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10 - The T&gt;ailv Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monda y, Dec. 2, 1974

Northern Ohio is socked in
By United Press International,
A severe but fi ckle winter
storm left much or northern
Ohio under from 10 to 15 inches
of snow Sunday night. The
National Weather Service a t
Cleveland said most roads in
the Toledo , Ohio, area were
closed by high winds and up to
16 inches of snow.
Parts of northeastern Ohio
and much or the central and
soutbern portions of the state
escaped with · only an lnch or
two of snow.
.
Emergency parking bans on
designated streets were issued
by police departments from the
Ohio River to Lake Erie while
salt was spread and crews
attemp).ed to clear the drifting
snow.
The major Cleveland airport
was closed at intervals for up
to an hour IJihUe runways were
being cleaned . Some flights

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday
December 2-5

NOT OPEN
FRI. ·SAT.· SUN.
DEC. 6·7·8
BLAZING SADDLES
( T echn ico lor)

were cancelled, and airplane
traffic was hampered by
visibility at times dropping to
one-half mile .
Eleven inches of snow had
fallen at Kent, Ohio, by sunset
SUnday . Kent State University
officials said the school would
be closed today and university
bus service halted because of
the weather.
Most roads in the state were
covered with slush and snow
SUnday , and the Ohio Highwa y
Patrol said they probably
would freeze durin g the night
!IS temperatures dropped . As
much as four inches of new
snow was foreca st to fall
overnight.
The patrol said Interstate 7&gt;
and U.S. 23 going from Toledo
into Michigan were closed
because of snow accumulation,
leaving only Ohio 99 and Ohio
49 still open to motorists
seeking to cross the border.
Both Ohio and Michigan
police told the Ohio Turnpike
Commission to ask motorists
not to try to cross the state line.
The commission had said it
expected 100,000 cars to travel
tbe Ohio Turnpike at the end of
the Thanksgiving Day holiday .
" They don 't want the Michigan travelers to even try to go

CLEAVON LITTLE

I Rl

DOFATOMEET
CHESTER
Ch es ter
Coun cil 323, Da ug hte r s of
America , will meet Tuesday at
7:30p .m. at the hall. Birthdays
will be observed and potluck
refreshmen~ served.

Color Cartoons
Show Starts 7 p.m .

Just a Short Drive
To downtown Athens, Ohio

DIVORCE ASKED
Shelba J . Dye, Rl . 1, Racine ,
has fil ed sui t for divorce in
Meigs Co unty Common Pleas
Court from William J . Dye, Rl.
1 Racine, on charges of extreme cruelty .

HELD OVER!
It takes up wh ere

y ""'"·"'

TOM LAUGHLIN

DELORES T~YLOR

The Trial of

Jack

Continued (rain page 1
back into Michigan because all
s tarted, the fire a pparently
the roads are closed either by
wa s c onfined to th e attic
snow or traffic pile--ups," said
c ommission Information section , or between the roof
Director Talbot Harding . and ceiling, fir emen said, but
this soon burned through a nd
"They wanted us to teD people
caved
in on the con tents .
to seek shelter immediately."
Firemen
did manage to save
Lt . David Furiate or the Ohio
U1e Miller Insurance Age ncy
Turnpike Patrol said aU roads
offi ce , althou gh th e r e was
into Michigan were closed.
som e s moke a nd wate r
" P eople trying to enter
Michigan are being stranded in dam age to it.
Firemen were hampered by
their cars or put up in farm
weather
conditi ons
a nd
hou s es and schools/ ' said
the lack of water pressure to
Furiale. " We are urging them
to get off at the nearest exit and fight the blaze.
New Haven firemen credited '
seek their own accomodaMason
Firemen with decisive
tions ."
assi
s
tance
durin g
th e
·Interstate 271 in Cuyahoga
SAMUEL LITTLEPAGE
emergency . They said they had
PT. PLEASANT - Samuel
County, Ohio, also was dosed,
Littlepage,
a
said the patrol, and northern contact with Ohio units and Dickinson
prominent Mason Countr al ·
wh
o
offered
help
at
all
others
Ohio entrances to Interstate 71
torney for 25 years , died a 9: 45
were blocked for hours by times .
Saturday night at Veteran 's
" We had a water problem, " Hospital in Huntington .
accumulated snow.
Mr. Littlepage, 58, died of
The patrol said it had logged Grinstead said, adding, " The cancer.
He had been a p~tient
no fatal traffic accidents in water main was too little and iri Ohio State University
ohio since Saturday, despite over-pumped. We ran out o£ Hospital in Columbus the past
eight weeks .
water a couple of times ."
the adverse weather.
A r esident of 2905 Chandler
He said Joe Young, em- Drive, Pt. Pleasant. Mr. LitMany rural school districts
in all parts or Ohio announced ployed by the town as Water tlepage had been active in "his
Sunday night that classes Superintendent, was on the law practice, Hyer and Lit·
tlepage, until 2112 months ago.
scene and "valved off, or
would be closed today.
Born Feb . 1, 1916 in
isolated the water line feeding Charleston , he was the son of
THEFT REPORTED
the fire " providing more water Burrell Kemp and Madge
Robins Littlepage . He was a
MASON , W. Va. - A tape pressur e.
graduate of Kentucky Military
recorder valued at $400 was
Gibbs said lh e loss is Institute and West Virg inia
reported today stolen fr om the believed to be " mostly covered University . Wh i le at the
band room at Wahama High by insurance."
University he was Eastern
Intercollegiate
Bo x ing
School. The Mason County
Gibbs said it is too early to Champion in 1936 and 1938 and
Sheriff 's Dept. said although a tell what plans will be made to National
Intercollegiate
window was fitOfld 'npen,-it was go back in business, but he is Boxing Champion in 1938.
Mr . Littlepage served in the
not ce rtain ttow entry was " hopeful or repla cin g his
United States Army for six
gained. The incident is under grocery store."
years. He participated in the
investigation.
battles of lwo Jima and

Two new arthritic
remedies dangerous

The F ood and Drug Ad- bec ause the produ c ts are
ministration has cautioned labeled "aspirin free ," con.
persons not to use two new swners may use the products
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS ar thritis remedies, "Aspirin not realizing they convert to a
- Edith McCoy, Syracuse ; Free Arthritis Pa'in Formula " salicylate. This means:
- Consumers could use the
Carl Moddispaugh, Mid- and "Saloxium Analgesic Antiproducts
in addition to aspirin
dleport; Dorothy Jenkins, Inflammatory Tablets." Both
or
other
salicylate
and suffer
Middleport ; Paul Reitmire, produc ts are being recalled by
Pomeroy ; Ellen Roush, Letart, Whitehall Laboratories of New from overdosage.
- Patients on anticoagulan t
· W. Va .; Wanda Benne It , York City at FDA's Request.
therapy
, s uch a s sodium
The products contain the
Parkersbur g ; Ronald Fry ,
warfarin , could suffer from
Middleport ; Mark Rigg s, pain reliever salsalate, which
excessive bleeding .
converts
to
sodium
salicylate
Pomeroy; Car ol Lunsford,
- Children accidentally
in the bod y. As such, it has the
Pomeroy .
·
swallowing
the products may
SATURDAY DISCHARGES same effect in the body as does
·not receive proper emergency
James Pape, Celesta aspirin or other salicylate.
FDA is concerned that, treatment. Physicians and
Pickens .
poison center personnel may .
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS not know about salsalate, a
Patricia Yate s , Pomeroy ;
little known ingredient, and
Barbara McDaniel, Pomeroy;
may not realize they are
BUCKS STOP BALL STATE
Franklin Wolfe, Syracuse.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Coach dealing with a salicylate
SUNDAY DISCHARGE
Fred Taylor feels his Onio overdose .
Shan lila! Goradla.
Both products being·recalled
State University basketball
team played "rather decently" are long, round tables packed
in the opening game win over 24 and lOll per botUe. They are
BaD State Saturday. They face similar to Whitehall's "Ara somewhat tougher test here thritis Pain Formula," which
tonight against traditionally does contain aspirin and is so
labeled. This product is not
tough Butler.
The Buckeyes opened the being recalled .
The prOducts being recalled
season Saturday with a conhave
been inll'oduced recently
vincing 91-64 victory over BaD
and
may
not have become
State while Buller defeated
available in all stores.
Cleveland State 80-75.
Craig Taylor, the Bucks ll-10 "Saloxium Analgesic Anticenter, led the Obio State Inflammatory Tablets" were
scoring against Ball State with being test marketed in Dayton,
20 points while slick sophomore Boston , Houston, and Seattle.
FDA believes the products as
guard Larry Bolden added 16
labeled
are new drugs being
and Steve Wenner, playing
with a broken bone in his marketed without prior approval in violation or the
shooting hand, got 13.
Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act.
BROWNS BLANK 49EW!
FDA learned of the drug
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Talk hazard from two sources. One
about having mud in your was a professor at the State
Compact cabinet
eye ... well, rookie safety Eddie University of New York at
fin i sh ed i n richlyBrown can go you one better Buffalo. The other was a
grained Ameri c an
than that. He had it in both eyes. Midland , Pennsylvania,
Walnut color .
Titan 101 Chassis
and
a few other places, too, but pharmacist who alerted the
- over 90 % solid ·
it
didn't
botber him a bit.
stale ! Solid-State
Agency through the FDA
Super Video Range
"Naw,
I
didn't
mind
it
at
Community
Pharamacists '
Tuning System.
all,'' said Brown, who in- Drug Defect Report System.
Automatic Tint
Guard . Customized
tercepted a Tom Owen pass
Tun ing . 5 11 x 3"
with just over five minutes left
to play Sunday to set up a one- :
yard touchdown run by Ken
Brown, which gave the
Cleveland Browns their first
shutout in two years, a 7-0
victory over the San Francisco
49ers.
i'l had to reach out to get it,
but I saw it comin' to me," said
'
Eddie. "Then splat! I couldn't
see a thing. I knew I caught the
baD, but I couldn't see where I
was going because my eyes
were full of mud."

FULL ZENITH QUAUTY!

INGELS FURNITURE
Middleport Gift-A-Rama Store

~
439-2006
l nc . 2~,'NtiU"·~ ;pr · --~,. ~L 5-8416
o.

tAss co u~c -:·l ~- .,

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-Soollo!Oisi;J,;Ad.POJ~l39~;

,,.

.way " ' .. :.: .... .:_. _vo a.ss20

tr,!,inPt1s Lt~ 14 10 Av. -439-8242

l rdwr ) ~Leonrd . " . . 578-8123.
·p 37E 60 .. ,. ....... . , AR B'82B8
·lc ~ rdwr 25 Sylltan A·v .:. 278-4944

,~;~}::l~}l;: FA~NICY

Mr . Fr ••ndlr

~ U?. ,f HinGe,, '-'.·:
· ··'. e Power Tools
e Hond TOol$

11{

..

e Slidi••gJ)&lt;oo.r Hc.. dw&lt;

and

Hidden

Valley

Collett

Littlepage

of

Morgantown , W . Va. ; two
daughters, Mrs. V. Courtlandt

I Kemp) Sm ith of Winfield, W.

Va . and M.rs . Alison Breedlove
of Columbus, Ohio. Another
daughter, Jennifer , died five
years ago .

The family suggests that
memorials be made to the

Mason Counly Youlh Center or

the Loyalty Permanent En·
dowment Fund of West
Virginia University.
Funeral services Will be held
at 10 a. m. Wednesday In the

Christ Episcopal Church with

Rev . Thomas Kuhn officiating .
Graveside services will be held
at 12 noon In the Spring Hill
Cemetery at Charleston.
Friends may call at the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home on
Tuesday 4lo 6 p.m. and 7:30 to
9

p. m. All lawyers will be

pall bearers
pallbearers .

and

honorary

CARROLL PICKENS
MASON Carroll

0.

Pickens. 68, Mason, died
Friday ln N\!natee Memorial

Hospital In Bradenton, Fla. He

was a retired founder , owner
and operator of the Pickens
Paint and Hardware Store in
Mason . After retiring he
moved to Florida with his

family.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday from the
Foglesong Funeral Home at

Mason with the Rev. Clarence
McCloud officiating . Burial
will

be

in

the

Robinson

Cemetery, Rt . 1, Rutland, 0.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 9 p. m.
::::w..:::::::::::::::".::~:::::.~.;·,,,.,

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EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, ratr Wednesday with
a cbance of rain Thunday
and clearing Friday. Hlgb
temperatures In tbe upper
30s and In Ule 40s. Law
temperatures In the upper
20s and lower 30s.
~~S«.; .... GW..m::!
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
was called Sunday at 8:10p.m.
to Uberty Lane for Bertha
Neimeyer, 94, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

.:.~. ':ll!:o'cli.&amp;.:.•: •.C:: :~~.:.11W1 ¥i

FIVE ON INJURY IJST
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Vel.eran guard John Demarle was
one of five Cleveland Browns
put on Ule injury list SUnday.
Demarle was listed in satisfactory condition at Shaker
Medical Center following
emergency surgery for aJ&gt;pendicitis.
The 6-3 guard joined the
Browns as a sixth ...ound draft
choice in 1967.
Fellow guard Pete Adams
also missed Sunday's victory
over the San Francisco 49ers.
He was suffering from back
spasms, a condition he had had
aU last week.
BENGALS FACING MIAMI
CINCINNATI ( UPI) - Cincinnati coach Paul Brown isn't
one for dealing tn theory.
He thinks the Bengals can
still earn a playoff berth but
they will probably have to beat
the Miami Dolphins to do It,
And that game comes up
tonight.
"There are literaUy dozens
of possibilities left," said
Brown. "You can't really
explain tbem.
"After this weekend, Ule
picture will be a little easier,
but still far from settled," be
said.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
High School Girls Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at Ule high school.

92 dead
Continued from page 1
find and remove bodies. The
parta that were found were plit
into plastic bags and taken \(/
Hocker's makeshift morgue in
Bluestone for Identification,
Most were unrecognizable.
One of the passengers kllled
was Brig Gen. Roscoe C.
cartwright, one of the Army's
first black generals, and
James Applewhite, an aide to
Rep. Andrew Young, 0-Ga. ,
Rep. William Bray, R-Ind;;
was usuaUy on that flight, but
his son said he returned tO
Washington early so he could
attend Ule Army-Navy footbaU
game, a decision that saved his
life.

IN HOLZER
Mrs. Ann M. · RusseU, Middleport, is confined to ' tbe iri,.
tensive care unit of Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipol~

SERVICE SET
Graveside ser1Ues for
Jennifer Dawn W«&lt;rclnko,
infant daughter of Thomas J.
and Patricia Marcinko, who
died at birth will be held
Tuesday at 10 a.m. at Our Lady
of Loretta Cemetery near Long
Bottom. Ewing Funeral Home
is in charge.

,

YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT HEADQUARTERS

SALE! MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT

I
SIZES 29 WAIST TO 50. THIS SAtE [NCWDES
OUR ENTIRE
OF MEN'S- -·DRESS SlACKS.
---- --STOCK
·- ·
SOLID COLORS AND SMART PATTERNS.
•··

MEN'S 116.95_SLACKS SALE 112.69 .
MEN'S 115.95 SlACKS SALE IUJ~· .
111.19
SALE
MEN'S 114.95 SlACKS
'
1
MEN'S 13.95 ~S SALE 110!49
MEN'S 112:95 SLACKS SALE 19.69
MEN'S 111.95. SI.QS SALE 18J9
.MEN'S 1i0.95 SLACKS . SALE 18.19
.

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Main Floot, Toy Store, Warehouse Open T11esdaJ, 9i30 to 5

,EL.BERFELDS IN· 'POMEROY,
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By United Press Iolernatlonal
STALLED BY HEAVY SNOWS IN COAL MINE AREAS,
voting continues today and Wednesday on a new, Ulree-year
contract for 120,000 striking members of the United Mine
Workers of America. Returns from four Pennsylvania locals that
voted early showed a slim margin in favor of the offer, but some
600minershave not voted. A southern Illinois mine union official
said the contract was narrowly rejected Ulere 4,290 to 4,131.
Mine Workers President Arnold Miller caUed on local
leaders to extend Ule voting deadline until 8 p.m. Wednesday
because of the bad weather . "We want to maximize rank and file
participation in this," he said.
Joe Duffy, treasurer...,cretary of UMW District 17,
h~adquartered in Charleston, W.Va., predicted that about 70 per
cent of the 17,000miners in his district would vote. "Six out of 10 I
talked to said they like the contract. But we got so many people
that are not saying nothing. Tbey are not opening their mouth on
how they are gonna vote," he said.

at

en tine

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL. XXVI

NO. 163

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1974

A STORM TIIAT CARRIED ITS FURY FROM THE MIDWEST to the East Coast left more than 35,000 persons stranded
today. Michigan officials caUed the snow storm the worst since
1886. National Guard heavy equipment was mobilized in western
Maryland and several communities were virtually isolated in
Pennsylvania.
The story was the same in parts of Ohio, West Virginia and
Virginia. Tbe American Red Cross estimated 35,000 stranded in
Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Maryland, and reports indicated thousands more were trapped by snow-blocked highways
in other slates.
In soutbwest Virginia, two persons froze to death. More than
18 inches of snow blanketed parts oftbe state. Dozens more died
aci'068 the storm frbnt in weather... elated traffic accidents . In
Michigan alone, 27 persons died of heart attacks suffered while
shoveling snow.
COLUMBUS - OHIO FARM BUREAU PRESIDENT
l..eQI)8rd SchneU suggests Ohio farmers reassess their plans for
buym'g more llQUipnent because the exlra farm producllon may
not merit tbe expense.
"In our own indnstry, we have looked for years with pride
• uppn our increased productivity per man employed," Schnell
told some 1,000 agricultural leaders at the OFB 's 56th annual
meeting here Monday. "But when we view our productivity as
measured against the doUars employed, Ule record is not Impressive."
MEMPHIS, TENN- FARMERS ARE in a belligerent mood
over the price of farm products, according to the president of the
National Farmers Organization,' and intend to do something
about it. About 10,000 farmers from 48 states started arriving
today for the threMay NFO convention intended to unite farmers for a push for minimum prices.
Oren Lee Stealey, of Rea, Mo., said Monday he expects to be
dealing with farmers who are upset over current farm prices and
perhaps ready to take more desperate measures to demonstrate
Ulelr dilemma. "Farmers are angry, upset and frustrated over
the prices they're getting for their products," Staley said. "Some
farmers are coming to this convention with ditches for calf
shoots already dug.

FIGHT AVOIDED
COLUMBUS (UPI) House Speaker A. G. Laoclone, D-Bellalre, today announced be would step down
from the House leadership
next session and allow
Speaker Pro Tempore Vernal
Rille, D-New Boston, to
become speaker In return lor
several
favorable
appointmentS.
Lanclone and Riffe Issued a
joint statement In whlcb they
said they would work together
during the 111th General
Assembly, whlch convenes
Jan. 6.

Arm s race capped Ford claims

EXTENDED FORECAT
Thursday
through
Saturday, chance or rain or
snow about Thursday and
again about Saturday. Highs
will be mostly In the 40s,
Overnight low temperatures
will be In the 20s on Thursday
and In the 30s Friday and
Satilrday.

Weather
Cloudy e astern por tion
tonight, chance or snow in
northeast. Colde r tonight,
lows in the mid 20s . Fair
Wednesday, warmer, hi ghs in
the lower 40s .
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy alll a.m. today
was 42 degrees under sunny
skies .

By HELEN THOMAS
hesitation or qualification,"
UPI White House Reporter
Ford told Monday's news
WASHINGTON (UPI) conference. " If we had not had
President Ford said the this agreement, it would have
nuclear weapons agreement required the United States to
with the Soviet Union "put a substantially increase its milicap on Ule arms race," but the tary expenditures in Ule stratefigures he released indicated gic areas. So, we put a cap on
that the United States must the arms race."
deploy more strategic weapons
The annual price tag for the
to reach the ceilings.
. 2,400 delivery systems "I can say this w!thout missiles launched either from
land or submarines, plus heavy
bombers -and 1,320 multiwarhead missiles wm go up from
$15 billion to $18 billion. Ford
said much of that would be
inflation .
Inflation took up Ule second
half of Ford's two-part meeting
The Meigs County Sheriff's witb reporters. The President
De10l. investigated two single again pressured Congress to
car accidents Monday mor- enact his legislative proposals,
ning.
At 6:41a .m. in Chester Twp .
on SR 7, Charles L. Craft,
Reedsville, was traveling north
when a buck deer ran in front
of his car and was struck and
killed . There was medium
damage. There were no personal injuries and no citation .
Pomeroy Council approved
At 9:03a .m . in Sulton Twp. the final reading of an or·
six-tenths of a mile west of dinance that will increase
Racine on SR 124 Erma Mc- Cable TV rates when it met
Clurg, Rutland , was travelin g Monday nigh t.
ea st when she hit a slick spot on
The rate increase provides
the highway causing the car to that regular customers will be
spin around and go into a ditch. increased $&gt;.&gt;0 to $6, disabled
The driver was not injured. persons $4 to $4.50 and senior
There was moderate damage. citizens $3.&gt;0 to $4.50.
No arrest was made.
ln other business, council
agreed to purchase the radar

•
D eer h It

OD

SR 7 b y car

2 hurt in wrecks
Four cars were heavily minor InJuries. Rairden was
damaged and two persons charged with driving while
injured in two accidents in· intoxicated, police said.
vestigated Monday evening
At 7:0&gt; a .m. today a car
and this morning by Pomeroy driven by Jeffrey Boggs ,
Police .
Pomeroy, passing an eastAt 5 p .m. Monday on West bound car on East Main St.,
Main St., a car driven by Marie sll'uck headon a west bound car
Vietro , Pomeroy, waiting to driven by Fern Norris, Racine.
make a . right turn onto Boggs was charged with
Ebenezer St., was struck in the driving while intoxicated,
rear by a car driven by Ber- police said. Mrs. Norris was
nard Rairden, Hartford, W.Va . taken to Veterans Memorial
Linda May Moore , a passenger Hospital by the Pomeroy E-R
in the Vietro car, was taken to Squad suffering a mouth inVeterans Memorial Hospital jury .
by the Pomeroy E-R Unit with

criticizing them for spending $1
billion more than he proposed.
He predicted the United States
would be without major gasoline shortages this winter,
barring another Arab all
embargo.
One of Ford's leglslaUve
recommendations -a trade
regula lion bill - is expected to
be discussed today when the
President speaks to Ule American Conference on Trade.
Another area in which Ford
has a !aceoff with Congress Is
in Ule appointment of a new
vice president. The nominee,
Nelson A. Rockefeller, also Is
scheduled · to meet with the
President today.
Ford wore a brand new blue
pin...triped suit for his flflh
news conference . It w~s so new

Cable rates hiked
now being used on a trial basis.
The radar will cos! approximately $1,400. Signs that
radar is in use will be placed at
each end uf the village.
Mayor Dale Smith reported
that he had been contacted by a
person interested in purchasing the Court Street Cab
Co. If it is sold, council will
issue a new license to the

Two of the three members of
the Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation whose
terms expire this year have
declined to accept reappointment.
This was announced when
the board mel Monday night In
the office of the Meigs County
Commissioners.
It
was
reported that a letter has been
sent to the commissioners

advising them that two of the
three
Ed
Kennedy,
president, and Iris Carr .:__ will
not accept additional terms.
The third member whose term
expires this year is Grace
Weber.
The
board
discussed
vacating
the
Rutland
Elementary School where the
Meigs Community School is
operated. The space taken up

on

Firemen on move

DEERSEASONOPENED..;_Isae~ D. JackiOII, PorUand

Route 1, didn't have to leave home to bag this 11 point buck
deer Monday. It was k!Ued on tbe .Jackson farm. At right, Bill
Spaun of Pomeroy was another of Meigs County's happy deer
hunters'. Bill hagged this 1~lnt, 201).pound buck in woods

buyer. It was also reported that
cab service rates will be
published, as council has had
complaints about rates.
Attending were Mayor
Smith, Ralph Werry, William
Snouffer, Harry Davis, Phil
Globakar, Lou Osborne,
council members, Henry
Werry , police officer, and Jane
Walton, clerk.

Two decline reap ointment
on Meigs retarda ion board

THE COLUMBUS &amp; SOUTHERN Ohio
(Continued
page 10)

The
Middleport
Fire \ one hour.
Department was busy Monday
At 7:25 p.m. the squad was .
night with the annual Christ- cal~ed to the. Jim Brewer
mas Parade and two fire calls. · .residence on Vme Street.
Bob Byer, Middleport fire
Fire behind the fireplace, bechief, reported that at 4:47 tween walls, was caused by a
p.m., firemen were called to faulty flu. Because of location
the Joe Moodispaugh residence of the fife, firemen were at the
on South Second Street. Fire scene two hours.
·
started in the kitchen
On the first fire the firemen
the house and had to run a hose relay 1,000
caulO!d heavy smoke damage feet. Byer publicly thanked
thro 1111:ho11tthe one story frame Charles Legar and the
Byer reported that it · Po!Deroy Fire Dept. which was
11 major fire and that there .on standby to ass1sl the Midextensive damage. dleport Unit so Ulat it could
Firemen were at the scene for participate in the parade.

Ulat he didn't want to pierce
Ule Iatric with a WIN button.
The President seemed relaxed and well prepared for the
series of questions on strategic
weapons. The United States
has
838 MIRY-equipped
missiles now . Pentagon
sources say plans caD for 1,286
of the hydra-headed rockets 34 less than the Umlt.
"I Intend to stay below the
ceiling," Ford said. "That Is
Ule agreement, but we do have
an obligation to stay up to that
ceiling, and Ule budget that I
will recommend wlU keep our
strategic forces either up to or
aimed at that objective ."
Current spending, Ford
acknowledged, was about $15
billion and the increase would
bring It to "the baD park"

figure of $18 b!Uion. "My best
judgment," he said, "Is that
our strategic anna cost wiD
hold relatively the same. It will
not be substantially expanded
other Ulan for any Increase
resulting from Inftatlon."
Ford was straightforward
and optimistic as he answered
questions on Ule economy.
"Our greatest danger today,"
he said, "Is to faD victim to the
more exaggerated alarms
that are being generated about
the underlying health and
strengtb of our economy."

Board reelects
Wally Bradford

its president

NEW YORK - ACI'RESS SIURLEY MacLAJNE, asked
about Rep . WUb\U' Mills' claim that he launched her into show
business said Monday Mills should "explain his ways and tell us .
'
what he 'means."
"I love old Wilbur," sh'e said, "buti didn't meet him until
late 1973.I was under the impression that I was launched a long
time before that." Mills said Sunday Ulat Miss MacLaine was
among 14 or 15 personalities he helped give a boost into show
business. He also said Miss MacLaine, exploding into laughter.
"what he wanted me to do was flop on him and I'm not a midnight swimmer," she said.
COLUMBUS -

TEN CENTS

';;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-;::::::::::-.:::~::

MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIF. - HURLED BY tremendous
orbital motion from Its encounter witb Jupiter, Pioneer 11 shot
away today for tbe first spacecraft look at the ringer planet
Saturn. The 570-pound Pioneer swept Monday night through
Jupiter's radiation belts to a point 26,000 miles from the planet's
.. cloud tops -three times closer than Pioneer 10 approach last
December.
It had not been known before whether a spaceship close
enough to Jupiter to catch Its orbital motion could survive a
radiation belt equal in power to several hydrogen bombs.
Pioneer was hit close to Ule planet with an intense radiation peak
that lasted only a few minutes. The peak caused several dozen
false commands to instruments but apparently resulted in no
great damage.
A NASA official said, "Pioneer 10 tickled Jupiter's dragon's
tall but Pioneer 11 flew right toto Ule dragon's moutb. It emerged
only a lltUe singed."

"FRIENDLY ONES". ·

KL 5·1234

.

120FOOLUMBUS AREA LOST
"'
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - Trans World AlrllDes today
released the foUowlng list of passengen from Columbus In the
plane wblcb crasbed Sunday at Uptll!rvffie, Va.:
Robert Filbert, Jr., Mils D. L.Al!en, Mr. R. Murday, Mill C.
casey, Mr. Terry Meehan, A. KJU!nesworth, Mr. R. Stanley, Mr.
J . RusleU, Kathleen Farrell, J. A. Bennett (Reynoldsburg), R. J.
Currie, and R. CUrrie.

· Happiness is shopping .w ith

lsrrnr •

I

iO'i5.

Yellow
Pages

&amp;TOOLS

NO SUCH

~ "'Su•:ce!ll Is getting what
you want_; happiness is
wanting what you get."

.

•·

WHOlESALE

;~·HARDWARE

C)HWI

··,{r
~"' · e Casters

&gt;

I[ •.

.

.
' .. '
"

Club

Country Club.
Surviving are his wife,
Jean Cole Littlepage ; his
mother, Mrs. B. K. tltflepage
of Milton, W. Va.; two sons ,
Samuel Dickinson Littlepage II
of Arlington , Va., and Stephen

Despite the cold, wet night, hundreds of
people lined the streets of downtown Middleport
Monday as a parade moved through the business
section to mark the official opening of the
Chl'istmas Holiday Season.
llighlighting the parade, of course, was
Santa and his sleigh. Several businessmen in red
suits rode with Santa and assisted him later in
handing treats to several hundred children.
Led by the Middleport Police Department.
the parade was made up of fire and emergency
units of Pomeroy and Middleport, the bands of
Meigs and Kyger Creek High Schools, the GloEttes, the Riggs Royai-Ettes, several commercial vehicles, Babs Whitt, the new Southeastern Ohio Junior Miss, Donna Boyd, the
Regatta Queen and her court.
Following the parade merchants staged a
moonlight sale offering special merchandise at
··~duced prices.
AT LEFT, Donna Boyd (left), Big Bend
Regatta Queen, and her court ride in the parade.
At right, Santa has made the eyes of a child
sparkle with friendly words and a treat.

THINGS AS

l Area Deaths !

Okinawa and was wounded
while commanding a flame thrower tank battalion on
Okinawa . He resigned his
commission as a lieutenant colonel to rE:turn to the West
Virginia University School of
Law and Qi aduated in 1949.
Mr . L1tflepage V(as a
member of Christ Episcopal
Church, of the Mason County
Bar , the West Virginia State
Bar where he served many
years on the Unlawful Practice
Comm i ttee ,
Edgewood
Countr.y Club. Army - Navy

Santa came, even in the rain

NO

!i..cf14EP1E WEll.~

r-------------------------,

lOWPR\tE ...
oo Sl - ~· ~~~~~-~: .-.. . .

:;;;»":=~1.).~!8!•.~:!$!:~:~i:i8!«:..&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;;::;:::::;:-.--:.;::;::;:;:;:;:;8i

Miller fire ·

back of Syracuse. Another successful bunter ~as Keltb
Curtis of Middleport, who killed a 7.point buck deer weighing
190pgundsatabout 10a.m . Monday in tbe Harrlsonv!Ue area.
According to Meigs County Game Warden Gary Swope 96
deer were !tiDed the· first day of the gun season in Meigs
County, up considerably over last year .

by the school is needed to
conduct regular classes, it is
reported . The matter of
vacating the Rutland School
was tabled, to be reconsidered
when new board members are
named.
It was agreed to send a letter
to the county commission
asking it to appropriate all tbe
money legally due the board so
that the Community School can
continue to operate this 1974-7&gt;
year . It was pointed out that
the commissioners may also be
asked for additional funds so
that the school year can be
completed.
· Board member Rick Crow
was named to contact Ule
trustees of the former carleton
College in Syracuse. The land
wbere carleton CoUege once
stood has been approved by the
board, tt-.e commissioners and
the state as Ule location for Ule
new school for the retarded.
Attending Ule meeUng were
Kennedy, Richard Chambers,
Crow, Manning Webster and
the school administration,
Margaret Ella Lewis .

Wallace Bradford, formerly
of Middleport, now of near
Coolville, was reelected
president of Ule Meigs County
Fair · Board
at
the
organlza tiona!
meeting
Monday
night
at
the
secretary's office on the
fairgrounds. '
Others elected are Danny
Zirkle, vice president, and
William B. Downie, treasurer.
Mrs . Lucille Leifheit wao
named delegate to the stale
convention In Columbus tn
January with Bradford named
the alternate.
Fair board secretary, named
earlier, Is Mrs. Wallace
Bradford.
Sunday four members of the
board were In Jackson to al.tend a meeting of Soutbeastern
Ohio
Fair
Boards.
Representing the Meigs Board
were Bradford, Downie,
Gerald Douglas and Fred
Goeglein.

Contract will be

signed soon
A formal contract between
Gallia County commissioners
and Meigs County commissioners wiD be signed next
Monday for general care '
services for six residenta of the
Gallia County Home who now'
reside in the Meigs County ·
Infirmary.
An agreement made earlier
between the two counties
provided that children from Ule
Meigs County Children's Home
would be moved to Gallipolis
and the elderly from Gallia
County to Meigs. The com- ,
missioners met In regular
session this morning with
Robert Clark and Henry Wells,
commissioners, and Mary
Hobstetter, acting clerk, al.tendlng.

Veterans Memorial Hotpltal
ADMITTED
Goldie
Lawson, Minersville; Sandra
Shields, Letart, W. Va.; Sharon
Wright, Middleport; Ollie
Tyree, Middleport; Velvie
McDonald, Albany; Charles
Werry, Pomeroy; Eloise
Layne, Pomeroy; May Boston,
Racine; Pearl Greathouse,
Portland; Beatrice White ,
Rutland.
DISCHARGED - Robert
Dail~y , Clara Ph!Uips, Roy
Gladman , lillian Werry.
~

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1974

Cincinnati outlook bleak after Dolphin romp
MIAMI (UP! l - The confidence tha t comes with two
straight Super Bowl championships showed itself Monday
night. The Miami Dolphins
believe tha t when they have to
produce t hey will.
That's the reason th ey

played the ir best ga me of the
year Monday night, a con·
vi.ncing 24-3 victory over the
Cincinnati Bengals . The win
kepl Miami in a lie with Buffalo for the American Football
Conference's Eastern Division
lead with a 9-3 record.

'"I think the Miami Dolphins
play the ir best ball with their
backs to the wall, a nd we
certainly have our backs to the
wall, don 't we'!" said a battered I ..arry Csonka after he
had gained 123 yards on 13
ca rries aga inst the Bengals.

" l feel it was oUI best pertogether, " Shuh:t said .
formance of the year/' said a
The Dolphins took control
pleased Coach Don Simla. "Our
immediately after taking the
defense pla yed rea lly well a nd
opening kickoff, marching 87
offensive ly we got after them .
ya rds in 14 plays on a drive that
" We haven't played consisttook 8:39 minutes.
ently for a long time, but we
Mercury Morris finally
finally put four good quarters
scored on a four-yard pass
from Bob Griese. Garo Yepremian added a 43-yard field
goal in the second quarter to
make it 10-0, but at the end of
the half Horst Muhlmann hit a
29-ya rd field goal for Cincinnati after Bernard Jackson
recove red a Morris fumble on
the Dolphin 22.
The first lime Miami got the
ball in the second half, the
Dolphins launched another
long
drive with Griese hilling
Southwest Confe rence ti tl e,
moved up one spot to 12th at 45 tight end Jim Mandich for a
score from four yards out.
points.
Miami of Ohio, Florida, Miami added a meaningless
Brigham Young, Texas A&amp;M, touchdown in the last minute
Michiga n State, Arizona (tie ), when Bennie Malone pranced
North Carolina (li e) and Tulsa over from the two-yard line .
Griese, who had signed a new
completed the top 20.

Alabama holds top spot,
but Buckeyes close in
NEW YORK ( UP!) - Alabama maintained a secure hold
on the No. 1 position in the
penultimate rat in gs of \he
United Press Interna tional
Board of Maj or College Football Coaches, with the top four
teams rema ining in the same
places.
However, for the fir st time,
the
Ame rica n
Footba ll
Coa ches Association has
agreed to vote again-after the
bowl games- so the Crimson
Tide cannot claim the national
championship--yet.
A win over Notre Dame
sh01od clinch the top spot for
Bear Bryant's gridders, who
own the only perfect record
among the nation 's major
college teams, in the final
ratings to be released Jan . 3.
The two meet in the Orange
Bowlat8 p.m . New Year's Day
in a rematch of the 1973 Sugar
Bowl and the Tide, 11-11 after a
close 17-13 win over Auburn,
will be seeking revenge for
their 24-23 loss to the Irish last
New Year's Eve.
But Notre Dame will have its
Irish up for the match as well.
Leading~ at the half against
Southern Cal, the Irish let down
their guard a nd were run off
the fi eld , 50.:24. They 'll be
looking to come back from the

humili a tin g loss- and what
better way than to beat No. 1'
Behind the leade r , Ohi o
State, Michigan and Southern
Ca l held Nos. 2 through 4, but
the Trojans made a rush at the
Wolve ri nes, finish in g only
three points behind in the
battle for third . The Buckeyes
were idle and Michigan
completed its season last week,
while USC made a serious bid
for the national title with its
whipping of No tre Dame,
which fell from fifth to eighth.
With Ohio State and Southern
Cal matched in the Rose Bowl,
a Trojan victory and a Crimson
Tide defeat would upset the
picture considerably and could
mean the title for Southern Cal.
A Buckeye win and a Tide loss
would likely gi ve Woody
Hayes' men the top spot they
held for so long this season.
Auburn, though losing to
Alabama , put up a tremendous
show in a game they could have
won and climbed one notch to
fifth. Penn State, a 31-10 winner
ov er Pittsburgh, jumped three
places to sixth and idle
Nebraska edged up one spot to
seventh .
In an extremely close battle
for the remaining two positions
in the top 10, idle North
Carolina State moved up one

~i{:f!Ntfff:t~l~m;ili!i!N!fll~m=!=!=!=~~!=!~ff!;!=~!J~;!;!;!~=im!i!m!i!~!;f;!J;i!i!imt
l!tl·Today's
mm[

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI S t Ed't
por s
• or

·.•.•.•,
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·=»._,

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spot to ninth a t 48 points, Texas
jumped from a tie for 18th to
lOth with 46 points on the ·
strength of its 32-3 rout over
Texas A&amp;M, idle Ma ryland
was again lith at 45 points and
Baylor, a 24-a winner over Rice
en route to capturing the

•

Second half surge wms
opener for Ohio State
By United Press International
Ohio State basketball coach
Fred Taylor isn 't one to push
the panic button.
Despite
his
favored
Bucke yes ' 38-34 halftime
deficit Monday night, Taylor
read no riot act.
" We just talked about how
little movement we had and
our goofy one-pass offense,"
said the veteran of 17 years at

osu.

