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10 - The Dati) S.nt.nel, MniLUepurt-l'omero). 0. Oft 9. l9o3

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Holzer Medical Center
• IDischarged)
•
Edna Ellis, Robert Halley,
Rubert Hesson, Brenda Holley,
Nora Huudashelt, Margaret
Johnson , Donald Kmg, Odessa
Kruskamp , David Masters,
UByd Mayes, John McGraw,
Paula McKinney, Ayen Mtlchell, Btlly Mosley, Betty
Porter, Mary Pte kens, Mrs.
Ronald
Ratliff,
Eileen

Mining deeds would be ~J. Voit~e alortg· Br'Jflay :~
BY JACK O'BHIAN
death .. That means \wo syndicates are m·restricted by new law
JAPANESE MAY HARBOH A
volved. '!'he Buyers want to make II a perma::··

By OHEW \'ON BEHGEN
WASH INGTON i UPI ) Time after titne tn the hills of
Appalachm, large COill hrm~
have pushed poverty-stncken
lando" ners off thetr property
in order to carve put the blnck
mmeral.
'!'he landowners objectl'd m
many rases, but lost out "hen
the coal t'Ompany produc-ed
half""entury-old deeds to
mineral rights
Sen. M,ulow W Cook,ll-Ky.,
planm"d to offer an a.~n£!n&lt;.IJnt:'t J t
today to a pendmg nat10nw1de
coal stnp muung btU tu g1ve
th e su1 face ownel'~ the uprcr
hand
It would requtre wn ttcn
consent or waiver by th&lt;'
surface owner before the coal
operator could tmpiement itis
"broad form deed' and extract
the coal.
The Senate, by a 53-33 vot&lt;·.
passed a sum lur but lumWd
amendment by Senate Demo, crahc leRder Mtke Mansf1eld,
0-Mont., as 1t began constder utton of the btll Mo nday.
Man sf wld' s amen d ment
would prolubil stnp mwon
all
land
tng
where. the federal govern ment owns the mwcr a l
rights, but a pnvate mdtVlduul
owns the surface. lt \\ ould
allow underground mirung on
such pt operty.
Mosl land fallmg unde1 the
MansfH'Id t~mc n dm ent IS tn the
western pl~.ins states
Cook's mncndm r nt toclay IS
looked on fa vorably by en·
vironmentahs ts . But Cook
warned Monday that m sulvmg
envtronmentfJl problems, the
btll co uld cause greater
econom1c
and
ener gy
problems
"We may stop some stnp
mirung, " he told, the Senate
_, "But we'r·e dig m a grave."

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
Ocl 9
Walt Di sney'$

REDKNOBS&amp;
BROOMSTICKS
(Techn•color)
A"g ela Lans bury

Dav1d Tomlin son

IG I
D• sney C.1 r toon s
Band Con cert

Pluto's He art· Throb
Adm1 ss ron $1,50 &amp; 7Sc
Show Sta rts 7 p m

Wednesday &amp; Thu1 sday
Oct 10 11

NOT OPEN

Sen. Henry M. J;&lt;ckson, DWiLsh . author of the bill, satd
u(Jt'Ontrolled strtp nun tng "has
off t-el~ a stark, WtjustLCiable,
and mtolerable degradation tn
the quality of life m local
('Qll"'HIUnllJ esm ••

Two amendments by Sen
Jcruungs Randolph, D·W Va ,
mvolvmg the economtc tmpact
of the btll , were also approved
One would direct the Cost of
Uvmg Cotm cll to grant (..'Oal
prtce lOcreuses to offset
p1oduc twn cost lfi{'reases
caused by the btll, and the
.other would provtde federal
money [or reloCllliOil and re·
employment o£ miners put out
of work by the btll

Willard Oay
dies at work

W11lard (BtU ) Clay , 60, Rl. 3,
Pomeroy, dted Monday after
collapswg at work on the

Mason Chnsttan Brethren
Church Clay was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by
tlte Mason E-R squad but was
pronounced dead on arrival

Mr Clay, a store room clerk
at the Kyger Creek Power
Plant

1n

Cheshlre, was a

member of the Mason
C'hrtsttan Brethren Church, of
the Uttltly Workers of
Arncnca , Local 430, the
Hutland Amertcan Legton Post
467, and W&lt;Js a veteran of World
War· two .
Il01 n Aug 15, 1913 in Hunltngton, Mr Clay was the son of
the late Frank and Besste
Collmgsworth Clay
He ts survived by hts wtfe,
Luctlle, Rl. 3, Pomeroy; three
step-sons, Dewey Smtih,
C'hester; Hoy Bush, Ft. Myers,
Fla., and Gay Bush, Westerville ; three s tep-daughters,
Mrs. Gertrude Brewer and
Mrs Arwana Tye, both of
Columbus, and Miss Dorothy
Smtih, Ft . Myers, Fla , and one
brother, Irvm Clay, Yakima,
Wash .
Funeral serviCes will be beld
Thursday, 1: 30 p.m. at the
Mason Chnstian Brethren
Chtu-ch, wtth James H. Lewis
of!lctatmg. Burtal wtll be m the
Kirkland Memorial Gardens
where nuhtary gravesrde rites
wtll be conducted.
Fnends may ca ll at the
Foglesong Funeral Home any
lime alter 3 p.m. Wednesday
The body will be taken to the
chw·ch one hour prior to the
serv1ce where 1t Wlll lie m
state.

'

PEARL Of A RESORT
NE WYORK I K"'S l - Moe Dali12 is dealing
wllh Japanese cash-ktds 1they're everywhere
smce devaluatton!J to peddle hts lavtsh La
Costa, Calif., health farm . there's a meagre
matter of a $16,000,000 Teamsters-Penston Fund
Loa~ holdtng tt off ... Among margmal
Watergate notes ts the fa ct that a couple of the
Whtte House mdtctees lolled _at La Costa whtle
plannmg thetr legal fight.
Howard Cosell treats hts crttics lhtsaway
he walked up to Datly News analyst Norm
Mtller at a gnd brash, placed both hands on
Norm 's shoulders and wheedled.&lt;Jealed , "I'm
really a very mce guy. I've worked hard for
everytlung I've got " True - that Jagged
personality couldn't possibly be mheriled ..
Mrs Cose ll a"-Sured all at the party Howard's
not returmng to Monday Night Football-calling
next season
Remember the Washmgton Post's " Agnew
Wtll Restgn 111 a Week" headlines ' Wha' hoppen ? Here 1t IS seven weeks and he'smore mtent
on hangmg in there than ever .. ABC-TV 's
Howard K Smtih zapped the Post, Senatorial
Watergate hearmgs and network d1storbons for
helpmg clobber Due Process.
Henry Ford II melted off 20 lbs. at La Costa
and looked spiffll y slender at "21" ... Multi·
mtlhonatre Russell Feldmann had a stroke, and
sold off hts Emerson and Dumont radio-TVstereo ftrms, kept only the vacuum cleaner
busmess ... Russ' beautiful twms are wed to
Spiro Skoufas Jr and lawyer Joe McKee .
Ea rly-radto Street Smger Arthur Tracy 1 m ll\s
70s, wtll campaign agamst Milton Berte for
pres of AGVA, the vaudevtll.,..nighlclub AFL·
CIO unton And for himself, of course
A syndicate is dealing for the closed
Copacabana since ex-operator Julie Podell's

((;onunued from Page It
lis
de . September. Three were fll'e calls, 24 were
ca
rna
m
e three miscellaneous calls. Of
emergenc_y runs, and the~e ~~and nine were out of tmvn. 1be
ne nt blac k-talent showcase. Don 't mvite ZsaZsa
the firstatd calls, 15 w~e tn
mil durmg the month.
3
626
and Kaye Stevens to the Slime bank · Kaye
town'svehiclesweredrtven ·
~ 1 budget commission
walked off with the plasttcs tycoon mvolved.
THE FINDINGS OF the Metgs un y
·
i
The Milton Rackmtls are dtvorcmg. Mtlton,
allocating $138,908.12 for the nJe~t ~~~ ~.~~~~~"::~nw::
retired president of MCA, once also principal
approved A request from Dr. · ·
dA
owner of Decca Records, came hor.te one mght
new streei ltght near the rear of hi~ office 011 North Secon ve.,
Reynolds, Uoyd Sears, Jr., w referred to the Safely Conuntltee.
to ftn d Gla dys wt th another man - her Iawyer Tammy Shotts, Janice Suns,
"l'Ma or ~-ride ask ·~ council to consider prohibiting the
who handed Mtlt the papers ... Liz Taylor may Mrs . J ane sprtege
· 1' Car1 solt'ct't;noY of ""'
merchants ""
by residents of ofber -~~~s. The mayor
-.,
ith h hc1ting No permits
guest on the Merv Grilfm Show - M.erv . m- Waugh, Coell Wetherholl,
troduced Liz to Mtke Todd, her only marrtage
said that.b)lSinesses are deluged W sue so
·
Rhonda Williams, Kimbal should be issued to allow any group to do any soliciting, the
ted Tbe suggestion will be studied. Council also
that didn't end tn anger ... Hedy Lamarr has her Mapes.
one datly meal at Clos Normand, lunolt-ltme
(Births)
mayor sugges ·
M'ddl
t Chamber of
t
took no action on a request from the 1 epor
.
f
f
d
11
ed
d
Mr. and Mrs. Lendel Jessee, eommerce that parking meters In town be made free during the
steak fo ow by sea so vttamms or esser
Never gams wetght. Stps a little, tho.
a son, Coalton; Mr. and Mrs. , Ch
sh ing season
Alec Gumness, biggest star-hit m London's Harold F1sher, Jr., a daughter,
rt~asil ~PP 11 agre~ that there will be no trick or treat
" Habeas Corpus," told some kid actors "Never Jackson.
ni ht ~n~ 1 ~,11~~~ !gain this year. Instead, the village wiD
be dtscourag~d," e.ptaining elder character
Pleasant Valley Hospital
.!ist Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, with Its anactress Marltte HWtt once was hts dramattc
Discharges : Lucmda Hard·
.
t
coach and adviSed ·him seriously to qwt, man Leon · Mrs Gary Nor- nual commuruty Halloween pa_r y. wertoaninquiryabouthow
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At the close of the meettng, m ans
District would know that it~
returned hts tUition an d assure d Str AI ec he ha d thup Mason. David Whttno talent; Marltta had the British grace to be tingu;n daughter Red House . the Leading Creek _Conservancy th five families on Middleport
t
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' been granted permiSSion to serve e
h
he acted w1'th h'un 1aer.
em barrass ed wens
Mrs. Barbara Jones, Pomt
dthattheClerk-Treasurerwillsenda
Have another Washington Rwnor : White Pleasant· Mrs Leonard Lee
HtU, Mayor Zerk1~ answere
House counsel Leonard Garment to doff his top- Southsld~
·
' letter to the distrtd. ,,_
Ung ere Chief of Police J J
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Others attendmg ~« mee
w
· •
Ntxon hat soon ... An assoctale wt th a su
onger
Btrlhs: October 5, a daughter
dM . I
e Supervisor Harold Chase.
am enanc
tummy viewed the sleazy " The Grande Boulfe" to Mr . and Mrs Woodrow Cremeans an
fltck and capsuled 1t thus : it commtts ALL Starcher Glen Morgan w
Seven Deadly Stns - pride, covetousness, lust, Va.; a daughter to Mr.' and
anger, gluttony, envy and sloth ... Tony Martm Mrs. David Whtttington, Red
starred at a Chtcago Hotel and left m an ex- House; October 6, a daughter
penstve huff : got hts pay~heck closmg rught to Mr . and Mrs. Andrew
(Continued from Page I)
wtth $1,250 deducted for tabS he'd signed. Last Beattie Long Bottom- Oh1o. an immediate 66 pet. increase in prtces plild by Western oil
ltme I'll play thts room, and other;ohimpers. Veter~ns Memorial H~spltal
comparues. Oil sources said the demand could result in the
Joe Louts says Muhammad Ali s chances
Admitted _ Rose- Hooper
biggest leap in crude otl prices in two years, a move almost
for a rt~g glory rerun are slun. Based on wal- Athens; Bernard Ratrden: certain to affect the Amertcan c·onsumer.
chmg hun closely m the ununpress1ve near-rruss Hartford ; worthy Brtght,
The sources said the price hike demand was presented
over Ken Norton ... Serg1o Francht and stster Langsville.
Monday to 13 Western companies by six stales on :he Persian
Dana Valery co-warbled a complete free mtm- Discharged _ Garrett Rtfe
Gulf, members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
show wtth th~ ptamst at Onde's. After mhahng a James Carnahan, Nellie Dunn: Countries (OPEC) . The six gulf states, Saudla Arabia, Iran,
Everett Erwin.
ltdy moun tam of fetuccmt.
Iraq, Kuwait, Abu Dhabi and Qatar, demanded that crude oil
•
pr1ces rtse from $3 a barrel to $5 and that machinery be
established to insure that in the future the prices keep step with
inflation, the sources srud.

°

The commtllee compnsed of
Mayor Musgrave, Robert
Wm~ett, Ed Sommer, the Rev.
John DavLs, Homer Sm1th,
Dick Ord and Barlow Jones
will be led by Smtih and Jones
as co-chaLrmen.
It was only last week that the
committee got a shot m the
arm when the Mason County
Court allocated $15,000 toward
complelton of the project.
Durmg the dtscuSSion w1th
court offtcJals, tl was agreed
that the ctty will go ahead wtth
furmshmg the " facthly w1th
r...,taurant type eqUipment for
the purpose of youngsters
using tl to provide food and
refreshments.
Also court of!Jctals suggested
that a ftreplace be added, but

reported concermng picmc

as was pomted out last night,
this will depend on the amount
of funds raised m the community drive.
Mayor Musgrave reported on
meeting with a group of
yoWtgsters who had projected
many tdeas regarding the
factltty to be used by teenagers
from all over the county.
Attention was called to the
need for block laymg next on'
the structure wtth Mayor
Musgrave statirtg that th1s IS
expected to get under way th1s
week.
Councilman Tom Sauer

tables in Harmon Park and
said due to their not bemg used
m the present location he
suggested movmg these to the
oppoSite end of the park .'One is
located bes1de the construction
area for the youth center.
Councilmen present were :
Jack Fowler, Tom Sauer,
Harry Rhodes, Howard Lee
MtUer, Everett Grtmm, Btll
Wellman, Russell Holland.
Others there were Patty
Burdette, ctty clerk; Carroll
Casto, ctly attorney and Mayor
·
John Musgrave.

Damascus

Open Wednesday and Thursday 9:30 to 5 p.m.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Turning cooler Friday or
Saturday. Daytime highs In
Mostly clear tomghl w1lh fog the upper 70s and low 80s
redevelopmg. Lows tomght m lowering to mid 50s and low
60s by Saturday. Nighttime
the mtd 50s and low 60s. Partly
lows in the 50s and low 60s
cloudy and contmued mild
Wednesday with highs in the lowering to upper 30s and
mid 40s by Saturday morupper 70s and low 80s
ning.
.
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LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature m downtown
SONGFEST SET
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
A Gospel songfest w1ll be
was 69 degrees under cloudy
held at the Assembly of God
sktes
Church, Dudding Lane, Mason,
Saturday, Oct. 13 at 7:30p.m.
featunng
the
"Gospel
UNIT CAJ.LED
The Middleport E-R squad Lighters" . Other singmg
answered a call to 371 S. groups wlll also be featured.
.
Second Ave., at 6·21 p.m. The Rev. Chester Tennant 1s
Monday for Mrs. Robert the pastor The public is mvited
Caruthers who w~s havmg to attend
dtfftculty breathtng She ·was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center
PRICE RAISED
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Standard Otl Company of Ohio
LOCAL TO MEET
Local 426 Ulthly Workers' (Soh10) today announced a one
Umotl of Amenca wtll meet at 5 cent per gallon mcrease in the
p.m Wednesday at the Union pnce of gasoline at tts comhall m Pomeroy Of!tctals said pany-operated stattons. The
the session Is very Important new prices are 39.9 cents per
and urged all · members to gallon for regular and low lead
43 .9 cents per gallon of
attend.
premtwn, a Sop10 spokesman
satd.

Weather

FOR - .

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THE HOME TEAM
BY FORMFIT ROGERS
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YOUR MONEY

NEEDS CARE, TOO
&gt;

Just like good health habits,
you need good money habits
too. Savings accounts, with in- · '
terest, can develop into healthy
•
sums in a short period of time.
A checking account is a good
way to keep h"ack of expenses
and enables you to stop unnecessary drains on your budget. .

Auto Teller Window ana Walk·up Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.
WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGH

L:ilbens ,a~ional B hk
-A.CIHCINNA Tl

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
t

(NfWSP.'.PER ENTf!RI'RISE ASSN )

I,

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This series of

KAREN GRIFFITH AS SHE appears in her Ohio State
Umvcrstly marchmg band uruform No bulges (from her long
tresses) can show m the top of her military-style hat

tradition

vehicle had moderate to heavy

tmued on m the dttch for ap-

The daughter of Me and Mrs Charles Gnfftth , Karen has
found that bemg the ftrst woman selected for the tradiltonally allmale band tS a challenge She's been swamped by news media
requests for mterv1ews, mcluding TV appearances She's h3n&lt;!led it well. Karen has never failed m her comments to emphastze that the men of the band have been most cooperative and
helpful
Karen has worked many hours to come up wtth a system for
gettmg her long tresses under the band uniform hat No bulges
are permtlted m the top of the hat, but wtth some expenmentmg,
she's managed 11.
Her Wttform, made for a male, had to go to the tatlor for
altermg Shoes - all must be ahke - were also a problem One of
the men of the band accompanted her to several Columbus stores
m her search for the male type shoe whtch would conform to
regulatwns and sllll Itt Karen 's foot , stze 51h
At any rate, Karen , a trumpet player who has appeared on
Metgs County stages many tunes , finally goltt all together \n
her umform she looks like the 159 others m the 160-ptece band,
whtch IS just the way she wants It
Karen ts busy m her new role. She marched wtlh the band at
the OSU-Washmgton game Saturday in pre-game and halftune
activtltes and on Sunday evening marched m downtown
Columbus when the band took part in Ute Columbus Day parade
Thts Swtday Karen wtll be takmg part m a ma rchmg band
concert to be held tn Mershon Auditorium - already sold out. She
wtll appear in the Lakewood concr,rl on Oct 18, the homecommg
parade and rally on Oct 26, and the Northwestern game on Oct.

damage to tis n ght door and
stde
Three and a half hours later,
depultes mvesltgated an acctdent on CR 43, ftve-tenths of a
mtle east of CR 46. A ptckup
truck dnven by Joseph D
Marcil\ko, Rt. I, Reedsville,
was tra veling east on 43 when

proximately 48 feel, h1ttmg a
rock whtch caused a blowout of
two of the truck's llres Nutter's veh1cle also had moderate
damage to tls nghl fron t wheel
and bumper.
No InJuries were reported,
and the other vehtcle was not
tdenttfted.

Karen Griffith

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are 111 lion-hearted Ultron®,
cling-free , and .blessed with /
I

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the Monsanto' Wear-Dated /1

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guarantee. Which makes

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them unbeatable ,
and beautiful ;

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Briefs~i
~·

By United Press International
SOME GASOLINE DEALERS, UNHAPPY Wl1'H Phase IV
regulations conlrollmg how much they can charge, have ignored
the controls and ratsed prices by as much as 6 cents a gallon, the
Internal Revenue Servtce sayd.
.
The IRS satd Tuesday 11 is mvestigatmg violattons of price
controls tp several states, but agenl!; swd tt is up to consumers to
report such mcreases to tltem, smce enforcement of the controls
1s based strtctly on complaints Bestdes the tlle~al prices mcrease, one major suppher, Standard Otl of Ohio, sa1d It IS
boosting tis wholesale pnces by a penny a gaUon . Onder Cost of
Living CoWtcil rules, gasoltne dealers are aUowed to raise their
prices above May, 15 levels only as much as wholesale prtces
have mcreased

1

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every stitch
of the way.
Baby Doll $8 Long Coat $14 Long Gown $10.

WASHINGTON - SENATE WATERGATE commlllee tnvesltgators are trymg to fmd out what happened to $100,000 in
cash that btllionatre Howard Hughes reportedly gave Charles G,
"Bebe" Rebozo, a close friend of Pres1d~nt Ntxon . Committee
sources said one question they are explormg tS whether any of
the money was used to lmance the purchase of Prestdent Nixon's
San Clemente home.
Other sources srud the Internal Revenue Service also was
investigating the reported transactton . "We are looking into the
possibility of a link between thts money and the purchase of the
San Clemente home," one committee source smd . "As yet we
don't have the eVIdence to call Rebozo or anyone else before the
hearings."

(Not shown) Short Gown $7. S~ort Coat $10 Sizes P S M·L

P•J•m• (s1zes 32·40) $12.
All in White/ Red, Blue Ba1IOOI1/ Biue, Snapdragon/ Pink

•

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
Be sure to register . in the
Foundations Department for
the RCA XllOO Portable Color
Television.
No
purchase
necessary and need not be
present to win.

CHARGING TOO MUCH
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!) The Internal Revlfue Serv1ce
has reported that 11 gasoline
stations in the LOUISVIlle area
have been found to be charging
prices slightly abov'e the Phase
IV cethngs
·

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VIENNA - THE MAJOR WESTERN OIL FIRMS ang SIX
Arab oil-producmg states were far apart m talks on Arap
demands for a two-thirds pnce increase for thetr prod~,ct but
kept the door open for agreement, otl sources satd today, There
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(Conltnued on Page 16)

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'l'he Arabs have reported
des troy tng more tha n 200
Israeli planes durmg the ftve
days of ftghltng but Israel sttll
clauned mastery of the atr.
Western mtliiary experts have
esllmated Israeli plane losses
at somewhere around 50, most
of them to the Surface-to-Atr
MISSiles (SAMs) supplied by
the Russians on both fron ts
Synan
ln
Damascus,
government sour ces s end
Israeli atr ratds on the nor-

TEN CENTS

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

ot,
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thern Synan ctltes of Horns and
Latakia today ktlled "hundreds
of women and workers " Syna
satd 200 were killed or wounded
Tuesday when Isr ael htl
Damascus; vtctuns mcluded
six Russ1ans killed at the
Russtan cultural center there
The Synans sa1d Isra eli
rockets also htl the otl refmery
a nd an electn ctty power
stalton m Horns, 106 mtles
north of Damascus and that
Israeli rockets also fell into an

eav

area mhab tlcd matnly by
wor kers , Inside Hams The
lsrach-Synan do~ftght Spllled
over Into Lebanese a1r space
and residents of Be1rut could
watch part of the battle over
the Lebanese mounta ms stx.
mtles from the ctly. Loud
bangs, a ppa r entl y sontc
booms, startled the ctllzens
of Beirut who have thus far
sta yed out uf the war desptle
mtense Palestmtan pressure.
It was the flrst air battle that

the mtlttary spokesman annoWtced wtth detatls But no
account of Israeh losses was
gtven
An Egypttan commumque
issued in Catro satd Egypt
fought off an Israeli atr attack
on forwa rd Egypttan atrftelds
today and hit back wtth concentrated air strtkes on Israeli
co mma nd posts and troop
concentrattons m the St~al
pemnsula . an
Egypllan
conununique satd.

•

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Karen Gnfftth of Pomeroy wtll go down m the annals of Ohto
State Universtty as the ftrst woman member of the nallonally
famous wttverstly marchmg band, breaktng a 95-year-old

Farne coming to

1~News .. in

tenderly embroidered tncots

The war appeared to have
turned mto a war of altrtlton
with _ne1ther s1dc expectmg a
qmck, knockout v1ctory. There
were ommous reports Iraq had
entered the ftghtmg on the stde
of the Arabs, and an lraqt
mthtary commWttque clauned
tls planes had struck on both
fronts.
Dtplomaltc efforts to end the
ftghting were at a complete
standstill. There were consultatiOns between Washmgton
and Moscow but no stgn of a
solutton . Untied Nattons
Secunty Counctl efforts were
to no avatl- and hmdered
further by a S&lt;mel walkout on
an Israeli spee~h

The Meigs County shenff's
department tnvesltgated three
auto acctdents Tuesday, two tn
Ohve Twp
At 12 nooij Shenff's depulles
were called to the Ohio Power
stle m Salem Twp ., where a
par ked truck operated by
Kenneth Renn, 31, Portsmouth,
(or ''some unknown reason''
backed mto a parked auto
owned by Cectl Dean Bnnager,
Racme
The Renn truck, parked o.n a
small mchne, mcurred nd
damage However, Brmager's

:-..-w:•:--:::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·. ··:·:····:····

'

gesl Israeli clatm of th ts war.
Catro reported its air force htt
lsr.aeh troops m lhe Sinal and
set ftre to Israeb military
headquarters there whtle beatmg off inland atr ratds

PHONE 992-2156

Deputies look.
' into 3 wrecks

The band's November schedule ts even more demanding .
And, of course, all qf these appeara nces reqwre many hours
of rehearsal so that the band wtll live up to the premswn expecled
by the hundreds of fans .
·
And who's enjoymg the busy, busy life ' Karen Grifftlh, of
•
I
course!

DIVORCE GRANTED
CASE PRESSED
Granted a dtvorce m Me1gs
BALTIMORE (UP! )
County Common Pleas Court
Judge
Walter E. Hollman,
was Ronda C. Dempsey,
Syracuse from Douglas M. determmed to resist further
Dempsey, Syracuse, on delays m a federal incharges of gross neglect of vestigation of Spiro T. Agnew,
rejected a request Monday by
duly and extreme cruelty.
newsmen for postponement of
their replies to newsleak
' BARBS
subpoenas, federal court
By PHIL PASTORET
sources said today.
The man who asks tf yo u
ha ve a mmute to spare JS
looking for half a day's work
from you
. AIRPORT CLOSED
+++
COLUM!IUS (UPI)- Heavy
Bookkeepers never get
volumes lent to them by us
fog early today closed Poi:t
+++
Colwnbus Altport and at least
16 commercial flights were
dtverted to other cities. The fog
was to lift later in the day but
at 9 a .m. the airpOrt was still
closed.
Don't say there aren't zombtes lhtnk of all the people
who walk around wtth thetr
bra tns tn a portable radto
case, and plugged mto lhetr
ears so they can move
'
+++
Our favorite bum Is like an
old· fashioned car: he has automatic shlftlessne$.

By Umled Press International
The Israeli Air Force carried
out masstve bomb attacks tn
Syna and Egypt today in an
effort to offset loss of the BarLev delense hne on the Suez
(;anal, Israel's worst mihtary
setback tn 25 years Air battles
swtrled through the sk1es and
each stde reported v1ctones.
Tank and artillery battles on
the Suez Canal front five to
rune mtles behmd the Bar-Lev
lme blazed through the ftfth
day of the 1973 Middle East
War but thus far have been
mdecistve. Israel did appear
winmng ba~k the Golan
Heights and UP! correspondent Rtchard C. Gross reported
the lsraehs had fought into
Qnettra , 38 mtles from
Damascus.
Israel satd its atr force shot
down 17 counterattackmg Synan M!Gs trymg to attack in the
Golan Hetghts area- the btg-

•

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1973

Ir

'J:l.

..._

POM EROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

•

I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NO 125

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

The Syrtans reported sh~=~~
down three Israeli
(Continued from Page I )
durmg the momtng in a pair
but four of the choppers were dogfights over the Golan
destroyed and all the troops Heights.
killed.
The Egyptian command
A spokesman satd the Israeli tank forces advancing in
atr strikes mto Egypt caused Sinal !lacked by
"senous damage" to the "completely destroyed
airftelds at El Mansura, 70 enemy's !90th armoror&gt;~ed~~:!:
m1les north of Cairo, and and captured Its c1
Kusnia .
Col. Assaf Yagouri."
In Damascus, the Syrian The Israeli command
government said its warplanes waves of warplanes ro•tr~!l
bombed an airport and mthtary:-across the Sinai throughout the
targets in Israel at Ramat Davi early hours to drive back
but "did not approach any EgypUan attempts to rel!tfor·ce I
"
tank teams In the Sinai.

.

.

VOL XXV

News. • • zn

illraeU Plaas Shots Down

•

Devoted To The lnter~t. Of The_ Meigs-Ma110n Area

•

Y_guths' projects occupy council
PT PLEASANT - Aclwns
to benefit youths of thts area
were taken by Point Pleasant
Ctty Counctl at tts regular
meetmg Monday evenmg,
when plans for. Halloween were
made and construction was
scheduled to resume on the
Youth Center proJect.
CoWtcil has set astde a one
hour pertod frortf6 :30 unttl 7:30
p.m October 30 for tr~ck or
treat mghl. However tl was
sltpulaled that thts IS only for
chtldren up to and mcludmg 14
years of age.
Mayor John Musgrave an·
noWtced that a fmance committee has been created to
secure funds lor the Mason
County Youth Center now
Wlder constructiOn at Harmon
Park

.
enttne
-

Water .surcharge

another truck, whtch failed to
stop after the acc tdent ,
crowded htm off the toad tn a
curve, forcmg Marcmko mto a
d1tch Marcmko's truck h1t a
bank, mcurnng moderate
damage to Its nght side.
At 6 20 p.m., on Route 681 , a
pt ckup tr uck dnven by
Hayward Nutter, 58, Rl. 1,
Reedsville, approached an
auto comtng from the oppostte
dtrectwn To avmd a colllston,
Nutter pulled hts truck off the
rtght stde of the road mlo a
dtlch. The Nutter truck con-

Landfill workers
•
•
wm pay mcrease
Metgs ' County sanitary
landftll employes were granted
a ra1se of 25 ~enls on the hour
by the Metgs CoWtty Commissioners Tuesday .
Eqwpment operators were
gtven a ratse from $3 per hour
to $3 25 and laborers $2.25 to
$2 50 per hour
In other busmess the commlsstoners paid ,two animal
cla ims , Larry Cummmgs,
Racme , $100 for the loss of a
, calf, and Jack Setdenabel,
Pomeroy, Rl. 2, $20 for the loss
of a lamb, both to predatory
animals.
A delegalton from the
Pomeroy PTA met wtth the
CQmmission 10 tegard to
fundmg of the Ped1atnc
Otological Diagnostic Chmc.

Weather
Generally clear tomght but
wtth patches of heavy fog
developmg a gam by 4 late
tomght, lows m the mid 50s to
the lower 60s. Thursday partly
clouay and continued- mtld,
high m tl)e 70s and lower 80s

The commissioners will rev1ew
the budge t the ftrsl of the year
before committmg themselves
as to how much money they
wtll appropriate to the clime.
Mrs Ralph Harvey, matron
at the children's 1\'ome , met
With the commisswn m regard
to addtltonal money for
operation of the home and the
purchase of a new clothes
washer.

Attending were Robert
Clark, Warden Ours and Henry
Wells, comm1sstoners, and
James Roush, Metgs County
Sanitanan and butlding Illspector, who served as clerk in
the absence of Mrs. Martha
Chambers.

~ ARBU RNED

Pomeroy Fire Chtef Charles
Legar satd today a car
belol\gmg to Paul Card was
gutted by fire Tuesday at 8.20
p.m. The car, a 1964
Studebaker, was parked on
Forest Run Road . Wmng
Wtder the dash was belteved to
have caused the ftre.

EASTERN IDGH SCHOOL'S HOMECOMING QUEEN
w1ll be crowned Friday night during pre-game ceremomes
Semor Queen candidates are front low from left, Mart1e
Caldwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Caldwell, Jr.;
Jane Whttehead, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, and Debbie Burns, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Anderson; back row, Rhonda Sovel, juruor attendant,

Convict escapes from institute
MARION, Oh10 (UP!) Mark Hodges, 32 1 a former
Beaverdam, Ohw, servtce
statwn operator sentenced to
prtson for assault wtth intent to
kill a soctal worker, walked
away - from the Marton
Correctional Inslt tute early
today
Authonlles satd Hodges and
Denms Burns, 24, of Canton,
were discovered m1ssing at
about 2 a.m . durmg a prison
bed check.

_Hodges was sentenced laSt
May 24 to 1-to-20 years for cut
ting wtlh mtend to wound Daw n
Menerey of Findlay, a county
socml worker, and a 1-lo-15year term for assault with mlent to ktll .
Hodges was charged w1th
runnmg MISs Menerey off a
county road and attemptmg to
assault her He was scared off
by a farmer who pulled up to
the scene m a truck.
The Menerey tnal was Hodg-

ployes· retinng can collect
money for unused sick leave
for a maximum of 30 days.
They can collect for one-fourth
of all Wtused leave .
Homer Cole and Phillip
Boyles, prestdent and vtce
prestdent, respecltvely , of the
Tuppers
Plams
School
Boosters Club, extended
thanks for Improvements to the
Tuppers Plams buildmg. They
agreed to ·1nstall Improved
lighltng tn the halls and restrooms 1f matenals are
provided by the board whtch
the board agreed to do

es' ftfth tr ial- m the last five
years for alleged attacks on
women . The first four ended in
hung junes or acquittal.
An ex-Green Beret ahd son of
an Ohio Northern University
philosophy teacher, Hodges
was charged in 1968 wtth the
murder of Karen Kern , 20, Sylvania, mece of the Ohio AFLCIO President Frank King.
Twtce in 1968, Hodges was
trted on charges of r~rutmg Deruse Fortner, 17, a Napoleon

High School semor, off the road
as she was riding her motorcycle and shootmg at her. The
ftrst jury deadlocked and the
second found him mnocent.
·In another case, he was ac·
qmtted on charges'bf assault on
a minor without mtent to
commit rape, involving a
Marysv1Ue gtrl
Burns, the other escapee,
was serving a hfe sentence on a
murder convtctton

Festival personalities exceeding 70
RIO GRANDE - More than entertainment
three dozen crafsmen and
Morgan's Ra1ders, a hill
entertamers
from
the mus1c group under the
Gallipolis - Rto Grande area dtreclton of Kenneth Ward of
wtll parttctpate m the Bob lltdwell, wtll perform all three
Evans Farm Festival here th1s days.
weekend, Oct. 12-13-14 at the · Also on the btll are Galltpolts
Bob Evans Farm .
craf tsmen Sarah Moshter,
Thtrty-ftve Ohtoans and West portraits; the Amencan
Vtrgmtans from wtthm a 15- Legton Auxthary, eX!ttbttmg
mtle radius of Galhpohs wtll crafts by veterans; Gallipolis
)Otn 36 exhtbttors and en- State lnslltute , varwus han·
tertainers from as far away as dicrafts ; Mrs Oscar Bastiam
Dayton,
Mansfie ld
and and Mrs. Roth, tole pamlmgs;
Wo'Oster to prov1de non·stop and Jean Ntday, hostess of the
music, dancmg, crafts and semor cttizens' crafts dtsplay.
home-style cookmg for the
J L. Napter will operate the
35,000 vts ttors ex pected to sorgh um mtll, whlle the
attend the harvest festival
Galhpohs rrstdents slated to
provide entertamment are
Glona Wmfteld, who wtll play
the dulcimer; Joyce Hawks, m
.'
charge of sktls !rom last year's
Seven defendants were fined
ht st~ncal mustc pagea nt,
and ftve others forfeited bonds
"Gal ita Country": and the m Middleport Mayor John
Saunders Trto , proVIding Zerkle's court Tuesday mght.
n\ustcal accompamment for
Joseph M. Hughes , Pomeroy,
Sunday's worship servtee led for trymg to escape from Jail,
by the Rev Paul Hawks, Paul was fined $107 and costs for
Wagner wtll be emcee for the damages to Jail, $25 and costs,

Gallipolis Rotary Club runs the
tee cream stand
Participants from Rto
Grande mclude Beverly
Louden, rug-weavmg and fall
decoratiOns display ; Arli e
Davis, Salem Bapltsl Church,
qUIItmg; Mrs. J on Lynch, wood
burntng; Mrs. Robert Wtlktns,
crafts exhtbtt; Mrs. Ed
SaFranco, Rio Grande Faculty
Women's Club, pencil sketches
and~ hardta ck; and
'
. Mrs
Willard
Reese, ceramtcs.
Hungry VISitors can see Mrs.
Steve Jenktns, Howard Foster,
Jr. , and Mrs. Don Morgan, all
of Rio Grande, for thelf pies,

Seven draw fines

--New curtains bought at Eastern
TUPPERS PLAINS
Routu1~ l.lusLness , mdudmg the
purchase of new front stage
curtams for the Eastern High
School aud1tonum, was concluded by the Eastern Local
School District Board of
Educatton Tuesday mght.
New stage curtams to be
made of vmyi were ordered
fr om the Holcomb Co ,
Cleveland, at a cost of $775
They are to be deltvered m one
month
The
boa,rd
approved
payment of UIIUsed sick leave
m accordance wtlh Senate Btll
3\. Under its prov'tstons, em-

daughter of Mi'. and Mrs. Garth So vel, Juli Whitehead, freshman attendant, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
and Pam Kautz, sophomore attendant, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Kautz. Miss Caldwell w11l be escorted by Rtck
Hollon, M1ss Jane Whitehead by Steve Anderson, Debbie
Burns by Bill Hayes, Miss Sovel by Tim Spencer, Juli
Whitehead by Terry Ferrar and Mtss Kautz by Steve Nelson.

Mrs . Susie Hemes was added
to the substitute teacher hst,
Mrs. Larry Young to the
substitute cook hst, and Mrs.
Marge Benedun1 to the sub·
st1lute cuslodtan hst, Sandra
Cowdery was employed as a
partttme bus driver m the
kindergarten program .
Bill Ph1lhps, Duane Wolfe
and Larry Heines were
authorized to attend a
basketball workshop 1n
Columbus on Oct. 19 and
Charles Swogger , prmctpal of
the htgh school, was authonzed
to attend a prmctpals' convehlton next month in

Columbus Lmda Myers was
employed as an assistant
custodian at the Chester
butldmg .
The

board
dtscussed
po s s tbiltt ~es of hirmg &lt;tddttional help for custodians,
but no aclton was taken Bills
were patd.
Altendmg were Supl John
Reibel, Swogger, Cole, Boyles,
"Clerk C. 0. Newland, and
board members I. 0. McCoy,
Roger Epple, Howard Caldwell, Jr , and Oris Smtth, and
Mrs Beatnce Douglas of the
Tuppers Plams s taff

reckless operation of a vehtcle,
and $25 and costs on charges of
intoxicahon and dtsorderly
manner.
.
Others fmed were Reta Jean
Hughes, 30, Pomeroy, $25 and
costs, dt&amp;lurbmg the peace;
Samuel C Payton , Jr ., 31,
Louisa, Ky ., $100 and costs,
three . days confin ement,
dnvtng whtle mloxicated;
Clifford Manley, Middleport,
$10 and £Osts, mtoxical10n ;
PaW L. Dawson, 65, Mtddleporl, $10 and costs, mtoxtcalton ; Judtth C. Simon, 24,
Cleveland , $10 and costs,
fatlure to y1eld, M1chael E.
Caruthers, 22, Middleport, $10
' and costs, running a slop stgn .
Forfetltng bonds were Gary
F Keller , 37, Pomeroy, $30
bond , no operator's ltcense ,
Vernon Hundley, Pt. Pleasant,
and Ofville W. Young, Mason,
$30 each, intoxtcalwn, Calvm
K Sp1res, 65, Rutland, $150,
leaving the scene of, ~n accident, and Henry A. Fell, 39,
Cleveland, $25, stop sign
VIOlahon,.

\
)

cheeses and corn bread,
r especttv e l y Thurman
restdenls Mrs Hobart Damels
and John Richards wtll operate
an apple butter s tand and apple
truck, respecti vely
FestJval-goers wtth a Utirst
can VIS! t Roger Wtlllatns, Sr.,
(Conltnued on Page 16)

Intoxication
arrests high
91 75 arrests made by the
Middleport Pollee Department
111 September, almost one-thtrd
were for tn tox: tcatwn, ac·
cordmg to t~e monthly report
to town council by Pollee Chief
J. J. Cremeans
The reported showed 24
tntoxlcatton arrests while
drivmg whtle mtoxtcated was
the second htghest offense with
12 arrests bemg made. Eight
were arrested for failtng to pay
parking meter ttckets and four
for speeding.
There were three arrests
each on charges of pernuttmg
dogs to run lQOse and reckless
operatiOn and two eac h for
dtsorderly manner, attempted
theft, illegal license, no
operator's license and assured
clear dtstance There was one
arrest each on the followmg
offenses . runnmg red light,
spinnmg ttres , fatlure to have
vehtcle under con trol, fatlure
to yteld n ght of way, aS&amp;ault
and battery, shooting BB gun,
permitting unlicensed driver to
operate vehtcle. Charges were
dropped ln four cases
The report showed parking
meter collecttons were $1,083
and the pollee crmser was
drtven 4,588 mtles.

�·.

•r

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__________________________ ,
2 - The D:uh S.ni:•lPJ·. MldlUerurt•Pomero\. 0., l.kt. 10: 1971

.

II

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

1

POPULAR THERAPY

1

Thin blood after co.ronary?·
(

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M 0

,.

lh.·.u lh•:tdt:r -

P,lfJ\\.Il'lln

or Cuum,ILlin 1..,

('u!IY!lHinh

Dear Ur L;~mb - Nf'&lt;tr l~ use-d tu trC'JI pJIIt'nh dullllJ.!.
f. •rnwr r.t'iH ll " ts bt_•ing and all l'r thi 'lr ht'&lt;~rl i.l tl .u k I
do c lorf'd lur lu.•.trl troub\(~ b£"hf'VC' till' llldJOI Il\ 4)1 pr ..H
Thf' \'.tr\l lU ~ ductvr ... C'.Jch haH· li &lt;'lflg hl'ilrl s pe1 J.ill"h do U"t'
(1\ 'N\

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4111 ..;UI'h

h•, J~I ,,

llll'diCIIH' S ;_ll

\Car altt•r !hi'

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hu~ ­

n and I 1t11nk II I" \\ell to H'i t'

h.ls flt'&lt;U l"led IJC\ t ) ll~ ll1ut
rwnod of tllll t" I dl11 Jes~ um ·

band ':, doctor 1s tlunn•n.c blood

llll'I.Jicinl' to prl'V Pnt b lolld

l'P!"ra'd olb()ut lb ti.!'C

,t h t?lr O\\ n method . .\1 v

Wtlh P;JO\\ ,lrlm

~h· hu ~ b.nui

dutllng 10 mos t pati('nlo; So l

mu s t han• h1s blood tc.':'tCd

a pp fll\1'

ever\' W('l'k The rnedt ('t nc ' "
th(' n ,HIJU'h'd to ttun thf' blood
m oro u1 to tlun ll lc.s:-; It
mak t&gt;~ 11 llC('CS~.:ln' for ml;"
hUsband to be around to h,l\ &lt;'

tr('.1lment \'ot cH• rv bmh L.ln
tak&lt;• Coum:niln or anv itt her
nll'di&lt;'IIH'" u;... c d lo r tlu -.. pur
PU"l' tor ex&lt;.u nph.•. the person

h• s blood tested ev('t ~ week

( l'l ...

hr~ s

Ol

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hu sband"

\\lth ~~ h1~tnn of blt.•edJng ul·

An oth er man 1n a nc.1 rtn

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ThP value of us1ng anti -

dolling mNilc mes 1s deh.ll u·

a do ctor\\ ho m. llu.•:-;

fun of P .lm\ar'fm li e S.J~s one
asp1rm l. ih ]Pt e.t r h rnorntng

"

Lht• h•I"JI ,,
rtH~ n
un tc"'"
tlu·n • 1.., ..t reason nuT It• do !'.&lt;'
1 \qmld prdrr tn :-•'l' po~ l lenL"

1

~·'\

111

1•
I1

general for tht• Lrcat-

uWnl nl h('a rl attacks
ThPH'

regul ar!\• The doclur e..t n see how we ll he IS
S l l( ktiJg to tn s pus l h e t~rl al ·

lm port:mec uf ~Lin ic ~; cited

lfQ Cl

fi OWCVC I

one

Oldlflct l \

Peerless Prognosticator

:
"

Egad, frtends, th is ts no
week for fa int -hea rted prognosticators as some ol the na ti on's gr ea test t1'adt t10nal
riv alnes are_ re ne\ved Lead ·
ing the list are suc h hotl y
contested Intrasta te feud s as
Kansas-Kansas Stale, who
w1ll get together for the 71sl

:

lim e al Law re n c e, and

•

Mlchlga n - M1ch 1gan Slate.
who tangl e for the 66t h tun e
at East Lanstng
Ln the other class ics we
ha ve ~ li SSO Utl ente rtatntng
Nebra s k a 1n their 67 lh
renewa l. Ok lahoma and
Texas, who w1ll match bra wn
·for the 68th tnne 111 Dallas,
and P itt s burgh vs We st
Vtrgmta 111 the 66th ot these
t hnllmg meetmgs
In the B1g E1ght encoun ter
at La wr ence, the Hoople
compu ters g ive the home·
ft el d edgt&gt; to the Ka nsas
Jayhawsk ovet the Wildcat s,
34·24
Th e M1chgan
Wol ve nn es have too many
guns for the Spartans a nd we
see the Wo lves wmmn g by a
28 ·7 co un1 Okl aho ma and
Tex as will stdge t he tr usu.nl

•
;"
p

...
~

•

•
•
•

!
:

Ill

:
•
:
:
,.
~

SI:O:C&gt;d asp1 nn tablet In the

in th e
1s not l' nough to
dcc: f l';JSt' the clollln g

rnnrn1n~ and an ot her

evcn 1n g

great!\
lt'IHlcncv uf t he bloo d I t
mt ghl pfevent excel.isJVC &lt;lu t-

•
..

•

iOI

lth the Sooners
•~ donnybrook\\
preval\111 g. 2 3-21 - um -

: kump h1
::
The b1g surpnses of the day
... will be at Columbta , M1ssoun ,
twhere the Missoun Tigers
"' ,., Will upse tlhe Ne braska Corn ~ husk ers , 25·20 , and at
~

Miami, 0. 2.1, Ohio U. 21
M l,chigan 2S, Mid1 . St. 7
:\'lJnnesota :15, Indiana 27

M ISSl)Uri 25, ~ebraska 20
Navy Hi , Sy ral'u sc 8
N C. St 27, Mary land j
No. Ill. :u, , Marshall 10
Northwestern 15, Iowa 1:1

hn til(' Htce Owls tn !! nus! on ,
35 12 .Jnd Alabam's Cnmson
'l' Hk c• ng ul l mg the l"lo11da
G.J toJ s, 26- LO , tn , a Sou th- C~11itorni a 40, Oregon 20
l;'cnn Sl. 47 , Army G
ea sLe rn Confe rence co ntest
Out west, the So u lher n Notre Dam e 3:; , R1 cc 12 (:\1)
Ca lltorn ta club wil l cunt muc Ri chmond 24, So. Miss . 12
1ts dnve fo r the Rose BoVvl Hutgcrs :18, Lafayette 8
- katt ~ kaff - by a na rr ow
17- JO VIC tory niarg111 over San Diego St. 33, Ne" Mex
Wa slungto n State
i'i~l\\ go on w 1th the
fo1 ccast
ArizonaSt. .~2 . Sa nJos eS t

14

( l\ )
A ri7ona Hi , Ne w Mex . 10 (Nl

LSl :!(), Aubur n 10
Ar k.tnsa s 2l. Baylor 12 (N)

Bn ghi.lm Young .14, Iow a St.
2X
Yale 17, Brown 10
Vlrg inia 21, Clemson 6
Utah St. 24, Colorado St. 12

Morga ntown w he re the Ptt t
: Panthe rs wtll claw the ir way Colorado 28, Air Force 20
• pa s t lhe rugg ed Moun · Co rne ll :12. Princeton 6
..., tatn ee r s. 21 - 18. R e member Dartmouth 16 , Penn J 2

you read 11 ~ 1rst 1n the Hoo ple
Forecast - ha r - ru mph!
Elsewhere 111 the p1gskin
spotlight we see the VISitm g
Oh10 Slate Bu~ k eyes sl1d111g
past the \\' isco nstn Ba dgers.

Duke 28, Tulane 26
E. Caro lina 22, VMI 7 INl
Miss St. 27. Florida St. 7
Alabctma 26, Florida 10
J)avulso n :~0 . Furman :W
28 -17 Notte Dame's Irt sh . Gt;orgia 17, Miss. 14
playmg m one of thetr ra re
noctu rnal eng agements, wtll Harvard .~2 . Columbia 1I
douse the lights- heh-heh - Holy Cross 27, Colgate 18

Oct. 9,1973
Pomeroy, 0 .

,1

Fun~s

SJ· 14

( N)

So. Cal 17 , Wash . St. tO
So. Ill J7, Xotvier ~ (N)

UCLA 35 , Stanford 28
Tampa 16. Villanovil 10

( 1\1 )

Tennessee 27, Ga. Te c h . fi

TCU 40. Idaho 20 INI
Texas Tech l7 , Texas A&amp;M 7
Oklahoma 2:1, Texas 21

West. Mich. 21. Toledo 14 INI
Utah 28, Wyoming 22 (N)
Wm &amp; Mary 21, Vanderbilt 7
IN)
S Carolina 31. Wak e Forest6
(N)

Washmgton 16. Oregon St. 12

Pittsburgh 21, West Va. 18
Ohio State 28,· Wisconsin 17
Delaware 28. Connecticut 21
Meigs 26 Wellston 0
Logan 26 Gallipolis 6
Jackson 38 Waverly 20
Athens 7 Ironton 6

We feature

usDA
ci:iO\Cb

MEATS

Van 28 Hannan 0

Wheelersburg 2H Minford 0
Ra celand 20 Ironton St. Joe 0
F'OUR TO IOWA
CHI CAGO (UP!) - The
Chicago Wh1te Sox announced
Tuesday four players mcluding
outfielder flank Allen, brother
of Sox star Dick Allen, have
been sent without options to the
Iowa Oaks of the Amencan
Association. Besides Allen, the
Sox sent pitcher Dave Lemons
and outfielders Joe Keough and
Ken Hottman to their farm
club.

CONNIE VAN MATRE,.a
graduate of Nationwide
Beauty Academy, is employed at Dorothy's Beauty
Salon in Syracuse. She
formerly was associated
with the All Styles Beauty
Salon in Gallipolis.

PLAN SALE
A yard sale Will be held at the
home of N.D. M1ller, Wolf Pen
Road, Oct. II, 12 and 13 starting at 10 a.m. each day. The
sale is being sponsored by
women of the Zwn community
and all proceeds w1ll be contnbuted to the youth group at
the Zion Church of Christ.

I

House Slippers

swimming pool, $286.80 , 'fire house constructiOn , ~o
$915 91, $2 ,873.09; planmng r eceipts, no disbursement,
federal revenue
commission, no re cei pts , $11.99;
$96.62, $335_83; street mam- sharing , no rece ipts, no
tenance, $202 .75, $2,264 .41, disbursements, $4,926 ; general
$6,602 51; sanitary sewer ; bond retirement, $4,104 99, no
$4,158.07, $3,432.44, $28,507.14; disbursements, $26,469.45.
Receipts for month tol&lt;lied
water , $6,903 59, $5,861.82 ,
$26
,59~ . 95
compared
to
$25,612.23 ; water meter deposit
trusts, $375, $255 21, $6,350.38; disbursements of $23,307.34.
sanitary sewer escrow, $895.10,
no disbursements, $63,155.36;

lor Men &amp; Wom e n

heritage
hou$e
Your THOM MeAN

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1111.

STEAK FOR DINNER
The annual Farm Bureau
meeting will be held at 7: 14
p.m . Tuesday at the Chester
Elementary School. A steak
dinner · will be served.
Reservations are to be made
by callmg 992-2181.

TO REMODEL•TO RENOVATE

It's On Sale!

Marriage License
Ernest L. Damewood, 52,
Syracuse, electrician, and lola
A. Bartrum, 52, Langsville,
beautician.

MAHOGANY

Exec Er::l .

ROBERT HOEFLICH .
C!T~ Ed!lor
Pubi •Shed dally e:o;cept
Saturday oy T11e Oh10 Va ll ey
PuOI1Shmg Co mp any 11 1
Court 51
Pom eroy Oh •o
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Second c lass pos)age pa 1d
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Subscr, pt , on
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Del,..,erE-d Oy earner wher e
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By Molor Route where
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N ~ w York 3 To ronto 3, o r

N e w England 3 Quebec 2
(On ly games schedul e d )
Wedne sday's Ga m es
W1nn1 peg 01 Van c o~ver
(O nly game Sc hedu led )

Sl a ·t·

•

Ft r 5t Downs
36
51
F1 r st Downs Ru sh ing
19
33
F1 r st Do'.'lns Passmg
16
15
F1 r st Down s by Pen ally 1
3
Yards Rushmg
411 699
Yards Pass 1ng
39 d 31B
To1al Yards
605 1017
, P e nalt ,es
22
1B
' P en alt y Y'l 1 d ;; qe
169 190

Pu nt s

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success agamst the Mets all
year. He's either gonna pitch a
shutout or give up one run, and
it will be up to us to better
that ."

~.

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LETIUCE
I

head
'

only
.

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29¢.

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~.

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WASHER

weren't good. They wercn!t
'pitcher's pitches,' they were
'hiller's pitches.' "
Rose, not a power httter
despite his two clutch homers
in this senes (the first one
came off M ets ace Tom Seaver
and tied game one at 1-1 ),
claimed he wasn1t swinging for
the fences.
" I've h1t only five homers all
year," Rose said . ul'm not
gomg up there to hit one out. "
"He was swingmg for It,"
sa1d Tony Perez, the husky first
baseman who got the Reds
their f1rst run with his first hit
of the senes, a solo homer m
the seventh inning. "Pete never
Jwnps at a high p1tch hke
that.,,
Anderson, naturally, couldn' t
say enough good things about
Rose, the man many believe is
the front-runner for the National League's Most Valuable
Player aw~rd.
"It's just like all • the great
ones," Anderson sa1d "When
they're booed like that, they
just go out and show 'em. They
don't pop off, they just show
'em That's what he was saying
when he waved his arm m the
air like that circling the
bases."
Rose, of course, was deligh ted to have been the hero for the
Reds,.,especially in hght of his
rude treatment from the fans.
"I think the th111g that reatly
stuck with me was the
vulgarity they pu I on those
'banners, 11 Rose said. But then
he smiled. "I guess maybe they
know me pretty well here."
They sure do, Pete.

/ .

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I

NEW YORK (UP!) -The
Cmcmnah Reds have a'"new life
today thanks to Pete Rose and
much to the dismay of over
50,000 New York Mets' diehards. But Reds' manager
Spark y Anderson actually
thought the agonizing 12th
inning 2-1 Cincmnati win over
New York had come an mnmg
earher,.
,
" I was sure (Dan ) DrieSSen's
shot was out of there m the
11th," a very relieved Anderson
recounted after h1s team
evened the Natwnal League
playoffs at two games apiece.
"There was no way (Rusty )
Staub would get to it."
But Staub did and, with a
spectacular leapmg catch
agamst the wall in deep nghtcenterfield, Drtessen's shot was
Just a long out. It left 1t to
Rose, the man Mets' fan have
come to hate after Monday's
near riot wh1ch started when
Rose and New York shortstop
Bud Harrelson exchanJ!ed blows
at second base in the fifth
mnmg.
"I'd have 'given a week 's pay
to go four-for-four today and
score all four times," satd
Rose, who did better than that
with his 12th 111ning solo homer
that broke up a 1-1 tie and
delivered the win and another
life to the Reds.
Throughout the game, Rose,
who was 3-for-5 for the day,
was booed lustily by the New
York fans and subjec ted to
some very uncomplimentary
banners and placards in the
sl&lt;!nds.
·" When (Mets' catcher Jerry)
Grote dropped that third strike
foul tip on me in the 12th, I
really felt like I had a new
life,'' Rose said.
About that lime Harry
Parker, the third Mets pitcher
of the day, came in with a
shoulder high fast ball that
Rose b'elted over the rightfleld
fence - this tune beyond
Staub's reach.
" I don't know how high it
was, 11 a disappointed Parker
said. " All I know is, my whole
repertoire of pitches to him

;r- ,....

GENERAL~~r ELECTRIC

Sparky_ thought
Dan's shot 'out'

Retreads

700 E. Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO
992 ·2101

•

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MUD &amp; SNOW

Mounted on your car.

..
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The

ECK OUR· PRIC....

