
"For one thing the em- that an Incomplete paaa
addreSiled envelope and 50 ,.,oo vttr; 51• months
11 ..50; fhret months, S7.SO.
:rhl pain Is lrnm the cents.
phuU
hu been taken off thrown Into the end Ia
vbsvlptlon prlct Includes
pressure of !he spur iniCI Ule
~nday Tlm...s ... Hnel.
vetoed it.
·" As long as there is •
stalemate, that would be it
lor !hill seesion," said House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
D-New Boston, after it
became clear Democrats
could not muster the required.
60 votes to override the veto.
Sen. Harry Meshel, DYOOn&amp;stown, chief sponsor of
Ule collective bargaining bill,
agreed little could be done
·without help from the
Republicans
and
the
governor, deapite all the work
put In by public employe
groups to obtain acceptable
legilllatlon .
"It looks very negative arid
dlamal for 1876," said Senate
President Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocase k. n . Akrn~ .
"I'm always usreeable to
wmpromlse, but the kind of

compromise you get from the
governor's office and the
~ubllcans ·ill surrender.''
Republlcansl}nlted .
Two of the 59 · House
Demo crats supported
Rhodes' veto while another
was absent. The vote was 56
to 37, with all 35 Republicans
on hand voting to sustain the
veto.
It was the third time this
year the House has failed to
override a veto already o,.er·
turned by the Senate, where
Democrats have the required
20 votes for an override by
Ulcmselves.
Rhodes' veto of the
collective bargaining
legislation was sustained
despite complaints from
spbnsors ll would give public
employes well-deserved bar·

Six former Rio stars will be
added to Hall of Fame
-.! -w.;;:· noce; thl

Barrlnc an -.IIICY, llie

lfoull and lllnlle will 1101
reconvene until January,
aave lor rou line houeekeeplnl
Ql . meellnp
.,._...; __Det. e.
u....

with

Sate..._ lcned
111-.ly
andunl

lo the · · · -

llclllitlm

:::'~~=-oi.Oitlotomare
publlc t1tillllte
elottly monitor electric

Athens sale
'
was best of
four in 19'75
ATHENS - Tht laal
araded feeder cell ale of 1m
In the Athena, Mella, GaW.,
Vinton and Jacbon area laat
Monday at the Athens
Uvt110ek- Yll'd wu the beet
or tile lour conducfe&lt;l.
Thera ""' 163 ateen sold
for an averqe o1 13UI per
hwldrtdwetcht, about four
cenla above the averqe of
the otber three lllu. The
steen averqed 621 pouncla
and broulht $110 per hud.
The price ranae on tile aletn
ran from til per hun·
dnclwetcht to ~.110.
Hellen (IN) IOid lot an
averqe or nuo per hun·
dred'll'elaht at an avera1e
welaht of 421 pounda and
....17 per hud. The helfer
avena• wu alm01t tile arne
as tile other 111111. The price
ranae on the helfen waa 'IS
to f28,10 per hundredwtlaht.

Clendenin house
.

caught on fire
RA&lt;.'INE - The Racine
fire Dept. wae called
Wtdneeday 'II 10:3! p.m. to
Portland to the relklence of
Goldie Clendellin. An • ·
lrleal short C.Uiht the 11ro
atory !tame hcimt on 11rt.
There waa only minor
damale utimaltd at 1110.
Eleven men anawered tile
call.
The Racine E·R ..ued was
called at l:t&amp; p.m. Wed·
DH&lt;!IY for Jll!lel Hlnldey,
Rt. I, Portland, who wu
taken to Holier Medical
Center.

RIO GRANDE - The Third
.,\IUiual . Rio Grande COlleae

Jiall of Fame induction
ceremonies will be held
during halftime of the
Homecomlna basketball
game between Rio Grande
imd Wliberforce
this
Saturday, Nov. IS.
Sixteen former Redman
athletes have been Inducted
Into the Hall of Fame at Rio
·Grande. Tbla year all more
former alan wiD be added.
Inductees Include Dallas E.
Cllrk, Paul R. Lyne, James
R. MarahaU, John H. Mat.
thewa, Robert K. Wion, and
Harold L. Ylnser.
Dallaa Clerlr at~nded Rlo
Grande College In 1950, and
waa a member of Ule 1950
Football team at Rio. Ac·
cording to Coach Christy
Arnold, &lt;.'lark was an out-

-GeneraliOfl Rap

Three injured in
five auto wrecks
Three penons were lnjiD'ed
In !lYe tramc accldenla In·
vatlaated Wednesday by tile
Gallla-Melga P.oet State
Hlchway Patrol.
The flrat occurred at7 a. m:
Wedneeday' on Rt. 7, twolenlhe of a mile south of
Atllena County where an auto
driven by Jamea B. Smith, 19;
Raedlville, struck the rear
end d a car operated by
Robert L. Headley, 18, Rl. I,
Lon&amp; Bottom. Smith was
altchUy injured but not im·
media~ly treated.
Smith wu charged with
failure to atop wltbln the
ueured clear dlalance.
MarOn P. Cremeens, 20,
CoolviDe, wu cited to Meigs
County Court for improper
backlns following an accident
Wednesday on Rl. 7 In
Tuppers Plaine. The patrol
said (.'remeans' · vehicle
backed Into a parked car
O'll'lled by Geneva Tuttle, 31,
of Middleport.
Donald Shggs, 59,
&lt;.'huhlre, was charged with

DR. LAMB ·

Surgery didn't help feet
lly Lawre~ee E. t-b, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Two
rear• qo m:r feet belen to
hll't ao bad I could hardly
walk. I lhoatlbt it wu my
ahoee, ao I bcJucht -ral
pain which didll't help one

' bit,

I went to an orlbcpedla
apeclailat, and he toat Xreys
of my fee~ and I bed alarce
..,... on each heel. The one on
m~ rtchl foot wu extra larae
10 he did IUI'III'Y on II. While
I waa out he ahOt my left foot
with _ . . . . to try to
ellmlule tile aptll' wllhout
llriii'Y·
8laee lhell I biYt llaen In
conetent Jilin In - rtcht
fool, and I .._, beln able
to walk on my rilbt IIMIIInce
tlleopnUon. '11lt•on my
l'llhlloolwu 10 tara• he heel
to tdt Gil part ol the heel
.....,, And my left heel Ia
-~ ..... all ... tllllt.

!'can n11t 111 ID)' lip IDII

•r

with a cane lilt.- 111111
walt very much at 1111 tile
plin Ia alm011 unbearable. I
lake pain pilla off and on 1111
I

the lime.
The doctor eays It's ar·
thriUs In my heels and feet
.becauee now my feet hurl all
over. He eays Ulia happens In
about one out of 10 who have
11111'111')'. He bed me on larae
dOiea of uplrln for a while
which helpe aome, but I doa't
IIIII to lake ao much uplrln.
I've tried all t)'ptll of therapy,
heat, soaking, etc., and
notlllng to help.
What do )'QU think of thil?
Should I conault· another
doclor?

DEAR READER - It
never hurta to aet a lfCQild
aplnlon. AN your doclor to
eend :rou to the nearest
ll'llvenlly medictl center for
a CGII!Plele review of your
ctee.

The treatment ol heelapurs
dllfere areatiy' dependlns on
their locat.lon, llie and the
..,...._. theyca•. A..la Ua • amaU, boaer
pynmld with tile tlf pointed
dtn!'mrll'd. It develops llfhen
bone Is deatroyed or damaged
and replaCed by new bOne.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thlll'Sday, Nov.l3, 1975

·nmiir!
.

I'.

:Defense is key to Bucks success

Speaklnl! from hill wheel
chair to reporters and 300

enthualastlc supporters at a
Montaomery mQtel, Walla~
angrily lnaillted his bealth
was excellent and esld he wu
tired of llslenlng to quesll01111
about it.
·He touched only briefly on
.foreign policy, promising to
support a strons national
defen~. and concentrated
most of his speech on the
problems facing ll)lddle-claas
Americans, whom · he
promised to lead to victory in
November.
"I want to say to the
chagrin and maybe em·
barrassment of much of the
national presa that my health
is excellent and I am able to
campaign activ~ly," he said.
WallaCf), who has been
paralyzed from the waist
down since he Willi shot In 1972
while campaigning In
lliBO'Iand for the Democratic
presidential nomination, said
he would only consider
submitting to an Independent
medical examination if all
other candidates did 10. HJa
supporters booed the reporter
who asked about auch ar.
examination .

u

197! HIGH SCHOOl
F=OOTBALL STANDINGS
d
;, 1 )1nc1u es games Ill rough Nov .
8
~ OVERALL STANDINGS)

"
,

,, Team
Al e.:ander
., Ironton
N Galtia
Wel lston
l ' Pl . Pleas .
war . Loca l
K . Creek
.; Eastern
Logan
Miller
: Trimb le
r- Wah am a
Jack son
' G~llipolls
' Meigs
1

w
9 ..
9
7
7
7
7
6
6
6

5
5
5
5
5
5

p . OP
208 45
143 75
234 90
184 101
1611 76
139 6J
284 107
190 150
164 160
170 127
184 166
109 147 .
246 111
196 131
173 117
0 138 105
0122132
0 66 145
o 90 242
o 91 166
1 as 217
0 113 246
0 110 175
0 39 223
2 44 239
all t eam s

L. T
1 0
1 0
2 o
J o
J o
3 0
2 1
J l
4 0
J 2
4 1
4 1
5 o
5 0
5 o

At h.ens

5 5

Nes
I Yor k

4 5

••

Warre n Loca l
A thens
Nels York
Vi nto n County

139
138
122
113

o

~
,.,
-:
'3

.
11

1

.,
·

TRI·VALLEY
&lt; Finau
W L T

P OP

Alexa nder
" I 0 110 25
Nels -York
4 I 0 f06 45
War . Local
4 I 0 80 23
Belpre
1 3 I 47 93
Vinton Ca .
1 4 0 57 106
Fed . Hocki n g 0 4 I IB 126
OFFENSIVELY
Team
P t s, A11g
28
Kyger Creek
31.6
North Gal li a
234 26 .0
Jackson
246 24 .6
A le)(an de'r
208 20 .8
Gallipolis
196 19.6
Eastern
190 19.0
Wellston
18d 18.4
Trimbl e
18d 18. d
Meigs ·
173 17 .3
Miller
170 17 .0
Logan
164 16 ,d
Pt . Pl easant
· 164 16 .4
Ironton
143 1~ 1

1
4

1
J 97

Preston , KC
13
0 78
L ucas , KC
7
31 76
Do r sey , Mill 12
o 72
Peoples . We ll 10
16 76
Peppers , l
II
0 66
Loga n . NG
9
" 58
SEOAL SCORING
(Final)
Name, T 1 TO PAT Pts
Davis , J
15
7: 98
Peppers , L
7
o .:12
Grey , Well
7
o 42
Wilson , G
6
6 .t2
Peoples , we n 5
9 39
Qual l s, M
5
4 34
Conroy , J
4
a J2
Pennell , A
5
o 30
Kriebel , 1
5
o 30
Chonko , A
4
o 24
Howard , 1
4
o 2-4
Davidson. L
a o 2.1
Morrow , J
3
6 24

' By JACK SAUNDERS
: UPI Sporll Writer
, NEW YORK (UPI)- Tom
·Seaver 's third Cy Young
Award meant "something
special" to him, the New
,York Meta pitcher said
Wednesday.
·' "Each one of the Cy Yotmg
,Awards means . something
"'llld nothing compares to
winning the first ttme,"
·'Seaver said at a news con·
.ference, "but Ibis one means
'something special to me, too.
I used to watch Sandy Koufax
from the bleachers 'll'hile I
·was gro'll'lng up. I knew how
many Urnes Koulax had won

'h."

ON YOUR
. GAS BILL WHEN YOU

COOL &amp; HE~T YOUR
HOME WITH THE
"

REVOWriONARY

EUORIC/GAS
"'
.._, COOLING-HEATING UNIT.
HEATS
WITH
GASI
.
.

"'

COOLS WITH ELECTRICITY I

The cumulative T¥
audience for the aeven1Janle
aeries was estimated at

393,1i30,IJOO-..lhe hlghelt e\'W
ior a World Seriea.

Rule changes favor offens~

ernplw••

......... ......._ .....,

the Bucks' victories over the
Boston Celtics and the
Washington Bullets as
Milwaukee launched its
winning streak.
"This team plays both ends
of the court,'' Qlstello said
Wednesday night as the
Bucks evened their record at

performance with 14 points
and IS rebounds.
Doug Collins led the 76ers
with 24 points, while forward
George McGinnis sat out the
game with a bruised right
heel.
In
other
National
Basketball Association
5-!i.
games Wednesday night ,
"We got off to a bad start Buffalo beat HoustOn 93-90,
because of Injuries to Bob Atlanta edged Detroit 109-106,
Dandridge and Jim Price ," Los Angeles defeated New
Costello said .
' Orleans 116-100 and Kansas
Dandridge, a slender for - City dumped Seattle, 107-92.
ward, scored 29. points ' In the American BaskethaU
against the 76ers and Price Association, Utah routed New
added 14.
York ·134-114, San Antonio
Elmore Smith, who came In clobbered Virginia 144·112
the trade for Abdui.Jabbar, · and Kentucky beat St. Louis,
turned In another strong . ~1.

Avg

14 .4
10 .6
9.8

9.7

8.7
8.4

B.O
7.6
6.6
6.d
Avg
11.0

6.0
6.0
6.0
5.6
4.9
4.6
4.3
43
3:4
J.4
· 3.4
34
·

Bench surgery
slated Monday
through much of the 1975
season after collidina with
San Francisco's Gary
Matthews in a game here
April 22. That collision
jammed Bench's shoulder
and damaged cartilage.
The operation will remove
some cartilage from the
acromlo·davlcular Joint on
Ule top of the lhoulder and
remove a smaU section of
bone from the collar bone.
II will ·be the second
operation in less Ulan three
years for the power-billing
and accurate-throwing
catcher.
In December, 1972, Bench
underwent lung SID'gery lor
removal of a benign lesion.
"Sometimes when I think
back io that," said Bench, "I
realize just how lucky I am to
be able to play."
Bench Indicated last month
. he would probagly have suraery 11000 on hill aching left
shoulder. He said Just before
the World Series he didn't
Intend to play next season

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - The
shoulder surgery scheduled
Monday for Cincinnati Reds
catcher Joh101y Bench "ill not
considered dangerous,''
according to club officials
who have talked to the
surgeon.
And,
Dr.
Donald
O'Donoghue; who w111 per·
form the operation In
Oklahoma City, Okla .,
figures Bench will be fully
recovered and "should have
oo problem In being ready for
the start of aprlng training"
In late February.
The Reds disclosed iste
Wednesday Ulat their '!I·
year... ld slugging star would
undergo surgery on his left
shoulder Monday to repair
damage from an early season
collision at home plate.
"The operation is not
consldered dangerous," said
a club official, "especially
since It does not lnwlve his
throwing arm. It's to be a
technical operation but not a
serious one.''
'
Bench played wiUI pain

Nolan' e'a rns
Hutch Award
DAYTON, Ohio ( UPI) Gary Nolan,
15-game
winner for the world
champion Cincinnati Reds
after being sidelined two and
a baH years with a shoulder
problem, was named today as
1975 winner of baseball's
Hutch Award.
The Cincinnati righthander
Is the lith winner of the
award, named In memory of
former maJor leaaue pitcher
and manager Fred Hutchlnaon, who died of cancer In
1964.
Nolan edged Boston Red
Sox catcher Carlton Fillk and
New York Mets pitcher Tom
Seaver In the voting by major
league broadcasters and
writers who support the
proJect.
The honor is voted to a
player who overcomes some
element of adversity and
"exemplifies the fi&amp;htlng
spirit, competitive desire and
character" of Hutchinson.
Announcement of the vote
was made by Ritter Collell,
sports editor of the Dayton
Journal
Herald
and
secretary-treasurer of the
Hutch Fund, '!be group also
makes available an annual
f2,0it0 scholarship arant to a
medical researcller in cancer
work.
Nolan posted a 1:;.9 record
with a 3.16 era and pitched 200

a

lmings for the Reds.
"I never knew Fred HUI·
chinson, but from the many
. Ullngs I've heard of him from
his days as manager of the
Reds, I feel very bonored,''
Nolen said. "To be able to
help the club win the
championship fulfiUed my
greatest comeback hopes."

B
2

,4,,,,®

.

Speeloqfi olfenae, Bmm
and hil Ben1a11 face a
productln team bere
Monday nJgll iD the lluiiU
IIlla.
"'Die (lllnlall') dlfaw
hu a ...... ClG111iJ11," IIIII
Brown. , , _ 11'17' ran liD
you muldn'l belieft. O.J.

l B. I
21.1
22 .3
23 .9
24 .6
26 .9

The ·former Dodger leftbander and Seaver are the
only pitchers to win Ule Cy
Young three times; Seaver
won his In 1969 and 1973, while
the Dodger Hall of Farner
won In 1963, 1965 and 1961&gt;-all
when only one award was
given, Instead of the present
award for each league.
"But it's got to be' a big
disappointment to Randy
Jones," said the B-foot·l, 19S:
pound Seaver after pulllna 98
points to 80 for the San Diego
Padres pitcher, drawing 15
first place votes to Jones'
seven. "If he had won I could
have said he deserved it. He
pitched awfully well."

J~~~ 19°/o

' ·•

pnUJ deep."

~~ - ~

17.5

·SeiJver says third Cy Young
Award .was 'something special'

Oiler Thomas Bentsen, 2t.
St. Joseph, Mich. ·
·
Spetlal mal~lenlinct
Joseph W. Mazes, 59,
Ashland, Wis.
•
Wiper Gordon MacCiellan,
30, Clearwater. Fla.

'
lrought hecll to tile liDe ill
ecrlmmal!linlteadoflhell.
Thil malrel ~ 111ft 8pl to
rtllr a fourth dDWD . . .. lalllead of Iaine fllr a laid ga.l,
btcl... lf :rou mila, lbe atber
team adD II dol!l t11ere

13.9
13.6
11. 3
13 .8

Wah am a
109 10.9
Hannan Tri) ce
90 10.0
Sout h ern
91
9. 1
Be lpr e
85
8.5
Southwestern
66
8.3
red . Hocki ng
44
4.4
Sy mm es Val ley
40
4.0
'Navc rty
39
3 .9
DEFENSIVELY
Team
Ph Avg
A lexand er
45
4.5
Warren Loca l
63
6. 3
Ir o nto n
75
7.5
Pt. Pl easa nt
76
7.6
N
orth allia
90 10.0
~ehltston
101 10 . 1
t ens
105 10 .5
Meigs
117 11.7
Kyger Creek
107 119
M 1' l l
127 12.7
er
WGa ll ipo li s
131 13 .1
ahama
1d 7 14.7
N 1 y k
e s or
132 14 .7
150 , 5.0
Eastern
Logan
160 16.0
Soulhern
166 16 6
r · bl
16

S'thwest.
3 5
:. Han . Tr ace
3 6
.. South er n
3 7
B elpre
2 7
" Vinton Co .
2 8
~ S. Val lev.
1 9
'"'
.. vvaverly
1 9
· Fed . Hocki ng
a
"
Fina l ·r ecords tor
J ~~'kso~
1 7~
, except lronlon, which ha s Symmes Va ll ey
17 5
Qualified lor the playoff s.
·southwestern
145
SEOAL STANDINGS
Be lpr e
217
{ Final)
Waver l y
223
Team
W . L. T
Ft . OP Fed . Hocking
239
1
Ironton
7 0 0 122 49 Vinton countv
2d6
Jackson
4 3 0 176 11 3 Hannan Tr ace
242
' logan
4 3 0 124 140
OVERALL SCORING
At hen s
4 3 0 11 9 67 Nam e, T
TO PAT Pt s
We ll ston
4 J 0 I OJ 93 Dav is, J
22
10 142
Meigs
3 4 0 95 95 Gilders , Ale,; 13
19 106
Gallipolis
2 5 0 100 125 Sullivan , N -Y ld
4 88
Waver l y
0 7 0 13 170 Echslenkamper , Trim

CLEVELAND UPI - Here
Is !he tlsl of crewmen lost In
the sinking of !he ore carrier
Edmund Fitzgerald on Lake
Superior Monday night:
Capt. Ernest McSorley, 63,
Toledo, Ohio
Chief Engineer George
Hotl, 60, Cabot, Pa.
2nd assistant Thomas E.
Edwards, 50, Oregon, Ohio
2nd assistant Russell
Haskell, 40, Millbury, Ohio
3rd assls tant Oliver
Champeau, 41, Milwaukee.
First male John H. Me·
earthy, 62, Bay Vlltsge, Ohio
Second mate James Prall,
.u, Lakewood, Ohio
Th,lrd mate Michael E.
Armagost, 37, Iron River,
Wis.
Wheelman John ,o. Sim·
mons, 60. Ashland, Wis.
Wheelman Eugene W.
O'Brien, 50, Toledo, C»&gt;lo
Wheelman
John
J.
Povlach, l9, Bradenton, Fla.
A.B. maintenance Thomas
D. Borgeson, 41 , Duluth.
Minn.
Watchman Ransom E.
Cundy, 53, Superior, Wis.
Watchman William J.
Spengler, S'l, Toledo, Ohio
Watchman Carl A. Peckol,
20, Aslabula, Ohio
Deck hand Mark A.
Thomas. 21, ' Richmond
Heights, Ohio
Deck hand Paul M. Rtlppa,
22, Ashtabula, Ohio
Deck hand · Bruce L.
Hudson, 22, Nortn Olmsted.
C»&gt;lo
:
Cadet-deck David E. Weiss,
22. Agoura. Calif.
'
Steward Robert C. Raf.
ferty, 62, Toledo, C»&gt;lo
2nd cook Allen G. Kalmon,
43, Washburn, Wis.
Porter Frederick
J.
Beelcher, 56, Superior, Wis.
Porter Nolan F. Church. 55,
Stiver Bay, Minn.
•
tst· assistant EdwarCI
Blndon, 47, Fairport Harbor&gt;,
C»&gt;io
•
Oiler Blane H. Wilhelm, s£,
Moquah, Wis.
·•
Oiler RalPh G. Walton, s(

IUI'Vt)'.

Grid stats.

•

Team

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
aevenUI game of the World
Sertu between the Onclnnatl
Reds and BOlton Red Soz waa
watched by more people than
any other sportlns event In
hllllory, it was lllli10W!Ced
Wednesday by NBCTV.
Accordlnc to the NeUien
TV Index, the game, wu 1et11
In 40,580,000 homes and wis
watched by an eatlmattd
75,930,000 people.
No
lelevllled event of any ldrid
baa ever been Sf'lll In m(l,'e
homes , accordins to tl!e

Pro Basketball Roundup
United Press In·
ternatlonal
The Milwaukee Bucks used
to consist ot Kareem Abdul·
Jabbar and four others.
Having traded the team's
only star, the Bucks now
must put five others on the
floor.
But Wednesday the Bucks
tr~unced the Philadelphia
76ers for the second straight
night 103-M, extendins their
winning streak to five.
"The defense was the key,"
Milwaukee Coach Larry
t.1lstello said. "We played
good defense agalnat the
76ers back to back."
Defense was also the key In

- r-----------------~ By

Lost crew

Fremont, Ohio

Today's

~owns
1

•

JYJ''D T
w .L' L

'
· BEREA, Ohio (UPI, -The
Cleveland Browns aave a
couple or former World Fool·
ball Leaaue playera tryouts
Wednesday, but oo decislon
was made about keeping
defensive back Harold
Phillips and linebacker Dick
Palmer.
Also Wednesday, two
former Browns got Jobs In the
NFL. Wide receiver Frank
Pitts, cut by Oaltland earlier
In the season, signed 'with the
Atlanta . Falcons and tackle
Olris Morrill signed with the
New Orleans Sa Inti. '
Meanwhile, Browns Thorn
Darden and Pete Adamswho both u"l'erwent suraery
last August and are on the

PLAYING NITEL Y

..

"'
·"

::. SAFE
.,

,
.,
"'

""

NO FUMES IN YOUR HOME
NO FLAME IN YOUR HOME

-INSTALLED OUTDOORS~

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
PH. 9~,·5321

TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY

GEO. HALL
Tt,! ES.· THURS.

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

8:30-1:00

The MEIGS

with the same sort of pain.
"I wouldn't go through It
again,'' said Bench. "If it
aches like it did this year, I
_p-obably would take as long
as needed to get It cured."
He said It was his
"emotions" and "desire to
play for a first place team"
that kept him In the lineup
late in the season and he let It
be known he was not about to
sit out the playoffs and World
Series just because of the
pain.
Despite the achln&amp; shoulder
which was believed to have
affected his swing, Bench still
managed to hit .283 and lead
the club In home runs with 28
this past season .
Although only 1:1, Bench
already ill considered Hall of
Fame material because of
what he's already ac·
compllshed with Ule bat and
glove.
He Is one of only five
National Leaguers . to have
won Ulree RBI cham·
pionships, Joining the com·
pany of Rogers Hornsby,
Johnny Mlze, Joe Medwick
and Hank Aaron.
The two-time National
League Most Valuable Player
award winner also belted a
league-leading 45 homers In
1970 and 40 In 1972.
Bench also ill considered
the finest defensive catcher
In the major leagues because
of a great &amp;love hand and hill
fast and accurate throws to
second.
Considered somewhat of a
celelrlty off the field, Bench
made news earlier !hill year
when he ended his bachelorhood and married model
Vickie Chesser after a short,
whirlwind courtship.

Braves 93, Rockets 90
Bob McAdoo returned to
action after missing one
game with a leg Injury,
scoring 33 points to carry
Buffalo past Houston and
giving the Braves a half·
game lead over Boston in the
Atlantic Division . Cal
Murphy scored '!/ to lead the
Rockets.
Hawks 109, Deirolt 106
Tom Van Arsdale, finishing
with 20 points, hit a 22-jump
shot with 28 secoqds left to
give Atlanta a 109-106 lead
and then grabbed a crucial
rebound to guarantee the
victory. Bob Lanier had 30
points for Detroit.
Kings 107, SuperSonics 92
Scott Wedman scored 28'
points as Kansas City handed
Seattle its seventllloss in nine
games. Jimmy Walker added
21 points to the Kings' total
while Fred Brown was high
scorer for the Sonlcs with 19.
Laten 116, Jazz 100
Abdui-Jabbar scored 33
points, grabbed 16 rebounds
and blocked eight shots to
make It easy for Los Angeles
in their fifth home win.
Reserve forward Nate
Williams led New Orleans
wiUI 24.
Stan 134, Nets 114
Utah guards Ron Boone
and John Roche combined for
63 points to lead the Stars to
an easy victory over New
York. Boone fmished with 35
points and Roche had 28.
Julius Erving led the Nets
with 30 points.
Spurs 114, Squires 112
George Gervln scored 26
points In leading San An·
tonio's romp over Virginia.
Ticky Burden scored 27.
points for Ule Squires, who
lost their loth game in 11
starts.
Colonels 98, Spirits 81
Bird Averitt, replacing in·
jured Ted McClain, scored 31
points to lead the Colonels to
their sixth straight victory.
Maurice Lucas scored '!/ to
lead St. Louis, playing
without Marvin Barnes, who
was In Providence, R.I., on a .
civil assault case against him
dating from his college days.

Reds get to

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK ( UPI) - The next question is obvious. Will the
ABA be the next league to fold ?
Dave DeBusschere says no, but keep in mind he's a friendly
witness. He 's the ABA commissioner. Whadd'ya expect him to
say, the whole league is gonna fall apart • Commissioners don't
talk that way.
Other people do , though, and what many of Ulem are sa yin&amp;
is that the ABA's troubles aren't necessarily over simply
because San Diego and Baltimore both found they couldn't
hack it anymore and went out of business inside the past Ulree
weeks.
The ABA is down to eight teams now. It could be reduced to
six before long because the Spirits of St. Louis and Virginia
Squires are playing their home games virtually In private.
They're drawing, as the sa)ling goes, flies, and when you're
paying some of your players like Marvin Barnes $300,000,
Maurice Lucas $200,000 and Don Chaney also $200,0it0, Ule way
St. Louis is, and people aren 'I even sho'll'lng up to see them, the
only course left to you suddenly grows clearer and clearer.
Remember the WFL? In case you 've forgotten, it used to be
a football league and had trouble drawing people also. Now It's
oply a memory.
"We're not like the WFL," says Dave DeBusschere. "We
have strong franchises. Naturally, I can't be excited with the
position the league is In now compared with Ule one It was In
last August, but I think we've come out of all this with a
positive attitude. We can have eight of the best teams In
basketball ."
·
That 's nice optimistic talk, but It doesn't solve the serious
problems In St. Louis and Virginia.
Last Friday, Harry Weltman, president of the St. Louis club
which lost more than a million dollars last year, said he was
considering moving the learn to Cincinnati because It wasn't
drawing at home. The amowu:ement shook up St. Louis
basketball fans so much, 1,141 of them broke down the doors to
see the Spirits beat San Diego In the losers' final game ewr.
Bill Musselman, wbo was tile San Diego coach as late as two
days ago but Is among Ule tmemployed today, atlllis In a state
of shock over Ule way the club suddenly ceased operations
Tuesday. Nobody will he Ulat shocked, though, if eomewhere
along the line St. Louill and VIrginia pull out.
Should that happen, it might not be lona before tile ABA and
NBA are forced to merge despite the vigorous objection of the
NBA players, who have had a court Injunction for' some time
now preventing the two leagues from consolidating.
"I think the honeymoon In sports Is over," says Weltman.
"The future of professional baskethsll could weD be in the
handB of the players themselves. They will have to see that a
merger is In the best Interests of the sport."
Hurry Weltman Is absolutely right Ulere, but In this day and
age of frantic business, business, business, whoever bothers
his hend thinking about such a thing as sport? Only the poor
fan , who keeps being bled more and more for a ticket.
Those playen opposed to any merger between the ABA and
NBA contend it would restrict Ulelr bargaining power severe.
ly.
Now isn't that dreadful! Instead of $200,000 a seuon, 10111e of
them would have to find some way to make ends meet on only
Sl50,0it0, Worse yet, if any more of these basketbaU teams fold,
some players might even have to go out and work for a living.
I wonder how many of them cbuld ftnd.~Job .

Pittsburgh

Pirates early

CINCINNATI ( UPI) - The
world champion Cincinnati
Reds announced today they
will open their 1976 sprina
training schedule against
Pittsburgh, the team the
Reds beat to win Ule National
Leaaue championship.
The Reds will play the
eastern division champ
Pirates In Bradenton, Fla.,
March 13 and meet again the
llextdaylntheopeninggame
tt AI Lopez Field in Tampa,
Jle Reds' spring training
home.
Reds pitchers and catchers
are to report to Tampa Feb.
1:1, with the first workout the
next day. The rest of the
club's Injured reserve tilt- squad reports March 3 and
worked out Wednesday In starts work the next day.
All early workouts will be
sweat clothes with their
at
the "Redsland " complex in
leanunates.
Browns quarterback Mike Tampa until the start of the
Phlpp8, who wiD start against 2S-game exhibition schedule,
the Raiders In Oakland when the club will move to
&amp;!nday, said Cleveland, now Lopez Field.
The Reds have been
lh'l, ill about to salvage a
training
In Tampa slnce' l931,
moment of &amp;lory from an
except
for
a period during
otherwise Inglorious season .
"This is the upset special,'' World War II when travel
Phlpp8 said. "Thill will be the was restricted and prehighlight of the eesson. We 'II season workouts were at
Bloomington, Ind .
save face somehow." .

WARRIORS TO MEET
The Meigs Warriors are lo
meet al Middleport field
Saturday at 6 p. m. for the ·
Southwestern Alumni game .

l00k at
.
p layers

MUD &amp;SNOW

RE-CAPS
Passenger
Sizes

2 $2695
frt

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Balanced Free.
Offer Good Thru Nov. 75

11'~

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Best In

Rabbit

Season

OPENS
NOV. 14
Our complete line of hunting supplies and
equipment is here ready for selection. Made
by world·known manufacturers and in a
large range of prices.

MUNITION OF ALL KIN
WESTERN ·REMINGTON

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

LICENSED GUN DEALER

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
110W. MAIN

Live Enterta lnment

A thought lor the day: U.S.
Justice Oliver Wendell
Holmes said, "The IHe of the
law has not been logic ; it has
been ellperience."

POMEROY

We Issue Hunting Ucense
&gt;I

.•

�2- The Dally Sentinel, Mldclleport·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 13, 1975

Wallace fighting lefties

Collective bargaining
vote ·stands
.
lly LEE LEONARD
llJ'I ,.,.... arr lllfarln
COLUMBUS (UPI) • Lesillatton . Httlnl . up
collective bar1alnlng
p-ocediiN!I lor public employeslpplfelltly II dead lor
Ule r•r ~d perhap. lor the
hellnceoltlle lllth -'on of
Ule Ohio General Allembly,
'll'hlch
runs
through
December, 1878. ·
The collectlve ~
bill, IDII&amp;ht by public employe
gro.- far a daelde IIIII
puJhed llpedaJit bird by
maJority Democnta thla
year, liVe I Jut 811p
Wedneldly u tlie Houae
Democrata feD four votel
short of overrldlnl Gov.
J._ A. Rhoclel' veto of tile

ampanlee.
Houee Overrldea Veto
And the dwnber voted 83
to 9 to override Rhodes' veto
of a bill glvlna tile Jeglalat~e
power to approve or In·
validate lltllte agency rules.
1be Smale will not take up
the veto until January, when
It Ia expected to be
overridden,
bemocratlc leaders, In·
eluding the autbor of Ule
collective bargaining
lltjlllltlon, were peulmiltlc
that any qreement can be
reeched on the controverl!ial
bill nnt year In the face of
lining Rlpubllcin oppo!litlon
to the rlgilt of ,public em·
plo,.. to lllrlke.
'01e limited rjght to lltrlke
' •• a key reiture ·~n the
lllfllll'e.
Acllan came u the Holile Democntlc bill and one of
put the fln1IIWW toudlel to the !1181n reuons Rhodes
Ule lt'll 'II'Wkl!w illlllon and
doled liP llhop fOr tha Yllf.

