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I

12 -

'
1'be DaUySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Thursday, Nov .•20;·~1~97;5_ _1!1111_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~------------------------,

Reading Herman Ross
of Mason dies
council
• ed
OrganlZ
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
"Right-to-Read" A'dvisory
Cotlllcii has been formed at
Tuppers Plains Elementary
School to help improve
reading instruction and
reading-readiness activities
In the kindergarten, !irst,
second and third grades.
Parents and teachers met
in the school library at 3 p.m.
Nov.Jito discussproblemsin
reading and plans to improve
reading levels of the children .
Parents attending the
organization meeting .were
Mrs. Robert Sanders, Mrs.
Bernard Shrivers, Mrs.
James Stout, Mrs. John Rice,
Mrs. Harold Hawk, Mrs.
Chaires Collins, Mrs. Robert
Trlpp, Mrs. Trent Upton,
Mrs. Robert Davis and Mrs.
Jon Karschnik.
Teachers present were
Mrs. Brannon, Mrs. Tripp,
Mrs. Caldwell, Mrs. Parker
and Mrs. Jonas.
Mrs. Greta Suttle, Meigs
County Educational
Supervisor, explained the
"Right to Read" program.
Mrs, Bea Douglas, principal,
welcqmed the group and
thanked parents for their
Interest In Improving the
reading program. Mrs. Rose
Marie Jonas and Mrs. San·
ders agreed to co-chair the
group. It Is planned to
determine children's reading
levels through testing, then
develop goals and activities
to strengthen reading.

~ospil4ll

News

Velerinl Memoriai Hospital
ADMITTED - . Kevin
. Mowery, Pomeroy; Clarence
Hayman, Racine; Alberta
Linthicum, Reedsville ;
General Hall, Racine; Debbie
Campbell, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Carl
HubWd, Mary Roush, Allen
Durham, Berdena Gardner.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - ' Mrs.
Harold · Stover,
Point
Pleasant; Wayne Cl\pehart,
New Haven; Robert Sheley,
Middleport; Albert Parsons,
Leon; Anita Spurloch, Point
Pleasant ; Freda Schultz,
Point Pleasant ; Donna
Hudson, Gallipolis Ferry;
James Stevens, Henderson;
Earl Reynolds, Gallipolis;
Joseph Bennett, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . Kenneth
Blrchfleld, Gallipolis, and
Robert wallace. Ft. Bragg,
N.C.

Voc center

MASON, W . Va. ~ Herman
D. Ross, 82, Mason, who died
Thursday morning in Holzer
Medical Center, was a retired
coal mmer. He was born
March I, 1893 at Clifton, a son
of Abb and Elizabeth Tully
Ross. He was a World War I
veteran and a member of the
VFW.
.
Surviving are his wife,
Carrie Riffie Ross, Mason;
four daughters, Mrs. Patrick
(Gladys) Riley, Mrs. Opal
McKirgan · and Mrs. Rose
Williamson, all Mason, and
Mrs. Carroll (Lillian) Eiliott,
St. Mary's w. Va.; one son,
John Henry Ross, Mason ; a
stepson, Herman Dempsey .
Riff, Swmyside, Utah; 13 •
grandchildren, 22 greatgrandchildren, and one
sister, Mrs. Lola Emerson,
Coschocton,
FWieral services will be
held Saturday at 1:30 p.m.
from the Foglesong FWieral
Home at Mason. The Rev.
James Lewis will officiate,
with burial in the IOOF
Cemetery
at
Mason.
Visitation hours at the
fWieral home will be 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.

"

..

.'

Shop Both

available

Friday c:and
Sc:aturday
'

Fall Coats
Stop by our Second
Floor Coat Department
now and try on a new
coat.

Still a nice selection of
fabrics, lengths and
colors
in
misses,
womens, half sizes and
preteens
(young
Juniors).

9:30 to

·

~~

YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT HEADQUARTERS

William' Bennett

Shop The Second Floor
Ungerie Department
For a fine . selection of
womens sleepwear
in
regular and womens sizes.
Nylon,
permanent
press, polyester cotton
and brushed tricot In a
wipe range of solid
colors and prints; waltz
gowns, long gowns,
baby dolls, pajamas and
robes.

NEW CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS were placed throughout Pomeroy Thursday hy
Ohio Power Company. The attractive Christmas trees were purchased by
Ute Pomeroy Chamber of Conunerce at a cost of $1,000. Pictured is one of the two that were
placed on the Meigs County Court House. Colored lights are featured on the trees . Aparade
will be held Tuesday to kick off the Christmas season. The parade will line up behind the
Pomeroy Junlor High at 6:30 p.m. and move down Main Street beginning at 7 p.m. The
parade will welcome the arrival of Santa Claus.
employ~ of the

died on Thursday
CHESHIRE - William C.
Bennett, 89, Rt. l, Cheshire,
died In Messer Nursing Home
In Clifton, W.Va., at 7:15a.m.
today. Mr. Bennett had been
Ill the past three years.
A retired. farmer and coal
miner, he was born April 4,
1886, in Concord, Ky.
Twice married, his first
wife was Bernice Bennett,•
who preceded him in death.in
1969. In 19'10 be married
Margaret Kyle, who sur·
vives, as do the following
step-children, Mrs. Paula
Dolin, Ottawa, W.Va.; David
Acree, Harrlaonville; Gary
Acree, Middleport; Rev.
James Acree, Port Huron,
Mich., and Phillip Acree,
Ripley, W. Va.; two grandchildren,
18
step·
grandchildren and two step
great~andchlldren; and a
brother, Edward Bennett,
Waverly.
Two brothers, two sisters
and a daughter preceded him
in death.
Mr. Bennett had been a
resident of the Clieshire area
since 1957. He was a member
of the Church of Christ,
Henderson, W. Va.
FW!eral services will be
held 2p.m. Saturday from the
Waugh-Halley-Wood FWieral
Home with Rev. James Acree
officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
fWieral home Friday from 7
until 9 p.m.

(CmUnued from page I)
Fioor surraces also provide
flexibility ; 40 per cent of lhe
BACK AT HOME
floor space is carpeted to give
BELPRE - Mr. and Mrs.
an aesthetic value, and a
seamless floor cov~ring is Carpenter, formerly of the
used where carpet is not Apple Grove-Letart Falls
appllca,ble such as rest area in Meigs County, are at
rooms, kitchens, cosmetology home bere after spending
laboratories, and the con- several weeks in Columbus
course areas. This type of where Mr. Carpenter WI·
· floor covering saves on derwent major surgery at
maintenance due to the fact it University Hospital. He is
needs only water and reported recuperating
detergent for cleaning. The satisfactorily.
remainder of the shop areas
have treated concrete floors
which requires minimum ·
amo111ts of maintenance.
,...--------,
Buildings are designed with
fullD'e . as well as present
needs In mind. As training
TnNtTE
areas progress and change,
NOV. lO
this physical flexibility will
become even more imNUrOPEN
portant.
FRI. thru SUN.

MEIGS lHEATRE

NOV. 2l·l3

EVERYBODY

Norm1n Jewlson''

.Featuring. .
•Printzess
•Mary Lane
•Jerold
•Jet Set
•Dee Dee Deb

I

VOL. XXVII

7"111

I

I,...,,.............,.. .........,.. _

(Tothnltotorl

Show starts at 1:00 p.m.

WANT AD WAY

1HE GIOVANNI
By

R!d\Nin.
Step Into e pair.
Platform soles
tall heela aet

In atyle.

leather
I

halp k..p

udget In shape.

THE SHOE BOX
, MIDDUPOIT,

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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

On His

~~=~;:::,~::::~::::::::::::::::::::;:;:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:-:·:-:::·:::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i::::::::

..,

'

Jl"ews • •. in Briefs\\1
.
By United Pl'Cis International ·
····
WASHINGTON - THE SENATE HAS VOTED for a
ceiling of $375.6 billion on federal spemjing during the current
fiscal year, ending June 30, 19'16. That's $8.6 billion more than
Congress agreed to last March. The resolutioo , approved
Thursday by a vote of 69-23. binds Congress under a law
enacted last year to appropriate no more than that amount,
and contemplates a deficit of $74.8 billion .
Debate centered chiefly on an effort by Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy ,!&gt;-Mass., to commit the Senate to approve $1.5 billion
in tax reforms. The House has voted in principle to commit
itaelf to $1 blilion worth of additional taxes through reform.
Sen. Russell B. long, D-La., chairman ol the Senate Finance
Committee, argued that "tax reform" is a misnomer because .
It means different things to different people and always winds
up culling, rather than Increasing, government revenues.
long made his point with doggerel: "Don tax you, don't
tax me, tax the fellow behind that tree." Kennedy's amend·
ment was defeated 76-21.

Sportswear

"Preferred List"

For Christmas

MENS SHIRTS - If you're looking for
mens shirts visit our mens department
lst floor - Dress Shirts - Sport Shirts ·
Knit Shirts - Leisure Shirts . Westerns.
Excellent selections in every type ·
famous make.
MENS BELTS - We feature Paris
belts for men - a wide assortment of
colors, widths - styles to fit your par·
tlcular needs - plus anothe~ selection
of popular priced sport belts - leather
work belts . Be sure to see them all.
Ties for him by
MENS TIES Wembley - an enormous selection In
solids and neat patterns. Ready tied
and tie them yourself ties. Select your
tie needs early while selection Is best.
Ask for a free gift box.
MENS. KNIT DRESS SLACKS- In
sizes from 29 to 44 waist. Hundreds of
pairs · all fine quality. Solid colors plaids. A fine selection of patterns.
Western styled slacks and regular
styles. All arranged for easy selection.

•CMfdinates

•Sweaters
•Blouses

•Skirts
•Pants·
•Shirts

•Jeans
•Kn~

Top$

Big selectibn of fashion
and basic colors in
misses. womens and
junior sizes_.

Stop In The Mens and lqs
• 1st Floor ~ See our fine line of Men's
Sweaters.

Gift .Suggestions

For the Boys On Your Ust

~~

-·

In sizes 36 'to 54. You're sure to find his size
-Coat Sweaters · Plenty of Sweater Vests .
Pullover styles, too In V neck - round neck
and novelty styles pi us the popular shawl
sweaters.
Solid col'ors and patterns. Now Is the time to
see these fine sweatt!rs and buy what you
need.
~~w-----~~~~~~~--~~~~_.~

Shop the Mechanic Street_Warehouse For RCA
Televisions ancl Whlrlaool Appliances

The curtailment levels that
will go· into effect with
December billings are: '
- 10 per cent curtailment
of all no-substituable industrial loads of one million
cubic feet or more a month .
- 20 per cent curtailment
of all substitutable industrial
loads of one million cubic feet
or more a month.
- 20 per cent curtailment
of all commercial cuStomers
that use one million cubic feet ·
or more a month.
- 100 per cent curtailment
of all industrial boiler loads of
one million cubic feet or more
per month.
,· ·
The individual curtailment

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1975

PRICE 15'

Elbirfelds Toyland is located in the Mechanic stleet .
Warehouse. Plenty ~ free customer pnng
.

Main Store, Annex and Wiriihciuie- Tiiylan!l Open
Both Friday and S.turday 9:30 to 8 P.M.

~lbe~elds

In-PQ.meroy

foWid 15 to 20 vacant or half
demolished houses that could
be razed at no expense to the
village by making application
through HUD. Total cost to
raze the houses was
(Continued on page 12)
TOPLAYSUNDAY
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern-Southern Alumni
football game will be played
at 2 p.m. Sunday on the
Eastern field. Admission is
$1.25 for adults and 75 cents
for students.

JOHN KERR, JR.

Kerr will MC
Jwrlor Miss
event Swulay

. g on di.splays
lgom

II Is planned lo sell bazaar

items during the oecem. ber display; donations Of
handmade gifts will be appredated . All items for the
display or bazaar should be
lefl at the museum on week
days . For furth er in- .
formati on, ph on~
the
musewn 992-3810 or 992-2264
or 992-5877.

The ASC Community
Committee election on Dec. I
is the final date for mailing or
delivering voted ballots to the
Meigs CoWity ASCS Office .
Ballots were mailed ·to all
known eligible voters today
for election of commWiily
committeemen and delegates
to the coWi ty convention . Any
eligible voter that does not
receive a ballot should
contact the ASCS Office,
Farmers Bank Building,
Pomeroy . Telephone number
is 992-3687.
Questions on eligibility to
vote or to hold office can be
answered by the ASCS Office,
which · has a copy of the
Regulations Governing ASC
County and Community
Committeemen available for
review . The County ASC
Committee decides questioos
on election procedures, and,
on eligibility to vote or hold
office . Such decisions may be
appealed to the State ASC
Committee.
Ballot coWiting is open to
the public, and will be at the

Meigs ASCS Office, at 9 a.m.
Dec. 4.
To insure the secrecy of a
vote,. the blank envelope
containing the ballot will be
thoroughly shuffled among
the other ballot envelopes
before opening. The number
of votes received by any
candidate is available on
reque st after the vote
counting is completed.
The candidates receiving
the first through the fifth
highest number of votes will
be elected to ihe positions of
chairman , vice-chairman,
regular member , first
alternate, and second
alternate on the c~mmittee in
that order .
The COW!ty convention will
he held at 10 a.m. Dec. 15 at
the local ASCS Office when a
cOWity committee member
and two alternates will be
elecld for the coming year.
ASCS Committee elections
are open to all eligible voters
without regard to race, color,
relig ion , sex, Qr national
origin.

14 GSI workers
on strike fired

Blaettnar
· b 00k S

material to bring them to the
musewn Sunday and share
them with the public.
· Plans for the December
display, "O ld Fashi oned
Chritmas," are complete.
Following is a list (Jf items
needed to make it a reality:
Chri stmas' pictures, old
cards, ~holos of Christmas
gatherings. Cln·islmas books,

I

ends on Dec·. 1

·-

relates to youngsters

lincluding floods , early
jchurches, families and
•buslnesses Will be On display
lin books owned by Fred
'Biaettnar Sunday 2·4 p.m. at
:I he Meigs County Museum on
• Butternut. Ave . In Pomeroy .
' The display of Indian ar: ufacts also is being continued.
An inv itation is extended lo

'I

ASC voting

levels for any of the 1,380
industrial customers subject
to cunailment will depend on
how much gas each customer
uses in each category. There
are 1,250 commercial
customers subject to curtailment.
During the November
billing period curtailment
levels were 100 per cent of
non-substitutable loads, 100
per cent of substitutable
loads except where exceptions were granted hy the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio, 100 per cent of boiler
loads, and 40 per cent on
large commercial customers.

Blind «;ollege student

youdrivea car?, ~nd how can
you tell li me ?
The visit was a profitable
one, not only for fhe children
but also for Miss Moon .
Alihou gh discussing her
blindneess with small
children is a relatively new
experi~nce, she said she
enjoyed thr frankness of the
questior.s.

J

imposed."

The master of ceremonies
and the judges for the i976
Southeast Ohio JWiior Miss
Scholarship Program are
announced today by the
Southeast Ohio JWtior Miss
Committee.
NEW YORK - CONSUMER DEMAND for dairy products
The M. C. will be John E.
has outpaced national milk production and pushed the
Kerr, Jr., sales represenwholesale price of butter to a record $1.16 pet pound -and it
tative of WMPO Radio, and
probably will get worse before it gets better.
judges for the finals are :
Indian sununer weather, the high price of butter. sub- ·
Mrs . Janet Korn , WJEH
stitutes and thirsty milk drinkers combined to raise butter
Radio, Gallipolis; Mrs . Suzy
prices, dairy industry observers said. Tbey predicted ThursCarpenter, 1965 Meigs County
day butter would cost even more before tapering next year,
Junior Miss; Joh n Zell,
when widespread dairy shortages are expected to ease.
secondary school consultant
for Henry County . Public
SAN CLEMENTE.t__CAIJF.
- WHILE MOST world
SchOOls; Richard Johnson,
(Continued on page 12)
assistant principal at Union
School, Mawnee, and Dean
Lutz, manager WLIT Radio ,
Steubenville .
Usherettes for the finals
MUSEUM viSITORS - Twenty~ine Pmteroy Elementary School first graders with
will be Barb Theiss, Vicki
tlleir teachCI', Mrs. Jeanette Thomas, and several mothers hiked to the Meigs Museum
Baso, Bobbie Chapman and
Thilrsday afternoon to view the exllibits. A group of tlle children with Uteir teacher are
Sheila Crouch of Southern
shown here at the cases containing Indian artifacts owned by lowell McNickle on display
High School. Providing music
Mrs. Denise Gibson's
Many Interesting qu~stions ' tl!ere the remainder of November. Groups are encouraged by the Meigs County Pioneer and
for the program will 'be apHistorical
SoCiety
tp
visit
the
museum,
but
should
call
for
an
appointment.
These.
Special Education .class at were asked by the pupils in
proximately 30 students from
Pomeroy Elementary School both classes. The pupils were .YOWlgsters were Ute first group of school children to tour the museum.
Meigs
High School Band
was vls(ted by Miss Peggy open and after the discussion
under direction of Dwight
Moon , a blind student at Ohio · began, they were comGoins and Randy Hunt.
University last Friday . Miss forta~leln~skin~peneirating "
old trucks and boys' toys,
The finals will be SWiday at
Moon is the roommate of quesltons mcludmg, how do ,
dolls, carriages, girls' toys, the .Meigs Junior High
Miss Lisa Wessinger who is you get dressed in the morold tree ornaments, wooden Auditorium in Middleport,
doing her student teaching ning ?, how do you eat1, how
bicycle&gt;, old winter sporting beginning at 3: U p.m . Ad·
with Mrs. Gibson.
do you read', liow do you
items (sleds, skates, etc.) vance tickets are students , $1
The class has been studying cross the streets?, how ean
and any other old fashioned and adults, $1.50. Tickets at
the human senses and how you get around withou t
Pictures and tl.slu rical I!Vei') IJI!Chavingscrap buuks , items representing Christthe door will be $1.25 and
il!lportant they are. Most bumping into things?, can !aCCOWlls of Meigs CoWity, pictures or other interesting mas.
recently they have been
studying
sight. ' , Miss .
Wessinger invited Miss Moon
to come and talk with the
class about what it is like to .
"be blind, giving the students a
chance to ask questions.
After talking with Mrs.
Gibson's class Miss Moon
went to Mrs. Ina Meadows'
fourth grade class.

'

BAlLOTS MAILED - Violet Morarity and Rita Buckley, ! tor, clerical workers at the
Meigs County Agriculture Stabilization and Conservation in Pomeroy display some of the
1700 ballots for the annual Af£ Community Committee election. The ballots went into the
mail to Meigs CoWily farmers today,

enttne

The first citizens' "input Manley , and Phyllis Henmeeting " that could lead to nessy, clerk, and 12 other
obtaining a federal grant for · persons attended the town
Pomeroy
thro ugl1 the hall meeting .
Housing Urban Development
Don Dunnell said that he
( HUD 1 Thursday evening knows of a ll)·acre vacant Jot
brought suggestions of behind
Rock
Springs
building a ball park for boys Cemetery that could be made
and girls, razing old vacant In to a ball park for boys and
homes, paving streets, and girls and a nice picnic area .
bui lding a commWiity center · F·rancis
Leighty,
on Prospect Hill .
representin g the Ralph
Mayor
Dale
Smith, Woolpert Consul ti ng Services
Coun cil men Ralph Werry, of Dayton, said he and Mayor
Harry Davis, Lou Osborne, Smith and Charles Legar, fire
Phil Globokar and John chief, on a tour of Pomeroy

r
I

HUD help available
ro·, lliiprove Pomeroy

Featuring Sty1t!s By. • •
•lorraine
•Fonnfit-RogeiS
•Phil Maid
•Katz

Christmas Gifts

BOYS BLUE JEANS- Sizes 8 to 18 In
regulars, slims ahd huskies - regular
denims and the popular pre-washed
styles.
BOYS FASHION JEANS- Regular and
slim sizes 8 to 18. Solid colors and plaids.
Polyester and cotton blends · corduroys.
A fine selection.
BOYS SHIRTS- Popular knit shirts and
numbers shirts. A wide array of colors styles and neat patterns. Let us help you
find one or two he'd like · also dressy
shirts and westerns.
BOYS JACKETS - Practical • good
looking jackets In plaids and solid colors.
Many with attached hands.
BQYS SWEATERS - Coat styles popular sleeveless sweaters and
pullovers . Select his proper size and
color.
And many, many other gift items suah as
plrjamas, belts, socks, toboggans.

NO. 156

.,J'

I

-- L.- - - - - - - - - - ' - - - -

Shop our Second Floor
Childrens Department for
girls coats in sizes 4 to 6x
and 7 to 14.

I ..

•

"The winter is only
beginning and all of
Columbia's figures are based
on the assumption that
wea !her will be normal," said
White. "If we should have a
severe winter, or If our
customers do not continue to
practice good conservation
and if the 'best effort contracts' we have with the
southwest producers do not
meet expectations the
situation could reverse itself
once again and more severe
curtailment levels could be

Devotell To .The lntere.d s uf1'he Meigs-Mason Area

•Preen

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

COLUMBUS (UP!) Columbia Ga~ of Ohio announced today that beginning
next month more natural gas
than had been expected
would be available to large
industrial and commercial
customers in Ohio.
A spokesman said winter
curtailment levels to the
large industrial and commercial customers would be
reduced but warned the
prospect of a severe natural
gas shortage still exists.
The company said the
purchase of large quantities
of gas surplus from the intrastate market in the Southwest and the availability of
additional volwnes of gas
from its suppliers were the
reasons for the reduction in
curtailment levels.
"Although the threat of
plant closings has diminished
because Columbia Gas of
Ohio has been able to offset
severe curtailments from its
suppliers through large
purchases of gas on the intrastate market In the southwest, the threat of a severe
gas shortage· has not been
eliminated," said Marvin E.
White, president of Columbia
Distribution Companies.

at y

e

"ROLLERBALL"

Shops the

More gas

..

$1.7~.

Tickets can be purchased
from the contestants or at the
Meigs Inn in Pomeroy
Saturday arternoon .
YOU KNOW
Masai tribesmen of Tan·
zania spit at each other to
indicate respect and good
will.
NOW

Fourteen workers at
· Gallipolis State Institute who
have been striking the facility
since Sunday were fired
Thursday.
Dr. Bernard Niehm, GSI
superintenden t, said the
workers were fired after
being off the job three consecutive days . He also said
the employes had been
picketing the facility and
blocking entrances.
As of II a.m. today, Dr.
Niehm was ln.conference and
not available to elaborate on
the firings.
Gallia County Commo n
Pleas Court issued a temporary restrat ining order
Thursday prohibiting strikers
from blockin g entrances ,
according to Niehm.
Probate Judge R. Wiiliam
Jenkins scheduled a hearing
for 3 p.m. today on a permanen! injunction against
. the strikers. Judge Jenkins is
sitting in for Judge Ron
Calhoun who is on assignment in Clerm ont County.
Niehm said at least 65
employes were off the job
Thursday, but he said the
hospital was operating at
near normal levels.
Niehm warned that other
workers may be fired if the
strike con tinues.
The workers were reportedly striking over a number
of local grievances.
Meanwhile. United Press
International reported today
an investigation at state
mental facilities should be
expanded to in clude the
" poli cies and practices
condoned or issued by administrators," according to
Karl Stewart , executive
director of the 35,000-rnember
Ohio Civil Service Employes
Association , who says
problems at the instituti ons
can be traced to cutbacks in
fWids.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
has been ordered by Gov.
James A. Rhodes to investigate reports of patient
abuse and mismanagement
ai the institutions.
·'We are in favor of the
highway patrol investigations
.. . as long as the Inquiries do

not run roughshod over
employes by questioning
them without informing them
of !heir constitutional rights,
as was recently done at
Haw thor nden State
Hospital," Stewart said
Thursday.
" We disagree, however,

that investigations of this sort
should concentrate at the
lowest levels on the table of
organization. We believe the
inquireis should be expanded
to include policies and
practices condoned or issued
by administrators, which
often help to feed the seeds of
discontent, temptation and
stress among workers and
result in neg lect or abuse for
the helpless residents. ·
Abuse and neglect can
also be attributed to the gross
inadequacy of funds in the
(Continued on page 12)

Basic Ed is
offered at
Eastern High
TUPPERS PLAINS - Free
adult basic education classes
are being offered io all Meigs
CoWl ty residents from 6 to 9
p.m. each Monday, Tuesday
and Thursday at Eastern
High School.
There is no charge to
enrolees and all materials
are furnished . Although the
ins truction Is primarily
centered upon the basic skills
of Reading, Math and
English , students are given a
variety of other subjects from
which to choose .
Students work toward their
own goals at their own
rates of speed. All adults
over 16 not currently enrolled in a public
school is welcome . Students
may learn to read or write,
prepare for the G.E.D. high
sc~oo l equi valency test,
refresh
knowledge
in ·
preparation for college or
technical school , or simply
pursue a fie ld of interest.
Those wishing more information should call 91154292.

�3- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport Pomeroy 0, Frlday, Nov 21 1975
2- The Dally Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , Frlday Nov 21 , 1975

CIA was plot happy with Ike, JFK and LBJ
DANIEL F GilMORE
WASHINGroN (UPI) With an arsenal ranging from
notlc poisons to boobytrapped seashells and
dynamite, the CIA plotted
WJsureessfully to kill Cuba •s
Fi~el Castro and Congolese
Premier Patrice Lumumba
and aided msurgents who
murdered three other foreign
leaders, a Senate report says
The charges span the administrations of Presidents
Dwight Eisenhower. John
Kennedy and Lyndon
Johnson
But the 347.page report
publi8hed Thursday by the
Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence - over President
Ford's strong objections said the panel was "unable to
draw firm conclusions
concerning who authorized
the assassmalion plots,"
including the pre~~idents of
the time
"~o foreign leaders were
killed as a result of
aasasaination plots Initiated
by officials of the Uruted
States," the report said
But it cited "concrete
evidence" of at least eight
plots against Castro and one
against Lwnumba
II said the CIA supplied
arms or other aid to inlllll'genll who - acting on
their own - killed Dominican
Republic dictator Rafael
Trujillo May 31, 1981, South
Vietnamese President Ngo
Dinh Diem and hls brother
Nhu Nov 2, 196.'1, and Gen
Rene Schneider, conunanderin-ehief of the Ch1lean army
Oct ~. 1970.
The committee said It
foond "some evidence" ol.
CIA involvement in plots to
kill President Sukarno of
Indonesia in the late 60s and
Haitian strongman Francois
"Papa Doc" Duvalier, who
died of natural causes ln 1971
Sen Barry Goldwater, R·
Ariz , and committee vice
chairman John Tower, R·
Tex , said they opposed
publlcation of the report.
Committee chairman
Frank Church, D-ldaho, told
a news conference 1s copies
of the white-bound, Inch-thick
By

report were handed to
reporters that Ford made a
"considerable effort" to
p-eVI!nt pubbcation right up
ID the last moment
The report Included 12
names of individuals the
admmlstrallon had argued
should have been cell50red
for the1r own safety
Church said failure to
publish the report would have
damaged U S Interests
abroad and led to endless

"speculation and Innuendo " PreSident Richard Nixon had
The report SBid Presidents authorized actions ln Chile,
Eisenhower, Kennedy and although he was not linked to
Johnson "should have any specific murder scheme
known" of the CIA "Whether or not the respecmachinations which could tive pres1dents knew of or
only have been authorized authorized the plots,' the
"at the highest levels "
report sa1d, "as ch1ef
It said lhete was "a executive officer of the
reasonable inference that the Uruted States, each must
plot to assassinste Lumumba hear the ultimate responwas authorized by President sibility for the actiVIties of h1s
EISenhower" and that former

Reagan's ticket would
he wholly conservative
By STEVE GERSTEL

MANCHESTER, N H
(UP!)- Ronald Reagan said
today if he wins the
Republican presidential
nomination he will choose a
runmng mate who fully
shares h1s conservative
VIews
Reagan, opening the
second day of his campaign in
the state with the earliest
presidential primary next
year, rejected suggestions he
might pick a moderate or
liberal to balance the GOP
ticket
"! have a different VIew
about this thing of balancmg
the ticket," Reagan told an
early morning news con·
ference "A candidate has an
obligation to pick someone
who would carry on - If he
had to - the same views
"It doean 't make sense to
pick a running mate who if he
had to take over would do
something different "
Reagan, who campaigned
111 Florida Thursday, left New
llampahire today for more
campaigning m Olarlotte,
N C , Chicago and Los
Angeles
Reagan, a 64-year~ld
former California governor,
again said that be and
PreSident Ford could battle
through the primaries
without ripping apart the
Republican party
He said that Republlcans

Lottery winners named

Providence helped him
CLEVELAND (UP!) f5,000wlnner Judy L Satullo
This week's big winner In the of Lakewood
Ohio Lottery Buckeye "1000"
Moaea Udge of Akron won
drawingsayshlsgood fortune $4,000, Annette Jesse! of
was providential
Cuyahoga FaJIB ~.000, Frank
"I got Yery lucky, with L Novlnec Sr of Cleveland
God's help," said David Wise, ~.000 and Smith Leitzke of
ij1, Johnstown, after winning Sandusky $1,000
$1,000 a month for life
ThiB week's regular win·
Thursday night
nlng numbers
The father of twin 16-year·
Three-digit number 086
old boys, before he knew he (zero.eighi-!U)
Willi eligible for the drawing,
Fo..--dlglt number. 5989
Monday went ID the coffee (flvenlne-e~ght-nlne)
llhop where he purchased
Five-digit number. 171195
Uckell last week and was told (onMeVen-eight-nlne.flve)
there had been a Buckeye
Slx-dlglt number 1&gt;49841
"1000" qualifier sold there (fivefour-mne-elght·fourWtse, a cook, went home, one)
checked his ttckets and
Lucky Buck wlnnlng nomdiscovered he woald be one of bers 834 (elght-three.four)
Thursday night's con- and 502365 (flve-zero-twotestants
tllreNlxflve)
The $10,000 winner was
Lucky Buck Bonus Jackpot
Ju)lus Galdys of Toledo, • number 11269 (elght~ne­
$7,500 winner Wanda Brewer lwoslx-nlne)
of Cuyahoga Falls and the

share '1he belief together"
that any GOP candidate was
really campaigning against
the Democrats
"It's like an audition,"
Reagan said ''The ranks
dec1de who carries the
banner and you unite them
hehlnd the winner "
Asked If he was out to
destroy Ford, Reagan said
"No, No" and refused to be
drawn Into any crlticiam of
Ford while conceding thai he
had differences with the
President on several Issw!s
Asked speclfcally whether
Ford had the leadership
quality to be President,
Reagan replied "he Is the
President "

By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - It
took a last-rnmute shuffle of
$100 million ID prevent New
York C1ty's first payless
payday
The city nearly missed a
regular $127 mllllon payroll
Thursday It had to delay
distribution of checks until
the banks closed to g1ve the
comptroller enough llme ID
deposit money makmg them
good
The $100 m1lhon was
shuftled from the teachers
pension !Wid ID the state and
back ID the city, ln the nick of
time
The state legialalure melln
emergency I!ICSSIOn at Albany
ID try to come up With $200
million ln hlgher city taxes ID
meet Pre~~ldenl Ford's Insistence on more self-belp

But for this, a plle of
ashes 'round her fireplace
By Goldle Cleudeoio
PORTLAND - l have
always belleved m m1racles
smce I could stand beside
Granny Wells and look at the
blg B1ble on her lap seeing
pictures of Daniel m the hon 's
den, Jonah and the whale and
Christ's resurrection among
other mmd boggling happemngs
And God has blessed me
hmes w1thoul number that I
can remember, limes when I
ask and limes when I didn't,
and when I felt very weak and
unworthy
Then, last Wednesday
evening my nephew, Danny
Roush, came by on his way to
work at the church and sa1d
he'd siDp on h1s way back to
watch "Cannon ' w1th me
Last wmler he'd come
home wl th me from church
Sunday and Wednesday
evenings because we both
hke detective stor1es, and
we'd have cookies and drmk
postum and talk and watch
TV
II had been several weeks l
hadn 't seen h1m, but I'd
missed him, and was glad he
was commg even though
usually I go to bed wllh the
ch1ckens and get up with the
roosters
But I read awhile, and got
ready for our snack, and
wal ted and read till he came
about 9
After Canon got his msn, l
went to the kitchen whlle
Danny changed stallons to

watch Petrocelll
Smoke was so th1ck I could
hardly see mto the ullllty
room and kllchen, and I could
hardly get my breath, unllll
opened the outs1de door
He checked the chunney
and went round the house,
and yelled back, 'There's a
f1re burmng out here, • then
came in and called h1s dad,
then ran out agam to get a
hose, as I called the !1re
department, not givmg
direchons I should, but they
came
Many people came by and
ms1de When the f1re truck
left, the electric company
truck pulled in and soon had
my lights on A hot w1re had
dropped on an alummum
eaves trough, rsn around the
house, and caught f1re under
where the washer sets'
Had I gone to bed at my
usual 7 30 or 8 there'd
probably have been a pile of
ashes of me and my home,
"round the ole stone fireplace
Thursday morning
May have been betttr so
Who knows•
How curiously thlngs do
happen Anyway, I'm very
grateful lo God and the folk
who helped, and wish I could
have mel some of ones I
talked w1th under different
circumstances
Danny and our branch
leader Bill Roush pulled off
v10yl siding and Insulation
and slowed up the burning I
didn't go ouls1de

'

I

•

from New Yorkers as a
condlt:on for
federal
assistance
But the lawmakers could
not agree on what taxes to
raise and went mto recess
Thursday mght
City workers had some
anxious moments when
Comptroller Harnson Goldm
withheld payroll checks unhl
after bankmg hours to
p-event cashmg madvance of
the regular payday IDday
The checks normally are
handed out a day m advance,
and many workers cash or
deposll them umned1ately
The payroll problem came
as a surprise because the
money to meet 11 previously
had been pledged by the
Teacher's Pension Fund
There was no explanation for
the delay
But Goldm assured

Miracles never cease

No sthoking will help
lung d1sease gets some
benef1 t soon and gradual
Improvement over years
The p1cture Is enhrely
different for heart and
vascular diSease Statistics
show that as soon as you quit
smoking you significantly
Improve your oullook ln
avmdlng these problems So,
•f you want to decrease the
chances of having a heart
attack or dropping dead
suddenly and are a heav)
smoker, just quitting w1ll
Improve your chances 300 per
cent at once
Now, don 't pay any attention lo whomever IS giVing
you negahve 1nput Go ahead
and quit for your own good
now And, 1f you want more
information on what 'obacco
does !lend 50 cents for 1be
Heallh Letter number 2~,
Tobaeco Cigarettes, Cigars,
Pipes Just wr1 te to me m
care of thiS newspaper P 0
Box 1551, Rad1o C1ty Slsllon,
New York, N,&lt; Y10019 Send a

High officials named In the
report as havmg knowledge
of some of the plots agaiiiSt
Castro and Lumumba m·
eluded the late CIA Director
Allen Dulles and hls deputy,
Richard BISSell, and fo11J1er
Defence Secretary Robert
McNamara, now president of
the World Bank
The report said that m the

long
stamped,
self.
addressed envelope lor
malllng
DEAR DR LAMII - Will
exerc1se reduce baggy skin
that occurs when miiM!eaged women reduce• Is there
sny way to prevent saggy
skin on arms and legs of older
women, or IS that just another
senior cltizen bablllty'
DEAR READER - Skin
tends to lose •Is natural light,
elasllc1 ty as you get older
There are only a few thmgs
you can do about it
Flrst, don't overstretch
your skin by getting fat Yoyo weight control leads to
repealed stretching of the
skin with repeated epiBodlll
of obesity Finally. it Simply
refuses to snap back arid just
sags
Second, mamtam your
muscle mass -Part of that
saggy skin on arms and
thighs 1s from IOSB of muscle
mass m those areas How do
you prevent thiS' Do some

1banksgivmg Day, which soon Will be with us once
agam,
Is the time we give spec tal thanks for the blessings
fall of 1960, two CIA offiCials
were asked by superiors to
of the past year
As we are on the eve of our b•-eentennlll year, It Is
assassmate Lumwnba and
fitting that we give !hanks for the blessmgs of the past 200
that poiBOns actually were
years We owe thanks for Jivmg In ~,p~erlca where we
sent to the Congo But before
the plot could be earned out,
enjoy privileges unknown to people ln any other countrY ln
Lumumba was killed May 30,
the world
1961, by rehels
1 Wonder how often we think of !lie great debt we owe
'
ID
the
past Nearly all of the precious freedoms ln our live~~ . i
The most outlandish
have been made sacred to us because of their cost
schemes allegedly were
To a certain ellenl this Is also true of material things ,
contrived to ebmmate the
When we compare the conveniences of our modern homes
durable Castro
With those of the homes of yesterday we realize how much
we have for which to be thankful We have these things
hecauae there were those before us who had the Inventive '
genius, the courage, and the perserverance to create ,
somethlng to help take the drudgery out of their lives
When we read about how our forefathers carved their
workers there would be
homes from the wilderness of our country we are ftlled
enough money on deposit ID
with admrrat1on and amazement We remember that
cover therr checks by the
::;gc;&gt;::.'dw~;~~f been brought to us by pains- ~r
lime the banks opened today
In another development,
The mementoes and antiques which have come to us ,
Mayor Abraham Beame said
from other generations are not only precious to us because
he had assurance from Gov
of therr beauty or association, but also because they are ,
Hugh Carey there were "no
reminders of what our forefathers paid to bl'lllll ,
bal'flerS" to a separate $150
CIVUIZBtlon to us These things should be preserved to ,
million fmanc1al package
teach future generations, lest the debt ID the past be
enablmg the city to pay 1ts
forgotten
bills through November
There IS nothlng we enjoy but whlch has been brought
The next critical deadline,
to us with great cost
'•
Beame SBid, w1ll be Dec 3,
We read a book, which inspires us and helps us to ,
when the spec1al $2 3 billiOn
nobler livmg, but do we think of what may have been the
fund created by the
price the author paid to pro®ce this book' He may have
legiSlature In September runs
experienced heart-breaking sorrows before be was able to
dry Without help, the city
wnte somethmg which has helped us
will be broke
We thlnk of our beloved America we enjoy Its
But by that tune, c1ty and
liberties and prosperlties We watch our beautiful flag
state offiCIBis hope to have
wavmg in the breeze under blue skies, and we are uplifted ,
federal backmg for 1ts bonds
With patr1ot1c p-1de But do we remember the coli of thiB
and notes to enable It to reflag• Do we think of the cost to those who made It possible :
enter the murucipal bond
for us to enjoy the bleiiSlngs Our flag's stars and bars are ,
market, which has been ' symbols of an endless sti'U£Ille for launan freedom,
closed to the City since April
l secured at the cost of blood, tears and sacrifice
We look at our Christian flag, and we realize It has
been brought to us by a greater cost and a longer period of :
suffering than that for our national freedom.
The bleiiSlngs of our Christian civillzalim have been
brought through centuries of suffering and even mar·
tyrdom In the beginning, Jesus Chrllt made the supreme
sacrifice when He gave IUs Ufe on tbe &lt;Zoss tbat all men ,
everywhere might enjoy eternal life Then the followers of .
Christ were often forced to give up their lives In defense of •'
the1r faith
.,
EVI!ry past age has contributed something to the wealth
of sprritual truth we enjoy
.~
Truly, we owe a great debt to the past which cannot be &gt;
paid unless we bve ln such a way the world will be a little ,
, hetter for our having Uved In It
As we continue to enjoy the fruits of love and service ~
of those who have gone before us, may we give special '&gt;
thanks thiS Thanksgiving Day, and may we reeolve that
we will pay the debt to the past by glvmg love and service
to our God, to our Country and to our fellowmen, so that all
who come after us will be blessed -Norma A Lee

Day saved by $100 million

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E Lamb, MD
DEAR DR LAMB ~ I was
planning on trymg to slop
smoking Then the other day
someone told me that 11 you
smoked for years thalli won't
do any gOOd, that 1t Is already
too late She also told me that
It lakes years to get Improvement anyway, even for
those who haven t smoked for
26yearsalready Is thiS true•
If so, why do you just adviSe
everybody to qUit smokmg•
It seems to me that lf 11 is
already too late you doctors
ought to let us puff In peace
DEAR READER - That
S&lt;lllleone doesn't know what
she IS talkJng about She
probably heard about the
lime it takes to correct the
damage to the lungs That
does lake 1 long time, and a
heavy smoker can look
forward to several years of
time before Ills lungs gel back
to near normal, if they are
able to at aU Even so, many
a person w1th evidence of

subordmates "

Our Debt to the Past

exercises that put the
muscles under load These
can be cabsthenlcs that use
arm and leg muscles and
your body weight, or, 1! you
want to go to an exercise
fac1Uty, you can even use
llghl weights or machmes
that do the same thing to help
you maintain your youthful
musculature.
1bjlrd, don't be a sun
worshipper Sun is your
skin'~ worst enemy Suntan
devel~ to protect your body
from harmful sun Under
every sun tan IS skin damagl\
to tlpo! elasUc fibers and
other structures Note that
your skin looks much younger
on the parll of Jbe body
protecled from sun and Wind
- in sm~e people these days
It Is hard to find such an area
b'CIIIIparlaon
Fourth, to protect your face
from crow•s feet and facl81
wrinkling lhal will make you
look 10 years older, do not
smoke

It s a nerve rack1ng ordeal
that I hope I never go through
agaln I huddled over the
!•replace m an old ram coat,
burmng wood and paper logs
for heat and hghl
Manon Slater, Racme and
Rev Cundiff came m Hope I
may see them agam Manon
I never knew but hiS parents
and grandparents, yes
Oh, yes, Manon d1d plow
my garden once many years
ago while h1s dad (now
deceased) sal m the yard and
talked of old limes
Manon'saunl, Neva Sloter,
was marned to my oldest
brother, Joe WI!JIIs, 11 ho d1ed
on their f1rsl anmversary,
Decocahon Day, m 1932, I
th1nk
She 1s now Neva Johnson
and hves at Ft Myers, Fla
Seems so long ago
There are many good
people all over the world,
especially m Me1gs County
These men were domg lhe1r
job but mce about 1t I hear
Lebanon Township lost or
counted out emergency
service Not on MY vole This
was my first call

CINDY GRINSTEAD
Mason - Cindy Renee
Grinstead of Anderson St ,
is one of nine contestants
who will compete for
Mason County's Junior
Miss Title on November 22
Astudent at Wahama High
Sehool, she Is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs Foster
Grinstead Among her
school activities are
Student
Council,
Keywanettes, Keywanette
president, Yearbook staff,
band, Stag~ Band, Pep
Band, newspaper and
junior class president
After she graduates from
Wahama she plans to at·
lend Buckeye Hills Nursing
School

Parade Entry Coupon

business establillhments say
"Go Bucks, Beat Bo" That's
in reference to Michigan
Coach Bo Schembechler,
sometimes called "Little
Woody" because of h1s coach·
ing similarity to Hayes, his
former boss
All the major shoppmg
centers have at least one
store with a special Ohio
State football corner, selling
pennants, hats, scarves,
bumper atJplera and many
other Buckeye souvenirs
One of the best selling
items In local bookstore1118 an
LP record entitled "Great
Moments In Ohio State
Football-a Tribute 1D Woody

ANN ARBOR M1ch (UP!)
- It's all two coaches could
want 10 a college football
game- everythmg but a
guaranteed national
champ10nsh1p IS wa1hng for
the wmner
Only Coach Bo Schem·
bechler of Mlchlgan could ask
for more gomg mto the
Wolvermes match With OhiO
Slate Saturday and the on))
request he m1ght make would
be to havr the two ties
femoved from h1s team s
record so they would I~ hke
the Buckeyes are
Both teams are assured of
gomg to a bowl- M1ch1gan 's
first m four seasons despite
tymg Ohlo State for the B1g
Ten crown the past three
'years The Wolvermes are
shooting for an un
:precedented hflh straight
year of wummg or tymg for
the conference crown
To the wmner goes the Rose
.Bowl b1d-but th1s year the
loser m1ght come out ahead
because the team that comes
(lui second-best Saturday (or
Mlch1gan, 1f the two he ) goes
to the Orange Bowl on New
Year's Day to take on the
WIMer of Saturday's Ok

lahoma-Nebraska game
It was Schembechler's
carpmg about bemg left home
the past three years that
mduced the B•g Ten to
change Us for.mula for
setecllng a Rose Bowl
representative (the athlehc
directors no longer vote) and
led to other conference learns
bes1des the champion bemg
permitted to appear m bowl
games
A VIctory for Ohio State
~ould cap a perfect regular
season for Coach Woody
Ha) es of the Buckeyes and
send hiJJI to Pasadena, Cabf ,
msearch of a poss1ble perfect
way to top off a long and
illustnous career
It would also practically
guarantee the Buckeyes a
national champ•onsh1p, smce
they currently hold first place
by a healthy margm over
Nebraska's Cornhuskers
A VICtory for M1eh1gan
would g1ve the Wolvermes,
currently rated fifth, s long
shot at the national cham·
piOnSillp If some other thmgs
work out In their favor In the
bowl games
The weather could play a

For participation in the annual
Chnstmas parade to be held in Pomeroy,
Nov 25.
Name ~~---------------------

Type of EntrY.:..__ _ __:__;__ ___

AddresL..__~:--::----:--::----::;::-:;-:;-

For those who have not been contacted.
Mail to Mrs. Don &lt;Carolyn&gt; Thomas, in care
of Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,
Pomeroy 45769 by noon on Nov. 25th. The ;
parade will line up behind the Pomeroy
Junior High at 6:30 p. m.

Pro Stan~
International Hockey
League StandingS

united Preu International
North
w I I pis gtgo

Saginaw
Port Huron
Muskegon
Fllnl

Kalamazoo

63 4
870

16 S2 39
16 57 S)
15 39 31
14 46 SO

6 S 3
672
4 7 3 11 43 59

.;- South
members of the "cultural
wT.Tpts 1191
shuns thai are Toledo and
oav1on
10 • 1 21 Sl 32
Columbus"
Toledo
7 4 4 18 51 SO
Fort wavne 6 9 2 l.t 64 Sf
Ohio Stale fans are a breed Columbus
3 10 3 9 3S ~
of a klnd
Thursday's Relults
1
No games sct)tduled
Take Steven K Kuhl who
Tonight's Games
was on hand when the sod at Daylon ol Fllnl
"
Ohio Stadium was dug up ID Saginaw at Kalamazoo
Muskegon at Toledo
'
be replaced by astroturf He Port Huron Columbus
Games
planted it ln his front yard ToledoS.turday's
at Fort wavne
When he moved, he took the Kalamazoo at Muskegon
Co tum bus at Port Huron
sod with him.
Sag1naw at Dayton
•'
Kool now hu 1 sign on his
front yard which reads.
"Upon IIIII hjtllowed turf,
trod the veatest of tbem all
"In deeds ne'er to be
forgotten, by lana of O.S.U
.DIVOTID TO TNI
INTIR,iTO'
•
football "
GS MA N ARIA
C~I!R
L
T
NNENILf
'
Then there's Tcm Gibbons
- .... ld
who painted his Vo!Uwagen
lfayell "
ROBERT NOEHICH
City Editor
Bumper stickers adorn to look lllte an Qljo State
Ptbllohod dally oxctpl
thousands of cars in the area football helmet
turdoy by Tho Ohio Vollov' •
ubtlohlng
compeny, Ill
Many of them say simply·
And Jut, there's the Michl·
ourt St Pomoroy Ohl~
45769 Bu,lntll Office Phone'
"Thank Yo~ Mrs Griffin," gan definition of a Buckeye
992 2]56 EGIIOrlll Phone 992 '
an obvious reference to Mrs
2157
"Some ldrld of nul "
Sttond clo11 POIIIOt PIIG
James Griffin, mother of
•
11 Pomeroy, Ohio
He1sman Trophy winder
Netlonol oGvortlolno
reprettnfltlvt
Wlrd .;
Archie Grlffln and his
Griffith Compony Inc
Bottlnolll l Gelleohar Olv ;
lrothers Ray and Duncan,
7NSI Third Avo Now York,
both Buckeye defensive
v 10011
MONTREAL (UPI) - The
Sublcrlpllon rot 11 '
llicks
National Hockey Llape and Qeltvortd
by carrier whore
The Press Club of Ohio the Soviet Ice Hoe~ey IVIII.III' 75 Ctnta
WHk
Mo or Routt where
cballen8ed the Detroit Press Federation have concluded By1rrler
ttrvlct
not
Cub to a small wager staling arrangements b' an etaM· vell•bl,. One tnonii),.S3 25
y mell n Ohio end w V• ,
II shouldrl 't he much of a game series which NHL
no Yllr 122 00 Six
ontha Sll so
Three•
contest agllnst "Do's also· Prellidenl Clarence Clmpbell
onlhl, 17 00 Elaowhero
2
oo yur. Six months
rans "
said Thuradl' wu •'the 111011 136 so.
three montho, II so 1
The Detrolt Press Club llgniDeant development In ulltcriP,tlon
prlco lnfludes
undoy Tltnn Sonllno .
accepted but warned its hockey since elpalllion "

,_r

,

:I

Pro

!Standin~s
World

:I

l

H o c k e y Assoc at1on

Stilnd ng s
By Umted Pr ess lnt~r nat•on al

0 U, Marshall to play
at 11 a.m. Saturday

Ea st
W I t Dh
9 6 0
18
7 9 l
I~

fteld "
Sw1ck has passed for 2,201
New Englund
Cle .... eta nd
6 7 2
14
yards
th1s season and has
About
the
only
th
mg
tnd• anapolts
6 10 0 12
qual ter back Gene Sw1ck another 171 yards runmng for
West
mmor factor 10 the game unage offense to stop
w I I ph
hasn t produced durmg h1s 2 372 yards Another 148
wh1ch Oh10 State IS favored to
Gordon Bell at la1lback IS Hous•on
9 7 0
18
agamsl the Flashes will make
M
nncsotil
wm by seven pomts, since the a~ tough to halt as Gnffm
B 7 I
17 career at the Umvers1ty of
San D1cgo
7
7
2
16
Toledo IS a wm over Kent htm the alll•me maJor
Saturday forecast called for And wh1le fullba ck Rob Lytle Phoen x
7 8 'l
16
college total offense leader,
temperatures m the low 30s IS a m1dget next to Johnson , D en11 er
5 10 I 11 State
Canad•an
pushmg hiJJI ahead of former
Sw1ck,
who
IS
w1thm
148
The state of Michigan has the Buckeyes fullback 1s a
w I I pi s
enjoyed unseasonably m1ld plowhorse next to the Quebec
yards of the maJor college Stanford star J1m Plunkett's
1~ 6 0 28
W tnntp eg
13 5 0 26
career total of!ense mark 7,887
weather all fall and both Wolvermes' quarterhorse eamonton
8 11 2 18
Kokal enters his final
teams could be slightly
8 8 1 17 gets h1s fmal crack Saturday
Two of M1ch1gan s more Ca lgary
Toronto
4
10
2
10
c'Olleg•ate
game needing Just
rught
when
the
Rockets
host
bbthered by the abrupt amazmg feats are the
Thursday s R es ults
fiVe
yards
to surpass the 6 000
change 111 temperature
the Golden Flashes at the
sterling performance of Mtnnesota 2 N ew Eng l and 0
W mn•peg 3 Qu eb ec 2 (O T l
mark
m
total offense yarGlass Bowl Both teams are 4
Archie Gnffm carnes a freshman RICk Leach at Phoen x 3 Edm onton 1
dage
streak of 31 stra1ght regular quarterback and the JOb San Otego 5 Denv er 1
6
day s Games
The M1am1 C•ncwnat•
The
Toledo-Kent
Midseason games m which he has turned m by the offenSive Ca lgary Fr
at Denver
gamed 100 yards or more mto Ime
E d monton at Houston
American Conference game clash w1ll be the 60th between
the two schools w1th the
IS one of SIX mvolvmg Oh1o
the contest and SchemThe youngster's who make C nctnnat at lo ronto
Redskips holdmg a 42-31~
up
MIChigan's
offensive
hne
teams
as
the
season,
except
hechler IS all but conceding
0
Nahonal Hockey
advantage
for bowl games, comes to a
hlm h1s yardage What miw were second, thrrd and
L ea gue Standmgs
M•amt , lfh lch has alreally
close
Schembechler hopes to do 1s fourth strmgers when the
Bv Umted Press lnternat.onal
Patnck
01V! S! OO
The other games mclude won the MAC IItle and the
make Gnffm have to work for season started InJuries to
W
L T Pts
OhiO Sta tes Tangerme ~wl berth wh1ch
his yards by carrymg the ball seniors Kirk Lewis and Steve Ph tla delph a
13 3 5 Jl top rated
Is land er s
8 6 5 21 nat10nal\y telev1sed tr1p to
goes w1th 11, 1s 9 I overall With
King dictated most of the NY
a lot
Allanta
7 9 2 16
1ts only loss 11}4 13 dec1s1on to
Stoppmg semor quar- changes
NY Rangers
7 11 2 16 M1Cn1gan, Bowlmg Green at
Smyth e DIVI $ton
M1ch1gan State
rexas
Arlington,
Cmcmnau
King,
who
underwent
lmee
terback Cornelius Greene
w L T Prs
Cmcmnat1 whose last five
from throwmg and executmg surgery after the f1rst game, ChiCago
10 4 6 26 M1am1, Oh10 Umver~!lY at
St LOUIS
7 7 4
18 Marshall and Centrallnd1ana
games
have been decided by
the
option
concerns has returned and 1s expected Vancouver
7 8 4
18
Schembechler more than to start Saturda)
Kansas C•tv
5 tO 2 12 at Wittenberg m an NCAA SIX pomts or less, IS 6-4 after
&lt;!I
1.:1 0
8 DiVISIOn Ill playoff contest
last week's 6-5 wm over Ohio
This w11l be the seventh Mnnesoa
haltmg Griffin He also wants
NOrrts DI VIS IOn
Kent State Coach Denms Uruvers1ty
to hiDIL g1ant fullback Pete tune m eight years M1ch1gan
W L T PI S
ll 4 l 29 Fitzgerald, who has h1s 0)171
Oh10 Umvers1ty, 4-5-1
Johnson and keep Wingback and Ohlo State have played Montreal
Los Angel es
12 6 2 26
overall,
Will be after the !DOth
outstanding
semor
s1gnal
Br1an Baschnagel 111 check for the Big Ten t1Ue and Rose P.t tsburg l
6 9 2 14
Detr01t
5
12
4
14
collegiate
VIctory for Coach
caller
m
Greg
Kokal,
calls
Hayes' problems are much Bowl berth Neither team has Wash1ngton
2 16 2
6
B1ll
Hess
when
the Bobcats
Sw1ck "a bnlhant quarthe same as Schembechler's recorded a v1ctory on the
Adam s 0 Yts1on
W
L
T
Pis
take on Marshall Ill an II a m
terback
he s runnmg agamst a good other's home f1eld Ill that Buffalo
15 J 1 31
'He's not only an excellent game at Huntmgt.on W Va
defense and he a m~rror- tiJJie
Toron to
9 5 4 n
Boston
9 6 J 22 passer, but he also has good
Hess will be gomg against
Calt tornta
7 13 2 16
long
IIJJie asSistant Frank
on
I
he
f1eld
judgment
and
has
Thursday s Resu lts
NY Islan ders 2 Boston 2
the ab1hty lo hurt you m Ellwood, who took over th1s
Ph llad elp hta J Cattforn•a 2
many wa)s ' sa1d Fitz- year at Marshall The
Buffalo 7 Delro11 2
Fndav s Games
ge rald ' A three or four 1bundertng Herd IS 2-8 on the
Pti!Sburgh at At lanta
touchdown lead 1sn't very season
Ca l tfornta at Wash•nglon
Bowlmg Green wh1ch has
secure when Sw1ck 1s on the
who broke h1s prev1ous Elvm Hayes, for almost half
Cohseum record of 49 pomts, the game Hayes, who still
Amencan Ba s ketball
then added a steal and a stuff managed lS pomls mcluding
Assoc1ahon Standmg s
shot to g1ve the Braves a Ill). fiVe m the !mal four mmutes, By Un•ted Pr ess tntHnat1ona 1
East
107 lead
was saddled w1th f1ve perW L Pet
GB
Elsewhere there was only sonal fouls and played only 26 Kentucky
7 4 636 New York
75583
1
one other NBA game and mmutes
7 7 500
111
St LOUIS
Washmgton heat Atlanta 105- Pacers 117, Nuggets 112
v.rg lnta
2 12 143 6 1 1
West
96 In the lone American
B1lly Keller scored four
W L Pet
GB
Basketball Association game, threepoml baskets and B1Uy lnd1ana
10 3 769
9 3 750
~
lnd1ana downed Denver 117- Knight hit for 36 pomts as Denv er
San Anton1o
8 4 667 1 '
112
2 9 182 7
lnd1ana rolled up a 23-polnt utah
By MILTON RICHMAN
Thursday s Gam e
Bullets 105, Hawks K
lead and then held off a late lnd•ana 117 Denver 112
UPI Sports Ed1tor
Ph1l Chemer scored 22 Denver rally Denver's
Fnday s Games
pomts and Wes Unseld added Claude Terry also hit on three Denv er at New York
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Em1le Francis has a good sense of
21 to lead Washmgton over three-pomters -two m the Utah vs V rgm1a at Norfolk humor and needs 11 more than ever now that he's about as
Atlanta The Bullets' victory fmal penod- helpmg the National BUketb•ll AssOC hlflon popular here m New York as Gerald Ford
Standmgs
was accomplished Without Nuggets close to 100-98
Rangers fans still are smoldermg because Francis dealt
Bv Umted Press lnternaf•onal
the serviCes of their hiP mRn
away such favorites as Eddie G1acomm , Brad Pa~k. Jean
Eastern Conference
Atlanttc Otvtston
Ga Ratelle and Derek Sanderwn GIBcomm's departure to Detroit
W L Pet
-was especially hard lor the fans to take Gnawing away at
Buffalo
9 A 692
Philadelph ia
8
4 667
' thein as muth, 1f not more, IS the fact the Rangers are m last
Boston
6 5 545 7
place now The fans don't hke that They don t like 11 at all, and
New Yor~
6 9 400 ,
Central D1v1 s on
haven't been bashful about mamfestmg their diSpleasure upon
W L Per
GB
Francis Neither have some of the City's hockey wnlers
Wash ng ton
7 d 636 8 5 61 5 ~
"It's nothmg we haven't seen hefore,' he says "I try to
He and the late J1m White He also booted 29 of 34 extra Atanta
New Orleans
6 1 462 2
Ignore 11 as much as I can Thmgs sa1d 111 the papers don't
5 6 455 7
molded the team mto 1ts pomts and k1cked one f1eld Houston
Cleveland
4
9 308 4
make that much difference to me I don l believe I\ hat I read l
wmmng trad111on of today goal
Western Confer ence
beheve m what I'm domg I'll stand or fall on that In hockey,
Preston
led
the
team
m
Mtdwes1 DIVISIOn
He con tlnued "There are
W
L
Pet
GB
we
're mvolved m a h1ghl) emotiOnal game It's a game of
no two people ahke You rushmg w1 th 830 yards m 167 Detro t
7 5 583
,.
,
highs
and lows, a combmat1on of all sports Nobody told me I
6 7 462
people are the greatest thing cames averagmg 4 9 yards Mtlw aukee
Kansas
c
tv
3
7
300
:
had to be 10 th1s busmess Nobody's got a gun to my head
m the world Athletes and per carry he scored 13 touch· Cht cago
3 9 250
makmg me stay 10 1\ But l happen to like 1t and Ill be m 1\ a
Pac he O•vr s•on
people associated w1th downs received two passes
W L Pet
G
B
long
tiJJie "
good
for
14
yards
and
passed
athlehcs are the greatest
G'olden S ate
9 " 692
Chances
are Emile FranciS will .• because he 's exception·
for
a
46
yard
touchdown
He
Los
Angeles
10
6
625
people m the world
Seaflle
7
8
467
3
ally
capable
Some forget exactly howcapable when things get
I coached for 12 years and was also the team's top Phoen1 x
d 6 400 31
rough
the
way
they have for the Rangers lately
5 a 385 4
my four years here al Kyger pwtler averagmg 27 6 yards Portland
Thursdays
R
e5
ult
s
For
those
w1th
short memones, Francis, both general
Creek were the happiest of 011 16 punts good for 441 Buffalo 118 Cleveland 115 IOT l
manager and coach until he turned over the coach10g JOb to
Washington 105 Atlanta 96
my hfe Wmmng Is 1m yards
Fndav s Games
Ron Stewart last May, IS the man who bu1lt the Rangers from
Both
backs
were
named
to
portant, but there are many
New York at Boston
the weakest team m hockey to one of the strongest Some
the
AII..SV
AC
Dream
team
Portland Philadelphia
other fond memones at
Buffalo
at
Oetrotl
The learn 's Best Offensive Chtcago vs Kansas Ctly a t people forget that For 20 years, the Rangers were the worst
Kyger Creek
team m the National Hockey League FranciS rebuilt the team
What do I remember• Lineman trophy went to 135- Omaha
Houston
at
Pho e nt~e
compl~tely In 1966-07, he led the Rangers mto the playoffs for
F1rst the people I was pound guard Tim Moles
Milwaukee at L os A ngel es
the
f1rst tune 10 hve years and never has missed smce
Moles,
a
member
of
the
All
associated WIth when I was
One
thmg he hasn 't been able to do 1s wm the Stanley Cup,
SVAC
Dream
learn,
was
here 15 years ago I
was
formed
two
years
ago
but
he
has won more games than any other Rangers' coach 10
remember the boys I credited w1th openmg up b•g
Kyger
Creek
w11l
play
a
10hlstory
and his wmnmg percentage of 606 1s the second best
coached, Coach Wh1le and holes m the oppos1llon
game
schedule
next
fall
and
ever
m
the NHL People forget that too
defense wh1ch perm1tled the
the other !me people •
the
b1g
nvalry
game
w1lh
They
have
short memones Hockey fans can reel off the
McColhns then gave some Bobcat offense to roll
Offensively, Kyger Creek North Galha ts set for the end names of all the great goalies hke Frankie Brunsek, Terry
Incidents of "greatness" m
Sawchuk, Jacques Plante and Gwnp Worsley , but converuent·
scored
284 pomts gamed of lhe season
the athletes he had at Kyger
Mrs
Fay
Sauer
presented
ly forget all of them were dealt away the same as Eddie
Creek
Tracmg
the1r 2,056 yards on the ground and
cerhf1cates
to
JUniOr
vars1ly
G1acomm
was by the Rangers a couple of weeks ago They
d1sappomtments to their 711 m the a1r
cheerleaders
Tammy
R1fe
remember
how G1acomln won the Vezma Trophy, awarded
Tom Slump, a sem01 who
moments of triumph he
Rob10
Fraley,
Carol
Shdham
annually
to
the top goahe 10 the league, only four years ago,
described former Bobcats C received honorable mentwn,
A Duncan, Homer Wllhams, All.SVAC, was the team s Debbie Clevenger, Momca but they forget Francis had to trade away the equally popular
Dave Ebhn, Ed French Dave Best Defensive Lmeman On Fisher, Robln R1fe and T10a Cesar Mantago to giVe G1acom1n a chance ongmally
Va r s 1t y ; EIJ1Ile ~anc1s doe~l.(prget:; , .- , , •
Carman, Denny Mulford and total team defensive pomts, H a m m o n d
cheerleadmg
al\ards
went to ~~ ' !'OIIcortun was playih« ,..1LH Pl'o'l'ft!MI:"I!, 1 ~w hiJJI and I
Slwnp, a linebacker on the
John Fellure
Jan
Stidham,
Dal\n
Martm
hked h1m 'says the Rangers' GM "What I hked was that he
An elder m the Worthmgton Bobcat 44 defense, amassed
Becky
Polcyn
I
•sa
Ell1s,
Lee
played the same way when he was behind as when he was
Chnshan Church, McColhns lSI pomta
Defensive polnts are g1ven Hammond and Kelley ahead Some goal-keepers have a tendency to lose heart when
emphasized rellgion and a
trust m God ' God doesn l for first h1t asSISts on Martm Donn Fhnt \las g1ven they get behmd and they're eas1e~ to beat Gwcomin wasn't
make m1slakes He hasn t tackles, tackles causmg the a cerhf1cate as an alternate !hal way I made my dec1s1on and tola hiJJI, 'from now on,
Jan Shdham and Dawn you're go1ng to be the goalkeeper for the New York Rangers
made one yet He created the ballplayer to lose yardage,
Marlin
on behalf of the for better or lor worse • At that pomt, 1t could've very eas1ly
earth and saved the best tackles on kickoffs assists on
chee
rlead1n
g s qu ad cost me my JOb"
kickoffs, wter ce pllons ,
creatwn, people for last"
presented
Mrs
Sauer
w1th a
'
McColhns
was
ac passes !mocked down , h1ts on
red and "h1te ca rnahon Sieve Shoemake r Todd
compamed by h1s wife, receivers causmg dropped
Taylor and B II Absh~re
Nancy, a son, Bobby, an all- passes fwnble recovenes, co•sage
Sophomores - Claude
Mrs
Sauer
pmchh1lled
for
conference football fullback blocked k1cks or punts, safety
Cornelius
Yancey Hall ey
Maur1ce
Mayes,
who
was
M1ke Hendnckson Darre ll
at Worlhmg High School and touchdown
Jones Randy Lucas Rusty
J1m Armbruster, another unable lo allend
Presentation of awards
Player
awards
went
to
Lucas
Greg Mulford Tim
h.ghhghled the rest of the semor linebacker was the
Sentors - Jim Armbruster N1berl and Scot! R1chards
team's Best DefensiVe Back
banquet program
Freshmen - Dan Chap
Jell Blazer Mike Curnutte
mAn
Mark Curnu1te Tom
Armbruster
had
146
defenCalv1n
Geiger
Tom
Kern
F1ve seniors received the
Halfhill
Howard Halley Bill
Tim
Lucas
Bill
Metzner
Tim
sive
pomts
He
was
credited
trophies presented by Head
Hood And y McQuaid Steve
Moles
Chris
Preston
R1
ck
Coach Jun Sprague on behalf w1lh bemg a hard h1lter on
Tom Stu mp Ol1ver Russell Randy Tay lor and
Kellh Tyler
and Jim Ward
of the Kyger Creek Athletic the Bobcat de!ens1ve un•t
Team Manger - Joe Ab
-J~nto&lt;&lt; - Steve Ba~rd
Coach Sprague thanked
Boosters Club
s h1re
Baylor
Steve
Darst
Tim Lucas, semor quar- everyone who helped 1n
C William Pnce gave the
1fe
H1ll Joe Hood
mvocallon
th e steak
terback and placekicker and malting the year a success
~:,tld'~~'~;;ler ., Brian Lucas d1nner was and red
by the
He
noted
1t
was
an
exc1hng
Chris Preston, sen10r
tailback shared the Best season both from the stand
point of watchmg and
Offensive Back Award
I ucas rushed for 242 yards coaci)lng Sprague said he
m 69 cames, a 3 5 yard was looking forward to next
average He scored seven season because we have a
OFFICE
RS 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 !CLOSE
touchdow~s
Lucas passed fme group of bOys returning
AT NOON ON THURS )- EAST COURT
for 594 yards, connecting on and will also benelll from the
45 of 80 passes fur Sti 25 pel Mld~et fonlball learn which
C nc n n a Tt

Umted Press lnternatwnal

Buffalo rally topples Cleveland
Pro Basketball Roundup
United Press International
Much to lhelr regret the
Cleveland Cavaliers fell
VICIIJJI Thursday night to two
thmgs most everyone In pro
basketball knows by now
(I) Bob McAdoo 15 the most
explosive scorer m the
;I':Iallonal Basketball
AssoCiation and
(2) No lead m pro
basketball 1s ever safe until
lhe game ts over
En route to a Cleveland
Cohsewn record of 50 pomts
McAdoo led a remarkable
6econd
half
Buffalo
~omeback that saw the

\KC

Braves rebound from a 23pomt def1c1t for a 11S-ll5
overtime victory
W1th the Braves trrulmg 7956 With 5 34 left 111 the th1rd
quarter, McAdoo scored e1ght
of Buffalo's next 16 pomts as
the Cavs lead was cut to 14 at
the start of the fmal period
Later a three.pomt play by
Randy Smlth tied the game
911-98 with 4 33 remammg m
regulatlon play
S.mth, who wound up w1th
23 points, pul the Braves
ahead to stay w1th a Ill-foot
jump shot after a rebound In
the overtime period McAdoo,

'• ' We

Sport Parade

grid champions honored

u

Nothing like the
OSU-Michigan game
By JOHN T IUDY
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Woody Hayes says there's
never been anything like It In
collegiate sports.
Ohio State defensive end
Pat Curto calls it a ''war "
Ron Boggs says It will
empty his barber shop on
Saturday
All three are talking about
the Ohio State-Michigan
football game, one of the
most Intense rivalries ln the
nation
The game will be played at
Ann Arbor, Mlch , Saturday
before approximately 106,000
lana and millions more will
watch It on national
lelevlllon
The contell pits unbeaten
and top ranked Ohio State
against fifth-ranked and
unbeaten but twice-tied
Michigan for the Big Ten
championllhlp and a trip to
the Role Bowl with the loser
going to the Orange Bowl
The: "war," game or
whltever you want to call it
his Ohio State lana ln more of
• fnaly than 1111181.
Tellers at one bank are
wearing scarlet-41nd-gray
Ohio State University
sweaters, aoother llint has
Ohio State banners on lts
tellers ~ages, SI8DS In the
windows of downtown

Buckeyes favored in
classic at Ann Arbor

r----------- -,

need to restore an

former head coach at Kyger
Creek H1gh School and
We need to carry our feelings director of gu•dance at
more mto our homes and Worthington H1gh School,
ilchools We need to express returned Thursday night to
~ur apprerna11on more often
dehver the annual banquet
People are the greatest lhmg message at the SVAC
In the world
champiOns gnd banquet
,,I• W1Lh those slatem• nts
McColllns coached at the
J{obert ! Bob) McColhns Class A school from 1958-62

~pprec1ahon for each other
(

'

Young
Colts
eye
•
:•
0
p
ms
·wm over D I h

.

pro Football Roundup
BY JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
Whatever magic Ted
Marchibroda Is conjuring m
Baltimore, It's working The
f~rst-year coach has taken a
club which finished w1th the
worst record in the Natlonal
Football League last season
and transformed It mto an
instant contender

Bert Jones hlt 16 of-22
passes for 277 yards and three
touchdowns 111 the romp over
the Jets Baltimore now has
scored 94 pomts m Its last two
games
The defense leads the AFC
mquarterback sacks with 36
Overshadowed m Miami's
loss to Houston &amp;mday was

an outstanding performance
bY Bob Griese, who hit 21-of·
Marchlbroda, a former 29 passes for 257 yards
85Sistant to George Allen at against one of the top
Washington, can really turn defenses ln the AFC The
th~heat on In the American already
mjury nddled
Conference East punday if Dolphln defense suffered
hls young Colts can upset the another major loss th1s week
Miami Dolphins M•amlleads when Jmebacker Mike Kolen
the AFC East wlth a 7-2 underwent knee surgery
record and Bs!Umore is tied Rookle Steve Towle w1n
with Buffalo at H, two replace him
games behmd
TI\e other major game
A VIctory by the Colts, who Sunday 'sends AFC Western
were 2·12last season but have leader
Oakland
to
now won four m a row, would Washington against the
~!PI them only a game hehind Redsklns, who lost a share of
~e Dolphins, with another f1rst place m the NFC East
meeting scheduled later this last week with a con·
season
troverslal 2().17 overtime loss
Mlam1 was upset 2t\-19 last to St Louis Oakland ls 7-2
ll!eek by Houston, with two and leads Its dlvislon by three
bl6cked extra pomts making games Washington ls 6-3 and
tl)e difference Baltlmore, tled with Dallas for second, a
nf~WlwhUe, toyed with the game behind St Louis
N~w York Jets ln a 52-19 rout
In other games Sunday, the
:"It looks hke we're cat- New York Glants meet Green
~mg BaltiJJiore when they , Bay ln Milwaukee, Cincmnatl
Ble really starting to RUI !I ' IS at Cleveland New England
tOt!ether," said M1ami etlach " at Buffalo Chicago at Los
~ Shuia 'They've', been 1 Angeles, 'Phlladel~hla at
pll!ymg a lot of good footllall Dallas, San Francisco at New
u11der Ted Marchlbroda
Orleans, Denver at Atlanta,
E1en In some of thelr early Detrolt at Kansas City, st
close losses, they had half. Louts at the New York Jets
lime leads They have a and San Diego at MiMesota
yo1111g front four that IS b1g Pittsburgh 18 at Houston
&amp;¢strong and really comln~ Monday nlght
atl&gt;ng •

N.