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

Jumbo Size

rc&lt;.:eivcr
.and
JlJJfller.
Sophomore T1111 l.uc.as is the
backup quar terback :u1d place
po111l'·""n average of 7. 2~\l',Qile kicker '
1ls offense has scored 124
Southern IS a ve t i!gmg 22 5
pomts, a 24 8 average.
pomts on offen se and has
On d ~fe n se, the Bobcats are sun endered 13.2 polllL'i per
led by semor lackltrs, David ga me on defense
Clay , Z65 pounds Marc
Th e Tl'.irnadocs' off enstvc
Lawhon, 210 pounds, and hne w1ll h11ve Jim Williams and
Bob by Donnell , 175 pound Tun Maurer aL t he ends;
JUOIOr. Linebackers are David Dennis Hawk and .John Salser
W1se, 160 pound junior and at the l&lt;lckles, Randy f orbes
Hudson, a 185 pound semor .
and M1ke Codner at the guards
Cornerbacks are Tabor, 160 and Dave Huddleston at
pound semor and Waller, 170 center
pound jwnor. Defens1ve ends
DefensiVely, Southern will
are J ohn Rwnley, 170 pound have Forbes and W1lhams at
senior and Ron Roush, 165 the en ds, Hawk and Jl on
pound semor. Safeties include Johnson at the tackles, Codner
Chns Preston , 145 pound al middle guard, Dunmhg and
sophomore , David Stroud, 130 Maurer at linebackers, Dave
pound Junior and John Gordon , Clark, Ord, Nease and Buddy
170 pound senior.
Ervin at the deep ba ck
The offensive lme IS positions.
relatively
young
with
Kyger Creek 1s looking for 1ts
sophomores Jeff Blazer and f1r"l league championship
J1m Ward and junior Jeff Icard since 1969. The Bobcats would
holdmg key positwns. Rumley have only wmless Symmes
1s the Bobcats' main pass

NEW YORK (UPI)- Tom but it',s also true for the loser of
Seaver gets his chance today to today s game that " there's no
prove he really is a "money" tomorrow·."
pitcher.
•
A.nd, whtle people may forget
The New York Mets ace that Tom Seaver won 10
righthander, sometimes criti- straight games down the
cized that he can't wm the "b1g stretch and won ~ World Series
ones"-but then, how many big game 111 1969, they remember
ones have the Mets ever had?- he was hlt hard 111 the playoffs,
pitches the fifth and fmal game beaten In the World Senes
of the National League playoffs , opener, . was awful in the
stre\Ch 111 ·~o. and knocked out
against the Cincinnati Reds.
It's the biggest assignment of 111 the Mets NL East cl111cher
his career for Seaver, who on Oct. I th1s year-although he
would like once and for all to did receive credit ior the
convert his critics. He himseU victory,
admits this will be his biggest
game " m \he ._ sef[j;e that it
never came down to one game
before."
•1
Sandy Koufax ]!itChed the
Dodgers to a pennant in the
last game of his last season
before retiring ; Bob Gibson
once won three 1 games m a
single World Series and more
recently came off the disabled
list to win with a gutty
performance on the next-to-last
day of the season and keep t':e
Cardinals alive; and Jim
Palmer has pitched four
pen nan ~clinching games for
Baltimore.
~OR
Those are the kind of
performances
that
earn
"money pitcher" labels, and
today, Seaver has his chance.
"! don't believe that a player
can really prepare himseU
dtfferenUy," he said. " A
consistent professional aihlete
has to just approach 1t like it's
another game and forget the
significance of it-but that's
awful hard to do. "
992-7161
Awfully hard, considering
N SECOND A
what's at stake,. for both Seaver
and the Met&lt; . It's a trite clioohe, •

ANY SIZE PASSENGER
TIRE
MUD&amp; SNOW
SUBURBANITE

.
.
.
•.

dition to hiS game-winning
homer , " It didn't bother .me
because I know there's a half
million people cheering me 500
miles away"
Mets were only eight
outs a!"ay from clinchmg the
pennant and winning the
playoff in four games before
Tony Perez tied the score 1-1
w1th a homer in the seventh. It
was Perez' first hit of the
playoffs and couldn't have
come at a better tune for
Cincmnati.
Stone Nurses Lead
Until Perez' homer, Mets'
lefty George Stone was nursing
a 1-0iead given him in the third
mning when Don Hahn and
Slone walked off Reds' starter
Fred Norman and Felix Millan
singled to score Hahn .
~Iter they tied the score, the
Reds had nwnerous chances to
win the game, leaving eight
runners stranded over the
runth, loth and 11th inn111gs .
Mets' relief ace Tug McGraw,
who relieved Stone with two out.
in the seventh, worked out of
each of the difficult situations,
one of them thanks to Rusty
Staub's sensational catch of
rookie Dan Driessen's liner m
the 11th.
Staub caught the ball over
his head on the run and crashed
into the rightfield wall. He was
momenl&lt;!rily stunned and admitted his right shoulder hurt
him slightly when he batted in
the bottom of the 12th,
X-rays taken after the game
proved negative but Sroub did
suffer contusions in the back of
the shoulder . A Mets' spokes,
man said Staub's playing
status would not be determined

'

5cor,ng
39
56
SCOR ING BY QUARTERS
ls1 2nd J rd 4th T

&lt;;ay, W. Va .
Valley left 1m tlwtr lea~ue
Xvrth (;LJJI!a w1ll attempt to
S&lt;·hedule after Fnday m~hl
snap "' one gt:~me losmg streak
Southern 11"1ust :s.t aU play
Symmes Valle) and South- · at (ireen The Ptrates are 2-3
roveral! and 2-2. in the SBAC.
western m league g&lt;.~mes .
:-lorth (;aUla's offense is led by
In lhe only other league
Sterlmg Logan , 190 pound
~arne F'nday , Coach Bub
tunlor tailback, Ralph Smith,
As hley 's Southwe stern
scntoi" quarterback, and Bruce
Highlanders travel to Eastern .
Hunyon, 2~8 pound fullba ck.
1mproved
Sou thwtslel'll 's
l .og;m scored both t ou ch ~
· squad tasted v1etory for lhe
downs
1n last Fnday's 20-14
first tllll t' tht~ . season la st
!t,Ss to Southern He has scored
Fn&lt;lay agatnst Symmes
H
pmnt&lt;i 111 flve games
Valley.
/'\ 11rth Gallta haS scored 9~
The Highlanders usmg a
potnts . an 18.4 g.mlC average
smglc wmg, were paced by the
whtl~ pcrmJttJng 97 pomts, a
ha rd -run nmg of semor fullba ck
19 4 aH•rag(·
Phil Lcw1s. Eastem is 2~:1 Ill ~ill
A~amst SVAC opponents,
ga mes and 2-2 111 the SV AC
The Eag les defeated Sym- Green lost to Southern and
mes Valley and Hannan T1 ace defeated Symmes Valley.
Hannan Trace is 1dle th1s
to open lhe season but have lost
weekend.
to Southern, Federal-Hockmg
and Kyger Creek smce then.
SVAC S TANDINGS
Coach Spi ke Be1'kh1m er 's TEAM ALL GAMES
W L T P OP
Eagles rely on the runmng Kyger Creek
5 0 0 12il 36
1 1 0 111 66
provided by M1ke Larkins, !DO Sout11ern
Nortt1 Gall 1a
? J 0 92 97
pound junwr fullback , J ohn Eastern
? 3 0 26 Jljl
rn
1 4 0 lf'2 107
Sheets, 190 pound semor and Southweste
Hannan Trace 0 3 1
0 97
SVAC O NLY
Randy Blake, !35 pound junwr.
W L P OP
Donme Eiclungcr , 150 pound TEAM
Kyger Creek
.\ 0 105 ?4
sophomor~(Ji l d not play 111 lhe Southern
3 0 79 14
Eastern
7
2 26 32
Kyger ·creek game
North Gallta
7 7 92 56"
l n oon -l e&lt;:~ g u e games, Coach Sou t hweo;tern
1 2 22 7B
Symmes
V.;tlley
0
3 14 d3
John Blake's North Gall 1a Hanna1:1 Tre~ce
0 3
0 91
P1rates tr&lt;:~vel to Lawrence Total s
12 12 338 338
Fnday 's. Games
County for a dash w1lh the
t&lt; yger Creek .;~t Sou t hern
until r~ght before today 's Mets in the 12th. He retired Green Bobcats and Symmes
Southwes t er n at Eas t ern
N o rth Galll.;! at Gree n
game. ...
pinch hitter Ken Griffey before Valley , 0-4, will travel to f'ml
Symrnes Va ll ey a t Fo rt Gay
Ken Boswell pinch-hit for Rose slugged h1s homer over
McGraw in the 11th and Harry the nghtfield fence on a 2-2
Parker came in to pitch for the pitch.
.if-"'".._

t;t ts are cxpcc.: ted to be at full
s tnm~th . K)ger Creek's J'ro 44
dl'll'IISt.' hil S surrendered 36

NL crown at stake

Seaver gets his
big chance today

and Recappable• Casing

6

.

NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
Cincmnati Reds and New York
Mets led w1th their aces today
to decide the National League
champion
Marauder
Ja ck Billingham of Cin,
cmnati and Tom Seaver of New
t'
York, who combined for a total
IS lCS
of 76 starts and nearly 600
ro11o w 1ng ar e th e stat rs l ics
Innings of work this season and
l or th e ftrsl 4 ga me:- s of Ihe 1973
fimshed with identical 19-10
Me ,gs Marauder
fo otbal l
~caso n
records, go t the pitching
INDIVIDUAL STATS
assignments for the fifth and
RUS HING
C Y Avg TO
decidmg playoff game at Shea
Wh!tla 1Ct1
38 ?0 9 5,5 3
Stadmm .
Ash
29 87 3
Oile r
I 4 44 3 I
" It would have been nice to
CouCh
10 d I d I
wm
today, but since tt's come
Magnolt .?f
11 .10 3 6
Warne r
17
2 0 1
down to one game, I'm glad
Wotfe
I 8 8
.
I'm ptfching 1t," Seaver smd
IOTALS
120 4 11 :; 4 4
OPPON
117 699 3 9 4
after Pete Rose's homer in the
PASSING
12th mnmg gave Cinc111nati a 2A C 'r' dsq I ld Pet
War(l er
63 24 39il 5 1 J8 o
1 v1ctory and squared the bestOp p on
55 21 318 6 3 38 o
of-five
series at Z.2 Tuesday.
PASS RECEIVING
C Yds Avg TO
The Supreme Compliment
Wolfe
7 125 17rj
"Pete Rose, 1s the only
Creme an s
4 9d 23 5 1
Lo wery
athlete I'd pay money to see,"
54 5~0 102~
Whitlatch
was the supreme complunent
Ash
3 31 10 3
Davenpor t
1 10 10
paid to the Reds' leftfielder by
TOTALS
24 394 16 4
I
Cmcmnati Manager Sparky
PUNTING
Anderson followmg Tuesday's
P Yds AVg
Eason
16 597 37 3
game. "For him to hit the
Op p on
18 566 31 4
homer was only proper, "
PUNT RETURNS
R Yds Avg
Anderson added, referring to
Wh1!1at c t1
3 23 7 7
,
• 3
the thunderous boos Rose
Ash
Coa t s
I
2 2
received by many in the crowd
TOTALS
6 31 5 2
of 50,786 at Shea Stadium every
6 41 6 8
OPPO N
KICKOFF RETURNS
time he came to bat and took
R Yd s Avg
his position in the field.
Whlllatc h
48 7217 5
Magn otta
4 7B ' 19 5
The boos were for Rose's
Eason
2 H
9 5
part in Monday's brawl with
Coat5
2
8
B
TOTALS
11 192 17 s
Mets
shortstop Bud Harrelson
OPPON
........,
7 I 38 19 7
and Anderson claimed he had
SC ORIN .G
TO PAT Pt s
never seen Rose so keyeil up as
Whllla l ch
3
18
he was for the fourth game.
Oll er
I
6
Low er y
I
6
"Nobody likes to be booed,"
Cre mean s
I
6
sa1d Rose, who also got two
George
3
3
TOTALS
3 39
singles and an intentiOnal walk
TEAM STATS
111 six trips to the plate in adM . OP

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pkg. --

-

•

9:00 to 7:00'·

An overflow crowd lS ex. gruund attat·k fcC~tunn g
pected Frtday mght m Racine puwe1
ttJnntug .
Soulhfor tht• Southern Vallev ern's
M1Lc h Nease, a
Alhlehc
Conference
l'hitH;JUnwr
tatlback,
has rushMcdw es t Onn s 1on
piortShlp game between th~ ed for 310 yards in five
w. I. pet g .b
Mdwauk.ee
0 0 000
lmbeaten
Kyge r Creek~ Bob{'e:tts ~~~m e~ wlult• S&lt;.·m·mg f,S points.
KC Omnh ."'
0 0 000
Chccagf)
0
1 000
and the Southern Tornadoe~.
Ky ger Cleek 's runn1ng game
'.,'
De lr o•f
0
1 000
Coach
Bill
Jewell's
dcfen1s
led by senior fullba ck
Pacct1C OIVtSton
dmg champs movu. mto the Lawrence Tabor Tabor has
w . 1 pet g b .
Los Ange les
1 0 1.000 ga
me with a 4-1 overall slatL\ sc:oretl56 points and has rushed
Phoenl~
0 0 .000
'1
&lt;tnd 3-0 SVAC record . Kyger fur 718 yards 111 five outmgs
Portl rmcl
0 0 000
' 1
Se attle
0 0 000
Creek
IS 5-0 and 4-0111 league
Mark Waller, a junior
'• ~'
GQiden Sta t e
0
0 000
compelll1on
_,iflilback, and Clay Hudson,
Tu es da:,. 's Res:ul1 s
Bu ff alo 107 H ous ton 105, o t
La st year , both teams bat- senior quarterback, arc the
New York 101 Oetro 1t 100
/\ lla n ta 128 Cap1 te l 114
tied to a scoreless he at Kyger Bobcats' other maJor runners.
G ldn Sf Bt C le, ppd . wet fl oor
Creek The Bobcats attempted Waller has scored four touchLos Angeles 117 Chcc ag o 97
three field ,goals but all were downs wh1le Hudson has
!Only !;lames schedul e d I
Wedne s day 's Game s
wide.
rushed for two touchdowns,
Hou st on al Phtlad el ph !a
Southern has posted victories two extra pomts and has
Golden StOl t e at Oe lr o1t
Ch1cagovs K C Omah a
over Hannan Trace 52-0 · thrown three scoring passes.
at Kansas C1 ty
The Tornadoes ' strong
Eastern, 7-0 and North 'cama',
Sea ttl e a t P hoen1x
!Only games scheduled !
20-14
running back, sophomore Greg
Kyger
Creek
defeated
North
Dunning, was injured in the
WHA Stand 1ngs
Galla, 22-16; Eastern , 25.0; Ea•tern game. Dunmng sat oul
By Untt ed Pres s Int er national
Ea st
Hannan Trace 26-0 and South- the Wahama game , but was
w
1. 1 pt s gl ga
western,
32-2. Southern's only rein jured last Friday al North
Ouf!bec
1 1 0
2 6
5
N ew YorK
0 0
2
2 5
5 loss was 44-Q to Wahama The
Ca lha. Semor quarterba ck
Toron to
0
0
2
2
7
7
Bobcats
posted
a
19·12
v1ctory
Vern Ord also returned to the
N ewEnglnd 1
I
0
2
~
6
Cleveland
0
0
1
1
2
2 over the White Falcons.
Tor·nado hneup Jasl week.
Ch 1cago
0 0
1 1 4
4
Both
teams
use
an
awesome
Coach Jim Sprague's BobW es t

Tea Bags..................... ·
.

Mrs. .Filbert's

Monday Thru Friday

0
0

GOODYEAR

69¢
.F abric Softener...•••. ~nt
:
4
9¢·
Bowl Margar1ne .•••..•..

Right reserved to ltmtl quantities

.I

NEW YORK (UP! ) -Johnny
Bench disagrees with his fnend
Pete R&lt;se.
Rose sorl o'f plays down the
1dea that he's a better player
when he gets mad, but Bench
feels just the opposite
'Hc 's stron ger , much
stronger and that much more
determined,'' says the Cmcmnatl Reds' all-star catcher.
" And that's hanllo be because
Pete 1s probably as determmed
as any man 111 the game today.
He concentrates so m uch.
"When he gets mad he increases hi s concentratiOn
about tune arid a half "
Bench alsp smd that the Reds
couldn't have a better pitcher·
go111g for them m loday's
National League championship
finale then Jack B1llmgham.
"He's def1mteiy the guy I'd
want out there m a big ga me ,"
said Bench. "Billingham only
gave up one run in the hrst
game, and he's had great

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN.

mon lh s 59 50, three m'onths,

S6

with Pete

Smoothie

Ka~n's

'

Big Ten t'oolball Roundup
CI-IICAGO (UP! ) - Fourthranked Mi chigan was slill
waitmg to finn up 1ts starting
lineup for Saturday's batlle
with Michigan State.
Wolvennc Coach Bo Stlicrnbechler sa1d his t.cam 's lflJUry
situatiOn has not changed
" We're. still wait mg on
several people but like 1 sa1d,
we're not crying. We'll be
ready to play," Schembechler
said .
'
Mich1gan State, w1th " t-3
record, 1s by far the underdog
again st the ~nb eate n Wol verines , but Schembechler sa1d
his team was "practtc mg with
enthusiasm' ' for what he
termed "one of the greatest
rivalnes m..cullege football.''
~ M1ch1gan Stale Coach Denny
Stolz was mum about lnJUries
and personnel changes, hopmg
to keep the Wolvennes guessing .
"There a1e many advantages of know mg changes
in the opponents' lineup,·· Stolz
5-'lid.
Wisconsm Coach Jotm Jardine put h1s Badgers thro ugh a
two-holl r workout tn preparation for Saturday's clash w1lh
Ohio State, the No. 1 team 111
the natwn Jardme sa1d defen.
sive end Ed Bosold and t ight _
end JHck Novak should be
ready to play Both had been
injured
Purdue was expected to be
lls heaithiCsl smce openmg t11e
season when tho Boilermakers
meet lllmo1s Sanu·day four
players, all of whom have been
bothered with mjunes, are
expected to be m actwn agatn st
the lli1111
Indiana gOl back startmg
defenstve end Mark D1Salvo
Tuesda y as the Hoos1ers
r ~v t ewed fu ndamental s tn
preparation for Mmnesota Dt
Salvo had been out with a

disagrees

·--~-·----------------------

1 0 1 000

0 000
',
Phda('ll•lplll&lt;l
0 000
I
Centritl 01VISIQII
w
I pJ:t g . b .
Atlanta
1
0 I 000
Cleveland
0
0 000
Capctal
0
1 000 • I
Hou ston
0 1 000
~ ·£:&gt;ste rn Confere nce

Bench

-4x8
SHEET

pet
q b
1 000

0

!

Bo~ton

PANELING

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHilL ,

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
· "The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"

CLOSED SUNDAYS .

w. 1
N ew 'r'Q rk
Bu ff alo

pmched nrrve .

The Daily Sentinel

SV AC: title at stak~ Friday

E.1 s t er n Con.lerence
Atlitnhc 01v1 S10n

PRICES ARE RIGHT!

PORK STEAK

Satu1day 9 to 9 .

Sto re

Middl epor1, 0

(ALL WOOD)

Shoulder Roast

'

SET HOMECOMING
Homecoming will be Sur1day
at the Flatw oods Uni
MethodlSt Church With a
basket dmner at noonn.~i~i::~:~
mus1c Will be by the J,
and others .. The a fternoor1 11
ser·vice w11l bcgm1at 1 30.
public is Jl'lvited.

SHOW TIMES SET
The Kyger Creek and South:
ern H1gh Schools band shows
will be present"&lt;~ at pre-game
time, begmning at 7:30 p.m.
Fnday, rather than at halftime . Homecoming is bemg
observed and coronation of the
queen Will take place a t
halftime.

PORK

•. ':i -------

.

'

NBA Stand'"Q S
Sy Un 1tt:'d Pees) l11tm noitllonal

team
•
IS ready

total $212,763 in Middleport

Major picks Missouri,, Pitt in upsets; favors
Oklahoma over Texas Longhorns
By MA JOR AMOS B HOOPLE

r

doc·tor
would like to see the commissioners put their full support and
It soun ds to m e l1ke your money behind 1t.
hu sband h;J s a co nscJenlJou s
Mrs. Judith Brostrom, Meigs Local speech and hearing
ca pabl e doc tor If he want s to
therapist,
stressed the importance of good hearing and speech to
get th e lu ll advantage of what
h1 s do c tor can do for htm he secure a full and rewarding future and life for a young child and
should st1ck wtth the program to help hun grow into a sell-supporting adult.
needles a nd all
Let the commissioners know how you feel on this cl111ic
before Thursday of this week . That is the day they meet with
POD personnel and decide the future of this very important
Send you r que1t•ons to Dr Lamb,
clime.
Ul car(' o l fh1 1 ntHnpaper, P 0 Box
Fot· the Pomeroy Elementary PTA,
155 1, RacUo C. ry Sto hon, New York ,
Mrs. Earl Thoma, President
NY 100/9 Foro c:opy of Dr Lomb' s
by

All Middleport V1llage funds
as of Sept . 30 totaled
$212,762.64, accordmg to the
monthl y report of ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate.
Makmg up about a fourth of
rt. Gay 28 Symmes Valley 6 the funds on hand is the
Kyger Creek 8 Southern 0
samtary sewer escrow fund
Eastern 7 Southl'estern 6
with a balance of $63,155.36.
Houston 4 1, Va Tech. S ( N l North Gallia 20 Green 8
Receipts and expenditures,
Purdue :u . Illinois 21
Belpre 28 Federal Hocking 12 respectively, for the-month and
Kansa s :14 , K;111 sas St. 24
Nelsonville-York 12 Warren 8 the balance of each fund ·as of
Bow linKGreen 19 , Kent St.
Alexander 12 Trimble 0
Se pt 30 mciude general,
12
Winfield 7 Wahama 6
$9,224.17, $9,815.66, $46,015.01 ;
Nitro 14 Pt. Pleasant 12
N. Carolina 15, Ke ntu c k y 14
cemetery, $446.48 , $506 .94,
Fairland 28 Rock Hill 12
(N)
$1,305.48; fire equipment, no
Coal Grove 44 Oak Hill 8
Louisvill{' 21. N. Tex . St. 6
tece 1pts, · $158.26, $90 17:
Soulh
Point
12
Chesapeake
8
Memphi s S t ."36, Tulsa 21 (Nl

'

1

1

, t,l{"k program . und th1 :s m ay
e n( Q UI·~g(' yo ur jwsband to do Dear Sir :
Asp1r1n doe s h, tvf' Some
so
as th e Pe rson on a
This is an open letter to the Meigs County Commissioners
an l1·clot11 ng t'f f t•c l ~ If vou d1et- 1sJUSt
more lik elv to sli ck to and the people of Meigs County concerning P .O.D. Cl111ic.
L&lt;.tkl' I:H g(' d oses 1t can 1 ~use
tlu· prog uHn 1f seCn freq uentl v
hll'f'd1ng !rom th t' d1ges t 1v('
The Pomerpy Elementary PTA fully supports lhis clime and

blc Ynu e.m fmcl wPII fc (o,grliZCd ,l u lhmtl il'S who cu e l or llng tc ncl c n t i CS 111 so me peo and iln otln~ r eac h evl•ntn~ t" II .1nd uti)(' IS 't't ho be iH.' V(' I I ple For anv m cdJtJn&lt;' tu be
a\1-th d l IS ITCCCSS&lt;I J\' li e ~ .l\S
h.1s no va iUt' or tha t the p r n h effective m p1 cvcntmg blood
1f a per:~on uses the asp•nn IH ~ h·rn s II ta ust! o;;. o utw etgh ,11n
c lot lin ~ probl ems 11 mu st sJg·
blood docs not hav(' to he test - adv~nt&lt;Jgc :-:. th a t m, l \ " ht• ob- m fJ(';J nll y prolong lh e c:lottmg
ed Oil ('(' .1 week
~
I .11 n('d
tllnc mcchamsms ;Jnd to te ll
M\' hu sba nd would \Jkc very
If
Jt IS or IS not effectJve the
Tht s IS .111 Op11110 il but I do
mu c h t o &lt;' h,,n gc to a sp1 rin 1f be lieve thi.lt .111l1 clott1n g mcd - blood has to be tested I would
booklet on c:holcsterof, send 50 cents
that does th(' work il l' would JCtnes s hould be used dunng guess that your fnend 's doc tor
t o rhe 1omc address and oslc l or
like vour Op1n1on about th e the i.l&lt; ute heart a ttack and IS not v er y Impressed wtth the
'"C holest erol" booklet
treatment
staded as soon as poo;;.o;;. lbl c 111 value ol ant i·c lo tling med1 -

ROUGH ROAD AHEAD

I

I
I

so mC' uthcr ad

JJo says

PT. I'LEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
Pl. Pleasant, W. Va.
Saturday, Oet. 6, 1,73
HOGS- 17~ to 2610 to 41 .
Heavies :16 to )9, Lights 37 to
fat Sows :18 25 to 39.7~,
32 to :13, Pigs 15 to 30, '""''~
Shoats 44 to 51
CATTLE - Steers 43 to
fle1fers 3'1 to 42, r at Cows 33
30, Canners 30 to 33, Bulls 40
42.50, Stock Cows and
450 lo 617 .50, Stock Steers 49
54, Stock He1fers 4~ to 53,
Steer Calves 54 to 62.85, "''"'~'
Heifer Calves 47 to 52.50
VEAL CALVES 65 25, Seconds 62, Medium 60
61 , Common &amp; Heavies 59 to
Culls 55 to 59.

II

I
to yo ur hu !:i band I

~Ht'

v;.~ nt.tg e~
b£' 1n~ :-=.t•cn

II ... .8~-'-"~
~.. c,a,£ :

'

:l - ·1ht' D:11l) &amp;ntind, Mldtlll'I&gt;OI'!-1 "\Jmt•ro~. o ., ()('t. 10, 191.~

~

Letten of oplnloa are wei&lt;Omed. They should be leu '
lhan 300 word• loag (or be subject to reduction by lhe
editor) and must be sl~ed wltlt lhe olgnee'o address.
Names may be withheld upoa pubUcolloo. However, on
request, names wUJ be dlsclooed. Letlfn should be In good
taote, addresslag Issues, aot penonalltles.

•

.

STARLIGHT CEILING FIXTURES
Ribbed white glass.

wtth prismatic crystal bottom, chrome ,
trim. 1~ .. dlam.,
e· doop. u- two

75W bulbs (not Incl.).

Whtte bent glass
accented w1th stern
and leaf pattern.

12 Inches SQuare.
sv. • deep. Uses two

sow bulbs (not met).

I~Z.~.35
t

'.

\

~

�·.

•r

•

__________________________ ,
2 - The D:uh S.ni:•lPJ·. MldlUerurt•Pomero\. 0., l.kt. 10: 1971

.

II

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

1

POPULAR THERAPY

1

Thin blood after co.ronary?·
(

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M 0

,.

lh.·.u lh•:tdt:r -

P,lfJ\\.Il'lln

or Cuum,ILlin 1..,

('u!IY!lHinh

Dear Ur L;~mb - Nf'&lt;tr l~ use-d tu trC'JI pJIIt'nh dullllJ.!.
f. •rnwr r.t'iH ll " ts bt_•ing and all l'r thi 'lr ht'&lt;~rl i.l tl .u k I
do c lorf'd lur lu.•.trl troub\(~ b£"hf'VC' till' llldJOI Il\ 4)1 pr ..H
Thf' \'.tr\l lU ~ ductvr ... C'.Jch haH· li &lt;'lflg hl'ilrl s pe1 J.ill"h do U"t'
(1\ 'N\

'"

._,t.l\

4111 ..;UI'h

h•, J~I ,,

llll'diCIIH' S ;_ll

\Car altt•r !hi'

~llat k

hu~ ­

n and I 1t11nk II I" \\ell to H'i t'

h.ls flt'&lt;U l"led IJC\ t ) ll~ ll1ut
rwnod of tllll t" I dl11 Jes~ um ·

band ':, doctor 1s tlunn•n.c blood

llll'I.Jicinl' to prl'V Pnt b lolld

l'P!"ra'd olb()ut lb ti.!'C

,t h t?lr O\\ n method . .\1 v

Wtlh P;JO\\ ,lrlm

~h· hu ~ b.nui

dutllng 10 mos t pati('nlo; So l

mu s t han• h1s blood tc.':'tCd

a pp fll\1'

ever\' W('l'k The rnedt ('t nc ' "
th(' n ,HIJU'h'd to ttun thf' blood
m oro u1 to tlun ll lc.s:-; It
mak t&gt;~ 11 llC('CS~.:ln' for ml;"
hUsband to be around to h,l\ &lt;'

tr('.1lment \'ot cH• rv bmh L.ln
tak&lt;• Coum:niln or anv itt her
nll'di&lt;'IIH'" u;... c d lo r tlu -.. pur
PU"l' tor ex&lt;.u nph.•. the person

h• s blood tested ev('t ~ week

( l'l ...

hr~ s

Ol

\'O Ur

hu sband"

\\lth ~~ h1~tnn of blt.•edJng ul·

An oth er man 1n a nc.1 rtn

c tt\'

ThP value of us1ng anti -

dolling mNilc mes 1s deh.ll u·

a do ctor\\ ho m. llu.•:-;

fun of P .lm\ar'fm li e S.J~s one
asp1rm l. ih ]Pt e.t r h rnorntng

"

Lht• h•I"JI ,,
rtH~ n
un tc"'"
tlu·n • 1.., ..t reason nuT It• do !'.&lt;'
1 \qmld prdrr tn :-•'l' po~ l lenL"

1

~·'\

111

1•
I1

general for tht• Lrcat-

uWnl nl h('a rl attacks
ThPH'

regul ar!\• The doclur e..t n see how we ll he IS
S l l( ktiJg to tn s pus l h e t~rl al ·

lm port:mec uf ~Lin ic ~; cited

lfQ Cl

fi OWCVC I

one

Oldlflct l \

Peerless Prognosticator

:
"

Egad, frtends, th is ts no
week for fa int -hea rted prognosticators as some ol the na ti on's gr ea test t1'adt t10nal
riv alnes are_ re ne\ved Lead ·
ing the list are suc h hotl y
contested Intrasta te feud s as
Kansas-Kansas Stale, who
w1ll get together for the 71sl

:

lim e al Law re n c e, and

•

Mlchlga n - M1ch 1gan Slate.
who tangl e for the 66t h tun e
at East Lanstng
Ln the other class ics we
ha ve ~ li SSO Utl ente rtatntng
Nebra s k a 1n their 67 lh
renewa l. Ok lahoma and
Texas, who w1ll match bra wn
·for the 68th tnne 111 Dallas,
and P itt s burgh vs We st
Vtrgmta 111 the 66th ot these
t hnllmg meetmgs
In the B1g E1ght encoun ter
at La wr ence, the Hoople
compu ters g ive the home·
ft el d edgt&gt; to the Ka nsas
Jayhawsk ovet the Wildcat s,
34·24
Th e M1chgan
Wol ve nn es have too many
guns for the Spartans a nd we
see the Wo lves wmmn g by a
28 ·7 co un1 Okl aho ma and
Tex as will stdge t he tr usu.nl

•
;"
p

...
~

•

•
•
•

!
:

Ill

:
•
:
:
,.
~

SI:O:C&gt;d asp1 nn tablet In the

in th e
1s not l' nough to
dcc: f l';JSt' the clollln g

rnnrn1n~ and an ot her

evcn 1n g

great!\
lt'IHlcncv uf t he bloo d I t
mt ghl pfevent excel.isJVC &lt;lu t-

•
..

•

iOI

lth the Sooners
•~ donnybrook\\
preval\111 g. 2 3-21 - um -

: kump h1
::
The b1g surpnses of the day
... will be at Columbta , M1ssoun ,
twhere the Missoun Tigers
"' ,., Will upse tlhe Ne braska Corn ~ husk ers , 25·20 , and at
~

Miami, 0. 2.1, Ohio U. 21
M l,chigan 2S, Mid1 . St. 7
:\'lJnnesota :15, Indiana 27

M ISSl)Uri 25, ~ebraska 20
Navy Hi , Sy ral'u sc 8
N C. St 27, Mary land j
No. Ill. :u, , Marshall 10
Northwestern 15, Iowa 1:1

hn til(' Htce Owls tn !! nus! on ,
35 12 .Jnd Alabam's Cnmson
'l' Hk c• ng ul l mg the l"lo11da
G.J toJ s, 26- LO , tn , a Sou th- C~11itorni a 40, Oregon 20
l;'cnn Sl. 47 , Army G
ea sLe rn Confe rence co ntest
Out west, the So u lher n Notre Dam e 3:; , R1 cc 12 (:\1)
Ca lltorn ta club wil l cunt muc Ri chmond 24, So. Miss . 12
1ts dnve fo r the Rose BoVvl Hutgcrs :18, Lafayette 8
- katt ~ kaff - by a na rr ow
17- JO VIC tory niarg111 over San Diego St. 33, Ne" Mex
Wa slungto n State
i'i~l\\ go on w 1th the
fo1 ccast
ArizonaSt. .~2 . Sa nJos eS t

14

( l\ )
A ri7ona Hi , Ne w Mex . 10 (Nl

LSl :!(), Aubur n 10
Ar k.tnsa s 2l. Baylor 12 (N)

Bn ghi.lm Young .14, Iow a St.
2X
Yale 17, Brown 10
Vlrg inia 21, Clemson 6
Utah St. 24, Colorado St. 12

Morga ntown w he re the Ptt t
: Panthe rs wtll claw the ir way Colorado 28, Air Force 20
• pa s t lhe rugg ed Moun · Co rne ll :12. Princeton 6
..., tatn ee r s. 21 - 18. R e member Dartmouth 16 , Penn J 2

you read 11 ~ 1rst 1n the Hoo ple
Forecast - ha r - ru mph!
Elsewhere 111 the p1gskin
spotlight we see the VISitm g
Oh10 Slate Bu~ k eyes sl1d111g
past the \\' isco nstn Ba dgers.

Duke 28, Tulane 26
E. Caro lina 22, VMI 7 INl
Miss St. 27. Florida St. 7
Alabctma 26, Florida 10
J)avulso n :~0 . Furman :W
28 -17 Notte Dame's Irt sh . Gt;orgia 17, Miss. 14
playmg m one of thetr ra re
noctu rnal eng agements, wtll Harvard .~2 . Columbia 1I
douse the lights- heh-heh - Holy Cross 27, Colgate 18

Oct. 9,1973
Pomeroy, 0 .

,1

Fun~s

SJ· 14

( N)

So. Cal 17 , Wash . St. tO
So. Ill J7, Xotvier ~ (N)

UCLA 35 , Stanford 28
Tampa 16. Villanovil 10

( 1\1 )

Tennessee 27, Ga. Te c h . fi

TCU 40. Idaho 20 INI
Texas Tech l7 , Texas A&amp;M 7
Oklahoma 2:1, Texas 21

West. Mich. 21. Toledo 14 INI
Utah 28, Wyoming 22 (N)
Wm &amp; Mary 21, Vanderbilt 7
IN)
S Carolina 31. Wak e Forest6
(N)

Washmgton 16. Oregon St. 12

Pittsburgh 21, West Va. 18
Ohio State 28,· Wisconsin 17
Delaware 28. Connecticut 21
Meigs 26 Wellston 0
Logan 26 Gallipolis 6
Jackson 38 Waverly 20
Athens 7 Ironton 6

We feature

usDA
ci:iO\Cb

MEATS

Van 28 Hannan 0

Wheelersburg 2H Minford 0
Ra celand 20 Ironton St. Joe 0
F'OUR TO IOWA
CHI CAGO (UP!) - The
Chicago Wh1te Sox announced
Tuesday four players mcluding
outfielder flank Allen, brother
of Sox star Dick Allen, have
been sent without options to the
Iowa Oaks of the Amencan
Association. Besides Allen, the
Sox sent pitcher Dave Lemons
and outfielders Joe Keough and
Ken Hottman to their farm
club.

CONNIE VAN MATRE,.a
graduate of Nationwide
Beauty Academy, is employed at Dorothy's Beauty
Salon in Syracuse. She
formerly was associated
with the All Styles Beauty
Salon in Gallipolis.

PLAN SALE
A yard sale Will be held at the
home of N.D. M1ller, Wolf Pen
Road, Oct. II, 12 and 13 starting at 10 a.m. each day. The
sale is being sponsored by
women of the Zwn community
and all proceeds w1ll be contnbuted to the youth group at
the Zion Church of Christ.

I

House Slippers

swimming pool, $286.80 , 'fire house constructiOn , ~o
$915 91, $2 ,873.09; planmng r eceipts, no disbursement,
federal revenue
commission, no re cei pts , $11.99;
$96.62, $335_83; street mam- sharing , no rece ipts, no
tenance, $202 .75, $2,264 .41, disbursements, $4,926 ; general
$6,602 51; sanitary sewer ; bond retirement, $4,104 99, no
$4,158.07, $3,432.44, $28,507.14; disbursements, $26,469.45.
Receipts for month tol&lt;lied
water , $6,903 59, $5,861.82 ,
$26
,59~ . 95
compared
to
$25,612.23 ; water meter deposit
trusts, $375, $255 21, $6,350.38; disbursements of $23,307.34.
sanitary sewer escrow, $895.10,
no disbursements, $63,155.36;

lor Men &amp; Wom e n

heritage
hou$e
Your THOM MeAN

USE OUR PRE-FINISHED

1111.

STEAK FOR DINNER
The annual Farm Bureau
meeting will be held at 7: 14
p.m . Tuesday at the Chester
Elementary School. A steak
dinner · will be served.
Reservations are to be made
by callmg 992-2181.

TO REMODEL•TO RENOVATE

It's On Sale!

Marriage License
Ernest L. Damewood, 52,
Syracuse, electrician, and lola
A. Bartrum, 52, Langsville,
beautician.

MAHOGANY

Exec Er::l .

ROBERT HOEFLICH .
C!T~ Ed!lor
Pubi •Shed dally e:o;cept
Saturday oy T11e Oh10 Va ll ey
PuOI1Shmg Co mp any 11 1
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Subscr, pt , on
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N ~ w York 3 To ronto 3, o r

N e w England 3 Quebec 2
(On ly games schedul e d )
Wedne sday's Ga m es
W1nn1 peg 01 Van c o~ver
(O nly game Sc hedu led )

Sl a ·t·

•

Ft r 5t Downs
36
51
F1 r st Downs Ru sh ing
19
33
F1 r st Do'.'lns Passmg
16
15
F1 r st Down s by Pen ally 1
3
Yards Rushmg
411 699
Yards Pass 1ng
39 d 31B
To1al Yards
605 1017
, P e nalt ,es
22
1B
' P en alt y Y'l 1 d ;; qe
169 190

Pu nt s

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success agamst the Mets all
year. He's either gonna pitch a
shutout or give up one run, and
it will be up to us to better
that ."

~.

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LETIUCE
I

head
'

only
.

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.

29¢.

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~.

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WASHER

weren't good. They wercn!t
'pitcher's pitches,' they were
'hiller's pitches.' "
Rose, not a power httter
despite his two clutch homers
in this senes (the first one
came off M ets ace Tom Seaver
and tied game one at 1-1 ),
claimed he wasn1t swinging for
the fences.
" I've h1t only five homers all
year," Rose said . ul'm not
gomg up there to hit one out. "
"He was swingmg for It,"
sa1d Tony Perez, the husky first
baseman who got the Reds
their f1rst run with his first hit
of the senes, a solo homer m
the seventh inning. "Pete never
Jwnps at a high p1tch hke
that.,,
Anderson, naturally, couldn' t
say enough good things about
Rose, the man many believe is
the front-runner for the National League's Most Valuable
Player aw~rd.
"It's just like all • the great
ones," Anderson sa1d "When
they're booed like that, they
just go out and show 'em. They
don't pop off, they just show
'em That's what he was saying
when he waved his arm m the
air like that circling the
bases."
Rose, of course, was deligh ted to have been the hero for the
Reds,.,especially in hght of his
rude treatment from the fans.
"I think the th111g that reatly
stuck with me was the
vulgarity they pu I on those
'banners, 11 Rose said. But then
he smiled. "I guess maybe they
know me pretty well here."
They sure do, Pete.

/ .

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Dining

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I

NEW YORK (UP!) -The
Cmcmnah Reds have a'"new life
today thanks to Pete Rose and
much to the dismay of over
50,000 New York Mets' diehards. But Reds' manager
Spark y Anderson actually
thought the agonizing 12th
inning 2-1 Cincmnati win over
New York had come an mnmg
earher,.
,
" I was sure (Dan ) DrieSSen's
shot was out of there m the
11th," a very relieved Anderson
recounted after h1s team
evened the Natwnal League
playoffs at two games apiece.
"There was no way (Rusty )
Staub would get to it."
But Staub did and, with a
spectacular leapmg catch
agamst the wall in deep nghtcenterfield, Drtessen's shot was
Just a long out. It left 1t to
Rose, the man Mets' fan have
come to hate after Monday's
near riot wh1ch started when
Rose and New York shortstop
Bud Harrelson exchanJ!ed blows
at second base in the fifth
mnmg.
"I'd have 'given a week 's pay
to go four-for-four today and
score all four times," satd
Rose, who did better than that
with his 12th 111ning solo homer
that broke up a 1-1 tie and
delivered the win and another
life to the Reds.
Throughout the game, Rose,
who was 3-for-5 for the day,
was booed lustily by the New
York fans and subjec ted to
some very uncomplimentary
banners and placards in the
sl&lt;!nds.
·" When (Mets' catcher Jerry)
Grote dropped that third strike
foul tip on me in the 12th, I
really felt like I had a new
life,'' Rose said.
About that lime Harry
Parker, the third Mets pitcher
of the day, came in with a
shoulder high fast ball that
Rose b'elted over the rightfleld
fence - this tune beyond
Staub's reach.
" I don't know how high it
was, 11 a disappointed Parker
said. " All I know is, my whole
repertoire of pitches to him

;r- ,....

GENERAL~~r ELECTRIC

Sparky_ thought
Dan's shot 'out'

Retreads

700 E. Main St.
POMEROY, OHIO
992 ·2101

•

'

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MUD &amp; SNOW

Mounted on your car.

..
-'

The

ECK OUR· PRIC....

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

Jumbo Size

rc&lt;.:eivcr
.and
JlJJfller.
Sophomore T1111 l.uc.as is the
backup quar terback :u1d place
po111l'·""n average of 7. 2~\l',Qile kicker '
1ls offense has scored 124
Southern IS a ve t i!gmg 22 5
pomts, a 24 8 average.
pomts on offen se and has
On d ~fe n se, the Bobcats are sun endered 13.2 polllL'i per
led by semor lackltrs, David ga me on defense
Clay , Z65 pounds Marc
Th e Tl'.irnadocs' off enstvc
Lawhon, 210 pounds, and hne w1ll h11ve Jim Williams and
Bob by Donnell , 175 pound Tun Maurer aL t he ends;
JUOIOr. Linebackers are David Dennis Hawk and .John Salser
W1se, 160 pound junior and at the l&lt;lckles, Randy f orbes
Hudson, a 185 pound semor .
and M1ke Codner at the guards
Cornerbacks are Tabor, 160 and Dave Huddleston at
pound semor and Waller, 170 center
pound jwnor. Defens1ve ends
DefensiVely, Southern will
are J ohn Rwnley, 170 pound have Forbes and W1lhams at
senior and Ron Roush, 165 the en ds, Hawk and Jl on
pound semor. Safeties include Johnson at the tackles, Codner
Chns Preston , 145 pound al middle guard, Dunmhg and
sophomore , David Stroud, 130 Maurer at linebackers, Dave
pound Junior and John Gordon , Clark, Ord, Nease and Buddy
170 pound senior.
Ervin at the deep ba ck
The offensive lme IS positions.
relatively
young
with
Kyger Creek 1s looking for 1ts
sophomores Jeff Blazer and f1r"l league championship
J1m Ward and junior Jeff Icard since 1969. The Bobcats would
holdmg key positwns. Rumley have only wmless Symmes
1s the Bobcats' main pass

NEW YORK (UPI)- Tom but it',s also true for the loser of
Seaver gets his chance today to today s game that " there's no
prove he really is a "money" tomorrow·."
pitcher.
•
A.nd, whtle people may forget
The New York Mets ace that Tom Seaver won 10
righthander, sometimes criti- straight games down the
cized that he can't wm the "b1g stretch and won ~ World Series
ones"-but then, how many big game 111 1969, they remember
ones have the Mets ever had?- he was hlt hard 111 the playoffs,
pitches the fifth and fmal game beaten In the World Senes
of the National League playoffs , opener, . was awful in the
stre\Ch 111 ·~o. and knocked out
against the Cincinnati Reds.
It's the biggest assignment of 111 the Mets NL East cl111cher
his career for Seaver, who on Oct. I th1s year-although he
would like once and for all to did receive credit ior the
convert his critics. He himseU victory,
admits this will be his biggest
game " m \he ._ sef[j;e that it
never came down to one game
before."
•1
Sandy Koufax ]!itChed the
Dodgers to a pennant in the
last game of his last season
before retiring ; Bob Gibson
once won three 1 games m a
single World Series and more
recently came off the disabled
list to win with a gutty
performance on the next-to-last
day of the season and keep t':e
Cardinals alive; and Jim
Palmer has pitched four
pen nan ~clinching games for
Baltimore.
~OR
Those are the kind of
performances
that
earn
"money pitcher" labels, and
today, Seaver has his chance.
"! don't believe that a player
can really prepare himseU
dtfferenUy," he said. " A
consistent professional aihlete
has to just approach 1t like it's
another game and forget the
significance of it-but that's
awful hard to do. "
992-7161
Awfully hard, considering
N SECOND A
what's at stake,. for both Seaver
and the Met&lt; . It's a trite clioohe, •

ANY SIZE PASSENGER
TIRE
MUD&amp; SNOW
SUBURBANITE

.
.
.
•.

dition to hiS game-winning
homer , " It didn't bother .me
because I know there's a half
million people cheering me 500
miles away"
Mets were only eight
outs a!"ay from clinchmg the
pennant and winning the
playoff in four games before
Tony Perez tied the score 1-1
w1th a homer in the seventh. It
was Perez' first hit of the
playoffs and couldn't have
come at a better tune for
Cincmnati.
Stone Nurses Lead
Until Perez' homer, Mets'
lefty George Stone was nursing
a 1-0iead given him in the third
mning when Don Hahn and
Slone walked off Reds' starter
Fred Norman and Felix Millan
singled to score Hahn .
~Iter they tied the score, the
Reds had nwnerous chances to
win the game, leaving eight
runners stranded over the
runth, loth and 11th inn111gs .
Mets' relief ace Tug McGraw,
who relieved Stone with two out.
in the seventh, worked out of
each of the difficult situations,
one of them thanks to Rusty
Staub's sensational catch of
rookie Dan Driessen's liner m
the 11th.
Staub caught the ball over
his head on the run and crashed
into the rightfield wall. He was
momenl&lt;!rily stunned and admitted his right shoulder hurt
him slightly when he batted in
the bottom of the 12th,
X-rays taken after the game
proved negative but Sroub did
suffer contusions in the back of
the shoulder . A Mets' spokes,
man said Staub's playing
status would not be determined

'

5cor,ng
39
56
SCOR ING BY QUARTERS
ls1 2nd J rd 4th T

&lt;;ay, W. Va .
Valley left 1m tlwtr lea~ue
Xvrth (;LJJI!a w1ll attempt to
S&lt;·hedule after Fnday m~hl
snap "' one gt:~me losmg streak
Southern 11"1ust :s.t aU play
Symmes Valle) and South- · at (ireen The Ptrates are 2-3
roveral! and 2-2. in the SBAC.
western m league g&lt;.~mes .
:-lorth (;aUla's offense is led by
In lhe only other league
Sterlmg Logan , 190 pound
~arne F'nday , Coach Bub
tunlor tailback, Ralph Smith,
As hley 's Southwe stern
scntoi" quarterback, and Bruce
Highlanders travel to Eastern .
Hunyon, 2~8 pound fullba ck.
1mproved
Sou thwtslel'll 's
l .og;m scored both t ou ch ~
· squad tasted v1etory for lhe
downs
1n last Fnday's 20-14
first tllll t' tht~ . season la st
!t,Ss to Southern He has scored
Fn&lt;lay agatnst Symmes
H
pmnt&lt;i 111 flve games
Valley.
/'\ 11rth Gallta haS scored 9~
The Highlanders usmg a
potnts . an 18.4 g.mlC average
smglc wmg, were paced by the
whtl~ pcrmJttJng 97 pomts, a
ha rd -run nmg of semor fullba ck
19 4 aH•rag(·
Phil Lcw1s. Eastem is 2~:1 Ill ~ill
A~amst SVAC opponents,
ga mes and 2-2 111 the SV AC
The Eag les defeated Sym- Green lost to Southern and
mes Valley and Hannan T1 ace defeated Symmes Valley.
Hannan Trace is 1dle th1s
to open lhe season but have lost
weekend.
to Southern, Federal-Hockmg
and Kyger Creek smce then.
SVAC S TANDINGS
Coach Spi ke Be1'kh1m er 's TEAM ALL GAMES
W L T P OP
Eagles rely on the runmng Kyger Creek
5 0 0 12il 36
1 1 0 111 66
provided by M1ke Larkins, !DO Sout11ern
Nortt1 Gall 1a
? J 0 92 97
pound junwr fullback , J ohn Eastern
? 3 0 26 Jljl
rn
1 4 0 lf'2 107
Sheets, 190 pound semor and Southweste
Hannan Trace 0 3 1
0 97
SVAC O NLY
Randy Blake, !35 pound junwr.
W L P OP
Donme Eiclungcr , 150 pound TEAM
Kyger Creek
.\ 0 105 ?4
sophomor~(Ji l d not play 111 lhe Southern
3 0 79 14
Eastern
7
2 26 32
Kyger ·creek game
North Gallta
7 7 92 56"
l n oon -l e&lt;:~ g u e games, Coach Sou t hweo;tern
1 2 22 7B
Symmes
V.;tlley
0
3 14 d3
John Blake's North Gall 1a Hanna1:1 Tre~ce
0 3
0 91
P1rates tr&lt;:~vel to Lawrence Total s
12 12 338 338
Fnday 's. Games
County for a dash w1lh the
t&lt; yger Creek .;~t Sou t hern
until r~ght before today 's Mets in the 12th. He retired Green Bobcats and Symmes
Southwes t er n at Eas t ern
N o rth Galll.;! at Gree n
game. ...
pinch hitter Ken Griffey before Valley , 0-4, will travel to f'ml
Symrnes Va ll ey a t Fo rt Gay
Ken Boswell pinch-hit for Rose slugged h1s homer over
McGraw in the 11th and Harry the nghtfield fence on a 2-2
Parker came in to pitch for the pitch.
.if-"'".._

t;t ts are cxpcc.: ted to be at full
s tnm~th . K)ger Creek's J'ro 44
dl'll'IISt.' hil S surrendered 36

NL crown at stake

Seaver gets his
big chance today

and Recappable• Casing

6

.

NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
Cincmnati Reds and New York
Mets led w1th their aces today
to decide the National League
champion
Marauder
Ja ck Billingham of Cin,
cmnati and Tom Seaver of New
t'
York, who combined for a total
IS lCS
of 76 starts and nearly 600
ro11o w 1ng ar e th e stat rs l ics
Innings of work this season and
l or th e ftrsl 4 ga me:- s of Ihe 1973
fimshed with identical 19-10
Me ,gs Marauder
fo otbal l
~caso n
records, go t the pitching
INDIVIDUAL STATS
assignments for the fifth and
RUS HING
C Y Avg TO
decidmg playoff game at Shea
Wh!tla 1Ct1
38 ?0 9 5,5 3
Stadmm .
Ash
29 87 3
Oile r
I 4 44 3 I
" It would have been nice to
CouCh
10 d I d I
wm
today, but since tt's come
Magnolt .?f
11 .10 3 6
Warne r
17
2 0 1
down to one game, I'm glad
Wotfe
I 8 8
.
I'm ptfching 1t," Seaver smd
IOTALS
120 4 11 :; 4 4
OPPON
117 699 3 9 4
after Pete Rose's homer in the
PASSING
12th mnmg gave Cinc111nati a 2A C 'r' dsq I ld Pet
War(l er
63 24 39il 5 1 J8 o
1 v1ctory and squared the bestOp p on
55 21 318 6 3 38 o
of-five
series at Z.2 Tuesday.
PASS RECEIVING
C Yds Avg TO
The Supreme Compliment
Wolfe
7 125 17rj
"Pete Rose, 1s the only
Creme an s
4 9d 23 5 1
Lo wery
athlete I'd pay money to see,"
54 5~0 102~
Whitlatch
was the supreme complunent
Ash
3 31 10 3
Davenpor t
1 10 10
paid to the Reds' leftfielder by
TOTALS
24 394 16 4
I
Cmcmnati Manager Sparky
PUNTING
Anderson followmg Tuesday's
P Yds AVg
Eason
16 597 37 3
game. "For him to hit the
Op p on
18 566 31 4
homer was only proper, "
PUNT RETURNS
R Yds Avg
Anderson added, referring to
Wh1!1at c t1
3 23 7 7
,
• 3
the thunderous boos Rose
Ash
Coa t s
I
2 2
received by many in the crowd
TOTALS
6 31 5 2
of 50,786 at Shea Stadium every
6 41 6 8
OPPO N
KICKOFF RETURNS
time he came to bat and took
R Yd s Avg
his position in the field.
Whlllatc h
48 7217 5
Magn otta
4 7B ' 19 5
The boos were for Rose's
Eason
2 H
9 5
part in Monday's brawl with
Coat5
2
8
B
TOTALS
11 192 17 s
Mets
shortstop Bud Harrelson
OPPON
........,
7 I 38 19 7
and Anderson claimed he had
SC ORIN .G
TO PAT Pt s
never seen Rose so keyeil up as
Whllla l ch
3
18
he was for the fourth game.
Oll er
I
6
Low er y
I
6
"Nobody likes to be booed,"
Cre mean s
I
6
sa1d Rose, who also got two
George
3
3
TOTALS
3 39
singles and an intentiOnal walk
TEAM STATS
111 six trips to the plate in adM . OP

70c to 90c

6% oz.
cans

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We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

HPoplar"

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Edmo nt on 0
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9:00 to 7:00'·

An overflow crowd lS ex. gruund attat·k fcC~tunn g
pected Frtday mght m Racine puwe1
ttJnntug .
Soulhfor tht• Southern Vallev ern's
M1Lc h Nease, a
Alhlehc
Conference
l'hitH;JUnwr
tatlback,
has rushMcdw es t Onn s 1on
piortShlp game between th~ ed for 310 yards in five
w. I. pet g .b
Mdwauk.ee
0 0 000
lmbeaten
Kyge r Creek~ Bob{'e:tts ~~~m e~ wlult• S&lt;.·m·mg f,S points.
KC Omnh ."'
0 0 000
Chccagf)
0
1 000
and the Southern Tornadoe~.
Ky ger Cleek 's runn1ng game
'.,'
De lr o•f
0
1 000
Coach
Bill
Jewell's
dcfen1s
led by senior fullba ck
Pacct1C OIVtSton
dmg champs movu. mto the Lawrence Tabor Tabor has
w . 1 pet g b .
Los Ange les
1 0 1.000 ga
me with a 4-1 overall slatL\ sc:oretl56 points and has rushed
Phoenl~
0 0 .000
'1
&lt;tnd 3-0 SVAC record . Kyger fur 718 yards 111 five outmgs
Portl rmcl
0 0 000
' 1
Se attle
0 0 000
Creek
IS 5-0 and 4-0111 league
Mark Waller, a junior
'• ~'
GQiden Sta t e
0
0 000
compelll1on
_,iflilback, and Clay Hudson,
Tu es da:,. 's Res:ul1 s
Bu ff alo 107 H ous ton 105, o t
La st year , both teams bat- senior quarterback, arc the
New York 101 Oetro 1t 100
/\ lla n ta 128 Cap1 te l 114
tied to a scoreless he at Kyger Bobcats' other maJor runners.
G ldn Sf Bt C le, ppd . wet fl oor
Creek The Bobcats attempted Waller has scored four touchLos Angeles 117 Chcc ag o 97
three field ,goals but all were downs wh1le Hudson has
!Only !;lames schedul e d I
Wedne s day 's Game s
wide.
rushed for two touchdowns,
Hou st on al Phtlad el ph !a
Southern has posted victories two extra pomts and has
Golden StOl t e at Oe lr o1t
Ch1cagovs K C Omah a
over Hannan Trace 52-0 · thrown three scoring passes.
at Kansas C1 ty
The Tornadoes ' strong
Eastern, 7-0 and North 'cama',
Sea ttl e a t P hoen1x
!Only games scheduled !
20-14
running back, sophomore Greg
Kyger
Creek
defeated
North
Dunning, was injured in the
WHA Stand 1ngs
Galla, 22-16; Eastern , 25.0; Ea•tern game. Dunmng sat oul
By Untt ed Pres s Int er national
Ea st
Hannan Trace 26-0 and South- the Wahama game , but was
w
1. 1 pt s gl ga
western,
32-2. Southern's only rein jured last Friday al North
Ouf!bec
1 1 0
2 6
5
N ew YorK
0 0
2
2 5
5 loss was 44-Q to Wahama The
Ca lha. Semor quarterba ck
Toron to
0
0
2
2
7
7
Bobcats
posted
a
19·12
v1ctory
Vern Ord also returned to the
N ewEnglnd 1
I
0
2
~
6
Cleveland
0
0
1
1
2
2 over the White Falcons.
Tor·nado hneup Jasl week.
Ch 1cago
0 0
1 1 4
4
Both
teams
use
an
awesome
Coach Jim Sprague's BobW es t

Tea Bags..................... ·
.

Mrs. .Filbert's

Monday Thru Friday

0
0

GOODYEAR

69¢
.F abric Softener...•••. ~nt
:
4
9¢·
Bowl Margar1ne .•••..•..

Right reserved to ltmtl quantities

.I

NEW YORK (UP! ) -Johnny
Bench disagrees with his fnend
Pete R&lt;se.
Rose sorl o'f plays down the
1dea that he's a better player
when he gets mad, but Bench
feels just the opposite
'Hc 's stron ger , much
stronger and that much more
determined,'' says the Cmcmnatl Reds' all-star catcher.
" And that's hanllo be because
Pete 1s probably as determmed
as any man 111 the game today.
He concentrates so m uch.
"When he gets mad he increases hi s concentratiOn
about tune arid a half "
Bench alsp smd that the Reds
couldn't have a better pitcher·
go111g for them m loday's
National League championship
finale then Jack B1llmgham.
"He's def1mteiy the guy I'd
want out there m a big ga me ,"
said Bench. "Billingham only
gave up one run in the hrst
game, and he's had great

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN.

mon lh s 59 50, three m'onths,

S6

with Pete

Smoothie

Ka~n's

'

Big Ten t'oolball Roundup
CI-IICAGO (UP! ) - Fourthranked Mi chigan was slill
waitmg to finn up 1ts starting
lineup for Saturday's batlle
with Michigan State.
Wolvennc Coach Bo Stlicrnbechler sa1d his t.cam 's lflJUry
situatiOn has not changed
" We're. still wait mg on
several people but like 1 sa1d,
we're not crying. We'll be
ready to play," Schembechler
said .
'
Mich1gan State, w1th " t-3
record, 1s by far the underdog
again st the ~nb eate n Wol verines , but Schembechler sa1d
his team was "practtc mg with
enthusiasm' ' for what he
termed "one of the greatest
rivalnes m..cullege football.''
~ M1ch1gan Stale Coach Denny
Stolz was mum about lnJUries
and personnel changes, hopmg
to keep the Wolvennes guessing .
"There a1e many advantages of know mg changes
in the opponents' lineup,·· Stolz
5-'lid.
Wisconsm Coach Jotm Jardine put h1s Badgers thro ugh a
two-holl r workout tn preparation for Saturday's clash w1lh
Ohio State, the No. 1 team 111
the natwn Jardme sa1d defen.
sive end Ed Bosold and t ight _
end JHck Novak should be
ready to play Both had been
injured
Purdue was expected to be
lls heaithiCsl smce openmg t11e
season when tho Boilermakers
meet lllmo1s Sanu·day four
players, all of whom have been
bothered with mjunes, are
expected to be m actwn agatn st
the lli1111
Indiana gOl back startmg
defenstve end Mark D1Salvo
Tuesda y as the Hoos1ers
r ~v t ewed fu ndamental s tn
preparation for Mmnesota Dt
Salvo had been out with a

disagrees

·--~-·----------------------

1 0 1 000

0 000
',
Phda('ll•lplll&lt;l
0 000
I
Centritl 01VISIQII
w
I pJ:t g . b .
Atlanta
1
0 I 000
Cleveland
0
0 000
Capctal
0
1 000 • I
Hou ston
0 1 000
~ ·£:&gt;ste rn Confere nce

Bench

-4x8
SHEET

pet
q b
1 000

0

!

Bo~ton

PANELING

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHilL ,

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
· "The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"

CLOSED SUNDAYS .

w. 1
N ew 'r'Q rk
Bu ff alo

pmched nrrve .

The Daily Sentinel

SV AC: title at stak~ Friday

E.1 s t er n Con.lerence
Atlitnhc 01v1 S10n

PRICES ARE RIGHT!

PORK STEAK

Satu1day 9 to 9 .

Sto re

Middl epor1, 0

(ALL WOOD)

Shoulder Roast

'

SET HOMECOMING
Homecoming will be Sur1day
at the Flatw oods Uni
MethodlSt Church With a
basket dmner at noonn.~i~i::~:~
mus1c Will be by the J,
and others .. The a fternoor1 11
ser·vice w11l bcgm1at 1 30.
public is Jl'lvited.

SHOW TIMES SET
The Kyger Creek and South:
ern H1gh Schools band shows
will be present"&lt;~ at pre-game
time, begmning at 7:30 p.m.
Fnday, rather than at halftime . Homecoming is bemg
observed and coronation of the
queen Will take place a t
halftime.

PORK

•. ':i -------

.

