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· IR -, The Daily Sentinel, Middle'!Klrl-Pomeroy, 0., W(•dn&lt;•!i&lt;I&lt;~Y Ort. 2, 197~

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.. .. . . -•

rccctvcd numerouS
tnqulrit•s from concerned
residents
or the lOth
Cungressionctl Dr.strict regard ·
ing the delivery or third-class
mail. Quite often, third&lt;lass
mail includes unsolicited
ma tler . Conce rn has been
expressed to our off1ce o.ve r the
increasing volwne of thirdcla ss .mail bein~ handled
loday.
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Wt&gt; l l&lt;tVl'

RON COUCH

\W• have contil('tPd thp

CONN IF. ROUSH

Three more Metgs County
students, hvo
graduates and one senior , ha.,.·e
high sc hool

been included tn the eigh th
annual edition of \o\rtlo 's Who

II ·

~ong

, I

Amen can High School
Students. Thcv arc·
Connie Lyn~e Roush, class of
1974, Sou th e rn Loca l Hig h
Schoo l, is the d aughter of Mr
and Mrs. James E. Roush .
Third St.. Racine. Con me was
achve m Pep Club. choir, glee
club, Tr i- M, French Cl ub ,
Science Club, . band, a nd
Candyslripers . She attends and
teaches a class of young people
at the Antiquity Baptist
Church . She has received a 200
hour pin as a Candystriper and
a Perfect Attendance Award at

MEiGS THEATRE
TONIGHT &amp; THURSDAY
OCT . 2-3
NOT OPEN
FR 1.-SAT .. SU N.
OCT. 4 -S-6
Dt'RTY MARY,
CRAZY LARRY
Technicolor

Pe ter Fonda

"PG"

CARTOONS

Show Starts 7 PM

()ffif'"

.

the Pos tmaster Genefal
regarding the situation' and we
have been advised -that the U.
S. Postal Scrvieejs reqUired to
de liver a ll marl · which is
pr operly
adc)J;essed
and
postage pa id , uri)ess there is
reason to believe that ~t ·con.·
t,ins prohibited matter
of

pc~rlic ulm· l y

lhose who

" Student teachers and new
staff members in the Pomeroy
~: ch l ~ vcr!l:&gt; Tll. He expects to
and 1.1 '•1dleport elementary
attend OSU alleJ r.:radualwn to schools this semester and their
stud y pharma cy
r oom or area assignments
~ hav e been annoW1ced .
Student teachers m Pomeroy
Maror L£"ague Results
(from
Ohio University) are
By United Press lnternal1on.ar
Gail
Andrews,
with Ida Diehl in
Nat1oifal League
sr Loui s
ooo roo roo ~ 1 8 o grade 2; Judith Ann Claypole,
t/lontreal
DOD 001 02x - J 7 0
Wtth Eleanor maettnar in
Gi bson ( 11 13 ) and S1m mon s.
Tor rez, Mu rra y (8) and F oat e
grade
2: Carol Jean Reese,
WP M urr ay { I 1) HR s - Sm1fh

HON COUCH IS THE SON of
Mr . and Mrs. Rober! Couch,
Mulberry Hls., Pomeroy. He
was active in National Honor
Soci e ty, basketball , track, !13r d) . Jorge n sen ( 11th )
Varsity M Club, freshman ,
000 000 100 - 1 4 3
reserve and varsity footb all Ci n ci
At l anta
310 000 2 1x -- 7 13 0
having letter ed in varsity
Bil l ingha m , Borbon ( I J. Nor
football for two year s, and m an (3), Dar cy (6 ) . Eastw 1c k
f'l a n d Benc h , Copra { 168 l
attended Buckeye Boys Slate. nnd Correll LP·- Bil l ingham
He left for Lackland Air ' 19 11 )
Force Base on Sept. 25 ror six Phi l a
200000000- 2 40
ooo 010 ooo- 1 4 o
weeks basic training in the Air New York
Lonb o rg [ 17 13 1 and Boone .
Force, then liave 38lo 62 weeks Se aver f 11 11 l An~ Hodg es
of schooling in the field ' of
Lo s Ang
201 OO:Z 201
8 ll I
languag es and interpretations. Hou s to n
000 004 001 -- 5 9 1
Sutton , Mar sh all ( 6 J, Brewer
Rick Couch, a sen ior at
18J and Y ea ger , R •c hard , York
Meigs High, is the son of Mr. ( 7), Cosq r ove f B I and M May .
and Mrs. Robert Couch , Rl. 2, WP - Sullon [1 99 ) L P - R IC h
ard
(2 3) .
H R -- C
John son
Pomeroy t Mulberr y His. l
ClO th I
He is active in National Chic a ga
010 00 1 300 - 5 10 1
Honor Society, the mar chmg P1I Sbrgh
000 300 12x ~ 6 11 2
D e t t o r e . Zamora ( 7) ,
symphonic band, music club. L nRoc
he
{ 7)
and
Sw1sh t r ;
church youth groups , yearbook Reuss . H erna n dez (7J, Minshall
staff , Pep Club , attended (7J. Giust1 (8) and Sa ngultl en .
WP - G 1v s li ( 7-SJ LP - LaRoche
Buckeye Boys' State, attended 15 6 ) HR - Ro b ertson (16th ).
the swnmer sc ience training
San D1 ego
000 020 000- 2 7 1
program in pharmacy at Ohio Sa n F ra n
010 200 04x -- 7 9 2
F re: sl eben . Hardy (7l , Tom
Stale University, and has
lin (81 and Ke ndall. Bradley.
received the Arion Fotmdation Barr (7) and Rader WP
ey cs 11) LP - F re1sleben
Award for outstanding musical B( 9radl
14 )

American League
B ait
000 02 2 02 1- 7 9 1
Detro1t
200 101 020 - 6 11 1
Palmer , Jacksan (8), Rey
no lds
(9 )
and
Hendr1c:ks ,
Coleman , Walker (8), Hil ler (9)
and Freehan . WP - Jackson (6
4) LP - Hiller (]7 14) . HRs :F r eehan
2
(17t h
&amp;
18Th ),
Coggi n s 14th ), Northrup (1?1t1J

OoOOoo

T e xas
.
ooo-· o 2 2
M1nn
203 roo oox - 611 o
Clyd e,
Terpko
(3),
and
Sundb erg : Goltz (1Q . JOl and
Borgmann L P - Ciyd e ( 3 9l.

C Ieve

OlD· 100 000-

4 7 2

Boston
202 110 Olx - 7 13 0
K l1ne , Gogolewski (7) and
Duncan Barr ( 1 OJ and Black
we ll. LP - Kline 15 10) . HR -

R1c:e

(1st) .

K~n C 1ty
001 000 000 - 1 6 0
Ch1cago
oro oa r oox - 2 7 2
Bt r d
(7 6 1 a nd
Marlinez ,
Her~ ly
( 8 ),
Kaat (21 Ill and
H errman n

(10 tnn s. J

N Y

000 000 200 0-

Milw

ooo 0(10 020 1- 3 io 1

2 12 0

MediC'tl ( 19 · 15) and Munson .
KOBEL, Murphy (])an d Port er
WP Murphy ( JQ . JO J

mail , cts well as additional
charges for forwarding and
retW"ning. ' '
Although most individuals
who receive"third-clas..o:; mail in
which they are not interested
s imply discard it, there is
additional recourse available.
The , Direct Mail Marketing
Ass ociation .at 230 Park
Avenue , New Y~k, New York
intere s ted
10017, will ai
persons who wis their names
removed from t mathng hsts
of member organizations:
One can also reruse a piece of

believ~

th·~· P11stiil Service is ca rryi ng

t:tl &lt;t ICJ~s . Aclu&lt;1lly ,
ths matl makes an import&lt;Jn l
1·ontribution to Postal Service
finances despite its lower rate,
heccmse iL~ handling cos~ are
;dsu lower. Amon~ the reasons
f1,r its lesser t' OSts are the
pr es orting f pac ka g ing and
bundling mail 1 and other
~pedal requirements imposed
un those using bulk third-class
.mail which are not required of
cus tomer s us ing first. c la ss·
this

llldil

mail when iJ.r is 'delivered
mark a piece of mail "rt•fu:sedl"
and return it unopened to
mails . "The only mail
may not be 'returned
ler delivery has been eff,ected
· is registered, insured, ce:rtifierl
or C.O.D.,'' Postal authorities
tell us.
OW' office will continue
assist in matters relating
mail service in an effort
.~ treamline the delivery of mall
and make the service more ,
responsive to the' needs of the
American people.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

A formal reply to our tnquiry
explained:
..
"We realize some people do

11 Oth Anniversary Sale

New faces in schools

Three in newest Who's Wlio
her school. She is atlendmg
0~10 Univerl ity for one year
with plan s to complete nurse
trainin g at
Ohio
State
University .

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('&lt;-tre fHr lhirJ ..di.t SS nulil ,

nul

! Washington, ·::~ : .!
1Report B~)]&lt;;;~n~ · !
I

RICK COUCH

•

with Denise Gibson in Special
I; Lorratne Ughrin, with
Rebecca Tate in grade 5, and
Cheryl Lynn Hook, with Nonga
Roberts in grade J. Dr . Lester
Mills of the university staff is
their supervisor.
New teachers in Pomerqy
are Mrs . John Blaettnar, grade
2; Mrs. P=trow, grade 6 and
patrol supe visor ; Suzanne
Edwards, sp ech and hearing:
Pat lhle, teacher corps; Fran
Seeton, teacher _. corps, and
Janic-e Schmoll , teacher corps
team leader .
In Middleport, student
teachers (from OU J, are
Jacqueline Sue Hovis, with
Mrs . Courtney Knight in grade
3; Karen Ann Leper, with Mrs.
Lucy White in .~rade _4;
Margaret Jea'?r Riggs, w1th
Mrs. ~ary Rose , kindergarten,
and May Ann Mckotch, with
Do~
Hanning, , assistant
principal and grade 4.
New on the teaching staff in
Middleport are Jane rBaer )
Bourne, grade 2; Suzanne
Edwards, spe~h and hearing;
Robin (Mills) Boring, teacher
corps; Nan y Thirkield ,
teacher corps, and- Janice Schmoll, teacher · corps team
leader. On the non-academic
staff, Nancy Jo Clatworlhy has
returned as a secretarial aide
in the Middleport building.

.YARN
I

Sale .99¢

0
0
0

::
::

,

0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

New

pr1n !s and

SO lid

COIOIS

Super Stretch
PANTY HQSE
S h ~e r

he&lt;Hi h lu l 100°'1

coo rdmat•ng co lor

~ lr r l c h

elast1 c wa 1s t leg
Oflenmgs
Nvlon.

f •t s 5-ft

n(IOn. Q "l' 511'!
t o 5 I ~ 5 ")

With

J!".-;.&lt;•"'"''\~'''"'"'•;'''"" One-t•ze.t•ts all

'~P6i~

100 10 150 ll&gt;s
sh &lt;1des

F ~s h• on

Dflllf $1ftldlff/ Prlto

ft

OVER 75 COLORS IN SELECTION
Be Sure to Register At Our Mechanic Street Warehouse or in our
Third Floor Furniture Department for

.

.

$500.00 iN GIFT CERTIFICATES
No purchase is necessary, y·ou need not ~e present t1, win .

Anniversary Sale Prices In Every Dep111rtment
On All Three Floors, Toyland In The Middle Block, and
At Our Mechan'i c Street Warehouse

ELBERFELDS IN POM'EROY

~;.t~

Baker's Secret

SHAMPOOS, RINSE$

I, IJ;GJ
&gt; Jr:.t]~: · %;::; 97J.y

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CHOOSE FROM
B-in Sq Cak.e.Pan
Bake 'n Roa st Pan

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6-Cup Muff in Pen
Loaf Pan

•

Cookie Sheet

4-Qt.

Majesty®

SPARKLE
1ARNS

,,n sk•'"'

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Clalrol ·

Conl yhO&gt;I'
forl;rbl&lt;•f, ), I"th'"•• h!Tin!.J
lldnT
l,ugc&lt;
V'.l H 'l,in
5 (\ I O 5 f t
9 "' l&amp;!"1 I n 230 II) S

CLIP AND SAVE

~-

lnvi11 ibln

1''

Dtlltfa •

·8/f. llf Vt/w

~~

82c without coupon

' '" 78..

HJ .oz

.

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-MRWOL•
•

SHAVE CREAM

HALO· ::.-:.:::

....

_17•

.U.Hf

NOUMOD··

CMiWMRS
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All vour !avo,tes . .,

rJ

t!?j;j ~:~~,, ~,~~:;

Bu1temu1, Molk S h s~e.

. ;:JiDILY.
...............
GLASSWARE

r,;.

·CRMICER JACI(,
. MIIII-,ACICS

· SPECIALSf
Prar. tocal evetyda \1
ql assw.;uel
Choose
Servrng li•shes, p1trh•
ers. bowls more

.

B •g barg &lt;ton . 10 mi" l·

oacl..s.

\ O·oz

si1e .

each w•lh loy surpr i$e

,., ,,..,,,,

lht .,.Iiiii

*.100

BEN~
- FRANKLI~
.

RALL'S .
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welcome here

f

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Mangieri, to help encourage child~en to read · books other
than those required in school. He added tha t a stee ring
cornmitlee is in full operation, with two board members ,
Wendall Hoojir and Carol Pierc-e, serv ing on tha t advisory
comm1ttee.
.
In other board action Tues day night, a pollcy on the
procedure fur approving attendance at professional
meetings , recommended by Supt. HargraVes , was put aside
for rewording and other .investigations, and a contract for
psychological testing by the Gallia-Melgs Comrnuruty Mental
Health Center was a pproved .
Ramona Hawk , Bertha Jane Garnes , Merium Hoffman
B.rld Adeline Snowden were appointed as substitute 'cooks ,
while Pc.ela Morris was appointed as a kinderga rte n a1de at
Pomeroy Elementary School at $2 per hour, 6 hours per
school day.
Appointed as substitute teachers were Marta Kay Black-

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wood, element,ry ; Flossie Allensworth, elementary; Gayle
Price, biology and English, and Karen Humphrey, health and
physical education .
Also appointed were James · Ranson, English and
history ; Penelope Blesset, English and German; Ronald
Zartman , history and government; Jeannie Taylor, biology,
~arth science, health and physical education; Wilbur Perrin,
English and speech; Charles McManus, elementary; Mary
Brooks, Art K-12, and Jean Wagner, Art K-12.
A conli,nuing contract for Marjorie Gibbs was approved
as was the appointment of John Raub as a custodian and Lois
J . Hawley as a kindergarten aide.
Confirmed to appointment.s in remedial reading were
Katherine Jacobs, Norma Wilson, Jane Russell, John Lisle,
Kathleen &amp;;ott, Daisy Cook, Margaret Parsons and Doris "
Johnson. Susan Edwards was appointed as a speech
Con tinued on page 2

•

a1
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1974

NEW YORK - INVESTORS, BRUISED by a sagging
market, took another beating Tuesday as the New York Stock
Exchange plunged to its lowest closing since the Cuban missile
crisis. Brokers, however, recpuped some of their earlier losses in
the first day of e.x tended trading hours. The NYSE extended the
daily trading period by 30minutes to 4 p.m. (EDT) to encourage
more trading and thus increase commission fees for brokers. A
nilmber of brokerage houses have reported huge losses this year
because trading has fallen drastically.
On the first day of the extended trading hours, 16.8 milljon
shares were traded, well above the 1974 average volume of 13.4
million shares daily. Nearly 1.2 million shares were traded in the
extra half ~our. The exchange estimates that 16 million shares
must be bought and sold for brokers to break even. The Dow
Jones Industrial index, which started the year at more than 850,
dipped below 600 at times Tuesday, but closed at 604.82, the
lowest since Nov. 2, 1962, when it closed at 604.58 during the
Cuban missile crisis.

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The Meigs County Board of
Education meeting in regular
session t'uesday night, approved five bus driving cer·
tiflcates. They were John
· Riebel, Dolly Wood, Dorothy
Blake, Carl Morris and Larry
Millhone.
, The board approved the
routine transfer of funds and
· county Supt. Robert Bowen
reported that ~atisfa_ctory
pro~ess is being made m the
redecorating and remodeling
of the first floor of the county
children's home which will
become the new offices for the
staff of the county ~oard .
OcCupancy of the st,ff Is expected to·-ra~&lt;e. pl11ce thi~

.....

month .
The Meigs County Board
agreed that it will be more
practical for a school board in
Gallia County · to serve as the
fiscal agent for a new class for
students with visual impairments- at Rio Grande . A
Gallia Board would be closer in
dist,nce imd Gallia County .will
have more students enrolled in
the course. Meigs Cbllnty will
have two students eligible for
the training .
.
Attend)ng the meeting were
Supt. Bowen, and board
members, Robert Burdette,
Harold Lohse, Harold Roush ,
George . Perry and Gordon
Collins.

I

TEN CENTS

Judge IDSIStS
truth be told
By JANE DENISON
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - U.
S. District Judge John J .
Sirica, in search of an unbiased
jury to hear the Watergate
cover-up trial, today sternly
warned the prospects they
could go to jail if they fail to
say truthfully how they feel
abOut the case.
Sirica delivered his lecture to
a fresh panel of 175 prospective
jurors as the five defendants,
all of them associates of former President Richard M.
Nixon who have been accused
of conspiring .to cover up the
bugging scandal, sat im·
passively at the defense t,bles.
When 60 of the new

MYSTERY TOY- Cbarles Cohen, retired New York Central railroader, is pictured with a
metal ferris wheel toy which has been around the Cohen 'home on Butternut Ave. f~r many
years. Mr. Cohen doesn't remember where it came from but apparently, the -toy 1s now a
collector's item. A Colwnbus collector recently offered Mr. Cohen $50 for t~e toy. There 1s no
manufacturer's mark or any information as to where, by whom, or when it was made on the
toy .

FIRST SNOW
The first snow of the fall
and sub freezing temperatures were reported In
parts of Ohio today by UPI
bringing more problems for
Buckeye State iarmers who
have been stricken with the
most adverse l\'ea!her
conditions In years.
The National Weather
Service said much of the
northeastern quarter of the

state received rain and a
light snow. Toledo In Northwestern Ohio had a low of 29
degrees and Findlay a low of
31.

"'

Easten1
High has

1st PTA

A PTA (Parent - Teacher
Association) was organized at
Eastern High School Monday
night,
the
first
such
organization in a Meigs County
high school.

The new Association includes

Elderly warned
Meigs County Senior Citizens
were advised today !.o , ~~ alert
for anyone posing as an agent
of the Society Security Agency
by Mrs . Eleanor Thomas,
executive director of the Meigs
CoWl ty Council on Aging.
Mrs. Thomas said: "The
sheriff has reported a recent
incident in the county in which
a person, who said he
represented the Social Security
Office, gained entrance to an
elderly person 's home and
threatened the individual if he
did not give information on
savings and other matters.
"This person is not a
represent,tive from the Social
Security office. The person was
described as a young white
male, slender, about six feet
t,ll. He showed (~.Yellow plastic
card with "Socill Security" on

it. This is not proper iden·
lification.
"If someone should come to
your house answ;ring the
above description and showing
that identification, call the
sheriff immediately. Also,
please call the Social Security
Office or the Se'nior Citizens
Center, 992-7886. Try to get a
descri ption of the person , his
car, and license number if
· possible.
"There are Social Security

the seventh through the 12th
grades at Eastern. Meeting
By Susan Fleshman
with ' the interested parents
Pomeroy Ubrarlan
were Chester Gooding, prin·
Ladies, are you looking
cipal, and one of the teachers.
Elected. were Mrs. Charles forward to the coming football
Martin, president; Mrs, Helen season as a wasteland of
Sunday afternoons'
Blake, first vice president;
Men , do. you never have time
Chester Gooding, secOnd vice
to-read
during the work-week ,
president; · Elden Blake,
and
wish
that you could catch
recording secretary; Mrs .
Linda Edwards, corresponding up on the current news and
secretary; and Mrs. Barb novelS over the weekend? .
Students, does Saturday fly
Hannwn, treasurer.
by
too fast for you, and by
It was decided that the PTA
will meet on the fourth. Monday . Sunday you want a place to
of each tDOnth at 7:30p.m. and, study and ·some handy enall parents are urged to attend . cyclopedias?
Men, women and children,
An executive meeting was set
for Monday, Oct. 7 at 7:30p.m. here is the answer:
Now SW1day has • a new
for. the purpnse of organizing
dimensior&gt;!
For a trial period
committees. Prayer b'y the
during
the
month
of October
principal concluded
the
the Pomeroy and Middleport
meeting.
libraries · will be open &lt;.every
SWlday afternoon from 2 to
4:30p .m, to give you more time
, Cloudy Jonight, frost by
to use and enjoy our books' .and
morning. Mostly sunny Tburs·
magaZines .
·day, highs in the upper 50s and
The libraries want to open
lower 60s.
their doors wider to the people

DETROIT (UP!) - Tbe
United Auto Workers has
dropped its experimental fourday work week at a Chrysler
Corp. plant, ending the only
four..Jay week in the auto h
dustry.
The UAW said Tuesday its
120 workers at Chrysler's
Tappan, N.Y., parts depot
voted overwhelmingly to scrub
the 60-day program.
The decision eould signal the
end of the four-day week as an
issue in future bargaining
between the union and the
major automakers.'
A union spokesman said
workers were opposed to the

· Weather

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veniremen indicated that being
sequestered would create a
hardship for them, Slrica
commented, "lt doesn't look
like we can get a jury today.' '
The contempt warning,
Sirica said, -was "not for the
purpose of intimidating,
coercing · or frightening ahy
prospective juror ,"
But he added that if it
developed at any time during
the trial that any one of them
had deliberately failed to tell
the· truth in answering
questions put to them during
the selection process, he could
be c1ted for contempt and sent
to jail.
"I'm going to repeat it once

I

more so nobody will have an
excuse should it happen ,"
Sirica said, wagging his finger.
"I've been aroWJd this court·
house a nwnber of years and
I've seen the kind of thing
happen that I'm trying here to
prevent."
Tbe judge, who has steered
the Watergate case through
about two years of court
proceedings, also warned that
the Indictment charging the
five defendants with conspiring
to obstruct justice "is not
evidence of anything" and that
they' · must be ·l![eswned innocent unless proven guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt.
Continued on page 2

not give them enough time with
their families."
The union said employes
voted 82~ on one ballot and J6.
23 ·on an alternate ballot to
discontinue tbe program.
Under the plan, half of the
warehouse staff worked four
1tJ.hour days from Monday
through Thursday and the rest
work from Tuesday through
Friday.
"This required most of them
to work out of their job
classifications and to do work
they weren't accustomed to/'
the UAW spokesman ex·

plained. "Some of them had to
handle several different jobo
on Friday and Monday, rather
than just one as they did u~er'
the old system, because there
were fewer _peoPle working on
those days . That was a major
objection."
The objections to job rotation
may also cause the WJion to
review some Ideas for relieving
assembly-line boredom, one
official said. Union negotiators
had contended in previous
contract talks that shHting jobo
periodically might be one way
to reduce job alienation.

1n d us
· try to ld to
educe chemz•ca"ls

job rotation required by tl!_e
revised schedule and objecteh&gt; . .
to other changes in work
practices.

represent,tives in ,!he area at
"Wealsofoundoutthatwhile
various times . You may call the workers enjoyed the threethe Social Security Office at day weekends in the swruner,
Athens, 1-592-1448 or Marietta, , ~hey became disenchanted
1-800-282-9711 - toll free .- and once their children were back
assure proper identifiCa tion. in school and thelr weekend
The Senior Citizens Center will activities were restricted/' the
also have the representative's spokesman said. " Many comname. "
~ plained that the ltJ.hour day did

in their communities and these
Sunday afternoon hours are
one way of finding out · what
library hours people want.
How about telling us when
YOU .would like to be able to
use the library? ~
In the morni.ng - to call up
· for information that you need
in your job or yow- home?
In the late afternoon - to
find magazine articles for a
school project or to pick up an
entert,ining novel after work?
In the evening - to have
time to visit the library even if
you work during the day, for a
&amp;timulating change from T.V.,
to rurther your own education ,
or to' find literature and information for school,'
Sunday afternoon - for you
if you cannot come to the
library at other times, for a
chance to widen your horizons? .
If it would be more conven ienti£ the library were open
differen t twurs, or more hours,
Je t us kn ow when you visit us,

•

4-day work week is out

...
,
1

WASHING~TON (UPI) New government orders issued
Tuesday will sharply reduce
the amount of potential cancercausing chemicals now being
used by the plastics,. industry
•
and farmers.
The Labor Department's
new regulations cutting to
almost zero the amoWll of vinyl
chloride gas to which factory
workers may be expose1l was
ch,allenged by the plastics
industry.
. An official of one company
said the rules would throw two
or call us at Pomeroy (992- million people out of work and
5813) or Middleport (.!192-57!3 ). said tbe finn ,would take legal
Remember, you can return action against the rules .
your l(brary books and drop off
Tbe Environmental Protecyour bookmobile books at lion Agency; delayed by two
either the Middleport . or months by a challenge from
Pomeroy libraries. The books Shell Chemical Co., Tuesday
will be returned to their proper ordered a halt to further
libraries for you .
production of two pesticides,
NEWS FROM OVAL, the aldrin and dieldrin. The two
Ohio Valley Area Libraries chemicals are used on about 10
"Mail-a-Book" catalogs are per cent of the natiOn's corn
being mailed.. to rural mailbox crop.
hold ers and you will soon be
EPA chief Russell Tra(n said
able to borrow books through the pesticides pose an "immi·
the mall. As soon as the nent hazard" of cancer in
Pomeroy- Middleport libraries humans and are particularly
·have the catalogs, those people dangerous to infants because of
who do ·not have rural their conswnption of dairy
mailboxel; ca n pick up a · products especially likely tQ
catalog .and also use the ser- have residues of the chemicals .
vice , When we visited OVAL
" Residues of aldrin-dieldrin
headquarters a few weeks ago are present in virtually every
we saw the st,cks of books that member of the U.S. populawill be available to you through tion," Train sal~.
the mail. "S talin," "Star
'Qle new vinyl chlor.lde rules
Trek ,'~ and "The Sting" were from the Occupational Safety
some of the eye-catching iitles • ·a nd Health Admini!;tration of
the Labor Department came
that you can borr~w .

Libraries offering new
hours on trial period

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PHONE· 992-2156
•

LONG BEACH, CALIF . - THE BLOOD CLOT on Richard
Nixon's right lWlg is shrinking, improving his health, but apparently without changing the recommended long convalescence
that is keeping him off the witness stand at the Watergate coverup trial.
·
Tbe former president's doctor said TUesday that a lWJg scan
revealed a "pa.rtial resolution," or reduction .in size, of the clot in
' Nixon's lung, and showed that no more clots were forming. Nixon
has been in Long Beach Memorial Hospital for nine days,
receiving anticoagulant drugs ta combafblood clotting caused by
a phlebitis eondition that began when he was in office.
·

5 certificates granted •

U.Hf27~

s•l• etrt

only

,.

.

ba&amp;ketball coa ch, effective Oct. 15. He was Jeplaced by
Robert Oliver, a former instructor at Wahama and ·southern
High Schools. Oliver was given a one-year contract.
,
[n other action, Dr. John Mangieri, dttector of the
Teachers Corps Project, reviewed the program's overwhelming su.ccess thus far . in the Meigs Local System.
Mangieri stated that the in-service training program
provided Meigs teachers through the Teacher Corps
Program is the largest in the country .
•' He added that over 50 pet. of the teachers in the Meigs
. District are taking part in the program, with 42 elementary
teachers and 38 secondary teachers inv.olved.
Mangieri also stated that a Midwest Teacher Corps
network has been set up to .serve Ohio, fllinois, indiana ,
Wisconsin, Michigan and Iowa. He added that the center of
the network will be based at Ohio University in Athens.
A rree reading committee will be rormed, according to

By United Press International
NEW YORK - CBS was the No. I network in prime time for
the week ending Sept. 29, 1974, according to tbe national Nielsen
ratings armounced Tuesday. CBS had seven of th• top 10 shows.
NBC placed two shows, and ABC mTe . CBS won Monday,
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday nights. NBC took Friday and
Sunday, and ABC won Wednesday night.
The ratings for the week were: CBS with a 21.0 rating; NBC
19.7; and ABC 16.8, The top !Osliows.for last week were :
CBS' "All in the Family," NBC's "Sandord and Son," CBS'
"~MASH,"'NBC's "Chico and the Man," CBS' "Hawaii Five~,"
CBS' ''Good Times,'' CBS' ''Mary Tyler· Moore Show,'' CBS'
"Bob Newhart Show," ABC's Wednesday Night Movie
"California Kid" a~d CBS' "The Waltons."

· .IJc w~lll Coupon

12·01:. ,,,.

Mdi111H loti"'

! *3.

I

The abandonment of the junior high and freshman
football programs for the remainder of the 1974 season ip the
Meigs Local School District was ,proposed TUesday night to
the board of education meeting in Middleport.
Board Member Robert Snowden of RuUand, citing what h.e
believed to be a "lack of proper coaching,'.' proposed the
move following discussion of the junior high and freshman
grid situations.
·
Snowden stated that there would only be about 12 freshmen remaining on that squad when it meets Gallipolis Thursday evening, ~nd he add$d .that this would mean players
would not , get needed rest during the game, thereby mcreasing the chance of physical injury.
On the situation in the junior high program, Snowden
stated in his opinion, "The head coach of the 7th and 8th
grade teams doesn' t know beans about football."
Snowden went on to criticize alleged aetions by freshman
coach Roger Brauer in a recent loss to the Athens frosh.
According to Snowden, Brauer pulled the first string with the
score tied 6-6, and "inserted players of lesser ability."
It was not learned whether or not Snowden consulted
Brauer about details of the situation in the Athens game.
The board moved to have Principals James Diehl; Senior
High, and Russell Moore, Jr . High; Supt: George Hargraves,
and Athletic Director Charles Chancey investigate and
report back to the board.
.•
In related action in the area of alhleti&lt;:S,"David Jenkins
resigned as a high school math teacher and ninth grade

7-or. alze

WSTRE CREME~
• MRSPRAY

1---------------1
siz11
only

L.

·Junior High, freshman grid programs under ~f~re

WASHINGTON - FEDERAL HEALTH CARE programs
are often biased in favor of city dwellers and suburbanites, says
the eochairrnan of the Appalachian RegionaL Commission. In
testimony before a House subcommittee Tuesday, ARC federal
cochairman Donald W. Whitehead charged that the government
has failed to "recognize the financial and technical poverty of
rural America" and that the result is a dearth of medical care
outside big city .areas.
·
Rep. William V. Alexander, D·Ark.,_said one-third of the
nation's poulation lives outside urban areas and they are "the
unseen, forgotten minority" as far as feder~l government is
ci&gt;ncerned. Whitehead said tbe ARC had taken strong steps to
expand health planning and, care services in Appalachia, but that
much more needs to be done . ·
"All the national health insurance in the world will not buy
health for a rural American who has no doctor to go to,"
Whitehead said.

