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8- The Da1ly Sentinel , Middle port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Dec. 9, 1974
REPORTS DENIED
\I I . ( ' ( 'I
.
1 I II
WASHIN GTO N (U P!) ''
• Hllltn
Treasury &amp;-cr('tary Wtllli.lm E.
Simon has clemed l'eports he 1s of" ( iflou tlit'~
threateni ng to rcs1gn .
" 1 have abso lutely no mtc nC'I.WTO N. W Va - Abbl G
tion of r~~i gm n g. pen od. " he Clm t!m , 89 , of Clifto n, who d 1ed
said . "Peop!r are alw ay s Sunda y in Pleasrmt Va lley
speculaltng 111 Woshmgton nnd Hospital . \\ &lt;lS bor n Sept. 6.
most of the tunc mco rr ectl) . · · 1885. 111 Buffalo, \V . Va .. a son
he added.
·
of thr la te Robert S tee l ~ and
An na Dun can Stee le He r
hu sba nd,
J[tmc s
Robert
A MEANS
Cha
ltm
,
d
ted
111
1952.
MIAMI ( UP! I - Cub a n
S urn vurs
Includ e
two
Premier Fidel Castro sa ys
da
ug
ht
ers.
Mrs.
Marjorie
Bali
,
women 's libera tion is a mea ns
of
achi ev ing
e('onomic Rt i. Cheste r . Mrs. Douglass
Ma yn ard . Col umbu s: three
developme nt .
sons,
.J ohn of Mason; Robert,
In a n address to me mbe r s of
of
Clifton.
and Oris , Point
CUba's construction mdustry,
Castro sing led out lhe role of Pleasan t . s ev e n g rand ~
Cuban women in the ind ustry , children. three sts ters . Mrs .
saying, "It has been shown that Mildred Fore cmd Mrs. Thelma
in many activttles ... women Ange l. Columbu s; Mrs. Lena
perform perfectly well a nd , in Cha ttin. Leo n. and t hree
some cases , are more careful bro the rs, Floyd , Arthu r, and
and more pr oducti ve t ha n r ha dic Steele , a ll of Dunbar
Sill' was a t:nember of the
1nen."
Um
ted Me th odis t Churc h.
The addre::;s was broadcast
F
unl'l'i-11
se rvices will be held
over Havcuw Hadio a nd m o ni ~
at
1
·
l()
p.m
. Wednesday at the
tored here.
Fog lesong Funeral Home at
Mason wi th the Hev . George
One wa y to ge t the Vt:•g et a · Host h~t r offt c tatin g Bunal will
bles out or so up IS to gr o\\' a be tn Lone Oa k Ce metery
mu stache.
Fnc nds will be received at the
fun eral hom e afte r 3 p.m.

.
Local Bowling

PCB BOYS

Sfiln dtn q s

Ph
77
68

Te."'m
7 tde s Sp o rt Stwp
I-IC'Q &lt;ltta I n

Younq

s Su per Ma r k et

Sm.th Nel so n M o t or s
T f'nlh 1 r &lt;l llll?rS

N el so n D ruq Co
Htqh •nd•v •dua l g am e
Smi tll ?OS , C Bac hn e r 182
$('co n d hig h tn d ga m e
B
Po rter 198 P C ar son 180
Ht q h ser •es
C Smt ih 58J .
C B a c h ne r .!9 7
Secon d htgh se rte s
A L
P he lps . J r 56 6 . P Car so n 48 1
Tec"'l" h ig h game
Z t de s
SporT Shop 70J
Tea m h tQil se r •es
Spa r t Sh o p 10 17
Tri · County League
Sta ndmg s

Team

PIS

)0
Catl og M e r ch a n t s
R a wl1 n g s Auto P~rt s
70
1H &amp; R Fi r es t on e
S8
R oach's G un Sh op
Pom er oy Ce ment B l ock Co
52
M •dw es t Steel Co
H tq h tndt v tdua l ga me - D a l e
Se ar ~

