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•

•
•

~ - Tht

Daily Sentinel, Middle~XJrt-Pomt'l"oy , 0 ., Oct. 29. 1973

Cox stand
1Continued fr om Page l l
administration's
prosecutor
would be subject to Nixon 's
veto. Then the test would be
whether tw o-thi rds of the
House and Senate would vote II&gt;
override that veto.
Sen. Birch Bayh. 0-lnd.,
predic ted Sunday Congress
will ' 'demand" its version . 41 1
don't
want
a sp ecial
prosecutor. I want an in·
dependent prosecutor ," Bayh
said.
But Sen . Marlow W. Cook, R·
Ky., said some "very serious
t"'.&gt;nSt\tutlonal questions '' stand
in the way. Article II of the
Constitution,
he
noted ,
provides for appointment of
most high officials by the
President, not by_.t)le courts.
Also, he said, if Judge Sirica
name d and s uper vise d a
prosecut or, how co uld he
impartially try the case?
Bayh said judges routinely
appoint U.S. atttorneys when
there are vacancies and also
name lawyers to represent
ind igent defendants, and in
neither case are they barred

rrom presiding over trials.
General Alexander M. Haig,
White House chi.ef of staff, said
Sunday th e administration

would oppose any prosecutor
conducting a ''fishing expedi·

tlon into the vital discussions

•

•

Cundiff trial

(Continued fr om Page I )
La rry became angry at the
remark by Harden and in
Huntingoon, Mrs . Cundiff said,
Harden wanted to buy Larry a

that occu r in the President's
office.··
new bicycle in order to " win
Cox was inlerviewd on NBC's back his love." However, Mrs.
Meet !he Press; Bayh and Cook Cundiff said Harden did not
on ABC's Issues and Answers, have enough money to make
and Haig on CBS' Face !he !he purchase.
Nation .
Answering questions on a
Cox suggested that the trip s he, Harden and the three
struggle over the nine tapes Cundiff sons had taken II&gt;
which Nixon last week ag reed Cedar Point, Mrs. Cundiff said
to surrender to ·Judge Sirica she had told her husband she
may be only the begiMing of was going to take !he boys tq
!hat battle. " I think it is quite
Kings Island . Harden had
possible ," he said, "that the
switched the destination in
nine tapes will !urn out to be case Cundiff visited Kings
less important in a practical
Island near Ci ncinnati looking
sense !han they have been In a
for the family, Mrs. Cundiff
sym bolic sense . They were
s tated. She said the eldest
clearly only th e first step in
Cundiff son, J immy, IS, had
seeking a great deal of imoverheard her arid Harden
portant evidence from the
talking about kiUing Cundiff on
White House."
that weekend , aitd that Jimmy
had let Harden know that he
heard .
She testified !hat she and
(Continued from Page I )
Harden had often discussed
long waterway only after ge tting rid of Cundiff. They had
pressure was applied by the planned at one time to place an
United States.
elec tri cal wire a cr oss the
" We were for ced to agree Cundiff driveway which would
and the relief and supply kill him when .he stopped to get
convoy II&gt; the 3rd Army was out and invesllgate the wire,
compeUed upon us," he said in Mrs . Cundiff said. a television interview.
AI !his point, Judge Bacon
Israeli newspapers said the asked Mrs. Cundiff ·if she unUnited Slates pressured Israel derstood her rights and
into permitting the convoy position that she was getting
because it feared the Soviet herself into by such testimony .
Union would act unilaterally II&gt;
Again she said :
save the 3rd Army from
" I want to tell the truth."
surrendering .
Mrs. Cundiff !hen oold of
Israeli Prime Minister Golda traveling to Ravenswood, w.
. Meir, in an interview with CBS, Va . with Harden and her eldest
said Sunday !hat the battlefield son, Jimmy, where . she and
talks , II&gt; arrange the convoy Harden talked to a man asking
raised "possibilities, f think him to help them klll Cundiff.
realistic ones, for future She said the man would have
meetings.''
no part of it. She implied that
"Now if you want me to say Harden had indicated that 'they
does it mean !his leads directly could make a contract with the
to peace quickly, 1couldn't say man to help kill Cundiff .
Ulat," she said. ''But it is a Jimmy was sent to another
" The best way to tackle a
good
start.. .. It's a start that room to play pool and did not
problem is to meet 11 head
people begin II&gt; talk."
o,n
(especially
on
hear the conversation among
Halloween) "
The
last
face-to-face the three, Mrs. Cundiff said.
meetings between Israeli and
She said that she and Harden
Egyptian officers ll&gt;ok place had talked to Eugene Atkins, a
duting truce talks following !he renter of the CWldiffs, and had
1956 Middle Easl war.
l\ t the PomeroY Cement
discussed with him placing
Block Co. you'll find the
cement blocks around Jim's
" FRIENDLY ONES " ha ve
le
s and throwing him in tbe
DIVORCES ASKED
no
" tri cks "
just
g
.
Two persqns have filed for lake . She satd
" trea ts". Being members
they also
.
d ·" Atk'
of HWI (w ith ·tremendous
div·or:.ce in Meigs County d tseusse
wtw•
IDS , a race
vo lum e bUying power)
.
h' . Ialli
II b
Common Pleas Court. Citing dr tver,
ts
IDS
ng
a ro ar
mak es thi s possi ble. Bring
grounds of gross· neglect of on the Hard en car so th a I l'f. I·t
yo ur problem s to th e
duty and extreme cruelty are struck the small car of Jtm
" FRIENDLY ONES".
Linda L. Lemley, 981 S. Second C dill it would kiU him.
un •
Ave., Middleport, fr om Charles
On the night of Aug. 20, the
M. Lemley, Los An ge les ,
nightbefore ·Harden was killed
· Calif., and Debra Sue Brumon a Pomeroy business section
field , 1284 ·Poweli St., Midstreet, Mrs . Cundiff said that
dleport, from Palri,c k E .
she and Harden .talked on !he
Brumfield, Beaufort, S. C.
telephone at length '!nd !bat
Harden had suggested that
Mrs. Cundiff park her car near
Harden's office,. !he Western
and Southern Life Insurance
Co., on East Mam St ., to make
Cundiff think she was .in !he
office. This, she said, was to
lure Cundiff up II&gt; the office
where Harden would kill him
und throw him down the stairs
to place blood on the walls and
stop.
Going back II&gt; Memorial
Day, !his year, Mrs. Cundiff
un&lt;\ier continued questioning by
Sh~, said tbat she and BiU
bad talked on the walkie talkies
after her husband had left for
work and she advised Harden
.
.
so that he could come .to her
house.
Site said that she and Harden
sat on the front porch and
discussed sex life. They had an
argument about Harden's
relations With Dorothy, HarTWO EVENINGS
den's wife, who had been a
EACH WEEK
patient earlier in the Athens
State. Hospital.
"We talked about how he
could (perform in bed) Mrs.
CUndiff said and Harden asked
her to, "go in the house and try
it." They entered the house and
locked and bolted .the front
door and went into !he bedroom
Mrs. Cundiff shared With her
husband. She w!!s in her nightgown and Harden had on only a
T..shirt, she said.
. The door II&gt; the bedroom was
. MONPA Y EVENING
also locked, she said. The door
to the breezeway nearby was
AND TUESDAY EVENING
shown through photos ins to 9: Jo--AII you can ea t, (or AI a Carte) .
troduced by Sheets along with
a photo showing the gun
..
cabinet nearby. The gun
cabinet is now empty but beld
several guns on !hat Memorial
Day evening, Mrs. Cundiff
stated.
She continued that she and
Harden were in bed wl)en !bey
heard a noise, She said Harden
ooened the bedroom door and

Trapped

NOTICE I

Our stores will be closed
Tuesday, Oct. 30 due to
death in the family.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
MASON FURNITURE

NUW

BUFFET

DINING

Wide Menu
· Choi ce

Dri nks and
Desse r1 Extra .

MEIGS THEATRE
TOnight thru Thursday

Oct. 29-Nov. l
WfftTE LIGffTNtNG
(Techntcolor)
Burt Reynolds
Jennifer Billingly

l PG)
Colorcarfoons :
J Little Pigs

M•ckey 's Trailer

POMEROY

PH . 992-3629

~e stated Harden, bracing

himself against her bed, held
!he bedroom door shut while he
dressed. Mrs. Cundiff said !hat
her husband broke open the
door . Cundiff had a piece of
pipe in his hand and a hunting
knife strapped in a sheath on
his side. Mrs. Cundiff said she
jumped at Jim II&gt; get !he· knife,
"so be wouldn 't hurt Bill ."
A light followed between
Cundiff and Harden and there
was some damage. The fight
moved outside where Harden,
Mrs. Cundiff said, tried II&gt; hit
Cundiff's head against concrete. TheCundiffs'secondson
had joined the three and was
hysterical. He tried to stop !he
fight.
" Bill said he was going to kill
Jim," Mrs. Cundiff said.
"Don 't kiU him, I love him,"
Mrs. ClUldiff said she ll&gt;ld.
Harden in an attempt II&gt; break
up the fight so !hat Larry, her
son would not see any more of
the fighting .
After the fight, Mrs. Cundiff
sa id she told her busband that Harden was
carrying a gun.
· However, Mrs. Cundiff said
!hat after !he fight , she concontinued to see Bill Harden,
"the same as before."
On the Saturday before !he
shooting she said.she, Harden
and the Cundiff sons went to a
fair near Marietta arriving
borne about 2 a.m. on SWlday.
The next day they met Harden
at !he river camp of Pete
Mararity and made the trip II&gt;
Huntingll&gt;n.
Mrs. Cundiff said !hat she
and Harden got into an
argument at the Soone Lodge
Motel in Huntingll&gt;n at which
time he had thrown a gun at
her. She identified it as !he .22
calibe~ gun state exhibit
belongmg to Harden.
She said !he_ group came
.· back .11&gt; !he ,nver camp of
Moranty' leavmg the motel,
and that ~er children remain~d
1~ the. car. Harden s~1d
somethmg about drowmng
himself and had gone to !he
b 1 d k Sh
'd h
oa
oc .
e sat
s e
f U · ed him th
nd tbe
o ow .
ere a
Y
talk d. til bo t 4
Th
.
e un a u a.m. e
children she said were in the
'
'
car asleep. She and Harden
went mto the camper for an
hour or so and Harden !hen left
.II&gt; get ready to go to work. She
testified !he boys and her
stayed with Har.den, coming
back at about 9 a.m. on Manday, the next day. After breakfast with Harden Mrs. Cundiff
and ber sons w..;t to a store II&gt;
shop near Gallipolis, returned
to the camp for a boatride With
Harden, and then went to !heir
Racine Route 1 residence
arriving !here about 4:30p.m.
Mrs. Cundiff said she was
asked about the whereabouts of
herself and !he children over
the past several days by her
husband wben she arrived
home.
She testified she told him:
"None of your damned
business."
She said this was her usual
response to her husband 's
questions.
Mrs. Cundiff related meeting
Harden on Tuesday, Aug. 28, at
the Jones Boys, and leaving
there with Jo Anp Atkins to go
to the river camp where she
worked on Harden's insurance
reports for him. She said
Harden came over alSo. The
two had made plans to meet
!hat night to complete !he
reports . The plan was to
complete the reports at !he
Cundiff home after Cundiff had
gone to work.
Harden called her at 5 p.m.
and they talked for "hours"
Mrs. Cundiff said. This was the
evening before. Harden was
killed. She said !hat Harden
had gone to Cheshire to make
sure that Jim Cundiff had gone
to work at Nitro. He called
Mrs. Cundiff to report that he
bad seen Cundiff and his
passenger, Charles Thomas, go
through Cheshire.
Mrs. Cundiff said she and
Harden again discussed liti'lng
Cundiff to !he Western · and
Southern Insurance Office.
Then she ll&gt;ld of receiving word
from Mrs. Peggy Thomas !hal
Cundiff was coming home ill
and had not gone II&gt; work at
Nitro.

,,
GET.I'ING BEITER acquainted with chUdren as part of !heir study on Child Care were
students of Mrs. Dwight Goins; Home Economics Class at Meigs High School. Shown L-R are
Margaret Corson, student; Tricia Wolfe, 20months, and Charlotte Fee, student.

Proffitt, Joe Holman, Eddie Sellers and Rich Deeder; third
row, Rodney Childers, Rick SeUers, Gene Shively, Joe
Brown, Tim Lee, Tim Wickersham, · and fourth row, Mr.
Spurlock, FFA advt.or ; Tony Carnahan, Dave Roush, Tim
Smith, Steve Booo, Rodney AUen, Greg Davis and Bill
Shively.

GREENHANDS INITIATED - Southern High Scbool
Future Farmers of America Greenhands were initiated
recently in appropriate ceremonies at the high school in
Racine. Front row, from left, Steve Pickens, Terry Spaun;
Robert Waldnig, Dave Kaiser, Charles Aikens, Gary SeUers;
second row, Paul Shain, Rick ~ndley, Jim Riffle, Jeff

PT.

~LEASANT

- Carl
E. Searls, president of striking
Local 426 UWUA at the Philip
Sporn Plant, said today the
National Labor Relations ·
Board will not allow the
petition of the Company for a
new election among the plant
employees ••as long as Local
426 has an Unfair Labor
Practice charge against !he
company. ' '
Searls, while disputing !he
right of !he company to obtain
a new election among plant
employees, said he talked
Saturday morning with one of
!he workers who had returned
II&gt; !he job and was informed,
"that it was news to him and
th~ other (about 90) men who
want back II&gt; work" that !he
petition was filed.
"I would like for !he men to
know !hat if Gene Gloss gets
you to vote a no union," said
Searls, "some of you men will
be fired because you know as
well as I do that Local 426
saved your job for you."
, Searls also revealed !hat
Local 426 wiU have a meeting
Tuesday, Ocll&gt;ber 30, at 10 a.
m. at the Fire House in New
Haven_.
Searls also said today !hat
!here was a weekend Incident

Bugged Bear
Show Starts 1 p.m.

.'
1L

F0 R
MISS AMERICA
HUSH PU.P PIES
PEDWI N
ROBIN HOOD
·ENDICOTT JOHNSON
ANGEL TREADS
K E os

ntE SHOE BOX

... ____..
Our Shoes Are
Still Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

-~
. •,

with
!he strike,
of the
union
members bad a gun of some
type fired in the d[&lt;ection of
him by a company guard.
The unlon president said two
of !he pickets were located on
the Ohio side of the river when
one of !be men inside the plant
slwuted to Roger Manuel and
asked him to come across !he
river and talk to him.
Searls
said
Manuel
preceeded II&gt; go across !he

.

Devoted To The lnura"

(Ova) Lyons of Utica, Mich.;
two sisters, Mrs. Hila Collins,
The Middleport E-R unit
Wellston, and Mrs. Lissa answered one call Sunday and
Brown,So. Charleston, W. Va. ; two earlv today.
23 grandchildren, and 18 greatSunday at I :17 they tr.ans·
grandchildren.
ported Woodrow Cuhn to
Funeral services for Mrs. Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Grate, who .was 8 member of He was having trouble
the Rutland Nazarene Church, breathing.
will he held Tuesday at 2 p.m .,
AI 12:5() a . m . today they
at · the Rutland Nazarene were called to the Lewis Smith
Church with !he the Rev. Lioyd residence, Harrisonville Road,
Grim officiating. Burial will be for Mary Smith, 19, who was
in the Vinll&gt;n Memorial Park having severe chest pains. She
Cemetery.
was taken to Veterans
Friends · may call at the Memorial Hospital. At 6:27 a .
Martin Funeral Home any time . m. they went II&gt; the F . W.
after 2 p.m. today until noon Wilcox residence, Langsville,
Tuesday when the body will lie for Ada Wilcox, 67, a medical
in state at !he church.
patient, who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

fultz, Columbus and an alillt,
Mrs . Clara Hennesy, Mid ;
dleport.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
Robert
with
the
Rev.
Baumgarner officiating .
·Burial will be in the Middleport
Hill Cemetery .
Friends · may call at !he
funeral home Tuesday from 7-9
p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital ·
Discharges- Mrs . Larry
Jordan, son, Gallipolis Ferry; .
Mrs. MontHiU, Jr., Leon; BiUy
King, Leon; . Mrs. Robert
· Keathley; daughter, Letart;
Mrs .
Edward
Carter,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mrs. Ray
Smith, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Ray Smith, son, Gallipolis
Ferry; Albert Stevens, Point
Pleasant; . Mrs. Garland
Nibert, Jr., Gallipolis; Mrs.
Jack Smith, Mason ; Leroy
Hayes, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Clyde Parsons, Leon; Mrs.
Vance Rees, Gallipolis;
Hamilton A.' Johnson, Point
Pleasant; 1 Mrs.
Harry
Rhoades, Point Pleasant.

river in a boat and was talking
II&gt; fi~e employees of !he plant,
BOOSTERS TO MEET .
when a guard came out of the . MASON- Wahama Athletic
screen house and shot at him. Boosters wm meet today at 8 p.
Manuel said he was seated in m. ·at the Wahama gym. lm·
!he boat, about 20 feet from the portant business matters will
Screen House, when the in~ be discussed. AU interested
cident ll&gt;ok place.
boosters are urged to attend.

SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Harry Brinker, Middleport;
Lillian Lee, Racine; David
Ross, Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Darrell Swartz, Thomas
Amy, Phillip Donovan, Linda
Cunningham, Nellie Schools,
Edna Stiles, Dores Arnold,
Mary Gilmore, Shilpa Goradic,
'NeU Dewees, Elizabeth Car·
penter.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Richard Vaughan, . Pomeroy.
· SUNDAY DISCHARGES Michael Jacks.
IN PROGRESS
' MASON - Revival is In
progress at !he First Baptist
Church, Mason, · wit!) C. E .
(Gene) Brudette, Dunbar,
evangelist. Services are
nighUy at 7:30 p. m . through
Nov, 4; special singing each
evening. Pastor is the Rev.
Walter Cloud. The public is
invited.

MEETING SET
The Tractor Pull Assn. will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p. rri. at
!he Meigs County Fairgrounds'.
All members a:re urged to
attend.
SING SCHEDULED
An old fashioned hymn sing
Will be held Saturday at 7-:30 p.
m . at !he Freedom Gospel
Mission at Bald Knobs. The
public Is invited.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Open Tuesday 9:30 to 5 p.m.

Mock-Turtle ·Slipon
.Our best selling style of lx3 Rib
Knit Nylon. Sizes 34 to 40 in
white, black, navy, brown, red,
.bottle green and camel.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'4''
•

REG. s1.00 PANTYHOSE

Our Number Olie style In Honeysweet, V\(lllow, Debonair, Misterie,
fresbe, Woodtones, White ·and fashion shades.

PAIRS

ELBERFELD$ U~ ltOMEROY
I

-

f).,•

~

'

'

MRS. DWIGHT GOINS, at Meigs High School, standing,
looks on as Treesa Herdman assists Jason Bush, one of the
yoWJger set !hat attended the Child Care program held at
Meigs High Monday. The students of Mrs. Goins prepared a ll
the material used by the children Monday. Tbe appearance
of the youngsters was to acquaint students with child care.

Of The· Meigs· MU$0n Area
PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1973

TE~

CENTS

endorses
By BOB HOEFLICH
"Let's wait and see what he
does. If he comes through the
door , I'm going to blow his
head off. "
This was one of the recorded
telephone statements of Mrs.
Thelma Cundiff to her lover,
WiUiam M. Harden, on the

night of Aug . 20, when she
lear ned that her husband ,
James R. Cundiff, being tried
for first degree murder in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court, bad not gone to work on
!he railroad.
The jury hearing the
evidence of !he Cundiff trial

;t~~~:s:::::;::;;;;::;:;: ;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :; :;:::::;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::.

J.News .• in Briefsll
By United Press lnternaltonal

'

WASHINGTON- BOTH THE UNITED STATES and Soviet
Union are operating beefed-&lt;tp naval forces in !he
Mediterranean ' and the United States sent
an aircraft carrier
.
. task force inti&gt; the Indian Ocean.
·
But !he Pentagon said there was no sign of any naval con·
frontation developing between !he two superpowers. SOur""
caUed !he U. S. m9ves " precautionary." The entry of !he carrier
Hancock five destroyers and an oiler to the Indian Ocean, a
'
.
move which began during last week's alert of U. S. forces,
marked the first ' time since the 1971 war between India and
Pakistan that a U. S. carrier task force bad operated in those
waters.
WASHINGTON - FACED WITH CHOOSING a special
Wat~rgate prosecull&gt;r, President Nixon . is at his mountain
retreat at Camp David, Md., where he often goes to ponder major
decisions.
Meanwhile, his lawyers were scheduled to confer ll&gt;day with
U.S. District Judge John J . Sirica on arrangements for turn.ing
over nine Watergate tapes, which !he President has agreed to
surrender.

listened for an hour and a half
solid this mornin g to the
recordings of Mrs. Cundiff's
telephone calls on the night
before William M. Harden was
killed ori Pomeroy's East Main
St. Wednesday morning, Aug.
29, allegedly by Cundiff. The
!apes were begun Monday
afternoon (see page 4) and
continued today.
The recordings wert! at times
dif£icult to understand but
parts of the conve rsation s
co uld be understood at a
distance from the jury box
where the tapes, made by
Cundiff, were being played.
The tapes had been edited to
omit the names of people not
involved in tl'te trial.
Judge J ohn C. Bacon·, whd is
presiding, warned the jury to
pay close attention to the tapes
because, he said, "it is doubtful
if it can be replayed. "
The first conversation played
this morning between Mrs .
Cundiff and Harden covered a
variety of subjects. They made
plans for Harden to be in
Cheshire that evening to make
sure that Cundiff passed
. through there on his viay to
work so that !hey would know
he could not interfere with
their plans to meet that

COLUMBUS - CLEVELAND BUSINESSMAN Janies D.
Nolan, 51, Monday became the first Democrat II&gt; challenge incumbent Gov . John J . Gilligan for tbe party 's gubernall&gt;rial
nomination in the primary next year. "I feel I have a good
chance in a head-to-head race,'' said Nolan, who ll&gt;ok out
petitions of candidacy Monday. "The race will he in !he 10 or 11
largest counties. ! think I've got abouf70 counties. If lbreak even
in Cuyahoga. County, i upset him."
Nolan was the Democratic nominee for secretary of state in
1966, but lost to Republican Ted W. Brown by 640,000 votes. "It's
the moderate against !he ultra-liberal governor," Nolan said.
"I'm proposing a 10 pet. reduction in tbe property tax. There's a
surplus of money and I think it ought \0 be returned II&gt; the people.
The working people want to see a cut in government spending.
Government cannot' solve every problem."

•

. WASHINGTON - TiiE WHITE HOUSE has labeled as·
"distorted" a published report that President Nixon ll&gt;ld them
Attorney General Richard Kieindienst not II&gt; appeal a ruling
.
involving International Telephone and Telegraph Corp.
1n a story in ooday's editions, The New York Times quoted
"sources close to !he case" as saying Kllendienst told !he
Watergate prosecutors he was ordei-ed not to appeal a lower
court settlement permitting IT!' II&gt; keep !he Hartford Fire In- .
surance
part of the Grinnell Corp., and sell holdings in
canteen Corp. The negotiated settlement fol!owed .a contribution
estimated as hlglt as $400,000 from an ITT subsidiary, the
Sheraton Corp., II&gt; the Republican National Convention in San'
Diego.

eo.,

I

I

r

evening. They talked about
Harden's wife and the food
which Harden was buying for
his wife and children.
During the co nv ersation,
Harden suggested Mrs. Cundiff
play the recording, " Set Me
Free'' to her husband and then
ask him, " Why don't you do the
same _for me?" Mrs. Cundiff
urged her lover to ge l his "stuff
done" so that she could be with
him that evening. MUsic from
the Cundiff stereo played in !he
background of the conversation.
The next call from the hom~
which was played was one
made by Mrs. Cundiff to Mrs .
Peggy Thomas. She asked Mrs .
Thomas if Jim had picked up
her husband, Chuck, to transport him to work. She said !hat
she had received a phone call
with a lot of mumbling on it and
thought perhaps her phone was
out of order and that it bad
been Jim calling her.
Mrs . Thomas assured Mrs.
Cundiff that Jim and her
husband !fad started for work.
The next call came to . the
Cundiff home from Mrs .
Thomas who advised Mrs.
Cundiff lila! the two men had
turned around and returned to
Cheshire beca use Jim was ill

and that Jim was on his way
home.
Then the recording indicated
Mrs. Cundiff attempted a
number of times to call out but
got no answers.
However, eventually a call
was completed , a conversation
betwee n Mrs. Cundiff and
Ha rd en. According to it,
Harden had· shown up at !he
Cundiff home and she yeUed
advising Harden that Jim was
enroute home .
On the phone, Mrs. Cundiff
said :
11 1
pulled a wise trick
· It
· 'l
l omg
l . " . Th a t. . . . am
working . You s tay right
there" .
She related her call to Mrs.
Thomas and the return call
from Mrs . Thomas about 10:30.
She said she was glad she had
called Mrs. Thomas in the first
place , because Mrs. Thomas
probably would not have called
her back to tell her ,or Jjm
coming back home if she had
not placed the first call.
At various intervals of .the
conversation, Mrs. Cundiff and
Harden tried to figure out
where Cundiff was as time
moved ahead and he had not
returned home .
At one point, Harden told

her:
"Get the gun out. "
Mrs. Cundiff had her son,
Jimmy, bring a gun to her from
under the Cundiff's bed. ·
Both Mrs . Cundiff and Harden
expressed anger at Cundiff for
not going on to work. They
talked ofwhattheir plan should
. be, and Mrs. Cundiff suggested
several things she "ought to
do" such as go onto the porch,
go to the garage, etc., but
ended up saying she would
remain on the couch and
pretend she did not know her
husband was returning home.
She said she had threatened
to blow her hUsband's head off
before he left to scare him, so
he would not be snooping
around .
During · that conversation,
Mrs .
Cundiff
began
. whispering. She told Harden
this was to keep her son,
Jimmy, who was seated on one
end of !he couch where she was
laying, from hearing. Several
times she checked to see if she
heard Cundiff arrive and sent
her son, Jimmy, to the window
several limes.
The two thought, perhaps,
Cundiff was really s ick
because he had complained
(Continued on Page 8)

clinics

The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Monday at the
Meigs Inn voted unanimously
to support continuation of ,the
Pediatric
Otological
Diagnostic Clinic ( POD) ,
which requires local funding by
the county commissioners.
Speaking on behalf of !he
program was Judy Brostrom,
speech and hearing therapist
for !he Meigs Local School
TWENTY-oNE MONTH· District. She ll&gt;ld !he chamber
OLD Dale Johnston was . that in order to get $)1,~00 in
having himself a ltme lo the slate fWJds the commissioners
cooking department at the must allot $8,000 of local
child study program held money.
Without !he state and county
Monday .at Meigs High
School as part of Child Care funds, according to Miss
study by Mrs. Dwight Goins' · Brostrom, the POD clinic
which aids youngster in the
hOme economics class • .
county school systems who
have speech and hearing
difficulties, will no longer be
able to operate.
She added !hat the monies
would be applied for an ear,
nose and throat speciidist,
audiologist, pediatrician, and
diagnostics and evaluation.
Rosalee Wise, Pomeroy, has "We want to help these
filed suit in Meigs County children now, before they
·Common Please Court against become handicapped adults,''
Cecil Notter, Gallipolis, asking she said.
Aiso speaking before the
$40,431.15 as a result of a traffic
accident nearly two years ago. chamber was Doris Bailey, a
The plaintiff claims that she technician and practical nurse
suffered permanent injuries to . for POD. She said four clinics
are held per year, and at one
The festival will begin with . and personS in the four age responsibility for !hem. If they her spinal column, neck and POD clinic held recently 19 .
...pJans have been completed
for the Meigs County Heart Ute parade at 6:30 around the groups who will be masked and plan to be judged, they should head in the accident on Nov, 10, · children were found to have
Association ' s first masked old Kroger Store on Second St. judged at the festival will be in · be at the auditorium by the 1971 on SR 7 in Chester speech or hearing difficulties
time the parade reaches !he Township.
Halloween
Festival and All participants should be at the parade.
"
out of just 43 tested.
She was a passenger in an
Very young children taking school and the first judging
Parade scheduled tomorrow the s tore by 6:15.
Three vision clinics also
auto driven by Beatrice F .
BandS,
sororities , part in the festival wfll not takes place.
evening at the Pomeroy Junior
are conducted . . Judy BrosJudging for !he festival will Dugan which stopped for a
High School auditorium and in emergency . units, Mason have to march in the parade
trom said she hopes the
County Junior Miss contestants unless their parents lake full be in the categories of ugliest,' school bus that was loading and Chamber will write a letter
downtown Pomeroy.
prettiest, and funniest, in age discharging children. Ac- to the local newspaper and to
groups of children from 2-7, 8- cording II&gt; !he suit, !he auto
the commissioners to, "Let
11, 12-17 and 18 and over.
!hat Notter was driving did not. them know you care. 11
Door prizes, games, and a stop in time, crashing into the
In other action, President
sweet shop will entertain !he rear of the Dugan auto.
Earl, Ingels reported that the
Plaintiff says that as a result
young and the young-at-heart
Chamber's financial balance is
at the festival in the ' of the accident and subsequent
now at $1,430.11.
auditorium following the injuries, she has incurred
Also, the tentative schedule ·
parade. Also door prizes will be $431.15 In medtcal expenses for the annual .Christmas
given to adults.
and has lost approximstely
promotion was discussed .
in
empl~yment
Among !he games to be held $~,000
Ingels announced that on Nov.
for the children are a 5 cent and payments. She also clatms !hat
23, a parade will begin at 1:15
10 cent fish pond lollipop tree ·!he injuries suffered will cost
p.m. in downtown Pomeroy
her additional medical exand duck pond . '
and proceed through the
The sweet shop will have penses and loss of work opdowntown area, disbanding at
homemade cand• cookies, portunities in the future.
!he old Pomeroy Junior High
cupcakes, hot doi:S and pop. A
School building.
'
fortune teller will also be on
BONDS FORFEITED
The parade, which Dwight
hand.
SYRACUSE - Bonds were Goins, director of !!te marching
Anyone wishing to donate to forfeited in Syracuse Mayor band at Meigs High School bas
1 the sweet shop may do so by
Herman London's Court agreed to supervise, will
bring ing
items
to
the Monday night, each for disband at 1:45, and will be
auditorium before 6:30 p.m . speeding, by Lynn Mallory, followed by a 2 p.m. movie at
Wednesday evening. Those Racine, and -Wayne A. Faires, the Meigs Theatre. Following
wishing to help conduct games Glouster. Police Chief Milton !he film, Santa Claus will he
should contact Mrs. James Varian ·was the arresting of- outside· !he theatre at apSoulsby or Ralph Werry, !he ficer .
proximately 4 p.m. to hand out
co-chairpersons for !he night's
THE MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES will assist Pomeroy Police !his evening, 7 to 7:30p.m.
gifts to children.
activities.
during trick or treat night to make certain children have a safe and sane Halloween. The
It was decided by the
HIP INJURED
Chamber
of
Commerce
Jaycees will wear jackets so children can recognize them. L-R are ll&lt;lb Buck, chairman of the
The Middleport E, R squad
. progr~m; Pollee Chief Jed Webster, and Richard Poulin Jaycee president. Buck and Poulin
was called at 9:35p.m. Monday members to turn ·discussion of .
CLOSED
BRIDGE
are wearing the jackets all Jaycees will be wearing. The siren wiU sound to begin and end
financial
matters
to 212 South Fifth St., for Mrs. the
James Bailey, superin·
surrounding
the
promotion
activities. Others who Will assist are Vic Gaul, Don Nelson, Vincent Knight, Rick Collins, Bill
E . M. Woods who in falling
tendent of tbe Metgs County
Nease, and Ken Collins. The group after leaving Pomeroy will assist in Irick or treat night in
sustained a hip injury. She was over to the board of directors.
State Highway Dept. an. ---,
·
Syracuse, 7 II&gt; 8 p .m .
It was also announced !hat
taken to Holzer Medical
;
nounced
Monday
the
Center. At I : 31 a .m. today the cost of the promotion last
damaged
bridge
on
SR
124
1
Lawrence Harrison of 383 Ash year was just over $2,570, at.d
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
at Langsville - wtll be
St., was removed to Holzer. !hat it should cost less this
A warming trend Thurs·
closed to all traffic beginning
year, approximately $2,100,
Medical Center.
da)' and Friday turning
Slate Representative Oakley the land area at Forked Run
today.
because new decorations will
Bailey said the contractor
cooler Saturday. Htgbs In tbe
Collins announced today !he State Park. ·
not have to be purchased as
TO
HOLZER
TAKEN
is
expected
•o
hegln
repairs
60s Thursday and Saturday
state controlling board has
last year.
RACINE - The Rac.ine E-R
The board of .dtrecll&gt;rs will
and to the 70s Friday. Lows .r~leaS.d $34,000 for ~he State
The land will be used as a 1 of tbe ':lrldge that was
squad
transported
Lloyd
earlier
this
year
.
damaged
In the 40s and lower 50s. Fair
Departmen!
of
Natural buf(er to protect park.entrance
also decide whether or not II&gt;
Roush, 77, Racine, Rt. 1, to free the parking meters for
when a tractor-troller struck
Thursday and Fi'lday and a
Resources to purchase 24 acres from development not _com~
Holzer Medical Center at 4:5() Christmas shopping again this
chance of showers Saturday. , located in Olive township in palible with park use, actt.
.
.
a.m.
today .
year.
\
.z:::~:::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::;m:;:::~::6:::::&gt;.::: . Me1gs County to be adde4 to .cording to Collins.

Suit asks

$40,431.15

Parade marches at 6:30

COLUMBUS -A 31-CENT OR 5 PCf. across-tbe-board wage
hike will be sought by !he 34,00(knemher Ohio Civil Service
Employees Association when the BOth General Assembly
reconvenes in January, officials announced Monday.
"There .can be no question that a pay increase is needed,"
Jim Marshall, executive secretary of the association said. "We
would be ignoring tbe needs of our members if we were to turn
our backs on them as !heir income is savagely devoured by !he
runaway in!I~Uon
.... of !he 70's. "

fire."

TUESDAY ONLY.