FINAUET..
NAIUPRA1

HAIRNET
8- o~

BIG MAMA
PANTY HOSE

I

ea

~

,! *1.

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

•

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OIL COMPApiY EXECUTIVES AND GOVERNMENT officials say a slight decrease In oil prices is only temporary
because Arab oil producers are ignoring pressure from
President Ford and will push crude oil prices even higher . .
· Standard Oil ofOhio, Skelly Oil Co. of Tulsa, Okla., and Clark
Oil Co., a major independent, dropped prices Tuesday on all
grades of gasoline. Mobil Oil Co. reduced its prices last month
and Exxon said it was reviewing its price structure. Gulf Oil Co.,
however, has raised its pump prices 1.5 cents a gallon on ~II
grades, citing higher costs for foreign crude and refined
products.

VALUABLE COUPONS

on 1y

t,_. ,

f

.

WAS!iiNGTON- BETTY FORD IS MAKING "unbelievable
progress" in her recovery from cancer surgery, her husband
says.
"She was in great spirits," President Ford told reporters
'after a visit to ber hospital suite at Bethesda Naval Medical
Center Tuesday night. "I thought . she made unbelievable
progress." Tbe First Lady had her cancerous right breast
removed Saturday and learned Monday that microscopic traces
of the cancer were found in two of 30 lymph nodes also removed.

NON-STICK

8 HtltH C~rllt· htrynlthf·

'.,.,
'

· .·.,. ;. ~"·.., ',

skein

Shimmery, frosted
colOrs in acryli·~ and
nylon,
worsted
weight.
Machine
wash and dry.

Fifth Avenun ·

-

REGULAR OR SPARKLE

I

SfRETCH .
BIKINIS

..

VOL XXVI , NO. 120

pro~

0

•.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meitfs-Mason Are11

Nonfst:ck GE s:lcone
coating ... pre-baked lo
assure quick . even
browning .
Same
bakeware used by

0

•

.-

Reg. 1.45, 4 ~. 4 p~

BAKING PANS

.fn.

'

"WINTUK"

'

BEN FRANK

.'

'

~

~

,

J

.'

r'j .

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after several months ' of
growing evidence that workers
exposed to tbe widely used
plastics industry gas were
developing a rare but fatal
form of liver cancer,
Under the new regulations,
workers may be exposed to no
more than one part per million
average over eight hours after
Jan , I and no more than '5 parts
per niillioh in any 1iknlnute
period.
Firestone Plastics Co. said
Tuesday the rules put the industry "on a collision course
with economic disaster . 11 An
official of the firm 's aid the
restrictions would "throw two
million jobo down tbe drain)'
That figure is ' the total
number of persons ·~mployed in
the plastics industry. Only
several thousand work in
factories where the raw gas
itself is niade before it is
turn~ to polyviny I chloride
and later
turned
into
everything from seat covers to

suitcases.

•

·

THREE FINED
Three defendants were fined
Tuesday nigh\ in Middleport
Mayor John zerl!le's Court.
Fined were Carroll Johnson,
43, Middleport,' $10. and costs,
disorderly manner; James R \
Pooler, :!0, Middleport, $5 and
costs, disorderly manner and
$5 and costs; running stop sign;
Kenneth Mohler , 36, Mid·
dleport, $150 and costs, three
days confinement, driving
while in.loxicaled.

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2-The Daily Senlmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 _,_W_.!'dnesday 0&lt; I 2 1974

•

H9using action committee will move quickly
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov
John J G1lhgan s specoal
conference on housmg bas
named a seven-man action
cornnuttee ' to make recom

mendations w1thm three weeks
on what can he done to prop up
Ohoo s saggmg home construe
tion mdustry
In addition, the comrmttee
was dispatched Tuesmiy to tell
leg1slallve leaders of the

conference s

unan1mous

recommendatiOn that the
General Assembly he recalled
ommedoately to take hn~l
acllon on a Golhga n ad
ministral!on b1ll settmg up a
state agency to help fmance
low and middle mcome
housmg
But the legislatiVe leadership
apparently short-e~rcuoted that
move Whtle the conference
was still m sesston Senate
President Pro Tempore Theodore M Gray R.Columbus

Consumers
shorted by
horsetrade
•

COLUMBUS (UP!) - An
execul!ve of the National
Farmers 0rgaruzation (NFO)
bel\eves Henry Ktssmger
horsetraded an agreement
between the U S and the
Mtddle East, swappmg cheap
food for h1gh-pr1ced oil -at the
~xpense of the Amencan

consumer

•

Amertcans are gomg to
have to compete w1th foreigners for food,' warned NFO
Secretary Art Phtlllps, here to
adojress the group s Ohto
convention
The Arabs and
Israelis couldn't get togetheJ
from the tome of Cllflst until
Henry Kissinger got there It
wasn t diplomacy -tl was
horse-trading that did 11 And
the only thmg this country has.
to offer IS cheap food
Phollips, calling the govern-

ment's controvers1al wheat

deal w1th Russia a 'outr~ght
gift," crttictzed pollctes of
exporting food need~d m

America
' We've got plenty of problems here he saod But we
try to take care ol everybody
else f1rst We have to start
taking care of the U S A
Phtll1ps, a natove of Greenfoeld Ohto sa1d farmers will
try to curb mllalton by
marketing more crops and
beef
'Inflation must he controlled
to prevent chaos, but farmers
cannot do 1t all," he sa1d
Farmers will try to oroduce
more , but 11 woll be difficult
because of the wet sprmg, midsummer dranght and early
freezmgs"
He also noted that the young
people are once again begmnmg to abandon the farms for
higher paymg city jobs
Last year, there was an
mcrease m pr1ces and a lot of
young people stayed on the
farm -thinking they could
compete wtth ctty workers
But a doubling m costs over
the past 18 months and
Mother Nature turned that
trend around thiS year "

announced there would he no
lij:tion on the btll unto! com
pletion of a legislative study on
the UQ(!I!ci gf the new federal •
housing law
Gray satd he had approval of
leaders from both parties m the
House and Senate to authoriZe
a study by the LegiSlative
Serv~ce Corrumssoon researc h
arm of the General Assembly
He named Rep Fredenck N
Young R,Dayton to head the
study
The lawmaket;s are m recess
unlll the end of-the year It has
been v1ewed as extremely
unlikely they would return at
least until after the November
electwn
But Gilligan s impromptu

housmg conference a ttended
by 22 representatives of the
home constructwn fmancmg
labor a nd real estate m
dustr~es S81d House Bfl.l 870
was of urgent pnonty to help
cure the housmg slump
We cannot stand odly by to
aw'lut federal help ' sa1d
Gilligan m his openmg re
marks
James I Huston, Cleveland
ch8lrffi8n of the gover110r s
Housmg and Community Deve
lopment Advisory
Com
mtsston was named chairman
·of the action commollee after
suggestmg the urgenc) of the
housmg leg!Sial!on
He satd the bill which sets up
a state housmg agency to help

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov
John J Gilligan s campatgn
manager Euge'l" P 0 Grady
Tuesday labeled former Gov
James A Rhodes guber
natortal campatgn J promises
w1thout prtce tags '
0 Grady satd Rhodes had
made $813 rrullton worth of
promises, but failed to tell how
he proposed to pay lor them
He sa1d Rhodes has promised
17 separate highway proJects
costing a total of $540 million,
distributed a projected state
surplus of $108 million for $223
mollton worth of projects, and
proposed construction of state
offoce bwldmgs m 10 major
Cities at a cost of »6 million
0 Grady also sa1d Rhodes
has proposed a World Trade

Center m Cleveland at a cost of
$12 mtlluon and $2 mtllion
worth of proJects for Lake
Milton near Youngstown •
A spokesman for Rhodes sa1d
0 Grady had overestomated
the reqmrements for Rhodes
highway promtses by $471
m1llion smce lha l amount
would come from the federal
goverrunent
He S8ld Rhodes promiSes
would requ~re $68 9 million m
highway funds and $130 million
m general revenues and that
thiS could be fmanced through
a $108 rrulllon surplus and $23
million worth of cuts m per
sonal serviCe contracts
A proposed port 1m
provementforCleveland would
be financed through revenue

Report cites cost
of newest prison
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Auditor Joseph 'r FergllS()n
said Tuesday the ma:r1mum
security priSOn near Lucasville
could have been built 10 years
earlier near London Ohto, and
saved taxpayers nearly $8
millwn
FergllSOn, m an audit report
of the Southern Ohlo Correction
Facility (SOCF) completed m
1972 at a cost of $27 8 million,
S8ld the facility could have
been built at London, some 27
mlles west of Columbus, at a
cost of $20 million in 1962\
The audit, covermg the
perood from July 1, 1972,
through March 18, 1974 contamed lindmgs for recovery of
$9,000 However,ltdevoted 10 of
1ts 18 pages to the decision to
locate the prison near
Lucasville It also ctted sloppy
bookkeepmg through the adlTlllllslratton of Gov John J
Gilligan
FergllSOn told newsmen that
former Gov James A Rhodes
fulfilled a 'political promiSe '
to locate the priSOn in Scioto
County
"! don't think it should ever
have been built there,'' Ferguson said "Rhodes told tjle
Republican chalrman of Scioto
County the prison would be
built there, and tt was "
FergllSOn said It was "suppoSition" on hiS part that a
political agreement was made

addmg he had no hard
evtdence
Ferguson s&amp;d he believed
the priSOn should have been
butlt at London or Grafton
The auditor said putting the
facrllty at London would have
located it near bus lines for
transportatiOn of the mmates
relatives
London already has a priSOn
farm and there could have
been personnel for lr&amp;nmg
guards
~
In sp1te of the apparent
advantages of the s1te at
London, the Site locatiOn was
changed
the report said
The audit also sa1dt the
priSOn could have been built on
'level farm land' at London
Buildmg the factlity in the
Appalachian foothills, the re
gort sa1d, resulted m the state
paymg more than five l!mes
the pnce per acre for flood land
and another $656,800 to level
the hmd
The report also sa1d the
guard personnel were hired as
"qualified but not ex
pertenced" and also referred to
the numerous strikes and
escape attempts with two
guards bemg killed m one
escape attempt "
The prison was to have been
finished m 1970, but 98 work
stoppages delayed 1\s completion until Oct 30, 1972

Son's problem was temporary

to

Buoldmg Construcllon Trade
Councll
B G Wolhamson vtce
prestdent of the Internatoonal
Brotherllood of Electrical Wor':i
kers, Cincmnalt questwned
whether a state housmg agency
would duplicate a federal
ageney
'
He was assured 11 would
complement the federal
agency by Davtd C SWeet,
state director of economic and
communoty development, and
a representative of the U S
Department of Housmg and
Urban Development
House B1ll 870 cleared the
Democrallc-eontrolled House
m July 197?, but has been held
m the Repubhcan-dommated

Promises criticized,~ defended

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I hope
you can help me understand
what this medical diagnosis Is,
and I would Uke to send your
statement to my son He was in
the hospital two years ago for
four days wlth "acute
gastroenteritis " Could you
explain what thiS IS and the
cause' Is there any medication
he can take Without havmg to
go to the hospital'
DEAR READER He
should be over that problem
Acute means sudden It also
means short A cold Is an acute
Illness A sudden attack of
a)lpendicitls Is an acute lllness,
no doubt you have heard the
term &amp;~te appendicitis
Gastro•nterlhs means mfianunallon (the "ills" part of
the word) of • the stomach
( gastro) and mtestines (enter)
A common Cll)IBe is oldfashioned 'food polsonmg "
The potato salad at the community ptcntc may be loaded
with bacteria tbat have grown
m number from the tline the
salad IS made to the time It Is
eaten
ImmediatE!
refrigeration from the time of
preparation
tome of eating
helps prevent this problem
Lack of refrlgerallon for

rmancmg on low-and mlddlea
mcome homes should take top
pnorltY With the conrerence,
and that lon g-range solutoons
should be developed over the
next three weeks
Named to the action cornnut
tee with Huston were Dav1d B
Albr~gbt., president of t,he OhiO
Savmgs and Loan League of
Akron Davtd S Cook pres1
de nt of Galbreath Mortgage
Co of Columbus Milan Marsh
prestdent of the Ohto AFL.CIO
Robert D Marshall Bowlmg
Green, prestdent of the Ohio
Home Bwlders Assoctallon AI
Ratner president of Forest
City Enterprises Cleveland
and Joseph Sedivy execullve
secretary of the Ohto State

several hours en route or while
waiting to he served promotes
growth of the bacteria
You can have food poisonmg
also from cream pies and
similar foods 11 not kept
properly refrigerated after
cooking I hesotate to eat cream
pies, puddings and potato
salads in P.Ubhc eating places
because you never know how
old 11 IS qr how 1t bas been kept
You can get a bacterW food
po1sonmg from meat, eggs and
other products- The germ
salmonella IS a major cause
Many housewives expose
themselves
and
famtly
unknowmgly to these bacteria
It IS not practical or possible to
have chicken, eggs and meat
free of sabnon~lla Cooking
destro¥s tbe bactei'Ul The
problem Is !hat !he germs get
on cookmg eq]lipment 'Ole
cook may use a knife to clean a
chicken or to handle raw meat
Then after the food Is cooked
and free of bacteria she uses
the same knife or plate that bas
the ge_nns on It from handling
the raw food This contaminates the cooked food w1th
sabnonella Tbe rule then Is
use clean, unused kitchen
utenstls and dishes for cooked
food Don t rinse off the fork or
knife-aod use it agam Keep the

'

counter and cookmg areas
clean at all tomes
Food IS also contammated by
the can opener The part that
slicks into the can to do the
cuttmg 'may be loaded With
bacteria If you can't regularly
clean your can opener properly
it Is a health hazard So, don I
just clean off the top of the can,
but be sure the can opener Is
clean
I noltCI!d that Dr Sclunidt,
head of the Food and Drug
Admmlstration, said recently
that people are worrymg about
the wrong things m food The
concern ilbout possible dangers
of food additives IS mmimal
compared to the dangers of
bacteria
Gastroenteritis can. also he
Cllused by flu-llke Ulnesses,
alcohol and other ways of
irritating the digestive tract
The acute form, though, lasts
only a few days If you lose a lot
of flu•d and salts you
sometimes need help durmg
the Ulness Once 11 Is over you
should be as good as new So
your son doesn't need to take
anything He should be well
But, 11 Is a good tdea to follow
the points listed here to help
avmd future problems This
applies to everyone not JUSt
vour ~on

bonds the Rhodes spokesman
satd
Promises without pnce
tags IS the Rhodes pattern,
0 Grady sa1d cotmg Rhodes
campa1gn for an Ohw Bond
CommiSSIOn m 1967
Rhodes conducted a Santa
Claus campatgn of the highest
d e g r e e O'Grady saod
Rhodes promiSed proJects for
every one of the 88 counties m
the state A college here a
water development proJect
there, a park here and a
pollubon control system there
'In no way am l claunmg

CLEVELAND (UP!)
General parto~r Nick Mlleti
and V1ce President Ted
Bonda will be deposed from
the Cleveland Indians' front
office in a shakeup that will
also see Frank Robllllion
named the field manager, it
\\as reported today
The Cleveland Press
reported the arrangement
was agreed upon Sunday in a
meeting among Robinson
and his agent, Booda, and
General Manager Phil Seghl

Pontiac bought
Meigs
County
Com
rmss1oners Monday agreed to
purchase a crwser for the
shenft s deparlment because
of an emergency s1tuat10n
A Pontiac was purchased
from Smtih Nelson who had the
lowest quotahon of $4 100 plus
trade m of a 1973 Plymouth
and other routme buSiness was
conducted Attendmg were
Robert Clark Warden O!lrs
and Henry Wells
com
m1ss10ners
and Martha
Chambers, clerk
ON DEAN'S LIST
Robert E Grossnickle son of
Mr
and Mrs
Herman
Grossmckle Reedsville has
'been named to the dean s list of
the
Oh1o
Institute
of
Technology Columbus for the
summer quarter w1th a 3 2
average Robert IS a 1973
graduate of Eastern Htgh
School

HONORS EARNED
Four Meigs Countians have
been named to the dean s list
for the summer ,II seSSion at
the Hocking Technical College
m Nelsonville Morton Barnes
of Pomeroy recetved a four
pomt average for the sesston
Others named to the roll with
at least a three pomt were
Sheila K Cozart, Pomeroy,
and Janet S Morris and Conme
Smoth both of Racine
CARE URGED
George
Hargraves
superintendent of the Meigs
Local School District remmds
motoriSts that school buses on
the roada m the middle of the
day are transporting kin
dergarten students He ask~
that motorists be especially
' careful because of the age of
these children

SPEAKER NAMED
Mrs Catherme Remley,
currator of the Campus
Martius Museum at Mariella
will he gpeaker when the Me1gs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society holds lts annual
meeting at 2 p m Sunday at the
mi!Beum ~eroy Reports
Will be gfVen, the status of the
museum progress wlll he
discussed and directors for the
new year w1ll be named All
mterested persons are invited
E-RRUNMADE
The Pomeroy E-R Squad was
called a\ 9 53 p m Tuesday to
the Duds and Suits for Sharon
Covert who had fallen Sbe was
taKen to Veteran[ Memor~al
Hospital

these projects are not ompor
tan t or unnecessary 0 Grady
sa1d
But if Jom Rhodes IS
gomg to make these kmils of
promises he owes ot to the
people to tell them truthfully
what they cost and how he
plans to pay for them '
0 Grady
said
Gtlhgan
proposed spendmg between
$035 million and $075 million
durmg the next btenmum for
health
and
education
programs to be fmanced
through growth m revenue
collect~tons w1thout new or
mcreased taxes

Judge
Contmued from page 1
It probably wtll he one of
the most omportant thmgs you
will ever have to do m your life
if you are selected to serve on
thts Jury,' Sir1ca told th• 65
prospects who survived
prehmmary screening
Tuesday
He summoned another 175
DIStrict of Columblll res1dents
for ftrst-round questoomng
today and another batch for
Thursday as he strives to weedout those who rrught come to
court w1th their mmds already
made up
The slow, pamstakmg
process of jury selecllon
resulted Tuesday m 90 persons
bemg excused after pleadmg
health, famtly or business
problems would make 1t 1m
possible for tl!em to be
sequestered for the three tofour month tr1al
A Jury was not expected to he
seated for several more days
The defendants - former At
torney General John N Mitchell once h1gh Whtte House
atdes H R Haldeman and
John D Ehrhchman, former
Ntxon campaign official
Robert C Mardtan and
campaogn lawyer Kenneth W
Parkinson -sat glumly as the
JUry search droned on
Haldeman wore a gold tie
clasp be'armg the preSidential
seal and a tiny etched
stgnature of Richard NIXon
Mitchell's face was aShen as he
entered the courtroom Wllh a
lawyer at each elbow and
slumped 1nto a cha1r Ehrlichman, on his way into the
courthouse, had been jeered by
a !ll:Oup of youtha calling
themselves Yippies and spat on
by one of them
A few of the defendants
swiveled around to look when
Sirica asked prospective jurors
to stand il they harbored "any
mental reservabons whatsoever" that the defendants were
mnocent men unless proven
gullty No one rose
As the questions continued,
one man said he knew defendant Parkmson, another S8ld
his father was acquainted wtth
buggmg
conspirator
E
Howard Hunt Jr and a third
volunteered that hiS mother
once had been arrested and
fined for a sit-In at the Pentagon None was ommediately
excused
The central figure in the
scandal and one of the unindicted coconspirators - NIXon
-remained hospttalized in
California, said to be too ill to
testily at least for a month and
posaib1y three His lawyers,
however, have yet made no
move to quash subpoenas for
his appearance
But two other key witnesses
were seen m the courthouse as
the trial began, apparently
undergomg final Interviews
with the prosecutors before
going on the stand They were
Jeb Stuart Magruder, who has
pleaded guilty in the cover-up
and is now in prison, an4
Alexander P Butterfield, who
revealed existence of the White
House tapmg system
Sir1ca opened the trial in the
cavernous Ceremonial Courtroom,, where he began the
Watergate buggmg ~21
months ago When prelim
jury screenmg IS om, he

Senate Rules Commottee smce
last May
One snag was the InsiStence
of labor umons that the
prevailing wage be paod on all
state housmg projects There
has- smce been a compromise
on that proVISIOn
We re not too happy With
certam prov1s1ons but who can
he happy all the tome' ' said
Marsh Why should we fmd
ourselves m the back seat (m
housmg construction)' If 1t
takes an mstrument llke this
( housmg agency) let s not
worry about the details '
Ratner saod netghboron~;
states of Mtchlgan, Pennsy1
vama and West V1rguua have
housmg agenc1es and have not
expenenced problems as sen
ous as Oh10 s
Donald L Huber prestdent
of Huber Homes m Dayton,
satd homebmlders are angry
because they see they r e
herng treated poorly
The housmg mdustry 1sn t
bemg slowed up, Huber satd
It s bemg woped out Some
thong s got to be done roght
now, or you 11 see such a
problem you won t he able to
comprehend 11

EPA schedules
Ironton hearing
COLUMBUS -

The Ohoo
Protecl!on
Agency (Ohio EPA ) announced
today 11 has scheduled a pubhc
meetmg on the aor poUutwn
apphca twn
for
North
Amer1can Refractories Co
13th and Ashtabula Streets
Ironton at 1 p m Thursday
October 31 1974 m Ironton Ctty
Hall Counctl Chambers 4th
and Ratlroad Streets Ironton
The purpose ox the meetmg IS
to cons1der evidence written
or oral from any person on
compliance schedules of the
company
Individuals unable to attend
the meel!ng may submtt
wntten tesl!mony to the
Hearmg Clerk Ohoo EPA 361
E Broa~ St
Box 1049
Columbus, OhiO 43216 unto! the
d 1te of the meetmg
Env~ronmental

Historic act at 10 Thursday

•

Sport Parade

'

Contmued from page 1
therapiSt and Greg McCall was appomted extended serVIce
for Title l Admmostra tion
L W McComas and Donald Wolfe were appomted clerks
for federal funds whole the supermtendenl was appomted as
the board s authoriZed agent to rece1ve and expend federal
funds
The payment of $245 each to Lela De"'Laval and Donna
Carr from DPPF Funds for work thi!)' performed m ordermg
and checkmg DPPF materials was approved
Attendance at the followmg meetmgs was also approved
Ray Goodman at a meeting for vocahonal director mterns m Columbus a basketball coachmg clime at Columbus
for Roger Brau"' John Arnott Ron Logan and Clifford
Queen and three meetmgs to he attended by Supt Hargraves
m Cincmnah Washmgton Court House and Athens
In queshonmg the basketball coaches clinoc, 11 was
moved by Pierce and seconded by Snowden that from now on
any teacher wtshmg to attend a meetmg other than those
meetmgs requored by law must forst present to the board a
Written letter stating what the meetmg IS about, the coach s
expectations etc The mollon passed unanomously
Reports were g1ven on a variety of subject matter, m
eluding -Bernard Fultz's letter to the EPA supporting a
request to retam the coal furna ces at HarrlSOnvtlle and
Salem Center The ERA replied to Fultz, slating that the
matter will rece1ve further consideratiOn m the sprmg
It was also reported that the work hemg done on the high
school athletic complex has hit a snag wtth the difficulty
stemmmg from the mabtllty to obtam a dram tile
The purchase of a dual wheel dolly and jack for the bus
garage was approved and Charles Ray Kyle released by the
Columbus C1ty School System was accepted as a student
Estomated tuition rates were also approved $18 50 per
month for an Ohw student and $77 54 per month for out of
state students
In !mal actwn Wendy Fneder and Rota Hamm were
appomted Adult Baste Educabon employes and Donna
Damels and Warren Black were appornted as subsbtute bus
drtvers
Attendmg were Supt Hargraves, Clerk L W McComas
board members Joe Sayre V~rgll King, Wendell Hoover,
Robert Snowden and Carol Pterce, and John.Mangten Carl
Demson and John Redovoan of the Teacher Corps Program

Mrs. Musser of
Rutland is dead
RUTLAND - Mrs Susan
Musser, 69, Rt 1, Rutland, died
Wednesday
mormng
at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
The daughter of the late
William and Susan Lemaster
Ramey she was also preceded
m death by two sons
Surv1vmg are her husband
Wesley D a son, Leon 0
Lemaster
Pomeroy,
a
brother
Isaac
Ramey ,
Georgta, two ststers, Mrs
Halley Rowland, Columbus
and Mrs Esther Whealer
Blain, Ky, and three grandchildreq The body was taken
to the EWing Funeral Home
where arrangements are being
completed
shift to h1s own smaller
courtroom four floors below for
indlvtdual quesltomng of each
prospective juror
Sirica warned the jury panel
members straightaway that
they would he sealed away
from the world for the duration
of the trial to guard against
possible influence, livmg m a
nearby motel and ealir)g their
meals together Expeditions to
the movies and even to church
w1ll he under the watchful eyes
of U s marshals
The standard federal Jury fee
IS $20 per day, though many
employers -including the gov·
ernment -pay the difference
between that and an employes
regular salary

nwnber all houses Th1s actwn
w1ll help vanous ullhty
compames to gtve better
service and w1ll assist fire and
emergency calls
Council agreed to draft an
ordmance for the house and lot
nwnbermg and to name all
streets and alleys
A letter was read from Ross
Roush, Mason Fife Chtef m
v1tmg Mayor Taylor and other
ctly offtctals to open house at
the f1re stallon Oct 12 from
1230to6pm

'
•
'
'

•
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•

"

"

Counc1l moved to appr&lt;nle
one trailer permit m Zuspatr.
Tratler Court and to set aSide '
$100 for a petty cash lund faro~
use by the mayor and recordel\
Pohce
Chtel
Rtchalid
Ohlinger submotted a polllll!
report for September noting
that the crmser traveled 1 ,71~
mtles 85 complamts answered 28 arrests made, mne
warnmgs Issued and one ac
c tdent mvesttgated
Tlr!!
meetmg was recessed
~

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Ocl1)
James Ball Nadine Barton,
Shelba
Corcle
Vanessa
Compston Ida Conley Fred
Dauber Mrs Milton DeGraw
and danghter James Dotson
Roberta Evans Gregory Fulk
Chr~stopher Gilmore Rosa
Gr~fhth
Ruth Hamtlton
James ltlll Howard Johnson
Lisa Kay Eleanor Keels
Beverly LewiS
Charlotte
Little, Richard Maione, Harley
Myers Davtd Newell Mary
Oiler, Charles Paxson Ada
Payne Garnette Proffitt Lo1s
Purkey Tara Riddle Heber
Riffle Mrs Carl Scaggs and
son Margaret Souders, Mrs
George Tilley and son Morgan
Turner, Mrs John Vtlotoe and
son Mrs James Walton and
son Marjone Ward Harry
Woomer
I Births)
Mr
and Mrs
Dennis
Brunton a daughter Oak Htll
Mr !lDd Mrs Douglas Crab
tree, a son Oak Hill Mr and
Mrs Robert F Stutler !w11,1,
son and daughter Leon W Va

Veterans Memorial HospitaiH
Admtssoons - John Blosser,
Middleport Janet Sogmao 1
Mtddleport, Thebna Grueser,
Pomeroy Florence Deeter
Racme
Loretta
Racme Karla Richards, N.,;.,.:;
Haven Tina Moore
Harry
Stahl
Maqor~e
Stewart
West
Columboa Michael Deem
Racme
~
Discharges Carma~
Jewett Sybil Greene Donal&amp;::
Hendricks
~

CONFINED AT HOME
C E Blakeslee IS confmed to
h1s Lincoln Hetghts home for
treatment of a back ailment
Former Metgs County Ex
tension Agent Blakeslee has
been confined for the past sox
weeks and following an
ex:ammabon at Umve~stty
Hospttal, will remain on bed
rest for another lour weeks

®.:X::m: ....~ ;: ' .. • • 1!81 Cl !' ll!lt
EXTENDED OUTLOOK "
Friday through Sunday;
fair through Sunday with '
highs in the 60o oa Friday'
warming !~the lower 70s by"
Sunday ana lows in the apper '
1
30s and the lower 40s

TO HAVE SURGERY
Gordon Collins, a member of
the Metgs County Board of
Educahon will enter Mt
Carmel
Hospotal
West
Columbus, today, wher1! he will
undergo major surgery within
the next few days
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature m Pomeroy
at 11 a m Wednesd~y was 45
degrees under sunny skies

Spurt~

I dnm

•

Trick or Treat night set
MASON - Trtck or Treat
Noghtwasset for Oct 31 from 6
to 7 p m and Halloween rules
spelled out by the Mason Town
Counctl Tuesday mght
Mayor Fred Taylor requests
parents to ass1st m curbmg
vandalism
dunng
the
Halloween
penod
and
caulloned that parents w1ll be
held responsible for acts of
vanqallSm commtlted by their
children
The town s siren Will blow
curfew each evemng at 9 p m
startmg tomght for the
remamder
of
October
Younsters are to he off the
streets between 9 p m and 5 30
a rn , wtless accornpamed by
an adult
Bernard Deloose of C and P
Telephone Co , of West
V1rgmta, dtscussed house
numbering w1th the councol
The !1rm 1s w1lling to purchase
the numbers and dostr1bute
them to home owners 1f the
town will pass an ordmance to

gers cop

0

UPl

Pleasant Valley Hospltsl ,
DISCHARGED - Cantpbli\L
Stevens Apple Grove,
Robert Shamblin, Henderson•
James Brumlteld Pomeroy,
Mrs Frank Blankensh1pJ
Mrs Amos Toll!£,
Leon
Rutland Thurman Smlt~.
&lt;ialllpolls Mrs Denzil
berhng Le\lP Mrs
Mayes Pomt
Stephen McGraw,
Ferry John Kalleel Poinl
Pleasant Ebner
Pomt Pleasant Mrs L~H
Stearns Pomt Pleasa nt,
Delmer Patterson, Apple
Grove Vema! Vance Btdweil '

No'r TALKING
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Nb1
talks were scheduled today between represehtatives of Food
Employes Local 590
Kroger Co as a strike by •. ~... --employes entered tis third •··'' "·' "
SQUAD CAIJ.ED
'"
The Middleport E-R Squad
was called at 2 51.p.m to
offtce of Dr Davis for William&lt;
Ralph Swan, who was taken
Holzer Medical Center

w

I

•

-

By Mil I liN Htt liM \N

Grid programs

'

The Dally Sent me l Moddleoort Pome•ov 0 Wednes(lav 0&lt;1 ? ln74

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Ford will make (
historic appearance before a House subcommittee
vcs
ling his pardon of former President Nixon al10
Tuesda he subcommittee announced today
The h pngs will be held in the same J:!~::,~~
Commtttee room in the Rayburn House Office :
where the Impeachment proceedings were carried out
agaorut Nixon Those proceedings led to Nixon's resignation
and Ford hecommg President
Rep Wilham L Hungate, D Mo , chairman of the
Cnminal Justice subcommittee, has said that H \he
television networks want to, they may televise the bearing
live He smd a maJOrity of his orne member subcommittee
would allow the television coverage