'

NBA Stand'"Q S
Sy Un 1tt:'d Pees) l11tm noitllonal

team
•
IS ready

total $212,763 in Middleport

Major picks Missouri,, Pitt in upsets; favors
Oklahoma over Texas Longhorns
By MA JOR AMOS B HOOPLE

r

doc·tor
would like to see the commissioners put their full support and
It soun ds to m e l1ke your money behind 1t.
hu sband h;J s a co nscJenlJou s
Mrs. Judith Brostrom, Meigs Local speech and hearing
ca pabl e doc tor If he want s to
therapist,
stressed the importance of good hearing and speech to
get th e lu ll advantage of what
h1 s do c tor can do for htm he secure a full and rewarding future and life for a young child and
should st1ck wtth the program to help hun grow into a sell-supporting adult.
needles a nd all
Let the commissioners know how you feel on this cl111ic
before Thursday of this week . That is the day they meet with
POD personnel and decide the future of this very important
Send you r que1t•ons to Dr Lamb,
clime.
Ul car(' o l fh1 1 ntHnpaper, P 0 Box
Fot· the Pomeroy Elementary PTA,
155 1, RacUo C. ry Sto hon, New York ,
Mrs. Earl Thoma, President
NY 100/9 Foro c:opy of Dr Lomb' s
by

All Middleport V1llage funds
as of Sept . 30 totaled
$212,762.64, accordmg to the
monthl y report of ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate.
Makmg up about a fourth of
rt. Gay 28 Symmes Valley 6 the funds on hand is the
Kyger Creek 8 Southern 0
samtary sewer escrow fund
Eastern 7 Southl'estern 6
with a balance of $63,155.36.
Houston 4 1, Va Tech. S ( N l North Gallia 20 Green 8
Receipts and expenditures,
Purdue :u . Illinois 21
Belpre 28 Federal Hocking 12 respectively, for the-month and
Kansa s :14 , K;111 sas St. 24
Nelsonville-York 12 Warren 8 the balance of each fund ·as of
Bow linKGreen 19 , Kent St.
Alexander 12 Trimble 0
Se pt 30 mciude general,
12
Winfield 7 Wahama 6
$9,224.17, $9,815.66, $46,015.01 ;
Nitro 14 Pt. Pleasant 12
N. Carolina 15, Ke ntu c k y 14
cemetery, $446.48 , $506 .94,
Fairland 28 Rock Hill 12
(N)
$1,305.48; fire equipment, no
Coal Grove 44 Oak Hill 8
Louisvill{' 21. N. Tex . St. 6
tece 1pts, · $158.26, $90 17:
Soulh
Point
12
Chesapeake
8
Memphi s S t ."36, Tulsa 21 (Nl

'

1

1

, t,l{"k program . und th1 :s m ay
e n( Q UI·~g(' yo ur jwsband to do Dear Sir :
Asp1r1n doe s h, tvf' Some
so
as th e Pe rson on a
This is an open letter to the Meigs County Commissioners
an l1·clot11 ng t'f f t•c l ~ If vou d1et- 1sJUSt
more lik elv to sli ck to and the people of Meigs County concerning P .O.D. Cl111ic.
L&lt;.tkl' I:H g(' d oses 1t can 1 ~use
tlu· prog uHn 1f seCn freq uentl v
hll'f'd1ng !rom th t' d1ges t 1v('
The Pomerpy Elementary PTA fully supports lhis clime and

blc Ynu e.m fmcl wPII fc (o,grliZCd ,l u lhmtl il'S who cu e l or llng tc ncl c n t i CS 111 so me peo and iln otln~ r eac h evl•ntn~ t" II .1nd uti)(' IS 't't ho be iH.' V(' I I ple For anv m cdJtJn&lt;' tu be
a\1-th d l IS ITCCCSS&lt;I J\' li e ~ .l\S
h.1s no va iUt' or tha t the p r n h effective m p1 cvcntmg blood
1f a per:~on uses the asp•nn IH ~ h·rn s II ta ust! o;;. o utw etgh ,11n
c lot lin ~ probl ems 11 mu st sJg·
blood docs not hav(' to he test - adv~nt&lt;Jgc :-:. th a t m, l \ " ht• ob- m fJ(';J nll y prolong lh e c:lottmg
ed Oil ('(' .1 week
~
I .11 n('d
tllnc mcchamsms ;Jnd to te ll
M\' hu sba nd would \Jkc very
If
Jt IS or IS not effectJve the
Tht s IS .111 Op11110 il but I do
mu c h t o &lt;' h,,n gc to a sp1 rin 1f be lieve thi.lt .111l1 clott1n g mcd - blood has to be tested I would
booklet on c:holcsterof, send 50 cents
that does th(' work il l' would JCtnes s hould be used dunng guess that your fnend 's doc tor
t o rhe 1omc address and oslc l or
like vour Op1n1on about th e the i.l&lt; ute heart a ttack and IS not v er y Impressed wtth the
'"C holest erol" booklet
treatment
staded as soon as poo;;.o;;. lbl c 111 value ol ant i·c lo tling med1 -

ROUGH ROAD AHEAD

I

I
I

so mC' uthcr ad

JJo says

PT. I'LEASANT
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
Pl. Pleasant, W. Va.
Saturday, Oet. 6, 1,73
HOGS- 17~ to 2610 to 41 .
Heavies :16 to )9, Lights 37 to
fat Sows :18 25 to 39.7~,
32 to :13, Pigs 15 to 30, '""''~
Shoats 44 to 51
CATTLE - Steers 43 to
fle1fers 3'1 to 42, r at Cows 33
30, Canners 30 to 33, Bulls 40
42.50, Stock Cows and
450 lo 617 .50, Stock Steers 49
54, Stock He1fers 4~ to 53,
Steer Calves 54 to 62.85, "''"'~'
Heifer Calves 47 to 52.50
VEAL CALVES 65 25, Seconds 62, Medium 60
61 , Common &amp; Heavies 59 to
Culls 55 to 59.

II

I
to yo ur hu !:i band I

~Ht'

v;.~ nt.tg e~
b£' 1n~ :-=.t•cn

II ... .8~-'-"~
~.. c,a,£ :

'

:l - ·1ht' D:11l) &amp;ntind, Mldtlll'I&gt;OI'!-1 "\Jmt•ro~. o ., ()('t. 10, 191.~

~

Letten of oplnloa are wei&lt;Omed. They should be leu '
lhan 300 word• loag (or be subject to reduction by lhe
editor) and must be sl~ed wltlt lhe olgnee'o address.
Names may be withheld upoa pubUcolloo. However, on
request, names wUJ be dlsclooed. Letlfn should be In good
taote, addresslag Issues, aot penonalltles.

•

.

STARLIGHT CEILING FIXTURES
Ribbed white glass.

wtth prismatic crystal bottom, chrome ,
trim. 1~ .. dlam.,
e· doop. u- two

75W bulbs (not Incl.).

Whtte bent glass
accented w1th stern
and leaf pattern.

12 Inches SQuare.
sv. • deep. Uses two

sow bulbs (not met).

I~Z.~.35
t

'.

\

~

�•

'

.
A's edge Orioles 2-1 zn 11th
-

~hutuut. ·It tl ti!IHII"{' ,
Can't n~irn a n Edgl·
Oakland A 's , sproutmg a couple Paluwr. W11..' an• of lht.• Ol'loh•s
Buth
pitdlt•rs "OIIll' tn to
t; f new heroes m Bert C'a.mpan- swfr. t·omcs b~iC'k to f~ce Blut·
rns and Ken Hollzm&lt;.IJI, sent a S{'('Oiltl time t()(la~·. _tlp('dmg !41a~ ·s game \~ith thr~L· da~ s
Vi&lt;fa BluE" out to hand tlw ~ tn o thcr goitd effort -i(/l keep (fP n•st so netthcr Side C'-lll

OAKLAND

\ UPI)

-

'lhi._• ptldtt•d

a

ftn•.fnt

Baltimore Orioles the knockout Ritltun ore ali\'£&gt; in lh e be!:it-of- t·laun i.lll t•dgc, Lilthough
nl mnentum seems to be on the
blow toda) and wr!lp up their ftv(' ALchampiunsh ip st• t•ics.
second straight American
·'Vidt:~ is my mcm ," i\'s A's si de .
League penn.-1nt .
skipper D1ck Williams said . (';mtpanc ri s, who hit onl_\ ·
Blue, a 20-game wtnncr 1\tesday etf'~"r Campaneris' lJat four homers all season, crm:kL•d
during the regula r season. w&lt;:~s and H olt z.rn~n·s pitching had his second of the play offs off
kay oed in lhc firSt gumc of the c•arricd Oak.J:wd to a dr;mlatk , veteran Mike Cue ll ar leading
1973 playoffs 111 Baltimore last 11 innin!!:, 2-1 vic tor y and a two off the bottom of the · lllh
Saturdny os Jim Palmer games to one lead over

Tliesdfl.y wtuiP llullwJetO . pJkhlO.L! &lt;.'olllp('lihn· l~ fur tht• hrst

hiiU' IH 10 rJ&lt;Jy S, Sl&lt;11)1}(.1d thC'
Unull's on threl' hit...
Tlw Onol(·s· vnly run t,ff hm1
&lt;'&lt;lT1Lt' on a homer bs Enrl
Williams in the sccn nd but then
Ken set tled down lo retire 14
bat tcrs in a· row be[ on:! Tonml)
Da\"is sna pped the strin g ·by
dr~wing a walk in the ~eventh.
Ke n finished strong, though.
getting the. la sL eight men1 in

Csonka is coming home

IJ('i'll &lt;Jtt l llh t~ti tL not been fvr
t1ld prus Jesus /\lou , Mike

of a ,~,..c·u,u l flir km~ d1mn In~
~IIIIJ4hi:-r.~t.· ....

· Jr thL· lwll h&lt;Jd a little more Andrews and Joe Hud1 .

Bclwecn them they e rlgi~
neert•d the run Lti&lt;-Jt lied the
scurc t.tt 1-1 in the ei~ hth . fiou

arl' on 1t," sald Baylor , '" 1
c·uu ld ha vl:' gotten back to the
ft:nt·t· ;md jumped .a Llit higher
tu eut&lt;:h it. I just couldn ' t jwnp
urd(•r ' O \Hap uplhL' \' idOl') .
·, " I w.il s -.t;1rting L&lt;1 ~c t .a liU!t• hi~h t•nouJ4h while on the run
tin.--d in the dghth," ~aul the ;_111d the ball never touched my
ll'fthander who won 21 1wrnes glove.''
But there never would have
dunn14 the reg ular ca mp~ngn,
"hut I was so keyed up I could

op~ncd the mnin~·with a p~nch­
hit s in~le , Andrew s , also pwchhltling, sent pinch-runner Allan
Lewis to sccontl wilh a good

sacrifice bunt and Rudi deliv-

0., Oct.IO, 1973

cred Lewis
·or the ~arne winning homer,
Cam paneris said he was
looking for a slider.
" When I came up · in the
11th ," said the little shortstop,
" l saw there was a lot of room
down the 'line, so I went Up
thinking l would try to pull the
ball. 1 wa s looking for a .slider
and I got it. "
.... ~...

hHve gone on.''
Cijm p a r~eris flililed a Cuellar
ins ide slider for l1is game·
winning homer. ']'he ball barcl)~
ducked over the fence nea r the
left field foul pole and there
scenied to be a differe nce of
oPinion on whether Baltimore
left field er Don Baylor could
have ca ught it.
Thought He Had a Chauce
Baltimore Manage r Ear l
Weaver sa id he thought Baylor
had a chance but lost a fra ction

•

oal·to oal av1ngs •
NAB I SCO
OREO

CRISCO

CLEVELAND l UP! ) - On gaining 1,051 yards ln 1971.
Chr istmas Day, 1946, just three
Another 110rtheastern Ohio
day s after -the Clc peland produ ('t making h is first apBrowns had defeated the New pearance as the Miami coach
York Yankees, 14·9, for lheir in Cleveland .is Don Shu la . He
first All-America Confer ence pla ye d football at nea rby
footb~ll champ ionship, a footPainesville Harvey High
NEW YORK ( UPl 1- If you don ' t know the whole story, then
ball hei'O w3s born ih Stow, Sc hool and played his college yo u'd certainly say Pete Rose comes out the spoile.d httle boy in
Ohio.
,tootball in Cle veland at John all this, the stubborn hard-head, and maybe even the I'Illam .
Now, '!:1 years later, thi s Carroll University.
That's only if you don't know the whole story .
young man will make his first
Shula has appeared here beThis part of it starts about 10 minutes before Tuesday's fourth
ATHENS, Ohio ( UPl ) appearance in Clel'ela nd sta- fore as the coac h of the oppos- National League playoff contest here, the one in which \et~ Rose
"From rags to riches , from
dium 1.0 try to stop a two-game ing team, but that was when he rockets a homer over the right field fence in the 12th mnmg to
dumb to brilliant in on~ week, 11
Brown s
winnin g
s treak was with the Baltimore Colts. produce a 2-1 victory over the New York Mets and square ~~
is the way Ohio. University 1
Monday nig ht.
Sh ula , who played for the playoff for . the Reds at two games apiece.
.(
- Coach Bill Hess desc•ibed his
The stadium is only 25 miles Browns, ha S three ot~er
Before the game, Donald Grant, the Mets' board c hamlmn; ... se lection as the United Press
from Stow, but Larry Csonka Browns almnni on his co ~ chin g comes up with what he con$iders a pretty good idea .
International national college
.took the long route home and staff.
0n the face of it, the idea is good because if there 's still any
coach of the week.
will arrive with the world -· One is Monte Clark , the of- lingering bad fe eling between the Mets ' Buddy Ha•relson and
The veteran Bobcat coach,
championship Miami Dolphins fensive lin e coach, ,who played Rose ol'er the fight they had Monday, any grudge or srnoldenng
whose team had been beaten
to display his talenls before in four tiUe games for C1eve- resentment, this idea takes care of it ni:ely.
soundly in its first two Mld-1
some of hi s home- town folks. land starling in 1963. Another is
Grant Seeks Out How sam
, American Conference games,
He still w.ears the fam ous Carl Taseff, a teammate of
Grant seeks out Bob Howsam, the Reds' President, and says to
was selec ted for th.e honor for
number "39" i,yhich · hang s in Shula 's at J ohn Carroll and a him:
OU's 14-12 victory over Northe trophy case at Stow High member of th e Browns in 1951" Would you ask Pete Rose if he 'd be willin g to meet Bud
thwestern.
School.
52.
Harrelson behind home plate befo re the game starts and s~ake
"It 's hard to believe but it's
The third is defensiv e line hands with him? Harrelson already ha s agreed to do so if Rose , real nice ," said Hess, who is in
Csonka , the most impressive
nmning back i.n Mi.=~mi 's short coach Mike " Moe" Scarry, will."
..
his 16th year at Ohio Univerhistory , has been compared 'of- who graduated from Western
Howsam says okay. He 'll go to Rose with the prop~sltiOn . Wby
sity . " I'll tell my coaches
ten with the great Bronko Na- Reserve
University
in not"? It certainly can't hurt anythmg and It may even_ mollify
we've been se-lected natiopal
gurski . He became the sixth Cleveland and coached there in many of the Shea StadiWll fans who still are screaming for
coaches of the week."
· -~·
man in National Football 1946-49.
Rose's blood el'ery time he pops his head out of the Reds,' dugout. ·
Hess a former assistant :of •
Scarry captained the CleveLeague history to put t'ogether
Howsamfinds Rose a~d pUts the proposal to him.
'
Wood/ Hayes ' at Ohio State,
two straight I ,000-yard seasons land Rams to the NFL title in
11Ie Reds ' captain ·and leftfielder listens qllletly a nd gives
said he had "no excuses" for
when he g~·ow1d out 1,117 yards
1945 and captained the first Howsam his answer.
the losses to Kent State and
to lead the Dolphins to an un- CJeveland Browns team to the
Negative. .
.
·
Toledo, " they just play ed good ·
defeated season in 1972 after 1946 title.
"I don't think it's right, " he says to Jus boss . " I have no hard
fOOtball ."
feelings toward Harrelson, but that isn't the point. I just don 't
Hess whose 15·year record
at Ohi6 was 84-62-3 going .into
think it'd be the right thing for m~ togo out there and shake
hands with him before the ball game."
this season said he felt " real
Buddy Hanelson didn't think it was the " ri ght" thing to do
good for ' ou.r young men
either, but he relucta ntly agreed. P&lt;&gt;t,e Rose wouldn 't.
because they 've . worked so
··
None Was Aware ·
· ·hard . The one thin~ abou.t them .
None atnong the 501786 w_ho saw Tuesday's g~me was aware of
we've said all along is they
the . behind-the-scenes attempt to , get · Rose and . Harrelson
have fought hard in every.
together.
.
.
·
game. "
·
Many in the ~rowd ·• came wJth banners. wh_ICh s~e.lled .out
Hess said he felt t he OU's
scatologically how they felt about the Reds switch-hittmg field
second touchdown against
leader .
_
•
.
Northwestern whic h climaxed
" Yeah, I saw the signs, 11 said Rose, when he was asked abo,ut
an 87.yard drive to give the
' {·: ....~
·them. 1 'I've never seen such vulgarity ·"
Bobcats a 14-10 lead _was a kev
---.., ~;::
Rose repeated the words on on e of the signs. Yrm cgu_ldn't get
to th e victory.
'
~
them into any family newspaper .
" lt gave us a big lift and. the
But back to Grant's proposition :
·
[act we were able to hold the
Howsam didn't try to sway Ho se one way or the other about
ba ll for nine minutes and 40
ge tting together with Harrelson.. ·
. .
·seconds helped our defense."
" I thought it was Pete's decisiOn to make," siid Howsam.
"Don Grant thought it would be good [or both pla ye rs and good
for the fans, and he could've been right, but it still was up to Pete
to say either yes or -no .."
Rose Said No
.
Pete Rose, who asks no quarter and gives none, said no.
•
· He wasn't rough about it, merely firm and unyielding .
Now here's the rub:
No matter who wins today's fin ale , no rna lter wh et her the Reds
or the Mels wind up. the N3tional League pennant winners , P~~e
Rose will make sure to seek out Harrelson when it's·all over .
If the Mets win, Rose will personally congratulate him , and if
the Reds win, he 'll make sure to tell the slender Mets' shortstop
he 1s sorry for wh3t happ~ned Monday and never meant it per.
sonally.
.
Whe t makes nie so positive Pete Rose is going 1.0 qo this '!
Simple.
. ·
·
·
.
He told me what he 's going to do , and there 's one more thmg
yo u shouid know about Pete Rose:
·
MAIN ST.
POM ERO Y
He always keeps his word.

Good Luck Soft

Hess UPI's

·COOKIES

3- lb.
Can

1-16 oz
Bowl

MARGARINE

.49¢

top coach

49¢
/

BEEF. SO TENDER IT'S PATENTED
SOUT H ER N

CABBAGE 2

tb.29¢

Yes . . . il's exclusively Swift ... one of the best known names in meals. Not on ly
was the tendering -fro m -within method approved through ? ut b y the U.S. Department of Agriculture ... but it was also patented . It's a patent for your pleasure ·. · ·
another example' of how our market wins the daily battle to prov1de you With
fine mogern beef e·;ery day!

MEAT SPECIA LS

BROUG HTO N'S

COTTAGE
CHEESE.

15 oz.
Pk g.

HOM E MAD E
30

oz.

WI.

'·

89~

HAM SALAD ........'~·.. 6gc

.

I.G.A.

· K AHN 'S POP LAR S LI CE D

APPLE
BUTTER
BOOT H S F RO ZE N

GALLON
CARTON

LIQUID

BREA D ED

COD FISH

2-lb .
Box

D E L MON TE
C H UCK

TUNA

112 fl a t

Ca n

LK
___
-·

49¢

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

PJolfiUitJII • YIIA¥ 1111.

O'YSTER
101h . oz.
STEW

With Co upon
Rutland .De'pt. Store
Expires 10- 13-73

.

GIANT SIZE

Ca n

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ONLY
·THURS.-FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
OCT. 11-12-13-14

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COFFEE
8 oz. $ 99

IF YOU .DON'T BELIEVE H, LOOK .IN YOUR EAVE

'

lh GALLON

S.TA-FLO .
SPRAY
S·TARCH

MARY ALLEN

r

APPLE
GRAPE
OR

46 oz.

JUICE
DEL MONTE
46 oz.
PINEAPPLE JUICE

· APPLE STRAWBERRY

22 oz.
18

oz.

F

D

R

TROUGHS.
.

WE WANT TO fHANK THE MANY P.EOPLE WHO

••

HAVE IGNORED THEIR AD, AN.D TO THOSE VERY
'
•
FEW WHO HAVEN'T, WE SAY GOOD LUCK,

N ew Yor~ lO ooo boo ooo- 1. 3 2
Norman, Gulletl (6 ), Carroll
( 10 1, Borbon "(12 ) and Bench;
Stone , McGraw {7), Park er ( 12)
and Grote. WP - CarrOII . LP ~
Parker . HRs- Per ez . Rose .

YOUR CHOICE

5 LB.
•

BAG

A L P layoffs
010 000 000 00 -

•

YOU'LL NEED IT.

1 3 0

•

H ollzrria n· an-d Fos!:.e, Tcnace,
(10l. H.r s - · Williar-ns ,. Cqm
paneri s.

SUNS TRADE WESLEY
PHOENIX ( UP! I - The
Phoenix Suns Tuesday traded
backup center Wal( Wesley
the Capitol Bullets . The Bullets
gave the Suns their third .round
draft choices in 1974 and 1975 in
e. change for Wesley. Meanwhile, the Suns acquired the 7·
foot Bob Christian from th e
Hawks in exchange Jor their
s_econd.round . draft choice in
1976 and third-round pick in
1977.
'

•

'

UWUA
LOCAL 426 ··

to

. ,r

..

.._,::

·'

•

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I

•.-

..

TASTER CHOICE

Oak·'
· aooooooto ol- 2 43
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Etchebar ren ;

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1 lb. pkg.

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OPERATING COMPANY. IT IS A "BLANK COMPANY"

Major' Leag Ue R.esulfs
By United Pres s Int ernat io nal
N L Playoff')
( 1"2 innings)
· Cincinnali
000 000 10000 , _ 2 8 0

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WHIPPED MIRACLE OLEO

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ON AN ECONOMICAL STRIKE AGAINST CENTRAL

. NEW . YORK (UPI ) The
U n i I e d Pre5 s Int e r na t iona l
Boa rd of Coaches too 15. sm all
co ll ege fo ot ba ll teams w ith
won lost re cords und f ir st place
v9te s in par enthes€'S
( Fifth
W ee k i
Team
Poin t s
1. de l aware f2d ) (5 -0J
305
2. Tenri St .· (I ) ("40 )
244
J. Hawaii (1 ) ( 4 01
202
4 . Boise St . {5) ( ~ · O J
I99
5. Cal Poly (J 0)
179
6 . We stern K y . (I) (3 OJ
117
7. Gr a mb l ing (4 -ll
109
. ,_ 65
' B. Louisiana T ec h (3-1 J
9. North Dakota St . C-4 - 11
41
10 . Ca rson -Newman (4 .0 )
J7
11 . Wittenburg (4 ;0)
30
11. tie Troy St. , Ala . ( 4 ,0· 1)
30
12 . South Dakota (4 - 1 )
26
13 Elon ( 1) (5 -0J
24
14 , East Texa s St . (4 - 1 )
20
15. Montana St . (3 -2)
16
16. Nev -Las Vega s··!l4 1 J
14
17. Emporia , Ka n . (4 0 1 ·
12
18 . Eas t ern Mich . (r -1)
11
19 . St. J"ho s. , Minn . (5' 0 )
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...

'

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'

.
A's edge Orioles 2-1 zn 11th
-

~hutuut. ·It tl ti!IHII"{' ,
Can't n~irn a n Edgl·
Oakland A 's , sproutmg a couple Paluwr. W11..' an• of lht.• Ol'loh•s
Buth
pitdlt•rs "OIIll' tn to
t; f new heroes m Bert C'a.mpan- swfr. t·omcs b~iC'k to f~ce Blut·
rns and Ken Hollzm&lt;.IJI, sent a S{'('Oiltl time t()(la~·. _tlp('dmg !41a~ ·s game \~ith thr~L· da~ s
Vi&lt;fa BluE" out to hand tlw ~ tn o thcr goitd effort -i(/l keep (fP n•st so netthcr Side C'-lll

OAKLAND

\ UPI)

-

'lhi._• ptldtt•d

a

ftn•.fnt

Baltimore Orioles the knockout Ritltun ore ali\'£&gt; in lh e be!:it-of- t·laun i.lll t•dgc, Lilthough
nl mnentum seems to be on the
blow toda) and wr!lp up their ftv(' ALchampiunsh ip st• t•ics.
second straight American
·'Vidt:~ is my mcm ," i\'s A's si de .
League penn.-1nt .
skipper D1ck Williams said . (';mtpanc ri s, who hit onl_\ ·
Blue, a 20-game wtnncr 1\tesday etf'~"r Campaneris' lJat four homers all season, crm:kL•d
during the regula r season. w&lt;:~s and H olt z.rn~n·s pitching had his second of the play offs off
kay oed in lhc firSt gumc of the c•arricd Oak.J:wd to a dr;mlatk , veteran Mike Cue ll ar leading
1973 playoffs 111 Baltimore last 11 innin!!:, 2-1 vic tor y and a two off the bottom of the · lllh
Saturdny os Jim Palmer games to one lead over

Tliesdfl.y wtuiP llullwJetO . pJkhlO.L! &lt;.'olllp('lihn· l~ fur tht• hrst

hiiU' IH 10 rJ&lt;Jy S, Sl&lt;11)1}(.1d thC'
Unull's on threl' hit...
Tlw Onol(·s· vnly run t,ff hm1
&lt;'&lt;lT1Lt' on a homer bs Enrl
Williams in the sccn nd but then
Ken set tled down lo retire 14
bat tcrs in a· row be[ on:! Tonml)
Da\"is sna pped the strin g ·by
dr~wing a walk in the ~eventh.
Ke n finished strong, though.
getting the. la sL eight men1 in

Csonka is coming home

IJ('i'll &lt;Jtt l llh t~ti tL not been fvr
t1ld prus Jesus /\lou , Mike

of a ,~,..c·u,u l flir km~ d1mn In~
~IIIIJ4hi:-r.~t.· ....

· Jr thL· lwll h&lt;Jd a little more Andrews and Joe Hud1 .

Bclwecn them they e rlgi~
neert•d the run Lti&lt;-Jt lied the
scurc t.tt 1-1 in the ei~ hth . fiou

arl' on 1t," sald Baylor , '" 1
c·uu ld ha vl:' gotten back to the
ft:nt·t· ;md jumped .a Llit higher
tu eut&lt;:h it. I just couldn ' t jwnp
urd(•r ' O \Hap uplhL' \' idOl') .
·, " I w.il s -.t;1rting L&lt;1 ~c t .a liU!t• hi~h t•nouJ4h while on the run
tin.--d in the dghth," ~aul the ;_111d the ball never touched my
ll'fthander who won 21 1wrnes glove.''
But there never would have
dunn14 the reg ular ca mp~ngn,
"hut I was so keyed up I could

op~ncd the mnin~·with a p~nch­
hit s in~le , Andrew s , also pwchhltling, sent pinch-runner Allan
Lewis to sccontl wilh a good

sacrifice bunt and Rudi deliv-

0., Oct.IO, 1973

cred Lewis
·or the ~arne winning homer,
Cam paneris said he was
looking for a slider.
" When I came up · in the
11th ," said the little shortstop,
" l saw there was a lot of room
down the 'line, so I went Up
thinking l would try to pull the
ball. 1 wa s looking for a .slider
and I got it. "
.... ~...

hHve gone on.''
Cijm p a r~eris flililed a Cuellar
ins ide slider for l1is game·
winning homer. ']'he ball barcl)~
ducked over the fence nea r the
left field foul pole and there
scenied to be a differe nce of
oPinion on whether Baltimore
left field er Don Baylor could
have ca ught it.
Thought He Had a Chauce
Baltimore Manage r Ear l
Weaver sa id he thought Baylor
had a chance but lost a fra ction

•

oal·to oal av1ngs •
NAB I SCO
OREO

CRISCO

CLEVELAND l UP! ) - On gaining 1,051 yards ln 1971.
Chr istmas Day, 1946, just three
Another 110rtheastern Ohio
day s after -the Clc peland produ ('t making h is first apBrowns had defeated the New pearance as the Miami coach
York Yankees, 14·9, for lheir in Cleveland .is Don Shu la . He
first All-America Confer ence pla ye d football at nea rby
footb~ll champ ionship, a footPainesville Harvey High
NEW YORK ( UPl 1- If you don ' t know the whole story, then
ball hei'O w3s born ih Stow, Sc hool and played his college yo u'd certainly say Pete Rose comes out the spoile.d httle boy in
Ohio.
,tootball in Cle veland at John all this, the stubborn hard-head, and maybe even the I'Illam .
Now, '!:1 years later, thi s Carroll University.
That's only if you don't know the whole story .
young man will make his first
Shula has appeared here beThis part of it starts about 10 minutes before Tuesday's fourth
ATHENS, Ohio ( UPl ) appearance in Clel'ela nd sta- fore as the coac h of the oppos- National League playoff contest here, the one in which \et~ Rose
"From rags to riches , from
dium 1.0 try to stop a two-game ing team, but that was when he rockets a homer over the right field fence in the 12th mnmg to
dumb to brilliant in on~ week, 11
Brown s
winnin g
s treak was with the Baltimore Colts. produce a 2-1 victory over the New York Mets and square ~~
is the way Ohio. University 1
Monday nig ht.
Sh ula , who played for the playoff for . the Reds at two games apiece.
.(
- Coach Bill Hess desc•ibed his
The stadium is only 25 miles Browns, ha S three ot~er
Before the game, Donald Grant, the Mets' board c hamlmn; ... se lection as the United Press
from Stow, but Larry Csonka Browns almnni on his co ~ chin g comes up with what he con$iders a pretty good idea .
International national college
.took the long route home and staff.
0n the face of it, the idea is good because if there 's still any
coach of the week.
will arrive with the world -· One is Monte Clark , the of- lingering bad fe eling between the Mets ' Buddy Ha•relson and
The veteran Bobcat coach,
championship Miami Dolphins fensive lin e coach, ,who played Rose ol'er the fight they had Monday, any grudge or srnoldenng
whose team had been beaten
to display his talenls before in four tiUe games for C1eve- resentment, this idea takes care of it ni:ely.
soundly in its first two Mld-1
some of hi s home- town folks. land starling in 1963. Another is
Grant Seeks Out How sam
, American Conference games,
He still w.ears the fam ous Carl Taseff, a teammate of
Grant seeks out Bob Howsam, the Reds' President, and says to
was selec ted for th.e honor for
number "39" i,yhich · hang s in Shula 's at J ohn Carroll and a him:
OU's 14-12 victory over Northe trophy case at Stow High member of th e Browns in 1951" Would you ask Pete Rose if he 'd be willin g to meet Bud
thwestern.
School.
52.
Harrelson behind home plate befo re the game starts and s~ake
"It 's hard to believe but it's
The third is defensiv e line hands with him? Harrelson already ha s agreed to do so if Rose , real nice ," said Hess, who is in
Csonka , the most impressive
nmning back i.n Mi.=~mi 's short coach Mike " Moe" Scarry, will."
..
his 16th year at Ohio Univerhistory , has been compared 'of- who graduated from Western
Howsam says okay. He 'll go to Rose with the prop~sltiOn . Wby
sity . " I'll tell my coaches
ten with the great Bronko Na- Reserve
University
in not"? It certainly can't hurt anythmg and It may even_ mollify
we've been se-lected natiopal
gurski . He became the sixth Cleveland and coached there in many of the Shea StadiWll fans who still are screaming for
coaches of the week."
· -~·
man in National Football 1946-49.
Rose's blood el'ery time he pops his head out of the Reds,' dugout. ·
Hess a former assistant :of •
Scarry captained the CleveLeague history to put t'ogether
Howsamfinds Rose a~d pUts the proposal to him.
'
Wood/ Hayes ' at Ohio State,
two straight I ,000-yard seasons land Rams to the NFL title in
11Ie Reds ' captain ·and leftfielder listens qllletly a nd gives
said he had "no excuses" for
when he g~·ow1d out 1,117 yards
1945 and captained the first Howsam his answer.
the losses to Kent State and
to lead the Dolphins to an un- CJeveland Browns team to the
Negative. .
.
·
Toledo, " they just play ed good ·
defeated season in 1972 after 1946 title.
"I don't think it's right, " he says to Jus boss . " I have no hard
fOOtball ."
feelings toward Harrelson, but that isn't the point. I just don 't
Hess whose 15·year record
at Ohi6 was 84-62-3 going .into
think it'd be the right thing for m~ togo out there and shake
hands with him before the ball game."
this season said he felt " real
Buddy Hanelson didn't think it was the " ri ght" thing to do
good for ' ou.r young men
either, but he relucta ntly agreed. P&lt;&gt;t,e Rose wouldn 't.
because they 've . worked so
··
None Was Aware ·
· ·hard . The one thin~ abou.t them .
None atnong the 501786 w_ho saw Tuesday's g~me was aware of
we've said all along is they
the . behind-the-scenes attempt to , get · Rose and . Harrelson
have fought hard in every.
together.
.
.
·
game. "
·
Many in the ~rowd ·• came wJth banners. wh_ICh s~e.lled .out
Hess said he felt t he OU's
scatologically how they felt about the Reds switch-hittmg field
second touchdown against
leader .
_
•
.
Northwestern whic h climaxed
" Yeah, I saw the signs, 11 said Rose, when he was asked abo,ut
an 87.yard drive to give the
' {·: ....~
·them. 1 'I've never seen such vulgarity ·"
Bobcats a 14-10 lead _was a kev
---.., ~;::
Rose repeated the words on on e of the signs. Yrm cgu_ldn't get
to th e victory.
'
~
them into any family newspaper .
" lt gave us a big lift and. the
But back to Grant's proposition :
·
[act we were able to hold the
Howsam didn't try to sway Ho se one way or the other about
ba ll for nine minutes and 40
ge tting together with Harrelson.. ·
. .
·seconds helped our defense."
" I thought it was Pete's decisiOn to make," siid Howsam.
"Don Grant thought it would be good [or both pla ye rs and good
for the fans, and he could've been right, but it still was up to Pete
to say either yes or -no .."
Rose Said No
.
Pete Rose, who asks no quarter and gives none, said no.
•
· He wasn't rough about it, merely firm and unyielding .
Now here's the rub:
No matter who wins today's fin ale , no rna lter wh et her the Reds
or the Mels wind up. the N3tional League pennant winners , P~~e
Rose will make sure to seek out Harrelson when it's·all over .
If the Mets win, Rose will personally congratulate him , and if
the Reds win, he 'll make sure to tell the slender Mets' shortstop
he 1s sorry for wh3t happ~ned Monday and never meant it per.
sonally.
.
Whe t makes nie so positive Pete Rose is going 1.0 qo this '!
Simple.
. ·
·
·
.
He told me what he 's going to do , and there 's one more thmg
yo u shouid know about Pete Rose:
·
MAIN ST.
POM ERO Y
He always keeps his word.

Good Luck Soft

Hess UPI's

·COOKIES

3- lb.
Can

1-16 oz
Bowl

MARGARINE

.49¢

top coach

49¢
/

BEEF. SO TENDER IT'S PATENTED
SOUT H ER N

CABBAGE 2

tb.29¢

Yes . . . il's exclusively Swift ... one of the best known names in meals. Not on ly
was the tendering -fro m -within method approved through ? ut b y the U.S. Department of Agriculture ... but it was also patented . It's a patent for your pleasure ·. · ·
another example' of how our market wins the daily battle to prov1de you With
fine mogern beef e·;ery day!

MEAT SPECIA LS

BROUG HTO N'S

COTTAGE
CHEESE.

15 oz.
Pk g.

HOM E MAD E
30

oz.

WI.

'·

89~

HAM SALAD ........'~·.. 6gc

.

I.G.A.

· K AHN 'S POP LAR S LI CE D

APPLE
BUTTER
BOOT H S F RO ZE N

GALLON
CARTON

LIQUID

BREA D ED

COD FISH

2-lb .
Box

D E L MON TE
C H UCK

TUNA

112 fl a t

Ca n

LK
___
-·

49¢

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

PJolfiUitJII • YIIA¥ 1111.

O'YSTER
101h . oz.
STEW

With Co upon
Rutland .De'pt. Store
Expires 10- 13-73

.

GIANT SIZE

Ca n

~~

_FINAL 4 DAYS
1\b~er
ONLY
·THURS.-FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
OCT. 11-12-13-14

FABULOUS RING RIOT!
.

.. I .

•.

'·

.

~
I I

·~rt,·co·rt

Cume

qen u uti:'

d1&lt;1

c a n te tt il'c
be

P &lt;II L.

t'-'"'

~·.. ·'IJ

Bring T h is Ad

ntorrlh ..•;e~. • r ·• rd• ' t~:. r~• ·!- l'

SlH o•jH~d.

,. J't' 1

d •· 19t11 •,•d, dn(J

d l11dZCd m·&lt;~"l' "'!he ,..,. t•,,tttJ~·
PC O PI C

1--fC-D

dr arno·r..o·
w(! ar

lilt:+

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,n HI( vu

t ni&gt;.;f' .Hlfl ' •.,.,,

•

o~•

n

O THER FINE
RINGS

i t r ,- r1

d lln"t 1-.llt;·w tt•c ·cr r.liH•:•.•u

Sor,.c of
a5 11 ogt1

a~

t.'--.c~t

r.nw. '·· d

L'f,I.OO. !-\II r

111 s le rJ•nq t:&gt;' IOK
K.u~t. H (; f-

•11.1'

Uf &amp;

j Birthstone

r r1•
1··

$

•

$7.99

UP

hi

Rings

$4.991

Bring this certiti ca le a nd $4 .99 plus tax andre· ·
ceive a LADIES' Sterling Silver or 10-kt. Gold
Filled ring , s~t with ' Y,- Kt . DIAMOND REPRO ·
DUCTlON. SPARKLING FLASHING WITH

Plus

hl

ONLY

I.G.A.
.
TOMATO

LAD ! ES' 2 KT

. s 6 .99

MEN'S R INGSFROM$ 5 . 99

IRE

'

SHOP &amp;SAVE THE EASY WAY

."T'

CHARGE IT!

Silver .Bridge Plaza, Both. Stores in .Gallipolis,
Point !Pleasant Store

COFFEE
8 oz. $ 99

IF YOU .DON'T BELIEVE H, LOOK .IN YOUR EAVE

'

lh GALLON

S.TA-FLO .
SPRAY
S·TARCH

MARY ALLEN

r

APPLE
GRAPE
OR

46 oz.

JUICE
DEL MONTE
46 oz.
PINEAPPLE JUICE

· APPLE STRAWBERRY

22 oz.
18

oz.

F

D

R

TROUGHS.
.

WE WANT TO fHANK THE MANY P.EOPLE WHO

••

HAVE IGNORED THEIR AD, AN.D TO THOSE VERY
'
•
FEW WHO HAVEN'T, WE SAY GOOD LUCK,

N ew Yor~ lO ooo boo ooo- 1. 3 2
Norman, Gulletl (6 ), Carroll
( 10 1, Borbon "(12 ) and Bench;
Stone , McGraw {7), Park er ( 12)
and Grote. WP - CarrOII . LP ~
Parker . HRs- Per ez . Rose .

YOUR CHOICE

5 LB.
•

BAG

A L P layoffs
010 000 000 00 -

•

YOU'LL NEED IT.

1 3 0

•

H ollzrria n· an-d Fos!:.e, Tcnace,
(10l. H.r s - · Williar-ns ,. Cqm
paneri s.

SUNS TRADE WESLEY
PHOENIX ( UP! I - The
Phoenix Suns Tuesday traded
backup center Wal( Wesley
the Capitol Bullets . The Bullets
gave the Suns their third .round
draft choices in 1974 and 1975 in
e. change for Wesley. Meanwhile, the Suns acquired the 7·
foot Bob Christian from th e
Hawks in exchange Jor their
s_econd.round . draft choice in
1976 and third-round pick in
1977.
'

•

'

UWUA
LOCAL 426 ··

to

. ,r

..

.._,::

·'

•

I
I

•.-

..

TASTER CHOICE

Oak·'
· aooooooto ol- 2 43
cui:;&gt; l lar and
Etchebar ren ;

$5.99

1 lb. pkg.

.'

OPERATING COMPANY. IT IS A "BLANK COMPANY"

Major' Leag Ue R.esulfs
By United Pres s Int ernat io nal
N L Playoff')
( 1"2 innings)
· Cincinnali
000 000 10000 , _ 2 8 0

Salt.

LADIES ' 1 KT

'.

J

.6 STICKS

'

( 11 inni ngs)

Limit 2 T o An Ad . .

I.G.A. ICE CREAM

WHIPPED MIRACLE OLEO

TIDE

ON AN ECONOMICAL STRIKE AGAINST CENTRAL

. NEW . YORK (UPI ) The
U n i I e d Pre5 s Int e r na t iona l
Boa rd of Coaches too 15. sm all
co ll ege fo ot ba ll teams w ith
won lost re cords und f ir st place
v9te s in par enthes€'S
( Fifth
W ee k i
Team
Poin t s
1. de l aware f2d ) (5 -0J
305
2. Tenri St .· (I ) ("40 )
244
J. Hawaii (1 ) ( 4 01
202
4 . Boise St . {5) ( ~ · O J
I99
5. Cal Poly (J 0)
179
6 . We stern K y . (I) (3 OJ
117
7. Gr a mb l ing (4 -ll
109
. ,_ 65
' B. Louisiana T ec h (3-1 J
9. North Dakota St . C-4 - 11
41
10 . Ca rson -Newman (4 .0 )
J7
11 . Wittenburg (4 ;0)
30
11. tie Troy St. , Ala . ( 4 ,0· 1)
30
12 . South Dakota (4 - 1 )
26
13 Elon ( 1) (5 -0J
24
14 , East Texa s St . (4 - 1 )
20
15. Montana St . (3 -2)
16
16. Nev -Las Vega s··!l4 1 J
14
17. Emporia , Ka n . (4 0 1 ·
12
18 . Eas t ern Mich . (r -1)
11
19 . St. J"ho s. , Minn . (5' 0 )
5

ONLY

...•.,.&gt;·,, .•. '

OPPOSE THE ADVERTISEMENT OF OUR JOBS, WHILE

College Ratings

FAMILY
P.ACKS

HILtO NS

THE MEMBERS OF LOCAl 426 U.W.U.A. STRONGLY

·c ha pman'S SHOES

CENTERS
&amp;
FIRST
CUT
MIXED

HOMOGENIZED
OHI OULON LtOUIO

8" Speed lace

I

HOMO MIL

BACON ............ ~~: . 89¢

M A B ROWN

AII-Pur.pose
Outdoor
Boot 'Favorite

CLIP THIS AD

...

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art of shoving your mistakes
on others.

LUNCHES .
DELICIOUS
FRENCH FRIES

AT

992 -5248

Middleport,

o.

Ti See f

·

~;
\1::

·
or · • •
THE
BEST
•

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Voice along Br'Way .. ,

·.·~-·-······ ······

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Power firms! L~uOsborne~!'
are .fighting : VALUES !·
.
.
I
I
I Catalog Merchant . :
Na der group122o
E.
1
SEARS

BY JACK O'BRIAN
The wine at the Taverna is locaJ Grat~
A NOTABLE OMISSION-ITALY
taferrata bisco and, like the white wines in
NEW YORK (-KFS ) - " You came back
Marino and Frascati seems to bite your palate
I
fr:om your vacation this year and never wrote a
with a chill delight on first taste: we never sip,
COLUMBUS !UP! ) - A
word about Italy," pouts Mrs. Clara Capparella
.we drink . It's a notably fine wine area and we'Ve te~m of attorneys representing
of North Tonawanda, N.Y. "Have you become
never met anything but a tasty vino. There's eight electric.power companies
disenchanted with the cowt_lry of my father ?
plenty of red wine in the area, simitarly fine Tuesday were scheduled . to
Have you abandoned your villa near Rome? I
locally, bu! •t d0c ~ n 't " travel" as do the sturdiei- argue before the Public
hope not." Indeed not, Mrs. C. We still love
Italian ~ -. , ''" · as Volpocelli ·Bolla, Suave Utilities 1 Conunission of Ohio~.
Italy, find its people among the fe)l' natives
Bolla , o•
··•
·: but on local tables, its that it should not accept a
where we've spentany·length of time who realty
bouquet ;
:c. en!, its taste sharply dry, class-action complaint filed by
are open, friendly and solicitous without ob- especiall&gt; , ! w ' .. te wines. You find similar the Ohio Public lnt..rest Action
seqUiousness. And we found Italy not so wildly
local vino-bclli wherever you slop.
Group i OPIAG ) , a Ralph
expensive as the scare~headlines convinced so
Our tiny villa is just below Pope Paul 's Nader spinoff.
many others .
summer palace at Castelgondolfo, and · just
OPIAG said · the power
Our dollars streiched not quite so far as last
above Sofia Loren 's fantastic $6,000,000 villa in companies should be prevented
year, but the exchange wasn't desperately
our little Marino. Makes a very interesting from advertising and otherhopeless as in France and Germany. Last year
sandwich. But our once snoozy little Marino has wise proinoting' the increased
!,~lire was worth $16; this year $17, so the
. gone the way of all civilization since affluence use of electricity in view of the
inflation was about 6 per cent~ not bad by . bas invaded virtually everything ' north of national energy crisis and
Eorope's skyrocketing inflaii9n. Ft~rthermore, . · Napoli: Parking spaces at a premium, several pollution programs.
.the farther you get from Rome, or any of the big
streets one-way, the clothes of yoWJg people
The group, represented by
cities, the less expensive the restaurants. One of
especially and even most of the elders changed, Cleveland Attorney James
our longti~e favorites is Cacciani. in Frascati, 3
drastically. The instant communication of TV Schiller, said since 1970 the
restaorant in an Italian resort town about six or
'did -it.
utilities have spent $75 million
eight miles from our li!Ue villa in Marino, also a
.
Hosteria dell Orso under Tony Pranteria's advertising which it feels
tiny vineyard town, as is Frascati ; higfi in the
ministrations has become the most stylish, by should be refWJded to the
Alban hills soJlle 14 miles (21 kilomet..rs) from
far, Roman restaoranl. It is casually format: customers.
·
Rome.
regularly turns up on all the taste-boggling lists,
Schiller said the consumer
Five of us had dinner at Cacciani, run by a
bas a "cabala" on its top floor, fi club for a foots the bill for the adpair of handsome brothers (one's hobby is
mostly younger set who jam the premises ex- vertising , yet has no voice in
:!ailing the Mediterranean, the other's is - cept in summer; two floors of tastefully exthe rate increase and the
American jazz ) and the check came to just
cellent formal dining, the Blue Bar on the " despoiling" of the enabout $4 each. That's with wine, ·but no
ground floor which is a meeting place for vironment by the coal-burning
cocktails. Another attractive restaorant · in
prosperous Italian and visiting American and utilities.
nearby Grottaferrata, the Taverna della
English" movie stars, where Romeo, a most
The utilities involves are
Sputino, bas delightful Italian charm, no avant · agreeable pianist, plays any request from
TQledo Edison, Cleveland
pretensions, its walls of local and pleasantly
Neapolitan plaints to American musicaJ Electric Illuminating Comrough tree-wood, its food, as is Cacciani, fine,
comedy standards ; even background music to pany, Columbus and Southern
honest, always fresh pasta, vegetables and · movies that have aurally delighted Romeo.
Ohio Electric, Cincinnati Gas
·meals, rWJ. by a remarkably young lad named
First time we ever heard..Da•id Raskin 's score and Electric, Ohio Edison,:
Fortini Basilio, who seemS everyWhere just ' ·for "The Bad andihe Beautiful" filin (starred
Ohio Power, Dayton Power and
when you need him. Tablecloths aren 't cloth at · Lana Turner and H:irk Douglas) was from
Light and Monongahela PQwer.
all; as a party leaves a tatile and another takes
Romeo's far-re~c~ing musical memory. And if
The Ohio Association of
over, the covering is removed and another
you ask for anything he isn't familiar with, be Broadcasters has inrervened il],
placed - it's butcher paper, Italy's country
certain he'll f[nd ·lt somehow and play it next the case on the side of the ·.
version of checkered tablecloths.
time you walk, or stagger, in .
power cqmpanies. Tile Ohio
Newspaper Association, which
bas not yet intervened, said
11
th~s . is ·the strongest, most
adverse attack on advertising
·to date in Ohio."

Main

HAM SALAD
AND ·
. CHEESE
• SPREAD

Morning Glorie~. League
Oct. 2, 1973 .

Team

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Pomeroy

()pen Mon.-:rhurs. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. - Fridays 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.- Saturdays
f a.m. to 8.30 p.m.
.

USDA Choice

Extra Lean

ROUND
STEAK

GROUND

•1.29

•1.29

-CHUCK
lb.

Fresh All Meat

WIENERS

Pts.

Excels ior Oil Co .

.25

G&amp;J Auto Parts

17

18

Gibbs Grocery

CHUCK ROAST
GROUND BEEF
CHOPPED SIRLOIN
STEW MEAT
SLICED BACON
LONGHORN CHEESE
SPARE RIBS
1 lb. HAM SAl A 0

$

WE

EPT FEDERAL FOOD

STAMPS~

...

..

Instrument Repainnen

Crane Ope•am
Bulldozer Operators
Laborers .

·O.m
Ucensed Boat Operator

. -. · · • We Will Tnin U~lled Applicants. .
. .
. . These jobs pnMde excellent wages and a benefits program whicfl includes
life 1~ra~ medical insurance, disability insurance, sic:ll·leM,·VICatiaOs,
and 'retirement
Although a strike is in progress, the company continues to apa•
the plant. . · · .
.
· . ..
.
.
.

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APPLICANTS MAY .CALL-675-2913
TO
ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW
•
,.
TINS

NeweH

PHI~IP SPORN PLANT
Post ott;e.

so,~~

ttlt

13. 1173. We

r i1~ t

NONE

q~ut i t ies .

11 limit
SOLD TO

DEALERS.
Regult~r ,

311, New Hllven. West Vlrltnil 2BM ·
Teltph0114',:, .,.. code 304-112-31111

An Equ1l Opportlnitr Emp,.,.
1

••••••••••i'••••••••••••llllllllillit•••l!ll•••tJill!l••••llllllll•••
'

By Goldie Clendenin .
PORTLAND _ On the third
Thursday in September. the
Emma smith Circle of the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints met
at the church in charge of
leader Golda Gillilan.
Devotions were by Lucy
Taylor, program chairman,
and business was conducted by
Golda, who suggested the same
officers be r~tained for another
year which was voted ·on and
accepted. Jane Johnson gave
an . account nf money In the
pledge bank which is used in
place. of having sales as a
finance project.
Refreshments were served

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.·...· --

Perk

.

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3~~"$269

N'f/,_,
(on.pare to
, ; t&gt;,ug. P,ite

Coupo~

With Coupon
E•plru October 13 , 1973

"S ~-jact

to upl : c:~~le state
local taus"

a.~ ~

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lb 1 9 ¢

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Tide Detergent

~/", ·- '-'g;,-fl-

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$109

W~lh

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V ALUABLE KROGlR CO UPON IIII{:G!]

King Sin Detergent. . ~

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Ivory Liquid

R~~
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79J

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Aug. Price lb. $1.49
One -quarter Pork loin Sliced lnlo

Aug. Prite .lb. $1 .69
U.S. Govl . Graded Choice
People's Choice Boneless Roast

Boston Roll

Pork
.Chops

29

lb

=

Wilh Co upon
Coupon hpirts Oclober 13 , 1971

·· ::

$129 . ..-1111
8nnmn~~~mi~~f~~;;~·mm111G
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VALUABLE KRO G ER C O UPON

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, Mint or Regular

·:s

. . ~~ .1 Ultra-Brite Toothpaste
; ~\\~ 't_
7-oz.
J

Aug. Pri&lt;e $2.69
U.S. Govl. Graded Choice

29
$
lb.

People's Choice Who le

Beef
Rib Eye

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CoupOR Elp1rn Dtlob er 13, Hll

slllllllll~·;;ii•~iim:i~;;~~~~~~~~~as

Kroger Wishbc&gt;ne- 10· to 12-lb.

Pre-Basted
Turkeys

59

Tube

-

~~~~~VALUABLE
~-

lb.

-~Reg.--

~$1.95,
\.. -\ , I

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KRO GER C OuPONJIIIr;;;l

1...;J

Instant

Sanko Coffee
8 -o :t.

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With Coupon
Coupon hpire s Otlaber 13, 1973

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-

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,

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=

4 89¢
Bulbs

With Coupon
caupon Expires october 1J, 1973

-

siiiiiiiU;;·~i~i·iim~~;;;l.llllll

~~~~~VALUABLE

l'/-:
'&gt;
....

ile Cloud

Ice
Cream
Cottage
Cheese
White

KROGER COUPO N

Niagara

1111

'·

,Spray Star.ch

Reg. /

t!z.(ial.
Ctn.

/ 66c_.

-=

I;,\ ' '

Kroger Lorge or Small ~urd

With Coupon

-

Cupon hplres October 13, 19JJ

~lllll.llll~~·~~iiiimm~~i~~~~~

24·oz.