Whatever he said, it was
effective,
because
the
Buckeyes came out gunning in
the final 20 minutes, outscoring
the Bulldogs 62-31 for a 96-69
victory, their second of the
season without a loss .
The leader of the second half
surge was 6-foot-7 senior Bill
Andreas. Held to three points
in the opening 20 minutes, the
husky Andreas tallied 14 points
in the first eight minutes after
Intermission to stake the Bucks
to a 58-00 lead. He fini&amp;hed with
19 for the game.
After that, it was all down
hill for the Buckeyes, who also
got double figure scoring from
Andy Stiegemeier with 18, his
career high, 17 each from
Craig Taylor and Larry Bolden
and 10 from freshman Mark
Bayless.
11
BUtler came in here
pumped up to play," said
Taylor, "and we didn't get that

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW ORLE:ANS (UPI) - Bowie Kuhn enjoys everything
connected with the baseball commissioner's office, !lle prestige,
the money and the publicity.
That last Item is never lost on him .
He doesn'lmind seeing his picture in the newspapers at all and
that 's why he 's always happy, even eager, to pose standing there
in his best Sunday judicial posture alongside maybe the state
governor , maybe some celebrated Hall of Farner like Joe
DiMaggio, or somebody, say, like Frank Robinson, baseball's
first black manager.
Bowie Kuhn knows the right people with whom to have his
picture taken, and from alii can gather, he feels he knows the
right lime to get his name in the papers aiso.
Last thursday looked like an excellent time. Why not? He was
fresh back from a triumphant tour of the Orient (he never lost a
NEW YORK (UP!) single , game in Japan) and with the winter baseball meetings
Temple quarterback Steve
about !o begin in a few more days, what better lime was there
Joachim, the national leader in
than this one to announce some earthshaking decision?
total offense, heads the UP!
Accordingly, Bowie Kuhn broke the news he was barring
All-East college football team
owner George Steinbrenner from operating the New York
that also includes three 1,000Yankees the next two years.
yard rushers and the nation 's
Presumably, Kuhn's action was "for. the good of baseball"
lea_ding scorer.
inasmuch as Steinbrenner pleaded guilty and was fined $15,000
Joachim, who transferred to
this past summer for illegal political contributions made through
Temple from Penn State after
his American Ship Building Company located in Cleveland.
his sophomore year, passed for
" U the public does not believe that a sport is honest, it would be
20 touchdowns, ran for nine
impossible for the sport to succeed, " Kuhn said.
more and averaged 222.7 yards
His logic escapes me completely.
a game in offense this year to
U he's saying George Steinbrenner broke the law, then he's
earn honors as UPI's Eastern
right. But Bowie Kuhn, as a lawyer must realize the Yankee
Player of the Year.
owner already has been penalized once by the courls, and ·for
He was joined in the backKuhn to do so again now in the name of baseball or anything else
field by sophomore Tony
makes no sense at all .
Dorsett of Pitt (1,004 yards, 11
U Bowie Kuhn, furthermore, is saying George Steinbrenner is
TDs) and juniors Artie Owens
dishonest, why is he permitting him back in baseball after an
of West Virginia (1,130 yards)
arbitrary period of two years' Besides, Steinbrenner voluntarily
and Keith Barnette of Boston
divorced himself from the day-t&lt;Kiay operation of the Yankees · College (22 touchdowns, the
last August simply to save baseball from any embarrassment, so
most in the country, and 1,096
what can possibly be the reason for Kuhn's measure other than a
yards).
mere show that he is equal to the law of the land, which he isn't
Penn State, the Eastern:
by any means.
champion for the seYJ!nth lime
The inconsistency of aU this does have ils humorous side.
in eight years, did not have a
Cesar Cedeno, the Houston outfielder, is found guilty of.killing
back selected but hardly was
a girl in a Dominican motel room, and he doesn't get so much as shut out. The Lions, 9-2, and
a public scolding from the baseball commissioner. George
headed for a Cotton Bowl game
SteinbreMer makes an illegal contribution and he's drummed
against Southwest Conference
out of the barracks for two years .
champion Baylor, were repreOne thing I notice is that Bowie Kuhn hasn't actually spelled
sented by six players, more
out all the details of ,the suspension.
than any other team.
Again, as a lawyer, he also knows the less he spells out, the less
All six were linemen-tight
he'll have to defend against if George Steinbrenner decides to go end Dan Natale, offensive
to court, and I have to bet he certainly will.
guard Tom Rafferty, center
Bowie Kulin haotbeen a lawyer more than 20 years, so I'm sure
Jack Baiorunos, defensive
·he can give someone like me lessons, but anytime he chooses I linemen Greg Murphy and
wish he would explain to me how baseball is so righteous when
Hartenstine
and
Mike
the very core of its structure, the free agent draft, runs contrary linebacker Greg Suttle. All are
W the law of the land.
seniors except Rafferty and
Similarly, I wish he'd tell me how "laws" made up by a group Suttle, who are juniors'.
of baseball men can possibly supersede the law of the land.
Only one other sophomore
He knows better than that.
was selected besides Dorsett,'
I happen to like Bowie Kuhn personally, but I think I'd charge who's already the career
him with an error In the action he bas taken against George
rushing leader at Pitt. He was
Steinbrenner, who strikes me basically as a decent man .Joe Klecko, a 255-pound defenSome are going around saying the commissioner showed a lot sive tackle from Temple.
of guts In his call a_gainst the Yankee boss.
The rest of the Offensive .
I think all he showed was that he likes to flex his muscle at team included wide receiver
· what he considers an opportune time and get his name in the Pat Mclnally of Harvard, who
paper.
caught 46 passes for 65S yards
Ultimately, Ibis could cost him dearly.
and eight touchdowns, tackles
Maybe even his job.
Neil Begley o( Army and AI

way until the second half."
16 points. Greg Olson and
While the second hall was freshman Randy Ayers tallied
kind to the Buckeyes, it turned 14 each and Chuck Goodyear
ou t to be the downfall for had 13.
Miami.
The activity picks up tonight
The Redskins, also gunning with 10 games on tap, headed
for their second straight win of by Cleveland State's visit to
the young season, jumped to a Ohio University.
1!).1 lead over Kentucky and
Other games find Slippery
were still on top 44-39 at in- Rock at Ashland, Southern
termission.
California College at Akron,
But the Southeastern Confer- Dyke at Capital, SteubenviUe
ence Wildcats , led by Bob at West Uberty (W. Va. ),
Guyette with 17 points and Wittenberg at Wabash (Ind.),
Kevin Grevey with 16, hit their Ohio Dominican at Kenyon,
first seven shots of the second Oberlin at Case Weste rn,
half a nd pulled out an 8().73 Urbana at Mount Vernon and
decision.
Wilberforce in action in the
Steve Fields led the well- West Virginia Tech Inbalanced Redskin attack with vitational Tournament.

....

,

•

"wol;l the way we have in the
past." Instead of depending on
the air game and going down to
the final minute of play for the
win, Miami reverted toils style
of last year, grinding it ·out and

Strike hampers
WFL playoffs
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UP!) Blazers in the first World Bowl
- Team owners anticipated a Dec. 5, refused to practice
decision today from Birming- Monday and said they would
ham Americans football not work out again until they
players on whether they would were paid for five previous
participate in the World games.
Football League championship
When the walkout took place
game Thursday after staging a the players had not reached a
surprise walkout Monday.
decision about participating in
The Americans players, the World Bowl, but met late
scheduled to meet the Florida Monday night to discuss it.
Allen Miller, WFL Players
Association counselor in Detroit, said a decision by the
players
not to take part in the
College Ba s.k etball Re sults.
By United Press. International
World Bowl ''would be the last
East
straw for the league. It would
R ider 108 K utztown 77
Cat h ed ral 92 St. Jos. -NY 6S
certainly kill attendance.''
Millersvl lO S Slh es lrn 90
Financial troubles have
F DU -Madison 103 De l. Val 74
Wilkes 58 Lock H aven 54
plagued the Americans for
Navy 60 Di cki n son 4 1
several weeks and team owner
Wm .&amp;Mary 69 Havertd 55
Prov . 79 Fullrln St. 69
Bill Putnam, who was
Assum pt ion 95 B ryant 83
Wlavailable for comment on
Colgate 82 1 thaca 65
Vermont 92 Da r tm th 72
the walkout, had been camN rt h estrn 82 Merrimck 78
paigning
for funds to keep the
South
Va 77 Wash . &amp; Lee 69
team here and meet the team's

taking control early.
Defensively, the Dolphins
never let Cincirmati out r:A the
hole. Shula said the game ball
went to cornerback Curtis
Johnson for playing an "exceptional game."
Johnson recovered a fumble
and made key plays on three
Ken Anderson passes,
"He made three plays right
in a row that were really
crucial," said safety Dick
Anderson. "He plays that way
all the time, but he's so quiet he
dnesn't get much attention.''
The loss gives Cincinnati a 75 record and drops them a 1~­
games behind AFC Central
leader Pittsburgh, whom the
Bengals play in the regularseason finale. H Miami and
Buffalo end up lied for the
Eastern Division lead, the nod
would go to the Dolphins
because they have won both
. games with the Bills this year.

Thrifty Santas LAY-AWAY NOW!
Sunbeam

'.

1 GAL
COOKER-FRYER

$33

bills.
Officials of federal, state,
county and city tax agencies
agreed to accept 30 per cent of
the World Bowl gate receipts to
cover more than $100,000 in
back taxes the team owed.
Most teams in the fledgling
WFL faced financial difficulties this season, including
F1orida, whose players had not
been paid for 13 weeks,

By CHRIS SCIIERF
UPI Sports Writer
Louisville Coach Denny
Crum 's fourth-ranked Cardinals opened their 1974-75
basketball season with a lastminute 91~7 ·victory over the
18th..-anked Houston Cougars
in their own den, Hofheinz
Pavilion . It was only the

Krevis of Boston College and
guard Ray Sweeney of Delaware.
Named on defense were
lineman Rich Feryok of Yale,
middle guard Gary Burley of
Pitt, linebackers Ray Preston
of Syracuse and Kelcy
Daviston of Pitt and backs
John Provost of Holy Cross,
whose 10 interceptions are the
most in the nation, Chet
Moeller of Navy and Glenn
Hodge of Pitt.
Joachim backed up John
Hufnagel at Penn State in 1971
and threw seven touchdown
passes in limited playing appearances . Following that
season, Joachim transferred to
Temple, feeling he would get a
better chance to play-and to
throw more-in Wayne Hardin's building program. After
sitting out the required year,
Joachim accounted for 20
TDs- 11 passing and nine
rushing-,in the Owls' 9-1
season, their best ever, in 1973.
This year Temple finished 6-2.
" I'm absolutely delighted
with the way things worked
out,'' Joachim said.

Cougars ' third loss since they
began playing there in 1969.
Junior Bridgeman, last seaSon's Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year,
completed a three-point play
with 21 seconds remaining for
Louisvtlle's winning points
after the lead changed bands
eight times in the frantic final
three minutes.
Bridgeman got credit for the
go-ahead basket on a goaltending call and also sank the
ensuing free throw after being
fouled on the play. Bill Bunton
converted two last«eond foul
shots for the final margin,
Seventh-ranked Alabama
and No. 8 South carolina
struggled some in their season
openers before scoring expected victories against lightly
regarded opponents.
The Crimson Tide trailed
early in the second half before
reeling off 12 straight points for
a 62-52 lead and coasted from
there to a 74-67 victory over
Oklahoma Slate. Leon Douglas
had 18 points to lead the
Alabama scoring, while Ricky
Brown added 17 and Charles
Cleveland 15.
Mike Dunleavy scored 28 ·
points and South Carolina
rolled over Bucknell, 88-74
despite an extremely errati~
performance.
• Alabama's chief SEC rival,
Kentucky, was forced to switch
to a zone defense in the second
half before sulxluing Miami of
Ohio, 8~73. Miami held a 44-39
halftime lead, but the Wildcats
limited their . foes to· only 29
points in the second half. Bob
Gayette led the Kentucky
scoring with 17 poinls and
Kevin ' Grevey added 16.
A trio of freshmen, Bruce
Campbell, Bill Eason and Bob
Misevicus, brought Providence

NOTICE!!
We Will Close
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Sunday, Dec. 8.
Would Lilce To Say THANKS
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Adolph's Dairy Valley

a hard-fought ~ victory
over the University of
California at Fullerton. The
Friars trailed, 21-18, in the first
half when Coach Dave Gavitt
inserted his three frosh and •
they gained a 39-J5 haHiime
edge for Providence.
But Fullerton closed the gap
to 57..;4 against Providence's
older hands , Gavitt again
turned to his freshmen and
they combined to score 14 of
Providence's last 22 points.
Campbell finished with 10
points, while Eas.on and
Misevlcus added 1eight each.
In other major games Monday, Auburn defeated South
Florida, 77-52; Oklahoma
blasted NW Missouri, 89-71;
Oral Roberts beat WisconsinMilwaukee, 115-70; Michigan
State edged Central Michigan,
82-78; Ohio State clobbered
Butler, 96-69; Vanderbilt
routed St. John's, 7:h53; Utah
squeezed by Rutgers, 92-.'19;
California edged Seattle, 73-71;
Washington State dumped San
Diego State, 76-67, and
Missouri defeated Rice, 92-67.

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Vndrblt 73 St. Jno . NY 53
Va Te ch 86 Florida 85
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Lewis 83 Geo . Will iams 69
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Louisville rallies by
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Joachim tops UPI
AU-East gridders

••

multi-year contract with the
Dolphins earlier in the day,
was at his best, hitting 11 of 13
passes for m yards and two
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Griese said the Dolphins

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1974

Cincinnati outlook bleak after Dolphin romp
MIAMI (UP! l - The confidence tha t comes with two
straight Super Bowl championships showed itself Monday
night. The Miami Dolphins
believe tha t when they have to
produce t hey will.
That's the reason th ey

played the ir best ga me of the
year Monday night, a con·
vi.ncing 24-3 victory over the
Cincinnati Bengals . The win
kepl Miami in a lie with Buffalo for the American Football
Conference's Eastern Division
lead with a 9-3 record.

'"I think the Miami Dolphins
play the ir best ball with their
backs to the wall, a nd we
certainly have our backs to the
wall, don 't we'!" said a battered I ..arry Csonka after he
had gained 123 yards on 13
ca rries aga inst the Bengals.

" l feel it was oUI best pertogether, " Shuh:t said .
formance of the year/' said a
The Dolphins took control
pleased Coach Don Simla. "Our
immediately after taking the
defense pla yed rea lly well a nd
opening kickoff, marching 87
offensive ly we got after them .
ya rds in 14 plays on a drive that
" We haven't played consisttook 8:39 minutes.
ently for a long time, but we
Mercury Morris finally
finally put four good quarters
scored on a four-yard pass
from Bob Griese. Garo Yepremian added a 43-yard field
goal in the second quarter to
make it 10-0, but at the end of
the half Horst Muhlmann hit a
29-ya rd field goal for Cincinnati after Bernard Jackson
recove red a Morris fumble on
the Dolphin 22.
The first lime Miami got the
ball in the second half, the
Dolphins launched another
long
drive with Griese hilling
Southwest Confe rence ti tl e,
moved up one spot to 12th at 45 tight end Jim Mandich for a
score from four yards out.
points.
Miami of Ohio, Florida, Miami added a meaningless
Brigham Young, Texas A&amp;M, touchdown in the last minute
Michiga n State, Arizona (tie ), when Bennie Malone pranced
North Carolina (li e) and Tulsa over from the two-yard line .
Griese, who had signed a new
completed the top 20.

Alabama holds top spot,
but Buckeyes close in
NEW YORK ( UP!) - Alabama maintained a secure hold
on the No. 1 position in the
penultimate rat in gs of \he
United Press Interna tional
Board of Maj or College Football Coaches, with the top four
teams rema ining in the same
places.
However, for the fir st time,
the
Ame rica n
Footba ll
Coa ches Association has
agreed to vote again-after the
bowl games- so the Crimson
Tide cannot claim the national
championship--yet.
A win over Notre Dame
sh01od clinch the top spot for
Bear Bryant's gridders, who
own the only perfect record
among the nation 's major
college teams, in the final
ratings to be released Jan . 3.
The two meet in the Orange
Bowlat8 p.m . New Year's Day
in a rematch of the 1973 Sugar
Bowl and the Tide, 11-11 after a
close 17-13 win over Auburn,
will be seeking revenge for
their 24-23 loss to the Irish last
New Year's Eve.
But Notre Dame will have its
Irish up for the match as well.
Leading~ at the half against
Southern Cal, the Irish let down
their guard a nd were run off
the fi eld , 50.:24. They 'll be
looking to come back from the

humili a tin g loss- and what
better way than to beat No. 1'
Behind the leade r , Ohi o
State, Michigan and Southern
Ca l held Nos. 2 through 4, but
the Trojans made a rush at the
Wolve ri nes, finish in g only
three points behind in the
battle for third . The Buckeyes
were idle and Michigan
completed its season last week,
while USC made a serious bid
for the national title with its
whipping of No tre Dame,
which fell from fifth to eighth.
With Ohio State and Southern
Cal matched in the Rose Bowl,
a Trojan victory and a Crimson
Tide defeat would upset the
picture considerably and could
mean the title for Southern Cal.
A Buckeye win and a Tide loss
would likely gi ve Woody
Hayes' men the top spot they
held for so long this season.
Auburn, though losing to
Alabama , put up a tremendous
show in a game they could have
won and climbed one notch to
fifth. Penn State, a 31-10 winner
ov er Pittsburgh, jumped three
places to sixth and idle
Nebraska edged up one spot to
seventh .
In an extremely close battle
for the remaining two positions
in the top 10, idle North
Carolina State moved up one

~i{:f!Ntfff:t~l~m;ili!i!N!fll~m=!=!=!=~~!=!~ff!;!=~!J~;!;!;!~=im!i!m!i!~!;f;!J;i!i!imt
l!tl·Today's
mm[

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI S t Ed't
por s
• or

·.•.•.•,
::::::::

·=»._,

::::::~

spot to ninth a t 48 points, Texas
jumped from a tie for 18th to
lOth with 46 points on the ·
strength of its 32-3 rout over
Texas A&amp;M, idle Ma ryland
was again lith at 45 points and
Baylor, a 24-a winner over Rice
en route to capturing the

•

Second half surge wms
opener for Ohio State
By United Press International
Ohio State basketball coach
Fred Taylor isn 't one to push
the panic button.
Despite
his
favored
Bucke yes ' 38-34 halftime
deficit Monday night, Taylor
read no riot act.
" We just talked about how
little movement we had and
our goofy one-pass offense,"
said the veteran of 17 years at

osu.

Whatever he said, it was
effective,
because
the
Buckeyes came out gunning in
the final 20 minutes, outscoring
the Bulldogs 62-31 for a 96-69
victory, their second of the
season without a loss .
The leader of the second half
surge was 6-foot-7 senior Bill
Andreas. Held to three points
in the opening 20 minutes, the
husky Andreas tallied 14 points
in the first eight minutes after
Intermission to stake the Bucks
to a 58-00 lead. He fini&amp;hed with
19 for the game.
After that, it was all down
hill for the Buckeyes, who also
got double figure scoring from
Andy Stiegemeier with 18, his
career high, 17 each from
Craig Taylor and Larry Bolden
and 10 from freshman Mark
Bayless.
11
BUtler came in here
pumped up to play," said
Taylor, "and we didn't get that

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW ORLE:ANS (UPI) - Bowie Kuhn enjoys everything
connected with the baseball commissioner's office, !lle prestige,
the money and the publicity.
That last Item is never lost on him .
He doesn'lmind seeing his picture in the newspapers at all and
that 's why he 's always happy, even eager, to pose standing there
in his best Sunday judicial posture alongside maybe the state
governor , maybe some celebrated Hall of Farner like Joe
DiMaggio, or somebody, say, like Frank Robinson, baseball's
first black manager.
Bowie Kuhn knows the right people with whom to have his
picture taken, and from alii can gather, he feels he knows the
right lime to get his name in the papers aiso.
Last thursday looked like an excellent time. Why not? He was
fresh back from a triumphant tour of the Orient (he never lost a
NEW YORK (UP!) single , game in Japan) and with the winter baseball meetings
Temple quarterback Steve
about !o begin in a few more days, what better lime was there
Joachim, the national leader in
than this one to announce some earthshaking decision?
total offense, heads the UP!
Accordingly, Bowie Kuhn broke the news he was barring
All-East college football team
owner George Steinbrenner from operating the New York
that also includes three 1,000Yankees the next two years.
yard rushers and the nation 's
Presumably, Kuhn's action was "for. the good of baseball"
lea_ding scorer.
inasmuch as Steinbrenner pleaded guilty and was fined $15,000
Joachim, who transferred to
this past summer for illegal political contributions made through
Temple from Penn State after
his American Ship Building Company located in Cleveland.
his sophomore year, passed for
" U the public does not believe that a sport is honest, it would be
20 touchdowns, ran for nine
impossible for the sport to succeed, " Kuhn said.
more and averaged 222.7 yards
His logic escapes me completely.
a game in offense this year to
U he's saying George Steinbrenner broke the law, then he's
earn honors as UPI's Eastern
right. But Bowie Kuhn, as a lawyer must realize the Yankee
Player of the Year.
owner already has been penalized once by the courls, and ·for
He was joined in the backKuhn to do so again now in the name of baseball or anything else
field by sophomore Tony
makes no sense at all .
Dorsett of Pitt (1,004 yards, 11
U Bowie Kuhn, furthermore, is saying George Steinbrenner is
TDs) and juniors Artie Owens
dishonest, why is he permitting him back in baseball after an
of West Virginia (1,130 yards)
arbitrary period of two years' Besides, Steinbrenner voluntarily
and Keith Barnette of Boston
divorced himself from the day-t&lt;Kiay operation of the Yankees · College (22 touchdowns, the
last August simply to save baseball from any embarrassment, so
most in the country, and 1,096
what can possibly be the reason for Kuhn's measure other than a
yards).
mere show that he is equal to the law of the land, which he isn't
Penn State, the Eastern:
by any means.
champion for the seYJ!nth lime
The inconsistency of aU this does have ils humorous side.
in eight years, did not have a
Cesar Cedeno, the Houston outfielder, is found guilty of.killing
back selected but hardly was
a girl in a Dominican motel room, and he doesn't get so much as shut out. The Lions, 9-2, and
a public scolding from the baseball commissioner. George
headed for a Cotton Bowl game
SteinbreMer makes an illegal contribution and he's drummed
against Southwest Conference
out of the barracks for two years .
champion Baylor, were repreOne thing I notice is that Bowie Kuhn hasn't actually spelled
sented by six players, more
out all the details of ,the suspension.
than any other team.
Again, as a lawyer, he also knows the less he spells out, the less
All six were linemen-tight
he'll have to defend against if George Steinbrenner decides to go end Dan Natale, offensive
to court, and I have to bet he certainly will.
guard Tom Rafferty, center
Bowie Kulin haotbeen a lawyer more than 20 years, so I'm sure
Jack Baiorunos, defensive
·he can give someone like me lessons, but anytime he chooses I linemen Greg Murphy and
wish he would explain to me how baseball is so righteous when
Hartenstine
and
Mike
the very core of its structure, the free agent draft, runs contrary linebacker Greg Suttle. All are
W the law of the land.
seniors except Rafferty and
Similarly, I wish he'd tell me how "laws" made up by a group Suttle, who are juniors'.
of baseball men can possibly supersede the law of the land.
Only one other sophomore
He knows better than that.
was selected besides Dorsett,'
I happen to like Bowie Kuhn personally, but I think I'd charge who's already the career
him with an error In the action he bas taken against George
rushing leader at Pitt. He was
Steinbrenner, who strikes me basically as a decent man .Joe Klecko, a 255-pound defenSome are going around saying the commissioner showed a lot sive tackle from Temple.
of guts In his call a_gainst the Yankee boss.
The rest of the Offensive .
I think all he showed was that he likes to flex his muscle at team included wide receiver
· what he considers an opportune time and get his name in the Pat Mclnally of Harvard, who
paper.
caught 46 passes for 65S yards
Ultimately, Ibis could cost him dearly.
and eight touchdowns, tackles
Maybe even his job.
Neil Begley o( Army and AI

way until the second half."
16 points. Greg Olson and
While the second hall was freshman Randy Ayers tallied
kind to the Buckeyes, it turned 14 each and Chuck Goodyear
ou t to be the downfall for had 13.
Miami.
The activity picks up tonight
The Redskins, also gunning with 10 games on tap, headed
for their second straight win of by Cleveland State's visit to
the young season, jumped to a Ohio University.
1!).1 lead over Kentucky and
Other games find Slippery
were still on top 44-39 at in- Rock at Ashland, Southern
termission.
California College at Akron,
But the Southeastern Confer- Dyke at Capital, SteubenviUe
ence Wildcats , led by Bob at West Uberty (W. Va. ),
Guyette with 17 points and Wittenberg at Wabash (Ind.),
Kevin Grevey with 16, hit their Ohio Dominican at Kenyon,
first seven shots of the second Oberlin at Case Weste rn,
half a nd pulled out an 8().73 Urbana at Mount Vernon and
decision.
Wilberforce in action in the
Steve Fields led the well- West Virginia Tech Inbalanced Redskin attack with vitational Tournament.

....

,

•

"wol;l the way we have in the
past." Instead of depending on
the air game and going down to
the final minute of play for the
win, Miami reverted toils style
of last year, grinding it ·out and

Strike hampers
WFL playoffs
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UP!) Blazers in the first World Bowl
- Team owners anticipated a Dec. 5, refused to practice
decision today from Birming- Monday and said they would
ham Americans football not work out again until they
players on whether they would were paid for five previous
participate in the World games.
Football League championship
When the walkout took place
game Thursday after staging a the players had not reached a
surprise walkout Monday.
decision about participating in
The Americans players, the World Bowl, but met late
scheduled to meet the Florida Monday night to discuss it.
Allen Miller, WFL Players
Association counselor in Detroit, said a decision by the
players
not to take part in the
College Ba s.k etball Re sults.
By United Press. International
World Bowl ''would be the last
East
straw for the league. It would
R ider 108 K utztown 77
Cat h ed ral 92 St. Jos. -NY 6S
certainly kill attendance.''
Millersvl lO S Slh es lrn 90
Financial troubles have
F DU -Madison 103 De l. Val 74
Wilkes 58 Lock H aven 54
plagued the Americans for
Navy 60 Di cki n son 4 1
several weeks and team owner
Wm .&amp;Mary 69 Havertd 55
Prov . 79 Fullrln St. 69
Bill Putnam, who was
Assum pt ion 95 B ryant 83
Wlavailable for comment on
Colgate 82 1 thaca 65
Vermont 92 Da r tm th 72
the walkout, had been camN rt h estrn 82 Merrimck 78
paigning
for funds to keep the
South
Va 77 Wash . &amp; Lee 69
team here and meet the team's

taking control early.
Defensively, the Dolphins
never let Cincirmati out r:A the
hole. Shula said the game ball
went to cornerback Curtis
Johnson for playing an "exceptional game."
Johnson recovered a fumble
and made key plays on three
Ken Anderson passes,
"He made three plays right
in a row that were really
crucial," said safety Dick
Anderson. "He plays that way
all the time, but he's so quiet he
dnesn't get much attention.''
The loss gives Cincinnati a 75 record and drops them a 1~­
games behind AFC Central
leader Pittsburgh, whom the
Bengals play in the regularseason finale. H Miami and
Buffalo end up lied for the
Eastern Division lead, the nod
would go to the Dolphins
because they have won both
. games with the Bills this year.

Thrifty Santas LAY-AWAY NOW!
Sunbeam

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$33

bills.
Officials of federal, state,
county and city tax agencies
agreed to accept 30 per cent of
the World Bowl gate receipts to
cover more than $100,000 in
back taxes the team owed.
Most teams in the fledgling
WFL faced financial difficulties this season, including
F1orida, whose players had not
been paid for 13 weeks,

By CHRIS SCIIERF
UPI Sports Writer
Louisville Coach Denny
Crum 's fourth-ranked Cardinals opened their 1974-75
basketball season with a lastminute 91~7 ·victory over the
18th..-anked Houston Cougars
in their own den, Hofheinz
Pavilion . It was only the

Krevis of Boston College and
guard Ray Sweeney of Delaware.
Named on defense were
lineman Rich Feryok of Yale,
middle guard Gary Burley of
Pitt, linebackers Ray Preston
of Syracuse and Kelcy
Daviston of Pitt and backs
John Provost of Holy Cross,
whose 10 interceptions are the
most in the nation, Chet
Moeller of Navy and Glenn
Hodge of Pitt.
Joachim backed up John
Hufnagel at Penn State in 1971
and threw seven touchdown
passes in limited playing appearances . Following that
season, Joachim transferred to
Temple, feeling he would get a
better chance to play-and to
throw more-in Wayne Hardin's building program. After
sitting out the required year,
Joachim accounted for 20
TDs- 11 passing and nine
rushing-,in the Owls' 9-1
season, their best ever, in 1973.
This year Temple finished 6-2.
" I'm absolutely delighted
with the way things worked
out,'' Joachim said.

Cougars ' third loss since they
began playing there in 1969.
Junior Bridgeman, last seaSon's Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year,
completed a three-point play
with 21 seconds remaining for
Louisvtlle's winning points
after the lead changed bands
eight times in the frantic final
three minutes.
Bridgeman got credit for the
go-ahead basket on a goaltending call and also sank the
ensuing free throw after being
fouled on the play. Bill Bunton
converted two last«eond foul
shots for the final margin,
Seventh-ranked Alabama
and No. 8 South carolina
struggled some in their season
openers before scoring expected victories against lightly
regarded opponents.
The Crimson Tide trailed
early in the second half before
reeling off 12 straight points for
a 62-52 lead and coasted from
there to a 74-67 victory over
Oklahoma Slate. Leon Douglas
had 18 points to lead the
Alabama scoring, while Ricky
Brown added 17 and Charles
Cleveland 15.
Mike Dunleavy scored 28 ·
points and South Carolina
rolled over Bucknell, 88-74
despite an extremely errati~
performance.
• Alabama's chief SEC rival,
Kentucky, was forced to switch
to a zone defense in the second
half before sulxluing Miami of
Ohio, 8~73. Miami held a 44-39
halftime lead, but the Wildcats
limited their . foes to· only 29
points in the second half. Bob
Gayette led the Kentucky
scoring with 17 poinls and
Kevin ' Grevey added 16.
A trio of freshmen, Bruce
Campbell, Bill Eason and Bob
Misevicus, brought Providence

NOTICE!!
We Will Close
For The Season
Sunday, Dec. 8.
Would Lilce To Say THANKS
To All O~r Patrons

Adolph's Dairy Valley

a hard-fought ~ victory
over the University of
California at Fullerton. The
Friars trailed, 21-18, in the first
half when Coach Dave Gavitt
inserted his three frosh and •
they gained a 39-J5 haHiime
edge for Providence.
But Fullerton closed the gap
to 57..;4 against Providence's
older hands , Gavitt again
turned to his freshmen and
they combined to score 14 of
Providence's last 22 points.
Campbell finished with 10
points, while Eas.on and
Misevlcus added 1eight each.
In other major games Monday, Auburn defeated South
Florida, 77-52; Oklahoma
blasted NW Missouri, 89-71;
Oral Roberts beat WisconsinMilwaukee, 115-70; Michigan
State edged Central Michigan,
82-78; Ohio State clobbered
Butler, 96-69; Vanderbilt
routed St. John's, 7:h53; Utah
squeezed by Rutgers, 92-.'19;
California edged Seattle, 73-71;
Washington State dumped San
Diego State, 76-67, and
Missouri defeated Rice, 92-67.

SOUD STATE
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Mercer 76 N . Ca r . A&amp; T 65
E . Ky. 106 Chrlstn Bapt . 82
Geotwn Ky . 80 Cmpbllsvl 72
Berea 94 Cenlre 90
Vndrblt 73 St. Jno . NY 53
Va Te ch 86 Florida 85
W . Ky. 90 Madi son 12
Union K y . 80 Crs n -NWM N 7fo Auburn 77 South Fla . 52
Miss . St . 91 Samfo rd 80
T ul ane95 S.W. T enn . S8
Xa vier (La . ) 86 Sam H ous . 75
McNeese 76 NW La . 70
North Ala . 83 Short er 63
Midwest
Ill . Wslyn 8 1 Bmi dii St . 69
Mill ikin 108 MacMurray 87
Lewis 83 Geo . Will iams 69
Elmhurst 81! Ro c kford 81
No . Mich . 90 Northland 72
So. Il l. 70 St.M ry ·~ Tex. (,7
O . Roberts 85 W is . .Milw 70
l nd St .- T .H . 77 La . Tech 70

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Louisville rallies by
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Joachim tops UPI
AU-East gridders

••

multi-year contract with the
Dolphins earlier in the day,
was at his best, hitting 11 of 13
passes for m yards and two
touchdowns.
Griese said the Dolphins

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5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1974

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 3, 19'14

we'D be able to put lhe whole

Baseball trade talks begin
• By BJU. IIIADDEN
UPI Sporta wruer

NEW ORLEANS ( UPI)
The Baltimore Orioles clooed
in oo slugger Ken Singleton,
the New York Mets, offering

Rusty Staub, went in two
different directions in pursuit
of a centerfielder and lhe
Pbiladelphia Pbillies
EU&gt;ed
hopeful of adding All-Star
catcher Bill Freehan in a three-

Two SVAC tilts on tap
Two: games a re slated
tonight in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference.
Coach Jim Foster's North
Gallia Pirates will """k their
secood slraight league victory
at Southwestern . Coach
Ri c hard
H am ilt on ·s
Highlanders lost a one point
heartbreaker to Ironton St. Joe

,

last Friday night.
In non-league action, Coach
Keith Cartett's Kyger Creek
Bobcats open their 1974-75
campaign against Buffalo of
Putnam County. W. Va. The
Bobcats split !heir two games
with the Bisons last year .
Kyger Creek will play at
Hannan on Thursday night.

Pro Standing3
N I!IA

St~ndings

By United Press International
E~stern Conference

Atlttntic Division
w. 1. pet . g.b.

Buffalo

16

6

727

New York
Boston
Ph tladelph ia

13
8 619
11 10 524
7 14 333
Cutrt~l Division
w
I. pet .
Wa~hington
16
6 727

C leveland

11

Houston

11

Atlanta

9

8 .579

10

.524

12 .429

New Orleans
1 20 .091
W est e rn Conference
Mictwest Division

21 1
41 1
8 '1

g.b.
3',
_., ,,

61 7
14

w. 1. pet. g . b .
Detr,·; t
11 10 .524
KC 1maha
12 11 .522
Chicago
10 II .476
I
Milwaukee
7 14 .333
4
Pacific D ivision
w . 1. pet . g . b .
Golden State
15
6 .71o4
Portland
12 10 .545
3"'
Seattle
12 12 .500
41 1
Los Angeles
9 12 .429
6
Phoenix
9 13 .409
6' '1
Monday ' s Result
Seattle 110 KC -Omaha 106
Tuesday 's Games
Milwauket at BuHalo
Los An'iltle$ at New York
Hous ton at Clevel and
Portland at Chicago
Atlanta at Phoenix
New Orleans at Go ld en St

•

International Hoelle,
Leit9Uit Standings
By United Press International
North
• - I. t . pts gf ta
Muskegon
16 6 I 33 103 55
Flint
15 6 2 32 85 52
Saginaw
13 9 1 27 82 6e
Port Huron
9 12 2 20 77 82
Larsing
7 12 1 15 79 HI
Kalamazoo
1 15 2 .. 36 73
South
w . I. t. pts gt ga
Dayton
16 4 1 33 93 69
Des Moines
12 11 1 2S 79. 83
Col umbus
10 10 1 21 81 78
Tol edo
8 15 1 l7 83 89
Fort Wayne
6 13 1 13 70 88
Monday 's Results
( No games sc heduled~
Today ' s G~mes
Flint at Kala mazoo

. College Ratings

NEW YORK ( UP! ) The
197.1 United Press Interna tional
Boarel of Coaches top 20 major
N8A St~ndings
college
footba ll rati ngs w i th
By United Pre ss lnt er n;~tionat
won . lost records and fir st place
Eastern Conference
votes in parentheses :
Atlantic Div isi on
Points
w. 1. pet. g . b. Team
I. Alabma ( 30• ( 11-0 )
342
BuHalo
16
6 .727
2. Ohio State. (SJ { 10· 1 l
. 315
New York
13
fl .619
2' '2
3. M ic h,igan I 10- 1 l
266
·easton
11 10 .52A
.~~ ~~
_. Southern Cal (9 - 1-1&gt;
263
Philadelphia
7 1• .333
8' ''
5. Auburn (9 ·2 )
U6
Centra• Division
6 . Penn State {9 -2)
126
w
1. pet. g.b..
7. Nebraska {8-Jl 113
Washington
16
6 . 727
8. Notre Dame (9 -2 )
90
Cle veland
11
8 . 579
3' '1
Ill . Car ol ina Sf . ( 9 -2 )
A8
Houston
11 10 .524
•''1 TO9 .. Te)llaS
(fi . Jl
-'6
. Atlanta
9' 12 ... 29 61 1
ll. Maryland {8-3)
.tS
New Orleans
2 20 .091 14
12. Baylor ( 8-3)
-'3
Western Conference
13 . Miam i (Ohio l c• -O· ll
24
M i dwest Div isio n
1-4. Florida (8 -J l
22
w. 1. pet . g . b . 16.
Br i gham Young (7-3 -1)
12
Detro it
11 10 .5 24
16. Texas A&amp;M { fl -31
B
KC -Omaha
12 11 .522
17. Michigan Sf . (7 -3- 1)
6
Chicago
10 11 .476
1
18
.
(T i e l Arirona (9 -2)
_.
Milwauk~
7 14 .333
4
(
T
i
e)
N
.
Carolina
O
-•
J
-'
Pacific Divisi on
. Tul~ (8 - 3 l
2
w . I. pet. g . ~ . W Note
: By agreement witt! t h e
Gold enState
15
6 .714
P ortland
12 10 .545
J''' Americ~n Foo·tball C oa ches .
Seattle
12 12 . 500
•' '1 teams on probation bV the NCA
are inellglble for top 20 and
Los Angeles
9 12 .429
6
Phoenix
9 13 .409
6' ·1 na t ional c hampi·onsh i p con sideration by th e UPt Boards of
Monctav•s Result
Coaches . Those teams currentlv
Sea ttle 1·10 KC -Omaha 106
on probation are : Oklahoma,
Tuesday#s Gamu
SMU , California , Long Beac h
Mi l waukee at Buffalo
State
a nd
Southwits tern
Los Angeles at New York
Louisiana .
Houston at Cleveland
Portland at Chicago
Atlanta at Phoenix
New Orleans at Golden St .
NHl.. Standings
By United ~ress InternatiOnal
Division 1
w. I . t . pts gf ga
P hl la
15 6 3 13 91 55

Atlanta
13 8
NY Rangers 10 8
N Y lslndrs
9 8
Divisi on
w . 1.
Van c uvr
15 6

s

s

31
25

1 25

72 66
87 70
82 68

2
t. pts gf ga
4 34 94 66

10 9 3 23

76 53
9 11 .. 22 69 90
7 II 5' 19 71 !17
.. 1!1 1
9 55 104
D i vi si on l
w. I. t . ph gf ga
Montr ea t
13 6 7 33 111 79
Los Ang
1'2 2 9 33 70 38
Pittsbgh
8 II 4 20 95 88
Detroit
7 13 2 16 61 94
Washngtn
2 19 3
7 54 124
Division 4
w. I. t . pts gf ga
Buffalo
18 .. .. 4() 12 1 85
12 6 5 . 29 99 69
Boston
Toronto
6 12 4 16 76 95
Ca lif
.. 16 513 58111
MaRday•s Result
Montreal 2 Atlanta 0
Tue1dav' s Gam es
Buffalo at wash ington
Cali fornia at St . Louis
Minnesota at Vancouver

Chicago
Minnesot a
St . L oui s
Kan City

•.