I

\

3

~

NEW YORK I UP I) Hank Aaron has g1ven 11 a lot of thought
an awful lot and he has made up his mmd
He feels he can play some more he wants to and he s gomg to
W1th the pressure of Babe Ruth s record no longer on his nund
and the fact he s fuushmg th1s season feeling so strong Hank
Aaron IS nat out convmced he ca n have a better year next season
than th1s one wh1ch wasn l really all that bad
He beheves he can go out there and gtve a good account of
himself and he mtends to
Not with the Atlanta Braves though
They re gmng slnclly \Hlh youth and at 40 he no longer ftl.s
mto that categor} He knows that and 11 "" t upsettmg lum as
much as you d think
The Braves bj this t1me are aware Hank Aaron wants to keep
playmg They do not want to stand m hls way and they have
made that fact known to hom
So what now '
So th1s now 1f thmgs can be worked out and there &amp; no bog
reason why they can l be Hank Aaron qwte likely will be traded
sometune after the World Senes
To whom '
To some club hke maybe the New York Mets the Ne" York
Yankees the San D1ego Padres or the Milwaukee Brewers
The Mets and Padres certamly could afford h1m and the
Yankees certamly could use hom but the Brewers really would
he the log1cal club to make a p1tch for h1m
They can t nghl now because technically he s sllll under
contract to the Braves and 11 would be considered tampermg but
once the season ends and the mterleague trading per1od goes onto
effect ftve days after the World Senes there wouldn t be
anythmg standmg m the Brewers way except the Braves
Milwaukee loves Hank Aaron
He played there 13) ears breakmg mto the btg leagues m that
ctty bac~ m 1954 and brmgmg the coty 1ts forst maJor league
pennant three years later w•th a dramatic home run agamst the
St LouiS Cardmals
Every tune Hank Aaron has returned to Milwaukee smce the
club moved to Atlanta he has been g1ven a royal welcome
Generally the ballpark has been sold out w1th everybody wanting
to see Hank Aaron
The Brewers even dug up the ongmal home plate .at County
Stadium and presented 11 to Aaron, who accepted ot warmly and
then turned 1t back to them so they could exh1btt 11 m the
ballpark
Hank Aaron feels pretty much the same way about the people
m Mtlwaukee that they do about him
What s more where there doesn t seem to be a place m the
Braves lineup for hom there IS one ready made w1th the
Brewers They need a designated hitter ThiS year Molwaukee
has used fellows like Bobby Mitchell, Mike Hegan and Deroo
Johnson as 1ts des1gnated httter Rtght now rooktes Gorman
Thomas and SlXto Lezcano are handlmg the JOb
,why not Hank Aaron next year' If 39-year-old Frank Robtnson
can do 1t for the Cleveland Ind~ans and manage them also next
sellson, why cant Aaron perform the same serv1ce for the
B""wers wtthout the extra burden of managmg'
Hank Asron IS m better physiCal shape now than Frank
Rolnnson He s h1ttmg 267 for the I) raves and has 68 RBls and 19
horoe r!lDs
Jhe Braves don t figure to hold up any club seekmg Asron
What about the front offtce JOb the Braves promiSed Aaron'
They talked to hom about 11 but he wasn I parllcularly enchanted w1th what they had m m1nd
When I gomto the front offtce he sa1d I want to contribute
sowething I don t want to JUS! walk around and shake hands I do
that enough durmg the wmter l don t want to have to keep domg
It all summer '
Primarily though Hank Aaron wants to keep on playmg yet
because he feels he sllll can do a !me job, and contnbute to a ball
club s success
He's gomg to play baseball agam next year and he ll probably
do all nght
Hank Aaron always has

By f KJ::U MtMANE
UJ»I SporL"i Wnter
The 1 os Angeles Dod~ers
tasted champagne Tuesday
mght and the Pittsburgh
Pirates are only one victory
away from poppmg the cork
The Dodgers clmched the
Nahonal I eague West IItle thelf fir st of any kind smce 1966
- Yi hen they defeate d the
Houston Aslros 8-5 whtle tHe
second-place Cmcumall Reds
were losmg to the Atlanta
Braves 7 1

•

est,

Buzz Capra When the Houston
I he P1ra1.-s mea nwh1l e
moved w1thm one game or scoreboard fla shed Dodgers
cllnchmg the Nl East totle by N I
C h a mp s
tnmmmg the Chtcago Cubs 6- Con gratu lattons
- Astra
5 "lnle the St Lows Cardmals offtc!als 1gnormg the fact Los
were losmg to the Montreal Angeles must '"" the playoff
8xpos 3-2 The Pirates host the ser~es to take the pennant - the
Cubs agam tomghl and the ~POfJ~er dugout erupted 1n
Cardinals play at Montreal
backslappmg celebraloon
The Dodgers playmg at
it feels great I m proud of
Houston knew they had each and every one of m}
become diVISion champwns ballplayers
sa1d Dodger
before the1r game was over as Manager Walter Alston sa1d
the Braves pummeled the Reds
We ve been tmprovmg all
behmd the fourlllf mt('htnp' or vpar lon~ anfi T ~"11 t c:,..-. ~"v

1rates near
reason £or thal to change n~w
Stcv~ &lt;~arvcy collected two
httsa nd became the ftrst maJor
leaguer to collect 200 hots and
100 RBis m one season m
sparkmg the Dodger victory
Don Sutton went five mmngs to
ea rn h1s 19th wm agamst mne
losses
Pittsburgh the most trou
blcsomc team fm Los Angeles
all season moved m as the
Dodgers hkely opponent after
Bob Robertson s two run

Our defense made toO
many mistakes--Sparky

Meigs Co. Branch

National League West on the
next to last day of the season
Sure we ve won 98 games

-@

Good week for chalk players:
Hoople's Big Five are favored

~

Creek the 1973 SVAC
defendmg champ w1ll attempt
to move another step toward
the" 1974 SVAC champ1_onshop
FNtlay mght m an omportan t
cl!ish agamst the always
rus;ged Eastern Eag les at_
,Ells tern
Coach J1m Sprague s Bobca{s own v1ctones over North
Gallla 35-8 Hannan Trace 400 ~hd Southwestern 21Hl
Coach Sp1ke Berkh1mer s
Eagles defea ted Symm~s
Valley 13.0 Southern 7 0
Zane Trace 26.0 but lost last
we\lk
18 6 at Federal
Hodting
Offensively the Bobcats
have scored 101 pomts an
average of 33 5 pomts per
outing whole the team s 44
defense has permotted JUSt 14
pomls for a 4 5 average
Eastern s offense has scored
52 pomts m four games a 13
pomt average but ofs rugged
delense has permitted Just 18
pomts, a 4 5 average
The Bobrat rur.· ,ng game IS
led by 1unwr tailback Chris
Preston who has rushed for 490
yards 10 three games wh1le
scormg s1x touchdowns
Mark Waller semor fullback
who sal out mast of the South
western game had over 100
yards rushmg m hos (~rst game
thi S season agamsl North
Gallla
Tim Locas 1umor Signal•
caUer seems to tJe commg mto
his' own as the Bobcat quar
terback Lucas has connected

•

w1th Juntor ends J1m Ward and
R1ck Sm oth for Important pass
complet10rrs the past two
weeks
Other Bobcat starters are
guards Jeff Icard and Dave
W1se tackles Bob Donne! and
Joe Stidham ce nter Jeff
Blazer and toght end Btll Metz
ner
Eastern s offense has Steve
Holter and Phtl Bowen at the
ends D Hannum and C
Star"her are the tackles
guards are G Walker and D
Mtlls and the center IS J
Sm1th
Runmng backs are Donme
EJchmger, or Randy Blake at
quarterback Mtke Larkms
fullback T Smoth spht back
and Joe Kuhn latlback
Ky~er Creek won last year s
battle enroute to the loop toUe
However Eastern IS always
tough on ots home fteld and the
Eagles own three w1ns over KC
m the past four games
In another bog game Friday
• ,ght Coach John Blake s
North Gallla Porates battle
Coach Boll Jewell's Southern
Tornadoes
North Gallia moves mlo the
game woth a 2-1 slate Southern
owns a 2 2 record North
Galha fol}owmg an openmg
loss to Kyger Creek, defeated
Southwestern and Symmes
Valley
Southern dropped 1ts opener
to Faorland and a 7.0 dectstop
to )'astern The Tornados have

beaten Hannan Trace and
Wahama
Sophomore quarterback
Mark Theoss scored two tOnch
downs last week m leading the
Pirates to thetr 2&amp;-8 wm over
Symmes Valley
Other P1rate backs are Jell
Hollenbaugh speedy latlback
Fred Logan sophomore wong
back another speedster and
b1g Bruce Runyon 250 pound
fullback
Anchormg the Pirate line are
ends Don Spencer and M•ke
Casey, tackles Greg George
and Russell Potts center
Gene Welch and guards,
Benny Hash and Btll Baker
Southern s offense clicked
last week at Mason as Greg
Dunmng 195 pound Junlor
jomed Mttch Nease m formmg
a fast hard runnong attack
Buddy Ervm a semor IS the
new Tornadq_quarterback
Coach Bob Ashley s Southwestern Hoghlanders Will seek
the!f flfst v1ctory of the year at
Symmes Valley
The Vikings are also lookmg
for thelf f~rst wm of the
campaogn Southwestern has
lost to Hannan W Va , North
Gallla and Kyger Creek
Symmes Valleys losses went
to Eastern Green and North
Galli a
The Hoghlanders are expected to start Terry Carter a
semor at quarterback Kevm
Walk er a se nwr IS th e
fullback Ch ros LewiS a

•

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SPECIAL BUYS ON NEW

SNOW
TIRES
nSURE GRIP Ill"

Whites

Kyger Creek at Eastern
•
m top SV AC tilt Friday
~yger

5.75%

and that s enough to fuush f1rst
most years sa1d Anderson
But I m very dosappomted m
those 98 wms We only won 95 m
72 and 99 last year and could
wmd up woth 99 by wmnmg our
last game (lomght) But this
was our worst of the past three
years
You can t make as many
mistakes as we did and expect r
to win Most of the games we
Tampa 40 Akron 6
did wm thts season, we won on
Amona 40, UTEP 12
sheer abll1ty But to really won
Penn St 34, Arl!lY 17
you ve got to play steady
Penn 37 Brown 14
baseball day 1n and day out '
Georgia 26 Clemson 10
The Atlanta Braves applied
Colo
St
25,
Brigham
the coup de grace to Cmcma
Young 21
nato s pennant hopes by
Cornell 32 Bucknell 8
beatmg the Reds 7 1 on a four
Dayton 28 So 111 20
hitter by Buzz Capra (16-81
Purdue 23, Duke ?
who was celebratmg hos 27th
Forlda St 21, Baylor 14
birthday
LSU 31, Florida 7
That locked up the d!Vlslon
Ga "l'ech 18 Virginia 15
IItle for the Los Angel es
Harvard 14 Rutgers 7
Dodgers their first s mce
Dartmouth 17, Holy Cross div!Soonal play began m 1969 It
14
also could gtve the Dodgers
Illinois 20, Calif 10
their first Natoonal I eague
Indiana 27 West Va 13
pennant smce Sandy Koufax
Iowa St 39 Ne~Mex 14
retired m 1966
Tex A&amp;M 28, K nsa~ 20
We ve got a good team,
Kent Sl 34 W ich 15
probably better than any other
Kentucky 35, Miami (0) 28
at five pos11lons, sa1d Ander
Notre Dame 32 Mlch St
son But we re gomg to he a
14
better team m 1975 We may
• Double multi anRie
Miss St 24, Kao St 20
not w)n 98 agam, not many
ANY SIZE LISTED
cleat:~
give positive
Alabama 30 Miss 20
g11p
and
110
traction
teams do but we re gmng to
BELOW
and atBhl\lty
play better, moke fewer mls
contest in Laramie and Navy 25, Boston Col 21
• Four bias plies of
takes '
W1sconsm one of the year s Nebraska 32 Minn 25
triple tempered
N
C
State
29
E
Carolina
Nylon
cord
Word
Is
out
that
the
Reds
biggest surpr~ses entertamlng
6
• Deep cen tl'lr shoulder
would
like
to
ptck
up
a
thtrd
Mtssouro at Madoson I con
grooves
built deep
baseman and a potcher m
fldently predict victories for Pitt 31, North Carolina 10
to b1te deep
the louc h Texas duo Texas aod Northwestern 26 1 Oregon wmter trades
16
I don t worry about that,
Texas A&amp;M by 35-17 an&lt;;l28-20
Ohio
U
17,
No
1ll
14
said
Anderson
Our man
counts respectively In the
Okla
42,
Wake
Forest
0
(front office chtef Bob How
other pair Amona Stste w1ll
30,
Columbia
6
Princeton
sam)
does a good job m that
prevail over the Cowboys, 39
Richmond
27,
Furman
17
department
I m
sure
29 and the Wtsconsm Badgers
San
Jose
St
33,
Long
whatever
he
does
it
will
be
Will outfight the MISSOUri
Beach St 8
right '
Ttgers to wm 21 18'
Houston
28,
So
Carolina
22
The Reds came mto Atlanta
The btg scrap m the East pits
So
Cal
21
Iowa
14
for
a !mal-two ga111e series and
revtved Navy agamst a good
SMU
36,
Oregon
St
10
tra1ling
the Dodgers by two
Boston College club We
Mlch 38, Stanford 11
'!be Braves wasted little tome
foresee a spme tmgling 25 21
Thos proce oncludes
Maryland
34,
Syracuse
17
soundmg
the death knell for the
tr1umph for the Moddies over
Fed
Ex
Tax ,
TelliL 24, Tulsa 21
Reds tttle hopes scoring three
the Eagles
Balancong
and
runs m the f~rst imung by
Now go on w1th my forecast Arkansas 38, TCU 14
Mountong
Tex Tecb 24, Okla St 14
getting two smgles a double
Air Force 24 Colo 20
and a tnple before the second
Texas 35 Wash 17
out was made
Toledo 21 Bowling Green
Capra, cast off by the New
20
York Mets th1s sprmg had a
UCLA 25, Utah 21
no·lutter gomg unl!l pmch
VMI 25 Va Tech 13
hitter Ed Ambr!Sler singled to
Ohio St 47, Wash Sl 8
lead off the soxth
So Miss 27 W Tex St
When Darrell Evans made
18
that good play m the fourth
Louisville 1&amp;, Wichita St
(starting a double play that
14
ended
the mnmg) I thought
Wm &amp; Mary 28 Citadel 15
about a no4utter said Capra
Wisconsin 21, Missouri 18
Pomeroy
E Maon
But I just as qwckly told
Arizona St 39, Wyoming
myself to forget about ot
29
sophomore IS the tailback and
Ttm Atha 1s the other runmng Yale 28, Colgate 14
****************************** ~·~? ****************
back
Logan 8 A!hens 7
Lmemen are Keith Grate lrontoo 14 Jackson 6
David Ingles Mark Jeffers Meigs 8 Gallipolis 6
Doug Mtller Doug Lester Wellston 38 Waverly 6
Carroll Ruff and James Ntda Eastern 6 Kyger Creek 0
Coach Dave Owens Hannan North Gallla 8 Southern 7
Trace Wildcats almost pulled Southwestern 12 Symmes
off their ftrst vic[9ry of the Valley 7
season last week before bowmg Hannan Trace 6 Hannan 0
to Green 12-10 m a hard.fought Alexander 20 Wahama 8
contest
George Washington 28 Pt
The Wtldcats are led by Plea~
junoor fullback Jeff Wells and Ftlflaltt14 Coal Grove 6
semor quarterback Wa)ne Rock Hill 56 Green 0
Hesson Hesson s favorite Oak Hill 22 South Point 14
targets are ends Charlle Warren Local 56 Vinton County
Cremeans and Larry Stbley 6
The HT starting lineup will Chesapeake 14 Piketoo 12
be Hesson at quarterback Wheelersburg to New Boston 0
Dave Jones, fullback , Kevm
•
Swam and James Waugh,
run nmg backs Cremeans and
Stbley wlll be the ends Rick
Waugh and Joe Slone at
tackles, Rick Jones and Terry
~
Waugh guards and Chns
Wangh w1ll he the center

ATLANTA (UP!) The Manager Sparky Anderson
whole year tl- was our defense Tuesday mght after hts Reds
&lt;hal did us m sa od Cir.cmnato were ehmmated 1n the

By MaJor Amos B Hoople
The Wozard of Odds
Egad, frtem:ls here we are tn
the flfsl week of October and
undefea ted
and
umted
collegiate ptgskm aggregatoons
are almost as s~arce as those
proverbial chicken's teeth heh heh 1 But I - ahem - have
some good nel\ s for you After
the recent reversals of form
th1s IS the weekend the chalk
players gel even as most of the
favored clubs woll eme rge
v1ctortous
Leadmg the parade w11l be
the Hoople Forecast Btg F ove
- Notre Dame, Ohto State
Alabama
Oklahoma and
Mtchtgan Look for the lr1sh to
record 1ts 24th vt,tory in 1ts
40th engagement wtlh the
resurgent Mtchogan State
Spartans by a 32 14 tally Ohw
Stale s Buckeyes should have
little trouble as they romp over
Washm~ton State 47-8
The Alabama
MISSISSippi
contest at Jackson f1gures to be
close wolh the Cr~mson Tide
beg inmng to roll m the second
half for a 30 20 tnumph'
Oklahoma and Mtchtgan
tunmg up for next week s
tradtl!on
laden clashes
wtth Texas and
MichIgan State respectovely
should rack up easy vtctortes
The Sooners woll chastise Wake
Forest 42 0 and the Wolverones
w1ll thrash host Stanford 38 11
- har rumph 1
Some other bigg1es - kaff
kaff match Texas and
Washmgton at Austm Texas
A&amp;M vs Kansas m Lawrence
Wyomm g hos hng Anzona
Stale 10 a Western Athlebc

horqer m the etghth gave the m the Eas t by edgmg Detroit 7
Pirates a come from behmd " 6 while New York lost to
Mi lwaukee 3 2 In 10 ummgs
VICtory over the Cubs
Robertson a part lime Also Mmnesota blanked Texas
player now \\oho once starred m 6-0 Boston defeated Cleveland
7-4 Ch1 cago ~ed Kansas City
a World Senes for the P~rales
2 I ami Cahfor ma shut out
SHtd the home run was one of
Oakland 2.0-~
the b1ggest llu 1lls of hos career
I don t lau~h n)uch hut I
really wanted to laugh then
Our Interest Is
Greater For You
he satd I don t know why I
JU St d1d I was really lhnlled
when I crossed the plate cmd
Sangy 1Manny Sangwllen) had
hts arms up and the guys
JU"'4JJd on me
On 90-Day
Oddly whole the P1ratcs
were"' mnmg v1a the home run
Certificates
the Cardmals were losmg the
same \l.oay ~Ike Jorgensen
5 75 per cent per year
clubbed a two run shot off Bob
pa1d on 9Q day Cer
Gtbson 111 the etghth mmn g to
t1f1cates of Depos1t
spark the Expos wm
Sl 000 00
M 1n1mum
The Ca. rdmals were leadmg
Intere st
Payable
2 1 w1lh two out m the eighth
Quarterly
when Wtlhe Davis smgled and
Jorgensen followed w1th his
11th homer
Jorge nse n ca lled 1t the
b1ggest and most Important
home run I ve ever lul If that
home run knocked the ca odi
nals out of the playoffs ot s not
because I m trymg to make
The Athen s County
Savmgs &amp; Loan Co
enemies We JUSl have our
296 Second St
professwnal pride
Pomeroy Ohto
In other NL ga mes Ph1la
delphia edged New York 2 I
and San Francosco whipped
San Diego 7 2
~!n.t~~
In Amencan League acllon
Baltomore clmched first place

MEIGS

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2-The Daily Senlmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 _,_W_.!'dnesday 0&lt; I 2 1974

•

H9using action committee will move quickly
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov
John J G1lhgan s specoal
conference on housmg bas
named a seven-man action
cornnuttee ' to make recom

mendations w1thm three weeks
on what can he done to prop up
Ohoo s saggmg home construe
tion mdustry
In addition, the comrmttee
was dispatched Tuesmiy to tell
leg1slallve leaders of the

conference s

unan1mous

recommendatiOn that the
General Assembly he recalled
ommedoately to take hn~l
acllon on a Golhga n ad
ministral!on b1ll settmg up a
state agency to help fmance
low and middle mcome
housmg
But the legislatiVe leadership
apparently short-e~rcuoted that
move Whtle the conference
was still m sesston Senate
President Pro Tempore Theodore M Gray R.Columbus

Consumers
shorted by
horsetrade
•

COLUMBUS (UP!) - An
execul!ve of the National
Farmers 0rgaruzation (NFO)
bel\eves Henry Ktssmger
horsetraded an agreement
between the U S and the
Mtddle East, swappmg cheap
food for h1gh-pr1ced oil -at the
~xpense of the Amencan

consumer

•

Amertcans are gomg to
have to compete w1th foreigners for food,' warned NFO
Secretary Art Phtlllps, here to
adojress the group s Ohto
convention
The Arabs and
Israelis couldn't get togetheJ
from the tome of Cllflst until
Henry Kissinger got there It
wasn t diplomacy -tl was
horse-trading that did 11 And
the only thmg this country has.
to offer IS cheap food
Phollips, calling the govern-

ment's controvers1al wheat

deal w1th Russia a 'outr~ght
gift," crttictzed pollctes of
exporting food need~d m

America
' We've got plenty of problems here he saod But we
try to take care ol everybody
else f1rst We have to start
taking care of the U S A
Phtll1ps, a natove of Greenfoeld Ohto sa1d farmers will
try to curb mllalton by
marketing more crops and
beef
'Inflation must he controlled
to prevent chaos, but farmers
cannot do 1t all," he sa1d
Farmers will try to oroduce
more , but 11 woll be difficult
because of the wet sprmg, midsummer dranght and early
freezmgs"
He also noted that the young
people are once again begmnmg to abandon the farms for
higher paymg city jobs
Last year, there was an
mcrease m pr1ces and a lot of
young people stayed on the
farm -thinking they could
compete wtth ctty workers
But a doubling m costs over
the past 18 months and
Mother Nature turned that
trend around thiS year "

announced there would he no
lij:tion on the btll unto! com
pletion of a legislative study on
the UQ(!I!ci gf the new federal •
housing law
Gray satd he had approval of
leaders from both parties m the
House and Senate to authoriZe
a study by the LegiSlative
Serv~ce Corrumssoon researc h
arm of the General Assembly
He named Rep Fredenck N
Young R,Dayton to head the
study
The lawmaket;s are m recess
unlll the end of-the year It has
been v1ewed as extremely
unlikely they would return at
least until after the November
electwn
But Gilligan s impromptu

housmg conference a ttended
by 22 representatives of the
home constructwn fmancmg
labor a nd real estate m
dustr~es S81d House Bfl.l 870
was of urgent pnonty to help
cure the housmg slump
We cannot stand odly by to
aw'lut federal help ' sa1d
Gilligan m his openmg re
marks
James I Huston, Cleveland
ch8lrffi8n of the gover110r s
Housmg and Community Deve
lopment Advisory
Com
mtsston was named chairman
·of the action commollee after
suggestmg the urgenc) of the
housmg leg!Sial!on
He satd the bill which sets up
a state housmg agency to help

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov
John J Gilligan s campatgn
manager Euge'l" P 0 Grady
Tuesday labeled former Gov
James A Rhodes guber
natortal campatgn J promises
w1thout prtce tags '
0 Grady satd Rhodes had
made $813 rrullton worth of
promises, but failed to tell how
he proposed to pay lor them
He sa1d Rhodes has promised
17 separate highway proJects
costing a total of $540 million,
distributed a projected state
surplus of $108 million for $223
mollton worth of projects, and
proposed construction of state
offoce bwldmgs m 10 major
Cities at a cost of »6 million
0 Grady also sa1d Rhodes
has proposed a World Trade

Center m Cleveland at a cost of
$12 mtlluon and $2 mtllion
worth of proJects for Lake
Milton near Youngstown •
A spokesman for Rhodes sa1d
0 Grady had overestomated
the reqmrements for Rhodes
highway promtses by $471
m1llion smce lha l amount
would come from the federal
goverrunent
He S8ld Rhodes promiSes
would requ~re $68 9 million m
highway funds and $130 million
m general revenues and that
thiS could be fmanced through
a $108 rrulllon surplus and $23
million worth of cuts m per
sonal serviCe contracts
A proposed port 1m
provementforCleveland would
be financed through revenue

Report cites cost
of newest prison
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Auditor Joseph 'r FergllS()n
said Tuesday the ma:r1mum
security priSOn near Lucasville
could have been built 10 years
earlier near London Ohto, and
saved taxpayers nearly $8
millwn
FergllSOn, m an audit report
of the Southern Ohlo Correction
Facility (SOCF) completed m
1972 at a cost of $27 8 million,
S8ld the facility could have
been built at London, some 27
mlles west of Columbus, at a
cost of $20 million in 1962\
The audit, covermg the
perood from July 1, 1972,
through March 18, 1974 contamed lindmgs for recovery of
$9,000 However,ltdevoted 10 of
1ts 18 pages to the decision to
locate the prison near
Lucasville It also ctted sloppy
bookkeepmg through the adlTlllllslratton of Gov John J
Gilligan
FergllSOn told newsmen that
former Gov James A Rhodes
fulfilled a 'political promiSe '
to locate the priSOn in Scioto
County
"! don't think it should ever
have been built there,'' Ferguson said "Rhodes told tjle
Republican chalrman of Scioto
County the prison would be
built there, and tt was "
FergllSOn said It was "suppoSition" on hiS part that a
political agreement was made

addmg he had no hard
evtdence
Ferguson s&amp;d he believed
the priSOn should have been
butlt at London or Grafton
The auditor said putting the
facrllty at London would have
located it near bus lines for
transportatiOn of the mmates
relatives
London already has a priSOn
farm and there could have
been personnel for lr&amp;nmg
guards
~
In sp1te of the apparent
advantages of the s1te at
London, the Site locatiOn was
changed
the report said
The audit also sa1dt the
priSOn could have been built on
'level farm land' at London
Buildmg the factlity in the
Appalachian foothills, the re
gort sa1d, resulted m the state
paymg more than five l!mes
the pnce per acre for flood land
and another $656,800 to level
the hmd
The report also sa1d the
guard personnel were hired as
"qualified but not ex
pertenced" and also referred to
the numerous strikes and
escape attempts with two
guards bemg killed m one
escape attempt "
The prison was to have been
finished m 1970, but 98 work
stoppages delayed 1\s completion until Oct 30, 1972

Son's problem was temporary

to

Buoldmg Construcllon Trade
Councll
B G Wolhamson vtce
prestdent of the Internatoonal
Brotherllood of Electrical Wor':i
kers, Cincmnalt questwned
whether a state housmg agency
would duplicate a federal
ageney
'
He was assured 11 would
complement the federal
agency by Davtd C SWeet,
state director of economic and
communoty development, and
a representative of the U S
Department of Housmg and
Urban Development
House B1ll 870 cleared the
Democrallc-eontrolled House
m July 197?, but has been held
m the Repubhcan-dommated

Promises criticized,~ defended

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I hope
you can help me understand
what this medical diagnosis Is,
and I would Uke to send your
statement to my son He was in
the hospital two years ago for
four days wlth "acute
gastroenteritis " Could you
explain what thiS IS and the
cause' Is there any medication
he can take Without havmg to
go to the hospital'
DEAR READER He
should be over that problem
Acute means sudden It also
means short A cold Is an acute
Illness A sudden attack of
a)lpendicitls Is an acute lllness,
no doubt you have heard the
term &amp;~te appendicitis
Gastro•nterlhs means mfianunallon (the "ills" part of
the word) of • the stomach
( gastro) and mtestines (enter)
A common Cll)IBe is oldfashioned 'food polsonmg "
The potato salad at the community ptcntc may be loaded
with bacteria tbat have grown
m number from the tline the
salad IS made to the time It Is
eaten
ImmediatE!
refrigeration from the time of
preparation
tome of eating
helps prevent this problem
Lack of refrlgerallon for

rmancmg on low-and mlddlea
mcome homes should take top
pnorltY With the conrerence,
and that lon g-range solutoons
should be developed over the
next three weeks
Named to the action cornnut
tee with Huston were Dav1d B
Albr~gbt., president of t,he OhiO
Savmgs and Loan League of
Akron Davtd S Cook pres1
de nt of Galbreath Mortgage
Co of Columbus Milan Marsh
prestdent of the Ohto AFL.CIO
Robert D Marshall Bowlmg
Green, prestdent of the Ohio
Home Bwlders Assoctallon AI
Ratner president of Forest
City Enterprises Cleveland
and Joseph Sedivy execullve
secretary of the Ohto State

several hours en route or while
waiting to he served promotes
growth of the bacteria
You can have food poisonmg
also from cream pies and
similar foods 11 not kept
properly refrigerated after
cooking I hesotate to eat cream
pies, puddings and potato
salads in P.Ubhc eating places
because you never know how
old 11 IS qr how 1t bas been kept
You can get a bacterW food
po1sonmg from meat, eggs and
other products- The germ
salmonella IS a major cause
Many housewives expose
themselves
and
famtly
unknowmgly to these bacteria
It IS not practical or possible to
have chicken, eggs and meat
free of sabnon~lla Cooking
destro¥s tbe bactei'Ul The
problem Is !hat !he germs get
on cookmg eq]lipment 'Ole
cook may use a knife to clean a
chicken or to handle raw meat
Then after the food Is cooked
and free of bacteria she uses
the same knife or plate that bas
the ge_nns on It from handling
the raw food This contaminates the cooked food w1th
sabnonella Tbe rule then Is
use clean, unused kitchen
utenstls and dishes for cooked
food Don t rinse off the fork or
knife-aod use it agam Keep the

'

counter and cookmg areas
clean at all tomes
Food IS also contammated by
the can opener The part that
slicks into the can to do the
cuttmg 'may be loaded With
bacteria If you can't regularly
clean your can opener properly
it Is a health hazard So, don I
just clean off the top of the can,
but be sure the can opener Is
clean
I noltCI!d that Dr Sclunidt,
head of the Food and Drug
Admmlstration, said recently
that people are worrymg about
the wrong things m food The
concern ilbout possible dangers
of food additives IS mmimal
compared to the dangers of
bacteria
Gastroenteritis can. also he
Cllused by flu-llke Ulnesses,
alcohol and other ways of
irritating the digestive tract
The acute form, though, lasts
only a few days If you lose a lot
of flu•d and salts you
sometimes need help durmg
the Ulness Once 11 Is over you
should be as good as new So
your son doesn't need to take
anything He should be well
But, 11 Is a good tdea to follow
the points listed here to help
avmd future problems This
applies to everyone not JUSt
vour ~on

bonds the Rhodes spokesman
satd
Promises without pnce
tags IS the Rhodes pattern,
0 Grady sa1d cotmg Rhodes
campa1gn for an Ohw Bond
CommiSSIOn m 1967
Rhodes conducted a Santa
Claus campatgn of the highest
d e g r e e O'Grady saod
Rhodes promiSed proJects for
every one of the 88 counties m
the state A college here a
water development proJect
there, a park here and a
pollubon control system there
'In no way am l claunmg