,
"

25 6
Secon d hig h i nd ga me
8 t il
R n df ord 755
H tqll sene s
J e tt W•l son
D&lt;t VI S

"'

Secon d h 1gh se r te s
E Vos s
il n d B latn e Car t er 606
T eam h 1g h g~m e - Po mer oy
Cem ent Bl oc k Co a n d H &amp; ~
F •r e s ton e 9 .1J
Te a m htqh ser• es
M•dw es t
Sl ce l Co :?689

POMEROY LANES
Late Mo nda y Ntgh t Mtxed

December2 , 1974

Won L os t

WAR IN EVITABLE
ROME (UP! I - King Hussein of Jordan sa id in an interview wtth an Italian
magr:IZme he be lieves a new
Middle East War is inevitab le
ond th1s time it may be fought
with atomic weapons.
" I don't even ask if the
disaster can be avoided . I only
ask how long 1t can be postponed," Hussein said in the
interview publi shed in the
current issue of the weekly
1'Europeo magazine .
Hussein blamed the hardening of positions in the Middle
East on the Rabat surmnit last
October where Arab leaders
recogn ized the Palestinian Lib- ,
eratwn Orga nization as the
sole rep r esentative of the
Palestinia ns.

..

MEIG S THEATRE

MON th r u THURSDAY

DEC . 9 12

NOT OPEN

I"I'Sitlt•JII

Lanham
O •ntmued from page 1

·Dec &lt;1.1974

todt~ y

by

For·mt•r

Po m eroy B owlt rtCJ L:l u ~ :.
E.u l v Wedn e sday
MDted L eague

:1

?let. '?r.

'

Co rn er Bar
100
20
J ac k s C lub
84
36
60
60
N o '1
M •d' Pom Sunoco
48
72
No J
36
El2
No 1
JO
90
High Women Game - Mar y
'loss 192 . Rheba H ys e ll 189 .
Mary vos s 185 High Men l nd
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1!;17 . Larrv

1~84 , ~d Vo ss 175
H tgh Ser1es , Women
Ma r y
Voss 547. Ellen Ro ug ht 490 ,
Naom1 F loyd 486 Men H i gh
Ser,es Ed voss 536 , L a rry
Dug a n 488 , Jef f Wt lso n 468

T eam H tgh Game Mid
Pom Sunoc:o 696
Team H ig h Sert es - Corner
Ba r 1990

LODGE TO MEET
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will mee t
Thursday at 7:30 p ,m . at the
hall he re. All master masons
are invited .
LADIES TO DINE
CHESTER - The Ladies
Auxi liary of the Chester Fire
Dept. will hold its Christmas
dm ner Sun da y at 5 p.m.
Members are asked to bring a
covered d1sh.
HITE CONFINED
John C. Hile, Middleport , is
confmed to Holzer Medical
Ce nter , Room 501. He became
ill while in Gallipolis and was
taken to the hospital by the
Gallipolis ER squad.

Gift Sale . . .One Week Only

He r man B. John so n, 68,
Bella ire, formerly of Me1gs
County . ct ted SundaY morning
followm g a shor t Illness.
The son of the late Philip a nd
Della Rcifer Johnson, he had
bee n a resident of Mmersville
several years, having followed
coa l rnm ing in Meigs Coun ty
and Charleston . He had worked
for the Powhattan Mines in
Ohto and was disabled in an
acc1dent about 25 years ago.
Surviving are hi s wife,
Ehzahe th F:piseto J ohnson ; a
daug hte r, Mary Ann Krauter,
Co lumbus: a so n, Philip
Johnson. 111 V1rginia; a sister,
Es ther Kramer, Englewood,
Ca lif ; five grandchildren ; a
brother, Cur tis D Johnson,
Rae me. a nd sever al nieces and
nephews .
A sister, Stella, and h1s
parents preceded h1m m death
Funeral se rv1ces will be held
at 10 a.m . Wednesda y at the
Rau ksec ht Fune ral Home m
Bellaire with burial there also.
Frie nd s may call at the fune ral
home from 7 to 9 th is eve ning
and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