Ch icago at San Diego
Detroit at Cinci nnati
Green Baov at San Fran
Hous ton at Denver
Miami at Baltimore
Oakland at Kansas City
Phila at NY Giants
Pittsburgh at New Eng
St L ouis at New Orleans
Monday's Game
Wash at Los Ang, twilight

way nineplayer swap.
At the end of lhe fu:st day in
baseball's winter meeting
"swap and shop" s
ms,
howner, nobody got anybody
of major~.
In the only trade made
Monday, lhe opening day ollhe

Comeback

falls short
OMAHA, Neb. (UPf) -

9 3 0 .750 276 173
7 5 0 .583 304 234
5 7 0 .417 2U 252

Bait
PiltSbgh

2 10, 0 . 167 136 267
Central
w . I. t. pet . pf pa
8 3 l .708 257 169

Cinci
Houston

7 5 0 .583
6 6 0 .500

26 1 209
194 22 1

Clevelnd

4 8 0 .333
West

210

275

w. I. t . pet. pf

pa
199

x -Oaklnd

10 2 0 . 833

321

Denver
6 5 I .542 265
Kan Citv
5 7 0 .417 212
San Die;o J 9 o . 250 167
MlltiMUtf C&amp;nference

263
25 1
264

w . f. t. pet. pf

pill
190

'

3 o . 750

wa shnotn
Dallas
Ph ill
NY Giants

s 4 0 .667
7
0 .583
5 7 0 .417
2 10 0 167
Cen1raJ
w . f. t . pet.
8 .. 0 .6-67

s

259

255 179
233 191
194 192
174 2'53
pf

p;~.

252

170

Green Bay 6 6" 0 .500 201
Detroit
6 6 0 .500 216

189
223

x -M i nn

ChiC&lt;II90

.. I 0 . J:JJ
West

x -LosAng

9

It

scare at Seattle before the
Sdnics linally capared 1 UD106 National Basketball
.~IOdalkln dedsioJI Monday
night.
The Sonlcs hit •.8 per C81l
frQID the field in the M on)
quarter and ga!nod a SJ.41
lead.

Spencer Haywood, who Jed
Seattle wilb 211 poiDta, "'''""""'
lhe third quarter wilb • buRt
lif lhe tip. He lhen 5jW ' I bill
anltJe and had to sit out - " '
four minutes, bat during tlilt
time his teanunates 01"''"'1 a
119-67 lead behind tbe oullide

time for a Singer
saving gift...its now!

The finest TQUCH &amp; SE.W* machine by Singer
ehrisunas Sale Price

$
off

niDe playtn, in1Ft , "·
1be _, 1lle deod II par.
apd, the Melli would lllld

81 iiiiiQ' -

. m-•

Staab

to PltlladeJpbla for

reg. price

Carrying case o r cabinet

.....

yean back, were malrlng
ova baa to tile PIIIUiel.for Del
Ulllel' in a •u ••L•ated lnterINplnlde lbll CIGIIId Involve

Roger
Alexander
from
CUlSIItutes · the "playll' to
Milwaukee to AUa11ta. He . named later,"

8)(

this· all-d1a l controlled
Si n~ · push-button bob·
bin. built -i n butto nholer.

built-i n speed
much morer

REUTER·
BROGAN
INSURANCE

basting ,

ehrlslmas Sale Price

FASHION MATE' Z IG -ZAG sewing ma ch in e
Has 7 interchangeable stitches,'"' exclusive fron t
drop-i n bobbin, other con venience features.
Carry ing case or cabinet extra
Model 258

PH. 992-5130
107 Syeama..

Pomeroy

1

Save $25.95 ·
Reg , $139.95•

$114

The Kings' Jilnmy

1

Credit Plan ilesianed to fit your bud Fl.

We ilso have a llber.al trade-In pOIIcv.

THE FABRIC SHOP, POMEROY
115 W. 2nd

Ph, 992-2284

•A T'llllmMk a l THE SINGE" COMPA.NV

w......

•

PEl...

Cage Scores
Souttnwest
Louisvi lle 91 HouSion 17
Texas Tech 91 Adams St . 72
Alabama 74 Okla . St . 67
Murrav St . 79 Texas 69
Tex . Wslyn 77 Trletn St . 71
Tex . · Arl. 71 E . N .Mex . 47
Okla . Bapt 96 Mo . Bapt 62
Midwstrn 78 S .F . Austin 73
McMurry 13 Angelg t9
Tex . Sou thrn 131 P . Quinn 111
NE La. 93 Hardin -Sim mons 70
Ark . St . 74 Ga . Southrn 72
Oklahoma City 95 TCU 91
Oklahoma 89 NE Mo . St . 71
West
Utah 92 Rutgers 89
Boise St . 96 utah St. 87
lda . St . 92 Lvla -Mrvmnt 19
Air Force 61 Doane 56
California 73 Seattle 71
wash . St . 16 San Die9o St. 67
St . Mary's 81 San Fran St . 76

terested persons are urged to
attend .
Mr. and Mrs. Asa Jordan of
Middleport have worked 3%
days to put the cemetery in tiptop shape. Glen Haning and
Mr . Allen each helped \&lt;.! day.
Their work was donated, Mr.

ce metery.

Jordan providing his own tools,

An open meeting, all in~:'~~.::::::~~
to

YO·UR CHRISTMAS
MONEY ON ICE
FOR YOU ...

~..

don't be surprised.

to maintain efficiency and stay

American housewife is a m13rvel

It's a lot like ourselves,

out ahead of your next
electric need,

of ingenuity. Especially today.

Oh, our company's numbers

and somehow manage to get

"-.·.

point of pain.
We've shelved new construction,
cancelled work programs, terminated outside contractors, and
said "nix" to new materials-

Her husband's no different

except where they might affect

He's back to being the original

service,

do-it-younl8ff gu.y.

Shop as sharp as we will, we
usually wind up paying lenders
at a cost-rate of 12 to 15% for
short-term loans, Afford It or not

J 0 . 750 227

Did you know that s mall
d iamonds ca n have the
I sa; me fire and bril liance
large ones? And at a
fraction of the cost.
Regency dia mond
eneagement rings and
bridal sets feature elet&gt;anll
smaller stones set tna~th~.l
to look like one larger
diamond. Now you can
have the bea uty a~d
brilliance you've always
dreamed of but never
thought you could afford.
Lay Away

Pion Nowl

This rising cost of money is onereason why your electric bill
has increased.

About the only difference

Except where~ has ·no choice.

between us is that you borrow in

If we should ever choose not to

emergency.

borrow, Heaven help us !lit ·

_

_ : _ _ . : _ __ _ __

.GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy .

POMEROY Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, will install new officers
at 7:30p.m. at the temp le. All
Master Masons invited .
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, .2 P-!J1~W~ay, borne.
of Mrs. Dwight Wallace with •
Mrs. M. L. French reviewin g
"Burr" by Gore Diva!. Roll
call: ''What is Treason ?"
POMEROY
WOMEN 'S
Christian Temperance Union ,
12 iioon Christmas potluck at
the home of Mrs. Robert
Warner, Wednesday.
SALEM Center School
Christmas musical program
when school PTA meets at 7:30
p.m. Public invited.
THURSDAY
WOMEN'S
Association,
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church , 7: 30
p .m . at the church . Mrs.
Thomas Rue, devotional
leader, with Mrs. Jack
Coleman and Mrs, Dwight
Wallace to have the program
Members of Group II will be
the hostesses.
EVANGELINE Chapter,
OES, 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport Masonic Temple .

The

Dai~

Sentinel

go e1 qp.11, lie~{! borrow for the

We borrow constantly, We have

able to produce enough

new one. Alford', it or not And

no choice,

electricity to go 'round,

ZENITH
COLOR TV

. pay the hii&amp;Iest rate·through the
We must have big chunks of

And when Jt comes to serving up

money far In excess and far in

current, there's no way we can

advance of-what.you pay us,'just

doctor tne meat loaf•

A MESSAGE FROM THE PEOPLE OF

~===·:·:··-·

All d J 111

•

eBLACK &amp;

... .

,.

:-Il l

or

Mason, were Thnnks-

g lvi nJ: dinncr guests of Mr. and
M1·s. Doyl t· Hudson a~ Hulland .
Flowers were placed on the
a ltar &lt;.II
Ma s on
United
Mc lh l[lis l Chu re h in ub:wrvance of the :J4th wedding
an niv ersary of Reverend and
Mrs. Claren(.'C McCloud on
December l. Reverend 'McCloud is pastor of thi s church.

Each class teac her and
helpers met at Mason United
Methndis t on Monday evening
::~ud ce lebrated th e Hanging of
the Green. The potluck dinner
started at 6p .m. The ladies and
gen ts decorated the ch urch and
classr ooms.

Rcvrrt&gt;nrl r.('nf2P Wt&gt;iri rl&lt; .

Apprentice program is announced
T he Joint Apprentil: eshi p
Training Committee of the
Par ke rs burg
Marietta
C{mtractors Assoc iation and
Ironworkers I.ueal Unon No.
787 hCls annuunced the for-·
mation ur a new class fur appre ntice Ironworkers.

Applications will be "cce pted
Dec. 22 through Jan . 22 between 8 a .m . and 10 a.m. at the
offices of th e Ir onworkers

Local Unwn No. 787 all4061':! J:lth Stree t in Parkersburg, W.

Va.
Appli ca n Is must be between
the ages of 18 and :10 years of
age . They must be high se houl
graduates, or the eq uivalent.
They mu::;t res ide in the
juri sdic tiuu of Local Union No.
787 which is M ason, Jack son,

Wood , Pleasanls. Wirt. Ritchie, Roan, Ca lhoun , Lewis,
Gilmer, Doddridge and Upshur
counties in Wes t Virginia, and
Morgan, Noble , Wa s!1ington,
Athens, and Meigs counties in

Ohio.
Applicants will be required
to take tests to determ ine
A g ram of s ilv er can b-.:
s tretched into a w ire rnore
than one mile long .

~Jptitude and ach ievement &lt;1 nd
will be interviewed by the :Joi nt
Appren ticeship Comm ittee.

Easy Termsl
Free De.llvery l

..

The Ir onworker Apprentice
prOg ram takes three years to
complete , and consists of both

un-l.he-jub training and related
classroom or correspondence
school work.

The program is certified by
the Bureau of Apprenliceship
and Training , U. S. Department of Labor, and the
recruitment , se lection , employment and trai ning of apprentices
is
without
disc rim ina ti on because
race, color, religion, national
ori gin, or sex. The committee
expects to se lect between 10
and 20 trainees, and training is
ex pected to start soon after
nt::x.l Feb . I.

or

OPEN EVERY
EVENING

K0t1Mitl McCullo.. h, II. lito. ChariHIIIHio, R. Ph.
Open Dilly,, . ...... .. , ,. ,.... .

MASON FURNIRIRE
HERMAN GRATE
77~5592
MASON, W. V(l.

•I

PH. 992-2955 -

PRESCRIPTIONS

Friendly Service
112 E , MAIN

. POMEROY, 0,

FOR HIM!

Elec. Razors
At
REDUCED
PRICES

.VIush for Men, English
Leather Toiletries,
Faberge, Brut, Dana's, .
Canoe Toiletries. Old
Spice, Aqua Velva , Max
Factor, Hai Karate and
Roman Brio.

-·

- WONDERFUL TO GIVEDELIGHTFUL TO RECEIVEI
New Collection

Fabergc's

Costume
Jewelry.
'1 00

-

Helena Ruben stdn
Heaven Sent
Courant

and up

Good
Selection
of

TOYS

I
I

I ,

Christmas

·CARDS

aae

box
and up

American Greetings
Loose Cards
For the Family

i

UGHJS AND
Aa:ESSORIES

a man should
doittwice.
Part of him belongs to
the job.
Part of him belongs to you .
So give him two
English Leather lotions.
Our after shave tor them .
Our cologne for you .
If he'd like to make a good
impress,ion, you're
doubling his odds at work .
And maybe improving his
chances at home.
The "Best Bet" gift
set in a handsome
box

$3,50

1

GHt

Wrap,
Ribbon , . Bows.
General Electric
Indoor
Light
Sets, Tinsel.

For Men &amp; Women
Mtns Billfolds
Ladlts Billfolds

s.oo
See Our Julftn PurHI"

up

For Her, A Fine Gift
Trlfold end Two Fold
lllllfolds, 110.00

Perfect Gift!

BIBLES

PIPES
Kaywoodie.
Yellow
Bole,
Dr .
Grabow,
Medico
and
Zippo
Lighters.

•
and up
TOitE TRIES FOR t\·:EN

FOR HIM!

WHITE TV

I

-~

last August, and had ~5
vehicles other than sc hool
buses , includin g 10 autos
Young . Her husband is
equipped with twoway radios.
sta h oned in the Army at
The examiners recom l.f,ui sv i He.
mended the school hoard make
Letart .
its own management study
Holiday guests of Mr . and
"rela ting to the possible overMrs . Alva I.uckeydoo were Mr.
sta ffin g of its district in the
. and Mrs . Roger Luckeydoo and
administrative, teaching and
two da!Jghlers of Dayton; Mrs .
non -teaching
personnel
R. C. King, Henderson ; Mrs.
areas," as well as a ut o
Landon Smith, Mason and
equipment use.

Large Assortment .

.

Ohio ·Power Company

-apt:;'"·* •

Tina ( runner Ka!hy·
Young) or Loui sville , Ky .,
spent Thanksg iving with her
pa rcn!s, Mr . and Mrs. Frank
and

raise for five years, begirming

INTEREST OF

MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
E xec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Pub I ished Qai l y
except
Saturday by The Ohio Va ll ey
Publishing Com pan y , Ill
Court St, Pom eroy , Ohio
-45769. Business Office Phone
992 -2156 . Editoria l P hone 99 22157 .
Sec ond c lass postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio.
N at iona l
advert is-i ng
repr esentativ e
Bottinelli Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East 42nd
St., N ew York , N ew York .
Subscription
rat es :
Delivered by car rier where
available 60 cents per w eek ;
By Motor Route wh e r e carrie r
service not available . One
month , S2 .60. By mail i n Ohio
and w . va .,. , One Year, SIS ; Six
months, $9.50; Three months ,
S6 . Elsewhere 522 .00 year ; six
months S11 .SO, lhree month s,
$6 . 50. Su bscription price in
eludes
Sundav
Tim es -

eSTFREO

C 1

Mr . an d Mrs. H. W. Saffard

DEVOTE-D TO THE

l5~e~n~tl~ne~1~
--------------~

pa

Pq AD; 7

rc:r

Mr . &lt;-H I ( I Mr.s. Norman
Keyrwld s, Mrs. La..ndon Smith ,

Su-p 10:Jt .. I2 ::11111MISt.tlt.l1!.

Sooner or later we wouldn't be

When 1he refri!Jerator finally

o,

lr;_tining

two Wf'Cks.

_

on " Making of Chrtsmons".

lo44

san Fren
4 s o .333 1So4 209
Nhf'Orlens4 8 0 .333 131 22&amp;
. AttM~ta
2 10
167
91 245
x·clinc~te:t~ division title
MMtfav•s Game
Miami 24 Cincinnati 3
htunf•Y1 1 G•mes
Atlanta at Minnno'la
Cleve1end at Oallas
SvMa·y•s Games
1
Ruffalo at NY Jets

l .akcs N:wal

ccn lt'r, is visiling hi:-; p:~n · nt s,
Mr . and Mrs. Fr;-~; • k Young,

reported.
They said the school hoard
had a uthorized the superintenden t a $1,000 annual pay

Chapte r 186 ,
l?i
" OES, installation or offi cers,
TUESDAY
7:30p.m. at temple .
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
SOUTHE RN Hi gh School
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 Girl s
Athle tic
Boosters
Tuesday , Columbus and meeting, 7:30 p.m. at high
Southern Ohio Electric Co. sc hool.
Cultural program by Susan
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Oliver. Electric Co . home Beta Sigma Phi, will meet at
economis t to ha ve demon. 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
stra tion .
Evelyn Knight. The cultura l
TIJESDAY
program on methods of
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio educa ti on will be given by Mrs.
Tractor
Pullers
Ass ' n ., Martha McPhail. Linda and
meeting, at 8 p.m. at the Ruth Riffle will be hostesses.
secretary 's office on the Rock
WEDNESDAY
Springs Fairgrounds.
WE L LS
Ce m et e r y
CHESTER Counc il 323, Association, 7 p.m., at town
Daughters of America, will hall in Pagetown (Pageville ).
meet at 7:30p.m. at the hall. Election of officers. Persons
interested urged to attend .

Usa Our Chrls1mas ·

Fixing;. Unkeringl making do.

tf lhat 80UIIda like your family,

--:.-·-

deliver it. All of it, Electricity,

check.

0011

.

struggle's the same.
We've pulled in the belt to the

make a strong man cry.

Join, our Chri-s tmas Oub today! .
Mali:e 49 Pf'8mpf weekly payments· and
the Sotlf payment is Free.

When you want it, we've got to

through on her husband's pay

cheerful about prices that would
There's nothing like a fresh supply of
cold cash when Christmas comes
aroundt And we have a perfect way of
maintaining your holiday money for·
you! It's called the Christmas Club an excellent savings program, You
decide how much money yoo wish to
put" aside each week -and just before
Christmas, we send you a check for all
the money you've contributed during
the year·,

·might be bigger, but the

not candles,

And, in front of the family, stay ·

Grf'a l

deemed to exist," exam iners

Quarterly birthdays will be
'' observed; potluck refresh-

..

Even the
smallest
diamonds
are gems.

When she has to be, the

meat loaf, hem the girls' skirts,

fini sht•d hi s b: 1:-;it· lr;dning at

including a crosscut saw and a
heavy duty mower.

Soc I. aI ·:.~-:;.:
~.~: Ca Iend arl:~_il. m~~~EROY

~~

LETUSKEEP

She'll shop sharp, doctor the

Nt•w Hawn
K Young, whcJ ha:j,.

minimize expenditures when a
potential financial crisis was

HARRISONVILLE - Harry
G. Haning , president of the
hoard of directors of the Wells
Cemetery, has announced a
meeting on Dec. 4 at 7 p.m . at
the town-house in Pageville
( Downington ) to elect new
offic ers and discuss ca re or the

,t_..

We have

.... .

se&lt;red 15 of bll 23 poiDta in the
final quarter to lead 1lle late
charge. KC-Omaba's Sam
Lacey, the NBA rebuund
leader wilb an a
r:l II
per game, collected 14 ..,..,t
shots and handed out 10 a""'n.

school hoard "had authorized
Wlwise expenditW"es."
}t":erguson ·said examiners
found "what appears to be a
to)Hleavy manpower situation
in the areas of non-teaching
supervisory and management
personnel," and indicated that
had prompted the decision for
the new management analyses
of school districts.
Examiners said the Elyria
school .district would end the
ca lendar year with a $14,419
financial deficit. They said it
was insufficient to warrant
closing schools, as it represented only about one-third of a
day's payroll.
"It is our opinion that not
every effort was made to

1.

Cemetery board to elect
new officers December 4

wizard ! Has the excl usive

your
homeowners
Insurance.
you 'r e
probably best advised
to let our experts
examine your policy to
see If It's up to date.
We'll help you find If
your
Insurance
protection Is adequate.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Auditor-elect Thomas E.
Ferguson plans to start
management a nalyses of
school districts when he takes
office in Janua11:, succeeding
his father, v.e teran state
Auditor Joseph T. ·Ferguson.
"We want to know, "'\d I'm
sure the people living iii the
various school districts want to
know, just how school funds
are being spent and for what,
and whether the students are
getting the most out of the
education doUar ," Ferguson
said in aruwuncing the new
auditing system.
The state auditor's office
Mond•y had ref~ed to certify
for closing the Elyria city
school district, said to he in
fmancial difficulty hecause the

Robc rl

Va .
Mason

H ilVI'Jis wuod , W .

tra

The more you sew, the
more you save-and sew·
ing's rea lly effortless with

If you're unsure about

Schools to be audited

13'1 209

w. I. 1'. pet. pt

l

PitCher

,_If ever there was a

ambit . . lunasfaruanat
' al 1 t Orioles'
mw a Bid we...., "and
'"'~ee~-.w
py."
Tbe lkts, wbo'n been
•• ......... wilt tr.tr eenfat.
field ....tiaa . . . u. deparJure ol T&gt; ... Alee • few

Unler l!lid reuow outfielder
Millie AaiEam. ..,. PblllJes
woald get J'reeban, centerflelder Mickey Stsnley,
reliof pitdtr Jim Ray and
ft&gt;otlng of Jim Fcm.
...... pHdler BID Slayback
Archie Clark swced 17 fer
the Sonics, Including eigbt in """' Delrolt far catcher Bob
ao.e aDd ... piaJII'.
the fourth quarter, and
' 'We're llill ta•tng," uld a
teammate
Fred
Brown. Detroit ,
"Maybe
finl!hed wllb 23, lnchwHJIII five
in the last 2:40 of the game.

Eost

St . Louis

asking price from Boston
would llltdy lnclade shortstop
lllld Harrelson, a commodity
the Mets are not lllat eager to
ezcbange.
In one. other e.en m«e
&amp;I I * 4" 1
minor
transacUon,
the
But 1lle Jlr;II&amp;.Nttblg Orioles, Brewers and Braves eM«~ the
11'1111 ~ to ........ linn boob on the Nov. 2 deal they
road.J to cal ...lbponr Dave
McNally aDd outfielder AI
"""""J to· lhnlnll in an
ell«t to adllllle 1-4, 2lDopoand
Singleton'• polentlal "big
stid&lt;" ......... 1l'lli lineup. The
...,._,
I '+
_, devoid of
E==
Jeltt lei pH )' g, WGIIId Jdck
in rlglltJ Jllb Tuib.
''We're. +... for. 1IUY who

made for Hank Aaron by
sendin~

I

Ioobd lW! an _,. Seattle win
wilb !be SaperSmlcs I fi1C
by 15 poilU lale in tile lbird
quart«.
But Kamas Cty~ bpt
figbtlng l!lid lhe Kla«::llnw •

NFI:. Standings
By United Press lntern~t l onal
American Conference
East
w. 1. t . pet. pf pa
Buffalo
9 3 0 . 750 240 205
Mi am i
New Eng
NY Jets

weekiCMfr; meetings, former
America~~ ~ .tolen 1-.
-Tommy 1... pel went ftGm
the llaol.ail Red Sea lo the
C.llfomia AD8els in eachulr;e
fer ......... Bob Heise.
11u1t one dlda"l Oc:aslan 1111y

thing IAJgether todliy ...
In between their nesottaUoos
for Ur1!111', lhe Mets ab!o talkecl
to the Red Sox about centerfielder Juan Benlque2. But the

PJo:KSONA I .~

· DMD WATaES

General Electric

HOT lATHER
MACHINE

Shockproof
Watert;~rool
. $9 .95 up
Elecfrtc
Timex Watches $2S.oo· up
Alarm Clocks by Weflclox
WinduP. and Electric

KODAK
INSTAMATIC
CAMERAS

."*

· F9r flllt extra tift a lllox of
StationliT tor lim Oi' Hlr. Alto
...,... Mate I'MJs,

A GOLD STAR STO-RE- FREE TICKETS

··.

..

Also. Complete Line Whitmaii~S candy
.

�., .

..
5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1974

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 3, 19'14

we'D be able to put lhe whole

Baseball trade talks begin
• By BJU. IIIADDEN
UPI Sporta wruer

NEW ORLEANS ( UPI)
The Baltimore Orioles clooed
in oo slugger Ken Singleton,
the New York Mets, offering

Rusty Staub, went in two
different directions in pursuit
of a centerfielder and lhe
Pbiladelphia Pbillies
EU&gt;ed
hopeful of adding All-Star
catcher Bill Freehan in a three-

Two SVAC tilts on tap
Two: games a re slated
tonight in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference.
Coach Jim Foster's North
Gallia Pirates will """k their
secood slraight league victory
at Southwestern . Coach
Ri c hard
H am ilt on ·s
Highlanders lost a one point
heartbreaker to Ironton St. Joe

,

last Friday night.
In non-league action, Coach
Keith Cartett's Kyger Creek
Bobcats open their 1974-75
campaign against Buffalo of
Putnam County. W. Va. The
Bobcats split !heir two games
with the Bisons last year .
Kyger Creek will play at
Hannan on Thursday night.

Pro Standing3
N I!IA

St~ndings

By United Press International
E~stern Conference

Atlttntic Division
w. 1. pet . g.b.

Buffalo

16

6

727

New York
Boston
Ph tladelph ia

13
8 619
11 10 524
7 14 333
Cutrt~l Division
w
I. pet .
Wa~hington
16
6 727

C leveland

11

Houston

11

Atlanta

9

8 .579

10

.524

12 .429

New Orleans
1 20 .091
W est e rn Conference
Mictwest Division

21 1
41 1
8 '1

g.b.
3',
_., ,,

61 7
14

w. 1. pet. g . b .
Detr,·; t
11 10 .524
KC 1maha
12 11 .522
Chicago
10 II .476
I
Milwaukee
7 14 .333
4
Pacific D ivision
w . 1. pet . g . b .
Golden State
15
6 .71o4
Portland
12 10 .545
3"'
Seattle
12 12 .500
41 1
Los Angeles
9 12 .429
6
Phoenix
9 13 .409
6' '1
Monday ' s Result
Seattle 110 KC -Omaha 106
Tuesday 's Games
Milwauket at BuHalo
Los An'iltle$ at New York
Hous ton at Clevel and
Portland at Chicago
Atlanta at Phoenix
New Orleans at Go ld en St

•

International Hoelle,
Leit9Uit Standings
By United Press International
North
• - I. t . pts gf ta
Muskegon
16 6 I 33 103 55
Flint
15 6 2 32 85 52
Saginaw
13 9 1 27 82 6e
Port Huron
9 12 2 20 77 82
Larsing
7 12 1 15 79 HI
Kalamazoo
1 15 2 .. 36 73
South
w . I. t. pts gt ga
Dayton
16 4 1 33 93 69
Des Moines
12 11 1 2S 79. 83
Col umbus
10 10 1 21 81 78
Tol edo
8 15 1 l7 83 89
Fort Wayne
6 13 1 13 70 88
Monday 's Results
( No games sc heduled~
Today ' s G~mes
Flint at Kala mazoo

. College Ratings

NEW YORK ( UP! ) The
197.1 United Press Interna tional
Boarel of Coaches top 20 major
N8A St~ndings
college
footba ll rati ngs w i th
By United Pre ss lnt er n;~tionat
won . lost records and fir st place
Eastern Conference
votes in parentheses :
Atlantic Div isi on
Points
w. 1. pet. g . b. Team
I. Alabma ( 30• ( 11-0 )
342
BuHalo
16
6 .727
2. Ohio State. (SJ { 10· 1 l
. 315
New York
13
fl .619
2' '2
3. M ic h,igan I 10- 1 l
266
·easton
11 10 .52A
.~~ ~~
_. Southern Cal (9 - 1-1&gt;
263
Philadelphia
7 1• .333
8' ''
5. Auburn (9 ·2 )
U6
Centra• Division
6 . Penn State {9 -2)
126
w
1. pet. g.b..
7. Nebraska {8-Jl 113
Washington
16
6 . 727
8. Notre Dame (9 -2 )
90
Cle veland
11
8 . 579
3' '1
Ill . Car ol ina Sf . ( 9 -2 )
A8
Houston
11 10 .524
•''1 TO9 .. Te)llaS
(fi . Jl
-'6
. Atlanta
9' 12 ... 29 61 1
ll. Maryland {8-3)
.tS
New Orleans
2 20 .091 14
12. Baylor ( 8-3)
-'3
Western Conference
13 . Miam i (Ohio l c• -O· ll
24
M i dwest Div isio n
1-4. Florida (8 -J l
22
w. 1. pet . g . b . 16.
Br i gham Young (7-3 -1)
12
Detro it
11 10 .5 24
16. Texas A&amp;M { fl -31
B
KC -Omaha
12 11 .522
17. Michigan Sf . (7 -3- 1)
6
Chicago
10 11 .476
1
18
.
(T i e l Arirona (9 -2)
_.
Milwauk~
7 14 .333
4
(
T
i
e)
N
.
Carolina
O
-•
J
-'
Pacific Divisi on
. Tul~ (8 - 3 l
2
w . I. pet. g . ~ . W Note
: By agreement witt! t h e
Gold enState
15
6 .714
P ortland
12 10 .545
J''' Americ~n Foo·tball C oa ches .
Seattle
12 12 . 500
•' '1 teams on probation bV the NCA
are inellglble for top 20 and
Los Angeles
9 12 .429
6
Phoenix
9 13 .409
6' ·1 na t ional c hampi·onsh i p con sideration by th e UPt Boards of
Monctav•s Result
Coaches . Those teams currentlv
Sea ttle 1·10 KC -Omaha 106
on probation are : Oklahoma,
Tuesday#s Gamu
SMU , California , Long Beac h
Mi l waukee at Buffalo
State
a nd
Southwits tern
Los Angeles at New York
Louisiana .
Houston at Cleveland
Portland at Chicago
Atlanta at Phoenix
New Orleans at Golden St .
NHl.. Standings
By United ~ress InternatiOnal
Division 1
w. I . t . pts gf ga
P hl la
15 6 3 13 91 55

Atlanta
13 8
NY Rangers 10 8
N Y lslndrs
9 8
Divisi on
w . 1.
Van c uvr
15 6

s

s

31
25

1 25

72 66
87 70
82 68

2
t. pts gf ga
4 34 94 66

10 9 3 23

76 53
9 11 .. 22 69 90
7 II 5' 19 71 !17
.. 1!1 1
9 55 104
D i vi si on l
w. I. t . ph gf ga
Montr ea t
13 6 7 33 111 79
Los Ang
1'2 2 9 33 70 38
Pittsbgh
8 II 4 20 95 88
Detroit
7 13 2 16 61 94
Washngtn
2 19 3
7 54 124
Division 4
w. I. t . pts gf ga
Buffalo
18 .. .. 4() 12 1 85
12 6 5 . 29 99 69
Boston
Toronto
6 12 4 16 76 95
Ca lif
.. 16 513 58111
MaRday•s Result
Montreal 2 Atlanta 0
Tue1dav' s Gam es
Buffalo at wash ington
Cali fornia at St . Louis
Minnesota at Vancouver

Chicago
Minnesot a
St . L oui s
Kan City

•.

Ch icago at San Diego
Detroit at Cinci nnati
Green Baov at San Fran
Hous ton at Denver
Miami at Baltimore
Oakland at Kansas City
Phila at NY Giants
Pittsburgh at New Eng
St L ouis at New Orleans
Monday's Game
Wash at Los Ang, twilight

way nineplayer swap.
At the end of lhe fu:st day in
baseball's winter meeting
"swap and shop" s
ms,
howner, nobody got anybody
of major~.
In the only trade made
Monday, lhe opening day ollhe

Comeback

falls short
OMAHA, Neb. (UPf) -

9 3 0 .750 276 173
7 5 0 .583 304 234
5 7 0 .417 2U 252

Bait
PiltSbgh

2 10, 0 . 167 136 267
Central
w . I. t. pet . pf pa
8 3 l .708 257 169

Cinci
Houston

7 5 0 .583
6 6 0 .500

26 1 209
194 22 1

Clevelnd

4 8 0 .333
West

210

275

w. I. t . pet. pf

pa
199

x -Oaklnd

10 2 0 . 833

321

Denver
6 5 I .542 265
Kan Citv
5 7 0 .417 212
San Die;o J 9 o . 250 167
MlltiMUtf C&amp;nference

263
25 1
264

w . f. t. pet. pf

pill
190

'

3 o . 750

wa shnotn
Dallas
Ph ill
NY Giants

s 4 0 .667
7
0 .583
5 7 0 .417
2 10 0 167
Cen1raJ
w . f. t . pet.
8 .. 0 .6-67

s

259

255 179
233 191
194 192
174 2'53
pf

p;~.

252

170

Green Bay 6 6" 0 .500 201
Detroit
6 6 0 .500 216

189
223

x -M i nn

ChiC&lt;II90

.. I 0 . J:JJ
West

x -LosAng

9

It

scare at Seattle before the
Sdnics linally capared 1 UD106 National Basketball
.~IOdalkln dedsioJI Monday
night.
The Sonlcs hit •.8 per C81l
frQID the field in the M on)
quarter and ga!nod a SJ.41
lead.

Spencer Haywood, who Jed
Seattle wilb 211 poiDta, "'''""""'
lhe third quarter wilb • buRt
lif lhe tip. He lhen 5jW ' I bill
anltJe and had to sit out - " '
four minutes, bat during tlilt
time his teanunates 01"''"'1 a
119-67 lead behind tbe oullide

time for a Singer
saving gift...its now!

The finest TQUCH &amp; SE.W* machine by Singer
ehrisunas Sale Price

$
off

niDe playtn, in1Ft , "·
1be _, 1lle deod II par.
apd, the Melli would lllld

81 iiiiiQ' -

. m-•

Staab

to PltlladeJpbla for

reg. price

Carrying case o r cabinet

.....

yean back, were malrlng
ova baa to tile PIIIUiel.for Del
Ulllel' in a •u ••L•ated lnterINplnlde lbll CIGIIId Involve

Roger
Alexander
from
CUlSIItutes · the "playll' to
Milwaukee to AUa11ta. He . named later,"

8)(

this· all-d1a l controlled
Si n~ · push-button bob·
bin. built -i n butto nholer.

built-i n speed
much morer

REUTER·
BROGAN
INSURANCE

basting ,

ehrlslmas Sale Price

FASHION MATE' Z IG -ZAG sewing ma ch in e
Has 7 interchangeable stitches,'"' exclusive fron t
drop-i n bobbin, other con venience features.
Carry ing case or cabinet extra
Model 258

PH. 992-5130
107 Syeama..

Pomeroy

1

Save $25.95 ·
Reg , $139.95•

$114

The Kings' Jilnmy

1

Credit Plan ilesianed to fit your bud Fl.

We ilso have a llber.al trade-In pOIIcv.

THE FABRIC SHOP, POMEROY
115 W. 2nd

Ph, 992-2284

•A T'llllmMk a l THE SINGE" COMPA.NV

w......

•

PEl...

Cage Scores
Souttnwest
Louisvi lle 91 HouSion 17
Texas Tech 91 Adams St . 72
Alabama 74 Okla . St . 67
Murrav St . 79 Texas 69
Tex . Wslyn 77 Trletn St . 71
Tex . · Arl. 71 E . N .Mex . 47
Okla . Bapt 96 Mo . Bapt 62
Midwstrn 78 S .F . Austin 73
McMurry 13 Angelg t9
Tex . Sou thrn 131 P . Quinn 111
NE La. 93 Hardin -Sim mons 70
Ark . St . 74 Ga . Southrn 72
Oklahoma City 95 TCU 91
Oklahoma 89 NE Mo . St . 71
West
Utah 92 Rutgers 89
Boise St . 96 utah St. 87
lda . St . 92 Lvla -Mrvmnt 19
Air Force 61 Doane 56
California 73 Seattle 71
wash . St . 16 San Die9o St. 67
St . Mary's 81 San Fran St . 76

terested persons are urged to
attend .
Mr. and Mrs. Asa Jordan of
Middleport have worked 3%
days to put the cemetery in tiptop shape. Glen Haning and
Mr . Allen each helped \&lt;.! day.
Their work was donated, Mr.

ce metery.

Jordan providing his own tools,

An open meeting, all in~:'~~.::::::~~
to

YO·UR CHRISTMAS
MONEY ON ICE
FOR YOU ...

~..

don't be surprised.

to maintain efficiency and stay

American housewife is a m13rvel

It's a lot like ourselves,

out ahead of your next
electric need,

of ingenuity. Especially today.

Oh, our company's numbers

and somehow manage to get

"-.·.

point of pain.
We've shelved new construction,
cancelled work programs, terminated outside contractors, and
said "nix" to new materials-

Her husband's no different

except where they might affect

He's back to being the original

service,

do-it-younl8ff gu.y.

Shop as sharp as we will, we
usually wind up paying lenders
at a cost-rate of 12 to 15% for
short-term loans, Afford It or not

J 0 . 750 227

Did you know that s mall
d iamonds ca n have the
I sa; me fire and bril liance
large ones? And at a
fraction of the cost.
Regency dia mond
eneagement rings and
bridal sets feature elet&gt;anll
smaller stones set tna~th~.l
to look like one larger
diamond. Now you can
have the bea uty a~d
brilliance you've always
dreamed of but never
thought you could afford.
Lay Away

Pion Nowl

This rising cost of money is onereason why your electric bill
has increased.

About the only difference

Except where~ has ·no choice.

between us is that you borrow in

If we should ever choose not to

emergency.

borrow, Heaven help us !lit ·

_

_ : _ _ . : _ __ _ __

.GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy .

POMEROY Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, will install new officers
at 7:30p.m. at the temp le. All
Master Masons invited .
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, .2 P-!J1~W~ay, borne.
of Mrs. Dwight Wallace with •
Mrs. M. L. French reviewin g
"Burr" by Gore Diva!. Roll
call: ''What is Treason ?"
POMEROY
WOMEN 'S
Christian Temperance Union ,
12 iioon Christmas potluck at
the home of Mrs. Robert
Warner, Wednesday.
SALEM Center School
Christmas musical program
when school PTA meets at 7:30
p.m. Public invited.
THURSDAY
WOMEN'S
Association,
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church , 7: 30
p .m . at the church . Mrs.
Thomas Rue, devotional
leader, with Mrs. Jack
Coleman and Mrs, Dwight
Wallace to have the program
Members of Group II will be
the hostesses.
EVANGELINE Chapter,
OES, 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport Masonic Temple .

The

Dai~

Sentinel

go e1 qp.11, lie~{! borrow for the

We borrow constantly, We have

able to produce enough

new one. Alford', it or not And

no choice,

electricity to go 'round,

ZENITH
COLOR TV

. pay the hii&amp;Iest rate·through the
We must have big chunks of

And when Jt comes to serving up

money far In excess and far in

current, there's no way we can

advance of-what.you pay us,'just

doctor tne meat loaf•

A MESSAGE FROM THE PEOPLE OF

~===·:·:··-·

All d J 111

•

eBLACK &amp;

... .

,.

