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                  <text>32 - The SWJday TimPS -Sentinel, SWJday, Oci. 19, 1975

.I

Weather

Conferences
set Thursday ·

RIO GRANDE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL SAFETY PATROL - Left to right, first row,
are Cora Wolfe, Mary Hines, Matthew Withee, Mark Rees; second row, Steve Runyon,
Nancy Evans, Marc Shockey, Steve Thompson, Sl!rah Evans, and faculty advisor, Garry
Adkins.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis City Schools will
ho)d their annual ParentTeacher conferences . Thursday in all schools (Ga l!ia
Academy High School, Green
Elementary, Rio Grande
· Elementary , Clay
Elementary and Washington
Elementary ).
'
All parents of · Gallia
Academy students wishing a
conference time should call
446-3250 Guidance Office at

Plan to find all. Jtandicapped
children launched at seminar
NELSONV ILJ,E
Representatives of all 27
Southeastern Oh io sc hool
districts took the first step
last week toward development of a plan to identify all
handicapped children ages 021 in the region.
The represen tatives attended a day-lo ng work

session in Nelsonville
Wednesday sponsored by the
Southeastern Ohio Special
Educa t ion Reg i onal
Re sour ce Ce nter (SEOSERRC ).
SEO-SERRC Director
Rober t L. Weinfurtner
explained that each school
di stri ct in ·Ohio - and
throughout the country - is
responsible for development
of such an identification
~ystem in response to Public
Law 93-360, the omnibus
federal education law
enacted by Congress and
signed by Presiden t Ford in
\974 .
The SEO-SERRC project is
funded by Title Vl-B or P. L.
93-380 and provides special
educati on technical
Carrol K. Snowc!.!!n
assistance to the 27 school
24 Stale Sf .
districta In Athens, Gallia,
Gallipolis
Hocking, Jackson, Meigs,
Phone 446-4290
Monroe, Morgan , Perry,
Vinton ~ nd Washington
See him for all your family
Counties.
Insurance needs.
Weinfurlner explained that
the
SEO-SERRC project will
lik1 A ,,,., ..... M.
assist
participating school
Gaod NBighbor,
districts
in the development
Slltrl farm
of their handicapped children
b TbB!f
identification systems. Plans
S!Jte Farm Insurance Com pan ies
must be submitted for apHome Offices: Blocimlngton, Illinois
proval to the Ohio Depart.
p 7302
·ment of Education's Division

NeigHBOr

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the high school and schedule
a c~nferen c e with their
children's teacher or
teachers.
All pnrents of elementary
students have been, or will be
sent, a lime for their conference. If this time is not
satisfactory, please notify the
school and a time will be
arranged.
· All pupils, kindergarten
i
through 12, will not attend
I
school on Oct. 2.1. In addition, .
kindergarten pupils will not '
attend school on Oct. 24.
Conferences for working
parents will be arranged in
the evening by request of the
parent.
TO ATTEND REGIONAL MEETING - These three Meigs High School students will
Gallipolis City Schools
· attend the regional meeting of Vocational and Industrial Clubs of America to be held in
encourage every parent
Licking County on Oct. 25. In the center is the Meigs Chapter VICA queen, Cheryl Haning,
attend their child's parent.
who will compete on the regional level. On the left and right, r~spectively, are Trudy Hall
teacher CD!)ference.
and Debbie Drake who are delegates.

of Specia l Education by provide for th e least
December I, 1975.
restrictive educational
The
plans
contain setting.
provisions for systems to deal ' The local district coor'with three components:
dinators will mee t again
- Identification of. the November 3, in Nelsonville to ,
children who are suspected of review
the
proposed
being handicapped
assessment system.
Multi-factored
Coordinators attending the
educa tiona! assessment or October IS meeting were
diagnosis of those children Sally Feallock, Alexander
requiring such se;vices
Local ; David Roach, Athens .
-"- Placement of' children . City; Elizabeth Elmore,
into appropriate programs. Federal-Hocking Local ;
The
school district Sharon Clements, Trimble
represen tatives - or the Local;· Madge Blackwood
local district coordinators Nelsonville-York City; Jea~
received an overview of 93- Gardner, Gallia County.180 from Joe Todd, assistant Local; Kenton L. Adkins,
director of Ohio's Division of Gallipolis City; Harry
Special Education.
Westfall, Logan City; Alma
The SEO-SERRC staff then Lemon , Oak Hill-Union
presented elements of a Local ;. Pearl Perkins,
MIDDLEPORT - U. S.
proposed system to identify Wellston City; John Worth- Navy Seaman Recruit
all children who are ington , Jackson City; Randall K. Yates, son of
suspected of being handi- Martha Vennari, Meigs Mrs. Patricia Slaven, 625
capped.
Local; Tom Kelly, Eastern Oliver St., Middleport,
The local school district Local; Joyce Thoren, graduated from the
coordi nators were given Southern Local (Meigs); Tim Recr.ult Training Comopportunity to respond to the Haught, Monroe County;
mand, Great Lakes, Ill., on
proposed system In small William Harkins, Morgan Oct. 3. He was a mem"':r of
group meetings.
County-Local ; M,artin Jm- the State Flags Unit.
Weinfurtner . said a broscio, Northern Local·
Randy is a 1975 graduate of
proposed assessment or Gary L. Martin, Souther~ Meigs High Schoot. After a
diagnosis component will be Local (Perry ); Hal D. 15 day leave here visiting
relatives and friend's,
planned for school district Frazer, New Lexington Citv:
Randy will report to San
scrutiny by October 31, 1975, Pat Hurley , Crooksville
Diego, Calif., to attend
and a proposed placement Exempted Village ; Melva
system by November 14, 1975. Crabtree, Vinton Count.vRadioman A School.
Subsequently the entire Local: Iwana Simon, . Fort
plan will be presented to the . Frye, Frontier
Local
super! nten den Is of all the Districts; Frances A. Luce,
DIXON AN INTERN
school . districts in late :Warren Local; H. W. Cooper,
MARIETTA - Marietta '
November, 1975.
Wolfe Creek Local; Peg
If the superin tendents Stacy, Marietta City; and Bill College senior Roger Dixon of
RD Pomeroy has completed a
approve the plan it will be Brown, Belpre City."
summer
internship program
submitted to· the Division of
Other special education
in
coordination
with the
Special Educa lion.
personnel attending in adWeinfurtner told the local dition to the SEO-SERRC college's Edwy R. Brown
school district coordinators staff included: Mary Bacon, Department of Petroleum
·Umt in addition to the man- Meigs County; Ma r tha Engineering. Dixon, Meigs,
date to develop the iden- Bridgeman, Washington 1972, was one of 58 MC
tification system , 93-380 County; Howard Buckley, students .l'lho uarticioated in
specifies thai: due process Marietta ; Tom Davis, the-job-training"
procedures will be followed ; Washington County ; Lynn program in conjunction with
provisions should be made for Hungerford, Athens County, 20 of the nation's leading
multi-factored, non - and Jerry Smith, Perry petroleum companies. Dixon
was an intern with Conoco in
discriminatory testing, and County.
Corpus Christi, Texas.
placement systems should

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Mildred F. While was given

' PORTSMOUTH
Southern Ohio counties would
be the largest benefactors if
Transportation lm- ·
provements Bond Issue No. 3
is passed in November, according to .John P. . Irwin,
Executive Vice-Presiden t of
the Automobile Club of
Southern Ohio and a VicePresident of The Ohio AAA
Association.
Following a meeting with
Governor Rhodes, the Ohio
AAA Association Board of

Trustees told the Governor,
"In support of a balanced
transportation system in Ohio
and in recognition of.the need
to complete Ohio's Interstate
and Primary Highway
Systems and to maintain
Ohio's streets, highways and
bridges , The Ohio AAA
Association supports the
passage of the TransporU1tion Improvements
Bond Issue."
Irwin said the bond
packages would provide an

records four times on Sunday Records have fallen the last
morning and five times on five -Wednesdays in a row.
Wednesday evening during
Edw~rd Evans captains the
the last six weeks.
·
bus, while Earl McKinley
Last week, 51 rode the bus drives on Sunday morni ng
to the Wedn'esday evening and Mike Stewart drives on
program, which consists of a - Wednesday evening. Mike
group of every age. This Gerlach, Paul Cunningham,
helped raise the attendance and Colleen VanMeter work
to an all time Wednesday in the program, calling on
high of 131. or this number' 79 people each week. Cathy
were below high school age. Baker helps on Ure bus ..

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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and _Jack Shaffer; Bruce
Maynard
and
Cindy
Maynard ; Dorlene J. Hill and
Jimmy D. Hill and Lillie Mae
Sibley a~d Roy Sibley.
The following cases were
dismissed for want of
prosecution: Joyce Jones vs
Harold B. Jones; Debra
Louise Underwood vs John
Logan Underwood ; Ralph D.
Jones vs Shirley A. Jones;
Carol Buttrick vs Roger
Butlrick and J.anet Lynn
StidhamOvs Ronald ·Leslie
Stidham . .

Issue Four
is endorsed

SALE
Was $369.95 Family-sized color TV at a

Ellen · Coen and William

WE'D RATHER
DO IT OURSELVESI
Here a~ the Bob Evans Steak
House we cut our own steaks
and bake all of our pies a·nd
' rolls right in our kitchen :
We even grind our coffee •.
it's really fresh.

COLUMBUS - Members of
' the , Ohio Commission on
Aging have endorsed Issue
Four which could boost
elderly housing programs in
the state.
" The lack of suitable
housing for our senior
citizens Is one of the main
concerns of the Commission
on Aging," said Marlin Janis,.
executive director. "Through
Issue Four, the stale can
provide low . interest construction funds to build senior
citizen housing and nursing
homes. This could apply to
both low·i~come public
housing and also ·housing
sponsored·· by non-profit
private organizations for
those older peOple with just a
lillie more income."

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on their T-S.hirts ·and Briefs

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, chance of showers
Wednesday or Thursday
and fair Friday, Highs In
70s and lows In the 50s
Wednesday, cooling off by
Friday to highs In 50 and
lows in tOs.

OEA will
oppose
. 4
proposals

iNews. . .-in Briefs\1
By United Press lnlernaliODal
BEIRUT, · Lebanon - Omani Infantry, artillery and
warplanes, backed by Iranian ground and naval forces, swept
along the Glilf of Aden's oil-rich coast today in a campaign ID
end a decade of Marxl8t guerrllli war.
Reports from the Oman!' capital of Muscat said troops
backing Sultan Qaboos bin ,SaJd were battllng rebels ill
mountainous Oman as well as across the border in Southern
Yemen.
The reporta sal~ the left--wing guerrillas of the Popular
Front for the Libel'atlon of Oman appeared to be retreating in
the face of the Om ani and Iranian offensive.

BOSTON ( UPI) - Rain
still leU today oa Fenway
Park where the twice-post·
poned slxth game ·of the
world series between the
Boston Red Sox and the
{;lnclnnatl
Reds
is
scheduled for 8:30 p.m.
EDT. ·
The National Weather
Service predicted Intermittent rain throughout
'the day, with an 80 per cent
cha,nce of rain In the early
evening. Nearly three
!nches of rain have fallen
on the field since Friday.
No early decision on
whether to play the game
wsa expected.

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POMER~Y

GNP measures the dollar
value of_all the production of
farms, factories, mines and
utilities and the services of
government employes,
doctors, bank tellers, insurance salesmen, dry
cleaners and other nonproduction workers.
Contributing to the second
consecutive quarthly rise in
GNP was an easing In the
inflation rate which enabled
consumers and illvestors to
get more for their money.
· The inflation rate was estimated at 5 per cent in the
third quarter, down from 5.1
per cent In the second quarter
and 9 per cent ill the first
quarter .
When Inflation Is added,
Commerce said the GNP
increased 16.7 per cent to

Dispatch
endorses
proposals
.

Directors
of
the
Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council (SEORC) voted
today to endorse Issues 2, 3, 4,
and 5·on the Nov. 4 ballot.
The SEORC's "board of
directors, meeting in
Pomeroy, also voted to affiliate with the National
Highway Users Federation,
in a new alliance with the
former Southeast~rn Ohio
Highway Users Conference
t SEOHUC) . The SEOHUC
will become the Regional
Development Council's highway cominlttee.
The director~ voted
unanimously to endorse the
LOCAL TEMPS
The tempera lure In
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Monday was 52 degrees
under extrem ely cloudy
skies.

Western Reserve Telephone
Co. updates calling procedures

Pomeroy-Mason
bn•dge·opened
for traffic

received in drive
thus far--Hubbard

$1.498 trillion. It was the
biggest increase since the
18.9 per cent rise in the first
quarter of 1951 during the
Korean War.
CollUllerce said consumers
increased spending $9.2
billion to $548.9 billion in the
third quarter. Since persona I
income declined at an annual
rate of $5 a person to $5,045,
the increased spending earne
from personal savings and
employment gains. •
Personal savings dipped
from 10.6 per cent of
disposable personal income
in the second quarter to 7.7
per cent ill the third quarter.
But unemployment fell
from a second quarter
average of 8.9 per cent of the .
workforce to about 8.3 per
cent in the third quarter.

Council likes Rhodes Issues
ballot proposals . Carl
Dahlberg, executive
secretary of the SEORC, said
it is the board'&amp; feeling that
the ballot proposals, "have
something to offer the people
of southeastern Ohio. We
need the kinds of development thaf this program offers ."

The four state issues
would:
- Provide tax incentives
for industries to locate or
expand in Ohio, particularly
in areas such as rural
south eastern Ohio where
industry is scarce and
unemployment widespread.
- Allow the issuance of up
to $1.75 billion in bonds to
upgrade - the state's transportation systems.
- Permit the 'state and

local governments to help
finance programs with
private
builders
and
developers to construct
housing for working families,
the elderly, health care and
extended nursing care.
- Authonze the issuance of
up to $2.75 billion in bonds to
create funds for returning to
the state's cities and villages
in the form of grants to be
used for locally - determined
com munity improvement
• projects.
Bob Evans, president of the
SEORC, said the council is
especially concerned about
helping the stale to obtain
funds to finance several highway projects in the 12-county
SEORC area that have been
set back by a shortage of
state money to match federal

appropriations. In the
regard, the merger of the
SEOHUC and the SEORC,
Evans said, wiD lend added
impetus to the SEORC's long.
time drive to obtain both neiV
regional highway cqnstruction
and
needed
maintenance on existing
rQads.
· The SEORC is the nation's
oldest regional development
orga nization , having bee n
foWJded in the early 1940s.
The SEOHUC was organized
only two years ago.
Dahlberg said the new
highway committee of the
SEORC will be headed by G.
Kenner Bush, editor and
publisher of the Athens
Messenger,
who
was
chairman of the SEOHUC
prior to the merger.

remainder of this fiscal year,
and a totill of $724 million
over three years. The
spending cuts must be approved by the Emergency
Financial Control Board,
wblch has the authority to
revise them.
The board was to begin Its
meeting this afternoon.
Reame also was to testify on
Ule city's financial !iroblems
before the House Subcommittee on Economic
Stabilization in Washington.
Victor Gotbaum, head of
the largest city employes
Wlion and chalnnan of a
coalition or the municipal
WJions, said Sunday he would
call a general strike If a
three-year wage freeze was

Talks resume
amid laughs

Imposed.
"If tbey are able to enforce.
a three-year free1:e it will
effectively kill collective
bargaining. Obviously we
don't want that," Gotbaum
said.
Default by the city, the
mayor said SWldily, wolild
,have "a catastrophic effect,
nationally
and
in·
ternatlonally," and tbe effect
on municipal services would
be devastating.
New York was about to
default on its debts Friday
when the city teacbers' union,
reversing its vote of the day
before, decided to use $150
million in pension funds to
buy city notes and support the
state aid plan.
Treasury Secretary
William Sin10n praised the
mayor Sunday , saying,
"Mayor Beame and those
men have done a tremendous
job in making a lot of tough
political decisions. And they
are tough - things that are
going to put "people out of
work in their .city."
But Simon said President
Ford remains opposed to
federal assistance for New
York, "because he feels, and
1 believe rightfully so, that
the solution to the problem up
there rests there for (city
officials ) to solve. And they
have the ability to solve
them ."

could show his wife' Nancy'
Peking 's Museum of Ancient
Art.
Kissinger then went back to
the table for a second session
with Vice Premier Teng
Hslaoping.
Aspokesman for Kissinger
said the talks were "cordial
and frank," but described
them only as a ''review or the
international situation ."
The Chinese staged their Squad answers
most popular modern opera ,
"The Azalea MoWltain," for 2 calls s,mday
the Kissingers this evening.
The opera tells the story of
T h e Mi d d I e p o r t
peasant revolutionaries faced Emergency Squad answered
with the choice of saving their two calls Sunday .
hideout or a grandmother.
Af 2: 4~ p.m . the squadwos
The Initial meeting opened called to 161 Pearl St., for
with Kissinger and Teng Henry Milliron who was ill.
laugblng off a dinner dispute He was taken to Veterans
over detente.
,,
Memorial Hospital where he
"It doesn't mattter even If was admitted.
we quarrel a ~it, " Teng said,
At9:34 p.m ., the squad W!IS
as he sat amid crystal to Route 7 below Middleport
chandeliers, porcelain · for Steve Hawley, who was
spittoons and red velvet ill. He was also taken to t
·;-, Veterans Mcmori~l Hospital.
carpeting.
I

\

'

)

..

,

NY must tighten belt

By United Press In·
teruatlonal
With imminent default
COOLVILLE
Sub- that all four party users will averted, a three-year
scribers of the Western still be required to giv.e their austerity plan to save $724
million is the next hurdle for
Reserve Telephone Co. in- number to an operator.
New York City to surmoWJt.
cluding Chester, 985,
The Western Reserve
The city says the buctgetPITTSBl)RGH - A 29-YEAR-OLD MAN, who perched on
Coolville, 667, Little Hocking, Telephone Co. is an affiliate
trinuning,
ordered by a state
a 15th-floor ledge of a downtown hotel for eight hours and
989, and Reedsville, 378, of
the
Midcontinent
board
that
bas authority over
threatened to jump 200 feet to the gr~Wld, continued to undergo
exchanges who have , one or Telephone Service 'Corp.,
the city's fiscal affairs, could
psychiatric examination today lp. a hospital.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The two party service will no serving over 727,000 subresult in the firing of up to
The would-be jumper, Richard DeVIto, 29, formerly of Columbus DispatCh endorsed longer have to "give their scribers in 12 states.
8,000more
workers this year,
Falnnont, W.Va., was pulled to safety by a priest.
the four constitutional number to ·an operator on
and
a
possible
wage freez~
The incident occurred Saturday at the William Penn Hotel amendment proposals on the long distance calls.
for three years. Mantclpal
where DeVIto has been a resident.
Beginning Oct. 21 , these
Nov. 4 ballot brought about
workers have warned a
will
be
by Gov. James A. Rhodes, numbers
general strike may be called
WASHINGTON - THEl SECRET SERVICE Is trying to saying ·they . present a automatically identified by
If
wages are frozen.
Improve Its protection of President Ford, but there Is no program "for all citizens". new equipment installed in
Mayor
Abraham Beame
evidence It has been negligent in recent incidenta that en·
"The Dispatch believes the these e~c hanges, George
has
prepared
budget
dangered him, says Treasury Secretary William E. Simon. issues carry, the spark which Shaffer, southern district
proposals
that
wolild
save
Simon, interviewed SWJday on ABC's Issues and Answers, will ignite a program ' to manager, announced today.
$200
'l!illion
during
the
was asked particularly about Ford's auto accident last week in Improve the Ohio economy."
Updating these exchanges
CHARLESTON, W. Va .,
Hartford, Conn.
.
the paper said Ill an editorial. required an expenditure of (UP!) - The bridge spanning
Preliminary indications from an Investigation are that
"It will be an Investment by $47,000 according to Mr. the Ohio River between
there was no negligence by the Secreet Service, but tliat "local Ohioans for the benefits of Shaffer. He further stated Mason, W. Va. and Pomeroy,
pollee authorities, as they subsequently explained on Ohioans," It read. "Certainly
Ohio, which has been closed
television, were negligent in guarding that particular · in- It follows that cranking up the
since Aug . I for repairs, was
tersection," Simon said.
economy would result in
reopened today.
more jobs, fewer people on
The Highways Department
CLEVELAND"- CHESSIE SYSTEM CHAIRMAN and relief and less crime. These
said the bridge will probably
O!lef Executive Officer Hays T. Watkins emerged in nearly are the goals of the
be · closed again for more
PEKING .(UPI)
total control of the railway giant over the weekend with the program."
repairs around March 15
resignation of Chessle President John W. Hanifill.
The four Issues would
when favorable weather Secretary of S~te Henry
Kissinger and Chilla's day-toHanifin and Watkins had disagreed over Chessle's offer to provide tax incentives or
returns.
day
ruler reviewed the in·
buy up a major portion of the bankrUpt Erie-Lackawanna abatements to encourage
The Ohio Department of
Four calls were answered
ternatlonal
situation today in
Railroad, insiders said. There were also personality dH· industry to locate In Oblo and
Highways has · been doing
the1r first meeting In the
ferences that began to -show up two years ago when Cyrus S. •Ohio Industry to expand, a over the weekend liy the" deck work on the bridge.
ornate Great Hall of tbe
Eaton was ousted from the chaimlllllllbip,
$1.75 blllion transportation Pomeroy emergency squad.
At
9:02p.m.
Saturday
the
People.
i&gt;'"Ogram. financed by a 9- ·
Kissinger attended the
WASHINGTON - THE DIRECTOR of the congressional lOtbs of a cent Increase per squad went to the Evelyn
DRIVER CITED
talks for an hour and 40
(Contmueu "" page JO)
gallon of gasoline, spur Landers home on Union
Two
vehicles
were minutes, then knocked off for
housing
industry
by Avenue for Penny Landers
who
was
having
difficulty
damaged
and
a
driver
was lunch and an elltra hour so he
providing lowillterest loans
$800
breathing.
She
was
taken
to
cited
to
Pomeroy
Mayor
's
through financial Institutions,
the
Holzer
Medical
Center.
at
Court
as
the
result
of
an
and a $2.75 billion program,
fWlded by a 7-!0lhs of one per 5:27a.m. Sunday, the squad accident 'on Wright St. ' in
cent In the state sales tax, for was called to 840 East Main Pomeroy at 1:45 a. m. SunSYRACUSE
Oris funds to defray costs on the development of capital im· for Freda Laudermilt who day .
Pomeroy pollee said a car
Hubbard, a member of the new emergency truck.
provements in local com- was Ill. She was taken to
SQUAD CALLED
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
driven
by Mark Oiler, 20,
Syracuse
Fire
and
Hubbard suggested that mlUlltles.
The Racine ER squad w&amp;s
Emergency Department and residents who wish to con"The Rlrodes program has ~ where she was lreated and Pomeroy, was backing into·
called
Saturday at 3:30p.m.
released.
Wright St. from -Mulberry
treasurer, repotted today tribute fllrul&amp;. IJiay send them viable balance, a potential
for
Debra
Cleland, Racine , a
At 8:40 p.m. sunday, the Ave. The car backed Into the
that $800 has been collected in care ~t the emergency , electricity to brighten . the
medical
patient
who was
from residents or Syracuse squad, to him, or Mary state's economy · via in- squad went East Main St, for yard of the Don Thomas
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
Pickens, Syracuse.
dustrial growth," the ·Mrs. Ernest Rea who had home and struck the parked
thl\8 far .
Hospital
and
Sunday
at 5:55
Hubbard explained that ' Hubbard also pointed out editorial read. "A resurgent fallen . She was . taken to station wagon of the Thomas
there Is a definite lack of ·that men of the vlllage are economy would aid the Vetera ns Memorial Hospital .family. Medium damages .P- m. to Letart Falls for Eric
Interest In the fire and urged to join and become unemployed, the small and at 8: i9 p.m. Sunday, the were Incurred to the Thomas Lawson, who had sustained
ell)Crgency squad as far as active members of the fire businessman, all levels of squad went. to Welshtown for vehicle and minor to the Oiler an eye injury. He was also
recruiting members and department
government., industry, all Clarence Imboden who car. Oiler was cited on a no ~ taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
refused treatment.
operator's license charge.
helping solicit the village ror
citizens. ·
:::::~::::::::.:::.:::~:: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::.~::~;:;:;: ;: ;.

Over Weekend

So, Hurry! You certainly .
will not want to miss this
Reg. 3 for $4.99
Limited sale on Hanes' comfortable
BRIEFS
'
durable, shrink-resistant Blue Label 20% OFF SALE
Blend Underwear.
·

ELBERFELDS IN

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

By LEONARD CURRY ~ · had been falling steadily
since the 1973 Arab oil emUPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON (UP!) - bargo.
The real GNP was
The national economy
estimated
at $1104.6 billion at
meas!D'ed by the real Gross
the
end
of
the
July-Seplember
National Product increased
quarter,
up
from
$783.6 billion
11.2 per cent in the third
in
the
second
quarter
.
quarter for the fastest growth
The 11.2 per cent increase
rate in more than 20 years,
the Commerce Department was the highest quarterly rise
since the 12.4 per cent gain in
said today.
·
The GNP gains occurred the frrst quarter of 1955.
primarily because conCommerce said private insumers dipped into their
vestment
increased $14.2
: savings to buy durables like
billion to $94.9 billion. That
cars and home appliances,
was much lower than the
while wealthy Americans and
business increased ·in- $120.5 billion annual rate at
vestment spending by a the end of 1974, but still
marked the first rise in two
stunning 18 per cent.
Consumers had been yea rs, an indication that
saving ·_at unusually high production and job . oprates smce last October . portunites will begin to grow
Private seCtor investment rather than shrink.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Education Association
said today It would oppose
Gov. James A. Rlrodes' four
bond proposals because
Jlllblic education would be the
"big loser" If the proposals
are approved.
The OEA said the Issues
would reduce local and state
tax revenues from Industry;
wolild force local and state
illcreases on other taxpayers
and would divert money from
the state general !WJd to pay .
off the proposed bond
issues.
''A reduction in state or
local tax revenues wolild
seriously weaken the ability
to finance Ohio schoolS," said
an OEA resolution.
"State fWlds needed to pay
off the proposed bonded indebtedness could divert the
equivalent of 40 per cent of
the Ohio Income tax
revenue-money that should
be used to help public .school
financing," the OEA said.
"Individually these Issues
represent an unwise approach to tbe serious
problems facing this state,"
the OEA said. "Collectively
Ure Issues could have a
disastrous eltect on Oblo's
financial stability with public
education a big loser."
The OEA also said, "there
.is no substantiation for the
wild claims about the number
of jobs and new industry that
are supposed to be produced
from these Issues."

makes 4 nms

20% OFF
SALE

This Offer good from October 19 to
October 31,1975. •

TIUS THREE wheeled "Super Tryke" is beillg assembled at Meigs High School for a
double amputee who resides in Meigs County. The vehicle arrived in many parts and is
being assembled free of charge by some of the aulD mechanic students of Richard Coleman,
faculty member . From the left are Brei Wyatt, Richard Coleman and Mike Kauff. Another
class member, Ralph Haning, has been active on the project, but was not present for the
picture.

GNP soars for highest
gain in over 20 years

Pomeroy squad·

Rea. 3 for

PRICE 15'

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::·

WASIHNGTON - WITH OIL CONTROLS due to expire
Nov. 15, the 94th Congress still has not been able to agree on a
national energy policy or deal with expected winter shortage or
natural gas.
Senate- House conferees resume negotiations today on an
energy package and Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wasb., says he
Is 95 per cent sure Congress will adopt an energy policy before
controls are ended.

1st time ever!

enttne

~VO~L~.X~
XV~II~~
NO~.~
13~
2 -~~~~
PO~M~
ER~OY~:M__ID~D~LE_PO_R~T~,O
__H~IO~~~~~~~~M~
ON~
DAY. ·oCTOBER 20,.1975

Omrch's bus adds greatly to · attendance
MIDDLEPORT - Attendance records are being
broken at !he Middleport
Church of Christ since a bus
ministry began in August.
The biggest difference is in
the Youth Programs on
Wednesday evenings: Little
Gliders. Whirlybirds, Jet
Cadets, and Alpha Teens.
Minister and Bus Director
George Glaze reports that
riders on the bus have broken

•

Devoted 1'o The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Areil

average of $171 per· capita for
transportation improvements
in Ohio, however, in the
Appalachi an co unties
spending would be $434 per
capita. $1.75 billion would be
provided from the sa le· of
bonds for tran spor tation
improvements and the bonds
would be repaid over a thirtyyear period fr om the
proceeds of nine- tenths cent
per gallon Increase in the
gasoline tax .

a divorce from John R. Henry Coen; Teresa Shaffer

White. They were married
Feb. 23, 1957 and have six
children.
William S. Easterling was
awarded a divorce from
Betty S. Easterling. They
were married Jan. 24, 1969
and have two children.
The following marriages
were dissolved : Donald
Robert Berry and Melody
Ann Berry; Jerry Lee Flack
and Patricia Flack; Rulli

at y

Southern co1mties favored

Judge ends ll marriages in_G-alli3
GALLIPOLIS - It was
"End, Marriage Day" here
Thursday as Common Pleas
Court Judge Ronald R.
Calhoun granted four
divorces, dissolved seven
others and threw five other
divorce petitions out of court.
Divorces granted on
grounds of gross neglect or
duty and extreme cruelty
were Beverly Byus from John
R. Byus. They were married
Aug. 8, 1971 and have one
child.

•

Fair tonight. Lows in low
40_s. Sunny and warmer
TUesday. Highs in upper 60s .
Probability of rain 60 per cent
today, 10 per cent tonight and
near zero Tuesday .

A thought for the day
American author Albert
Payscm Terh\me said, "Win
without boasting, l011e without
excuse."

�,.
'
3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday,Oct 20, 1975

2 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday . Oct. 20. 1975

De~ocrats
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes challenged
the Deroocratic-controlled
General Assembly again last
week with a pa1r of vetoes.
Each one was basically
different in nature Yet the
final outcome on eacb one
could have a profound effect

Ohio politics
on e~ecutive powers m Ohio
government.
Rhodes disapproved one
section of a b1ll settmg up a
state public defender to
provtde legal counsel to those
who cannot afford it.
The vetoed section would
have allowed the public
defender to pursue any
remedy "he decides Is in the
interest of justice."
Such broad language
would, In the governor's
view, have given the public
defender carte blanche to
make appeals, whether
necessary or warranted, at
the taxpayers' expense.
Under the Ohio Con·
stitution, a governor is
allowed to make a partial
veto only in an appropriations
bill.
True, the publlc defender
bill appropriates money to set
up the new agency. But it
would seem any item veto
ought to be restricted to the
money itsell and not to a
section dealing wlth powers
of the public defender.
If those powers ultimately
cost the state money, the
legislature must appropriate
it. The governor could then
exercise his item veto.
This point' already is being
tested in the Ohio Supreme
Court in legislation changing
the state school subsidy formula . Rhodes made a
number of item vetoes m that
bill. Although It contained no
money, he reasoned the
provisions would ultimately

challenged twice by Rhodes vetos

necessary workload on the
require flUids
Gen"
eral Assembly .
A court ruhng 1n the
- Force the legislature to
governor 's favor could
strengthen the hand of the
executive branch m vetomg
legislation.
The second bill, vetoed
entirely by Rhodes, would
have allowed the General
Assembly to pass on agency
rules, even before they went
into effect.
Under current law, the
General Assembly can d1rect
agencles through legislation
or challenge agency rules
once they are m effect The
blli would have given the
lawmakers direct input into
rulemaking.
Rhodes' veto flew squarely
m the face of legislative will
on the subject. The bill had
cleared the House 86 to 1 and
the Senate by 24 to 7.
An override seems a
distinct possibility, since only
60 votes are needed in the
House and 20 in the Senate.
"The Constitution clearly
states that the legislature and
only the legislature shall
make the laws in Ohio," said
Rep. Thomas P. Gilmartm,
DYoungstown, the chief
sponsor, In urging an
override.
"These agencies have not
only abused this authority,"
Gilmartin continued. "They
have In many cases nullified
the Ohio Revised Code by
passing rules that do exactly
the opposite of the provisions
of law."
In a lengthy and well·
documented veto message,
Rhodes made a number ot
formldable points.
He said the U.S. Supreme
Court already has ruled such
a law would give a legislature
unwarranted administrative
powers.
The governor also said the
legislative
review
of
proposed rules would:
- Require costly and time·
(First of Three
consuming duplicate
related columns)
hearings and place an unWASHIN GTON - For

h1re outside consultants to
gain the techrucal expertise
needed to pass judgment on

could affect workmen 's comthe admm1strallve rules.
- cause delays in the lm- pen sa ti on benefits,
plementatipn of rules which emergency fuel supphes and
rates, collectiOn of property
taxes, coni r a c t s for inner
city rehabilitation, and state
employe travel pay and
expenses.
Rhodes has shrewdly
touched on some sensitive
areas to motivate the
lawmakers to sustain hiS
veto- money, Jobs, taxes ,
energy, labo~ benefits, urban
renewal and state employes.
If overridden, the governor
may be able to score some
points wlth heavy constituenCies- the taxpayers , the
jobless, organized labor, the
poor and state workers.
It will be mterestmg to see
which wins out, legislative
pcide or the thirst for votes,
as the ruMing battle continues for legislative and
executive powers.

"Look out, it may be catching!"

fhe Almanac
By United Press International
Today IS Monday, Oct 20,
the 293rd day of 1975with 72 to
follow.
The moon is full.
The morning stars are

Hardened arteries and brain disease
so,llum salt. There are a
DEAR READER - No,
variety of disorders that
acid neutralized coffee Is not occur If one is low on
decaffeinated. If a coffee is
potassmm
decaffeinated it will say so
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 hope
specifically. I agree that it is
you
can clear up this matter
often hard to tell the dlf.
on nutri lion
ference between some brands
My ne1ghbor claims mtlk
of decaffelna ted coffee and
caused her teeth to abscess
regular coffee as far as taste and decay, therefore she will
is concerned. If you like 1t
not give her grandsons mtlk
perked you can perk it the
while they are with her (three
way you suggested.
weeks) . I gave them milk at
If you want more inmy house, and they couldn't
formation on coffee wnte to
get enough and that's when
me in care of this newspaper,
she told me it was wrong.
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Slation, New York, NY 10019. Instead of milk she gives
them water or juice. She says
Send 50 cents, a long,
her doctor says skim milk Is
stamped, self-addressed
bad because of the high
envelope, and ask for The
carbohydrate content - •but
Health Letter number 1-1,
to drink the cream dtluted
Coffee, Tea, Cola , Cocoa.
w1th water
Yes, all fruits contain
The boys aged 2 and 6 live
po tassium . You , need
in a town many miles from
potassium for normal funchere and ap pea r to be
tion of your cells. The prinhealthy, normal children
Cipal salt In your cells Is a without allergies. I don 't
potassi um salt while the
know what they get at home.
prlnc1pai salt In your blood
Please straighten me out .on
and outside the cells 1s
this matter.
DEAR REA~ER - Your
neighbor means well, but she
has been given the wrong
information . M1lk does not
cause abscessed teeth or
dental decay. On the contrary , good experiments in
dogs have shown that a
calcium deficient diet leads
to loose teeth because
calciJIIR 1s lost from the bone
around the root of the tooth.
Then gum disease (pyorrhea)
with small abscesses and
eventually loss of Iee th
develops. By returning the
dogs to a good diet with lots of
calcium the dental problem
cleared up.
Milk is our main source of
calcium, and certain ly
growmg children w1 th a
growmg skeleton need lots of
calci um . There is no
significa nt amount . of
calcium in fruit Juice, and
some hard water has a little
but not nearly the amount
needed. Cream ts low m
calcium compat·ed to milk,
since cream is supposed to be
mostly fat separated from the
rest of the milk It will not
¢) lf15b;NU. llle ~~
replace milk in terms of
eithe r good protein or
"I'd like to retlfe, like Frank Sinatra , and earn a
calciwn . I hope these boys
little money working once in a while like he's
ge lling plenty or milk at
are
domgl"

By Lawrence E. 4mb. M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Since
so many times coffee Is
eliminated fr om a per&amp;on's
d1et for varwus reasons ,
please ,answer this. Is "acid
neut ralized" considered
"decaffeinated'" Also, If a
person IS sold on brewed
coffee, can't you put instant
decaffeinated coffee into a
coffee pot just as with regular
ground, and perk It (using
measurements on instant
coffee labels) ? I understand
one can hardly tell the difference from fresh brewed
coffee.
Also, I do not understand
the need for potassium . What
foods furnish it? One doctor
who lets his maternity
patien ts use fluid pills
prescnbcs also !bat they eat
a banana a day to provide
potassium . You suggested
orange juice: Sounds as If the
fruits may all have some
measure of this - true or
false?

Berrys World

hunw

•

A Chronicle of America

'Maddest Idea':
Samuel Chase, a delegate to
the Conti nent al Congress
fro m Ma ryland "II IS the
maddest 1dea m the world ,
to th1rlk of bu1 ldmg an
Ameman fleet We sh ould
mortgage the whol e con·
tment "

.

more than 50 years the In·
ternatlonal Cnmlnal Pohce
OrganizatiOn, Interpol, has
categomed itself as a btg
pohce force with little pollee
power Spokesmen msist
Interpol is like a private
de'tecllve collec!tve with units
m 120 member nations, and
whose authority does not go
beyond the gathering and
passing on of tnformallon between
various
police
jurisdictiOns.
Thus has any question of
In terpol's potential for abuse
been soundly denied by In·
terpol officers; 11 can not
arrest, it can not extradite, 11
1s "merely a condwt for information dissemination."
In fact tt is more more than
this. G1ven Its ab1hty to
pursue mvesllgatwns far
beyond the borders of normal
legal authority, and giv~n
also Its 1solallon from the
official responsibilities and
limitations of state law en·
forcement, Interpol is tn 1ts
own way the most powerful
and far-reaching police
agercy tn the world.
One distressing example
should Illustrate the pomt.
Enter Mohammed Sami, an
mternational c1vil servant
from Afghamslan, working
under Un ited Nallons
oversight and living in
Washington. Samt has flied
su1 t a~amst Interpol for $3
million, charging the United
States branch with having
recklessly and Illegally
forced his arrest, detention
and humiliation last summer.
Sami, it should be noted,
and as will be shown, IS an
embittered man, thus his
comments on Interpol should
obviously be read in that
light But the facts of his
clash with Interpol USA,
bemg heavily documented,
are for the most part not in
dispute. Only the courts can
determine if he deserves
compensation for
his
argument with authorities,
but clearly his complaint
deserves airing.
As Sami says it, and
documents verify, he was
granted a d1vorce from his
American w1fe In 1974, and at
that time given custody of his
two children by a Maryland
judge. "My wife, however,
wasn 't satisfied. She took the
children and moved to
Florida. I was allowed to visit
the children, but only occaswnally and with guards
present. Last &gt;pring, on a
vistt, I got fed up with the
guards and decided to take
the children on vacation; so
when we· were alone we
slipped away "
Sami's decision to take the
kids on\ ho '•day, !U'wtse at
best, was used by his former
wife as - grounds for the

'

"'

-By Ros~ Mackenzie &amp; Jefl MacNelly /10 1975, Unlled Fea ture Syndicate

1 ""

L..-..,..----------------....1•"
...'

Venus, Mars, Mercury and
Saturn
The evemng star is Juptter.
Those born on this day are
under the s1gn of Libra .
American educator John
Dewey was born Oct. 20, 1859.
On Ibis day in history:
In 1918, Germany accepted
American Pres id e nt
Wdoodrow Wilson's terms to
end World War I.
In 1944, American troops
bega n a campaign to

recapture the island of Leyte
in the Philippines.
In 1964, Herbert Hoover,
31st president of the United
slates, dted at lbe age of 90.
In 1973, President Nixon
fired spec1al Watergate
Prosecutor Archibald Cox;
Attorney General Elliott
Rtchardson and deputy
Wtlli am Ru&lt;:kelshaus ,
refusmg to dismiss Cox, res•gned their posts.

"'

..

·•

'·
'"
"'
'"
•"
'·

'

Editorial comment,-

"'
"

·"''"
'

,_
'"

"
'

opinion, features

Interpol overlooks
a few basic rights

"

We Hold These Truths ...

....