Elmer Kaber of
Albany is dead
FW1eral se rvices for E lmer
Ervin Ka iser, 69, Albany, who
d1ed Sunday in Holzer Medical
Center , a retired auto body
mechanic in Athens, will be
held Tuesday a t 1: 30 p. m . at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
in Mas on . The Rev . James H.
Lew is w1ll officiate, and burtal
will be in Gr aham Cemetery.
Friends will be received at the
funeral home after 3 p. m .
today.
Mr. Kaiser was born August
8, 1905 at West Jefferson, Ohio,
a son of the late Fred and Rose
Kaiser .
He is survived by his wife.
Loret ta McDaniel Kaiser,
Albany ; one daughter , Mrs.
Jo hnn y (Lucy ) Murphy ,
Louisville, Ky .; a stepdaug hter, Mrs. Boyd (Audrey)
Kinzel , Rt . 2, Pomeroy; a
bro t her, Lawrence Kaiser ,
Columbus; five grandchildren,
two stepchildren, and several
nieces and nep hews.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. John
Bigelow, Mtddleport ; Marjorie
Rainey, Henderson; Mrs. Okty
Jord a n, Henderson; Mrs .
Theodore Smith , Leon; Vickie
Jeffers , Gallipolis; Theodore
Stevens , Point Pleasant;
Charles Westmoreland , Cottageville; Mrs . John Hoffman,
Mason ; David Robert, Point
Pleasant; Milliard Blackburn,
Vinton ; Bertha Plants, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . Harry Varian,
Clifton; Mrs. Ferrell Kiser,
Point
Pleasant;
David
Sullivan, Leon; Mrs. Jerry
Byus, son, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Gary Rainey, twin
daughters, Apple Grove;
Dennis Shinn, Mt. Alto; Carter
Sandlin, Patriot; Glenn Jones,
Gallipolis Ferry ; Bertha
Plants, Point Pleasant; Mrs .
John
Bonecutter,
P oint
Pleasant; Mrs. Jack Stegall,
Gallipoli s ; John Weekly ,
Mason; Myrtle Sayre, Point
Pleasant ; Arthur Koenig,
Reedsville ;
Mrs .
Paul
Rayburn, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Myrtle
Thomas,
Point
Pleasant, and Nelma Saunders, Buffalo.

AVOCADO
YELLOW

Compact in Size,
Big in Features!

The PALETTE • Ft335
Add a splash of, color! Famous Zen ith
quality chassis with solid-state mod ules,
so lld ~s tate tu ning syslem and Zen i th
Royalty Crest Tubes. Light enough to go
wh ere you go, toug h enough to lake it.

Reg_ $109.95
This Sale.

,N~rN The qua hty goes m before the name goes on :