Ctn.

~~~~~VALUABLE
....,.

93~

&lt;:.

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·

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Spic &amp; Span

~

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KROG E"- C OuPON

All Purpose Cleaner

.~Reg.'' I(_

Village Bakery Premium

:~:··79¢.

5

-9nlllllll;;·~:i~i·iim~;;;~~~~~~~~~~

:;'I

Bre~d

With Coupon

-

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Caupon h••res Octo•er 13. 197J

tv-~
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Reg.~

,·

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15c :-.

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All Detergent'

:::69¢.

4

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/ 59c &lt;:.
~,1'
Reg. 1_

-

Red

Delicious
Apples

4

·lb.

Bag

tJ~

-

Sizo

Bartlett
Pears
\

Irish Spring Soap

3 3~:;:··39¢

.,
I

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~lettra

Kroger Coffee

·t Ratr
··

Va. and others.
Lucy Taylor, nan Roush,
Mercedes Condon, . Anna
Cornell, tJane Johnson, Ruth
Bradford and others made and
served the dinner. The men
by Golda and Lucy a.nd an hour said there was too much food
was spent m vistlmg. Plans and it was too good for them to
were made to serve dinner at do a good afternoon's work.
· the church for volunteer men , Women cleaned windows,
laying a g~s line to the church cupboards, floors . and walls, . ·
next Thursday..
varnished paneling and waxed
Others attendmg were Peafl seats and windows. Cleaning
Proffitt, Joan Proffitt and two the lawn for winrer"is the next
. daughters, Ilah Roush, Patty . project.
.
Jane got new lmoleum fo_r the
, Roush, Tricta and Sherry; ·
Anna Cornell, M~rcedes rest rooms; wall~ were pam~d
Condon ·and this report'l!';.. ,.
ear her m the summ~r . We re
On Sept. 27 the ctrcle served . proud of and very thankful for
the potluck ~inner to men our church home butll mosUy
layl~g gas line, and to do some by mell)be,r s, friends . and
cleaning. Men workmg were . netghbors wtth much sacroftce.
Ralph Johnson, pastor; Herb
Men, women and chtldren
Wbtte, Racine; Denny and wor~ed together, .Played and
Danny Roush, Portland; prayed together, a rewardmg
Richard Redmond, Mason, W. prOJect.

Drip or

Vac Pok

Plus Top Value Stamps

' ·
le d b
Cleaning project COf!l/! . !e ry
men and WO.men oif church

.

•

O cto ~er

fund cutbacks

r. ·

Cerical
Warehousemen
Welders
Machinists
Electricians
Mechanics
bb Technicians

.

lllrw

rutrn

v 151

has iob openinp for permanent emp. . in the following stil~

,.

' I

GROUND BEEF
RIB . STEAKS
PORK STEAKS .
ROUND STEAKS
BULK SAUSAGE
HAM SALAD

4 lb.
Jib.
3 lb.
2 lb.
3 lb.
1 lb.
3 lb.

992-3502

I

.

· er planets.

$

New Haven, W.Va.

High · Ind ividual Game
Marlene Wilson 110.
Second High Ind . Game
' Vic~y Gillilan 157.
H1gh Series Marlene
W ilson 479 .
Second High Ser ies - Vicky
Gillilan 445 .
Team
H i gh
Game
Pocklington Construction 787.

The planet Jupiter is more
than 1,000 times the size of
the earth· and exceeds the
combined mass of all the oth-

PORK CHOPS
CHUCK ROAST
LARGE FRANKS
SLICED BACON .
ROUND STEAK
GROUND BEEF

Philip Sporn Plant

14

J eam High Series Suno co 221 3.

. (343)

J lb.
' Jib.
J lb.
J lb.
J lb.
1 lb.

CDpJufU 1!13 . lh~ lrecer
Ce. 1 tml u• Pr itU . coad

.opposed by area PTA

central Operating Company's

20

Spencer's Market

J lb. PORK STEAK
2 lb. CHOPPED SIRLOIN
2 lb. ROUND STEAK

Pomeroy

PH. 992-2178 -

26

Newell Sunoco
Pock llngton .Con st .

lb. BULK SAUSAGE

J lb. GROUND BEEF

Phone Us
Your Order!' (344)

·'"-----------J

Pomeroy Bo.w ling Lanes

~ Milk

2

J lb.
4 lb.
2 lb.
J lb.
2 lb.
2 lb.

'

.Engagement Announced

A

McCLURE'S

WEDNESIJAY
CUB SCOUT Pa c k 245
Reorganizationat meeting, 7:30
p.m. at American Legion Hall.
Middleport. All interested boys
and pare~ts invited.
TUPPERS PLAINS CommWJily Club , 7:30p.m. at home
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Garde~ers, 8 p.m. at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co . social room . Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter to be in
charge of the program .

UX:AL 426, UtiUly Workers
Union of America, will hold a
meeting at 5 p.m. at Union
Hall, PomerQy. AU asked to
attend important session .
POMEROY - MIODLEPOitT
Lions Club, noon Wednesday ~t
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
RAM,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m . at
'
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. ·
THURSDAY
DEBRA ANN RAWSON
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Sacred
Heart Church basement,
Pomeroy . .
''
MEIGS County Humane
The bride-elect is a 1972
Mr . and Mrs. Emmett
Society,
7:30 Thursday at the
: Rawson, Middleport, Ohio, graduate of Meigs High School
Middleport village hall.
" are
announcing
the and is employed at Richards
POMEROY First Baptist
engagement and approaching and Son Inc., Racine.
Chorch,
Missionary Society,
Mr. Grady Is a 1972
I
marriage Of their daughter,
Debra Ann, to Lawrence graduate of Point Pleasant · 7:30p.m. Thursday. Mrs . Ivan
Walker to present the program
Grady, Jr., son ·of Mr. and and is employed at Robbins
entiUed " Youth is Hope."
• Mrs. Lawrence Grady, Sr. and Myers, Gallipolis. The
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
event will take place Nov: 22.
Point Pleasant.
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
•
Speaker from the Meigs
Community School.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Society regular meeting, 7:30
p.m . Thursday, Middleport
Village
Hall.
Everyone
welcome.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453·
The Pomeroy PTA's action Snowden, Rutland, Norman
Monday night to oppose federal Hysell and Wendell Hoover, F&amp;AM, Thursday, 8 p.m. All
cutbacks in funding of the Pomeroy . Frank Board, in· master masons invited.
school milk program in a letter cumbent candidate for rePAST OFFICERS Club ,
campaign was reinforced election, was unable to attend Racine Chapter, Thursday, 8
Tuesday when Mrs. Earl since the Board of Education p.m. at the home of Mr. and
Thoma, pre~ident, and Mrs. was in session.
Mrs. Ernest Wingett. All past
William
Stephenson,
Tentative arrangements officers invited .
le gis lative agent, conferred were made for an art class to
w i lh a representative of begin next week with Mrs.
FRIDAy
Congressman Clarence Miller . Margaret Ella Lewis as in· .
REVIVAL Friday, Saturday
A letter of opposition to the structor. Mrs. Thoma report..d · and Sunday at Rutland Church
c utbacks
directed
. to that letters will be sent to the . of God. Evangelist Yvonne ·
Congressma n Miller was parents later this week.
Lewingdon, Columbus. Special
pas.s ed
along
to
his
Robert Morris, principal, singing by Heavenly Highway
representatives, and Mrs . announced
American singers . Public ·invited. SerThoma and Mrs. Stephenson Education Week, OCt. 22-25, vices 7":30 p.m.
reviewed the problems being and invited the parents to visit
SATURDAY
encount..red in the Pomeroy the classrooms during the
GOSPEL
SONGFEST
school where the children of week.
Assembly of God Church,
· numerous families are either
Plans were made for the Dudding Lane, Mason, \:30
· of low inco me or public annual Halloween party Oct. p.m . "Gospel Lighters,"
assistance status.
Tl, 6:30 to 10 p.m. in the school
Crown City, featured singers.
Another action taken at the gym with door prizes, a sweet Chester Tennant , pastor.
Monday night meeting by the shop, flea market, fortune
Public invited.
PT ti was endorsement of the .5 t..lleis, games, etc. to be in·
.SUNDAY
mill bond issue which. would eluded in the activities.
ANN IVERS A R Y. and_
provide matching fund s for
A poster cont..st to promote
homecoming at Rutland
construction of a school the party will be held in each
Church Of Christ. Bible School
building for the mentally classroom with a first, second
at 9:30a.m. Worship services
· retard ed.
.
and third place prize to be
atl0:30 a .m. Dinner in church
John Krawsczyn, a teacher awarded in each grade. The
basement at' noon. Afternoon
in the school, point..d out the prizes will be purchased by the
program at 2 p.m. with Ernie
need tor a building equipped to PTA from the safety pairol
J ohnson as guest speaker .
serve the retarded noting that members who are selling
Special music a nd singing
none now empty meets the items.
grOups from area .churches.
requirements. The thing to be
The health and welfare
Public invited.
voted on in November is not committee
reported • on
T
another operating levy, he. ' clothing 'which is available at
l
stressed, but a bond issue . to . the school for children who
Pomona, Ca-Oonna Rae
run 20 years for the con- bave mishaps, such as falling
Wilson and Hal Massingill,
struction of a building.
in a puddle or ripping a gar- , residents of Mason,. while
'
Also speaking at the meeting ment.
visiting
relali ves in -the
Mrs. Jimmy Jo Hemsley
was Mrs. Judith Brostrom,
Southern California area,
Meigs Local speech and annoWJced that subscriptions
were among the million-plus
hearing ·therapist. She talked to the Ohio Parent Teacher
visitors enjoying the 1973
. on the Orthological Diagnostic Magazine is $1 and she is hand'
edition of the huge Los
Clinic and urged the support of ling the orders.
Angeles County Fair in
Mrs. Thoma, preside.nt,
the PTA in getting the prog'ram
Pomona during its Sept. 14-30
reinstated. Mrs. Brostrom ~nnowteed the Nov. I meeting
run.
The annual fall event is the .
asked the unit to direct a l.e tter of the Meigs County Council of ;
largest cowtly fair in the
to the Meigs County Com- Parents and Teachers will be
nation a.~d fourth largest of all
. missioners and to the commun: held at Middleport. Also noted
fairs in ·the United States,
ity through a Latter to the is the Monday visit of the
including slate fairs,
Editor urging that the program bloodmobile at the school.
Thousands of competitive
be continued.
The attendance banner went
exhibits,
flower and garden
The therapist said that local to the fourth grade. To open the
show, ftpe.arts, interior design
funding must be approved by meeting, Mrs. ·. Judy Werry,
shOwcase, livestock, horse
the Commissioners who to date first grade mother, led in the
racing, jWlior fair, .home arts,
bave not allocated the ,money pledge, and Mrs. Ann Hemsley
free grandstad shows and
needed so that federal funds gave devotions. Mrs. Thoma
entertainment are but a few or
can be secured.,
read an article "The Little Red
the .features of. the exposition.
Present at the meeti.ng were School House." Refreshments
Fair dates in 1~71 are Sept.
· .three candidates for the Board were served by ihe sixth grade
13
through 29.
'
•
of Education of the Meigs parents. Parents visited the
Local School District, Robert · rooms following the meeting.

J1 SCHOOL TIME

·'·
.

I,_

Any couple married long
enough to use U(l their wed·
ding gift of marJoram in th e
spice rack deserves _another .
jar for a golden ann•versary
present.

EY J(JDS!

4th &amp; Locust

...

+++

·-·
..,

!' Social li
Calendar~l

By PHIL PASTORET

However, here's the address
postcard applications should
_go to, if and when the tags are
+++
issued: AnUerless Deer Permils, Division of Wildlife,
Fountain Square, Columbus ..
43224.
PostcardS must ·bear the
hunter's name and address,
deer tag pumber, and county of
choice. Some 1,200 permits wilt
H yo u have time on your
be issued among the 16
hands,
be tter tighten you r
counties.
wrist watc h strap.

Here'S the Man

:'!

:~:!
;~:

~;

:;:;
DAYI'ON DAILY NEWS
severing the rear feet.
EDITOR'S NOTE : Stat«.&gt; go,•ern- Transportation to a ir concHrion ,:4 or the purse strings :
·,·, Wrilten For Uoited Press
Now the dressed squirreJ is
me-ot. wUh. ~ · see min gly in- computer room.
- Rcqttire the governor, except a .!~.t~ lnler-national
- ready for stove or freezer, and
satiable thirst for money, will spend
~7.381 for microfilm for the s tate newly-elected one, to present his budget ;.;:
WESl' MILTON - Squirrels no tainting hair has touched
wttil i!'sall goneaudsomelimes go into treasu rer's ofji('('.
by "th e time the legislature convenes in ;:;; are tough .
edible m.eat if the job is done
debt. UPI Siatchouse Reporter Lee
- $2 ,500 for a ··stock m"rkel iden- January .
·:·:
The. little bushytails canal&gt;- right.
Leooard, In the last of a series of nine tifiers'file service " for the Department
- Require a representative of the
sorb a lot of lead and still es· This handy. and inexpensive
articles on the mushrooming st»te of Economic and Community legislative finance committees or ··the ::: cape into the treetops,
rig should work equally well on
budget. describes another tool for · . Development.
Legislative Service Commission to ;~;~
Even after a day 's hunt, bag- . other small game or forgovernment. spending a_od then offers
- $8 ,822 for something called a participate in discussions as agencies
ged squirrels can be tough. bearers during trapping
some suggesuons for om proving the "rotogatherer and stitcher" for the prepare to submit their budge t requests i\: Tough on the hunt..r faced with season. Barefoot said he pla"ns
budget-making process. In conclusion, attorney general 's office .
to the governor .
:;:; skinning and dressing them, to market the skinning tripod
however, he notes · that only by
- Thousands of other dollars for an
'-Give members of the House and ;~: that is. ·
within the next year.
removing politlu and professionalizing assortment of cars, copiers, computers, Senate finance committees no other ·
But Harold Barefoot, a canoe
1973 Ohio DJ&gt;er Tags,
the legislature could the trend to bigger adding machines and typewrilersm
assignments, so they can concentrate :;; manufacuturer and dealer of although ballyhooed by state
budgets be "halted.
The only item sq uashed was $4,91~ for on th e budget work. Provide the
this Miami county community, officials as being available "by
-22,000 sheets of stiff paper for the Ohio committees with enough staff for ,;j;: bas hit upon a very handy rig Sept. I," are still not on sale at
By LEE LEONARD
industrial Commission to use for safety thorough research .
;:;; which makes the average most normal locations.
U!'I Statehouse Reporter
slogans on auto bumper stickers. The · - Eliminate floor sessions during the ;:;: start-to-finish lime no more
The tags, which cost $5.35 for
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - In case the board members were afraid the slogans first month or six weeks of each year to :;:~ than five minutes.
Ohio residents, are required
executive branch has left something out might turn out to be political.
allow the finance committees to hold ';!;
Barefoot has built an alumi- for anyone plaMing to hWlt
of its budget, or if the need arises for
"We put a penalty on those who don't budget hearings each day. R&lt;!quire that :;:; num tripod stamling four feet deer in the Buckeye state.
something extra, there is another spend money," said Rep. Ronald H. the House and Senate finance com- :~; high at the apex. Three small . They are also required for
weapon in its arsenal called the state Weyand!, D·Akron, chairman of a rriittees hold joint public hearings to ~;; chain~&gt; · altached the legs give ~yone wishing ' to apply for
·Controlling Board.
House Finance subsection . "The money eliminate duplication of testimony and · j:j: · the tripod stability.
Ohio's first modern-day ant·
The Controlling Board js now lapses If ills not spent. This is a dumb gov~ both chambers the same slant on ;:,~
Two additional chains, each lerless deer season in 16
dominated by legislators, but rWl QY the proposition to begin with."
· the budget.
;!;! tipped with a small metal ring, counties starting in late
stale Finance Department.lts purpose
One way to reni the lapses and waste
- Require that any new programs be ;:;: hang from two of the legs. November . Postcard appliis to remedy oversights between bud~ in government appriations, and accompanied by a price tag for the :l:l These are used to form nooses cations must bear the hunter's
gets, when legislative action would take · perhaps pinpoint available revenues current and future budget periods, even :;~ which anchor the squirrel by serial number from his tag.
too long.
more closely would be to adopt an if it is estimated .
~l its hocks.
Applications
for
the
Too often, the board is an easy annua l budget.
-,Set up a special finance sub- i'i
Barefoot uses a sharp knife 1973 antlerless deer permits
vehicle for shufflipJ:.. fWJds within
Assistant Senate Minority Leader committee to study longr~nge state ~Z to make the first cut inside are reported to have been
agencies, transferring spare money Oliver Ocasek, D·Akron , bas · been needs and outline a five or 10-year i;!; each rear leg, running the accepted by state wildlife
from one porpose to another.
trying to get Ohio on a yearly - instead spending plan.
:;~ knife 's point up to each ring. personnel any time after Sept.
Peak activity comes just before the of biennial ·- budget for 10 years.
- Establish the machinery for
Then common pliers are 1, but the Jack of tags makes
new budget is enacted. Agencies
"The administration, no matter who auditing the effectiveness of each ;~ used to grip the leg skin,
stumble over one another to get before it is, wants to put the lid on for two program for which state appropriations ;;! pulling It down like a glove.
the board and exhaust their surplus years and not open i_t up, '' Ocasek said. are ma~e . . .
..
~~: The tail is then removed, and
fwtds before the fiscal period expires. " It makes budgetmg . very difficult.
Even of pohttcs cannot be removed ;:;:, the pliers again pull the rump
Any ~~lapsed," or unspent, money They say an aruma! budget would give from the budgeting process, some ~:~: skin downward.
would not" be usable in the new fiscal us the same headache every year in· improvements can be made.
:;:;· It is then a simple matter to
year. Moreover, lapses give the im- stead of every oth er year . If you went
Those improvements cannot be made :;:; use both hands to pull the
pression the agency asked for too much by that logic, you'd only have a budget without
increased
work
and ';!; loosened hide down over the
in the first place and ruin future every five years ."
professionalism in the legislature. But ::~; animal's head and front feet.
requests for more.
Rep: William E . Hinig, D-New1 then, the ' lawmakers are already ;:;: Removing these. also removes
The agenda for the Controlling Board Philadelphia , now in his fifth term on leaning that way with annual sessions :;;; the hide completely.
meeting last June 25, five days before the House Finance Committee, agreed. and a salary of $17,500.
:;;;
All that remains is making a
the end of the fiscal biennium, con" It's extremely difficult to estimate
As expressed by Rep. George D. ;:;; single cut up the entire ventral
tained 86 items - double the normal two years in advance how much money Tablack, D-Campbell: ·
:i:i
number.
you'll hav~, ·:, Hinig said. "I don 't know
"Things won't change until the ;:;: ~---------~--t
·I
The state was authorized to make of any industry that sets its budget two legislature takes it upon itself to make
1
1
HOMEMADE
these expenditures to use up money : years in advance. Business operates on its force known as an equal branch of · !~l I
1
-f7 ,000 for 5,000 pheasants for an annual budget, and Ohio govern- state government. The ·legislature l: I
I
hunting.
mentis big business."
doesn't bave the wherewithal to come ?.: I
0
I
~.000 for a suprplus aerial camera
Othe&lt; chances which would improve up with the answers, and it won-'t as :;: I
I
for the Natural Resources Department. the budgeting process by saving time long as the rank-and.file citizen looks ;~; I
I
- $2,500 for the Department of and giving the legislature more control on us as a part-time legislature."
;~: I
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BARBS

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I o.shytails' toughness
!~~!.~,!! ~!."""'~~.~~M.~~~

I Controlling Board doles· out
....

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1 .,.- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepon-Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. to. 1973

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Being perfect requires the
art of shoving your mistakes
on others.

LUNCHES .
DELICIOUS
FRENCH FRIES

AT

992 -5248

Middleport,

o.

Ti See f

·

~;
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·
or · • •
THE
BEST
•

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Voice along Br'Way .. ,

·.·~-·-······ ······

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Power firms! L~uOsborne~!'
are .fighting : VALUES !·
.
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I
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I Catalog Merchant . :
Na der group122o
E.
1
SEARS

BY JACK O'BRIAN
The wine at the Taverna is locaJ Grat~
A NOTABLE OMISSION-ITALY
taferrata bisco and, like the white wines in
NEW YORK (-KFS ) - " You came back
Marino and Frascati seems to bite your palate
I
fr:om your vacation this year and never wrote a
with a chill delight on first taste: we never sip,
COLUMBUS !UP! ) - A
word about Italy," pouts Mrs. Clara Capparella
.we drink . It's a notably fine wine area and we'Ve te~m of attorneys representing
of North Tonawanda, N.Y. "Have you become
never met anything but a tasty vino. There's eight electric.power companies
disenchanted with the cowt_lry of my father ?
plenty of red wine in the area, simitarly fine Tuesday were scheduled . to
Have you abandoned your villa near Rome? I
locally, bu! •t d0c ~ n 't " travel" as do the sturdiei- argue before the Public
hope not." Indeed not, Mrs. C. We still love
Italian ~ -. , ''" · as Volpocelli ·Bolla, Suave Utilities 1 Conunission of Ohio~.
Italy, find its people among the fe)l' natives
Bolla , o•
··•
·: but on local tables, its that it should not accept a
where we've spentany·length of time who realty
bouquet ;
:c. en!, its taste sharply dry, class-action complaint filed by
are open, friendly and solicitous without ob- especiall&gt; , ! w ' .. te wines. You find similar the Ohio Public lnt..rest Action
seqUiousness. And we found Italy not so wildly
local vino-bclli wherever you slop.
Group i OPIAG ) , a Ralph
expensive as the scare~headlines convinced so
Our tiny villa is just below Pope Paul 's Nader spinoff.
many others .
summer palace at Castelgondolfo, and · just
OPIAG said · the power
Our dollars streiched not quite so far as last
above Sofia Loren 's fantastic $6,000,000 villa in companies should be prevented
year, but the exchange wasn't desperately
our little Marino. Makes a very interesting from advertising and otherhopeless as in France and Germany. Last year
sandwich. But our once snoozy little Marino has wise proinoting' the increased
!,~lire was worth $16; this year $17, so the
. gone the way of all civilization since affluence use of electricity in view of the
inflation was about 6 per cent~ not bad by . bas invaded virtually everything ' north of national energy crisis and
Eorope's skyrocketing inflaii9n. Ft~rthermore, . · Napoli: Parking spaces at a premium, several pollution programs.
.the farther you get from Rome, or any of the big
streets one-way, the clothes of yoWJg people
The group, represented by
cities, the less expensive the restaurants. One of
especially and even most of the elders changed, Cleveland Attorney James
our longti~e favorites is Cacciani. in Frascati, 3
drastically. The instant communication of TV Schiller, said since 1970 the
restaorant in an Italian resort town about six or
'did -it.
utilities have spent $75 million
eight miles from our li!Ue villa in Marino, also a
.
Hosteria dell Orso under Tony Pranteria's advertising which it feels
tiny vineyard town, as is Frascati ; higfi in the
ministrations has become the most stylish, by should be refWJded to the
Alban hills soJlle 14 miles (21 kilomet..rs) from
far, Roman restaoranl. It is casually format: customers.
·
Rome.
regularly turns up on all the taste-boggling lists,
Schiller said the consumer
Five of us had dinner at Cacciani, run by a
bas a "cabala" on its top floor, fi club for a foots the bill for the adpair of handsome brothers (one's hobby is
mostly younger set who jam the premises ex- vertising , yet has no voice in
:!ailing the Mediterranean, the other's is - cept in summer; two floors of tastefully exthe rate increase and the
American jazz ) and the check came to just
cellent formal dining, the Blue Bar on the " despoiling" of the enabout $4 each. That's with wine, ·but no
ground floor which is a meeting place for vironment by the coal-burning
cocktails. Another attractive restaorant · in
prosperous Italian and visiting American and utilities.
nearby Grottaferrata, the Taverna della
English" movie stars, where Romeo, a most
The utilities involves are
Sputino, bas delightful Italian charm, no avant · agreeable pianist, plays any request from
TQledo Edison, Cleveland
pretensions, its walls of local and pleasantly
Neapolitan plaints to American musicaJ Electric Illuminating Comrough tree-wood, its food, as is Cacciani, fine,
comedy standards ; even background music to pany, Columbus and Southern
honest, always fresh pasta, vegetables and · movies that have aurally delighted Romeo.
Ohio Electric, Cincinnati Gas
·meals, rWJ. by a remarkably young lad named
First time we ever heard..Da•id Raskin 's score and Electric, Ohio Edison,:
Fortini Basilio, who seemS everyWhere just ' ·for "The Bad andihe Beautiful" filin (starred
Ohio Power, Dayton Power and
when you need him. Tablecloths aren 't cloth at · Lana Turner and H:irk Douglas) was from
Light and Monongahela PQwer.
all; as a party leaves a tatile and another takes
Romeo's far-re~c~ing musical memory. And if
The Ohio Association of
over, the covering is removed and another
you ask for anything he isn't familiar with, be Broadcasters has inrervened il],
placed - it's butcher paper, Italy's country
certain he'll f[nd ·lt somehow and play it next the case on the side of the ·.
version of checkered tablecloths.
time you walk, or stagger, in .
power cqmpanies. Tile Ohio
Newspaper Association, which
bas not yet intervened, said
11
th~s . is ·the strongest, most
adverse attack on advertising
·to date in Ohio."

Main

HAM SALAD
AND ·
. CHEESE
• SPREAD

Morning Glorie~. League
Oct. 2, 1973 .

Team

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Pomeroy

()pen Mon.-:rhurs. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. - Fridays 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.- Saturdays
f a.m. to 8.30 p.m.
.

USDA Choice

Extra Lean

ROUND
STEAK

GROUND

•1.29

•1.29

-CHUCK
lb.

Fresh All Meat

WIENERS

Pts.

Excels ior Oil Co .

.25

G&amp;J Auto Parts

17

18

Gibbs Grocery

CHUCK ROAST
GROUND BEEF
CHOPPED SIRLOIN
STEW MEAT
SLICED BACON
LONGHORN CHEESE
SPARE RIBS
1 lb. HAM SAl A 0

$

WE

EPT FEDERAL FOOD

STAMPS~

...

..

Instrument Repainnen

Crane Ope•am
Bulldozer Operators
Laborers .

·O.m
Ucensed Boat Operator

. -. · · • We Will Tnin U~lled Applicants. .
. .
. . These jobs pnMde excellent wages and a benefits program whicfl includes
life 1~ra~ medical insurance, disability insurance, sic:ll·leM,·VICatiaOs,
and 'retirement
Although a strike is in progress, the company continues to apa•
the plant. . · · .
.
· . ..
.
.
.

'

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'

•

APPLICANTS MAY .CALL-675-2913
TO
ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW
•
,.
TINS

NeweH

PHI~IP SPORN PLANT
Post ott;e.

so,~~

ttlt

13. 1173. We

r i1~ t

NONE

q~ut i t ies .

11 limit
SOLD TO

DEALERS.
Regult~r ,

311, New Hllven. West Vlrltnil 2BM ·
Teltph0114',:, .,.. code 304-112-31111

An Equ1l Opportlnitr Emp,.,.
1

••••••••••i'••••••••••••llllllllillit•••l!ll•••tJill!l••••llllllll•••
'

By Goldie Clendenin .
PORTLAND _ On the third
Thursday in September. the
Emma smith Circle of the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints met
at the church in charge of
leader Golda Gillilan.
Devotions were by Lucy
Taylor, program chairman,
and business was conducted by
Golda, who suggested the same
officers be r~tained for another
year which was voted ·on and
accepted. Jane Johnson gave
an . account nf money In the
pledge bank which is used in
place. of having sales as a
finance project.
Refreshments were served

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.·...· --

Perk

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3~~"$269

N'f/,_,
(on.pare to
, ; t&gt;,ug. P,ite

Coupo~

With Coupon
E•plru October 13 , 1973

"S ~-jact

to upl : c:~~le state
local taus"

a.~ ~

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lb 1 9 ¢

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Tide Detergent

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V ALUABLE KROGlR CO UPON IIII{:G!]

King Sin Detergent. . ~

~-

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Ivory Liquid

R~~
-1
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,

79J

48·o&gt; .

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-

Aug. Price lb. $1.49
One -quarter Pork loin Sliced lnlo

Aug. Prite .lb. $1 .69
U.S. Govl . Graded Choice
People's Choice Boneless Roast

Boston Roll

Pork
.Chops

29

lb

=

Wilh Co upon
Coupon hpirts Oclober 13 , 1971

·· ::

$129 . ..-1111
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VALUABLE KRO G ER C O UPON

•

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, Mint or Regular

·:s

. . ~~ .1 Ultra-Brite Toothpaste
; ~\\~ 't_
7-oz.
J

Aug. Pri&lt;e $2.69
U.S. Govl. Graded Choice

29
$
lb.

People's Choice Who le

Beef
Rib Eye

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slllllllll~·;;ii•~iim:i~;;~~~~~~~~~as

Kroger Wishbc&gt;ne- 10· to 12-lb.

Pre-Basted
Turkeys

59

Tube

-

~~~~~VALUABLE
~-

lb.

-~Reg.--

~$1.95,
\.. -\ , I

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-

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KRO GER C OuPONJIIIr;;;l

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Instant

Sanko Coffee
8 -o :t.

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With Coupon
Coupon hpire s Otlaber 13, 1973

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Bulbs

With Coupon
caupon Expires october 1J, 1973

-

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Ice
Cream
Cottage
Cheese
White

KROGER COUPO N

Niagara

1111

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Reg. /

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Ctn.

/ 66c_.

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Kroger Lorge or Small ~urd

With Coupon

-

Cupon hplres October 13, 19JJ

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24·oz.

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Spic &amp; Span

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KROG E"- C OuPON

All Purpose Cleaner

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Village Bakery Premium

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5

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With Coupon

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All Detergent'

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Red

Delicious
Apples

4

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Bag

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Bartlett
Pears
\

Irish Spring Soap

3 3~:;:··39¢

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Kroger Coffee

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Va. and others.
Lucy Taylor, nan Roush,
Mercedes Condon, . Anna
Cornell, tJane Johnson, Ruth
Bradford and others made and
served the dinner. The men
by Golda and Lucy a.nd an hour said there was too much food
was spent m vistlmg. Plans and it was too good for them to
were made to serve dinner at do a good afternoon's work.
· the church for volunteer men , Women cleaned windows,
laying a g~s line to the church cupboards, floors . and walls, . ·
next Thursday..
varnished paneling and waxed
Others attendmg were Peafl seats and windows. Cleaning
Proffitt, Joan Proffitt and two the lawn for winrer"is the next
. daughters, Ilah Roush, Patty . project.
.
Jane got new lmoleum fo_r the
, Roush, Tricta and Sherry; ·
Anna Cornell, M~rcedes rest rooms; wall~ were pam~d
Condon ·and this report'l!';.. ,.
ear her m the summ~r . We re
On Sept. 27 the ctrcle served . proud of and very thankful for
the potluck ~inner to men our church home butll mosUy
layl~g gas line, and to do some by mell)be,r s, friends . and
cleaning. Men workmg were . netghbors wtth much sacroftce.
Ralph Johnson, pastor; Herb
Men, women and chtldren
Wbtte, Racine; Denny and wor~ed together, .Played and
Danny Roush, Portland; prayed together, a rewardmg
Richard Redmond, Mason, W. prOJect.

Drip or

Vac Pok

Plus Top Value Stamps

' ·
le d b
Cleaning project COf!l/! . !e ry
men and WO.men oif church

.

•

O cto ~er

fund cutbacks

r. ·

Cerical
Warehousemen
Welders
Machinists
Electricians
Mechanics
bb Technicians

.

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rutrn

v 151

has iob openinp for permanent emp. . in the following stil~

,.

' I

GROUND BEEF
RIB . STEAKS
PORK STEAKS .
ROUND STEAKS
BULK SAUSAGE
HAM SALAD

4 lb.
Jib.
3 lb.
2 lb.
3 lb.
1 lb.
3 lb.

992-3502

I

.

· er planets.

$

New Haven, W.Va.

High · Ind ividual Game
Marlene Wilson 110.
Second High Ind . Game
' Vic~y Gillilan 157.
H1gh Series Marlene
W ilson 479 .
Second High Ser ies - Vicky
Gillilan 445 .
Team
H i gh
Game
Pocklington Construction 787.

The planet Jupiter is more
than 1,000 times the size of
the earth· and exceeds the
combined mass of all the oth-

PORK CHOPS
CHUCK ROAST
LARGE FRANKS
SLICED BACON .
ROUND STEAK
GROUND BEEF

Philip Sporn Plant

14

J eam High Series Suno co 221 3.

. (343)

J lb.
' Jib.
J lb.
J lb.
J lb.
1 lb.

CDpJufU 1!13 . lh~ lrecer
Ce. 1 tml u• Pr itU . coad

.opposed by area PTA

central Operating Company's

20

Spencer's Market

J lb. PORK STEAK
2 lb. CHOPPED SIRLOIN
2 lb. ROUND STEAK

Pomeroy

PH. 992-2178 -

26

Newell Sunoco
Pock llngton .Con st .

lb. BULK SAUSAGE

J lb. GROUND BEEF

Phone Us
Your Order!' (344)

·'"-----------J

Pomeroy Bo.w ling Lanes

~ Milk

2

J lb.
4 lb.
2 lb.
J lb.
2 lb.
2 lb.

'

.Engagement Announced

A

McCLURE'S

WEDNESIJAY
CUB SCOUT Pa c k 245
Reorganizationat meeting, 7:30
p.m. at American Legion Hall.
Middleport. All interested boys
and pare~ts invited.
TUPPERS PLAINS CommWJily Club , 7:30p.m. at home
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Garde~ers, 8 p.m. at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co . social room . Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter to be in
charge of the program .

UX:AL 426, UtiUly Workers
Union of America, will hold a
meeting at 5 p.m. at Union
Hall, PomerQy. AU asked to
attend important session .
POMEROY - MIODLEPOitT
Lions Club, noon Wednesday ~t
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
RAM,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m . at
'
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. ·
THURSDAY
DEBRA ANN RAWSON
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Sacred
Heart Church basement,
Pomeroy . .
''
MEIGS County Humane
The bride-elect is a 1972
Mr . and Mrs. Emmett
Society,
7:30 Thursday at the
: Rawson, Middleport, Ohio, graduate of Meigs High School
Middleport village hall.
" are
announcing
the and is employed at Richards
POMEROY First Baptist
engagement and approaching and Son Inc., Racine.
Chorch,
Missionary Society,
Mr. Grady Is a 1972
I
marriage Of their daughter,
Debra Ann, to Lawrence graduate of Point Pleasant · 7:30p.m. Thursday. Mrs . Ivan
Walker to present the program
Grady, Jr., son ·of Mr. and and is employed at Robbins
entiUed " Youth is Hope."
• Mrs. Lawrence Grady, Sr. and Myers, Gallipolis. The
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
event will take place Nov: 22.
Point Pleasant.
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
•
Speaker from the Meigs
Community School.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Society regular meeting, 7:30
p.m . Thursday, Middleport
Village
Hall.
Everyone
welcome.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453·
The Pomeroy PTA's action Snowden, Rutland, Norman
Monday night to oppose federal Hysell and Wendell Hoover, F&amp;AM, Thursday, 8 p.m. All
cutbacks in funding of the Pomeroy . Frank Board, in· master masons invited.
school milk program in a letter cumbent candidate for rePAST OFFICERS Club ,
campaign was reinforced election, was unable to attend Racine Chapter, Thursday, 8
Tuesday when Mrs. Earl since the Board of Education p.m. at the home of Mr. and
Thoma, pre~ident, and Mrs. was in session.
Mrs. Ernest Wingett. All past
William
Stephenson,
Tentative arrangements officers invited .
le gis lative agent, conferred were made for an art class to
w i lh a representative of begin next week with Mrs.
FRIDAy
Congressman Clarence Miller . Margaret Ella Lewis as in· .
REVIVAL Friday, Saturday
A letter of opposition to the structor. Mrs. Thoma report..d · and Sunday at Rutland Church
c utbacks
directed
. to that letters will be sent to the . of God. Evangelist Yvonne ·
Congressma n Miller was parents later this week.
Lewingdon, Columbus. Special
pas.s ed
along
to
his
Robert Morris, principal, singing by Heavenly Highway
representatives, and Mrs . announced
American singers . Public ·invited. SerThoma and Mrs. Stephenson Education Week, OCt. 22-25, vices 7":30 p.m.
reviewed the problems being and invited the parents to visit
SATURDAY
encount..red in the Pomeroy the classrooms during the
GOSPEL
SONGFEST
school where the children of week.
Assembly of God Church,
· numerous families are either
Plans were made for the Dudding Lane, Mason, \:30
· of low inco me or public annual Halloween party Oct. p.m . "Gospel Lighters,"
assistance status.
Tl, 6:30 to 10 p.m. in the school
Crown City, featured singers.
Another action taken at the gym with door prizes, a sweet Chester Tennant , pastor.
Monday night meeting by the shop, flea market, fortune
Public invited.
PT ti was endorsement of the .5 t..lleis, games, etc. to be in·
.SUNDAY
mill bond issue which. would eluded in the activities.
ANN IVERS A R Y. and_
provide matching fund s for
A poster cont..st to promote
homecoming at Rutland
construction of a school the party will be held in each
Church Of Christ. Bible School
building for the mentally classroom with a first, second
at 9:30a.m. Worship services
· retard ed.
.
and third place prize to be
atl0:30 a .m. Dinner in church
John Krawsczyn, a teacher awarded in each grade. The
basement at' noon. Afternoon
in the school, point..d out the prizes will be purchased by the
program at 2 p.m. with Ernie
need tor a building equipped to PTA from the safety pairol
J ohnson as guest speaker .
serve the retarded noting that members who are selling
Special music a nd singing
none now empty meets the items.
grOups from area .churches.
requirements. The thing to be
The health and welfare
Public invited.
voted on in November is not committee
reported • on
T
another operating levy, he. ' clothing 'which is available at
l
stressed, but a bond issue . to . the school for children who
Pomona, Ca-Oonna Rae
run 20 years for the con- bave mishaps, such as falling
Wilson and Hal Massingill,
struction of a building.
in a puddle or ripping a gar- , residents of Mason,. while
'
Also speaking at the meeting ment.
visiting
relali ves in -the
Mrs. Jimmy Jo Hemsley
was Mrs. Judith Brostrom,
Southern California area,
Meigs Local speech and annoWJced that subscriptions
were among the million-plus
hearing ·therapist. She talked to the Ohio Parent Teacher
visitors enjoying the 1973
. on the Orthological Diagnostic Magazine is $1 and she is hand'
edition of the huge Los
Clinic and urged the support of ling the orders.
Angeles County Fair in
Mrs. Thoma, preside.nt,
the PTA in getting the prog'ram
Pomona during its Sept. 14-30
reinstated. Mrs. Brostrom ~nnowteed the Nov. I meeting
run.
The annual fall event is the .
asked the unit to direct a l.e tter of the Meigs County Council of ;
largest cowtly fair in the
to the Meigs County Com- Parents and Teachers will be
nation a.~d fourth largest of all
. missioners and to the commun: held at Middleport. Also noted
fairs in ·the United States,
ity through a Latter to the is the Monday visit of the
including slate fairs,
Editor urging that the program bloodmobile at the school.
Thousands of competitive
be continued.
The attendance banner went
exhibits,
flower and garden
The therapist said that local to the fourth grade. To open the
show, ftpe.arts, interior design
funding must be approved by meeting, Mrs. ·. Judy Werry,
shOwcase, livestock, horse
the Commissioners who to date first grade mother, led in the
racing, jWlior fair, .home arts,
bave not allocated the ,money pledge, and Mrs. Ann Hemsley
free grandstad shows and
needed so that federal funds gave devotions. Mrs. Thoma
entertainment are but a few or
can be secured.,
read an article "The Little Red
the .features of. the exposition.
Present at the meeti.ng were School House." Refreshments
Fair dates in 1~71 are Sept.
· .three candidates for the Board were served by ihe sixth grade
13
through 29.
'
•
of Education of the Meigs parents. Parents visited the
Local School District, Robert · rooms following the meeting.

J1 SCHOOL TIME

·'·
.

I,_

Any couple married long
enough to use U(l their wed·
ding gift of marJoram in th e
spice rack deserves _another .
jar for a golden ann•versary
present.

EY J(JDS!

4th &amp; Locust

...

+++

·-·
..,

!' Social li
Calendar~l

By PHIL PASTORET

However, here's the address
postcard applications should
_go to, if and when the tags are
+++
issued: AnUerless Deer Permils, Division of Wildlife,
Fountain Square, Columbus ..
43224.
PostcardS must ·bear the
hunter's name and address,
deer tag pumber, and county of
choice. Some 1,200 permits wilt
H yo u have time on your
be issued among the 16
hands,
be tter tighten you r
counties.
wrist watc h strap.

Here'S the Man

:'!

:~:!
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:;:;
DAYI'ON DAILY NEWS
severing the rear feet.
EDITOR'S NOTE : Stat«.&gt; go,•ern- Transportation to a ir concHrion ,:4 or the purse strings :
·,·, Wrilten For Uoited Press
Now the dressed squirreJ is
me-ot. wUh. ~ · see min gly in- computer room.
- Rcqttire the governor, except a .!~.t~ lnler-national
- ready for stove or freezer, and
satiable thirst for money, will spend
~7.381 for microfilm for the s tate newly-elected one, to present his budget ;.;:
WESl' MILTON - Squirrels no tainting hair has touched
wttil i!'sall goneaudsomelimes go into treasu rer's ofji('('.
by "th e time the legislature convenes in ;:;; are tough .
edible m.eat if the job is done
debt. UPI Siatchouse Reporter Lee
- $2 ,500 for a ··stock m"rkel iden- January .
·:·:
The. little bushytails canal&gt;- right.
Leooard, In the last of a series of nine tifiers'file service " for the Department
- Require a representative of the
sorb a lot of lead and still es· This handy. and inexpensive
articles on the mushrooming st»te of Economic and Community legislative finance committees or ··the ::: cape into the treetops,
rig should work equally well on
budget. describes another tool for · . Development.
Legislative Service Commission to ;~;~
Even after a day 's hunt, bag- . other small game or forgovernment. spending a_od then offers
- $8 ,822 for something called a participate in discussions as agencies
ged squirrels can be tough. bearers during trapping
some suggesuons for om proving the "rotogatherer and stitcher" for the prepare to submit their budge t requests i\: Tough on the hunt..r faced with season. Barefoot said he pla"ns
budget-making process. In conclusion, attorney general 's office .
to the governor .
:;:; skinning and dressing them, to market the skinning tripod
however, he notes · that only by
- Thousands of other dollars for an
'-Give members of the House and ;~: that is. ·
within the next year.
removing politlu and professionalizing assortment of cars, copiers, computers, Senate finance committees no other ·
But Harold Barefoot, a canoe
1973 Ohio DJ&gt;er Tags,
the legislature could the trend to bigger adding machines and typewrilersm
assignments, so they can concentrate :;; manufacuturer and dealer of although ballyhooed by state
budgets be "halted.
The only item sq uashed was $4,91~ for on th e budget work. Provide the
this Miami county community, officials as being available "by
-22,000 sheets of stiff paper for the Ohio committees with enough staff for ,;j;: bas hit upon a very handy rig Sept. I," are still not on sale at
By LEE LEONARD
industrial Commission to use for safety thorough research .
;:;; which makes the average most normal locations.
U!'I Statehouse Reporter
slogans on auto bumper stickers. The · - Eliminate floor sessions during the ;:;: start-to-finish lime no more
The tags, which cost $5.35 for
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - In case the board members were afraid the slogans first month or six weeks of each year to :;:~ than five minutes.
Ohio residents, are required
executive branch has left something out might turn out to be political.
allow the finance committees to hold ';!;
Barefoot has built an alumi- for anyone plaMing to hWlt
of its budget, or if the need arises for
"We put a penalty on those who don't budget hearings each day. R&lt;!quire that :;:; num tripod stamling four feet deer in the Buckeye state.
something extra, there is another spend money," said Rep. Ronald H. the House and Senate finance com- :~; high at the apex. Three small . They are also required for
weapon in its arsenal called the state Weyand!, D·Akron, chairman of a rriittees hold joint public hearings to ~;; chain~&gt; · altached the legs give ~yone wishing ' to apply for
·Controlling Board.
House Finance subsection . "The money eliminate duplication of testimony and · j:j: · the tripod stability.
Ohio's first modern-day ant·
The Controlling Board js now lapses If ills not spent. This is a dumb gov~ both chambers the same slant on ;:,~
Two additional chains, each lerless deer season in 16
dominated by legislators, but rWl QY the proposition to begin with."
· the budget.
;!;! tipped with a small metal ring, counties starting in late
stale Finance Department.lts purpose
One way to reni the lapses and waste
- Require that any new programs be ;:;: hang from two of the legs. November . Postcard appliis to remedy oversights between bud~ in government appriations, and accompanied by a price tag for the :l:l These are used to form nooses cations must bear the hunter's
gets, when legislative action would take · perhaps pinpoint available revenues current and future budget periods, even :;~ which anchor the squirrel by serial number from his tag.
too long.
more closely would be to adopt an if it is estimated .
~l its hocks.
Applications
for
the
Too often, the board is an easy annua l budget.
-,Set up a special finance sub- i'i
Barefoot uses a sharp knife 1973 antlerless deer permits
vehicle for shufflipJ:.. fWJds within
Assistant Senate Minority Leader committee to study longr~nge state ~Z to make the first cut inside are reported to have been
agencies, transferring spare money Oliver Ocasek, D·Akron , bas · been needs and outline a five or 10-year i;!; each rear leg, running the accepted by state wildlife
from one porpose to another.
trying to get Ohio on a yearly - instead spending plan.
:;~ knife 's point up to each ring. personnel any time after Sept.
Peak activity comes just before the of biennial ·- budget for 10 years.
- Establish the machinery for
Then common pliers are 1, but the Jack of tags makes
new budget is enacted. Agencies
"The administration, no matter who auditing the effectiveness of each ;~ used to grip the leg skin,
stumble over one another to get before it is, wants to put the lid on for two program for which state appropriations ;;! pulling It down like a glove.
the board and exhaust their surplus years and not open i_t up, '' Ocasek said. are ma~e . . .
..
~~: The tail is then removed, and
fwtds before the fiscal period expires. " It makes budgetmg . very difficult.
Even of pohttcs cannot be removed ;:;:, the pliers again pull the rump
Any ~~lapsed," or unspent, money They say an aruma! budget would give from the budgeting process, some ~:~: skin downward.
would not" be usable in the new fiscal us the same headache every year in· improvements can be made.
:;:;· It is then a simple matter to
year. Moreover, lapses give the im- stead of every oth er year . If you went
Those improvements cannot be made :;:; use both hands to pull the
pression the agency asked for too much by that logic, you'd only have a budget without
increased
work
and ';!; loosened hide down over the
in the first place and ruin future every five years ."
professionalism in the legislature. But ::~; animal's head and front feet.
requests for more.
Rep: William E . Hinig, D-New1 then, the ' lawmakers are already ;:;: Removing these. also removes
The agenda for the Controlling Board Philadelphia , now in his fifth term on leaning that way with annual sessions :;;; the hide completely.
meeting last June 25, five days before the House Finance Committee, agreed. and a salary of $17,500.
:;;;
All that remains is making a
the end of the fiscal biennium, con" It's extremely difficult to estimate
As expressed by Rep. George D. ;:;; single cut up the entire ventral
tained 86 items - double the normal two years in advance how much money Tablack, D-Campbell: ·
:i:i
number.
you'll hav~, ·:, Hinig said. "I don 't know
"Things won't change until the ;:;: ~---------~--t
·I
The state was authorized to make of any industry that sets its budget two legislature takes it upon itself to make
1
1
HOMEMADE
these expenditures to use up money : years in advance. Business operates on its force known as an equal branch of · !~l I
1
-f7 ,000 for 5,000 pheasants for an annual budget, and Ohio govern- state government. The ·legislature l: I
I
hunting.
mentis big business."
doesn't bave the wherewithal to come ?.: I
0
I
~.000 for a suprplus aerial camera
Othe&lt; chances which would improve up with the answers, and it won-'t as :;: I
I
for the Natural Resources Department. the budgeting process by saving time long as the rank-and.file citizen looks ;~; I
I
- $2,500 for the Department of and giving the legislature more control on us as a part-time legislature."
;~: I
I

:::::;:.x.:-:-:-:.-:-:-;o.-:-:-:-:·:·::::~!:::::·::::i:x·:·:::·=·~~·

BARBS

::l

;j;j

~~

B

I o.shytails' toughness
!~~!.~,!! ~!."""'~~.~~M.~~~

I Controlling Board doles· out
....

'

1 .,.- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepon-Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. to. 1973

/•

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' .

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. 'I'fill :
t J II -

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..

•

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A- Til&lt;' Oallv &amp;ntinel. Mi~~IPmrt-P,...,....,.ov n
f

l

Letart Falls PTA meets

.'
f

'

•:)"
'

.

~

Airman and Mrs. Charles Vanan

Rites solemnized
Miss
Deone
We ldon,
Ainnan Varian is a 1973
Harrisonville, and Airman graduate of Meigs High School.
Charles Varian, Jr., Hartford, He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. Va . , were united in Charles Varian, Sr.
marriage at 2 p.m. Sept. 10 at
Maid of honor for the bride
the Church of Jesus Christ in was Mrs. Melanie Larkins,
Rutland. The Rev. Ray Rouse Pomeroy, Best man for the
performed the double-ring bridegroom was Thomas
ceremOny.
Varian, Clifton, W. Va.
The new Mrs. Varian is the
A small reception was held
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy following the ceremony for the
Rouse 1nd attends Meigs High family and friends attending.
School.

l.t::Ti\ 11'1' i'AI.l.;; - Charles
PI1Well asked for su pport in his
bi d for re-electi on to the
Southern Local School District
Board of Education, and John
Krawsczyn urged votes for the
one-half mill bond issue for
school construction funds for
retarded at the Monda y night
mee tin ~ of the Letart Falls.
PTA.
.
Krawsczyn, a teacher at the
Meigs Commu nity School,
spoke on construction of a
school building equipped to fill
the needs of Meigs County's
retarded children and adults.
He reported that local -funds
would be matched by the state.
The bond issue received the
endorsement of the PTA.
A soup supper and festival
was planned for Oct. 20 with
committees being appointed as
follows :
Kitchen : Mrs. Mary Roush,
Mrs. Pauline Wolfe, Mrs. Betty
Morris, Mrs. Ruth Riffle, Mrs.
Linda Burnem , Mrs. Lois
Allen, Mrs . Edith Rose, Mrs.
Florence Thornton, Mrs. Hazel
Roy, Mrs. Janet Manuel, Mrs.

Sybi l Hlftte. M r~. Mar~a ret

to"ort une. Mrs. Kathryn Wolfr
and Mrs. Belly Wilson.
. Ser ving : Mrs. Phyllis
O'Brien, Mrs. Opal Hupp, Mrs.
Wilson, Mrs. Violet Arnott,
Mrs. Patty Michael and Mrs.
Betty Shiveley .
Coun lry; Store : Mrs . Na ncy
Cummings, Mrs. Romona
Yonker and Mrs. Linda Grady.
Dining Room : Mrs. Kathryn
Hill, Mrs. Crestlyn Hill.
Games : William Downie,
Roger Roush,· Mrs. Lawrence,
and Vicky Cummings.
Tickets , Downie and Mrs.
Eileen Buck. ·
The menu will in clude
vege table soup, chili, sloppy
joes, hotdogs, pie and cake,
coffee and Kool-Aid . There will
also be entertainment during
tl1e evening.
Also planned by the PTA was
a Christmas bazaar.and a bake
sale, Nov. 30 and Dec. I at the
Joe Stobart building in Racine.
Orders are now being taken for
' housewares and may be placed
at 247·2672 or 247-2581.

Ohio River Museum to open
MARIE'ITA - The new Ohio
,River Museum , the state
museum of the inland
waterways, will be dedicatl!d
and opened to the public here in
ct'remonies w be held at 1 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 14.
The museum is :oca ted on '
the Muskingum River, within
sight of the Ohio, at Front and

PLAN SERVI.CES
The Flowers Brothers of
Marietta will present a concert
of sacred and inspirational
music at the Middleport First
Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday. The musical program
is open to the public. The Rev .
Edward B. Fischer, interim
pastor, will be speaking at the
morning worship hour on the
topic, " Christian Growth."
Sunday school for all ages
begins at 9:15 a.m. with the
worship hour at 10:15. There is
a nursery at all services.

St. Clair Streets.
Constructed and equipped
with s tate capital improvements bond issue and
Ohio Historical Society private
funds U&gt;talling . $450,000, th\Y
building is a unique structure
of lhree galleries of 4,800
square feet. Each gallery is a
separate room on stilts designed 'to be flooded. Open
gangways connect the galleries
and permit visitors to look at
the river as they go from one
building tQ another.
Project architects were
Eesley, Lee and Vargo,
Marietta.
Beneath the elevated
galleries an open plaza con- ·
tains reflecting pools and will
house outdoor exhibits next
year.
The W. P. S~yder, Jr., last
steam sternwheeled towbOat
on the river, complete in all
details, is a part of the Museum
complex and may be boarded
by the public..
Museum exhibits treating
riverhistory from the canoe to

the towboat and including the
natural history o! the Ohio
Valley will not be completed
until mid-December. Portions
of exhibit.!f will be in place for
the dedication, however. A
feature of the Museum will be a
small, multi-media theater to
_Qperate continuously.
Exhibits are being prepared
and installed by the staff of The
Ohio Historical Society under
the direction of William G.
Keener, curaU&gt;r of history.
Exhibits designer is Bernard
Stockwell and Associates,
Columbus. The society will
administer lhe completed
facility.
Dr . Robert E . Cecile,
chairman, Ohio American
Revolution Bicentennial
Commission, will dedicate the
museum at the I p.m.
ceremonies . Others participating will be Dr , Harold J.
Grimm, society president, and
State Representative Sam
Speck, New Concord, who will
accept from Marcus McCorison, Worcester, Mass., for

the museum a lead plate
placed at the future site of
Marietta in 1749 to claim the
Ohio Valley for France. The
plate is a loan or the American
Antiquarian Society. This is the
first time it has been exhibited
in Ohio since- its accidental
discovery 175 years ago.
Society trustee John A.
Burnworth, Marietta, will be
master of ceremonies for the
event. captain Frederick Way,
Jr., Sewickley, Pennsylvania,
president of the Sons and
Daughters of Pioneer Rivermen, will cut the ribbon admitting the . public to the
museum. The group has loaned
many items for the exhibits.
The Ohio River Museum will
be open throughout the year
from 9 a.m . U&gt; 5 p.m . Monday
~~)rough Saturday; I to 5 p.m.
Sunday and holidays. A
reduced admission charge
from the $1 for adults and 50
cents for children una ccompanied by a parent is
proposed to be ln effect until
the completion of e~ibits .

... nus
II .,,,.~ ._
WINCHESTER

22 LONG RIFLE
3 EASY W~YS TO IUY ...
CASH, CHARGE,

'U"

AMMO

12 -16-20 AND
4 10 GUAGE

~ ··

lfJO round~ per car ton A great buy!

(H&amp;R{if 11

LAY-AWAY

UMW elects officers
Mrs. John Bechtle was reelected president of the United
Methodist Women of Heath
Church at a meeting Monday
night at the church.
Other ilfficers elected, all to
belnstalled in November, were
Mrs. Charles Bradbury, vice
president;
Mrs . James
Criswell, secretary; Mrs. C. F.
' Hibbs, treasurer ; Mrs. Forrest
Bachtel, secretary of social
concerns;
Mrs.
Robert
Baumgarner, missionary
education ; Mrs : Rose McDade,
spiritual growth; Mrs. Nan
Moore , program
rna terial ·•
•
Mrs. Mary Rinehart, Mrs.
Terri Byer and Mrs. Bessie
Haddox, membership ; Mrs.
Earl Knight, Mrs. Frances
Wilson, Mrs. Emma Wayland,
local church affairs ; Mrs. C. E.
Young, campus rninistry i and
Mrs. L. W. McComas, Mrs.
Wilson , Mrs . Jane Gilkey ,
nominating committee.
In conjunction with the installation serviCe next month,
a pledge service will also be
conducted. It was reported that
the group made $128 on the
recent rummage sale.
Announced was a workshop
at Grace United Methodist
Church, Gallipolis, Oct. 21, and
a conference Oct. 25 at 8:30
p.m. at the Heath Church. Mrs .
Moore reported on the Service
of Celebration attended by 11
women of Heath Church.
To open the meeting Mrs.
Bechtle welcomed the 28
members and read an article
on United Methodist Wornen.
Mrs. Ern;e Fraser gave the
devotions using a poem,
"Autumn," the song , "The
Church's One Foundation " and
scripture from Thessalonians.
"Living and Acting In Love"
was the program topic used by
Mrs . Knight who was assisted
by Mrs. Glen ·Lambert and
Mrs. Gilkey. Mrs. Knight told
!he role of the church in
missions, gave
severa l
definitions for the word
~~c hurch" and commented on
the close relationship between
family and church. She noted
that the earliest Christian
Church was in Jerusalem with

.,

"' l! ~PI-I Y

\

SHOP EARLY WHILE
I QUANTITIES LAST

the disciples as the leaders.
As a part of the program,
Mrs. Knight conducted two
interviews, one with an early
Christian, portrayed by Mrs.
Lambert and the other with
someone from a modern
church portrayed by Mrs.
Gilkey.
In the ~arly · Christian interview the dialogue was based
on the book of Acts. The day at
Pentecost was reviewed along
with the problems of banding
together to preach the message
ilf .joy and faith for everyone.
Mrs . Gilkey's interview
centered on the problems of the
declining congregation and the
need for emphasis on missions,
and the work of missionaries ·
around the world as well as the
need for Christians to be interested in everyone, the
lonely, the depressed and the
sad.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs . M. L. French, Mrs.
James Jivideq, Mrs. Steve
Houchins and Mrs. C. M.
Hennessy.

HECK'S REG. TO

$3.99
SPORTS DEPT.

'

with More Big Storewide Savingsl

AUTOMATIC
SHOTGUN

PUMP SHOTGUN

5

114

~·o¥•n de''Y'' on ov • cj~o d
tng \ Oo tqun\ mo k• • nuo """' IIUlO

A 1-

Qe,,

PQ IN I(P '""
~ h o ,, e f&lt;&gt;• foel d
on d "" 9" ' I~(&gt;O I • n 9

HECK'S REG.

$8.80
. SPORTS DEPT.
3-PLA(E

TRUtK

88

GUN RACK

HECK 'S REG .
$190.00 -

HECK 'S REG.
$134 . 93

$249

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

HEC!LS

USE
YOUR
HECK'S

AUTOMAT!(
SHOTGUN

pi uq f_omtl hed

$2688

'119 18

CHARLES
DALY

M o de l 870 P u mp
Shotgun 5 -sho t c a pa c ity w it h 3 -s h o t

22 GAUGE
NO. 10

'

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. "'"~4"

•2.29

SPOIITS

"FRIENDLY
PERSUASION"

REED GUN
CASE

MASTER

GUN LOCK
HECK'S REG. _

CRUSHED NYLON
PANTY HOSE

FRENCH
DESIGNS

MURPHY'S OWN QUALITY BRAND

•

BABY AFGHAN KITS
IN HOSPITAL
Edgar Greenlee, Pleasant
Ridge, Pomeroy, is a patient in
Holzer Medical Center. His
room number is 224.

REGULAR U.77
Shell or ripple kit with 10
ouncu of soft DuPont Orion'
acrylic for a 28x36" afghan .
Yellow, green , white or pink,
blue, white. Full directions.

REGULAR $14.81 • 45 PC. SETS

BRISTOL TABLE LAMPS
styles
Reg. 118.94

299

(

DECORA-TiVE LiGHTED BASE

SAVE 78c]

Melamine Dinnerware
Eight each:

dinnerplotes,
cups, saucers, bread and

lovely imported
w ith hondblown glou

and ont1que bran base.
Ornate gold trimmed
shade . 32" high . Lovely
alone and in pairs!

KIT

butter plates, soup . bowls.
Vegetable bowl , platter ,
creamer, sugar with lid.

16~~

16 Pc. sets

.' . . .
:; ': :.. : ..: :-: .·

TRUCK LOAD
SALE

•, '

SAVE $1
DEEP CUFFED .

On Kitchen
Cabinets
Big 'Saving's At

.
'• ,•. :-: .

::;

..

:· :: · ::.

SAF-T·BAK

5'7", 100-150 lbs.

-::,

3

97

'REGULAR $2.29

SET

REGULAR $4.88

long sleeve turtleneck or point_c_ollor body
suit. Solid color, front pleated flares .. Per·
feet aclionweor for school!

. -.

25

1973 FORD CARS
'AND TRUCKS

LUNCHBOX TREAT! ·

REG.&amp;&amp;c
82c

.

Grow heohhy,
bright blooms
in every color.
Plant now for
spring flowers.

' CHOCOLATE
CANDIES

POUND

167

•. HECK' S
REG . .
$10.99

.

sass-

~4.47

W~'-~i"

~-

..
.

~d

OCT. 11 .12,1301t.Y

WITH COUPON

~H

OCT. 11,12,13 ONLY

OCT.11,t2,t301ft.Y

.. .. ,

HUNTING PANTS \

\'

The~e c o rt1 fo rt oble , (O~vo l ond
tough l ro u ~e n ore o f heo vywetgh t
Army Duck rn Mu ~ tord . Woter re ·
p~: l l e n t treated and feoture fulr
rubber remforced in both ~nee~
and seat Belt IQo p ~. tw o fro nt
~ la 1 h pod :ets, two rear po ckets,
o ne w1th flap button , zrpper fly.

ss8~
SPfJ/JTS DEPT.

HUNTING

IN:)ULATED

UNDERWEAR

Rugged ligh tweight all rubbe r
loa m insula ted boo t. Semi·hord
moccosm toe 5oft wo ven nap l111 · .
1119 lor warm th. Guuet hned Mul

d eated

s ol ~

an d heel

Shell Acetate Taffeta, lined wrth the some
fabric, •nsulot10n 6 oz Acryhc bottmg . 2
pc svot , zipper fly front jkt . w1th snaps , J
pc kmt, Ivii cut pa nts with re-m/arced judo

A 1 ~or ted

$1.09
SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$9.99

SPORTS
DEPT.

n ot&lt;h

1-IECK'S REG. $11.99 ,

•

HECK'S REG. $9.99

HECK'S REG,

SPORTS BEPT.

$17.99

THERMAL
INSULATED

SPORTS DEPT.

B-LAZE ORANGE

INSULATED
HUNTING JACKET
w a, h a"d W•o•, l&gt;e&lt;lry 70 O.,..•t • Nylon
5h, ll Wind l'"'"f AND Wn•~ • Re ""'lt. m
l""'lo~oo~ al 5

or. O...PO"I Ooc•0&lt;1 · 88"

~ ly F•o m. TWO Jo&gt;OOl.o.~ PA lO~ POCK

ET5 •hi11 ed bod lor t•lrO lot ol'l(! nylt ,

'not collar
•DI '-'" I&lt;&gt;r

JONES STYLE

HUNTING HAT
PRS.

SJ69
HECK'S REG. $2.2~

sass

l l lt' i .

IHAND WARMER

HECK'S
REG.

-

$6~8·

j5 6t,RRQ.·

SPORTS DEPT.

. HUNTING
SOCKS

''"'" l•• • ~'e hal&lt;i e• tub Padded
1!-&lt;o"ld,, Q"d elbow ll&lt;&gt;f&lt;""' "'"o&lt; T•

•

HECK'S REG. $1.29

INSULATED

,.., rh 8 I"' III&lt;&gt;Op&gt; •n M &lt;h Bv nn~
'~lop po.-l•ol Zoppertd galnf' J)O( 'U

•

EACH

·'

Moutllwuh

47c:

116'

HECK'S REG. 99'

,.

' .

HUNTING
COAT

I;

Best deals ever on all cars and

-..:~~

, '

(

HECK'S
SUIT ·

.27!o.

99&lt;

•

REG.

ChiWibll

Chocolate covered peanuts,
stars, bridge mix. Peanut
clusters, milk balls.

,~,~

·-&lt;

.

I

It

BOTTLE 0_!A;_..,.t.. ~
100 &lt;&gt;'~c!Jtll'

.

J

;!l:

BOOTS

Qoc,,, ,BS, .

.

POund

""

:.

..~I' Iii''"

SAF-T-BAK

$ 88

Vmy l Safety and Wororng Vest
Inte r no too r1al Fluo r ~c enl orooge-.

Holds identification, change, credit
cords, checkbook!
zipp·e r
Handy
'pocket, key ring.

•

..

SAFETY VEST

REGULAR $2.98

. .
... .

'

·-re·

HECK'S REG. $7.99

FLAME

Imported TULIP BULBS
PAcfFK

12, 16, 20 &amp;
410 GAUGE

HECK'S REG.
15.99

196

POCKET HAND WARMER

KIT

garrre poc kzipper S he ll
each bo Hom

$1188

TOP QUALITY GROWERS

Final Clearance. .of
All
'

N~ lon R ub -

p oc ke l.

SAVE
$1.02

"'!«

CLEANING

•

Army Duc k - Wat e r
Repell en t ftnis h- Dou blc Loyer s hou l der
p oc k's ,
beri zed
e ts wi lh
l oop ~ 1n

SOLID FUEL

· SHOTGUN

HUNTING
COAT

. ::

.- ..

49~

REG. 62'

SHAKESPEARE ARROWS

$1788

SPORTS DEPT.

Girls' 3 to &amp;X
BODY SUIT &amp; FASHIONABLE
SLACK S.ETS CHECKMATES

199

Rugged .cofton and polyester / cottar cpn _ Cozy knitted caftan with ribbed crew neck
really take it! Popular burgundy and
and cu./Jed ,ragian sleeves. White, navy
brown twills, blue denim. Sizes 29-38.
and campus colors. Sizes S, M, l, XL.

HECK'S REG. $21.99

SAVE $1.01
STRETCHY
SPORT NYLON

FLEECE
LINED
SWEATSHIRTS

REGULAR $6.98

2119 Jacksoo Polot Pleasaot

•'

'•

MEN'S WARM

5 '98

Dale's
Kitchen
Center

•'

• Sho rt stroke SI NGLE
fa st o ctton • High impa ct
pm,tic fo rearm a nd ~t a&gt;c k - Pos1t i11e cross- bolt safety • Adlu st oble rear s1g ht fo r wi ndage ond'elevot1 0 n • 35 BB mo g oz1ne •
Ove rall leng th 36 in . • Avera ge ve loc ity 300 feet p e r second

$2.49
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S

¢

B B REPEATER
pump fo r

HECK'S REG.

Nude heel, run bon
toe micromesh . Fit 5'-

$5.99

100%-Cotton, Rugged warmth for hunting
com fort.
HECK'S REG.
99'

CROSMAN RAWHIDE

~3.96

SPECIAL

MEN'S and
YOUNG MEN'S
DENIM ·
BAGGIES

[SA'4UZ]

JON-E
HANDWARMER flUID

HECK'S REG.

HUNTING GLOVES

$499

$188

REGULAR 77c

De luxe mode l gun case that is con toured
Io rge en ol.:J gh to 1ncl ude t he sco pe .

rdTes and sho tgu ns

HUNTING CLOVES

57c

REED SCOPE GUN CASE

ing . Si zes to Itt mos t popula r

•5.88

NEW FALL SHADES

8 oz.

Y1nyl gun ~ase wit h co nver11en t
zipper a nd handle fo r c arry -

FOR PISTOLS, SHOTGUNS AND RIFLES

GOBLE'S USED CAR ~~sPECIALS"

•

REMINGTON

lightwe ig ht , p u ~h ·
bul! on re le q se ,
ru stproof , h 1g h ·
stre ng th olu ml num
rece1 11er, le ~s not·
iceobld re cod .

TROOPER HAT

Dishwasher Safe
Detergent Proof
Stain Resistant

WIN(HESTER

$

•.

and culf. l he l o~ e • l pt oled

~ .., ,._,

$899
HECK'S REG.

$11.99
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. '3.99

SPORTS DEPT.

11.17

$1.17
OUPON

WITH COUPON

OCT.11·12·t3 ONlY

trucks in stock

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.
992-2196

lrd AVE.
•

MI.DDLEPORT, 0.

