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......-.......-_..,......_,._~.:.':"'

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'

•
:·'&lt;:
" "----·&gt;i

Day!

PRICES GOOD THRU NOVEMBER 2.7

RIGHT RESERVED TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

BETSY ROSS
Brown &amp; Serve

Honey Dipped

ROLLS

DONUTS

'HOLSUM

39¢

BETSY ROSS

BREAD

I oz.
size

VOL, XXVI NO. 231

....

Gold Band
---------

We Have Smaller Sizes In Stock

ARMOUR'S STAR BONELESS

lb.

•••••••••••••••••••••••
ARMOUR'S STAR SLICED PORK STEAK ••••••••••••••••Ib. 99e
r•••••••••••M&amp;R COUPON·-------·•1

iCRISCO

99

~

99
$
1

2
I
I.
..---••------------~----..1 L------------------------------.J
"' """" Needed

FRESH CO-RN

ON

COB

IN PKG. OF

·YELLOW ONIONS
'

)' -

Y1JATE
PJNK

.

-

5 FOR
LB.

.

59~-

FLORIDA

-

ORANGES
15~

100
size

..

-Secretary of
of food wiD continue to
SUGAR -Amstar, the nalion'slargestsugar company, raised the wholesale price of
sugar nearly 13 per cent to nearly 75 ceniB a pound, an Increase that could push the retail
price to nearly~ a pound In a few weeks. The government opeus an Investigation of
sugar prices today.
AUTOS -Ford and American Moton over the weekend announced a total of 40,000
additional layoffs because of slumping sales - bringing the Industry total to 200,000
before Christmas .
SfEEL- U.S. Steel said It Is laying "off 4,300 more employes because of the coal
strike. n brings to 18,000 the number of U. S. Steel employes furloughed since the strike

'.:· ',:··'.:•;',
:
..

5¢

GRAPEFRUI.T

began.
INTEREST -The government has cut the FHA and VA Interest ceiUngs for home

~

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~:~
:!:l
:-:·:

j

~
~~

EA.

Miss Witte is
'74 Junior Miss
Babs Witte, Pomeroy of pearance award.
Miss Wi tte is the daughter of
Meig s Hi gh Sc hool, was
Mr.
and Mrs_ William Witte,
crow ned Miss Southeast Ohio
Junior Miss at the J un ior Miss Miss Chapman the da ughter of
Pageant Saturday nigh t at Mr . and Mrs . Paul Chapman,
Meigs JWJ ior High in Mid- Miss Devol the daughter of Mr.
dleport.
and Mrs. Calvin Devol, and
Jennifer
C hapman, Miss Owen the daughter of Mr.
Pomeroy, also of Meigs High and Mrs . Richard S. Owen.
Bill Pine was maste r of
School , was named first runceremonies
and Ralph Werry
nerup , and Bet h Devol ,
Buchtel, Nelsonville-York High chairman of the an nu al event.
School was second runnerup. Peggy O'Brian and Jan Holter,
pageant
winne rs
Judy Owen, Mid dleport, 1973
presented
the
winners.
Meigs High , received the
scholastic awa rd . Miss Witte
also received the youth fitness
and talent award; Miss Devol
the pers onality award and Miss
Chapman the poise and ap-

Cars hang

over 1-75
CINC INNATI I UP! I
Seven Penn Cen tral coal cars
jumped the track on a r ailpass
over Interstate 75 early th is
morning and a:re in danger of
falling into the southbound lane
underneath the overpass,
police sa id .
Officials sa id the seven coa l
cars a re leaning aga inst
guardrails and there iS a "5050" chance the steel railing
could give way."
Traffic was closed at the
Galbraith Road ramp area
s hortly after the 5:15 a.m.
derailment. Penn Ce ntra l
crews are at the scene to clear
lhe tracks.
Very little coal spilled into
the roadways , police said.
There were no injuries.
Penn Central spo kes m an
said a broken rail caused the
accident, but would no t
comment on whether the rail
road is responsibl e for
maintaining tracks over an
interstate.

lb.-

WORKING HARD - Middleport ~umnl, above,
reaching back to the championship year 1944 Wlcrer lite late
coach Forrest Bachtel, will field a beefy and still quick
(bopelully) team fu oppose Pomeroy and Rutland alumni
Thursday at 2:30 p.m. on the greensward of Marauder

l

"'

Probe asked
into 1500%
sugar profit

WASHINGTON ( UP!) Sen . Robert Taft Jr. , R-Dhio ,
critical of soaring sugar prices,
today called on the Federal
Trade Commission to explain
why sugar firms reaped a 1,500
per cent profit.
"With the price of food
already ta king its toll on the
family budget, this una ccountable rise in sugar prices
needs a better explanalion than
the double talk we have heard
so far," said Taft, who wants
the firm s to jus tify the profits.
The President's CowlCil on
Wage and Price Stability
bega n hearings today int o
sugar pricing. At the same
lime, Armstar, one of the
coWl try's major sugar fir ms.,
announced an increase from 75
cents to $1 per pound. '

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday throu g h
Friday, a chance or showers
Wednesday and Thursday.
Falr Friday. Highs In the 40s
and lows In the 30s.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R sq uad
answered a call to Riverview
Drive at 11 :04 a .m . Sunday for
Betty Pooler who was ex·
periencing chest pains. She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admi tied.

LB.

\

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

;!;\

White or Yellow

OR,_ GOLDEN .APPLES

Sparrows first reached the
United States m 1805, when the
Brooklyn In stitute imported
eigh t pairs fr om England to
prote c t s hade trees from
caterpillar s .

.,_,

·w

8 '100
4 BAG 79e SWEET
'POTATOES
400l.
99e 19e
TRAY :
FOR

U.S. NO. 1

REP

Wlrn OOIIPON

EXPIRES 11-27-7&lt;

Now You Know

enttne

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1974

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

JNeW~'::in jj~ Protest
· mounted

NOTICE
PRICES ON TURKEYS
GOOD ONLY WHILE
THEY LAST.
Y LIMITED.

3 lb.
can

at y

WASHINGTON ( UPil Food prices could end up 15
mortgages to 9 per cent, effeetlve today.
percent higher for the year .
~.,;
GREYHOUND - The Greyhound bus strike Is settled.
.,.. about double the rise forecast,
COAL- The government's top mediator tries to settle the coal strike.
!\~ according to Agric ultur e
~~w,w·~·.;:::::::::::::::.-:~:::::::::::-;::::::~-:=:::::::~::=::::::::::::::~::::::::x::::~:=:=:=:::~===~::::::~:=:=:=:~::::::::.':::::=:::::=::::::::::~:=:=:=:::::=:=:=:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Secretary Earl L. Buetz.
Butz said Sunday that food
costs would continue upward
next year and that Americas
would just have whave to pay
more or ea t less.
"I think 1974 will end up
a hove 1973 on 6 average around
By United Press International
14 to 15 per cent increase,"
CLEVELAND- UNEMPLOYMENT IS BITING deeper and
CHARLESTON, W. Va. Butz said in a televised in·
deeper tnfu the ranks of whitecollar workers, according to a
( UP! ) - They marched a round terview ZABC's "Issues a nd
report in Industry Week Magazine today. In October, governthe Lincoln sta tue and said, Answers") .
ment figures showed 1.4 million whi~ollar workers were
''This is just the beginning. ' '
Wlemployed, an increase of about 300,000 over October of 1973.
They flashed "V" signs to
''There will be some more
Bluecollar workers were the first to worry about possible
passing cars on the Boulevard.
(price
increases) next year.
loss of jobs as the Wlemployment rate crept up to 60 per cent last
They waved homemade pla- Not in that magnitude, but I
month, the highest it has been in some 42 months. But the report
cards.
think t here will be some
indicated the greatest number of whitecollar cutbacks appear to
One sign proclaimed, "Save
more ."
have taken place in the auto industry over the past 12 months and
our eartll. Keep our mountains
He also said he thought
more such furloughs remain a distinct possibility.
b ea utiful.
Outlaw
strip
controls on food prices would
mining.''
be "counterproductive" bePEKING ~ SECRETARY· OFSTATEHENRY A. Kissinger
Another said, "Dig it. Don't
cause
" people don't abide by
arrived In a dark, cold Peking today but received a red carpet
strip it." There were about 20
them;
they don't work."
welcome from the Chinese leadership.
of them. Men and women, in
Butz
defended President
There were no cheers, no banners, no a pplause as Kissinger
their 20s and 30s.
Ford's
refusal
to accept a
stepped from his Air Force jet trailed by his wife, Nancy, bundThey came from the hollows
propo sal by the U.S . delegation
led up In a brown fur coat . Aging Chainnan Mao Tse-tung and
and moWitains to the West
to
the recent World Food
alllng Premier Chou En-lal were not at the airport. But Kissinger
Virginia Capitol to dramatize
Conference in Rome for an
did not expect them.
their opposition to strip additional one million tons of
mining . It la sted through
emergency food aid for hWigry
NEW YORK - MARGARETIA "HAPPY" Rockefeller
midday
today,
a
"symbolic
nations.
today uncrerwent surgery for removal of her cancerous right
gesture,"
one
bearded
youn
g
treast just five weeks after doctors removed her left breast in a
man explained, to show that
radical mastectomy. Mrs. Rockefeller went into surgery shortly
''You can't make a decision
"we' re fed up of stripping, fed
before 8:30a.m. at Sloan-Kettering Medical Center's Memortal
like that in vacuum. You have
up of legislative inaction, fed
got w take into consideration
Hospital.
up of special interest groups."
th e impact on the budget ," he
They claimed to represent
TUNIS- A PALESfiNIAN SUICIDE SQUAD in search of
hundreds of persons who have said .
sanctuary declcred at the last moment against martyrdom today
"You have got w consider the
signed a petition demanding
and released three hijack hostages in exchange for the reluctant
availab le supplies in t hi s
the abolition of s urfa ce
welcome of Tunisia. The guerrillas, trying to avoid being turned
country are tight. You have to
mining .
over to angry comrades in the Palestine Liberation
consider the impact on the cost
Pledge To March Again
Organization, laid down their pistols, submachine guns and
And they pledged oo march tO of living in this country."
grenades this morning to end a four-day air and ground drama.
He said the United States
the Capitol again next month,
The commandos then stepped out of an emergency exit of a
should decide where its extra
calling upon "the people of this
hijacked British Airways jet and marched down an escape
food goes "case by case ,
state
to join us." "There's only
ladder with their last remaining hostages - three British
country by country."·
3 per cent of coal In the United
crewmen. Airport sources said the Palestinians argued among
Butz also indicated he would
States that can be strip
themselves at the last minute whether they should become
favor
trading with Cuba "if we
mined," said Rich MacDowell,
martyrs for the Palestinian cause by blowing up the VCIO jet and
a spokesman for the group. could solve the diplomatic
committing suicide.
"Because of that it is not going problems.''
CUba, a major sugar produ·
oo be the answer to the energy
LONDON AGATHA CHRISTIE WROTE "The
cer,
would "make an excellent
problem . Stripping Is just a
Mousetrap " as a radio play for the late Queen Mary's 80th birthform of rape of our natural rice market" for U.S. growers,
day. She thought a stage version might have "a nice little run. " It
he said.
resources."
did . It turned 22 fuday . It's the longest running play in British
Butz also branded the preMacDowell,
a
member
of
the
history. The murder mystery thriller completed its 9,139\h stage
dicted
dollar a poWid cost for
Lincoln
County
Citizens
to
performance Saturday night with a kind of inexorable
sugar
"too doggoned high·
Abolish Strip Mining "(_hich
inevitability.
sponsored the march, said priced'' and said the answer
The actress who takes over the leading role tonight dropped
surface
mining ruins the was more production.
outofthesamepart 17years ago . London audiences now rotal3.5
"Somehow or other, when
mllllon and 41 other countries have been mousetrapped in 22 ecology.
you
get a little more money,
other Wtguages. A spokesman for the production gave out the
you want oo eat bette~ and one
annual statistics : "During the run 41 miles of shirts have been
LOCAL TEMPS
of
the things you turn first is
ironed, the curtain has been raised and lowered approximately
The temperati.U'e in down- sweets and it doeo;n 't take
106,700 times, approximately 144 tons of programs have been
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. much increa~:~e in the con·
sold, nearly 1 million ice creams have been consumed by
Monday was 41 degrees Wider sumption of sweets oo increase
patrons."
the ' demands tremendously. 11
cloudy skies.
Continued on page 8

lB.

COFFEE

•

weeks .
Even if the union 's bargai.Jl..
ing cou ncil accepts t he new
terms , the ratification proce-dure will take about 10 days ·
while rank..and~file miners are
informed of contract terms and
vote on it.
Miners dO not work without a
contract so there will be no
going ba ck to work WJtil the
pact is ra tified .

1

ARMOUR

ROAST

bar gai ning " wh~n he emerged
from the Hay Adams Hotel
wlth
Simon
after
the
agrcem~nt was a nn ounced .
The stri ke already has
ca used perhaps 20,000 layoffs
iii the rail, coke and steel industries . Although most s teel
layoffs are blamed on slow
automob ile sa les, widespread
layoffs could occur if a coal
strike goes for more than four

Eat
less
II ·Economy at a glance IIll
or
spend
·', !~'.\·;:~ rlse~D
Ag~~= ~~sB~t~:~':t.": prlce
•
@ more Is
advised
~·

CHASE &amp; SANBOIRN

•

ag reement had not made the
h'l'ade.
However, he got some help
from William J . Usery Jr .,
direcwr of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service,
whom Miller praised for
"evenhanded treatment of both
parties (that) bridged t he
difficult gap between us at the
crucial time . n
Usery said, "It 's been tough

.

69'e

FRESH
OYSTERS

provements in the tentative
contract package.
" We intend w devote Monday to the task of finalizing
contract language so that a
complete a nd final document
can be prese nted £or the
ratihcation process without
de lay."
Miller had to face a reluctant
management group which was
disappointed that their first

.;~~&lt;~:=::::::::::::...::::::::::::=::::::~;:-;;:;::::=:::::::=:::;:;::~:::::::~;:::::::::!:!:::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::~:::!:::::::::!:::::~::;:;
~
..
···~

'&lt;!

to 20 lb.

to the bargaining table.
Ne it her Mill er nor chie f
industry negotiator Cuy Farmer would answer questions
about the contract. Simon said,
"I'll make no comment on the
package Wltil it is ratified by
the miners."
The union handed out a joint
stateme nt which read: "The
UMWA and BCOA have tonight
agreed in principle on im·

•

!~

I&amp;

T he earlier arrange me nt ,
reached Nov. 13, was scuttled
by the union 's militant 39member bargaining co uncil,
which is expected w begin its
review of the new offer by
Tuesday.
The council was not satisfied
with the original tentative
contract and voted "almost
Wlanimously" to send UMW
Presicrent Arnold Miller back

Devoted To 'Fhe Interests Of The Meigs-Mason A rea

SPICE

49¢

loaf

The set tlement was a n nounced
by
Treasury
Secretary William E . Simon,
who conferred with industry
officials for more than three
hours.
The tentative pact super sedes what both sides had
called " probably the best
agree ment in any industry that
has been made in mocrern
times."

Cle&amp;ri ng and colder tonigh t,
low 15 to 20. SWiny Tuesday ,
high in the middle 305.

FRANK'S
PUMPKIN PIE

Bake &amp; Brake

WASHINGTON ( UPI) _
Coal negotiators agreed on an
Improved contract Sunday
night.
The agreement came after
Informal talks among negoliat.Jrs for the Bituminous Coal
()perawrs Association and the
United Mine Workers of
America . Some 120,000 miners
have been oot on strike since
Nov. 12.

Weather

79e

doz.

Agreement reached on improved coal contract

II

We'll Be ~

Closed '
Thanksgivin

twm

·'

"

••'
•
•

pkg.

•

•

,,

14 - Thr .Sunday Times- Sentillt&gt; l ~ Sw1day ; Nov . 24, 1974

...........

-------~· -

---·'

..· \

·•

Stadium in Pomeroy. 11da " renewal" of the old Thanks·
giving Day ~arne between Pomeroy and Middleport is a
benefit event for the Meigs CoWity Cancer Crusade. The 1944
player is 255 lb. tackle Bob Mi]ls. Biggest player Is 380 lb .
Dave Ashley of the '66 squad . (See pages for squad roster).

•

DINNERS LIMITED
A limited number of Thanks·
giving turkey dinners will ,be
delivered to senior citizens
living alone or incapacitated on
Wednesday through the Meigs
Coun ty Senior Citizens Ce nter .
The turkey and fruit have been
given the center by the YoWJg
Wives Club. Anyone wishing
one of the dinner, who falls in
the categories above, should
contact the Senior Citizens
Center, 992-7886,
before
Wednesday morr;ting.

'"

JUNIOR MISS WINNERS - Babs Witte was crowned
Miss Southeast Ohio Junior Miss at the Junior Miss Pageant
Saturday night at Meigs Junior High School. With Miss Witte
are the other winners, l.r, Miss Judy Owen, scholastic
award; Miss Beth Devol , second runnerup, who also received
the Personality award; Miss Witte, who also received the
Youth Fitness and Talent Awards, and Miss Jennifer
Chapman, first runnerup, who also received the Poise and
Appearance Award.

MEIGS' JUNIOR MISS - Bat.. Witte, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William Witte, Pomeroy, a senior at Meigs High
School, is Southeast Ohio's JWiior Miss.

10-year accord
made on arms
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford and Soviet
leader Leonid Brezhnev have
agreed to limit the nuclear
arms race for the next decade.
Returning Sunday night from
the Vladivostok summit talks,
where the agreement was
reached, Ford st ressed that
"many details remain to be
worked
out
by
our
negolia rors."
"But ceilings on the strategic
forces of both nations have
been accepted," he said. "A
good agreement that will serve
the interests of the United
States and the Soviet Union is
within our grasp."
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger said the agreement
in
principle
was
the
breakthrough in nuclear arms
talks " that we have sought in
recent years.' '
11
We have achieved a cap on
the anns race if we can solve
the technical problems of
implementing the agreement
that was made here,"
Kissinger wid reporters in
Vladivostok. "But I believe
that with good wiU that should
be possible."
Administration sources said
it allows the Soviet Union w
keep its advantage in numbers
of intercontinental nuclear
missiles but lets the United
States keep its advantage in
the number of missiles
equipped
with
multiple
wal'heads.
Press Secretary Ron Nessen
was exultant. "It is one of the
most significant agreements
since World War II," Nessen

dec lared, saying ''Richard
Nixon could not achieve this in
five years, President Ford
achieved it in three months.''
On TUesday Ford will begin
explaining st!U secret details of
the agreement wcongressional
leaders of both parties, and he
will brief more members of
Congress during the week.
He could meet opposition
from legislators such as Sen.
Henry M. Jackson , D--Wash.,
who have resisted previous , _
U.S.-Soxiet nuclear accords as
giving too much away to the
Russians.
A spokesman for Jackson
said his arms control subcommittee would hold hearings on
the agreement· "as soon as
possible,''
Administration officials said
Ford expects to receive within
a week a written statement
from Brezhnev confirming
points on which the two leaders
agreed verbally .
Broad ouilines of the agreement were set forth in a
statement signed by Ford and
Brezbnev Sljnday in the second
Door solarium of a health spa
near the icy Siberian port city
of Vladlvoswk.
U.S. officials hope the tech·
nicalities can be worked out at
U.S ...Soviet strategic arms
limitation talks resuming in
Geneva in January and the
agreement could be formally
signed when Brezhnev visits
the United Slates the following
May or June .
It goes beyond an interim •
nuclear arms accord signed
Continued on p.:t:: &lt;lo 8

�2- The Daily Sentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Mnday Nov 20 1974
ORDINANCE NO 1016 74
AN ORDINANCE FI X ING THE
RATES WHICH COL UM BUS
AND
SOUTHERN
OHIO
ELECTRIC COMPANY
ITS
SUCCESSORS AND A S SIGNS

MAY CHARGE

FOR

STAN

CARD SECONDARY
ELEC
TRIC SERVICE TO CON
SUMERS IN THE VILLAGE

OF

MIDDLEPORT

MEIGS

COUNTY
OHIO
AND
ESTABLISHING A FORMULA

FOR VARYING SUCH RAT ES
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE

OF MIDDLEPORT STATE OF
OHIO
SE CTION 1 Tha t h e rates
and pr ces Whi Ch Columbus and
South e rn Oh o El ec::l r c Com

pany
{h e r e nafter
ca ed
Compan y ) ts s u ccesso r s
and as s tgns sha t be ent t ec1 to
c harg e for standard second ar y
e \e c tr c serv1 c e t u rn sh ed to
consumers n t he V lage of
M ddleport Oh o (h ere na t t er
ca lled
Mun1C1pa 1fy
f or t he
per od set forth n Sec t• o n 5 o f
th s Ordinance ar e her e b y f xed
at not to ex ceed the foll o w n g
Sc h edu e of R ates
~ESIDENCE SERVICE
Ava1lable
for
res de n ce
se r v ce to consum e r s us n g
s mg e phao;e- 60 cyc l es
20 240
1101ts
a 1rer nat1ng c ur re n t
s uppl es through 0 11 e rh ead
d str but on ta c t es
F r s t 20 kwh o r less per m o n h
fo r S2 25
Nex t eo kwh per m ont h 050
per kwh
Nex t 100 k w h p er month 044
per kwh
Nex t 600 kwh p er month 035
p er kwh
All over aoo kwh p e r man h
$ 03 2 per kwh
SEASONAL PROVISION
Our ng th e per od e x t end ng
f r om
th e c u s tomer s f rst
regularly sc h eduled monthly
meter read ng follow ng Se p
tember lOth and n c l u d ng e ght
c onsecut ve
re gula r l y
sc hedu le d
month y
m ete r
all k low att hour s
r ead ng s
over 1300 w II be b lied at 2 JOe
per k lowatt h o ur
FUEL COST ADJUSTMENT
The en e rgen c y cha r g e a p
pi cabl e to a l kilowa tt hours of
en ergy con s umed shall be m
c rea sed or de cr ea sed 00 11c per
KWH per each full on e t er1fh
cent ( 1c ) mcrease o r d ec r e ase
above o r below s xty e g hl and
on e half cents ( 68 5c) c o st per
m II on (I 000 0001 BTU of fu el
consumed at the Compan y s
generat1ng stat ons dur.ng h e
most re c ent mon t h f or wh ch
such c osts hav e bee n d et e r
m ned
MINIMUM CHARGE
M n mum montl'11 y cha r ge
$2 25 per m e ter per month
GENERAL
SERVICE
SMALL - SECONDARY
AVAILABILITY
Aya labl e for genera
g ht
and pow e r se rv ce to c on sumers
us ng the Co m pan y s stan da r d
serv ce for purpo ses oth e r th an
r es dental use and establ s h g
Ma x mum Capa c I es ge n era l y
tess than 20 k lowa tt s
CHARACTER OF SERVICE
Alternat ng
c urr e n t
60
cy c l e s del v e r e d from tl'1 e
Company s
s e c ondary
dtstnbutton sys t em s at n o m nal
voltag es of 120 240 or 12 0 20a
volts s mgle phase and 120
208 120 240 '2 08 240 and 480
volt s three phase Serv ce of a t
least one of tl'1 e fo r e g o n g
character s t cs sh al l be mad e
ava ila bl e to a custom er
the
pa r t cutar s e r v ce c har ac
ten st1 cs to be at opt on of the
Companv

SCHED UL E OF CHARGE S
F rst 20 k wh or tess per mon t h
fQ~$2 80
Nex t 80 k wh per month 05044
per kwh
Next 50 kwh pe r mof'lth p l u s
100 kwh per kw of Ma x 1mum
Capacity m excess of 6 0 kw
04744 per kwh
Balance to 5000 kwh per
month 02744 per kwh
A l l over 5000 kwh per mon t h
02444 per kwh
FUEL COST ADJUSTMENT
The en ergy charge appl
cable
to
all
k to
watt 1'1our s of e n e rgy c on
sumed shall be ncreased or
decreased COll e per K WH p er
each full one tenth cent ( l c)
ncrease or decrease abov e or
below Stxty e ght and one ha l f
cents (68 5c) average cost per
mill on (1 000 000) BTU of fue
consumed at the Company s
generat ng s tat i ons durmg the
most recent month for wh 1ch
such costs have b een d eter
mm ed
DETERMINATION
OF
MAXIMUM CAPACITY
Th e Max1mum Capac1ty shalt
be the sum o T ffle lnd1v dual
Demands of each metered
serv 1ce
suppled under the
prov s tan of th1S Sc hedule
except as mod f1ed here nafter
Th e lnd vidua l Demand of
each metered serv1ce shal l b e
determ ned separate l y
The
lnd1v dua l Demand shal l be the
measured Demand where the
connected load on a metered
serv ce s n excess of twenty
(20 ) k lo watts
where th e
connected toad s twenty ( 30)
k low atts or tess the IndiVIdual
Demand may be determ ned at
the Company s opt on as the
Measured Demand establ i Shed
by cont nuous measurem ent or
by per od1c test or as the
Est mated Demand der ved
from the connected toad
Mea sured Demands
e1ther
by permanent nstallat on of
demand meter or by penod c
test s hall be determ ned m
accordance w th the Company s
standard pract ces and e xc ept
m unusual c a ses shall be the
max1mum 30 m1nute ntegrated
kilowatt demand rec ord ng of
an mtegratmg demand meter
or th e h ighest reg strat on of a
thermal type demand m e ter
dur ng th e b llmg per ad
In
nstances of h ghly f l uctuatmg
toads or demands of short
dural on
the
Measured
Demand may be determmed by
appropr ate meter ng equ 1p
men I designed to measure fully
the Impact of such demands
Where Measured Demands are
determ ned by per od c t est a
Measured Demand so deter

m ned sha I cant nue n eft ect
u ' t I superseded by il sub
sequent t cs
E st ma t ed D ema n ds shall b e
de erm n ed I rom th e co nn ec t ed
load on eac h nd v d u a l meter ed
serv ce as to t o w s
F r s t 5 000 watts at 90 percent
N ext 5 000 wa tt s at 80 pe r ce n t
Over 0 000 watts a t 70 per
ce n t
Th e Max m u m Ca pa c ty n
an y n o n h sh a 1 n ot b e l ess th an
hem n m u m b II n g d e m a nd f
any spec fed n th e serv ce
co n rae!
M NIMUM CHARGE
T he
M n mum
M o nthl y
Charge sha ll be ( I $1 00 plu s
( II J $2 05 per
k lo w a ft per
mon th appl ed to a Max mu m
C ;Jpac ty equ valen l t o 50
perc en of the g r ea t er o f ( a ) th e
h ghes t M ax m um Ca pa c t y
p r ev ous y estab t Shed dur ng
h e term of th e se r v ce co nt rac
or
b
th e
ca p ac t y
requ ements o f he co n sum er
as spec t ed
n t h e ser 'J ce
co ! ra e
SERVIC E AND CONTRACT
PROVI SIONS
E a c h se p a r a t e p o 1nt o f
d el ve y of serv ce b y on e o
mo e Meter ed Se r ... ces s1'1 al be
co n s d er cd a Con t rac t Lo ca t on
and sha be me t er ed a nd b l ed
u nd e
a sepa r a t e se r v ce
co n t r a c
On y one Mete r ed Se rv ce o f
each ty p e as to vo lt age and
p h ase w
be supp l ed to a
consumer un d er t h s Sc h edu e
at o n e Con r act Loc at on
Whe r e wo or mo r e ser v ces a e
sup p l e d t o a co n su m e a on e
Co nt act Loca on sa d ser
v ces
w th n the 1 m ta on s
ab o ve sa ted m ay be com b ned
n on e se r v ce co ntra ct und er
t h s Sc h ed u e or ma y be serv ed
und er se pa ra te c ontr a ct s und er
th s
or
o tl'1 e r
a ppl cabl e
Sc hedu es at th e c on sum er s
opt o n
T h s Sc h edul e s gen e ra ly
app ca bl e to co n sum er s w th
Ma x mum
Ca pa c ty
equ r e m ent s of ess than 20
k1 o wa tt s
a lth o u g h
arg e r
con sum ers may from t me to
t1 m e b e se r ve d under
ts
p rov s o ns How ever wl'1 en a
con sum ers Ma x 1m um Capa c ty
ex cee ds 50 k Ia watt s or t he total
en erg y u t I zat o n s exceeds
20 ooo k1 owatt hours n any
m onth th s Sc h edul e sha 1 not
b e a v a ta ble for a m n mum
per o d of t we ve ( 12) m onth s

Bengrus shock
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - The less m the second half whtle
Cmcmnah Bengals tn]urtcs Anderson threw TD pass No 4
moun l but Ken Anderson - an II yarder to Chtp Myers con tmues to ease the pam
and then sat out most of lhe
Anderson the NFL s leadmg !mal quar ter
passer ftred four touchdown
Dawson Not Blamed
passes and !ted two club
Kansas Ctty s only score•
records Sunday m gutdmg the were Jan Stenerud s ft eld goah
Injury riddled Bengals to a 33-li of 27 and 47 yards bul
rout of the Kansas Ctty Chtefs
quarterback Len Dawson WB'
The four TD tosses tied the not to blame for no touchdowns
Cmcmnatt smgle game mark
Len was n ghl on the mar~
set by Greg Cook m 1969 and wtth hts passmg sa td Stram
Anderson also reached hts own whocoWJted seven passes - two
club record of 18 season sconng of them \\OU!d be touchdowns aenals fr om a year ago The that were dropped by recetvers
fourth year veteran has three
Wtthout a doubt
satd
more games m whtch to break Stram 1t was our worst game
tha t record
of the season
The easy vtclory upped the
The Bengals played one of
Bengals record to 7-4 and kept their best and accordmg to
thetr playoff hopes ahve defenstve tackle Ron Carpenter
Kansas Ctty havmg Its worst the team ha d been challenged
season m a decade shpped to by Brown
47
Coach Brown satd the hat
Cmcmnah went 1nto the was on us and today was a
game
wtth
only
three response to that challenge
healthy runnmg backs and satd Carpenter who blocked a
came out wtth JUSt two KC held goal try
Bro\\n explamed that m sptte
Charhe Dav•s spramed a
of
the tn]urtes he wanted hts
tendon m the ftrst quarter
team
to respond as professwn
mtssed the rest of the game
and hts future status was not als a s we nea r the end of the
season
unmedtately known
The Bengals awarded game
Half Dozen Bengals Atling
balls
to Howard Fest - who
All told half-a-dozen key
Bengals are athng but 1! replaced InJured Bob Johnson
Anderson stays healthy 1t could at center --and to Wtlhams the
be enough! to get the team mto runmng back who two years
ago was playmg sem1 pro ball
pos t..season play
That Kenny Anderson 1s a wtth the Oklahoma Ctty Wran
glers
terrtftc young quarterback
Wtlhams churned out 96
marveled Chtefs coach Hank
yards m 20 carnes and was the
Stram
day
s leadmg rusher
Bengals coach Paul Brown
Satd
Wtlhams after recetvmg
who almost weekly has to
the
game
ball I thanked my
search for new superlahves for
Anderson settled for He s an hnemen
The touchdown by Maddox exceptional guy
the
only one not commg from
The qwet unassurmng Ander
son who htt 19 of 33 for 262 an Anderson pass - was pure
yards merely satd he was glad IndiVIdual effort
The 6-o 240-pounder crashed
he could help Cmcmnatl get
through
the Kansas Ctty de
off to a lead for a change
Indeed the lead that Ander fense to eastly block Jerrel
son helped bwld was more than Wtlson s punt on the Chtefs 30enough to humble the Chtefs yard hne Maddox raced after
the ball as 1t rolled toward the
also hurt badly by InJUries
Thanks to three ftrst half TD end zone
The ball eluded a couple of
tosses -18 and stx yards to
players
but Maddox grabbed 1t
Isaac Curtis and 19 yards to Ed
Wtlhams--eoupled wtth defen at the three yard !me and
stve end Bob Maddox s touch stepped mto the end zone
It was my ftrst touchdown
down after blocking a punt the
Bengals raced to a 27 6 beamed Maddox and I felt
good all over
halfltme lead
C!ncy held the Chtefs score

Always willing to
leant--Woody
COLUMBUS Ohto (UPI ) - coach
hke Mtchtgan s Bo
Ohio State coach Woody Hayes Schembechler
says he s always wtlhng to
Schembechler had satd that
learn sometlung from a great Saturday s Buckeye Wolverme
clash mtght be dectded by the
then the rates and pr ces for
standard secondary e l eclr c
serv c e herlnabove set forth
sl'1an be amended as lollows
RESIDENCE SERVICE
The Mm mum Cl'1arge and the
Charge for the ftrst 20 kwh or
less of ele c tr c energy con
sumed per month shall be $1 85
Otherw se the sc hedu l e r e m a n s
unchanged

GENERAL
SERVICE
SMALL - SECONOARY

The charg e for the f rst 20
kwh or less of e lec tr c energy
consumed per month shall be
$1 80
and
the
aggregate
M nlmum Monthly Charge shall

kickmg game

I started thinkmg about
that
Hayes said whose
Buckeyes were selected Sunday
by the Btg Ten athletic
directors to make their third
straight Rose Bowl appearance

I m always wtlhng to learn
from a great coach so we
worked very hard on It
The placement porta on of h1s
d dl
ea Y kickmg duo
Tom

be reduced " oo pee mo•th Klaban drtlled four fteld goals
s e the sc l'1edule rem a ns
u•changed
to provtde all the pomts m the
SECTION 7 That lh " Or Buckeyes 1210 wm whtle
dman c e shall take effect from
and after the earliest per 1od PWlter Tom Skladany averaged

Otherw

allowed by law and ts written
a cc eptan c e by Columbus and

45 2 yards per kick mcludmg a

Southern Oh o Electr c Com 63-yarder whtch pulled the
pan Y
Bucks out of a hole m the thtrd
SECTION
8
That
the
Mun ctpal ty by leg s tat ve quarter
actton or th e Company shal l 11 Thts was the greatest ltickmg
hav e the r gl'1t to term nate thts
,
Ordtnan ce at any t me upon we ve ever had
Hayes satd,
wnlten not ce fled w lh the and I II have to adlmt I got
other party hereto at least
th rty (30) days pr1or t o such the
msprrahon from Bo
term nat ton date
Klaban Thrills Crowd
SECTION 9 That the terms
and prov1slons of thts Ordnance
Klaban who with hts parents
are lust and several and the and younger sister escaped
mvafld ty of one shall not affect f
the valtd1ty of the other
rom commumst Czechos

-

-~

-

THE SOUTHERN TORNADOS open the 1974-75 season
Tuesday mght at home agamst Waterford Members of coach
Carl Wolfe s Southern squad are front row 1-r, Mike

TO HANDLE
A LOAN OF

$500.

People trust us to handle their savings.

WAN

&amp;'SAVINGS

llage of Middleport th s 11th

By DENNY FOBES
ll wtll be a watt and see
basketball season as far as the
Southern Tornados are con

cerned
That •s the concensus of head
coach Carl Wolfe as he enters
hts second year at Racme after
bnngmg wmmng basketball
back to Southern for the ftrst
tame m several years
Wolfe a former Racme Htgh
standout who returned to hts
nahve area arter stx years at
the Met gs Marauder helm 1s
the only SVAC coach who does
not have at least one slarter
back from the 1973 74 season
Gone are all the first liners of
last season all leaguers Bob
Mtller and Pete Sayre and
other starters Randy Warner
Vern Ord Dave Thetss and
Norman Curfman
The only varstty players
from last season who saw
much achon are 5-10 semor
guard Mttch Nease better
!mown for hts pro~ess on the
football fteld and :i-9 semor
guard Buddy Ervm
Al so back ar e several
reserves from last season
Mtke Rober ts and Danny
Brown Both got m some
varst ty playmg time near the
end of the season
I don t know what to ex
pect satd Wolfe Were a
young team but we should be a
But after the ftrst 15
mmutes the Ohto State defen
se led by tackles Pete Custck
and Ntek Buonamtct end Van
DeCree and linebacker Bruce
Eha throttled the Wolvenne
runmng attack
Juntor tatlback Gordon Bell
of Troy Ohto gamed 108 yards
m the game m 2o cames but
92 of them came m the ftrst
half most of 11 on pttchouts
from Franklm on the opbon
play
Alter a sha ky start our
defense played fabulous satd
Hayes addmg he thought Bell
was splendtd except we dtd a
good JOb of cutting htm off m
the second half
Griffin Continues Reeord
The Buckeyes Archte Gnffm
had 111 hard-earned yards m 20
carnes but 89 of them came m
the opemng 20 mmutes It was
the 21st stratght regular season
game and 22nd overall m which
Gnffm the leadmg Hetsman
Trophy candtdate has gone
over 100 yards m a game
The game was a lyptcal Ohto
State Mtchigan affatr low scor
mg and hard htttmg wtth
drama nght down to the end
A year ago at Ann Arbor the
Buckeyes !wtce had thetr backs
to the wall m the closmg
mmutes as Mtchtgan s Mike
Lantry m1ssed fteld goals whtch
would have broken a 10-10 tie
Lantry had a chance agam
Saturday to wm 1t for the
Wolvermes but hiS 33-yard
fteld goal w1th 16 seconds
remammg JUSt slid outside the
left upnght
As Hayes satd after the
game I have to feel that the
Man upstatrs looked after us

•

season

Pro Standings
Pro Foo'tball Standmgs
By Untied Press Internation a l

NFL

forward Glenn Stmpson
semor guard Tun Hill
1un10r forward Btll Shivley
6-4 semor center Harold
Utile time wtll be wasted
fmdmg out JUst what
mtknown quanbty wtll do
Southern opens the
season Tuesday mght at
agamst Waterford The
of second year coach
Kmght split a pa1r of
With Wolfe s crew last w;,,t~,
and Kmght has all ftve start.&gt;r
back from that squad
Ketth McFarren Alt:hotJgh
McFarren was held at bay
the Tornados last season
year before as a sophomore
npped the cords for 46 pomts
a game w1 th Southern
Taking the court for
Tornados as the opemng
will be Roberts and Htll at
guards WIth Dunmng
and Brown or Cross on
front !me
I really en1oy working wtth
thiS bunch Wolfe concluded
They re competitors they II
come at you

From what Wolfe has been
1974 75 Southern Roster
HI Yr
able to dtseern m scrtmmage Player Pos
encounters wtth Warren, Buddy Ervtn G
59 1
x M tch Nease G
5 10
Morgan Wellston Federal T1m Htll G
5 10
Hocking and Coal Grove the Harold Black C
64
Glenn S1mpson F
6 o 12
Tornados have been spotty
M ke Roberts G
6 0 11
'We look real good m one Danny Brown F
6 1 11
quarter he satd, and then Brady Huffman F
5 10 11
we turn around and look bad 10 Greg Dunnmg F
5 11 11
Paul Cross C
6 4 11
the next one
Paul Schultz F
6 o 11
Besides Dunnmg Nease
B111 Shivley F
5 10 11
Ervm, Cross, Roberts and Head Coach - Carl Wolfe
Asst Coach - James Hamm
Brown other Tornados Wolfe Manager - Randy Dudd ng
Will be counting on this season x
Denotes return ng let
are 6-li juniOr forward Paul Ierman
Schult&gt;, :i-10 )untor forward •
Brady Huffman, 6-ll semor
;;

Mld·Amerlean Collfereoce F1nal Stalldlnp
Conference

Overall

wltpopwltpop
Mianu
50015352

90128276

3 2 0 110 132

6 5 0 262 270

3209875

650249201

2 3 0 98 114

6 4

2309085

740254163

0 5 0 46 137

3 8 0 187 269

Toledo

Amer•can Confer e nce
Ea st
w 1 t pet pf
Mam
8 3 0 727 252

B 3 0 727 234 205
7 4 0 636 278 193
4 7 0 364 187 238
2 9 o 182 136 261
Central
pa
w
I t pel pf
P ttsbrgh 7 2 1 750 2 19 149

C nc nnatl 7
Houston
5

Wash
8 3 0 727
Dallas
6 5 0 545
Phil a
4 7 0 364
NYG1ants 2 9 0 182
Central
w t t pet
Mmnesota 7 4 0 63 6

0

0

4 6 I 143 178

000

0

0

730274168

0.e~

I

.. ,,-.-.~..

cn·--vrr· · JJW""ie".c:.::::::..n

In 1963 President John F
Kennedy assassinated In Dallas three days earlier, was
burted m Arlington National
Cemetery

' LOVE, HATE,

A thought for the day
Amencan poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow said, Into
each life some rain must fall
some days must be dark and
dreary"

AND WARLIFE OF AN
EX·P .O.W.