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$88

INGELS FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT
OPEN EVENINGS

Gift-A-Rama Store

UP TO 14 INCHES OF WIND-DRIVEN SNOWtathe
mountains of Texas and New Mexico Sunday. Wit.l
to
more than 50 miles per hour in the mountain passe( 1' ' uthern
Ca)Uornia .
'"
· "
Five inches of snow, lashed to 50 m .p.h. winds, fell at
Guadalupe Pass in southwest Texas and uo to 14 inches
blocked the passes at higher elevations in New Mexico.
Travelers advisories, which went into effect Sunday, were
discontinued early today .
ATHENS - THOUSANDS OF CHANTING GREEKS danced
in the streets today, celebrating an overwhelming, two-t~ne
referendum vote to reject the monarchy. "Let's turn the palace
into a school ," celebrants shouted as Athenians converged on
downtown Constitution Square, waving flags, blowing car horns
and shaking hands.
Greeks voted by a resounding 68.8 to 31.2 per cent margin iJi
Sunday's referendum to live in a republic and abolish tbe 142year&lt;J id monarchy. With 92 per cent of the hallots counted, there
were 2,899,282 votes in favor of a republic and 1,318,827 in support
of a monarchy .
The republicans won large margins in the traditional
monarchist bastions of southern Greece as well as in the country 's antimonarchist urban centers. The decision cleared the
way for the Greek parliament, holding Its first session toda~, to
begin work on a new constitution and prepare for presidential
elections.
CLEVELAND - FORTY-FIVE PERSONS, displaced by a
fire of undetermined origin at the Hawley House Hotel in the
downtown section here Saturday, were being cared for today by
Red Cross Officials.
The blaze clatmed the life of city Fireman John McNamee,
31, Avon, and injured 12 other persons - including six firemen .
Witnesses said the fire was punctuated by explosions that blew
out windows in the once-fashionable structure. A damage
estimate was not immediately released .

Reverse is not expected
our public institutiortB and
processes, that this Is an Important thing to do ."
Gllllgan said he would gQ to
court against Secretary of
State Ted Brown If he did not
get a proper rec01mt.
"We're going to press Mr .
Brown to do what the law
provides in a recoWlt, to see to
it that every ballot and every
vote Is COWlted again, and
counted in front of witnesses,"
he said.
"If there's any doubt about
the ballot, then there are
provisions
that
It
be
challenged, and If Mr. Brown
doesn 't understand the law, he
needs some instruction on lt.
We have no reservations of
taking him into court and
getting him instructed."

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Gov.
John J. Gilligan said today he
doubted If the secretary of
state's recount of the Ohio
November hallots would keep
him in office.
"It is highly unlikely that the
result (of the election) will be
reversed,'' Gilligan said.
"The purpoSI! of the recount
is to convince or help to convince the people of Ohio that
the electorial procedures that
we use a nd the counting
methods that we use are
capable of producing an honest
a nd accurate count of the
votes ... that the person who
received most of the votes is
the one declared elected.
"I think that in this period of
eroding public confidence in

Open Tonight Til 9
SHOP TUESDAY 9:30 TO 9

Save During Our
Storewide Sale
0/_ OFF*

2

/0

'

All Regular Priced Merchandise
*Women's and Girls Apparel
*Lingerie and Accessories
*Men's and Boys Apparel
*Linens, Draperies, Domestics

State says witness

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of only three of its kind, was not built according to Its

VOL. XXVI Nu.

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i tes~'!"!~teln told the threemember court the bridge, one ~
~~gn.

Design plans, he said, called for a yield factor of safety
~ of I.75, but was built only for 1.5, he said.
~ "The factors of safety were much too low to comply with
:;,: good engineering practice," the engineer said.
§!
Lichtenstein, who frequenUy employed a blackboard to
~ demonstrate his mathematics, reviewed in detail the
;:,: design and construction of the span, which was supported
~~ by a linking chain of eyebars.
~:l
He agreed that removal of a single pin from one of the
;&gt;: 50-foot eyebars would have caused the bridge to collapse,
but suggested that the span could have been inspected If a
i~ temporary support system had been employed.
&gt;~
"A system would have been constructed where cables
:::l were used to support the bridge on a temporary basis
while the inspection took place," he said.
~,
Lichtenstein agreed such a task would have been "a
very major undertaking," costing in the neighborhood of
·••• $2 to $2.5 mlllion.
ngln
~-,»~ duFallure of thele br~dghe, accordindg to the e
. eer_. ":das
e to extrem y hlg stress an some corrosion ms1 e
~~ the head of the C-13 eyebar.
!$ He said th~ state should have inspected the bridge upon
§l Its purchase in 1941, then approximately every two years
~~ thereafter. The structure was built in 1928.
~
Following collapse of the span, the state tore down a

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The world's third bridge supported by a linking eyebar
chain, the F1orlanopolis Brldge,in Brazil, is still standing.