•

'

'

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA .. BOTH GALLIPOLIS STORES - POINT PLEASANT STORE
•
. ,.
•
•

•

•

'

.

. '·'
•

.,
•

_,

• I

.'

r

, I"

\

J

�..

..

•

•

A- Til&lt;' Oallv &amp;ntinel. Mi~~IPmrt-P,...,....,.ov n
f

l

Letart Falls PTA meets

.'
f

'

•:)"
'

.

~

Airman and Mrs. Charles Vanan

Rites solemnized
Miss
Deone
We ldon,
Ainnan Varian is a 1973
Harrisonville, and Airman graduate of Meigs High School.
Charles Varian, Jr., Hartford, He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. Va . , were united in Charles Varian, Sr.
marriage at 2 p.m. Sept. 10 at
Maid of honor for the bride
the Church of Jesus Christ in was Mrs. Melanie Larkins,
Rutland. The Rev. Ray Rouse Pomeroy, Best man for the
performed the double-ring bridegroom was Thomas
ceremOny.
Varian, Clifton, W. Va.
The new Mrs. Varian is the
A small reception was held
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy following the ceremony for the
Rouse 1nd attends Meigs High family and friends attending.
School.

l.t::Ti\ 11'1' i'AI.l.;; - Charles
PI1Well asked for su pport in his
bi d for re-electi on to the
Southern Local School District
Board of Education, and John
Krawsczyn urged votes for the
one-half mill bond issue for
school construction funds for
retarded at the Monda y night
mee tin ~ of the Letart Falls.
PTA.
.
Krawsczyn, a teacher at the
Meigs Commu nity School,
spoke on construction of a
school building equipped to fill
the needs of Meigs County's
retarded children and adults.
He reported that local -funds
would be matched by the state.
The bond issue received the
endorsement of the PTA.
A soup supper and festival
was planned for Oct. 20 with
committees being appointed as
follows :
Kitchen : Mrs. Mary Roush,
Mrs. Pauline Wolfe, Mrs. Betty
Morris, Mrs. Ruth Riffle, Mrs.
Linda Burnem , Mrs. Lois
Allen, Mrs . Edith Rose, Mrs.
Florence Thornton, Mrs. Hazel
Roy, Mrs. Janet Manuel, Mrs.

Sybi l Hlftte. M r~. Mar~a ret

to"ort une. Mrs. Kathryn Wolfr
and Mrs. Belly Wilson.
. Ser ving : Mrs. Phyllis
O'Brien, Mrs. Opal Hupp, Mrs.
Wilson, Mrs. Violet Arnott,
Mrs. Patty Michael and Mrs.
Betty Shiveley .
Coun lry; Store : Mrs . Na ncy
Cummings, Mrs. Romona
Yonker and Mrs. Linda Grady.
Dining Room : Mrs. Kathryn
Hill, Mrs. Crestlyn Hill.
Games : William Downie,
Roger Roush,· Mrs. Lawrence,
and Vicky Cummings.
Tickets , Downie and Mrs.
Eileen Buck. ·
The menu will in clude
vege table soup, chili, sloppy
joes, hotdogs, pie and cake,
coffee and Kool-Aid . There will
also be entertainment during
tl1e evening.
Also planned by the PTA was
a Christmas bazaar.and a bake
sale, Nov. 30 and Dec. I at the
Joe Stobart building in Racine.
Orders are now being taken for
' housewares and may be placed
at 247·2672 or 247-2581.

Ohio River Museum to open
MARIE'ITA - The new Ohio
,River Museum , the state
museum of the inland
waterways, will be dedicatl!d
and opened to the public here in
ct'remonies w be held at 1 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 14.
The museum is :oca ted on '
the Muskingum River, within
sight of the Ohio, at Front and

PLAN SERVI.CES
The Flowers Brothers of
Marietta will present a concert
of sacred and inspirational
music at the Middleport First
Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday. The musical program
is open to the public. The Rev .
Edward B. Fischer, interim
pastor, will be speaking at the
morning worship hour on the
topic, " Christian Growth."
Sunday school for all ages
begins at 9:15 a.m. with the
worship hour at 10:15. There is
a nursery at all services.

St. Clair Streets.
Constructed and equipped
with s tate capital improvements bond issue and
Ohio Historical Society private
funds U&gt;talling . $450,000, th\Y
building is a unique structure
of lhree galleries of 4,800
square feet. Each gallery is a
separate room on stilts designed 'to be flooded. Open
gangways connect the galleries
and permit visitors to look at
the river as they go from one
building tQ another.
Project architects were
Eesley, Lee and Vargo,
Marietta.
Beneath the elevated
galleries an open plaza con- ·
tains reflecting pools and will
house outdoor exhibits next
year.
The W. P. S~yder, Jr., last
steam sternwheeled towbOat
on the river, complete in all
details, is a part of the Museum
complex and may be boarded
by the public..
Museum exhibits treating
riverhistory from the canoe to

the towboat and including the
natural history o! the Ohio
Valley will not be completed
until mid-December. Portions
of exhibit.!f will be in place for
the dedication, however. A
feature of the Museum will be a
small, multi-media theater to
_Qperate continuously.
Exhibits are being prepared
and installed by the staff of The
Ohio Historical Society under
the direction of William G.
Keener, curaU&gt;r of history.
Exhibits designer is Bernard
Stockwell and Associates,
Columbus. The society will
administer lhe completed
facility.
Dr . Robert E . Cecile,
chairman, Ohio American
Revolution Bicentennial
Commission, will dedicate the
museum at the I p.m.
ceremonies . Others participating will be Dr , Harold J.
Grimm, society president, and
State Representative Sam
Speck, New Concord, who will
accept from Marcus McCorison, Worcester, Mass., for

the museum a lead plate
placed at the future site of
Marietta in 1749 to claim the
Ohio Valley for France. The
plate is a loan or the American
Antiquarian Society. This is the
first time it has been exhibited
in Ohio since- its accidental
discovery 175 years ago.
Society trustee John A.
Burnworth, Marietta, will be
master of ceremonies for the
event. captain Frederick Way,
Jr., Sewickley, Pennsylvania,
president of the Sons and
Daughters of Pioneer Rivermen, will cut the ribbon admitting the . public to the
museum. The group has loaned
many items for the exhibits.
The Ohio River Museum will
be open throughout the year
from 9 a.m . U&gt; 5 p.m . Monday
~~)rough Saturday; I to 5 p.m.
Sunday and holidays. A
reduced admission charge
from the $1 for adults and 50
cents for children una ccompanied by a parent is
proposed to be ln effect until
the completion of e~ibits .

... nus
II .,,,.~ ._
WINCHESTER

22 LONG RIFLE
3 EASY W~YS TO IUY ...
CASH, CHARGE,

'U"

AMMO

12 -16-20 AND
4 10 GUAGE

~ ··

lfJO round~ per car ton A great buy!

(H&amp;R{if 11

LAY-AWAY

UMW elects officers
Mrs. John Bechtle was reelected president of the United
Methodist Women of Heath
Church at a meeting Monday
night at the church.
Other ilfficers elected, all to
belnstalled in November, were
Mrs. Charles Bradbury, vice
president;
Mrs . James
Criswell, secretary; Mrs. C. F.
' Hibbs, treasurer ; Mrs. Forrest
Bachtel, secretary of social
concerns;
Mrs.
Robert
Baumgarner, missionary
education ; Mrs : Rose McDade,
spiritual growth; Mrs. Nan
Moore , program
rna terial ·•
•
Mrs. Mary Rinehart, Mrs.
Terri Byer and Mrs. Bessie
Haddox, membership ; Mrs.
Earl Knight, Mrs. Frances
Wilson, Mrs. Emma Wayland,
local church affairs ; Mrs. C. E.
Young, campus rninistry i and
Mrs. L. W. McComas, Mrs.
Wilson , Mrs . Jane Gilkey ,
nominating committee.
In conjunction with the installation serviCe next month,
a pledge service will also be
conducted. It was reported that
the group made $128 on the
recent rummage sale.
Announced was a workshop
at Grace United Methodist
Church, Gallipolis, Oct. 21, and
a conference Oct. 25 at 8:30
p.m. at the Heath Church. Mrs .
Moore reported on the Service
of Celebration attended by 11
women of Heath Church.
To open the meeting Mrs.
Bechtle welcomed the 28
members and read an article
on United Methodist Wornen.
Mrs. Ern;e Fraser gave the
devotions using a poem,
"Autumn," the song , "The
Church's One Foundation " and
scripture from Thessalonians.
"Living and Acting In Love"
was the program topic used by
Mrs . Knight who was assisted
by Mrs. Glen ·Lambert and
Mrs. Gilkey. Mrs. Knight told
!he role of the church in
missions, gave
severa l
definitions for the word
~~c hurch" and commented on
the close relationship between
family and church. She noted
that the earliest Christian
Church was in Jerusalem with

.,

"' l! ~PI-I Y

\

SHOP EARLY WHILE
I QUANTITIES LAST

the disciples as the leaders.
As a part of the program,
Mrs. Knight conducted two
interviews, one with an early
Christian, portrayed by Mrs.
Lambert and the other with
someone from a modern
church portrayed by Mrs.
Gilkey.
In the ~arly · Christian interview the dialogue was based
on the book of Acts. The day at
Pentecost was reviewed along
with the problems of banding
together to preach the message
ilf .joy and faith for everyone.
Mrs . Gilkey's interview
centered on the problems of the
declining congregation and the
need for emphasis on missions,
and the work of missionaries ·
around the world as well as the
need for Christians to be interested in everyone, the
lonely, the depressed and the
sad.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs . M. L. French, Mrs.
James Jivideq, Mrs. Steve
Houchins and Mrs. C. M.
Hennessy.

HECK'S REG. TO

$3.99
SPORTS DEPT.

'

with More Big Storewide Savingsl

AUTOMATIC
SHOTGUN

PUMP SHOTGUN

5

114

~·o¥•n de''Y'' on ov • cj~o d
tng \ Oo tqun\ mo k• • nuo """' IIUlO

A 1-

Qe,,

PQ IN I(P '""
~ h o ,, e f&lt;&gt;• foel d
on d "" 9" ' I~(&gt;O I • n 9

HECK'S REG.

$8.80
. SPORTS DEPT.
3-PLA(E

TRUtK

88

GUN RACK

HECK 'S REG .
$190.00 -

HECK 'S REG.
$134 . 93

$249

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

HEC!LS

USE
YOUR
HECK'S

AUTOMAT!(
SHOTGUN

pi uq f_omtl hed

$2688

'119 18

CHARLES
DALY

M o de l 870 P u mp
Shotgun 5 -sho t c a pa c ity w it h 3 -s h o t

22 GAUGE
NO. 10

'

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. "'"~4"

•2.29

SPOIITS

"FRIENDLY
PERSUASION"

REED GUN
CASE

MASTER

GUN LOCK
HECK'S REG. _

CRUSHED NYLON
PANTY HOSE

FRENCH
DESIGNS

MURPHY'S OWN QUALITY BRAND

•

BABY AFGHAN KITS
IN HOSPITAL
Edgar Greenlee, Pleasant
Ridge, Pomeroy, is a patient in
Holzer Medical Center. His
room number is 224.

REGULAR U.77
Shell or ripple kit with 10
ouncu of soft DuPont Orion'
acrylic for a 28x36" afghan .
Yellow, green , white or pink,
blue, white. Full directions.

REGULAR $14.81 • 45 PC. SETS

BRISTOL TABLE LAMPS
styles
Reg. 118.94

299

(

DECORA-TiVE LiGHTED BASE

SAVE 78c]

Melamine Dinnerware
Eight each:

dinnerplotes,
cups, saucers, bread and

lovely imported
w ith hondblown glou

and ont1que bran base.
Ornate gold trimmed
shade . 32" high . Lovely
alone and in pairs!

KIT

butter plates, soup . bowls.
Vegetable bowl , platter ,
creamer, sugar with lid.

16~~

16 Pc. sets

.' . . .
:; ': :.. : ..: :-: .·

TRUCK LOAD
SALE

•, '

SAVE $1
DEEP CUFFED .

On Kitchen
Cabinets
Big 'Saving's At

.
'• ,•. :-: .

::;

..

:· :: · ::.

SAF-T·BAK

5'7", 100-150 lbs.

-::,

3

97

'REGULAR $2.29

SET

REGULAR $4.88

long sleeve turtleneck or point_c_ollor body
suit. Solid color, front pleated flares .. Per·
feet aclionweor for school!

. -.

25

1973 FORD CARS
'AND TRUCKS

LUNCHBOX TREAT! ·

REG.&amp;&amp;c
82c

.

Grow heohhy,
bright blooms
in every color.
Plant now for
spring flowers.

' CHOCOLATE
CANDIES

POUND

167

•. HECK' S
REG . .
$10.99

.

sass-

~4.47

W~'-~i"

~-

..
.

~d

OCT. 11 .12,1301t.Y

WITH COUPON

~H

OCT. 11,12,13 ONLY

OCT.11,t2,t301ft.Y

.. .. ,

HUNTING PANTS \

\'

The~e c o rt1 fo rt oble , (O~vo l ond
tough l ro u ~e n ore o f heo vywetgh t
Army Duck rn Mu ~ tord . Woter re ·
p~: l l e n t treated and feoture fulr
rubber remforced in both ~nee~
and seat Belt IQo p ~. tw o fro nt
~ la 1 h pod :ets, two rear po ckets,
o ne w1th flap button , zrpper fly.

ss8~
SPfJ/JTS DEPT.

HUNTING

IN:)ULATED

UNDERWEAR

Rugged ligh tweight all rubbe r
loa m insula ted boo t. Semi·hord
moccosm toe 5oft wo ven nap l111 · .
1119 lor warm th. Guuet hned Mul

d eated

s ol ~

an d heel

Shell Acetate Taffeta, lined wrth the some
fabric, •nsulot10n 6 oz Acryhc bottmg . 2
pc svot , zipper fly front jkt . w1th snaps , J
pc kmt, Ivii cut pa nts with re-m/arced judo

A 1 ~or ted

$1.09
SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$9.99

SPORTS
DEPT.

n ot&lt;h

1-IECK'S REG. $11.99 ,

•

HECK'S REG. $9.99

HECK'S REG,

SPORTS BEPT.

$17.99

THERMAL
INSULATED

SPORTS DEPT.

B-LAZE ORANGE

INSULATED
HUNTING JACKET
w a, h a"d W•o•, l&gt;e&lt;lry 70 O.,..•t • Nylon
5h, ll Wind l'"'"f AND Wn•~ • Re ""'lt. m
l""'lo~oo~ al 5

or. O...PO"I Ooc•0&lt;1 · 88"

~ ly F•o m. TWO Jo&gt;OOl.o.~ PA lO~ POCK

ET5 •hi11 ed bod lor t•lrO lot ol'l(! nylt ,

'not collar
•DI '-'" I&lt;&gt;r

JONES STYLE

HUNTING HAT
PRS.

SJ69
HECK'S REG. $2.2~

sass

l l lt' i .

IHAND WARMER

HECK'S
REG.

-

$6~8·

j5 6t,RRQ.·

SPORTS DEPT.

. HUNTING
SOCKS

''"'" l•• • ~'e hal&lt;i e• tub Padded
1!-&lt;o"ld,, Q"d elbow ll&lt;&gt;f&lt;""' "'"o&lt; T•

•

HECK'S REG. $1.29

INSULATED

,.., rh 8 I"' III&lt;&gt;Op&gt; •n M &lt;h Bv nn~
'~lop po.-l•ol Zoppertd galnf' J)O( 'U

•

EACH

·'

Moutllwuh

47c:

116'

HECK'S REG. 99'

,.

' .

HUNTING
COAT

I;

Best deals ever on all cars and

-..:~~

, '

(

HECK'S
SUIT ·

.27!o.

99&lt;

•

REG.

ChiWibll

Chocolate covered peanuts,
stars, bridge mix. Peanut
clusters, milk balls.

,~,~

·-&lt;

.

I

It

BOTTLE 0_!A;_..,.t.. ~
100 &lt;&gt;'~c!Jtll'

.

J

;!l:

BOOTS

Qoc,,, ,BS, .

.

POund

""

:.

..~I' Iii''"

SAF-T-BAK

$ 88

Vmy l Safety and Wororng Vest
Inte r no too r1al Fluo r ~c enl orooge-.

Holds identification, change, credit
cords, checkbook!
zipp·e r
Handy
'pocket, key ring.

•

..

SAFETY VEST

REGULAR $2.98

. .
... .

'

·-re·

HECK'S REG. $7.99

FLAME

Imported TULIP BULBS
PAcfFK

12, 16, 20 &amp;
410 GAUGE

HECK'S REG.
15.99

196

POCKET HAND WARMER

KIT

garrre poc kzipper S he ll
each bo Hom

$1188

TOP QUALITY GROWERS

Final Clearance. .of
All
'

N~ lon R ub -

p oc ke l.

SAVE
$1.02

"'!«

CLEANING

•

Army Duc k - Wat e r
Repell en t ftnis h- Dou blc Loyer s hou l der
p oc k's ,
beri zed
e ts wi lh
l oop ~ 1n

SOLID FUEL

· SHOTGUN

HUNTING
COAT

. ::

.- ..

49~

REG. 62'

SHAKESPEARE ARROWS

$1788

SPORTS DEPT.

Girls' 3 to &amp;X
BODY SUIT &amp; FASHIONABLE
SLACK S.ETS CHECKMATES

199

Rugged .cofton and polyester / cottar cpn _ Cozy knitted caftan with ribbed crew neck
really take it! Popular burgundy and
and cu./Jed ,ragian sleeves. White, navy
brown twills, blue denim. Sizes 29-38.
and campus colors. Sizes S, M, l, XL.

HECK'S REG. $21.99

SAVE $1.01
STRETCHY
SPORT NYLON

FLEECE
LINED
SWEATSHIRTS

REGULAR $6.98

2119 Jacksoo Polot Pleasaot

•'

'•

MEN'S WARM

5 '98

Dale's
Kitchen
Center

•'

• Sho rt stroke SI NGLE
fa st o ctton • High impa ct
pm,tic fo rearm a nd ~t a&gt;c k - Pos1t i11e cross- bolt safety • Adlu st oble rear s1g ht fo r wi ndage ond'elevot1 0 n • 35 BB mo g oz1ne •
Ove rall leng th 36 in . • Avera ge ve loc ity 300 feet p e r second

$2.49
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S

¢

B B REPEATER
pump fo r

HECK'S REG.

Nude heel, run bon
toe micromesh . Fit 5'-

$5.99

100%-Cotton, Rugged warmth for hunting
com fort.
HECK'S REG.
99'

CROSMAN RAWHIDE

~3.96

SPECIAL

MEN'S and
YOUNG MEN'S
DENIM ·
BAGGIES

[SA'4UZ]

JON-E
HANDWARMER flUID

HECK'S REG.

HUNTING GLOVES

$499

$188

REGULAR 77c

De luxe mode l gun case that is con toured
Io rge en ol.:J gh to 1ncl ude t he sco pe .

rdTes and sho tgu ns

HUNTING CLOVES

57c

REED SCOPE GUN CASE

ing . Si zes to Itt mos t popula r

•5.88

NEW FALL SHADES

8 oz.

Y1nyl gun ~ase wit h co nver11en t
zipper a nd handle fo r c arry -

FOR PISTOLS, SHOTGUNS AND RIFLES

GOBLE'S USED CAR ~~sPECIALS"

•

REMINGTON

lightwe ig ht , p u ~h ·
bul! on re le q se ,
ru stproof , h 1g h ·
stre ng th olu ml num
rece1 11er, le ~s not·
iceobld re cod .

TROOPER HAT

Dishwasher Safe
Detergent Proof
Stain Resistant

WIN(HESTER

$

•.

and culf. l he l o~ e • l pt oled

~ .., ,._,

$899
HECK'S REG.

$11.99
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. '3.99

SPORTS DEPT.

11.17

$1.17
OUPON

WITH COUPON

OCT.11·12·t3 ONlY

trucks in stock

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.
992-2196

lrd AVE.
•

MI.DDLEPORT, 0.

•

'

'

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA .. BOTH GALLIPOLIS STORES - POINT PLEASANT STORE
•
. ,.
•
•

•

•

'

.

. '·'
•

.,
•

_,

• I

.'

r

, I"

\

J

�•

OPEII DAILY
10 TO 9

OPEl DAI~Y
10 TO 9

OPEl DAILY
10 'ro 9

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

- SUMDAY

IT07

~---PR_IC..._ES
Ladies' Department

LADIES

ASH FLASH

6-VOLT

·s3

.CAMP
LAMP

FALL

SKIRTS

l\
••

&amp;ck hos ov11 et

HECK'S REG. $6.88

hol e~

lor

wi re~

Tilted cassette

holder Th i-s u.nit ho s oll the d eluxe feorvres.for o
complete home e n tertai n m~nt center .

H:~~:s

(l OTHING DEPT.

br eo ~ ob te

BODY SUIT .
Grea t for t he

N e ~'

' . !

· ~ _;

·

HOUSEWARE '
DEPT.

OLD ENGLISH

HECK 'S REG :
$5.88

m

L u&lt;.lr(:~'

$

66

RE.GULAR PRICES $9.99
TO. $'20.99

HECK'S
REG.
$6 .88

BAR STOOLS
Fo om -cv1 hio11 ed &gt;eor. 24 "" a11 d JO'" h1gh .
revol ~e ~ 1mooth ly on bo ll b e o rr ng1. COn·
to ured boc ~ r ist . ( hror'[le -ploted t oot re ~t.
5 t o y · le~el g lid e \ .

. $1444
HECK'S REG. $'20.44

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S ,
REG.
$3.19

STEEl
36·DRAWER

•

• Se t&gt; thrv d r o we r~ e Stee l 1rome •
((lrry on g honcl le e fvll ~i lt' d • owt:r~

FOLDING CHAIRS

II! Mo~;~h "" P"' ' mno .. ja l • ~ &lt;:" ka1 pnu ll'd "!l' li re'''".ll lo' ,
«u !h ""'m, jQd' "'l • ~e o ! a nd cold Ne•t • ~h r&lt;&gt;" do ~ n
Bo&lt;l de u 9~ e li !o • eoor '"'" ' 'ng • Co ntcu•e d !o• tc,.,.fco•.

$422
HECK'S REG. $5.99

. . HOUSEWARE DEPT.

COSCO FOLDING
Foom -c v~hion ed ~ eat . 2J"
high , snaps av t for eo~y revp hol $lering .
Roomy, !b lety ·lreo ded step.

• Full-leng t h ~tee t panel m 1e •

tion polyet hylene ( a rqer \

So li ds cu'ld 2 to ne in si:z;e 'j S-M-l.

77

HECK'S REG. $14.44

'

oz.

~

.. '..: =

j

B.

SPORTS DEPT.

(C
) ... . . . . .
.· · ,,.,. l..,...-,.

ASSORTED COLORS

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG ." "
33'

SJ99

LUCITE WALL PAINT
'" eo " """rli.,lvlly 5cop " !'d .. o~ • deo ~ ·u p ,

$5 79

HECK'S REG.
. $1.99

HQJJSEWARI
DEPT.

HOUSEWA/IE DEPT.

I

\

\

I

. '

S 1. Here's a LUCITE exclu sive. Your own World Series souven ir

HECK'S REG. $4.97

~

HECK'S
. REG.
$1.34

LUG WRENCH

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

•
. '

'
'

'

S(REWDRIVER .
SET

99(

'

imp ri nted with wi nning team . nome , and team emb lem. Get
your order blank at our Point Deportment today.

SPRAY-ON

~

HECK'S .REG. $2.48 .

6-PIECE

Get a 1973 World Ser ies Comme morative Baseba ll .. . Only

' $14~

''

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $7.97

~·"-'&lt;=''"''

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

HECK'S .
REG • .
·. $1.66

HYDRAULIC

AUTO BODY

REPAIR KIT
~ So~e up to 20 % o n lvel cosh e

.HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

CiALLON

HECK'S REG; $,6.97

MILES MASTER

71'

$299

$679

CiALLON

Choo ·se fr om these
sce"nts: lavend er , Ro se ,
Forest and HerbaL

HECK'S REG.

FITS MOST CLOTHESDRYERS

HECK'S REG.
$1.S2

prn!N I" e .•~el .•"""' aolt ou r the wea! ~e r . I !!I I mo•th"e oo.rt .
won o f ~ g *""'heo'" Bu,lt " ' p 10 m•r . rl••U• n o•• ~ur IOO&lt;: 1-,.cl
"'"'~' d ..:&gt;n•u p
·

FOR AUTOMOBILES
I 5 if• OZ.

FRESHENER
'

SJll

lUCi l E h ot ~~~ 1ko~o&lt; n ro lcu tlo ~11e• rhc::r1 c lhr r ~oci• "Q ko'" '
~ o h h o n c nar,onw,de 1.-, 1 on h~nd&lt;ed\ of h"""'' lr d 1;,, to"

UNDERCOATING
·SPRAY
DECREASER

. . ...

WITH FLEXIBLE HOSE

99(

LUCITE HOUSE PAINT

f • ( rl•"9 '"'19" of &lt;do•• ro "'&lt;l l&lt;h "' &lt;K&lt;rfl! l U(f ff Woll Poon1
Go e• on l ol l '" '" ~"" d" e' e&lt;en '" ' '•' 10 1hony &lt;j lc'&gt; f.,,
•w ood • &lt;&gt;• ~ . &lt;Ob•nt ll , lu.,,;lv •e. l ttcf. n ood lxllk rno", woll 1

cu

'201NCH
4-WAY

DRYER VENT KIT

PLUNGER

H.ECK ' S REG.
$5 .99

GALLON
511E ,

....

25 POUNDS

HARDWARE DEPT.

.33 . OLD 2-CiALLON
ANCHOR PAINT
CAN .

FUEL

LUCITE·
..

w,~ , ~a,.r y ,

COLEMAN

SPORTS
DEPT.

$1.3~

. HECK'S REG •
99'

FISHING REELS NOT INCLUDED

-.

AIR

VACUUM
BOTTLE

' '

CLOG BUSTER

7 OZ. RENUZIT

HECK'S REG. TO $1 .99

i

HECK'S
REG •

.

HARDWARE DEPT.

ASSORTED COlORS

... '

'

.

HECK'S REG. $2.99

bVJne r head .

•19(
·- =

MANTLES

HECK'S REG. $4.33

o r; Berni 0 M o ro c"

'

ggc

COLEMAN

Portab le. Me tal F.ame , S torog e , O rg on , I~r
Cab inet w1 t ~ 15 "See- Thr v"' Sytre ne_Dra we rs.

K11 ro n ~1.~ 1 ~ of Bo o ~ 1
ll urne r Heo d wi th
p ro pa ne la nk. e A
torch fl;. r o il ~ C O l On~
• lile7tme gua ran tee

·$]

6-PACK

.

~

.

Wo
' mos t po pu rar
l a n t e r n ... _h old s t w o
p1nts o t fuel ... en oug h
f or
10
to
12
hours ... lw o Cole man
Si lk -lite mant les product
twi ce the lig ht •. los t up to
four times os lon g as ordinary mantle s.

SPORTS
DEPT.

.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

QUART
VANGUARD

I

TORCH ·

FUTURE

""""'""

$4.66

I

BERNZ· O -MAWTIC
.
BLOW

HOUSEWARE

HECK'S
REG.

"'- ·

HARDWARE DtPT.

HECK'S REG. $8.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

CHOICE
CLOTHING
'DEPT.
.
'

HECK ' S REG. $8 .99

ss99

A. 15 QUART UTILITY PAIL .
B. 1 5 . QUART DISH PAN
C. 1 1/2 BUSHEL LAUNDRY BASKET
D,..24 QUART WASTE BASKET
E. 29 112 QT. SWING-TOP WASTE BIN

lo ng ~ l e eve s , V - n ec~ , a nd Plac k et .

Sell lvbroco-

e

Ba ked e nomel
~ tee ! tra ck • Frit tion type la tch • Smar t d~H •g n
• A uo rle~ colo r~ .
.

$999

HECK'S
REG • .
$16.99

$299

$64~

FOLDING DOORS

STEP STOOL
Fold$ 5 Vi" !lo t .

FESCO PLASTIC SALE

Ap pear ing da il y in o ctiYe lives. Se lec ·
11 0 r1 of olwaydre t h po lyester kr1il
1 o p ~. Tw o ~ lyl e ~ to choose ·tra m wit h

$

TUBULAR

SPORTS DEPT.

CABINET

CABINET

~

ERN

$100
•

42

COLEMAN

BATTERIES
10 FOR

. HECK'S REG. PRICE

~)
............ .

2 1 1 p rnl fue l
cap:w t y.

SPORTS
DEPT.

SO o OFF 79(

•11.99

STEEL .
15-DRAWER

IATTERY

r ng camper.

"D" FLASHLIGHT

FISHING RODS
FISHING TACKLE

. POLY TARP
$899

l or f or the
!igh t-trovel -

HECK'S
REG.
$16.99

. lUSH UGH1

HECK'S REG. TO $'21.89

HECK'S REG.

SPORTS
DEPT.

-'

12

KNIT TOPS

SPORTS DEPT. .

stove po pu ·

I

$1588

HECK'S REG.
$2.49

10x12

HEAV
DUTY

COSCO DELUXE

CLOTHIN&amp; DEPT.

•

HECK'S
REG.
$1,44

BATTERY

1 \

(

SJ · ~~

re mp con tr ol .o f

heot rn teo\r ly Pro~rdo:-1
up to 18 hov r ~ of ht'ol

be rwe e11 l ollon~

SPORTS
DEPT.

ca l a nd long wear ing b og ·for
the ultima te in cam p ing an d
wa rrnt h . Jom pr o o t zi pp er .
Cut ~ iz e 36" x 80"

EVEREADY
CAMP LAMP

II1 \
1

wi th 24" Bo tt om Cu ff with Pul lo n W o i&lt;&gt;t in &lt;&gt;o lr cL Qnd Pa tl err.s . ·
Co l o r ~. o f Block, Navy, Bro wn, ·
Red_, o r. d G ree n i11 ~ ize. !&gt; R- l R.
·

D r t~ l

$'29.99

Th e eco no·
my
an d
p o r tabi/ rty
ma k e ~ t hr s

3 Lb . nylon inw loted wash ab le
.sleepi ng bag - t~ e mo st p ra cti -

'

Pants Sty led

lrne,mdvdrng P1 clu\ove

COLEMAN

AND

LADI ES'
POLYE STER

~ t y l e)

BARLOW

SPOIITS
DEPT.

S REG. PRICE

'

KNIT PANTS

HECK'S
REG.
$'2.49

SPORTS
DEPT.

BAG

MASTER

LANTERN
BATTERY

20 o OFF

'FURNITURE
POLISH
HECK'S REG.
. . 93~

CLOTH/N6
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

STOVE

·SLEEPING

EVEREADY

ClasSic looks lead t he way fo r fa ll, a s knit s and
softe r fabr ics shape the season' s si lhoue tt es. Auf umn 's· here, in o u r new collection .of fa ll . dres ses.
~hoose fro m a wide a ssor t me nt of styles and fa b ric s
1n J un1ors , MISses, and Half Sizes.

HECK'S REG. $1.18

$422

SPORTS DEPT.

KNIFE

FALL DRESSES .

(

· .tv'"•&lt;J Sle e,e.~'l t h Pl ad ~t Z1p Fr on t
r~r·rd 8 1J if on fron t m 5olr ds and
(h.;-6~: Cho0v·: fr orr '&gt;r H"&gt; S- M -L

SPORTS
DEPT.

·-1.99

SPORTS
DEPT.

. ' .)•

SL·r•s tha t nill be the fall lmh10n.

Gr eat

e

6-VOLT

Ponts ona

HECK'S
REG.
$69.88

HECK'S
REG.

1wi1ch

FIXTURES.

CElLI

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99

COLEMAN

P v ~hbu tl o n

HOUSEWARE DIP T~

LADIES'

-

ABlE (AI Al Y!IC
hPo te r wo th oil o l th!
lrne\t IPo tur es h oM tf,e
top o f th e Coleman

SIMILAR TO ILLUSTRATION

• Throw~ o bvl
.lerl oke beom ' 1
mi le •
Un ·

$2199

$35.88

Here's c. ... ooo BTU to
5000 BTUAOJUSI

CAMP
LANTERN

HOme Ente rt a inme nt Cente r ho ld\ ~tereo ~ pe e ker s .
plu !. &lt;&gt;helf for re&lt;ord player thor moves 1n and ovt .

'

8' x 10' CABIN TENT

COLEMAN

6' 4'" Ce nter, 4' wo lh To p a nd Stde~. 6 o i . Or ,H Colon o f Gol d and Green ,
Vinyl coo led Nylo n Flcoo r. "l N y lo n Sueened W indows, up Flop~. Ei~ no o
f rcme wi;h odto cent Pol e~ and it is Wa ter p roo f and Mrldew r e ~osto n t .

6-VOLT

ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

I

-------

FLASHLIGHT
2 DCELL

--

HIPWELL

HOME

LE QUANTITIES LAST

SJ99~

HECK'S
REG.
$5.49

SPORTS
DEPT.

DAY OCT. 14

IN EFFECT T
HUNTING
49 KNIFE15

Redu ce ~ eng ine weer e Pr~ven~ oil
d iluf ion • Mokei e ngine start qui dter
• Pro.,. id e~ ~mooth idle e Allow~ full
luellto w • Eliminate s "jerking " o t 011
1peeds • El iminates sta ll ~ from Flood ing; Percolofion , &amp; Vop-or lock e Filters
the fue l

$466

-AUTOMOTIVE ·
DEPT.

Cqnto·ins o Crenm hard ·
ner, applicator, sand
paper and Fiber G lo ss

LEVER TYPE

JACK .

CREASE CUN·

1 1./ zTON
CAPACITY '

.

. $)99

sc reentng .

QUART SiZE

HECK'S REG. $4.99

$188

GREAS.ETUBES.

(I ·

HECK'S
REG. ·
$'2.99

)

HECK'S REG •
$13.99

00

AUTOMO.TIVE ·
DEPT.

14 oz.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

•

..

"
'

�•

OPEII DAILY
10 TO 9

OPEl DAI~Y
10 TO 9

OPEl DAILY
10 'ro 9

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

- SUMDAY

IT07

~---PR_IC..._ES
Ladies' Department

LADIES

ASH FLASH

6-VOLT

·s3

.CAMP
LAMP

FALL

SKIRTS

l\
••

&amp;ck hos ov11 et

HECK'S REG. $6.88

hol e~

lor

wi re~

Tilted cassette

holder Th i-s u.nit ho s oll the d eluxe feorvres.for o
complete home e n tertai n m~nt center .

H:~~:s

(l OTHING DEPT.

br eo ~ ob te

BODY SUIT .
Grea t for t he

N e ~'

' . !

· ~ _;

·

HOUSEWARE '
DEPT.

OLD ENGLISH

HECK 'S REG :
$5.88

m

L u&lt;.lr(:~'

$

66

RE.GULAR PRICES $9.99
TO. $'20.99

HECK'S
REG.
$6 .88

BAR STOOLS
Fo om -cv1 hio11 ed &gt;eor. 24 "" a11 d JO'" h1gh .
revol ~e ~ 1mooth ly on bo ll b e o rr ng1. COn·
to ured boc ~ r ist . ( hror'[le -ploted t oot re ~t.
5 t o y · le~el g lid e \ .

. $1444
HECK'S REG. $'20.44

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S ,
REG.
$3.19

STEEl
36·DRAWER

•

• Se t&gt; thrv d r o we r~ e Stee l 1rome •
((lrry on g honcl le e fvll ~i lt' d • owt:r~

FOLDING CHAIRS

II! Mo~;~h "" P"' ' mno .. ja l • ~ &lt;:" ka1 pnu ll'd "!l' li re'''".ll lo' ,
«u !h ""'m, jQd' "'l • ~e o ! a nd cold Ne•t • ~h r&lt;&gt;" do ~ n
Bo&lt;l de u 9~ e li !o • eoor '"'" ' 'ng • Co ntcu•e d !o• tc,.,.fco•.

$422
HECK'S REG. $5.99

. . HOUSEWARE DEPT.

COSCO FOLDING
Foom -c v~hion ed ~ eat . 2J"
high , snaps av t for eo~y revp hol $lering .
Roomy, !b lety ·lreo ded step.

• Full-leng t h ~tee t panel m 1e •

tion polyet hylene ( a rqer \

So li ds cu'ld 2 to ne in si:z;e 'j S-M-l.

77

HECK'S REG. $14.44

'

oz.

~

.. '..: =

j

B.

SPORTS DEPT.

(C
) ... . . . . .
.· · ,,.,. l..,...-,.

ASSORTED COLORS

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG ." "
33'

SJ99

LUCITE WALL PAINT
'" eo " """rli.,lvlly 5cop " !'d .. o~ • deo ~ ·u p ,

$5 79

HECK'S REG.
. $1.99

HQJJSEWARI
DEPT.

HOUSEWA/IE DEPT.

I

\

\

I

. '

S 1. Here's a LUCITE exclu sive. Your own World Series souven ir

HECK'S REG. $4.97

~

HECK'S
. REG.
$1.34

LUG WRENCH

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

•
. '

'
'

'

S(REWDRIVER .
SET

99(

'

imp ri nted with wi nning team . nome , and team emb lem. Get
your order blank at our Point Deportment today.

SPRAY-ON

~

HECK'S .REG. $2.48 .

6-PIECE

Get a 1973 World Ser ies Comme morative Baseba ll .. . Only

' $14~

''

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $7.97

~·"-'&lt;=''"''

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

HECK'S .
REG • .
·. $1.66

HYDRAULIC

AUTO BODY

REPAIR KIT
~ So~e up to 20 % o n lvel cosh e

.HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

CiALLON

HECK'S REG; $,6.97

MILES MASTER

71'

$299

$679

CiALLON

Choo ·se fr om these
sce"nts: lavend er , Ro se ,
Forest and HerbaL

HECK'S REG.

FITS MOST CLOTHESDRYERS

HECK'S REG.
$1.S2

prn!N I" e .•~el .•"""' aolt ou r the wea! ~e r . I !!I I mo•th"e oo.rt .
won o f ~ g *""'heo'" Bu,lt " ' p 10 m•r . rl••U• n o•• ~ur IOO&lt;: 1-,.cl
"'"'~' d ..:&gt;n•u p
·

FOR AUTOMOBILES
I 5 if• OZ.

FRESHENER
'

SJll

lUCi l E h ot ~~~ 1ko~o&lt; n ro lcu tlo ~11e• rhc::r1 c lhr r ~oci• "Q ko'" '
~ o h h o n c nar,onw,de 1.-, 1 on h~nd&lt;ed\ of h"""'' lr d 1;,, to"

UNDERCOATING
·SPRAY
DECREASER

. . ...

WITH FLEXIBLE HOSE

99(

LUCITE HOUSE PAINT

f • ( rl•"9 '"'19" of &lt;do•• ro "'&lt;l l&lt;h "' &lt;K&lt;rfl! l U(f ff Woll Poon1
Go e• on l ol l '" '" ~"" d" e' e&lt;en '" ' '•' 10 1hony &lt;j lc'&gt; f.,,
•w ood • &lt;&gt;• ~ . &lt;Ob•nt ll , lu.,,;lv •e. l ttcf. n ood lxllk rno", woll 1

cu

'201NCH
4-WAY

DRYER VENT KIT

PLUNGER

H.ECK ' S REG.
$5 .99

GALLON
511E ,

....

25 POUNDS

HARDWARE DEPT.

.33 . OLD 2-CiALLON
ANCHOR PAINT
CAN .

FUEL

LUCITE·
..

w,~ , ~a,.r y ,

COLEMAN

SPORTS
DEPT.

$1.3~

. HECK'S REG •
99'

FISHING REELS NOT INCLUDED

-.

AIR

VACUUM
BOTTLE

' '

CLOG BUSTER

7 OZ. RENUZIT

HECK'S REG. TO $1 .99

i

HECK'S
REG •

.

HARDWARE DEPT.

ASSORTED COlORS

... '

'

.

HECK'S REG. $2.99

bVJne r head .

•19(
·- =

MANTLES

HECK'S REG. $4.33

o r; Berni 0 M o ro c"

'

ggc

COLEMAN

Portab le. Me tal F.ame , S torog e , O rg on , I~r
Cab inet w1 t ~ 15 "See- Thr v"' Sytre ne_Dra we rs.

K11 ro n ~1.~ 1 ~ of Bo o ~ 1
ll urne r Heo d wi th
p ro pa ne la nk. e A
torch fl;. r o il ~ C O l On~
• lile7tme gua ran tee

·$]

6-PACK

.

~

.

Wo
' mos t po pu rar
l a n t e r n ... _h old s t w o
p1nts o t fuel ... en oug h
f or
10
to
12
hours ... lw o Cole man
Si lk -lite mant les product
twi ce the lig ht •. los t up to
four times os lon g as ordinary mantle s.

SPORTS
DEPT.

.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

QUART
VANGUARD

I

TORCH ·

FUTURE

""""'""

$4.66

I

BERNZ· O -MAWTIC
.
BLOW

HOUSEWARE

HECK'S
REG.

"'- ·

HARDWARE DtPT.

HECK'S REG. $8.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

CHOICE
CLOTHING
'DEPT.
.
'

HECK ' S REG. $8 .99

ss99

A. 15 QUART UTILITY PAIL .
B. 1 5 . QUART DISH PAN
C. 1 1/2 BUSHEL LAUNDRY BASKET
D,..24 QUART WASTE BASKET
E. 29 112 QT. SWING-TOP WASTE BIN

lo ng ~ l e eve s , V - n ec~ , a nd Plac k et .

Sell lvbroco-

e

Ba ked e nomel
~ tee ! tra ck • Frit tion type la tch • Smar t d~H •g n
• A uo rle~ colo r~ .
.

$999

HECK'S
REG • .
$16.99

$299

$64~

FOLDING DOORS

STEP STOOL
Fold$ 5 Vi" !lo t .

FESCO PLASTIC SALE

Ap pear ing da il y in o ctiYe lives. Se lec ·
11 0 r1 of olwaydre t h po lyester kr1il
1 o p ~. Tw o ~ lyl e ~ to choose ·tra m wit h

$

TUBULAR

SPORTS DEPT.

CABINET

CABINET

~

ERN

$100
•

42

COLEMAN

BATTERIES
10 FOR

. HECK'S REG. PRICE

~)
............ .

2 1 1 p rnl fue l
cap:w t y.

SPORTS
DEPT.

SO o OFF 79(

•11.99

STEEL .
15-DRAWER

IATTERY

r ng camper.

"D" FLASHLIGHT

FISHING RODS
FISHING TACKLE

. POLY TARP
$899

l or f or the
!igh t-trovel -

HECK'S
REG.
$16.99

. lUSH UGH1

HECK'S REG. TO $'21.89

HECK'S REG.

SPORTS
DEPT.

-'

12

KNIT TOPS

SPORTS DEPT. .

stove po pu ·

I

$1588

HECK'S REG.
$2.49

10x12

HEAV
DUTY

COSCO DELUXE

CLOTHIN&amp; DEPT.

•

HECK'S
REG.
$1,44

BATTERY

1 \

(

SJ · ~~

re mp con tr ol .o f

heot rn teo\r ly Pro~rdo:-1
up to 18 hov r ~ of ht'ol

be rwe e11 l ollon~

SPORTS
DEPT.

ca l a nd long wear ing b og ·for
the ultima te in cam p ing an d
wa rrnt h . Jom pr o o t zi pp er .
Cut ~ iz e 36" x 80"

EVEREADY
CAMP LAMP

II1 \
1

wi th 24" Bo tt om Cu ff with Pul lo n W o i&lt;&gt;t in &lt;&gt;o lr cL Qnd Pa tl err.s . ·
Co l o r ~. o f Block, Navy, Bro wn, ·
Red_, o r. d G ree n i11 ~ ize. !&gt; R- l R.
·

D r t~ l

$'29.99

Th e eco no·
my
an d
p o r tabi/ rty
ma k e ~ t hr s

3 Lb . nylon inw loted wash ab le
.sleepi ng bag - t~ e mo st p ra cti -

'

Pants Sty led

lrne,mdvdrng P1 clu\ove

COLEMAN

AND

LADI ES'
POLYE STER

~ t y l e)

BARLOW

SPOIITS
DEPT.

S REG. PRICE

'

KNIT PANTS

HECK'S
REG.
$'2.49

SPORTS
DEPT.

BAG

MASTER

LANTERN
BATTERY

20 o OFF

'FURNITURE
POLISH
HECK'S REG.
. . 93~

CLOTH/N6
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

STOVE

·SLEEPING

EVEREADY

ClasSic looks lead t he way fo r fa ll, a s knit s and
softe r fabr ics shape the season' s si lhoue tt es. Auf umn 's· here, in o u r new collection .of fa ll . dres ses.
~hoose fro m a wide a ssor t me nt of styles and fa b ric s
1n J un1ors , MISses, and Half Sizes.

HECK'S REG. $1.18

$422

SPORTS DEPT.

KNIFE

FALL DRESSES .

(

· .tv'"•&lt;J Sle e,e.~'l t h Pl ad ~t Z1p Fr on t
r~r·rd 8 1J if on fron t m 5olr ds and
(h.;-6~: Cho0v·: fr orr '&gt;r H"&gt; S- M -L

SPORTS
DEPT.

·-1.99

SPORTS
DEPT.

. ' .)•

SL·r•s tha t nill be the fall lmh10n.

Gr eat

e

6-VOLT

Ponts ona

HECK'S
REG.
$69.88

HECK'S
REG.

1wi1ch

FIXTURES.

CElLI

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99

COLEMAN

P v ~hbu tl o n

HOUSEWARE DIP T~

LADIES'

-

ABlE (AI Al Y!IC
hPo te r wo th oil o l th!
lrne\t IPo tur es h oM tf,e
top o f th e Coleman

SIMILAR TO ILLUSTRATION

• Throw~ o bvl
.lerl oke beom ' 1
mi le •
Un ·

$2199

$35.88

Here's c. ... ooo BTU to
5000 BTUAOJUSI

CAMP
LANTERN

HOme Ente rt a inme nt Cente r ho ld\ ~tereo ~ pe e ker s .
plu !. &lt;&gt;helf for re&lt;ord player thor moves 1n and ovt .

'

8' x 10' CABIN TENT

COLEMAN

6' 4'" Ce nter, 4' wo lh To p a nd Stde~. 6 o i . Or ,H Colon o f Gol d and Green ,
Vinyl coo led Nylo n Flcoo r. "l N y lo n Sueened W indows, up Flop~. Ei~ no o
f rcme wi;h odto cent Pol e~ and it is Wa ter p roo f and Mrldew r e ~osto n t .

6-VOLT

ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

I

-------

FLASHLIGHT
2 DCELL

--

HIPWELL

HOME

LE QUANTITIES LAST

SJ99~

HECK'S
REG.
$5.49

SPORTS
DEPT.

DAY OCT. 14

IN EFFECT T
HUNTING
49 KNIFE15

Redu ce ~ eng ine weer e Pr~ven~ oil
d iluf ion • Mokei e ngine start qui dter
• Pro.,. id e~ ~mooth idle e Allow~ full
luellto w • Eliminate s "jerking " o t 011
1peeds • El iminates sta ll ~ from Flood ing; Percolofion , &amp; Vop-or lock e Filters
the fue l

$466

-AUTOMOTIVE ·
DEPT.

Cqnto·ins o Crenm hard ·
ner, applicator, sand
paper and Fiber G lo ss

LEVER TYPE

JACK .

CREASE CUN·

1 1./ zTON
CAPACITY '

.

. $)99

sc reentng .

QUART SiZE

HECK'S REG. $4.99

$188

GREAS.ETUBES.

(I ·

HECK'S
REG. ·
$'2.99

)

HECK'S REG •
$13.99

00

AUTOMO.TIVE ·
DEPT.

14 oz.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

•

..

"
'

�'
'

'

'

.

·'

'

;~~*:::::J::~::~:~~~:~;~:~~;=~:~~=~:r.:.~~~!:~:::~~:~~~-~~~r~?..:.~-~-~-~!~~;~~~~~:·.·:~~-~
I .the aa·y~ ~fte;···:····., ~ :l:!

•

.

,..-. r

'

~~ ~

... .. Leaks

-:, •

·~

1.... .

... .
~ •j

•• •

~ ~

'
Picture this:

OPEII DAILY
10 TO 9

OPEII DAILY
10 TO 9

public policy, whelhe r or not to approve a proP.,sal to levy a
surcha r~e on an munici pal water bills of $1.50 per month for one
year. Tins bemg a prQPOsition thai, if appro\-'&lt;!, would cost about
everybody money, there was no monkey business in the talk.
Suddenly, without war ning, there is a deafening, splinter ing
crash ,~ s1ckenmg. s~ene of a twirling human form, gyrating legs
and arms, and as If m one sequence of action a thud and a ma n
lying on the long council table around which 'the mayor and his
legislators are sitting.
,
· Impossible? Not a1all. It almost happened - and very easily
could hav~ happened - Monday night in Middleport town hall.
Council was. in deliberative session noted. Sounds in the
ceiling wereoverheard. Upon investigation , O!ief of Police J . J .
~emeans discovered one of his resident patrons in the nearby
1a1l had m;tnagedto get himself onto a heating conduit and was
wiggling his way to freedom (he hoped ).
It SO happens that the conduit is in free air space between an
upper original ceiling and a lower one of quite flimsy material.
Should the prisoner ha ve slipped off onto the lower ceiling there
wasn 't much in it to stop him plununeling onto council's table
below.
WE HAVE NOTIIJNG AGAINST our friends in the medi~al
profession. Nor are we dedicaied to running them out of buiiness.
However, thanks to syndicaled columnist Morton Mockridge
(from the Columbus Citizen~Journal , Oct . 9) we have the
following Indian recipe :
"Take two teaspoonfuls of cayenne pepper, two ounces of
cloves, and one ounce of cinnamon , well pulverized and minced.
Put it in two qUarts orgood whiskey, add two pounds of sugar and
shake it well. Let it stand for about a week, when it is ready for
use ,
"For the preservation of life and health , this is lhe most
extraordinary medicine in use, and should be kept by every
family . It is the only sure, safe and speedy cure known for intermittent bilious and chill fevers, fevers and ague , black vomit
consumption, bronchitis, liver complaint, colds, coughs,
soreness of the chest, and weak stomach.
..
" IT WAS NEVER knoW!! to fail in cholera, cholera morbus,
and will relieve the most severe dysentery and bowel complaints
in a very short time . It will strengthtn the stomach and bowels.
Directi ~ns: Take one tablespoonful three times a day, half an
hour before eating . In case of seyere cholera morbus, one
tablespoon every half-hour until relieved . For children, in
proportion to age, sweetened."
MOCKRIDGE COPPED THE RECIPE from James G.
Smith whom he called " the advertising ace of Columbus, Ohio."
Smith Claimed to have come upon it in an ancient book found
among his mother's possessions after her death, the work of
Grandpa George Smith begun in England in 1863 and intended
primarily to keep animals healthy or to cure them of disease,
Mockridge noted, tongue in cheek, that Smith's Grandfather
George died at 88, his mother at 86, his Uncle Jim at 97, and so on.
Whether the Indian recipe contributes to good health and
long life or not ... by the way, where can we buy cayenne pepper,

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

\

.

7-SPEEDBLENDER

~~

Bl··• J ( "' tn1f !. , 7 rr q-ulor p &lt;&gt;Pd\ und.

b tt!tt'ty fM /IM hrg h pubh l Wt
vt Cl' bur d po •1a b1e tOdoo ln tpgro tcd ( H (V tl ~
A( ba Ttery opc ro l tOn Bo11d w lc( IOr ~wtlc fl

Fir, .h fll,1ncl ~nl&lt;d •l•t ll' 1'/00 "'~ti l mr, td r
[o,..- &lt;dloovdl&gt; In dt&lt;Jrr·•· ol fnv• tl..ror(t l &lt;)l
{O'u•·• ..,;,~ • hro;, •· ,cl)llrtr tlfH-1 U({ f' llh
.'J

St&gt;por (I IP po Wer

up h•nt r.. ll'lrw l 4ln1' t'H '11fh hnndl to
Jl·*'&lt;

t'

'olot

&lt;&lt;.lOr doo(jt;-d

108

l•d

SJ 599 .

PERCOLATOR
ser v ~

yo u

bcoutrtully. Big fcirndy·s.i H: b re w ~ 4 to 1'2
cvps. Streng th '.r· lector fw istloc k sa fety

Lrgh t

top

stgnol~

Kee p ~ coff ee

wfwn •cody ·

.. G. E.
STAND MIXER

I ~ ~e rve .

ho t ou t onw tt cally . Pop up

bosh•t

e V&lt;&gt;•·g~l r ,.,.. ~ ~·,, ,. ,,.d '' ',J"·o~r&gt;'l&gt;
•r•erl !o&lt; d-&lt;1l "" I~ "d '"''"' •~•~" , ,

....

,,...• ,•• •··-~~ · -~~· ,,..,., lo r • \-. ,
•·I~ .~,-~ b• e&lt;l" ·i '""' ·I"' ''", ,., m

'

'" '.
o&lt;t~"' 1,., ·~o;ii&lt;'~Q~-"' "''J
'""' '"
,,, ,_,,,., '"'"'"' ''"'"'' •' ....,.. ,,
",

'

G. E. TEFLON
WAFFLE BAKER
11 g rill s cheese and 1am·a1o s a~d ·
wi chcs, fr ies bacon and egg s; and
bak es waffles

~~ . ~ 199~9
-

-.

li&gt;&lt;&lt;Md ic• Ut"&lt; ' · "'l~r·.o

•

,., , ,,,~,

JEWELRY

••r e r. ,..,,,"'·"'Ni,

'""'r
.,.,&lt;11

HECK 'S REG , $11 .96

2-SLICE

MUNSEY

• &lt;;ciod oin t• · " " '"P •

POPCORN POPPER

o'IOt l_(. e ,~l&lt;;:&lt;&gt;""~·i_

EK - 1 S

SUNBEAM PORCELAINIZED

._\

HI-DOME

$999

.

.

HECK ' S REG ,
$1.19

'~ '

.
'

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77&lt;

.

'

. 88

.
rl
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M·· .· .
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St y e&gt;. gr oo•n ~,&amp;n dy r (•) horr fo1 o:: rl _u.IL·r ncr ! uro l
loo k. lndudc' o " r:(hr'n L:'1f\ on. I ccnr p on h (••t·l

:.:;~ .,:,',; 12$Vol1 '

JCuBES

FLASH CUBES

( 12FLASHES )

JEWELRY DEPT.

77(

Wom

HECK'S REG. $1 5. 96

'

125 PIECE
· JR , ARCHITECT

•

RAPID FIRE

RIFLE

.., ,' I. .

SET

'

Servic-e for four .

Pla stic

co nstr uc -

HECK'S REG ,

99 '

TOY
DEPT.

TOY DEPT.

FINGER PAINT SET

WINCHESTER
" FIRING SOUND"

SSP ULTRA CHROME

Age:. : 3 to Adul t. Ea ch se t con -

RIFLE

t or n ~ p oint , fi nger po in t . spot u !o 'i and ins t n.JC ir o n s.

~

CHOICE

....

RACERS
The new lo o k in SSP .

li c high gl oss

A ra ~ e r me ta l-

f in i~h !hOt rea ll y gl~om

ma chmes. Eo ck ro &lt;e· r sold s c po• a t ~ ly
co mp lete with T -~ t rc ll

AS SEEN ONTV

HECK 'S REG ..
99 '

EACH
HECK'S REG.
$1.34

$2.99

TOY DEPT.

.:;;:~ ~

.. ... eo.~

SJ ·99

HECK ' S REG .

•.

OR

tio n .

12" HOT PANTS DOG

,., ~,

MIL TON BRADLEY

'

'

•
.
--~­
KENNER

TOY DEPT.

TOY DEPT. ·

13

oz.

REVLON
HAIR SPRAY

49&lt;

$299
HECK ' S REG.
$3.99

HECK' S REG, 88 •

TOY DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

' "

·ANACIN
WILKINSON
STAINLESS STEEL ·

7 o"
z .~

VOS SHAMPOO

58(

SO'S

S' S

• NORMAL OR DRY
H~CK'S REG.

. · HECK ' S REG , 7 9 '

84 '
HECK ' S REG. 59 '

COSMETIC DEPT. .

oz.

BRYLCREEM

FLICKER

HAIR DRESSING

LADIES
RAZOR

BLADES

I

3

•

l

.94&lt;

. &lt;HECK'S REG . $1.2 8

COSMETIC DEPT.

SOFT &amp; DRI
ANTI PERSPIRANT

$124
. COSMETIC DEPT.

with .U.S. District Court Judge
Walter E. HOffnum, seeking to
block ·efforts by Agnew 's
lawyers to question til em under
oath Thursday on .leaks. Hoff.
man already has turped down a
request to delay the ques·
tivning.
Agnew 's attorneys have subpoenaed for questioning
reporters for four New York
and .Washington newspapers,
the NBC and CBS television
netw orks and Time and
Newsweek magazines:
!The New York Times.

OS REDUCING
PLAN CANDY

$199

HECK'S REG. $1.88

CM!~'!J.DEPT.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN DAILY 9 to 9
CUT FRO M EN GLISH

Charcoal Steak

• • •

CUT FRO M CHUCK

Cube Steaks. • • .
BONELESS
Delmonico Steaks

•

.

'

.
•... ..

•

. I

'

.

'

P, oil\~

\

.

'

HOliday bazaar pla ns were
made at a recent meeting of
the Catholic Women's Club at
the Sacred Heart Church.
The bazaar has been set for
Nov. 8 with the dinner to be one
of creamed baked' chicken and .
ham at the price of $2.25 for
adull.&lt;l, and $1.25 for children,
excluding dessert. Mrs. Vera
Buchanan and Mrs . Katie
Biron were appointed to the
f.ood committee.
In addi tion .to lhe dinner a
bake sale. parcel post, fish
pond, and fancy work booth
will be included at the bazaar .
The. Rev. Fr. Ber nard
Krajcovic reported· that the

projector has arr ived
and that he will be securing
religious films for use in the
children' s
lessons . The
projector cost $433.34 with $283
on hand now to pay for it.
The next meeting, Nov. I,
was set for cleaning the kitchen
in preparation for the bazaar.
Thank you notes were read
from 1.eland Sisson, Moth~r
Mary Clare, Dr. and Mrs.
Edmund Butrimas, Mr. and
Mrs. -Francis Biron .
Mrs . Buchanan, Mrs. Cecelia
Mitch, Mrs. Helen Handley,
and Elizabeth Hept were the
~
hostesses.
sound

.,

c .r~

&lt;!C "' \h

CENTER

s''lct

C"""'

BLADE

lb.

09

$

FULL

$139

SEMI -BONELESS

FULL
CENTER

BLADE
CUT

lb.

CUT

.

. .

.

~ Stea.~a,

•••• 1b.$J49

~"9~~
FULLCUT SHOULDER
$J29 J.LB.PKG. OR LGR.
· GtuM.uut Cltuelt. ••••••
•• lb.
lb.

BONELESS·

Crt.oaatR.ib"R.oaa.f, ••.

fb.

.

$J59
lO·Ib ~

25 to

lb.

$J19

fb,

$,3~
·
.

ROUND BO NE SHOULDER

AYg:. Wt.

Wh.o~

Be.eit RiiJ
Valencia Oranges
W-a~~ington St-a le

RED OR

• •

GOLDEN Dehc1ous Apples
New Crop Florid.-.

White Grapefruit

•

Cu+ To Yoyr
Order ln+a

3 •$1

Rib

4'"' 69&lt;

Stea~s .

lb~J19
FROZEN

SLICED 89c LB.

Sulbu...,

OSCAR MAYER

Ri b Ey1 Ste1k1, Rib
Ro..st , B11i1ing St1 lps

For Those Cool Days!

.

Swiaa~
Miaa~
.
.

:rMAf.tud,•eoe.oa;.

.__..., pkg.

p.g.

Folger's Coffee
VACUUM PACKED.
FOlger's Coffee
CC FFEE

•

•

&lt;

$110

l · lb.
Mn

3,.. $311
lb .