:-Il l

or

Mason, were Thnnks-

g lvi nJ: dinncr guests of Mr. and
M1·s. Doyl t· Hudson a~ Hulland .
Flowers were placed on the
a ltar &lt;.II
Ma s on
United
Mc lh l[lis l Chu re h in ub:wrvance of the :J4th wedding
an niv ersary of Reverend and
Mrs. Claren(.'C McCloud on
December l. Reverend 'McCloud is pastor of thi s church.

Each class teac her and
helpers met at Mason United
Methndis t on Monday evening
::~ud ce lebrated th e Hanging of
the Green. The potluck dinner
started at 6p .m. The ladies and
gen ts decorated the ch urch and
classr ooms.

Rcvrrt&gt;nrl r.('nf2P Wt&gt;iri rl&lt; .

Apprentice program is announced
T he Joint Apprentil: eshi p
Training Committee of the
Par ke rs burg
Marietta
C{mtractors Assoc iation and
Ironworkers I.ueal Unon No.
787 hCls annuunced the for-·
mation ur a new class fur appre ntice Ironworkers.

Applications will be "cce pted
Dec. 22 through Jan . 22 between 8 a .m . and 10 a.m. at the
offices of th e Ir onworkers

Local Unwn No. 787 all4061':! J:lth Stree t in Parkersburg, W.

Va.
Appli ca n Is must be between
the ages of 18 and :10 years of
age . They must be high se houl
graduates, or the eq uivalent.
They mu::;t res ide in the
juri sdic tiuu of Local Union No.
787 which is M ason, Jack son,

Wood , Pleasanls. Wirt. Ritchie, Roan, Ca lhoun , Lewis,
Gilmer, Doddridge and Upshur
counties in Wes t Virginia, and
Morgan, Noble , Wa s!1ington,
Athens, and Meigs counties in

Ohio.
Applicants will be required
to take tests to determ ine
A g ram of s ilv er can b-.:
s tretched into a w ire rnore
than one mile long .

~Jptitude and ach ievement &lt;1 nd
will be interviewed by the :Joi nt
Appren ticeship Comm ittee.

Easy Termsl
Free De.llvery l

..

The Ir onworker Apprentice
prOg ram takes three years to
complete , and consists of both

un-l.he-jub training and related
classroom or correspondence
school work.

The program is certified by
the Bureau of Apprenliceship
and Training , U. S. Department of Labor, and the
recruitment , se lection , employment and trai ning of apprentices
is
without
disc rim ina ti on because
race, color, religion, national
ori gin, or sex. The committee
expects to se lect between 10
and 20 trainees, and training is
ex pected to start soon after
nt::x.l Feb . I.

or

OPEN EVERY
EVENING

K0t1Mitl McCullo.. h, II. lito. ChariHIIIHio, R. Ph.
Open Dilly,, . ...... .. , ,. ,.... .

MASON FURNIRIRE
HERMAN GRATE
77~5592
MASON, W. V(l.

•I

PH. 992-2955 -

PRESCRIPTIONS

Friendly Service
112 E , MAIN

. POMEROY, 0,

FOR HIM!

Elec. Razors
At
REDUCED
PRICES

.VIush for Men, English
Leather Toiletries,
Faberge, Brut, Dana's, .
Canoe Toiletries. Old
Spice, Aqua Velva , Max
Factor, Hai Karate and
Roman Brio.

-·

- WONDERFUL TO GIVEDELIGHTFUL TO RECEIVEI
New Collection

Fabergc's

Costume
Jewelry.
'1 00

-

Helena Ruben stdn
Heaven Sent
Courant

and up

Good
Selection
of

TOYS

I
I

I ,

Christmas

·CARDS

aae

box
and up

American Greetings
Loose Cards
For the Family

i

UGHJS AND
Aa:ESSORIES

a man should
doittwice.
Part of him belongs to
the job.
Part of him belongs to you .
So give him two
English Leather lotions.
Our after shave tor them .
Our cologne for you .
If he'd like to make a good
impress,ion, you're
doubling his odds at work .
And maybe improving his
chances at home.
The "Best Bet" gift
set in a handsome
box

$3,50

1

GHt

Wrap,
Ribbon , . Bows.
General Electric
Indoor
Light
Sets, Tinsel.

For Men &amp; Women
Mtns Billfolds
Ladlts Billfolds

s.oo
See Our Julftn PurHI"

up

For Her, A Fine Gift
Trlfold end Two Fold
lllllfolds, 110.00

Perfect Gift!

BIBLES

PIPES
Kaywoodie.
Yellow
Bole,
Dr .
Grabow,
Medico
and
Zippo
Lighters.

•
and up
TOitE TRIES FOR t\·:EN

FOR HIM!

WHITE TV

I

-~

last August, and had ~5
vehicles other than sc hool
buses , includin g 10 autos
Young . Her husband is
equipped with twoway radios.
sta h oned in the Army at
The examiners recom l.f,ui sv i He.
mended the school hoard make
Letart .
its own management study
Holiday guests of Mr . and
"rela ting to the possible overMrs . Alva I.uckeydoo were Mr.
sta ffin g of its district in the
. and Mrs . Roger Luckeydoo and
administrative, teaching and
two da!Jghlers of Dayton; Mrs .
non -teaching
personnel
R. C. King, Henderson ; Mrs.
areas," as well as a ut o
Landon Smith, Mason and
equipment use.

Large Assortment .

.

Ohio ·Power Company

-apt:;'"·* •

Tina ( runner Ka!hy·
Young) or Loui sville , Ky .,
spent Thanksg iving with her
pa rcn!s, Mr . and Mrs. Frank
and

raise for five years, begirming

INTEREST OF

MEIGS -MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
E xec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Pub I ished Qai l y
except
Saturday by The Ohio Va ll ey
Publishing Com pan y , Ill
Court St, Pom eroy , Ohio
-45769. Business Office Phone
992 -2156 . Editoria l P hone 99 22157 .
Sec ond c lass postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio.
N at iona l
advert is-i ng
repr esentativ e
Bottinelli Gallagher, Inc ., 12 East 42nd
St., N ew York , N ew York .
Subscription
rat es :
Delivered by car rier where
available 60 cents per w eek ;
By Motor Route wh e r e carrie r
service not available . One
month , S2 .60. By mail i n Ohio
and w . va .,. , One Year, SIS ; Six
months, $9.50; Three months ,
S6 . Elsewhere 522 .00 year ; six
months S11 .SO, lhree month s,
$6 . 50. Su bscription price in
eludes
Sundav
Tim es -

eSTFREO

C 1

Mr . an d Mrs. H. W. Saffard

DEVOTE-D TO THE

l5~e~n~tl~ne~1~
--------------~

pa

Pq AD; 7

rc:r

Mr . &lt;-H I ( I Mr.s. Norman
Keyrwld s, Mrs. La..ndon Smith ,

Su-p 10:Jt .. I2 ::11111MISt.tlt.l1!.

Sooner or later we wouldn't be

When 1he refri!Jerator finally

o,

lr;_tining

two Wf'Cks.

_

on " Making of Chrtsmons".

lo44

san Fren
4 s o .333 1So4 209
Nhf'Orlens4 8 0 .333 131 22&amp;
. AttM~ta
2 10
167
91 245
x·clinc~te:t~ division title
MMtfav•s Game
Miami 24 Cincinnati 3
htunf•Y1 1 G•mes
Atlanta at Minnno'la
Cleve1end at Oallas
SvMa·y•s Games
1
Ruffalo at NY Jets

l .akcs N:wal

ccn lt'r, is visiling hi:-; p:~n · nt s,
Mr . and Mrs. Fr;-~; • k Young,

reported.
They said the school hoard
had a uthorized the superintenden t a $1,000 annual pay

Chapte r 186 ,
l?i
" OES, installation or offi cers,
TUESDAY
7:30p.m. at temple .
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
SOUTHE RN Hi gh School
Bela Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 Girl s
Athle tic
Boosters
Tuesday , Columbus and meeting, 7:30 p.m. at high
Southern Ohio Electric Co. sc hool.
Cultural program by Susan
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Oliver. Electric Co . home Beta Sigma Phi, will meet at
economis t to ha ve demon. 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
stra tion .
Evelyn Knight. The cultura l
TIJESDAY
program on methods of
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio educa ti on will be given by Mrs.
Tractor
Pullers
Ass ' n ., Martha McPhail. Linda and
meeting, at 8 p.m. at the Ruth Riffle will be hostesses.
secretary 's office on the Rock
WEDNESDAY
Springs Fairgrounds.
WE L LS
Ce m et e r y
CHESTER Counc il 323, Association, 7 p.m., at town
Daughters of America, will hall in Pagetown (Pageville ).
meet at 7:30p.m. at the hall. Election of officers. Persons
interested urged to attend .

Usa Our Chrls1mas ·

Fixing;. Unkeringl making do.

tf lhat 80UIIda like your family,

--:.-·-

deliver it. All of it, Electricity,

check.

0011

.

struggle's the same.
We've pulled in the belt to the

make a strong man cry.

Join, our Chri-s tmas Oub today! .
Mali:e 49 Pf'8mpf weekly payments· and
the Sotlf payment is Free.

When you want it, we've got to

through on her husband's pay

cheerful about prices that would
There's nothing like a fresh supply of
cold cash when Christmas comes
aroundt And we have a perfect way of
maintaining your holiday money for·
you! It's called the Christmas Club an excellent savings program, You
decide how much money yoo wish to
put" aside each week -and just before
Christmas, we send you a check for all
the money you've contributed during
the year·,

·might be bigger, but the

not candles,

And, in front of the family, stay ·

Grf'a l

deemed to exist," exam iners

Quarterly birthdays will be
'' observed; potluck refresh-

..

Even the
smallest
diamonds
are gems.

When she has to be, the

meat loaf, hem the girls' skirts,

fini sht•d hi s b: 1:-;it· lr;dning at

including a crosscut saw and a
heavy duty mower.

Soc I. aI ·:.~-:;.:
~.~: Ca Iend arl:~_il. m~~~EROY

~~

LETUSKEEP

She'll shop sharp, doctor the

Nt•w Hawn
K Young, whcJ ha:j,.

minimize expenditures when a
potential financial crisis was

HARRISONVILLE - Harry
G. Haning , president of the
hoard of directors of the Wells
Cemetery, has announced a
meeting on Dec. 4 at 7 p.m . at
the town-house in Pageville
( Downington ) to elect new
offic ers and discuss ca re or the

,t_..

We have

.... .

se&lt;red 15 of bll 23 poiDta in the
final quarter to lead 1lle late
charge. KC-Omaba's Sam
Lacey, the NBA rebuund
leader wilb an a
r:l II
per game, collected 14 ..,..,t
shots and handed out 10 a""'n.

school hoard "had authorized
Wlwise expenditW"es."
}t":erguson ·said examiners
found "what appears to be a
to)Hleavy manpower situation
in the areas of non-teaching
supervisory and management
personnel," and indicated that
had prompted the decision for
the new management analyses
of school districts.
Examiners said the Elyria
school .district would end the
ca lendar year with a $14,419
financial deficit. They said it
was insufficient to warrant
closing schools, as it represented only about one-third of a
day's payroll.
"It is our opinion that not
every effort was made to

1.

Cemetery board to elect
new officers December 4

wizard ! Has the excl usive

your
homeowners
Insurance.
you 'r e
probably best advised
to let our experts
examine your policy to
see If It's up to date.
We'll help you find If
your
Insurance
protection Is adequate.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Auditor-elect Thomas E.
Ferguson plans to start
management a nalyses of
school districts when he takes
office in Janua11:, succeeding
his father, v.e teran state
Auditor Joseph T. ·Ferguson.
"We want to know, "'\d I'm
sure the people living iii the
various school districts want to
know, just how school funds
are being spent and for what,
and whether the students are
getting the most out of the
education doUar ," Ferguson
said in aruwuncing the new
auditing system.
The state auditor's office
Mond•y had ref~ed to certify
for closing the Elyria city
school district, said to he in
fmancial difficulty hecause the

Robc rl

Va .
Mason

H ilVI'Jis wuod , W .

tra

The more you sew, the
more you save-and sew·
ing's rea lly effortless with

If you're unsure about

Schools to be audited

13'1 209

w. I. 1'. pet. pt

l

PitCher

,_If ever there was a

ambit . . lunasfaruanat
' al 1 t Orioles'
mw a Bid we...., "and
'"'~ee~-.w
py."
Tbe lkts, wbo'n been
•• ......... wilt tr.tr eenfat.
field ....tiaa . . . u. deparJure ol T&gt; ... Alee • few

Unler l!lid reuow outfielder
Millie AaiEam. ..,. PblllJes
woald get J'reeban, centerflelder Mickey Stsnley,
reliof pitdtr Jim Ray and
ft&gt;otlng of Jim Fcm.
...... pHdler BID Slayback
Archie Clark swced 17 fer
the Sonics, Including eigbt in """' Delrolt far catcher Bob
ao.e aDd ... piaJII'.
the fourth quarter, and
' 'We're llill ta•tng," uld a
teammate
Fred
Brown. Detroit ,
"Maybe
finl!hed wllb 23, lnchwHJIII five
in the last 2:40 of the game.

Eost

St . Louis

asking price from Boston
would llltdy lnclade shortstop
lllld Harrelson, a commodity
the Mets are not lllat eager to
ezcbange.
In one. other e.en m«e
&amp;I I * 4" 1
minor
transacUon,
the
But 1lle Jlr;II&amp;.Nttblg Orioles, Brewers and Braves eM«~ the
11'1111 ~ to ........ linn boob on the Nov. 2 deal they
road.J to cal ...lbponr Dave
McNally aDd outfielder AI
"""""J to· lhnlnll in an
ell«t to adllllle 1-4, 2lDopoand
Singleton'• polentlal "big
stid&lt;" ......... 1l'lli lineup. The
...,._,
I '+
_, devoid of
E==
Jeltt lei pH )' g, WGIIId Jdck
in rlglltJ Jllb Tuib.
''We're. +... for. 1IUY who

made for Hank Aaron by
sendin~

I

Ioobd lW! an _,. Seattle win
wilb !be SaperSmlcs I fi1C
by 15 poilU lale in tile lbird
quart«.
But Kamas Cty~ bpt
figbtlng l!lid lhe Kla«::llnw •

NFI:. Standings
By United Press lntern~t l onal
American Conference
East
w. 1. t . pet. pf pa
Buffalo
9 3 0 . 750 240 205
Mi am i
New Eng
NY Jets

weekiCMfr; meetings, former
America~~ ~ .tolen 1-.
-Tommy 1... pel went ftGm
the llaol.ail Red Sea lo the
C.llfomia AD8els in eachulr;e
fer ......... Bob Heise.
11u1t one dlda"l Oc:aslan 1111y

thing IAJgether todliy ...
In between their nesottaUoos
for Ur1!111', lhe Mets ab!o talkecl
to the Red Sox about centerfielder Juan Benlque2. But the

PJo:KSONA I .~

· DMD WATaES

General Electric

HOT lATHER
MACHINE

Shockproof
Watert;~rool
. $9 .95 up
Elecfrtc
Timex Watches $2S.oo· up
Alarm Clocks by Weflclox
WinduP. and Electric

KODAK
INSTAMATIC
CAMERAS

."*

· F9r flllt extra tift a lllox of
StationliT tor lim Oi' Hlr. Alto
...,... Mate I'MJs,

A GOLD STAR STO-RE- FREE TICKETS

··.

..

Also. Complete Line Whitmaii~S candy
.

�.-

..
•

6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1974

State awards, plans mark meet
Presenta tlon of s tat(' a \\'a rd s
an d
pl a nn in g
for
t 975
highlig hted the off icers c onfe ren ce

of

M e i g~

Co unty

granges F riday night at the
Rock Springs Grange Ha ll .
Makin g the presentation of
the a wards was Mrs. Pa uli ne
Atkins. For women's a c liyiti es.
Colwnbia , Harr isonville and
Raci ne rece ived bl ue ri bbons :
Star , red : Rock Springs . r ed:
P omo na , green . Th e Sta r
.Juni nr Grange received a red
ribbon for cookies a nd ca ndies :

Mrs. Emma Adams, Racine, a
g reen for her car rot ca ke: Mrs .
Atkins , a green for her tea
apron ; Mrs . Av anelle HolJid ay,
a green for holiday breads.
Racine, Columbi a a nd Rock
Spr.i ngs Gra nge s r eee iv ed
me rit a wa rds for CA RE

contributions se nt to Honduras.
In the na ti ona l cr oc het
contest, ribbon wi nne rs were
Ava Gree nlees an d Rose
Hooper of Columbi a, croc het

T he 1\\'0·Yt'a r llll'll lbersh ip
d rivl' fr um .l t-tn . l , 1975 , l hro u~ h
Dee. :m. 1977, wa s an noun ced .

II w as al so a nnounced Iha l the
Na tiona l Gra ngt• eonvcntiun
will-be in Coi ulllbus nrxt year
and that a t that li me the
seve nth degree will be given
along wit h tlw si:~~:th deg ree if
any onr desi n·s.
The excha nge pr ogr am for
s ubordinat e gran ges in Meigs
Cou nty wa s ann oun ce d as
foll ows: Ha rris onvi ll e, Ohio
Va lley an d Ruc k Sp ri ngs:

the m ee tin g.

..~.J$.:;:~:,z~w~:~..:x~:~.
.•&amp;"-'.::=:=-;:-":~
..
,....,

~~\

Pomeroy . . . !1l
i~l Personal Notes ~
*

a

maga zin e

~

Rev. and Mrs. Robert Kuhn
spent Thanksgiving in Drav osburg, Pa., vis iting Mr . and
Mrs. William A. Miller.
Thanksgiving guests of Mr .
a nd Mrs . Bert Grimm, Le tart
Fall s, were Mr. and Mrs .
Rober t Grimm and Am y ,
Columbus, son Steve, s tudent
a t Ohio Univ e r s ity, and
daughter , Christy , University
of Ken tucky ; Tori Morre , Ohi o
State University ; and Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Grimm, David
and Paula, Ohio University
student, St. Clairsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Opha Offutt
returned Saturday from a
holiday visit in Martinsburg,
Pa ., with Mrs. Offutt 's m other ,
Mrs. Eva Kauffman .
Dr . and Mrs . E . A. Tracy,
Colwnbus, spent the Thanksg ivin g weekend with hi s
mother , Mrs . E . J . Trac y.
Mrs.
Sadie
Thuene r ,
Syracuse, was the Thank sgiving guest of her da ughter
and family , Mr . and Mrs .
William Lehew .
Mr. and Mrs . . Vincen t Dabo,
Pomeroy, joined Mr. and Mrs.
Th omas Kelly and family for
Thanksgiving dinner .

Club plans arrangements
RUTLAND - Frui t pla tes
and Christmas arra nge ments
will a gain thi s yea r be
prepared for the elderly a nd
shut-ins o£ Rutla nd , according
to plans made a t a recent
me e tiog of th e Rutl an d
Frie. uly Ga rd eners at the
home of Mrs. Lois Wa l~e r.
It was reported that table
arran gements for the Me igs
football banquet ha d bee n
made by Mrs. J oan F etty , Mrs.
Walker , Mrs. Ma rgare t Edwards, Mrs . Jane t Bolin, Mrs .
Charlotte Willford, Mrs. Donna
Williams on and Mts. Jua nita
Lambert. Flora l arra ngements
will also be made for the
Emergency Medical Serv ice
dinner.
Repor ts were give n on the
Region II, Ohio Assoc ia tion of
Garden Club , mee t in g in
Gallipolis rec entlv a nd at tended by Mrs. Bolin, Mrs.

Improvement project continues

Ht' rt\l n( ·k Grove, Alfred and
l .o-nu·r l: a nd Columbh-1, .SI.a r
and HaC'in(•.
, Tll12 ('lllml y prnjec! aga in th i:-;
year will be lhe ~'ri endly Hills
Camp at Zanesv ille.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
will give a rrpur1 on the Sl.ate
(;ra nge eonventi on a t the
Janu ary P om ona m ee tin g .
Eacll subordi na te gra nge is to
have a represen ta ti ve there for
' I he pur pose or relay ing the
inrun ha tion to the r espedive
gra nges.
Granges were a lso asked lo
beg in work on the prince a nd
princess contest.
A potluck dinner pr~ced ed

work ; J,t• lh tl Morri:-; , Rm.·ine ,
a k han : and Sha r un .k m.•ll,
H ; tr r i ~ on ,· i ll ~·. doily .
Mr . a nd Mrs . Mt&gt;ncle l .l o!'Clan.
dep uty ll UISl t•r and juvenile
ma tron ga vt' sN·rc t&lt;.u·y nwa rd s
to Mrs. Gr a ce Cla rk . Airrl'd :
Mrs. Fran ces G1~c g lein. Rot·k
Sprin gs :
M r s.
Wc s tina
l'r &lt;Jb l rt•e. Co lumbia: Mr s.
J ohn Holli day, Sl. ar ; and Mrs.
i,(' tha Mor ri s . Racine .

by

Nation al
Wildli fe. we re a lso given to the
ch ild re n.
For devotions , Mrs. Walker
ga ve a med itation titled ' 'Out
in the Fie ld with God ."
The progra m by Mrs. Carpen ter wa s a dem ons tration on
ma ki ng wreaths a nd swags out
of pinecones a nd Chr istmas
artHi cial £l owers.
·
Mrs . Carol Wolfe will hos t
the next me eting. Refr eshments were served by Mrs .
Wa lker .

Ne u• 1-faven ladies
view )ire ji!m

NEW HAVEN, IV. Va . Di ck Gri nstea d, Chief of New
Haven Rescue Squa d , talked to
the New Have n Woman's Club
on what Mason County had
Edwards , Mrs . Sus ie Car· dune to pre pare for a mass
emergency and showed films
penter and Mrs. F e tty .
It was noted that jack-o'- when the group me t recently at
lanterns had been made (rom the New Haven Public Library.
pwnpkins donated by Mrs. Lee A film showing what fabri cs
Woods, Sr., for the October are very fla m ma ble was s hown
therapy session wi th the titled , "Your Clothing Can
special educa tion students, and Burn ."
Gr ins tea d pointed out tha t
that turkeys were m a de from
th
e to wn ha s 30 per sons
pine cones at the November
ila ble to go on e me rgency
ava
sessi on . Copie s o£Ranger Rick,
squa d run s . He s aid seve ral
per sons ha ve adva nced fi r s t
aid tr a ining.
WOMEN PLAN SALE
The prog ram was sponsored
A rwnmage sale will be at by the Community Imthe Catholic Women 's Club of provement , Debbie White , is
the Sacred Heart Parish,
chairman. Mrs. Kenneth
Thursday , in the church
Thompson, president of the
basement from 9 a .m . to 6 p.m .
New Haven Wom an's Club 1
In addition to cloth' ng , the sale
pr eside d, when the gr oup
will feature good used toys an~ approv ed the 1975 budge t.
games.
The club voted to pa rti cipate
in ' the Winter Fes tival in New
Haven on December 7 by entering a float. Ladies in charge
BAZAAR SET
are Connie Frishette and Lois
Annual holiday bazaar of the Robinson.
Enterprise United Methodist
The club Chris tmas party
Church will be Thursday and will be Dec. 17 at the New
Friday from 9 to 5 p.m. at the Haven Library . The group
church.
voted to have a $2 gift exchange.
Mr s. R obe rt Hi c ke l wa s
HAS SURGERY
appoin ted cha irwoman of the
Rick Triplett, formerly of Drug Abuse Committee .
Middleport, underw e nt
Hos tesses were Mrs. Tom
surgery . Monday at Doctors Hoffman , Mrs . Marian Batey,
Hospital, Van Buren St. , Mrs. Frank Young , Mrs . John
Hollywood, Fla . He is c onfined Marshall, Mrs . Sharon Vickers
to Room 339.
and Mrs . Elton Clevenger.
Those attending were Mrs.
Georg e Circle, Mrs . Jesse
COUPLE WED
Abel, Mrs. Wayne Carter, Mrs.
Jack L. Wolfe, Racine , and John Wolfe, Mrs . Kenneth
June L. McKnight, London, W. Thompson , · Mrs.
Connie
Va., were married at Cedar Frishette, Mrs. Loi s Robinson,
Grove, W. Va. , Dec. 1. They Mrs. C. T. Dodd, Mrs. Donald
are now residing in Clifton ' w.
Bumgardner, Mrs . Diane
Va.
Divers, Mrs . Mark Ward, Mrs.
Jack Flesher, Mrs . Dah Edwards and hostesses, Mrs.
The oldest golf club in Hoffman, Mrs. Batey, Mrs.
North America ts"The Royal Young , Mrs. Mars hall, Mrs.
Montreal" founded in 1873.
Clevenger, Grinstead and son:

Shower fetes
Linda Brown

Win ne r nr the firs t fl lacc in
Ht•r. 1on I I of th e Ohio

Jt,~:?:~~l~=iJ;:lH~::::~~:::::::~::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::j::~:j::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::.

I .·.. .. .pdf&lt;~~.:~~~:;;l
::n:

G!andmother wants ::::::i

;lili!

to

save newspapers

1\ 1~1

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DE AR PO LLY - I ha ve sav ed many of the newspapers with
headlines and stories rela tive to the momentous events of the
past few months. The day will come when my gra ndchildren will
appreciate them as they study his tory and current eve nts. I
would lik e to kno w the best wuy to preserve these papers. MRS. E. 's.

1\ssuci a l j(Jn

IJf

Ga r den Cl ubs.

Sea r s
-Co mlll un it. y
Im nr oVtltnen1 prog ra m, 1he Bend
0' 1hc Riv er Gar den Club ,
lll ec li ng at the horrlc of Mrs.
Hobert
Kuh n , Pomer oy ,
M(md a y·n ig ht. voted to continue
th e project ror annUle r year .
T he pr ojec t is bea utificati on
of lhc Letar t Falls Cerneter y.
Numerous trees a nd sh r ubs
ha ve been plan ted there as we ll
a s s Pveral othe r plan ti ngs have
been ma de. Mr s . W. 0. Barn itz ,
SCIP cha irw oma n, noted that
the award \',;as m Hde to the club
&lt;:tl the rece nt reg innal m eeting
in Ga llipolis.
The Ch r istm as fl ower show,

DEAR MRS. E . S. - I would roll the papers and th•n seal
them with tape so they are completely air tight. 1'erhaps some
readers will know of and send a different Idea. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is that s upermarkets do not
have special coun ters for senior citizens with mini-size packages
of meat , fruit a nd vegeta bles which would help limited budgets
as the r egular size packa ges hold too m uc h and cost too much.
Being able to buy smaller qua ntities would a llow the ag ed more
Da vid Casci, Col umbus,
variety in their m ea ls. - PEARL.
Ar thur Ca sci a nd Da le Va lory ~
DEAR POLLY - Elaine wh o has a n iodine stain on a wood
Ma ns fi eld, spent the Thanksbowl will find tha t iodine is solubl e in a lcohol. I think it would be
giv ing holiday wi th Mr . and
worth a try on wood . It work s well on cloth, Hnolewn , e tc. Mrs. Pa ul Casco.
MAE .
Than ksg iving dinn er guests
DEAR POLLY - Ela ine should try putting cornstarch on the
uf Mr. an d Mrs. Sidney Russell,
iodine stain on her woo den bowl. Dampen the bowl , apply the
Mid dleport,
we r e
the ir
cornstarch and leave it on a n hour or so. It should draw out the
chil dre n and ramilies, Mr . an d
stain but th e cornstarch must be damp . This has worked great
Mrs . R obe rt Ha yt h a nd
lor me on all materia ls. - WILMA .
c hildr e n, Susan , Sa ndra ,
DEAR FRIENDS - The fini sh on the wood will have
Robin , Wellston : Mr . and Mrs .
something w do with the-way anything works on the Iodine stain.
Larr y Li ndsey a nd c.hil dren ,
Heavy varnish or shellac would be a protection and probably
Li sa, Lois Ann , a nd Si dn ey ~
make the stain easier to remove while unfinished wood has
Mill ersport. J oining the family
nothing to prevent the penetration of a stain. It might be very
ror Thanksgiving dinner was
difficult to remove unless one wants. to try sanding.- POLLY.
Mrs. Lelah Wea therby, MidDEAR POLLY - For the first time I have been knitting with
dleport. The Lindsey famil y
two strands of ya rn knitted at the same time. I discovered that by
rem a ined for the wee kend .
slipping a sma ll pla stic marker or ring over the two enda before
starting my work helps keep the two ya rns closer wge ther and
the ring is just pushed a lon g ahead of the knitting. - MRS. D. I.
DEAR POLLY - A dear elderly friend gave me a collection
HOSTS PARTY
of old keys tha t she had saved for over 80 years . Their nice
Mrs.
Beula h White e nshapes inspired me w spray them go ld and th en hang the m on
tertained
Thanksg ivin g nigh t
our Christmas tree as ornaments. This made the loveliest tree
with a dinner party. Her guests
and a very sentimental one, too. - HELEN.
we
re Mr . and Mrs. Emers on
DEAR READERS- I was intrigued with Helen's suggestion
Well
and daughter, Dori s, Mr .
for a Christmas tree decorated with keys. Most of us would be
surprised at how many old discarded keys we have tucked away and Mrs. Howard Well , Mr .
here and there and gulden keys attached to gold cord for hanging a nd Mrs. Thomas Dars t, Greg
and J eff, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
would give a most unusual effect. - POLLY.
White, Miss Kitty Metzger ,
You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite home- Mrs . Ag nes White , Richard
making idea, Pet Peeve , Polly's Problem or solution to a Duc kworth and Mrs. Fl orence
Hannay.
problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

" Ch ri.s lma s in the Air ," to be
s taged this wee kend a t the
Pom eroy Elementary Sehoul ,
wa s announced and seve r&lt;:~!
members ind ica ted that they
will be making arra ngemenl'5
ror t. hc s how. The club m ade
plans also to a ss i~t in serv in g
rcfres hmenls du r ing the shuw.
Mrs . Be r t Grimm , cou n ty
con tact c hairwom an , repor ted
on the recent county mee li n~.
A rep or t on the reg iona l
mee ti ng was give n by Mrs.
Wilson Ca rpen ter, pl'esid ent.
To open the m ee ting, Mrs.
J a mes Diehl read a poe m and
the clu b pr ayer was given in
uni son. De votions were by Mrs.
Kuhn who talked on thankf ul n e s s a n d g r atit ud e concl ud ing with pra ye r. F or roll
call members responded with a
garden er's concern .
T he ecology r eport was on
re cycling m a ter ia l an d mak ing
compos t piles. Mrs. Glenn
Wes t talked on hor tieul turc a nd
d iscussed ways to rid vard s of
mol es 'and what pes ti-cides tu
us e . Mr s. Andr ew Cr us:s
discuss ed pruning and how
pruning mak es a ga rden neat
an d yoUil g looking . She sa1d to
trim out a ll the old bra nches ,
an d then to trim the other!) at
vary in g le ngth to ke e p a

gr.rt cefu i and na tur a l loo k. Most
evergreens, s he sa id, s hould be
trimmed in the fa ll or early
s pring. F lowering s hru bs
:-;hould be trim me d afte r
bl oomin g in the s pri ng.
Prog r am
books
we r e
distri buted .
Mrs. Ed ward Sim pson was
&lt;-~ward ed a blue r ib bon for her
mT&lt;-~. n gc ment titled " A Gar ·
dener 's P ot Pourri."
The Chris tmas mee ting of
the club will be at the home of
Mrs . Simpson Dec . 1:l with a
gift exchange to ta ke place at
that li me. Gfit wr appings will
be j udged . Mr s. Kuhn ass is ted
by her daug h te r , .Ja nelle,
:served r efr eshmt:!n l"i.

F ILMS SCHED ULE D
Two fil ms, open to the pu bli c ,
will be shown at 7: 30 p.m.
Friday at the Bradford Churc h
under the sponsorship of Adult
Class r\o . 1 The films are
·· Th r·ough th e Gate ? of
Sp lendo r ", a stor y of five
mis:-;iona r ies going to the Inca
Ind irJ ;ls in South Am erica , a nd
"S ilent Wiln ess", a film
leani ng m ore towa rds youth . A
fellows hip iw ur wi ll be held
fulluw ing the mov ies with pie
:md coffee to be served .

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS

•

Tuesday , Dec. 3, 1974

MARK V HOLDS PRICES DOWN!

-'

...'•

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
StJ1mp.~

W e Accept Federal Food
PHONE 992-3480

MIDDLEPORT 0'

to Limit

Reserve The

SLICED

OHIO LOTTERY TICKETS HERE

lb.
GROUND
BEEF

GROUND
CHUCK

79~

lb.

Extra lean

Fresh and Lean

Fresh and Lean

SUPERIORS BONElESS

HAM SLICES .......................'~:..

GRC)UND
ROUND

•1.09

lb.

lb.

SUPERIORS

•1.19

HOME MADE

HAM SALAD
lb. 99~
SWIFl'S PREMIUM

__,

'

I

,

'

-

--·

-

PRICE BEATER!

THIS COMING SA TURDAY
DECEMB ER 7

PRICE BEATER!

CHRISTMAS HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE

LOCATED IN TH RIF T SHOP BUI LD ING
ACROSS FROM POMEROY PO ST OFF ICE

MAXWELL HOUSE

Door prizes will be award ed . Drawing wilt be held for $100
~ort~ of groceries of wi nn er's choi ce at M &amp; R Food liner
In Middleport. There wi11 be nu merous handmade item s
planters. ceramics, ~:o lle ctors item s, cakes , cookies a nd
candy.
Free coffee. Com e in and browse. Carry out lunc h wi ll
be served from 11:00 until 2: oo .
Sponsored by

14 oz.
1ar

NO
COUPON
NEEDED

$299

CARNATION

TIDE

12 pak

10 lb. 11 oz.
box

SPECIALS

2 lb. box

•1.69

10¢
~rts ................ ~: .
8
9¢
Prem ••..••.•..•...• c:~. ·
3
rol~ $1
Aluminum Fo1l.....
10¢
Natural Cereal •.•••••
s
$1
Choice Morsels...
$199
Little Cigars••••••• ~n.~

FILLET
OF SOLE

FRENCH
DINNERS
FRIES

99¢

2
for

MEAT

PRICE BEATER!

69¢

2 lb.
pkg.

SCOT LAD

•

99e

giant size

NEW•.. INTRODUCTORY OFFER SIZE

PURINA

ROOT BEER
Y2 gal.

for

WINCHESTER

lfz gal.
crt.

SCOT LAD

bxs.

jug

69¢

crt.

VAUEY BEll

2%
gal.
crt.

$}29

BROUGHTON'S

MODERN DAIRY

COTTAGE
CHEESE

HOMO

SAYRE HARDWARE

EST'.l9U

RC COLA

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$

pak

Everyday Price ~a Pak •1.59

PRICE
BEATER!

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Twin Pak
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16 oz.
bois.

8

beh.

MILK

. NEW H

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$ 29

BREAD
Favorite

16 ounce

4.tw.ror$1

DAD'S ROOT BEER
OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREEl

8

lti oz. .

btls.

....
I

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$149
'

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gallon

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CELERY·

What makes us a different kind of loan compa'!)' makes us a better kind of loan compa'!)'.

79¢

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carton

.,

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FOODS AT LOWER PRICES!

MILK

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JUICY

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MILK

D

LIQUID DETERGENT

for

CITY WAN
&amp;SAVINGS

'"

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

ERA

12 oz.

.

SCOT lAD •

'

·'

BOOTH'S

ORE IDA

TV

$3.49

~

roll

CA_
NDY _BREATH MINTS

-~NQtEON

IRDZEN fOOD

BANQUET

..

FISH &amp;
FRIES

FAMILY SIZE

HOT COCOA MIX

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY

'"

GORTON'S

GRADE A SMAU

ATOOL. RO.T ATft

I'

12

5 lb. can •7.9_.9,._---....._

- - - ,- -:----" .

I·---~ -

----.,.

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WIENERS ...........................~~t

CANNED HAM

TBIS CRBISTIIAS, BIVB ~ ~·
TRB TOYS TOYOUIDDS, ~
GIVB YOUIIU.ll A
~

12

SUPERIORS AU BEEF

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SUPERIORS

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$ 49

1
7
9¢
.
POLISH SAUSAGE ......... ,......:.
oz. 69¢ ':
WIENERS............................~~~:.
79¢.
BOLOGNA................................
.
oz. 79¢

~;s
(~

,--:;

lb.

69~

SUPERIORS

BAZAAR

RUTLAND A bridal
shower honoring Linda Brown,
birde-&lt;&gt;lect of Dean Weber was
held Friday night at the home
of Mrs. Vernon Weber ,
Rutland , with Mrs . Emerson
Jones and Miss Donna Weber
as hostesses .
A red and g reen c olor
scheme was carried out in the
decorations. Cake, punch and
wedding bell 111ints were
served. Winning prizes were
Mrs. Dennis McCuen, Mrs .
Kenda Rainey, Mrs. Frank
YoUil g and Mrs. Burwn Brown.
Guests other than those
named were Mrs. Raymond
Cole, Mrs. Kenneth Chaney ,
Mrs. Howard Birchfield, Mrs.
Grace Colwell, Mrs. Kathryn
Colwell, Miss Mary Colwell,
Mrs. Harold Rife , Miss Ellen
Rife , Miss Mae Weber, Mrs .
Robert Bwngarner, Mrs. PaUl
Baer, Mrs. Curtis King, Mrs .
Harold Sauer , Mrs. Fred
Williamson, Mrs . Marjorie
Milhoan and Mrs. Freddie
Houdashelt.
Sending gilts are Mrs . Leo
Kennedy, Mrs. Ralph Clark,
Mrs. Denver Weber, Mrs. Carl
Morris, Mrs. Russell Little,
Mrs. Harvey Erlewine, Mrs.
Margaret Parsons, Mrs . C. 0 .
Chapman, Mrs. Ann Webster,
Mrs. Marie Bishop, Mrs. Nate
Wise, Mrs. Edith Williamson
Mrs. Bill Williamson, Mi~
Mary Sauer, Miss Joy Sauer
and Miss Jane Wise .

•

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ol

..•••

:~

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..
•

6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1974

State awards, plans mark meet
Presenta tlon of s tat(' a \\'a rd s
an d
pl a nn in g
for
t 975
highlig hted the off icers c onfe ren ce

of

M e i g~

Co unty

granges F riday night at the
Rock Springs Grange Ha ll .
Makin g the presentation of
the a wards was Mrs. Pa uli ne
Atkins. For women's a c liyiti es.
Colwnbia , Harr isonville and
Raci ne rece ived bl ue ri bbons :
Star , red : Rock Springs . r ed:
P omo na , green . Th e Sta r
.Juni nr Grange received a red
ribbon for cookies a nd ca ndies :

Mrs. Emma Adams, Racine, a
g reen for her car rot ca ke: Mrs .
Atkins , a green for her tea
apron ; Mrs . Av anelle HolJid ay,
a green for holiday breads.
Racine, Columbi a a nd Rock
Spr.i ngs Gra nge s r eee iv ed
me rit a wa rds for CA RE

contributions se nt to Honduras.
In the na ti ona l cr oc het
contest, ribbon wi nne rs were
Ava Gree nlees an d Rose
Hooper of Columbi a, croc het

T he 1\\'0·Yt'a r llll'll lbersh ip
d rivl' fr um .l t-tn . l , 1975 , l hro u~ h
Dee. :m. 1977, wa s an noun ced .