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hi Our Toy Store Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday-!'- 2-3 P.M.

--

FREE CUSTOMER PARKING ~N SECOND STREET
AND AT OUR MEatANIC STREET WARBtOUSE

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By United Press International
WASHINGTON -NELSON A. ROCKEFELLER today was
assured of easy Senate approval to be the nation's 41st vice
president. Despite opposition from conservative Republl~ns,
including Sen. Barry Goldw~ter, R-Ariz., Rockefeller was hailed
in Senate debate Monday on both sides of the aisle as "highly
qualified" to hold the country's second highest office.
The Senate vote was scheduled for 3 p.m. EST today. The
House Judiciary Committee is expected to clear the nomination
later this week, with the full House voting on final confirmation
next week.
·
Goldwater said he would vote against the 86-year&lt;Jld
multimillionaire because Rockefeller had used his vast wealth to
buy "political power." Rockefeller opposed Goldwater for the
1964 presidential nomination.

DETROIT - FORD MOTOR CO. Chairman Henry Ford U
said Monday the No. 2 automaker will cut capital expenditures
next year bY more than 11 per~~ from .thls .year's record $900
m11llon because of Its sharp prol1t drop.
Ford said about $100 mlllion of-the $800 mlllioli the company
spends next year will be to meet U. S. government safety,
damageablllty and pollution control regulations. The finn had
expected to spend more than $1 billion this year, before the auto
sales slump. More than 3 m1111011 square feet of floor space will be
added to Ford worldwide facillties in 19T.i, nearly hal£ in North
America . Ford will complete expan8ion projects at 13 locations
1n the United States next year with the largest being 277,9110
square feet for addiUonal Steel Division facilities at the Rouge
oomplex in Dearborn.
'
OOLUMBUS- THE NATION'S DEEPENING recession
combined with Wiation has_resulteil ,in more Ohio famllles
seeking Aid to Dependent Children benefits, omclals announced
· Mooday. Slate Welfare DlrectorCharles W. Bates Said the two
factors apparenUy eaused an lOIIE!l'Pected Increase in the ADC
recipient count July through September, the llr~t quarter of the

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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7.

Briefsl

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en tine

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

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CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UPI ) - A veteran consulting §:.
1:1
engineer has charged the state of West Virginia failed to :·~
completely evaluate the Silver Bridge after il was purchased 33 years ago.
More testimony was expected todlly from A.G.
Lichtenstein, the lone wilness Monday when the state
Court of Claims resumed its landmark trial stenuning
from the Dec. 16, 1967, bridge fallure which killed 46
persons.
Atotal of $6.5 mlllion in damages is sought on behalf of
56 claimants who contend the state was negligent in
maintaining the 1,500-foot bridge before it collapsed into
:
llle Ohio River at Point Pleasant.
"'
Lichtenstein, an engineer of Teaneck, N.J ., who has designed and evaluated about 2,000 bridges, said the state ~
shbri?duld have made a complete evaluation of the suspension ,.,
ge after It was purchased in 1941.
:;::
"It behooved the state of West Virginia right then and
there for' It to find out what it (bridge) was all about," he :~

11 ~ews •. zn

r1 Bring Your Children To See Santa Claus

OFFICE HOURS 9:'30-TO 12, 2 TO 5 !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
POMEROY'

• ; I

Szlver Brzdge was
never evaluated by

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.*Notions, Greeting Cards, Gift Wrap
*Records, Tapes, Instruments
*Housewares, Giftwares
*Furniture and Furnishings.
*Toys, Games, Bicycles
*sAtE PRICES DO NOT APPLY TO PRIOR SALES, LA\fls,
MAJOR APPLIANCES AND HOME ELECTRONICs