• •

I

Instant Nescafe • •
COFFEE
Instant Nescafe • •
aUaNst
. . ·'. ·. ,,. I

btl.of
24

NyQw£

I

·Iva. .

• • ••
1-lh.
pkg .

•

Dole Pineapple ,J~, .

•

A&amp;P

Coffee Creamer •
Dream Whip • • •
Pine Sol Cleaner • •
Friskies Dinners • 25
Kal Kan Cat Food
Brownie Mix • • • •
r
Jif Peanut Butter • •
UQ bii O

~

l·lb .
• bowl

$129

,o\LL YAR IETIES

&amp;··.
100
Otte~4·"Dag v~. . . . .
~.
EVERYDAY LOW
. ·
"''·••·$ 100
QRpo- "Be.elr "Dog "Fooc(, . • • • • ~ .'""
MRS. filBERT'S
Soft Margarine •
.s~~E~yfield Waffles

l ·lb.
jJkJ.

6

SHOP &amp;
SAVE!

.
..
$100
"8~.&amp;~ "Fn.oatect ShDb • • • • . ';;~:
WITHIRON
$219

2 79•

·' ~·

All Meat Franks
FROZEN FILLETS
Perch · •

FLAVORS

JANE PARKER
Buttermilk Bread ':':'·
PLAIN OR SEEDED
l~m. $100
·Rye .Bread,;:~:•• 3

$109
.

.

Whole Smoked Picnic .• '"

4 ge

1~1CE

~·

Semi-Boneless Ham • •

~prA!., .JuJee.••••••••• 2 !~: &amp;9~ .
All

• •

" SUPER-RIGHT " HALF

1)~

14·•··69¢
VACUUM PACKED

All Meat Franks
Bulk Sliced Bacon

Short Ribs,

Delm onico Sle•ks,

l hi .

DOG FOOD

49··

1

-~· EVERYD A Y LOW fR ICE

8

lh.t
hn

$3''

•

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DUNCAN HINES

DON T FO RGET JELL

•·•··
btl. $119
.
ft.l-d
"-:II

FABRIC·
SOFTENER

FOR Cl E.-.NE "- PANS

zoe .

19'

.• ' .

Vegas casino owned by biJ.
lionairc Howard Hughes for his
GOP
campaign.
The
newspaper said the campaign
money was solicited by Agnew
for Blair.
.
Blair was the judge who last
December impaneled \lie spe~
cia! grand jury which recently
has been considering Agnew's
case.

Catholic women meet

"aonclc\S
Beef

"' 5179
"' $169
'
"' $279

1ttJitJ:IIIi•I!JJ•1il I---, ,-

'

special prosecutor I S ~P ­
ppinted .
The Senate Watergate committee, meanwh.ile, has received state campaign contribution records of C. Stanley
Blair , unsuccessful gobernatorial candidate in the 1970
Maryland election . Newsday
reported that Blair, now a U.S.
Di.trict Court judge here,
received $10,000 from a Las

'

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

....

CHOCOLATE &amp; VANILLA

case until th'e grand juty has ·
considered air. evidence. A
request by Agnew for a hearing
· by the fuJI House has been rcjected by Speaker Carl
Albert . The committee .Is
eonsidering a " resolution of
inquiry.' ' which would give
Agnew the House hearing he
wants . ·
John F . . Banzhaf Ill, a
George Washington University
professor of ' law, filed his
second suit in th~ Agnew case.
It opposed the subpoenaing of
reporters aod sought to halt the
grand jury presentation until a

term and practice law. He also seat probably will he U.S. Andrews an·d former governor
said he intended to cont inue . Reps. William Keating of .Cin~ James Rhodes.
cattle breeding.
cinnati and Clarence Brown of
Saxbe's decision to retire not
only
means a wide open
The senator's decision was .. Urbana.
seen by political observers as a
Sax be, who serv ed as Rep~bl ican prima ry, but · it
spark that probably will touch speaker of the Ohio House of could
also
affect
the
off a primary fighl. Minutes Representatives and Ohio De m ocr a tic p r ima r ·y .
after the armoun cement, Lt. Attorney General before being Whatever Democrat receives
G&lt;lv. J ohn.Brown said he would elected to the Senate, said he the nomiilation, he wiil not
seek the nomination to fi lJ. made his decision ove r a year have to face a candidate as
Saxbe 's seat.
ago and, at that time, notified fo rmida ble as Sax be.
Two other contenders for the" then state GOP Chairman John

Supt . Gegrge _Hargraves the Education Commuuu.:cmon
representing Meigs Local Center, Camp Hill, Pa.
"'
Dallas Gardner, superins.chool district, joined several
96·01.
btl,
hundred Ohio school ad· ·tendentofWoQ&lt;!County schools
ministrators in atlendance at is president of the state
the fifth annual conference of association which represents
I
. the Buckeye Association of more than ' 1200 . superinI
School Administrators at tendents, assistant superin·
.I
Scot's Inn October 3-4-5.
tendents, university professors
I
With ''Let's Hear it For Ohio and .other . public school ad~
Schools" as the central theme, ministrators. Other officers
I
presentations and panel are Philip Williams, Madison
I
discussions dealt with com- Local Schools (Franklin
I
municating with staff, parents, County). president elect;
legislators and community David Marcum, Greenhillsgroups. The superinlendent's Forest· Park, past president;
1Zflltf:Jifi•lii4•X:I ...,
association·· expressed· grave Kenneth Crim, Montgomery ,~
I
ni,
Coup-Or\
Tow~~rd
tj,e
I
I
This Coupon
Toward the I
concern about todaY'• public Countv; George Hargraves, 1
Worth
Pureh,uto of I 1
Worth
Purch,•ue·of I
;school image and focused upon · Meigs Local; Lee R. McI I
I
·upgrilding the image of Murri.n,
Toledo;
David I
I. I
I
schools, Featured speakers Moberi.v, Cleveland-University I
including Dr. Harold" · E . . Heights; Stuart Openlander, I
I I
I
Sponberg, presi(jent of Eas,tern Parma; Robert Smith, ·S;ili· I . U*) L it~~ ito~. Coupo~ 1)11 ,,,.,,,~ . 'sl I I
L•'l'•l O no Coo.~pon por 1tmi1~
r;l I
Michigan University, and Dr. dusky, and Rod W. Swank, \ . _ "" Ro d te moDI • "thr ~ Set.. Cot, 1]!1\, ' ~ I \ . _ ~, ke du·mt bl • t hi~ S., 1. Oot l h h t2J I
-------~-'
Allltjrl R. Ho!Uday, director of ·Heath·. ·
'

HECK'S REG:
9~ '

opposed by .n ews agencies

quoting ilfl internal JU:)tkc
Flepar\ment study, said today
there dfe indications that one
of the major sources of
allegedly damaging news leaks
against Agnew "may have
been the Vice President's own
office or the While House." )
Judge Hofbnan sche(luled a 2
p.m. EDT hearing, apparently
connected wilh the inquiry into
leaks. ·
. In Washi ngton, Attorney
Gener al Elliot Richardson.
wrote the House Judicia ry
Committee, urging Congress
not to intervene in the Agnew

pared a legal brief to be filed

WASHING TON (UP! ) Ohio's se ni or Republican
senator, Willia m B. Saxbe,
anno unce d
Tueshe
will
not
seek
re-e le.ction next year be ~
cause of Hmostly per son a!_.;e ~~
sons."
Sax be , 57, said he intended to
return to his MechanicSburg
home at the end of his present

Hargraves participated
in Columbus conference

.

•

Saxbe's withdrawal muddies up politics in Ohio

·

WASHmGTON (UP! )- The mostly white suburbs. The high
Supreme Court influences the court had upheld a iower
law of the land by re jecting as cour't's veto of the .merger
well as deciding· caSes . on earlier this year .
Tuesday, the court r~fused to
-Rej~cled for the fifth time
review, and so left inl&lt;lcl, an attempt by former Teamster
hundreds of lower court deci- President James R. Hoffa to
sions on school integration, get his 1964 jury. l&lt;lmpering
presidential impoundment of cohviction overturned .
funds. obsct nity . and man y . · - Refused to take . up . a
· other subjects.
.
. challenge to federal law wh1.ch
On the first day" of business forbids racial " blotkbusting; '
following its SUJIImer recess, by real esl&lt;lte dealers. .
the Court took some 900 actions,
- Refused to recon~1der a
many. of which were refusals to ruling that newspapers may be
consider appeals of rulings compelled to eliminate sex
from lower courts across the preferences in help~wanted ads,
nation .
and refused lo hear an appeal
One of the most far-reaching of a ruling that stores may pay
decisions involved a denial of a women salespersons less than
request by the state of Georgia men in certain instances .
· to sue President Nixon direclly · - Turned down an appeal by
in the high court for refusing to . Richard P. McCoy, a Vietnam
spend funds appropriated for veteran sentenced toJ5 .Y,ears
education, highways and fight· m p:1son ror hiJa_ckmg a Umted
ing pollution .
A1rhnes plane m Apnl, 1972 .
The decision means that the from Denver to Los Angeles
administration·must continue to• and collecting · $500,000 · in
press for impoundment of such ransom .
- Agreed to rule on the
funds in lower courts, where it
has lost almost every case so constitutionality of a provision
in military law, dating back to
far .
In other major actions, the colonial days, under which two
court :
servicemen were prosecuted for
- Rejected several requests protesting the Vietnam War .
to reconsider its ruling. last
,
June which, esl&lt;lblished a new
TWO RUNS MADE
·definition of obscenity and gave
Middleport E-R squad anstates more leeway in drawing swered a call Tuesday at 10•10
their own pornography stan~ a.m. to Rutland for Ernest
Molden who was l&lt;lken to
dards.
- Refused to interfere in a Veterans Memorial Hospital
federal judge's proposal to and admitted. Today a( 7:14
combine the predominantly . a.m. it transported Lawrence
black school" system of Rich- Harrison of 383 Ash St., io
mond, Va ., with those of two Holzer Medical Center.

$2799

•

'

'

High Court not
meddling much .

CASSETTE
RECORDER.

dis~losures

By KEN NETH f11ANCKL lNG
BALTIMORE, Md . (UP! ) - '
Cil(ng ~onstilutional
guarantees of freedom of the
press, a group of reporters and
news agencies are challenging
in court Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew's effort io force them to
disc lose sources of news
"leaks" abo ut him.
Meanwhile, a U.S. grand
jury, which has been meeting
Wlder tigh t security, was expected to continue its probe of
the vice president.
· Lawyers for the newsmen
and news agencies have pr e~

200

SOUNDESIGN

LA

M-16

.

'' ' ~

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

,._ "

SYLVANIA

JEWELRY DEPT.

. _.,. · · •I&gt;•

. ~.

HECK'S REG,

• Drop •111
r rl.r!1 Loo·do n_ g · ~- ~~ r e •

Sha rpene r wrth hon rut: t ~ lloc uu-dc fo • coor tr ~l l ed
Oc r;Q-,,_ ~o h o,o(o d n I!!"'"·" rtf• , .. ,

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$1999

ba11 eroP ~

$99.9

··n·

. HECK'S REG. $34.96

Hddvn \O'd .&lt;lorOt:•· rl.',uu~ ~· ' •&lt; lrd f101d •·•

H~~~:;; E~: ;,;· ;":~6

·~•·•&lt;l '' '"t
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·5ho6 1lnq Reqvlfe &gt; no

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CAMERA

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Sr1ob ti'&gt; d e.! rg r ~ r'no'Ot h. q uw• o pe ro t on ..Ope n~
\ londord ~ ~~ .,;,.un ~qL.J i l k ly u nd r•.O&gt;r\· O LJl~· R ~
leo\c ·• cu tt rng a ~&gt; &lt;' ~''b ly 1or rm~rer&gt;lb 1 e cl e anrng
HordcnPd ~ I re {U II w-q \Jiudt' dt=~rqn•.;(l to· lon&gt;l

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30MINUTE
CASSETTE TAPE

SJ99

CA
lift•

.

&gt;

'"""'''"-''·i'l"•'r

_, .. ,..

~-' ·-'"~

SLIDE TRAY

"''. s1899

HECK ' S REG .
$21.96

PDI_~•uod

JEWELRY DEPT.

HECK ' S REG, $2 .44

· r.

SQUARE SHOOTER

HECK'S REG, $11.96

AIRQUIPT

Supe r&lt;to ugh por(CIO or1 P&lt;ten o rJo r ('CJ SY dec;tnmg.s cro rch rcsi ll on cc • t. Ttt o ctr~e h uH e t ~ ty l­
rng • l? c •no'!l;lb lc ~H.' OI n;on tro l l o r eo1y clean

•

JEWELR DEPT.

sfoin less sfeel slici ng blades.

~&lt;$''10': ~~;~~t '?-~ B~-~ '5 .T. ~ ,E

/"' ) FRY PAN .

'I' ~' -~ • -• • P.

HECK ' S REG, $34,96

and grea se re sistan t . 9" ' hollow ground

-·

JEWELRY

T100 5

r ''" 't!~&lt;'-.•~•·•• ' •' • '111·_,,,!'~~·:&lt;'
~lodO -:i "- 1 &lt;If&gt;..,. lun·t • "" tool

Compacf power handle , odor , heo f

2
HECK ' S REG. $1 3 .116

a,,lt.,• '"" "

•tC· • f'••ep ·•· · · •··-leu r•·•~· • fl&lt;•vh•~
"'''''" ""'' ~" • •'Ji' • ' •' " pc•· '""' r»&gt;•. ' ' • ' ".,.,,. ' P&lt;&gt;"'

HECK ' S REG.
$4.44

TOASTER

G. E. CASSETTE
TAPE RECORDER

JEWELRY DEPT.

$J44

SUNBEAM

'"$2'9'9?

99

HECK'S REG . $39.88

HECK 'S REG.
$33.96

I 1 .,, ..,

Big 3 qua rt (Opa c ity .
Hea t resisto11 t glo ~s
cove r. Eo sy cleo11ing
ond set'ving . Non skid .
ta bl e legs. Cor·d in cluded

HECK'S REG. $24.96

ruH f'tHto·~. 4 PM d ynwl'·lf lf..'t'o k•·•
Eo~~ ~c c \ Iide ' " lc w nmg ;\ F( Ort FM

N

:.rw ••d· (~~ " c' .., II,,,,, ~

l.o w pr o f tie ~tylmg Buil t ir1 FM oro d AM

2 ste p tone Corllr i)l FM AM ~d r · c t or
' wl! ch Com e &gt; itt un !rque wht te wt i h
bl o&lt; k tri rrt, o i'l d ~ a dd le to n wtt h b ro wn

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$2799

• •,lr.,.. ~··• ·1•nl'

nhy"•r o·do~~&gt;•• ~··•·•

G44T

dtlt ~

""''h

lt gh t

5 -Speed Hand Mixer is ready o nd wi llin g fo r
any challe ng e r: re o tive : wo rn en th ink up ! De·
pe ndobly b uilt tor com istcn l n1ixi ng. F e at ure~
de toc hob le co rd ; open ho ndl e st yling lo r b t;~ l ­
once. In white , o vo codo o r hm..,es t g o ld.

SUNBEAM

SIZE. Styled to

IIU lull rnq mr•ter

5-SPEED MIXER

JEWELRY DEPT.

~MJ\HY

\ Wtll h

Squt&gt;ldt &lt;On h ol Unu\r.lnl l&lt;.&gt;fl&lt;" dtnl

HAMILTON BEACH

HECK 'S REG. $ 1 9. 96

12 CU P

RADIO ·

v,,,,oh&lt;ll &lt; A(

by the editor

!own:couflcil is in quiet, intense discussion on a matter of

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN. OCT. 14 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
PANASONIC
·-·~,.....--HAMIL TON BEACH
POLICE BAND

?

•

"'*"

-----

---- ---·- ____ ,
1

S.O.S. Pads .

• • •

MA !I.GA ki NE

Fleischmann's
I

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.I

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·i' l'tl!ltj:IIU,Jf};tti:I -,
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Towards The
Purchose Of

I• Worth

I
I
I

• • •

Tow•"" The f
Pure•••• Of I

1

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Viva Napkins

.fl.. 3

ph p ,,,
1411

5100

----------- .... -, .

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Lim'lt. o~.

Cou ~~n

PI' h mil , .

hdtltlt bl t l~r~ St l .. Ckt. l)th. '

,*'1Zf!Jt!:l!fi•Iil;t•J:I ..., I~ 1'21~i'~'~'!'~~)C:I~t~t~&lt;~·lii~J~;t~·II:~·r:-· ... \ , ... 1ZI!Itf:llfi•J»J;t,J:I ...,

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Purcha1e of

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Worth

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Picture this:

OPEII DAILY
10 TO 9

OPEII DAILY
10 TO 9

public policy, whelhe r or not to approve a proP.,sal to levy a
surcha r~e on an munici pal water bills of $1.50 per month for one
year. Tins bemg a prQPOsition thai, if appro\-'&lt;!, would cost about
everybody money, there was no monkey business in the talk.
Suddenly, without war ning, there is a deafening, splinter ing
crash ,~ s1ckenmg. s~ene of a twirling human form, gyrating legs
and arms, and as If m one sequence of action a thud and a ma n
lying on the long council table around which 'the mayor and his
legislators are sitting.
,
· Impossible? Not a1all. It almost happened - and very easily
could hav~ happened - Monday night in Middleport town hall.
Council was. in deliberative session noted. Sounds in the
ceiling wereoverheard. Upon investigation , O!ief of Police J . J .
~emeans discovered one of his resident patrons in the nearby
1a1l had m;tnagedto get himself onto a heating conduit and was
wiggling his way to freedom (he hoped ).
It SO happens that the conduit is in free air space between an
upper original ceiling and a lower one of quite flimsy material.
Should the prisoner ha ve slipped off onto the lower ceiling there
wasn 't much in it to stop him plununeling onto council's table
below.
WE HAVE NOTIIJNG AGAINST our friends in the medi~al
profession. Nor are we dedicaied to running them out of buiiness.
However, thanks to syndicaled columnist Morton Mockridge
(from the Columbus Citizen~Journal , Oct . 9) we have the
following Indian recipe :
"Take two teaspoonfuls of cayenne pepper, two ounces of
cloves, and one ounce of cinnamon , well pulverized and minced.
Put it in two qUarts orgood whiskey, add two pounds of sugar and
shake it well. Let it stand for about a week, when it is ready for
use ,
"For the preservation of life and health , this is lhe most
extraordinary medicine in use, and should be kept by every
family . It is the only sure, safe and speedy cure known for intermittent bilious and chill fevers, fevers and ague , black vomit
consumption, bronchitis, liver complaint, colds, coughs,
soreness of the chest, and weak stomach.
..
" IT WAS NEVER knoW!! to fail in cholera, cholera morbus,
and will relieve the most severe dysentery and bowel complaints
in a very short time . It will strengthtn the stomach and bowels.
Directi ~ns: Take one tablespoonful three times a day, half an
hour before eating . In case of seyere cholera morbus, one
tablespoon every half-hour until relieved . For children, in
proportion to age, sweetened."
MOCKRIDGE COPPED THE RECIPE from James G.
Smith whom he called " the advertising ace of Columbus, Ohio."
Smith Claimed to have come upon it in an ancient book found
among his mother's possessions after her death, the work of
Grandpa George Smith begun in England in 1863 and intended
primarily to keep animals healthy or to cure them of disease,
Mockridge noted, tongue in cheek, that Smith's Grandfather
George died at 88, his mother at 86, his Uncle Jim at 97, and so on.
Whether the Indian recipe contributes to good health and
long life or not ... by the way, where can we buy cayenne pepper,

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

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.

7-SPEEDBLENDER

~~

Bl··• J ( "' tn1f !. , 7 rr q-ulor p &lt;&gt;Pd\ und.

b tt!tt'ty fM /IM hrg h pubh l Wt
vt Cl' bur d po •1a b1e tOdoo ln tpgro tcd ( H (V tl ~
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108

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ser v ~

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bcoutrtully. Big fcirndy·s.i H: b re w ~ 4 to 1'2
cvps. Streng th '.r· lector fw istloc k sa fety

Lrgh t

top

stgnol~

Kee p ~ coff ee

wfwn •cody ·

.. G. E.
STAND MIXER

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ho t ou t onw tt cally . Pop up

bosh•t

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G. E. TEFLON
WAFFLE BAKER
11 g rill s cheese and 1am·a1o s a~d ·
wi chcs, fr ies bacon and egg s; and
bak es waffles

~~ . ~ 199~9
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••r e r. ,..,,,"'·"'Ni,

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.,.,&lt;11

HECK 'S REG , $11 .96

2-SLICE

MUNSEY

• &lt;;ciod oin t• · " " '"P •

POPCORN POPPER

o'IOt l_(. e ,~l&lt;;:&lt;&gt;""~·i_

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SUNBEAM PORCELAINIZED

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$999

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HECK ' S REG ,
$1.19

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loo k. lndudc' o " r:(hr'n L:'1f\ on. I ccnr p on h (••t·l

:.:;~ .,:,',; 12$Vol1 '

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FLASH CUBES

( 12FLASHES )

JEWELRY DEPT.

77(

Wom

HECK'S REG. $1 5. 96

'

125 PIECE
· JR , ARCHITECT

•

RAPID FIRE

RIFLE

.., ,' I. .

SET

'

Servic-e for four .

Pla stic

co nstr uc -

HECK'S REG ,

99 '

TOY
DEPT.

TOY DEPT.

FINGER PAINT SET

WINCHESTER
" FIRING SOUND"

SSP ULTRA CHROME

Age:. : 3 to Adul t. Ea ch se t con -

RIFLE

t or n ~ p oint , fi nger po in t . spot u !o 'i and ins t n.JC ir o n s.

~

CHOICE

....

RACERS
The new lo o k in SSP .

li c high gl oss

A ra ~ e r me ta l-

f in i~h !hOt rea ll y gl~om

ma chmes. Eo ck ro &lt;e· r sold s c po• a t ~ ly
co mp lete with T -~ t rc ll

AS SEEN ONTV

HECK 'S REG ..
99 '

EACH
HECK'S REG.
$1.34

$2.99

TOY DEPT.

.:;;:~ ~

.. ... eo.~

SJ ·99

HECK ' S REG .

•.

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tio n .

12" HOT PANTS DOG

,., ~,

MIL TON BRADLEY

'

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.
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KENNER

TOY DEPT.

TOY DEPT. ·

13

oz.

REVLON
HAIR SPRAY

49&lt;

$299
HECK ' S REG.
$3.99

HECK' S REG, 88 •

TOY DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

' "

·ANACIN
WILKINSON
STAINLESS STEEL ·

7 o"
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VOS SHAMPOO

58(

SO'S

S' S

• NORMAL OR DRY
H~CK'S REG.

. · HECK ' S REG , 7 9 '

84 '
HECK ' S REG. 59 '

COSMETIC DEPT. .

oz.

BRYLCREEM

FLICKER

HAIR DRESSING

LADIES
RAZOR

BLADES

I

3

•

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.94&lt;

. &lt;HECK'S REG . $1.2 8

COSMETIC DEPT.

SOFT &amp; DRI
ANTI PERSPIRANT

$124
. COSMETIC DEPT.

with .U.S. District Court Judge
Walter E. HOffnum, seeking to
block ·efforts by Agnew 's
lawyers to question til em under
oath Thursday on .leaks. Hoff.
man already has turped down a
request to delay the ques·
tivning.
Agnew 's attorneys have subpoenaed for questioning
reporters for four New York
and .Washington newspapers,
the NBC and CBS television
netw orks and Time and
Newsweek magazines:
!The New York Times.

OS REDUCING
PLAN CANDY

$199

HECK'S REG. $1.88

CM!~'!J.DEPT.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN DAILY 9 to 9
CUT FRO M EN GLISH

Charcoal Steak

• • •

CUT FRO M CHUCK

Cube Steaks. • • .
BONELESS
Delmonico Steaks

•

.

'

.
•... ..

•

. I

'

.

'

P, oil\~

\

.

'

HOliday bazaar pla ns were
made at a recent meeting of
the Catholic Women's Club at
the Sacred Heart Church.
The bazaar has been set for
Nov. 8 with the dinner to be one
of creamed baked' chicken and .
ham at the price of $2.25 for
adull.&lt;l, and $1.25 for children,
excluding dessert. Mrs. Vera
Buchanan and Mrs . Katie
Biron were appointed to the
f.ood committee.
In addi tion .to lhe dinner a
bake sale. parcel post, fish
pond, and fancy work booth
will be included at the bazaar .
The. Rev. Fr. Ber nard
Krajcovic reported· that the

projector has arr ived
and that he will be securing
religious films for use in the
children' s
lessons . The
projector cost $433.34 with $283
on hand now to pay for it.
The next meeting, Nov. I,
was set for cleaning the kitchen
in preparation for the bazaar.
Thank you notes were read
from 1.eland Sisson, Moth~r
Mary Clare, Dr. and Mrs.
Edmund Butrimas, Mr. and
Mrs. -Francis Biron .
Mrs . Buchanan, Mrs. Cecelia
Mitch, Mrs. Helen Handley,
and Elizabeth Hept were the
~
hostesses.
sound

.,

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CENTER

s''lct

C"""'

BLADE

lb.

09

$

FULL

$139

SEMI -BONELESS

FULL
CENTER

BLADE
CUT

lb.

CUT

.

. .

.

~ Stea.~a,

•••• 1b.$J49

~"9~~
FULLCUT SHOULDER
$J29 J.LB.PKG. OR LGR.
· GtuM.uut Cltuelt. ••••••
•• lb.
lb.

BONELESS·

Crt.oaatR.ib"R.oaa.f, ••.

fb.

.

$J59
lO·Ib ~

25 to

lb.

$J19

fb,

$,3~
·
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ROUND BO NE SHOULDER

AYg:. Wt.

Wh.o~

Be.eit RiiJ
Valencia Oranges
W-a~~ington St-a le

RED OR

• •

GOLDEN Dehc1ous Apples
New Crop Florid.-.

White Grapefruit

•

Cu+ To Yoyr
Order ln+a

3 •$1

Rib

4'"' 69&lt;

Stea~s .

lb~J19
FROZEN

SLICED 89c LB.

Sulbu...,

OSCAR MAYER

Ri b Ey1 Ste1k1, Rib
Ro..st , B11i1ing St1 lps

For Those Cool Days!

.

Swiaa~
Miaa~
.
.

:rMAf.tud,•eoe.oa;.

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p.g.

Folger's Coffee
VACUUM PACKED.
FOlger's Coffee
CC FFEE

•

•

&lt;

$110

l · lb.
Mn

3,.. $311
lb .

• •

I

Instant Nescafe • •
COFFEE
Instant Nescafe • •
aUaNst
. . ·'. ·. ,,. I

btl.of
24

NyQw£

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• • ••
1-lh.
pkg .

•

Dole Pineapple ,J~, .

•

A&amp;P

Coffee Creamer •
Dream Whip • • •
Pine Sol Cleaner • •
Friskies Dinners • 25
Kal Kan Cat Food
Brownie Mix • • • •
r
Jif Peanut Butter • •
UQ bii O

~

l·lb .
• bowl

$129

,o\LL YAR IETIES

&amp;··.
100
Otte~4·"Dag v~. . . . .
~.
EVERYDAY LOW
. ·
"''·••·$ 100
QRpo- "Be.elr "Dog "Fooc(, . • • • • ~ .'""
MRS. filBERT'S
Soft Margarine •
.s~~E~yfield Waffles

l ·lb.
jJkJ.

6

SHOP &amp;
SAVE!

.
..
$100
"8~.&amp;~ "Fn.oatect ShDb • • • • . ';;~:
WITHIRON
$219

2 79•

·' ~·

All Meat Franks
FROZEN FILLETS
Perch · •

FLAVORS

JANE PARKER
Buttermilk Bread ':':'·
PLAIN OR SEEDED
l~m. $100
·Rye .Bread,;:~:•• 3

$109
.

.

Whole Smoked Picnic .• '"

4 ge

1~1CE

~·

Semi-Boneless Ham • •

~prA!., .JuJee.••••••••• 2 !~: &amp;9~ .
All

• •

" SUPER-RIGHT " HALF

1)~

14·•··69¢
VACUUM PACKED

All Meat Franks
Bulk Sliced Bacon

Short Ribs,

Delm onico Sle•ks,

l hi .

DOG FOOD

49··

1

-~· EVERYD A Y LOW fR ICE

8

lh.t
hn

$3''

•

~

DUNCAN HINES

DON T FO RGET JELL

•·•··
btl. $119
.
ft.l-d
"-:II

FABRIC·
SOFTENER

FOR Cl E.-.NE "- PANS

zoe .

19'

.• ' .

Vegas casino owned by biJ.
lionairc Howard Hughes for his
GOP
campaign.
The
newspaper said the campaign
money was solicited by Agnew
for Blair.
.
Blair was the judge who last
December impaneled \lie spe~
cia! grand jury which recently
has been considering Agnew's
case.

Catholic women meet

"aonclc\S
Beef

"' 5179
"' $169
'
"' $279

1ttJitJ:IIIi•I!JJ•1il I---, ,-

'

special prosecutor I S ~P ­
ppinted .
The Senate Watergate committee, meanwh.ile, has received state campaign contribution records of C. Stanley
Blair , unsuccessful gobernatorial candidate in the 1970
Maryland election . Newsday
reported that Blair, now a U.S.
Di.trict Court judge here,
received $10,000 from a Las

'

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

....

CHOCOLATE &amp; VANILLA

case until th'e grand juty has ·
considered air. evidence. A
request by Agnew for a hearing
· by the fuJI House has been rcjected by Speaker Carl
Albert . The committee .Is
eonsidering a " resolution of
inquiry.' ' which would give
Agnew the House hearing he
wants . ·
John F . . Banzhaf Ill, a
George Washington University
professor of ' law, filed his
second suit in th~ Agnew case.
It opposed the subpoenaing of
reporters aod sought to halt the
grand jury presentation until a

term and practice law. He also seat probably will he U.S. Andrews an·d former governor
said he intended to cont inue . Reps. William Keating of .Cin~ James Rhodes.
cattle breeding.
cinnati and Clarence Brown of
Saxbe's decision to retire not
only
means a wide open
The senator's decision was .. Urbana.
seen by political observers as a
Sax be, who serv ed as Rep~bl ican prima ry, but · it
spark that probably will touch speaker of the Ohio House of could
also
affect
the
off a primary fighl. Minutes Representatives and Ohio De m ocr a tic p r ima r ·y .
after the armoun cement, Lt. Attorney General before being Whatever Democrat receives
G&lt;lv. J ohn.Brown said he would elected to the Senate, said he the nomiilation, he wiil not
seek the nomination to fi lJ. made his decision ove r a year have to face a candidate as
Saxbe 's seat.
ago and, at that time, notified fo rmida ble as Sax be.
Two other contenders for the" then state GOP Chairman John

Supt . Gegrge _Hargraves the Education Commuuu.:cmon
representing Meigs Local Center, Camp Hill, Pa.
"'
Dallas Gardner, superins.chool district, joined several
96·01.
btl,
hundred Ohio school ad· ·tendentofWoQ&lt;!County schools
ministrators in atlendance at is president of the state
the fifth annual conference of association which represents
I
. the Buckeye Association of more than ' 1200 . superinI
School Administrators at tendents, assistant superin·
.I
Scot's Inn October 3-4-5.
tendents, university professors
I
With ''Let's Hear it For Ohio and .other . public school ad~
Schools" as the central theme, ministrators. Other officers
I
presentations and panel are Philip Williams, Madison
I
discussions dealt with com- Local Schools (Franklin
I
municating with staff, parents, County). president elect;
legislators and community David Marcum, Greenhillsgroups. The superinlendent's Forest· Park, past president;
1Zflltf:Jifi•lii4•X:I ...,
association·· expressed· grave Kenneth Crim, Montgomery ,~
I
ni,
Coup-Or\
Tow~~rd
tj,e
I
I
This Coupon
Toward the I
concern about todaY'• public Countv; George Hargraves, 1
Worth
Pureh,uto of I 1
Worth
Purch,•ue·of I
;school image and focused upon · Meigs Local; Lee R. McI I
I
·upgrilding the image of Murri.n,
Toledo;
David I
I. I
I
schools, Featured speakers Moberi.v, Cleveland-University I
including Dr. Harold" · E . . Heights; Stuart Openlander, I
I I
I
Sponberg, presi(jent of Eas,tern Parma; Robert Smith, ·S;ili· I . U*) L it~~ ito~. Coupo~ 1)11 ,,,.,,,~ . 'sl I I
L•'l'•l O no Coo.~pon por 1tmi1~
r;l I
Michigan University, and Dr. dusky, and Rod W. Swank, \ . _ "" Ro d te moDI • "thr ~ Set.. Cot, 1]!1\, ' ~ I \ . _ ~, ke du·mt bl • t hi~ S., 1. Oot l h h t2J I
-------~-'
Allltjrl R. Ho!Uday, director of ·Heath·. ·
'

HECK'S REG:
9~ '

opposed by .n ews agencies

quoting ilfl internal JU:)tkc
Flepar\ment study, said today
there dfe indications that one
of the major sources of
allegedly damaging news leaks
against Agnew "may have
been the Vice President's own
office or the While House." )
Judge Hofbnan sche(luled a 2
p.m. EDT hearing, apparently
connected wilh the inquiry into
leaks. ·
. In Washi ngton, Attorney
Gener al Elliot Richardson.
wrote the House Judicia ry
Committee, urging Congress
not to intervene in the Agnew

pared a legal brief to be filed

WASHING TON (UP! ) Ohio's se ni or Republican
senator, Willia m B. Saxbe,
anno unce d
Tueshe
will
not
seek
re-e le.ction next year be ~
cause of Hmostly per son a!_.;e ~~
sons."
Sax be , 57, said he intended to
return to his MechanicSburg
home at the end of his present

Hargraves participated
in Columbus conference

.

•

Saxbe's withdrawal muddies up politics in Ohio

·

WASHmGTON (UP! )- The mostly white suburbs. The high
Supreme Court influences the court had upheld a iower
law of the land by re jecting as cour't's veto of the .merger
well as deciding· caSes . on earlier this year .
Tuesday, the court r~fused to
-Rej~cled for the fifth time
review, and so left inl&lt;lcl, an attempt by former Teamster
hundreds of lower court deci- President James R. Hoffa to
sions on school integration, get his 1964 jury. l&lt;lmpering
presidential impoundment of cohviction overturned .
funds. obsct nity . and man y . · - Refused to take . up . a
· other subjects.
.
. challenge to federal law wh1.ch
On the first day" of business forbids racial " blotkbusting; '
following its SUJIImer recess, by real esl&lt;lte dealers. .
the Court took some 900 actions,
- Refused to recon~1der a
many. of which were refusals to ruling that newspapers may be
consider appeals of rulings compelled to eliminate sex
from lower courts across the preferences in help~wanted ads,
nation .
and refused lo hear an appeal
One of the most far-reaching of a ruling that stores may pay
decisions involved a denial of a women salespersons less than
request by the state of Georgia men in certain instances .
· to sue President Nixon direclly · - Turned down an appeal by
in the high court for refusing to . Richard P. McCoy, a Vietnam
spend funds appropriated for veteran sentenced toJ5 .Y,ears
education, highways and fight· m p:1son ror hiJa_ckmg a Umted
ing pollution .
A1rhnes plane m Apnl, 1972 .
The decision means that the from Denver to Los Angeles
administration·must continue to• and collecting · $500,000 · in
press for impoundment of such ransom .
- Agreed to rule on the
funds in lower courts, where it
has lost almost every case so constitutionality of a provision
in military law, dating back to
far .
In other major actions, the colonial days, under which two
court :
servicemen were prosecuted for
- Rejected several requests protesting the Vietnam War .
to reconsider its ruling. last
,
June which, esl&lt;lblished a new
TWO RUNS MADE
·definition of obscenity and gave
Middleport E-R squad anstates more leeway in drawing swered a call Tuesday at 10•10
their own pornography stan~ a.m. to Rutland for Ernest
Molden who was l&lt;lken to
dards.
- Refused to interfere in a Veterans Memorial Hospital
federal judge's proposal to and admitted. Today a( 7:14
combine the predominantly . a.m. it transported Lawrence
black school" system of Rich- Harrison of 383 Ash St., io
mond, Va ., with those of two Holzer Medical Center.

$2799

•

'

'

High Court not
meddling much .

CASSETTE
RECORDER.

dis~losures

By KEN NETH f11ANCKL lNG
BALTIMORE, Md . (UP! ) - '
Cil(ng ~onstilutional
guarantees of freedom of the
press, a group of reporters and
news agencies are challenging
in court Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew's effort io force them to
disc lose sources of news
"leaks" abo ut him.
Meanwhile, a U.S. grand
jury, which has been meeting
Wlder tigh t security, was expected to continue its probe of
the vice president.
· Lawyers for the newsmen
and news agencies have pr e~

200

SOUNDESIGN

LA

M-16

.

'' ' ~

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

,._ "

SYLVANIA

JEWELRY DEPT.

. _.,. · · •I&gt;•

. ~.

HECK'S REG,

• Drop •111
r rl.r!1 Loo·do n_ g · ~- ~~ r e •

Sha rpene r wrth hon rut: t ~ lloc uu-dc fo • coor tr ~l l ed
Oc r;Q-,,_ ~o h o,o(o d n I!!"'"·" rtf• , .. ,

'

' ~"-d ·· fo.· c~ · Wit~C-&gt;(1 ,~;o••dJ

$1999

ba11 eroP ~

$99.9

··n·

. HECK'S REG. $34.96

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CASSETTE TAPE

SJ99

CA
lift•

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SLIDE TRAY

"''. s1899

HECK ' S REG .
$21.96

PDI_~•uod

JEWELRY DEPT.

HECK ' S REG, $2 .44

· r.

SQUARE SHOOTER

HECK'S REG, $11.96

AIRQUIPT

Supe r&lt;to ugh por(CIO or1 P&lt;ten o rJo r ('CJ SY dec;tnmg.s cro rch rcsi ll on cc • t. Ttt o ctr~e h uH e t ~ ty l­
rng • l? c •no'!l;lb lc ~H.' OI n;on tro l l o r eo1y clean

•

JEWELR DEPT.

sfoin less sfeel slici ng blades.

~&lt;$''10': ~~;~~t '?-~ B~-~ '5 .T. ~ ,E

/"' ) FRY PAN .

'I' ~' -~ • -• • P.

HECK ' S REG, $34,96

and grea se re sistan t . 9" ' hollow ground

-·

JEWELRY

T100 5

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~lodO -:i "- 1 &lt;If&gt;..,. lun·t • "" tool

Compacf power handle , odor , heo f

2
HECK ' S REG. $1 3 .116

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HECK ' S REG.
$4.44

TOASTER

G. E. CASSETTE
TAPE RECORDER

JEWELRY DEPT.

$J44

SUNBEAM

'"$2'9'9?

99

HECK'S REG . $39.88

HECK 'S REG.
$33.96

I 1 .,, ..,

Big 3 qua rt (Opa c ity .
Hea t resisto11 t glo ~s
cove r. Eo sy cleo11ing
ond set'ving . Non skid .
ta bl e legs. Cor·d in cluded

HECK'S REG. $24.96

ruH f'tHto·~. 4 PM d ynwl'·lf lf..'t'o k•·•
Eo~~ ~c c \ Iide ' " lc w nmg ;\ F( Ort FM

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l.o w pr o f tie ~tylmg Buil t ir1 FM oro d AM

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' wl! ch Com e &gt; itt un !rque wht te wt i h
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$2799

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5 -Speed Hand Mixer is ready o nd wi llin g fo r
any challe ng e r: re o tive : wo rn en th ink up ! De·
pe ndobly b uilt tor com istcn l n1ixi ng. F e at ure~
de toc hob le co rd ; open ho ndl e st yling lo r b t;~ l ­
once. In white , o vo codo o r hm..,es t g o ld.

SUNBEAM

SIZE. Styled to

IIU lull rnq mr•ter

5-SPEED MIXER

JEWELRY DEPT.

~MJ\HY

\ Wtll h

Squt&gt;ldt &lt;On h ol Unu\r.lnl l&lt;.&gt;fl&lt;" dtnl

HAMILTON BEACH

HECK 'S REG. $ 1 9. 96

12 CU P

RADIO ·

v,,,,oh&lt;ll &lt; A(

by the editor

!own:couflcil is in quiet, intense discussion on a matter of

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN. OCT. 14 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
PANASONIC
·-·~,.....--HAMIL TON BEACH
POLICE BAND

?

•

"'*"

-----

---- ---·- ____ ,
1

S.O.S. Pads .

• • •

MA !I.GA ki NE

Fleischmann's
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Towards The
Purchose Of

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Tow•"" The f
Pure•••• Of I

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Viva Napkins

.fl.. 3

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1411

5100

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PI' h mil , .

hdtltlt bl t l~r~ St l .. Ckt. l)th. '

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Purcha1e of

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Worth

Towud the
Purchase of

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Warth

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Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

DEADLINES
S P M Day Betore Pub llc at on
Monday Dead! ne 9 a m

Cancella on -

Correct ons

will be accep ~d unt 9 a m
Day of PubJ cat on

for

REGULATIONS
Tl'le Pub Sher reserves the
r tghl toed 1 or re ect any ads
deemed obtE'ct onal
The
pub! sher w
not be respon
Sible tor more than one n

1911 CHEV BLAZER
S1895
Wheel dr vc l • ck ng frl hubs automat c tr;~n s power
steer ng &amp; brakes Delu:~teir m p~ ckage rad o good I res
spa c n€'ver been used Veh cle ot man~ uses clean m
ter or wh te top over blue body
1971 CHEV 8 PICKUP
$.2195
V 8 eng ne st;:~nd tran s Custam De uxe Cilb rad o R
step bumper wh te wa I !ires blue f n sh Sharp 1 owner
tr ade n
J

cor rect nserl on
RATES

Fo r Wa nt Ad Serv ce

Scents per word one nsertion
M n mum Charge~ 00
14 cents per word three
consecu t ve nsert ons
26 cents pe word s )I; con
secut ve nser ons
25 Per Cent D scount on pa d

1911CHEVROLETIMPALA
~49S
Custom Coupe lc-ral I owner car I ke new wh te wall
I res factory a r automat c transm1 ss on power s teer ng
&amp; brakes Dark green 1 n sh w th black v nyl root spotless

ads and ads ,p a d w th n
o
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 for 50 word m n
mum Each add 1 onal word

3c

nter Of rad

Charge

per

and bt! nformed of the tunc
tons of \OU governmen are
-e m boded n pub 1!: no ces n
tha se f government charges
a
c t zens 0 be nfo ned
h s newspaper urges e"e ry
c zen to ead and stud~ these
n'O~ ces
we strong y adv se
tho-&amp;.e c t zens seek ng f u her
nf o r mat on o ex ere se t he r
r ghl ot ac~ess to public
re cords and pub c meet ngs

Edw n 5 Cozart
Cha rman
Dorothy M Johnston
0 rector
Dated sept 13 1973
110) 3 10 17 24 4tc

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE s hereby g ven that
'" pursuance of a Reso ut on of
the Counc
of the VI age of
Pomeroy Oh o passed on the
20th day of August 197 3 there
w 11 be subm tted to a vote C'f the
peop e of said V llage at a
Genera ELECTION to be held
n the V I age of Pomeroy Oh o
at the regular places of \/Of ng
there n on Tuesday the 61h day
of November 1973 the quest on
of le"y ng n excess of th~ ten
m 111 m tat on tor the benet t of
Pomero;- V age for the pur
pou of prov d ng and man
taln ng f re apparatus
ap
pllances
bu ld ngs
or Sites
therefor or sources of water
supply and mater ats therefor
or the establ shment and
me ntenance of I nes of f re
alarm telegraph or the payment
of permanent
part t me
or
volunteer f rem_ en or f re
fight ng com pan es to operate
the same n the V !age of
Pomeroy Oh o
Sad tax be ng a renewal of
;,n ex st ng tax of 1 m
to run
for five years at a ra t e not
exce~d ng 1 0 ml
for each one
do tar of valuat on
wh ch
amounts to ten cents for each
one
hundred
dol ar s
o•
vatuat on tor f ve yea s
The Pols for sad Elect on
w I be open at 6 30o cock. AM
&amp;nd rem a n open unt I 6 30
o ~;lock P M Eastern Standard
T me of sa d day
By order Of the Board of
El~ c t ons
of M e gs County
Oh

o

Edw n S Cozart
Cha rman
Doro hy M ,Joh nston
D rector
Dated Se pt 3 1973
(10 ) 3 10

17

2-4 4tc

SURGERY FOR WALTON
DETROIT ( UPI ) - Guard
Chuck Walton a mamstay of
the Detroit Uons offensove hne
for seven seasons ts scheduled
for surgery Wednesday for
ligament reprur m his left knee
Rocky Rasley a lout year
ve~an from Oregon State
will replace Walum Sunday in
the game at New Orleans w1th
the Samts

GREAT
•• COUNTRY
STEREO

92.1

WMPO-FM
Mtddloport Pomerov

I

STEA K DINNER
Roservat ons Make them at
our off ce n Pomeroy P 0
Bo~&lt; 426 orca I Pomeroy 992

RED CARPET INN, PHONE 304-675-5007
Or Wrote Jewell Co Inc
Box 104 Moddleport 0

JOB OPENING
Program Planner for Gallo a Me1gs
Commumty Act10n Agency
Qualofocatoons
Prevoous experoence on de ve lop ng State or
Federal Programs
Send resume to
Box 686 Pomeroy Ohoo 45769
Box 16 Gall polos Ohoo 45631
Salary Neqotoable
Apphcaltons must be '" by Oct 18 1973
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOT CE s nereby g ven tha
n pur suance of a R eso ut on of
the Counc
of th e v lage of
Syracuse Oh o pa ssed on the
5th day of Ju y 973 there w
be subrp tted to a vote of the
peopl e of sad V Iage at a
Genera ELECT ION to be he d
n the v rrage of Syracuse Oh o
at th e regu ar p ace of vot ng
there n on Tue sday the 6 h day
of November 973 the Quest on
of evy ng n excess of the t en
m I I m at on to the bene! t of
Syracuse V !age fo
the pur
pose of prov d ng and m a n
tan ng f re apparatu s ap
p ances
bu d ngs
or s tes
therefor or sources of wale
supply and mater ats therefor
o
H1e estab shment and
ma nlenance of
nes of f re
a arm telegraph or the payment
of pf;!rmanent
part t me or
vo unteer f em en or f re
f ght ng com panes to operate
the same n the V age Of
Syracuse 0 o
Sa d tax be ng a renew a of
an ex st ng tax of two m s to
run for f ve years at a ra e no
exceed ng 2 0 m 1 s for each one
do ar of va uat on
w h ch
amounts to twenty ce nts for
each one hundred do l a s of
va uat on tor f ve years
The Po Is for sa d E ect on
w be open at 6 JOoc l cok AM
and reman open un
6 30
o c lock PM Eastern Standard
T me ot sad day
By order of the Board of
Elect ons
of Me gs County
Oh o

SWEE PER Repa rs
Parts
Supp e
D sco unt pr c es on
Gene a merchand se thru
our ca talog department
Phone
367 7736
Dav s
Vacuum Cl eaner Sto re
0
a m
5 p m Ad d son Oh o
9 23 30 c
YARD Sa e F'r dav &amp; Satu rday
9 a m
5 p m 571 L aure
5
M dd eporl Oh o
10 9 3tc

--------

w

L L acce p b ds o put on a
ga ... an zed
oof on chu ch
un t Oct 5 Ph one 843 2432 or
843 2687
l 096tp

K05CO T
KOSMET CS
&amp;
W GS Many spec as d ur ng
Phone
he mon th of Oct
He en Jane B own ~92 5 13
10 2 tfc

Wanted To Buy
BEEF h des W
p ay S9 per
h de Phone 773 5600 Grover
C Roush Ma son W Va
10 7 Otp
NO 1 Copper 62c rad ators
30c brass :ZOe batter es 90c
clean dry G nseng roo s $58
b ye ow root $5 may app e
60c M A Hal
Reed sv l e
Pho n e 378 6249
9 23 tf c

CORNER
cupboards
wa 1
cupboards ct ests o ct guns
any co nd ton
A l so I) ue
de corated stoneware Wr te
Edw n S Cozart
P 0
Box 44 Mart nsburg
Cha rman
Oh o 43935 or c a
1 48.4 4440
after 7 p m
Dorothy M Johnston
a a 90tc
b rectorDated Se pt 13 1973 - -- -- - --~

J

flO

3 10

1 24 4t c

WANT EO
tor
auct on
househo d goods Too s most
anyth ing of va ue W II buy or
se t on com m ss on W t haul
Ca
992 J354 or 992 2792
Hayman s
7 25 tfc

OHIO COLLEGE
FOOTBALL RECORDS
Bv Umted Press International
M d A mer can Conference
League Overal
W.LT
WLT
13ow ng Green
4 0 0
'2 0
0 0
0
KentS ate
3
0
To edo
1 1 o
2 ' 0
0 0 0
M am
4 0 0
Wes ern M ch

0 2 0

2 '

Oh o Un ver s y

0

0 2 0
2 0
Oh o Confere nce
B ue 0 v 5 on
League Ove at
W l T
W l T
M us k ngum 0 0 0
' 2 0
Mar etta
0 0 0
2 2 0
Den son
o o o
2 2 0
Ott er be n
0 0 0
Oh oWes eyan
' ' 0
0 0 0
3 0
RedOvson
Lea gue Overall
W l T
W L T
He de be-rg 0 0 0
4 0 0
W ttcnberg 0 0 0
4 0 0
0 0 0
Cap Ia
J 0 0
Mt Un o
0 0 0
3 I 0
Ba dw n wa ace
0 0 0
22 ' 00
Woeste
0 0 0
B g Ten
League Overall
W l T
W l T
Oh o Slat e
1 0 0
J 0 0
M ch ga n
1 0 0
4 0 0
It nos
1 0 0
2 2 0
Purdu e
1 0 0
2 ' 0
Northwe stern
I 0 0
1 J 0
Indiana
0
o
2 2 0
M nnesota
0
0
1 J 0
M ch gan State
0
0
1 J 0
W scons n
0
0
1 3 0
Iowa
0 1 0
0 4 0
Others
W L T
Centra State
4
I
0
Bluffton
3
1
0
H ram
2
I
0
Ash and
3
2
0
Det an ce
3
2
0
W lm ngton
0
Joh n Car o r
2
Kenyon
'1
2 0
Obe rt n
'1
2 0
F ndlay
2
0
Dayt~:m
2
0
Xav er
2
J
0
Cin e nnat
t
J
0
Akron
1
4
0
Case Western Reserve

l

Oh o Norther n
Youngstown Sta l e

0

J

0

4
4

0

---------OLD turn lure oak

tables
clocks ce boxes brass beds
or
compete
d shes
h ouse holds
Wr te M
D
M ler Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
ca J 992 6271
s 13 He

Help Wanted
WOMAN wanted to ve n w th
e der y ady very ght house
keep n g Ca 992 5939
10 9 3t c
___.,_

___ _____ _

WOMAN wanted at M dway
Market Ca 992 2565 for an
nterv ew
10 9 3tc

--------BRUSH HOG S
992 5858

GARAGE Sa e
Ente pr se
parsonage
R
33 ant que
d shes furn ture baby tf'mS
:n sc
Thursday th ough
Sa turday 10 am t 5 p m
10 I 0 3 p

KENNELS of Calhoun - Toy
poodle pupp es £60 to $9 5
s amese k en5 !!. 15 Phone
256 6247
10 7 JOtc
CA RN Terr er AKC puppy
sma
shaggy we gh 2 bs
a
matur ty
$75
Phone
Coo v le 667 62 4
TO 5 6tp

------~---'-·-

PARKV EW Kenne s Pood es
toy mae and 1 female
Phone 992 5443
1 15 tfc

lobtle Homes For Sale
4 x 65 TRAILER 2 bedroom
very good cond t o Phone 773
5805
B 22 ttc
CASH pad for a I makes and
lllDde ls ot mob e homes
Phone area code 6 4 423 9531
4 13 tfc

phone

WANTED
PAPER CARRIER
IN

SYRACUSE

The Dally Sentinel
PHONE 992 2156
For Sa e
CUB CADET 10 H P
w lh
cv lf va ors $425
One New
dea pant seller S 25 Ca I
alter 6 p m 949 37 46

9S7
W ESTWOOO
Mob e
Home excellenl cond I on.
Ca 992 5867
10 9 61p

19os- wiNoso R oo •

12

The bas1c system lor map
makmg was worked out by
Ge1 ha1 d1 s Mercator Flem
osh ge ographer H1s world
map of 1587 appeared m ~
world aUas published m 1607

In the B1ble the 37th
chapter of Isatah and the
O 19th chapter of the second
~ book of Kmgs are a!Jke

2

bedrooms Very good con d t on Ca I 992 35 1
10 9 14tc

67

MOUNT Vernon Mob e
3 bedroom~
Home 12 x 5~
front k tchen
ca
985 4179
ask ng $3 500
0 9 3tp

-----

50 ACRE FARM w th 5 room
house bafh on hardtop road
w lh bu ld ng s tes $20 000
Ca t 992 5795
10 2 10tc

----"--

-- -

1973 14x70 MOB LE home
washer a d dryer
d sh
washer sta n ess stee l s nk
garbage d sposa
eye I eve
oven range dacron po yester
carpe
arge of Phone 742
30a3
7 a tf
STEREO RAD 0 Btrack tape
comb nat on am fm rad o 4
way speaker sound system
Ba ance $111 92 or use our
budget terms Ca l 992 39tS5
0 7 6tC
EXCELS OR Sa I Works
E
Man St Pomeroy A I k nds
of sa il water pe ets water
nuggets bo ck sa t and own
Oh o R ver Sa t Phone 992
3891
6 5 ttc

cOmpaCf p Orfa bJ 8
WASHER

Only '224.95

·

Model WLP LOIN

ComDact Portable
ELEC. DRYER

Only •132.95
,t,\pdel DLP 1050P
~ POMEROY
9. _Jack W Carsey Mgr

12 X 60 MOB LE home w th 13 x
7 expando
3 bedrooms ,
~
Phone 992 2181
p umbed and
w r ed for
wasner &amp; dryer new furnace. L______________________ J
extra large hot water heater
all electr c home
3
comple te y yours
n t ve NEW
bedrooms 1 2 bath carporit
years $85 per month Cal 675
wa I to wall carpet bu It n
5895
range and oven 1 acre of
10 106tc
ground compe te y pr vate
Cal 7&lt;12 6261
10 10 4tc

A1r Condtltoners
Awnongs
Underpmnong

Comp l ete
mob l e home
serv ce plus g gant1c
d s play of mob1le homes
always ava1lable at

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
423 7521

BELPRE 0

For Rent

Gray Manor
Apartments
Now Avaolable

Two Bedroom
FurniShed Apt
All new furn1ture noce
area no pets

Call Earl Ingels, Jr
992 3863

After 6--992 5844

10 051&lt; --------------~-------

•

STA R
k IS rat s Qu "Ckly
sure '1 1 bs $ 69 Ebersbach
Hdwe
Sugar Run M lis
P Ekens Hdwe Mason
10 9 3Qtp

MOB U ; home 69 Regent 12 x
46 2 bedroom w
se I w thor GROCERY bus ness tor sale
w thout
turn lure
Good
Bu d ng for sa e or lease
cond t on Ca 773 5689 or see
Phone 773 5618 from a 30 p m
Mart n Graham at Zuspaifto 10 p m tor appo ntment
Street Mason West V rg n a
J 20 lfc
0 3 7tc

7 15 ttc

-------..--

1956 r.oR D three qua ler ton
good cond 1 on $275 Call 949
3746 alter 6 p m
0 9 Si c

REVIVAL star t ng at Pom-eroy
Wesleyan Ho ness Chur c h on LOTS of chrysanthemums fo r
sal e f eld grown We on y
R
t43 w th Rev Ray mond
hav e one color
yet ow 10
R ce Evange st Sun day Oct
bunches for $5 We have some
4 spec a
s ng ng each
out n ful bloom some ust
even ng a
7 30
Pa s tor
budd ng Reyno ds FJower
Re\lerend Ode
Mantey
Shop Ma son w va ca 773
Everyone welcome
5147
0 10 6tc
9 26 H e
SHOOT NG Match Ra e ne Gun
Cub Su nday Oct 4
p m UPHOLSTER your own fur
assorted meats
fa c tory
n ture We hav e a
he sup
choked gun s on y
pi es
you
w 1
need
10 103tc
Upho stery F abr cs a very
arge se le c t on of ny l ons
BASEME NT Sa le
Thursday
ve vets Her cu on v ny s - n
and Fr day
o d la sh oned
co tton p nts a so remnants
rad o record p ayer c om
Foam
for cush ons
and
b nedl buffet Tappan h gh
padd ng
Burlap den ms
oven r ang e
sm a
tabes
ca mbr c foam glue z pper s
some d shes b g se ect on of
spr ngs and c l ps ch pboards
c oth ng 244 Mulberry Ave
egs se w ng thread dacron
Pomeroy Oh o
tacks webb ng we I cord
cotton sw ve ba ses -and all
0 0 2tc
o her sup p es you w need
G A NT yard sa e 778 0 \ler
New urn tU re at ow
ow
St r ce M dd e port Oh o Oct
pr ces
Pomeroy Recovery
2 and 13th 9 am t
5p m
622 E Ma n 992 755 4
n case of ra n w 1 be held n
0 5 30tc
ga age Bl ender a most new
v ng
oom s u te
amps MED UM s zedwesternsadde
ch ars p atform rocker
tt e
$50 a so h ghcha r S7 Phone
g r s and women s cloth ng
Coo lv e 667 6214
d shes and ot s of other n ce
! em s
0 10 3tc 1972 9 2 Foot p ck up camper
S eeps four
self conta ned
$1 250 Ca I 742 5980
10 5 7tc

1220 Washmgton Blvd

4x5 ft

BLACK Tennessee Wa ker
colt Telephone 992 3640 after
S p m
10 4 n t c

J AND il ROOM furn shed and
unturn shed
apartments
Phon e 992 5434
4 12 tfc
MOBILE home
12 X 50
2
bedroom Ca Albert H II 9.49
2261 Rae ne Oh o
10 5 6tc
4 ROOM apartment w th bath
and? bt:!drooms on lOA Spr ng
Avenu e C.a 992 5908
10 7 6tc

AUTO TRIM
992-2839
Co Road S

Bu11t to Your Specs
Delivered to Job Sttt

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

Heat1ng
A1r Cond
Refngerahon
Plumbing
Electncal Appliances Auto
Air Cond
Res1dent1al or
Commercial

DUI'fiP TRUCK
SERVICE

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E Maon Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
~nd

215 N Second
Phone 992 3509
24 Hour Servoce

) FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

From the laroest
Bu i iCiozer Rad1ator to
~ma t est H eater Lore
Nathan B1ggs
Rad1alor Spec1ahst

the

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph

~92 1:174

Roofong
Spoutong
Porch Repaor Com
plete
Home
Remodelong
For Free Est1 male

1

Pomeroy

Ph. 742-3985
Spec1al1st
Wheel

Real Estate For Sale

Alignment

It Must
Be Right
or we w II
Make If R•ght

TEAFORD
\ltrq!l B T t·.dorri. S1
Broki'l'
110 MPch.1!H\ &lt;;tn'('t

Ponwroy. Ohw

·1~

8 4 JO Oa1ly 8 12 Sat
Q H Rawtmgs Sons

NEW LISTING - 3 bedrooms
bath d nmg room large k t
chen 2 porches front enclosed
Hot wa t er heat Full basement
m ce lot and 2 car garage Only
$13 50000
GRAVEL HILL - 3 bedrooms
bath gas f urna ce large k 1
chen level lot 1 car garage
w th storage Vacant so you
can soon move n $15 500

LARGE

HOME

Gas

f replace gas F A f iJrnace
n c e modern k t c hen 5 lar9e
bedrooms w th c losets large
front por c h on corner lot m
Rutland
w th trees and
shrubbery
NEW LISTING - Convenient 3
bedroom home n ce bath
modern b rch kitchen large
llv ng hot water heat ing 1 c ar
garage S19 500 00

NEW LISTING -

3 bedroom

raneh home bath gas furna ... e
garag e
and n ce lot
n
Syracuse Want $19 500 00

NEW

LISTING

-

Has

2

apartments 2 bedrooms down
w th
gas
furnaces
full
basement and 1 bedroom
apartment up Garage and n ce
n
M ddleport
Ask1ng

S25 000 00
OVER 2 ACRES -

About half

cleared the re st has arge saw
t mber T P water av a lable

Only $5 000 00
YOU - Now can have a new 3
bedroom home w1th 1 2 baths
e lect n c heat
set on your
foundat on for 1ust $16 000 00

NEW LISTING - 157 acres of
n ce ay ng farm land
n
Columba Townsh1p Large
barn n ce pastures w th ca ttle
80 acres of crop land Large 4
bedroom house w th bath
M nerals 2 farm ponds &amp; good
t mber

INVEST
WHERE
YOUR
MONEY I S SAFE AND WILL
EARN YOU MORE REAL
ESTATE IS THE ANSWER
HAVE A TALK WITH ONE OF

us

RON SHEPARD Floor Wal
Remodel ng
Ceram c tile
baths Box 28D Rut and 742
3664
6 26 tfc
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROB C
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPA RED
MILLER
SAN TAT ON
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
3035
10 4 tfc
AUTOMOBILE nsurance been
cance lled ?
Lost
your
operator s I cense Ca
992
7428
6 15 tfc
DEAD SlOCK - Will rem'"".,
at a reasonab e charge Cal
245 5514
8 23 90t c

Real Estate For Sale
5 ROOM house w th bath att c
room garage ar d workshop
comb ned
doub e lot
n
R ac ne on F tth Street A
new turn tur
Ca 1 949 2933
0 10 3tp
HOME m Chester P . acres
n ce locat on
near Gav n
Call 367 7114
10 5 12tc

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

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

6 ROOMS and bath
n town
$11 000 Call 992 3975 or 992
2571
9 2B tfc

-------....------HOG Tamworth Purebred
Bo~r

Set of 12 end p ows Cal
949 2115
o 10 3tc
MASSEY Ferguson Model 12
bater used one season Also
one profess on a draw ng
ta~ e
Cal 247 2-40-4 after 5

pm

10 105t c
1970 12 X 60 VALIANT mob le
home 196a Camara ss 350 4
speed Call 9EIS 4207 anyt1me
10 10 Jtc
GREE N beans pu 1 your own
Br ng conta ners $2 bushel
Eugene E Oav s Phone 247
2198

- -- - - -

ACRE tots D&amp;rw n area
Tuppers
Pta ns
water
Contact Hershel McClure
Da ry lste unt 3 p m 992
5248 after 3 992 3436
9 28 12tc
1

___ _..____
POMEROY HERES
ECONOMY 2 slory frame 2
bedroom s NEW bath NEW
gas F A furnace NEW hot
water tank Full basement
Some
carpet1ng
and
panel ng $6 500 00

TUPPERS PLAINS - 1 year
old 3 bedrooms W C N1ce
bath
Dm ng room
N1ce
kttchen All electr c Garage
&amp; Pat o 1 acre $19 500 00

RUTLAND -

Ph 992 5271
Lincoln thll Pomeroy 0

-----

B1d 1n proper hand Important
~ORTIL

+++

Dear Helen
Our son qwt high school two months before gradualton H1s
Dad and 1 also have eleventh grade educatoons But that dodn 1
keep us from bemg successfu 1
Smoking was the mam trouble w1th fom He got so many
suspenswns he JUSt gave up Teachers e"en hld under ca rs m the
parkmg lot to catch k1ds at 11
Now Tom has a very good constructoon JOb but he s sttll put
down Parents of his gorl call htm that dropout a nd advose her
not to go wtUt h1m Why 1s the doploma so awfully Important to so
many people' Toms a hard worker and smart Isn l lbat
enough' - TIRED OF TWO FOUR LEITERS WORDS DROP
OUTS
Dear Tired
Yes that s enough Many sell taught people make ot b1g But
1! the word drop out bothers Tom as much as 11 bothe1 s you
why doesn the enroll m mght school and wm his d1ploma ' (And
why don t you JOtn him ' Adult classes are fun and very
rewarding) - H
1 OO - New s3 4 6 B 13 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 5
Illustrated Man 8 Move
00 - N ews 13 4

+++

Adam s R1b Asswne thai I\\ o you ng lawyers get ma ned
and one becomes an assistant d1stnct attorney while the other
JOinS a law ftrm that specJahzes m crtmma1 defense cases
l hat s the premise of Adam s R1b and If you can beheve
that Perry Mason never loses a case ) 0u can beheve th~hi
ser es woll be p1ttmg husband agatnsl wofe most of lhe ttme
In a season that seems atmed at ex.tractmg lau ghs from
lower-c lass vulganty

ng
Mach nes
Serv c e on at
makes Reaso11able rates
The Sew ng Ce nter M d
dleport Oh o
11 6 tf c

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

EXCAVA TNG-oo~rs ~rge
and sma I
Backhoes and
loaders on track and t res
Dump truck. Lo boy ser
v ce Sept c tanks nstal ed
George ( B I l Pu I ns phone
992 2-478 or 992 7402
2 9 tt c

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

SEWING MACH NES Repa r
serv ce at makes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Author zed S nger Sa les and
Service We Sharpen sc .ssors
3 29 tfc

MO
Eh~""; -repa-;-E~c
tr ca plumb ng and heat ng
Phone 992 5858
.._
7 15 lf c

Bit

___ ___________

f
Dryers
Surround • clothes
with gentle even
heat No hot spots
no
overdry ng
Fine Mesh L nt
F Iter
We Spec1ahte In

MAYTAG

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~;.~~~·l

-~---~~~ 6tc '-------~--;-__! ~i:L:...:.,:_=.:_'~~--.:;;::..:.::=-=.:===-~~....c:==;t.;.-L.[.

tnes

lo show some

by Hf:NRI ARNOLD ,ond BOB L££

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square to

I I
LAASl

I I
IBLAMME~

"

13 Demon
strate
14 A seal
15 Young
sheep
IG Perkins

Move

The

-

6 Prtme nb
7

eg
Fabled

Yesterday s Aoswer
19 Pl-es1den
25 Song

bird
10 Molnar

and

hal pre
rogatJVe

play
(2 wds )
11 Leadmg
lady
12 Unendong

J7 Before

18 Mamfest

20 Indus
tr1besman
21 Breaks a
traffic la w
23 Destroy
24 Soc ial

refratn
27 --burner
29 Dijll~ of

21 Fr1ghlen

mg
22 Empty
talk
23 To laugh
(Fr )

16 lraman s
ancestor

song.