revolution at tiM! ballot box"
By FLOYD H. NORRIS
gaining powers and was 'the
· MONTGOMERY, Ala. against the ''ultraliberal left
only reasonable way to (UP!) - Gov. George C. who led us Into this mess we
ourselves
In,
prevent mass walkouts.
Wallace has begun his fourth find
Rep. Edward J. Or1ett, J). campaign for the presidency, domesticslly and foreign ."
DaytOn, said Ohio has ranked strongly criticizing the left
Wallace thus lought to
Ullrd in the nation In the ·'ll'ing of his own Democratic differentiate hlmaelf from the
number of poblic employe party and ignoring the other nine announced Demo. strikes during the pall Ulree · Republicans.
cratic hopefuls, most of
Wallace did not mention whom have aimed their fire
years despite a ~w on the
books which prolulits such President Focd or the GOP at Ford and blamed Ule
Wednesday In amOWlcing he nation's Ills on two terms of
strikes.
But Assistant House was seeking the Democratic Republican leadership.
The newest ·Candidate
MinoritY. Leader Norman ~­ nomination In 1976.
The Alabama governor hopes to win or finish well In a
MW'dDCk, R.-l'ill~mnat\. SSid
the bill would provoke public called for "a political series of primaries, begin·
·employe strikes In _wholesale
nlng In Massachusetts and
numbers. He sa1d Penn·
Florida, and to aarner blocks
sylvania, which has a similar
of delegates even In states he
ATrEND CONFERENCE
law, has public services In·
Mrs. Joanne Williams, loses, !banks to Ule party's
terrupled and local govern· assistant cashier of The ne'll' rules on proportional
menta bankrupted by em- Farmers Bank and Savings representaUon.
ploye demands.
Co., and Mrs. Maxine Grif·
The Sena!f had voted to lith, cashier of The Pomeroy
override the governor's vetO National Bank attended the Next-of·kin
of the collective baraalnlng
Fall Conference of the Ohio
bill lest month, 20 tO 11.
Group of the National
House members agreed
Association of Bank Women, of veterans fail
unanimously with Senate
Inc., at the Hilton Inn-North,
changes In the bill calling for
In Columbus, on Nov. 8 and 9. to take bonqs
Increased monitoring of fuel
cost surcharges and coal Nearly 100 women officers of
The Ohio Vietnam Veterans
procurement practices by banks throughout the state
·attended.
Bonus Commission has
eiec!ric uUliUes.
reported Sll next-of-kin
As written, the le&amp;lslatlon
survivors
have not applied
graduate
of
Rio
Grande,
was
requires the amount and
standing member of the
for
their
bonus.
an
outstanding
baseball
Increase of any fuel adteam. A native of south.
WEEKEND VISITORS
The deceased veteran did
eastern Ohio, (.1ark has spent player during his under- justment costs to he clet~rly
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Earl
Kelley
of
not
have to have been
the laet25 years In Franklin graduate day~. He was a stated on customers' electric
Lancaster
.
were
weekend
deceased in VIetnam;
teacher, administrator, an bills, ·with notification any
County.
Paul Lyne, President of Rio attorney, and a member of Ume the SW'charge Increases guests of Mr. and Mrs. anytime durins the VIetnam
Herbert Djxon, Enterprise. Era Conflict, AugustS, 1964 to
Grande Colleae from 1954· the Rio Grande College Board by 15 per cent or more in a
They
were joined for Sunday July I, 1973. However, any
1962, coeched the Redman of Trustees. He died in Six-month period.
Public Hearings Required dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Ray veteran, or survivor Is
Balketba11 Team from 1923- Columbus in )947.
Bob Wion attended Rio
The PUCO will be required Pullins, Scott and Usa, and eligible for benefits, if the
1929 and from 1932-1938. Lyne
served
in
Center was dedicated to him Grande College from 1949- mder the blll to hold a public Roger Dixon, a student at ve'teran
Marietta College.
Vietnam anytime from
In 1970. Durin&amp; his presidency 1951. During these years he hearing at least every six
February 28, 1961 to July I,
two new doml torles and an played baseba11, basketbal1 months on the fuel ad1973.
and
football.
~e
was
con.
justment costs of each of the
admlniatratlon building were
IN HOSPITAL
For further information,
sldered an excellent football electric companies In Ohio. If
conatrucled.
Mrs.
Wilma
Stobart,
please contact W. W. Am·
James Marshall attended player. Following his college an Increase ill unjU.Btlfied, the
Rio Grande Co11ege In 1964- work, Bob Wion has had an commieslon wlll be em· Pomeroy, Is a medical berger, Veterans Service
patient at the Holzer Medical Office, 114 Mulberry Avenue,
1965. He then entered the outstandlns career in powered to rescind lt.
Genter.
Her room number ill Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992The p-oposal also contains
service and returned to Rio in coaching.
533.
2820.
Harold Yinaer attended Rio Incentives for electric
1968-1970. In balketba11 he
companies
to
use
coal
more
was a tremendous jumper Grande College In 1938-1939,
· -e;·&amp;:.w~:Wh:~~::::::,S,::8'.::
and an excellent shooter. and was considered an out- efficiently, and requirements p~~~w.~.~-e;
Marshall now live§ in standing center on the for annual reports and audits
o
Redman Football Team. of the uUlities.
Columbus.
House Minority Leader
John Matthews, a 1917 During his college days he
was selected to the Cliarles F. Kurfess, ft.
By Helen and Sue Bottel
~:.
:$
Associated Press Ali-Ohlo Bowlin&amp; Green, made a
Football Team. He has had stamch defense of Rhodes'
an outstandlna career in veto of the bill permlttln&amp; the
Watched Pot Nev\ll' Riles
physical education of which legislature to Invalidate RAP:
he said : "Almost my entire agency rules.
Kurfese said tbe legislation
I'm oot fat, but I have a pot. My ltomach ellcks out unless 1
life has been devoted to
malte a lot of effort to hold it ln. I exerctae,!11111 I try to atand
Physical Education and would encouraae special stralaht, but I sU11 need some helpful hlntl on 'll'haf to do for a
Interest aroupelo peeler lhe _ POT BELLy
athletics."
failure to yield the ~t of
legislature constantly for . ror:
way l!lllO\llns an a~cldenl at
chanaes In rule&amp; set by stale
'!be ato 1111cb 1e11oa bu jut IIMa!t !he mNt elude
4:25p.m. Wednesday on Rt. 7
Hober Medical Center
boards and c~ons. •: m-leeohbe eallre body- IIIII t.bey're jut alMa!! die eulell
north of the Silver Memorial
(Dlscharses, Nov. I!)
"Besides," said Kurfe111, 10 foraet.
·
Bridge. The patrol said the
Kevin Burnette, Harlan "we can already overrule any You'll lind people wltb flat llomae• l!ave !raiDed tbemSkasas car pulled across Rt. C&amp;rmon, Oscar &lt;.1ark, Robert regulatlon or rule on the selva to "sack IIID" ao wellll!al ~bey do II nbellllldeall)',
7 In the path of an auto Coffey, Nellie Conger, Helen books."
\ wbelllerllley're IIIIIDI, ftandlnl, niiiiDI,ISIIal, wbatever.
operated by Ruth Ann Goody, Dennillon, Robert Durham,
"The heU we cen,'' retorted
IIHt exeerdlel bere II "llOIIIIIIJrt a - . " PlllltiiGM
35, Rt. 1, Gallipolis. There Ullle Gheen, Anaela Hale, Rep. Arthur R. Wilkowski, 0.. m•clee tipt allli keep IMm d&amp;JII -II ta11e1 almellao effort
were moderate damage.
Mrs. Richard Hinchman and Toledo, who receDed that tile onceyon're Into lllehablt,llllllfylllllaJwllblt an yo11lfe, we
A slnsle car mishap OC· son, Mary lnsels, Jean Senate had• buried ''under can almlllll pmanlee y111'U never have 1 pat - or for 11!11
curred at 1:15 a. m. on the Jarrell, Lola Jones, Everett heavy lobbying presaure" !Diller, 1 plllllan prvl!lem. -HELEN AND 8llE
+++
Ebenezer-Carmel Rd. six and Keels, Lily Kerr , Ethel legislation which would have
six tenthe miles west of Rt. Knotts, Richard Little, rescinded a Department of DEAR RAP:
I have a girlfriend (Doria) who can't set guyeon her own.
325, where Joseph L. Drema Marcum, Charlotte Natural Resources rule
pennlttlna
the
huntlna
of
I
share
mine wiUI her becauu there are ueually two or three
Gutherie, 51, Rt. 2, VInton, Miller, Anna Mink, Robert
mourning
doves.
•
banging
around. She's areal, but llby.
lost control of hill car which Neal, (.'ynthla Norton, Mason
Kurfese'
plea
sustain
the
I
asked
Mike II he'd take her out when I ctn't 110, and he's
10
ran off tile right -side of the Peck, Sandra Peyton, Mrs.
governor's
veto
fell
before
been
nice
about
it bectuae he r~~~lly Ulre1 her. But IIO'f he's
8
highway striking a tree James Phillips and son
boushl me a ring and wante lo go lltlldy. I'd nther not, for
I
'
Diana Pope, Eric Price, strona tide of legislative Doris' sake _ she Ulree blm 1 lot _ and a1ao becauee I dDn't
stump. Gutherie had vislbl;' Shirley Robinson, Mrs. Paul sentiment to recapture eome want to be tied down. But I don't want to'- Mike either.
inJuries but was not Im- Russ and daughter, Nellie control over the executive
Why ill It a girl hu to aive up all the other boye jllll
mediately treated.
Sayre, Robert Schoffler, !ranch.
because one lhe may Dire beat (but not BEST-beet) wanta. to
Afinal mishap occurred at Gladys Shaver, Mrs. Carl
"They don't have a put a hold on her? -JAN
7:35a.m. on County Road 12, Shockey and daughter, Mrs. poJIIIun's worth of power that DEAR JAN:
five tenthe of a mile east of Roger Smith and son, Donald we haven't Riven Ulem,"·said
Yoa dell'I -If 7111're firm 111rap Try It eta• IDee Mille
Johnson Rd., where David E. Specht, Annita Stevenson , Rep. William G. Batchelder, that he!IIIDI aro-.J wltb uvenlll'lllldlll betllr II!-. IolBI
R-Medlna, In eupport of the aro11111 with a11111dy wbo IIIIPIIIIke blm feel trapped, Gold
Moore, 'rl, Rt.l, Nortbup, lost Miriam Walter.
override. ''Oil what meat laek! - SUE
control or hls car on the wet
( B~, Nov. !%,
pavement. The vehicle lefl
+++
Mr. and Mrs. Michael haUl thil o~r caesar fed that
the highway strildns a fence. Langona , daughter , he hath gro'll'ft 10 mighty?" DEAR JAN:
In other action, the House:
ADd II 7011 c:u'l c•vlllee 111m, well, lbere'a alwaye Dvrfl.
Cheshire.
- Agreed with Senate Sbe'dpnltablyltveto.-pttbatrtac.-HELEN
P.S. D tbe tbetlllldeeea'l cblD J-.1!111be lt'l better tbal
amendmente and sent to
Rhodes a bill provldbc for W1l1 •
permanent hunUna and DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
trapping licen.&amp;eS to penona
Bob and I ehow our feellnge In weird waye. We can't seem
6S and older.
lo say 8l'l)'lhJng 10 111ch other withoul eeven1 cull. They start
out u ldddlns, but then they re~Uy begin to hurt.
-Gave final legislative apFor Instance, he never ccmpllments me_ ju.!t glveslitUe
p-oval, 88to S, to a measure dlgsUire, "You'vebeeneatqonlon pizza ap.ln! ;; when llries
increulng finance charges him. So I, of coune, come bacll wltb a slam too.
on 111!11111oane.
We can lhow we Dire each other when we're mekq out,
Spurs also occur In soft tissues, and it can cause
-Accepted
the
reeignalion
but
we
can never say lt. How come? - SUNK IN DISTRESS
degeneration of tile vertebrae pain in much of the foot. In of Rep. Jamea T. lA!Iren, J). DEAR SUNK:
from underlying arthritis. mOst cases the best approach
OndnniiU, effective Dec. I.
Sam- hal 10 aay II ftnC! 8IDee Boll '11'011'1, ny doa'l
Arthritia apurs are growths for small spurs is to provide Luken wu elected to Cln· •YOU? - HELEN
that develop where damaged proper support to the foot, clnnaU City Councll earlier
+++
or degenerated bone Is Including tile arch, to relieve this month.
NOTE JI'ROM SIJE: llaellmee pyallave alerrtble time
replaced.
the pressure on the ates:pr .... -11011, Let 111111-- 1111 -bart, .... perl!apl
On Ule heel there are two tachment of the tough fascia
J1ii~lj'1~
·
Bob wiD dllqe.
nialn locations. for spun, 011 to tile bone. Heat, Injections
the flal bottom aurface, and and various foot supports are
D~~?nDTNr
at the back 'll'here the achiUea help(ul. The Ideals to remove
M~!GS·MAUN AREA
tendon attaches to the heel the cauae of the irritation. CHESTIII
L. TANI'IIHILL
.• lxtc.ld.
bone.
When all other meuures fall,
ltOIIRT HOI,LICH
There Ia a tight, tough layer it may be neceiBiry to
··
C!lr !dllor
Publllhto aouy oxctpt
of ftbrous sheets or tissue remove the spur, and the Soturdoy
CINCINNATI (UPI) - mUin8 field aoale," IHitel
by The Oh'o VtUt
attached to tile bottom of the technique depends on Its sire. Pub!llhlno com,any, 11
Rule clu1n8• have led to the Brown. "Wilen you relum the
, Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio
heel bone. When you walk or In many cases the heelap~r 45769. eustnns Office Phone olftlll!lve expJooloo In the lootball to the line from
1'011 It tugs on Ita attachment does not need to be rmoved. 99'1-2156. Edltcwlol Phone "2· National Footall League, Ill· where II wu lrlc:bd (If
2157.
to the bone. With strain, and
class postaot paid
For Information on tf Second
urea Cincinnati Benaall beJund the -.,...s Una) wl!en
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
II Ia more likely If the bone osteowtbriUs send 10 cenla
N • !lanai
adYerllslno pneral manqer and head ll1e . . . . . a-d, ,w'rt
Wlrd baa a
tendency
lo for The HuiUI Letter nwnber rtpresentatlve
not U apt 10 IO for the field
Grlffllh Comptny, Inc ., coach Paul Brown.
depneratlon as in arthritia, a 4·10 , Osleoarthrllls : BottlntUI &amp; GtiiOOhtr Plv.,
IIDal
uoflen.
So far lhll .-on lbere
Thll'll Avt .. Now York,
sliver of bone Ia pulled off Deaeneratlon or Wear and 757
"By
Ule' ume token,"
have been 44 more touchdown
N.Y. 10017.
where the lucia Ia attached Tear Arthritis. Address your
SuttscriJttlon retes :
pwa than at lbla pint a added Brown, ''you put !Din
by cerrltr where
to lt. In tile repair proce111 tile letter to Dr. Lamb In, care of Delivered
Vlillblt7S Ctnlt per WMk .
year qo.
on gaq for loachpyramld.m:e bone ap1r Is thla newepaper, P. 0 . Boa IJ Motor Routt whtrt
dDwne
..._.
li reiJbc on
l!ro'll'ft
Ia
a
member
of
the
ltrvlct
~ot
hrllled. Tlte same can 1551, Radio City Station, Ne10 11'11~
~alit It, Ont mon!f!1.1U5.
)'VII'
ldcl!lr.
Tl!at'l
.., lhn
NFL 'a competition com·
lin Ohio and w. lit .. _mlttee that hal been a1teriDI . . mort IDI t ••n ,_..
haDPen ..... the achUiee Yen, NY 10019. Be 111ft to yntmo Yttr
122.00; Six
onlhs, Sli .SO; Thrtt ndN 10 open up tile pme,
"Anather _
.. tile ndl
teridon altachea at the back of enclollt along, stamped, self·
onths. 17 .00 . IEisewhtre
tile heel.
"For one thing the em- that an Incomplete paaa
addreSiled envelope and 50 ,.,oo vttr; 51• months
11 ..50; fhret months, S7.SO.
:rhl pain Is lrnm the cents.
phuU
hu been taken off thrown Into the end Ia
vbsvlptlon prlct Includes
pressure of !he spur iniCI Ule
~nday Tlm...s ... Hnel.
vetoed it.
·" As long as there is •
stalemate, that would be it
lor !hill seesion," said House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
D-New Boston, after it
became clear Democrats
could not muster the required.
60 votes to override the veto.
Sen. Harry Meshel, DYOOn&amp;stown, chief sponsor of
Ule collective bargaining bill,
agreed little could be done
·without help from the
Republicans
and
the
governor, deapite all the work
put In by public employe
groups to obtain acceptable
legilllatlon .
"It looks very negative arid
dlamal for 1876," said Senate
President Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocase k. n . Akrn~ .
"I'm always usreeable to
wmpromlse, but the kind of

compromise you get from the
governor's office and the
~ubllcans ·ill surrender.''
Republlcansl}nlted .
Two of the 59 · House
Demo crats supported
Rhodes' veto while another
was absent. The vote was 56
to 37, with all 35 Republicans
on hand voting to sustain the
veto.
It was the third time this
year the House has failed to
override a veto already o,.er·
turned by the Senate, where
Democrats have the required
20 votes for an override by
Ulcmselves.
Rhodes' veto of the
collective bargaining
legislation was sustained
despite complaints from
spbnsors ll would give public
employes well-deserved bar·

Six former Rio stars will be
added to Hall of Fame
-.! -w.;;:· noce; thl

Barrlnc an -.IIICY, llie

lfoull and lllnlle will 1101
reconvene until January,
aave lor rou line houeekeeplnl
Ql . meellnp
.,._...; __Det. e.
u....

with

Sate..._ lcned
111-.ly
andunl

lo the · · · -

llclllitlm

:::'~~=-oi.Oitlotomare
publlc t1tillllte
elottly monitor electric

Athens sale
'
was best of
four in 19'75
ATHENS - Tht laal
araded feeder cell ale of 1m
In the Athena, Mella, GaW.,
Vinton and Jacbon area laat
Monday at the Athens
Uvt110ek- Yll'd wu the beet
or tile lour conducfe&lt;l.
Thera ""' 163 ateen sold
for an averqe o1 13UI per
hwldrtdwetcht, about four
cenla above the averqe of
the otber three lllu. The
steen averqed 621 pouncla
and broulht $110 per hud.
The price ranae on tile aletn
ran from til per hun·
dnclwetcht to ~.110.
Hellen (IN) IOid lot an
averqe or nuo per hun·
dred'll'elaht at an avera1e
welaht of 421 pounda and
....17 per hud. The helfer
avena• wu alm01t tile arne
as tile other 111111. The price
ranae on the helfen waa 'IS
to f28,10 per hundredwtlaht.

Clendenin house
.

caught on fire
RA&lt;.'INE - The Racine
fire Dept. wae called
Wtdneeday 'II 10:3! p.m. to
Portland to the relklence of
Goldie Clendellin. An • ·
lrleal short C.Uiht the 11ro
atory !tame hcimt on 11rt.
There waa only minor
damale utimaltd at 1110.
Eleven men anawered tile
call.
The Racine E·R ..ued was
called at l:t&amp; p.m. Wed·
DH&lt;!IY for Jll!lel Hlnldey,
Rt. I, Portland, who wu
taken to Holier Medical
Center.

RIO GRANDE - The Third
.,\IUiual . Rio Grande COlleae

Jiall of Fame induction
ceremonies will be held
during halftime of the
Homecomlna basketball
game between Rio Grande
imd Wliberforce
this
Saturday, Nov. IS.
Sixteen former Redman
athletes have been Inducted
Into the Hall of Fame at Rio
·Grande. Tbla year all more
former alan wiD be added.
Inductees Include Dallas E.
Cllrk, Paul R. Lyne, James
R. MarahaU, John H. Mat.
thewa, Robert K. Wion, and
Harold L. Ylnser.
Dallaa Clerlr at~nded Rlo
Grande College In 1950, and
waa a member of Ule 1950
Football team at Rio. Ac·
cording to Coach Christy
Arnold, &lt;.'lark was an out-

-GeneraliOfl Rap

Three injured in
five auto wrecks
Three penons were lnjiD'ed
In !lYe tramc accldenla In·
vatlaated Wednesday by tile
Gallla-Melga P.oet State
Hlchway Patrol.
The flrat occurred at7 a. m:
Wedneeday' on Rt. 7, twolenlhe of a mile south of
Atllena County where an auto
driven by Jamea B. Smith, 19;
Raedlville, struck the rear
end d a car operated by
Robert L. Headley, 18, Rl. I,
Lon&amp; Bottom. Smith was
altchUy injured but not im·
media~ly treated.
Smith wu charged with
failure to atop wltbln the
ueured clear dlalance.
MarOn P. Cremeens, 20,
CoolviDe, wu cited to Meigs
County Court for improper
backlns following an accident
Wednesday on Rl. 7 In
Tuppers Plaine. The patrol
said (.'remeans' · vehicle
backed Into a parked car
O'll'lled by Geneva Tuttle, 31,
of Middleport.
Donald Shggs, 59,
&lt;.'huhlre, was charged with

DR. LAMB ·

Surgery didn't help feet
lly Lawre~ee E. t-b, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Two
rear• qo m:r feet belen to
hll't ao bad I could hardly
walk. I lhoatlbt it wu my
ahoee, ao I bcJucht -ral
pain which didll't help one

' bit,

I went to an orlbcpedla
apeclailat, and he toat Xreys
of my fee~ and I bed alarce
..,... on each heel. The one on
m~ rtchl foot wu extra larae
10 he did IUI'III'Y on II. While
I waa out he ahOt my left foot
with _ . . . . to try to
ellmlule tile aptll' wllhout
llriii'Y·
8laee lhell I biYt llaen In
conetent Jilin In - rtcht
fool, and I .._, beln able
to walk on my rilbt IIMIIInce
tlleopnUon. '11lt•on my
l'llhlloolwu 10 tara• he heel
to tdt Gil part ol the heel
.....,, And my left heel Ia
-~ ..... all ... tllllt.

!'can n11t 111 ID)' lip IDII

•r

with a cane lilt.- 111111
walt very much at 1111 tile
plin Ia alm011 unbearable. I
lake pain pilla off and on 1111
I

the lime.
The doctor eays It's ar·
thriUs In my heels and feet
.becauee now my feet hurl all
over. He eays Ulia happens In
about one out of 10 who have
11111'111')'. He bed me on larae
dOiea of uplrln for a while
which helpe aome, but I doa't
IIIII to lake ao much uplrln.
I've tried all t)'ptll of therapy,
heat, soaking, etc., and
notlllng to help.
What do )'QU think of thil?
Should I conault· another
doclor?

DEAR READER - It
never hurta to aet a lfCQild
aplnlon. AN your doclor to
eend :rou to the nearest
ll'llvenlly medictl center for
a CGII!Plele review of your
ctee.

The treatment ol heelapurs
dllfere areatiy' dependlns on
their locat.lon, llie and the
..,...._. theyca•. A..la Ua • amaU, boaer
pynmld with tile tlf pointed
dtn!'mrll'd. It develops llfhen
bone Is deatroyed or damaged
and replaCed by new bOne.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thlll'Sday, Nov.l3, 1975

·nmiir!
.

I'.

:Defense is key to Bucks success

Speaklnl! from hill wheel
chair to reporters and 300

enthualastlc supporters at a
Montaomery mQtel, Walla~
angrily lnaillted his bealth
was excellent and esld he wu
tired of llslenlng to quesll01111
about it.
·He touched only briefly on
.foreign policy, promising to
support a strons national
defen~. and concentrated
most of his speech on the
problems facing ll)lddle-claas
Americans, whom · he
promised to lead to victory in
November.
"I want to say to the
chagrin and maybe em·
barrassment of much of the
national presa that my health
is excellent and I am able to
campaign activ~ly," he said.
WallaCf), who has been
paralyzed from the waist
down since he Willi shot In 1972
while campaigning In
lliBO'Iand for the Democratic
presidential nomination, said
he would only consider
submitting to an Independent
medical examination if all
other candidates did 10. HJa
supporters booed the reporter
who asked about auch ar.
examination .

u

197! HIGH SCHOOl
F=OOTBALL STANDINGS
d
;, 1 )1nc1u es games Ill rough Nov .
8
~ OVERALL STANDINGS)

"
,

,, Team
Al e.:ander
., Ironton
N Galtia
Wel lston
l ' Pl . Pleas .
war . Loca l
K . Creek
.; Eastern
Logan
Miller
: Trimb le
r- Wah am a
Jack son
' G~llipolls
' Meigs
1

w
9 ..
9
7
7
7
7
6
6
6

5
5
5
5
5
5

p . OP
208 45
143 75
234 90
184 101
1611 76
139 6J
284 107
190 150
164 160
170 127
184 166
109 147 .
246 111
196 131
173 117
0 138 105
0122132
0 66 145
o 90 242
o 91 166
1 as 217
0 113 246
0 110 175
0 39 223
2 44 239
all t eam s

L. T
1 0
1 0
2 o
J o
J o
3 0
2 1
J l
4 0
J 2
4 1
4 1
5 o
5 0
5 o

At h.ens

5 5

Nes
I Yor k

4 5

••

Warre n Loca l
A thens
Nels York
Vi nto n County

139
138
122
113

o

~
,.,
-:
'3

.
11

1

.,
·

TRI·VALLEY
&lt; Finau
W L T

P OP

Alexa nder
" I 0 110 25
Nels -York
4 I 0 f06 45
War . Local
4 I 0 80 23
Belpre
1 3 I 47 93
Vinton Ca .
1 4 0 57 106
Fed . Hocki n g 0 4 I IB 126
OFFENSIVELY
Team
P t s, A11g
28
Kyger Creek
31.6
North Gal li a
234 26 .0
Jackson
246 24 .6
A le)(an de'r
208 20 .8
Gallipolis
196 19.6
Eastern
190 19.0
Wellston
18d 18.4
Trimbl e
18d 18. d
Meigs ·
173 17 .3
Miller
170 17 .0
Logan
164 16 ,d
Pt . Pl easant
· 164 16 .4
Ironton
143 1~ 1

1
4

1
J 97

Preston , KC
13
0 78
L ucas , KC
7
31 76
Do r sey , Mill 12
o 72
Peoples . We ll 10
16 76
Peppers , l
II
0 66
Loga n . NG
9
" 58
SEOAL SCORING
(Final)
Name, T 1 TO PAT Pts
Davis , J
15
7: 98
Peppers , L
7
o .:12
Grey , Well
7
o 42
Wilson , G
6
6 .t2
Peoples , we n 5
9 39
Qual l s, M
5
4 34
Conroy , J
4
a J2
Pennell , A
5
o 30
Kriebel , 1
5
o 30
Chonko , A
4
o 24
Howard , 1
4
o 2-4
Davidson. L
a o 2.1
Morrow , J
3
6 24

' By JACK SAUNDERS
: UPI Sporll Writer
, NEW YORK (UPI)- Tom
·Seaver 's third Cy Young
Award meant "something
special" to him, the New
,York Meta pitcher said
Wednesday.
·' "Each one of the Cy Yotmg
,Awards means . something
"'llld nothing compares to
winning the first ttme,"
·'Seaver said at a news con·
.ference, "but Ibis one means
'something special to me, too.
I used to watch Sandy Koufax
from the bleachers 'll'hile I
·was gro'll'lng up. I knew how
many Urnes Koulax had won

'h."

ON YOUR
. GAS BILL WHEN YOU

COOL &amp; HE~T YOUR
HOME WITH THE
"

REVOWriONARY

EUORIC/GAS
"'
.._, COOLING-HEATING UNIT.
HEATS
WITH
GASI
.
.

"'

COOLS WITH ELECTRICITY I

The cumulative T¥
audience for the aeven1Janle
aeries was estimated at

393,1i30,IJOO-..lhe hlghelt e\'W
ior a World Seriea.

Rule changes favor offens~

ernplw••

......... ......._ .....,

the Bucks' victories over the
Boston Celtics and the
Washington Bullets as
Milwaukee launched its
winning streak.
"This team plays both ends
of the court,'' Qlstello said
Wednesday night as the
Bucks evened their record at

performance with 14 points
and IS rebounds.
Doug Collins led the 76ers
with 24 points, while forward
George McGinnis sat out the
game with a bruised right
heel.
In
other
National
Basketball Association
5-!i.
games Wednesday night ,
"We got off to a bad start Buffalo beat HoustOn 93-90,
because of Injuries to Bob Atlanta edged Detroit 109-106,
Dandridge and Jim Price ," Los Angeles defeated New
Costello said .
' Orleans 116-100 and Kansas
Dandridge, a slender for - City dumped Seattle, 107-92.
ward, scored 29. points ' In the American BaskethaU
against the 76ers and Price Association, Utah routed New
added 14.
York ·134-114, San Antonio
Elmore Smith, who came In clobbered Virginia 144·112
the trade for Abdui.Jabbar, · and Kentucky beat St. Louis,
turned In another strong . ~1.

Avg

14 .4
10 .6
9.8

9.7

8.7
8.4

B.O
7.6
6.6
6.d
Avg
11.0

6.0
6.0
6.0
5.6
4.9
4.6
4.3
43
3:4
J.4
· 3.4
34
·

Bench surgery
slated Monday
through much of the 1975
season after collidina with
San Francisco's Gary
Matthews in a game here
April 22. That collision
jammed Bench's shoulder
and damaged cartilage.
The operation will remove
some cartilage from the
acromlo·davlcular Joint on
Ule top of the lhoulder and
remove a smaU section of
bone from the collar bone.
II will ·be the second
operation in less Ulan three
years for the power-billing
and accurate-throwing
catcher.
In December, 1972, Bench
underwent lung SID'gery lor
removal of a benign lesion.
"Sometimes when I think
back io that," said Bench, "I
realize just how lucky I am to
be able to play."
Bench Indicated last month
. he would probagly have suraery 11000 on hill aching left
shoulder. He said Just before
the World Series he didn't
Intend to play next season

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - The
shoulder surgery scheduled
Monday for Cincinnati Reds
catcher Joh101y Bench "ill not
considered dangerous,''
according to club officials
who have talked to the
surgeon.
And,
Dr.
Donald
O'Donoghue; who w111 per·
form the operation In
Oklahoma City, Okla .,
figures Bench will be fully
recovered and "should have
oo problem In being ready for
the start of aprlng training"
In late February.
The Reds disclosed iste
Wednesday Ulat their '!I·
year... ld slugging star would
undergo surgery on his left
shoulder Monday to repair
damage from an early season
collision at home plate.
"The operation is not
consldered dangerous," said
a club official, "especially
since It does not lnwlve his
throwing arm. It's to be a
technical operation but not a
serious one.''
'
Bench played wiUI pain

Nolan' e'a rns
Hutch Award
DAYTON, Ohio ( UPI) Gary Nolan,
15-game
winner for the world
champion Cincinnati Reds
after being sidelined two and
a baH years with a shoulder
problem, was named today as
1975 winner of baseball's
Hutch Award.
The Cincinnati righthander
Is the lith winner of the
award, named In memory of
former maJor leaaue pitcher
and manager Fred Hutchlnaon, who died of cancer In
1964.
Nolan edged Boston Red
Sox catcher Carlton Fillk and
New York Mets pitcher Tom
Seaver In the voting by major
league broadcasters and
writers who support the
proJect.
The honor is voted to a
player who overcomes some
element of adversity and
"exemplifies the fi&amp;htlng
spirit, competitive desire and
character" of Hutchinson.
Announcement of the vote
was made by Ritter Collell,
sports editor of the Dayton
Journal
Herald
and
secretary-treasurer of the
Hutch Fund, '!be group also
makes available an annual
f2,0it0 scholarship arant to a
medical researcller in cancer
work.
Nolan posted a 1:;.9 record
with a 3.16 era and pitched 200

a

lmings for the Reds.
"I never knew Fred HUI·
chinson, but from the many
. Ullngs I've heard of him from
his days as manager of the
Reds, I feel very bonored,''
Nolen said. "To be able to
help the club win the
championship fulfiUed my
greatest comeback hopes."

B
2

,4,,,,®

.

Speeloqfi olfenae, Bmm
and hil Ben1a11 face a
productln team bere
Monday nJgll iD the lluiiU
IIlla.
"'Die (lllnlall') dlfaw
hu a ...... ClG111iJ11," IIIII
Brown. , , _ 11'17' ran liD
you muldn'l belieft. O.J.

l B. I
21.1
22 .3
23 .9
24 .6
26 .9

The ·former Dodger leftbander and Seaver are the
only pitchers to win Ule Cy
Young three times; Seaver
won his In 1969 and 1973, while
the Dodger Hall of Farner
won In 1963, 1965 and 1961&gt;-all
when only one award was
given, Instead of the present
award for each league.
"But it's got to be' a big
disappointment to Randy
Jones," said the B-foot·l, 19S:
pound Seaver after pulllna 98
points to 80 for the San Diego
Padres pitcher, drawing 15
first place votes to Jones'
seven. "If he had won I could
have said he deserved it. He
pitched awfully well."

J~~~ 19°/o

' ·•

pnUJ deep."

~~ - ~

17.5

·SeiJver says third Cy Young
Award .was 'something special'

Oiler Thomas Bentsen, 2t.
St. Joseph, Mich. ·
·
Spetlal mal~lenlinct
Joseph W. Mazes, 59,
Ashland, Wis.
•
Wiper Gordon MacCiellan,
30, Clearwater. Fla.

'
lrought hecll to tile liDe ill
ecrlmmal!linlteadoflhell.
Thil malrel ~ 111ft 8pl to
rtllr a fourth dDWD . . .. lalllead of Iaine fllr a laid ga.l,
btcl... lf :rou mila, lbe atber
team adD II dol!l t11ere

13.9
13.6
11. 3
13 .8

Wah am a
109 10.9
Hannan Tri) ce
90 10.0
Sout h ern
91
9. 1
Be lpr e
85
8.5
Southwestern
66
8.3
red . Hocki ng
44
4.4
Sy mm es Val ley
40
4.0
'Navc rty
39
3 .9
DEFENSIVELY
Team
Ph Avg
A lexand er
45
4.5
Warren Loca l
63
6. 3
Ir o nto n
75
7.5
Pt. Pl easa nt
76
7.6
N
orth allia
90 10.0
~ehltston
101 10 . 1
t ens
105 10 .5
Meigs
117 11.7
Kyger Creek
107 119
M 1' l l
127 12.7
er
WGa ll ipo li s
131 13 .1
ahama
1d 7 14.7
N 1 y k
e s or
132 14 .7
150 , 5.0
Eastern
Logan
160 16.0
Soulhern
166 16 6
r · bl
16

S'thwest.
3 5
:. Han . Tr ace
3 6
.. South er n
3 7
B elpre
2 7
" Vinton Co .
2 8
~ S. Val lev.
1 9
'"'
.. vvaverly
1 9
· Fed . Hocki ng
a
"
Fina l ·r ecords tor
J ~~'kso~
1 7~
, except lronlon, which ha s Symmes Va ll ey
17 5
Qualified lor the playoff s.
·southwestern
145
SEOAL STANDINGS
Be lpr e
217
{ Final)
Waver l y
223
Team
W . L. T
Ft . OP Fed . Hocking
239
1
Ironton
7 0 0 122 49 Vinton countv
2d6
Jackson
4 3 0 176 11 3 Hannan Tr ace
242
' logan
4 3 0 124 140
OVERALL SCORING
At hen s
4 3 0 11 9 67 Nam e, T
TO PAT Pt s
We ll ston
4 J 0 I OJ 93 Dav is, J
22
10 142
Meigs
3 4 0 95 95 Gilders , Ale,; 13
19 106
Gallipolis
2 5 0 100 125 Sullivan , N -Y ld
4 88
Waver l y
0 7 0 13 170 Echslenkamper , Trim

CLEVELAND UPI - Here
Is !he tlsl of crewmen lost In
the sinking of !he ore carrier
Edmund Fitzgerald on Lake
Superior Monday night:
Capt. Ernest McSorley, 63,
Toledo, Ohio
Chief Engineer George
Hotl, 60, Cabot, Pa.
2nd assistant Thomas E.
Edwards, 50, Oregon, Ohio
2nd assistant Russell
Haskell, 40, Millbury, Ohio
3rd assls tant Oliver
Champeau, 41, Milwaukee.
First male John H. Me·
earthy, 62, Bay Vlltsge, Ohio
Second mate James Prall,
.u, Lakewood, Ohio
Th,lrd mate Michael E.
Armagost, 37, Iron River,
Wis.
Wheelman John ,o. Sim·
mons, 60. Ashland, Wis.
Wheelman Eugene W.
O'Brien, 50, Toledo, C»&gt;lo
Wheelman
John
J.
Povlach, l9, Bradenton, Fla.
A.B. maintenance Thomas
D. Borgeson, 41 , Duluth.
Minn.
Watchman Ransom E.
Cundy, 53, Superior, Wis.
Watchman William J.
Spengler, S'l, Toledo, Ohio
Watchman Carl A. Peckol,
20, Aslabula, Ohio
Deck hand Mark A.
Thomas. 21, ' Richmond
Heights, Ohio
Deck hand Paul M. Rtlppa,
22, Ashtabula, Ohio
Deck hand · Bruce L.
Hudson, 22, Nortn Olmsted.
C»&gt;lo
:
Cadet-deck David E. Weiss,
22. Agoura. Calif.
'
Steward Robert C. Raf.
ferty, 62, Toledo, C»&gt;lo
2nd cook Allen G. Kalmon,
43, Washburn, Wis.
Porter Frederick
J.
Beelcher, 56, Superior, Wis.
Porter Nolan F. Church. 55,
Stiver Bay, Minn.
•
tst· assistant EdwarCI
Blndon, 47, Fairport Harbor&gt;,
C»&gt;io
•
Oiler Blane H. Wilhelm, s£,
Moquah, Wis.
·•
Oiler RalPh G. Walton, s(

IUI'Vt)'.

Grid stats.

•

Team

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
aevenUI game of the World
Sertu between the Onclnnatl
Reds and BOlton Red Soz waa
watched by more people than
any other sportlns event In
hllllory, it was lllli10W!Ced
Wednesday by NBCTV.
Accordlnc to the NeUien
TV Index, the game, wu 1et11
In 40,580,000 homes and wis
watched by an eatlmattd
75,930,000 people.
No
lelevllled event of any ldrid
baa ever been Sf'lll In m(l,'e
homes , accordins to tl!e

Pro Basketball Roundup
United Press In·
ternatlonal
The Milwaukee Bucks used
to consist ot Kareem Abdul·
Jabbar and four others.
Having traded the team's
only star, the Bucks now
must put five others on the
floor.
But Wednesday the Bucks
tr~unced the Philadelphia
76ers for the second straight
night 103-M, extendins their
winning streak to five.
"The defense was the key,"
Milwaukee Coach Larry
t.1lstello said. "We played
good defense agalnat the
76ers back to back."
Defense was also the key In

- r-----------------~ By

Lost crew

Fremont, Ohio

Today's

~owns
1

•

JYJ''D T
w .L' L

'
· BEREA, Ohio (UPI, -The
Cleveland Browns aave a
couple or former World Fool·
ball Leaaue playera tryouts
Wednesday, but oo decislon
was made about keeping
defensive back Harold
Phillips and linebacker Dick
Palmer.
Also Wednesday, two
former Browns got Jobs In the
NFL. Wide receiver Frank
Pitts, cut by Oaltland earlier
In the season, signed 'with the
Atlanta . Falcons and tackle
Olris Morrill signed with the
New Orleans Sa Inti. '
Meanwhile, Browns Thorn
Darden and Pete Adamswho both u"l'erwent suraery
last August and are on the

PLAYING NITEL Y

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NO FUMES IN YOUR HOME
NO FLAME IN YOUR HOME

-INSTALLED OUTDOORS~

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
PH. 9~,·5321

TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY

GEO. HALL
Tt,! ES.· THURS.

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

8:30-1:00

The MEIGS

with the same sort of pain.
"I wouldn't go through It
again,'' said Bench. "If it
aches like it did this year, I
_p-obably would take as long
as needed to get It cured."
He said It was his
"emotions" and "desire to
play for a first place team"
that kept him In the lineup
late in the season and he let It
be known he was not about to
sit out the playoffs and World
Series just because of the
pain.
Despite the achln&amp; shoulder
which was believed to have
affected his swing, Bench still
managed to hit .283 and lead
the club In home runs with 28
this past season .
Although only 1:1, Bench
already ill considered Hall of
Fame material because of
what he's already ac·
compllshed with Ule bat and
glove.
He Is one of only five
National Leaguers . to have
won Ulree RBI cham·
pionships, Joining the com·
pany of Rogers Hornsby,
Johnny Mlze, Joe Medwick
and Hank Aaron.
The two-time National
League Most Valuable Player
award winner also belted a
league-leading 45 homers In
1970 and 40 In 1972.
Bench also ill considered
the finest defensive catcher
In the major leagues because
of a great &amp;love hand and hill
fast and accurate throws to
second.
Considered somewhat of a
celelrlty off the field, Bench
made news earlier !hill year
when he ended his bachelorhood and married model
Vickie Chesser after a short,
whirlwind courtship.

Braves 93, Rockets 90
Bob McAdoo returned to
action after missing one
game with a leg Injury,
scoring 33 points to carry
Buffalo past Houston and
giving the Braves a half·
game lead over Boston in the
Atlantic Division . Cal
Murphy scored '!/ to lead the
Rockets.
Hawks 109, Deirolt 106
Tom Van Arsdale, finishing
with 20 points, hit a 22-jump
shot with 28 secoqds left to
give Atlanta a 109-106 lead
and then grabbed a crucial
rebound to guarantee the
victory. Bob Lanier had 30
points for Detroit.
Kings 107, SuperSonics 92
Scott Wedman scored 28'
points as Kansas City handed
Seattle its seventllloss in nine
games. Jimmy Walker added
21 points to the Kings' total
while Fred Brown was high
scorer for the Sonlcs with 19.
Laten 116, Jazz 100
Abdui-Jabbar scored 33
points, grabbed 16 rebounds
and blocked eight shots to
make It easy for Los Angeles
in their fifth home win.
Reserve forward Nate
Williams led New Orleans
wiUI 24.
Stan 134, Nets 114
Utah guards Ron Boone
and John Roche combined for
63 points to lead the Stars to
an easy victory over New
York. Boone fmished with 35
points and Roche had 28.
Julius Erving led the Nets
with 30 points.
Spurs 114, Squires 112
George Gervln scored 26
points In leading San An·
tonio's romp over Virginia.
Ticky Burden scored 27.
points for Ule Squires, who
lost their loth game in 11
starts.
Colonels 98, Spirits 81
Bird Averitt, replacing in·
jured Ted McClain, scored 31
points to lead the Colonels to
their sixth straight victory.
Maurice Lucas scored '!/ to
lead St. Louis, playing
without Marvin Barnes, who
was In Providence, R.I., on a .
civil assault case against him
dating from his college days.

Reds get to

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK ( UPI) - The next question is obvious. Will the
ABA be the next league to fold ?
Dave DeBusschere says no, but keep in mind he's a friendly
witness. He 's the ABA commissioner. Whadd'ya expect him to
say, the whole league is gonna fall apart • Commissioners don't
talk that way.
Other people do , though, and what many of Ulem are sa yin&amp;
is that the ABA's troubles aren't necessarily over simply
because San Diego and Baltimore both found they couldn't
hack it anymore and went out of business inside the past Ulree
weeks.
The ABA is down to eight teams now. It could be reduced to
six before long because the Spirits of St. Louis and Virginia
Squires are playing their home games virtually In private.
They're drawing, as the sa)ling goes, flies, and when you're
paying some of your players like Marvin Barnes $300,000,
Maurice Lucas $200,000 and Don Chaney also $200,0it0, Ule way
St. Louis is, and people aren 'I even sho'll'lng up to see them, the
only course left to you suddenly grows clearer and clearer.
Remember the WFL? In case you 've forgotten, it used to be
a football league and had trouble drawing people also. Now It's
oply a memory.
"We're not like the WFL," says Dave DeBusschere. "We
have strong franchises. Naturally, I can't be excited with the
position the league is In now compared with Ule one It was In
last August, but I think we've come out of all this with a
positive attitude. We can have eight of the best teams In
basketball ."
·
That 's nice optimistic talk, but It doesn't solve the serious
problems In St. Louis and Virginia.
Last Friday, Harry Weltman, president of the St. Louis club
which lost more than a million dollars last year, said he was
considering moving the learn to Cincinnati because It wasn't
drawing at home. The amowu:ement shook up St. Louis
basketball fans so much, 1,141 of them broke down the doors to
see the Spirits beat San Diego In the losers' final game ewr.
Bill Musselman, wbo was tile San Diego coach as late as two
days ago but Is among Ule tmemployed today, atlllis In a state
of shock over Ule way the club suddenly ceased operations
Tuesday. Nobody will he Ulat shocked, though, if eomewhere
along the line St. Louill and VIrginia pull out.
Should that happen, it might not be lona before tile ABA and
NBA are forced to merge despite the vigorous objection of the
NBA players, who have had a court Injunction for' some time
now preventing the two leagues from consolidating.
"I think the honeymoon In sports Is over," says Weltman.
"The future of professional baskethsll could weD be in the
handB of the players themselves. They will have to see that a
merger is In the best Interests of the sport."
Hurry Weltman Is absolutely right Ulere, but In this day and
age of frantic business, business, business, whoever bothers
his hend thinking about such a thing as sport? Only the poor
fan , who keeps being bled more and more for a ticket.
Those playen opposed to any merger between the ABA and
NBA contend it would restrict Ulelr bargaining power severe.
ly.
Now isn't that dreadful! Instead of $200,000 a seuon, 10111e of
them would have to find some way to make ends meet on only
Sl50,0it0, Worse yet, if any more of these basketbaU teams fold,
some players might even have to go out and work for a living.
I wonder how many of them cbuld ftnd.~Job .