TOM TIEDE

DR. LAMB

.•••

Perspective on Spain

"'

"'
The
curious
double
standard
the
democracies
of
Europe
for
some
reason
are
in
~ he habit of "'
issuance of a Florida arrest
warrant. And in the second e111ploying when it comes to judging !be behavior of socialist and non..soc1alist governments
l:'
week of May, Interpol en- has seldom been asglarmglyobvious as it has in the case of Apam of late.
The execution by the Franco government of five convicted terrorists, desptte appeals for .:.
tered the picture. No one is
cer ta1n how Interpol became mercy from everybody from the Pope to prime ministers and presidents, set off a wave of
mvolved, but 1ts nght of In· outrage lbroughout Europe. Diplomats were called home, economic sanctions were
threatened.
~
teres! is not in question. An
Wha't
barbansm
agrunst
those
whose
only
crime
has
been
to
blow
up,
shoot
and
otherwise
'
arrest warrant was issued for
dispatch
more
than
50
policemen
and
civilians
m
Spain
so
far
this
year.
The
only
people
Sam1, he was leaving the
country, and under terms of outraged by the murders themselves seemto be the Spaniards.
Francisco Franco, of course, is an old fool who either believes the Almighty lias suspended " '
Interpol's charter that's all
the
laws
of nature on his behalf or is too senile to realize that be Is prov1ding history with "'
the ipformation it needed to
another example of "after me, the deluge."
'"
!Jecome tnvolved .
' Tyrant that he may be, however, for the'ordinary Spaniard, life under Franco at his most "'
The extent of Interpol's
mvolvement, and
the despotic has been infinitely freer than that of the ordinary Russian under the absolute .. :.
totalitarianism of the Communist system at its most benevolent.
"
judgments used theretn ,
Yet in their zeal to see Europe rld of its last non-Communist dictatorship, Western leaders -;
however, are at 1ssue. Acare calling for a visitation of chaos upon Spain from whtch only the Communists will benefit. ··~·
cording to documents, InAs for the United states, it finds itself In somewhat the same awkward position it has been .,,,
terpol pursued Sanii, merely
In wtth regard to Portugal. l.Alases on U. S military bases m Spain, which may or may not be ""'
a fath er involved in a
vital to Western Europe's defense, have just been renegotiated.
'""
domestic Jangle, as if he were
But any expression of support by Washington for the Franco government, whether in the ~"
a heinous thug. Dozens of interests of our own global security or purely out of concern at the prospect of another people "
cables were sent to Interpol
going down the CommWiist tube, would immediately bring down the wrath of our home-grown ""
capitals m Europe, not humanitarians.
suggesti ng but ordering
Fortunately, the Portuguese so far have demonstrated a tenacious determination to win -~
Sami's arrest.
the kind of political freedom they have never really known. Thos one can still hope that when ''"
At several points the cables Spain's time of transition comes, and it IS comjng soon, the Spanish will also know what is best ""'
sounded as if they had for themselves despite the "help" pf their friends in the democracies.
·
""
originated in the U. S. State
Department, rather than In a
private pollee office . The
"USA will extradite," In""
terpol excessively assured in
The history of warfare, up until the nuclear era anyway, offers an abundance of examples ' ;'
an "urgent" cable to l{ome
of how every innovation in offensive weaponry hils eventually been countered by a develop- :.
on May 13, "please take
ment In defensive weaponry, and vice versa.
."'
immediate action to arrest
The same things is true of the war against crime. Acase in point is a nifty little Item called '
Sami."
the "Taser Pubhc Defender" which its maker, Taser System of Los Angeles, calls a nonlethal ""
Eventually Sami was
crime pcevention device for stopping attackers. Looking something Uke a flashllght, the device "''
arrested by German pollee
launches two small darts attached to batteries by 16-foot wires. The darts can penetrate l.j ""'
and detained three days,
Inches of clothing and deliver a 50,000-volt jolt that Is exceedingly painful and lncapacliatlrt6 " •
illegally, as it happened.
but not desdly. Or so the company says in its literature.
,.;
Interpol had insisted Sam!
As might have been predicted, however, in the first ' 'Wartime" use of the Taser Puh'lc
was a kidnaper, but lbere is Defender that has come to our attention, a young woman and her male companion walked Into ' ":
no extradition agreement foe a gas station in Miami where the woman smllingly zapped the attendant with the electronic '
that offense between West
dart gun and then helped her accomplice clean out the cash register. The attendant, who Jtue to ' " 1
Germany and America. the company's promtse was not killed, described it as "the worst pain I ever felt."
""
Moreover, even if there were,
To make the story complete, the Taser Public Defender was stolen from an ontce In ""
Sam!, because of h1s U. N. Miami. In fact, it was one of eight stolen - and not by anybody Interested in defending the ,v:
status, was entitled .to pubUc, you may be slii'C.
,~
diplomalle
consideratiOns he
·"
1
never received.
' In the end Sami's govern""
men t complained to the
I Ill/
American government and
' "t
For all the talk about "the lmper~al presidency" and the abuse of executive power, the fact ·
the State Department. never
contacted by Interpol during of the matter is that a presidentts to a startling degree at the mercy not only of Congress but of ·""
n
the chase, issued an apology a horde of invisible bureaucrats who are virtually Immune to executivedisctpline.
So says university professor and columnist John P. Roche, who bases the statement on his ·::
to Sami for his " illegal
·
deten!ton" and discomforts. experience as a speech writer and advisor to J.,yndon B. Johnson.
Harry Truman was right when he satd "the buck stops here." That ts, 1t Is the president's
Interpol now ref115es· to
diSCUSS the Sam! case, saying obligation to settle policy, From Inside, however, says Roche, "you rapidly learn that the real
such would violate his right to problem is to get Important decisions where they belong: on the desk in the Oval Office."
stopping the buck at the,top "dolls not call for displays of courage as much as It does for an :
prtvacy. That rlgh't, of
efficient
espionage apparatus to guarantee that key decisions are not being made by lnvlalbie '' :
course, was already violated
bureaucrats,
to make sure the buck does not stop someplace else."
:
when, as the biological father
The
armor
of
this
bureaucracy
Is
clvli
service
tenur.e,
provided
by
Congress
to
about
98
per
,
,
legally entitled to the custody
of his children, he was chased cent of the administrative establishment and originally considered a great reform designed to ·~:
half way,around the world by eliminate the spoils system. Roche discovered that he was one of only about700members of the _ ~:
.,
an Interpol claiming he was a thousands In the Johnson administration whom the President could sununarily fire,
The
real
battle
in
Washington,
he
claims,
is
not
between
the
administration
and
Congress.
kidnaper.
"How could they do it?" "It Is between the president and a secret alliance of the legislature and the bureaucracy, who ·-'1
'
Sam! asks now, shaking his share the common objective of cutting the president down."
It Is almost unposslble to exaggerate the ingenuity displayed by the bureaucracy )n ~.;:
head. "And tf they could do it
to me they' can do it to stonewalling a presidential policy, he says. Take the example of the supply of deacl~ poisons ·~~:
, ":
anyone. Who are these people retain~ by the CIA in defiance ofa presidential order.
How
could
the
president
have
found
out
about
it
?
The
CIA
director
didn't
tell
him.
By
_: :
that they can do such things
getting
one
of
the
mvtslble
men
down
about
five
layers
to
squeal
on
another
?
.,,
m the world?"
1
Actually, says Roche, most episodes of this sort surface because of a personal grudge ".",1
leacllnii lo an anonymous tip to a congressman or journaliat.
'
,'.~I
Watergate, he suggests, while it was an absurd, criminal extreme, was part of a process · ::
A thought for the day:
Herbert Hoover said, "Older that goes back to World War II In which presidents have been driven to Improvise techniques ;:;~
I
~ ~·
men declare war. But it is for control of the administration. .
.
Ironically,
in
his
effort
to
create
the
power
the
textbooks
say
he
had,
Richard
Nixon
set
In
:
~
youth that must fight and
motion
a
train
of
events
leading
to
contressional
predominance
Wlmatched
In
history.
·
..
,
d.le. "
li.Ul

A good idea, but •••

Even President no match

::I

'

'J

'

'

Turner's kick
sinks Browns

Pitchers changed for sixth game

By BILL MADDEN
Bowie Kuhn was not too
UPI SpOrts Writer
optimistic tomght's game
BOSTON (UP!) - It'll now could be played because of
be
Gary Nolan versus Luis the weather.
By l'RACY RINGOLSBY
Wlable to get the Broncos
UPI Sports Writer
going and Ram~y was called -Tiant in the stxth game of a
Kuhn, who caUed off game
DENVER (UP!) - Denver on to spark Denver with 12:45 World Series although six for the second straight
baseball Commissioner day Sundav, rescheduled it
Bronco placekicker Jim to play .
•
Turner says he is not a classic
Ramsey promptly directed
kicker. He's just a puncher Denver 57 yards with Jon
"I'm not a stylist," said Keyworth plunging over for
Turner. "I don't try to keep the game's flfst touchdown
my bead down, it's unnstural from a yard out to cut
but then I'm not a classic Cleveland's lead to 15-13.
kicker. I guess I am what is After Cockroft missed a 27·
called a puncher."
yard field goal to cap
Sunday afternoon, Turner, Cleveland's next possession,
who booted two field goals in Ramsey moved the Broncos
the first half, applied the from their own 20 to tlie three,
knockout punch to the Cleve- where Ross fumbled.
By RICK VAN SAN[
land Browns, booting a
And again, the veteran
CINCINNATI (UP!)
career-best 53-yd. field goal from North Texas State came
as lime ran out and gave the through in the final!: 43 when
WATERFORD - Coach "I'm dreaming," said rookie
turnover prone Bronco team • Cleveland punted to the Spike Berkhimer's Eastern Marvin Cobb clutching the
know I am."
a 11&gt;-15 VIctory over winless Bronco 32 and Ramsey Eagles won their fifth game game ball.
The astonished 22ryear-old
Cleveland.
moved the team to the this season here Saturday
Turner 's kick over- Cleveland 36 to set up Tur- romping host Waterford, 37-7. Cincinnati Bengals corThe Eagles 5-1-1 travel to nerback wasn't dreaming
shadowed the record«itlng ner's kick. On that drive,
efforts
of
Browns' Ramsey converted a fourh Southern Saturday nightman but he certainly gave t~
placekicker Don Cockroft, a and eight situation by Important SVAC encounter. Oskiand Raiders nightmares
native of nearby FoWitain, throwing 14 yards to Jack Ftve different players scored Sunday.
· Cobb, in for hl3 first series
Colo., who set a team record Dolbin and a fourth and four for the Eagles.
Scoring summary:' Don ofplaysfromscrlnunageasa
with five field goals and by running 10 yards.
connected on his first four
Cleveland coach Forrest Elchmger, four -yard run. professional, intercepted a
attempts to tie the NFL Gregg, whose team had Eichinger EP's. Joe Kuhn, Ken Stabler pass and dashed
consecutive field goal mark allowed an average 47 points six-yard run. E1chinger EP's. 52 yards for the gameof 16 set by Kansas City's Jan In losing its first four games, Kevm Barton, 10-yard pass winning touchdown in the
Stenerud In 1969
was frustrated after his team from Bob McClure. Eichinger unbeaten Bengals' 14-10
rainy-day thriller over the
Turner's kick came nearly recovered five Denver kick.
two minutes after Bronco fumbles and intercepted a
Mark Lawson, 11-yard run. Raiders.
"I couldn't believe It when 1
running back Oliver Ross, pass but was unable to win. E1chmger
k1ck
Ph1i
caught
it," the rookie out of
who fumbled twlce earlier
"We should have gone in LaComb, 65-yard pWII return.
Southern
California satd
and dropped a touchdown for scores twice when we had E1chmger kick.
recalling
how
he felt as ~
pass, fumbled at the the ball inside the five but we
By
16 6 14 1}-37 started his 52-yard run for the
Cleveland three.
only got field goals," satd Eastern
Waterford
0 0 0 7- 7 end zone that broke a 7-7 tie
"I still felt confident that Gregg.
late in the third quarter.
we'd get another chance,"
Bronco coach John Ralston
"Where 1s everybody?" the
said Bronco reserve quar- was relieved with the win
six-foot, 185 pounder remem·
terback Steve Ramsey. "I which put the Broncos m a lle BG stomps Kent;
bered thinking as he foWid
la'iew all we had to do was get for first place in the AFC
clear
sailing down the
!&amp; ball back and Jim has West with Oakland at 3-2.
Toledo wins big
Sidellne. " Isn't anybody
lieen looking super, so 1 was
"We haven't put together a
going to tackle me?"
cilnfldent he'd get it ln."
solid performance yet," said ~ United Press International
Ramsey's performance Ralsion . "And when you have
Becaus' no one could
Although the f1rst annual
was just as Important to the games Uke this, normally you Mid-American Conference tackle Cobb, the Bengals
Broncos' success as Turner's don't win. We will take thts football doubleheader drew IOOay enjoy a :;..o record, the
field goal. Starting quar- victory and run ."
only 11,107 fans Saturday best start in the eight-year
terback Charley Johnson was
night
in
Cleveland's history of the franchise.
It was the second straight
Municipal StadiUm , many
loss
for disappointing
went away convinced
Oskiand,
a pre-6C&amp;son Super
Bowling Green Is a serious
Bowl
favorite
which now has
contender for the MAC title
a
3-2
mark.
for the first time since 1!165.
It was appcoprlate that a
The Falcons unleashed a
savage ground attack to pass interception should win
the game on a rainy day that
The
Gallia
County (one of hts three ) set up a 21- smash Kent State 35-9 in the produced
eight
in·
Disciples Amateur football yard pass from Quarterback second game after Toledo terceptions- four against
team defeated the Meigs Bob Ratliff to speedy Larry snapped a five-game losmg each team.
Warriors SWiday 40-9 1n a Howell for another s1x points. streak in the opener with a 25But Cobb was the ooly man
real offensive battle. GalUa Cremeans' kick made it 31-9 7 decisiOn over winless to turn an Interception Into a
Western Michigan.
showing new strength on going into the final period
touchdown, and he wouldn't
In
the
tth
quarter,
Gallia
offense clicking off 505 totat
have done It had it not been
yards while Me1gs had 339. scored on&amp; 15 yard reverse by
for an Injury.
The Disciples team ran for George Curry, Cremeans
Tied 7·7 late in the third
347 yards, passed for 156 again splitting the upnghts
period with Stabler trying to
yards while Meigs ran for 212 for the perfect extra point
move the Raiders, veteran
yards and passed for 127 day making the score
Cincinnati cornerback Ken
SAN ANTbNIO, Tex. Riley suffered a minor Injury
Disciples 38-9 Meigs.
yards.
(UP!)
- Veteran Don
The
last
score
came
late
in
Meigs took an early lead on
and In came Cobb.
January
capped a 1975
the second play from the fourth quareter when
"!figured I might get in on
scrimmage on a M yard TO Meigs halfback Ron Quillen comeback Sunday with a a tackle or two," shrugged
pass from Paul Aikman to stepped back 1n the end zone sudden-death victory over Cobb, whose only previous
Chip Haggerty. Aikman's try to pass and was hit there by Larry Hinson for flrst'prize in play was on specialty teams.
for the extra point was wide Jack Parsons for the two the $125,000 Texas Open.
January tapped in an 18- "And! thought theymlght try
point safety making the final
making it 6-0 Meigs
to throw on me because I was
mch putt on the second hole of new .'~
The Disciples then took the score, Gallia Disciples 40,
the playoff to collect $26,000
ball on the kick at their own Warriors 9.
and
the championship of the
Gallia running ace, Keith
goal. Keith Sayre ran the kick
last
individual
tournament of
all the way for the TD. Orland Sayre, led all yardage with the season.
Cremeans' kick was good to 284 yards on 20 carries by
Hinson, of Dougiss, Ga.,
make the score 7-6 Gallla at way of ground. Bob Ratliff calmly curled In an uphiU
had 31 yards for Gallla on the
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
the end of the first stanza.
. putt of more than 30 feet oo'
FOOTBALL SCORES
ground,
and
George
Curry
Opening
the second
United Press fntern•tlcmal
the
18th
hole
to
tie
January
at
S1ture1av
quarter, Meigs ' Aikman had 22.
In the pass receptions the end of 72 holes at 13- Xen ia 3 Springboro 0
booted a 15-yard field goal to
under'i&gt;ar 275 over the par 72, Fai rborn Park Hill s 21
put Meigs in the lead 9-7. department, Fred Staley 7,038-yard Woodlake Golf Trotwood 0
tu! carawas Ceth 44 Malvern
Later Orland Cremeans ·completed ~ for 52 yards; Club Course. January had 0
booted a 42 yard field goal to Curry added 47 yards on one appeared to be the winner 0Tuscarawlls Val 70 Str asburg
put lhe Disciples back In front reception and Howell had 3 outright after outdistancing a JF Kennedy 22 Glenv il le 6
for 24 yards.
Cle John Adams 24 Cle East
10-9.'
tight field that saw 20 golfers H 1gh 6
For
Meigs,
the
leadmg
A few plays later, the
within three strokes of the Clev He ig hts 27 Parma 13
Falls 40 Rocky
Disciples speedy halfback gainer was Chip Hagerty In lead at one lime during the Olmstead
River 6
Keith Sayre, scampesed the air w1th 124 yards and last round.
Fairport 21 Beechwood 12
Kirtland 6 Richmond Heights
around the end for an 11 yard four completions; Ron
0
Quillen
109
yards
on
16
touchdown. The conversion
Cle Lutheran w 14 Hlghlend o
Hawkins
School
19
by Orland Cremeans made carries on the ground and
Ledgemont 0
Bruce
Harris
adding
another
THIS WEEK 'S
the score 17-9 Disciples.'
Plllsburgh Shadysid e 19
OHIO COLLEGE
Gilmour 14
In the third quarter, speedy 74 yards in 19 carries.
FOOTBALL
SCHEDULE
K Iski Prep •o Wesl Res
Team standings:
United Preu 1nternatlon11
Keith Sayre scampered
Acad~my 1&lt;4
Saturd1y
W L POP
Shadys ide. 20 Llnsty lnSIIlute
Wllouclied 7~ yards to payd.lrt
Ohio State ar Purdu e
IW Va.l 6
Galha
4010334
Miami at Bowling Green
making It 23-9 and "Big 0"
Canton Cath 13 Canton Leh Ohio Un iver sity a t Toledo
• 226294
man 6
added the extra point for 24-9. Meigs
Centra M ic higan at Kent Poland 2B Lincoln 12
Washington
044683
Sta te
·
A few plays later, a
Akron Buch te l 16 Akron East
Soulhw est Louisiana at 0
Disciples defensive InCi ncinnati
Akron S! Vln -St Merv 13
terception by John Frazier AIRPOR[ DECISION NEAR Dayton at McNeese St (La ) Warren W R 8
In)
West Bra!'lch 20 Liberty 0
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Youngstown St at Akron {n) Niles 21 Cle Col lnwood 6
Civil Aeronautics Board will As hland at Hi llsda le
Mansfield
Madhon
J.7
Baldw !n -Walla ce at Marlefla coshocton o
make a decision this week on
F ranklin ( Ind . ) at Heidelberg East L i verpool 28 DuBois
DEVOTED TO THE
the City of Columbus' request Musklngum at Denison
INTEREST OF
IPa I 1
Wooster: at Otterbein
ME.IGS·MASON AREA
for Wright Alrllnes to utillze CaJ)
Cle St lgr'latlu s loll Cle Rhodes
Ital
at
Ohio
Wesleyan
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL Don Scott Airfield here for
0
Wittenberg at Mount Un ion As htebule
E•ec. Ed.
Harbo r
20
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ke
nyon
at
Grove
Cltv
three-times-a-day commuter
AshtlbUII
Sl.
John
0
City Editor
Chic ago at Oberl 1n
33 Sou thington 0
PuDtlshed dolly excep1 airline flights to and from west Vlrg lnoo St. at Oh io Perry
Buffalo
N'lc hols 22 Unlv
Saturday by Tho Oh iOValley Cleveland.
North ern
·
School
1l
Publlshlng company, 111
'Wilmington at Manchester Cle Holy Nome 30 Padua 6
Court Sl ., Pomeroy , Oh !o
Wright began the service l ind I
Elrrla West 54 Margaretta o
•5769 Business Olflce Phone
Defiance at Aruterson (I nd . ) Co Ready 13 Col St. Charles
992 .2156. Editorial Phone 992 earlier this month after
B l uft ton at Ro se Hulman 13 tllel
2157 .
receiving CAB approval for l ind . I
Second clns poatage paid
Newark c,rh 10 Col Walkins
the flighllt this year. Wright, Tavlor {lnd) et Fmdlay
at Pomeroy, OhiO .
Memor
ial o
.
Ca rfleg le Melton at Case Hebron Lakewood 15 Licking
Netlonal
adve rt i si ng However, did not get a
Western
representative
ward .
Heights 0
'
Griffith company , Inc .. contract with Ohio State H iram at Be thany IW Va ) Logen
E'm 22 Lancaster
Botllnelll &amp; Gollaghor Dlv .. University which owns Don Allegheny (Pa . ) at John Fisher Coth
o
757 Third Ave. , New York,
Carrol!
'
He~llton
TownstJip
J-.
(n
l
denote!
night
game
N Y 10017 .
Scott field. Because of the
Olentano\1 0
Subacrlptlon ratta ·
Dtllvered by carrier where lack of a. contract, OSU ofavellable 75 cents per week, flctals asked Wright to stop
By Molor Route where
carrier
servlct
not
using the field or face legal
avallablt, Ont monlht. S3.2l action.
By mel! tn Oh Ia and vv Va.,
no Year 122 00 , Six
The airlines maintains the
onths, 'S11 lO ; Three
OFF ICE
:30 to
2 tci 5 (CLOSE
onths, 17 .00. Elsewhore airport is funded with federal
26 00 yeor , Six months money and Is a public liPid
AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT
13 .50 ; three monlhs, 17 lO.
ubscrlptlon price Includes
which can &gt;te used for comunday T i mes Sentinel
muter 8ervice.

.Eagles

wallop
foe 3 7-7

..

Meigs Warriors

January gets

Texas victory

w

·I

1

game bemg played Monday
night," Kuhn sa1d "It'll
depend mostly on the f1eld
conditiOn."
And.as the Red Sox Fenway
Park groundskeeper Joe
Mooney acknowledged, the

Cobb's 2 intercepts
kill Raiders, 14-10
"i

Disciples whip

for 8:30 p.m. EDT tonight.
But the rains wh1ch have
pelted thts ctly for three days
were not expected to cease
until just prior to game time.
"I'd have to say, I'm not
verv optimistic about the

Indeed, Oakland did·.
"We tried to work on
Cobb," revealed Raiders'
coach John Madden. And,
disclosed Stabler, "we were
taking a shot at Cobb."
So, Stabler tried to hit
speedster Cliff Branch, who
was faking Cobb, but the
rookie said he saw the timing
on the play was off.
"Branch had already made
his cut and the ball should
have been in the alf " said
Cobb. " But I looked at
'Stabler and he hadn't thrown
it yet.
"!saw it coming and I went
for the interception all the
way."
Admitted Branch, "The kid
(Cobb) recovered quick."
But Cobb didn't settle for
only one interception.
Early in the fourth quarter
he nabbed another Stabler
aenal m the end zone to
thwa~t an Oakland drive that
could have tied the game.
The Raiders did get a ~
yard field goal from ts-year,.,___ Blanda rru'dway
old """'ge
throu gh the final period to

come wtthm 14;-10, but a final
desperation dr1ve was halted
wtth44seconds remammg ~ ·
naturally, another pass mterception- this time by Jim
LeC~lf on the Cmcmnah 20.
Sa1d Ben~a~ Coach Paul
Brown, relishing the four
pass m.tercepll?ns, "Our
defense IS our prtde and JOY
now "
Bengals quarterback Ken
Anders?"· wh? thre~ a
careerh1gh four mtercephons
and htt only four on 19 pass
attempts on one of his worse
days ev~r, still looked on the
bright stde.
"The Bengals won on the
scoreboard," said Anderson,
managmg a faint smile, "so I
feel good."
Stabler was about on a par
with Anderson, connecting on
only eight of .24 passes ..
Madden SBid the Ra1ders
played better than m last
week's humiliating 42-10 loss
to Kansas C1ty, but still he
moaned about the second
straight defeat.
''Two 10 a row," he muttered. "It's tough to take."

Starr gets Pack
lst win in 1975
National Football League
Roundup
By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Writer
Bart Starr never had any
trouble beating the Dallas
Cowboys.
In seven games as a player,
Starr quarterbacked the
Green Bay Packers to six
victortes against
th~
Cowboys, including back4oback National Football
Lesgue championship games
in 1966 and 1967.
In the one year Starr came
back to the Packers as an
assistant coach to tutor the
quarterbacks- 1972 -Green
Bay handed Dallas ooe of just
four losses the Cowboys suf.
fered that year.
This year Starr returned as
head coach of Green Bay to
restore some of the gUtter he
pcovided as a player. But
through the first four games
of the season, the Packers
were winless and were outscored l!K-55.
Then Dallas popped up on
the Green Bay scheduleWidefeated and playing oo
their home field. So Starr dug
into his files and pulled out an
old script, the " Championship Game, 1967." That
was the game Starr directed
a last minute touchdown
drive and capped It by
sneaking into the end zone
from one yard out to give the
Pack a 21-17 victory.
He gave the script to John
Had!, his quarterback this
year, and told him to go to
work. And go to work Had.!
did, lowering the number of
unbeaten teams in the NFL to
three with a toucMown in the
last two minutes to give
Green Bay a 19-17 victory.
"The whole game typifies
Bart starr and his entire
staff," ~ad! said. " They
d.ldn 't blame anybody when
we IQ8t earlier. They stayed

with us. They said we were
doing the right thing . We beat
perhaps the best team in pro
football. It's going to give us a
lot of confidence."
Hadl passed 26 yards to
tight end Rich McGeorge
with I : ~2 remaining to give
the Packers their first victory
before a stunned sellout
crowd of 64,934 at Texas
stadium. The score was set
up by a Golden Richards
fumble of a Green Bay punt
at the Dallas 31.
"There was no way they
could beat us," added Dallas
tackle Rayfield Wright, "but
they did "
The Packers got a bonus in
the game from rookie kicker
Joe Danelo, who booted field
goals of 24 and 29 yards anfl
was responsible for Green
Bay's ~ halftime lead.
Danelo was Signed this
week to fill the shoes of twotime NFL scoring champion
Chester Marco!, who is out
with a pulled thigh muscle.
The Packers previously tried
to hide Marcel's absence with
lineman Dave Purelfory, but
found out accuracy means a
lot more than a strong leg.
The loss left Dallas at 4-1
but still atop the NFC
Eastern Division with
Washington was upset by
Houston 13-10.
In other games, Minnesota
beat Detroit 25-19, St Louis
topped Philadelphia 31-20,
Los Angeles spanked AUanla
22r7, San Francisco outscored
New Orleans 35-21, Pitts:
burgh crushed Chicago 34-3,
Cincinnati nipped Oakland 1410, Miaml smothered the New
York Jets 4~, New England
belted Baltimore 21-10,
Denver edged Cleveland 11&gt;- .
15, and Kansas City topped
San Diego 12-10.
The New York Gl8nts play
at Buffalo tonight.

TRY

rn

w

a:

::J
......

zw

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
OR A J STAEHLl

OR. FREEMAN MALTZ

AUACODE U4

POONE:

252-3181 252·84-tS
One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Parltats, Extractions,
X. Rays, Cleaning

many observers felt would be
more effective than Nolan 's
in the cozy quarters of
Fenway.
Anderson also confirmed
Nolan wiU now p1tch game six
no matter what, while team
ace Don Gullett will be held
back In the·event of a sevenlb
game.
Past weather delays in the
World Series mciude 1911
when rain postponed play six
dliys between the third and
fourth games. The old
Philadeiph 1a Athletics
defeated the former New
York Giants in six games in
that series.

field condttion will depend
mostly on when the ram
stops.
" U and when the rain
stops," Mooney srud, "We

would bring in helicopters to
help dry the field and get 1t
mto shape as we have done
tw1ce this year."
Meanwhile the late•! postponement caused both Reds'
Manager Sparky Anderson
and Red Sox Skipper Darrell
Johnson to alter the1r sixth
game pitching plans.
Johnson, obviOusly taking
the' stance that you can't save
your best pitcher for the
seventh game If there IS no
seventh game, flip-flopped
h1s onginal sixth game
designee Bill Lee With LUIS
Tiant, a tWo-tune winner
already this series.
Anderson in turn countered
by scratchmg sinkerball specialist Jack Billingham for
Gary Nolan - a decision that
d1d not sit lightly with
Billingham.
"I'm angered, shocked and
upset," said Billingham who
was looking forward to pitching what could be the
clincher for the Reds, leading
three games to two. "I pitched well here last week and
gave up only one earned run,
the other bemg the result of
George Foster losing his
footing on the wet grass in left
field ."
Anderson, although conceding his right-hander's
right to be miffed, defended
the decision to scratch
Billingham, whose style

Ara nixes
Cincinnati
job rumors

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) Retired Notre Dame football
coach Ara Parseghlan
squelched rumors this
weekend he would replace
Paul Brown at the helm of the
Cincinnati Bengals.
Parseghian, attending the
Miam1
of
Ohio-Ohio
University football game,
said he would have a publlc
announcement at the end of
the year whether he will
return to football.
Parseghian retired last
year after coaching the
Fighting Irish for 12 seasons.
He said he was mystified by
rumors he would replace
Brown as coach of the
Bengals.
"I'm absolutely baffied and
mystified by that report," he
said. "No truth in it. I don't
know why that rumor got
started.
"I'm as agitated as Paul
Brown
must be by it," he
N a 1 i o n a I Football Leagu e
said. "We haven't discussed
.
Standi ngs
By Unl1ed Press International
it. I have no commitment to
American Conference
anyooe for next year." .
East
w. L. T. Pel. Parseghlan played for
Buffalo
4 0 0 1000
M iami
4 1 0 BOO Miarru of Ohio and coach~
NY Jets
2 3 0 400 here for five seasons.
Balt1more
1 A 0 200
He said rumors have been
N-ew England
1 A 0 200
Central
rampant
concerning his
W L T. Pet.
future,
but
that
he has not yet
0
1
000
C1nc1nnat1
5 0
P11lsburgh
4 I 0 BOO made up hill mind whether he
4
1 0 800
Houston
Cle11el l!lnd
0 5 0 000 will return to football.
West
W. L. T . Pet
~

FOOTBALL

Oakland

. 3

Denver

3
2

2
2

Kansas C1ty
•
3 0
San D1tgO
0 5 0
National Conf erence

400
000

East

L. T Pet
I 0 800
Washington
3 2 0 600
S t LOUi S
J
2 0 600
NY Giants
l 3 0 250
Ph iladelphia
1 4 0 700
Central
W L T Pet
Mmne!!tota
5 0 0 I 000
3 2 0 600
DetrOit
I 4 0 200
Green Bay
I 4 0 200
Ch 1cago
West
W L T Pel
Los Angeles
4 I o 800
Atlanta
2 3 0 AOO
san Franc•sco
2 3 o AOO
New Orl eans
I A 0 200
Sunday 's Results
New England 21 Balti more 10
Pttts buroh J4 Ch 1caQ'o J
Green Bay 19 Dallas 11
St LOUIS 31 Ph lllldelphia 20
Houston 13 Washington 10
MlllMI 43 NY Jets 0
San Fran cisco 35 New Orlean s

w

Da i i~ S.

••

0 600
0 ~

A

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21

Cinclnnall l J. Oakland 10
Los Ange les 22 Atl anta 1
Kanses City 12 Sl!ln Diego 10
Minnesota 2S De troil 19
Denver 16 Cle11eland 15
Monday's Game
NV G!ants at Buffl!llo . night

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Renlers Insura nce The cost
1S low and the coverage
comprehensive

Steve Snowden
iisa'Powetl St.
Middleport, 0 .
PH. 992-7155

....
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243 Ruger77Vor77R
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22 Colt Both Cylinders
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()-! 10 43205
'Yo u'U Srni.l1 Tomorrow If You Tokt&gt; Cnrt Oj )'ou r 7'e. r tli To1lu V'

MONJAY THROUGH FRIDAY
8:3J A.M. TO 6'3) P.M.

SPORTS and CB's
FINANCING ARRANGED
308 Pap
MiddlepoJt

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3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday,Oct 20, 1975

2 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday . Oct. 20. 1975

De~ocrats
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes challenged
the Deroocratic-controlled
General Assembly again last
week with a pa1r of vetoes.
Each one was basically
different in nature Yet the
final outcome on eacb one
could have a profound effect

Ohio politics
on e~ecutive powers m Ohio
government.
Rhodes disapproved one
section of a b1ll settmg up a
state public defender to
provtde legal counsel to those
who cannot afford it.
The vetoed section would
have allowed the public
defender to pursue any
remedy "he decides Is in the
interest of justice."
Such broad language
would, In the governor's
view, have given the public
defender carte blanche to
make appeals, whether
necessary or warranted, at
the taxpayers' expense.
Under the Ohio Con·
stitution, a governor is
allowed to make a partial
veto only in an appropriations
bill.
True, the publlc defender
bill appropriates money to set
up the new agency. But it
would seem any item veto
ought to be restricted to the
money itsell and not to a
section dealing wlth powers
of the public defender.
If those powers ultimately
cost the state money, the
legislature must appropriate
it. The governor could then
exercise his item veto.
This point' already is being
tested in the Ohio Supreme
Court in legislation changing
the state school subsidy formula . Rhodes made a
number of item vetoes m that
bill. Although It contained no
money, he reasoned the
provisions would ultimately

challenged twice by Rhodes vetos

necessary workload on the
require flUids
Gen"
eral Assembly .
A court ruhng 1n the
- Force the legislature to
governor 's favor could
strengthen the hand of the
executive branch m vetomg
legislation.
The second bill, vetoed
entirely by Rhodes, would
have allowed the General
Assembly to pass on agency
rules, even before they went
into effect.
Under current law, the
General Assembly can d1rect
agencles through legislation
or challenge agency rules
once they are m effect The
blli would have given the
lawmakers direct input into
rulemaking.
Rhodes' veto flew squarely
m the face of legislative will
on the subject. The bill had
cleared the House 86 to 1 and
the Senate by 24 to 7.
An override seems a
distinct possibility, since only
60 votes are needed in the
House and 20 in the Senate.
"The Constitution clearly
states that the legislature and
only the legislature shall
make the laws in Ohio," said
Rep. Thomas P. Gilmartm,
DYoungstown, the chief
sponsor, In urging an
override.
"These agencies have not
only abused this authority,"
Gilmartin continued. "They
have In many cases nullified
the Ohio Revised Code by
passing rules that do exactly
the opposite of the provisions
of law."
In a lengthy and well·
documented veto message,
Rhodes made a number ot
formldable points.
He said the U.S. Supreme
Court already has ruled such
a law would give a legislature
unwarranted administrative
powers.
The governor also said the
legislative
review
of
proposed rules would:
- Require costly and time·
(First of Three
consuming duplicate
related columns)
hearings and place an unWASHIN GTON - For

h1re outside consultants to
gain the techrucal expertise
needed to pass judgment on

could affect workmen 's comthe admm1strallve rules.
- cause delays in the lm- pen sa ti on benefits,
plementatipn of rules which emergency fuel supphes and
rates, collectiOn of property
taxes, coni r a c t s for inner
city rehabilitation, and state
employe travel pay and
expenses.
Rhodes has shrewdly
touched on some sensitive
areas to motivate the
lawmakers to sustain hiS
veto- money, Jobs, taxes ,
energy, labo~ benefits, urban
renewal and state employes.
If overridden, the governor
may be able to score some
points wlth heavy constituenCies- the taxpayers , the
jobless, organized labor, the
poor and state workers.
It will be mterestmg to see
which wins out, legislative
pcide or the thirst for votes,
as the ruMing battle continues for legislative and
executive powers.

"Look out, it may be catching!"

fhe Almanac
By United Press International
Today IS Monday, Oct 20,
the 293rd day of 1975with 72 to
follow.
The moon is full.
The morning stars are

Hardened arteries and brain disease
so,llum salt. There are a
DEAR READER - No,
variety of disorders that
acid neutralized coffee Is not occur If one is low on
decaffeinated. If a coffee is
potassmm
decaffeinated it will say so
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 hope
specifically. I agree that it is
you
can clear up this matter
often hard to tell the dlf.
on nutri lion
ference between some brands
My ne1ghbor claims mtlk
of decaffelna ted coffee and
caused her teeth to abscess
regular coffee as far as taste and decay, therefore she will
is concerned. If you like 1t
not give her grandsons mtlk
perked you can perk it the
while they are with her (three
way you suggested.
weeks) . I gave them milk at
If you want more inmy house, and they couldn't
formation on coffee wnte to
get enough and that's when
me in care of this newspaper,
she told me it was wrong.
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Slation, New York, NY 10019. Instead of milk she gives
them water or juice. She says
Send 50 cents, a long,
her doctor says skim milk Is
stamped, self-addressed
bad because of the high
envelope, and ask for The
carbohydrate content - •but
Health Letter number 1-1,
to drink the cream dtluted
Coffee, Tea, Cola , Cocoa.
w1th water
Yes, all fruits contain
The boys aged 2 and 6 live
po tassium . You , need
in a town many miles from
potassium for normal funchere and ap pea r to be
tion of your cells. The prinhealthy, normal children
Cipal salt In your cells Is a without allergies. I don 't
potassi um salt while the
know what they get at home.
prlnc1pai salt In your blood
Please straighten me out .on
and outside the cells 1s
this matter.
DEAR REA~ER - Your
neighbor means well, but she
has been given the wrong
information . M1lk does not
cause abscessed teeth or
dental decay. On the contrary , good experiments in
dogs have shown that a
calcium deficient diet leads
to loose teeth because
calciJIIR 1s lost from the bone
around the root of the tooth.
Then gum disease (pyorrhea)
with small abscesses and
eventually loss of Iee th
develops. By returning the
dogs to a good diet with lots of
calcium the dental problem
cleared up.
Milk is our main source of
calcium, and certain ly
growmg children w1 th a
growmg skeleton need lots of
calci um . There is no
significa nt amount . of
calcium in fruit Juice, and
some hard water has a little
but not nearly the amount
needed. Cream ts low m
calcium compat·ed to milk,
since cream is supposed to be
mostly fat separated from the
rest of the milk It will not
¢) lf15b;NU. llle ~~
replace milk in terms of
eithe r good protein or
"I'd like to retlfe, like Frank Sinatra , and earn a
calciwn . I hope these boys
little money working once in a while like he's
ge lling plenty or milk at
are
domgl"

By Lawrence E. 4mb. M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Since
so many times coffee Is
eliminated fr om a per&amp;on's
d1et for varwus reasons ,
please ,answer this. Is "acid
neut ralized" considered
"decaffeinated'" Also, If a
person IS sold on brewed
coffee, can't you put instant
decaffeinated coffee into a
coffee pot just as with regular
ground, and perk It (using
measurements on instant
coffee labels) ? I understand
one can hardly tell the difference from fresh brewed
coffee.
Also, I do not understand
the need for potassium . What
foods furnish it? One doctor
who lets his maternity
patien ts use fluid pills
prescnbcs also !bat they eat
a banana a day to provide
potassium . You suggested
orange juice: Sounds as If the
fruits may all have some
measure of this - true or
false?

Berrys World

hunw

•

A Chronicle of America

'Maddest Idea':
Samuel Chase, a delegate to
the Conti nent al Congress
fro m Ma ryland "II IS the
maddest 1dea m the world ,
to th1rlk of bu1 ldmg an
Ameman fleet We sh ould
mortgage the whol e con·
tment "

.

more than 50 years the In·
ternatlonal Cnmlnal Pohce
OrganizatiOn, Interpol, has
categomed itself as a btg
pohce force with little pollee
power Spokesmen msist
Interpol is like a private
de'tecllve collec!tve with units
m 120 member nations, and
whose authority does not go
beyond the gathering and
passing on of tnformallon between
various
police
jurisdictiOns.
Thus has any question of
In terpol's potential for abuse
been soundly denied by In·
terpol officers; 11 can not
arrest, it can not extradite, 11
1s "merely a condwt for information dissemination."
In fact tt is more more than
this. G1ven Its ab1hty to
pursue mvesllgatwns far
beyond the borders of normal
legal authority, and giv~n
also Its 1solallon from the
official responsibilities and
limitations of state law en·
forcement, Interpol is tn 1ts
own way the most powerful
and far-reaching police
agercy tn the world.
One distressing example
should Illustrate the pomt.
Enter Mohammed Sami, an
mternational c1vil servant
from Afghamslan, working
under Un ited Nallons
oversight and living in
Washington. Samt has flied
su1 t a~amst Interpol for $3
million, charging the United
States branch with having
recklessly and Illegally
forced his arrest, detention
and humiliation last summer.
Sami, it should be noted,
and as will be shown, IS an
embittered man, thus his
comments on Interpol should
obviously be read in that
light But the facts of his
clash with Interpol USA,
bemg heavily documented,
are for the most part not in
dispute. Only the courts can
determine if he deserves
compensation for
his
argument with authorities,
but clearly his complaint
deserves airing.
As Sami says it, and
documents verify, he was
granted a d1vorce from his
American w1fe In 1974, and at
that time given custody of his
two children by a Maryland
judge. "My wife, however,
wasn 't satisfied. She took the
children and moved to
Florida. I was allowed to visit
the children, but only occaswnally and with guards
present. Last &gt;pring, on a
vistt, I got fed up with the
guards and decided to take
the children on vacation; so
when we· were alone we
slipped away "
Sami's decision to take the
kids on\ ho '•day, !U'wtse at
best, was used by his former
wife as - grounds for the

'

"'

-By Ros~ Mackenzie &amp; Jefl MacNelly /10 1975, Unlled Fea ture Syndicate

1 ""

L..-..,..----------------....1•"
...'