'

True-life documentary
of author s captivity In
North Korea - a
stirring chronicle of
courage and en
durance

b88t

pa
16 1

545

t

pet
0 727

189

92

115 196

N Or eans 4 6 0 400 11 5
San F r an
4 7 0 364 184
Atlanta
2 9 o 18 2 8 4
x cltnched diVISIOn title
Sunday s Results
Buffalo 15 Cl ev eland 10
Oetro1t 34 Ch1cago 17
wash ngton 26 Ph1 ad e lph a
St Lou s 23 NY G1ants 21
c nc nnat 1 33 Kansa s C ity 6
NV J ets 17M amt 14

111
202
2 5

LA

8 3

7

State Farm
means fast,
fair claim
service anywhere.
Call: 992-7155

INIUIIANCI

•

C n c nnat

o:. r::~mP

a t M am

n ght

N BA Standtng s
By Un1ted Press tnternattonal
Eastern Confe r ence
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
w l oct a b
5 4
789
B u ff a lo
11 7
61
3
N ew Y or k
10 9
526 s
Bo s ton
7 10 41 2 7
Ph Ia
Central D1v san
w 1 oct a h
w ash
3 s
722
Ho us ton
I 6
647 3 1
Cl e vel and
9 8
529 3 1
A tl anta
7 11
389 6
N Or ea n s
2 17
10 5 11 ?
We stern Conf erenc e
MidWe st 0 VI SIOn
w I oct a b
Ch c ag o
10 9 527
KC Omah a
10 9
526
10 10
500
1
De t ro t
M l wkee
-4 13
235 5
Pactf c DIVIS on
w I pet g b
G Stat e
13 6
684
Sea tt e
10 9
526 3
Por tland
9 0
474 4
LA
6 10
375 5 2
Pho en x
71 1 389 5~
!:laTuraay s Hesu!Ts
Buffalo 117 Pfloen x 10 4
M lw a uk ee 90 New Yor k 72
Ph lad elph a 98 Boston 96
KC Omaha 103 At lant a 100
Cl ev e land 121 New O r lean s 100
G olden State 1 10 De t ro t 98
Sea ttl e 11 7 P ortl a nd 110
Sundays Results
Ch iC a g o 91 Buffa lo 89
K C Omaha 109 Clev e land 89
W a s h ng t on 111 Lo s A nge es 108
Ho u s ton 124 Seattl e 109
Mondays Games
( N o ga mes scheduled )

ABA Stand ng s
By Un ted Press Internal anal
East
w I pet q b
K e ntuc k y
12 4
750
13 9 591 2
N ew York
St LOU S
38 1 6
8 IJ
M em ph s
5 15 250 9
V rg n a
4 14
222 9
Wes l
w 1 pet g b
O e n11er
16
4 800 San A n ton o 14
5 7 37 1 1 2
San 0 ego
a 9
471 6 1
Utah
9 11
450 7
lnd a na
6 ll
353 8 •
Saturdays Results
nd1ana 104 New Yo r k 95
D env er 122 V1rg n a 110
San A nton o 127 St Loui s 114
Utah 111 Kentucky 110 ot
Sundays Results
N ew York 99 Denver 90 aft
M e mph s 103 St Lou s 94
SanD ego 117 Utah 97
Mondays Games
(No games sch edul ed )

.

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPIDMETRIST

OFF ICE HOURS 9 30 TO 12 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS J- EAST COURT ST,
POMEROY

4 7 0 176 261
·u:J.Y!A, ! • ~

on your
reading litt

pi
223

pa
137

w

lUTE fUif MUTUAL
AUTOUOIILE
IIIUIAICE CDMP.IIT
H... ltflu
ll. .tlllt• 11111111

Northern Dllilo!S
0

161

168
179
237

l1ke a good ne1ghbor
State Farm
IS there
".·••·.·,·.·.··M""

Ball State
0

209
158

pf
197

How
long can
you live
on love?

Eastern Michigan

0 0 0

o

5

3 8 0 273
West

Ch cago

232 155

5 0 545 181 153

Gree n Ba y 6
Detro t
6

Mlchl~an

0 0 0

D a la s 10 H o u ston 0
N ew Engla n d 27 Ball mo re 17
Green B ay 34 San D ego 0
L os An g e l es 20 M nnesota 17
D enver 20 Oa k and 17
Sa n F r a n c sco 27 A tl an t a 0
Manday s Gam e
P t sbur gh at N ew O r l ean s
n ght
Thursday s Gam es
De n ver a t Det r o1t
Was h ngton at Da ll as
Sundays Gam es
Ba tt mo re at Buffa lo
G r ee n Ba y at Ph1 a delph a
Ho us ton at P tts burg h
Ka n s a s C t y a t St L OUIS
L os A n ge l es at A tl an ta
N ew E ng l and at Oak and
N ew Or lean s a t M nneso t a
NY G ants a t Ch ca g o
SanD ego a t NY Jets
San F r anc se a at Cle v e la n d
Mnnrt:av

Western Michigan
091034193

185
21

De nv er
5 5 1 500 23 4 236
Kansas Ct y 4 7 o 364 195 238
SanD ego 3 B 0 273 153 237
Nattonal Conf e r enc e
East
w
I t
pet pf
pa
St LOUIS
9 2 0 818 246 173

250 203

0

258
181

3 8 0 ~73 203 275
West
w I t pet pf p a
x Oakland 9 2 0 818 280 173

Kent State

000

4 0 636
6 o 455

C ev eland

Bowling Green

Central

pa
170

Buff a lo
N England
NY J et s
Bait

Oh10U

inllaliot'i

Love

It can move mountiuns.

But 1t cant run a household

A Great Gift Idea• ••

Or meet all the b1lls Or put

ktrlB through college

That takes money
And one good way to make
sure your money wtll grow
along wtth your marnage 1s

bl

stgmng up now for the Pay rol
Savmgs Plan where you work
Then an amount you spectfy

w•ll be set as1de from each pay

Southern High gridders
honored with banquet
BY DENNY FOBES
Athlehcs ts one of the !west
thmgs that can happen to you
especially football
Wtth that opemng !me Pomt
Pleasant head football coach
Dtck Ware set the tone for hts
address at the Southern Htgh
School football banquet
Saturday e vemng m the htgh
school gymnastum
You have to dedtc ate
yourself m moldmg yourself
mlo part of that mold that
you II be m future years
Ware staled as he spoke to
Southern football players
cheerleaders and parents
Ware who m 3o years of
coachmg 27 as a head coac h
ha s a won lost percentage of 66
pet labeled football the most
compelltive sport and hsted
numerous thmgs that should be
learned m athletics
Those charactenstics Ware
beh eves an athlete should
develop are sportsmanship
leadership dedtcatton destre
colnpeti!tve sp1r1t team play
responstbthty and prtde
Concermng prtde Ware
stated You should have prtde
tn
yourself
your ac
comphshments your school
church
commumty and
parents
Above all he satd you
should have respect and
loyalty

Ware added that an athle~ homeconung the very next
has a much better chance of week
bemg a success tha n a non

athlete You have to wm m
hfe 1! ) OU are gomg to be
successful he satd I don l
thmk anv ed uca twnal system
would be the same wtthout
athle!tcs
Ware 06 a graduate of
Fmrmont College and a nahve
of Webster Spnngs W Va
commended today s athle tes
catm g that there are so many
other thmgs to do today bestdes
gellin g tn\ olved m sports
You play 1t by ch01ce he
satd no one makes you play
Wa re s
addr e ss
was

preceded by a bullet dmner
a nd foll owed by the tn
tr oduc ll on of the Southern
cheerleaders by thetr sponsor
Carla Shuler
Head foo tball coach Btll
Jewell saymg that he was
pleased but not sahsfted wtth
the Tornado season presen~d
awards to hts backs before
asststan t coach John Duddmg
mtroduced the hnemen
Jewell satd that he wtll not be
saltsfled until Southern ha s the
best Class A football team m
Ohto The Tornados low pomt
lhts fall accordtng to Jewell
was the loss to arch rtval
Eastern whtle the htgh pomt
rummg
Wahama s
was

lhe bes t

IS

yet to come

J ewell concluded
The tlnrd year mentor then
presented awards to the etghl
Southern se mor gndders
Monty Hart Glenn Simpson
Run Johnson Don Bush Dave
Huddl es ton Buddy Ervm
John Salser and Mttch Nease
Je\\ell pomted out that Nease
gamed 4 042 yards in his career
at Southern scored 302 points
was Al~SV AC 3 years and was
the league s most valuable
player th1s season

Je\\ ell then announced the
wann er s

of

th e

Honorary

Captam award for outstandmg

HONORARY CAPTAINS - Selected honorary captains for their outstandmg per
formances throughout the 1974 Tornado football season were 1-r Damy Brown Mttch Nease
and Greg Dunmng Combmed these three gndders of head coach Bill Jewell wer""m on 210
tackles thts fall bestdes compnsmg the mam part of the Southern offenstve backfteld Nease
was also awarded the Leadership Trophy as voted by hiS teammates

pe rforma nces Nea se Greg

Dunnmg and Danny Brown
The Leade rship Award
presented to the most valuable
Tornado as voted by hts team
mates went to Nease
Herb Whtte then presented
spectal plaques to four persons
who helped durmg the season
Bob Spurlock Jtm Carnahan
pnnc1pal Jtm Ada ms and
s up enn~ndenl 1 Bob Ord
The 1974 offtcers of the
Alhleltc Boosters were also
mtroduced They are president
Danny Brown secretary Dee
Brown

trea s urer

Martha

Duddmg and reporter Wmme
Waldmg
Spectal thanks were also
' extended to the Tornado band
and 1ts dtrector Joy Btgler
·~'
Buddy Ervm on behalf of the
Honored Saturday evening at the &amp;&gt;uthern Tornado , football team presented a gtlt
'
football banquet were
to the Southern coaches
Grldders - Donald Bush, Martin Bush, Danny Brown,
Jewell Duddmg and assiStant
' Joe Brown, Randy Dudding, Danny Dudding, Donny ' Jtm Hamm whtle Stephame
Dudding, Greg Dunning, Eric Dunning, Buddy Ervin, Herb
Ord presented a g1ft to Shuler
Ervin, Chris Forbes, Mark Forbes, Dave Huddleston, Mike
on behalf of the cheerleaders
' Huddleston, Monty Hart, Mitch"' ... , John Salser, Gleun
Carnahan served as the
"" Simpson, Ron Johnson, Ken &amp;.ose, . . ..r Adkins, Steve
mas ~ r of ceremomes and the
' Boso, Tony Carnahan, Dan Codner, Gr·~ &lt;-'undiff, Steve
Rev S~ve Wtlson gave the
Hendricks, Otris Hill, Jerry Johnson, Doug Warden, Kevin
bened1clwn
' WUford, Scott Wolfe, Marty Foley, Perry Hill, Steve Hill,
Steve Nease, John Sayre, Richard Teaford and Mike
Warner
Managers - Dave Clark and &amp;bert Phillips
Statisticians - Meagan Brown and Dave Clark
Varsity Cheerleaders - RAlnda Ash Stephanie Ord,
' Vickie WoUe, Cheryl Larkins, Debbie RAJush and Pam

Honored at grid banquet

•

SENIOR HONOREES - Semor members of the 1974 Southern football team were honored
wtth trophies presented by coach Bill Jewell Tornado sentors are front row 1-r John Salser
Buddy Ervm Dave Huddleston Ron Johnson and back row 1-r Glenn Simpson Monty Hart
Don Bush and Mitch Nease

•

ams In,
ave
new
Same lineup

s

Parsons

~

Reserve Oteerleader&amp; - Melania Waldnig, Rhonda ,
, West, Usa Allen, Julie Gooch, Ten1na Dill and Patty
IWblnson

•

zn big bowl
by FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The Rose Bowl IS becommg
the prtvate domam of Ohto
State and Southern Callforma
Those two national powers
earned the r1ght to represent
thetr conferences m the New
Years Day shmutg at Pasade·
na Calif over the weekend
and 11 marked the thtrd sue
cesstve year they will be
meetmg m the nation s oldest
post-&lt;&gt;eason classic
OhiO State was selected as
the Big Ten Conference re
presentative by a vote of the
athletic directors Sunday after
the third-ranked Buckeyes had
defeated second-ranked Michi
gan 12-!0at Colwnbus Ohio on
Saturday to finish m a he with
the Wolvermes for the confer
ence championship
Southern Califorrua, which
lost to Ohio State m last
January s Rose Bowl but won
the p~evious year, cfincbed a
spot m thiS year s game by
whipping UCLA 34-9 to WUI the
Pacific Eight crown for the
seventh time m the last !Wie
years
The appearance of Ohio State
marks the first time m history
that a Btg Ten school will
represent the conference Ill the
Rose Bowl thr~ years in a
row Prtor to 1973 the Big Ten
had a ruling that no team could
go to the Rose Bowl two years
in a row unless there were

mttlgatmg ctrcumstances such as Ohto State s refusal to
accept the btd m 1961
Iromcally, the team wtth the
best record m the nation over
the past three years has been
MIChigan (30 2 I) Yet the
Wolvermes have not been to a
bowl because they have failed
to defeat the Buckeyes durmg
that stretch
For the second year Ill a row
Michigan blew a chance to
defeat Ohio State because of
the inability of kicker Mike
Lantry to convert a field goal
Last year, when the two teams
battled to a !().10 tie, Lantry
miSsed a 44-yard fteld goal
attempt m the closmg seconds
and Saturday he failed from
the 33 w1th 18 seconds left
Instead, it was Ohio State s
ktcker, little known Tom
Klaban who proved the differ
ence m the game Klaban a
soccer...tyle kicker from Ole
choslovalda who was not even
on scholarship booted four
field goals in four attempts three of them from more than
40yards -to account for all the
Buckeyes' scoring
Southern Califorma duln t
have to sweat as much in
wlnnmg Its crucial game
against UCLA The Trojans
clearly outmamed the BI'UIIIS
and, w1th Anthony Davts
shattering 0 J Sunpson s con
ference career rushing mlUjk,
Contmued on page 8

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
The Los Angeles Rams have
a Natwnal Football League
diVIsiOn !ttle vtrtually chnched
thanks to James Hams ac
curacy whtle the Buffalo Btlls
have new hope for thetr playoff
berth thanks to Joe Namath s
moxie
Hams threw an etght-yard
touchdown pass to Jack Snow
wtth I 14 left Sunday gtvmg the
Rams a 20-17 vtctory over the
Mmnesota Vtkmgs The Rams
wtll chnch the Western title m
the NFC Monday mght tf the
Pittsburgh Steelers who are
seven pomt fa vontes defeat the
New Orleans Samts
The Btlls Just managed to
sqwdge past the Cleveland
Browns l:i-10 but were handed
a new shot at thetr dtvtswn title
when Namath came through m
the !mal mmutes to gtve the
New York Jets a 17 14 lrtumph
over the two-time Super Bowl
champton Mtamt Dolphms The
Btlls and Dolphms go mto the
!mal three weeks of the season
wtth tdentical 8-3 records
The St Louts Cardmals
defeated the New York Gtants
23-21 the Denver Broncos upset
the Oakland Ratders 2~17 the
Detrott Uons whtpped the
Chtcago Bears 34 T7 the Green
Bay Packers routed the San
Dtego Chargers 34-0 the New
England Patnots topped the
Baltimore Colts 27 17 the
Dallas Cowboys shut out the
Houston Otlers 1().0 the Cmcm
natt Bengals romped over the
Kansas Ctty Chtefs 33-li the
Washington Redsklns outscored
the Phtladelphta Eagles 26-7,

and the San Franctsco 49ers
rolled over the Atlanta Falcons
27-0 m Sundays other games
The Steelers have all the
moltvatton they need on the
Monday mghl TV game smce a
vtclory over the Sam ts would '
put them to wtthm one wm m
thetr last two games of wmmng
the AFC s Central Dtvtston
champtonshtp
Cardinals 23 Gianlll 21
The Cardmals virtually
chnched a spot m the playoffs
for the ftrst time smce 1948
when Jtm Bakken kicked hts
thtrd fteld goal of the game a
36-yarder with three seconds to
go The Gtants have now lost
lht ee stratghl games-one m
overtime one wtth two seconds
to go and the thtrd wtth three
seconds left
Broncos 20 Raiders 17
Jon Kenworth gained 148
yards and Otis Armstrong 146
rushmg as the Broncos snapped
the Ratders mne game wmnmg
streak Ken Stabler threw 34
and seven yards to Fred
Btlenmkoff for Oakland s touch
downs The Ratders had a!
ready clinched the dtvtswn
htle
Lions 34 Bears 17
Punt returns of 38 and 58
yards by Dtck Jauron led to
two touchdowns for the Ltons
who moved steadtly on the
ground to beat the Bears eastly
The Ltons scormg thetr most
pom ts m a game thts season
had a 34 3 lead before the
Bears scored thetr first touch
down Altle Taylor gamed 80
yards rushing and scored one

ope

touchdown (or the Uons
Packers 34 Chargers 0
John Had! completed 14 of 22
passes for 157 yards mcludmg
one touchdown leadmg the
Packers to thetr htghes t smgle
game pomt total smce Novem
ber 1972 The Packers took a
13-0 halftime lead when Enck
Torkelson ptcked up a fwnble
and ran 29 yards for a
touchdown m the second penod
Palrlots 27 Colts 17
Jtm Plunkett threw a touch
down pass and ran for another
TD as the Patnots snapped a
three game losmg streak and
remamed m lhe1r diVISIOn race
along wtth Mtamt and Buffalo
It was the mnth loss m II
games for the Colts who
traded 17 3 at halftime
Cowboys 10 Oilers 0
Doug Denmson scored Dallas
touchdown on a one yard
plunge m the first penod and
Efren Herrera added a 20 yard
fteld goal early m the lhtrd
penod m a game dommated by
the Cowboys defense Cowboy
defensemen Harvey Martm Ed
Jones BtU Gregory Jethro
Pugh and Pat Toomay sacked
Houston s Dan Pastormt for 75
yards m losses whtle the
secondary allowed Otler recetv
ers a total of 13 catches for o5
yards
Bengals 33 Chiefs 6
Ken Anderson completed 19
of 33 passes for 262 yards and
four touchdowns m leadmg the
Bengals to thetr romp over the
Chtefs Kan sas Ctty whtch lost
11$ seventh dectston m II
games managed only f1eld

goals of 27 and 47 yards by Jan
Stenerud
Redskins 26 Eagles 7
Rookte Larry Jones 102-yard
fD kickoff return early m the
thtrd pertod was the chnchmg
play tn the Redskins wtn over
the Eagles who have lost SIX
stratght games

Transparent

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PH. 992-2318
:11117 Spring Ave , Pomeroy

'

•

Tornados also have been htt
early by the tn]ury bug
Nease the only returmng
letterman suffered a spramed
ankle dunng the football
season, and spramed hts other
ankle recently m a basketball
workout
Brown a hustlmg 6-1 JuniOr
forward has m1ssed several
practices wtth a football m
Jury while Greg Dunnmg a :;..
II )untor forward, has suffered
a broken nose and also has
knee and foot aliments
Wtth all these phySical
problems Wolfe satd he II be
counting on much needed help
from Paul Cross a 6-4 Junior
who should help the Tornados
especially early m the season
As for the SVAC outlook
Wolfe stated
They re all
gomg to be tough for us
everybody on our schedule wtll
be tough " pomtlng out that
Southern has non league en
comtters wtth such teams as
Glouster Wahama Hannan
and Waterford all wtth most of
thetr starters back from last

good defenstve team a sound
defenstve squad
But ' Wolfe added these
kids are wmners wtth the nghl
frames of mmd We ve got 12
good atbtudes
Thts year s Tornado squad IS
not a btg one, netther IS 1t
qwck wtth the latter taking
away any concenlrated threat
of a full court press during the
season
Wolfe also readily adlmts
that thts season s squad IS not
blessed w1th natural shooters,
as he stated We II m1ss two
good shooters we had last year
Sayre and Mtller But Wolfe
also added that Mike Roberts
a Junior who plays m much the
same style as Mtller, could
develop mto a real good player
11 he gets his shooting touch
developed
Despite thts lack of pure
shooters Wolfe thmks there IS
one advantage to not havmg
JUst one or two outstandmg
mdtVIdual performers
Our ftrst mne players are
pretty equal as far as ability IS
concerned ' he stated 'My
ftrst player and the ninth one
are
pretty
much
In
terchangeable he satd m
dtcating that thiS will allow
htm to subsl!tute with
regulartty and keep fresh
players on the Door
Wolfe wtll again go with the
man to.man defense, while
offensively he sa1d this Will be
a pattern ball club citing the
lack of qwckness We won t
do anythmg fancy " he
proclatmed
As 11 the above Isn't enough
to dampen the hopes of
Southern cage supporters, the

GAWPOUS
BUSINESS COLlEGE

12&lt;; F Main St • 992 2171

Roberts, Mitch Nease Glenn Simpson, Buddy Ervm,
Hill and Brady Huffman ami back row 1-r Greg Durming,
Danny Brown Harold Black, Paul Cross, Paul Schultz
Bill Shivley

By Gary Philli[JS
Well 1t s time for the real thmg now
Area cage teams wtll be openmg the1r seasons thts week and
we have some real mterestmg contests already commg up Now
lets take a look at those games
nlESDAY NOV 26
S V A C - Hannan Trace vs South Pomt Opemng game of
the year could go etther way South Pomt 63 Hannan Trace !i6
Waterford vs Southern Wtldcats mfhct first wound on
Tornados Waterford 70 Southern 59
Other games Ironton 68 Coal Grove :;7
FRIDAY, NOV 29
S V A C - Hannan Trace vs Eastern The dtfference m this
game will be the H T offense Hannan Trace 73 Eastern 55
Southern vs North Gallia Ptrates open season m a wuuung
note North Gallia 64 Soutl11!rn 52
&amp;&gt;uthwestern vs Ironton St Joe Flyers will prevail I tlunk
Ironton St Joe 60 SOuthwestern 51
Chesapeake vs Symmes Valley Vikings have a little more
than they can handle Chesapeake 68 Symmes Valley 60
Other games - Ironton 61 Athens o3 Jackson o7 Oak Htll :;o
and Raceland 72 Coal Grove 59
SATURDAY NOV 30
Portsmouth 78 South Pomt 62 Jackson 69 Logan 62 and
Trimble 58 Berne-Umon o2

It's wait and see at Southern

Passed by the Counci l of the lovakia m 1967 brought the
'
day of Novembec 1974
Buckeyes back from a 1().0 ftrst
quarter deftclt wtth hiS boom
ATTE ST
mg kicks before a sun-drenched
Gene Grate
Clerk
record crowd of 88 243 and a
Approved thts 11th day of
natwnal teleVISIOn audience
November 1974
Fred Hoffman The 6-1 182-pound juntor
Mayor from Cincmnah completing hts
(11) 18 25 2tc
first year as the regular
Buckeye placement spectahst
htt field goals of 47 20 and 43
r
)'ards m the second pertod and
got the clincher from 45 yards
out early m the thtrd quarter
Haye&amp; satd he couldn t
FORA BETTER
remember one of hts team s
JOB, SOONERever wmnlng a game before
GOTO
Without a touchdown but was
BUSINESS
fteld goals
qwck to add
COLLEGE
defmttely are a part of the Several Career Courses
game and you better look m Available Approved for
every nook and cranny you can Veterans Benefits
for a way to score
Wr1te v1slt or call 446 4367
MIChigan scored the ftrst two for free cata log New classes
times It had the ball on a 42- start Dec 9
yard pass from quarterback
Denms Franldm to wmgback
Gtl Chapman early in the ftrsl
quarter and a 37 yard field goal
s
.:Gallipolis
by Mtke Lantry a few minutes 36 Locust
State
N~7_1
02·00328
later
v

'I'RUSI'US

What makes us a different
kind of loan company
makes us a better kind of
loan company

How the@
.will bounce

Dawson &amp; Co.

TERM OF CONTRACT
Th e te rm of the contract for
se r v ce und er th1 S Schedul e
sha I b e as prov d ed n the n
d v dual c ontract w th each
con su m e r bu t n no ca se s hall
th e contra c t t e rm b e less than
one yea r
SECT I ON 2 Th a t the ra tes
for el ec tr c se rv ce set fo r th n
Sect on 1 of 111 s Ordnan ce shall
be c al cu l at ed as follows
( 1) Ea ch mon t l'1 durmg the
term o r th s Ord nan c e th e
Co mpa n y w il l cal c ulate b liS for
stand a rd se co n d ar y e l e c tr c
se r v ce .n t f1 e Mun c pa ty at
th e r ates se t forth n Sec t on l of
th s Ordn an ce
(2 ) Each mo nth th e company
w II r e nd er a b 1 for street
I ght ng
serv ce
n
tf1 e
Mun c pa l l y In a c.::ordance
w h th e p r ov sons of the t hen
eff ec t v e stree t 1 ght ng or
d nan ce of th e Mun c pa l tty
(J J Ea c h m onth dur ng the
term of th s Ord nance t he
Co m p a ny w I r ec a l culate b lis
f o r r es d e nt1 a l and general
se rv 1c e - sm a ll - se condar y
serv ce a t th e rat es set fortl'1 m
Sec t on 1 of th s O r dmance
a m end ed n th e m anner set
fo r th n Sec t on 6 of lh s Or
d nance
(4
T h e d ffere nce between
he
c at c ulat ons
under
P ara g raph ( I J h e r e nabov e
r eferr ed to In th s Sec t on 2 and
th e ca lcu at1ons as prov ded n
P AR AGRA PH (3) h e r e mabov e
r eferr ed to In th s Sect10n 2 shall
bea ppl ed to the payment of the
curr ent b Is to the Mun1 c pa lty
for serv ce. r e ndered under the
tl'1en effect1v e Street L ght ng
Ordm a nce m c lud ng any unpa d
balan ce from prev1ou s penods
Any
su c l'1
d fference
no t
requ red for t he paym e nt of the
current b II shal l be app l ied to
subsequent b li s fo r sad ser
v ces
SECTION 3 t hat n the even t
the t erm of a ny c ontract fo r
st andard s econdary electr c
ser v c e he re after made w1 t h
consumers n th e Mun1cpah t y
pur suan t t o the pro v son of th s
Ordnan c e sl1all ex tend beyond
the t erm mat on date of th s
Ordinance the rates mcludmg
the M n1mum Monthly Charge
chargeable ther e under shall be
th e rat es 10 effect W1fh n the
Mun coal tv at th e t me such
c harge s made
SECTION 4 That the Ru l es
and Regulat ons conta ned In
th e Company s P U C 0 No 1
on f lew t h The Publ c Ut 1 t es
Comm1 ss on of Oh10 (a s the
same may from t me to t1me
be a mended or supplemented)
as are not n confl ct w th the
ex press proVI SIOns of thts Or
dman c e are appl cat&gt;Je to al l
ser v 1ce render ed under and
pursuant to th s Ordnance
Noth ng conta1ned w thm th1s
Ordnan ce shall prevent any
con s um e r from tak ng ad
vantage w thm t he effect ve
per od of th1 S Ordm a nce of any
appl1 c able rule
regutat on
supplement or opt anal rate
Wh ch the Company may make
ava table n ts P U C 0 No 1
on f1le w th the Public UtI ties
Com miss on of Oh o for the
c lass of service nvolved
SECTION 5
That th s Or
d nance shall be and reman 10
force a s to 01lls for electr c
s erv ce
based
on
meter
r ead ng s m a de dur1ng the
per1od commene~ng on the
effect1ve date of lh1s Ordmance
and endmg on J uly 25 1976
sub teet to pr1or termtnat on of
th i s Ordnan ce as prov d ed for
n Sec t on 8 of this Ordnance
SECTION 6 That 1f at any
t me With n the per od f xed by
th s Ordnance the Mun1C1pallty
should author ze an alternat ve
method for the payment of the
then c urrent bills of the
Municipal ty tor street 1 ghtmg
at the rates and m accordance
w th the terms and prov tSIOns of
th e then effecttve street 1 ghtmg
ordnance of the Mun1 c pal ty

.l'"'f1"rV

3-TheDailySentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday , Nov 20,1974

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�2- The Daily Sentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Mnday Nov 20 1974
ORDINANCE NO 1016 74
AN ORDINANCE FI X ING THE
RATES WHICH COL UM BUS
AND
SOUTHERN
OHIO
ELECTRIC COMPANY
ITS
SUCCESSORS AND A S SIGNS

MAY CHARGE

FOR

STAN

CARD SECONDARY
ELEC
TRIC SERVICE TO CON
SUMERS IN THE VILLAGE

OF

MIDDLEPORT

MEIGS

COUNTY
OHIO
AND
ESTABLISHING A FORMULA

FOR VARYING SUCH RAT ES
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE

OF MIDDLEPORT STATE OF
OHIO
SE CTION 1 Tha t h e rates
and pr ces Whi Ch Columbus and
South e rn Oh o El ec::l r c Com

pany
{h e r e nafter
ca ed
Compan y ) ts s u ccesso r s
and as s tgns sha t be ent t ec1 to
c harg e for standard second ar y
e \e c tr c serv1 c e t u rn sh ed to
consumers n t he V lage of
M ddleport Oh o (h ere na t t er
ca lled
Mun1C1pa 1fy
f or t he
per od set forth n Sec t• o n 5 o f
th s Ordinance ar e her e b y f xed
at not to ex ceed the foll o w n g
Sc h edu e of R ates
~ESIDENCE SERVICE
Ava1lable
for
res de n ce
se r v ce to consum e r s us n g
s mg e phao;e- 60 cyc l es
20 240
1101ts
a 1rer nat1ng c ur re n t
s uppl es through 0 11 e rh ead
d str but on ta c t es
F r s t 20 kwh o r less per m o n h
fo r S2 25
Nex t eo kwh per m ont h 050
per kwh
Nex t 100 k w h p er month 044
per kwh
Nex t 600 kwh p er month 035
p er kwh
All over aoo kwh p e r man h
$ 03 2 per kwh
SEASONAL PROVISION
Our ng th e per od e x t end ng
f r om
th e c u s tomer s f rst
regularly sc h eduled monthly
meter read ng follow ng Se p
tember lOth and n c l u d ng e ght
c onsecut ve
re gula r l y
sc hedu le d
month y
m ete r
all k low att hour s
r ead ng s
over 1300 w II be b lied at 2 JOe
per k lowatt h o ur
FUEL COST ADJUSTMENT
The en e rgen c y cha r g e a p
pi cabl e to a l kilowa tt hours of
en ergy con s umed shall be m
c rea sed or de cr ea sed 00 11c per
KWH per each full on e t er1fh
cent ( 1c ) mcrease o r d ec r e ase
above o r below s xty e g hl and
on e half cents ( 68 5c) c o st per
m II on (I 000 0001 BTU of fu el
consumed at the Compan y s
generat1ng stat ons dur.ng h e
most re c ent mon t h f or wh ch
such c osts hav e bee n d et e r
m ned
MINIMUM CHARGE
M n mum montl'11 y cha r ge
$2 25 per m e ter per month
GENERAL
SERVICE
SMALL - SECONDARY
AVAILABILITY
Aya labl e for genera
g ht
and pow e r se rv ce to c on sumers
us ng the Co m pan y s stan da r d
serv ce for purpo ses oth e r th an
r es dental use and establ s h g
Ma x mum Capa c I es ge n era l y
tess than 20 k lowa tt s
CHARACTER OF SERVICE
Alternat ng
c urr e n t
60
cy c l e s del v e r e d from tl'1 e
Company s
s e c ondary
dtstnbutton sys t em s at n o m nal
voltag es of 120 240 or 12 0 20a
volts s mgle phase and 120
208 120 240 '2 08 240 and 480
volt s three phase Serv ce of a t
least one of tl'1 e fo r e g o n g
character s t cs sh al l be mad e
ava ila bl e to a custom er
the
pa r t cutar s e r v ce c har ac
ten st1 cs to be at opt on of the
Companv

SCHED UL E OF CHARGE S
F rst 20 k wh or tess per mon t h
fQ~$2 80
Nex t 80 k wh per month 05044
per kwh
Next 50 kwh pe r mof'lth p l u s
100 kwh per kw of Ma x 1mum
Capacity m excess of 6 0 kw
04744 per kwh
Balance to 5000 kwh per
month 02744 per kwh
A l l over 5000 kwh per mon t h
02444 per kwh
FUEL COST ADJUSTMENT
The en ergy charge appl
cable
to
all
k to
watt 1'1our s of e n e rgy c on
sumed shall be ncreased or
decreased COll e per K WH p er
each full one tenth cent ( l c)
ncrease or decrease abov e or
below Stxty e ght and one ha l f
cents (68 5c) average cost per
mill on (1 000 000) BTU of fue
consumed at the Company s
generat ng s tat i ons durmg the
most recent month for wh 1ch
such costs have b een d eter
mm ed
DETERMINATION
OF
MAXIMUM CAPACITY
Th e Max1mum Capac1ty shalt
be the sum o T ffle lnd1v dual
Demands of each metered
serv 1ce
suppled under the
prov s tan of th1S Sc hedule
except as mod f1ed here nafter
Th e lnd vidua l Demand of
each metered serv1ce shal l b e
determ ned separate l y
The
lnd1v dua l Demand shal l be the
measured Demand where the
connected load on a metered
serv ce s n excess of twenty
(20 ) k lo watts
where th e
connected toad s twenty ( 30)
k low atts or tess the IndiVIdual
Demand may be determ ned at
the Company s opt on as the
Measured Demand establ i Shed
by cont nuous measurem ent or
by per od1c test or as the
Est mated Demand der ved
from the connected toad
Mea sured Demands
e1ther
by permanent nstallat on of
demand meter or by penod c
test s hall be determ ned m
accordance w th the Company s
standard pract ces and e xc ept
m unusual c a ses shall be the
max1mum 30 m1nute ntegrated
kilowatt demand rec ord ng of
an mtegratmg demand meter
or th e h ighest reg strat on of a
thermal type demand m e ter
dur ng th e b llmg per ad
In
nstances of h ghly f l uctuatmg
toads or demands of short
dural on
the
Measured
Demand may be determmed by
appropr ate meter ng equ 1p
men I designed to measure fully
the Impact of such demands
Where Measured Demands are
determ ned by per od c t est a
Measured Demand so deter

m ned sha I cant nue n eft ect
u ' t I superseded by il sub
sequent t cs
E st ma t ed D ema n ds shall b e
de erm n ed I rom th e co nn ec t ed
load on eac h nd v d u a l meter ed
serv ce as to t o w s
F r s t 5 000 watts at 90 percent
N ext 5 000 wa tt s at 80 pe r ce n t
Over 0 000 watts a t 70 per
ce n t
Th e Max m u m Ca pa c ty n
an y n o n h sh a 1 n ot b e l ess th an
hem n m u m b II n g d e m a nd f
any spec fed n th e serv ce
co n rae!
M NIMUM CHARGE
T he
M n mum
M o nthl y
Charge sha ll be ( I $1 00 plu s
( II J $2 05 per
k lo w a ft per
mon th appl ed to a Max mu m
C ;Jpac ty equ valen l t o 50
perc en of the g r ea t er o f ( a ) th e
h ghes t M ax m um Ca pa c t y
p r ev ous y estab t Shed dur ng
h e term of th e se r v ce co nt rac
or
b
th e
ca p ac t y
requ ements o f he co n sum er
as spec t ed
n t h e ser 'J ce
co ! ra e
SERVIC E AND CONTRACT
PROVI SIONS
E a c h se p a r a t e p o 1nt o f
d el ve y of serv ce b y on e o
mo e Meter ed Se r ... ces s1'1 al be
co n s d er cd a Con t rac t Lo ca t on
and sha be me t er ed a nd b l ed
u nd e
a sepa r a t e se r v ce
co n t r a c
On y one Mete r ed Se rv ce o f
each ty p e as to vo lt age and
p h ase w
be supp l ed to a
consumer un d er t h s Sc h edu e
at o n e Con r act Loc at on
Whe r e wo or mo r e ser v ces a e
sup p l e d t o a co n su m e a on e
Co nt act Loca on sa d ser
v ces
w th n the 1 m ta on s
ab o ve sa ted m ay be com b ned
n on e se r v ce co ntra ct und er
t h s Sc h ed u e or ma y be serv ed
und er se pa ra te c ontr a ct s und er
th s
or
o tl'1 e r
a ppl cabl e
Sc hedu es at th e c on sum er s
opt o n
T h s Sc h edul e s gen e ra ly
app ca bl e to co n sum er s w th
Ma x mum
Ca pa c ty
equ r e m ent s of ess than 20
k1 o wa tt s
a lth o u g h
arg e r
con sum ers may from t me to
t1 m e b e se r ve d under
ts
p rov s o ns How ever wl'1 en a
con sum ers Ma x 1m um Capa c ty
ex cee ds 50 k Ia watt s or t he total
en erg y u t I zat o n s exceeds
20 ooo k1 owatt hours n any
m onth th s Sc h edul e sha 1 not
b e a v a ta ble for a m n mum
per o d of t we ve ( 12) m onth s