Pittsburgh

Pirates early

CINCINNATI ( UPI) - The
world champion Cincinnati
Reds announced today they
will open their 1976 sprina
training schedule against
Pittsburgh, the team the
Reds beat to win Ule National
Leaaue championship.
The Reds will play the
eastern division champ
Pirates In Bradenton, Fla.,
March 13 and meet again the
llextdaylntheopeninggame
tt AI Lopez Field in Tampa,
Jle Reds' spring training
home.
Reds pitchers and catchers
are to report to Tampa Feb.
1:1, with the first workout the
next day. The rest of the
club's Injured reserve tilt- squad reports March 3 and
worked out Wednesday In starts work the next day.
All early workouts will be
sweat clothes with their
at
the "Redsland " complex in
leanunates.
Browns quarterback Mike Tampa until the start of the
Phlpp8, who wiD start against 2S-game exhibition schedule,
the Raiders In Oakland when the club will move to
&amp;!nday, said Cleveland, now Lopez Field.
The Reds have been
lh'l, ill about to salvage a
training
In Tampa slnce' l931,
moment of &amp;lory from an
except
for
a period during
otherwise Inglorious season .
"This is the upset special,'' World War II when travel
Phlpp8 said. "Thill will be the was restricted and prehighlight of the eesson. We 'II season workouts were at
Bloomington, Ind .
save face somehow." .

WARRIORS TO MEET
The Meigs Warriors are lo
meet al Middleport field
Saturday at 6 p. m. for the ·
Southwestern Alumni game .

l00k at
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p layers

MUD &amp;SNOW

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Passenger
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NOV. 14
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MUNITION OF ALL KIN
WESTERN ·REMINGTON

SHOTGUNS &amp;RIFLES
Remington - Winchester - Ithaca
Harrison &amp; Richardson Mossberg- Browning Gun Cleaning
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A thought lor the day: U.S.
Justice Oliver Wendell
Holmes said, "The IHe of the
law has not been logic ; it has
been ellperience."

POMEROY

We Issue Hunting Ucense
&gt;I

.•

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'lbursday, Nov .13, 1975

f - 1'lw! Daily Senli~l . Middlcport-P'""',.."' . 11., 'I11Ur:;&lt;IHv, Nuv . 1:1. 1975

Auxiliary donates.

Michigan may ·be tougher--Blackman
Ten Football Roundup
CHICAGO I UP I) - - Illinois
Coach Bob Blackman was
awed by Ohio SLBte last week
1n his team's 40.3 defeat . But
be says Michigan, his team's
foe this saturday, may be
eve n better tha n the
Buckeyes.
"Statistics will show you
just how fine a team Ohio
State is," Blackman said
Wednesday. "But a closer
look will show you that
Michiga n actually leads tbc
Buckeyes
in
several
ca tegories.
' 'As awesome as Oh io
Slate's offen~ivP tP~ro i ~ .
J~g

.
.,. . .
.

"'- ;!!',/• ~.

.

1,\ .1,;.""'

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preparation for its game at
Purdue, where the Hawkeye&amp;
haven't won since 1956 . . H
they win saturday, it will give
them a three-game winning
streak for the first time since

to December party " i

saturday ."
Northwestern would be ,
happy with just a one-game ,
winning streak. Coach JOhn ;
Pont said his No. 1 quar· •
terback, Randy Dean, has :
"lost
littie bit of COil· ,
1964.
them ."
Iowa
Coach
Bob
Commings
lidence"
during
the Wildcats'
Blackman may be right,
said
the
Boilennakers
are
four-game
losing
streak but ,
but Michigan seems equally
much
like
the
Hawkeyes
this
he
will
still
st.Brt
Saturday
wary of the lllinl .
year.
against Michigan State.
•
Michiga n Coach Bo tunnel."
"Purdue is having a poor
"Randy is only a junior and
Schembechler, guarding
Schembechler learned that
against the possibility his light end George Pryzgodski, year recordwise," he said. the worst thing I could do for •
team will be looking past who has missed the last three "But they have excellent the young man would be to;
Dlinois to its showdown with games with an infected leg, personnel. In the same area, I bench him ," Pont said. "That~
Ohio SLBte a week later, returned to practice and think we're much better than would create a situation with•
showed the Wolverines one should be ready by saturday . our record indicates. .a lack of confidence that ,
brief film Wednesday to cure
At Iowa aty, Iowa worked Hopefully, we can show that might never be overcome.";
However, he said he has'
out in winter~ike weather in
"all the confidence in tbc"
world" in No. 2 quarterbac)t
KimGirkins and he would not'
be afraid to use him, too. "

actually is the Big
Ten's No. lteam statistically,
and the same is true on
defense. Our team will ha ve
w play an errorless game if
we have any hopes of beating
Mkhi~an

them.
It was a movie of last
year's . Michigan-Illinois
game, which the Wolves won
14-6.
However, Schernbechler
appeared conlidenl.
" I think we have come a
long way," he said. uwe can
see the.light at the end of the

a

'

RICHARD COLE, MEIGS Marauder
TIM COATS, SOPHOMORE fullback for
senior wingback . He Is the son of Mr. and lhe Meigs Marauders. He is five feet eight
Mrs. Richard Cole, Rl. 2, Pomeroy. He is rive tnche:; tall and weighs 130 pounds. He is the
feel 10 Inches !all and weighs 132 pounds. son of Mrs. Barbara James, Nye Ave.,
Pomeroy .

COLUMBUS iUPl) Three new champions were
crowned today in the United
Press International Ohio
High School Board of Coaches
football ratings.
Lakewood St. Edward in
aass AM, Wyoming in aass
M and Canal Winchester in
aass A, all with 10-0 records,
are the new mythical state
champions. It was the first
titles for each.
St. Edward unseated
defending champion Cincinnati Moeller in the big
school voting, although tbe
Crusaders ran their regular
season winning streak to 32
straight. Moeller finished
second to St. Ed, 303 point.'! to
288.

GEORGE GUM, MEIGS MARAUDER
sophomore quarterback. George Is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. George Gum, Sr., Rt. 4,
Pomeroy . He Is 6 feet tall and weighs ·150
pounds.

JIM
ROSENBAUM,
MEIGS
MARAUDER sophomore fullback . Jim .
stands five feet eight inches taU and weighs
133 pounds. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Rosenbaum, Wright Street,
Pomeroy.

Gallia 's Kyger Creek girls
in Ohio's first regional meet
COLUMBUS

(U PI I

Pairings for lhls weekend 's
Ohio

high

sch ool

r eglonel

gi rl s volleyba ll tournem ents :

CLASS A

At Dayton

Runls 12 ·1 vs . Frankforl

Adeno 16·0.
. Tipp City Be th el 10

V$

Sl.

Academy 12 • -

Thornvil le Sheri dan u 1 vs .

Deyton Kiser 9-S

At Bowli ng Green
Archbo ld
15· 1
vs .
Spr ingfield Nor thwe stern 16·
0.
Pemberville Eastwood 14-2
vs . Mansfiel d Ontario 20 -1.

At Midpark
Lakeside Danbury 12·1 vs . Akron 51. Vlnceni ·St. Mary 9·

Bern•rd 8·8.
At Oberlin

Massillon Tvstaw 16·2 vs .

Colu m biana Crest.., j ew lJ .J.
BUcyrus Wy nford 12-.tl vs .

2.

Je romnvll le t+llls da le 13 -2.

Fal lS 9·3.

At Bowllrit Gree n
Montpelier 16 -0 "' · Kal ida

12-J
Minster
t2 1'

Ind ian Valley North IS 1 \IS .
Kygfr Creek 12 -.tl .
West Jefferson 11 J vs .
Newa rk ColMollc 11 0.

CLASS AA

At Dayton
Cincin nati M c N icho las 1.4 1
vs . Cincinnati
Ur sul ine

Ober lin

14-0 vs . Ol m sted

At Ott er b ei n

West

Musklngum

B-7 vs .

aeM ter 11 o.

21·0 vs . Mil ler City

Af Olttrb eJ n

Middletown 15·0 vs . Cln .
c in natl Oak Hills 1~ . 0 .
At Otterbein
H ill iard IB · l vs . Dayton
Weyne 11 .3.
Marietlll 15·1 vs . Co lumbus
Wes t 15. 1.
At Midpark
Canton Glen Oak 1.4 .1 vs .
Nordo n itt 8.8.
Stow 16 o v s. Willoughby
South 13·0.
Winn ers of th e 16 reglona ls
advance to the f irs t girls state
vo ll ey ball tournam ent Nov .
22 at Oner bein Co ll ege . ·

Wei sville 12 -2 vs . H eat h 11 ·

J.

CLASS AAA

At Bow li nt Green
Toledo Sta rt 21 -1

vs .

Clevelan d Rhod ts 15 -1.

Lorain Se nior
Celina 15·6,

13 -3 vs .

At D1yton
Ke!lertno Falrrnont Easl
15· 1 vs . Clncln ne tl Se ton 14·5.

Shock Absorber
Light recoil is
enough reason to
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to be sure you get your money's worth:
• Available in 12, 16, 20, 28, and 410 gauges. Magnums
and lightweights also available.
• Solid steel receiver for e~ tra strength.
• DuPont scratch resistant RK -Wwood finish.
• Smooth "vibra·honed" metal finish for beautilul blueing
and smoother operation.
• Dependable gas operation system reduces
recoil sensation.
·
• Distinctive, secure grip checkering, and attractive
white-line spacers.
• Interchangeable b·arrels within gauge.
GREAT GUN S DESERVE GRfAl AM MU NITION , WE MAK E 80TH ,

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8-5:30 Min. thru Thurs.

8-8:30 FRI. &amp; SAT.
MASON, WEST VIRGINIA

00

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~C)KETBALL

Wyoming, won iii a threeteam battle with Akron St.
Vincent, the defendirig AA
champion, and Cleveland
Holy Name.
Wyoming received 184
points, compared with 174 for
St. Vincent and 169 for Holy
Name.
. Wyoming and Holy Name
(8-0) both qualified for this
weekend's st.Bte high school
playoffs's, but St. Vincent,
which finished 9-1, failed to
make it.
Winchester, nmnerup to
Middletown Fenwick last
year and the Cll\ss A leader
since the second week ~ the

3
~

4 .429
1 .364

21 ~

31l

. · Wednesdty'5 Re5Uits
Allan Ia 109 De tro it 106
Milwaukee 107 Phil ll dCIPh la 84
Buffalo 93 Houston 80
Kansas City 107 Seattle 97
Los Ange les 11 6 New Orleans

100

Tl1ursday •s Games
Houston at New York
Boston at washington
Chicago at Golden Stalte
Seallle at Phoen ix

1
•,

wummg run for Cincinnati.
Federal agents were •
assigned to guard Barnett,'·
his wife and their ·2-year-old .
daughter after the umpire
received an anonymous
threat on his and biB family's
lives.
Kubek and Gowdy were •
blamed by Barnett for "not ·
only calling the game, but
trying to interpret" the BC•
lion. The announcers told a
nationwide television
audience they disagreed with
his dectsion and "ran and
reran" videotape of the play,
he says.
•
"They said they disagreed
with the call tlme and tlme
again," Barnett said. "I
totally blame Curt Gowdy
and Tony Kubek for all the
problems I've had." ·
Kuhek and Gowdy said
later during NBC coverage of
the Series they had sent an
to Barnett.
For the Lowest

-

Tire Prices
In the Area

s

CLASS A

Team
Po ints
l . Can . Win e. (91 (lQ .Q)
168
7. New . Ca th , (2) ( 10·0l
159
3. Loudonvill e ( I ) (10 .0} 123
4. Burton Ber k . (2 ) (9·0 l 89

s. carey\2119·11

Ironton Is another of the AA
playoff teams, while the
other, Oregon Cardinal
Stritch (7-3), finished tied for
13th In the ftnal raUngs.
COLUMBUS (UP II - The
f; nol -United Pr ess In·
te rna tioM I Ohio High Sd1 ool

Board oJ coaches Joolbal l
r at ings with f irs t pla ce vo tes
and won ·losl reco rds in
parenl heses:
CLASS AAA
Team
Points
1. Lakewood St. Ed . l\31 110.
303
01
2. Ci n. Moell er 1101 (\O .OJ286
3. F;nd la y 161I10-01
m
4. Newark (41 f JQ.O)
24 7
5. Can . McK . 11)(9' 11
167
o. E. Liv. 19·11
93
7. No . &lt;;an. Hoover I\O.Ol 60
8. Ke l. Aller 19·0·11
57
9. Colerain 19 ·11
56
10. Princet on (8·2 1
45
second ten : 11. . warren

The best place to took
for it is at OUTTONS,
where you always
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prices.
We Accept
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Drug Co.
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TREAD
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992-3106

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Middleport, U.

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Wesl. 10
Tea m

'gtc~Ss AA
Points

1. Wyomi ng 111 t lO·Ol
164
2. Ak. 51. Vln , 151 19·11
174
3. Cle. Ho ly Name Il l li -OI

SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER 15.
'

2 SHOWS - 6:00 &amp; 9:30 PM

Grand Ole
Opry·Show

''•

TINGLEY
MARGUERITE'S
SHOES

GALLIA ACADEMY HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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FEATURING THE STARS •••

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Molson, W. Va .

MASON FURNITURE
Herman Grate

In Pomeroy at Nelson's Drug Store
In Middleoort at Vilaie Drug Store

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·
'In Gallpolis At Gillngham's Drugs,
Sparky's Sunoco, Carl's Tavem and
S&amp;E 2.Wa'y Radio. Admission, $3.00 ·
Reservations and Tickets

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I

Thanksgivi ng.' '

Allending were Pastor
William Middleswarth, Mr~ .
Blaeltnar, Miss Erna Jesse ,
Mrs . .Judy Eichinger, Mrs.
Virginia Thoren , Mrs. Daisy
Frecker, Mrs. Veda Davis, 1

Ohio

Thursday, Friday, Saturday &amp;Sunday

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Sunday 10:30to 12 : JO and Sto 9 p.m.
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•'•'o'OT.-!·:·:·:·:·~·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:O:·:·: ·:·:·:·:-=·:·:.:.:.:.:o:.:.:O':·;·. •!•:;:.:• .•: •:•.• .• . • .•: •; •:• ,•:•:•, •. •:·. ·!·.·:·. ·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·· .

•

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BONANZA BOX

ANACIN

Christmas Cards
On Sale
Box &amp;Bulk

-COMPLETE GARAGE SERVICE _;

Sponsored by: Gallia·Meigs
Fraternal Order of Police, No. 95.
Tickets At The Door Night .of
Show.

'

TOM NORRIS

GUEST AT MEET
Mrs. Earl (:tnlght, da,ughter '
of' Mrs. M. &lt;:. Wilson, was a,
guest at the recent meeting of
the Middleport Garden t1ub
held at the home of Mrs.
Sibley Slack. A contributing
hostess for the meeting was
Mrs. William Hamm.

·BAIRD BROS. AUTO PARTS

Call Gallipolis 446-9795'

VALLEY
LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
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Middleport

my friends of

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-FULL LINE-

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NIGHT
ONLY

·-

Installation highlights
UMW meeting Monday

Hard ing 35 ; 12. Zanesville 29 ;
1J. Gahanna lincoln ·27 ; ' 14.
Lakewood 20 ; IS. Greensbur g
Green 23 ; 16. Centerv ille 14 ;
17 . Avon Lake 1J ; 18 . Cin ·
cinnali L aSa lle 12; 19. Cin .
clnnati Woodward 11; 20 .
(tie ) Geneva and Co lumbu s '

wi ll he a~signed at the
Christmas party .
Mrs. Margare l Blaettnar
opened lhe meeting by
reading "Try Being Thankful
for You" by Norman Vincen t
Peale and "A Prayer of

the crismons to be used on lhe
Chrislm"s tree in ihe sanctuary. II was decided to
purchase clear mini-lighls for
the tree and the date to
decorate it will be announc-ed
at the next meeting.
The women's thank offering will be taken during
Ihe churc h service on Nov. 23.
As remembrance to shut-ins
of the two churches, each
woman· will send Christmas
cards and messa.ge. Names

Party held
on birthday

BEND

FRillY UNTIL 8 PM

'·

NEW HOURS
B:30 to8:30 Daily
1L oo to 4: oo Sunday

67

6. M id . Fe nw . (1)(7 .3l
69
7. Ridgemont (8.0 11
.53
8. Bluffton ( l ) (9. 1)
41
9. Tusc . Cath . ( 1) (9·0· 1)
44
10. Ro ck for d Par k..U. l · l ) 37
Second t en : 11. ltie)
Leipsic and Ar l ing ton , 32 ·
each ; 13 . Lisbon Ande r son ( 1l
32;
u . (tiel A lba n y
Alexand er and Wi l l iamsburg!
18 each ; 16. Buckeye Centra
17 ; 17 . (!ie l Sali n evi lle
Soulher n and Ollawa H ills
( l J.
14
each ;
19 ,
Newcome rst own 12 ; 20 . (tiel
Pla in City Jona than Alder
ana Lo ckla nd , 11 each .
Others with 10 or more
po i nts :
Ceda r vi ll e
and
Monroeville .

(!),{).!).

Support l;en ter

for their
support.

Mon., Tues., Wed . &amp; sit.-8:30til s:oo
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

.

169

4. Lon don ( 11 f IO·OJ
134
5. Ironto n (9 I )
111
6. Be ll aire (31 {9-l l
76
7. New lex(9 . l l
72
8. lima Cath (1) (8 ·1· 1) 70
9 . Ci r clevi ll e (9 I)
44
10 . Della f 1J &lt;B ·O· I l
JJ
Second t e n : 11.
ttie J
Madeira and Wheelersbur g,
32 each ; 13. (l ie ) Oberl in (1 l
and Or egon Car d inal Str itch ,
28 each ; 15 . Swanton ( I ) 24 ;
16. Genoa 22 ; 17 . Cadiz 15; lB .
Big Wa lnut ( 1J 14 ; 19. Cana l
Fulton Northw est 12 : 20 . I tie l
Por t Clinton and Poland , 11
each .

It's

STORE HOURS

773-5592

AND SURGICAL

Letart Township

Phlladelphlo 3 ButJalo 1

Atlanta 2 Kansas C!ty 1
Pittsb urg h 6 wash ington 6
Thursday 's Games
NY Islanders at Los Ang el es
Chicago at Philadelphia
Montreal at Pittsburgh
Kansas City at Detroit
Minnesota at Boston

school voting.
Behind the Bulldogs came
once beaten East Uverpool
(9-1), followed in order by
North Canton Hoover ( 1~).
Kettering Alter (9·0·1 ),
Cincinnati Colerain (9-1) and
Princeton (11-2). Princeton's
two losses were to St. Edward
and Moeller.
London, which finished 1().
0, grabbed the No. 4 spot in
the final AA ratings, with
Ironton 19·1) fifth and
Bellaire' (9-1) sixth. New .
Lexington (~1), an 11-7 loser
to Maysville in Its final game,
fell to seventh, followed by
Uma Central Catholic (Il-l·
1), Circleville (9-1) and Delta

Holiday activ ities were
of the members to attend the
THURSDAY
planned al lhe Tuesday night
party at C:hlllicothe. The unit
PRECEPTOR CHAPTER, meeling of the American
also made a donation to the Beta Sigma Phi Sorori ty, tea Lutheran Church Women of
Cancer Society, planned a 7:30 p.m., home of Roberta Sl. Paul apd St. Jo hn
Christmas gift box for a local O'Elrien; degree for one Lutheran Church at the St.
· veteran, and subscribed to
member.
Paul Church in Pomeroy.
the legislative bulletin.
CATHOIJC Women 's Club,
Plans were completed for a
To open the meeting, Mrs. . 8 p.m. at Sacred Heart Chrislmas party on Dec. 9 in
&lt;:ampbel!. Harper ·, Church; hostesses, Catherine , lhe fellqwship hail of St.
Americanism chairwoman , Biron, Alice Freeman, Paul's Church with women of
led in singing of the national Phyllis Hennessy and Hilda both churches to attend. 11
an them and the pledge to the Harris.
will be a qovered dish dinner
flag after the colors were
LAUREL CLIFF Better at 6:30 with .a $1 gift e)&lt;·
posted. Mrs. Nellie Winston Health Club, 7:30p.m. at the change.
had the prayer .
home of Madeline Chaffin,
A discussion was held on
Mrs . Ernest Bowles Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy .
legislative chairwoman :
MEIGS
COUNTY
asked members to write
HUMANE SOCIETY, 7:30
leiters to &lt;:ongressmen in
p.m. at the Middleport with music by Hocking Vall~.
protest to amnesty and also in
Village Hall. All members Blue Grass Boys, sponsored
support of Bill 8-760 perurged to attend and the public by Alexander Alumni Assn.;
taining to 'jobs for veterans.
cake walks to be held ; public
invited.
Mrs. Winston reported that
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8. invited.
cards had been sent to Mrs.
HOLIDAY BAZAAR and
p.m. at the Rock Springs
Sherman Butler , Mrs. Frank
bake
sale al Dale &lt;.:. Warner
urRnge Hall.
Washington and Mrs. Naomi
Insurance
Agency, W. Main
GIHl SCOUT Service Unit
Bentley . Mrs. Smith In -.
St.,
Pomeroy,
by Forest Run
meeting, 7 to 8 p.m. at the
troduced Mrs. Milton Roush,
Columbus and S&lt;&gt;uthem Ohio Methodist Ch ur c h .
ALFRED ROUSH
a guest.
Houseplants, antique china
Electric Co., Middleport.
The bulletin of the Eighth
dolls
, "bye lo" doll, afghan,
ELEC:TION of officers
District president was read
homemade
ca ndy , baked
along with an invitation from when Shade River Lodge 453, goods will be features.
Department headquarters F&amp;AM, meets at 7:30p.m. All
FISH FRY by Middleport
inviting members to attend a members asked to attend.
Fire Department at departOHIO VALLEY Grange ment headquarters, begindinner honoring Mrs. Alan
2612
Letart Falls, 7:30 p. m. ning 11 a.m. with fish sandSchaenel, national president.
MASON - Mr. and Mrs·. It will be held Dec. 13 at the Potluck refreshments.
wiches and fi sh dinn ers
Alfred Roush entertained at Neil House.
REVIVAL
at
Middleport
available.
their home here on Nov. 9 In
A report was given on the t'hurch of the Nazarene every
BEAN
DINNER
at
celebration of the sixth birth- field orientation school held
evening through Sunday with Syracuse Asbury United
day of their son, Alfred at Gallipolis by Mrs. Charles
former pastor, ' 1959·1967, Methodist Church beginning
Lewis.
saunders. A(;hristmas party Rev. t1ude Bartlett speaking, at 5 p.m. Menu includes bean
&lt;:ake, ice cream, nuts and was planned for Dec. 2 with a
7:30eachevening and 10 :30 a. soup, hot dogs, cornbread,
Kool-Aid were served and dinner at a restaurant
m. Sunday morning ; public pie, coffee and tea .
gifts were presented to the followed by a gift exchange at
invited.
youngster.
the home of Mrs. Saunders.
FRIDAY
Attendin g were Amy Mrs. Ruth Brown, veterans
MARY
SHRINE
37, Order
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Dale affairs and rehabilitation
of
the
White
Shrine
of
Uttle, Dale Ray, Daleanna chairwoman, presented the ·
Jerusalem, 8 p.m . at the
and Willie, Mr. and ~rs . .program wblch included a
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
'Harry &lt;:. Roush, Jr., lalk on her volunteer work at
Rehearsal to be held for the
Samantha and Peanuts, Mrs. the C:hllllcothe Hospital.
James Van Meter and Lori, Assessments were paid to the ceremonial in December. All
members reminded that dues
Mrs. Michael Brewer and children and youth, veterans
for 1976, $4.50, are payable
'Mike, Mrs. Harry C. Roush, affairs and rehabilitation. A
now , Potluck to follow the
Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. &lt;:harles prayer for peace was given
meeting.
Roush. Sending gifts were by Mrs . Winston. SandRETURN JONATHAN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roble wiches , potato chips and
Meigs Chapter of the
and Randy.
dessert were served.
Daughters of the American
Revolution, I:30 p.m. at the
Meigs Inn: &lt;:harles Knight,
attorney, to be the ·speaker.
The grave of Mrs. C. M.
Hennesy to be marked
preceding the meeting.,.
HAPPY HARVESTERS
dass, Trinity (;hurch, soclai
Ins lallation of officers by with the date to be announced room, 7:30 p.m.
the Rev. Robert Bumgarner later.
.SQUARE DANCE from 8lo
10" Boot.
!lllghlighted a meeting of the
A •20 conll'lbutlon to the 12
at
Harrisonville Deep tough !read.
~Heath United Methodist . Ministerial · Association for Elementary School spon- Exclusive
Knee High.
;&lt;:hurch Wom.en Monday Christmas baskets for the sored by senior citize ns . bu"t to n closu re . Deep Iou gh
Iread . Excl usive
night.
poor was made. A thank-you Adults
&lt;:hlldren under 12
bullon closure .
Installed with a litany and a card was read from lhe free . Refr~shments and cake
fi lgh Top
scripture were Mrs. Kathryn &lt;:ancer Society for donations walk.
·
.
OZ.
WorkRubber.
Knight, president; Mrs. Billy given In memory of the sister
SPECIAL SERVI&lt;:ES at
Covers the enlire
shoe. Deep Iough
:.Jo
Krawsczyn , vice- of Mrs. Bumgarner.
Long
Bottom
United
.president; Mrs. &lt;:lara
Mrs. Hibbs conducted the M !hod' t ' 'h h
cr• Iswe II , secretary ; Mrs. pledge service. She~ opened Sunday
e
ts at,; ore
..;r
7:30 through
p. m.
'Elizabeth Hibbs, treasurer; with group singing of "Thb Is Evangelist Emmett Frazier.
:r,lrs . Juanita Bachtel My Father's World" and read The 80th anniversary of the
,VhristiBJI social involvement; "The Heritage and the church will be celebrated
Mrs. Bumgarner, Christian Women o( the Earth" and Sunday with a basket dinnerglobal concerns ; Mrs. Grace spoke of the spirit of at noon and program at'1:30.
MukLu k Boo1
Easy on and
French, Christian per· gratitude. Pledge cards were Public Invited.
off. Sturdv
gonhood; Mrs. Nan Moore 1· signed and members read in •·
SATURDAY
molded sole.
j)rogram re source ; Mrs . unison the United Methodlat
POUND WILD coon hunt
Mary Rinehart, mem· Women's purpose . She sponsored by Shade River
bershlp ; Mrs . Emma co ncluded with singing Coon Hunters Assn! begin·
. wayland, Mrs. Lorena Davis "Bless Be the Tie that ning at 6 p.m. at Silver Ridge
and Mrs. Beulah Hayes, Binds". Mrs. Julia McC:Omas, club house ; eight trophies to
~upportative community; Mrs . Rinehart and Mrs. be awarded and all coon
Mrs. Lettie Young, public Diane George served refresh- hunters welcome.
SHADE RIVER Belles and
relations and historian; Mrs. ments. AThanksgiving motif
:Voung, Mrs. Frances Wilson was carried out In the table Beaus will hold Western
and Mrs. Pauline Horton, A~n••tlons .
square dance, Royal Oak
)iomlnating committee.
'"' d
Par k, 8 to 11 p.m. ; ""a
Mrs. Frances Brew Ington,
DINNERNOV.22
Johnson, caller.
,yice-president, conducted the
RAC:INE - The annual
SQUARE DAN&lt;:E, 9 to t02 E. Main
Pomeroy
;111eeting with Mrs. &lt;:riswell Thanksgiving dinner of . midnight,
at
Shade
·~rtlng on World Com- Racine Grange will be held at
Elementary School at Shade
'munlty Day. The annual 6 30
Sat d N
p, m.
ay, ov.
holiday bazaar was discussed 22,: at
theonhall.urThose
at-lltlli_ _ _ _ _ _'"ll tending are to take their own
1
Continues
!able service, some article
for
an
auction
and
gifts
for
I Wish to Thank
Storewide
the Athens State Hospital.

AND THE COUN.TRY PERSUADERS ·

MASON FURNITURE

Am eritan Basketball Associa·
tion Standings
By United Press lntorn :lflonat
East
w. I. pet . g.b.
Kent ucky
7 1 .615 New Yor k
6 4 .600 2
st. Louis
6 5 .545 ·21 .,
Virginia
1 10 .091 71 1
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Denver
1 2 .778
San An lonio
6 3 .667 1
Indiana
5 3 .625 11 )
Utah
2 7 .m
Wedn esday's Results
Utah t3rt New York 114
~ a n flntonio 1-4.1 Virgin ia 11 2
Ken' ucky 9fL St. Louis 8
Thurfdav's Gam es
l..;1n .fl ntonio ,11 Vir&lt;1inilt

'

t

Ba.r nett blames
Gowdy and Kubek
for all hi.s trouble .

National Hockey League Stand·
·
ings
BV United Press International
National Basketb1ll Associatio n
Patrick Division
w. ,, t. ph
Stlndlngs
. By United Pr ess International Philadelphia
11 2 4 20
Eastern conterence
NY Islanders
8 3 4 20
Atlantic Oivlslan
Atlan ta
o 8· 1 13
w. I. pet. g.b. NY Ranger s
5 10 2 12
Bulfato
6 J .667 ~
Smythe Divi sion
Boston
. s 3 .625
1 '~
w. l. t. ph
PhlladelpMia S 4 .556 1 Chicago
9 4 4 22
New York
J 8 .213 ~
St. Louis
6 6 4 16
Central Dlv l1lon
Vancouver
5 8 3 13
w. 1. pet. g.b . Ka nsas City
4 B 2 10
Washington
S 1 .7 14
Minnesota
3 11 o 6
Atlanta
5 3 .625
1"
. Norris Divi sion
New Or leans
6 S .545 1
w. 1. t. pts
J 4 .429 2
Houston
Montreal
11 3 2 2.4
C l e~eland
3 6 .333 J
Los Ang eles
11 5 1 2J
Wes tern Con tere nce
Pittsb urgh
6 6 2 U
Midwes t Division
Detro it
J 10 3 9
w. L pet. g.b. WaShi ngton
2 12 2 6
Detroit
S .5 .500
Adams Divi si on
Milwaukee
5 .5 .500
w. 1. t. pts
Chicago
3 5 .375
Bu ffa lo
11 3 1 23
Kansas City
3 .5 .375
Toronto ·
7 5 3 17
Pacific Division
Bos lon
6 6 2 u
w. I. pet. g .b. California
6 10 7 14
Golden St5 te
6 1 .150 -..
Wednesday 's RI! suits
Los Ange les
7 5 ..583 1
NY Rangers 4 Chlcago 4
Portl an d
4 5 .444 71 ~ Cll liforn la 5 NY Islander s I
PhOen i x
Seatt l e

voting this year, finished its
second straight perfect 10-0
season Friday night with a u;.
0 win over Uberty Union.
The Indians, who missed a
state playoff spot for the
second straight year despite
20winsinarow,hada 16&amp;-159
ed ge over rwmerup Newark
Catholic, which was the No.2
team all eight weeks of the
balloting.
The top four teams in the
AAA ratings will all be in the
playoff semifinals.
Following the top two, St.;
Edward and Moeller, Findlay
finished No. 3 and Newark
No. 4. All had 1~ regular
season records. The playoff
matchup has Moeller going
against Findlay and St. Ed
against Newark.
Loudonville (!~). which
also missed a playoff berth,
finished third in Class A,
ff
W hile th ree 0 th er pIa yo
teams, Burton Berkshire,
Carey and Middletown
Fenwick , the defending
champion, finished fourth,
fifth and sixth.
Ridgemont, Biuffton, Tuscarawas Catholic and Rockford Parkway round out the
aass A top ten.
Canton McKinley (9·1),
, ished . the season
Which fm
with a nine:game win streak,
was a distant fifth in the big
.I

MARION, Ohio (UPf) Sportscasters Curt Gowdy
and Tony Kubek were
responsible for umpire Larry
Barnett
receiving
threatening mail after a
controversial call In the
·World Series, according to
Barnett.
.
Barnett was the key figure
In a controversial play in tbe
third game of the Series when
he did not rule interference
following a collision at home
plate on a play that set up tbe

PRESCRIPTION

'75 UPI champs

•.

Adonation to the December
birthday party 'at the
(;hillicothe Veterans Hospital
was made when the
American Legion Auxillary
of Lewis Manley Post 263 met
at the Meigs Inn with Mrs.
Zuelelia Smith as hostess.
· Mrs. Lula Hampton
presided at the meeting and
plnns were made for several

Lakewood St. Edward, Wyoming and
Canal~Winchester

Luthe ratJ church women make r~-~i'-~y_~_.~,~_~n_g_~"-~-~~-HI R"-~-~!-'i-~-'~_;_nic-"n_d_M_r_s._B._rb·a-.ra
REMODEUNG
plans
for
holiday
activities
Calendar
NEEDS

~r--:~~S~~:i~T:'~~:,~~

200-202 East Main St. ·
POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRIDAY&amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

ONLY

32 Christmas
::

'

'1.09

CARDS
Reg.

'1.50

ONLY

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'lbursday, Nov .13, 1975

f - 1'lw! Daily Senli~l . Middlcport-P'""',.."' . 11., 'I11Ur:;&lt;IHv, Nuv . 1:1. 1975

Auxiliary donates.

Michigan may ·be tougher--Blackman
Ten Football Roundup
CHICAGO I UP I) - - Illinois
Coach Bob Blackman was
awed by Ohio SLBte last week
1n his team's 40.3 defeat . But
be says Michigan, his team's
foe this saturday, may be
eve n better tha n the
Buckeyes.
"Statistics will show you
just how fine a team Ohio
State is," Blackman said
Wednesday. "But a closer
look will show you that
Michiga n actually leads tbc
Buckeyes
in
several
ca tegories.
' 'As awesome as Oh io
Slate's offen~ivP tP~ro i ~ .
J~g

.
.,. . .
.

"'- ;!!',/• ~.

.

1,\ .1,;.""'

• ~··

. ...·

'lr

..,. •''I 1'\

• r

1 ••
' '

M

.

..

,,.. '

I

'/'

•.

preparation for its game at
Purdue, where the Hawkeye&amp;
haven't won since 1956 . . H
they win saturday, it will give
them a three-game winning
streak for the first time since

to December party " i

saturday ."
Northwestern would be ,
happy with just a one-game ,
winning streak. Coach JOhn ;
Pont said his No. 1 quar· •
terback, Randy Dean, has :
"lost
littie bit of COil· ,
1964.
them ."
Iowa
Coach
Bob
Commings
lidence"
during
the Wildcats'
Blackman may be right,
said
the
Boilennakers
are
four-game
losing
streak but ,
but Michigan seems equally
much
like
the
Hawkeyes
this
he
will
still
st.Brt
Saturday
wary of the lllinl .
year.
against Michigan State.
•
Michiga n Coach Bo tunnel."
"Purdue is having a poor
"Randy is only a junior and
Schembechler, guarding
Schembechler learned that
against the possibility his light end George Pryzgodski, year recordwise," he said. the worst thing I could do for •
team will be looking past who has missed the last three "But they have excellent the young man would be to;
Dlinois to its showdown with games with an infected leg, personnel. In the same area, I bench him ," Pont said. "That~
Ohio SLBte a week later, returned to practice and think we're much better than would create a situation with•
showed the Wolverines one should be ready by saturday . our record indicates. .a lack of confidence that ,
brief film Wednesday to cure
At Iowa aty, Iowa worked Hopefully, we can show that might never be overcome.";
However, he said he has'
out in winter~ike weather in
"all the confidence in tbc"
world" in No. 2 quarterbac)t
KimGirkins and he would not'
be afraid to use him, too. "

actually is the Big
Ten's No. lteam statistically,
and the same is true on
defense. Our team will ha ve
w play an errorless game if
we have any hopes of beating
Mkhi~an

them.
It was a movie of last
year's . Michigan-Illinois
game, which the Wolves won
14-6.
However, Schernbechler
appeared conlidenl.
" I think we have come a
long way," he said. uwe can
see the.light at the end of the

a

'

RICHARD COLE, MEIGS Marauder
TIM COATS, SOPHOMORE fullback for
senior wingback . He Is the son of Mr. and lhe Meigs Marauders. He is five feet eight
Mrs. Richard Cole, Rl. 2, Pomeroy. He is rive tnche:; tall and weighs 130 pounds. He is the
feel 10 Inches !all and weighs 132 pounds. son of Mrs. Barbara James, Nye Ave.,
Pomeroy .

COLUMBUS iUPl) Three new champions were
crowned today in the United
Press International Ohio
High School Board of Coaches
football ratings.
Lakewood St. Edward in
aass AM, Wyoming in aass
M and Canal Winchester in
aass A, all with 10-0 records,
are the new mythical state
champions. It was the first
titles for each.
St. Edward unseated
defending champion Cincinnati Moeller in the big
school voting, although tbe
Crusaders ran their regular
season winning streak to 32
straight. Moeller finished
second to St. Ed, 303 point.'! to
288.

GEORGE GUM, MEIGS MARAUDER
sophomore quarterback. George Is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. George Gum, Sr., Rt. 4,
Pomeroy . He Is 6 feet tall and weighs ·150
pounds.

JIM
ROSENBAUM,
MEIGS
MARAUDER sophomore fullback . Jim .
stands five feet eight inches taU and weighs
133 pounds. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Rosenbaum, Wright Street,
Pomeroy.

Gallia 's Kyger Creek girls
in Ohio's first regional meet
COLUMBUS

(U PI I

Pairings for lhls weekend 's
Ohio

high

sch ool

r eglonel

gi rl s volleyba ll tournem ents :

CLASS A

At Dayton

Runls 12 ·1 vs . Frankforl

Adeno 16·0.
. Tipp City Be th el 10

V$

Sl.

Academy 12 • -

Thornvil le Sheri dan u 1 vs .

Deyton Kiser 9-S

At Bowli ng Green
Archbo ld
15· 1
vs .
Spr ingfield Nor thwe stern 16·
0.
Pemberville Eastwood 14-2
vs . Mansfiel d Ontario 20 -1.

At Midpark
Lakeside Danbury 12·1 vs . Akron 51. Vlnceni ·St. Mary 9·

Bern•rd 8·8.
At Oberlin

Massillon Tvstaw 16·2 vs .

Colu m biana Crest.., j ew lJ .J.
BUcyrus Wy nford 12-.tl vs .

2.

Je romnvll le t+llls da le 13 -2.

Fal lS 9·3.

At Bowllrit Gree n
Montpelier 16 -0 "' · Kal ida

12-J
Minster
t2 1'

Ind ian Valley North IS 1 \IS .
Kygfr Creek 12 -.tl .
West Jefferson 11 J vs .
Newa rk ColMollc 11 0.

CLASS AA

At Dayton
Cincin nati M c N icho las 1.4 1
vs . Cincinnati
Ur sul ine

Ober lin

14-0 vs . Ol m sted

At Ott er b ei n

West

Musklngum

B-7 vs .

aeM ter 11 o.