II w as al so a nnounced Iha l the
Na tiona l Gra ngt• eonvcntiun
will-be in Coi ulllbus nrxt year
and that a t that li me the
seve nth degree will be given
along wit h tlw si:~~:th deg ree if
any onr desi n·s.
The excha nge pr ogr am for
s ubordinat e gran ges in Meigs
Cou nty wa s ann oun ce d as
foll ows: Ha rris onvi ll e, Ohio
Va lley an d Ruc k Sp ri ngs:

the m ee tin g.

..~.J$.:;:~:,z~w~:~..:x~:~.
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Pomeroy . . . !1l
i~l Personal Notes ~
*

a

maga zin e

~

Rev. and Mrs. Robert Kuhn
spent Thanksgiving in Drav osburg, Pa., vis iting Mr . and
Mrs. William A. Miller.
Thanksgiving guests of Mr .
a nd Mrs . Bert Grimm, Le tart
Fall s, were Mr. and Mrs .
Rober t Grimm and Am y ,
Columbus, son Steve, s tudent
a t Ohio Univ e r s ity, and
daughter , Christy , University
of Ken tucky ; Tori Morre , Ohi o
State University ; and Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Grimm, David
and Paula, Ohio University
student, St. Clairsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Opha Offutt
returned Saturday from a
holiday visit in Martinsburg,
Pa ., with Mrs. Offutt 's m other ,
Mrs. Eva Kauffman .
Dr . and Mrs . E . A. Tracy,
Colwnbus, spent the Thanksg ivin g weekend with hi s
mother , Mrs . E . J . Trac y.
Mrs.
Sadie
Thuene r ,
Syracuse, was the Thank sgiving guest of her da ughter
and family , Mr . and Mrs .
William Lehew .
Mr. and Mrs . . Vincen t Dabo,
Pomeroy, joined Mr. and Mrs.
Th omas Kelly and family for
Thanksgiving dinner .

Club plans arrangements
RUTLAND - Frui t pla tes
and Christmas arra nge ments
will a gain thi s yea r be
prepared for the elderly a nd
shut-ins o£ Rutla nd , according
to plans made a t a recent
me e tiog of th e Rutl an d
Frie. uly Ga rd eners at the
home of Mrs. Lois Wa l~e r.
It was reported that table
arran gements for the Me igs
football banquet ha d bee n
made by Mrs. J oan F etty , Mrs.
Walker , Mrs. Ma rgare t Edwards, Mrs . Jane t Bolin, Mrs .
Charlotte Willford, Mrs. Donna
Williams on and Mts. Jua nita
Lambert. Flora l arra ngements
will also be made for the
Emergency Medical Serv ice
dinner.
Repor ts were give n on the
Region II, Ohio Assoc ia tion of
Garden Club , mee t in g in
Gallipolis rec entlv a nd at tended by Mrs. Bolin, Mrs.

Improvement project continues

Ht' rt\l n( ·k Grove, Alfred and
l .o-nu·r l: a nd Columbh-1, .SI.a r
and HaC'in(•.
, Tll12 ('lllml y prnjec! aga in th i:-;
year will be lhe ~'ri endly Hills
Camp at Zanesv ille.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
will give a rrpur1 on the Sl.ate
(;ra nge eonventi on a t the
Janu ary P om ona m ee tin g .
Eacll subordi na te gra nge is to
have a represen ta ti ve there for
' I he pur pose or relay ing the
inrun ha tion to the r espedive
gra nges.
Granges were a lso asked lo
beg in work on the prince a nd
princess contest.
A potluck dinner pr~ced ed

work ; J,t• lh tl Morri:-; , Rm.·ine ,
a k han : and Sha r un .k m.•ll,
H ; tr r i ~ on ,· i ll ~·. doily .
Mr . a nd Mrs . Mt&gt;ncle l .l o!'Clan.
dep uty ll UISl t•r and juvenile
ma tron ga vt' sN·rc t&lt;.u·y nwa rd s
to Mrs. Gr a ce Cla rk . Airrl'd :
Mrs. Fran ces G1~c g lein. Rot·k
Sprin gs :
M r s.
Wc s tina
l'r &lt;Jb l rt•e. Co lumbia: Mr s.
J ohn Holli day, Sl. ar ; and Mrs.
i,(' tha Mor ri s . Racine .

by

Nation al
Wildli fe. we re a lso given to the
ch ild re n.
For devotions , Mrs. Walker
ga ve a med itation titled ' 'Out
in the Fie ld with God ."
The progra m by Mrs. Carpen ter wa s a dem ons tration on
ma ki ng wreaths a nd swags out
of pinecones a nd Chr istmas
artHi cial £l owers.
·
Mrs . Carol Wolfe will hos t
the next me eting. Refr eshments were served by Mrs .
Wa lker .

Ne u• 1-faven ladies
view )ire ji!m

NEW HAVEN, IV. Va . Di ck Gri nstea d, Chief of New
Haven Rescue Squa d , talked to
the New Have n Woman's Club
on what Mason County had
Edwards , Mrs . Sus ie Car· dune to pre pare for a mass
emergency and showed films
penter and Mrs. F e tty .
It was noted that jack-o'- when the group me t recently at
lanterns had been made (rom the New Haven Public Library.
pwnpkins donated by Mrs. Lee A film showing what fabri cs
Woods, Sr., for the October are very fla m ma ble was s hown
therapy session wi th the titled , "Your Clothing Can
special educa tion students, and Burn ."
Gr ins tea d pointed out tha t
that turkeys were m a de from
th
e to wn ha s 30 per sons
pine cones at the November
ila ble to go on e me rgency
ava
sessi on . Copie s o£Ranger Rick,
squa d run s . He s aid seve ral
per sons ha ve adva nced fi r s t
aid tr a ining.
WOMEN PLAN SALE
The prog ram was sponsored
A rwnmage sale will be at by the Community Imthe Catholic Women 's Club of provement , Debbie White , is
the Sacred Heart Parish,
chairman. Mrs. Kenneth
Thursday , in the church
Thompson, president of the
basement from 9 a .m . to 6 p.m .
New Haven Wom an's Club 1
In addition to cloth' ng , the sale
pr eside d, when the gr oup
will feature good used toys an~ approv ed the 1975 budge t.
games.
The club voted to pa rti cipate
in ' the Winter Fes tival in New
Haven on December 7 by entering a float. Ladies in charge
BAZAAR SET
are Connie Frishette and Lois
Annual holiday bazaar of the Robinson.
Enterprise United Methodist
The club Chris tmas party
Church will be Thursday and will be Dec. 17 at the New
Friday from 9 to 5 p.m. at the Haven Library . The group
church.
voted to have a $2 gift exchange.
Mr s. R obe rt Hi c ke l wa s
HAS SURGERY
appoin ted cha irwoman of the
Rick Triplett, formerly of Drug Abuse Committee .
Middleport, underw e nt
Hos tesses were Mrs. Tom
surgery . Monday at Doctors Hoffman , Mrs . Marian Batey,
Hospital, Van Buren St. , Mrs. Frank Young , Mrs . John
Hollywood, Fla . He is c onfined Marshall, Mrs . Sharon Vickers
to Room 339.
and Mrs . Elton Clevenger.
Those attending were Mrs.
Georg e Circle, Mrs . Jesse
COUPLE WED
Abel, Mrs. Wayne Carter, Mrs.
Jack L. Wolfe, Racine , and John Wolfe, Mrs . Kenneth
June L. McKnight, London, W. Thompson , · Mrs.
Connie
Va., were married at Cedar Frishette, Mrs. Loi s Robinson,
Grove, W. Va. , Dec. 1. They Mrs. C. T. Dodd, Mrs. Donald
are now residing in Clifton ' w.
Bumgardner, Mrs . Diane
Va.
Divers, Mrs . Mark Ward, Mrs.
Jack Flesher, Mrs . Dah Edwards and hostesses, Mrs.
The oldest golf club in Hoffman, Mrs. Batey, Mrs.
North America ts"The Royal Young , Mrs. Mars hall, Mrs.
Montreal" founded in 1873.
Clevenger, Grinstead and son:

Shower fetes
Linda Brown

Win ne r nr the firs t fl lacc in
Ht•r. 1on I I of th e Ohio

Jt,~:?:~~l~=iJ;:lH~::::~~:::::::~::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::j::~:j::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::.

I .·.. .. .pdf&lt;~~.:~~~:;;l
::n:

G!andmother wants ::::::i

;lili!

to

save newspapers

1\ 1~1

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DE AR PO LLY - I ha ve sav ed many of the newspapers with
headlines and stories rela tive to the momentous events of the
past few months. The day will come when my gra ndchildren will
appreciate them as they study his tory and current eve nts. I
would lik e to kno w the best wuy to preserve these papers. MRS. E. 's.

1\ssuci a l j(Jn

IJf

Ga r den Cl ubs.

Sea r s
-Co mlll un it. y
Im nr oVtltnen1 prog ra m, 1he Bend
0' 1hc Riv er Gar den Club ,
lll ec li ng at the horrlc of Mrs.
Hobert
Kuh n , Pomer oy ,
M(md a y·n ig ht. voted to continue
th e project ror annUle r year .
T he pr ojec t is bea utificati on
of lhc Letar t Falls Cerneter y.
Numerous trees a nd sh r ubs
ha ve been plan ted there as we ll
a s s Pveral othe r plan ti ngs have
been ma de. Mr s . W. 0. Barn itz ,
SCIP cha irw oma n, noted that
the award \',;as m Hde to the club
&lt;:tl the rece nt reg innal m eeting
in Ga llipolis.
The Ch r istm as fl ower show,

DEAR MRS. E . S. - I would roll the papers and th•n seal
them with tape so they are completely air tight. 1'erhaps some
readers will know of and send a different Idea. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is that s upermarkets do not
have special coun ters for senior citizens with mini-size packages
of meat , fruit a nd vegeta bles which would help limited budgets
as the r egular size packa ges hold too m uc h and cost too much.
Being able to buy smaller qua ntities would a llow the ag ed more
Da vid Casci, Col umbus,
variety in their m ea ls. - PEARL.
Ar thur Ca sci a nd Da le Va lory ~
DEAR POLLY - Elaine wh o has a n iodine stain on a wood
Ma ns fi eld, spent the Thanksbowl will find tha t iodine is solubl e in a lcohol. I think it would be
giv ing holiday wi th Mr . and
worth a try on wood . It work s well on cloth, Hnolewn , e tc. Mrs. Pa ul Casco.
MAE .
Than ksg iving dinn er guests
DEAR POLLY - Ela ine should try putting cornstarch on the
uf Mr. an d Mrs. Sidney Russell,
iodine stain on her woo den bowl. Dampen the bowl , apply the
Mid dleport,
we r e
the ir
cornstarch and leave it on a n hour or so. It should draw out the
chil dre n and ramilies, Mr . an d
stain but th e cornstarch must be damp . This has worked great
Mrs . R obe rt Ha yt h a nd
lor me on all materia ls. - WILMA .
c hildr e n, Susan , Sa ndra ,
DEAR FRIENDS - The fini sh on the wood will have
Robin , Wellston : Mr . and Mrs .
something w do with the-way anything works on the Iodine stain.
Larr y Li ndsey a nd c.hil dren ,
Heavy varnish or shellac would be a protection and probably
Li sa, Lois Ann , a nd Si dn ey ~
make the stain easier to remove while unfinished wood has
Mill ersport. J oining the family
nothing to prevent the penetration of a stain. It might be very
ror Thanksgiving dinner was
difficult to remove unless one wants. to try sanding.- POLLY.
Mrs. Lelah Wea therby, MidDEAR POLLY - For the first time I have been knitting with
dleport. The Lindsey famil y
two strands of ya rn knitted at the same time. I discovered that by
rem a ined for the wee kend .
slipping a sma ll pla stic marker or ring over the two enda before
starting my work helps keep the two ya rns closer wge ther and
the ring is just pushed a lon g ahead of the knitting. - MRS. D. I.
DEAR POLLY - A dear elderly friend gave me a collection
HOSTS PARTY
of old keys tha t she had saved for over 80 years . Their nice
Mrs.
Beula h White e nshapes inspired me w spray them go ld and th en hang the m on
tertained
Thanksg ivin g nigh t
our Christmas tree as ornaments. This made the loveliest tree
with a dinner party. Her guests
and a very sentimental one, too. - HELEN.
we
re Mr . and Mrs. Emers on
DEAR READERS- I was intrigued with Helen's suggestion
Well
and daughter, Dori s, Mr .
for a Christmas tree decorated with keys. Most of us would be
surprised at how many old discarded keys we have tucked away and Mrs. Howard Well , Mr .
here and there and gulden keys attached to gold cord for hanging a nd Mrs. Thomas Dars t, Greg
and J eff, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
would give a most unusual effect. - POLLY.
White, Miss Kitty Metzger ,
You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite home- Mrs . Ag nes White , Richard
making idea, Pet Peeve , Polly's Problem or solution to a Duc kworth and Mrs. Fl orence
Hannay.
problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

" Ch ri.s lma s in the Air ," to be
s taged this wee kend a t the
Pom eroy Elementary Sehoul ,
wa s announced and seve r&lt;:~!
members ind ica ted that they
will be making arra ngemenl'5
ror t. hc s how. The club m ade
plans also to a ss i~t in serv in g
rcfres hmenls du r ing the shuw.
Mrs . Be r t Grimm , cou n ty
con tact c hairwom an , repor ted
on the recent county mee li n~.
A rep or t on the reg iona l
mee ti ng was give n by Mrs.
Wilson Ca rpen ter, pl'esid ent.
To open the m ee ting, Mrs.
J a mes Diehl read a poe m and
the clu b pr ayer was given in
uni son. De votions were by Mrs.
Kuhn who talked on thankf ul n e s s a n d g r atit ud e concl ud ing with pra ye r. F or roll
call members responded with a
garden er's concern .
T he ecology r eport was on
re cycling m a ter ia l an d mak ing
compos t piles. Mrs. Glenn
Wes t talked on hor tieul turc a nd
d iscussed ways to rid vard s of
mol es 'and what pes ti-cides tu
us e . Mr s. Andr ew Cr us:s
discuss ed pruning and how
pruning mak es a ga rden neat
an d yoUil g looking . She sa1d to
trim out a ll the old bra nches ,
an d then to trim the other!) at
vary in g le ngth to ke e p a

gr.rt cefu i and na tur a l loo k. Most
evergreens, s he sa id, s hould be
trimmed in the fa ll or early
s pring. F lowering s hru bs
:-;hould be trim me d afte r
bl oomin g in the s pri ng.
Prog r am
books
we r e
distri buted .
Mrs. Ed ward Sim pson was
&lt;-~ward ed a blue r ib bon for her
mT&lt;-~. n gc ment titled " A Gar ·
dener 's P ot Pourri."
The Chris tmas mee ting of
the club will be at the home of
Mrs . Simpson Dec . 1:l with a
gift exchange to ta ke place at
that li me. Gfit wr appings will
be j udged . Mr s. Kuhn ass is ted
by her daug h te r , .Ja nelle,
:served r efr eshmt:!n l"i.

F ILMS SCHED ULE D
Two fil ms, open to the pu bli c ,
will be shown at 7: 30 p.m.
Friday at the Bradford Churc h
under the sponsorship of Adult
Class r\o . 1 The films are
·· Th r·ough th e Gate ? of
Sp lendo r ", a stor y of five
mis:-;iona r ies going to the Inca
Ind irJ ;ls in South Am erica , a nd
"S ilent Wiln ess", a film
leani ng m ore towa rds youth . A
fellows hip iw ur wi ll be held
fulluw ing the mov ies with pie
:md coffee to be served .

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS

•

Tuesday , Dec. 3, 1974

MARK V HOLDS PRICES DOWN!

-'

...'•

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
StJ1mp.~

W e Accept Federal Food
PHONE 992-3480

MIDDLEPORT 0'

to Limit

Reserve The

SLICED

OHIO LOTTERY TICKETS HERE

lb.
GROUND
BEEF

GROUND
CHUCK

79~

lb.

Extra lean

Fresh and Lean

Fresh and Lean

SUPERIORS BONElESS

HAM SLICES .......................'~:..

GRC)UND
ROUND

•1.09

lb.

lb.

SUPERIORS

•1.19

HOME MADE

HAM SALAD
lb. 99~
SWIFl'S PREMIUM

__,

'

I

,

'

-

--·

-

PRICE BEATER!

THIS COMING SA TURDAY
DECEMB ER 7

PRICE BEATER!

CHRISTMAS HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE

LOCATED IN TH RIF T SHOP BUI LD ING
ACROSS FROM POMEROY PO ST OFF ICE

MAXWELL HOUSE

Door prizes will be award ed . Drawing wilt be held for $100
~ort~ of groceries of wi nn er's choi ce at M &amp; R Food liner
In Middleport. There wi11 be nu merous handmade item s
planters. ceramics, ~:o lle ctors item s, cakes , cookies a nd
candy.
Free coffee. Com e in and browse. Carry out lunc h wi ll
be served from 11:00 until 2: oo .
Sponsored by

14 oz.
1ar

NO
COUPON
NEEDED

$299

CARNATION

TIDE

12 pak

10 lb. 11 oz.
box

SPECIALS

2 lb. box

•1.69

10¢
~rts ................ ~: .
8
9¢
Prem ••..••.•..•...• c:~. ·
3
rol~ $1
Aluminum Fo1l.....
10¢
Natural Cereal •.•••••
s
$1
Choice Morsels...
$199
Little Cigars••••••• ~n.~

FILLET
OF SOLE

FRENCH
DINNERS
FRIES

99¢

2
for

MEAT

PRICE BEATER!

69¢

2 lb.
pkg.

SCOT LAD

•

99e

giant size

NEW•.. INTRODUCTORY OFFER SIZE

PURINA

ROOT BEER
Y2 gal.

for

WINCHESTER

lfz gal.
crt.

SCOT LAD

bxs.

jug

69¢

crt.

VAUEY BEll

2%
gal.
crt.

$}29

BROUGHTON'S

MODERN DAIRY

COTTAGE
CHEESE

HOMO

SAYRE HARDWARE

EST'.l9U

RC COLA

c

.·

I
'

I

.

$

pak

Everyday Price ~a Pak •1.59

PRICE
BEATER!

•

Modern Dairy
Twin Pak
~j

I

16 oz.
bois.

8

beh.

MILK

. NEW H

•••

$ 29

BREAD
Favorite

16 ounce

4.tw.ror$1

DAD'S ROOT BEER
OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREEl

8

lti oz. .

btls.

....
I

-·~

$149
'

'· '

;

JUMBO

. .,

125 E. Main St. • 992-2171

'

E.D.LP.
gallon

'

'

.,

Aorida Fresh

CELERY·

What makes us a different kind of loan compa'!)' makes us a better kind of loan compa'!)'.

79¢

large
carton

.,

PRICE BEATER!

'

bag

79¢

FOODS AT LOWER PRICES!

MILK

••

Fresh Florida
JUICY

ICE
MILK

D

LIQUID DETERGENT

for

CITY WAN
&amp;SAVINGS

'"

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

ERA

12 oz.

.

SCOT lAD •

'

·'

BOOTH'S

ORE IDA

TV

$3.49

~

roll

CA_
NDY _BREATH MINTS

-~NQtEON

IRDZEN fOOD

BANQUET

..

FISH &amp;
FRIES

FAMILY SIZE

HOT COCOA MIX

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY

'"

GORTON'S

GRADE A SMAU

ATOOL. RO.T ATft

I'

12

5 lb. can •7.9_.9,._---....._

- - - ,- -:----" .

I·---~ -

----.,.

lb.

WIENERS ...........................~~t

CANNED HAM

TBIS CRBISTIIAS, BIVB ~ ~·
TRB TOYS TOYOUIDDS, ~
GIVB YOUIIU.ll A
~

12

SUPERIORS AU BEEF

""
ALEXKARRASsays. ~~~ ~. ~-c

_:._...)

lb

SUPERIORS

.

~ .-r---. _

$ 49

1
7
9¢
.
POLISH SAUSAGE ......... ,......:.
oz. 69¢ ':
WIENERS............................~~~:.
79¢.
BOLOGNA................................
.
oz. 79¢

~;s
(~

,--:;

lb.

69~

SUPERIORS

BAZAAR

RUTLAND A bridal
shower honoring Linda Brown,
birde-&lt;&gt;lect of Dean Weber was
held Friday night at the home
of Mrs. Vernon Weber ,
Rutland , with Mrs . Emerson
Jones and Miss Donna Weber
as hostesses .
A red and g reen c olor
scheme was carried out in the
decorations. Cake, punch and
wedding bell 111ints were
served. Winning prizes were
Mrs. Dennis McCuen, Mrs .
Kenda Rainey, Mrs. Frank
YoUil g and Mrs. Burwn Brown.
Guests other than those
named were Mrs. Raymond
Cole, Mrs. Kenneth Chaney ,
Mrs. Howard Birchfield, Mrs.
Grace Colwell, Mrs. Kathryn
Colwell, Miss Mary Colwell,
Mrs. Harold Rife , Miss Ellen
Rife , Miss Mae Weber, Mrs .
Robert Bwngarner, Mrs. PaUl
Baer, Mrs. Curtis King, Mrs .
Harold Sauer , Mrs. Fred
Williamson, Mrs . Marjorie
Milhoan and Mrs. Freddie
Houdashelt.
Sending gilts are Mrs . Leo
Kennedy, Mrs. Ralph Clark,
Mrs. Denver Weber, Mrs. Carl
Morris, Mrs. Russell Little,
Mrs. Harvey Erlewine, Mrs.
Margaret Parsons, Mrs . C. 0 .
Chapman, Mrs. Ann Webster,
Mrs. Marie Bishop, Mrs. Nate
Wise, Mrs. Edith Williamson
Mrs. Bill Williamson, Mi~
Mary Sauer, Miss Joy Sauer
and Miss Jane Wise .

•

,)

ol

..•••

:~

�8 - The Daily Senllnel, Middleporl-Pumero) , 0 . Tuesday , D&lt;&gt;c 3, 1974

Sentinel Classifieds _Get Results!
In Memof}

Notice

IN

..:.O~ COT

M EMORY Of Ja mes E
Ed
Spe n ce r who pn SSl' (1
a way 7 year s il~o todilv Occ

K OS ME TI CS
Rf'member
Chr s t mas 1S
com1nq We have ma n y nrw
produ ct s tnat wtll m a k e n ce
f1 fl s
Pt1onc BROW N S 99?
51 I J
1 1 J ttc

J
M e m o r tes a r e treasut es
No on e can stea l
De ath Is a hearta c h £'
Noth ing cap. hNI
Som e ha vq ;f~t go!ten
Now l hat t&lt;f u 'r~ gone
But I w1ll f.~m ember
N o m at te r ho w lonQ
Sa d l y m 1s.sed by

~·h
.,

Ttlur s d&lt;JV
i'lnf'i
S&lt;~tu r day
ntqtlt
7 p m
at
Masdn Auctton H or ton St 1n
Maso n . W Va Co nstgnments.
wei{_Qmt'
Pnon e (3 0.1) 773
5.J 71
10 3 lie

Not1ce •

- -if~ - -

A

H AVE
your
d eer
t r ophy
m o un ted o\lso o th e r sm,1 11
an 1ma l s an&lt;;f btrd~
P ho n e
H oward B r c hft e ld Rutland
742 5932 .
I 7 3 II C
A B SO LUTE LY no t-.u n1 1ng
t ra v pl ng o r t r e~pilSSi n Q day
or n tgh l W1HWu t perm ss1on
b y ow n er on ou r farm Carl
and W anda Fmd l mg Rt 1
Re ecs svt! l ft Oh10
12 J 61P

1-! EVIVAL W1ll b eg lll Dec 1
t11 ro uqn Dec 7 n t the Ch ur ch
of
Go d
Ches t e r
Oh1o
Evanqe t s t w d l b€' Rev Joe
P. 1 Cls.ley I rom 1\ll')( ilndrt &lt;l V&lt;l
Sr&gt;rv 1ces w1 ll beq tn each
C'ven tng 1 30 P m and 5pe c ta l
S1n q111 g
C &lt;! C h
cven on Q
Ev eryone v.. Picomc
Pa sto r
Rev Dnn L Ayers
11 26 12tc

Lost

? BEAGLE fl'ma l es a n d 1 male
Bengl e Lost n Mme r svtlle
a r e a s nee Su nd&lt;1 y Phon e ~ 91
.' ~ 17 or c ont.1c t Ca lvtn l m
baden M tner sv lie Oh to

-· -

11 29 6 1p

~

PA UL ' S B arb et' S110p 111 R actne
. wtll b e c lose d Dec 7 thr o u gh
D ec 7 Wtlt op en D ec 9
12 1 31C
NO H U NTIN G· or lre sp as s mg
wtthout p er m tSStOn
John
Ros e , G l en n T u ttl e , Theodore
Pullin s , Ben B1 cker s.
P aul
Moor e
Dan Sm 1th
Pa ul
Erv tn , Ed son Ro ush Roge r
, Oa 1els J am es Parsons
v~ tor Hy se U
Del Heasley
Ed't'a r d F r eck er
Geo rg e
Frecker . Ha r o l d Brown Btll
( Gruese r , J a n1ce Rt t ch te , Alvil
Coates , J a m es Bat le y Carl
Morri s, V inton Jo n es A r c ht e
: Rose . Ca r' l Ht c k s John P ra ll
11e.r.rnan L aw s on
Ke nn et h
G ary
Gr1 tf tt h,
- Laws o n.
Stanl ey Tru sse ll. Cl1nto n
. ~ l tz e r , CTov er Wh i t e
A nt on
!.otter , Mon 1d Good , M ayfo rd
t;tarns, Robe r t Codner, O r v tl
Ho l ter P aul Orr , Bo b L ee
Doug las C tr cle Joan Wol f e
'Arc-hte- T unle
11 276tp

197&lt; OPEL MANTA

S2895

'l Doo r or a nge ftm sh , blk vtnyl tn l e rt or , buc k e t seat s, tess
th an 5,000 mil es &amp; 3 m d o ld Radto, d e l uxe b u mpe r s

1972 DODGE DART CUSTOM

S249l

4 Door, loca l 1 owner CC\_r, 318 V 8 e ng m e, a uto m a f te tra n s ,
power steer mg , a tr condtfton e d , v inyl tnm , vt nyl ta p
A utumn gol d ft n1 sh , w w ttres, ltk e ne w , r a dto

1972VEGAGT

Mobile Homes For Sale
1'11 10 v A LIANT 65 x 12. 3 b edrooni
fully ca rpet ed , L P gas h ea t
Phon e '11 92 77 51
a 2s tf c

Pets For Sale
1\KC
lr s ll
Se t t ers
Ha s
eliCE'I I en 1 c hampiOn pf' d t
qree
c ome s
wt t h
sho t s
and pape r s Can be see n at the
R 1cnard
L
Fe lty
Jr
restde n ce 1n Ru t la nd or ca l l
747,1101 H a lf down wrll n o ld
l or ChrtS ima s
11 ?7 ti c
1 R ABB I T dogs, S60 Ptlon e 7J /
5322
1:l 1 31p

WantP.rt To Buy
CAS H SSUUS
FO R
JU NK
CARS
Com p
FR YE 'S
TRUCK and A U TO P A RT S
R utland phone 742 6094
1 1 2626 tc

S10
FO R
1unk
ca r s
$15
d el tv e r ed
$7 JUnk ed a ut o
bo d tes P hon e 9,j 9 ,j.f84
1124 261p
CA:&gt; H pa1d for al l ma ke s and
m ode ls ot m o btle hom es
P h on e ar ea c od e 61 ~ 423 95 31
4 13 tfc

O L D f urn 11ure , ICE' bo&gt;o:es , br ass
beds o r com p le l e ho u se h ol d s
W r tl e M
D Mt l l er , R t 4
Pom e r oy Oh 10 Ca ll 9'il1 77 60
10 7 7 4
J UNK aula s, compl e te and
d e l1v er ed to our yard W e
p 1ck up auto bO d 1es and b uy
al l k tnd s of scr a p met a l s and
tr o n R1d er s Sal v ag e St R t
12.1
Rt 4, Pome ro y , O h tO
Ca ll 992 5468
10 17 lf c:

J BE'bROOM hou s.e
3975 or 99 2 2571

BE D ROOM doubl e Wtd e
m o bt l c h om e 1n Sy ra c u se
D c po s 11 r eq utred N o c hildr en
or p e ts Call 99 2 2441 a fter 6
P m
12 1 lf c

D ODG E P o l a r a
1350
UN F URN IS HED a pt 4 room s
e:~~celle nt cond tlt on
wn ti e
and b .-J th ln q ut re a r 399 s
llt nyl lop
p s , p b
au t o
Th1 rd St , M idd lepor t
f rans. m 1SS 1on
fa tr
t 1 res
12 1 3tc
P h one 992 35 98
11 2961c
J AND 4 ROOM furn i Shed and
unfurniSh e d
apartments
Phone 992 54 34
4 12 lfc

..

1

l:OUS
~

mustc

to

'Season of

li.RA'ILER . 2 bedroom , Brown ' s
Trader P ark Ph o n e 99 2 3324
1 1 a tf c

the

Wttch'

while Donovan wrote lhe
words "
Laler , he accompanied
Donovan on a worldwide tour
but when they returned to
England, Ph1llips was waylaid
by Immi!lration authonlles
wh q-_, prevented hts entry,
claSS!fY.mg liim an undesirable
·alien! ''We had been busied for
gra~ whit~ on tour and they
didn't want' us back. Donovan,
a ~ntish subject, they had to
let-in, Me, they didn't."
Phillips, personal vices now
constst of some alcohol
(sparingly) , manjuanuana
(sporadically ) and cigarettes
(incessantly) He has hved in
1!2ly for several years now
w1lh a woman and her son from
a prevwus marna&gt;te.
He read voraciously and is
rehcent on few topics. ll Is
reOecled m his music which

CoUNTRY Mobtl~ Home Pa r k ,
Rt 33 , ten miles no rt h of
Pomeroy
Lar ge lot s wtth
con c rete pat 1os, Sid e wal ks,
, unners
and
off
s treet
parktng
Al so, spa c e s for 1
small trailer s Phone 99 2 7 479
7 21 lfc

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

4 RM furn1-:;hed apt c los e to
Powell ' s Super V alu phone
992 J658
11 20 He
FURNI SHED apt Adu l ts only ,
Middleport Phon e 992 3 87~
11 1Affc

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

UN F URNISHED
hou s e ,
4
rooms and bath 1650 Ltnco l n
Helghts Phon e 992 38 74
11 14 tf c

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

FURNI S HED
apartmen t,
uttl l tJes furn tshed , s u1table
for two worktng m en or
rel tred c ouple Ltvtng r oom ,
k ttchen , shower and bath On
mam h ighway, Ma son. W Va
Phone 773 5147
10 27 -tfc
FURNISHED apt 3 rooms ;md
batt1 , tdeal for
worktng
couple Phone 992 2937
12 2 6tp
FOUR
ROOM
furn i Shed
apartment (2 bedroomsJ m
M tddleport Phone 992 2676
12 2 31c

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

bathes

cate

you

wash

m

of

a

deli-

concern

and gentility He does not
want to lay a verbal 2x4 between your

eyes; 1t Is not hls

Wanted To Rent
H OUS E m coun t ry Me1gs or
Gallta County , $75 per month
or l ess Have no c ht l dren Call
245 5293 afler 8 p m
12 1 6tc

slyle
Not disgusted with the HOUSE tn Country , M e 1gs or
Gallla, $75 per montt1 or tes s
United States but dcfmilely
Have no chtldren
Phone
disturbed, Shawn Is no radical.
245 5293 after 8 p m
His philosophy can be swnmed - -----------~~ 61c
up In the lyrics from a song on
h•s album " Second Contribution," his favortte:
HOW TO EARN MONEY AT
"A' 't
h
HOME
MAILING
COM
In
no SUC
thing as
MISSION
CIRCULAR S !

Help Wanted

revolution

E X C E L LEN T
P R0 F I T
POTENTIAL
OFFER
DETAILS 25c &amp; STAMPED
ADDRESSED ENVELOPE
ANN CLARK, 1223 LACLAIR ,
PGH PA 15218

It 'S go t anot he r name
It's called evolution
Go slow , 11

------- ----~_2~261~

We. talkJo you
lika .a person.

PARTTlME babys11t e r needed
Phone 992 51~2
12 1 6t c
---~- -.- -------

For Sale
VALNUT stereo radio , am fm ,
8 track tape combinat ion
Balance $107 45 or terms Call

992 ]965

11 19 ttc

WMP0/13901
ON YOUR DIAL

a fantasy by P. Pastoret and D. Baur

THE ~~LO BEFORE THERE
WERE TOYS CI-11LOREN MA.DE-

... AND fl. BIT OF WOOD
WAS iH!: NEARESi

WCR.6i OF ALL, THE'
CHILDREN HAD NO

DO WITH A STICK AND A
STONE 'TO KNOCK AROUND ...

THIN&gt;&amp; 1'0 A BOAT ANY
CHI'-D 14AD!

BIRTHDA'I', 50 ...

IN

- - -

TR A I L E R space 2 m il es from
Pomeroy , Rt 14 3 Ph o n e 99 2
5858
10 27 tfc

SHAWN PHILLIPS: They
got the message.

TOYS I=OR A

------ ------FIREWOOD for f 1rep1ac:e
stove Cut to length
992 76~4

or
Phone

ll 3 26tc
APPLES , FtiZpatrtck or'c hard ,
Sta t e Route 689 ,
Phone
Wilkesville , 669 3785
11 21 26t c
----- ----- -~---

HOLST~tN Spr i nger Cows for
sale
Earl Dean, Chester
Phone 985 -3855
ll 27 61p

=-------------60 INCH strands pearl

beads~
reg Sl 17 and Sl 29 sale price ,
35c polyester fabrtc spec ~al
S2 98 yard Cake decoratlv~
supplie!. Nove lty Fabric lind
Crafts , Washtngton Bl v d ..
Belpre , ~hto
11 27 .ttc

'

_______ .

....__

~-

-

I

Route 7 by-pass towards
Rutland

11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 , Janak1 33 ; Wide World Mystery
13; FBI 6, Movie "Mr Inside Mr Outside" 8, Mcv1e " My
Six Convicts" 10.
1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4

2.oo-News 4,13.
CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7 30-Washlngton Debates For the Seventies"The Parties and

Lawn Mowers :-

the Issues".
8 30-The Gunslingers " The Westerners" "Zane
Theatre 0 •
9· 30-The Underworld "Target: The Corruptors"

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

Phone (304) 773-5503

'

For 5ale
275 G A L L O N fu el Oi l t ank Wtlh
ra c k Phon e 992 3324
12 3 6t c
L O SE wet g ht Wtltl N ew Shape
Tablel s an d Hy dre:~~ Wa t er
P il lS at Dutton Drug, M1d
d l e port an d N el son Drug
~ 1 23 Jtp

.r Sale
2 - - H 78 15 IN snow ttres 1.000
mtl es. L tke new Albert Hill ,
phone 9~9 2261
12 1 6tp
SE ARS 12 h p lawn and garden
tra c to r w1 t h 42 1n mower , 10
m p low , d tsk , dozer b l ade ,
cu lt 1vator !.95(\ Call 247 2623
12 1 31c

19 7 ~

ZIG Z AG
S EWIN G
MA C H I NE S l eft 1n l ayaway
A ll bu11t m to bullonh o le do
st retch sewmg
and fan c y
s.t 1tc htng Pay lU St :ti 48 75 cash
o r term s avatlabl e Trade tn s
acc epted Phon e 99 2 7155
12 3 lfc

WA L NUT s tereo rad1o a m fm,
8 tr a ck tap e combfnat1on
Balanc e S1t0 69 o r t erm s Call
992 3965
12 3 tfc
VACL•UM Cle an er s Brand n e w
t ank type m odel s W1 t h 5 a t
t achments O nl y 524 50 c a sh
N ew
o r t e r m s ava ilab l e
U prtght mod els Sl 9 90 c ash or
te rm s av ailab le
Trad e m s
accepfed Phon e 99 2 77 55
12 3 tf c

GROCERY bustness for sale
Bulldtng tor sale or tease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to iO p m for appointment
3 20 tfc
FIREWOOD, any length Call
992 542 2 or 992 3312
11 10 26tp

S EWING-~.. ~ - ..... s brand- new
Zig Zag 1n n tce walnut table
In orig tnal cartons
Never
used
Clearance on
'74
Model s
(On l y
a
few
avallable l. U 3 40 cash or
terms availab l e Pt1one 992
7755
10 15 tfc

Real Estate For Sale

'

~

Sales &amp; Service

Fire Extinguishers, Home
Ftre Alarms, Testing &amp; '
0
Rehlt1ng.
Phone 742-4673 or 742-5595
Bill Brawn, Owner
Rutland, Oh1o
0

GEO GORDON , Carpentry and
r e modeling
" Floor
to
Ce1t1ng "
Phone 992 5060 ,
Mtddleport, Ohto
'·
12 3 5tp

-

-

SEWING MACHINES Repai ~ •,
s~rvtee , all P"'akes , 9'n 2284
The Fabr i c 'Shop , Pomeroy ,
Authorized Stnger Sa l es ancf"
Sen11ce We sharpen Sc t,sors
3 29 tfc.. '

DOZER work, land c l~arlng byr
the acre hourly or contract,
f-arm ponds, roads, etc Large ,
dozer and operator w1tt1 over
20 years experience Pullins
Excavating , Pomeroy, Ohto •
Phone 992 2478.
1219tfc 1

------------~:i EPTlC

TANKS
cleaned "'
Modern Sanitatton . 992 3954 or
992 7349
918tfc (.