I

•

'

'

won two lA a row after haVIng
1ls s1x-game wmmng streak
snapped by a parr of losses,
takes a 11-2 record to Texas·
Arlmgton, 3-7
The Falcons rolled over
Southern llliOOIS 41Hi last
weekend
Wittenberg ( 9-1 ), wh1ch
suffered 1ls first defeat of the
season last Saturday, losmg
~ to Muskmgum m the Oh1o
Conference t1tle game tr1es
to bounce back agamst In
diana Central, 11-2
The wumer of that game
advances to the sem1fmals
the followmg weekend
agamst one of Saturday's
three ot her DIVISion Ill
playoff wmners

Marauders
dominate
dream team
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP! ) Central .state placed 10
players on the 29-man NAJA
all District 22 football team
announced Thursday.
The Marauders, who
fm1shed With a ~record, had
five players named to each
the offens1ve and defensive
squads
Fmdlay 2-8 on the year,
wound up w1th the next
h1ghest
number
of
representatives, e1ght, while
W1lmmgton (6·2-1) and
Def1ance (4-6) had fiVe each
and Bluffton (5-3-1) three
Central State's representa·
lives on the defense were
lineman RICk Washmgton,
linebackers William Hopson
and Ivan Seahorn and deep
becks Nat Ciano and Wi111e
Hill
Offensively. the Marauders
landed w1de receivers W1lhe
Zachery and Terry Judkms,
mter1or lineman Barry Hall,
quarterback Steve Thomas
and runmng back KeVIn
Scott
Fmdlay had lineman Bill
Miller, lmebacker Mark Nl&amp;o
won~er and back John
Pequ1gnot on the defenSive
team and w1de rece~ver Jeff
Huffman, lineman Mark
Newburg and back Ke1th
Slmth on the offense
The W1lmmgton players
named were lineman Larry
Jones, linebacker J8!Die Perkins, back Bill Mobley and
k1cker Dave B1shop on
defense and lineman Curet
Chford on offense
Named from Defiance were
linemen Tim Lee and Jeff
Noggle and back Kevin Wierman on defense and lineman
Chm Maxwell and back
Rocky T1sdale on offense
The
three
Bluffton
representatives were
defenstve ltneman Sylvester
Moore, offensive lineman
Blame Sevor and return
specialist Greg Barnett

5 Pack

RIFLE
SLUGS

$}39

�3- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport Pomeroy 0, Frlday, Nov 21 1975
2- The Dally Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , Frlday Nov 21 , 1975

CIA was plot happy with Ike, JFK and LBJ
DANIEL F GilMORE
WASHINGroN (UPI) With an arsenal ranging from
notlc poisons to boobytrapped seashells and
dynamite, the CIA plotted
WJsureessfully to kill Cuba •s
Fi~el Castro and Congolese
Premier Patrice Lumumba
and aided msurgents who
murdered three other foreign
leaders, a Senate report says
The charges span the administrations of Presidents
Dwight Eisenhower. John
Kennedy and Lyndon
Johnson
But the 347.page report
publi8hed Thursday by the
Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence - over President
Ford's strong objections said the panel was "unable to
draw firm conclusions
concerning who authorized
the assassmalion plots,"
including the pre~~idents of
the time
"~o foreign leaders were
killed as a result of
aasasaination plots Initiated
by officials of the Uruted
States," the report said
But it cited "concrete
evidence" of at least eight
plots against Castro and one
against Lwnumba
II said the CIA supplied
arms or other aid to inlllll'genll who - acting on
their own - killed Dominican
Republic dictator Rafael
Trujillo May 31, 1981, South
Vietnamese President Ngo
Dinh Diem and hls brother
Nhu Nov 2, 196.'1, and Gen
Rene Schneider, conunanderin-ehief of the Ch1lean army
Oct ~. 1970.
The committee said It
foond "some evidence" ol.
CIA involvement in plots to
kill President Sukarno of
Indonesia in the late 60s and
Haitian strongman Francois
"Papa Doc" Duvalier, who
died of natural causes ln 1971
Sen Barry Goldwater, R·
Ariz , and committee vice
chairman John Tower, R·
Tex , said they opposed
publlcation of the report.
Committee chairman
Frank Church, D-ldaho, told
a news conference 1s copies
of the white-bound, Inch-thick
By

report were handed to
reporters that Ford made a
"considerable effort" to
p-eVI!nt pubbcation right up
ID the last moment
The report Included 12
names of individuals the
admmlstrallon had argued
should have been cell50red
for the1r own safety
Church said failure to
publish the report would have
damaged U S Interests
abroad and led to endless

"speculation and Innuendo " PreSident Richard Nixon had
The report SBid Presidents authorized actions ln Chile,
Eisenhower, Kennedy and although he was not linked to
Johnson "should have any specific murder scheme
known" of the CIA "Whether or not the respecmachinations which could tive pres1dents knew of or
only have been authorized authorized the plots,' the
"at the highest levels "
report sa1d, "as ch1ef
It said lhete was "a executive officer of the
reasonable inference that the Uruted States, each must
plot to assassinste Lumumba hear the ultimate responwas authorized by President sibility for the actiVIties of h1s
EISenhower" and that former

Reagan's ticket would
he wholly conservative
By STEVE GERSTEL

MANCHESTER, N H
(UP!)- Ronald Reagan said
today if he wins the
Republican presidential
nomination he will choose a
runmng mate who fully
shares h1s conservative
VIews
Reagan, opening the
second day of his campaign in
the state with the earliest
presidential primary next
year, rejected suggestions he
might pick a moderate or
liberal to balance the GOP
ticket
"! have a different VIew
about this thing of balancmg
the ticket," Reagan told an
early morning news con·
ference "A candidate has an
obligation to pick someone
who would carry on - If he
had to - the same views
"It doean 't make sense to
pick a running mate who if he
had to take over would do
something different "
Reagan, who campaigned
111 Florida Thursday, left New
llampahire today for more
campaigning m Olarlotte,
N C , Chicago and Los
Angeles
Reagan, a 64-year~ld
former California governor,
again said that be and
PreSident Ford could battle
through the primaries
without ripping apart the
Republican party
He said that Republlcans

Lottery winners named

Providence helped him
CLEVELAND (UP!) f5,000wlnner Judy L Satullo
This week's big winner In the of Lakewood
Ohio Lottery Buckeye "1000"
Moaea Udge of Akron won
drawingsayshlsgood fortune $4,000, Annette Jesse! of
was providential
Cuyahoga FaJIB ~.000, Frank
"I got Yery lucky, with L Novlnec Sr of Cleveland
God's help," said David Wise, ~.000 and Smith Leitzke of
ij1, Johnstown, after winning Sandusky $1,000
$1,000 a month for life
ThiB week's regular win·
Thursday night
nlng numbers
The father of twin 16-year·
Three-digit number 086
old boys, before he knew he (zero.eighi-!U)
Willi eligible for the drawing,
Fo..--dlglt number. 5989
Monday went ID the coffee (flvenlne-e~ght-nlne)
llhop where he purchased
Five-digit number. 171195
Uckell last week and was told (onMeVen-eight-nlne.flve)
there had been a Buckeye
Slx-dlglt number 1&gt;49841
"1000" qualifier sold there (fivefour-mne-elght·fourWtse, a cook, went home, one)
checked his ttckets and
Lucky Buck wlnnlng nomdiscovered he woald be one of bers 834 (elght-three.four)
Thursday night's con- and 502365 (flve-zero-twotestants
tllreNlxflve)
The $10,000 winner was
Lucky Buck Bonus Jackpot
Ju)lus Galdys of Toledo, • number 11269 (elght~ne­
$7,500 winner Wanda Brewer lwoslx-nlne)
of Cuyahoga Falls and the

share '1he belief together"
that any GOP candidate was
really campaigning against
the Democrats
"It's like an audition,"
Reagan said ''The ranks
dec1de who carries the
banner and you unite them
hehlnd the winner "
Asked If he was out to
destroy Ford, Reagan said
"No, No" and refused to be
drawn Into any crlticiam of
Ford while conceding thai he
had differences with the
President on several Issw!s
Asked speclfcally whether
Ford had the leadership
quality to be President,
Reagan replied "he Is the
President "

By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - It
took a last-rnmute shuffle of
$100 million ID prevent New
York C1ty's first payless
payday
The city nearly missed a
regular $127 mllllon payroll
Thursday It had to delay
distribution of checks until
the banks closed to g1ve the
comptroller enough llme ID
deposit money makmg them
good
The $100 m1lhon was
shuftled from the teachers
pension !Wid ID the state and
back ID the city, ln the nick of
time
The state legialalure melln
emergency I!ICSSIOn at Albany
ID try to come up With $200
million ln hlgher city taxes ID
meet Pre~~ldenl Ford's Insistence on more self-belp

But for this, a plle of
ashes 'round her fireplace
By Goldle Cleudeoio
PORTLAND - l have
always belleved m m1racles
smce I could stand beside
Granny Wells and look at the
blg B1ble on her lap seeing
pictures of Daniel m the hon 's
den, Jonah and the whale and
Christ's resurrection among
other mmd boggling happemngs
And God has blessed me
hmes w1thoul number that I
can remember, limes when I
ask and limes when I didn't,
and when I felt very weak and
unworthy
Then, last Wednesday
evening my nephew, Danny
Roush, came by on his way to
work at the church and sa1d
he'd siDp on h1s way back to
watch "Cannon ' w1th me
Last wmler he'd come
home wl th me from church
Sunday and Wednesday
evenings because we both
hke detective stor1es, and
we'd have cookies and drmk
postum and talk and watch
TV
II had been several weeks l
hadn 't seen h1m, but I'd
missed him, and was glad he
was commg even though
usually I go to bed wllh the
ch1ckens and get up with the
roosters
But I read awhile, and got
ready for our snack, and
wal ted and read till he came
about 9
After Canon got his msn, l
went to the kitchen whlle
Danny changed stallons to

watch Petrocelll
Smoke was so th1ck I could
hardly see mto the ullllty
room and kllchen, and I could
hardly get my breath, unllll
opened the outs1de door
He checked the chunney
and went round the house,
and yelled back, 'There's a
f1re burmng out here, • then
came in and called h1s dad,
then ran out agam to get a
hose, as I called the !1re
department, not givmg
direchons I should, but they
came
Many people came by and
ms1de When the f1re truck
left, the electric company
truck pulled in and soon had
my lights on A hot w1re had
dropped on an alummum
eaves trough, rsn around the
house, and caught f1re under
where the washer sets'
Had I gone to bed at my
usual 7 30 or 8 there'd
probably have been a pile of
ashes of me and my home,
"round the ole stone fireplace
Thursday morning
May have been betttr so
Who knows•
How curiously thlngs do
happen Anyway, I'm very
grateful lo God and the folk
who helped, and wish I could
have mel some of ones I
talked w1th under different
circumstances
Danny and our branch
leader Bill Roush pulled off
v10yl siding and Insulation
and slowed up the burning I
didn't go ouls1de

'

I

•

from New Yorkers as a
condlt:on for
federal
assistance
But the lawmakers could
not agree on what taxes to
raise and went mto recess
Thursday mght
City workers had some
anxious moments when
Comptroller Harnson Goldm
withheld payroll checks unhl
after bankmg hours to
p-event cashmg madvance of
the regular payday IDday
The checks normally are
handed out a day m advance,
and many workers cash or
deposll them umned1ately
The payroll problem came
as a surprise because the
money to meet 11 previously
had been pledged by the
Teacher's Pension Fund
There was no explanation for
the delay
But Goldm assured

Miracles never cease

No sthoking will help
lung d1sease gets some
benef1 t soon and gradual
Improvement over years
The p1cture Is enhrely
different for heart and
vascular diSease Statistics
show that as soon as you quit
smoking you significantly
Improve your oullook ln
avmdlng these problems So,
•f you want to decrease the
chances of having a heart
attack or dropping dead
suddenly and are a heav)
smoker, just quitting w1ll
Improve your chances 300 per
cent at once
Now, don 't pay any attention lo whomever IS giVing
you negahve 1nput Go ahead
and quit for your own good
now And, 1f you want more
information on what 'obacco
does !lend 50 cents for 1be
Heallh Letter number 2~,
Tobaeco Cigarettes, Cigars,
Pipes Just wr1 te to me m
care of thiS newspaper P 0
Box 1551, Rad1o C1ty Slsllon,
New York, N,&lt; Y10019 Send a

High officials named In the
report as havmg knowledge
of some of the plots agaiiiSt
Castro and Lumumba m·
eluded the late CIA Director
Allen Dulles and hls deputy,
Richard BISSell, and fo11J1er
Defence Secretary Robert
McNamara, now president of
the World Bank
The report said that m the

long
stamped,
self.
addressed envelope lor
malllng
DEAR DR LAMII - Will
exerc1se reduce baggy skin
that occurs when miiM!eaged women reduce• Is there
sny way to prevent saggy
skin on arms and legs of older
women, or IS that just another
senior cltizen bablllty'
DEAR READER - Skin
tends to lose •Is natural light,
elasllc1 ty as you get older
There are only a few thmgs
you can do about it
Flrst, don't overstretch
your skin by getting fat Yoyo weight control leads to
repealed stretching of the
skin with repeated epiBodlll
of obesity Finally. it Simply
refuses to snap back arid just
sags
Second, mamtam your
muscle mass -Part of that
saggy skin on arms and
thighs 1s from IOSB of muscle
mass m those areas How do
you prevent thiS' Do some

1banksgivmg Day, which soon Will be with us once
agam,
Is the time we give spec tal thanks for the blessings
fall of 1960, two CIA offiCials
were asked by superiors to
of the past year
As we are on the eve of our b•-eentennlll year, It Is
assassmate Lumwnba and
fitting that we give !hanks for the blessmgs of the past 200
that poiBOns actually were
years We owe thanks for Jivmg In ~,p~erlca where we
sent to the Congo But before
the plot could be earned out,
enjoy privileges unknown to people ln any other countrY ln
Lumumba was killed May 30,
the world
1961, by rehels
1 Wonder how often we think of !lie great debt we owe
'
ID
the
past Nearly all of the precious freedoms ln our live~~ . i
The most outlandish
have been made sacred to us because of their cost
schemes allegedly were
To a certain ellenl this Is also true of material things ,
contrived to ebmmate the
When we compare the conveniences of our modern homes
durable Castro
With those of the homes of yesterday we realize how much
we have for which to be thankful We have these things
hecauae there were those before us who had the Inventive '
genius, the courage, and the perserverance to create ,
somethlng to help take the drudgery out of their lives
When we read about how our forefathers carved their
workers there would be
homes from the wilderness of our country we are ftlled
enough money on deposit ID
with admrrat1on and amazement We remember that
cover therr checks by the
::;gc;&gt;::.'dw~;~~f been brought to us by pains- ~r
lime the banks opened today
In another development,
The mementoes and antiques which have come to us ,
Mayor Abraham Beame said
from other generations are not only precious to us because
he had assurance from Gov
of therr beauty or association, but also because they are ,
Hugh Carey there were "no
reminders of what our forefathers paid to bl'lllll ,
bal'flerS" to a separate $150
CIVUIZBtlon to us These things should be preserved to ,
million fmanc1al package
teach future generations, lest the debt ID the past be
enablmg the city to pay 1ts
forgotten
bills through November
There IS nothlng we enjoy but whlch has been brought
The next critical deadline,
to us with great cost
'•
Beame SBid, w1ll be Dec 3,
We read a book, which inspires us and helps us to ,
when the spec1al $2 3 billiOn
nobler livmg, but do we think of what may have been the
fund created by the
price the author paid to pro®ce this book' He may have
legiSlature In September runs
experienced heart-breaking sorrows before be was able to
dry Without help, the city
wnte somethmg which has helped us
will be broke
We thlnk of our beloved America we enjoy Its
But by that tune, c1ty and
liberties and prosperlties We watch our beautiful flag
state offiCIBis hope to have
wavmg in the breeze under blue skies, and we are uplifted ,
federal backmg for 1ts bonds
With patr1ot1c p-1de But do we remember the coli of thiB
and notes to enable It to reflag• Do we think of the cost to those who made It possible :
enter the murucipal bond
for us to enjoy the bleiiSlngs Our flag's stars and bars are ,
market, which has been ' symbols of an endless sti'U£Ille for launan freedom,
closed to the City since April
l secured at the cost of blood, tears and sacrifice
We look at our Christian flag, and we realize It has
been brought to us by a greater cost and a longer period of :
suffering than that for our national freedom.
The bleiiSlngs of our Christian civillzalim have been
brought through centuries of suffering and even mar·
tyrdom In the beginning, Jesus Chrllt made the supreme
sacrifice when He gave IUs Ufe on tbe &lt;Zoss tbat all men ,
everywhere might enjoy eternal life Then the followers of .
Christ were often forced to give up their lives In defense of •'
the1r faith
.,
EVI!ry past age has contributed something to the wealth
of sprritual truth we enjoy
.~
Truly, we owe a great debt to the past which cannot be &gt;
paid unless we bve ln such a way the world will be a little ,
, hetter for our having Uved In It
As we continue to enjoy the fruits of love and service ~
of those who have gone before us, may we give special '&gt;
thanks thiS Thanksgiving Day, and may we reeolve that
we will pay the debt to the past by glvmg love and service
to our God, to our Country and to our fellowmen, so that all
who come after us will be blessed -Norma A Lee

Day saved by $100 million

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E Lamb, MD
DEAR DR LAMB ~ I was
planning on trymg to slop
smoking Then the other day
someone told me that 11 you
smoked for years thalli won't
do any gOOd, that 1t Is already
too late She also told me that
It lakes years to get Improvement anyway, even for
those who haven t smoked for
26yearsalready Is thiS true•
If so, why do you just adviSe
everybody to qUit smokmg•
It seems to me that lf 11 is
already too late you doctors
ought to let us puff In peace
DEAR READER - That
S&lt;lllleone doesn't know what
she IS talkJng about She
probably heard about the
lime it takes to correct the
damage to the lungs That
does lake 1 long time, and a
heavy smoker can look
forward to several years of
time before Ills lungs gel back
to near normal, if they are
able to at aU Even so, many
a person w1th evidence of

subordmates "

Our Debt to the Past

exercises that put the
muscles under load These
can be cabsthenlcs that use
arm and leg muscles and
your body weight, or, 1! you
want to go to an exercise
fac1Uty, you can even use
llghl weights or machmes
that do the same thing to help
you maintain your youthful
musculature.
1bjlrd, don't be a sun
worshipper Sun is your
skin'~ worst enemy Suntan
devel~ to protect your body
from harmful sun Under
every sun tan IS skin damagl\
to tlpo! elasUc fibers and
other structures Note that
your skin looks much younger
on the parll of Jbe body
protecled from sun and Wind
- in sm~e people these days
It Is hard to find such an area
b'CIIIIparlaon
Fourth, to protect your face
from crow•s feet and facl81
wrinkling lhal will make you
look 10 years older, do not
smoke

It s a nerve rack1ng ordeal
that I hope I never go through
agaln I huddled over the
!•replace m an old ram coat,
burmng wood and paper logs
for heat and hghl
Manon Slater, Racme and
Rev Cundiff came m Hope I
may see them agam Manon
I never knew but hiS parents
and grandparents, yes
Oh, yes, Manon d1d plow
my garden once many years
ago while h1s dad (now
deceased) sal m the yard and
talked of old limes
Manon'saunl, Neva Sloter,
was marned to my oldest
brother, Joe WI!JIIs, 11 ho d1ed
on their f1rsl anmversary,
Decocahon Day, m 1932, I
th1nk
She 1s now Neva Johnson
and hves at Ft Myers, Fla
Seems so long ago
There are many good
people all over the world,
especially m Me1gs County
These men were domg lhe1r
job but mce about 1t I hear
Lebanon Township lost or
counted out emergency
service Not on MY vole This
was my first call

CINDY GRINSTEAD
Mason - Cindy Renee
Grinstead of Anderson St ,
is one of nine contestants
who will compete for
Mason County's Junior
Miss Title on November 22
Astudent at Wahama High
Sehool, she Is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs Foster
Grinstead Among her
school activities are
Student
Council,
Keywanettes, Keywanette
president, Yearbook staff,
band, Stag~ Band, Pep
Band, newspaper and
junior class president
After she graduates from
Wahama she plans to at·
lend Buckeye Hills Nursing
School

Parade Entry Coupon

business establillhments say
"Go Bucks, Beat Bo" That's
in reference to Michigan
Coach Bo Schembechler,
sometimes called "Little
Woody" because of h1s coach·
ing similarity to Hayes, his
former boss
All the major shoppmg
centers have at least one
store with a special Ohio
State football corner, selling
pennants, hats, scarves,
bumper atJplera and many
other Buckeye souvenirs
One of the best selling
items In local bookstore1118 an
LP record entitled "Great
Moments In Ohio State
Football-a Tribute 1D Woody

ANN ARBOR M1ch (UP!)
- It's all two coaches could
want 10 a college football
game- everythmg but a
guaranteed national
champ10nsh1p IS wa1hng for
the wmner
Only Coach Bo Schem·
bechler of Mlchlgan could ask
for more gomg mto the
Wolvermes match With OhiO
Slate Saturday and the on))
request he m1ght make would
be to havr the two ties
femoved from h1s team s
record so they would I~ hke
the Buckeyes are
Both teams are assured of
gomg to a bowl- M1ch1gan 's
first m four seasons despite
tymg Ohlo State for the B1g
Ten crown the past three
'years The Wolvermes are
shooting for an un
:precedented hflh straight
year of wummg or tymg for
the conference crown
To the wmner goes the Rose
.Bowl b1d-but th1s year the
loser m1ght come out ahead
because the team that comes
(lui second-best Saturday (or
Mlch1gan, 1f the two he ) goes
to the Orange Bowl on New
Year's Day to take on the
WIMer of Saturday's Ok

lahoma-Nebraska game
It was Schembechler's
carpmg about bemg left home
the past three years that
mduced the B•g Ten to
change Us for.mula for
setecllng a Rose Bowl
representative (the athlehc
directors no longer vote) and
led to other conference learns
bes1des the champion bemg
permitted to appear m bowl
games
A VIctory for Ohio State
~ould cap a perfect regular
season for Coach Woody
Ha) es of the Buckeyes and
send hiJJI to Pasadena, Cabf ,
msearch of a poss1ble perfect
way to top off a long and
illustnous career
It would also practically
guarantee the Buckeyes a
national champ•onsh1p, smce
they currently hold first place
by a healthy margm over
Nebraska's Cornhuskers
A VICtory for M1eh1gan
would g1ve the Wolvermes,
currently rated fifth, s long
shot at the national cham·
piOnSillp If some other thmgs
work out In their favor In the
bowl games
The weather could play a

For participation in the annual
Chnstmas parade to be held in Pomeroy,
Nov 25.
Name ~~---------------------

Type of EntrY.:..__ _ __:__;__ ___

AddresL..__~:--::----:--::----::;::-:;-:;-

For those who have not been contacted.
Mail to Mrs. Don &lt;Carolyn&gt; Thomas, in care
of Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,
Pomeroy 45769 by noon on Nov. 25th. The ;
parade will line up behind the Pomeroy
Junior High at 6:30 p. m.

Pro Stan~
International Hockey
League StandingS

united Preu International
North
w I I pis gtgo

Saginaw
Port Huron
Muskegon
Fllnl

Kalamazoo

63 4
870

16 S2 39
16 57 S)
15 39 31
14 46 SO

6 S 3
672
4 7 3 11 43 59

.;- South
members of the "cultural
wT.Tpts 1191
shuns thai are Toledo and
oav1on
10 • 1 21 Sl 32
Columbus"
Toledo
7 4 4 18 51 SO
Fort wavne 6 9 2 l.t 64 Sf
Ohio Stale fans are a breed Columbus
3 10 3 9 3S ~
of a klnd
Thursday's Relults
1
No games sct)tduled
Take Steven K Kuhl who
Tonight's Games
was on hand when the sod at Daylon ol Fllnl
"
Ohio Stadium was dug up ID Saginaw at Kalamazoo
Muskegon at Toledo
'
be replaced by astroturf He Port Huron Columbus
Games
planted it ln his front yard ToledoS.turday's
at Fort wavne
When he moved, he took the Kalamazoo at Muskegon
Co tum bus at Port Huron
sod with him.
Sag1naw at Dayton
•'
Kool now hu 1 sign on his
front yard which reads.
"Upon IIIII hjtllowed turf,
trod the veatest of tbem all
"In deeds ne'er to be
forgotten, by lana of O.S.U
.DIVOTID TO TNI
INTIR,iTO'
•
football "
GS MA N ARIA
C~I!R
L
T
NNENILf
'
Then there's Tcm Gibbons
- .... ld
who painted his Vo!Uwagen
lfayell "
ROBERT NOEHICH
City Editor
Bumper stickers adorn to look lllte an Qljo State
Ptbllohod dally oxctpl
thousands of cars in the area football helmet
turdoy by Tho Ohio Vollov' •
ubtlohlng
compeny, Ill
Many of them say simply·
And Jut, there's the Michl·
ourt St Pomoroy Ohl~
45769 Bu,lntll Office Phone'
"Thank Yo~ Mrs Griffin," gan definition of a Buckeye
992 2]56 EGIIOrlll Phone 992 '
an obvious reference to Mrs
2157
"Some ldrld of nul "
Sttond clo11 POIIIOt PIIG
James Griffin, mother of
•
11 Pomeroy, Ohio
He1sman Trophy winder
Netlonol oGvortlolno
reprettnfltlvt
Wlrd .;
Archie Grlffln and his
Griffith Compony Inc
Bottlnolll l Gelleohar Olv ;
lrothers Ray and Duncan,
7NSI Third Avo Now York,
both Buckeye defensive
v 10011
MONTREAL (UPI) - The
Sublcrlpllon rot 11 '
llicks
National Hockey Llape and Qeltvortd
by carrier whore
The Press Club of Ohio the Soviet Ice Hoe~ey IVIII.III' 75 Ctnta
WHk
Mo or Routt where
cballen8ed the Detroit Press Federation have concluded By1rrler
ttrvlct
not
Cub to a small wager staling arrangements b' an etaM· vell•bl,. One tnonii),.S3 25
y mell n Ohio end w V• ,
II shouldrl 't he much of a game series which NHL
no Yllr 122 00 Six
ontha Sll so
Three•
contest agllnst "Do's also· Prellidenl Clarence Clmpbell
onlhl, 17 00 Elaowhero
2
oo yur. Six months
rans "
said Thuradl' wu •'the 111011 136 so.
three montho, II so 1
The Detrolt Press Club llgniDeant development In ulltcriP,tlon
prlco lnfludes
undoy Tltnn Sonllno .
accepted but warned its hockey since elpalllion "

,_r

,

:I

Pro

!Standin~s
World

:I

l

H o c k e y Assoc at1on

Stilnd ng s
By Umted Pr ess lnt~r nat•on al

0 U, Marshall to play
at 11 a.m. Saturday

Ea st
W I t Dh
9 6 0
18
7 9 l
I~

fteld "
Sw1ck has passed for 2,201
New Englund
Cle .... eta nd
6 7 2
14
yards
th1s season and has
About
the
only
th
mg
tnd• anapolts
6 10 0 12
qual ter back Gene Sw1ck another 171 yards runmng for
West
mmor factor 10 the game unage offense to stop
w I I ph
hasn t produced durmg h1s 2 372 yards Another 148
wh1ch Oh10 State IS favored to
Gordon Bell at la1lback IS Hous•on
9 7 0
18
agamsl the Flashes will make
M
nncsotil
wm by seven pomts, since the a~ tough to halt as Gnffm
B 7 I
17 career at the Umvers1ty of
San D1cgo
7
7
2
16
Toledo IS a wm over Kent htm the alll•me maJor
Saturday forecast called for And wh1le fullba ck Rob Lytle Phoen x
7 8 'l
16
college total offense leader,
temperatures m the low 30s IS a m1dget next to Johnson , D en11 er
5 10 I 11 State
Canad•an
pushmg hiJJI ahead of former
Sw1ck,
who
IS
w1thm
148
The state of Michigan has the Buckeyes fullback 1s a
w I I pi s
enjoyed unseasonably m1ld plowhorse next to the Quebec
yards of the maJor college Stanford star J1m Plunkett's
1~ 6 0 28
W tnntp eg
13 5 0 26
career total of!ense mark 7,887
weather all fall and both Wolvermes' quarterhorse eamonton
8 11 2 18
Kokal enters his final
teams could be slightly
8 8 1 17 gets h1s fmal crack Saturday
Two of M1ch1gan s more Ca lgary
Toronto
4
10
2
10
c'Olleg•ate
game needing Just
rught
when
the
Rockets
host
bbthered by the abrupt amazmg feats are the
Thursday s R es ults
fiVe
yards
to surpass the 6 000
change 111 temperature
the Golden Flashes at the
sterling performance of Mtnnesota 2 N ew Eng l and 0
W mn•peg 3 Qu eb ec 2 (O T l
mark
m
total offense yarGlass Bowl Both teams are 4
Archie Gnffm carnes a freshman RICk Leach at Phoen x 3 Edm onton 1
dage
streak of 31 stra1ght regular quarterback and the JOb San Otego 5 Denv er 1
6
day s Games
The M1am1 C•ncwnat•
The
Toledo-Kent
Midseason games m which he has turned m by the offenSive Ca lgary Fr
at Denver
gamed 100 yards or more mto Ime
E d monton at Houston
American Conference game clash w1ll be the 60th between
the two schools w1th the
IS one of SIX mvolvmg Oh1o
the contest and SchemThe youngster's who make C nctnnat at lo ronto
Redskips holdmg a 42-31~
up
MIChigan's
offensive
hne
teams
as
the
season,
except
hechler IS all but conceding
0
Nahonal Hockey
advantage
for bowl games, comes to a
hlm h1s yardage What miw were second, thrrd and
L ea gue Standmgs
M•amt , lfh lch has alreally
close
Schembechler hopes to do 1s fourth strmgers when the
Bv Umted Press lnternat.onal
Patnck
01V! S! OO
The other games mclude won the MAC IItle and the
make Gnffm have to work for season started InJuries to
W
L T Pts
OhiO Sta tes Tangerme ~wl berth wh1ch
his yards by carrymg the ball seniors Kirk Lewis and Steve Ph tla delph a
13 3 5 Jl top rated
Is land er s
8 6 5 21 nat10nal\y telev1sed tr1p to
goes w1th 11, 1s 9 I overall With
King dictated most of the NY
a lot
Allanta
7 9 2 16
1ts only loss 11}4 13 dec1s1on to
Stoppmg semor quar- changes
NY Rangers
7 11 2 16 M1Cn1gan, Bowlmg Green at
Smyth e DIVI $ton
M1ch1gan State
rexas
Arlington,
Cmcmnau
King,
who
underwent
lmee
terback Cornelius Greene
w L T Prs
Cmcmnat1 whose last five
from throwmg and executmg surgery after the f1rst game, ChiCago
10 4 6 26 M1am1, Oh10 Umver~!lY at
St LOUIS
7 7 4
18 Marshall and Centrallnd1ana
games
have been decided by
the
option
concerns has returned and 1s expected Vancouver
7 8 4
18
Schembechler more than to start Saturda)
Kansas C•tv
5 tO 2 12 at Wittenberg m an NCAA SIX pomts or less, IS 6-4 after
&lt;!I
1.:1 0
8 DiVISIOn Ill playoff contest
last week's 6-5 wm over Ohio
This w11l be the seventh Mnnesoa
haltmg Griffin He also wants
NOrrts DI VIS IOn
Kent State Coach Denms Uruvers1ty
to hiDIL g1ant fullback Pete tune m eight years M1ch1gan
W L T PI S
ll 4 l 29 Fitzgerald, who has h1s 0)171
Oh10 Umvers1ty, 4-5-1
Johnson and keep Wingback and Ohlo State have played Montreal
Los Angel es
12 6 2 26
overall,
Will be after the !DOth
outstanding
semor
s1gnal
Br1an Baschnagel 111 check for the Big Ten t1Ue and Rose P.t tsburg l
6 9 2 14
Detr01t
5
12
4
14
collegiate
VIctory for Coach
caller
m
Greg
Kokal,
calls
Hayes' problems are much Bowl berth Neither team has Wash1ngton
2 16 2
6
B1ll
Hess
when
the Bobcats
Sw1ck "a bnlhant quarthe same as Schembechler's recorded a v1ctory on the
Adam s 0 Yts1on
W
L
T
Pis
take on Marshall Ill an II a m
terback
he s runnmg agamst a good other's home f1eld Ill that Buffalo
15 J 1 31
'He's not only an excellent game at Huntmgt.on W Va
defense and he a m~rror- tiJJie
Toron to
9 5 4 n
Boston
9 6 J 22 passer, but he also has good
Hess will be gomg against
Calt tornta
7 13 2 16
long
IIJJie asSistant Frank
on
I
he
f1eld
judgment
and
has
Thursday s Resu lts
NY Islan ders 2 Boston 2
the ab1hty lo hurt you m Ellwood, who took over th1s
Ph llad elp hta J Cattforn•a 2
many wa)s ' sa1d Fitz- year at Marshall The
Buffalo 7 Delro11 2
Fndav s Games
ge rald ' A three or four 1bundertng Herd IS 2-8 on the
Pti!Sburgh at At lanta
touchdown lead 1sn't very season
Ca l tfornta at Wash•nglon
Bowlmg Green wh1ch has
secure when Sw1ck 1s on the
who broke h1s prev1ous Elvm Hayes, for almost half
Cohseum record of 49 pomts, the game Hayes, who still
Amencan Ba s ketball
then added a steal and a stuff managed lS pomls mcluding
Assoc1ahon Standmg s
shot to g1ve the Braves a Ill). fiVe m the !mal four mmutes, By Un•ted Pr ess tntHnat1ona 1
East
107 lead
was saddled w1th f1ve perW L Pet
GB
Elsewhere there was only sonal fouls and played only 26 Kentucky
7 4 636 New York
75583
1
one other NBA game and mmutes
7 7 500
111
St LOUIS
Washmgton heat Atlanta 105- Pacers 117, Nuggets 112
v.rg lnta
2 12 143 6 1 1
West
96 In the lone American
B1lly Keller scored four
W L Pet
GB
Basketball Association game, threepoml baskets and B1Uy lnd1ana
10 3 769
9 3 750
~
lnd1ana downed Denver 117- Knight hit for 36 pomts as Denv er
San Anton1o
8 4 667 1 '
112
2 9 182 7
lnd1ana rolled up a 23-polnt utah
By MILTON RICHMAN
Thursday s Gam e
Bullets 105, Hawks K
lead and then held off a late lnd•ana 117 Denver 112
UPI Sports Ed1tor
Ph1l Chemer scored 22 Denver rally Denver's
Fnday s Games
pomts and Wes Unseld added Claude Terry also hit on three Denv er at New York
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Em1le Francis has a good sense of
21 to lead Washmgton over three-pomters -two m the Utah vs V rgm1a at Norfolk humor and needs 11 more than ever now that he's about as
Atlanta The Bullets' victory fmal penod- helpmg the National BUketb•ll AssOC hlflon popular here m New York as Gerald Ford
Standmgs
was accomplished Without Nuggets close to 100-98
Rangers fans still are smoldermg because Francis dealt
Bv Umted Press lnternaf•onal
the serviCes of their hiP mRn
away such favorites as Eddie G1acomm , Brad Pa~k. Jean
Eastern Conference
Atlanttc Otvtston
Ga Ratelle and Derek Sanderwn GIBcomm's departure to Detroit
W L Pet
-was especially hard lor the fans to take Gnawing away at
Buffalo
9 A 692
Philadelph ia
8
4 667
' thein as muth, 1f not more, IS the fact the Rangers are m last
Boston
6 5 545 7
place now The fans don't hke that They don t like 11 at all, and
New Yor~
6 9 400 ,
Central D1v1 s on
haven't been bashful about mamfestmg their diSpleasure upon
W L Per
GB
Francis Neither have some of the City's hockey wnlers
Wash ng ton
7 d 636 8 5 61 5 ~
"It's nothmg we haven't seen hefore,' he says "I try to
He and the late J1m White He also booted 29 of 34 extra Atanta
New Orleans
6 1 462 2
Ignore 11 as much as I can Thmgs sa1d 111 the papers don't
5 6 455 7
molded the team mto 1ts pomts and k1cked one f1eld Houston
Cleveland
4
9 308 4
make that much difference to me I don l believe I\ hat I read l
wmmng trad111on of today goal
Western Confer ence
beheve m what I'm domg I'll stand or fall on that In hockey,
Preston
led
the
team
m
Mtdwes1 DIVISIOn
He con tlnued "There are
W
L
Pet
GB
we
're mvolved m a h1ghl) emotiOnal game It's a game of
no two people ahke You rushmg w1 th 830 yards m 167 Detro t
7 5 583
,.
,
highs
and lows, a combmat1on of all sports Nobody told me I
6 7 462
people are the greatest thing cames averagmg 4 9 yards Mtlw aukee
Kansas
c
tv
3
7
300
:
had to be 10 th1s busmess Nobody's got a gun to my head
m the world Athletes and per carry he scored 13 touch· Cht cago
3 9 250
makmg me stay 10 1\ But l happen to like 1t and Ill be m 1\ a
Pac he O•vr s•on
people associated w1th downs received two passes
W L Pet
G
B
long
tiJJie "
good
for
14
yards
and
passed
athlehcs are the greatest
G'olden S ate
9 " 692
Chances
are Emile FranciS will .• because he 's exception·
for
a
46
yard
touchdown
He
Los
Angeles
10
6
625
people m the world
Seaflle
7
8
467
3
ally
capable
Some forget exactly howcapable when things get
I coached for 12 years and was also the team's top Phoen1 x
d 6 400 31
rough
the
way
they have for the Rangers lately
5 a 385 4
my four years here al Kyger pwtler averagmg 27 6 yards Portland
Thursdays
R
e5
ult
s
For
those
w1th
short memones, Francis, both general
Creek were the happiest of 011 16 punts good for 441 Buffalo 118 Cleveland 115 IOT l
manager and coach until he turned over the coach10g JOb to
Washington 105 Atlanta 96
my hfe Wmmng Is 1m yards
Fndav s Games
Ron Stewart last May, IS the man who bu1lt the Rangers from
Both
backs
were
named
to
portant, but there are many
New York at Boston
the weakest team m hockey to one of the strongest Some
the
AII..SV
AC
Dream
team
Portland Philadelphia
other fond memones at
Buffalo
at
Oetrotl
The learn 's Best Offensive Chtcago vs Kansas Ctly a t people forget that For 20 years, the Rangers were the worst
Kyger Creek
team m the National Hockey League FranciS rebuilt the team
What do I remember• Lineman trophy went to 135- Omaha
Houston
at
Pho e nt~e
compl~tely In 1966-07, he led the Rangers mto the playoffs for
F1rst the people I was pound guard Tim Moles
Milwaukee at L os A ngel es
the
f1rst tune 10 hve years and never has missed smce
Moles,
a
member
of
the
All
associated WIth when I was
One
thmg he hasn 't been able to do 1s wm the Stanley Cup,
SVAC
Dream
learn,
was
here 15 years ago I
was
formed
two
years
ago
but
he
has won more games than any other Rangers' coach 10
remember the boys I credited w1th openmg up b•g
Kyger
Creek
w11l
play
a
10hlstory
and his wmnmg percentage of 606 1s the second best
coached, Coach Wh1le and holes m the oppos1llon
game
schedule
next
fall
and
ever
m
the NHL People forget that too
defense wh1ch perm1tled the
the other !me people •
the
b1g
nvalry
game
w1lh
They
have
short memones Hockey fans can reel off the
McColhns then gave some Bobcat offense to roll
Offensively, Kyger Creek North Galha ts set for the end names of all the great goalies hke Frankie Brunsek, Terry
Incidents of "greatness" m
Sawchuk, Jacques Plante and Gwnp Worsley , but converuent·
scored
284 pomts gamed of lhe season
the athletes he had at Kyger
Mrs
Fay
Sauer
presented
ly forget all of them were dealt away the same as Eddie
Creek
Tracmg
the1r 2,056 yards on the ground and
cerhf1cates
to
JUniOr
vars1ly
G1acomm
was by the Rangers a couple of weeks ago They
d1sappomtments to their 711 m the a1r
cheerleaders
Tammy
R1fe
remember
how G1acomln won the Vezma Trophy, awarded
Tom Slump, a sem01 who
moments of triumph he
Rob10
Fraley,
Carol
Shdham
annually
to
the top goahe 10 the league, only four years ago,
described former Bobcats C received honorable mentwn,
A Duncan, Homer Wllhams, All.SVAC, was the team s Debbie Clevenger, Momca but they forget Francis had to trade away the equally popular
Dave Ebhn, Ed French Dave Best Defensive Lmeman On Fisher, Robln R1fe and T10a Cesar Mantago to giVe G1acom1n a chance ongmally
Va r s 1t y ; EIJ1Ile ~anc1s doe~l.(prget:; , .- , , •
Carman, Denny Mulford and total team defensive pomts, H a m m o n d
cheerleadmg
al\ards
went to ~~ ' !'OIIcortun was playih« ,..1LH Pl'o'l'ft!MI:"I!, 1 ~w hiJJI and I
Slwnp, a linebacker on the
John Fellure
Jan
Stidham,
Dal\n
Martm
hked h1m 'says the Rangers' GM "What I hked was that he
An elder m the Worthmgton Bobcat 44 defense, amassed
Becky
Polcyn
I
•sa
Ell1s,
Lee
played the same way when he was behind as when he was
Chnshan Church, McColhns lSI pomta
Defensive polnts are g1ven Hammond and Kelley ahead Some goal-keepers have a tendency to lose heart when
emphasized rellgion and a
trust m God ' God doesn l for first h1t asSISts on Martm Donn Fhnt \las g1ven they get behmd and they're eas1e~ to beat Gwcomin wasn't
make m1slakes He hasn t tackles, tackles causmg the a cerhf1cate as an alternate !hal way I made my dec1s1on and tola hiJJI, 'from now on,
Jan Shdham and Dawn you're go1ng to be the goalkeeper for the New York Rangers
made one yet He created the ballplayer to lose yardage,
Marlin
on behalf of the for better or lor worse • At that pomt, 1t could've very eas1ly
earth and saved the best tackles on kickoffs assists on
chee
rlead1n
g s qu ad cost me my JOb"
kickoffs, wter ce pllons ,
creatwn, people for last"
presented
Mrs
Sauer
w1th a
'
McColhns
was
ac passes !mocked down , h1ts on
red and "h1te ca rnahon Sieve Shoemake r Todd
compamed by h1s wife, receivers causmg dropped
Taylor and B II Absh~re
Nancy, a son, Bobby, an all- passes fwnble recovenes, co•sage
Sophomores - Claude
Mrs
Sauer
pmchh1lled
for
conference football fullback blocked k1cks or punts, safety
Cornelius
Yancey Hall ey
Maur1ce
Mayes,
who
was
M1ke Hendnckson Darre ll
at Worlhmg High School and touchdown
Jones Randy Lucas Rusty
J1m Armbruster, another unable lo allend
Presentation of awards
Player
awards
went
to
Lucas
Greg Mulford Tim
h.ghhghled the rest of the semor linebacker was the
Sentors - Jim Armbruster N1berl and Scot! R1chards
team's Best DefensiVe Back
banquet program
Freshmen - Dan Chap
Jell Blazer Mike Curnutte
mAn
Mark Curnu1te Tom
Armbruster
had
146
defenCalv1n
Geiger
Tom
Kern
F1ve seniors received the
Halfhill
Howard Halley Bill
Tim
Lucas
Bill
Metzner
Tim
sive
pomts
He
was
credited
trophies presented by Head
Hood And y McQuaid Steve
Moles
Chris
Preston
R1
ck
Coach Jun Sprague on behalf w1lh bemg a hard h1lter on
Tom Stu mp Ol1ver Russell Randy Tay lor and
Kellh Tyler
and Jim Ward
of the Kyger Creek Athletic the Bobcat de!ens1ve un•t
Team Manger - Joe Ab
-J~nto&lt;&lt; - Steve Ba~rd
Coach Sprague thanked
Boosters Club
s h1re
Baylor
Steve
Darst
Tim Lucas, semor quar- everyone who helped 1n
C William Pnce gave the
1fe
H1ll Joe Hood
mvocallon
th e steak
terback and placekicker and malting the year a success
~:,tld'~~'~;;ler ., Brian Lucas d1nner was and red
by the
He
noted
1t
was
an
exc1hng
Chris Preston, sen10r
tailback shared the Best season both from the stand
point of watchmg and
Offensive Back Award
I ucas rushed for 242 yards coaci)lng Sprague said he
m 69 cames, a 3 5 yard was looking forward to next
average He scored seven season because we have a
OFFICE
RS 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 !CLOSE
touchdow~s
Lucas passed fme group of bOys returning
AT NOON ON THURS )- EAST COURT
for 594 yards, connecting on and will also benelll from the
45 of 80 passes fur Sti 25 pel Mld~et fonlball learn which
C nc n n a Tt

Umted Press lnternatwnal

Buffalo rally topples Cleveland
Pro Basketball Roundup
United Press International
Much to lhelr regret the
Cleveland Cavaliers fell
VICIIJJI Thursday night to two
thmgs most everyone In pro
basketball knows by now
(I) Bob McAdoo 15 the most
explosive scorer m the
;I':Iallonal Basketball
AssoCiation and
(2) No lead m pro
basketball 1s ever safe until
lhe game ts over
En route to a Cleveland
Cohsewn record of 50 pomts
McAdoo led a remarkable
6econd
half
Buffalo
~omeback that saw the

\KC

Braves rebound from a 23pomt def1c1t for a 11S-ll5
overtime victory
W1th the Braves trrulmg 7956 With 5 34 left 111 the th1rd
quarter, McAdoo scored e1ght
of Buffalo's next 16 pomts as
the Cavs lead was cut to 14 at
the start of the fmal period
Later a three.pomt play by
Randy Smlth tied the game
911-98 with 4 33 remammg m
regulatlon play
S.mth, who wound up w1th
23 points, pul the Braves
ahead to stay w1th a Ill-foot
jump shot after a rebound In
the overtime period McAdoo,

'• ' We

Sport Parade

grid champions honored

u

Nothing like the
OSU-Michigan game
By JOHN T IUDY
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Woody Hayes says there's
never been anything like It In
collegiate sports.
Ohio State defensive end
Pat Curto calls it a ''war "
Ron Boggs says It will
empty his barber shop on
Saturday
All three are talking about
the Ohio State-Michigan
football game, one of the
most Intense rivalries ln the
nation
The game will be played at
Ann Arbor, Mlch , Saturday
before approximately 106,000
lana and millions more will
watch It on national
lelevlllon
The contell pits unbeaten
and top ranked Ohio State
against fifth-ranked and
unbeaten but twice-tied
Michigan for the Big Ten
championllhlp and a trip to
the Role Bowl with the loser
going to the Orange Bowl
The: "war," game or
whltever you want to call it
his Ohio State lana ln more of
• fnaly than 1111181.
Tellers at one bank are
wearing scarlet-41nd-gray
Ohio State University
sweaters, aoother llint has
Ohio State banners on lts
tellers ~ages, SI8DS In the
windows of downtown

Buckeyes favored in
classic at Ann Arbor

r----------- -,

need to restore an

former head coach at Kyger
Creek H1gh School and
We need to carry our feelings director of gu•dance at
more mto our homes and Worthington H1gh School,
ilchools We need to express returned Thursday night to
~ur apprerna11on more often
dehver the annual banquet
People are the greatest lhmg message at the SVAC
In the world
champiOns gnd banquet
,,I• W1Lh those slatem• nts
McColllns coached at the
J{obert ! Bob) McColhns Class A school from 1958-62

~pprec1ahon for each other
(

'

Young
Colts
eye
•
:•
0
p
ms
·wm over D I h

.

pro Football Roundup
BY JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
Whatever magic Ted
Marchibroda Is conjuring m
Baltimore, It's working The
f~rst-year coach has taken a
club which finished w1th the
worst record in the Natlonal
Football League last season
and transformed It mto an
instant contender

Bert Jones hlt 16 of-22
passes for 277 yards and three
touchdowns 111 the romp over
the Jets Baltimore now has
scored 94 pomts m Its last two
games
The defense leads the AFC
mquarterback sacks with 36
Overshadowed m Miami's
loss to Houston &amp;mday was

an outstanding performance
bY Bob Griese, who hit 21-of·
Marchlbroda, a former 29 passes for 257 yards
85Sistant to George Allen at against one of the top
Washington, can really turn defenses ln the AFC The
th~heat on In the American already
mjury nddled
Conference East punday if Dolphln defense suffered
hls young Colts can upset the another major loss th1s week
Miami Dolphins M•amlleads when Jmebacker Mike Kolen
the AFC East wlth a 7-2 underwent knee surgery
record and Bs!Umore is tied Rookle Steve Towle w1n
with Buffalo at H, two replace him
games behmd
TI\e other major game
A VIctory by the Colts, who Sunday 'sends AFC Western
were 2·12last season but have leader
Oakland
to
now won four m a row, would Washington against the
~!PI them only a game hehind Redsklns, who lost a share of
~e Dolphins, with another f1rst place m the NFC East
meeting scheduled later this last week with a con·
season
troverslal 2().17 overtime loss
Mlam1 was upset 2t\-19 last to St Louis Oakland ls 7-2
ll!eek by Houston, with two and leads Its dlvislon by three
bl6cked extra pomts making games Washington ls 6-3 and
tl)e difference Baltlmore, tled with Dallas for second, a
nf~WlwhUe, toyed with the game behind St Louis
N~w York Jets ln a 52-19 rout
In other games Sunday, the
:"It looks hke we're cat- New York Glants meet Green
~mg BaltiJJiore when they , Bay ln Milwaukee, Cincmnatl
Ble really starting to RUI !I ' IS at Cleveland New England
tOt!ether," said M1ami etlach " at Buffalo Chicago at Los
~ Shuia 'They've', been 1 Angeles, 'Phlladel~hla at
pll!ymg a lot of good footllall Dallas, San Francisco at New
u11der Ted Marchlbroda
Orleans, Denver at Atlanta,
E1en In some of thelr early Detrolt at Kansas City, st
close losses, they had half. Louts at the New York Jets
lime leads They have a and San Diego at MiMesota
yo1111g front four that IS b1g Pittsburgh 18 at Houston
&amp;¢strong and really comln~ Monday nlght
atl&gt;ng •

N.

I

•

'

'

won two lA a row after haVIng
1ls s1x-game wmmng streak
snapped by a parr of losses,
takes a 11-2 record to Texas·
Arlmgton, 3-7
The Falcons rolled over
Southern llliOOIS 41Hi last
weekend
Wittenberg ( 9-1 ), wh1ch
suffered 1ls first defeat of the
season last Saturday, losmg
~ to Muskmgum m the Oh1o
Conference t1tle game tr1es
to bounce back agamst In
diana Central, 11-2
The wumer of that game
advances to the sem1fmals
the followmg weekend
agamst one of Saturday's
three ot her DIVISion Ill
playoff wmners

Marauders
dominate
dream team
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP! ) Central .state placed 10
players on the 29-man NAJA
all District 22 football team
announced Thursday.
The Marauders, who
fm1shed With a ~record, had
five players named to each
the offens1ve and defensive
squads
Fmdlay 2-8 on the year,
wound up w1th the next
h1ghest
number
of
representatives, e1ght, while
W1lmmgton (6·2-1) and
Def1ance (4-6) had fiVe each
and Bluffton (5-3-1) three
Central State's representa·
lives on the defense were
lineman RICk Washmgton,
linebackers William Hopson
and Ivan Seahorn and deep
becks Nat Ciano and Wi111e
Hill
Offensively. the Marauders
landed w1de receivers W1lhe
Zachery and Terry Judkms,
mter1or lineman Barry Hall,
quarterback Steve Thomas
and runmng back KeVIn
Scott
Fmdlay had lineman Bill
Miller, lmebacker Mark Nl&amp;o
won~er and back John
Pequ1gnot on the defenSive
team and w1de rece~ver Jeff
Huffman, lineman Mark
Newburg and back Ke1th
Slmth on the offense
The W1lmmgton players
named were lineman Larry
Jones, linebacker J8!Die Perkins, back Bill Mobley and
k1cker Dave B1shop on
defense and lineman Curet
Chford on offense
Named from Defiance were
linemen Tim Lee and Jeff
Noggle and back Kevin Wierman on defense and lineman
Chm Maxwell and back
Rocky T1sdale on offense
The
three
Bluffton
representatives were
defenstve ltneman Sylvester
Moore, offensive lineman
Blame Sevor and return
specialist Greg Barnett

5 Pack

RIFLE
SLUGS

$}39

�....
4- The Dmly Sentinel. Mtddleport-Pomero~ , 0, Frtday. Nov 21 1975

Redmen host Quakers
in non-league battle

RICK JOHNSON , son of Mr and Mrs
Harry Johnson, Rt 3, Pomeroy. He is a jumor
_center for the Metgs Marauders He ts ftve
feel eight mches Utll and weighs 130 pounds.

Coach Art Lanham's Rw
Grande College Redmen wtll
host Coach John Bryant's
vtsthng Wtlmmgton College
Quaket s tn a non-league
basketball contest at L)ne
Center Saturday Tipoff hme
IS 8 p m.
II wtll be Rto's second
outmg of the 1975-76 campaign The Redmen pohshed
off Wtlberforce 92-69 m thetr
opener last Saturday ntghl It
wtll be the Quakers' season
opener
Last year, at Wtlmmgton,
6-7 seniOr Fletcher Yates
scored on a drtvmg layup at
MARK MITCH, Metgs Marauder
the buzzer lo gtve the
sophomore guard ts five feet, etght inches Utll
Quakers a thrtlhng 83-81
and wetghs 140 pounds. He ts Ute son of Mr.
tr iumph over the Redmen
and Mrs. Gene Milch, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
Gone from lhat 11-14 squad
of a year ago are Yates and
Larry Mann. Yates tossed m
13 agamst Rw last winter
whtle Mann dumped m 21
Returmng, however, ts
Capt Bob Deye, the only
semor on lhts year 's squad
Deye, a guard, rtpped the
nels for 24 pomts agamst lhe
Redmen last year
Members of the tough
Hooster-Buckeye Conference,
Wtlmmgton wtll nol have lhe
services of Terry Ludban lhts
year, leavmg Bryant wtlh
three btg holes to fill with the
gradualton of Yates and

Mann Ludban has gtven up
the spor t accordtng to
Bryant
The WI!mm glo n mentor
hopes to 1111 the vacan t slots
wtlh a combinatiOn of ftve
players, tncludmg three
Junior college transfers
The transfers are Mtke
Levangie, from Lees Junior
College, In Kentucky, Chff
Wa shmglon, from Ahce
Lloyd C~llege, also m Kentucky , and Irwm Shoulders,
from Greenville Juntor
College, m South Carolina
All are about 6-5.
Two returnees who lVIII vte
for the mstde slots are letterman Charles Taylor and
JV starter Bryan Btckerstaff
"We wtll be oulstzed inSide," Bryant explains "and
we wtll have to work to keep
opponents away from the
boards." ·
Bestdes Deye, re turmng at
the guard spots, Bryant also
has Bob Blanton, a Morrow,
Ohw, product who played at
Ltltle Mtamt High
The
Quakers face a
demanding schedule lhts
year, accordmg lo Bryant
"Our schedule ts tougher
lhts year , but we wtll get
more playmg expenence lhts
lime around because we
1

SEOAL grid banquet
Dec. 4, at Iron'ton

BRI!:NT STANLEJY, Meigs Marauder
sophomore guard. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs J Fred Stanley, Rt. 2, Albany He Is six
feet tall and weighs 170 pounds.

Ironton wtll host the 27th
annual Southeastern Ohto
League All-Star football
banquet for the ftfth consecullve year on Thursday,
Dec 4
Thts was announced
WHEELER THOMAS, son of Mr and Wednesday mght durmg the
Mt·s. James A Thomas, Rt. I, Mtddleport, ts a fall meeting of the
Juruor guard for the Metgs Marauders He Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League held at Jackson High
stands stx feet tall and weigiis 155 pounds
School
The banquet will be held m
the Ironton High School
cafelerta, begmmng at 6 30
p.m. Interested parents and
fans may purchase tickets at
thetr respecllve htgh schools
in the etghl-team conference.
In other matters, league
o[ftcers recogmzed Ironton as
the 1975 SEOAL grtd
champiOn and Jackson was
recogmzed as the 1975
SEOAL golf champwn
League teams will play a
double round robin schedule
in baseballagam next sprtng.
The 1976 SEOAL track meet
will be held May 5, at Athens,

beglnmng at 4 p m
Offictals discussed the
possibility of movmg the
league wrestling match from
Feb 21 back to Feb. 20, but no
aclton was taken. Ironton will
host thts year's match
Metgs Coach Charles
Chancey was authoriZed by
acltng prestdenl Ed Stewart
to draw up the 1976 etghth,
mnlh and reserve grid
schedules
Stewart, who prestded m
the absence of league
prestdent James N. M. Davts,
appomted the girls p!J1stcal
educallon director and coach
from
Jackson as a
representative of the league
to contact each school for a
representative to come up
wtth recommendations on
gtrls league for athletics The
recommendations will be
discussed during the next
league mee ltng, to be held
March 3, at 7 p m at Jackson
Htgh School.

Grill stats

197S SOUTHEASTERN

DAVE MILLER, Meigs Marauder junior
guard He stands ftve feet mne mches and
weighs !52 pounds. He is the son of Mrs. Jane
Miller, South Second Ave., Middleport.

BLAIN!!: QUALLS, Meigs Marauder
sophomore Utckle. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Qualls, Chester Road, Pomeroy.
He IS ftve feet ll inches tall and weighs 150
pou~ds .