Bengrus shock
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - The less m the second half whtle
Cmcmnah Bengals tn]urtcs Anderson threw TD pass No 4
moun l but Ken Anderson - an II yarder to Chtp Myers con tmues to ease the pam
and then sat out most of lhe
Anderson the NFL s leadmg !mal quar ter
passer ftred four touchdown
Dawson Not Blamed
passes and !ted two club
Kansas Ctty s only score•
records Sunday m gutdmg the were Jan Stenerud s ft eld goah
Injury riddled Bengals to a 33-li of 27 and 47 yards bul
rout of the Kansas Ctty Chtefs
quarterback Len Dawson WB'
The four TD tosses tied the not to blame for no touchdowns
Cmcmnatt smgle game mark
Len was n ghl on the mar~
set by Greg Cook m 1969 and wtth hts passmg sa td Stram
Anderson also reached hts own whocoWJted seven passes - two
club record of 18 season sconng of them \\OU!d be touchdowns aenals fr om a year ago The that were dropped by recetvers
fourth year veteran has three
Wtthout a doubt
satd
more games m whtch to break Stram 1t was our worst game
tha t record
of the season
The easy vtclory upped the
The Bengals played one of
Bengals record to 7-4 and kept their best and accordmg to
thetr playoff hopes ahve defenstve tackle Ron Carpenter
Kansas Ctty havmg Its worst the team ha d been challenged
season m a decade shpped to by Brown
47
Coach Brown satd the hat
Cmcmnah went 1nto the was on us and today was a
game
wtth
only
three response to that challenge
healthy runnmg backs and satd Carpenter who blocked a
came out wtth JUSt two KC held goal try
Bro\\n explamed that m sptte
Charhe Dav•s spramed a
of
the tn]urtes he wanted hts
tendon m the ftrst quarter
team
to respond as professwn
mtssed the rest of the game
and hts future status was not als a s we nea r the end of the
season
unmedtately known
The Bengals awarded game
Half Dozen Bengals Atling
balls
to Howard Fest - who
All told half-a-dozen key
Bengals are athng but 1! replaced InJured Bob Johnson
Anderson stays healthy 1t could at center --and to Wtlhams the
be enough! to get the team mto runmng back who two years
ago was playmg sem1 pro ball
pos t..season play
That Kenny Anderson 1s a wtth the Oklahoma Ctty Wran
glers
terrtftc young quarterback
Wtlhams churned out 96
marveled Chtefs coach Hank
yards m 20 carnes and was the
Stram
day
s leadmg rusher
Bengals coach Paul Brown
Satd
Wtlhams after recetvmg
who almost weekly has to
the
game
ball I thanked my
search for new superlahves for
Anderson settled for He s an hnemen
The touchdown by Maddox exceptional guy
the
only one not commg from
The qwet unassurmng Ander
son who htt 19 of 33 for 262 an Anderson pass - was pure
yards merely satd he was glad IndiVIdual effort
The 6-o 240-pounder crashed
he could help Cmcmnatl get
through
the Kansas Ctty de
off to a lead for a change
Indeed the lead that Ander fense to eastly block Jerrel
son helped bwld was more than Wtlson s punt on the Chtefs 30enough to humble the Chtefs yard hne Maddox raced after
the ball as 1t rolled toward the
also hurt badly by InJUries
Thanks to three ftrst half TD end zone
The ball eluded a couple of
tosses -18 and stx yards to
players
but Maddox grabbed 1t
Isaac Curtis and 19 yards to Ed
Wtlhams--eoupled wtth defen at the three yard !me and
stve end Bob Maddox s touch stepped mto the end zone
It was my ftrst touchdown
down after blocking a punt the
Bengals raced to a 27 6 beamed Maddox and I felt
good all over
halfltme lead
C!ncy held the Chtefs score

Always willing to
leant--Woody
COLUMBUS Ohto (UPI ) - coach
hke Mtchtgan s Bo
Ohio State coach Woody Hayes Schembechler
says he s always wtlhng to
Schembechler had satd that
learn sometlung from a great Saturday s Buckeye Wolverme
clash mtght be dectded by the
then the rates and pr ces for
standard secondary e l eclr c
serv c e herlnabove set forth
sl'1an be amended as lollows
RESIDENCE SERVICE
The Mm mum Cl'1arge and the
Charge for the ftrst 20 kwh or
less of ele c tr c energy con
sumed per month shall be $1 85
Otherw se the sc hedu l e r e m a n s
unchanged

GENERAL
SERVICE
SMALL - SECONOARY

The charg e for the f rst 20
kwh or less of e lec tr c energy
consumed per month shall be
$1 80
and
the
aggregate
M nlmum Monthly Charge shall

kickmg game

I started thinkmg about
that
Hayes said whose
Buckeyes were selected Sunday
by the Btg Ten athletic
directors to make their third
straight Rose Bowl appearance

I m always wtlhng to learn
from a great coach so we
worked very hard on It
The placement porta on of h1s
d dl
ea Y kickmg duo
Tom

be reduced " oo pee mo•th Klaban drtlled four fteld goals
s e the sc l'1edule rem a ns
u•changed
to provtde all the pomts m the
SECTION 7 That lh " Or Buckeyes 1210 wm whtle
dman c e shall take effect from
and after the earliest per 1od PWlter Tom Skladany averaged

Otherw

allowed by law and ts written
a cc eptan c e by Columbus and

45 2 yards per kick mcludmg a

Southern Oh o Electr c Com 63-yarder whtch pulled the
pan Y
Bucks out of a hole m the thtrd
SECTION
8
That
the
Mun ctpal ty by leg s tat ve quarter
actton or th e Company shal l 11 Thts was the greatest ltickmg
hav e the r gl'1t to term nate thts
,
Ordtnan ce at any t me upon we ve ever had
Hayes satd,
wnlten not ce fled w lh the and I II have to adlmt I got
other party hereto at least
th rty (30) days pr1or t o such the
msprrahon from Bo
term nat ton date
Klaban Thrills Crowd
SECTION 9 That the terms
and prov1slons of thts Ordnance
Klaban who with hts parents
are lust and several and the and younger sister escaped
mvafld ty of one shall not affect f
the valtd1ty of the other
rom commumst Czechos

-

-~

-

THE SOUTHERN TORNADOS open the 1974-75 season
Tuesday mght at home agamst Waterford Members of coach
Carl Wolfe s Southern squad are front row 1-r, Mike

TO HANDLE
A LOAN OF

$500.

People trust us to handle their savings.

WAN

&amp;'SAVINGS

llage of Middleport th s 11th

By DENNY FOBES
ll wtll be a watt and see
basketball season as far as the
Southern Tornados are con

cerned
That •s the concensus of head
coach Carl Wolfe as he enters
hts second year at Racme after
bnngmg wmmng basketball
back to Southern for the ftrst
tame m several years
Wolfe a former Racme Htgh
standout who returned to hts
nahve area arter stx years at
the Met gs Marauder helm 1s
the only SVAC coach who does
not have at least one slarter
back from the 1973 74 season
Gone are all the first liners of
last season all leaguers Bob
Mtller and Pete Sayre and
other starters Randy Warner
Vern Ord Dave Thetss and
Norman Curfman
The only varstty players
from last season who saw
much achon are 5-10 semor
guard Mttch Nease better
!mown for hts pro~ess on the
football fteld and :i-9 semor
guard Buddy Ervm
Al so back ar e several
reserves from last season
Mtke Rober ts and Danny
Brown Both got m some
varst ty playmg time near the
end of the season
I don t know what to ex
pect satd Wolfe Were a
young team but we should be a
But after the ftrst 15
mmutes the Ohto State defen
se led by tackles Pete Custck
and Ntek Buonamtct end Van
DeCree and linebacker Bruce
Eha throttled the Wolvenne
runmng attack
Juntor tatlback Gordon Bell
of Troy Ohto gamed 108 yards
m the game m 2o cames but
92 of them came m the ftrst
half most of 11 on pttchouts
from Franklm on the opbon
play
Alter a sha ky start our
defense played fabulous satd
Hayes addmg he thought Bell
was splendtd except we dtd a
good JOb of cutting htm off m
the second half
Griffin Continues Reeord
The Buckeyes Archte Gnffm
had 111 hard-earned yards m 20
carnes but 89 of them came m
the opemng 20 mmutes It was
the 21st stratght regular season
game and 22nd overall m which
Gnffm the leadmg Hetsman
Trophy candtdate has gone
over 100 yards m a game
The game was a lyptcal Ohto
State Mtchigan affatr low scor
mg and hard htttmg wtth
drama nght down to the end
A year ago at Ann Arbor the
Buckeyes !wtce had thetr backs
to the wall m the closmg
mmutes as Mtchtgan s Mike
Lantry m1ssed fteld goals whtch
would have broken a 10-10 tie
Lantry had a chance agam
Saturday to wm 1t for the
Wolvermes but hiS 33-yard
fteld goal w1th 16 seconds
remammg JUSt slid outside the
left upnght
As Hayes satd after the
game I have to feel that the
Man upstatrs looked after us

•

season

Pro Standings
Pro Foo'tball Standmgs
By Untied Press Internation a l

NFL

forward Glenn Stmpson
semor guard Tun Hill
1un10r forward Btll Shivley
6-4 semor center Harold
Utile time wtll be wasted
fmdmg out JUst what
mtknown quanbty wtll do
Southern opens the
season Tuesday mght at
agamst Waterford The
of second year coach
Kmght split a pa1r of
With Wolfe s crew last w;,,t~,
and Kmght has all ftve start.&gt;r
back from that squad
Ketth McFarren Alt:hotJgh
McFarren was held at bay
the Tornados last season
year before as a sophomore
npped the cords for 46 pomts
a game w1 th Southern
Taking the court for
Tornados as the opemng
will be Roberts and Htll at
guards WIth Dunmng
and Brown or Cross on
front !me
I really en1oy working wtth
thiS bunch Wolfe concluded
They re competitors they II
come at you

From what Wolfe has been
1974 75 Southern Roster
HI Yr
able to dtseern m scrtmmage Player Pos
encounters wtth Warren, Buddy Ervtn G
59 1
x M tch Nease G
5 10
Morgan Wellston Federal T1m Htll G
5 10
Hocking and Coal Grove the Harold Black C
64
Glenn S1mpson F
6 o 12
Tornados have been spotty
M ke Roberts G
6 0 11
'We look real good m one Danny Brown F
6 1 11
quarter he satd, and then Brady Huffman F
5 10 11
we turn around and look bad 10 Greg Dunnmg F
5 11 11
Paul Cross C
6 4 11
the next one
Paul Schultz F
6 o 11
Besides Dunnmg Nease
B111 Shivley F
5 10 11
Ervm, Cross, Roberts and Head Coach - Carl Wolfe
Asst Coach - James Hamm
Brown other Tornados Wolfe Manager - Randy Dudd ng
Will be counting on this season x
Denotes return ng let
are 6-li juniOr forward Paul Ierman
Schult&gt;, :i-10 )untor forward •
Brady Huffman, 6-ll semor
;;

Mld·Amerlean Collfereoce F1nal Stalldlnp
Conference

Overall

wltpopwltpop
Mianu
50015352

90128276

3 2 0 110 132

6 5 0 262 270

3209875

650249201

2 3 0 98 114

6 4

2309085

740254163

0 5 0 46 137

3 8 0 187 269

Toledo

Amer•can Confer e nce
Ea st
w 1 t pet pf
Mam
8 3 0 727 252

B 3 0 727 234 205
7 4 0 636 278 193
4 7 0 364 187 238
2 9 o 182 136 261
Central
pa
w
I t pel pf
P ttsbrgh 7 2 1 750 2 19 149

C nc nnatl 7
Houston
5

Wash
8 3 0 727
Dallas
6 5 0 545
Phil a
4 7 0 364
NYG1ants 2 9 0 182
Central
w t t pet
Mmnesota 7 4 0 63 6

0

0

4 6 I 143 178

000

0

0

730274168

0.e~

I

.. ,,-.-.~..

cn·--vrr· · JJW""ie".c:.::::::..n

In 1963 President John F
Kennedy assassinated In Dallas three days earlier, was
burted m Arlington National
Cemetery

' LOVE, HATE,

A thought for the day
Amencan poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow said, Into
each life some rain must fall
some days must be dark and
dreary"

AND WARLIFE OF AN
EX·P .O.W.

'

True-life documentary
of author s captivity In
North Korea - a
stirring chronicle of
courage and en
durance

b88t

pa
16 1

545

t

pet
0 727

189

92

115 196

N Or eans 4 6 0 400 11 5
San F r an
4 7 0 364 184
Atlanta
2 9 o 18 2 8 4
x cltnched diVISIOn title
Sunday s Results
Buffalo 15 Cl ev eland 10
Oetro1t 34 Ch1cago 17
wash ngton 26 Ph1 ad e lph a
St Lou s 23 NY G1ants 21
c nc nnat 1 33 Kansa s C ity 6
NV J ets 17M amt 14

111
202
2 5

LA

8 3

7

State Farm
means fast,
fair claim
service anywhere.
Call: 992-7155

INIUIIANCI

•

C n c nnat

o:. r::~mP

a t M am

n ght

N BA Standtng s
By Un1ted Press tnternattonal
Eastern Confe r ence
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
w l oct a b
5 4
789
B u ff a lo
11 7
61
3
N ew Y or k
10 9
526 s
Bo s ton
7 10 41 2 7
Ph Ia
Central D1v san
w 1 oct a h
w ash
3 s
722
Ho us ton
I 6
647 3 1
Cl e vel and
9 8
529 3 1
A tl anta
7 11
389 6
N Or ea n s
2 17
10 5 11 ?
We stern Conf erenc e
MidWe st 0 VI SIOn
w I oct a b
Ch c ag o
10 9 527
KC Omah a
10 9
526
10 10
500
1
De t ro t
M l wkee
-4 13
235 5
Pactf c DIVIS on
w I pet g b
G Stat e
13 6
684
Sea tt e
10 9
526 3
Por tland
9 0
474 4
LA
6 10
375 5 2
Pho en x
71 1 389 5~
!:laTuraay s Hesu!Ts
Buffalo 117 Pfloen x 10 4
M lw a uk ee 90 New Yor k 72
Ph lad elph a 98 Boston 96
KC Omaha 103 At lant a 100
Cl ev e land 121 New O r lean s 100
G olden State 1 10 De t ro t 98
Sea ttl e 11 7 P ortl a nd 110
Sundays Results
Ch iC a g o 91 Buffa lo 89
K C Omaha 109 Clev e land 89
W a s h ng t on 111 Lo s A nge es 108
Ho u s ton 124 Seattl e 109
Mondays Games
( N o ga mes scheduled )

ABA Stand ng s
By Un ted Press Internal anal
East
w I pet q b
K e ntuc k y
12 4
750
13 9 591 2
N ew York
St LOU S
38 1 6
8 IJ
M em ph s
5 15 250 9
V rg n a
4 14
222 9
Wes l
w 1 pet g b
O e n11er
16
4 800 San A n ton o 14
5 7 37 1 1 2
San 0 ego
a 9
471 6 1
Utah
9 11
450 7
lnd a na
6 ll
353 8 •
Saturdays Results
nd1ana 104 New Yo r k 95
D env er 122 V1rg n a 110
San A nton o 127 St Loui s 114
Utah 111 Kentucky 110 ot
Sundays Results
N ew York 99 Denver 90 aft
M e mph s 103 St Lou s 94
SanD ego 117 Utah 97
Mondays Games
(No games sch edul ed )

.

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPIDMETRIST

OFF ICE HOURS 9 30 TO 12 2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS J- EAST COURT ST,
POMEROY

4 7 0 176 261
·u:J.Y!A, ! • ~

on your
reading litt

pi
223

pa
137

w

lUTE fUif MUTUAL
AUTOUOIILE
IIIUIAICE CDMP.IIT
H... ltflu
ll. .tlllt• 11111111

Northern Dllilo!S
0

161

168
179
237

l1ke a good ne1ghbor
State Farm
IS there
".·••·.·,·.·.··M""

Ball State
0

209
158

pf
197

How
long can
you live
on love?

Eastern Michigan

0 0 0

o

5

3 8 0 273
West

Ch cago

232 155

5 0 545 181 153

Gree n Ba y 6
Detro t
6

Mlchl~an

0 0 0

D a la s 10 H o u ston 0
N ew Engla n d 27 Ball mo re 17
Green B ay 34 San D ego 0
L os An g e l es 20 M nnesota 17
D enver 20 Oa k and 17
Sa n F r a n c sco 27 A tl an t a 0
Manday s Gam e
P t sbur gh at N ew O r l ean s
n ght
Thursday s Gam es
De n ver a t Det r o1t
Was h ngton at Da ll as
Sundays Gam es
Ba tt mo re at Buffa lo
G r ee n Ba y at Ph1 a delph a
Ho us ton at P tts burg h
Ka n s a s C t y a t St L OUIS
L os A n ge l es at A tl an ta
N ew E ng l and at Oak and
N ew Or lean s a t M nneso t a
NY G ants a t Ch ca g o
SanD ego a t NY Jets
San F r anc se a at Cle v e la n d
Mnnrt:av

Western Michigan
091034193

185
21

De nv er
5 5 1 500 23 4 236
Kansas Ct y 4 7 o 364 195 238
SanD ego 3 B 0 273 153 237
Nattonal Conf e r enc e
East
w
I t
pet pf
pa
St LOUIS
9 2 0 818 246 173

250 203

0

258
181

3 8 0 ~73 203 275
West
w I t pet pf p a
x Oakland 9 2 0 818 280 173

Kent State

000

4 0 636
6 o 455

C ev eland

Bowling Green

Central

pa
170

Buff a lo
N England
NY J et s
Bait

Oh10U

inllaliot'i

Love

It can move mountiuns.

But 1t cant run a household

A Great Gift Idea• ••

Or meet all the b1lls Or put

ktrlB through college

That takes money
And one good way to make
sure your money wtll grow
along wtth your marnage 1s

bl

stgmng up now for the Pay rol
Savmgs Plan where you work
Then an amount you spectfy

w•ll be set as1de from each pay

Southern High gridders
honored with banquet
BY DENNY FOBES
Athlehcs ts one of the !west
thmgs that can happen to you
especially football
Wtth that opemng !me Pomt
Pleasant head football coach
Dtck Ware set the tone for hts
address at the Southern Htgh
School football banquet
Saturday e vemng m the htgh
school gymnastum
You have to dedtc ate
yourself m moldmg yourself
mlo part of that mold that
you II be m future years
Ware staled as he spoke to
Southern football players
cheerleaders and parents
Ware who m 3o years of
coachmg 27 as a head coac h
ha s a won lost percentage of 66
pet labeled football the most
compelltive sport and hsted
numerous thmgs that should be
learned m athletics
Those charactenstics Ware
beh eves an athlete should
develop are sportsmanship
leadership dedtcatton destre
colnpeti!tve sp1r1t team play
responstbthty and prtde
Concermng prtde Ware
stated You should have prtde
tn
yourself
your ac
comphshments your school
church
commumty and
parents
Above all he satd you
should have respect and
loyalty

Ware added that an athle~ homeconung the very next
has a much better chance of week
bemg a success tha n a non

athlete You have to wm m
hfe 1! ) OU are gomg to be
successful he satd I don l
thmk anv ed uca twnal system
would be the same wtthout
athle!tcs
Ware 06 a graduate of
Fmrmont College and a nahve
of Webster Spnngs W Va
commended today s athle tes
catm g that there are so many
other thmgs to do today bestdes
gellin g tn\ olved m sports
You play 1t by ch01ce he
satd no one makes you play
Wa re s
addr e ss
was

preceded by a bullet dmner
a nd foll owed by the tn
tr oduc ll on of the Southern
cheerleaders by thetr sponsor
Carla Shuler
Head foo tball coach Btll
Jewell saymg that he was
pleased but not sahsfted wtth
the Tornado season presen~d
awards to hts backs before
asststan t coach John Duddmg
mtroduced the hnemen
Jewell satd that he wtll not be
saltsfled until Southern ha s the
best Class A football team m
Ohto The Tornados low pomt
lhts fall accordtng to Jewell
was the loss to arch rtval
Eastern whtle the htgh pomt
rummg
Wahama s
was

lhe bes t

IS

yet to come

J ewell concluded
The tlnrd year mentor then
presented awards to the etghl
Southern se mor gndders
Monty Hart Glenn Simpson
Run Johnson Don Bush Dave
Huddl es ton Buddy Ervm
John Salser and Mttch Nease
Je\\ell pomted out that Nease
gamed 4 042 yards in his career
at Southern scored 302 points
was Al~SV AC 3 years and was
the league s most valuable
player th1s season

Je\\ ell then announced the
wann er s

of

th e

Honorary

Captam award for outstandmg

HONORARY CAPTAINS - Selected honorary captains for their outstandmg per
formances throughout the 1974 Tornado football season were 1-r Damy Brown Mttch Nease
and Greg Dunmng Combmed these three gndders of head coach Bill Jewell wer""m on 210
tackles thts fall bestdes compnsmg the mam part of the Southern offenstve backfteld Nease
was also awarded the Leadership Trophy as voted by hiS teammates

pe rforma nces Nea se Greg

Dunnmg and Danny Brown
The Leade rship Award
presented to the most valuable
Tornado as voted by hts team
mates went to Nease
Herb Whtte then presented
spectal plaques to four persons
who helped durmg the season
Bob Spurlock Jtm Carnahan
pnnc1pal Jtm Ada ms and
s up enn~ndenl 1 Bob Ord
The 1974 offtcers of the
Alhleltc Boosters were also
mtroduced They are president
Danny Brown secretary Dee
Brown

trea s urer

Martha

Duddmg and reporter Wmme
Waldmg
Spectal thanks were also
' extended to the Tornado band
and 1ts dtrector Joy Btgler
·~'
Buddy Ervm on behalf of the
Honored Saturday evening at the &amp;&gt;uthern Tornado , football team presented a gtlt
'
football banquet were
to the Southern coaches
Grldders - Donald Bush, Martin Bush, Danny Brown,
Jewell Duddmg and assiStant
' Joe Brown, Randy Dudding, Danny Dudding, Donny ' Jtm Hamm whtle Stephame
Dudding, Greg Dunning, Eric Dunning, Buddy Ervin, Herb
Ord presented a g1ft to Shuler
Ervin, Chris Forbes, Mark Forbes, Dave Huddleston, Mike
on behalf of the cheerleaders
' Huddleston, Monty Hart, Mitch"' ... , John Salser, Gleun
Carnahan served as the
"" Simpson, Ron Johnson, Ken &amp;.ose, . . ..r Adkins, Steve
mas ~ r of ceremomes and the
' Boso, Tony Carnahan, Dan Codner, Gr·~ &lt;-'undiff, Steve
Rev S~ve Wtlson gave the
Hendricks, Otris Hill, Jerry Johnson, Doug Warden, Kevin
bened1clwn
' WUford, Scott Wolfe, Marty Foley, Perry Hill, Steve Hill,
Steve Nease, John Sayre, Richard Teaford and Mike
Warner
Managers - Dave Clark and &amp;bert Phillips
Statisticians - Meagan Brown and Dave Clark
Varsity Cheerleaders - RAlnda Ash Stephanie Ord,
' Vickie WoUe, Cheryl Larkins, Debbie RAJush and Pam

Honored at grid banquet

•

SENIOR HONOREES - Semor members of the 1974 Southern football team were honored
wtth trophies presented by coach Bill Jewell Tornado sentors are front row 1-r John Salser
Buddy Ervm Dave Huddleston Ron Johnson and back row 1-r Glenn Simpson Monty Hart
Don Bush and Mitch Nease

•

ams In,
ave
new
Same lineup

s

Parsons

~

Reserve Oteerleader&amp; - Melania Waldnig, Rhonda ,
, West, Usa Allen, Julie Gooch, Ten1na Dill and Patty
IWblnson

•

zn big bowl
by FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The Rose Bowl IS becommg
the prtvate domam of Ohto
State and Southern Callforma
Those two national powers
earned the r1ght to represent
thetr conferences m the New
Years Day shmutg at Pasade·
na Calif over the weekend
and 11 marked the thtrd sue
cesstve year they will be
meetmg m the nation s oldest
post-&lt;&gt;eason classic
OhiO State was selected as
the Big Ten Conference re
presentative by a vote of the
athletic directors Sunday after
the third-ranked Buckeyes had
defeated second-ranked Michi
gan 12-!0at Colwnbus Ohio on
Saturday to finish m a he with
the Wolvermes for the confer
ence championship
Southern Califorrua, which
lost to Ohio State m last
January s Rose Bowl but won
the p~evious year, cfincbed a
spot m thiS year s game by
whipping UCLA 34-9 to WUI the
Pacific Eight crown for the
seventh time m the last !Wie
years
The appearance of Ohio State
marks the first time m history
that a Btg Ten school will
represent the conference Ill the
Rose Bowl thr~ years in a
row Prtor to 1973 the Big Ten
had a ruling that no team could
go to the Rose Bowl two years
in a row unless there were

mttlgatmg ctrcumstances such as Ohto State s refusal to
accept the btd m 1961
Iromcally, the team wtth the
best record m the nation over
the past three years has been
MIChigan (30 2 I) Yet the
Wolvermes have not been to a
bowl because they have failed
to defeat the Buckeyes durmg
that stretch
For the second year Ill a row
Michigan blew a chance to
defeat Ohio State because of
the inability of kicker Mike
Lantry to convert a field goal
Last year, when the two teams
battled to a !().10 tie, Lantry
miSsed a 44-yard fteld goal
attempt m the closmg seconds
and Saturday he failed from
the 33 w1th 18 seconds left
Instead, it was Ohio State s
ktcker, little known Tom
Klaban who proved the differ
ence m the game Klaban a
soccer...tyle kicker from Ole
choslovalda who was not even
on scholarship booted four
field goals in four attempts three of them from more than
40yards -to account for all the
Buckeyes' scoring
Southern Califorma duln t
have to sweat as much in
wlnnmg Its crucial game
against UCLA The Trojans
clearly outmamed the BI'UIIIS
and, w1th Anthony Davts
shattering 0 J Sunpson s con
ference career rushing mlUjk,
Contmued on page 8

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
The Los Angeles Rams have
a Natwnal Football League
diVIsiOn !ttle vtrtually chnched
thanks to James Hams ac
curacy whtle the Buffalo Btlls
have new hope for thetr playoff
berth thanks to Joe Namath s
moxie
Hams threw an etght-yard
touchdown pass to Jack Snow
wtth I 14 left Sunday gtvmg the
Rams a 20-17 vtctory over the
Mmnesota Vtkmgs The Rams
wtll chnch the Western title m
the NFC Monday mght tf the
Pittsburgh Steelers who are
seven pomt fa vontes defeat the
New Orleans Samts
The Btlls Just managed to
sqwdge past the Cleveland
Browns l:i-10 but were handed
a new shot at thetr dtvtswn title
when Namath came through m
the !mal mmutes to gtve the
New York Jets a 17 14 lrtumph
over the two-time Super Bowl
champton Mtamt Dolphms The
Btlls and Dolphms go mto the
!mal three weeks of the season
wtth tdentical 8-3 records
The St Louts Cardmals
defeated the New York Gtants
23-21 the Denver Broncos upset
the Oakland Ratders 2~17 the
Detrott Uons whtpped the
Chtcago Bears 34 T7 the Green
Bay Packers routed the San
Dtego Chargers 34-0 the New
England Patnots topped the
Baltimore Colts 27 17 the
Dallas Cowboys shut out the
Houston Otlers 1().0 the Cmcm
natt Bengals romped over the
Kansas Ctty Chtefs 33-li the
Washington Redsklns outscored
the Phtladelphta Eagles 26-7,

and the San Franctsco 49ers
rolled over the Atlanta Falcons
27-0 m Sundays other games
The Steelers have all the
moltvatton they need on the
Monday mghl TV game smce a
vtclory over the Sam ts would '
put them to wtthm one wm m
thetr last two games of wmmng
the AFC s Central Dtvtston
champtonshtp
Cardinals 23 Gianlll 21
The Cardmals virtually
chnched a spot m the playoffs
for the ftrst time smce 1948
when Jtm Bakken kicked hts
thtrd fteld goal of the game a
36-yarder with three seconds to
go The Gtants have now lost
lht ee stratghl games-one m
overtime one wtth two seconds
to go and the thtrd wtth three
seconds left
Broncos 20 Raiders 17
Jon Kenworth gained 148
yards and Otis Armstrong 146
rushmg as the Broncos snapped
the Ratders mne game wmnmg
streak Ken Stabler threw 34
and seven yards to Fred
Btlenmkoff for Oakland s touch
downs The Ratders had a!
ready clinched the dtvtswn
htle
Lions 34 Bears 17
Punt returns of 38 and 58
yards by Dtck Jauron led to
two touchdowns for the Ltons
who moved steadtly on the
ground to beat the Bears eastly
The Ltons scormg thetr most
pom ts m a game thts season
had a 34 3 lead before the
Bears scored thetr first touch
down Altle Taylor gamed 80
yards rushing and scored one

ope

touchdown (or the Uons
Packers 34 Chargers 0
John Had! completed 14 of 22
passes for 157 yards mcludmg
one touchdown leadmg the
Packers to thetr htghes t smgle
game pomt total smce Novem
ber 1972 The Packers took a
13-0 halftime lead when Enck
Torkelson ptcked up a fwnble
and ran 29 yards for a
touchdown m the second penod
Palrlots 27 Colts 17
Jtm Plunkett threw a touch
down pass and ran for another
TD as the Patnots snapped a
three game losmg streak and
remamed m lhe1r diVISIOn race
along wtth Mtamt and Buffalo
It was the mnth loss m II
games for the Colts who
traded 17 3 at halftime
Cowboys 10 Oilers 0
Doug Denmson scored Dallas
touchdown on a one yard
plunge m the first penod and
Efren Herrera added a 20 yard
fteld goal early m the lhtrd
penod m a game dommated by
the Cowboys defense Cowboy
defensemen Harvey Martm Ed
Jones BtU Gregory Jethro
Pugh and Pat Toomay sacked
Houston s Dan Pastormt for 75
yards m losses whtle the
secondary allowed Otler recetv
ers a total of 13 catches for o5
yards
Bengals 33 Chiefs 6
Ken Anderson completed 19
of 33 passes for 262 yards and
four touchdowns m leadmg the
Bengals to thetr romp over the
Chtefs Kan sas Ctty whtch lost
11$ seventh dectston m II
games managed only f1eld

goals of 27 and 47 yards by Jan
Stenerud
Redskins 26 Eagles 7
Rookte Larry Jones 102-yard
fD kickoff return early m the
thtrd pertod was the chnchmg
play tn the Redskins wtn over
the Eagles who have lost SIX
stratght games

Transparent

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PH. 992-2318
:11117 Spring Ave , Pomeroy

'

•

Tornados also have been htt
early by the tn]ury bug
Nease the only returmng
letterman suffered a spramed
ankle dunng the football
season, and spramed hts other
ankle recently m a basketball
workout
Brown a hustlmg 6-1 JuniOr
forward has m1ssed several
practices wtth a football m
Jury while Greg Dunnmg a :;..
II )untor forward, has suffered
a broken nose and also has
knee and foot aliments
Wtth all these phySical
problems Wolfe satd he II be
counting on much needed help
from Paul Cross a 6-4 Junior
who should help the Tornados
especially early m the season
As for the SVAC outlook
Wolfe stated
They re all
gomg to be tough for us
everybody on our schedule wtll
be tough " pomtlng out that
Southern has non league en
comtters wtth such teams as
Glouster Wahama Hannan
and Waterford all wtth most of
thetr starters back from last

good defenstve team a sound
defenstve squad
But ' Wolfe added these
kids are wmners wtth the nghl
frames of mmd We ve got 12
good atbtudes
Thts year s Tornado squad IS
not a btg one, netther IS 1t
qwck wtth the latter taking
away any concenlrated threat
of a full court press during the
season
Wolfe also readily adlmts
that thts season s squad IS not
blessed w1th natural shooters,
as he stated We II m1ss two
good shooters we had last year
Sayre and Mtller But Wolfe
also added that Mike Roberts
a Junior who plays m much the
same style as Mtller, could
develop mto a real good player
11 he gets his shooting touch
developed
Despite thts lack of pure
shooters Wolfe thmks there IS
one advantage to not havmg
JUst one or two outstandmg
mdtVIdual performers
Our ftrst mne players are
pretty equal as far as ability IS
concerned ' he stated 'My
ftrst player and the ninth one
are
pretty
much
In
terchangeable he satd m
dtcating that thiS will allow
htm to subsl!tute with
regulartty and keep fresh
players on the Door
Wolfe wtll again go with the
man to.man defense, while
offensively he sa1d this Will be
a pattern ball club citing the
lack of qwckness We won t
do anythmg fancy " he
proclatmed
As 11 the above Isn't enough
to dampen the hopes of
Southern cage supporters, the

GAWPOUS
BUSINESS COLlEGE

12&lt;; F Main St • 992 2171

Roberts, Mitch Nease Glenn Simpson, Buddy Ervm,
Hill and Brady Huffman ami back row 1-r Greg Durming,
Danny Brown Harold Black, Paul Cross, Paul Schultz
Bill Shivley

By Gary Philli[JS
Well 1t s time for the real thmg now
Area cage teams wtll be openmg the1r seasons thts week and
we have some real mterestmg contests already commg up Now
lets take a look at those games
nlESDAY NOV 26
S V A C - Hannan Trace vs South Pomt Opemng game of
the year could go etther way South Pomt 63 Hannan Trace !i6
Waterford vs Southern Wtldcats mfhct first wound on
Tornados Waterford 70 Southern 59
Other games Ironton 68 Coal Grove :;7
FRIDAY, NOV 29
S V A C - Hannan Trace vs Eastern The dtfference m this
game will be the H T offense Hannan Trace 73 Eastern 55
Southern vs North Gallia Ptrates open season m a wuuung
note North Gallia 64 Soutl11!rn 52
&amp;&gt;uthwestern vs Ironton St Joe Flyers will prevail I tlunk
Ironton St Joe 60 SOuthwestern 51
Chesapeake vs Symmes Valley Vikings have a little more
than they can handle Chesapeake 68 Symmes Valley 60
Other games - Ironton 61 Athens o3 Jackson o7 Oak Htll :;o
and Raceland 72 Coal Grove 59
SATURDAY NOV 30
Portsmouth 78 South Pomt 62 Jackson 69 Logan 62 and
Trimble 58 Berne-Umon o2

It's wait and see at Southern

Passed by the Counci l of the lovakia m 1967 brought the
'
day of Novembec 1974
Buckeyes back from a 1().0 ftrst
quarter deftclt wtth hiS boom
ATTE ST
mg kicks before a sun-drenched
Gene Grate
Clerk
record crowd of 88 243 and a
Approved thts 11th day of
natwnal teleVISIOn audience
November 1974
Fred Hoffman The 6-1 182-pound juntor
Mayor from Cincmnah completing hts
(11) 18 25 2tc
first year as the regular
Buckeye placement spectahst
htt field goals of 47 20 and 43
r
)'ards m the second pertod and
got the clincher from 45 yards
out early m the thtrd quarter
Haye&amp; satd he couldn t
FORA BETTER
remember one of hts team s
JOB, SOONERever wmnlng a game before
GOTO
Without a touchdown but was
BUSINESS
fteld goals
qwck to add
COLLEGE
defmttely are a part of the Several Career Courses
game and you better look m Available Approved for
every nook and cranny you can Veterans Benefits
for a way to score
Wr1te v1slt or call 446 4367
MIChigan scored the ftrst two for free cata log New classes
times It had the ball on a 42- start Dec 9
yard pass from quarterback
Denms Franldm to wmgback
Gtl Chapman early in the ftrsl
quarter and a 37 yard field goal
s
.:Gallipolis
by Mtke Lantry a few minutes 36 Locust
State
N~7_1
02·00328
later
v

'I'RUSI'US

What makes us a different
kind of loan company
makes us a better kind of
loan company

How the@
.will bounce

Dawson &amp; Co.