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

SEF'ftC
TANKS
cleaned,
reasonable rates
Ph
4.46 1 _
~782, Gallipolis J ohn Russell,t"
owner and operator
_
5 12.tfc

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

DOZERO r backhoe work
Phone l 446 3981 or 446 3459
9 8-tfc

:J·OD-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13i Pricae Is

Right 8,10.
3· JO-One Life to Live 13; Match Game 8,10, Lass1e 6; How to
Survive a Marriage 3,4,135.

r:

over your three hearts

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

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

3

NORTH

(Aug 23-Sepl 22)

Dear Helen and Sue:
I won't take up a lot of your Ume by going on about my
problem.ll's quite simple : My parents beat me . They never talk .
They just hit
Is there someplace in my smaU town where I can go to gel
belp? My brothers will back me up. Several of my friends'
parents would be glad to take me in as a sort of foster child, but 1
Wlderstand it has to be legaL
I'm battered and bruised and sick of It all. Please give me
somehelp,ifil'sonly a kind word. -CAN'T KEEP QUIET ANY
LONGER
Dear CKQAL:
Call the Child Welfare office at your county seal. Better yet,
show an adult friend your bruises, and ask her to contact
authorities. It won't be pleasant, revealing that you have unfit
parents, butil's much better than constant beatings. -SUE

+++
Dear C.:
Since you already have several offers, perhaps you could
find a new home without going through all that legal misery. Is it
possible that your parents would let you move in with friends, if
they were (fll'lllly) contacted by, say, a ministn or school
counselor? Why not discuss tills with your counselor and see
what he can do. - HELEN

+++
Rap :
)lly boyfriend has a lot of girl cousins, that he brings to my
house to eat and drink. But I asked some of his relatives, and they
told me these weren't his cousins.
Down In the Bahamas where we live, everybody has lots of
relatives. My boyfriend told me he has so many that some of

1974
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)

Bonanza 4, Movie "Hangman's Knot" 10;

Mike Douglas 13
4:30-Bewltched 3, ABC Afterschool Special 6,13; Lucy Show 8.
Santa Claus 15.
S.oo-Mr. Rogers 20,33; Merv Griffin 4; FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8;
. Bonanza 15
5:30-Eiec. Co 33; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; News 6; Jack
O'Lanfern 13.
6:(10-News 3,4,8,10,15; ABC News 13; Sesame St. 20; News 6,
1 Diagnostic &amp; Prescriptive Teaching of Reading 33
6:311-News 3,4,8,10,15, Journey lo Japan 33; Bewitched 6.
Gomer Pyle 13.
7 oo-News 10; What's My Lme 8; Truth or Cons. 3; Celobrity
Sweepstakes 3; Zoom 33; I spy 15; Elec. Co. 20 , Bowling lor
Dollars 6, Big Red Machine 4
7 30-Let's Make A Deal6. Mel Tlllls8, Pollee Surgeon 3; Name
That Tune 4; Antiques 20; Episode Action 33
8:(10-LIItle Houoo on tho Prairie 3,4,15, That's My Mama 6,13,
Tony Orlando and Dawn 8,10; Feeling Good 20; Jack the
Ripper 33.
8 :10--{;reat American Dream Machine 20,33; "Movie "Onl"
' With Married Men" 13; Mcvle "Sweet, Sweet Rachel" 6.
9 oo-Cannon 8,10; Lucas Tanner 3,4,15; Masterpiece Theatre 3,
Billy Graham 8,10; Da Vinci 20.
IO:oo-Pelrocelll 3,4,15; Get Christie Love 6,13; Man Hunter 8,
10; TBA 33, News 20
11·oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33
11·30-Johnny Carson 3; Janakl 33; Wide World Speclal13, FBI
6; Movie "Tip on a Dead Jockey" 8; Movie "Kiss Me Kate"
10.
12 · 30-WIId Wild West 6

mtstnteq&gt;ret a friend's mdepenljent behavior as disloyalty

on too much now

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23 -

TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20)

0ec 21) Avo1d the company

There wtl! be dtsrupttons on
the home rront Fam1ly members won 't co - operate proper ly Don't be a pnnctpal ofrender

of one today w 1th whom you ve
had cross words recently A
thoughtless remark could set
art new sparks

GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20)

19) Someone you ~now well 1S
a tntle too c un eu s about
something you cons1der personal He II be pry 1ng aga1n to-

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 -Jan

Be eKtremely tactful tn han·
dling subordtnates today One

of them has an old grudge

day
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.

smoldertng that s about to lg-

mte

CANCER (June 21-Jufy 22)
Your matenal p1cture looks
good for now, but there s a
leak that should be plugged
Its your tendency to spend '
fooliShly
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You II
be far mora tolerant and pa·
t1ent today wtth outSiders than
you wtll be w1th your own
famtly

19) You re hkely
day to another s
act agatnst your
ment 1f you don t
the pressure

to y1eld to wtshes and
belter JUdgs tand up to

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
One that you II team up w1th on
a chore IS too Independent to
be a good co worker He 11 try
to bo ss yo u 1f y ou let h1m

them don't know each other.
But I still don't think it's right. Besides, it's expensive. He
says he loves only me, but he can't be mean to his cousins What
should I do?- L. P .

L.:
Find a guy who doesn't overrun you wtth female relatives
(who are more likely "kissin' cousins"). - SUE
Dear L:
Or turn them into "cussin"' cousins by making your house
off timlts to freeloaders. (Including, perhaps, your ever-lovin'
boyfriend.) - HELEN

JlllllM®lb~®/.W lotn&amp;lor/-.1 ~
Unscramble theMe foor Jumblu,
one letter to uch square, to
form four ordmary words.

I

tMECION

rn

l :llO-Tomorrow 3,4; Take Five For Life IS.
2.oo-News 4,13
CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7· 30 p.m.- Country and Western U.S.A
What do you 8.30 p.m.-Superstar Theatro.

I I

• 7 52
¥A K J 2

d9

One letter simply atands for another. In tbla rsm ... A II
used for the three L's, X for tho two O'a, ole. Slatll lit....
apostrophes, the len&amp;th and formation of the . . , . 1ft •
hlato Each day the code leiters are dlloreat.

FOR' MONEOY

CR\'PT()QUOTE

Now IU'Tance the circled letten
to torm the aurprlu anJwer, aa
aucreated by the above cartoon.

BeLLE

DRIVEL OBJECT

\ An•w~r~ Khat the hollpiiUij~l'd balo;(•r was - " ILL·BAEO"

VWRFFRK
DRPTF

M T L J

VWRFFRK

JIL

FRWNMIJit
JY

FOPVa.-

WJURWL
YWJFL
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THERE IS NO ~=t::~
SO GREAT AS THE CHARM OF A I
PERAMENT.-HENRY VAN DYKE
{@ 19H Kine Featu .... Syndicate, IM.)

now')

BRAINLESS -OH,

LITTLE ORPHAN
EAST
•J94

'ai'

ITS F~OM

EXCUSE MEt MEAN BRAIN•
•VOU CAN'T CiET
AVVAV WITH THISf

AW;il&amp;'

AND I N£AAL¥ MISSEO IT •

¥Q743
• 10 8 6

• 7 52

aa

AXYDLIIAAX&amp;
LONGFELLOW

!J'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

.AQ9
•J 9 3
WEST
• Q 10 8 6 3
¥106 5

14

WHY THE FAMILY
NE.VEOR 0!5JEOC:TEI7
WHEN JUNIOR' Wli&lt;:i:t7

tii111X111IJ

Jumblf'll LOVER
Ye..erdar'•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
I Rathskeller I Military ·
5 West Pomt
unit
freshman
Z " Tempest"
10 Viva voce
sprite
11 Hairdo
3 Go amiss
gadget
(3 wds.)
13 Tiny brook
4 Building
Last
extension
15 Fencing
5 Buddtng
dummy
M.D.'s
16 Wooden
course
core
6 Friend to
17 Beak
none
18 Item for
7 Ancient
Cinderella
times
zo Goddess
8 Gwnmed up
(Lat.)
the works
21 Poverty
( 2 wds.)
22 Trtal run
9 Weirdest
23 Quoted
25 Rtch cake
26 On high
27 Skm
aperture
28 Female
ruff
29 Wash
32 Sin
33 Porker
34 -&lt;le
France
35 Island in
U.S. Marine
lore
37 Unexpected
problem
38 Words of
warning
(2 wds.)
39 Girl's
name
40 Expunge
U Coward

Ia

I

i!:;sl HE WAS AN

[4

~.. ¥Jwt

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTB- Hen'1 how te w•

~'LYMALi

IJ

ed•

vanc ement

Don I push yourself beyond the
11m1ts of your energ1es You II
only be frustrated 11 you take

You expect more from others
today than you should You II

J.EXEI'

lor seU-tmprovemM"'t lnd

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)

+++
4 oo-Mr. Cartoon 3; Sesame Sf 33; Tattletales 8, Somerset IS ,

til

w111 pe11&lt; up conolcllflllly .,..
year You II be NVW 10&lt; knowledge IIIII .., b&lt;l -

Most ot the t1me you try to be
fan· and reasonable Today
you re O'Jerty prote c t•~e about
things you deem are yours

For Wednesday, Dec 4,

•tt

Your tntereat en rww

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Gilligan's Isle 6;

Dec.4, 1174

Another's aCtion s w11l anger
you You re more likely to k eep
•t to yourself than to let h1m
know about 11

Two finesses better than one

~NtE· - ·

~

LI TTL.E

o\Nt.IIE • · •

.A85

•K6
SOUTH I D)

·------- --- ,- ---.-..

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

VI~GO

(AJu,.en tomorro"')

WIN AT BRIDGE

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

=--:------------

Grey

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1974
6:(10-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester "TO.
6 2!&gt;--Farm Report I 3.
6:30-FiveMinutes to L1ve By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8; Tht
Story 13; School Scene 10.
6: 3s-&lt;:olumbus Today 4.
6:45--Mornlng Report 3.
7 oo-Today 3,4,15, CBS News 8,10; H R Putnstul6, Farmer' s
Daughter 13.
7 30-New Zoo Revue 6; Lldsvllle 13.
8·oo-New Zoo Revue 13; Capt'. Kangaroo 8, Jell's Collie 6;
Sesame St. 33; Popeye 10.
8:2!&gt;--Jack LaLanne 13; Capt Kangaroo 10.
8: 30-Brady Bunch 6.
8: 55-News 13.
9:oo-Paul Dixon 4; AM 3; Phil Donahue 15; Wild Wild West 6,
Bullwlnkle 8; Movie "Fathom" 13
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; HazelS; Taltlotales10.
IO.oo-Joker's Wild 8,10; Company 6; Name That Tune 3,15.
10: 30-Gambit 8,10; Winning Streak 3,4,15, Phil Donahue 4
11 ·(10-Password 13; High Rollers 3,15; Now You See If 8.10;
$10.000 Pyramid 6.
,
11 311-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Brady Bunch 13; Love of Life
8,10.
11 5!&gt;--CBS News 8, Dan !mel's World 10.
12:(10-Jackpot 3,15, Password 6; Bob Braun's SO-SO Club 6;
News 8,10; Mr. Rogers 33; News 13.
12:30-Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Split Second 6, Celebrity
Sweepstakes 3,15; Afternoon With OJ 13; Elec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1:(10-News 3; All My Children 6,13; Not For Women Only 15.
Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp; Restless 10
1: 30-As The World Turns 8,10; Jeopardy 3,4,15; Let's Make A
Deal 6,13.
2:oo-Oays 01 Our Lives 3.4.15; Guiding Light 8.10; Newlywed
Game 6,13.
2· 30-Doctors 3.4.15; Edge of Night 8,10; Girl In My Life 6,13.

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

CHR IS TMA S tr ees for sale , 6
m ties north of Pomeroy on 2 BEDROOM house for Si!lle
S500 down , S70 per month
Old R t 33 Buy tree now or
EXCELSIOR -sal( Works, ~~
Phone 992 3975 or 992 2571
r e serve
Cut fresh when
Mam St ', Pomeroy. All kin~
12 3 lfc
des1red Opha Offutl , Phone
of salt water pettets, ..water
992 3296
nuggets, block salt and own J
12 3 6tp NO MONEY DOWN Monthly
Ohio River Salt Phone 992
payments according 10 tn
3891
c ome New 3 bedroom home
19 57 CHEVY parts
NEW
6-S-llc l ,
with wall to wall carpettng on
Lakewood lractton bars , ht
0.
I
1 2 acre l andscaped lots
Call
tacker a1r shock s, hooke r
\..kC:MEANS
CONCREl
I
today for more lnfOrmat Jon ,
headers, Wtth l " c ollectors for
del1vered Monday through •
992 5976
s mall blo c k
Cal l 991 3496
Saturday
and
evenings 1
_ .. , , 6 p m BE ST OFFER
12 3 1tc
Phone 446 1142
10 17 tfc - --~-~ - - ----~6 13 tf
WILL TRADE - FINANCING
REGI S TER Eo h o r se- 9Years
ARRANGED
WITH
'C BF&lt;A,.DFORO , AuctiOneer
old , gentle sorr e l. 5290 Call
MIN I MUM
DOWN
Will
Complete Servtce
74 2 4211 afte r 5, 742 5501 or
c ons tder trade for old e r
Phone 9.49 3821 or 9"9 J161
742 6863
home. trader , or land on th1S
Racine / Ohfo
11 29 61c
new 3 bedroom , 2 bath home
Critt
Bradford
wtth 2 car garage, large
5 1I
I S YOUR present home too btg
fam lly room, an· condttioned
or have too many steps to
Mo&gt;Je tn Immediately , Call
R~ADY .MIX
-CONCRETE
climb ? See lh1s one floor f1ve
now 992 5976
room home at 205 Sprtng
delivered right
to your 1
12 3 ltc
Ave , Pomeroy Completely
project Fast and easy Free
redecorated tns tde and out 7 ROOM house , bath, garage,
estimates Phone 992 3284
New L uxa tr e furnace system,
Goegteln Ready M1x Co,
full basement. large garden,
M lddleport , Oh 10
n 1c e ullltty building
An
newly remodeled In R:ac1ne
tmproV ed home , r e asonably
Call 9~9 2836 after 7 p m
6 30 tfc
pr tced Phon e 99 2 5292
12 3 12tc ~-~- ---- ------11 29 tf c
'EXCAVATiNG , dozer , loader - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - NEW
bt level
home,
3
and backhoe work, septrc , ,
tanks installed; dump truelks
bedrooms , built tn k•tchen .
basement w1th one car
and IQ ·boys for htre , will haul
SIEGLER and
garage Phone 742 3615 or see
fill dirt , top soil , limestone ~
MONOGRAM
Mdo HutChiSOn
orav~T.- Call Bob- or· ~over ' I
11 1 ftc
Jeffers, day phone 992-7089 ,J1 1
~ night phone 992 3525 or 992 1"
l232
BUILDING lot. SOft front8ge X
2 11 ttd "
165ft. The second lot on left on
R 1ver&gt;Jiew Drfve, Ltncoln ...::_---;.:+-- - -::::....- -- -- -- ---. J,• •
H til , Pomeroy , Ohio If m
NOW Open 1 Howell and Boswell r '
terested.-call 992 3230 after 51
Auto Repa1r, 330 Mechantc St
pm
Hours 9 a m
to 5 · 30 p m
Evenings by appo1ntment.
10 17 tfc
Free grease 10b w1th oil ·~
Priced For Quick Sale
change through Dec J Phone
BRICK home. 6 room bath,
992 7627
't
front,
back
porches
11 27 6tc ..
Ba s emen, ,
gas
furnace
'
POMEROY LANDMARK!
Phone 992 5676
Jack W Carsev, Mgr
CAR'P-ET -Installalloti ~ S1 25 per r11
12 1 3tc
Phone 992 -2181.
yard Phone R tc:hard West,
8~3 2667
BUILDING lOtS to f sate, for
1113 26tp " 1
res 1dent1a 1 homes only , 1 acre - - - -- -- - - - - - - NEW fron t end l oader to fi t
and larger at Rock Sprmgs
WILL do tree tnmmmg around ~
Ford or Ferguson tractor ,
Phone 992 2789
th 1S area , reasonr!ble pri ces
S225 . 3 pt h1tch rnower 5125
12 1 6tp
Call (304) 882 2930
_' :
Phone 985 3594
,
11 1 3tc
12 l 7tp ~--- ----- ~---HOUSE 3 bedroom has been ; - -- - - - -- - -- - - remodeled , ready tlr'move tn
350 JOHN Deere Dozer , 6 ft
Carpeted,
pr~ced to sell in
f'
..;JrCI
hydraul tc b l ade, good c on
Middleport
Phone
992
-7244
d tfton 55 500 Phon e 985 J594
12 1 3tc
12 1 7tp

.AK
• 98
• K J 43
•QI0742
Both vulnerable
West

North

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

I.

Pass

Pass

East

Soutb
IN T

Openmg lead- 6•

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

•FUEL OIL
HEATERS

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

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

r-or ""le

"

1

l 95J 30 FERGU SON, good
c:ondtt1on , $1 250 Phone 985
3594
12 1 7tp

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

------------REG Angus calves, 3 he ifers.
and I bul l $1 , 200 B1tl Wttte,
Rt 3. Pomeroy , Ohtoor phone
992 2789
12 l 61P
SINGER sewtng ma c t11n e, like
new , 1973 model 1n nlce
walnut cabme t Makes design
StitChes , ZtO zags , but
tonholes
bl tnd h e ms, etc
Only S84 Call Ravenswood .
27 3 9521 or after 5 p m 273

9893

12 1 tfc

--- ---------E L _E_C T R 0 L U X
Vacuum

Cleaner complete with at
tachments, cordwlnder and
pa tnt spray Used but In like
new condttlon
Pfty S34 45
,cash or budget plan available
Phone 99 2-7755 .
1l 26 tfc

"'

PORTLAND - 4 nice level
lots close to the river, drilled
well, garage &amp; outbuilding,
house has 4 BR lOOK,
JUST $4,700.00
CARPENTER 2 story
frame, lust renovated, 2
acres, 1'12 baths. 4 BR, dining
R, 2 garages, can finance
part. ss.ooo 00.
MIDDLEPORT close In- 27
acres, large barn with silo,
milk house, equipment shedr-

home

has

3

BR,

bath,

t e ned We1gh between 200 250
poundS Ptlone 378 6 152
11 29 3tc

F OR better cleanmg , to keep
color s g l eammg , u se Blue
Lu s tr e carpe t cle a n e r R ent
el ectnc Shampooer $1 Baker
F ur nttur e Compan y
11 29 3tc

STEREO , rad 10 c ombination . 8
t rack tape , am fm radio , 4
s peaker
sound
system
Balance $106 a4 or term s . Call
992 3965
11 26 tfc

MAN WE 00 NEED
HOUSES TO SELL - LET
US KNOW WHAT YOU
HAVE .
992·2259 or 9t2-2561

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

.

f.&gt;

Brown's Fire &amp;
Safety Equipment

PHONE
949-3832 or 843·2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to a house.
Pa1nt1ng, s1dmg, roofing,
paper hanging, kllchen
cabmets, etc

Alum mum stdmg, roofing,
complete restdentlal con struction. Wiring, plumbmg,
elec
heattng,
kitchen
cabmets etc
27 Yrs. expenence in const
trade.

'

Protect Your Home
Or Business

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

6.30-NBC News 3,4,15; CBS News 8,10,. Bewilched 6; Gomer
Pyle 13.
7 oo-Truth or Consequences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars 6, What's
My L1ne? 8; News 10; Wild Kingdom 15; Antiques 20. Art of
Football 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Wild, Wild World of Animals 6,
$25.000 Pyramid 8; Price Is Right 10, To Tell Te Truth 13 ;
TBA IS; Ohio Election 20; Marco Sportlite 33.
B:oo-Adam-12 3.4.15; Happy Days 6,13, Amenca 33 . Billy
• Graham 8,10
8:30-Evenlng at Symphony 33 ; Movie " Red Badge of Courage"
3,4,15; Movie "Betrayal" 6,13
9·(10-Hawall Flve-0 8.10.
9·30-Woman 20; Barenbolm On Beethoven 33
10 oo-Pollce Story 3,4,15; Marcus Welby 6,13, Barnaby Jones
8; News 20, Mountain Scene 33; ChanneiiO Reports 10
10.30-News 20; Soundstago 33
ll·oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15.33.

All Small Applian

Open Mon - Sat.
I A.M. 6 P.M.

basement, TV room, NG
furnace, city water . JUST
$30.000.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS
1
otory ranch. 2 BR, bath.
dining R. HW floors, 1 level
acre . basement ASKING
ONLY $13,500.00.

-

.BOWERS '
REPAIR

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

SewiNG ~ ach.n~s .bra;dnew
Z1g Zag m ntce walnut table
In original cartons
Never
used
Clearance on
' 74
models
lOn l y
a
few
avatlabl e J S.t3 40 c ash or
terms availab l e Phone 992
7755
11 26 tfc

--------- ---H A MP SHIRE ptg s Corn faf .
...THERE WERE
NO PLAY THINGS
FOR PRE:St=NT'S !

On State Rt 124, 1!2 m1. from

JOHNSON'S

3 R OO M furnt sh ed a partme n t
Ul 11i t1eS p a 1d, 35 6 N F our th
5 1 , M1 ddl epo rf
12 1 Jtc

PRIVATE meet1n g room for
any organtzat 1on , pt1 o ne 992
3 915
3 ll ffc

play loud enough, any band can
get them dancmg . But to keep
them siiii m their seats,
hslening, hopefully savonng that 's a show ' Thal's what f
love."
A s tudent of yoga and kung
fu, Phillips says he "fell mto
yoga and the martial arts
pretty much on my own while 1
was m the Navy It's a comfort
to me now , not the selfproleclion but but the peace of
mmd 11 brmgs You need 1t
these days "
Phillips IS hardly ghb about
his colorful past( " ldwell more
on where I'm headed then
where I've been" ). Born m
Texas and raised m the Southwest, he jomed the Navy m 1959
afterdroppmg out of schooL He
completed his high school
educal!on while m the service
where he also 12ught himself
gwl2r and later, sitar.
Durmg the m1d- '60s, he
served his stretch m New York
C1ty and migrated to England
where he ran mto another
street poet named Donovan
Le1lch The two sl2rted wriltng
music together. "I still
remember sitting on a couch m
a Oat in London picking out the

.

,...

.

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

By Stephen Ford
make people realize tha t th1s
COLUMBUS , Ohw ( NEA) Is n't JUSt their kids future
. When Shawn Phillips dies , \\ e '• e Je opar diZing, It's our
perhaps they should display his futur e, loo "
remams, Lenin-hke, m the
He hOi sts h1s double-neck
Smilhsoman. For after all, he Gibson guitar up around h1s
IS ruporyg_ !he last of a species neck as a representallve from
long on tbe musicians' en- A&amp;M
standing
nearby
dangered hst - a Diogenes es timates the Size of the
with a gultar as h1s lamp.
audience " Damn ," the rep
WtJf his SIXth A&amp;M album snaps, " ha lf-emply. The IdiOts
i4llt . r eleased , Phillips con- who prom oted this concert
tmues as tne focus of a cull He scheduled 1t durmg a four-&lt;lay
ts a olusJd3n known only lo a weeke nd Who stays on campu s
light cmole of sens1llve souls then? This place Is deser ted "
who leave his concer ts g lutted
Ph1lhps shakes his head and
w1th food for thought And sa y s
h a If hearted ly ,
although the s1nger- composer " Some tim es I lhmk aboul
apprectales the fidelity h1s fans recordmg JUS t one commerctal
have shown as others Dock single , y'know, somelhmg to
about r6Ck bands with gold really dommale the AM radio
records and sold-out concerts, stallons That would gel more
Phillips, at 31, Is frustrated
people to hslen to me, then I
"I can ' t seem to get my could unleash my real music message across ," he says share my message "
backs tage at Ohio State
He pa uses a gam , " Naa, I
Universi ty In Co lumbu s
couldn' t really do tha t. My fan s
"People who already kn ow would never forgtve me. I
what I'm trymg to say come to would never forgive me " Then
these con~~rt.s. They buy my he sleps from the wmgs to
records. '!)hey already feel confront a meager audience
concern •fql· what's gomg on that wears a "So enterl2m us
pohltcalll,:* ;~hat we're dmng already" look on Its gnm face
to the envltimlll4lllt, But I want
The three-and-a-hall hour set
to reach those P!-9Jlle who don'! , Is launched by Phillips and his
agree with us- those who may six-man
group
playing
feel differently about the s!2te favon tes, followed by a freeof hfe, irthey •11 lis ten "
wheelin g jam of expenmental
Tall, ~ gAngly With a WISPY sound thal alternately lulls,
beard and long rus ty hmr then ass aults, the audience ll
pulled into a poqytall, Phtlhps 1s concluded by Phillips onglance$ at the OUI5r then peers stage alone, armed only with a
d1rectly mlo yo~ ' eyes, maybe acousltc guitar , a four-octave
pleadmg, uNo o~." he pauses vmce and a heart full of feeling .
while fishing fOr the right As lhe s tgelight comes up, an ,
words, " takes 1any of this explosion erupts from the
senously Scientists warn us audience and you know they
about what we 've done to the understand
environment and how 11 may be
Backstage a g am , Phillips
Irrevm-sible.
dnes himself with a towel. "l
" Right now , we 're told that hl\e to see the audience out of
freon gas used to propel the their seals and boogeying m
mgred1ents of aerosol cans 1s the aisles once we're undestroying the ozone. When the derway . But mce as 1: is, that's
ozone rg'Oes, We ' ll burn up But secondary We're not a boogey
does · anythinlf
take
11 band. I gel more satisfaction
seriously ? Does the govern- from the dude m the front row
ment order manufacturers to with h1s eyes closed and gently
stop dlstribilt.l~ aerosol cans? rockmg back a nd forth m h1s
Of course li~ti!-\Does the public seat than I do over people
lhmk in~~,~ JOke? How do we rockmg m lhe aisles If you

Fully Insured

-

P h on e 992

19 68

rather than commercial

0.

FREE ESTIMATE

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

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

3 R M lurm shed a p a rt me n t tn
Mt dd leport Ph on e 992 3333
11 1 3t c

1

i
'

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

Racine. o.

5th 51

Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service. Free
Estimates.

6 RO OM hou se at 'ili'5 M a pl e Sl
M1d d l e por t 6 mo nth s le ase
r e qu tr e d Phon e 992 76.12
12 J 6tc

1970 C H EVRO L ET C.apn p s,
p b , at r c o n dt11ont ng , 350
a utom attC 1n good con d tfJO n
W tll se l l reaso n able Pno n e
2&lt;17 2679
11 26 8t c

Racll)~,

RACINE GARAGE

HElL
RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING

17 3 lfc

196 6 CJS JEE P
e &gt;o: ce l l en t
condtt ton Ca l l 742 4473
12 ) 3t p

Shawn Phillips: right

[hnstmJ.S

r en t

11 26 12t p

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

GOOD
U SE D p1ano , p r ef e r
med tum to sm al l Stze P hone
992 3103
11 27 61c

for

GHEEN'S
PAINTING
•

.

DUPL E X a pt m M td dl epor t
Cal t ( 304 ) ll82 2050 afte r 5 p m
11 76 lf c
T RA I LE R s p ace
P ho n e 367 77 43

--

949-3295

1974·---------------Generation Rap

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3.1974
6:oo-News3,4,6,8,10,13,1S , Sesame St. 20 ; Adlenan Counseling
Te&lt;:hnlques 33

'

For Rent

1'il7 1 OL D SMOB I LE C ull i3SS
Supr e m e 1 ow n e r ne w se t o f
6 000 m tie s
r adt a l 11r es
p e rf ect C(l ndtt ton P er son a lly
ow n e d
Ar n o l d
G rat e
Ru tl an d , See a t Rutl a n d
Fu r n tl ur e Co mp il ny
Pn on e
14? 4211 da y
nt Qh t ca ll 74 2
55 41
1? 3 tf c

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 3,

TeleViSiOfl Log

- -

Middleport.
All
work
guaranteed. Phone 949-3611.

777 Pearl Street
Moddleport, Ohoo
Phone 992 - 5~67 or 992 3861

'} BE DROO M m o b tle home tn
Ractn e a r ea Phone 991 sa58
11 29 tt c

Wanted To Buy

· _c

Pick up daily •n Pomeroy &amp;

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

Sl995

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

1

Construction &amp; Remodel

T RADE IN
1972 Gree n bne r
12x60 7 bed r oom , 3 d r de lu :~~e
c oac t1 , needs clea n up on
Save on tt1t s on etn s td e
F tn a n c lng av a il a b le w tth
sma ll down pa ym ent Can be
seen a t K tng sbur y M ob rl e
H ome Sa l es at 1100 Ma tn st ,
P o m e r oy Oh 1o or c a ll 99?
7034
12 3 51c

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

rlrSt
• 4

Water, Electric, Gas, Sewer
lines, tnsta lied
Work
guaranteed.
Dorer, Backhoe, Trucks
Ltmestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Commerctai-Residenttal

T RAUE
IN , ltkC' n ew
1971
f ree do rn l ~x60 3 d r c a rp e t ed
through o ut
2 be dr oo m s,
m any tu)(ur y fea tur es save 35
pe t o l or 1g rnal sa le p r tce B uy
wtl h or wtth oul furn tt ure Can
be seen a t K tngsb ur y H om e
Sales Lo t 1100 E M a tn St ,
Pome r o y Oh to or cal l 99 1
70) 4
12 3 Si c

Hatc hba ck , low m1 leage by 1 owner, ne w w w t1re s tr a n s
fe rr ed from ne w car, 4 speed tran s, r a dio , green ftnl sh ,
bla ck v in y l inte rt or de lux e tnm

Diogenes with a guitar

l:hc

,-

-

.

.

Business Services

--

11 '!? Otp

.

NO hunltng on my f Mm l or
d e er Vel' n on N e a se
17 ? 3tp

-- - -

Pomeroy_
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

NO HUN T IN G on Da l e Ltltle
prop e r ty 111 Ba l l R un Stgned
DillE' Lttl l e

WI L L tli e. pa r t y that bo r ro w ed
my comealon g p l ease r e1 urn
it "as I need tl
Al lii n B a l l
12 3 31p
--~o: --....t.:..

2 SIGNS

)-\ UC T IO N

\1 3 l tc

~

Auto Sales

.

1

TUPPERS PLAINS
3 ,;;
bedroom home. bath, gas
furnaCe, breezeway, garage,
and extra large lot. $16.000.00. "'
RACINE - 10 room home, 4 "
bedrooms, bath, carpeting .
steam heat, large lot and 2 car ""'

StS,OOO,OO.
•
CARPETED ~ 3 bedrooms, ""
large closets, gas F .A. furnace,
porches, baoement, and fenced
yard. $17,500.00.
HOME AND INCOME - 8
room house, 2 baths, S

garag~.

bedrooms,

and

a .c room ef-

flclency wllh bath. All for
$18,000.00.
BUILDING LOT Water,
electric, and telophono service.
Several locations. $1500.00 up.
YOUR DOLLARS IN REAL
ESTATE ARE A SOUND
INVESTMENT FOR YOUR
FUTURE.

1

'
•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

II you only have to w1n one
finesse, then Ills clear that two
finesses are better than one.

/

One rinesse is an even-money
propositiOn One finesse out of
two makes the odds m your
favor JUSt over three to one
South Analyzed the six of
spades lead as fourth best from
a four five or six-card suit He
CountOd a lot of winmng tncks
for himself, 1f he could set up
his clubs Unfortunately for l...:~:;;:;;'"=:::
that purpose, he was going to r
run out of time West would-get
h1s spades set up first
He Counted only four losers in
case the spades were gomg to
break 4-4 but he knew that a suit
breaks 4-t only about 33 per
cent of the t1me
He Counted eight top winners
for htmself and saw that he
could score a mnth, tf he !messed successfully for the queen of L.:~~-~==~~~
hearts. That 50 per cent chance
was certainly better than a 33
cent one.
aperbetter
play But he finally saw
He led his mne of hearts and
let it ride It forced East's
queen and South had hts ninth
trick Suppose 1t had lost to the
10?
Then South would still have
the finesse agamst the queen
left.

BORN LOSER
Oi,\~E~&gt;.~-~1 WELL, IF WT'S
11\t; W/&gt;.'i 'I:JU FEEt., \QJ

)OtJR' mAINED

NOSe HAS PICKeD
U~ A SCIENr'- t=H

OLD I!AAAAC.LICl6.,60

EFRAM~

~ 10 'OJR OLD

L~!

,WINNIE~~=':::~~~]~::\'j~~~~~~~~~~;,~~fS'I~"lll~Ec~W/'!.~'{,~HAVE§[i~~~~~~m
IN'I1TA11~

ALlEY OOP

THE

10 aJR FA5HION

5HOW (;ONE
our~

CNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSNI

LZ:B;I :JIJ&amp;,&gt;..if XI
The biddmg h'!" been
West

North

East

16
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Yoo , South. hold
• 4 3 ¥ A Q 10 8 6 • K J

I

s

Soutb

Dble
3•
"
4 .. A Q S

•

•

GOODY FIR

YQU_,_IATERII
"e GOi \folie
FUST Rtiii&amp;ER !!

What do you do now"
.on

"'

A-Jusl past. Your partDer laa
made a veey sttoDI bid, but be II
Ullslied willt 1ame alld Willi IWI

little spades, yo• sbo1ld be olso.
Remember hll IWO·t~de cue INII
did not paraatee aay spade coatrel
at all
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding four heartJ
your partner has bid lhr.. spadea

..

�8 - The Daily Senllnel, Middleporl-Pumero) , 0 . Tuesday , D&lt;&gt;c 3, 1974

Sentinel Classifieds _Get Results!
In Memof}

Notice

IN

..:.O~ COT

M EMORY Of Ja mes E
Ed
Spe n ce r who pn SSl' (1
a way 7 year s il~o todilv Occ

K OS ME TI CS
Rf'member
Chr s t mas 1S
com1nq We have ma n y nrw
produ ct s tnat wtll m a k e n ce
f1 fl s
Pt1onc BROW N S 99?
51 I J
1 1 J ttc

J
M e m o r tes a r e treasut es
No on e can stea l
De ath Is a hearta c h £'
Noth ing cap. hNI
Som e ha vq ;f~t go!ten
Now l hat t&lt;f u 'r~ gone
But I w1ll f.~m ember
N o m at te r ho w lonQ
Sa d l y m 1s.sed by

~·h
.,

Ttlur s d&lt;JV
i'lnf'i
S&lt;~tu r day
ntqtlt
7 p m
at
Masdn Auctton H or ton St 1n
Maso n . W Va Co nstgnments.
wei{_Qmt'
Pnon e (3 0.1) 773
5.J 71
10 3 lie

Not1ce •

- -if~ - -

A

H AVE
your
d eer
t r ophy
m o un ted o\lso o th e r sm,1 11
an 1ma l s an&lt;;f btrd~
P ho n e
H oward B r c hft e ld Rutland
742 5932 .
I 7 3 II C
A B SO LUTE LY no t-.u n1 1ng
t ra v pl ng o r t r e~pilSSi n Q day
or n tgh l W1HWu t perm ss1on
b y ow n er on ou r farm Carl
and W anda Fmd l mg Rt 1
Re ecs svt! l ft Oh10
12 J 61P

1-! EVIVAL W1ll b eg lll Dec 1
t11 ro uqn Dec 7 n t the Ch ur ch
of
Go d
Ches t e r
Oh1o
Evanqe t s t w d l b€' Rev Joe
P. 1 Cls.ley I rom 1\ll')( ilndrt &lt;l V&lt;l
Sr&gt;rv 1ces w1 ll beq tn each
C'ven tng 1 30 P m and 5pe c ta l
S1n q111 g
C &lt;! C h
cven on Q
Ev eryone v.. Picomc
Pa sto r
Rev Dnn L Ayers
11 26 12tc

Lost

? BEAGLE fl'ma l es a n d 1 male
Bengl e Lost n Mme r svtlle
a r e a s nee Su nd&lt;1 y Phon e ~ 91
.' ~ 17 or c ont.1c t Ca lvtn l m
baden M tner sv lie Oh to

-· -

11 29 6 1p

~

PA UL ' S B arb et' S110p 111 R actne
. wtll b e c lose d Dec 7 thr o u gh
D ec 7 Wtlt op en D ec 9
12 1 31C
NO H U NTIN G· or lre sp as s mg
wtthout p er m tSStOn
John
Ros e , G l en n T u ttl e , Theodore
Pullin s , Ben B1 cker s.
P aul
Moor e
Dan Sm 1th
Pa ul
Erv tn , Ed son Ro ush Roge r
, Oa 1els J am es Parsons
v~ tor Hy se U
Del Heasley
Ed't'a r d F r eck er
Geo rg e
Frecker . Ha r o l d Brown Btll
( Gruese r , J a n1ce Rt t ch te , Alvil
Coates , J a m es Bat le y Carl
Morri s, V inton Jo n es A r c ht e
: Rose . Ca r' l Ht c k s John P ra ll
11e.r.rnan L aw s on
Ke nn et h
G ary
Gr1 tf tt h,
- Laws o n.
Stanl ey Tru sse ll. Cl1nto n
. ~ l tz e r , CTov er Wh i t e
A nt on
!.otter , Mon 1d Good , M ayfo rd
t;tarns, Robe r t Codner, O r v tl
Ho l ter P aul Orr , Bo b L ee
Doug las C tr cle Joan Wol f e
'Arc-hte- T unle
11 276tp

197&lt; OPEL MANTA

S2895

'l Doo r or a nge ftm sh , blk vtnyl tn l e rt or , buc k e t seat s, tess
th an 5,000 mil es &amp; 3 m d o ld Radto, d e l uxe b u mpe r s

1972 DODGE DART CUSTOM

S249l

4 Door, loca l 1 owner CC\_r, 318 V 8 e ng m e, a uto m a f te tra n s ,
power steer mg , a tr condtfton e d , v inyl tnm , vt nyl ta p
A utumn gol d ft n1 sh , w w ttres, ltk e ne w , r a dto

1972VEGAGT

Mobile Homes For Sale
1'11 10 v A LIANT 65 x 12. 3 b edrooni
fully ca rpet ed , L P gas h ea t
Phon e '11 92 77 51
a 2s tf c

Pets For Sale
1\KC
lr s ll
Se t t ers
Ha s
eliCE'I I en 1 c hampiOn pf' d t
qree
c ome s
wt t h
sho t s
and pape r s Can be see n at the
R 1cnard
L
Fe lty
Jr
restde n ce 1n Ru t la nd or ca l l
747,1101 H a lf down wrll n o ld
l or ChrtS ima s
11 ?7 ti c
1 R ABB I T dogs, S60 Ptlon e 7J /
5322
1:l 1 31p

WantP.rt To Buy
CAS H SSUUS
FO R
JU NK
CARS
Com p
FR YE 'S
TRUCK and A U TO P A RT S
R utland phone 742 6094
1 1 2626 tc

S10
FO R
1unk
ca r s
$15
d el tv e r ed
$7 JUnk ed a ut o
bo d tes P hon e 9,j 9 ,j.f84
1124 261p
CA:&gt; H pa1d for al l ma ke s and
m ode ls ot m o btle hom es
P h on e ar ea c od e 61 ~ 423 95 31
4 13 tfc

O L D f urn 11ure , ICE' bo&gt;o:es , br ass
beds o r com p le l e ho u se h ol d s
W r tl e M
D Mt l l er , R t 4
Pom e r oy Oh 10 Ca ll 9'il1 77 60
10 7 7 4
J UNK aula s, compl e te and
d e l1v er ed to our yard W e
p 1ck up auto bO d 1es and b uy
al l k tnd s of scr a p met a l s and
tr o n R1d er s Sal v ag e St R t
12.1
Rt 4, Pome ro y , O h tO
Ca ll 992 5468
10 17 lf c:

J BE'bROOM hou s.e
3975 or 99 2 2571

BE D ROOM doubl e Wtd e
m o bt l c h om e 1n Sy ra c u se
D c po s 11 r eq utred N o c hildr en
or p e ts Call 99 2 2441 a fter 6
P m
12 1 lf c

D ODG E P o l a r a
1350
UN F URN IS HED a pt 4 room s
e:~~celle nt cond tlt on
wn ti e
and b .-J th ln q ut re a r 399 s
llt nyl lop
p s , p b
au t o
Th1 rd St , M idd lepor t
f rans. m 1SS 1on
fa tr
t 1 res
12 1 3tc
P h one 992 35 98
11 2961c
J AND 4 ROOM furn i Shed and
unfurniSh e d
apartments
Phone 992 54 34
4 12 lfc

..