•

"I

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Chamber

WASHINGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A.
Kissinger and Ismail Fahmi, a specia_l . r~presentatl~e . of
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat_, fou~d their Initial discusston of
the complex Middle East situation, 10cludlng tbe shaky ceaseflre •'very satisfactory."
'Those were !he words both Kissinger and Faluni used II&gt;
describe their 90-rninute meeting at !he State Deparlment
. Monday night. Kissinger and Fahmi meet again today. Neither
~ · side was willing II&gt; disclose anything . specific concerning the
talks. Kissinger said after Monday night's meeti_ng: ''We are
talking about the whole complex of Issues, including !he cease-

REGULARLY $7.98

Tuesday·Only
SALE

VOL. XXV NO. 139

CLEVELAND - U. S. 'SEN. WILLIAM B. SAXBE, R.Qhlo,
beads the list of !hose being considered for appointment as U. S.
Attorney General, according II&gt; reliable sources, !he Cleveland
Plain Dealer reported ·.111 a copyrighted story Tuesday ;
Saxbe, who announ~dearller !his month !hat he wm not run
for re-election in 1974, confirmed !hat he discussed !he aPpointment with several White House aides, tbe paper said. "But I
have not seen the President, and WJtil I do, that's where it
stands,'' be was quoted as saying.

_..,\

I

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·,

unit called
out three times

Lodowic Crary die«J on Monday

Searls denies

ONE OF TiiE HOME ECONOMICS classes at Meigs High Scbool entertained the younger
set at scbool Monday following their study on Child Care. Taking part were Juli e Hysell, age
four ; Kevin Manly , age three, and Earl Phelps, Jr., age 2, L-R, front, and back , were s tud~nts
of the class, Brenda Hysell and Kathy Manley.

E·R

Julia Grate of Rutland dies

H8rden came to her home
and. she told him that Cundiff
was coming back from work.
RUTLAND - Mrs. Julia
She said Harden went II&gt; his Esther Grate, 76, Rutland, died
m other 's and again they early Sunday at the Morrow
talked. Jim had not appeared County Hospital, Mt. Gilead.
home and Harden told Mrs.
Mrs . Grate, born Nov. 30,
Cundiff he would go to see if 1896, in Buffalo, W. Va., was
Cundiff had gone to a docll&gt;r or the daughter or the late
a hospital. Later Harden called Francis 0 . and Alice Neighher from the Western and borgall Cobb. She was also
Southern office. They talked preceded in death by a brother,
for a long time, until after sister and a great-grandchild .
midnight, Mrs. CWldiff said.
Married in 1916 II&gt; Early
Mrs . Cundiff said that Grate, who died Aug. 7, 195~,
Harden told her to get a gun Mrs: Grate is survived by six
Arnold ,
Herman,
and at !his lime she told her sons:
son, Jimmy, to bring her a George, and Wendall, all of
pistol from under her bed. She Rutland, and Robert and Paul,
did not identify this gun as of Marion; two daughters, Mrs.
being Harden's.
John ( Eva ) Hersman of
" I'll shoot !he ( ... ) if he Castalia, and Mrs. William
comes through the door ," Mrs.
Cundiff said she told Harden.
The gun was loaded, she said.
However, her husband did nut
Lodowic Crary, 60; died
return to their home and she
next saw him at 4 a.m. at Monday morning in the
Pomeroy village hall after Monterey Nursing Home,
Harden was dead, Mrs. Cundiff Columbus. Born April 14, 1913
in Middleport, Mr. Crary was
said.
.In other statements, Mrs. preceded in death by his
Cundiff told of being visited by parents, the late Fred and
Harden at a Gallipolis Hospital Esther McKinley Crary.
He is survived by a sister,
in May, 1973, when her husband
Mrs.
Ben (Mary Francis)
arrived. A fight aimost look
place there and ended when
"Yes, I did, ''. she replied .
Harden · told Clilldiff to meet
Attempts to bring insurance
him up !he road and he would
"take care of him,'' Mrs. on Cundiff inti&gt; testimony were
not too successful although
Cundiff slated.
She said she last talked to Mrs. Cundiff said that at one
Harden at 1 a.m. on the mor- time she arrived home and
ning he died, or a little later, found Harden going through
and .! hat she did not leave !he papers in her bedroom. telline
Cundiff house. She fell asleep her !hat she was lying about
the amount of insura·n ce
on the couch she said.
She said ·she was Wlaware Cundiff carried: Harden--also
that her husband had· been allegedly told Eugene Atkins
recording her conversations !hat, if he would. get " rid of
with Harden on the telephone. Cundiff;" he would be given
She said she did visit a Jawj-er half of the insurance money,
once about securing a divorce. · Mrs. Cundiff said in concluding
"Thelma Cundiff, did you her testimony before recess
love Bill Harden," Sheets and cross examination by the
state.
asked.

•
- - - - - - - - - · . -......
11111!"~~~~'!"'.., where
in connection
II'
HEADQUARTERS
one

()r"der our regular menu everr· niyi,i 5 io 10 .·

The MEIGS INN

looked II&gt; the front door exclaiming .. My God, it's Jim."
Harden, she said slammed
and locked the bedroom door.

Meigs park to be expanded
c.

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·~------~-~------------------~--~~----~~-.----------~----·----------------

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3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. 30, 1973

- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Oct. 30, 1973

A ttend convention
Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Baptist
Pome r oy
rch , returned Saturday
the !48th annual meeting
the Ohio Baptist Convention
Cincinnati at the Ninth St.,
Ba~1tist Church.
"New Life in Christ" was the
theme or the meeting presided
by Or. George Terjun g,

of the Baptist Union of lreJand .
Song leader for a hymn sing
during the convention was Dr.
James Marshall, minister of

Institute Rev. Deeth at
Grace Episcopal Church

The serv ice of ins titution for
the Rev. Harold R. Deeth as
Memorial Baptist Church. the rector of Grace Episcopal
Akr on. Dr. Myers spoke on Church, P omeroy, will be held
"New Life in Christ for . the at 7:30p.m., Monday , Nov. 5.
Local Church" Friday, and the'.
Conduc ting the serv ice wi11
Rev. Longri Ao, India, was be U1e Rt . . Rev . John M.
featured speaker at the World Krumm, Bishop of Southern
ofMrs.
the Kuhn
Boardis of
a Mission Support dinner Friday Ohio. Other participants will be
of the Ohio Baptis t night. There was special music the Rev . David B. Allardyce,
ion and atteqded by the Alderson-Broaddus re ctor , St. Phllip Church,
lse,;sions concerning business of Choir.
Circleville, and_ Captfiin
" New l..ife in Christ for the William Paddock , Diocesan
the board. One of the featured
speakers at the convention was Individual'' was disc ussed by Staff, Cincinnati, the readers ;
Or . William Myers, Baptist Dr. Brian Archbald, president Raymond Williamson, senior
Northshore Church, Chicago, of the Norther n Baptist warden, and Theodore Reed,
S&lt;minary of which the Rev . Jr., junior warden , the
Ill.
Speaking on the topic, " New Mr . Kuh n is an alumni.
receiving wardens; the Rev.
For the Saturday afternoon J ohn E . Mason, assista nt
Life in Christ for the
~~::~~:~t!~~' was Dr. Robert hymn sing, Mrs. Kuhn was · rector, Christ Church, Cinr(
general secretary of organ ist.
ci nnati, the preacher; and the
American Baptist ChurOther hi ghli ghts of the Rev . Albert H. Mackenzie,
in the U.S.A. Dr . J. J . convention included presenM&lt;&gt;ro;m, minister at large at _____t_Cl_ qg_~~ .---. _b y _ the.. Cov~ n a n t
··'"·'~·""i·· c~uri:fi, b i': 'terjung;· P laye r s Drama tic Gr oup ,
and Or. J oseph I. Chapman, E nceno, Ca lif. , a pla y,
executh•e minister of the Ohio " Mission Accompl_ished " by a
A holiday baza ar will be held
Baptis t Conven tion were in yo uth group , awardin g of
at Dudley 's Flower Shop, Nov.
char ge of the commu nion se rvice pins, presf ntation of
15, by the Loyal Women's Class
service.
new pastors, ins talla tion of
of the Middleport Chu rch ot
The Rev . and Mrs. Kuhn new offi cers and board
Christ.
atte-nded the mi nisters' a nd members a nd a concluding
Thursday night at the church
wives' breakfast. Bible s tudies message "New Life_for All" by
final plans were made for the
were conducted during the Or . William A. J ohnson , black
bazaar which will also feature
mee ti ngs by Or . J os hua pastor from the ghetto in
the sale of baked goods . Miss
Thompson, genera l secretary Chicago.
Frances Roush will soli ci t the
ba ked items. On display at the
meeting were baske ts of
several sizes to be sold by Mrs.
Edgar Rey nolds . Mrs. Frank
Beach also noted tha t se veral
rugs are made up and ready for
sale .
The annual Christmas dinner
party was set for Dec. 6 at 6
p.m. and will be served by the
Bereans. Mrs. Martha Childs,
Mrs. Alice Robeson and Mrs .
Mary Bailey were appointed to
the n ominating c ommittee .
Mrs . Ida Childs, Miss Roush
and Mrs. Audrey Swett were

l

youth in music at Arlington

~i~t~;~:

rec tor , St. Peter Ch urc h,
Gallipolis, the master or
cere monies.
Als o participatirl~ in the
in s titution se rvi ce will be
Norbet Compton and John J .
McGraw , ushers; Ange la
Sisso n, crucifer ; Mathew
Dillard and Paul Reed, flag
bearers; and Lorinda Seth and
Catherine Meadows, to rch
bearers. Organist will be
Gladys Hornberger Foley,
A.A.G.O.
Immediately following the
ser vice a reception will be held
in the Parish Hall.
Preceding the service of
institution , a potluck supper
wi ll be held. Each fam ily is to
take its own table service.
Meat will be supplied.

Table favors, name tags a nd
It was noted that 3.1 m int
candle replicas a re being made cups had been furn ished for the
by the junior meml)ers of the Auxiliary mee ting las t week. A
Americ~n Legion Auxiliary of
$5 donation for the Eighth
Drew · Webster Post 39, ,lor District jun ior veterans party
hospita lized veterans.
at Athens Mental · Hea lth
Mee ting Friday afte rnoon at Center Nov. B was made and
the hall, the girls ma de 200 the girls will also furnish ice
name tags for the Athens cream cups.
Me nial Health Ce nter , and
Ha lloween cards were signed
prepared )5 candles ma de from Rovna k and for Sherrie
from soap and washcloths for Marshall, a cystic fibrosis
Millers Cottage at the Dayton child, and also for Lori Wood
Vetera ns Hospilal. They also who is confined to her home
planned to provide 100 table with a broken leg .
fav ors for the Dec. 13 birthday
Fa ye Reibel presided at the
pa r ty at th e Chilli cothe mee ting with Cheryl Lehew
Hospital and to prepare loot giving the prayer . Meml&gt;lrs
bags to be sent there also.
gave the pledge and preamble
Mrs . Harry Davis , advisor , in unison .
reported that s he and Mr.
F or the program,d Mrs .
Davis had visited Bill Rovnak, Davis conducted a quiz on
a veteran at the Arcadia Rest bicyc le safety . The next
Home on his birthday and had mee ting will be Nov. 19 at the
ta ken a box of candy and a tray home of Mrs. Davis. At that
of
fruit , g um , mints and time the girls will work on
using " Patience" as he r topic.
She read scripture from Psalm cigarettes from the unit. Six Christmas projects.
37, and meditations " Res t in cards were also sent.
the Lord') and " Wait Patiently
for Hi m ". She a lso used
seve ral other scriptures and
had a reading "God is Never
RA CINE - A program on Mrs. Helen Billings, Athens,
La te", along with prayer from
educa
tion in observance of for a gift to the work at the
Pete Ma rsha ll , " The Discipline
Am erican Education Week was Athens Mental Health Center.
of Patie nce" .
by Mrs; Frances · The unit also received a letter
presented
F or th e prog r am , Miss
Mildred Ha wley showed slides Roberts, president, at the from the Dayton Veterans
of
the Hospital thanking the unit for
of her summer trip to Alaska. r ecent mee ting
Refr eshments were· served American Legion AuxiliBry of two boxes of ribbons which
they use to make r'ugs with,
by Mrs. Robeson and Miss Racine Pos t 602.
Planned at the meeting was
The reception honoring Mrs .
Nina Russe11 with Mrs. Nina
an
Election
Day
dinner
to
·be
Devon Tipple Eigfith Distric t
Bland aS a contributor .
served at the hall by the president was announced. It
Auxiliary. The menU will in- was nQted that 16 members are
clude vegetable soup, sand· needed to reach quota and the
wiches, pie and coffee .
president urged payment of
Thank-yoU notes were read dues prior to Nov. 10, birthday
from Mrs . Beulah Bradford for rolls call time. Mr~ . Roberts
a book of poems presented to served refreshments.
her at the time of a death in the
family. Also read was a note of
I]
appreciation from Mrs. ·.Pat
TUESDAY
DREW \\IEBSTER Post 39, Rile y, Ohio Department
American Legion, past com- president, for a gift at her
manders. and board of trustees recent r_eceptio~·~ an~ one fro~.
.-.······~w.:-v-.·.-.·..,···.-.:·.--.·.-.:·.-··•.,o.••••
A dance was planned for
·,""o•:•,•,·..:•o•;t-,
,•,•:•.•.-.•,..,•:.:•,•. }.•:•.•,•, :...:.:-.-.,•,•:•:•:•.
mee ting, 7:30 p.m. at the •,•,
.. Nciv~ 24 at the American
Legion hall.
RACINE LODGE 461 , F and ·:·:
' '
. :i:l;:; Legiori hall in Pomeroy · when
~
Beta Beta Preceptor Chapter
'~
AM, special m~e ting, Racine •,•,
of Bela Sigma Phi Sorority met
Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m. to ~
!:!w . Thursday
night at the home of
confer the M. M. Degree. All ~
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Stolp, Mrs. Nellie Brown.
Mas_ter
Mas ons
invited.
In the absence of Mrs. Vera
Indianapolis, Ind., were recent
Refres hments.
HALLOWEEN party for visitors of her brother-in-law Crow, president, Mrs. Lois
yoWlg people of Harrisonville, and sister,Mrs. Fred Goeglein. Rosenbaum, vice president,
Mr. B.nd Mrs. Bert Grimm, had charge of the meeting
6 :30 to 8:30 p.m. at
H3rrisonvi11e School isYI!l - Mi-s. Gretta Simpson, arid Mrs. attended by 15 members.
A Christmas party was
Simpson
have
Prizes awarded for costumes. Isabelle
There wi11 be variety of games. returned from an autumn announced for Dec. 14 at the
Trick or treat night will not be foliage tour through West home of .Mrs. Mary Pickens.
Virginia, Maryland and Names were distributed for a
observed;
They
visited telephone campaign for the
MEIGS County Riding Club, Virginia_.
7:30 p.m. at Rock Springs numerous places of scenic and promotion of the .5 mill bond
issue for the mentally retarded
Grange Hall. Everyone invited historical interest.
Mr . . and Mrs. William A. children's school.
to attend .
Miss Judy Brostrurn will be
PAST
MATRONS
of Miller, Dravosburg, Pa ., were
speaker
for the Nov. 6 meeting.
recent
visitors
of
the
Rev.
and
Pomeroy Chapter 186-. OES, .
7:30p.m. home of Mrs. Hart· Mrs .-Roberf RUhn and family . She · is a speeCh and hearing
The Rev. and Mrs. Robert therapist and will talk on the
well Curd.
Otological
Kuhn visited in Ashland over Pediatric
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club, ·the weekend with their son and Diagnostic (POD) Clinics .
7:30p.m . at the home of Mrs . daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Crow imd Mrs. Margaret
Fred Nease. It will be a "come David Kuhn, before returning Follrod will be hostesses at
as you are .. party and there home following the Ohio that meeting .
Mrs. Shirley Custer and Mrs.
Baptist Convention in Cinwill be a plant exchange.
J:!rown
served refreshments .
cinnati last Week.
THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Ga rden
Club Association, 7:30p.m. at
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church. Planning Session for
the Chris tmas flower show. All
clubs asked to be represented
REEDSVILLE - Members wmmng prizes. A balance of
along with other interes ted of. the New Me Club met twice $28.95 was reported in the
individuals .
recently in weekly meetings, treasury. Door prizes were
ROONEY UMW meet at home on Oct.. !6 and Oct. 23, both at awarded to l..inda Well and
of Mrs. Andrew Byus, 7:30p.m. the home of Ruth Putman. At Ruth Putman.
other members present were
GALUA County Retired the earlier meeting Cindy
Teachers Associc_ltion meets Scyoc and .F lossie Maxon tied Judy Limbach, Marlene
with covered. dish luncheon at for queen with a loss of three Putman, Barbara Well and
noon in the First Presbyterian pounds and at the later Connie "Putman.
Anyone interested should
Church. Speaker will be Rev. meeting Carol Scyoc ·was
Carl Hicks, Pomeroy. Election queen on a loss of one poWld. A call Ruth Putman, 667-3396 at
of . officers . Any guests are pig also was award~d at each Coolville or Marlene Putman
welcome .
378-6371, at Reeds-:me.
meeting. ·
Games were played with all .

Lojarwomenf;!Cln bazaar

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•••••••••••••••••~

1~-----~--------..
To The Meigs County Voters
1

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1 Vote
1:

(NO).

oN

l.ssue 3

namedtheto holiday
contactdinner
members
about
. The
next meeting was set for the
third Thursday in November
due to the Thanksg iv ing

·1
I ::~E~~::r~t;sthe~~;~~~:

report ed · on hearing from
Liston Fultz, a former
resident, following his illness.
Passage of Issue 3 could result in
A letter concerning a gift of
Meigs County not having a resident
money to Arlene Spurlock, a
judge.
miss ionary in Afri c a , was
read.
This would greatly hinder the prompt
It was reported that Mrs.
Margaret Boyer is home from
and effective administration of your
· the Holzer Medical Center, and
courts.
that
Les lie
Erwin . is
recuperating at hOme . Also it
Meigs County Bar Association
was reported that the siste.r of
Mrs . Fred Gardner _is
Pd. Pol . Adv . • hospitalized .
,._______________
Mrs. Robeson gave devotions

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Moshier wins 3rd
chess play title

Auxiliary making
favors for .veterans

Racine .Auxiliary meets

J
Pt-an uance

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Pomeroy

.
..
: : Personal Notes
*

CHESHIRE - The Kyger
Creek High SChool Chess Club
won its third s traig ht annual
K.C.H .S. Ch ess tournament
Saturday in three Swiss Style
rounds and one ti e- br ea~ing
game, lasting nine hours
altogether .
In round I Bert Moshier
defeated Mitch Salem, F red
Wes tfa ll de fea ted Oliver
Taylor, Geor ge Thompson
defeated James Westfa ll, and
Randy Taylor defeated Don
Gabri tsch (a later ruling made
both winners).
In the second round Moshier
defeated Randy
Tayl or,
West!all took Thompson, Sa·
Jem ' defeated Westfall and
Gabritsch beat Oliver Taylor.
In the championship round ,
Moshier defeated Wes tfall in a
match for firs t and second
place (it was Moshier 's th ird
straight annual win .) Moshier,
a. junior at KC, founded the
club -and twice has been its
president, three tim es a
director, 3nd once its repor ter.
Westfall joined the club last
year and won second place. He
is club secrelary .
In other matches George
Thompson defeated Ga bri tsch,
Salem defeated Randy Taylor
and Westfall defeated Oliver
Taylor, This side play made
the final s.tandings, Moshier J.
0, Westfall 2·1, Thompson 2-1,
Salem 2·1, Gabritsch 2·1, R. .
Taylor 1-2, Westfall 1·2, 0.
Taylor, vice president of the
club, 1)-3.
Ties existing for second ,
third, and fourth place were
settled ·under agreed up on
systems of ru1es . However,
Thompson and Salem played
one tie-breaking
g ame,
Thompson winning, and with it
third place in the tourney.
Prizes were $12.50 ( trophy )
.first: $10 cash, second , and a
U.S. C. F . memb&lt;!rship and
free entry to the Gallia County
· Open value $18, to third and
fourth place winner s.
The b.es t two games follow :

New Me club has meeting

! LIMITED .TIME OFFER .
FAMOUS FIRESTONE

7*
WHITEWALLS

FREf
ICE
SCRAPER

ALL .OTHER ·SIZES IN

A/stJ w.UIIble witlt

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO

ICE GRIP 17

sruos.n

The Eastern · Eagle High
Sc hool
marching
band
presented another fine half.
time show last Friday evening
at the intermission of the
Eastern-Alexander football
1, 76 Fed. exc . tax
game.
The band began a downfield
2.21 Fed . exc . tax
drill to the tune of " This I.s' My
Country," beginning in two
2.38 Fed . exc . tax
company fronts, and using
diagonal marching, peg-legs,
breaka ways, backward
2.55 Fed. exc . lax
marching step-twos and drag
turns. The band ended that
drill
in concert formation as
2.64 Fed , exc. tax
the majorettes · performed a
hoop baton routine at midfield.
The band then play'ed
2.80 Fed . esc . tax
·-~ Varsity
Drag" as the
STOCK
majorettes and cheerleaders
were feaiured in a pom-pom
routine.
Under direction of Charles
Wills, the band then played
' )Them Basses," featuring Bill
Amberger, Joe Buchanan and
Oavid Weber in the march in
'I
which the basses have the
melody throughout. 'the band
concluded with a· -precision
i and 'il'i exit.

· 25.22
'26.73
•29.41
'31.16
· G78xl5 ·. 531.86
H78x15 '33.12
650x13
E78x14
F78x14
G78x14

I

992-2094
'

606 E. MAIN

Eagle band
in show

ATIEND SEMINAR
MJ'!!. Jacob Johnson· and
daughter, · Mona, of Jonnie's
Beauty ' Salon, Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Doris
Thomas, a Rutland beautician,
were among those in Colwnbus
· Sunday for a hair styling
seminar at the SCott Inn. Jerry
Gordon, Chicago hair stylist,
demonstrated the latest in
cutting including the ducktail
and the teddy bear.

WIN PRIZES
Door prizes at the annual
Halloween · carnival of the .
Pomeroy Elementary SChool
PTA Saturday night were
awarded to Pam Snider, Billy
Colmer, and Joe Jeffers. Mrs.
Earl Thoma,
president,
reported the carnival a success. She also noted that the
first place.winner in the poster
contest in Mrs. Kuhn's · first
grade was Debbie Werry not
Debbie Boring as was reported
earlier.

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R ES I G NS

CHARLESTON ,
W.Va .
( UPI) - Ali -Star catc her
Johnny Bench, one of · the
National League's most feared
sluggers, watched his offensive
talents slip in the 1973 season
because he "misjudged" his
lung surgery, Cincinnati Reds
baseball announcer J oe
Nuxhall said Monday .
1
' He told me he misjudged
the operation," Nuxha!l told
the Charleston Exchange Club,
referring to an off..season operation performed on the Reds '
slagging catcher after the 1972
campaign.
Bench) twice the National
League's recipient of the Most
Valuable Player award before
his ~th birthday last year, saw
his home run production tumble to ~ the past season, while
knocking in a respectable, but
drastically lower, 101 runs.
11
He said he didn't have the
strength to hit certain pitches
that he normally would hit out
of_the park ,'' said Nuxhall, a

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Ohio smndings

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CANCEL SALEAPPLE GROVE
A
rummage sale planned for this
weekend by the Apple Grove . ·
United Methodist Church
Women has been postponed
until a later time .

AT RECEPTION
Mrs. Allen Hampton of the
American Legion Auxiliary
263, and Mrs. Virgil Walker,
Mrs. Eunie Brinker of the
Auxiliary of Post 602 were in
Lancaster Sunday for a
reception honoring Mrs. Devon
Tipple,
Eighth
District
president.

POSTPONE MEETING
A meeting of the Middl~port
l..iterary .Club scheduled for
Wednesday has been postponed
due to a death in the family of
Mrs. C. M. Hennesy, hostess.

Ohio Wesleyan
I

Finley undecided

The Gold en Eagle 1:\as
been cl ock ed fly i ng at a
speed of 120 mph, a du ck.
hawk. at 165 to 180, for shor t
d istan ce fl ying . A l arg e
b ea r ded · v ultur e
wa s
c loc ked goi ng into a d ive at
11 0 mph. Th e flying f i sh, to
elude its enemies, takes ott
on top ot 1he wa t er sifn i lar
t o fhe way an ai rplan e taxis
at tak eoff . A fter a " ta xi" of
fiv e to 20 y ard s it can tak e
off In any di r e ct i on, even
do wnw i nd . AI the end of th e
'.' taxi ", it ga i ns a speed at
approx imately 35 mph . A
cheetah c an gain a speed of
10 mph for a short distanc e,
The speed with wh i ch you
can acc omplish every day
house hold cleaning chores
w ith Refined Water will
amaze y ou! You can fly
throu gh h eavy c leaning
iobs suc h as laundry, and
bath and k itc hen cleaning
with ju ~t Refined. Water
and soap . You don' t have to
spend needless hours and
hard sc rubbing over the
laundry try ing to get out
the gray . Let Refined
Water s p eed up your
household cleaning . You'll
wonder why you didn ' t
have Refined Water long
ago; There is nothing else
l ike it. Call 882 -2525 .

.SAYRE
HARDWA.RE
882-2525
New Haven, W, Va

,,"

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•••
Voters of Meigs Local School District

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" I have no objections to
CHICAGO (UPI ).- Baseball or no fines," the two--time
magnate Charles 0 . Finley defending champion A's wi11 be being fined about the lights, "
today was pondering an appeal back in the World Series "once Finley said, adding that he was
Wtaware of a rule permitting
of Commissioner Bowie Kuhn's more in '75.''
the lights to be turned on only
The
fine
was
th
e
third
Kuhn
latest and most stinging repri·
mand-a $7,ootl fine of base· has slapped on Finley since he at the beginning of an inning.
However, he contested theball's "bad boy" for the took the commissionei-'s offiCe.
commotion he created while .Kuhn ordered the A'.s owner to corrunission's action in the
his Oakland A's were winning pay $0,ootl for asking that much publicized Andrews in·
Andrews be pui on the·disabled . cident, in which the A's second ·
the World Series.
Finley said before the disci- list after the O•klaod second baseman left the teain for one
plinary action was formally baseman made two. crucial game after signing a statement
announced, that he would errors in the 12-~ning second saying he was disabled.
" I was fined only because I
appeal $6,ootl of \he fines to game won by the New York
requested permission to put
baseball's seven-man Mets .
Kuhn also fined Finley $1,ootl Andrews on the disabled Jist,"
ExecutiVe Council. But he
bolked Monday after Kuhn for a public announcement Finley said. "The doctor said
issued the fine, which included made by Oakland during the Andrews was disabled and the
$S,ootl for Finley's firing of opening ' game r egarding the commissioner fined me for
second baseman Mike An· Mets' refusal to allow the A's to asking for a replacement.''
When Kuhn refused to dedrews following the second add a 25th player to their roster
and $1,000 because Finley clare Andrews disabled, he
game of the series.
''I don't know what I'm going asked that the lights be 'turned returned to the team but only
to do," he said by telephone on as the A's came to bat in the made one pinch-hitting ap-from his farm in LaPorte, Ind. ninth- inning of the second , pearance during the rest of the
series. He said Finley 1'embarHe said only, that "regard· game.
rassed" him into saying he was
less of hell or high water, fines
disabled.
Kuhn said that $1,00tl was the
normal .maximurn for a World
Series fine but he believed the
Andrews incident waS beyond
the World Series ouUines.
Kuhn fined Finley $5,000 once
before- for giving bonuses to
Gene·Tenace and. Joe Rudi for
their play in the 1972 World
&amp;ries-&lt;~nd he also fined him
$500 after intervening and
settling Finley's contract
At The
stalemate with pitcher Vida
Blue.
The council to which Finley
could appeal the latest fine
consists of seven men : the
commissioner, the presidents
3 Miles South of Middleport
of the two major leagues, and
two club representatives from
On St. Rt 7
each league .

Now Appearing Nightly

9:00P.M. to 2:00A.M.

AGGRESSIVE, PROGRESSIVE, INTERESTED &amp;-OUALIFIED

Vote For

~

•

AT THE ORGAN

·
e
lpl
H

-Your Children
• -Your Scho~l System

10 TIL 2
Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday .N ights

~Meigs

County In the Future
VOTE FOR•••

MEIGS INN

••
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••
•••
•

GARY DE"NIS" EVANS ·
11

(DENNY)

.•

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•

Pomeroy· .

•

For

Southern Local
Board of Education

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2 5 0
2 5 0

0

0 3 0
Red Div i sion
Conferen c e Ov erall
WLT

WLT

Wittenber g 3 0 0
Bald wi n -Wall ace
2

I

Woos ter
Hei delb er g

2
I

1 .0
2 0

Ca p i l al

1

2

7 0 0

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0

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tune doesn 't end as abruptly as.
it did for Joe.''
Ohio State is "awesome,''
Blackman said. ••Jt could be
one of the greatest college
teams ever.''
" At t he same time," he said,
"our hoys have a lot ·or pride

v;;.

now and
sincerely believe
we can koock them off."
Blackman contended "there
is not that much difference"
between OSU and the Jllini, and
cited statistics to support his
argument. In the last three
seascns, he said , Ohio State has

won only four more Big Ten
games than illinois. So far this
sea.son,lllinois ranks se.cond in
the Big· Ten in overall defense
and third on offense, while the
Buckeyes are first in olfense
and fifth on defense .
('You don 't win games on
stan sties,' O...Siack rnan said,
"but the point is there is not
that much difference. We 're a
good football team."

I

Yletnam Veteran • Southern High Graduate .
'

•

You put it there, and you can l ake sorne o ut
anyt1me you need rl. Fo r college tuitron. fin eme rgen cy.
Bills . Or tor that vaca t1 on you ·ve been pu ll ing oft.
At City Loan
Company , we make seconcf
mortgage loans wo rt11 .
thousands of dollars .
You've done a lot
.
-;,
. ,., ,.
tor your hou se. Now le t
your house do some lhing
to r you.

CITY LOAN .

COMPANY ,/
__

2nd mortgage loans to $15,000. ,
'

4

4

0,

125 Ma in St, 992·2171

3
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6

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P omeroy, 0 .

1

1

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0

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7

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WLT

OhiO Sta te
4
M ith ig an
4
Illinoi s.
4
Northw es tern
2
Purd ue
2
M inne so t a
2
-'~" i.£h ig an Slat e

The

Dai~

WLT

0 0
0 0
0 0

6 0- 0
7 0 0
5 2 0

2 0
2 0
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Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL ,

ROBE= ;•~0'i:dFL1 CH ,
Clly Eimor
Pub li shed d8 11 Y except
S.lll urd!ly by Th&amp; Oh io Vlllley
Publi sh ing Company , 111
Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio ,
AS769 ..Bu s ines OHice Phon&amp;
992 -215 6. Ed itor ial Phone 993 .

0

0

Central Operating Company's.
Philip Sporn Plant

represe-ntat i ve

Bott l ne l l l ·

Gauaoher, Inc., 12 East ~2nd
St ., New York .,New York .
Su bscr i pt i on rates :
Del i veud by c arr i er where
cents per week ;

available

ss

where
c arr i er
servi ce
not
nallable : One month , $2 . By
ma l l In Ohio anci w . va .. One
Year , $16 ; Sl• months, -1.50 ;
By

Motor

Route

Three

months ,
15 . 50 .
Elnwh~re
Ill year ; l l •

months $9 .50 ; three months,
16. Subsci" l ptloro price ln cludu
Sunday
Times Sentinel.

•

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has job openinp for permanent emp!Oyinent in the following sldlls:

•

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•

21S7 .

Second class postao;~e paid
at Pomeroy , Oh lo ,
Nat i ona l
advlrt l sl ng

•

•'•

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•'

New Haven, W.Va.

•

••

WarehcluselneQ
.Weldels

•
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•

Machinists
Electricians

Mechanics

lnstrumem Repainnen
Crane Operators
Bulldoze( Operators
Laborers .

•
•'

(}pemor$

We Wil Train UnskiRed Applieant(
.
. .
These jobs provide excellent wages and a benefits program which indades
life insurance, medical insurance, disability insurance, sick leave, ..ations, halidlys,

"Remembered
everything but
.
msurance.

,,

Takihg a trip? Stop for
Trip-A cci dent and Luggage
iris ur an ce at the Downing ·
Childs Ag enc y . Ask for
Cred i t Car d i n su ran ce to
cover use of you r c redit
card i f Jost or stolen .

and ~retirement
·
·. .
. ·
Although a sbike is in progress, the company continues to opalfe
the plant.

·

APPLICANTS MAY CALL-675-2913 TO ·
ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW.

••

•

•

Downing-· ·
Childs

y
. PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Pott Ofti« ao11 368. N... t-Ywen , Welt Virwkde 212•
T•...,...one: .,.. code lW-182-3111

An Equal Opportunity

.•

Emp~art·

MIDDLEPORT. 0.
~

I,

•

030
34 0
Big Ten
.
Conference Overall

AGENCY, INC.
Pd. ~ol. Adv.

Day ton
·ci nci nnat i
Ob er li n
A kr on
X av ie r
You n g stown Sto!!lt e
Oh io Northern
Fi ndlay
Case wes1ern

There's money in your house.