21·0 vs . Mil ler City

Af Olttrb eJ n

Middletown 15·0 vs . Cln .
c in natl Oak Hills 1~ . 0 .
At Otterbein
H ill iard IB · l vs . Dayton
Weyne 11 .3.
Marietlll 15·1 vs . Co lumbus
Wes t 15. 1.
At Midpark
Canton Glen Oak 1.4 .1 vs .
Nordo n itt 8.8.
Stow 16 o v s. Willoughby
South 13·0.
Winn ers of th e 16 reglona ls
advance to the f irs t girls state
vo ll ey ball tournam ent Nov .
22 at Oner bein Co ll ege . ·

Wei sville 12 -2 vs . H eat h 11 ·

J.

CLASS AAA

At Bow li nt Green
Toledo Sta rt 21 -1

vs .

Clevelan d Rhod ts 15 -1.

Lorain Se nior
Celina 15·6,

13 -3 vs .

At D1yton
Ke!lertno Falrrnont Easl
15· 1 vs . Clncln ne tl Se ton 14·5.

Shock Absorber
Light recoil is
enough reason to
buy the Remington
ModelllOO, but we put in a few extras just
to be sure you get your money's worth:
• Available in 12, 16, 20, 28, and 410 gauges. Magnums
and lightweights also available.
• Solid steel receiver for e~ tra strength.
• DuPont scratch resistant RK -Wwood finish.
• Smooth "vibra·honed" metal finish for beautilul blueing
and smoother operation.
• Dependable gas operation system reduces
recoil sensation.
·
• Distinctive, secure grip checkering, and attractive
white-line spacers.
• Interchangeable b·arrels within gauge.
GREAT GUN S DESERVE GRfAl AM MU NITION , WE MAK E 80TH ,

SPECIAL

*179
PICKENS HARDWARE CO.

/b!t,ZNt
. 00
'"'liP'
Reg. I 219.

8-5:30 Min. thru Thurs.

8-8:30 FRI. &amp; SAT.
MASON, WEST VIRGINIA

00

®

~C)KETBALL

Wyoming, won iii a threeteam battle with Akron St.
Vincent, the defendirig AA
champion, and Cleveland
Holy Name.
Wyoming received 184
points, compared with 174 for
St. Vincent and 169 for Holy
Name.
. Wyoming and Holy Name
(8-0) both qualified for this
weekend's st.Bte high school
playoffs's, but St. Vincent,
which finished 9-1, failed to
make it.
Winchester, nmnerup to
Middletown Fenwick last
year and the Cll\ss A leader
since the second week ~ the

3
~

4 .429
1 .364

21 ~

31l

. · Wednesdty'5 Re5Uits
Allan Ia 109 De tro it 106
Milwaukee 107 Phil ll dCIPh la 84
Buffalo 93 Houston 80
Kansas City 107 Seattle 97
Los Ange les 11 6 New Orleans

100

Tl1ursday •s Games
Houston at New York
Boston at washington
Chicago at Golden Stalte
Seallle at Phoen ix

1
•,

wummg run for Cincinnati.
Federal agents were •
assigned to guard Barnett,'·
his wife and their ·2-year-old .
daughter after the umpire
received an anonymous
threat on his and biB family's
lives.
Kubek and Gowdy were •
blamed by Barnett for "not ·
only calling the game, but
trying to interpret" the BC•
lion. The announcers told a
nationwide television
audience they disagreed with
his dectsion and "ran and
reran" videotape of the play,
he says.
•
"They said they disagreed
with the call tlme and tlme
again," Barnett said. "I
totally blame Curt Gowdy
and Tony Kubek for all the
problems I've had." ·
Kuhek and Gowdy said
later during NBC coverage of
the Series they had sent an
to Barnett.
For the Lowest

-

Tire Prices
In the Area

s

CLASS A

Team
Po ints
l . Can . Win e. (91 (lQ .Q)
168
7. New . Ca th , (2) ( 10·0l
159
3. Loudonvill e ( I ) (10 .0} 123
4. Burton Ber k . (2 ) (9·0 l 89

s. carey\2119·11

Ironton Is another of the AA
playoff teams, while the
other, Oregon Cardinal
Stritch (7-3), finished tied for
13th In the ftnal raUngs.
COLUMBUS (UP II - The
f; nol -United Pr ess In·
te rna tioM I Ohio High Sd1 ool

Board oJ coaches Joolbal l
r at ings with f irs t pla ce vo tes
and won ·losl reco rds in
parenl heses:
CLASS AAA
Team
Points
1. Lakewood St. Ed . l\31 110.
303
01
2. Ci n. Moell er 1101 (\O .OJ286
3. F;nd la y 161I10-01
m
4. Newark (41 f JQ.O)
24 7
5. Can . McK . 11)(9' 11
167
o. E. Liv. 19·11
93
7. No . &lt;;an. Hoover I\O.Ol 60
8. Ke l. Aller 19·0·11
57
9. Colerain 19 ·11
56
10. Princet on (8·2 1
45
second ten : 11. . warren

The best place to took
for it is at OUTTONS,
where you always
feel at home with low
prices.
We Accept
BankAmericard

DUTTON
Drug Co.
"Your
Prescription
Dru~J Store"

TREAD
-LIGHTLY

992-3106

l3ox. 19oz

Middleport, U.

LlciSSIC Slip-On
Styled by the people who know how to put comfort on
your feet. Brushed pigskin mO&lt;: toe with an elastic band
to
It snug. Thick Nitro crepe sole wi th a steel
shank support .

Wesl. 10
Tea m

'gtc~Ss AA
Points

1. Wyomi ng 111 t lO·Ol
164
2. Ak. 51. Vln , 151 19·11
174
3. Cle. Ho ly Name Il l li -OI

SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER 15.
'

2 SHOWS - 6:00 &amp; 9:30 PM

Grand Ole
Opry·Show

''•

TINGLEY
MARGUERITE'S
SHOES

GALLIA ACADEMY HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

r•••--•••••••••••••-.

FEATURING THE STARS •••

*ROY DRUSKY *
*HERB and BARB*

.i'

I

TIRE CENTER

TICKm ON SALE Now ,

Molson, W. Va .

MASON FURNITURE
Herman Grate

In Pomeroy at Nelson's Drug Store
In Middleoort at Vilaie Drug Store

•
•
••

,

&amp; Dutton's Drugs
·
'In Gallpolis At Gillngham's Drugs,
Sparky's Sunoco, Carl's Tavem and
S&amp;E 2.Wa'y Radio. Admission, $3.00 ·
Reservations and Tickets

'

I ___,;;P.a;;:ld~PIIolii..IAildlitvi.. .I

AUTOMATIC TRANS. A SP~CIALY
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
BODY SHOP
RADIATOR REPAIR
ROUTE 7

GALLIPOLIS. OHI045631
NEXT TO OLD SILVER IRIDGE

·PHONE 446-4060

Mason, W.Va.
I

Thanksgivi ng.' '

Allending were Pastor
William Middleswarth, Mr~ .
Blaeltnar, Miss Erna Jesse ,
Mrs . .Judy Eichinger, Mrs.
Virginia Thoren , Mrs. Daisy
Frecker, Mrs. Veda Davis, 1

Ohio

Thursday, Friday, Saturday &amp;Sunday

t'n

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R.
Open Daily 8:00a .m. to 9:30p.m.'
Sunday 10:30to 12 : JO and Sto 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PW. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112E.MA1N
.
POMEROY,().

-

-~--

GE HEATED

. Colgate'~

SHAVE CREAM
DISPENSER

COLGATE
7 oz.
Reg. '1.44

DENTAL
CREAM

79 ~

REGULAR 19.98

VICKS FORMULA 44
COUGH MIXTURE
6 OUNCE
REG. 12Al
ONLY

,., ...

I

•

REGUlAR 79'
7 oz.
ONLY

~

KLEENITE
DENTURE CLEANSER
REG. 11.19

High Potency Vitamin
Fonnula With Minerals

30 Free With 100

CEPACOL
,.Eii!~

49~

Theragran M

6 OUNCE

64~

ONLY

n u un

TUSSY
SPRAY
DEODORANT

1.39
..

~~

11.99

ONLY

Reg. '7.98
ONLY

4.69

MOUTHWASH
14 OUNCE
REG:
11.45

VICKS
VAPORUB

EVENINGS

LINDA LEE

PANTY HOSE

3.1 oz.
REG. 12.19

TIL

REGULAR 1.00
ONE
SIZE ONly
FITS
All

ONLY

59~

10

Many 1-ms On
Sale For
auistmas! I

*

100 TABLETS
REGUlAR '1.91

Fall Bulbs For
Spring Blooms

-··
. . .
...•••Vo&gt;o!-:·······;111,·,···· ···

'

.

t ·~.. ~:"'"~i"'"i'l''"''''''

•'•'o'OT.-!·:·:·:·:·~·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:O:·:·: ·:·:·:·:-=·:·:.:.:.:.:o:.:.:O':·;·. •!•:;:.:• .•: •:•.• .• . • .•: •; •:• ,•:•:•, •. •:·. ·!·.·:·. ·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·· .

•

Make Pomeroy Your Shopping Center1

~,

PHONE :
1

992-349~.

AMERICAN GREETINGS
BONANZA BOX

ANACIN

Christmas Cards
On Sale
Box &amp;Bulk

-COMPLETE GARAGE SERVICE _;

Sponsored by: Gallia·Meigs
Fraternal Order of Police, No. 95.
Tickets At The Door Night .of
Show.

'

TOM NORRIS

GUEST AT MEET
Mrs. Earl (:tnlght, da,ughter '
of' Mrs. M. &lt;:. Wilson, was a,
guest at the recent meeting of
the Middleport Garden t1ub
held at the home of Mrs.
Sibley Slack. A contributing
hostess for the meeting was
Mrs. William Hamm.

·BAIRD BROS. AUTO PARTS

Call Gallipolis 446-9795'

VALLEY
LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CO •
Middleport

my friends of

*JIM BLACKSTONE*

773-5111

-FULL LINE-

NOVEMBER DISCOUNT DAYS

•8

n.

NIGHT
ONLY

·-

Installation highlights
UMW meeting Monday

Hard ing 35 ; 12. Zanesville 29 ;
1J. Gahanna lincoln ·27 ; ' 14.
Lakewood 20 ; IS. Greensbur g
Green 23 ; 16. Centerv ille 14 ;
17 . Avon Lake 1J ; 18 . Cin ·
cinnali L aSa lle 12; 19. Cin .
clnnati Woodward 11; 20 .
(tie ) Geneva and Co lumbu s '

wi ll he a~signed at the
Christmas party .
Mrs. Margare l Blaettnar
opened lhe meeting by
reading "Try Being Thankful
for You" by Norman Vincen t
Peale and "A Prayer of

the crismons to be used on lhe
Chrislm"s tree in ihe sanctuary. II was decided to
purchase clear mini-lighls for
the tree and the date to
decorate it will be announc-ed
at the next meeting.
The women's thank offering will be taken during
Ihe churc h service on Nov. 23.
As remembrance to shut-ins
of the two churches, each
woman· will send Christmas
cards and messa.ge. Names

Party held
on birthday

BEND

FRillY UNTIL 8 PM

'·

NEW HOURS
B:30 to8:30 Daily
1L oo to 4: oo Sunday

67

6. M id . Fe nw . (1)(7 .3l
69
7. Ridgemont (8.0 11
.53
8. Bluffton ( l ) (9. 1)
41
9. Tusc . Cath . ( 1) (9·0· 1)
44
10. Ro ck for d Par k..U. l · l ) 37
Second t en : 11. ltie)
Leipsic and Ar l ing ton , 32 ·
each ; 13 . Lisbon Ande r son ( 1l
32;
u . (tiel A lba n y
Alexand er and Wi l l iamsburg!
18 each ; 16. Buckeye Centra
17 ; 17 . (!ie l Sali n evi lle
Soulher n and Ollawa H ills
( l J.
14
each ;
19 ,
Newcome rst own 12 ; 20 . (tiel
Pla in City Jona than Alder
ana Lo ckla nd , 11 each .
Others with 10 or more
po i nts :
Ceda r vi ll e
and
Monroeville .

(!),{).!).

Support l;en ter

for their
support.

Mon., Tues., Wed . &amp; sit.-8:30til s:oo
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

.

169

4. Lon don ( 11 f IO·OJ
134
5. Ironto n (9 I )
111
6. Be ll aire (31 {9-l l
76
7. New lex(9 . l l
72
8. lima Cath (1) (8 ·1· 1) 70
9 . Ci r clevi ll e (9 I)
44
10 . Della f 1J &lt;B ·O· I l
JJ
Second t e n : 11.
ttie J
Madeira and Wheelersbur g,
32 each ; 13. (l ie ) Oberl in (1 l
and Or egon Car d inal Str itch ,
28 each ; 15 . Swanton ( I ) 24 ;
16. Genoa 22 ; 17 . Cadiz 15; lB .
Big Wa lnut ( 1J 14 ; 19. Cana l
Fulton Northw est 12 : 20 . I tie l
Por t Clinton and Poland , 11
each .

It's

STORE HOURS

773-5592

AND SURGICAL

Letart Township

Phlladelphlo 3 ButJalo 1

Atlanta 2 Kansas C!ty 1
Pittsb urg h 6 wash ington 6
Thursday 's Games
NY Islanders at Los Ang el es
Chicago at Philadelphia
Montreal at Pittsburgh
Kansas City at Detroit
Minnesota at Boston

school voting.
Behind the Bulldogs came
once beaten East Uverpool
(9-1), followed in order by
North Canton Hoover ( 1~).
Kettering Alter (9·0·1 ),
Cincinnati Colerain (9-1) and
Princeton (11-2). Princeton's
two losses were to St. Edward
and Moeller.
London, which finished 1().
0, grabbed the No. 4 spot in
the final AA ratings, with
Ironton 19·1) fifth and
Bellaire' (9-1) sixth. New .
Lexington (~1), an 11-7 loser
to Maysville in Its final game,
fell to seventh, followed by
Uma Central Catholic (Il-l·
1), Circleville (9-1) and Delta

Holiday activ ities were
of the members to attend the
THURSDAY
planned al lhe Tuesday night
party at C:hlllicothe. The unit
PRECEPTOR CHAPTER, meeling of the American
also made a donation to the Beta Sigma Phi Sorori ty, tea Lutheran Church Women of
Cancer Society, planned a 7:30 p.m., home of Roberta Sl. Paul apd St. Jo hn
Christmas gift box for a local O'Elrien; degree for one Lutheran Church at the St.
· veteran, and subscribed to
member.
Paul Church in Pomeroy.
the legislative bulletin.
CATHOIJC Women 's Club,
Plans were completed for a
To open the meeting, Mrs. . 8 p.m. at Sacred Heart Chrislmas party on Dec. 9 in
&lt;:ampbel!. Harper ·, Church; hostesses, Catherine , lhe fellqwship hail of St.
Americanism chairwoman , Biron, Alice Freeman, Paul's Church with women of
led in singing of the national Phyllis Hennessy and Hilda both churches to attend. 11
an them and the pledge to the Harris.
will be a qovered dish dinner
flag after the colors were
LAUREL CLIFF Better at 6:30 with .a $1 gift e)&lt;·
posted. Mrs. Nellie Winston Health Club, 7:30p.m. at the change.
had the prayer .
home of Madeline Chaffin,
A discussion was held on
Mrs . Ernest Bowles Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy .
legislative chairwoman :
MEIGS
COUNTY
asked members to write
HUMANE SOCIETY, 7:30
leiters to &lt;:ongressmen in
p.m. at the Middleport with music by Hocking Vall~.
protest to amnesty and also in
Village Hall. All members Blue Grass Boys, sponsored
support of Bill 8-760 perurged to attend and the public by Alexander Alumni Assn.;
taining to 'jobs for veterans.
cake walks to be held ; public
invited.
Mrs. Winston reported that
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8. invited.
cards had been sent to Mrs.
HOLIDAY BAZAAR and
p.m. at the Rock Springs
Sherman Butler , Mrs. Frank
bake
sale al Dale &lt;.:. Warner
urRnge Hall.
Washington and Mrs. Naomi
Insurance
Agency, W. Main
GIHl SCOUT Service Unit
Bentley . Mrs. Smith In -.
St.,
Pomeroy,
by Forest Run
meeting, 7 to 8 p.m. at the
troduced Mrs. Milton Roush,
Columbus and S&lt;&gt;uthem Ohio Methodist Ch ur c h .
ALFRED ROUSH
a guest.
Houseplants, antique china
Electric Co., Middleport.
The bulletin of the Eighth
dolls
, "bye lo" doll, afghan,
ELEC:TION of officers
District president was read
homemade
ca ndy , baked
along with an invitation from when Shade River Lodge 453, goods will be features.
Department headquarters F&amp;AM, meets at 7:30p.m. All
FISH FRY by Middleport
inviting members to attend a members asked to attend.
Fire Department at departOHIO VALLEY Grange ment headquarters, begindinner honoring Mrs. Alan
2612
Letart Falls, 7:30 p. m. ning 11 a.m. with fish sandSchaenel, national president.
MASON - Mr. and Mrs·. It will be held Dec. 13 at the Potluck refreshments.
wiches and fi sh dinn ers
Alfred Roush entertained at Neil House.
REVIVAL
at
Middleport
available.
their home here on Nov. 9 In
A report was given on the t'hurch of the Nazarene every
BEAN
DINNER
at
celebration of the sixth birth- field orientation school held
evening through Sunday with Syracuse Asbury United
day of their son, Alfred at Gallipolis by Mrs. Charles
former pastor, ' 1959·1967, Methodist Church beginning
Lewis.
saunders. A(;hristmas party Rev. t1ude Bartlett speaking, at 5 p.m. Menu includes bean
&lt;:ake, ice cream, nuts and was planned for Dec. 2 with a
7:30eachevening and 10 :30 a. soup, hot dogs, cornbread,
Kool-Aid were served and dinner at a restaurant
m. Sunday morning ; public pie, coffee and tea .
gifts were presented to the followed by a gift exchange at
invited.
youngster.
the home of Mrs. Saunders.
FRIDAY
Attendin g were Amy Mrs. Ruth Brown, veterans
MARY
SHRINE
37, Order
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Dale affairs and rehabilitation
of
the
White
Shrine
of
Uttle, Dale Ray, Daleanna chairwoman, presented the ·
Jerusalem, 8 p.m . at the
and Willie, Mr. and ~rs . .program wblch included a
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
'Harry &lt;:. Roush, Jr., lalk on her volunteer work at
Rehearsal to be held for the
Samantha and Peanuts, Mrs. the C:hllllcothe Hospital.
James Van Meter and Lori, Assessments were paid to the ceremonial in December. All
members reminded that dues
Mrs. Michael Brewer and children and youth, veterans
for 1976, $4.50, are payable
'Mike, Mrs. Harry C. Roush, affairs and rehabilitation. A
now , Potluck to follow the
Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. &lt;:harles prayer for peace was given
meeting.
Roush. Sending gifts were by Mrs . Winston. SandRETURN JONATHAN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roble wiches , potato chips and
Meigs Chapter of the
and Randy.
dessert were served.
Daughters of the American
Revolution, I:30 p.m. at the
Meigs Inn: &lt;:harles Knight,
attorney, to be the ·speaker.
The grave of Mrs. C. M.
Hennesy to be marked
preceding the meeting.,.
HAPPY HARVESTERS
dass, Trinity (;hurch, soclai
Ins lallation of officers by with the date to be announced room, 7:30 p.m.
the Rev. Robert Bumgarner later.
.SQUARE DANCE from 8lo
10" Boot.
!lllghlighted a meeting of the
A •20 conll'lbutlon to the 12
at
Harrisonville Deep tough !read.
~Heath United Methodist . Ministerial · Association for Elementary School spon- Exclusive
Knee High.
;&lt;:hurch Wom.en Monday Christmas baskets for the sored by senior citize ns . bu"t to n closu re . Deep Iou gh
Iread . Excl usive
night.
poor was made. A thank-you Adults
&lt;:hlldren under 12
bullon closure .
Installed with a litany and a card was read from lhe free . Refr~shments and cake
fi lgh Top
scripture were Mrs. Kathryn &lt;:ancer Society for donations walk.
·
.
OZ.
WorkRubber.
Knight, president; Mrs. Billy given In memory of the sister
SPECIAL SERVI&lt;:ES at
Covers the enlire
shoe. Deep Iough
:.Jo
Krawsczyn , vice- of Mrs. Bumgarner.
Long
Bottom
United
.president; Mrs. &lt;:lara
Mrs. Hibbs conducted the M !hod' t ' 'h h
cr• Iswe II , secretary ; Mrs. pledge service. She~ opened Sunday
e
ts at,; ore
..;r
7:30 through
p. m.
'Elizabeth Hibbs, treasurer; with group singing of "Thb Is Evangelist Emmett Frazier.
:r,lrs . Juanita Bachtel My Father's World" and read The 80th anniversary of the
,VhristiBJI social involvement; "The Heritage and the church will be celebrated
Mrs. Bumgarner, Christian Women o( the Earth" and Sunday with a basket dinnerglobal concerns ; Mrs. Grace spoke of the spirit of at noon and program at'1:30.
MukLu k Boo1
Easy on and
French, Christian per· gratitude. Pledge cards were Public Invited.
off. Sturdv
gonhood; Mrs. Nan Moore 1· signed and members read in •·
SATURDAY
molded sole.
j)rogram re source ; Mrs . unison the United Methodlat
POUND WILD coon hunt
Mary Rinehart, mem· Women's purpose . She sponsored by Shade River
bershlp ; Mrs . Emma co ncluded with singing Coon Hunters Assn! begin·
. wayland, Mrs. Lorena Davis "Bless Be the Tie that ning at 6 p.m. at Silver Ridge
and Mrs. Beulah Hayes, Binds". Mrs. Julia McC:Omas, club house ; eight trophies to
~upportative community; Mrs . Rinehart and Mrs. be awarded and all coon
Mrs. Lettie Young, public Diane George served refresh- hunters welcome.
SHADE RIVER Belles and
relations and historian; Mrs. ments. AThanksgiving motif
:Voung, Mrs. Frances Wilson was carried out In the table Beaus will hold Western
and Mrs. Pauline Horton, A~n••tlons .
square dance, Royal Oak
)iomlnating committee.
'"' d
Par k, 8 to 11 p.m. ; ""a
Mrs. Frances Brew Ington,
DINNERNOV.22
Johnson, caller.
,yice-president, conducted the
RAC:INE - The annual
SQUARE DAN&lt;:E, 9 to t02 E. Main
Pomeroy
;111eeting with Mrs. &lt;:riswell Thanksgiving dinner of . midnight,
at
Shade
·~rtlng on World Com- Racine Grange will be held at
Elementary School at Shade
'munlty Day. The annual 6 30
Sat d N
p, m.
ay, ov.
holiday bazaar was discussed 22,: at
theonhall.urThose
at-lltlli_ _ _ _ _ _'"ll tending are to take their own
1
Continues
!able service, some article
for
an
auction
and
gifts
for
I Wish to Thank
Storewide
the Athens State Hospital.

AND THE COUN.TRY PERSUADERS ·

MASON FURNITURE

Am eritan Basketball Associa·
tion Standings
By United Press lntorn :lflonat
East
w. I. pet . g.b.
Kent ucky
7 1 .615 New Yor k
6 4 .600 2
st. Louis
6 5 .545 ·21 .,
Virginia
1 10 .091 71 1
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Denver
1 2 .778
San An lonio
6 3 .667 1
Indiana
5 3 .625 11 )
Utah
2 7 .m
Wedn esday's Results
Utah t3rt New York 114
~ a n flntonio 1-4.1 Virgin ia 11 2
Ken' ucky 9fL St. Louis 8
Thurfdav's Gam es
l..;1n .fl ntonio ,11 Vir&lt;1inilt

'

t

Ba.r nett blames
Gowdy and Kubek
for all hi.s trouble .

National Hockey League Stand·
·
ings
BV United Press International
National Basketb1ll Associatio n
Patrick Division
w. ,, t. ph
Stlndlngs
. By United Pr ess International Philadelphia
11 2 4 20
Eastern conterence
NY Islanders
8 3 4 20
Atlantic Oivlslan
Atlan ta
o 8· 1 13
w. I. pet. g.b. NY Ranger s
5 10 2 12
Bulfato
6 J .667 ~
Smythe Divi sion
Boston
. s 3 .625
1 '~
w. l. t. ph
PhlladelpMia S 4 .556 1 Chicago
9 4 4 22
New York
J 8 .213 ~
St. Louis
6 6 4 16
Central Dlv l1lon
Vancouver
5 8 3 13
w. 1. pet. g.b . Ka nsas City
4 B 2 10
Washington
S 1 .7 14
Minnesota
3 11 o 6
Atlanta
5 3 .625
1"
. Norris Divi sion
New Or leans
6 S .545 1
w. 1. t. pts
J 4 .429 2
Houston
Montreal
11 3 2 2.4
C l e~eland
3 6 .333 J
Los Ang eles
11 5 1 2J
Wes tern Con tere nce
Pittsb urgh
6 6 2 U
Midwes t Division
Detro it
J 10 3 9
w. L pet. g.b. WaShi ngton
2 12 2 6
Detroit
S .5 .500
Adams Divi si on
Milwaukee
5 .5 .500
w. 1. t. pts
Chicago
3 5 .375
Bu ffa lo
11 3 1 23
Kansas City
3 .5 .375
Toronto ·
7 5 3 17
Pacific Division
Bos lon
6 6 2 u
w. I. pet. g .b. California
6 10 7 14
Golden St5 te
6 1 .150 -..
Wednesday 's RI! suits
Los Ange les
7 5 ..583 1
NY Rangers 4 Chlcago 4
Portl an d
4 5 .444 71 ~ Cll liforn la 5 NY Islander s I
PhOen i x
Seatt l e

voting this year, finished its
second straight perfect 10-0
season Friday night with a u;.
0 win over Uberty Union.
The Indians, who missed a
state playoff spot for the
second straight year despite
20winsinarow,hada 16&amp;-159
ed ge over rwmerup Newark
Catholic, which was the No.2
team all eight weeks of the
balloting.
The top four teams in the
AAA ratings will all be in the
playoff semifinals.
Following the top two, St.;
Edward and Moeller, Findlay
finished No. 3 and Newark
No. 4. All had 1~ regular
season records. The playoff
matchup has Moeller going
against Findlay and St. Ed
against Newark.
Loudonville (!~). which
also missed a playoff berth,
finished third in Class A,
ff
W hile th ree 0 th er pIa yo
teams, Burton Berkshire,
Carey and Middletown
Fenwick , the defending
champion, finished fourth,
fifth and sixth.
Ridgemont, Biuffton, Tuscarawas Catholic and Rockford Parkway round out the
aass A top ten.
Canton McKinley (9·1),
, ished . the season
Which fm
with a nine:game win streak,
was a distant fifth in the big
.I

MARION, Ohio (UPf) Sportscasters Curt Gowdy
and Tony Kubek were
responsible for umpire Larry
Barnett
receiving
threatening mail after a
controversial call In the
·World Series, according to
Barnett.
.
Barnett was the key figure
In a controversial play in tbe
third game of the Series when
he did not rule interference
following a collision at home
plate on a play that set up tbe

PRESCRIPTION

'75 UPI champs

•.

Adonation to the December
birthday party 'at the
(;hillicothe Veterans Hospital
was made when the
American Legion Auxillary
of Lewis Manley Post 263 met
at the Meigs Inn with Mrs.
Zuelelia Smith as hostess.
· Mrs. Lula Hampton
presided at the meeting and
plnns were made for several

Lakewood St. Edward, Wyoming and
Canal~Winchester

Luthe ratJ church women make r~-~i'-~y_~_.~,~_~n_g_~"-~-~~-HI R"-~-~!-'i-~-'~_;_nic-"n_d_M_r_s._B._rb·a-.ra
REMODEUNG
plans
for
holiday
activities
Calendar
NEEDS

~r--:~~S~~:i~T:'~~:,~~

200-202 East Main St. ·
POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRIDAY&amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

ONLY

32 Christmas
::

'

'1.09

CARDS
Reg.

'1.50

ONLY

�•.

"

... ..

,. .....

..

.

,_

--- . . .

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov . 13, 1975
6 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. 13, 1975

New officers were elected
at the Tuesday night meetin~
of the Hearthstone Class of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hubbard.

Elected were John Werner ,
president ; Paul Smart, vice
president ; Mrs . Allen
Hughes, secrel&lt;lry: Milton
Hood, treasurer, and Mrs.
Willis Anthony, [lowers.
Edison .Baker presided at

Day of Prayer observed
Baptist World Day of
Prayer was observed at the
reeenl meeting of the Middleport Mount Moriah Baptist
Church Missionary Society at
the home of Mrs. Nellie
Winston .
Mrs. Florence Richards
was leader for the service
with Mrs. Julia Williams and
Mrs . Henrle lla Robinson
gtvmg
the
sc rlplur~
meditation. Mrs. Campbell
Harper gave an· explanation
of the Baptist Women's Day
of Prayer.
Mrs. Ernest Bowles spoke
on the Hondorus disaster and

Festival
plans made

following an explanation of
where the offering will go,
Mrs. Richards led 1n the
dedication service. The offering will be sent to the
Baptist Women's Department.
·
Mrs. Bowles was program
leader using poems about
Thanksgiving read by the
members. Mrs. Robinson was
elected delegate to the
Hocking District Missionary
Convention in Glouster. It
was voted to pay dues to
Church Women ·United of
Meigs County and to purchase two certificates for the
World Community Day
service. A Christmas party
was planned for Dec. 4 at the
church.

the meeting which opened
with prayer and Mrs. Pat!!
Smart gave devotions using a
meditation entitled "Thankful Hope of Israel" . Plans
were made for a Christmas
dinner and party at lhe
Werner home . The class will
help decorate the church for
the Christmas services. The
three poinsettias to be purchased will be taken to shul- ·
ins after the services.
Donations for various
projects were made. Special
prayer was given for Don
Wilson, a surgical patient at
Holzer Medical Center. 1\lso
remembered was the family
of Mrs. Eunice Hart, sisterin-law of Mrs. Hubbard.
The program featured
Thanksgiving readings by
each one present. Attending
were the Rev. Pe ler Granda!,
Mrs. Freda Hood, Edison
Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Willis
Anthony, Mr. and Mrs. David
Darst, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Chase, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Smith, Mr. and Mrs . John
Werner, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Hughes and Mr. and Mrs.
Hubbard.

Polly's Pointers

SALEM CENTER - Plans
for a fall festival Nov. 22 were
made at a recent meeting of
the Salem Center PTA.
Members were asked to ·•
contribute trade stamp books i!t- '1 . ··
and Royal C..'rown bottle caps · il:ii);.; ·
toward carnival expenses. By Polly
The festival will begin at 5 p.
Polly'a Problem
m.
DEAR POLLY - Please
A sweeper purchased for tell me how to remove paint
the school by the PTA was on that was spattered on a chair
dii!Play. American Education and table when the walls
Week was announced for were being painted. Nov. 17 thro\lgh 21. School THELMA.
plctureS&gt;wlll be taken on Nov.
DEAR THELMA - Paint
19.
spatters Bhould be wiped up
For devotions, Mrs. Russell a• they fall, In a• short a time
'Whitely used "Aware~ess" asiO oriS minutes a ring may
by lee 'ltacy. Patrolman R. form that Is very hard to
Gillespie presented a remove. Hereafter keep a
program on the formation of cloth dampeued with water
the State Highway Patrol and close by to wipe up latex paint
reviewed new laws for the apattera and paint aolvent on
unit.
a cloth for oil base paint.
The attendance banner was Probably the best you can do
won by the second grade. at lhl• late dote Is to try to
Relreslunents were served. soften the paint (try turpentine) and when soft
GENTLY o&lt;rape oH paint
spatters with a dull knife. The
flulsh on the chair and table
SPECIAL SERVICES
LONG BOTTOM - There 1may need some work after
will be special services at the the paint Is removed. Long
Bottom
United POLLY.
Methodist Church Nov. 14, 15
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
and 16 at 7:30 nightly. Em' melt Frasier of Circleville Peeve Is with parents who
will be the evangelist. The take their children shopping
80th anniversary of the and them dwnp them off in
church will be celebrated the toy department while
Suhday with basket dinner they shop in other parts of the
at 12:30 p.m. and a program store. The children often tear
at I :30, The pul;lllc Is lnv'ited the platlc coverings off the
toys. Many of them are then
to attend.
so soiled and damaged that
the store has to sell them at a
loss, and In the long run such
RECUPERATING
Recuperating at her home things cause other consumers
on ,W. Main St. is Freda M. to hsve to pay more. - L. B.
DEAR POLLY - Even in
Smith who suffered a broken
the
swellering summer heat I
lell shoulder and a sprained
am wrapping Christmas
ankle In a fall on Nov. 4.

a

StJITED
for
LEISURE
. FOR lHE
ti)UDAYS

GREAT
GIFf IDEA
FOR HIM
See our new selection
of leisure suits now.
Be first to choose one
for him lor Christ·
mas. Regulars and
longs In beautiful
plain colors.

1:

Refreshments will be
served by the Pomeroy PTA
Tuesday when parents are
invited to visit the Pomeroy
Elementary School in observance of American
Education Week.
Meeting Monday night at
the school, the PTA made
arrangements to serve coffee
and donuts during the
visitation time. It was noted
that Meigs High School
visitation day is Nov. 20 and
Meigs J(lnior High, Nov. 19.
Jil)l Soulsby presided at the
meeting during which lime he

•,

.
. •. ':.·
'

rr

Mr. and Mrs. Randon R. Smith

Outdoor ceremony
unites Smith-Hayes

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Archella Lou Hayes and
Randon Russell Smith exchanged wedding vows Sept.
6 at 1:30 p.m. in an outdoor
ceremony at the Union
Campground of the United
Methodist Church in New
gilts, or I might say h•tf Haven. Pastor John Campwrapping them. All year long bell and Pastor Dave Fields,
when I hear someone express Jr ., the latter an uncle of the
a desire or need for groom, officiated.
something or I find an
The bride Is a daughter of
especially good bargain that! Mrs. Billie Hayes of New
think would please someone I Haven and Robert Hayes of
buy it. It put illn a gift box S)Tacuse, and the groom is a
and wrap In newsprint paper son of Mrs. Bonnie Fields of
gotten from our newspaper New Haven and Russell
office at a reasonable price. I Smith of Lincoln Park, Mich.
find this paper has many
Nuptial
music
was
uses. Each such package is presented by Miss Marcia
nwnbered and I also keep a Ann Udel, organist, and Mrs.
very personal notebook Laverne Powell and Thomas
wherein (among other Hoffman sang " Because"
goodies ) I write the nwnber and "Wedding Song".
of the package, the name of
For her wedding the bride
the person to whom Ills to be wore a mu.Siin gown of emgiVen and a brief coded broidered eyelet featuring a
(spelling
bac~wards ' chapel-length train fas/lioned
pe~haps l or short h~nd- by the bride. The Victorian
wr11ten note aaylng .whahs in style bodice ·was accented
it. These are stored '" a with lull-length Juliet sleeves
cupboard, basement or gathered at the wrist with
~r;:: un~ around the firs t wide button cuffs. In her hair
A1
wore a coronet of yellow
1 ~e we have a she
.
daisies and baby's breath
family gill wrapping party with greenery. Her bouquet
and varieties of wrappmg, consisted of yellow daisies
bows, stick~rs, old greeting with troplcana roses trimmed
cards, cllppmgs of P.lclured with baby's breath and
clever gift wraps, etc., are all greenery.
provided. All these boxes '"
The matron-of-honor, sister
newsprtnt are brought out of the bride, was Mrs.
and everyo~e sees who can Dreami Hawky, Columbus,
com~ up wtlh the cleverest, and bridesmaids were Miss
prelhest
or most traditional Brenda Love, cousm
. o1 th e
.
1
Iookmg
wrapping. A smal bride, and a friend, Miss
nwnber Is taped on each gift Cathy Weaver. Dennis Smith
and prizes are given for the of Lincoln Park, Mich., was
best wrapping In each his brother's best man with
category. All are placed groomsmen Millon Tennant,
under the tree and no one New Haven . Dennis Wood
knows whose gill he or she New Haven: Tom Schwab
has wrapped. Each day I add and Jack Ha~es, the latter' a
:~ proper na!"e tags to one brother of the bride, and
woof the gifts. The family James Love a cousin of the
enjoys all of this tmme~ly bride.
'
and some real masterpieces
Immediately following the
emerge. This way no one ceremony, a reception was
person Is burdened with held at the American Legion
wrapping most of the gl!ts Hall In New Haven. Pam
and there Is a famtly Atkinson, Mason, registered
· together~ss and tradition. ll the guests and assistants
makes Christmas spread were Bob Hayes, Mrs .
through the entire year. Hope Beverly Smith, Miss Vivian
others may enjoy dong this, Woodrwn and Mr K lh
too. - JOYCE.
s. a Y

Paint spatters
need fast work

Richard.
After the reception, the
bride and groom left for a
honeymoon at Burr Oak Slate
Park and are now in
residence in Marietta,
Mrs. Smith is a graduate of
Wahama High School and
Marshall University and is
employed with the General
Consultant, Inc., in Parkersburg as a cytotechnologist. ,
Mr . Smith is a graduate of
Wahama High School and
Jackson Manpower Center
and a tlended Marshall
University. He presently is
employed as a serviceman
with the Forma Scientific,
Inc., in Marietta, Ohio.

Social
Calendar

MIKE SEARLES

thanked the cqmmiltees and
others for assistance with the
fall festival which brought in
$185.52. It was noted that a
parachute obtained by Carl
Roach for the PTA is torn and
· Soulsby asked for mothers to
assist in the repair. A report
on the recent convention of
the Ohio PTA was given by
Mrs. Maxine Goeglein.
Stressed at the meeting
was the importance of getting
PTA membership and
Souls by asked that the room
mothers work toward 100 per
cent membership in their
respective rooms. It was
reported that there is a leak
in the storage room.
Among the matters discussed was bus scheduling.
II was noted that some
children are arriving at the
school about 7:10 a. m. and
there was some question as to
proper suprvision at that
time. Robert Morris agreed
to check into the matter and
see if some revision of
scheduling can be made. A
health situation in the school
was also discussed and It was
emphasized that parents be
alerted so that treatment can

Birthday
observed
Mike Searles, son of Janet
Marcum, Pomeroy, was
honored recently with a
surprise birthday party at his
home given by his mother
and alllll, Patty Searles.
Favors of toys and candy
were given to those attending. Games were played
and prizes won by Marly
Searles, Greta Kennedy,
Steve Musser and Ryan
Hysell. The door prize was
pre sen ted to Christy Hysell.
Refreshments of Ice cream,
cake, potato chips, and
beverage were served to
those named and Sandy
Marcum, Tara and Beth
C.1ark, Jeremy Hysell, Angle
and Vlki RU88ell, Jinuny
Hysell, Beth, Angle and
Clarissa Pierce, Wendy Fry,
Mono Johnson, Rolland and
Susie Searles.
Sending gilts were Veva
Searles, Muriel Johnson, Mr.
~nd Mrs. William Marcum,
Ronnie Davis and Karrie
Johnson .