TERM OF CONTRACT
Th e te rm of the contract for
se r v ce und er th1 S Schedul e
sha I b e as prov d ed n the n
d v dual c ontract w th each
con su m e r bu t n no ca se s hall
th e contra c t t e rm b e less than
one yea r
SECT I ON 2 Th a t the ra tes
for el ec tr c se rv ce set fo r th n
Sect on 1 of 111 s Ordnan ce shall
be c al cu l at ed as follows
( 1) Ea ch mon t l'1 durmg the
term o r th s Ord nan c e th e
Co mpa n y w il l cal c ulate b liS for
stand a rd se co n d ar y e l e c tr c
se r v ce .n t f1 e Mun c pa ty at
th e r ates se t forth n Sec t on l of
th s Ordn an ce
(2 ) Each mo nth th e company
w II r e nd er a b 1 for street
I ght ng
serv ce
n
tf1 e
Mun c pa l l y In a c.::ordance
w h th e p r ov sons of the t hen
eff ec t v e stree t 1 ght ng or
d nan ce of th e Mun c pa l tty
(J J Ea c h m onth dur ng the
term of th s Ord nance t he
Co m p a ny w I r ec a l culate b lis
f o r r es d e nt1 a l and general
se rv 1c e - sm a ll - se condar y
serv ce a t th e rat es set fortl'1 m
Sec t on 1 of th s O r dmance
a m end ed n th e m anner set
fo r th n Sec t on 6 of lh s Or
d nance
(4
T h e d ffere nce between
he
c at c ulat ons
under
P ara g raph ( I J h e r e nabov e
r eferr ed to In th s Sec t on 2 and
th e ca lcu at1ons as prov ded n
P AR AGRA PH (3) h e r e mabov e
r eferr ed to In th s Sect10n 2 shall
bea ppl ed to the payment of the
curr ent b Is to the Mun1 c pa lty
for serv ce. r e ndered under the
tl'1en effect1v e Street L ght ng
Ordm a nce m c lud ng any unpa d
balan ce from prev1ou s penods
Any
su c l'1
d fference
no t
requ red for t he paym e nt of the
current b II shal l be app l ied to
subsequent b li s fo r sad ser
v ces
SECTION 3 t hat n the even t
the t erm of a ny c ontract fo r
st andard s econdary electr c
ser v c e he re after made w1 t h
consumers n th e Mun1cpah t y
pur suan t t o the pro v son of th s
Ordnan c e sl1all ex tend beyond
the t erm mat on date of th s
Ordinance the rates mcludmg
the M n1mum Monthly Charge
chargeable ther e under shall be
th e rat es 10 effect W1fh n the
Mun coal tv at th e t me such
c harge s made
SECTION 4 That the Ru l es
and Regulat ons conta ned In
th e Company s P U C 0 No 1
on f lew t h The Publ c Ut 1 t es
Comm1 ss on of Oh10 (a s the
same may from t me to t1me
be a mended or supplemented)
as are not n confl ct w th the
ex press proVI SIOns of thts Or
dman c e are appl cat&gt;Je to al l
ser v 1ce render ed under and
pursuant to th s Ordnance
Noth ng conta1ned w thm th1s
Ordnan ce shall prevent any
con s um e r from tak ng ad
vantage w thm t he effect ve
per od of th1 S Ordm a nce of any
appl1 c able rule
regutat on
supplement or opt anal rate
Wh ch the Company may make
ava table n ts P U C 0 No 1
on f1le w th the Public UtI ties
Com miss on of Oh o for the
c lass of service nvolved
SECTION 5
That th s Or
d nance shall be and reman 10
force a s to 01lls for electr c
s erv ce
based
on
meter
r ead ng s m a de dur1ng the
per1od commene~ng on the
effect1ve date of lh1s Ordmance
and endmg on J uly 25 1976
sub teet to pr1or termtnat on of
th i s Ordnan ce as prov d ed for
n Sec t on 8 of this Ordnance
SECTION 6 That 1f at any
t me With n the per od f xed by
th s Ordnance the Mun1C1pallty
should author ze an alternat ve
method for the payment of the
then c urrent bills of the
Municipal ty tor street 1 ghtmg
at the rates and m accordance
w th the terms and prov tSIOns of
th e then effecttve street 1 ghtmg
ordnance of the Mun1 c pal ty

.l'"'f1"rV

3-TheDailySentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday , Nov 20,1974

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cutt1ng ed ges
fiO~E011
Is easy to n ~ff 'fOil c1tOtl

FLEX 0

stall

f 11o1E

Can be

cut or sc o r ed
to any s ze or sha pe to ftt wood
or metal frames Co m es tn stand
ard pre cut s ze s a t g las s pnces

At Your Hardware Lumber

and Building Supply Store
WARP BROS Chlcuo 60651
P1oneen In Pint

tt

for Over 50 Y..rt

�.

-

..

·'

·- ..

·~-

.... .'

..

.,

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Monday, Nov. 25, 1974

'

.

.

Saturday's
high school

Duke made it
sound so rosy
CHICAGO (UPI) - Big Ten
Commissioner Wayne Duke
made it all sound so rosy .
The meeting was "very

cordial." There was no "in·
fighting."
There also were no comments
after Ohio State was awarded
an Wlprecedented third straight
Rose Bowl trip Sunday-for an
unprecedented third consecutive meeting with Southern
California. The Buckeyes got
the bid in a secret ballot by Big
Ten ., thletic directors , who
seem to be the !all guys in the
annual furor over which team,
Ohio State or Michigan, will
play in the New Year 's Day
classic.
Saturday Ohio State eked out
a 12-10 win over Michigan,
snapping the longest unbeaten
streak in major college football
at 21 games. For the third
straight year, it left the two
teams tied for the league
championship, this time with 71 records . Michigan State
finished a close third with a li-11 mark.
Duke, central character in
the drama, assembled · the
athletic directors in Chicago for
a vote which he hoped would
avoid a stir like the one
following last year's li-4 telephone vote. That vote sent the
Buckeyes to Pasadena after the
two teams tied 10-10 in their
ti tl~ showdown.
Unanimous Decision
This time , Duke said, the
athletic directors ''Wlanimously
agreed" upon five points of
voting procedure. The directors
agreed to vote in sealed,
unmarked envelopes, that Duke
and attorney Byron Gregory
would coWl I the ballots and not
divulge the votes and that each
athletic director would keep his
vote "confidential" and not
discuss it in public. The ballots
woUld be kept in a vault at
Gregory's law offices in case
they are challenged.
The muzzle seemed to work.
The athletic directors reviewed
films of the Ohio StateMichigan game for three hours ,
then voted and departed without comment. Two hours later,
Duke announced the verdict to
more than 100 waiting newsmen, and the only clue which
could be gleaned about tlie vote
was that It was not a tie,
because it was agreed that the
last team to go West would be
eliminated in the case of a tie.
" In my view, the discussions
at this morning's meeting were
most cordial indeed," Duke
said. "There was no indication
whatsoever of any in-fighting.
"I have no comment on the
outcome of the vote. Undoub-

;
•

••
'

By Uni1ed P.- ess lnler na t i onal

Saturday

tedly , Ohio State and Michigan
are fin e football teams and
either one would have made an
excellent choice as the representative of this conference
in the 1975 Rose Bowl game,
just as either one would have
made an excellent choice as the
representa tive in las t year's
game."
Schembechler Quiet
The athletic directors refused
to comment, and Michigan
Coach Bo Schembechler, who
last year drew a two-y ear
probation for his public cri ticism of the vote, did not even
answer his phone .
But Ohio State coach Woody
Hayes said, " We got it (the
Rose Bowl bid) because we
earned it. This is just grea t.
Actually, they couldn' t go any
other way because we beat the
other team."
Michigan might argue the
poin t, because a missed field
goal by the Wolves ' Mike
Lantry made the difference for
the second straight year.
Lantry's kick sailed high and
drifted just to the left of the
uprights with 18 seconds left,
spoiling a Michigan comeback
attempt in the waning seconds.
It justified Schembechler's
prognostication that the kicking
game would make the difference. Ohio State 's soccer-style
kicker Tom Klaban booted four
field goals, three from more
than 40 yards out, despite at
least two bad snaps from
center to his holder, Brian
Baschnagel. It allowed the
Buckeyes to escape with a
victory although they were held
without a touchdown for the
first time in recent years.
Michigan Empty-handed
Michigan, with the best
record in the nation at 30-2-1 in
the last three years, didn't have
a bowi bid to show for it. Both
of the Wolves• losses and the tie
came against Ohio State.
Ohio State will go to the Rose
Bowl for the fifth time in the
last seven years. Two years
ago, the Buckeyes lost to
Southern Cal 42-17, but they
avenged the defeat with a 42-41
win last year.
Elsewhere in the final day of
Big Ten action , Michi~an State
crushed Iowa 60-21 behind a
record-setting day from junior
quarterback Charlie ·Baggett,
Wisconsin beat Minnesota 40-14
on 304 yards and five touchdowns from jWJior Billy Mareb.
Illinois ~ave coach J:!o~
'!ilackman his first winning
season in four years with a 2814 win over Northwestern, and
Purdue dumped cross-state
rival Indiana 311-17.

statistic except points.
Simpson, who ·last year ran
for 2,003 yards to eclipse
Brown's season record, needs
only 63 yards to reach 1,000 for
the year . It was his fourth
game over 100 yards this year.
O.J. At His Beot
One play showed him at his
best despite a case of flu.
Buffalo had the ball on the
Cleveland 41 early in the
second period, with the Browns
leading 3-0, when quarterback
Joe Ferguson handed off tO
Simpson.
He burst over right tackle,
cut sharply left through the
secondary and outran the
defensive backs to the goal line
to give Buffalo the lead it never
lost.
"When .he gets into·the open,
you see what happens," said
Buffalo coach Lou Saban. "It
was a big seven points for us."
It was Simpson's longest run
of the season and came on a
soggy, muddy field as a daylong rain persisted through the
game. "I don't mind nmning ln.
the mud," Simpson tonfessed.
Cleveland scored first with
quarterback Brian Sipe

••

•
•
••
•
•
•
•

MONDAY
Ridgewood 73 West Holmes. 54
CHAPTER 17, Ohio Ass'n. of
Co l Eastmoor 70· At hens 59
wes tervil l e 66 Col North land 53 Public
Sc hool Employes,
O l e nt angy 65 Sunbury Big
meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the
Walnut 59
Buckeye Centra l 63 North moor
Meigs Junior High School
59
cafeteri a, Middleport.
Marion F r ank lin 65 Marion
Harding 55
EASTERN HIGH PTSA will
Moral R idgeda te 49 Mf. Gi lead
at 7:30 p.m. at the high
meet
J5
Ohio Deaf 66 N ewark St. P eter
sc
hool.
A program will be
Pau l 56
•
presented by s tudents under
F indlay 70 Walnut Ridge 58
Spa r ta High l and 68 Danville 53
the direction of Mrs. Jenny
Northwestern
68
Madison
Ma
chir. Members are selling
P la i n s 54
Tiffin
Colum b ia n
59
Tol fruitc akes, and res idents
Bowsher 57
Tal St FranCis 57 Tot Stritc h 50 wishing to purchase them may ·
To t St. John 53 Maumee 44
contact Mrs . Charles Martin,
Tal DeVilbiSS 72 Ta l Wh i t mer 59
Mrs . Barb Hannum, Mrs .
Genoa 74 Port Cl i nton 53
F r e mon t 57 Fostiria 26
Pearl Edwards or purchase
Wayne sville 50 Cl inton Massie
them at Newell's Sohio Station
47
Mans Madison 59 Shelby 50
in Chester.
Mans St. P eters 69 Lexington 54
• TUESDAY
Upper Sandusky 53 Bucyrus
Cr awfo rd 50
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Cl e Marshall 53 Fai rv i ew 49
Chapter OES, 7:30 p.m. at
Brook l yn 71 Cte Rhodes 52
Lake Ca th o l i c 52 Cle Holy N ame home of Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
50
Well i ngton 83 Black River 69
JUNIOR American Legion
W i ll oughby South 68 Eucl i d 56
Auxiliary, 6 p.m . at Feeney Eastlake North 74 Col l inwood 41
P aines H a r vey 66 Chardon 43 1 Bennett Post 128 hall in MidAk ron ( .H 62 Lou isville AQuinas
dleport.
52
Waterloo 76 Strau sburg 44
DREW Webster Unit 39,
Ak ron Cen . Catholic 57 Oak .
American Legion Auxiliary,
wood 37
Loudonv i ll e 65 H i ll sdale 39
7:30p.m. at the hall . Initiation
Youngs town South 67 Akron
of new member by Mrs. Mary
Sout h 63
Martin .
Medina 60 Bru n swic k 47
Kiski Prep 64 Western Reserve
TUESDAY
Acade m y 52
Wel l in gton 83 Black River 69
AMERICAN
LEGION
Smit hville 72 Kidron Central
Auxiliary; Racine Post 602,
Ch rist ian 48
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge, 7:30 p.m. Toesday at
th e Temple. Work in the
Master Mason degree with all
ALL GAMES
Team
W L POP Master Masons invited.
Log an
1 6 72 63
WEDNESDAY
Athens
1 1 19? 117
AMERICAN
Legion
Gallipolis
0 0 0 0
Waverly
0 0 0 0 Auxili a r y and American
Jackson
0 0 0 0
Legion, Feeney - Bennett Post
Meigs
0 0 0 0 128, Middleport, potluck dinner
Ironton
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 at 6:30 p.m. with both groups
Wellston
South Point
0 0 0 0 having mee tings at 7:30 p .m .
Wheelersburg
0 0 0 0
Portsmouth
0 0 0 0

Standings

At~~a.~sr~!Ji~h~illeYork

4]·

Logan 72, Lancaster 63

Saturday's Result:
Eas·tmoor 70 Athens 59
Tuesday's games:
Hannan Trace at South Point
Ironton at Coal Grove
Wellston at Vinton County
.Wednesday 's games :
Holl1ard at Logan
Milford at Portsmouth
Friday's games :
Jackson at Logan
Waver!~ at Mel~s
~~~~~r':b~~gw:t ls~~7re Dame
Ironton al Athens
Hannan Trace at Eastern
Saturday's games:
South Point at Portsmouth

Bulldogs
lose 70-59
cage tilt
Host Athens dropped a 70-59
non-league hardwood decision
Columbus
Eastmoor
to
Saturday night.
Colulnbus led 27-13, 29-31 and
62-43 at the quartermarlis. The
loss left Athens with a 1-1

season mark.
Doug Horn and Bill Greer
paced the Bulldogs with 12 and
11 points while Jim Hurt led
Columbus with 23 markers.
The Bulldogs will now
prepare for Friday's SEOAL
opener against the powerful
Ironton Tigers.
Columbus Eastmoor (71Gasion 1-0-2; Stewart 0-1-1;
Jones 3·2-Bi Laswell 1·0-2;
Pounds8-2-18 ; Mills0-1·1; Hurt
10·3-23 ; Edwards 1·0·2; Wilson
6·1·13 . Totals 30-10-70.
Athens (59) - Butner 0-4-4;
Chonko 4-1-9; Dalley 1-2-4;
Elwood 4-0-8; Faulkner 2-1·5;
Green 3· 0-6; Greer 5-1-11 ; Horn

4-4·12. Tot a Is 23-13-59.
Score by Quarters:
13 18 12 16-59
Athens
Eastmoor
27 22 13 8--70
Reserve Score:
Eastmoor 42 Athens 9.

directing an ~yard, 24-play
drive paying off on Don
Cockroft's field goal one
minute into the second quarter,
which consumed 12:28.
"We felt they had their own
ball and weren't going to let
anyone else play With it,"
Saban quipped.
Cockroft Gels Second Cbanee
The drive nearly failed when
Cockroft missed a 28-yard
attempt but a Buffalo penalty
gave him a secOnd chance and
he hit from 21 yarda.

•

·
Holiday dinner plans were
made during the Thursday
night meeting of the Busy Bee
.
Class of the Middleport Ftrst
Baptist Church at the home of
Mrs Elizabeth Searles
·
·.
The dinner will be gtven at
the Middleport Church of
Christon Dec.13 at6p.m. with
the Men's Class to join with the
Busy Bees. After dinner, a gift
exchange and party will be
.
h h
held at the Bapltst c ur.c .
Officers for 1975 were elected
and include Mrs . Rose Mary
Lyons, president; Mrs. Leora
Sigman, vice president; Mrs.
Beulah White, secretary; Mrs.
Isabelle
Winebrenner,
assistant secretary; Mrs.
Lettie Roush, treasurer; and
Mrs. Nora Jordan, cards and
flowers .
Appointed to the committee
to serve dinners for bereaved
families were Mrs. Freda
Edwards, Mrs. Eva Hartley,
Mrs. Wilma Parmalee, Mrs.
Nelle Werner, Mrs . Nora
Jordan , and Mrs . Lyons .
Named teachers were Mrs.
Roma Hawkins, and Mrs .
Sigman.
at
the
Acknowledged
meeting was a $10 gift from

Portland honor
pupils named
PORTLAND - The second
six weeks honor roll for the
Portland Elementary School
has been announced. Named
were (names in capital letters,
aliA): .
Grade 6 - BONNIE BOSO,
Tina Cozart, Armintha Holter,
JANET · MIDDLESWART,
Charlotte Pickens, DANNY
TALBOTT, JOE JOHNSON .
GRADE 5 - SHERRY
BEEGLE, AUCIA EVANS,
Kris
Johnson,
KELLY
PICKENS, Renee Smith.
Grade 4 - CINDY EVANS,
BRUCE JOHNSON, TAMMY
MEADOWS, DEBRA OCTEAU, Lori Sprouse, DANNETT WEDDLE .
Grade ·3 - Vicky Barber,
Wade Connoley, CHR!STLE
LAWRENCE, DANNY
WEDDLE.
Grade 2 - Ray Lawrence,
Buddy
McGhee,
Kevin
Teaford, Bruce Wolfe.
Grade I - Theresa Barber,
Randy Beegle, Charlie Boso,
Lee Cornell.
Special Education Honor
Roll: Dewey Autherson.

SADDLE OXFO~DS
Flat-Black &amp; White
Girts 8'12·4
Womens 5-10

TOM LAUGHLIN
'•
DELORES TAYLOR
t
I

Poll Parrot
and
Miss Wonderful

I

TheTriaJOt

.heritaD house

Jack

•
\

I

Your Thorn MeAn Store
Middleport, 0.

-··

by Polly Cra~er

Non~slip

A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club member•.

SUPERIORS SEMI-BONELESS
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLy - How can one remove rubber designs that
were put in a bathtub to prevent slipping? Mine are yellow and
discolored. No one seems to know the answer. - MRS. 0 . T.

By Mn. Edward Slmpoon
Bend of tbe River Garden Club
In November the first thing we think about is the problem of
leaves. Hardwood leaves such as oak and beech should be put
aside for winter mulching. They do not rot quickly. Maple leaves
decay quickly and become humus by spring.
Tulip bulbs may be planted this month. If you plan to have
hyacinth indoors, November is about the last chance to pot them .
Winter houseplants need care to help them through the
winter. The real remedy for these plants is a house humidifier. It
is also good !or ourselves.
For anyone who wishes to garden without DDT IUld other
chemical insecticides, the following have been compiled. Castor
beans at!i'act and poison Japanese bettles. Horse radish repels
potato bugs when planted near potatoes. Marigolds repel
cucumber, beetles when planted near cucumbers, squash,
pumpkins and melons. Nasturtiums repel Mexican bean beetles
when planted near beans, repels aphids when planted near
broccoli; repels cucumber beetles and squash bugs when planted
near these crops, pumpkins and melons.
Parsley repels rose beetles when planted near roses. Sage
repels white cabbage butterflies when planted near plants of
cabbage family and repels ticks.

A gift wiU be sent to the
Middleport firemen and to
children who formerly resided
in the Meigs County Children's
Home as the special Christmas
projects of Class 12, Heath
United Methodist Church.
Meeting Thursday night at
the church, Mrs. Emerson
Jones opened the meeting with
an organ prelude , "Bless This
House." Mrs. Mary Rinehart
read "Back to the Clouds,"
and gave a Thanksgiving

M
L
h
Mrs . Lula
ae
ync .
Arrangements were made to
send $5 to Emma Matthews for
· ·
I'
·
Thanksgtvmg. A dona ton to
the class was made by Mrs.
Sadie Turner as a part of a
b 1
k · 1 h id d ·
ake ess ba e ~ e e
ur~ng
the ev.emng wtth $18 bemg
made for the class treasury.
Members sang, " F-or God So
Loved the World " to open the
meeting with Mrs . Jordan
· ·
d
t' n f om II
glVlng . evo to s r . .
Cortnlhtans and a medttatton
"Giving Says I Love You."
Members answered roll call by
naming something they want
for Christmas.
The birthdays of Mrs .
Kathryn Wise, Mrs. Jordan,
Mrs. Julia Grim, Mrs. Betty
Gilkey, and Mrs. Oeida Chase
were observed . Attending
besides those named were Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. Iva
Turner, Mrs. Eloise Wilson,
Mrs. EJecta Souders, Mrs.
Ruth Johnson, Miss Kathryn .
Werner, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
Mrs. Louise Skaggs. Contributing hostesses were Mrs.
Edith Sauer, Mrs. Elizabeth
Gardner , andMrs. Irene Cross.

Racine pupils
honors listed
RACINE - The second six
weeks honor roll for the Racine
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a "B" or
above in all their subjects to be
named to the roll were :
•
Grade I - Lori Adams,
Wanda Adkins, Tracy Cleland,
Tina Forester, Mandy Hill,
llrad Holsinger, Melissa !hie,
Alana Lyons, Kelly Rizer,
Kenda Rizer, Robin Savage,
Chad Sayre, Becky Van Meter.
Grade 2 - Tonya Bailey,
Vincent Cleland, Sandra
Harden, Deborah Holter, Lois
Ihle, David . PoweU, Dorsel
Randolph, Melody West, Loria
Wolfe.
Grade 3 - James Bush,
Teresa Hill, Unda Proffitt,
Laren Wolfe.
Grade 4 - Kathy Baker,
Chris Bostick, Angie Glenn,
Rollin · Johnson, Scott Justis,
·Becky Lee, Clair Morris, David
Parsons, Terry Patterson,
Tracy Riffle, David Salmons,
Tonja Salser, Lori Warden,
Melanie Weese':
Grade'S- Kim Bickers Kim
Follrod, Allen Pape, Jay Rees,
M~linda Salmons, Rita Sloter,
Kent Wolfe.
Grade 6 - Paul Cardone,
Sonja Hill, Della Johnson, Bob ·
Bill Lee, Carl Morris, Mary
Beth Obitz, Becky Rhodes,
~k Simpson, Bryan Wolfe,
Paula Wolfe.

'\

Acc~pt

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lb.

CANNED HAM '
31b.

$

99

99
can

SUNSHINE
KRISPY ·
CRACKERS

PRODUCE

1~b.

$189

FOLGER'S
INSTANT 10 oz. iar

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•NO

COFFEE:

NI:EDEU

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SCOT lAD

ICE CREAM
GALLON $}49

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PIES
SHASTA

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4 p.m. to clo•lng

I$115 French Fri.es, 1· 60'
Only

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WINCHESTER
UTri.E CIGARS

Smai'-Orink
&amp; LOllipop
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CRT.

doz.

69¢

COTTAGE CHEESE
89~

FAIRMONT
24 OZ. CARTON

MILK

29~

$1.2

MODERN DAIRY
TWIN PACK

1::.$129
pak

With,13.00
Purchase

Everyday Price ~a Pak.•1.59

MILK
Modern Da~ry
Twin Pak
gallon

crt.

$ 19

SATURDAY ONLY

each

lb.

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Grade A large

$100

16 oz.

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each49e

NICKERSON AUETS OF

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PIES

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DAIRY

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Big Shete
French Fries.
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lbs.

BANQUET MINCE

., ....

FOR KIDS
0 "'V
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BUYS

8

BANQUET PUMPKIN

we can Hnd them
anywhere,
the FTD w.ty. So, call
or vitlit us todq.

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Mark V Values for a Festive ThaN!sgiving

almCMt

59 N. Second St.

'149

RC COLA

iJilta /or your
bu&amp;ineu •fJSocilltes.

• '

FOR ADULTS

GAL.

bch

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•utumn /Jowers.

SALAD

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oz.$

BATH SIZE

··

SHERBET
¢

28
BOTS.

Throw-Away
Bottles

.

OFFICERS ELECTED
Officers were elected at the
recent organ_izational meeting
Of lhe Women's Missionary ·
Union held at the First ·
Southern· Baptist Church,
Pomeroy. Elected were Mrs. '
Jane Snouffer, president; Mrs.
Rachel Lefabre, secretary;
Mrs. Betty Pauley, progralJI
chairwoman; Mrs. Faye
CLO:l'HING OFFERED
Spencer, prayer chairwoman;
"Free Clothing Day" will be Mrs .
Sylvia
Zwilling,
held at The Salvation Army, missionary action. leader. Next
115 Butternut, . PQmeroy, , on · •meeting was announced for
Wednesday, ,Nov. 21, from 10 Dec. 16 at · 7:30 p.m, with
o'clock ·until . noon . All area babysitting service to be
residents are welcome.
provided.

8

14 OZ. JAR · $
eNO COUPON

POP

SLICES

CHOICE GOLDEN RIPE

MAXWEll HOUSE

INSTANT

HAM

BANANAS

Marie V Dessert Specialsl

box

HAM
lb.

5 lb.

can

HOME MADE

Superiors Polish Sausage. ........ .'............. lb. 79~
Superiors Bologna, by the piece.... ,..... lb. 79c
Superiors Wieners ,................... 12 oz. pkg. 69&lt;
Superiors All Beef Wieners..... 12 oz. pkg. 79~
Ground Beef, any amount ..................... lb. 79~
Ground Chuck; fresh, lean..................... lb •. •1 09
Ground Round, extra lean ..................... lb. '1 1'
Bacon Ends &amp; Pieces ................................ lb. 79~

.INCREDIBUitO!BLE!

II

SUPERIORS

HAM$ 29

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

TUESDAY NIGHT ISFAMILY FUN NIGHT
BURGER CHEF/

I

lb.

Half or Whole

BONELESS

CANNED POP

·
,

MIDDLEPORT, 0'

SUPERIORS

:·
:
I

to lG

OHIO LOTTERY TICKETS HERE

ments were served by Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Rose
Reynolds, and Mrs. Eleanor
Lohse, with Mrs. HatUe Swift,
a contributing hostess.

Christmas boxes for shut-ins
will be prepared by the Loyal
Women's Class of the Middleport Church of Christ on
Dec. 18 and delivered the
following day.
Plans for the annual
remembrance project were
made Thursday night at the
church. Mrs. Alice Robeson,
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds and Mrs.
Eleanor Lohse will have
charge of the project with other
class members helping deliver
them.
New .officers elected were
Miss
Mildred
Hawley,
president; Mrs. Beulah Roush,
vice president; .-Mrs. Ida
Childs, treasurer;
Mrs.
Margaret Lallance, secretary;
Mrs.
Audrey
Theobald,
as;;istant secretary.
Mrs. Robeson donated an
afghan to the class to be used in
a fund raising project. It was
announced that Miss Arlene
Spurlock, missionary to Africa,
will speak at the Jan . 23
meeting. The annual Christmas party will be held Dec. 9.
Acknowledgment of a gift of
money sent to the Grundy
Mission School was read.
For devotions, Mrs. Rose
Reynolds read Psalm 95 and
gave a meditation, "Thanksgiving Fragrance," and a
prayer. Mrs. Mary Bailey '
presented tbe program from
the book, "Women of the
Bible" using Lydia. Refresh-

~0

Federal Food Stamps

Reserve The Right t o Limit Quantities"

Shut-ins remembered

I

,·

We

PHONE : 992·3480

prayer. For roll call each
member commented on things
for which they are thankful.
Mrs. Glenn Lambert was
appointed to send Christmas
cards to servicemen of the
church. Names as new
secretary was Mrs. Jones. The
annual holiday party will be
held at the parsonage O'\ the
regular meeting date with the
Rev. Robert Bumgarner to
have the program . Mrs.
Bumgarner and Mrs. Steve
Houchins will be the hostesses
and this year there will be no
gift exchange. Chrislmas gifts
wiU be given to the custodian of
the churc~, the pastor and his
wife.
It was noted that Mrs. Jones
will have charge of ordering
the poinsettias for the church
decorations .
Mrs. Dwight Wallace for the
program reviewed "Something
More" by Kathryn Marshall.
In her review she noted that
although Mrs. Marshall had
always been a believer in God
and done lots of Christian acts
both in the church l¥!d the
community, she was not free
from sorrow and heartache.
Mrs. Wallace related the series
of sorrowful events, the death
of her husband, a grandson,
and a granddaughter, which
led to her close spiritual adventure with God . and the
relinquishing of her whole self
to God.
Mrs. Wallace said that Mrs.
Marshall described fear as a
lack of faith in God and told Of
how she handled unhappy
situations within her own
family. Mrs. Marshall's first
book was entitled, "A Man
Called Peter," her second,
Christi." She is now married to
a man who works on
Guideposts.
The Lord's Prayer in unison
concluded the meeting. A
dessert course was served by
Mrs. James Criswell and Mrs.
John Ketc[Jka .
BAZAAR PLANNED
There will be a Christmas
Bazaar at the Enterprise
United Methodist €burch on
Route 33, north of Pomeroy, on
Dec. 5-6 .from 9 ·a.m. to 5 p,m,
Featured will be Christmas
items of all kinds, magic art,
knit articles, decorated soap,
tree ornaments, decorated
candles and arrangements and
much, much more. There will
also be for Sl!le a variety of
homemade Christmas COOkieS
and candies. Come one, come
all.
DONATIONS MADE
Donations
from
the
Missionary Society of the
Pomeroy Baptist Church and
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Drew .Webster Post 39 were
among the post election contributions made to the
promotion of the levy for the
Meigs CommWJity School for
'retarded children. Mrs. Harold
Sauer~, chairwoman . of the
committee, announced receipt
of the late donatiQils .

SUPER MARKEl- Open Daily 9 to 10 · Sun.

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve concerns OIU' staff of life.
What is happening to our bread? It seems to me that modern
bakers have "refined" bread beyond any semblilnce of what it
should and used to be. I am reall:t angry ahout this and find it
almost impossible to believe there is any nutritional value left In
it Lately 1find it is not baked to its full capadty as the slices are
~dly shaped and tbe yeast smell is eo strong. I challenge the
bakers to give us a less "refined" and a fully baked bread. MRS. J.G.N., a burned-liP housewife.
DEAR POLLy - I am a square dancer and starch my nylon
net petticoats with one cup of Epsom Sl!lts added to a quart of
water. This is perfect and might be just the answer for J Q&amp;n who
wants to add body to her nylon lace tablecloth.
My greetings to Mim as I am with her concerning her Pet
Peeve. I have been trying to find those nice old-fashioned rough
bath towels for years. - WINIPAT.
DEAR POLLY - and Joan who wants to add body to her
nylon lace tablecloth - A friend had this problem with her nylon
ruffled curtains and read that powdered milk would ~o it. She has
been using this for some lime and likes it. UtUe bits of the dry
milk are left but they are so small they really do not show. Try
different amoWJts of milk and water Wllil the desired consistency
is acquired.- HELEN.
DEAR POLLY - My husband thoroughly dislikes painting
the exterior of our house. However, with our new plan the house
has never looked nicer and he does not fussas much about doing
the painting. Only one side Is painted each year and it always
looks fresh and neat. - ElLIE.
DEAR POLLY - With shortening prices sky rocketing
(whi.t isn't?) I save -wberever I can. When I have used the
shortening in a can I save the tin. When ready to grease a pan I
was up a pieceofwaxedpaper, rub around inside the can, grease
the pan and then SI!Ve the tin and paper until the next baking. No
waste with shortening clinging to tbe tin or from paper having too
much shortening on it. Here is to Sj,lvlng. -C~LE. ·
DEAR READERS - I set such a tlu on a low flame__or_~e.!!
tbe pllot Ugbt on the stove, melt what shortelllng cUng1 to tbe can
and tben pour this Into a small can thalia kept In the refrigerator
just for tbio leftover shortening use. -POLLY.
You will reeelve a dollar If Polly !Mel your favorite homemaking Idea, Pet l'eeve, Polly's Problem or aituaUoa to a
problem. Write- Polly In care of tbla newapaper.

Special projects set

•

r

designs - ,
hard to remove

Notes . ...

Baptists plan dinner

•

•

·Polly 's Pointers_
-

•

Green Thumb

cage scores

Simpson runs
through Browns

••
••
•'

I

' .

OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREE}--

2

lb.
pkg.

8

..

16 oz.
btb.

'139

�.

-

..

·'

·- ..

·~-

.... .'

..

.,

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Monday, Nov. 25, 1974

'

.

.

Saturday's
high school

Duke made it
sound so rosy
CHICAGO (UPI) - Big Ten
Commissioner Wayne Duke
made it all sound so rosy .
The meeting was "very

cordial." There was no "in·
fighting."
There also were no comments
after Ohio State was awarded
an Wlprecedented third straight
Rose Bowl trip Sunday-for an
unprecedented third consecutive meeting with Southern
California. The Buckeyes got
the bid in a secret ballot by Big
Ten ., thletic directors , who
seem to be the !all guys in the
annual furor over which team,
Ohio State or Michigan, will
play in the New Year 's Day
classic.
Saturday Ohio State eked out
a 12-10 win over Michigan,
snapping the longest unbeaten
streak in major college football
at 21 games. For the third
straight year, it left the two
teams tied for the league
championship, this time with 71 records . Michigan State
finished a close third with a li-11 mark.
Duke, central character in
the drama, assembled · the
athletic directors in Chicago for
a vote which he hoped would
avoid a stir like the one
following last year's li-4 telephone vote. That vote sent the
Buckeyes to Pasadena after the
two teams tied 10-10 in their
ti tl~ showdown.
Unanimous Decision
This time , Duke said, the
athletic directors ''Wlanimously
agreed" upon five points of
voting procedure. The directors
agreed to vote in sealed,
unmarked envelopes, that Duke
and attorney Byron Gregory
would coWl I the ballots and not
divulge the votes and that each
athletic director would keep his
vote "confidential" and not
discuss it in public. The ballots
woUld be kept in a vault at
Gregory's law offices in case
they are challenged.
The muzzle seemed to work.
The athletic directors reviewed
films of the Ohio StateMichigan game for three hours ,
then voted and departed without comment. Two hours later,
Duke announced the verdict to
more than 100 waiting newsmen, and the only clue which
could be gleaned about tlie vote
was that It was not a tie,
because it was agreed that the
last team to go West would be
eliminated in the case of a tie.
" In my view, the discussions
at this morning's meeting were
most cordial indeed," Duke
said. "There was no indication
whatsoever of any in-fighting.
"I have no comment on the
outcome of the vote. Undoub-

;
•

••
'

By Uni1ed P.- ess lnler na t i onal

Saturday

tedly , Ohio State and Michigan
are fin e football teams and
either one would have made an
excellent choice as the representative of this conference
in the 1975 Rose Bowl game,
just as either one would have
made an excellent choice as the
representa tive in las t year's
game."
Schembechler Quiet
The athletic directors refused
to comment, and Michigan
Coach Bo Schembechler, who
last year drew a two-y ear
probation for his public cri ticism of the vote, did not even
answer his phone .
But Ohio State coach Woody
Hayes said, " We got it (the
Rose Bowl bid) because we
earned it. This is just grea t.
Actually, they couldn' t go any
other way because we beat the
other team."
Michigan might argue the
poin t, because a missed field
goal by the Wolves ' Mike
Lantry made the difference for
the second straight year.
Lantry's kick sailed high and
drifted just to the left of the
uprights with 18 seconds left,
spoiling a Michigan comeback
attempt in the waning seconds.
It justified Schembechler's
prognostication that the kicking
game would make the difference. Ohio State 's soccer-style
kicker Tom Klaban booted four
field goals, three from more
than 40 yards out, despite at
least two bad snaps from
center to his holder, Brian
Baschnagel. It allowed the
Buckeyes to escape with a
victory although they were held
without a touchdown for the
first time in recent years.
Michigan Empty-handed
Michigan, with the best
record in the nation at 30-2-1 in
the last three years, didn't have
a bowi bid to show for it. Both
of the Wolves• losses and the tie
came against Ohio State.
Ohio State will go to the Rose
Bowl for the fifth time in the
last seven years. Two years
ago, the Buckeyes lost to
Southern Cal 42-17, but they
avenged the defeat with a 42-41
win last year.
Elsewhere in the final day of
Big Ten action , Michi~an State
crushed Iowa 60-21 behind a
record-setting day from junior
quarterback Charlie ·Baggett,
Wisconsin beat Minnesota 40-14
on 304 yards and five touchdowns from jWJior Billy Mareb.
Illinois ~ave coach J:!o~
'!ilackman his first winning
season in four years with a 2814 win over Northwestern, and
Purdue dumped cross-state
rival Indiana 311-17.

statistic except points.
Simpson, who ·last year ran
for 2,003 yards to eclipse
Brown's season record, needs
only 63 yards to reach 1,000 for
the year . It was his fourth
game over 100 yards this year.
O.J. At His Beot
One play showed him at his
best despite a case of flu.
Buffalo had the ball on the
Cleveland 41 early in the
second period, with the Browns
leading 3-0, when quarterback
Joe Ferguson handed off tO
Simpson.
He burst over right tackle,
cut sharply left through the
secondary and outran the
defensive backs to the goal line
to give Buffalo the lead it never
lost.
"When .he gets into·the open,
you see what happens," said
Buffalo coach Lou Saban. "It
was a big seven points for us."
It was Simpson's longest run
of the season and came on a
soggy, muddy field as a daylong rain persisted through the
game. "I don't mind nmning ln.
the mud," Simpson tonfessed.
Cleveland scored first with
quarterback Brian Sipe

••

•
•
••
•
•
•
•

MONDAY
Ridgewood 73 West Holmes. 54
CHAPTER 17, Ohio Ass'n. of
Co l Eastmoor 70· At hens 59
wes tervil l e 66 Col North land 53 Public
Sc hool Employes,
O l e nt angy 65 Sunbury Big
meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the
Walnut 59
Buckeye Centra l 63 North moor
Meigs Junior High School
59
cafeteri a, Middleport.
Marion F r ank lin 65 Marion
Harding 55
EASTERN HIGH PTSA will
Moral R idgeda te 49 Mf. Gi lead
at 7:30 p.m. at the high
meet
J5
Ohio Deaf 66 N ewark St. P eter
sc
hool.
A program will be
Pau l 56
•
presented by s tudents under
F indlay 70 Walnut Ridge 58
Spa r ta High l and 68 Danville 53
the direction of Mrs. Jenny
Northwestern
68
Madison
Ma
chir. Members are selling
P la i n s 54
Tiffin
Colum b ia n
59
Tol fruitc akes, and res idents
Bowsher 57
Tal St FranCis 57 Tot Stritc h 50 wishing to purchase them may ·
To t St. John 53 Maumee 44
contact Mrs . Charles Martin,
Tal DeVilbiSS 72 Ta l Wh i t mer 59
Mrs . Barb Hannum, Mrs .
Genoa 74 Port Cl i nton 53
F r e mon t 57 Fostiria 26
Pearl Edwards or purchase
Wayne sville 50 Cl inton Massie
them at Newell's Sohio Station
47
Mans Madison 59 Shelby 50
in Chester.
Mans St. P eters 69 Lexington 54
• TUESDAY
Upper Sandusky 53 Bucyrus
Cr awfo rd 50
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy
Cl e Marshall 53 Fai rv i ew 49
Chapter OES, 7:30 p.m. at
Brook l yn 71 Cte Rhodes 52
Lake Ca th o l i c 52 Cle Holy N ame home of Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
50
Well i ngton 83 Black River 69
JUNIOR American Legion
W i ll oughby South 68 Eucl i d 56
Auxiliary, 6 p.m . at Feeney Eastlake North 74 Col l inwood 41
P aines H a r vey 66 Chardon 43 1 Bennett Post 128 hall in MidAk ron ( .H 62 Lou isville AQuinas
dleport.
52
Waterloo 76 Strau sburg 44
DREW Webster Unit 39,
Ak ron Cen . Catholic 57 Oak .
American Legion Auxiliary,
wood 37
Loudonv i ll e 65 H i ll sdale 39
7:30p.m. at the hall . Initiation
Youngs town South 67 Akron
of new member by Mrs. Mary
Sout h 63
Martin .
Medina 60 Bru n swic k 47
Kiski Prep 64 Western Reserve
TUESDAY
Acade m y 52
Wel l in gton 83 Black River 69
AMERICAN
LEGION
Smit hville 72 Kidron Central
Auxiliary; Racine Post 602,
Ch rist ian 48
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge, 7:30 p.m. Toesday at
th e Temple. Work in the
Master Mason degree with all
ALL GAMES
Team
W L POP Master Masons invited.
Log an
1 6 72 63
WEDNESDAY
Athens
1 1 19? 117
AMERICAN
Legion
Gallipolis
0 0 0 0
Waverly
0 0 0 0 Auxili a r y and American
Jackson
0 0 0 0
Legion, Feeney - Bennett Post
Meigs
0 0 0 0 128, Middleport, potluck dinner
Ironton
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 at 6:30 p.m. with both groups
Wellston
South Point
0 0 0 0 having mee tings at 7:30 p .m .
Wheelersburg
0 0 0 0
Portsmouth
0 0 0 0

Standings

At~~a.~sr~!Ji~h~illeYork

4]·

Logan 72, Lancaster 63

Saturday's Result:
Eas·tmoor 70 Athens 59
Tuesday's games:
Hannan Trace at South Point
Ironton at Coal Grove
Wellston at Vinton County
.Wednesday 's games :
Holl1ard at Logan
Milford at Portsmouth
Friday's games :
Jackson at Logan
Waver!~ at Mel~s
~~~~~r':b~~gw:t ls~~7re Dame
Ironton al Athens
Hannan Trace at Eastern
Saturday's games:
South Point at Portsmouth

Bulldogs
lose 70-59
cage tilt
Host Athens dropped a 70-59
non-league hardwood decision
Columbus
Eastmoor
to
Saturday night.
Colulnbus led 27-13, 29-31 and
62-43 at the quartermarlis. The
loss left Athens with a 1-1

season mark.
Doug Horn and Bill Greer
paced the Bulldogs with 12 and
11 points while Jim Hurt led
Columbus with 23 markers.
The Bulldogs will now
prepare for Friday's SEOAL
opener against the powerful
Ironton Tigers.
Columbus Eastmoor (71Gasion 1-0-2; Stewart 0-1-1;
Jones 3·2-Bi Laswell 1·0-2;
Pounds8-2-18 ; Mills0-1·1; Hurt
10·3-23 ; Edwards 1·0·2; Wilson
6·1·13 . Totals 30-10-70.
Athens (59) - Butner 0-4-4;
Chonko 4-1-9; Dalley 1-2-4;
Elwood 4-0-8; Faulkner 2-1·5;
Green 3· 0-6; Greer 5-1-11 ; Horn

4-4·12. Tot a Is 23-13-59.
Score by Quarters:
13 18 12 16-59
Athens
Eastmoor
27 22 13 8--70
Reserve Score:
Eastmoor 42 Athens 9.

directing an ~yard, 24-play
drive paying off on Don
Cockroft's field goal one
minute into the second quarter,
which consumed 12:28.
"We felt they had their own
ball and weren't going to let
anyone else play With it,"
Saban quipped.
Cockroft Gels Second Cbanee
The drive nearly failed when
Cockroft missed a 28-yard
attempt but a Buffalo penalty
gave him a secOnd chance and
he hit from 21 yarda.