M ount Un ion

KINGS ·ARMS NITE CLUB

••
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George H'a ll

Den ison

I

The Charley Lilly Band

•

Ph. 992-3629

Hayes' one-yard TO run.
as any visitor to their
John J.eypoldt kicked third boisterous lockerroom could
quarter field goals or 3!, 17 and attest . There was much back·
eig ht yards for t he Bills and the slapping, yelling a nd horseplay
Ch iefs got their final scure just in th e Bills' quarters as m any
two seconds into the final or the players ta lked about
quar ter on a two-yard touch· making the playoffs a nd, as
Simpson put it, "we're halfway
down plunge by Beathard .
Chiefs Coach Hank Stram there" .
Ferguson,
the
rookie
said he thought the reason
Simpson was having so much quarterback who says' he's
success this season was be- ga ining more _confidence with
_every game he plays , also said
cause of his supporting cast.
" He's always been a great he thought th e Bills were
back." Stram said, " And he's playoff -bound but wa nted to do
got a great supportin g cast. most of his ta lk ing about
That 's the difference. You Simpscn.
can 't play a game when you
" He's the smoothest ha ndoff
gear your defense on one man. I've ever had in my life,''
There ar e too many other men F er g uson s aid . '~ W i th his
on the squad that can hurt ability and if the offensive line
keeps blocking for him , he can Cheerleading
you."
The Bills figured this was the ge t 2,000 ya rds.
clinic Nov. 3
" When he got close to the
game wh ich would ultimately
The Organization and Ad·
decide wh ich team will get the 1,000 mark , the linemen were m inis trati on cla ss at Rio
wild card playo ff berth as the sayin g, 'let's block for him,"' Grande College, in cooperation
best second place team in the Ferguson added . "When he got with the Ri o Grande College
American F ootball Conference the 1,000, they said, 'let 's get c heerleaders, will sponsor a
him some mor e.'"
c hee rl e ading
c linic
on ·
Saturday, Nov. 3, at Lyne
Center , Jl,i o Grande College .
Eight high sc hools will
pa rti c ipa te in the c linic:
Hannan
Trace,
Gallia
familiar persona lity to local
Tolan , suspended in th e pen· and Roger Nelson, who sat out Academy , Kyger Creek, North
baseball fan s.
ant-&lt;lrive a fter a run-in with a mos t of 19 73 with · arm G allia , . So uthwe s1tern,
Nwr:hall not only is known for, Reds offidal, later rejoined the problems.
Wellston , Oak Hill, and
his colorful play-by-play or the team·but was dropped from the
Nuxhall said outfielder Pete Jackson.
Reds, but U1e one-time Cincin· Cincinnati roster before the Rose, the leag ue's top hitter,
The day will be filled with
nati hurler pitched for the for- National Lea gue playoffs for had the "inside track" in thi s
cheerleading chants, m ounJs ,
mer Charleston Senators in wh at offic ials 1abe 11ed a year 's MVP votin g, while
pep rousers, and p~rfec ting
1949-50.
Hdivisive attitude.''
Pittsburgh's Willie StargeU, cheerleading skills. The event
Nuxh a ll , youngest maj or
Nuxhall said he went into · Reds second baseman Joe will begin at9a.m . and end at 2
league pitcher when he made Manager Sparky Anderson 's Morgan and San Francisco's
p.m. with a noon IWlcheon
his debut at 15, called Charles- office once and "told him that Bobby Bonds were close third.
included.
ton the city wher e he "finally the next tim e Tolan refused to
Anyone from the commWlity
found home plate.''
congratulate a teammate for
who
is
interested
in
As for Bench , the Reds an· hittin g a home run , I was goin g
cheerleading is welcome.
nolincer said "one of his proj- to let it go (on the air ). "
OHIO COLLEGE
Project members would like
11
ects for the winter will be to
FOOTBALL RECORDS
Sparky said 'okay'," the
to
express special thanks to
B y Un i t ed Pre ss lnternation·a l
work to get his strength back." announcer said .
Mid ·Arnerican C.onterence
Patty F org ey, the college
Turning to the troubles of
On other topics, Nuxhall said
Conference Overall
cheerl
eader advisor.
W L T
W L T.
outfielder Bobby Tolan, wh o shortstop Dave Concepcion, M i ami
J o 0
1 0 o
had a dismal year at the plate side line d with an ankle injury
KentS t at e 3 (} 0
6 1 0
I 3 0
2 5 0
Bo w ling Gre en
and eventually :was a so urce of in late July, was en route to full
2 5 0
Wi
scbnsi
n
1
3
0
5 2 0
'
2 0
0 • 0
2 5 0
In dian a
friction in the clubhouse, Nux- re covery and would play Wes t er n M i chigan
0 4 0· . 0 7 0
Iowa
I
3
0
5
3
0
hall eorruncnted :.
winter b1B1l · in · his native
Oth ers
3 4' 0
Toledo
1 3 0
W L T
Bobby 's turning against his Venezuela.
Ohio University
5
I
0
H
i
ram
130
240
own te ammates is what
.As for -off -season trades,
4
I
2
Joh n Carroll
Ohio Conferenc e
6
2
0
Def i ance
worries us. Aft er a home rWl , Nuxhall
indi cated
a
• Blue Division
5
3 0
Ce-n tra l S l at~
Conference Overall
·he would never congratQlate righthanded starter would be
5
3
0
Ashl an d · ·
W L T
W L· T
anyone, not even his O\I,'Tl _ the Reds ' main goal, depending
Ma r ietl a
3 0 0
5 2 0 W il m ington
3
'
0
4
3 0
Ot t er bei n_
1 1 o
4 J o Bl ufft on
roommate .
on th e p~ogress of Gary Nolan
•
3
0
Kenyon
Musk i ngum 1 I 0
4 3 0

NxB

BxB

·~

Illinois: so far, so good

CHICAGO (UP! ) - lllinois
football Coach Bob Blackman
has the Dlini riding high with a
~ Big Ten record and tied
with Ohio State and Michigan
for the conference lead.
The only trouble is Dlinois
must play No. 1 r anked Ohio
State at Champaign, Ill., this
weekend and face fourth,.ated
Michigan on tbe road the
following Saturday.
The situation, Blackman told
a Qua rterback Club luncheon
Monday, reminded him about
the stor y of a construction
worker named Joe who f~ll
from the 90th n oor of a
skyscraper .
1
' Ha lfway
down someone
yelled, 'how are things going,
Joe.'
"So far , so good,' J Oe yelled
back."
" That 's the wa y we feel
now,'' Blackman said. ''So far ,
so good . I hope our good for -

ORCHARD PARK ; N.Y. J im Brown's record pace of
(UPI ) - O.J . Simpson has a 1,863 yards in a season .
great idea for an encore"I didn't r ealize I carried ~
another l,ootl yards .
that m uch because I wasn't
Simpson did it all Monday ge ttin g tired," Simpson said.
night, reaching the l ,tJOO.yard " I was getting cram ps in my
rushing mark , scoring two legs. Our r wming game will get
t~uchdowns and lea din g a bett er as (J oe ) Fer guson
flre&lt;\-up Buffalo Bills team to a matures."
2:!-14 win ove~ the Kansas City ··: · The Bills got off to a '14.{) lead
Ch•efs before a na tiona l ea rly in the first quarter, the
television audience and 76,071 first touchdown set· up after
cheering fan s at Rich Stadium. linebacke r J im Cheyunski
" We'll go for another 1,000 reco ver ed a Len Dawson
yards in the next se ven fwnble on the Chiefs' 15.
games," Simpson said happily. Simpson took the ball over ·
"The guys were talking that from the one at the 2:33 mark.
when Monday night football
Cheyunski followed by inter·
comes, they wanted me to have cepting a Daw~ n pass at Ul.e ·
1,000 yards."
Kansas City 35 and returning it
Simpson carried a National to the four. Simpso n again went
Football League single game over from four yard s out ~!
record 39 times, picking up 157 3:42.
The Chiefs countered when
yards to give him 1,025 for the
season as the Bills stuck to Pe te Beathard, who came in at
their ground game, picking up quarterba ck when Dawson suf.
246yards compared with 37 for fered an ankle injury, connectthe Chiefs on the ground . The .ed with Wendell Hayes on a 27·
yardage put Simpson ahead of yard screen pass play to set up

P -QR4 !!

P -QR 4

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~

Nuxhall says Bench .misjudged surgery

P XP
RxR

RxR

P .K 4

Q .Q \

B·- K 3

P -6 3

P · Q R3
N .Q 3

P -QB 4
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p .Q4
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83
KN&lt;i
KNS ?
02

Black
Moshier

Wtl ite
Westtall

Q -0 2

N
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P
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0. ]. Simpson passes
•
1, 000 tnark, Bills wzn

OR Ql
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3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. 30, 1973

- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Oct. 30, 1973

A ttend convention
Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Baptist
Pome r oy
rch , returned Saturday
the !48th annual meeting
the Ohio Baptist Convention
Cincinnati at the Ninth St.,
Ba~1tist Church.
"New Life in Christ" was the
theme or the meeting presided
by Or. George Terjun g,

of the Baptist Union of lreJand .
Song leader for a hymn sing
during the convention was Dr.
James Marshall, minister of

Institute Rev. Deeth at
Grace Episcopal Church

The serv ice of ins titution for
the Rev. Harold R. Deeth as
Memorial Baptist Church. the rector of Grace Episcopal
Akr on. Dr. Myers spoke on Church, P omeroy, will be held
"New Life in Christ for . the at 7:30p.m., Monday , Nov. 5.
Local Church" Friday, and the'.
Conduc ting the serv ice wi11
Rev. Longri Ao, India, was be U1e Rt . . Rev . John M.
featured speaker at the World Krumm, Bishop of Southern
ofMrs.
the Kuhn
Boardis of
a Mission Support dinner Friday Ohio. Other participants will be
of the Ohio Baptis t night. There was special music the Rev . David B. Allardyce,
ion and atteqded by the Alderson-Broaddus re ctor , St. Phllip Church,
lse,;sions concerning business of Choir.
Circleville, and_ Captfiin
" New l..ife in Christ for the William Paddock , Diocesan
the board. One of the featured
speakers at the convention was Individual'' was disc ussed by Staff, Cincinnati, the readers ;
Or . William Myers, Baptist Dr. Brian Archbald, president Raymond Williamson, senior
Northshore Church, Chicago, of the Norther n Baptist warden, and Theodore Reed,
S&lt;minary of which the Rev . Jr., junior warden , the
Ill.
Speaking on the topic, " New Mr . Kuh n is an alumni.
receiving wardens; the Rev.
For the Saturday afternoon J ohn E . Mason, assista nt
Life in Christ for the
~~::~~:~t!~~' was Dr. Robert hymn sing, Mrs. Kuhn was · rector, Christ Church, Cinr(
general secretary of organ ist.
ci nnati, the preacher; and the
American Baptist ChurOther hi ghli ghts of the Rev . Albert H. Mackenzie,
in the U.S.A. Dr . J. J . convention included presenM&lt;&gt;ro;m, minister at large at _____t_Cl_ qg_~~ .---. _b y _ the.. Cov~ n a n t
··'"·'~·""i·· c~uri:fi, b i': 'terjung;· P laye r s Drama tic Gr oup ,
and Or. J oseph I. Chapman, E nceno, Ca lif. , a pla y,
executh•e minister of the Ohio " Mission Accompl_ished " by a
A holiday baza ar will be held
Baptis t Conven tion were in yo uth group , awardin g of
at Dudley 's Flower Shop, Nov.
char ge of the commu nion se rvice pins, presf ntation of
15, by the Loyal Women's Class
service.
new pastors, ins talla tion of
of the Middleport Chu rch ot
The Rev . and Mrs. Kuhn new offi cers and board
Christ.
atte-nded the mi nisters' a nd members a nd a concluding
Thursday night at the church
wives' breakfast. Bible s tudies message "New Life_for All" by
final plans were made for the
were conducted during the Or . William A. J ohnson , black
bazaar which will also feature
mee ti ngs by Or . J os hua pastor from the ghetto in
the sale of baked goods . Miss
Thompson, genera l secretary Chicago.
Frances Roush will soli ci t the
ba ked items. On display at the
meeting were baske ts of
several sizes to be sold by Mrs.
Edgar Rey nolds . Mrs. Frank
Beach also noted tha t se veral
rugs are made up and ready for
sale .
The annual Christmas dinner
party was set for Dec. 6 at 6
p.m. and will be served by the
Bereans. Mrs. Martha Childs,
Mrs. Alice Robeson and Mrs .
Mary Bailey were appointed to
the n ominating c ommittee .
Mrs . Ida Childs, Miss Roush
and Mrs. Audrey Swett were

l

youth in music at Arlington

~i~t~;~:

rec tor , St. Peter Ch urc h,
Gallipolis, the master or
cere monies.
Als o participatirl~ in the
in s titution se rvi ce will be
Norbet Compton and John J .
McGraw , ushers; Ange la
Sisso n, crucifer ; Mathew
Dillard and Paul Reed, flag
bearers; and Lorinda Seth and
Catherine Meadows, to rch
bearers. Organist will be
Gladys Hornberger Foley,
A.A.G.O.
Immediately following the
ser vice a reception will be held
in the Parish Hall.
Preceding the service of
institution , a potluck supper
wi ll be held. Each fam ily is to
take its own table service.
Meat will be supplied.

Table favors, name tags a nd
It was noted that 3.1 m int
candle replicas a re being made cups had been furn ished for the
by the junior meml)ers of the Auxiliary mee ting las t week. A
Americ~n Legion Auxiliary of
$5 donation for the Eighth
Drew · Webster Post 39, ,lor District jun ior veterans party
hospita lized veterans.
at Athens Mental · Hea lth
Mee ting Friday afte rnoon at Center Nov. B was made and
the hall, the girls ma de 200 the girls will also furnish ice
name tags for the Athens cream cups.
Me nial Health Ce nter , and
Ha lloween cards were signed
prepared )5 candles ma de from Rovna k and for Sherrie
from soap and washcloths for Marshall, a cystic fibrosis
Millers Cottage at the Dayton child, and also for Lori Wood
Vetera ns Hospilal. They also who is confined to her home
planned to provide 100 table with a broken leg .
fav ors for the Dec. 13 birthday
Fa ye Reibel presided at the
pa r ty at th e Chilli cothe mee ting with Cheryl Lehew
Hospital and to prepare loot giving the prayer . Meml&gt;lrs
bags to be sent there also.
gave the pledge and preamble
Mrs . Harry Davis , advisor , in unison .
reported that s he and Mr.
F or the program,d Mrs .
Davis had visited Bill Rovnak, Davis conducted a quiz on
a veteran at the Arcadia Rest bicyc le safety . The next
Home on his birthday and had mee ting will be Nov. 19 at the
ta ken a box of candy and a tray home of Mrs. Davis. At that
of
fruit , g um , mints and time the girls will work on
using " Patience" as he r topic.
She read scripture from Psalm cigarettes from the unit. Six Christmas projects.
37, and meditations " Res t in cards were also sent.
the Lord') and " Wait Patiently
for Hi m ". She a lso used
seve ral other scriptures and
had a reading "God is Never
RA CINE - A program on Mrs. Helen Billings, Athens,
La te", along with prayer from
educa
tion in observance of for a gift to the work at the
Pete Ma rsha ll , " The Discipline
Am erican Education Week was Athens Mental Health Center.
of Patie nce" .
by Mrs; Frances · The unit also received a letter
presented
F or th e prog r am , Miss
Mildred Ha wley showed slides Roberts, president, at the from the Dayton Veterans
of
the Hospital thanking the unit for
of her summer trip to Alaska. r ecent mee ting
Refr eshments were· served American Legion AuxiliBry of two boxes of ribbons which
they use to make r'ugs with,
by Mrs. Robeson and Miss Racine Pos t 602.
Planned at the meeting was
The reception honoring Mrs .
Nina Russe11 with Mrs. Nina
an
Election
Day
dinner
to
·be
Devon Tipple Eigfith Distric t
Bland aS a contributor .
served at the hall by the president was announced. It
Auxiliary. The menU will in- was nQted that 16 members are
clude vegetable soup, sand· needed to reach quota and the
wiches, pie and coffee .
president urged payment of
Thank-yoU notes were read dues prior to Nov. 10, birthday
from Mrs . Beulah Bradford for rolls call time. Mr~ . Roberts
a book of poems presented to served refreshments.
her at the time of a death in the
family. Also read was a note of
I]
appreciation from Mrs. ·.Pat
TUESDAY
DREW \\IEBSTER Post 39, Rile y, Ohio Department
American Legion, past com- president, for a gift at her
manders. and board of trustees recent r_eceptio~·~ an~ one fro~.
.-.······~w.:-v-.·.-.·..,···.-.:·.--.·.-.:·.-··•.,o.••••
A dance was planned for
·,""o•:•,•,·..:•o•;t-,
,•,•:•.•.-.•,..,•:.:•,•. }.•:•.•,•, :...:.:-.-.,•,•:•:•:•.
mee ting, 7:30 p.m. at the •,•,
.. Nciv~ 24 at the American
Legion hall.
RACINE LODGE 461 , F and ·:·:
' '
. :i:l;:; Legiori hall in Pomeroy · when
~
Beta Beta Preceptor Chapter
'~
AM, special m~e ting, Racine •,•,
of Bela Sigma Phi Sorority met
Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m. to ~
!:!w . Thursday
night at the home of
confer the M. M. Degree. All ~
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Stolp, Mrs. Nellie Brown.
Mas_ter
Mas ons
invited.
In the absence of Mrs. Vera
Indianapolis, Ind., were recent
Refres hments.
HALLOWEEN party for visitors of her brother-in-law Crow, president, Mrs. Lois
yoWlg people of Harrisonville, and sister,Mrs. Fred Goeglein. Rosenbaum, vice president,
Mr. B.nd Mrs. Bert Grimm, had charge of the meeting
6 :30 to 8:30 p.m. at
H3rrisonvi11e School isYI!l - Mi-s. Gretta Simpson, arid Mrs. attended by 15 members.
A Christmas party was
Simpson
have
Prizes awarded for costumes. Isabelle
There wi11 be variety of games. returned from an autumn announced for Dec. 14 at the
Trick or treat night will not be foliage tour through West home of .Mrs. Mary Pickens.
Virginia, Maryland and Names were distributed for a
observed;
They
visited telephone campaign for the
MEIGS County Riding Club, Virginia_.
7:30 p.m. at Rock Springs numerous places of scenic and promotion of the .5 mill bond
issue for the mentally retarded
Grange Hall. Everyone invited historical interest.
Mr . . and Mrs. William A. children's school.
to attend .
Miss Judy Brostrurn will be
PAST
MATRONS
of Miller, Dravosburg, Pa ., were
speaker
for the Nov. 6 meeting.
recent
visitors
of
the
Rev.
and
Pomeroy Chapter 186-. OES, .
7:30p.m. home of Mrs. Hart· Mrs .-Roberf RUhn and family . She · is a speeCh and hearing
The Rev. and Mrs. Robert therapist and will talk on the
well Curd.
Otological
Kuhn visited in Ashland over Pediatric
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club, ·the weekend with their son and Diagnostic (POD) Clinics .
7:30p.m . at the home of Mrs . daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Crow imd Mrs. Margaret
Fred Nease. It will be a "come David Kuhn, before returning Follrod will be hostesses at
as you are .. party and there home following the Ohio that meeting .
Mrs. Shirley Custer and Mrs.
Baptist Convention in Cinwill be a plant exchange.
J:!rown
served refreshments .
cinnati last Week.
THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Ga rden
Club Association, 7:30p.m. at
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church. Planning Session for
the Chris tmas flower show. All
clubs asked to be represented
REEDSVILLE - Members wmmng prizes. A balance of
along with other interes ted of. the New Me Club met twice $28.95 was reported in the
individuals .
recently in weekly meetings, treasury. Door prizes were
ROONEY UMW meet at home on Oct.. !6 and Oct. 23, both at awarded to l..inda Well and
of Mrs. Andrew Byus, 7:30p.m. the home of Ruth Putman. At Ruth Putman.
other members present were
GALUA County Retired the earlier meeting Cindy
Teachers Associc_ltion meets Scyoc and .F lossie Maxon tied Judy Limbach, Marlene
with covered. dish luncheon at for queen with a loss of three Putman, Barbara Well and
noon in the First Presbyterian pounds and at the later Connie "Putman.
Anyone interested should
Church. Speaker will be Rev. meeting Carol Scyoc ·was
Carl Hicks, Pomeroy. Election queen on a loss of one poWld. A call Ruth Putman, 667-3396 at
of . officers . Any guests are pig also was award~d at each Coolville or Marlene Putman
welcome .
378-6371, at Reeds-:me.
meeting. ·
Games were played with all .

Lojarwomenf;!Cln bazaar

__....

..._.

•••••••••••••••••~

1~-----~--------..
To The Meigs County Voters
1

I
1 Vote
1:

(NO).

oN

l.ssue 3

namedtheto holiday
contactdinner
members
about
. The
next meeting was set for the
third Thursday in November
due to the Thanksg iv ing

·1
I ::~E~~::r~t;sthe~~;~~~:

report ed · on hearing from
Liston Fultz, a former
resident, following his illness.
Passage of Issue 3 could result in
A letter concerning a gift of
Meigs County not having a resident
money to Arlene Spurlock, a
judge.
miss ionary in Afri c a , was
read.
This would greatly hinder the prompt
It was reported that Mrs.
Margaret Boyer is home from
and effective administration of your
· the Holzer Medical Center, and
courts.
that
Les lie
Erwin . is
recuperating at hOme . Also it
Meigs County Bar Association
was reported that the siste.r of
Mrs . Fred Gardner _is
Pd. Pol . Adv . • hospitalized .
,._______________
Mrs. Robeson gave devotions

I
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I.
I
I
I

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1
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1

-

I

Moshier wins 3rd
chess play title

Auxiliary making
favors for .veterans

Racine .Auxiliary meets

J
Pt-an uance

~

: ::

Pomeroy

.
..
: : Personal Notes
*

CHESHIRE - The Kyger
Creek High SChool Chess Club
won its third s traig ht annual
K.C.H .S. Ch ess tournament
Saturday in three Swiss Style
rounds and one ti e- br ea~ing
game, lasting nine hours
altogether .
In round I Bert Moshier
defeated Mitch Salem, F red
Wes tfa ll de fea ted Oliver
Taylor, Geor ge Thompson
defeated James Westfa ll, and
Randy Taylor defeated Don
Gabri tsch (a later ruling made
both winners).
In the second round Moshier
defeated Randy
Tayl or,
West!all took Thompson, Sa·
Jem ' defeated Westfall and
Gabritsch beat Oliver Taylor.
In the championship round ,
Moshier defeated Wes tfall in a
match for firs t and second
place (it was Moshier 's th ird
straight annual win .) Moshier,
a. junior at KC, founded the
club -and twice has been its
president, three tim es a
director, 3nd once its repor ter.
Westfall joined the club last
year and won second place. He
is club secrelary .
In other matches George
Thompson defeated Ga bri tsch,
Salem defeated Randy Taylor
and Westfall defeated Oliver
Taylor, This side play made
the final s.tandings, Moshier J.
0, Westfall 2·1, Thompson 2-1,
Salem 2·1, Gabritsch 2·1, R. .
Taylor 1-2, Westfall 1·2, 0.
Taylor, vice president of the
club, 1)-3.
Ties existing for second ,
third, and fourth place were
settled ·under agreed up on
systems of ru1es . However,
Thompson and Salem played
one tie-breaking
g ame,
Thompson winning, and with it
third place in the tourney.
Prizes were $12.50 ( trophy )
.first: $10 cash, second , and a
U.S. C. F . memb&lt;!rship and
free entry to the Gallia County
· Open value $18, to third and
fourth place winner s.
The b.es t two games follow :

New Me club has meeting

! LIMITED .TIME OFFER .
FAMOUS FIRESTONE

7*
WHITEWALLS

FREf
ICE
SCRAPER

ALL .OTHER ·SIZES IN

A/stJ w.UIIble witlt

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO

ICE GRIP 17

sruos.n

The Eastern · Eagle High
Sc hool
marching
band
presented another fine half.
time show last Friday evening
at the intermission of the
Eastern-Alexander football
1, 76 Fed. exc . tax
game.
The band began a downfield
2.21 Fed . exc . tax
drill to the tune of " This I.s' My
Country," beginning in two
2.38 Fed . exc . tax
company fronts, and using
diagonal marching, peg-legs,
breaka ways, backward
2.55 Fed. exc . lax
marching step-twos and drag
turns. The band ended that
drill
in concert formation as
2.64 Fed , exc. tax
the majorettes · performed a
hoop baton routine at midfield.
The band then play'ed
2.80 Fed . esc . tax
·-~ Varsity
Drag" as the
STOCK
majorettes and cheerleaders
were feaiured in a pom-pom
routine.
Under direction of Charles
Wills, the band then played
' )Them Basses," featuring Bill
Amberger, Joe Buchanan and
Oavid Weber in the march in
'I
which the basses have the
melody throughout. 'the band
concluded with a· -precision
i and 'il'i exit.

· 25.22
'26.73
•29.41
'31.16
· G78xl5 ·. 531.86
H78x15 '33.12
650x13
E78x14
F78x14
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992-2094
'

606 E. MAIN

Eagle band
in show

ATIEND SEMINAR
MJ'!!. Jacob Johnson· and
daughter, · Mona, of Jonnie's
Beauty ' Salon, Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Doris
Thomas, a Rutland beautician,
were among those in Colwnbus
· Sunday for a hair styling
seminar at the SCott Inn. Jerry
Gordon, Chicago hair stylist,
demonstrated the latest in
cutting including the ducktail
and the teddy bear.

WIN PRIZES
Door prizes at the annual
Halloween · carnival of the .
Pomeroy Elementary SChool
PTA Saturday night were
awarded to Pam Snider, Billy
Colmer, and Joe Jeffers. Mrs.
Earl Thoma,
president,
reported the carnival a success. She also noted that the
first place.winner in the poster
contest in Mrs. Kuhn's · first
grade was Debbie Werry not
Debbie Boring as was reported
earlier.

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CHARLESTON ,
W.Va .
( UPI) - Ali -Star catc her
Johnny Bench, one of · the
National League's most feared
sluggers, watched his offensive
talents slip in the 1973 season
because he "misjudged" his
lung surgery, Cincinnati Reds
baseball announcer J oe
Nuxhall said Monday .
1
' He told me he misjudged
the operation," Nuxha!l told
the Charleston Exchange Club,
referring to an off..season operation performed on the Reds '
slagging catcher after the 1972
campaign.
Bench) twice the National
League's recipient of the Most
Valuable Player award before
his ~th birthday last year, saw
his home run production tumble to ~ the past season, while
knocking in a respectable, but
drastically lower, 101 runs.
11
He said he didn't have the
strength to hit certain pitches
that he normally would hit out
of_the park ,'' said Nuxhall, a

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CANCEL SALEAPPLE GROVE
A
rummage sale planned for this
weekend by the Apple Grove . ·
United Methodist Church
Women has been postponed
until a later time .

AT RECEPTION
Mrs. Allen Hampton of the
American Legion Auxiliary
263, and Mrs. Virgil Walker,
Mrs. Eunie Brinker of the
Auxiliary of Post 602 were in
Lancaster Sunday for a
reception honoring Mrs. Devon
Tipple,
Eighth
District
president.

POSTPONE MEETING
A meeting of the Middl~port
l..iterary .Club scheduled for
Wednesday has been postponed
due to a death in the family of
Mrs. C. M. Hennesy, hostess.

Ohio Wesleyan
I

Finley undecided

The Gold en Eagle 1:\as
been cl ock ed fly i ng at a
speed of 120 mph, a du ck.
hawk. at 165 to 180, for shor t
d istan ce fl ying . A l arg e
b ea r ded · v ultur e
wa s
c loc ked goi ng into a d ive at
11 0 mph. Th e flying f i sh, to
elude its enemies, takes ott
on top ot 1he wa t er sifn i lar
t o fhe way an ai rplan e taxis
at tak eoff . A fter a " ta xi" of
fiv e to 20 y ard s it can tak e
off In any di r e ct i on, even
do wnw i nd . AI the end of th e
'.' taxi ", it ga i ns a speed at
approx imately 35 mph . A
cheetah c an gain a speed of
10 mph for a short distanc e,
The speed with wh i ch you
can acc omplish every day
house hold cleaning chores
w ith Refined Water will
amaze y ou! You can fly
throu gh h eavy c leaning
iobs suc h as laundry, and
bath and k itc hen cleaning
with ju ~t Refined. Water
and soap . You don' t have to
spend needless hours and
hard sc rubbing over the
laundry try ing to get out
the gray . Let Refined
Water s p eed up your
household cleaning . You'll
wonder why you didn ' t
have Refined Water long
ago; There is nothing else
l ike it. Call 882 -2525 .

.SAYRE
HARDWA.RE
882-2525
New Haven, W, Va

,,"

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Voters of Meigs Local School District

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" I have no objections to
CHICAGO (UPI ).- Baseball or no fines," the two--time
magnate Charles 0 . Finley defending champion A's wi11 be being fined about the lights, "
today was pondering an appeal back in the World Series "once Finley said, adding that he was
Wtaware of a rule permitting
of Commissioner Bowie Kuhn's more in '75.''
the lights to be turned on only
The
fine
was
th
e
third
Kuhn
latest and most stinging repri·
mand-a $7,ootl fine of base· has slapped on Finley since he at the beginning of an inning.
However, he contested theball's "bad boy" for the took the commissionei-'s offiCe.
commotion he created while .Kuhn ordered the A'.s owner to corrunission's action in the
his Oakland A's were winning pay $0,ootl for asking that much publicized Andrews in·
Andrews be pui on the·disabled . cident, in which the A's second ·
the World Series.
Finley said before the disci- list after the O•klaod second baseman left the teain for one
plinary action was formally baseman made two. crucial game after signing a statement
announced, that he would errors in the 12-~ning second saying he was disabled.
" I was fined only because I
appeal $6,ootl of \he fines to game won by the New York
requested permission to put
baseball's seven-man Mets .
Kuhn also fined Finley $1,ootl Andrews on the disabled Jist,"
ExecutiVe Council. But he
bolked Monday after Kuhn for a public announcement Finley said. "The doctor said
issued the fine, which included made by Oakland during the Andrews was disabled and the
$S,ootl for Finley's firing of opening ' game r egarding the commissioner fined me for
second baseman Mike An· Mets' refusal to allow the A's to asking for a replacement.''
When Kuhn refused to dedrews following the second add a 25th player to their roster
and $1,000 because Finley clare Andrews disabled, he
game of the series.
''I don't know what I'm going asked that the lights be 'turned returned to the team but only
to do," he said by telephone on as the A's came to bat in the made one pinch-hitting ap-from his farm in LaPorte, Ind. ninth- inning of the second , pearance during the rest of the
series. He said Finley 1'embarHe said only, that "regard· game.
rassed" him into saying he was
less of hell or high water, fines
disabled.
Kuhn said that $1,00tl was the
normal .maximurn for a World
Series fine but he believed the
Andrews incident waS beyond
the World Series ouUines.
Kuhn fined Finley $5,000 once
before- for giving bonuses to
Gene·Tenace and. Joe Rudi for
their play in the 1972 World
&amp;ries-&lt;~nd he also fined him
$500 after intervening and
settling Finley's contract
At The
stalemate with pitcher Vida
Blue.
The council to which Finley
could appeal the latest fine
consists of seven men : the
commissioner, the presidents
3 Miles South of Middleport
of the two major leagues, and
two club representatives from
On St. Rt 7
each league .

Now Appearing Nightly

9:00P.M. to 2:00A.M.

AGGRESSIVE, PROGRESSIVE, INTERESTED &amp;-OUALIFIED

Vote For

~

•

AT THE ORGAN

·
e
lpl
H

-Your Children
• -Your Scho~l System

10 TIL 2
Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday .N ights

~Meigs

County In the Future
VOTE FOR•••

MEIGS INN

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•••
•

GARY DE"NIS" EVANS ·
11

(DENNY)

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Pomeroy· .

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For

Southern Local
Board of Education

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2 5 0
2 5 0

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0 3 0
Red Div i sion
Conferen c e Ov erall
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Wittenber g 3 0 0
Bald wi n -Wall ace
2

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Woos ter
Hei delb er g

2
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1 .0
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Ca p i l al

1

2

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tune doesn 't end as abruptly as.
it did for Joe.''
Ohio State is "awesome,''
Blackman said. ••Jt could be
one of the greatest college
teams ever.''
" At t he same time," he said,
"our hoys have a lot ·or pride

v;;.

now and
sincerely believe
we can koock them off."
Blackman contended "there
is not that much difference"
between OSU and the Jllini, and
cited statistics to support his
argument. In the last three
seascns, he said , Ohio State has

won only four more Big Ten
games than illinois. So far this
sea.son,lllinois ranks se.cond in
the Big· Ten in overall defense
and third on offense, while the
Buckeyes are first in olfense
and fifth on defense .
('You don 't win games on
stan sties,' O...Siack rnan said,
"but the point is there is not
that much difference. We 're a
good football team."

I

Yletnam Veteran • Southern High Graduate .
'

•

You put it there, and you can l ake sorne o ut
anyt1me you need rl. Fo r college tuitron. fin eme rgen cy.
Bills . Or tor that vaca t1 on you ·ve been pu ll ing oft.
At City Loan
Company , we make seconcf
mortgage loans wo rt11 .
thousands of dollars .
You've done a lot
.
-;,
. ,., ,.
tor your hou se. Now le t
your house do some lhing
to r you.

CITY LOAN .

COMPANY ,/
__

2nd mortgage loans to $15,000. ,
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0,

125 Ma in St, 992·2171

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P omeroy, 0 .

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WLT

OhiO Sta te
4
M ith ig an
4
Illinoi s.
4
Northw es tern
2
Purd ue
2
M inne so t a
2
-'~" i.£h ig an Slat e

The

Dai~

WLT

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7 0 0
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Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS· MASON AREA
CHESTER L . TANNEHILL ,

ROBE= ;•~0'i:dFL1 CH ,
Clly Eimor
Pub li shed d8 11 Y except
S.lll urd!ly by Th&amp; Oh io Vlllley
Publi sh ing Company , 111
Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio ,
AS769 ..Bu s ines OHice Phon&amp;
992 -215 6. Ed itor ial Phone 993 .

0

0

Central Operating Company's.
Philip Sporn Plant

represe-ntat i ve

Bott l ne l l l ·

Gauaoher, Inc., 12 East ~2nd
St ., New York .,New York .
Su bscr i pt i on rates :
Del i veud by c arr i er where
cents per week ;

available

ss

where
c arr i er
servi ce
not
nallable : One month , $2 . By
ma l l In Ohio anci w . va .. One
Year , $16 ; Sl• months, -1.50 ;
By

Motor

Route

Three

months ,
15 . 50 .
Elnwh~re
Ill year ; l l •

months $9 .50 ; three months,
16. Subsci" l ptloro price ln cludu
Sunday
Times Sentinel.

•

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has job openinp for permanent emp!Oyinent in the following sldlls:

•

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•

21S7 .

Second class postao;~e paid
at Pomeroy , Oh lo ,
Nat i ona l
advlrt l sl ng

•

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New Haven, W.Va.

•

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WarehcluselneQ
.Weldels

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Machinists
Electricians

Mechanics

lnstrumem Repainnen
Crane Operators
Bulldoze( Operators
Laborers .

•
•'

(}pemor$

We Wil Train UnskiRed Applieant(
.
. .
These jobs provide excellent wages and a benefits program which indades
life insurance, medical insurance, disability insurance, sick leave, ..ations, halidlys,

"Remembered
everything but
.
msurance.