Venus, Mars, Mercury and
Saturn
The evemng star is Juptter.
Those born on this day are
under the s1gn of Libra .
American educator John
Dewey was born Oct. 20, 1859.
On Ibis day in history:
In 1918, Germany accepted
American Pres id e nt
Wdoodrow Wilson's terms to
end World War I.
In 1944, American troops
bega n a campaign to

recapture the island of Leyte
in the Philippines.
In 1964, Herbert Hoover,
31st president of the United
slates, dted at lbe age of 90.
In 1973, President Nixon
fired spec1al Watergate
Prosecutor Archibald Cox;
Attorney General Elliott
Rtchardson and deputy
Wtlli am Ru&lt;:kelshaus ,
refusmg to dismiss Cox, res•gned their posts.

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'"
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Editorial comment,-

"'
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·"''"
'

,_
'"

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opinion, features

Interpol overlooks
a few basic rights

"

We Hold These Truths ...

....

TOM TIEDE

DR. LAMB

.•••

Perspective on Spain

"'

"'
The
curious
double
standard
the
democracies
of
Europe
for
some
reason
are
in
~ he habit of "'
issuance of a Florida arrest
warrant. And in the second e111ploying when it comes to judging !be behavior of socialist and non..soc1alist governments
l:'
week of May, Interpol en- has seldom been asglarmglyobvious as it has in the case of Apam of late.
The execution by the Franco government of five convicted terrorists, desptte appeals for .:.
tered the picture. No one is
cer ta1n how Interpol became mercy from everybody from the Pope to prime ministers and presidents, set off a wave of
mvolved, but 1ts nght of In· outrage lbroughout Europe. Diplomats were called home, economic sanctions were
threatened.
~
teres! is not in question. An
Wha't
barbansm
agrunst
those
whose
only
crime
has
been
to
blow
up,
shoot
and
otherwise
'
arrest warrant was issued for
dispatch
more
than
50
policemen
and
civilians
m
Spain
so
far
this
year.
The
only
people
Sam1, he was leaving the
country, and under terms of outraged by the murders themselves seemto be the Spaniards.
Francisco Franco, of course, is an old fool who either believes the Almighty lias suspended " '
Interpol's charter that's all
the
laws
of nature on his behalf or is too senile to realize that be Is prov1ding history with "'
the ipformation it needed to
another example of "after me, the deluge."
'"
!Jecome tnvolved .
' Tyrant that he may be, however, for the'ordinary Spaniard, life under Franco at his most "'
The extent of Interpol's
mvolvement, and
the despotic has been infinitely freer than that of the ordinary Russian under the absolute .. :.
totalitarianism of the Communist system at its most benevolent.
"
judgments used theretn ,
Yet in their zeal to see Europe rld of its last non-Communist dictatorship, Western leaders -;
however, are at 1ssue. Acare calling for a visitation of chaos upon Spain from whtch only the Communists will benefit. ··~·
cording to documents, InAs for the United states, it finds itself In somewhat the same awkward position it has been .,,,
terpol pursued Sanii, merely
In wtth regard to Portugal. l.Alases on U. S military bases m Spain, which may or may not be ""'
a fath er involved in a
vital to Western Europe's defense, have just been renegotiated.
'""
domestic Jangle, as if he were
But any expression of support by Washington for the Franco government, whether in the ~"
a heinous thug. Dozens of interests of our own global security or purely out of concern at the prospect of another people "
cables were sent to Interpol
going down the CommWiist tube, would immediately bring down the wrath of our home-grown ""
capitals m Europe, not humanitarians.
suggesti ng but ordering
Fortunately, the Portuguese so far have demonstrated a tenacious determination to win -~
Sami's arrest.
the kind of political freedom they have never really known. Thos one can still hope that when ''"
At several points the cables Spain's time of transition comes, and it IS comjng soon, the Spanish will also know what is best ""'
sounded as if they had for themselves despite the "help" pf their friends in the democracies.
·
""
originated in the U. S. State
Department, rather than In a
private pollee office . The
"USA will extradite," In""
terpol excessively assured in
The history of warfare, up until the nuclear era anyway, offers an abundance of examples ' ;'
an "urgent" cable to l{ome
of how every innovation in offensive weaponry hils eventually been countered by a develop- :.
on May 13, "please take
ment In defensive weaponry, and vice versa.
."'
immediate action to arrest
The same things is true of the war against crime. Acase in point is a nifty little Item called '
Sami."
the "Taser Pubhc Defender" which its maker, Taser System of Los Angeles, calls a nonlethal ""
Eventually Sami was
crime pcevention device for stopping attackers. Looking something Uke a flashllght, the device "''
arrested by German pollee
launches two small darts attached to batteries by 16-foot wires. The darts can penetrate l.j ""'
and detained three days,
Inches of clothing and deliver a 50,000-volt jolt that Is exceedingly painful and lncapacliatlrt6 " •
illegally, as it happened.
but not desdly. Or so the company says in its literature.
,.;
Interpol had insisted Sam!
As might have been predicted, however, in the first ' 'Wartime" use of the Taser Puh'lc
was a kidnaper, but lbere is Defender that has come to our attention, a young woman and her male companion walked Into ' ":
no extradition agreement foe a gas station in Miami where the woman smllingly zapped the attendant with the electronic '
that offense between West
dart gun and then helped her accomplice clean out the cash register. The attendant, who Jtue to ' " 1
Germany and America. the company's promtse was not killed, described it as "the worst pain I ever felt."
""
Moreover, even if there were,
To make the story complete, the Taser Public Defender was stolen from an ontce In ""
Sam!, because of h1s U. N. Miami. In fact, it was one of eight stolen - and not by anybody Interested in defending the ,v:
status, was entitled .to pubUc, you may be slii'C.
,~
diplomalle
consideratiOns he
·"
1
never received.
' In the end Sami's govern""
men t complained to the
I Ill/
American government and
' "t
For all the talk about "the lmper~al presidency" and the abuse of executive power, the fact ·
the State Department. never
contacted by Interpol during of the matter is that a presidentts to a startling degree at the mercy not only of Congress but of ·""
n
the chase, issued an apology a horde of invisible bureaucrats who are virtually Immune to executivedisctpline.
So says university professor and columnist John P. Roche, who bases the statement on his ·::
to Sami for his " illegal
·
deten!ton" and discomforts. experience as a speech writer and advisor to J.,yndon B. Johnson.
Harry Truman was right when he satd "the buck stops here." That ts, 1t Is the president's
Interpol now ref115es· to
diSCUSS the Sam! case, saying obligation to settle policy, From Inside, however, says Roche, "you rapidly learn that the real
such would violate his right to problem is to get Important decisions where they belong: on the desk in the Oval Office."
stopping the buck at the,top "dolls not call for displays of courage as much as It does for an :
prtvacy. That rlgh't, of
efficient
espionage apparatus to guarantee that key decisions are not being made by lnvlalbie '' :
course, was already violated
bureaucrats,
to make sure the buck does not stop someplace else."
:
when, as the biological father
The
armor
of
this
bureaucracy
Is
clvli
service
tenur.e,
provided
by
Congress
to
about
98
per
,
,
legally entitled to the custody
of his children, he was chased cent of the administrative establishment and originally considered a great reform designed to ·~:
half way,around the world by eliminate the spoils system. Roche discovered that he was one of only about700members of the _ ~:
.,
an Interpol claiming he was a thousands In the Johnson administration whom the President could sununarily fire,
The
real
battle
in
Washington,
he
claims,
is
not
between
the
administration
and
Congress.
kidnaper.
"How could they do it?" "It Is between the president and a secret alliance of the legislature and the bureaucracy, who ·-'1
'
Sam! asks now, shaking his share the common objective of cutting the president down."
It Is almost unposslble to exaggerate the ingenuity displayed by the bureaucracy )n ~.;:
head. "And tf they could do it
to me they' can do it to stonewalling a presidential policy, he says. Take the example of the supply of deacl~ poisons ·~~:
, ":
anyone. Who are these people retain~ by the CIA in defiance ofa presidential order.
How
could
the
president
have
found
out
about
it
?
The
CIA
director
didn't
tell
him.
By
_: :
that they can do such things
getting
one
of
the
mvtslble
men
down
about
five
layers
to
squeal
on
another
?
.,,
m the world?"
1
Actually, says Roche, most episodes of this sort surface because of a personal grudge ".",1
leacllnii lo an anonymous tip to a congressman or journaliat.
'
,'.~I
Watergate, he suggests, while it was an absurd, criminal extreme, was part of a process · ::
A thought for the day:
Herbert Hoover said, "Older that goes back to World War II In which presidents have been driven to Improvise techniques ;:;~
I
~ ~·
men declare war. But it is for control of the administration. .
.
Ironically,
in
his
effort
to
create
the
power
the
textbooks
say
he
had,
Richard
Nixon
set
In
:
~
youth that must fight and
motion
a
train
of
events
leading
to
contressional
predominance
Wlmatched
In
history.
·
..
,
d.le. "
li.Ul

A good idea, but •••

Even President no match

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Turner's kick
sinks Browns

Pitchers changed for sixth game

By BILL MADDEN
Bowie Kuhn was not too
UPI SpOrts Writer
optimistic tomght's game
BOSTON (UP!) - It'll now could be played because of
be
Gary Nolan versus Luis the weather.
By l'RACY RINGOLSBY
Wlable to get the Broncos
UPI Sports Writer
going and Ram~y was called -Tiant in the stxth game of a
Kuhn, who caUed off game
DENVER (UP!) - Denver on to spark Denver with 12:45 World Series although six for the second straight
baseball Commissioner day Sundav, rescheduled it
Bronco placekicker Jim to play .
•
Turner says he is not a classic
Ramsey promptly directed
kicker. He's just a puncher Denver 57 yards with Jon
"I'm not a stylist," said Keyworth plunging over for
Turner. "I don't try to keep the game's flfst touchdown
my bead down, it's unnstural from a yard out to cut
but then I'm not a classic Cleveland's lead to 15-13.
kicker. I guess I am what is After Cockroft missed a 27·
called a puncher."
yard field goal to cap
Sunday afternoon, Turner, Cleveland's next possession,
who booted two field goals in Ramsey moved the Broncos
the first half, applied the from their own 20 to tlie three,
knockout punch to the Cleve- where Ross fumbled.
By RICK VAN SAN[
land Browns, booting a
And again, the veteran
CINCINNATI (UP!)
career-best 53-yd. field goal from North Texas State came
as lime ran out and gave the through in the final!: 43 when
WATERFORD - Coach "I'm dreaming," said rookie
turnover prone Bronco team • Cleveland punted to the Spike Berkhimer's Eastern Marvin Cobb clutching the
know I am."
a 11&gt;-15 VIctory over winless Bronco 32 and Ramsey Eagles won their fifth game game ball.
The astonished 22ryear-old
Cleveland.
moved the team to the this season here Saturday
Turner 's kick over- Cleveland 36 to set up Tur- romping host Waterford, 37-7. Cincinnati Bengals corThe Eagles 5-1-1 travel to nerback wasn't dreaming
shadowed the record«itlng ner's kick. On that drive,
efforts
of
Browns' Ramsey converted a fourh Southern Saturday nightman but he certainly gave t~
placekicker Don Cockroft, a and eight situation by Important SVAC encounter. Oskiand Raiders nightmares
native of nearby FoWitain, throwing 14 yards to Jack Ftve different players scored Sunday.
· Cobb, in for hl3 first series
Colo., who set a team record Dolbin and a fourth and four for the Eagles.
Scoring summary:' Don ofplaysfromscrlnunageasa
with five field goals and by running 10 yards.
connected on his first four
Cleveland coach Forrest Elchmger, four -yard run. professional, intercepted a
attempts to tie the NFL Gregg, whose team had Eichinger EP's. Joe Kuhn, Ken Stabler pass and dashed
consecutive field goal mark allowed an average 47 points six-yard run. E1chinger EP's. 52 yards for the gameof 16 set by Kansas City's Jan In losing its first four games, Kevm Barton, 10-yard pass winning touchdown in the
Stenerud In 1969
was frustrated after his team from Bob McClure. Eichinger unbeaten Bengals' 14-10
rainy-day thriller over the
Turner's kick came nearly recovered five Denver kick.
two minutes after Bronco fumbles and intercepted a
Mark Lawson, 11-yard run. Raiders.
"I couldn't believe It when 1
running back Oliver Ross, pass but was unable to win. E1chmger
k1ck
Ph1i
caught
it," the rookie out of
who fumbled twlce earlier
"We should have gone in LaComb, 65-yard pWII return.
Southern
California satd
and dropped a touchdown for scores twice when we had E1chmger kick.
recalling
how
he felt as ~
pass, fumbled at the the ball inside the five but we
By
16 6 14 1}-37 started his 52-yard run for the
Cleveland three.
only got field goals," satd Eastern
Waterford
0 0 0 7- 7 end zone that broke a 7-7 tie
"I still felt confident that Gregg.
late in the third quarter.
we'd get another chance,"
Bronco coach John Ralston
"Where 1s everybody?" the
said Bronco reserve quar- was relieved with the win
six-foot, 185 pounder remem·
terback Steve Ramsey. "I which put the Broncos m a lle BG stomps Kent;
bered thinking as he foWid
la'iew all we had to do was get for first place in the AFC
clear
sailing down the
!&amp; ball back and Jim has West with Oakland at 3-2.
Toledo wins big
Sidellne. " Isn't anybody
lieen looking super, so 1 was
"We haven't put together a
going to tackle me?"
cilnfldent he'd get it ln."
solid performance yet," said ~ United Press International
Ramsey's performance Ralsion . "And when you have
Becaus' no one could
Although the f1rst annual
was just as Important to the games Uke this, normally you Mid-American Conference tackle Cobb, the Bengals
Broncos' success as Turner's don't win. We will take thts football doubleheader drew IOOay enjoy a :;..o record, the
field goal. Starting quar- victory and run ."
only 11,107 fans Saturday best start in the eight-year
terback Charley Johnson was
night
in
Cleveland's history of the franchise.
It was the second straight
Municipal StadiUm , many
loss
for disappointing
went away convinced
Oskiand,
a pre-6C&amp;son Super
Bowling Green Is a serious
Bowl
favorite
which now has
contender for the MAC title
a
3-2
mark.
for the first time since 1!165.
It was appcoprlate that a
The Falcons unleashed a
savage ground attack to pass interception should win
the game on a rainy day that
The
Gallia
County (one of hts three ) set up a 21- smash Kent State 35-9 in the produced
eight
in·
Disciples Amateur football yard pass from Quarterback second game after Toledo terceptions- four against
team defeated the Meigs Bob Ratliff to speedy Larry snapped a five-game losmg each team.
Warriors SWiday 40-9 1n a Howell for another s1x points. streak in the opener with a 25But Cobb was the ooly man
real offensive battle. GalUa Cremeans' kick made it 31-9 7 decisiOn over winless to turn an Interception Into a
Western Michigan.
showing new strength on going into the final period
touchdown, and he wouldn't
In
the
tth
quarter,
Gallia
offense clicking off 505 totat
have done It had it not been
yards while Me1gs had 339. scored on&amp; 15 yard reverse by
for an Injury.
The Disciples team ran for George Curry, Cremeans
Tied 7·7 late in the third
347 yards, passed for 156 again splitting the upnghts
period with Stabler trying to
yards while Meigs ran for 212 for the perfect extra point
move the Raiders, veteran
yards and passed for 127 day making the score
Cincinnati cornerback Ken
SAN ANTbNIO, Tex. Riley suffered a minor Injury
Disciples 38-9 Meigs.
yards.
(UP!)
- Veteran Don
The
last
score
came
late
in
Meigs took an early lead on
and In came Cobb.
January
capped a 1975
the second play from the fourth quareter when
"!figured I might get in on
scrimmage on a M yard TO Meigs halfback Ron Quillen comeback Sunday with a a tackle or two," shrugged
pass from Paul Aikman to stepped back 1n the end zone sudden-death victory over Cobb, whose only previous
Chip Haggerty. Aikman's try to pass and was hit there by Larry Hinson for flrst'prize in play was on specialty teams.
for the extra point was wide Jack Parsons for the two the $125,000 Texas Open.
January tapped in an 18- "And! thought theymlght try
point safety making the final
making it 6-0 Meigs
to throw on me because I was
mch putt on the second hole of new .'~
The Disciples then took the score, Gallia Disciples 40,
the playoff to collect $26,000
ball on the kick at their own Warriors 9.
and
the championship of the
Gallia running ace, Keith
goal. Keith Sayre ran the kick
last
individual
tournament of
all the way for the TD. Orland Sayre, led all yardage with the season.
Cremeans' kick was good to 284 yards on 20 carries by
Hinson, of Dougiss, Ga.,
make the score 7-6 Gallla at way of ground. Bob Ratliff calmly curled In an uphiU
had 31 yards for Gallla on the
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
the end of the first stanza.
. putt of more than 30 feet oo'
FOOTBALL SCORES
ground,
and
George
Curry
Opening
the second
United Press fntern•tlcmal
the
18th
hole
to
tie
January
at
S1ture1av
quarter, Meigs ' Aikman had 22.
In the pass receptions the end of 72 holes at 13- Xen ia 3 Springboro 0
booted a 15-yard field goal to
under'i&gt;ar 275 over the par 72, Fai rborn Park Hill s 21
put Meigs in the lead 9-7. department, Fred Staley 7,038-yard Woodlake Golf Trotwood 0
tu! carawas Ceth 44 Malvern
Later Orland Cremeans ·completed ~ for 52 yards; Club Course. January had 0
booted a 42 yard field goal to Curry added 47 yards on one appeared to be the winner 0Tuscarawlls Val 70 Str asburg
put lhe Disciples back In front reception and Howell had 3 outright after outdistancing a JF Kennedy 22 Glenv il le 6
for 24 yards.
Cle John Adams 24 Cle East
10-9.'
tight field that saw 20 golfers H 1gh 6
For
Meigs,
the
leadmg
A few plays later, the
within three strokes of the Clev He ig hts 27 Parma 13
Falls 40 Rocky
Disciples speedy halfback gainer was Chip Hagerty In lead at one lime during the Olmstead
River 6
Keith Sayre, scampesed the air w1th 124 yards and last round.
Fairport 21 Beechwood 12
Kirtland 6 Richmond Heights
around the end for an 11 yard four completions; Ron
0
Quillen
109
yards
on
16
touchdown. The conversion
Cle Lutheran w 14 Hlghlend o
Hawkins
School
19
by Orland Cremeans made carries on the ground and
Ledgemont 0
Bruce
Harris
adding
another
THIS WEEK 'S
the score 17-9 Disciples.'
Plllsburgh Shadysid e 19
OHIO COLLEGE
Gilmour 14
In the third quarter, speedy 74 yards in 19 carries.
FOOTBALL
SCHEDULE
K Iski Prep •o Wesl Res
Team standings:
United Preu 1nternatlon11
Keith Sayre scampered
Acad~my 1&lt;4
Saturd1y
W L POP
Shadys ide. 20 Llnsty lnSIIlute
Wllouclied 7~ yards to payd.lrt
Ohio State ar Purdu e
IW Va.l 6
Galha
4010334
Miami at Bowling Green
making It 23-9 and "Big 0"
Canton Cath 13 Canton Leh Ohio Un iver sity a t Toledo
• 226294
man 6
added the extra point for 24-9. Meigs
Centra M ic higan at Kent Poland 2B Lincoln 12
Washington
044683
Sta te
·
A few plays later, a
Akron Buch te l 16 Akron East
Soulhw est Louisiana at 0
Disciples defensive InCi ncinnati
Akron S! Vln -St Merv 13
terception by John Frazier AIRPOR[ DECISION NEAR Dayton at McNeese St (La ) Warren W R 8
In)
West Bra!'lch 20 Liberty 0
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Youngstown St at Akron {n) Niles 21 Cle Col lnwood 6
Civil Aeronautics Board will As hland at Hi llsda le
Mansfield
Madhon
J.7
Baldw !n -Walla ce at Marlefla coshocton o
make a decision this week on
F ranklin ( Ind . ) at Heidelberg East L i verpool 28 DuBois
DEVOTED TO THE
the City of Columbus' request Musklngum at Denison
INTEREST OF
IPa I 1
Wooster: at Otterbein
ME.IGS·MASON AREA
for Wright Alrllnes to utillze CaJ)
Cle St lgr'latlu s loll Cle Rhodes
Ital
at
Ohio
Wesleyan
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL Don Scott Airfield here for
0
Wittenberg at Mount Un ion As htebule
E•ec. Ed.
Harbo r
20
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ke
nyon
at
Grove
Cltv
three-times-a-day commuter
AshtlbUII
Sl.
John
0
City Editor
Chic ago at Oberl 1n
33 Sou thington 0
PuDtlshed dolly excep1 airline flights to and from west Vlrg lnoo St. at Oh io Perry
Buffalo
N'lc hols 22 Unlv
Saturday by Tho Oh iOValley Cleveland.
North ern
·
School
1l
Publlshlng company, 111
'Wilmington at Manchester Cle Holy Nome 30 Padua 6
Court Sl ., Pomeroy , Oh !o
Wright began the service l ind I
Elrrla West 54 Margaretta o
•5769 Business Olflce Phone
Defiance at Aruterson (I nd . ) Co Ready 13 Col St. Charles
992 .2156. Editorial Phone 992 earlier this month after
B l uft ton at Ro se Hulman 13 tllel
2157 .
receiving CAB approval for l ind . I
Second clns poatage paid
Newark c,rh 10 Col Walkins
the flighllt this year. Wright, Tavlor {lnd) et Fmdlay
at Pomeroy, OhiO .
Memor
ial o
.
Ca rfleg le Melton at Case Hebron Lakewood 15 Licking
Netlonal
adve rt i si ng However, did not get a
Western
representative
ward .
Heights 0
'
Griffith company , Inc .. contract with Ohio State H iram at Be thany IW Va ) Logen
E'm 22 Lancaster
Botllnelll &amp; Gollaghor Dlv .. University which owns Don Allegheny (Pa . ) at John Fisher Coth
o
757 Third Ave. , New York,
Carrol!
'
He~llton
TownstJip
J-.
(n
l
denote!
night
game
N Y 10017 .
Scott field. Because of the
Olentano\1 0
Subacrlptlon ratta ·
Dtllvered by carrier where lack of a. contract, OSU ofavellable 75 cents per week, flctals asked Wright to stop
By Molor Route where
carrier
servlct
not
using the field or face legal
avallablt, Ont monlht. S3.2l action.
By mel! tn Oh Ia and vv Va.,
no Year 122 00 , Six
The airlines maintains the
onths, 'S11 lO ; Three
OFF ICE
:30 to
2 tci 5 (CLOSE
onths, 17 .00. Elsewhore airport is funded with federal
26 00 yeor , Six months money and Is a public liPid
AT NOON ON THURS.l-EAST COURT
13 .50 ; three monlhs, 17 lO.
ubscrlptlon price Includes
which can &gt;te used for comunday T i mes Sentinel
muter 8ervice.

.Eagles

wallop
foe 3 7-7

..

Meigs Warriors

January gets

Texas victory

w

·I

1

game bemg played Monday
night," Kuhn sa1d "It'll
depend mostly on the f1eld
conditiOn."
And.as the Red Sox Fenway
Park groundskeeper Joe
Mooney acknowledged, the

Cobb's 2 intercepts
kill Raiders, 14-10
"i

Disciples whip

for 8:30 p.m. EDT tonight.
But the rains wh1ch have
pelted thts ctly for three days
were not expected to cease
until just prior to game time.
"I'd have to say, I'm not
verv optimistic about the

Indeed, Oakland did·.
"We tried to work on
Cobb," revealed Raiders'
coach John Madden. And,
disclosed Stabler, "we were
taking a shot at Cobb."
So, Stabler tried to hit
speedster Cliff Branch, who
was faking Cobb, but the
rookie said he saw the timing
on the play was off.
"Branch had already made
his cut and the ball should
have been in the alf " said
Cobb. " But I looked at
'Stabler and he hadn't thrown
it yet.
"!saw it coming and I went
for the interception all the
way."
Admitted Branch, "The kid
(Cobb) recovered quick."
But Cobb didn't settle for
only one interception.
Early in the fourth quarter
he nabbed another Stabler
aenal m the end zone to
thwa~t an Oakland drive that
could have tied the game.
The Raiders did get a ~
yard field goal from ts-year,.,___ Blanda rru'dway
old """'ge
throu gh the final period to

come wtthm 14;-10, but a final
desperation dr1ve was halted
wtth44seconds remammg ~ ·
naturally, another pass mterception- this time by Jim
LeC~lf on the Cmcmnah 20.
Sa1d Ben~a~ Coach Paul
Brown, relishing the four
pass m.tercepll?ns, "Our
defense IS our prtde and JOY
now "
Bengals quarterback Ken
Anders?"· wh? thre~ a
careerh1gh four mtercephons
and htt only four on 19 pass
attempts on one of his worse
days ev~r, still looked on the
bright stde.
"The Bengals won on the
scoreboard," said Anderson,
managmg a faint smile, "so I
feel good."
Stabler was about on a par
with Anderson, connecting on
only eight of .24 passes ..
Madden SBid the Ra1ders
played better than m last
week's humiliating 42-10 loss
to Kansas C1ty, but still he
moaned about the second
straight defeat.
''Two 10 a row," he muttered. "It's tough to take."

Starr gets Pack
lst win in 1975
National Football League
Roundup
By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Writer
Bart Starr never had any
trouble beating the Dallas
Cowboys.
In seven games as a player,
Starr quarterbacked the
Green Bay Packers to six
victortes against
th~
Cowboys, including back4oback National Football
Lesgue championship games
in 1966 and 1967.
In the one year Starr came
back to the Packers as an
assistant coach to tutor the
quarterbacks- 1972 -Green
Bay handed Dallas ooe of just
four losses the Cowboys suf.
fered that year.
This year Starr returned as
head coach of Green Bay to
restore some of the gUtter he
pcovided as a player. But
through the first four games
of the season, the Packers
were winless and were outscored l!K-55.
Then Dallas popped up on
the Green Bay scheduleWidefeated and playing oo
their home field. So Starr dug
into his files and pulled out an
old script, the " Championship Game, 1967." That
was the game Starr directed
a last minute touchdown
drive and capped It by
sneaking into the end zone
from one yard out to give the
Pack a 21-17 victory.
He gave the script to John
Had!, his quarterback this
year, and told him to go to
work. And go to work Had.!
did, lowering the number of
unbeaten teams in the NFL to
three with a toucMown in the
last two minutes to give
Green Bay a 19-17 victory.
"The whole game typifies
Bart starr and his entire
staff," ~ad! said. " They
d.ldn 't blame anybody when
we IQ8t earlier. They stayed

with us. They said we were
doing the right thing . We beat
perhaps the best team in pro
football. It's going to give us a
lot of confidence."
Hadl passed 26 yards to
tight end Rich McGeorge
with I : ~2 remaining to give
the Packers their first victory
before a stunned sellout
crowd of 64,934 at Texas
stadium. The score was set
up by a Golden Richards
fumble of a Green Bay punt
at the Dallas 31.
"There was no way they
could beat us," added Dallas
tackle Rayfield Wright, "but
they did "
The Packers got a bonus in
the game from rookie kicker
Joe Danelo, who booted field
goals of 24 and 29 yards anfl
was responsible for Green
Bay's ~ halftime lead.
Danelo was Signed this
week to fill the shoes of twotime NFL scoring champion
Chester Marco!, who is out
with a pulled thigh muscle.
The Packers previously tried
to hide Marcel's absence with
lineman Dave Purelfory, but
found out accuracy means a
lot more than a strong leg.
The loss left Dallas at 4-1
but still atop the NFC
Eastern Division with
Washington was upset by
Houston 13-10.
In other games, Minnesota
beat Detroit 25-19, St Louis
topped Philadelphia 31-20,
Los Angeles spanked AUanla
22r7, San Francisco outscored
New Orleans 35-21, Pitts:
burgh crushed Chicago 34-3,
Cincinnati nipped Oakland 1410, Miaml smothered the New
York Jets 4~, New England
belted Baltimore 21-10,
Denver edged Cleveland 11&gt;- .
15, and Kansas City topped
San Diego 12-10.
The New York Gl8nts play
at Buffalo tonight.

TRY

rn

w

a:

::J
......

zw

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
OR A J STAEHLl

OR. FREEMAN MALTZ

AUACODE U4

POONE:

252-3181 252·84-tS
One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Parltats, Extractions,
X. Rays, Cleaning

many observers felt would be
more effective than Nolan 's
in the cozy quarters of
Fenway.
Anderson also confirmed
Nolan wiU now p1tch game six
no matter what, while team
ace Don Gullett will be held
back In the·event of a sevenlb
game.
Past weather delays in the
World Series mciude 1911
when rain postponed play six
dliys between the third and
fourth games. The old
Philadeiph 1a Athletics
defeated the former New
York Giants in six games in
that series.

field condttion will depend
mostly on when the ram
stops.
" U and when the rain
stops," Mooney srud, "We

would bring in helicopters to
help dry the field and get 1t
mto shape as we have done
tw1ce this year."
Meanwhile the late•! postponement caused both Reds'
Manager Sparky Anderson
and Red Sox Skipper Darrell
Johnson to alter the1r sixth
game pitching plans.
Johnson, obviOusly taking
the' stance that you can't save
your best pitcher for the
seventh game If there IS no
seventh game, flip-flopped
h1s onginal sixth game
designee Bill Lee With LUIS
Tiant, a tWo-tune winner
already this series.
Anderson in turn countered
by scratchmg sinkerball specialist Jack Billingham for
Gary Nolan - a decision that
d1d not sit lightly with
Billingham.
"I'm angered, shocked and
upset," said Billingham who
was looking forward to pitching what could be the
clincher for the Reds, leading
three games to two. "I pitched well here last week and
gave up only one earned run,
the other bemg the result of
George Foster losing his
footing on the wet grass in left
field ."
Anderson, although conceding his right-hander's
right to be miffed, defended
the decision to scratch
Billingham, whose style

Ara nixes
Cincinnati
job rumors

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) Retired Notre Dame football
coach Ara Parseghlan
squelched rumors this
weekend he would replace
Paul Brown at the helm of the
Cincinnati Bengals.
Parseghian, attending the
Miam1
of
Ohio-Ohio
University football game,
said he would have a publlc
announcement at the end of
the year whether he will
return to football.
Parseghian retired last
year after coaching the
Fighting Irish for 12 seasons.
He said he was mystified by
rumors he would replace
Brown as coach of the
Bengals.
"I'm absolutely baffied and
mystified by that report," he
said. "No truth in it. I don't
know why that rumor got
started.
"I'm as agitated as Paul
Brown
must be by it," he
N a 1 i o n a I Football Leagu e
said. "We haven't discussed
.
Standi ngs
By Unl1ed Press International
it. I have no commitment to
American Conference
anyooe for next year." .
East
w. L. T. Pel. Parseghlan played for
Buffalo
4 0 0 1000
M iami
4 1 0 BOO Miarru of Ohio and coach~
NY Jets
2 3 0 400 here for five seasons.
Balt1more
1 A 0 200
He said rumors have been
N-ew England
1 A 0 200
Central
rampant
concerning his
W L T. Pet.
future,
but
that
he has not yet
0
1
000
C1nc1nnat1
5 0
P11lsburgh
4 I 0 BOO made up hill mind whether he
4
1 0 800
Houston
Cle11el l!lnd
0 5 0 000 will return to football.
West
W. L. T . Pet
~

FOOTBALL

Oakland

. 3

Denver

3
2

2
2

Kansas C1ty
•
3 0
San D1tgO
0 5 0
National Conf erence

400
000

East

L. T Pet
I 0 800
Washington
3 2 0 600
S t LOUi S
J
2 0 600
NY Giants
l 3 0 250
Ph iladelphia
1 4 0 700
Central
W L T Pet
Mmne!!tota
5 0 0 I 000
3 2 0 600
DetrOit
I 4 0 200
Green Bay
I 4 0 200
Ch 1cago
West
W L T Pel
Los Angeles
4 I o 800
Atlanta
2 3 0 AOO
san Franc•sco
2 3 o AOO
New Orl eans
I A 0 200
Sunday 's Results
New England 21 Balti more 10
Pttts buroh J4 Ch 1caQ'o J
Green Bay 19 Dallas 11
St LOUIS 31 Ph lllldelphia 20
Houston 13 Washington 10
MlllMI 43 NY Jets 0
San Fran cisco 35 New Orlean s

w

Da i i~ S.

••

0 600
0 ~

A

'

21

Cinclnnall l J. Oakland 10
Los Ange les 22 Atl anta 1
Kanses City 12 Sl!ln Diego 10
Minnesota 2S De troil 19
Denver 16 Cle11eland 15
Monday's Game
NV G!ants at Buffl!llo . night

"How mUCh
would it cost
to replace

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i· ~

in your .

aparbnent ••?"
See me about Stale Farm
Renlers Insura nce The cost
1S low and the coverage
comprehensive

Steve Snowden
iisa'Powetl St.
Middleport, 0 .
PH. 992-7155

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'Yo u'U Srni.l1 Tomorrow If You Tokt&gt; Cnrt Oj )'ou r 7'e. r tli To1lu V'

MONJAY THROUGH FRIDAY
8:3J A.M. TO 6'3) P.M.

SPORTS and CB's
FINANCING ARRANGED
308 Pap
MiddlepoJt

.'

'

�•

New Haven women meet

noe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-PIBIIeroy, 0., Monday' Oct . 20. 1975
,~~'1&gt;.~*''''''*~~;,,,.,,,.,.,.,.,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,,,,t

~ Hele~
Help
%
.

:~ ~
:;;

~

:;:;

u
..S

~

t .e

By Hc·lt•Jl Hottel

t

w

:;:
·.·.

Starting today and continuing Wednesday and Friday of
this week, Helen Bottel reveals the .results of tlle marriage
survey eonducU!d tllis summer via her .column.
MARRIAGE SURVEY (PARr I)
Is marriage going out of style ?
Definitely not, Insist nearly 4,000 "Helen Help Us" readers
who answered my recent "Mini ..Survey lor Married and
Formerly Married People." Even those whose relationships
ha ve bombed are hopeful about the next time around. And please note - men are more marriage-oriented than women in
these liberated times.

+++

Less than 7 per cent of male correspondenl.'! and 11 per
cent of tlle females believe marriage is on the way out. But,
when asked, "If you were starting over again, would you still
marry?" 10 per cent of men and 14 per cent of women replied,
"No !" And 30 per cent (of both sexes) admitted they would
NOT marry the same person, though some Indicated they were
quite happy in tllelr present unions. As one honest wile put it :
"Ours Is a good marriage, even great occasionally, but
who would wantexacUy the same thing twice ' 1often fantasize
an affair, wondering what I've missed, "
While most people dre8111 of extramarital romance my
HHU study reveals the majority still limit infidelity to
dre81111ng. Some 35 per cent of the men and 20 per cent or ·the
women admit to affairs while married, although a number
qualified, "This doesn't Include one-night stands: I don't
consider them affairs."

NEW HAVEN, ·w. va. _
The New Haven Women of
the Church or God. ~et ,in
October in the m1ss1onary
. building with Delores Taylor
and Becky Reed hostesses.
9elores Taylor was in
charge of devotions. Her
scripture was taken from
Matth ew 25 :31-46- 1 was
Hungry and You Gave Me
Food. She also read a poem,
"There's A World Out
There." Sue Erwin led in
prayer.
The
program
was
presented by Orpha Fields.
The second program was
given on Global Consciousness, the theme being
"God's World - hungry! ".
She reported that the
National Board of Women of
the Church of God approved a
$25,000 two-year project and a
World Relief gr4nt of $500 for

threeareasoftheworld. She meelingwillbeB?nnieFielrls
dosed the program .bY, stalmg and Grace CunmnghHm. An

lha~prayin~,sharing ,cari~g , e~ecutlveCO!IIml\teemeellng

lovmg, g1vmg, and changmg
are all part of the remedy lor
the world hungry . Aller the
program, a short business
meeting was held. A report
was given on the Group Bible
Sludy by Delores Taylor .
It was reported that tlle
State Board of the WCG voted
to send the Christmas gift
boxes to the Home Mission
Stati on
in
Alliance
Nebraska . . Stewards hip
Director Becky Reed, will be
in charg~ of the box.
ll was announced that the
Pre-Christmas Prayer Vigil
around the world will be
observed in West Virginia on
December 25. The local
society
will observe the hour
1
from 8:00 - 9:00 p.m..
Hostesses for next month's

n.ato,...

RllAUIIUS

IWI

BLAZER SUIT proves nattering to woman who wants
to be stylish but has a full figure. Blazer is simply styled to
button over pull-on pants or a skirt lor a suit look.
Designed in easy-care polyester by Lady Fairfield.

Surprise party ·held recently

Carpenter's class, Mrs .
Frances Whittington, Mrs.
Judith Eblin, - Mrs. Sharon
Doss, Mrs. Pat Kitchen; Mrs.
Helen Maag 's class, Mrs.
Judy Farley, Mrs. Becky
Drenner, Mrs . Maurisha
Nelson, Mrs. Nancy Snyder.
Second Grade : Miss
Barbara Logan 's class, Mrs.
Shirley Roush, Wilma Reece,
Mrs. Mildred Nash, Mrs .
Carolyn Clonch; Mrs. Twila """""vV~-./V&gt;.fV'V'v\'M
Childs' class, Mrs. Phyllis
Baker, Mrs. Kathy Chadwell,
Mrs. Nancy Snyder and Mrs.
Elai~e Miller.
Third Grade : Mrs. Maxine

Darrell Norris is eligible and wi II be a Write
In Candidate for the office of Clerk of Letart
Township; at the Election Tuesday. Nov. 4.
Darrell is a resident of Apple Grove. 0 .. is a
respectable citizen and a 1%9 graduate of
Southern Local Higll School. Your votes will
be appred'ated.

Signed: Darrell Norris

1 ·

Ca.Iend ar

Of the people,
By the people,
Fhrthe people,
From the people.

Fra nk Ulair

is now on TV
and raU iu.
repor ting en ergy

news from

Col um bia Gas

m.

Ifnatural gas cost
its worth, ·
there wouldn't be a shortage today.
Natural gas is our cleanest fuel. It doesn't
blacken skies.,it doesn' t pollute rivers and
stream s. It has always been cheap. And
that's 'the root of the naiurai gas shortage
toda v. ·
Tlic drillers' price of natural gas has
been controlled by government and , as
Columbia Gus poin ts o ut, he Id anilicially
low. compared to the cost and value of
other fuel s. Because it is clean and val !table. and inexpensive, the demand for
natural gas has far outgrown the avail abl e supplie s. And, Ioo much of it is
wasted.
Columbia says we must und erstand the
fa~;t that America is runnin g o ut of cheap
energy and we have to conserve natural
gas like lhe preci ous natural r~ sourcc thai
it is. But we can' t stop. the re. Ne &gt;l' gas
supplies mu si be produced.