Safety program is blocked
By MICHAEL J . CONLON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
government safety program
designed to seek out defective
Christmas tree lights before
conswners buy them this
season has been halted by
legal maneuvers by the
hghting mdustry.
The Industry protested
what it said was the use of
1
'vigilantes ~~
The Consume r Product

Ssfety CommisSion program
uwolved use of "conswner
deputies" - 500 to 600
volunteers who were to look
through store inventories and
tell retailers tf they had
potentially hazardous lights
on thetr hands.
They were to be armed wiUt
a booklet descnbmg hazards
and were authorized to use
certain tests \o demonstrate
to the retailers whether a

Big Eight grid title on line
NORMAl't, vKta. tUI"IJ Wtth the Oklahoma dynasty
shghtly shaken, the Nebraska
Cornhuskers will try to do
so me further damage
Ss lurday tn another ol thetr
bttlcrly-fougbt games to
dc'C tde the Big l!:tghl Conferen ce championship and a
spot m the Orange Bowl
The unde!ea ted and second' an ked Corn huskers wtll go
tnlo the conics! as a sltghlly
sut·prtstng four-potni un derdog to the stx!IH au ked
and once-beaten Sooners
A capactty crowd of more
than 70,000 wtll squeeze mto
Owen Fteid lor the contest
A win or a tie for Nebrask~
would give lhe Cornhuskcrs

the Btg Etght Conference htle
outnghl and the trtp to Mtanu
NC\'' Year's Day.
If Oklahoma wms, lite
Sooners will he Nebraska for
the league championship and
ta ke the lrtp to Florida.
STARKVILLE, Mtss
(UP!) - Ron Polk, NCAA
Baseball Col!ch of Ute Year m
1973 at Georgia Southern
College, was named head
baseball coach Thursday at
Mtssissippi ~ate University.
Polk, 31, succeeds Junmy
Bragan who restgned last
, week to accept a JOb under
former teammate Alex
Grammas or lhe Mtlwaukee
Brewers

given strmg of lights was
dangerous.
But before the first deputy
could go to work, the National
Ornament and l!:lectric Light
Omstmas Association Inc.,
which
represents
27
manufacturers and Importers, went to court.
It objected to the govern·
ment's sending "VIgilantes"
into the stores, a lawyer lor
the group said, and asked for
a stay against Ute program.
A federal judge In New
York told the commission the
program could go ahead but
that the deputies could use
neither the booklet nor the
prescrtbed test methOds in
the stores.
At that point, the commission called a halt to the
whole plan.
The agency is expected to
go to an appeals court wtUtin
the next few days to ask for
an end to the stay, so lt can
put the program into effect.
Meanwhile It Is relying on
mspections from its regional
offices. Those I nspectiOns
have produced several
reports of suspected defects,
mostly mvolving miniature
hghts unpqrted from the
Pactftc
'I

()HIO ATHLETIC
LEAGUE FOOTBALL STATISTICS
FINAL TEAM STATISTICS-OFFENSE
FIRST DOWNS SCR. PLAYS
PASSING
ruNT
Team
No. Avg. No. Avg. Cmp- T t TO No-Yds Avg
Athens
80 10 0 369 46 I 31 81 7 7 26 611 25.8
Galllpolts 17 9 6 368 46 0 34 68 9 7 25 773 30.9
Ironton
73 9.1 337 42 1 21 39 2 &lt;1 26 872 33 5
Jackson •108 13.5 x397 49.6 35-67 4 5 19-603 31 o
l~an
89 11 t 382 47.8 x36 74 10 2 26-922 x35.5
Me•gs
71 8 9 362 45 3 29 88 5 2 21 620 29 5
Waverly
48 6 0 335 41 9 26 102 7 1 31 984 31.7
Wellston
83 10.4 343 42 9 15 43 7 1 27 871 32.3
TOTAL OFFENSIVE YARDAGE
TEAM
RUSH AVG PASS AVE T AVG
Athens
1139 142 4 x6ll7 75 9 1746 218.'3
Gallipolis
1057 132 1 474 59 3 1531 191.4
Ironton
113t w 4 4~ 51 1 1540 192.5
Jackson
x1S04 188 0 5~ 63 6 x2013 251 6
logan
1273 159.1 460 57 5 1733 216 6
Me1gs
945 118 I 348 43 5 1293 161.6
Waverly
431
53.9 328 41 0 759 94.9
Wellston
1450 181 3 271 339 1721 215.1
FINAL TEAM STATISTICS-DEFENSE
FST. DOWNS SCR. PLAYS PASS
PUNT
No. Avg No. Avg. Cmp-T I TO No-Yds Avg
Team
Athens
x62 78 349 43 6 26-70 5 0 26 918 35.3
GallipoliS
69 86 357 446 27-71 8 1 30940 31.3
Ironton
68 8 5 340 425 37-86 6 2 29 828 28 6
Jackson
98 12.3 392 49 0 31-74 7 6 24 825 34 4
logan
82 10.3 394 49 3 29 74 8 3 25·775 31 0
Me•gs
92 11 .5 379 47.4 X24 65 7 9 19 538 K28.3
Wa\lerly
89 111 x338 423 2859 4 6 21660 314
Wellston
69 86 344 430 2563 6 2 27-832 308
TOTAL Q.EFENSIVE YARDAGE
TEAM
RUSH AVG PASS AVG T AVG
Athens
823 102.9 x306 38.3 1129 141 1
GallipoliS
1142 142 8 428 53.5 1570 196 3
Ironton
651 81 4 459 57.4 x1110 138 8
Jac)&lt;son
1358 169 8 489 611 1847 230 9
Logan
1238 154 8 469 58 6 1101 m 4
Meigs
1388 173.5 392 49 o 1180 222 5
Waverly
1451 181.4 541 67.6 1992 249 o
Wellston
897 109.9 322 40 3 1201 150 1
•-Team leader In each category (seven categories)
OFFENSE - Jackson 4, Logan 2, Athens 1
DEFENSE - Meigs 2. Ironton 2, Athens 2, Waverly 1
FINAL lND
'
lEADERS
Hubbard, L
25 382 2
RUSHING
Osborne, J
18 258 2
Yds C.r Avg. Wilson, G
16 310 5
854 164 5.2 S Thomas, Wav t6 176 I
Davls J
676 117 58
Saunders, G
t4 188 2
Peppers, L
KO RETURNS
Yds No TO
Peoples. Well
634 99 6. 4
391 11 2
Qvalls, M
582 125 4.7 Davis. J
282 15 o
Grey, Wel l
547 122 4 5 Peoples, Well
Magnotta, M
269 13 o
PASSING
231 11 0
Cmp-T I Yds TO Peppers, L
189 11 0
Conroy, J
35-67 4 509 5 Thomas, Wav
PUNT
RETURNS
Johnson, G 34-64 8 474 7
Yds No. TO
Smlfh. L
34-67 9 426 2
131 12 o
Chonko, A 31 81 7 607 7 Magnotta, M
82 t 1
Ander•' -.v. ·29 tis 5 348 · 2 Wilson , G
Walton,
A
76
9 0
· - - PUNTING
Hubbard, L
60 10 0
(14 or morel
50 11 0
Yds No Avg B Thomas, I
INTERCEPTIONS
Byers, L
504 14 36 0
No Yds TO
Kr&gt;ebel , I
718 22 35.4 Wilson, G
5 69 0
Patton. Well
871 27 32.3 Crawford, J
5 12 0
T. Oatley, Wav
984 31 31 7
I
3 58 I
Scarberry, G
567 18 31.5 Crockrell.
Pepper;,
L
3 35 0
RECEIVING
Hubbard, L
3 34 I
No. Tds TO Stewart,
M
3 2 0
1

I'

patitctpale tn two holiday
tournaments whtle last year
we played tn none/ he says
Bryant feels the current
team ts ·•the best over-all
group since I came here m
1971 "
The coach satd there ts
more depth and overall
quahly lhan on prevtous
Quaker teams he has
coached.
"What we lack ts that one
person lo domtnate the
boards If we can work
1

around that, we should field a
contendmg team "
Coach Lanham's probable
slarhng hneup mcludes 6-4 ,
JUniOr Jtm Noe and 6-5
sophomore Gtl Price at the
forward slots; Capt. Jtm
Stewart, 6-7 sent or at center,
Mac Barbee, 6-0 sophomore
and Paul Albanese, 6-0 senior
at lhe guard posiltons
Followtng Saturday's
contest, the Redmen wtll play
at Dyke College Monday
mght near Cleveland.

Long wait over
for the big 2
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
months of wattmg are over
for OhiO State and
Michigan-the "big two" of
the Btg Ten.
All the talk about Michigan
State, Wisconsin and lllmois
being contenders for this
year 's Big Ten tttle can agam
be lrud to rest as the conference's two super powers,
for Ute seventh tune m etght
years, meet head-to-head
Ssturday in Ann Arbor to
dectde the championship.
In the last eight years, only
in 1971, when the Wolverines
won an outnght title wtUt an
11-0 record, has this
tradttwnal season-ending
battle not decided the league
champion and Rose Bowl
representative.
The only difference Utis
year ts the loser of the game
gets quite a consolation
prtze-a trip to Miami and
Ute Orange Bowl against
either
Nebraska
or
Oklahoma.
Ohto State, I~ and rated
No. I, IS listed as a sevenpoint favorite over the fifthranked Wolverines (8·M),
who haven't lost m thetr
101,701-l!eat stadiwn In the
last 41 games, although :led
twtce Utts year by Stanford
and Baylor.
Despite the stadiwn's hsted
seating capacity, Ute all tune
record crowd for a college
football game, 105,223, could
be broken
Thousands and thousands
of words have been written
and spoken about Saturday's
nationally televiSed (I p.m.)
contest, but the most accurate probably came from
Ohio State asststant Ralph
Staub.
"We'U be prepared for
them and I'm sure they will
be prepared for us," Staub
declared.
"Th~ greatest thing we
have going for us Is our
seniors," Staub said. "Since
I've been here, I have not
seen
such
complete
dedication to a cause."
The Buckeye seniors, led
by Reisman winner Archie
:Griffin, Cornelius Greene,
Brian Baschnagel, Ted SmiUt
and others, have come close
to the national champtonship
before, only to have it
snatched from thetr grasp at
the last moment
This year, they realize that
two more wins and the long·
sought dream will come true.
And, although the Orange
Bowl would be nice, a fourUt
straight Rose Bowl would be
lDlprecedented.
Michigan, whtch got off to a
rocky start, tying two of Its

ftrst Utree games, has won
seven m a row, although
some have not been without a
scare.
Gordon Bell, a Troy, Ohio
nahve, is Ute Wolverines'
answer to Griffm and has
been called by Schembecher
the best back in the nation.
Another Ohioan, Rob Lytle
of Fremont, is the fullback,
although he wetghs less than
200 pounds, whtle freshman
Rick Leach has been the
quarterback since the start of
the season .
The Wolvermes lead the
Big Ten in both total offense
and defense, although Ohio
State tops both the scoring
and
scoring
defense
categories.
A~ked to compare thts
year's Michigan team to
others in Ute past, Coach
Woody Hayes said, "they are
always a good defensive
team. They have an exceptionally good offensive

GROVE CITY. Oh•o IUPI) Tony 's Tumble

ofi the heavy

favor•le at 3 5 odds, look the
lead on the far turn and held on
to bea t Darby Dee by a nose In
the featured S4 900 sodh allow

'~

10 p m

RAN DALL , Ohto
NORTH
IUPI) - Look Who's Here ,
w1th leadmg toc Key Anlonlo
Graell aboard, won the featured
allowance purse at Th tsfledown
Thursday by covermg the mile
tnl4135
1 Bel 1eve II was fSecond and
Aunt Todd was thtrd
The 3 year old winner re
turned S-4 60 S2 60 S2 20
The 6 4 5 trtfecta of Portance,
Teresa Bell and Mean Mama
was worth Sl 100 80 to the
holders of 35 ticke ts The S 2
da1ly double of Prtdes- Joe and
Pen and Sword pa1d Sl2 20
A crowd of 3,.469 wagered
$334 ,834

PBS

'I

team this year, but they've
kept the good defense. Thetr
offense ts more explosive
than other Michigan teams."
Defensive standouts in·
elude mtddle guard Tim
Davis of Warren, Ohio,
tackles Greg Morton of
Akron, and Jeff Perlinger,
wolfman Don Dufek and
linebackers Calvm O'Neal
and Dave Devich.
Although Michtgan holds a
39-27~ edge over Ohio State in
the all-time series, the
Buckeyes are up 15-8-1 m
Hayes' 24 games against tbe
Wolverines.
Who IS going to Win ?
"The team which makes
the fewest mistakes," Staub
believes.

&amp;ROW'S
STEAK
HOUSE

•

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Horne of
the Fabulous

Cash

"

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delivered

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MEAT - Turkey &amp; Dressing, Roast Beef,
Flounder Fish, Ham, Hamburger Steak .
VEGETABLES - Lima Beans, Brocolll,
Noodles, Potatoes (sweet, mashed, home
fries).
SALAD- Cranberry, tossed, slaw, cottage
cheese.
PIE -

Pumpkin &amp; Cherry.
CLOSED THANKSGIVING

Sunday, Nov. 23, Hrs. 8: 30·2: 00
Weekdays 6:00-8:30
Ph. 949-2515 Racine, Ohio
3rd St.

8 pm
A1BC pre sents "Amertca ,
YOIJ're On" Toptcal comedy
On NBC, The Inv iSibl e Man
gets caug ht m a small town
speed trap
On CBS, RhOda Is charmed
by .. next door nelghbor V1vtan
Vanc e, and Mother Ida feel s
thrtatened
PBS presents " W~y Me?"
Report
on
breast
cert~er ,
followed on manv ste.Hbrt1 'With
l1ve call '" program 'ilji'H~d by
phystctans , nurses and publ ic
' heallh offietals
a 30 p.m .
~hyii1S is on CBS
9 p. m
On A ll 1n the Family CBS,
Arch1e and Mtke f ight ov er the
11
corn mg baby's rel tg1on -

any

On PB S, Woman AIJve F ilm
by Vtc Los1ck, 'Four Men from
Oregon '
blues s1nger Novel
Ia Nelson
Sylv 1a Port er on
wor k1 ng worn en
On ABC, "The Academy
Presents Oscar's Greatest
H1ts' Mustcal nu mber s from
20 years of Academy Award
telecasts Jack Lemmon 1S host
Among th e 17 performers
Louts Armstrong , L1Za Mmnellt ,
Mae West
On NB C. Joe Forresfer uses
widow Rosemary Forsyth to get
at her broth er 1n law , who may
be a narcc:H1cs smuggler
CBS lnqutry
" Th e Assas
~tns," 1 Part l
Exam1nes th e
murders of President John F
Kennedy and Sen Robert F
Kennedy
(Part 2 will b~
broadcast Wednesday )
On Woman, PB S, ' Ststers tn
C r 1 m e"
F r~da
Adler,
cnm 1nologlst discusses crtme
comm1 1ted by women
II 30 p m
ABC Mystery "AI ten Lover"
His name 1S Marc he's from
another d1mens1on and he
appea r s on a TV screen m front
of Kate Mulgrew , wtth Pernell
Roberts and John Ventantonto
U S D1stnc t Judge Sam uel
Cont1 ruled that M1ss Moore, a
45 year old former FBI tnfor
mant, 1s able to ass1st lawyers
M1ss
prepare her defense
Moore underwent several weeks
of psych1alnc testmg In San
Diego followmg her arrest Sept
22 out si de !he St Franets Hotel,
where a shot was flred at Ford
as he walk ed to hts wa1ttng
ltmousme The shot mtssed
Dr Jack Eardley, chief at the
psych1atnc department at the
federal med1cal ractllly al
Spnngfleld Mo , and Dr Karl
Menninger of the Menn1nger
both
Clin1c m Topeka , Kan
test1fled that they fell the
defendant was competent
Menn1nger satd Mtss Moore
" does
have
a reasona ble
under standmg of the nature of
th e charges agamst her and 1s
able to ass1st her attorneys "
NBC Ton tght Show Mclean
Stevenson IS guest host to
Muhamm51d
Alt and
Nett
Sed aka
CBS Mov1e IS "Banacek The
Van1sh1ng Chaltec ' Last seen
m the Boston Museum

WEDNESDAY
6 30 p.m.
Book Beat PBS "L 1fe Goes
to the Movtes ," edf ted by Davrd
Scherman

8pm

NBC atrs " Prowlers of the
Everglades " A look at the
an1mat tnhabttants
On ABC When Thtngs Were
Roll en
On CBS Tony Orlando and
Dawn Guests Ruth Buzz1 and
Roy Clark
PBS pr esen ts The Tr• blll
Eye ' Across the Fronller s •
What happens when trrbal art
li nd European 1nfluence meet?
What tS alrpor1 arP
8 30 p m
NBC presents "The Moon
Spmners" Hayley Mills , travel
lng w tth aunt Joan Greenwood
on Crete, meets John McEnery,
who 's accused of a Jewel
robbery . w1fh Irene Pappas
and Et r Wa llach
9pm
Cannon is on CBS Dean
Stockwe ll , charged wtth kdhng
a lerrorlst , becomes a hero 10
h•s fa ther Gen Morgan Wood
ward
";. On A BC Bllretta
r On PB S. Great Performan
ce\ Tcha1kowsky's Fourth
Symphony Leonard Bernstem
conducts the New Yor" Ptuthar
mon 1c
10 p.m
CBS lnqu1ry
' The Assas
sms.' Part 2 Exammatton of
the killings of Pres 1den t Kenne
dy In Dallas, 1963 and Sen
Robert Kennedy In Los An
oeles, 1968
On ABC Sto!!lrsky lind Hutch
" Terror on the Docks "

ABC football
Ptltsburg h
Steelers at Houston Oilers.
PBS presents " Memories of
On PBS. Say Brother " Ca
Prince Albert Hunt ," folk !au rlbbean " A VtSII to St Cro1x.
music1an (R )
V I
'Conoresstonal Rap ' with
NBC movte " Or , Zhivago" Rep Ralph Metcalfe, DIll
11965) part 2 based on BCJr ts
ll , lD p m.
Pasternak's ' novel of love and
NBC Tonlght show McLean
conscience '" Ru.!lsia from 1903 Stevenson Is guest host to
IO 1943
comedienne Liz Torres
9: 30p.m .
ABC movte
" The Nfg ht
Maude is on CBS Vlvtan Sta lker " Is there 11 vampire tn
returns from a med ita ti On spll Las Vegas? Could anyone teiP
diHermined to be more open Reporter Darren McGav1n
w1th Ar thur , but tie won ' t share lh1nks so Wtth Srmon Oakland,
his troub les - espec1ally thai Carol Lynley Larry L1nvtll e
he may have lost S18.000 to a
CBS Movfe " The Doberman
swi ndler
Gang ' Dogs bile bank
On Realtdades, PBS. a day In
the hazardous l 1fe of an Illegal
TH U R SOA Y ( Thank5g1vlng )
allen family
the poetry of
9 a.m.
Pablo Neruda
a look at
CBS All American Thanks
Ch1CMO farm workers
giving Parade" Highlights of
10 p m
parades In Oelroll Honolulu,
CBS has Med1cal Center
New York, Philad elphia a nd
Senior cll iz.ens demand beller Toron to
condil tons, hold the ir rest home
10 a.m.
dtrector hostage
NBC has the .49th annual
" Macy s Thanksgtvtng" Day
II :30 p m
Parad e "
NBC has th e Ton ig ht Show
12 : 30 p.m
McLean Ste venson tS guest host
CBS hlls footbell Los An
to Kareem Abdul Jabbar and
getes Rams vs Detro 1t Lions .
Or Joyce Broth ers
from Metropolitan Sl lldlum
CBS Mov1e
" Hitchh ike I "
Ct orl s Lea chman picks up Pontiac , M1ch
NBC presents "A Man for All
M1 chael Brandon, a young
Seasons " ( 1966) . starring Paul
murderer ; w ith Sherry Jack
Scofield and Robert Shaw In the
son ,
dra rrye of Sir Thomas More 's
defian ce at K !no Henry v Ill
TUESDAY
Also stars Wendy H1ller , Leo
6:30 p m
PBS airs Getltn' Over IOn McKe rn , Orson Welles
3: 30 p.m
Welgt11J How to lose we1ght
NBC hlls football
Buffalo
without ktl!ing yourself
BII!S at St LOUIS Card tnats
8 pm
6. 30 p. m.
NBC airs Mov in' On " Please
PBS airs Gelttn' Over (On
Don' t Talk to I he Drtver ''
Sonny and W1ll rescue bus FOOd)
1 p m.
passengers and Injured driver
PBS has Bl ack Perspeclivc
alter a blowout end get pinned
down by a sntper fi lmed near on the News
p.m.
Atlanta
NBC presents "Liv ing Free, "
ABC t1as Happy Days Fonzie
Introduces 'Sticks' Downey to sequel to "Born Free" George
lind Joy Adamson help three
the gang w!th mixed results he'S "c olored " Fea tur es John tt oo ClJbS , born to domesticated
Elsa learn to 11ve in the Kenya
Antt1ony Batley
wild erne&amp;s
&amp;y DONALO B. THACKREt
On CBS. The Wellons " The
~AN FRANCISCO I UP II - A Tt1anksglvlng Story" A m tt
1
federal judge ruled tOday tt1at ecc:ldent blurs John Boy's vi
SMa Jane Moore ts mentally sian and threatens his fu ture
competent to stand tr ia l on (R l
c~liroes
of
attempltng
to
Barney Miller Is on ABC
anasslnate Pres ident Ford
fight ing an endless rainstorm
~n Good Times, CBS, Florid&amp; that may collapse the ceiling ,
PBS has
The
Romantic
Plakets a supermarket after
th!fY sell her rotten meat The Rebellion The English pa inter
Turner . Part 2 (RJ
mdnager has her arrested
8•30 p m
On PBS, " Hannukah "
PBS alrs Classtc Theatre
•
8. 30pm
has Consumer Surv iva l Preview The Humanities 1n
Art Tontgh t, a preview ot
Ki~ Tonight. " Here 's to ~vour
He11th
A Look at Med 1cat " Trelawney of th e 'Wells"' by
Sir Arthur Wing Pinero A look
Insurance " &lt;R l
llJ1 ABC Welcome Back, a1 the Vic torian theater
On The Rocks, ABC. Fuentes
Kofler
" Barbarino's Girl "
VInnie gels romantic about his has a new roommate - the
tutor, Helatnt Lembeck , and once Honorable Judoe Sorrell
Boo~e . Wt"\0 sent him up
t e~s a rlbbmg from fl'1e others
,
9 p. m ,
,
9 p.m
1
PBS
airs
Classic Theetre ,
R&lt;BS has the t~scent of Man
" WOrld Within World " Ttie The Humanit ies In Art Tonight,
"T relawney of the 'Wells'" Sir
OtCJill ( R I
Arthur Wing Pinero's satiric
Police Women . NBC. Sot
Rose Trelawney
Crowley Is suspended after 1'1e melodrama
accidentally kitts B teen age wants to leave the stage and
marry Into high society, lind
robllery suspect
On ABC The Rookie, frets abOut 1t a great deal
Clumsy rookte becomes 'a hero Stars John Alderton, Elaine
Tit'(IOr, Elizabeth Seal
by accident

1S my op1n10n that she does
have 1h~l I (eel that she 1S
competen! to stand trial '
A lt er' hearing arguments
from the defense Cont1 r efu sed
to delay Miss Moore's tnal and
ordered II to begin as scheduled
Dec 15
Eardley sa1d " the record
shows !hat tn the past she
perhaps had some pertods of
emo tt onal turmo1l ," bul satd tt
dtd not affect his op 1n1on
About 50 60 persons were
present m the cou rtroom Mtss
Moore , the mother of a 9 year
old boy wore the same red
white and blue striped stacks
she has worn tn prev1ous court
appe,. rances
The Ntn th U S Court of
Appeals has ruled that in spite
of the r equt re ment of the
federal Speedy Tnat Act that
!nat must beg tn Within 90 days
ltme spent on
ot arrest
psychtatrlc exam malton of Mtss
Moore need not be counted If 1t
leaves lnadequa!e ttme to
prepare a defense
In sett1ng the Dec 15 trtal
date
Cont1 sa1d he was
co mpel led to proceed by the
act 's r equ1rements
ABC has NCAA football'
Georgia vs Georgia Tech
10 p.m
NBC atrs 'Socia l Securtty How Secure'l " " a system 1n
deep f1nanctal
trouble
Robert Rogers, producer
CBS presents ' Steve and
Eydie 'Our Love tS Here to
Stay " Stev e La wrence and
Eyd1e Gorme, w1th Gene Kelly,
perform a solid hour of George
Gershwin songs Among the 30
selecttons
"A Foggy Day"
Ot Thee 1 S1ng &lt;Baby) ,"
' Th ey Clln't~~o Tllke That Away
From Me " ~
11 p.m
On PB S, Godspell Goes to
th e Plymouth Plantat1on for
wtlh
Henry
Thanksgiving ,'
Steel e Commager { R l
11·30 p m
NBC Tont ght sbow wi1h guest
host Mclean 5"tevenson and
Charles Nelson ~e!lly
CBS Mo,ne 1S 'Showboat"
(1951) , starnng Howard Keel ,
Ava Gardner , Kathryn Gray
son Based on the mus1ca1 by
Jerome Kern and Oscar Ham
merstetn II , songs rnclude
"Bi ll " ' 01' Man R1'11er " From
Edna Ferber 's novel
12 IS p m
Longstreet tS on ABC Extor
tl onrst Barry Nelson sets bomb,
then has heart a !lack
FRIDAY
2·30 p.m .
ABC has NCA A footba ll
Texas at Texas A&amp;M
8 p.m .
NBC presents '' Wtn n te the
Pooh and Ttgger Too " The
den 1zens of the 'hundred aker
wood have a problem how to
cure T 1ger from the annovlnq
hab1l of bounc 1ng on all hts
frt ends (he ltkes to bounce)
Sebast 1an Cabot narrates. Sterl
•ng Holloway provides the votee
of Pooh , based on A A M ilne's
characters
On CBS, Roy Clark hosts the
"Country Mus1c Htl Parade,'
fea tur ing performances of the
top 3 coun try songs of the
week , a medley of Clark's
major h1ts and "monster " htl
songs from the past, from the
Grand Ole Opry , Nashv1lle
PBS airs Washi ngton week tn
Rev1ew
ABC has college footba ll

UCLA

vs USC

8· 30 p m.
CBS airs M A S H Col Potter
tries to cu rb a fever epldemtc
by assign ing Mal Burns to rl!!t
cont ro l
PBS has Wall Street week
" Eckstein on Economy,'' w1th
Otto Eckstetn , pr eSident ot
Data Resourc es
On ChtCO and the Man , NB C,
Ed meets h is 'sec r et love '
Stl ent !1Im st ar Carmel Myers
9 p

m.

On CBS , Hawa ii Five o
Cr1me writer James Olson
dtscovers a body m1ssmg lor
seven years and brands the
F1ve 0 un1t •ncompeten t
NB C has The Rockford Files
Rockford gets framed '" a
small town , scrtpl bv Gordon
Dewson
10 p.m
On NBC Poli ce Story " L11t le
soy Lost " Detecttve Robert
For ster, strugglmg to keep the
love of htS son, IS asstgned to
ftnd the young boy of a cou pl e
who don' t care tf he returns
Barnllby Jones Is on CBS
AdOpted he1ress Trtsh Stewart
WIShes to fi nd her real mother ,
Ei leen Brennan says she's the
one Barney rs doubtful
11 30 p m
The Tonight Show tS on NBC
Guest host Mclean Stevens,.,
w1th Marvin Hamllsch and Th e
5th Dimension

ABC

special "The Playboy

Bunny of the Year Pagean t,''
w1th host John Davidson . Charo
and 22 bunny hopefuls (One of
the iudges ts Groucho Marx l
Barb1 Benton sings " Brass
Knuckles" The winner gels
crowned by Hugh Hefner ( R)
CBS mov ie
'The Patsy"
{1964)
Bellboy Sfanley Bell
(Jerry Lewis&gt; tS franstormed
Into a recording star, then
abandoned , with Peter Lorre,
Kee nan Wynn

!ATURDAY

I2 .lO p.m .

ABC has football the Army
Navy game, from Philadelph ia

4pm

ABC has college football
Alllbllma vs
Auburn, from
Birmingham , Ala
4:30 p.m.
CBS Spon s Spectacular 'Su
perskllles / ' champ1on figure
skaters perform tn an Ol ymp tc
fund event. from Mlldlson
Sq uare Garden. New York
1 p.m .
PBS has Firing Ltne, wtlh
William Buc:kley
8 p.m.
CBS airs The Jefffersons
On ABC. Sa turday Night Ltve
with HOWllrd Cosell
The International Anlma'tlon
Festival on PBS features ll
James Thurber story, a bum
bllng magicllln, and danc 1ng
geometric forms
On NBC, EmergencY' Doctor
bitten by calftsh, and a patien t
wttt1 sealed eyelids lhe spat
tert~d glue on his fa ce)
1.30 p.m.
Doc is on CBS Mr Goldman
doesn 't
want
e
specialist
removing his gall stones , he
wants Doc Bogert, who mey not
be up to It
9 p.m .
Mary Tyler Moore Is on CBS
S W A T IS on ABC Gang
leader threatenS to blow
harbor
and
kitl
sctentis
F
eatures Dlana Muldaur as
"a ttra ctive Nobel prize Winning
scientist Kele Darby," taken
hostage by her lormer boy
friend , the Qang leader
NBC fT\Ovie " NIOht FIIQht
from Moscow" ( 1973 )
Es
plonage, assassination, trea$00
CIA vs KGB Stars Henry
FOnda Yul Br~nner .
Asked by the [lldgelf she hos 0 CBSt·! p m
the ability to asstst her
n
'
Bob Newhart 's
aftorneys, Eardley replied "It ~i~'rer , Martha Scott , comes '.O

e

~.........M . . . . . . .MM. . . . . . ..._~. . . . . . ..._~. . . . . . .M . . . .' " ,,'"

'

7·30 p.m.

On PB S, Lowell Thomas
Remembers " 1921 '
8pm
On ABC , The Sue Mtll ron
Dollar Man battles murderous
moonsh1ners
On CBS, Cher welcomes
Davtd Bowte and Tony Randall
PB S has an Evening at
Sym phony Tontghl three noc
turnes by Debussy - Nuages,
Fetes , and
S1 renes
Also.
Prokoftev's Symphony No 3
Claudra Abbado conducts !he
Bos ton Symphony Orchestra
Lorna Cooke de Veron leads the
Conservalory
New
England
Chorus
, 9 p m
A BC moyie 'The Legend of
Va'lentmo" Story of S1lent
sc reen star Rudolph Valent1no
stars Franco Nero, Suzan ne
Plesherte , Yvette M1m leux
PBS has Masterp1ece Th ea
tre Noronous woman
'S ue
cess " Aurore lives m Parts
W1ti1
lover Jutes San deau ,
clo th es
and
weers
men's
firSt
novel ,
publishes her
' lnd1ana "a n tnstant success
NB C Mystery McClOUd 1n
Thr ee Guns for New York "
Three g u n m e n ktdnap
McCloud's 91rltnend
On CBS Ko 1a k Is t1ampered
by federal agents while looktng
mto the murder of Robert
Aida 's bookkeeper
10 p m
&lt;ln CBS, Bron k. lfnds new
clUes to the murder of his wife
rwo years ago
11 p m
~es atrs Ku p's Show

MONDAY

Center Piece

With A
CANDLE

review
On Swiss Family Rob 1nson ,
ABC Karl IS b1tten by a Chimp
that may have a flllal disease
On CBS, Three For the Road
John and Endy unwrltmgly help
heiress Etyssa Davalos escape
Mer father 's bodyguards
. NBC presents "Wil ly Wonka
and the Chocolale Factory"
(1971), musical fantasy srarrtng
Gene Wilder and Jack Alber t

son

Special

•5,95

Wh tt e slavery

a nee race for 2 year olds at
Beulah Park Thursday
Ktss 'n Nancy sh owed
The w1nner , ndden by Clifton
Schw1ng, " covered the
Sl)(
furlon gs I n 1 13 2 5 and
return ed SJ 40, S2 80 and S2 60
The 53 dally double combtna
!ton of Mtsty Lagoon and Level
was worth $12 2{)
A crowd of 2,800 'wagered
$292,289

Thanksgiving

Only

Wolfpen
News Notes

How they rm

'

"

,,"

eas,

"

'""'

"'
".,

On

CI!S hos Switch Pete orrlves

to ptck up his dale and
discovers she's been sold Into

ur

IU p m.
On CBS. Carol Burnett w1th
The Po1nter S1sters
On PB S Sound5tage ' Her bie
and Chtck ' Jazz musrcrans
Herb1e Hancock
(wlfh 1he
Headhunters ) and Chick Corea
(with Return to For ever ) p lay
separately together and 1n a
tnbute to Mtles Dav1s
ABC Closeup on ' The Con
sum er Offens1ve Who Speaks
for the Consumer? " What has
Ra lph Nader done for you
l~te l y?
Wrdten by M1chae l
Joseloff
1130 pm
NBC has NCAA baske tball
The cham pton Bru ms of UCLA
defend t he~ r title agamst the
Hoos1ers of tnd1a na Untv ersily,
from the St Lours Arena

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilsor
and three sons of Sissonville,
W. Va and Mr and Mrs
Wayne Wilson and famtly
were guests of Mrs. Erma
Wtlson on Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush,
Mr and Mrs. Herbert Roush
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs Walter McDade at
Troy
Mrs Alice Balser ts conftned to Veterans Memonal
HospiUtl. Her son, Carroll
Balser, Mansfield, vistled her
Sunday.
Miss Vicki Ables of Canal
Winchester spent Monday
and Tuesday wtlh her
parents, Mr and Mrs Jack
Ables and Paul .
Mrs. Herbert Powell of
Flortda ca lled on Mrs
EhzabeUt Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Norris
vtstted Mrs Mtldred Gathers
and famtly tn Columbus
Monday and Tuesday.
Mr . and Mrs. Hoyt
Ferguson of Point Pleasant
spent Sunday wtth Mrs. Pearl
Noms. Other VISitors were
Mr and Mrs. Fern Noms,
Mrs . Florence Adams, Mrs
PhyllisO'Brten, Mr. and Mrs
Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs
Darrell Norris and Tracy,
Herschel and Clarence
Norris, and Mrs. Herschel
Roush .
Mr and Mrs Paul Davts of
Parkersburg were dtnner
guests Sunday of Mrs Ada
Noms, Mr . and Mrs. Erwtn
Gloeckner, Mr and Mrs
Davtd Gloeckner and
daughter, Mrs . Rtchard
Norris and daughter of
Carroll were also Sunday
guests tn the Gloeckner
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Htll,
Mr. and Mrs Darrell Norris
and Tracy, Mrs Dolly Wolfe
spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs Robert Casper at
Columbus
Mr . and Mrs Raymond
Teaford of Chester VISited
Mr and Mrs. Cloist Badgely
Sunday
Mrs Eula Wolfe and Mrs.
John Ord and daughters were
Parkersbur g vtst to r s
Saturday.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs Edna Roush of Racme
spent Thursday through
Friday wtth Mr and Mrs.
Russell Roush .
Mtss Mary Findley, Sharon
and Ctndy Roush, spent
Thursday through Sunday
wl th the Rev and Mrs
Waller Bickacson and
daughter, Sharon at New
Brtghton, Pa
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewts
of Chiton spent Wednesday
evemng wtUt Mr. and Mrs
Russell Roush.
Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Styer of Waterford spent
Saturday evenmg w!Ut Mr
and Mrs. Herbert Sayre.

BIIJ, AND JANET STOBAUGH

Evangelist coming SWiday
Wilham F Stobaugh wtll present a gospel concert of
mustc at the Middleport Church of Chrtst Sunday at 7 30
p.m. A widely traveled evangehst and gospel smger of
Cincmnall, he began hts smgmg career 1&gt;1th a
professwnal choir at age 10. He has sung on radto and
television, recorded several albums, etghl-tracks, and
cassettes, and has been travehng as an evangelist since
1970.
A graduate of the Cincinnati Bible Semmary, he has
worked wtUt the Chnsttan Restoration Assoctalwn smce
1971. He has held mtmstrtes m Mtchtgan, Ohio, and
Kentucky, and was a member of and spokesman for the
Gospelatres Quartet mne years
He and his wtle Janel wtll be at the Mtddleport Church
for just this one serVIce, then return next April 4-9 for a
revival. George Glaze, minister, mVltes everyone to thts
presentation of the gospel m music.

Mutual Protective

Insurance Co.

P.O. Box 4
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
446-1875

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Name ________ _
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Cit¥---- ---Zlp. __
Phone ________ _

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Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of

:Deposit.
Sl.OOO.OO
Minimum .
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.Payable Quarterly.
A substant ial penelly Is
mvoked on all ctrltf1cate
accounts Wi thdrawn prior
to the date of mlltUrtiY

Meip Co. blch

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The Athens Counh
Sntngl &amp; Loan co
second St
Pomeroy. Ohio

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Seed and Milling
HEADeUARTERS

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Fencing - Baler and Binder Twint • Sprtya •
Gates.

FANrY FUNNY MONI!:Y at first glance maybe. bul
tl turns out to be something entirely dtfferent on close
Inspection, as Dean Warfel is dOing. Ctrcml boards for
closed-drcutt TV surveillance cameras m banks, pnsons,
atrports, apartments and factories are mass prmted at
Lancaster, Pa., plant of RCA Electro.Opttcs and Oe\1ces

ATLANTA (UP!) - Mack
Herron, a $-foot~ running
back who had an outstanding
season at New England m
1974, Thursday signed as a
free agent wiUt lhe Atlanta
Falcons.
Herron, 27, had been placed
on waivers by the Patrtots.
Last year he rushed for 824
yards, caught 38 passes for
474 yards, returned 35 punts
for 517 yards and returned 28
kickoffs for 629 yards In 1973
he led the NFL in ktckoff
return yardage when he
returned 41 for 1,092 yards.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

Pnmeroy

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For ftee tnfDrmciilon
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Mr and Mrs Wtlltam
Boyce of Columbus and
Bcilha Russell were Monday
evenmg guests of M1 and
Mrs Harley .Johnson
MI and Mrs Lovell Blake
of Charleston, W Va were
Tuesday dmner guests of Mr
and Mrs Harley Johnson and
Oli o John son They also
vt stlcd wtth Mrs J R
Murphy, Mrs
Howard
Thoma and MI s Harley E
Johnson and Mrs Charley
Smttll
Mr and Mrs Char ley
Smtih "ere Monday busmess
visitors tn Columbus Whtle
Iheie they vtstled wtth Mrs
Ssndy Randall and Kelly of
Bnggs Road
Mr and Mrs Harley T
Johnson celebrated lhetr 601h
weddtn g anmversary Sunday Mr and Mrs Ho11ard
Thoma, Mr and Mrs Harley
E ,lohnson, Tamm), Cheryl
and Terry, Donna Ltttle, Mrs
J R Murphy, Peggy, Carmel , Barbara , Mr and Mt s.
John Downs, Mr and Mrs
John E Murphy and Chns,
Mr and Mrs Larry Barr,
Davtd and Mtchelle attended
and brought Cill'ered dtshes
for dtnner Mrs Larry Barr
baked a three layer cake wtlh
60th weddmg decoratiOns for
dessert Ltncoln Russell was

an afternoon v1s1tor
Mr and Mrs Wtlliam
Boyce of Columbus were
11eekend vtstlors of Mrs
Bertha Russell
Mr . Lmcoln Russell was a
dtnner guest o[ Mr and Mrs.
Omton Gt lkey of Albany on
Sunday.

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MRS. MILLARD VAN METER

Middleport

PH. 992-2039

POMEROY

�....
4- The Dmly Sentinel. Mtddleport-Pomero~ , 0, Frtday. Nov 21 1975

Redmen host Quakers
in non-league battle

RICK JOHNSON , son of Mr and Mrs
Harry Johnson, Rt 3, Pomeroy. He is a jumor
_center for the Metgs Marauders He ts ftve
feel eight mches Utll and weighs 130 pounds.

Coach Art Lanham's Rw
Grande College Redmen wtll
host Coach John Bryant's
vtsthng Wtlmmgton College
Quaket s tn a non-league
basketball contest at L)ne
Center Saturday Tipoff hme
IS 8 p m.
II wtll be Rto's second
outmg of the 1975-76 campaign The Redmen pohshed
off Wtlberforce 92-69 m thetr
opener last Saturday ntghl It
wtll be the Quakers' season
opener
Last year, at Wtlmmgton,
6-7 seniOr Fletcher Yates
scored on a drtvmg layup at
MARK MITCH, Metgs Marauder
the buzzer lo gtve the
sophomore guard ts five feet, etght inches Utll
Quakers a thrtlhng 83-81
and wetghs 140 pounds. He ts Ute son of Mr.
tr iumph over the Redmen
and Mrs. Gene Milch, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
Gone from lhat 11-14 squad
of a year ago are Yates and
Larry Mann. Yates tossed m
13 agamst Rw last winter
whtle Mann dumped m 21
Returmng, however, ts
Capt Bob Deye, the only
semor on lhts year 's squad
Deye, a guard, rtpped the
nels for 24 pomts agamst lhe
Redmen last year
Members of the tough
Hooster-Buckeye Conference,
Wtlmmgton wtll nol have lhe
services of Terry Ludban lhts
year, leavmg Bryant wtlh
three btg holes to fill with the
gradualton of Yates and

Mann Ludban has gtven up
the spor t accordtng to
Bryant
The WI!mm glo n mentor
hopes to 1111 the vacan t slots
wtlh a combinatiOn of ftve
players, tncludmg three
Junior college transfers
The transfers are Mtke
Levangie, from Lees Junior
College, In Kentucky, Chff
Wa shmglon, from Ahce
Lloyd C~llege, also m Kentucky , and Irwm Shoulders,
from Greenville Juntor
College, m South Carolina
All are about 6-5.
Two returnees who lVIII vte
for the mstde slots are letterman Charles Taylor and
JV starter Bryan Btckerstaff
"We wtll be oulstzed inSide," Bryant explains "and
we wtll have to work to keep
opponents away from the
boards." ·
Bestdes Deye, re turmng at
the guard spots, Bryant also
has Bob Blanton, a Morrow,
Ohw, product who played at
Ltltle Mtamt High
The
Quakers face a
demanding schedule lhts
year, accordmg lo Bryant
"Our schedule ts tougher
lhts year , but we wtll get
more playmg expenence lhts
lime around because we
1

SEOAL grid banquet
Dec. 4, at Iron'ton

BRI!:NT STANLEJY, Meigs Marauder
sophomore guard. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs J Fred Stanley, Rt. 2, Albany He Is six
feet tall and weighs 170 pounds.

Ironton wtll host the 27th
annual Southeastern Ohto
League All-Star football
banquet for the ftfth consecullve year on Thursday,
Dec 4
Thts was announced
WHEELER THOMAS, son of Mr and Wednesday mght durmg the
Mt·s. James A Thomas, Rt. I, Mtddleport, ts a fall meeting of the
Juruor guard for the Metgs Marauders He Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League held at Jackson High
stands stx feet tall and weigiis 155 pounds
School
The banquet will be held m
the Ironton High School
cafelerta, begmmng at 6 30
p.m. Interested parents and
fans may purchase tickets at
thetr respecllve htgh schools
in the etghl-team conference.
In other matters, league
o[ftcers recogmzed Ironton as
the 1975 SEOAL grtd
champiOn and Jackson was
recogmzed as the 1975
SEOAL golf champwn
League teams will play a
double round robin schedule
in baseballagam next sprtng.
The 1976 SEOAL track meet
will be held May 5, at Athens,

beglnmng at 4 p m
Offictals discussed the
possibility of movmg the
league wrestling match from
Feb 21 back to Feb. 20, but no
aclton was taken. Ironton will
host thts year's match
Metgs Coach Charles
Chancey was authoriZed by
acltng prestdenl Ed Stewart
to draw up the 1976 etghth,
mnlh and reserve grid
schedules
Stewart, who prestded m
the absence of league
prestdent James N. M. Davts,
appomted the girls p!J1stcal
educallon director and coach
from
Jackson as a
representative of the league
to contact each school for a
representative to come up
wtth recommendations on
gtrls league for athletics The
recommendations will be
discussed during the next
league mee ltng, to be held
March 3, at 7 p m at Jackson
Htgh School.

Grill stats

197S SOUTHEASTERN

DAVE MILLER, Meigs Marauder junior
guard He stands ftve feet mne mches and
weighs !52 pounds. He is the son of Mrs. Jane
Miller, South Second Ave., Middleport.

BLAIN!!: QUALLS, Meigs Marauder
sophomore Utckle. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Qualls, Chester Road, Pomeroy.
He IS ftve feet ll inches tall and weighs 150
pou~ds .

Safety program is blocked
By MICHAEL J . CONLON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
government safety program
designed to seek out defective
Christmas tree lights before
conswners buy them this
season has been halted by
legal maneuvers by the
hghting mdustry.
The Industry protested
what it said was the use of
1
'vigilantes ~~
The Consume r Product

Ssfety CommisSion program
uwolved use of "conswner
deputies" - 500 to 600
volunteers who were to look
through store inventories and
tell retailers tf they had
potentially hazardous lights
on thetr hands.
They were to be armed wiUt
a booklet descnbmg hazards
and were authorized to use
certain tests \o demonstrate
to the retailers whether a

Big Eight grid title on line
NORMAl't, vKta. tUI"IJ Wtth the Oklahoma dynasty
shghtly shaken, the Nebraska
Cornhuskers will try to do
so me further damage
Ss lurday tn another ol thetr
bttlcrly-fougbt games to
dc'C tde the Big l!:tghl Conferen ce championship and a
spot m the Orange Bowl
The unde!ea ted and second' an ked Corn huskers wtll go
tnlo the conics! as a sltghlly
sut·prtstng four-potni un derdog to the stx!IH au ked
and once-beaten Sooners
A capactty crowd of more
than 70,000 wtll squeeze mto
Owen Fteid lor the contest
A win or a tie for Nebrask~
would give lhe Cornhuskcrs

the Btg Etght Conference htle
outnghl and the trtp to Mtanu
NC\'' Year's Day.
If Oklahoma wms, lite
Sooners will he Nebraska for
the league championship and
ta ke the lrtp to Florida.
STARKVILLE, Mtss
(UP!) - Ron Polk, NCAA
Baseball Col!ch of Ute Year m
1973 at Georgia Southern
College, was named head
baseball coach Thursday at
Mtssissippi ~ate University.
Polk, 31, succeeds Junmy
Bragan who restgned last
, week to accept a JOb under
former teammate Alex
Grammas or lhe Mtlwaukee
Brewers

given strmg of lights was
dangerous.
But before the first deputy
could go to work, the National
Ornament and l!:lectric Light
Omstmas Association Inc.,
which
represents
27
manufacturers and Importers, went to court.
It objected to the govern·
ment's sending "VIgilantes"
into the stores, a lawyer lor
the group said, and asked for
a stay against Ute program.
A federal judge In New
York told the commission the
program could go ahead but
that the deputies could use
neither the booklet nor the
prescrtbed test methOds in
the stores.
At that point, the commission called a halt to the
whole plan.
The agency is expected to
go to an appeals court wtUtin
the next few days to ask for
an end to the stay, so lt can
put the program into effect.
Meanwhile It Is relying on
mspections from its regional
offices. Those I nspectiOns
have produced several
reports of suspected defects,
mostly mvolving miniature
hghts unpqrted from the
Pactftc
'I

()HIO ATHLETIC
LEAGUE FOOTBALL STATISTICS
FINAL TEAM STATISTICS-OFFENSE
FIRST DOWNS SCR. PLAYS
PASSING
ruNT
Team
No. Avg. No. Avg. Cmp- T t TO No-Yds Avg
Athens
80 10 0 369 46 I 31 81 7 7 26 611 25.8
Galllpolts 17 9 6 368 46 0 34 68 9 7 25 773 30.9
Ironton
73 9.1 337 42 1 21 39 2 &lt;1 26 872 33 5
Jackson •108 13.5 x397 49.6 35-67 4 5 19-603 31 o
l~an
89 11 t 382 47.8 x36 74 10 2 26-922 x35.5
Me•gs
71 8 9 362 45 3 29 88 5 2 21 620 29 5
Waverly
48 6 0 335 41 9 26 102 7 1 31 984 31.7
Wellston
83 10.4 343 42 9 15 43 7 1 27 871 32.3
TOTAL OFFENSIVE YARDAGE
TEAM
RUSH AVG PASS AVE T AVG
Athens
1139 142 4 x6ll7 75 9 1746 218.'3
Gallipolis
1057 132 1 474 59 3 1531 191.4
Ironton
113t w 4 4~ 51 1 1540 192.5
Jackson
x1S04 188 0 5~ 63 6 x2013 251 6
logan
1273 159.1 460 57 5 1733 216 6
Me1gs
945 118 I 348 43 5 1293 161.6
Waverly
431
53.9 328 41 0 759 94.9
Wellston
1450 181 3 271 339 1721 215.1
FINAL TEAM STATISTICS-DEFENSE
FST. DOWNS SCR. PLAYS PASS
PUNT
No. Avg No. Avg. Cmp-T I TO No-Yds Avg
Team
Athens
x62 78 349 43 6 26-70 5 0 26 918 35.3
GallipoliS
69 86 357 446 27-71 8 1 30940 31.3
Ironton
68 8 5 340 425 37-86 6 2 29 828 28 6
Jackson
98 12.3 392 49 0 31-74 7 6 24 825 34 4
logan
82 10.3 394 49 3 29 74 8 3 25·775 31 0
Me•gs
92 11 .5 379 47.4 X24 65 7 9 19 538 K28.3
Wa\lerly
89 111 x338 423 2859 4 6 21660 314
Wellston
69 86 344 430 2563 6 2 27-832 308
TOTAL Q.EFENSIVE YARDAGE
TEAM
RUSH AVG PASS AVG T AVG
Athens
823 102.9 x306 38.3 1129 141 1
GallipoliS
1142 142 8 428 53.5 1570 196 3
Ironton
651 81 4 459 57.4 x1110 138 8
Jac)&lt;son
1358 169 8 489 611 1847 230 9
Logan
1238 154 8 469 58 6 1101 m 4
Meigs
1388 173.5 392 49 o 1180 222 5
Waverly
1451 181.4 541 67.6 1992 249 o
Wellston
897 109.9 322 40 3 1201 150 1
•-Team leader In each category (seven categories)
OFFENSE - Jackson 4, Logan 2, Athens 1
DEFENSE - Meigs 2. Ironton 2, Athens 2, Waverly 1
FINAL lND
'
lEADERS
Hubbard, L
25 382 2
RUSHING
Osborne, J
18 258 2
Yds C.r Avg. Wilson, G
16 310 5
854 164 5.2 S Thomas, Wav t6 176 I
Davls J
676 117 58
Saunders, G
t4 188 2
Peppers, L
KO RETURNS
Yds No TO
Peoples. Well
634 99 6. 4
391 11 2
Qvalls, M
582 125 4.7 Davis. J
282 15 o
Grey, Wel l
547 122 4 5 Peoples, Well
Magnotta, M
269 13 o
PASSING
231 11 0
Cmp-T I Yds TO Peppers, L
189 11 0
Conroy, J
35-67 4 509 5 Thomas, Wav
PUNT
RETURNS
Johnson, G 34-64 8 474 7
Yds No. TO
Smlfh. L
34-67 9 426 2
131 12 o
Chonko, A 31 81 7 607 7 Magnotta, M
82 t 1
Ander•' -.v. ·29 tis 5 348 · 2 Wilson , G
Walton,
A
76
9 0
· - - PUNTING
Hubbard, L
60 10 0
(14 or morel
50 11 0
Yds No Avg B Thomas, I
INTERCEPTIONS
Byers, L
504 14 36 0
No Yds TO
Kr&gt;ebel , I
718 22 35.4 Wilson, G
5 69 0
Patton. Well
871 27 32.3 Crawford, J
5 12 0
T. Oatley, Wav
984 31 31 7
I
3 58 I
Scarberry, G
567 18 31.5 Crockrell.
Pepper;,
L
3 35 0
RECEIVING
Hubbard, L
3 34 I
No. Tds TO Stewart,
M
3 2 0
1

I'

patitctpale tn two holiday
tournaments whtle last year
we played tn none/ he says
Bryant feels the current
team ts ·•the best over-all
group since I came here m
1971 "
The coach satd there ts
more depth and overall
quahly lhan on prevtous
Quaker teams he has
coached.
"What we lack ts that one
person lo domtnate the
boards If we can work
1

around that, we should field a
contendmg team "
Coach Lanham's probable
slarhng hneup mcludes 6-4 ,
JUniOr Jtm Noe and 6-5
sophomore Gtl Price at the
forward slots; Capt. Jtm
Stewart, 6-7 sent or at center,
Mac Barbee, 6-0 sophomore
and Paul Albanese, 6-0 senior
at lhe guard posiltons
Followtng Saturday's
contest, the Redmen wtll play
at Dyke College Monday
mght near Cleveland.

Long wait over
for the big 2
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
months of wattmg are over
for OhiO State and
Michigan-the "big two" of
the Btg Ten.
All the talk about Michigan
State, Wisconsin and lllmois
being contenders for this
year 's Big Ten tttle can agam
be lrud to rest as the conference's two super powers,
for Ute seventh tune m etght
years, meet head-to-head
Ssturday in Ann Arbor to
dectde the championship.
In the last eight years, only
in 1971, when the Wolverines
won an outnght title wtUt an
11-0 record, has this
tradttwnal season-ending
battle not decided the league
champion and Rose Bowl
representative.
The only difference Utis
year ts the loser of the game
gets quite a consolation
prtze-a trip to Miami and
Ute Orange Bowl against
either
Nebraska
or
Oklahoma.
Ohto State, I~ and rated
No. I, IS listed as a sevenpoint favorite over the fifthranked Wolverines (8·M),
who haven't lost m thetr
101,701-l!eat stadiwn In the
last 41 games, although :led
twtce Utts year by Stanford
and Baylor.
Despite the stadiwn's hsted
seating capacity, Ute all tune
record crowd for a college
football game, 105,223, could
be broken
Thousands and thousands
of words have been written
and spoken about Saturday's
nationally televiSed (I p.m.)
contest, but the most accurate probably came from
Ohio State asststant Ralph
Staub.
"We'U be prepared for
them and I'm sure they will
be prepared for us," Staub
declared.
"Th~ greatest thing we
have going for us Is our
seniors," Staub said. "Since
I've been here, I have not
seen
such
complete
dedication to a cause."
The Buckeye seniors, led
by Reisman winner Archie
:Griffin, Cornelius Greene,
Brian Baschnagel, Ted SmiUt
and others, have come close
to the national champtonship
before, only to have it
snatched from thetr grasp at
the last moment
This year, they realize that
two more wins and the long·
sought dream will come true.
And, although the Orange
Bowl would be nice, a fourUt
straight Rose Bowl would be
lDlprecedented.
Michigan, whtch got off to a
rocky start, tying two of Its

ftrst Utree games, has won
seven m a row, although
some have not been without a
scare.
Gordon Bell, a Troy, Ohio
nahve, is Ute Wolverines'
answer to Griffm and has
been called by Schembecher
the best back in the nation.
Another Ohioan, Rob Lytle
of Fremont, is the fullback,
although he wetghs less than
200 pounds, whtle freshman
Rick Leach has been the
quarterback since the start of
the season .
The Wolvermes lead the
Big Ten in both total offense
and defense, although Ohio
State tops both the scoring
and
scoring
defense
categories.
A~ked to compare thts
year's Michigan team to
others in Ute past, Coach
Woody Hayes said, "they are
always a good defensive
team. They have an exceptionally good offensive

GROVE CITY. Oh•o IUPI) Tony 's Tumble

ofi the heavy

favor•le at 3 5 odds, look the
lead on the far turn and held on
to bea t Darby Dee by a nose In
the featured S4 900 sodh allow

'~

10 p m

RAN DALL , Ohto
NORTH
IUPI) - Look Who's Here ,
w1th leadmg toc Key Anlonlo
Graell aboard, won the featured
allowance purse at Th tsfledown
Thursday by covermg the mile
tnl4135
1 Bel 1eve II was fSecond and
Aunt Todd was thtrd
The 3 year old winner re
turned S-4 60 S2 60 S2 20
The 6 4 5 trtfecta of Portance,
Teresa Bell and Mean Mama
was worth Sl 100 80 to the
holders of 35 ticke ts The S 2
da1ly double of Prtdes- Joe and
Pen and Sword pa1d Sl2 20
A crowd of 3,.469 wagered
$334 ,834

PBS

'I

team this year, but they've
kept the good defense. Thetr
offense ts more explosive
than other Michigan teams."
Defensive standouts in·
elude mtddle guard Tim
Davis of Warren, Ohio,
tackles Greg Morton of
Akron, and Jeff Perlinger,
wolfman Don Dufek and
linebackers Calvm O'Neal
and Dave Devich.
Although Michtgan holds a
39-27~ edge over Ohio State in
the all-time series, the
Buckeyes are up 15-8-1 m
Hayes' 24 games against tbe
Wolverines.
Who IS going to Win ?
"The team which makes
the fewest mistakes," Staub
believes.

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STEAMBOAT INN
MEAT - Turkey &amp; Dressing, Roast Beef,
Flounder Fish, Ham, Hamburger Steak .
VEGETABLES - Lima Beans, Brocolll,
Noodles, Potatoes (sweet, mashed, home
fries).
SALAD- Cranberry, tossed, slaw, cottage
cheese.
PIE -

Pumpkin &amp; Cherry.
CLOSED THANKSGIVING

Sunday, Nov. 23, Hrs. 8: 30·2: 00
Weekdays 6:00-8:30
Ph. 949-2515 Racine, Ohio
3rd St.

8 pm
A1BC pre sents "Amertca ,
YOIJ're On" Toptcal comedy
On NBC, The Inv iSibl e Man
gets caug ht m a small town
speed trap
On CBS, RhOda Is charmed
by .. next door nelghbor V1vtan
Vanc e, and Mother Ida feel s
thrtatened
PBS presents " W~y Me?"
Report
on
breast
cert~er ,
followed on manv ste.Hbrt1 'With
l1ve call '" program 'ilji'H~d by
phystctans , nurses and publ ic
' heallh offietals
a 30 p.m .
~hyii1S is on CBS
9 p. m
On A ll 1n the Family CBS,
Arch1e and Mtke f ight ov er the
11
corn mg baby's rel tg1on -

any

On PB S, Woman AIJve F ilm
by Vtc Los1ck, 'Four Men from
Oregon '
blues s1nger Novel
Ia Nelson
Sylv 1a Port er on
wor k1 ng worn en
On ABC, "The Academy
Presents Oscar's Greatest
H1ts' Mustcal nu mber s from
20 years of Academy Award
telecasts Jack Lemmon 1S host
Among th e 17 performers
Louts Armstrong , L1Za Mmnellt ,
Mae West
On NB C. Joe Forresfer uses
widow Rosemary Forsyth to get
at her broth er 1n law , who may
be a narcc:H1cs smuggler
CBS lnqutry
" Th e Assas
~tns," 1 Part l
Exam1nes th e
murders of President John F
Kennedy and Sen Robert F
Kennedy
(Part 2 will b~
broadcast Wednesday )
On Woman, PB S, ' Ststers tn
C r 1 m e"
F r~da
Adler,
cnm 1nologlst discusses crtme
comm1 1ted by women
II 30 p m
ABC Mystery "AI ten Lover"
His name 1S Marc he's from
another d1mens1on and he
appea r s on a TV screen m front
of Kate Mulgrew , wtth Pernell
Roberts and John Ventantonto
U S D1stnc t Judge Sam uel
Cont1 ruled that M1ss Moore, a
45 year old former FBI tnfor
mant, 1s able to ass1st lawyers
M1ss
prepare her defense
Moore underwent several weeks
of psych1alnc testmg In San
Diego followmg her arrest Sept
22 out si de !he St Franets Hotel,
where a shot was flred at Ford
as he walk ed to hts wa1ttng
ltmousme The shot mtssed
Dr Jack Eardley, chief at the
psych1atnc department at the
federal med1cal ractllly al
Spnngfleld Mo , and Dr Karl
Menninger of the Menn1nger
both
Clin1c m Topeka , Kan
test1fled that they fell the
defendant was competent
Menn1nger satd Mtss Moore
" does
have
a reasona ble
under standmg of the nature of
th e charges agamst her and 1s
able to ass1st her attorneys "
NBC Ton tght Show Mclean
Stevenson IS guest host to
Muhamm51d
Alt and
Nett
Sed aka
CBS Mov1e IS "Banacek The
Van1sh1ng Chaltec ' Last seen
m the Boston Museum

WEDNESDAY
6 30 p.m.
Book Beat PBS "L 1fe Goes
to the Movtes ," edf ted by Davrd
Scherman

8pm

NBC atrs " Prowlers of the
Everglades " A look at the
an1mat tnhabttants
On ABC When Thtngs Were
Roll en
On CBS Tony Orlando and
Dawn Guests Ruth Buzz1 and
Roy Clark
PBS pr esen ts The Tr• blll
Eye ' Across the Fronller s •
What happens when trrbal art
li nd European 1nfluence meet?
What tS alrpor1 arP
8 30 p m
NBC presents "The Moon
Spmners" Hayley Mills , travel
lng w tth aunt Joan Greenwood
on Crete, meets John McEnery,
who 's accused of a Jewel
robbery . w1fh Irene Pappas
and Et r Wa llach
9pm
Cannon is on CBS Dean
Stockwe ll , charged wtth kdhng
a lerrorlst , becomes a hero 10
h•s fa ther Gen Morgan Wood
ward
";. On A BC Bllretta
r On PB S. Great Performan
ce\ Tcha1kowsky's Fourth
Symphony Leonard Bernstem
conducts the New Yor" Ptuthar
mon 1c
10 p.m
CBS lnqu1ry
' The Assas
sms.' Part 2 Exammatton of
the killings of Pres 1den t Kenne
dy In Dallas, 1963 and Sen
Robert Kennedy In Los An
oeles, 1968
On ABC Sto!!lrsky lind Hutch
" Terror on the Docks "

ABC football
Ptltsburg h
Steelers at Houston Oilers.
PBS presents " Memories of
On PBS. Say Brother " Ca
Prince Albert Hunt ," folk !au rlbbean " A VtSII to St Cro1x.
music1an (R )
V I
'Conoresstonal Rap ' with
NBC movte " Or , Zhivago" Rep Ralph Metcalfe, DIll
11965) part 2 based on BCJr ts
ll , lD p m.
Pasternak's ' novel of love and
NBC Tonlght show McLean
conscience '" Ru.!lsia from 1903 Stevenson Is guest host to
IO 1943
comedienne Liz Torres
9: 30p.m .
ABC movte
" The Nfg ht
Maude is on CBS Vlvtan Sta lker " Is there 11 vampire tn
returns from a med ita ti On spll Las Vegas? Could anyone teiP
diHermined to be more open Reporter Darren McGav1n
w1th Ar thur , but tie won ' t share lh1nks so Wtth Srmon Oakland,
his troub les - espec1ally thai Carol Lynley Larry L1nvtll e
he may have lost S18.000 to a
CBS Movfe " The Doberman
swi ndler
Gang ' Dogs bile bank
On Realtdades, PBS. a day In
the hazardous l 1fe of an Illegal
TH U R SOA Y ( Thank5g1vlng )
allen family
the poetry of
9 a.m.
Pablo Neruda
a look at
CBS All American Thanks
Ch1CMO farm workers
giving Parade" Highlights of
10 p m
parades In Oelroll Honolulu,
CBS has Med1cal Center
New York, Philad elphia a nd
Senior cll iz.ens demand beller Toron to
condil tons, hold the ir rest home
10 a.m.
dtrector hostage
NBC has the .49th annual
" Macy s Thanksgtvtng" Day
II :30 p m
Parad e "
NBC has th e Ton ig ht Show
12 : 30 p.m
McLean Ste venson tS guest host
CBS hlls footbell Los An
to Kareem Abdul Jabbar and
getes Rams vs Detro 1t Lions .
Or Joyce Broth ers
from Metropolitan Sl lldlum
CBS Mov1e
" Hitchh ike I "
Ct orl s Lea chman picks up Pontiac , M1ch
NBC presents "A Man for All
M1 chael Brandon, a young
Seasons " ( 1966) . starring Paul
murderer ; w ith Sherry Jack
Scofield and Robert Shaw In the
son ,
dra rrye of Sir Thomas More 's
defian ce at K !no Henry v Ill
TUESDAY
Also stars Wendy H1ller , Leo
6:30 p m
PBS airs Getltn' Over IOn McKe rn , Orson Welles
3: 30 p.m
Welgt11J How to lose we1ght
NBC hlls football
Buffalo
without ktl!ing yourself
BII!S at St LOUIS Card tnats
8 pm
6. 30 p. m.
NBC airs Mov in' On " Please
PBS airs Gelttn' Over (On
Don' t Talk to I he Drtver ''
Sonny and W1ll rescue bus FOOd)
1 p m.
passengers and Injured driver
PBS has Bl ack Perspeclivc
alter a blowout end get pinned
down by a sntper fi lmed near on the News
p.m.
Atlanta
NBC presents "Liv ing Free, "
ABC t1as Happy Days Fonzie
Introduces 'Sticks' Downey to sequel to "Born Free" George
lind Joy Adamson help three
the gang w!th mixed results he'S "c olored " Fea tur es John tt oo ClJbS , born to domesticated
Elsa learn to 11ve in the Kenya
Antt1ony Batley
wild erne&amp;s
&amp;y DONALO B. THACKREt
On CBS. The Wellons " The
~AN FRANCISCO I UP II - A Tt1anksglvlng Story" A m tt
1
federal judge ruled tOday tt1at ecc:ldent blurs John Boy's vi
SMa Jane Moore ts mentally sian and threatens his fu ture
competent to stand tr ia l on (R l
c~liroes
of
attempltng
to
Barney Miller Is on ABC
anasslnate Pres ident Ford
fight ing an endless rainstorm
~n Good Times, CBS, Florid&amp; that may collapse the ceiling ,
PBS has
The
Romantic
Plakets a supermarket after
th!fY sell her rotten meat The Rebellion The English pa inter
Turner . Part 2 (RJ
mdnager has her arrested
8•30 p m
On PBS, " Hannukah "
PBS alrs Classtc Theatre
•
8. 30pm
has Consumer Surv iva l Preview The Humanities 1n
Art Tontgh t, a preview ot
Ki~ Tonight. " Here 's to ~vour
He11th
A Look at Med 1cat " Trelawney of th e 'Wells"' by
Sir Arthur Wing Pinero A look
Insurance " &lt;R l
llJ1 ABC Welcome Back, a1 the Vic torian theater
On The Rocks, ABC. Fuentes
Kofler
" Barbarino's Girl "
VInnie gels romantic about his has a new roommate - the
tutor, Helatnt Lembeck , and once Honorable Judoe Sorrell
Boo~e . Wt"\0 sent him up
t e~s a rlbbmg from fl'1e others
,
9 p. m ,
,
9 p.m
1
PBS
airs
Classic Theetre ,
R&lt;BS has the t~scent of Man
" WOrld Within World " Ttie The Humanit ies In Art Tonight,
"T relawney of the 'Wells'" Sir
OtCJill ( R I
Arthur Wing Pinero's satiric
Police Women . NBC. Sot
Rose Trelawney
Crowley Is suspended after 1'1e melodrama
accidentally kitts B teen age wants to leave the stage and
marry Into high society, lind
robllery suspect
On ABC The Rookie, frets abOut 1t a great deal
Clumsy rookte becomes 'a hero Stars John Alderton, Elaine
Tit'(IOr, Elizabeth Seal
by accident

1S my op1n10n that she does
have 1h~l I (eel that she 1S
competen! to stand trial '
A lt er' hearing arguments
from the defense Cont1 r efu sed
to delay Miss Moore's tnal and
ordered II to begin as scheduled
Dec 15
Eardley sa1d " the record
shows !hat tn the past she
perhaps had some pertods of
emo tt onal turmo1l ," bul satd tt
dtd not affect his op 1n1on
About 50 60 persons were
present m the cou rtroom Mtss
Moore , the mother of a 9 year
old boy wore the same red
white and blue striped stacks
she has worn tn prev1ous court
appe,. rances
The Ntn th U S Court of
Appeals has ruled that in spite
of the r equt re ment of the
federal Speedy Tnat Act that
!nat must beg tn Within 90 days
ltme spent on
ot arrest
psychtatrlc exam malton of Mtss
Moore need not be counted If 1t
leaves lnadequa!e ttme to
prepare a defense
In sett1ng the Dec 15 trtal
date
Cont1 sa1d he was
co mpel led to proceed by the
act 's r equ1rements
ABC has NCAA football'
Georgia vs Georgia Tech
10 p.m
NBC atrs 'Socia l Securtty How Secure'l " " a system 1n
deep f1nanctal
trouble
Robert Rogers, producer
CBS presents ' Steve and
Eydie 'Our Love tS Here to
Stay " Stev e La wrence and
Eyd1e Gorme, w1th Gene Kelly,
perform a solid hour of George
Gershwin songs Among the 30
selecttons
"A Foggy Day"
Ot Thee 1 S1ng &lt;Baby) ,"
' Th ey Clln't~~o Tllke That Away
From Me " ~
11 p.m
On PB S, Godspell Goes to
th e Plymouth Plantat1on for
wtlh
Henry
Thanksgiving ,'
Steel e Commager { R l
11·30 p m
NBC Tont ght sbow wi1h guest
host Mclean 5"tevenson and
Charles Nelson ~e!lly
CBS Mo,ne 1S 'Showboat"
(1951) , starnng Howard Keel ,
Ava Gardner , Kathryn Gray
son Based on the mus1ca1 by
Jerome Kern and Oscar Ham
merstetn II , songs rnclude
"Bi ll " ' 01' Man R1'11er " From
Edna Ferber 's novel
12 IS p m
Longstreet tS on ABC Extor
tl onrst Barry Nelson sets bomb,
then has heart a !lack
FRIDAY
2·30 p.m .
ABC has NCA A footba ll
Texas at Texas A&amp;M
8 p.m .
NBC presents '' Wtn n te the
Pooh and Ttgger Too " The
den 1zens of the 'hundred aker
wood have a problem how to
cure T 1ger from the annovlnq
hab1l of bounc 1ng on all hts
frt ends (he ltkes to bounce)
Sebast 1an Cabot narrates. Sterl
•ng Holloway provides the votee
of Pooh , based on A A M ilne's
characters
On CBS, Roy Clark hosts the
"Country Mus1c Htl Parade,'
fea tur ing performances of the
top 3 coun try songs of the
week , a medley of Clark's
major h1ts and "monster " htl
songs from the past, from the
Grand Ole Opry , Nashv1lle
PBS airs Washi ngton week tn
Rev1ew
ABC has college footba ll

UCLA

vs USC

8· 30 p m.
CBS airs M A S H Col Potter
tries to cu rb a fever epldemtc
by assign ing Mal Burns to rl!!t
cont ro l
PBS has Wall Street week
" Eckstein on Economy,'' w1th
Otto Eckstetn , pr eSident ot
Data Resourc es
On ChtCO and the Man , NB C,
Ed meets h is 'sec r et love '
Stl ent !1Im st ar Carmel Myers
9 p

m.