CLEVELAND (UP!)
General parto~r Nick Mlleti
and V1ce President Ted
Bonda will be deposed from
the Cleveland Indians' front
office in a shakeup that will
also see Frank Robllllion
named the field manager, it
\\as reported today
The Cleveland Press
reported the arrangement
was agreed upon Sunday in a
meeting among Robinson
and his agent, Booda, and
General Manager Phil Seghl

Pontiac bought
Meigs
County
Com
rmss1oners Monday agreed to
purchase a crwser for the
shenft s deparlment because
of an emergency s1tuat10n
A Pontiac was purchased
from Smtih Nelson who had the
lowest quotahon of $4 100 plus
trade m of a 1973 Plymouth
and other routme buSiness was
conducted Attendmg were
Robert Clark Warden O!lrs
and Henry Wells
com
m1ss10ners
and Martha
Chambers, clerk
ON DEAN'S LIST
Robert E Grossnickle son of
Mr
and Mrs
Herman
Grossmckle Reedsville has
'been named to the dean s list of
the
Oh1o
Institute
of
Technology Columbus for the
summer quarter w1th a 3 2
average Robert IS a 1973
graduate of Eastern Htgh
School

HONORS EARNED
Four Meigs Countians have
been named to the dean s list
for the summer ,II seSSion at
the Hocking Technical College
m Nelsonville Morton Barnes
of Pomeroy recetved a four
pomt average for the sesston
Others named to the roll with
at least a three pomt were
Sheila K Cozart, Pomeroy,
and Janet S Morris and Conme
Smoth both of Racine
CARE URGED
George
Hargraves
superintendent of the Meigs
Local School District remmds
motoriSts that school buses on
the roada m the middle of the
day are transporting kin
dergarten students He ask~
that motorists be especially
' careful because of the age of
these children

SPEAKER NAMED
Mrs Catherme Remley,
currator of the Campus
Martius Museum at Mariella
will he gpeaker when the Me1gs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society holds lts annual
meeting at 2 p m Sunday at the
mi!Beum ~eroy Reports
Will be gfVen, the status of the
museum progress wlll he
discussed and directors for the
new year w1ll be named All
mterested persons are invited
E-RRUNMADE
The Pomeroy E-R Squad was
called a\ 9 53 p m Tuesday to
the Duds and Suits for Sharon
Covert who had fallen Sbe was
taKen to Veteran[ Memor~al
Hospital

these projects are not ompor
tan t or unnecessary 0 Grady
sa1d
But if Jom Rhodes IS
gomg to make these kmils of
promises he owes ot to the
people to tell them truthfully
what they cost and how he
plans to pay for them '
0 Grady
said
Gtlhgan
proposed spendmg between
$035 million and $075 million
durmg the next btenmum for
health
and
education
programs to be fmanced
through growth m revenue
collect~tons w1thout new or
mcreased taxes

Judge
Contmued from page 1
It probably wtll he one of
the most omportant thmgs you
will ever have to do m your life
if you are selected to serve on
thts Jury,' Sir1ca told th• 65
prospects who survived
prehmmary screening
Tuesday
He summoned another 175
DIStrict of Columblll res1dents
for ftrst-round questoomng
today and another batch for
Thursday as he strives to weedout those who rrught come to
court w1th their mmds already
made up
The slow, pamstakmg
process of jury selecllon
resulted Tuesday m 90 persons
bemg excused after pleadmg
health, famtly or business
problems would make 1t 1m
possible for tl!em to be
sequestered for the three tofour month tr1al
A Jury was not expected to he
seated for several more days
The defendants - former At
torney General John N Mitchell once h1gh Whtte House
atdes H R Haldeman and
John D Ehrhchman, former
Ntxon campaign official
Robert C Mardtan and
campaogn lawyer Kenneth W
Parkinson -sat glumly as the
JUry search droned on
Haldeman wore a gold tie
clasp be'armg the preSidential
seal and a tiny etched
stgnature of Richard NIXon
Mitchell's face was aShen as he
entered the courtroom Wllh a
lawyer at each elbow and
slumped 1nto a cha1r Ehrlichman, on his way into the
courthouse, had been jeered by
a !ll:Oup of youtha calling
themselves Yippies and spat on
by one of them
A few of the defendants
swiveled around to look when
Sirica asked prospective jurors
to stand il they harbored "any
mental reservabons whatsoever" that the defendants were
mnocent men unless proven
gullty No one rose
As the questions continued,
one man said he knew defendant Parkmson, another S8ld
his father was acquainted wtth
buggmg
conspirator
E
Howard Hunt Jr and a third
volunteered that hiS mother
once had been arrested and
fined for a sit-In at the Pentagon None was ommediately
excused
The central figure in the
scandal and one of the unindicted coconspirators - NIXon
-remained hospttalized in
California, said to be too ill to
testily at least for a month and
posaib1y three His lawyers,
however, have yet made no
move to quash subpoenas for
his appearance
But two other key witnesses
were seen m the courthouse as
the trial began, apparently
undergomg final Interviews
with the prosecutors before
going on the stand They were
Jeb Stuart Magruder, who has
pleaded guilty in the cover-up
and is now in prison, an4
Alexander P Butterfield, who
revealed existence of the White
House tapmg system
Sir1ca opened the trial in the
cavernous Ceremonial Courtroom,, where he began the
Watergate buggmg ~21
months ago When prelim
jury screenmg IS om, he

Senate Rules Commottee smce
last May
One snag was the InsiStence
of labor umons that the
prevailing wage be paod on all
state housmg projects There
has- smce been a compromise
on that proVISIOn
We re not too happy With
certam prov1s1ons but who can
he happy all the tome' ' said
Marsh Why should we fmd
ourselves m the back seat (m
housmg construction)' If 1t
takes an mstrument llke this
( housmg agency) let s not
worry about the details '
Ratner saod netghboron~;
states of Mtchlgan, Pennsy1
vama and West V1rguua have
housmg agenc1es and have not
expenenced problems as sen
ous as Oh10 s
Donald L Huber prestdent
of Huber Homes m Dayton,
satd homebmlders are angry
because they see they r e
herng treated poorly
The housmg mdustry 1sn t
bemg slowed up, Huber satd
It s bemg woped out Some
thong s got to be done roght
now, or you 11 see such a
problem you won t he able to
comprehend 11

EPA schedules
Ironton hearing
COLUMBUS -

The Ohoo
Protecl!on
Agency (Ohio EPA ) announced
today 11 has scheduled a pubhc
meetmg on the aor poUutwn
apphca twn
for
North
Amer1can Refractories Co
13th and Ashtabula Streets
Ironton at 1 p m Thursday
October 31 1974 m Ironton Ctty
Hall Counctl Chambers 4th
and Ratlroad Streets Ironton
The purpose ox the meetmg IS
to cons1der evidence written
or oral from any person on
compliance schedules of the
company
Individuals unable to attend
the meel!ng may submtt
wntten tesl!mony to the
Hearmg Clerk Ohoo EPA 361
E Broa~ St
Box 1049
Columbus, OhiO 43216 unto! the
d 1te of the meetmg
Env~ronmental

Historic act at 10 Thursday

•

Sport Parade

'

Contmued from page 1
therapiSt and Greg McCall was appomted extended serVIce
for Title l Admmostra tion
L W McComas and Donald Wolfe were appomted clerks
for federal funds whole the supermtendenl was appomted as
the board s authoriZed agent to rece1ve and expend federal
funds
The payment of $245 each to Lela De"'Laval and Donna
Carr from DPPF Funds for work thi!)' performed m ordermg
and checkmg DPPF materials was approved
Attendance at the followmg meetmgs was also approved
Ray Goodman at a meeting for vocahonal director mterns m Columbus a basketball coachmg clime at Columbus
for Roger Brau"' John Arnott Ron Logan and Clifford
Queen and three meetmgs to he attended by Supt Hargraves
m Cincmnah Washmgton Court House and Athens
In queshonmg the basketball coaches clinoc, 11 was
moved by Pierce and seconded by Snowden that from now on
any teacher wtshmg to attend a meetmg other than those
meetmgs requored by law must forst present to the board a
Written letter stating what the meetmg IS about, the coach s
expectations etc The mollon passed unanomously
Reports were g1ven on a variety of subject matter, m
eluding -Bernard Fultz's letter to the EPA supporting a
request to retam the coal furna ces at HarrlSOnvtlle and
Salem Center The ERA replied to Fultz, slating that the
matter will rece1ve further consideratiOn m the sprmg
It was also reported that the work hemg done on the high
school athletic complex has hit a snag wtth the difficulty
stemmmg from the mabtllty to obtam a dram tile
The purchase of a dual wheel dolly and jack for the bus
garage was approved and Charles Ray Kyle released by the
Columbus C1ty School System was accepted as a student
Estomated tuition rates were also approved $18 50 per
month for an Ohw student and $77 54 per month for out of
state students
In !mal actwn Wendy Fneder and Rota Hamm were
appomted Adult Baste Educabon employes and Donna
Damels and Warren Black were appornted as subsbtute bus
drtvers
Attendmg were Supt Hargraves, Clerk L W McComas
board members Joe Sayre V~rgll King, Wendell Hoover,
Robert Snowden and Carol Pterce, and John.Mangten Carl
Demson and John Redovoan of the Teacher Corps Program

Mrs. Musser of
Rutland is dead
RUTLAND - Mrs Susan
Musser, 69, Rt 1, Rutland, died
Wednesday
mormng
at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
The daughter of the late
William and Susan Lemaster
Ramey she was also preceded
m death by two sons
Surv1vmg are her husband
Wesley D a son, Leon 0
Lemaster
Pomeroy,
a
brother
Isaac
Ramey ,
Georgta, two ststers, Mrs
Halley Rowland, Columbus
and Mrs Esther Whealer
Blain, Ky, and three grandchildreq The body was taken
to the EWing Funeral Home
where arrangements are being
completed
shift to h1s own smaller
courtroom four floors below for
indlvtdual quesltomng of each
prospective juror
Sirica warned the jury panel
members straightaway that
they would he sealed away
from the world for the duration
of the trial to guard against
possible influence, livmg m a
nearby motel and ealir)g their
meals together Expeditions to
the movies and even to church
w1ll he under the watchful eyes
of U s marshals
The standard federal Jury fee
IS $20 per day, though many
employers -including the gov·
ernment -pay the difference
between that and an employes
regular salary

nwnber all houses Th1s actwn
w1ll help vanous ullhty
compames to gtve better
service and w1ll assist fire and
emergency calls
Council agreed to draft an
ordmance for the house and lot
nwnbermg and to name all
streets and alleys
A letter was read from Ross
Roush, Mason Fife Chtef m
v1tmg Mayor Taylor and other
ctly offtctals to open house at
the f1re stallon Oct 12 from
1230to6pm

'
•
'
'

•
'

•

"

"

Counc1l moved to appr&lt;nle
one trailer permit m Zuspatr.
Tratler Court and to set aSide '
$100 for a petty cash lund faro~
use by the mayor and recordel\
Pohce
Chtel
Rtchalid
Ohlinger submotted a polllll!
report for September noting
that the crmser traveled 1 ,71~
mtles 85 complamts answered 28 arrests made, mne
warnmgs Issued and one ac
c tdent mvesttgated
Tlr!!
meetmg was recessed
~

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, Ocl1)
James Ball Nadine Barton,
Shelba
Corcle
Vanessa
Compston Ida Conley Fred
Dauber Mrs Milton DeGraw
and danghter James Dotson
Roberta Evans Gregory Fulk
Chr~stopher Gilmore Rosa
Gr~fhth
Ruth Hamtlton
James ltlll Howard Johnson
Lisa Kay Eleanor Keels
Beverly LewiS
Charlotte
Little, Richard Maione, Harley
Myers Davtd Newell Mary
Oiler, Charles Paxson Ada
Payne Garnette Proffitt Lo1s
Purkey Tara Riddle Heber
Riffle Mrs Carl Scaggs and
son Margaret Souders, Mrs
George Tilley and son Morgan
Turner, Mrs John Vtlotoe and
son Mrs James Walton and
son Marjone Ward Harry
Woomer
I Births)
Mr
and Mrs
Dennis
Brunton a daughter Oak Htll
Mr !lDd Mrs Douglas Crab
tree, a son Oak Hill Mr and
Mrs Robert F Stutler !w11,1,
son and daughter Leon W Va

Veterans Memorial HospitaiH
Admtssoons - John Blosser,
Middleport Janet Sogmao 1
Mtddleport, Thebna Grueser,
Pomeroy Florence Deeter
Racme
Loretta
Racme Karla Richards, N.,;.,.:;
Haven Tina Moore
Harry
Stahl
Maqor~e
Stewart
West
Columboa Michael Deem
Racme
~
Discharges Carma~
Jewett Sybil Greene Donal&amp;::
Hendricks
~

CONFINED AT HOME
C E Blakeslee IS confmed to
h1s Lincoln Hetghts home for
treatment of a back ailment
Former Metgs County Ex
tension Agent Blakeslee has
been confined for the past sox
weeks and following an
ex:ammabon at Umve~stty
Hospttal, will remain on bed
rest for another lour weeks

®.:X::m: ....~ ;: ' .. • • 1!81 Cl !' ll!lt
EXTENDED OUTLOOK "
Friday through Sunday;
fair through Sunday with '
highs in the 60o oa Friday'
warming !~the lower 70s by"
Sunday ana lows in the apper '
1
30s and the lower 40s

TO HAVE SURGERY
Gordon Collins, a member of
the Metgs County Board of
Educahon will enter Mt
Carmel
Hospotal
West
Columbus, today, wher1! he will
undergo major surgery within
the next few days
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature m Pomeroy
at 11 a m Wednesd~y was 45
degrees under sunny skies

Spurt~

I dnm

•

Trick or Treat night set
MASON - Trtck or Treat
Noghtwasset for Oct 31 from 6
to 7 p m and Halloween rules
spelled out by the Mason Town
Counctl Tuesday mght
Mayor Fred Taylor requests
parents to ass1st m curbmg
vandalism
dunng
the
Halloween
penod
and
caulloned that parents w1ll be
held responsible for acts of
vanqallSm commtlted by their
children
The town s siren Will blow
curfew each evemng at 9 p m
startmg tomght for the
remamder
of
October
Younsters are to he off the
streets between 9 p m and 5 30
a rn , wtless accornpamed by
an adult
Bernard Deloose of C and P
Telephone Co , of West
V1rgmta, dtscussed house
numbering w1th the councol
The !1rm 1s w1lling to purchase
the numbers and dostr1bute
them to home owners 1f the
town will pass an ordmance to

gers cop

0

UPl

Pleasant Valley Hospltsl ,
DISCHARGED - Cantpbli\L
Stevens Apple Grove,
Robert Shamblin, Henderson•
James Brumlteld Pomeroy,
Mrs Frank Blankensh1pJ
Mrs Amos Toll!£,
Leon
Rutland Thurman Smlt~.
&lt;ialllpolls Mrs Denzil
berhng Le\lP Mrs
Mayes Pomt
Stephen McGraw,
Ferry John Kalleel Poinl
Pleasant Ebner
Pomt Pleasant Mrs L~H
Stearns Pomt Pleasa nt,
Delmer Patterson, Apple
Grove Vema! Vance Btdweil '

No'r TALKING
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Nb1
talks were scheduled today between represehtatives of Food
Employes Local 590
Kroger Co as a strike by •. ~... --employes entered tis third •··'' "·' "
SQUAD CAIJ.ED
'"
The Middleport E-R Squad
was called at 2 51.p.m to
offtce of Dr Davis for William&lt;
Ralph Swan, who was taken
Holzer Medical Center

w

I

•

-

By Mil I liN Htt liM \N

Grid programs

'

The Dally Sent me l Moddleoort Pome•ov 0 Wednes(lav 0&lt;1 ? ln74

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Ford will make (
historic appearance before a House subcommittee
vcs
ling his pardon of former President Nixon al10
Tuesda he subcommittee announced today
The h pngs will be held in the same J:!~::,~~
Commtttee room in the Rayburn House Office :
where the Impeachment proceedings were carried out
agaorut Nixon Those proceedings led to Nixon's resignation
and Ford hecommg President
Rep Wilham L Hungate, D Mo , chairman of the
Cnminal Justice subcommittee, has said that H \he
television networks want to, they may televise the bearing
live He smd a maJOrity of his orne member subcommittee
would allow the television coverage

I

\

3

~

NEW YORK I UP I) Hank Aaron has g1ven 11 a lot of thought
an awful lot and he has made up his mmd
He feels he can play some more he wants to and he s gomg to
W1th the pressure of Babe Ruth s record no longer on his nund
and the fact he s fuushmg th1s season feeling so strong Hank
Aaron IS nat out convmced he ca n have a better year next season
than th1s one wh1ch wasn l really all that bad
He beheves he can go out there and gtve a good account of
himself and he mtends to
Not with the Atlanta Braves though
They re gmng slnclly \Hlh youth and at 40 he no longer ftl.s
mto that categor} He knows that and 11 "" t upsettmg lum as
much as you d think
The Braves bj this t1me are aware Hank Aaron wants to keep
playmg They do not want to stand m hls way and they have
made that fact known to hom
So what now '
So th1s now 1f thmgs can be worked out and there &amp; no bog
reason why they can l be Hank Aaron qwte likely will be traded
sometune after the World Senes
To whom '
To some club hke maybe the New York Mets the Ne" York
Yankees the San D1ego Padres or the Milwaukee Brewers
The Mets and Padres certamly could afford h1m and the
Yankees certamly could use hom but the Brewers really would
he the log1cal club to make a p1tch for h1m
They can t nghl now because technically he s sllll under
contract to the Braves and 11 would be considered tampermg but
once the season ends and the mterleague trading per1od goes onto
effect ftve days after the World Senes there wouldn t be
anythmg standmg m the Brewers way except the Braves
Milwaukee loves Hank Aaron
He played there 13) ears breakmg mto the btg leagues m that
ctty bac~ m 1954 and brmgmg the coty 1ts forst maJor league
pennant three years later w•th a dramatic home run agamst the
St LouiS Cardmals
Every tune Hank Aaron has returned to Milwaukee smce the
club moved to Atlanta he has been g1ven a royal welcome
Generally the ballpark has been sold out w1th everybody wanting
to see Hank Aaron
The Brewers even dug up the ongmal home plate .at County
Stadium and presented 11 to Aaron, who accepted ot warmly and
then turned 1t back to them so they could exh1btt 11 m the
ballpark
Hank Aaron feels pretty much the same way about the people
m Mtlwaukee that they do about him
What s more where there doesn t seem to be a place m the
Braves lineup for hom there IS one ready made w1th the
Brewers They need a designated hitter ThiS year Molwaukee
has used fellows like Bobby Mitchell, Mike Hegan and Deroo
Johnson as 1ts des1gnated httter Rtght now rooktes Gorman
Thomas and SlXto Lezcano are handlmg the JOb
,why not Hank Aaron next year' If 39-year-old Frank Robtnson
can do 1t for the Cleveland Ind~ans and manage them also next
sellson, why cant Aaron perform the same serv1ce for the
B""wers wtthout the extra burden of managmg'
Hank Asron IS m better physiCal shape now than Frank
Rolnnson He s h1ttmg 267 for the I) raves and has 68 RBls and 19
horoe r!lDs
Jhe Braves don t figure to hold up any club seekmg Asron
What about the front offtce JOb the Braves promiSed Aaron'
They talked to hom about 11 but he wasn I parllcularly enchanted w1th what they had m m1nd
When I gomto the front offtce he sa1d I want to contribute
sowething I don t want to JUS! walk around and shake hands I do
that enough durmg the wmter l don t want to have to keep domg
It all summer '
Primarily though Hank Aaron wants to keep on playmg yet
because he feels he sllll can do a !me job, and contnbute to a ball
club s success
He's gomg to play baseball agam next year and he ll probably
do all nght
Hank Aaron always has

By f KJ::U MtMANE
UJ»I SporL"i Wnter
The 1 os Angeles Dod~ers
tasted champagne Tuesday
mght and the Pittsburgh
Pirates are only one victory
away from poppmg the cork
The Dodgers clmched the
Nahonal I eague West IItle thelf fir st of any kind smce 1966
- Yi hen they defeate d the
Houston Aslros 8-5 whtle tHe
second-place Cmcumall Reds
were losmg to the Atlanta
Braves 7 1

•

est,

Buzz Capra When the Houston
I he P1ra1.-s mea nwh1l e
moved w1thm one game or scoreboard fla shed Dodgers
cllnchmg the Nl East totle by N I
C h a mp s
tnmmmg the Chtcago Cubs 6- Con gratu lattons
- Astra
5 "lnle the St Lows Cardmals offtc!als 1gnormg the fact Los
were losmg to the Montreal Angeles must '"" the playoff
8xpos 3-2 The Pirates host the ser~es to take the pennant - the
Cubs agam tomghl and the ~POfJ~er dugout erupted 1n
Cardinals play at Montreal
backslappmg celebraloon
The Dodgers playmg at
it feels great I m proud of
Houston knew they had each and every one of m}
become diVISion champwns ballplayers
sa1d Dodger
before the1r game was over as Manager Walter Alston sa1d
the Braves pummeled the Reds
We ve been tmprovmg all
behmd the fourlllf mt('htnp' or vpar lon~ anfi T ~"11 t c:,..-. ~"v

1rates near
reason £or thal to change n~w
Stcv~ &lt;~arvcy collected two
httsa nd became the ftrst maJor
leaguer to collect 200 hots and
100 RBis m one season m
sparkmg the Dodger victory
Don Sutton went five mmngs to
ea rn h1s 19th wm agamst mne
losses
Pittsburgh the most trou
blcsomc team fm Los Angeles
all season moved m as the
Dodgers hkely opponent after
Bob Robertson s two run

Our defense made toO
many mistakes--Sparky

Meigs Co. Branch

National League West on the
next to last day of the season
Sure we ve won 98 games

-@

Good week for chalk players:
Hoople's Big Five are favored

~

Creek the 1973 SVAC
defendmg champ w1ll attempt
to move another step toward
the" 1974 SVAC champ1_onshop
FNtlay mght m an omportan t
cl!ish agamst the always
rus;ged Eastern Eag les at_
,Ells tern
Coach J1m Sprague s Bobca{s own v1ctones over North
Gallla 35-8 Hannan Trace 400 ~hd Southwestern 21Hl
Coach Sp1ke Berkh1mer s
Eagles defea ted Symm~s
Valley 13.0 Southern 7 0
Zane Trace 26.0 but lost last
we\lk
18 6 at Federal
Hodting
Offensively the Bobcats
have scored 101 pomts an
average of 33 5 pomts per
outing whole the team s 44
defense has permotted JUSt 14
pomls for a 4 5 average
Eastern s offense has scored
52 pomts m four games a 13
pomt average but ofs rugged
delense has permitted Just 18
pomts, a 4 5 average
The Bobrat rur.· ,ng game IS
led by 1unwr tailback Chris
Preston who has rushed for 490
yards 10 three games wh1le
scormg s1x touchdowns
Mark Waller semor fullback
who sal out mast of the South
western game had over 100
yards rushmg m hos (~rst game
thi S season agamsl North
Gallla
Tim Locas 1umor Signal•
caUer seems to tJe commg mto
his' own as the Bobcat quar
terback Lucas has connected

•

w1th Juntor ends J1m Ward and
R1ck Sm oth for Important pass
complet10rrs the past two
weeks
Other Bobcat starters are
guards Jeff Icard and Dave
W1se tackles Bob Donne! and
Joe Stidham ce nter Jeff
Blazer and toght end Btll Metz
ner
Eastern s offense has Steve
Holter and Phtl Bowen at the
ends D Hannum and C
Star"her are the tackles
guards are G Walker and D
Mtlls and the center IS J
Sm1th
Runmng backs are Donme
EJchmger, or Randy Blake at
quarterback Mtke Larkms
fullback T Smoth spht back
and Joe Kuhn latlback
Ky~er Creek won last year s
battle enroute to the loop toUe
However Eastern IS always
tough on ots home fteld and the
Eagles own three w1ns over KC
m the past four games
In another bog game Friday
• ,ght Coach John Blake s
North Gallla Porates battle
Coach Boll Jewell's Southern
Tornadoes
North Gallia moves mlo the
game woth a 2-1 slate Southern
owns a 2 2 record North
Galha fol}owmg an openmg
loss to Kyger Creek, defeated
Southwestern and Symmes
Valley
Southern dropped 1ts opener
to Faorland and a 7.0 dectstop
to )'astern The Tornados have

beaten Hannan Trace and
Wahama
Sophomore quarterback
Mark Theoss scored two tOnch
downs last week m leading the
Pirates to thetr 2&amp;-8 wm over
Symmes Valley
Other P1rate backs are Jell
Hollenbaugh speedy latlback
Fred Logan sophomore wong
back another speedster and
b1g Bruce Runyon 250 pound
fullback
Anchormg the Pirate line are
ends Don Spencer and M•ke
Casey, tackles Greg George
and Russell Potts center
Gene Welch and guards,
Benny Hash and Btll Baker
Southern s offense clicked
last week at Mason as Greg
Dunmng 195 pound Junlor
jomed Mttch Nease m formmg
a fast hard runnong attack
Buddy Ervm a semor IS the
new Tornadq_quarterback
Coach Bob Ashley s Southwestern Hoghlanders Will seek
the!f flfst v1ctory of the year at
Symmes Valley
The Vikings are also lookmg
for thelf f~rst wm of the
campaogn Southwestern has
lost to Hannan W Va , North
Gallla and Kyger Creek
Symmes Valleys losses went
to Eastern Green and North
Galli a
The Hoghlanders are expected to start Terry Carter a
semor at quarterback Kevm
Walk er a se nwr IS th e
fullback Ch ros LewiS a

•

\

SPECIAL BUYS ON NEW

SNOW
TIRES
nSURE GRIP Ill"

Whites

Kyger Creek at Eastern
•
m top SV AC tilt Friday
~yger

5.75%

and that s enough to fuush f1rst
most years sa1d Anderson
But I m very dosappomted m
those 98 wms We only won 95 m
72 and 99 last year and could
wmd up woth 99 by wmnmg our
last game (lomght) But this
was our worst of the past three
years
You can t make as many
mistakes as we did and expect r
to win Most of the games we
Tampa 40 Akron 6
did wm thts season, we won on
Amona 40, UTEP 12
sheer abll1ty But to really won
Penn St 34, Arl!lY 17
you ve got to play steady
Penn 37 Brown 14
baseball day 1n and day out '
Georgia 26 Clemson 10
The Atlanta Braves applied
Colo
St
25,
Brigham
the coup de grace to Cmcma
Young 21
nato s pennant hopes by
Cornell 32 Bucknell 8
beatmg the Reds 7 1 on a four
Dayton 28 So 111 20
hitter by Buzz Capra (16-81
Purdue 23, Duke ?
who was celebratmg hos 27th
Forlda St 21, Baylor 14
birthday
LSU 31, Florida 7
That locked up the d!Vlslon
Ga "l'ech 18 Virginia 15
IItle for the Los Angel es
Harvard 14 Rutgers 7
Dodgers their first s mce
Dartmouth 17, Holy Cross div!Soonal play began m 1969 It
14
also could gtve the Dodgers
Illinois 20, Calif 10
their first Natoonal I eague
Indiana 27 West Va 13
pennant smce Sandy Koufax
Iowa St 39 Ne~Mex 14
retired m 1966
Tex A&amp;M 28, K nsa~ 20
We ve got a good team,
Kent Sl 34 W ich 15
probably better than any other
Kentucky 35, Miami (0) 28
at five pos11lons, sa1d Ander
Notre Dame 32 Mlch St
son But we re gomg to he a
14
better team m 1975 We may
• Double multi anRie
Miss St 24, Kao St 20
not w)n 98 agam, not many
ANY SIZE LISTED
cleat:~
give positive
Alabama 30 Miss 20
g11p
and
110
traction
teams do but we re gmng to
BELOW
and atBhl\lty
play better, moke fewer mls
contest in Laramie and Navy 25, Boston Col 21
• Four bias plies of
takes '
W1sconsm one of the year s Nebraska 32 Minn 25
triple tempered
N
C
State
29
E
Carolina
Nylon
cord
Word
Is
out
that
the
Reds
biggest surpr~ses entertamlng
6
• Deep cen tl'lr shoulder
would
like
to
ptck
up
a
thtrd
Mtssouro at Madoson I con
grooves
built deep
baseman and a potcher m
fldently predict victories for Pitt 31, North Carolina 10
to b1te deep
the louc h Texas duo Texas aod Northwestern 26 1 Oregon wmter trades
16
I don t worry about that,
Texas A&amp;M by 35-17 an&lt;;l28-20
Ohio
U
17,
No
1ll
14
said
Anderson
Our man
counts respectively In the
Okla
42,
Wake
Forest
0
(front office chtef Bob How
other pair Amona Stste w1ll
30,
Columbia
6
Princeton
sam)
does a good job m that
prevail over the Cowboys, 39
Richmond
27,
Furman
17
department
I m
sure
29 and the Wtsconsm Badgers
San
Jose
St
33,
Long
whatever
he
does
it
will
be
Will outfight the MISSOUri
Beach St 8
right '
Ttgers to wm 21 18'
Houston
28,
So
Carolina
22
The Reds came mto Atlanta
The btg scrap m the East pits
So
Cal
21
Iowa
14
for
a !mal-two ga111e series and
revtved Navy agamst a good
SMU
36,
Oregon
St
10
tra1ling
the Dodgers by two
Boston College club We
Mlch 38, Stanford 11
'!be Braves wasted little tome
foresee a spme tmgling 25 21
Thos proce oncludes
Maryland
34,
Syracuse
17
soundmg
the death knell for the
tr1umph for the Moddies over
Fed
Ex
Tax ,
TelliL 24, Tulsa 21
Reds tttle hopes scoring three
the Eagles
Balancong
and
runs m the f~rst imung by
Now go on w1th my forecast Arkansas 38, TCU 14
Mountong
Tex Tecb 24, Okla St 14
getting two smgles a double
Air Force 24 Colo 20
and a tnple before the second
Texas 35 Wash 17
out was made
Toledo 21 Bowling Green
Capra, cast off by the New
20
York Mets th1s sprmg had a
UCLA 25, Utah 21
no·lutter gomg unl!l pmch
VMI 25 Va Tech 13
hitter Ed Ambr!Sler singled to
Ohio St 47, Wash Sl 8
lead off the soxth
So Miss 27 W Tex St
When Darrell Evans made
18
that good play m the fourth
Louisville 1&amp;, Wichita St
(starting a double play that
14
ended
the mnmg) I thought
Wm &amp; Mary 28 Citadel 15
about a no4utter said Capra
Wisconsin 21, Missouri 18
Pomeroy
E Maon
But I just as qwckly told
Arizona St 39, Wyoming
myself to forget about ot
29
sophomore IS the tailback and
Ttm Atha 1s the other runmng Yale 28, Colgate 14
****************************** ~·~? ****************
back
Logan 8 A!hens 7
Lmemen are Keith Grate lrontoo 14 Jackson 6
David Ingles Mark Jeffers Meigs 8 Gallipolis 6
Doug Mtller Doug Lester Wellston 38 Waverly 6
Carroll Ruff and James Ntda Eastern 6 Kyger Creek 0
Coach Dave Owens Hannan North Gallla 8 Southern 7
Trace Wildcats almost pulled Southwestern 12 Symmes
off their ftrst vic[9ry of the Valley 7
season last week before bowmg Hannan Trace 6 Hannan 0
to Green 12-10 m a hard.fought Alexander 20 Wahama 8
contest
George Washington 28 Pt
The Wtldcats are led by Plea~
junoor fullback Jeff Wells and Ftlflaltt14 Coal Grove 6
semor quarterback Wa)ne Rock Hill 56 Green 0
Hesson Hesson s favorite Oak Hill 22 South Point 14
targets are ends Charlle Warren Local 56 Vinton County
Cremeans and Larry Stbley 6
The HT starting lineup will Chesapeake 14 Piketoo 12
be Hesson at quarterback Wheelersburg to New Boston 0
Dave Jones, fullback , Kevm
•
Swam and James Waugh,
run nmg backs Cremeans and
Stbley wlll be the ends Rick
Waugh and Joe Slone at
tackles, Rick Jones and Terry
~
Waugh guards and Chns
Wangh w1ll he the center