SATURDAY
MEIGS COUNTY
RETIRED Teachers
Association luncheon, noon at
'!tinily Church. Program will
be presented by the Bicentennial Minuteman.
.SUNDAY
OLD FASHIONED Hymn
Sing at United Faith C..'hurch,
Pomeroy, SR 1 on bypass, 2
p.m. Local talent will · be
featured. Pastor Robert E.
ORIENTATION HEW
Smith, Sr ., Invites the public
Orientation for field service
to attend.
with veterans was held
recently at the Gallipolis
American Legion Auxiliary
HOSPITALIZED
hall under the 'direction of
Charles Frazier is a Mrs. Raymond s·loan,
patient at the Veterans Ashland. Mrs. Arnold
Mell\orial Hospital. His room Richards, Middleport, Eighth
number is 137.
District president, arranged
the workahop for Auxiliary
mem~rs of the district.

be administered. Notes on the
matter were sent home with
the children earlier. .
The room award for attendance went to the fifth
grade. The program consisted of contemporary group
exe rcises by Mrs . Mary
Hysell 's fifth grade, and a
choral reading by Mrs. Helen
Williams sixth grade.
The next meeting will be
held on Dec. 8 with a musical
program by Mrs. Gladys
Foley. Refreshments were
served by the fifth grade.

••

New York Clothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

.,

....

.THE
COMELY .

CARA~E:LL€®

(lft))l()

in come program makes
nionthly payments to people
with lillie or no income and ·
limited resources who are G5
and over or blind or disabled :
Eligibility {or payments and
payment amounts can be
affected by changes in income, place of residence,
marital status, and other
circwnstances.

" People have 30 days to
report such ~han~es lo any
social security office,"
Peterson said . "Under the
law, .failure to repo~t. changes
- or delay in reporting
changes - can mean
reductions in supplemental
security income payments."
The· penally is $25 for the
first failure or delay, $50 for

.

Rev. Geo. Reach

Missionaries
will conduct
church service
RACINE - . Rev. and Mrs.
" veorge Rench, missionaries
•;; to Indonesia, will conduct a
' ' service at the Church of the
Nazarene here Nov . 14 at 7:30
''"',, p.m. He received his A.!3.
· degree from Pasadena
College and his B.D. degree
from
the.
Nazarene
Theological Seminary in
.. Kansas City , Mo. Aller
" paslorlng the Chinese C..'hurch
of the Nazarene in Fresno,
Calif. he was assigned to .
Taiwan in 1959 and then
transferred to Indonesia in
1973 where he superintended
the establishing of the Church
of the Nazarene.
The service will include an
audio-visual presentation
entitled "Tell the Good
·News" and also a demonstration of Angklung musical
inslrwnents. The public is
invited to attend this informative and inspirational
service.

LESTOIL

CONTI QUE

2Soz.

WETTING
SOLUTION

&lt;&gt;

Reg.
Everyday
Price
$1.·19

PLASTIC
STRIPS
50 with
20 FREE
Reg. Everyday
Price99c

1 For
The Price
Of1

LIP
BALM

., ............... .

"''"'"''"""''

ilA~G~•Es
~·, : ~t:~

~·

, ·...

l.o I ,

:::a:buv,
::

)CW/1

, '"

IMJI

Y•" '

Trustees of

NORELCO QUICK DRY1000
HAIR DRYER/STYLER

musewn will

meet Friday

Now!

REG.
EVERYDAY

All Interested persons In
Meigs C!ollllty are Invited to·
attend a meeting of the
trustees of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical
Society Friday morning Nov.
·14 'from ' IO to II a.m. at lhemusewn, 144 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
All meetings are open to the
,.... public and attendance Is
~..
W'ged.
The rriuseum Is open to the
public 10 to II a.m. and 2 to 4
~ p.m. Tuesday, Thursday and
Friday and will be open
Sunday, Nov. 16 from 2 to 4
p.m.
A deeision on how much
longer the current exhibit on
Indian Artifacts wl!l be
displayed wl!l be made
Friday morning·.

Use Our
Chrisbnas
Lay AWIJ
Plan!

- Dries hair

These are ou r fashion favorites ... lovely. little
wa tches thai never go out of style. They're all
pretty, precise and very prudently priced. Slop
by today and see our full selection of Caravelle
classics .. . all precision jeweled and 'Bu lova
Guaran teed.
A. S1ttn silver dl1t. $ti.M
1. l7 Jtwets. hPIIISion bruelet. S3US
C. Swup StCOIId. RI ISed numerals. U7.1S

Goesslefs Jewelry Store
POMEROY

..

super-

fast

-4 heal settings
- The kind the
professi onals

PRICE •1.54

use .

.Model •
HB 1700

SLOW COOKER
SIM-R-WARE

~

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Reg.
Everyday
Price
49c Ea.

..

byBulova

COURT ST.

The moon is between its
first quarter and full phase.
The · morning stars ·are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Saturn .
The evening star is Jupiter,
Those born on this date are
und er the sign of Scorpio.
Scottish author Rober t
Louis Stevenson was born
Nov. 13, 1850.
fhe Almanac
On this day In history:
Today is Thursday, Nov. 13, In 1927, the Holland Tunnel
the 317th day of 1975 with 48to under the Hudson Riv~r befollow.

sa id.
People ge tting sup p1emenl&lt;!l security income
paym ents can get informa lio,n about reporting
changes in their circumstances by calli ng 5924440 - station to statio~
collect.

u\

Start losing we ight today or
money back . MONADE)( Is a
tiny tablet and easy to take.
MONADEX wi ll help curb
your desire for exce.ss food .
Eat less · weigh tess . 'ontains
no dangeroUs drugs and will
not make you nervou&amp;. No
sfrenuous exercise. Change
your life ... st.rt today .
MONADEX cost Sl .OO for a lO
day supply. Large economy
size is ss.oo . Also try
AQUATABS : fhey work gently
to help vou lose water -bloat.
AQUATABS - a "water pil!"
that works - $3 .00. Both
guaranteed and sold by :
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
112 E. Main, Pomeroy &amp;
Dutton Drug Store, Mid ·
dl eport. Mail Orders Filled.

People who don 't report
~ hange s in circumstances ·
that affect their supplemental security Income
.payments may · have a
penalty deducted from future
paymen Is, according to Ed
Peterson, Manager of the
·Athens Social Security Offices.
The supplemental security

..

LOSE UGLY FAT

~~--From VanWyck,
"That's Cotfee"
is the automa tic
drip cof1eemaker
with the triple
fil ler system for
fine flavor. Makes
2·10 cups of
de licious
restaurant style
coffee in monutes
and keeps it
servi hot.

BACK FROM TRIP
Mr . and Mrs . James
C..'rlswell, Middleport, have
returned after a week in
Morgantown, W. Va . visiting
their
son-in·law
aijd
daughter , Mr . ·and Mrs.
Robert C..'usler and children,
Bart and Jennifer.

3112 QT.·

•1277
REG. ,
EVERYDAY
PRICE
$15.88
Country style cooker -server
that never needs watching. It's
electric,
htweight &amp; safe.

CLAIROL

MIRROR MIRROR
Mirror, Mirror

ts an all·
purpose lighted
mirror.

James A. Heaton, Helen L.
Heaton to Thomas Buckley,
Judith A. Buckley, .70 acre,
Chester.
David S. Heaton, · Janet
Heaton to Thomas Buckley,
Judith A. Buckley, .25 acre,
Chesler.
Ann C. Dater, Charles H.
Dater to Geraldine c. Reed,
46.766 acres, Rutland.
Hollis Clark, Letha C..1ark to
Kenneth W. Madden, Sr.,
Mary Lou Madden, .4 acre,
Salisbury.
Hollis Clark, Letha Clark to
Kenneth W. Madden Jr.,
Edna Jane Madden, .033
acre, Salisbury.
Alma Brown, Clifford E. .
Brown, Scott Brown to Ewing
E. Hutton, Judy J. Hutton,
parcel, Rutland.
Carl · Findling, Wanda F.
Findling to Carl Findling,
Wanda F. Findling, parcels,
Orange.
· Benny R. S!leari, GhrlsUne
Spears to Auston Newsome,
Rosalyn Newsome, lot,
Syracuse .
.Tohn P. Hood, Kathy S.
Hood to Roy C. Lyons,
HOURS
Martha E. Lyons, lot, Mid9to 5 Mon.- Fri.
dleport,
91o aSat.
Ronald ' V. Jones, Mary
Closed Sunday
Marie Jones )o Harlan A.
Bal!ard, Alta L. Ballard, :20
arre, Lebanon.

\

:lust w~at you need
for Fall: Sew-special
Conn le mocs. Special
'cause twin rows of ·
up -front stitches '
create that handsome '
handsewn
style .
Special ' cause it's
light on the step while ·
It keeps that heavy '
like.
look
you
Special ly for you for ·
Fall! Brown leather
uppers.

1418
Hot Spot for Coffee, Tea or gravies.
Solid American Walnut handles In hand·
rubbed oil fin ish.

Reg . Everyday
Price S9.S9

Reg. Everyday
Price
S15.95

Model

RM-1

LIBBEY

.f

SPICE GARDEN

ILOIEthui·LY

GI-ASSV{ARE
Set Of 4
Decorative
Spice Garden
Design

!t

•

SIZE
.NO
FIGlUit

e

T•

...
Rocks

leu 10 20. jO ~ .. ~, ~' l m .,, l' ~"'''' ,.,., 1n1
IM l ~ !'ll l!db'~ Ati'( ORI'.f M&lt;C~~·~ Q f' ~· c •··~·~·.

1o.,, MO'&gt;t J:t•a•t 1t ••:e a~ ·· ~·J•t u
t&gt;\tM d .,.y ctlr ''V) ,,·nwg
p!.ln lon·ot116tJ~h161&gt;}·~ l ' ulr 1 tj' "11Qrod
lfl'll~l$ all(IJ ~fll ·~ f.,~ly tlij· 1•~1 \&lt;II t~l ~H 1!

~~~ ~ ~ !i)

ro~ 'o;J~o~- 1~1)

'f6~t

fd l
·-~~~

1111llv ll-mi! n•t tm.td. ~·•d · u.. ~ ~
AtrlOP.I'Il r ,,,, t~il•l lq:lf

~~~tl l~

e·I''' 1.lt rw•'

41 Cl. TAB LETS

•

heritage house

Racine, Ohio

MIDilEPORT, OHIO

949-2'5 25
I'

c~ASH

NO
DIETS
• NO STRENUOUS
EXERCISES

~.P ~ d' Jlolllall'f '11'·\!o&lt;'JI ~ff ltH 1~.1 ~P'I •OS ~I)
w~g~t tit~ •t'~ "''' 11rcr~ ' "~ I(}VIQ I• ~nu gtl

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..

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o1 I tilt ~11 ~·U l~lJt! t. 1 O" t 01 IMif Sil ~1~1

AVAILAILEfOI IINTAL

~.

STORE•

KERM'S KORNER

Penalties possible in SSI payments

PTA to serve refreshments
at Tuesday open house

New class officers elected

$100 for c~ch
subsequent failure or delay .
"The penalty isn't applied
if people could n't help
reporting la te or weren 't at
iault for not reporting
changes in their circumstances," Peterson said.
"Also, people who make a
false statement that causes
them to get .money not
righlf~lly due may be
prosecuted for fraud
". he
.
I he second , and

_.....,
•

nc~~
l,t,~ht

$249

tween New York City and
New Jersey· was opened. It
had been. under construction
seven y~ars .
In 1933, the first recorded ·
"s it-down" strike in the
United States wa s staged by
workers at the Hormel
Packing Company in Austin,
Minh.
In 1973, the U.S. Senate
approved a bill authorizin~
.construction of an oil pipeline
J from Alaska.

�•.

"

... ..

,. .....

..

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,_

--- . . .

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov . 13, 1975
6 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. 13, 1975

New officers were elected
at the Tuesday night meetin~
of the Hearthstone Class of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hubbard.

Elected were John Werner ,
president ; Paul Smart, vice
president ; Mrs . Allen
Hughes, secrel&lt;lry: Milton
Hood, treasurer, and Mrs.
Willis Anthony, [lowers.
Edison .Baker presided at

Day of Prayer observed
Baptist World Day of
Prayer was observed at the
reeenl meeting of the Middleport Mount Moriah Baptist
Church Missionary Society at
the home of Mrs. Nellie
Winston .
Mrs. Florence Richards
was leader for the service
with Mrs. Julia Williams and
Mrs . Henrle lla Robinson
gtvmg
the
sc rlplur~
meditation. Mrs. Campbell
Harper gave an· explanation
of the Baptist Women's Day
of Prayer.
Mrs. Ernest Bowles spoke
on the Hondorus disaster and

Festival
plans made

following an explanation of
where the offering will go,
Mrs. Richards led 1n the
dedication service. The offering will be sent to the
Baptist Women's Department.
·
Mrs. Bowles was program
leader using poems about
Thanksgiving read by the
members. Mrs. Robinson was
elected delegate to the
Hocking District Missionary
Convention in Glouster. It
was voted to pay dues to
Church Women ·United of
Meigs County and to purchase two certificates for the
World Community Day
service. A Christmas party
was planned for Dec. 4 at the
church.

the meeting which opened
with prayer and Mrs. Pat!!
Smart gave devotions using a
meditation entitled "Thankful Hope of Israel" . Plans
were made for a Christmas
dinner and party at lhe
Werner home . The class will
help decorate the church for
the Christmas services. The
three poinsettias to be purchased will be taken to shul- ·
ins after the services.
Donations for various
projects were made. Special
prayer was given for Don
Wilson, a surgical patient at
Holzer Medical Center. 1\lso
remembered was the family
of Mrs. Eunice Hart, sisterin-law of Mrs. Hubbard.
The program featured
Thanksgiving readings by
each one present. Attending
were the Rev. Pe ler Granda!,
Mrs. Freda Hood, Edison
Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Willis
Anthony, Mr. and Mrs. David
Darst, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Chase, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Smith, Mr. and Mrs . John
Werner, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Hughes and Mr. and Mrs.
Hubbard.

Polly's Pointers

SALEM CENTER - Plans
for a fall festival Nov. 22 were
made at a recent meeting of
the Salem Center PTA.
Members were asked to ·•
contribute trade stamp books i!t- '1 . ··
and Royal C..'rown bottle caps · il:ii);.; ·
toward carnival expenses. By Polly
The festival will begin at 5 p.
Polly'a Problem
m.
DEAR POLLY - Please
A sweeper purchased for tell me how to remove paint
the school by the PTA was on that was spattered on a chair
dii!Play. American Education and table when the walls
Week was announced for were being painted. Nov. 17 thro\lgh 21. School THELMA.
plctureS&gt;wlll be taken on Nov.
DEAR THELMA - Paint
19.
spatters Bhould be wiped up
For devotions, Mrs. Russell a• they fall, In a• short a time
'Whitely used "Aware~ess" asiO oriS minutes a ring may
by lee 'ltacy. Patrolman R. form that Is very hard to
Gillespie presented a remove. Hereafter keep a
program on the formation of cloth dampeued with water
the State Highway Patrol and close by to wipe up latex paint
reviewed new laws for the apattera and paint aolvent on
unit.
a cloth for oil base paint.
The attendance banner was Probably the best you can do
won by the second grade. at lhl• late dote Is to try to
Relreslunents were served. soften the paint (try turpentine) and when soft
GENTLY o&lt;rape oH paint
spatters with a dull knife. The
flulsh on the chair and table
SPECIAL SERVICES
LONG BOTTOM - There 1may need some work after
will be special services at the the paint Is removed. Long
Bottom
United POLLY.
Methodist Church Nov. 14, 15
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
and 16 at 7:30 nightly. Em' melt Frasier of Circleville Peeve Is with parents who
will be the evangelist. The take their children shopping
80th anniversary of the and them dwnp them off in
church will be celebrated the toy department while
Suhday with basket dinner they shop in other parts of the
at 12:30 p.m. and a program store. The children often tear
at I :30, The pul;lllc Is lnv'ited the platlc coverings off the
toys. Many of them are then
to attend.
so soiled and damaged that
the store has to sell them at a
loss, and In the long run such
RECUPERATING
Recuperating at her home things cause other consumers
on ,W. Main St. is Freda M. to hsve to pay more. - L. B.
DEAR POLLY - Even in
Smith who suffered a broken
the
swellering summer heat I
lell shoulder and a sprained
am wrapping Christmas
ankle In a fall on Nov. 4.

a

StJITED
for
LEISURE
. FOR lHE
ti)UDAYS

GREAT
GIFf IDEA
FOR HIM
See our new selection
of leisure suits now.
Be first to choose one
for him lor Christ·
mas. Regulars and
longs In beautiful
plain colors.

1:

Refreshments will be
served by the Pomeroy PTA
Tuesday when parents are
invited to visit the Pomeroy
Elementary School in observance of American
Education Week.
Meeting Monday night at
the school, the PTA made
arrangements to serve coffee
and donuts during the
visitation time. It was noted
that Meigs High School
visitation day is Nov. 20 and
Meigs J(lnior High, Nov. 19.
Jil)l Soulsby presided at the
meeting during which lime he

•,

.
. •. ':.·
'

rr

Mr. and Mrs. Randon R. Smith

Outdoor ceremony
unites Smith-Hayes

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Archella Lou Hayes and
Randon Russell Smith exchanged wedding vows Sept.
6 at 1:30 p.m. in an outdoor
ceremony at the Union
Campground of the United
Methodist Church in New
gilts, or I might say h•tf Haven. Pastor John Campwrapping them. All year long bell and Pastor Dave Fields,
when I hear someone express Jr ., the latter an uncle of the
a desire or need for groom, officiated.
something or I find an
The bride Is a daughter of
especially good bargain that! Mrs. Billie Hayes of New
think would please someone I Haven and Robert Hayes of
buy it. It put illn a gift box S)Tacuse, and the groom is a
and wrap In newsprint paper son of Mrs. Bonnie Fields of
gotten from our newspaper New Haven and Russell
office at a reasonable price. I Smith of Lincoln Park, Mich.
find this paper has many
Nuptial
music
was
uses. Each such package is presented by Miss Marcia
nwnbered and I also keep a Ann Udel, organist, and Mrs.
very personal notebook Laverne Powell and Thomas
wherein (among other Hoffman sang " Because"
goodies ) I write the nwnber and "Wedding Song".
of the package, the name of
For her wedding the bride
the person to whom Ills to be wore a mu.Siin gown of emgiVen and a brief coded broidered eyelet featuring a
(spelling
bac~wards ' chapel-length train fas/lioned
pe~haps l or short h~nd- by the bride. The Victorian
wr11ten note aaylng .whahs in style bodice ·was accented
it. These are stored '" a with lull-length Juliet sleeves
cupboard, basement or gathered at the wrist with
~r;:: un~ around the firs t wide button cuffs. In her hair
A1
wore a coronet of yellow
1 ~e we have a she
.
daisies and baby's breath
family gill wrapping party with greenery. Her bouquet
and varieties of wrappmg, consisted of yellow daisies
bows, stick~rs, old greeting with troplcana roses trimmed
cards, cllppmgs of P.lclured with baby's breath and
clever gift wraps, etc., are all greenery.
provided. All these boxes '"
The matron-of-honor, sister
newsprtnt are brought out of the bride, was Mrs.
and everyo~e sees who can Dreami Hawky, Columbus,
com~ up wtlh the cleverest, and bridesmaids were Miss
prelhest
or most traditional Brenda Love, cousm
. o1 th e
.
1
Iookmg
wrapping. A smal bride, and a friend, Miss
nwnber Is taped on each gift Cathy Weaver. Dennis Smith
and prizes are given for the of Lincoln Park, Mich., was
best wrapping In each his brother's best man with
category. All are placed groomsmen Millon Tennant,
under the tree and no one New Haven . Dennis Wood
knows whose gill he or she New Haven: Tom Schwab
has wrapped. Each day I add and Jack Ha~es, the latter' a
:~ proper na!"e tags to one brother of the bride, and
woof the gifts. The family James Love a cousin of the
enjoys all of this tmme~ly bride.
'
and some real masterpieces
Immediately following the
emerge. This way no one ceremony, a reception was
person Is burdened with held at the American Legion
wrapping most of the gl!ts Hall In New Haven. Pam
and there Is a famtly Atkinson, Mason, registered
· together~ss and tradition. ll the guests and assistants
makes Christmas spread were Bob Hayes, Mrs .
through the entire year. Hope Beverly Smith, Miss Vivian
others may enjoy dong this, Woodrwn and Mr K lh
too. - JOYCE.
s. a Y

Paint spatters
need fast work

Richard.
After the reception, the
bride and groom left for a
honeymoon at Burr Oak Slate
Park and are now in
residence in Marietta,
Mrs. Smith is a graduate of
Wahama High School and
Marshall University and is
employed with the General
Consultant, Inc., in Parkersburg as a cytotechnologist. ,
Mr . Smith is a graduate of
Wahama High School and
Jackson Manpower Center
and a tlended Marshall
University. He presently is
employed as a serviceman
with the Forma Scientific,
Inc., in Marietta, Ohio.

Social
Calendar

MIKE SEARLES

thanked the cqmmiltees and
others for assistance with the
fall festival which brought in
$185.52. It was noted that a
parachute obtained by Carl
Roach for the PTA is torn and
· Soulsby asked for mothers to
assist in the repair. A report
on the recent convention of
the Ohio PTA was given by
Mrs. Maxine Goeglein.
Stressed at the meeting
was the importance of getting
PTA membership and
Souls by asked that the room
mothers work toward 100 per
cent membership in their
respective rooms. It was
reported that there is a leak
in the storage room.
Among the matters discussed was bus scheduling.
II was noted that some
children are arriving at the
school about 7:10 a. m. and
there was some question as to
proper suprvision at that
time. Robert Morris agreed
to check into the matter and
see if some revision of
scheduling can be made. A
health situation in the school
was also discussed and It was
emphasized that parents be
alerted so that treatment can

Birthday
observed
Mike Searles, son of Janet
Marcum, Pomeroy, was
honored recently with a
surprise birthday party at his
home given by his mother
and alllll, Patty Searles.
Favors of toys and candy
were given to those attending. Games were played
and prizes won by Marly
Searles, Greta Kennedy,
Steve Musser and Ryan
Hysell. The door prize was
pre sen ted to Christy Hysell.
Refreshments of Ice cream,
cake, potato chips, and
beverage were served to
those named and Sandy
Marcum, Tara and Beth
C.1ark, Jeremy Hysell, Angle
and Vlki RU88ell, Jinuny
Hysell, Beth, Angle and
Clarissa Pierce, Wendy Fry,
Mono Johnson, Rolland and
Susie Searles.
Sending gilts were Veva
Searles, Muriel Johnson, Mr.
~nd Mrs. William Marcum,
Ronnie Davis and Karrie
Johnson .

SATURDAY
MEIGS COUNTY
RETIRED Teachers
Association luncheon, noon at
'!tinily Church. Program will
be presented by the Bicentennial Minuteman.
.SUNDAY
OLD FASHIONED Hymn
Sing at United Faith C..'hurch,
Pomeroy, SR 1 on bypass, 2
p.m. Local talent will · be
featured. Pastor Robert E.
ORIENTATION HEW
Smith, Sr ., Invites the public
Orientation for field service
to attend.
with veterans was held
recently at the Gallipolis
American Legion Auxiliary
HOSPITALIZED
hall under the 'direction of
Charles Frazier is a Mrs. Raymond s·loan,
patient at the Veterans Ashland. Mrs. Arnold
Mell\orial Hospital. His room Richards, Middleport, Eighth
number is 137.
District president, arranged
the workahop for Auxiliary
mem~rs of the district.

be administered. Notes on the
matter were sent home with
the children earlier. .
The room award for attendance went to the fifth
grade. The program consisted of contemporary group
exe rcises by Mrs . Mary
Hysell 's fifth grade, and a
choral reading by Mrs. Helen
Williams sixth grade.
The next meeting will be
held on Dec. 8 with a musical
program by Mrs. Gladys
Foley. Refreshments were
served by the fifth grade.

••

New York Clothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

.,

....

.THE
COMELY .

CARA~E:LL€®

(lft))l()

in come program makes
nionthly payments to people
with lillie or no income and ·
limited resources who are G5
and over or blind or disabled :
Eligibility {or payments and
payment amounts can be
affected by changes in income, place of residence,
marital status, and other
circwnstances.

" People have 30 days to
report such ~han~es lo any
social security office,"
Peterson said . "Under the
law, .failure to repo~t. changes
- or delay in reporting
changes - can mean
reductions in supplemental
security income payments."
The· penally is $25 for the
first failure or delay, $50 for

.

Rev. Geo. Reach

Missionaries
will conduct
church service
RACINE - . Rev. and Mrs.
" veorge Rench, missionaries
•;; to Indonesia, will conduct a
' ' service at the Church of the
Nazarene here Nov . 14 at 7:30
''"',, p.m. He received his A.!3.
· degree from Pasadena
College and his B.D. degree
from
the.
Nazarene
Theological Seminary in
.. Kansas City , Mo. Aller
" paslorlng the Chinese C..'hurch
of the Nazarene in Fresno,
Calif. he was assigned to .
Taiwan in 1959 and then
transferred to Indonesia in
1973 where he superintended
the establishing of the Church
of the Nazarene.
The service will include an
audio-visual presentation
entitled "Tell the Good
·News" and also a demonstration of Angklung musical
inslrwnents. The public is
invited to attend this informative and inspirational
service.

LESTOIL

CONTI QUE

2Soz.

WETTING
SOLUTION

&lt;&gt;

Reg.
Everyday
Price
$1.·19

PLASTIC
STRIPS
50 with
20 FREE
Reg. Everyday
Price99c

1 For
The Price
Of1

LIP
BALM

., ............... .

"''"'"''"""''

ilA~G~•Es
~·, : ~t:~

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l.o I ,

:::a:buv,
::

)CW/1

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IMJI

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Trustees of

NORELCO QUICK DRY1000
HAIR DRYER/STYLER

musewn will

meet Friday

Now!

REG.
EVERYDAY

All Interested persons In
Meigs C!ollllty are Invited to·
attend a meeting of the
trustees of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical
Society Friday morning Nov.
·14 'from ' IO to II a.m. at lhemusewn, 144 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
All meetings are open to the
,.... public and attendance Is
~..
W'ged.
The rriuseum Is open to the
public 10 to II a.m. and 2 to 4
~ p.m. Tuesday, Thursday and
Friday and will be open
Sunday, Nov. 16 from 2 to 4
p.m.
A deeision on how much
longer the current exhibit on
Indian Artifacts wl!l be
displayed wl!l be made
Friday morning·.

Use Our
Chrisbnas
Lay AWIJ
Plan!

- Dries hair

These are ou r fashion favorites ... lovely. little
wa tches thai never go out of style. They're all
pretty, precise and very prudently priced. Slop
by today and see our full selection of Caravelle
classics .. . all precision jeweled and 'Bu lova
Guaran teed.
A. S1ttn silver dl1t. $ti.M
1. l7 Jtwets. hPIIISion bruelet. S3US
C. Swup StCOIId. RI ISed numerals. U7.1S

Goesslefs Jewelry Store
POMEROY

..

super-

fast

-4 heal settings
- The kind the
professi onals

PRICE •1.54

use .

.Model •
HB 1700

SLOW COOKER
SIM-R-WARE

~

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Reg.
Everyday
Price
49c Ea.

..

byBulova

COURT ST.

The moon is between its
first quarter and full phase.
The · morning stars ·are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Saturn .
The evening star is Jupiter,
Those born on this date are
und er the sign of Scorpio.
Scottish author Rober t
Louis Stevenson was born
Nov. 13, 1850.
fhe Almanac
On this day In history:
Today is Thursday, Nov. 13, In 1927, the Holland Tunnel
the 317th day of 1975 with 48to under the Hudson Riv~r befollow.

sa id.
People ge tting sup p1emenl&lt;!l security income
paym ents can get informa lio,n about reporting
changes in their circumstances by calli ng 5924440 - station to statio~
collect.

u\

Start losing we ight today or
money back . MONADE)( Is a
tiny tablet and easy to take.
MONADEX wi ll help curb
your desire for exce.ss food .
Eat less · weigh tess . 'ontains
no dangeroUs drugs and will
not make you nervou&amp;. No
sfrenuous exercise. Change
your life ... st.rt today .
MONADEX cost Sl .OO for a lO
day supply. Large economy
size is ss.oo . Also try
AQUATABS : fhey work gently
to help vou lose water -bloat.
AQUATABS - a "water pil!"
that works - $3 .00. Both
guaranteed and sold by :
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
112 E. Main, Pomeroy &amp;
Dutton Drug Store, Mid ·
dl eport. Mail Orders Filled.

People who don 't report
~ hange s in circumstances ·
that affect their supplemental security Income
.payments may · have a
penalty deducted from future
paymen Is, according to Ed
Peterson, Manager of the
·Athens Social Security Offices.
The supplemental security

..

LOSE UGLY FAT

~~--From VanWyck,
"That's Cotfee"
is the automa tic
drip cof1eemaker
with the triple
fil ler system for
fine flavor. Makes
2·10 cups of
de licious
restaurant style
coffee in monutes
and keeps it
servi hot.

BACK FROM TRIP
Mr . and Mrs . James
C..'rlswell, Middleport, have
returned after a week in
Morgantown, W. Va . visiting
their
son-in·law
aijd
daughter , Mr . ·and Mrs.
Robert C..'usler and children,
Bart and Jennifer.

3112 QT.·

•1277
REG. ,
EVERYDAY
PRICE
$15.88
Country style cooker -server
that never needs watching. It's
electric,
htweight &amp; safe.

CLAIROL

MIRROR MIRROR
Mirror, Mirror

ts an all·
purpose lighted
mirror.

James A. Heaton, Helen L.
Heaton to Thomas Buckley,
Judith A. Buckley, .70 acre,
Chester.
David S. Heaton, · Janet
Heaton to Thomas Buckley,
Judith A. Buckley, .25 acre,
Chesler.
Ann C. Dater, Charles H.
Dater to Geraldine c. Reed,
46.766 acres, Rutland.
Hollis Clark, Letha C..1ark to
Kenneth W. Madden, Sr.,
Mary Lou Madden, .4 acre,
Salisbury.
Hollis Clark, Letha Clark to
Kenneth W. Madden Jr.,
Edna Jane Madden, .033
acre, Salisbury.
Alma Brown, Clifford E. .
Brown, Scott Brown to Ewing
E. Hutton, Judy J. Hutton,
parcel, Rutland.
Carl · Findling, Wanda F.
Findling to Carl Findling,
Wanda F. Findling, parcels,
Orange.
· Benny R. S!leari, GhrlsUne
Spears to Auston Newsome,
Rosalyn Newsome, lot,
Syracuse .
.Tohn P. Hood, Kathy S.
Hood to Roy C. Lyons,
HOURS
Martha E. Lyons, lot, Mid9to 5 Mon.- Fri.
dleport,
91o aSat.
Ronald ' V. Jones, Mary
Closed Sunday
Marie Jones )o Harlan A.
Bal!ard, Alta L. Ballard, :20
arre, Lebanon.

\

:lust w~at you need
for Fall: Sew-special
Conn le mocs. Special
'cause twin rows of ·
up -front stitches '
create that handsome '
handsewn
style .
Special ' cause it's
light on the step while ·
It keeps that heavy '
like.
look
you
Special ly for you for ·
Fall! Brown leather
uppers.

1418
Hot Spot for Coffee, Tea or gravies.
Solid American Walnut handles In hand·
rubbed oil fin ish.

Reg . Everyday
Price S9.S9

Reg. Everyday
Price
S15.95

Model

RM-1

LIBBEY

.f

SPICE GARDEN

ILOIEthui·LY

GI-ASSV{ARE
Set Of 4
Decorative
Spice Garden
Design

!t

•

SIZE
.NO
FIGlUit

e

T•

...
Rocks

leu 10 20. jO ~ .. ~, ~' l m .,, l' ~"'''' ,.,., 1n1
IM l ~ !'ll l!db'~ Ati'( ORI'.f M&lt;C~~·~ Q f' ~· c •··~·~·.

1o.,, MO'&gt;t J:t•a•t 1t ••:e a~ ·· ~·J•t u
t&gt;\tM d .,.y ctlr ''V) ,,·nwg
p!.ln lon·ot116tJ~h161&gt;}·~ l ' ulr 1 tj' "11Qrod
lfl'll~l$ all(IJ ~fll ·~ f.,~ly tlij· 1•~1 \&lt;II t~l ~H 1!

~~~ ~ ~ !i)

ro~ 'o;J~o~- 1~1)

'f6~t

fd l
·-~~~

1111llv ll-mi! n•t tm.td. ~·•d · u.. ~ ~
AtrlOP.I'Il r ,,,, t~il•l lq:lf

~~~tl l~

e·I''' 1.lt rw•'

41 Cl. TAB LETS

•

heritage house

Racine, Ohio

MIDilEPORT, OHIO

949-2'5 25
I'

c~ASH

NO
DIETS
• NO STRENUOUS
EXERCISES

~.P ~ d' Jlolllall'f '11'·\!o&lt;'JI ~ff ltH 1~.1 ~P'I •OS ~I)
w~g~t tit~ •t'~ "''' 11rcr~ ' "~ I(}VIQ I• ~nu gtl

,.__..

1
..

.:J:~:~r1~~~~ ~

o1 I tilt ~11 ~·U l~lJt! t. 1 O" t 01 IMif Sil ~1~1

AVAILAILEfOI IINTAL

~.

STORE•

KERM'S KORNER

Penalties possible in SSI payments

PTA to serve refreshments
at Tuesday open house

New class officers elected

$100 for c~ch
subsequent failure or delay .
"The penalty isn't applied
if people could n't help
reporting la te or weren 't at
iault for not reporting
changes in their circumstances," Peterson said.
"Also, people who make a
false statement that causes
them to get .money not
righlf~lly due may be
prosecuted for fraud
". he
.
I he second , and

_.....,
•

nc~~
l,t,~ht

$249

tween New York City and
New Jersey· was opened. It
had been. under construction
seven y~ars .
In 1933, the first recorded ·
"s it-down" strike in the
United States wa s staged by
workers at the Hormel
Packing Company in Austin,
Minh.
In 1973, the U.S. Senate
approved a bill authorizin~
.construction of an oil pipeline
J from Alaska.

�8- The•IJally :sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday , Nov 13, 1975

J}lJJJW@M®u..t

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifi~ds.~:..

kl._IIJ ..J ,_.

Unoc:rambltlh••• roor Jumbl.,,
one letter to eat.h ~quare, to
f'orm four ord1nary "AOrda.

'

Help Wanted
R N wa n ted 4 hours per week
at Syracuse Nu rsmg Home
I pply 1n person any 1m1c
I I 7 61C

DENUC

0

I I

BE EGLE

IKOPHOUI

I I

I
J I (J I

tVEGASA

rabbol

dog,

No" orranre the clr&lt;led letlen
to Corm the aurpri10 IINtwer, u
auueated by the above Cll'loon.

Phone 992 S421

CHIHUAHUAS

or

LOVING

Katie

E

MEMORY

Blake

who

passed away one year ago

today
Gone
but
not
forg otten Sad ly mtssed by

the fomlly

11 13 t tc

iN-LOViNG -MEMORY;,-;;~
fath er and grandfather
Louis Walker. Sr, Nov 12

Loving memories never die

As years go on and days pa ss

by ,

In aur hearts a mem ory Is
kept ,
One we lov ed and will never
forget
Sad I Y m lssed by children and
grandchildren

I Ill He
-- ---------- -~-

Card of Thanb

WOULD LIKE lo thank all

our neig hbors and friends
tor everyone s kindness

992 2759

Phone

19 70 BUDDY trailer
16141 69B 3l66

~EMODEUNG

Plumb ing
heatmg and all tvpes of
gen eral
repair
Work
g uar anteed 20 years eJIJ.1
perlence
Phone 992 2~()9
5 I If~

Rev

Robert

Hevden and Rev Mid
dteswart, Entern Star lind
o of A T.hanks tor the toad ,
cards and expressions of
kindness shown
Bernice . Marvin . William ,
Chlllrl es Darst and Mar lone

Darst Murr11v

llf l llp

--------------Notice
CHR I STMAS auct ion sale

truckload of toys , gifts and
m lscellaneous, F r i day~ 7 p
m Ml!lson Auction Mason j

w Vo

11132trc

ROOM and board for sen tor:
citizens . very n Ice
992 lS09

Phone

10 12 lfc
HELEN'S -;:i"Ai;;;;;jy-;;-Shop

MOBILE HOMES SALES

Kanauga Ohio Phone (614)
446 9662
•
11 7 51c

... LD

turnmlr.E,"1Pice boxe!,
brass beds , or complete
household~
Write M
o..
Mi ll er, Rt 4, Pomeroy ,

As;.tui :i

t9 73 -N
;;-x~O,;-al!;. ' 3
bedrm 11 ~ bath gas heat
Take over payments Phone

10 114

Phone 992 3457

11 12 3tc
---------------

992 l3SB

11 7 61C

197 5 14X70 TRAILER , ex

ce llent cond il lon especrally
buill for offices Low price
for qu1ck. sale Phone 004)
675 1921 or 675 5829
10 30 lfc

Wanted

nt

Tuppers

Plains

4

Notice

W ITHOUT my perm issio n
there wilt be no hunting or
trupassing on my property
Bob McGraw
Meagan
Far m , off lower Bowman s

ONE bedrm mobile 1'1ome for

rent Phone 992 l509

easy an gas, S300 Phone 992
3746

11 ll 31c
1966COMET.6cy l autamal1c
Phone 99 2 7885 between 12
noon and 8 p rn No phone
calls on Sunday

I Ill 61c
1969 CHEVY Super Sport. 4

apartment~
adults only lr~ Middleport
Phone 991 lB74

'
l2SI!c
--------------.
3 RMS and bath furnished ,
uti l ities paid
Phone 992

29l7

II 9 61p

l~

rebate on 515 Coldwave
Hel en Dorst. owner Phone

(6W 667 l966

11 12 6tc
____________ __ _.