Roommothers
selected
at
'
Middleport Elementary

Write In Candidate

So~'~j~~'W.: Pack .243

Will be helrl on Monday,
,. ........,
·l . .:t ·:·
A membership drive will be
October 27, at 7:00 p.m.
conducted by the Meigs Girls
The Halloween theme was
Athleti c Boosters, it was
used in tlle decorations and
ann
oun ced at a re cent
refr es hments . Attending
meeting
of the group at Meigs
were Becky Reed, Delores·,
High
School.
Taylor, Sue Erwin, Roberta
Membership cards will be
MaynarJ , Ada Johnson, Rena
John son , Grace Gun- prepared and sold by the
bo osters. Mrs. Kenneth
nirtgham , Orpha Fields, Sara
McLaughlin
presided at the
Gibbs and Bonnie Fields.
, meeting during which \ime it
Mr s. David Fields, Jr ·
attended - tlle State Board was noted that the budget lor
Meeting and Prayer Retreat the year had been approved
by the school board. The
of the West Virginia Women
bQos ters agreed to allow $1
of the Church of God recently
snack money per person for
at Cedar Lakes. Mrs. Fields
each away game of the
is State President of the
basketball team.
WCG. The theme , of the
It was announced that the
retreat was "Joy Cometh".
volleyball, Class A Sectional,
Mrs. Esther Bauer from.
Anderson, Indiana was the will be held Nov. 4, 6 and 6 at
Meigs ·High. Plans were
guest speaker. Mrs. Bauer
" has filled variou,s posts of made to recognize Richard
leadership in the Church of Maue , organizer of the
God at the national level as boosters, who was reported
trustee of the college, pastor, ill. Purchase of a reuther
evangelist and Christian board was also approved.
education leader.
RIZZO OPPOSED
t&gt;HILADELPHIA (UPI) The Philadelphia Inquirer
called incumbent Mayor
Frank L, Rizzo "an arrogant
and divisive tyrant," Sunday
A birthday dinner honoring and endorsed black inMrs. Martha Childs was held dependent Charles W.
Sunday at the home of Mr. Bowser in the November
and Mrs. Cash Bahr, Mid- mayoralty election.
dleport. The dinner was
potluck with children and
Accidents are costly That's what the United Way is all about. People.
grandchildren in attendance.
People with problems. Y(·ung people. People hit
Present were Mr. and Mrs. SAFETY PAYS.
· by disasters. People withr•llt homes. People out of
Bahr, Mr. and Mrs. George
work. And people willing to help. People who
Pope, Mr. and Mrs. David
Garst and son · Jason,
care the United Way. It's the world's greatest
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
program of people helping people. People just
William Childs, Mr. and Mrs.
like you.
Robert Reeves, Bryan and
Jamie, Mr. and Mrs. Mick
nWlll'lcl ...
Childs, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Gibbs, Mr. and
Middleport
Mrs. Greg Gibbs and sons
9 to S Mon .-Fri.
Sean and P. J. and Mrs. Doug
9to8 Sat.
UnttlldWiy
A P\Jbl ic Service ol Thlt Newapaper
Van Meter, Mary Melissa and
~ &amp; The A&lt;lvtl lisl ng Council
Closed Sunday
Verna, New Haven, W. Va.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. children, Mrs. Vicki Hanson,
Clark entertained recenUy Ricky Clark and Sherri
with a surprise birthday Clark, all born in October .
A pink, blue and purple
party honoring their three
color scheme was carried out
in the decorations which
Philson's class, Mrs. Jea" featured the Flintstone
.Fisher, Mrs. Emma Moodis- theme. Adecorated cake was
paugh, Mrs. Carolyn French, served with homemade ice
Mrs. Betty McKinley; Mrs. cream and soft drinks. AtJulia McComas' class, Mrs. tending besides Mr. and Mrs.
Marilyn Poulin, Mrs . Joyce Clark and their children were
Blake, Mrs. Mary Hoover, Harold Hanson, Mrs. Evelyn
Mrs. ·Sharon Bailey.
Spencer, Terry Clark and
Fourth Grade: Mrs. Barr's Nancy Large. .
class, Mrs. Cherole Burdette,
Mrs. Ruby Rife, Mrs. Mary
Walburn, Mrs . Mary Jo
Pooler ; Mrs. Lucy White 's
class, Mrs. Nancy Cele, ·Mrs.
+++
Betty Denny, Mrs. Nancy
"The main thing In an affair Is to keep your perspective. Van Meter, M~s. Lucille
Certain emotional or physical needs are being met but is this Davis.
enough to·end a marriage - or Is it tlle impetus to make you
realize tllat, with effort and appreciation, you can make your
own marriage better? In other words, don't use an affair as a
substitute lor your marriage, but as a learning situation. If
you've got a special kind of mate, you might even tell him or
her about the liaison. Mostly, I wouldn't recommend
however."- J. T.

Middleport Elementary .
room mothers met receQUy
with Mrs. Pat Kitchen to
discuss activities lor th e
school year and set dale lor
serving at tlle PTA meetings.
Room mothers are:
Kindergarten : morning
class, Mrs. Jane Frymyer,
Mrs. Sharon Wright, Mrs.
Rita Little, Mrs . Donna
Pullins and Mrs. Ruth Ann
Plants; afternoon, Mrs. Mary
Brewer, Mrs . Susan Baer,
Mrs. Robert Acree, Mrs.
C0nnie Dodson and Mrs .
Snndra Hanning.
First Grade: Mrs. Wilson

·Boos~ers plan drive
for new membership·

Mrs. Childs
honors birthday

+++

Figures here are somewhat less startling than tllose in
other recent surveys for obvio~s reasons: HHU respondents
are all ages, !rom young newlyweds to over-00 greatgrandparents. Moreover, thef have no specific life style, as do
readers of Playboy (free and easy), or of Redbook
(predominanUy under-35, white suburban housewifes with
outside jobs). Ours is a sampling of all types, from conservative to swinger, and their ietters Indicate (but don't
prove) that S&lt;K:aUed old-JashiOiled beliefs and values are not
dead In 1975 America.
Take, for example, my questions 011 group marriage,
threesomes, swinging, etc. : Less than 5 per cent of my serveyees reported participation in any of tllese and only 7 per
cent (15per cent In California) were interested in trying them.
(Men showed slighUy more curiosity than women here - but
not much.)
The majority checked, "These are not for me but I believe
in letting people do their own thing," though a sizeable number
also registered eltller shock or disgust. One woman said, "We
thought 'swinging' might revive our marriage, but It just
proved we needed di,vorce."
An Oregon man wrote from a commune: "It's the only way
to go," but his wife, in a separate letter, wasn't sure: "You
can't always put down jealousy, and fights about the kids just
aren't cool."
• Threesomes: "I figured I should try everything, but once
is enough!" most experimenters said.
In the area of affairs, my correspondents were more
liberal. Over 35 per cent of husbands and 25 per cent of wives
felt "an affair sometimes helps a marriage." (This approximates the number who actually reported affairs, but they
often aren't the same people.)
"Do you think an affair Is ever warranted ?" brought
"Yes" votes from~ per cent of the men and neado per cent of
the women, nationwide - and In California, the figure was
considerably higher.
'
Comments about affairs ranged from extreme guilt and
repentance to "Look, if I didn't have a great sex thing going
with my secretary, I might betempU!d to leave my wile - who
Is great as a companion, helpmate, mother,.intellectual equal,
but not In bed."
And (from a wife): "An affair saved our marriage. I
taught my husbaixl what 'the other man' did RIGHT, but I
never let him know where I learned the bedroom techniques."
"An affair restored my sell-confidence," wrote a Penn·
sylvania wo!llan. ''Before, I thought I was frigid."
Several men leveled about "neCding the security of
marriage but the excitement of the chase." They might be
surprised to learn their wives felt likewise.
Here is a letter that speaks for many: "Affairs do Indeed
help a marrage, II a. partner is sexually dissatisfied, feels
unnecessary or unwanU!d. The courtship attitudes prevalent in
a new relationship are more exciting and stimulating. But
often we realize the marriage partner Is more comfortable in
Ute long run, for the old saw is true : sex isn 't everytlllng.

_5 - The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mo~day, Oct. 20, 1975

YOUR CHOICE OF
3 COMBINATIONS:

Abo ut a third o f !he na tion's total
energy. and over half of all the fuel used
by industry, is natural gas. Our supplies
o f natural gas cann o t be all owed to
rf main locked up in the face ~f need.
· Columbia knows 11r 11' gas WJII have to
Just more . More to find, more to produce, and more to use . And they feel that
if federal policies continue to discourage
the development of ne.w gas ITere at
home. in the Gulf of .Mexico, and in the
outer continental shelf oil' the Atlan tic
Coast. we may not ha ve a choice betwee n
higher prices and higher unemployment.
The American economy can't aft'ord to
have a third of the co untry's energy
supply and half o f indu£try's needs decline further. No one likes to pay higher
prices for anything. But, no one likes to
be out of work either.

·'

RACINE - Awards were
presented ' at the recent
meeting of Racine Cub Scout
Fack 243 presided over by
Cubmaster Earl Cleland.
Webelos Zane Beegle and
David Salmons presented the
colors and joined in the
pledge to the flag led by Zaf1e
Beegle. Cleland reported on
the trophy received for the
July 4 parade in Racine and
the school night for cub scout
registration held last montll .
Awards were presented to
Richard Hill and Ralph
Fisher, denner cord; Sean
Rilfie, assistant denner cord

and a bobcat badge; Zane
Beagle, Webelos Forester,
artist and uthletic activity
badges; Paul Hill, Jr.,
Webelos artist an\1 forester
activtty badges; David
Salmans, Webelos artist
activity badge·; Alan Crisp,
bobcat badge. Eligible for
awards, but not present were ·
Steve Fisher, assistant
denner cord ,andCharlesRay
Lawrence, a "Pedro" patch
for a Boy's Life magazine
subscription. Receiving individual president's unit
award patches were Jan and
Trevor Cardone and Jason

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"•"".

.

Polly's p nt er s

0I
Hill.
Den 2 presented a gam e
enlilled "Santa Fe Trail "
with atl of the boys par- ,
ticipating. Jan Cardone , den '\ 1
leader coach, Jean Cleland , ;:,~ .
den mother, and Cleland gave By. Polly Cramer
a skit, "Cub Seoul Dilemma
INFI..ATION FIGHTER
those "cents off " coupOfls and
or Den Mottters Dragnet."
DEAR READERS _ In- note th eir expiration dales.
There was also a skit ,
"Pioneer Folklore" by Den 2. nation is pethaps the mnjor . Plan your meals and shopAn outing at Camp worry of housewives on every ping list around them . On an
Kiashuta, a Halloween party income level so, If yo•• like the envelope make the shoppin g
and the fall camporee on Oct. idea, we 'plan to ~evote one list I using as many coupons
24, 25 and 26 were announced. column each week to Pointers as. possible and making the
Cresllyn and Linda Hill concerning clothing, housing, list as long as your freezer
served refreshments. Crafts food, etc., to help combat and wallet will allow). Put
and cub seoul projects were inflation. Please pass on to us the coupons in an envelope
on display. A "living circle~· and fellow readers any ways and put in your purse. While
you have discovered for shopping stick to your list.
closed the meeting .
making
a dollar go further.
First prepare foods that
Attending were Don
Hope to hear from you soon. take tlle longest to cook such
Beegle, Sue , Tracy and Zane, - POLI..Y.
as a ham or turkey.
Mary Porter , Bill, John and
Whenever possible bone or
Mark, Jo Ann and Alan
cut
fat from any meat before
DEAR POLLY - To utilize
Crisep. Daniel · Rillle,
cookin!}. Bones go into the
Shannon , Sean, Tracy and every bit of that expensive stock po l and fat is rendered
Denise, Helen Hill and heat let your oven work alter to replace butter in cooking .
Richard, Libby Fisher and it is turned off but still hot. When possible cut a roast in
Ralph, Scott Cleland , Tony Remove the plastic wrap- meal size portions so that less
Frederick, Don Salmons, pings from any crackers, time is required lor cookin g.
Carol, Melinda and Mavis, cookies, potato chips and Freeze leftover meat. It can
Linda Hill and Jason , Jan even prepared breakfast he reheated without further
Cardone, Trevor and Annett, cereals. Put these foods in the nuisance. Make individual
Crestlyn Hill and Paul, Jr., hot oven to rreshen and crisp. meat loaves and cas.Serules
Earl Cleland , Jean , J81ll~s , Often things ·can be made lor freezing.
appetizing that might
Tracy and Marty.
Meals that are to be frozen
otherwise be thrown away.
without
cooking should be cut
There is no danger of burning
into
serving
portions and well
with the heat turned off. Leftover oven hsat is also great wrapped for freezing . Alter a
lor drying cookie sheets, cooking day when many
cupcake holders, iron frying things are cooked at one lime
pans and other metal things your freezer will have many
that should be thoroughly dry good meals and o.ne healing
before s loring .- ELIZ- of the oven will have served
many purposes. At mealtime
ABETH.
DEAR POLLY - I have pull out what is needed and
Costume prizes were used the following for years heat in a toaster oven for
awarded at a Halloween but now lind it extra good about hall an hour since most
party held for the members of when we must watch all our such ovens will hold enough
the Laurel Clill Free pennies . White vinegar for four people . - TERESA.
Methodist Church Sunday makes an inexpensive subschool class of Mrs. Mildred stitute for fabri c softener,
You 11'111 receive a dollar If
Jacobs and their guests.
Polly
uses your fa&gt;orlte
prevents diaper rash, leaves
Because Mrs . Jacobs was clothes soft and fluffy and homemaking Idea, Pet
hospitalize~ , Mrs. Barbara
with a nice odor . It also Peeve, Polly's Problem or
Sargent hosted the party . prevents a buildup In the solution to a problem. Write
Artificial
pumpkins, washer hose. - MRS. J. U. Polly In care of this newsscarecrows and witches
DEAR POLLY - An oc- paper.
decorated the party room . casional " food day" can
Costumes were judged by really cut costs and work
Becky Eblin, Belinda Friend while resulting in better
and Tom Soulsby with prizes eating. This is especially
going to Mrs. Harold Hanson, good for singles a,nd working
the prettiest; Diane Lewis, couples. Begin by sorting
most original, and Betty Will,
ugliest.
Mrs . Jack Ja cobs and
Diane Lewis ~opduc ted
ROYAL BffifHDAY
games. Cider and cake were
TOKYO (UP!) - Japanese
served, and games prizes
Crown Princess Mlchiko
went to Susan Fleshman and
Monday celebrated her 41st
Mike Wright. Grace was
given by the Rev. Floyd birthday today.
Michiko, a commoner who
Shook. Others attending were
met
·her husband, Crown
Mrs. Floyd Shook, Harold
Prince Akihito on the tennis
Hanson, Mr . and Mrs . Ernie
ljaggy, Mr. and Mrs. Dick courts of a summer resort 17
years ago, married him In
Folmer, Rick Ash, Sherri and
April, 1959 after extensive
Joan Clark and Jean Windon.
training in court etiquette.

Saving energy
and stale snacks

.,
MONDAY
MEIGS County Men 's
~eUowship of Churches of
Christ, 7:30p.m. at Rutland
Church of Christ with items
for Mountain Mission School
Grundy, Va., to be prepared
for
sending following
business session .
MEIGS Band Boosters
~egtilar meeting 7:30p.m. at
high school with parents of all
band members asked to
attend.
MlDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women's
Club dinner meeting, 6:30
p.m. Meigs Inn. Helen
gave material. on Grand·Morrison, district legislative · MINERSVILLE
Readings
on
autumn
and
mother 's Day which is
representative, will he guest
speaker . "Woman of the holidays of October were celebrated the second Sunday
Year" and "Woman of the presented at the Wednesday in October, and Mrs. June
meeting of the United Sayre read "Listen to the
Week" to he selected.
MEIGS COUNTY Garden Methodist Women of the . Fiddler."
Other readings were
Clubs Association , 7:30 p.m. Minersville United Methodist
Church.
"Indian
Summer/'· Mrs.
at the Middleport Firemen's
Phillips;
"Tr
1'ck or Treat, "
A
day
of
quilting
and
sack
lounge. New ollicers)l'iU be
luncheon
preceded
the
Mrs. Stella Grueser; "The
insU!lled, final plans will be
made for the Region II meeting presided over by Glory of Autumn, " Mrs. Lillie
"America's
meeting, and Christmas Mrs. Mildred Phillips. Mrs. Starcher;
Doris
Grueser
presented
the
Pride,"
Mrs.
kathryn
Miller;
nower show schedule wlll he
program
which
opened
with
"Tne
Forgotten
Man,"
Mrs.
discussed.
group
singing
of
"America,"
Grueser,
and
"On
Aulwnn,"
' FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity
Church, 7:30 p.m. at tlle prayer by Mrs. Stella ,a poem, also by ·Mrs .
church. Miss Erma Smitllto Grueser and scripture from Grueser.
A card ,.was signed lor
St. Mark by Mrs. Phillips .
present the program.
Mrs.
Sadie
Brown
read
Harry
$efser who i~ at the
NON-CERTIFIED PER"
Beauty
is
God
's
HandThurli'er
Rest ChnlC '"
SONNEI.L of Southern LoColumbus.
Mrs. Mary
writing,"
Mrs
.
Ruby
Grueser
cal School District, 7 p.m.
Russell
will
have the
at the high school. OAPSE
November
meeting
. Mrs.
representative will be
WEDNESDAY
Miller
was
a
guest.
Others
present.
POMEROY
MID·
TUESDAy
DLEPORT Lions Club, noon attending were Mrs. Ruby
SOUTHERN LOCAL · at- the Meigs Inn with Lions Grueser, Gertrude Mitchell.
BAND BOOSTERS,
7:30 District Governor Paul Kelly,
p.m. at high school.
Ohio District 13K as the
SALISBURY PTA, 7:30 speaker. Topic, "Lionism is
p.m. There wlli!Je a speaker an Opportwtity." Induction of
from Rio Grande Community new members, awards to he
Officers were el~cted at the
College.
presented .
Wednesday night meeting of
CHESTER Council 323 ,
OHIO VALLEY COM- the Past Presidenls of the
Daughters of America, 7:30 MANDERY 24, 7:30 p.m. American Legion Auxiliary
p.m. Inspection will be held. Masonic Temple, with all of Drew Webster Post 39 held
Members urged to attend and Knights
and
officers at the home of Mrs . Faye
to wear white. . _
requested to attend.
Wildermuth.
Elected were Mrs. Veda
.; RUTLAND FIREMEN and
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Davis,
president; Mrs .
:· the Ladies of the Auxlilary at Club, 2 p.m. at the home of
Couch ,
vice
:- the fire house, 7:30 p.m. Mrs . Robert Bumgarner. Isabelle
:: Plims to be made lor work Mrs. Roy Cassell will review president; Mrs. Iva Powell,
' session. All members urged "Witchcraft at Salem" by secretary, and Mrs. Faye
, to attend.
Chadwich Hansen, and Mrs. Wildermuth, treasurer. ·
Prayer and the pledge to
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, M. L. French will give
the
flag opened the meeting.
; Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 "Patrick Henry" by William
• p.m., Columbus and Southern Wirt. For roll call members Mrs . Pearl Knapp had
:, Ohio Electric Co, Cultural are to give a '"bewitching" devotions using the "Message
of the Dogwood" and a poem
~- program, "This Is My experience.
about
October . Mrs. Davis
·:country" with Joyce Bar- AMERICAN Legion
will
host
the Nov . 29 meeting.
: umus, leader, and Janet Auxiliary, Feeney - Bennett
Refreshments
were served.
, Downie and Pat Brogan, Post '128, 7:30p.m. preceded
Others
attending
were Mrs.
· hostesses.
by a dinner·or both the Legion
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Leona
' ; . OBSERVAICE OF World and the Auxiliary.
Smith,
Miss Erma Smith and
''War I night with annual
FEENEY-BENNEIT Post
Mrs.
Grace
Pratt with Mrs.
oyster stew supper by Drew 128, American Legion, 7:30
Marge
Reuter
, a guest.
. :webster Post 39, American p.m.
· Legion, 8 p.m. at post home .
· World War I veterans
· needing transporting, call
· Charles Swatzel.
MEETING of Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, 7
' p.m. with work In the entered
~· -apprentice
degree. All
, Master Masons lnylt.ed.
• .. OCTOBER MEETING of
Service like ours.
Wha t's more. when you need us. we're there .
·.'Meigs County Regional
Because when it comes to service no one comes close
The simpl e fac t ts: no one has the men, the avai lable
to
lhe
phone
company.
And
even
lhoogh
someone
else
equ
ipment. the total e•pe ri en ce to serv ice your phone
: ·Planning Commission set for
may
give
you
a
positive
pictur
e
about
their
phone
systems.
faster
than the phone company.
, ; 3 ,p.m. in ASCS conference
they 're a long way· from giving you the kind of servi ce
Alter all , we're only a phone call aw ay.
•. room of Farmers Bank
plcluoe you get from the phone company.
For example , we won 't set you up with a highly spe: ;,Building.
cialized phone system unless we can back it up with a
I :~
WEDNESDAy
highly specialized service force .
; • MIDDLEPORT
Citizens
" , Recreation Committee
:·meeting 7: 30 p.m. in .former ·
'
.,. council chambers at Mid; •' die port Village Hall to
: ;·discuss JulY, 1-4, 1976
;; ;.Railroad Festival Days.
~ ~ Public Invited.

Minersville women hear
readings on October

.,

•

receives awards

Past presidents
elect officers

HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Wilma Stobart, Rock .
Springs Road , is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center.
Admitted Friday night, she is ·
in )loom 234.

Play it safe and rure
It may be time to
have your preeent
policy updated.

Let's fallc Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992 -2143

102 W. Main

with someone else's phone system.
lfi i 4

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Buy Any Full Size or Queen Size Bemco
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Cover yourself wit.h savings. Gt:t into a Bcm('() right now!

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Full Size Bemco Box Spring &amp; Mattress, 249.95
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Open the dOOr to friendship

plus fine service by visiting
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1503 Eastern Ave.

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Pomeroy

H~~e's what you don't get.

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AND

Miss Ern a .!esse hos ted a
meeting of the Magnolia Club
at her home Thursday night.
Th e Lord's Prayer · in
unison ropened the meeting
wi th devotions being given by
Mrs. Ellen Couch who read
from the 37 th Psalm and gave
a meditation
entitled
"Learning to Rest in the
Lord ." A prog ram of contests
was conducted by Mrs.
Bertha Canaday.
The Nov. 20 meeting will he
at the home of Mrs. Ella
Smith with Mrs . Doris
Grueser to have ·devotions
and tll e program to consist of
Thanksg iving readings and
poems.
Refreshments were served
to those named and Mrs .
Margaret Rose, Mrs . Georgia
Watson, Mrs. Ethel Stewart,
Mrs. Gladys Cuckler and
Mrs. Burton Smith. Miss
Martha Jesse was a guest at
the meeting.

Halloween
costumes
win prizes

I~ BIG SHEF AND LARGE
FRENCH FRIES.
~.DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER

MaRnolia Club gathers

992-2635

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MIDDLEPORT

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,,_ WOtiG f Olttltlr S/t&gt;rtMO P,IJ .

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New Haven women meet

noe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-PIBIIeroy, 0., Monday' Oct . 20. 1975
,~~'1&gt;.~*''''''*~~;,,,.,,,.,.,.,.,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,,,,t

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Help
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By Hc·lt•Jl Hottel

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·.·.

Starting today and continuing Wednesday and Friday of
this week, Helen Bottel reveals the .results of tlle marriage
survey eonducU!d tllis summer via her .column.
MARRIAGE SURVEY (PARr I)
Is marriage going out of style ?
Definitely not, Insist nearly 4,000 "Helen Help Us" readers
who answered my recent "Mini ..Survey lor Married and
Formerly Married People." Even those whose relationships
ha ve bombed are hopeful about the next time around. And please note - men are more marriage-oriented than women in
these liberated times.

+++

Less than 7 per cent of male correspondenl.'! and 11 per
cent of tlle females believe marriage is on the way out. But,
when asked, "If you were starting over again, would you still
marry?" 10 per cent of men and 14 per cent of women replied,
"No !" And 30 per cent (of both sexes) admitted they would
NOT marry the same person, though some Indicated they were
quite happy in tllelr present unions. As one honest wile put it :
"Ours Is a good marriage, even great occasionally, but
who would wantexacUy the same thing twice ' 1often fantasize
an affair, wondering what I've missed, "
While most people dre8111 of extramarital romance my
HHU study reveals the majority still limit infidelity to
dre81111ng. Some 35 per cent of the men and 20 per cent or ·the
women admit to affairs while married, although a number
qualified, "This doesn't Include one-night stands: I don't
consider them affairs."

NEW HAVEN, ·w. va. _
The New Haven Women of
the Church or God. ~et ,in
October in the m1ss1onary
. building with Delores Taylor
and Becky Reed hostesses.
9elores Taylor was in
charge of devotions. Her
scripture was taken from
Matth ew 25 :31-46- 1 was
Hungry and You Gave Me
Food. She also read a poem,
"There's A World Out
There." Sue Erwin led in
prayer.
The
program
was
presented by Orpha Fields.
The second program was
given on Global Consciousness, the theme being
"God's World - hungry! ".
She reported that the
National Board of Women of
the Church of God approved a
$25,000 two-year project and a
World Relief gr4nt of $500 for

threeareasoftheworld. She meelingwillbeB?nnieFielrls
dosed the program .bY, stalmg and Grace CunmnghHm. An

lha~prayin~,sharing ,cari~g , e~ecutlveCO!IIml\teemeellng

lovmg, g1vmg, and changmg
are all part of the remedy lor
the world hungry . Aller the
program, a short business
meeting was held. A report
was given on the Group Bible
Sludy by Delores Taylor .
It was reported that tlle
State Board of the WCG voted
to send the Christmas gift
boxes to the Home Mission
Stati on
in
Alliance
Nebraska . . Stewards hip
Director Becky Reed, will be
in charg~ of the box.
ll was announced that the
Pre-Christmas Prayer Vigil
around the world will be
observed in West Virginia on
December 25. The local
society
will observe the hour
1
from 8:00 - 9:00 p.m..
Hostesses for next month's

n.ato,...

RllAUIIUS

IWI

BLAZER SUIT proves nattering to woman who wants
to be stylish but has a full figure. Blazer is simply styled to
button over pull-on pants or a skirt lor a suit look.
Designed in easy-care polyester by Lady Fairfield.

Surprise party ·held recently

Carpenter's class, Mrs .
Frances Whittington, Mrs.
Judith Eblin, - Mrs. Sharon
Doss, Mrs. Pat Kitchen; Mrs.
Helen Maag 's class, Mrs.
Judy Farley, Mrs. Becky
Drenner, Mrs . Maurisha
Nelson, Mrs. Nancy Snyder.
Second Grade : Miss
Barbara Logan 's class, Mrs.
Shirley Roush, Wilma Reece,
Mrs. Mildred Nash, Mrs .
Carolyn Clonch; Mrs. Twila """""vV~-./V&gt;.fV'V'v\'M
Childs' class, Mrs. Phyllis
Baker, Mrs. Kathy Chadwell,
Mrs. Nancy Snyder and Mrs.
Elai~e Miller.
Third Grade : Mrs. Maxine

Darrell Norris is eligible and wi II be a Write
In Candidate for the office of Clerk of Letart
Township; at the Election Tuesday. Nov. 4.
Darrell is a resident of Apple Grove. 0 .. is a
respectable citizen and a 1%9 graduate of
Southern Local Higll School. Your votes will
be appred'ated.

Signed: Darrell Norris

1 ·

Ca.Iend ar

Of the people,
By the people,
Fhrthe people,
From the people.

Fra nk Ulair

is now on TV
and raU iu.
repor ting en ergy

news from

Col um bia Gas

m.

Ifnatural gas cost
its worth, ·
there wouldn't be a shortage today.
Natural gas is our cleanest fuel. It doesn't
blacken skies.,it doesn' t pollute rivers and
stream s. It has always been cheap. And
that's 'the root of the naiurai gas shortage
toda v. ·
Tlic drillers' price of natural gas has
been controlled by government and , as
Columbia Gus poin ts o ut, he Id anilicially
low. compared to the cost and value of
other fuel s. Because it is clean and val !table. and inexpensive, the demand for
natural gas has far outgrown the avail abl e supplie s. And, Ioo much of it is
wasted.
Columbia says we must und erstand the
fa~;t that America is runnin g o ut of cheap
energy and we have to conserve natural
gas like lhe preci ous natural r~ sourcc thai
it is. But we can' t stop. the re. Ne &gt;l' gas
supplies mu si be produced.

Roommothers
selected
at
'
Middleport Elementary

Write In Candidate

So~'~j~~'W.: Pack .243

Will be helrl on Monday,
,. ........,
·l . .:t ·:·
A membership drive will be
October 27, at 7:00 p.m.
conducted by the Meigs Girls
The Halloween theme was
Athleti c Boosters, it was
used in tlle decorations and
ann
oun ced at a re cent
refr es hments . Attending
meeting
of the group at Meigs
were Becky Reed, Delores·,
High
School.
Taylor, Sue Erwin, Roberta
Membership cards will be
MaynarJ , Ada Johnson, Rena
John son , Grace Gun- prepared and sold by the
bo osters. Mrs. Kenneth
nirtgham , Orpha Fields, Sara
McLaughlin
presided at the
Gibbs and Bonnie Fields.
, meeting during which \ime it
Mr s. David Fields, Jr ·
attended - tlle State Board was noted that the budget lor
Meeting and Prayer Retreat the year had been approved
by the school board. The
of the West Virginia Women
bQos ters agreed to allow $1
of the Church of God recently
snack money per person for
at Cedar Lakes. Mrs. Fields
each away game of the
is State President of the
basketball team.
WCG. The theme , of the
It was announced that the
retreat was "Joy Cometh".
volleyball, Class A Sectional,
Mrs. Esther Bauer from.
Anderson, Indiana was the will be held Nov. 4, 6 and 6 at
Meigs ·High. Plans were
guest speaker. Mrs. Bauer
" has filled variou,s posts of made to recognize Richard
leadership in the Church of Maue , organizer of the
God at the national level as boosters, who was reported
trustee of the college, pastor, ill. Purchase of a reuther
evangelist and Christian board was also approved.
education leader.
RIZZO OPPOSED
t&gt;HILADELPHIA (UPI) The Philadelphia Inquirer
called incumbent Mayor
Frank L, Rizzo "an arrogant
and divisive tyrant," Sunday
A birthday dinner honoring and endorsed black inMrs. Martha Childs was held dependent Charles W.
Sunday at the home of Mr. Bowser in the November
and Mrs. Cash Bahr, Mid- mayoralty election.
dleport. The dinner was
potluck with children and
Accidents are costly That's what the United Way is all about. People.
grandchildren in attendance.
People with problems. Y(·ung people. People hit
Present were Mr. and Mrs. SAFETY PAYS.
· by disasters. People withr•llt homes. People out of
Bahr, Mr. and Mrs. George
work. And people willing to help. People who
Pope, Mr. and Mrs. David
Garst and son · Jason,
care the United Way. It's the world's greatest
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
program of people helping people. People just
William Childs, Mr. and Mrs.
like you.
Robert Reeves, Bryan and
Jamie, Mr. and Mrs. Mick
nWlll'lcl ...
Childs, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Gibbs, Mr. and
Middleport
Mrs. Greg Gibbs and sons
9 to S Mon .-Fri.
Sean and P. J. and Mrs. Doug
9to8 Sat.
UnttlldWiy
A P\Jbl ic Service ol Thlt Newapaper
Van Meter, Mary Melissa and
~ &amp; The A&lt;lvtl lisl ng Council
Closed Sunday
Verna, New Haven, W. Va.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. children, Mrs. Vicki Hanson,
Clark entertained recenUy Ricky Clark and Sherri
with a surprise birthday Clark, all born in October .
A pink, blue and purple
party honoring their three
color scheme was carried out
in the decorations which
Philson's class, Mrs. Jea" featured the Flintstone
.Fisher, Mrs. Emma Moodis- theme. Adecorated cake was
paugh, Mrs. Carolyn French, served with homemade ice
Mrs. Betty McKinley; Mrs. cream and soft drinks. AtJulia McComas' class, Mrs. tending besides Mr. and Mrs.
Marilyn Poulin, Mrs . Joyce Clark and their children were
Blake, Mrs. Mary Hoover, Harold Hanson, Mrs. Evelyn
Mrs. ·Sharon Bailey.
Spencer, Terry Clark and
Fourth Grade: Mrs. Barr's Nancy Large. .
class, Mrs. Cherole Burdette,
Mrs. Ruby Rife, Mrs. Mary
Walburn, Mrs . Mary Jo
Pooler ; Mrs. Lucy White 's
class, Mrs. Nancy Cele, ·Mrs.
+++
Betty Denny, Mrs. Nancy
"The main thing In an affair Is to keep your perspective. Van Meter, M~s. Lucille
Certain emotional or physical needs are being met but is this Davis.
enough to·end a marriage - or Is it tlle impetus to make you
realize tllat, with effort and appreciation, you can make your
own marriage better? In other words, don't use an affair as a
substitute lor your marriage, but as a learning situation. If
you've got a special kind of mate, you might even tell him or
her about the liaison. Mostly, I wouldn't recommend
however."- J. T.

Middleport Elementary .
room mothers met receQUy
with Mrs. Pat Kitchen to
discuss activities lor th e
school year and set dale lor
serving at tlle PTA meetings.
Room mothers are:
Kindergarten : morning
class, Mrs. Jane Frymyer,
Mrs. Sharon Wright, Mrs.
Rita Little, Mrs . Donna
Pullins and Mrs. Ruth Ann
Plants; afternoon, Mrs. Mary
Brewer, Mrs . Susan Baer,
Mrs. Robert Acree, Mrs.
C0nnie Dodson and Mrs .
Snndra Hanning.
First Grade: Mrs. Wilson

·Boos~ers plan drive
for new membership·

Mrs. Childs
honors birthday

+++

Figures here are somewhat less startling than tllose in
other recent surveys for obvio~s reasons: HHU respondents
are all ages, !rom young newlyweds to over-00 greatgrandparents. Moreover, thef have no specific life style, as do
readers of Playboy (free and easy), or of Redbook
(predominanUy under-35, white suburban housewifes with
outside jobs). Ours is a sampling of all types, from conservative to swinger, and their ietters Indicate (but don't
prove) that S&lt;K:aUed old-JashiOiled beliefs and values are not
dead In 1975 America.
Take, for example, my questions 011 group marriage,
threesomes, swinging, etc. : Less than 5 per cent of my serveyees reported participation in any of tllese and only 7 per
cent (15per cent In California) were interested in trying them.
(Men showed slighUy more curiosity than women here - but
not much.)
The majority checked, "These are not for me but I believe
in letting people do their own thing," though a sizeable number
also registered eltller shock or disgust. One woman said, "We
thought 'swinging' might revive our marriage, but It just
proved we needed di,vorce."
An Oregon man wrote from a commune: "It's the only way
to go," but his wife, in a separate letter, wasn't sure: "You
can't always put down jealousy, and fights about the kids just
aren't cool."
• Threesomes: "I figured I should try everything, but once
is enough!" most experimenters said.
In the area of affairs, my correspondents were more
liberal. Over 35 per cent of husbands and 25 per cent of wives
felt "an affair sometimes helps a marriage." (This approximates the number who actually reported affairs, but they
often aren't the same people.)
"Do you think an affair Is ever warranted ?" brought
"Yes" votes from~ per cent of the men and neado per cent of
the women, nationwide - and In California, the figure was
considerably higher.
'
Comments about affairs ranged from extreme guilt and
repentance to "Look, if I didn't have a great sex thing going
with my secretary, I might betempU!d to leave my wile - who
Is great as a companion, helpmate, mother,.intellectual equal,
but not In bed."
And (from a wife): "An affair saved our marriage. I
taught my husbaixl what 'the other man' did RIGHT, but I
never let him know where I learned the bedroom techniques."
"An affair restored my sell-confidence," wrote a Penn·
sylvania wo!llan. ''Before, I thought I was frigid."
Several men leveled about "neCding the security of
marriage but the excitement of the chase." They might be
surprised to learn their wives felt likewise.
Here is a letter that speaks for many: "Affairs do Indeed
help a marrage, II a. partner is sexually dissatisfied, feels
unnecessary or unwanU!d. The courtship attitudes prevalent in
a new relationship are more exciting and stimulating. But
often we realize the marriage partner Is more comfortable in
Ute long run, for the old saw is true : sex isn 't everytlllng.

_5 - The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mo~day, Oct. 20, 1975

YOUR CHOICE OF
3 COMBINATIONS:

Abo ut a third o f !he na tion's total
energy. and over half of all the fuel used
by industry, is natural gas. Our supplies
o f natural gas cann o t be all owed to
rf main locked up in the face ~f need.
· Columbia knows 11r 11' gas WJII have to
Just more . More to find, more to produce, and more to use . And they feel that
if federal policies continue to discourage
the development of ne.w gas ITere at
home. in the Gulf of .Mexico, and in the
outer continental shelf oil' the Atlan tic
Coast. we may not ha ve a choice betwee n
higher prices and higher unemployment.
The American economy can't aft'ord to
have a third of the co untry's energy
supply and half o f indu£try's needs decline further. No one likes to pay higher
prices for anything. But, no one likes to
be out of work either.

·'

RACINE - Awards were
presented ' at the recent
meeting of Racine Cub Scout
Fack 243 presided over by
Cubmaster Earl Cleland.
Webelos Zane Beegle and
David Salmons presented the
colors and joined in the
pledge to the flag led by Zaf1e
Beegle. Cleland reported on
the trophy received for the
July 4 parade in Racine and
the school night for cub scout
registration held last montll .
Awards were presented to
Richard Hill and Ralph
Fisher, denner cord; Sean
Rilfie, assistant denner cord

and a bobcat badge; Zane
Beagle, Webelos Forester,
artist and uthletic activity
badges; Paul Hill, Jr.,
Webelos artist an\1 forester
activtty badges; David
Salmans, Webelos artist
activity badge·; Alan Crisp,
bobcat badge. Eligible for
awards, but not present were ·
Steve Fisher, assistant
denner cord ,andCharlesRay
Lawrence, a "Pedro" patch
for a Boy's Life magazine
subscription. Receiving individual president's unit
award patches were Jan and
Trevor Cardone and Jason

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Polly's p nt er s

0I
Hill.
Den 2 presented a gam e
enlilled "Santa Fe Trail "
with atl of the boys par- ,
ticipating. Jan Cardone , den '\ 1
leader coach, Jean Cleland , ;:,~ .
den mother, and Cleland gave By. Polly Cramer
a skit, "Cub Seoul Dilemma
INFI..ATION FIGHTER
those "cents off " coupOfls and
or Den Mottters Dragnet."
DEAR READERS _ In- note th eir expiration dales.
There was also a skit ,
"Pioneer Folklore" by Den 2. nation is pethaps the mnjor . Plan your meals and shopAn outing at Camp worry of housewives on every ping list around them . On an
Kiashuta, a Halloween party income level so, If yo•• like the envelope make the shoppin g
and the fall camporee on Oct. idea, we 'plan to ~evote one list I using as many coupons
24, 25 and 26 were announced. column each week to Pointers as. possible and making the
Cresllyn and Linda Hill concerning clothing, housing, list as long as your freezer
served refreshments. Crafts food, etc., to help combat and wallet will allow). Put
and cub seoul projects were inflation. Please pass on to us the coupons in an envelope
on display. A "living circle~· and fellow readers any ways and put in your purse. While
you have discovered for shopping stick to your list.
closed the meeting .
making
a dollar go further.
First prepare foods that
Attending were Don
Hope to hear from you soon. take tlle longest to cook such
Beegle, Sue , Tracy and Zane, - POLI..Y.
as a ham or turkey.
Mary Porter , Bill, John and
Whenever possible bone or
Mark, Jo Ann and Alan
cut
fat from any meat before
DEAR POLLY - To utilize
Crisep. Daniel · Rillle,
cookin!}. Bones go into the
Shannon , Sean, Tracy and every bit of that expensive stock po l and fat is rendered
Denise, Helen Hill and heat let your oven work alter to replace butter in cooking .
Richard, Libby Fisher and it is turned off but still hot. When possible cut a roast in
Ralph, Scott Cleland , Tony Remove the plastic wrap- meal size portions so that less
Frederick, Don Salmons, pings from any crackers, time is required lor cookin g.
Carol, Melinda and Mavis, cookies, potato chips and Freeze leftover meat. It can
Linda Hill and Jason , Jan even prepared breakfast he reheated without further
Cardone, Trevor and Annett, cereals. Put these foods in the nuisance. Make individual
Crestlyn Hill and Paul, Jr., hot oven to rreshen and crisp. meat loaves and cas.Serules
Earl Cleland , Jean , J81ll~s , Often things ·can be made lor freezing.
appetizing that might
Tracy and Marty.
Meals that are to be frozen
otherwise be thrown away.
without
cooking should be cut
There is no danger of burning
into
serving
portions and well
with the heat turned off. Leftover oven hsat is also great wrapped for freezing . Alter a
lor drying cookie sheets, cooking day when many
cupcake holders, iron frying things are cooked at one lime
pans and other metal things your freezer will have many
that should be thoroughly dry good meals and o.ne healing
before s loring .- ELIZ- of the oven will have served
many purposes. At mealtime
ABETH.
DEAR POLLY - I have pull out what is needed and
Costume prizes were used the following for years heat in a toaster oven for
awarded at a Halloween but now lind it extra good about hall an hour since most
party held for the members of when we must watch all our such ovens will hold enough
the Laurel Clill Free pennies . White vinegar for four people . - TERESA.
Methodist Church Sunday makes an inexpensive subschool class of Mrs. Mildred stitute for fabri c softener,
You 11'111 receive a dollar If
Jacobs and their guests.
Polly
uses your fa&gt;orlte
prevents diaper rash, leaves
Because Mrs . Jacobs was clothes soft and fluffy and homemaking Idea, Pet
hospitalize~ , Mrs. Barbara
with a nice odor . It also Peeve, Polly's Problem or
Sargent hosted the party . prevents a buildup In the solution to a problem. Write
Artificial
pumpkins, washer hose. - MRS. J. U. Polly In care of this newsscarecrows and witches
DEAR POLLY - An oc- paper.
decorated the party room . casional " food day" can
Costumes were judged by really cut costs and work
Becky Eblin, Belinda Friend while resulting in better
and Tom Soulsby with prizes eating. This is especially
going to Mrs. Harold Hanson, good for singles a,nd working
the prettiest; Diane Lewis, couples. Begin by sorting
most original, and Betty Will,
ugliest.
Mrs . Jack Ja cobs and
Diane Lewis ~opduc ted
ROYAL BffifHDAY
games. Cider and cake were
TOKYO (UP!) - Japanese
served, and games prizes
Crown Princess Mlchiko
went to Susan Fleshman and
Monday celebrated her 41st
Mike Wright. Grace was
given by the Rev. Floyd birthday today.
Michiko, a commoner who
Shook. Others attending were
met
·her husband, Crown
Mrs. Floyd Shook, Harold
Prince Akihito on the tennis
Hanson, Mr . and Mrs . Ernie
ljaggy, Mr. and Mrs. Dick courts of a summer resort 17
years ago, married him In
Folmer, Rick Ash, Sherri and
April, 1959 after extensive
Joan Clark and Jean Windon.
training in court etiquette.