ATLANTA (UP!) The Manager Sparky Anderson
whole year tl- was our defense Tuesday mght after hts Reds
&lt;hal did us m sa od Cir.cmnato were ehmmated 1n the

By MaJor Amos B Hoople
The Wozard of Odds
Egad, frtem:ls here we are tn
the flfsl week of October and
undefea ted
and
umted
collegiate ptgskm aggregatoons
are almost as s~arce as those
proverbial chicken's teeth heh heh 1 But I - ahem - have
some good nel\ s for you After
the recent reversals of form
th1s IS the weekend the chalk
players gel even as most of the
favored clubs woll eme rge
v1ctortous
Leadmg the parade w11l be
the Hoople Forecast Btg F ove
- Notre Dame, Ohto State
Alabama
Oklahoma and
Mtchtgan Look for the lr1sh to
record 1ts 24th vt,tory in 1ts
40th engagement wtlh the
resurgent Mtchogan State
Spartans by a 32 14 tally Ohw
Stale s Buckeyes should have
little trouble as they romp over
Washm~ton State 47-8
The Alabama
MISSISSippi
contest at Jackson f1gures to be
close wolh the Cr~mson Tide
beg inmng to roll m the second
half for a 30 20 tnumph'
Oklahoma and Mtchtgan
tunmg up for next week s
tradtl!on
laden clashes
wtth Texas and
MichIgan State respectovely
should rack up easy vtctortes
The Sooners woll chastise Wake
Forest 42 0 and the Wolverones
w1ll thrash host Stanford 38 11
- har rumph 1
Some other bigg1es - kaff
kaff match Texas and
Washmgton at Austm Texas
A&amp;M vs Kansas m Lawrence
Wyomm g hos hng Anzona
Stale 10 a Western Athlebc

horqer m the etghth gave the m the Eas t by edgmg Detroit 7
Pirates a come from behmd " 6 while New York lost to
Mi lwaukee 3 2 In 10 ummgs
VICtory over the Cubs
Robertson a part lime Also Mmnesota blanked Texas
player now \\oho once starred m 6-0 Boston defeated Cleveland
7-4 Ch1 cago ~ed Kansas City
a World Senes for the P~rales
2 I ami Cahfor ma shut out
SHtd the home run was one of
Oakland 2.0-~
the b1ggest llu 1lls of hos career
I don t lau~h n)uch hut I
really wanted to laugh then
Our Interest Is
Greater For You
he satd I don t know why I
JU St d1d I was really lhnlled
when I crossed the plate cmd
Sangy 1Manny Sangwllen) had
hts arms up and the guys
JU"'4JJd on me
On 90-Day
Oddly whole the P1ratcs
were"' mnmg v1a the home run
Certificates
the Cardmals were losmg the
same \l.oay ~Ike Jorgensen
5 75 per cent per year
clubbed a two run shot off Bob
pa1d on 9Q day Cer
Gtbson 111 the etghth mmn g to
t1f1cates of Depos1t
spark the Expos wm
Sl 000 00
M 1n1mum
The Ca. rdmals were leadmg
Intere st
Payable
2 1 w1lh two out m the eighth
Quarterly
when Wtlhe Davis smgled and
Jorgensen followed w1th his
11th homer
Jorge nse n ca lled 1t the
b1ggest and most Important
home run I ve ever lul If that
home run knocked the ca odi
nals out of the playoffs ot s not
because I m trymg to make
The Athen s County
Savmgs &amp; Loan Co
enemies We JUSl have our
296 Second St
professwnal pride
Pomeroy Ohto
In other NL ga mes Ph1la
delphia edged New York 2 I
and San Francosco whipped
San Diego 7 2
~!n.t~~
In Amencan League acllon
Baltomore clmched first place

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The winners and the losersshowed equa l class Tuesday
night when the ordeal ot her-

wise known as the American
League's Easte rn Di.vision
race finally ended.
The Baltimore Orioles are

the winners and the New York
Yankees a re the loser s.
The Orioles, exerti ng unrelenting pressure for the last
month of .the season, set up
their rifth Eastern title in six
years when they beat the
Detroit Tigers, 7-0, Tuesday
aft ernoon . That set up a "lose
and out" situation for the
Yankees in their night game

with the Milwaukee Brewers
and they just couldn 't keep, the
pace, losing to the Brewers, 32, in 10 innings.
The way the ra ce ended was
rather typica l of the teams the regal Orioles rallying in the
late innings for their victory
and the raga muffin Yankees,
poor relatives of th ose famous
Yankees who used to · win the

their !Jolel in Detroit. Ttwn
theY threw a " littl e" cham-·
pagne party in a local g inmi ll
prior to playing out th e season
Mimage r Hill Virdon said it
for a ll the Yankees in . the
g loom of their clubhouse whe n
he pointed out, "we've got
nothing to be ashamed of ... I
can't see how any body will
beat us next year ... no doubt

Dave Goltz p itc hed a twohi tte r for his lOth win and
Danny Thom pson a nd Steve
Brye each drove in two run s fpr

b le d hom e the winning iUn with
one out in the ninth inning of
th eir ga me in Detroit. Grant
Jackson , who worked one inning, r eceived credit for the
victory, while relieve r J ohn

the Twins.
Re d Sox 7, Indians' 4

Bill Freehan hit two homers
for the Tigers, while Rich
Cogg ins and Jim Norlhrup
connected for the Orioles.
George Medich carr ied a 2-0
lea d into the eighth but the
Brewers tied the score on
s u ccess ive triple s by Bob
Ha nsen and Don Money a nd
roo ki e
Sixto
Leczan o's

pennant season after season,
scratching and scrambling and

Angels 2, A's 0
sacrifice fly. They won it in the . Frank Tanana sca ttered six
lOth whe n Jack Lind le d off hits and struck out 10 to raise

eventually losing.
The Orioles, classy as usua.l
followed the progress of the

with a double, John Vukovich
sacrificed a nd Medich walked
tw o batters before George
Scott delivere d th e game-

Yankees' ga me in Milwaukee

•With a hookup telephone to

his record for the Angels to 1519. Ken Holtzman , try ing for
his 20th victory, suffered his
17th loss for the A's.

Indians to name Robinson
new manager on Thursday
NEW YORK (UP!) - Frank
Robinson, the only· man to
\

Robinson will become the

win

the Mo st Valuable Player
Award in both the National and·
American

become

Leagues,

the

firs t

will

blac k

baseball Thursday when he
will be named player-manager
of the Cleveland Indians , it has
been learned.

yo u ca n't do things like go out

League where he managed the
Santur ce club for five winters~

He succeeded present Baltimor e Orioles Manager Earl
Weaver as manager of Santurce and it was Weaver who
.recommended Robinson for the

Sa nturce job.
Unde r Weaver, Robinsun

helped the Orioles into four
World Series. He was voted the
American League 's MVP in
1966 after winning the Triple
Crown, leading the league with
122 RBI, 49 homers and .a .316
batting .average.
·

" There is some good young
talent on this club, " he said.

"It's a type team that ·can
m ove because it 's young. The

older a player gets, the more
set in his ways he becomes.

mana·

Robinson was named the

' " The toughest thing about
ma naging is not that l am
black. I hope they would hire

ger . .The speculation ga ined
when

funny feeling,

dri nking with the m anytnore ."
Rob in son's on ly previo us
m anager ial experience came
in the Puerto Rican Winter

assess the Indians personnel in
a general way.

California Angels two and a
half weeks ago and the immediate speculation was that
he was purchased rioTonly for
his hitting ability but also to

credence last week
Aspromonte was fired .

realizing yo u 'll be the man a nd

for Tuesday night's game.
But when questioned further
by newsm en, Robinson did

on waive~S from the

as

manager since 1952 when Lou
Boudreau handled both jobs
with the Boston Red Sox,

when he served as playermanager.
"So far as I know, it's . not
official," sa id Robinson , who
was with the Indians in Bo3ton

role of designated hitter and
his $173,000 a year salary,
making him the highest paid
manager in baseball history.
The Indians· obtained Robin-

replace &amp;promonte

would be a

Boudr eau who led the Indians
to a world championship in 1948

Robinson, who will succeed
Ken Aspromonte as manager,
also will retain both his current

it

major league's first player -

gett ing into four games as a
pl aye r th a t year. It was

m a na ge r in major league

son, 39,

e lbows with these guys,

m e more for my qualifications

National League's MVP with
Cincinnati in 1961, a year in
which he had 124 RBI , 37
homers and a .323 batting

tha n for that. But after rubbing

average .

The biggest c hange fo~
Po rtland has been the addition
of NFL veteran Pete Beathard
at quarterback . It was Beathard who ignited the winning
.
h l'f ed h ·s
dr1ve
tat I t
t e torm to

the upset of Birmingham.
In other WFL games tonigh t,
F1orida is at Philaoelphia,
Detroit
at
Shreveport,
Jacksonville at Memphis a nd
Birmingham at the Hawaiians.
The new Charlotte fran chise,

Wilt ends pro cage career

transpla nted from New York
last week , i s at Chicago
Thursday night in the national

SAN DIEGO (UP!) .:::_ Wilt
Chamberlain ended his fantastic pro basketball career
Tuesday to the surprise of no

television game.

"At this point, he wants to be
associated with the Q's but to
retire from playing basketball

one.

The giant who dominated
basketball since his high school
days in Philadelphia had called
a news conference to announce

his status with the San Diego
Conquistadors.
He' failed to appear but
owner Dr. Leonard Bloom
spoke for him.

Philadelphia Warriors of the
National Basketball
Association in 1959 after a stint
wi th the Harlem Globetrotters.
During his ca re.e r ~e amassed
31,419 points, an NBA record.
He scored 100 points in one
game.
The Warriors traded Chamberlain to Los Angeles, and he
jumped the Lakers last year to
sign a $600,000 a year contract
with the Q's as player-eoach.
The courts would not allow him

and coaching," Bloom said ..

" His reasons will be disclosed
in a national magazine (Sports
mustrated ) tomorrow.''

Although the Q's have been
practicing for some time,
Chamberlain had not been
coaching them and there was
little doubt as to his plans to
retire .

Chamberlain, 38, joined the

SIMON'S

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Tuesday .
·
It was the Blue Devi ls' lith
league c hamp ions hip in 16
years, and second with in fi ve
months .
~
In· the prev ious 15 leag ue
tournaments, a c ti on was he ld
in the s prin g. The sta te forced

Ohw schools to play golf in the
fall earlier thi s yea r.
most rewa rding golf title as far
as I'm concerned, " remarked
Milhoan. "Nobody gave us a
cha nce this time a r otrn d . But
the .boys came through when

. -

Florida , the top defensive
team in the league, will try to
hold its one-game lead over
New York-Charlotte In the
East when it faces the Bell .
King

Corcoran

p . ~incinnati
Atlant.:~

(P

p .m .
S t.

MILK

x. Ballimor ~
New Yo rk
Boston
Clevela nd
Mi lwaukee
D•et ro it

....

x Oakland

Telo:as
Minnesota
82 79 .509 8
Ch icago
79 80 .497 10
77 84 .478 13
Kan sas City
Ca lif ornia
67 94 .416 23
.~~: - clinched divi sion title

*

provides

*

*

Player
Ke ith Wil son
Mar k Bucha non
Jeff Yerian
Ron Clark
Ran dy Wil son

•

•

•

J

'I

57

58

85
90
98

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TOTALS
187 176
WAVERLY (366)

~~?.... ..

C ARIO C A
to play, however, because of
EL.DOAAOO
his contract with the Lakers.
Rt'ngs from $1 00 to $10.000
As coach he showed up most
of the tilpe but occasionally
·handed the duties to trinner
Bill Antonini and disappeared.
Blooin sa id Chamberlain
would "be associated with. the ' Keepsake eogagement diS·
Q's," buf did not e la borate.
monds have perfect' color. cu t
and c larity. Choose· from our
Frequently the subject of

.

84
94

1st 2nd Tot.
44 43 87
45 42 87
47 45 92

21 b.

LB.

,,

48

TOTALS
176 180
JACKSON 1363)

MAYONNAISE •• Jar

1

42 · 43
44 46

PRODUCE

severe ~ ime zone change

built a '$1 million house in Los
·Angeles, prefer~ volleyball to
basketball and once announced
he would fight Muhammad Ali
for the world heavyweight
boxing ti tle.
His next ve nture could well
be in proni!)ting , track a nd
field , but he was not ·a round to
Ray.. If

42
46
47

48

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Tof'n Russe ll
J im Pi e rce
Ma rk Dennis

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Both have had problems and
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Chambe rlain

42

48
95
53m ..·.t5 . '98
TOTALS
172 168 340
TOTALS
18
1,4 ·W
ATHEN S (343)
MEIGS (374! ' . .. .
Athens led GAHS 167-172 Player
1st 2nd Tot .
Playe r
1st 2JICI Tot.
38 42 80
afte r the firs t ni ne holes. The Mike Blosser
Bruce Blackston 46 • &gt;~AO · '86
Howie Dean
41
40 '8 1
Chuck Fat trod
48 ;·...s 93
Bulldogs fin ished with 343, Steve He nsley
47 44 9 1 Jeff Warne r
44 '"1 / 52 •96
fi ring a 176 on the fi na l nine . Steve Labertor , 41 50 9 1 .Joh nThomas
52 · ·~ ':47
'99
50
44 94
GARS came back with a 168 on Tim Lavelle
Mike Nessel road 47 ..,,').02 ·99
16 7 176 343 . TOTALS
. 185 , ~ ln
the las t nine to fi nish with a 340. TOTALS
WELLSTON t345 )
.
We llston,
pr e-season Player
1st 2nd Tot .
TOP 10 SHOOTERS
_, ,
39
40
79
fa vorite , fi nished ' third with Tom Appledorn
Player- School
·· :·.. Store
44
41
85
Tom Appledor n, Wellston
i/9: ·
345. Ironton was fow-th with Tony Sites
Barry Hen r y
45 42 87
Bre
nt
Johnson,
GallipoliS
80 ·
350, Logan fifth with '356, Jim Derrow
46
48 94
Mike Blosser, Athens '\1
80
Jackson sixth at 363, Waverly Cha r les Millikan 54 46 100 Howie Dean , Athens · · "'~
81
174 171 345
seventh at 366 and Meigs last TOTALS
Ken Auble, Ironton
;'
81
IRONTON (350)
Tom Young, Gallipolis \'':
82
with 374.
Player
1st 2nd Tot.
Mike Mc Broom, Logan -.,
83 ·
40
41
r1
After playing at Chillicothe Ken Auble
Danny Cox, GallipoliS . - i
84
44
11
today, the Gallians will_ take Ed J ewe ll
. Tony Sites, Well s ton
'
85
Chris Black
43 4t!
Ed Jewell, Ironton
J.. .
85
part in the Class AA Sectiona l Dave Osborne
47 46
J oh n Russel l, Logan
3&gt;~
85
• Tournament , slated Friday at Chr is Rudm an
43 5~ 16
170 180 350
Meigs. Nine team s are entered TOTALS
LOGAN !356)
in t hat event. The top three Player
lsf 2nd Tot.
teams will advance to the Mike McB room
42 41 83
Thorn MeAn;

16

5 LB. SUGAR Wlllf
ANY 15.00
$}99
PURCHASE

'UJ9

Danny Cox
Tom Wi seman
Rusty Sa und ers

w . I . pet . g .b .

90 71 . 559
88 73 .547
2
84 77 .522
6
76 85 .472 14
76 85 472 1.1
72 89 447 18
West
w. I. p et . g.b.
90 1'1 .559
83 76 .5.22 6

since moving ·from Houston.

controversy,

'

44~"! · ..43 · · 87
45·'$.~.,·51
.96
49:,l ~ 7 · 96

Marty Drenne n
Dave Hartley
Stan Crace
Ric k Conkle

American Lea gue
' Ea st

when it travelS to Honolulu to
take on the Hawaiians, like
Portland, a much-improved
team .

.GAL '__.$}21

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Louis (McGlo then 16 -12)
Montrea t (Ren ko 12-161, 8:05
P.m.
Los Angeles (Messers mith
a t Houston /Ro ber fs .10 -12J.
om

Philadelphia with one of the top
passing attacks in the league.
Detroit declared itself bankrupt last week and Shreveport
was blasted in its first game

a

•

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"' VENTURA

PROUGHTON'S

in indiVidual honors with a
n in e-over-p ar 80. Well s ton's
Tom Appledorn won m edalist
honors with a 79.

Pa'rk, Ohio was killed in a one( T. Carroll 4 21 at car crash Tuesday on U.S. 258
Nie kr o 19·131, 7:.35 south of here .

the league last week. The
Shark players were not paid for
a month a nd face a .Memphis
team . which now is tied with
Birmingham for the . best .
record in the WFL, ll-2.
Birmingham, now faced with
battling Memphis for 'th.e
Centra l title, a lso must handle

. LB.

ROUND
·STEAK

GROUND .
CHUCK

75 Southeas tern Ohio League
golf c hampionsh ip at lronton

The s ame is true of Jacksonville, whi ch was taken over by

MON.-THURS. 9 to 7, FR1.9 to 8 p.m_, SAT. 9 to 8:30

FAVORITE
BREAD

h
h
oac
Jo n
.Milhoan 's
30 Gallipolis Blue Devils, down
19
75 fiv e strukes afte r the first nine
77 · holes o f ac tion, rallied on the
1'1 secondninetOcapturethe 1974·

sea son. Portland was conSidered a so rt spot on the th ey ha d to, and I'm real proud
sched ule. That spot sudden ly of the enti re sq ua d."
district .
Mil hoan pointed out Danny
has turned h::1rd.
He r e 's Tuesday 's · SE Ot\L
Storm Coach Dick Coury, Cox was oqe of the Devils' results:
who openly a dmitted earl y in her os , firing a 42-42-84 on the
1974-75 SEOAL
GOLF TOURNAMENT
the year lhaL he had a bad par 71 course. Brent Johnson,
GALLIPOLIS 1340)
leam, scoured the National who ' captured league rr.edalist
~layer
l st 2nd Tot.
Footba ll League waiver lists honors as a freshman las t
Brent .Johnson
41
39
80
Tom Young
41
41 82
and came up with som e fresh April, finished second thi s fa!.
talen t. The res ult was an
almost c omplete turnabout,
especia ll y on defense, a nd this
was best exemplifie d last week
w h en Portland upse t Bir ming h am. The Am e ri ca ns
e ntere d the game wi th an Il -l
Major Leag ue St a ndin gs
Tu es da y's Results
reco rd .
By United Press International
Min neso ta 6 Tex a s 0
National League
Bal ti mor e 7 Detroit 6
P ortland plaYs hosV to anoth~
Ea st
•
Boston 7 Cleveland 4
er
of
Jhe
league's
w. I. pet .
87 74 540 g. b . Mi lwaukee 3 N Y. 2, to inn s.
P tttsb urgh
Chi ea go 2 Kan sas City 1
powerho u ses, Sou t h ern st Louis
86 75 53 4 1
Cali forn ia 2 Qak la nd 0
California, tonight and Sun Philadelphia 79 8 2 .:19 1 a
Toda y' s Probab le Pitchers
Montrea l
7Y 82 .:191 8
(All Tim es E DT)
,
Coach Tom Fears, whose team New York
71 90 441 16
Bal tim ore ·(Cue ll ar 22 -IO J at
66 95 .:110 21
is 9-4 with a comfor table 4' 2 • Chicago
Detroit (Frym an 6 -9 or LaGrow
West
game lead in the West , is ap~
w. 1. pet . g.b . 8 1Bl, 1:30 p.m
Texas
(Bibby
19 -191 a t
x Los Ange les 10 1 60 .627
'
h
pre c ns1ve.
Cincinnati
98 63 .609 J
Minneso ta (D ecke r 16-14 ), 2.15
p
m
" This week 's game wi ll be Atlanta
87 74 540 14
Kansas Ci ty ( B ~•sby 22 ·14) at
esp ecially tough," Fears said . ~~~,~~nc i s co ~~ ~g : ~~? ~~
Chicago (Johnsor, 10·4), 2 : 15
P m.
" Portland is one of the most san Di ego
59 102 .306 42
· Clevelan d (G . Perry 20 ·13 l at
improve d teams in the league. x-c linched div isio n Iitl e
Bos ton ( P ole 1.0) , 3:30p .m.
Tuesday's Re su lts
r-.ew Yo r k ( Dobso n . 18-15) a t
They were tough when we Ph il ade lphia 2 New York 1
Mil vau kee (C olborn 10. 12), 4 JO
playedthemat homebutCoac h MontreaiJ St. Lou is 2
p. m
P itt sburgh 6 Chi cago 5
Coury has been doing an Atl a nta 1 Cincinna t i 1
Oak la nd. (B lue 17 15) a t
Ca liforn ia ( Dobson 1 ) ), 11.00
outs tandin g job a nd they have Los An ge les 8 Hou s ton 5
P.m
·
San Fr a n ci sc o 7 Sa n Dieg o 1
added some players that have
Todav 's Probable Pitch ers
he lped them. They should be a
(All Times ED "f)
San Dieg o (Spi ll ne r 9-11 ) a t
m uch tougher team tha n they s an Franci sc o (Monte fu sc o 3 ·
wer e a f ew weeks ago ."
21, J· !'5 p.m.
Phila de lphia (Ca rlton 16 - 13)
MAN KILLED
The Sun r a n its winning at New York (M a tla ck 13 -14l.
N.C . (UPI)
KINSTON,
s treak to four games wi th a 57-i , ·8: 05 p.m .
Chica go (Reusc hel JJ .12l a t Gordon S. Mason of Brook
r out of Jacksonville.last week. P it ts bu r g h (Rooke r 15 -111,7:35

the White Sox.

-

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71

the World Footba ll League

•

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BY JOE CARNICELLI

•

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UPI Spurts Writer
Throughout the first half of

,

•

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" This ha s to be the school's

Steve Barr pitched a sevenhitter for his first major league
victory , st riking out three and
walking six . Jim Rice sna pped
a 44 t ie with his firs t major
league hom e r in the fourth
inning.
White Sox 2, Royals 1
Jim Kaat pitched a six-hit ter
to raise his record to 21-13 for

Hiller suffer ed the loss.

retazns

10)

Portland
showing
muscle

Sa n Diego 2.
Twins 6, Rangers U

hitter Andy Etchebarren dou-

&lt;JB

7

B M c N e c~e

Nat ional Leag ue res ults
were L os Angeles 8 Huus ton 5,
Atl anta 7 Cincmnati I, Pittsburg h 6 Chicago 5, Montreal 3
St. Loui s 2, Phila delphia 2 New
York 1, an d San Francisco i

a tie for the title when ginch-

Nf'v L-" S Vt•qas IJ .OJ
St (] 0)
9 Nor1t1 Dtlko lcl (2 ll
10 Ab lnc Chrstn o 11
11 s outh D.1ko lil I J ,..1
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u E 10 n 11 01
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75 7

[) t •I ,)W&lt;1!. (' ( JI( J. Q )
T r nn \ t I l l 0 I I
Tr oy '-, 1 I I ! {JQ J

.I

ot her AI. games.

about it , we didn 't fold."
Th e Orioles clinc hed at least

Te,)m

l( •( il f l f1~~1 0 1

1 Vv n K.ylh l i';'Q l
J I IQ·~ r ~ ~ 1~ 1 !)0 1

winn ing si ngle.
Mirm eso la dcft•a led Texas. 60: Hos ton beat Cle·vrland, 7-4 ;
Chicago loppe d Kansas City, 2~
I, &lt;md Ca liforni a won 2-0 over
Western Cham pion Oakla nd in

tudav.

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Oriolesi cla zm
Eastern crown
By FRED •DOWN •
UPI Sports Writer

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The winners and the losersshowed equa l class Tuesday
night when the ordeal ot her-

wise known as the American
League's Easte rn Di.vision
race finally ended.
The Baltimore Orioles are

the winners and the New York
Yankees a re the loser s.
The Orioles, exerti ng unrelenting pressure for the last
month of .the season, set up
their rifth Eastern title in six
years when they beat the
Detroit Tigers, 7-0, Tuesday
aft ernoon . That set up a "lose
and out" situation for the
Yankees in their night game

with the Milwaukee Brewers
and they just couldn 't keep, the
pace, losing to the Brewers, 32, in 10 innings.
The way the ra ce ended was
rather typica l of the teams the regal Orioles rallying in the
late innings for their victory
and the raga muffin Yankees,
poor relatives of th ose famous
Yankees who used to · win the

their !Jolel in Detroit. Ttwn
theY threw a " littl e" cham-·
pagne party in a local g inmi ll
prior to playing out th e season
Mimage r Hill Virdon said it
for a ll the Yankees in . the
g loom of their clubhouse whe n
he pointed out, "we've got
nothing to be ashamed of ... I
can't see how any body will
beat us next year ... no doubt

Dave Goltz p itc hed a twohi tte r for his lOth win and
Danny Thom pson a nd Steve
Brye each drove in two run s fpr

b le d hom e the winning iUn with
one out in the ninth inning of
th eir ga me in Detroit. Grant
Jackson , who worked one inning, r eceived credit for the
victory, while relieve r J ohn

the Twins.
Re d Sox 7, Indians' 4

Bill Freehan hit two homers
for the Tigers, while Rich
Cogg ins and Jim Norlhrup
connected for the Orioles.
George Medich carr ied a 2-0
lea d into the eighth but the
Brewers tied the score on
s u ccess ive triple s by Bob
Ha nsen and Don Money a nd
roo ki e
Sixto
Leczan o's

pennant season after season,
scratching and scrambling and

Angels 2, A's 0
sacrifice fly. They won it in the . Frank Tanana sca ttered six
lOth whe n Jack Lind le d off hits and struck out 10 to raise

eventually losing.
The Orioles, classy as usua.l
followed the progress of the

with a double, John Vukovich
sacrificed a nd Medich walked
tw o batters before George
Scott delivere d th e game-

Yankees' ga me in Milwaukee

•With a hookup telephone to

his record for the Angels to 1519. Ken Holtzman , try ing for
his 20th victory, suffered his
17th loss for the A's.

Indians to name Robinson
new manager on Thursday
NEW YORK (UP!) - Frank
Robinson, the only· man to
\

Robinson will become the

win

the Mo st Valuable Player
Award in both the National and·
American

become

Leagues,

the

firs t

will

blac k

baseball Thursday when he
will be named player-manager
of the Cleveland Indians , it has
been learned.

yo u ca n't do things like go out

League where he managed the
Santur ce club for five winters~

He succeeded present Baltimor e Orioles Manager Earl
Weaver as manager of Santurce and it was Weaver who
.recommended Robinson for the

Sa nturce job.
Unde r Weaver, Robinsun

helped the Orioles into four
World Series. He was voted the
American League 's MVP in
1966 after winning the Triple
Crown, leading the league with
122 RBI, 49 homers and .a .316
batting .average.
·

" There is some good young
talent on this club, " he said.

"It's a type team that ·can
m ove because it 's young. The

older a player gets, the more
set in his ways he becomes.

mana·

Robinson was named the

' " The toughest thing about
ma naging is not that l am
black. I hope they would hire

ger . .The speculation ga ined
when

funny feeling,

dri nking with the m anytnore ."
Rob in son's on ly previo us
m anager ial experience came
in the Puerto Rican Winter

assess the Indians personnel in
a general way.

California Angels two and a
half weeks ago and the immediate speculation was that
he was purchased rioTonly for
his hitting ability but also to

credence last week
Aspromonte was fired .

realizing yo u 'll be the man a nd

for Tuesday night's game.
But when questioned further
by newsm en, Robinson did

on waive~S from the

as

manager since 1952 when Lou
Boudreau handled both jobs
with the Boston Red Sox,

when he served as playermanager.
"So far as I know, it's . not
official," sa id Robinson , who
was with the Indians in Bo3ton

role of designated hitter and
his $173,000 a year salary,
making him the highest paid
manager in baseball history.
The Indians· obtained Robin-

replace &amp;promonte

would be a

Boudr eau who led the Indians
to a world championship in 1948

Robinson, who will succeed
Ken Aspromonte as manager,
also will retain both his current

it

major league's first player -

gett ing into four games as a
pl aye r th a t year. It was

m a na ge r in major league

son, 39,

e lbows with these guys,

m e more for my qualifications

National League's MVP with
Cincinnati in 1961, a year in
which he had 124 RBI , 37
homers and a .323 batting

tha n for that. But after rubbing

average .

The biggest c hange fo~
Po rtland has been the addition
of NFL veteran Pete Beathard
at quarterback . It was Beathard who ignited the winning
.
h l'f ed h ·s
dr1ve
tat I t
t e torm to

the upset of Birmingham.
In other WFL games tonigh t,
F1orida is at Philaoelphia,
Detroit
at
Shreveport,
Jacksonville at Memphis a nd
Birmingham at the Hawaiians.
The new Charlotte fran chise,

Wilt ends pro cage career

transpla nted from New York
last week , i s at Chicago
Thursday night in the national

SAN DIEGO (UP!) .:::_ Wilt
Chamberlain ended his fantastic pro basketball career
Tuesday to the surprise of no

television game.

"At this point, he wants to be
associated with the Q's but to
retire from playing basketball

one.

The giant who dominated
basketball since his high school
days in Philadelphia had called
a news conference to announce

his status with the San Diego
Conquistadors.
He' failed to appear but
owner Dr. Leonard Bloom
spoke for him.

Philadelphia Warriors of the
National Basketball
Association in 1959 after a stint
wi th the Harlem Globetrotters.
During his ca re.e r ~e amassed
31,419 points, an NBA record.
He scored 100 points in one
game.
The Warriors traded Chamberlain to Los Angeles, and he
jumped the Lakers last year to
sign a $600,000 a year contract
with the Q's as player-eoach.
The courts would not allow him

and coaching," Bloom said ..

" His reasons will be disclosed
in a national magazine (Sports
mustrated ) tomorrow.''

Although the Q's have been
practicing for some time,
Chamberlain had not been
coaching them and there was
little doubt as to his plans to
retire .