,,

Takihg a trip? Stop for
Trip-A cci dent and Luggage
iris ur an ce at the Downing ·
Childs Ag enc y . Ask for
Cred i t Car d i n su ran ce to
cover use of you r c redit
card i f Jost or stolen .

and ~retirement
·
·. .
. ·
Although a sbike is in progress, the company continues to opalfe
the plant.

·

APPLICANTS MAY CALL-675-2913 TO ·
ARRANGE AN INTERVIEW.

••

•

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Downing-· ·
Childs

y
. PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Pott Ofti« ao11 368. N... t-Ywen , Welt Virwkde 212•
T•...,...one: .,.. code lW-182-3111

An Equal Opportunity

.•

Emp~art·

MIDDLEPORT. 0.
~

I,

•

030
34 0
Big Ten
.
Conference Overall

AGENCY, INC.
Pd. ~ol. Adv.

Day ton
·ci nci nnat i
Ob er li n
A kr on
X av ie r
You n g stown Sto!!lt e
Oh io Northern
Fi ndlay
Case wes1ern

There's money in your house.

M ount Un ion

KINGS ·ARMS NITE CLUB

••
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George H'a ll

Den ison

I

The Charley Lilly Band

•

Ph. 992-3629

Hayes' one-yard TO run.
as any visitor to their
John J.eypoldt kicked third boisterous lockerroom could
quarter field goals or 3!, 17 and attest . There was much back·
eig ht yards for t he Bills and the slapping, yelling a nd horseplay
Ch iefs got their final scure just in th e Bills' quarters as m any
two seconds into the final or the players ta lked about
quar ter on a two-yard touch· making the playoffs a nd, as
Simpson put it, "we're halfway
down plunge by Beathard .
Chiefs Coach Hank Stram there" .
Ferguson,
the
rookie
said he thought the reason
Simpson was having so much quarterback who says' he's
success this season was be- ga ining more _confidence with
_every game he plays , also said
cause of his supporting cast.
" He's always been a great he thought th e Bills were
back." Stram said, " And he's playoff -bound but wa nted to do
got a great supportin g cast. most of his ta lk ing about
That 's the difference. You Simpscn.
can 't play a game when you
" He's the smoothest ha ndoff
gear your defense on one man. I've ever had in my life,''
There ar e too many other men F er g uson s aid . '~ W i th his
on the squad that can hurt ability and if the offensive line
keeps blocking for him , he can Cheerleading
you."
The Bills figured this was the ge t 2,000 ya rds.
clinic Nov. 3
" When he got close to the
game wh ich would ultimately
The Organization and Ad·
decide wh ich team will get the 1,000 mark , the linemen were m inis trati on cla ss at Rio
wild card playo ff berth as the sayin g, 'let's block for him,"' Grande College, in cooperation
best second place team in the Ferguson added . "When he got with the Ri o Grande College
American F ootball Conference the 1,000, they said, 'let 's get c heerleaders, will sponsor a
him some mor e.'"
c hee rl e ading
c linic
on ·
Saturday, Nov. 3, at Lyne
Center , Jl,i o Grande College .
Eight high sc hools will
pa rti c ipa te in the c linic:
Hannan
Trace,
Gallia
familiar persona lity to local
Tolan , suspended in th e pen· and Roger Nelson, who sat out Academy , Kyger Creek, North
baseball fan s.
ant-&lt;lrive a fter a run-in with a mos t of 19 73 with · arm G allia , . So uthwe s1tern,
Nwr:hall not only is known for, Reds offidal, later rejoined the problems.
Wellston , Oak Hill, and
his colorful play-by-play or the team·but was dropped from the
Nuxhall said outfielder Pete Jackson.
Reds, but U1e one-time Cincin· Cincinnati roster before the Rose, the leag ue's top hitter,
The day will be filled with
nati hurler pitched for the for- National Lea gue playoffs for had the "inside track" in thi s
cheerleading chants, m ounJs ,
mer Charleston Senators in wh at offic ials 1abe 11ed a year 's MVP votin g, while
pep rousers, and p~rfec ting
1949-50.
Hdivisive attitude.''
Pittsburgh's Willie StargeU, cheerleading skills. The event
Nuxh a ll , youngest maj or
Nuxhall said he went into · Reds second baseman Joe will begin at9a.m . and end at 2
league pitcher when he made Manager Sparky Anderson 's Morgan and San Francisco's
p.m. with a noon IWlcheon
his debut at 15, called Charles- office once and "told him that Bobby Bonds were close third.
included.
ton the city wher e he "finally the next tim e Tolan refused to
Anyone from the commWlity
found home plate.''
congratulate a teammate for
who
is
interested
in
As for Bench , the Reds an· hittin g a home run , I was goin g
cheerleading is welcome.
nolincer said "one of his proj- to let it go (on the air ). "
OHIO COLLEGE
Project members would like
11
ects for the winter will be to
FOOTBALL RECORDS
Sparky said 'okay'," the
to
express special thanks to
B y Un i t ed Pre ss lnternation·a l
work to get his strength back." announcer said .
Mid ·Arnerican C.onterence
Patty F org ey, the college
Turning to the troubles of
On other topics, Nuxhall said
Conference Overall
cheerl
eader advisor.
W L T
W L T.
outfielder Bobby Tolan, wh o shortstop Dave Concepcion, M i ami
J o 0
1 0 o
had a dismal year at the plate side line d with an ankle injury
KentS t at e 3 (} 0
6 1 0
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Bo w ling Gre en
and eventually :was a so urce of in late July, was en route to full
2 5 0
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scbnsi
n
1
3
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5 2 0
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2 5 0
In dian a
friction in the clubhouse, Nux- re covery and would play Wes t er n M i chigan
0 4 0· . 0 7 0
Iowa
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5
3
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hall eorruncnted :.
winter b1B1l · in · his native
Oth ers
3 4' 0
Toledo
1 3 0
W L T
Bobby 's turning against his Venezuela.
Ohio University
5
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0
H
i
ram
130
240
own te ammates is what
.As for -off -season trades,
4
I
2
Joh n Carroll
Ohio Conferenc e
6
2
0
Def i ance
worries us. Aft er a home rWl , Nuxhall
indi cated
a
• Blue Division
5
3 0
Ce-n tra l S l at~
Conference Overall
·he would never congratQlate righthanded starter would be
5
3
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Ashl an d · ·
W L T
W L· T
anyone, not even his O\I,'Tl _ the Reds ' main goal, depending
Ma r ietl a
3 0 0
5 2 0 W il m ington
3
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4
3 0
Ot t er bei n_
1 1 o
4 J o Bl ufft on
roommate .
on th e p~ogress of Gary Nolan
•
3
0
Kenyon
Musk i ngum 1 I 0
4 3 0

NxB

BxB

·~

Illinois: so far, so good

CHICAGO (UP! ) - lllinois
football Coach Bob Blackman
has the Dlini riding high with a
~ Big Ten record and tied
with Ohio State and Michigan
for the conference lead.
The only trouble is Dlinois
must play No. 1 r anked Ohio
State at Champaign, Ill., this
weekend and face fourth,.ated
Michigan on tbe road the
following Saturday.
The situation, Blackman told
a Qua rterback Club luncheon
Monday, reminded him about
the stor y of a construction
worker named Joe who f~ll
from the 90th n oor of a
skyscraper .
1
' Ha lfway
down someone
yelled, 'how are things going,
Joe.'
"So far , so good,' J Oe yelled
back."
" That 's the wa y we feel
now,'' Blackman said. ''So far ,
so good . I hope our good for -

ORCHARD PARK ; N.Y. J im Brown's record pace of
(UPI ) - O.J . Simpson has a 1,863 yards in a season .
great idea for an encore"I didn't r ealize I carried ~
another l,ootl yards .
that m uch because I wasn't
Simpson did it all Monday ge ttin g tired," Simpson said.
night, reaching the l ,tJOO.yard " I was getting cram ps in my
rushing mark , scoring two legs. Our r wming game will get
t~uchdowns and lea din g a bett er as (J oe ) Fer guson
flre&lt;\-up Buffalo Bills team to a matures."
2:!-14 win ove~ the Kansas City ··: · The Bills got off to a '14.{) lead
Ch•efs before a na tiona l ea rly in the first quarter, the
television audience and 76,071 first touchdown set· up after
cheering fan s at Rich Stadium. linebacke r J im Cheyunski
" We'll go for another 1,000 reco ver ed a Len Dawson
yards in the next se ven fwnble on the Chiefs' 15.
games," Simpson said happily. Simpson took the ball over ·
"The guys were talking that from the one at the 2:33 mark.
when Monday night football
Cheyunski followed by inter·
comes, they wanted me to have cepting a Daw~ n pass at Ul.e ·
1,000 yards."
Kansas City 35 and returning it
Simpson carried a National to the four. Simpso n again went
Football League single game over from four yard s out ~!
record 39 times, picking up 157 3:42.
The Chiefs countered when
yards to give him 1,025 for the
season as the Bills stuck to Pe te Beathard, who came in at
their ground game, picking up quarterba ck when Dawson suf.
246yards compared with 37 for fered an ankle injury, connectthe Chiefs on the ground . The .ed with Wendell Hayes on a 27·
yardage put Simpson ahead of yard screen pass play to set up

P -QR4 !!

P -QR 4

:lll

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Nuxhall says Bench .misjudged surgery

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Black
Moshier

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Westtall

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N
N
N
P
P
N

~

0. ]. Simpson passes
•
1, 000 tnark, Bills wzn

OR Ql
K R -Q l

NxP

::;.:::::~t::::=:=:=~~=~;::;:;.;~:::!:.:::::::::_;".;::::;:;::::-:=.:--=::::::~::::::::::::;:;:::::;~;:;:;:;::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::.:·:::·:·:~·:·:~:::::::::::;:::::::;;:::~:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:;:::;:::::~::X:~-s,:

.[

r
r

�I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I"

~'" '

- ' " ..

I"'''"''"'"'"

.,.,

... _ (' "'·f"'' "' "' ""'" ,, .. , ,._,.,.,.. .. .,.., ... " "-

reJafiOMShip l;letween his wife
and Harden . He said that he
spoke ·to Harden about it,.
urging the deceased to spend
more time with his own wife
and family . He also said that he
mentioned the situation to Mrs.
Cundiff who said Harden was
only wanting to help.
Asked if he had any other
about . the
ind i cations
relationship of the two, Cundiff
said Harden apparently did not
want to spend time at his· own
home, but when Mrs. Harden
wa·s hospitalized for a nervious
disorder and the Cundiffs.kept
the three Harde·n. · children ,
Harden wanted to be with his
chi ldren at the Cundiff home
every night.
Speaking of other in ·
di cat ions, Cundiff said that
seve ral ti.mes he returned
home from work in the mor ning s and found two coffee
cups at different locations and
. that an unusual amount of food
had been consumed .
Cun~iff said he asked his
wife about the food and the
coffee cups·, who replied:
" It's too G..........,...(amned bad
you have to count everything in
the house befOre you go to work
and a~ain when you come
home .'
·
Going back to Memorial
Day, 1973. Cundiff said he had
the night off from his work on
the railroad, but told his wife

he had to work . He said he left
home in his auto as usual but
qrove to Snowball Hi ll where
he parked . hi~ car . He then
walked through the woods to
hi s .h ome and sat down at a
picnic table near the house .
While sitting there. Cundiff
said he heard voices and saw
his wife and Harden ap proaching the Cundiff house
from the lake . They did not see
him as they sat down on the
front porch, Cundiff sfated.
Cundiff said he moved to the
breezeway of the house and sat
there for about 30 minutes
getting " parts " of the con versation between Harden and
Mrs . Cundiff.
Cundiff said they talked of
their sex life and of the sex life
between Mrs. Harden and her
husband and Cundiff and Mrs.
Cundiff. Then , he said, they
went into the house. Cundiff
related then his moving to the
front porch and looking
through panes of glass in the
door . l-Ie later saw them go into
the Cundiffs ' bedroom . Cundiff
told . of waiting three or four
minutes, then unlocking the
door quietly . A chain, however,
was latched on the door.
Cundiff said he kicked the door,
tearing loose thE! latch to get
into the living room . He said as
he stepped Into the living room ,
Harden stepped out of the
bedroom, wearing only a T·
shirt, and then went back into
the bedroom ..
Cund i ff said he tried to get ·
into the bedroom but the door
was loc:ked . He said he kicked
that door and the lock broke.
Harden, he said, held the door
closed until he got dressed.
Photos of the doors which were
damaged were shown Cundiff
as defense exhibits and he
identifi ed them .
Shown a hunting knife he was
wearing in a sheath on his belt
the night he returned to the
hou~. Cundiff demonstrated
for the iury' the unsewn edges
of the sheath and how In a
.struggle fQr the · k,nlfe, one
could have been cut by the
knife.
Cunditf -identified a piece of

pipe which he had picked up
outside before entering the
house and said ·that he had
roiled the pipe under a piece of
furniture when Mrs. Cundiff
and Harden made a joke of his

hav ing it.
·
The
defendant, , under
questioning by Sheets, pointed

out thot a ,gun cabinet full of
guns .-•• dose by.Jhe Cundift

'

-------

-

him," Harden said.

..... ·-· - ···-,
.. _.. , .
school.
"
Mrs. Cundiff spoke of one of
her children and how he had
helped her keep something
hidden from the defendant .
There was a 'discussion of two
of her children preceding an
outburst of profanity by Mrs .
Cundiff when she apparenty

They disc·ussed " how in the
hell" Mrs . Cundiff caul~ stand

fu_rniture while

11\,111 1; -

and located Jhe machine under
the restaurant. The set had ear
phones so that he could not only
record but could hear at the
same time, he told the court .
Cund iff said, working in his
spare time, he 'completed the ·
installation on· Aug . 26 . .
He told the j·ury the first
recordings were of a poor
quality and that the first
conversations recorded had a
great deal ot · static in them.
However, he said by Aug .. 28,
the day before Harden was
killed, he ,had the recQr~ing
machine working so that
recordings
were of
the
fi"eqvency
of. · a · normal
telephone conversation .
Cundiff said that he started
recording about 4 p.m . on
Tuesday , Aug. 28, and knew he
was getting a recording of a
long conversation between his
wife and Harden . He listened
from t i me to time with the
earphones but went on about
his work ·at the lj:~i _ke and did not
play the whole tape before
starting to his job at Nitro, W.
Va ., on 't he railroad.
·
·
Attorneys Agree
Before
the
recording
machine was readied to play in
court. Judge John C. Bacon
announced that the tape was
being permitted through an
agreement among the . af.
torneys but that portions were

, • ., ;:,,

..._,_llfUIII

, ::OU~~I;"'I&lt;;;U

too the use of ·taiL
· " It's a G---damned shame.
we can't live," Harden said.
They referred to the need fa
" something" at the Cundiff
driveway for Cundiff when he

came home .

"We need a contract ~n

'

"7"

.................. --~

-~

... -

_ .. _ . .

In
(:ross
examination,
ProsecUtor Fultz questioned
Laudermilt if he had ever
"kil led for hire?". Getting a

I

-----

JEWELRY STORE

ARE YOU SPENDING TOO MUCH
FOR YOUR INSURANCE?
YOU CAN BE
ARE YOU A

Dress-A-Doll*is
.· a happiness thing.

CALL NOW FOR THE MOST COMPETITIVE
HOMEOWN'ERS AND AUTOMOBILE RATES IN TOWN

L~UT

8ROG• ..

li:CN~ 1ti!OtNUI

59~

box of 5

.

Dolls must be
returned by
November 19

107 Sycamore St., Pom•roy, 0.
PH. H2.J130

Whole Kernel
cr':am Style .

STALEY'S

~APLE

j

•

Rc · coLA

5

cans
for

24oz.

.,,. ,.

TO PERMIT AGRICULTURAL.I.AND TO BE VAJ••
UEil FOR TAXATION IN ACCORDANCE WITH ITS
AGRICULTURAL USE.

''

(Propos«! by Rtsolution of thE" GenE-ral As9embl7 of Ohio)

•

Take •
to

EFFEl'TI.\'f: IJATE o\:'\ll REPEAL

the

polls
with

~

you •

.

·-

Paid Political AdvE:-tisement by M eigs .County Farm 'Bureau Federation

'

&lt;l warded. Don't worry about sewinfl
skills. Your doll will find a home in tlw
Mill S oi a child on Christmas day·. and.
be loved .
·
.
You make Drj&gt;Ss-A-Do\1• a happiness
thing. Thank you.

Coca~Cola

69¢

•'S FAVORITf
.·

Big 32 oz. bots.

qt.

c

bots.

Golden

Ripe

10¢Jb.
------~--

See How Much You Save
With Mark VCoupons
MAXWELL HoUSE·COFP'EE.

REGULAR
DRIP ELEC. PERK

2lb. can $1 79
1

WITH THIS COUPON
uffer expires

FAIRMONT

.

VALl/ABLf. COUPON

J

32 II. oz. ~1 ql.)

11·24·73

REGULAR RETAIL

2.19

.

gal.

AT

POTATOES

pak
'
l

•

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN

YOU BUY A. 10 OZ. JAR OF

Iada at

NORTY STAR

DRUMSTICKS

49~

oy
MARK V
STI1RE

11-3-73

I

1.09

0000
ONLV

2% 'MlLK

KING SIZE

ONLY

1

MARK· V.

·-

I

BANANAS

tlturnable Bottle

SCOT LAD
FRENCH FRIES

Stebbins and Associates, lnr

· ·
.
• Member of Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is ()pen 9 a.m.to 7 p.m. (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum
Depositor .

'

.

l-Ib.
pkg.

@Copyrig ht 1973 by Richard

POMEROY, OHIO

.

. GRAPES

1h gallon

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings CO.

If :rduptL·d. t h i,:-; :tnwnrluwn t ~ hall t ake effed
.h nu: u·y I. l ~l'i-1 :l rul .the &lt;' \i :-ti rrg ;-;cdiPn :-;hall IJe
rcp, ·;r)t-d fru m .. :. tri'h clll•dil c date .

69¢
TOMATOES .......... :..
2 lb

RED RIPE
RED

$}00

OCEAN PERCH

I

.

bch.

:

ICE CREAM

l' ltoi'OSF.H CO~STITl"TIO~· AI. A:"t1ESD~ENT

·ttAbfM~h

..

CARROTS

WITH 13.00 OR MORE PURCHASE

Seal test

Vote Yes on ISSUE 1
1

=

.

GOLDEN

count

·
SYRUP. •••••••••••b~~.
...

He Ip _Save
It
.

NO

.CEL

16 oz.

ongs to

=

29e
ERY ················~····

LARGE

PAK

FROZEN FOODS ••• DAIRY BUYS

Le amendecl
exclu si \·ely to
to be \·ahred for
ils current value for
and to allow recove ry of
rl.rr.,-,,ncc i n the clollar amount
ng from a Ynluation
on anolher u:-:. e?

8,!1 00

·

'

YELLOW CORN ••••••••

ide II of ·

APPLES

cans

JOAN OF ARC

Wt• tw&lt;&gt;d yuur luo&gt;lp to bring happiness
to IWt'cly childrt&gt;n this Christmas. Come
in now- supply oi dolls is I i m-it eel- and
pick up a free dolL Design and sew an
ouliit ior it, then return it to us. It will
lw displayed in our 'lobby with all the
Dn•ss-A-Do\1 dolls. Prizes' will lw

•2.88

3 oz.

lr-..,;.;.,.;......;__.;..;..;._______________________'1

ew

carton

.ROME BEAUTY

IUU.G \,\jU

THURSDAY ONLY

JOLLI- LOLLI

4

VII'IWIIIII6

39~

8 oz. jar

KRISPY

.

Reuter Insurance Agency
-~ -

\lUI Uiti \II CGIII.:;I

.

pkgs.

NOW!
.

HAPPY HARRY

CIERALC REUTER

---· --o-

REG. 49c EA. ARCHWAY

Enter our Dress-A-Doll Contest

,. I

,_...

2 89¢
COOKIES ••••••••••••••
CRACKERS •• ~ •••••••••••• i~J~ 39¢
PAPLER TOWELS •••••• 3~~~sbo$1 OO
.
p
ICE .Po. S. •• , ~ •• •••••••.!:x. •• 69¢
89¢
POTTED MEAT •••••••• 4

struck her toe on a piece of
talking to

-····
•

69~

doz.

Court St., Pomeroy

.

COFFEE

AT·

MARK V STORE .

10 OZ. JAR ONLY

$109

WRMCOUI'ON

__O!_!!:~U!,O~Pl!f~l!! •1frt•EMJ!S.ll-16-73o=--:--=-.

.

...

•

.;

�I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I"

~'" '

- ' " ..

I"'''"''"'"'"

.,.,

... _ (' "'·f"'' "' "' ""'" ,, .. , ,._,.,.,.. .. .,.., ... " "-

reJafiOMShip l;letween his wife
and Harden . He said that he
spoke ·to Harden about it,.
urging the deceased to spend
more time with his own wife
and family . He also said that he
mentioned the situation to Mrs.
Cundiff who said Harden was
only wanting to help.
Asked if he had any other
about . the
ind i cations
relationship of the two, Cundiff
said Harden apparently did not
want to spend time at his· own
home, but when Mrs. Harden
wa·s hospitalized for a nervious
disorder and the Cundiffs.kept
the three Harde·n. · children ,
Harden wanted to be with his
chi ldren at the Cundiff home
every night.
Speaking of other in ·
di cat ions, Cundiff said that
seve ral ti.mes he returned
home from work in the mor ning s and found two coffee
cups at different locations and
. that an unusual amount of food
had been consumed .
Cun~iff said he asked his
wife about the food and the
coffee cups·, who replied:
" It's too G..........,...(amned bad
you have to count everything in
the house befOre you go to work
and a~ain when you come
home .'
·
Going back to Memorial
Day, 1973. Cundiff said he had
the night off from his work on
the railroad, but told his wife

he had to work . He said he left
home in his auto as usual but
qrove to Snowball Hi ll where
he parked . hi~ car . He then
walked through the woods to
hi s .h ome and sat down at a
picnic table near the house .
While sitting there. Cundiff
said he heard voices and saw
his wife and Harden ap proaching the Cundiff house
from the lake . They did not see
him as they sat down on the
front porch, Cundiff sfated.
Cundiff said he moved to the
breezeway of the house and sat
there for about 30 minutes
getting " parts " of the con versation between Harden and
Mrs . Cundiff.
Cundiff said they talked of
their sex life and of the sex life
between Mrs. Harden and her
husband and Cundiff and Mrs.
Cundiff. Then , he said, they
went into the house. Cundiff
related then his moving to the
front porch and looking
through panes of glass in the
door . l-Ie later saw them go into
the Cundiffs ' bedroom . Cundiff
told . of waiting three or four
minutes, then unlocking the
door quietly . A chain, however,
was latched on the door.
Cundiff said he kicked the door,
tearing loose thE! latch to get
into the living room . He said as
he stepped Into the living room ,
Harden stepped out of the
bedroom, wearing only a T·
shirt, and then went back into
the bedroom ..
Cund i ff said he tried to get ·
into the bedroom but the door
was loc:ked . He said he kicked
that door and the lock broke.
Harden, he said, held the door
closed until he got dressed.
Photos of the doors which were
damaged were shown Cundiff
as defense exhibits and he
identifi ed them .
Shown a hunting knife he was
wearing in a sheath on his belt
the night he returned to the
hou~. Cundiff demonstrated
for the iury' the unsewn edges
of the sheath and how In a
.struggle fQr the · k,nlfe, one
could have been cut by the
knife.
Cunditf -identified a piece of

pipe which he had picked up
outside before entering the
house and said ·that he had
roiled the pipe under a piece of
furniture when Mrs. Cundiff
and Harden made a joke of his

hav ing it.
·
The
defendant, , under
questioning by Sheets, pointed

out thot a ,gun cabinet full of
guns .-•• dose by.Jhe Cundift

'

-------

-

him," Harden said.

..... ·-· - ···-,
.. _.. , .
school.
"
Mrs. Cundiff spoke of one of
her children and how he had
helped her keep something
hidden from the defendant .
There was a 'discussion of two
of her children preceding an
outburst of profanity by Mrs .
Cundiff when she apparenty

They disc·ussed " how in the
hell" Mrs . Cundiff caul~ stand

fu_rniture while

11\,111 1; -

and located Jhe machine under
the restaurant. The set had ear
phones so that he could not only
record but could hear at the
same time, he told the court .
Cund iff said, working in his
spare time, he 'completed the ·
installation on· Aug . 26 . .
He told the j·ury the first
recordings were of a poor
quality and that the first
conversations recorded had a
great deal ot · static in them.
However, he said by Aug .. 28,
the day before Harden was
killed, he ,had the recQr~ing
machine working so that
recordings
were of
the
fi"eqvency
of. · a · normal
telephone conversation .
Cundiff said that he started
recording about 4 p.m . on
Tuesday , Aug. 28, and knew he
was getting a recording of a
long conversation between his
wife and Harden . He listened
from t i me to time with the
earphones but went on about
his work ·at the lj:~i _ke and did not
play the whole tape before
starting to his job at Nitro, W.
Va ., on 't he railroad.
·
·
Attorneys Agree
Before
the
recording
machine was readied to play in
court. Judge John C. Bacon
announced that the tape was
being permitted through an
agreement among the . af.
torneys but that portions were

, • ., ;:,,

..._,_llfUIII

, ::OU~~I;"'I&lt;;;U

too the use of ·taiL
· " It's a G---damned shame.
we can't live," Harden said.
They referred to the need fa
" something" at the Cundiff
driveway for Cundiff when he

came home .

"We need a contract ~n

'

"7"

.................. --~

-~

... -

_ .. _ . .

In
(:ross
examination,
ProsecUtor Fultz questioned
Laudermilt if he had ever
"kil led for hire?". Getting a

I

-----

JEWELRY STORE

ARE YOU SPENDING TOO MUCH
FOR YOUR INSURANCE?
YOU CAN BE
ARE YOU A

Dress-A-Doll*is
.· a happiness thing.

CALL NOW FOR THE MOST COMPETITIVE
HOMEOWN'ERS AND AUTOMOBILE RATES IN TOWN

L~UT

8ROG• ..

li:CN~ 1ti!OtNUI

59~

box of 5

.

Dolls must be
returned by
November 19

107 Sycamore St., Pom•roy, 0.
PH. H2.J130

Whole Kernel
cr':am Style .

STALEY'S

~APLE

j

•

Rc · coLA

5

cans
for

24oz.

.,,. ,.

TO PERMIT AGRICULTURAL.I.AND TO BE VAJ••
UEil FOR TAXATION IN ACCORDANCE WITH ITS
AGRICULTURAL USE.

''

(Propos«! by Rtsolution of thE" GenE-ral As9embl7 of Ohio)

•

Take •
to

EFFEl'TI.\'f: IJATE o\:'\ll REPEAL

the

polls
with

~

you •

.

·-

Paid Political AdvE:-tisement by M eigs .County Farm 'Bureau Federation

'

&lt;l warded. Don't worry about sewinfl
skills. Your doll will find a home in tlw
Mill S oi a child on Christmas day·. and.
be loved .
·
.
You make Drj&gt;Ss-A-Do\1• a happiness
thing. Thank you.

Coca~Cola

69¢

•'S FAVORITf
.·

Big 32 oz. bots.

qt.

c

bots.

Golden

Ripe

10¢Jb.
------~--

See How Much You Save
With Mark VCoupons
MAXWELL HoUSE·COFP'EE.

REGULAR
DRIP ELEC. PERK

2lb. can $1 79
1

WITH THIS COUPON
uffer expires

FAIRMONT

.

VALl/ABLf. COUPON

J

32 II. oz. ~1 ql.)

11·24·73

REGULAR RETAIL

2.19

.

gal.

AT

POTATOES

pak
'
l

•

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN

YOU BUY A. 10 OZ. JAR OF

Iada at

NORTY STAR

DRUMSTICKS

49~

oy
MARK V
STI1RE

11-3-73

I

1.09

0000
ONLV

2% 'MlLK

KING SIZE

ONLY

1

MARK· V.

·-

I

BANANAS

tlturnable Bottle

SCOT LAD
FRENCH FRIES

Stebbins and Associates, lnr

· ·
.
• Member of Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is ()pen 9 a.m.to 7 p.m. (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum
Depositor .

'

.

l-Ib.
pkg.

@Copyrig ht 1973 by Richard

POMEROY, OHIO

.

. GRAPES

1h gallon

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings CO.

If :rduptL·d. t h i,:-; :tnwnrluwn t ~ hall t ake effed
.h nu: u·y I. l ~l'i-1 :l rul .the &lt;' \i :-ti rrg ;-;cdiPn :-;hall IJe
rcp, ·;r)t-d fru m .. :. tri'h clll•dil c date .

69¢
TOMATOES .......... :..
2 lb

RED RIPE
RED

$}00

OCEAN PERCH

I

.

bch.

:

ICE CREAM

l' ltoi'OSF.H CO~STITl"TIO~· AI. A:"t1ESD~ENT

·ttAbfM~h

..

CARROTS

WITH 13.00 OR MORE PURCHASE

Seal test

Vote Yes on ISSUE 1
1

=

.

GOLDEN

count

·
SYRUP. •••••••••••b~~.
...

He Ip _Save
It
.

NO

.CEL

16 oz.

ongs to

=

29e
ERY ················~····

LARGE

PAK

FROZEN FOODS ••• DAIRY BUYS

Le amendecl
exclu si \·ely to
to be \·ahred for
ils current value for
and to allow recove ry of
rl.rr.,-,,ncc i n the clollar amount
ng from a Ynluation
on anolher u:-:. e?

8,!1 00

·

'

YELLOW CORN ••••••••

ide II of ·

APPLES

cans

JOAN OF ARC

Wt• tw&lt;&gt;d yuur luo&gt;lp to bring happiness
to IWt'cly childrt&gt;n this Christmas. Come
in now- supply oi dolls is I i m-it eel- and
pick up a free dolL Design and sew an
ouliit ior it, then return it to us. It will
lw displayed in our 'lobby with all the
Dn•ss-A-Do\1 dolls. Prizes' will lw

•2.88

3 oz.

lr-..,;.;.,.;......;__.;..;..;._______________________'1

ew

carton

.ROME BEAUTY

IUU.G \,\jU

THURSDAY ONLY

JOLLI- LOLLI

4

VII'IWIIIII6

39~

8 oz. jar

KRISPY

.

Reuter Insurance Agency
-~ -

\lUI Uiti \II CGIII.:;I

.

pkgs.

NOW!
.

HAPPY HARRY

CIERALC REUTER

---· --o-

REG. 49c EA. ARCHWAY

Enter our Dress-A-Doll Contest

,. I

,_...

2 89¢
COOKIES ••••••••••••••
CRACKERS •• ~ •••••••••••• i~J~ 39¢
PAPLER TOWELS •••••• 3~~~sbo$1 OO
.
p
ICE .Po. S. •• , ~ •• •••••••.!:x. •• 69¢
89¢
POTTED MEAT •••••••• 4

struck her toe on a piece of
talking to

-····
•

69~

doz.

Court St., Pomeroy

.

COFFEE

AT·

MARK V STORE .

10 OZ. JAR ONLY

$109

WRMCOUI'ON

__O!_!!:~U!,O~Pl!f~l!! •1frt•EMJ!S.ll-16-73o=--:--=-.

.

...