Saving energy
and stale snacks

.,
MONDAY
MEIGS County Men 's
~eUowship of Churches of
Christ, 7:30p.m. at Rutland
Church of Christ with items
for Mountain Mission School
Grundy, Va., to be prepared
for
sending following
business session .
MEIGS Band Boosters
~egtilar meeting 7:30p.m. at
high school with parents of all
band members asked to
attend.
MlDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women's
Club dinner meeting, 6:30
p.m. Meigs Inn. Helen
gave material. on Grand·Morrison, district legislative · MINERSVILLE
Readings
on
autumn
and
mother 's Day which is
representative, will he guest
speaker . "Woman of the holidays of October were celebrated the second Sunday
Year" and "Woman of the presented at the Wednesday in October, and Mrs. June
meeting of the United Sayre read "Listen to the
Week" to he selected.
MEIGS COUNTY Garden Methodist Women of the . Fiddler."
Other readings were
Clubs Association , 7:30 p.m. Minersville United Methodist
Church.
"Indian
Summer/'· Mrs.
at the Middleport Firemen's
Phillips;
"Tr
1'ck or Treat, "
A
day
of
quilting
and
sack
lounge. New ollicers)l'iU be
luncheon
preceded
the
Mrs. Stella Grueser; "The
insU!lled, final plans will be
made for the Region II meeting presided over by Glory of Autumn, " Mrs. Lillie
"America's
meeting, and Christmas Mrs. Mildred Phillips. Mrs. Starcher;
Doris
Grueser
presented
the
Pride,"
Mrs.
kathryn
Miller;
nower show schedule wlll he
program
which
opened
with
"Tne
Forgotten
Man,"
Mrs.
discussed.
group
singing
of
"America,"
Grueser,
and
"On
Aulwnn,"
' FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity
Church, 7:30 p.m. at tlle prayer by Mrs. Stella ,a poem, also by ·Mrs .
church. Miss Erma Smitllto Grueser and scripture from Grueser.
A card ,.was signed lor
St. Mark by Mrs. Phillips .
present the program.
Mrs.
Sadie
Brown
read
Harry
$efser who i~ at the
NON-CERTIFIED PER"
Beauty
is
God
's
HandThurli'er
Rest ChnlC '"
SONNEI.L of Southern LoColumbus.
Mrs. Mary
writing,"
Mrs
.
Ruby
Grueser
cal School District, 7 p.m.
Russell
will
have the
at the high school. OAPSE
November
meeting
. Mrs.
representative will be
WEDNESDAY
Miller
was
a
guest.
Others
present.
POMEROY
MID·
TUESDAy
DLEPORT Lions Club, noon attending were Mrs. Ruby
SOUTHERN LOCAL · at- the Meigs Inn with Lions Grueser, Gertrude Mitchell.
BAND BOOSTERS,
7:30 District Governor Paul Kelly,
p.m. at high school.
Ohio District 13K as the
SALISBURY PTA, 7:30 speaker. Topic, "Lionism is
p.m. There wlli!Je a speaker an Opportwtity." Induction of
from Rio Grande Community new members, awards to he
Officers were el~cted at the
College.
presented .
Wednesday night meeting of
CHESTER Council 323 ,
OHIO VALLEY COM- the Past Presidenls of the
Daughters of America, 7:30 MANDERY 24, 7:30 p.m. American Legion Auxiliary
p.m. Inspection will be held. Masonic Temple, with all of Drew Webster Post 39 held
Members urged to attend and Knights
and
officers at the home of Mrs . Faye
to wear white. . _
requested to attend.
Wildermuth.
Elected were Mrs. Veda
.; RUTLAND FIREMEN and
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Davis,
president; Mrs .
:· the Ladies of the Auxlilary at Club, 2 p.m. at the home of
Couch ,
vice
:- the fire house, 7:30 p.m. Mrs . Robert Bumgarner. Isabelle
:: Plims to be made lor work Mrs. Roy Cassell will review president; Mrs. Iva Powell,
' session. All members urged "Witchcraft at Salem" by secretary, and Mrs. Faye
, to attend.
Chadwich Hansen, and Mrs. Wildermuth, treasurer. ·
Prayer and the pledge to
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, M. L. French will give
the
flag opened the meeting.
; Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 "Patrick Henry" by William
• p.m., Columbus and Southern Wirt. For roll call members Mrs . Pearl Knapp had
:, Ohio Electric Co, Cultural are to give a '"bewitching" devotions using the "Message
of the Dogwood" and a poem
~- program, "This Is My experience.
about
October . Mrs. Davis
·:country" with Joyce Bar- AMERICAN Legion
will
host
the Nov . 29 meeting.
: umus, leader, and Janet Auxiliary, Feeney - Bennett
Refreshments
were served.
, Downie and Pat Brogan, Post '128, 7:30p.m. preceded
Others
attending
were Mrs.
· hostesses.
by a dinner·or both the Legion
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Leona
' ; . OBSERVAICE OF World and the Auxiliary.
Smith,
Miss Erma Smith and
''War I night with annual
FEENEY-BENNEIT Post
Mrs.
Grace
Pratt with Mrs.
oyster stew supper by Drew 128, American Legion, 7:30
Marge
Reuter
, a guest.
. :webster Post 39, American p.m.
· Legion, 8 p.m. at post home .
· World War I veterans
· needing transporting, call
· Charles Swatzel.
MEETING of Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, 7
' p.m. with work In the entered
~· -apprentice
degree. All
, Master Masons lnylt.ed.
• .. OCTOBER MEETING of
Service like ours.
Wha t's more. when you need us. we're there .
·.'Meigs County Regional
Because when it comes to service no one comes close
The simpl e fac t ts: no one has the men, the avai lable
to
lhe
phone
company.
And
even
lhoogh
someone
else
equ
ipment. the total e•pe ri en ce to serv ice your phone
: ·Planning Commission set for
may
give
you
a
positive
pictur
e
about
their
phone
systems.
faster
than the phone company.
, ; 3 ,p.m. in ASCS conference
they 're a long way· from giving you the kind of servi ce
Alter all , we're only a phone call aw ay.
•. room of Farmers Bank
plcluoe you get from the phone company.
For example , we won 't set you up with a highly spe: ;,Building.
cialized phone system unless we can back it up with a
I :~
WEDNESDAy
highly specialized service force .
; • MIDDLEPORT
Citizens
" , Recreation Committee
:·meeting 7: 30 p.m. in .former ·
'
.,. council chambers at Mid; •' die port Village Hall to
: ;·discuss JulY, 1-4, 1976
;; ;.Railroad Festival Days.
~ ~ Public Invited.

Minersville women hear
readings on October

.,

•

receives awards

Past presidents
elect officers

HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Wilma Stobart, Rock .
Springs Road , is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center.
Admitted Friday night, she is ·
in )loom 234.

Play it safe and rure
It may be time to
have your preeent
policy updated.

Let's fallc Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992 -2143

102 W. Main

with someone else's phone system.
lfi i 4

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

.

,.. I·

.

•' I

r:.

l'l

~

SAVE UP TO $80
Buy Any Full Size or Queen Size Bemco
Quiltorama&lt;~~&gt;

Posture J&lt;~~&gt; or Posture II&lt;~~&gt;
mattress set now and the blanket,
sheets, pillows and pillowcases ~e free!
Eve n withoul Ihe free bedding
package , your Bemco 1s a great
buy. Exctus1 ve H ealth-O-Mat1 c•
construction adjusts and readjusts

LARGE FRENCH FRIES.

to your we1ght. your shape, your
sleeping positi on so yo u can e nd
every clay with the sounds of a
good nig ht's sleep.

Cover yourself wit.h savings. Gt:t into a Bcm('() right now!

I

:I. SKIPPER'S TREAT

Don't bang the door on
trlendshlp. You may be lhl
· C!llt who Is Iarred!'

AND

LARGE FRENCH FRIES.

~kmco (,!uihorama. The firm mattress that isn't hard.

Full Size Bemco Box Spring &amp; Mattress, 249.95
Queen Size Bemco Box Spring &amp; Mattress, 299.95

Open the dOOr to friendship

plus fine service by visiting
the· home
of
th'

PT. PLEASANT
2325 Jackson Ave.
GALLIPOLIS
1503 Eastern Ave.

"FRIENDLY

INGELS FURNITURE
Bank Rate Financing

Paid Political Advertisement

•

I

Pomeroy

H~~e's what you don't get.

•

AND

Miss Ern a .!esse hos ted a
meeting of the Magnolia Club
at her home Thursday night.
Th e Lord's Prayer · in
unison ropened the meeting
wi th devotions being given by
Mrs. Ellen Couch who read
from the 37 th Psalm and gave
a meditation
entitled
"Learning to Rest in the
Lord ." A prog ram of contests
was conducted by Mrs.
Bertha Canaday.
The Nov. 20 meeting will he
at the home of Mrs. Ella
Smith with Mrs . Doris
Grueser to have ·devotions
and tll e program to consist of
Thanksg iving readings and
poems.
Refreshments were served
to those named and Mrs .
Margaret Rose, Mrs . Georgia
Watson, Mrs. Ethel Stewart,
Mrs. Gladys Cuckler and
Mrs. Burton Smith. Miss
Martha Jesse was a guest at
the meeting.

Halloween
costumes
win prizes

I~ BIG SHEF AND LARGE
FRENCH FRIES.
~.DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER

MaRnolia Club gathers

992-2635

•

''

••

'

''
•

I

MIDDLEPORT

-

B .

"

,,_ WOtiG f Olttltlr S/t&gt;rtMO P,IJ .

�6 The DaUy Sent nel M ddl po

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SeJ"VIce's use Growmg say new figures

t'U&amp;L C NO C£
FULL TEXT OF AMEND
MENT$ TO T~E
OH 0
CONST TUT ON PROPOSED
IIY N TAT VE PET TON
TO liE SUIM TTED 0 THE
VOTeRS AT TME GENERA
ELECT ON NOVEMBER
t l W TH ARGUMENTS N
FAVOR AND ARGUMEN S
N OPPOS T ON TO EACH

•

•

SEOEMS OD IDISSIOD

engse
epa ay
n e o whom had any
a n ng beyond he ba Red
C oss c urse
Desp te he numbe
a
m u d wa
o an
hou fo he p and of en d d
Some d ed unne es
y
SEOEMS 6 sta on a d 28
eh e eas y u pe lo med
he o d ways The e n

1.7 minutes from call

was u o 2 8 m nu e
a e age f 9 5 has u wo
m nu es
m o r ea er
pe fo rna e
Expe ence has he ped n
aon ofaes
ndng
oo In 9 3 we a e aged
abou 1m nu esen ou e Fo
ompa son
94wehad edued ha o
I hope ote s e gn z
93m nu es N wwe ea 89
h s espons b y when hey
W hou kn wedgeo h s go othepo nNo embe A
da a he gu es ould ha e
gone the o he way
as
we
We use
a
managemen oo fo g ng
e ce
peop e he be
S ate Funds A ocat d
poss ble
COLUMBUS UPI
State
A o d ng o D W am Aud o Thomas E Fe guson
H A e p es den o he Sa u day sa d he 0 tobe
Oh o Va ley Health Serv es allocation of Local Govern
Founda on a d ha man of men Fund money would to al
he EMS e y omm te o
$4 179 998 b mgmg he 1975
s th s ype to a to $52 95 257
A hens Coun y
of espons b y ha s he
Under he funds lormu a
key ssue o ole s of e y Oh o s 88 coun es ece ved
p oposa s n A hens Ga a
he mon h &gt;
2 of
Jackson and Law ence alloca on or $3 831 680 whi e
the mun c pali es di ded the
oun es h s No embe
P e ous o SEOEMS remammg $348 3 7

The da a
o e ed
mon h y on a s a on by
sta on bas s
he 6 sta on
sy em and used fo
managemen pu poses I has
been e ayed o the U S
Depa men
of Hea h
Edu a on and We fa e
mon hy snce 19 3 as a
eqw emen n he use o
edera unds fo pa t a
suppo o he system
Thsandohe nfoma n
o e ted by SEOEMS s ed
by HEW n a na onal data
ba kfo hepu pose fad ng
p anne s of EMS systems
e ewhe e Tay o sa d
Cons an awa e ess of
what s go g on n he system
and the w nn ngness f our
people to do some h ng abou
g ves the publ wha hey
ha e old us hey wanted he
expaned
n our n a
yea when e ery h ng wa
new
ook o e
h ee
m nutes to o an am bulan e
Fo 19 4 our system ave age

ATHENS A bulan es o
he
)I heas
Oh o
Emergen y Med ca Se v es
SEOEMS
sys em a e
en ou e a a f help on
an ave age of 1 m nu e afte
a al see edanda he
s te anywhe e n he 3 500
square m e area n an
a erage f 8 9 n nute Ia e
a o d ng o f gures re eased
by SEOEMS Ope a on Ch ef
W I am Tay o

ce se
e wa
-&lt;:atch-&lt;:an ba
en oun e
he
Coun g he une a
o un ee
and
we had

SPECIALS
WE CARRY A COMPLnE
LINE OF WEATHER SEALS
AIDS SAVI PUlL THIS
WINTER" SAVEMONEYIY
BUYING DURING OUR
D
BIG SALEI

n

Den
SELF SEAL

STORM TITE

ADHESIVE SPONGE
WEATHERSTRIP
Pu e spcnge ubbe cush on w h se
door w

8

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A~GUMENT N OP
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REG 89'

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36x34
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237

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'{d~ STORM DOOR KIT
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GARAGE DOOR
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co.

The Department
Store of BUildmg
BROWN

Con lnued on next page

5 0

o sae
&amp; 0

Smce 1915

v

LATEX
CAULK
•
REG

orbom

d ""

REG 4 95

ltiotu ~
oi "'~

...

""'

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK

01 s enct

terM

ii

~=M~
The F ierdly Ores

49

77c

�6 The DaUy Sent nel M ddl po

7 TheDa lySe nel M ddlepor Porre oy 0 Mooday 1

Po

0 95

ambul
a ha
he se
sta ed

SeJ"VIce's use Growmg say new figures

t'U&amp;L C NO C£
FULL TEXT OF AMEND
MENT$ TO T~E
OH 0
CONST TUT ON PROPOSED
IIY N TAT VE PET TON
TO liE SUIM TTED 0 THE
VOTeRS AT TME GENERA
ELECT ON NOVEMBER
t l W TH ARGUMENTS N
FAVOR AND ARGUMEN S
N OPPOS T ON TO EACH

•

•

SEOEMS OD IDISSIOD

engse
epa ay
n e o whom had any
a n ng beyond he ba Red
C oss c urse
Desp te he numbe
a
m u d wa
o an
hou fo he p and of en d d
Some d ed unne es
y
SEOEMS 6 sta on a d 28
eh e eas y u pe lo med
he o d ways The e n

1.7 minutes from call

was u o 2 8 m nu e
a e age f 9 5 has u wo
m nu es
m o r ea er
pe fo rna e
Expe ence has he ped n
aon ofaes
ndng
oo In 9 3 we a e aged
abou 1m nu esen ou e Fo
ompa son
94wehad edued ha o
I hope ote s e gn z
93m nu es N wwe ea 89
h s espons b y when hey
W hou kn wedgeo h s go othepo nNo embe A
da a he gu es ould ha e
gone the o he way
as
we
We use
a
managemen oo fo g ng
e ce
peop e he be
S ate Funds A ocat d
poss ble
COLUMBUS UPI
State
A o d ng o D W am Aud o Thomas E Fe guson
H A e p es den o he Sa u day sa d he 0 tobe
Oh o Va ley Health Serv es allocation of Local Govern
Founda on a d ha man of men Fund money would to al
he EMS e y omm te o
$4 179 998 b mgmg he 1975
s th s ype to a to $52 95 257
A hens Coun y
of espons b y ha s he
Under he funds lormu a
key ssue o ole s of e y Oh o s 88 coun es ece ved
p oposa s n A hens Ga a
he mon h &gt;
2 of
Jackson and Law ence alloca on or $3 831 680 whi e
the mun c pali es di ded the
oun es h s No embe
P e ous o SEOEMS remammg $348 3 7

The da a
o e ed
mon h y on a s a on by
sta on bas s
he 6 sta on
sy em and used fo
managemen pu poses I has
been e ayed o the U S
Depa men
of Hea h
Edu a on and We fa e
mon hy snce 19 3 as a
eqw emen n he use o
edera unds fo pa t a
suppo o he system
Thsandohe nfoma n
o e ted by SEOEMS s ed
by HEW n a na onal data
ba kfo hepu pose fad ng
p anne s of EMS systems
e ewhe e Tay o sa d
Cons an awa e ess of
what s go g on n he system
and the w nn ngness f our
people to do some h ng abou
g ves the publ wha hey
ha e old us hey wanted he
expaned
n our n a
yea when e ery h ng wa
new
ook o e
h ee
m nutes to o an am bulan e
Fo 19 4 our system ave age

ATHENS A bulan es o
he
)I heas
Oh o
Emergen y Med ca Se v es
SEOEMS
sys em a e
en ou e a a f help on
an ave age of 1 m nu e afte
a al see edanda he
s te anywhe e n he 3 500
square m e area n an
a erage f 8 9 n nute Ia e
a o d ng o f gures re eased
by SEOEMS Ope a on Ch ef
W I am Tay o

ce se
e wa
-&lt;:atch-&lt;:an ba
en oun e
he
Coun g he une a
o un ee
and
we had

SPECIALS
WE CARRY A COMPLnE
LINE OF WEATHER SEALS
AIDS SAVI PUlL THIS
WINTER" SAVEMONEYIY
BUYING DURING OUR
D
BIG SALEI

n

Den
SELF SEAL

STORM TITE

ADHESIVE SPONGE
WEATHERSTRIP
Pu e spcnge ubbe cush on w h se
door w

8

0(

dow

"'"'

REG
A~GUMENT N OP
POS TON
TO PROPOSED AMEND

SA

E

W L

PERCEN

~A

AXES

58
pre punched
m m
OC&lt;I bbe ed e pro ee on

OU~

SE

BY

3 6 x38 REG 109

29

WEATHERSTRIP

MENT
VOTE NO ON SSUE S
SSUE

adhe ve bock ng

l

REG

Pol

odlle

sac

39

5 6 x 3 B REG

29

7 6

59

X3 8

5 6 x3A REG 229
Dennts

DRARSEAL
oom
shon w n
Sj)OnQe

ebaci&lt; no

36x38
REG 89'

1

ono

36x34
REG '1!1

57c sac

REG

INNER SEAL

WEATHERSTRIPPING

II&gt; o ee
rvbbe

W1

fl ad

e moo ded
pooge
b e pp ng

237

REG 379

os mas
h ghwe '
ex s ng

1J~ STORM WINDOW KIT

37C
'{d~ STORM DOOR KIT
44C

Twa w ndow k

nc udes a

needed REG 55

hemoe als

K nc udes rna e ols needed fo stondo d
doo REG 59

o go

0
0

~.

9REG399

247

SLIP HEAD
SASH UNIT

rubbe

16 REG 6 99

444

..
lallll

GARAGE DOOR
SEAL
•

'l

1033

co.

The Department
Store of BUildmg
BROWN

Con lnued on next page

5 0

o sae
&amp; 0

Smce 1915

v

LATEX
CAULK
•
REG

orbom

d ""

REG 4 95

ltiotu ~
oi "'~

...

""'

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK

01 s enct

terM

ii

~=M~
The F ierdly Ores

49

77c

�9 - The Daily Sent mel, Ml~dlepor·t·Pumeroy , 0 , Monday , Del. 20, 1975
DICK

3i~M;:::~;::;;:.·por· Fast Results Use The Sentinel ClasSifieds

EXTORTION!

WANT ADS
INFORMATI ON
DEADLINES
- ___:_
5 P M D ay f'\etor £' Pub
'
locn I l O ll
Mondny O f'tt dl•n~ '1 t1 111
Cn nce tt a 1 ton Co rr ec tton s
V'l d\ be accep ted un!ll 9 a m
tar Day of Publ! ca tton
REGUlAT ION S
f h e Pubtt s ~1er rese rv es the
FECAH
r 1qht to e dll or re tec1 any ads
dC('nlCd ObiCt;t tOnttl
The
pu blt s her
w tll
not
be
r es ponstb ~ c tor more tha n one
19 7SC APRICE CLASSIC
55495
tn correc l tn se rlton
4 door , Co De mo. sandstone ftnt sh , vtnyl top .and vtnyl
RATES
trtm . AM rad to and tape , atr co nd , automaftc P S,
WHE I-J DOWNTIWDDEN,
For Witnt Ad Serv1ce
P B , P door locks, P wmdows Crutse Control ,
MAY l!oE THE CAU5E
5 cent s per Word one tnserlto n
Mtn11n um Char ge $1 00
comforttlt, delu xe bumper and guards Thts car ts
OF !'!:EVOLUTION .
14 cent s per word thr ee
really loaded and cames new car t1tle and balance of '
consec ut ' vf&gt; tn se r I ton s
wa rra nt y Save
26 c en ts per word StK con
AGNEET
Now BJTan(e the circled letters sc cuttve •nsert10ns
Ce nt D t sc o un ~ on pa td
1971 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
$529a
~ ~ to form the surprise answer, u il 25ds Per
an d ads pa td wtt ht n 10
Cpe
,
less
than
7,000
m1les,
deluxe
belts,
tlrit
glass
, atr
~~·=:::1::·==~===~~,d:_~•:•~rr~•:•ted by the above cartoon. days CARD OF THANK S
cond1t1oned , delu xe bumpers and guard s, remote LH B.
&amp; Obttuary
RH mtrror, 400 48 B I engine , AM radio and tape, a[lx
IL
$') 00 for 50 wo rd mtntmum
ltgh tl ng, comfortilt wheel Ltke new and a real sharpte
E.e-: h lH:h.l tdon al word Jc
(An•w~" tomorro w)
BLIND ADS
1\ ddHt ona\ 25t: Charge p er
Juml•l" LIMBO CIVIL UNLOAD LAGOON
Adverttsemcnt
~• tunl~t' ·~
OFFICE HOURS
r\mw~r= n hat 1/()U mtqltt lw ll' h'f·n 11011 It t
8 JO a m •o ~ 00 p m Daily
uff st eam-' BOILING'
6 30 a n1
1o 12 00 Noon
Sa•urday
'
Saturday 's College Football
Res ults
Bv United Press tn tl'r nattonal
ROOM and board for sen ror
1972 CAPRI $1.350 ft rm Good
East
PUBLIC NOTICE
cll ~r e n s ve r y nr ce
Ph on e
shape, Phone 992 5335
Boston u 16 Bucknell 0
The
annual
e
lec
tton
of
the
99 2 3509
10 16 61p
Boston College 17 Navy 3
Met gs Coun ty Ag rt c uttural
10 12 tf c
-- -BROWN
---------Colgate n Prtnceton 21
Socte ty Dtr ec tors will be he ld I F YOU d tdn t buy at tndtan 1975
CAMARO
Wllh
Jo e 5 Sport s yo u lo s t
Connectr cut 14 Mittne 0
Thur sda y Nov embe r 6, 19 75
plat
d
c
loth
tn
lertor
v
a
ps
ELECTION
NOTIC
E
money
Dart mou th 10 Brown 10
at th e off tce of the .~ e t gs
p b
AM F M stereo wtlh 8
On N ove mb er I B, 1975 m Cou n ty Com m tSStoners In 1 he
10 16 7tc
Hetrvard 34 Corn ell 13
tra c k tape, 19 ,000 mil es
·H c ordan ce with Chapt er Cou r t house at Pom eroy , Oh o
Ithaca 30 Wilkes 0
ra dtal tt res, Ra !lye wheels
1515 01 14 Rev tse d Code of fr om 5 10 9 p m
SPE CIA L mee ttng of th e
Lehtgh 35 Dela ware 23
Phon e 742 272J
Oh io, th e Ohio Soil and Water
Ractne Gun Cl ub, Thurs da y,
Mass 23 Rhode Island 0
Oua l t ft ca lton s
for
10 15 61p
Conse r va r ro n Commr tt ee w ill dt recto rs are tha t they mus t
Oc t 23 to vote on new by
Maine 14 Connectic ut 0
ca use an el ectron to be hel d at be a qualtft ed vote r ol Me tgs
laws and ra tsl ng annual
Mlddlebur)l 48 Hamilton 0
197 4 CONT INENT AL, 4 Or
dues
New Hampsh ire 28 Cent ral So utl'l ern Hrgh Sc hool , 8 00 County and m us t have a
~own ca r wtlh sun roof. and
p m , e lectmg two sup ervt sors me mb ershtp tt cket tn sa id
10 15 7tc
Conn 0
a real bea ut y m so\td bla c k
Nt chols 2 Bridgewater (Mass J to fil l the ex p tr lng J yea r soc tety of 1975
tnt er to r ts bla c k p lush
terms of Jos eph Batley and
0
Cand tdates pett ltons must NEW " OIL OF MINK '
velvet Equ tppe d wtl h every
Re~ Shenetle ld
produc ts, new ca talog s Ge t
Nor theastern 27 Sprtngfteld 7
be
ftl
e
d
wtlh
th&amp;'Sec
retary
no
opt ton 29,000 miles and lt ke
Nomtnees to fill th e ex pir ing la ter than 5 p m Thu rsday , on our growmg custo mer
Penn Sl 19 Syrac use 1
new ms tde a nd out Cost
term s are Joseph Batl ey October
lt s l Or maybe you would
PIIISb urgh 52 Ar my 20
30
1975
On
ly
persons
nea r $1 1,000 wd l sell for
Rut land Townshtp Leona rd holdmg membershtp ltcke ts a t
ltke to take orders? Phone
Rutgers 24 Wm &amp; Mary 0
$6 , ~00 Phon e (614) 98 5 35'i'S
Huffm an . Bedford Towns ht p th e c lose of th e 1975 Count y
Helen J Brown , 992 5113
Tulane 16 west Vl rgtnta 14
10 l7 31c
Re~
Shenef ie ld ,
Sa lem r atr or at least ( IS) ca lend a r
KOS CO T
Indep end e nt
Vlllanov! 21 Mars hall 14
Ots tn but or
waynesburg 29 Slippery Rock 7 Townsht p and Wayne W days be for e the da te o f
Ut;~ton , Oli~o~e Town sht p
9 21 lfc 1969 GTO Ca ll any tim e aft er
are qua \l tt ed to vote
5 p m , 992 7284
Nominations will be at eleclton
South
Th
e
Me
tgs
Agr
tcu
llur
al
10 14 6tc
cepted from the flo or at the Soctety By Mrs Walla ce WILL car e fo r fe male
Au burn 31 Georg ta Tech 27
paltents , or elderly woman
Challanooga 21 E Tenn 51 13 ttm e of elec tion or by pet d ton Bradford Secre tary
subm til e d one week prt or to
tn my hom e Phone 99 2 73 14 1968 BUIC K Rtvtera, ftrs t S200
Duke 25 Clemson 21
lakes Century Bar , L Hess
elect ion
co ntamm g
th e 110) 13 20 27 , 3t c
Florida 34 Florida Sl 8
10 19 6tc
10 19 Jl p
Florida A&amp;M 52 Morris Brown Stgna t ures of 25 landow ner s
~.----- ----------Only landown e rs and oc
0
THE MEIG S Alumni ar e
cupters are eligib le to vote
Furm an 21 Holy Cross 14
s pon sortng a masquerade 1969 OLD SMO BI LE. Cutlass S
s
wil
l
a
lso
be
open
at
th
e
Poll
Coupe, $350 V 8 wtlh
Georg ia 47 Vanderbilt 3
Dan ce, Sa turday, Nov 1,
PUBLIC
NOTICE
county So t! Conservatto n
aulomattc tran s mt sston ,
Gra mbling 38 Mtss Vall ey 22
from
9 p m to 1 a m Ad
Ac
lmg
under
dtrect
order
of
Ser vice off• ce fro m 8 00 a m
p s, vtnyl root, tap e player ,
Howard J5 Vtrglnlft St 12
m tSS tOI1 52 per son, SJ couple
•o 4 00 p m on the e lect to n th e Board of Tax Appear s a nd
co
nt ac t Tony Keeba u gh
LSU 17 Kent ucky 14
Se
veral
rock
bands,
brtng
tn comp lt ance wllh Sec tton
da te
aft e r 6p m at (6 14 ) 985 39 13
Maryland 21 Wlllke Forest 0
beverages
Games and
5715 26 of The Oh to Revtsed
10 19 7tc
MemphiS St 41 LOUtSV tll e 7
prtzes Adults 18 and over
wh ich slates tn pa rt th at
Meigs SWCO OffiC e ItCode
Miss St 15 No T~ xas St 12
10 19 12tc -:------------ts
the
dut
y
of
the
Count
y
Box 432
No Carolina St 21 No Carolina
Pomer oy , Oh io 45 769 Aud tlor to change val uation s - - - - - - - - - - - - - ?0
for th by said Boa rd of Tax
992 3628 set
RtCh mond 24 VMI 19
Ap peals This order dtr ec ts
Leo
ta
Yo
un
g
,
Salisbury St 33 Johns Hopktns
Secretary th e MetQS Co un ty Audtlor 10 ONE checkbook stub tn lad tes
26
110)
20
(
11)
3,
21
C
tncrease all tracts lots dr
lounge a t th _e court ho use
So Carolina 35 Misstss tppt 29
parcels and butldtn gs by
be t 1eved
Pllone Addt e REMODELING
So Caroltna 51 35 Morgan St 0
Plumbtng
Pu11 1ns (614) 985 3952
twenty percent (20 pe rcen t)
Tennessee St 1.4 Vlrgln•a Unton
heattng and all types of
In
comp
lia
nce
wtlh
~h is order
10
8t
c
10
7
ge ne r al
r e pa •r
Work
the valuattons of sa id tra c ts, _ -~- _ - - - - - - - - - VI rg inia Tech 24 Vtrgtnla 17
guaranteed 20 years ex '
lots, par cels and butl dtnos
PUBLIC NOTICE
per.enc e Phone 99 2 1.d 09
TO SHARON JEFFERS,
have been changed and lhe
Mtdwut
La st Known Addr ess
5 1 ff ~
oooKs are open for mspeclton
Akron 24 Tem pl e 23
Routt' No 1,
ot
the
tn
crease
tn
your ta x CAS H pa td tor all makes a na
Arkansas St 14 Ctnclnnalt 9
Putland, Oh10
value at th e Metgs Cou nty models of mo btl e homes
Oowltng Green 35 Ken ! St 9
Audt lo r's Off tce , Pomoy , Phone area code 614 423
Esn Illinois 3 wsn 11/ lno ts 3
You ar e her eby noltft ed th at Ohio
9531
lnd St (lnd ) 56 'Dayton 14
ha ve been named
you
4 13 tf c
SMAL L apt
s ize
gas
Iowa 20 lndt ana 10
Defendant tn a legal actton
Howard E Fra nk __ __ - - - - - - - - - - coo ks tove or rang e PI us,
Kansas 21 Iowa St 10
enttlled Ev e r e tt Je ff e r s
MetgS County
sma ll refrt ge rator with
Mlamt (Oh io I 17 Ohto u 9
P lam tl lf vs Sharon Jeff ers ,
Audll or
fr eeze r Phone 992 38 50
Michigan 69 Northwes tern 0
De fen dant , th a t thts cause has
10 19 31C
Michigan St 38 Minnesota 15
been assigned Case No 15938 , (10) 16, 17, 20 , 21, 22 23 24 , 27
3 FAM IL Y Yar d Sale , ho use
Ohio St 56 Wtsconsm o
and Is pend ing In the Com mo n 28 29 I Otc
n ex t to post Offtce tn 22 SEMI
Oklahoma 25 KaMas St 3
P le~ s Court of Meigs County ,
automattc rtfl e
Ru tland Phon e J.i2 21 03
Purdue 26 llltno ts 24
IN THE
Ph one 742 3074
Ohto Pomeroy , Oh to 45769
10 15 41C
Wes t Texas 24 Drake 6
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
10 17 6tp
The object ot tht s com pt am t tS
PROBATE DIVISION
Yo ungstown St 28 Morehead St fo r divor ce
dl~o~ I S t On
of
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
0
prope rt y and ot her prop er
1964 AN o older dtm es,
re lief
quarters , and hal~o~es Also,
Southwest
vou are required to answer IN THE MATTER OF SET TO GIVE AWAY - Beeole
gold and Stiv er tewelry Ca ll
Lou isi ana Tech 41 NW Louls ia wllhl n lwe nty etg ht days afte r TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS, and hound pups to give
Rutland 7.d2 2JJ 1 Rog er
na 14
the las t pub ll cat ton of thi s PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
away Phone 992 2773
Wamsley
Nebraska 28 Oklahoma St 20
10 12 12tc
1019 3t
notice , once each week for Stx COUNTY, OHIO
New Mexico 28 Utah 23
Acco un ts and vouchers of - - - - - - - - - - - - - - P
s uccesstve weeks The las t
Rice 28 SMU 17
foll ow tng
nam ed
pu blt catlo n wt ll be on the
) LO furnitur e, tc c b o ~es, ·
So MtSS 34 Texas Arlmgton 1
November 17t h, 1975 . and the fod u"anes have been f1l ed m
' brass beds, or comp le te
Texas 24 Arkans as 18
th
e
Probate
Court
,
Me
tgs
twe nt y e1ght days wi ll com
households Wrtte M D.
Tex as A&amp;M ' " TCU 6
mence on that dat e
County Oh!o fpr approval F IR ST ltne mechant c wan ted
Mi ll e r , ~I 4, Po meroy ,
Tulsa 41 Wicht Ia St 10
bl
th
t
t
In case of you r fa il ur e to and se llle ment
Oh to Cal l 992 1760
CASE NO 18 ,333 Ft ftee nth
prefera Y Wt
au oma tc
a nswe r , or oth erwt se res pond ,
10 7 74
ent
Acco
un
t
Be
ll"
L
transmtssto
n
ex
per
te
nce
01
West
as re qu ired by the Ohio Rul es Curr
Bo~t.
7&lt;13,
Pome
roy
,
'
w
rtt
e
Arizona 32 Texa s Tech 28
Ohta
of Ci vil Procedure , judgment Smt th , Guard tan of Mary K
Arlzone 51 33 Colorado St 3
G{t tlagh er a mtno r
10 15 6tc
by defau ll wtlt be re nd e red
Ca lifornia 51 Oregon St 24
agatns t you for the• re li e f of
CA S E NO 19 ,925 StX lh _ --Colorado 31 Missourt 20
Annua\ Acco unt of Dorot hy
dema nds In thts c lat m
2112 ACRES tn Flatwoods area
Hawaii 24 Portland St 1
Gt lm or e , Gua rdtan of De lbe rl LADY to ltve tn and drt ve car
a nd 1974 14 x 65 mobt !e
Montana t4.1daho 3
P hone 992 2936
LARRY SPEN CER, Norm a n Ca ll , an tncompet ent
home, se ll se parately or
10
19
3tc
Montana St 19 Id aho S1 1
person
Cler k of Courts
toget her Phon e 992 7338
CA S E NO 20 909 FIrs ! ~-~----------Notre Dame 31 At r Force 30
Metgs County
10 19 71p
San Otego St 46 New Mex ico
Cur r en~ Accou nt of Ed tson
Common Pleas Cou r t
51 3
!101 13,20 27 111 1 1 10 , 17, 61c Ho bsleller , Ad mtnt stra tor of
1974 CAMERON mobt le hom e,
san Jose St 41 u of Pacific 13
the Es tat e of Me r le E Rtce. SMA LL ho use for rent
12 x 60 2 bedrm , total e lec
So Ca! tfornla 17 Oregon 3
com pletely furntshed wtlh
Deceased
M tddl eport a rea Phone 992
s! anford 24 washtngton 21
CA S E NO 20 926 Ft rst
7791 after d p m
new furn tture and washer
world H o c k e y Assoctation Curr
UCLA 37 Washington St 1
ent Acco unt ot Edna M
10 20 ·3lc
and dryer On 111• acre of
Standtngs
Utah S1 30 We ber St 1
$ to b art , Guardian of the ------------4--- la nd ,lo ca t ed on Unio n
Bv United Press lnfernattonal
Wyom ing 31 UTE P 14
Guar dian s hip
Estate o f
Ayen ue tn Pomeroy CalL
East
Pil me la Sue St obart a mtnor TR AIL ER space , 3~ mile
992 7129
W L T Pts
CA SE NO 21 ,349 Ftrs t a nd
nortl'1 of Me tgs Htgh Sc hool
10 12 91c
CtnCt nnat t
2 1 0
4 F tn a l Account of Je rome
on old Rl 33 Phone 992 2941 - - - -- - - - - - - - - - .
2 1 0
New Eng land
Coo k, Execu tor of the Esta te
' 1019\lc 1969 PMt 2 bedrm , 12 ~ 52
1 2 0
2 of Atla nta Georgia Cook . - - -- -- -- - - - - - Cle~o~eland
mob tle home . lncludtng
Ind iana polis
2 deceased
1 ' 0
BE DRM apt Pom eroy
underplnnlnq and porches
West
CASE NO 21,404 Fi rst and
Hom e and Auto Phone 992 - $3 ,210 Phon e (6 W 9al 3104
W L T Pts F mal Account of He len M
¥,'11rld Footb•ll
2094
or 992 550~
3 2 0
6 Wo odyard Admlntslratrt x of
Phoen ix
Lugut Standings
10 19 3tc
10 16 31c
Houston
2
2
0
4
the Estate of Marg ie Sum
By Un ited Preu International
2
2
0
4
San
Ot~go
East
me rs . deceased
J R M turn tshed ground floor 1913 VINDA LE Trailer and lot
Mt nnesota
2 2 0
'
W L T , Pet
Unless exceptions are ftl ed
apt near Jo ne s Bovs All
located tn Tu ppers Plains
2
2
0
4
Denver
the reto , sat d accounts will be
uttltltes furnished Call 992
Btrmingham
t 0 0 1 000
Phone (6 14 ) 667 3817
Canadian
fo r hea rm g before said Court
2050
any
ttm
e
from
12
noon
Philadelphia
t I 0 500
10 16 121c
W L. T. Pts on the 18th day of No vember ,
ll
lllOpm
Char lolle
1 1 o 500 Edmonton
3
3
I
1
10
19
31c
1975 at wh ic h tim e satd ac
M~mphls
0 I 0
000
~0 X 8 MOBILE hom e, very
3 1 0
6 coun t wtll be considered -and
Jacksonville
0 2 0.
000 Quebec
nt ce lnd tan J oe 's Sports
Wm01peg
3
2
0
6
conttnued from day to day 3 BE DRM house. turnts hed ,
West
and CB'• , JOB Page, Mid
Toronto
1
7
1
3
unlll ftna lly dt sposed of
W L T Pet
dl epor l
Also, 1 furn ts hed tra t\er
Calgary
1
2
0
2
Any person Int erested may
Por tl lmd
2 o o I 000
10 16 71(
Phone 992 2780 or 992 3432
Res ults
hi e writt en exception s to satd
Southern C&amp;ll frn 2 0 0 I 000 TorontoSaturdav•s
10 19 lfc
3
N'ew
England
1
Hawaiians
1 1 0 soo Denver 6 lndtl!l napoll s 4
accoun ts or to ma tter s per - - - - - - - - - - - - - San An ton io
0 1 0 000 Quebec
tai nmg to lhe exec ution of the TR AILE R spa ce tor rent Al l
3 Houston 2
Shreveport
o I o ooo Edmon ton
trust not tess than tt ve days uttltltes Phon e 992 5535
J
Mtn
nesota
1
Saturday 's Results
prtor to the date se t for
9 16 lfc
San
Otego
2
Wtnnt
pcg
I
heartng
Philadelphia 18 Char lotte 10
Sunday's
Results
Sunday ' s Games
will
:11\ ND ~R OO M turn ts hed and
Phoen•x 6 Wtnnt peg 5
MANNING D WEBSTER
Shreveport ~1 San Antonto 31
un fur nts hed
apartm e n t~
Houston 6 Cleveland 5
Btrmtngham 21 Memph ts 0
JUDGE
P h,one 99 1 5434
Edmon ton 4 Cmclnnatl 2
COMMON PLE AS COURT.
Portland 30 Jacksonv ill e 13
4 1? 1fc
Monday' s Games
PR OBATE DIVISIO N
Southern Cal ifornia 26 Hawa tt 1 I No games
scheduled )
MEIG S COU NT Y,OH IO
.
(111120, lie 'F UR~ . ... r1ED
a par tft'lent,
adu lts only tn Middleport
Phon e 992 3874
FIRE TRUCK
3 25 tfc
N0.1 HEATING OIL
FOR SALE
•
Se!!led bids wlll be rece tv ed f-U KNt ... nt:D i p t 3 rooms
NO.2 HEATING OIL
•n the otftce ot the Vtllage and balh . utdtl les paid
Degree Day Delivery
Clerk Pomeroy, Ohio , unt tl 12 Phon e 992 2937
Budget Pa Plan
o c lock noon on Nove mber 3,
10 14 6tc
With 36 in. Mower
1975 for a 1952 GMC Pumper
•
POMEROY
LANDMARK
Ftre Truck with the followi ng 2 BEDRM unfurnis hed house
ec:~ u• pme nt
"·J"ack W, Carsey, Mgr
wit h garag e Phon e 992 5758
500 G P M
. _ , Phone9Y2-21al
10 14 6tp
fro nt mount pump
340 Ga llon boost er la nk
With 40 in. Mower
J Sect ton 2~ loot wood ladder ONE bedrm a par tme nt fo r
7 10 toot section 4 Inch hard r ent at Rivers ide Apt s REDUCE safe and fast wllh
Go Bese TabiC'ts and E Va p
Phone 99 2 3273
suc tton hose
" wa ter Ptlls," Nelson Drug
10 17 3tc
1 10 foo ~ 21 mch hard
10 20 lie
- ----------.:-~
sUe t ton hose
Auto. with 42 in. mower.
200 toot reel hose
1
YOUNG layers , Jersey mtlk
-1 Inch st rai ne r
cow , one deep fr eeze, frost
l f Pom eroy Larg(' lo ts Wtlh
2' 1 tnch stratner
free r efrigerator
Second
1S lb C02 C)(llng ulsher
concre te pilttos, !it dCw alks .
house on ttght at Si lver Run
Sode ac id extlngu• sher
ru tw f'rs ,1nd oil s tr ee t
Demo, 42 in . mower.
Road 3 mtles below Mtd
Axe
'IJM._ I l1(! Ph one 99,' 717 9
I
dteport Leslie Wh it tington
s ge !lon Indian F tre Ftg ht er
t2 31 1fc
10 19 31p
2 1 1 Inch noi:l:les
1
2• , HI Ch nozzle
Mn R~home loca ted m
TWIN bu ll calves , 2 weeks old ·
Mtddleport , adults on ly
ltghl and s tre n
Demo, 30 in. mower. ,
Also , green beans Phone
Truck' pr esenlly In scrvt ce Phone 99 2 5135
10 8 lf c
843 2353
and has tess •han 10 000 a c~u a\ -Also many ne\'1 wheel horse tractors in
10 19 l tc
m tie~
? QE DRM tretiler . Kin gsbury
stock.
The rtghl tS reser\l ed • to
Road · ~ mtle bfl St Rt 143
re tec • any an d all btds
f-urnishe d. no pet5, 1 or 2 WINCHE STER model I)
nic kel steel , 12 gauge pump ,
chtldren Phone 742 3122
'
venHiated rtb and new
J ane Wallon ,
10 7 261C
wood, e~cellent cond it ion
Clerk
S350
G:ontact
Marv in
VIL LAGE 01
Kee baugh , 992 -5342 doys ,
POMER OY , OHIO TRA IL E R, adults onl y Ph one
992 3181
evenings (6 14 ) 985 3913
CHESTER, OHIO
10 12 lfc
10 19 71C

Auto Sales

_

_______,

2 SIGNS· 'Pomeroy

b
I I
II
I
t
I I IJ

OF
QUALITY. 1Motor

I

~Priiii
=
IM SUR
=PII~ISE:.:::AHSWIII
=Itm
~-'1 D ( I

Notice

Lost

Employment Wanted

Wanted

Wanted To Buy

Yard Sale

Pets

Help Wanted

Mobile Homes for Sale

- - - - - - - -- - -

f Or 'Ren t

sale

Yes, we
new
·accept
customers.