Chamberlain, 38, joined the

SIMON'S

MARI&lt;Et

115 MAIN ST., POMEROY

SMOKED
PICNIC.
HAMS

EXTRA LEAN

Tuesday .
·
It was the Blue Devi ls' lith
league c hamp ions hip in 16
years, and second with in fi ve
months .
~
In· the prev ious 15 leag ue
tournaments, a c ti on was he ld
in the s prin g. The sta te forced

Ohw schools to play golf in the
fall earlier thi s yea r.
most rewa rding golf title as far
as I'm concerned, " remarked
Milhoan. "Nobody gave us a
cha nce this time a r otrn d . But
the .boys came through when

. -

Florida , the top defensive
team in the league, will try to
hold its one-game lead over
New York-Charlotte In the
East when it faces the Bell .
King

Corcoran

p . ~incinnati
Atlant.:~

(P

p .m .
S t.

MILK

x. Ballimor ~
New Yo rk
Boston
Clevela nd
Mi lwaukee
D•et ro it

....

x Oakland

Telo:as
Minnesota
82 79 .509 8
Ch icago
79 80 .497 10
77 84 .478 13
Kan sas City
Ca lif ornia
67 94 .416 23
.~~: - clinched divi sion title

*

provides

*

*

Player
Ke ith Wil son
Mar k Bucha non
Jeff Yerian
Ron Clark
Ran dy Wil son

•

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85
90
98

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1st 2nd Tot .

Player ·
Tim Dail ey

MIDDLEPORT.

87

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TOTALS
187 176
WAVERLY (366)

~~?.... ..

C ARIO C A
to play, however, because of
EL.DOAAOO
his contract with the Lakers.
Rt'ngs from $1 00 to $10.000
As coach he showed up most
of the tilpe but occasionally
·handed the duties to trinner
Bill Antonini and disappeared.
Blooin sa id Chamberlain
would "be associated with. the ' Keepsake eogagement diS·
Q's," buf did not e la borate.
monds have perfect' color. cu t
and c larity. Choose· from our
Frequently the subject of

.

84
94

1st 2nd Tot.
44 43 87
45 42 87
47 45 92

21 b.

LB.

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TOTALS
176 180
JACKSON 1363)

MAYONNAISE •• Jar

1

42 · 43
44 46

PRODUCE

severe ~ ime zone change

built a '$1 million house in Los
·Angeles, prefer~ volleyball to
basketball and once announced
he would fight Muhammad Ali
for the world heavyweight
boxing ti tle.
His next ve nture could well
be in proni!)ting , track a nd
field , but he was not ·a round to
Ray.. If

42
46
47

48

J ohn Russe ll
Tof'n Russe ll
J im Pi e rce
Ma rk Dennis

*
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RED
45¢
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ON IONS.:.; ...
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51b.·89¢

Both have had problems and
are st rug gling for survi~al.

Chambe rlain

42

48
95
53m ..·.t5 . '98
TOTALS
172 168 340
TOTALS
18
1,4 ·W
ATHEN S (343)
MEIGS (374! ' . .. .
Athens led GAHS 167-172 Player
1st 2nd Tot .
Playe r
1st 2JICI Tot.
38 42 80
afte r the firs t ni ne holes. The Mike Blosser
Bruce Blackston 46 • &gt;~AO · '86
Howie Dean
41
40 '8 1
Chuck Fat trod
48 ;·...s 93
Bulldogs fin ished with 343, Steve He nsley
47 44 9 1 Jeff Warne r
44 '"1 / 52 •96
fi ring a 176 on the fi na l nine . Steve Labertor , 41 50 9 1 .Joh nThomas
52 · ·~ ':47
'99
50
44 94
GARS came back with a 168 on Tim Lavelle
Mike Nessel road 47 ..,,').02 ·99
16 7 176 343 . TOTALS
. 185 , ~ ln
the las t nine to fi nish with a 340. TOTALS
WELLSTON t345 )
.
We llston,
pr e-season Player
1st 2nd Tot .
TOP 10 SHOOTERS
_, ,
39
40
79
fa vorite , fi nished ' third with Tom Appledorn
Player- School
·· :·.. Store
44
41
85
Tom Appledor n, Wellston
i/9: ·
345. Ironton was fow-th with Tony Sites
Barry Hen r y
45 42 87
Bre
nt
Johnson,
GallipoliS
80 ·
350, Logan fifth with '356, Jim Derrow
46
48 94
Mike Blosser, Athens '\1
80
Jackson sixth at 363, Waverly Cha r les Millikan 54 46 100 Howie Dean , Athens · · "'~
81
174 171 345
seventh at 366 and Meigs last TOTALS
Ken Auble, Ironton
;'
81
IRONTON (350)
Tom Young, Gallipolis \'':
82
with 374.
Player
1st 2nd Tot.
Mike Mc Broom, Logan -.,
83 ·
40
41
r1
After playing at Chillicothe Ken Auble
Danny Cox, GallipoliS . - i
84
44
11
today, the Gallians will_ take Ed J ewe ll
. Tony Sites, Well s ton
'
85
Chris Black
43 4t!
Ed Jewell, Ironton
J.. .
85
part in the Class AA Sectiona l Dave Osborne
47 46
J oh n Russel l, Logan
3&gt;~
85
• Tournament , slated Friday at Chr is Rudm an
43 5~ 16
170 180 350
Meigs. Nine team s are entered TOTALS
LOGAN !356)
in t hat event. The top three Player
lsf 2nd Tot.
teams will advance to the Mike McB room
42 41 83
Thorn MeAn;

16

5 LB. SUGAR Wlllf
ANY 15.00
$}99
PURCHASE

'UJ9

Danny Cox
Tom Wi seman
Rusty Sa und ers

w . I . pet . g .b .

90 71 . 559
88 73 .547
2
84 77 .522
6
76 85 .472 14
76 85 472 1.1
72 89 447 18
West
w. I. p et . g.b.
90 1'1 .559
83 76 .5.22 6

since moving ·from Houston.

controversy,

'

44~"! · ..43 · · 87
45·'$.~.,·51
.96
49:,l ~ 7 · 96

Marty Drenne n
Dave Hartley
Stan Crace
Ric k Conkle

American Lea gue
' Ea st

when it travelS to Honolulu to
take on the Hawaiians, like
Portland, a much-improved
team .

.GAL '__.$}21

...,.

-.

Louis (McGlo then 16 -12)
Montrea t (Ren ko 12-161, 8:05
P.m.
Los Angeles (Messers mith
a t Houston /Ro ber fs .10 -12J.
om

Philadelphia with one of the top
passing attacks in the league.
Detroit declared itself bankrupt last week and Shreveport
was blasted in its first game

a

•

at

"' VENTURA

PROUGHTON'S

in indiVidual honors with a
n in e-over-p ar 80. Well s ton's
Tom Appledorn won m edalist
honors with a 79.

Pa'rk, Ohio was killed in a one( T. Carroll 4 21 at car crash Tuesday on U.S. 258
Nie kr o 19·131, 7:.35 south of here .

the league last week. The
Shark players were not paid for
a month a nd face a .Memphis
team . which now is tied with
Birmingham for the . best .
record in the WFL, ll-2.
Birmingham, now faced with
battling Memphis for 'th.e
Centra l title, a lso must handle

. LB.

ROUND
·STEAK

GROUND .
CHUCK

75 Southeas tern Ohio League
golf c hampionsh ip at lronton

The s ame is true of Jacksonville, whi ch was taken over by

MON.-THURS. 9 to 7, FR1.9 to 8 p.m_, SAT. 9 to 8:30

FAVORITE
BREAD

h
h
oac
Jo n
.Milhoan 's
30 Gallipolis Blue Devils, down
19
75 fiv e strukes afte r the first nine
77 · holes o f ac tion, rallied on the
1'1 secondninetOcapturethe 1974·

sea son. Portland was conSidered a so rt spot on the th ey ha d to, and I'm real proud
sched ule. That spot sudden ly of the enti re sq ua d."
district .
Mil hoan pointed out Danny
has turned h::1rd.
He r e 's Tuesday 's · SE Ot\L
Storm Coach Dick Coury, Cox was oqe of the Devils' results:
who openly a dmitted earl y in her os , firing a 42-42-84 on the
1974-75 SEOAL
GOLF TOURNAMENT
the year lhaL he had a bad par 71 course. Brent Johnson,
GALLIPOLIS 1340)
leam, scoured the National who ' captured league rr.edalist
~layer
l st 2nd Tot.
Footba ll League waiver lists honors as a freshman las t
Brent .Johnson
41
39
80
Tom Young
41
41 82
and came up with som e fresh April, finished second thi s fa!.
talen t. The res ult was an
almost c omplete turnabout,
especia ll y on defense, a nd this
was best exemplifie d last week
w h en Portland upse t Bir ming h am. The Am e ri ca ns
e ntere d the game wi th an Il -l
Major Leag ue St a ndin gs
Tu es da y's Results
reco rd .
By United Press International
Min neso ta 6 Tex a s 0
National League
Bal ti mor e 7 Detroit 6
P ortland plaYs hosV to anoth~
Ea st
•
Boston 7 Cleveland 4
er
of
Jhe
league's
w. I. pet .
87 74 540 g. b . Mi lwaukee 3 N Y. 2, to inn s.
P tttsb urgh
Chi ea go 2 Kan sas City 1
powerho u ses, Sou t h ern st Louis
86 75 53 4 1
Cali forn ia 2 Qak la nd 0
California, tonight and Sun Philadelphia 79 8 2 .:19 1 a
Toda y' s Probab le Pitchers
Montrea l
7Y 82 .:191 8
(All Tim es E DT)
,
Coach Tom Fears, whose team New York
71 90 441 16
Bal tim ore ·(Cue ll ar 22 -IO J at
66 95 .:110 21
is 9-4 with a comfor table 4' 2 • Chicago
Detroit (Frym an 6 -9 or LaGrow
West
game lead in the West , is ap~
w. 1. pet . g.b . 8 1Bl, 1:30 p.m
Texas
(Bibby
19 -191 a t
x Los Ange les 10 1 60 .627
'
h
pre c ns1ve.
Cincinnati
98 63 .609 J
Minneso ta (D ecke r 16-14 ), 2.15
p
m
" This week 's game wi ll be Atlanta
87 74 540 14
Kansas Ci ty ( B ~•sby 22 ·14) at
esp ecially tough," Fears said . ~~~,~~nc i s co ~~ ~g : ~~? ~~
Chicago (Johnsor, 10·4), 2 : 15
P m.
" Portland is one of the most san Di ego
59 102 .306 42
· Clevelan d (G . Perry 20 ·13 l at
improve d teams in the league. x-c linched div isio n Iitl e
Bos ton ( P ole 1.0) , 3:30p .m.
Tuesday's Re su lts
r-.ew Yo r k ( Dobso n . 18-15) a t
They were tough when we Ph il ade lphia 2 New York 1
Mil vau kee (C olborn 10. 12), 4 JO
playedthemat homebutCoac h MontreaiJ St. Lou is 2
p. m
P itt sburgh 6 Chi cago 5
Coury has been doing an Atl a nta 1 Cincinna t i 1
Oak la nd. (B lue 17 15) a t
Ca liforn ia ( Dobson 1 ) ), 11.00
outs tandin g job a nd they have Los An ge les 8 Hou s ton 5
P.m
·
San Fr a n ci sc o 7 Sa n Dieg o 1
added some players that have
Todav 's Probable Pitch ers
he lped them. They should be a
(All Times ED "f)
San Dieg o (Spi ll ne r 9-11 ) a t
m uch tougher team tha n they s an Franci sc o (Monte fu sc o 3 ·
wer e a f ew weeks ago ."
21, J· !'5 p.m.
Phila de lphia (Ca rlton 16 - 13)
MAN KILLED
The Sun r a n its winning at New York (M a tla ck 13 -14l.
N.C . (UPI)
KINSTON,
s treak to four games wi th a 57-i , ·8: 05 p.m .
Chica go (Reusc hel JJ .12l a t Gordon S. Mason of Brook
r out of Jacksonville.last week. P it ts bu r g h (Rooke r 15 -111,7:35

the White Sox.

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C'

71

the World Footba ll League

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BY JOE CARNICELLI

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UPI Spurts Writer
Throughout the first half of

,

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" This ha s to be the school's

Steve Barr pitched a sevenhitter for his first major league
victory , st riking out three and
walking six . Jim Rice sna pped
a 44 t ie with his firs t major
league hom e r in the fourth
inning.
White Sox 2, Royals 1
Jim Kaat pitched a six-hit ter
to raise his record to 21-13 for

Hiller suffer ed the loss.

retazns

10)

Portland
showing
muscle

Sa n Diego 2.
Twins 6, Rangers U

hitter Andy Etchebarren dou-

&lt;JB

7

B M c N e c~e

Nat ional Leag ue res ults
were L os Angeles 8 Huus ton 5,
Atl anta 7 Cincmnati I, Pittsburg h 6 Chicago 5, Montreal 3
St. Loui s 2, Phila delphia 2 New
York 1, an d San Francisco i

a tie for the title when ginch-

Nf'v L-" S Vt•qas IJ .OJ
St (] 0)
9 Nor1t1 Dtlko lcl (2 ll
10 Ab lnc Chrstn o 11
11 s outh D.1ko lil I J ,..1
l l lnd &lt;; 1 () Ol
u E 10 n 11 01
1.1 &lt;&gt; lp lln F A si n r ·1 O!
1
-~ Gramb li ng ('J 11

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71 1

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791
75 7

[) t •I ,)W&lt;1!. (' ( JI( J. Q )
T r nn \ t I l l 0 I I
Tr oy '-, 1 I I ! {JQ J

.I

ot her AI. games.

about it , we didn 't fold."
Th e Orioles clinc hed at least

Te,)m

l( •( il f l f1~~1 0 1

1 Vv n K.ylh l i';'Q l
J I IQ·~ r ~ ~ 1~ 1 !)0 1

winn ing si ngle.
Mirm eso la dcft•a led Texas. 60: Hos ton beat Cle·vrland, 7-4 ;
Chicago loppe d Kansas City, 2~
I, &lt;md Ca liforni a won 2-0 over
Western Cham pion Oakla nd in

tudav.

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1\.Q, Hd o t ( O,)C h i'S !OO l 'i r, f! l ,lll
fOIIf&gt;qC' f ooHJ ,~I t ! Ci1 fll ') o f I'J /J
wdt. won too;,t recorrls ,l ncl fir s~
pl ,lf(' VO'(' " on n&lt;~rr nHl C' 'i ~&gt; 'i.

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Oriolesi cla zm
Eastern crown
By FRED •DOWN •
UPI Sports Writer

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·.
6- The Dail,ntinel,

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(onsumers can be bad news

Middleport-Pomero~, O.,WedneSday,~ct. 2,1974

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Penny Pariseau, well known
for her work in the 'field of
ad.Jkacy for children's rights,
has been appointed regional
coordinator of Southern Ohio
for Adopt-a .Child Today, Inc:
She is a -1960 graduate of
Waverly High School and is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

.... Cit

Robert Freed, Middleport.
Bob Attenweiler announced
the alJpointme nt of .. M.rs.
Pariseau at the recent state
board meeting in Youngs(own .
Penny, who has been

x·--x3!:N.~:·:·=M:•'•'•'•';•,•;

g Socia I. -. .· ;
ICalendar!

.,
0
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WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPOR1 Firemen's
Auxiliary, 1:30 p.m. Wed nesday, at the hall with
Marilyn Epple and Kathy
Chadwell as hostesses.

c:
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(I)

•

NEW YORK iUPI) - · Let's
hear it from the pther side of
the sales counter .Clerks it:~ department and
specialty stores have th.eir
complaints too. The customer
apparently isn't always right. I
gather this from the mail
received after t this column
chided sa lespeople who knot in
corners to talk while a shoppfr
waits, who disappear into a
stock room and don't emerge,
whose writing on sales slips is
illegible except for the amount
of purchase.
annoyed
readers
The
co unterchar ge that . some
customers are simply more
than human patience ca n bear.
They write of the ' 'just
looking" type, obviously not
really a buyer, but using up a
saleswoman's time just the
same.
_.
They chide the customer who
insists on trying on practically
everything in sight, or tries to
and finally decides she wants
something which comes only in
junor sizes "while she's a
generous size 18.''
Then there is the in-a-hurry
shopper Who on lunch hour 'or
coffee break decides, for
example that she wants a
dozen pairs of stockings or
other necessities, the clerk
finds only half a dozen in stock,
asks to be excused to check the
stockroom, returns to find the
customer gone. "It does take a

h~ve the~r

little time to v.'alk to and from
lht• stockroom ," wrote one
annoyed clerk.
Lack of courtesy on the part
or customers in another gripe.
· Clerk says, "May I help you ?"
and gets for rep.ly a look of
disdain or in some instanceS
the observation, "I'd rather
have a man help me :"
'
Clerk s after a while
recognize the repeat ~ustomer
who's rude, nagging and
overbearing -and they learn
to shy away from the "pain in
the neck."
Readers
write
that
customers should realize
clerks are people too, that their
duties are more than selling.

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Ttu.•y also take inven'tocies and
dean and straighten stock
after customers " who seem to
enjoy mussing up she lves and
racks."
Sometimes I wonder,' ' writes
one, " " how they keep their
homes. Neat as a pin? Or
looking like a disaster area'"
·As fot my challenge of
handwriting on sales . s lips ,
salespeople answer that they
don't have time to show' they
were peffect in school penmanship . -But as for the figures
being clear, said one. "I don't
want our computer to chew me
out."
There's the complaint about
lhe late shoppers. They duck in

trying on, and are th'e,re 20
minut es pa st clos in g lim e
whil e th e pool' clerk who's tired
and ha s aching feet misses her
regular. bus and as a resull'wil(
ha ve littl e time with her family
that evening.
With the 01ristmas holiday
shopping season' coming on, the
salespeople are forewarning . .
As one said, "You can get so
rushed there is no time to eat or
anything. A.•;; for the Christmas
spirit, it's practically "non- ·
existent in the majority of
shoppers towards the clerks.
"~oppers arc worse (at
Chri"stmas) than at any other
time of the year;" said one.

Club-- makes fund donation

SEOGMA

has meeting

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Christmas show
chairwoman named ·

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l'oM rDdnn
HOitturllul ltll'
C1tlftin1 At lion

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Chapman's has
a tasteful
collection of foot .. wear lor Fall .
They'll mingle with
all the latest
styles for that
touch of class.

SHOES

with
AUTUMN

AIRS•••
WE'RE KNOWN AS THE

FAMILY SHOE liTORE

CHAPMAN'S
POMEROY

98'· LB.

... -·- · ·-

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Feline distemper shots and distemper.
hepatitis and leptospirosis shots for dogs . '
Have dogs ~n leash and cats in containers .

I

$} il LB.

•'

Fronts ·
85' LB.

Prices
include
c111'1ing, wrapping
&amp; freezing. Beef
sold at hanging
weight .

...,i...;;..-----~~~'11

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ENJOX TOUR
Mr. and Mr·s . Charles Price,
Co lumbus, were weekend
guests of Mr. a~d Mrs. Karl
Vet. Dr. Paul WaShburn, DVM, Jackson, 0 .
Owen, Middleport. They came
Sponsored by
' especially to· go on tlie
Meigs Co. Humane Society
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,.................... historical home tour .

,.

(533)

Hinds

1 to 4:30

Also Available

SL. BACON

Sides Beef

-.SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5th

EUREKA

'

A new 20-minu te color Servit~e (C ROP) is giving
filmstrip with so und , authored people around the world hope
and narrated by Margaret as the orga nization help s
Brugler, Ohio CROP director , overcome hunger's root causes
agricultural
is available without charge for t h rough
water
Meigs CoW'\ ty organizations, development,
development,
land
reclamation
Rev . Harold Deeth, rector of
Grace Episcopal Church and ·a and conservation , literacy and
member of CROP Board, said. vocational training and family
Ttru film depicts some of the plannin g.
ways in which Church World
The film strip shows so.mc of
the circumstan ces over which
those vlctirns of hun ger can
VISIT MRS. TURNER
Mr. and Mrs . Dale Metcalf hav e liltle· --c ontrol without
and Mr . and Mrs. Howard outside assistance. Any group
Bowers, Lanca s ter, were interes ted in seeuring the film
recent visitors of Mr . and Mrs. may write Ohio CROP, 4256 N.
High St., ColumBus, Ohio 43214.
Ben Turner.

.::.::.:.:::.--1~~'1

RABIES CLIN-IC

:i.

Filmstrip available

MEATS
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INGELS FURNITURE

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DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peevf&lt; concorns road signs . While
on H recent trip our family was quite annoyed to sec signs saying
!;Lodgings, restaurant a head - 5 miles ," then get th ere and find
they were no longer in business a'nd perhaps have to drive at
least 10 mil ~s more to fine· something. It seems th ere should be a
law requirihg the remova l of signs for non-existent places. Also
many signs say " Motel- 5 miles" and then closer to the same
motel is another sign saying seven ;niles. The c loser one gets the
fmth er the distanc e given on the s igns . - MRS. S.
DEAR POLLY - a nd Mrs. H.S. who has a new Dutch oven
that gives a metallic taste to any food cooked in it - My solution
to this problem is to put potato peels, celery tops or other parts of
vegetables not being used, meat bones or whatever 3nd even sa lt,
pepper a nd shortening in the pot, put water over them to cover
well, put top on and cook this for an hour or more , the longer the
better. Just be sure to check on the water so there is plen ty at all
times. This food shou ld absorb the odor. If it does not d o the trick
I think she has gotten a bum cooker that will always have tha i
taste. This is from my own experience. - OVAH .
DEAR POLLY - 1 wonder if Mrs. H.S. seasoned her Dutch
oven. The directions that came with mine sav that when rust or
black sticks to your dish towel it is ti m'e to do it aga in.
Thoroughly sco ur the insidC-with steel wool or a metal scouring
pad and then wash with soap and water and dry thoroughly. Coat
the inside with unseasoned fat and place m a mode rate (300
degree) oven for two hours, remove and wipe out excess rat with
a paper towel and it should be good as new . - MRS. R. N.
DEAR POLLY - If you have trouble ge tting paint off the
windows after the house is painted try the following. With a cloth
.or your fingertips spread dishwashing liquid around the edges of
the window panes for about an inch. Let dry and then paint the
frames . When paint is completely dry wash the dishwashing
liquid, away with water and the spattered - on pa int is washed
away, too. -- EVELYN .

'lAC. PAK

Regional
meet set

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POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POI.l.Y - Our naugahyde bean bag chair is filled
with styrofoa m in plastic pellets. When it looked dirty we un·
thinkin gly hosed it off and water seeped through the seams. Nter
a few days the c hair developed a musty odor and no amount of
airing and sunning d oes away with this smell . I woUld like to
know if anyone else has had this happen a nd if they were able to
·correct it suc cessfully. Ho'w':l We hate not being c-tble to use this
good cha ir. - LYNN .

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. Musty oder. linger$
· in bean bag chair

her home; a nd Mrs. Ja ck
Robson of the gardens at the
Mormon Tabernacle at Salt
Lake City, Utah .
Makin g arrangements for
c hurches during the past
month were M~s. Weber, Mrs.
Eugene AtkinS, Miss Ruby
Diehl, Mrs. Canaday, Mrs.
Virgil Atkins and Mrs. : Jack
Robson .
Mrs. Chris Diehl won the
traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Milhoan . Mrs . Victor
Nelson will prov ide the one for
the October meeting .
Miss Diehl presented the
program with Mrs . Charles
Foley readin g "Ga rdenin g
with Birds." She told of how
birds cat insecis on plan is ·of
their need £or water, and of
their enjoyment of a bird bath.
Mrs. Russell Litll ... presented
a paper on propagation of
plants prepared by Mrs .
Everett Colwell . She showed an
arrangement of flower s grOwn
from;;eeds, describing it as the
~fascinating of all garden
art. She compared those gifted
in growing plants to those
gifted in art and music and
spoke of the five kinds of
propagation: seeds, cuttings,
divers ion,
layering
and
grafting . She said that plants
raised from seed are much
healthier and are not in as
much danger of disease. Mrs .
Ralph Turner displayed a bird
figurine used with red r~ses .
Timely hinis on gardening.
were prepared by Mrs . Cush
Johnston and read by Mrs.
Charles Foley . She sugg~sted
bringing in potted plan ts,
digging liul.bs and preparing
them for storage.
Mrs . Virgil Atkins gave
devotions to ope n the meeting .
She read script ure from
Timothy 2:3-5, and gave two
readings, "Whatis Life" taken
from pebbles in the Sand, and
"Johnnie Get Wise.'" For roll
call members named a North
American bird.
Mrs. Bishop and Mrs.
Robson, co-hostess , served a
salad course, cake, sandwiches , coffee, and mints. Nex:t
meeting will be at the home of
Mrs . Roy Snowden with Mrs.
Robert Canaday as cO-hostess.
Officers will be installed by
Mrs. Paul Winn. There will be
a bulb exchange.

Classes listed in
flower show .

I

By Polly Cramer

just before a :;; tore closes s tart

Fall workshop
set for Church
'omen U:nt'ted

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Polly 's Pointers

say

RUTLAND - A donation to members viewed dahlia s ,
the Wahkeena Fund, a project begonias, mums and other fall
of conservation of the Ohio . fl owers .
Association of Garden Clubs,
A report on the historical
was made by the Rutland home tour was given by Mrs.
Garden Club at a meeting Robert Canaday whO noted
Monday night' at the home of that club member s had
Mrs. C. E. Bishop.
pr ovided
two
flow e r
Miss Ruby Diehl reported on arrangements for the Reed
the tour Sept. 22 of the garden home.
A communication was - read
of Mrs. Richard Barton, the
OAGC Region 11 outstanding from the regional director
gardener of 1973, and of the announcing the Region 11
visit to the gardens of Mrs. meeting at Grace United
Methodist Churc h. Speaker
Homer Holter.
REGULAR meeting , Racine
Mrs. Barton took the and demonstrator will be Mrs.
SALE SLATED
American Legion Post 602.
members on a tour of her Edward Ray who will feature
Oyster stew to be served; 8
Women of the St. Paul garden to view the nwnerous the Christmas holidays in her
Lutheran Church will hold a trees, shrubs, roses and fall program .
p.m.
FRIDAY
rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 4 flow ers, and then serv"ed
Schedules for the Nov. 2 and
p.m. Friday in Fellowship homema de ice cream and 3 flower show at the Rutland
FISH FRY at Middleport TJ
Fire Department Headquar- VV 1
Hall of the church .
cake. At t.he Holter home the United Methodist Church were
ters, starting at 3 p.m.; fish
Church Women United in
distributed by Mrs. Charles
sandwiches to be served.
Ohio's Area H will hold a fall
Lewis , chairwoman. Theme is
SPECIAL services at Long workshop Oct. 23 at the Mida "Wishbook Christmas."
Bottom United Methodist dlepo rt
First
United
Several members reported
Church, through Sunday, Oct. Presbyterian Church, Mrs.
on gardens they had visited.
· 6, 7:30 nighUy with Rev. Bud Harry S. Moore, Area H
Mrs . Lawrence Milhoan and
Hatfield evangelist; public Chairmwoman, announced
Mrs . Vernon Weber told of
invited.
today.
their visit to Kingwood Center,
Joining area women for the
HYMN sing Hazel ComMiss Ruby Diehl and Mrs .
munity Chur~h 7:30 p.m. workshop will be Georgia
RUTLAND - Nine classes for junior exhibitors and they Stella Atkins of the Queen
Barnett family from McArthur Snyder, state president of have been included in the are "Page 1295, Sleds," an Elizabeth Garden in British
Church Women United , and artistic arrangements classes arrangement using white Columbia, Mrs. Robert Reibel.
will be featured.
Celia Davis, vice president for
SATURDAY
of the holiday flower show, ':A flowers; and "Page 892, Morristown, an honorary
DANCE ~t Harrisonville unit cultivation, along with Wishbook Christmas,"· to be Candle s," an a rr ange ment member present for the
Elementary School from 8 p.m. other members of the staged by the Rutland Garden using one or more candles.
meeting, of the attes concolor
E}tecutive
Board.
to 12 midnight,.' sponsored by
In the horticulture division, fir tree on the church lawn near
Club, Nov. 2-3 at the Rutland
A coffee hour will be held at United Methodist Church open to the pubiic for exhibit
Harrisonville Senior Citizens.
10 a.m. with the meeting to . basement.
. Adults $1, children 5o cents.
with .no limit on the number of
convene
at
10:30
a.m.
LunSOUP, BAKE and Yard Sale,
In the' section on " Catalog · entries, are classes for
cheons
will
be
served
at
noon
Index,;, the classes are as housepla nt s, both blooming
Saturday, 11 a.m. at Syracuse
by
the
women
of
the
host
and foliage, and berried
Presbyterian Church annex.
follows:
church·
at
·a
cost
·
of
$2.50.
branches , one, 12 to 18 inches
Purchasers asked to take
" Page No. 604, Diaqwnds" Meetings
will
reconvene
after
containers for carry.(lut soup
an arrangement using lots of high . The junior horticulture
the luncheon and plans are for glitter.
cla sses are for blooming
orders.
the workshop to conclude about
houseplants,
foliage
"Page No. 702, Bibles" - ·an
SUNDAY
Plans for fund-raising
2:30 p.m.
houseP,Iants,
and
dried
arrangement with a religious
ANNUAL Homecoming
projects
were laid by the
Mrs. Moore reports that aura suitable for use in a home. materi.ils-suitable for use in
Hemlock · Grove Christian
Southeastern
Ohio Gospel
consideration will be given to
"Page No. 172 , Winter arrangements, a collection of Music Assoc ., when 10 memChurch. Basket dinner . at
the resolution passed at the Coats" - an arrangement five different items.
12:30; afternoon services at 2
bers met for potluc~ and a
annual meeting April . 19 con- using flowers in warm colors.
While the first five classes of
business session at the Springp.m. featuring "Gospel Tones"
cerning the place of the Church
"Page No. 672, Skis"- using the artistic arrangements field. Grange Hall, Kerr.
from Chester .
Women .United in meeting the
division are re stri c ted to
ll was agreed to hold sings in
TALK and slides by Marshall challenge of criminal of- two containers, may or may exhibits from the sponsoring
not
be
identical.
·
area
churches with the freewill
and Sandy Ruth, missionaries fenders, espedally youth and
club members orlly. the in- offering going to promote the
"Page
No.
1294,
Playpens"
to South Korea at MI. Union females.
vitational classes are open to
- interpretive.
large professional sings. The
Missionary Baptist Church,
Those
attending
the
all
Meigs County garden..club
The
invitational
classes
in
sings
will be done by local
1:30 p.m.; public invited.
workshop are asked to come the artistic arrangements members and the public.
talent and will give new groups
prepared to share with others division are "Page 604,
Anyone under 21 may exhibit
a chance to break into gospel
all they can about agencies in Wedding Rings," your favorite in
the
junior
artistic
performing.
SHOWER CANCELLED
the area which deal with all Christmas arrangement; and arrangements classes.
The first of the sings is
A Shower for Mr. and Mrs. phases of the offender, pre, "Page 628, Basketballs,"
In the educational divison
tentatively
set for Nov. ·9 with
Drexel Vance, due to a fire that past, and during the trouble
arrangement showing motion. there are classes for created the groups and place to be
destroyed their home, has been and punishment.
There are also two classes flowers, a collection of five announced.
cancelled at the request of Mr.
Mrs. Moore will be attending
made from some type of dried
A total of $31 was reported
and Mrs. Vance. The event was the national meeting of Church
plant material. There Is also a
in at the recent bake sale
taken
· planned by the Lend-A-Hand Women United at Memphis,
c lass for pictures and-or
and
the
group voted to see
class of the Harrisonville Tenn ., Oct. 10.13, and will
plaques, but these must include
about participating in the Old
Presbyterian· Church for report on it at the area
some plant material, and may
Mrs. Roy Holter, a member " be either two or three Fashioned days promotion on
Thtlrsctay night.
meeting.
the Gallipolis park front.
of the 'Chester Garden Club, dimensional.
Geraldine Sexton had the
will be the 1974 Christmas
There are
also
nondevotions from I Corinthians 15
flower show chairwoman for competitive
classes
for
· the Meigs County Garden Club evergreen specimen displays with Pat Henson presiding over
the business session.
Association.
and African violets, and
Announcement of her ap- special displays of gardening
pointment was made by Mrs. books and magazines from the
Bert Grimm, Meigs County Meigs County Bookmobile and
contact chairwoman . The show handcraft articles made by the
will be staged Saturday and Meigs Community school
Sunday,'•Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 at workshop.
the Pomeroy Elementary
Oral judging by the standard
School. Mrs. Holter will an- · system according to the OAGC
A fall regional meeting of the
notmce committees.
rules will be at I p.m. Saturday. One blue, one red, one Episcopal Church Women
yellow, and one white ribbon, the East Region, Diocese of
will be laid in each class, ex· Southern Ohio, will be held at
cept the junior classes where the Grace Episcopal Church,
to SELL RUMMAGE
as many white ribbons as the Pomeroy, Oct. 11. . '
Women of Trinity Church
Mrs. Harry S. Moore,
judge desires may be laid. The
will have a rummage sale in
member
at large of the East
Bank Rate Financing
show will be opened for public
the
church
basement
Thursday
992-2635
MIDDLEPORT
viewing .at I p.m., Saturday, Region, advised that the
and Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
meeting will begin at 10 a.m.
Nov. 2.
............,..............liliiiiilll............. with a coffee hour . The
business session will convene
at 10:30 a.m. and a luncheon
'
will be served at noon by the
women of the host church .
Overnight vlsiis in the homes
of local members can be
ar,ranged. Churches are asked
At County Garage ·
to notify Mrs. Ted Reed, Jr ., of
cleans on I he floor and
Ro~k Springs Fair Grounds
Pomeroy as to how many will
above the floor with
be attending the meeting .
fewer strokes! ·
•llft!lml
'POMEROY Lodge 164
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. All Master
Masons invited.
SYRACUSE Cub Scout Pack
242 at school inunediately after
school.
JUNIOR American Legion,
Drew Webster Post 39, 7 p.m.
at the hall.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club, 8
p.m . with the meeting to be
preceded by Mass and
Benediction at 7:30 p.m.