•

.;

�•

7 - The Daily Sentmei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. Oct 30, 1973
&amp;-The Da1ly Sentmei , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Oct 30, t973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
.1anted To Do

WANT ADS
INF ORMATION
DEADLINES

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

5 PM Day Befor e P ubllc at ron
Monda y Oeadlme 9 a m
Can celt at ron Corre c t iOnS

wilt be acce pted un1119 am tor
Day o t Pu b llc af ron
REGULATIONS
The Pu b lrshe r reser-ves the
r tght to edr t or re 1ect anv ads
deeme d obt e ctton a l
The
pv blt Sher w ill not be respon
Stb le tor more than one In

correct .nserttoo
RATES
For Want Ad Service

5 cents per Word one lnsertton
Mm tmum Charge Sl oo
'"

c ent s

per

word

consecu l tve mserttons

thret:

26 cents per word suo; con

secutrve tnse.rf tons

25 Per cent D rs c ount on pcud
ads and ads pa rd wtlhtn 10

days

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 for 50 word m m
tmum Ea ch add rtronal word

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

HOUSEWORK wanted
992 7562

- - -- - - - - - - - - - S16fS
1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU
~oar gold t rnlsh spotless clean rntenor V 8 engrne
automat1 c power steenng rad ro A honey of a buy

i119S
·1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
4 door V 8 automatr c power s teering radro good trres
blue ftnrsh s potless lntenor
1970 DODGE POLAR A
SII9S
4 door factory arr
automat rc transmrsslon power
steenng &amp; brakes good whrte wall t1res whrte trnrsh
vmyl roof ra dro heavy duty sus pensron

Auto Sales
1968 MERCURY Cvclo ne VB
automat ic
390
engme
ssoo Call 7112 3-422
10 30 5tc

--------------1967 INTERNATIONAL Scout
aoo 4 wheel dn ve pos1t 1ve
tract1on , good shape
773 5250 Mason

992 7009

Acres, Sutton
Larry Joe Queen, Myrta
Queen to Earl F Ingels , Jr ,
Dale E Shultz, Roy E Dav1s ,
Lot, Middleport
EliZab eth
Howell
to
Elizabe th Howell, Edward
Templeron , Lot, Syracuse
Florence Evelyn Goldsberry,
W1lham Glenn Goldsberry to
Robert E Rommes, Joyce A
R ommes, Parcels, Bedford
Frank Cleland, Delores M
Cleland to Laura Etta Cornwell ,
Charles
Edward
Wildermuth, Lots 33 and 34,
Weldon 's Add , Racme
Karl E Fisher, dec to Julie
Kautz , Cert for ~ tran s ,

Pomeroy
Trusrees of Property of Penn
Central Trans Co to H L
Whobrey, Parcels, SaliSbury
Geoo_ge Cremeans , Audrey
Cremeans to Edsel E Hart,
Roger Hart , Parcels, Orange
Robert L Heron, Trusree, to
Earl W
Cleek, Parcels,
Lebanon
John Q R1ce, dec to Merle
E Rtce , Edna Anderson, Aff
for trans , Middleport
Edna Anderson to George
Anders on , Aff for trans ,
Mtddleport
Franklm Real Estate Co to
Second Argyl e Associates,
6 908 Acre, Columbia
Franklm R eal Estate Co to
Second Argyle Assoc1ates,
Columb•a

TO MEET THURSDAY
The Kyger Creek Athletic
Boosrers Club wtll meet at 7 30
p m Thursday at the h1gh
school Films of the Kyger
Creek-Alexander and Kyger
Creek-Symmes Valley games
w1ll be shown Boosrers will
also fmali'r.e plans for the
annual football banquet All
parents and boosrers are urged
ro at rend
PARTY PLANNED
LONG BOTTOM
A
Halloween party will be held in
tl)e basement of the Long
Bottom Umte&lt;( MethodiSt
Churc h this evemng from 6 30
to730pm

w a 1r stereo tape dec k w1th
FM radtO
Fenton slo tted
wheels 2 800 m des Call 992
7020 or 99 2 5488
102B6tp

Wanted To Buy

Notice

IN memory of Da lton A
Grover s b 1rthday today
State Fa 1m Insurance Compa m e'&gt;
Oc tob er 30 1973
There was a guy so swee t as WOULD the woman dnvmg the
anyone wou ld want to meet
tru c k or her lady passenger
He had a cheen e,.sm 1le and he lp
who h 1! my wh rte Ford LTD
tor everyone yoo d want to
and tumped the curb on
know
Sunday October 28 at 12 15 at
He worked h1s l1fe away w1thout
th e Jones Boys please call and
a selfiSh day
make arranQements tor
G1v 1ng word ily goods to others
repa.r I have your license
that he cou ld have used along
number call by Thursday or 1
th e way
w111 turn th is matter ov e r to
He 1sn t only m1 ss ed by us h s
the po11 ce ca 11 992 2789
fam ily but &lt;;~ II who ever knew
10 30 3tc
h•m
Happy B1 rthday 1n Heaven KOSCOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
Daddy
WIGS Many spec1als durmg
Sadly m 1ssed by wife
th e month of Oct Phon e
My r tl e children and grand
Helen J ane Brown 992 511 3
children
10 2 H e
10 30 lt c
FABRIC SALE 8 1ggest little
IN MEMORY of my late
shop 1n the area All kn 1ts 1n
husband
Chester
A
shop on sa le one week on ly
Donohew I cannot say and 1
Monday Octob er 29 thr u Sa t
will not say that he 1S dead he
Nov 3 All f1rst qualify
1S lUS t away W1th a chee r y
polyester double kn1 ts up to
s m lie and a wave of the hand
$7 98 values gomg at $3 29
He has wandered 1n to an
noth.ng htgher and a larg e
unk n own land And let t us
selec t1 on at $2 98 Must clear
dream ng how ve r y 1a1r It
stock to make roorn for new
need s mu s t be s1 nce he l1nger s
s h pment Come and get em
ther e 1 thlllk ot h1m still as
wh1l e they last
Carlma
th e same f say he 1S not dea d
Fabr1cs on Route 7 one halt
he IS lUSt away HIS Wife Ruth
mile north of Chester Oh10 at
Donohew
Henr y Hunter res1dence
10 30 ltc
Onve a l1 tt1 e save a lot
10 2B 3t c

· Dor othy E
Harden to
Lawrence E Blake, Audrey
Blake, 100 Acre Lot 286, 122 40

10 30 3tp

-------------1973 PLY MOUTH DUSTER 340

A

Transfers

10 30 6tc

667 3652

IN MEM ORY of mother 3
PUREBRED
Sale
West
years ago
Vlrgm,a Pol le d Here ford
True was her her heart Her
Assoc ,aflon will hotel annual
a c11ons were k1nd
FALL
Sale November 9th at
Her eye was a pattern To those
6 30 p m
Jackson County
left beh1nd
Fa trgrounds
near
Co t
A wonderfu l mother
In a
tageville Sellmg 10 bulls and
garden of rest
31 he1 fers For mtor ma11on
Its !rue what they say
God
wnte Rt 2 Box 115 Spen cer
chOoses the best
W Va or c all 927 2104
HE' took. her hand we had to
10 29 5t c
part He gave her rest
Bvt broke our hearts God s
word 1S true
H1s cause 1S JUS! Dear Lord we
leave her Ill your trust
ltllfl fill • •
In Memory of Pear t Denney St-,: 0·h1"
by daughters and grand
Child ren
10 30 ltp

Property

10 30 Jtp

-------------1965 IMP ALA Chevrole t Phone

Adverttsement
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Da II y
B 30 a m to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

Meigs

Phone

-------------1961J COUGAR 302 3 speed Call

per

In Memory

10 30 3tc

WILL do paper hanc;png and
pa 1ntlng Call Arthur Musser
7.s 2 522J
10 21 lOtp

3c

BLIND A DS
Add t t tona t 25c Charge

Phone

For Sale

LOT S of chrysanthemums tor
sale t 1e ld grown We only
have one color - yellow 10
bunches for SS We have some
out m full bloom some 1ust
budd ing Reynolds Flower
Shop Mason w va cau 77l
5147
9 26 tiC
G"RocERY~ buS J"I1;5$fo 75aR Bulldmg for $ale or tea se
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m tor appo.ntment
3 20 lfc
GUNS buy sale trade Have
new Remington 1100 s 87 s
Ith acafull37 choke
s All 1No
n 12
'gauge
w1th
secqnds
have handguns all kmds 1
have a tot of m1sc 1tems to
trade and will trade for
almost anythtng Been same
toc at 1on 2 1 years Fifes
M1ddleport back of Speed
Queen Laundry Mat
10 28 Stc
~------------

UPH OLSTER your own fur
n1ture we have all the s up
you
w1ll
need
pl tes
Upholstery Fabr~cs a very
large se lec t1on of nylons
velvets Her cu ton v111yls - 111
cotton pnnts also remnant'!&gt;
Foam for c ush1ons and
padding Burlap den1ms
c ambr iC foam glu e Zippers
s pn ngs and c llps chipboards
legs sewmg thr ead da cron
tacks webbmg welt cord
cotton sw1vel bases and all
other supplieS you will need
New furn1tur e at low low
pr 1ces Pomeroy Recovery
622 E Mam 992 755-4
10 5 30tc

WANTED f for
aucteon
househol d good s Tools most 1968 CHEVELLE 55 396
anyth1no of value Will bMY or
Automatic transm iSSIOn P S
sell on commission Will "'haul
&amp;
P B new t ~res and new
Call 99 2 3354 or 992 2792
exhaust system New battery
Hayman s
7 25 tfc
Con ta ct Robert Bu c k 992 1965 BELAIR Chevrolet Wdl
3833
a lso trade for truck topper
OLD furn1ture oak tab les,
1D256tc
Call 247 2196
c loc ks tee boxes brass beds
10 26 6t c
d1shes
or
complete
hOUSeholdS Wr1te M 0
REFRIGERATOR for sale
Miller Rt 4, Pomero y Oh io
Phone 843 2846
~
'J. BEDROOM total ly electriC
ca ll 992 6271
10 26 !l1C
5 13 tfc
trailer furn ,shed on 3 acres of
land
near
Dexter
1n
Harnsonvllle Phone 742 3744
Save Up to 40 Pet
Calt after 4 p m
10 24 12tp
On Fuel BillS

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

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

for Rent

--------------Help Wanted

LADY TO help c are with elderly
lady to l1ve 1n or stay by the
day Phone 992 5585
10 29 3tc

ROOMS by the week .. S18 up
Me igs Inn , Pomeroy
7 12 tfc

· EXPERIENCED

ASK US ABOUT

Radiato

WOOD TRUSSES

.Service
Frnm the laroest Truck or
Bulld oz..er Radiator to the
~mauest
Heate r Core
1
Nathan Btgg s.
Rad•ator Specialist

On Most Amel'tca!\ Cars

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
~~=======::o::m::e::r::•::Y~

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

lfOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Open 8 Ttl S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Ma1n, Pomeroy , 0

MATE~IALS

p

Ph YY2 2174

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Builtto Your '$pees.
Delivered to Job Site

773 5554

CO
Muon, W V•

-,----,::----'------t
Spee~ahst

Gene's
Body Shop

S·T·R·E·T-C-H

Wheel
Alignment

YOUR BUILDING
D-0-L-L-A-R
With Skilled
Craftsmanship

II Must
Be R1ght
orwew111
If Right

Ph . 992-5271
L1ncoln H1ll Pomeroy, 0

Pa1nt1ng A Spectalty
Area 's Most
Reasonable Pnces

All work guaranteed
'

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION
Rooftno,

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

For Free Esttmate

Porch

Ph. 742-6273
MOBILE home repatr Elec
tr1 c al plumbmg and heatmg
Phone 992 5858
7 15 tf c

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

AUTO TRIM
992-2839

OPFICE SUPPLIES

Ca- Road 5

and

Stop In and See
Floor D1~la't':
OPEN for busmess Mr Clean
Body Sh op and Detail Serv 1c e
BOB W Main Street Porn eroy
Oh 10
10 30 7tc

Bradbury

COMPLETE
INTERIOR
REPAIR

FURNITURE

EXCAVATING Dozers large
an d small
Backhoes and
loaders on track and tires
Dump tru ck - Lo bov s~r
v1ce Se pt1c tank&amp; Ins ta lled
George (~Ill ) Pull ins phone
992 2-478 or 992 7402
2 9 tfc

Smart
d ecorator des1gn
PRIVATE meet1ng room for
wa ln u t gratned or r1 cti
LADY to help care w1th elder ly
any organ,zat1on, phone 992
fr u dwood
v1nyl clad
lady live In or by the da y
3915
-----------~-Phone 992 5585
ca binets are handsomel y
TU NE UP S PECIA L Get ready
3 11 tfc
10 30 3tc
for w~nter save money
h1ghl 1ghted
wtth
gold
spec 1al s tarts Oc t 31 to No v ~ - ------------1973 MOBILE Home for rent In
anod1zed alum mum to blend
17 Roberts Garage Horton SE WING MACHINES Repair
country No children Call be
RELIABLE lady to live Ill home
w1th the fme st furn1 s hmgs .
Str ee t Ma s on W va Phone
w th elderly couple Ass 1st 1n
tween 4 p m and 9 p m 742
serv1 c e all makes 992 228-4
1 ()04) 773 542 1
l1ght housekeeping some
3821
2 BEDROOMhou se Jyea rsold
A Sue For Every Home .
The FabriC Sh op Pomeroy
COOking and C(lre of Invalid
10
_.._
26 tf c
carpet1ng b1g k1tchen w1th
10 30 Olp
Authorized S111ger Sales and
PriCes Start At S210
husband 1 day and 1 n1ght off
lots of ca binets lf• acre of
Serv1 ce We Sha rpen SCISSOrS
per week. Call 992 5293
9 ... _
POMEROY
ground Ract"ne Ohio Call FOR FREE esi1mates on
3 AND :( ROOM furniShed and
3 29 ffc
~ Jack w Carsey Mgr
10 28 tfc
949 4998
unfurnished
apartments
alummum Siding
Stor m
9 12 tf c
Phone 992 5434
!---------·~h·~·~·~·~·~·2~-:2~1~··~_j
Doors and Windows
car DOZER and back hoe work
LOCAL co mpany has lm
412ttc
,
ports Marquees and Radmg
ponds and septi C tanlts d1t
med1ate openmg for an ex
ELECTROLUX Sweeper de luxe
Phon e
Ch arles
L isle
chmg servic e top sod fil l
YOU
CAN
still
beat
the
penenced telephone Installer HOME 1n Rutland Referen ce
model Comp lete w 1th a ll
Syracuse Oh 1o Carl Jacob
d1rt
l1mestone
B&amp; K
skyro c ket1ng cost of new
and repa1rman Must be able
~;leanmg attachments and
requ1red Phone 742 6161
Safes Representa• lve V V
Escavat1ng Phone 992 5367 or
con
s
truction
with
th
1
s
lovely
to trouble shoot w1thout
uses
paper
bags
Sl1ghtly
used
10 30 6tp
Johnson and Son Inc
992 3861
older home bemg offered for
su p e rv1S 10n Knowledge of
but cleans and looks like new
9 1 tfc
6 22 tfc
s
ale
by
owner
1n
sche matiCS and work1ng
Will se ll for S3 7 25 cash or
--=--------2
BEDROOM
upsta1rs
fur
Pomeroy
~ecently
re
electr~cal pr1nts essenteal
terms ava il able Ph one 992
C BRADFOR,O Auct1oneer
~EADY MI X
CONCRETE
n1shed apartment moden S75
modeled the home has 3
Excellent wages and good
29B4
Comp lete Serv ice
del1vered r1ght to your
per
month
NO
pets
Call
bedrooms
bath
large
tam
lly
frmge benefitS Se nd bnet
10
30
6tc
Phon e 949 382 1
pro1ect Fast and easy Free
Robert H1ll RaCine 949 3811
sfyle k1tch en and a separate
resume af work exper1ence
Ra c me Oh10
10
25
9tp
est 1mates Phone 99 2 328.4
d1n1ng
or
tam
dy
roo
m
New
and educat•on to Box 729 s 111
CLOSE OUT on new Ztg Zag
Cr 1tt Bradford
Goegle1n Ready M1)( Co •I
a 1um1n um S1dmg ex ter 1or
care of The Dally Sentmel
Sew1ng Ma c h Illes For sew1ng
5
1 tfc
Middleport Ohio
out
s1
d
e
entrance
to
w
1th
Pomeroy Oh10 457 69
stretch fab f iCS buttonholes
basement A se ll ng pnce of
6 30 tfc
10 28 Stc
fancy de s ,gn s etc Pa 1nt
EXCAVATING
dozer
.
loader
$15
000
mcludes
comple1e
Slightly blemished Choice of
and backhoe work
septiC
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
turn1shmgs tor th 1s horne
CASH pa1d for all mekes and
carry1ng case or sewmg
tanks ' nstalled dump trucks REA SONABLE rates Ph 446
Owner wlll he lp f1nan ce Call
EXPERIENCED machln1st for
models of mobde homes
stand $49 80 cash or terms
and to boys for h1re w111 haul
593 5667 (A then s) Shown by
4782 Gallipo lis John Russell ,
tool and dye repair com
Phone area code 614 423 9531
ava ilab le Phone 992 2984
fill
d ir t top soli l1mestone
appomtmenf
only
owner and Operator
I
4
13
tfc
pet1t1ve wages good frmges
10 30 6tc
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
10 14 30tc
s 11 trc
Apply RobbinS Myers
Bob
Jeffers day Phone 992 7009
McCormiCk Road GallipoliS
used wr inger washers
STEWART
Co~~ravan TWO
n1ght
phone 99 2 J525 or 992 l:LNA end Wh 1te Sew1ng
Oh iO BoiC 502 45631 Write or
Phone 992 2094 Pomeroy
Housetra11er Call 949 3868
5232
IN NEED of a VACUUM
Machines
Service on All
call \c ollect) 446 4012
Home
&amp;
Auto
10 26 Stc
2 11 ttc
CLEANER and a hom e work
makes Reasonab'e rates '
10 26 7tc
10
30
3tc
shop all built 1nto one? For
The Se w1ng Center M1d
O Pt::N
Roge r Hysell s
free demonstratiOn ca ll 992
dleport Ohio
NEED a mature housek.eeper ' ' \ - - , - - - - - - - - - - , - 196B C HE V ROLET, power
7020 or 992 5488
Garage near Crossroa ds on
1116ttc
Write H E Stau cher Box 114
steermg power brakes a 1r
A1r Cond•honeri
10 28 61p
St Rt 124 all mechan1 ca)
Portland
c ond 1t1onmg 1970 14ft JFK
work 1n c lud1ng automat c G&amp;EAPPU~~R~~;P hone
10 24 6tp
Awnmgs
cub c amper also K•mball
HY SELL &amp; BAILEY Garage
transm
1SS 1ons Monda y thru
at the shop 992 3802 or 949
p1ano 11~e new cond1t10n Call
Underpmmng
Sat
B
30
a
m to 6 p m Phone
4254
sale at Harry Ba il eys 1126 E
Athens 593 7390
991. 5682 garage or 992 7121
Man Street 4 house s above BRUSH HOGS 4XS ft phone
10 24 30tp
10 30 3tc
992 5858
res1dence
wat e r works
Pomeroy
Lomplete mob•le home
7 15 tfc serv1ce Wednesday Thursday and
10 28 26tc o •oELL- -w--HEEL- Ailg,:;-ment
plus gtgant1c
1969 HONDA CL 350 good
locl!lted at Crossroads R t 124
Fn day
cond1t10n SJ2 5 Phone 949
dtsplay of molf;1le homes
nqw back to work Complete
10 28 3tc
SEPTIC
TANK
S
AROBIC
3261
alway s ava1lable at
front end servICe tune up and
SEWAGE
SYSTE
MS
TUPPERS
PLAINS
FOR
10305tc
brake
serv ice
Wheels
CLEANED
REPAIRED
A TIRED FATHER - The
balanced electronically All
MILLER
S
ANITATION
MILLER
perfect sduat1on for a
work guaranteed Reuonable
THIS WEEK onJy 20 percent off
STEWART OHIO PH 662
GRAI N dri ll Bryan Harr 1s
rates Phone 742 3232
on all upholstery fabric and
3035
famtlyman A 3 bedroom 1
Reedsville Oh10 667 3652
2 18 tfc
unfiniShed turn1ture chests
ft"OBILE
HOMES
10 4 tfc
bath
Ranch
type
located
on
1
10 30 3tc
corner cabi nets ntghtstands
acre on a dead end street
"Di:AO SlOC K
Will remove RON SHEPARD Fl oor Wal l
desks deacon s bench Boston
1220 Washmgton Blvd
WANTED old upnghtP~nos and be 1nformed ot the tunc
at a reasonab le charge Call
Remodeling Ceram1c t il e
All
Electric
Nice
kttchen
for
rockers
and
Captam
s
cha~rs
Any cond1t on pay111g $10 t1ons of your governm en t are
f .423 7511
BELPRE, 0
245 5514
baths Box 280 Rutland 742
Pomeroy
Recovery
622
East
mom
Easy
to
dust
hardwood
each Wnte g1ve d ' re cflons embo d ied 111 pu blic not1ces In
a 23 90tc.
3664
Ma1n Street Pomeroy Phone
to W1tten P1an o Company that se lf government ch arges
floors
Garage
and -~~
6 26 tfc
992
7554
BOIC 1B8 SardiS OhiO 43946
S EPTIC
TANK S cleaned
Breezeway All this for
10
28
6tc
all
CitiZens
to
be
1nformed
10 26 6tp th s newspaper urges every
Modern San1 flll 10 n 992 3954o r HARRISON S TV serv1ce and
119 SOD 00 About $4,000 00
992 7349
to read and !!.tudy these
KENNELS
of
Calhoun
Toy
se rv1 ce ca lls Phone 992 2522
STEREO RADIO am fm 8
down
NO 1 Co pper 65 c rad1ators not iCes we strongly adv1se
10 23 tfc
pupptes
S60
to
$95
poodle
2 9 tfc
tra
c
k
tape
comblnatlon
tour
30c brass 2Sc batlenes 90c those c1 t1zens seek.1ng furtherr
POMEROY - JUST OUT
S1amese klftens 1 $15 Phone
speaker
sound
system
clea n dry Ginseng roots S57
OF TOWN - I 36 Acres 4 FOR your new house contacT
nformaflon to exerc )se the1r
256 6247
balance Is $114 44 Use our
lb yellow r oot $5 ma y apple r1ght
R oush
Construct 1011
of access to public
large bedrooms bath some
10
7
30tc
budget
terms
Call
992
3965
60c M A Hall Reedsville
Sy
ra
cuse
Oh 10 Phone 992
. ;c
records
and
publ
iC
meet111gs
10 28 6tc
Your Favonte Country
paneling
tile
and
carpeting
Phone 378 6249
5039
small
9 23 tf c ;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;, AKC poodle pupp1es
Mus1c Stars V1s11 On
No energy problem here as
10 17 14tc
m1n1ature black or wh1te 1971 FORO half ton p1ckup ,
you
have
a
good
coal
fur
CO RNER cupboards
wall
shotsandwormed S75 Phone
13 500 m1les 1966 Ford 7 x 10
AUTOMOBILE ~.:::anc:been"
cupboards c hests old guns
PUBLIC NOTICE
Coolv1lle, 667 6214
nace 1 mile to Elem Jl/ 2
dump fa 1r concesston stand
c an ce lled?
Lost
your
any condlt 1on Also blue
On November 12 1973 m
10 30 12tp
at Me ,gs Athens Jackson
mile to H1 School $9,500 00
operator s flcen!t'e Call 992
decorated stoneware Wr 1te accordan c e W1lh
Chapter - - - - - - - - - - - -- v ille Fa1r Phone even1ngs
RUTLAND WANT TO
7428
.
P 0 Box 44 Martmsburg
15150114RevlsedCodeof0hiO AKC REGISTERED female
992 3954 or see John Tucker
•
61Stfc;
RETIRE' - 2 bedrooms,
Ohio 43935 or call 1 484 4440 the Ohto Soli and Water Con
lnsh setter pupp1es 7 weeks
Hysell Run
after 7 p m
servat1on CommiSSIOn Will
old Papers ready to go $75
10 28 6tc
bath , natural ga s furnace ,
WILL tnm or cut trees and
B a 90tc· cause an electiOn to be held at
Make excellent pets Phone
large block garage and
Salisbury Elementary Schoof at
992 5072
Shrubbery Also c lean out
workshop ( almost new)
e1ect1ng two
10 29 3tc
ba se ments aft1cs etc Cal{
Monday thru Friday
)0 BUSHEL ot new c orn 7 30 p m
949 J221 or 742 4441
s upervisors to fill the eiCplfmg - - - - - - - - - - -- - Storm doors &amp; windows ,
delivered Jo hn Houdashe lt
10 1030tc
On
three year terms of Thereon POODLE Groommg No ap 6 ROOMS and bath 1n town,
Mmersvt Jie Oh10
garden
plot
recently
po1ntment necessary ss May
10283tp Johnson and Roy Miller
$11000 Call 992 3975 or 992
remodeled JUST SB,SOO 00
Nom 111ees to fill the expiring
stay w1th dog Call Coolville
McCO ; ; - ;UCTIO;-;ERV-;-CE ·
2571
-- ~-------- - - SYRACUSE
- 2 YEARS
terms are Thereon Johnson ot
667 3915
9 2B tfc
For a real auct 1on call lhe
Letart TownShiP Roy Miller of
10 25 6tp
OLD - 3 bedrooms, Bath,
real McCoy
l 0
Ma c
Chester Township Thomas - - - - - - - - - - - - - - McCoy
Chester OhiO
Utlltty
room.
lovely
k1tchen.
Mob ile Homes for sale
The iSS ot Sutton Townsh•P and
------------2~ t!c
M_•d_d_te-'p-o_rt_
- P_om_e_,ro~y--1
cabmets range , dmmg area
12X60 GARDNER mobile hQm &amp; Robert Mattox of Columb 1a GERMAN Shepherd pupptes for
for sale on rented 101 111 t6wnstitP ~,. Nominations wrll be sale Call 992 5907
all electric
Carport &amp;
10 28 3tp
Pomeroy tw.o bedroom s all accepted 1rom the floor at -the
Storage
Lot
100xl00
Hard
elec triC w1th 2'!X 10 E-xpando t1me of election or by; petlt1on - - - -- - - - - -- - - ·;, cpl B f, ,lii'l d '),
wood
floors
some
carpetmg
black. ch1huahua
Central
a1r
c arp.et:' subm1tted one week pnor to SMALL
H1 ol\ ,,
male Phone 992 3904
All
drapes go
About
thro ughou t Plumbed fo ri elect1on conta 11110 g 25 Ian
10 28 6t c
I 1 "1 ~-~~(·( hdll l( ')tt ('( I
washer and d ryer also do wners names Only Ian
$4,000 00 down
downers and occup1ers are - - - -- - - - - - - - - carport
metal bu1ld 1ng
Pl!lllProy , Oh1o !5769
WE
HAVE
A
NICE
porch and underp.nn1ng W!ll eiiQ ible to vote
SELECTION
OF
se ll w1fh or w1thout furn1ture
Me,gs Soil and Water Con
Near
NOW AVAILABLE
Pn ced to r QUICk sale Phon e serva t 1on
PROPERTIES. DROP IN
Otstr1ct APPROXIMATELY20acresof 2 ACRES PLUS 992 7451
Pomeroy 1ust off Rovtes 7 and
Box 432
land eiCcellent burld1ng s1te
HENRY E CLELAND
10 30 6tc
Pomeroy Oh10 45769 Call 742 5223
33 NEW LISTING
BROKER
( 10J 12, 30, 2tc
10 21 :,J.Otp RT 33 - One acre, 6 room
992-2259
house, and fra1ler spot Only
If
no
answer
992-2568
1973 ZIG ZAG sewing mach me $5 000 00
NOTICE OF
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Th1S
~ machme
darns
em
APPOINTMENT
7 room
bro1ders
overcasts and OVER I ACRE Steers Chmce 42 50-43 90
No 10,059
'
monograms
all
w1thout
at
house
bath
and
1
bedroom
Good to chmce 42-42 50
Estate of H c Day Deceased
tachments Pay balance of rental
'
Notice 1s hereby geven thet
Tlo1s Week's Specral
$41
50 or pay $6 a month Call
Standard 38-40 75, Hetfers
Fred W Crow Ill whose Post
BUILbiNG LOT Out of
992
5331
Chmce42-43 25, Good to chotce , Off1ce Address IS Pomeroy
Water
ava1lable
10 21 tfc town
10 has been duly appointed as
40 75-41 75, Standard 34 50- Oh
$2 000 00
Adm iniStrator de bon 1s non w1th
FOR TRADE - 2 bedroom
37 50, Cows
Commercia( the Will Anne~Ced of the Estate
H C Day late of Mergs
FOR
SALE
home. bath, gas furnace , or
35 75-37 60 , Utthty 31-35 , of
County Ohio deceased
$15,000 00
Canner cutrers , 24-29 75 Bulls
Dated th 1s 12th day of October
•
I ACRE PLUS - 2 bedroom
1973
New
l4
cu
ft
Hot'pcunt
Butc her Bulls 42 25-down
.
home,
bath, good F A gas
Frost Free Refrtgerator.
'
Stocker Bulls 38 - 46 50
Mannmg D Webster
furnace
$11 ,500 00
avocado
Judge of the
Stocker and Feeder Cattle
tOO
ACRES
- Wild land , old
- New Magic Chef 30" Elec
Probate Court
buildings
All
mmerals $150 00
Steer calves, 50-62 50, Hetfer
Me1gS County OhiO
Range, avocado
11
0)
16
23
30
3tc
1
per
acre
ca lves, 41-52 50, Yearhng
New Early AmE"'"ican
GROCERY And llv1ng
· Ltving Room Sutte
sreers 38 75-47, Holsrem steers
quarters
Lock
,
stoG:k and
Entire Lot, $600
NOTICE OF
50 50 down , Veal calves 69 50
APPOINTMENT
barrel
(Dealer's Cost)
down , Baby calves 55-122 50
Citie No 21051
2 FAMILY HOUSE On
Or
Sold Separately
' Estate of R11s1v R•y Fraley
6 cyl , auto , P S, 2 lone
Lambs 3!40
corner
level
lot
$13,500
DO
Deceased
paint r.ad1o, w s w t1res
2 BEDROOMS - Gas furnace
Hogs 200-230 43 25 , 230-240
Not1ce 1S hereby olven that
CALL
and bath Out $4 000 00
43
' Carolyn Fraley Of Route 4,
Po merpy Oh io has been duly
Sows
L1ght sows, 37 50, appointed Admrn1stratr1x of the
STAR' kills rats Qu1ckly WE HAVE 19 LOTS, 3 FARMS
estate
of
Rusty
Ray
Fraley,
sure 21!2 lbs $1 69 Ebersbach S BUSINESS PROPERTIES
Heavy sows, 38 90, L1ght deceJsed late of Route 4,
Hdwe
Sugar Run M1lls AND OVER 30 HOUSES FOR
boars, 35, Butcher Boars, 35
Pomeroy Metos County Oh10
Pickens Hdwe, Mason
SALE COME IN AND LETS
Cred• tors are requ1red to file
tO 9 30tp
the ir claims w 1 t~ said flduc 1ary
PRACTICE CANCELLED
W1th111 four months
"You'll Like Our Qual1tr,
Dated fh1S 12th dav of October
Way of Do1ng Business '
Rehearsals for the annual 1973
~
GMAC FINANCING
muSical of the B1g Bend
m.sl~2.
Pomeroy
HENMAN GRATE
Mann1ng D Webster
Mmstrel AssOCiation thiS week
Open
Evenings
'T11'
00
5592
M,r,SON, ~-VA.
Probate Judge
have been cancelled un tt l.
T•IS
P
M.
•
of said County
.......
{10 ) 16 23 30 3tc
Thursday mg~t at 6 30 p m
~----...._

Real Estate for 5ale

____________

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

Mobile Homes for Sale

WIN AT BRIDGE

Returning lead takes
NORTH
• tO 6 3
:

-----------

'J+ to
K

t•

'

.

THE RALPH
EMERY SHOW

STEREO

I

sor.

3 Cheat,

prear
range
( 3 wds )
4 The Jones

ener's
phrase
(2 wds )

13. - Bede
14. Grant a
clatm

boy

5 Tiresome
6 LX W -

to
15 Thus
(Lat )
16. Romes
- Veneto
17 V1tahty
18 Hire

'7 Relig10us
school
( abbr )
8 Decetve
( 4 wda )
9 Perfume
10 Reserva

( 2 wds •)
28 Fust

rate

21. Branch

Yesterday's An1wer
16 Jnvahd
29. ChriS
19. Gnaw
of
20. Mam
tenms
artery
30 "l Pagh23 Italian ICe
acc1"
cream
herotne
specialty
32 EleZ4 French
phant's
ctty
ear
Z5 Slanted
35 Ram
26 SwiSS
36 Peru ·
house
v1an
style
ctty

of
math
( abbr J
Z2 Formerly

ZS. We~rm g
shoes

24. Mamtoba
lndtan
25 Hastened

26 Enemy
of

Carthage

27 Henry of

JOurnalism
28. Celest1al
Caty 11

an occa
SIOR

34 Entrance
way
36 Angered
37 Withstand

38 Twme

I LORBI ~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

I I Dl
tjAP[~ I J
PAZ10~
1

! (J

Is

Now an-ance the circled lettero

to rorm the surpriae answer, as

(Annn:r1 tomorrow)

!

work

it:

CRYPTOQUOTES

1~-=~=·=--==~~~·~I[XXIIIIJ
Ye•terd•r'•

to

One letter Simply stands for another In th1s sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are different

~::;=~=========:::==-~·~uuest.ed by the above cartoon.

Jumble• WAGER

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

ITLAW

COMPIL

SOOTHE

An•wer; What a l1fe on the ocean ll!UVe I&amp;-"5WILI.''

BJ

BK

X

KSMP

AZXMXAJPM,
QPRJK
- D A

XK

BN

YSAZ

KBDU
VW S
XK

WN

BYTMWLPQ

FBCP

TXVBVD

DPJJBUD

YWUPV.

FBAZJPURPMD

Yesterday's Crypt&lt;&gt;quote· ONE MAN IS NO MORE THAN
ANOTHER IF HE DOES NO MORE THAN ANOTHERCERVANTES
"(© 1973 Kll)g Features Synd1cat.e, Inc)

92

I.5.

3+

3.

By Oswald &amp; James J~coby

IT'S ALL RIGHT 10
TELL HER , DEAR
SHE'~ ONE OF'

® WHAT'5 GOIN 'ON &gt;YOU
ALL l..OOK UKE.1HE CAT
1HAT &amp;WALlOWED THE:

~OO'RE A REA!. RIOT Of I.At:.:.HS,]

IHAH

1HEFAMikYI

lth.-.t CANARY!

I/JIN 001l1T '[)l)
'=0 IX»Jilln
TH~ f\05PITAL.
~ t.CC!&gt;et-l
1\jl; a?!,T.; q.\

1\tt; WH~~t:HAIR.;!

Then he paused to count
tncks It looked as 1f South
had been dealt seven to e1ght
clubs and the three good
hearts m dunlmy made 11.
East and West needed two
qu1ck tncks to save the game.
Could they be m spades'
Not hkely at all West had
made a vulnerable overcall
on a su•t headed by lUngqueen plus nothmg better
lhan the mne He surely held
at least f1ve spades
After that thought East led
back h1s three of d1amonds
and West cashed two diamond tncks to set the contract

ALLEY OOP

(NEWSPAPER ENT!! HPRISE ASSN )

"

••

•

The btddmg has been
North East
West

30
South
I+

Pass
Pass
Pass

3+

1"
3'
49

'

Pass
Pass
Pass

,3NT

You South, hold
• A2,5+ AQJ87.AKJ65
What do you do now.,

A-Pass

MASON FURNITURE

__ ___________ _

Unacramble these four Jumbles,
one Jetter to each square, to
form four ordmary words.

H1s f1rst thought was to

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

m

DOWN

1 Shore
2. - rubber

11 Wtse
about
12 Threat

31 Former
boxer,
Lee 32. Thruh
33. Brmkof

return his partner 's su1t

..

•2195

taptr

5 Breed of
dog

EAST
.J7 5
'A7542
+Q763

went up wtth the ace South
followed w1th his jack and 11
was up to East to ead

BLACK &amp;
WHIT£ TV

992-7777

4&amp;. Brazlltan

chest

DICK TRACY

~;;:;;;rr--m

to the correct dec1S1on and

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

•

can Identify wtth, and the early ratmgs would seem to bear them
out
But w1th so many police,detective-lawyer sertes around this
year, surely there must be a place for a change of pace such as
thiS series I hope 11 makes 11 - w1thout an mdestructible Joe
ManniX or an Infallible Perry Mason

39 Tyrant

who never returns 1t, but you

PH. 882·2148
NEW HAVEN, W. VA.

NOVA 2 DR.

Ll'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

won' t do nearly as well as the
player who uses some JUdgment m the matter
South won the ftrst tnck
w 1th his ace of spades, led a
trump to dummy's ace and
returned the nme of hearts
Thts gave East qUite a
problem Could South be vmd
of hearts' Fmally East came

Allied Block &amp; Supply, Inc.