1

l:OUS
~

mustc

to

'Season of

li.RA'ILER . 2 bedroom , Brown ' s
Trader P ark Ph o n e 99 2 3324
1 1 a tf c

the

Wttch'

while Donovan wrote lhe
words "
Laler , he accompanied
Donovan on a worldwide tour
but when they returned to
England, Ph1llips was waylaid
by Immi!lration authonlles
wh q-_, prevented hts entry,
claSS!fY.mg liim an undesirable
·alien! ''We had been busied for
gra~ whit~ on tour and they
didn't want' us back. Donovan,
a ~ntish subject, they had to
let-in, Me, they didn't."
Phillips, personal vices now
constst of some alcohol
(sparingly) , manjuanuana
(sporadically ) and cigarettes
(incessantly) He has hved in
1!2ly for several years now
w1lh a woman and her son from
a prevwus marna&gt;te.
He read voraciously and is
rehcent on few topics. ll Is
reOecled m his music which

CoUNTRY Mobtl~ Home Pa r k ,
Rt 33 , ten miles no rt h of
Pomeroy
Lar ge lot s wtth
con c rete pat 1os, Sid e wal ks,
, unners
and
off
s treet
parktng
Al so, spa c e s for 1
small trailer s Phone 99 2 7 479
7 21 lfc

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

4 RM furn1-:;hed apt c los e to
Powell ' s Super V alu phone
992 J658
11 20 He
FURNI SHED apt Adu l ts only ,
Middleport Phon e 992 3 87~
11 1Affc

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

UN F URNISHED
hou s e ,
4
rooms and bath 1650 Ltnco l n
Helghts Phon e 992 38 74
11 14 tf c

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

FURNI S HED
apartmen t,
uttl l tJes furn tshed , s u1table
for two worktng m en or
rel tred c ouple Ltvtng r oom ,
k ttchen , shower and bath On
mam h ighway, Ma son. W Va
Phone 773 5147
10 27 -tfc
FURNISHED apt 3 rooms ;md
batt1 , tdeal for
worktng
couple Phone 992 2937
12 2 6tp
FOUR
ROOM
furn i Shed
apartment (2 bedroomsJ m
M tddleport Phone 992 2676
12 2 31c

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

bathes

cate

you

wash

m

of

a

deli-

concern

and gentility He does not
want to lay a verbal 2x4 between your

eyes; 1t Is not hls

Wanted To Rent
H OUS E m coun t ry Me1gs or
Gallta County , $75 per month
or l ess Have no c ht l dren Call
245 5293 afler 8 p m
12 1 6tc

slyle
Not disgusted with the HOUSE tn Country , M e 1gs or
Gallla, $75 per montt1 or tes s
United States but dcfmilely
Have no chtldren
Phone
disturbed, Shawn Is no radical.
245 5293 after 8 p m
His philosophy can be swnmed - -----------~~ 61c
up In the lyrics from a song on
h•s album " Second Contribution," his favortte:
HOW TO EARN MONEY AT
"A' 't
h
HOME
MAILING
COM
In
no SUC
thing as
MISSION
CIRCULAR S !

Help Wanted

revolution

E X C E L LEN T
P R0 F I T
POTENTIAL
OFFER
DETAILS 25c &amp; STAMPED
ADDRESSED ENVELOPE
ANN CLARK, 1223 LACLAIR ,
PGH PA 15218

It 'S go t anot he r name
It's called evolution
Go slow , 11

------- ----~_2~261~

We. talkJo you
lika .a person.

PARTTlME babys11t e r needed
Phone 992 51~2
12 1 6t c
---~- -.- -------

For Sale
VALNUT stereo radio , am fm ,
8 track tape combinat ion
Balance $107 45 or terms Call

992 ]965

11 19 ttc

WMP0/13901
ON YOUR DIAL

a fantasy by P. Pastoret and D. Baur

THE ~~LO BEFORE THERE
WERE TOYS CI-11LOREN MA.DE-

... AND fl. BIT OF WOOD
WAS iH!: NEARESi

WCR.6i OF ALL, THE'
CHILDREN HAD NO

DO WITH A STICK AND A
STONE 'TO KNOCK AROUND ...

THIN&gt;&amp; 1'0 A BOAT ANY
CHI'-D 14AD!

BIRTHDA'I', 50 ...

IN

- - -

TR A I L E R space 2 m il es from
Pomeroy , Rt 14 3 Ph o n e 99 2
5858
10 27 tfc

SHAWN PHILLIPS: They
got the message.

TOYS I=OR A

------ ------FIREWOOD for f 1rep1ac:e
stove Cut to length
992 76~4

or
Phone

ll 3 26tc
APPLES , FtiZpatrtck or'c hard ,
Sta t e Route 689 ,
Phone
Wilkesville , 669 3785
11 21 26t c
----- ----- -~---

HOLST~tN Spr i nger Cows for
sale
Earl Dean, Chester
Phone 985 -3855
ll 27 61p

=-------------60 INCH strands pearl

beads~
reg Sl 17 and Sl 29 sale price ,
35c polyester fabrtc spec ~al
S2 98 yard Cake decoratlv~
supplie!. Nove lty Fabric lind
Crafts , Washtngton Bl v d ..
Belpre , ~hto
11 27 .ttc

'

_______ .

....__

~-

-

I

Route 7 by-pass towards
Rutland

11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 , Janak1 33 ; Wide World Mystery
13; FBI 6, Movie "Mr Inside Mr Outside" 8, Mcv1e " My
Six Convicts" 10.
1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4

2.oo-News 4,13.
CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7 30-Washlngton Debates For the Seventies"The Parties and

Lawn Mowers :-

the Issues".
8 30-The Gunslingers " The Westerners" "Zane
Theatre 0 •
9· 30-The Underworld "Target: The Corruptors"

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

Phone (304) 773-5503

'

For 5ale
275 G A L L O N fu el Oi l t ank Wtlh
ra c k Phon e 992 3324
12 3 6t c
L O SE wet g ht Wtltl N ew Shape
Tablel s an d Hy dre:~~ Wa t er
P il lS at Dutton Drug, M1d
d l e port an d N el son Drug
~ 1 23 Jtp

.r Sale
2 - - H 78 15 IN snow ttres 1.000
mtl es. L tke new Albert Hill ,
phone 9~9 2261
12 1 6tp
SE ARS 12 h p lawn and garden
tra c to r w1 t h 42 1n mower , 10
m p low , d tsk , dozer b l ade ,
cu lt 1vator !.95(\ Call 247 2623
12 1 31c

19 7 ~

ZIG Z AG
S EWIN G
MA C H I NE S l eft 1n l ayaway
A ll bu11t m to bullonh o le do
st retch sewmg
and fan c y
s.t 1tc htng Pay lU St :ti 48 75 cash
o r term s avatlabl e Trade tn s
acc epted Phon e 99 2 7155
12 3 lfc

WA L NUT s tereo rad1o a m fm,
8 tr a ck tap e combfnat1on
Balanc e S1t0 69 o r t erm s Call
992 3965
12 3 tfc
VACL•UM Cle an er s Brand n e w
t ank type m odel s W1 t h 5 a t
t achments O nl y 524 50 c a sh
N ew
o r t e r m s ava ilab l e
U prtght mod els Sl 9 90 c ash or
te rm s av ailab le
Trad e m s
accepfed Phon e 99 2 77 55
12 3 tf c

GROCERY bustness for sale
Bulldtng tor sale or tease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to iO p m for appointment
3 20 tfc
FIREWOOD, any length Call
992 542 2 or 992 3312
11 10 26tp

S EWING-~.. ~ - ..... s brand- new
Zig Zag 1n n tce walnut table
In orig tnal cartons
Never
used
Clearance on
'74
Model s
(On l y
a
few
avallable l. U 3 40 cash or
terms availab l e Pt1one 992
7755
10 15 tfc

Real Estate For Sale

'

~

Sales &amp; Service

Fire Extinguishers, Home
Ftre Alarms, Testing &amp; '
0
Rehlt1ng.
Phone 742-4673 or 742-5595
Bill Brawn, Owner
Rutland, Oh1o
0

GEO GORDON , Carpentry and
r e modeling
" Floor
to
Ce1t1ng "
Phone 992 5060 ,
Mtddleport, Ohto
'·
12 3 5tp

-

-

SEWING MACHINES Repai ~ •,
s~rvtee , all P"'akes , 9'n 2284
The Fabr i c 'Shop , Pomeroy ,
Authorized Stnger Sa l es ancf"
Sen11ce We sharpen Sc t,sors
3 29 tfc.. '

DOZER work, land c l~arlng byr
the acre hourly or contract,
f-arm ponds, roads, etc Large ,
dozer and operator w1tt1 over
20 years experience Pullins
Excavating , Pomeroy, Ohto •
Phone 992 2478.
1219tfc 1

------------~:i EPTlC

TANKS
cleaned "'
Modern Sanitatton . 992 3954 or
992 7349
918tfc (.

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

SEF'ftC
TANKS
cleaned,
reasonable rates
Ph
4.46 1 _
~782, Gallipolis J ohn Russell,t"
owner and operator
_
5 12.tfc

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

DOZERO r backhoe work
Phone l 446 3981 or 446 3459
9 8-tfc

:J·OD-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13i Pricae Is

Right 8,10.
3· JO-One Life to Live 13; Match Game 8,10, Lass1e 6; How to
Survive a Marriage 3,4,135.

r:

over your three hearts

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

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

3

NORTH

(Aug 23-Sepl 22)

Dear Helen and Sue:
I won't take up a lot of your Ume by going on about my
problem.ll's quite simple : My parents beat me . They never talk .
They just hit
Is there someplace in my smaU town where I can go to gel
belp? My brothers will back me up. Several of my friends'
parents would be glad to take me in as a sort of foster child, but 1
Wlderstand it has to be legaL
I'm battered and bruised and sick of It all. Please give me
somehelp,ifil'sonly a kind word. -CAN'T KEEP QUIET ANY
LONGER
Dear CKQAL:
Call the Child Welfare office at your county seal. Better yet,
show an adult friend your bruises, and ask her to contact
authorities. It won't be pleasant, revealing that you have unfit
parents, butil's much better than constant beatings. -SUE

+++
Dear C.:
Since you already have several offers, perhaps you could
find a new home without going through all that legal misery. Is it
possible that your parents would let you move in with friends, if
they were (fll'lllly) contacted by, say, a ministn or school
counselor? Why not discuss tills with your counselor and see
what he can do. - HELEN

+++
Rap :
)lly boyfriend has a lot of girl cousins, that he brings to my
house to eat and drink. But I asked some of his relatives, and they
told me these weren't his cousins.
Down In the Bahamas where we live, everybody has lots of
relatives. My boyfriend told me he has so many that some of

1974
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)

Bonanza 4, Movie "Hangman's Knot" 10;

Mike Douglas 13
4:30-Bewltched 3, ABC Afterschool Special 6,13; Lucy Show 8.
Santa Claus 15.
S.oo-Mr. Rogers 20,33; Merv Griffin 4; FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8;
. Bonanza 15
5:30-Eiec. Co 33; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; News 6; Jack
O'Lanfern 13.
6:(10-News 3,4,8,10,15; ABC News 13; Sesame St. 20; News 6,
1 Diagnostic &amp; Prescriptive Teaching of Reading 33
6:311-News 3,4,8,10,15, Journey lo Japan 33; Bewitched 6.
Gomer Pyle 13.
7 oo-News 10; What's My Lme 8; Truth or Cons. 3; Celobrity
Sweepstakes 3; Zoom 33; I spy 15; Elec. Co. 20 , Bowling lor
Dollars 6, Big Red Machine 4
7 30-Let's Make A Deal6. Mel Tlllls8, Pollee Surgeon 3; Name
That Tune 4; Antiques 20; Episode Action 33
8:(10-LIItle Houoo on tho Prairie 3,4,15, That's My Mama 6,13,
Tony Orlando and Dawn 8,10; Feeling Good 20; Jack the
Ripper 33.
8 :10--{;reat American Dream Machine 20,33; "Movie "Onl"
' With Married Men" 13; Mcvle "Sweet, Sweet Rachel" 6.
9 oo-Cannon 8,10; Lucas Tanner 3,4,15; Masterpiece Theatre 3,
Billy Graham 8,10; Da Vinci 20.
IO:oo-Pelrocelll 3,4,15; Get Christie Love 6,13; Man Hunter 8,
10; TBA 33, News 20
11·oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33
11·30-Johnny Carson 3; Janakl 33; Wide World Speclal13, FBI
6; Movie "Tip on a Dead Jockey" 8; Movie "Kiss Me Kate"
10.
12 · 30-WIId Wild West 6

mtstnteq&gt;ret a friend's mdepenljent behavior as disloyalty

on too much now

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23 -

TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20)

0ec 21) Avo1d the company

There wtl! be dtsrupttons on
the home rront Fam1ly members won 't co - operate proper ly Don't be a pnnctpal ofrender

of one today w 1th whom you ve
had cross words recently A
thoughtless remark could set
art new sparks

GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20)

19) Someone you ~now well 1S
a tntle too c un eu s about
something you cons1der personal He II be pry 1ng aga1n to-

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 -Jan

Be eKtremely tactful tn han·
dling subordtnates today One

of them has an old grudge

day
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.

smoldertng that s about to lg-

mte

CANCER (June 21-Jufy 22)
Your matenal p1cture looks
good for now, but there s a
leak that should be plugged
Its your tendency to spend '
fooliShly
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You II
be far mora tolerant and pa·
t1ent today wtth outSiders than
you wtll be w1th your own
famtly

19) You re hkely
day to another s
act agatnst your
ment 1f you don t
the pressure

to y1eld to wtshes and
belter JUdgs tand up to

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
One that you II team up w1th on
a chore IS too Independent to
be a good co worker He 11 try
to bo ss yo u 1f y ou let h1m

them don't know each other.
But I still don't think it's right. Besides, it's expensive. He
says he loves only me, but he can't be mean to his cousins What
should I do?- L. P .

L.:
Find a guy who doesn't overrun you wtth female relatives
(who are more likely "kissin' cousins"). - SUE
Dear L:
Or turn them into "cussin"' cousins by making your house
off timlts to freeloaders. (Including, perhaps, your ever-lovin'
boyfriend.) - HELEN

JlllllM®lb~®/.W lotn&amp;lor/-.1 ~
Unscramble theMe foor Jumblu,
one letter to uch square, to
form four ordmary words.

I

tMECION

rn

l :llO-Tomorrow 3,4; Take Five For Life IS.
2.oo-News 4,13
CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7· 30 p.m.- Country and Western U.S.A
What do you 8.30 p.m.-Superstar Theatro.

I I

• 7 52
¥A K J 2

d9

One letter simply atands for another. In tbla rsm ... A II
used for the three L's, X for tho two O'a, ole. Slatll lit....
apostrophes, the len&amp;th and formation of the . . , . 1ft •
hlato Each day the code leiters are dlloreat.

FOR' MONEOY

CR\'PT()QUOTE

Now IU'Tance the circled letten
to torm the aurprlu anJwer, aa
aucreated by the above cartoon.

BeLLE

DRIVEL OBJECT

\ An•w~r~ Khat the hollpiiUij~l'd balo;(•r was - " ILL·BAEO"

VWRFFRK
DRPTF

M T L J

VWRFFRK

JIL

FRWNMIJit
JY

FOPVa.-

WJURWL
YWJFL
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THERE IS NO ~=t::~
SO GREAT AS THE CHARM OF A I
PERAMENT.-HENRY VAN DYKE
{@ 19H Kine Featu .... Syndicate, IM.)

now')

BRAINLESS -OH,

LITTLE ORPHAN
EAST
•J94

'ai'

ITS F~OM

EXCUSE MEt MEAN BRAIN•
•VOU CAN'T CiET
AVVAV WITH THISf

AW;il&amp;'

AND I N£AAL¥ MISSEO IT •

¥Q743
• 10 8 6

• 7 52

aa

AXYDLIIAAX&amp;
LONGFELLOW

!J'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

.AQ9
•J 9 3
WEST
• Q 10 8 6 3
¥106 5

14

WHY THE FAMILY
NE.VEOR 0!5JEOC:TEI7
WHEN JUNIOR' Wli&lt;:i:t7

tii111X111IJ

Jumblf'll LOVER
Ye..erdar'•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
I Rathskeller I Military ·
5 West Pomt
unit
freshman
Z " Tempest"
10 Viva voce
sprite
11 Hairdo
3 Go amiss
gadget
(3 wds.)
13 Tiny brook
4 Building
Last
extension
15 Fencing
5 Buddtng
dummy
M.D.'s
16 Wooden
course
core
6 Friend to
17 Beak
none
18 Item for
7 Ancient
Cinderella
times
zo Goddess
8 Gwnmed up
(Lat.)
the works
21 Poverty
( 2 wds.)
22 Trtal run
9 Weirdest
23 Quoted
25 Rtch cake
26 On high
27 Skm
aperture
28 Female
ruff
29 Wash
32 Sin
33 Porker
34 -&lt;le
France
35 Island in
U.S. Marine
lore
37 Unexpected
problem
38 Words of
warning
(2 wds.)
39 Girl's
name
40 Expunge
U Coward

Ia

I

i!:;sl HE WAS AN

[4

~.. ¥Jwt

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTB- Hen'1 how te w•

~'LYMALi

IJ

ed•

vanc ement

Don I push yourself beyond the
11m1ts of your energ1es You II
only be frustrated 11 you take

You expect more from others
today than you should You II

J.EXEI'

lor seU-tmprovemM"'t lnd

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)

+++
4 oo-Mr. Cartoon 3; Sesame Sf 33; Tattletales 8, Somerset IS ,

til

w111 pe11&lt; up conolcllflllly .,..
year You II be NVW 10&lt; knowledge IIIII .., b&lt;l -

Most ot the t1me you try to be
fan· and reasonable Today
you re O'Jerty prote c t•~e about
things you deem are yours

For Wednesday, Dec 4,

•tt

Your tntereat en rww

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Gilligan's Isle 6;

Dec.4, 1174

Another's aCtion s w11l anger
you You re more likely to k eep
•t to yourself than to let h1m
know about 11

Two finesses better than one

~NtE· - ·

~

LI TTL.E

o\Nt.IIE • · •

.A85

•K6
SOUTH I D)

·------- --- ,- ---.-..

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

VI~GO

(AJu,.en tomorro"')

WIN AT BRIDGE

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

=--:------------

Grey

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1974
6:(10-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester "TO.
6 2!&gt;--Farm Report I 3.
6:30-FiveMinutes to L1ve By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8; Tht
Story 13; School Scene 10.
6: 3s-&lt;:olumbus Today 4.
6:45--Mornlng Report 3.
7 oo-Today 3,4,15, CBS News 8,10; H R Putnstul6, Farmer' s
Daughter 13.
7 30-New Zoo Revue 6; Lldsvllle 13.
8·oo-New Zoo Revue 13; Capt'. Kangaroo 8, Jell's Collie 6;
Sesame St. 33; Popeye 10.
8:2!&gt;--Jack LaLanne 13; Capt Kangaroo 10.
8: 30-Brady Bunch 6.
8: 55-News 13.
9:oo-Paul Dixon 4; AM 3; Phil Donahue 15; Wild Wild West 6,
Bullwlnkle 8; Movie "Fathom" 13
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; HazelS; Taltlotales10.
IO.oo-Joker's Wild 8,10; Company 6; Name That Tune 3,15.
10: 30-Gambit 8,10; Winning Streak 3,4,15, Phil Donahue 4
11 ·(10-Password 13; High Rollers 3,15; Now You See If 8.10;
$10.000 Pyramid 6.
,
11 311-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Brady Bunch 13; Love of Life
8,10.
11 5!&gt;--CBS News 8, Dan !mel's World 10.
12:(10-Jackpot 3,15, Password 6; Bob Braun's SO-SO Club 6;
News 8,10; Mr. Rogers 33; News 13.
12:30-Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Split Second 6, Celebrity
Sweepstakes 3,15; Afternoon With OJ 13; Elec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1:(10-News 3; All My Children 6,13; Not For Women Only 15.
Phil Donahue 8, Young &amp; Restless 10
1: 30-As The World Turns 8,10; Jeopardy 3,4,15; Let's Make A
Deal 6,13.
2:oo-Oays 01 Our Lives 3.4.15; Guiding Light 8.10; Newlywed
Game 6,13.
2· 30-Doctors 3.4.15; Edge of Night 8,10; Girl In My Life 6,13.

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

CHR IS TMA S tr ees for sale , 6
m ties north of Pomeroy on 2 BEDROOM house for Si!lle
S500 down , S70 per month
Old R t 33 Buy tree now or
EXCELSIOR -sal( Works, ~~
Phone 992 3975 or 992 2571
r e serve
Cut fresh when
Mam St ', Pomeroy. All kin~
12 3 lfc
des1red Opha Offutl , Phone
of salt water pettets, ..water
992 3296
nuggets, block salt and own J
12 3 6tp NO MONEY DOWN Monthly
Ohio River Salt Phone 992
payments according 10 tn
3891
c ome New 3 bedroom home
19 57 CHEVY parts
NEW
6-S-llc l ,
with wall to wall carpettng on
Lakewood lractton bars , ht
0.
I
1 2 acre l andscaped lots
Call
tacker a1r shock s, hooke r
\..kC:MEANS
CONCREl
I
today for more lnfOrmat Jon ,
headers, Wtth l " c ollectors for
del1vered Monday through •
992 5976
s mall blo c k
Cal l 991 3496
Saturday
and
evenings 1
_ .. , , 6 p m BE ST OFFER
12 3 1tc
Phone 446 1142
10 17 tfc - --~-~ - - ----~6 13 tf
WILL TRADE - FINANCING
REGI S TER Eo h o r se- 9Years
ARRANGED
WITH
'C BF&lt;A,.DFORO , AuctiOneer
old , gentle sorr e l. 5290 Call
MIN I MUM
DOWN
Will
Complete Servtce
74 2 4211 afte r 5, 742 5501 or
c ons tder trade for old e r
Phone 9.49 3821 or 9"9 J161
742 6863
home. trader , or land on th1S
Racine / Ohfo
11 29 61c
new 3 bedroom , 2 bath home
Critt
Bradford
wtth 2 car garage, large
5 1I
I S YOUR present home too btg
fam lly room, an· condttioned
or have too many steps to
Mo&gt;Je tn Immediately , Call
R~ADY .MIX
-CONCRETE
climb ? See lh1s one floor f1ve
now 992 5976
room home at 205 Sprtng
delivered right
to your 1
12 3 ltc
Ave , Pomeroy Completely
project Fast and easy Free
redecorated tns tde and out 7 ROOM house , bath, garage,
estimates Phone 992 3284
New L uxa tr e furnace system,
Goegteln Ready M1x Co,
full basement. large garden,
M lddleport , Oh 10
n 1c e ullltty building
An
newly remodeled In R:ac1ne
tmproV ed home , r e asonably
Call 9~9 2836 after 7 p m
6 30 tfc
pr tced Phon e 99 2 5292
12 3 12tc ~-~- ---- ------11 29 tf c
'EXCAVATiNG , dozer , loader - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - NEW
bt level
home,
3
and backhoe work, septrc , ,
tanks installed; dump truelks
bedrooms , built tn k•tchen .
basement w1th one car
and IQ ·boys for htre , will haul
SIEGLER and
garage Phone 742 3615 or see
fill dirt , top soil , limestone ~
MONOGRAM
Mdo HutChiSOn
orav~T.- Call Bob- or· ~over ' I
11 1 ftc
Jeffers, day phone 992-7089 ,J1 1
~ night phone 992 3525 or 992 1"
l232
BUILDING lot. SOft front8ge X
2 11 ttd "
165ft. The second lot on left on
R 1ver&gt;Jiew Drfve, Ltncoln ...::_---;.:+-- - -::::....- -- -- -- ---. J,• •
H til , Pomeroy , Ohio If m
NOW Open 1 Howell and Boswell r '
terested.-call 992 3230 after 51
Auto Repa1r, 330 Mechantc St
pm
Hours 9 a m
to 5 · 30 p m
Evenings by appo1ntment.
10 17 tfc
Free grease 10b w1th oil ·~
Priced For Quick Sale
change through Dec J Phone
BRICK home. 6 room bath,
992 7627
't
front,
back
porches
11 27 6tc ..
Ba s emen, ,
gas
furnace
'
POMEROY LANDMARK!
Phone 992 5676
Jack W Carsev, Mgr
CAR'P-ET -Installalloti ~ S1 25 per r11
12 1 3tc
Phone 992 -2181.
yard Phone R tc:hard West,
8~3 2667
BUILDING lOtS to f sate, for
1113 26tp " 1
res 1dent1a 1 homes only , 1 acre - - - -- -- - - - - - - NEW fron t end l oader to fi t
and larger at Rock Sprmgs
WILL do tree tnmmmg around ~
Ford or Ferguson tractor ,
Phone 992 2789
th 1S area , reasonr!ble pri ces
S225 . 3 pt h1tch rnower 5125
12 1 6tp
Call (304) 882 2930
_' :
Phone 985 3594
,
11 1 3tc
12 l 7tp ~--- ----- ~---HOUSE 3 bedroom has been ; - -- - - - -- - -- - - remodeled , ready tlr'move tn
350 JOHN Deere Dozer , 6 ft
Carpeted,
pr~ced to sell in
f'
..;JrCI
hydraul tc b l ade, good c on
Middleport
Phone
992
-7244
d tfton 55 500 Phon e 985 J594
12 1 3tc
12 1 7tp

.AK
• 98
• K J 43
•QI0742
Both vulnerable
West

North

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

I.

Pass

Pass

East

Soutb
IN T

Openmg lead- 6•

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

•FUEL OIL
HEATERS

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

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

r-or ""le

"

1

l 95J 30 FERGU SON, good
c:ondtt1on , $1 250 Phone 985
3594
12 1 7tp

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

------------REG Angus calves, 3 he ifers.
and I bul l $1 , 200 B1tl Wttte,
Rt 3. Pomeroy , Ohtoor phone
992 2789
12 l 61P
SINGER sewtng ma c t11n e, like
new , 1973 model 1n nlce
walnut cabme t Makes design
StitChes , ZtO zags , but
tonholes
bl tnd h e ms, etc
Only S84 Call Ravenswood .
27 3 9521 or after 5 p m 273

9893

12 1 tfc

--- ---------E L _E_C T R 0 L U X
Vacuum

Cleaner complete with at
tachments, cordwlnder and
pa tnt spray Used but In like
new condttlon
Pfty S34 45
,cash or budget plan available
Phone 99 2-7755 .
1l 26 tfc

"'

PORTLAND - 4 nice level
lots close to the river, drilled
well, garage &amp; outbuilding,
house has 4 BR lOOK,
JUST $4,700.00
CARPENTER 2 story
frame, lust renovated, 2
acres, 1'12 baths. 4 BR, dining
R, 2 garages, can finance
part. ss.ooo 00.
MIDDLEPORT close In- 27
acres, large barn with silo,
milk house, equipment shedr-

home

has

3

BR,

bath,

t e ned We1gh between 200 250
poundS Ptlone 378 6 152
11 29 3tc

F OR better cleanmg , to keep
color s g l eammg , u se Blue
Lu s tr e carpe t cle a n e r R ent
el ectnc Shampooer $1 Baker
F ur nttur e Compan y
11 29 3tc

STEREO , rad 10 c ombination . 8
t rack tape , am fm radio , 4
s peaker
sound
system
Balance $106 a4 or term s . Call
992 3965
11 26 tfc

MAN WE 00 NEED
HOUSES TO SELL - LET
US KNOW WHAT YOU
HAVE .
992·2259 or 9t2-2561

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

.

f.&gt;

Brown's Fire &amp;
Safety Equipment

PHONE
949-3832 or 843·2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf to a house.
Pa1nt1ng, s1dmg, roofing,
paper hanging, kllchen
cabmets, etc

Alum mum stdmg, roofing,
complete restdentlal con struction. Wiring, plumbmg,
elec
heattng,
kitchen
cabmets etc
27 Yrs. expenence in const
trade.

'

Protect Your Home
Or Business

D&amp;D
CONSTRUCTION

6.30-NBC News 3,4,15; CBS News 8,10,. Bewilched 6; Gomer
Pyle 13.
7 oo-Truth or Consequences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars 6, What's
My L1ne? 8; News 10; Wild Kingdom 15; Antiques 20. Art of
Football 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Wild, Wild World of Animals 6,
$25.000 Pyramid 8; Price Is Right 10, To Tell Te Truth 13 ;
TBA IS; Ohio Election 20; Marco Sportlite 33.
B:oo-Adam-12 3.4.15; Happy Days 6,13, Amenca 33 . Billy
• Graham 8,10
8:30-Evenlng at Symphony 33 ; Movie " Red Badge of Courage"
3,4,15; Movie "Betrayal" 6,13
9·(10-Hawall Flve-0 8.10.
9·30-Woman 20; Barenbolm On Beethoven 33
10 oo-Pollce Story 3,4,15; Marcus Welby 6,13, Barnaby Jones
8; News 20, Mountain Scene 33; ChanneiiO Reports 10
10.30-News 20; Soundstago 33
ll·oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15.33.

All Small Applian

Open Mon - Sat.
I A.M. 6 P.M.

basement, TV room, NG
furnace, city water . JUST
$30.000.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS
1
otory ranch. 2 BR, bath.
dining R. HW floors, 1 level
acre . basement ASKING
ONLY $13,500.00.

-

.BOWERS '
REPAIR

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

SewiNG ~ ach.n~s .bra;dnew
Z1g Zag m ntce walnut table
In original cartons
Never
used
Clearance on
' 74
models
lOn l y
a
few
avatlabl e J S.t3 40 c ash or
terms availab l e Phone 992
7755
11 26 tfc

--------- ---H A MP SHIRE ptg s Corn faf .
...THERE WERE
NO PLAY THINGS
FOR PRE:St=NT'S !

On State Rt 124, 1!2 m1. from

JOHNSON'S

3 R OO M furnt sh ed a partme n t
Ul 11i t1eS p a 1d, 35 6 N F our th
5 1 , M1 ddl epo rf
12 1 Jtc

PRIVATE meet1n g room for
any organtzat 1on , pt1 o ne 992
3 915
3 ll ffc

play loud enough, any band can
get them dancmg . But to keep
them siiii m their seats,
hslening, hopefully savonng that 's a show ' Thal's what f
love."
A s tudent of yoga and kung
fu, Phillips says he "fell mto
yoga and the martial arts
pretty much on my own while 1
was m the Navy It's a comfort
to me now , not the selfproleclion but but the peace of
mmd 11 brmgs You need 1t
these days "
Phillips IS hardly ghb about
his colorful past( " ldwell more
on where I'm headed then
where I've been" ). Born m
Texas and raised m the Southwest, he jomed the Navy m 1959
afterdroppmg out of schooL He
completed his high school
educal!on while m the service
where he also 12ught himself
gwl2r and later, sitar.
Durmg the m1d- '60s, he
served his stretch m New York
C1ty and migrated to England
where he ran mto another
street poet named Donovan
Le1lch The two sl2rted wriltng
music together. "I still
remember sitting on a couch m
a Oat in London picking out the

.

,...

.

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

By Stephen Ford
make people realize tha t th1s
COLUMBUS , Ohw ( NEA) Is n't JUSt their kids future
. When Shawn Phillips dies , \\ e '• e Je opar diZing, It's our
perhaps they should display his futur e, loo "
remams, Lenin-hke, m the
He hOi sts h1s double-neck
Smilhsoman. For after all, he Gibson guitar up around h1s
IS ruporyg_ !he last of a species neck as a representallve from
long on tbe musicians' en- A&amp;M
standing
nearby
dangered hst - a Diogenes es timates the Size of the
with a gultar as h1s lamp.
audience " Damn ," the rep
WtJf his SIXth A&amp;M album snaps, " ha lf-emply. The IdiOts
i4llt . r eleased , Phillips con- who prom oted this concert
tmues as tne focus of a cull He scheduled 1t durmg a four-&lt;lay
ts a olusJd3n known only lo a weeke nd Who stays on campu s
light cmole of sens1llve souls then? This place Is deser ted "
who leave his concer ts g lutted
Ph1lhps shakes his head and
w1th food for thought And sa y s
h a If hearted ly ,
although the s1nger- composer " Some tim es I lhmk aboul
apprectales the fidelity h1s fans recordmg JUS t one commerctal
have shown as others Dock single , y'know, somelhmg to
about r6Ck bands with gold really dommale the AM radio
records and sold-out concerts, stallons That would gel more
Phillips, at 31, Is frustrated
people to hslen to me, then I
"I can ' t seem to get my could unleash my real music message across ," he says share my message "
backs tage at Ohio State
He pa uses a gam , " Naa, I
Universi ty In Co lumbu s
couldn' t really do tha t. My fan s
"People who already kn ow would never forgtve me. I
what I'm trymg to say come to would never forgive me " Then
these con~~rt.s. They buy my he sleps from the wmgs to
records. '!)hey already feel confront a meager audience
concern •fql· what's gomg on that wears a "So enterl2m us
pohltcalll,:* ;~hat we're dmng already" look on Its gnm face
to the envltimlll4lllt, But I want
The three-and-a-hall hour set
to reach those P!-9Jlle who don'! , Is launched by Phillips and his
agree with us- those who may six-man
group
playing
feel differently about the s!2te favon tes, followed by a freeof hfe, irthey •11 lis ten "
wheelin g jam of expenmental
Tall, ~ gAngly With a WISPY sound thal alternately lulls,
beard and long rus ty hmr then ass aults, the audience ll
pulled into a poqytall, Phtlhps 1s concluded by Phillips onglance$ at the OUI5r then peers stage alone, armed only with a
d1rectly mlo yo~ ' eyes, maybe acousltc guitar , a four-octave
pleadmg, uNo o~." he pauses vmce and a heart full of feeling .
while fishing fOr the right As lhe s tgelight comes up, an ,
words, " takes 1any of this explosion erupts from the
senously Scientists warn us audience and you know they
about what we 've done to the understand
environment and how 11 may be
Backstage a g am , Phillips
Irrevm-sible.
dnes himself with a towel. "l
" Right now , we 're told that hl\e to see the audience out of
freon gas used to propel the their seals and boogeying m
mgred1ents of aerosol cans 1s the aisles once we're undestroying the ozone. When the derway . But mce as 1: is, that's
ozone rg'Oes, We ' ll burn up But secondary We're not a boogey
does · anythinlf
take
11 band. I gel more satisfaction
seriously ? Does the govern- from the dude m the front row
ment order manufacturers to with h1s eyes closed and gently
stop dlstribilt.l~ aerosol cans? rockmg back a nd forth m h1s
Of course li~ti!-\Does the public seat than I do over people
lhmk in~~,~ JOke? How do we rockmg m lhe aisles If you

Fully Insured

-

P h on e 992

19 68

rather than commercial

0.

FREE ESTIMATE

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

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

3 R M lurm shed a p a rt me n t tn
Mt dd leport Ph on e 992 3333
11 1 3t c

1

i
'

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

Racine. o.

5th 51

Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service. Free
Estimates.

6 RO OM hou se at 'ili'5 M a pl e Sl
M1d d l e por t 6 mo nth s le ase
r e qu tr e d Phon e 992 76.12
12 J 6tc

1970 C H EVRO L ET C.apn p s,
p b , at r c o n dt11ont ng , 350
a utom attC 1n good con d tfJO n
W tll se l l reaso n able Pno n e
2&lt;17 2679
11 26 8t c

Racll)~,

RACINE GARAGE

HElL
RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING

17 3 lfc

196 6 CJS JEE P
e &gt;o: ce l l en t
condtt ton Ca l l 742 4473
12 ) 3t p

Shawn Phillips: right

[hnstmJ.S

r en t

11 26 12t p

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

GOOD
U SE D p1ano , p r ef e r
med tum to sm al l Stze P hone
992 3103
11 27 61c

for

GHEEN'S
PAINTING
•

.

DUPL E X a pt m M td dl epor t
Cal t ( 304 ) ll82 2050 afte r 5 p m
11 76 lf c
T RA I LE R s p ace
P ho n e 367 77 43

--

949-3295

1974·---------------Generation Rap

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3.1974
6:oo-News3,4,6,8,10,13,1S , Sesame St. 20 ; Adlenan Counseling
Te&lt;:hnlques 33

'

For Rent

1'il7 1 OL D SMOB I LE C ull i3SS
Supr e m e 1 ow n e r ne w se t o f
6 000 m tie s
r adt a l 11r es
p e rf ect C(l ndtt ton P er son a lly
ow n e d
Ar n o l d
G rat e
Ru tl an d , See a t Rutl a n d
Fu r n tl ur e Co mp il ny
Pn on e
14? 4211 da y
nt Qh t ca ll 74 2
55 41
1? 3 tf c

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 3,

TeleViSiOfl Log

- -

Middleport.
All
work
guaranteed. Phone 949-3611.

777 Pearl Street
Moddleport, Ohoo
Phone 992 - 5~67 or 992 3861

'} BE DROO M m o b tle home tn
Ractn e a r ea Phone 991 sa58
11 29 tt c

Wanted To Buy

· _c

Pick up daily •n Pomeroy &amp;

8-K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

Sl995

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

1

Construction &amp; Remodel

T RADE IN
1972 Gree n bne r
12x60 7 bed r oom , 3 d r de lu :~~e
c oac t1 , needs clea n up on
Save on tt1t s on etn s td e
F tn a n c lng av a il a b le w tth
sma ll down pa ym ent Can be
seen a t K tng sbur y M ob rl e
H ome Sa l es at 1100 Ma tn st ,
P o m e r oy Oh 1o or c a ll 99?
7034
12 3 51c

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

rlrSt
• 4

Water, Electric, Gas, Sewer
lines, tnsta lied
Work
guaranteed.
Dorer, Backhoe, Trucks
Ltmestone &amp; Fill Dirt
Commerctai-Residenttal

T RAUE
IN , ltkC' n ew
1971
f ree do rn l ~x60 3 d r c a rp e t ed
through o ut
2 be dr oo m s,
m any tu)(ur y fea tur es save 35
pe t o l or 1g rnal sa le p r tce B uy
wtl h or wtth oul furn tt ure Can
be seen a t K tngsb ur y H om e
Sales Lo t 1100 E M a tn St ,
Pome r o y Oh to or cal l 99 1
70) 4
12 3 Si c

Hatc hba ck , low m1 leage by 1 owner, ne w w w t1re s tr a n s
fe rr ed from ne w car, 4 speed tran s, r a dio , green ftnl sh ,
bla ck v in y l inte rt or de lux e tnm

Diogenes with a guitar

l:hc

,-

-

.