FUEL OIL

- 7 hp Wheelholse Jractor

v

12 hp Gravely Trador

10 hp Wheelhorse Tractor

/(~~ r~~ ~t' 'l.~~nb:l t~\csHn~~~

14 hp Electric_Wheelhorse Tractor

6 hp Electric Wheel~ T~or

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

--------------- _____________

BAUM
TR4E VALUE ·

"

'

.......,

Buy,

We Paint Anything

Ph. 742·2328
9 17 1 mo

BOOKKEEPING,
Tax Advisory Service,
Collection systems,

R&amp;J COINS
Phone 742·2331
Roger Wamsley-Rutland
10151mo

Ph. 992-3313
or 992-5880

Johnson Masonry

&amp; Remodeling

LARRY WHOBREY,

Btrd &amp; MastiC Vinyl
Stdmg
Alean, Alcoa &amp; Wolverln1
Aluminum Stdmg
Btrd VtnYI Gutters
and Downspouts
Sofftts of all kinds
10 I 7S

Accountant
Phone 992-6173
9 21 30tc

For Sale
WARM Mornmg gas heate r, 1
yr old , $175 Call (614) 985
3540 befor e 2 p m
10 19 61p .

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating
Your Hell Dealer
Racin e. Ohto
Thtrd Sf
Ph. 949-596!
Emerge ncy
949 2211 or 1192 5700
Co mpl ete atr cond tll onmg
sa les and se rvtce, heating ,
p\umbtng roofm g an d
general sheet meta l work
Free Eshm ates
9 14 1 mo . I .

a nd Arrow Spec• als
Bea n - Gr lzz le y, 565 Bear
- Blac k Bear , $50 Bean Kod tak Mag , 580 . No 145
Cedar Conventa PI , 52 ea ,
No 1834 Bea r Mag Alum , 54
each No 1 63~ Mag Alum
53 25 each , No
1694
F tberglass , S2 75 each . Bow
BE ORM
home
tU SI
F tShtng Rtg 5 12 SO
Bow
ftnt s hed , remod eltng, Salem
Qw\ven , S15, Bow S! r tngs,
St , Rutland Phone 74?' 2)09
51 SO eac h , Ftt Pro Glove. 55
a~oRr 4 p m or see Mtlo B
each
Arm guard . 54 50
HutchtSOn
each , Bow stnnger, 52 SO
9 23 lie
eac h , Mtght Mtfe Tr ee
Stand 517 SO lnd tan Joe s HOU SE tor sa te, reasonable
Sports and CB's , 308 Pag e Prtced , Phone 992 76.48
Sf , Mtddleport
9 28 121c
10 19 3tc

BOW

Real Estate For Sale

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

REG Polled Hereford Bull s, HOU SE on 1672 Ltnco \n H'Qts
one 5 yr old, two yea rl tng s
4 r ooms , large ktlchen
E ~ce llenl
dtSpOS tlto ns
bsaement n•ce backyard
Phone 992 11 6S or 992 2826
and low pr tce d See between
10 19 7tc
10 a m J p m
10 20 12tc
SEE your Kmg Ashley wood _
burnmg s to~o~e s a t Wtlktnson
Small Engt ne , 498 Locus! 3 BR HOME , just f tn tshed
r emodeling Salem 51
St , Mtddleport Phone 992
Rutland Phon e 742 2J06
3092
after 4 p m or see Mtlo B
10 19 6tc
Hutcht nson
10 9 He
AI RCO wel dtng machtne ,
new , 250 amp , AC DC
Bumb le Bee (MAl Phone RE AL E STAT E LOAf~S VA,
992 3410
NO DOWN PAYME NT ,
10 19 61C
MOST VETERA NS STIL L
QUALIFY F HA as low as 3
FA RM ALL H tn A 1 cond llton , percen t down Ev erybody
set of 2 ro w cu lftvators
qualtftes , 30 year ttrms
refin anc mg. Also, available ,
compl ete tn A I co ndllton
steel wh eeled Stde del tvery
Ftr s t Mortgage Servi ces 77
rake $1 , 100 tor everythtng
E Sta le A ~hen s Phon e {6 141
Chester
Fontly ,
Long
592 3052 tor tnform a lto n
Bottom , Ohio or cal l (614)
10 17 61 c
981 4190
10 19 61p HO USE FOR SAL E on Lincoln
Hgts J large bedrms and
ANYON E tnteres ted tn pur
bath ltvtng rm , TV rm ,
chasi ng a grave lo t m the
large bu t\! tn kttchen
Calholic Ceme te ry Call
coun te r to p ran ge built tn
(606 1 w 2996
double oven . au tumn gold,
10 19 61p
l arg~ bar tn kttc h en, all full y
ca rpet ed,
tn
J rm ,
~ N EW 1000x20 ny lon lug type
basement garage with
ttres with tmea s below cost
Stld tng door s Wtt h or
Phone 99 2 666~
wrtho u t fJ.Irntture , prtc ed
I
101961 p low Ca ll 992 2404 for m
format ton
I0 7 12t c

Real Estate for Sale

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

3 6 E DRM house In Racine 3 BEDRM S, ~ torag e shed,
Phone 949 2671
fenced In ba ck yard , nt ce
10 I 261C
size lot Phone 992 7631
10 19·61c
.,-------------~ --------------

WIN AT BRIDGE

Sales &amp; Senrice
1600 Nye St.

992-7608

office supp~ service.

ANTI QUE pen nant watc h ,
r tngs and earrmgs Fts h
aquartum , hubcaps, m tsc
s ta le Rt 143 N IJ4 mil e
from Rt 7 , lSI trailer be .
yond road lo landftll Ra n .
dolph restdenca
ltc
10 19

Sell or Trade

Appra tsal servtce on
estates and collecttons

Free Estimates
AI Tromm

CAPTAIN EASY

T - BUT WHO KNOW$

EASY RETURN S FROM FILMING THE

e.t.AZES !
I DIDN' T
THINK, THE

2&gt;16FEET TO FIND &gt;'1 5 l.ITTLE PAL 60NE;!
POOR WASH!, ,
THESE PRIIVTS
TELL
S TORY,
At.L I
HE'S&gt;

Pomeroy

C ~EATURE 5

LOOKED VERY

22 ACRES OF GROUNU 1 home . 1 tile building · 1
mobile home 4 rentals 3
of which have free gas.
Always rented and near
recreational
facilities.
Income of $420.00 per
month plus gas Income ,
$25,000
NEW HOME - About 1
acre Brick &amp; frame 3
lovely BR zonec for quiet .
l'h baths that mak..
bath ing fun. You'll whistle.
while you work In this
lovely. kitchen with range,
oven and lovely dining
area. Garage and room for
workshop , $25,900.
MIDDLEPORT
Beautiful lot With alley In
rear Frame and stone
building with modern bath.
Nat. gos F. A furnace .
Paneling and tile Spend a
few S and have a nice
apartment, $7,000.
POMEROY - HORN OF
PLENTY - plenty of space
thai Is Could have 2
apartments . or live In and
rent 1 5 BR could have 7 2
balhs . New ngas F A
furnace , All In n ice condition SJO,OOO .
MAY
I
BE
YOUR
BROKER? DEMAND
FOR HOMES IS IN ·
CREASING
OUR
WAITING
LIST
OF
BUYERS IS GROWING WE NEED All TYPES
OF
PROPERTIES
THROUGHOUT
THE
COUNTY
992-225'
No Answer n2·2568

.-----.,.,. - - - - - - . ,
NORTH ID I
2
4 AQ8 6
II' A B~ 2
t 10 6
olo K 7 6
WEST
EAST
• K 72
913
• to
"Q 10 7
6
II' J
. tA Q942
7
• KJ
• 10 4
olo QJ8 3
SOUTH

UN!

FIERCE -OR.

DAN6EROU5

....

A

EXPER.IEtlCED
.
Radlato
Service ' -·~

I
l

From the largest Tru ck or
Bul ldoze r R.,dtator to the
s'Jiall es t Heater Core
Nathan Btggs
Radtator Spec 1a11st _

• Js
II' K 913
• es3
olo A952
Both vulnerable

BORN LOSER

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

.

Pom eroy

Ph 992 1174

West

Nortb East

Pass

lolo
2 II'

Soulh

PasS Ill'
Pass Pass

Opemng lead - A t

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown tnfo Wa lis &amp; Atftcs
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; ODORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING•SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

Ll riLl!; Ul\t't1AN

~

Syracuse, Oh10
Ph 99!-3993
4 10 t mo.

ANNIE-BRAIN

EX CAV AT IN G do ze r loa der
and backhoe work sep ttc
tanks tns talled
d um p .
tru cks and 10 boys for htre
oJ11 II hau l f t\ 1 d trl top sotl ,
ltmestone and gra vel,. Ca tt
rob or Roge r Jc trers day
phone 997 70B9 ntgh l phon e
9il] 3575 or 99? 52J7

I

lillie

E'I.CA..,..-p; t i:N G', - backhoe ,
doze r an d dt~ c h e r Gas,
e lec trtc and wate r ltn e
burtal basemen ts , looters.
sepltc systems and brush
c lean tng Will haul fill dtrt.
top so tl. sa nd and grave l,
limestone for drt veways and
ro ads Ph one Charles R
Ha lttel d. Ba ckho e Serv tce ,
Rt 1, RIJ11an d, Oh tO, 742
6092
7 II 90! c

WEL L,

LEM~!i:

CHECI(, 100LS, FOOD,

WA"TE!i! , SLANK!;TS " , VEP 1 i"T 'S
ALL HERE! THE ONLY "T1-I IN6

WE'RE MISSING IS

1

~ILLE.

NEIGLER' S Build in g and
Su pply We spec ialize In
build ing houses Also, do
repair work and cabtnets ,
al umtnum sidi ng Ca ll Guy
Nelgle r , 949 2508 , If no
answer ca ll 9 ~9 2813 or 949
2417
10 I 261p
SE W IN G

GASOIJNE AILEY

That about
does it.
Mr. Wallet!

'• EPT IC TI\NKS c lean ed
Modern San tla tmn 992 J9.St
or 992 7349
9 18 !IC
MIX I..V NCRETE
d e lt-1/ ere d r tgh l to your
prote ct r ast and easy r rce
es ttmat es Phone 992 31811
Cioeqletn Reu dy Mtx Co ,
Mtddiep ort Ohta,
6 JO lf( 1

~E I\ OY

E:L.WUV L• tlUY Yt: t&lt; :, ~t: t-' A II{
Sweepers to,1ste rs , trans
all sma ll app l1o1n ces Lawn
mower , next to S t a t ~ H1gh
way Ga ra ge on Route 7
PhOn e 985 3821

- --

ihe

Ever~thinq

verdict'

a relief!

is fine!

Look l1ke
Mebbe we
M1ster Skeez1x better come
ca\lm' later,
qot

Melba!

••

Astra-

~fc

Graph

U1LJJBf!ER

HAIIRI5CINVILLE - 14 X 70 VYc .&gt; t"ECIALIZE In mobile :
home fur11ac e repa ir Phone
3 bedrooms , and
99 ~ 5818
6 acres $11,500 00
9 18 lfc
POMEROY - Nice 2 B Rs,
bath carpeting and equlppec 0 &amp; D TREE Tr lmmtng , 20 ,..
years e~ per le n ce In sured,
kitchen. $13,500
free esti m a les Call 992 3057
POMEROY - Good 3 B.R.
or Il l 667 30&lt;1. Coolville
older home 1t;, baths, hot
· 10 15 ttc
water heat on Main St, Ask ing
C BRADFO"Ro , Auctio neer
$31,500.
Com plete Service Phone
EASTERN - 5 B R modern
9~9 2487 or 9.49 2000 Racin e,
home, 3 ba ths, nice kit bar ,
Oh io Crl!t Bradford ,
s un deck and 2 car ga rage
10 9.1fc
...__
$41.500.
POMEROY ,- 2 B R home, -BACI&lt; HOt: tor rent , -hour or
co ntra ct
Reg or e)(
bath, gas furnace , fenced
cavatl ng type Septic tan ks
yard Asking $10,000
msta!! ed Btl \ Pullm s Phone
BAS HAN - 3 8 R home, bath
992 2H8
furna ce heat and fen ced
8 27 lfc
$25,000,
DO elum mum sid ing,
40 ACRES - On 'good gravel NE
gutter
work ,
rooti ng,
road. $10,000.
paneling , painting , plum
b ing , we fhc th e whole
house AI Tromm , 7.42 2328
- 9·24-ll c
WI LL trim or cut tre es and
s hrubbery Phone 949 2545
or 742 31 67
10 8 26tc

HfT THIS
! Af&lt;TM '111

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

1975

______________

YEB ..•HE'S AWAY
RIGHTI¥JW

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

-WHAR HELL BE

.• BUT THAT
CL~DE THRASHER SAID
HE'D TAKE A POT· SHOT
AT ME TH' NEXTTIME
I CUT ACROST HIS
PROPITTV· · •
0 .... 11111111'11 Plftl MI(IUIII

IIIII •l"'':

_,,~tl- 1"'1
~IIIIMI IIIII r. &gt;ol.'

IOolflo«o,l o; -

,, , • I~
"'fi !..,tll

@Your

s

K P II

tl'lol~w,III!'Cr&lt;ln•'l'lll\i1\lt

6.oo-Columbus Today 4, Sunrise Semester 10
6 25-Fa r m Report 13
6 JG-New Zoo Revue 4, News 6, B1ble Answers 8;
Concerns B. Comments 10, Rev Cleophus Robinson
13
-, •
6 45-Mornlng Report 3
6 55-Chuck White Reports 10, News 13
1 QO-Today 3,4,15 , AM Amertce 6,13. CBS News 8;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7 3D-Schoolles 10
a QO-lucy Show 6, Capt Kangaroo 8,10, Sesame Sf .
33
a 3D-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M. 3; Ph il Donahue 4,15, lucy Show a , Mor·
nlng with D J . 13.
,
9 3D-Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6;
Musical Chairs 8, New Zoo Revue 13
10 DO-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 4,15 , Dinah 6;
Magazine 8,10, Mike Douglas 13
10 3D-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15
11 QO-High Rollers 3, 15; I Dream of Jeannie 4;
Gambit 8, 10, Elec Co 20
11 ·3o-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Happy Days 13;
M i dday~ ~ Love of Life a, 10; Sesame St. 20.
,
11 55-Take Kerr B; Dan Imel's World 10,
12 oo-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3.15; Showoffs 13,
Bob Braun' s 50 50 Club 4, News 6,8,10.
12 3Q-3 tor The Money 3,15 ; All My Children 6,13,
Searc h for Tomorrow 8,10
12 45-E iec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1 QO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13, Phil Donahue 8;
Young B. the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 30-Days qf Our Lives 3.~ . 15; Let's Make a Deal6, 13;
As the World Turns B,lO
2 Q0-$10,000 Pyram id 6, 13, Guiding Light 8,10
2 30-Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reosoo 6,13, Edge of
Night 8, 10.

3 oo-Another World 3,4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13;
Match Game 8, 10. Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3D-One Life to Live 13, Tattletales 8,10;
Romagnolls' Table 20
4 oo-speclal Treat 3,4, 15; Mickey Mouse Club 6,8;
M1ster Roaers 20,33; Movie "You're Never Too
Younl[' 10, Dinah 13
4·30-Mod Squad 6, Partridge Family a, Sesame St.
20,33
5 oo-Bonanza 3, Merv Grlftln 4; Family Affelr a; Star
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Trek 15.
ACROSS
2 Persran
5 3D-Adam 12 4; News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co 20,33; Adam 12 13.
1 Not cloudy
nat1ve
6 oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; HOdgepodge
6 Radio
3 French
Lodge 20; Jody's Body Shop 33
feature
season
6.3D-NBC
News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13, Andy Grlftllh 6;
10 Btzarre
4 Burnoose
CBS News a;10; Your Future Is Now 33; Arabs &amp;
II Gift from
wearer
Israelis 20
the Queen
s Narrated
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the Truth ~~ Bowlllng
12 Fitzgerald 's
anew
for Dollars 6; Wilburn Brothers a, News 10; Name
" The - "
6 Telegraphic
That Tune 13, Family Affair 15; Antiques 20; Wild
(2 wds,)
sound
World of An ima ls 33 .
Yesterday' s Answer
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal wlm It 6;
14 - tube
7 Very tiny
.
$25,000 Pvramld a, Evenlna Edition with Martin
15 Still
( coUoq,)
18 WWI
32 Oregon
Agronsky
20; Prlc~_ ls_ Rig_!ltlO ; To Tell The Truth
16 Poorest
( hyph, wd.)
cannon
city
13, Wally's Workshop 15; Family Theatre 33.
fleece
8 "Tiny Allee"
(2 wds.)
33 Late Papa
a oo-Movln' On 3,4, IS; Happy Days 6,)3; Good Times
19 Adjective
playwright
22 Caddoan
Doc's land
8,1 0; Birth &amp; Death of a Star 33; G"raveyard of the
lor Abner
9 Philippme
Ind1an
35 Wrath
Gulf 20,
..---:----., 20 Spelling
raland
24 Pasture
39 Mortgage
a: 3D-Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13; Joe and Sons 8,10;
contest
II Trencher·
27 Had lWlch 41 Knockout
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33
'
21 ScottiSh
man's favor· 28 - party
9 oo-Pollce Story 3,,.,15; Rookies 6,13; Switch 8,10;
count
Ascent of Man 20,33
land owner
ite spot
30 In the least 42 Girl's name
comp'nLI 1
43 Alter ta•es 10 oo-Joe Forrester 3,~. 15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6, 13;
MISS
23- Wallach 13 Non-Jew
(2 wds.)
Beacon Hill 8.10; News 20 ; Woman Allvel 33.
2.1 Brink
16 Toby
31 Short·
44 Pia~
10
3D-Woman
20,33
~rv"""-~"" 26 Arctic base
contents
legged
kicker's
11 QO-News 3,~,6, a , 10,1 3,15; ABC News 33.
in Greenland 17 Nasty
hound
gadget
11.3D-Johnny Carson 3.~ . 15 ; Wide World Mystery 13;
29 M1ss Lillie, r:-'T."'"T.:'-r.:--r:::-FBI 6; Pan American Games Wrap. Up 8; Movie
to some
" The Hurricane" 10; Janakl 33.
o 31 Keep the
11 4D-Movle "Skyway to Death" B
roast JUICy
12 ,30-Wide World Myssfery 6.
1·oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13,
32 " - Stoops
to Conquer"
where joint ventures pr shared
34 Bmd
tnterests sre concerned Make
36 The capital
them your priority prolocts
of Japan
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· N.,, 22)
fl SwiSS nver
Let your hean rule your head
38 Soviet lake
AH 15 S£NDIN' LI'L
today In doclslons affoctlng
40 Stephen A
"' Bern1ce Bade Osol one you' love The other party
ABN~R 'lb. DtATH-'fRAp·
For Tuoodor. Oct. 21, 1875
would do lho same II roln
Douglas'
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 11) were reversed
ruckname
Your l1nanclal prospects are SAGITIARIUS (N ... 23·Dc.
( 2 wds )
SAFE~
=:-+--11--; lar brighter &lt;oday lha n they 21) There's opportunity about
45 Caroline's
were yeste rday II you're enter· you today regarding your work
aunt
prlslng, a proltt Is likely
or caree r Take time tor
46Embank·
TAURUS (April 20·M•r 20) pleasantnes - w1th the boss, If
ment
You'll make a very favorttble possible
47 Indian l1tle
1mpress10n today on persons CAPRICORN (Doc, 22· Jin.
48 Growing
b--1--+-4-+--1 you come tn contact wtth es· 11) Someone who hilS admired
outward
pectall y those ot the opposite
you from a distance may be
DOWN
sex
getting tn touch today It's one
GEMINI (Mir 21-Juno 20) yo u've been hoping to hear
I Small wheel L...J.....L--1Someone who thmks qu 1te from
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it : highly of you Will be busy AQUARIUS (Jin. 20-Fob. tl)
beh 1nd lhe scenes. pulling You have a li ttle luck tucked
AXYDLBAAXR
strings
for your benet tt t0day
away that you can bank on to·
MEAM!/11/Lt..
ta ' LONGFELLOW
CANCER (Juno 2t ·July 22) dey It w1ll come Into play If you
One letter simply stands for another. In thts sample A is You tend to stand oul In a 11 nd yourself In a rough spot '
used ror the three L's, X for lhe t"o D's, etc. Smgle letters, crowd today Compliments PISCES (fib, 20·M-h 10)
apostrophes, the length nnd (ormation of the 11 0rds ore all from o1hers are li kely, as well It 5 8 good day to work on
hmts Each day the code letters are different
as a s urprise tnvltatlon to a fun creative or artistic projects
event
The end results should be exCRYPTOQUOTES
LEO (July 23•Aug 22) Things ceptlonally pleasing
will go very smoothly lor yo~
TPCR
VIZ R P E JPSET SD JLLIM - today In an area where you
recen tl y g)(per le nc ed a
probl em Move QUICkly wht!e
I
MRIJ-K L DJSORDKR
UF
JZSR DOM conditions favor you

I found nothmq I Well11hats

What's

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

MII'I'O j.lfiH! I IHI llll"f't
.......1ft IICIUIIDU · ~ ..Itt
POIQII.., I"~ .,...,.., """

7 oo-TruthorCons 3, ToTelltheTruth4 ; Bowling tor
Dol la r~ 6 . Buck Owens 8, News 10, Candid Camera
13, Family Affair 15: On Aging 20: Classic Theatre
Preview 33
7 3D-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3: Don Adams
Screen Test~ ; Match Game PM 6, Pr ice Is Right 8;
Eveni ng Edition with Martin Agronsky 20, To Tell
the Tr uth 13; High Road to Adventure 10, To Be
Announced 15, Marco Sportllte : Football 33
a oo-Bobby VInton 3, Barbary Coast 6, 13; Invisible
Man 4,,15 , Gunsmoke a, In Performance at Wolf
Trap 20,33, Rhoda 10
e 3D-We Think You Should Know 3; Phyllis lO.
9 ro.-Movle " The UFO Incident" 3,4,15, NFL Football
--S, 13, All In The Family 8,10. Almeta Speaks The
Blues 20,33.
9 3D-Maude 8, 10, Not Forgotten 20 ; Realldades 33
10 OQ-Medlcal Center 8, 10; News 20, To Be Announce&lt; 33
10 3D-Earthkeeplng 33
11 QO-News 3,4,8,10,15, ABC News 33
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21 , 1975

~.wd'

ALLEYOOP

rv11\ L H I N 1;.
Repa 1rs, ser ~o~t ce, a ll mak es
9n 218 4 Th e F~br • c, f•h op
Po me roy 1\ uthoi"rzcd Stnger
\ a l es and Se r vtce
We
Shi!rp en 5CtSSO rS
3 29 tt c

}\S~·~~~

An Oh1o reader wants to
kn ow what we respond to
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
partner 's one-heart opemng
b1d
With
J1m " We have had qutte a
47
6
.K 52 +AQ84 ... J753 '
few quest1on s about the so·
Th is IS a clearc ut hand for
called short club You were
one of the inventors weren' t an Immediate ra1se up to two
hearts pla ywg s tandard
you'} "
Oswald " Proba bly the to· Amencan , Jacoby modern or
ventor Way ba ck m 1933 or any regular system II partner
1934 I suggested that a hand only holds fou r hearts he
such a s North 's be opened one llnows 1t
club rather than one spade
That club b1d was a general
( Do you have a question
ut1hty b1d. It guaranteed at lor the experts' Wnte "Ask
least three clubs to an honor lhe Ja cobys" ca re of th1s
and partner was supposed to newspaper rhe Jacobys w1ll
assu me we held fo ur It was m answer mdiVIdu al questiOns
no sense a forcing bid and just 11 s tamped. self-addressed
never seemed to get us mto envelopes are enclosed The
troub le "
most mterestmg quest1ons
J1 m " I see you have p1cked will be used m thiS colu m n
a hand wh1ch shows the b1d at and w111 rece1ve cop1es ot
1ts best The club opemng JACOBY MODERN I

ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN
,.....-......~
..::;-~

lARRY lAVENDER
.

match pomt game and that 50
pomts IS worth somethmg m
rubber brtdge Incidentally , 1!
West tnes to compete w1th a
three-diamond b1d he ts likely
to b e se t three tr1ck s
dou bled "

.

.,

FREE ESTIMATES

ena bl es North and South to get
to a mce comfortable two
hearts Careful play bnngs
the cont ract home w1th an
overtnc~ "
Oswa ld " II Nor th opens
one spade South res!ionds one
notrump The hand play s
there and South will probably
make one notrump '
J1m " There IS a lot of
d1!!erence between thr ee
hear ts and one not rump tn a

Pass

WUULD YUu BE LI EVE ?
Build an all steel building al
Pole Barn prices' Gold en
Gtant All Steel Butldtngs
Rt 4, ' Box lAB, Wav erl y
Ohio Phone 947 '1296
1 24 ttc

,0

HOW THEY MAY
REACT \1\iHt::tJ
THEIR i!&gt;LOOD's

A look at the short club

ASK A FOOLISH QUESTIO" ·
GET A FOOLISH ANSWER!

!

-1 16

'

FOR SALE-

MONDAY , OCTOBER 20, 1975
4 3o-Bew1tcnec 3, Mod ~quad 6, Partndge Family 8
Sesame St 2G,J3, Gel Smart 15
5 QO-Bonanza 3, Fam1ly Alfatr 8, Star Trek 15
5 3D-Adam 12 4, News 6 ; Beverly Hl llb 1ll1es 8, Elec
Co 20.33; Adam 12 13
6 QO-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS, ABC News 6, Hodgepodge
lodge 20, Special Educallon 33
6 3D-NBC News3,4 , ~; ABC News 13, Andy Grtfflth 6,
CBS News B,l 0,13, Mekl ng It Count 20

1-::::::::-~========::;-;:::=~
o. We Paint Houses
Coins, Currency
D&amp;M
We Paint Barns
and Supplies
·APPLIANCE
We Paint Roofs

Notice

For

WORK!

Business Sert?ices

I

I II J

4

-WAKE UP

C

DOGOLY

b
II I

IT WON'T

Television log for easy viewing

I DONE?

BLACKMAIL.!

l'n.r~,ambl&lt; th•••'rour Ju;,bl•s,

onr ~ ltrr to f'ach squart&gt;, to
for"' four ordinary word11.

·BUT W&gt;lAT' &gt;lAVE

a· rthd ay

SE . - ROWPZ

P II

PD

VLR

VIRGO (Aug. 23 · Sopl. 22)
Yo ur c harm and sense of
humor wtll wtn alltes to~ay The
res ults you seek can be a chteYed through · s oil sell "
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 23) This
Is a favorable day for yo u

Oct, 21, 1t71
An ambltton that you've had for
some time but have been un·
able to 1eallze Is likely to be
ac hieved lhls coming year
c9 ntects yo u've made are now
ready to help you

DON'T SCARE
US NONE· ·

W0005TOCK HA,
WING •!

' TENN15

�9 - The Daily Sent mel, Ml~dlepor·t·Pumeroy , 0 , Monday , Del. 20, 1975
DICK

3i~M;:::~;::;;:.·por· Fast Results Use The Sentinel ClasSifieds

EXTORTION!