•

·
Holiday dinner plans were
made during the Thursday
night meeting of the Busy Bee
.
Class of the Middleport Ftrst
Baptist Church at the home of
Mrs Elizabeth Searles
·
·.
The dinner will be gtven at
the Middleport Church of
Christon Dec.13 at6p.m. with
the Men's Class to join with the
Busy Bees. After dinner, a gift
exchange and party will be
.
h h
held at the Bapltst c ur.c .
Officers for 1975 were elected
and include Mrs . Rose Mary
Lyons, president; Mrs. Leora
Sigman, vice president; Mrs.
Beulah White, secretary; Mrs.
Isabelle
Winebrenner,
assistant secretary; Mrs.
Lettie Roush, treasurer; and
Mrs. Nora Jordan, cards and
flowers .
Appointed to the committee
to serve dinners for bereaved
families were Mrs. Freda
Edwards, Mrs. Eva Hartley,
Mrs. Wilma Parmalee, Mrs.
Nelle Werner, Mrs . Nora
Jordan , and Mrs . Lyons .
Named teachers were Mrs.
Roma Hawkins, and Mrs .
Sigman.
at
the
Acknowledged
meeting was a $10 gift from

Portland honor
pupils named
PORTLAND - The second
six weeks honor roll for the
Portland Elementary School
has been announced. Named
were (names in capital letters,
aliA): .
Grade 6 - BONNIE BOSO,
Tina Cozart, Armintha Holter,
JANET · MIDDLESWART,
Charlotte Pickens, DANNY
TALBOTT, JOE JOHNSON .
GRADE 5 - SHERRY
BEEGLE, AUCIA EVANS,
Kris
Johnson,
KELLY
PICKENS, Renee Smith.
Grade 4 - CINDY EVANS,
BRUCE JOHNSON, TAMMY
MEADOWS, DEBRA OCTEAU, Lori Sprouse, DANNETT WEDDLE .
Grade ·3 - Vicky Barber,
Wade Connoley, CHR!STLE
LAWRENCE, DANNY
WEDDLE.
Grade 2 - Ray Lawrence,
Buddy
McGhee,
Kevin
Teaford, Bruce Wolfe.
Grade I - Theresa Barber,
Randy Beegle, Charlie Boso,
Lee Cornell.
Special Education Honor
Roll: Dewey Autherson.

SADDLE OXFO~DS
Flat-Black &amp; White
Girts 8'12·4
Womens 5-10

TOM LAUGHLIN
'•
DELORES TAYLOR
t
I

Poll Parrot
and
Miss Wonderful

I

TheTriaJOt

.heritaD house

Jack

•
\

I

Your Thorn MeAn Store
Middleport, 0.

-··

by Polly Cra~er

Non~slip

A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club member•.

SUPERIORS SEMI-BONELESS
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLy - How can one remove rubber designs that
were put in a bathtub to prevent slipping? Mine are yellow and
discolored. No one seems to know the answer. - MRS. 0 . T.

By Mn. Edward Slmpoon
Bend of tbe River Garden Club
In November the first thing we think about is the problem of
leaves. Hardwood leaves such as oak and beech should be put
aside for winter mulching. They do not rot quickly. Maple leaves
decay quickly and become humus by spring.
Tulip bulbs may be planted this month. If you plan to have
hyacinth indoors, November is about the last chance to pot them .
Winter houseplants need care to help them through the
winter. The real remedy for these plants is a house humidifier. It
is also good !or ourselves.
For anyone who wishes to garden without DDT IUld other
chemical insecticides, the following have been compiled. Castor
beans at!i'act and poison Japanese bettles. Horse radish repels
potato bugs when planted near potatoes. Marigolds repel
cucumber, beetles when planted near cucumbers, squash,
pumpkins and melons. Nasturtiums repel Mexican bean beetles
when planted near beans, repels aphids when planted near
broccoli; repels cucumber beetles and squash bugs when planted
near these crops, pumpkins and melons.
Parsley repels rose beetles when planted near roses. Sage
repels white cabbage butterflies when planted near plants of
cabbage family and repels ticks.

A gift wiU be sent to the
Middleport firemen and to
children who formerly resided
in the Meigs County Children's
Home as the special Christmas
projects of Class 12, Heath
United Methodist Church.
Meeting Thursday night at
the church, Mrs. Emerson
Jones opened the meeting with
an organ prelude , "Bless This
House." Mrs. Mary Rinehart
read "Back to the Clouds,"
and gave a Thanksgiving

M
L
h
Mrs . Lula
ae
ync .
Arrangements were made to
send $5 to Emma Matthews for
· ·
I'
·
Thanksgtvmg. A dona ton to
the class was made by Mrs.
Sadie Turner as a part of a
b 1
k · 1 h id d ·
ake ess ba e ~ e e
ur~ng
the ev.emng wtth $18 bemg
made for the class treasury.
Members sang, " F-or God So
Loved the World " to open the
meeting with Mrs . Jordan
· ·
d
t' n f om II
glVlng . evo to s r . .
Cortnlhtans and a medttatton
"Giving Says I Love You."
Members answered roll call by
naming something they want
for Christmas.
The birthdays of Mrs .
Kathryn Wise, Mrs. Jordan,
Mrs. Julia Grim, Mrs. Betty
Gilkey, and Mrs. Oeida Chase
were observed . Attending
besides those named were Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. Iva
Turner, Mrs. Eloise Wilson,
Mrs. EJecta Souders, Mrs.
Ruth Johnson, Miss Kathryn .
Werner, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
Mrs. Louise Skaggs. Contributing hostesses were Mrs.
Edith Sauer, Mrs. Elizabeth
Gardner , andMrs. Irene Cross.

Racine pupils
honors listed
RACINE - The second six
weeks honor roll for the Racine
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a "B" or
above in all their subjects to be
named to the roll were :
•
Grade I - Lori Adams,
Wanda Adkins, Tracy Cleland,
Tina Forester, Mandy Hill,
llrad Holsinger, Melissa !hie,
Alana Lyons, Kelly Rizer,
Kenda Rizer, Robin Savage,
Chad Sayre, Becky Van Meter.
Grade 2 - Tonya Bailey,
Vincent Cleland, Sandra
Harden, Deborah Holter, Lois
Ihle, David . PoweU, Dorsel
Randolph, Melody West, Loria
Wolfe.
Grade 3 - James Bush,
Teresa Hill, Unda Proffitt,
Laren Wolfe.
Grade 4 - Kathy Baker,
Chris Bostick, Angie Glenn,
Rollin · Johnson, Scott Justis,
·Becky Lee, Clair Morris, David
Parsons, Terry Patterson,
Tracy Riffle, David Salmons,
Tonja Salser, Lori Warden,
Melanie Weese':
Grade'S- Kim Bickers Kim
Follrod, Allen Pape, Jay Rees,
M~linda Salmons, Rita Sloter,
Kent Wolfe.
Grade 6 - Paul Cardone,
Sonja Hill, Della Johnson, Bob ·
Bill Lee, Carl Morris, Mary
Beth Obitz, Becky Rhodes,
~k Simpson, Bryan Wolfe,
Paula Wolfe.

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COTTAGE CHEESE
89~

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MILK

29~

$1.2

MODERN DAIRY
TWIN PACK

1::.$129
pak

With,13.00
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Everyday Price ~a Pak.•1.59

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gallon

crt.

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NICKERSON AUETS OF

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FOR KIDS
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we can Hnd them
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Mark V Values for a Festive ThaN!sgiving

almCMt

59 N. Second St.

'149

RC COLA

iJilta /or your
bu&amp;ineu •fJSocilltes.

• '

FOR ADULTS

GAL.

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•utumn /Jowers.

SALAD

CELERY

oz.$

BATH SIZE

··

SHERBET
¢

28
BOTS.

Throw-Away
Bottles

.

OFFICERS ELECTED
Officers were elected at the
recent organ_izational meeting
Of lhe Women's Missionary ·
Union held at the First ·
Southern· Baptist Church,
Pomeroy. Elected were Mrs. '
Jane Snouffer, president; Mrs.
Rachel Lefabre, secretary;
Mrs. Betty Pauley, progralJI
chairwoman; Mrs. Faye
CLO:l'HING OFFERED
Spencer, prayer chairwoman;
"Free Clothing Day" will be Mrs .
Sylvia
Zwilling,
held at The Salvation Army, missionary action. leader. Next
115 Butternut, . PQmeroy, , on · •meeting was announced for
Wednesday, ,Nov. 21, from 10 Dec. 16 at · 7:30 p.m, with
o'clock ·until . noon . All area babysitting service to be
residents are welcome.
provided.

8

14 OZ. JAR · $
eNO COUPON

POP

SLICES

CHOICE GOLDEN RIPE

MAXWEll HOUSE

INSTANT

HAM

BANANAS

Marie V Dessert Specialsl

box

HAM
lb.

5 lb.

can

HOME MADE

Superiors Polish Sausage. ........ .'............. lb. 79~
Superiors Bologna, by the piece.... ,..... lb. 79c
Superiors Wieners ,................... 12 oz. pkg. 69&lt;
Superiors All Beef Wieners..... 12 oz. pkg. 79~
Ground Beef, any amount ..................... lb. 79~
Ground Chuck; fresh, lean..................... lb •. •1 09
Ground Round, extra lean ..................... lb. '1 1'
Bacon Ends &amp; Pieces ................................ lb. 79~

.INCREDIBUitO!BLE!

II

SUPERIORS

HAM$ 29

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

TUESDAY NIGHT ISFAMILY FUN NIGHT
BURGER CHEF/

I

lb.

Half or Whole

BONELESS

CANNED POP

·
,

MIDDLEPORT, 0'

SUPERIORS

:·
:
I

to lG

OHIO LOTTERY TICKETS HERE

ments were served by Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Rose
Reynolds, and Mrs. Eleanor
Lohse, with Mrs. HatUe Swift,
a contributing hostess.

Christmas boxes for shut-ins
will be prepared by the Loyal
Women's Class of the Middleport Church of Christ on
Dec. 18 and delivered the
following day.
Plans for the annual
remembrance project were
made Thursday night at the
church. Mrs. Alice Robeson,
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds and Mrs.
Eleanor Lohse will have
charge of the project with other
class members helping deliver
them.
New .officers elected were
Miss
Mildred
Hawley,
president; Mrs. Beulah Roush,
vice president; .-Mrs. Ida
Childs, treasurer;
Mrs.
Margaret Lallance, secretary;
Mrs.
Audrey
Theobald,
as;;istant secretary.
Mrs. Robeson donated an
afghan to the class to be used in
a fund raising project. It was
announced that Miss Arlene
Spurlock, missionary to Africa,
will speak at the Jan . 23
meeting. The annual Christmas party will be held Dec. 9.
Acknowledgment of a gift of
money sent to the Grundy
Mission School was read.
For devotions, Mrs. Rose
Reynolds read Psalm 95 and
gave a meditation, "Thanksgiving Fragrance," and a
prayer. Mrs. Mary Bailey '
presented tbe program from
the book, "Women of the
Bible" using Lydia. Refresh-

~0

Federal Food Stamps

Reserve The Right t o Limit Quantities"

Shut-ins remembered

I

,·

We

PHONE : 992·3480

prayer. For roll call each
member commented on things
for which they are thankful.
Mrs. Glenn Lambert was
appointed to send Christmas
cards to servicemen of the
church. Names as new
secretary was Mrs. Jones. The
annual holiday party will be
held at the parsonage O'\ the
regular meeting date with the
Rev. Robert Bumgarner to
have the program . Mrs.
Bumgarner and Mrs. Steve
Houchins will be the hostesses
and this year there will be no
gift exchange. Chrislmas gifts
wiU be given to the custodian of
the churc~, the pastor and his
wife.
It was noted that Mrs. Jones
will have charge of ordering
the poinsettias for the church
decorations .
Mrs. Dwight Wallace for the
program reviewed "Something
More" by Kathryn Marshall.
In her review she noted that
although Mrs. Marshall had
always been a believer in God
and done lots of Christian acts
both in the church l¥!d the
community, she was not free
from sorrow and heartache.
Mrs. Wallace related the series
of sorrowful events, the death
of her husband, a grandson,
and a granddaughter, which
led to her close spiritual adventure with God . and the
relinquishing of her whole self
to God.
Mrs. Wallace said that Mrs.
Marshall described fear as a
lack of faith in God and told Of
how she handled unhappy
situations within her own
family. Mrs. Marshall's first
book was entitled, "A Man
Called Peter," her second,
Christi." She is now married to
a man who works on
Guideposts.
The Lord's Prayer in unison
concluded the meeting. A
dessert course was served by
Mrs. James Criswell and Mrs.
John Ketc[Jka .
BAZAAR PLANNED
There will be a Christmas
Bazaar at the Enterprise
United Methodist €burch on
Route 33, north of Pomeroy, on
Dec. 5-6 .from 9 ·a.m. to 5 p,m,
Featured will be Christmas
items of all kinds, magic art,
knit articles, decorated soap,
tree ornaments, decorated
candles and arrangements and
much, much more. There will
also be for Sl!le a variety of
homemade Christmas COOkieS
and candies. Come one, come
all.
DONATIONS MADE
Donations
from
the
Missionary Society of the
Pomeroy Baptist Church and
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Drew .Webster Post 39 were
among the post election contributions made to the
promotion of the levy for the
Meigs CommWJity School for
'retarded children. Mrs. Harold
Sauer~, chairwoman . of the
committee, announced receipt
of the late donatiQils .

SUPER MARKEl- Open Daily 9 to 10 · Sun.

DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve concerns OIU' staff of life.
What is happening to our bread? It seems to me that modern
bakers have "refined" bread beyond any semblilnce of what it
should and used to be. I am reall:t angry ahout this and find it
almost impossible to believe there is any nutritional value left In
it Lately 1find it is not baked to its full capadty as the slices are
~dly shaped and tbe yeast smell is eo strong. I challenge the
bakers to give us a less "refined" and a fully baked bread. MRS. J.G.N., a burned-liP housewife.
DEAR POLLy - I am a square dancer and starch my nylon
net petticoats with one cup of Epsom Sl!lts added to a quart of
water. This is perfect and might be just the answer for J Q&amp;n who
wants to add body to her nylon lace tablecloth.
My greetings to Mim as I am with her concerning her Pet
Peeve. I have been trying to find those nice old-fashioned rough
bath towels for years. - WINIPAT.
DEAR POLLY - and Joan who wants to add body to her
nylon lace tablecloth - A friend had this problem with her nylon
ruffled curtains and read that powdered milk would ~o it. She has
been using this for some lime and likes it. UtUe bits of the dry
milk are left but they are so small they really do not show. Try
different amoWJts of milk and water Wllil the desired consistency
is acquired.- HELEN.
DEAR POLLY - My husband thoroughly dislikes painting
the exterior of our house. However, with our new plan the house
has never looked nicer and he does not fussas much about doing
the painting. Only one side Is painted each year and it always
looks fresh and neat. - ElLIE.
DEAR POLLY - With shortening prices sky rocketing
(whi.t isn't?) I save -wberever I can. When I have used the
shortening in a can I save the tin. When ready to grease a pan I
was up a pieceofwaxedpaper, rub around inside the can, grease
the pan and then SI!Ve the tin and paper until the next baking. No
waste with shortening clinging to tbe tin or from paper having too
much shortening on it. Here is to Sj,lvlng. -C~LE. ·
DEAR READERS - I set such a tlu on a low flame__or_~e.!!
tbe pllot Ugbt on the stove, melt what shortelllng cUng1 to tbe can
and tben pour this Into a small can thalia kept In the refrigerator
just for tbio leftover shortening use. -POLLY.
You will reeelve a dollar If Polly !Mel your favorite homemaking Idea, Pet l'eeve, Polly's Problem or aituaUoa to a
problem. Write- Polly In care of tbla newapaper.

Special projects set

•

r

designs - ,
hard to remove

Notes . ...

Baptists plan dinner

•

•

·Polly 's Pointers_
-

•

Green Thumb

cage scores

Simpson runs
through Browns

••
••
•'

I

' .

OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREE}--

2

lb.
pkg.

8

..

16 oz.
btb.

'139

�.
I

8- Tlie Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Mondj'y , Nov. 25, 1974

lll\fl&gt;."*l"*l~Mil!MiliiSll!i!lllill1tll!l&amp;li88888t18Mil!M!lllll\fl&gt;.lllill1tlllill1tllilllllllll8ill

Television Log
13, .Bonanza 4; Movie " Postman s Knock '' 10
4:3!1 - Jackpot 4; Bonanza 15 , Mod &gt;quao o; Gilligan's Is 13,

Adlerian Counseling Techmques 33
NB'C News 3, ~. 15 , CBS New s 8. 10 . Bew1tr'hed 6 , Gomer

6 30 -

Pyle 13.
7 00 - Truth or Cors 3; News 10, Wha t's My lone 8, E lec Co

20 , Workshop 15 , Bowling for Dol lars 6, Candid Ca m era 13 ;

Insight 33.
7. 30 - That Good Ole Nas nvllle Mu sic 3, Bu ck Owens 8;
Episode Action 33; Help Thy Ne ighbor 4, Pollee Surgeon 6 :
Municipal Court 6; To Tell the Truth 13, Mountwood Park
Mountain Song 20
8 00 - Rookies 6, 13 , In Performance at Wolf Tra p 20, 33 .
Born Free 3,4, 15; Smithsonian Institution Special B. 10
9 00 - NF~ Football6, 13 . Movi e "Kings of the Sun" 3, 4, 15 ,
Maude 8, 10
9· 30 - Caught In the Act 20, 33 , Rhoda 8, 10.
10;0&lt;' - Medical Center 8, Ne ws 20 , Washing ton Stra1ght Talk

33, Tom Jones 10

10· 30 -

Journey 33.

ll · OO - News3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15
11.30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 , Janak I 33 ; Movi e '' Mc ll n tock" a
Movie " Ride Beyond Vengeance" 10

'

12 00 -

News 6, 13

12 ·30 -

Mission Impossible 6 , Untouchables 13

1 00 1 30 -

2 00 -

Tomorrow 3, 4
News 13

News 4

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Nov. 25, 1974
Dear Helen:
I have a friend I love dearly. Tbe big problem Ia: How do we
avoid eating with her?
'
Her family has four dogs and four cata and her children
handle them. Then they're asked to make a salad or set the table,
etc .. And they never wash their hands before doing 110.
How do I get It act'08S that this is unsanitary? - GERM
CONSCIOUS

Helen Help

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1974
•:oo - Mr . Cartoon and the Banana Splits 3, Somerset 15 .
Tattletales B; Sesame St. 33 , Gllll~an's Is 6; 110.000 Pyramid
Bewitched 3; ~ucy Show 8
5:00 - Merv Griffin 4; Mister Rogers 20 , 33 , Anyth 1ng You Can
Do 13 ; FBI3; Andy Griffith 8, Ironside 13
5:30- Elec. Co. 33 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20. News 6. Trail s West
15.
6. 00 - News3,4, 15, News8, 10, Sesame S! 20. ~B C News 6, 13 ,

Us. • •

By Helen Hottel

Dear G .C. :
U your friend reads the paper - mlsalon acccmpllahed,

'Supermarket' Nelgbbor
Dear Helen :
I'm Ured of being the "~op and Save" supennarket for my
neighbor : I shop - she saves, by borrowing constanUy .
~e almost never pays back, but once in a while she'll ask to
buy a can of fruit or something. U I charge her the price stamped
on the Ud, I still lase, because chances are It's a third again
higher when I go to replace It.
~e's a good person and I don't want to lose her friendship.
How do I get it across that with the price of food today, It's hard
enough feeding my own family, let alone hers• - BORROWED
TO DEATII
Dear B To 0 :
You haVE three choices:
1. Get as much as you giVe, that is, check what your neighbor .
carr1eo on her shelves, and start borrowil)g .

2. Learn to say "Sorry, I'm fresh out," or HJ only have
enough for dirmer," without guilt.
3. Tell her, "Look, I need some things too : Let's go to the
etore and stock up." (In her car, if possible.)
Or you can keep a list of borrowed Items, ask for repayment,
and probably lose a friend. - H.

mer's Daughter 13

7. 30 - New Zoo Revue 6 ; Udsvllle 13
8 00 - New Zoo Revue 13 . Capt Kangaroo 8; Jeff 's Collie 6,
Sesam e St 33 , PoC'eye 10
8: 25 - Jack Lalan ""~ 13. Capt. Kangaroo 10
8: 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8:55- News 13 .
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4. AM 3, Phil Donahue 15 ; Wild Wild West 6,
Bullwlnkle 8, Movie " Sodom and Gomorrah" Conclusion 13

9:30- Not For Women Only 3; HazelS ; Tattletales 10
10: 00 - Joker's Wild 8, 10,. Company 6; Name That Tune 3, 15
10:30 - G~mblt8. 10; Winning Streak 3, 4, 15. Phil Donahue 4
11:00 - Password 13 , High Rollers 3. 15 . Now You See It 8, 10 ;
$10,000 Pyram1d 6
11 : 300 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 ; Brady Bunch 13, love of
~lie 8, 10.
11:55 - CBS News8, On Imel ' s World 10
12 : 00 - Jackpot 3, 15, Password 6; Bob Braun' s so so Club 4,

Dear Helen ·
While I was on vacation I took a small bag of fresh pears to
the breakfast table of my group in a coffee shop. My tablemates
were embarrassed and would not accept any of the fruit. Said it
was bad social fonn to carry yolD' own food into a restaurant.
The pears were not meant to replace food ordered. Old I
conunit a social blunder? - V. L.
Dear V.:
In my book : No! But then I've never been a "What will
people think?" addict. -H.

-·

5 00 - Merv Griffin 4; Mister Rogers 20, 33, Anything You Con
Do 13; FBI3 , Andy Griffith 8; Ironside 13.
5 ~~:- Elec Co 33 ; Hodgepodge lodge 20 ; News 6; Trails West
6 00 -

Pyle 13.

Truth or Consequences 3, 4: Bowling for Dollars 6·

What' s My ~lne? 8, News 10; Wild Kingdom 15, Antiques 20 ;
Art of Football 33.
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4; Wild, W1ld World of Animals 6,
$25,000 Pyramid 8, Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth 13,
TBA 15; Ohio Election 20 ; Marto Sportlite 33
8 00 - Happy Days 13; Good Times 10 ; America 33; Winnie the
Pooh and The Blustery Day 3, 4, 15 ; New World Coming 6, B
C. Cartoon 8
8· 30 - .fo!o-A S-H 10 ; Evening at Symphony 33, Movie "Death
Stalk 3, 4, 15; Movie' " The Godchild" 13 , Movie "The House
That Wouldn't Die" 6 : New World Coming 8.
9· DO - Hawaii Flve-0 8, 10.
9 30 - Woman 20 ; Barenbolm On Beethoven 33.
10 00- Pollee Story 3, 4. 15; Marcus WelbY 6. 13 , Barnaby Jones
8, News 20, Englebert Humperd~nck 10; Soundstage 33.
10:30- Your Future Is Now20; Mete Hawaii JJ.
11:00- News 3, 4, 6, 8. 10, 13, 15,33
11 : 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, IS; Mission Impossible 6, Janakl33;
Wide World· California Jam 13; Movie "The Liquidator" 8,
Movie " The Angry Breed" 10.
l 00- Tomorrow 3, 4
2 00 - News 4, 13.

News 8, 10, Mr. Rogers 33 : News 13

12· 30- Celebrity Sweepstakes 3. IS . Split Second 6, Search tor
Tomorrow 8, 10, Afternoon w1th OJ 13 . Elec Co 33
12· 55- NBC News 3, 15.
1:00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13; Green Acres 10 ; Not For
Women Only 15, Making Things Grow 33 , Ph1l Donahue 8;
Young &amp; Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15

1· 30- Jeopardy 4, 15; ~et's Make A Deal 6, 13; As the World
Turns 8, 10; Dig It 33 ; Telethon 3
2. 00- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13 . Guld1ng
Light 8, 10, Insight 33.
2:30- Doctors 3, 4.15. Girl In My ~1fe 13; Edge of Night 8, 10,

Performance 33.

3.00- Another World 3, 4, 15; Price Is R1ght 8, 10 , General
Hospital 6. 13; Great American Dream Machine 33
3:30 - How To Survive A Marriage 3, 15; Match Game 8, 110;
One Life to Live 13 , Lassie 6, Dollar DeciSions 20.
4 DO - Mr. cartoon &amp; The Banana Splits 3; Somerset IS , Tat-

tletales 8; Sesame St 33 ; Gilligan' s Isle 6, Bonanza 4; Mov1e

"Delphi Bureau" 10; Mike Douglas 13
4· 30 - Jackpot 4, Bonanza 15; Mod Squad 6, Bewitched 3; ~ucy
Show 8.

CAB~E CHANNE~

7 30 P m -

WIN AT BRIDGE

FIVE
Washington Debates For the Seventies "The

Parties and the Issues "
,
B· Jo P m.- The Gvnslingers "The Westerners," "Zane Grey

They try to fool the old man

Theatre."
9:30 p.m . - The Underworld "Target: The Corruptors."

NOI&lt;AMN
SAID HE!6

+

R.)5T'S&lt;.

HE ACTUALLY

GOING; ID "fl.JE

weeeueve

~OON

Nov. 28, 11174
Sudden breaks you ve never
had batore Will present !hamselves concerning your work
or career th1s year. However
lhey'll be of a fteetlng nalure
and need prompt exploltallor

together? - H.

Unscramble these four Jumbleo,

one letter to eaeh squue, to
form four ordinary word1.

For Your Copy of "Wiult 1s a Ctu8h -What II a Flrlt Ulve •
What Ia GeUina to Know Younelf" send a STAMPED, lelf.
addr~, WNG envelo_pe to Helen and Sue Bottel, P .0" Box
23067, Sacramento, Calif., 96e23.

ACROSS
1 Speech
Imperfection
5 Partner
of miss
8 Norwegian
city
9 Moving
forward
13 Christmas
gift for
juruor

39 Some
d Czech

14 Look

5 Golfer

·~

'r"
'.
'c

-

DOWN

'or.

1 Missing
2 Cay
3 Dullard

sullen
15 Pagoda
ornament
16 New
Guinea
town

Ben and
family
&amp; Bay
7 Tango
complement
10 Odets play
17 11 - Maria"
(3 wds.)
18 Sow
11 One of
20 N.Z.
the gears
parrot
21 Lab bottles
22 Designate
23 Devil fish
24 SWldsy

•"

''
'"
'"

Yesterday's

12 Imagined
18 Refrain
In old

28 Food
sbop

28 "Two

songs
19 Delayed
Z1 Ice cream
flavor
Z2 Went
apace
23 Madman
24 European
capital

Women"

Oscar
winner
32 Price
paid
33 - gas
35 The gwns
36 Gordon
Me-

..
•

~·

Z5 Angel (Fr.)
28 Carried
27 Partner
of tuck
Disabled

28

·-

211 Asian
river

'

•
•

•

director
36 Theater
group
',

how to work it:
A.XYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

I

A.uwer1

-

One letter simply stands for another. In !lila sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln&amp;le Jetton
apostrophes, the lenith and formation of the words are an
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

(A-wen to•orrow)

JumbJ.,. MONEY

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

~=~=~,J~~!!!~~~~~·=u=r=re=•Jted
L
Prill*l • AIISWIIIIIri
I br(theI above
I ICU'Ioon.
I J
Salurday'•

'.

CRYPI'OQUOTE

Now .......,. the circled !ellen
to form the ourprloe anawer, &amp;I

I

.. News, Events

' '

dsnce

KRABEM1
~ 'i

.'
-

river

(colloq.,
2 wds.)
4 Home for
peas

DUNCE BRAZEN OIV1DE

Boxed in a .aquare rinQ- ..ROUND"

XPHCH'G
TQMMHC
XPH

GLJHYLTB
RWCXB

EPL

U H K H C B. - Z Q M

wx

WKK

By the Day

PFYYWCT

Yeaterday's Cryptoquote: NO MAN IS RICH ENOUGH TO
BUY BACK HIS PAST.~ Wn.DE

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hudson,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Huclaon of
Racine, Mr. and Mrs . Shelby
Pickens and family of
Pomeroy visited on Soodsy
wl th Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Taylor .
Mr. and Mrs . William Perry
of Hollond, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs.
George Perry of Dexter, Mr.
and Mrs. James Circle and
George Circle of New Haven,
W. Va., visited with Mary
Circle over the weekend.
Ray Johnson · of Racine
called at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur E. Johnson and
family, Betty Van Meter on
Saturday.
Mrs. Allan Taylor and
granddaughter, Shirley, were
in Colwnbus on Tuesday and
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Don
Wilson and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester were at the home of
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Lee and
famlly recenUy.

SINCii '!HIE -niORN
KING HA5 EVI!ItV·
ONE IN 'lOUR:

OW';!" HE ...

COUNTJN LOCI&lt;liP
IN'lO HIS CRiiO.TS
~ $'($'TEM,

+

+7

.AQJI073

North-South vulnerable
est

North

East

BORN LOSER

South

PRISCILLA'S POP

14
I NT
2+
34
Pass
ass Pass
Pass
Openmg lead- +2

2.
54

CROAk'

cRoAK

CROAK
CROAK
CROAK

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald. "One of the me•
things about gettmg old "
that the smart, ;young player:
try to fool you.'
J1m· "Are ;rou puttmg mE
in that class?
Oswald· "No. You aren't old
but you certamly aren ' t
young any more. Fifteen
years back you might have BLONDIE
made the same first discard
East made. Today, xou I'D LIKE A CHEESEBURGER
wouldn't be that obviOus. '
AND CO~ i=EE TO
J1m: "All r~ght. Tell your

BUGS BUNNY
TRIED IT, BUT PEOPLE
KEPT B RI NGING

Fairview
News Notes

'----"--·-&lt;

'----""'-1 IT BACK

story."

Oswald. "I ruffed the second diamond, entered dummy with the kmg of hearu
and led the nine of clubs for a
finesse. West took his km~
and led another diamond. 1
ruffed that and played tw&lt;
rounds of trumps. East dropped
the three of spades on the
first of these trump leads and
a d1amond on the second

one."