On CBS , Hawa ii Five o
Cr1me writer James Olson
dtscovers a body m1ssmg lor
seven years and brands the
F1ve 0 un1t •ncompeten t
NB C has The Rockford Files
Rockford gets framed '" a
small town , scrtpl bv Gordon
Dewson
10 p.m
On NBC Poli ce Story " L11t le
soy Lost " Detecttve Robert
For ster, strugglmg to keep the
love of htS son, IS asstgned to
ftnd the young boy of a cou pl e
who don' t care tf he returns
Barnllby Jones Is on CBS
AdOpted he1ress Trtsh Stewart
WIShes to fi nd her real mother ,
Ei leen Brennan says she's the
one Barney rs doubtful
11 30 p m
The Tonight Show tS on NBC
Guest host Mclean Stevens,.,
w1th Marvin Hamllsch and Th e
5th Dimension

ABC

special "The Playboy

Bunny of the Year Pagean t,''
w1th host John Davidson . Charo
and 22 bunny hopefuls (One of
the iudges ts Groucho Marx l
Barb1 Benton sings " Brass
Knuckles" The winner gels
crowned by Hugh Hefner ( R)
CBS mov ie
'The Patsy"
{1964)
Bellboy Sfanley Bell
(Jerry Lewis&gt; tS franstormed
Into a recording star, then
abandoned , with Peter Lorre,
Kee nan Wynn

!ATURDAY

I2 .lO p.m .

ABC has football the Army
Navy game, from Philadelph ia

4pm

ABC has college football
Alllbllma vs
Auburn, from
Birmingham , Ala
4:30 p.m.
CBS Spon s Spectacular 'Su
perskllles / ' champ1on figure
skaters perform tn an Ol ymp tc
fund event. from Mlldlson
Sq uare Garden. New York
1 p.m .
PBS has Firing Ltne, wtlh
William Buc:kley
8 p.m.
CBS airs The Jefffersons
On ABC. Sa turday Night Ltve
with HOWllrd Cosell
The International Anlma'tlon
Festival on PBS features ll
James Thurber story, a bum
bllng magicllln, and danc 1ng
geometric forms
On NBC, EmergencY' Doctor
bitten by calftsh, and a patien t
wttt1 sealed eyelids lhe spat
tert~d glue on his fa ce)
1.30 p.m.
Doc is on CBS Mr Goldman
doesn 't
want
e
specialist
removing his gall stones , he
wants Doc Bogert, who mey not
be up to It
9 p.m .
Mary Tyler Moore Is on CBS
S W A T IS on ABC Gang
leader threatenS to blow
harbor
and
kitl
sctentis
F
eatures Dlana Muldaur as
"a ttra ctive Nobel prize Winning
scientist Kele Darby," taken
hostage by her lormer boy
friend , the Qang leader
NBC fT\Ovie " NIOht FIIQht
from Moscow" ( 1973 )
Es
plonage, assassination, trea$00
CIA vs KGB Stars Henry
FOnda Yul Br~nner .
Asked by the [lldgelf she hos 0 CBSt·! p m
the ability to asstst her
n
'
Bob Newhart 's
aftorneys, Eardley replied "It ~i~'rer , Martha Scott , comes '.O

e

~.........M . . . . . . .MM. . . . . . ..._~. . . . . . ..._~. . . . . . .M . . . .' " ,,'"

'

7·30 p.m.

On PB S, Lowell Thomas
Remembers " 1921 '
8pm
On ABC , The Sue Mtll ron
Dollar Man battles murderous
moonsh1ners
On CBS, Cher welcomes
Davtd Bowte and Tony Randall
PB S has an Evening at
Sym phony Tontghl three noc
turnes by Debussy - Nuages,
Fetes , and
S1 renes
Also.
Prokoftev's Symphony No 3
Claudra Abbado conducts !he
Bos ton Symphony Orchestra
Lorna Cooke de Veron leads the
Conservalory
New
England
Chorus
, 9 p m
A BC moyie 'The Legend of
Va'lentmo" Story of S1lent
sc reen star Rudolph Valent1no
stars Franco Nero, Suzan ne
Plesherte , Yvette M1m leux
PBS has Masterp1ece Th ea
tre Noronous woman
'S ue
cess " Aurore lives m Parts
W1ti1
lover Jutes San deau ,
clo th es
and
weers
men's
firSt
novel ,
publishes her
' lnd1ana "a n tnstant success
NB C Mystery McClOUd 1n
Thr ee Guns for New York "
Three g u n m e n ktdnap
McCloud's 91rltnend
On CBS Ko 1a k Is t1ampered
by federal agents while looktng
mto the murder of Robert
Aida 's bookkeeper
10 p m
&lt;ln CBS, Bron k. lfnds new
clUes to the murder of his wife
rwo years ago
11 p m
~es atrs Ku p's Show

MONDAY

Center Piece

With A
CANDLE

review
On Swiss Family Rob 1nson ,
ABC Karl IS b1tten by a Chimp
that may have a flllal disease
On CBS, Three For the Road
John and Endy unwrltmgly help
heiress Etyssa Davalos escape
Mer father 's bodyguards
. NBC presents "Wil ly Wonka
and the Chocolale Factory"
(1971), musical fantasy srarrtng
Gene Wilder and Jack Alber t

son

Special

•5,95

Wh tt e slavery

a nee race for 2 year olds at
Beulah Park Thursday
Ktss 'n Nancy sh owed
The w1nner , ndden by Clifton
Schw1ng, " covered the
Sl)(
furlon gs I n 1 13 2 5 and
return ed SJ 40, S2 80 and S2 60
The 53 dally double combtna
!ton of Mtsty Lagoon and Level
was worth $12 2{)
A crowd of 2,800 'wagered
$292,289

Thanksgiving

Only

Wolfpen
News Notes

How they rm

'

"

,,"

eas,

"

'""'

"'
".,

On

CI!S hos Switch Pete orrlves

to ptck up his dale and
discovers she's been sold Into

ur

IU p m.
On CBS. Carol Burnett w1th
The Po1nter S1sters
On PB S Sound5tage ' Her bie
and Chtck ' Jazz musrcrans
Herb1e Hancock
(wlfh 1he
Headhunters ) and Chick Corea
(with Return to For ever ) p lay
separately together and 1n a
tnbute to Mtles Dav1s
ABC Closeup on ' The Con
sum er Offens1ve Who Speaks
for the Consumer? " What has
Ra lph Nader done for you
l~te l y?
Wrdten by M1chae l
Joseloff
1130 pm
NBC has NCAA baske tball
The cham pton Bru ms of UCLA
defend t he~ r title agamst the
Hoos1ers of tnd1a na Untv ersily,
from the St Lours Arena

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilsor
and three sons of Sissonville,
W. Va and Mr and Mrs
Wayne Wilson and famtly
were guests of Mrs. Erma
Wtlson on Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush,
Mr and Mrs. Herbert Roush
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs Walter McDade at
Troy
Mrs Alice Balser ts conftned to Veterans Memonal
HospiUtl. Her son, Carroll
Balser, Mansfield, vistled her
Sunday.
Miss Vicki Ables of Canal
Winchester spent Monday
and Tuesday wtlh her
parents, Mr and Mrs Jack
Ables and Paul .
Mrs. Herbert Powell of
Flortda ca lled on Mrs
EhzabeUt Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Norris
vtstted Mrs Mtldred Gathers
and famtly tn Columbus
Monday and Tuesday.
Mr . and Mrs. Hoyt
Ferguson of Point Pleasant
spent Sunday wtth Mrs. Pearl
Noms. Other VISitors were
Mr and Mrs. Fern Noms,
Mrs . Florence Adams, Mrs
PhyllisO'Brten, Mr. and Mrs
Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs
Darrell Norris and Tracy,
Herschel and Clarence
Norris, and Mrs. Herschel
Roush .
Mr and Mrs Paul Davts of
Parkersburg were dtnner
guests Sunday of Mrs Ada
Noms, Mr . and Mrs. Erwtn
Gloeckner, Mr and Mrs
Davtd Gloeckner and
daughter, Mrs . Rtchard
Norris and daughter of
Carroll were also Sunday
guests tn the Gloeckner
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Htll,
Mr. and Mrs Darrell Norris
and Tracy, Mrs Dolly Wolfe
spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs Robert Casper at
Columbus
Mr . and Mrs Raymond
Teaford of Chester VISited
Mr and Mrs. Cloist Badgely
Sunday
Mrs Eula Wolfe and Mrs.
John Ord and daughters were
Parkersbur g vtst to r s
Saturday.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs Edna Roush of Racme
spent Thursday through
Friday wtth Mr and Mrs.
Russell Roush .
Mtss Mary Findley, Sharon
and Ctndy Roush, spent
Thursday through Sunday
wl th the Rev and Mrs
Waller Bickacson and
daughter, Sharon at New
Brtghton, Pa
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewts
of Chiton spent Wednesday
evemng wtUt Mr. and Mrs
Russell Roush.
Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Styer of Waterford spent
Saturday evenmg w!Ut Mr
and Mrs. Herbert Sayre.

BIIJ, AND JANET STOBAUGH

Evangelist coming SWiday
Wilham F Stobaugh wtll present a gospel concert of
mustc at the Middleport Church of Chrtst Sunday at 7 30
p.m. A widely traveled evangehst and gospel smger of
Cincmnall, he began hts smgmg career 1&gt;1th a
professwnal choir at age 10. He has sung on radto and
television, recorded several albums, etghl-tracks, and
cassettes, and has been travehng as an evangelist since
1970.
A graduate of the Cincinnati Bible Semmary, he has
worked wtUt the Chnsttan Restoration Assoctalwn smce
1971. He has held mtmstrtes m Mtchtgan, Ohio, and
Kentucky, and was a member of and spokesman for the
Gospelatres Quartet mne years
He and his wtle Janel wtll be at the Mtddleport Church
for just this one serVIce, then return next April 4-9 for a
revival. George Glaze, minister, mVltes everyone to thts
presentation of the gospel m music.

Mutual Protective

Insurance Co.

P.O. Box 4
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
446-1875

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Cit¥---- ---Zlp. __
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Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of

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A substant ial penelly Is
mvoked on all ctrltf1cate
accounts Wi thdrawn prior
to the date of mlltUrtiY

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The Athens Counh
Sntngl &amp; Loan co
second St
Pomeroy. Ohio

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HEADeUARTERS

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Fencing - Baler and Binder Twint • Sprtya •
Gates.

FANrY FUNNY MONI!:Y at first glance maybe. bul
tl turns out to be something entirely dtfferent on close
Inspection, as Dean Warfel is dOing. Ctrcml boards for
closed-drcutt TV surveillance cameras m banks, pnsons,
atrports, apartments and factories are mass prmted at
Lancaster, Pa., plant of RCA Electro.Opttcs and Oe\1ces

ATLANTA (UP!) - Mack
Herron, a $-foot~ running
back who had an outstanding
season at New England m
1974, Thursday signed as a
free agent wiUt lhe Atlanta
Falcons.
Herron, 27, had been placed
on waivers by the Patrtots.
Last year he rushed for 824
yards, caught 38 passes for
474 yards, returned 35 punts
for 517 yards and returned 28
kickoffs for 629 yards In 1973
he led the NFL in ktckoff
return yardage when he
returned 41 for 1,092 yards.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

Pnmeroy

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A1TEN1ION ALL
SENIOR CITIZENS
Up to $30,000 is now
available to you when
you must enter a
Convalescent
Nursing Home.
For ftee tnfDrmciilon
'with no obligation, mail
thil coupan.to:

Mr and Mrs Wtlltam
Boyce of Columbus and
Bcilha Russell were Monday
evenmg guests of M1 and
Mrs Harley .Johnson
MI and Mrs Lovell Blake
of Charleston, W Va were
Tuesday dmner guests of Mr
and Mrs Harley Johnson and
Oli o John son They also
vt stlcd wtth Mrs J R
Murphy, Mrs
Howard
Thoma and MI s Harley E
Johnson and Mrs Charley
Smttll
Mr and Mrs Char ley
Smtih "ere Monday busmess
visitors tn Columbus Whtle
Iheie they vtstled wtth Mrs
Ssndy Randall and Kelly of
Bnggs Road
Mr and Mrs Harley T
Johnson celebrated lhetr 601h
weddtn g anmversary Sunday Mr and Mrs Ho11ard
Thoma, Mr and Mrs Harley
E ,lohnson, Tamm), Cheryl
and Terry, Donna Ltttle, Mrs
J R Murphy, Peggy, Carmel , Barbara , Mr and Mt s.
John Downs, Mr and Mrs
John E Murphy and Chns,
Mr and Mrs Larry Barr,
Davtd and Mtchelle attended
and brought Cill'ered dtshes
for dtnner Mrs Larry Barr
baked a three layer cake wtlh
60th weddmg decoratiOns for
dessert Ltncoln Russell was

an afternoon v1s1tor
Mr and Mrs Wtlliam
Boyce of Columbus were
11eekend vtstlors of Mrs
Bertha Russell
Mr . Lmcoln Russell was a
dtnner guest o[ Mr and Mrs.
Omton Gt lkey of Albany on
Sunday.

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POMEROY

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P_&lt;l:llleroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov. 21, 1975

6- The Dal\ySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . 21, 1975
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Girl Scout Diary
By Charlene Hoeflich

.

:::

\lli

iij

Fourteen Meigs County girl scout troops w1ll march m the
Nov. 25 Christmas parade at Pomeroy , it was decided at the
recent unit service meeting presided over by Mrs. Pat Thoma,
ser\·ice unit direetor.
Several of the troops will march in the Middleport parade
on Dee. 1. Also p)anned for the holiday season was individual
troop caroling at the Pomeroy village Olristmas tree.
Mrs. Margaret Parker talked about a special museum
project where the girls are Invited to display old-fashioned
things of Christmas or create a holiday scene. Cornhusk dolls
and animals are being made by one Salisbury troop for a
nativity display.
· Mrs. Merle Johnson announced a first aid course for
leaders and assistant leaders to be taught Jan . 19 and 26, the
place to be announced. Distributed at the meeting we_re
pamphlets on the flag provided by Western and Southern L1fe
Insurance Co.
Mrs. Thoma reported that Brownie and junior troops are
in the process of being established at Harrisonville. Currently,
she noted, there are .262 girls and 52 leaders, assistant leaders
and committee members registered in the girl scout program
of the county.

POMEROY BROWNIE TROOP 76
The third anniversary of Troop 76 was celebrated at the
Tuesdav .niRhl meelinR. A decorated cake for the party was
provided py Mrs. Rita Eblin.
' M.-'s.' Betty Lane turned In $4.84 from bottle cap redemption . The flag salute and Brownie pledge was led by Kim ~blln,
and the final practice for the Bicentennial Sing was held.
POMEROY JUNIORS 180
Pomeroy juniors joined the Middleport junior troop
Saturday for a picnic at Forest Acres Park. The girls had a
wiener roast and enjoyed softball games in the afternoon .
AI th~ Tuesday after school meeting of the Pomeroy troop,
final plans were made for the bicentennial sing held last night
and Mrs. Gertrude Casto, leader announced that each one
participating qualifies for a bicentennial patch.
Marching in the Pomeroy Christmas parade on Nov. 25
was discll.!llled along with the Dec. 5, 6 and 7 outing at Camp
Klashu\8 . At the weekend camp, requirements will be completed for the camp patch. A court of awards will be held on
Saturday night with the parents to be guests.
The Blue Jay~ served refreshments following the meeting.
RACINE JUNIOR SCOUTS 1137
Work on the craft project of making pilgrim boys out of
Readers Digest magazines was continued when Racine juniors
met Tuesday with Reta Hiil, leader, and Kay Warden and
Everlyn Maynard, assistants in charge.
Plans
were
made
to march in
the
Nov; 25 parade In Pomeroy and the final practice for the Bicentennial Sing was held. Melanie Sabnons
led In the pledge to the Oag and the promise and girl seoul laws
were led by Melanie Weese. Laren Wolfe served refreshments.
SYRACUSE BROWNIES 1120
An investiture. and rededication ceremony 'lor the
Syracuse Brownies was held last Thursday with Carol Hendrix, Kathryn Pickens, Heidi Cobb, Tiiena Herald, Kristina
Haynes, Kim Adams, Katen Cook, Tracie Hubbard, Sherry
Ritchie, Cindy Arnold, Laura Roush, Juanita Guinther and
Angie Davis being invested as new Brownies.
Those rededicated and presented their year pins were
Melinda HID, Becky Rolllb, BeekY Arnott, Sherrl Sisson,
Becky Atkins, Tammy Atkins, Christina Arnold, Julie
Hou~~&amp;shelt, Melissa Hubbard, J\D Nease, U!ri Stewart and
Paula Winebrenner.
AI last night's meeting the girls finished their fruit
plaques. Tanuny Atkins served refreshments, Sherri Sisson
led in the pledge to the Oag, and Becky Atkins gave the
BroWille ):romise. There will be no meeting next week due to
Than~sgtving .

CHESTER JUNIORS 1049
One hundred percent attendance at the Bicentennial Sing
Thunday night was reported by Mrs. Charlene Althouse,
junior leader. The troop spent the meeting preceding the Sing
practicing. Next meeting will be held on Dec. 4.
SYRACUSE JUNIOR TROOP 1204 ·
The Syracuse juniors were instituted Tuesday in
ceremonies conducted by Mrs. Susan WinebreMer, leader,
and Mrs. Sharon Michael, assistant leader. Pins were
presented to the new scouts in a candlelight ceremony before a
few parents. Final practice was held for the Sing.
POMEROYGIRLSCOUTTJtOOP271
Membel'!l of Pomeroy Troop 271 were reminded tliat
registration dues are to be paid at next week's meeting when
the girls met Tuesday night at the Pomeroy Elementary
School. Sing practice was held. Nancy Johnson led the pledge
and Darcy Hysell, the promise.

By l'olly Cramer

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Tea and vinegar
clean coffee pot

Pully's Prohlt·m

DEAR POLLY - My
problem ;, I hat I he glass kn ob
on lhe lop of my percolator js
stained and I cannul remuve
this ugly look. ~ MRS.
G.V.B.
DEAR MRS. G. V.R - Try
soaking just the glass knob in
a solution of household
arrinwnia and water OR

Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Yarbrouuh
0'

Yarbrough-Simmons
exchange nuptial vows
RUTLAND - Miss Kathy
S. Simmons became the bride
of Harry S. Yarbrough ,
Saturday, Oct. 18, in a 2 p.m.
double ring ceremony at the
Rutland Chu rch of the
Nazarene.
Rev. Ll oyd Grimm offi ciated at the ceremony,
joining the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Tommy Simmons,
Rt . 1, Middleport, and the son
of Mr . an d Mrs . Virgil
Yarbrough, Rt. 1, Rutland.
The bride was given in
marriage by her fa ther. She
wore a full gown of white lace
ove r white taffeta . The
square neckline was trimmed
with tiny seed pearls and the
long tapered sleeves were of
lace. The train was chapel
length and her veil was made
of weddin~ tulle attached to a
white satin
headpie ce
trimmed with white carnations made of fabric . She
carried a bouquet of red·
rosebuds surr ounded by
white mums, baby's breath
and greenery . The center of
. the bouquet was a corsage
which was removed later to
be worn by the bride on her
wedding trip .
A friend of the bride, Joyce
Llad, was ma tron of honor
and the bride's sister,
Melanie Simmons, was
bridesmaid. They both wore
polyes~r crepe gowns of
Chinese red, featurin g an
empire bodice, flared skirts,
short flared sleeves and Vnecklines. Both carried a
single whi te carnation wi th
greenery and red and white
streamers, and wore a red
carnation in their hair. Mindy
McDonald, cousi n of the
bride, was flower girl, and
Sonya Wise was attendant.
Both little gi rls wore
polyester gowns of red and
while, with red and white
ribbons in their hair.
The groom 's best man was
Glen Crisp. Ushers were
Danny McDonald and Danny
Cremea ns, uncles of the
bride . Jennifer Grate was at
the organ . Gues ts were
registered at the door by
Barbara Cremeans, aunt of

lhe br ide .
Following the ceremony, a
recepti on was held at the
American Legion Eli Dennison Posl, Rutland. The
t•efreshmenl table and gift
table were decorated with
pink and white streamers and
white I issue bells. Refresh·
ments were mints, nuts,
punch and the lraditi onal
wedding cake lopped with
miniature bride and groom .
Assisting at the refreshmen t
ta ble were Retha Clonch,
Judy McDonald, Sharon Wise
and Jean Cremeans .
The bride is graduate of
Meigs High School and the
groom is a grad ua le of
Rutland High Sc hool.
The newlyweds are now
residing in Salem Center,
after a wedding trip to the
Smokey Mls. and par ts of
Alabama.

a

vinegar and tea leaves OR
two or three tablespoons of
water conditioner in hot
dctcrge11t suds and leave for
several hours. - POLLY.
DEA R POLLY - I lov e
gara ge sales and have had
severa l myself, but have
some Pel Peeves concerning
them. One is with the people
who do not take down thm
signs as soon as the sale is
ove1:. We have ofte n wasted
much gas, lune and energy
looking for an address on a
sign only to discover there is
no sale after ali - the time
had expired. Then some of
lhe signs are in such small
print that it is impossible to·
read them as you drive past ,
and 1hey are placed where
one cannot stop to read them.
·And last, but not leas t, the
re ason for having such a sale
is lo ge t rid of unwanted .
"junk" so the prices ofte n put
on such items are too high.
You will come out ahea d in
lhe long run if prices are
realistic. - S.M.P.
DEAR POLLY - I have
noticed how many people ask
questions concerning mildew
and musty odors. Calcium
chloride is perfect for such
problems. Make a wooden
container, fasten a piece of
coppe r screen wire on, in
such a manner that you can
load il at the top with about
lwo inches of the chloride.
Place a pan under the copper

scree n and the water that
ga lhers will drop into the pan.
In lhis way ail dampness;
mildew and musty odors will
gradua lly di sappea r . The
waler will have to be emptied
!rom lhe pan quite frequently
at first and then less as the
room atmosphere is clea1·ed.
-- MILTON .
DEAR POLLY - This is
for I hose fi shermen who still
prefer using angle worms as
bait. To make a bait bank, fill
a box with moist soil and dig
up some worms to put in the
box . Keep I he box in a cool
dry place and every week
feed them a cup of coffe e
grounds and one of corn
meal. 1f these instructions
are followed you will have
wor ms whenever you want

them. - MARY G.
DEAR MARY - We will
take y~ur word for it. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - To save
money on accessories for
Barbie dolls save empty food
cans and canisters. I made a
Barbie doll house and used an
empty lin bandage contain er
with a hinged top !or a clothes
hamper. It is really easy and
fun lo star t building and
furnishing such a house using
discards you can convert into
furnishings. - TERESA.
DEAR POLLY - To clean
I he beaters on your mixer cut
a half inch slit in the end of a
rubber spatula . . Slide the
blades of the beaters through
the sli t lor each cleaning. MRS. R.L.
You will receive a dollar if
Polly us es your favorite
homemakin g id ea, Pet
Peeve, Polly' s Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly In care of this
newspaper.

More than 75 members of
the Middlepor t Mount Moriah
Baptist Church congregation.
re lati ves and friends attended a reception Sunday
hon oring the Rev . Henry L.
Key on his fifth anniversary
as pastor of the church.
At the special morning
service, Risden Miller served
as master of ceremonies with
Charles S. Scott at the piano.
The opening number w~s
'"Holy, Holy, Holy." Mrs.
Arnold Richards and Mrs.
Nellie Winston led in the
devotio ns open in g with
scripture and prayer. There
was group singing of " I Must
Tell Jesus," an d severa l
testimonies were given in
praise of the pastor and in
appreciation of his work .
. The congrega ti on sang
"Pass Me Not" after which
Miss Carrie E. Ward extende d a welcome an d
recognized visi tors an d
friends. Prior to a [)oral
presen tation to the Rev. Mr .
and Mrs. Key by Mrs. Arnold
Richards, the pianist gave a
rendition of "Precious Lord."
The choral · selection,
"What a Friend We Have In
Jesus" was followed by a
tribute to the pastor by Mrs.
Ernes t Bowl es. She staled
that of the many qualities
which he has shown, the most
outstanding one is concern,
and commented on the need
(or more concern in the world
today.
Remarks were given by
several of the visitors and
long-time fri ends of the Rev.
Mr. Key. Mrs. Key also spoke
directing her tribute to the
members of the church for
their graci ous acceptance
and affectio n toward the
family .
An inspirational message
by the pastor followed
scripture reading by Mrs.
Richards and prayer . To
conclude the service, the
Rev. Mr. Key with Mrs.
Campbell Harper at the piano

Ceremonial
attended
Twelve members of Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White
Shrine of
Jeru sa lem,
.Pomeroy, at tended the
Lafayette Shrine ceremonial
in Gallipolis Tuesday night.
Going from here were Mrs.
Clara Riley, Mrs . Erma
Yoho, Miss Edith Hutsinpiiier,
Mrs . Marie
Haw kin s , Mrs . Beatrice
Robs on, Mrs . Evelyn
Grueser, · Mrs .
He len
Reynolds, Mrs . Pearl
Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Hughes, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Warner.

FF~ra:n~k.:~::;;_,

f

S tun nin g
g i ftl
Our sp ec ial

7.50

ne of the
· nicest. Si mplest pieces
of ;ewelry
we've seen
in yea rs' And
so low-pnced.
too ' Wat c h her
twinkle with happiness
on Christm as. and ever
after.

Use K&amp;C
Lay Away Plan

PLANS BAZAAR
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va .
- There will be a Christmas
Bazaar at the West Colwnbia
Grade School Saturday,
December 6, sponsored by
the West Columbia U. M.
Church Sunda y School. There
will be gift items, soup,
sandwiches, · pop , baked
goods and games.

Bill Young explains
mini-park project

MONITORS LISTED
Riverby monitors for this
weekend have bee n announ ce d.
Saturday's
m onitors are Mrs : Neal
Prendergast and Mrs .•
Geneva Howell, I to 3 p.m.;
Mrs. Jake Moore and Mrs,
Jack Fruth, 3 to 5 p.m.
Monitors for Sunday are Mrs.
Chester Tannehill and Mrs.
Robert Moore, 1 to 3 p.m.;
Mrs. Carl Irvin 'and Mrs.
Betty Clark, 3 to 5 p.m.

reported on the bazaar plans
in the absence of Kathy
Cumings, ways and means
chairw oma n,
who
is
hospitalized.
Pat
Shrivers
gave
"Heritage Heartbeat," and
Sandi Sargent presented the
cultural report, "Women to
Whom We Are Indebted;"
Refreshments were served
by Linda King and Darla
Hawley.

See
.JJ.~r Wide

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Ph. 992-2176

By Goldie Clendeain
· The men kept the lawn and at Holzer's jn early part of his
".POR~LAND . Th e driveway nice all summer, life. I think everyone was
Saints Church here will some of the women helping. happy as Nancy hasn't gotten
wmd up the old year with Ji~ Cleland's group of young out much since Chris arrived .
much accomplished, but men attended the picnic held
Phyllis and Freda Midmo:e to be done .
"
at Forked Run State Park. dleswart are among our
Stnce ~~operate on a pay
When the Election Day newest members, always
as we ~o bas1s, most of our hmch program came up, a willing and able to go about
work IS done by volunteer . committee wsa formed anything needed to be done.
members. Jt takes longer to headed by Ida Holter and
I believe Phyllis has caught
complete a job. They a:e Phyllis Stobart who got a a real glimpse of what Zionic
ready to lay the new pulptt, group of helpers together and living is all about, and is
though, we hope by Chnst- set to work. Ida , L.P.N., who doing everything she possibly
mas.
.
.
loves to babysit, traded her can to bring it about. This
Th~ lunches served on part off to Nancy Adams to sit calls for much prayer and
election day were a success in with little Chris whom she work .
every way. A g_ood swn was had specialed during his stay
cleared, but mostly the best
part was that the cooperation
.. ::w:~~~m:::~-::::::::::,:,,,:,:,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:::::::::''''''':''"':':':''':''';,,,,,,,,m,,:,n
was wonderful.
The young adults did most
of the plannlllg and the work,
with a lew grandmothers' ·
helping; not great ones,
leaving out yours truly . All I
By Helen llouel
did alter voting, was eat and
It .
.
.
visit with ones who came in.
LeUer From a Lawyer
There were so many I had not DEAR HELEN:
seen in so· long. I live about
Your ooiwnn .has lately carried a spate of letters from
two miles from the Hubert mentally and physically beaten.(jown wives who "want out,"
Prices; hadn't seen hiin, and but offer such excuses ns :
only saw Mrs. Price once
I. Tl)e children need a father Image.
since leaving Portland in '61.
2. l have no place to go.
Some Fitch boys, the fourth
3. I can't support myself.
and fifth generations of the
4. My husband tells me to get out but he'Dieep the house
Cash Fitch family were and kids so I stay and get more beatings.
there. So I found out my old
5. I can't afford a lawyer or a counselor. 1Even when the
schoolmate, Ora Fitch, lives man is quite wealthy.)
at Coolville. The last I knew
6. At least I've got food and a roof over my head here she was at Parkersburg.
I've never tried to make it on my own.
Bessie Fitch lives at
7. He threatens to kill me if I leave him.
Dewitt's Run; hadn 't seen
I feel sad for these ladies, but from experience, I can tell
her in years and looks just the you that they'd rather settle for "comfortable" misery (i.e .,
same; trips along like a 16 food , lodging, and minimum security with a sadistic
year old.
"provider") than to take a chance with persons they have no
There were a few I ride the faith in - themselves. Perhaps they haven't 'quite made it to
Senior Citizens bus with and masochism, but they're such fearful losers that real decisions
see at the Center. It 's always are beyond their scope. ~xcuses are their stock in trade.
great to go places and see ofd,
Sometimes the braver of their numbers come to my office.
well-remembered faces . They display their bruises, and insist that THIS time they 'D
)'hey are fewer every year , file for divorce. And then the alibis start : I'll have to wait till
as my generation is going the kids are out of school...! can't take my cat and dog to an
down the valley, one by one. apartment, and he won't care for them ...How can we live in
Another schoolmate, Alice three rooms when we're used to ten rooms in the suburbs?
Watson Timmons, was ... My parents would die if they heard we were splitting up ...
brought back last week to her Well, if I stay out of his way and don't gripe about his girl
last resting place here.
friends,! guesslcanllve like this till the children are grown ...
I never thought of the
Wiiiit they're saying !~We·rr· settle for miserable
camera or recorder when I marriages if they save us from standing on our own two feet. "
left that day. Wish l wasn't so
Society did a great disservice to women when for so many
forgetful !
I
always years It kept them meek and mild, Insisting this was the best
remember things I should way to keep their men. Despite "liberation," many continue in
forget!
this mold, and they're the decisioniess creatures who take
We 'll be back on our usual anything, rather than brave the world alone. - LAWYER
schedule now Tuesday
even(ng, young adults meet; DEAR LAWYER :
Wednesday, prayer meeting ;
You're so right!
rpursday, women 's meeting;
These beatendown wives spend page after soggy page
Sunday wiD be potluck and describing absolutely vUe marriages. But in every paragraph
fellowship meeting after the there's at least one "reason" why they can't break away .
. '!11anksgiving service. The
And their excuses add up to one big lack in themselves:
choir is practicing for that: guts! Oh, they camouflage well - everything from "He'd
I would express ap· come after me and punch me out," (He punches her out every
predation to our young folk day at home, so what's the difference?) to "Who'd tend the
for their participation in the outdoor bird feeders if I left?" But they usually mean, "I'd
church work this last year. rather spend my life suffering and complaining than make a
decision."
I pity such women but I don't shed many tears over them.
Mostly I tell them to stop wringing their hands and make a
choice: either try with ail their might to improve their
marriages, or walk out and don't look back!
(And enrollment in an Assertiveness Training Class would
help a great deal !)- H.

Us, , ,

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1he

Sunday School attendance
onNov. 16was43, the offering
$20.07. The Christmas
program date was set for
Sunday evening, Dec. 21, tit 8
o'clock.
Worship services were held
at 11 with Duane Sydenstricker speaking from Mark
7:5-9. Attendance was 20.
Marilyn Robinson and Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. D. Woode

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Middleoort, Ohio

News Notes
By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Nov. 16 at the Free Methodist
Church was 84 . There were 58
present for worship service.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise nf
McConnel sville a !te nded
morning se rvices at the loca l
church .
Mrs. William Jacobs, Mrs.
William Davis, Mrs . Dedee
Mun ny o( Columbus visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Jacobs and Mr . and
Mrs . Clarence Curtis.
Visitin g recently with Mr .
and Mrs . Merlin Tracy were
Mr. and Mrs . and Mrs.
Stephen Tuttle. Mrs . Tuttle is
a sister of Mrs. Tracy from
Fresno, Calif. Rich and Joey
Silveris , Fresno, Calif.
The La ur el Cliff Health
Club met Thursday evenin ~
at the home of Mrs . Madiyn
Ca!in at Pomer oy . Ten
members were pre sen t.
Plans :.vere mad e for the
Christmas party to be held at
the home of Mrs . .Mar jorie
Goe tt in .Pomeroy.
sCENE AT THE BICENTENNIAL SING OF MEIGS illUNTY GIRL SCOUTS.
'
Mrs. Harmon Fox and Mrs.
Ruth
Dou ~ ias
visited
Sat urday with Harold Uoyd
Dailey, brother of Mrs. Fox,
who is a patient in Holzer
Medical Center.
Nearly 300 parents and Cadette Troop. The colors scout and Brownie promise.
Mrs. Edna Baker has been
friends were on hand Thurs- were advanced by members They joined in singing "Girl returned to her home from
day night !or the Bicentennial of Middleport Troop 1039 and Scouts Together."
A welcome was extended Veterans Memoria l Hosp_1tal.
Sing staged by 14 Meigs the over 250 scouts, their
County Girl Scout Troops in leaders, assistants and by Mrs. Pat Thoma, service
the Mei gs Junior Hig h committee members all unit director who presented a
In 1938, Nazi for ces ocstanding on the stage led in bicentennial patch to Mrs.
School auditorium .
Gladys
Foley,
accompanist.
cupied
the western regions of
Hostesses for the Sing were the pledge to the flag, the
Mrs.
J
udy
Werry
introduced
C'lechoslovakia and declared
members of th e Rutland national anthm and the ~iri
eac h of the troops with each · all persons in those areas
one singing several songs. To German citizens.
conclude the Sing, Barbara
Whitlatch played taps and the
girls an d their leaders sang
Lay-Away
"Now the Day is Over."
Participating
were'
Earty While
Brownie troops of Pomeroy ,
Chester, Racine, Syracuse
Selection Is Good.
and Rutland ; junior troops of
- Gill CertificatesSalisbury, Racine , Syracuse,
Store Hours :
Pomeroy , Mid dl eport ,
9tol Mon . . Fri.
Chester and Rutland , and the
9to8Sat.
Rutland Cadette Troop.

Reedsville
News Notes
Ry Mrs. 1.. Ralderson
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Dawayn e
Daurst
at
Corapolis, Pa. , recently.
Dennis Reed, who is employed at Disney World, Fla.,
has been visiting with his
parents . Mr : and Mrs. Alvin
Reed.
Mrs . Opal Randolph and
Mrs. Effie Hauber visited
with Mrs. Hauber's daughter ,
Mrs. Pa ul a Caffee at
Columbus.
Mrs. Rose Thomas visited
with Mrs . Gladys Baughman
and Jack Gale at Gahanaa.
Sunday din ner guests of
Mr. and Mrs . Chester
Mundry and Lori were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Price and
Mrs. Jeanie Starcher of Long
Bottom.
Mr . and Mrs . Junior
Co ngrove of Zanesville
visi ted with Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Wilson .

Scouts stage 'Bicentennial Sing

DEAR HELEN :
Bravo for you! In publishing "Wants a Test Case's" letter
you've exposed a sltuation that has irked me for several years:
How can hospitals get away with charging for meals they don't
serve, when they charge for every tiny pill, on an itemized
sheet? I had two weeks of intravenous feedings (extra charges,
and how! ), yet my "room and service" bill was exactly the
same as if I'd had three squares a day . No matter that health
IDsurance pays - I feel for my insurance company, too,
though they get it back in higher premiums. - ART

Alfred
Social Notes

· lti16
,

':"

LARRY'S

Open Thru Sat.
9 til 8
Open Sunday

8

Laurel Oiff

Much done, much to be done ·

Helen Help

there was conor••• •.wn

Development of the minipark in Pomeroy was
discussed by Bill Young of the
Meigs'County Jaycees at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority held in
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Elec tric Co. soc ia l
room .
Young
reported
on
progress and talked about
further development plans.
Holiday par ties were
planned and Mrs. Maurisha
Nelson noted that the gift
exchange will take place on
Dec. 16 at the home of Debi
Buck , while the couples
dinner party will be held at
the Meigs Inn, Dec. 19,
The Christmas bazaar was
announced for Nov. 29 at
Trinity Church, 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. with a variety ol handmade items and baked goods
to be for sale. Pat Brogan

.

You."
·
Coming !rom Columbus for
the service were the children
of the Rev. and Mrs: Key,
Jenny and Davis, and Mrs.
Robert Walburn, Mrs. Joan
Ferguson , Mr. and Mrs.
Robert C. Anderson, Clyde
Lyn ch, Deacon John H.
White, and Deacon and Mrs.

sang "Does .Jesus Gare," and

with Dan Hayman and Hymn
Timers.
BRADFORD Church of
Christ, revival, 7:30 ea.ch
night through Sunday, w1th
Dave Roberson, evangelist.
SATURDAY
Bible study class on Saturday
THANKSG IVIN G DIN~"RIDAY
NER, 7 p.m. at Syracuse
HYMN SING, 7:30p.m. at starting at 9 a.m .
Church of God . Members and
Hazel Community Church
R 0 L L I N G H 1 L I. S . guests only.
CHAPTE R 838, Parents
Great Selection
Without Partners, 7:30 p.m.
WORK IN EA degree,
at Grace United Methodist Shade River Lodge 453, at tbe
' ...... uo..... ;;f;£-:tChur ch. Speaker
Jan hail in Chester, 7:30p.m.
11
My wife sold my comero
Wetherhoit will discuss
RACINE Grange annual with a Want Ad -lor doing
problems of marriage and turkey dinner ' 6:30 p.m. at that 1' 1
divorce.
Election
of hail . Take covered dish, own
nominating committee to be table service, items for
held.
auction and Christmas gifts
Kalanchoe
for Athens State Hospital.
P A ST
M A 'I' K U N:; ,
SOUP AND pie supper at
Decorative
Evangeline Chapter 176, Syracuse Munlcipall)uilding,
Pepper
O.E.S., 7:30p.m. at the home starting at 4p.m. by Syracuse
of Mrs. Marie Hawkins.
United Methodist Church .
Jerusalem ·
SATURDAY
Those wishing carry out
BAKE
SALE
by
Trinity
service,
please lake con. Cherry
Youth at the New York tainers.
Clothing House beginning at
PUBLIC Square dance, 8 to
Gloxinia
9:30a .m.
midnight at Middleport
Azalea
SOUP AND SANDWICH Eleme ntary School with
luncheon at Trinity Church music by String Dusters and
Mum
basement, with serving tu Glen Lambert and Cora
begin at !0:30a .m. sponsored Hilton, callers. Admission $1
by Sunday School. Soup, chill, per person. Children under 12 .
sandwiches, desserts .
accompanying· parents will
SOUP SUPPER and be admitted free. Dance
Cash and Carry
Bazaar, St. Paul 's Unite~ sponsored by Middl eport
Methodist Church Ann ex, Disaster Unit.
• Tuppers Plains from 4 to 7
p.m.
~IONDA \'
SOUTHERN High School
MEET the Basket~all
Football banquet, 6:30 p.m. Team, 7 p.m. at Larry R.
S9 N. stcond St.
Bring covered dish . Public Morrison Gym, Meigs High
Middleport, 0 .
invited.
School.

Social
Calendar

I

Rev. Henry Key is
Polly's Pointers honored on anniversary

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attended Long Bottom
Church's celebration of 80
years of worship in the
present buildin g Sunday
afternoon.
Evelyn Well , Thelma
Henderson , Nina Robinson
and Chas. &amp; Helen Woode
attended the County Council
of Ministries meeting at the
Rock Springs UM Church
Monday evening, Nov . 10.
Attending the Bible Study
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Burke here last week
were Tanya Huffman and
son, Sharon Swindell and son,
Eleanor Douglas, Ethel
. Guthrie, Helen Woode , Kate
Honacher, and the hostess,
Gay Ann Burke, and two
children.
Wednesday evening prayer
services are held ·at the
church here each week at B
o'clock.
Genevieve Gu t hrie
returned to her home here
Saturday evening from
Holzer Medical Center and is
much improved.
Sunday guesb of Clara
Foilrod and Ina Robinson
were Mr. and Mrs. Carleton
Follrod and Charles of
Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs .
Gerald Swartz and £amily of
Marietta .
Mr . and .Mrs . Llo yd
Diiiinger and family were
dinner guests.of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Taylor
last Sunday.
Represen Iing
Alfred
Church at the Athens District
Conference at lhe United

Thanksgiving Is almost here and
once age in your thoughts are home·
ward bound. Send those loving

thoug hts to the folks back home
with the beautiful FTD Homecomer
Bouquet, oro trod I·
lionel Mum plant in a
decorati ve pot cover.
Come In and see our
many flora l des igns.

REAm our ANDTOOOITI£M

1HE FTD flORIST WAY

~~~~-~-·
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heritage house

Carmel News,
By the Day

59 N. Second
Middleport, 0 .

Middleport, Ohio

Mr . an d Mrs. Larry Circle
and son have returned to
their home at Fort Lauderdale , Fla., after spending
three weeks here with
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester called on Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Lee and family
on Tuesday.
Larry Sayre and William
Carleton of Racine called at
the home of Arthur Johnson
on Sunday evening .
Mr . and Mrs. Goerge Circle
and daughter, Cheryl , Mr.
and Mrs. James Circle, all of
New Haven, visited wi th
Mary Circle on Sunday.
Betty Van Meter and Eunie
Brinker called at the home of
William Carleton of' Racine
recently.
Vi rgil and Bob Woods of
Chester called on Robert Lee Choose o shed roof, tile roof or born roof feeder, ony of wfli&lt;h con
installed in tree, on pole or on o platform. Feeders hold five pounds
recently.
Twenty-one persons were
present for Sunday school on
toad
· last Sunday .

GIFTS
FOR THE -

HOME

CHARMING AND ENCHANTING DANCES depicting
the ancient legends of Korea will be performed by the
tittle Angels Sunday at the Gallia Academy High School
auditorium. The concert Is the season opener for the Tri County Community Concert ASsn. Curtain time is Bp.m.

Theater season
opens this evening
ATHENS - Music, strobes
and gir ls in cages "Welcome to 'Big Tom 's' You're gonna like it here We have Melissa. Sally, Vicki
and Chrissy" - and so opens
the Ohio University Experimental Theater Series
with David Rabe's "In the
Boom Boom Room," a play
about the rugged and gutsey
life of a go-go dancer in a
Philadelphia Discot~eque .
Chrissy, _played by J ody
Fleischer, a victim of sexual
exploitation and her inability
to face life, struggles to
establish her own identity as
a person of sincerity and
warmth. Her effort s are
never encouraged but actually thwarted by the at-

ti tudes of her parents, portrayed by Dick Miller and
Barbara Hipkiss, and her
constan t compa nion, AI ,
portrayed by Morgan
Williams.
The director, Kevi n
Thompson , a graduate
student in Jhe Professional
Director Training Program,
says that " Boom Boom is
dynamic and raw entertainment. It gives and
Jakes and deals with life in an
atmosphere of passionate
realism."
The
producti on
is
scheduled for a three-night
run- Friday, Saturday and
Su nday. All performances
are at 8 p.m. in the Forum
Theater. General admission
li ckets are availa ble at
Memorial Auditorium Box
Office, 594-5010.

Methodist Churc h in Athens
las t Sunday was Lloyd
Dillinger of Shade.
Dana Swartz of Columbus
visited at the Paul &amp; Virgie
Buckley home last Friday
(interested in the drilling in
process), and also called on
Clara Follr od and Ni na
Robinson.
Sherman and Pamela
Henderson recen liy visited
the Harold Henderson family.
Mr. and Mr s. Arthur
Ather ton recently visited
th eir son, Cla rence and
family, at Long Bottom._

n thought for the day :
American statesman Daniel
Webster said, ~·Let our object
be our country, our whole
country and nothing but our

country."

BIRD FEEDERS

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�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P_&lt;l:llleroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov. 21, 1975

6- The Dal\ySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . 21, 1975
~~::~~:$$!~::&gt;:?:=:;:::=:::::::::-:;:::::::::::::::;~s~~:~:~:~:~:x: ::::~::::::::::~r

Girl Scout Diary
By Charlene Hoeflich

.

:::

\lli

iij

Fourteen Meigs County girl scout troops w1ll march m the
Nov. 25 Christmas parade at Pomeroy , it was decided at the
recent unit service meeting presided over by Mrs. Pat Thoma,
ser\·ice unit direetor.
Several of the troops will march in the Middleport parade
on Dee. 1. Also p)anned for the holiday season was individual
troop caroling at the Pomeroy village Olristmas tree.
Mrs. Margaret Parker talked about a special museum
project where the girls are Invited to display old-fashioned
things of Christmas or create a holiday scene. Cornhusk dolls
and animals are being made by one Salisbury troop for a
nativity display.
· Mrs. Merle Johnson announced a first aid course for
leaders and assistant leaders to be taught Jan . 19 and 26, the
place to be announced. Distributed at the meeting we_re
pamphlets on the flag provided by Western and Southern L1fe
Insurance Co.
Mrs. Thoma reported that Brownie and junior troops are
in the process of being established at Harrisonville. Currently,
she noted, there are .262 girls and 52 leaders, assistant leaders
and committee members registered in the girl scout program
of the county.

POMEROY BROWNIE TROOP 76
The third anniversary of Troop 76 was celebrated at the
Tuesdav .niRhl meelinR. A decorated cake for the party was
provided py Mrs. Rita Eblin.
' M.-'s.' Betty Lane turned In $4.84 from bottle cap redemption . The flag salute and Brownie pledge was led by Kim ~blln,
and the final practice for the Bicentennial Sing was held.
POMEROY JUNIORS 180
Pomeroy juniors joined the Middleport junior troop
Saturday for a picnic at Forest Acres Park. The girls had a
wiener roast and enjoyed softball games in the afternoon .
AI th~ Tuesday after school meeting of the Pomeroy troop,
final plans were made for the bicentennial sing held last night
and Mrs. Gertrude Casto, leader announced that each one
participating qualifies for a bicentennial patch.
Marching in the Pomeroy Christmas parade on Nov. 25
was discll.!llled along with the Dec. 5, 6 and 7 outing at Camp
Klashu\8 . At the weekend camp, requirements will be completed for the camp patch. A court of awards will be held on
Saturday night with the parents to be guests.
The Blue Jay~ served refreshments following the meeting.
RACINE JUNIOR SCOUTS 1137
Work on the craft project of making pilgrim boys out of
Readers Digest magazines was continued when Racine juniors
met Tuesday with Reta Hiil, leader, and Kay Warden and
Everlyn Maynard, assistants in charge.
Plans
were
made
to march in
the
Nov; 25 parade In Pomeroy and the final practice for the Bicentennial Sing was held. Melanie Sabnons
led In the pledge to the Oag and the promise and girl seoul laws
were led by Melanie Weese. Laren Wolfe served refreshments.
SYRACUSE BROWNIES 1120
An investiture. and rededication ceremony 'lor the
Syracuse Brownies was held last Thursday with Carol Hendrix, Kathryn Pickens, Heidi Cobb, Tiiena Herald, Kristina
Haynes, Kim Adams, Katen Cook, Tracie Hubbard, Sherry
Ritchie, Cindy Arnold, Laura Roush, Juanita Guinther and
Angie Davis being invested as new Brownies.
Those rededicated and presented their year pins were
Melinda HID, Becky Rolllb, BeekY Arnott, Sherrl Sisson,
Becky Atkins, Tammy Atkins, Christina Arnold, Julie
Hou~~&amp;shelt, Melissa Hubbard, J\D Nease, U!ri Stewart and
Paula Winebrenner.
AI last night's meeting the girls finished their fruit
plaques. Tanuny Atkins served refreshments, Sherri Sisson
led in the pledge to the Oag, and Becky Atkins gave the
BroWille ):romise. There will be no meeting next week due to
Than~sgtving .

CHESTER JUNIORS 1049
One hundred percent attendance at the Bicentennial Sing
Thunday night was reported by Mrs. Charlene Althouse,
junior leader. The troop spent the meeting preceding the Sing
practicing. Next meeting will be held on Dec. 4.
SYRACUSE JUNIOR TROOP 1204 ·
The Syracuse juniors were instituted Tuesday in
ceremonies conducted by Mrs. Susan WinebreMer, leader,
and Mrs. Sharon Michael, assistant leader. Pins were
presented to the new scouts in a candlelight ceremony before a
few parents. Final practice was held for the Sing.
POMEROYGIRLSCOUTTJtOOP271
Membel'!l of Pomeroy Troop 271 were reminded tliat
registration dues are to be paid at next week's meeting when
the girls met Tuesday night at the Pomeroy Elementary
School. Sing practice was held. Nancy Johnson led the pledge
and Darcy Hysell, the promise.

By l'olly Cramer

BLOOMING
PLANTS

20% OFF

Tea and vinegar
clean coffee pot

Pully's Prohlt·m

DEAR POLLY - My
problem ;, I hat I he glass kn ob
on lhe lop of my percolator js
stained and I cannul remuve
this ugly look. ~ MRS.
G.V.B.
DEAR MRS. G. V.R - Try
soaking just the glass knob in
a solution of household
arrinwnia and water OR

Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Yarbrouuh
0'

Yarbrough-Simmons
exchange nuptial vows
RUTLAND - Miss Kathy
S. Simmons became the bride
of Harry S. Yarbrough ,
Saturday, Oct. 18, in a 2 p.m.
double ring ceremony at the
Rutland Chu rch of the
Nazarene.
Rev. Ll oyd Grimm offi ciated at the ceremony,
joining the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Tommy Simmons,
Rt . 1, Middleport, and the son
of Mr . an d Mrs . Virgil
Yarbrough, Rt. 1, Rutland.
The bride was given in
marriage by her fa ther. She
wore a full gown of white lace
ove r white taffeta . The
square neckline was trimmed
with tiny seed pearls and the
long tapered sleeves were of
lace. The train was chapel
length and her veil was made
of weddin~ tulle attached to a
white satin
headpie ce
trimmed with white carnations made of fabric . She
carried a bouquet of red·
rosebuds surr ounded by
white mums, baby's breath
and greenery . The center of
. the bouquet was a corsage
which was removed later to
be worn by the bride on her
wedding trip .
A friend of the bride, Joyce
Llad, was ma tron of honor
and the bride's sister,
Melanie Simmons, was
bridesmaid. They both wore
polyes~r crepe gowns of
Chinese red, featurin g an
empire bodice, flared skirts,
short flared sleeves and Vnecklines. Both carried a
single whi te carnation wi th
greenery and red and white
streamers, and wore a red
carnation in their hair. Mindy
McDonald, cousi n of the
bride, was flower girl, and
Sonya Wise was attendant.
Both little gi rls wore
polyester gowns of red and
while, with red and white
ribbons in their hair.
The groom 's best man was
Glen Crisp. Ushers were
Danny McDonald and Danny
Cremea ns, uncles of the
bride . Jennifer Grate was at
the organ . Gues ts were
registered at the door by
Barbara Cremeans, aunt of

lhe br ide .
Following the ceremony, a
recepti on was held at the
American Legion Eli Dennison Posl, Rutland. The
t•efreshmenl table and gift
table were decorated with
pink and white streamers and
white I issue bells. Refresh·
ments were mints, nuts,
punch and the lraditi onal
wedding cake lopped with
miniature bride and groom .
Assisting at the refreshmen t
ta ble were Retha Clonch,
Judy McDonald, Sharon Wise
and Jean Cremeans .
The bride is graduate of
Meigs High School and the
groom is a grad ua le of
Rutland High Sc hool.
The newlyweds are now
residing in Salem Center,
after a wedding trip to the
Smokey Mls. and par ts of
Alabama.

a

vinegar and tea leaves OR
two or three tablespoons of
water conditioner in hot
dctcrge11t suds and leave for
several hours. - POLLY.
DEA R POLLY - I lov e
gara ge sales and have had
severa l myself, but have
some Pel Peeves concerning
them. One is with the people
who do not take down thm
signs as soon as the sale is
ove1:. We have ofte n wasted
much gas, lune and energy
looking for an address on a
sign only to discover there is
no sale after ali - the time
had expired. Then some of
lhe signs are in such small
print that it is impossible to·
read them as you drive past ,
and 1hey are placed where
one cannot stop to read them.
·And last, but not leas t, the
re ason for having such a sale
is lo ge t rid of unwanted .
"junk" so the prices ofte n put
on such items are too high.
You will come out ahea d in
lhe long run if prices are
realistic. - S.M.P.
DEAR POLLY - I have
noticed how many people ask
questions concerning mildew
and musty odors. Calcium
chloride is perfect for such
problems. Make a wooden
container, fasten a piece of
coppe r screen wire on, in
such a manner that you can
load il at the top with about
lwo inches of the chloride.
Place a pan under the copper

scree n and the water that
ga lhers will drop into the pan.
In lhis way ail dampness;
mildew and musty odors will
gradua lly di sappea r . The
waler will have to be emptied
!rom lhe pan quite frequently
at first and then less as the
room atmosphere is clea1·ed.
-- MILTON .
DEAR POLLY - This is
for I hose fi shermen who still
prefer using angle worms as
bait. To make a bait bank, fill
a box with moist soil and dig
up some worms to put in the
box . Keep I he box in a cool
dry place and every week
feed them a cup of coffe e
grounds and one of corn
meal. 1f these instructions
are followed you will have
wor ms whenever you want

them. - MARY G.
DEAR MARY - We will
take y~ur word for it. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - To save
money on accessories for
Barbie dolls save empty food
cans and canisters. I made a
Barbie doll house and used an
empty lin bandage contain er
with a hinged top !or a clothes
hamper. It is really easy and
fun lo star t building and
furnishing such a house using
discards you can convert into
furnishings. - TERESA.
DEAR POLLY - To clean
I he beaters on your mixer cut
a half inch slit in the end of a
rubber spatula . . Slide the
blades of the beaters through
the sli t lor each cleaning. MRS. R.L.
You will receive a dollar if
Polly us es your favorite
homemakin g id ea, Pet
Peeve, Polly' s Problem or
solution to a problem. Write
Polly In care of this
newspaper.

More than 75 members of
the Middlepor t Mount Moriah
Baptist Church congregation.
re lati ves and friends attended a reception Sunday
hon oring the Rev . Henry L.
Key on his fifth anniversary
as pastor of the church.
At the special morning
service, Risden Miller served
as master of ceremonies with
Charles S. Scott at the piano.
The opening number w~s
'"Holy, Holy, Holy." Mrs.
Arnold Richards and Mrs.
Nellie Winston led in the
devotio ns open in g with
scripture and prayer. There
was group singing of " I Must
Tell Jesus," an d severa l
testimonies were given in
praise of the pastor and in
appreciation of his work .
. The congrega ti on sang
"Pass Me Not" after which
Miss Carrie E. Ward extende d a welcome an d
recognized visi tors an d
friends. Prior to a [)oral
presen tation to the Rev. Mr .
and Mrs. Key by Mrs. Arnold
Richards, the pianist gave a
rendition of "Precious Lord."
The choral · selection,
"What a Friend We Have In
Jesus" was followed by a
tribute to the pastor by Mrs.
Ernes t Bowl es. She staled
that of the many qualities
which he has shown, the most
outstanding one is concern,
and commented on the need
(or more concern in the world
today.
Remarks were given by
several of the visitors and
long-time fri ends of the Rev.
Mr. Key. Mrs. Key also spoke
directing her tribute to the
members of the church for
their graci ous acceptance
and affectio n toward the
family .
An inspirational message
by the pastor followed
scripture reading by Mrs.
Richards and prayer . To
conclude the service, the
Rev. Mr. Key with Mrs.
Campbell Harper at the piano

Ceremonial
attended
Twelve members of Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White
Shrine of
Jeru sa lem,
.Pomeroy, at tended the
Lafayette Shrine ceremonial
in Gallipolis Tuesday night.
Going from here were Mrs.
Clara Riley, Mrs . Erma
Yoho, Miss Edith Hutsinpiiier,
Mrs . Marie
Haw kin s , Mrs . Beatrice
Robs on, Mrs . Evelyn
Grueser, · Mrs .
He len
Reynolds, Mrs . Pearl
Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Hughes, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Warner.

FF~ra:n~k.:~::;;_,

f

S tun nin g
g i ftl
Our sp ec ial

7.50

ne of the
· nicest. Si mplest pieces
of ;ewelry
we've seen
in yea rs' And
so low-pnced.
too ' Wat c h her
twinkle with happiness
on Christm as. and ever
after.

Use K&amp;C
Lay Away Plan

PLANS BAZAAR
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va .
- There will be a Christmas
Bazaar at the West Colwnbia
Grade School Saturday,
December 6, sponsored by
the West Columbia U. M.
Church Sunda y School. There
will be gift items, soup,
sandwiches, · pop , baked
goods and games.

Bill Young explains
mini-park project

MONITORS LISTED
Riverby monitors for this
weekend have bee n announ ce d.
Saturday's
m onitors are Mrs : Neal
Prendergast and Mrs .•
Geneva Howell, I to 3 p.m.;
Mrs. Jake Moore and Mrs,
Jack Fruth, 3 to 5 p.m.
Monitors for Sunday are Mrs.
Chester Tannehill and Mrs.
Robert Moore, 1 to 3 p.m.;
Mrs. Carl Irvin 'and Mrs.
Betty Clark, 3 to 5 p.m.

reported on the bazaar plans
in the absence of Kathy
Cumings, ways and means
chairw oma n,
who
is
hospitalized.
Pat
Shrivers
gave
"Heritage Heartbeat," and
Sandi Sargent presented the
cultural report, "Women to
Whom We Are Indebted;"
Refreshments were served
by Linda King and Darla
Hawley.

See
.JJ.~r Wide

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By Goldie Clendeain
· The men kept the lawn and at Holzer's jn early part of his
".POR~LAND . Th e driveway nice all summer, life. I think everyone was
Saints Church here will some of the women helping. happy as Nancy hasn't gotten
wmd up the old year with Ji~ Cleland's group of young out much since Chris arrived .
much accomplished, but men attended the picnic held
Phyllis and Freda Midmo:e to be done .
"
at Forked Run State Park. dleswart are among our
Stnce ~~operate on a pay
When the Election Day newest members, always
as we ~o bas1s, most of our hmch program came up, a willing and able to go about
work IS done by volunteer . committee wsa formed anything needed to be done.
members. Jt takes longer to headed by Ida Holter and
I believe Phyllis has caught
complete a job. They a:e Phyllis Stobart who got a a real glimpse of what Zionic
ready to lay the new pulptt, group of helpers together and living is all about, and is
though, we hope by Chnst- set to work. Ida , L.P.N., who doing everything she possibly
mas.
.
.
loves to babysit, traded her can to bring it about. This
Th~ lunches served on part off to Nancy Adams to sit calls for much prayer and
election day were a success in with little Chris whom she work .
every way. A g_ood swn was had specialed during his stay
cleared, but mostly the best
part was that the cooperation
.. ::w:~~~m:::~-::::::::::,:,,,:,:,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:::::::::''''''':''"':':':''':''';,,,,,,,,m,,:,n
was wonderful.
The young adults did most
of the plannlllg and the work,
with a lew grandmothers' ·
helping; not great ones,
leaving out yours truly . All I
By Helen llouel
did alter voting, was eat and
It .
.
.
visit with ones who came in.
LeUer From a Lawyer
There were so many I had not DEAR HELEN:
seen in so· long. I live about
Your ooiwnn .has lately carried a spate of letters from
two miles from the Hubert mentally and physically beaten.(jown wives who "want out,"
Prices; hadn't seen hiin, and but offer such excuses ns :
only saw Mrs. Price once
I. Tl)e children need a father Image.
since leaving Portland in '61.
2. l have no place to go.
Some Fitch boys, the fourth
3. I can't support myself.
and fifth generations of the
4. My husband tells me to get out but he'Dieep the house
Cash Fitch family were and kids so I stay and get more beatings.
there. So I found out my old
5. I can't afford a lawyer or a counselor. 1Even when the
schoolmate, Ora Fitch, lives man is quite wealthy.)
at Coolville. The last I knew
6. At least I've got food and a roof over my head here she was at Parkersburg.
I've never tried to make it on my own.
Bessie Fitch lives at
7. He threatens to kill me if I leave him.
Dewitt's Run; hadn 't seen
I feel sad for these ladies, but from experience, I can tell
her in years and looks just the you that they'd rather settle for "comfortable" misery (i.e .,
same; trips along like a 16 food , lodging, and minimum security with a sadistic
year old.
"provider") than to take a chance with persons they have no
There were a few I ride the faith in - themselves. Perhaps they haven't 'quite made it to
Senior Citizens bus with and masochism, but they're such fearful losers that real decisions
see at the Center. It 's always are beyond their scope. ~xcuses are their stock in trade.
great to go places and see ofd,
Sometimes the braver of their numbers come to my office.
well-remembered faces . They display their bruises, and insist that THIS time they 'D
)'hey are fewer every year , file for divorce. And then the alibis start : I'll have to wait till
as my generation is going the kids are out of school...! can't take my cat and dog to an
down the valley, one by one. apartment, and he won't care for them ...How can we live in
Another schoolmate, Alice three rooms when we're used to ten rooms in the suburbs?
Watson Timmons, was ... My parents would die if they heard we were splitting up ...
brought back last week to her Well, if I stay out of his way and don't gripe about his girl
last resting place here.
friends,! guesslcanllve like this till the children are grown ...
I never thought of the
Wiiiit they're saying !~We·rr· settle for miserable
camera or recorder when I marriages if they save us from standing on our own two feet. "
left that day. Wish l wasn't so
Society did a great disservice to women when for so many
forgetful !
I
always years It kept them meek and mild, Insisting this was the best
remember things I should way to keep their men. Despite "liberation," many continue in
forget!
this mold, and they're the decisioniess creatures who take
We 'll be back on our usual anything, rather than brave the world alone. - LAWYER
schedule now Tuesday
even(ng, young adults meet; DEAR LAWYER :
Wednesday, prayer meeting ;
You're so right!
rpursday, women 's meeting;
These beatendown wives spend page after soggy page
Sunday wiD be potluck and describing absolutely vUe marriages. But in every paragraph
fellowship meeting after the there's at least one "reason" why they can't break away .
. '!11anksgiving service. The
And their excuses add up to one big lack in themselves:
choir is practicing for that: guts! Oh, they camouflage well - everything from "He'd
I would express ap· come after me and punch me out," (He punches her out every
predation to our young folk day at home, so what's the difference?) to "Who'd tend the
for their participation in the outdoor bird feeders if I left?" But they usually mean, "I'd
church work this last year. rather spend my life suffering and complaining than make a
decision."
I pity such women but I don't shed many tears over them.
Mostly I tell them to stop wringing their hands and make a
choice: either try with ail their might to improve their
marriages, or walk out and don't look back!
(And enrollment in an Assertiveness Training Class would
help a great deal !)- H.

Us, , ,

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1he

Sunday School attendance
onNov. 16was43, the offering
$20.07. The Christmas
program date was set for
Sunday evening, Dec. 21, tit 8
o'clock.
Worship services were held
at 11 with Duane Sydenstricker speaking from Mark
7:5-9. Attendance was 20.
Marilyn Robinson and Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. D. Woode

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Middleoort, Ohio

News Notes
By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Nov. 16 at the Free Methodist
Church was 84 . There were 58
present for worship service.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise nf
McConnel sville a !te nded
morning se rvices at the loca l
church .
Mrs. William Jacobs, Mrs.
William Davis, Mrs . Dedee
Mun ny o( Columbus visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Jacobs and Mr . and
Mrs . Clarence Curtis.
Visitin g recently with Mr .
and Mrs . Merlin Tracy were
Mr. and Mrs . and Mrs.
Stephen Tuttle. Mrs . Tuttle is
a sister of Mrs. Tracy from
Fresno, Calif. Rich and Joey
Silveris , Fresno, Calif.
The La ur el Cliff Health
Club met Thursday evenin ~
at the home of Mrs . Madiyn
Ca!in at Pomer oy . Ten
members were pre sen t.
Plans :.vere mad e for the
Christmas party to be held at
the home of Mrs . .Mar jorie
Goe tt in .Pomeroy.
sCENE AT THE BICENTENNIAL SING OF MEIGS illUNTY GIRL SCOUTS.
'
Mrs. Harmon Fox and Mrs.
Ruth
Dou ~ ias
visited
Sat urday with Harold Uoyd
Dailey, brother of Mrs. Fox,
who is a patient in Holzer
Medical Center.
Nearly 300 parents and Cadette Troop. The colors scout and Brownie promise.
Mrs. Edna Baker has been
friends were on hand Thurs- were advanced by members They joined in singing "Girl returned to her home from
day night !or the Bicentennial of Middleport Troop 1039 and Scouts Together."
A welcome was extended Veterans Memoria l Hosp_1tal.
Sing staged by 14 Meigs the over 250 scouts, their
County Girl Scout Troops in leaders, assistants and by Mrs. Pat Thoma, service
the Mei gs Junior Hig h committee members all unit director who presented a
In 1938, Nazi for ces ocstanding on the stage led in bicentennial patch to Mrs.
School auditorium .
Gladys
Foley,
accompanist.
cupied
the western regions of
Hostesses for the Sing were the pledge to the flag, the
Mrs.
J
udy
Werry
introduced
C'lechoslovakia and declared
members of th e Rutland national anthm and the ~iri
eac h of the troops with each · all persons in those areas
one singing several songs. To German citizens.
conclude the Sing, Barbara
Whitlatch played taps and the
girls an d their leaders sang
Lay-Away
"Now the Day is Over."
Participating
were'
Earty While
Brownie troops of Pomeroy ,
Chester, Racine, Syracuse
Selection Is Good.
and Rutland ; junior troops of
- Gill CertificatesSalisbury, Racine , Syracuse,
Store Hours :
Pomeroy , Mid dl eport ,
9tol Mon . . Fri.
Chester and Rutland , and the
9to8Sat.
Rutland Cadette Troop.

Reedsville
News Notes
Ry Mrs. 1.. Ralderson
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Dawayn e
Daurst
at
Corapolis, Pa. , recently.
Dennis Reed, who is employed at Disney World, Fla.,
has been visiting with his
parents . Mr : and Mrs. Alvin
Reed.
Mrs . Opal Randolph and
Mrs. Effie Hauber visited
with Mrs. Hauber's daughter ,
Mrs. Pa ul a Caffee at
Columbus.
Mrs. Rose Thomas visited
with Mrs . Gladys Baughman
and Jack Gale at Gahanaa.
Sunday din ner guests of
Mr. and Mrs . Chester
Mundry and Lori were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Price and
Mrs. Jeanie Starcher of Long
Bottom.
Mr . and Mrs . Junior
Co ngrove of Zanesville
visi ted with Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Wilson .

Scouts stage 'Bicentennial Sing

DEAR HELEN :
Bravo for you! In publishing "Wants a Test Case's" letter
you've exposed a sltuation that has irked me for several years:
How can hospitals get away with charging for meals they don't
serve, when they charge for every tiny pill, on an itemized
sheet? I had two weeks of intravenous feedings (extra charges,
and how! ), yet my "room and service" bill was exactly the
same as if I'd had three squares a day . No matter that health
IDsurance pays - I feel for my insurance company, too,
though they get it back in higher premiums. - ART

Alfred
Social Notes

· lti16
,

':"

LARRY'S

Open Thru Sat.
9 til 8
Open Sunday

8

Laurel Oiff

Much done, much to be done ·

Helen Help

there was conor••• •.wn

Development of the minipark in Pomeroy was
discussed by Bill Young of the
Meigs'County Jaycees at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority held in
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Elec tric Co. soc ia l
room .
Young
reported
on
progress and talked about
further development plans.
Holiday par ties were
planned and Mrs. Maurisha
Nelson noted that the gift
exchange will take place on
Dec. 16 at the home of Debi
Buck , while the couples
dinner party will be held at
the Meigs Inn, Dec. 19,
The Christmas bazaar was
announced for Nov. 29 at
Trinity Church, 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. with a variety ol handmade items and baked goods
to be for sale. Pat Brogan

.

You."
·
Coming !rom Columbus for
the service were the children
of the Rev. and Mrs: Key,
Jenny and Davis, and Mrs.
Robert Walburn, Mrs. Joan
Ferguson , Mr. and Mrs.
Robert C. Anderson, Clyde
Lyn ch, Deacon John H.
White, and Deacon and Mrs.

sang "Does .Jesus Gare," and

with Dan Hayman and Hymn
Timers.
BRADFORD Church of
Christ, revival, 7:30 ea.ch
night through Sunday, w1th
Dave Roberson, evangelist.
SATURDAY
Bible study class on Saturday
THANKSG IVIN G DIN~"RIDAY
NER, 7 p.m. at Syracuse
HYMN SING, 7:30p.m. at starting at 9 a.m .
Church of God . Members and
Hazel Community Church
R 0 L L I N G H 1 L I. S . guests only.
CHAPTE R 838, Parents
Great Selection
Without Partners, 7:30 p.m.
WORK IN EA degree,
at Grace United Methodist Shade River Lodge 453, at tbe
' ...... uo..... ;;f;£-:tChur ch. Speaker
Jan hail in Chester, 7:30p.m.
11
My wife sold my comero
Wetherhoit will discuss
RACINE Grange annual with a Want Ad -lor doing
problems of marriage and turkey dinner ' 6:30 p.m. at that 1' 1
divorce.
Election
of hail . Take covered dish, own
nominating committee to be table service, items for
held.
auction and Christmas gifts
Kalanchoe
for Athens State Hospital.
P A ST
M A 'I' K U N:; ,
SOUP AND pie supper at
Decorative
Evangeline Chapter 176, Syracuse Munlcipall)uilding,
Pepper
O.E.S., 7:30p.m. at the home starting at 4p.m. by Syracuse
of Mrs. Marie Hawkins.
United Methodist Church .
Jerusalem ·
SATURDAY
Those wishing carry out
BAKE
SALE
by
Trinity
service,
please lake con. Cherry
Youth at the New York tainers.
Clothing House beginning at
PUBLIC Square dance, 8 to
Gloxinia
9:30a .m.
midnight at Middleport
Azalea
SOUP AND SANDWICH Eleme ntary School with
luncheon at Trinity Church music by String Dusters and
Mum
basement, with serving tu Glen Lambert and Cora
begin at !0:30a .m. sponsored Hilton, callers. Admission $1
by Sunday School. Soup, chill, per person. Children under 12 .
sandwiches, desserts .
accompanying· parents will
SOUP SUPPER and be admitted free. Dance
Cash and Carry
Bazaar, St. Paul 's Unite~ sponsored by Middl eport
Methodist Church Ann ex, Disaster Unit.
• Tuppers Plains from 4 to 7
p.m.
~IONDA \'
SOUTHERN High School
MEET the Basket~all
Football banquet, 6:30 p.m. Team, 7 p.m. at Larry R.
S9 N. stcond St.
Bring covered dish . Public Morrison Gym, Meigs High
Middleport, 0 .
invited.
School.

Social
Calendar

I

Rev. Henry Key is
Polly's Pointers honored on anniversary

..

..,..

attended Long Bottom
Church's celebration of 80
years of worship in the
present buildin g Sunday
afternoon.
Evelyn Well , Thelma
Henderson , Nina Robinson
and Chas. &amp; Helen Woode
attended the County Council
of Ministries meeting at the
Rock Springs UM Church
Monday evening, Nov . 10.
Attending the Bible Study
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Burke here last week
were Tanya Huffman and
son, Sharon Swindell and son,
Eleanor Douglas, Ethel
. Guthrie, Helen Woode , Kate
Honacher, and the hostess,
Gay Ann Burke, and two
children.
Wednesday evening prayer
services are held ·at the
church here each week at B
o'clock.
Genevieve Gu t hrie
returned to her home here
Saturday evening from
Holzer Medical Center and is
much improved.
Sunday guesb of Clara
Foilrod and Ina Robinson
were Mr. and Mrs. Carleton
Follrod and Charles of
Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs .
Gerald Swartz and £amily of
Marietta .
Mr . and .Mrs . Llo yd
Diiiinger and family were
dinner guests.of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Taylor
last Sunday.
Represen Iing
Alfred
Church at the Athens District
Conference at lhe United

Thanksgiving Is almost here and
once age in your thoughts are home·
ward bound. Send those loving

thoug hts to the folks back home
with the beautiful FTD Homecomer
Bouquet, oro trod I·
lionel Mum plant in a
decorati ve pot cover.
Come In and see our
many flora l des igns.

REAm our ANDTOOOITI£M

1HE FTD flORIST WAY