.

Business Services

--

11 '!? Otp

.

NO hunltng on my f Mm l or
d e er Vel' n on N e a se
17 ? 3tp

-- - -

Pomeroy_
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

NO HUN T IN G on Da l e Ltltle
prop e r ty 111 Ba l l R un Stgned
DillE' Lttl l e

WI L L tli e. pa r t y that bo r ro w ed
my comealon g p l ease r e1 urn
it "as I need tl
Al lii n B a l l
12 3 31p
--~o: --....t.:..

2 SIGNS

)-\ UC T IO N

\1 3 l tc

~

Auto Sales

.

1

TUPPERS PLAINS
3 ,;;
bedroom home. bath, gas
furnaCe, breezeway, garage,
and extra large lot. $16.000.00. "'
RACINE - 10 room home, 4 "
bedrooms, bath, carpeting .
steam heat, large lot and 2 car ""'

StS,OOO,OO.
•
CARPETED ~ 3 bedrooms, ""
large closets, gas F .A. furnace,
porches, baoement, and fenced
yard. $17,500.00.
HOME AND INCOME - 8
room house, 2 baths, S

garag~.

bedrooms,

and

a .c room ef-

flclency wllh bath. All for
$18,000.00.
BUILDING LOT Water,
electric, and telophono service.
Several locations. $1500.00 up.
YOUR DOLLARS IN REAL
ESTATE ARE A SOUND
INVESTMENT FOR YOUR
FUTURE.

1

'
•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

II you only have to w1n one
finesse, then Ills clear that two
finesses are better than one.

/

One rinesse is an even-money
propositiOn One finesse out of
two makes the odds m your
favor JUSt over three to one
South Analyzed the six of
spades lead as fourth best from
a four five or six-card suit He
CountOd a lot of winmng tncks
for himself, 1f he could set up
his clubs Unfortunately for l...:~:;;:;;'"=:::
that purpose, he was going to r
run out of time West would-get
h1s spades set up first
He Counted only four losers in
case the spades were gomg to
break 4-4 but he knew that a suit
breaks 4-t only about 33 per
cent of the t1me
He Counted eight top winners
for htmself and saw that he
could score a mnth, tf he !messed successfully for the queen of L.:~~-~==~~~
hearts. That 50 per cent chance
was certainly better than a 33
cent one.
aperbetter
play But he finally saw
He led his mne of hearts and
let it ride It forced East's
queen and South had hts ninth
trick Suppose 1t had lost to the
10?
Then South would still have
the finesse agamst the queen
left.

BORN LOSER
Oi,\~E~&gt;.~-~1 WELL, IF WT'S
11\t; W/&gt;.'i 'I:JU FEEt., \QJ

)OtJR' mAINED

NOSe HAS PICKeD
U~ A SCIENr'- t=H

OLD I!AAAAC.LICl6.,60

EFRAM~

~ 10 'OJR OLD

L~!

,WINNIE~~=':::~~~]~::\'j~~~~~~~~~~;,~~fS'I~"lll~Ec~W/'!.~'{,~HAVE§[i~~~~~~m
IN'I1TA11~

ALlEY OOP

THE

10 aJR FA5HION

5HOW (;ONE
our~

CNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSNI

LZ:B;I :JIJ&amp;,&gt;..if XI
The biddmg h'!" been
West

North

East

16
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Yoo , South. hold
• 4 3 ¥ A Q 10 8 6 • K J

I

s

Soutb

Dble
3•
"
4 .. A Q S

•

•

GOODY FIR

YQU_,_IATERII
"e GOi \folie
FUST Rtiii&amp;ER !!

What do you do now"
.on

"'

A-Jusl past. Your partDer laa
made a veey sttoDI bid, but be II
Ullslied willt 1ame alld Willi IWI

little spades, yo• sbo1ld be olso.
Remember hll IWO·t~de cue INII
did not paraatee aay spade coatrel
at all
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding four heartJ
your partner has bid lhr.. spadea

..

�. '

·-

..

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 3, IU74
Agen c y exec uti vt•
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~=~=~=~:::=:=:=::~:~:;:~:;::~=~~=~:::=:::=:=:=::::::::x:::::::.-::::=====*::::::::::::::::::.::::::::;:::...:::

' 1'

Ole/ Linde )111&lt;~ ovt'rtlue /mo/.-

board will meet
CHESHIRE - The executive
board of the Gallia - Meigs
Community Action Agency' will
hold its mon thly meeting on
Thursday, Dec . 5 beginning at
7:30 p.m. at the Cheshire
Commutlity Center. The advisory committees of each
county will meet at 7 p.m. to
prepare for the reorganization
· to be held in
· Justa Shor1 Drive
To do~nfown Athens, Ohio

HELD OVER!
\

It takes up where
YoJA\.

TOM LAUGHLIN

DELORES TAYLOR

The Trial of

Jack

IDDLEPOR
THURSDAY,
DEC.5
SHOW TIME
7:30 PM
EIGS JR. HIGH SCH
SPONSORED BY
MIDDLEPORT
VOL. FIRE DEPT. .

SANTA'S

MAGICAL
WORK
SHOP

Starring

Joe Eddie
MASTER MAGICIAN
Featuring

PhiliPPe

Snow slows
coal voting
BELLAIRE, Ohio (UPI ) Heavy snow Monday hampered voting by southeastern
Ohio and West Virginia coal
miners, members of United
Mine Workers District 6, on the
union 's new contract with the
Bituminous Coa l Operators
Association.
Voting results were not
immediately available from
District 6 headquarters here. A
spokesman at the headquarters said all results are being
sent directly to the union's
international
headquarters.
Voting began Monda y and was
extended to 8 p.m. Wednesday
because of the heavy snowfall.
District 6 President J ohn
Guzek, meeting today with
members of Local 6271 to
discuss and answer questions
on the new contract, predicted

ADVANCITICKrTS
ONSAUNOW

a majoroty of the district's
members would ratify the new
pact.
Twenty-two of the district's
48 locals met Monday to
discuss the contract and most
wtion members were expected
to cast their ballots today and
Wednesday.
Many miners complained the
30-article contract was too
complex a nd not clearly explained by union officials.
" It 's nothing but confusing,"
said one local president who
asked not to be identified.
"They can't explain it to us
because they don 't understand
it. I just don't think my men
will pass it."
Most miners said the voting
on the new pact would be close,
while others predicted wildcat
strike s if the contract is
ratified.

Homemakers meet
LETART, W. Va . - Mrs.
Violet Sl.anton, Rt. 1, ulart,
was welcomed as a new
member of the Cherokee
Homemakers Club, when the
group met Tuesday evening at
the home of Mrs. Da vid
Dewhurst, Letart.
Mrs .
Dewhurs t, president, presided

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday
Dec. 3-4-S
NOT OPEN

THE CLOWN
Plus
OTHER STARS
OFTHI
IIGTOP

6-children m bus hurt
.S1x sLudc rH.:-; ubo&lt;:.~rd a Mcig~

By SIL'&gt;an Fleshman
Pomeroy-Middleport Ubrarlan
''We want to be happy , but we can't be happy, 'til we ·
make you happy too !"
~at Is the song the folks at lhe Pomeroy and Middle~ libraries are singing during the month of
December. For the whole month we won 't be charging any
fines on overdue books. This is our Christmas present to
you, and we hope that it makes you happy.
In return, you can make us happy by bringing back to
the libraries any of our books which may have strayed
onto your shelves. We need our books so that we can lend
them lo people who haven't had a cbance to read them yet.
Christmas is a good time to be unseUlsh, so help us to
share our books with everyone. And thlak or the money
you can save during the no-fine month of December!
If your great-uncle Joe look out a library book 20
years ago 1111d you haven't had the courage to return It,
this is your big chance to brlag it In and save $365 in
overdue fines! (Five cents a day Isn't very much built
sure mounts up!) Just to see if anybody comes close to
Uncle Joe's 20 years, we will keep a record of the books
that are brought back. Whoever brlags in the book that
has been overdue the longest will receive a " timely" gift.
So make us happy - and be happy too - bring hack a
book tbal 's overdue.

FRI. -SAT.·SUN.
DEC. 6-7-8
BLAZING SADDLES

( Technicolor)

whe n minutes were read and
treasurer's report given.
Mrs.
Ollie
Browning
presented the devotions . She
used Psalm 67 and gave a
reading, "Try Being Thankful
for You," by Norman Vincent
Peale. Mrs. K. K. Scites closed
the devotions with prayer.
Mrs. Oscar Casto was in
charge or
the
lesson,
" Promises, More Promises. "
Refreshments were served
by the hostess, Mrs . Dewhurst,
to Mrs . Ollie Browning, Mrs.
Charles Stone, Mrs. K. K.
Scites, Mrs. Luther Smith and
Mrs. Oscar Casto.

~~;:.. ~~'*{?"'"'!'::::?:W..::::.::::::::::::t~:::::~:::~:::::::x:-W.::::::·:.:
.
..'**:::::::::::::::::::::'-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::c::::::::~;.:

•

Local Sdwul bus we re if) jured,

none serously, in a bus. t.anker
truck aed rlent Mond&lt;:.~y on
Coun (y Road 46, two miles
north of Langsville.
Pll. Roger Gillespie of the
Gallia-Meigs Post Slaie Highway Patrol said a City lee and
Fuel tanker truck driven by

Mid1&lt;1d Bolin , 19, of Midd lepor t, wenlielt of the center
striking a southbound school
bus driven by E lla Southern,
29, of Rutland .
The injured students were
transporte d to Veterans
Memorial Hospita l lor treatment by the Pomeroy
SEOEMS
Ambul a n ces.

I.
.~l,.,

Treated and released we.re
Mi c hael Wilford, Richard
Vanhauten, Pam Gilkey,
Bethany Hobsletter, Howard
Barr and Edith Woodard.
There was mbderate damage
to both vehicles. Bolin was
cited to Meigs County Court for
failure to yield one hall or the
roadway.

~
:~1

:?;
~:
;:~

t:1

~ :·j.·

_
,

«·

~:;
r~

Mills' image clouded up
WASHIN GTON (UPI) to Boston last weekend to
Wilbur Mills once was known appear on stage with. stripper
as the intellectual giant of the
Fanne Foxe, "the Tidal Basin
House of Representatives, a Bombshell,"
sealed his
powerful man who held the comfuittee's fate .
country's tax laws in his grip
Ways and Means Democrats
and who could Ioree presidents were angry, especially the
to come begging to him, bat in southerners.
hand.
Back home in Arkansas, the
Now, friends and enemies state's largest newspaper, the
alike are asking why he could Arkansas Gazette, editorially
not cope with a simple little sex called on Mills either to
scandal.
" forego his public inOpenly his colleagues discretions" or resign.
wonder about his mental
The Gazette echoed a theme
health ,
and
fledgling heard often through the halls of
movemenLs are afoot to a t~ Congress: Mills was forgiven
tempt the unthinkabl e for - the original Tidal Basin
remove him next January as incident in which Miss Foxe
the chairman of the House jumped from his car, intoxWays and Means Committee. icated, and dived into the Tidal
Already the Democratic Basin, a backwater of the
Caucus has removed the Ways Potomac River, but he "will
and Means Committee 's find no such spirit of forgiveJX)wers to make House com- ness now" after his apmittee assignments, and it is pearance on stage in Boston.
likely the committee will be
"It's a matter of judgement
expanded so that it can be and menta] balance," said one
packed
with
liberal southern Democrat.
Democrats.
Mills, looking tired and
This might well have hap- drawn, spent most of Monday
pened anyway, but Mills' trip in the ornate Ways and Mean•

Committee room In the Capitol,
occasionally going to the House
floor where the Democratic
Caucus met, bpt not making
any speeches.
Reporters, who for years
hung on every Mills utterance
on taxes and trade, quietly
came and went asking questions or a different sort.
Why did he go to Boston?
"l just wanled to dispel all

those innuendoes about us," he
said, adding, "If I was keeping
a girl, I sure wouldn't advertise
it like that."
What was his relationship
with her?
Only ·a family friend, no
sexual relations, he insisted,
although,"! suppose at my age
I should be flattered that
anyone thinks that."
In New York, where Miss
Foxe
began · a
week 's
engagement Monday, she said
she had not approved of Mills
appearing on the stage with
her, but, ''whenever he wants
to do something he jnst goes in
and does it. Nobody can stop

@
~~

proposed the larger committee
which will allow a mass U:Ofusion of liberal Democrats on
the traditionally conservative
committee.
Mills . meanwhile . w~s
reported on danger of losliig-bis
committee chairmanship In
January because of his appearance on a Boston stage with a
stripper.
"This isn't the same Wilbur
Mills I knew," said one highranking Ways and Means
member. ult's sad. "
Most of his committee memM
bers have backed away from
support of Mills, and it appeared only a major drive by

News . . . in Briefs

Con tinu ed from page 1
Electric Co. bas ·asked the state Public Utilities Commission to
increase its rates to all incorporated communities in Franklin
County, in order to get an extra $24.1 million revenue.
·
The application covered residential and general service
rates formerly fixed by ordinances which expired on or before
last SatW'day. Together with the firm's Nov. 6 application, the
pending rate increase requests would affect 97.7 per cent of all
C&amp;O customers and increase its revenues by $50.7 million. Only a
few wholesale customers and ordinance munclpallties in
southern Ohio are not involved.

'
BERNA BURCHAM

TERRI BLACKHURST

Ten girls accepted in pageant
MASON, W. Va . - Ten
conteslants fr om two of Mason
County's high schools have
been accepted to compele in
the Mason County JWlior Miss
Pageant to be slaged Dec. 7 at
Wahama High School.
The Wahama Band Booslers
will sponsor the annual event
with participants representing
'Point Pleasant and Wahama
High Schools. Te n girls
vying in the co mpe tition are
Terri
Blackhurst,
Wahama;
Berna

Jea~

Burcham, Point Pleasant
High; Mary Lee Fox, WHS;
Gewanna Johnson , WHS ;
Carolyn Sue Roush, WHS ; Lou
Ellen Roush, WHS ; Susan
Lynn Spears, PHS; Regina
Tolbert, WHS; Tamara Shay
Tolliver, PHS; Teresa Van
Meter, WHS.
Two equal winners will be
announced at the event next
weekend, both of whom will
then compele in the State
Junior Miss Pageant to be held
in Princeton, January 12.

Ford, Murphy
say keep cool

I Rl

Color Cartoons
Show Starts 1 p.m .·

'

By United Press International
President Ford and the new
chairman of General Motors,
in separate appeals , told
Americans
Monday
the
Mills could save his chainnanproblems of the economy are
ship.
oggravated by fear and talk
On Monday, the Democrats, about hard times.
meetlngtoorganizelorthenew
Ford said times are nowhere
Congress, voted to remove the
near as desperate as the Great
Ways and Menns Conunlttee's
J)epression, when President
years-old powers to make
Franklin D. Roosevelt said the
House committee assignments.
only thing Americans have to
fear is fear itself.
But Ford added, "It is a good
Holzer Medical Center
thing
to remembe.r ." since
(Discharged Dec. 2)
John Blankenship, Ruby
Bossard , Luther Bowles,
Michael Burton, George Casto,
Nancy Cox, Linda Hall, Virgil
Johnson , Jeffrey Jones,
Caroline Long, Mrs . Dewey
McCain and son, Mildred
DAUGHTER BORN
McDaniel, Cathy Mulford,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kelly ,
Mrs. Robert Reeves and son, Middleport, announce the birth
Jimmy Sheets, Mrs. Clifford of a 6 lbs., 11 ozs. daughler
Smith and son, Lelia Vollborn. Loretta Jean, early Sunday
(Births)
morning al Holzer Medical
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Center. Grandparents are Mr.
Barlow, a son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Dabor,
and Mrs. Raymond Burton, Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. M.
Jackson, a son; Mr . and Mrs. L. Kelly, Middleport. Mrs. J .
Marty Morarity, a daughler, K. Smith, Sr., Middleport, is
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Donald the great-grandmother. Mr.
W. Mullins, a daughter , and Mrs. Kelly also have two
McArthur ; Mr . and Mrs . other children, Janell , 12, and,
William R. Wickline, a son, Tommy, 11.
Racine.

"our greatest danger today is
to fall victim to the mO!'e
exaggerated alarms."
Thomas A. Murphy, in his
ftrst news conference as chairman of GM, called upon the
news media, Pl:esldent Ford
himself, and even fellow auto
exeCutives to stop "doom and
gloom talk" a bout the
economy.
Murphy said such talk is
wrecking consumer con~
fidence, hurting car sales and
contributing to the woes of the
economy.
" All the gloom and doom Ialli
can't dissuade me from the
fact 'that economically we're
still very strong and we're
going to pull out of tbls thing
together, and I emphasize that
word 'together,'" Murphy said.
Ford, in a televised~;~~
conference, safd the
States had the ability to
with inflation, recession
the energy crisis, but he
acknowledged ''we're going to
take some lumps and · we're
going to take some bumps.' ~
Ford once again ruled out a
20-cent or better tax on a gallon:.·
or gasoline to force energy .•
conservation, but he did no~ .
rule out a smaller tax hike in•,
·t he neighborhood of 10 cents a ·
gallon.

be classified
In Memory

:*******************w***********t
:

For )'our Dining and Listening
.
Pleasu,re......

**
**
*

:

GEO. HALL

:

AND THE HALLMARKS

*

*

!
**
**
*

:

!
·!

*

: TONIGHT 8:00 TO 12:30

:

**

**

~

!

The MEIGS INN
~h.

992-3629

Pomeroy

:

!

********************************•

IN LOV ING memo r y o f Morr is
N . Hart;~ en who pa ssed away ,
Dec J , 1971.

Friends

may

t h ink

we

have

forgotten.
When at ti mes th ey see us
s mil e,
B ut l ittle do t h ey know the

heartaches,

Tt1at we cove r all t h e while.
They say ti me heals all sorrow
A n d it 1'1 elps ~s to forge t ,
But time so fa r has only proved
How much we miss him yet.
Sad l y missed by w ife ,
Do rothy and sons, Bob , Don ,
and familie s.
12 -3· ltC
Fo r Sa l e
HAMPSHIRE pigs. Co rn fat tened , weigh b etw ee n 200 .250
pounds . Phone 378 -6152.

12 ·3·5tc

Pets for sa le
POOD LE

grooming,

$5.

Call

Coolv il le 667 ·3915. W i ll have
pupp ies for sa le mi ddle of
Janu a ry or before :
l2 ·3· 3fp

NOW ___ _: __

.1
~

YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT HEADQUARTERS
A Practical Gift Idea!

annon Royal Family
·•BATH ENSEMBLES
•SHEETS AND PILLOWCASES

SALE~ PRICES

..

I

I

~

r:::

.

~~

~:
_:;j

f.im~;
~
&gt;~

~

;

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.....

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::::·
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~1!1

By United Press International
The president of District 6 of
the United Mine Workers union
said today chances were only
"50&lt;i0" that the 15,000 miners
in his district which encompasses eastern Ohio and the
Northern Panhandle of West
Virginia would ratify a new
contract with the coal industry
but predicted it would be approved by a "slim margin " on
a nationwide vote.
John Guzek also said a move
by officials of some district
locals in southeastern Ohio to
send representatives to Washington to monitor vote counting
had not been authorized by his
office.
Guzek sa id Mond ay the

.

•
miners were not dissatisfied
with the money provisions of
th e new three-year pact but
were unhappy with two other
provisions of the contract.
" It looks to me like its going
to be about 50-SO in this district
as far as I can find out,'' said
Guzek. "Overall, though , when
the international gets a ll the
votes I think it will pass by a
slim margin."
" If not, then we go back to
the bargaining table," Guzek
said.
Guzek said the miners were
apparently dissatisfied with a
safety clause and with the
grievance procedure.
"The big question is the way
the contract is worded," said

Guzek. " When I brought the
contract back (from negotiations in Washington) I sa id
there were two things I particularly didn't ca re for .
"One is health and safety ,"
he said . 11 Where a man can
r emove himself from what he
co nsider s
a
dangerous
situation . And if they (the coal
companies) find out it wasn't a
dangerous situation . Then they
(the miners) can be reprimanded. I don't think a man should
be reprimanded for getting out
of conditions he thinks are
W'l.safe. ' '

Guzek also said one step had
been removed from the griev·
ance procedure which could
mea n the union grievance

•

enttne

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1974

VOL. XXVI NO. 164

fN:ews
. •• zn Briefi
•

·:

•

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;, .

.

.

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TEN CENTS

Recession
•
to contmue

.

MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIF. - ·THE CONSTANT orange and
pictures of Jupiter steadily flowing back to earth from the
Pioneer 11 spacecraft fascinated scientists today with the
possibility of life on the huge planet. The orange has two possible
causes - one of them the presence of organic molecules tbat
combine into living organisms.
Jupiter's atmosphere Contains the same chemicals belleved
to have produced· life on eartb . four -.billion years ago. The
chemicals are anunimla, methane and hydrogen together with
water. '"l1le orange color !Its with the theory of chemical
evolution of life," said Tom Gehrels of the University of Arizona,
the man In charge of Pioneer's picture-taking apparatus.
The alternative explanation for the orange would be tbe
presence of clouds of amonia hydrosulfldes. This explanation
was rejected for complex reasons by Bradford Smith, a
University of New Mexico astronomer.

UFE WAS BEGINNING TO RETURN TO NORMAL in
snowoQJJothered northern Ohio today as highways_crews succeeded in opening nearly all roadways closed by the 20-inch
weekend snow storm.
Many schools which had been shutdown Mo~day and
Tuesday were expected to reswne classes today as clear skies
and temperatures in the 3Us helped emergency crews in their
cleanup operations.

committe could be left out or
Four of five UMW locals in
individual grievances.
the Athens area voted this
Meanwhile, William Yost, week to accept the agreement.
Bellaire, chairman of the Ohio
Local 1957 in Southeastern
political arm of the UMW and Ohio reportedly voted 52-SO
president of the Unions local aggainst the pact in a three2262, said two representatives hour meeting in Wilkesville
would be sent to Washington Tuesday.
because his members "don't
Local 1957 'president Robert
trust" Arnold Miller, president Porter said his local was '
of the union.
generally disappointed in the
Yost is part of a smalll union contract proposal, but wasn't
faction calling for Miller's " ticlded to death" to have an
resignation and the resignation opportunity to vote on the ofof other top UMW officials.
fered contract.
" It's getting pretty bad when
Locall890in Meigs County in
you have to send your own men southeastern Ohio, voted 15+-94
to Washington to see what is to accept the contract while
going on," said Yost. "You local 1186 in the same county
have to wonder about a guy voted 161-113 to accept the
who comes out of a coal field contract and in New Lexington,
and says he knows what the Ohio, members of locallJ40 of
miners want, and them comes the Peabody Coal Co. Sunnyhill
up with Tony Boyle tactics. ·mine, voted 199-162 to go back
Miller
ta lks
about to work.
Democracy, but I wonder
The biggest margin in favor
where it went. We don 't trust of the contract in Southern
him .
Ohio's coalllelds was tallied in
Yost said the contract McConnelsville where local
proposal lost in eight of 13 1605 voted 361-87 in favor of the
locals surrounding Bellaire. troposal.
District 6 has 26 locals.
Continued on page 14

Jobless at 6.2%

..... ~

By United Press International
WASHINGTON- FORMER WHITE HOUSE CHIEF of staff
H. R. Haldeman denied under strenuous cro~amlnation
Tuesday that he believed cash payments were made to the
Watergate burglars In order to avoid jeopardizlng President
Richard M. Nixon's re-election.
In a lull day of often acrimonious jousting with assistant
Prosecutor Richard Ben-Veniste in U. S. District Court,
Haldeman testilled he did not know the full story of Watergate
until March 1973 - nine months after the break-in and one month
before he resigned despite recorded conversations with then
P!'esident Nixon showing .1/.J•t he did.

PARTII;IPATING ON AN advisory committee
representing two welding courses at the Meigs High School
are, I tor, Kenneth Eblin, Ron Browning, Arthur Strauss and

Willard Miller. Training courses in Meigs LoCal's Vocational
Education Dept. thiB year have been strengthened by experienced professional advice and counsel, according to Ray
Goodman, director.

•

Pomeroy-Athens bus semce
not dead yet, chamber told

Two options remain to the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce in its project to revive
bus service between Athens
and
Pomeroy. Both were
LONDON - BUDGET.CU'ITJNG BRITAlN has stripped its
discussed
whe1o the Chamber
once mighty overseas military presence to a few scattered
met Monday at noon at the
garrisons, letting the sun finally set on a former imperial past.
Meigs
Inn.
Plagued by the country's worst economic crisis since World War
Fred
Morrow,
vice
n, the Labor government announced a 10-year, $10.9 billion cut
president, read a letter from
Tuesday In defense spending ·and a pullback of most British
Jeff
Burt of Buckeye-Hills
forces east of Suez.
Hocking
Valley Regional
Defense Secretary Roy Mason told Parliament Britain would
Development
District that said
concentrate Its remaining overseas forces in the North AUantic
Treaty Alliance. "NATO Is the clinchpin of Brlllsh security,'' . funds for a transit system may
become available under the
Mason said. He said It would remain ''the first charge on the
new
federal law signed by
resources available for defense ."
President
Ford recently.
'!be cuts would reduce Britain's Far East presence to a token
The other option, Morrow
contingement in the five - nation Commonwealth force in
said,
is that David Vaughan ,
Southeast Asia and a garrison guarding Hong Kong, one of the
who
is
associated with the
few remaining British colonies.
transit system in Athens
(AORTA
) may be in position to
TOKYO - AMERICAN-EDUCATED TAKEO 'MIKI took
arrange
bus
serwice.
over today as hend of Japan's ruling political party, guaranCarolyn
Thomas
reported
teeing bis election as prime mlnlster next week. Kukuel Tanaka
that the chamber felt th-. t the
resigned as party president and prime minister Nov!026 in the
Christmas
parade was very
face of corruption charges. The 56-year-old outgoing leader did
not attend the caucus.
In a lrief acceptance speech, the bespectacled Mlkl said he
was determined to "give all I bave" to combat inflation and to
cooperate with oil producing nations in preserving energy
resources. Mlkl, a graduate of the University of California, has
Insisted Japan maintain friendly relations with the United States
and aU other countries of the world.

d

' '

~
~

at y

LOCAL TEMPS
. Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m.
was 43, degrees under sunny
skies.

'

Miners voting 50-50 on
contract in District 6

»
:::::

•

wASHiNGTON- A LAST-MINUTE AMENDMENT from
Sen. J . Bennett' Johnston, D-La., brolie a deadlock on strip ,
' mining legislation and a House-Senate conference agreed on
language for the bill designed to protect the environment.
'!be measure-stlll requires final action by both the House and
Senate. It would demand !bat .strip miners cleB!) up the land they
exploit and place a 25 cent per ton tax on deep mined coal and 35
cents a ton on snrlace mined coal to help pay for lt.

\'

I

•••:=::::w::-;:::::::::::::.~:::::~:=:::::::::::--:::::::=:::=:::=:=:=::~::m":::;:;:;:;:=-~:!:..;:::::~.:;::::~:::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-~:::::::~3::::y_:~-::::!&amp;»::!=~:::::-:::m::::=:::::s-~~:~::

DIVORCE GRANTED
Donna Koehler , College
Road, Syracuse, filed lor
divorce in Meigs County
common Pleas Court against
John Koehler, .same address,
ch!&gt;rging gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty . The
marriage of Chatles R.
Lawrence and Sheryn J .
Lawrence, both of Portland,
was dissolved.

I

.

ByDAVEBOWRING
Wrllten for United Press International
This is the week that Ohio deer hunters have awaited all year long. Most lei.iveS have
fal1en , clearing the fores't s of southeastern Ohio for the anxious glances of both hunters
and the hunted . ·
saplings ~n tlidden ridges are newly destroyed by the antlers-of some a morous
whitei8ii buclt~,itsliark stripped away, itsbranches aske'\', its sap running free. Yardsquare patChes of leaf mold and forest litter dot the woodjots where some buck left h1s
calling card. He will reviSit these spots regularly to check for does in the area.
Wood smoke will filler through the hardwoods as pal-ties of hunters happily set up
deer campo. Some do yarn ..pinning and tillk about lastJear 's hits and misses. Staccato
shots will echo through the hollows as wily bucks, pushe from their beds at midday' boll
ahead of driving hunters with only a flash of their great white tails mark their passage
through the woqds.
And when it tS all over, 11 of every i2 Ohio deer hunters will go home without their
quarry. Tl\ey
enviomilyglare at the cars of more successful hunters on the highway ,
their cartops bearing one or more deer for all the world to see.
But in more Ohio homes than ever before, evening meals will feature venison steaks
under unions as the snows of a deep Ohio winter swirl outside. Perhaps as many as IO,GOO
deer will be harvested in Ohio this week, yet the state's herd will still nwnber about 7580,000 next fall, when we all meet again in the woods to greet the dear season.
Monday Good Opening Day
COLUMBUS (UP!)- There were 1,975 deer bagged Monday, opening day of the 1974
gun season, Ohio Division of Wildlife Chief Dan C. Armbruster said Tuesday. The figure
was 14less than last yearmainlybecauseofheavy snows in many areas olthe state .
Leading the way with 209 deer ldlled was Ashtabula County, where hunters were
permitted to take deer of either sex, followed by Muskingum County with 140 bagged and
Trumbull County, where the bagging of both sexes also is permitted, with 125. Meigs '
count was 96, Gallla's 51.
The. deer gun seasons runs through Thursday.

LU.U.

him."

too late to

CLEAVON liTTLE

I

will

Ways, Means revamped
WASHINGTON (UP I) .House Democrats voted to
expand the Ways and Means
Committee from 25 to 37
members today, continuing the
major revamping of the oncepowerful committee that they
began Monday.
·
With Ways and Means Chairman Wilbur Mills unable to
mount any oppo si tion , the
amendment passed by voice
vote in a closed caucus of 291
re..lected and newly elected
Democrats. There were no
audible ''no's. ''
Rep . Charles Vanik, !).{)hio,
himself a member of the Ways
and
Means
Committee,

This, the long·-awaited
- week

successful. Mrs . Thomas also
noted that she wished to thank
the
commissioners
for
paneling the walls in the office
of the chamber and repairing
the ceiling.
Mrs. Thomas also reporled
that the Christmas drawings
will be held each Saturday a t 1
p.m. at the chamber office
located on the ground floor of
the courthouse. The co lor
television to be given away on
Dec. 24 is on display at the
office of the Athens County
Savings and Loan.
Mrs. Thomas disclosed that
some merchants will be
staying open in the evenings
beginning Dec. 9 and more will
remain open in the evening
later on in the Christmas
season.
A letter was read from the
Ohio Valley
Fellowship
Organization, which has an

·s chool records
open to parents

In
accordance
with
requirements of a new federal
law, the Meigs County Board of
Education Tuesday night
adopled a policy permitting
parents to review the school
records of .thelr .children .
.The policy will perm! t
SQUAD CALLED
parents the right to review the
The Middleport Emejgency complete school records of
Squad answered a call to 244
their children and to appeal
Sycamore St., at 12:34 p.m. entries they feel are inaccurate
Tuesday for Julia Capehart,
or a violation of the privacy of
who was ill with abdominal
the student. The policy
pains . She was taken to provides that the records must
Veterans Memorial Hospital be provided to the parents
where she was admitted.
within 45 days afler a .request
to see them has been received.
A studen~, upon reaching 18,
Veteraos Memorial Hospital
also
is given the right to
Admitted - Julia Capehart,
Jl1lddleport; Marahel Frecker, . examine Ills own school
Pomeroy; Sylvia Wolfe, records.
Racine.
The new policy provides also
Discharged ·- Constance thai life records of the studentsCraig, Teriil~ Russell, Frieda cannot be passed on to a
Mossmao.
potential emp.l uyer 1· r l (j

anyone else, excluding the
teachers and offlcials in a
district, without the consent of
parents or students.
Records of students are in
the county' board offices and
the policy adopted Tuesday
night -refers to these records.
Local boards of education are
expected to take action soon to
pass similar legislation so that
records are available to
parents, for inspection. The
local district records may well
be a little more detailed, Meigs
County Sup~rintendenl Robert
Bowen said.
•
The board also issued bus
driver certificates to Raymond
Cottrill, James Hamm and
John Arnott. Atlending the
meeting were all · board
members, G~orge Perry,
Gordon Collins, Bob Burdetle,
Har old Lohse a nd Harold
Roush , and Supt. Bowen.

•

"information " trailer in
Racine, inviting persons
having problems with alcohol
or drugs to come in . Anyone
may visit the trailer in Racine
and obtain material available
on the program .
Morrow, manager of the
local Ohio Power Co. office,
presided in the absence of Ted
Reed, president.

Hope to pay
by new .year
RACINE - Spokesmen lor
the Racine E-R squad said
today it would be a wonderful
Christmas gift to be able to pay
off the balance due, $1,500, on
their new "Ill bulance.
They anticipate h'aving that
swn paid by Christmas or the
first of the year. The squad is
extending their thanks to those
who have contributed already .
Latest contributors are Billy
Hill , Ada Stigteanor, Kermit
Walton, Emma Adams , Pearl
McCiead, Irene Busch, Archie
Donahue , Maxine Diddle,
James L. Spencer, Herman
Carson, Shirley A. Johnson,
Barbara Sargent, Erma J.
Smith, Adams Drilling Co.,
Harriett Hyatt, Raymond.
Radcliffe, · Ira Beegle, Ethel
Sarson, Doris Wilt, Mr. and
Mrs . Don F . Johnson, Larry E .
Spencer, Raymond Adams,
Ewing Funeral Home, Fred
Roush, Roy Pearson, Nora C.
Cross and Kathy Holman .

COMING DEC. 16
·The bloodmobile for Meigs
County will be at, the Pomeroy
Elementary School Dec. 16
fr om, 1 to 6 p.m . Give a unit of
blood for someone wlio may be
yourself. Seventeen year old
persons can give with parents'
consent.
' ·

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday, It·
will be partly cloudy Friday,
becoming mostly cloudy
Saturday and Sunday with a
chance of showers. Daytime
highs will be In the 50s
Friday, dropping Into the 40s
Saturday and Sunday.
Overnight lows will be In the
30s.

Two forfeited
bond~ to court

By Richard Hughes, UPI Business Writer
There are signals that still more Americans will
be losing jobs in the next few months, the government said Tuesday, causing a deeper recession .
The government also stepped into the gold
market and prices plunged on European markets.
The Commerce Department reported that companies are trying to unload large inventories of
unsold goods before making new purchases, thus
forcing production cutbacks and higher unemployment.
.
Orders placed with manufacturers dropped $4
billion in October. At the same time, shipments of
goods rose $2 billion. The Labor Department
releases its nationwide unemployment rate for
November later this week, and it is all but certain to
be well above the 6 per cent October figure.
Economists at First City
National Bank of New York
estimated that it would hit 6.3
- per cent, or nearly six million
unemployed persons.
December
unemployment
would be even higher , the bank
said.
The dlp in new orders was
concentrated in heavy goods
including cars, trucks, airplanes, steel and applicances,
the Commerce Department
said.
The United States said it
would sell 2 muiton ounces of
gold bullion, less than I per
cent of the U.S. stockpile, Jan.
6, six days after it becomes
legal for Americans to own
gold bullion.
Gold prices on London and
Zurich markets dropped
sharply and gold mining stocks
took heavy losses on the New
york Stock Exchange.
Some bullion dealers said the
decision to hold a public
auction of gold was designed to
limit speculation.

The price of gold rose from
about $150 an ounce in August,
when the ban was lifted after
Dec. 31, to a record high of
$19().50 two wee~s ago.
John Flynn, New York
foreign currency dealer, said
the U.S. action was taken to
"instill some fear In speculators" by demonstrating tbat
the goverrunent can control the
market.
But another dealer, James
E. Sinclair • said smart
speculators had already sold at
a profit. "U anyone had not
expected this, they were
crazy," Sinclair said.

Two defen dants forfeited
bonds and Ulree others were
lined by Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting $30 bonds were
Hanna J . Greenlee , Middleport, failing to yield right of
The Gallla-Meigs Post, Ohio
way, and Sherry Hutton, 23,
Highway Patrol, investigated
Pomeroy, for disturbing the
three auto accidents Tuesday
peace. Fined were George
evening.
Marshon , 42, Middleport, $10
An auto driven by Franklin
and costs, no operator 's
Taylor, 25, Middleport, was
license ; Larry M. Well, 32,
se vere ly damaged when
Shade, $5 and costs, left of
Taylor, southbound on old SR 7
cenler, and $25 and costs, On
south of Middleport, crossing
resisting B.rrest, and James D.
The Me igs Co unty Com- railroad tracks, lost control of
McDougal, 20, Cheshire, $10
missi oners appointed Grace his vehicle and hit a corner of
ond costs, speeding.
Weber to serve on the Meigs the bridge over Leading Creek.
Taylor was not Injured and
County Board of Mental
no
citatiOn was issued.
Retardation and named two
At 7:30p.m. Tuesday, on SR
Clear and cold tonight . Lows others to fill the expired terms
35
west of SR 7, Girro J.
between 20 and 25. Sunny, not of Ed Kennedy, president, and
Pelverino,
49, of Freehold, N.
as cold Thursday, highs in the Iris Carr.
J.,
was
westbound
on US 35
Named to the lour year term
middle 40s.
which begins Jan. 1, 1975, were when an auto driven by
TWO APPOINTED
Mrs. Wilma Parker, Chesler, • Deborah G. Lasuze, 20, RichCOLUMBUS ( UP! ) - Gov. and William Carr, Coolville, mond, Ind. , atlempted to pass
at the same time Polverino
John J . Gilligan Tuesday RD.
changed lanes . The Lasuze
announced the appointments of
vehicle swerved back into
David A. Edwards, 46,
Polverino
's tractor trailer ,
Colwnbus, and Donald E. Ellis,
causing
slight
damage to the
55, Dayton, to the state Board
trailer, while the Lasuze
of Building Standards for twovehicle was moderately
year lerms ending Oct. 13, 1976.
damaged.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Lasuze was cited for im·
Department investigaled a two proper passing while no incar accident Tuesday at 7:30 juries were reported, .
p.m. on TR 109 in Sulton Twp.
A cow, owned by George E .
Gary R. Sellers, 16, Rt. 1, Pope,U&gt;wer River Rd. was the
Racine , was traveling west on cause of an accident at 11:30
TR 109 and Jimmy W. Deem, Tuesday night when Maxine H.
35, Rt. \ Racine, was traveling Denney, 49, Vinlon, was northeast when the two collided in a bound on SR 160 just north of
curve. Sellers failed to yield· SR 554, and her vehicle slr1lck
right of way and Deem was left the animal. Neither Denney
of center.
nor the cow was injured, while
There were no injuries or :he Denney vehicle suffered
arrests. There was mediwn slight damage. No citations
property d~mage .
1
were i~ted. '
i
)

Patrol logs
3 accidents

Three named
COunty hoard

Weather

Autos collide on
township road

2

,.,

'

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