33 Exude
34 Pottery
36 C&lt;~fern
37 OL:l note

class

25 Woody
vme

26 Counter

tenor
27 P1stol part
28 Cheer
29 Governed
30 -- Gol
Sixpence

3'1 J•ne

Austen
novel
38 Monkey or
pamt
39 Den
40 Referees
count
U Pay ones

D

part
DOWN

1 For fear

I I
0
'GLQuz~ I I

that

A 5 &amp;N 1&gt;4AT

ONE::!:&gt; I&lt;:EDUCI I-J&amp;

CRYPTOQUOTES
ZDJLG

Now &amp;rTange the ctrcled letters
to form the surpnae answer as

_.:_::
Prill::_:lfle:::.,:SUII:::::PR~ISI:_:INSWIII=~here-:___jl

Ll

rI I

f I ]

WOVEN

DECENT

1'e1lerd•y •

AFLOAT

Antwer Jltothmg pmd yet-ami no
obJectwns - :ALL OWfD

1DLH

PDDRH

~==~:=:::=:;:::::=::~-·~·~r~r~•::•tedbytheabovecartoon

Jumble• LlAVl

and
Levant

Barker

VSCD

SOC

KDGGBZ C

YLS

V P C N L A ~" E C
ZDHVCDS DP ZDJt:(J:

N DJ L Q L G

W

XDGGBZC

Z DJ! G

M LDGM L

XL G S W'~ T

HNWJ

(Mtwen lomorruwJ

Spe ll ol Ev 1 6 13
Two Love s 10

ately
5 Homolka

31 Spamsh
queen
32 St1tch
35 War of--

fo.-m four ordmary words

FECEN

8 Repeat
9 Assuage

Yesterdays Crypt&lt;&gt;quote THERE IS BUT ONE MOJ;{AL!
TY AS THERE IS BUT ONE GEOMETRY VOLTAIRE •
(© 197.'1 Kmg Features Synd cate Inc )

-WE FINALLY
FOUND THE
OWNERS
NAME

FA Sl

+1

+J 94

. \ I.J )I'lb 4

. 7?
t 654
+ K8ti o

t Q1109

Wi-IAT

sou Ill 10
• A o:1
• K 93
t I J

+ A I 02
h Suu I u nc1 1blc
\\ ~ I

---.------- --- ---------.- Sew
ELNA and Wh te

openl}

one

bv THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Pam
1 Suburban
3 Sentry s
s ghl
phrase
5 Boston
(3 wds )
Brums star
4 Jmmedt

10

+ QO

c a ts Phone 992 2522
2 9 tfc

W LL tr m or cut t ees and
shrubbery
A so c lean out
basements all cs e tc Ca
949 372 or 742 4441
0 0 30 c

this

sophisltcallon and mtelltgence
Ken Howard IS Adam and Blythe Danner IS Amanda Both
are cast as capable If mexpenenced young attorne}s and

• Oo

--------------HARRISON S TV ~erv ce and

Rutland

Dear Sus
Many \\omen JUSt hke many men don t asp1re to top
management but putting all women mto one no 1eal amb1t10n
category ls hogwash bramwash and male \\httewash as
Michael Korda aptly pomls oul m his new book Male
G'hauvuusm - How 11 Works
Thts outspoken executiVe tells why and how the male
hierarchy con~ptres to keep \\omen down and unde r m a best
seller that should make htm as popular as cockroaches m the
company conference room but Villl probably have more real
Impact on Ute busmess world than Gloroa Steonern and Belly
Fnedan combtned Why ? ( Ah 1rony ) Because he sa man
and men hsten to men Clock
Korda contends that desptte weaselong hp seoVICe equal
pay for equal work more often means less pay for equal wm k
Wlder a female JOb classlfJcatwn He descnbes low
machinatlons and flimsy excuses whtch hold the gt rls m theu
places - behmd typewrtlers or servong coffee Hos book bo1slles
With mstances of unfatr play (sexual and sex1sl ) fuzz) thonkmg
prejudices and Jealousies hallbaked male fears and Sill}
mtsconcepttons which haven t ~eally changed smce chasllll belt
days It should be on every workmg woman s desk and I
recommend ol also lor mer. husbands oncludcd "ho SAY ~ ac
tually beheve ) they champiOn women s n ghls
We ve come a long way maybe but accordmg to Korda a
busmessman who knows we ve st1ll gol a long way lo go - H

&lt;Ted Led woth br~ons enou~h respectovely so that neJth&lt;r'~ a
dcur~ut edge m tile pr~cltce of law love~nd marnage One eptsode n voiVlng about attempts to bi.in a porno~h1c
tnO\IIe and p.-osecutc the the;,~lte-()wner v.as rather pedestnan 111
o•s outhne and led to a predictable concluston
It was saved however by the Interplay between Mr lfoward
and M1ss Danner •ho got mlo some rather sexually"""l'hcol
conversatiOns about JUSt how much prurtent mterest was
r nsed m each of lhem by voewmg ll e skon ll1ck The doalogue
was honest and refreshmgly free of hall~rly allusions yet
d1dn t deny the emol1ons each of the partoes fell a boul walUnng a
shghtly~leansed stag mov1e wolh only the 11mesl cla1m to any
redeemmg soct.a I value
Frankly I rather Joked ol No one IS gomg to s1t aroillul the
ltvmg room roarmg at the outrageousness of the scenes a la
Archoe Bunke• bul1t s a neallotlle corned) unpretentoq4s and
charactcnzed by respcctiable actmg lind that s more than you
can sav for most of the new sho" s thts yea r

+ KQ lOS

EXCAVAT IN G dozer
oader
and backhoe work
sept c
tanks nsta ed dump tru ck s
and o boys for h re w
haul
f I d rt top so
mestCtne
and &lt;'rave Ca Bob or Roger
Je ffers day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 99 '1
5232
2 11 tfc

Millytag
Hiilo of Hut

741 42'1

1

betng m full comman&lt;l' - SUSPICIOUS

+

Perma Press

plan 3 bedrooms Bath
D nmg R TV room New
floor cove.- ng
Uti! ty R
Full basement
Gas floor
furnace 2 car garage w1th

WIN AT BRIDGE

WI sl

2 speed Operafjon
Ql.o ce of water
t'emps
Auto
water
le~el
contro l
L nt
F Iter or Power
F1n Ag tator

ne ghborhood $20 000 00
MIDDLE PORT 1 floor

Ph

00 - M ster Ca rt oon 3 Love Amer can Style 13 So mer set 15
Sesa me Sl 33 20 Speed racer 6
.:1 30 - Green Acres 3 Jeopa rdy 4 I Love Lucy 6 G 11 gan s
Island 13 Hazel 8 Bonanza 15
5 00 ....,. Bonanza 3 Mr Roge't's 20 33 M erv Gr ff n 4 Andy
G If th8 I Drea m of Jea nne 13 M ss on lmposs 1b e6
5 30 - E lec Co 33 Gomer Pyle USMC 13 Beverly H 1 b ! I es 8
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Tra Is West 15
5 55 - Ear N ght nga le 15
6 00 - N ews 3 d 8 15 News 6 10 Sesam e St 20 M lestones of
Progress 33 ABC New s 13
6 30 - NBC N ews 3 4 15 ABC New s 6 CBS News 8 10 L Ias
Yoga &amp; You 33 Hogans Heroes 13
7 00 - What s My L ne 8 News 10 Beat the Cloc k 4 Elec Co
20 Course o f Our T mes 33 Truth or Conseq 3 6 Lets M'-'ke
AOeal13 CalloftheWes115 CoachesCommentss
7 30 - Ho l~wood SquaresJ To Tel the Truth 6 W ld K ngdom
10 Bea t the Clock 13 Zoom 20 Lookmg Ahead 33 Sale of th e
Centu r y -4 Ozz e s G rls 8 Johnny Mann s Stand Up and
Cheer 15
8 00 - The Waltons 8 10 Advoca t es 20 33 Toma 6 13 F 1p
W lson 3 4 5
9 00 - Irons de 3 4 15 Kung Fu 6 13 Move The S n s ot
Rache l Cade 8 Jack e Gleason 10
10 00 - Street sof SanFran csco6 13 News 20 NBC Foil es3 4
15 CBS Reports 10

5 I tfc

ce

10 Oayt me 90 8

&lt;1

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

serv

The Qu et Man

my questton
Is lhts because women don t really want the r e~-ponstbthty of

Corrtmumg to look at the 19H 74 season !&gt; n~w offenn~;;s I II
g J\( rny unpres:swn of a c:ouple of the situatiOn come&lt;hes v.hich
abound on tl • lube on Frtday mghts lhos year
Needles and Pms
Th1s Slt-&lt;:olll 1s set tn New Yorks
garment dislroct and deals" oth the world of fashoon
It s blessed w1tfi.a surpnsmgly good cast headed by Norman
Fell who runs the shop and shows himself to be a great asset on
playing stra1ghl man much of the lime for lbe rest of lhe cast J
hkc h1m and the v.ay lhe wntcrs ha" e resastod the temptatiOn to
make hom a carocature of a garment·&lt;hstroct hustler
rhe show IS also blessed Wllh Louoe Nye a genumely funny
man but here the scropl seems lo bog down badly - not knowmg
ex 1ctly what to do with such com1c talent 1 hey ve cast hun as
Fells brother In Ia" generally d1shked by the en lore cast and
ftttmg mto no parttcu1ar mche m the plot
rhet e s an admtrable attempt too not to emphasize the
Jewoshness of VIrtually lhe whole thmg and play around too much
w1lh eUtnoc hwnor although 11 certamly would be JUsllfled m a
show alx&gt;ut an tndustry that1s Jommated by Jews
lhenaggmgsuspJcton about Needles and Pms show long
Ute produce' s can keep gomg woth decent comedy plots about a
busmess that tsn t noted for ots boEfofa I don l lhmk Utey can
suslatn Ute story hne through more than a sessoon of thai long
lith 1t s the case then I d predict the !ashton emphasts this
season \1111 be on the bust and wa1st A waste of !me talent m
Norman Fell and I oule Nye and a show that "tnds up a bust I
hope not because the show has ots moments but 1t may wear lhtn
as a see through blouse after a fe" ep tsodes

t K82
4

- -.....------- • ----

Nice k1tchen and din ng
area Hardwood floors All
electnc
Large lot
Good

at Pops 20 M ove

3 30 ._ Return o f Peyton Place 3 15 One L te to Live 13
Donahue 4 Mat ch Game 73 8 Fl ntstones6 F lm 33

Com pete Serv ce
Phone 949 J821
RacneOho
Cr tf Bradford

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

SB SOO 00
SYRACUSE - In new ad
dtl on 3 large BR Bath

d ng Ltghl &amp; 10
2 30 - DoctorsJ 4 15 Edge of N1ght8 10 G rl n My L fe6 13
3 00 - AnnfhPr Wor ld 3 4 15 General Hoso1ta l 6 13 Even nq

C BRAOFOR D Auct oneer

DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and s~ptlc tanks d t
c h ng serv ce top so 1 f 1
dirt
lmestone
B&amp;K
Escavating Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861
- - - - - ----u-;-:;-jT- 1
5 ROOM house on 3 acres of
9 1 ffc
and
Tuppers
P.lams
Chester water
all new NE GLERS
FOR
HOUSE
plumb ing alum num sld ng
BUILDERS
C ALL GUY
fuel o 1 furnace Call 9a5 3539
NE IGLER RA CINE OHIO
93012tp
91130tp

2 l::iedrooms Bath New floor
covenng Gas F A furnace
Porches Garage &amp; storage
Storm doors &amp; windows
Porches
Just remodeled

Gu

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE ra tes. P h 446
4782 Gall po s John Russ e 1
Owner and Operator
5 12 lf c

2 NEW homes 3 bedrooms
bu t n k t chens
ocated n
Rufland
Call M o Hut
ct'l nson 742 3615 or 742 6743
10 7 7t c

1 story frame

workshop $13 000 00
BUY A HOME TODAY SAVE
MONEY
TOMORROW
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
II no answer 992 2568

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

s

a

Open 8 T1t 5
Monday thru Satu.-day
606 E Mam Pomeroy 0

McCOY S AUCT ON SER VICE
For a real auct on ca 1 th e
8 ACRES of land on State Route
rea McCoy
0
Mac
McCoy Chester Oh o
143 on new pro~osed waiter
ne Ca I 992 3640 after 5 p m
10 3 tfc
10 4 12tc

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

SINGER AutOmllt c Z g Zag
Sew ng mach nes n sew ng
tab e Makes buttonholes
sews on buftons bl nd hems
etc Top notch cond ton Pay
$51 or terms available Phone
992 298.4
10 10 6tc

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

RE;ADY MIX
CONCRETE
deH ...-er-et1
r ght
to yourpro ect Fast and easy Free
est mate!. Phone 992 328 4
Goeg en R ea dy M x co
M dd eporf Oh o
6 30 lfc

carpet ng b g k.ltchen w th
ots of c ab nets
' ac re of
ground Rae he Oh o Ca I
949 4998
9 12 tfc

REDUCE 6Xcess flu ds W th
F u dex
Lose we ght w th
Dex A D et
capsules
at
Nelson Drugs

VACUUM C eaners new 1973
model
Compete w th
all
c ean ng tools Sma I pant
damage n sh pp ng W II take
$27 cash or budget p an
ava ab e Phone 992 2984
10 10 6tc

--GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

----.~--

--- --------2 BEDROOM house 3 years o d

Jtp

PAINT DAMAGE 1973 ZIG
ZAG SEW ING MACHINES
St II n or g nat cartons No
attachments needed as our
con tra s are bu t In
Sews
w th 1 or 2 needles makes
buflonho es sew on buttons
monograms and bl nd hem
st tch Fu 1 cash p~ ce $38 50
or budget plan ava1lable
Phone 992 2984
10 10 6tc

On Most American Cars

FOR FREE est mates on
alum num s d r-.g
St orm
Doors and w ndows
car
ports Marquees and Ra I ng
Phone
Char es.
L s e
Syracuse Oh o carl Jacob
Sa es Representat ve V v
Jo hflSOn and Son
nc
6 22 lf c

_____________ _

THURSDAY OCT 11 1913
6 00 - Sunr se Semmar 4 Sac;red Heart tO
6 15
A mer ca s Problems 10 1
6 20 - Farro Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 B1ble .4nswers B Patterns tor L v ng
13 N ews 6
6 45 - Corncob Report 3 Farmt me 10
7 ORO - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Fl ntstones 13 Romper

a

BY PAUL CRABTREE

n Bottt-!

Dear Helen
Women s LiberatiOn has tn:,-p1red many I cadhnes but Ldon t
see imy more women m top management sLnce tl en crged A:;
someone pmnted m your column the; re tnf1ltr thnK the labor
market (truck dnvers lumber moll operators chmbeJ s ollugh
power lutes etc ) but m o[f1ces lhe¥ seldom advance beyond
executtve asststant whtch means glonfted seer euu j
Bog bosses are still a most exclusovel) male I unless the
\\ Oman O\\OS the busmess) Jf there sa reason I suspect It hes m

Cttnnon 8 10
Woman 20 Wash ngton Debates 33
News 20 Love Story 3 1.1 l5 Doc Elliot 6 13 Cl If
Robertson At Squaw Valley 0
0 30
Marshall News Meet ng 33
00 NewsJ 4 6 B 10 13 5 Janak 33
30
Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Mov ng TMgets 6 13 Moves
M ongo s Back n Town 8
Island of Love 10
1 00
News 4 13

oom6

lo

A Mao lor All Wumcn

9 30
0 00

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

Gene's
6ody Shop

It, llo

13

7 30
Rocky &amp; Bullw nkle 13 New Zoo Revve6
8 00 - Cap t Kangaroo 10 8 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
La ss e 6
8 30 - 0 ck Van Dyke 3 Huck and Yog 6
8 55 ~ N ews 13
9 00 ~ Paul 0 xon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Fr endly Junct 10n 10
AM 3 Mr Rogers 33 Brady Bunch 6 Abbott and Costello a
B ography 33 Mov e L s.a 13
9 30
To Tell the Tru th 3 Secre t St orm 8 M chaels and Co 6
9 55 -- Chuck Wh te R eports 10
10 00
D nah Shore J 15 Jokers w ld 10 8
lO 30
Baffle 3 4 15 $10 000 Pyram d a 10 M1k e Douglass 6
1100 Gamb t8 10 Password13 WzardofOddsJ 4 15
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 ot 15 Brady Bunch 13 Bowl ng 6
Love of L1fe a 10
55 - CBS News
Don I mel World 10
12 OO - Jeopardy3 15 Pa ssword 6 NewsB 10 13 Bob Brauns
50 50 Club 4
2 30 - 3Ws3 5 Spl t Second 6 SearchforT omor r ows 10
2 55 - NB C N ews 3 15
00 - All My Ch ldren 6 3 N ews 3 Not For W omen Only 5
Concentrat on
Wha t s My L ne 10
30 - 3 On A Mat c h 3 4 5 Let s Make A Dea l 6 13 A s the
World Tu rn s 8 10
2 00 - Day s of Our L ves 3 4 15 New lywe d Game 13 6

&amp;·THINGS

Helen Help
Us. • •

Q 00

992 3954 or 992 7349

OPE N
1-.!oger Hyse I s
Ga rag e near Crossroads on
S
Rt _J24
a 1 mechan ca
work tic ud ng autom&lt;tt c
transm ss ons
Monday
F r day 8 30 am t 1 5 p m
Sa turday - B 30 o 12 noon
Un e5s by appt Phone 992
5682 or 992 7121
9 16 30 c
WHEEL A onment
ocated 111 Crossro11ds Rt 124
now back to work Complete
front end serv ce tune up and
brake
serv ce
Whee s
ba anced e ectron c a y At
work guaranteed Reasonable
rates Phone 742 3232
.._
2 18 tf c

8

JOHN TUCKER
Rt 4 Pomeroy 0

All work guaranteed

0 DELL

8

MODERN
SANITATION

Pamtmg A Spec1alty

769

7

24 HOUR SERVICE

All work guaranteed

EX

LOSE we ght w th New Shape
Tab ets and Hydrex Water
pll s at Dutton Drug
n
M dd eport and Nelson Drug

___,_o_ Jo

P AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

Mason W va

7

All WEATHER
ROOFING CO.
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
Phone 992 2550

MATERIALS CO

992 2094

Bradbury

6

ROOFING
FUR
NACE
CLEANING
AND REPAIR AND
1
PLUMBING

Tel~~E~o~~~~o ~og

Nul\s J .I 8 0 IS 6 A~l Nt&gt;wS 3 l;,l~l \.: ~~ I
Personetlly ~nd 8C'h~v orill Oevctop1 ('nt 3J
30 N('ws J 1 6 8 10 1&gt; Hog&lt;n s Heroe s IJ
oo News 0 Whf\t s My L ne B Truth or Conseq 3 6 B~ t
the Clock J Anyth ng You Can Do 13 Etec Co 20 K 10w
Yovr Schools 33 1 Spy 15
.30
Ep sode Act on 33 On The Money 4 To Tell the Truth 6
Solie 01 the Century" Pol ce Surgeon 3 The Judge 10 Beat
the Clock 13 Koow Your Ant ques 10
00
Adam 113 4 15 Sonny &amp; Cher 8 IL Bob &amp; Carol lJ. Ted
&amp; Al1ce 6 13 Essene 10 JJ
30 Ten.lfly 3 .J 15 Movie Don t Be Afret d of the Dark 6

6 00

COMPLETE
INTERIOR
REPAIR

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

1972 HONDA 450 Te ephone 992
3640 afler 5 p m
10 4 2tc

Pets Fm Sale

Not1ce

WOOD TRUSSES

For Sale

2 Bl

RUSSELL'S

PRE FABRICATED

773 5S54

F SH N G
De by
Rut and
A ner can Leg on Fa rm
\2
pe poe
m t 4 Ra nbow
r ou ca lf sh bass 7 a m 1
7 p n Sa turday and Sunday
0 0 3tp

reloable s teady drr ve r sa lesma n who en
IOYS operatong h s own local establo shed
busoness f ve days a week n compan y vehocle
no onvestment or expen ses no strokes or
layoffs We offer your tam ly utmost securrty
and fabulous b e ne fot s guaranteed sa lary and
advancement onto management ba sed on your
ambotoon For nte r v ew con tact Mr Pr tch
ard

Your R1ght to Know

Oh o

Tucsdav October 16
1 14 PM
Chest er Grade School

34

a

ASK US ABOUT

TRAILER
Browns Tra ter
Park M nersv le Ca 1 99'1
3374
0 9 tc

.

WE NEED

PUBLIC NOTJCES

~~

&lt;JI 69? P u

IS - The Daoly St'ntmel Moddleporl.Pomcro) 0 0.:1 10 1973

Business Services

kOOMS by the week Slu up
Me Q!. Inn Pomeroy
7 17 He

n
A~ ddl~ o
1 ue!&gt;d&lt;1y
Wed A PAW 1M E N 1 S Good to
he
nc .. o v ~ cJ fhvr !l.d ~Y SIM nq
work
nq
man
and
w
te
nedr
1'1 &lt;.; &lt;1 m
Oarw
Oh o
Eff c ency
10 8 3 c
apartme IS newly decorated
w I rent furn shed or u
furn shed Electr c heat ~nd
.
c Ty water Rent reasonable
113 511B
Me gs County Farm
10 9 tfc
Bureau Federation
!'t- l

ENTERTAINMENT

OPEN EV ES8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m o 5 00 p m Da y
8 30 a m
to 1:? 00 Noon
S11furdav

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF tHE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE s hereby g ven that
n pursuance of a R esolut on of
the Board of Trustees of the
Townsh p of Ru11and
Oh o
passed Qn the 1st day of August
1973 there w
be subm !fed tO'&gt;
a vote of the people of sa d
Township
at
a
Genera
ELECTION to be he d n th e
Townsh p of Rutland Me gs
'County Oh o at the regular
places of vot ng there n
on
Tuesday
the 6th day ot
November 1973 the quest on of
le"Ying n excess of the ten m 1
t m tat I on for the benet t of
Rut and Townsh p Board of
Trustees for the purpose of
prov d ng and rna nta n ng f re
apparatus
app an c es
bu dmgs or s tes therefo r or
sources of water supp y and
mater als therefor
or the
establishment and ma ntenance
of I nes of f re a arm te egraph
or the payment of permanent
part time or volunteer I rem en
or fire f ght ng com pan es to
operate the same
Sad ta x be ng a renewal of
an ex sf ng tax of 1 m 1 to run
for f ve years at a rate not
exceed ng 2 m II for each one
dotl~r of vatuat on
wh (:h
amounts to f ve cents for each
one
hundred
do ars
of
valuat on for f ve years
The Pot s (or sa d E ect on
w II be open at 6 30o clock AM
and reman open unt 1 6 30
o clock P M Eastern Standard
Time of sad day
By order ot the Board of
Elect ons
of Me gs County

o Real sha p

~Lt

ANNUAL MEETING

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

BLIND ADS'

Addtt ona 25c
Advert semen!

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

'y

~ent

PRIVAl"E mef't ng room for
an 'I organ zat on phone 991
3975
3 11 ttc

Notoc.e

WANT ADS
I NFORMATION

'

I

"

lh

• 4•
I

~

o,

1- :1st

South

P.a

4· •~ r

I IS

1- t Q

What you
woth th
clean n
lad4s

Rv Osw tid &amp; James Jacoby

WI en an open ng no trump s
forget all about
Ja co by transfer and JUSt bid
no r m a l\ That s \'to:. try to bid
normal I\ No one ha ever real
ly worked out a good system of
b1ddmg un those few occaswns
\\lieu a no trump ts overcall~
One thmg you can do 1f yo u
want to play game m a major
su1t and don t want to lead to be
t11 ough your partner IS to use
the rexas transfE:r agamst an
overcall of three clubs or less
Th e r e xa s f1nve nled by D~ve
Ca rt e r o fSt LouJ S) Js uscdat
tha four level Four dtamonds
tra1slers to hearts ,_ four hearts
1o spad es ll has one grea t
wea kn ess 10 that partner ts
hkely to lorgel when hos part
n e r JUmps t o four a n&lt;Jl et the
hand play on the" runif'Sml
If North play s at lour spades
Ea st wo l l ope n a heart Wes t
can take two heal ts and lead a
thtrd wh (! reupon North will
have no play for h1s contract
Wtth South decla rer at four
spades the best lead West can
make 1s ad amond South wms
tn ht s h md draws trumps
leads a club a nd hnesses hts 10

baq

Rut..s &gt;

ovcrcalle I \\ C

West

w

n s and l ea ds a

~~~~~~..:===:._,--.J "THE K 00
®PERRY CO '&gt;OJ "THINK SEfiNC&gt;
KNOW
WENDY ORe LLY MIGHT HELP ABOUT HAL
SNAP W NN ~ OUT OF HER

DEPRE&amp;&amp; ON

MARTINS

DEA"TH
uAN E

I KNOW AND 5!-IE: LOOKS

HOW D D 11Hi fcN.N:;
COM5 OJTZ

WCX&lt;Sc EVERY MY .SHE
CANT GO 0/V LIKE
TH/5 MUCH l.O/VGIER 1

PERRY'

-./F TWO 1'\ASSLERS CAN FOP.M ONE:
OC:fe_PUS THPI.U CAN FORNI A

CE•u IPaDI!. !!

second

d1 a mond won by dummy s
kmg A second club 1s led the

Jack r nessed successfully and
dummy .s last dtarnond ts d s
ca1 dcd on the club a&lt;.:e

o:e; 1:J ,!@Mtu
NEW S"' Atl.ER EN I ERPR SE ASSN

Wtsl

3.
Lt

p

J u»

to

g l 1 teen
1 th
I I'll

3N 1
You Sou t l oll

South

I+
Pa s~

2N T

Pus

I+

Pas

+~K 84 .KJ 2 tA

4+KI6

Wt tdu}uudonow
A - P~ss You have e~a~alv what
) ou have shown bv )OUr prt!vlous

b ds

fOIJA Y S QUESTIO~
...Jns l c I f bidd ng three no
trump y u partner h&lt;! S b d f Or
c.:luhs ove1 vour U rf'e sp&lt;tdes What

do vu d now

I

BALLS 0' FIRE"
ARE 1./E FIXIN TO
MOVE OUT OF HOOT! N
HOllER FER GOOD
LOWEEZY?

LANDS NO II ME AN TATER ARE
J EST GOIN OVER TO V SIT MY S ISTER
IONE'I MAE FER TH AFTERNOON

I DOtH VNDERSTAND
'i'OU SNOOI"(

flOW CAN AN'ItJNE 5LEEi'

AL~ Ni6HT IN TH' RAN

liKE THi5 1

APPARtNTLV JUST
BUYS BUILDINGS ANt
SURNS
DOWN

�•
H - 1 h&lt; 0 ull St'o• Ill&lt; I Mld&lt;Ut 1&gt; 11 PomtTOI

o

tl&lt;

1 LO 1 11 '

FP

~

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

DEADLINES
S P M Day Betore Pub llc at on
Monday Dead! ne 9 a m

Cancella on -

Correct ons

will be accep ~d unt 9 a m
Day of PubJ cat on

for

REGULATIONS
Tl'le Pub Sher reserves the
r tghl toed 1 or re ect any ads
deemed obtE'ct onal
The
pub! sher w
not be respon
Sible tor more than one n

1911 CHEV BLAZER
S1895
Wheel dr vc l • ck ng frl hubs automat c tr;~n s power
steer ng &amp; brakes Delu:~teir m p~ ckage rad o good I res
spa c n€'ver been used Veh cle ot man~ uses clean m
ter or wh te top over blue body
1971 CHEV 8 PICKUP
$.2195
V 8 eng ne st;:~nd tran s Custam De uxe Cilb rad o R
step bumper wh te wa I !ires blue f n sh Sharp 1 owner
tr ade n
J

cor rect nserl on
RATES

Fo r Wa nt Ad Serv ce

Scents per word one nsertion
M n mum Charge~ 00
14 cents per word three
consecu t ve nsert ons
26 cents pe word s )I; con
secut ve nser ons
25 Per Cent D scount on pa d

1911CHEVROLETIMPALA
~49S
Custom Coupe lc-ral I owner car I ke new wh te wall
I res factory a r automat c transm1 ss on power s teer ng
&amp; brakes Dark green 1 n sh w th black v nyl root spotless

ads and ads ,p a d w th n
o
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 for 50 word m n
mum Each add 1 onal word

3c

nter Of rad

Charge

per

and bt! nformed of the tunc
tons of \OU governmen are
-e m boded n pub 1!: no ces n
tha se f government charges
a
c t zens 0 be nfo ned
h s newspaper urges e"e ry
c zen to ead and stud~ these
n'O~ ces
we strong y adv se
tho-&amp;.e c t zens seek ng f u her
nf o r mat on o ex ere se t he r
r ghl ot ac~ess to public
re cords and pub c meet ngs

Edw n 5 Cozart
Cha rman
Dorothy M Johnston
0 rector
Dated sept 13 1973
110) 3 10 17 24 4tc

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE s hereby g ven that
'" pursuance of a Reso ut on of
the Counc
of the VI age of
Pomeroy Oh o passed on the
20th day of August 197 3 there
w 11 be subm tted to a vote C'f the
peop e of said V llage at a
Genera ELECTION to be held
n the V I age of Pomeroy Oh o
at the regular places of \/Of ng
there n on Tuesday the 61h day
of November 1973 the quest on
of le"y ng n excess of th~ ten
m 111 m tat on tor the benet t of
Pomero;- V age for the pur
pou of prov d ng and man
taln ng f re apparatus
ap
pllances
bu ld ngs
or Sites
therefor or sources of water
supply and mater ats therefor
or the establ shment and
me ntenance of I nes of f re
alarm telegraph or the payment
of permanent
part t me
or
volunteer f rem_ en or f re
fight ng com pan es to operate
the same n the V !age of
Pomeroy Oh o
Sad tax be ng a renewal of
;,n ex st ng tax of 1 m
to run
for five years at a ra t e not
exce~d ng 1 0 ml
for each one
do tar of valuat on
wh ch
amounts to ten cents for each
one
hundred
dol ar s
o•
vatuat on tor f ve yea s
The Pols for sad Elect on
w I be open at 6 30o cock. AM
&amp;nd rem a n open unt I 6 30
o ~;lock P M Eastern Standard
T me of sa d day
By order Of the Board of
El~ c t ons
of M e gs County
Oh

o

Edw n S Cozart
Cha rman
Doro hy M ,Joh nston
D rector
Dated Se pt 3 1973
(10 ) 3 10

17

2-4 4tc

SURGERY FOR WALTON
DETROIT ( UPI ) - Guard
Chuck Walton a mamstay of
the Detroit Uons offensove hne
for seven seasons ts scheduled
for surgery Wednesday for
ligament reprur m his left knee
Rocky Rasley a lout year
ve~an from Oregon State
will replace Walum Sunday in
the game at New Orleans w1th
the Samts

GREAT
•• COUNTRY
STEREO

92.1

WMPO-FM
Mtddloport Pomerov

I

STEA K DINNER
Roservat ons Make them at
our off ce n Pomeroy P 0
Bo~&lt; 426 orca I Pomeroy 992

RED CARPET INN, PHONE 304-675-5007
Or Wrote Jewell Co Inc
Box 104 Moddleport 0

JOB OPENING
Program Planner for Gallo a Me1gs
Commumty Act10n Agency
Qualofocatoons
Prevoous experoence on de ve lop ng State or
Federal Programs
Send resume to
Box 686 Pomeroy Ohoo 45769
Box 16 Gall polos Ohoo 45631
Salary Neqotoable
Apphcaltons must be '" by Oct 18 1973
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOT CE s nereby g ven tha
n pur suance of a R eso ut on of
the Counc
of th e v lage of
Syracuse Oh o pa ssed on the
5th day of Ju y 973 there w
be subrp tted to a vote of the
peopl e of sad V Iage at a
Genera ELECT ION to be he d
n the v rrage of Syracuse Oh o
at th e regu ar p ace of vot ng
there n on Tue sday the 6 h day
of November 973 the Quest on
of evy ng n excess of the t en
m I I m at on to the bene! t of
Syracuse V !age fo
the pur
pose of prov d ng and m a n
tan ng f re apparatu s ap
p ances
bu d ngs
or s tes
therefor or sources of wale
supply and mater ats therefor
o
H1e estab shment and
ma nlenance of
nes of f re
a arm telegraph or the payment
of pf;!rmanent
part t me or
vo unteer f em en or f re
f ght ng com panes to operate
the same n the V age Of
Syracuse 0 o
Sa d tax be ng a renew a of
an ex st ng tax of two m s to
run for f ve years at a ra e no
exceed ng 2 0 m 1 s for each one
do ar of va uat on
w h ch
amounts to twenty ce nts for
each one hundred do l a s of
va uat on tor f ve years
The Po Is for sa d E ect on
w be open at 6 JOoc l cok AM
and reman open un
6 30
o c lock PM Eastern Standard
T me ot sad day
By order of the Board of
Elect ons
of Me gs County
Oh o

SWEE PER Repa rs
Parts
Supp e
D sco unt pr c es on
Gene a merchand se thru
our ca talog department
Phone
367 7736
Dav s
Vacuum Cl eaner Sto re
0
a m
5 p m Ad d son Oh o
9 23 30 c
YARD Sa e F'r dav &amp; Satu rday
9 a m
5 p m 571 L aure
5
M dd eporl Oh o
10 9 3tc

--------

w

L L acce p b ds o put on a
ga ... an zed
oof on chu ch
un t Oct 5 Ph one 843 2432 or
843 2687
l 096tp

K05CO T
KOSMET CS
&amp;
W GS Many spec as d ur ng
Phone
he mon th of Oct
He en Jane B own ~92 5 13
10 2 tfc

Wanted To Buy
BEEF h des W
p ay S9 per
h de Phone 773 5600 Grover
C Roush Ma son W Va
10 7 Otp
NO 1 Copper 62c rad ators
30c brass :ZOe batter es 90c
clean dry G nseng roo s $58
b ye ow root $5 may app e
60c M A Hal
Reed sv l e
Pho n e 378 6249
9 23 tf c

CORNER
cupboards
wa 1
cupboards ct ests o ct guns
any co nd ton
A l so I) ue
de corated stoneware Wr te
Edw n S Cozart
P 0
Box 44 Mart nsburg
Cha rman
Oh o 43935 or c a
1 48.4 4440
after 7 p m
Dorothy M Johnston
a a 90tc
b rectorDated Se pt 13 1973 - -- -- - --~

J

flO

3 10

1 24 4t c

WANT EO
tor
auct on
househo d goods Too s most
anyth ing of va ue W II buy or
se t on com m ss on W t haul
Ca
992 J354 or 992 2792
Hayman s
7 25 tfc

OHIO COLLEGE
FOOTBALL RECORDS
Bv Umted Press International
M d A mer can Conference
League Overal
W.LT
WLT
13ow ng Green
4 0 0
'2 0
0 0
0
KentS ate
3
0
To edo
1 1 o
2 ' 0
0 0 0
M am
4 0 0
Wes ern M ch

0 2 0

2 '

Oh o Un ver s y

0

0 2 0
2 0
Oh o Confere nce
B ue 0 v 5 on
League Ove at
W l T
W l T
M us k ngum 0 0 0
' 2 0
Mar etta
0 0 0
2 2 0
Den son
o o o
2 2 0
Ott er be n
0 0 0
Oh oWes eyan
' ' 0
0 0 0
3 0
RedOvson
Lea gue Overall
W l T
W L T
He de be-rg 0 0 0
4 0 0
W ttcnberg 0 0 0
4 0 0
0 0 0
Cap Ia
J 0 0
Mt Un o
0 0 0
3 I 0
Ba dw n wa ace
0 0 0
22 ' 00
Woeste
0 0 0
B g Ten
League Overall
W l T
W l T
Oh o Slat e
1 0 0
J 0 0
M ch ga n
1 0 0
4 0 0
It nos
1 0 0
2 2 0
Purdu e
1 0 0
2 ' 0
Northwe stern
I 0 0
1 J 0
Indiana
0
o
2 2 0
M nnesota
0
0
1 J 0
M ch gan State
0
0
1 J 0
W scons n
0
0
1 3 0
Iowa
0 1 0
0 4 0
Others
W L T
Centra State
4
I
0
Bluffton
3
1
0
H ram
2
I
0
Ash and
3
2
0
Det an ce
3
2
0
W lm ngton
0
Joh n Car o r
2
Kenyon
'1
2 0
Obe rt n
'1
2 0
F ndlay
2
0
Dayt~:m
2
0
Xav er
2
J
0
Cin e nnat
t
J
0
Akron
1
4
0
Case Western Reserve

l

Oh o Norther n
Youngstown Sta l e

0

J

0

4
4

0

---------OLD turn lure oak

tables
clocks ce boxes brass beds
or
compete
d shes
h ouse holds
Wr te M
D
M ler Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
ca J 992 6271
s 13 He

Help Wanted
WOMAN wanted to ve n w th
e der y ady very ght house
keep n g Ca 992 5939
10 9 3t c
___.,_

___ _____ _

WOMAN wanted at M dway
Market Ca 992 2565 for an
nterv ew
10 9 3tc

--------BRUSH HOG S
992 5858

GARAGE Sa e
Ente pr se
parsonage
R
33 ant que
d shes furn ture baby tf'mS
:n sc
Thursday th ough
Sa turday 10 am t 5 p m
10 I 0 3 p

KENNELS of Calhoun - Toy
poodle pupp es £60 to $9 5
s amese k en5 !!. 15 Phone
256 6247
10 7 JOtc
CA RN Terr er AKC puppy
sma
shaggy we gh 2 bs
a
matur ty
$75
Phone
Coo v le 667 62 4
TO 5 6tp

------~---'-·-

PARKV EW Kenne s Pood es
toy mae and 1 female
Phone 992 5443
1 15 tfc

lobtle Homes For Sale
4 x 65 TRAILER 2 bedroom
very good cond t o Phone 773
5805
B 22 ttc
CASH pad for a I makes and
lllDde ls ot mob e homes
Phone area code 6 4 423 9531
4 13 tfc

phone

WANTED
PAPER CARRIER
IN

SYRACUSE

The Dally Sentinel
PHONE 992 2156
For Sa e
CUB CADET 10 H P
w lh
cv lf va ors $425
One New
dea pant seller S 25 Ca I
alter 6 p m 949 37 46

9S7
W ESTWOOO
Mob e
Home excellenl cond I on.
Ca 992 5867
10 9 61p

19os- wiNoso R oo •

12

The bas1c system lor map
makmg was worked out by
Ge1 ha1 d1 s Mercator Flem
osh ge ographer H1s world
map of 1587 appeared m ~
world aUas published m 1607

In the B1ble the 37th
chapter of Isatah and the
O 19th chapter of the second
~ book of Kmgs are a!Jke

2

bedrooms Very good con d t on Ca I 992 35 1
10 9 14tc

67

MOUNT Vernon Mob e
3 bedroom~
Home 12 x 5~
front k tchen
ca
985 4179
ask ng $3 500
0 9 3tp

-----

50 ACRE FARM w th 5 room
house bafh on hardtop road
w lh bu ld ng s tes $20 000
Ca t 992 5795
10 2 10tc

----"--

-- -

1973 14x70 MOB LE home
washer a d dryer
d sh
washer sta n ess stee l s nk
garbage d sposa
eye I eve
oven range dacron po yester
carpe
arge of Phone 742
30a3
7 a tf
STEREO RAD 0 Btrack tape
comb nat on am fm rad o 4
way speaker sound system
Ba ance $111 92 or use our
budget terms Ca l 992 39tS5
0 7 6tC
EXCELS OR Sa I Works
E
Man St Pomeroy A I k nds
of sa il water pe ets water
nuggets bo ck sa t and own
Oh o R ver Sa t Phone 992
3891
6 5 ttc

cOmpaCf p Orfa bJ 8
WASHER

Only '224.95

·

Model WLP LOIN

ComDact Portable
ELEC. DRYER

Only •132.95
,t,\pdel DLP 1050P
~ POMEROY
9. _Jack W Carsey Mgr

12 X 60 MOB LE home w th 13 x
7 expando
3 bedrooms ,
~
Phone 992 2181
p umbed and
w r ed for
wasner &amp; dryer new furnace. L______________________ J
extra large hot water heater
all electr c home
3
comple te y yours
n t ve NEW
bedrooms 1 2 bath carporit
years $85 per month Cal 675
wa I to wall carpet bu It n
5895
range and oven 1 acre of
10 106tc
ground compe te y pr vate
Cal 7&lt;12 6261
10 10 4tc

A1r Condtltoners
Awnongs
Underpmnong

Comp l ete
mob l e home
serv ce plus g gant1c
d s play of mob1le homes
always ava1lable at

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
423 7521

BELPRE 0

For Rent

Gray Manor
Apartments
Now Avaolable

Two Bedroom
FurniShed Apt
All new furn1ture noce
area no pets

Call Earl Ingels, Jr
992 3863

After 6--992 5844

10 051&lt; --------------~-------

•

STA R
k IS rat s Qu "Ckly
sure '1 1 bs $ 69 Ebersbach
Hdwe
Sugar Run M lis
P Ekens Hdwe Mason
10 9 3Qtp

MOB U ; home 69 Regent 12 x
46 2 bedroom w
se I w thor GROCERY bus ness tor sale
w thout
turn lure
Good
Bu d ng for sa e or lease
cond t on Ca 773 5689 or see
Phone 773 5618 from a 30 p m
Mart n Graham at Zuspaifto 10 p m tor appo ntment
Street Mason West V rg n a
J 20 lfc
0 3 7tc

7 15 ttc

-------..--

1956 r.oR D three qua ler ton
good cond 1 on $275 Call 949
3746 alter 6 p m
0 9 Si c

REVIVAL star t ng at Pom-eroy
Wesleyan Ho ness Chur c h on LOTS of chrysanthemums fo r
sal e f eld grown We on y
R
t43 w th Rev Ray mond
hav e one color
yet ow 10
R ce Evange st Sun day Oct
bunches for $5 We have some
4 spec a
s ng ng each
out n ful bloom some ust
even ng a
7 30
Pa s tor
budd ng Reyno ds FJower
Re\lerend Ode
Mantey
Shop Ma son w va ca 773
Everyone welcome
5147
0 10 6tc
9 26 H e
SHOOT NG Match Ra e ne Gun
Cub Su nday Oct 4
p m UPHOLSTER your own fur
assorted meats
fa c tory
n ture We hav e a
he sup
choked gun s on y
pi es
you
w 1
need
10 103tc
Upho stery F abr cs a very
arge se le c t on of ny l ons
BASEME NT Sa le
Thursday
ve vets Her cu on v ny s - n
and Fr day
o d la sh oned
co tton p nts a so remnants
rad o record p ayer c om
Foam
for cush ons
and
b nedl buffet Tappan h gh
padd ng
Burlap den ms
oven r ang e
sm a
tabes
ca mbr c foam glue z pper s
some d shes b g se ect on of
spr ngs and c l ps ch pboards
c oth ng 244 Mulberry Ave
egs se w ng thread dacron
Pomeroy Oh o
tacks webb ng we I cord
cotton sw ve ba ses -and all
0 0 2tc
o her sup p es you w need
G A NT yard sa e 778 0 \ler
New urn tU re at ow
ow
St r ce M dd e port Oh o Oct
pr ces
Pomeroy Recovery
2 and 13th 9 am t
5p m
622 E Ma n 992 755 4
n case of ra n w 1 be held n
0 5 30tc
ga age Bl ender a most new
v ng
oom s u te
amps MED UM s zedwesternsadde
ch ars p atform rocker
tt e
$50 a so h ghcha r S7 Phone
g r s and women s cloth ng
Coo lv e 667 6214
d shes and ot s of other n ce
! em s
0 10 3tc 1972 9 2 Foot p ck up camper
S eeps four
self conta ned
$1 250 Ca I 742 5980
10 5 7tc

1220 Washmgton Blvd

4x5 ft

BLACK Tennessee Wa ker
colt Telephone 992 3640 after
S p m
10 4 n t c

J AND il ROOM furn shed and
unturn shed
apartments
Phon e 992 5434
4 12 tfc
MOBILE home
12 X 50
2
bedroom Ca Albert H II 9.49
2261 Rae ne Oh o
10 5 6tc
4 ROOM apartment w th bath
and? bt:!drooms on lOA Spr ng
Avenu e C.a 992 5908
10 7 6tc

AUTO TRIM
992-2839
Co Road S

Bu11t to Your Specs
Delivered to Job Sttt

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

Heat1ng
A1r Cond
Refngerahon
Plumbing
Electncal Appliances Auto
Air Cond
Res1dent1al or
Commercial

DUI'fiP TRUCK
SERVICE

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E Maon Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES
~nd

215 N Second
Phone 992 3509
24 Hour Servoce

) FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

From the laroest
Bu i iCiozer Rad1ator to
~ma t est H eater Lore
Nathan B1ggs
Rad1alor Spec1ahst

the

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph

~92 1:174

Roofong
Spoutong
Porch Repaor Com
plete
Home
Remodelong
For Free Est1 male

1

Pomeroy

Ph. 742-3985
Spec1al1st
Wheel

Real Estate For Sale

Alignment

It Must
Be Right
or we w II
Make If R•ght

TEAFORD
\ltrq!l B T t·.dorri. S1
Broki'l'
110 MPch.1!H\ &lt;;tn'('t

Ponwroy. Ohw

·1~

8 4 JO Oa1ly 8 12 Sat
Q H Rawtmgs Sons

NEW LISTING - 3 bedrooms
bath d nmg room large k t
chen 2 porches front enclosed
Hot wa t er heat Full basement
m ce lot and 2 car garage Only
$13 50000
GRAVEL HILL - 3 bedrooms
bath gas f urna ce large k 1
chen level lot 1 car garage
w th storage Vacant so you
can soon move n $15 500

LARGE

HOME

Gas

f replace gas F A f iJrnace
n c e modern k t c hen 5 lar9e
bedrooms w th c losets large
front por c h on corner lot m
Rutland
w th trees and
shrubbery
NEW LISTING - Convenient 3
bedroom home n ce bath
modern b rch kitchen large
llv ng hot water heat ing 1 c ar
garage S19 500 00

NEW LISTING -

3 bedroom

raneh home bath gas furna ... e
garag e
and n ce lot
n
Syracuse Want $19 500 00

NEW

LISTING

-

Has

2

apartments 2 bedrooms down
w th
gas
furnaces
full
basement and 1 bedroom
apartment up Garage and n ce
n
M ddleport
Ask1ng

S25 000 00
OVER 2 ACRES -

About half

cleared the re st has arge saw
t mber T P water av a lable

Only $5 000 00
YOU - Now can have a new 3
bedroom home w1th 1 2 baths
e lect n c heat
set on your
foundat on for 1ust $16 000 00

NEW LISTING - 157 acres of
n ce ay ng farm land
n
Columba Townsh1p Large
barn n ce pastures w th ca ttle
80 acres of crop land Large 4
bedroom house w th bath
M nerals 2 farm ponds &amp; good
t mber

INVEST
WHERE
YOUR
MONEY I S SAFE AND WILL
EARN YOU MORE REAL
ESTATE IS THE ANSWER
HAVE A TALK WITH ONE OF

us

RON SHEPARD Floor Wal
Remodel ng
Ceram c tile
baths Box 28D Rut and 742
3664
6 26 tfc
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROB C
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEANED
REPA RED
MILLER
SAN TAT ON
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
3035
10 4 tfc
AUTOMOBILE nsurance been
cance lled ?
Lost
your
operator s I cense Ca
992
7428
6 15 tfc
DEAD SlOCK - Will rem'"".,
at a reasonab e charge Cal
245 5514
8 23 90t c

Real Estate For Sale
5 ROOM house w th bath att c
room garage ar d workshop
comb ned
doub e lot
n
R ac ne on F tth Street A
new turn tur
Ca 1 949 2933
0 10 3tp
HOME m Chester P . acres
n ce locat on
near Gav n
Call 367 7114
10 5 12tc

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

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

6 ROOMS and bath
n town
$11 000 Call 992 3975 or 992
2571
9 2B tfc

-------....------HOG Tamworth Purebred
Bo~r

Set of 12 end p ows Cal
949 2115
o 10 3tc
MASSEY Ferguson Model 12
bater used one season Also
one profess on a draw ng
ta~ e
Cal 247 2-40-4 after 5

pm

10 105t c
1970 12 X 60 VALIANT mob le
home 196a Camara ss 350 4
speed Call 9EIS 4207 anyt1me
10 10 Jtc
GREE N beans pu 1 your own
Br ng conta ners $2 bushel
Eugene E Oav s Phone 247
2198

- -- - - -

ACRE tots D&amp;rw n area
Tuppers
Pta ns
water
Contact Hershel McClure
Da ry lste unt 3 p m 992
5248 after 3 992 3436
9 28 12tc
1

___ _..____
POMEROY HERES
ECONOMY 2 slory frame 2
bedroom s NEW bath NEW
gas F A furnace NEW hot
water tank Full basement
Some
carpet1ng
and
panel ng $6 500 00

TUPPERS PLAINS - 1 year
old 3 bedrooms W C N1ce
bath
Dm ng room
N1ce
kttchen All electr c Garage
&amp; Pat o 1 acre $19 500 00

RUTLAND -

Ph 992 5271
Lincoln thll Pomeroy 0

-----

B1d 1n proper hand Important
~ORTIL

+++

Dear Helen
Our son qwt high school two months before gradualton H1s
Dad and 1 also have eleventh grade educatoons But that dodn 1
keep us from bemg successfu 1
Smoking was the mam trouble w1th fom He got so many
suspenswns he JUSt gave up Teachers e"en hld under ca rs m the
parkmg lot to catch k1ds at 11
Now Tom has a very good constructoon JOb but he s sttll put
down Parents of his gorl call htm that dropout a nd advose her
not to go wtUt h1m Why 1s the doploma so awfully Important to so
many people' Toms a hard worker and smart Isn l lbat
enough' - TIRED OF TWO FOUR LEITERS WORDS DROP
OUTS
Dear Tired
Yes that s enough Many sell taught people make ot b1g But
1! the word drop out bothers Tom as much as 11 bothe1 s you
why doesn the enroll m mght school and wm his d1ploma ' (And
why don t you JOtn him ' Adult classes are fun and very
rewarding) - H
1 OO - New s3 4 6 B 13 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 5
Illustrated Man 8 Move
00 - N ews 13 4

+++

Adam s R1b Asswne thai I\\ o you ng lawyers get ma ned
and one becomes an assistant d1stnct attorney while the other
JOinS a law ftrm that specJahzes m crtmma1 defense cases
l hat s the premise of Adam s R1b and If you can beheve
that Perry Mason never loses a case ) 0u can beheve th~hi
ser es woll be p1ttmg husband agatnsl wofe most of lhe ttme
In a season that seems atmed at ex.tractmg lau ghs from
lower-c lass vulganty

ng
Mach nes
Serv c e on at
makes Reaso11able rates
The Sew ng Ce nter M d
dleport Oh o
11 6 tf c

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

EXCAVA TNG-oo~rs ~rge
and sma I
Backhoes and
loaders on track and t res
Dump truck. Lo boy ser
v ce Sept c tanks nstal ed
George ( B I l Pu I ns phone
992 2-478 or 992 7402
2 9 tt c

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

SEWING MACH NES Repa r
serv ce at makes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Author zed S nger Sa les and
Service We Sharpen sc .ssors
3 29 tfc

MO
Eh~""; -repa-;-E~c
tr ca plumb ng and heat ng
Phone 992 5858
.._
7 15 lf c

Bit

___ ___________

f
Dryers
Surround • clothes
with gentle even
heat No hot spots
no
overdry ng
Fine Mesh L nt
F Iter
We Spec1ahte In

MAYTAG

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~;.~~~·l

-~---~~~ 6tc '-------~--;-__! ~i:L:...:.,:_=.:_'~~--.:;;::..:.::=-=.:===-~~....c:==;t.;.-L.[.

tnes

lo show some

by Hf:NRI ARNOLD ,ond BOB L££

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square to

I I
LAASl

I I
IBLAMME~

"

13 Demon
strate
14 A seal
15 Young
sheep
IG Perkins

Move

The

-

6 Prtme nb
7

eg
Fabled

Yesterday s Aoswer
19 Pl-es1den
25 Song

bird
10 Molnar

and

hal pre
rogatJVe

play
(2 wds )
11 Leadmg
lady
12 Unendong

J7 Before

18 Mamfest

20 Indus
tr1besman
21 Breaks a
traffic la w
23 Destroy
24 Soc ial

refratn
27 --burner
29 Dijll~ of

21 Fr1ghlen

mg
22 Empty
talk
23 To laugh
(Fr )

16 lraman s
ancestor

song.

33 Exude
34 Pottery
36 C&lt;~fern
37 OL:l note

class

25 Woody
vme

26 Counter

tenor
27 P1stol part
28 Cheer
29 Governed
30 -- Gol
Sixpence

3'1 J•ne

Austen
novel
38 Monkey or
pamt
39 Den
40 Referees
count
U Pay ones

D

part
DOWN

1 For fear

I I
0
'GLQuz~ I I

that

A 5 &amp;N 1&gt;4AT

ONE::!:&gt; I&lt;:EDUCI I-J&amp;

CRYPTOQUOTES
ZDJLG

Now &amp;rTange the ctrcled letters
to form the surpnae answer as

_.:_::
Prill::_:lfle:::.,:SUII:::::PR~ISI:_:INSWIII=~here-:___jl

Ll

rI I

f I ]

WOVEN

DECENT

1'e1lerd•y •

AFLOAT

Antwer Jltothmg pmd yet-ami no
obJectwns - :ALL OWfD

1DLH

PDDRH

~==~:=:::=:;:::::=::~-·~·~r~r~•::•tedbytheabovecartoon

Jumble• LlAVl

and
Levant

Barker

VSCD

SOC

KDGGBZ C

YLS

V P C N L A ~" E C
ZDHVCDS DP ZDJt:(J:

N DJ L Q L G

W

XDGGBZC

Z DJ! G

M LDGM L

XL G S W'~ T

HNWJ

(Mtwen lomorruwJ

Spe ll ol Ev 1 6 13
Two Love s 10

ately
5 Homolka

31 Spamsh
queen
32 St1tch
35 War of--

fo.-m four ordmary words

FECEN

8 Repeat
9 Assuage

Yesterdays Crypt&lt;&gt;quote THERE IS BUT ONE MOJ;{AL!
TY AS THERE IS BUT ONE GEOMETRY VOLTAIRE •
(© 197.'1 Kmg Features Synd cate Inc )

-WE FINALLY
FOUND THE
OWNERS
NAME

FA Sl

+1

+J 94

. \ I.J )I'lb 4

. 7?
t 654
+ K8ti o

t Q1109

Wi-IAT

sou Ill 10
• A o:1
• K 93
t I J

+ A I 02
h Suu I u nc1 1blc
\\ ~ I

---.------- --- ---------.- Sew
ELNA and Wh te

openl}

one

bv THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Pam
1 Suburban
3 Sentry s
s ghl
phrase
5 Boston
(3 wds )
Brums star
4 Jmmedt

10

+ QO

c a ts Phone 992 2522
2 9 tfc

W LL tr m or cut t ees and
shrubbery
A so c lean out
basements all cs e tc Ca
949 372 or 742 4441
0 0 30 c

this

sophisltcallon and mtelltgence
Ken Howard IS Adam and Blythe Danner IS Amanda Both
are cast as capable If mexpenenced young attorne}s and

• Oo

--------------HARRISON S TV ~erv ce and

Rutland

Dear Sus
Many \\omen JUSt hke many men don t asp1re to top
management but putting all women mto one no 1eal amb1t10n
category ls hogwash bramwash and male \\httewash as
Michael Korda aptly pomls oul m his new book Male
G'hauvuusm - How 11 Works
Thts outspoken executiVe tells why and how the male
hierarchy con~ptres to keep \\omen down and unde r m a best
seller that should make htm as popular as cockroaches m the
company conference room but Villl probably have more real
Impact on Ute busmess world than Gloroa Steonern and Belly
Fnedan combtned Why ? ( Ah 1rony ) Because he sa man
and men hsten to men Clock
Korda contends that desptte weaselong hp seoVICe equal
pay for equal work more often means less pay for equal wm k
Wlder a female JOb classlfJcatwn He descnbes low
machinatlons and flimsy excuses whtch hold the gt rls m theu
places - behmd typewrtlers or servong coffee Hos book bo1slles
With mstances of unfatr play (sexual and sex1sl ) fuzz) thonkmg
prejudices and Jealousies hallbaked male fears and Sill}
mtsconcepttons which haven t ~eally changed smce chasllll belt
days It should be on every workmg woman s desk and I
recommend ol also lor mer. husbands oncludcd "ho SAY ~ ac
tually beheve ) they champiOn women s n ghls
We ve come a long way maybe but accordmg to Korda a
busmessman who knows we ve st1ll gol a long way lo go - H

&lt;Ted Led woth br~ons enou~h respectovely so that neJth&lt;r'~ a
dcur~ut edge m tile pr~cltce of law love~nd marnage One eptsode n voiVlng about attempts to bi.in a porno~h1c
tnO\IIe and p.-osecutc the the;,~lte-()wner v.as rather pedestnan 111
o•s outhne and led to a predictable concluston
It was saved however by the Interplay between Mr lfoward
and M1ss Danner •ho got mlo some rather sexually"""l'hcol
conversatiOns about JUSt how much prurtent mterest was
r nsed m each of lhem by voewmg ll e skon ll1ck The doalogue
was honest and refreshmgly free of hall~rly allusions yet
d1dn t deny the emol1ons each of the partoes fell a boul walUnng a
shghtly~leansed stag mov1e wolh only the 11mesl cla1m to any
redeemmg soct.a I value
Frankly I rather Joked ol No one IS gomg to s1t aroillul the
ltvmg room roarmg at the outrageousness of the scenes a la
Archoe Bunke• bul1t s a neallotlle corned) unpretentoq4s and
charactcnzed by respcctiable actmg lind that s more than you
can sav for most of the new sho" s thts yea r

+ KQ lOS

EXCAVAT IN G dozer
oader
and backhoe work
sept c
tanks nsta ed dump tru ck s
and o boys for h re w
haul
f I d rt top so
mestCtne
and &lt;'rave Ca Bob or Roger
Je ffers day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 99 '1
5232
2 11 tfc

Millytag
Hiilo of Hut

741 42'1

1

betng m full comman&lt;l' - SUSPICIOUS

+

Perma Press

plan 3 bedrooms Bath
D nmg R TV room New
floor cove.- ng
Uti! ty R
Full basement
Gas floor
furnace 2 car garage w1th

WIN AT BRIDGE

WI sl

2 speed Operafjon
Ql.o ce of water
t'emps
Auto
water
le~el
contro l
L nt
F Iter or Power
F1n Ag tator

ne ghborhood $20 000 00
MIDDLE PORT 1 floor

Ph

00 - M ster Ca rt oon 3 Love Amer can Style 13 So mer set 15
Sesa me Sl 33 20 Speed racer 6
.:1 30 - Green Acres 3 Jeopa rdy 4 I Love Lucy 6 G 11 gan s
Island 13 Hazel 8 Bonanza 15
5 00 ....,. Bonanza 3 Mr Roge't's 20 33 M erv Gr ff n 4 Andy
G If th8 I Drea m of Jea nne 13 M ss on lmposs 1b e6
5 30 - E lec Co 33 Gomer Pyle USMC 13 Beverly H 1 b ! I es 8
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Tra Is West 15
5 55 - Ear N ght nga le 15
6 00 - N ews 3 d 8 15 News 6 10 Sesam e St 20 M lestones of
Progress 33 ABC New s 13
6 30 - NBC N ews 3 4 15 ABC New s 6 CBS News 8 10 L Ias
Yoga &amp; You 33 Hogans Heroes 13
7 00 - What s My L ne 8 News 10 Beat the Cloc k 4 Elec Co
20 Course o f Our T mes 33 Truth or Conseq 3 6 Lets M'-'ke
AOeal13 CalloftheWes115 CoachesCommentss
7 30 - Ho l~wood SquaresJ To Tel the Truth 6 W ld K ngdom
10 Bea t the Clock 13 Zoom 20 Lookmg Ahead 33 Sale of th e
Centu r y -4 Ozz e s G rls 8 Johnny Mann s Stand Up and
Cheer 15
8 00 - The Waltons 8 10 Advoca t es 20 33 Toma 6 13 F 1p
W lson 3 4 5
9 00 - Irons de 3 4 15 Kung Fu 6 13 Move The S n s ot
Rache l Cade 8 Jack e Gleason 10
10 00 - Street sof SanFran csco6 13 News 20 NBC Foil es3 4
15 CBS Reports 10

5 I tfc

ce

10 Oayt me 90 8

&lt;1

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

serv

The Qu et Man

my questton
Is lhts because women don t really want the r e~-ponstbthty of

Corrtmumg to look at the 19H 74 season !&gt; n~w offenn~;;s I II
g J\( rny unpres:swn of a c:ouple of the situatiOn come&lt;hes v.hich
abound on tl • lube on Frtday mghts lhos year
Needles and Pms
Th1s Slt-&lt;:olll 1s set tn New Yorks
garment dislroct and deals" oth the world of fashoon
It s blessed w1tfi.a surpnsmgly good cast headed by Norman
Fell who runs the shop and shows himself to be a great asset on
playing stra1ghl man much of the lime for lbe rest of lhe cast J
hkc h1m and the v.ay lhe wntcrs ha" e resastod the temptatiOn to
make hom a carocature of a garment·&lt;hstroct hustler
rhe show IS also blessed Wllh Louoe Nye a genumely funny
man but here the scropl seems lo bog down badly - not knowmg
ex 1ctly what to do with such com1c talent 1 hey ve cast hun as
Fells brother In Ia" generally d1shked by the en lore cast and
ftttmg mto no parttcu1ar mche m the plot
rhet e s an admtrable attempt too not to emphasize the
Jewoshness of VIrtually lhe whole thmg and play around too much
w1lh eUtnoc hwnor although 11 certamly would be JUsllfled m a
show alx&gt;ut an tndustry that1s Jommated by Jews
lhenaggmgsuspJcton about Needles and Pms show long
Ute produce' s can keep gomg woth decent comedy plots about a
busmess that tsn t noted for ots boEfofa I don l lhmk Utey can
suslatn Ute story hne through more than a sessoon of thai long
lith 1t s the case then I d predict the !ashton emphasts this
season \1111 be on the bust and wa1st A waste of !me talent m
Norman Fell and I oule Nye and a show that "tnds up a bust I
hope not because the show has ots moments but 1t may wear lhtn
as a see through blouse after a fe" ep tsodes

t K82
4

- -.....------- • ----

Nice k1tchen and din ng
area Hardwood floors All
electnc
Large lot
Good

at Pops 20 M ove

3 30 ._ Return o f Peyton Place 3 15 One L te to Live 13
Donahue 4 Mat ch Game 73 8 Fl ntstones6 F lm 33

Com pete Serv ce
Phone 949 J821
RacneOho
Cr tf Bradford

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

SB SOO 00
SYRACUSE - In new ad
dtl on 3 large BR Bath

d ng Ltghl &amp; 10
2 30 - DoctorsJ 4 15 Edge of N1ght8 10 G rl n My L fe6 13
3 00 - AnnfhPr Wor ld 3 4 15 General Hoso1ta l 6 13 Even nq

C BRAOFOR D Auct oneer

DOZER and back hoe work
ponds and s~ptlc tanks d t
c h ng serv ce top so 1 f 1
dirt
lmestone
B&amp;K
Escavating Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861
- - - - - ----u-;-:;-jT- 1
5 ROOM house on 3 acres of
9 1 ffc
and
Tuppers
P.lams
Chester water
all new NE GLERS
FOR
HOUSE
plumb ing alum num sld ng
BUILDERS
C ALL GUY
fuel o 1 furnace Call 9a5 3539
NE IGLER RA CINE OHIO
93012tp
91130tp

2 l::iedrooms Bath New floor
covenng Gas F A furnace
Porches Garage &amp; storage
Storm doors &amp; windows
Porches
Just remodeled

Gu

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE ra tes. P h 446
4782 Gall po s John Russ e 1
Owner and Operator
5 12 lf c

2 NEW homes 3 bedrooms
bu t n k t chens
ocated n
Rufland
Call M o Hut
ct'l nson 742 3615 or 742 6743
10 7 7t c

1 story frame

workshop $13 000 00
BUY A HOME TODAY SAVE
MONEY
TOMORROW
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER
992 2259
II no answer 992 2568

Area s Most
Reasonable Pnces

s

a

Open 8 T1t 5
Monday thru Satu.-day
606 E Mam Pomeroy 0

McCOY S AUCT ON SER VICE
For a real auct on ca 1 th e
8 ACRES of land on State Route
rea McCoy
0
Mac
McCoy Chester Oh o
143 on new pro~osed waiter
ne Ca I 992 3640 after 5 p m
10 3 tfc
10 4 12tc

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

SINGER AutOmllt c Z g Zag
Sew ng mach nes n sew ng
tab e Makes buttonholes
sews on buftons bl nd hems
etc Top notch cond ton Pay
$51 or terms available Phone
992 298.4
10 10 6tc

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

RE;ADY MIX
CONCRETE
deH ...-er-et1
r ght
to yourpro ect Fast and easy Free
est mate!. Phone 992 328 4
Goeg en R ea dy M x co
M dd eporf Oh o
6 30 lfc

carpet ng b g k.ltchen w th
ots of c ab nets
' ac re of
ground Rae he Oh o Ca I
949 4998
9 12 tfc

REDUCE 6Xcess flu ds W th
F u dex
Lose we ght w th
Dex A D et
capsules
at
Nelson Drugs

VACUUM C eaners new 1973
model
Compete w th
all
c ean ng tools Sma I pant
damage n sh pp ng W II take
$27 cash or budget p an
ava ab e Phone 992 2984
10 10 6tc

--GUARANTEEDPhone 992 2094

----.~--

--- --------2 BEDROOM house 3 years o d

Jtp

PAINT DAMAGE 1973 ZIG
ZAG SEW ING MACHINES
St II n or g nat cartons No
attachments needed as our
con tra s are bu t In
Sews
w th 1 or 2 needles makes
buflonho es sew on buttons
monograms and bl nd hem
st tch Fu 1 cash p~ ce $38 50
or budget plan ava1lable
Phone 992 2984
10 10 6tc

On Most American Cars

FOR FREE est mates on
alum num s d r-.g
St orm
Doors and w ndows
car
ports Marquees and Ra I ng
Phone
Char es.
L s e
Syracuse Oh o carl Jacob
Sa es Representat ve V v
Jo hflSOn and Son
nc
6 22 lf c

_____________ _

THURSDAY OCT 11 1913
6 00 - Sunr se Semmar 4 Sac;red Heart tO
6 15
A mer ca s Problems 10 1
6 20 - Farro Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 B1ble .4nswers B Patterns tor L v ng
13 N ews 6
6 45 - Corncob Report 3 Farmt me 10
7 ORO - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Fl ntstones 13 Romper

a

BY PAUL CRABTREE

n Bottt-!

Dear Helen
Women s LiberatiOn has tn:,-p1red many I cadhnes but Ldon t
see imy more women m top management sLnce tl en crged A:;
someone pmnted m your column the; re tnf1ltr thnK the labor
market (truck dnvers lumber moll operators chmbeJ s ollugh
power lutes etc ) but m o[f1ces lhe¥ seldom advance beyond
executtve asststant whtch means glonfted seer euu j
Bog bosses are still a most exclusovel) male I unless the
\\ Oman O\\OS the busmess) Jf there sa reason I suspect It hes m

Cttnnon 8 10
Woman 20 Wash ngton Debates 33
News 20 Love Story 3 1.1 l5 Doc Elliot 6 13 Cl If
Robertson At Squaw Valley 0
0 30
Marshall News Meet ng 33
00 NewsJ 4 6 B 10 13 5 Janak 33
30
Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Mov ng TMgets 6 13 Moves
M ongo s Back n Town 8
Island of Love 10
1 00
News 4 13

oom6

lo

A Mao lor All Wumcn

9 30
0 00

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

Gene's
6ody Shop

It, llo

13

7 30
Rocky &amp; Bullw nkle 13 New Zoo Revve6
8 00 - Cap t Kangaroo 10 8 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
La ss e 6
8 30 - 0 ck Van Dyke 3 Huck and Yog 6
8 55 ~ N ews 13
9 00 ~ Paul 0 xon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Fr endly Junct 10n 10
AM 3 Mr Rogers 33 Brady Bunch 6 Abbott and Costello a
B ography 33 Mov e L s.a 13
9 30
To Tell the Tru th 3 Secre t St orm 8 M chaels and Co 6
9 55 -- Chuck Wh te R eports 10
10 00
D nah Shore J 15 Jokers w ld 10 8
lO 30
Baffle 3 4 15 $10 000 Pyram d a 10 M1k e Douglass 6
1100 Gamb t8 10 Password13 WzardofOddsJ 4 15
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 ot 15 Brady Bunch 13 Bowl ng 6
Love of L1fe a 10
55 - CBS News
Don I mel World 10
12 OO - Jeopardy3 15 Pa ssword 6 NewsB 10 13 Bob Brauns
50 50 Club 4
2 30 - 3Ws3 5 Spl t Second 6 SearchforT omor r ows 10
2 55 - NB C N ews 3 15
00 - All My Ch ldren 6 3 N ews 3 Not For W omen Only 5
Concentrat on
Wha t s My L ne 10
30 - 3 On A Mat c h 3 4 5 Let s Make A Dea l 6 13 A s the
World Tu rn s 8 10
2 00 - Day s of Our L ves 3 4 15 New lywe d Game 13 6

&amp;·THINGS

Helen Help
Us. • •

Q 00

992 3954 or 992 7349

OPE N
1-.!oger Hyse I s
Ga rag e near Crossroads on
S
Rt _J24
a 1 mechan ca
work tic ud ng autom&lt;tt c
transm ss ons
Monday
F r day 8 30 am t 1 5 p m
Sa turday - B 30 o 12 noon
Un e5s by appt Phone 992
5682 or 992 7121
9 16 30 c
WHEEL A onment
ocated 111 Crossro11ds Rt 124
now back to work Complete
front end serv ce tune up and
brake
serv ce
Whee s
ba anced e ectron c a y At
work guaranteed Reasonable
rates Phone 742 3232
.._
2 18 tf c

8

JOHN TUCKER
Rt 4 Pomeroy 0

All work guaranteed

0 DELL

8

MODERN
SANITATION

Pamtmg A Spec1alty

769

7

24 HOUR SERVICE

All work guaranteed

EX

LOSE we ght w th New Shape
Tab ets and Hydrex Water
pll s at Dutton Drug
n
M dd eport and Nelson Drug

___,_o_ Jo

P AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

Mason W va

7

All WEATHER
ROOFING CO.
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
Phone 992 2550

MATERIALS CO

992 2094

Bradbury

6

ROOFING
FUR
NACE
CLEANING
AND REPAIR AND
1
PLUMBING

Tel~~E~o~~~~o ~og

Nul\s J .I 8 0 IS 6 A~l Nt&gt;wS 3 l;,l~l \.: ~~ I
Personetlly ~nd 8C'h~v orill Oevctop1 ('nt 3J
30 N('ws J 1 6 8 10 1&gt; Hog&lt;n s Heroe s IJ
oo News 0 Whf\t s My L ne B Truth or Conseq 3 6 B~ t
the Clock J Anyth ng You Can Do 13 Etec Co 20 K 10w
Yovr Schools 33 1 Spy 15
.30
Ep sode Act on 33 On The Money 4 To Tell the Truth 6
Solie 01 the Century" Pol ce Surgeon 3 The Judge 10 Beat
the Clock 13 Koow Your Ant ques 10
00
Adam 113 4 15 Sonny &amp; Cher 8 IL Bob &amp; Carol lJ. Ted
&amp; Al1ce 6 13 Essene 10 JJ
30 Ten.lfly 3 .J 15 Movie Don t Be Afret d of the Dark 6

6 00

COMPLETE
INTERIOR
REPAIR

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

1972 HONDA 450 Te ephone 992
3640 afler 5 p m
10 4 2tc

Pets Fm Sale

Not1ce

WOOD TRUSSES

For Sale

2 Bl

RUSSELL'S

PRE FABRICATED

773 5S54

F SH N G
De by
Rut and
A ner can Leg on Fa rm
\2
pe poe
m t 4 Ra nbow
r ou ca lf sh bass 7 a m 1
7 p n Sa turday and Sunday
0 0 3tp

reloable s teady drr ve r sa lesma n who en
IOYS operatong h s own local establo shed
busoness f ve days a week n compan y vehocle
no onvestment or expen ses no strokes or
layoffs We offer your tam ly utmost securrty
and fabulous b e ne fot s guaranteed sa lary and
advancement onto management ba sed on your
ambotoon For nte r v ew con tact Mr Pr tch
ard

Your R1ght to Know

Oh o

Tucsdav October 16
1 14 PM
Chest er Grade School

34

a

ASK US ABOUT

TRAILER
Browns Tra ter
Park M nersv le Ca 1 99'1
3374
0 9 tc

.

WE NEED

PUBLIC NOTJCES

~~

&lt;JI 69? P u

IS - The Daoly St'ntmel Moddleporl.Pomcro) 0 0.:1 10 1973

Business Services

kOOMS by the week Slu up
Me Q!. Inn Pomeroy
7 17 He

n
A~ ddl~ o
1 ue!&gt;d&lt;1y
Wed A PAW 1M E N 1 S Good to
he
nc .. o v ~ cJ fhvr !l.d ~Y SIM nq
work
nq
man
and
w
te
nedr
1'1 &lt;.; &lt;1 m
Oarw
Oh o
Eff c ency
10 8 3 c
apartme IS newly decorated
w I rent furn shed or u
furn shed Electr c heat ~nd
.
c Ty water Rent reasonable
113 511B
Me gs County Farm
10 9 tfc
Bureau Federation
!'t- l

ENTERTAINMENT

OPEN EV ES8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m o 5 00 p m Da y
8 30 a m
to 1:? 00 Noon
S11furdav

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF tHE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE s hereby g ven that
n pursuance of a R esolut on of
the Board of Trustees of the
Townsh p of Ru11and
Oh o
passed Qn the 1st day of August
1973 there w
be subm !fed tO'&gt;
a vote of the people of sa d
Township
at
a
Genera
ELECTION to be he d n th e
Townsh p of Rutland Me gs
'County Oh o at the regular
places of vot ng there n
on
Tuesday
the 6th day ot
November 1973 the quest on of
le"Ying n excess of the ten m 1
t m tat I on for the benet t of
Rut and Townsh p Board of
Trustees for the purpose of
prov d ng and rna nta n ng f re
apparatus
app an c es
bu dmgs or s tes therefo r or
sources of water supp y and
mater als therefor
or the
establishment and ma ntenance
of I nes of f re a arm te egraph
or the payment of permanent
part time or volunteer I rem en
or fire f ght ng com pan es to
operate the same
Sad ta x be ng a renewal of
an ex sf ng tax of 1 m 1 to run
for f ve years at a rate not
exceed ng 2 m II for each one
dotl~r of vatuat on
wh (:h
amounts to f ve cents for each
one
hundred
do ars
of
valuat on for f ve years
The Pot s (or sa d E ect on
w II be open at 6 30o clock AM
and reman open unt 1 6 30
o clock P M Eastern Standard
Time of sad day
By order ot the Board of
Elect ons
of Me gs County

o Real sha p

~Lt

ANNUAL MEETING

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

BLIND ADS'

Addtt ona 25c
Advert semen!

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

'y

~ent

PRIVAl"E mef't ng room for
an 'I organ zat on phone 991
3975
3 11 ttc

Notoc.e

WANT ADS
I NFORMATION

'

I

"

lh

• 4•
I

~

o,

1- :1st

South

P.a

4· •~ r

I IS

1- t Q

What you
woth th
clean n
lad4s

Rv Osw tid &amp; James Jacoby

WI en an open ng no trump s
forget all about
Ja co by transfer and JUSt bid
no r m a l\ That s \'to:. try to bid
normal I\ No one ha ever real
ly worked out a good system of
b1ddmg un those few occaswns
\\lieu a no trump ts overcall~
One thmg you can do 1f yo u
want to play game m a major
su1t and don t want to lead to be
t11 ough your partner IS to use
the rexas transfE:r agamst an
overcall of three clubs or less
Th e r e xa s f1nve nled by D~ve
Ca rt e r o fSt LouJ S) Js uscdat
tha four level Four dtamonds
tra1slers to hearts ,_ four hearts
1o spad es ll has one grea t
wea kn ess 10 that partner ts
hkely to lorgel when hos part
n e r JUmps t o four a n&lt;Jl et the
hand play on the" runif'Sml
If North play s at lour spades
Ea st wo l l ope n a heart Wes t
can take two heal ts and lead a
thtrd wh (! reupon North will
have no play for h1s contract
Wtth South decla rer at four
spades the best lead West can
make 1s ad amond South wms
tn ht s h md draws trumps
leads a club a nd hnesses hts 10

baq

Rut..s &gt;

ovcrcalle I \\ C

West

w

n s and l ea ds a