Jim· "I wouldn' t have been
that obvious fifteen years
ago. Maybe twenty-four
• · :years back, when I was learn·
mg as a freshman at Notre

CAPI' AIN EASY

THE PHANTOM
SCR'AMo P'ICKLEPL!SG:
VOU'IlE THE MONSY6 1lA~Pit.J' VUL.TURS
AI..VIE HI'FtSP ME- T'

•

P~ECT HIM
Ac:n~ST t

Oswald "In any event, it
was obv10us he wanted to
look like a man who d&gt;dn't
hold the queen of spades. It
didn't take me more than
half·a·second to lead a spade
to dummy's king and play
him for that all-important

••

~~:.__ _ _ _.::.__,r---'-'"-,

'fO!.JL.L. Ne'JER
FINEr AN'/ GoW

"THERe

I

Mrs. Mary Donohue and son,

11-IA"rt; WH'/
tM NOT" l71661N6
ve~~

Bertha Robinson were Mrs.

annual

holiday

.

bazaac.. entitled CHRISTMAofi
HOlJISE, located across from
Pomeroy
Post
Offtee ,
December 7 Carry out lun ch
11 2.4 J t c

-NO------------DEER hunting on farms of
Charles Yost,

flement ,

Po1nts

Nease Set

Ivan

and

it'SIGNS

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

Well, F •v e

11 24 6tp

-I ------------WILL SHOOT to kill anyone
who enters the Century Bar
after clos1ng hours Without
my permi!IS ton
Leonard ( Boo) Hen
11 22 3tp

-------------PIANO tnstructton by schooled

and experienced teacher
Begmner, •ntermedlate, and
advanced student welcomed
Mrs Wm
Bartholomew ,
Third Sl , Rac1ne Phone 949
2551
11 22 6tc

S2195
2 Door, orange finish , blk. vinyl interior, bucket seats, less
than 5,000 mfles &amp; 3 mo old Radio, deluxe bum pet's
$2495

4 Door, local I owner car, 318 V-Beng me, automatic trans ,
power steering, a1r conditioned, vmyl trim, vmyl top
Autumn gold finish, w w tires, like new, radio

Remember Chrrstmas 1S
com ing We have many new
prOducts that w•ll make n1ce
gifts Phone BROWN'S, 992
5113
n 3 ttc ~----------------------------------~
1968 FORD stat eon wa gon , S300
1972 vw Super Beetle, goOd
AUCTION , Thursdav and
Phone- 992 5301
cond1tton Phone 992 3981
Saturday night, 7 p m at
11 22 5tc:
11 21 6tc
M.asdh Auct1on. Horton St In -~----- -- ---- M'aspn, W va Cons1gnments
1969 350 PONTIAC F~rebtrd ,
welcome Phone ()0.4) 77l
Power
good cond rt1on Phone (304 1 1973 CUTLASS S
5H1
steenng, brakes , windows .
882 249 7
10 3 tfc
AM FM stereo tape player .
11 19 6tc
cru1se control, tilt wheel ,
rad1a ls, new brakes and
1973 OLO S Cutlass S Excellent
NOTICE
s hocks n 200 Phone 992 3381
cond 1t1on 350 engtne wtlh
or 992 3453
p s, p b and a rr , Call992 39 14
To The unknown heirs and
11216tp
after 5pm
dev1sees of Oscar Sanborn .
11
19
61p
deceased ,
1973 GMC panel van truck
To Robert Sanborn. address
Rad1el t1res , ltke new C p
1969 vw Phone 992 38U
unknown , and
Wdl tams , 592 Broadwa y St.
11 24 Jtp
To The unknown he trs and
Middleport
dtv1sees of Robert Sanborn
11 2t 6tc
You are hereby notlf1ed that For Rent
you have been named Defen
1960 WILLYS Jeep, new motor ,
dents rn a legal action entitled J AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
new top . new t1res. ln ex
unfurniShed
apartments
Franklin G Tr.plett, et al ,
cellent cond1t1on Phone 667
Phone 992 5434
Pla1nt1ffs , vs the unknown
3759 or ~67 3652
heirs and devtsees of Oscar
4 12 tfc
11 19 6tc
Sanborn, deceased , et al ,
Defendants Th1s actton has PRIVATE meeting room for
any organization ; phone 992 ·
been assigned use No 15,692,
3975
and rs pend1ng m the Court of
Common Pleas of Me igs
J 11 -tfc
County. Pomeroy , Oh 10, 45769
Tht 0b1ect of the Complamt is HOU SE and trailer tor re~l ~~ HULLED hickory nuts . wood tn
trees Phone 949 3718
to quiet the tttle of the Pla intiffs
town . 2 bedroom s Phone 99 2
1n the followmg descrtbed real
11 25 3tc
3975 and 992 2571
estate, to wtt
11 6 tfc
Situated m the Village of
1 TON Chevrolet truck ,
Mtddleport , County of M"ttgS , TRA ILER space , 2 m eles from 1970
dual wheels , V8 , 4 speed
and State of Oh io, and bounded
Looks and runs good Harold
Pomeroy, Rt 143 Phone 992
and descrrbed as follows Bemg
Brewer , Long Bottom , Ohio
5858
the south half of Lot Number
Phone
985 3554.
10
27
tfc
Two Hundred and Seventy 1270)
1117tfc
In Horton's Addlt1on to Lower TRAILER . 2 bedroom , Brown 's
--~- - -- ----~-Pomeroy , now Incorporated
Trailer Park. Phone 992 33 2.4
PAINT DAMAGE. 197111/ ZIG
into and made a part of the
11 8 tfc
ZAG SEWING MACHINES
Village of Middleport . Oheo
St
tll m or1g1na1 cartons No
Reference Deeds Volume
attachments needed as our
158, Page 620. and Volume 247. COUNTRY Mobil~ Home Park,
controls are built in Sews
Page 213, Meigs County Deed
Rt 33, ten m•les north of
w•th 1 or 2 needles, makes
Pomeroy Large lots with
Records
buttonholes , sews on buttons .
concrete patios. sidewalks ,
It 1S a further prayer rn satd
monograms.
and blind hem
funners
and
off
street
Complaint to reform the deed
st1tch Full cash pnce S38 50
parking Also. spaces tor
from Oscar Sanborn to Helena
or budget plan available
small trailers Phone 992 7.479
Sanborn recorded in Volume
Phone 992 7755
150, Page 74. Me1gs Coun ty
7 21 tfc
11 19 ttc
Deed Records
You are requ1red to answer 4 RM furnished apt close to PICKING up a P•ano 1n your
the Complarnt wtthin 28 day s
Powell 's Super Valu , phone
area . looktng for a respon
after the last publ•cat •on or thrs
992 3~58
slble party to lake over
notice, whiCh Will be published
11 20 lfc
payments Cart collect Credtt
once each week for six con
Manager , 772 5669, or write
secut.ve weeks
The last 2 BEDROOM furn cottage at
Cred1t Manager , 260 E Main
publication will be made on
Rock Springs , •deal for school
Sf , ChilliCOthe, Ohro 45601
December 9, 197.4 . and the 28
personneL adult s only .
11 19 6tc
days for answer will commence
refer ence des1red Phone 992 --~---- ---- - -on tf)at date .
2789
WALNUT stereo rad1o, am fm ,
In case ot yout failure to
I 1 J tfc
8 track tape combinat ion
answer or otherwise respond as
Balance S107 45 or terms Call
requered by the OhiO Rules of
992 3965
Civil Procedure , judgment by F URNISHED apt Adults only,
M1ddleport
Phone
992
3874
11 19 tfc
default will be rendered against
1114tfc
you for the relief demanded in
VACUUM Cleaners new 197.4
the Complaint
UNFURNISHED house , 4
model Complete with all
rooms and bath 1650 Lmcoln
cleaning too ls small patnt
Dated October 31 , 197.4
Heigh ts Phone 992 38H
damage In shipping Will take
11 14tfc
$27 cash or budget plan
Larry E Spencer,
available Phone 992 7155
Clerk of Court ,
11 19 tfc
Me~gs County , Ohio
FURNISHED apartment ,
utllrt1es furn iShed , suttable
(11} 4, 11 , 18, 25 (12 ) 2, 9, 6tc
for two working men or SINGER AutomatiC Z1g Zag
Sewtng Machmes, In sewing
ret~red couple Liv1ng room,
table Makes buttonholes ,
kitChen. Shower and bath On
seWs on bullons , blind hems,
main hrghway , Mason , W va
etc Top notch condition Pay
Phone 773 5147
$51 or terms available Phone
NOTICE OF
10 27 tfc
992 7755
APPOINTMENT
1119tfc
Case No. 21330 2 8 E DROOM trailer
in
Estate of Harne1t Hyatt
Syracuse, close to school No 1500 BALES of good ml)(ed hay,
Deceased
ch1ldren or pets Deposit
Sl a bate Phone 388 8U7
Notece tS hereb'll given that
requ1red Phone 992 2441 after
11 · 196tc
Elizabeth Axie Roush of R D 2,
~ 30 p m
Racine, Me1gs County , has been
10 18 ttc DEER SLAYER - Slug guns fn
duly appomted Executrix of the
stock. Remington. W 1n
Estate of Harrtett Hyatt . FURN ISHED apartment, J
chester , Ithaca , deer slugs,
deceased , late of Letart
rooms and bath , 1dea1 for
Sl
20 per box , New 1100 and
Township, Me1gs County , Oh10
work1ng coup le Phone 992
H870 Rem.ngtons, many other
Creditors are requtred to file
2937
guns Thai's Fife ' s, Third Sf ,
their claims with safd fiduc1ary
11246tc
Middleport Phone 992 7494
within four months
11 19 6tc
Dated thIs Uth day of
November 1974
Wanted To
LOWERY organ with ac
Mann1n0 D Webster
cessor~es , A beaut1ful Christ
Judge OLD furn1ture , 1ce bolleS , brass
mas gift , must be seen to
beds,
or
complete
households
Court of Common Pleas,
appreciate May be seen at
Write M o Mtller. Rt 1111 ,
Probate D1vrston
2d Union Avenue or call 992
Pomeroy , Oh10 Call 992 7760
5617
10 7 74
ftll lB. 25 f12l 2. 3tc
11 15 12tc
TRAILER , 2 to 3 bedrooms ,
want to take over pa....,ments FIREWOOD, any length Call
Phone 985 3878.
992-5422 or 992 3312
NOTICE OF
11 20 61c
11 -10 26tp
APPOINTMENT
c .u e No. 21349
Estate of Atlilnf• Georgia Cook $10 FOR tunk cars , SIS GRAVEL . sand, Mason sand .
Deceased.
del1vered, S7 tunked auto
ltmestone , Ptt Run by the ton
Notice Is h,ereby given that
bodies Phone 949 4484
D.et1vered Phone 111111116 1U2
Jerome cook of Hemlock
1124 26tp
10 18 tfc
Grove, Meigs county, Oh io, has
been duly appointed e)(ecutor CA,:,H pe14 for 111 makes and SEWING Machines , brand new
of the Estate of Atlanta Georgia
models of mobile homes
Zig Zag In nice walnut table
Cook, deceased, late of Bedford
Phone area code 614 423 9531
rn ang inal cartons Never
Township. Me igs County, Oh10
1 1/ .13 -tfc
used
Clearance on '74
Creditors are required to ftle
(Only
a
few
Models .
their claims w1th said f1duc 1ary JUNK autos, complete and
aYallable), Sol/3 11110 cash or
w1lhln four months
terms available Phone 992
del1'1ered to our yard . we
Dated this 22nd day of
PICk up auto bodies end buy
7755
November 1974
10 15 tfc
all kmds of scrap metals and
1ron Rider•s Salvage, St. R t.
Menning D Webster
12111/, Rl oil , Pomeroy, Oh io
Judge
COLEMAN Fuel 011 Floor
Call 992 5468
Court of Common Pleas.
furnace, 50 ,000 BTU working
10
17
lfc
Probate DIVISIOn
condition , S50. Will trade for
or buy an Iron pot belly stove
Mrs . Harold
Barnhart,
no 25 (121 2. 9. 3tc
Wanted
Tuppers Plains, Oh10 Phone
667 3•81
HOW TO EARN MONEY AT
11 22 3tc
.Wantl!fl To
HOME MAILING COM ·
MISSION
CIRCULARS!
EXCELLENT
PROF IT DISHWASHER Phont 13041
CASHSSSSSSS FOR
JUNK
773 5332
POTENTIAL OFFER
CARS
Camp
FRYE'S
11 22 -6tc
DETAILS
2Sc
&amp;
STAMPED
TRUCK and AUTO PARTS
AODRESSED ENVELOPE
Rutland , phone 742 609.4
ANN CLAR K, 1223 LACLAIR . SAVE on your heating bill and
11 26-26tc
beautify your mobile home
PGH PA 15218
with lifetime aluminum
11 ·10·26tp
sk:lrtlng or underpinning. S
Lock connec11ons in baked on
CHAIN OPERATION looking
finish to match the cotor of
for career m lnded people to
menv homes. 1200 complete
fill h1gh pa1d positions
pack:age Installed for the first
Management and sates
5 customers. Call 992 · 703&lt;~;
opentngs available Complete
l'ltn1ngs 9•9-3655
trarnlng provided. Salary PIUS
11·22·Stc
comm1ssron . Cell 992 7.UO 9
a m to 5 p m for Interview . -~------.-,--,make electric carpet
11 2.4 4tc EVERY
shampooer doe&amp; a better job
With famous Blue Lustre
Baker Furniture Co .
Employment Wanted
ll 22 3tc
WILL keep preschool children
In my home , 2 to 6 years old s
· 1=:=::~~
business for sale
days per week Phone 992· GRUl:E~Y
Building for sale or lease
5098
Phone 773 5618 from • · 30 p m
11 20 6tc
to iO p.m for appointment .
3-20-lfc
_,_
, ---.-.,--'-

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

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

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

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

fofSale

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

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

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

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

-------------Buy

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

0

Shields.
-1

Help

Buy

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

LAFF- A- DAY

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

Jack Sargent, Mrs. Marlene
Fisher, Molly and Amy, of
Racine, Mrs. Ann Radford,and
..____
d•ughter,
Stephanie
of
"II only she'd never discovered
Pomeroy Route, and Mrs. Pete bow warm the set gets I"

I

•••

FIREWOOD for sale Call 7•2

Lost
LOST, strayed , or stolen Large
white collie at Long Bottom
Catt 98S 3929 P M Cowdery
11 24 .Jtp

oi/8JI

10 29 26tc

------------"'0TATOES and corn Jonn

t-\lll, Letart Falls , Oh 10
P'hone 2f7 2U2
,~~~·p

____ __: _______

"DAN'S SHOE REPAIR"

1

=

''

318 N . 2nd Street
Middleport, Ohio

lor
farm ,
home
and
warehouse S100 and up
Phone 1 875 2362
11 216tc

I

\

Phone 992-3684

Water , E lectrtc, Gas. Sewer
Ltnes , Installed
Work
guaranteed
~zer, Backhoe. Trucks
L1mestone &amp; Fill D•rt
Commercia I- Res1dent1a I
Consfruct1on &amp;. Remodel

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

JOHNSON MASONRY

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

777 Pearl Street
Middleport . Oh10
Phone 992 5367 or 992 -3861

992 -7608

Rt. 7 &amp; Union Ave .
PUREBRED Hereford bull , 26
months old
1953 mode l
Ferguson tra c tor
John
Sheets, 3 miles south of
Middleport on Rt 7
11 24 6tp

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

ELE C TROLUX
v acuum
cleaner , A I cond1t1on , uses
paper bags , has cordwmder
and many attachments Also ,
shampooer atta c hment tn
eluded (Only 4 a'lailable ) at
S37 70 cash
or
term s
avatlabl e Phone 99'2 7755
11 13 ttc

P1ck up dally 1n Pomeroy &amp;
Middleport.
All
work
guaranteed Phone 949-1611.

NEW 1974 ZIG ZAG SEWING
MACHINES
In origina l
fa ctory carton New Ztg Zag
to make buttonholes, sew on
buttons monograms , and
make fancy des1gns w1th just
the twest of a smgle d•al Left
in lay a wav and never been
used Wrll sell for only S47
cash . or terms ava1lable
Phone 992 7755
11 13 lfC

RACINE GARAGE
5th St.

Racine, 0 .

Pomeroy,

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

On State Rt. 124, 'h mi. from
Route 7 by-pass towards
Rutlond.

FUEL OIL
HEATERS
Priced For Quick Sale

8-6 P . M .
ANY AGE CHILD

By da y or hou r. r easonable
rates, reliab le peopl e with
medical tra 1ning .
Ph m -7608 belore 5 p m.
or 742-4902 after 5 p.m .

BOWERS
REPAIR .
Lawn MoweiS
Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Rovte 3

Open Mon .. Sat
8 A.M.· 6 P.M.

I

JOHNSON'S
REMODEliNG &amp; CONST.

All Small Appliances '

Ph. 992·5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanical Work

j

DAY NURSERY

PHONE
949.3832 or 843-2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a sj'lelf to a house
Painting , s1ding , roofing,
paper hang1ng , k1tchen
cabinets, etc.

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

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

o.

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

'

Alummum s1d1ng, roofing ,
complete res1denl1al con struct1on. Wmng . plumbing,
elec.
heating ,
kttchen
cab1nets etc.
27 Yrs. expenence rn const.
trade.
Phone (304) 773-5503

·-~OMEROYLANDMARK
' ...., Jack

,

_

w

C.rsey ••f!oor .

1

Phonetf2 - 21~

CLOSE OUT on new Z1g 7.ag
Sewing Machmes For sewing
stretch fabrics , buttonholes.
fancy des1gns , elc Pamt
slightly blemished Cho1ce of
carrying case or U!W tng
stand $.49 80 cash or terms
bvallable Phone 992 7755
11 s tfc

------------STEREO
radio,
em fm .

8

track tape combination , 1111
speaker
sound
system
Balance $109 .56 or easy
terms Call 992 39~5
11 5 lfc

GHEEN'S PAINTING
949-3295
Racil)e, 0.

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work
FREE ESTIMATE
Fully Insured

------------ ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe

HElL

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING
Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service. Free
Estimates .

l

Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING CO.
Interior, Exterior
Decorating and
Remodeling

I

o/INYL SIDING
PH. 992·7454 or
992· 7129
Free Estimates. Middl eport. 0.

DOZER or backho e work READY MIX
CONCRETE CA RP...ET rnsta llat ton S1 25 pe.
Phone 446 3981 or 446 34S9
dell'lered r 1ght to y ou r
yar d Phone R tc hard West ,
9 8 tfc
model Complete W1th all
projec t Fas t and easy Fr ee
843 '1667
cleaning attachments and
estimat es Phone 99 2 32 84
I I 13 26tp
us es paper bags Slightly used EXCAVATING , dozer . loader
Goegleln Ready Mil( Co
but cleans and looks like new
and backhoe work , septrc
Middleport , Oh10
Wilt sell for $37 25 cash or
!:!EWIN G MAC HIN ES f.l! epat r
tanks Installed , dump trudl: s
6 30 tfc
terms available Phone 992
ser'11ce . a ll m akes , 992 2284
and to boys for hire , w111 haul
17.55
The F abn c 'Shop , Pomero y
fill dirt . top soil , 1 1 me~tone 'C Bk': ADF ORO Auctioneer
Author1zed S1n ger Sales and
11 S lfc
orav~: r. Call Bob or Roger
Complete Servtce
Ser v1ce We shar pen Sc rss ors
Jeffers , day phone 992 7089 ,
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
night phone 992 3525 or 992
J 29 lfc
Rac ine , Oh io
5232
MobBe Homes For
Crlft Bra~fo rd
DOZER work , la nd cl ~arm g by
2 11 ttc
th e a cre hourly or contra ct,
5 1 lie
-------- ----~-farm ponds , roa ds etc Large
do ze r and operator w1th ov er
CHARLE S R Hatfie ld, m tnt
~lVI In tho rolling hills of
20 years e)( perr ence Pull inS
backho e and do ze r water
Exc avatmg Pom eroy, OhiO
5outhom Olllo In your own
ltnes, dra ins footers. brus h
Ph one 992 2478
3 BR, •II electric mobile
clean 1ng Rt 1. Rutland , Ohto
12 19 tf c
609
2
Phon
e
742
home In 5outllern Ohio's
II 3 251c
newnt mobile homo park.
CREME AN S CON CRE TE
15 min. from Alhons or .
del1vere d Mon da 'll thr ou g h
EXCELSIOR Sal t Wor ks, E
Pomeroy. Price reduced to .
Satu r d ay and e'1e n 1n gs
Ma1n
St
',
Pom
ero
v
All
ki
nds
get this mobile homo p.ork
Phone 446 1142
ot ~rt wa ter pellets, water
sf•rted. Sot up &amp; rudy to
t. 13 lfc
nuggets . block sa lf and own
move Into. For furtllttr
Oh10 R1ver Sa lt Phon e 992
3891
details cont•ct ...
SEPrt C TANKS c lea ned ,
'"'' ACRES - Several fruit
6 5 If&lt;
reason a ble ra tes Ph 44~
NO DOWN PAYMENT
trees, garage, and 5 room ---- -----------478'1. Ga ll1 poltS John Russel l
TO VETERANS
hcuse . Want only $8500.00.
owner a nd op erator
TANK S c lea ned
33 ACRES - Good hunting :S EPTIC
5 l '1 tf&lt;
Modern San1 tat1 on 992 395&lt;1 or
area 3 bedroom home, bath,
992 734 9
electric heat. city water and
9 18 tf C'
minerals .
3 ACRES - All clean farm
CA TTLE A I Serv •ce Phone
land. 2 bedroom home, bath.
L Par ke r , 99'1 2264 Pomeroy,
furnace, and dr illed well Just
or 667 3151 Coo lv tll e stat to n
1100 E. Molin Pomeroy, 0.
11 11 lJ tc
$10.000 00.
C.ll992-7034
1 ACRE - Nearly new 3 -------------Open Dally 11 to 7
a nat ion a ll y a dv e rti se d
bedroom home, nice bath with
noncarbonaled v1 tamin C
shower Compact kitchen.
t1 "
enri c hed fr u1t d r ink IS
stove, refriger ator , lots of
ava1 lable for vending 1n 12
f970VAltANT 65x12, J'bedroorTf cabinets,
and
dining
oz . cans. lndivrduals who are
fully carpeted , LP gas heat . $17,500.00
Phone 992 7751
ser~ously
cons idering a
~ARGE GARDEN 7
room
8 25 tfc
bus
mess
of
their
own should
house. bath, nice large living,
~
Investigate
an
extraordinary
fron1 porch, carport, on level
distributorship currently
lot. $16,500 00
For
available 10 this area Th1s IS
WE HAVE THE TIME IF YOU
a secure busmess for those
HAVE THE FINANCING AND
who can spare a few hours
WANT TO START SAVING
each week (no s e!Hng).
YOUR MONEY.
restockmg vendors placed on
location by our speci alists . A
ON YOUR DIAL
qual1fied individual may
'
start part time and ex pand
with company financ ing 1o a
full t1me bus iness

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

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

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

Sale

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

Real Estate For Slile

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

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

KINGSBURY
MOBIL£ HOMES

----------

Hi-C

We. talk to you

lika person.

- ---------Real Estate

Sale

SYRACUSE Close to
river, double level lot,
fenced, 3 B. R., bath,
basement, porches , N.G.
forced air furnace. priced
right.
POMEROY - Downtown
business room and nice
apal'lm-ent over. Excellent
for any type business.
Asking only $11,000.00.
REEDSVILLE - 9 acres
about all tillable, lovely
building site, T.P. water,
located
on
Rt .
12A
ovlf'looklng rlvlf'. ss.eoo.
MINERSVILLE - 1 story
frame, 3 BR, bath, nice
kitchen, porch11, natural
gas, TP water, lots of
ground. $7,900.
WE' HAVE BUYERS- WE
NEED HOMES TO SE~~LET US KNOW WHAT YOU
HAVE.
tt2-225for tn-2.561

1-- -- - - - - - - - -

WMP0/1390.

CASH REQUIRED
PLAN 1
S2.604
P~AN 2
S4,794
P~AN 3
S9,581
Tra ining prov1ded. No experience required
Ta x
shelt'r with 60 pet wrlteoff.
Investment fully secured by
new equipment (five year
warranty) and inventory .
Earnings guaranteed with a
written buy back agreement.
For immediate information
or Interview call collect (301)
699 5300 or write Including
phone number to HEA~ TH
ORIN KS OF AMERICA,
INC . 5801 Annapolis Road,
Bladensburg ,
Maryland
20710

10 17 ttc

----------OLD • room house on 2 nice lots

In Syracuse. S3 ,000 or possible
land contraCt. Phone 992 5898
11 22 -Jic

5 ROOM house 'With bath and
lot Drilled well Call after 4
p m , 2"7 2581
11 24 6tp

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

NEW
bt level
home .
3
bedrooms . buill m kttchen,
basement w1th one car
garage Phone 742 3615 or see
Milo Hutch1son
'
11 1 tfc

-------------HOU SE tor sale. 249 Un•on

Ave , All newly decorated
•nsrde May be seen b'll ap
pointment Phone 992 561 7
11 15 12tc

(Not a subsidiary of CocaCola Company.)

..

- --- -- -~--~ - ,-

\

.'

KNAPP SHOES

Keep out the cold and cut the cost of beating!
Dress your home up warm for cold days
ahead. Siding: Insulates, adds beauty, &gt;s
durable, adds value, is colorful. Siding can be
installed anytime . Ask us about Soffit, Fascia,
Gutters and Downspouts, too.
FREE ESTIMATE

--------------GOLF CA RT S, gas and Plectr1c,

·

Orthopedic &amp; Correctional Work

REMODELING?

BEAUTI F UL art wor k for sale.
wood marbe and or1gmal
pa1nt1ngs et c Phone 99 2 7648
11 21 5tc

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

lill

FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup and Delivery

992-5162
Syracuse, Ohio

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

-------------KOSCOT
KOSMETIC S

,----------------

DAN ARNOLD

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

1972 VEGA GT
$1995
Hatchback , low mileage by 1 owner, new w-w tires transferred from new car, • speed trans , radio , green finish ,
black vinyl mterior, deluxe trim

Ji§

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

1968 DELTA 88 OldSmObi le, 1965
Electra 25 Bueck , both 1n good
cond1t1on Also , 4 room hou se
and '2 lots 10 Letarl V1llage
See
Thoma s
Hayman ,
Syra cuse , Oh10
11 2161c
- -- ------------~
1973 YAMAHA 175 Enduro
Phone 949 2762 after 6 p m
11 215tc
APPLES Fltzpatr rck Orchard ,
State Route 689 , Phone
WilkeSVIll e, 669 3785
11 21 26tc

19740PE~MANTA

1972 DODGE DART CUSTOM

Business Services

1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lakewood tract1on bars, hi
1acker air shocks , hooker
headers , wltl'l 3" coll,ctors for
smarr block Call t 992 .3496
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
------ - ----- - 10- -p -tfc
CONN trumpet , good cond1t1on
S75 Phone 992 3606
11 21 6tc

Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

w•ll be served

...

~=:=~~~~~~~~~~;-f:=-&lt;:::::~4
''

I

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Roush,
Mrs. Winnie Walding of
SyraCU81!, and Jeff Miller.
David, and Mr . and Mrs.
Edward Laudermilt and
children of Pomeroy visited
Mrs. Donohue's mother, Mrs.
Rcae Bachus at the Angel of
Mercy Rest Home at Alb.ny •
Sunday gueals of Mrs.

TODAV'S QUESTION
You bid two hearts. Your
do
you do
now?you to three. What
partner
raases
An1wer Tomorrow

By Mn. Herbert Rowlb
Brian Robinson of Port
Ricky, Fla., spent a week with
his grandparents, Mrs. Bertha
Robinson, Mr. and Mrs .
Chrissie Powell of Racine and
other relatives. Raymond
Robinson of Norfolk, Va. spent
the weekend with his JO'and·
parents, the Powells at Racine,
and Mrs. Robinson, and also
visited his brother, Brian.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush Sunday were
Mel and Robert Walding,
Edward Smith, Mr. and Mrs.

Dana Lewll, Mrs. Edna Roush,

card."

The bldd1ng has been
25
Weal
North Eaot South
1•
Dble.
Pass
24
Pass •
You, South. hold
• 4 3 • A Q 10 8 6 +K J 4 ...A Q 3
What do you do now?
A-Bid two hearta. Your hand
Ia 11r0111 enough lo make this
oteondbld.

Auto Sales

MEIGS County Humane Soc •ety
have

FIREWOOD for fireplace Of
stove Cut to lengti" Phone
992 7~44
11 3 16tc

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

Dame."

lz:e 11:1,!U?.:;t :1

Mrs. June Wickersham and
mother, Mrs . Ferne B.
Hayman, were shopping at
Grand Cenlral Mall, Parkersburg , Saturday.
·
Paul
Hayman,
North
Royalton,
Ohio,
Harold
Hayman of Westerville, visited
their brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Hayman recenUy. Ray
has been confined to Holzer
Medical Center and is now
home and improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ours of
New Brighton, Pa., spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Donohew, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Ours, Mr . and Mrs.
Wiley Ours.
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Donahew
of Colwnbus spent Wednesday
IDllil Fridsy with Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Donohew. They also
visited Mr and Mrs. George
Donohew at Circleville, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. •Jeff Donohew
spent the weekend With Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Proffitt at
Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs . Erwin
Gloeckner spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Badgely and children at
Fairfax, Va.
Mrs. Ada Norris spent the
weekend with her daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davis at
Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell
visited their daughter, Lorna
Bell at Colwnbus Thursday
through Sunday.
Jerry Johnson of Racine
spent the weekend With his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Smith Sr.
Mrs. Iva Orr called on Mrs.
Mae Durst Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush,
Mrs. Iva Orr were shopping at
Fruth's Pharmacy at Pt.
Pleasant
and
Murphys ,
Gallipolis, Saturday evening.

Carmel News,

HDHCB

HWXG

Notice
will

by THOMAS JOSEPH

37 Square

I
I I tJ I
ljiEESID I
I I ()

Apple Grove

ti61M"·a(

For Sale

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
By MJ:o. Herbert RollSb

hemp

ARGJN

-"'

+++

weight

.5

+

PERSONAL to "WW It Work?' ' -You two go togetber like
Hee Haw and the Boeton Symphony. Hqw about a a-month!
engagement (at least) to test the ldnd of Jlllllie you niake

31 Perched
:U Entice
36 Russian

"fliiNI&lt;5

TON16HT.

+++

30 Turkish

I!ORTY

NORTH
25
• KJ2
• K64
8543
.962
WEST
EAST
.754
.Q63
.JI082
.Q973
J92
AKQ106
.K84
SOUTH &lt;Dl
• A 109 8
• AS

not, well, llbe's a dear friend. can't you level wilh her?, ..:H.

dinner

News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15 ; Sesame St 20, Adlerian

Counseling Techniques 3J
6. 30 - NBC News 3. 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10; Bewltched6; Gomer

7.00 -

11

lie later you'll get whll you
want on better terma
SCORPIO COot. 24·Nov. 22)
If you re as~lng advice of
someone, be sure they have
the necessary expertise or
their suggestions, though wellIntended, w111 be expensive
SAOITT ARIUS CNov. 23·
Dec. 21) Your good Intentions
Will only serve to complicate
concht1ons rf you poke your
nose 1nto the affairs of a pal
w1thout being asked
CAPRICORN CDec. 22·J•n.
1 II) Something of value can be
gained now through persons
you have social contacts with
1f you-hilndle altuatlona properly
AQUARIUS CJ•n. 20·Feb.
18) Today will have Its
surprises around the home .
You'd better brace yoursell for
some dlsrupt1ons or unex pected drop-1ns
PISCES CFeb. 20·M•rch 20)
Take plenty ot t1me to lhlnk
before you speak today or
you'll say some things thai another Will lake the wrong way

ForTueadoy,Nov.211,1g74
ARIES CM•rch 21-Aprll 1 II)
If you re not careful you're
go1ng to let a fine opportunity
of a matenal nature slip
through your fingers by be1ng
1nd11ferent
TAURUS CAprll 20-Mey 20)
Don I ret go of what you have 1n
hopes of gett1ng something
bolter 11 !hal "something bet ·
tar" 15 Sl1ll an unknown quanllly
GEMINI CMay 21-June 20)
Don t ovenndulge 1n WIShlul
thlnk1ng
Face matters
reallsl1cally Base your conclusions upon the facts as they
actually exist
CANCER CJune 21-July 22)
Thes 19 not a good day for you
10 1nvo1ve yoursell in somethmg w1th fnends that contains
e lements of nsk or chance
~EO CJuly 23-Aug. 22) Your
pnde can lead you 1nto mak1ng
commitments you 'll later have
a tough t1me dehvenng Cool
the "b1g shot" role for now
VIRGO CAug. 23·8ept. 22)
You II be much sharper tomorrow 1n makmg decisions than
you are today Allow yourself
tame to sleep on things before
actmg
LIBRA CS.pt. 23·0ct. 23)
Don't buy anything Impulsively
now Time IS on your side A lit-

+++

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26,1974
6·00 - Sunrise Seminar 4, Summer Semester 10
6: 25 - Farm Report 13
6: 30 - Five Minutes to L1ve By 4, News 6 . Bible Answers 8, The
Story 13 , School Scene 10
6 · 35- Columbus Today 4.
6 45 - Morning Report 3.
7 00- Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10 , H R Pu fnstuf 6; Far-

'.

�.
I

8- Tlie Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Mondj'y , Nov. 25, 1974

lll\fl&gt;."*l"*l~Mil!MiliiSll!i!lllill1tll!l&amp;li88888t18Mil!M!lllll\fl&gt;.lllill1tlllill1tllilllllllll8ill

Television Log
13, .Bonanza 4; Movie " Postman s Knock '' 10
4:3!1 - Jackpot 4; Bonanza 15 , Mod &gt;quao o; Gilligan's Is 13,

Adlerian Counseling Techmques 33
NB'C News 3, ~. 15 , CBS New s 8. 10 . Bew1tr'hed 6 , Gomer

6 30 -

Pyle 13.
7 00 - Truth or Cors 3; News 10, Wha t's My lone 8, E lec Co

20 , Workshop 15 , Bowling for Dol lars 6, Candid Ca m era 13 ;

Insight 33.
7. 30 - That Good Ole Nas nvllle Mu sic 3, Bu ck Owens 8;
Episode Action 33; Help Thy Ne ighbor 4, Pollee Surgeon 6 :
Municipal Court 6; To Tell the Truth 13, Mountwood Park
Mountain Song 20
8 00 - Rookies 6, 13 , In Performance at Wolf Tra p 20, 33 .
Born Free 3,4, 15; Smithsonian Institution Special B. 10
9 00 - NF~ Football6, 13 . Movi e "Kings of the Sun" 3, 4, 15 ,
Maude 8, 10
9· 30 - Caught In the Act 20, 33 , Rhoda 8, 10.
10;0&lt;' - Medical Center 8, Ne ws 20 , Washing ton Stra1ght Talk

33, Tom Jones 10

10· 30 -

Journey 33.

ll · OO - News3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15
11.30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 , Janak I 33 ; Movi e '' Mc ll n tock" a
Movie " Ride Beyond Vengeance" 10

'

12 00 -

News 6, 13

12 ·30 -

Mission Impossible 6 , Untouchables 13

1 00 1 30 -

2 00 -

Tomorrow 3, 4
News 13

News 4

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Nov. 25, 1974
Dear Helen:
I have a friend I love dearly. Tbe big problem Ia: How do we
avoid eating with her?
'
Her family has four dogs and four cata and her children
handle them. Then they're asked to make a salad or set the table,
etc .. And they never wash their hands before doing 110.
How do I get It act'08S that this is unsanitary? - GERM
CONSCIOUS

Helen Help

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1974
•:oo - Mr . Cartoon and the Banana Splits 3, Somerset 15 .
Tattletales B; Sesame St. 33 , Gllll~an's Is 6; 110.000 Pyramid
Bewitched 3; ~ucy Show 8
5:00 - Merv Griffin 4; Mister Rogers 20 , 33 , Anyth 1ng You Can
Do 13 ; FBI3; Andy Griffith 8, Ironside 13
5:30- Elec. Co. 33 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20. News 6. Trail s West
15.
6. 00 - News3,4, 15, News8, 10, Sesame S! 20. ~B C News 6, 13 ,

Us. • •

By Helen Hottel

Dear G .C. :
U your friend reads the paper - mlsalon acccmpllahed,

'Supermarket' Nelgbbor
Dear Helen :
I'm Ured of being the "~op and Save" supennarket for my
neighbor : I shop - she saves, by borrowing constanUy .
~e almost never pays back, but once in a while she'll ask to
buy a can of fruit or something. U I charge her the price stamped
on the Ud, I still lase, because chances are It's a third again
higher when I go to replace It.
~e's a good person and I don't want to lose her friendship.
How do I get it across that with the price of food today, It's hard
enough feeding my own family, let alone hers• - BORROWED
TO DEATII
Dear B To 0 :
You haVE three choices:
1. Get as much as you giVe, that is, check what your neighbor .
carr1eo on her shelves, and start borrowil)g .

2. Learn to say "Sorry, I'm fresh out," or HJ only have
enough for dirmer," without guilt.
3. Tell her, "Look, I need some things too : Let's go to the
etore and stock up." (In her car, if possible.)
Or you can keep a list of borrowed Items, ask for repayment,
and probably lose a friend. - H.

mer's Daughter 13

7. 30 - New Zoo Revue 6 ; Udsvllle 13
8 00 - New Zoo Revue 13 . Capt Kangaroo 8; Jeff 's Collie 6,
Sesam e St 33 , PoC'eye 10
8: 25 - Jack Lalan ""~ 13. Capt. Kangaroo 10
8: 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8:55- News 13 .
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4. AM 3, Phil Donahue 15 ; Wild Wild West 6,
Bullwlnkle 8, Movie " Sodom and Gomorrah" Conclusion 13

9:30- Not For Women Only 3; HazelS ; Tattletales 10
10: 00 - Joker's Wild 8, 10,. Company 6; Name That Tune 3, 15
10:30 - G~mblt8. 10; Winning Streak 3, 4, 15. Phil Donahue 4
11:00 - Password 13 , High Rollers 3. 15 . Now You See It 8, 10 ;
$10,000 Pyram1d 6
11 : 300 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 ; Brady Bunch 13, love of
~lie 8, 10.
11:55 - CBS News8, On Imel ' s World 10
12 : 00 - Jackpot 3, 15, Password 6; Bob Braun' s so so Club 4,

Dear Helen ·
While I was on vacation I took a small bag of fresh pears to
the breakfast table of my group in a coffee shop. My tablemates
were embarrassed and would not accept any of the fruit. Said it
was bad social fonn to carry yolD' own food into a restaurant.
The pears were not meant to replace food ordered. Old I
conunit a social blunder? - V. L.
Dear V.:
In my book : No! But then I've never been a "What will
people think?" addict. -H.

-·

5 00 - Merv Griffin 4; Mister Rogers 20, 33, Anything You Con
Do 13; FBI3 , Andy Griffith 8; Ironside 13.
5 ~~:- Elec Co 33 ; Hodgepodge lodge 20 ; News 6; Trails West
6 00 -

Pyle 13.

Truth or Consequences 3, 4: Bowling for Dollars 6·

What' s My ~lne? 8, News 10; Wild Kingdom 15, Antiques 20 ;
Art of Football 33.
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4; Wild, W1ld World of Animals 6,
$25,000 Pyramid 8, Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth 13,
TBA 15; Ohio Election 20 ; Marto Sportlite 33
8 00 - Happy Days 13; Good Times 10 ; America 33; Winnie the
Pooh and The Blustery Day 3, 4, 15 ; New World Coming 6, B
C. Cartoon 8
8· 30 - .fo!o-A S-H 10 ; Evening at Symphony 33, Movie "Death
Stalk 3, 4, 15; Movie' " The Godchild" 13 , Movie "The House
That Wouldn't Die" 6 : New World Coming 8.
9· DO - Hawaii Flve-0 8, 10.
9 30 - Woman 20 ; Barenbolm On Beethoven 33.
10 00- Pollee Story 3, 4. 15; Marcus WelbY 6. 13 , Barnaby Jones
8, News 20, Englebert Humperd~nck 10; Soundstage 33.
10:30- Your Future Is Now20; Mete Hawaii JJ.
11:00- News 3, 4, 6, 8. 10, 13, 15,33
11 : 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, IS; Mission Impossible 6, Janakl33;
Wide World· California Jam 13; Movie "The Liquidator" 8,
Movie " The Angry Breed" 10.
l 00- Tomorrow 3, 4
2 00 - News 4, 13.

News 8, 10, Mr. Rogers 33 : News 13

12· 30- Celebrity Sweepstakes 3. IS . Split Second 6, Search tor
Tomorrow 8, 10, Afternoon w1th OJ 13 . Elec Co 33
12· 55- NBC News 3, 15.
1:00 - News 3, All My Children 6, 13; Green Acres 10 ; Not For
Women Only 15, Making Things Grow 33 , Ph1l Donahue 8;
Young &amp; Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15

1· 30- Jeopardy 4, 15; ~et's Make A Deal 6, 13; As the World
Turns 8, 10; Dig It 33 ; Telethon 3
2. 00- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13 . Guld1ng
Light 8, 10, Insight 33.
2:30- Doctors 3, 4.15. Girl In My ~1fe 13; Edge of Night 8, 10,

Performance 33.

3.00- Another World 3, 4, 15; Price Is R1ght 8, 10 , General
Hospital 6. 13; Great American Dream Machine 33
3:30 - How To Survive A Marriage 3, 15; Match Game 8, 110;
One Life to Live 13 , Lassie 6, Dollar DeciSions 20.
4 DO - Mr. cartoon &amp; The Banana Splits 3; Somerset IS , Tat-

tletales 8; Sesame St 33 ; Gilligan' s Isle 6, Bonanza 4; Mov1e

"Delphi Bureau" 10; Mike Douglas 13
4· 30 - Jackpot 4, Bonanza 15; Mod Squad 6, Bewitched 3; ~ucy
Show 8.

CAB~E CHANNE~

7 30 P m -

WIN AT BRIDGE

FIVE
Washington Debates For the Seventies "The

Parties and the Issues "
,
B· Jo P m.- The Gvnslingers "The Westerners," "Zane Grey

They try to fool the old man

Theatre."
9:30 p.m . - The Underworld "Target: The Corruptors."

NOI&lt;AMN
SAID HE!6

+

R.)5T'S&lt;.

HE ACTUALLY

GOING; ID "fl.JE

weeeueve

~OON

Nov. 28, 11174
Sudden breaks you ve never
had batore Will present !hamselves concerning your work
or career th1s year. However
lhey'll be of a fteetlng nalure
and need prompt exploltallor

together? - H.

Unscramble these four Jumbleo,

one letter to eaeh squue, to
form four ordinary word1.