WANT ADS
INFORMATI ON
DEADLINES
- ___:_
5 P M D ay f'\etor £' Pub
'
locn I l O ll
Mondny O f'tt dl•n~ '1 t1 111
Cn nce tt a 1 ton Co rr ec tton s
V'l d\ be accep ted un!ll 9 a m
tar Day of Publ! ca tton
REGUlAT ION S
f h e Pubtt s ~1er rese rv es the
FECAH
r 1qht to e dll or re tec1 any ads
dC('nlCd ObiCt;t tOnttl
The
pu blt s her
w tll
not
be
r es ponstb ~ c tor more tha n one
19 7SC APRICE CLASSIC
55495
tn correc l tn se rlton
4 door , Co De mo. sandstone ftnt sh , vtnyl top .and vtnyl
RATES
trtm . AM rad to and tape , atr co nd , automaftc P S,
WHE I-J DOWNTIWDDEN,
For Witnt Ad Serv1ce
P B , P door locks, P wmdows Crutse Control ,
MAY l!oE THE CAU5E
5 cent s per Word one tnserlto n
Mtn11n um Char ge $1 00
comforttlt, delu xe bumper and guards Thts car ts
OF !'!:EVOLUTION .
14 cent s per word thr ee
really loaded and cames new car t1tle and balance of '
consec ut ' vf&gt; tn se r I ton s
wa rra nt y Save
26 c en ts per word StK con
AGNEET
Now BJTan(e the circled letters sc cuttve •nsert10ns
Ce nt D t sc o un ~ on pa td
1971 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
$529a
~ ~ to form the surprise answer, u il 25ds Per
an d ads pa td wtt ht n 10
Cpe
,
less
than
7,000
m1les,
deluxe
belts,
tlrit
glass
, atr
~~·=:::1::·==~===~~,d:_~•:•~rr~•:•ted by the above cartoon. days CARD OF THANK S
cond1t1oned , delu xe bumpers and guard s, remote LH B.
&amp; Obttuary
RH mtrror, 400 48 B I engine , AM radio and tape, a[lx
IL
$') 00 for 50 wo rd mtntmum
ltgh tl ng, comfortilt wheel Ltke new and a real sharpte
E.e-: h lH:h.l tdon al word Jc
(An•w~" tomorro w)
BLIND ADS
1\ ddHt ona\ 25t: Charge p er
Juml•l" LIMBO CIVIL UNLOAD LAGOON
Adverttsemcnt
~• tunl~t' ·~
OFFICE HOURS
r\mw~r= n hat 1/()U mtqltt lw ll' h'f·n 11011 It t
8 JO a m •o ~ 00 p m Daily
uff st eam-' BOILING'
6 30 a n1
1o 12 00 Noon
Sa•urday
'
Saturday 's College Football
Res ults
Bv United Press tn tl'r nattonal
ROOM and board for sen ror
1972 CAPRI $1.350 ft rm Good
East
PUBLIC NOTICE
cll ~r e n s ve r y nr ce
Ph on e
shape, Phone 992 5335
Boston u 16 Bucknell 0
The
annual
e
lec
tton
of
the
99 2 3509
10 16 61p
Boston College 17 Navy 3
Met gs Coun ty Ag rt c uttural
10 12 tf c
-- -BROWN
---------Colgate n Prtnceton 21
Socte ty Dtr ec tors will be he ld I F YOU d tdn t buy at tndtan 1975
CAMARO
Wllh
Jo e 5 Sport s yo u lo s t
Connectr cut 14 Mittne 0
Thur sda y Nov embe r 6, 19 75
plat
d
c
loth
tn
lertor
v
a
ps
ELECTION
NOTIC
E
money
Dart mou th 10 Brown 10
at th e off tce of the .~ e t gs
p b
AM F M stereo wtlh 8
On N ove mb er I B, 1975 m Cou n ty Com m tSStoners In 1 he
10 16 7tc
Hetrvard 34 Corn ell 13
tra c k tape, 19 ,000 mil es
·H c ordan ce with Chapt er Cou r t house at Pom eroy , Oh o
Ithaca 30 Wilkes 0
ra dtal tt res, Ra !lye wheels
1515 01 14 Rev tse d Code of fr om 5 10 9 p m
SPE CIA L mee ttng of th e
Lehtgh 35 Dela ware 23
Phon e 742 272J
Oh io, th e Ohio Soil and Water
Ractne Gun Cl ub, Thurs da y,
Mass 23 Rhode Island 0
Oua l t ft ca lton s
for
10 15 61p
Conse r va r ro n Commr tt ee w ill dt recto rs are tha t they mus t
Oc t 23 to vote on new by
Maine 14 Connectic ut 0
ca use an el ectron to be hel d at be a qualtft ed vote r ol Me tgs
laws and ra tsl ng annual
Mlddlebur)l 48 Hamilton 0
197 4 CONT INENT AL, 4 Or
dues
New Hampsh ire 28 Cent ral So utl'l ern Hrgh Sc hool , 8 00 County and m us t have a
~own ca r wtlh sun roof. and
p m , e lectmg two sup ervt sors me mb ershtp tt cket tn sa id
10 15 7tc
Conn 0
a real bea ut y m so\td bla c k
Nt chols 2 Bridgewater (Mass J to fil l the ex p tr lng J yea r soc tety of 1975
tnt er to r ts bla c k p lush
terms of Jos eph Batley and
0
Cand tdates pett ltons must NEW " OIL OF MINK '
velvet Equ tppe d wtl h every
Re~ Shenetle ld
produc ts, new ca talog s Ge t
Nor theastern 27 Sprtngfteld 7
be
ftl
e
d
wtlh
th&amp;'Sec
retary
no
opt ton 29,000 miles and lt ke
Nomtnees to fill th e ex pir ing la ter than 5 p m Thu rsday , on our growmg custo mer
Penn Sl 19 Syrac use 1
new ms tde a nd out Cost
term s are Joseph Batl ey October
lt s l Or maybe you would
PIIISb urgh 52 Ar my 20
30
1975
On
ly
persons
nea r $1 1,000 wd l sell for
Rut land Townshtp Leona rd holdmg membershtp ltcke ts a t
ltke to take orders? Phone
Rutgers 24 Wm &amp; Mary 0
$6 , ~00 Phon e (614) 98 5 35'i'S
Huffm an . Bedford Towns ht p th e c lose of th e 1975 Count y
Helen J Brown , 992 5113
Tulane 16 west Vl rgtnta 14
10 l7 31c
Re~
Shenef ie ld ,
Sa lem r atr or at least ( IS) ca lend a r
KOS CO T
Indep end e nt
Vlllanov! 21 Mars hall 14
Ots tn but or
waynesburg 29 Slippery Rock 7 Townsht p and Wayne W days be for e the da te o f
Ut;~ton , Oli~o~e Town sht p
9 21 lfc 1969 GTO Ca ll any tim e aft er
are qua \l tt ed to vote
5 p m , 992 7284
Nominations will be at eleclton
South
Th
e
Me
tgs
Agr
tcu
llur
al
10 14 6tc
cepted from the flo or at the Soctety By Mrs Walla ce WILL car e fo r fe male
Au burn 31 Georg ta Tech 27
paltents , or elderly woman
Challanooga 21 E Tenn 51 13 ttm e of elec tion or by pet d ton Bradford Secre tary
subm til e d one week prt or to
tn my hom e Phone 99 2 73 14 1968 BUIC K Rtvtera, ftrs t S200
Duke 25 Clemson 21
lakes Century Bar , L Hess
elect ion
co ntamm g
th e 110) 13 20 27 , 3t c
Florida 34 Florida Sl 8
10 19 6tc
10 19 Jl p
Florida A&amp;M 52 Morris Brown Stgna t ures of 25 landow ner s
~.----- ----------Only landown e rs and oc
0
THE MEIG S Alumni ar e
cupters are eligib le to vote
Furm an 21 Holy Cross 14
s pon sortng a masquerade 1969 OLD SMO BI LE. Cutlass S
s
wil
l
a
lso
be
open
at
th
e
Poll
Coupe, $350 V 8 wtlh
Georg ia 47 Vanderbilt 3
Dan ce, Sa turday, Nov 1,
PUBLIC
NOTICE
county So t! Conservatto n
aulomattc tran s mt sston ,
Gra mbling 38 Mtss Vall ey 22
from
9 p m to 1 a m Ad
Ac
lmg
under
dtrect
order
of
Ser vice off• ce fro m 8 00 a m
p s, vtnyl root, tap e player ,
Howard J5 Vtrglnlft St 12
m tSS tOI1 52 per son, SJ couple
•o 4 00 p m on the e lect to n th e Board of Tax Appear s a nd
co
nt ac t Tony Keeba u gh
LSU 17 Kent ucky 14
Se
veral
rock
bands,
brtng
tn comp lt ance wllh Sec tton
da te
aft e r 6p m at (6 14 ) 985 39 13
Maryland 21 Wlllke Forest 0
beverages
Games and
5715 26 of The Oh to Revtsed
10 19 7tc
MemphiS St 41 LOUtSV tll e 7
prtzes Adults 18 and over
wh ich slates tn pa rt th at
Meigs SWCO OffiC e ItCode
Miss St 15 No T~ xas St 12
10 19 12tc -:------------ts
the
dut
y
of
the
Count
y
Box 432
No Carolina St 21 No Carolina
Pomer oy , Oh io 45 769 Aud tlor to change val uation s - - - - - - - - - - - - - ?0
for th by said Boa rd of Tax
992 3628 set
RtCh mond 24 VMI 19
Ap peals This order dtr ec ts
Leo
ta
Yo
un
g
,
Salisbury St 33 Johns Hopktns
Secretary th e MetQS Co un ty Audtlor 10 ONE checkbook stub tn lad tes
26
110)
20
(
11)
3,
21
C
tncrease all tracts lots dr
lounge a t th _e court ho use
So Carolina 35 Misstss tppt 29
parcels and butldtn gs by
be t 1eved
Pllone Addt e REMODELING
So Caroltna 51 35 Morgan St 0
Plumbtng
Pu11 1ns (614) 985 3952
twenty percent (20 pe rcen t)
Tennessee St 1.4 Vlrgln•a Unton
heattng and all types of
In
comp
lia
nce
wtlh
~h is order
10
8t
c
10
7
ge ne r al
r e pa •r
Work
the valuattons of sa id tra c ts, _ -~- _ - - - - - - - - - VI rg inia Tech 24 Vtrgtnla 17
guaranteed 20 years ex '
lots, par cels and butl dtnos
PUBLIC NOTICE
per.enc e Phone 99 2 1.d 09
TO SHARON JEFFERS,
have been changed and lhe
Mtdwut
La st Known Addr ess
5 1 ff ~
oooKs are open for mspeclton
Akron 24 Tem pl e 23
Routt' No 1,
ot
the
tn
crease
tn
your ta x CAS H pa td tor all makes a na
Arkansas St 14 Ctnclnnalt 9
Putland, Oh10
value at th e Metgs Cou nty models of mo btl e homes
Oowltng Green 35 Ken ! St 9
Audt lo r's Off tce , Pomoy , Phone area code 614 423
Esn Illinois 3 wsn 11/ lno ts 3
You ar e her eby noltft ed th at Ohio
9531
lnd St (lnd ) 56 'Dayton 14
ha ve been named
you
4 13 tf c
SMAL L apt
s ize
gas
Iowa 20 lndt ana 10
Defendant tn a legal actton
Howard E Fra nk __ __ - - - - - - - - - - coo ks tove or rang e PI us,
Kansas 21 Iowa St 10
enttlled Ev e r e tt Je ff e r s
MetgS County
sma ll refrt ge rator with
Mlamt (Oh io I 17 Ohto u 9
P lam tl lf vs Sharon Jeff ers ,
Audll or
fr eeze r Phone 992 38 50
Michigan 69 Northwes tern 0
De fen dant , th a t thts cause has
10 19 31C
Michigan St 38 Minnesota 15
been assigned Case No 15938 , (10) 16, 17, 20 , 21, 22 23 24 , 27
3 FAM IL Y Yar d Sale , ho use
Ohio St 56 Wtsconsm o
and Is pend ing In the Com mo n 28 29 I Otc
n ex t to post Offtce tn 22 SEMI
Oklahoma 25 KaMas St 3
P le~ s Court of Meigs County ,
automattc rtfl e
Ru tland Phon e J.i2 21 03
Purdue 26 llltno ts 24
IN THE
Ph one 742 3074
Ohto Pomeroy , Oh to 45769
10 15 41C
Wes t Texas 24 Drake 6
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
10 17 6tp
The object ot tht s com pt am t tS
PROBATE DIVISION
Yo ungstown St 28 Morehead St fo r divor ce
dl~o~ I S t On
of
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
0
prope rt y and ot her prop er
1964 AN o older dtm es,
re lief
quarters , and hal~o~es Also,
Southwest
vou are required to answer IN THE MATTER OF SET TO GIVE AWAY - Beeole
gold and Stiv er tewelry Ca ll
Lou isi ana Tech 41 NW Louls ia wllhl n lwe nty etg ht days afte r TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS, and hound pups to give
Rutland 7.d2 2JJ 1 Rog er
na 14
the las t pub ll cat ton of thi s PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
away Phone 992 2773
Wamsley
Nebraska 28 Oklahoma St 20
10 12 12tc
1019 3t
notice , once each week for Stx COUNTY, OHIO
New Mexico 28 Utah 23
Acco un ts and vouchers of - - - - - - - - - - - - - - P
s uccesstve weeks The las t
Rice 28 SMU 17
foll ow tng
nam ed
pu blt catlo n wt ll be on the
) LO furnitur e, tc c b o ~es, ·
So MtSS 34 Texas Arlmgton 1
November 17t h, 1975 . and the fod u"anes have been f1l ed m
' brass beds, or comp le te
Texas 24 Arkans as 18
th
e
Probate
Court
,
Me
tgs
twe nt y e1ght days wi ll com
households Wrtte M D.
Tex as A&amp;M ' " TCU 6
mence on that dat e
County Oh!o fpr approval F IR ST ltne mechant c wan ted
Mi ll e r , ~I 4, Po meroy ,
Tulsa 41 Wicht Ia St 10
bl
th
t
t
In case of you r fa il ur e to and se llle ment
Oh to Cal l 992 1760
CASE NO 18 ,333 Ft ftee nth
prefera Y Wt
au oma tc
a nswe r , or oth erwt se res pond ,
10 7 74
ent
Acco
un
t
Be
ll"
L
transmtssto
n
ex
per
te
nce
01
West
as re qu ired by the Ohio Rul es Curr
Bo~t.
7&lt;13,
Pome
roy
,
'
w
rtt
e
Arizona 32 Texa s Tech 28
Ohta
of Ci vil Procedure , judgment Smt th , Guard tan of Mary K
Arlzone 51 33 Colorado St 3
G{t tlagh er a mtno r
10 15 6tc
by defau ll wtlt be re nd e red
Ca lifornia 51 Oregon St 24
agatns t you for the• re li e f of
CA S E NO 19 ,925 StX lh _ --Colorado 31 Missourt 20
Annua\ Acco unt of Dorot hy
dema nds In thts c lat m
2112 ACRES tn Flatwoods area
Hawaii 24 Portland St 1
Gt lm or e , Gua rdtan of De lbe rl LADY to ltve tn and drt ve car
a nd 1974 14 x 65 mobt !e
Montana t4.1daho 3
P hone 992 2936
LARRY SPEN CER, Norm a n Ca ll , an tncompet ent
home, se ll se parately or
10
19
3tc
Montana St 19 Id aho S1 1
person
Cler k of Courts
toget her Phon e 992 7338
CA S E NO 20 909 FIrs ! ~-~----------Notre Dame 31 At r Force 30
Metgs County
10 19 71p
San Otego St 46 New Mex ico
Cur r en~ Accou nt of Ed tson
Common Pleas Cou r t
51 3
!101 13,20 27 111 1 1 10 , 17, 61c Ho bsleller , Ad mtnt stra tor of
1974 CAMERON mobt le hom e,
san Jose St 41 u of Pacific 13
the Es tat e of Me r le E Rtce. SMA LL ho use for rent
12 x 60 2 bedrm , total e lec
So Ca! tfornla 17 Oregon 3
com pletely furntshed wtlh
Deceased
M tddl eport a rea Phone 992
s! anford 24 washtngton 21
CA S E NO 20 926 Ft rst
7791 after d p m
new furn tture and washer
world H o c k e y Assoctation Curr
UCLA 37 Washington St 1
ent Acco unt ot Edna M
10 20 ·3lc
and dryer On 111• acre of
Standtngs
Utah S1 30 We ber St 1
$ to b art , Guardian of the ------------4--- la nd ,lo ca t ed on Unio n
Bv United Press lnfernattonal
Wyom ing 31 UTE P 14
Guar dian s hip
Estate o f
Ayen ue tn Pomeroy CalL
East
Pil me la Sue St obart a mtnor TR AIL ER space , 3~ mile
992 7129
W L T Pts
CA SE NO 21 ,349 Ftrs t a nd
nortl'1 of Me tgs Htgh Sc hool
10 12 91c
CtnCt nnat t
2 1 0
4 F tn a l Account of Je rome
on old Rl 33 Phone 992 2941 - - - -- - - - - - - - - - .
2 1 0
New Eng land
Coo k, Execu tor of the Esta te
' 1019\lc 1969 PMt 2 bedrm , 12 ~ 52
1 2 0
2 of Atla nta Georgia Cook . - - -- -- -- - - - - - Cle~o~eland
mob tle home . lncludtng
Ind iana polis
2 deceased
1 ' 0
BE DRM apt Pom eroy
underplnnlnq and porches
West
CASE NO 21,404 Fi rst and
Hom e and Auto Phone 992 - $3 ,210 Phon e (6 W 9al 3104
W L T Pts F mal Account of He len M
¥,'11rld Footb•ll
2094
or 992 550~
3 2 0
6 Wo odyard Admlntslratrt x of
Phoen ix
Lugut Standings
10 19 3tc
10 16 31c
Houston
2
2
0
4
the Estate of Marg ie Sum
By Un ited Preu International
2
2
0
4
San
Ot~go
East
me rs . deceased
J R M turn tshed ground floor 1913 VINDA LE Trailer and lot
Mt nnesota
2 2 0
'
W L T , Pet
Unless exceptions are ftl ed
apt near Jo ne s Bovs All
located tn Tu ppers Plains
2
2
0
4
Denver
the reto , sat d accounts will be
uttltltes furnished Call 992
Btrmingham
t 0 0 1 000
Phone (6 14 ) 667 3817
Canadian
fo r hea rm g before said Court
2050
any
ttm
e
from
12
noon
Philadelphia
t I 0 500
10 16 121c
W L. T. Pts on the 18th day of No vember ,
ll
lllOpm
Char lolle
1 1 o 500 Edmonton
3
3
I
1
10
19
31c
1975 at wh ic h tim e satd ac
M~mphls
0 I 0
000
~0 X 8 MOBILE hom e, very
3 1 0
6 coun t wtll be considered -and
Jacksonville
0 2 0.
000 Quebec
nt ce lnd tan J oe 's Sports
Wm01peg
3
2
0
6
conttnued from day to day 3 BE DRM house. turnts hed ,
West
and CB'• , JOB Page, Mid
Toronto
1
7
1
3
unlll ftna lly dt sposed of
W L T Pet
dl epor l
Also, 1 furn ts hed tra t\er
Calgary
1
2
0
2
Any person Int erested may
Por tl lmd
2 o o I 000
10 16 71(
Phone 992 2780 or 992 3432
Res ults
hi e writt en exception s to satd
Southern C&amp;ll frn 2 0 0 I 000 TorontoSaturdav•s
10 19 lfc
3
N'ew
England
1
Hawaiians
1 1 0 soo Denver 6 lndtl!l napoll s 4
accoun ts or to ma tter s per - - - - - - - - - - - - - San An ton io
0 1 0 000 Quebec
tai nmg to lhe exec ution of the TR AILE R spa ce tor rent Al l
3 Houston 2
Shreveport
o I o ooo Edmon ton
trust not tess than tt ve days uttltltes Phon e 992 5535
J
Mtn
nesota
1
Saturday 's Results
prtor to the date se t for
9 16 lfc
San
Otego
2
Wtnnt
pcg
I
heartng
Philadelphia 18 Char lotte 10
Sunday's
Results
Sunday ' s Games
will
:11\ ND ~R OO M turn ts hed and
Phoen•x 6 Wtnnt peg 5
MANNING D WEBSTER
Shreveport ~1 San Antonto 31
un fur nts hed
apartm e n t~
Houston 6 Cleveland 5
Btrmtngham 21 Memph ts 0
JUDGE
P h,one 99 1 5434
Edmon ton 4 Cmclnnatl 2
COMMON PLE AS COURT.
Portland 30 Jacksonv ill e 13
4 1? 1fc
Monday' s Games
PR OBATE DIVISIO N
Southern Cal ifornia 26 Hawa tt 1 I No games
scheduled )
MEIG S COU NT Y,OH IO
.
(111120, lie 'F UR~ . ... r1ED
a par tft'lent,
adu lts only tn Middleport
Phon e 992 3874
FIRE TRUCK
3 25 tfc
N0.1 HEATING OIL
FOR SALE
•
Se!!led bids wlll be rece tv ed f-U KNt ... nt:D i p t 3 rooms
NO.2 HEATING OIL
•n the otftce ot the Vtllage and balh . utdtl les paid
Degree Day Delivery
Clerk Pomeroy, Ohio , unt tl 12 Phon e 992 2937
Budget Pa Plan
o c lock noon on Nove mber 3,
10 14 6tc
With 36 in. Mower
1975 for a 1952 GMC Pumper
•
POMEROY
LANDMARK
Ftre Truck with the followi ng 2 BEDRM unfurnis hed house
ec:~ u• pme nt
"·J"ack W, Carsey, Mgr
wit h garag e Phon e 992 5758
500 G P M
. _ , Phone9Y2-21al
10 14 6tp
fro nt mount pump
340 Ga llon boost er la nk
With 40 in. Mower
J Sect ton 2~ loot wood ladder ONE bedrm a par tme nt fo r
7 10 toot section 4 Inch hard r ent at Rivers ide Apt s REDUCE safe and fast wllh
Go Bese TabiC'ts and E Va p
Phone 99 2 3273
suc tton hose
" wa ter Ptlls," Nelson Drug
10 17 3tc
1 10 foo ~ 21 mch hard
10 20 lie
- ----------.:-~
sUe t ton hose
Auto. with 42 in. mower.
200 toot reel hose
1
YOUNG layers , Jersey mtlk
-1 Inch st rai ne r
cow , one deep fr eeze, frost
l f Pom eroy Larg(' lo ts Wtlh
2' 1 tnch stratner
free r efrigerator
Second
1S lb C02 C)(llng ulsher
concre te pilttos, !it dCw alks .
house on ttght at Si lver Run
Sode ac id extlngu• sher
ru tw f'rs ,1nd oil s tr ee t
Demo, 42 in . mower.
Road 3 mtles below Mtd
Axe
'IJM._ I l1(! Ph one 99,' 717 9
I
dteport Leslie Wh it tington
s ge !lon Indian F tre Ftg ht er
t2 31 1fc
10 19 31p
2 1 1 Inch noi:l:les
1
2• , HI Ch nozzle
Mn R~home loca ted m
TWIN bu ll calves , 2 weeks old ·
Mtddleport , adults on ly
ltghl and s tre n
Demo, 30 in. mower. ,
Also , green beans Phone
Truck' pr esenlly In scrvt ce Phone 99 2 5135
10 8 lf c
843 2353
and has tess •han 10 000 a c~u a\ -Also many ne\'1 wheel horse tractors in
10 19 l tc
m tie~
? QE DRM tretiler . Kin gsbury
stock.
The rtghl tS reser\l ed • to
Road · ~ mtle bfl St Rt 143
re tec • any an d all btds
f-urnishe d. no pet5, 1 or 2 WINCHE STER model I)
nic kel steel , 12 gauge pump ,
chtldren Phone 742 3122
'
venHiated rtb and new
J ane Wallon ,
10 7 261C
wood, e~cellent cond it ion
Clerk
S350
G:ontact
Marv in
VIL LAGE 01
Kee baugh , 992 -5342 doys ,
POMER OY , OHIO TRA IL E R, adults onl y Ph one
992 3181
evenings (6 14 ) 985 3913
CHESTER, OHIO
10 12 lfc
10 19 71C

Auto Sales

_

_______,

2 SIGNS· 'Pomeroy

b
I I
II
I
t
I I IJ

OF
QUALITY. 1Motor

I

~Priiii
=
IM SUR
=PII~ISE:.:::AHSWIII
=Itm
~-'1 D ( I

Notice

Lost

Employment Wanted

Wanted

Wanted To Buy

Yard Sale

Pets

Help Wanted

Mobile Homes for Sale

- - - - - - - -- - -

f Or 'Ren t

sale

Yes, we
new
·accept
customers.

FUEL OIL

- 7 hp Wheelholse Jractor

v

12 hp Gravely Trador

10 hp Wheelhorse Tractor

/(~~ r~~ ~t' 'l.~~nb:l t~\csHn~~~

14 hp Electric_Wheelhorse Tractor

6 hp Electric Wheel~ T~or

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

--------------- _____________

BAUM
TR4E VALUE ·

"

'

.......,

Buy,

We Paint Anything

Ph. 742·2328
9 17 1 mo

BOOKKEEPING,
Tax Advisory Service,
Collection systems,

R&amp;J COINS
Phone 742·2331
Roger Wamsley-Rutland
10151mo

Ph. 992-3313
or 992-5880

Johnson Masonry

&amp; Remodeling

LARRY WHOBREY,

Btrd &amp; MastiC Vinyl
Stdmg
Alean, Alcoa &amp; Wolverln1
Aluminum Stdmg
Btrd VtnYI Gutters
and Downspouts
Sofftts of all kinds
10 I 7S

Accountant
Phone 992-6173
9 21 30tc

For Sale
WARM Mornmg gas heate r, 1
yr old , $175 Call (614) 985
3540 befor e 2 p m
10 19 61p .

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating
Your Hell Dealer
Racin e. Ohto
Thtrd Sf
Ph. 949-596!
Emerge ncy
949 2211 or 1192 5700
Co mpl ete atr cond tll onmg
sa les and se rvtce, heating ,
p\umbtng roofm g an d
general sheet meta l work
Free Eshm ates
9 14 1 mo . I .

a nd Arrow Spec• als
Bea n - Gr lzz le y, 565 Bear
- Blac k Bear , $50 Bean Kod tak Mag , 580 . No 145
Cedar Conventa PI , 52 ea ,
No 1834 Bea r Mag Alum , 54
each No 1 63~ Mag Alum
53 25 each , No
1694
F tberglass , S2 75 each . Bow
BE ORM
home
tU SI
F tShtng Rtg 5 12 SO
Bow
ftnt s hed , remod eltng, Salem
Qw\ven , S15, Bow S! r tngs,
St , Rutland Phone 74?' 2)09
51 SO eac h , Ftt Pro Glove. 55
a~oRr 4 p m or see Mtlo B
each
Arm guard . 54 50
HutchtSOn
each , Bow stnnger, 52 SO
9 23 lie
eac h , Mtght Mtfe Tr ee
Stand 517 SO lnd tan Joe s HOU SE tor sa te, reasonable
Sports and CB's , 308 Pag e Prtced , Phone 992 76.48
Sf , Mtddleport
9 28 121c
10 19 3tc

BOW

Real Estate For Sale

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

REG Polled Hereford Bull s, HOU SE on 1672 Ltnco \n H'Qts
one 5 yr old, two yea rl tng s
4 r ooms , large ktlchen
E ~ce llenl
dtSpOS tlto ns
bsaement n•ce backyard
Phone 992 11 6S or 992 2826
and low pr tce d See between
10 19 7tc
10 a m J p m
10 20 12tc
SEE your Kmg Ashley wood _
burnmg s to~o~e s a t Wtlktnson
Small Engt ne , 498 Locus! 3 BR HOME , just f tn tshed
r emodeling Salem 51
St , Mtddleport Phone 992
Rutland Phon e 742 2J06
3092
after 4 p m or see Mtlo B
10 19 6tc
Hutcht nson
10 9 He
AI RCO wel dtng machtne ,
new , 250 amp , AC DC
Bumb le Bee (MAl Phone RE AL E STAT E LOAf~S VA,
992 3410
NO DOWN PAYME NT ,
10 19 61C
MOST VETERA NS STIL L
QUALIFY F HA as low as 3
FA RM ALL H tn A 1 cond llton , percen t down Ev erybody
set of 2 ro w cu lftvators
qualtftes , 30 year ttrms
refin anc mg. Also, available ,
compl ete tn A I co ndllton
steel wh eeled Stde del tvery
Ftr s t Mortgage Servi ces 77
rake $1 , 100 tor everythtng
E Sta le A ~hen s Phon e {6 141
Chester
Fontly ,
Long
592 3052 tor tnform a lto n
Bottom , Ohio or cal l (614)
10 17 61 c
981 4190
10 19 61p HO USE FOR SAL E on Lincoln
Hgts J large bedrms and
ANYON E tnteres ted tn pur
bath ltvtng rm , TV rm ,
chasi ng a grave lo t m the
large bu t\! tn kttchen
Calholic Ceme te ry Call
coun te r to p ran ge built tn
(606 1 w 2996
double oven . au tumn gold,
10 19 61p
l arg~ bar tn kttc h en, all full y
ca rpet ed,
tn
J rm ,
~ N EW 1000x20 ny lon lug type
basement garage with
ttres with tmea s below cost
Stld tng door s Wtt h or
Phone 99 2 666~
wrtho u t fJ.Irntture , prtc ed
I
101961 p low Ca ll 992 2404 for m
format ton
I0 7 12t c

Real Estate for Sale

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

3 6 E DRM house In Racine 3 BEDRM S, ~ torag e shed,
Phone 949 2671
fenced In ba ck yard , nt ce
10 I 261C
size lot Phone 992 7631
10 19·61c
.,-------------~ --------------

WIN AT BRIDGE

Sales &amp; Senrice
1600 Nye St.

992-7608

office supp~ service.

ANTI QUE pen nant watc h ,
r tngs and earrmgs Fts h
aquartum , hubcaps, m tsc
s ta le Rt 143 N IJ4 mil e
from Rt 7 , lSI trailer be .
yond road lo landftll Ra n .
dolph restdenca
ltc
10 19

Sell or Trade

Appra tsal servtce on
estates and collecttons

Free Estimates
AI Tromm

CAPTAIN EASY

T - BUT WHO KNOW$

EASY RETURN S FROM FILMING THE

e.t.AZES !
I DIDN' T
THINK, THE

2&gt;16FEET TO FIND &gt;'1 5 l.ITTLE PAL 60NE;!
POOR WASH!, ,
THESE PRIIVTS
TELL
S TORY,
At.L I
HE'S&gt;

Pomeroy

C ~EATURE 5

LOOKED VERY

22 ACRES OF GROUNU 1 home . 1 tile building · 1
mobile home 4 rentals 3
of which have free gas.
Always rented and near
recreational
facilities.
Income of $420.00 per
month plus gas Income ,
$25,000
NEW HOME - About 1
acre Brick &amp; frame 3
lovely BR zonec for quiet .
l'h baths that mak..
bath ing fun. You'll whistle.
while you work In this
lovely. kitchen with range,
oven and lovely dining
area. Garage and room for
workshop , $25,900.
MIDDLEPORT
Beautiful lot With alley In
rear Frame and stone
building with modern bath.
Nat. gos F. A furnace .
Paneling and tile Spend a
few S and have a nice
apartment, $7,000.
POMEROY - HORN OF
PLENTY - plenty of space
thai Is Could have 2
apartments . or live In and
rent 1 5 BR could have 7 2
balhs . New ngas F A
furnace , All In n ice condition SJO,OOO .
MAY
I
BE
YOUR
BROKER? DEMAND
FOR HOMES IS IN ·
CREASING
OUR
WAITING
LIST
OF
BUYERS IS GROWING WE NEED All TYPES
OF
PROPERTIES
THROUGHOUT
THE
COUNTY
992-225'
No Answer n2·2568

.-----.,.,. - - - - - - . ,
NORTH ID I
2
4 AQ8 6
II' A B~ 2
t 10 6
olo K 7 6
WEST
EAST
• K 72
913
• to
"Q 10 7
6
II' J
. tA Q942
7
• KJ
• 10 4
olo QJ8 3
SOUTH

UN!

FIERCE -OR.

DAN6EROU5

....

A

EXPER.IEtlCED
.
Radlato
Service ' -·~

I
l

From the largest Tru ck or
Bul ldoze r R.,dtator to the
s'Jiall es t Heater Core
Nathan Btggs
Radtator Spec 1a11st _

• Js
II' K 913
• es3
olo A952
Both vulnerable

BORN LOSER

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

.

Pom eroy

Ph 992 1174

West

Nortb East

Pass

lolo
2 II'

Soulh

PasS Ill'
Pass Pass

Opemng lead - A t

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown tnfo Wa lis &amp; Atftcs
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; ODORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING•SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

Ll riLl!; Ul\t't1AN

~

Syracuse, Oh10
Ph 99!-3993
4 10 t mo.

ANNIE-BRAIN

EX CAV AT IN G do ze r loa der
and backhoe work sep ttc
tanks tns talled
d um p .
tru cks and 10 boys for htre
oJ11 II hau l f t\ 1 d trl top sotl ,
ltmestone and gra vel,. Ca tt
rob or Roge r Jc trers day
phone 997 70B9 ntgh l phon e
9il] 3575 or 99? 52J7

I

lillie

E'I.CA..,..-p; t i:N G', - backhoe ,
doze r an d dt~ c h e r Gas,
e lec trtc and wate r ltn e
burtal basemen ts , looters.
sepltc systems and brush
c lean tng Will haul fill dtrt.
top so tl. sa nd and grave l,
limestone for drt veways and
ro ads Ph one Charles R
Ha lttel d. Ba ckho e Serv tce ,
Rt 1, RIJ11an d, Oh tO, 742
6092
7 II 90! c

WEL L,

LEM~!i:

CHECI(, 100LS, FOOD,

WA"TE!i! , SLANK!;TS " , VEP 1 i"T 'S
ALL HERE! THE ONLY "T1-I IN6

WE'RE MISSING IS

1

~ILLE.

NEIGLER' S Build in g and
Su pply We spec ialize In
build ing houses Also, do
repair work and cabtnets ,
al umtnum sidi ng Ca ll Guy
Nelgle r , 949 2508 , If no
answer ca ll 9 ~9 2813 or 949
2417
10 I 261p
SE W IN G

GASOIJNE AILEY

That about
does it.
Mr. Wallet!

'• EPT IC TI\NKS c lean ed
Modern San tla tmn 992 J9.St
or 992 7349
9 18 !IC
MIX I..V NCRETE
d e lt-1/ ere d r tgh l to your
prote ct r ast and easy r rce
es ttmat es Phone 992 31811
Cioeqletn Reu dy Mtx Co ,
Mtddiep ort Ohta,
6 JO lf( 1

~E I\ OY

E:L.WUV L• tlUY Yt: t&lt; :, ~t: t-' A II{
Sweepers to,1ste rs , trans
all sma ll app l1o1n ces Lawn
mower , next to S t a t ~ H1gh
way Ga ra ge on Route 7
PhOn e 985 3821

- --

ihe

Ever~thinq

verdict'

a relief!

is fine!

Look l1ke
Mebbe we
M1ster Skeez1x better come
ca\lm' later,
qot

Melba!

••

Astra-

~fc

Graph

U1LJJBf!ER

HAIIRI5CINVILLE - 14 X 70 VYc .&gt; t"ECIALIZE In mobile :
home fur11ac e repa ir Phone
3 bedrooms , and
99 ~ 5818
6 acres $11,500 00
9 18 lfc
POMEROY - Nice 2 B Rs,
bath carpeting and equlppec 0 &amp; D TREE Tr lmmtng , 20 ,..
years e~ per le n ce In sured,
kitchen. $13,500
free esti m a les Call 992 3057
POMEROY - Good 3 B.R.
or Il l 667 30&lt;1. Coolville
older home 1t;, baths, hot
· 10 15 ttc
water heat on Main St, Ask ing
C BRADFO"Ro , Auctio neer
$31,500.
Com plete Service Phone
EASTERN - 5 B R modern
9~9 2487 or 9.49 2000 Racin e,
home, 3 ba ths, nice kit bar ,
Oh io Crl!t Bradford ,
s un deck and 2 car ga rage
10 9.1fc
...__
$41.500.
POMEROY ,- 2 B R home, -BACI&lt; HOt: tor rent , -hour or
co ntra ct
Reg or e)(
bath, gas furnace , fenced
cavatl ng type Septic tan ks
yard Asking $10,000
msta!! ed Btl \ Pullm s Phone
BAS HAN - 3 8 R home, bath
992 2H8
furna ce heat and fen ced
8 27 lfc
$25,000,
DO elum mum sid ing,
40 ACRES - On 'good gravel NE
gutter
work ,
rooti ng,
road. $10,000.
paneling , painting , plum
b ing , we fhc th e whole
house AI Tromm , 7.42 2328
- 9·24-ll c
WI LL trim or cut tre es and
s hrubbery Phone 949 2545
or 742 31 67
10 8 26tc

HfT THIS
! Af&lt;TM '111

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

1975

______________

YEB ..•HE'S AWAY
RIGHTI¥JW

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

-WHAR HELL BE

.• BUT THAT
CL~DE THRASHER SAID
HE'D TAKE A POT· SHOT
AT ME TH' NEXTTIME
I CUT ACROST HIS
PROPITTV· · •
0 .... 11111111'11 Plftl MI(IUIII

IIIII •l"'':

_,,~tl- 1"'1
~IIIIMI IIIII r. &gt;ol.'

IOolflo«o,l o; -

,, , • I~
"'fi !..,tll

@Your

s

K P II

tl'lol~w,III!'Cr&lt;ln•'l'lll\i1\lt

6.oo-Columbus Today 4, Sunrise Semester 10
6 25-Fa r m Report 13
6 JG-New Zoo Revue 4, News 6, B1ble Answers 8;
Concerns B. Comments 10, Rev Cleophus Robinson
13
-, •
6 45-Mornlng Report 3
6 55-Chuck White Reports 10, News 13
1 QO-Today 3,4,15 , AM Amertce 6,13. CBS News 8;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7 3D-Schoolles 10
a QO-lucy Show 6, Capt Kangaroo 8,10, Sesame Sf .
33
a 3D-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M. 3; Ph il Donahue 4,15, lucy Show a , Mor·
nlng with D J . 13.
,
9 3D-Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6;
Musical Chairs 8, New Zoo Revue 13
10 DO-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 4,15 , Dinah 6;
Magazine 8,10, Mike Douglas 13
10 3D-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15
11 QO-High Rollers 3, 15; I Dream of Jeannie 4;
Gambit 8, 10, Elec Co 20
11 ·3o-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Happy Days 13;
M i dday~ ~ Love of Life a, 10; Sesame St. 20.
,
11 55-Take Kerr B; Dan Imel's World 10,
12 oo-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3.15; Showoffs 13,
Bob Braun' s 50 50 Club 4, News 6,8,10.
12 3Q-3 tor The Money 3,15 ; All My Children 6,13,
Searc h for Tomorrow 8,10
12 45-E iec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1 QO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13, Phil Donahue 8;
Young B. the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 30-Days qf Our Lives 3.~ . 15; Let's Make a Deal6, 13;
As the World Turns B,lO
2 Q0-$10,000 Pyram id 6, 13, Guiding Light 8,10
2 30-Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reosoo 6,13, Edge of
Night 8, 10.

3 oo-Another World 3,4, 15, General Hospital 6, 13;
Match Game 8, 10. Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3D-One Life to Live 13, Tattletales 8,10;
Romagnolls' Table 20
4 oo-speclal Treat 3,4, 15; Mickey Mouse Club 6,8;
M1ster Roaers 20,33; Movie "You're Never Too
Younl[' 10, Dinah 13
4·30-Mod Squad 6, Partridge Family a, Sesame St.
20,33
5 oo-Bonanza 3, Merv Grlftln 4; Family Affelr a; Star
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Trek 15.
ACROSS
2 Persran
5 3D-Adam 12 4; News 6, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co 20,33; Adam 12 13.
1 Not cloudy
nat1ve
6 oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; HOdgepodge
6 Radio
3 French
Lodge 20; Jody's Body Shop 33
feature
season
6.3D-NBC
News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13, Andy Grlftllh 6;
10 Btzarre
4 Burnoose
CBS News a;10; Your Future Is Now 33; Arabs &amp;
II Gift from
wearer
Israelis 20
the Queen
s Narrated
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the Truth ~~ Bowlllng
12 Fitzgerald 's
anew
for Dollars 6; Wilburn Brothers a, News 10; Name
" The - "
6 Telegraphic
That Tune 13, Family Affair 15; Antiques 20; Wild
(2 wds,)
sound
World of An ima ls 33 .
Yesterday' s Answer
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal wlm It 6;
14 - tube
7 Very tiny
.
$25,000 Pvramld a, Evenlna Edition with Martin
15 Still
( coUoq,)
18 WWI
32 Oregon
Agronsky
20; Prlc~_ ls_ Rig_!ltlO ; To Tell The Truth
16 Poorest
( hyph, wd.)
cannon
city
13, Wally's Workshop 15; Family Theatre 33.
fleece
8 "Tiny Allee"
(2 wds.)
33 Late Papa
a oo-Movln' On 3,4, IS; Happy Days 6,)3; Good Times
19 Adjective
playwright
22 Caddoan
Doc's land
8,1 0; Birth &amp; Death of a Star 33; G"raveyard of the
lor Abner
9 Philippme
Ind1an
35 Wrath
Gulf 20,
..---:----., 20 Spelling
raland
24 Pasture
39 Mortgage
a: 3D-Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13; Joe and Sons 8,10;
contest
II Trencher·
27 Had lWlch 41 Knockout
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33
'
21 ScottiSh
man's favor· 28 - party
9 oo-Pollce Story 3,,.,15; Rookies 6,13; Switch 8,10;
count
Ascent of Man 20,33
land owner
ite spot
30 In the least 42 Girl's name
comp'nLI 1
43 Alter ta•es 10 oo-Joe Forrester 3,~. 15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 6, 13;
MISS
23- Wallach 13 Non-Jew
(2 wds.)
Beacon Hill 8.10; News 20 ; Woman Allvel 33.
2.1 Brink
16 Toby
31 Short·
44 Pia~
10
3D-Woman
20,33
~rv"""-~"" 26 Arctic base
contents
legged
kicker's
11 QO-News 3,~,6, a , 10,1 3,15; ABC News 33.
in Greenland 17 Nasty
hound
gadget
11.3D-Johnny Carson 3.~ . 15 ; Wide World Mystery 13;
29 M1ss Lillie, r:-'T."'"T.:'-r.:--r:::-FBI 6; Pan American Games Wrap. Up 8; Movie
to some
" The Hurricane" 10; Janakl 33.
o 31 Keep the
11 4D-Movle "Skyway to Death" B
roast JUICy
12 ,30-Wide World Myssfery 6.
1·oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13,
32 " - Stoops
to Conquer"
where joint ventures pr shared
34 Bmd
tnterests sre concerned Make
36 The capital
them your priority prolocts
of Japan
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· N.,, 22)
fl SwiSS nver
Let your hean rule your head
38 Soviet lake
AH 15 S£NDIN' LI'L
today In doclslons affoctlng
40 Stephen A
"' Bern1ce Bade Osol one you' love The other party
ABN~R 'lb. DtATH-'fRAp·
For Tuoodor. Oct. 21, 1875
would do lho same II roln
Douglas'
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 11) were reversed
ruckname
Your l1nanclal prospects are SAGITIARIUS (N ... 23·Dc.
( 2 wds )
SAFE~
=:-+--11--; lar brighter &lt;oday lha n they 21) There's opportunity about
45 Caroline's
were yeste rday II you're enter· you today regarding your work
aunt
prlslng, a proltt Is likely
or caree r Take time tor
46Embank·
TAURUS (April 20·M•r 20) pleasantnes - w1th the boss, If
ment
You'll make a very favorttble possible
47 Indian l1tle
1mpress10n today on persons CAPRICORN (Doc, 22· Jin.
48 Growing
b--1--+-4-+--1 you come tn contact wtth es· 11) Someone who hilS admired
outward
pectall y those ot the opposite
you from a distance may be
DOWN
sex
getting tn touch today It's one
GEMINI (Mir 21-Juno 20) yo u've been hoping to hear
I Small wheel L...J.....L--1Someone who thmks qu 1te from
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it : highly of you Will be busy AQUARIUS (Jin. 20-Fob. tl)
beh 1nd lhe scenes. pulling You have a li ttle luck tucked
AXYDLBAAXR
strings
for your benet tt t0day
away that you can bank on to·
MEAM!/11/Lt..
ta ' LONGFELLOW
CANCER (Juno 2t ·July 22) dey It w1ll come Into play If you
One letter simply stands for another. In thts sample A is You tend to stand oul In a 11 nd yourself In a rough spot '
used ror the three L's, X for lhe t"o D's, etc. Smgle letters, crowd today Compliments PISCES (fib, 20·M-h 10)
apostrophes, the length nnd (ormation of the 11 0rds ore all from o1hers are li kely, as well It 5 8 good day to work on
hmts Each day the code letters are different
as a s urprise tnvltatlon to a fun creative or artistic projects
event
The end results should be exCRYPTOQUOTES
LEO (July 23•Aug 22) Things ceptlonally pleasing
will go very smoothly lor yo~
TPCR
VIZ R P E JPSET SD JLLIM - today In an area where you
recen tl y g)(per le nc ed a
probl em Move QUICkly wht!e
I
MRIJ-K L DJSORDKR
UF
JZSR DOM conditions favor you

I found nothmq I Well11hats

What's

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

MII'I'O j.lfiH! I IHI llll"f't
.......1ft IICIUIIDU · ~ ..Itt
POIQII.., I"~ .,...,.., """

7 oo-TruthorCons 3, ToTelltheTruth4 ; Bowling tor
Dol la r~ 6 . Buck Owens 8, News 10, Candid Camera
13, Family Affair 15: On Aging 20: Classic Theatre
Preview 33
7 3D-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3: Don Adams
Screen Test~ ; Match Game PM 6, Pr ice Is Right 8;
Eveni ng Edition with Martin Agronsky 20, To Tell
the Tr uth 13; High Road to Adventure 10, To Be
Announced 15, Marco Sportllte : Football 33
a oo-Bobby VInton 3, Barbary Coast 6, 13; Invisible
Man 4,,15 , Gunsmoke a, In Performance at Wolf
Trap 20,33, Rhoda 10
e 3D-We Think You Should Know 3; Phyllis lO.
9 ro.-Movle " The UFO Incident" 3,4,15, NFL Football
--S, 13, All In The Family 8,10. Almeta Speaks The
Blues 20,33.
9 3D-Maude 8, 10, Not Forgotten 20 ; Realldades 33
10 OQ-Medlcal Center 8, 10; News 20, To Be Announce&lt; 33
10 3D-Earthkeeplng 33
11 QO-News 3,4,8,10,15, ABC News 33
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21 , 1975

~.wd'

ALLEYOOP

rv11\ L H I N 1;.
Repa 1rs, ser ~o~t ce, a ll mak es
9n 218 4 Th e F~br • c, f•h op
Po me roy 1\ uthoi"rzcd Stnger
\ a l es and Se r vtce
We
Shi!rp en 5CtSSO rS
3 29 tt c

}\S~·~~~

An Oh1o reader wants to
kn ow what we respond to
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
partner 's one-heart opemng
b1d
With
J1m " We have had qutte a
47
6
.K 52 +AQ84 ... J753 '
few quest1on s about the so·
Th is IS a clearc ut hand for
called short club You were
one of the inventors weren' t an Immediate ra1se up to two
hearts pla ywg s tandard
you'} "
Oswald " Proba bly the to· Amencan , Jacoby modern or
ventor Way ba ck m 1933 or any regular system II partner
1934 I suggested that a hand only holds fou r hearts he
such a s North 's be opened one llnows 1t
club rather than one spade
That club b1d was a general
( Do you have a question
ut1hty b1d. It guaranteed at lor the experts' Wnte "Ask
least three clubs to an honor lhe Ja cobys" ca re of th1s
and partner was supposed to newspaper rhe Jacobys w1ll
assu me we held fo ur It was m answer mdiVIdu al questiOns
no sense a forcing bid and just 11 s tamped. self-addressed
never seemed to get us mto envelopes are enclosed The
troub le "
most mterestmg quest1ons
J1 m " I see you have p1cked will be used m thiS colu m n
a hand wh1ch shows the b1d at and w111 rece1ve cop1es ot
1ts best The club opemng JACOBY MODERN I

ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN
,.....-......~
..::;-~

lARRY lAVENDER
.

match pomt game and that 50
pomts IS worth somethmg m
rubber brtdge Incidentally , 1!
West tnes to compete w1th a
three-diamond b1d he ts likely
to b e se t three tr1ck s
dou bled "

.

.,

FREE ESTIMATES

ena bl es North and South to get
to a mce comfortable two
hearts Careful play bnngs
the cont ract home w1th an
overtnc~ "
Oswa ld " II Nor th opens
one spade South res!ionds one
notrump The hand play s
there and South will probably
make one notrump '
J1m " There IS a lot of
d1!!erence between thr ee
hear ts and one not rump tn a

Pass

WUULD YUu BE LI EVE ?
Build an all steel building al
Pole Barn prices' Gold en
Gtant All Steel Butldtngs
Rt 4, ' Box lAB, Wav erl y
Ohio Phone 947 '1296
1 24 ttc

,0

HOW THEY MAY
REACT \1\iHt::tJ
THEIR i!&gt;LOOD's

A look at the short club

ASK A FOOLISH QUESTIO" ·
GET A FOOLISH ANSWER!

!

-1 16

'

FOR SALE-

MONDAY , OCTOBER 20, 1975
4 3o-Bew1tcnec 3, Mod ~quad 6, Partndge Family 8
Sesame St 2G,J3, Gel Smart 15
5 QO-Bonanza 3, Fam1ly Alfatr 8, Star Trek 15
5 3D-Adam 12 4, News 6 ; Beverly Hl llb 1ll1es 8, Elec
Co 20.33; Adam 12 13
6 QO-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS, ABC News 6, Hodgepodge
lodge 20, Special Educallon 33
6 3D-NBC News3,4 , ~; ABC News 13, Andy Grtfflth 6,
CBS News B,l 0,13, Mekl ng It Count 20

1-::::::::-~========::;-;:::=~
o. We Paint Houses
Coins, Currency
D&amp;M
We Paint Barns
and Supplies
·APPLIANCE
We Paint Roofs

Notice

For

WORK!

Business Sert?ices

I

I II J

4

-WAKE UP

C

DOGOLY

b
II I

IT WON'T

Television log for easy viewing

I DONE?

BLACKMAIL.!

l'n.r~,ambl&lt; th•••'rour Ju;,bl•s,

onr ~ ltrr to f'ach squart&gt;, to
for"' four ordinary word11.

·BUT W&gt;lAT' &gt;lAVE

a· rthd ay

SE . - ROWPZ

P II

PD

VLR

VIRGO (Aug. 23 · Sopl. 22)
Yo ur c harm and sense of
humor wtll wtn alltes to~ay The
res ults you seek can be a chteYed through · s oil sell "
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 23) This
Is a favorable day for yo u

Oct, 21, 1t71
An ambltton that you've had for
some time but have been un·
able to 1eallze Is likely to be
ac hieved lhls coming year
c9 ntects yo u've made are now
ready to help you

DON'T SCARE
US NONE· ·

W0005TOCK HA,
WING •!