~~~~~~..:===:._,--.J "THE K 00
®PERRY CO '&gt;OJ "THINK SEfiNC&gt;
KNOW
WENDY ORe LLY MIGHT HELP ABOUT HAL
SNAP W NN ~ OUT OF HER

DEPRE&amp;&amp; ON

MARTINS

DEA"TH
uAN E

I KNOW AND 5!-IE: LOOKS

HOW D D 11Hi fcN.N:;
COM5 OJTZ

WCX&lt;Sc EVERY MY .SHE
CANT GO 0/V LIKE
TH/5 MUCH l.O/VGIER 1

PERRY'

-./F TWO 1'\ASSLERS CAN FOP.M ONE:
OC:fe_PUS THPI.U CAN FORNI A

CE•u IPaDI!. !!

second

d1 a mond won by dummy s
kmg A second club 1s led the

Jack r nessed successfully and
dummy .s last dtarnond ts d s
ca1 dcd on the club a&lt;.:e

o:e; 1:J ,!@Mtu
NEW S"' Atl.ER EN I ERPR SE ASSN

Wtsl

3.
Lt

p

J u»

to

g l 1 teen
1 th
I I'll

3N 1
You Sou t l oll

South

I+
Pa s~

2N T

Pus

I+

Pas

+~K 84 .KJ 2 tA

4+KI6

Wt tdu}uudonow
A - P~ss You have e~a~alv what
) ou have shown bv )OUr prt!vlous

b ds

fOIJA Y S QUESTIO~
...Jns l c I f bidd ng three no
trump y u partner h&lt;! S b d f Or
c.:luhs ove1 vour U rf'e sp&lt;tdes What

do vu d now

I

BALLS 0' FIRE"
ARE 1./E FIXIN TO
MOVE OUT OF HOOT! N
HOllER FER GOOD
LOWEEZY?

LANDS NO II ME AN TATER ARE
J EST GOIN OVER TO V SIT MY S ISTER
IONE'I MAE FER TH AFTERNOON

I DOtH VNDERSTAND
'i'OU SNOOI"(

flOW CAN AN'ItJNE 5LEEi'

AL~ Ni6HT IN TH' RAN

liKE THi5 1

APPARtNTLV JUST
BUYS BUILDINGS ANt
SURNS
DOWN

�_.
1~ -

'

•

1'11t' Da1ly &amp;&gt;ntin&lt; •. Middkport· Pomeroy. 0 .• O..·t. 10, 19/J

Festival
(Continued from Page

Lovejoy's ouster official

I)

News.

•

• in Briefs

1ConUnued from Page 1)
·· '
is still a big gap between the two negotia_ting teams,': one oil
source said. "But both sides are detenmned to contmue the

or
Thurman,
who
wilt
PT . PLEASANT - Jack prol&gt;le ms .at this timE" . HP&lt;t d Start childr~n in lhe
demons
trate
cider-making.
J.
Lovejoy's appeal against his
Th•· Rc,· . Charles McDonald Pow I Plduant and New Haven
H. Hill of Henderson, W. Va .- talks."
.•
ouste-r ~JI Wahama was or- discussed Beale F:lemenlar) &lt;Jrea to rid£&gt; school buses.
.
The
talks
started
Monday
in the Vienna headquarters of the
has
set
up
a
moonshine
still,
ficially dismissed and several School, calling attention to the prnvided there is room ._ and
although the finished product Organization of Pelrolewn Exporting Countries (OPEC) . Both
delegations wr re heard }!rowth in that area. and a skin~ granted sev~tral tr dnsportation
will not be for sale.
sides discussed Arab demands for a new system to keep prices in
Tuesday night by the Mason for expanded facilities. Supt. requests.
step with world inflation and a two-thirds increase from the
- Accepted the resignations
CoWity Board of Education.
Charles Withers submitted a
Pete Call of Bidwell wiU current $3 to 15 per barrel. Oil sources said the Western oil
Official action was taken· by Comprehe nsive Plan for a new of Paula Harnm , ~ teacher at
handle a tobacco exhibit, while companies wanted time before the next meetmg, so far unthe board for the insertion of a Beale School, but said the Central , due to husband being
Del Bachner of Rutland scheduled, to consider tbe proposals t~t were put to them by the
letter fr om Dr . Daniel B. earliest pos.sible time it could transferred; Alice Laudermilt,
operates a sawmill.
Arab stal~_1\lesday . ,
Taylor, State Superintendent of be started would be the first of custodia n at Mason Grade, due
to ill health ; Bertha Holley.
Schools. into last night 's next JW1e .
Handi crafts
will , be
WASHINGTON - IN A MOVE THAT HAD virtual
minut es which con cerned
substitute
cook,
due
to
ill
demonstrated by Pt. Pleasant,
The board employed several
health, and Donna Thomas,
W. Va. , residents Harley Wlanimous support in F1orida, the government has restorOd the
Lovejoy. one-time vice- personnel.
principal at Wahama High
Burns; s trong art; . and Mrs. name Cape Canaveralto the landmark tbat was changed to Cape
In further action, t.ne board : substitute cook.
School.
- Transferred Harold Smith
· Milford Icard, caning and Kennedy after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy 10 '
- Delayed discussior: on
Dr . Taylor. in com- co ntra cts and salaries of from c ustodian at Point
basketry . Bill Mayer of years ago .
Assistant Interior Secrewry Stephen Wakefield signed the
InWlications sent to each board axuiliary and school service Pleasant Jun io r High to
Pomeroy will perform wood
doCW'nent
that restored the name historians believe the Spanish
member, said the board acted personnel when Adrian Lathey · custodian at Mason Grade. -~
earving wt&gt;ile Pauline Hester
within its discretionary did not appear as noted on the
of New Haven, W. Va ., shows . explorer Ponce de Leon gave the ca~ on Florida's east coast 400
7 Changed the status of
authority in refusing to renew agenda . He is awaiting a report Daisy Kn app, cook at
her eggshell sculptures. years ago. The action, approved by the Board of GeographiC
Lovejoy's probationary con- from the Attorney General 's Wahama. to additional $25 as
Lapidary work · will be Names Tuesday, makes no chauge in the name Jobn F. Kennedy
tract or employment.
exhibited by Mr. and Mrs. Space Center, whicli also wall renamed after the assassination.
office before coming before the head cook; Esther Gillispie's
In other business, Mrs. board .
salary supplemented $45 as
·Howard Nolan, Syracuse. ·
LOUISVILLE, KY. -' THE AMERICAN Episcopal ChW'ch
Barbara
Reed,
speech
secretar.y at Sunnyside.
~Granted permission for
Rodney residents Mr. and voted overwhelmlng!y Tuesday to liberalize its procedures for
therapist, discussed the Multi'
Mrs. W. S. Fanning, members allowing divorced persons to legally marry within the church.
Uandicapped Program and the
'
'
of lh ~ Rodney United
Under the new marriage laws of the church, divorced per·
COWily's speech program.
Methodist ChW'ch and Mrs. sons may now marry in the church if an Episcopal minister is
.
She said yo ungsters three,
ANGELAIRES - The "Angelalres," a vocal group from ·
Newt Jones will exhtbil flax convinced thatthe couple intends the marriage to be for life. The
foW', and five may be helped
SUgar ·Grove, Ohio will be appearing at the "Seven Nights for
scutching and spinning, aprons minister also must be sW'e that the couple's previous marriages
through the pr ogram and
Christ" crusade to be held at Southern High School in Racine
and pin cushions and flower have been nullified and that proper concern will be shown for any
pointed out the W'gent need to
beginning Oct. 15 through the 21, nighUy at 7:30. The Rev.
decorations, respectively, children of earlier marriages.
get them into the program at
William DeMoss bf New Haven will be the guest speaker. .
while Marion Markham of
these young ages so they would
Middleport shows her fW'niture
not be hindered when the time
The 37th anniversary of the Patient and Kind" by Mrs.
decorations.
comes that they will be Laurel Cliff Beller Health Club
I These local , residents their talents with the public at available to the public at
I
I represent the diversity of the lhree-&lt;lay festival. Many moderate prices. Admission
associated in regular classes. was observed Monday night Paul Frick.
A
thank
you
card
was
read
I
Mrs. Rood cited the need for with a potluck dinner at the
the
Lawrence
Smith
from
I skilled handicrafters and items hand-made by the and parking at the festival are
housinf -and transportation as home of Mrs. Charles R. Karr,
family and the Marvin Spencer
I entertainers who will share visiting craftsmen will be free.
being among their existing Sr.
family . A $5 donation was I
I
A fealW'e of the dinner party made to Cystic Fibrosis, and
By Clarence II
was the observance of Mr. the group voted to endorse the
r-------------~-----------------------,
Our Interest Is
•
Karr 's birth08y anniversary Meigs Coinmunity School bond
I
Miller
I
.
Greater For You
with cake and ice cream being issue, .5 for 20 years, and gave I
served by Mrs. Clifford Jacobs. a donation to the promotion
Approval of some form . of termination from a federally
Mrs . Allen Eichinger opened fWid .
pension reform legislation this administered insurance
devotions with a 'reading
New officers elected were year now appears a certainty . program, which in turn would
"Sketches." Other readings Mrs. Iva Powell, president; On September 19, the Senate
'
Shop Thursday 9:30 to S p.m. Open
were " Eight Bits" by Mrs. Mrs. Mabel Tracy, vice W!animously adopted a bill guarantee payment of pensions
On 90-Day
to
retirees
whose
pension
plans
both
Friday and Saturda·y 9:30 to 9
Dwight Parker; "Thanks Be to president ; Mrs. Parker, setUng Federal standards for
no
longer·
existed.
This
would
p.m.
God" by Mrs. Nellie Tracy ; treasurer; and Mrs. Amber . pension plans providing
Certificates
be
financed
by
a
one
dollar
" If" by Mrs. Parker; "Where Lohn, secretary~ Sunshine gifts retirement income for more
Can
You Worship God'" by were ~ x c hanged and new than . 30 million Americans. annual premium fC'r each
of Deposit
participant. The measW'e also
Mrs. Lloyd Wright ;_ "Love is names were drawn.
5.75 per cent per year
Similar legislation is moving prescribes stringent rules of
aid on 90 day CerA!tending besides those along in the House.
conduct tor trustees and
ificates of Deposit.
Many workers covered by fiduciaries
named were Mrs. Della Curtis,
administering
$1.000.00 Minimum.
Mrs . Mildred Bowen, Mrs. private pension plans never employee benefit funds to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Doris Buckley, Mrs . Georgia receive benefits because they prevent their misuse.
Interest
Payable
ADMISSIONS
Mark
Quarterly.
Diehl, Mrs. Donna 'Gilmore, are either discharged, laid off,
The House Education and
Oldaker, Hartford; William
and the Karrs' granddaughter, resign, or their employers go Labor Committee has just
Kuhn , Reedsville ; Forrest
Polly, and her daughter, Kelly. out of business. For several reported its version of pension
John son, Mason ; Clarence
years, Congress has been reforms ·and the Ways and
Napper, Racine; Ernest
pondering whether private Means Committee will conMolden, Rutland ; Mary Smith,
Plain and fancy •••
pension plans should be sider their bill shortly.
Middleport ; Karen Jenkins,
regulated to protect the earned
these coordinates
As one who has eviQenced
Middleport ; Sonya Cutler,
DIVORCES FILED
pension rights of the in- considerable hardship on the
create the all(tie Athens County
Langsville; Evelyn Landers,
Martha J. Haynes, 51 N.
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
Pomeroy; Naomi Miller. Third Ave., Middleport, has dividual, or whether Federal part of Southeastern Ohio
occasion outfit.
296 Second St .
Reedsville; Pamela filed for divorce in. Meigs regul~tion would discoura_ge, residents affected by such
Pomeroy, Ohio
O'Laughlin, A!hens; Douglas County Common Pleas Court rather than encourage, ex- pension conditions, ·I support
Dress it up ••• dress
Halfhill , Ches hire ; Dores fr om Gary R. Haynes, pansion , ~ of these worthy reform in this ar~~ programs in the fulW'e.
Arnold, Pomeroy,
.Forestville, Md ., on the
it down ••• these
The bill passed by the Senate
DISCHARGES - Clarence groW!ds of extreme cruelty.
Berry coordinates by
Adams, Early Scarberry , Also filing for divorce was represents a cautious first step
\. .
.
toward correcting ineQuities in
Isaac Hazan offer
Clara Smith.
Ralph E. Brownrigg, 85 Elm
private pension plans. It does
St., Middleport, from Debra
daytime rightness or
not require any employer to set
Lynn Brownrigg, Crestline,
nitetime .verve.
up a plan but sets forth
.Ohio, for gross neglect of duty
minimwn s!&lt;lndards for those · Mrs. Anna Frances (Fannie )
They're the solution
and extre.me cruelty.
who do : Fo~ example, any Childers, 89, who resided with a
for the "right" lookperson employed by the same daughter in London, Ohio, died ·
anytime, anywhere.
employer for at least five years at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the I
•·
would be guaranteed a right to Madison-L ,ras Convalescent I'
25 pet. of his earned pension Center, London. She had been
Tweed, fitted singlePLEASANT VALLEY
benefits. Tl)is would increase ill several months.
breasted b Iazer 1 of
DISCHARGES : William to 1110 pet. over the next ten
She was born Aug. 9, 1884, in
Litchfield, Point Pleasant ; years. Also included is a Gallia County, daughter of the
wool and nylon, is
Mrs . David Jeffers, Mason; " portability " provision late David Allan and Margaret
highlighted with matchMrs . Mary Byus, Susan whereby pension rights of Ward White.
ing rayon velvet trim
Cromley, Point Pleasant;
She was 'the wife of the late
employees who change jobs
Ed.die Russell , Gallipolis ; could be transferred between John Frederick Childers. He
. at collgr, flaps and on
Charles
Waugh,
Point two consenting employers. preceded her in death in 1943.
buttons. Sizes 6 t'o 16.
Pleasant, and Mrs. Wilda
She
is
survived
by
two
New l&lt;lx incentives would be
e e ••• o " • •
DW!can, Gallipolis Ferry.
provided for self-employed children,, Frank Childers,
persons to set aside fWids for Gallipolis, and Mrs. Daniel
(Eulah) Grim, London. Five
High-rise trousers, in
their own retirement plans.
rayon velvet, are cuffed
Under the Senate bill, also, grandchildren survive. She
spent
most
of
her
life
in
Gallia
employers would be required
and stitdi-creased for
to purchase insurance against County . She was a member of
trim and nifty effect.
bankruptcy or pension plan Old Pine ChW'ch.
FW!eral services will be held
Sizes 6 to 16 ••••
1 p.m. Friday at Old Pine
ChW'ch with burial in Old Pine
Button-up, long-sleeved
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
shirt, in White Chiara®
fWieral
home
from
3:30
p.m.
JUDGMENT GRANTED
Crepe, is contrasting
Conunonweallh Loan Co., until 5 p.m. .and 7-9 p.m. . on
companion. Sizes 32 to
Parkersbur-g, W. Va., has been ThW'sday.
38 •••••••••••••
awarded a judgment in Meigs
CoWity Common Pleas Court in AFFEcriONATE DIVORCE
A SPECIAL GIFT FOR
the amount of $689.82 from
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
Jack E. and Vivian Phillips, 70 (UP!) - Elvis Presley and his
the perfec t ba lance of nat ural
OR
N. Second Ave., Middleport. wife liscilla endeq their six
GRANDM OTHER
GRANDI= ATHER
i_
ng and the co lor ful tradi t io nal 1nset c reates a moc&gt;dl
Commonwealth peUlioned that year marriage Tuesday with'
makes ll decoratmg e ::1s v. Cushi onflor Supreme is
in Marcb and Jun~ of 1972 the an affectionate goodbye kiss
.. OR THF ENTIRF FAMILY
s upe"r cu shioned Shin yl V1n y l No· Wa x Floor It 's ea sy
Phillipses •had ·boqowed $249 and a $1.5 rnillion properly
SPECIAL PURCHASE
main l ain :md Jt keep s it s l o ng ~ la s t i ng pe r formance .
and later $672, and they stiil settlement.
owed the company $689.82.
The singing idol, 38, emerged
'
Name of Children
FAMOUS MAKER
•
~
from
the
courthouse
.
arm
in
or Grandchildren
• SO"; MORE C USHI ON FOR GREATER COMFORT.
·
)
arm with his former wife, 25,
Engraved on heads.
SLATE YARD s~iE
after !be divorce petition was
• SEAMLESS BEA UTY T IIROUG JI OUT TilE HOME
The Middleport Alumni granted .
[From 1 to 35 heads) Association
will have a yard
Their daughter Lisa's
69% polyester and 31 % wool. ChooSe from three
ThW'sday
at
the
home
of
custody
will be shared between j
sale
•••••••••••••
Fall fashion styles.
Mrs. Robert (Iva Stewart) them but she will live with .
1
Sisson, New Lima Road, Priscilla, who currently I
Rutland . The sale will be held resides in the Marina del Rey
8
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Proceeds area of Los Angeles.,
·
, will go toward sl&lt;lging the
annual reW!ion and · dance. in
NOW YOU KNOW
May.
Rats fed a diet deficient 'In
•
live up to 40 pet. longer
BE SURE TO REGISTER in the First Floor Foundations
; - - - - - - - - - - . ·. calories
than rats fed a normal
Department for the RCA XL-100 Portable Color
baianced diet.

Club celebrates
3 7th anniversary

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!Washington
I Report

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

5.75%

ew res
By MIKE FEINSII..BER
WASHINC!'TON (UP!) - Spiro T. J\gnew has resigned llle vice
~esulency m disgrace, compelling Presider.t Nixon to bargain
With t!le Democratic Congress over naming hiS second in command and possible successor.
Ag_new, for five years Nixon's heir apparent, ended his stormy
political career in a purple-draped Baltimore courtroom ln a deal
'? wliich he traded his position and repu!&lt;ltion in·exchange for a
ltght sentence. He said he acted to save his family and the naUon
anguish .
The White House said Nixon, his influence in Congress
weakened bY Watergate, would submit a nominee for congressional examination and confirmation withln days rather than
w~;eks .
·
Unless the nominee is a nonpolitical caretaker-,as former Vice
President and Sen. Hubert U. Hwnphrey, D-Minn ., and other key
Democrats are demanding:_he will have a head start toward
succeeding Nixon In 1976. Democrats don't want to build up a
potent opponent.
Agnew, 54, the son of a Greek immigrant, was tne favorite for
the Republican nomination to succeed Nixon WI til 10 weeks ago
when he was forced to reveal that he was under investigation for
serlo~s crimes.
He denoW!ced the charges as "damned lies" but also engaged
in two rounds of secret "plea bargaining" with Attorney General
Elliot L. Richardson.
The results came before federal Judge Walter E. Hoffman
Wednesday with Agnew pleading "nolo contendere" - no con·
test- to a siugle count of tax evasion. The judge said the plea was
the "full equivalent to a plea of guilty,'' fined Agnew $10,000 and
put him on three years probation-but spared him the ignominy
of having to report to a probation officer.
.
Richardson gave the court a dewiled "exposition of evidence."
It said several of Agnew's closest associates had told the.federal
prosecutors that Agnew initiated and directed, almost from his

•

first days in office. a plan to extort thousands of dollars from
consulting engineers awarded contracts bY the swte without
competitive bidding. The paper said· Agnew told his associates
this was "customary" in Maryland.

Principal Figures Named
The paper said Agnew accepted $85,000 from two of foW'
principal figures it named.
Money also was taken, the documents said, from I. H. Hammerman, a wealthy real estate man and a sixth-grade classmate
of Agnew's, and Jerome B. Wolff, Agnew's director of the state
Road Comrnbsion. Each received 25 per cent of kickbacks from
seven cooperating consulting engineering firms and Agnew got
54l per cent, the document said.
Even after his inauguration as vice president on Jan. 20, 1969, it
said, money !lowed to Agnew. Eugineer Allen Green "continued
to make cash payments to Vice President Agnew three or four
times a year up to and including December, 1972,'' it said.
Hoffman said he usually imposed jail sentences when lawyers,
accounl&lt;lnts or executives admitted evading wxes, but be would
yield to RichardsoQ's plea for "compa;;sion" and to save the
nation tunnoil.
He called Agnew's case" atragic event in history."
Agnew said he resigned "in the best interest of the nation" and
to spare his family from a "brutalizing" coW't fight which could
have lasted two years.
'
He Took No Brlbes
But he insisted anew· he look no bribes, demanded no extortion.
He said he would tell his story in an address to the nation in a few
days.
He still faces the pOSSibility of swte prosecuUon by Marylaad
authorities. And an IRS official said a person in Agnew's positi8n
would still owe back wxes plus a 50 per cent penalty.
In the formal atmosphere of the Oval Office, Agnew met Nixon
Tuesday night to disclose bis decision.
Throughout Wednesday, the President gave no inkling of the

.

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Mrs. Orilders,
89, succumbs

··-""

REGALCREST

VOL. XXV

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

NO. 126

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MOTHER FATHER

···!'·•········

JUNIOR DRESSES
•

Regular ·35.00 ·

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For Stock On Hand
Clearance
INGELS FURNITURE

MEIGS THEATR£
"'

Tonigllt &amp; Thursday

N~tf~~~1 N
. , .. ·''

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Fri .- Sat .-Sun.
Oct. 12-13· 14
PETE ' N TILLIE

Hang On Wall . ..
Use on Stand

(Technicolor)
Walter Matthau ·
· Carol Burnett
Cartoons :
Where Are You
Taking Off ... Whal?
Show Starts 7 p.m.

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
992.-2635
MIDDLEPORT

..

- Television. No purchase is necessary and you need not be
present to win.

.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperalW'e in downtown · Pomeroy at 11 a. m .
Wednesday was 62 degrees and
in heavy fog .

Ready To Wear Department, 2nd Aoor

DANCE SET
RACINE. - There will be a
dance at SOuthern High School
· following the Kyger Creek • ·
~ouihern game with . Boot
Jacks providing the music.

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ELBERFELDS
'IN
POMEROY
.______ _______
________________
,.;,

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"Dear Mr. Secretary:
"I hereby resign the office of vice president of the United
Stales, effective immediately.
''Sincerely ,
"Spiro T. Agnew"

•

upon whom to nominate·as a successor , aides said.

Agnew became the second vice president to resign, the first to
st~p down under duress. Vice President John C. Calhoun, denied
renomination, resigned Dec. 28, 1832, three months before the
expiration of his term·, to fill Senate seat to which he had b""n
named.
:··
Agnew's resignation surprised the nation and shook his party.
Untainted bY Watergate, he was the favorite of conservatives,
.who are likely to dominate the 1976 convention.
Nixon's choice of Agnew for his rW!ning mate at the 1968
convention was a surprise. Agnew Was an unknown. But Nixon
apparently thought he would help with ethnic voters, in the
border states and in propounding that year's " law and order"
theme.
,
Agnew was bored and uncomfortable with his ceremonial
duties but in 1970 he found a way to fame through controversial
oratory that made him the administration's cutting edge.
His alliterative attacks on such targets as the "effete corps of
impudent snobs" and "nattering nabobs of negativism" won his
attention -and wrath from his wrgets. His most famous speech

Govs. Rockefeller of New York, a moderate, and Reagan of
California, a conservative, along with Democrat-tw-nedRepublican John B. Connally Jr., a Nixon favorite, all said tbey
would not speculate on whether they would serve should Nixon
ask them to accept the three remaining years in Agnew's tenn.
Also named as possible successors are Richardson and Deputy
Attorney General William Ruckelshaus ; former Secretary of
Stale William P. Rogers and GOP NaUonal Chairman George
8ush, former United Nations ambassador.
From the ranks of Congress came the other prospects-Sen.
Barry M. Goldwater, R-Ariz., his party's 1964. presidential

a

nominee; former Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky .1 an ex-

diplomat; former Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del. , known for his
integrity; Sen. Howard H. Baker, R-Tenn., of the Watergate
committee ; and Sen. George D. Aiken, R·Vt., Republican dean
of the Senate.
In the meantime, House Speaker Carl Albert, Mkla ., stands
next in the tine of presidential succession. A few hOW'S after
Agnew made his move, Secret Service agents moved in to protect
Albert, previously guarded by a single policeman.

attacked television network executives and commentators for

Now You Know
·rhe first time the office of U.

s. vice

president was vacant

was on Aptil 20, 1812, when
George Clinton died while
serving in the office.

office

was

extensively

damaged. Postal operations
continued in the main office
which was temporarily parUtioned off for security &lt;easons
and for protection from the
weather. The operations were
moved into temporary ·quarters at the school in December,

SMOKEY THE BEAR was on band Wednesday n1orning when the Middleport Fire
Deparln1ent conducted drills at Meigs JW!ior High, Pearl St. Ele~entary, and Bradbury
schools. Shown with Smokey at Bradbury School were, front, 1-r, Dav1d Hysell, Smokey, and
Tina Smith; back row, Jim Daniels who is a member of the fire department and Smokey's
trainer. Bob Byer, 'fire chief, said pupils at Bradbury and Pearl. Street School set a record m
evacuating ttleir buildings. Bradbury pupils we~e out in 40 seconds with the rriain exit blocked
and those at Pearl St. were out in 45 seconds wtth one ext\ blocked. Puptls at the JUruor high
building were out in one minute and 45 seconds. At the junior high Byer. addressed_the student
body on fire prevention in school and home and dislnbuted materral on ftre prevention.

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zce cOmes home

The Tri.SI&lt;lte Red Cross
Blood Center is making a
special effort in Meigs County
for the support next Monday of
an all voiW!teer blood donor
tW'nout. The blood program,
which serves whim blood is
needed, gives protection to the
donor· and his family.
The Tri-State Red Cross
Blood Program offers two
plans:

immediately the total blood
needs of the entire group plus
group members' husband or
wife, members' children under

The Individual Plans covers
immediately the toml blood
needs for the donor, the
h~sband . or wife, children
under 18, parents and parents·
in-law, and any relatives living
in the same household and
economically dependent upon
it. This plan is effective as long
as one gives at least once per
year.
The Group Plan · ccvers

Mrs. Donahey,

18, members ' parents and

parents-in-law and any relative
living in the Sarne household
and economically dependent
upon a member. This plan is
effective for as long as the
group is meeting its quo !&lt;I of 20
pet. donations per year fro.m

Lions endorsed
"·· ...
bond issue for
special school

The Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions
Club unanimously en:::::::::::::::::::•:::•t•:•:~:?.:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::•:
dorsed the half mill remrded
VOTING CHANGED
school bond issue at its regular
The Meigs CoWity Board of luncheon n1eeting VVednesday
Elections reports a change in at the Meigs Inn.
the ~oling location for
Mrs. Jeanette Thomas,
residents of Pomeroy Precinct. director of the Meigs County
This year, voters of the · Community School, explained
precinct will cast their ballots to the club the need of the bond
in the Johnson Masonry issue to be voted upon at the
building located at the corner November election. The school
of Union Ave. and the Route 7 is cW'rently operated in the
bypass.
Rutland Elemenl&lt;lry School.
The sl&lt;lte recommends that
all handicapped children
should be in a one-floor plan
building; Mr~. Thomas said.
She said that present structUres are . not adequate. The
the group.
bond issue would help provide
This is a chance to protect funds for the construction of
family and YOW' &lt;;&lt;'~Wiily new building which would
thr?ugh membershrp m the , con!&lt;lin not only the school for
Me1gs CoW!Iy Red Cross Blood the retarded but also · a
Program. Donors must. be in sheltered workshop. State
good health, between .the ages funds to help with the project,
of 18 through 65._
.
.
50 per cent, have been ·a p·
The bloodmobtle w11l be m proved, Mrs. Thomas said.
Pomeroy Oct. 15, at Pomeroy
Richard Chambers second
Elementary on Mulberry ·Ave. vice president, presid~.
from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Appeal made for volunteer donors ·

TEN CENTS

PHO NE 992-2156

The Pomeroy Post Office will 1972, while repairs were made the cliff's overhang was done to
to the main office .
prevent a fulW'e fall and was
quarters in the old Pomeroy
Rock was removed from the beheficial not only to the posl&lt;ll
Senior High School.back to the cliff behind the post office properly but to other
post office building on Second under the s,upervision of the businesses . in that area,
St. this weekend, Postmaster Army Corps of Engineers. The Soulsby said.
James Soulsby announced cost of th~ rock removed, both
today.
that which fell ar.d a portion of
Soulsby said regular win&lt;low
The Pomeroy Post Office the cliff, and repairs to the hours, 8 a .m . to noon, will be
was heavily damaged by ·a building as a result of the slide, observed SatW'day at the high
rockslide on Dec. 3, 1971. No ran about $200,000. Removal of school location. However, it
one was injW'ed, but the post
probably will be necessary to

close the lobby of the downtown
office on Sunday to allow lime
to place mail in post office
boxes. If this is necessary, the
lobby of the post office will
reopen at 6 a.m . Monday. Tpe
lobby will then remain open 24
hoW's a day as it has in' the
past.
Soulsby· said that although
the employes of the post office
worked Wider less than ideal

conditions for many months, he
feels that they have done an
outstanding job · in keeping .
service at a high level. He also
expressed thanks to patrons
inconvenienced
by_ the
necessary move for their
patience and cooperation .
Soulsby also thanked the Meigs
Local School Board for making
the senior high building .
available.

Two achieve state honor
Two Meigs County students
won third place honors in the
stale competition of the
cultutal arts program at the
68th annual convention of the
Ohio Congress of PTA which
concluded in Cleveland
Wednesday night.
They are Melissa Ann !hie,
11, a sixth grader at the Racine
Elemen!&lt;lry School, and Jayne

Lee Hoeflich,. 9, a fifth grader The two were tbe only students
at the Bradbury School.
of District 16, wmposed of
· Melissa, daughter of Mr. and some dozen coutnies in SouthMrs. Edward !hie of Racine, ern Ohio, to pla~e in state
was awarded third place judging.
honors in the water color · Entries were selected from
painting division, and Jayne the state level judging lasi
Lee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. spring following judging in. the
Bob Hoeflich of Pomeroy, won local school of each parthird place with her piano ticipant, and then on the COWI!y
music composition, "MysUc".
(Continued on Page 6)

Membership drive set
"M Night" (Membership
Drive) will highlight the Nov.
14 meeting, the Meigs CoWity
· Jaycees decided Wednesday
night.
Victor Gaul, " M Night"
chairman, stressed the pW'·
pose of the membership drive
and pointed out the impor!&lt;lnce
of a personal conmct with
prospective members.
Jaycees are men between the
ages of 18-35 interested in their
commWii\y. They' ar~ not just
businessmen , but farmers,
mechanics, salesmen, and
teachers,
among
other
vocations.
A meeting will be held

Wednesday to begin the personal con!&lt;lcl drive.
Robert Buck, Red Cross
Chairman, asked members to
support the bloodmobile which
will be held Monday from 1 to 6
p.m. at the Pomeroy
Elemen!&lt;lry School. Buck also
said the Jaycees will assist
Pomeroy and Syracuse in
patrolling streets on' trick or·
treat night, Oct. 30.
Richard Poulin, president, .
and Vincent Kight, treasW'er,
. reported on a recent district 93
meeting at Marietta. Meigs
CoW!ty Jaycees were first in
district 93 with membership

...

retention with district 93 being
first in Region 9 and Region 9
second In the state with
-membership retention.
Bruce Teaford, "Speak-Up"
chairman gave a report on his
program. A member of the
chapter will give his Speak-Up
at the next regular meeting,
Teaford .said.
Don Nelson reported on the
basketball league now being
formed In the county. The next
meeUng will be at the Pomeroy
National Bank board of
directors room with Mrs .

Jeanette Thomas as guest
speaker.

i

put it to work."
- It's been working well the past several years. In tbe
fiscal years•of 1971 and 1972, Mrs. Donahey's investment &lt;:(
taxpayers' money has brought an additional $79 million into
the state Cookie jar. The Democratic partY has estimated that
her perfonnance this year will bring another $50 rnillion into
the sl&lt;lte vaults.
·
Mrs. Donahey, whose late husband, John W, Donahey, was
an Ohio lieutenant governor, while her late father-in-law, Vico
Donahey, served as Governor of Ohio and U. S. Senator, indicated that the above gains in the state's money supply are
not just sitting around Columbus.
"In the fiscal year 19)'2-1973, Meigs COWity got back
$1,389,964.93,'' she said. The breakdown was something like
$360,000 in gasoline wxes, $163,200 to mWiicipalities, $40,988 to
• townships, $391,421 in motor vehicle taxes, over $85,000 in roll
back taxes and approximately $349,355 in assorted ·minor

state's ·banker,
·
is honored h ere
.

By .DENNY FOBES

"We put the money to work right away," was the theme
WedneSday evenirlg when Swte. Treasurer Gertrude Donahey
addressed approxiinately 350 persons at a dinner sponsored by ·
the loth Oisttict Democratic Action Club in her honor at tbe
Meigs High School cafeteria.
It was the second visit in three years to Meigs County for
the first woman ever elected to a swte-wide executive office in
Ohio. In 1970 she appeared at the old Pomeroy Uigh School
while campaigning for the office she won.
Her appearance here was the third in a series of "get to
know the people" events .sponsored by the Action Club to
acquaint the people of the c;ounty with their high-level state
officials. Previous ·speakers hav.e been J. Phillip Rlchley,
director of ttan5Portation, and Pete O'Grady, director of the
state highway department.
.
•
Mrs. Donabey, the banker of the stat~ of Ohio, empha~ized
these polnw:
.
-The banking system is one of the foremost economic
foundations of Ohio. She said, "I don't levy !be wxes. The
General Assembly does that. All
.
. I do Is collect the money and
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member.
It read :

presidential speeches with dissenting "instant

Agnew moW! ted an aggressive defense after the nation learned ·
on Aug. 6 that he was under investigation by the Baltimore grand
jury. He accused the Justice Department of leaking news
damaging to him and said Henry E . Petersen, head of the
criminal division.. burned by his failW'e to convict Watergate .
higherups, wanted his scalp as a "big trophy ." ·
From the start, Nixon played a neutralist's role, becoming
almost a spectator· while his *~· president and Justice Department warred. Nixon limited his defense of Agnew to the period of
his federal service.
.
But briefed fully on the eviden.ce •.Nixon rnay have concluded
that a. resignation was inevitable and may have already decided

move from its temporary

Sale 24'

Closeout Prices

Meanwhile, Agnew spent the morning in his office. he too kept
the secret, from all but two aides.
At 1 p.m., he slipped away and was driven to Baltimore. At2:00
p.m., somberly he entered the courtroom, his hair slightly ·
mussed, a bit less precisely combed than usual.
• At the same moment, in keeping with precedent, a Jetter of
resignation was placed before Kissinger, the senior Cabinet

analysis."

Post 0

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following

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1973

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momentous secret he kept.

Devoted To The /nteruts Of1Jul Meigt·Mwon Area

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OCTOBER SALE!

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Fair tonight with lows in the
50s. Sunny to partly cloudy
Friday with haze and some
morning fog . Highs in the 70s
·and lower 80s.

IT'S THE

BERRIES

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taxes.

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Mrs. Donahey added that the state income tax has raised
$373 rnillion, and that Ohip is wol,'th approximately $8 billion:
" It is a great, great honor to serve the people of !he swte d
Ohio," she said, adding, "All of the dqu-s to the treasW'er's
office, except the one tQ the vault, 'are always open to
everyone."

Despite Watergate and the resignation of the vicepresident of the Vnlted States, Mrs. Donahey, with Ernest A.
Wingett of Racine, the Action Club Tfeastirer and chairman of
the. Meigs CoWIIy Dep!ocratic Party, expressed praise and
hope for the two-party system \halls the basis of the Republic.
Mrs. Donahey said, "We 'must always· fight for a strong
two-party system." Wingett said, "Ever since 1796 the'
Democratic Party has ltelded a presldentlal candi~te ; and
ever since 1856 the Republicans have fielded a pre$dential
candidate. We must try to retain these two political parties."
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I

l

LET'S HEAR IT FOR OlUO, says E. A. Wingett,
proml~nl Meigs deomocrat, gesturing to a poster. From the .
When asked ' her reaction to Vice-President Agnew's
resignation, ~rs. Donahey· said, "I couldn't believe it. I just
hope people, especially the youug peOple, don't lose faith in
their elected offlciltls."
Before Mrs. Donahey's talk, Hanley Hackett, president 0: ·

left, State Treasurer Gertrude Donahey, I!Ainley Hackett,
Mrs. E. A. Wingett, and Bill Abdella.

the lOth Disttlct Democratic Action Club, presided over a '
regular meeting of the club. He outlined the history of the
organization and the "Get to Know the People" series.
The purpose of the series, according to Hackett, Is to
. (Continued on Page 6)
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'

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