~~~~-~-·
'-.../p~

heritage house

Carmel News,
By the Day

59 N. Second
Middleport, 0 .

Middleport, Ohio

Mr . an d Mrs. Larry Circle
and son have returned to
their home at Fort Lauderdale , Fla., after spending
three weeks here with
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester called on Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Lee and family
on Tuesday.
Larry Sayre and William
Carleton of Racine called at
the home of Arthur Johnson
on Sunday evening .
Mr . and Mrs. Goerge Circle
and daughter, Cheryl , Mr.
and Mrs. James Circle, all of
New Haven, visited wi th
Mary Circle on Sunday.
Betty Van Meter and Eunie
Brinker called at the home of
William Carleton of' Racine
recently.
Vi rgil and Bob Woods of
Chester called on Robert Lee Choose o shed roof, tile roof or born roof feeder, ony of wfli&lt;h con
installed in tree, on pole or on o platform. Feeders hold five pounds
recently.
Twenty-one persons were
present for Sunday school on
toad
· last Sunday .

GIFTS
FOR THE -

HOME

CHARMING AND ENCHANTING DANCES depicting
the ancient legends of Korea will be performed by the
tittle Angels Sunday at the Gallia Academy High School
auditorium. The concert Is the season opener for the Tri County Community Concert ASsn. Curtain time is Bp.m.

Theater season
opens this evening
ATHENS - Music, strobes
and gir ls in cages "Welcome to 'Big Tom 's' You're gonna like it here We have Melissa. Sally, Vicki
and Chrissy" - and so opens
the Ohio University Experimental Theater Series
with David Rabe's "In the
Boom Boom Room," a play
about the rugged and gutsey
life of a go-go dancer in a
Philadelphia Discot~eque .
Chrissy, _played by J ody
Fleischer, a victim of sexual
exploitation and her inability
to face life, struggles to
establish her own identity as
a person of sincerity and
warmth. Her effort s are
never encouraged but actually thwarted by the at-

ti tudes of her parents, portrayed by Dick Miller and
Barbara Hipkiss, and her
constan t compa nion, AI ,
portrayed by Morgan
Williams.
The director, Kevi n
Thompson , a graduate
student in Jhe Professional
Director Training Program,
says that " Boom Boom is
dynamic and raw entertainment. It gives and
Jakes and deals with life in an
atmosphere of passionate
realism."
The
producti on
is
scheduled for a three-night
run- Friday, Saturday and
Su nday. All performances
are at 8 p.m. in the Forum
Theater. General admission
li ckets are availa ble at
Memorial Auditorium Box
Office, 594-5010.

Methodist Churc h in Athens
las t Sunday was Lloyd
Dillinger of Shade.
Dana Swartz of Columbus
visited at the Paul &amp; Virgie
Buckley home last Friday
(interested in the drilling in
process), and also called on
Clara Follr od and Ni na
Robinson.
Sherman and Pamela
Henderson recen liy visited
the Harold Henderson family.
Mr. and Mr s. Arthur
Ather ton recently visited
th eir son, Cla rence and
family, at Long Bottom._

n thought for the day :
American statesman Daniel
Webster said, ~·Let our object
be our country, our whole
country and nothing but our

country."

BIRD FEEDERS

. 4!!

~ed. vouR~ ~c~o~icE

PLANtTARY

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TOOLS AND AIDS

THE FRIENDLY ONEI

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BOffiiNG COMPANY
Middleport

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The Department Store
of Building Since 1915

�.

'..

8- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Nov . 21. 1975
~

POME
Rev w H
Rov. Mayer Sunday school
supt Chur ch sc hool 9 I S
am worship servt ce 10 24
am Youth cho tr reh eaF sttl.
Monday , J 30 p m und e r
drrecltOn of MMy Skrnner
senior cho.r rehea rsal 7 30
p m Thursday wtth Mrs Pau l
Neue d irector
POMEROY CHURC H OF
THE NAZARENE - Corn er
Unton and Mulberry Rev
Ctyde V Hender son pastor
Sunda'f schoo l 9 30 am , Glen
McClung , supt
mornrng
worshtp , 10 30 a m eventng
serv ic e
7 30
m td week
se rvrce . Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EP ISCOP Al - Th e
Rev Harold Deelh rector
Churc h serv•ces 10 30 am
Ho ly communton llr st Sunday
of mon th church sctlool. 10 30
am for nurserv throuoh 12
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Rrc har d Evanson ,
pastor Bib le school , 9 30
a m , worshrp 10 30 a m ,
adul t worsh ' p serv tee and
young pE!ople 's meet ing 7 30
p m Combrned Btble study
and prayer meelmg Wed
nesdey , 7 30 p m
THE SA LVATION ARMY En '&lt;lOY Ray W Wtnrng , off tcer
tn charge Sunday J~ am ,
Hol iness meeting . 10 30 am .
Su nday
School
Young
Peop le ' s Leg1on , 7 p m ,
Thur sday 1 to 3 p m Ladtes
Hom e League . 7 p m Prep
cla sses
ST . PAUL LUTHERAN
CHURCH ,
Corne r
of
Syc amore and Second Sts ,
Pomeroy , Th e Rev Wi ll iam
Mldd leswerth Pastor , Sunday
Sch ool a t 9 45 a fl1 1 ~nd
Ch urch Servtces 11 a 1n
SACRED HEART - Rev
Fa th er .. Pa ul 0
Welton ,
pastor
Phone
997 2825
Saturday evemng Mass 1 7 JO,
Sunday Ma ss , 8 and 10 a m ,
Con fessron , Saturda y 7 7 30
pm
POMEROY FIRST SAP ·
TIST - Robert Kuh n , pastor .
Wi ll ia m Watson. Sun day
schoo l sup! Sunday schoo l.
9 lOam , BYF 6 p m Btble
study , Wednesday 7 p rn
ChOir practice Wednesday ,
8 JO p m
BURLINGHAM - CHURCH
- Pas-tor Je rr y Lew is Sunday
sc hool 2 JOp m with wo rship
scrvrce at J 30 p rn mtd
weel service , Tu esday , 7 30 p
m

hr p l 10 Wec.ltH 'id&lt;" Y p1a yc r
MORSE
CHAPE L
an~ llrl~ h: !&gt; tudy 7 !0 1 nl
pil Sfvr
Troy
rSht p I I il Ill
Chun.h
TUPPERS
PlAINS
Zw11 1t nq , •UIIdrt y sc 11oo1 sup! Wu
~C hOOI tO a Ill
CHRI St i AN CHUR C. tl ~ und.w
sc hool 9 JO ,, m
PORTLAND - Wor s h1p I llf/ 1'111 ll rHJU ',\ICJOd Pol 'olor
mor nmq wor sh rp
10 :\ 0
Sunday CViln gr.IISirC tll CC irnQ , 1 lOp ru Chur ch ~l hOOI9 30 I C'IW ,1r U C rtd wro \1 J c,unday
'r hool '11rpt '•Il l del\' ~choo l
1 JO p m
Prayer ntt) c tmq '' m
SUTTON - Chur ch ~c h ool ,"~ ,o •I ,,
Morntnq sermon,
Wednesday 7 JO p 111
9
30.1
111 Won~ htp 1St and Jrd
~ und(l v cverung
10 10 tt 111
MIDDLEPORT
"Undays
tO
JO
am
•.r.r vt cc 1 p 111
MT MORIAH BAPTIST NORTH
EAST
ClUSTER
LETART FALLS UNITED
Corn er Fou r lh and Mat n
Rev Rob ert Meece,
~~ET H RE N
Rev
Mtddleport Rev Hen r y Key .
PastCir
I r1 Lldnd
Norr •.., pasto r ,
Jr pastor Sunday (',CJ1oo1.
Dcnnts Crecgar.
I loyd Norr rs , sup t
Sunday
9 30 a m
Mn.
E r vtn
AHOC MiniSter
!!c hool 9 30
mo rntng
Baumgardner , sup! , Morntnq
JOPPA - Worshtp 10 am
sermon 10 30 il m , Prayer
worsh tp. 10 45 i'l m
Schoo l9 am , Prayer servt ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
JEHOVAH ' S WITNESSES Church
CHE SHIRE CHURCH OF
- Larry Ce~rnahan prestd.ng Mcet tnq Wednesday !I p m
lONG BOTTOM - Wor
GOO OF PROPHECY ·· G P
m tnts ter
Sunday , 1.3tblc ShiP
9
a
m
Sunday·
School
'1 t111lh , pastor Sunday s cnoo l,
lee lure 9 30 il m
Wa tch
9 45 a m • Prayer Meclrng
10 ,1 nt
Arthur He nso n.
tower study , 10 30 a m
Wednesday
7
30
p
rn
~ up I
Mornrng Wo r sh1 p, 11
Tuesday , Brb le study 7 JO
NORTH
BETHEL
a 11 1 Young People 's ser11tce,
p m
Thursday m tnrstry WorShip
Church
7 p m
Evenm~ serv 1ce, 7 30
school 7 30 p m
se r vrce Schoot 10 a11m am
p m
W~d n esd ay
M•d Week.
meetrng 8 30 p m
ALFRED - Sunday School
Prayer \1erv•ce , 7 30 p m ,
MIDDlEPORT CHURC H 9 115
a m WorShiP 11 a m , Youlh meet1ng 6 30 p m ,
OF CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN
er mee h ng Wednesday
Evcnmg worshtp , 7 JO p m
UNION - Lawrence Manley 7Pray
CHESTER CHURCH OF
pa stor , Mrs Russe ll Young . Sp45mp m , UMW Jrd Tuesday
THE NAZARENE - Rev
Sunday School Su p! Sunday
REEDSVILLE - Sunday
Herber!
Gr ate ,
pa sto r
Sc hool 9 30 am Eventng
hool 9 30 a m Worship 7 30 Wo rshtp servrce, 11 am and
worship . 7 30 Wednesday pScm
, Prayer Meetrng 7 30
7 30 p m
Sunday Sun day
prayer mee tmg 1 30 p m
m Tuesday UMW 7 30
Sc hoo l 9 JO a m Rtc hard
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF pp m
lsi Thur sday
Bar ton supt Prayer meeting
GOO - Racine Route 2 th e
SfLVER RIDGE ..... Wor
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Rev
James M
Muncy, Shtp
10 am Church Sc hool 9 , BRADFORD CHURCH OF
pa stor Sun day sc hool 9 45
CHRI ST - Cliffor d Smtth ,
am . morning worstl rp, 11 om
TUPPERS PLAINS m•nrs ter Sunday School 9 30
a m eventng wors hr p 7 30 Worsh
am
mor n tng church 10 30
Prayer meettng, Tuesday , 10 am tp 9 am Church School
am Sunday eventng servtce ,
7 30 p m
Young people's
KENO
CHURCH
OF 7 30 p m Wednesda y servtce,
meeti ng 7 30 p m Thur sday CHRIST - George Fred err ck,
MIDDLEPORT FIRST supt Se rvtce weekly 9 30 8 pIll
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
SA PTIST - Corn er Srxlh and o:l m on Sunday Preachmg
Palm e r , the Rev
Peter lrrst and lh tr t:l Sundeys of METHODIST - Rev Floyd F
Gral'ldal, pa stor
Danny month by Cl1 ff ord Smti h , 9 30 Shook. pa stor . Lloyd Wnght.
sunday sc hool su pt Sunday
Tho mpso n , supertn lendenl an&gt;
school 9 30 am
Mo rnt ng
Sunday Schoo l WMPO R,dto
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
program 7 d5 a m , Sunday UNION - Darrell Doddrtll worshtp 10 30 am evenrng
Sc hool 9 15 a m Mornt nq pa stor Sundav Schoo l 9 30 worshtp 7 30 p m Wed
, Chr1st1an Yout h
worshtp 10 15 a m Youth am Leonard Gilmore ftr sl nesday
ac lrvt ltes and fe ll owshtp for elder evenrng servtce 7 30 Cr usade 6 30 p m Cho tr
pract•ce Thur ~ d ay 7 p m
1un•or and senio r ht gh p m
Wednesday praye r
DEXT ER CHURCH OF
st ud ents 6 p m Sunday mee tmg 7 30 p m
CHRIS T - Char les Russe ll.
evenm~ worshtp
7 JO p m
MT MORIAH CHUR CH OF Sr rnrntsler Norman C Wttl
Mrd wee k prayer serv 1ces GOO - Ra cme Route 2 Th e
sup t
Sunday school 9 30
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Rev Cnarl es Hand pastor a m worshtp se rvtc e 10 30
' CHURCH OF CHRIST , 5unday sc hool 9 4S am
a 111
Bt bl e study Tuesday,
Mtd dleporl 5th and Main morntng wors hr p, 11 am 730 p nt
George Glaze , mrnts t er . Event ng servr ces Tuesday
R·EORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF
James
Sheels
sup ertn and Frtday , 7 30 p m
BEARWAllOW
R
lOGE
LATTER DAY SAINTS tenden l Btble school 9 30
a m morntng worstlrp 10 30 CHURCH OF CHRI ST ·- Doug Portland
Ractne Road
Tuesday
Seaman
m
,n1sler
lltb
le
W&gt;il•am Roush . pastor Denny
My Susan took part tn the Thanksg1ving pageant at church
a m , even•ng wors hr p 7 JO
I Connlhlans
s
tudy
9
10
am
morn
tng
prayer servrce, 7 p m Wed
Sunday
Sc hoo l
sahool Ofcourse, lmadeherptlgnmcostume. L.ater,as lwatch ed
EYans
nesday
.. wo rshi p tO 10 am eventng D.reclor Sunday Sch ool 9 JO
15
54 57
her smg,ng, she looked JUSt hke the ptctures I have seen of pilgnm
MIDDLEPORT
Church worshtp a p m wednesday t1 m . Mornmg worshtp 10 30
Wecfnesday
Of
Th e
NaJar e ne 111gh• 1\t bl e stu dy 8 p m
am Su nQay eventng serv.ce
ch1ldren lfe ltalumpmmythroatandhadareal senseof ldenhty
MT OLIVE CHURCH 7 P m Wednesday evenmg
Rev Don Co le. pas
Mark
w1th
those
men,
women
and
children
who
lono
ago
Withstood
the
lor
Mr s Ma r y Lat h ey Long Bollom Sundav Sctlool
h
prayer ser vtces 7 30 p m
13 24 27
Su nd ay Sc hoOl su pt Sundav 10 a m w1th W1l lard Prgott .
BE THLEHEM BAPTIST hardshtps of hfe m a new and ahen world.
su
pt
Evange
lt
st
rc
message
sc hool 9 30 a m
mornrng
Rev Earl Sh uler pa slo r
1
These mumgra nts weren't superhuman, they were peop e
Thursday
worship , II am
Sun day ea ch Sunday even .n g , 7 30 by wo r shr p se r v1ce 9 30 am ,
eva ngei 1Sitc meetrn g 7 30 Elder Russell Ctt ne mtntste r Sunday sch ool 10 30 a m
JUSt
hke
you and me. They had the courage to believe m a new hfe
John
p m
pr ayer
meettng, of I he Apos lot c Fa rt h Brble Btbl e s lu CfY and pr ayer
l
ldl ea d
18 36·37
Stud y, We dnesday, 7 30 p m
sc rv&lt;ee Th urs~a.y. 7 JO P m- anewcountry lh ey bel1eve d t h e"u ltima tes tru ggewou
'We dn esday 7 30 p m
THE
UN! T E D STIVERSVILLE COM ·
to lhe freedom they so fervently sought.
CARLETON CHURCH Fnday
MIN . MUNITY CHURCH - Sund ay
PRESBYTERIAN
K rngs b ury Roa d Gary K •ng ,
Over three and a half centunes have passed The foundation
ISTRY
OF
MEIGS school se r vtce 10 a m
pastor
Sunday
school
9 30
Revelation
COUNTY , Dwight L lavrtz . Prayer mee trng Thur sday , 7 am
evenmg wors hi P. 7 JO
theptlgnmfatherslatdforusseemstobeshak.ingbeneathourfeet,
1 4 .8
p
m
Sunday
even
tng
serv
tce
Pa stor Otrec tor
p m Prayer meeting , Wed
and even our fa1th wavers
7
p
m
HARRISONVILLE
Saturday
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST nesd ay 7 30 p m
Sunday Churc h Sc hool. 9 30
L o NG
a o T T o M
But, reconsider. We owe tt to those ptlgnms as
Revelatton
.. Pomero y
Harnsonv tile
am , Mrs Homer Lee , Su pt ,
Road M1ke ·Gtr ton pa stor
CHRISTIAN - Bruce Smd h,
wellas toourselves.toreaffirmourbeheftnGod andm
.
Mo rn in g Wo rshtp 10 30
1 12 16
MIDDl EPORT - Sunday Steven Stanley . Sunday schoo l Supl Brble School. 9 JO a m
Church Sc hool q 30 a m supf Su nday school. 9 30 Preachmg servtce 10 45 a m
_ thiS Th a nksg111m g?
Scrrotun!s setected
Rtchard vaughan , &amp;u pt , am . mornrng worshtp and pas tor Wattace Damewood ,
commun1on
,
10
30
am
No
evenmo
s::.:e
"
;ril
v'j'fr
e
'-&lt;07';~
The Ame11 t
Mornrng WorshtD , 10 30 am
H Y SE l l
R0 N
F R E E Cup, , ght 1975 He1ster Adwei11510Q Serw1te Joe St 1asbufg V11g lnla
B ble Soc•1
evenrng
you th
SYRACUSE - Morn tng Su nd ay
Worship , 9 am , Sund ay Chnstr an en deavor 6 30 p m , METHODIST CHURCH Chur ch Sc hool, 10 a m Mrs wors hrp se rv1ce 7 30 p m Rev Paul Nev ill e, pastor
Wednesday e~Je nm g prayer Sunday Sc hool 9 30 am
Sampson Ha ll Sunt
With the hope It wilL in some measure, foster and help sustam that
•meettng
and Brbte s tudy . 7 30 Mor n tng ser111Ce 10 JO a rn
RUTLAND CHURCH OF pm
youttl
serv•ce.
6
.tiS
p
m
which
is good in fami ly and community life, this feature is sponsored by
GOD Rev James D
ST
JOHN LUTHERAN Evangeltsl•c se r vtce 1 30 p rn
Guy nn
pas lor
Sunda y CHURCH,
the
business
firms and organizations whose names appear below
e Gro ve , The Prayer meetrnq , Thur sd ay
sc ho ol. 10 a m
Sunday Rev Wll lta Ptn
7
m
Mtddle
swa
r
th
,
30
p
m
worshtp 11 a m , Su nda y
'
FREEDOM
GOSPEl
Pastor Church Servt ces 9 30
FRESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS
eventng service 7 p m , am
Sunday Sctlool 10 30 a m MISSION at Ba ld Knob Rev
2 Convement Locations
Wedn esday worshi p serv 1ce,
BRADBURY CHURCH OF E J Gr rtftlh supl of ch ur ch
•
7 30 p m
CHRIST - Btble Sc hool. 9 30 Re v L R Glu esen&lt;.amp
Pomeroy
Ph
.
m
-2582
Bakers of Goo d Bread
CHURCH Nea r Long a m . mornmg worshtp 10 30 pas tor Ruger Wtl lfr ed Sr
.Hunltngton, W Va
Bottom , Edse l Har t. pastor am Sun day eVentng wo rshtp Sunday School sup! Sunday
Mason, Ph . 77l·SI21
servtce 7 p m . cho• r prachce sch ool 9 30 am . pray e r
Sunday schOOl. 10 a m
Churc h, 7 30 p m , prayer Wednesday 7 p m Rev Je ff mee trn g, Tuesday, 7 30 p m
1, you th mee t1ng . 6 p m Su nday
me etmg , 7 30 p m Thursday Ranso n Pastor
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST - leaders Ada van Meier and
MIDDLE PORT
PEN ·
TECOSTAL - Thi rd Ave , the Rev Freeland Nor rrs pastor Gretta Su ttle Su nday even tng
Rev William Kn ttt el, pastor Sundav schoot 10 a m , worshtp , 7 p m lhrough
"Ronald Dugan , Sunday Sc hOOl Church serv •ce . 7 p m wtnter months
Two locations
MT HERMON CHURCH
Supt Classes fo r a ll ages , Wednesday Btbl e ~tu dy , 7
Grocer1es &amp; General Me rchand1 ~e
Moddleport, 0 .
St
N
S~rond
St
OF
THE
UfiiTED
om
evening se r ~lce. 7 30 , Bible
Ph
9495772
Galhpolrs, 0 .
Rac1ne
BRETHREN
IN
CHRIST
RACINE
CHURCH
OF
THE
46 Cour St ' "
study Wed n esaday , 7 30
p m , youth services. Fr1 day, NAZARENE - Re\1 Jo hn A Rev J ames H Leach , pastor
Co ffma n pas tor s un day Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m ,
7 30 p m
Spencer
supl
Sch ooL 9 30 a m
Ge ra ld Russell
FREEWILL BAPTIST Corner Ash a nd Plum , Mid Wells su p! Mornmg wo rsht p, Wo rshtp se rv1ce 10 45 a m
d le pcrt. No e l Herrma n , 10 30 a m , Sunday e11enlng Eventng wor shrp al1ernalrng
7 30
Prayer wllh C E al 7 30 p m on
pastor Saturday eveni ng worshtp
service 7 p m Sund t!IY sc hool meetrng , We dn esday 7 JO p Sunday Pray er meetrng 7 JO
We Fi ll All Doctors Prescnp l1on s
21 4 E. Ma1n
p m Wedn es day Alfr ed
Pomeroy
10 am
Sunday evenmg m
992·295S
Pomeroy
Wolfe
lil
y
leade
r
Ph
992-SI30
worsh 1p, 7 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST
WHITE 'S CHAPEL
Roy
-- Wa lt er P B1kacsan , pastor , Coo lville RD Rev
Ronnte Sa lser . Sunday school Deeter paslor Sunday school
s upt Su nday schoo l, 9 30 9 30 a m . worsh tp se rvrce.
am morn tng worshtp 10 &lt;10 10 30 a m Bt bl e study and
Sunday even rng worship , 7 30 , praye r sennce , Wednesda y,
Lou1s W Osborne
Wednesday eventng B1ble 7 30 p m
Ph . 992 3486
100 E Main
220 E Mam
Pomeroy
Ph . 992 2178
study, 7 30
RUTLAND
Pomeroy
DANVILLE
WESLEYAN
RU
"t
LAND
CHURCH
OF
MEIGS
Rod Kas le r ,
Rev l elon Glasu re, pastor CHRIST COOPERATIVE PARISH
Sunday Schoo l. 9 30 am
pastor V H Bra ley , Sunday
THE UNITED
youth and 1un1or vou lh ser school supt Su nday school.
METHODIST CHURCH
wo rsh tp ser vtce
vrce 6 45 p m . even rng 9 30 a m
Robert T. Bumgarner,
worshrp , 7 30 p m
prayer and communron , 10 30 am
Director
Keepsake Diamond Rings
Bakers of Gay 90 Bread
and praise. Wednesday , 7 30 youlh meellng 6p m Su nday
POMEROY CLUSTER
om
even•ng servtce 7 re gul a r
Middleport
Ph 992·3030
Rev Robert Hayden
21'l E. Ma1n St , Pomeroy
SILVER
RUN
FREE boa rd meettng thrrd Safur
Ph . m ·3785
Rev D wm . Svdenstncker
BAPTIST - M1les Tr out , day 7 p m
CHESTER - Wors ht p 9 15 pas
lo r , Sunday Sc hool , 10
RUTLAND --COMMUNITY
a m Churc h Sc hool 10 a m
am, Leon Mtller , - sup! CHURCH - Sunday School
POMEROY - Worship
Evening servtce. 7 p m ,
10 JOa m Church School9 15 Pra yer meellng , Thursday , 7 9 30 am , wors hip service , 11
am Wednesday - P ray er
a m UMY F 6 30 p m
pm
meeting , 7 30 p m Youth
I Formerly Sa di e's Markel l
ENTERPRISE - Worsh1p
CHESTER CHURCH OF services, Frtday , 7 30 p m ,
Middleport , Oh1o
Syracuse
9 a m Churc h-Sc hool 10 am
Ph . 992·3986
GODRev
Bobby
Porter
,
Sunday n ig ht worship , 7 30
ROCK
SPRINGS
Sun day school. 9 30
worship 10 a m Church apastor
RUTlAND CHURCH OF
m
.
worsh
serv tee . 11
Sc hool 9 am UMYF 6 30 am eventng•Pservice
THE NAZAI{ENE - Rev
•
,
7
30
pm
Lloyd 0 Grtmm , J r , pastor
youth
serv.ce
,
Wednesday
,
FLATWOODS - Worshtp 7 JO p m
Sunday sc hool. 9 30 am
11 am Church School 10 a m
worsh tp serv tce , 10 30 am
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Ted Jones , broadcast lt ve O'tler WMPO
CHURCH Rev. Robert Bumgarner
700 E Main
Pomeroy
pastor
Sunday
schoo l, 9 30 young people 's serv1ce , 6 &lt;IS
HEATH - Worship 10 30 am
evang eltstrc servrce , 7 30 p m
Oiai992·ZIOI
Roy
Srg
man
,
supt
"
Hetl"
Deal
er
a m Church School 9 30 a m
,
Prayer
meet1ng
,
Wednesday
,
mor n111g wors hip
10 JO
Ph . 949-5961
Third St.
UMY F 6pm
p m .
Mtss ronary
fiunday evening serv rce . 7 30 7 30
RUTlAND
Jeffrey lllld
mee tr ng , 7 30 p m ft r st
tweek
se
r
vtce
Wed
Gerber Pastor WorShiP nesday 7 ~ Jo p m
Wednesday of month
10 30 am Chur ch Sc hool 9 30
MASON COUNTY
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
am
THE
NAZARENE
-Rev
SYRACUSE CLUST ER
.
Fme Food &amp; Serv1ce
MA SO N FIRST BAPTIST - ·
Howard C Btack , pastor Bob
Rev. RIChard E JarVIS
The Store wi th A Hearl
Middleport
Lo~ ust Sl
Secon
d
and
Pomeroy
Sis,
Sch
ool
Supt
Moore
Sunday
ASBURY - Wors hip 11 sunday Sch oOl. c lasses for all Stan Cratg, pastor Sun day
Ractne
Ph 949·3342
Oiai99H248
am Chur ch School 9 so a m
ages 9 30 am
mornrng schoo l 9 45 a m
worsh rp
UMW f1r sl Tuesday
trammg
10 45 NYP S Sunda y serv•ce . 11 am
FORST RUN - Worship 9 6worshtp
unton
6
JO
p
m
evenrng
30
p
m ~r ivangeltstic se r
&amp;
am Church Sc tlool 10 a m
worsh •P servrce, 7 30 p m
vice
Sunday
,
7
30
p
m
Mid
UMW third Wednesday 7 30 week prayer meetmg , Wed Mid week pr ayer servtce
P m
•
, 7 30 p m , Mrssronary Wed nesday 7 30 p m
MINERSVILLE - Worshrp n!!osday
MASON
CHURCH
OF
meet tng second Wednesday
10 am Church Sc hool 9 am
Sa les- Quasar- Service
7JOpm
CHRIST, P 0 BO)C .dB? . Mtller
Ph . 949.9S91
Ractne
UMW thrrd Monday 7 30 p m
Ph 949·31SI
St , Mason W Va Sunday
UNITED
FAITH
NON
·
Rae
me
SYRACUSE Church DENOMINATIONAL - Rev Btble Study 10 am , Worshtp
Schoo l 9 30 am Worship Robert Smtih , pastor Sun day 11 a m and 7 p m Btble Study
ser-vice 7 30 p m
school , 9 30 a m
class We dne sd ay 7 p m
Voc.al
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
leader Leo Htll , worshtp musrc
Rev Howard Shtvetey
servtce 10 30 am
ch urch
FIRST
S OUTHERN
Rev Steven W1ko n_
7 ]0 p 01
BAPTIST - Corner of Seco nd
Rev Zelia Krunewski
.
E 0 E N
' U N I T E 0 and Anderson Mason Pastor f
"The ~rlen dly Folks"
Middleport
Oial992·3284
BETHAN't' - (Dorcas)
BRETHREN IN CHURIST er Ctou d Sunday sc hool
~
Pomoroy, OhiO
Wors h1p 9 30 a m Church Elden R Blake . pastor 9Walt
45 am . worsh rp servtce , 11
School 10 30 am
nd ay Sch ool 10 am , a 111 arrd 7 30 p m WeeklY'
CARMEL - Church Sc hool Su
Howa rd
McCoy ,
s up t , 8tble study Wed nes day 1 30
9 30 am wors hip 10 30 a m
Mo rn 1ng sermon, 11 a m , pm
2nd and .tth Sund ays
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
Su nday
ntght
ser \lices :
APPLE GROVE - Sun&lt;t ey Chrtstlan Ende a vor 7 JO GOD, Duddrng Lan e. Mason
School 9 JO am Worshi p 1 30 p m Song servtce , 8 p m , W Va
~OODLINER
Chester Ten nant ,
Pomeroy , Ohio
Ill Court St
p nt 1st and 3rd Sundays , Preachrng a 30 p m
Mid Pastor Sunday School 9 &lt;~5
Mtddteport,
Ohto
Prayer meeti ng Wednesday \'\ e elo.
Prayer
meettng , am Children's Chuq:h 6 .J5
.
7 30 p m Fellowship supper
c dnesday , 7 p m
Ray p m • Young People 's Se r ~Jr c e
fr rs1 Saturday 6 p m UMW Adams . lay leader
"
6 ·15
p m ,
EvangcltSitc
Meigs County Branch
2nd Tuesda'( 7 30 p m
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
Scrv
tce
7
30
p
m
Worn
ens
EAST LETART - Church CHRIST
located at Mtsslonary counc1t 10 am
Schodl 1st 2nd . Jrd Sundays , Rutland on New Ltma Road , frrs1 and lhr rd Tu es day s
9 JO am
Four1h Sunday ne,.,t to Forest Acre Park
Pray e r and 01ble Study
Middleport , Ohoo
10 30 am
Worshtp 2nd
Ray Rouse . pastor
Wednesday , T 30 p m
Sunday 7 30 p m 4th Sunday Rev
Robert Musser , Su nday School
Ph 992 ·3163
296 W. S..cond
Pomerov
9 JO a m . Prayer Meeting supt Sunday school. 10 30
Wed nesd ay 1 30 p m UMW am . worsh iP 7 30 p m Bible
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
lsi Tuesday 7 30 p m
study , Wednesday. 7 JO p m , CHRIST tn Ch r slran Unton
WESLEYAN - (Ractne l ·- ~ aturdav n1ghl pretv r. r ser
Th~ Pev Wtl ltam camp bell ,·
Sunday Sc hool 10 a m Vllf&gt; J l0 p !1l
PAStor Sunday Sc hool 9 JO
Wors hip 11 am , Jr UMYF
HEMLOCK
GROVE am , James Hug hes , supt ,
Wed nesday 3•30 p m Bible
Chester, Ohio
Roger , even111g serv tcc , 7 30 p tn
The F lneslln Mobile Homes
Study Thursday 7 p m Choir ,CHRtnJAN
Watson
puto
r.
Wallace
Wednesday
e\lenmg
prayer
Pra c t1ce ·Thursday 8 p m "1
1100 E. Matn
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-7034
8r8Hfdtd,•..!supt , morning rnoetmg , 7 JO p m You th
LETART FALLS - Church worship
,
9'
90,
church
scttool
,
prayer
service
each
Tuesday
Schoo l 1st , 2nd , Jr:d s'undays to JO,
young
people 's
FAIRVIEW
BIBLE I
10 15 am Jlh Sundav 9 IS meeting , 6 30 p m , evening
..
ctiURCH , Letart. W Va, Rt
am , Worship lsi , 2nd 3rd worship,
1:30 p.m • Bible 1 Rev George Hoschar .
Sl/nda ys 9 1~ a m , 41h S1Y,Ilf. We&lt;lnosdoy , 1 :~0 p.m .
'
pa s tor. ~ Sunday School
9 30
Sunday 7 30 p m
Nal1onwlde Insura nce Co of Columbus, 0 ,
Sma II Engine Sales &amp; S..rvlce ,
a 11\ .Prayer and Btble study
MORNING
STAR
301
Sprtng
Ave
Pomeroy
/, ev
trcrl C.oK
pasro r
498 Locust St. Middleport Ph . 992-3092
Worshtp 9 30 a m . Church Sunday Sc hool supt , Joe 1 JO 1p m Cottage Pr ayer
Dial
992
2ll8
:-.
erv
.ce
Tuesday
,
10
am
.
Sc hool 10 30 a m , Mu:t Week
~ay re
Sunday school, 9 .45 Wors h lp Serv Jce Thu rs day ,
Se r vrce Wednesday 8 p m
a m . Sunday evening wor 7 30 p m
.
~ p c n c cr

ESlEYAN
H LINES S CHURCH
Harrl so nvt ttC' Re v 0 Dc lt
Mantey Pn stor Hc rtry Ebltn
Sunda y School su p! 5llnday
Sc hool 9 30 a rn
EventnQ
wor sh tp 7 30 p m Prayer and
Pra tse se r v,c e Thursday 7 10
p m

SYRACUSE
F IR ST
CHURCH OF GOO - Rev
Georg e 0 ler pa stor Sunday
sc hool , 9 &lt;~ 5 a m
rnornrng
pre a c h rng .
11
am
E'YiiOg eiiSII CSe r vtCC 7 30 p ll1
Prayer meC' Itng ltwr sday
7 30 p m
POMEROY
WESTSIDE
CHUR CH OF CHRIST, 200 W
Matn S!
Je rry Paul
m ln1sl er , ptlone 992 7666
Con s e rv a t tv e
non
tn str umental
Sunday wor
sh ip 10 11 m ll1bte stu dy 11
am . wor shtp 6 om Wed
nf!Sday Btb te s tudy 7 p m
RUTLAND
FREEWill
BAPTIST - Rog er Turn er
pa s tor Sunday schoo l 10
am
Mor ntng wo rshtp I I
am Sunday C\ICntng srrvrce
1 30 Wednesday B tb h: study
I 30 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE
CHRISTIAN CH UR CH - Rev
Ron Terry pasto r Sunday
sc hool. 10 am , Mrs Worley
Fran c ts ,
supertn t endent
Morn tng worsh rp , 11 a m
Sunday evenr ng servrce , 7 JO
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST Prea.chlng
9 JO a m
ftrst and second
Sundays of eac h month !ht rd
an d fourth Sun(layc; each
mon th , worship scrvtce a t 7 JO
p 111 Wednesday even tn gs a t
7 30 Prayer and Btbl e Stud y
SE V E NTH DAY AD
VENTIST , Mu lberry HC!!Jhls
Road
Pomeroy
Pastor Gerard Seton Sab
balh Schoo l Superintendent ,
Rtta Whrte Sabbath Sc hool
Saturday a ll ern oon al 7 00 .
with
worsh1p
servrce
followmg al 3 15
FIRST
SOUTHERN
BA PTIST 282 Mu lber r y
Ave , Pomero y altdta led with
S 8 C . the Rev Bradl ey
RUTLAND FIRST SAP
TIST CHURCH - Rev Roger
Ford . Jr , pas to r
Drewy
Go re , supt , Sunday school
9 30 a m , mor n rng worshiP
10 4 ~ a m
TH E HILANO CHAPEL ,
Geo rg e Casto pastor Sunda y
even rng
School 9 30 a m
wor shtp
7 30
Thurs day
cvent ng prilyer se rvtcc , 7 30

P"'

RAY CROMLEY
Massacre shuffle
a breath of air?
By Ray Cromley
- Forget, for tile mom ent what President
Ford's Halloween reshuffie may or may not do for him at next
year's Republican Presidential convention and in the
November election.
The shifts, maladroit in execution and damagmg to some
very able men, may, nevertheless, four years from now, be a
boon to tile candidate-hungry Republican party, so frequently
doomed to nominating IUlknoWIIB.
N. a minority party In voter registration, m the U. S.
Senate and House in tile governor 's mansions, Republicans
have a most difficult time in running candidates with wellspOtlighted !XoVen records in high posts, whose names are
household words .
Politically, Washington can be a first-rate training groWld,
furnlshlng a platfonn In which able men can make tllemselves
known nationwide - a boon for tllose who look forward to
rwmlng for tile Senate or House, for a governorship, state
legislature seat, or for five president or president of tile United
Slates at some time in their lives
A party falling of recent Republican presidents - both Mr.
Ei~enhower and Mr. Nixon - much complained about in-GOP
rankll, is tllat these two men did little during tlleir terms of
' office to develop able younger men, put tllem into positions of
!l'ominence where they could gain the public recogrution
necessary to win tough future campaigns
To a marked degree, tile record shows, both Mr
Eisenhower and Mr . NIXon brought in nonpolitical types not
likely to have strong party or elective posts after leavmg tbetr
posts in the Eisenhower or Nixon administrations.
However damaging otherwise his recent shuffie, Mr . Ford,
has willingly or WJwlttingly , brought to tile fore a stable of
relatively young men.
In the S81Tle shifts, he has eliminated men with no great
political potential m the next decade.
Nelson Rockefeller, for all his chann and ablhty, w111 be
too old In 1980 to have much of a future as a candidate for
etecUve off1ce.
James Schlesinger and Wilham Colby, men of extremely
great talent, have thus far shown no mterest in runrung for any
elective post and no one to my knowledge has tBiked seriously
of their entering the field .
George Busb, Donald Rumsfeld and Elliott Ric hardson
have thetr political futures before them. All three have shown
cmslderable ability as candidates AU three have recently
been somewhat away from tile public eye, Richardson and
Busb as ambassadors, and Rumsfeld as Mr. Ford's exec in the
White House. These are not posts designed to build public
reputations.
But three posts are •a drop in the bucket There a re 12 to 15
other major positions which, 1f given to men with outstanding '
political prospectB, could make a major difference some key
'
elections in 1978, 1980, 1982 and further down the pike.
State, Treasury, Agriculture come read1ly to mind.
What Mr. Ford will do further on changing men and
programs, however , is not clear. Historically , he 's been•a slow
starter, then, when wanmid up, a hard charger
But It is a good bet that Mr . Ford's nominee for Vice
President will be one of tile tllree he's just put m new posts, or
90me other promising relatively young man as far as high
officials go,
•

In

- ---

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of America

Abigail Adams, wife of John
Adams of Massachusetts .
.. Let us separate. [the
British authortttes] are un·
worthy to be our brethren .
Let us renounce them , and,
Ins tead of applications.
let us beseech the Almtghty
to blast their counsels, and
bring to naught ali their
devices"
-8)1 Ron M1ckenzie 6 Jeff MatNeii)'/Cl l915, Until l Ftature Syndicate

FRIDAY , NOVEMBER 21, 197S

"m

1

CAP!'AIN EASY
~fiT? HOPI' THIS 5POHIGH T'5
E~OU6H FOR MOVIES!

NOPE: JUST WAN
TO 6H PICTURS5
THOSE' AMAZONS
0~ FI LM! ...

~RIGHT

. IN CAS~ ANY

HEINER'S BAKERY

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

DUDLEV'S

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

RE'PORT~RS

ARE' A 6tT SKEPTICAL AT
THE

~EW~

CONFEREN CE

TOMORROW!

•

1 31}--Porter Wagoner l, Bobby Vinton 4, Candid
Camera 6, Evenmg Edi t ton wi1h Martin Agransky
20 $25,000 Pyramid 10 To Tell th e Truth 13, Pop
Goes the Coun try lS, Black Perspective on the
News 33
8 oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, IS, Barbary Coast 6, 13, Dr
Seuss 8, Washmgton Week tn Rev1ew 20,33, Arch1e
Griffm 10
8 31}--ChiCO &amp; th e Man 3,4, IS MASH 8, 10, W AI Str eet
Wee k 20,33.
9 oo-Rocklord F1les 3 4, 1S, Movie " Murder on Flig ht
502" 6,13, Ha waii F1ve 0 8 10, F1r1ng L1 ne 20,
Masterpiece Theatre 33
10 oo-Pollce Story 3,4,1S , Barnaby Jones 8,1 0; News
20 , Paul Nuchlms 33

WIN AT BRIDGE
East's return tricks South
opentng btd Thus hts Jac k of
21 spades was su rely gomg to be
lA A 12
a wmner There fore , he took
• 9 71
dummy s ace of spades a nd tn·
tKQ10 5
stead of d1scardmg a spade on
iAKJ IO
a doamond promptly led a
WEST
EAST ill I
trump
lA K 9 4
~tdli O ol
East went r1ght up woth hts
• 10 5 .1
• AJ
ace and led a low spade It
t 9 8 4 'I
• lo 2
dtdn ' L m atter what South did
"' A875
2
next West collected tncks
SOUTH
With h1 s queen and 10 and
• J 85
followed up With the extra
•K\1 8o2
blow He led ht s last spade
t A7
East ruffed w1th the Jac k
... Q 4 l
South had to overruff and
Both vulnerable
eventually West scored a tnck
With h1 s 10 of hearts
\\ e!i l North Ea!il
South
NOttTtl

BORN LOSER

1-A\URe~ wt'Li&lt;.!? llli·N
AAG!J'r 'OJ &amp;€TTl~ TilE

r&lt;;fEZ, I FClRG:oT

ABCOT' 1J.l6
FIG::&gt;HT!

17'fWV'/ C!E wiJI r.:or HUI&lt;T"
1\{~ KAD TO

F10HH

"' 9'

'"'

P;~ ss
J•
Pass
Pass Pa ss Pass
Open mg lead - 2 •

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

K&amp;C JEWELERS

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

----

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANIUE-"MY ION, MY ION"
YfS,
5~-

0F

r-'1':1 •

IT'S JUST

THAT WE lM

You so--

YOU'RE STILL

OUR BOY TO

us

mu

SUI HE'S

A GI1EAT •
AND FIIMOUS
MAN NOW,

BESS -

~NOW-

ALlEY OOP

The Unlu cky Ex per t had
co rra lled u s aga 1n He
re marked 'My hand was too
good If I hadn 't he ld the Jack
of spades 1 would have ma de
mv contract Instead I went
dOwn t~o
" Of course East made a
tern ftc defenSIVe play aga1nst
me. but my opponents a lwa ys
play tha i way He took hts ace
of clubs and promp tly placed
the ktng of spades on the
,.."'''!!V"...,o: table Now look what happen·
cd to me·
We were able to guess Our
unluck y fne nd assu med that
~....::;.,;::_ Ea st held both the kmg a nd
queen of spades as part of h1 s

IT'S A YOU NG
LADY . SOMEONE

WHO'LL MAKE' T11E
PHOTOGRAPHS AND
TAKE I&gt;IO'TES FOR

YOUVE NEVER

MET '

PFT!;' $Al(E?

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

.

RUTH'S MARKET

4•

An lllin01 s reader wants to
know what he should have bid
ne xt H1s hand was
iA AK63 .8 5 t A K Q987 ... 6

-

BLUE &amp; GRAY RESTAURANT

,.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

~=~~u~r;cou~n;~:A;n~d~~wh~a~t=bet~le:r~w~a~~~th~a~n~m~~~o~urc:h:u:rc:h~~=~!~~~~=J~~~

He ope ned one dt amond
Pa rtn e r JUm ped to th ree
clubs He b1d three diamonds
and partner lhree hearts
Th e answer IS tha t he should
have bid three spades w1th
every mtentton of headmg for
a s lam - probabl y 1n
no trump
(Do you have a q uestion

8 oo-Counlry &amp; Western U SA !c)
9 co-Stagecoach West
10 OI}--Burke's Law
SATURDAY, NOVEMBEic 2l, 1975
6 oo-FIIm 4, Sunrise Semester 10, Debates for the '70S
13
6 30 - Fun For Everyone 6; TV Classroom 8,
Treehouse Club 10
1 oo-Saturday Report 3, Farm Front ~; Eddie
Saunders 6, Treehouse Club 8, U S Farm Report
10, Kentucky Afield 13
1 31}--B ullwinkle 3, I Dre am of Jeannie 4; Jelsons 6,
Vegetable Soup 13, Dusty' s Treehouse 8, Man from
C 0 S I 10, Oevlln 13, Mister Rogers 20.
8 oo-Emergency Plus 4 3,4,1S, Hong Kong Phooey
6,13; Pebbles and Bamm Bamm 8,10 ; S..same
Street 20
8 31}--Josle and The Pussycats 3,4, 15, Tom and Jerry.
GrapeApe6,13 , Bugs Bunny Road Runners, Bugs
Bunny and friends 10
9·oo-Secret L1ves 01 Waldo Kilty 3,4,15, Electric
Company 20 ·
9 31}--Pink Panther 3,4, I5; Lost Saucer 13, Big Blue
Marble 6; Scooby Doo 8, 10 , Mister Rogers 20.
10 oo-Land Of The Lost 3,4, IS, Adventures of Gilligan
I3, Hot Dog 6, Shazam t Isis 8, 10, Sesame Sfreel20.
10 31}--Run, Joe, Run 3,4, IS , Groov les Goolles 6, 13.
11 oo-Return to the Planet of the Apes M , 15, Speed
Buggy 6, 13; Space Nuts 8, 10; Electric Company 20
11·31}--Weslwlnd 3,~, 15; Oddball Couple 6,13; Ghost
Busters B 10, Mister RQ!lers 20.
12 OG-Jetsons 3,4, IS , Uncle Croc's Blo&lt;k 6, 13, Valley
of the Dmosaurs 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20
12 31}--Go USA 3,4, IS , College Football 6, 13 , Fat
Albert 8,10
12 45-College Football 6,13 ;.
1 oo-soul Train 3, It Takes A Th ief 4; Children's Film
Festival 8, 10, Wrestling 1S , To Be Announced 33.
1·31}--Whaf's A City AIIAbout• 8,10
2 OG-Marshall Football'75 3, Bonanza~; VIewpoint 8;
Urban League 10, Across The Fence IS; Film 33.
2 31}-- NFL Game Of The Week 3, Movie " The In·
credible Mr Limpet" 8, Death Valley Days 10, To
Be Announced 1S, Valiant Years 33.

3 oo-Green Acres 3; Movte " No Man Is An Island"~.
Death Valley Days 10; To Be Announced 15,
Family at War 33
answer md1v1dual quest1ons
3 31}--Movie " The Bank Dick" 3; All Things Bright and
Beautiful 10.
11 stamped se ll-addressed
4 00 - College Football 6, 13, To Be Announced 15,
envelopes are enclosed The
Making Things Grow 33
most 1n teres!mg queslrons
4 31}--Sporls Spectacular 8, 10. Preserving Food 33.
wt/1 be used m th1s column
5 oo-FBI 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, All Things Bright
and w1fl rece1ve cop1es of
and Beautiful 15, French Chet 33
JACOBY MODERN)
s 31}--Adam 12 4. Highway Safely 33
6 oo-News 3,4 ,8, 10, God Has The Answer IS; What
now , America? 33
6 31}--NBC News 3,4,1S, Rhoda a; CBS News 10, Lilias,
, Yoaga and You 33
7 oo-World At War 3, Lawrence Welk ~. 15; Hee Haw
6,8; Flnng Line 33 In The Know 10; Newsmaker
'7S 13.
7 .31}--Treasure Hunt 3; Dr Seuss 10, Wild Kingdom 13
B.OG-Emergency' . 3,4,1S, Howard Cosell 6,13,
Peanuts 8,10, Rivals ot Sherlo&lt;k Holmes 33
8 31}--Jeffersons 8, 10.
9·QO-Movle " Doctor Zhlvago" 3,4, 15; S.W AT. 6, 13,
Mary Tyler Moore 8,10; American Family 33
9 31}--Bob Newhart 8,10
10 oo-Mall Helm 6, 13, Carol Burnett 8, 10; Soundsl119e
33.
Yetlerday's Answer
11:00--News 3,4,8, tO, 13 , Buckeye Football Highlights
15 Sandwich
2&amp; French
6 ; Outdoors with Ken Callaway 15, Monty Python's
staple
r1ver
Flying Circus 33
18 Biddy 's
28 Unnatural 11 30--Movle " A Very Special Favor" 3; Saturday
Night 4, IS, ABC News 6, Don Kirshner's Rock
place
2!1 Slur over
Concert 8; Woody Hayes Football tO, Movfe
21 Discovery
30 Chain of
"Creature from the Black Lagoon" 13, Janak! 33
22 Ward off
hills
11 45-Movle " Battle of the Worlds" 6.
23 Type of
34 Equal
12 oo-Movle " A Dandy In Aspic" TO
novel
36 Distaff
I :DO-Movie ' Death of a Gunfighter" 4
24 Kind of
cottontail
I 15-Movle " The Crimson Cull" 13
tUMel
3'1 "Stop"
I 31}--Soul Train 6
2:QO-Movle " Story of Three Loves" 10.
25 Stages
color
2·31}--Movle " Kiss of Evil" ~
4·QO-Movle "The Sergeant Was a Lady" ~ . Movie
" The Main Allraclioo" 10.

AstraGraph

MARK V STORE

Bernice Bede Osol

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

For Solurdoy, Nov. 22, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 1D) II
wtl i be d1fftcult to get your mate
an d those around you to share
your natural enthusrasm today
SubdUE! your ardor Do what s
best lor a ll

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE

RACINE FOOD MARKET

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
You try to spread yourself too
lhtn today Keep In mtnd It ls
better to do one thrng well than
to attempt everythmg and accomplish nothrng

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I,

CHA NNEL 5 Fnday
I oo-wr estllng

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

RAY'S T.V. HOME
ENTERTAINMENT tENTER

...

tO 31}--Avtallon Weather 20
II 01}--News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15, ABC News 33.
t 1 JI}--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Wide World Special
"JFK A T1me to Remember" 13 , Sammy &amp;
Company 6, Movie " The Trouble with Girls" 8,
Movie "Hush Hush, Sweet Charlotte" 10, Janak!
33
1 oo-Midn lghl Special 3,4, 15, Wide World Special 6,
Movi e " Ret urn of the Fly " 10; News 13
2 31}--Movle " Now You See It, Now You Don't"~
4 31}--Movle "See How They Run" 4

lor !he ·ex perfs? Wnte "Ask
!he Jacobys" ca re of !his
newspaper Th e Jacobys w11!

-

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

'Blast Their Counsels':

Television log for easy viewing

GOEGLEIN READY MIX

.

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

GAUL'S MARKET

WILKINSON'S

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

BUT I

THOUGHT

AND WEIGH
EVERY BIT OF
2.30 f-OUNDS I

HE WAS

SICKLY!

' SICKLY,' MY fOOT' IF
YOU ASK ME~THEONLY
THING HE'&amp; viCK OF
IS WORK.' _ __....

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
Responsiblhly Is normally your
cup of tea but today 1f you can
only let George do 11 you'll
probably be JUSI as happy

CANCER IJuno 21 -July 22) In
your haste to please you may
One letter simply stonds lor another. In this sample A is act agarn st your be st JUdgment
used lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Sln1le letters. and harm your own 1nterests
apostrophes. the length and formation of the words ore all Bener to nsk oflend1ng than to
hints. Each day the code letters are different
create frustrall ons

PISCES IFob. 20-Morch 20)
Avo1d l•nanc1al flyers loday. especrally those 1nvolvlng others
Advtstng assocrates poorly will
ca'Use
long -standing
resentments

DAILY
FOOT-THREE ..

that co uld brtng lasting
notonety

budget H you run oul at cash
you II regret QMng that credit
card more use than rs prudent

GEMINI (May 21 -June 201 11

--'--'--'--d. couic:J be a tough day on your
HE MUST BE SIX·

lleeMg glary Dan t do

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Doc.
21) You lend 10 De a trifle
careless w1th tne possess1ons
of others today If you borrow
somethmg tind break or lose U
11s your baby
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon .
1D) Though II seems simpler lo
you today lett ing others make
dec rs1ons tor you Is a mrstake
You II get the short end ot lhe
StiCk
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
Your tntentrons are good , but
Ihe flesh Is weak today You II
procrastmate do tf,e JOb poor ly and have to do tl agam

,-t--t-+-:-i

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

than

somelhmg for temporary fame

CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

CRYPTOQUOTES
WPB
ECM

LEO iJuly 23 - Aug 22)
QPUX
EB
XPU
PCQ Hun cfles are pr one to ovemde
your usually lagtcal petspec·
live At times tt11s could be fme
PVQ
QNPUUY
BMIUTBL
LCTQ, Today your lniU1t lon lsn t all
that gre at
CML V XVYY
QPUX
TUG C AGYYT VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopl 22} II
you can I keep a ttght rern on
CML
C
AUZB.-ZUABZW
EUZYBT your purse strings today don t
Yesterclay's Cryptoquote: .. A GIRL NEVER REALLY wonder later whal happened It
LOOKS AS WELL AS SHE DOES ON BOARD A STEAMSHIP, wrll be too late
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0cl 23) Your
OR EVEN A YACHT. - ANITA LOOS
tmage rs more tmportant to you
!Cl19TD Kina FNhlieo Syndlcalt, Jnt. )
Pf \ ' l I '

~Your
V'Birthday
No•. 22, 1D75
Don 1 change your methods ol
operalton this coming year on
a projeCt you ve been nursing
along lor some time Chances
of a payoff for you are better
with proven procedures

f.IMM .. MI{ ICE CUSES
ME MELTING...

jl

�.