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a

member of ACT for three years
will hold this office for two
years. She has served as
secretary, vice presiderit and is
no~ serving as co~hai rperson
along with her husband Dennis
of the Ohio Valley Chapter of
ACT.
As regional coordinator her
duties will be to organize and to
coordinate activities of the
existing four chapters in
Southern Ohio and to assist any
group of interested persons in
forming their local chapters of
ACT. She will also remain a
contact for people requesting
information on adoption and
for agencies in finding homes
for hard-to-place children. The
phone number is Wellston 3844371.
Ohio Valley ACT, Athens
ACT, an&lt;! . Southeastern Appalachian Chapter of ACT are
all chapters of ACT of Ohio.
There are chapters in every
major urban area in Ohio. ACT
was incorporated in November, 1969, and is a nonprofit
organization composed of
~ itizens concerned for the
righis of children.

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Salesfolk

Coordinator named

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Phone Us

Yo.ur Order I
992-3,01
..

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LB.

3 lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb. ·SLICED PORK srEAK
3 lb. ROUND STEAK
'
4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb. END CUT PORK CHQPS

3 lb.
3 lb.

4 lb.
3 lb:
2 lb.
3 lb.

GROUND BEEF
RIB STEAK
CHUCK ROAST
ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
MIXED PORK CHOPS
BOILING BEEF

4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
2 lb .

ROUND .STEAK

3 lb . CUBE STEAK
3 lb. PORK SJEAK

3- FRESH . FRYERS
4 lb. BOILING BEEF

3

$

95

$
1

lb. GROUND CHUCK

3 lb. SIRLOIN ·TIP STEAK
3 lb. T-BONES
3 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK

lb. MIXED PORK CHOPS
3 lb. BU.LK WIENERS
4 lb. BOILINy BEEF
. 4 lb.
UCK ROAST
4

accept Federal

..
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$
Foo~- Stamps

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6- The Dail,ntinel,

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(onsumers can be bad news

Middleport-Pomero~, O.,WedneSday,~ct. 2,1974

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Penny Pariseau, well known
for her work in the 'field of
ad.Jkacy for children's rights,
has been appointed regional
coordinator of Southern Ohio
for Adopt-a .Child Today, Inc:
She is a -1960 graduate of
Waverly High School and is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

.... Cit

Robert Freed, Middleport.
Bob Attenweiler announced
the alJpointme nt of .. M.rs.
Pariseau at the recent state
board meeting in Youngs(own .
Penny, who has been

x·--x3!:N.~:·:·=M:•'•'•'•';•,•;

g Socia I. -. .· ;
ICalendar!

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WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPOR1 Firemen's
Auxiliary, 1:30 p.m. Wed nesday, at the hall with
Marilyn Epple and Kathy
Chadwell as hostesses.

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(I)

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NEW YORK iUPI) - · Let's
hear it from the pther side of
the sales counter .Clerks it:~ department and
specialty stores have th.eir
complaints too. The customer
apparently isn't always right. I
gather this from the mail
received after t this column
chided sa lespeople who knot in
corners to talk while a shoppfr
waits, who disappear into a
stock room and don't emerge,
whose writing on sales slips is
illegible except for the amount
of purchase.
annoyed
readers
The
co unterchar ge that . some
customers are simply more
than human patience ca n bear.
They write of the ' 'just
looking" type, obviously not
really a buyer, but using up a
saleswoman's time just the
same.
_.
They chide the customer who
insists on trying on practically
everything in sight, or tries to
and finally decides she wants
something which comes only in
junor sizes "while she's a
generous size 18.''
Then there is the in-a-hurry
shopper Who on lunch hour 'or
coffee break decides, for
example that she wants a
dozen pairs of stockings or
other necessities, the clerk
finds only half a dozen in stock,
asks to be excused to check the
stockroom, returns to find the
customer gone. "It does take a

h~ve the~r

little time to v.'alk to and from
lht• stockroom ," wrote one
annoyed clerk.
Lack of courtesy on the part
or customers in another gripe.
· Clerk says, "May I help you ?"
and gets for rep.ly a look of
disdain or in some instanceS
the observation, "I'd rather
have a man help me :"
'
Clerk s after a while
recognize the repeat ~ustomer
who's rude, nagging and
overbearing -and they learn
to shy away from the "pain in
the neck."
Readers
write
that
customers should realize
clerks are people too, that their
duties are more than selling.

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Ttu.•y also take inven'tocies and
dean and straighten stock
after customers " who seem to
enjoy mussing up she lves and
racks."
Sometimes I wonder,' ' writes
one, " " how they keep their
homes. Neat as a pin? Or
looking like a disaster area'"
·As fot my challenge of
handwriting on sales . s lips ,
salespeople answer that they
don't have time to show' they
were peffect in school penmanship . -But as for the figures
being clear, said one. "I don't
want our computer to chew me
out."
There's the complaint about
lhe late shoppers. They duck in

trying on, and are th'e,re 20
minut es pa st clos in g lim e
whil e th e pool' clerk who's tired
and ha s aching feet misses her
regular. bus and as a resull'wil(
ha ve littl e time with her family
that evening.
With the 01ristmas holiday
shopping season' coming on, the
salespeople are forewarning . .
As one said, "You can get so
rushed there is no time to eat or
anything. A.•;; for the Christmas
spirit, it's practically "non- ·
existent in the majority of
shoppers towards the clerks.
"~oppers arc worse (at
Chri"stmas) than at any other
time of the year;" said one.

Club-- makes fund donation

SEOGMA

has meeting

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Christmas show
chairwoman named ·

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HOitturllul ltll'
C1tlftin1 At lion

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Chapman's has
a tasteful
collection of foot .. wear lor Fall .
They'll mingle with
all the latest
styles for that
touch of class.

SHOES

with
AUTUMN

AIRS•••
WE'RE KNOWN AS THE

FAMILY SHOE liTORE

CHAPMAN'S
POMEROY

98'· LB.

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4. C"-1

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Feline distemper shots and distemper.
hepatitis and leptospirosis shots for dogs . '
Have dogs ~n leash and cats in containers .

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$} il LB.

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Fronts ·
85' LB.

Prices
include
c111'1ing, wrapping
&amp; freezing. Beef
sold at hanging
weight .

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ENJOX TOUR
Mr. and Mr·s . Charles Price,
Co lumbus, were weekend
guests of Mr. a~d Mrs. Karl
Vet. Dr. Paul WaShburn, DVM, Jackson, 0 .
Owen, Middleport. They came
Sponsored by
' especially to· go on tlie
Meigs Co. Humane Society
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,.................... historical home tour .

,.

(533)

Hinds

1 to 4:30

Also Available

SL. BACON

Sides Beef

-.SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5th

EUREKA

'

A new 20-minu te color Servit~e (C ROP) is giving
filmstrip with so und , authored people around the world hope
and narrated by Margaret as the orga nization help s
Brugler, Ohio CROP director , overcome hunger's root causes
agricultural
is available without charge for t h rough
water
Meigs CoW'\ ty organizations, development,
development,
land
reclamation
Rev . Harold Deeth, rector of
Grace Episcopal Church and ·a and conservation , literacy and
member of CROP Board, said. vocational training and family
Ttru film depicts some of the plannin g.
ways in which Church World
The film strip shows so.mc of
the circumstan ces over which
those vlctirns of hun ger can
VISIT MRS. TURNER
Mr. and Mrs . Dale Metcalf hav e liltle· --c ontrol without
and Mr . and Mrs. Howard outside assistance. Any group
Bowers, Lanca s ter, were interes ted in seeuring the film
recent visitors of Mr . and Mrs. may write Ohio CROP, 4256 N.
High St., ColumBus, Ohio 43214.
Ben Turner.

.::.::.:.:::.--1~~'1

RABIES CLIN-IC

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Filmstrip available

MEATS
....
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INGELS FURNITURE

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DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peevf&lt; concorns road signs . While
on H recent trip our family was quite annoyed to sec signs saying
!;Lodgings, restaurant a head - 5 miles ," then get th ere and find
they were no longer in business a'nd perhaps have to drive at
least 10 mil ~s more to fine· something. It seems th ere should be a
law requirihg the remova l of signs for non-existent places. Also
many signs say " Motel- 5 miles" and then closer to the same
motel is another sign saying seven ;niles. The c loser one gets the
fmth er the distanc e given on the s igns . - MRS. S.
DEAR POLLY - a nd Mrs. H.S. who has a new Dutch oven
that gives a metallic taste to any food cooked in it - My solution
to this problem is to put potato peels, celery tops or other parts of
vegetables not being used, meat bones or whatever 3nd even sa lt,
pepper a nd shortening in the pot, put water over them to cover
well, put top on and cook this for an hour or more , the longer the
better. Just be sure to check on the water so there is plen ty at all
times. This food shou ld absorb the odor. If it does not d o the trick
I think she has gotten a bum cooker that will always have tha i
taste. This is from my own experience. - OVAH .
DEAR POLLY - 1 wonder if Mrs. H.S. seasoned her Dutch
oven. The directions that came with mine sav that when rust or
black sticks to your dish towel it is ti m'e to do it aga in.
Thoroughly sco ur the insidC-with steel wool or a metal scouring
pad and then wash with soap and water and dry thoroughly. Coat
the inside with unseasoned fat and place m a mode rate (300
degree) oven for two hours, remove and wipe out excess rat with
a paper towel and it should be good as new . - MRS. R. N.
DEAR POLLY - If you have trouble ge tting paint off the
windows after the house is painted try the following. With a cloth
.or your fingertips spread dishwashing liquid around the edges of
the window panes for about an inch. Let dry and then paint the
frames . When paint is completely dry wash the dishwashing
liquid, away with water and the spattered - on pa int is washed
away, too. -- EVELYN .

'lAC. PAK

Regional
meet set

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POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POI.l.Y - Our naugahyde bean bag chair is filled
with styrofoa m in plastic pellets. When it looked dirty we un·
thinkin gly hosed it off and water seeped through the seams. Nter
a few days the c hair developed a musty odor and no amount of
airing and sunning d oes away with this smell . I woUld like to
know if anyone else has had this happen a nd if they were able to
·correct it suc cessfully. Ho'w':l We hate not being c-tble to use this
good cha ir. - LYNN .

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. Musty oder. linger$
· in bean bag chair

her home; a nd Mrs. Ja ck
Robson of the gardens at the
Mormon Tabernacle at Salt
Lake City, Utah .
Makin g arrangements for
c hurches during the past
month were M~s. Weber, Mrs.
Eugene AtkinS, Miss Ruby
Diehl, Mrs. Canaday, Mrs.
Virgil Atkins and Mrs. : Jack
Robson .
Mrs. Chris Diehl won the
traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Milhoan . Mrs . Victor
Nelson will prov ide the one for
the October meeting .
Miss Diehl presented the
program with Mrs . Charles
Foley readin g "Ga rdenin g
with Birds." She told of how
birds cat insecis on plan is ·of
their need £or water, and of
their enjoyment of a bird bath.
Mrs. Russell Litll ... presented
a paper on propagation of
plants prepared by Mrs .
Everett Colwell . She showed an
arrangement of flower s grOwn
from;;eeds, describing it as the
~fascinating of all garden
art. She compared those gifted
in growing plants to those
gifted in art and music and
spoke of the five kinds of
propagation: seeds, cuttings,
divers ion,
layering
and
grafting . She said that plants
raised from seed are much
healthier and are not in as
much danger of disease. Mrs .
Ralph Turner displayed a bird
figurine used with red r~ses .
Timely hinis on gardening.
were prepared by Mrs . Cush
Johnston and read by Mrs.
Charles Foley . She sugg~sted
bringing in potted plan ts,
digging liul.bs and preparing
them for storage.
Mrs . Virgil Atkins gave
devotions to ope n the meeting .
She read script ure from
Timothy 2:3-5, and gave two
readings, "Whatis Life" taken
from pebbles in the Sand, and
"Johnnie Get Wise.'" For roll
call members named a North
American bird.
Mrs. Bishop and Mrs.
Robson, co-hostess , served a
salad course, cake, sandwiches , coffee, and mints. Nex:t
meeting will be at the home of
Mrs . Roy Snowden with Mrs.
Robert Canaday as cO-hostess.
Officers will be installed by
Mrs. Paul Winn. There will be
a bulb exchange.

Classes listed in
flower show .

I

By Polly Cramer

just before a :;; tore closes s tart

Fall workshop
set for Church
'omen U:nt'ted

..

Polly 's Pointers

say

RUTLAND - A donation to members viewed dahlia s ,
the Wahkeena Fund, a project begonias, mums and other fall
of conservation of the Ohio . fl owers .
Association of Garden Clubs,
A report on the historical
was made by the Rutland home tour was given by Mrs.
Garden Club at a meeting Robert Canaday whO noted
Monday night' at the home of that club member s had
Mrs. C. E. Bishop.
pr ovided
two
flow e r
Miss Ruby Diehl reported on arrangements for the Reed
the tour Sept. 22 of the garden home.
A communication was - read
of Mrs. Richard Barton, the
OAGC Region 11 outstanding from the regional director
gardener of 1973, and of the announcing the Region 11
visit to the gardens of Mrs. meeting at Grace United
Methodist Churc h. Speaker
Homer Holter.
REGULAR meeting , Racine
Mrs. Barton took the and demonstrator will be Mrs.
SALE SLATED
American Legion Post 602.
members on a tour of her Edward Ray who will feature
Oyster stew to be served; 8
Women of the St. Paul garden to view the nwnerous the Christmas holidays in her
Lutheran Church will hold a trees, shrubs, roses and fall program .
p.m.
FRIDAY
rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 4 flow ers, and then serv"ed
Schedules for the Nov. 2 and
p.m. Friday in Fellowship homema de ice cream and 3 flower show at the Rutland
FISH FRY at Middleport TJ
Fire Department Headquar- VV 1
Hall of the church .
cake. At t.he Holter home the United Methodist Church were
ters, starting at 3 p.m.; fish
Church Women United in
distributed by Mrs. Charles
sandwiches to be served.
Ohio's Area H will hold a fall
Lewis , chairwoman. Theme is
SPECIAL services at Long workshop Oct. 23 at the Mida "Wishbook Christmas."
Bottom United Methodist dlepo rt
First
United
Several members reported
Church, through Sunday, Oct. Presbyterian Church, Mrs.
on gardens they had visited.
· 6, 7:30 nighUy with Rev. Bud Harry S. Moore, Area H
Mrs . Lawrence Milhoan and
Hatfield evangelist; public Chairmwoman, announced
Mrs . Vernon Weber told of
invited.
today.
their visit to Kingwood Center,
Joining area women for the
HYMN sing Hazel ComMiss Ruby Diehl and Mrs .
munity Chur~h 7:30 p.m. workshop will be Georgia
RUTLAND - Nine classes for junior exhibitors and they Stella Atkins of the Queen
Barnett family from McArthur Snyder, state president of have been included in the are "Page 1295, Sleds," an Elizabeth Garden in British
Church Women United , and artistic arrangements classes arrangement using white Columbia, Mrs. Robert Reibel.
will be featured.
Celia Davis, vice president for
SATURDAY
of the holiday flower show, ':A flowers; and "Page 892, Morristown, an honorary
DANCE ~t Harrisonville unit cultivation, along with Wishbook Christmas,"· to be Candle s," an a rr ange ment member present for the
Elementary School from 8 p.m. other members of the staged by the Rutland Garden using one or more candles.
meeting, of the attes concolor
E}tecutive
Board.
to 12 midnight,.' sponsored by
In the horticulture division, fir tree on the church lawn near
Club, Nov. 2-3 at the Rutland
A coffee hour will be held at United Methodist Church open to the pubiic for exhibit
Harrisonville Senior Citizens.
10 a.m. with the meeting to . basement.
. Adults $1, children 5o cents.
with .no limit on the number of
convene
at
10:30
a.m.
LunSOUP, BAKE and Yard Sale,
In the' section on " Catalog · entries, are classes for
cheons
will
be
served
at
noon
Index,;, the classes are as housepla nt s, both blooming
Saturday, 11 a.m. at Syracuse
by
the
women
of
the
host
and foliage, and berried
Presbyterian Church annex.
follows:
church·
at
·a
cost
·
of
$2.50.
branches , one, 12 to 18 inches
Purchasers asked to take
" Page No. 604, Diaqwnds" Meetings
will
reconvene
after
containers for carry.(lut soup
an arrangement using lots of high . The junior horticulture
the luncheon and plans are for glitter.
cla sses are for blooming
orders.
the workshop to conclude about
houseplants,
foliage
"Page No. 702, Bibles" - ·an
SUNDAY
Plans for fund-raising
2:30 p.m.
houseP,Iants,
and
dried
arrangement with a religious
ANNUAL Homecoming
projects
were laid by the
Mrs. Moore reports that aura suitable for use in a home. materi.ils-suitable for use in
Hemlock · Grove Christian
Southeastern
Ohio Gospel
consideration will be given to
"Page No. 172 , Winter arrangements, a collection of Music Assoc ., when 10 memChurch. Basket dinner . at
the resolution passed at the Coats" - an arrangement five different items.
12:30; afternoon services at 2
bers met for potluc~ and a
annual meeting April . 19 con- using flowers in warm colors.
While the first five classes of
business session at the Springp.m. featuring "Gospel Tones"
cerning the place of the Church
"Page No. 672, Skis"- using the artistic arrangements field. Grange Hall, Kerr.
from Chester .
Women .United in meeting the
division are re stri c ted to
ll was agreed to hold sings in
TALK and slides by Marshall challenge of criminal of- two containers, may or may exhibits from the sponsoring
not
be
identical.
·
area
churches with the freewill
and Sandy Ruth, missionaries fenders, espedally youth and
club members orlly. the in- offering going to promote the
"Page
No.
1294,
Playpens"
to South Korea at MI. Union females.
vitational classes are open to
- interpretive.
large professional sings. The
Missionary Baptist Church,
Those
attending
the
all
Meigs County garden..club
The
invitational
classes
in
sings
will be done by local
1:30 p.m.; public invited.
workshop are asked to come the artistic arrangements members and the public.
talent and will give new groups
prepared to share with others division are "Page 604,
Anyone under 21 may exhibit
a chance to break into gospel
all they can about agencies in Wedding Rings," your favorite in
the
junior
artistic
performing.
SHOWER CANCELLED
the area which deal with all Christmas arrangement; and arrangements classes.
The first of the sings is
A Shower for Mr. and Mrs. phases of the offender, pre, "Page 628, Basketballs,"
In the educational divison
tentatively
set for Nov. ·9 with
Drexel Vance, due to a fire that past, and during the trouble
arrangement showing motion. there are classes for created the groups and place to be
destroyed their home, has been and punishment.
There are also two classes flowers, a collection of five announced.
cancelled at the request of Mr.
Mrs. Moore will be attending
made from some type of dried
A total of $31 was reported
and Mrs. Vance. The event was the national meeting of Church
plant material. There Is also a
in at the recent bake sale
taken
· planned by the Lend-A-Hand Women United at Memphis,
c lass for pictures and-or
and
the
group voted to see
class of the Harrisonville Tenn ., Oct. 10.13, and will
plaques, but these must include
about participating in the Old
Presbyterian· Church for report on it at the area
some plant material, and may
Mrs. Roy Holter, a member " be either two or three Fashioned days promotion on
Thtlrsctay night.
meeting.
the Gallipolis park front.
of the 'Chester Garden Club, dimensional.
Geraldine Sexton had the
will be the 1974 Christmas
There are
also
nondevotions from I Corinthians 15
flower show chairwoman for competitive
classes
for
· the Meigs County Garden Club evergreen specimen displays with Pat Henson presiding over
the business session.
Association.
and African violets, and
Announcement of her ap- special displays of gardening
pointment was made by Mrs. books and magazines from the
Bert Grimm, Meigs County Meigs County Bookmobile and
contact chairwoman . The show handcraft articles made by the
will be staged Saturday and Meigs Community school
Sunday,'•Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 at workshop.
the Pomeroy Elementary
Oral judging by the standard
School. Mrs. Holter will an- · system according to the OAGC
A fall regional meeting of the
notmce committees.
rules will be at I p.m. Saturday. One blue, one red, one Episcopal Church Women
yellow, and one white ribbon, the East Region, Diocese of
will be laid in each class, ex· Southern Ohio, will be held at
cept the junior classes where the Grace Episcopal Church,
to SELL RUMMAGE
as many white ribbons as the Pomeroy, Oct. 11. . '
Women of Trinity Church
Mrs. Harry S. Moore,
judge desires may be laid. The
will have a rummage sale in
member
at large of the East
Bank Rate Financing
show will be opened for public
the
church
basement
Thursday
992-2635
MIDDLEPORT
viewing .at I p.m., Saturday, Region, advised that the
and Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
meeting will begin at 10 a.m.
Nov. 2.
............,..............liliiiiilll............. with a coffee hour . The
business session will convene
at 10:30 a.m. and a luncheon
'
will be served at noon by the
women of the host church .
Overnight vlsiis in the homes
of local members can be
ar,ranged. Churches are asked
At County Garage ·
to notify Mrs. Ted Reed, Jr ., of
cleans on I he floor and
Ro~k Springs Fair Grounds
Pomeroy as to how many will
above the floor with
be attending the meeting .
fewer strokes! ·
•llft!lml
'POMEROY Lodge 164
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. All Master
Masons invited.
SYRACUSE Cub Scout Pack
242 at school inunediately after
school.
JUNIOR American Legion,
Drew Webster Post 39, 7 p.m.
at the hall.
THURSDAY
CATHOLIC Women's Club, 8
p.m . with the meeting to be
preceded by Mass and
Benediction at 7:30 p.m.

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a

member of ACT for three years
will hold this office for two
years. She has served as
secretary, vice presiderit and is
no~ serving as co~hai rperson
along with her husband Dennis
of the Ohio Valley Chapter of
ACT.
As regional coordinator her
duties will be to organize and to
coordinate activities of the
existing four chapters in
Southern Ohio and to assist any
group of interested persons in
forming their local chapters of
ACT. She will also remain a
contact for people requesting
information on adoption and
for agencies in finding homes
for hard-to-place children. The
phone number is Wellston 3844371.
Ohio Valley ACT, Athens
ACT, an&lt;! . Southeastern Appalachian Chapter of ACT are
all chapters of ACT of Ohio.
There are chapters in every
major urban area in Ohio. ACT
was incorporated in November, 1969, and is a nonprofit
organization composed of
~ itizens concerned for the
righis of children.

r :

--- 0.... rn
"'

Salesfolk

Coordinator named

"'·

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:z:'" n
c.n Cit '"
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Phone Us

Yo.ur Order I
992-3,01
..

I.

LB.

3 lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb. ·SLICED PORK srEAK
3 lb. ROUND STEAK
'
4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb. END CUT PORK CHQPS

3 lb.
3 lb.

4 lb.
3 lb:
2 lb.
3 lb.

GROUND BEEF
RIB STEAK
CHUCK ROAST
ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
MIXED PORK CHOPS
BOILING BEEF

4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
2 lb .

ROUND .STEAK

3 lb . CUBE STEAK
3 lb. PORK SJEAK

3- FRESH . FRYERS
4 lb. BOILING BEEF

3

$

95

$
1

lb. GROUND CHUCK

3 lb. SIRLOIN ·TIP STEAK
3 lb. T-BONES
3 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK

lb. MIXED PORK CHOPS
3 lb. BU.LK WIENERS
4 lb. BOILINy BEEF
. 4 lb.
UCK ROAST
4

accept Federal

..
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$
Foo~- Stamps

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8 - Tl1t ' Dally &amp;ntiflt•l , f\.hd tl kpurt-PtJilll'ro~ , 0, \Vt·tlrlt':-id &lt;~,\ _i)c! :.;, J~ l'i -1
. ;:::::: ::::~:;:!:·:·:·:·:·:!:~:~:!::::::::::::::::::;:::::::.:-::::::::::::::;

Whopper corn . fu1lk

'

RAY CROMLEY

l'anlon of ,'\ i '""
had ~a .\~ Cml\\a\.