11 12 41p

1969 CORVETTE , red W1lh
removable black. vinyl top ,
red mter1or , low m1 1eage
K 1ng roll bar . cragers on
rear , 4 speed ms1de ptpes
So meone to take over
pa ym en ts Phone 992 7179
11 12 41C

1971

LARGE buslne~s building In
Mason, large glass front.
dr•.ve m rur doors , wlll rent
or tess
11 or all ot ground floor , 3200
Also the follow i ng r ea l
square feet , good location
esta te situated , in the t ... n
Phone (J041 882 llS6 or 113
ship, county, state l:lnc;l
S611
tract ion , section town range
11 ll tic
and lot abo11e mentioned, and
In Ohio Company's Purchase,
and described as follows 2 BR house at 916 Locust St ,
Beginning at a paint on the
Middleport, or calf 992 S75B

985 4H1

11 9 l2tc
-- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

land "eretofore deeded to
Thomas Garrell by R C
Mlctdleswart end wife and
recorded December 24, 1894 In
Deed Book 78. Pages SBS and

1113 61p

2 bedrm Mobile Home 10
Syracuse,
Located
on
private lot Adults only, no

pels Phone (6141 98S lS04 or
992 S596
11 ll lie

TRAILER spa ce for renl All
utilities Phone 992 SS35
9 16 tf c

Gorrell by R 0 Mlddl.etwort1

thence north to said Gorrell s
northeast cornM t thence east
10 a po int 58 1 16 rods west of
I he east line of said lot , thence
south to ff1e pl•c• or bevlnnlng

Also the following real
estate situated In the tow n
ship , co unty and state above
mentioned , and bounded as
follows
Beginning at tta
southeast corner of Lot 166 ,
thence west to Thomas
BEDRM double Wide,
Gorrell'S east l ine • thence
utilities
pa1d
near
north w i th said Thomas
Pomeroy Phone 992 7017 or
Gorrell's east line to a l!ne
992 1666
running west from Henderson
11 12 4fp
Pr ic e' s northwest cbrner,
thence east to said Hender~on
Pr ice's northwest corner, FREE RENT AT VILLAGE
thence south along line of said
MI&gt;:NOR
IN
MID
Lot 166 to the place of
DLEPOR T 1 we are so sure
beginning Being In Section 14
that you wilt lov e our apart
Range 11 , Town J, and being a
ments that we give you two
part of Fraction A, and can
weeks RENT FREE Just
talnlng 24 acres. more or tess
pay your security deposit
end stay SIX months and the
Also the following described
real es~ate situated In the
firs t 2 weeks Is tree You wifl
enjoy monthly leases all
Townsh i p of Lebanon Countv
a( Meigs and State at Ohio,
~tectrlc liv ing , carpeting,
range and refrigerator, free
being in Section 13, Town 3.
Range 11 , Lot 166, of the Ohio
trash PICkup, cab l e TV
(opti o nal) end laundry
Company's Purchese. and
more fully described as
fac l llf!es convenient to
follows Commencing at A H
shopping on Third and Mill
Price 's and R W Connell's
on Middleport
VILLAGE
southeast corner , running
MANOR Is yours for one
west 10 fee t, thence northeast
bedroom
apartments
20 teet to the north and south
stl\rllng at 5104 monthly plus
line of R w Connell's farm ,
etec we pey for everything
thence south 20 teet to the
else See the Manager at
place of beginning , containing
R1ver$1de Apartment~ or
one rod of ground , more or
ca lf 992 l273 This offer wtll
less The same to be an outlet
en d soon , sa move In now
between t wo parcels of land
and save SSSS
owned by the said Thomes
10 2l If&lt;
Gorrell
Also the following described 7 RM HOUSE In sv ra cuse ,
(eal estate. situa ted !n the
Oh10 Basem ent. garage ,
Township , County and State
real ntce home, must have
above
mentioned ,
end
references u Interested Cllll
bouncred and described as
dav f6)4) 4.d6 7699, evenmgs
follows Being In Lots 142 and
(614) U6 95l 9
'
UJ , Sections 14 and 15, Town 3,
II 5 lfc
Range 11 , of the O~lo Com
pany•s Purchase Beginning
A BEAUTIFUL furnished
at Richard Haddo•'s south
apartment for co uples on ly
west corner, thence north
Includes washer, dryer and
about 1 rods , thence west to
cable In Middleport over
John W Haddox s corner ,
Slim and lrlm Phone 992
thence south with road about 7
1889
rods thence to the place of
II 11 61p
beginning, con ta ining 2 acres , -more or len
You are requ.red to answer 2 BEORM apt and 2 bedrm
trailer 1n ReedSIIIIIe j Ohio
within 28 days after the la st
Phone (614) 378 638.4
publi cation of notice which
1111 61&lt;
will be published once each
week to r Sl~&lt; success 1ve weeks
begmnlng Thursday October FURNISHEO hous• and
trailer '" Middleport area
16, 1975 The last publication
Call 992 7791 afler &lt; 30 p m
will be made on November 20 ,
11 11 Jtc
1975, and the 28 days far an
swer will commence an that
J BEDRM l p arlly furnished ,
date In case of your fa ilure
basement new furnac e and
or otherw+se, to respond as
water heat~r propene gas,
required by the Ohio Rules of
on Co Rd 2B , $100 por
Civil Procedure. judgment by
month and 1100 deposit .
defauq Will be rendered
reference requested. Phone
a.glllns'f _y:pu for the relief
B&lt;3 2193 day or 949 2821 offer
demandf.l:t in the claim
6 p m
, -,.... _ _,......,1 _ _ _ ._
11 _11_lie
Larry Spencer
_
Clerk at Courts
4 -,.. M furnished apt , adults
Meigs County
onlv Phone 992 5908 b•lor• 2
Common Pleas Court

and containing 3 acres, more (tO I 16. 2l, JO (I I I 6, 13, j(), 6fc

PLYMOUTH

Sport

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

.

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

__..__________ _

~

pm

-

------ ~-

_._.

___ _

11 2 lie

percent an fuel bil ls Install
Inside m any weather on
most Windows Available a t
King Bu ilder 's Supply Co

ducks

11 12 6tc

Phon e 992 l74B

11 7 6tc
F ARMALL tractor H 1n good
shape Phone 992 3640 $425
11 7 61c

Yes, we will
accept
new
customers.

KEEP carpets
beautiful
despite footsteps at a busy
fam lly Buy Blue Lustre ,
Rent electr.c shampooer
Nelson 's Drug Stare

16 FT
TRAVEL Tra11er .
sleeps 6 Phone 992 2318 day ,
or call 992 7133 after
11 3 lie
ELECTR I C Washer and
dryer matched set, RCA
stereo, radio Am Fm, golf
cart. bags, and clubs,

4

ladder back cha1rs. new

Phone 949 27l5

11 ll lip

ONE FULL lead glass door
with brass f1tl1ngs, one
sto rm
door
and
one
basement door w1th brass
fillings Real cheap
405
Sp nng A\le Pomeroy
11 13 3t c

19 73 PICKUP bed for Ford
F 100. 8 fl Phone 99'.1 3640

WAtER HEATER , 52 ga l lon,
like new , etectrjc , S60 GA~

111 2 lie

1971 CHEVROLET Su burban
350, P S , p b , A I Phone
99 2 3491
11 II 61 p
1974-~ GMCJ;mmy -.awhee t
dnve , automat1c, p s 1ape
player 350 .t barr el heavy
dut y tra1ler , tawmg speciaL
on off road fires . other
extras E•cellent condllion
Phone 992 3829 after 5 JO
p m all day , on Saturdav
and Sunday
11 7 61C
1968 FORD Picku p truck, 8 fl
bed , heavy duty F 250 SS25
Phone 992 3640

11 7 61c

II IJ lip

CL OTHES DRYER

use~.

540 or oest offer Phone 992

2082

AMMO. AND

Shotgun 410 , 16

Five

BEORM

home,

ius!

lmlshed, remodeling , Sal4;:m
Sl , Rutland Phone 7421/0~
after A p m or see Milo B
Hutch ison
9 23 lfc

HOU SE 1n Porlland, take over
payments 5 rooms and
bath good well 2 acres of
ground. coal heat Phone

84l 2292

10 28 121&lt;

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

2' &gt;

Route
124, 200 foot r i ver frontage
1910 12 x 63 3 bedrm , bath
and helf mobile home. 10 x
!Os torage shed 11 x 30 patio
wl!h one mobile home rental
space Sl.S,OClO firm
Call
area code (219) 785 2362 or
wr i te A E Ball~y, New
Durham Mall Estate, Lot
141
Westville
Indiana
46391

ONE 3 year old Thorovgnbred
10 31 121c
tilly . S4SO Also one yearling
half Thoroug hbred (Oit 59" CUSTOM Homes, no down
tal l Sl50 Phone 992 7583
payment , VA Loans, FHA 11 4 121c
both noed •leeve $190
As low as 3 percent down
Phone 992 a724 evenmgs
Your plans or ours Call or
11 9 6tc 196S FERG USON diesel Wllh
write Shepard Contrllctlng ,
Box 28A , Rutland ~ 45775
H o front end loader good
1972 RALLY Nova One local
Phone 742 2409
cond i tion $3,000 1968 Ford
owner, call after s p m 843
10 ll 26tc
I' 2 ton , long wheel base
2S91
S1 ,200tgood condition Like
11 9 IIC
new M F grinder mixer .
6 ROOM house with bath In
S2,800 Phone 992 7584
Middleport on o SOx 120 lot
11 9 Sic
Wall to wall carpeting ,
- ~ ----.---------paneling,
new c;ed1ngs,
p np organ , baby
FOR RENT OR SALE in ANTIQUE
garbage
disposaL etc
cr1b
mattress
Phone
949
Pomeroy , 2 bedrm home ,
Garage wlfh storage area
2542
large tot , full basement
S13 ,500 For appointment ,
11
7
6tc
Phone 742 2757
co li 992 2022
11 ll 61p AIR. STOP vinyl weather
11 ,. 12tc
str1pplng for your doors
Available at King Builder 's s ROOM house and both, forge
Supply Co Phone 992 l748
lot Can be easily financed,
11 1 61&lt;
Inquire at Shammy's Carry
oul 60.5 W Main , Pom~roy,

For Rent or Sale

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

Saturday, Avons and m ise
Ra i n
cancels,
Donna
Williamson, Slllem Center,
Rvtland
11 1J 21c

one S year old. t wa
yearl1ngs
Excellent
dispositions Phone 992 5565

or 992 2826

11106fc

BUSH hog 5 II l pi hitch,
YARD SA LE all week. on
good conditiOn 5175 Phone
Lark1n Stree t , Rutland
16141 ~85 lS94
+nSlde and out Ldts of Avon
II 9 7fp
boll,les, baby bed , 26 In
g 1rl s bike , record player 1964 10 10 JOHN Deere dozer.
bed clothes, qurlts, etc and
6 tt
t a blade , winch ,
other m1sc Call 742 2078
canopv. revers1ble . new
1111 41c pain! and engine, goad

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

condition, u.soo
16141 985 l59&lt;

Ohio

11

l BR HOME,

just

3 bedroom
construction with carpet ,
ceramic tile, garage, Iorge
lot Buy now and pick your
colors FHA financing
available. Price $21,500
Phone: 667-4304

Realty

NO. 147 - Lovoly 2 BR
home, excellent condition,
carpeting, drapes, fu ll
base , lge back yard Well
worth seeing, $9,000 oo
NO. 123 - 9S a .• more or
less, good piece lo raise &amp;
lraln horses, box sta lls,
riding ring, lge home,
carpeted, mod kllchen ,
beaullful country selling,
$70,000.00
ACREAGE - 9 64 a , 6 a ,
1 72 a. end almosl 2 a

Now

under

Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Ca II
992-7133
CONTACT·
Lots Pauley
Branch Manager

$2S,OOO

POMEROY - 2 story
frame, 3 BR, both, new
kllchen
wllh
range ,
disposal, full basement, N
gas HW heat, porches ,
storm doors &amp; windows
$17,000
POMEROY
ROOM
GALORE - 21/ 2 slory
frame. 5 BR. 2 baths, new
N gas FA furnace &amp; HW
tank , porches, paneling &amp;
tile, In good condlllon
Nlove right In $10,000
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP - 138
ROLLING ACRES H.avy
timber
minerals . old
house &amp; good well Good
hunting GOING AT JUST
$175.00 per acre.
TO BUY OR SELL CALL
US TODAY
HENRY CLELAND
BROKER

F tft 's, Mlddleoort1 OhiO

l o f36tc '

QN E
- .;,;j·;.:-;;ht;:Onddr ye7,
one cut boerd, 1 coffee table,
blue glass lop , 1 old kitc hen
cabinet, 1 old dresser . one
Hotpomt refrtgerator . one
bo x springs and mattress In

good shape Phone 992 122S
II 11 41&lt;
----------- -ROTOTILLER , Reg Ap

-

paloose colt, Dalmallon dog
pony and billy goat Phone

__ _______ _

9927330

-.

11 11 3tc

TWO cemetery lots In Meigs
Memory Gardens 78 A, 1 &amp;

2 Phon• 949 2608

11 11_,lie
- - - _H___ _• _______
HAY for $Ole PhOnf 8&lt;3 2581
11 II 61c

Repa i rs serv• ce ell makes
,
99 2 2284 The F~br1c Shop ,
Pomerov Au thahz ed's1nger ·
~ ales and
serv1ce
we .'
sharpen Sc1ssors
329tfCt

----- 0

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

CAMPER. only used 3 mon
ths If Interested, call 742

2707

'
11116fc
-----·--- -------

......,...,_

10 ll 26tc ,
~ ------'

&amp; LJ ll&lt;t;;t: •nmmmv. ~u
years experience Insured,

GASOIJNE AlLEY

free estimates Coli 992 lOS7

I

10 IS lie

EX CAVA I INu , BACKHOES
ANO DOZER, LARGE AND
SMAL L SEPTIC TANKS
INSTALLED
BILL :·.
PULLINS PHONE 992 2418,
DAY OR NIGHT
'

11 11 7fltp :: :

C

I

'

BRADFORD Auctioneer ' '
Complete service
Phone 1 •
949 2487 or 949 2000 Racine , ~ 1
Ohio, Cr tn Bradford
•' '
1091fC 1 ~ :

--------------IF
a

I '

'
YOU are lntereosted '"
new home or have your
present on e remodeled , or '
'•
you are m need of a new
roof Call · Roush Con
struct10n ," Greg Roush, 992

I ,'

7583

11 7 121&lt;

HOUSE on L incoln Heights, 2 ,
bedrm , large kitchen, full
basement, n1ce back yard,
only S8,900 WITh new fur ;
nlture, only $10,300 Phone 1

992 7648

''

Phone

OHIO PALLET co.
I

%Redolence

3 Glandular

character

organ

11 W11hout
moisture
11 Valued fur
1! Meander
lJ Zealous
tt "Botch -"

4 Dull:h
loWII
i Overdue
I Codtney's

(Clooney
&amp;eemary
hit)

sroup

11 Anchor
7 InferWe
n
Overlay
I John GleM,
lor one

21 Torero fan's

.-e-:G7.;:-, %1 Steal ( sl )

Jog

,.....

state

15 Stroke of
llghlnlng

shout

%8 Plunder
29 Out

wilh gold
of the
way
Z2 Navlgl!tlOnal
system
30 Ravine
31 Get In
23Shlnlng
3t French
ULanguiJh
shooting
Z5 Remove
match
from
II Soctety
office

Ius

Zl I..lnller on

· . ~Quay

Letter
Seaame
Old times
First-aid

used
to be?

•
~~~~~~\:==~~~~~7N~[:-~~~~~~;w~~,~~w~
r:
IX:6S
13/...lT AH
ONLY AH 60TTA 1-Pt'ESTLY eral
t::oN'I

WANTA......._,~

PAPPY /N

BRE"AK /N

11-1' J&lt;ACr:= e

A Nr:=W

AN' I-ONORABLY MAi&lt;E"
TRY~-ITS 11-I'Ccc:e:

ONGr

~~;1,

1

•B~BMIOeol
For Frldoy, NO¥. 14, 1175

Pop's pride

~J~

O' TH' HILLS!!

I.

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11)
You re likely to run Into une;.t·
petted opposition today from

speaker
Kind of

several sources One of vour
btggest thorns will be a
domestic tssue

farmer

Mental
balance
Brink

411 Vestibule
41 "- Barrel

~;1!5~~~ DAILY
Polka" CRYPTOQUOTB- Here'• how to work It:

1-..l......li-.....,~

Ia
SUR£,.BARRY,
iF YUJ'D LIKE!
I '

AXYDLBAAXI.
LONGFELLOW

One letter aimply atands for another. In thlo aample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slncle letters,
apoatrophes, the lenllh and rormatlon or the worda are all
blats. Eaeh day the eode letters are dllerent.
CBYPTOQUOTBS

'

I

PKQWTEODQZ

HDN

I' '

AFEW

"

AN

DWFKH

HJ

DFO

JPH

FXDW;

EJ

I

cw

AN

ODQZ'O

J

WTWAN

PJK

PKQWTE·

OFSW .- VQRRQFA

CRFSW

LISTEN TO
\

."Great Country Stereo"
WITH
JIM WILLIAMS

1eekdays 10:00 A.M. to 2:00 A.M.

o I

•

1

'I ''
lI
'''
' I'
I'

--~~---

ON

WMPO fM SJERm 92
"

''
'•' ''

TAURUS (April ZO·MIJ' ZO)
Oihers are going to be ex&lt;remety demandtng of you to·
day and 11 possible they're goIng 10 make you the fall guy lor
lhetr lal 11ngs
GEMINI jMay 21-June ZO) Be
careful today not to 1mpose
upon friends unnecessarily
Th1nk tw1ce before requesting
favors or lo!!lns

CANCER jJUM 21-July 22)
For reasons not totallv valid

others will be a bit resentful of
you today especially 1f you re
In the catbird seat g1vmg
orders

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Vou II
have small pattence wilh per·
sons today who aren t
wholeheartedly In support of
your views Same sharp exchBOges are likely
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22) Today could be a real bummer
busmesswise It you conduct
your afla1rs Impulsively Keep
your eye on the prof1t column
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0CI. 23) II will
require ell the diplomacy you

''
I I'

MaQnlflcent Monsters of the DeeD I, 10; Washlnafon
Week In Review 20,33; Stagecoach West .5.
8 30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15, Wall Street Week 20.33
9 DO-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie "Hustling" 13;
Movie "Move Over, Darling" 6, Hawaii Flve-0
8,10, Firing Line 20: Masterpiece Theatre 33.;
Country &amp; Western U S A. 5
10· oo-Pollce Story 3,,., 15, Barnaby Jones 8, !0: News
20: Paul Nuchlms 33, Burke's Law 5
10: JG-Avlallon Weather 20.
11 :DO-News 3,4.6; News 8,10,13,15; ABC News~ 11 30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Special 13;
Sammy &amp; Company 6: Movie " The 500 Pound
Jerk" 8, Movie "The Deadly Bees" 10; Janak! 33.
1 DO-Midnight Special 3,4,15; Wlde World Special 6;
Movie " Devil Doll" 10, News 13.
2 30-Movle "The Protected Man" 4.
4 DO-Movie "Stagecoach to Dancers' Rock" •·
5 30-Movle "Love and Kisses" 4

AstroGrapt-1

Item
Canadian
province
(abbr.)

lJL ABNER

DO-Columbus Today 4, Sunrise Semester 10
15-Folk Literature 3
25-Farm Report 13
3G-New Zoo Revue 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10, Blue Ridge Quartet 13
6 4()--0unce of Prevention lD
6.45-Mornlng Report 3
6 55-Chuck White Reports 10; News 13
7 CIO--'Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8, Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7 30-Schodlles 10
8 DO-Lucy Show 6, Capt Kangoroo B,\0, Se!llme St.
33
8 JG-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3, Phil Donahue;, 15; Lucy Show 8, Mike
Douglas 10: Morning with D J . 13.
9 3G-Not For Women Only 3: One Life to Live 6: Give
N-Take 8, New Zoo Revue 13.
IO·DO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Dinah 6; Price II
Right 8,10: Mike Douglas 13
10:3G-Wheel of Fortune 3,&lt;,15
11 DO-High Rollers 3,15, I Dream of Jeannie 4:
Gambit 8,10
11 30-Hollywood Squares 3,15: Happy Days 13;
Midday 4, Love of Life 8,10, Se!llme St. 20,33
11 •55-Take Kerr 8, Don lm~l's World 10
12 DO-Magnificent Marble Moc~lne 3,15; ShoWOtfs\3,
Bob Braun' s 50 50 Club 4; News 6,8,10
12 30-3 lor the Money 3,15; All My Children 6,13,
Search for tomorrow 8,10
12 45-Eiec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3,15
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Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 30-Days of Our Llves3,4,15; Lers Make a Doal6,13;
As the World Turns 8, 10.
2 DO-S\0,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Guiding Light 8, 10.
2 30-Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Night 8,10
3.CIO--'Another World 3,4,15, General Hospital 6,13;
Match Game a, 10; Say Brother 20.
3 30-{)ne Life to Live 13; Max B. Nlmble6; Taftlelales
8,10; Black Perspective on the News 20.
4 ~Isler Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4: Somei'HI 15;
Mickey Mouse Cl\lb 6,1; Mister R09en 20,33; Movie
"Lost In a Harem" 10; Dinah 13.
4.30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8,
Sesame St 20,33 ; Get Smart 15.
5 DO-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5 30-Adam-12 4, News 6. Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co 20,33 , Adam -12 13
6 DO-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20.
6 3G-NBC News 3,.,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News B, 10; Two-Way StrHt 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the Truth 4; Lawrence
Welk 8, Bowling for Dollars 6; Aviation Weather
33; News 10; Don Adams Screen Test 13; .;amlly
Affair 15; 0111o Journal 20; Wrestling 5
7 30-Porter Wagoner 3; Bobby VInton 4: Candl~
Camera 6, Evening Edition with Martin Agronaky
20, $25,000 Pyramid 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Pop
Goes the Country 15, Block Perspective on the
News Jl,

6
6
6
6

B DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3..4,15: Barbary Coast 6, 13;

cattle

opener

itiiiOiilhio...... :

DACRES - 2 houses, 0!18
11 12 lie B R , 2 baths, 011'e 7 rooms a
th All minerals. $31,000.
1912 G MIDGET 11 000 AC
TUI&gt;:L MILES $1.150, for MIDDLEPORT - 3 B R a
more •nfarmalion, call (614)
th, mod. kit .. 2 porches, a
667 l7S9 or 667 36S2
levtl
lot. $12,500 eo.
1112 Sic
NEW LISTING - Paneling
1974 TWO bedrm • Skylme mod kll., 2 B R s, both
Home. 12 x 60. Barcelona corner In Racine S\2,900
Span 1!h Decor washer and SPECIAL - 2 block building
dryer, cement patio W1lh lot,
210 fl frontage x lOS width, and one acre. $8,000.
Tuppers Pla ins water, f1ear MIDDLEPORT 3 B.R.s
Meigs H1gh School, 112.000
mod
kit
,
bath,
buement,
Also , 1970 Triumph Spitfire
MK3 1967 Triumph Spitfire porches and 1 acre. 1129.500
MK2 , 1970 engine Sell NEW LISTING - All tlec.,
reasonable Phone 992 7060
B R.s, both, femlly room
11 12 31&lt; petlo and nice kit. Syracuse
--1973 HONDA M T $300 Phone $24,500.
992 l4l2
REALLY NICE - 3 B.R,s,
11 12 3tc ceramic baths, mod kit , bar
- -·· .... -- --·r
r IR C WOOD Phone 992:1640 family room, bonment a
f1 12 61&lt; dbl garage. ~.000.

cle&amp;rance

I "Romola"

11 Joe CGUege t "Marsell·
yeU
lalae,"
17 Accord
lor one
1t Suffix lor
11 "Pine
meteor
Tree"

It was sittinQ on
top of the TV!

stare

I

DELIVERED TO:

I MI. Miles

15 Proffer

and

)()' HAFfA K8tH
MFE A NE:W

Real Estate For Sale

'85.00 TO '200.00 PER M
VENEER MIITE OM, '400.00 PERM

11 13 lie

How
come 1 never
saw it?

or (1) 667 3041 , Coolville

-------7------

ll~~f#jj{;~
If

". 13

SAW LOGS

House with bath,
garage , basement , built In
porch, 12 acre. Hobson

~EREIN~5~·

BEAUTIFY yovr home with
Perm a Stone New homes.
as well as remodeling work •
Expert 1ns ta ll at1on
Free•
estimates Phone 742 2409 '

DOWN

ACROSS

1 White or

1

WANTED I

6 ROOM

"'II' I KNOW I-IlM,
HE'S PIIOSABLV UP

"THEM .

MACHiNE

396S

-.,~--

IT'S 100 BAt&gt; OSCAR
WASN'T AROUND10
5/11(~ "TO,

9 18 lfc

S EWING

(Fo r a copy or JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to ' Wm
a t Brtdge ," c/o lhJS
newspaper, P 0 Box 489,
Rad10 Ctly SfatJon. New York,
N Y 10019)

by

home furnace repair Phone

992 S8SI

An lndtana reader wants to
know how to play a bndge
hand wtth no k1ng of
d1amonds
The answer ts that gremhns
somettmes get tnto a
newspaper and eat the kmg of
d1amonds In that case it Is up
to the reader to hnd that hand
that needs that kmg and see tf
the art1cle can then make
se nse If 11 doesn't the
gremhns have really out·
smarted us

~-'6THOMAS JOSEPH

24 lie

WE SPELtALIZE In mobile

tape comblnatton Balance
1104 70 or terms Call 992

~-~

The two notrump response
to an arllhc1al two club open·
mg shows at least e1ght h1gh·
11-IJ
card potnts and a notrump·
type hand It also should deny
any worthfess doubleton and
IF POSSIBLE THERE
SHOULD BE AN HONOR IN
EACH SUIT
The 1dea IS that tl the opener
has a notrump hand of h1s own
THING - there w1ll be no har m m let·
J --'·c·THA!'S tmg that opening hand become
VOU'VE dummy
~:"""''""A
Wath three queens and a
kmg and 4·3·3·3 dtstrabutaon ,
South responds two notrump
North has opened two clubs
w1th a 23-pomt hand so he

•
4

"ELIEVto•

11 6 26tc

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

PHONE 992-3325
10 Mechanic
Pomeroy, 0

l

,-- ~~· ·

,o

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

c

YUU

Pass

Openmg lead - 10 •

'.

SEPTIC TANK S c leanea
Modern san•tat1on 992 J 95 o~~
or 991 7349
918tfc 1: :

1

TUPPEIC) I'LAIN5 - S
yrs old 3 BR , both, dining
R, full basemen! w uti lily ,
porches. FA furnace heat,
aboul '1. A Wonderful
view $19,500
MIDDLEPORT - Lovely
lot &amp; location - Add a
shower and a couple of
partitions and have a
beautiful custom 2 BR
home N gas FA fur~e
$7,000
OPEN AGAIN FOR SA~E
- 22ACRESOF GROUND
l.lllce home . 1 tile bldg . 1
mobile home 4 rentals 3 of
which hove free gas
Always rented and near
recreational facllllles
Income of $420 00 per
month plus gas Income

Pass

.•

Build an all steel bu1ldmg at
Pole Barn pr 1ces' Golden
G•ant All Steel Buildings,
Rt 4 Box 148, waverly,
Oh10 Phone 947 2296

to 9 lfc

REMINGTON, 1,100 outn, STE REO RADIO , modern
now 12 or 20 go S112 so
des1gn1 am fm radlo r 8 track

For Safe

•!

sweepers toasters , Irons. '
all !ima ll appl1ances Lawn 1
mower next to State High
way Garage on Route ~
Phone 985 382 5
.., 16 ttc

MI A LUNCRETE
del1v'ered r1 ght to yo ur
protect r ast and easy F ree
est.mate~
Phone 99 2 ]28.4
Goeglem Rea dy M•~&lt; Co ,
~ dd lepar t Oh•o~
6 JO uC 1

finished

TEAFORD REALTY

"

ELWOOU 80WE~5 REPAIR.! ;

H~AUl

9 6tc

11 9 71p

', •'

11 12 1 mo.

EXCAV1-1 I I NV, dOZer 1 IOaO~;tl : •
and backhoe work sept1c
tank s Installed
dump;
trucks and lo boys for hi re
w1tt haul f1ll d1rt top so11, ,.
lim es tone and gravel,. Ca ll
13 ob or Roger Jeffers day
phone R92 70B9 n1ght phone
99 2 3525 or 992 52 32
2 11 tfc

804 W. Main

remodeftng
Salem St ,
Rutland
Phone 742 2306
atter 4 p m or see Milo B
Hutchmson

Phone 992 7113

s tmply ratses to three
13 notrump ThiS tells South JUSt
what h1s hand as South adds 9
¥A K 4 2
to 23 or 24 and makes an over·
+A 10 8
. bad of stx notrump
• AKJ
West opens the 10 of spades
t:AST
WEST
and South tsn't al all happy
• A 43
• 10 9 8 2
wath the dummy or has over·
¥ 10 7 3
• J 965
bad Twenty three pomts plus 9
+65 4
• QJ 2
equals 32 and tsn't enough for
• 8 65 3
• 97
a slam and South can only
SOUTH
count to 11 tncks
•Q6 5
However, lady lu ck smtles
WQ8
on ham and the 12th develops
tK 973
because West gets squee•ed
• Q 10 4 2
South samply cashes all his
Both vulnerable
black cards West1s forced to
d1scard a heart m order to
guard hts queen-JaCk of
West North East South
d1amonds and South collects a
2"'
Pass 2 N T
fourth heart plus slam, game
Pass 3 N T Pass 6 N T
and rubber
NORTH &lt;01
• KJ7

Pomeroy

Yard Sale

YARD SALE, Friday and REG Polled Hereford bulls

NT response to two clubs

new

homes

INCOlPOilATED

11 12 6fc

and 12 ga\Jlje. S29 up , pump APPROXIMATELY
acres . 200 fl an State

guns , 10 and 12 gauge , SS9 .
automat1cs 1 12 gauQe, S99,
High power shee ts, S3 83 ,
IMR powder , $4 98 , black
powder , S2 90 deer slugs ,
51 29 , Match and deer
barre ls for SIIOO and &lt;$870
F 1fe 's, Middleport Phone
992 7494
11 ll 61&lt;

Strout~

5 ROOM house for sale , tn
Rutland Phone 742 2801 or
992 S19S

CUSTOM handmade and STONE black home on Vme
Street In Racine Four room
Cl'lrved teet her belts purses,
and full bath Also block.
dog collars, ha1r clips, brass
vld11y room . separate from
ha ir clips Specled buckles,
\ house Phone 1614) 985 4231
1dea1 gUts Call 992 7097
I Ill lip or 992 5930
11 7 61p
POWDER

s 261&lt;

Real Estate For Sale

l

THE DIAMOND? IN WQ - ~OMA?
MINE OR 'IOU·· 'IOU KNOW
WHICH ! 0 CHOOSE!

MORlAN
Construction Co.

WUULll

1113 11C

SHOTGUNS

Ph. 992-2174

WIN AT BRIDGE

f!.UT IF I COLILD ?TEAl AI.!.

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

NO. 1 HEATING OIL
N0.2 HEATING OIL
Degree O.y O.llvery
Budget Pay Pion
POMEROY LANDMARK
'l'aJ_ack W. Carsoy, Mgr.
6it Phone 992-2181

sf m

bowling ball and bag

10

OH , PIPE DOW'-1! 'IOU MU$T THINK.
J:M A ~ITWIT IF 'IOU El'.P&amp; C.T Me TO
FAl.l FOfl! ~CH A CO~!V'I Llt.JE!

SMJTH NELSON
MOlOR$, INC.

Phone 742-2331
R09er Womsley-Rutlond
1015-1 mo

7 CIO--'Muslc Connecloon 5
7 3o-Speclal Edition Better Late than Never 5
B 3G-Rex Humbord s
9 3G-E nslgn O'Toole 5
10 oo-Burke's Law I
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1t75

6, 13, Movie " Foster and Laur 1e'' 8, Classic Theatre

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Spec•allst

R&amp;J COINS

FUEL OIL

11 ll 61 c

GOLDEN
and
sliver
pheasants and peatowl
Robert Lew1s, Spnng Ave
Pomeroy Phone 992 2924

1973 FO RO F11 PICkup , 8 II
COUNTRY Mobile Home
bed good shape Call 992
Park, Rt 33 ten mtles north
J640
of Pomeroy Large tots w1th
11 7 6tc
concrete pat ios , sidewa lks
runners and off slr eet
19.41 PONTIAC 4 Cloar sedan,
par'k1ng "Phone 992 7179
end Interior , good
12 31 tiel body
shape - with two motors,

586

NOTICE OF
PUBLICATION
To
George Deem , Jr ,
whose lest known residence
was East LiverpooL Ohio
43920 . Franklin O'Nei L whose
last known res idence was Old
Pltt~burgh Raad r Rochester.
Pennsylvania 15074. Hobert
Icenhower , whose last known
reSidence was 1l6 Pacolet
Orn.. e. Gaffney S C 29340.
William Icenhower , whose
last known res1dence was R
F o .. wenctv Orlv~ . Baltic ,
Conn 06330, Jerry Icenhower .
whose last ~nown residence
was 5430 Cloverly Avenue.
Temple C1ty, California 91710 ;
Jo Ann Conard, whose last
known residence was Route 1.
Croton, Ohio 43013, Mary Jo
Mock . whose last 1 known
residence was 1053 5 Rose
Avenue , Apt 17, Los Angeles,
Cal ifornia , and th e unknown
heirs and dev isees of Martha
O'NeiL dtceasett
You are hereby no tified that
you
have
been
named
ttefendants In a legal action
entitled Garnet E Johnson. et
al , plamlltfs , vs
Edna
Shroacts, et at , defendants
This action has been assigned
Case Number 15,687 , and Is
pend1ng In t he Court of
Common
Pteas ,
Me1gs
County, Pomeroy , Oh10 45769
The oblect ot the Complaint Is
to partition the fallowing
dtscr.bed real ntate , to wit
Situate In Lebanon Town
Ship , Me1gs County , Ohio
be ing 1 part of Fract1on A,
section 14, Town l , Range 1l
Ohio Company ' s Purchase r
bOunded and descr ibed as
follows
6tg1nntng at the
southwest earner of said
section , thence north on said
secrton tine 81 rods to a rock
from which a chestnut oak 20
Inches bears south 74 1'1
degrees east 1511 feet , the~ce
east 69 rod~ and 23 links ,
thence south 88 rods to south
line of said uchon . thence
west to the place of beglnnmg ,
containing 38 h acres more or
tess
Also the following real
estate situated m the town
ship, county and state above
mentioned , and 1n Fract•on A,
Section l4, Town 3, Range 11,
t:ot 166, Oh 10 Company's
Purchase . and described as
follows Beglnnmg at a paint
an the soulh tme of s&amp;1d lot , s•
1 16 rods west of the soutHeast
corner ot said lot Thence west
on south line of satd 101 to tht
southeas t earner of land
heretofore d eeded to Thomas

RABBIT dog and
Phone 842 2185

Suburban stat1on wagon
W1lh 1973 X J60 engme and
transm1SS10n less !han
25,000 m des sI 295 Phone
949 2789 after s p m
11 12 3tc

TR A ILER space tor rent 1n
Mtddleport Phone 992 5434
to 21 26tc

SKATE A WAY
ROLLER
RIN~ ANNOUNCES BUS
SCHE DULE SATURDAYS
ONLY STARTING NOV
Wh
RACINE
6 40,
SYRACI:JSE 6 SO , MIO • south fine of sold Lot 166, 4l
OLEPORT 7 15, Thanks rods end 12 links west of the
g 1v1ng Par tv Nov 26 and 28
corner of said lot at
OPEN · WED, FRI, AND asoutheast
stone ; thence west 14 rods
SATURDAY
7J010(1()
ll 7 11 links to a stone ,
PRIVATE
PARTIES . and
thence north 88 rods. thence
MON, ruE&amp; , THURS east
I Hods and 13 7 11 links to
EVE SAT AND SU NDAY a stone
thence south 88 r od~
AFTERNOO NS
PHONE to the . place
of beginning,
(6141 9BS l929 or 9B5 9996 or contain ing 8acres
, and lom lng

TON lnternallonat pickup .
H 0
sprmgs to carry cemper
heavv bumper with hitch for
horse tra1 ler Low m ileage
To see. contact 992 7017
4 speect transmIssion

an

has lolned the stett on
Thursday , Friday
and
Saturday November Get
Acquainted Special Is S2

NOW selling Fuller Brush
Products Phone 992 34 10
10 6 ttc

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

11 9 tfc

FURNISHED

SADDLE Phone 742 2545
11 12 3tc

THE
IN SIDE
STORM
WINDOWS ' SAVE UP lo lO

For Sale

ONE Maple bed complete S45
One
Remmgtan
w1Cie
1965 DODGE conventional
c~rrl age typewr.ter and
cab, 2 ton truck 12 ft flat
table, 550 Gne pale tamp .
good rubber , V 8 .d speed 2
SJO One meto11 l c loset, S25
speed axle, 1650 Phone
One callphOne tape recar
(614) 98S 3594
der , 190 Phone 992 3760
I I 9 11p
11 12 ltc

J AND 4 rm furnished and
unfurnished apts Phone 992

54l4

AtRCO weld1ng mach1ne
new etec all accessories
ncluded
Phone 992 3410
10 28 lfc

NE HAVE shotgun shells,
r1fl e shells. cleantng ac
cessar !es hunting clothes,
boots, black powder guns
and accessor1es, reload 1ng
matenals , scopes, mounts,
knives, sleepmg bags, boa t
rackets
and
c ushions,
holsters, belts rifle streps
and much , much mare at
Indi an Joe's Spor ts and
CBs 308 Page Sf , M1d
d leporl
10 11 lOIC

speed. S900 Phone 742 3076
11 13 3fc

10 31 lfc

II 4 261&lt;

nounces that Mary Newell

_______ _

SlOO Phone 16141 985 l594

l94l

11 s 81p
--------------

_____

11 9 lip
7 RM unfurn ished apt In
Rutland Inquire at Sa lem
1966 DODGE WindOW van
Street Market. or call 142
standard, 6, new paint S600
2424 or 742 314 1
Phone (614) 985 3594
11 7 6!c
11 9 11p

13 lfc

PUT SOME color In your life
with
genuine
Artex
decorator paints Discover
the fu, by creati ng beautiful
hand pa inted lin ens Free
Instruction classes Cal l
Alice S Neas&amp;, {614) 98 5

--

1947 DODGE ton 1 l 12ft fl at
good rubber, good condition

For Rent

9Sl l

Run

11 12 6t p

Appraisal service on
eslotes and colltcllons

3 BEDRM house 1n Rac ine
Phone 949 2671

For Sale

________________

1962 FOR D PickUp,, , ton , 6
cyl standard, runs good
1300 Phone 992 3746
11 13 3tc
..._

From the largest Tr\~Ck or
Bulldozer Rad1ator to the '
SIJallest Heater Core

Buy, Sell or Trade

"The Wild Duck" 33, Movie "Our Man Flint" 10
10 OG-Medlcal Story 3,4,15, Harry 0 6,13, News 20.
11 CIO--'News 3,M,B,10,13, 15, ABC News 33
11 3G-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Mannix 13, FBI 6, Kofak
B, Movie "Keeper olthe Flame" 10, Janakl33
12 3G-Longstreet 13, Mannix 6
I CIO--' Tomorrow 3,&lt;
1 30-longslreel 6, News 13

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13. 1975
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Ohio State Lottery 6
Evening Edition wolh Marlin Agronsky 20, Wild
Kingdom 10 To Tell the Truth 13 Music Ctfy
US A IS
8 CIO--'Mac Davts l,4,15, Barney Miller 6,13, Waltons
B. 10. Romantic Rebellion 33, Classic Theatre "The
Rivals" 20
i 3Q--On The Rocks 6,13, Classic Theatre Preview 33
9 CIO--'EIIery Queen J,o,lS Streets of San Francisco

Coins, Currency
and Supplies

Real Estate for Sale

------POMEROY, OHIO
;

bedrm , 1913 Carlan i4 x 69
2 bedrm 1972 Esquire 14 x
69 2 bedrm , 1974 Schult 14
x 69 2 bedrm K ANAUGA

Wanted To Buy

-o'ii"E"-;INoL:
E" t;~- c;;;;;Pie ,,
w it h chest of d rawers

Ph , 992!3993

POMo~~~!ve¥.~!9.! CO. @)

196S BUDPY 12 x 65 2 bdr , 1964 CHEVY NOVA 2 dr 283
1965 Parklane , 12 x 69, 2
v 8 auromatic transm iSSion,

during the death of Doris
Maxwell Darst Thonks to t'A~H paid tor a ll makes and
veterans
Memorial I mod&amp;ts of mobile homes
Hospital. Dr Tell e and Dr
Phone area code 614 .423
Bl azewicz.

fur

ntshed Pr1 ce d to sell Phone

10 21 301&lt;

Ohio Coli 9911160

L.AVE~DER

S'o acuse, Ohto

4 tO 1 mo

TR AILER and lot In Rutland
Wi ll consider land contrttcl
Phone 992 1960
11 11 6tc

pane ling,

lloormg and ceiling

LARRY

power steering, rad1a

Mobile Homes For Sale

mo4trn world - MONEY

CARPENTRY

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE.
$1295
Blk vinyl roof, grey finish, good tires, automatic,

11 9 6tc

Employment Wanted

In MemOIJ

1971 MATADOR
$1395
4-door, local car, air conditioned, lull equtpment.

AKC

Reg Phone 742 2962

Blown tnlo Wall• &amp; Attlu
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENt
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING,SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

n1ce car with good economy

female ,

male and 2 pupp 1es

MINER GLOOMY NOVICE

Anawnt Mudt &lt;'Plan,ed In Ut t

1972 COMET% OR
$1795
6cyl sld Irons, rodlo,llke new w w tires, blue fonlsh,

11961&lt;

''
''
•' .

-----·---· ---

FREE ESTIMATES

Blown
lrtsulation Services

county
Humani
Soc~ety. J female German
Shepl'1erd type, 10 weeks old,
puppies wormed and halt
shots , W1ll be large Clogs

(A.twert lomorrow}

".........,.]lombl'"' BYLAW

S

MEIGS

IPrillte-IIISWIII~nl "(I I I J-[ I I I J"

IN

OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

man ths old up To 6 years
Also wh1te guineas W1ll
trllde far guns Phone 7&lt;12
151 1
11 7 6tc

HE WA-5 "THOIWU6HL.Y
EXAM1'-IIN6 A
SOUTH AMER:ICAN
Cc;&gt;UNTI':Y.

Business Services

2 SIGNS :Pome~oy

Pets

Television log for easy viewing

--------------~ ·-

Auto Sales

,THIS SOUP 15
PWMBTASTY,

LOWEEZV-·
WHA'tKIND
IS IT?

I{OU CAN'T 60 TO NEEDlES
FOR THANKSGIVING .•'ttlU'lL
6ET LOST IN THE DE SERf!

to maintain har·
mony with cfooe essoclet•
today Don taoy anything you'll
tater r09ret
SCORPIO jOel. 24-NO!t. 22)
It'• best to temporarily aet
aSide tasks dtstalfelul to you
today You'll only do lh8m In 1
careless hollhoarted !Uhlon
IAGinAIIIUI (No¥. 21-Dec.
21) Your self-dlsclpflnelslfkoly
to leave a lot 10 bo dtllred today Be careful not to do
something foolish In front of

can muster

fnends

CAPRICORN (Dec. 12-.lan.
11) Don 1 make motor

domesllt doctsfone today
wtthoul lull epprovaf b\' your
mate II things go wrong you'll
reap the wrath
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 11)
LoUie lhlngs thai don't normally
bug you w•fl gel under your
sk in today Be corelul Don't
snap at someone who doean't
deserve It

PISCES (Feb. ZO·Morch ZO)
Your financ ial aspects ar•
rather dubtoua today Don't
contribute to matters by spen·
~lng

when you shoutdn'l

~Your
VBirthday
No•. 14, 1175
Th1ngs of a speculative nature

will be extra appealing 10 you
this yoar You re llkoly 10 have
many Irons In the fire Rnu"•
will be rewerdlng II you don'1
take on more than you can

manage

�8- The•IJally :sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday , Nov 13, 1975

J}lJJJW@M®u..t

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifi~ds.~:..

kl._IIJ ..J ,_.

Unoc:rambltlh••• roor Jumbl.,,
one letter to eat.h ~quare, to
f'orm four ord1nary "AOrda.

'

Help Wanted
R N wa n ted 4 hours per week
at Syracuse Nu rsmg Home
I pply 1n person any 1m1c
I I 7 61C

DENUC

0

I I

BE EGLE

IKOPHOUI

I I

I
J I (J I

tVEGASA

rabbol

dog,

No" orranre the clr&lt;led letlen
to Corm the aurpri10 IINtwer, u
auueated by the above Cll'loon.

Phone 992 S421

CHIHUAHUAS

or

LOVING

Katie

E

MEMORY

Blake

who

passed away one year ago

today
Gone
but
not
forg otten Sad ly mtssed by

the fomlly

11 13 t tc

iN-LOViNG -MEMORY;,-;;~
fath er and grandfather
Louis Walker. Sr, Nov 12

Loving memories never die

As years go on and days pa ss

by ,

In aur hearts a mem ory Is
kept ,
One we lov ed and will never
forget
Sad I Y m lssed by children and
grandchildren

I Ill He
-- ---------- -~-

Card of Thanb

WOULD LIKE lo thank all

our neig hbors and friends
tor everyone s kindness

992 2759

Phone

19 70 BUDDY trailer
16141 69B 3l66

~EMODEUNG

Plumb ing
heatmg and all tvpes of
gen eral
repair
Work
g uar anteed 20 years eJIJ.1
perlence
Phone 992 2~()9
5 I If~

Rev

Robert

Hevden and Rev Mid
dteswart, Entern Star lind
o of A T.hanks tor the toad ,
cards and expressions of
kindness shown
Bernice . Marvin . William ,
Chlllrl es Darst and Mar lone

Darst Murr11v

llf l llp

--------------Notice
CHR I STMAS auct ion sale

truckload of toys , gifts and
m lscellaneous, F r i day~ 7 p
m Ml!lson Auction Mason j

w Vo

11132trc

ROOM and board for sen tor:
citizens . very n Ice
992 lS09

Phone

10 12 lfc
HELEN'S -;:i"Ai;;;;;jy-;;-Shop

MOBILE HOMES SALES

Kanauga Ohio Phone (614)
446 9662
•
11 7 51c

... LD

turnmlr.E,"1Pice boxe!,
brass beds , or complete
household~
Write M
o..
Mi ll er, Rt 4, Pomeroy ,

As;.tui :i

t9 73 -N
;;-x~O,;-al!;. ' 3
bedrm 11 ~ bath gas heat
Take over payments Phone

10 114

Phone 992 3457

11 12 3tc
---------------

992 l3SB

11 7 61C

197 5 14X70 TRAILER , ex

ce llent cond il lon especrally
buill for offices Low price
for qu1ck. sale Phone 004)
675 1921 or 675 5829
10 30 lfc

Wanted

nt

Tuppers

Plains

4

Notice

W ITHOUT my perm issio n
there wilt be no hunting or
trupassing on my property
Bob McGraw
Meagan
Far m , off lower Bowman s

ONE bedrm mobile 1'1ome for

rent Phone 992 l509

easy an gas, S300 Phone 992
3746

11 ll 31c
1966COMET.6cy l autamal1c
Phone 99 2 7885 between 12
noon and 8 p rn No phone
calls on Sunday

I Ill 61c
1969 CHEVY Super Sport. 4

apartment~
adults only lr~ Middleport
Phone 991 lB74

'
l2SI!c
--------------.
3 RMS and bath furnished ,
uti l ities paid
Phone 992

29l7

II 9 61p

l~

rebate on 515 Coldwave
Hel en Dorst. owner Phone

(6W 667 l966

11 12 6tc
____________ __ _.

11 12 41p

1969 CORVETTE , red W1lh
removable black. vinyl top ,
red mter1or , low m1 1eage
K 1ng roll bar . cragers on
rear , 4 speed ms1de ptpes
So meone to take over
pa ym en ts Phone 992 7179
11 12 41C

1971

LARGE buslne~s building In
Mason, large glass front.
dr•.ve m rur doors , wlll rent
or tess
11 or all ot ground floor , 3200
Also the follow i ng r ea l
square feet , good location
esta te situated , in the t ... n
Phone (J041 882 llS6 or 113
ship, county, state l:lnc;l
S611
tract ion , section town range
11 ll tic
and lot abo11e mentioned, and
In Ohio Company's Purchase,
and described as follows 2 BR house at 916 Locust St ,
Beginning at a paint on the
Middleport, or calf 992 S75B

985 4H1

11 9 l2tc
-- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

land "eretofore deeded to
Thomas Garrell by R C
Mlctdleswart end wife and
recorded December 24, 1894 In
Deed Book 78. Pages SBS and

1113 61p

2 bedrm Mobile Home 10
Syracuse,
Located
on
private lot Adults only, no

pels Phone (6141 98S lS04 or
992 S596
11 ll lie

TRAILER spa ce for renl All
utilities Phone 992 SS35
9 16 tf c

Gorrell by R 0 Mlddl.etwort1

thence north to said Gorrell s
northeast cornM t thence east
10 a po int 58 1 16 rods west of
I he east line of said lot , thence
south to ff1e pl•c• or bevlnnlng

Also the following real
estate situated In the tow n
ship , co unty and state above
mentioned , and bounded as
follows
Beginning at tta
southeast corner of Lot 166 ,
thence west to Thomas
BEDRM double Wide,
Gorrell'S east l ine • thence
utilities
pa1d
near
north w i th said Thomas
Pomeroy Phone 992 7017 or
Gorrell's east line to a l!ne
992 1666
running west from Henderson
11 12 4fp
Pr ic e' s northwest cbrner,
thence east to said Hender~on
Pr ice's northwest corner, FREE RENT AT VILLAGE
thence south along line of said
MI&gt;:NOR
IN
MID
Lot 166 to the place of
DLEPOR T 1 we are so sure
beginning Being In Section 14
that you wilt lov e our apart
Range 11 , Town J, and being a
ments that we give you two
part of Fraction A, and can
weeks RENT FREE Just
talnlng 24 acres. more or tess
pay your security deposit
end stay SIX months and the
Also the following described
real es~ate situated In the
firs t 2 weeks Is tree You wifl
enjoy monthly leases all
Townsh i p of Lebanon Countv
a( Meigs and State at Ohio,
~tectrlc liv ing , carpeting,
range and refrigerator, free
being in Section 13, Town 3.
Range 11 , Lot 166, of the Ohio
trash PICkup, cab l e TV
(opti o nal) end laundry
Company's Purchese. and
more fully described as
fac l llf!es convenient to
follows Commencing at A H
shopping on Third and Mill
Price 's and R W Connell's
on Middleport
VILLAGE
southeast corner , running
MANOR Is yours for one
west 10 fee t, thence northeast
bedroom
apartments
20 teet to the north and south
stl\rllng at 5104 monthly plus
line of R w Connell's farm ,
etec we pey for everything
thence south 20 teet to the
else See the Manager at
place of beginning , containing
R1ver$1de Apartment~ or
one rod of ground , more or
ca lf 992 l273 This offer wtll
less The same to be an outlet
en d soon , sa move In now
between t wo parcels of land
and save SSSS
owned by the said Thomes
10 2l If&lt;
Gorrell
Also the following described 7 RM HOUSE In sv ra cuse ,
(eal estate. situa ted !n the
Oh10 Basem ent. garage ,
Township , County and State
real ntce home, must have
above
mentioned ,
end
references u Interested Cllll
bouncred and described as
dav f6)4) 4.d6 7699, evenmgs
follows Being In Lots 142 and
(614) U6 95l 9
'
UJ , Sections 14 and 15, Town 3,
II 5 lfc
Range 11 , of the O~lo Com
pany•s Purchase Beginning
A BEAUTIFUL furnished
at Richard Haddo•'s south
apartment for co uples on ly
west corner, thence north
Includes washer, dryer and
about 1 rods , thence west to
cable In Middleport over
John W Haddox s corner ,
Slim and lrlm Phone 992
thence south with road about 7
1889
rods thence to the place of
II 11 61p
beginning, con ta ining 2 acres , -more or len
You are requ.red to answer 2 BEORM apt and 2 bedrm
trailer 1n ReedSIIIIIe j Ohio
within 28 days after the la st
Phone (614) 378 638.4
publi cation of notice which
1111 61&lt;
will be published once each
week to r Sl~&lt; success 1ve weeks
begmnlng Thursday October FURNISHEO hous• and
trailer '" Middleport area
16, 1975 The last publication
Call 992 7791 afler &lt; 30 p m
will be made on November 20 ,
11 11 Jtc
1975, and the 28 days far an
swer will commence an that
J BEDRM l p arlly furnished ,
date In case of your fa ilure
basement new furnac e and
or otherw+se, to respond as
water heat~r propene gas,
required by the Ohio Rules of
on Co Rd 2B , $100 por
Civil Procedure. judgment by
month and 1100 deposit .
defauq Will be rendered
reference requested. Phone
a.glllns'f _y:pu for the relief
B&lt;3 2193 day or 949 2821 offer
demandf.l:t in the claim
6 p m
, -,.... _ _,......,1 _ _ _ ._
11 _11_lie
Larry Spencer
_
Clerk at Courts
4 -,.. M furnished apt , adults
Meigs County
onlv Phone 992 5908 b•lor• 2
Common Pleas Court

and containing 3 acres, more (tO I 16. 2l, JO (I I I 6, 13, j(), 6fc

PLYMOUTH

Sport

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

.

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

__..__________ _

~

pm

-

------ ~-

_._.

___ _

11 2 lie

percent an fuel bil ls Install
Inside m any weather on
most Windows Available a t
King Bu ilder 's Supply Co

ducks

11 12 6tc

Phon e 992 l74B

11 7 6tc
F ARMALL tractor H 1n good
shape Phone 992 3640 $425
11 7 61c

Yes, we will
accept
new
customers.

KEEP carpets
beautiful
despite footsteps at a busy
fam lly Buy Blue Lustre ,
Rent electr.c shampooer
Nelson 's Drug Stare

16 FT
TRAVEL Tra11er .
sleeps 6 Phone 992 2318 day ,
or call 992 7133 after
11 3 lie
ELECTR I C Washer and
dryer matched set, RCA
stereo, radio Am Fm, golf
cart. bags, and clubs,

4

ladder back cha1rs. new

Phone 949 27l5

11 ll lip

ONE FULL lead glass door
with brass f1tl1ngs, one
sto rm
door
and
one
basement door w1th brass
fillings Real cheap
405
Sp nng A\le Pomeroy
11 13 3t c

19 73 PICKUP bed for Ford
F 100. 8 fl Phone 99'.1 3640

WAtER HEATER , 52 ga l lon,
like new , etectrjc , S60 GA~

111 2 lie

1971 CHEVROLET Su burban
350, P S , p b , A I Phone
99 2 3491
11 II 61 p
1974-~ GMCJ;mmy -.awhee t
dnve , automat1c, p s 1ape
player 350 .t barr el heavy
dut y tra1ler , tawmg speciaL
on off road fires . other
extras E•cellent condllion
Phone 992 3829 after 5 JO
p m all day , on Saturdav
and Sunday
11 7 61C
1968 FORD Picku p truck, 8 fl
bed , heavy duty F 250 SS25
Phone 992 3640

11 7 61c

II IJ lip

CL OTHES DRYER

use~.

540 or oest offer Phone 992

2082

AMMO. AND

Shotgun 410 , 16

Five

BEORM

home,

ius!

lmlshed, remodeling , Sal4;:m
Sl , Rutland Phone 7421/0~
after A p m or see Milo B
Hutch ison
9 23 lfc

HOU SE 1n Porlland, take over
payments 5 rooms and
bath good well 2 acres of
ground. coal heat Phone

84l 2292

10 28 121&lt;

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

2' &gt;

Route
124, 200 foot r i ver frontage
1910 12 x 63 3 bedrm , bath
and helf mobile home. 10 x
!Os torage shed 11 x 30 patio
wl!h one mobile home rental
space Sl.S,OClO firm
Call
area code (219) 785 2362 or
wr i te A E Ball~y, New
Durham Mall Estate, Lot
141
Westville
Indiana
46391

ONE 3 year old Thorovgnbred
10 31 121c
tilly . S4SO Also one yearling
half Thoroug hbred (Oit 59" CUSTOM Homes, no down
tal l Sl50 Phone 992 7583
payment , VA Loans, FHA 11 4 121c
both noed •leeve $190
As low as 3 percent down
Phone 992 a724 evenmgs
Your plans or ours Call or
11 9 6tc 196S FERG USON diesel Wllh
write Shepard Contrllctlng ,
Box 28A , Rutland ~ 45775
H o front end loader good
1972 RALLY Nova One local
Phone 742 2409
cond i tion $3,000 1968 Ford
owner, call after s p m 843
10 ll 26tc
I' 2 ton , long wheel base
2S91
S1 ,200tgood condition Like
11 9 IIC
new M F grinder mixer .
6 ROOM house with bath In
S2,800 Phone 992 7584
Middleport on o SOx 120 lot
11 9 Sic
Wall to wall carpeting ,
- ~ ----.---------paneling,
new c;ed1ngs,
p np organ , baby
FOR RENT OR SALE in ANTIQUE
garbage
disposaL etc
cr1b
mattress
Phone
949
Pomeroy , 2 bedrm home ,
Garage wlfh storage area
2542
large tot , full basement
S13 ,500 For appointment ,
11
7
6tc
Phone 742 2757
co li 992 2022
11 ll 61p AIR. STOP vinyl weather
11 ,. 12tc
str1pplng for your doors
Available at King Builder 's s ROOM house and both, forge
Supply Co Phone 992 l748
lot Can be easily financed,
11 1 61&lt;
Inquire at Shammy's Carry
oul 60.5 W Main , Pom~roy,

For Rent or Sale

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

Saturday, Avons and m ise
Ra i n
cancels,
Donna
Williamson, Slllem Center,
Rvtland
11 1J 21c

one S year old. t wa
yearl1ngs
Excellent
dispositions Phone 992 5565

or 992 2826

11106fc

BUSH hog 5 II l pi hitch,
YARD SA LE all week. on
good conditiOn 5175 Phone
Lark1n Stree t , Rutland
16141 ~85 lS94
+nSlde and out Ldts of Avon
II 9 7fp
boll,les, baby bed , 26 In
g 1rl s bike , record player 1964 10 10 JOHN Deere dozer.
bed clothes, qurlts, etc and
6 tt
t a blade , winch ,
other m1sc Call 742 2078
canopv. revers1ble . new
1111 41c pain! and engine, goad

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

condition, u.soo
16141 985 l59&lt;

Ohio

11

l BR HOME,

just

3 bedroom
construction with carpet ,
ceramic tile, garage, Iorge
lot Buy now and pick your
colors FHA financing
available. Price $21,500
Phone: 667-4304

Realty

NO. 147 - Lovoly 2 BR
home, excellent condition,
carpeting, drapes, fu ll
base , lge back yard Well
worth seeing, $9,000 oo
NO. 123 - 9S a .• more or
less, good piece lo raise &amp;
lraln horses, box sta lls,
riding ring, lge home,
carpeted, mod kllchen ,
beaullful country selling,
$70,000.00
ACREAGE - 9 64 a , 6 a ,
1 72 a. end almosl 2 a

Now

under

Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Ca II
992-7133
CONTACT·
Lots Pauley
Branch Manager

$2S,OOO

POMEROY - 2 story
frame, 3 BR, both, new
kllchen
wllh
range ,
disposal, full basement, N
gas HW heat, porches ,
storm doors &amp; windows
$17,000
POMEROY
ROOM
GALORE - 21/ 2 slory
frame. 5 BR. 2 baths, new
N gas FA furnace &amp; HW
tank , porches, paneling &amp;
tile, In good condlllon
Nlove right In $10,000
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP - 138
ROLLING ACRES H.avy
timber
minerals . old
house &amp; good well Good
hunting GOING AT JUST
$175.00 per acre.
TO BUY OR SELL CALL
US TODAY
HENRY CLELAND
BROKER

F tft 's, Mlddleoort1 OhiO

l o f36tc '

QN E
- .;,;j·;.:-;;ht;:Onddr ye7,
one cut boerd, 1 coffee table,
blue glass lop , 1 old kitc hen
cabinet, 1 old dresser . one
Hotpomt refrtgerator . one
bo x springs and mattress In

good shape Phone 992 122S
II 11 41&lt;
----------- -ROTOTILLER , Reg Ap

-

paloose colt, Dalmallon dog
pony and billy goat Phone

__ _______ _

9927330

-.

11 11 3tc

TWO cemetery lots In Meigs
Memory Gardens 78 A, 1 &amp;

2 Phon• 949 2608

11 11_,lie
- - - _H___ _• _______
HAY for $Ole PhOnf 8&lt;3 2581
11 II 61c

Repa i rs serv• ce ell makes
,
99 2 2284 The F~br1c Shop ,
Pomerov Au thahz ed's1nger ·
~ ales and
serv1ce
we .'
sharpen Sc1ssors
329tfCt

----- 0

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

CAMPER. only used 3 mon
ths If Interested, call 742

2707

'
11116fc
-----·--- -------

......,...,_

10 ll 26tc ,
~ ------'

&amp; LJ ll&lt;t;;t: •nmmmv. ~u
years experience Insured,

GASOIJNE AlLEY

free estimates Coli 992 lOS7

I

10 IS lie

EX CAVA I INu , BACKHOES
ANO DOZER, LARGE AND
SMAL L SEPTIC TANKS
INSTALLED
BILL :·.
PULLINS PHONE 992 2418,
DAY OR NIGHT
'

11 11 7fltp :: :

C

I

'

BRADFORD Auctioneer ' '
Complete service
Phone 1 •
949 2487 or 949 2000 Racine , ~ 1
Ohio, Cr tn Bradford
•' '
1091fC 1 ~ :

--------------IF
a

I '

'
YOU are lntereosted '"
new home or have your
present on e remodeled , or '
'•
you are m need of a new
roof Call · Roush Con
struct10n ," Greg Roush, 992

I ,'

7583

11 7 121&lt;

HOUSE on L incoln Heights, 2 ,
bedrm , large kitchen, full
basement, n1ce back yard,
only S8,900 WITh new fur ;
nlture, only $10,300 Phone 1

992 7648

''

Phone

OHIO PALLET co.
I

%Redolence

3 Glandular

character

organ

11 W11hout
moisture
11 Valued fur
1! Meander
lJ Zealous
tt "Botch -"

4 Dull:h
loWII
i Overdue
I Codtney's

(Clooney
&amp;eemary
hit)

sroup

11 Anchor
7 InferWe
n
Overlay
I John GleM,
lor one

21 Torero fan's

.-e-:G7.;:-, %1 Steal ( sl )

Jog

,.....

state

15 Stroke of
llghlnlng

shout

%8 Plunder
29 Out

wilh gold
of the
way
Z2 Navlgl!tlOnal
system
30 Ravine
31 Get In
23Shlnlng
3t French
ULanguiJh
shooting
Z5 Remove
match
from
II Soctety
office

Ius

Zl I..lnller on

· . ~Quay

Letter
Seaame
Old times
First-aid

used
to be?

•
~~~~~~\:==~~~~~7N~[:-~~~~~~;w~~,~~w~
r:
IX:6S
13/...lT AH
ONLY AH 60TTA 1-Pt'ESTLY eral
t::oN'I