For Your Copy of "Wiult 1s a Ctu8h -What II a Flrlt Ulve •
What Ia GeUina to Know Younelf" send a STAMPED, lelf.
addr~, WNG envelo_pe to Helen and Sue Bottel, P .0" Box
23067, Sacramento, Calif., 96e23.

ACROSS
1 Speech
Imperfection
5 Partner
of miss
8 Norwegian
city
9 Moving
forward
13 Christmas
gift for
juruor

39 Some
d Czech

14 Look

5 Golfer

·~

'r"
'.
'c

-

DOWN

'or.

1 Missing
2 Cay
3 Dullard

sullen
15 Pagoda
ornament
16 New
Guinea
town

Ben and
family
&amp; Bay
7 Tango
complement
10 Odets play
17 11 - Maria"
(3 wds.)
18 Sow
11 One of
20 N.Z.
the gears
parrot
21 Lab bottles
22 Designate
23 Devil fish
24 SWldsy

•"

''
'"
'"

Yesterday's

12 Imagined
18 Refrain
In old

28 Food
sbop

28 "Two

songs
19 Delayed
Z1 Ice cream
flavor
Z2 Went
apace
23 Madman
24 European
capital

Women"

Oscar
winner
32 Price
paid
33 - gas
35 The gwns
36 Gordon
Me-

..
•

~·

Z5 Angel (Fr.)
28 Carried
27 Partner
of tuck
Disabled

28

·-

211 Asian
river

'

•
•

•

director
36 Theater
group
',

how to work it:
A.XYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

I

A.uwer1

-

One letter simply stands for another. In !lila sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln&amp;le Jetton
apostrophes, the lenith and formation of the words are an
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

(A-wen to•orrow)

JumbJ.,. MONEY

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

~=~=~,J~~!!!~~~~~·=u=r=re=•Jted
L
Prill*l • AIISWIIIIIri
I br(theI above
I ICU'Ioon.
I J
Salurday'•

'.

CRYPI'OQUOTE

Now .......,. the circled !ellen
to form the ourprloe anawer, &amp;I

I

.. News, Events

' '

dsnce

KRABEM1
~ 'i

.'
-

river

(colloq.,
2 wds.)
4 Home for
peas

DUNCE BRAZEN OIV1DE

Boxed in a .aquare rinQ- ..ROUND"

XPHCH'G
TQMMHC
XPH

GLJHYLTB
RWCXB

EPL

U H K H C B. - Z Q M

wx

WKK

By the Day

PFYYWCT

Yeaterday's Cryptoquote: NO MAN IS RICH ENOUGH TO
BUY BACK HIS PAST.~ Wn.DE

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hudson,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Huclaon of
Racine, Mr. and Mrs . Shelby
Pickens and family of
Pomeroy visited on Soodsy
wl th Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Taylor .
Mr. and Mrs . William Perry
of Hollond, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs.
George Perry of Dexter, Mr.
and Mrs. James Circle and
George Circle of New Haven,
W. Va., visited with Mary
Circle over the weekend.
Ray Johnson · of Racine
called at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur E. Johnson and
family, Betty Van Meter on
Saturday.
Mrs. Allan Taylor and
granddaughter, Shirley, were
in Colwnbus on Tuesday and
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Don
Wilson and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester were at the home of
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Lee and
famlly recenUy.

SINCii '!HIE -niORN
KING HA5 EVI!ItV·
ONE IN 'lOUR:

OW';!" HE ...

COUNTJN LOCI&lt;liP
IN'lO HIS CRiiO.TS
~ $'($'TEM,

+

+7

.AQJI073

North-South vulnerable
est

North

East

BORN LOSER

South

PRISCILLA'S POP

14
I NT
2+
34
Pass
ass Pass
Pass
Openmg lead- +2

2.
54

CROAk'

cRoAK

CROAK
CROAK
CROAK

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald. "One of the me•
things about gettmg old "
that the smart, ;young player:
try to fool you.'
J1m· "Are ;rou puttmg mE
in that class?
Oswald· "No. You aren't old
but you certamly aren ' t
young any more. Fifteen
years back you might have BLONDIE
made the same first discard
East made. Today, xou I'D LIKE A CHEESEBURGER
wouldn't be that obviOus. '
AND CO~ i=EE TO
J1m: "All r~ght. Tell your

BUGS BUNNY
TRIED IT, BUT PEOPLE
KEPT B RI NGING

Fairview
News Notes

'----"--·-&lt;

'----""'-1 IT BACK

story."

Oswald. "I ruffed the second diamond, entered dummy with the kmg of hearu
and led the nine of clubs for a
finesse. West took his km~
and led another diamond. 1
ruffed that and played tw&lt;
rounds of trumps. East dropped
the three of spades on the
first of these trump leads and
a d1amond on the second

one."

Jim· "I wouldn' t have been
that obvious fifteen years
ago. Maybe twenty-four
• · :years back, when I was learn·
mg as a freshman at Notre

CAPI' AIN EASY

THE PHANTOM
SCR'AMo P'ICKLEPL!SG:
VOU'IlE THE MONSY6 1lA~Pit.J' VUL.TURS
AI..VIE HI'FtSP ME- T'

•

P~ECT HIM
Ac:n~ST t

Oswald "In any event, it
was obv10us he wanted to
look like a man who d&gt;dn't
hold the queen of spades. It
didn't take me more than
half·a·second to lead a spade
to dummy's king and play
him for that all-important

••

~~:.__ _ _ _.::.__,r---'-'"-,

'fO!.JL.L. Ne'JER
FINEr AN'/ GoW

"THERe

I

Mrs. Mary Donohue and son,

11-IA"rt; WH'/
tM NOT" l71661N6
ve~~

Bertha Robinson were Mrs.

annual

holiday

.

bazaac.. entitled CHRISTMAofi
HOlJISE, located across from
Pomeroy
Post
Offtee ,
December 7 Carry out lun ch
11 2.4 J t c

-NO------------DEER hunting on farms of
Charles Yost,

flement ,

Po1nts

Nease Set

Ivan

and

it'SIGNS

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

Well, F •v e

11 24 6tp

-I ------------WILL SHOOT to kill anyone
who enters the Century Bar
after clos1ng hours Without
my permi!IS ton
Leonard ( Boo) Hen
11 22 3tp

-------------PIANO tnstructton by schooled

and experienced teacher
Begmner, •ntermedlate, and
advanced student welcomed
Mrs Wm
Bartholomew ,
Third Sl , Rac1ne Phone 949
2551
11 22 6tc

S2195
2 Door, orange finish , blk. vinyl interior, bucket seats, less
than 5,000 mfles &amp; 3 mo old Radio, deluxe bum pet's
$2495

4 Door, local I owner car, 318 V-Beng me, automatic trans ,
power steering, a1r conditioned, vmyl trim, vmyl top
Autumn gold finish, w w tires, like new, radio

Remember Chrrstmas 1S
com ing We have many new
prOducts that w•ll make n1ce
gifts Phone BROWN'S, 992
5113
n 3 ttc ~----------------------------------~
1968 FORD stat eon wa gon , S300
1972 vw Super Beetle, goOd
AUCTION , Thursdav and
Phone- 992 5301
cond1tton Phone 992 3981
Saturday night, 7 p m at
11 22 5tc:
11 21 6tc
M.asdh Auct1on. Horton St In -~----- -- ---- M'aspn, W va Cons1gnments
1969 350 PONTIAC F~rebtrd ,
welcome Phone ()0.4) 77l
Power
good cond rt1on Phone (304 1 1973 CUTLASS S
5H1
steenng, brakes , windows .
882 249 7
10 3 tfc
AM FM stereo tape player .
11 19 6tc
cru1se control, tilt wheel ,
rad1a ls, new brakes and
1973 OLO S Cutlass S Excellent
NOTICE
s hocks n 200 Phone 992 3381
cond 1t1on 350 engtne wtlh
or 992 3453
p s, p b and a rr , Call992 39 14
To The unknown heirs and
11216tp
after 5pm
dev1sees of Oscar Sanborn .
11
19
61p
deceased ,
1973 GMC panel van truck
To Robert Sanborn. address
Rad1el t1res , ltke new C p
1969 vw Phone 992 38U
unknown , and
Wdl tams , 592 Broadwa y St.
11 24 Jtp
To The unknown he trs and
Middleport
dtv1sees of Robert Sanborn
11 2t 6tc
You are hereby notlf1ed that For Rent
you have been named Defen
1960 WILLYS Jeep, new motor ,
dents rn a legal action entitled J AND 4 ROOM furniShed and
new top . new t1res. ln ex
unfurniShed
apartments
Franklin G Tr.plett, et al ,
cellent cond1t1on Phone 667
Phone 992 5434
Pla1nt1ffs , vs the unknown
3759 or ~67 3652
heirs and devtsees of Oscar
4 12 tfc
11 19 6tc
Sanborn, deceased , et al ,
Defendants Th1s actton has PRIVATE meeting room for
any organization ; phone 992 ·
been assigned use No 15,692,
3975
and rs pend1ng m the Court of
Common Pleas of Me igs
J 11 -tfc
County. Pomeroy , Oh 10, 45769
Tht 0b1ect of the Complamt is HOU SE and trailer tor re~l ~~ HULLED hickory nuts . wood tn
trees Phone 949 3718
to quiet the tttle of the Pla intiffs
town . 2 bedroom s Phone 99 2
1n the followmg descrtbed real
11 25 3tc
3975 and 992 2571
estate, to wtt
11 6 tfc
Situated m the Village of
1 TON Chevrolet truck ,
Mtddleport , County of M"ttgS , TRA ILER space , 2 m eles from 1970
dual wheels , V8 , 4 speed
and State of Oh io, and bounded
Looks and runs good Harold
Pomeroy, Rt 143 Phone 992
and descrrbed as follows Bemg
Brewer , Long Bottom , Ohio
5858
the south half of Lot Number
Phone
985 3554.
10
27
tfc
Two Hundred and Seventy 1270)
1117tfc
In Horton's Addlt1on to Lower TRAILER . 2 bedroom , Brown 's
--~- - -- ----~-Pomeroy , now Incorporated
Trailer Park. Phone 992 33 2.4
PAINT DAMAGE. 197111/ ZIG
into and made a part of the
11 8 tfc
ZAG SEWING MACHINES
Village of Middleport . Oheo
St
tll m or1g1na1 cartons No
Reference Deeds Volume
attachments needed as our
158, Page 620. and Volume 247. COUNTRY Mobil~ Home Park,
controls are built in Sews
Page 213, Meigs County Deed
Rt 33, ten m•les north of
w•th 1 or 2 needles, makes
Pomeroy Large lots with
Records
buttonholes , sews on buttons .
concrete patios. sidewalks ,
It 1S a further prayer rn satd
monograms.
and blind hem
funners
and
off
street
Complaint to reform the deed
st1tch Full cash pnce S38 50
parking Also. spaces tor
from Oscar Sanborn to Helena
or budget plan available
small trailers Phone 992 7.479
Sanborn recorded in Volume
Phone 992 7755
150, Page 74. Me1gs Coun ty
7 21 tfc
11 19 ttc
Deed Records
You are requ1red to answer 4 RM furnished apt close to PICKING up a P•ano 1n your
the Complarnt wtthin 28 day s
Powell 's Super Valu , phone
area . looktng for a respon
after the last publ•cat •on or thrs
992 3~58
slble party to lake over
notice, whiCh Will be published
11 20 lfc
payments Cart collect Credtt
once each week for six con
Manager , 772 5669, or write
secut.ve weeks
The last 2 BEDROOM furn cottage at
Cred1t Manager , 260 E Main
publication will be made on
Rock Springs , •deal for school
Sf , ChilliCOthe, Ohro 45601
December 9, 197.4 . and the 28
personneL adult s only .
11 19 6tc
days for answer will commence
refer ence des1red Phone 992 --~---- ---- - -on tf)at date .
2789
WALNUT stereo rad1o, am fm ,
In case ot yout failure to
I 1 J tfc
8 track tape combinat ion
answer or otherwise respond as
Balance S107 45 or terms Call
requered by the OhiO Rules of
992 3965
Civil Procedure , judgment by F URNISHED apt Adults only,
M1ddleport
Phone
992
3874
11 19 tfc
default will be rendered against
1114tfc
you for the relief demanded in
VACUUM Cleaners new 197.4
the Complaint
UNFURNISHED house , 4
model Complete with all
rooms and bath 1650 Lmcoln
cleaning too ls small patnt
Dated October 31 , 197.4
Heigh ts Phone 992 38H
damage In shipping Will take
11 14tfc
$27 cash or budget plan
Larry E Spencer,
available Phone 992 7155
Clerk of Court ,
11 19 tfc
Me~gs County , Ohio
FURNISHED apartment ,
utllrt1es furn iShed , suttable
(11} 4, 11 , 18, 25 (12 ) 2, 9, 6tc
for two working men or SINGER AutomatiC Z1g Zag
Sewtng Machmes, In sewing
ret~red couple Liv1ng room,
table Makes buttonholes ,
kitChen. Shower and bath On
seWs on bullons , blind hems,
main hrghway , Mason , W va
etc Top notch condition Pay
Phone 773 5147
$51 or terms available Phone
NOTICE OF
10 27 tfc
992 7755
APPOINTMENT
1119tfc
Case No. 21330 2 8 E DROOM trailer
in
Estate of Harne1t Hyatt
Syracuse, close to school No 1500 BALES of good ml)(ed hay,
Deceased
ch1ldren or pets Deposit
Sl a bate Phone 388 8U7
Notece tS hereb'll given that
requ1red Phone 992 2441 after
11 · 196tc
Elizabeth Axie Roush of R D 2,
~ 30 p m
Racine, Me1gs County , has been
10 18 ttc DEER SLAYER - Slug guns fn
duly appomted Executrix of the
stock. Remington. W 1n
Estate of Harrtett Hyatt . FURN ISHED apartment, J
chester , Ithaca , deer slugs,
deceased , late of Letart
rooms and bath , 1dea1 for
Sl
20 per box , New 1100 and
Township, Me1gs County , Oh10
work1ng coup le Phone 992
H870 Rem.ngtons, many other
Creditors are requtred to file
2937
guns Thai's Fife ' s, Third Sf ,
their claims with safd fiduc1ary
11246tc
Middleport Phone 992 7494
within four months
11 19 6tc
Dated thIs Uth day of
November 1974
Wanted To
LOWERY organ with ac
Mann1n0 D Webster
cessor~es , A beaut1ful Christ
Judge OLD furn1ture , 1ce bolleS , brass
mas gift , must be seen to
beds,
or
complete
households
Court of Common Pleas,
appreciate May be seen at
Write M o Mtller. Rt 1111 ,
Probate D1vrston
2d Union Avenue or call 992
Pomeroy , Oh10 Call 992 7760
5617
10 7 74
ftll lB. 25 f12l 2. 3tc
11 15 12tc
TRAILER , 2 to 3 bedrooms ,
want to take over pa....,ments FIREWOOD, any length Call
Phone 985 3878.
992-5422 or 992 3312
NOTICE OF
11 20 61c
11 -10 26tp
APPOINTMENT
c .u e No. 21349
Estate of Atlilnf• Georgia Cook $10 FOR tunk cars , SIS GRAVEL . sand, Mason sand .
Deceased.
del1vered, S7 tunked auto
ltmestone , Ptt Run by the ton
Notice Is h,ereby given that
bodies Phone 949 4484
D.et1vered Phone 111111116 1U2
Jerome cook of Hemlock
1124 26tp
10 18 tfc
Grove, Meigs county, Oh io, has
been duly appointed e)(ecutor CA,:,H pe14 for 111 makes and SEWING Machines , brand new
of the Estate of Atlanta Georgia
models of mobile homes
Zig Zag In nice walnut table
Cook, deceased, late of Bedford
Phone area code 614 423 9531
rn ang inal cartons Never
Township. Me igs County, Oh10
1 1/ .13 -tfc
used
Clearance on '74
Creditors are required to ftle
(Only
a
few
Models .
their claims w1th said f1duc 1ary JUNK autos, complete and
aYallable), Sol/3 11110 cash or
w1lhln four months
terms available Phone 992
del1'1ered to our yard . we
Dated this 22nd day of
PICk up auto bodies end buy
7755
November 1974
10 15 tfc
all kmds of scrap metals and
1ron Rider•s Salvage, St. R t.
Menning D Webster
12111/, Rl oil , Pomeroy, Oh io
Judge
COLEMAN Fuel 011 Floor
Call 992 5468
Court of Common Pleas.
furnace, 50 ,000 BTU working
10
17
lfc
Probate DIVISIOn
condition , S50. Will trade for
or buy an Iron pot belly stove
Mrs . Harold
Barnhart,
no 25 (121 2. 9. 3tc
Wanted
Tuppers Plains, Oh10 Phone
667 3•81
HOW TO EARN MONEY AT
11 22 3tc
.Wantl!fl To
HOME MAILING COM ·
MISSION
CIRCULARS!
EXCELLENT
PROF IT DISHWASHER Phont 13041
CASHSSSSSSS FOR
JUNK
773 5332
POTENTIAL OFFER
CARS
Camp
FRYE'S
11 22 -6tc
DETAILS
2Sc
&amp;
STAMPED
TRUCK and AUTO PARTS
AODRESSED ENVELOPE
Rutland , phone 742 609.4
ANN CLAR K, 1223 LACLAIR . SAVE on your heating bill and
11 26-26tc
beautify your mobile home
PGH PA 15218
with lifetime aluminum
11 ·10·26tp
sk:lrtlng or underpinning. S
Lock connec11ons in baked on
CHAIN OPERATION looking
finish to match the cotor of
for career m lnded people to
menv homes. 1200 complete
fill h1gh pa1d positions
pack:age Installed for the first
Management and sates
5 customers. Call 992 · 703&lt;~;
opentngs available Complete
l'ltn1ngs 9•9-3655
trarnlng provided. Salary PIUS
11·22·Stc
comm1ssron . Cell 992 7.UO 9
a m to 5 p m for Interview . -~------.-,--,make electric carpet
11 2.4 4tc EVERY
shampooer doe&amp; a better job
With famous Blue Lustre
Baker Furniture Co .
Employment Wanted
ll 22 3tc
WILL keep preschool children
In my home , 2 to 6 years old s
· 1=:=::~~
business for sale
days per week Phone 992· GRUl:E~Y
Building for sale or lease
5098
Phone 773 5618 from • · 30 p m
11 20 6tc
to iO p.m for appointment .
3-20-lfc
_,_
, ---.-.,--'-

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

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

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

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

fofSale

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

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

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

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

-------------Buy

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

0

Shields.
-1

Help

Buy

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

LAFF- A- DAY

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

Jack Sargent, Mrs. Marlene
Fisher, Molly and Amy, of
Racine, Mrs. Ann Radford,and
..____
d•ughter,
Stephanie
of
"II only she'd never discovered
Pomeroy Route, and Mrs. Pete bow warm the set gets I"

I

•••

FIREWOOD for sale Call 7•2

Lost
LOST, strayed , or stolen Large
white collie at Long Bottom
Catt 98S 3929 P M Cowdery
11 24 .Jtp

oi/8JI

10 29 26tc

------------"'0TATOES and corn Jonn

t-\lll, Letart Falls , Oh 10
P'hone 2f7 2U2
,~~~·p

____ __: _______

"DAN'S SHOE REPAIR"

1

=

''

318 N . 2nd Street
Middleport, Ohio

lor
farm ,
home
and
warehouse S100 and up
Phone 1 875 2362
11 216tc

I

\

Phone 992-3684

Water , E lectrtc, Gas. Sewer
Ltnes , Installed
Work
guaranteed
~zer, Backhoe. Trucks
L1mestone &amp; Fill D•rt
Commercia I- Res1dent1a I
Consfruct1on &amp;. Remodel

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

JOHNSON MASONRY

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

777 Pearl Street
Middleport . Oh10
Phone 992 5367 or 992 -3861

992 -7608

Rt. 7 &amp; Union Ave .
PUREBRED Hereford bull , 26
months old
1953 mode l
Ferguson tra c tor
John
Sheets, 3 miles south of
Middleport on Rt 7
11 24 6tp

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

ELE C TROLUX
v acuum
cleaner , A I cond1t1on , uses
paper bags , has cordwmder
and many attachments Also ,
shampooer atta c hment tn
eluded (Only 4 a'lailable ) at
S37 70 cash
or
term s
avatlabl e Phone 99'2 7755
11 13 ttc

P1ck up dally 1n Pomeroy &amp;
Middleport.
All
work
guaranteed Phone 949-1611.

NEW 1974 ZIG ZAG SEWING
MACHINES
In origina l
fa ctory carton New Ztg Zag
to make buttonholes, sew on
buttons monograms , and
make fancy des1gns w1th just
the twest of a smgle d•al Left
in lay a wav and never been
used Wrll sell for only S47
cash . or terms ava1lable
Phone 992 7755
11 13 lfC

RACINE GARAGE
5th St.

Racine, 0 .

Pomeroy,

SIEGLER and
MONOGRAM

On State Rt. 124, 'h mi. from
Route 7 by-pass towards
Rutlond.

FUEL OIL
HEATERS
Priced For Quick Sale

8-6 P . M .
ANY AGE CHILD

By da y or hou r. r easonable
rates, reliab le peopl e with
medical tra 1ning .
Ph m -7608 belore 5 p m.
or 742-4902 after 5 p.m .

BOWERS
REPAIR .
Lawn MoweiS
Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Rovte 3

Open Mon .. Sat
8 A.M.· 6 P.M.

I

JOHNSON'S
REMODEliNG &amp; CONST.

All Small Appliances '

Ph. 992·5682 or 992-7121
All Mechanical Work

j

DAY NURSERY

PHONE
949.3832 or 843-2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a sj'lelf to a house
Painting , s1ding , roofing,
paper hang1ng , k1tchen
cabinets, etc.

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

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

o.

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

'

Alummum s1d1ng, roofing ,
complete res1denl1al con struct1on. Wmng . plumbing,
elec.
heating ,
kttchen
cab1nets etc.
27 Yrs. expenence rn const.
trade.
Phone (304) 773-5503

·-~OMEROYLANDMARK
' ...., Jack

,

_

w

C.rsey ••f!oor .

1

Phonetf2 - 21~

CLOSE OUT on new Z1g 7.ag
Sewing Machmes For sewing
stretch fabrics , buttonholes.
fancy des1gns , elc Pamt
slightly blemished Cho1ce of
carrying case or U!W tng
stand $.49 80 cash or terms
bvallable Phone 992 7755
11 s tfc

------------STEREO
radio,
em fm .

8

track tape combination , 1111
speaker
sound
system
Balance $109 .56 or easy
terms Call 992 39~5
11 5 lfc

GHEEN'S PAINTING
949-3295
Racil)e, 0.

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work
FREE ESTIMATE
Fully Insured

------------ ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe

HElL

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING
Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service. Free
Estimates .

l

Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING CO.
Interior, Exterior
Decorating and
Remodeling

I

o/INYL SIDING
PH. 992·7454 or
992· 7129
Free Estimates. Middl eport. 0.

DOZER or backho e work READY MIX
CONCRETE CA RP...ET rnsta llat ton S1 25 pe.
Phone 446 3981 or 446 34S9
dell'lered r 1ght to y ou r
yar d Phone R tc hard West ,
9 8 tfc
model Complete W1th all
projec t Fas t and easy Fr ee
843 '1667
cleaning attachments and
estimat es Phone 99 2 32 84
I I 13 26tp
us es paper bags Slightly used EXCAVATING , dozer . loader
Goegleln Ready Mil( Co
but cleans and looks like new
and backhoe work , septrc
Middleport , Oh10
Wilt sell for $37 25 cash or
!:!EWIN G MAC HIN ES f.l! epat r
tanks Installed , dump trudl: s
6 30 tfc
terms available Phone 992
ser'11ce . a ll m akes , 992 2284
and to boys for hire , w111 haul
17.55
The F abn c 'Shop , Pomero y
fill dirt . top soil , 1 1 me~tone 'C Bk': ADF ORO Auctioneer
Author1zed S1n ger Sales and
11 S lfc
orav~: r. Call Bob or Roger
Complete Servtce
Ser v1ce We shar pen Sc rss ors
Jeffers , day phone 992 7089 ,
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
night phone 992 3525 or 992
J 29 lfc
Rac ine , Oh io
5232
MobBe Homes For
Crlft Bra~fo rd
DOZER work , la nd cl ~arm g by
2 11 ttc
th e a cre hourly or contra ct,
5 1 lie
-------- ----~-farm ponds , roa ds etc Large
do ze r and operator w1th ov er
CHARLE S R Hatfie ld, m tnt
~lVI In tho rolling hills of
20 years e)( perr ence Pull inS
backho e and do ze r water
Exc avatmg Pom eroy, OhiO
5outhom Olllo In your own
ltnes, dra ins footers. brus h
Ph one 992 2478
3 BR, •II electric mobile
clean 1ng Rt 1. Rutland , Ohto
12 19 tf c
609
2
Phon
e
742
home In 5outllern Ohio's
II 3 251c
newnt mobile homo park.
CREME AN S CON CRE TE
15 min. from Alhons or .
del1vere d Mon da 'll thr ou g h
EXCELSIOR Sal t Wor ks, E
Pomeroy. Price reduced to .
Satu r d ay and e'1e n 1n gs
Ma1n
St
',
Pom
ero
v
All
ki
nds
get this mobile homo p.ork
Phone 446 1142
ot ~rt wa ter pellets, water
sf•rted. Sot up &amp; rudy to
t. 13 lfc
nuggets . block sa lf and own
move Into. For furtllttr
Oh10 R1ver Sa lt Phon e 992
3891
details cont•ct ...
SEPrt C TANKS c lea ned ,
'"'' ACRES - Several fruit
6 5 If&lt;
reason a ble ra tes Ph 44~
NO DOWN PAYMENT
trees, garage, and 5 room ---- -----------478'1. Ga ll1 poltS John Russel l
TO VETERANS
hcuse . Want only $8500.00.
owner a nd op erator
TANK S c lea ned
33 ACRES - Good hunting :S EPTIC
5 l '1 tf&lt;
Modern San1 tat1 on 992 395&lt;1 or
area 3 bedroom home, bath,
992 734 9
electric heat. city water and
9 18 tf C'
minerals .
3 ACRES - All clean farm
CA TTLE A I Serv •ce Phone
land. 2 bedroom home, bath.
L Par ke r , 99'1 2264 Pomeroy,
furnace, and dr illed well Just
or 667 3151 Coo lv tll e stat to n
1100 E. Molin Pomeroy, 0.
11 11 lJ tc
$10.000 00.
C.ll992-7034
1 ACRE - Nearly new 3 -------------Open Dally 11 to 7
a nat ion a ll y a dv e rti se d
bedroom home, nice bath with
noncarbonaled v1 tamin C
shower Compact kitchen.
t1 "
enri c hed fr u1t d r ink IS
stove, refriger ator , lots of
ava1 lable for vending 1n 12
f970VAltANT 65x12, J'bedroorTf cabinets,
and
dining
oz . cans. lndivrduals who are
fully carpeted , LP gas heat . $17,500.00
Phone 992 7751
ser~ously
cons idering a
~ARGE GARDEN 7
room
8 25 tfc
bus
mess
of
their
own should
house. bath, nice large living,
~
Investigate
an
extraordinary
fron1 porch, carport, on level
distributorship currently
lot. $16,500 00
For
available 10 this area Th1s IS
WE HAVE THE TIME IF YOU
a secure busmess for those
HAVE THE FINANCING AND
who can spare a few hours
WANT TO START SAVING
each week (no s e!Hng).
YOUR MONEY.
restockmg vendors placed on
location by our speci alists . A
ON YOUR DIAL
qual1fied individual may
'
start part time and ex pand
with company financ ing 1o a
full t1me bus iness

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

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

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

Sale

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

Real Estate For Slile

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

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

KINGSBURY
MOBIL£ HOMES

----------

Hi-C

We. talk to you

lika person.

- ---------Real Estate

Sale

SYRACUSE Close to
river, double level lot,
fenced, 3 B. R., bath,
basement, porches , N.G.
forced air furnace. priced
right.
POMEROY - Downtown
business room and nice
apal'lm-ent over. Excellent
for any type business.
Asking only $11,000.00.
REEDSVILLE - 9 acres
about all tillable, lovely
building site, T.P. water,
located
on
Rt .
12A
ovlf'looklng rlvlf'. ss.eoo.
MINERSVILLE - 1 story
frame, 3 BR, bath, nice
kitchen, porch11, natural
gas, TP water, lots of
ground. $7,900.
WE' HAVE BUYERS- WE
NEED HOMES TO SE~~LET US KNOW WHAT YOU
HAVE.
tt2-225for tn-2.561

1-- -- - - - - - - - -

WMP0/1390.

CASH REQUIRED
PLAN 1
S2.604
P~AN 2
S4,794
P~AN 3
S9,581
Tra ining prov1ded. No experience required
Ta x
shelt'r with 60 pet wrlteoff.
Investment fully secured by
new equipment (five year
warranty) and inventory .
Earnings guaranteed with a
written buy back agreement.
For immediate information
or Interview call collect (301)
699 5300 or write Including
phone number to HEA~ TH
ORIN KS OF AMERICA,
INC . 5801 Annapolis Road,
Bladensburg ,
Maryland
20710

10 17 ttc

----------OLD • room house on 2 nice lots

In Syracuse. S3 ,000 or possible
land contraCt. Phone 992 5898
11 22 -Jic

5 ROOM house 'With bath and
lot Drilled well Call after 4
p m , 2"7 2581
11 24 6tp

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

NEW
bt level
home .
3
bedrooms . buill m kttchen,
basement w1th one car
garage Phone 742 3615 or see
Milo Hutch1son
'
11 1 tfc

-------------HOU SE tor sale. 249 Un•on

Ave , All newly decorated
•nsrde May be seen b'll ap
pointment Phone 992 561 7
11 15 12tc

(Not a subsidiary of CocaCola Company.)

..

- --- -- -~--~ - ,-

\

.'

KNAPP SHOES

Keep out the cold and cut the cost of beating!
Dress your home up warm for cold days
ahead. Siding: Insulates, adds beauty, &gt;s
durable, adds value, is colorful. Siding can be
installed anytime . Ask us about Soffit, Fascia,
Gutters and Downspouts, too.
FREE ESTIMATE

--------------GOLF CA RT S, gas and Plectr1c,

·

Orthopedic &amp; Correctional Work

REMODELING?

BEAUTI F UL art wor k for sale.
wood marbe and or1gmal
pa1nt1ngs et c Phone 99 2 7648
11 21 5tc

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

lill

FREE ESTIMATE
Pickup and Delivery

992-5162
Syracuse, Ohio

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

-------------KOSCOT
KOSMETIC S

,----------------

DAN ARNOLD

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

1972 VEGA GT
$1995
Hatchback , low mileage by 1 owner, new w-w tires transferred from new car, • speed trans , radio , green finish ,
black vinyl mterior, deluxe trim

Ji§

SEE US FOR YOUR
UPHOLSTERING NEEDS

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING

1968 DELTA 88 OldSmObi le, 1965
Electra 25 Bueck , both 1n good
cond1t1on Also , 4 room hou se
and '2 lots 10 Letarl V1llage
See
Thoma s
Hayman ,
Syra cuse , Oh10
11 2161c
- -- ------------~
1973 YAMAHA 175 Enduro
Phone 949 2762 after 6 p m
11 215tc
APPLES Fltzpatr rck Orchard ,
State Route 689 , Phone
WilkeSVIll e, 669 3785
11 21 26tc

19740PE~MANTA

1972 DODGE DART CUSTOM

Business Services

1957 CHEVY parts
NEW
Lakewood tract1on bars, hi
1acker air shocks , hooker
headers , wltl'l 3" coll,ctors for
smarr block Call t 992 .3496
after 6 p m BEST OFFER
------ - ----- - 10- -p -tfc
CONN trumpet , good cond1t1on
S75 Phone 992 3606
11 21 6tc

Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

w•ll be served

...

~=:=~~~~~~~~~~;-f:=-&lt;:::::~4
''

I

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Roush,
Mrs. Winnie Walding of
SyraCU81!, and Jeff Miller.
David, and Mr . and Mrs.
Edward Laudermilt and
children of Pomeroy visited
Mrs. Donohue's mother, Mrs.
Rcae Bachus at the Angel of
Mercy Rest Home at Alb.ny •
Sunday gueals of Mrs.

TODAV'S QUESTION
You bid two hearts. Your
do
you do
now?you to three. What
partner
raases
An1wer Tomorrow

By Mn. Herbert Rowlb
Brian Robinson of Port
Ricky, Fla., spent a week with
his grandparents, Mrs. Bertha
Robinson, Mr. and Mrs .
Chrissie Powell of Racine and
other relatives. Raymond
Robinson of Norfolk, Va. spent
the weekend with his JO'and·
parents, the Powells at Racine,
and Mrs. Robinson, and also
visited his brother, Brian.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush Sunday were
Mel and Robert Walding,
Edward Smith, Mr. and Mrs.

Dana Lewll, Mrs. Edna Roush,

card."

The bldd1ng has been
25
Weal
North Eaot South
1•
Dble.
Pass
24
Pass •
You, South. hold
• 4 3 • A Q 10 8 6 +K J 4 ...A Q 3
What do you do now?
A-Bid two hearta. Your hand
Ia 11r0111 enough lo make this
oteondbld.

Auto Sales

MEIGS County Humane Soc •ety
have

FIREWOOD for fireplace Of
stove Cut to lengti" Phone
992 7~44
11 3 16tc

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

Dame."

lz:e 11:1,!U?.:;t :1

Mrs. June Wickersham and
mother, Mrs . Ferne B.
Hayman, were shopping at
Grand Cenlral Mall, Parkersburg , Saturday.
·
Paul
Hayman,
North
Royalton,
Ohio,
Harold
Hayman of Westerville, visited
their brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Hayman recenUy. Ray
has been confined to Holzer
Medical Center and is now
home and improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ours of
New Brighton, Pa., spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Donohew, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Ours, Mr . and Mrs.
Wiley Ours.
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Donahew
of Colwnbus spent Wednesday
IDllil Fridsy with Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Donohew. They also
visited Mr and Mrs. George
Donohew at Circleville, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. •Jeff Donohew
spent the weekend With Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Proffitt at
Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs . Erwin
Gloeckner spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Badgely and children at
Fairfax, Va.
Mrs. Ada Norris spent the
weekend with her daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davis at
Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell
visited their daughter, Lorna
Bell at Colwnbus Thursday
through Sunday.
Jerry Johnson of Racine
spent the weekend With his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Smith Sr.
Mrs. Iva Orr called on Mrs.
Mae Durst Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush,
Mrs. Iva Orr were shopping at
Fruth's Pharmacy at Pt.
Pleasant
and
Murphys ,
Gallipolis, Saturday evening.

Carmel News,

HDHCB

HWXG

Notice
will

by THOMAS JOSEPH

37 Square

I
I I tJ I
ljiEESID I
I I ()

Apple Grove

ti61M"·a(

For Sale

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
By MJ:o. Herbert RollSb

hemp

ARGJN

-"'

+++

weight

.5

+

PERSONAL to "WW It Work?' ' -You two go togetber like
Hee Haw and the Boeton Symphony. Hqw about a a-month!
engagement (at least) to test the ldnd of Jlllllie you niake

31 Perched
:U Entice
36 Russian

"fliiNI&lt;5

TON16HT.

+++

30 Turkish

I!ORTY

NORTH
25
• KJ2
• K64
8543
.962
WEST
EAST
.754
.Q63
.JI082
.Q973
J92
AKQ106
.K84
SOUTH &lt;Dl
• A 109 8
• AS

not, well, llbe's a dear friend. can't you level wilh her?, ..:H.

dinner

News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15 ; Sesame St 20, Adlerian

Counseling Techniques 3J
6. 30 - NBC News 3. 4, 15, CBS News 8, 10; Bewltched6; Gomer

7.00 -

11

lie later you'll get whll you
want on better terma
SCORPIO COot. 24·Nov. 22)
If you re as~lng advice of
someone, be sure they have
the necessary expertise or
their suggestions, though wellIntended, w111 be expensive
SAOITT ARIUS CNov. 23·
Dec. 21) Your good Intentions
Will only serve to complicate
concht1ons rf you poke your
nose 1nto the affairs of a pal
w1thout being asked
CAPRICORN CDec. 22·J•n.
1 II) Something of value can be
gained now through persons
you have social contacts with
1f you-hilndle altuatlona properly
AQUARIUS CJ•n. 20·Feb.
18) Today will have Its
surprises around the home .
You'd better brace yoursell for
some dlsrupt1ons or unex pected drop-1ns
PISCES CFeb. 20·M•rch 20)
Take plenty ot t1me to lhlnk
before you speak today or
you'll say some things thai another Will lake the wrong way

ForTueadoy,Nov.211,1g74
ARIES CM•rch 21-Aprll 1 II)
If you re not careful you're
go1ng to let a fine opportunity
of a matenal nature slip
through your fingers by be1ng
1nd11ferent
TAURUS CAprll 20-Mey 20)
Don I ret go of what you have 1n
hopes of gett1ng something
bolter 11 !hal "something bet ·
tar" 15 Sl1ll an unknown quanllly
GEMINI CMay 21-June 20)
Don t ovenndulge 1n WIShlul
thlnk1ng
Face matters
reallsl1cally Base your conclusions upon the facts as they
actually exist
CANCER CJune 21-July 22)
Thes 19 not a good day for you
10 1nvo1ve yoursell in somethmg w1th fnends that contains
e lements of nsk or chance
~EO CJuly 23-Aug. 22) Your
pnde can lead you 1nto mak1ng
commitments you 'll later have
a tough t1me dehvenng Cool
the "b1g shot" role for now
VIRGO CAug. 23·8ept. 22)
You II be much sharper tomorrow 1n makmg decisions than
you are today Allow yourself
tame to sleep on things before
actmg
LIBRA CS.pt. 23·0ct. 23)
Don't buy anything Impulsively
now Time IS on your side A lit-

+++

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26,1974
6·00 - Sunrise Seminar 4, Summer Semester 10
6: 25 - Farm Report 13
6: 30 - Five Minutes to L1ve By 4, News 6 . Bible Answers 8, The
Story 13 , School Scene 10
6 · 35- Columbus Today 4.
6 45 - Morning Report 3.
7 00- Today 3, 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10 , H R Pu fnstuf 6; Far-

'.