Has neighbors

CHLU~IRUS

iU PII
Prt.•s idNit Ford's pardoi. of
Ri1·hard
Ni:!!Q n
was
" pn·matun• ... ill f'onceh:&lt;'d

&lt;

· By Ray Crumley
WASHINGTON - !NEAl ... and an int~·rfcr('flf'l' with
If yo u need a n exam ple of how
justi('(', ·· accoreling lo Ja'rk
the
fe dera l 1 government
Conway. president of . "'-e
prom~otes inflat~n. visit the
production a ~ ronomi s t at th('
nali ona l ci ti u ns ' lo~ y1
Inters tate Commerce Com.
Univers ity of Illi nois at Ur - ' grJ \p l:um mon Cause. ' _ mission.
'
bana, sa id th~ plant ha s · &lt;.1
" It was probably the worst ·
That agency is nO worse
natLu·aJ :1dv&lt;tntage over tts
thing h(' 1Ford 1 f'fmld have
than most but being typical it
brethre n pla nted in t:o ws
don e," said Cn nw ~y, adding
illusl rates how inefficient and
because i1 ha s no compelition
ht• ~elh.•vC"s Fnrd now sees
llilwise government regulation
for light. mois ture or nu tnents.
th e " absolute revulsion that
ca n drive up cos ts and
Hut s till. he said, "I must
tonk pla cl' in thl· country
therefore prices. The price of
confess I haven' t hf'c'trd of one
when the pardon was an·
transportation is espec ially
with that man y ears."
nounced.
important because it enters
Hurnm
says
he
had
"It was prt&gt;maturc, it was
into the cost of virtually everypollina ted the plant fr om lw u
ill cuncelved." said Conwa}'.
thong we buy from food to
swet't corn plbnts. but ,hasn 'l
here to addtrss lhe Ohio
houses and motor cats.
done anyt hin~-: else to it.
Chapter of the Washington
Take these unhappy
" I haven't culti vated :t.
group. "It was interference
examples glea ned, not from
fertilized it Or watered it," he
'"ith thP working system of
industry complaints, but from
sa id . " I've m ostly just looked
justice in that you just don 't
goverrm1ent st udies:
at it. And H lot of people are · pardon pt•ople before they
ICC opposition to multiplestopping by to see it. "
have been charged and tried
car and volume rail freight
Edgar says he planned to
and convicted," he· said.
rates dela yed unconscionably
show pictur es of the plant at a
the introduction of efficient
meeting
of
13 cou nty
un it tniins.
agricul tu ral specia li sts thi s
Amc n ca ns con~ um e more
ICC
a ttitudes
have
week , and he's going to sew th a n 231.000 tons of pt-&gt;.&lt;mut discouraged the wider ap·
some of the plan t's seeds on a butlt•r eac h yeur
plicat ion of containerization,
test plot.
Bu t h e isn't ex pect ing
anything revolutionary unless
' 'the go od man upstairs does an
awful ly lot. "
LAS VEGAS, Nev. iUPI ) Sa ha ra In vita tional golf
As for Hwnm, he says he
Modest JohnnY).Miller, who tournament.
doesn't know what significance
keeps insisting fie's not that
Miller, '1:1 , became pro golf's
the plant has, ' 'But we've sure
good while piling up victory aiJ.tim e single season money
had a lot of fun out of it."
after Victory , launches a bid winner at Napa, Calif., Sunday
for his ninth wm of the year when he wrapped up the $30,ooo·
Thursday in th e $135,000 first-pla ce award in the Kaiser
International Open,
"I still don't fee l I'm in the
same category with a Jack
Nicklaus , a Lee Trevino or a
Gary Player, ·• said Miller, who
enters the Sahara with $346,933
in the bank for 1974 ~ "I hope I
ca n be there some day, but I
think you have to wait two or
cent of the total vote, enough to and others tr ied to put together three more years to see."
win or lose a close election. I a mock Ni xon-Mc Gover n
For Miller. it will be his next·
believe it made the difference television debate in 1972, they to-last event of the year. He
. the Kennedy-Lodge (Senate)
'
m
leaned so fa r backwards to won't pla y in the $125,000 San
race in 1952."
se lect fiim clips of the former Antonio·Texas Open in two
Some of O'Brien's stories are President, that the project had weeks but does plan on being at
new and well·told. Recounting to be abandoned.
Disney World in florida in four
how LBJ was trying to mollify
"When the screening was weeks for the $250,000 Team
a group of. congressmen who over, McGovern ordered that Cha mpionship, the final ·
objected to Veterans Hospita l the 'debate' must never be tour nam ent on the 1974
clos in gs in their districts , shown . Everyone agreed we schedule, where he will be
O'Brien said the President told had been too fair . Nixon had paired with Grier Jones.
the group that one of the in- won ."
How. ·.er, the PGA doesn 't
stallations wa s a small town
count
Disney World money
O'Brien wants his story to be
Texas VA hospital that ha d a defense of ethical politics and towards the official money
become " nothin g more than a a spur to reform in tht murky wirming list.
firetrap."
field s of campaign ·financin g
First-place here is worth
To-ease economic distress in and political advertising -he $27,000 and Miller's com.
the town , he said, it ·would be damns both some of Nixon 's petition will include four of the
used in the future as a anti-McGovern and Johnson's other top 10 money winners in
Women's Job Corps Center.
. anti·Gbldwater
telev ision '74 - Oave.Stockton (No.5), J.
Rep . Harold Cooley, D·N.C., spots.
C. Snead ( No ~ 7). Jerry Heard
quickly disabused Johnson of
And he says: "One of the tNo. 8) and' Tom Watson .(No.
the notion that he had soothed reasons I've written this book 9). .
the delegation with th~ ques- is to show what the world of
Also in the field of ·144 are
tion: "You gonna burn tht
politics is really lik&lt;&gt;, not an Tom Weiskopf, who ranks 12th
women?''
un"tlerwo rld of cloak-and· on the money winning list this
"Wha t?" Johnson said.
ctagger activity, but a vast year; Dave Hill, 15th; defend·
"You said it was a firetrap," publiC' arena in which men and ing champion John Mahaffey,
CQo ley said. "You gonna burn ideas do battle and in which 17th, and Leonard Thompson,
the women?"
great deeds can sometfrnes be 18th ~ All have surpassed the
Johnso~ sat down, saying " I
achieved."
$1011,000 mark.
didn't kn ow we had Bob Hope
Miller's eight victories began
in the audience."
when he captured the first
But the usefulness of this
BIL~S WA,lilik MOSLEY
three events of the year, the
book is the sense that O'Brien
ORCHARD PARK , N.Y. Bing Crosby Pro-Am and the
conveys that politics can be a
I UPI! - The Buffalo Bills Phoenix and Tucson opens . in
rational and honorable calling. · waived rookie running back January . He didn 't win in
The!'e is none of the Chotiner·
Wayne Mosley Tuesday and February but captured the
Colson.S.gretti type of tactic
acquired rookie defensive back Heritage in March and the
extolled here, and in fact
Leonard Fairley, who had been Tournament of Champions in
O'Brien relates that when he
waived by the Houston bi!ers. ApriL

in .wonder
By SAM HANCOCK
HARRISBURG, IlL 1U~l ­
Most an~· afternoon in th is
sou thern Illinois town, you can
find people hangmg arolUld
Vic tor Humm 's yard looking at
one htundm ~e r of a corn stalk .
It has 21 shoots, about ha lf of
wlli ch have developed into
ears. Most corn plants sprout
only one or two shoo ts.
l-nunm says · the eight-foot
plan t ap parently started from
corn kernels his wife shook out
of a pair of trousers tnto th e
yard shrubber y.
" We noticed it coming up
about the middle of JlUle ," he
says . --we started to cut it
down, but my wife sa id, ·no le t it grov.-·. ' "
Since ltl en. the plant has
grow n in to quite a conversation
p ie('e amon g the townspeople
and agncu1ture specialists in
Sali ne ColUl ty .
Robert Edgar', the county
ag ri cul ture ex ten sion adviser.
said, "I've see n some plants
with five or six of these
!shoots ), but I've never seen
one where they had this many.
It 's rare.''
Walter 0 . Scott, a crop

Overregulation ·feeds inflation
which both governmentJ and
in~u~try believe can c_ut costS,
.
markedly .
RttBulatory pro ced ur es
.i.ohibit~ the e ffic ienci e~ which
come through . the joint usa~e
and joint control of common
trackage by two rail companies.
ICC proced ures encourage
discriminato ry ra tes, ....forcing
one class of rail 1Servi ce to
subsidize another. A Depart·,
ment of_Transportation surVey
brings out that perishables and
freight on light-dens ity lines
are subsidized by other freight.
Protracted hearings and
court' reviews on mergers may

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JN:. . .. . ; ; .. B. .·-.

Waid Cross Sons Store ~
i

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I

. Pearl St.

949-5772

Racine, Ohio

l

•
Miller afte:E. 9th wm

USDA CHOICE

IIIIE'AFI

CHUCK ROAST••••••~·69~ ­
ENGLISH ROAST••• ~s~ 89~
ARM ROAST. •••••••~.89~
BEEF STEW MEAT••• !~.•.1 9
NU-MAID

MARGARINE ................~~:.59~
KRAFT VEI.VETTA

2 lb.

CHEESE SPREAD.........~.~~.. ! 1 39
.

3 lb.

SHORTENING ....... :.... ~~-~.....! 1
DELMONICO
.
.
-.

NEW FLORIDA

.

s lb.,
Bag

69¢

B.

3. 9~

16 oz.

-

59

ETTI.....~.~~.....

GRAPEFRUIT

.

7. 9~

oz.
... !:~~!!: ...
24

·TICKETS' ON SALE

Op•n
•n11
Mon. thi'u

HERE
NOW

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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., OCT. 5
We Reserve Ktght 10 llmrt Quantity.
.

Thrifty Prices

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

:

Right Reserved to Limit.Quantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed. food Stamps

'Pricet Effective Oct. 2·9

HALVES

ARMOUR'S

9

SEALD SWEET

46

can

¥ . .. ,

1

Monday Thru Friday

9:00 lo 7:00

·

Saturday 9 to 9

CLOSED SUNDAYS

1 Our Better Quality
from USDA Choice Beef

LB. 59e

qt.

Jumbo

Luoc:h Meats
~~r~:.:~~s lB;

sse

HOME GROWN CABBAGE, lbc 10c

New Home Grown Potatoes
.,

10

•

. LB.95~

.lb.

•1.39
NEW YEUOW

TOKAY.
GRAPES ·
•

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lb.

39~

ONIO~S

.,3

lb.

43~

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Training sessions for Meigs
County's 240 poll workers have
been schedul~d , by the Meigs
county Board of Elections.
The sessions are required
under a new Ohio l~w. Eac~
poll worker is required to, at·
tend one of four sessions to be
held before e~ch primary and
general elecUon in the future.
~ Poll worker&lt;. are urged . to
aitend the t:r .oing session to
which the} are assigned.
However, if tllat is impossible,
they may attend one of the
others. A regisler of Plfll

GROUND ROUND

NEW CROP

lb.99e sos4
·
89 '1oos9so
lb.
.lb.
·.
'

3 lb. or
More pkg.

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WASIITNGTON - THE HOUSE THAT WAS ready to im.J!!Iach .Rlcl!al:&lt;I·J!!ixon;·)las decided. that his resign,ation doe~ not
,entiUe him to $850,000 in public funds for the transitiOn to pnvate
life. It voted 317 to 72 Wednesday for a supplemental ap.
propriations bill which would give Nixon· only $2011,000 and insisted that no taxpayers' money be used to transport the White
House tapes to California .
· The House appropriations committee proposed giving Nixon
$398,000, but by a 342-47 vote, the full cbamber subtracted
$145,000 of the $245,000 request for the first six months out of
office and bl( a 321~2 margin, removed $53,000 from the $153,000
earmarked fbr his second six months. Both amendments were
offered by Rep. Joseph Addabo, D·N.Y.
The action was likely to have an effect on the Senate. Its
Appropriations Committee seheduled a m~eting behind closed '
doors on its subcoffiffilttee recommendations to glVe NIXon
$328,000 in transition money , The House had little patience with
appeals not to punish Nixon for hi? actions in office.
.
. A:; Rep. John Moss, D-Calif., asked , "What serviCes c~ a
president who left office under less than honorable conditiOns
provide to the United States? "

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workers and alternates at·
tending will be kept.
The first of the four sessions
will be held at the Middleport
Junior High School auditorium
at 8 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 14.
Workers from all precincts in
Pomeroy and Middleport
Villages and from the Pomer.oy
Precinct are assigned to that
program.
The second session will be
held at the Harri s~ nville
Elementary School audito~ium
on Tuesday, Oct. 15. ~ Poll
workers from Columbia, Dyes·

HUNTINGTON , W. Va .
(UP!) - This a rea along the
banks of the Ohio River has all
the ingredients for, booming,
viable economic grQwth.
Flat available land, a ·rarity
in West Virginia, abounds.
Transporta ti on access is
good, with it&amp; ri.v er shipment
tonnage ranking highe r than
any inland port in the nation,
its airport vastly modernized
and enlarged, and main lines of
two successful railroads snak~
ing aroWJd it.
The education climate is
sound , with one of the state's
two universities, and local
financial institutions are large
enough to attract potential
business investments.
The tax structure equals,

possibly betters, that of most
regions .
Importantly, especially with
th e advent of the energy crisis
and new emphasis on coal
production, it rests in the heart
of vast soft coal reserves.
But with all that going for it,
metropolitan Huntingtlin, including Ashland, Ky., and
Ironton . Ohio, \raditionally has
an unemployment rate above
the national average.
''We've had a nagging per·
sistence of unemployment in
this region ," said State Sen.
Robert Nelson, a national
lobbyist for the United Mine
Workers WJion .
"If it's bad where you have a
fairly concentrated industry or
market , it must be rea lly rough

in other sections of th e state,"
Netson says.
Much of the blame, according to Nelson and others,
fa lls on railure to recognize the
problem.
" The attitude and initiative
to really sell the region and
aevelop it is sadly lacking, "
Nelson says. "The blame goes
back to the Chamber of
Commerce , local government ,
public figures and to some
labor organizations.''
''We have to overcome our
inferiority complex and not
always let others solve our
problems for us," said Bob
Meyers, president of the Kyova
Interstate Planning Commission, a group formed to
promote growth In the Tri-

State reg ion .
"We must reject lhe attitude
of the past 20 years - holding
the status quo, " Meyers says.
Meyer s' comm ission was
responsible for the latest study
of the region 's potential.
Prepared in 1972, the picture
painted by the study is not a
rosy one.
"In all candor the opportunities to further development in
the region' s economy by
existing industries is clouded
and limited by trends toward
automation and mechaniza·
lion,'' the repor\ stated.
The study said new jobs
could come in fu ture years in
the manufacturin g and service
industries, but only· in limited
numbers .

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
•

VOL XXVI

NO. 121

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1974

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

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS -

:::--::::;;:::;:;:::::;:::;::::;;:::;:::::;:;:==-~::!;;::s::;;;:~:~;;:~:~:::::~:~;;;;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:=-;:~:=:!:;s~:::~~:!:~:~s::~.:-.:::~::-.::::·

Heavy tax plan
aired by 'Ford
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
administration is considering
energy cOitSetvation measures
that include heavy taxes for
e~cessfve use of gasolin e,
eleciricity, natural gas and
other fuels .
The measures ge nerally
would provide tax relief ~ for
energy-thrifty America~s with
incomes of $1~,000 or less,
government officials said.
One of the proposals, a
"refundable fee '" of 2l) to 30
cents per gallon of gasoline, for

3 ~ seniors

motorists who drive less, drew
an angry public response
Wednesday.
" The sw itchboard was
jammed a ll day, " said a
spokesman for the Federal
Energy Administration. ' 'People were ca lling us and their
congressmen to oppose it. "
Other proposa ls under
consideration are:
-Excessi~e use surcharges
if consumers use more natural
gas and electricity than they
did the previous year.
- A tax credit for homeowners of up to 40 per cent of the
amoUnt spent for insulation,
storm windows and other
energy conserying expen.
ditures.
- Legislation to require
large e nergy consumers to
d eve lop conservation
programs and follow them.
Voluntary projects sponsored
by the Commerce Department
last winter generallY\ failed,
one FEA official said.
The proposed "refundable
fee " on gasoline was disclosed
by FEA Administrator John
Sawhill in Washington and
Deputy FEA Administrator
· ·Roger Santin San Fr~ncisco.
Under the S~wh1ll . plan,
which FEA offiCials said has
"circulated at th e hl g hes.~
levels m the White Ho~,
motorists would pay w at
amounts to a tax of 2ll to 30
cents per gallon when they buy
gasoline.
The government then would
give each motorist $1011 back
each year. It wo~d be paid to
them through their employers,
at the ~ate of $2 per week added
to their pay checks.
· With a 2l) cent tax, a person
who drives 10,0110 miles. a year
m a car that gets 2ll miles per
gallon would break ee~:~·
paymg $100 m tax and g
g
!Continued on Page 10)

commend e d

Poll worker sessions scheduled.

GROUND BEEF

Chunk Bologna

The attorney general issued
the opinion at the, request of

Meigs Co u ~ty Prose cuti ng
the propooed school.
Attorney Bernard Fultz. C. H.
Both the Meigs County Board
Williams, a member of the . of Mental RE-tardation and the
board of trusteeS of Carl eton Meigs CoW1ty Commissioners
College, presented the opi nion haVe voted to se lect the
to the board .
Syracuse traotfor tlie proposed
Following long discussi on, school, The final decision now
the board voted W1animously to · rests with the H oard or'
mee.t sometime in November Trustees of Carl eton College.
with representatives of the . '\ .
Meigs Collilty Board of Mental
Board of trustees: chairman
Retardation to discuss the Orville Crooks presided over
prospects of the board of the meeting attended by 10 of
trustees donating the land fOr
the 21 members.

entine

., Robbie new Indian boss

lb.

OL

21

t._J

Half o-r Whole

2'12

_ ~By United Press' lnlernallonal
NEW YORK - INDICTMENTs' OF 17 EMPLOYES and
executives of a bankrupt Wall Street commodities option firm on
charges of bilking customers of more than $2 million were announced Wednesday by New York Attorney General Louis J~
Lefkowitz. The firm, Collins &amp; Day Group, Inc., which has an.
office in Dayton, Ohio, was linked to organized crime by
Lefkowitz;
The finn allegedly operated "in the nature of a 'Ponzi'
scheme, in that the monies provided by later investors were use:O
to make whatever payments were made to the preceding in·
vestors for monies due based on transactions,'' said Lefkowitz in
a statement.
''This is a typical example of how organized crime takes over
a company and milks it to its advantage," Lefkowitz said.

Three seniors at Meigs High
School have be en named
"Merit Program Commended
Students" by the National
Merit Scholarship Corp.
Principal James Diehl said
Debora C. Kennedy, Eileen A.
Kennedy and Sonia Kiser have
received the commendation.
These students are among
the 38 0011 commended students
named on the basis of their
OOLUMBUS- GEORGE C. EVANS, 43, was named Wedhigh performance on the 1973
nesday as Ohio's new assistant chief for surface mining in .the
Preliminary Scholas ti c Ap·
(Continued on Page 10)
titude Test . Nationa l Merit
Scholarship Qualifying Test.
Commended students are in
the upper two pet. of those
expected to graduate from trigh
school in 197~. Although the
CLEVELAND ( UP! ) · received
a
Seghi,
commended students rank high
Frank Robinson, the only man congratulatory telegram from on the test their scores· were
to ever win the Most Valuable President ' Gerald Ford . . just below 'those of the 15,0110
Player Award in both the Robinson, who was obtained semi-finalists announced :n
National League and the · from the California Angels, September.
'
American League, today was succeeds Ken A:;promonte who
To increase their scholarship
named player-manager of the was fired .
opportunities the scholarship
A:;promonte said Wednesday program re'ports the com·
Cleveland Indians, the first
black manager in major league night in Boston· following the mendoo students' names to the
Tribe's victory in the season regionally accredited colleges
history.
Robinson, at a news con· finale, the Tribe " did a helluva
they named as their first and
ference here where his ap· joB". But who cares any more? second choices when they took
pointment was announced by I'm on the outside."
the test.
Tribe General Mana~er Phil

Phebe Has National~ Advertised
Brands At

o·s ·

rze1 si

RICAHRD B. KAY, of Cleveland, center, independent
candidate for the U: S. Senate, spoke to the Meigs County Bar
N.soeiation Wednesday at a noon luncheon at the Meigs Inn .
With Kay are, left, Frederick Crow II, Pomeroy attorney,
secretary af the bar association and Marming Webster, r~g ht,
, Meigs County Probate Judge,,/ president of the association).
Kay told the seven attorneys present that he considered
himself a statesman, not a politician, and more statesmen
are needed . Kay was the civilian attor:~ey for former Lt.
William Calley ~·who was found guilty of " premeditated
murder" of 22 civilians at My Lai in March of 1968. Kay said
if justice had prevailed, former President Nixon would have
freed Calley. He said that he has requested a pardon for
Calley from President Gerald Ford. In referring to the news
media, Kay said the public is " brainwashed" epch day. He
added the present two party system is sick, not America, and
that a third party is nee!led to clean up the illness. He said he
owed no political favors and that "We must think of America
first. " Others attending were Charles Knight , Fred Crow,
Jim O"Brien, Robert Buck a nd Frank W. Porter.

NEW YORK- SOME NORTH AMERICAN paper producers
of newsprint have announced $25 increases, bringing the U. S.
price for 30-pound "Fwsprint to nearly $260 a ton. The price hikes ,
announced within recent days, will be effective next Jan. I.
The companies are Boise Cascade of Boise, Idaho ; Domtar
Ltd, of Quebec; Price PaJll'r and Pulp Co. of Quebec and Anglocanadian Pulp and Paper Co. of Toronto. Other compames said
they are considering higher prices. Canadian industry sources
said the $260price wjll just keep up with increases for producllon
and labor.

~ ~

'

Green Giant Peas.,...................).~~- 29¢
Johnson's Pledge.~~~~~ ............;;;~:.$_129
Peac
.~. h
~0.
¢
age
es
......................
~~~
.....
.
59
.
.
v·
s
·
oz~ 59¢
. 1enna ausage ;........................~~~---·
Gfa pefru1t. Ju1ce
. . .~.~~-~!';~.!.~!'!~~ .. ~~~.....·49¢.
. ns.....................
VANC~AMP'.S
2 oz. 79¢
Pork &amp; Bea
Jerzee .D
. ry M1"lk ........................~·.~.~~ ... .$2 99
49¢
Scot Towel~, ..........:..................:..~~'!..... ·

~+- ~

, WNG BEACH, CAUF. - RICHARD NIXON DOES ,not
have cancer and will be released from the hospital later this
week the former president's doctor says. Nixon 's bout with
phlebitis, aod the lengthy convalescence urged by his physician,
were expected to keep him off the wltness stand at the Watergate
cover-up trial for a month or more, possibly preventing any
appearance.
.
Dr. John Lungren reported Wednesday that an extensive
battery of tests since Nixon was admitted to Long ~ach
Memoria1Hospital10days ago " have failed to reveal any hidden
malignancy" - cancer - as the cause of the phlebitis: The
doctor had never indicated public concern over cancer, which lS
connected with phlebitis only in rare cases.

°

FLUFF'S

&gt;'\

.:-~

OOLUMBUS, OHIO - THE COLUMBUS, OHIO Dispatch
and the Philadelphia Daily News Wednesday jointly offered a
$10,0110 reward for information leading to a conviction in con·
nection with the strangulation death of a Coltunbus woman
studying at the Philadelphia College of Art.
Bonnie Jean Craig, :ro, daughter of Dispatch Assistant City
Editor .!_ames Craig, was semally assaulted and sirangled one or
two days before her body was discovered at a friend 's
Philadelphia apartment Sunday. The Dispatch matched a $5,0110
reward offered at the request of pollee by the Daily News under
its "secret witness" program, used to get leads in baffling cases.

1--------.....~.

Rome .

·. ews •• zn

...

'

indicated in his opinion that ·
Isaac Carleton, who orig inally
donated the land for a college
in the 1860s, meant the land to
be used for educat~o na l pW'poses forever . Brown pain~
out if the land were to be
disposed of in any other fashion
than to be used for educa tional
purposes, the proceeds would
be used. for educati on .

Valley undersells itself

~

~

Re~

~-·-

The Boa!;.d of·Trustees of the
lon g since closed Ca rleton
Co lle ge in Syracuse may
donate a 5.71 acre tract of land
it owns ror the proposed Meigs
County School for the Mentally
Retarded according to an
opinion rendered by State Atty.
Gen . William Brown.
The opinion was disclosed at
a special meeting of the board
Wednesday night a t Syracuse
Elementary SchooL
Attorney Gener$11 Rrflwn also

'

Politics can he clean says
Larry O'Brien in new hook

'.

Tract grant-- legal

·Worse yet; si&gt;mei&gt;f the newer
agencies make the ICC look
generous by (!Dmparison.
Now there are ·flumbers :of
"inflation bli.sting " programs;
which are politically appealing
but highly .impraeti~tl· Th.S..
too often monopoliz~ .the attention of Congresp, the Whil ;;
House and participants in miniswnmits .
But there are also genuine ·
practical ways to spur the
eco(\omy, reduce inflation and
hold em ployment al high
levels. These less glamorous
proposals are talked·, about
privately when experts get
tog et her. In such meetings
itetns like regulations which
pad ·costs, the obtuse attitudes
of men in regulatory agencies
and laws which discourage
competition are high on the list
of effective attacks on our
economic problems.
But there is little follow
through .

r,

Washington Window

By ARNOLD B. SAWISLAK
WASHINGTON ( UPI) Larry O' Brien has written his
second book. The first was a set
, of instructions for assembling
a political campaign that was
so simple and successful that
the Co mmi ttee to Re -Elect the
President thought he must be
keeping something back.
So Gordon Liddy led his
bungling burglars back to
Watergate to bug the phone
and learn the secrets of the
Democratic National Commit·
tee chairma n. This led to a
ser ies of eve nt s of some
national interest and to the last
cha pter of O'Brien's autobio·
graphy, "No Final Victories. A
Life In Politics From John F.
Kennedy To Watergate. "
O'Brien writes an entertain.
ing book, studded with anecdotes about the Kennedys ,
Lyndon Johnson and a cast of
lesser political lights. He also
tells how·he organized winning
I and some losing ) political
campaigns sta}ting with his
own successful run for president of the bartender's union in
Springfield, Mass.
It turris out to be, just as the
O'Brien manual said, a job of
nuts-a nd ~bolts organization
combined with the factors of
good issues and good candidates.
·
" I believe," O'Brien says,
"that effective organization
ca n affect .perhaps 3 to 5 per

·take so long I the expected
benefits are dissipated before
the merger is permitted.
In 1971 , the railroads were
required by the ICC to main·
la in service on 21,000 miles of
lightly traveled tra'ck for which
revenues were ' less than
operatin g costs, forcing the
rails to charge higher rates on
profitable routes, thus driving
away busi ness. Aga in, raising
costs.
Innovations which improve
service or reduce costs almost
inevitably require changes in
rates to realize their potential,
says one government study. By
slowing and discouraging such

price cha nges the ICC inhibits
the very proCess of innovation.
ICC attitudes dis co urage
such efficiencies as could be
achieved by closer cooperation
between the railroads , ttuck
lines and barge operations . ."
The ICC makes it virtually :
impossible for rail lines · to
mak~ those expeditious shifts
i~ rates eflen required to meet
competition .
The re!!"lation of trucking
operations ha s been even.more
ridiculous.
-~
The fixing of routes is so
arbitrary tha t tnlcking firms
may be required to make a 50
mile detour north to pick up a
load 1011 miles south.
TI1ere are limitations on the
type of goods carried ..
Trucks frequently have been
required to return empty even
when suitable cargoes 'were
available - but proscribed for
one unimportant reason or
another.

ville, Rutland Village, East
and West Rutland, Dexter,
Salem , Pomeroy Precinct,
Rock Springs, Harrisonville
and Pageville are assigned to
that session. Starting time is 8
p.m.
,
On Oct. 21at 8 p.m., the third
session 'will be held at the
Eastern High School· cafeteria.
Poll workers from East and
West Bedford, Norlh and South
Chester,
Long
Bottom,
Olivedale, Reedsville, Alfred
and Tuppers Plains are to
attend that meeting .

~~ Utility .wants 20-25% rate hike
!;!~=:;
~:

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~~

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Columbus &amp; Soutbem "Ohio
Electric Co. said Wednesday It would ask lor a 20 1o 25 per
cent rate Increase In mid-November or early December.
The request comes on top of a 19 per cent rate ID·
crease approved In early September by lhe Public
Ulllltles Commission of Ohio, Bob Jones, public In·
fonmdton director lor the utility, said the new increases
would help to oHsel rising costs, equlpme11t and dipping
sales.

;i:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::i::;:;:::·:~&gt;=~=~=~:::i:~::::=:::::::::::::::::::=::-:::~:::::::~:::::::::::~:::::::~~?.::?.:s:::~:::::?.:s:

Corn, s~yheans
kaput in Ohio

By United Press Jolemalional to slaughter 1,0110 calves as.' an
A record breaking freeze economic protest, livestock
that covered much of Ohio breeders in many parts of the
early today will probably bring country are rushing animals,
an end to the growing season including pregnant ones, to
fo r the state's corn and market.
soybean crop and push prices
The farm e rs anticipate
at the supermarket even rising feed grain prices and a
higher with one supermarket tight feed market.
Ed Pendergast, an official of
chain already listing corn,
peas, green beans and beets as the U.S. Agriculture Extension
being in short supply,
Service in Indianapolis, Ind.,
said
Wednesday
some
The national Weather Ser·
vice sald record 'lows for this producers have been sending
date were 25 at Toledo and 29 at pregnant sows to market,
Cincinnati. Snow flurries were recenUy.
The move, w~ich some might
also reported over portions of
the Northeast section of Ohio think reatuslve, PenQergast
said, is a result of the early
overnlght, the service said.
"I think this is going to take killing frost that means far·
ca re of any question as to mers will be paying higher
whether there is going to be prices lor feed for swine kept
any more maturity in corn and over winter.
soybeans," C. William Swank,
executive vice president of the
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation
told United Press lnterriational

MARAUDER LEADERS - Terry 'Bradbury' Whi~tch
and head coach Charley Chancey will lead the Meigs
Marauders Friday night when they host Lthe always tough
Gallipolis Blue Devils in Marauder Stadium. Whitlatch, the
Marauder captain in 1974, has rushed for 300 yards in just 52
carries, an average of 5.8yards per try. Chancey, the dean of
the SEOAL gridirons, Is the winningest coach in the league
since the consolidation of Rutland, Middleport and Pomeroy
High Schools in 11)67.

Four captt•red, charged

today~

Elsewhe re , although ranchers in Texas postponed plans

"'

Velerans Memorial Hospllal
ADMISSIONS Robert
Cooper, Pomeroy ; Mary
Pierce, Long ~oltom; Rhonda
Barnhart, Pomeroy; Phyllis
Bennett, Clifton; Gloria
Wagner , Racine ; Emma
Cummins, Pomeroy: Delores
Neville , Pomeroy; Dana
.
Covert, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES Leora
Schart, Esther Pitzer, Lizzie
Davidson .

BONFIRE TONIGHT
The Meigs High student
The final session will be on council will sponsor a rally,
Tuesday, Oct. 22, at the South· complete with a bonfire tonight
ern High School cafeteria at· 8 behind the old Pomeroy Junior
p.m. with workers from Great High School beginning at 7:30
Riverr Portland, East Letart, · p.m . Friday night .the
Le tart, Minersville , Racine Marauders host arch·riVal
and Syracuse Villages and Gall!polis
in . Ma~auder
Racine Precinct to attend tha~ Stadium. ijlllne time Friday IS
session.
8 p.m.
The goal of the b&lt;Jard in
conducting the
training
LOCAL TEMPS
sessions for the 240 workers of
Temperature in downtown
the county's 40 voting precincts
is 1P have 100 perc~nt trained Pomeroy Thursdlly at II a.m .
personnel Ior the Nov. ~ was 47 degrees under sunny
);kies.
, .
election .
~·

By Dale Rothgeb, Jr.
Charges of auto · larceny,
possession of · s tolen credit
cards, carrying a concealed
weapon and contributing to the
delinquency of a minor were
lodged against three men
arrested Wednesday by the
Ohio Highway Patrol on the
Green Gables parking lot on
upper Rt. 7 at George's Creek
Rd .
~
A fOW'th person, a 17·yE!ar·
old girl, was charged with auto
larceny, possession of stolen
credit cards and carrying a

Leading Creek
taps turned on
Water is now available
through the Leading Creek
Conservancy District Rural
Water System It was an·
nounced today.
Customers who have not
used the water, or cuslomers
who do not have their service
lines installed, will be billed
Oct. 15 thr ough Nov. 14 .
Customers using the water at
the present time will be billed
lnunediately.

concealed weapon by the his three"Coinpanions .to come
Gallia-Meigs Post State High- out . Within seconds, Ptl. Coler
way. She will appear ~fore was joined by PtL David
Gallia County Juvenile Judge Carmon, Sgt. H. D. Conklin,
Ptl, Bruce Wallace and CapR. William Jenkins today.
The men, Joseph (Jose) tain R. c. Wilson and Lt. D. D.
Tavano , 19, NaSpeth, New ' Greenlee of the Jackson Post . ·
York; Carl W. Ohler, Jr ., 24, State Highway PatroL
During their investigation,
Columbus, and Darrell A.
Payne, 19, Columbus, will the patrol found a quantity of
appear in Gallipolis Mimicipal credit cards and articles of new
Court Friday. Their capture clothing, includin g s hoes,
was an example of how instant purchased through use of the
colnmWlication, good training, stolen credit cards.
The cards were owned 'by
and cO:OJleration makes crime a
Roush of ,
ri sky 'business, It went like Mrs . Mieko
this :
.
Reynoldsburg, Ohio, 11nd had
Ptl . G. A. Cole r while been taken early Wednesday
cruising In !hi! Cheshire area morning at a groc~ry store.
The car was owned by Vii&lt;!
radioed for a routine cheCk on a
car with ·oul.of·stale plates to Tavano of Maspeth, N. Y.,
his !ron t. He learned the car father of Joseph Tavano. The
had been reported stolen in older Tavano had filed a s tolen
car complaint . with the New
New York.
PtL Coler asked for York State Police.
A loaded .22 caliber
assistance In stopping the
Derringer plstol was round
vehicle .
The officers, in radio con~ under the righl front seat.
Lt . Ernest Wigglesworth ,
terence planned to stop the
soulhbound car ·· at the in· commander of the Gallia·
teraection of Rt. 7 and 3~ but Meigs Post State Highway
Tavano, the driver, turned Into Patrol, said today that Ptl.
the Green Gables parking lot. Coler will receive the Patrpl's
Ptl. Coler, with his flasher lllue Max lighflling bolt award
and siren on, pulled in behind for his work in Wednesday's
Tavano ·imd ordered him and apprehension.

I

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