WANTA......._,~

PAPPY /N

BRE"AK /N

11-1' J&lt;ACr:= e

A Nr:=W

AN' I-ONORABLY MAi&lt;E"
TRY~-ITS 11-I'Ccc:e:

ONGr

~~;1,

1

•B~BMIOeol
For Frldoy, NO¥. 14, 1175

Pop's pride

~J~

O' TH' HILLS!!

I.

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11)
You re likely to run Into une;.t·
petted opposition today from

speaker
Kind of

several sources One of vour
btggest thorns will be a
domestic tssue

farmer

Mental
balance
Brink

411 Vestibule
41 "- Barrel

~;1!5~~~ DAILY
Polka" CRYPTOQUOTB- Here'• how to work It:

1-..l......li-.....,~

Ia
SUR£,.BARRY,
iF YUJ'D LIKE!
I '

AXYDLBAAXI.
LONGFELLOW

One letter aimply atands for another. In thlo aample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slncle letters,
apoatrophes, the lenllh and rormatlon or the worda are all
blats. Eaeh day the eode letters are dllerent.
CBYPTOQUOTBS

'

I

PKQWTEODQZ

HDN

I' '

AFEW

"

AN

DWFKH

HJ

DFO

JPH

FXDW;

EJ

I

cw

AN

ODQZ'O

J

WTWAN

PJK

PKQWTE·

OFSW .- VQRRQFA

CRFSW

LISTEN TO
\

."Great Country Stereo"
WITH
JIM WILLIAMS

1eekdays 10:00 A.M. to 2:00 A.M.

o I

•

1

'I ''
lI
'''
' I'
I'

--~~---

ON

WMPO fM SJERm 92
"

''
'•' ''

TAURUS (April ZO·MIJ' ZO)
Oihers are going to be ex&lt;remety demandtng of you to·
day and 11 possible they're goIng 10 make you the fall guy lor
lhetr lal 11ngs
GEMINI jMay 21-June ZO) Be
careful today not to 1mpose
upon friends unnecessarily
Th1nk tw1ce before requesting
favors or lo!!lns

CANCER jJUM 21-July 22)
For reasons not totallv valid

others will be a bit resentful of
you today especially 1f you re
In the catbird seat g1vmg
orders

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Vou II
have small pattence wilh per·
sons today who aren t
wholeheartedly In support of
your views Same sharp exchBOges are likely
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22) Today could be a real bummer
busmesswise It you conduct
your afla1rs Impulsively Keep
your eye on the prof1t column
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0CI. 23) II will
require ell the diplomacy you

''
I I'

MaQnlflcent Monsters of the DeeD I, 10; Washlnafon
Week In Review 20,33; Stagecoach West .5.
8 30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15, Wall Street Week 20.33
9 DO-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie "Hustling" 13;
Movie "Move Over, Darling" 6, Hawaii Flve-0
8,10, Firing Line 20: Masterpiece Theatre 33.;
Country &amp; Western U S A. 5
10· oo-Pollce Story 3,,., 15, Barnaby Jones 8, !0: News
20: Paul Nuchlms 33, Burke's Law 5
10: JG-Avlallon Weather 20.
11 :DO-News 3,4.6; News 8,10,13,15; ABC News~ 11 30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Special 13;
Sammy &amp; Company 6: Movie " The 500 Pound
Jerk" 8, Movie "The Deadly Bees" 10; Janak! 33.
1 DO-Midnight Special 3,4,15; Wlde World Special 6;
Movie " Devil Doll" 10, News 13.
2 30-Movle "The Protected Man" 4.
4 DO-Movie "Stagecoach to Dancers' Rock" •·
5 30-Movle "Love and Kisses" 4

AstroGrapt-1

Item
Canadian
province
(abbr.)

lJL ABNER

DO-Columbus Today 4, Sunrise Semester 10
15-Folk Literature 3
25-Farm Report 13
3G-New Zoo Revue 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10, Blue Ridge Quartet 13
6 4()--0unce of Prevention lD
6.45-Mornlng Report 3
6 55-Chuck White Reports 10; News 13
7 CIO--'Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
News 8, Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7 30-Schodlles 10
8 DO-Lucy Show 6, Capt Kangoroo B,\0, Se!llme St.
33
8 JG-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3, Phil Donahue;, 15; Lucy Show 8, Mike
Douglas 10: Morning with D J . 13.
9 3G-Not For Women Only 3: One Life to Live 6: Give
N-Take 8, New Zoo Revue 13.
IO·DO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Dinah 6; Price II
Right 8,10: Mike Douglas 13
10:3G-Wheel of Fortune 3,&lt;,15
11 DO-High Rollers 3,15, I Dream of Jeannie 4:
Gambit 8,10
11 30-Hollywood Squares 3,15: Happy Days 13;
Midday 4, Love of Life 8,10, Se!llme St. 20,33
11 •55-Take Kerr 8, Don lm~l's World 10
12 DO-Magnificent Marble Moc~lne 3,15; ShoWOtfs\3,
Bob Braun' s 50 50 Club 4; News 6,8,10
12 30-3 lor the Money 3,15; All My Children 6,13,
Search for tomorrow 8,10
12 45-Eiec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1 DO-News 3, Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8:
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 30-Days of Our Llves3,4,15; Lers Make a Doal6,13;
As the World Turns 8, 10.
2 DO-S\0,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Guiding Light 8, 10.
2 30-Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Night 8,10
3.CIO--'Another World 3,4,15, General Hospital 6,13;
Match Game a, 10; Say Brother 20.
3 30-{)ne Life to Live 13; Max B. Nlmble6; Taftlelales
8,10; Black Perspective on the News 20.
4 ~Isler Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4: Somei'HI 15;
Mickey Mouse Cl\lb 6,1; Mister R09en 20,33; Movie
"Lost In a Harem" 10; Dinah 13.
4.30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8,
Sesame St 20,33 ; Get Smart 15.
5 DO-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5 30-Adam-12 4, News 6. Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co 20,33 , Adam -12 13
6 DO-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20.
6 3G-NBC News 3,.,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News B, 10; Two-Way StrHt 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the Truth 4; Lawrence
Welk 8, Bowling for Dollars 6; Aviation Weather
33; News 10; Don Adams Screen Test 13; .;amlly
Affair 15; 0111o Journal 20; Wrestling 5
7 30-Porter Wagoner 3; Bobby VInton 4: Candl~
Camera 6, Evening Edition with Martin Agronaky
20, $25,000 Pyramid 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Pop
Goes the Country 15, Block Perspective on the
News Jl,

6
6
6
6

B DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3..4,15: Barbary Coast 6, 13;

cattle

opener

itiiiOiilhio...... :

DACRES - 2 houses, 0!18
11 12 lie B R , 2 baths, 011'e 7 rooms a
th All minerals. $31,000.
1912 G MIDGET 11 000 AC
TUI&gt;:L MILES $1.150, for MIDDLEPORT - 3 B R a
more •nfarmalion, call (614)
th, mod. kit .. 2 porches, a
667 l7S9 or 667 36S2
levtl
lot. $12,500 eo.
1112 Sic
NEW LISTING - Paneling
1974 TWO bedrm • Skylme mod kll., 2 B R s, both
Home. 12 x 60. Barcelona corner In Racine S\2,900
Span 1!h Decor washer and SPECIAL - 2 block building
dryer, cement patio W1lh lot,
210 fl frontage x lOS width, and one acre. $8,000.
Tuppers Pla ins water, f1ear MIDDLEPORT 3 B.R.s
Meigs H1gh School, 112.000
mod
kit
,
bath,
buement,
Also , 1970 Triumph Spitfire
MK3 1967 Triumph Spitfire porches and 1 acre. 1129.500
MK2 , 1970 engine Sell NEW LISTING - All tlec.,
reasonable Phone 992 7060
B R.s, both, femlly room
11 12 31&lt; petlo and nice kit. Syracuse
--1973 HONDA M T $300 Phone $24,500.
992 l4l2
REALLY NICE - 3 B.R,s,
11 12 3tc ceramic baths, mod kit , bar
- -·· .... -- --·r
r IR C WOOD Phone 992:1640 family room, bonment a
f1 12 61&lt; dbl garage. ~.000.

cle&amp;rance

I "Romola"

11 Joe CGUege t "Marsell·
yeU
lalae,"
17 Accord
lor one
1t Suffix lor
11 "Pine
meteor
Tree"

It was sittinQ on
top of the TV!

stare

I

DELIVERED TO:

I MI. Miles

15 Proffer

and

)()' HAFfA K8tH
MFE A NE:W

Real Estate For Sale

'85.00 TO '200.00 PER M
VENEER MIITE OM, '400.00 PERM

11 13 lie

How
come 1 never
saw it?

or (1) 667 3041 , Coolville

-------7------

ll~~f#jj{;~
If

". 13

SAW LOGS

House with bath,
garage , basement , built In
porch, 12 acre. Hobson

~EREIN~5~·

BEAUTIFY yovr home with
Perm a Stone New homes.
as well as remodeling work •
Expert 1ns ta ll at1on
Free•
estimates Phone 742 2409 '

DOWN

ACROSS

1 White or

1

WANTED I

6 ROOM

"'II' I KNOW I-IlM,
HE'S PIIOSABLV UP

"THEM .

MACHiNE

396S

-.,~--

IT'S 100 BAt&gt; OSCAR
WASN'T AROUND10
5/11(~ "TO,

9 18 lfc

S EWING

(Fo r a copy or JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to ' Wm
a t Brtdge ," c/o lhJS
newspaper, P 0 Box 489,
Rad10 Ctly SfatJon. New York,
N Y 10019)

by

home furnace repair Phone

992 S8SI

An lndtana reader wants to
know how to play a bndge
hand wtth no k1ng of
d1amonds
The answer ts that gremhns
somettmes get tnto a
newspaper and eat the kmg of
d1amonds In that case it Is up
to the reader to hnd that hand
that needs that kmg and see tf
the art1cle can then make
se nse If 11 doesn't the
gremhns have really out·
smarted us

~-'6THOMAS JOSEPH

24 lie

WE SPELtALIZE In mobile

tape comblnatton Balance
1104 70 or terms Call 992

~-~

The two notrump response
to an arllhc1al two club open·
mg shows at least e1ght h1gh·
11-IJ
card potnts and a notrump·
type hand It also should deny
any worthfess doubleton and
IF POSSIBLE THERE
SHOULD BE AN HONOR IN
EACH SUIT
The 1dea IS that tl the opener
has a notrump hand of h1s own
THING - there w1ll be no har m m let·
J --'·c·THA!'S tmg that opening hand become
VOU'VE dummy
~:"""''""A
Wath three queens and a
kmg and 4·3·3·3 dtstrabutaon ,
South responds two notrump
North has opened two clubs
w1th a 23-pomt hand so he

•
4

"ELIEVto•

11 6 26tc

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

PHONE 992-3325
10 Mechanic
Pomeroy, 0

l

,-- ~~· ·

,o

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

c

YUU

Pass

Openmg lead - 10 •

'.

SEPTIC TANK S c leanea
Modern san•tat1on 992 J 95 o~~
or 991 7349
918tfc 1: :

1

TUPPEIC) I'LAIN5 - S
yrs old 3 BR , both, dining
R, full basemen! w uti lily ,
porches. FA furnace heat,
aboul '1. A Wonderful
view $19,500
MIDDLEPORT - Lovely
lot &amp; location - Add a
shower and a couple of
partitions and have a
beautiful custom 2 BR
home N gas FA fur~e
$7,000
OPEN AGAIN FOR SA~E
- 22ACRESOF GROUND
l.lllce home . 1 tile bldg . 1
mobile home 4 rentals 3 of
which hove free gas
Always rented and near
recreational facllllles
Income of $420 00 per
month plus gas Income

Pass

.•

Build an all steel bu1ldmg at
Pole Barn pr 1ces' Golden
G•ant All Steel Buildings,
Rt 4 Box 148, waverly,
Oh10 Phone 947 2296

to 9 lfc

REMINGTON, 1,100 outn, STE REO RADIO , modern
now 12 or 20 go S112 so
des1gn1 am fm radlo r 8 track

For Safe

•!

sweepers toasters , Irons. '
all !ima ll appl1ances Lawn 1
mower next to State High
way Garage on Route ~
Phone 985 382 5
.., 16 ttc

MI A LUNCRETE
del1v'ered r1 ght to yo ur
protect r ast and easy F ree
est.mate~
Phone 99 2 ]28.4
Goeglem Rea dy M•~&lt; Co ,
~ dd lepar t Oh•o~
6 JO uC 1

finished

TEAFORD REALTY

"

ELWOOU 80WE~5 REPAIR.! ;

H~AUl

9 6tc

11 9 71p

', •'

11 12 1 mo.

EXCAV1-1 I I NV, dOZer 1 IOaO~;tl : •
and backhoe work sept1c
tank s Installed
dump;
trucks and lo boys for hi re
w1tt haul f1ll d1rt top so11, ,.
lim es tone and gravel,. Ca ll
13 ob or Roger Jeffers day
phone R92 70B9 n1ght phone
99 2 3525 or 992 52 32
2 11 tfc

804 W. Main

remodeftng
Salem St ,
Rutland
Phone 742 2306
atter 4 p m or see Milo B
Hutchmson

Phone 992 7113

s tmply ratses to three
13 notrump ThiS tells South JUSt
what h1s hand as South adds 9
¥A K 4 2
to 23 or 24 and makes an over·
+A 10 8
. bad of stx notrump
• AKJ
West opens the 10 of spades
t:AST
WEST
and South tsn't al all happy
• A 43
• 10 9 8 2
wath the dummy or has over·
¥ 10 7 3
• J 965
bad Twenty three pomts plus 9
+65 4
• QJ 2
equals 32 and tsn't enough for
• 8 65 3
• 97
a slam and South can only
SOUTH
count to 11 tncks
•Q6 5
However, lady lu ck smtles
WQ8
on ham and the 12th develops
tK 973
because West gets squee•ed
• Q 10 4 2
South samply cashes all his
Both vulnerable
black cards West1s forced to
d1scard a heart m order to
guard hts queen-JaCk of
West North East South
d1amonds and South collects a
2"'
Pass 2 N T
fourth heart plus slam, game
Pass 3 N T Pass 6 N T
and rubber
NORTH &lt;01
• KJ7

Pomeroy

Yard Sale

YARD SALE, Friday and REG Polled Hereford bulls

NT response to two clubs

new

homes

INCOlPOilATED

11 12 6fc

and 12 ga\Jlje. S29 up , pump APPROXIMATELY
acres . 200 fl an State

guns , 10 and 12 gauge , SS9 .
automat1cs 1 12 gauQe, S99,
High power shee ts, S3 83 ,
IMR powder , $4 98 , black
powder , S2 90 deer slugs ,
51 29 , Match and deer
barre ls for SIIOO and &lt;$870
F 1fe 's, Middleport Phone
992 7494
11 ll 61&lt;

Strout~

5 ROOM house for sale , tn
Rutland Phone 742 2801 or
992 S19S

CUSTOM handmade and STONE black home on Vme
Street In Racine Four room
Cl'lrved teet her belts purses,
and full bath Also block.
dog collars, ha1r clips, brass
vld11y room . separate from
ha ir clips Specled buckles,
\ house Phone 1614) 985 4231
1dea1 gUts Call 992 7097
I Ill lip or 992 5930
11 7 61p
POWDER

s 261&lt;

Real Estate For Sale

l

THE DIAMOND? IN WQ - ~OMA?
MINE OR 'IOU·· 'IOU KNOW
WHICH ! 0 CHOOSE!

MORlAN
Construction Co.

WUULll

1113 11C

SHOTGUNS

Ph. 992-2174

WIN AT BRIDGE

f!.UT IF I COLILD ?TEAl AI.!.

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

NO. 1 HEATING OIL
N0.2 HEATING OIL
Degree O.y O.llvery
Budget Pay Pion
POMEROY LANDMARK
'l'aJ_ack W. Carsoy, Mgr.
6it Phone 992-2181

sf m

bowling ball and bag

10

OH , PIPE DOW'-1! 'IOU MU$T THINK.
J:M A ~ITWIT IF 'IOU El'.P&amp; C.T Me TO
FAl.l FOfl! ~CH A CO~!V'I Llt.JE!

SMJTH NELSON
MOlOR$, INC.