'..

8- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Nov . 21. 1975
~

POME
Rev w H
Rov. Mayer Sunday school
supt Chur ch sc hool 9 I S
am worship servt ce 10 24
am Youth cho tr reh eaF sttl.
Monday , J 30 p m und e r
drrecltOn of MMy Skrnner
senior cho.r rehea rsal 7 30
p m Thursday wtth Mrs Pau l
Neue d irector
POMEROY CHURC H OF
THE NAZARENE - Corn er
Unton and Mulberry Rev
Ctyde V Hender son pastor
Sunda'f schoo l 9 30 am , Glen
McClung , supt
mornrng
worshtp , 10 30 a m eventng
serv ic e
7 30
m td week
se rvrce . Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EP ISCOP Al - Th e
Rev Harold Deelh rector
Churc h serv•ces 10 30 am
Ho ly communton llr st Sunday
of mon th church sctlool. 10 30
am for nurserv throuoh 12
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST - Rrc har d Evanson ,
pastor Bib le school , 9 30
a m , worshrp 10 30 a m ,
adul t worsh ' p serv tee and
young pE!ople 's meet ing 7 30
p m Combrned Btble study
and prayer meelmg Wed
nesdey , 7 30 p m
THE SA LVATION ARMY En '&lt;lOY Ray W Wtnrng , off tcer
tn charge Sunday J~ am ,
Hol iness meeting . 10 30 am .
Su nday
School
Young
Peop le ' s Leg1on , 7 p m ,
Thur sday 1 to 3 p m Ladtes
Hom e League . 7 p m Prep
cla sses
ST . PAUL LUTHERAN
CHURCH ,
Corne r
of
Syc amore and Second Sts ,
Pomeroy , Th e Rev Wi ll iam
Mldd leswerth Pastor , Sunday
Sch ool a t 9 45 a fl1 1 ~nd
Ch urch Servtces 11 a 1n
SACRED HEART - Rev
Fa th er .. Pa ul 0
Welton ,
pastor
Phone
997 2825
Saturday evemng Mass 1 7 JO,
Sunday Ma ss , 8 and 10 a m ,
Con fessron , Saturda y 7 7 30
pm
POMEROY FIRST SAP ·
TIST - Robert Kuh n , pastor .
Wi ll ia m Watson. Sun day
schoo l sup! Sunday schoo l.
9 lOam , BYF 6 p m Btble
study , Wednesday 7 p rn
ChOir practice Wednesday ,
8 JO p m
BURLINGHAM - CHURCH
- Pas-tor Je rr y Lew is Sunday
sc hool 2 JOp m with wo rship
scrvrce at J 30 p rn mtd
weel service , Tu esday , 7 30 p
m

hr p l 10 Wec.ltH 'id&lt;" Y p1a yc r
MORSE
CHAPE L
an~ llrl~ h: !&gt; tudy 7 !0 1 nl
pil Sfvr
Troy
rSht p I I il Ill
Chun.h
TUPPERS
PlAINS
Zw11 1t nq , •UIIdrt y sc 11oo1 sup! Wu
~C hOOI tO a Ill
CHRI St i AN CHUR C. tl ~ und.w
sc hool 9 JO ,, m
PORTLAND - Wor s h1p I llf/ 1'111 ll rHJU ',\ICJOd Pol 'olor
mor nmq wor sh rp
10 :\ 0
Sunday CViln gr.IISirC tll CC irnQ , 1 lOp ru Chur ch ~l hOOI9 30 I C'IW ,1r U C rtd wro \1 J c,unday
'r hool '11rpt '•Il l del\' ~choo l
1 JO p m
Prayer ntt) c tmq '' m
SUTTON - Chur ch ~c h ool ,"~ ,o •I ,,
Morntnq sermon,
Wednesday 7 JO p 111
9
30.1
111 Won~ htp 1St and Jrd
~ und(l v cverung
10 10 tt 111
MIDDLEPORT
"Undays
tO
JO
am
•.r.r vt cc 1 p 111
MT MORIAH BAPTIST NORTH
EAST
ClUSTER
LETART FALLS UNITED
Corn er Fou r lh and Mat n
Rev Rob ert Meece,
~~ET H RE N
Rev
Mtddleport Rev Hen r y Key .
PastCir
I r1 Lldnd
Norr •.., pasto r ,
Jr pastor Sunday (',CJ1oo1.
Dcnnts Crecgar.
I loyd Norr rs , sup t
Sunday
9 30 a m
Mn.
E r vtn
AHOC MiniSter
!!c hool 9 30
mo rntng
Baumgardner , sup! , Morntnq
JOPPA - Worshtp 10 am
sermon 10 30 il m , Prayer
worsh tp. 10 45 i'l m
Schoo l9 am , Prayer servt ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
JEHOVAH ' S WITNESSES Church
CHE SHIRE CHURCH OF
- Larry Ce~rnahan prestd.ng Mcet tnq Wednesday !I p m
lONG BOTTOM - Wor
GOO OF PROPHECY ·· G P
m tnts ter
Sunday , 1.3tblc ShiP
9
a
m
Sunday·
School
'1 t111lh , pastor Sunday s cnoo l,
lee lure 9 30 il m
Wa tch
9 45 a m • Prayer Meclrng
10 ,1 nt
Arthur He nso n.
tower study , 10 30 a m
Wednesday
7
30
p
rn
~ up I
Mornrng Wo r sh1 p, 11
Tuesday , Brb le study 7 JO
NORTH
BETHEL
a 11 1 Young People 's ser11tce,
p m
Thursday m tnrstry WorShip
Church
7 p m
Evenm~ serv 1ce, 7 30
school 7 30 p m
se r vrce Schoot 10 a11m am
p m
W~d n esd ay
M•d Week.
meetrng 8 30 p m
ALFRED - Sunday School
Prayer \1erv•ce , 7 30 p m ,
MIDDlEPORT CHURC H 9 115
a m WorShiP 11 a m , Youlh meet1ng 6 30 p m ,
OF CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN
er mee h ng Wednesday
Evcnmg worshtp , 7 JO p m
UNION - Lawrence Manley 7Pray
CHESTER CHURCH OF
pa stor , Mrs Russe ll Young . Sp45mp m , UMW Jrd Tuesday
THE NAZARENE - Rev
Sunday School Su p! Sunday
REEDSVILLE - Sunday
Herber!
Gr ate ,
pa sto r
Sc hool 9 30 am Eventng
hool 9 30 a m Worship 7 30 Wo rshtp servrce, 11 am and
worship . 7 30 Wednesday pScm
, Prayer Meetrng 7 30
7 30 p m
Sunday Sun day
prayer mee tmg 1 30 p m
m Tuesday UMW 7 30
Sc hoo l 9 JO a m Rtc hard
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF pp m
lsi Thur sday
Bar ton supt Prayer meeting
GOO - Racine Route 2 th e
SfLVER RIDGE ..... Wor
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Rev
James M
Muncy, Shtp
10 am Church Sc hool 9 , BRADFORD CHURCH OF
pa stor Sun day sc hool 9 45
CHRI ST - Cliffor d Smtth ,
am . morning worstl rp, 11 om
TUPPERS PLAINS m•nrs ter Sunday School 9 30
a m eventng wors hr p 7 30 Worsh
am
mor n tng church 10 30
Prayer meettng, Tuesday , 10 am tp 9 am Church School
am Sunday eventng servtce ,
7 30 p m
Young people's
KENO
CHURCH
OF 7 30 p m Wednesda y servtce,
meeti ng 7 30 p m Thur sday CHRIST - George Fred err ck,
MIDDLEPORT FIRST supt Se rvtce weekly 9 30 8 pIll
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
SA PTIST - Corn er Srxlh and o:l m on Sunday Preachmg
Palm e r , the Rev
Peter lrrst and lh tr t:l Sundeys of METHODIST - Rev Floyd F
Gral'ldal, pa stor
Danny month by Cl1 ff ord Smti h , 9 30 Shook. pa stor . Lloyd Wnght.
sunday sc hool su pt Sunday
Tho mpso n , supertn lendenl an&gt;
school 9 30 am
Mo rnt ng
Sunday Schoo l WMPO R,dto
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
program 7 d5 a m , Sunday UNION - Darrell Doddrtll worshtp 10 30 am evenrng
Sc hool 9 15 a m Mornt nq pa stor Sundav Schoo l 9 30 worshtp 7 30 p m Wed
, Chr1st1an Yout h
worshtp 10 15 a m Youth am Leonard Gilmore ftr sl nesday
ac lrvt ltes and fe ll owshtp for elder evenrng servtce 7 30 Cr usade 6 30 p m Cho tr
pract•ce Thur ~ d ay 7 p m
1un•or and senio r ht gh p m
Wednesday praye r
DEXT ER CHURCH OF
st ud ents 6 p m Sunday mee tmg 7 30 p m
CHRIS T - Char les Russe ll.
evenm~ worshtp
7 JO p m
MT MORIAH CHUR CH OF Sr rnrntsler Norman C Wttl
Mrd wee k prayer serv 1ces GOO - Ra cme Route 2 Th e
sup t
Sunday school 9 30
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Rev Cnarl es Hand pastor a m worshtp se rvtc e 10 30
' CHURCH OF CHRIST , 5unday sc hool 9 4S am
a 111
Bt bl e study Tuesday,
Mtd dleporl 5th and Main morntng wors hr p, 11 am 730 p nt
George Glaze , mrnts t er . Event ng servr ces Tuesday
R·EORGANIZED CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST OF
James
Sheels
sup ertn and Frtday , 7 30 p m
BEARWAllOW
R
lOGE
LATTER DAY SAINTS tenden l Btble school 9 30
a m morntng worstlrp 10 30 CHURCH OF CHRI ST ·- Doug Portland
Ractne Road
Tuesday
Seaman
m
,n1sler
lltb
le
W&gt;il•am Roush . pastor Denny
My Susan took part tn the Thanksg1ving pageant at church
a m , even•ng wors hr p 7 JO
I Connlhlans
s
tudy
9
10
am
morn
tng
prayer servrce, 7 p m Wed
Sunday
Sc hoo l
sahool Ofcourse, lmadeherptlgnmcostume. L.ater,as lwatch ed
EYans
nesday
.. wo rshi p tO 10 am eventng D.reclor Sunday Sch ool 9 JO
15
54 57
her smg,ng, she looked JUSt hke the ptctures I have seen of pilgnm
MIDDLEPORT
Church worshtp a p m wednesday t1 m . Mornmg worshtp 10 30
Wecfnesday
Of
Th e
NaJar e ne 111gh• 1\t bl e stu dy 8 p m
am Su nQay eventng serv.ce
ch1ldren lfe ltalumpmmythroatandhadareal senseof ldenhty
MT OLIVE CHURCH 7 P m Wednesday evenmg
Rev Don Co le. pas
Mark
w1th
those
men,
women
and
children
who
lono
ago
Withstood
the
lor
Mr s Ma r y Lat h ey Long Bollom Sundav Sctlool
h
prayer ser vtces 7 30 p m
13 24 27
Su nd ay Sc hoOl su pt Sundav 10 a m w1th W1l lard Prgott .
BE THLEHEM BAPTIST hardshtps of hfe m a new and ahen world.
su
pt
Evange
lt
st
rc
message
sc hool 9 30 a m
mornrng
Rev Earl Sh uler pa slo r
1
These mumgra nts weren't superhuman, they were peop e
Thursday
worship , II am
Sun day ea ch Sunday even .n g , 7 30 by wo r shr p se r v1ce 9 30 am ,
eva ngei 1Sitc meetrn g 7 30 Elder Russell Ctt ne mtntste r Sunday sch ool 10 30 a m
JUSt
hke
you and me. They had the courage to believe m a new hfe
John
p m
pr ayer
meettng, of I he Apos lot c Fa rt h Brble Btbl e s lu CfY and pr ayer
l
ldl ea d
18 36·37
Stud y, We dnesday, 7 30 p m
sc rv&lt;ee Th urs~a.y. 7 JO P m- anewcountry lh ey bel1eve d t h e"u ltima tes tru ggewou
'We dn esday 7 30 p m
THE
UN! T E D STIVERSVILLE COM ·
to lhe freedom they so fervently sought.
CARLETON CHURCH Fnday
MIN . MUNITY CHURCH - Sund ay
PRESBYTERIAN
K rngs b ury Roa d Gary K •ng ,
Over three and a half centunes have passed The foundation
ISTRY
OF
MEIGS school se r vtce 10 a m
pastor
Sunday
school
9 30
Revelation
COUNTY , Dwight L lavrtz . Prayer mee trng Thur sday , 7 am
evenmg wors hi P. 7 JO
theptlgnmfatherslatdforusseemstobeshak.ingbeneathourfeet,
1 4 .8
p
m
Sunday
even
tng
serv
tce
Pa stor Otrec tor
p m Prayer meeting , Wed
and even our fa1th wavers
7
p
m
HARRISONVILLE
Saturday
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST nesd ay 7 30 p m
Sunday Churc h Sc hool. 9 30
L o NG
a o T T o M
But, reconsider. We owe tt to those ptlgnms as
Revelatton
.. Pomero y
Harnsonv tile
am , Mrs Homer Lee , Su pt ,
Road M1ke ·Gtr ton pa stor
CHRISTIAN - Bruce Smd h,
wellas toourselves.toreaffirmourbeheftnGod andm
.
Mo rn in g Wo rshtp 10 30
1 12 16
MIDDl EPORT - Sunday Steven Stanley . Sunday schoo l Supl Brble School. 9 JO a m
Church Sc hool q 30 a m supf Su nday school. 9 30 Preachmg servtce 10 45 a m
_ thiS Th a nksg111m g?
Scrrotun!s setected
Rtchard vaughan , &amp;u pt , am . mornrng worshtp and pas tor Wattace Damewood ,
commun1on
,
10
30
am
No
evenmo
s::.:e
"
;ril
v'j'fr
e
'-&lt;07';~
The Ame11 t
Mornrng WorshtD , 10 30 am
H Y SE l l
R0 N
F R E E Cup, , ght 1975 He1ster Adwei11510Q Serw1te Joe St 1asbufg V11g lnla
B ble Soc•1
evenrng
you th
SYRACUSE - Morn tng Su nd ay
Worship , 9 am , Sund ay Chnstr an en deavor 6 30 p m , METHODIST CHURCH Chur ch Sc hool, 10 a m Mrs wors hrp se rv1ce 7 30 p m Rev Paul Nev ill e, pastor
Wednesday e~Je nm g prayer Sunday Sc hool 9 30 am
Sampson Ha ll Sunt
With the hope It wilL in some measure, foster and help sustam that
•meettng
and Brbte s tudy . 7 30 Mor n tng ser111Ce 10 JO a rn
RUTLAND CHURCH OF pm
youttl
serv•ce.
6
.tiS
p
m
which
is good in fami ly and community life, this feature is sponsored by
GOD Rev James D
ST
JOHN LUTHERAN Evangeltsl•c se r vtce 1 30 p rn
Guy nn
pas lor
Sunda y CHURCH,
the
business
firms and organizations whose names appear below
e Gro ve , The Prayer meetrnq , Thur sd ay
sc ho ol. 10 a m
Sunday Rev Wll lta Ptn
7
m
Mtddle
swa
r
th
,
30
p
m
worshtp 11 a m , Su nda y
'
FREEDOM
GOSPEl
Pastor Church Servt ces 9 30
FRESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS
eventng service 7 p m , am
Sunday Sctlool 10 30 a m MISSION at Ba ld Knob Rev
2 Convement Locations
Wedn esday worshi p serv 1ce,
BRADBURY CHURCH OF E J Gr rtftlh supl of ch ur ch
•
7 30 p m
CHRIST - Btble Sc hool. 9 30 Re v L R Glu esen&lt;.amp
Pomeroy
Ph
.
m
-2582
Bakers of Goo d Bread
CHURCH Nea r Long a m . mornmg worshtp 10 30 pas tor Ruger Wtl lfr ed Sr
.Hunltngton, W Va
Bottom , Edse l Har t. pastor am Sun day eVentng wo rshtp Sunday School sup! Sunday
Mason, Ph . 77l·SI21
servtce 7 p m . cho• r prachce sch ool 9 30 am . pray e r
Sunday schOOl. 10 a m
Churc h, 7 30 p m , prayer Wednesday 7 p m Rev Je ff mee trn g, Tuesday, 7 30 p m
1, you th mee t1ng . 6 p m Su nday
me etmg , 7 30 p m Thursday Ranso n Pastor
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST - leaders Ada van Meier and
MIDDLE PORT
PEN ·
TECOSTAL - Thi rd Ave , the Rev Freeland Nor rrs pastor Gretta Su ttle Su nday even tng
Rev William Kn ttt el, pastor Sundav schoot 10 a m , worshtp , 7 p m lhrough
"Ronald Dugan , Sunday Sc hOOl Church serv •ce . 7 p m wtnter months
Two locations
MT HERMON CHURCH
Supt Classes fo r a ll ages , Wednesday Btbl e ~tu dy , 7
Grocer1es &amp; General Me rchand1 ~e
Moddleport, 0 .
St
N
S~rond
St
OF
THE
UfiiTED
om
evening se r ~lce. 7 30 , Bible
Ph
9495772
Galhpolrs, 0 .
Rac1ne
BRETHREN
IN
CHRIST
RACINE
CHURCH
OF
THE
46 Cour St ' "
study Wed n esaday , 7 30
p m , youth services. Fr1 day, NAZARENE - Re\1 Jo hn A Rev J ames H Leach , pastor
Co ffma n pas tor s un day Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m ,
7 30 p m
Spencer
supl
Sch ooL 9 30 a m
Ge ra ld Russell
FREEWILL BAPTIST Corner Ash a nd Plum , Mid Wells su p! Mornmg wo rsht p, Wo rshtp se rv1ce 10 45 a m
d le pcrt. No e l Herrma n , 10 30 a m , Sunday e11enlng Eventng wor shrp al1ernalrng
7 30
Prayer wllh C E al 7 30 p m on
pastor Saturday eveni ng worshtp
service 7 p m Sund t!IY sc hool meetrng , We dn esday 7 JO p Sunday Pray er meetrng 7 JO
We Fi ll All Doctors Prescnp l1on s
21 4 E. Ma1n
p m Wedn es day Alfr ed
Pomeroy
10 am
Sunday evenmg m
992·295S
Pomeroy
Wolfe
lil
y
leade
r
Ph
992-SI30
worsh 1p, 7 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST
WHITE 'S CHAPEL
Roy
-- Wa lt er P B1kacsan , pastor , Coo lville RD Rev
Ronnte Sa lser . Sunday school Deeter paslor Sunday school
s upt Su nday schoo l, 9 30 9 30 a m . worsh tp se rvrce.
am morn tng worshtp 10 &lt;10 10 30 a m Bt bl e study and
Sunday even rng worship , 7 30 , praye r sennce , Wednesda y,
Lou1s W Osborne
Wednesday eventng B1ble 7 30 p m
Ph . 992 3486
100 E Main
220 E Mam
Pomeroy
Ph . 992 2178
study, 7 30
RUTLAND
Pomeroy
DANVILLE
WESLEYAN
RU
"t
LAND
CHURCH
OF
MEIGS
Rod Kas le r ,
Rev l elon Glasu re, pastor CHRIST COOPERATIVE PARISH
Sunday Schoo l. 9 30 am
pastor V H Bra ley , Sunday
THE UNITED
youth and 1un1or vou lh ser school supt Su nday school.
METHODIST CHURCH
wo rsh tp ser vtce
vrce 6 45 p m . even rng 9 30 a m
Robert T. Bumgarner,
worshrp , 7 30 p m
prayer and communron , 10 30 am
Director
Keepsake Diamond Rings
Bakers of Gay 90 Bread
and praise. Wednesday , 7 30 youlh meellng 6p m Su nday
POMEROY CLUSTER
om
even•ng servtce 7 re gul a r
Middleport
Ph 992·3030
Rev Robert Hayden
21'l E. Ma1n St , Pomeroy
SILVER
RUN
FREE boa rd meettng thrrd Safur
Ph . m ·3785
Rev D wm . Svdenstncker
BAPTIST - M1les Tr out , day 7 p m
CHESTER - Wors ht p 9 15 pas
lo r , Sunday Sc hool , 10
RUTLAND --COMMUNITY
a m Churc h Sc hool 10 a m
am, Leon Mtller , - sup! CHURCH - Sunday School
POMEROY - Worship
Evening servtce. 7 p m ,
10 JOa m Church School9 15 Pra yer meellng , Thursday , 7 9 30 am , wors hip service , 11
am Wednesday - P ray er
a m UMY F 6 30 p m
pm
meeting , 7 30 p m Youth
I Formerly Sa di e's Markel l
ENTERPRISE - Worsh1p
CHESTER CHURCH OF services, Frtday , 7 30 p m ,
Middleport , Oh1o
Syracuse
9 a m Churc h-Sc hool 10 am
Ph . 992·3986
GODRev
Bobby
Porter
,
Sunday n ig ht worship , 7 30
ROCK
SPRINGS
Sun day school. 9 30
worship 10 a m Church apastor
RUTlAND CHURCH OF
m
.
worsh
serv tee . 11
Sc hool 9 am UMYF 6 30 am eventng•Pservice
THE NAZAI{ENE - Rev
•
,
7
30
pm
Lloyd 0 Grtmm , J r , pastor
youth
serv.ce
,
Wednesday
,
FLATWOODS - Worshtp 7 JO p m
Sunday sc hool. 9 30 am
11 am Church School 10 a m
worsh tp serv tce , 10 30 am
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Ted Jones , broadcast lt ve O'tler WMPO
CHURCH Rev. Robert Bumgarner
700 E Main
Pomeroy
pastor
Sunday
schoo l, 9 30 young people 's serv1ce , 6 &lt;IS
HEATH - Worship 10 30 am
evang eltstrc servrce , 7 30 p m
Oiai992·ZIOI
Roy
Srg
man
,
supt
"
Hetl"
Deal
er
a m Church School 9 30 a m
,
Prayer
meet1ng
,
Wednesday
,
mor n111g wors hip
10 JO
Ph . 949-5961
Third St.
UMY F 6pm
p m .
Mtss ronary
fiunday evening serv rce . 7 30 7 30
RUTlAND
Jeffrey lllld
mee tr ng , 7 30 p m ft r st
tweek
se
r
vtce
Wed
Gerber Pastor WorShiP nesday 7 ~ Jo p m
Wednesday of month
10 30 am Chur ch Sc hool 9 30
MASON COUNTY
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
am
THE
NAZARENE
-Rev
SYRACUSE CLUST ER
.
Fme Food &amp; Serv1ce
MA SO N FIRST BAPTIST - ·
Howard C Btack , pastor Bob
Rev. RIChard E JarVIS
The Store wi th A Hearl
Middleport
Lo~ ust Sl
Secon
d
and
Pomeroy
Sis,
Sch
ool
Supt
Moore
Sunday
ASBURY - Wors hip 11 sunday Sch oOl. c lasses for all Stan Cratg, pastor Sun day
Ractne
Ph 949·3342
Oiai99H248
am Chur ch School 9 so a m
ages 9 30 am
mornrng schoo l 9 45 a m
worsh rp
UMW f1r sl Tuesday
trammg
10 45 NYP S Sunda y serv•ce . 11 am
FORST RUN - Worship 9 6worshtp
unton
6
JO
p
m
evenrng
30
p
m ~r ivangeltstic se r
&amp;
am Church Sc tlool 10 a m
worsh •P servrce, 7 30 p m
vice
Sunday
,
7
30
p
m
Mid
UMW third Wednesday 7 30 week prayer meetmg , Wed Mid week pr ayer servtce
P m
•
, 7 30 p m , Mrssronary Wed nesday 7 30 p m
MINERSVILLE - Worshrp n!!osday
MASON
CHURCH
OF
meet tng second Wednesday
10 am Church Sc hool 9 am
Sa les- Quasar- Service
7JOpm
CHRIST, P 0 BO)C .dB? . Mtller
Ph . 949.9S91
Ractne
UMW thrrd Monday 7 30 p m
Ph 949·31SI
St , Mason W Va Sunday
UNITED
FAITH
NON
·
Rae
me
SYRACUSE Church DENOMINATIONAL - Rev Btble Study 10 am , Worshtp
Schoo l 9 30 am Worship Robert Smtih , pastor Sun day 11 a m and 7 p m Btble Study
ser-vice 7 30 p m
school , 9 30 a m
class We dne sd ay 7 p m
Voc.al
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
leader Leo Htll , worshtp musrc
Rev Howard Shtvetey
servtce 10 30 am
ch urch
FIRST
S OUTHERN
Rev Steven W1ko n_
7 ]0 p 01
BAPTIST - Corner of Seco nd
Rev Zelia Krunewski
.
E 0 E N
' U N I T E 0 and Anderson Mason Pastor f
"The ~rlen dly Folks"
Middleport
Oial992·3284
BETHAN't' - (Dorcas)
BRETHREN IN CHURIST er Ctou d Sunday sc hool
~
Pomoroy, OhiO
Wors h1p 9 30 a m Church Elden R Blake . pastor 9Walt
45 am . worsh rp servtce , 11
School 10 30 am
nd ay Sch ool 10 am , a 111 arrd 7 30 p m WeeklY'
CARMEL - Church Sc hool Su
Howa rd
McCoy ,
s up t , 8tble study Wed nes day 1 30
9 30 am wors hip 10 30 a m
Mo rn 1ng sermon, 11 a m , pm
2nd and .tth Sund ays
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
Su nday
ntght
ser \lices :
APPLE GROVE - Sun&lt;t ey Chrtstlan Ende a vor 7 JO GOD, Duddrng Lan e. Mason
School 9 JO am Worshi p 1 30 p m Song servtce , 8 p m , W Va
~OODLINER
Chester Ten nant ,
Pomeroy , Ohio
Ill Court St
p nt 1st and 3rd Sundays , Preachrng a 30 p m
Mid Pastor Sunday School 9 &lt;~5
Mtddteport,
Ohto
Prayer meeti ng Wednesday \'\ e elo.
Prayer
meettng , am Children's Chuq:h 6 .J5
.
7 30 p m Fellowship supper
c dnesday , 7 p m
Ray p m • Young People 's Se r ~Jr c e
fr rs1 Saturday 6 p m UMW Adams . lay leader
"
6 ·15
p m ,
EvangcltSitc
Meigs County Branch
2nd Tuesda'( 7 30 p m
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
Scrv
tce
7
30
p
m
Worn
ens
EAST LETART - Church CHRIST
located at Mtsslonary counc1t 10 am
Schodl 1st 2nd . Jrd Sundays , Rutland on New Ltma Road , frrs1 and lhr rd Tu es day s
9 JO am
Four1h Sunday ne,.,t to Forest Acre Park
Pray e r and 01ble Study
Middleport , Ohoo
10 30 am
Worshtp 2nd
Ray Rouse . pastor
Wednesday , T 30 p m
Sunday 7 30 p m 4th Sunday Rev
Robert Musser , Su nday School
Ph 992 ·3163
296 W. S..cond
Pomerov
9 JO a m . Prayer Meeting supt Sunday school. 10 30
Wed nesd ay 1 30 p m UMW am . worsh iP 7 30 p m Bible
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
lsi Tuesday 7 30 p m
study , Wednesday. 7 JO p m , CHRIST tn Ch r slran Unton
WESLEYAN - (Ractne l ·- ~ aturdav n1ghl pretv r. r ser
Th~ Pev Wtl ltam camp bell ,·
Sunday Sc hool 10 a m Vllf&gt; J l0 p !1l
PAStor Sunday Sc hool 9 JO
Wors hip 11 am , Jr UMYF
HEMLOCK
GROVE am , James Hug hes , supt ,
Wed nesday 3•30 p m Bible
Chester, Ohio
Roger , even111g serv tcc , 7 30 p tn
The F lneslln Mobile Homes
Study Thursday 7 p m Choir ,CHRtnJAN
Watson
puto
r.
Wallace
Wednesday
e\lenmg
prayer
Pra c t1ce ·Thursday 8 p m "1
1100 E. Matn
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-7034
8r8Hfdtd,•..!supt , morning rnoetmg , 7 JO p m You th
LETART FALLS - Church worship
,
9'
90,
church
scttool
,
prayer
service
each
Tuesday
Schoo l 1st , 2nd , Jr:d s'undays to JO,
young
people 's
FAIRVIEW
BIBLE I
10 15 am Jlh Sundav 9 IS meeting , 6 30 p m , evening
..
ctiURCH , Letart. W Va, Rt
am , Worship lsi , 2nd 3rd worship,
1:30 p.m • Bible 1 Rev George Hoschar .
Sl/nda ys 9 1~ a m , 41h S1Y,Ilf. We&lt;lnosdoy , 1 :~0 p.m .
'
pa s tor. ~ Sunday School
9 30
Sunday 7 30 p m
Nal1onwlde Insura nce Co of Columbus, 0 ,
Sma II Engine Sales &amp; S..rvlce ,
a 11\ .Prayer and Btble study
MORNING
STAR
301
Sprtng
Ave
Pomeroy
/, ev
trcrl C.oK
pasro r
498 Locust St. Middleport Ph . 992-3092
Worshtp 9 30 a m . Church Sunday Sc hool supt , Joe 1 JO 1p m Cottage Pr ayer
Dial
992
2ll8
:-.
erv
.ce
Tuesday
,
10
am
.
Sc hool 10 30 a m , Mu:t Week
~ay re
Sunday school, 9 .45 Wors h lp Serv Jce Thu rs day ,
Se r vrce Wednesday 8 p m
a m . Sunday evening wor 7 30 p m
.
~ p c n c cr

ESlEYAN
H LINES S CHURCH
Harrl so nvt ttC' Re v 0 Dc lt
Mantey Pn stor Hc rtry Ebltn
Sunda y School su p! 5llnday
Sc hool 9 30 a rn
EventnQ
wor sh tp 7 30 p m Prayer and
Pra tse se r v,c e Thursday 7 10
p m

SYRACUSE
F IR ST
CHURCH OF GOO - Rev
Georg e 0 ler pa stor Sunday
sc hool , 9 &lt;~ 5 a m
rnornrng
pre a c h rng .
11
am
E'YiiOg eiiSII CSe r vtCC 7 30 p ll1
Prayer meC' Itng ltwr sday
7 30 p m
POMEROY
WESTSIDE
CHUR CH OF CHRIST, 200 W
Matn S!
Je rry Paul
m ln1sl er , ptlone 992 7666
Con s e rv a t tv e
non
tn str umental
Sunday wor
sh ip 10 11 m ll1bte stu dy 11
am . wor shtp 6 om Wed
nf!Sday Btb te s tudy 7 p m
RUTLAND
FREEWill
BAPTIST - Rog er Turn er
pa s tor Sunday schoo l 10
am
Mor ntng wo rshtp I I
am Sunday C\ICntng srrvrce
1 30 Wednesday B tb h: study
I 30 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE
CHRISTIAN CH UR CH - Rev
Ron Terry pasto r Sunday
sc hool. 10 am , Mrs Worley
Fran c ts ,
supertn t endent
Morn tng worsh rp , 11 a m
Sunday evenr ng servrce , 7 JO
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST Prea.chlng
9 JO a m
ftrst and second
Sundays of eac h month !ht rd
an d fourth Sun(layc; each
mon th , worship scrvtce a t 7 JO
p 111 Wednesday even tn gs a t
7 30 Prayer and Btbl e Stud y
SE V E NTH DAY AD
VENTIST , Mu lberry HC!!Jhls
Road
Pomeroy
Pastor Gerard Seton Sab
balh Schoo l Superintendent ,
Rtta Whrte Sabbath Sc hool
Saturday a ll ern oon al 7 00 .
with
worsh1p
servrce
followmg al 3 15
FIRST
SOUTHERN
BA PTIST 282 Mu lber r y
Ave , Pomero y altdta led with
S 8 C . the Rev Bradl ey
RUTLAND FIRST SAP
TIST CHURCH - Rev Roger
Ford . Jr , pas to r
Drewy
Go re , supt , Sunday school
9 30 a m , mor n rng worshiP
10 4 ~ a m
TH E HILANO CHAPEL ,
Geo rg e Casto pastor Sunda y
even rng
School 9 30 a m
wor shtp
7 30
Thurs day
cvent ng prilyer se rvtcc , 7 30

P"'

RAY CROMLEY
Massacre shuffle
a breath of air?
By Ray Cromley
- Forget, for tile mom ent what President
Ford's Halloween reshuffie may or may not do for him at next
year's Republican Presidential convention and in the
November election.
The shifts, maladroit in execution and damagmg to some
very able men, may, nevertheless, four years from now, be a
boon to tile candidate-hungry Republican party, so frequently
doomed to nominating IUlknoWIIB.
N. a minority party In voter registration, m the U. S.
Senate and House in tile governor 's mansions, Republicans
have a most difficult time in running candidates with wellspOtlighted !XoVen records in high posts, whose names are
household words .
Politically, Washington can be a first-rate training groWld,
furnlshlng a platfonn In which able men can make tllemselves
known nationwide - a boon for tllose who look forward to
rwmlng for tile Senate or House, for a governorship, state
legislature seat, or for five president or president of tile United
Slates at some time in their lives
A party falling of recent Republican presidents - both Mr.
Ei~enhower and Mr. Nixon - much complained about in-GOP
rankll, is tllat these two men did little during tlleir terms of
' office to develop able younger men, put tllem into positions of
!l'ominence where they could gain the public recogrution
necessary to win tough future campaigns
To a marked degree, tile record shows, both Mr
Eisenhower and Mr . NIXon brought in nonpolitical types not
likely to have strong party or elective posts after leavmg tbetr
posts in the Eisenhower or Nixon administrations.
However damaging otherwise his recent shuffie, Mr . Ford,
has willingly or WJwlttingly , brought to tile fore a stable of
relatively young men.
In the S81Tle shifts, he has eliminated men with no great
political potential m the next decade.
Nelson Rockefeller, for all his chann and ablhty, w111 be
too old In 1980 to have much of a future as a candidate for
etecUve off1ce.
James Schlesinger and Wilham Colby, men of extremely
great talent, have thus far shown no mterest in runrung for any
elective post and no one to my knowledge has tBiked seriously
of their entering the field .
George Busb, Donald Rumsfeld and Elliott Ric hardson
have thetr political futures before them. All three have shown
cmslderable ability as candidates AU three have recently
been somewhat away from tile public eye, Richardson and
Busb as ambassadors, and Rumsfeld as Mr. Ford's exec in the
White House. These are not posts designed to build public
reputations.
But three posts are •a drop in the bucket There a re 12 to 15
other major positions which, 1f given to men with outstanding '
political prospectB, could make a major difference some key
'
elections in 1978, 1980, 1982 and further down the pike.
State, Treasury, Agriculture come read1ly to mind.
What Mr. Ford will do further on changing men and
programs, however , is not clear. Historically , he 's been•a slow
starter, then, when wanmid up, a hard charger
But It is a good bet that Mr . Ford's nominee for Vice
President will be one of tile tllree he's just put m new posts, or
90me other promising relatively young man as far as high
officials go,
•

In

- ---

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of America

Abigail Adams, wife of John
Adams of Massachusetts .
.. Let us separate. [the
British authortttes] are un·
worthy to be our brethren .
Let us renounce them , and,
Ins tead of applications.
let us beseech the Almtghty
to blast their counsels, and
bring to naught ali their
devices"
-8)1 Ron M1ckenzie 6 Jeff MatNeii)'/Cl l915, Until l Ftature Syndicate

FRIDAY , NOVEMBER 21, 197S

"m

1

CAP!'AIN EASY
~fiT? HOPI' THIS 5POHIGH T'5
E~OU6H FOR MOVIES!

NOPE: JUST WAN
TO 6H PICTURS5
THOSE' AMAZONS
0~ FI LM! ...

~RIGHT

. IN CAS~ ANY

HEINER'S BAKERY

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

DUDLEV'S

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

RE'PORT~RS

ARE' A 6tT SKEPTICAL AT
THE

~EW~

CONFEREN CE

TOMORROW!

•

1 31}--Porter Wagoner l, Bobby Vinton 4, Candid
Camera 6, Evenmg Edi t ton wi1h Martin Agransky
20 $25,000 Pyramid 10 To Tell th e Truth 13, Pop
Goes the Coun try lS, Black Perspective on the
News 33
8 oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, IS, Barbary Coast 6, 13, Dr
Seuss 8, Washmgton Week tn Rev1ew 20,33, Arch1e
Griffm 10
8 31}--ChiCO &amp; th e Man 3,4, IS MASH 8, 10, W AI Str eet
Wee k 20,33.
9 oo-Rocklord F1les 3 4, 1S, Movie " Murder on Flig ht
502" 6,13, Ha waii F1ve 0 8 10, F1r1ng L1 ne 20,
Masterpiece Theatre 33
10 oo-Pollce Story 3,4,1S , Barnaby Jones 8,1 0; News
20 , Paul Nuchlms 33

WIN AT BRIDGE
East's return tricks South
opentng btd Thus hts Jac k of
21 spades was su rely gomg to be
lA A 12
a wmner There fore , he took
• 9 71
dummy s ace of spades a nd tn·
tKQ10 5
stead of d1scardmg a spade on
iAKJ IO
a doamond promptly led a
WEST
EAST ill I
trump
lA K 9 4
~tdli O ol
East went r1ght up woth hts
• 10 5 .1
• AJ
ace and led a low spade It
t 9 8 4 'I
• lo 2
dtdn ' L m atter what South did
"' A875
2
next West collected tncks
SOUTH
With h1 s queen and 10 and
• J 85
followed up With the extra
•K\1 8o2
blow He led ht s last spade
t A7
East ruffed w1th the Jac k
... Q 4 l
South had to overruff and
Both vulnerable
eventually West scored a tnck
With h1 s 10 of hearts
\\ e!i l North Ea!il
South
NOttTtl

BORN LOSER

1-A\URe~ wt'Li&lt;.!? llli·N
AAG!J'r 'OJ &amp;€TTl~ TilE

r&lt;;fEZ, I FClRG:oT

ABCOT' 1J.l6
FIG::&gt;HT!

17'fWV'/ C!E wiJI r.:or HUI&lt;T"
1\{~ KAD TO

F10HH

"' 9'

'"'

P;~ ss
J•
Pass
Pass Pa ss Pass
Open mg lead - 2 •

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

K&amp;C JEWELERS

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

----

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANIUE-"MY ION, MY ION"
YfS,
5~-

0F

r-'1':1 •

IT'S JUST

THAT WE lM

You so--

YOU'RE STILL

OUR BOY TO

us

mu

SUI HE'S

A GI1EAT •
AND FIIMOUS
MAN NOW,

BESS -

~NOW-

ALlEY OOP

The Unlu cky Ex per t had
co rra lled u s aga 1n He
re marked 'My hand was too
good If I hadn 't he ld the Jack
of spades 1 would have ma de
mv contract Instead I went
dOwn t~o
" Of course East made a
tern ftc defenSIVe play aga1nst
me. but my opponents a lwa ys
play tha i way He took hts ace
of clubs and promp tly placed
the ktng of spades on the
,.."'''!!V"...,o: table Now look what happen·
cd to me·
We were able to guess Our
unluck y fne nd assu med that
~....::;.,;::_ Ea st held both the kmg a nd
queen of spades as part of h1 s

IT'S A YOU NG
LADY . SOMEONE

WHO'LL MAKE' T11E
PHOTOGRAPHS AND
TAKE I&gt;IO'TES FOR

YOUVE NEVER

MET '

PFT!;' $Al(E?

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

.

RUTH'S MARKET

4•

An lllin01 s reader wants to
know what he should have bid
ne xt H1s hand was
iA AK63 .8 5 t A K Q987 ... 6

-

BLUE &amp; GRAY RESTAURANT

,.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

~=~~u~r;cou~n;~:A;n~d~~wh~a~t=bet~le:r~w~a~~~th~a~n~m~~~o~urc:h:u:rc:h~~=~!~~~~=J~~~

He ope ned one dt amond
Pa rtn e r JUm ped to th ree
clubs He b1d three diamonds
and partner lhree hearts
Th e answer IS tha t he should
have bid three spades w1th
every mtentton of headmg for
a s lam - probabl y 1n
no trump
(Do you have a q uestion

8 oo-Counlry &amp; Western U SA !c)
9 co-Stagecoach West
10 OI}--Burke's Law
SATURDAY, NOVEMBEic 2l, 1975
6 oo-FIIm 4, Sunrise Semester 10, Debates for the '70S
13
6 30 - Fun For Everyone 6; TV Classroom 8,
Treehouse Club 10
1 oo-Saturday Report 3, Farm Front ~; Eddie
Saunders 6, Treehouse Club 8, U S Farm Report
10, Kentucky Afield 13
1 31}--B ullwinkle 3, I Dre am of Jeannie 4; Jelsons 6,
Vegetable Soup 13, Dusty' s Treehouse 8, Man from
C 0 S I 10, Oevlln 13, Mister Rogers 20.
8 oo-Emergency Plus 4 3,4,1S, Hong Kong Phooey
6,13; Pebbles and Bamm Bamm 8,10 ; S..same
Street 20
8 31}--Josle and The Pussycats 3,4, 15, Tom and Jerry.
GrapeApe6,13 , Bugs Bunny Road Runners, Bugs
Bunny and friends 10
9·oo-Secret L1ves 01 Waldo Kilty 3,4,15, Electric
Company 20 ·
9 31}--Pink Panther 3,4, I5; Lost Saucer 13, Big Blue
Marble 6; Scooby Doo 8, 10 , Mister Rogers 20.
10 oo-Land Of The Lost 3,4, IS, Adventures of Gilligan
I3, Hot Dog 6, Shazam t Isis 8, 10, Sesame Sfreel20.
10 31}--Run, Joe, Run 3,4, IS , Groov les Goolles 6, 13.
11 oo-Return to the Planet of the Apes M , 15, Speed
Buggy 6, 13; Space Nuts 8, 10; Electric Company 20
11·31}--Weslwlnd 3,~, 15; Oddball Couple 6,13; Ghost
Busters B 10, Mister RQ!lers 20.
12 OG-Jetsons 3,4, IS , Uncle Croc's Blo&lt;k 6, 13, Valley
of the Dmosaurs 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20
12 31}--Go USA 3,4, IS , College Football 6, 13 , Fat
Albert 8,10
12 45-College Football 6,13 ;.
1 oo-soul Train 3, It Takes A Th ief 4; Children's Film
Festival 8, 10, Wrestling 1S , To Be Announced 33.
1·31}--Whaf's A City AIIAbout• 8,10
2 OG-Marshall Football'75 3, Bonanza~; VIewpoint 8;
Urban League 10, Across The Fence IS; Film 33.
2 31}-- NFL Game Of The Week 3, Movie " The In·
credible Mr Limpet" 8, Death Valley Days 10, To
Be Announced 1S, Valiant Years 33.

3 oo-Green Acres 3; Movte " No Man Is An Island"~.
Death Valley Days 10; To Be Announced 15,
Family at War 33
answer md1v1dual quest1ons
3 31}--Movie " The Bank Dick" 3; All Things Bright and
Beautiful 10.
11 stamped se ll-addressed
4 00 - College Football 6, 13, To Be Announced 15,
envelopes are enclosed The
Making Things Grow 33
most 1n teres!mg queslrons
4 31}--Sporls Spectacular 8, 10. Preserving Food 33.
wt/1 be used m th1s column
5 oo-FBI 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4, All Things Bright
and w1fl rece1ve cop1es of
and Beautiful 15, French Chet 33
JACOBY MODERN)
s 31}--Adam 12 4. Highway Safely 33
6 oo-News 3,4 ,8, 10, God Has The Answer IS; What
now , America? 33
6 31}--NBC News 3,4,1S, Rhoda a; CBS News 10, Lilias,
, Yoaga and You 33
7 oo-World At War 3, Lawrence Welk ~. 15; Hee Haw
6,8; Flnng Line 33 In The Know 10; Newsmaker
'7S 13.
7 .31}--Treasure Hunt 3; Dr Seuss 10, Wild Kingdom 13
B.OG-Emergency' . 3,4,1S, Howard Cosell 6,13,
Peanuts 8,10, Rivals ot Sherlo&lt;k Holmes 33
8 31}--Jeffersons 8, 10.
9·QO-Movle " Doctor Zhlvago" 3,4, 15; S.W AT. 6, 13,
Mary Tyler Moore 8,10; American Family 33
9 31}--Bob Newhart 8,10
10 oo-Mall Helm 6, 13, Carol Burnett 8, 10; Soundsl119e
33.
Yetlerday's Answer
11:00--News 3,4,8, tO, 13 , Buckeye Football Highlights
15 Sandwich
2&amp; French
6 ; Outdoors with Ken Callaway 15, Monty Python's
staple
r1ver
Flying Circus 33
18 Biddy 's
28 Unnatural 11 30--Movle " A Very Special Favor" 3; Saturday
Night 4, IS, ABC News 6, Don Kirshner's Rock
place
2!1 Slur over
Concert 8; Woody Hayes Football tO, Movfe
21 Discovery
30 Chain of
"Creature from the Black Lagoon" 13, Janak! 33
22 Ward off
hills
11 45-Movle " Battle of the Worlds" 6.
23 Type of
34 Equal
12 oo-Movle " A Dandy In Aspic" TO
novel
36 Distaff
I :DO-Movie ' Death of a Gunfighter" 4
24 Kind of
cottontail
I 15-Movle " The Crimson Cull" 13
tUMel
3'1 "Stop"
I 31}--Soul Train 6
2:QO-Movle " Story of Three Loves" 10.
25 Stages
color
2·31}--Movle " Kiss of Evil" ~
4·QO-Movle "The Sergeant Was a Lady" ~ . Movie
" The Main Allraclioo" 10.

AstraGraph

MARK V STORE

Bernice Bede Osol

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

For Solurdoy, Nov. 22, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 1D) II
wtl i be d1fftcult to get your mate
an d those around you to share
your natural enthusrasm today
SubdUE! your ardor Do what s
best lor a ll

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE

RACINE FOOD MARKET

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
You try to spread yourself too
lhtn today Keep In mtnd It ls
better to do one thrng well than
to attempt everythmg and accomplish nothrng

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I,

CHA NNEL 5 Fnday
I oo-wr estllng

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

RAY'S T.V. HOME
ENTERTAINMENT tENTER

...

tO 31}--Avtallon Weather 20
II 01}--News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15, ABC News 33.
t 1 JI}--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Wide World Special
"JFK A T1me to Remember" 13 , Sammy &amp;
Company 6, Movie " The Trouble with Girls" 8,
Movie "Hush Hush, Sweet Charlotte" 10, Janak!
33
1 oo-Midn lghl Special 3,4, 15, Wide World Special 6,
Movi e " Ret urn of the Fly " 10; News 13
2 31}--Movle " Now You See It, Now You Don't"~
4 31}--Movle "See How They Run" 4

lor !he ·ex perfs? Wnte "Ask
!he Jacobys" ca re of !his
newspaper Th e Jacobys w11!

-

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

'Blast Their Counsels':

Television log for easy viewing

GOEGLEIN READY MIX

.

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

GAUL'S MARKET

WILKINSON'S

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

BUT I

THOUGHT

AND WEIGH
EVERY BIT OF
2.30 f-OUNDS I

HE WAS

SICKLY!

' SICKLY,' MY fOOT' IF
YOU ASK ME~THEONLY
THING HE'&amp; viCK OF
IS WORK.' _ __....

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
Responsiblhly Is normally your
cup of tea but today 1f you can
only let George do 11 you'll
probably be JUSI as happy

CANCER IJuno 21 -July 22) In
your haste to please you may
One letter simply stonds lor another. In this sample A is act agarn st your be st JUdgment
used lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Sln1le letters. and harm your own 1nterests
apostrophes. the length and formation of the words ore all Bener to nsk oflend1ng than to
hints. Each day the code letters are different
create frustrall ons

PISCES IFob. 20-Morch 20)
Avo1d l•nanc1al flyers loday. especrally those 1nvolvlng others
Advtstng assocrates poorly will
ca'Use
long -standing
resentments

DAILY
FOOT-THREE ..

that co uld brtng lasting
notonety

budget H you run oul at cash
you II regret QMng that credit
card more use than rs prudent

GEMINI (May 21 -June 201 11

--'--'--'--d. couic:J be a tough day on your
HE MUST BE SIX·

lleeMg glary Dan t do

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Doc.
21) You lend 10 De a trifle
careless w1th tne possess1ons
of others today If you borrow
somethmg tind break or lose U
11s your baby
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon .
1D) Though II seems simpler lo
you today lett ing others make
dec rs1ons tor you Is a mrstake
You II get the short end ot lhe
StiCk
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
Your tntentrons are good , but
Ihe flesh Is weak today You II
procrastmate do tf,e JOb poor ly and have to do tl agam

,-t--t-+-:-i

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

than

somelhmg for temporary fame

CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

CRYPTOQUOTES
WPB
ECM

LEO iJuly 23 - Aug 22)
QPUX
EB
XPU
PCQ Hun cfles are pr one to ovemde
your usually lagtcal petspec·
live At times tt11s could be fme
PVQ
QNPUUY
BMIUTBL
LCTQ, Today your lniU1t lon lsn t all
that gre at
CML V XVYY
QPUX
TUG C AGYYT VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopl 22} II
you can I keep a ttght rern on
CML
C
AUZB.-ZUABZW
EUZYBT your purse strings today don t
Yesterclay's Cryptoquote: .. A GIRL NEVER REALLY wonder later whal happened It
LOOKS AS WELL AS SHE DOES ON BOARD A STEAMSHIP, wrll be too late
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0cl 23) Your
OR EVEN A YACHT. - ANITA LOOS
tmage rs more tmportant to you
!Cl19TD Kina FNhlieo Syndlcalt, Jnt. )
Pf \ ' l I '

~Your
V'Birthday
No•. 22, 1D75
Don 1 change your methods ol
operalton this coming year on
a projeCt you ve been nursing
along lor some time Chances
of a payoff for you are better
with proven procedures

f.IMM .. MI{ ICE CUSES
ME MELTING...

jl

�2

~fijiJi[jl~~e;r::::~,:=· ;: For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
\ lm;rrRmhlf' these four Jumhlf!s
one lttler to tach squ1m tn
form fo u r ordi na r y "ord s

WANT ADS

INFORMATION
DEADLINES

SOUNilS

LIKE

A POLITE SOI&lt;.T
OF SEI&lt;:VANI

Now arran.ce the ended letters
to form the surprne answer, 1111
aurgested by the above cartoon

=~=Prin=t~lhe~SI R~PR~ISI~ANSW~~ERh=ere===~ ''[Il l lJ"

(An•wr. n lomorrow)

Be for e
PM
Day
5
Pub li CaTIOn
Mon d ay Oead lt nc 9 a m
Cdnce llat10n
Cor r ec llon s
w11t be a1;,cep l ed unt1l 9 a m
lor Da y of Publt c1111on
REGULATIONS.
Th e Publi sh er rese r ves !he
r1g h t to e d ll or r e te&lt;. I any a d 5
d eeme d ob 1e CI 1onal
Th e
publ is her
wil l
nol
be
r espon s1b le for m or e th an on e
n corr ec l 1n se r l1 on

RATES

For Want Ad Serv 1ce
5 ce n ts per word on e mser t on
Mmtmum Charge Sl 00
II ce nt s per wo rd th r ee
consecu t1v e tn se r11 on s
26 c ent s per word SIX con
SCC Ut 1v e lll SCf' IO il S
15 Per Cenl Dt sc oun ton pa td
ad s and ads pad W1lh n 10
d ay s

~uto Sales

Pets

CAR DOF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Wanted To Buy
RACIN- E F 1r e Depl want s to
buy a w11lk 1n coo ler or
compr es sor tor sam e Ca ll
949 212 1 afl er 5 p m
11 21 31c

S2 00 for 50 word m1n1 m um
Eac h add11 1o na1 word J
ce n ts

AL L tt ems mu s t be Old Old 1975- o A T-sUN - e210- Halc h
Jumblr• HANDY GOUGE SUBTLV PAVING
b ack w 1l h 111r cond ltto nmg
ke y s m alch lobs
gu ns
BLIND ADS
elec c lock
rear Window
' 4'•u·rrl•r • Ant .. _.r 11n r fu rli 111 fa rnu r .11 fru o nf ~:
powd e r
flasks
p o wd er
1\d dil•on al 2Sc Ct1arg e p er
hor ns bank and lays 1111 or
shad e rad1a l !ires al so 4
Adv erll semen t
I I fJf Ill lilt - EGGPLANT
tr on
s t or e lle ms
Ad
f11ct ory l1r es and 2 snow
OFFICE HOUR S
ve rt1 s1ng etc Posl c ards
l1res $3 490 Cal l 992 345 3
8 30 a m to S 00 p m
!.dv er ware sew1ng 1lem s
11 18 61p
Dally G 30 a m to 12 00 Noon
th1mbles
e tc
Kntv e5
COMMON PLEAS CO URT Sat urday
smo k1n g
ptp c s
1971 OODG E P ckup 1:1 to n
M!; IGSCOUNTY OHIO
phonogr11phs mus1c bo x es
VB engme autom11llc good
POM E ROY 0HIOIIS76~
p aper we1g h ts marb les tnk
runn ng c ondll 1on
5800
No 15 953 Noltce
w e lls boltles hal p1ns
Phon e (6141 247 7161
LL OYD SE LLARDS ET AL
carnpa 1gn 11ems be ll s oil
11 \4 8tp
Plillf1tlff S RO OM and board for se n 1or
lamp s an d lan ler ns mm er s
Ctl1 ze ns very 111 ce Phone
1974
GMC___,
_
J•mm
Y
4W
h ee l
vs
ra 1troad et c cloc ks dolls
99 2 3509
FLO Y D SELL ARDS
dnve automat c p s t ap e
ol d 1ewel r y wa tches rm gs
10 12 l f C
Ad dt css Unkno w n
p layer 350 4 barrel heavy
ch111ns
etc
Steel traps
POME RO Y
duty tra il er towtng spec 1al
derbys
h1gh hats
eve
BO W LI N G L A N ES
ASO
N
Auction
Frtday
M
D AVI D SE LLARDS
on ofl road t1 res and other
g l8 sses poll er y tars tU QS
Early Su ndn y M u:c d
p
m
New
and
use
d
m
er
L ns t known i!ddr ess
ex tr as Exce ll ent co n d111on
p e wler
p ic tur es
and
N ov 16 19'H
c hand1 se som e ani Qu es
Mi dk i ff Wes t V1rgtnta 255 40
Phon e 992 3829 aft er 5 30
fr a me s g lass d1 shes and
Stand1 ng s
Mason Auc t1o n Horton St
p m or all day Saturd ay and
ch 1na pla xes turn 11ur e of
TC.1111
Mason W Va
FLOYD SELLARDS JR ,
Sun day
all t ypes mon ey and c om s
Jacks Dairy Ba r
60 36
11 21 He
Addr ~s!l Unknown
11 21 2t c
arr
ow
head
s
and
lnd
tan
Tom s Carry Out
58 38
art
1t
act
s
plus
all
Naz1
wa
r
Pomeroy F lowet Shop 45 5 I
THE UNKNOWN H EIRS
1972 CHEVY Capr1c e d dr 400
SKA TE A W A Y
ROLL E R
ilems Ph on e 992 20SO be
Pullins E•cavallnq
1~
.S?
Sperl Sedan 2 barrel all
DEVISEES
LEGA
TEES
lw
c
cn
3
p
m
and
I
I
p
m
R
I
N
K
A
NN
OU
NCE
S
BU
S
H1ll &amp; MCiycr Bar b
.tJ 53
EXECUTORS
,
AD
11nted gla ss 1111 steertng
SC
HEDULE
SA
TU
RD
A
Y
S
Monday
through
F
nda
y
Team No 6
38 58
M I NIS T RATORS
AND
a c and power wmdows
ONLY STARTING NOV
11 19 12tc
H igh lnd Gi! llC
Men
ASS I GNS
OF
FL OYD
S2 350 Also 1971 Oldsmobile
ltlh
RA CINE
6 40
Darrell Ouqan 219
L~ rry
SE LLARDS
DECEA SED
88 4 dr 350 I barre l
SYR ACUS E 6 50 MID L-D- 7~ii~ t~r e - ~; -b ~x-;;s ... lDella
Dugan 111 Women Rheba
ow m ll eage
I ke new
Ad dr ess Uknown
brass beds or comple te
DLEPORT 7 15 Thanks
llySc l l 118 Belly W!'li l lii! Ch
52 100 Phone 949 105 1
households Wnt e M
o,
g
v
mg
Party
Nov
26
and
28
702
ET A L
Def endants.
11 16 M e
OPEN WED FR AND Mtller R l 4 Pomeroy
lnd H g h Ser1es
Men
SE
RVI
CE
BY
PUBL
ICAT
ION
Oh1
0
Ca
ll
992
7760
SA
TURDA
Y
7
30
10
00
l any Duga n 563
Darrell
To th e Dehmda nts ab ov e
10 7 74
PRIV ATE
PARTIES
Dug"'n 536 Women Rheba
For Sale
named
MON TUE S THUR S
H ysoll 537 Mary voss .t9.1
1972
KAWA SAK I 750
You are t1e rb y n o1!f ed th at a
EVE
SAT
AND
SUNDAY
TC! am H lgl1 G 1m e
Jac k s
motorcy c le and Hon da 50
Complain t h as bee n f1 l ed m
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
AF
TER
N
OONS
PHONE
Da1ry Bar nR
Mml b1ke
n
exce l le nt
the Common P lease Court of
( Ol d ) 985 39 29 or 98 5 999 6 or
Te1un H 1gh Seres
Jacks
con d1llon
Phon e 992 319 1
1973 NA SHUA 14 x 70 3
Mc,gs County Oh o Case No
9ij5
41
11
Otllry Oar 204 7
11 19 J! c
bedrm 117 bath g as h eat
I S 953 demandtng pt'lr ll t 10n of
11 9 1/ l c
T11k e ov er payments Phone
IIH~ foll owi n g dcscnbed r eal
W A RM
MORNING
gas
Early Sun dily M1xcd
992 3388
cslatc tow 1
healer
12 000 BT U auto
N ov 9, 1975
11 16 61c
The to11ow1 ng real esta t e WI TH OU T m y p erm1 SS 10 11
Ih ere w 11 b e n o huntmg or
Slanclings
temp er a lure cont r ols S125
si! uatcd In lhe County of
tresp asst ng on m y pr op er ly
T ea m
Dorolh y Y oung at Youngs
MCIQS 111 the Slate Of OhiO an d
19 75 l&lt;l x7 0 TR A ILER
e1&lt;
Bb b Mc Gr11w
Mc agan
Toms Ca t rv Out
56 32
Market or ca ll 992 7229
n the V1 Hage of Rull and
ce ll ent cond111 on espec ta ll y
F arm oft l ower Bo w m an s
J!Jck s Drt1ry Bar
56 J2
11 20 31c
bound ed and descr1b ed as
bu il l for off1c es Low pr 1ce
Run
Pul l II'S ExcavaHng
41 &lt;~6
follow s Bein g Lot Num ber
tor
QU
ICk
sa
le
Ph
on
e
(3
04)
11 .t 161C
Pon1 F lower Shop
.11 41
5 GA IT ED Pa l am tno sta ll ton
rour (4) n Luh s Ad d tt 1on to
675 1921 or 67 5 58 29
Hil l a. Maver Ba rb
37 51
Phon e 99 2 7094
Rulland 0 1110
10 30 tfc
Terun No 6
31 S6
11 18 41C
Re fer ence Deed Vol 161
Wanted
H igh l11 d Game
Men Jr
Page 94 S Deed Re c o rd s
WA
NTED
E
)(
p
er
i
en
c
ed
Phelps 116 Jr Phelps 113
POT A TOE S f orsa l e50a n d 100
M(ngs Counly Oh10
Pe ek A Poo Stud to bre ed For Rent
WomPn
Mary Vo!.S 190
lb
cags
Across from
You arc noli! fed I ha l you are
fem ale Pee k A Poe Phone 12)( 65 T RAILER sm all col
Rt1cbfl ttv sclt and Marlene
Shamrock 10 Hend erson W
r equi r ed 10 a n swe r
!h e
992 38&lt;4
Wilso n 189
Va Donald Wal hu Rl 35
Comp li'l 111 wlt h1 n twe nt y e1 gh l
rage su •l able fo r 1 or 2 men
11 21 61p
H lcJh lnd Scrtes
Men
Hender son w Va
d ays a fl er the l As t publ 1cat on
Rous h Lane
CheS hir e
Jr Ph e- lps 580 Ed Voss 51 9
11 1S 261C
T ho las ! pu bl, c at lon w i ll be
Ohto
3 bedroom trailer
;;
,{SH
paid
tor
alr
makfs
and
Wome11
Mary Voss 536
1Hadc on !h e 19th d ay of
Cl 1flon w va Con structio n 1971 DODGE Cha r ger S E A
mode ls of mobil e hom es
MArl nc Wilson 5!7
Dece n tber 197S
workers pref err ed Call 304
Phon e ar ea cod e 614 42 3
Tolllll H1qh Gan e
Tom s
1 cond1l 1on new motol and
LARRY E SPE NCER
77 3 5873
953 1
tr ansm 1SS 1o n Phone 9 '9
carry Out '51
Cl erk of cour t s
4
13
ttc
11
20
6tc
Tom s
Team H1 gh Series
2417 Bashan
M eigS County Oh10
II IB 61p
Car ry Out ?01 1
( 11) 1 14 21 28, (12) s 12 , 19 , ~ -3 RM and bath fu rni shed
7tc
Po m eroy Gow l1ng L anes
house adults only P h on e WE H AVE sholgun she ll s
Help Wanted
N ov 11 1975
992 5535
cl eanmg ac
r1fl e sh ells
12 ME N needed ful l or part
T 11 County L eagu e
L EGA- L NOTICE
11 20 lfc
cesso r1 es huntmg c lothes ,
ltm e S3 96 per hour
No
St an din gs
S e t~ l e d b1 ds wil l be r ecetved
boo t s bla c k powd er guns
e xper1enc e n e c essary
Pt s
Te.lm
by th e M e• gs L ocal School
and accessones relo11d1ng
Phone ( 6141 A46 0677
P om eroy Ccm~Jn! B locK Co
~
R
M
l
urn1
shed
apl
adults
Board o f Educ11!10n a\
mal er lats scop es mounts
l1 21 31c
54 oth1estrtcl
on
ly
Phone
992
5908
before
2
ofl tcc o f " 'e Clerk in the
kn1v es sl eep 1ng bags "' boat
Roach s Gun Sllop
5.t
p
m
tackets
and
c ushions
Sl!ars Ciilal og Merct1an ts JO MCIQS JUniO r H1gh Sch ool
11 2 lfc
Budd 1n g
M iddl epor t
Oh10
hotsl ers Cells n il e slraps
Mistellaneous Sales
Me1gS Inn
JO
and mu ch, much more at
H &amp; It F \res tone
26 for l hrce used school buses
YA RD SALE Thu rs day and J B EDRM partly fu r n 1sh ed
nam~ l y
GMC 1965
Do dge
lnd 1an Joe's Sports and
Hfgtl 111d v1dua l game
I\
Fr1d11y
tu rnflur e cloth es
basement
new
furna
c
e
and
1965
In
tern
al
ona
l
1962
CBs JOB Page Sl
Mid
L
Ph elps
Jr
'131
B II
and
m1SC
12
til
l
d
p
m
B1ds w1 ll be received until
Witte r h eat er propane gas
dl eporl
Rad ford 217 A L Phe lps Jr
Thur
sday
and
10
ti
l
l
A
p
m
7 30 P M on Decem b er B
on Co Rd 28 $100 per
10 17 301 C
227
F nday M D Mi ller cor n er
m onth and SlOO de~os t
197 5 a1 wh fc h time b 1ds w II b e
H fqh se r1e s - A L Phelps
o f Wolf P en Road and Route
ref erence r equ est ed Phone DON T
merely
br ght en
Jr 6J3 Lou Sauer S56 011 1 op t•ncd
8d3 2793 day or 949 28 28 a ft er
Me 1gs L oca l Sc hOo l D ts lr c t
143 Phon e 99 2 7760
Blue Lustr e
c arp e ts
Rad ford 554
11 20 21c
6p m
L W M cC om 11 s Cl er k
I hem
no r11p1d r esolf,ng
Team
t11 gh
qa ne
11 11 tfc
(\ 1) 21 129 ( 12) 5 7 41C
~
Rent Shilmpooer N elsons
Pom etoy Cemen t Bloctc Co
1 FA M IL Y garag e Sal e F r
Drug Slor e
879
and Saturday 10 a m 111 1 S 7 R M HOU SE 10 Sy rac u se
Tet'lm
h 1gh
ser1es
11 2061c
p m Anllq ue oak chma
Oh1 o Bas em ent g ara ge
Pom croy Cement Block Co
r
e111
n1
ce
home
must
have
cab
lne
l
chest
of
draw
er
s
7519
M OD E RN Wa lnut Console
r e fer ence s i11 n ter es ted Call
c ol p 1c ture s d es k
old
A M FM rad10
4 sp eed
day
(614
)
4ol6
7699
ev
en1ngs
Ear l y Wedne sday
d ish es c lolhlng , Chr1stmas
changer Balance S101 BOor
Phelp
s
Jr
201
Ca
r
oly
n
(
61
4)
.4
46
953
9
Mtx ed Leag ue
decoratiOns atum1num tr ee
term s Ca ll 99 2 3965
I I 5 ti c
Bachne r 182
S ' an d lng ~
old oak dol t cab 1nel so fa , 2
11 20tfc
H1
gh
Se
nes
Men
Wt\
ard
Pis
T cillll
cher r y end t abl es and Olh er
66 Boyer 591 wome n Car oly n
Z1d e s Sporl ;,hop
m1 sc
1tem s
W i se c up TR A ILER spa c e for re nt All
TWO SNOW ltr es 700 13 good
Bachner 516
Second h 1g h
YounYoung s Super Mkl
ulllill es Phone 99 2 553S
re s1d end
109 Un1on A ve
senes
Men
Wil
l
Por
ter
co nd 1h0n $15 pcur Phon e
46
Nelson Drug Co
9
16
tf
c
Pomeroy
98.S 3824 Chester
40 53 1 WOtllOil Betly St'lll lh 511
Sm l 11 N elson Motor s
th ir d lllgh se n es A L
11203tc
Ten l h I romf'rs
38 Phe
lps J r
196
wome n
H l(tt1 tndlv tct ua t gome
IScl bel le Couc h t92
Me n W illard Boye r 240
11 18 61C
Te a 11 !u gh game - Z1de s
wom en Edna Rvssc l l 1Y"
Spor
t
St1op
on
d
Nelson
Dr
v
g
second tl tgtl nd game
TR AILER lOt off Kmgsbury
PUBLIC NOTICE
11 21 61p
co 703
Men W1 llard Boye r 202
Road near Harr 1sonv t! le
IN
ACC
ORDANCE
WITH
T eam h1 g senes - Zl de's
women
Belly Smtih 188
Fre
e
na
t
ura
!
gas
c
1ty
SEC 307 86 OF THE OHI O waler Phone 742 2577
W A SHER and dryer In good
Spo r t Shop t970
1111rd lllgh lnd game - A L
REV ISED CODE SEALED
condtl lon
Phone 247 2252
._
11
18
13t
c
B•D ' WILL BE RECEIVED
II 21 31p

I

homes

"

_____________

BY THt ME IGS COUNT Y
COMM ISS IONER S IN THEIR
OFFICE IN THE COURT
HOUSE POMERO Y OHIO
A5769 UNTI L 10 00 AM ON
NOVEM BE R 2S ih , 197S AT
WH ICH TIME AND PLACE
THE BIOS WILL BE
OPENED
AND READ
ALO UD FOR THE SALE OF
HIGHW AY EQ UIPMEN T
THE EQU IPMEN T FOR
SALE IS AS rOLLOWS

Arwtlrer Specml
Purchase!
'

&lt;FACTORY SECONDS)
Very l1tlle fla ws - prac
11call y flaw less

SEALY AND SIMMONS

Mattresses &amp; Boxsprings
SOME
MATCHING
PAIRS
Regular Values to $149.95

•44 •4&amp;

•sa

Twin, Full Size, (1 King)

1 -- 1970 Int ernational 1700
ser1es 2 ton Dump T r uck
Seria l No 4 16070 H 967433
M o tor 34 5 V 8
1 1958 Ford l 11 ton
F latb ed Truck Ser l aR No
F 60BU 27706 Motor 29 2 V 8
1 1966 Dodge Stn110n
W agon Ser.al No WLA S E67

FUR NI SH ED 2 bedrm cot
! ag e Roc k Sprm gs Adult s
on l y Very n1ce Phon e 99 2

2789

11 1B 51c

J A ND 4 r m

turnt shed and
un f ur n iSh ed apt s P hone 99 2
543 4
11 9 tfc

AV A IL A BLE 2 bedrm
all
el ec lrtc modern
ran c h
located outs ide Racme Up
10 25 acres boflom l and
available
Re f eren c es
r eQuir ed Call 992 5550 a ft er
5 p m
11 16 7t c

FU RNI SH ED
ap a rtment'"
adults on ly In M idd lepor t
1 - 1971 !nterna110nal 1700
Ph one 992 387-4
ser 1es 2 ton Dump Truc k
3 25 tic
Scn al NO
4160 70H 114.5 22
M o tor 345 v B
2
Ma r 1on Du m p Beds for L A RGE busmess bUIIOIII~ 11
Ma son larg e glass fr ont
1700 senes Dump Tr ucks
dr iv e m r ear doors will rent
2 - Fr ont End Load ers for
11 or all of ground floor . 3200
2&lt;1 04 Intern ational Tra c tors
THE FOLLOWIN G ARE TO square fe et good local/on

106S57 Mo lor 318 V8

------- -------:4

BE
CON SIDERED
AS
MINIMUM
RE
QUIREMENT S FOR THE
BIDDERS

Phone 1304 1 882 3356 or 773

5611

11 I J lie
- - - - ---~ --- -- ---

Ea ch pu!ce o f eq utp menl
will be sold as 1S w it h no 1CO\J N 1 R Y Mob i l e HOm(
!"a rk Rl 33 ten mil es n orH
warran IS ex pr ess ed or 1m
o f Pom er oy L arg e lot s Wtft
p lied and no addilions or
c o11c r e te pallos Sid ew alks
sub1ra ct1ons to the equlpm enl
r unne rs and ofl s tree
be f or e or aft er the sale
1-1arl on q 'Ph on e 992 7.t 79
The bidder s w 11 1 fu r n ish
12 31 He
the 1r own b id form s Th e fron t
o l th e env elope enclostn g the
'
b d
must
be
marked FR EE RENT AT VILL A G~
1
M A N OR
IN
M ID
E qui pm en t Sa L E Bid '
DL E PORTI We ar e so sure
The su ccessful b1dder mu st
tha t you wtll lo~ e our apart
m ak e payment 1n full to the
m ents lha l we g fve you two
M e1gs Count y Comm iss ion ers
w ee k s RENT F REE Jus t
be for e th e equ1pment Is
pay your security depos ft
re mo ved and remova l ol
an d s tay SIX months and the
eQu pmcnt must b e w ilhtn ten
flrS l lweeks 1S free You wilt
d 11 ys alt er the sa l e
en1ov month ly leases , al l
Th e ct~ u l pm e nt ma y be
.elec lrt c llvmg
carpet ing
tn spec ted at th e Me tgs County
ran ge and r elr lge r a tor free
H1 gh way Depar tment , loca ted
!ra s h p ic kup
c eble TV
at l h e H igh w ay Garag e Rt 7
!O PI •onall a nd l aundry
B y Pa ss
R oc k
Spr i ng s
fa c tlltles Conv en1en l to
Pom er oy Oh io
shopp1no on Thtrd and Mit I
l'h e M eigs Counl y,., Com
tn Middlepor t
V IL L A GE
mtSS IOners res er ve l h c r •g htto
M A NOR 1S yours f or one
eccepl or rej ect any or all b 1ds
bedroom
apartmen t s
or any part ther eof
stM t lng at S10" mpnthly plus
~lee We pay lor everylfl ln;
v ery trulY yoUrs
else see tne Manager at
Marth a Chamber'
Rlv E"rstde Apartments or
CINk
call 992 3273 'Th is offer Will
Board ol M eigs
end soon , so move tn now
County Commi SSIOner s
and sav e SUS
( II ) 11, 10 ?tc
10 23 '"

10" Boot

Excl u~ 1 ve
but1 on c los ure

tread E:xclustve

B E A UTIF Y yo ur home w d h
Perm a Ston e N ew hom es
as w el l as r em odel1n g wor k
E x per l ,n s ta llat on
Fr ee
es ttm ates Ph on e 742 240Q
10 3t 161c

Real

Estate

For

Sale

GIVE YOUR w1 f e a Chr1 Si mas
pr esent !h 1s y ear ol great
en1oym ent A new Bl Lev el
11 3 or d
hom e bath
two car garag e
b edrm s
and ac re of groun d located
on th e Wtldw ood Es ta tes at
F ta l woods
6 m il es from
Pomeroy Ohro Sel l ng at
c ost pr 1c e
Georg e S
Hob ste ll er Own er Bo x 101
Pom ero y Oht o Phon e 1614)

a.