70 CHEV.

the Clock 13 Know Your Anhques.20 Pol1t1cal Talk 15
8 00 - Sonny &amp; Cher a, 10 Bob and Carol and Ted and AI tee 6
13 Adam 12 3, 4 15 When Witches Hovered Near 20 33
8 30 - Tenafl y 3 4 15 Mov1e Guess Who s Sleepmg 1n My
Bed 6 13
9 00 ~ Cannon a 10 Sesson 20 33
9 30 - Woman 20 Wa shmgton Debates 33
10 00 - News 20 Owen Marshall6 13 Kotak a 10 Lov e Story 3
4 15
10 30 - Mountam Scene 33
11 00 - New s3 4 6,810 13 15 Janak l33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Dt c k Cavett 6 Movtes Who Slew
The Gtrl Who Knew Too
Aunt1e Roo? 8 )Seconds 10
Mu c h ' 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 D1 ck Ca vett 13
200 - News4
'1 30 - News 13

have an ever-present "hero" or continwng character the viewers

ACROSS

1 Anhque

will do better than the man

4:30 TO 5:30

ZENITH
COLOR TV

marked change from the foolishness and sorcery of the
precedmg hour
The cops look and act pretty much like cops Tbey aren 'I
mdestruct•ble, like Joe Mannix, nor are they infallible, like
Perry Mason They sweat, bleed, lose thell' tempers, exchange
bad jokes, and pretty much act like human bemgs
The settings are marvelous, underplayed and unspectacular
A pohce station looks like a pollee station, not-too-clean, notvery--attractive, and stripped down to the bare bureaucratic
essentwls
A different story runs each week, and I genumely enjoyed
last week's entry, about the slow personal1ty changes and
ult1111ate destruction of a cop who knew he had rerrnmal cancer,
but was hidmg the fact from his long-tune partner It wasn't
overdone, but the unpact was there, nonetheless
Thts ser1es can't possibly come up w1th plots that good every
week, and actors that are so completely accepted (Claude Akins
and Paul Burke were very, very good) But it can pass on a
couple of cllche-'ndden clinkers, tf only they'll throw m an occastonal fme story such as the cancer-riddled cop It bad tis
flaws, but it still managed to be far above most of the " drama"
on TV today
The critics say the sertes can't survtve because 1t doesn't

by THOMAS JOSEPH

If you always return the
your partner has led you

CONCRETE BLOCK

~

"Pollee Story,'' and tt's a

+++
Dear Honest
Your honesty may either lose you a frtendshtp or create a

'

SUit

ci_ _

P.O. BOX 652

tO 9

Pass Pass
Pass
0 nmg Jead - •K

WMPO-fM
STEREO. 92.l

for Sale

lS

MHAM
Don't be so darn mce ' This gll'l belittles because you let her
get away With 11. G1ve as good as you get, and ooll her you 'll keep
right on bemg honest about her bad pomts - afrer all, she's
taught you how 1 - SUE

It?

.KQ87642
East West vulnerable
Wes t North
East South

Real Estate for Sale

TEAFORD

R1gtlt behind "The MagiCian"

I've got thiS fnend who drwes me bananas, but she's betrer
than the next best person around, so don 't rell me to lose her.
She thinks she IS the grearest, m figure, brams and beauty
We both take llle same dress siZe, but if we try on the same 1U!m,
It 's a utomatically "too small" for me and "too big" for her My
Slze-12 frtend thinks she IS thmner than my stze-5even Sister I
She says she once lost 20 pounds m five days, playmg gu-ls'
football Twenty poWlds, my left clav1cle I When I try to change
thesubJectshe JUst starts boasting about something else, and she
expects me to listen m perfect awe She's an only child and gets
whaoover she wants
I spramed my leg and had to walk on crutches, but she mforrned me there was notliing wrong With me Then she broke her
toe, and went around on crutches all over the neighborhood,
trymg to get p1ty
She lives m a fantasy world, and maybe tl's better that way
because she' s sure satisfied With herself, but why does she need
to brmg everyone else down •
We 've been frtends for e~ght years, her family ts great to me,
and she would be okay 1f she didn't brag and bebttle so much
What can !do• - MORE HONEST ABOUT MYSELF

SOUTH (Q l

---------

..=::....-::::=..------------

thought

group of wnters out of a hat, or even the workshop Consequently, the SCI'lpls are pedestr•an - and some of the illustons
pulled by Bill Bixby make me expect to see htgh comedy, mstead
of high drama It's got as many giiill1llcks as " Get Smart," the
old pnvare-eye spool that starred Don Adams - but lliiS one ISil't
bemg played for laughs Maybe 11 should be
Actually, 1t's not altogelller unpleasant to watch BIXby
workmg hiS wiZB!'dry as the world 's greatest mag1c1an saves
damsels m distress, fights crune, and generally proves himself a
very mce person But alrer several weeks of thiS, I have a feeling
that It's gomg to wear very, very thm
ThiS IS the kind of ser1es that would seem more at home m the
c nce-a-month rotatmg slot of a mm•-ser~es, like McCloud or
Columbo and that sort 11 would g1ve a change of pace and a
chance to develop stronge r story bnes As 11 stands, f see little
hope for tis survival

Rap

.9 .A .3

Your R1ght to Know

Pets for Sale

''TheMaglctan,'' sad to say, hasn't been able to puU a decent

Our Advice· Roast the Boaster

30

WEST
.KQ9642
,66 3
+ AJ5

PUBLIC NOTICES

,,,,zen

~ 4Q

a

• A J 10 ,

_______ _

Wanted To Buy

NBC this fall has a Tllesday mght block of detective shows,
more or less, stackmg them throughout the 8-11 prune-time
hours I've already looked at "Chase," a very routine cops--androbbers opus, and dlSIIIissed 11 Now let's VIeW the other two
"The Magiclllll" featured Bill BIXby as the world's most
celebrated mag1c1an, but he 's not the jype to Sit around sawmg
gu-ls m half or climbing ropes m his spare lime
Instead, he abgns hunself With the forces of mceness and
fights the forces of badness He has a staff of sorts, w1th the
obligatory older adVISOr and the equally-()bligatory black a1de,
but the real star of llle supportmg cast IB hiB workshop, as he
calls 1t, where all his trtcks, gurumcks and paraphernalia are
manufactured and stored It's qutre a pla ce

Room6
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullw lnkle 13 New Zoo Revue6
B 00 - Capt Kangaroos 10 NewZooRevue l3 Ses ameSt 33
La ss1e 6
B 30 - Dlck Van Dyke 13 Huck and Yog16
8 55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul DIICOn 4 Phd Donahu e 15 , Frtendly Juncfton 10
A M 3 Brady Bunch 6, Abbott and Costello 8 Cove r to Cover
33 Movte Elephant Walk 13
9 30 - ToTelltheTruthJ Secret StormS Mi cha e ls&amp;Co 6
9 55 - Chuck Wh 1te Reports 10
10 00 - Dmah Shore 3,15 Jokers Wild 10 8
10 30 - Battle 3 4 TS $10 000 Pyram id 8 10 Mtk e Douglass 6
11 00 - GambltB 10 Passwor d\ 3 Wlzardof0dds3 415
11 30 - HollywoodSquares3 4 15 Love of LileS 10 Bowlmg6
Brady Bunc h 13 Sesame Street 33
11 55 - CBS News 8 Dan lmel s WorldlO
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4
News 13 News 10 8
12 30 - Se i:~r c h for Tomorrow 8, 10 Sp lit Second 6 3 W s 3 15
12 45 - Electrtc Co mpany 33
12 55 - News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All M y Children 6 13 Not for Women Onl y 15
Concen1ratlon 8 What s My L1ne 10
30 - Three on a Matc h 3, 4 15 As the World Turn s 8 10 , ABC
Afternoon Playbreak 6 13
1 45 - Cove r to Cover 33
2 00 - Day sot Our Ltves 3 4 15 Gu tdmg L1ght B, 10
2 30 - Doctors 3 4 15 Edge of N 1ght 8, 10
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 Genera1 Hospital 6, 13 Pr1ce Is
R1ght B 10 RFO 20
3 30 - Return of Peyton Place3 15 One Ltfeto Llve13 Secret
Storm 10 Ph1l Donahue 4 Match Game 73 8 Flmtstones 6
Handlul of As hes 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame Sf 33 Love
Amencan Style 13 Merv Gnftm 4 Speedracer 6 I Love
Lu cy a Sesame Street 20 Movie A Ti c klish Affair 10
4 30 - HazelS Gilligan s Island 13 Green Acres 3 Jeopardy .4
I Love Lucy 6 Bonanza 15
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Griffm 4 Andy
Gnfl1tha I DreamofJeannleiJ MISSIOn lmposslble6
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Beverly Hillbillies 8
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Trails West 15
5 ss - E:arl Ntghhngale 15
6 00 - News 3 4 8, 10 15 6 ABC News 13 Sesame Street 20
Personality and Behav1oral Development 33
6 30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Hogans Heroes 13
7 00 - News 10 What' s My Lme a Truth or Conseq 3 6 Beat
the Clock 4 Anythmg You Can Do 13 Elec Co 20 Know
Your Schools 33 American L1fe Style 15
7 30 .,....,. Ef•sode Act1on 33 On the Money 4 To Tell the Truth 6
Sale o the Century a Poll ee Surgeon 3 The Judge 10 Beat

RUSSELL'S

992 -2094
606 E. Mam PomerO)'

BY PAUL CRABTREE

00 15 20 25 30 6
6 45 - Corncob Reports 3 F armt1me 10
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8, 10 Fllntstones 13 Romper

PH 992 -6675

Generati9n Rap
By Hdt•n and Sut- Hottel

WEDNESDAY , OCT 31 , 1973
Sunnse Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Urban League 10
Farm Report 13
Paul Harvey 13
Columbu s Today4 B1bleAnswers8, TheStory13 News

6
6
6
4
6

D. L.
MOORE &amp; SONS

B4 JOOaiiY
Sat
t , Ill (' R: H Rawlings Sons
Bulld mg
Middleport , 0
99?: 210 1

&amp; THINGS

T.!!,ESOAY.LOCT 30, 1973
6 OOABCNews 3 4 8 10 IS, 6 Sesame Street 10 Sportscope 33
News 13
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 IS ABC News 6 CBS News 8, 10
Hogans Heroes 13 Your Future Is Now 33
7 00 - What' s My Li ne 8 Elec Co 20 Beat lhe Clock 4 News
lO . Trulh or Coosequenc;;es 3 6 Dusty s Tra11 13 Marco
S portllte 33, Bobby Bowden 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 RFD 20 New Pnce Is R1ghl8, 10.
Ne-w Dat1ng Game 3 World of Su r v1va1 4 Beat the Clock 13
Wacky World of Jonathan Winter s 15 let's Travel33
8 ooP - IIMal udeM8 10, Temperatures R1s1ng 6 13 Chase 3 .4 , 15
ro e m
uslc 20, 33
8 30 - Movle Ordeal"6 13 Hawaii F1ve 08 10
9 00 - Mag1 c1an 3, 4 15
9 30 - Sh,:.f1 8, 10 One of a Kmd 33 Sonny Terry and Browme
McGhee 10
10 00 - Pollee- Story 3 4 15 New s 20 Marcus Welby MD 6 , 13
Our Street 33
lO 30 - Woman 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6, 8, 10, 13 15 Janakl33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4, 15 Di ck Cavett 6 Mov ie T1ck
Ttck
Ttck" 8 The Last Voy.!ge ' 10 ' The Upper Hand
13
I 00 ~ Tomorrow 3 4 Dick Cavet1 13
2 00 - News 4
2 30 - News 13

'EXPERT ..
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

PRe FABRICATEO

Spout•ng ,
Repatr , Com
plete
Home
Remodeling

MONOGRAM
OIL HEATERS

Television Log

Business Services

STEREO Rad10 t om
bmat on w•th 8 tl'"ack built m,
take over paymf'nts ot n 55
per monlh or pay SlOt SO Call
99'} 533}
10 11 ft c

IY 73

better fnend There are two kmds of braggarts the tactlessly
" convmced," who 1eally beheve what they say, and the jealooaly
msecure who brmg others down to build themselves up The first
would respond best to Sue's method The second' This type
usually latches on to "mce" people who don't ftght back If your
friends IS one of these , don't be surprised when she drops you for
a worm who doesn't turn - HELEN
•
NOTE FROM SUE • But 11 won 'I be much of a loss now will

M'l DADBURN
NOSE HAS BEeN
ITCHIN'TH'
LIVELONG

DA"'"

iHAT'S A
SHORE SIGN
'IO'RE FIXIN'
TO GIT A
VISITOR ,

PPMJ

Your partner Is

showing • bad hand with a lot of
hearts.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of btddmg four hearts
your partner has b1d four clubs
over your three notrump What do

you do now'

-

~----~-~~----------~----------------------~------~~~--~------------------~----~~---'---'--~

I

I

�•

7 - The Daily Sentmei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. Oct 30, 1973
&amp;-The Da1ly Sentmei , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Oct 30, t973

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
.1anted To Do

WANT ADS
INF ORMATION
DEADLINES

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

5 PM Day Befor e P ubllc at ron
Monda y Oeadlme 9 a m
Can celt at ron Corre c t iOnS

wilt be acce pted un1119 am tor
Day o t Pu b llc af ron
REGULATIONS
The Pu b lrshe r reser-ves the
r tght to edr t or re 1ect anv ads
deeme d obt e ctton a l
The
pv blt Sher w ill not be respon
Stb le tor more than one In

correct .nserttoo
RATES
For Want Ad Service

5 cents per Word one lnsertton
Mm tmum Charge Sl oo
'"

c ent s

per

word

consecu l tve mserttons

thret:

26 cents per word suo; con

secutrve tnse.rf tons

25 Per cent D rs c ount on pcud
ads and ads pa rd wtlhtn 10

days

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 00 for 50 word m m
tmum Ea ch add rtronal word

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

HOUSEWORK wanted
992 7562

- - -- - - - - - - - - - S16fS
1970 CHEVELLE MALIBU
~oar gold t rnlsh spotless clean rntenor V 8 engrne
automat1 c power steenng rad ro A honey of a buy

i119S
·1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
4 door V 8 automatr c power s teering radro good trres
blue ftnrsh s potless lntenor
1970 DODGE POLAR A
SII9S
4 door factory arr
automat rc transmrsslon power
steenng &amp; brakes good whrte wall t1res whrte trnrsh
vmyl roof ra dro heavy duty sus pensron

Auto Sales
1968 MERCURY Cvclo ne VB
automat ic
390
engme
ssoo Call 7112 3-422
10 30 5tc

--------------1967 INTERNATIONAL Scout
aoo 4 wheel dn ve pos1t 1ve
tract1on , good shape
773 5250 Mason

992 7009

Acres, Sutton
Larry Joe Queen, Myrta
Queen to Earl F Ingels , Jr ,
Dale E Shultz, Roy E Dav1s ,
Lot, Middleport
EliZab eth
Howell
to
Elizabe th Howell, Edward
Templeron , Lot, Syracuse
Florence Evelyn Goldsberry,
W1lham Glenn Goldsberry to
Robert E Rommes, Joyce A
R ommes, Parcels, Bedford
Frank Cleland, Delores M
Cleland to Laura Etta Cornwell ,
Charles
Edward
Wildermuth, Lots 33 and 34,
Weldon 's Add , Racme
Karl E Fisher, dec to Julie
Kautz , Cert for ~ tran s ,

Pomeroy
Trusrees of Property of Penn
Central Trans Co to H L
Whobrey, Parcels, SaliSbury
Geoo_ge Cremeans , Audrey
Cremeans to Edsel E Hart,
Roger Hart , Parcels, Orange
Robert L Heron, Trusree, to
Earl W
Cleek, Parcels,
Lebanon
John Q R1ce, dec to Merle
E Rtce , Edna Anderson, Aff
for trans , Middleport
Edna Anderson to George
Anders on , Aff for trans ,
Mtddleport
Franklm Real Estate Co to
Second Argyl e Associates,
6 908 Acre, Columbia
Franklm R eal Estate Co to
Second Argyle Assoc1ates,
Columb•a

TO MEET THURSDAY
The Kyger Creek Athletic
Boosrers Club wtll meet at 7 30
p m Thursday at the h1gh
school Films of the Kyger
Creek-Alexander and Kyger
Creek-Symmes Valley games
w1ll be shown Boosrers will
also fmali'r.e plans for the
annual football banquet All
parents and boosrers are urged
ro at rend
PARTY PLANNED
LONG BOTTOM
A
Halloween party will be held in
tl)e basement of the Long
Bottom Umte&lt;( MethodiSt
Churc h this evemng from 6 30
to730pm

w a 1r stereo tape dec k w1th
FM radtO
Fenton slo tted
wheels 2 800 m des Call 992
7020 or 99 2 5488
102B6tp

Wanted To Buy

Notice

IN memory of Da lton A
Grover s b 1rthday today
State Fa 1m Insurance Compa m e'&gt;
Oc tob er 30 1973
There was a guy so swee t as WOULD the woman dnvmg the
anyone wou ld want to meet
tru c k or her lady passenger
He had a cheen e,.sm 1le and he lp
who h 1! my wh rte Ford LTD
tor everyone yoo d want to
and tumped the curb on
know
Sunday October 28 at 12 15 at
He worked h1s l1fe away w1thout
th e Jones Boys please call and
a selfiSh day
make arranQements tor
G1v 1ng word ily goods to others
repa.r I have your license
that he cou ld have used along
number call by Thursday or 1
th e way
w111 turn th is matter ov e r to
He 1sn t only m1 ss ed by us h s
the po11 ce ca 11 992 2789
fam ily but &lt;;~ II who ever knew
10 30 3tc
h•m
Happy B1 rthday 1n Heaven KOSCOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
Daddy
WIGS Many spec1als durmg
Sadly m 1ssed by wife
th e month of Oct Phon e
My r tl e children and grand
Helen J ane Brown 992 511 3
children
10 2 H e
10 30 lt c
FABRIC SALE 8 1ggest little
IN MEMORY of my late
shop 1n the area All kn 1ts 1n
husband
Chester
A
shop on sa le one week on ly
Donohew I cannot say and 1
Monday Octob er 29 thr u Sa t
will not say that he 1S dead he
Nov 3 All f1rst qualify
1S lUS t away W1th a chee r y
polyester double kn1 ts up to
s m lie and a wave of the hand
$7 98 values gomg at $3 29
He has wandered 1n to an
noth.ng htgher and a larg e
unk n own land And let t us
selec t1 on at $2 98 Must clear
dream ng how ve r y 1a1r It
stock to make roorn for new
need s mu s t be s1 nce he l1nger s
s h pment Come and get em
ther e 1 thlllk ot h1m still as
wh1l e they last
Carlma
th e same f say he 1S not dea d
Fabr1cs on Route 7 one halt
he IS lUSt away HIS Wife Ruth
mile north of Chester Oh10 at
Donohew
Henr y Hunter res1dence
10 30 ltc
Onve a l1 tt1 e save a lot
10 2B 3t c

· Dor othy E
Harden to
Lawrence E Blake, Audrey
Blake, 100 Acre Lot 286, 122 40

10 30 3tp

-------------1973 PLY MOUTH DUSTER 340

A

Transfers

10 30 6tc

667 3652

IN MEM ORY of mother 3
PUREBRED
Sale
West
years ago
Vlrgm,a Pol le d Here ford
True was her her heart Her
Assoc ,aflon will hotel annual
a c11ons were k1nd
FALL
Sale November 9th at
Her eye was a pattern To those
6 30 p m
Jackson County
left beh1nd
Fa trgrounds
near
Co t
A wonderfu l mother
In a
tageville Sellmg 10 bulls and
garden of rest
31 he1 fers For mtor ma11on
Its !rue what they say
God
wnte Rt 2 Box 115 Spen cer
chOoses the best
W Va or c all 927 2104
HE' took. her hand we had to
10 29 5t c
part He gave her rest
Bvt broke our hearts God s
word 1S true
H1s cause 1S JUS! Dear Lord we
leave her Ill your trust
ltllfl fill • •
In Memory of Pear t Denney St-,: 0·h1"
by daughters and grand
Child ren
10 30 ltp

Property

10 30 Jtp

-------------1965 IMP ALA Chevrole t Phone

Adverttsement
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m Da II y
B 30 a m to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

Meigs

Phone

-------------1961J COUGAR 302 3 speed Call

per

In Memory

10 30 3tc

WILL do paper hanc;png and
pa 1ntlng Call Arthur Musser
7.s 2 522J
10 21 lOtp

3c

BLIND A DS
Add t t tona t 25c Charge

Phone

For Sale

LOT S of chrysanthemums tor
sale t 1e ld grown We only
have one color - yellow 10
bunches for SS We have some
out m full bloom some 1ust
budd ing Reynolds Flower
Shop Mason w va cau 77l
5147
9 26 tiC
G"RocERY~ buS J"I1;5$fo 75aR Bulldmg for $ale or tea se
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m tor appo.ntment
3 20 lfc
GUNS buy sale trade Have
new Remington 1100 s 87 s
Ith acafull37 choke
s All 1No
n 12
'gauge
w1th
secqnds
have handguns all kmds 1
have a tot of m1sc 1tems to
trade and will trade for
almost anythtng Been same
toc at 1on 2 1 years Fifes
M1ddleport back of Speed
Queen Laundry Mat
10 28 Stc
~------------

UPH OLSTER your own fur
n1ture we have all the s up
you
w1ll
need
pl tes
Upholstery Fabr~cs a very
large se lec t1on of nylons
velvets Her cu ton v111yls - 111
cotton pnnts also remnant'!&gt;
Foam for c ush1ons and
padding Burlap den1ms
c ambr iC foam glu e Zippers
s pn ngs and c llps chipboards
legs sewmg thr ead da cron
tacks webbmg welt cord
cotton sw1vel bases and all
other supplieS you will need
New furn1tur e at low low
pr 1ces Pomeroy Recovery
622 E Mam 992 755-4
10 5 30tc

WANTED f for
aucteon
househol d good s Tools most 1968 CHEVELLE 55 396
anyth1no of value Will bMY or
Automatic transm iSSIOn P S
sell on commission Will "'haul
&amp;
P B new t ~res and new
Call 99 2 3354 or 992 2792
exhaust system New battery
Hayman s
7 25 tfc
Con ta ct Robert Bu c k 992 1965 BELAIR Chevrolet Wdl
3833
a lso trade for truck topper
OLD furn1ture oak tab les,
1D256tc
Call 247 2196
c loc ks tee boxes brass beds
10 26 6t c
d1shes
or
complete
hOUSeholdS Wr1te M 0
REFRIGERATOR for sale
Miller Rt 4, Pomero y Oh io
Phone 843 2846
~
'J. BEDROOM total ly electriC
ca ll 992 6271
10 26 !l1C
5 13 tfc
trailer furn ,shed on 3 acres of
land
near
Dexter
1n
Harnsonvllle Phone 742 3744
Save Up to 40 Pet
Calt after 4 p m
10 24 12tp
On Fuel BillS

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

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

for Rent

--------------Help Wanted

LADY TO help c are with elderly
lady to l1ve 1n or stay by the
day Phone 992 5585
10 29 3tc

ROOMS by the week .. S18 up
Me igs Inn , Pomeroy
7 12 tfc

· EXPERIENCED

ASK US ABOUT

Radiato

WOOD TRUSSES

.Service
Frnm the laroest Truck or
Bulld oz..er Radiator to the
~mauest
Heate r Core
1
Nathan Btgg s.
Rad•ator Specialist

On Most Amel'tca!\ Cars

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
~~=======::o::m::e::r::•::Y~

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

lfOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Open 8 Ttl S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Ma1n, Pomeroy , 0

MATE~IALS

p

Ph YY2 2174

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Builtto Your '$pees.
Delivered to Job Site

773 5554

CO
Muon, W V•

-,----,::----'------t
Spee~ahst

Gene's
Body Shop

S·T·R·E·T-C-H

Wheel
Alignment

YOUR BUILDING
D-0-L-L-A-R
With Skilled
Craftsmanship

II Must
Be R1ght
orwew111
If Right

Ph . 992-5271
L1ncoln H1ll Pomeroy, 0

Pa1nt1ng A Spectalty
Area 's Most
Reasonable Pnces

All work guaranteed
'

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION
Rooftno,

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

For Free Esttmate

Porch

Ph. 742-6273
MOBILE home repatr Elec
tr1 c al plumbmg and heatmg
Phone 992 5858
7 15 tf c

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

AUTO TRIM
992-2839

OPFICE SUPPLIES

Ca- Road 5

and

Stop In and See
Floor D1~la't':
OPEN for busmess Mr Clean
Body Sh op and Detail Serv 1c e
BOB W Main Street Porn eroy
Oh 10
10 30 7tc

Bradbury

COMPLETE
INTERIOR
REPAIR

FURNITURE

EXCAVATING Dozers large
an d small
Backhoes and
loaders on track and tires
Dump tru ck - Lo bov s~r
v1ce Se pt1c tank&amp; Ins ta lled
George (~Ill ) Pull ins phone
992 2-478 or 992 7402
2 9 tfc