�·~

•

'

the Camden Clar k Memorial
Hos pital in Pa rkersburg
following a br ief illness.
Mr . Archer, born Sept. 24 ,
1874, near Bashan in Meigs
Coun ty. was the son of the late

A. J . and Elizabeth Roush
Archer. He was also preceded
in death by his first wife. Ora
B. Staats; a daughter , Mattie
L..ois Mineard: his second wife,
Minnie Gaston ; an infan t son,

th ree brothers, five sisters, and
one grandson.
Mr. Archer , a m ember of th e

Lo tt ridge Methodist Church,
was a re tired farmer.

He is surv ived by a son,
Russe ll Archer, Guysville; two
daughters, Mrs . Clarence Iris

•

"One of the worst tragedies
tha i can befa ll a man is to
have ulce rs and still not be
a success."
The " FRIEND L Y ONES "
take this opportunity to
w ish all their f riends and
cus tomers
A
VERY
PLEASA NT
THAN KSG IVIN G
DAY .

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
I
t h•'

Q.·p.•r lnwnt

H~,~dd1n.q '!t•:cl:' \~lS

Sto r e

of

Warner , Athens, and Naomi
Archer, at home; one brother,
Walter Ar c her, Racine ; a
siste r , Eva Archer, Racine: six

d '! tt'd

Middleport alumni~id roster

fr on

RF.LATIVE DIES
Th omas Clark and Mrs.
Mildred Hemsley, both of
Syracuse,

recei ved

word

recently of the death of their

Pomeroy.

s ister -in-law,

SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Joy Vance, Harley Eblin,
Jr., Lelah Rhodes.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Betty Pooler , Middleport ;
Sarah Bush, Letart; Robert
Oatley, Middleport; Shantilil
Goradin, Pomeroy; Do res
Arn old, Pomeroy ; Vir gil

( Th elma ) Clark, Toronto ,
Ohio. Mr . Clark is a former
resident of Syracuse. Hi s
address is 706 F edera l St. ,

Fla., in Meigs County c ommon

One o ut of eve r y eight
Ala s kan s hol d s a fl yi ng

Briefs

URBANA - A POWERFUL ELAST, AFPARI!:NTLY caused
by ~ natural gas leak, ripped through the home of U. S. Rep.
Clarence Brown Sunday, causin g an estimated $1 million
damage. The congressman and his family, in Washington at the
time or the explosion, new here today to examine the ruins of
their 16-&lt;'oom Victorian~"yle home .
The state fire marshall and goo company personnel were at
the scene. Officials said the blast, believed caused b¥ a ~as
furnace, destroyed a room._.ize area in the center of the home
and caused extensive damage to the .rear section .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Kathleen Shane, Racine;
Oscar Imboden, Sr., Minersvi ll e; Mary Derenberger,

pleas court on charges of gross
neglec t of duty.

Mrs.

F r ank

Toron to.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES
Mrs.
Teresa Jeffers, Southside;
Lynette Sturgeon, Ashton;
Tom Burris, Bidwell; Mrs.
Earl Rollins , Leon; Mrs .
James Jeffers , Columbus;
William
Smith ,
Point
Pleasant ; Austin Johnson, Pt.
Pleasant ; Corahelle Russell,
Pomeroy ; Benjamin Hall ,
West Colwnbia; Lorena Weiss,
Mason , and Terry Durst, Point
Pleasant.

Following is the roster of the Middleport alumni
football team that wili tackle the Pomeroy and
Rutland alums Thanksgiving day in Marauder
Stadium at 2:30p.m. in the Cancer Crusade ~nefit.
Coaches for the Middleport squad ar~ Bruce
Wallace and John Blake.
Bob Mills, 255, Middleport, 49.
Bill Andrews , 250, Pomeroy, 56,
Richard Hovatter, 190, Middleport, 57.
Harlan Whitlatch, 150, Middleport, 59.
Frank Aeiker, 169, Middleport, 59.
Bob Southern, 200, Middleport, 61. •
Sandy Clonch, 168, Middleport, 62.
Richard &lt;Red) Hayes, 210, Middleport, 63.
Gene Wise, 155, Middleport, 63.
Jim Andrews, 215, Pomeroy, 64.
Bruce Wallace, 180, Middleport, 65.
Dave Ashley, 380, Middleport, 66.
John Blake, 208, Middleport, 66.
Bob Carruthers, 220, Middleport, 66.
John Hood, 140, Middleport, 66.
Bruce Harris, 175, Meigs, 67.
Ray Hindy, 170, Meigs, 67.
Clarence Mcintyre, 165, Eastern, 67.
Jerry Davenport, 170, Meigs, 68.
Mike Johnson, 170, Meigs, 68.
Dennis Ault, 185, Meigs, 69.
Richard Gilkey, 175, Meigs, 69.
Larry Grogan, 190, Meigs, 69.
John Krawsczyn, 145, Meigs, 69.
Larry Lemley, 220, Meigs, 69.
John Smith, 175, Meigs, 69.
Max Whitlatch, 198, Meigs, 69.

license. a bout s ix times the
national ave ra ge .

Gilligan's future uncertain
PRE-FINISHED

campaign designed exclusively to demolish the opposition,"
Gilligan said.
"I've been in a lot of campaigns before when I started
behind, was always behind, knew I was behind, clawing and
scratching. But this time, 1 had the feeling I was sandbagged,
that I just walked, fat ,' dwnb, and happy, down this dark alley
and got coldcocked and never even got my dukes up."
''Negative Media Biltz"
In retrospect, the governor said a "negative medis blitz" Is
almost Impossible to counter, except by ''waging the same kind
of campaign earlier, harder and louder than the other fellow ."
The unexpected defeat left Gilligan "totally shocked, surprised
and appalled."
He doesn't know what he will be doing after leaving office Jan.
13, but Gilligan has not ruled out a campaign for governor in 1978
or the U.S. Senate in 1976.
"I haven't the vaguest idea of what I'm going to do," Gilligan
said. "Obviously, I have to find a way to make a living. I would
like to find an opportunity, or work, in a setup that would give me
some time to do some reading, writing and studying."
But politics still may be in his future.
"I don't know at this point. I'm still picking up the pieces. I'm
obviously interested in politics -it's been a major part of my llfe
for 20 years," said tlie 57-year-old Gilligan.
"I still believe the political arena Is where we help change
society and improve it. I hope to be involved -but whether I'll
ever be a candidate again, I can't say," he abded . "I won't
foreclose it absolutely."

COUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. John J . &lt;;;illigan is a tittle bitter
about his apparent loss in the Nov . 5 gubernatorial election, and
still doesn't know what he will do when he when he leaves offlice
in January .
The Democratic governor, who has not yet ruled out a recount
pending fmal official results of the election, grudgingly expresses admiration for James A. Rhodes, while loathing the
tactics he used to win his way back to the governorship.
"Jim Rhodes is a fonnidable campaigner, a gut fighter who
wages a tough campaign," the defeated Gilligan said over the
weekend. He said he regarded Rhodes' comback campaign as
slick, devastatingly effective and brilliantly executed.
Charges "Uofalr" Campaign
Gilligan said Rhodes' media attack -which he considered
crucial in his defeat - was ''unfair, wholly untrue, distorted,
outrageous untruths" employing the "super.,..turatlon He."
The governor said Rhndes' approach was a "negative"
campaign conducted "not so much to elect Rhndes as to defeat

PANELING

me."

with pre-finis hed mou ldings to match. Stop in
today and take advantage of big savings on just

the righ t sty le and shade for t hat special dream
roo m.
~nrl?.

THIS AD

&amp; SUPPLY CO.
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Phone 675-1160
Store Hours Mon.-Fri. 8:011-5:00 Sat. 8-12:00

more."

GIFT FOR THE HOME
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High Efficiency
Cleaner With
ROTO-MATIC"
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CLEANS SHAGS
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lOW
FLAT PILE

TOOL-PAK• tool carrier. 9-piece
luxe tool set. Long, flexible vinyl na&gt;ss.
Lifetime lubricated motor. Suoet·-si;ze
disposable dust bag . Power selector
handle.

Another
Motor
Here!

Eleanor Miller
of Middleport
died on Monday

Two killed

MEIGS tHEATRE

Is worth 10 pet discount on any paneling purchased
our· stu•ck. This Ad must be presented to get DIBoount.
expires 12-14-74

3126th St.

Gilligan charged Rhodes fabricated issues, painting a
distorted picture Implying that "thousand of jobs were leaving
Ohio and hundreds of factories were closing ... really terrifying
people. The campaign commercials divided people, generated
tear, distrust and hatred."
The governor said Rhodes' media blitz and a new generation of
campaign weaponry caught him unprepared.
"We were used to campaigns designed to puff up a candidatesell him to the populace. What we were not prepared for was a
DIVORCE GRANTED
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Vona K. Whitt,
Middleport, was granted a
Continued from page 1
divorce from Charles C. Whitt,
between Brezhnev and former
Iron ton, on charges of gross
President Richard Nixon in
neglect of duty and extreme
May, 1972, which expires in
~ruelty.
October, 1977. The new agreement would run from then until
December 31, 1985.
Ford appeared tired but
Tonighllhru Thursday
elated as he walked down the
November 25-28
ramp of Air Force One at
NOT OPEN
Andrews Air Force base near
here Sunday night after an 8Fri .• Sat., Sun.
day, 16,550 mile journey to
Nov. 29-30, Dec. 1
Japan, South Korea and the
JEREMIAH JOHNSON
Soviet Union, his first venture
(TechnicolorJ
Robert Redford
into global,.dlplomacy.
lPG)
His wife, Betty, aod daughtcartoons
er,
Susan, kissed and hugged
Show Starts 7 p.m.
him. Ford told about 200
welcomers ; "I believe we
accomplished what we set out
to achieve -and perhaps

10-year

When it comes to beautiful pre-fin ished paneling, we have this areas most complete stock

He referred to the nuclear
agreement with Brezhnev as
an understanding which
"established a sound basis for
a new agreement that will
constrain our military competition over the next decade."
Ford arrived In Vladivostok
Saturday, flying ·from South
Korea vis Tokyo, where Air
Force One picked up a Soviet
navigator and radio operator.
He and Brezhnev talked
during a two-hoW' train ride to
dkeanskly, a spa and sanitorium used by Soviet government
agencies.
Saturday night they met until
half past mld!llght, canceling a
banquet, ,an!l resumed on
&amp;mday. One U.S: aide sald the
two leaders "hit It off
famously ."
Brezhnev told Ford that if

$14995

..

Play it oafe and- mre.
It may be time to
have yonr preaent
policy updated,

( Model 1260) Power-Teem

Harrisonville
honors ·listed

Holzer Medical Center
(Births)
Nov. 22 - Mrs. Kenneth
Clemons, daughter, Radcliff.
Mrs. Burl Duncan, 1aughter,
Gallipolis Ferry. Mrs. William
S. Walters, danghter, Vinton.
Nov. 23 - Mrs. Larry
Howell, son, Gallipolis.
Nov. 24 - Mrs. Edward A.
Malone, son, Jackson . Mrs.
Carl Swaney, Jr ., son, Jackson.
Mrs .
Randel
Williams,
daughter, Oak Hill.

HOURS SET
The Meigs County bookmobile will be at Salem Center
from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Tuesday.

A Gift-A-Rama $tore

Plans to build.an addil.inn "tu

Maintenance

•

••

VOL. XXVI

...

....
...
'0.
'0•

. .,

.

guerrillas to the Palestine liberation Organization. Police
guarded the loW' air pirates and seven freed cormnaodo
prisoners in a secret hideout while Tunisian authorities decided
what to do with the guerrillas.
"Ther~ are several possibilities, one of which would be to
hand them over to the PLO," Foreign Minister Habit Chatti said.
"Thls is the most plausible one. The PLO is determined to end
this sort of operation." The 11 guerrillas surrendered Monday
morning at the eod of a four-&lt;lay air and ground drama that
began last Thursday with the hijacking of a British Airways VC!O
jetliner in the Persian Gulf.
FOW' guerrillas seized the plane, shooting a stewardess in the
back and ldlllng a passenger before winning the release of seven
commandos Imprisoned In Holland and Egypt. The Palestinian
guerrillas had demanded to be "set free without trial and without
. being turned over to the PLO,'' but Chatti said the men gave up
Monday without getting any solid guarantee.

UNITED NATIONS - U THANT, THE self-effacing
Burmese llchoolma._: who served a record 10 years as U.N.
ileeretary·general, will' be' the first person to lie in state at the
United Nations, 'l11ant, 65, died Monday at Columbia
Presbyterl8n Hotipltalln New York. He suffered from cancer and
had developed pneumonia.- .
·
The United Nationa' third secretary general, Than! held
·wlllot he onee called the ''lonely, frustrating job" from Sept. 17,
1861, to Dec. 31 1&amp;71 the longest tenure of any U.N. chief.
'r
·uec:utlve. "We have
lost one of the great mep of our age, "U.S.
Amball&amp;llor John Scall said.
.. ''We admired above all hiS hwnanity, his respect for truman
dignity and Ilia complete integrity,'' Kurt Waldheim, 'Thant's

99

I

'

Elbei1elds
In Pomeroy ·
.
_L

-·

- ---

. POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TOKYO - PRIME MINISTER KAKUEI Tanaka, whose
rags to riches Career came back to haunt him, resigned today In
the face fl. charges i)e ulled his political power to amass a huge
fortune. "As a public figure I am solely to blame for the fact that
my personal aftalrs lnylted the people's mlswtderstandlng and I
feel pain that I cannot bear," he said In a resignation statement.
Tanaka, whose pOpularity plunged frqm euphoric high to a
I!C8ndal-marred lOw ~g his two years in power, blamed
himBelf
Ja~'s "Political chaos" and unsolved problems.
"That Is why· I have decided to submit my resignation soleiiU1!y
and aerenely," u\e 56-year-old prime miniBter said in a state~ent
read to newiltn811 by ·Noboru Takeshita, the chief cabmet
secretary.
"

(SALE LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND)

I

.,

'

jllleceuot,sald.

.

••

.

JO~uRG - SURGEONS TRIED today to get two
beartB to beat In unison inalde a iitl-year-old engineer, the first
Continued on page' S
It

.

.- 1

Turner who pointed out that
Page St. is scheduled to he
greatly improved from State
Issue I Funds but that the work
has never m a terialized . The

was stopped by Middleport
Police between the hour s of 11
p .m. a11d 7 a .m . for no apparent
reason . Mayor Hoffman said
he doubled if police stopped
vehicles without reason, but
added that he will chec k into it.
A co mpl a in t w.as lodged
against the dumpin~ of old
motor vehicles at the lagoon
site. Chase said that about 100
such vehicles had been dumped
there to keep the wall of the
lagoon from going into the Ohio '
River . This prevents thousands
of gallons of sewage in the
lagoon fr om emptying into the
river.

CoWJcil agreed to purchase a
pickup truck from Goebel Ford
Continued on page 8

•

enttne

NEW MARAUDER LOOK - Lisa Thomas, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Thomas, models one of the new Meigs
High School hand uniforms ordered by the Meigs Band
Boosters. With Mrs . Thomas is Dwight Goins, band Instructor. The boosters ordered 136 band uniforms at a cost of
$145 each, five majorette uniforms at $139 each, one field
commander's ouUit for $160, ten pair of trousers for drummers and 20 sweaters for the drummers, all at a total cost of
$20,471.65. Seven thousand dollars has been paid on the indebtedness thus far. Persons wishing to contribute are asked
to mall checks to the Uniform Fund, care of Dwight Goins at
Meigs High School , Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

-

-'

cloudiness a nd a little warmer
Wednesday with a chance of

Weather
TEN CENTS

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1974

Fair and cold tonight. Lows
in t he 20s. Conside rable

light snow or snow possibly
mixed with rain in extreme
southern counties .

Recount assured

NEW YORK -MARGARETTA "HAPPY" Rockefeller, who
underwent two mastectomies less than six weeks apart, said she
was happy It was over and w8!')ted to sleep..Mrs. Rockefeller had
her cancerous right breast removed Monday. Her left breast had
been removed Oct. l7. Both operations were perfonned at SloanKettering Memorial Cancer Center.
Mrs. Rockefeller spent two hours and 28 minutes in surgery
Monday where the simple masteciomy was performed. After the
operation was oompleted doctors said it was a complete success
and said her chances for a full recovery were 90 per cent over 10
years.

(MODEL U4047)

'49

A request to improve the
lower end of Page St. was
received from Mrs.
Ben

SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF.- THE WATERGATE oourt's
three medical examiners, ordered to determine whether Richard
Nixon to really too sick to testify, spent almost two hours on the
fonner President's estate Monday, presUJl18biY carrying out the
examination.
They left without a word to reporters on what they found, but
planned a news conference for today just prior to boarding a
plane for Washington. They said they could give "a broad picture
of the problem," but the final determination would be kept for
their report to U.S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica, which is
due by Friday.

Save Your SalesiiP-• for
Valuable .Premiums

' '1 .

NO. 159

'

!

to make deliveries.
It was reported that there is

will be under the railroad
tracks on First St. From the
Ra wlings..Coats Funeral Home
downriver to about Hamilton
Sl. Chase recommended that
the railroad be contacted to ask
if it would dump hea vy
materials over the bank to help
hold it. Mayor Fred Hoffman
will make the contact.

By United Press lnleruatlonal
COLUMBUS -OHIO'S 88 COUNTY BOARDS of elections
have been notified to be prepared for a possible recount of the
November gubernatorial race, Secretary of State Ted W. Brown
said Monday.
Ha recount is called, boarda will have five work days -until
Dec. 9- to complete the work, Brown said.

UPRIGHT CONVERTIBLE

Sale

heating and C{"loling sys tem lies as it has in the past, the river

is not known ; however, the
welfare building will become
the property of the village
when it is paid for.
Counci l authorized Chase to
proceed with the erection of
signs limiting the weight of
vehicles on village streets to
5,000 pounds. The signs will be
placed at the three entrances of
the town . Heavier vehicles
may travel through the town
only with the permission of
Chief of Police J. J . Cremeens.
The weight limit does not affect
vehicles coming in to the town

mayor will Jo1Jk into Mrs.
Turner's reques t.
The new counci lwoman, Mrs .
Jean Craig, sa id tha t she
received a comp lai nt from a
woman who charged that she

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

for

FIREMEN CALLED
Pomeroy firemen were
called to Welshtown at 9:08
a.m. Sunday to extinguish a
· brush lire. At 9:28 a.m. the
Pomeroy ER unit went to 117
Locust St., for Earl Quivey who
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

half dozen authorized to purchase new

at y

TUNIS - A TOP GOVERNMENT OFFICIAL said today
Tunisia probably will turn over a group of breakaway Arab

"•'

of som e

businessmen who ccmtributed diving boards with it.
money for the construction of
Chase repor ted that if the
th e buildin g. Where the Ohio River bank continues to
responsibility of the new erode in the nex t year as much

•

NEW YORK - DRAMATIC IMPROVEMENTS was
reported today in the experimental use of an anticancer drug
(cyclophosphamide) for treating advanced cases of prostate
cancer in elderly men given only a few weeks to live. Dr. Gerald
P. Murphy, director fo the Roswell Park Memorial Institute,
Buffalo, N. Y., reported significant tumor shrinkage in 52 per
cent of 106 patients studies for up to 24 weeks. None of the successful cases has yet had a relapse although the cancer had
spread too much for a cure to be considered possible.
"They had everything. Their llfe expectancy is but a matter
of a few weeks. So the fact that you get stability and remission
and relief iB most surprising. The surprising thing is they're still

..

g roup

Supervisor

Harold Chase, who had \net
with council earlier on the
matter, said t.he room, seven
by 10 feet with an eight foot
ceiling will he constructed
under the stairway leading to
the second floor of the village
hall. The room will contain a
shower, lavatory and commode. It will also have an
emergency door which can be
opened to provide a second exit
in case of fife .
Cost of the project will be
about $2,000. Chase and his
department will do the work .
There is no definite time the
project will be started or
completed .
'
Chase alsb repOrted that a
new cooling and heating
system needed in the welfare

DOUGH FOR DOUGH for "Gifts for Yanks Who Gave"
program will get tinilerway Wednesday evening with a house
to house canvass of the Pomeroy area. Purchasing bread,
right, Is Harry Davis, cfiainnan ill the program, from Jack
Ambrose, manager of Kroger Stllre. The annual event is
sponscired by Drew Webster 39 American Legion. Residents
are asked to turn on their porch lights and to give as much as
they can as the cost of the bread has increased over last year.

• Rolls on wheels.

Cemetery. Frlenda may call. at
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home anytime after 10 a. m.
Tueaday.

build1ng wilt cost $:1,165.40, suu1c rnoney le ft from a fund
excl uding insta llation . A se t aside for the new a pron at
confcr('nce will l&gt;c held with a the Middlepor t pool. Chase wa s

the Middt'eporl Jail were
completed by Middlepor t
Village Council Monday night.

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Continued from page 3 .
easily whipped UCLA for the
third straight year.
Davis, a Helsman Trophy
candidate, rushed for a season
high 195 yarda and boosted hiS
career total to 3,609 yarda as
the Trojans extended their
league unbeaten string to a
record 25 games. Davis also
scored
one
touchdown,
bringing his career total to 48.
Trojan coach John McKay
said he was looking forward to
the "rubber match" with Ohio
State on Jan. 1.
"We won one and they won
one. Now Woody and I get to
stand on the sidelines an,_
scream at each other again,','
said McKay, whose team beat
Ohio·State 4:1.-17 in 1972 then lost
42-21 last year. "Actually I
would prefer to play a lesser
team -like Ball State. Ohl9
State Is a better offensive team
than they were il year ago."
Ohio State and Southern
California weren't the only
teams to win important games
Saturday. Oklahoma, Harvard,
Baylor,
Tennessee
and
Brigham Young also turned in
key victories.
Oklahoma remained unbeaten by whipping Nebraska
23-14 to win the Big Eight
Conference, Harvard upset
previously undefeated Yale 2116 to tie for the Ivy League
title, Baylor moved a step
closer to Ita first Southwest
Conference crown In history by
downing SMU 31-14, Tennessee
nailed down a Liberty Bowl
berth by topping Kentucky 24-7
and Brigham Young won the
Western Athletic Conference
and a spot in the Fiesta Bowl
by defewoing Utah 48-20.
Steve Davis, Joe Washington
and Jim Littrell combined for
482 yards rushing In Oklahoma's victory over fifth._
ranked and Sugar Bowl-bound
Nebraska. So easily did the·
Sooners run over the Cornhuskers that Davis threw mly
three passes, none of which
were complete.

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy

DALE .C. WARNER
INS. AGENCY

INGELS FURNITURE

Rita

Williamson, Brian Willis ,
Retha Yost, Pam Althouse,
second grade ; Tina Yost,
Brenda Largent, Paula Carl,
Betty Newhouse, Eugene
Phillips, Paul Riggs, Jerry
Grounds, Christine Riggs,
Monte Chapman, Malinda
Wells, all A's; Sherry Arnold,
all A's, third grade; Robin
Barrett, Brent Finlaw, Brad
Largent, Julia Spencer, Renee
Willis, fourth grade; Mark
Cline, Vicky DeBord, all A's;
Patricia Grounds, Angela
Harmon, Brenda Williams,
fifth grade; Robert Harmon,
sixth grade. .

let's .Talk Soon

Come In For A Eureka No-Nonsense Demonstration Todalfl

Wein,

Cell added to jail .

•

Same lineup

HARRISONVILLE - The
honor roll of Harrisonville
Elementary School for the
second six weeks has heen
annoWJced. Named were :
Lisa Riggs , Amy Frye ,
Bridget Largent, Vincent King ,
Melissa Howard , Buster
Haning , Buddy Gans, Kenda
Donehue and David Reeves ,
first grade; Mike Celine ,
Katrina Donohue, all A's;
Lorena Donohue, Jimmy
Eblin, Kristin Hebner, Betty
Ann Loftis, Gloria Nelson,
Vicky Peavley, Linda Riggs,
Karen Spencer, all A's;
Kristina

,.

·~

Ron Quillen, 180, Kyger Creek, 69.
Pat Archer, 155, Mel~ts , 70.
Mick Childs, 160, Meigs, 71.
Tom Hoffner, 165, Meigs, 71.
John Th9mas, 165, Meigs, 71.
Itich Qualls, 159, Meigs, 71.
Chip Haggerty, 152, Meigs, 72.
Jon Buck, 175, Meigs, 72.
Keith Van lnwagen, 175, Meigs, 72.

PRINCETON, W. Va. (UP!)
- Two persons were shot and
killed, including one Ohioan,
here Sunday by an assailant . Mrs. Eleanor Lambert Miller
who then fatally wounded 70, Middleport, a retired school
himself with the murder teacher, died early Monday
weapon, State Police said.
morning at the Holzer Medical
Investigative troopers said Center following a lingering
the shooting apparently illness.
stemmed from a family
Mrs. Miller was born Dec. 26,
argument. Mary Moye, 51, of 1903 in Ironton, the daughter of
Princeton, and her brother, the late Edward E. and Mary
Harold D. Hatcher, 41, of North Willard Lambert. Besides her
Ridgeville, Ohio, were shot parents, she was preceded in
with a .22 caliber rifle at death by her husband, David C.
nearby Camp Creek, Mercer Miller, in 1970.
County.
Mrs. Miller was a member of
Police said the victims had Grace Episcopal Church in
been shot by Mrs. Moye's ex- Pomeroy; Return Jonathan
husband, Lonie Okes, 51.
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American Revolution; Pi
Beta
Phi Sorority. She had
the nuclear agreement Is
taught
during her career in the
finally signed "You and I will
elementary
and high schools of
be thanked by aU the peoples of
the world. I think we have done Ohio and West VIrginia, her
a good job in this respect, here last years at Wahama High
School where she tanght home
In Vladivostok."
The two leaders signed their economics.
Surivlng are a daughter,
joint statement with champagne and celebrated later Mrs. Larry (Mary Carolyn)
Wiley, New Haven, teacher at
with vodka.
They also issued a joint the Pomeroy elementary
communique calling for a just school; a grandson, Arthur
and lasting peace in the Middle William Wiley, and a grandEast, efforts to control the daughter, Jennifer Caroline
spread of nuclear weapons to Wiley, all of New Haven; a
other countries and long term brother, Gordon l.A!e Lambert
of Birmingham, Ala; two .
economic cooperation.
·sisters,
Miss Marion Lambert
They returned to Vladivostok
by- train and Brezlmev gave and Miss Allee Jane Lambert,
Ford a loW' of that city, which both. of Youngstown.
Funeral services will be held
has been clooed to Americans
at 10:30 a. m. Wednesday at
for 26 years.
"Good-bye and · God bless Grace Eplsl:opal Church. with
you," Ford told Brezhnev as he the Rev. Harold Deeth ofboarded Air Force One for the ficiating. BW'Ial will be in
Olght home.
Middleport's
Riverview

llllllliilll------~~~~~!!'!!1!!'!!'-.--

ONLY
Eureka Model 1261 Power-Team

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• • • ln

grandch ildren , and two grea tgrandchildren .
Roush, Racine; James Pape ,
Funeral services will be
Syracuse.
Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Whi te Funeral Home in
Guy Bing, Jr ., Roland DodCoolville, with the Rev. Walter
derer .
Frost and the Rev. Robert
DIVORCE FINAL
Meece orriciating. Burial will
Donald Maurer, Racine, has
be in the Coolville Cemetery.
been granted a divorce from
Friends may ca ll at the funera l
Patricia D. Maurer , Largo,
home any time.

•

•

1Vews

John Archer. 100. Guysville,
Rt. 1. d ied S:l turday £'VC'nin~ at

.•

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8 -- The Daily Se nt inel, Middlep&lt;JJ'l-Pomcruy. 0 .. Mon&lt;k•y. l'&gt;ov. 25. 1974

John Archer dies at age 100

---

SANTA SURROUNDED- Hundreds of youngsters crowded around Santa Claus Monday
evening on The Farmers Bank and Savings Co. lot to receive candy canes provided by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce when the Christmas season was opened in Pomeroy.

2,000 greet Santa
Approximately 2,000 persons
braves the cold Monday night
to welcome llSanta Claus" who
officially opened the Chris !mas
season In Pomeroy in the
annual Christmas parade.
The parade started at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
and ended at the Farmers
Bank and Savings parking lot
where Santa distributed treats
to hundreds of children.
Approximately 20 units
moved off at 7 p.m . in the

Deer avoided,
wreck wasn't

1:1

i~

parade according to Carolyn
Thomas, chairman. Both sides
of Pomeroy's Main St. were ~~::
lined with people from the ·.·.
school to the bank.
The chamber earlier had :·'..·.'·
purchased 1,000 candy canes ..
for Santa to distribute. The ...
parade was · termed a "huge '.~·.1_!

::·.'!:~

success".

:~~1

Bands from Kyger Creek,
Meigs, Southern and Eastern ~
High Schools marched in the :W;:;:
r.::
parade.

Violations found
in Vinton County

A single car accident
.COLUMBUS (UP[) - State
reported to Sheriff Robert C.
Auditor Joseph Ferguson today
Hartenbach's Dept. Monday
reported findings for recovery
occurred Sunday at 10:30 p.m.
totaling $7,449 against 26
on Vinega~ St., Sutton Twp. on
employes of the Vinton County
the Vic Hysell property.
engineer 's office for apparent
Kenton D. Holman, 16,
violations of vacation and sick
Syracuse, was traveling up hill leave.
·
when he saw two deer on the
Ferguson said the employes
right side of the highway. He
used vacation and or sick leave
swerved to avoid hitting them,
allowances on non-worktng
skidded, and afte~. braking, his
days or the eighty-hour pay
car went over a hill and turned
period Saturday and Sunday '
over on its top;
adding extra hours to their pay
The vehicle was demolished .
which is a violation of state
There were no personal inlaw. A state examiner said 23
juries. No citation was issued .
employes misused vacation
benefits and three misused
both vacation and benefits and
ihree misused both vacation
FIREMEN CAU.ED
The Pomeroy Fire Depart- and sick leave.
ment answered a call to the
White House on East Main St.
· Veterau Memorial Hospital
at 4:27 p.m. Monday when
Admltt.d - Carl Schultz,
burning leaves blew against •
Jr., Racine; Ervin Bawngardthe back door catching It on
ner, Pomeroy; Clara Lavenfire .' Losses were set at $25.
der, Syracuse; Roy · Pooler,
Porileroy;

. LocAL TEMPS
The temperatlU'e in downtown pomeroy at lla.m . today
was 51 degrees under sunny
skies.

Constance Craig,
·
Discharged ~ Kenneth
Davis, Virginia Pennington,
Eunice Halsey, Oscar Imboden, Sr., Laura Roush.
Pome~oy.

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COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan said Monday
night he definitely will ask for a
recount of the guhernatorlal
election results in which James
A. Rhodes apparently won by a
12,500-vote margin.
"We helteve the people of the
state of Ohio are entitled to an
honest and accurate count in
this election and they're going
to get it," Gilligan told
Democratic state executive
committee members here.
" If indeed it be the will of the
general electorate that this
administration change, there
wUI be no shadow of a doubt
about the accuracy and
honesty of the count."
Gillligan also encouraged
party members to not let his
apparent defeat weaken party
achievements, and he vowed to
continue his efforts to work
"for a strong and active
Democratic party long after
I'm gone" from the statehouse.
Eugene O'Grady, Gilligan's
campaign manager, said national professionals, "lawyers
and some computer experts
from the Democratic National
Committee" are ru:slsiing in
mapping the recount strategy.
The highway safety director,
on leave for campaign work

would seek to renegotiate the
Dec. 9 starting date for the
recounts set Monday by Secretary of State Ted Brown,
because it would occur at the
end of the Democratic national
mini-convention, winding up
Dec. 8.
Committee members also
pinpointed priority legislation
on three fronts they will seek to
rush through the Ohio General
Assembly before they lose
control of the governor's office
Jan . 13. The session starts Jan.

Democrats would have to ram
through any must legislation to
be certain it would become
law.
Concerning legislative prt.
orlttes, Ohio House Speaker A.
G. Lancione, 0-Bellaire, who
may be ousted in the turnover,
said Democratic Ieglslatora
would push for a bill to switch
the Income tax collection from
the state Tax Department to
the state treasurer's office,
where Mrs. Gertrude Donahey,
a Democrat, will continue to
serve.
6.
Lancione said the move
Democrats vowed to achieve
at least oongresslonal reappor- would "salvage from 300 to 500
tionment, election law reform jobs for Democrats " now
- especially in the area of working in the state Tas
voter registration, and an Department.
"That's party politics ,"
administrative reorganization ·
to preserve up to 500 state jobs Lancione s&amp;id . "They can't
blame us for that."
for Democrats.
The Bellaire party leader
The party also began a
financial retrenclunent, when also said Democrats would
their reapcommitteemen adopted a 1975 concentrate
budget of $458,000, compared po~runent efforts on drawtnc
Democratic:
with this year's expenditure of up · new
nearly $1.52 million, Including congressional districts at
a year-end deficit of $161,637. Colwnbus, Dayton and CinDemocrats will control both cinnati.
"We're going to he ready to
legislative houses and the
governor's office only between move (on the three legislative
Jan. 8 and 13 when Rhodes fronts) the day we're sworn
apparently will be sworn in. So in," he said.

30-million Americans asked . · •
to boycott sugar 10 chlys
:1

•

• •

zt zn wrztzng

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Consumer Federation of
America, the country's largest organized couumer

::~f:,.~a1~ ':.~~ 0~n:.!";!;:~ to

boyoott sugar during
The organization, which claims lo represent 30 mlllion
Americans, rirged the public to eul down on use of augared
products permanently and to aoll the government lo tell
food processors to use Ieos ougar In loot! product..
Americans consume about 101 poundl of sugar per
person per year, about 75 per ceDI of which comes In food
they buy.
The federation made Ito appeal Monday as the
government's Co101cD on Wage and Price StabDity opened
hearings on the high price of 1ugar.

i~

.,.,

~;-?·:-~"·
.

.®

WASHINGTON (UPI ) President Ford briefed congressional leaders today on his

York Times said today the two
leaders agreed to limit their

nuclear arms agreement with
the Russia"""~s. Hi s severest
arms control critic, Sen. Henry

less than 2,500 long-range
missiles and bomhers each.
House and Senate leaders and
the ranking Democratic and
Republican members of the
committees on appropriatlo111,
foreign affairs and annecl
services were invited to the ·
briefing.
Jackson , who does not fit In
any of those categories but
heads the Senate Arms Control
subcommittee and has Ions
been considered an expert on
the subject, said today that the
Vladivostok swnmit was "aU

• M. Jackson, D-Wash., who was
not invited, said ford should

~~l

1:11 have

gotten

something

in

:&gt;.i
writing.
N
::;:
Ford and Soviet Communist
§l
:1l leader Leonid I. Brezhnev
~~!
~ reached the agreement during
»
N
~==~=!Z~»"-?..W-«&amp;:*».:i8m?.i:!8!-~J1T j: }J».r@"..«»-:~::?~-os~S:::8W/4 the weekend at their meeting in
Vladivostok. They issued a
general statement agreeing to
limit numbers of missiles and
numbers of multiple-w"!'head
missiles- known as MIRVsNo charges were filed In lost control. In a curve. His through 1985.
three traffic accidents in- vehicle ran off the left side of
Specifics of the agreement
vestigated Monday by the the highway striking a tree and were not released but The New
Gallia-Meigs Post State High- fence. There was moderate
way Patrol.
damage.
The first occurred on County
Meanwhile, in reference to
Road 20, seven tenths of a mile the Patrol 's report of a Friday
north of Rt. iJ3 in Meigs County accident, Joseph M. Salyers,
where an auto driven by 25, Patriot Star Rt., Galllpolis,
William D. Justice , 19, said he did not lose control of
Pomeroy, went out of control, his car In an accident Friday
ran off the right side of the on Rt. 35, one tenth of a mile
LANCASTER, Ohio (UP! )highway striking a dllch and south of the Silver Memorial
All
59 of the city's firefighters
mailbox. There was · min"" Bridge as reported.
damage.
Salyers said his car struck a walked off their jobs here l~te '
Phyllis Marie Larkins, 41, sign post which had been Mond~~ In protest of c1ty
Long Bottom, escaped injury in knocked down earlier by an coWJcr!s failure to enact a
a single car mishap on Rt. 7, Wlknown vehicle. The sign's wage hike.
four tenths of a mile north of post, Salyers said, remained In
Chief Wallace Kerns and an
the Meigs County line in Athens place, broken off three Inches assistant chief were the only
County.
above the ground, ruining one fireme~ on duty at the city's
The patrol said Mrs. Larkins of his front tires.
three firehouses early today·
Kerns said he and the other fire
'reached for her purse which
officer would attempt to handle
feU off the seat, lost control of
any calls and · would rely on
her car which ran off the highINTEREST DOWN
assistance from nearby
way striking an embankment.
DETROIT
(UP!)
The
volunteer fire depattments.
There was minor damage.
The walkout came after
A Gallla County accident Michigan National Bank of
occurred at 8:15 a .m. on the Detroit the state's fifth largest council; in Its regUlar Monday
Vanco-Falrfield Rd. one mile bank ~td today it will cut its night session, failed to act on a
west of Rt. 588. According to prim~ interest rate effective payhlkeordinancewhichlthas
the report, James A. Bennett, Monday to 93(, per cent - the had under study for several
monllls, ,officials ;:std.
34, Rt. I, Vinton, traveling west nation 's lowest.

3 mishaps .logged

Firemen walk
.· off their jobs
at Lancaster

s

offensive nuclear arsenals

to

verbal."

"Apparently there's nothilll
in writing," Jackson said . "I
think it is so important In
negotiating with the Russians to
get it all in writing. We can't
mislead the!Q, they can't
mislead us." ·
Interviewed on the CBS
Morning News, Jackson also
was suspicious of any secret
agreements reached with the
Russians .
"I hope we get all the facti
on the table," he said. "The
last agreement we learned of a
couple 'years later that there
were secret agreement. between the secretary (of state)'
and the Russians and betweell
Mr. Nixon and the Russians. SO
until all the facts are out on the
table we will not know what the
si tuatlon is."
Jackson, who is expected lit
announce shlli'Uy that he will be
a candidate for tile Democratle
presidential nomination In 1971,
said his main preoccupation re
lated to the number of misaUel
or delivery systems and 1thelr
size
~tipulaled
tn
the
agreemel\1.
.•

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