Phone 742-2331
R09er Womsley-Rutlond
1015-1 mo

7 CIO--'Muslc Connecloon 5
7 3o-Speclal Edition Better Late than Never 5
B 3G-Rex Humbord s
9 3G-E nslgn O'Toole 5
10 oo-Burke's Law I
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1t75

6, 13, Movie " Foster and Laur 1e'' 8, Classic Theatre

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Spec•allst

R&amp;J COINS

FUEL OIL

11 ll 61 c

GOLDEN
and
sliver
pheasants and peatowl
Robert Lew1s, Spnng Ave
Pomeroy Phone 992 2924

1973 FO RO F11 PICkup , 8 II
COUNTRY Mobile Home
bed good shape Call 992
Park, Rt 33 ten mtles north
J640
of Pomeroy Large tots w1th
11 7 6tc
concrete pat ios , sidewa lks
runners and off slr eet
19.41 PONTIAC 4 Cloar sedan,
par'k1ng "Phone 992 7179
end Interior , good
12 31 tiel body
shape - with two motors,

586

NOTICE OF
PUBLICATION
To
George Deem , Jr ,
whose lest known residence
was East LiverpooL Ohio
43920 . Franklin O'Nei L whose
last known res idence was Old
Pltt~burgh Raad r Rochester.
Pennsylvania 15074. Hobert
Icenhower , whose last known
reSidence was 1l6 Pacolet
Orn.. e. Gaffney S C 29340.
William Icenhower , whose
last known res1dence was R
F o .. wenctv Orlv~ . Baltic ,
Conn 06330, Jerry Icenhower .
whose last ~nown residence
was 5430 Cloverly Avenue.
Temple C1ty, California 91710 ;
Jo Ann Conard, whose last
known residence was Route 1.
Croton, Ohio 43013, Mary Jo
Mock . whose last 1 known
residence was 1053 5 Rose
Avenue , Apt 17, Los Angeles,
Cal ifornia , and th e unknown
heirs and dev isees of Martha
O'NeiL dtceasett
You are hereby no tified that
you
have
been
named
ttefendants In a legal action
entitled Garnet E Johnson. et
al , plamlltfs , vs
Edna
Shroacts, et at , defendants
This action has been assigned
Case Number 15,687 , and Is
pend1ng In t he Court of
Common
Pteas ,
Me1gs
County, Pomeroy , Oh10 45769
The oblect ot the Complaint Is
to partition the fallowing
dtscr.bed real ntate , to wit
Situate In Lebanon Town
Ship , Me1gs County , Ohio
be ing 1 part of Fract1on A,
section 14, Town l , Range 1l
Ohio Company ' s Purchase r
bOunded and descr ibed as
follows
6tg1nntng at the
southwest earner of said
section , thence north on said
secrton tine 81 rods to a rock
from which a chestnut oak 20
Inches bears south 74 1'1
degrees east 1511 feet , the~ce
east 69 rod~ and 23 links ,
thence south 88 rods to south
line of said uchon . thence
west to the place of beglnnmg ,
containing 38 h acres more or
tess
Also the following real
estate situated m the town
ship, county and state above
mentioned , and 1n Fract•on A,
Section l4, Town 3, Range 11,
t:ot 166, Oh 10 Company's
Purchase . and described as
follows Beglnnmg at a paint
an the soulh tme of s&amp;1d lot , s•
1 16 rods west of the soutHeast
corner ot said lot Thence west
on south line of satd 101 to tht
southeas t earner of land
heretofore d eeded to Thomas

RABBIT dog and
Phone 842 2185

Suburban stat1on wagon
W1lh 1973 X J60 engme and
transm1SS10n less !han
25,000 m des sI 295 Phone
949 2789 after s p m
11 12 3tc

TR A ILER space tor rent 1n
Mtddleport Phone 992 5434
to 21 26tc

SKATE A WAY
ROLLER
RIN~ ANNOUNCES BUS
SCHE DULE SATURDAYS
ONLY STARTING NOV
Wh
RACINE
6 40,
SYRACI:JSE 6 SO , MIO • south fine of sold Lot 166, 4l
OLEPORT 7 15, Thanks rods end 12 links west of the
g 1v1ng Par tv Nov 26 and 28
corner of said lot at
OPEN · WED, FRI, AND asoutheast
stone ; thence west 14 rods
SATURDAY
7J010(1()
ll 7 11 links to a stone ,
PRIVATE
PARTIES . and
thence north 88 rods. thence
MON, ruE&amp; , THURS east
I Hods and 13 7 11 links to
EVE SAT AND SU NDAY a stone
thence south 88 r od~
AFTERNOO NS
PHONE to the . place
of beginning,
(6141 9BS l929 or 9B5 9996 or contain ing 8acres
, and lom lng

TON lnternallonat pickup .
H 0
sprmgs to carry cemper
heavv bumper with hitch for
horse tra1 ler Low m ileage
To see. contact 992 7017
4 speect transmIssion

an

has lolned the stett on
Thursday , Friday
and
Saturday November Get
Acquainted Special Is S2

NOW selling Fuller Brush
Products Phone 992 34 10
10 6 ttc

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

11 9 tfc

FURNISHED

SADDLE Phone 742 2545
11 12 3tc

THE
IN SIDE
STORM
WINDOWS ' SAVE UP lo lO

For Sale

ONE Maple bed complete S45
One
Remmgtan
w1Cie
1965 DODGE conventional
c~rrl age typewr.ter and
cab, 2 ton truck 12 ft flat
table, 550 Gne pale tamp .
good rubber , V 8 .d speed 2
SJO One meto11 l c loset, S25
speed axle, 1650 Phone
One callphOne tape recar
(614) 98S 3594
der , 190 Phone 992 3760
I I 9 11p
11 12 ltc

J AND 4 rm furnished and
unfurnished apts Phone 992

54l4

AtRCO weld1ng mach1ne
new etec all accessories
ncluded
Phone 992 3410
10 28 lfc

NE HAVE shotgun shells,
r1fl e shells. cleantng ac
cessar !es hunting clothes,
boots, black powder guns
and accessor1es, reload 1ng
matenals , scopes, mounts,
knives, sleepmg bags, boa t
rackets
and
c ushions,
holsters, belts rifle streps
and much , much mare at
Indi an Joe's Spor ts and
CBs 308 Page Sf , M1d
d leporl
10 11 lOIC

speed. S900 Phone 742 3076
11 13 3fc

10 31 lfc

II 4 261&lt;

nounces that Mary Newell

_______ _

SlOO Phone 16141 985 l594

l94l

11 s 81p
--------------

_____

11 9 lip
7 RM unfurn ished apt In
Rutland Inquire at Sa lem
1966 DODGE WindOW van
Street Market. or call 142
standard, 6, new paint S600
2424 or 742 314 1
Phone (614) 985 3594
11 7 6!c
11 9 11p

13 lfc

PUT SOME color In your life
with
genuine
Artex
decorator paints Discover
the fu, by creati ng beautiful
hand pa inted lin ens Free
Instruction classes Cal l
Alice S Neas&amp;, {614) 98 5

--

1947 DODGE ton 1 l 12ft fl at
good rubber, good condition

For Rent

9Sl l

Run

11 12 6t p

Appraisal service on
eslotes and colltcllons

3 BEDRM house 1n Rac ine
Phone 949 2671

For Sale

________________

1962 FOR D PickUp,, , ton , 6
cyl standard, runs good
1300 Phone 992 3746
11 13 3tc
..._

From the largest Tr\~Ck or
Bulldozer Rad1ator to the '
SIJallest Heater Core

Buy, Sell or Trade

"The Wild Duck" 33, Movie "Our Man Flint" 10
10 OG-Medlcal Story 3,4,15, Harry 0 6,13, News 20.
11 CIO--'News 3,M,B,10,13, 15, ABC News 33
11 3G-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Mannix 13, FBI 6, Kofak
B, Movie "Keeper olthe Flame" 10, Janakl33
12 3G-Longstreet 13, Mannix 6
I CIO--' Tomorrow 3,&lt;
1 30-longslreel 6, News 13

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13. 1975
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Ohio State Lottery 6
Evening Edition wolh Marlin Agronsky 20, Wild
Kingdom 10 To Tell the Truth 13 Music Ctfy
US A IS
8 CIO--'Mac Davts l,4,15, Barney Miller 6,13, Waltons
B. 10. Romantic Rebellion 33, Classic Theatre "The
Rivals" 20
i 3Q--On The Rocks 6,13, Classic Theatre Preview 33
9 CIO--'EIIery Queen J,o,lS Streets of San Francisco

Coins, Currency
and Supplies

Real Estate for Sale

------POMEROY, OHIO
;

bedrm , 1913 Carlan i4 x 69
2 bedrm 1972 Esquire 14 x
69 2 bedrm , 1974 Schult 14
x 69 2 bedrm K ANAUGA

Wanted To Buy

-o'ii"E"-;INoL:
E" t;~- c;;;;;Pie ,,
w it h chest of d rawers

Ph , 992!3993

POMo~~~!ve¥.~!9.! CO. @)

196S BUDPY 12 x 65 2 bdr , 1964 CHEVY NOVA 2 dr 283
1965 Parklane , 12 x 69, 2
v 8 auromatic transm iSSion,

during the death of Doris
Maxwell Darst Thonks to t'A~H paid tor a ll makes and
veterans
Memorial I mod&amp;ts of mobile homes
Hospital. Dr Tell e and Dr
Phone area code 614 .423
Bl azewicz.

fur

ntshed Pr1 ce d to sell Phone

10 21 301&lt;

Ohio Coli 9911160

L.AVE~DER

S'o acuse, Ohto

4 tO 1 mo

TR AILER and lot In Rutland
Wi ll consider land contrttcl
Phone 992 1960
11 11 6tc

pane ling,

lloormg and ceiling

LARRY

power steering, rad1a

Mobile Homes For Sale

mo4trn world - MONEY

CARPENTRY

1970 NOVA V-8 CPE.
$1295
Blk vinyl roof, grey finish, good tires, automatic,

11 9 6tc

Employment Wanted

In MemOIJ

1971 MATADOR
$1395
4-door, local car, air conditioned, lull equtpment.

AKC

Reg Phone 742 2962

Blown tnlo Wall• &amp; Attlu
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENt
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING,SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

n1ce car with good economy

female ,

male and 2 pupp 1es

MINER GLOOMY NOVICE

Anawnt Mudt &lt;'Plan,ed In Ut t

1972 COMET% OR
$1795
6cyl sld Irons, rodlo,llke new w w tires, blue fonlsh,

11961&lt;

''
''
•' .

-----·---· ---

FREE ESTIMATES

Blown
lrtsulation Services

county
Humani
Soc~ety. J female German
Shepl'1erd type, 10 weeks old,
puppies wormed and halt
shots , W1ll be large Clogs

(A.twert lomorrow}

".........,.]lombl'"' BYLAW

S

MEIGS

IPrillte-IIISWIII~nl "(I I I J-[ I I I J"

IN

OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

man ths old up To 6 years
Also wh1te guineas W1ll
trllde far guns Phone 7&lt;12
151 1
11 7 6tc

HE WA-5 "THOIWU6HL.Y
EXAM1'-IIN6 A
SOUTH AMER:ICAN
Cc;&gt;UNTI':Y.

Business Services

2 SIGNS :Pome~oy

Pets

Television log for easy viewing

--------------~ ·-

Auto Sales

,THIS SOUP 15
PWMBTASTY,

LOWEEZV-·
WHA'tKIND
IS IT?

I{OU CAN'T 60 TO NEEDlES
FOR THANKSGIVING .•'ttlU'lL
6ET LOST IN THE DE SERf!

to maintain har·
mony with cfooe essoclet•
today Don taoy anything you'll
tater r09ret
SCORPIO jOel. 24-NO!t. 22)
It'• best to temporarily aet
aSide tasks dtstalfelul to you
today You'll only do lh8m In 1
careless hollhoarted !Uhlon
IAGinAIIIUI (No¥. 21-Dec.
21) Your self-dlsclpflnelslfkoly
to leave a lot 10 bo dtllred today Be careful not to do
something foolish In front of

can muster

fnends

CAPRICORN (Dec. 12-.lan.
11) Don 1 make motor

domesllt doctsfone today
wtthoul lull epprovaf b\' your
mate II things go wrong you'll
reap the wrath
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 11)
LoUie lhlngs thai don't normally
bug you w•fl gel under your
sk in today Be corelul Don't
snap at someone who doean't
deserve It

PISCES (Feb. ZO·Morch ZO)
Your financ ial aspects ar•
rather dubtoua today Don't
contribute to matters by spen·
~lng

when you shoutdn'l

~Your
VBirthday
No•. 14, 1175
Th1ngs of a speculative nature

will be extra appealing 10 you
this yoar You re llkoly 10 have
many Irons In the fire Rnu"•
will be rewerdlng II you don'1
take on more than you can

manage

�,'
'..

'l

\0- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thwsday, Nov. 13, 1975

Recovery in

Ford will hear, '$ign it'
B)&gt; WILLIAM E. CLAV'J.'()N

WASHINGTON iUPI) President Ford's top energy
advisers will recommend
that Ford sign a compromise
energy bill containing a
provision for lowering service station gasoline prices
over the next 18 months,
administration officials said
today.
Acongressional conference
committee, which debated
the energy package for six
weeks, approved the measure
Wednesday night. The bill
must now be approved by
both houses of Congress
before it is sent to the
President.
Federal Energy Administrator Frank Zarb is

Iva Bell dies
Mrs. Iva Bell, 84, Avon,
Ohio, died Wedn esday
morning in a rest home. Mrs.
Bell was born and reared in
Meigs County.
She Is survived by a son,
Vance Bell, •Avon Lake; two
grandchildren, and four
great-grandchildren, and one
brother, Clint Birth, Portland. Funeral services will
be held Friday at 2 p. m. at
the
Wesleyan
United
Methodist Church at Sunbury, Ohio.

HEADQUARTt:RS

JOR
QUALITY

FLEX-STEEL
FURNITURE

scheduled to discuss the bill
with Ford at a White House
meeting
today.
Ad ministration offiCials said
Zarb will recommend that
Ford approve it.
~sically, the biil would:
- Push fuel prices down but
allow them to rise gradually
after mid-1977.

- Make mandatory some
energy
conservation
measures.
- Set gasoline mileage
standards for cars.
- Urge Americans to use
alternate fuels.
~ive the President power
to ration gasoline In an
emergency.

Meg and Hatari

building up their
gorilla romance
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Will
Meg and Hatari "go ape"
over each otlier'
Cincinnati Zoo officials
hope so.
Meg and Hatari are
\owland gorillas brought
together to mate-llOmething
that generally doesn't happen
with gorillas in captivity.
Except, that is, at the
Cincinnati Zoo- whecti the
great apes are encouraged to
become great lovers.
. So, Meg, a 13-year-old
female who nearly died of a
broken heart when her gorilla
boyfriend died this past
summer at Busch Gardens in
Tampa, Fla ., has been
brought here to meet Hatari,
a local lover of some note.
·The Cincinnati Zoo holds
the world record of eight
gorillas born In captivity (all

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
THUR., NOV , 13
NOT OPEN
Fri. thru Sunday
NOV. 14-16
SMILE
I Technlcolor)
Show starts at 7:00p.m.

eight since 1970) and 12-yearoid, 350-powtd Hatarl has
fathered haH of them.
"Even though Hatari is
quite a ladies man, you never
know what is golng to happen
when you put two gorillas
together for the first time,' 1
says zoo official Pep Wilson.
"You could have a knockdown, drag-out."
But Hatari and Meg,
together two weeks now,
seem to be hitting it off.
"So far they're getting
along pretty well," observes
Wilson. "I don't think
anything really exciting has
happened yet. Right now
They're in a get-acquainted
stage-a cautious couriship.
"He grabs her f09t and
pulls her arowtd a little. She
nips him on the arm. A little
gorilla affection."
Gorillas are considered endangered species and zoo
officials try to place them in
situations where they will
reproduce, which is why
Busch Gardens put the lonely
Meg on "lndefinte loan" to
the Cincinnati Zoo.
Hatari and other Cincy
gorillas are encouraged to
become Romeos with
something called "Mr. Ed's
U!ve Powder,'' a special
concoction of vitamins and
minerals mixed in with the
gorilla's food and name.d for
zoo director Ed Maruska.

autos holding

Constant
(Continued from page 1)

from regul;lr artive service
as an AssoCiate.Justice oi the
Supreme
Court of the United
DETROIT ( UPI) - The
States."
auto industry's slow recovery
He noted he had been
from a two-year slump
forced
"to leave the bench
con tinued in early November
several
times" during recent
with analysts estimating that
coiU'I
~tguments.
He said, "I
new car sales topped last
shall
continue
to
seek relief
year by 39 per cent - the best
from
this
unabated
pain, but
year-to-year gain in almost
there
ls
no
bright
prospect
in
three years.
view."
Sales hit an estimated
The President accepted the
190,000 cars in the Nov. 1-10
retirement
''With profowtd
period with all four U. S.
perSQnal
sympathy
for the
companies gaining in the
sad
circwnstances"
which
reports to be issu&lt;;d today,
caused
Douglas
to
leave.
analysts said. The period
Ford said, "Your dlstin· ·
compares with last year's
guished
years of service are
136,921 sales, the lowest for a
unequaled
in all the history of
non-strike period since 1959
the coiU'I. Your contributions
as the indus try headed
deeper into its worst slump to the law, both as scholar
and jurist, and your service
since the great depression.·
... as a member and chair·
man
of the Securities and
::;:::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Exchange Commission
SAN· FRANCISCO (UPI) constitute a lifetime of
- San Francisco voters, dedicated public service
by
few
who took on clly pollee In matched
the polling booths, are Americans."
. Douglas was appointed by
paying the price In the
traffic court. Since voters President Franklin D. Roose·
last'week rejeeled a series veil after serving as the
of proposals backed by second chairnian of the SEC.
pollee, lhe number of HetookhisseatApril17,1939,
traffic llckets issued have succeeding one of his legal
idols, Louis D. Brandeis. At
goue up sharply.
411, he was one of the youngest
On Tuesday, Nov. 4 election day - about 350 men to sit on the coiU'I.
The retirement leaves the ·
tickets were banded out Ia
court
dominated by con·
the city.
servative
thinkers appointed
On Wednesday, when the
by
Richard
M. Nixon.
results on lbe Issues InA
White
House
spokesman
volving policemen's pay
were known 1,'114 motorists said Ford had not decided
got tags. Between last whom he would nominate to
Thursday and· Sunday, fill Douglas' seat. As House
minority leader in 1969 Ford
16,61~ more tickets were
attempted
to impeach
handed out. The Increased
Douglas.
Many
observers had
number of llckets contho.ught Douglas would keep
tinued this week.
his seat at all coSts until next
fall, on the chance Ford
might be replaced.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Possible nonlinees could In·
ADMITTED
Anne elude Attorney General
Marchese, Parkersburg, Edward H. Levi, 64, a
Nora Gorham, Syracuse; respected legal scholar with
Thomas McClung, Pomeroy. little courtroom experience.
DISC,'HARGED - C-1arence
Ford declined Wednesday
Murray, . Hosmer Roush, to rule out a wom11n.
Ruth Burrows, Joyce Fisher, Prominent female jurists
Sally Owens, John Metzger, include Judge Shirley M.
Dorothy Jarvis, Dixie Hufstedler, 50, of the 9th
Flowers, Rebecca Bego, Circuit Court of Appeals and
Robert Roush.
District Judge Comella G.
Kennedy In Detroit.
Chief Justice Warren E.
Burger, who sueceeded me ol
Douglaa' closest friends, Earl
Warren, and frequently dlsa·
greed with Douglas, said the
retirement "brings to a clolle
a career unique In the annals
of this court. His service
spana the tenure of five chief
justices and 111118 a record tl1flt
may never be equaled." ·
Douglas' wife C&amp;thy, 32,
ssld llbe was sad his con·
tribution to the cqurt Is over
but happy "because I think
this will give hbn the freedom
and lellure to recuperate,"
Douglas was proud of hla
stamina and was convinced
be could overcome his latest
l,&gt;,b'=!j ~._, setback. As a boy he
conquered polio. In 1949 a
horse fell on him, breaking 13
ribs. A pacemaker was Installed In his chest In 1981
because his heartbeat was

BAHR CLOTHIERS

ELBER·
FELDS IN. P·OMEROY
..
.

.

Open Friday
and Saturday Nights
·.
Until 8:00 P.M.

Suits and Sport Coats by Leather Jackets by Cresco
Curlee, Merit, Hubbard, and
and Cooper.
Warren Sewell.
Leisure Suits by Hubbard, Mr.
Pants by Haggar, Hubbard,
I and Ha!!Aar.
Levi.
Denims by Levi
Shirts by Arrow, Cavier Underwear by .t,rrow, Jockey,
Clubs.
BVD, and Hones
Western Shirts by Ranch.
Socks by Interwoven
Hats by Stetson ond lldams. Luggage by Airway and
Wool Shirts, Jackets and Caps
SamlOnlle
by Pendleton .
Wotlets, Key Cases, Travel
Sweaters by Puritan, Jockey
Kits by M"k,er
International, Arrow and
Pendleton .
Toiletries by Brut and
Romane.
Robes and Pajamas by
Fleetway and BVD.

irregular.

; .
/

,.,._1

USE OUR LAY-AWAY OR

YOUR BANKAMERICARD

r

!

Pant Suits by
catalina,
Jantzen,
coddington,
Lori Lynn.
Slacks
by
Cataiina,
Jantzen,
Coddington, and
Douglas Marc.
Sweaters
Catalina
Jantzen.

by
and

Coats: Suburban;
.All-Weather
and Long Dress
Coats by BeHy
Rose and Great
Six.
Hand
Ba :gs,
·Billfolds
and
Blouses by Lady
Key Cases by
·
Manhattan,
Meeker.
Jantzen,
Cata Iina
and
Lori Lynn.
Knit Tops by
Switchmates
Denim Jeans by
and Fairchild.
Turtle Bax
Ladies Hosiery by
Mojud.

BAHR CLOTHIERS

..

Middleport, Ohio

. . . . . . . .-.. . . . . . . . ._.._. ,_.

Store Hours : 9:15 to 5:00 Mon . thru Sat.
9: Uto8:00 Fri.

~ ~u-~-·H~----_..-

SALES REPORTED
•September 1975 sales of
Series E4rH United States
Savings Bonds In Ohio were
~.4 million. AI the end of
September, the State attained
76.6 pet. of Ita 1976 sales g011l.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Meigs
County Volunteer Savings 8
Ol!da ChlllrmiiR, said Sep.
!ember sales of Savings 8
ondlt In Meigs Countywere
f31,8i'2. 60.3 pet. of its annual
sales ROlli on Deptember 30.

\

,-(

DOUGH FOR' DOUGH PLAN - Paul easel, a member of Drew ·Webster Post 39,
American Legion, and local, district and state chairman of the "Gift for the Yanks Who
Gave" Program of the Legion confers with Susan Hudson, assistant manager of the Kroger
Store, Pomeroy, on the local "dough for dough" campaign to be conducted in Pomeroy
Tuesday evening. At 6 p.m. Tue9day members of Drew Webster Post 39 will meet at the post
home and then will move through Pomeroy delivering loaves of bread from Kroger's to
homes in the town. In exchange, they will accept contributions for the "Gifts Who Gave"
program. Proceeds from the activity are used •to make ChristlTUis memorable for
hospitalized veterans.

•

By RICK VAN SANT
LYNCHBURG, Ohio (UP!)
- The school teacher
mustache controversy in this
small southwestern Ohio
commwtity has sprouted new
dimensions.
Four teachers in the
process of being fired for
wearing mustaches have
filed a $200,000 lawsuit in a
Cincinnati federal court,
contending their constitutional rights have been violated.
"Most of my students think
its a rather small point for the
school board to make," says
Eugene Blough, one of the
mustachioed four. "I think
the students' thinking is more
mature than the school
board's."
Blough and fellow teachers
John Jones, James King and
Phil Blankenship have had·

a1 y
VOl. XXVII

NO. 151

Devotecl To The lntere.ods of 1'he Meig.~-M1tsm1 Area
• POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1975

WHILE THEY LAST

Y2 PRICE

By Unlled Press lnlernalioaal
WASHIONGTON - THE SENATE ARMED Services
Qlmmlttee has voted unanimou~ly to recommend that the
chief of President Ford's staff, Donald H. Rumsfeld, be
confirmed as secretary of defense.
Sen. John C. Steilnis, IJ.Miss., said Thursday he imagined
the lull Senate would vote next week on whether Rumsfeld
would replace James R. Schlesinger at the Pentagon. Stennis
said the questions were some of the toughest he had seen and
pralled
Rumaleld'a answers p , . , ~~·
"
'
.•
&lt;I"\
..........
I

FRIDAY and SATURDAY SALE

Men's and Boys'

WINTER JACKETS
A tremendous selection of styles colors - lengths - materials In boys
sizes 8 to 20, juvenile boys sizes 2
to 7 and mens sizes 36 to 54. Buy
what you need for wear yourself
or giving at Christmas time.

Sale ·Prices
I

. . . . . ._

1

.......

''* -

Sale! Men's and·Boys' Sweaters
Special two day sale - lnclud!!s
all of our mens and boys sweaters.
Cardigans - Vests · Si lpovers. An
excellent selection.
Juvenile Boys
Regular Boys

Sizes 2 to 7
Sizes 8 to 20
36 to 52

Mens Sizes

Sale -Prices
Elberfalds Toyland Open
Now At Our Warehouse On
Mechanic Street
Plenty of free parking. Bring the kiddles to Toyland
- see the tremendous selection of toys - all excellent buys. Use our convenient lay-away plan.

~~~--~~~~~~~~~~--~-~-"WN

Open Friday and Saturday Nlehts Til I

ELBERFELDS .IN .POM_EROY

.,. ._.,~....~

~

WASIUNGroN - REP. PHIUP E. RUPPE, R-Mich.,
says he plans to introduce legislation calling for construction
ol a natural gas pipeline from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska , through
canada to serve the U. S. Midwest. U passed, such legislation
would authorize C9"struction of the pipeline by the Arctic Gas
Conaortium rather thlln by El Paso Natural Gas, which is
seeking a license to bulld a gas pipeline paralleling the Trans·
Alaska oil pipeline.
The Michigan Republican said Thursday a trans-Canada
pipeline proposed·by Arctic Gas would be "not only in the
Interest of the gas..short midwestern states but of the entire
nation" by also making Canadian gas available for export to
the Unlted·Statee. The Arctic Gas proposal calls for a pipeline
through the Mackenzie River valley to Calgary, Alta ., where it
would be split into a leg serving the western states and one
lei'Ving the Midwest and the East.
cLEJVELAND - STEREOTYPERS at the Cleveland
Press and the Plain Dealer have voted to accept a new contract with the publishers that will give the _workers raises
totaling ~7 over three years, plus cost-of-living Increases.
The agreement approved Thursday, Is retroactive to May
31and brings wS28H-week wages for night work and $282 for
days. It Is similar to pacta signed by other wtions at the two
newspapers.
WASHINGTON - 'l'HE NATIONAL COAL Association
Thursday estimated U.S. bituminous coal producUon for the
week ended Nov. 8, at 13,98$,1MXl tons.
Produ~tlon for the same period In 1974 was 14,195,000 tons.
Production from Jan. 1 to Nov. 8 was estimated at 548,350,000
tons. The revised figure for Nov .1was 12,770,000 tons.
COLUMBUS - - CLAIMS FOR UNEMPLOYMENT
benefits shot up 16.8 per cent the first week in November,
according to the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
Bureau Director Albert G. Giles said three-fifths of the
increase could be attributed to layoffs in the auto and steel
Industries. State and federal P,rogram claims, however,
dropped .2 per cent from the last we~k In September, totaling
2S3,984, said Giles. The total Included 221,100 continuing claims
for those unemployed one week or more.
DETROIT - 'l'HE 45 PER CENT JUMP in early
November new car sales - the sing!~ biggest gain in over
three years - surprised even the analysts. ~rican Motors
doubled Its sales of last year .in the Nov. 1·10 period, General
Motors was up 56 per cent, Chrysler 47 per cent and the Ford
Motor Co. 22per cent in the reports issued Thursday.
But even with the strong rebound - the fourth straight 10day period in which sales topped a yearo~~go period "caution" Ia the word being used in Detroit. Industrywide
layoffs will climb by nearly 7, 700 workers as truck Qutput Is cut
by GM and Ford and car production at one Chrysler plant. The
cuta come as the trade publication automotive News reports
that auto output will hit170,498 cars this week, up 3.4 per cent
from a year ago ~nd the highestfor the year.

·Aid plan like.d
, WASHINGTON (UPI ) - among Albany, Manhatta~,
Without saying so, President · the · Whlte House and
Ford appears to ~ave agreed Congress, there will be signed
to federal aid to help New legislation providing 'the
York City - and to be taking federal billlona that will be
credit for saving the city needed to preserve solvency
from bankfuptcy.
in the city.
The general expectation Is
Washington's aid would
that willlin a week or so, after still be needed under a $l.4
negotiations between and
(Conlinued on page 12)
'

;\
.~

second class citizen. Never
once has my teaching ability
been questioned~just how I
look while I'm teaching."
Although Blankenship, a
health and physical education

teacher, has recently shaved
his mustache, he still joined
the lawsuit.
~~He didn't cave in," JXlints
out Blough. "I think his
musta, he just got to itching."

- ..
,..

PRICE 15'

0

.·-

We've selected· special groups from our regular stock of
womens, misses and juniors Fall Coordinates, sportswear
separates and dresses for this sale.

I

Lynchburg-Clay board votes
4-1 to terminate contracts;
constitutional issue pressed
in lawsuit by 4 instructors

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

Fall .Sportswear and Dresses

I

.

"None of us had ever seen a
dress code for teachers and
when Mr. Jones asked to see
it, they didn 't show him a
copy,
"Three of us grew
mustaches too and we were
ali given notices of termination. I still haven't seen
a dress code. I ask the
superintendent about it and
he skirts aroimd it, says it's
board policy."
The non-mustachioed
bolll'd members have voted 41 to'uphold the terminations.
"I'm willing to pursue this
fight because I think it has
implications for the whole
faculty," says Blough. "I
think we have the support of
most of the 50 faculty
members and everybody else
I've talked to around town
thinks it's kind of ridiculous.
· " It makes me feel like a

Industry favors regulations

SPECIAL CLEARANCE

' - - - - - - - - - - - - _ . . ....

their contracts terminated by
the Lynchburg-Clay Board of
Education for refusing to
shave their mustaches.
The four are still being
allowed to teach while their
appeal - which this week took
the form of a $200,000 U.S.
District Cowl suit- is being
considered .
It all started when Jones, a
junior high basketball coach,
came back to the 1,200student school system this
autumn sporting a mustache.
Blough, 40, a 13-year
veteran industrial · arts
teacher, said he was surprised to find out the
mustache wasn't appreciated
by the five-member school
board and Sehool Superin·
tendent George W. Roush .
"They jumped all over Mr.
Jones and he was told to
shave it off," said Blough .

eli tine

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

.

·Douglas waa still confident
he could overcome his latest
pllyalcal · battle last ~.
when he prematurely
returned to the court, and
flun a wheelchair Invited
new1111en to aCIXIIIlpany him
on a hike in a few monlhl.
lnatead, h1a a'-lces from
the bench became more frequent In recent days.
Last Tlu'lday he return~
to Ule Rusk Instilute in New
York, where be apent the
spring and summer un·
dergolng rehabilltatlon
treatment hoping to Improve
the use ol his paralyled left
llide which kept him cmllned
to a Wheelchair untU Ule day
he retired. The trip was
termed "routine."
Doqlu' dedslon to retire
was made quickly, 11lmoll on
the spur ol the moment,
according to court aource.1.
He arrived at the verdlcl only
hours before Ule White House
made It public.
A court spokesman quoted
Burger u saybw no other ·
member of the court
suggested Douglas step
down.

0

I

MIDDLEPORT
Chcae·from

Fired, mustachioed teachers
fight hack, sue for $200,000

'

By DON PHILL.WS
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Amerii:an industry has complained of government meddling for years, and a major
plank in most Republican
party platforms has been to
muzzle the bureaucracy and
allow the free enterprise
system to work.
Now
a
Republican
president has proposed doing
exactly that in one of the
largest industries in the
country ..:... trsnsporllltion,
And wflO are the greatest
oppone!lls
of
Ford's
regulatory reforms?
Large segments of the

Ford for
all men
brothers
DURHAM, N.C. (UPI) President Ford launched a
Republican Party fund·
raising visit to the, ·south
today at a predominantly
black university and said he
is working for the day when
ali people "are brothers and

sisters."
"I hope and work for the
day when the human mind
and spirit are no longer
shackled by ignorance and
prejudice, when all the
children of God are brothers
and sisters," Ford said in his
prepared remarks at North
Carolina Central University.
Ford's schedule takes hltn
from Durham to Raleigh for
two GOP fund-!'aising receptions, then to Atlanta to
further boost the $4.4 million
he has raised for his party
this year. He then flies back
to Washington to change
planes for a weekend Western
economic summit meeting In
Paris.
At North Carolina Central,
the President proclaimed his
support for equal rights.
"Inequality, injustice, lack
of competition are gradually
being removed from the
America~ scene," he said. "I
support the Equal Rights
Amendment just as I support
a new and broader extension
of the Voting Right Act.
"Much niore remains to be
done. I hope and work for the
day when competitionopportunity - for all
AmericaM will be equal and
fair without race or religion
or sex ever a factor ."
Hailing such graduates of
the university as Mayor
Maynard Jackson of Atlanta
and Olympic gold medal
winning high hurdler tee
Calhoun, Ford said that
"despite the burden, despite
the added difftcultles, blacks
have entered all types of
competition and come out
national champions, indeed
national heroes."

transportation industry.
It would appear the companies - at least the truckers
and the airlines - do not
want more freedom from big
goverrunent. Railroads seem
to have less fear of
deregulation.
· Ford has sent Congress
three separate bills designed
to ease regulation on the
highways, airways and
railways.
Ail three allow freedom
within limits to raise or lower
rates without government ap.
proval, end the practice of
joint rateofretting, allow new
companies more freedom to
enter the market and older

THE lm'H ANNIVERSARY of the U!ng Bottom
public inconvenience and
United Methodist Church will be observed Swtday
confusion."
beginning with a basket dinner at 12:30.
What do these Industry
groups
have
against
deregulation ?
Government regulatory
policies aim to protect those
already in business.
U the present regulatory
policy is abandoned, hun·
By Katie Crow
taught the same class since
dreds of new truck lines may
Members
of
the
Long
1957, and has taught Sunday
spring up overnight, possibly
Bottom
Un'ited
methodist
School altogether 40 years.
with better service and lower
rates, possibly chl\slng some C-'hurch Swtday will celebrate The pastor is Robert Meece ;
m~\8\lttellpollfl~ ~ ·
older !Irma Olll·o! exlet"M.''l, the 8oq, ann.illf"'!rY of the~ Dennis. Creeger Is associate
pastor.
.When the airline plan was
1n the ·aviatim lndwtty, . church. ·
Historian of the church,
sent to Congress Oct. 7, the dozens of airlines might comSammy Rairden, 83, is the
Air Transport Association pete on lucrative routes with and of U!ng Bottom, is Leona oldes t memhe.r. He received
complained it "would disrupt no guarentee that the existing Hensley. She, with her sister, his 16 year pin in July.
airline service and cause protected airline would win Mae McPeek , are coThose having the longest
chairpersons
of
the membership in the church
out.
;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:::;:::;:;:::;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::
Rate wars would be likely. celebration.
are Marie Swan, Ada Bissell
Worship service will be and Mrs . Hensley.
Railroads do not fear a
moderate lessening of held at the regular hour of 9
Former pastors and
a.m.
and
Sunday
Sehool
at
.
regulation
because
they
teachers
have been invited to
WAsHINGlUN (UP!) - The Senate voled today to
9:45.
The
afternoon
service
generally
compete
with
attend and make remarks at
extend lhla weekCIIII'a tcllecluled el()iraUoa of domeatir oU
price controls lor another 30 days to complete work on 1 trucks and barges rather will begin with a basket the afternoon services .
dinner at 12: 30.
than among themselves.
Comments wiU also be made
national energy bill for President Ford's CO!IIIderalioa.
Mrs. Hensley will have a by members and visitors.
Ford, who faces divided Republican oplnl011 In Coqress
number of church records Bonnie Welsh will present a
on whether to approve the long...aoge bill, Ia ell)leCted to go
OPEN LOWER
and group pictures on vocal solo.
along with the enenslon UIt II ..ssed by the House.
NEW YORK I UPI )
display.
One is a biU dated in
Couples of the church who
Senate and House conferees have already agreed on tbe
Prices opened lower in
1914
for
a new roof of 2,825 have celebrated their 61st,
compromise bill, whlcb would roll bact gasoline prlres for
moderate trading today on
square feet pu t on the 59th and 5th wedding annow and then allow gradual oil price Increases later.
the New York Stock Exbuilding for SS a square, a niversaries respectively are
::::::;:::;:;:::::::::::;:;:::,:;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::· change.
total of $141.25. The building Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Rairden,
is SO feet by 30 feel.
Mr. and Mrs . Riley Pigott
The church budget from and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
June, 1951 to 1952 was $938.18. Prince. Mr . and Mrs. Prince
Today it pays a minister are also Gold Star parents.
Construction of a com- community's Railroad operating funds at $1 each. much more than that.
The public is invited to
Mrs. Hensley received her attend the celebration.
munity center with an "old Festival in July, said that he
The group discussed
railroad look" was proposed has been advised that the building a sand box at the 24 year pin in July. She has
at a meeting of the com- Middlepor t Elementary community park and the
munity recreation committee School will be available for
matter will be taken up again
in Middlepor_t Wednesday use as a display area and for at the next meeting to be held
here will be a step towards
evening.
other purposes when the on Wednesday, Nov. 19, at By MA'1111S CIIAZANOV
RAS
SUDAR , U.N. peace in the Middle East,"
II was agreed to write to the festival is staged July 1-4.
7:30 p.m. at Middleport
Chessie Bridge and Building
Plans were made to sell village hall. The group will be Demilitarized Zone, Sinai said Swedish Maj. Gen. Bengt
Dept. in Columbus asking for advertisements in a festival permitted to use the Bicen- Desert (UPI) - Israel began Uljestrand, commander of
plans of an old freight depot program , copies of which are tennial emblem in con- its withdrawal from the Sinai U.N . forces in the Sinai
structure.
to be dis tributed at the junction with its Railroad Desert ·today, turning over desert.
the Ras Sudar oil field to the
It was Israel's first return
Paul Gerald, heading the festival and to sell mem- Days Festival.
United
Nations
under
the
of
territory under the
bership cards to obtain
terms of the peace agreement agreement, hammered out
with Egypt.
during U.S. Secretary of
At the brief noon ceremony State Henry Kissinger's
an Israeli private took down shuttl~ diplomacy mission in
the flag of the Jewish state August.
and a Finnish colonel and an
Indonesian colonel hoisted
the U.N. flag .
"I do hope our joint efforts
established companies more
freedom to abandon unprofitable routes.
The idea is to let competition drive down fares and
lower the average consumer's cost of living.
But when Ford's plan to
reduce regulation of truck
and bus lines was made
public
Thursday, the
American
Trucking
Association denowtced it as
"the ultimate in govern-

Anniversary will be
celebrated by church,

Senate extends oil controls

Railroad look wanted

Sinai .withdrawal begun

Children

commended
Murder trial
date is set

FIRST FOUJES TICKET - Mrs. nOn Pearch, Middleport, jeft, purchased the first
ticket for the 1975 Fail Follies of the Big Bend Minstrel Assn. at Dutton's Drug Store
Thursday afternoon from Teresa Davis. The advance tickets, selling at 25 cents less than
the door price ol$1.50 on sh.ow night, Suturday, Nov . 29, at 8:10p.m., are available at Outtons and Bahr Clothier In Middleport ; Swisher and U!hse Drug Store, Nelson 's Drug Store
and the New York Clothing House in Pomeroy, and at Miller's Market in Rutland. The fail
musical is being staged at the Meigo High School under spo!ISOrship of the Meigs AUJ!etic
Boosters.

Charles TYree, Minilleport,
has been returned fr um
Chillicothe Corre cti ona l
Institute by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept. to face a
charge of murder.
Tyree on June 19 this year,
shot Ruby Jarvis of Middleport. Tyree was sentenced
to 2 to 1,5 years in the
Chiiiicothe Correc tional
Institute on a charge of
causing physical harm. Two
weeks after he was sentenced, Ruby Jarvis died ,
allegedly of her wounds.
II

RUTLAN D
May or
Eugene Thompson and town
coun cil in their November
me e tin g co mm e nded
children of Rutland for 'exce llent behavior during the
Halloween ·season.
May or Th ompson appoin ted co uncilwoman
Joan ne Stewart to head a
Bi centennial committee
represen ting civic and other
groups in Rutland area
willing to help. Persons are to
contact Joanne Stewart.
Attending wer e Mayor
Thompson, Larry Edwards,
Pearl VanMeter , Joanne
Stewart , Bi ll Williamson,
Ern est Nicholso n, and
Wendel Gra te.. · co un cil
members, and Vernon
Weber, clerk.

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