Smart
d ecorator des1gn
PRIVATE meet1ng room for
wa ln u t gratned or r1 cti
LADY to help care w1th elder ly
any organ,zat1on, phone 992
fr u dwood
v1nyl clad
lady live In or by the da y
3915
-----------~-Phone 992 5585
ca binets are handsomel y
TU NE UP S PECIA L Get ready
3 11 tfc
10 30 3tc
for w~nter save money
h1ghl 1ghted
wtth
gold
spec 1al s tarts Oc t 31 to No v ~ - ------------1973 MOBILE Home for rent In
anod1zed alum mum to blend
17 Roberts Garage Horton SE WING MACHINES Repair
country No children Call be
RELIABLE lady to live Ill home
w1th the fme st furn1 s hmgs .
Str ee t Ma s on W va Phone
w th elderly couple Ass 1st 1n
tween 4 p m and 9 p m 742
serv1 c e all makes 992 228-4
1 ()04) 773 542 1
l1ght housekeeping some
3821
2 BEDROOMhou se Jyea rsold
A Sue For Every Home .
The FabriC Sh op Pomeroy
COOking and C(lre of Invalid
10
_.._
26 tf c
carpet1ng b1g k1tchen w1th
10 30 Olp
Authorized S111ger Sales and
PriCes Start At S210
husband 1 day and 1 n1ght off
lots of ca binets lf• acre of
Serv1 ce We Sha rpen SCISSOrS
per week. Call 992 5293
9 ... _
POMEROY
ground Ract"ne Ohio Call FOR FREE esi1mates on
3 AND :( ROOM furniShed and
3 29 ffc
~ Jack w Carsey Mgr
10 28 tfc
949 4998
unfurnished
apartments
alummum Siding
Stor m
9 12 tf c
Phone 992 5434
!---------·~h·~·~·~·~·~·2~-:2~1~··~_j
Doors and Windows
car DOZER and back hoe work
LOCAL co mpany has lm
412ttc
,
ports Marquees and Radmg
ponds and septi C tanlts d1t
med1ate openmg for an ex
ELECTROLUX Sweeper de luxe
Phon e
Ch arles
L isle
chmg servic e top sod fil l
YOU
CAN
still
beat
the
penenced telephone Installer HOME 1n Rutland Referen ce
model Comp lete w 1th a ll
Syracuse Oh 1o Carl Jacob
d1rt
l1mestone
B&amp; K
skyro c ket1ng cost of new
and repa1rman Must be able
~;leanmg attachments and
requ1red Phone 742 6161
Safes Representa• lve V V
Escavat1ng Phone 992 5367 or
con
s
truction
with
th
1
s
lovely
to trouble shoot w1thout
uses
paper
bags
Sl1ghtly
used
10 30 6tp
Johnson and Son Inc
992 3861
older home bemg offered for
su p e rv1S 10n Knowledge of
but cleans and looks like new
9 1 tfc
6 22 tfc
s
ale
by
owner
1n
sche matiCS and work1ng
Will se ll for S3 7 25 cash or
--=--------2
BEDROOM
upsta1rs
fur
Pomeroy
~ecently
re
electr~cal pr1nts essenteal
terms ava il able Ph one 992
C BRADFOR,O Auct1oneer
~EADY MI X
CONCRETE
n1shed apartment moden S75
modeled the home has 3
Excellent wages and good
29B4
Comp lete Serv ice
del1vered r1ght to your
per
month
NO
pets
Call
bedrooms
bath
large
tam
lly
frmge benefitS Se nd bnet
10
30
6tc
Phon e 949 382 1
pro1ect Fast and easy Free
Robert H1ll RaCine 949 3811
sfyle k1tch en and a separate
resume af work exper1ence
Ra c me Oh10
10
25
9tp
est 1mates Phone 99 2 328.4
d1n1ng
or
tam
dy
roo
m
New
and educat•on to Box 729 s 111
CLOSE OUT on new Ztg Zag
Cr 1tt Bradford
Goegle1n Ready M1)( Co •I
a 1um1n um S1dmg ex ter 1or
care of The Dally Sentmel
Sew1ng Ma c h Illes For sew1ng
5
1 tfc
Middleport Ohio
out
s1
d
e
entrance
to
w
1th
Pomeroy Oh10 457 69
stretch fab f iCS buttonholes
basement A se ll ng pnce of
6 30 tfc
10 28 Stc
fancy de s ,gn s etc Pa 1nt
EXCAVATING
dozer
.
loader
$15
000
mcludes
comple1e
Slightly blemished Choice of
and backhoe work
septiC
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
turn1shmgs tor th 1s horne
CASH pa1d for all mekes and
carry1ng case or sewmg
tanks ' nstalled dump trucks REA SONABLE rates Ph 446
Owner wlll he lp f1nan ce Call
EXPERIENCED machln1st for
models of mobde homes
stand $49 80 cash or terms
and to boys for h1re w111 haul
593 5667 (A then s) Shown by
4782 Gallipo lis John Russell ,
tool and dye repair com
Phone area code 614 423 9531
ava ilab le Phone 992 2984
fill
d ir t top soli l1mestone
appomtmenf
only
owner and Operator
I
4
13
tfc
pet1t1ve wages good frmges
10 30 6tc
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
10 14 30tc
s 11 trc
Apply RobbinS Myers
Bob
Jeffers day Phone 992 7009
McCormiCk Road GallipoliS
used wr inger washers
STEWART
Co~~ravan TWO
n1ght
phone 99 2 J525 or 992 l:LNA end Wh 1te Sew1ng
Oh iO BoiC 502 45631 Write or
Phone 992 2094 Pomeroy
Housetra11er Call 949 3868
5232
IN NEED of a VACUUM
Machines
Service on All
call \c ollect) 446 4012
Home
&amp;
Auto
10 26 Stc
2 11 ttc
CLEANER and a hom e work
makes Reasonab'e rates '
10 26 7tc
10
30
3tc
shop all built 1nto one? For
The Se w1ng Center M1d
O Pt::N
Roge r Hysell s
free demonstratiOn ca ll 992
dleport Ohio
NEED a mature housek.eeper ' ' \ - - , - - - - - - - - - - , - 196B C HE V ROLET, power
7020 or 992 5488
Garage near Crossroa ds on
1116ttc
Write H E Stau cher Box 114
steermg power brakes a 1r
A1r Cond•honeri
10 28 61p
St Rt 124 all mechan1 ca)
Portland
c ond 1t1onmg 1970 14ft JFK
work 1n c lud1ng automat c G&amp;EAPPU~~R~~;P hone
10 24 6tp
Awnmgs
cub c amper also K•mball
HY SELL &amp; BAILEY Garage
transm
1SS 1ons Monda y thru
at the shop 992 3802 or 949
p1ano 11~e new cond1t10n Call
Underpmmng
Sat
B
30
a
m to 6 p m Phone
4254
sale at Harry Ba il eys 1126 E
Athens 593 7390
991. 5682 garage or 992 7121
Man Street 4 house s above BRUSH HOGS 4XS ft phone
10 24 30tp
10 30 3tc
992 5858
res1dence
wat e r works
Pomeroy
Lomplete mob•le home
7 15 tfc serv1ce Wednesday Thursday and
10 28 26tc o •oELL- -w--HEEL- Ailg,:;-ment
plus gtgant1c
1969 HONDA CL 350 good
locl!lted at Crossroads R t 124
Fn day
cond1t10n SJ2 5 Phone 949
dtsplay of molf;1le homes
nqw back to work Complete
10 28 3tc
SEPTIC
TANK
S
AROBIC
3261
alway s ava1lable at
front end servICe tune up and
SEWAGE
SYSTE
MS
TUPPERS
PLAINS
FOR
10305tc
brake
serv ice
Wheels
CLEANED
REPAIRED
A TIRED FATHER - The
balanced electronically All
MILLER
S
ANITATION
MILLER
perfect sduat1on for a
work guaranteed Reuonable
THIS WEEK onJy 20 percent off
STEWART OHIO PH 662
GRAI N dri ll Bryan Harr 1s
rates Phone 742 3232
on all upholstery fabric and
3035
famtlyman A 3 bedroom 1
Reedsville Oh10 667 3652
2 18 tfc
unfiniShed turn1ture chests
ft"OBILE
HOMES
10 4 tfc
bath
Ranch
type
located
on
1
10 30 3tc
corner cabi nets ntghtstands
acre on a dead end street
"Di:AO SlOC K
Will remove RON SHEPARD Fl oor Wal l
desks deacon s bench Boston
1220 Washmgton Blvd
WANTED old upnghtP~nos and be 1nformed ot the tunc
at a reasonab le charge Call
Remodeling Ceram1c t il e
All
Electric
Nice
kttchen
for
rockers
and
Captam
s
cha~rs
Any cond1t on pay111g $10 t1ons of your governm en t are
f .423 7511
BELPRE, 0
245 5514
baths Box 280 Rutland 742
Pomeroy
Recovery
622
East
mom
Easy
to
dust
hardwood
each Wnte g1ve d ' re cflons embo d ied 111 pu blic not1ces In
a 23 90tc.
3664
Ma1n Street Pomeroy Phone
to W1tten P1an o Company that se lf government ch arges
floors
Garage
and -~~
6 26 tfc
992
7554
BOIC 1B8 SardiS OhiO 43946
S EPTIC
TANK S cleaned
Breezeway All this for
10
28
6tc
all
CitiZens
to
be
1nformed
10 26 6tp th s newspaper urges every
Modern San1 flll 10 n 992 3954o r HARRISON S TV serv1ce and
119 SOD 00 About $4,000 00
992 7349
to read and !!.tudy these
KENNELS
of
Calhoun
Toy
se rv1 ce ca lls Phone 992 2522
STEREO RADIO am fm 8
down
NO 1 Co pper 65 c rad1ators not iCes we strongly adv1se
10 23 tfc
pupptes
S60
to
$95
poodle
2 9 tfc
tra
c
k
tape
comblnatlon
tour
30c brass 2Sc batlenes 90c those c1 t1zens seek.1ng furtherr
POMEROY - JUST OUT
S1amese klftens 1 $15 Phone
speaker
sound
system
clea n dry Ginseng roots S57
OF TOWN - I 36 Acres 4 FOR your new house contacT
nformaflon to exerc )se the1r
256 6247
balance Is $114 44 Use our
lb yellow r oot $5 ma y apple r1ght
R oush
Construct 1011
of access to public
large bedrooms bath some
10
7
30tc
budget
terms
Call
992
3965
60c M A Hall Reedsville
Sy
ra
cuse
Oh 10 Phone 992
. ;c
records
and
publ
iC
meet111gs
10 28 6tc
Your Favonte Country
paneling
tile
and
carpeting
Phone 378 6249
5039
small
9 23 tf c ;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;, AKC poodle pupp1es
Mus1c Stars V1s11 On
No energy problem here as
10 17 14tc
m1n1ature black or wh1te 1971 FORO half ton p1ckup ,
you
have
a
good
coal
fur
CO RNER cupboards
wall
shotsandwormed S75 Phone
13 500 m1les 1966 Ford 7 x 10
AUTOMOBILE ~.:::anc:been"
cupboards c hests old guns
PUBLIC NOTICE
Coolv1lle, 667 6214
nace 1 mile to Elem Jl/ 2
dump fa 1r concesston stand
c an ce lled?
Lost
your
any condlt 1on Also blue
On November 12 1973 m
10 30 12tp
at Me ,gs Athens Jackson
mile to H1 School $9,500 00
operator s flcen!t'e Call 992
decorated stoneware Wr 1te accordan c e W1lh
Chapter - - - - - - - - - - - -- v ille Fa1r Phone even1ngs
RUTLAND WANT TO
7428
.
P 0 Box 44 Martmsburg
15150114RevlsedCodeof0hiO AKC REGISTERED female
992 3954 or see John Tucker
•
61Stfc;
RETIRE' - 2 bedrooms,
Ohio 43935 or call 1 484 4440 the Ohto Soli and Water Con
lnsh setter pupp1es 7 weeks
Hysell Run
after 7 p m
servat1on CommiSSIOn Will
old Papers ready to go $75
10 28 6tc
bath , natural ga s furnace ,
WILL tnm or cut trees and
B a 90tc· cause an electiOn to be held at
Make excellent pets Phone
large block garage and
Salisbury Elementary Schoof at
992 5072
Shrubbery Also c lean out
workshop ( almost new)
e1ect1ng two
10 29 3tc
ba se ments aft1cs etc Cal{
Monday thru Friday
)0 BUSHEL ot new c orn 7 30 p m
949 J221 or 742 4441
s upervisors to fill the eiCplfmg - - - - - - - - - - -- - Storm doors &amp; windows ,
delivered Jo hn Houdashe lt
10 1030tc
On
three year terms of Thereon POODLE Groommg No ap 6 ROOMS and bath 1n town,
Mmersvt Jie Oh10
garden
plot
recently
po1ntment necessary ss May
10283tp Johnson and Roy Miller
$11000 Call 992 3975 or 992
remodeled JUST SB,SOO 00
Nom 111ees to fill the expiring
stay w1th dog Call Coolville
McCO ; ; - ;UCTIO;-;ERV-;-CE ·
2571
-- ~-------- - - SYRACUSE
- 2 YEARS
terms are Thereon Johnson ot
667 3915
9 2B tfc
For a real auct 1on call lhe
Letart TownShiP Roy Miller of
10 25 6tp
OLD - 3 bedrooms, Bath,
real McCoy
l 0
Ma c
Chester Township Thomas - - - - - - - - - - - - - - McCoy
Chester OhiO
Utlltty
room.
lovely
k1tchen.
Mob ile Homes for sale
The iSS ot Sutton Townsh•P and
------------2~ t!c
M_•d_d_te-'p-o_rt_
- P_om_e_,ro~y--1
cabmets range , dmmg area
12X60 GARDNER mobile hQm &amp; Robert Mattox of Columb 1a GERMAN Shepherd pupptes for
for sale on rented 101 111 t6wnstitP ~,. Nominations wrll be sale Call 992 5907
all electric
Carport &amp;
10 28 3tp
Pomeroy tw.o bedroom s all accepted 1rom the floor at -the
Storage
Lot
100xl00
Hard
elec triC w1th 2'!X 10 E-xpando t1me of election or by; petlt1on - - - -- - - - - -- - - ·;, cpl B f, ,lii'l d '),
wood
floors
some
carpetmg
black. ch1huahua
Central
a1r
c arp.et:' subm1tted one week pnor to SMALL
H1 ol\ ,,
male Phone 992 3904
All
drapes go
About
thro ughou t Plumbed fo ri elect1on conta 11110 g 25 Ian
10 28 6t c
I 1 "1 ~-~~(·( hdll l( ')tt ('( I
washer and d ryer also do wners names Only Ian
$4,000 00 down
downers and occup1ers are - - - -- - - - - - - - - carport
metal bu1ld 1ng
Pl!lllProy , Oh1o !5769
WE
HAVE
A
NICE
porch and underp.nn1ng W!ll eiiQ ible to vote
SELECTION
OF
se ll w1fh or w1thout furn1ture
Me,gs Soil and Water Con
Near
NOW AVAILABLE
Pn ced to r QUICk sale Phon e serva t 1on
PROPERTIES. DROP IN
Otstr1ct APPROXIMATELY20acresof 2 ACRES PLUS 992 7451
Pomeroy 1ust off Rovtes 7 and
Box 432
land eiCcellent burld1ng s1te
HENRY E CLELAND
10 30 6tc
Pomeroy Oh10 45769 Call 742 5223
33 NEW LISTING
BROKER
( 10J 12, 30, 2tc
10 21 :,J.Otp RT 33 - One acre, 6 room
992-2259
house, and fra1ler spot Only
If
no
answer
992-2568
1973 ZIG ZAG sewing mach me $5 000 00
NOTICE OF
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Th1S
~ machme
darns
em
APPOINTMENT
7 room
bro1ders
overcasts and OVER I ACRE Steers Chmce 42 50-43 90
No 10,059
'
monograms
all
w1thout
at
house
bath
and
1
bedroom
Good to chmce 42-42 50
Estate of H c Day Deceased
tachments Pay balance of rental
'
Notice 1s hereby geven thet
Tlo1s Week's Specral
$41
50 or pay $6 a month Call
Standard 38-40 75, Hetfers
Fred W Crow Ill whose Post
BUILbiNG LOT Out of
992
5331
Chmce42-43 25, Good to chotce , Off1ce Address IS Pomeroy
Water
ava1lable
10 21 tfc town
10 has been duly appointed as
40 75-41 75, Standard 34 50- Oh
$2 000 00
Adm iniStrator de bon 1s non w1th
FOR TRADE - 2 bedroom
37 50, Cows
Commercia( the Will Anne~Ced of the Estate
H C Day late of Mergs
FOR
SALE
home. bath, gas furnace , or
35 75-37 60 , Utthty 31-35 , of
County Ohio deceased
$15,000 00
Canner cutrers , 24-29 75 Bulls
Dated th 1s 12th day of October
•
I ACRE PLUS - 2 bedroom
1973
New
l4
cu
ft
Hot'pcunt
Butc her Bulls 42 25-down
.
home,
bath, good F A gas
Frost Free Refrtgerator.
'
Stocker Bulls 38 - 46 50
Mannmg D Webster
furnace
$11 ,500 00
avocado
Judge of the
Stocker and Feeder Cattle
tOO
ACRES
- Wild land , old
- New Magic Chef 30" Elec
Probate Court
buildings
All
mmerals $150 00
Steer calves, 50-62 50, Hetfer
Me1gS County OhiO
Range, avocado
11
0)
16
23
30
3tc
1
per
acre
ca lves, 41-52 50, Yearhng
New Early AmE"'"ican
GROCERY And llv1ng
· Ltving Room Sutte
sreers 38 75-47, Holsrem steers
quarters
Lock
,
stoG:k and
Entire Lot, $600
NOTICE OF
50 50 down , Veal calves 69 50
APPOINTMENT
barrel
(Dealer's Cost)
down , Baby calves 55-122 50
Citie No 21051
2 FAMILY HOUSE On
Or
Sold Separately
' Estate of R11s1v R•y Fraley
6 cyl , auto , P S, 2 lone
Lambs 3!40
corner
level
lot
$13,500
DO
Deceased
paint r.ad1o, w s w t1res
2 BEDROOMS - Gas furnace
Hogs 200-230 43 25 , 230-240
Not1ce 1S hereby olven that
CALL
and bath Out $4 000 00
43
' Carolyn Fraley Of Route 4,
Po merpy Oh io has been duly
Sows
L1ght sows, 37 50, appointed Admrn1stratr1x of the
STAR' kills rats Qu1ckly WE HAVE 19 LOTS, 3 FARMS
estate
of
Rusty
Ray
Fraley,
sure 21!2 lbs $1 69 Ebersbach S BUSINESS PROPERTIES
Heavy sows, 38 90, L1ght deceJsed late of Route 4,
Hdwe
Sugar Run M1lls AND OVER 30 HOUSES FOR
boars, 35, Butcher Boars, 35
Pomeroy Metos County Oh10
Pickens Hdwe, Mason
SALE COME IN AND LETS
Cred• tors are requ1red to file
tO 9 30tp
the ir claims w 1 t~ said flduc 1ary
PRACTICE CANCELLED
W1th111 four months
"You'll Like Our Qual1tr,
Dated fh1S 12th dav of October
Way of Do1ng Business '
Rehearsals for the annual 1973
~
GMAC FINANCING
muSical of the B1g Bend
m.sl~2.
Pomeroy
HENMAN GRATE
Mann1ng D Webster
Mmstrel AssOCiation thiS week
Open
Evenings
'T11'
00
5592
M,r,SON, ~-VA.
Probate Judge
have been cancelled un tt l.
T•IS
P
M.
•
of said County
.......
{10 ) 16 23 30 3tc
Thursday mg~t at 6 30 p m
~----...._

Real Estate for 5ale

____________

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

Mobile Homes for Sale

WIN AT BRIDGE

Returning lead takes
NORTH
• tO 6 3
:

-----------

'J+ to
K

t•

'

.

THE RALPH
EMERY SHOW

STEREO

I

sor.

3 Cheat,

prear
range
( 3 wds )
4 The Jones

ener's
phrase
(2 wds )

13. - Bede
14. Grant a
clatm

boy

5 Tiresome
6 LX W -

to
15 Thus
(Lat )
16. Romes
- Veneto
17 V1tahty
18 Hire

'7 Relig10us
school
( abbr )
8 Decetve
( 4 wda )
9 Perfume
10 Reserva

( 2 wds •)
28 Fust

rate

21. Branch

Yesterday's An1wer
16 Jnvahd
29. ChriS
19. Gnaw
of
20. Mam
tenms
artery
30 "l Pagh23 Italian ICe
acc1"
cream
herotne
specialty
32 EleZ4 French
phant's
ctty
ear
Z5 Slanted
35 Ram
26 SwiSS
36 Peru ·
house
v1an
style
ctty

of
math
( abbr J
Z2 Formerly

ZS. We~rm g
shoes

24. Mamtoba
lndtan
25 Hastened

26 Enemy
of

Carthage

27 Henry of

JOurnalism
28. Celest1al
Caty 11

an occa
SIOR

34 Entrance
way
36 Angered
37 Withstand

38 Twme

I LORBI ~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

I I Dl
tjAP[~ I J
PAZ10~
1

! (J

Is

Now an-ance the circled lettero

to rorm the surpriae answer, as

(Annn:r1 tomorrow)

!

work

it:

CRYPTOQUOTES

1~-=~=·=--==~~~·~I[XXIIIIJ
Ye•terd•r'•

to

One letter Simply stands for another In th1s sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are different

~::;=~=========:::==-~·~uuest.ed by the above cartoon.

Jumble• WAGER

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

ITLAW

COMPIL

SOOTHE

An•wer; What a l1fe on the ocean ll!UVe I&amp;-"5WILI.''

BJ

BK

X

KSMP

AZXMXAJPM,
QPRJK
- D A

XK

BN

YSAZ

KBDU
VW S
XK

WN

BYTMWLPQ

FBCP

TXVBVD

DPJJBUD

YWUPV.

FBAZJPURPMD

Yesterday's Crypt&lt;&gt;quote· ONE MAN IS NO MORE THAN
ANOTHER IF HE DOES NO MORE THAN ANOTHERCERVANTES
"(© 1973 Kll)g Features Synd1cat.e, Inc)

92

I.5.

3+

3.

By Oswald &amp; James J~coby

IT'S ALL RIGHT 10
TELL HER , DEAR
SHE'~ ONE OF'

® WHAT'5 GOIN 'ON &gt;YOU
ALL l..OOK UKE.1HE CAT
1HAT &amp;WALlOWED THE:

~OO'RE A REA!. RIOT Of I.At:.:.HS,]

IHAH

1HEFAMikYI

lth.-.t CANARY!

I/JIN 001l1T '[)l)
'=0 IX»Jilln
TH~ f\05PITAL.
~ t.CC!&gt;et-l
1\jl; a?!,T.; q.\

1\tt; WH~~t:HAIR.;!

Then he paused to count
tncks It looked as 1f South
had been dealt seven to e1ght
clubs and the three good
hearts m dunlmy made 11.
East and West needed two
qu1ck tncks to save the game.
Could they be m spades'
Not hkely at all West had
made a vulnerable overcall
on a su•t headed by lUngqueen plus nothmg better
lhan the mne He surely held
at least f1ve spades
After that thought East led
back h1s three of d1amonds
and West cashed two diamond tncks to set the contract

ALLEY OOP

(NEWSPAPER ENT!! HPRISE ASSN )

"

••

•

The btddmg has been
North East
West

30
South
I+

Pass
Pass
Pass

3+

1"
3'
49

'

Pass
Pass
Pass

,3NT

You South, hold
• A2,5+ AQJ87.AKJ65
What do you do now.,

A-Pass

MASON FURNITURE

__ ___________ _

Unacramble these four Jumbles,
one Jetter to each square, to
form four ordmary words.

H1s f1rst thought was to

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

m

DOWN

1 Shore
2. - rubber

11 Wtse
about
12 Threat

31 Former
boxer,
Lee 32. Thruh
33. Brmkof

return his partner 's su1t

..

•2195

taptr

5 Breed of
dog

EAST
.J7 5
'A7542
+Q763

went up wtth the ace South
followed w1th his jack and 11
was up to East to ead

BLACK &amp;
WHIT£ TV

992-7777

4&amp;. Brazlltan

chest

DICK TRACY

~;;:;;;rr--m

to the correct dec1S1on and

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

•

can Identify wtth, and the early ratmgs would seem to bear them
out
But w1th so many police,detective-lawyer sertes around this
year, surely there must be a place for a change of pace such as
thiS series I hope 11 makes 11 - w1thout an mdestructible Joe
ManniX or an Infallible Perry Mason

39 Tyrant

who never returns 1t, but you

PH. 882·2148
NEW HAVEN, W. VA.

NOVA 2 DR.

Ll'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

won' t do nearly as well as the
player who uses some JUdgment m the matter
South won the ftrst tnck
w 1th his ace of spades, led a
trump to dummy's ace and
returned the nme of hearts
Thts gave East qUite a
problem Could South be vmd
of hearts' Fmally East came

Allied Block &amp; Supply, Inc.

70 CHEV.

the Clock 13 Know Your Anhques.20 Pol1t1cal Talk 15
8 00 - Sonny &amp; Cher a, 10 Bob and Carol and Ted and AI tee 6
13 Adam 12 3, 4 15 When Witches Hovered Near 20 33
8 30 - Tenafl y 3 4 15 Mov1e Guess Who s Sleepmg 1n My
Bed 6 13
9 00 ~ Cannon a 10 Sesson 20 33
9 30 - Woman 20 Wa shmgton Debates 33
10 00 - News 20 Owen Marshall6 13 Kotak a 10 Lov e Story 3
4 15
10 30 - Mountam Scene 33
11 00 - New s3 4 6,810 13 15 Janak l33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Dt c k Cavett 6 Movtes Who Slew
The Gtrl Who Knew Too
Aunt1e Roo? 8 )Seconds 10
Mu c h ' 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 D1 ck Ca vett 13
200 - News4
'1 30 - News 13

have an ever-present "hero" or continwng character the viewers

ACROSS

1 Anhque

will do better than the man

4:30 TO 5:30

ZENITH
COLOR TV

marked change from the foolishness and sorcery of the
precedmg hour
The cops look and act pretty much like cops Tbey aren 'I
mdestruct•ble, like Joe Mannix, nor are they infallible, like
Perry Mason They sweat, bleed, lose thell' tempers, exchange
bad jokes, and pretty much act like human bemgs
The settings are marvelous, underplayed and unspectacular
A pohce station looks like a pollee station, not-too-clean, notvery--attractive, and stripped down to the bare bureaucratic
essentwls
A different story runs each week, and I genumely enjoyed
last week's entry, about the slow personal1ty changes and
ult1111ate destruction of a cop who knew he had rerrnmal cancer,
but was hidmg the fact from his long-tune partner It wasn't
overdone, but the unpact was there, nonetheless
Thts ser1es can't possibly come up w1th plots that good every
week, and actors that are so completely accepted (Claude Akins
and Paul Burke were very, very good) But it can pass on a
couple of cllche-'ndden clinkers, tf only they'll throw m an occastonal fme story such as the cancer-riddled cop It bad tis
flaws, but it still managed to be far above most of the " drama"
on TV today
The critics say the sertes can't survtve because 1t doesn't

by THOMAS JOSEPH

If you always return the
your partner has led you

CONCRETE BLOCK

~

"Pollee Story,'' and tt's a

+++
Dear Honest
Your honesty may either lose you a frtendshtp or create a

'

SUit

ci_ _

P.O. BOX 652

tO 9

Pass Pass
Pass
0 nmg Jead - •K

WMPO-fM
STEREO. 92.l

for Sale

lS

MHAM
Don't be so darn mce ' This gll'l belittles because you let her
get away With 11. G1ve as good as you get, and ooll her you 'll keep
right on bemg honest about her bad pomts - afrer all, she's
taught you how 1 - SUE

It?

.KQ87642
East West vulnerable
Wes t North
East South

Real Estate for Sale

TEAFORD

R1gtlt behind "The MagiCian"

I've got thiS fnend who drwes me bananas, but she's betrer
than the next best person around, so don 't rell me to lose her.
She thinks she IS the grearest, m figure, brams and beauty
We both take llle same dress siZe, but if we try on the same 1U!m,
It 's a utomatically "too small" for me and "too big" for her My
Slze-12 frtend thinks she IS thmner than my stze-5even Sister I
She says she once lost 20 pounds m five days, playmg gu-ls'
football Twenty poWlds, my left clav1cle I When I try to change
thesubJectshe JUst starts boasting about something else, and she
expects me to listen m perfect awe She's an only child and gets
whaoover she wants
I spramed my leg and had to walk on crutches, but she mforrned me there was notliing wrong With me Then she broke her
toe, and went around on crutches all over the neighborhood,
trymg to get p1ty
She lives m a fantasy world, and maybe tl's better that way
because she' s sure satisfied With herself, but why does she need
to brmg everyone else down •
We 've been frtends for e~ght years, her family ts great to me,
and she would be okay 1f she didn't brag and bebttle so much
What can !do• - MORE HONEST ABOUT MYSELF

SOUTH (Q l

---------

..=::....-::::=..------------

thought

group of wnters out of a hat, or even the workshop Consequently, the SCI'lpls are pedestr•an - and some of the illustons
pulled by Bill Bixby make me expect to see htgh comedy, mstead
of high drama It's got as many giiill1llcks as " Get Smart," the
old pnvare-eye spool that starred Don Adams - but lliiS one ISil't
bemg played for laughs Maybe 11 should be
Actually, 1t's not altogelller unpleasant to watch BIXby
workmg hiS wiZB!'dry as the world 's greatest mag1c1an saves
damsels m distress, fights crune, and generally proves himself a
very mce person But alrer several weeks of thiS, I have a feeling
that It's gomg to wear very, very thm
ThiS IS the kind of ser1es that would seem more at home m the
c nce-a-month rotatmg slot of a mm•-ser~es, like McCloud or
Columbo and that sort 11 would g1ve a change of pace and a
chance to develop stronge r story bnes As 11 stands, f see little
hope for tis survival

Rap

.9 .A .3

Your R1ght to Know

Pets for Sale

''TheMaglctan,'' sad to say, hasn't been able to puU a decent

Our Advice· Roast the Boaster

30

WEST
.KQ9642
,66 3
+ AJ5

PUBLIC NOTICES

,,,,zen

~ 4Q

a

• A J 10 ,

_______ _

Wanted To Buy

NBC this fall has a Tllesday mght block of detective shows,
more or less, stackmg them throughout the 8-11 prune-time
hours I've already looked at "Chase," a very routine cops--androbbers opus, and dlSIIIissed 11 Now let's VIeW the other two
"The Magiclllll" featured Bill BIXby as the world's most
celebrated mag1c1an, but he 's not the jype to Sit around sawmg
gu-ls m half or climbing ropes m his spare lime
Instead, he abgns hunself With the forces of mceness and
fights the forces of badness He has a staff of sorts, w1th the
obligatory older adVISOr and the equally-()bligatory black a1de,
but the real star of llle supportmg cast IB hiB workshop, as he
calls 1t, where all his trtcks, gurumcks and paraphernalia are
manufactured and stored It's qutre a pla ce

Room6
7 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullw lnkle 13 New Zoo Revue6
B 00 - Capt Kangaroos 10 NewZooRevue l3 Ses ameSt 33
La ss1e 6
B 30 - Dlck Van Dyke 13 Huck and Yog16
8 55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul DIICOn 4 Phd Donahu e 15 , Frtendly Juncfton 10
A M 3 Brady Bunch 6, Abbott and Costello 8 Cove r to Cover
33 Movte Elephant Walk 13
9 30 - ToTelltheTruthJ Secret StormS Mi cha e ls&amp;Co 6
9 55 - Chuck Wh 1te Reports 10
10 00 - Dmah Shore 3,15 Jokers Wild 10 8
10 30 - Battle 3 4 TS $10 000 Pyram id 8 10 Mtk e Douglass 6
11 00 - GambltB 10 Passwor d\ 3 Wlzardof0dds3 415
11 30 - HollywoodSquares3 4 15 Love of LileS 10 Bowlmg6
Brady Bunc h 13 Sesame Street 33
11 55 - CBS News 8 Dan lmel s WorldlO
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4
News 13 News 10 8
12 30 - Se i:~r c h for Tomorrow 8, 10 Sp lit Second 6 3 W s 3 15
12 45 - Electrtc Co mpany 33
12 55 - News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All M y Children 6 13 Not for Women Onl y 15
Concen1ratlon 8 What s My L1ne 10
30 - Three on a Matc h 3, 4 15 As the World Turn s 8 10 , ABC
Afternoon Playbreak 6 13
1 45 - Cove r to Cover 33
2 00 - Day sot Our Ltves 3 4 15 Gu tdmg L1ght B, 10
2 30 - Doctors 3 4 15 Edge of N 1ght 8, 10
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 Genera1 Hospital 6, 13 Pr1ce Is
R1ght B 10 RFO 20
3 30 - Return of Peyton Place3 15 One Ltfeto Llve13 Secret
Storm 10 Ph1l Donahue 4 Match Game 73 8 Flmtstones 6
Handlul of As hes 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame Sf 33 Love
Amencan Style 13 Merv Gnftm 4 Speedracer 6 I Love
Lu cy a Sesame Street 20 Movie A Ti c klish Affair 10
4 30 - HazelS Gilligan s Island 13 Green Acres 3 Jeopardy .4
I Love Lucy 6 Bonanza 15
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Griffm 4 Andy
Gnfl1tha I DreamofJeannleiJ MISSIOn lmposslble6
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13 Beverly Hillbillies 8
Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Trails West 15
5 ss - E:arl Ntghhngale 15
6 00 - News 3 4 8, 10 15 6 ABC News 13 Sesame Street 20
Personality and Behav1oral Development 33
6 30 - News 3 4 6 8 10 15 Hogans Heroes 13
7 00 - News 10 What' s My Lme a Truth or Conseq 3 6 Beat
the Clock 4 Anythmg You Can Do 13 Elec Co 20 Know
Your Schools 33 American L1fe Style 15
7 30 .,....,. Ef•sode Act1on 33 On the Money 4 To Tell the Truth 6
Sale o the Century a Poll ee Surgeon 3 The Judge 10 Beat

RUSSELL'S

992 -2094
606 E. Mam PomerO)'

BY PAUL CRABTREE

00 15 20 25 30 6
6 45 - Corncob Reports 3 F armt1me 10
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8, 10 Fllntstones 13 Romper

PH 992 -6675

Generati9n Rap
By Hdt•n and Sut- Hottel

WEDNESDAY , OCT 31 , 1973
Sunnse Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Urban League 10
Farm Report 13
Paul Harvey 13
Columbu s Today4 B1bleAnswers8, TheStory13 News

6
6
6
4
6

D. L.
MOORE &amp; SONS

B4 JOOaiiY
Sat
t , Ill (' R: H Rawlings Sons
Bulld mg
Middleport , 0
99?: 210 1

&amp; THINGS

T.!!,ESOAY.LOCT 30, 1973
6 OOABCNews 3 4 8 10 IS, 6 Sesame Street 10 Sportscope 33
News 13
6 30 - NBC News 3 4 IS ABC News 6 CBS News 8, 10
Hogans Heroes 13 Your Future Is Now 33
7 00 - What' s My Li ne 8 Elec Co 20 Beat lhe Clock 4 News
lO . Trulh or Coosequenc;;es 3 6 Dusty s Tra11 13 Marco
S portllte 33, Bobby Bowden 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 RFD 20 New Pnce Is R1ghl8, 10.
Ne-w Dat1ng Game 3 World of Su r v1va1 4 Beat the Clock 13
Wacky World of Jonathan Winter s 15 let's Travel33
8 ooP - IIMal udeM8 10, Temperatures R1s1ng 6 13 Chase 3 .4 , 15
ro e m
uslc 20, 33
8 30 - Movle Ordeal"6 13 Hawaii F1ve 08 10
9 00 - Mag1 c1an 3, 4 15
9 30 - Sh,:.f1 8, 10 One of a Kmd 33 Sonny Terry and Browme
McGhee 10
10 00 - Pollee- Story 3 4 15 New s 20 Marcus Welby MD 6 , 13
Our Street 33
lO 30 - Woman 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6, 8, 10, 13 15 Janakl33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4, 15 Di ck Cavett 6 Mov ie T1ck
Ttck
Ttck" 8 The Last Voy.!ge ' 10 ' The Upper Hand
13
I 00 ~ Tomorrow 3 4 Dick Cavet1 13
2 00 - News 4
2 30 - News 13

'EXPERT ..
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

PRe FABRICATEO

Spout•ng ,
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plete
Home
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Business Services

STEREO Rad10 t om
bmat on w•th 8 tl'"ack built m,
take over paymf'nts ot n 55
per monlh or pay SlOt SO Call
99'} 533}
10 11 ft c

IY 73

better fnend There are two kmds of braggarts the tactlessly
" convmced," who 1eally beheve what they say, and the jealooaly
msecure who brmg others down to build themselves up The first
would respond best to Sue's method The second' This type
usually latches on to "mce" people who don't ftght back If your
friends IS one of these , don't be surprised when she drops you for
a worm who doesn't turn - HELEN
•
NOTE FROM SUE • But 11 won 'I be much of a loss now will

M'l DADBURN
NOSE HAS BEeN
ITCHIN'TH'
LIVELONG

DA"'"

iHAT'S A
SHORE SIGN
'IO'RE FIXIN'
TO GIT A
VISITOR ,

PPMJ

Your partner Is

showing • bad hand with a lot of
hearts.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of btddmg four hearts
your partner has b1d four clubs
over your three notrump What do

you do now'

-

~----~-~~----------~----------------------~------~~~--~------------------~----~~---'---'--~

I

I

�..
8 - The Daily S.nt inel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. O&lt;·t. 3Q . 197:1

Vietnam bonus would he financed

Ritchie to
give facts

by $300 million Ohio bond issue

PT PLEASANT - William
S. Ritchie, Jr .. West V~rg mta
De partment of Highways
Commissioner , will explatn
how Mason County will benefit
from passage or the $500
million Better Roads and
Bridges Amendment at a bipartisan meeting tonight at 8
p.m . m the courtroom of the
courthouse open to the public.
A local commtttee of

business

leaders,

commtttee ,

ln

whose

purJ%&gt;se IS for the betterment of
roads and bndges in Mason
County, is composed of E .
Bartow Jones, Paul Crabtree,
Homer
Smith,
Charles
Lanham, John C. Musgrave,
Delegate Michael Shaw and
Robert Wingett.
The special Electton IS on
November 6 to vote on
Amendment No. 2.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharged - Mrs Elste

lngnck, Gallipolis; Wtlham
Jacobs,
Mason;
Odessa
Greenlee, Leon; Mary Byus,
Sheldon Htll; Doyle Keefer,

Point

Pleasant;

Harold

Adams, Gallipolis; Foster

VanSickle, Gallipolts; Mrs .
Albert Frosch, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Floyd West, Vmton; Mrs.
Jasper Austin, Point Pleasant,
and
Hobart
Rimmey,
Southstde.

What you
should know
about diamonds:

LOVER LV

1

nominee Gerald Ford 's conrirmat10n ran mto complications with the Intensified confrontation between the
White 1-iouse and Congress over the Watergate tapes.

NOW YOU KNOW
Tintoretto, one of the great
Renaissance pamters, was
named Jacopo Robust!, but
received h1s name, meamng

" little dyer," because hts
father was a dyer

A perfectly cu t d tamond
wil l re flect all the ltght
upwards l or m ax1m um
bn lltance

Gaiha County Commissioners

1

c:Art Carved
Use Our Chnstmas
LAY-AWAY PLAN

GOESSLER .

JEWELRY STORE
Court St , Pomeroy

MRS. MEINHART DIES
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart, 75,
Locust St., Pomeroy, dted this
mormng at Holzer Medical
Center. Funeral arrangements
wtll be announced by Ewmg
Funeral Home.

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Ar· House have borne frustration
chibald Cox says the White and delay."
Cox said assertions by White
House withbeld "urgently needed" evidence from h1m House Chtef of Staff Alexander
throughout his more than five Haig that only limtted documonths as special Watergate ments had been withheld from
the Watergate prosecutors
prosecutor .
Cox, testifymg Monday were "certalnly inaccurate."
"For the most part our ef·
before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, said that "on the forts were unsuccessful/' the
whole our efforts to obtain Harvard law professor and
informatiOn from the White · former U.S. solicttor general

Sheriff's department
•
•
contznues operatzons

Cutting

nme deputies,

desptte

a

resolution approved by the
Monday whtch allows funds
fotahng $1,614 94 for two weeks
for just ftve deputies, a cook,
secretary and jat1 matron .
Sheriff Saunders and the
commissjoncrs fallcd to

reach ·agreement oo the
status of nine lulltlme
deputies employed by the
sheriff's department during
a two hour session Monday
morning.
Meanwhile, Saunders wtll
contmue hts fuLl force untl1 a
legal opmion IS obtained from
Common Pleas Court Judge
Ronald R. Calhoun.
In
departmg,
Shenff
Saunders satd, "It's either nine
deputies or shut down the
department, I can't do the JOb I

All Checking
Accounts
would be alike if
all Banks were alike

Anyone whose tour of duty was cut short of the 9May
minimum by illness or injury sustained in Vietnam would receive a bonus accordmg to the number of days served.
In lieu of cash, the veterans may select an educallonal assistance bonus, good for double the amount of their cash bonus
when applied to tuition or fees at an accredited educational institution.
.
Survivors of the estimated 3,000 Ohioans killed in action m
Vietnam w1ll be eligible for an automatic $1,000 bonus, as will
designated survivors of servicemen held prisoner or missing in
action.
If a POW or MIA were to return after his family collected the
$1,000, he would be able to collect an additional $1,000 under the
terms of the proposal.
Application for a bonus would have to be made to the state by
Jan. 1, 1977.
The proposal aiso authorizes transfer of $11.4 nullion from the
Korean Conflict Compensation Fund to the Vtetnam bonus fund.

Information withheld says Cox

CONGRESSIONAL HOSTAGE? Vice·presidenliaf

Galha County Shenff James
W Saunders conbnues to
operate his department wtth

Ev e ry A rtCarved d tamond IS prec tst on cu t for
b rtllt ance whe the r 1t s
sha pe 1s ro u n d ova l ,
pea r or marqUi se

Wlder penal confmement. Anyone rece1vmg a bonus from
another state is ineligible.
Eligible veterans must have lived m Ohio for at lea•t one year
pnor to their service, and must etther have an ' honorable
discharge, be retired or still be in service.
The bonus is $10 for each month of stateside duty, $15 for each
month of sea duty or foreign serVIce outside of Vietnam, and $20
for each month of duty m Vietnam or a hostile fire pay zone.
The maxunum cash bonus 1S $500, and this amount will
automatically go to any person medically discharged or medically retired from service due to combat related dtsabtlities .

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
l'OLUMBUS (UP[) - State Issue 4 on the Nov. 6 ballot
authorizes the sale of up to $3QO million worth of bonds or notes by
the state to finance a VIetnam War era veterans~ bonus - a
mwumum $500 in cash or $1,000 educational asSistance grant for
ea ch ehgtble Ohio serVIceman.
The proposal, originated by House Speaker Pro Tempore
Vernal G. Rtffe , D-New Boston, was adopted by the legiSlature
last February following a lengthy quarrel over how to finance 1!.
Democrats at first called for a new 0.6-rmll statewide property
tax to pay off the bonds , while Republicans wanted the money to
come out of the state general fund.
Followmg approval of a state lottery, 11 was agreed there
would he enough money m the general fund to use for a bonus,
expected to cost about $270 millwn if all of Ohio's 497,000 eligtble
servicemen receive maxunum benehts
Expenence has indicated that 88 per cent of the servicemen
ehgtble for a World War II bonus applied, and 75 per cent of those
eligible for a Korean War bonus applied.
U approved, the Vtebtam War bonus would go to Ohio serVJcemen on active duty anywhere for at least 90 days between
Aug. 5, 1964, and July 1, 1973.
Also ehgible are servicemen who were on act1ve duty m the
Republic of Vietnam between ~'eb. 28, 1961 and Dec. 31, 1965, or m
a hosttle liTe pay zone after that date.

cooperation with the Poml
Plea sant • Mason Count y
Chamber of Commerc e,
requested this special meeting .