985 41 86

II 16 61c

F O R SALE b y Own er 11 ~
s lory small fram e hou se m
Tuppe rs Pla1ns OhtO on R 1
7 4 bedr m
l 1v 1ng rm
kiiChen , bath Ulll 1ly room 2
p or ches E tec ba seboa r d
h eat storm door and wm
d ew s well msu l at ed Ap
proM 1 ac re lot S12 500
Phone 1614 J 667 6361
11 16 61p
3

Phone 992 3960

11 21 12tc

BE ORM
fa rg e k1l chen
l1 v1n g rm d1nmg rm 11 "'
b ath d 1spos al ce ntral a1r
ce ntral
hea t
w a ter
pur111caiiOn sy stem
fu lly
c arp eled w1red thr oug hout
l or TV
an d t el ephon e
VtnY I sl dtnQ doub le g lass
wtndow s exc es s storag e
spa ce m c losets and llx 11
m e tal lawn butld lng One 01
M tddl epor t s beller hom es
Call 992 31 29 betw een 1 15
and 4 p m lor appomlmen t
II 20 6tc
._

______________

11 21 4tc
HOU SE for sal e 111 Por tland
HOUSE for sale 5 rooms wit h
lake over p a yments 5 rms
bath , mod ern kt lc hen fuel
and balh good we ll and 2
oil heat new stove 1 a cre
acr es of ground Phon e 843
(Ba ll Run Road) See by
229 2
appl
on l y
Also , one
11 17 121c
Stokermatlc st ove $175 One
gas Magu:l Che f range S25
3 BR HOME \U S! ltnt Shed
See at 232 South Second
Si!tle m Sl
r em od e l1ng
M•ddleport Oh10 45760
R utl and
Phon e 742 2306
11 21 Jtc
afler 4 p m or see Milo B
H u t chin son
HOG S ready 10 bulch er A lso
10 9 tfc
beef and da1ry call te Cal l ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 9491115
11 19 61c Ho use on un cotn Het ghl s 2
b ectrm l arg e kttch en fu ll
b ase m en t ni ce b ack yard
NOW se111ng Fu ll er Brush
only sa 900 W1th new fur
Products
Phone 992 3410
n1tur e on l y SI O,J OO Phon e
10 6 lfc
99 2 7648

11 6 261c

A I R CO w e l ding ma c h i ne ,
n ew elec al l acce ssones
In c luded
Phone 992 34 10
10 28 tf c
ONE cow to freshen soon One
250 ga ll on Un lco bulk m lk
tank 2 un1t Dela~i!l milkers
Wllh vacuum pump All for
$4 75 Phone Arthur Spen c er

161•) 985 3891

II 16 61p

6

k UUM
g a{ ag e
por ch

Phone

MOu s e Wnn udlll
ba sem ent bull! 1n
1
1 ;s er e
Hobson
992 7733

3- - ut:Ut&lt;M
home
finished temode l tng
5 1 R ulland Phone
after "p m or see Milo
Hutchison

197J TRU CK 1 ton Ford F 38 A CRE S
2 ho uses
'1.
350 Heavy duty LWB f )(
ga rag es barn drill ed we lt
cellen t conditi on Call 304
o ve rlook tng Oh o R 1ver
773 5308 after .5 p m
Pr iced for QUI Ck so!ll le Phone
_ __ _
11 16 If
247 )2 47
__ - - - - -1- - BAS SETT twm bed bedrm
suite a nd s 1n g l e beds
dressers and dOUble bedrm
s' ROOM house partia lly I
suits Refrlge .. ato r s, an d
fu rtfliShed
( r e frl gerato~
black and white telev 1s1on
sto\' e, washer and dryer
set
Phone ( 6J.41 6676361
bedroom suite and dinette
11 16 6!p
"'. UIIe l Newly remodeled
and newly carpeted Good
f wi N G ,NGb;gy cradle- ilew
to c at.o n
E~&lt;l e r l or
was
unftn ls hed
while
pme
paint ed thts yen can 742
plan t er
c lock
soli d
2801 after 5 30 p m or 992
mah,gany
Gall Mi l ler
579 5
Phone 992 3196

11

19 41C

217 4

~ 92

0 DE LL Al 1nem ent loc at ed
b e h1n d
Rull11nd
Gr ade
Sc ho o l Tun eu p br a ke s
w h ee l ba lan cmg a t, n emenl
Ph one 742 20Col
11 16 ti c

EX CAVA TING

TEAFORD REALTY
PHONE 992 3325
0

RUTLAND - B rms, 4 or 5
8 R s ba lh 2 car garage
and garden $12 000
POMEROY - 8 Rms 1'12
bath s, hot wate r heat
Basement &amp; large yard
$20 000
157 ACRES - Good fences
1m proved pas tures B room
house &amp; m tnera ls $60 000

TRAILER LAND - 3 9S
acres

On e

tratler

wt fh

sa te Second septic lank
All lor Onl y 58500
26 ACRES - Of rolling
!and Good 6 Rm hou se
balh, barn &amp; oth e r
buddmgs $26 000
MIDDLEPORT
3
fu ll basement 517 000

BA CKH OE S

AND DOZER LA RGE AND
SMALL&gt;. S li..TI ~ TANKS
IN STI\ •.E D
BILL
PULLIN S PHONE 992 247 8
DAY OR NIGHT
1111 78tp
WU ULD YOU BELIEVE?
Bu ld an e ll ste el butldtng at
Pete Bar n pr1 ces' Gold en
G •ant A ll St eel Bu il dings
R I" 4 Box 14B w a v er ly
Oh o Ph one 9-4 7 22 96
_.,7 24 lfc

---

_______

&gt;EW ING

.1\A CHI ' c

Re pa1 r s servtce all m ak es
992 128 1 T he Fj! bn c Shop
P oLneroy Aul hOr ,zed'smger
Sa l es and Se r viCe
We
sharpen Sctssors
3 29 l f c

WE SPE CI ALIZE 1n m obl ie
ho~e furnac e repair Phone

992 5858

9

bedrooms , d ln tng ntce
k ttc hen gas furnace and

18 lfc

O a, D rw. E E Trimming, 20
y ear s ex perr en ce In sured
fr ee es timates Cal l 99 '2 3057
or 11) 667 3041 Coolv i ll e
10 15 lie

- - ---- ---- --LET US DO IT!I

Carpeting
POME t&lt;u, - , 8R bath,
fu ll basement has 1 BR TV
room , utddy w orkshop

Large yard $9,500
Ml DOLE PORT - Ex
ce!lenl cond 2 BR. bath,
carpeted paneled full
basemen!, carporl FA N
gas heat $13 000
POMEROY - 200 ft
fr o nt age

for

home

air

power seats

73 Cadilac Sed. DeVille, power, air .... . 14995
73 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, pow., air...... 14795
73 Monte Carlo 2 Dr., v-roof, air........ 13695
72 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, power, atr .... 13395
73 P~. futy Ill 4 Dr., V-8 auto... . ......11995
73 Pont. LeMans 4 Dr., pow., a1r. .. ... 12995
72 Datsun 2 Door, std .. ........... . . .... 11595
72 Pontiac H.T. Cpe., V-roof, POWer...... 12395
72 Buick LS Cus. Con., power, air ...... . '2895
72 Buick Electra, V-top, pow., air . •• •.•. 12695
72 P~. Gold Duster, 6 cyl~ 3 speed .... 1l995
72 Olds 98 HT Sed., power, air ........ 12695
72 Chev. Imp. Cus. Cpe., full power, air 12295
72 Olds Lux. Sed., full POWer, fact air 12895
72 Dodge Swinger Cpe., 318 V-8, auto. 11895

1974 Chev C tO 'It Ton Ptckup, super custom auto P S
P B, radio, carpel long bed One owner S3588 00
1973 Butck LeSabre Custom, 4 dr H T, fa clory a1r, cruise
control, vinyl top Sold lh&lt;S one new S3188 oo

2 SIGNS
OF

IN PRIME COIIIIDITION
.---------TRUCKS--------~

'1995
~~~e:~r, .~~~~,., ~~.~~ ~ ~~~~., ,.,., ,, ,.

307 V-8 sta trans., 39,000

Pomeroy

au to

500 E. Matn
Ohio, Ph . 992 2174

Pomeroy

BEDRM
m o b il e ho m e
1 16 tfc
pan e l! n g
w a ll to w a ll
carp elm g
g arag e ultlll y
bud d mg 3 &amp; 4 10 acr e lot C BRADFORD Auctioneer
Com p let e Se rv tc e
Phon e
Rutla n d St
M 1d d l epo r1
91
9
1487
or
94
9
2000
Racine
Phon e 992 384 3
Oh10 Cr 111 Bradford
11 18 6lc
10 9 ti c
T WO lots m the cou ntr y 105 x
105 leac h ) T uppers Plam s E XCAVA TI NG doz,er lo11 dcr
wa le r
near M e1 gs H1 gh
and backhoe won scp tt c
tanks
m stalled
du mp
Sc hOOl S2 500 each One lot
tr uck s an d lo boys fo r h1rc
1S se t up f or m ob ile hom e
Mobil e
ho m e
so ld
w1 1 h aul f ill d1r! to p soil
sep ar al ely Phon e 992 7060
l 1mes tone an d gr avel" Ca ll
\1 18 61C
Bo b or Roge r Je ff er s d ay
phone R91 7089 r1 ghl phone
H OUSE f or sal e 1n Port lan d
991 3515 or 991 5232
Ta ke over pa y m ent s 5
2 11 li e
roqm s and bath good w elt
and 2 ac r es ol gr ound REA DY MI X CO NCRETE
Ph on e 8d 3 2292
de l i Vered r1 g ht 10 yo u r
11 18 12tc
pr otec l tF as t and ea sy F re e
l?S t tm at es Phone 992 32 84
Goegte,n Readv M1)1. Co
CU ST OM Homes no down
~ dd lcport Oh 10 1
pay m en t VA L oa n s F HA 6 JO ti c
A s low 11s 3 p er ce nl dow n
Yo ur plans o r ou r s Ca ll or
wr i te Sh ep ar d Co n1r ac l 1n g
SEP TI C T A N KS c l l'a n ed
60)( 281\
Ru tl an d 45775
Moder n Sani tation 992 39~d
or 99 2 73 t9
Ph one 742 24 09
10 31 26tc
9 18 tic

10 Mechantc

pass ,

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.

1971 01evy C.10 PU

POMEROY LANDMARK
• •J.. ck W Carsey, Mlir
Ail Phone 992 2181

TR A ILER and lot 10 Rutland
Will constder land contract

5934

Knee Htgh
Deep tOu gh

butt on closure

T WO used llghl we1ght chatn
saw s Pomeroy Home &amp;
Auto Phone 992 209d
11 21 31C

BA SS ETT B R Sut l e, tt ke
new Gas range 3 pc sl ate 4
x 8 pool table Phone 992

Ph

Real Estate for Sale

Deep tough head

1974 Grandvtlle Wagon, 9

AM F M radio Local owner Only $4588 00

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC •.

PhoneH2-2331
Roger Wamsley Rutland
1015 1mo

4 10 1 mo

USED CARS

1973 0pel19002 Dr. Wagon, auto 4 cyl I 9 liter engine A 1973 Ponltac Catahna, 2dr H T auto, P S, P 8 , air We
rea! gas saver One owner $26118 oo
scld !his one new Areal buy at $3188 00
We sit II hove some cheap cars for sale, less lhan S800 oo So come on tn &amp;lets talk Turkey
Buy your next car from vour Friendly Dealer The dealership that wants you as a Fr1end, not tust as
a customer
See one oflhese Fnendly Salesmen· Ceward Calvert, J D Slory or Btll Nelson
Open EveQtngs tit 7 p m &amp; Sal. ttl 5 P m. Servtce from 8 am Itt 4·30 p m Mon thru Fn Serv&lt;ee
dosed Sat.

Nathan B1gg s
Rad1ator Spectallst

R&amp;J COINS

Ph 992 3993

1973 G.M C 1/t Ton Ptckup, super custom auto , P S , P B ,
radto. Extra sharp S3188 oo

From the l argest Tru c k or
Bulldo ze r Rad1ator to the
smallest Hea te r Core

on

Apprat s al
se rv1ce
estates and collections

1974 Butck Century 2 Dr H T., auto , P 5 P B AM FM&amp;
tape a&lt;r cond L&lt;ke new $3888 oo

or

frailer wafer avai lable,
original ly has 2 houses
$3 000
RUTLA ND - 2 BR, bath,
carpeting , paneling ,
porches , garage, good
cond&lt;hon S9 500
DEX TER - 157 acres.
large house, wa fer system,
barn &amp; olher bldgs $38,000
POMEROY - 71!&gt;acres 4
BR balh, carpe ting ,
paneling, hot water heal,
basement storage S!S,OOO
PHONE 992 2259

501 NYLON

$499 _ '
Square
Yard

RUBBER BACK
we hav e hundr eds Of
carp et valu es Yo ur j ob can
be comp leted m 1"' lo 2
weeks N o tong wall ing
p er1od Our 1ns1aller has 28
years ex per ien ce
Expert
l nstallat1on You ' ll Ilks
wh8 1 yo u gel

1967 01evy C.10

~~e ~~~:...1.~~~.~.' 1.~~:
...

Pomeroy
Co.
.
QUALITY 'Motor

1695
70 Dodge Mon. 4 Dr., V-8 auto., P.B., ..11395
70 Olds 98 HT Sed., pow., F. air ........ 11095
69 Ply. 4 Door, V-8 auto................ 1895
·69 Olds 88 HT Cpe., 350 V-8, F. air •••. 1895
68 Olds Cut. 4 Dr. HT, 350 V-8, P.'b.... '895
68 Dodge Dart Cpe., V-8 auto ....... . .....'995
68 Pontiac Bonn. 4 Door atr .............. 1395
67 Chevelle 4 boor 6 c~. auto........... 1695
68 Olds 98 Lus. Sed., air ................ 1795
68 Buick Skvlark 4 Door. ..... . ........... 1895
67 Mercuty 2 Dr. H.T., atr... . . ....... .. ... '295
66 Cadillac Sed. DeVille! air ..... : ...... . .. '695
_69 Chevrolet% ton Pickuo .... .. .. ....... s1295
1'/: Dodge 1 ton Truck, flat bee!... . ... .. 12695
71

197S CHEVROLET CAPRICE
S5298
Cpe , less than 7 000 miles deluxe belts, lint glass, air
conditioned, delu•ebumpers and guards, remote LH &amp;
RH mirror 400 48 Bleng lne, AM radio and tape aux
lighting comfort &lt;It whee! Like_new and a real sharp&lt;e
1968 MERC CDMET2 DR
$349
V 8 std trans rad •o
1969CHEVRDLEJ BEL AIR 4 DR
V8 aulomlhc a1r cond, power sleen ng
radio Special

l

ms

brakes,

$329

Luxury Coupe, locally
owned, fully equipped ................ .

1973 Fcrd Gal. 500

2 Dr. H T., bronze w1th

2295
1973 Chevy Impala 4 DR.
$2295
972 Ford LTD Coupe
$1895
1972 Mere. Montego
$1795
1972 Buick LeSabre
~u0e~~fut~.: ~.~: :..~.:
~ 1595
1971 ·Buck Riviera
$
1595
~~;~f~a~~~s~ ~ ~ 1595
1971 Olds Custom Cruiser
$
1695
1971 Ford LTD Country Squire
$1695
fri~: .~?:.~~:.~~.~~~.?~.~~~.......... ..
1
!~~ a~~ ~~.~ ~ 1195
~~~npv~~~.~.~~~:.f.~~~ ••~:~: ..... ·····~

Sed ., fact air. P.S., P B.,
vinyl roof .•• ••••. ••.•. ..•.. •. ...•..•..•

Fact. atr. P. S., P B, vinyl
oof, 38,000 miles ..•••. .•..•. ••••. ..•.

"'dr. ::.ed., fact . air. P .S.,

P. B , vtnyl roof .......... .. . ... ..... .. .

••

..

..........

2 Dr , fact a[r, P S., P B,

vinyl roof, tilt wheeL AMtape (won't last long) ............. .

.........

9 pass , 4 dr , sta wagon,
Climate Control. tilt
wheel. AM-F M, lug rack ......... .

Sta. Wag , fact air, p 5,
1

:

.........

-ICONOM Y SPICIALS-

~1795
~:~ .~~.~~ .~ ..~::. ~. ~~~:: .~" . . ...... '~ 1795

1972 V.W. Bug, auto. trans ............

$1395
$11

1972 Chev. vega Hathtiack, auto •.•.••••• ••• ••, •• , .••• •.•••••
971
Ford
PtntD.
unaboul, 4 cyt., 4 spd . •.•••• •••••••••

Several other cars in stock at Riggs.

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Rutland

..... ........ ..

1973 Olds 98

CALL142 2211
TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE
11'(: 1.iRPE T CONSULTANT

742 22 J1

~ 59

.

RIGGS USED CARS
i.o

atedon St ~ Rt . 7

Chester, o.

TOM TIEDE

Wallace's recoiYl
worse than health
By Tom Tiede
MONTGOMERY, Ala
Shortly belore Geoue
Wallace announced h1s
formal bid for the presidency,
a campaign aide said thts of
the candidate's chances
'If s10gle - mtndedness
coun ts for much, the
governor should win 10 a
walk Th1s !ella's gol no olher
interest, no other thought
than bein' Prestdenl It's not
like Bentsen or Carter, who if
they lose lhey JUSI go back to
their m1lhons and the1r
hobbles and their other lives.
George hasn 'I got no other
life now, no sex, no sports,
nothin', all he's go t rema1010'
is 1978 "
Indeed, in terms of smgular
zealotry, George Wallace
may be the leading
presidential candidate of all
hme Assoc1ates describe
him as almost desperately
conumtted He has neglected
slate affairs here to the point
where much of the real
decision making power 1s in
the hands of his brother,
Gerald, and most of the dayto-day routine ts admlmstered by vanously
capable lieutenants. As for
pnvate responsibilities, such
as his two famibes, the
governor has never been
attentiv e 1n the normal
fashion , Bnd how has no t1me
for them whatever
Insofar as self-denial is
oflen as admirable 10 a
polllic1an as chastity IS in a
priest, Wallace's dedlcatwn
may have some popular
beneftl Voters favor the
enthusiastic Vel there 1s
another side to zeal and In
lh1s case II appears lo
be dark
Bt a lime
when Americans seem to
be rebelling against automa ted leaders, Wallace

Market Report
down, Shoats 17 to 37
SALES REPORT
Oblo Vmley Uvesloek Co.
GaUipolls, Ohio
Nov, 15, 1975
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs 20
to 28, 300 to 400 lbs 20 to 28 50,
400 to 1100 lblt 21 to 32, 500 to
800 lba. 21 to 35, 600 to 700 lbs.
21 to 37 50, 700 lbs. and over 21
to 40,
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
300 lbs. 15 to 21, 300 to 400 lbs
16 w23, 400 to 500 lbs. 17 to 25,

500 lo 600 lbs. 19 Lu :1:1, 600 to

700 lbs. 18 to 24 SO, 700 lbs. and
over IB to 33.50
STOCK COWS &amp; BULlS (by the head) Stock Cows 100
to 150, Sloek Cows and Calves
140 to 210, Stock Bulls 85 to
200,BabyCalvea10to30, (By
the pound) Canners &amp; Cutters
Cows 15 to 20, Holstein Cows
18 50 to 24, Commercial Bulls
21 to 27 50.
VEA I, CALVES - Tops 220
lbs to 250 58 'o 66 50, MediWll
200lbs. to 300 34 1o 47, Culls 30

ATHENS LIVESTOCK
SALES, INC.
Nov. 19, 1975
Feeder Steers ( 400-M0 lbs )
20--34 50, Feeder Heifers (4007001bs.) 17 5().27.50, Slaughter
Bulls (over 1,000 lbs ) ~
27 20, Feeder Bulls (400-800
lbs ) ~29 50
Slaughter Cows - Utthty
22, Canner-Cutter 14-21 75
Veals 25-59 50, Pigs 1by the
head ) 20-37 50

IS10creasmgly emergmg as a
kind of Slrangelov1an robol,
mecliamcal m lhought and
pw-pose, possessed by deep
' myslenes thai are beyond
easy mterpretahon
How, for exam ple, can one
falhom lhe governor 's forfmture of stale obbgalions• A
U S Attorney here has sa1d
that lhough Wallace has run
for Pres1denl four times "he
hasn't run h1s slate for three
tenns " Even a on.e-t1me
Wallace confidant, John
Cohn, says the man has
'been a temble governor '
In more than a decade of
Wallace leadership, though
his ow n stock has soared
nahonally, the sta te of
Alabama has gone from 47th
to 48th m the Umon m lhe
percentage of poor residenl$,
and from 45th to 49th m per
capita Income
H1s chrome and cruel
neglecl or h1s fam1ly ,
however, IS even more baffling, and perhaps more
telling of the candidate's
character His present w1fe
Cornelia says Wallace 1s
s1mply too politically active
to be "much of a father to my
boys " Others here, however,
say the governor's reluctance
lo be a parent predates his
pobhcs "George was never
much of the fam1ly kmd,"
says a loog acquamtance
"Lurleen, you know, he just
more or less used her all of
her life "
Lurleen was Wallace's f1rs1
w1fe, a private, unassummg
woman whom he neglected
for much of their marriage,
Lhen discovered her worth
only in a political way In
a book about the Wallace
fam1ly, George Wallace Jr
speaks glowingly of Lurleen
as bemg both his mother and
father figure The governor
forever away, George Jr
tell~ of h1s mother "lightmg
up" their home with her
presence Even at Christmas
the father was disinterested ;
he mBde it a pomt to be home
then, but while Lurleen got up
early w1lh the k1ds to unwrap
presenll&gt;, the governor laid
about 10 bed to mid-morning,
readmg the newspapers
In 1966, prevented by law
!rom succeedmg himse lf m
the slate house, Wallace ran
Lurleen as a surrogate, thts
even lhough she was
scheduled to undergo surgery
for cancer of the uterus. II
was a tasteless Wallace ploy,
altogether se1!1sh, which

\

NOW
TO SAVE!

Check These Great Used C11r Buys.
All Have Been Checked and Ready To Go For Winter
1974 Ponftac Lemans 2 Dr HT, factory air , auto P 8
P S , tape, local one owner $3988 00

Busmess Phone 992-5880
ReSidence 992 3313
11181mo

Buy, Sell or Trade

Syracuse, Oh1o

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

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

Call today for
Serv1ce Tomorrow

Coins, Currency
and Supplies

FREE ESTIMATES
"
Blown
lnsulahon Serv1ces
Blown &lt;nlo Wa lis &amp;Atttcs
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS
LARRY LAVENDER

TINGLEY

con -

co lors FHA financing
available Price $21,500.
Phone 667 6304
11 -12-lmo,

21 1 mo

For Sale

under

ceramtc ti le garage large
lot Buy now an d p tck your

1 mtle on State Route 124
Toward Rutland

..

Now

3 bedroom

strucllon w&lt;th ca r pel,

PH. 992-5682

BOWLING

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

new

Five

Intersection of R! 33 &amp; 7
Pomeroy

FREE I

VALUE
RATED

SO LET SMITH NELSON PUT TURKEY ON YOUR THANKSGIVING TABLE.
OFFER GOOD THRU NOV. 30, 1975

Sales and Service

Tuppers Plams, Oh1o

Atl Mechantca! Work

11

D&amp;M Appliance

MORlAN
Construction CO.

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

I

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

BUY ONE OF OUR USED CARS
PRICED '500 OR MORE AND GET ATURKEY

'

NO TIME LIKE

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
SAYS-LET'S TALK TURKEYI

Business Services

COLLI E pup s lo g 1v e aw a y Har t s Used Car s New Haven
w V a Au thortzed Rop er
Phon ~ 992 702?
1 t t9 J1tc
Deal er Tra c lor s 8 10 lJ 16
Hors e pow er L awn mow ers
til ler s saw s Y ear end sal e
Employment Wanted
12 cham saw Reg $14 7 so
now S129 95 Harl s Used
'kEMODE L I NG
Pl umb n y
Car s Phone BB2 2793 N ew
hca tm g and a l l l yp cs Ofl
Ha ven
r epa1r
Wor~
y en er al
11 17 PI c
Quilr ant eed 20 yea r s e
per1en ce
Phone 992 2&lt;1 09
H&lt;J rt s U s ed Car s
Y our
s 1 ·~ C o l u mbia B 1 ke
Headquar t ers Fu I !1 ne o l
CA RP E NTRY
p an e 11n Q
B1 cy c les to choose trom
fl oormg and ce ll tng Ph on e
Ph on e !!8 2 27 93 New Ha ven
992 275 9
11 17 6tc
10 21 30 tc
H a rt s Use d C11rs Reddy
Porlabl e H eaters
S1ze
r 11nges 30 000 BTU lo 150 000
BTU Som e vented Ther
mo s tats avai l ab l e wllh
h eal ers 30 000 BTU Reg
S129 95 Sa le S109 95 Phone
882 279 3 N ew Haven
11 17 61C

11-The Daily Sentmei,Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Nov 21, 1975

Ford LTD Wagon, pow., luggage

rack1

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burns, lloyd Me laughlin or Marvin
Keebaugh.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" You'll like Our Quality Way
of Domg Busmess"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open l;venmgs Untti~ : On-T,I5p.m . Sat.

Plains socked• in
by heavy storms
•

Their ctty may be burled
under more than a foot of
snow and clogged w1th stalled
cars, but the Grand Island,
Neb., police are st1ll offermg
speedy serv1ce
" H you don't know where
your car JS, call the pollee,"
SBld Grand Island Pollee
Clue! Tom SmBha "We'll tell
you where It is and how much
it'll cost to get 1t back."
Business, goverrunent and
education ground wa halt in
the cenlral Plains and upper
Midwest Thursday as
hOwling winds piled a foot
and a half of snow Into 13-foot
nonetheless succeeded
When she even tually d1ed ,
Wallace opened her coffm to
spectators, agamst her ex·
pressed w1shes He ended the
episode by having a bust to
her memory placed awkwardly m the lobby of the
state capitol. Referring to her
today, he calls her, formally,
"Governor Lurleen
I! should be noted that
Wallace 1s not the only
preSldenllal ca nd1dale who
has excluded hts flesh and
blood from h1s llfe, Gerald
Ford bemg another who has
generally felt his career more
nnportant than h1s children
' Yet Wallace 1s a spec1al
example, 1f only because he 1s
a special case devo1d of
warmth and philosophy and
now a k1nd of ulhmate
polilical creature, he offers
lhe nalt on naught but
polilical pass10n
II remams to be seen if
many ' oters feel thiS IS
enough man Amcma and 1n
a world r unmn~ slwrl of
cverylhmg except poli lical
11

pa:-;ston

drifts.
Wattresses at the Husky
House Restaurant at Limon,
Colo , on Colorado's eastern
Plains, were among the few
thmgsmovmg m the blizzardswept reg1ons
Hundreds of motonsts sat
m roads1de cafes m Limon,
wa1hng for highway crews to
assault mammoth drtfts
block mg major
transcontmental highways
"We 're full of people," sa1d
Karen Br1ggs of the Husky
House. "We have a lot of
people just s1ttmg They can't
go anywhere."
A state pohce off1cer
radioed Denver that Limon, a
lllwn of 2,000 persons, "JS
unable to cope with the high
Influx of people "
Thousands of travelers
were stranded, Cities were
1mmob&gt;hzed, schools shut
tlown
wholesale
and
busmesses and govenunent
off1ces clOsed ftpm Colorado,
to Kansas, Nelraska, the
Dakotas and Mmnesota
Only two deaths were
reported - both In lraffic
mishaps on snow-packed
highways,
All public and paroclual
schools In the Duluth, Mmn.SUpertor, Wls area were
closed and the Nat10nal
Water Quality Laboratory
Issued a spteiAI warning to
residents of the area not to
drink unfiltered water
because the storm stirred up
" lUI excessively high level"
of the asbestos f1bers dumped
Into Lake Supenor by the
Reserve Mmmg Co
Up to 18 inches of snow fell
along the blizzard's path and
winds of up to 75 mUes per
how- stacked up drifts 12 to 13
feet high m rural areas of

75 Ford Holdovers . New cars. Good
selection of most senes
Lowest
Pri ces.

72 Cadillac Sedan Deville ...............$3695
Ex tr a sharp wtth genu tn e leather

dltmnmg

Comfronton a1r con

73 Pontiac Catalina ......................'2995
4 dr Hardtop atr cond ttlon tng one careful local owner, new

Ford trade 10 E xcept tonal tn every way

73 Chevrolet VB Pickup ................ ~2995
Lu )( ury model wtth beaut i fu l interror Shows tender care
Power steen ng &amp; brakes Auto tran s

73 Ford Van Qub Wagon ·· .... :rr... ·-'3795
~r steenng

8 pass Chatteau l uxury model A uto trans
L tke new condd1on

72 Opel 2 Dr. Sedan .................. }1995
Auto trans
model N1ce

4 cyl

economy

Butck s popular economy

'

73 Ford VB Gran Torino ................'2595
4 Dr

Sedan, 302 V8 One local owner Shows good care

75 Cadillac Deville·· ..............
··· .. ·.. $AVE
Full

A Dr sedan less than 2100 m1les
clea n

eqUipment Showroom

69 Chevrolet VB Camero................ ~1695
Sma ll VB auto t r ans, power steenng

MANY MORE
SEE: Fred Blaettnar, Pat H1ll, Melvm little,
or Dan Thompson
Open Eventngs Til6:00
Except Thurs. and Sat. TIIS: 00

DAN THOMPSON
FORD
PHONE
992·2l!J6

Castro
surVived
•
8 plots
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Fidel Castro was the target of
• at least e1ght CIA murder
plots that mvolved hirmg
gangsters and using polSOn
Mgars, pens and pills, an
exploding seashell "and other
devices wh1ch stram the
unagmatloo "
The agency was ~etting up
one of the schemes on the day
Pres1dent Jolm Kemedy was
assassmated, accordmg to a
Senate mtelhgence com·
mittee report released
Thursday
The plottmg agalllSt the
Cuban leader also mvolved
disruptive tact1cs, mcluding a
plan to expose Castro to a
spec1al shoe polish that would
make h1s beard fall out and
destroy his whiskered
unage.
"The most 1roruc of these
plots," the report sa1d, "took
place on November 22, 1963 the very day that President
Kennedy was shot m Dallas
- when a CIA official offered
a potson pen w a Cuban for
use agamst Caslro "
The report said that "at the
same lime an emlSSBry from
President Kennedy was
meetmg w1th Castro to explore the possibility of Improved relations "
The report so1d the f1rst
murder plot was hatched July
20, 1960, and that the committee had "concrete" proof
of other plots through 1965
The report's section on
Castro and Cuba comprised
almost one-th1rd of the 347-

west central Nebraska
Tom Baxter's cattle had a
field day Thursday as the
storm packed snow to the
height or hiS feedyard fen·
ces.
"Several hundred head of
my cattle just walked over
the top of the fence and
sea ttered everywhere," the
Grand Island rancher SOld
"We've tracked some of the
cattle as far away as 2\'z
mtles "

461

s. Third

MMJII:part

TOM RUE
MOTORS

69 Ford LTD
4 dr.

'1095

68 Chev.· Wagon

9 pass.

'1095

66 Cad1llac
4 dr.

'795
67 Buick R1vera

2 dr.

'295
68 Chevelle 2 dr

•895
70 V W. Bug

'995
69 Opel 2 dr.

'595

See Tom Rue ,
or Ray Douglas
Ph . 992-2594

page document
It so1d "one plot, mvolvmg
the use of underworld figUres
reportedly twice progressed
wlhe pomt of sendmg polson
paUs to CUba and dispatching
teams to commtl tlle deed "
In the early 1961E, the
agency - knowmg Castro
enJoyed skind1vmg - explored the poss1b11tty of
planting an exotic seashell,
r1gged 1o explode It also
conSidered arrangmg whave
the premier recetve a "gift"
of a deadly contammated
d1vmg su1t . Both 1deas
eventually were abandoned
The "beard pian" was to
have been used when Castro
stopped at a hotel durmg a
tr1p abroad and, according w
custom, put his shoes m the
hall to be shmed. A CIA
operative was whave dusted
the shoes w1th thalliwn salts,
which would would have
caused h1s haJC to fall out
However, Caslro canceled
the 1r1p
A box of Caslro's favorite
ctgars was treated at CIA
labora wries w1th a botulinum
toxm "so potent that a person
would die after putting one
his mouth " The ra:ord did
not disclose whether any
were debvered

•

�2

~fijiJi[jl~~e;r::::~,:=· ;: For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
\ lm;rrRmhlf' these four Jumhlf!s
one lttler to tach squ1m tn
form fo u r ordi na r y "ord s

WANT ADS

INFORMATION
DEADLINES

SOUNilS

LIKE

A POLITE SOI&lt;.T
OF SEI&lt;:VANI

Now arran.ce the ended letters
to form the surprne answer, 1111
aurgested by the above cartoon

=~=Prin=t~lhe~SI R~PR~ISI~ANSW~~ERh=ere===~ ''[Il l lJ"

(An•wr. n lomorrow)

Be for e
PM
Day
5
Pub li CaTIOn
Mon d ay Oead lt nc 9 a m
Cdnce llat10n
Cor r ec llon s
w11t be a1;,cep l ed unt1l 9 a m
lor Da y of Publt c1111on
REGULATIONS.
Th e Publi sh er rese r ves !he
r1g h t to e d ll or r e te&lt;. I any a d 5
d eeme d ob 1e CI 1onal
Th e
publ is her
wil l
nol
be
r espon s1b le for m or e th an on e
n corr ec l 1n se r l1 on

RATES

For Want Ad Serv 1ce
5 ce n ts per word on e mser t on
Mmtmum Charge Sl 00
II ce nt s per wo rd th r ee
consecu t1v e tn se r11 on s
26 c ent s per word SIX con
SCC Ut 1v e lll SCf' IO il S
15 Per Cenl Dt sc oun ton pa td
ad s and ads pad W1lh n 10
d ay s

~uto Sales

Pets

CAR DOF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Wanted To Buy
RACIN- E F 1r e Depl want s to
buy a w11lk 1n coo ler or
compr es sor tor sam e Ca ll
949 212 1 afl er 5 p m
11 21 31c

S2 00 for 50 word m1n1 m um
Eac h add11 1o na1 word J
ce n ts

AL L tt ems mu s t be Old Old 1975- o A T-sUN - e210- Halc h
Jumblr• HANDY GOUGE SUBTLV PAVING
b ack w 1l h 111r cond ltto nmg
ke y s m alch lobs
gu ns
BLIND ADS
elec c lock
rear Window
' 4'•u·rrl•r • Ant .. _.r 11n r fu rli 111 fa rnu r .11 fru o nf ~:
powd e r
flasks
p o wd er
1\d dil•on al 2Sc Ct1arg e p er
hor ns bank and lays 1111 or
shad e rad1a l !ires al so 4
Adv erll semen t
I I fJf Ill lilt - EGGPLANT
tr on
s t or e lle ms
Ad
f11ct ory l1r es and 2 snow
OFFICE HOUR S
ve rt1 s1ng etc Posl c ards
l1res $3 490 Cal l 992 345 3
8 30 a m to S 00 p m
!.dv er ware sew1ng 1lem s
11 18 61p
Dally G 30 a m to 12 00 Noon
th1mbles
e tc
Kntv e5
COMMON PLEAS CO URT Sat urday
smo k1n g
ptp c s
1971 OODG E P ckup 1:1 to n
M!; IGSCOUNTY OHIO
phonogr11phs mus1c bo x es
VB engme autom11llc good
POM E ROY 0HIOIIS76~
p aper we1g h ts marb les tnk
runn ng c ondll 1on
5800
No 15 953 Noltce
w e lls boltles hal p1ns
Phon e (6141 247 7161
LL OYD SE LLARDS ET AL
carnpa 1gn 11ems be ll s oil
11 \4 8tp
Plillf1tlff S RO OM and board for se n 1or
lamp s an d lan ler ns mm er s
Ctl1 ze ns very 111 ce Phone
1974
GMC___,
_
J•mm
Y
4W
h ee l
vs
ra 1troad et c cloc ks dolls
99 2 3509
FLO Y D SELL ARDS
dnve automat c p s t ap e
ol d 1ewel r y wa tches rm gs
10 12 l f C
Ad dt css Unkno w n
p layer 350 4 barrel heavy
ch111ns
etc
Steel traps
POME RO Y
duty tra il er towtng spec 1al
derbys
h1gh hats
eve
BO W LI N G L A N ES
ASO
N
Auction
Frtday
M
D AVI D SE LLARDS
on ofl road t1 res and other
g l8 sses poll er y tars tU QS
Early Su ndn y M u:c d
p
m
New
and
use
d
m
er
L ns t known i!ddr ess
ex tr as Exce ll ent co n d111on
p e wler
p ic tur es
and
N ov 16 19'H
c hand1 se som e ani Qu es
Mi dk i ff Wes t V1rgtnta 255 40
Phon e 992 3829 aft er 5 30
fr a me s g lass d1 shes and
Stand1 ng s
Mason Auc t1o n Horton St
p m or all day Saturd ay and
ch 1na pla xes turn 11ur e of
TC.1111
Mason W Va
FLOYD SELLARDS JR ,
Sun day
all t ypes mon ey and c om s
Jacks Dairy Ba r
60 36
11 21 He
Addr ~s!l Unknown
11 21 2t c
arr
ow
head
s
and
lnd
tan
Tom s Carry Out
58 38
art
1t
act
s
plus
all
Naz1
wa
r
Pomeroy F lowet Shop 45 5 I
THE UNKNOWN H EIRS
1972 CHEVY Capr1c e d dr 400
SKA TE A W A Y
ROLL E R
ilems Ph on e 992 20SO be
Pullins E•cavallnq
1~
.S?
Sperl Sedan 2 barrel all
DEVISEES
LEGA
TEES
lw
c
cn
3
p
m
and
I
I
p
m
R
I
N
K
A
NN
OU
NCE
S
BU
S
H1ll &amp; MCiycr Bar b
.tJ 53
EXECUTORS
,
AD
11nted gla ss 1111 steertng
SC
HEDULE
SA
TU
RD
A
Y
S
Monday
through
F
nda
y
Team No 6
38 58
M I NIS T RATORS
AND
a c and power wmdows
ONLY STARTING NOV
11 19 12tc
H igh lnd Gi! llC
Men
ASS I GNS
OF
FL OYD
S2 350 Also 1971 Oldsmobile
ltlh
RA CINE
6 40
Darrell Ouqan 219
L~ rry
SE LLARDS
DECEA SED
88 4 dr 350 I barre l
SYR ACUS E 6 50 MID L-D- 7~ii~ t~r e - ~; -b ~x-;;s ... lDella
Dugan 111 Women Rheba
ow m ll eage
I ke new
Ad dr ess Uknown
brass beds or comple te
DLEPORT 7 15 Thanks
llySc l l 118 Belly W!'li l lii! Ch
52 100 Phone 949 105 1
households Wnt e M
o,
g
v
mg
Party
Nov
26
and
28
702
ET A L
Def endants.
11 16 M e
OPEN WED FR AND Mtller R l 4 Pomeroy
lnd H g h Ser1es
Men
SE
RVI
CE
BY
PUBL
ICAT
ION
Oh1
0
Ca
ll
992
7760
SA
TURDA
Y
7
30
10
00
l any Duga n 563
Darrell
To th e Dehmda nts ab ov e
10 7 74
PRIV ATE
PARTIES
Dug"'n 536 Women Rheba
For Sale
named
MON TUE S THUR S
H ysoll 537 Mary voss .t9.1
1972
KAWA SAK I 750
You are t1e rb y n o1!f ed th at a
EVE
SAT
AND
SUNDAY
TC! am H lgl1 G 1m e
Jac k s
motorcy c le and Hon da 50
Complain t h as bee n f1 l ed m
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
AF
TER
N
OONS
PHONE
Da1ry Bar nR
Mml b1ke
n
exce l le nt
the Common P lease Court of
( Ol d ) 985 39 29 or 98 5 999 6 or
Te1un H 1gh Seres
Jacks
con d1llon
Phon e 992 319 1
1973 NA SHUA 14 x 70 3
Mc,gs County Oh o Case No
9ij5
41
11
Otllry Oar 204 7
11 19 J! c
bedrm 117 bath g as h eat
I S 953 demandtng pt'lr ll t 10n of
11 9 1/ l c
T11k e ov er payments Phone
IIH~ foll owi n g dcscnbed r eal
W A RM
MORNING
gas
Early Sun dily M1xcd
992 3388
cslatc tow 1
healer
12 000 BT U auto
N ov 9, 1975
11 16 61c
The to11ow1 ng real esta t e WI TH OU T m y p erm1 SS 10 11
Ih ere w 11 b e n o huntmg or
Slanclings
temp er a lure cont r ols S125
si! uatcd In lhe County of
tresp asst ng on m y pr op er ly
T ea m
Dorolh y Y oung at Youngs
MCIQS 111 the Slate Of OhiO an d
19 75 l&lt;l x7 0 TR A ILER
e1&lt;
Bb b Mc Gr11w
Mc agan
Toms Ca t rv Out
56 32
Market or ca ll 992 7229
n the V1 Hage of Rull and
ce ll ent cond111 on espec ta ll y
F arm oft l ower Bo w m an s
J!Jck s Drt1ry Bar
56 J2
11 20 31c
bound ed and descr1b ed as
bu il l for off1c es Low pr 1ce
Run
Pul l II'S ExcavaHng
41 &lt;~6
follow s Bein g Lot Num ber
tor
QU
ICk
sa
le
Ph
on
e
(3
04)
11 .t 161C
Pon1 F lower Shop
.11 41
5 GA IT ED Pa l am tno sta ll ton
rour (4) n Luh s Ad d tt 1on to
675 1921 or 67 5 58 29
Hil l a. Maver Ba rb
37 51
Phon e 99 2 7094
Rulland 0 1110
10 30 tfc
Terun No 6
31 S6
11 18 41C
Re fer ence Deed Vol 161
Wanted
H igh l11 d Game
Men Jr
Page 94 S Deed Re c o rd s
WA
NTED
E
)(
p
er
i
en
c
ed
Phelps 116 Jr Phelps 113
POT A TOE S f orsa l e50a n d 100
M(ngs Counly Oh10
Pe ek A Poo Stud to bre ed For Rent
WomPn
Mary Vo!.S 190
lb
cags
Across from
You arc noli! fed I ha l you are
fem ale Pee k A Poe Phone 12)( 65 T RAILER sm all col
Rt1cbfl ttv sclt and Marlene
Shamrock 10 Hend erson W
r equi r ed 10 a n swe r
!h e
992 38&lt;4
Wilso n 189
Va Donald Wal hu Rl 35
Comp li'l 111 wlt h1 n twe nt y e1 gh l
rage su •l able fo r 1 or 2 men
11 21 61p
H lcJh lnd Scrtes
Men
Hender son w Va
d ays a fl er the l As t publ 1cat on
Rous h Lane
CheS hir e
Jr Ph e- lps 580 Ed Voss 51 9
11 1S 261C
T ho las ! pu bl, c at lon w i ll be
Ohto
3 bedroom trailer
;;
,{SH
paid
tor
alr
makfs
and
Wome11
Mary Voss 536
1Hadc on !h e 19th d ay of
Cl 1flon w va Con structio n 1971 DODGE Cha r ger S E A
mode ls of mobil e hom es
MArl nc Wilson 5!7
Dece n tber 197S
workers pref err ed Call 304
Phon e ar ea cod e 614 42 3
Tolllll H1qh Gan e
Tom s
1 cond1l 1on new motol and
LARRY E SPE NCER
77 3 5873
953 1
tr ansm 1SS 1o n Phone 9 '9
carry Out '51
Cl erk of cour t s
4
13
ttc
11
20
6tc
Tom s
Team H1 gh Series
2417 Bashan
M eigS County Oh10
II IB 61p
Car ry Out ?01 1
( 11) 1 14 21 28, (12) s 12 , 19 , ~ -3 RM and bath fu rni shed
7tc
Po m eroy Gow l1ng L anes
house adults only P h on e WE H AVE sholgun she ll s
Help Wanted
N ov 11 1975
992 5535
cl eanmg ac
r1fl e sh ells
12 ME N needed ful l or part
T 11 County L eagu e
L EGA- L NOTICE
11 20 lfc
cesso r1 es huntmg c lothes ,
ltm e S3 96 per hour
No
St an din gs
S e t~ l e d b1 ds wil l be r ecetved
boo t s bla c k powd er guns
e xper1enc e n e c essary
Pt s
Te.lm
by th e M e• gs L ocal School
and accessones relo11d1ng
Phone ( 6141 A46 0677
P om eroy Ccm~Jn! B locK Co
~
R
M
l
urn1
shed
apl
adults
Board o f Educ11!10n a\
mal er lats scop es mounts
l1 21 31c
54 oth1estrtcl
on
ly
Phone
992
5908
before
2
ofl tcc o f " 'e Clerk in the
kn1v es sl eep 1ng bags "' boat
Roach s Gun Sllop
5.t
p
m
tackets
and
c ushions
Sl!ars Ciilal og Merct1an ts JO MCIQS JUniO r H1gh Sch ool
11 2 lfc
Budd 1n g
M iddl epor t
Oh10
hotsl ers Cells n il e slraps
Mistellaneous Sales
Me1gS Inn
JO
and mu ch, much more at
H &amp; It F \res tone
26 for l hrce used school buses
YA RD SALE Thu rs day and J B EDRM partly fu r n 1sh ed
nam~ l y
GMC 1965
Do dge
lnd 1an Joe's Sports and
Hfgtl 111d v1dua l game
I\
Fr1d11y
tu rnflur e cloth es
basement
new
furna
c
e
and
1965
In
tern
al
ona
l
1962
CBs JOB Page Sl
Mid
L
Ph elps
Jr
'131
B II
and
m1SC
12
til
l
d
p
m
B1ds w1 ll be received until
Witte r h eat er propane gas
dl eporl
Rad ford 217 A L Phe lps Jr
Thur
sday
and
10
ti
l
l
A
p
m
7 30 P M on Decem b er B
on Co Rd 28 $100 per
10 17 301 C
227
F nday M D Mi ller cor n er
m onth and SlOO de~os t
197 5 a1 wh fc h time b 1ds w II b e
H fqh se r1e s - A L Phelps
o f Wolf P en Road and Route
ref erence r equ est ed Phone DON T
merely
br ght en
Jr 6J3 Lou Sauer S56 011 1 op t•ncd
8d3 2793 day or 949 28 28 a ft er
Me 1gs L oca l Sc hOo l D ts lr c t
143 Phon e 99 2 7760
Blue Lustr e
c arp e ts
Rad ford 554
11 20 21c
6p m
L W M cC om 11 s Cl er k
I hem
no r11p1d r esolf,ng
Team
t11 gh
qa ne
11 11 tfc
(\ 1) 21 129 ( 12) 5 7 41C
~
Rent Shilmpooer N elsons
Pom etoy Cemen t Bloctc Co
1 FA M IL Y garag e Sal e F r
Drug Slor e
879
and Saturday 10 a m 111 1 S 7 R M HOU SE 10 Sy rac u se
Tet'lm
h 1gh
ser1es
11 2061c
p m Anllq ue oak chma
Oh1 o Bas em ent g ara ge
Pom croy Cement Block Co
r
e111
n1
ce
home
must
have
cab
lne
l
chest
of
draw
er
s
7519
M OD E RN Wa lnut Console
r e fer ence s i11 n ter es ted Call
c ol p 1c ture s d es k
old
A M FM rad10
4 sp eed
day
(614
)
4ol6
7699
ev
en1ngs
Ear l y Wedne sday
d ish es c lolhlng , Chr1stmas
changer Balance S101 BOor
Phelp
s
Jr
201
Ca
r
oly
n
(
61
4)
.4
46
953
9
Mtx ed Leag ue
decoratiOns atum1num tr ee
term s Ca ll 99 2 3965
I I 5 ti c
Bachne r 182
S ' an d lng ~
old oak dol t cab 1nel so fa , 2
11 20tfc
H1
gh
Se
nes
Men
Wt\
ard
Pis
T cillll
cher r y end t abl es and Olh er
66 Boyer 591 wome n Car oly n
Z1d e s Sporl ;,hop
m1 sc
1tem s
W i se c up TR A ILER spa c e for re nt All
TWO SNOW ltr es 700 13 good
Bachner 516
Second h 1g h
YounYoung s Super Mkl
ulllill es Phone 99 2 553S
re s1d end
109 Un1on A ve
senes
Men
Wil
l
Por
ter
co nd 1h0n $15 pcur Phon e
46
Nelson Drug Co
9
16
tf
c
Pomeroy
98.S 3824 Chester
40 53 1 WOtllOil Betly St'lll lh 511
Sm l 11 N elson Motor s
th ir d lllgh se n es A L
11203tc
Ten l h I romf'rs
38 Phe
lps J r
196
wome n
H l(tt1 tndlv tct ua t gome
IScl bel le Couc h t92
Me n W illard Boye r 240
11 18 61C
Te a 11 !u gh game - Z1de s
wom en Edna Rvssc l l 1Y"
Spor
t
St1op
on
d
Nelson
Dr
v
g
second tl tgtl nd game
TR AILER lOt off Kmgsbury
PUBLIC NOTICE
11 21 61p
co 703
Men W1 llard Boye r 202
Road near Harr 1sonv t! le
IN
ACC
ORDANCE
WITH
T eam h1 g senes - Zl de's
women
Belly Smtih 188
Fre
e
na
t
ura
!
gas
c
1ty
SEC 307 86 OF THE OHI O waler Phone 742 2577
W A SHER and dryer In good
Spo r t Shop t970
1111rd lllgh lnd game - A L
REV ISED CODE SEALED
condtl lon
Phone 247 2252
._
11
18
13t
c
B•D ' WILL BE RECEIVED
II 21 31p

I

homes

"

_____________

BY THt ME IGS COUNT Y
COMM ISS IONER S IN THEIR
OFFICE IN THE COURT
HOUSE POMERO Y OHIO
A5769 UNTI L 10 00 AM ON
NOVEM BE R 2S ih , 197S AT
WH ICH TIME AND PLACE
THE BIOS WILL BE
OPENED
AND READ
ALO UD FOR THE SALE OF
HIGHW AY EQ UIPMEN T
THE EQU IPMEN T FOR
SALE IS AS rOLLOWS

Arwtlrer Specml
Purchase!
'

&lt;FACTORY SECONDS)
Very l1tlle fla ws - prac
11call y flaw less

SEALY AND SIMMONS

Mattresses &amp; Boxsprings
SOME
MATCHING
PAIRS
Regular Values to $149.95

•44 •4&amp;

•sa

Twin, Full Size, (1 King)

1 -- 1970 Int ernational 1700
ser1es 2 ton Dump T r uck
Seria l No 4 16070 H 967433
M o tor 34 5 V 8
1 1958 Ford l 11 ton
F latb ed Truck Ser l aR No
F 60BU 27706 Motor 29 2 V 8
1 1966 Dodge Stn110n
W agon Ser.al No WLA S E67

FUR NI SH ED 2 bedrm cot
! ag e Roc k Sprm gs Adult s
on l y Very n1ce Phon e 99 2

2789

11 1B 51c

J A ND 4 r m

turnt shed and
un f ur n iSh ed apt s P hone 99 2
543 4
11 9 tfc

AV A IL A BLE 2 bedrm
all
el ec lrtc modern
ran c h
located outs ide Racme Up
10 25 acres boflom l and
available
Re f eren c es
r eQuir ed Call 992 5550 a ft er
5 p m
11 16 7t c

FU RNI SH ED
ap a rtment'"
adults on ly In M idd lepor t
1 - 1971 !nterna110nal 1700
Ph one 992 387-4
ser 1es 2 ton Dump Truc k
3 25 tic
Scn al NO
4160 70H 114.5 22
M o tor 345 v B
2
Ma r 1on Du m p Beds for L A RGE busmess bUIIOIII~ 11
Ma son larg e glass fr ont
1700 senes Dump Tr ucks
dr iv e m r ear doors will rent
2 - Fr ont End Load ers for
11 or all of ground floor . 3200
2&lt;1 04 Intern ational Tra c tors
THE FOLLOWIN G ARE TO square fe et good local/on

106S57 Mo lor 318 V8

------- -------:4

BE
CON SIDERED
AS
MINIMUM
RE
QUIREMENT S FOR THE
BIDDERS

Phone 1304 1 882 3356 or 773

5611

11 I J lie
- - - - ---~ --- -- ---

Ea ch pu!ce o f eq utp menl
will be sold as 1S w it h no 1CO\J N 1 R Y Mob i l e HOm(
!"a rk Rl 33 ten mil es n orH
warran IS ex pr ess ed or 1m
o f Pom er oy L arg e lot s Wtft
p lied and no addilions or
c o11c r e te pallos Sid ew alks
sub1ra ct1ons to the equlpm enl
r unne rs and ofl s tree
be f or e or aft er the sale
1-1arl on q 'Ph on e 992 7.t 79
The bidder s w 11 1 fu r n ish
12 31 He
the 1r own b id form s Th e fron t
o l th e env elope enclostn g the
'
b d
must
be
marked FR EE RENT AT VILL A G~
1
M A N OR
IN
M ID
E qui pm en t Sa L E Bid '
DL E PORTI We ar e so sure
The su ccessful b1dder mu st
tha t you wtll lo~ e our apart
m ak e payment 1n full to the
m ents lha l we g fve you two
M e1gs Count y Comm iss ion ers
w ee k s RENT F REE Jus t
be for e th e equ1pment Is
pay your security depos ft
re mo ved and remova l ol
an d s tay SIX months and the
eQu pmcnt must b e w ilhtn ten
flrS l lweeks 1S free You wilt
d 11 ys alt er the sa l e
en1ov month ly leases , al l
Th e ct~ u l pm e nt ma y be
.elec lrt c llvmg
carpet ing
tn spec ted at th e Me tgs County
ran ge and r elr lge r a tor free
H1 gh way Depar tment , loca ted
!ra s h p ic kup
c eble TV
at l h e H igh w ay Garag e Rt 7
!O PI •onall a nd l aundry
B y Pa ss
R oc k
Spr i ng s
fa c tlltles Conv en1en l to
Pom er oy Oh io
shopp1no on Thtrd and Mit I
l'h e M eigs Counl y,., Com
tn Middlepor t
V IL L A GE
mtSS IOners res er ve l h c r •g htto
M A NOR 1S yours f or one
eccepl or rej ect any or all b 1ds
bedroom
apartmen t s
or any part ther eof
stM t lng at S10" mpnthly plus
~lee We pay lor everylfl ln;
v ery trulY yoUrs
else see tne Manager at
Marth a Chamber'
Rlv E"rstde Apartments or
CINk
call 992 3273 'Th is offer Will
Board ol M eigs
end soon , so move tn now
County Commi SSIOner s
and sav e SUS
( II ) 11, 10 ?tc
10 23 '"

10" Boot

Excl u~ 1 ve
but1 on c los ure

tread E:xclustve

B E A UTIF Y yo ur home w d h
Perm a Ston e N ew hom es
as w el l as r em odel1n g wor k
E x per l ,n s ta llat on
Fr ee
es ttm ates Ph on e 742 240Q
10 3t 161c

Real

Estate

For

Sale

GIVE YOUR w1 f e a Chr1 Si mas
pr esent !h 1s y ear ol great
en1oym ent A new Bl Lev el
11 3 or d
hom e bath
two car garag e
b edrm s
and ac re of groun d located
on th e Wtldw ood Es ta tes at
F ta l woods
6 m il es from
Pomeroy Ohro Sel l ng at
c ost pr 1c e
Georg e S
Hob ste ll er Own er Bo x 101
Pom ero y Oht o Phon e 1614)

a.