' TENN15

�;a ~ 'l'he Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct.

20. 1975

1

'

Suspect charged with Destination :
Moon or Boston
killing six persons

News •• in Briefs

hers of the Henery Kellie
Si!liants' mother said her
family.
son admitted the killings to
Simants, 29, stood in front her and her husband , but
of a judge Sunday, staring at police would not say if they
Ute ·floor while he was for - had a confession.
mally char~ed with six
Lincoln CoUilty Sheriff Gorcounts of firstldegree murder. don · Gilster questioned
The victims, "including three Simants but said his
The Meigs County Sheriff's Township, County Road 36
children,
lived next door to statements were "not too
DR. M. J. FREDRICK
lJe parl ment investigated (Success Road), Douglas W.
Simants on a secluded dirt clear.n
f0\11' accidents and an act of Holsinger, 57, Rt. l, Reedsroad at ihe north edge of
"He (!IDlants) had been
vf'l11dalisrn Qver the weekend . ville, was traveling south on
town. A rifle was used i!l the drinking," said Gilster, "but
' F'o ·iriay, at 11 :30 p. m. in County Road 46, when he
slayings.
I wouldn't say he was that
Rullund Township, Larry L. apparently went to sleep. The
Simants, a slight 5-foot-7 drunk.'' ·
Cleland, IU. I, Langsville, car went .o!f the hi ghway,
man, was ordered held
Killed were Kellie and his
without bond. A preliminary wife, Marie,in their 60s;·their ·
""s lnlVe lin g on County over a 25 foo l embankment
hearing was scheduled for son David, 33; and three of
Ho&gt;1d 13 when lhe car went off and rolled over two times
'
on the rig ht side of the high- coming lo rest on its wheels.
Wednesdjly.
their grandchildren
way in lo a ditch, oul of the Holsinger was taken to St.
Dr. Michael J. Fredrick
Neighbors of Slmants who Florence, 10, who lived with
di lch into u culvert and rolled Joseph Hospil&lt;ll by private has joined the staff of Taylor .
were questioned said he them, and Deanne, 8, and
over lwoce. The driver had car. The re was ·heavy Chiropractic Clinic.
didn 't mix much with others Daniel, 5, who were visiting
Dr. Fredrick received his I'
as far as they knew.
leg and head in juries, but was damage. No citation was
their father.
not treated. The car was issued.
"I
didn't
even
know
he
The bodies were found after
Bachelor of Arts degree from
existed,"
said
Albert
Meyen,
demolished. No citation was
Monm
oulh
Co
llege
,
Mon
authorities received an
The sheriff's department is
who lived a block away from anonymous telephone call.
issued.
Investigating vandalism lo 56 mouth, Ill.
After graduation, he spent
Jue Studlick , ucpart- Simants.
Al 10 "· m. Saturday in mailboxes th at occurre d
three years in the United ment
of
Geology,
Chesler Township, Mt. early Saturday morning .
Slates
Army,
attainiQg
the
Ohio
State
Univ
ersity,.
Herman Road, Ruth E.
The 56 boxes were torn
Steele, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, wa s down by a vehicle. Some were ran k of lsl Lieutenant. It was today offered a small
traveling south and a car even pulled from the ground during this time that due to reward to an individual
do·iven by James Meredith, an d thrown over em- his courageous efforts in or individuals who lind a box Veterans Memorial Hospital
Holzer Medical Center
gro und combat he was of scientific instruments
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Hl. 3, Pomeroy, wa s bankments.
(Births, Oct. l7)
which were washed away by - Beatrice Price, Pomeroy ; Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Clark.
h'aveling north and the two
The area where the van- awarded the Bronze Star.
Dr . Fredrick has his heavy rain over the weekend . Louise Burbridge, Albany; daughter, Oak Hill ; Mr. and
collided In a curve. They had dalism started was on SR 248
According to Studlick, he Ralph Harvey, Minersville; Mrs .
visible signs of injuries but in Chester to Eagle Ridge doc torate fr om Palmer
Justin
Fowler,
weo·e not. treated. There was then to Bashan-Keno Road College of Chiropractic in was conducting a weather Vera Stewart, Cheshire.
daughter,.Point Pleasant, W.
SATURDAY DIS - Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
severe properly damage. No then back to SR 248, then on Davenport, Iowa, where he -experiment on Stingy Run
graduated
cum
laude
with
Creek,
in
Cheshire
Twp.
Rain
CHARGES
Erwin Petrie, daughter, Vinton; Mr.
cllntions were issued.
the Ltck Skillet and Success
honors.
He
served
a
twelve
washedawayagrayplywooct
'Gloeckner
,
Tim
o thy and Mrs. Charles Thornton,
Satu ,
Roads and on · SR 681 in
month
internship
In the box, three by two by two feet, , Lawrence, Ruth Smith, son,_Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.
Salurdny at 7: 15 p. m. In Reedsville.
Palmer College Outpatient. containing instruments on Bernice Molden , Charles
(Births, Oct. 18)
Hullund Township on SR 124,
Clinic.
This
,is
the
largest
.
weather
findings.
There
was
Ellis,
Earl
Wines,
Ethel
Stitt,
Mr.
and Mrs. Phil Cook,
n deer was killed when it ran
REVIVAL SCHEDULED
chlropralic
clinic
In
the
a
lock
on
the
box.
It
weighs
Lawton
Templeton,
Reese
son, Ravenswood, W. Va.;
into the path of a car dri ven
The Pomeroy Wesleya n
Williams. .
Mr . and Mrs. Bernard
by Virgie E. Jacks, 23, Rt. I, Holiness Church will hold a world, handling in excess of between 30 and 40 pounds.
60,000 patient visits in 1973.
Persons
having
inSUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Wilson, dau gh ter , Point
Bul.land.
Dr. Fredrick has for the formation on the box should Evalene· Pauley, Portland·;
Swtday at 4 a. m. In Olive revival Oct. 22 through Oct.
26, 7:30 each night. The Rev. past year, been associated at contact Studlick al The Ohio Robert Waldnig, Ra cine; · Pleasant, W. Va.
(Births, Oct. 19)
WilHam Owens, distri ct the Huntington Chiropractic State University, Depar t- Elizabeth Frederick, Long
Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Harsuperintendent, will be the Clinic, Huntington, W. Va.
ment of Geology, Columbus, Bottom; Martin Tom, Jr., mon , son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
guest spea ker. There will be
Ohio, 43210, or phone 422-0505 Albany ; Henry Milliron, Mrs. Roger Wallace, son,
TONITE lhru THUR.
special singing each evening.
or 800-1634 after 6 p.m.
Middleport ; Letitia Rea, Point Pleasant, W. Va.
OCT. 20-23
Pastor O'Dell Manley exPomeroy.
NOT OPEN
SEEKS DIVORCE
tends invitation to the public
SUNDAY DISCHARGES In Meigs County commong
to attend.
OCT. 24-26
Orville Landers, Bhvanna
pleas court, Beverly Ann
FR J..SAT,.-SU,N.
·Gordie, Shirley Wise, Dordy
Karr,
Rl. 2, Pomeroy, filed
OCT. 24·26
TO MEET TUESDAY
Call, Robert Phillips, Lester
Clint Eastwood
suit for divorce against
A
Meigs
County
Girl
Scout
.
Sevy,
Pamela Lawson, Jo
In
Jeffrey J. Karr, Sr., Rt. 2,
service
Ullit
meeting
will
be
Ellen
Lawson, Mary McTHE EIGER SANCTION .
Pomeroy,
charging
gross
from
7
to
8
p.m.
Tuesday
held
t Technlcolor)
Carty.
Show starts ol 7:00p.m.
al the Pomeroy Elementary neglect of duty and extreme
RACINE - Mrs. Mary
cruelty.
School.
Beaver, 82, form erly of
Mrs. Lucinda Da~es, 92, a
' Meogs County native, died
Racine, died at 5 a.m. Sunday
Saturday afternoon at the
in Oklahoma City, Okla.
home of her brot her, Ri chard
Mr. Beaver was preceded
following a
in death by her husband, RUTLAND - Stanley Reed, Columbus,
·
long
illness.
Waldo, and a daughter, Nada Pearl Molden, 67, 3685 Behm
Born in Pomeroy, th e
Alice. Mr . and Mrs. Beaver Road, Columbus, died
daughter
of Wo'II'oam and
were former residents of unexpectedly Saturday. Mr.
Sarah Reed, Mrs. Danes was
Racine.
Molden was dead on arrival a resident of Columbus for 37
Surviving
are
five at Ucklng County Hospital in
d d
years where she owne an
daughters , Mrs . Naomi Newark.
operated the Towner ConStobort, Racine; Mrs. Freda
He was born Dec. 2, 1908 in fec tionery on · Northwest
Jones, Mrs. Ruth Pierce and Gallia County, the son of the
retiring she
Mrs .
Jean
Vaughn , late Edward and Alma Boulevard. After
1 tt
k
Oklahoma City; Mrs. Betty Grimes Molden. He was a carne to Mldd epor o rna e
Jo Allen, Tyler, Texas; a son, lactory worker having been her home with her sister,
.
Dr. James Waldo Beaver, employed by Ford Motor, Mrs. Maude Betz an d resoded
Dallas.. Tex.; 12 grand- Federal Glass Co., and was a here for seven years.
Besides her brother ,
children and 19 great grand- head painter for the
Richard
R •~d , and her sister,
children.
American Blowers Co ., Mrs. Betz, · is survived by
Among the grandchildren Columbus, before his
another slsll&lt;o , Mrs. Brooks
surviving are Mrs . Pat re tiremen l.
Embleton, New Haven, W. Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Lamb of Columbus, .several ·
Va. ; Mrs. Margie Wolfe and Dick (Muriel) Foley, nieces and nephews . A
Mrs. Bever ly Cummins, Rutland; two •stepdaughters, daughter , Virginia, one
great-· Mrs. David (Fay) Berry, brother and . two sisters
Racine,
and
grandchildren, Eric, Erin, with whom he made his preceded her in death.
Funeral services will be
and Heather Embleton, Lori home, and Mrs . John (Doris)
and Bruce Wolfe, and Jamie Miller of San Diego, Cali!. held at the John Quintz
Funeral Home in Columbus
and Jodie Cummins.
Also surviving are three step- Monday at 7:30p.m. and at
Funeral services will be grandchildren, five slepheld Tuesday afternoon at the great.grandchildren, several the First Baptist Cburch in
Middl eport at 2:30 p.m.
Bill Merritt Funeral Home In
nieces, nephews and cousins. Tuesday with the Rev. Peter
Bethany, Okla.
Funeral services wiU be Grandal officiating. Burial
held at 2 p. m. Tuesday ai the
be in the Middleport Hill
Rutland Chapel of the Walker
MEET TONIGHT
Cemetery.
The
Hannan
Trace Funeral Home with Rev.
Friends will be received at
Boosters will meet at the Cecil Wise officiating. Bllrial
from 1 p.m. to the
grade school, beginning at will be in Miles Cemetery. the
timechurch
of service.
7:30 this evening. The public Military rites will be conTO HOST MEET
ducted by Eli Denison Post
1779: The Patriots at sea.
Is invited.
Group II, Middleport First
467, American Legion ,
Thanks to France, we have our own navy now. You'd wonder
United Presbyterian Church,
Friends
may
call
at
the
how we inexperienced Americans would fare in a sea battle.
funeral home anytime. The will meet at 7:30 p.m.
But yo u see John Paul Jones in action, and you stop wonder!amil)( wiU receive friends at Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
ing. lt:s September 23rd on the high seas. Jones is aboard his .
the chapel from 7 to 9 this Karl· Owen with Mrs. Myron
Miller in charge of
evening ..
fl agship, the Bonhomme Richard, when along comes the
devotionals.

Four accidents.probed
in Meigs over weekend

Dr. Fredrick
joins Taylor
Clinic staff

SUTHERLAND, Neb.
(l!JPI) - Charles Erwin
Simants kept pretty much to
himself - so much so that
some of his neighbors in this
rural community of 840
persons didn 't know he
existed . But that is all
changed today.
The quiet wheat and ranching community along the
South Platte . River now
knows Simants as Ute man
who was and charged with
shooting to deatp six mem-

Offer reward
+'or missing
instruments

HOSPITAL NEWS

MEIGS THEATRE

Mrs. Danes,
92, cbJimed
after illness

Mary Beaver,
82, dies in
Oklahoma

Stanley Molden

67, claimed

From aGreat American Bank

will

'

Sempis a British 44-gun frigate. Cannon fire · begins the
battle. Then, the muskets. Jones may be outweaponed, but
he won 't be outdone. He lashes t he two ships together, and
hi s men climb aboard the Serapis to fight ha nd-to-hand,
American style. It looks bad for the Bonhomme Richard.
Slowly, she begins to sink. The S erapis assumes victory is at
hand. Her captain cries, "Do you surrender?" Jones puts it
t his way: "I pave not yet begun to fight !" Three hundred of
his men are killed or wounded , but he fights. Until t he
British surrender. The brave British captain is knighted.
But we are victorious. $'

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS .CQ.l
Pomeroy, Ohio

40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
for Each DepOSitor

1

Scrubber shied away from, legislators told

0

(Continued from page I)
budget office says the House-passed defense bill is almost $1
billion above the target set by Congress.
The administration requested $96.4 billion for the current
· fiscal year, and the !louse voted a $90.2 billion appropriation.

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
'

Robert Hayden officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home after 7
this evening.
EVENT RESCHEDULED
SYRACUSE - A soup
supper and bake sale
scheduled for Oct. 25 has been
changed to Nov. 8. The event
is being' sponsored by ·the
Syracuse firemen and
emergency squad members
at the fire slatlon.
HYMN SING SLATED
There will be a hymn sing
Saturday, Oct. 25 at 7:30p.m.
at the. Hazel Community
Church featuring Dan
!layman and the Country
Hymn timers. Everyone Is
welcome to attend.

CLAIMED BY DEATH
Billy · Ray Roush , 23;·
Claxton, Ga ., died unex.
pecledly Saturday at Claxton.
Funeral services will be
conducted at 2 ·p.nl. Tuesday
at Stevens Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant. Burial will
follow in Yauger Cemetery
near Leon. Roush Is survived
by relatives in Mason, Gallia
·and Meigs COunties. He was
born in Pomeroy.

VOL. XXVII

TUESDAY
ANNUAL MEETING of
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society, 7:30p. m.
at museum, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Trustees to be
elected and officers chosen
for next year; film, "Going ·
Back to Urnes tone" wlli be
shOwn ; refreshments.

Man charged
with DWI

by Ohio Patrol
Elmer E. Van Meter, 53, of
Pomeroy' was charged with
DWI following a traffic ac·
cidentat 3:40p.m. Sunday on
Rt. 7at the intersection of the
Gallipolis By-Pass.
According to the GalllaMeigs Post State Highway
Patrol, Van Meter's car
turned left sl&lt;iking the left
front of an auto operated by
Gene 0 . Haer, 38, of Buffalo,
W. Va. There was moderate •
damage.
A two-vehicle colllslon
occurred at 5:30 p.m. O!l
Horse Creek Rd. one and two
tenths miles east of Swan
Creek where cars driven by
Frances A. Harris, 19, Crown
aty, and ·Perry Cardwell, 29,
of Crown City, sideswiped on
a hillcrest. .There was minor
damage and no charges were
filed .
A third Sunday accident
occurred at 3 p.m. on Rt. 141,
two tenths of a mile east of
the Cora-Beaver Rd. where
Bridgett E. Pl~hford, 18, of
Thurman, lost cootrol of her
cor which ran off Ute highway
striking a telephone pole.
There was minor damage.
A SatW'day accident occurredat 8:411p.m. on Rt. 233,
five tenths of a mile from Ute
Jackson County line where
Jerry A. Bock, 19: of Logan,
Ohio, lost control of his car
which hit high water and
l&lt;aveled off the left side of the
highway striking a ditch.

..- - - - - - - - - - - - · - - - -·•

Elberfel~ .In ·Pomeroy

Housewares Department, 1st Floor

llUN*

your.own oarplltis
(I&amp;. do·i,·gOUPBBifpPiCBB)
.
wllltooar - 1 0 1 1 -.
• "Stt1111" Is • tflllrlc tlll'm
GOIIIIIIDIIIJ 1oUJ tv Ltnc!'lbt

tM 1\ot water utractl"'
froctll If carpet CINitlftO.

ILUIIIWIPIII CWIII,.,
II'" 1111• WMIII 11111111

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio
0

Rent for only
'12001 dly

RtHMIIIIIIIIti,YAC fot' 1ht dly you wlnl: ta vet your cafpeta r11lly elfin

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

He estilrulted the cleaning
system wo11ld boost the cost
of burning coal for power by
about 60 per cent. The
scrubbing will add 50 cents
cost per one million BTU's
produced to the 80cents spent
on coal, for a ~~ cost of
$1.30 per one million BTU's.
Cleamng coal through
liquefaction would cost $2.411
for the_ same amount of

w~.ather

.

cllllllftl -llw nl,. coo 1o , . . -

8:30-6:00

CLARKSIIURG , w. va.
_ A scrubber system
guarante.P to remove more
than 90 per cent of sulfur 1n
West Virginia coal has been
shied away from, a Pemsylvan!&amp; coal official told West
Vll'glnia legislators Monday.
The stack gas scrubbing
system was explained to 8
legislative coal committee by
Dr. John Sudbury, general
(UPJ)

manager of the COnoco Coal
Development CO. of Library,
Pa.
·
.
The process, developed m
the past seven years, will be
guaranteed by Conoco to
clean high sulfur content
coal, Sudbury asser.ted.
."As expensive as It is ... It's
still the cheapest way to
remove sulfur from coal,"
Sudbury told the legislator..

Fair tonight with lows in
the \lpper 40s to the lower 50s.
Partly cloudy Wedn esday
with highs in the 70s.

., 1 ..,.111011r low-· Wo'JIIIol'

A FULL
SERVICE

MEMBER I;:EDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

Joseph Edward Martin, 57,
PleaBanl Ridge, Pomeroy,
died Sunday ' afternoon at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Martin was born sept.
25, 1918. He was preceded in
death by his parents, Stephen
and Cora Young Martin ,
along with three brothers and
two sisters.
He was employed at the
Parkersburg Rig and Reel
Co., and attended the
Methoctist Cburch.
Mr. Martin is SIU'vived by
two sisters, Anna Mae Greenlee and Mildred Tubbs, both
of Pomeroy; two brothers,
Herman Martin, Pomeroy,
and Leo Mm:tin, South Point.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at
Ewirig Cbapel with the Rev.

~·rENSEN

SPECIAL MEETING
RACINE - Racine village •
council will hold a special
meeting
at 7:30 p.m. ·
.
Tuesday. Attorney Frank W.
Porter will be present for the
session.

d - . ....... "' Cl 1.......,. 11o11... 1or. Wo hon

SUNDAY
11 :()().5:00

l3ANI&lt;

Joseph Martin,
57, succumbs

MEET TUESDAY
The Blue Devil Boosters
Club will meet at 8 p. m. at
the high school Tuesday.

Nt II CI,.U .• • ... illllllillj.. ,.-IDMI

DAILY EXCEPT

.

promised a caravan to
· anotber world, a journey by
UFO and spiritual means to
another dimension . Applicants must leave behind aU
earthly connections, lnclud·
ing their children and
property.

REliT OUR RINIENYAt- IM--"""
ciHOiftl -101 111M llltl •lrt. tlriM IIMIIIII-

Open: .
8:30-8:00
~ED.

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A
mysterious couple may be
leading tbeir band of UFOseekers
toward
New
England, according to a
woman who says she was
part of the group' for almost
two months.
She also said Ute leaders of
the group have collected
large sums of . money from
their followers and she
worries about ber friends wbo
are still with them,
"I was with the group from
May 5 to June 30 when they
abandoned me In Flagstaff,
Arizona,"
said
Joan
Culpepper, who described
herself In an Interview as a
"teacher of metaphysics and
practicing psychic."
The group's leaders left ber
because of her skepticism
about the trip to another
world, she said, and have
since warned her to he quiet.
"I think they're headln~ for
New England or the Boston
area. I still have friends in
the group and a caller told me
there were people Interested
there and. they plamed to
congregate around the
Boston area."
The group, which first
came to attention In Oregon,
has been reported since then
in Colorado and Illinois,
apparently moving east.
Its mysterious leaders, a
man and a woman known as
"The Two" by their
followers, reportedly have

By KAY

energy, according to Sudbury, while the purchase of
cleQn west coal to the east
would cost $2.00 for that
quantity.
Hesaldthepricewouldrise
to. $3.30 if gasification were
used.
.
Sudbury estimated the
cleamng process which
scrubs ~e gas ~it ted from
coal as tt burns m the stacks.

would cost $15 to $20 miUion
for a 200 megawatt power
pl?nt.
.,
'We would like very much
in the next month to talk
some utility into using It,"
said Sudbury, who repor!ed
lack of success on all atte~pts so for. Sudbury adnutted the cost represents a
sizeable investmentfor which
there is no financial return.

system guarantees removal
of 92 per ~ent .
Dr. Edge! Stambaugh of
the Batelle Memorial Institute in Columbus, Ohio
explained a $2 million study
on a hydrothermal coal
process to remo'l!e sulfur.
"We simply chemically
.leash the coal out of sulfur "
Stambaugh said.
'
He estimated cost of the

•

•

system at 411 to 80 cents per
miillon BTU's produced cornpared to the 50 cent figure
presented by COnoco.
In its experiments, Battelle
bas only processed about a
third of a ton of coal a day
since November of last year,
be reported, He said the Institute is looking for a sponsor
for a pilot plant which would
process 50 tons of coal per
day.

Now You Know

enttne

at y

e

"Nobody gets anything out
of it except a clean environment," he surmised.
"And If you are going to get a
cleaner environment, that's
Ute price you·have to pay."
Atest of West Virginia coal
at a $3.5 million pilot station
in Philadelphia, he reported,
resulted in 98 per cent
removal of sulfur. In a
practical sense, he said the

The District of Columbia
led the 50 states last year in
per capil&lt;l liquor sales, 6.82
ga llons for every man ,
woman and child - three
limes the natiofi'al average.

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Ma."nn Area
NO. 133

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE 15'

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1975

:f.=:::::::::::::::~:::;:;~:::::::::;::;;::::::::::::.:::: :::.:·:·:::::::: :· :::·:::: : ::;:::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:

»

.

.

~ .

fNews. . . in Briefsf\l

~

~

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - THE UNITED STATES and the Soviet
Union have signed a five-year agreement providing for more
stable Russian purchases of U. S. wheat and corn. They still
ore nesotlaUng a deal for American purchase of RUS.!Iian oll.
PreSident Ford announced the grain agreement Monday.
He lnunediately lifted an embargo on U. S. grain sales-io.the
Soviet Union that had been in effect since August.
Agriculture secretary Earl Butz said the effect on food
prices in America would be minimal.
INDIANAPOUS, IND. - SEN. BIRCH BAYH, D-Ind.,
today announced his candidacy for President of the United
States in a JFK-eounding declaration based on an FDR.\heme.
· Bayh's formal announcement as tbe ninth Democratic
candidate for the presidency came from Ute rostrwn of the
Indiana House of Representatives after an infonnal announcementearller at his birthplace of Shirkieville near Terre
Haute.
NEW YORK - 1THE STATE BOARD overseeing New
York City finances hils given last-minute approvlll to a plan to
cut city expenses by $724 miUion over three years by
ellminatJ,ng jobs and programs and freezing.wages.
Mayor Abraham Berune had been required to submit tbe
program to the Emergency 'Financial Control Board. The
board's approval Monday night - two hours befo!]_ a midnight
deadline - cleared the way for allocation of $2.3 billion in state
funds designed to stave off city default through November.

stgnup for tbe second aminal Black and Blue Bowl between alumni of Middleport, Rutland, Pomeroy and
Meigs high acboolJ will take place thla evealug at 8 In tbe .
office of the American Cancer Society on Soutb Third
Street In Middleport.
•
Plans will !)e_diBcllllsed for the ·J'urkey Day clash tbat
netted over $1,000 In lut year's Meigs County Cancer
Crusade.
· ua81
CruJade chairman, WaiJKe Hatfield, will
also chair the football game committee this year.
All Interested grldmen are urged to altelld. An additional day of slgnup will take plaee Wednesday at 8 p.m.
In the Cancer Society office.
Graduates of Middleport will be trying to pull Ute
Yellow Jackets even after dropping lbe Initial contest wltb
the Pomeroy Panthers, ~.

year'•

Pomeroy Council Monday
night accepted the bid from
the Pomeroy Motor Company
for a new cruiser.
The Pomeroy Motor
Company bid was in the
amount of $5,647 .45, less
disc'ount of $648.45, less l&lt;ade ·
in lor old . cruiser of $~50.
rnaking a total of $4,249. ·
The other bid submitted
was from Smith Nelson in the
Because of peculiarities amount of $5,935.85, less
caused by time change boon- $935.85 making a total of
daries across the country, 60 $5,000.
Trick or treat night will be
counties In Indiana--around
Wednesday,
Oct. 28, !rom 6 to
Indianapolis, Fort Wayne and
7
p.m.
with
the
siren to blow
.South Bend in tbe eastern
to
begin
and
end
the evening
time zone-have remained on
activities
.
pennanent .standard time,
Council set the week of
never changing to daylight
time and so will not be of- Nov . 17 as leaf collection
week with the schedule to be
fected on Oct. 26.
announced
later .
Arizona and Hawaii, as
Mayor
Dale
Smith reported
well as Puerto Rico, tbe
that
there
is
one
more pour to
Vlrgtn.Jslands and American
be
done
to
the
parking lot
Samoa have never switched
wall,
then
they
will
begin to
to daylight time and they also
will not change their clocks
on Oct. 26.

Nation returns to
standard time Sunday
By GENE BERNHAROr

WASHINGTON (UP!)
The nation returns to standard time next Sunday, with
clocks set back one hour on
that date.
Daylight saving time ends
at 2 am. on Oct. 26, when
clocks officially will be set
back to I a.m. under
MEXICO CITY - Rescue workers using acetylene tOrcbes provisions of the 1966
cut through the wreckage of two subway trains today in a Unifonn Time Act. Standard
desperate, nlghtlong search for survivors trapped in "the time will remain in effect
until the last Sunday in April,
west sylllem In the world."
Authorities reported at le11t :16 per110ns killed and 55 in- 1976.
jured in the "impo&amp;1ible ~ &lt;:elde nt " - a two-train crash in · The · country , is now
operating under the perMe:rlco aty's ultramodern 1111bway system.
One train slammed into the back of another Monday when manent time change schedule
thesuppolledly foolproof safeguards of the city's computerized mandated by the' 1966 act, ·
after a confusing year in 1974
subway broke down.
when emergency daylight Salisbury Twp.
MORRISTOWN, N. J . - JOSEPH AND JUUA Quinlan saving time was . ordered to
has 2 precincts
are trying to convince a court their daughter's vegetable-like conserve energy.
Tbe
emergency
act
was
e:rlatence should be ended - by disconnecting the machine
Salisbury Township which
that keeps her alive. But one doctor says it would violate enacted late in 1973 at the
peak
of
the
energy
crisis
and
before
the · reduction of
"medical tradition."
put
Ute
nation
on
daylight
poll
ing
places
had three
New Jersey Attorney General William Hyland said the
time
effective
Jan.
6,
1974.
precincts,
will
have
only two
family 's plan would be homicide. Tbe Quinlans were scheduled
to testify in Superior Court that 21-year.()ld Karen Am, tbeir The act was to continue to precincts as of Nov. 4.
Pomeroy Precinct is no
adopted daul!hter, has ended the "nrthly phase" of life and April, 1975.
Complaints flowed into longer existent due to the
should be removed from a respirator. Tbey want it 110 she can
Congress,
however, that change in the number of
attain a "better life."
daylight time in winter precincts. According to the
BONN, WEST GERMANY - ALABAMA Gov. George C. months caused hazards for new plan for voting in the
Wallace said today he was "skeptical" about detente with children going to school in the township residents living on
Russia because MOICow has won most past dealings with 'the dark with the result that the the west side of Route 143 and
nation went back on standard Route 7 and north to township
United States.
•
time
on Oct. TT, 1974 with a boundary will vote in the
Wallace Is on a flve'i\atlon, 13-day European tour. He was
provision
it would return to Bradbury Precinct which will
SC)heduled to fly to West Berlin later In the day. His aides said
daylll!ht
time
on Feb. 23, 1975 be at the Bradbury School.
that attempts to arrange a trip across the Berlin Wall into East
and
continue
to
Oct. 26, 1975. Those living east of Route 143
Berlin had not worked out.
Tbe emergency act has now and Route 7 north to the
LORAIN, OmO - ABOUT 300 MEMBERS of the Ohio expired and the 1966 law t01'nship boundary will vote
Association of Public School Emplyes struck the Lorain city resumes with the provisions In the Rock Springs Precinct.
schoola today but the Board of Education said school was being that standard time begina on That voting place will be in
the last Sunday of each Oc- the Salisbury ·Township
conducted as usual.·
The workers, mostly cafeteria and cleaning employes, say tober and daylight time takes . building which is located on
Rock
Springs
Uieir contract expired last July and school officials have over on the last Sunday of the
each April.
Fairgrounds.
refused to turn the dispute over to binding arbitration.
MILFORD, MICH. - GENERAL MOTORS says part of
the 38 per cent fuel economy gaine made in the past two years
will be lost In attempls to meet the government's 1978 clean air
standards.
GM Executive Vice President Howard Kehrl said Monday
many motorists mlghi not notice the difference In sas mileage
because cars will be shorter, lighter and powered by smaller
engines. But he said, new cars will not deliver the same
economy as 1975 models of tbe same size.

Stolen .{lar
is reoovered
The Pomeroy Police
Department recovered a
stolen car In Pomeroy
Monday night. .
'
Police Chief Jed Webster
said his department was
given a Up that the vehicle
might be in Pomeroy, Two 16year-old girls wh o allegedly
stole the car out of
Springfield were reported to
be visiting in ·Pomeroy. The
vehicle was found parked on
village.()wned property near
the bookmobile he~dquar­
ters. It was Impounded and
hauled In about 10!30 p.m.
The two girls were arrested
in Gallia County Monday
night. The girls and the
·vehicle were to be returned to
Springfield today.

.,

·:::~:~i¥~:~:6~g:ijt~i:::::::
Thursday through
Saturday, a chance of
showers Thursday and lair
Friday and Saturday.
Hlshs wlll be In the 70s
Thursday and Friday and
jn the 60s to the lower 70s
Saturday. Lows will be In
the 40s and lower 50s.
::::;:;::::::::::::::~~:::::;:~:~:~~::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::

ON CHANNELll
The Meigs County Senior
Citizens will be featured on
WOUB, ./lthens, Channel 20,
or on local cable television,
Channel !I instead of ,Channel
9 which was earlier stated.
The program on aging will be
shown at 3 p.m. Wednesday.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Tues1ay was 59 degrees
' under sunny skies.

.'

New police cruiser
purchased by council

Search resumed
for missing man
Search operations super- time.
vised by the Gallia County
Jenkins swam to the southsheriff's department and west bank and VanSickle
Gallia County Disaster slarted to swim downstream.
Services director Mike He was last seen heading for
Swisher continued today in the northeast bank.
Raccoon Creek where Mike
A search by sheriff's
VanSickle, 22, Rt. 2, deputies, volunteers of the
Galllpolls, is presumed to Gallla County Disaster
have drowned Monday night. Service A@imcy and the
According to the Gallla · Gallipolis Fire Department
County sheriff's deparlment, Monday night was fruitless.
the incident occurred·at 7:30
Deputy sheriff J. D. Taylor
p.m,, but was n_ot reported estimated the ra/n-swollen
until 9:29 p.m. The accident . creek current at be ween live
occurred in Raccoon Creek, and 10 M.P.H. A foot search
was called off at midnight
adjacent to Davis Rd.
Deputies said VanSickle, and resumed this morning.
the son of Mr. and Mrs . .
F111ter VanSickle, and David
Jenkins, 19, Rt. 2. Patriot,
were boa ling down Raccoon
SQUAD CALLED
Creek from Rt. 775 in the
The
Pomeroy Emersency
vicinity of White Cemetery
S&lt;juad
answered a call to
Rd . when their 12 foo t
aluminum craft strupk a log Route 248, the Dana McCain
and took on water. Both men home Monday morning for
made It to the floating log Gladys Shumway who was
which jammed th~ir boat laken lo Velarans Memorial
wb&lt;re they stdyed' a short Hospital.

Two men

indicted

on charges
IDS ANGELES (UP!) - A
federal grand jury has Indicted two vagabonds on
charges of conspirlns to
assassinate President Ford
by exploding a bomb in a
sewer and shooting him, the
second alleged plot against
him on the same day.
The indictment Monday described a plan lo kill Ford
when he visited Sacramento,
Calif., Sept. 5- the same day
Charles Manson disciple Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme
was arrested for pointing a
loaded .45 caliber pistol at the
President.
The plan - if it was a
serious attempt on F'ord's life
- was broken up by a Santa
Barbara, Calif., detective
investigating Ute theft of a
television set from a motel.
By the time Ford reached
Sacramento, the two men Gary S. DeSure and Preston
Mayo - were in jail in Santa
Barbara on charges of
threatening to kill the
President.
The grand jury indictment
Monday added the graver
charge of conspiracy to kill
the President. Threatening
the Presi!lent's life earrles a
maximum ptlson term of five
years, but conspiring to
actually carry out such a
threat carries a possible life
sentence.
No motive was given.
There is no known connection
between the two men and
Miss Fromme .
DeSure, 31, was ldentlfied
as an escapee from the
Montana State Hospital, and
Mayo, 24, as from Warren
County, Va. They were held
under $l00,000 bail for
arraignment Oct. 28.
The Indictment said they
discussed the plot Aug, 17ln a
motel room in Dixon, Tenn.,
plannlng· to steal guns and
dynamite from an armory in
San Franclscll' ......1 . ,~

(

I

fill up the · area, weather of red clay are needed. suggested that Wesley Buehl,
Manley stated that. 30-inch county engineer, be advised
penni tting.
Chief of Police Jed Webster tile comes in sections of three and possibly he would draw
reported that since Oct. 11, .feel and each section costs . up specifications and then
possibly council could ad$102 has been collected from $10 or $12, if delivered.
Manley stated that it would vertise for bids.
old parking tickets that are
cost approximately $3,000 for
Phil Globakar, councilman,
past due.
labor
but
the
slip
if
it
isn't
suggested
that Jane Walton
Councilman John Manley
repaired
it
will
be
necessary
write
a
letter
to Rep. Ron
reported tbat he, along with
lo
block
the
road
off
to
any
James
and
Sen.
Oakley
Bill Pullins . 0[ Pullins Ext.avel.
Collins
thanking
them
for
cavating, had checked the
Council
members
extheir
cooperation
in
getting
slip on Hill Street.
According to Manley, plained that at the present the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Pullins advised that a 3(l.inch time there are no funds opened sooner than anconcrete tile is needed to available to do the work. ticipated. Extra praise went
catch the water and a new Manley then suggested the to the iron workers who
(Continued on page 10)
catch basin and several loads road be closed . Council

Question in Letart Twp.:
Where will the· voters go?
LETART FALLS - Where,
oh where, will the voters go?
This is the question in
Letart Township, due to a
confiict which has developed
in the voting location there
lor the Nov. 4 election.
The township was reduced
in the summer from two
·precincts to one precinct with
the voting place set in East
Letart in which is known as
"town house." However, a
delegation rece ntly approached the Meigs County
Board of Elections with a
petition bearing over 300
signatures from the township
asking that the voting place
be at the Letart Falls Cornmunity Building.
Three board members,
·Leslie F. Fultz, William
Cozart and James Qulvey,
agreed and voted to having
the voting take place In the
Letart Falls Community
Building. The fourth member
voting against the change,
challenged the vote on ;tt.e

basis that changes of voting
places must be made at least
25 days prior to an election
and there were only 22 days
remaining before the Nov . 4
election.
A delegation from the
Le tart Township area
reported their side of the
request to have the voting
place moved from the "town
house" in East Lelarl to the
Letart Falls Community
Building. They said that the
board could change the
precinct within the 25 day
period In case of an
emergency, They said that an
emergency did exist and that
· the community building was
more satisfactory. They said
the owner of "town house"
had advised the trustees who
used the "town house" for a
meeting spot that Ute building
was to be vacated and no
longer used for the trustee
meetings or an election.
The board of elections met
. in special session Friday

evening and two of ·the
members, Leslie F. Fultz and
James Quivey voted to move
the voting place from East
Letart to Letart Falls on an
emergency basis. William
Cozart abstained from voting
and Ernest Wingett voted
against the moving of the
polling place.
Wingett said that he
checked with the Secretary of
Slate's office on Monday on
the legality of the 2-1 vote
because law requires that a
motion be carried by a
major! ty and the 2-1 vote did
not Indica te a majority.
Wingett said he was informed
that he was correct in his
thinking but tho t the
secretary of State's office
could do nothing about a legal
decision on the matter until
the question was submitted
by the local board of elections. Wingett sa id he will
now try to set up a meeting of
the board to attempt to
(COntinued on page 10)

Precinct workers total
180 for Nov. 4 election
Precinct officials for the
Nov. 4 election has been
named by the Meigs County
Board of Elections.
This is the smallest number
of precinct workers to be
named in the county lor some
time due to the reduction of
precincts this year from 40 to
30 in the county. Each
precinct has six workers
thereby meaning a reduction
of workers for the Nov. 4
election from 240 to 180.
Meantime, electio n
precinct employes are un der go ing law-required
training sessions this week at
the Pomeroy Elementary
School in preparation for the
Nov. 4 election.
The workers will include:
I in each precinct, the first
name is the presiding judge,
the next three are judges and
· the last two are clerks :
EAST BEDFORD PCT. Syl"la L. Mldklfl, Mildred F.

Vern C. Well. Ernest Wood,
Louise Harrison, Cecil 0 .
Toben, Mrs. Louise Wel l,
Audra L. Well.
NORTH CHESTER PCT.Mary Joyce Mora, Bertha F.
Smith , Dorolhy L. Myers,
Mary F. He yes. Norma J.
Sexson, Marcia L. KeJier.
SOUTH CHESTER PCT..Dorothy M. Ritchie, Irene
McGrath, Helen M. Boat.
right, Louise Pitzer, Cora H.
Wolf, Thelma M. White.
COLUMBIA PCT.- Louise
z. Ellis, Ida M. Cheadle.
EJizabelh Jordan, VIvian R.
Gaslon, Beu lah M. Perry,
Vera L. Holcomb.
LEBANON PCT. - Carol
E. Rhodes, Donna V. Larkins.
VIckie Proffitt, Dorothy V.
Brewer, Ann L. Boso, Juanita
M. Sayre.
LETART PCT.- Elmer L.
Pickens, Clare J . PoweJI,
Lois A. AJien, Nora C. Cross.
Janel Sue Manuel. Evelyn 0 .
Manuel.
.
OLIVE PCT. - Ernestine
Hayman , Shirley A. Balser,
EJizabeth Borloe, Betty L.
Osborn, Margaret
R.
Grossnickle , Mary
L.
Longenetfe.
REEDSVILLE PCT.
Belting, Herman A. Grueser, Dolores J . Foster. Dorothy
Ruby C. Marshall, Rut h Ann M. Wells, Mary Allee Blse .
Lamberl. Eva L. King.
Ruth A. Balderson. Thelma J.
WEST BEDFORD PCT. "- Smllh. Mildred 0 . Harris.

ORANGE PCT. - C. 0 .
Newland, Mary U. Robinson,
Evelyn E. Summerfield ;
Dor is A. Koenig , Ina B.
Masser, Evelyn Wel l.
RUTLAND VILLAGE Berni ce H. Nelson, Ruth 0 .
Erlew lne, AdeJine Snowden,
Jeanette Oav is, Thelma A.
Hysell , Ma rgerel A. Ed wards .

·

I

EAS T RUTLAND
VIrg inia B. Michael, Marie L.
Birchfield, Pearl E. Little,
Jestle G. Molden. Myrtle M.
Clerk. Dolores E. BeJiey.
WEST RUTLAND - Mrs .
Rose EJien Carson . Selh F
Nicholson , Allegra Wil D
Leveda J . Yost, Ma xine
Dyer, Dena F. Hoffman .
SALEM PCT. - Nel lie M.
Myers, Avanel Holliday ,
Vlcey Ham ley, Georgie G.
Calvin, Frances C. Minor,
Es ther F. Anderson .
MIDDLEPORT - 1stW.Lena M. McK inley, Grace V.
French, Leleh V. Weatherby ,
Juan ita D. Gerard, Marlha
E. Haggerty , Linda A.
Gerard .
MIDDLEPORT - 2nd W.
- Eloise B. Wil son, Helen J .
Byer, Loretta S. Imboden,
Mrs . Peggy Lllwls, Pearl
Reynolds, Mrs. Gemma M.
(COntinued on pase 10)

1

..

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