The

Merchant marme service does not count, nor does ume spent

EDITOR'S NO'fE: Thls is the second In a series of Utree dis·
patches prepared by United Press International detailing the
contents of th e four consti-tutional questions appearing on the
Nov . 6 ballot in Ohio.

was elected to do with less than
mne men . Bestdes, my
deputies should have some
cecunty. They have families
and must live too.' '
Commtsston President
Johnny Johnson concluded,
"You were elected to run your
office. We w1ll provtde funds
for your cook, key personnel
and ftve deputies, but, you
must cut back your deputies."
In ackno.,ledging that he
has overspent his budget,
Sheriff Saunders replied,
11
Nearly $5,000 was spent for
old bills left by Sheriff
Walker 1 plus unexpected
bospital bills for prisoners
during my first month in
office. There are always
numerous bills for repairs on
the three old sheriff's
cruisers."
CommissJOners
Monday
afternoon voted to pay $5,400 m
outstandmg btlls made by
Sheriff Saunders and agreed to
approprtate a sufficient
amount of money for the
operatmn of hiS offtce for the
remamdcr of the year.
Dw-ing the 'mormng sesston,
commtssioners discussed the
posstbiHlles of trading m the
three old crmsers for two new
cars. ft was the consensus that
two new cars be purchased and
then traded on newer models

when they obtam between
70,000 and 75,000 mtles.
The three old cruisers
currently have between 110,000
and 150,000 mtles each. It was
also suggested that the commission or~er two cars wtth
Jess horsepower which wtll be
mofe economic to operate.
Shenff Saunders offered to
trade one or both cars for the
fullllme employment of hiS
mne deputles but was turned
down "We must get new cars
to cut down on the large repair
bills, " saJd one comrrussioner.

New Haven's
TorT set
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Goblins, witches, ghosts and
the like wtll be roaming
commumties of Mason County
tonight when "Trick or Treat"
is observed in several Mason
County commuruties.
Among them is New Haven's
observance from 5 until 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Following Trick or
Treat a party will be held m the
New Haven Community
Buildmg at 6 p.m.
Mason held its Halloween
celebration Saturday night m
an event that started early in
the day and lasted until after
midnight with both young and
old participating.

Bow hunters

make kills
PT. PLEASANT - Two bow
hunters in Mason County have
reported deer ktlls smce the
season opened October 13.
Darrell Hoffman of Letart
bagged a seven point buck m
the Kaiser Alum mum Plant
area on the third day of this
season . Maxie Lewis of
Grandvtew Hetghts, Point
Pleasant was another lucky
hunrer ,.;ith a kill ot a seven
pomt buck on the Cornstalk
Hunting Grounds.
Bow and arrow season on
deer IS in effect until December
31.

College Ratings
NEW
Un1ted
Board
college

YORK ( UPI ) The
Press International ' s
of Coaches ma1or
football rat1ngs W1th
number of f 1rst place votes rn

par an theses

(Seventh weeki
Pomts
334
315
257
246
205
178
120

Team
1
2
3
4
5

Oh10 State (6 01 (22)
Alabama (7 OJ (91
Oklahoma {50 1 J {3)
M1Ch1gan (7'0)
Notre0ame(60 ) (1)

6 Penn State (7 Ol
7LSU(70)

68
63

B An zona State (7 OJ

9 UCLA(61J
10 Southern Callforn'a (51

29

II
11 Tennessee (6 1)

28

:~

\2 MISSOUri {6 1)

13 Tulane {6 OJ
14 Texas (4 2)
15 Nebraska (5 J. J l

1~

16 Houston {5 lJ

5

17 (t1e) Texas Tech (6 1 l
!T1e) Colorado (5-2)
19 (t i e) Auburn (5 21
(T re) Miam1 {0) (7 -0)

2
2
1
'

Early Sunday M1xed

Oct . 28, 1973
W

New Shipment

Tom ' s Carry Out
Sw•sher &amp; Lohse Phar
Eagles Cl ub

BOYS

BUT THEY'RE NOT
The big difference in Checking
Accounts is the wa~ · banks
serve. People I ike our Checking
Service because they appreciate
our efficiency, friendliness,
helpfulness. We think that you
will too, and we invite you to
open an account.

DEPOSITS INSUREDT0$20,000.00

Auto Teller Window ana Walk-up Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.
PITTSBURGH

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store

MIDDLEPORT

(Women) Patty
Marly Voss 200

Admiral
"

G rea t sound lr o m
stereo records, a~ tra ck
ste reo tape cartr1dges
AM ~ FM and ste reo FM
rad 1o E 1 g h t ~ speaker . - - - - "
ste reo sou nd system
feat ure s lwo powerf ul
t0-1n c h woo fers for
dy n amt c bas s Convenient slide c ontrols
and pu sh -bultc n fun c-

tiOn sele ctor

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Carson

BAKER FURNITURE
MIODLEPORT, OHIO

207,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Gary
Hostetter, Reedsvllle; Dorothy
Greathouse, Racine; Dorman
Dills, Minersville; Hazel
Kunze, Middleport; Clarence
Curtis, Pomeroy; Frank
Zerkle, New Haven.
DISCHARGES - John P. ·

went to Attorney General Elliot
Richardson to seek help m
obtaining White House documents relating to da!I'y in·
dustry support for N"'on's
campaign.
Richardson was "forbidden
to turn them over," despite the
fact that the Jusllce Department's Ctvil Division had
access to them, Cox said.
He satd papers were sometimes filed with presidential
documents in what he called "a
legal maneuver" to keep them
from him.
Cox said he would not accept
the role of special prosecutor
again, even if 1! were offered
him.

(Continued from Page 4)
Harden am:l Mrs. Cund1ff, Fultz
char ged that they were not
sen ous and that nothing was
ever
done
about
them .
Referr ing to the electric wire,
Mrs Cund1ff sa1d she knew the
th reats were senous but flat
she and Harden never had a
chan c;e to do anything about
the electr ic wire and that
Eugene Atkins did not go ahead
wi th the plan to place a roll bar
on the Harden car .
She said that she had known
nothing about her teleph'V'!e ...
conversat1ons wit' Haraen
being recorded b y her husband
unti l after Harden's death Jim
had told her not to lie, she sa id,
because what sHe said was all
on tape.
Fultz chi!rged Mrs. Cund itf
with changing her story after
she found out that her con v ersations had been recorded
" Isn ' t it true that you didn ' t
start tel li ng anybody unti l alter
you found out about the
tapes? " Fultz asked.
Mrs Cundiff sa1d she hadn't
talked to any.one but attorneys
and had told the truth Dunng
the long cross exammat1on .
tws . Condiff showed the jury
how she had been instructed by
Harden, she said, to fire the
defective 22 caliber pistol
which 1S a state exhibit as
Harden' s gun
Upon redirect by Sheets,
Mrs Cund1ff said that Harden
had thrown his gun at her when
they became engaged '" a
quarrel at the Huntington
motel She sa1d he told her to
take 1t before he did something
w1 th tf She said she put the gun
m Harden' s brief case in which
he carried a change of clothing .
Mrs. Cundiff sa1d she never lett
her home on Aug 28 or the
morning of Aug 29 unlll her
parents came to the house
about 3 30 a m and told her
what had happened . She sa1d
that she had gone to Harden's
off 1ce on occaslo11 alone, about
11 or 12 at mght, leaving her
c h1ldren with her mother .

NEW NUMBER
WASHINGTON, D. C.
November 1 the Public Affairs
Offtce of the Equal Employment Opportumly Commtsston wJII have a new
relephone number' ( 202) 3438555 . The new telephone
number and system was being
1nstalled to better handle an
mcreasing amount of public
inqUtrtes concermng JOb
dtscr1m1natton and equal
employment. '
..._

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Tapes hare
(Continued from Page 1)
before leaving the house to one
of the children that he dtd not
feel well. Mrs. Cundiff and
Harden discussed Harden's
traveling out to Veterans
Memorial Hosp1tal to see tf
Cundiff was out there.
Mrs. Cundiff had Jimmy
"turn on the stereo light" and
the mustc which had been
silent for the long, drawn out
conversation, marked with
long pauses, agam began to
play in the background.
Jimmy, preparmg food for
his mother, received yelled
instructions as his mother
talked to Harden. Harden and
Mrs. Cundiff observed that an
hour had passed since Mrs.
Thomas had called Mrs.
Cundiff and Jim still had not
appeared.
At points durmg the conversation both Mrs. Cundiff
and Harden were yawning,
Harden commented:
"G-D, I can't stand this. It's
driving me crasy." This was
followed by a long silence.
The tape recordmgs were
discontinued at 10:30 a.m. to
give the jury a break and were
to resume after the recess.
AT BACHNER FARM
APPLE GROVE, Ohio- Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Warner and
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson
spent a few days at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bachner in
Rutland while the Bachners
were at the Bob Evans Farm In
Gallipolis where Mr. Bachner
operated an old sawmill. He
sawed 18 different logs from
his farm at Rutland during the
festival at the Evans Farm.
Mr. Warner enjoyed squirrel
hunting while VISitmg at the
Bachner farm.
IN ITALY
REEDSVILLE -

Army

Sc•o•t•t,•E•lm-e•r•Ka-u•tz•.- - - · private first class Robert L.
Fortney, 20, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert J. Fortney, Route
1, Reedsville, Is serving as a
driver
In headquarters comTonight thru Thursday
pany, lsi battalion, 509th In·
Oct. JO ·Nov, I
\ lantry in Vicenza, Italy, Pfc.
NOT OPEN
Fortney entered the army in
Fn -Sat .. Sun.
March 1972 and received basic
Nov. 1-l-4
training at Ft. Kndx, Ky. He
WHITE LIGHTNING
attended Eastern High School.
(Technlcolor}

MEIGS THEATRE

(PG)

Colorcartoons:
J lillfe P1gs
Mickey's Trailer '
Bugged Be.1r
Show Starts 7 p.m.

Weather
Considerable cloudiness
tonight, Wednesday. Low
tonight in upper 30s and lower
40s. High Wednesday in mid Ill

upper 50s.

Sadat threatens to resume war
By United Pre., lntematlonal
Egyptian Prestdent Anwar
Sadat threatened' today to
resume the war if the Israelis
do not return to the Oct. 22
cease-fire lines, but he sa1d he
would restrain his army pending outcome of mtense di·
plomatlc negotiations in
Washington .
His CaiTO statement coincided with the departure for
Washington of Israeli Prime
Minister Golda Meir wtth the
reported intention of preSSing
President Nixon not to bow to
Soviet and Egyptian demands
for such a pullback, which
would free the trapped 20,000man Egypttan 3rd Army ,
Nixon and Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger were
conferring
with
acting
Egyptian Foreign Minister
!small Fahmi and Soviet
Ambassador Anatoly F
Dobrynin . Nixon ,will meet
with Mrs. Meir on Thursday
and Kissinger will visit Cairo
next Tuesday and Wednesday.
At the heart of the current
impasse is Israel's demand for
the immediate release of
captured prisoners of war, an
issue so emotionally charged in

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Dally high temperatures In
the 60s Friday and Saturday
and In the 50s Sunday. Lows
at nlghlln the 40s. A chance
of rain Saturday and Sunday.

Hfmtsh off the IsraeliS" on Ule
west hank of the Suez Canal if
they do not return to the Oct . 22
positions. lt was his first public
statement smce Oct 16 when
he announced that his condition
for a cease ~flre was the 1mmediate withdrawal of the
Israelis to the borders that
exiSted before the June 1967
war.
"I am r estraining my miJitary men becau s e I - am
awaiting the outcome of what
is gomg on in Washington now
and aiso the visit of Kissinger
to Cairo," Sadat said.
'
He announ ced Kissinger
would visit Cairo Nov , S-7 as
part of a tour of Mtddle East
countries before he goes to
Pelting for talks wtth Premier
Chou En-la1.
Refernng to the Israeli
poSitions on the west hank of
the Suez Canal, Sadat said:
" This IS a pocket which is
doomed . This IS well-known m
mihtary circles ... but we want
peace.
"I am restrainmg my mill·
tary men wtth great difficulty
because they want to liqwdate
this pocket and consider it an
easy job. The Israelis them·

selves know th is They have
told some people their position
·is fragile.
" But I do not want to break
the cease-fir e."
Sadat said th iS s ituation was
the reason for Fahmi's visit to
Washmgton.
The Egyptians say that m the
two days followmg the Oct. 22
cease-fire I sraeli tanks thru st
southward a long the canal to
Suez City , cuttmg off som e
20,000 troops of the Egypttan
3rd Army on the east bank of
the canal fr om !hell' supplies.
11
The 3rd Army IS not alJ on
the east bank, only part of it is

on the east ba nk ," Sadat sa1d.
" The g r ea ter part sta nd s
behind the Israeli lines on the
west ba nk and I can storm my
way tbrough and fmiSh off the
Israelis . But we are abtdmg by
the cease--ftre."
An Israeli milttary spokesman sa id that on the southern
Suez front unarmed Egyptian
troops unloaded 23 mor e trucks
of food , water and medicme for
thelr besieged 3rd Army .
It brought to 23 the number of
Egyptian trucks tha t have
passed.through th e Israeli lines
m Egypt to take r elief to the
trapped troo ps.

. {·;::·:::::::;.;:;::;:::::::.::;.;.~:·:·:·:-:::·;o:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::·:·:·:·:::::·:::·:::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:::;::::::::::;:::.:::.:·:::·:·:·:·:·!·!·:1C

:[:[
[.:,.:•.·:
:
····
;:;·
:[::

~:

...
:::
~~~

:·:
~~

:::l.:,:
-.
~:

:::

C. E. Blakeslee, right, in the picture at right, Meigs
County Extension Agent, Agriculture, was honored for 35
years service to the Cooperative Extension Service at a
recognition hanquet the evening of October 24, at the Ohio
Union Ballroom at Ohio State University, Making the
presentation was Jim Hell, president of the Ohio County
Extension Agents Assn. The banquet was sponsored by the
Ohio County Extension Agents Association, Extension
Professors Association, and Epsilon Sigma Phi, Extension
honorary fraternity. Blakeslee has been Meigs County's
county extension agent, Agriculture for 33% years; was
aJc~g coCouoty..agefnt t?LJefferson,dPickaedwa.y, ch arrotll, ~od
acasoo un..,_es or 17 iil years, an serv m 1 e ex eos1on
program in Luce County, Newberry, Mlch~ seven months.

:~::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!·:::::::::·:;:;:;:;::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:-:·: !·!:!·!::::::::-:·::::::::;.:

Now You Know

Weather
Rain
spreadm g
nor.
theastward across state again
thiS afternoon and tomght. Low
tomghl m the 40s. Thursday
cloudy and cool , showers
northeast Htgh m upper 40s

See the complete selection of Eccobay
Sportswear now in our Second Floor
Ready To Wear Department.

ELBERFELDS

VOL. XXV NO. 140

In Scotla nd , hollowed-out
turmps are used for jack
o'lanterns

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Cundiff testifies
Harden shot fir·s t
BY BOB HOEFLICH
James R Cundiff, 35, drew
his gun m self defense and
killed Wtl11am M. ( Btli )
• Harden unintentionally early
on the mormng of Aug . 29 on
Pomeroy's East Main St.
Cundiff, ln the sixth day of
his tr1al tn Mmgs County
Common Pleas for fil'st degree
murder tn the death of Harden,
1ocal msurance man, and the
thtrd part of a love triangle
mvolving the defendant's wile,
Thelma, took the stand
Tuesday in hts own defense.
Hts testimony that Harden
drew and ftred first on the
fateful mormng appeared
unshaked under Intensive cross
examination by Prosecutor
Bernard Fultz
For the ftrst two hours of the
trtal Tuesday, the JUry listened
to tape recordmgs between
Mrs. Thelma Cundiff, the
defendant's wife, and her
alleged lover, Harden , Cundiff
had recorded the conversation
unknown to h1s · wlfe and
Harden on August 28, the day
and night precedmg Harden's
death. After the tapes had been
heard, Cundiff testified that he
had heard a portion of the
recordings before leavmg for
hls employment at Nttro, W.
Va. He left the house about 9
p.m. the evening of Aug 28, he
satd.
Cundiff said m listening to
the telephone conversation be~
tween his wife and Harden,
through earphones wbtle the
machine was recording, he
heard that Harden was going to
lure him mto hls office
(Western and Southern Ufe
Insurance Co., East Main St.,
Pomeroy ) and "spatter h1s
blood all over the steps " He
said also that he heard them
talk about putting a wire near
the house to electrocute him
and puttmg a ~~contract" on
him, that is, hirmg someone to
help kill him.
Continuing, Cundiff satd he
heard his wife and Harden
make plans for Harden to park
m Cheshire to make sure he,
Cundiff, went to work .. Cundiff
said he was scared when he
heard the conversation be·
tween the two.
Cundiff testified that he
stopped at the home of a frlend
near Mtddleport enroute to
work that night, the evening of
Aug. 28, and bought a pistol.
The .38 caliber gun which
allegedly killed Harden was
shown to Cundiff who Identified
it. He had purchased it from
Carl L. Taylor who had also
given him ammunition for the
pistol. Cundiff said that he
purchased the gun because he
·knew "they were plotting to
kill ,;,e." He said he didn't
!mow what to expect in the
future.
Tbe defendant rela¥ his
story of picking up hl.s coworker on the Penn Central
'

I

Israel that diplomatic sources
said Mrs. MelT would give it
top pnority m her Washingon
talks.
Israeli Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan armounced Tues·
day there would be an onmedial" exchange of wounded"
prisoners, but Sadat said there
would be no exchange until
Israel pulls back to the Oct. 22
cease-fire lmes .
There also was the fear in Tel
Aviv that Israel's freeing of the
trapped 3rd army would enable
CaiTo to turn a military defeat
Into a political VIctory and
tncrease Arab demands for a
return to the boundanes that
existed before the 1967 Six Day
War.
Sadat told a Cairo news
conference the Egyptian army
IS ready to storm tbrough and

,

Dev,oted To The lntere&amp;t. OJ The Meig~-M010n Area

I

Burt Reynolds
Jenn•fer Billingsly

The CERVANTES
Model 1(5843

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

46

44
TIME TO FILE
Fr1endly Tavern
40
PT. PLEASANT - Orville Pull inS Excavat.ng
36
22 58
(Buck) Sturgeon, MMon Roseberry Pennzod
H1gh Team Series - Tom's
County assessor, has tssued ~ Carry Out 1993, SWiSher &amp;
reminder on filing of personal Lohse Pharmacy 1937
H1gh Team Game - Tom ' s
property
and
business Carry
Out 709, Swlshers 6.
assessment forms. Thursday, Lohse Pharmacy 69.5
High Ser1es - {Men&gt; Larry
Nov. 1, is the last day to file Dugan
584 , Jr Phelps 570,
such forms pertaining to taxes (Women ) Max me Dugan 474 ,
Carson 471
of the 1974 tax year whtch Patfy
H1gh Game - (Menl Larry
began July 1.
Dugan 218 , Larry Dugan 213 .

HIGH TOP
WORK SHOES

Console Stereo tn
Luxurious Armoire
Cabinet

L.
28
34
36
40
44

52

under President Kennedy said.
"We were not furmshed all the
presidential papers"
requested.
Cox said it was "vital" that
the committee approve a
proposed bill that would direct
Chief U.S. DIStnct Court Judge
John J. SITica to appoint a
special prosecutor who would
be' totally independent of the
White House.
Cox said that among the
papers he was denied were
"nine specific Items" relating
to wiretapping and other
surveillance actiVIties, mclud~
mg the bugging of columniSt
Joseph Kraft's phone. He satd
these were "urgently needed,
out none have yet been
produced."
He said he also was unable to
get logs of meetings between
President Nixon and six administration officials who were
prominent figures in the
Watergate investigation.
At one point, Cox said he

Tape played

.

Railroad, Charles Thomas, m
Cheshtre and of the two
proceedmg downnver to near
the fatien Stiver Bndge.
Cundiff said he was " nervous
and upsefl ' as he drove
downnver and decided not to
go to work, so he called hls
crew diSpatcher and la1d off
sick Cundiff said he and
Thomas returned to Cheshire
where Thomas got out of the
car and Cundiff contmued
upnver. He sa1d he saw one of
the Harden vehicles, a 1965
blue Cadillac, parked In
Cheshtre near a church when
he went through. He satd 1t was
around 10 p m . when he let
Thomas out of the car
Cundtff testified that he
drove around the Route 7
bypass·, past Me1gs H1gh
School, cut across to Five
Pomts and drove over the flood
road to Bouman's Run where
he parked his car, then walked
the approxtmate half mile to
his home. He satd he took the
newly P\U'Chased gun with hun,
placing 1! m hiS belt at the back
but toward his right Side. The
gun was loaded, he sa1d. He
saw no one when he reached his
house, and went onto the front
porch where he stayed for
about an hour, before leavmg.
The defendant said he heard
his wife talkmg from time to
time and heard the phone ring'
once. He heard her answer it.
He could not hear any talk of
any s1gnificance, but earlier
had heacd on the earphones
that his wife was gomg to pick
up Harden. He said he was
unaware then that his wife and
Harden knew he had not gone
on to work. He said he then left
the porch, went to his car, and
traveling around the flood
road, drove into Pomeroy. He
stated that he parked hts car on
Second St. across from the
Pomeroy Bowling Alley, and
again with the gun in the same
location
walked
down
Sycamore St. to Main St.
Continmng wtth the details of
the early morning before
Harden died, Cundiff said he
stopped in the Duds 'n Suds and
bought a can of pop, dtinlting it
as he walked down the street
toward the Western and Southern Insurance Co. offtce. He
said he noticed the downstairs
hallway lighted, but he did not
try the door to see if it was
open.
Cundiff stated that he walked
to the end of the block (to Lynn
St.) and stood in front of the
"dime store" for a while. His
wtfe didn'tshow up, he said, so
he crossed the street and
looked at the river. He then
went to the side of a pizza truck
parked on the upper parking lot
and was standing Utere, he
reported, when Ralph Werry
drove past hint. Cundiff satd he
made no effort to hide. After
standing near the pizza truck
for a period he estimated at be·

tween 15 and 20 minutes,
Cundiff said his wtfe still had
not come so he walked across
Main St., and started up the
street CundtEf testified that he
was gmng home.
Cundiff stated that he was
walking at a normal pace near
the Western and Southern
ofhce when Harden ° just
stepped down from the doorway of the office .' '
Cundiff teshfied then the
followmg conversatiOn passed
between them :
Harden: "Wbat the hell
are you doing here?' '
Cundiff: "Bill, I want to
talk to you".
Harden: "What about?"
Cundill: "My wile and
kids, Bill''.
Harden: " I d()o't know
what you're talking about."
Cundtff sa1d Harden had hiS
hand in a trouser pocket all of
the hme and at the end of hts
last statement, pulled a gun
from his pocket and fired at
him. Cundiff said he pulled his
.38 from his belt and fired at
Harden.
Cundiff said he fired his gun
a second tune. Harden, he said,
had both hands on his own gun
and was bent over.
Cundiff said the two men
moved up the street and he did
not know at this time that he
had hit Harden. Cundiff
restlfied upon questiomng by
one of hiS attorneys, Warren
Sheets of Gallipolis, that he dtd
not premeditate kllling Harden, and that he did not puryosely kill h1m . .
"I shot to save my own life,"
he stated.
Cundiff said at no time that
he knew of were he and Harden
on the steps leadmg to the
office of Dr. John Rtdgway
from which he termed the "life
and death struggle" between
the two men continued all the
way up the street.
He stated that he did not
(Continued on Page 20)

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31 , 1973

GM strike date
.~et by Woodcock
DETROIT (UPI) - The
United Auto Workers has set
a 10 a.m. N()v, 19 strike
deadline at General Motors
Corp., the last of the
automotive " big three '"
without a new national
contract. Tbe strike deadline
was made public Tuesday by
UAW President Leonard
Woodcock minutes after the
unton's National Ford
Council, by a wide margin,
recommended approval of a
new contract with Ford
Motor Co.
Strike deadlines also "ere
set for Nov. 16 at Ford of
Canada and lor Nov. 26' at
GM of Canada. Woodcock
said the deadlines were set
so close together so none
would fall near Christmas.

Cover-up
defined
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Ar·
chihald Cox says refusal by
President Nixon to turn over
'!dditional Watergate tapes or
documents would amount to a
"cover·up" of possible wrong&amp;
doing.
When Sen. Robert C. Byrd,
D-W. Va., asked the ousted
special prosecutor 'l'uesday
whether that could be called
the ' 1ultirnate coverup," Cox
replied: "I have no quarrel
with your characteriztion. I
think 1! would m effect cover up
things that can be wrong."
Cox, who was fll'ed by Nixon
after he refused to stop seeking
Watergate material through
the courts, appears again
today before Senate Judiciary
Committee hearings
on
legislation to establish a new,
court-appointed special
prosecutor.
The Senate's Democrats,
meeting in caucus Tuesday,
urged that such a prosecutor be
independent of both the executive and legtslative branches of
govenunent.
sponsor
of
the
The
(Continued Qll Page 20)

Chaney makes
OU grid team
as defenseman
Bill Chaney, a 1973 graduate
of Meigs High School, has
made the Bobcat football team,
playing defensive end.
Chaney, an all-around
athlete at Meigs, lettering in
three varsity sports,, was
Meigs' first athlete to make all·
SEOAL m both football and
hasketball in the same year.
He was also named to the first
team district and All-State
honorable mention in the AAA
football selections.
A Geology major, Chaney
plans to try out for the OU
haseball team in the spring if
spring football drils do not
conflict wtlh 1the baseball
I

BILL CHANEY
program. He Is a pitcher. He is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ken
Chaney, Rt. I, Shade.
1

TEN CENTS

PHON E 992 21 56

Attorneys ask jury
to set CuRdi
ree
By BOB HOEFLICH
The case of James R. Cundtff, 35, Racine Route 1,
charged wtlh first degree
murder m the death of Wtlham
M Harden, 34, Racme Route 1,
early on the mormng of Aug.
29, went to the Jury at 11 :05
am. today
Sea tmg of the jury began
Tuesday, Oct. 23. The final
juror was seated the next
morning. The tnal has
proceeded smce that time and
mcluded a full day of testimony
last Saturday.
This mormng 's court session
mcluded the fmal arguments of
the defense attorneys, Warren
Sheets of Galhpohs and Sam
Lopmsky, Charleston, W. Va .,
and of Prosecutor Bernard
Fultz.
The fmal statements of the
attorneys were in dtrect
contrast. The defense attorneys became
plainly
emotwnal as they urged the
jury to return a not gullty
verdict.
The prosecution calmly
argued for a verdict of guilty to
murder I.
Although Judge John C.
Bacon, who has prestded over
the tr1al, mdtcated to the Jury
that the closing arguments of
the attorneys were . not
eVIdence, but more of an
analysis of each side, tile
presentatwos seemed to be
points of extreme interest not
only to the Jury but to the
spectators packed into the
courtroom.
Highly emotional, Sheets
called the aetlons of Mrs.
Cundlif and the late Harden
"animal behavior". In fact,
be said that animals In the
jungle did not behave as
badly as they had.
"The mistake Jim Cundiff
made was not by killing
them both on May 30,"
Sheets shouted.
He said the evidence has
shown that Harden was a
break"" of homes, did not want
to provide food for his children,
was gmlty of adultry and a
consPirator to murder plans.
He charged that Thelma
Cundiff, wife of the defendant,
had neglected her 'chtldren,
was an adultress and aiso was
a conspirator to murder.
He said that if Cundiff didn't
have JUStification to kill
Harden under the circumstances on Aug . 29, "then
we don 't have any laws In this
country".
He challenged the Jurors to
think what they would have
done If they had been Cundiff.
On Memorial Day, May 30,
when he caught his w1fe and
Harden in bed and nearby
there was a loaded shot gun.
The defense attorney noted
Cundiff's working 17 and 18

I

hours a day at Maplewood
Lake and on the railroad to
provtde for hts wife and three
chtldren while hiS wtfe and
three cluldren were bemg
taken on trips and to motels-by
Harden.
Sheets urged the jury to send
Cundiff home to take care of
hts children .
Sheets and Lopmsky shared
the period allowed for the
defense's closmg argwnents.
Lapinsky, also emotiOnal,
pointed out that Me1gs Coroner
R R. Ptckens had testified that
Harden , wtth the chest wound
t hat he had, could have
wrestled for three or four
nunutes and certainly could
have thrown hiS .22 caliber
re\tOlver across the street m
Pomeroy where the con·
frontatwn between Cundiff and
Harden took place.
He sa1d Cundiff with hiS
character and reputation,
wh1ch had been testifted too by
a number of citizens, was a
defendant the jury must
beheve; that Cundiff was the
one who knew what had happened on the morning of Aug.
29, and that he was worthy of
behef.
Cundiff killed in self defense,
Lopmsky told the JUry .

Fultz charged that Cundiff
Lopmsky satd Cundiff had only
wan red to talk to Harden on the had premeditated the murder
evening of Aug 28 and the of Harden.
He pointed out that the
mornmg of Aug. 29 to get back
burden of proof of this is on the
his w1fe and children.
uHarden had mterrupted this state and the state must prove
peacefu I fami)y, " Lopmsky first degree murder beyond a
reasonable doubt. He pointed
charged.
He charged that Harden was o"ut that the jury had observed
trymg to adjust his defectiVe that IllS difficult to get people
.22 gun to fire a second lime to come forth to help prove
when Cundiff fired hts .38 at criminal cases.
He said he had developed a
Harden on the morning of Aug.
29. He contended that Cundtff theory about the killing:
"Mrs. Cundiff had made it
had been nght to use a gun 1f he
felt his life was being en- happen" in her relationship
with Harden. He satd there was
dangered.
one
witness missing from the
Lopmsky emphaSized that
several witnesses near the trial, the decedent, Harden,
scene on Aug. 29 had seen who also " was a man of
nothing until they heard a shot peaceful reputatJ on."
Fultz staled that it was
"Have you ever heard such
vulgarity", Lopinsky asked as strange that mor e people had
not mformed Cundiff of the
he stressed the behavwr be· relat ion ship between Mrs .
tween Mrs. Cundiff and Har- Cundiff and Harden and
theonzed that on the n1ght of
den
Aug 28, Mrs Cundtff and
Cundiff would have been out Harden had taken extra
of hiS mind to openly shoot precaut ions to see that Cundiff
Harden with so many people had gone to h1s employment m
Nitro bec au se, the prosecutor
around" Lapinsky sa1d, projected, Cundiff had told one
refernng again to the morning of them that he would kill
Harden 1f he caught Mrs.
of Aug . 29.
Cundiff and Harden t ogether
Prosecutor Fultz made the aga1n
first statements Wednesday
Fultz charged that Cund1ff
morning and was permitted to had made the r ecorded tape
rebut! the statements of the conver sat ions be cause he
(Continued on Page 20)
defense.

Nixon offer near
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. William B. Saxbe, R.Ohio,
who once accused President
Nixon of having "taken leave
of hts senses," may be Nixon's
next attorney general.
Saxbe went to the White
House thts morning and in~
formed Senate sources said
Nixon would offer hun the JOb.
Saxbe
told
repor.ters
Tuesday that White House
Chtef of Staff Alexander M.
Haig had asked him if he were
mterested m the post, and that
he was indeed interested He
said the FBI was checkmg his
hackground, but that, as of
then , he had no fll'III offer from
Nixon.
Saxbe, 57, recently announced he would not run again
for the Senate when his term
expires at the end of next year,
but wanted to return to his Ohio
cattle farm. He served three
terms as attorney general of
his state.
Saxbe often has b.acked Nixon on major legislation, but
also has been an outspoken
cntic. Referring to the President's
statements
on
Watergate, he once said: "He
(Nixon) is like the man who
plays piano in a house of ill
repute and says he doesn't
know what's going on uP.
stairs."

During the Christmas, 1972,
bombing in Indochina, Saxbe
said NIJ[on "must have taken
leave of his senses"- the very
pbrase Nixon used at his news
conference last week to
describe television com~
mentators.
_
The post of attorney general
has been vacant since Elliot L.
Rtchardson resigned rather
than fire special prosecutor
Archibald Cox.
Saxbe said Haig also asked if
he would be mterested in being

special prosecutor, "but that
was disposed of in the first five
mmutes. I'm not interested."
Sen. John G. Tower, R"Tex.,
said Saxbe would be a good
choice for attorney general,
and his only regret would be
that Gov. John Gilligan, a
Democrat, would get to appomt
a successor to fill Saxbe's seat.
"Bill has been known to use
strong language," Tower said
of Saxbe "But he's an objective man. He calls them as
he sees them."

Choice criticized
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Rep. John Ashbrook, R.Qhio,
sa1d Tuesday President NIXon
has " taken leave of h1s senses"
if he nominates Sen. William B.
Saxbe, R.Qhio, as U. S., Attorney General, whtch will give
the Democrats another seat in
the Senate.
If Saxbe accepts the
apointment he would have to
resign from the Senate, which
would leave the way open for
Democratic Gov . John J.
Gilligan to nominate his sue·
• cessor, probably a Democrat.
Several members of Ohio's
congressional
delegatiOn ,
while not questioning Saxbe's
abtlily to handle the job,

'.

questwned NIXon's motives,
especially m the face of the loss
of a Senate seat.
"I think the President has
taken leave of his senses," said
Ashbrook, using the same
quote Saxbe used to criticize
stepped up bombing of Ind&lt;&gt;Chma last year.
" I guess the president
doesn ' t know there's an
election year stnce he's not
running ," said Ashbrook. un's
going to be trouble enough
electing a Republican senator
because of Richard Nixon. And
now he 's trying to rehabilitate
his sagging image at the expense of the Ohio Republican
Party.''

f,

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