985 41 86

II 16 61c

F O R SALE b y Own er 11 ~
s lory small fram e hou se m
Tuppe rs Pla1ns OhtO on R 1
7 4 bedr m
l 1v 1ng rm
kiiChen , bath Ulll 1ly room 2
p or ches E tec ba seboa r d
h eat storm door and wm
d ew s well msu l at ed Ap
proM 1 ac re lot S12 500
Phone 1614 J 667 6361
11 16 61p
3

Phone 992 3960

11 21 12tc

BE ORM
fa rg e k1l chen
l1 v1n g rm d1nmg rm 11 "'
b ath d 1spos al ce ntral a1r
ce ntral
hea t
w a ter
pur111caiiOn sy stem
fu lly
c arp eled w1red thr oug hout
l or TV
an d t el ephon e
VtnY I sl dtnQ doub le g lass
wtndow s exc es s storag e
spa ce m c losets and llx 11
m e tal lawn butld lng One 01
M tddl epor t s beller hom es
Call 992 31 29 betw een 1 15
and 4 p m lor appomlmen t
II 20 6tc
._

______________

11 21 4tc
HOU SE for sal e 111 Por tland
HOUSE for sale 5 rooms wit h
lake over p a yments 5 rms
bath , mod ern kt lc hen fuel
and balh good we ll and 2
oil heat new stove 1 a cre
acr es of ground Phon e 843
(Ba ll Run Road) See by
229 2
appl
on l y
Also , one
11 17 121c
Stokermatlc st ove $175 One
gas Magu:l Che f range S25
3 BR HOME \U S! ltnt Shed
See at 232 South Second
Si!tle m Sl
r em od e l1ng
M•ddleport Oh10 45760
R utl and
Phon e 742 2306
11 21 Jtc
afler 4 p m or see Milo B
H u t chin son
HOG S ready 10 bulch er A lso
10 9 tfc
beef and da1ry call te Cal l ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 9491115
11 19 61c Ho use on un cotn Het ghl s 2
b ectrm l arg e kttch en fu ll
b ase m en t ni ce b ack yard
NOW se111ng Fu ll er Brush
only sa 900 W1th new fur
Products
Phone 992 3410
n1tur e on l y SI O,J OO Phon e
10 6 lfc
99 2 7648

11 6 261c

A I R CO w e l ding ma c h i ne ,
n ew elec al l acce ssones
In c luded
Phone 992 34 10
10 28 tf c
ONE cow to freshen soon One
250 ga ll on Un lco bulk m lk
tank 2 un1t Dela~i!l milkers
Wllh vacuum pump All for
$4 75 Phone Arthur Spen c er

161•) 985 3891

II 16 61p

6

k UUM
g a{ ag e
por ch

Phone

MOu s e Wnn udlll
ba sem ent bull! 1n
1
1 ;s er e
Hobson
992 7733

3- - ut:Ut&lt;M
home
finished temode l tng
5 1 R ulland Phone
after "p m or see Milo
Hutchison

197J TRU CK 1 ton Ford F 38 A CRE S
2 ho uses
'1.
350 Heavy duty LWB f )(
ga rag es barn drill ed we lt
cellen t conditi on Call 304
o ve rlook tng Oh o R 1ver
773 5308 after .5 p m
Pr iced for QUI Ck so!ll le Phone
_ __ _
11 16 If
247 )2 47
__ - - - - -1- - BAS SETT twm bed bedrm
suite a nd s 1n g l e beds
dressers and dOUble bedrm
s' ROOM house partia lly I
suits Refrlge .. ato r s, an d
fu rtfliShed
( r e frl gerato~
black and white telev 1s1on
sto\' e, washer and dryer
set
Phone ( 6J.41 6676361
bedroom suite and dinette
11 16 6!p
"'. UIIe l Newly remodeled
and newly carpeted Good
f wi N G ,NGb;gy cradle- ilew
to c at.o n
E~&lt;l e r l or
was
unftn ls hed
while
pme
paint ed thts yen can 742
plan t er
c lock
soli d
2801 after 5 30 p m or 992
mah,gany
Gall Mi l ler
579 5
Phone 992 3196

11

19 41C

217 4

~ 92

0 DE LL Al 1nem ent loc at ed
b e h1n d
Rull11nd
Gr ade
Sc ho o l Tun eu p br a ke s
w h ee l ba lan cmg a t, n emenl
Ph one 742 20Col
11 16 ti c

EX CAVA TING

TEAFORD REALTY
PHONE 992 3325
0

RUTLAND - B rms, 4 or 5
8 R s ba lh 2 car garage
and garden $12 000
POMEROY - 8 Rms 1'12
bath s, hot wate r heat
Basement &amp; large yard
$20 000
157 ACRES - Good fences
1m proved pas tures B room
house &amp; m tnera ls $60 000

TRAILER LAND - 3 9S
acres

On e

tratler

wt fh

sa te Second septic lank
All lor Onl y 58500
26 ACRES - Of rolling
!and Good 6 Rm hou se
balh, barn &amp; oth e r
buddmgs $26 000
MIDDLEPORT
3
fu ll basement 517 000

BA CKH OE S

AND DOZER LA RGE AND
SMALL&gt;. S li..TI ~ TANKS
IN STI\ •.E D
BILL
PULLIN S PHONE 992 247 8
DAY OR NIGHT
1111 78tp
WU ULD YOU BELIEVE?
Bu ld an e ll ste el butldtng at
Pete Bar n pr1 ces' Gold en
G •ant A ll St eel Bu il dings
R I" 4 Box 14B w a v er ly
Oh o Ph one 9-4 7 22 96
_.,7 24 lfc

---

_______

&gt;EW ING

.1\A CHI ' c

Re pa1 r s servtce all m ak es
992 128 1 T he Fj! bn c Shop
P oLneroy Aul hOr ,zed'smger
Sa l es and Se r viCe
We
sharpen Sctssors
3 29 l f c

WE SPE CI ALIZE 1n m obl ie
ho~e furnac e repair Phone

992 5858

9

bedrooms , d ln tng ntce
k ttc hen gas furnace and

18 lfc

O a, D rw. E E Trimming, 20
y ear s ex perr en ce In sured
fr ee es timates Cal l 99 '2 3057
or 11) 667 3041 Coolv i ll e
10 15 lie

- - ---- ---- --LET US DO IT!I

Carpeting
POME t&lt;u, - , 8R bath,
fu ll basement has 1 BR TV
room , utddy w orkshop

Large yard $9,500
Ml DOLE PORT - Ex
ce!lenl cond 2 BR. bath,
carpeted paneled full
basemen!, carporl FA N
gas heat $13 000
POMEROY - 200 ft
fr o nt age

for

home

air

power seats

73 Cadilac Sed. DeVille, power, air .... . 14995
73 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, pow., air...... 14795
73 Monte Carlo 2 Dr., v-roof, air........ 13695
72 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, power, atr .... 13395
73 P~. futy Ill 4 Dr., V-8 auto... . ......11995
73 Pont. LeMans 4 Dr., pow., a1r. .. ... 12995
72 Datsun 2 Door, std .. ........... . . .... 11595
72 Pontiac H.T. Cpe., V-roof, POWer...... 12395
72 Buick LS Cus. Con., power, air ...... . '2895
72 Buick Electra, V-top, pow., air . •• •.•. 12695
72 P~. Gold Duster, 6 cyl~ 3 speed .... 1l995
72 Olds 98 HT Sed., power, air ........ 12695
72 Chev. Imp. Cus. Cpe., full power, air 12295
72 Olds Lux. Sed., full POWer, fact air 12895
72 Dodge Swinger Cpe., 318 V-8, auto. 11895

1974 Chev C tO 'It Ton Ptckup, super custom auto P S
P B, radio, carpel long bed One owner S3588 00
1973 Butck LeSabre Custom, 4 dr H T, fa clory a1r, cruise
control, vinyl top Sold lh&lt;S one new S3188 oo

2 SIGNS
OF

IN PRIME COIIIIDITION
.---------TRUCKS--------~

'1995
~~~e:~r, .~~~~,., ~~.~~ ~ ~~~~., ,.,., ,, ,.

307 V-8 sta trans., 39,000

Pomeroy

au to

500 E. Matn
Ohio, Ph . 992 2174

Pomeroy

BEDRM
m o b il e ho m e
1 16 tfc
pan e l! n g
w a ll to w a ll
carp elm g
g arag e ultlll y
bud d mg 3 &amp; 4 10 acr e lot C BRADFORD Auctioneer
Com p let e Se rv tc e
Phon e
Rutla n d St
M 1d d l epo r1
91
9
1487
or
94
9
2000
Racine
Phon e 992 384 3
Oh10 Cr 111 Bradford
11 18 6lc
10 9 ti c
T WO lots m the cou ntr y 105 x
105 leac h ) T uppers Plam s E XCAVA TI NG doz,er lo11 dcr
wa le r
near M e1 gs H1 gh
and backhoe won scp tt c
tanks
m stalled
du mp
Sc hOOl S2 500 each One lot
tr uck s an d lo boys fo r h1rc
1S se t up f or m ob ile hom e
Mobil e
ho m e
so ld
w1 1 h aul f ill d1r! to p soil
sep ar al ely Phon e 992 7060
l 1mes tone an d gr avel" Ca ll
\1 18 61C
Bo b or Roge r Je ff er s d ay
phone R91 7089 r1 ghl phone
H OUSE f or sal e 1n Port lan d
991 3515 or 991 5232
Ta ke over pa y m ent s 5
2 11 li e
roqm s and bath good w elt
and 2 ac r es ol gr ound REA DY MI X CO NCRETE
Ph on e 8d 3 2292
de l i Vered r1 g ht 10 yo u r
11 18 12tc
pr otec l tF as t and ea sy F re e
l?S t tm at es Phone 992 32 84
Goegte,n Readv M1)1. Co
CU ST OM Homes no down
~ dd lcport Oh 10 1
pay m en t VA L oa n s F HA 6 JO ti c
A s low 11s 3 p er ce nl dow n
Yo ur plans o r ou r s Ca ll or
wr i te Sh ep ar d Co n1r ac l 1n g
SEP TI C T A N KS c l l'a n ed
60)( 281\
Ru tl an d 45775
Moder n Sani tation 992 39~d
or 99 2 73 t9
Ph one 742 24 09
10 31 26tc
9 18 tic

10 Mechantc

pass ,

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.

1971 01evy C.10 PU

POMEROY LANDMARK
• •J.. ck W Carsey, Mlir
Ail Phone 992 2181

TR A ILER and lot 10 Rutland
Will constder land contract

5934

Knee Htgh
Deep tOu gh

butt on closure

T WO used llghl we1ght chatn
saw s Pomeroy Home &amp;
Auto Phone 992 209d
11 21 31C

BA SS ETT B R Sut l e, tt ke
new Gas range 3 pc sl ate 4
x 8 pool table Phone 992

Ph

Real Estate for Sale

Deep tough head

1974 Grandvtlle Wagon, 9

AM F M radio Local owner Only $4588 00

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC •.

PhoneH2-2331
Roger Wamsley Rutland
1015 1mo

4 10 1 mo

USED CARS

1973 0pel19002 Dr. Wagon, auto 4 cyl I 9 liter engine A 1973 Ponltac Catahna, 2dr H T auto, P S, P 8 , air We
rea! gas saver One owner $26118 oo
scld !his one new Areal buy at $3188 00
We sit II hove some cheap cars for sale, less lhan S800 oo So come on tn &amp;lets talk Turkey
Buy your next car from vour Friendly Dealer The dealership that wants you as a Fr1end, not tust as
a customer
See one oflhese Fnendly Salesmen· Ceward Calvert, J D Slory or Btll Nelson
Open EveQtngs tit 7 p m &amp; Sal. ttl 5 P m. Servtce from 8 am Itt 4·30 p m Mon thru Fn Serv&lt;ee
dosed Sat.

Nathan B1gg s
Rad1ator Spectallst

R&amp;J COINS

Ph 992 3993

1973 G.M C 1/t Ton Ptckup, super custom auto , P S , P B ,
radto. Extra sharp S3188 oo

From the l argest Tru c k or
Bulldo ze r Rad1ator to the
smallest Hea te r Core

on

Apprat s al
se rv1ce
estates and collections

1974 Butck Century 2 Dr H T., auto , P 5 P B AM FM&amp;
tape a&lt;r cond L&lt;ke new $3888 oo

or

frailer wafer avai lable,
original ly has 2 houses
$3 000
RUTLA ND - 2 BR, bath,
carpeting , paneling ,
porches , garage, good
cond&lt;hon S9 500
DEX TER - 157 acres.
large house, wa fer system,
barn &amp; olher bldgs $38,000
POMEROY - 71!&gt;acres 4
BR balh, carpe ting ,
paneling, hot water heal,
basement storage S!S,OOO
PHONE 992 2259

501 NYLON

$499 _ '
Square
Yard

RUBBER BACK
we hav e hundr eds Of
carp et valu es Yo ur j ob can
be comp leted m 1"' lo 2
weeks N o tong wall ing
p er1od Our 1ns1aller has 28
years ex per ien ce
Expert
l nstallat1on You ' ll Ilks
wh8 1 yo u gel

1967 01evy C.10

~~e ~~~:...1.~~~.~.' 1.~~:
...

Pomeroy
Co.
.
QUALITY 'Motor

1695
70 Dodge Mon. 4 Dr., V-8 auto., P.B., ..11395
70 Olds 98 HT Sed., pow., F. air ........ 11095
69 Ply. 4 Door, V-8 auto................ 1895
·69 Olds 88 HT Cpe., 350 V-8, F. air •••. 1895
68 Olds Cut. 4 Dr. HT, 350 V-8, P.'b.... '895
68 Dodge Dart Cpe., V-8 auto ....... . .....'995
68 Pontiac Bonn. 4 Door atr .............. 1395
67 Chevelle 4 boor 6 c~. auto........... 1695
68 Olds 98 Lus. Sed., air ................ 1795
68 Buick Skvlark 4 Door. ..... . ........... 1895
67 Mercuty 2 Dr. H.T., atr... . . ....... .. ... '295
66 Cadillac Sed. DeVille! air ..... : ...... . .. '695
_69 Chevrolet% ton Pickuo .... .. .. ....... s1295
1'/: Dodge 1 ton Truck, flat bee!... . ... .. 12695
71

197S CHEVROLET CAPRICE
S5298
Cpe , less than 7 000 miles deluxe belts, lint glass, air
conditioned, delu•ebumpers and guards, remote LH &amp;
RH mirror 400 48 Bleng lne, AM radio and tape aux
lighting comfort &lt;It whee! Like_new and a real sharp&lt;e
1968 MERC CDMET2 DR
$349
V 8 std trans rad •o
1969CHEVRDLEJ BEL AIR 4 DR
V8 aulomlhc a1r cond, power sleen ng
radio Special

l

ms

brakes,

$329

Luxury Coupe, locally
owned, fully equipped ................ .

1973 Fcrd Gal. 500

2 Dr. H T., bronze w1th

2295
1973 Chevy Impala 4 DR.
$2295
972 Ford LTD Coupe
$1895
1972 Mere. Montego
$1795
1972 Buick LeSabre
~u0e~~fut~.: ~.~: :..~.:
~ 1595
1971 ·Buck Riviera
$
1595
~~;~f~a~~~s~ ~ ~ 1595
1971 Olds Custom Cruiser
$
1695
1971 Ford LTD Country Squire
$1695
fri~: .~?:.~~:.~~.~~~.?~.~~~.......... ..
1
!~~ a~~ ~~.~ ~ 1195
~~~npv~~~.~.~~~:.f.~~~ ••~:~: ..... ·····~

Sed ., fact air. P.S., P B.,
vinyl roof .•• ••••. ••.•. ..•.. •. ...•..•..•

Fact. atr. P. S., P B, vinyl
oof, 38,000 miles ..•••. .•..•. ••••. ..•.

"'dr. ::.ed., fact . air. P .S.,

P. B , vtnyl roof .......... .. . ... ..... .. .

••

..

..........

2 Dr , fact a[r, P S., P B,

vinyl roof, tilt wheeL AMtape (won't last long) ............. .

.........

9 pass , 4 dr , sta wagon,
Climate Control. tilt
wheel. AM-F M, lug rack ......... .

Sta. Wag , fact air, p 5,
1

:

.........

-ICONOM Y SPICIALS-

~1795
~:~ .~~.~~ .~ ..~::. ~. ~~~:: .~" . . ...... '~ 1795

1972 V.W. Bug, auto. trans ............

$1395
$11

1972 Chev. vega Hathtiack, auto •.•.••••• ••• ••, •• , .••• •.•••••
971
Ford
PtntD.
unaboul, 4 cyt., 4 spd . •.•••• •••••••••

Several other cars in stock at Riggs.

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Rutland

..... ........ ..

1973 Olds 98

CALL142 2211
TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE
11'(: 1.iRPE T CONSULTANT

742 22 J1

~ 59

.

RIGGS USED CARS
i.o

atedon St ~ Rt . 7

Chester, o.

TOM TIEDE

Wallace's recoiYl
worse than health
By Tom Tiede
MONTGOMERY, Ala
Shortly belore Geoue
Wallace announced h1s
formal bid for the presidency,
a campaign aide said thts of
the candidate's chances
'If s10gle - mtndedness
coun ts for much, the
governor should win 10 a
walk Th1s !ella's gol no olher
interest, no other thought
than bein' Prestdenl It's not
like Bentsen or Carter, who if
they lose lhey JUSI go back to
their m1lhons and the1r
hobbles and their other lives.
George hasn 'I got no other
life now, no sex, no sports,
nothin', all he's go t rema1010'
is 1978 "
Indeed, in terms of smgular
zealotry, George Wallace
may be the leading
presidential candidate of all
hme Assoc1ates describe
him as almost desperately
conumtted He has neglected
slate affairs here to the point
where much of the real
decision making power 1s in
the hands of his brother,
Gerald, and most of the dayto-day routine ts admlmstered by vanously
capable lieutenants. As for
pnvate responsibilities, such
as his two famibes, the
governor has never been
attentiv e 1n the normal
fashion , Bnd how has no t1me
for them whatever
Insofar as self-denial is
oflen as admirable 10 a
polllic1an as chastity IS in a
priest, Wallace's dedlcatwn
may have some popular
beneftl Voters favor the
enthusiastic Vel there 1s
another side to zeal and In
lh1s case II appears lo
be dark
Bt a lime
when Americans seem to
be rebelling against automa ted leaders, Wallace

Market Report
down, Shoats 17 to 37
SALES REPORT
Oblo Vmley Uvesloek Co.
GaUipolls, Ohio
Nov, 15, 1975
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs 20
to 28, 300 to 400 lbs 20 to 28 50,
400 to 1100 lblt 21 to 32, 500 to
800 lba. 21 to 35, 600 to 700 lbs.
21 to 37 50, 700 lbs. and over 21
to 40,
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
300 lbs. 15 to 21, 300 to 400 lbs
16 w23, 400 to 500 lbs. 17 to 25,

500 lo 600 lbs. 19 Lu :1:1, 600 to

700 lbs. 18 to 24 SO, 700 lbs. and
over IB to 33.50
STOCK COWS &amp; BULlS (by the head) Stock Cows 100
to 150, Sloek Cows and Calves
140 to 210, Stock Bulls 85 to
200,BabyCalvea10to30, (By
the pound) Canners &amp; Cutters
Cows 15 to 20, Holstein Cows
18 50 to 24, Commercial Bulls
21 to 27 50.
VEA I, CALVES - Tops 220
lbs to 250 58 'o 66 50, MediWll
200lbs. to 300 34 1o 47, Culls 30

ATHENS LIVESTOCK
SALES, INC.
Nov. 19, 1975
Feeder Steers ( 400-M0 lbs )
20--34 50, Feeder Heifers (4007001bs.) 17 5().27.50, Slaughter
Bulls (over 1,000 lbs ) ~
27 20, Feeder Bulls (400-800
lbs ) ~29 50
Slaughter Cows - Utthty
22, Canner-Cutter 14-21 75
Veals 25-59 50, Pigs 1by the
head ) 20-37 50

IS10creasmgly emergmg as a
kind of Slrangelov1an robol,
mecliamcal m lhought and
pw-pose, possessed by deep
' myslenes thai are beyond
easy mterpretahon
How, for exam ple, can one
falhom lhe governor 's forfmture of stale obbgalions• A
U S Attorney here has sa1d
that lhough Wallace has run
for Pres1denl four times "he
hasn't run h1s slate for three
tenns " Even a on.e-t1me
Wallace confidant, John
Cohn, says the man has
'been a temble governor '
In more than a decade of
Wallace leadership, though
his ow n stock has soared
nahonally, the sta te of
Alabama has gone from 47th
to 48th m the Umon m lhe
percentage of poor residenl$,
and from 45th to 49th m per
capita Income
H1s chrome and cruel
neglecl or h1s fam1ly ,
however, IS even more baffling, and perhaps more
telling of the candidate's
character His present w1fe
Cornelia says Wallace 1s
s1mply too politically active
to be "much of a father to my
boys " Others here, however,
say the governor's reluctance
lo be a parent predates his
pobhcs "George was never
much of the fam1ly kmd,"
says a loog acquamtance
"Lurleen, you know, he just
more or less used her all of
her life "
Lurleen was Wallace's f1rs1
w1fe, a private, unassummg
woman whom he neglected
for much of their marriage,
Lhen discovered her worth
only in a political way In
a book about the Wallace
fam1ly, George Wallace Jr
speaks glowingly of Lurleen
as bemg both his mother and
father figure The governor
forever away, George Jr
tell~ of h1s mother "lightmg
up" their home with her
presence Even at Christmas
the father was disinterested ;
he mBde it a pomt to be home
then, but while Lurleen got up
early w1lh the k1ds to unwrap
presenll&gt;, the governor laid
about 10 bed to mid-morning,
readmg the newspapers
In 1966, prevented by law
!rom succeedmg himse lf m
the slate house, Wallace ran
Lurleen as a surrogate, thts
even lhough she was
scheduled to undergo surgery
for cancer of the uterus. II
was a tasteless Wallace ploy,
altogether se1!1sh, which

\

NOW
TO SAVE!

Check These Great Used C11r Buys.
All Have Been Checked and Ready To Go For Winter
1974 Ponftac Lemans 2 Dr HT, factory air , auto P 8
P S , tape, local one owner $3988 00

Busmess Phone 992-5880
ReSidence 992 3313
11181mo

Buy, Sell or Trade

Syracuse, Oh1o

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

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

Call today for
Serv1ce Tomorrow

Coins, Currency
and Supplies

FREE ESTIMATES
"
Blown
lnsulahon Serv1ces
Blown &lt;nlo Wa lis &amp;Atttcs
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS
LARRY LAVENDER

TINGLEY

con -

co lors FHA financing
available Price $21,500.
Phone 667 6304
11 -12-lmo,

21 1 mo

For Sale

under

ceramtc ti le garage large
lot Buy now an d p tck your

1 mtle on State Route 124
Toward Rutland

..

Now

3 bedroom

strucllon w&lt;th ca r pel,

PH. 992-5682

BOWLING

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

new

Five

Intersection of R! 33 &amp; 7
Pomeroy

FREE I

VALUE
RATED

SO LET SMITH NELSON PUT TURKEY ON YOUR THANKSGIVING TABLE.
OFFER GOOD THRU NOV. 30, 1975

Sales and Service

Tuppers Plams, Oh1o

Atl Mechantca! Work

11

D&amp;M Appliance

MORlAN
Construction CO.

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

I

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

BUY ONE OF OUR USED CARS
PRICED '500 OR MORE AND GET ATURKEY

'

NO TIME LIKE

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
SAYS-LET'S TALK TURKEYI

Business Services

COLLI E pup s lo g 1v e aw a y Har t s Used Car s New Haven
w V a Au thortzed Rop er
Phon ~ 992 702?
1 t t9 J1tc
Deal er Tra c lor s 8 10 lJ 16
Hors e pow er L awn mow ers
til ler s saw s Y ear end sal e
Employment Wanted
12 cham saw Reg $14 7 so
now S129 95 Harl s Used
'kEMODE L I NG
Pl umb n y
Car s Phone BB2 2793 N ew
hca tm g and a l l l yp cs Ofl
Ha ven
r epa1r
Wor~
y en er al
11 17 PI c
Quilr ant eed 20 yea r s e
per1en ce
Phone 992 2&lt;1 09
H&lt;J rt s U s ed Car s
Y our
s 1 ·~ C o l u mbia B 1 ke
Headquar t ers Fu I !1 ne o l
CA RP E NTRY
p an e 11n Q
B1 cy c les to choose trom
fl oormg and ce ll tng Ph on e
Ph on e !!8 2 27 93 New Ha ven
992 275 9
11 17 6tc
10 21 30 tc
H a rt s Use d C11rs Reddy
Porlabl e H eaters
S1ze
r 11nges 30 000 BTU lo 150 000
BTU Som e vented Ther
mo s tats avai l ab l e wllh
h eal ers 30 000 BTU Reg
S129 95 Sa le S109 95 Phone
882 279 3 N ew Haven
11 17 61C

11-The Daily Sentmei,Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Nov 21, 1975

Ford LTD Wagon, pow., luggage

rack1

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burns, lloyd Me laughlin or Marvin
Keebaugh.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" You'll like Our Quality Way
of Domg Busmess"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open l;venmgs Untti~ : On-T,I5p.m . Sat.

Plains socked• in
by heavy storms
•

Their ctty may be burled
under more than a foot of
snow and clogged w1th stalled
cars, but the Grand Island,
Neb., police are st1ll offermg
speedy serv1ce
" H you don't know where
your car JS, call the pollee,"
SBld Grand Island Pollee
Clue! Tom SmBha "We'll tell
you where It is and how much
it'll cost to get 1t back."
Business, goverrunent and
education ground wa halt in
the cenlral Plains and upper
Midwest Thursday as
hOwling winds piled a foot
and a half of snow Into 13-foot
nonetheless succeeded
When she even tually d1ed ,
Wallace opened her coffm to
spectators, agamst her ex·
pressed w1shes He ended the
episode by having a bust to
her memory placed awkwardly m the lobby of the
state capitol. Referring to her
today, he calls her, formally,
"Governor Lurleen
I! should be noted that
Wallace 1s not the only
preSldenllal ca nd1dale who
has excluded hts flesh and
blood from h1s llfe, Gerald
Ford bemg another who has
generally felt his career more
nnportant than h1s children
' Yet Wallace 1s a spec1al
example, 1f only because he 1s
a special case devo1d of
warmth and philosophy and
now a k1nd of ulhmate
polilical creature, he offers
lhe nalt on naught but
polilical pass10n
II remams to be seen if
many ' oters feel thiS IS
enough man Amcma and 1n
a world r unmn~ slwrl of
cverylhmg except poli lical
11

pa:-;ston

drifts.
Wattresses at the Husky
House Restaurant at Limon,
Colo , on Colorado's eastern
Plains, were among the few
thmgsmovmg m the blizzardswept reg1ons
Hundreds of motonsts sat
m roads1de cafes m Limon,
wa1hng for highway crews to
assault mammoth drtfts
block mg major
transcontmental highways
"We 're full of people," sa1d
Karen Br1ggs of the Husky
House. "We have a lot of
people just s1ttmg They can't
go anywhere."
A state pohce off1cer
radioed Denver that Limon, a
lllwn of 2,000 persons, "JS
unable to cope with the high
Influx of people "
Thousands of travelers
were stranded, Cities were
1mmob&gt;hzed, schools shut
tlown
wholesale
and
busmesses and govenunent
off1ces clOsed ftpm Colorado,
to Kansas, Nelraska, the
Dakotas and Mmnesota
Only two deaths were
reported - both In lraffic
mishaps on snow-packed
highways,
All public and paroclual
schools In the Duluth, Mmn.SUpertor, Wls area were
closed and the Nat10nal
Water Quality Laboratory
Issued a spteiAI warning to
residents of the area not to
drink unfiltered water
because the storm stirred up
" lUI excessively high level"
of the asbestos f1bers dumped
Into Lake Supenor by the
Reserve Mmmg Co
Up to 18 inches of snow fell
along the blizzard's path and
winds of up to 75 mUes per
how- stacked up drifts 12 to 13
feet high m rural areas of

75 Ford Holdovers . New cars. Good
selection of most senes
Lowest
Pri ces.

72 Cadillac Sedan Deville ...............$3695
Ex tr a sharp wtth genu tn e leather

dltmnmg

Comfronton a1r con

73 Pontiac Catalina ......................'2995
4 dr Hardtop atr cond ttlon tng one careful local owner, new

Ford trade 10 E xcept tonal tn every way

73 Chevrolet VB Pickup ................ ~2995
Lu )( ury model wtth beaut i fu l interror Shows tender care
Power steen ng &amp; brakes Auto tran s

73 Ford Van Qub Wagon ·· .... :rr... ·-'3795
~r steenng

8 pass Chatteau l uxury model A uto trans
L tke new condd1on

72 Opel 2 Dr. Sedan .................. }1995
Auto trans
model N1ce

4 cyl

economy

Butck s popular economy

'

73 Ford VB Gran Torino ................'2595
4 Dr

Sedan, 302 V8 One local owner Shows good care

75 Cadillac Deville·· ..............
··· .. ·.. $AVE
Full

A Dr sedan less than 2100 m1les
clea n

eqUipment Showroom

69 Chevrolet VB Camero................ ~1695
Sma ll VB auto t r ans, power steenng

MANY MORE
SEE: Fred Blaettnar, Pat H1ll, Melvm little,
or Dan Thompson
Open Eventngs Til6:00
Except Thurs. and Sat. TIIS: 00

DAN THOMPSON
FORD
PHONE
992·2l!J6

Castro
surVived
•
8 plots
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Fidel Castro was the target of
• at least e1ght CIA murder
plots that mvolved hirmg
gangsters and using polSOn
Mgars, pens and pills, an
exploding seashell "and other
devices wh1ch stram the
unagmatloo "
The agency was ~etting up
one of the schemes on the day
Pres1dent Jolm Kemedy was
assassmated, accordmg to a
Senate mtelhgence com·
mittee report released
Thursday
The plottmg agalllSt the
Cuban leader also mvolved
disruptive tact1cs, mcluding a
plan to expose Castro to a
spec1al shoe polish that would
make h1s beard fall out and
destroy his whiskered
unage.
"The most 1roruc of these
plots," the report sa1d, "took
place on November 22, 1963 the very day that President
Kennedy was shot m Dallas
- when a CIA official offered
a potson pen w a Cuban for
use agamst Caslro "
The report said that "at the
same lime an emlSSBry from
President Kennedy was
meetmg w1th Castro to explore the possibility of Improved relations "
The report so1d the f1rst
murder plot was hatched July
20, 1960, and that the committee had "concrete" proof
of other plots through 1965
The report's section on
Castro and Cuba comprised
almost one-th1rd of the 347-

west central Nebraska
Tom Baxter's cattle had a
field day Thursday as the
storm packed snow to the
height or hiS feedyard fen·
ces.
"Several hundred head of
my cattle just walked over
the top of the fence and
sea ttered everywhere," the
Grand Island rancher SOld
"We've tracked some of the
cattle as far away as 2\'z
mtles "

461

s. Third

MMJII:part

TOM RUE
MOTORS

69 Ford LTD
4 dr.

'1095

68 Chev.· Wagon

9 pass.

'1095

66 Cad1llac
4 dr.

'795
67 Buick R1vera

2 dr.

'295
68 Chevelle 2 dr

•895
70 V W. Bug

'995
69 Opel 2 dr.

'595

See Tom Rue ,
or Ray Douglas
Ph . 992-2594

page document
It so1d "one plot, mvolvmg
the use of underworld figUres
reportedly twice progressed
wlhe pomt of sendmg polson
paUs to CUba and dispatching
teams to commtl tlle deed "
In the early 1961E, the
agency - knowmg Castro
enJoyed skind1vmg - explored the poss1b11tty of
planting an exotic seashell,
r1gged 1o explode It also
conSidered arrangmg whave
the premier recetve a "gift"
of a deadly contammated
d1vmg su1t . Both 1deas
eventually were abandoned
The "beard pian" was to
have been used when Castro
stopped at a hotel durmg a
tr1p abroad and, according w
custom, put his shoes m the
hall to be shmed. A CIA
operative was whave dusted
the shoes w1th thalliwn salts,
which would would have
caused h1s haJC to fall out
However, Caslro canceled
the 1r1p
A box of Caslro's favorite
ctgars was treated at CIA
labora wries w1th a botulinum
toxm "so potent that a person
would die after putting one
his mouth " The ra:ord did
not disclose whether any
were debvered

•

�•

•
12·- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov. 21, 1975

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

Tools, equipment taken
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach said today a
breaking and entering occurred Thursday night in to
the garage of the Edwin
Davis and Son Company at
Danville with an un determin ed am ount of
equipment and tools being
laken. Herman Henry of the
BC! is assisting in the investigati on.
On Wednesday the sheriff's
dept . ar rested two male
juveniles on charges of
stealing tapes and other

DRIVER CITED
One driver was cited to.
mayor's cour t as the result of
an accident on West Main St.
at 3: 40 p.m. Wednesday.
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster said an eastbound
car driven by Terry
Whitlatch, Middleport, struck
the rear of another eastbound
car driven by Bruce Harris,
Middl epor t, which was
slowing or had slopped in the
lane of traffic . There were
medium damages to the
Harris car and heavy to
Whitlatch's. Whitlatch was
cited on an assured clear
dislance charge . Harris was
treated for injuries at
Veterans Memorial Hospilal
and released.

MEIGS lHEATRE
TONITE THRU SUN.
NOV. 21·21
Norman JewiSon 's

"ROLLERBALL
(Technlcolor I
Starring: James Caan and
Joan Houseman .

Show starts at 7:00p.m.

sound equipmcnl from cars
al Meigs High SchO\ll They
will appear In juveoile ~ourt .
On Nov: 19 the department
investigated a breaking and
entering of the Grace Gardner home on Township Road
41 In Rutland . A TV se t,
ant.iqucs, a radio and other
items were Ia ken. The sheriff
said today all items have
been recovered and one
juvenile boy is in custody.
All a.m. today in Salisbury

Twp. on U.S. Rt. 33, Bernard
The sherjff disclosed that
B. Lyons, 2!i, Middleport, was his depar.lmenl last Friday
driving south when he ibsl . ·.transported Gerald Eugene
control, went off the road on Rupe and Lonnie Black, both
the lefl; into a ditch and hit a of Rutland, to Chillicothe to
concrete bridge. Lyons, who begin serving terms of fi to 25
suffered lacerations lo his and 41o 2!i years respeclively
face, was taken to Veterans on convi ction of armed
Memorial Hospilal by private robbery of the Pomeroy
car where he was treated and Kroger Store last July.
released .

·Robinson

l4GSI
(Continued from page I)
department's Menial Health
and Ment al Retardation's
in slit ull onai system, understaffing of facilities,
causing a reduction in what
were previously even
Inadequate rehabilitation
programs, and "the failure of
department and, local administrators to resolve
problems brought to their
atte nlion
by
labor
org aniza tion s and employes," Stewart said.
A Thursday news conference called by department
Director Dr. Timothy Moritz
and Highway Safety Director
Donald Cook was labeled
" another
example
of
diversion
and ·smoke
by
Comscree ning"
muni ca tion s Workers of
America Council 4455
Director Hershel Sigall.
" The real issue facing Ohio
is one of administrative
patient neglec t and no t •
patient abuse," Sigall said,
" and the Department's
su bsequent attempt to find a ·
scapegoa l for their own
Ineptitude and a very real
shor:oge of employes in the
instituti ons
is
unpardonable.'

honored
in Athens
ATHENS - E. F. I Robbie )
Robinson, former mayor of
Pomeroy and ·veteran
councilman, was one of 11
southeas tern Ohio , community leaders honored here
Thursday night at the Ohio
HI
''
University In~ by the Southeastern Ohi-Q. . Regional
Council.
Bill Childs , Middleport
insurance agent, presented
the reswne of Mr. Robinson's
aclivilies, and Atty. Bernard
Ful tz presented a plaque to
the honoree.
Robinson, was mayor o(
Pomeroy four years, served
on council 14 years, is in his
eighth year on the Pomeroy
Board of Public Affairs, has
been a member of the Meiss
Coun ty Regional ,Planning
Commissi on since its inception In the early 1960's and
has been a Pomeroy
businessman for 55 years.
Carl Dahlberg of Wellston
was master of ceremonies
and Bob Evans, SEORC
president, "(elcomed the
guests.
•

Naomi Roush dies

I :

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday
through
Tuesday, a slow wannlng
trend Sunda r ihrough
Tuesday with a chance of
snow flurries Sunday and a
chance
nf
showen
Tuesday. Highs will be351'!
40 Sunday and In .the 40s
Tuesday. Lows generaUy
.will be In the 20s.

·
'

Local news
in briefs
The Oh-Kan Cotn Club will
conduct a regular business
meeting on Monday In the
social rooms of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Company building on Mill
Street, Middleport. A social
hour and trad,lng session
precedes the 8 p.m. meeting .
Several out of town coin
dealers will be present to buy,
sell, or trade collectors Items.
A 37 Jot coin auction follows
the meeting and refresh~
ments will be served. In terested resideots are Invited
to attend, Ed Burkett,
president, said.
RACINE - Racine Chapter
13&lt;. OES, will have a practice
sesslcin in preparation tor the
annual installation of,orrJcer$
on .Sunday at 2 p.m. All of ~
fleers-elect and the lnslatllng
officers are ·asked to be
present . The

annual

In -

stallation will be held on the
regular meeting night. af 8
p.m. Dec. 1.

RACINE - Racine lodge
461, F and AM, will meet ln
special session

·at

7 p.m.

Tuesday at the temple with
work In the first degree. All
Mrs. Naomi M. Roush, members are urged to attend.
8&lt;, Front St.. Middleport,
died Thursday evening al
Hol~er Medical Center. Mrs .
Roush was born June 1&lt;, 1891
at New Haven . The daughter
of the late William · and
Attrella Hall Kirby, she was
also preceded In death by her
husband , LeeR , Roush, and a
brother.
She was a. member of the
New Haven United Methodist
Church •. and past matron of
Evangeline 172 OES, Middleport . She was a former
0. H. Carl, Lyda Cart to
elementary school teacher In
New Haven.
Jay Hall , Jr ., parcel,
She Is survived by three Salisbury.
daughters. Mrs. Harley L.
Joyce Grover to Dalton B.
(Catherine V.) Brown: Mrs.
Joseph A. (Dorothy) Young, Grover, parcel, Salisbury.
and Mrs . Richard (Jatando)
Laura Circle to Cecil Dean
Root, all of Middleport ; two
Brinager,
Ruby . Jean
soos, Alfred L. IPete I Roush,
Middleport, and Charles Brinager, .13 acre, Sutton,
IDick) Robert Roush, Des
Dale F. Boyd, Ethel Boyd
Moines, Iowa : eight grand- to Harry t;\. Lyons, Sr.,
children, and 14 greatWanda Lyons, Jot, Racine,
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be Sulton.
held Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
Orville A. Crooks, dec., to
Rawlings Coa ts Funeral
LlD'a
N, Crooks, Cert. of
Home with the Rev. Robert
Bumgarner officiating. Trans., Syracuse .
Burial will be In Riverview
Glen Sian ley, Elsie Slanley
Cemetery . There will be
to
Robert Blankenship, Stella
services Saturday at 7; 30
p.m. at the funeral home Blankenship, 1.0013 acre,
conducted by Evangeline Bedford.
Chapter 172 OES. Friends
'Lorenzo D, Davis, Zelda
may call at the funeral home
Davis to Lorenzo D. Davis
alter 10 a.m. Saturday.
Jr ., Jane R. Davis, parcels,
Salisbury.
Guy W, Will, dec. , to F.
Lenore Will, Barbara Marsh,
Jerry Lee Will, Affid. of
Trans., Bedford.
Hollis Walters, Maxie
Waltel-s
, Estelle Fesher to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Dorsel Charles Bissell , Margaret
BisSell, I&gt; acre, Chester.
Biggs, Pomeroy,
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Zelda
DISCHARGED - Charles
M.
Hobstetter, to Roland E.
Beiler, Shiriey Sparks.
Goodwin, Sherry S. Goodwin ,
lot, MidCIIeptirt. ·'
PLEASANT VALLEY .

Meigs
Property

Transfers

, Join our
Christmas Club
today.
Add a little
each week.

Sit back Cool it..
And dream of
a green"Christmas.

Make 49 Prompt
Payments, Pomeroy
National makes the
50th Payment For You

HOSPITAL
NEWS

DISCHARGES - Marceline
Schultz,
Point
Pleasant; Bessie Lee, Point
Pleasant; Homer Pierce,
Point Pleasant ; Ida Shifiet,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Ross
Roush and Rena McDaniel,
Mason ; Mrs. Baisden -Miller,
Lakin; .•Mil. Loie Johnsoo,
H~nderson; and Mrs. Iva
Amb\U"gey, Point Pleasant,

•'
UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
was called to old Route 33 at
9:24 a.m. Friday for Floyd
Barnhouse who •was having
difficulty breathing. He was
laken to Veterans Memorial
Hospilal.

PLAYING NITELY

TUESDAY THRU SATURQAY

GEO. HALL
TUES. -THURS,
B:J0-1:00

FRL &amp; SAT.
,9;lo-2 :00

The MEIGS INN
992-3629

Member FDIC

Best ·In
Live Entertainment

MF.F.T THF. TF.AM
ROCK SPRINGS - M~t
the Team fl!lght for the
197&gt;-76 basketball team at
Meigs High will be Monday, Nov. 24, at 7 p.m. at
Larry R. Morrison Gym.
,
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Volunteer
•
•
proJect
IS

announced

Resignation is accepted
The resignation of Karen
Kirkland, Special Education
teacher at Southern High
School, was accepted by the
Board of Education Thursday
night.

workshop on identification of
handicapped children at
Nelsonville on Dec. 4, granted
permission for Jane Wagner,
clerk, to adyertise for bids for
a new school bus, and for bids
to convert the coal furnace at
Syracuse to fuel ,. oil; ap:··
.
proved selling one ' p1ece
desks and chairs at Syracuse
at $5 each; the Title I coordinator and the superintendent to attend a workshop
on federal programs In
ColUillbus on Dec. 2; Title I
coordinator and two parents
to attend Tille I ParentTeacher Conference in
ColWllbus on Dec. 9 through

II; approved the Activity

Fund budget; granted band:
boosters right to use the high:
school to serve a dinner for:
Provico Co., on Pee, 10;'
Syracuse Cub Scouts will use:
' .
a class room for meetings:
Karen Williams and Karen
an&lt;I ' Ufe building for pa.ck,
Walker were added to the
m~etings , and agreed tosubstitute teachers list and
repair the roof at Racine!
Mrs. Phyliss Harris wa s
Elemenlary School.
•
employed as part time
The
board
wiil
meet
Thurs-·.
custodian .
day, Dec. 18. Attending were
The board agreed to begin a
Denny Evans, President ;.
girls basketball program in
Jack Bostick, Robert Sayre,;
. the junior high for the school
Grover Salser, Jr., David"
year.
Nease, board members:'·
In other business the board
Bobby Ord, Mrs. Wagner,;
approved the following: For
Roger Adams, and Dallas:
Supt. Bobby Ord and school
Hill,
newly elected board '
' members to attend a
members; Conn&lt;!~! Andrews,·
girls athletic coach, Vickie:
GRANDSON ON TJiBE ,. ,C arr, and Larry Wolfe ;
Four defendants The
game Marshall 'vs. principal at Portland.
Dayton Flyers played last
fmed by mayor
week will be televised over
Four defendants were fined Channel 2 Saturday. The
by Pomeroy Mayor Dale E. quarterback from Dayton is
' •ph om ore B. J . Dailey,
.Smith Thursday night.
(Continued from page I)
They were :Vicky K. g1andson of Mr. and Mrs.
estimated
at $16,000.
.
Proffitt, Portland, $10 and Everett Dailey, Pomeroy.
Leighty also said that there ·
,costs, running a red light;
is money available for street ~
William Landers, Pomeroy,
paving. The streets recom- :
SQUAD CALLED
$10 and costs, disturbing the
mended
were Cave, Liberty, ·
The Pomeroy E-R . squad
peace ; Franklin lhle, Racine,
Remington,
Rock, Martin, .
$10 and costs, squealing tires, answered a call for Harry
Condor,
Cherry, .
Elden,
and Thomas Rose , Jr ., Watson, Welzgaii St., at 5:47
Welsh
Town
Hili,
main
road ·
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, p.m. Thursday. Watson , who
in
the
cemetery
,Mulberry
speeding . Forfeiting his received a head injury in a
Heights to Highland Street
$18.70 bond posted for fall, was taken to Veterans
Church, Water or New St.,
Memorial
Hospilal
where
he
speeding was Ronnie Huband Hill St.
was treated.
bard, Syracuse.
Leighty also recommended
his choice for a community.
center is the ' old Sugar Rim .
school, or Prospect Hill ,
(Continued from page I)
behind the hospital. The ·
leaders respondect to the death of Gen. Francisco Franco with Prospect Hlil site, Leighty;
cautious condolences; offering little persona!" praiae, former fell, was the best location for &gt;
President Richard Nixon released a lengthy tribute to the late a . possible grant through • .
Spanish dicta,tor. "Few leaders in this century have guided HUD.
their country with such finn conviction and strength," Nixon
Mayor Smith, Leighty, and'
wrote Thursday.
Eleanor Thomas, executive:
"After a tragic, bloody-civil war, he brought Spain back lo director of the . Council on
economic recovery.' He united a divided nation through a Aging are to meet with HUD ·,
policy of firmness and fairness toward those who had fought officials in Columbus in:•
against him . Through nearly four decades of leadership, Gen. regard to a combined senior·
Franco earned the deep affection of his own people and respect citizens center and a com-·
for the Spanish natio11 around the world."
munity center for Pomeroy.:
Nixon also described Franco as a "loyal friend and ally of
The next meeting will be on
the United Slates," and said he would "never forget the Dec. 4, at 7:30 p.m. and is.
magnificent welcome" he and his wife received in Spain.
open to the public.
·•

The Meigs Local SchDfll
District, together wiU1 the
local Teacher Corvs Project,
is inviting adults to lake part
in a " Meigs Volunteer
Program" which is designed
to give adults an opportunity
to work in the school system.
The program will begin in
February and extend through
April, 1976.
Persons who enjoy working
with children, who are willing
to donate time during the
school day, who are dependable , and agree to lake part
in a short training program
are being sought.
Some of the functions a
volunteer might perform
include helping individuals
and small groups with independent study, tutoring,
operating movie projectors,
!ape recorders and other
audiQ-visual equipment,
helping the teacher in
keeping classroom · records,
help'ing
the
teacher
reproduce materials ,
checking out books, collecttng:money for thln~s such as
lunches or workbooks , and
arranging classroom
displays.
A training program will
lake place in January to help
familiarize the participants
with aclivities.
The program will begin on
a . small scale in two
elemenlary schools, Bradbury Elementary and
Rutland Elementary. These
two schools were chosen after
the -teachers at the respective
schools indica ted their desire
to participate in the initial
program. Even if Interested
persons do not have a child
attending classes at either of
the designated schools, they
are still urged to Ia!" part.
Residents wishing to apply
may pick _up an application at ·
any time of the Meigs Local
Schools or at the Teachers
Corps office in the c~ntral
building at Middleport.
Anyone having qu~stions
concerning the ,,Meigs
Volunteer Program may call
John Redovian at the
Teacher Corps office, · 992-

EQUAL TIME NOW
WASHINGTON ( UP!)
Television sla lions that show
old Ronald Reagan movies or
broadcast the "Death Valley
Days" series be narrated will
be liable to equal lime
by
other
demands
Republican
presidential
candidates. A Federal
Communications Commission spokesman said
Thursday ita political fairness pollcy would apply now
that Reagan has formally
declared himself a GOP
candidate.

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was
issued to Jimmy Elwood
Brown, 23, Rt. I, Millfield,
and Jeno1ette Jean Tucker, 21,
Rt. 2, Albany.

AWARD WINNING DRIVERS - Left to right Carl
' Stover; Eddie Ours, Rodney Stapleton, Lee Ours, John
'Dearth,
service manger for Ryder, Richard Carr, Ryder
,,.

llrivers
honored for safety record
.

1

~ GALLIPOLIS - Drivers employed by
the, _Gallipolis Parts Warehouse were
honored at a sa fety awards dinner last
week by lhe Ryder Truck Rental for
achieving over one-half million miles of
accl~ent free driving during lhe past 12

,

Second. Floor
''

MILL END CARPETS
Now On Sale At The
Mechanic Street WarehouM
12x12 .................... .. $ale '68.00
12x 15....'. ................. Sale '88.00
12x 18......................
~ Sql, '98.00
.
'

.

\

')11' 'I'

Main Store. Anne11 and Warehouse-Toyland Open Tonight UntiiB
Shop Saturday 9:30 To 8 P.M.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

months.
The dinner was held at Oscar's
Restaurant where each of the 10 truck
drivers received a safely award pin .
Richard Carr , sa fely manager for
Ryder Truck Re ntal, made the individ ual

a

farm

Councrut ivcs rnar'kel a substantial per-

Pair Sunday nigh t and lows
in the 20s . A chance of snow
north and rain or snow
central and south Monday.
ltighs mid 30s to low 40s.

Uniled Sla les, making th e r'edcration a

prcsC nt.ations &lt;.~ml p r&lt;.t i~cd lhc drivers fur
!heir cxceplinnal c4mlribution to highwH)'

sa fely. Carr alsu tJ.l'Csenlcd ll la rge plaque
lo J ohn I.. Cornett, president of r. PW , on
behalf uf the nation-wide leasing company
fur his Cal'cfUJ ~ l cc ti on of Ihe dri\'CI'S who

Weather

unba

must efferlivc voice on n(:ttlonal issues for
dairy farmrrs und their cooperatives.

into HII se&lt;'tiuns of Ohio, and some
a r ~a:.; of West Virgi nia and Kentucky.
I•' (JlJ owi ng the dinner Carr conducted a
1Conl.i11ued 011 page 21
II'Jrel

+

tmts

IDJi;AS FOR MAKING HOMEMADE educational toys were offered by June
Varner, Child Development Specialist, Buckeye Hills Vocational District, at a
Holiday Happening in Meigs County Friday. She also explained resow·ces
ava ilable in child development and conducted tours of a mobile unit brought in for
the day lo the Pomeroy Lutheran C1mrch. See Page 14.

Your lnvited

ttttittt

&amp;u e~St

lleitching .More ·
1'/wn 12,000
Fumilit!S

Uevotetl To Tht' ( in•ult•r M idtlle Uhio J! ulley
. I

. VOL. lU NO. 43

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1975

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PR ICE25 CENTS

Gallia citizens organize to improve
quality of public school education

Jane Colby

Sportswe.~r,

safety manager, Jack Stapleton, John Cornett, president of
GPW, Richard Fellure, Faron Sanders, Tim Smi th, and
Randy Rice . Not pictured, Robbie Phillips.

Producers

t (Jilllnodlly
urg c.1 n izt~ ti on !'&lt;'presenting nearly all of the
St' vc n tl hundred dairy marke ting
tf ro pNali vcs se rv ing this nation .
is

percentage of the milk producers in the

fn family finn

Ulac or Banana in

Nationa l Milk

Th e

F ~ tl cndi u n

Youngest
Crow
•

Sizes 718 to 17/18

PRODUCTION UP
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The
National
Coal
AMoclalion 8ald Thursday it
estimated U.S. bituminous
coal production for the week
ended Nov . 16 at 13,575,000
tons , . Production for the
corresponding period for 1974
were 7,210,000 tons.

Brra rd of Directors IJy the delcKtll cs ut the

just Amved

Blazers
Shirt Jackets
Fashion Pants
Basic Pull-On Pants
Two-Pocket Skirts
Pointelle Sweaters
Solid Color Tops
Print Tops·and Shirts

&lt;.1

5!)111 Annual Convenlion in New Orclecms
let sl wee k.
NP:tst' srrvcs a!&gt;l President of Hunt i n ~ to n lnll' rs la te Milk
Pr odu c e r~
As sot iet tion , a nd represent s th at
nrg;mization irn the fed eration Board .

A'ITY I. C~ RSON t ROW

Chance of snow tonight,
lows In the mid 20s. tloudy,
continued cold Saturday,
highs in the mid 30s.
Probability of preclpll~tlon
50 per cent today, 40 per cent
tonight, 20 per cent Saturday.

'

the Nctl iona l Milk Producers Federation

YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT HEADOUAlll'ERS

Weather

I&gt;&lt;:Jvid Nease ,

'

•i

pl'olni uenr dairpH\Ifl here, wm; elected lu

News •• in Briefs

7~2.

$5,58t COMES
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office reported
$14,580,018.54 In welfare
assistance money being
distrlbu ~ed to Ohio's 88
counties ln October. Meigs
County's share was $5,599.04.

1\1 1!\ EHSV JJ.I.E

.

HUD help

'.

Nease is on
milk hoard

· SY HACUSE -.1. Carson. Crow, son of
Mr. and Mrs , Fred Crow, Jr ., Syracuse,
sworn in as atlorney-at'law earlier this
month, has joined the offices 0( (.'row,
Crow, and Porter . His associates are his
fatHer, F'red Crow, Jr.; his brother,
Frederick Q·ow III, and Frank W. Porter.
·'rile youngest of I he Fred Crow family
lo become a lawyer, Carson was an outslanding foolbali player at Pomeroy High
School and at Ohio University, While
pll!ring for OU he was cen ter lor three
years and played In the Tangerine Bowl in
\968. In 1970 he was named most valuable
pll!yer al Ohio University and received all
Mid-American Honorable Mention in 1969
and 1970. He graduated from Ohio Northern University Law School and was a
member of its honor commiltee.
~

$40 stolen
lrom .desk
' GALLIPOLIS - Only money was
Ioken in a breaking and entering Friday
morning at the law offices of William P.
Cherrington and Dean Evans in the K of P
BUjiding on Second Ave. and Locust St.
\ According to the Galllpolls . Police
Department, the en try occurred "etween
n\IQn Thursday and 9 a.m. Friday, Officers
sa;ta someone broke into the offices by
gelling on Ihe roof of an adjacent building
and cutli ng lhe screen on a restroom
window.
'!'he ofli ce of Mrs. Molly Plymale,
receptionist, was entered. The in truder or
Intruders upmoed her desk by using key's
fouhd in a metal cabinet. Appo·oximately
$40 was taken from the desk.
' Atty . Cherrington's office was also
errt·ered but nothing was taken. Entry then
w~s made Into the offi ce of Atty. Dean
Evans where between $3 and $5 in change
w,s missing !rom his desk. Two tape
rncbrders and two weapons were ie!l inlacl.
. 'City police officers also investigated
the- theft of a purse owned by Mrs. Pearl
Bowling of HI . 2, Ga llipolis. According to
thi, report, il contained $67 and credit
car&lt;ls .

An incidenl was reported by Mike
Fuseardo of the Workers of America
1Contlnle.d on page 2)

r

GALLIPOLIS - "The Commi llee for building program replacing antiquated
Beller Ed ucati on in Ga liia Coun ty elem entar y buildi ngs , reunov(:t ling of
Schools" is the name given to a newly exishng buildings con structed in tile 50s
organized group of persons interested In and combining the existi ng four high
impo•oving the education uf alithe chil dren schools into one or two secondury
buildings.
in Gallia County.
The hi gh school building pr ogram has
According to Tom .tones, a ·own City,
been
under study since il1c Slate Departchairman of the group , lhc comtnillee was
ment
revoked the charters oi the Southformed lo provide input and assistance to
western,
H ~mnan Tr~:~ce and Nor lll Gallla
the · Gailia County Local Board of
Districts
in 1973. A study has been conEducation to assure beller education for
ducted
by
the board's architect George
all children through the best educators
Walter
.
. tadmlnlstralors and teachcrsl, better
The high schuoi building program is
facilities, and broader curriculum.
necessary
because it is not possible to offer
The group formeo·ly was known as the
sufficien1
courses
to meet even minimwn
Gallta County Local P.'f.O.
.
sl&lt;mdards
wlih
lhe
existing small studen t
Meeting last week al Southwestern
enrollment
in
the
four
high schools.
High School, the parents discussed Ihe new
Marsha11
Kimmel
was appointed ns
building program under consideration by
lhe
commUter's
represenhttivc
to rondm·l
the Galila . Coun ly Local Board of
a
survey
and
slve
the
'
'pros
and
cons" uf
Education. Main poin ts reviewed inthe
one
or
two
high
school
concep
t.
cluded :
Duane
_
Hun
ter
of
Addison
was
apThe school board must lake steps to
pointed
connnillee's
re
prescnlil
tive
to
ask
upgrade the buildin gs and course offerings
in the county school system in order lo The Board of Educati on to &lt;'Undue! a study
meet minimWll standards set by the Stale o( the lime and cost of tra nsporti ng
sludenls to nne hi gh schO!'I compared to
Departmen t of Education.
In order to reach that goal , the Galila two high schools.
The commillee felt surh a sludy
Local School Board is considering a

should be made in order to determine the
li me involved in transporting sludents

fr om I heir homes to one or lwo buildings.
&amp;!me parrots altending last Wednesday's
mcetwg fell students would have to spend
too much lime traveling to one high school
because of the distance from their homes.
·others thought that the lime spent
!raveling lo one building would not be
excessive if sufficient planning were done
on transporl;ltion and enough funds were
budge·rea to provide adequate transportation .

Chairman ~one s urged all parents to
atte nd the specia l board . meetings
scheduled Monday and Wenesday nights at
Southwestern and Hannan Trace High
Schools to discuss the building program ,
and another meeting is set for Dec. 3 at
Kyger Creek High School.

GAME BAW - The Farmers Bank and Savings Co. and The Pomeroy
National Bank are providing footbaUs for the annual Pomeroy-Middleport Alumni
footbaU game to be staged at 2:30p.m. Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, at the former
Middleport High School football field in Middleport. Alumni ol Pomeroy, Middleport, Rutland and Meigs High Schools will make up the two teams. Pictured
presenting the footballs to Wally Hatfield, center, chairman of the game projecl.
are lefl, George Hobstetler representing The Pomeroy National Bank, and Paul
Kloes representing The Farmers Bank and Savings Co, Proceeds from the game
will go to the Melts Unit of the American Cancer Society.

Cong. Miller wants
Gallipolis hearing
GALLIPOLIS - U. S. Congressman
Clrence Miller (R·IOlh district ) has formally requested thai the planned public
hearing on the Chessie Railway System's
petition to abandon rail service on the 83mile Logan.()alllpolis-Pomeroy line be
held as soon as possible in Gallipolis.
lp a leUer dated Nov . 19 to the interstate Commerce Commission , Miller
said : "The C&amp;O reques~ for abandonment lisl'j three consecutive track
segments in iL• petition. Altogether , 18 rail
stations and-or communilies are served by
the line proposed for abandonment, As one
who recognizes the importance of railway
service to the economic growt h of !his
four-counly area of southeastern Ohio, we
are opposed to the C&amp;O request and
respectively urge the Commission to act in
favor of mainlaining local rail service."
He con tinued :
"Permit me to point out several
factors which support the effor t to keep the
Logan-Gailipolis-Pomeroy line. First and
foremost, approval of the abandonme1it
would leave the region without rail service. The Final System Pian of the United
Stales Railway Associalton (USRA ) does

Sa:Rta to parachute
onto Plaza park lot
GALLIPOLIS - Santa Claus will
arrive at the Silver Bridge Plaza by
parachute Instead of a sleigh this year .
A sh'opplng center spokesman suid
&amp;1nla will "land " In the center 's parking
lot on Saturday, Nov . 29, ul ~pproxlma le l y
2 p.m.
,
It will be Sant11's first parachute jump
in Gall Ia Coun ly since t!1e famous 1949
incident which made national head lines .
That was the year Ole' Sl. Nick missed his
target - the Public Square ~- and landed
in the icy Ohio River as u result of 11 s trong
wind .
Steve Barhors t will make this ·yeat·'s
jwnp. He is a member of U1e Gre.en County
Parachute Club.

not include in ConRail the only nther major
rail line coming from southern Perry
Count y, lhJ·ough Athens County and into
Meigs Coun ty .
"The USRA recommendation to drop
!his particular line has been upheld and
the Final System Plan has taken effect. If
the ICC permits the abandonment uf the
C&amp;O Line noled above, the Meigs-Gnllia·
Vinlon-Hocklng County region would be
virtually isola led in terms of rail service.
The movement of goods by rail would
cease. as wou ld the lransporlallon of coal
to impurtan l 111arkel places and customers
beyond the prodhclion area .
" In our opposition of USR A's
recommendations regarding USRA Line
No. 514, we have continually underscored
the vi lai contribution coal produclion and
railroads have made in strengthening the
economic base of the region . Guilla County
is Ihe site of I he multi-million dollar James
Gavin Power Plant. The plan t will burn
over. five million Ions of coal annually.
" In nei ghboring Meigs County , a new
extensive coal mining complex is now
operational. Tile ripple effect resulting
from the abandomne11l uf the Logan ~
Gallipolis-Pomeroy line would adve1·sely
affec t Ihe polenliai for conlinu etl economic

·

JACK MATTHEWS

Matthews heading up
Red· Cross fund drive

Free EMS proposed
in second levy vote
GA LLIPOLIS - A free emergency
medical service in Gallipolis and Gailia
Counly , under the direction of the
Southeastern Ohio Medical Serv ice, could
be a reality soon.
Friday night more than 100 persons,
representing all seclions of lhe city and

lracled individuals in all walks of life
throughout the city and county.
The gatherin g was called by a group of
GALLIPOLIS - Jack Matthews, who
concerned
residents to sec whal Gallia's
has been appointed chairman of the 1976
step
should
be following the defeat of EMS
Gallia Couuty American Red Cross Fund
operaling
levy
al the polls ea rlier this
Drive, is a native of Gallia County.
monlh.
Mr. Matthews gradual ed from
Federa l funds for the national pilot
Morehead Slate University in 1974 with a counly answering a call £or " concerned
ci!izens,"
went
on
record
favoring·
a
projec
t will end Dec. 31, not only for
B.A. degree in Business Administration.
special
election
in
March
calling
lor
a
.4
of
Gallia,
but for six other counties im·olved
While attending Morehead Stale he was
a
mill
levy
for
EMS,
providing
service
to
in
tile
seven..:ounty
SEOEMS pr oject .
Program Director of the Sludenl Govern consumers
is
free
in
the
cily
and
county
.
Operating
levies
for conlin ued service
ment Associa tion, Po·esident of the Jn.
On
Nov.
4,
voters
turned
down
EM
S'
have
been
approved
by
voters in Hocking,
lrafralerniiy Council, and belonged to the
request
for
a
.4
of
a
mill
operating
levy
by
Athens
and
La
wrence
Counties.
Lmnbdo Chi Alpha Fraternity .
Friday, cit izens we re prese nted
Since ~ radua ti ug he has been an 669 voles, but thai proposal carried a $25
se
rvice
charge
for
all
.consumers,
plus
various
op tions as to what could be done to
employe of the Ohio Valley Bank. He is a
addilionol
costs
for
anythi
ng
over
a
ISsave
the
service in Gallia County.
member of the First Baptist Church,
Of
four
options presented, citizens
mile
hauL
Gallipolis Lions Club and treasurer for the
The
citizens'
request
on
a
special
fa
vored
pulling
. ~ o f a mill opera ting levy
Bicentennial Committee. He gradualed
election
will
be
presented
to
the
Gallia
back
on
the
ballot
al.u special elec tion in
from Gailia Academy High School in 1970
County
Commissioners
for
their
approval.
Ma:rch,
providing
emergency service to
where he was AII-SEOAI. in haskelball and
Friday's session, held In the French consumers wou\1"1 be f1·ec ir1Ga llia County .
golf.
500
Room at Holzer Medical Cen ter. atprugress.
tContinued on page 2)
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. 1:1. B.
" As Ihe record will \'erlfy, m ~HI Y local Mallhcws. He and his wife. the former
business concerns, public offi cia ls and Dyan Kellogg· of G~lc,, Mills, Ohio, reside
represen4•tives of Ohio Valley industries Hf !1~14 F' OUI'lh t\Vt'.

share our deep concern in til is mattt:r.
· ~ Rete ntly. snmc new Information has

surfoeo•d which has mode rNentlon of this Judge sentences Walker
line alithe more '"scntiui. We l1a' ''' been
advised thAI Associated Grocers, tuc., uf
lluntlngton . West· Vlrglnln, is planning to to 2·15 years in pen ,
relucatt• its husiucss lnlhe Gu i!lpolls area .
POM F. ROY ·- Appearing before
•n11 s 25 year-o l~ firm wilt employ 60 per· Meigs Coulll y Cm111uon Pleas Judge John
son s. will hilvc an annual puyroll ex- C. Bacon Sa turday was Danny Walker, 18,
ceeding $600,000 und will generate apltuJiand.
proximately 500 curs bf rull traffic each
Walker had been indicted earlier anti
year. The business hns gruwn stcadil)'. pleaded guilt y on charges related to the
with tntal sates nearing $20 mill ion tn 1974. robbery of Jack Ambrose, manager of Ihe
·'Essential to the rchx:alion or the Pmne,·oy Kroger Store on July 10. Walker
bUSiness Is t11e avullubillly of l'Bil S('l'l"i&lt;'e, wus sc ii iCil ccd 2-t5ycm·s in the Chillicothe
(Conlinued on page 2)
Currecl iorw:JI [ n:-; ! itul it~tt .

Ten more fired at GSI

GALLIPOLIS - Ten more empl oyes
at Gallipolis Sta le Institute have been !ired
fnr being off Ihe job lhrce consecutive days
and picketing.
Dr. Bernard Niehm, GSI supcrlnlendent, who fired the employes Friday,
said more workers may be dismissed
Monday. Niehm fired 14 emplo)' Cs Thursday . Also Friday, rcprcsenlal i1 .s of the
in stitull on ail d the Connnuni cal ifon o
Workers of America in Ohio agl'ccd upon
regulation picketers .
The i· junelion agreenll'nL worked out
prior to . hea ring on the mat ter in Gailia
Conn.y l ommon J pteas Cour t Frid a),

i

provides for two pickets at each of two
en trances and four pickets at the hospital 's
main entl'fl ll('C ut any given time, Niehm

said.
Al sti , I he injun ction pr ohibi ts grouping
uf empl oyes or parking of cars within 300
fee.t of any hospital cntrLtnce, N\etun su id.

Alt hough ll1c facili ty is being picketed,
most workers were on the jub Fridny.
Nichm said ('IIIPloycs \H' I'C worki n l~ thetr
IIUI"IIlH} shift S and pickct mg 011 their O[f
time .

~

As man)' as 65 workers slay&lt;•d ulf the
job Thursday protesting unresolved local
grie w.:un·cs.
I

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