N. W. CQMPTON, 0. D.

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The first reading of an or- Wedneoday so that testing can
dinance ·which will pr&lt;ivide · be' carried • out.- All · lines in
approximately 10 pet. salary Middleport were flushed
increases for village employes Sunday night, he said.
was unanimously approved
. The group discussed the
Monday night by Middleport contract between Pomeroy and
Village Council.
Middleport through whic h
The ordinance, if approved in Pomeroy provides Middleport
two more readings, would with two and half million
increase salaried employes 10 gallons of water each month
per cent and hourly employes for $1,000. Chase said the fee is
35 cents an hour . Mayor Fred reasonable with the amount of
Hoffman indicated that the expense involved. However , he
wage hike, including increase said Pomeroy had bee n
for water and sewage depart- notified that water from
ment workers will cost Mid- ·Pomeroy will be turned off any
dleport about $8,000 annually . time that il becomes muddy.
COIJilcilman James Brewer
Councilman Marvin Kelly
admitted the increased cost was advised to Inform Roscoe
will be hard on the village, but Fowler that a two-foot removal
supported it because if several of curbing will be permitted
good employes quit to seek near the end of an alley close to
more rewarding employmenl it his home. It was indicated that
would be a greater hardship . the rem.,.al must be done with
Council discussed the water the approval of Chase .
situation with maintenance
Mrs. Jean Craig, council
supervisor Harold Chase. He woman, said that one resident
said that during the recent had requested a shield over the
problem in Pomeroy, the traffic light on Third Ave ., to
Middleport water did not test enable motorists to see the
unsafe.
colors be tter when sun hits the
However, he said that five light. She also told of several
tests a day started on Monday requests for alley imand will be made through provements, and sewer im-

YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT HEADQUARTERS.

MARKET REPORT
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
December7, 1974
Sales Report Of
Ohio Valley l.Jvestoek Co.
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 20 to
24.75; 300 to 400 lbs. 21.50 to 28;
400 to 500 lbs. 20 to 25.50; 500 to
600 lbs. 22 to 28; 600 to 700 lbs.
21.50 to 30; 700 lbs. and Over
22.50 to 33.
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
300 lbs. 18 to 24; 300 to 400 lbs .
17.50 to 22.75; 400 to 500 lbs. 18
to 23; 500 to 600 lbs. 20 to 23.85 ;
600 to 700 lbs. 21 to 28.25; 700
lbs. and Over 20 to 31.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULUi (By
.The Head) -Stock Cows 110 to
165 ; Stock Cows and Calves 150·
to 265; Stock Bulls 125 to 210;
Baby Calves 5 to 25; (By The
Pound) - Canners &amp; Cutters
Cows 11 to 17.75; Holstein Cows
19 to 21; Commercial Bulls
(1,000 lbs. and Over) 21 to 'n.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 40 to 48; Medium 200
lbs. to 300 'n to 37 ; Culls 20 to
31.

OPTOMETRIST

Continued from page 1
,
program. President Ford has proposed his own $2.5 billion
temporary job program.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

1b(l

TUESDAY, Dt.CEMBt.R 10, 1974

TEN CENTS

::=::·:~:::::~:~::::::::&amp;:::::~::::::::~~~::·:iS:::::~:~:~:::o:::::::-:::::s~:«!::~S?-·:::~~=·=•::~'8!&amp;'~':!~».::::::::::::::::::::~.::::::::::::&amp;::--::::::::::w.o!'.:-.:».:::o».:'/#..W

Meigs mines reopened

ea S l er credit
_.

try officials began to direct
By RICHARD HUGHES
their attention more to fighting
UPI Business Writer
The Federal Reserve Board recession than inflation.
Henry Ford II, chairman of
moved quickly Monday to
Ford Motor Co., told a news
stlmulale the economy by
extending easier credit for briefing in New York the
Federal Reserve " kept monebusiness expansion.
tary policy too tight for too
In other developments, Genlong."
eral Motors lowered car prices,
He ~aid the money supply,
two sugar companies lowered
has increased at less
which
prices and Henry Ford
than 3 per cent since June,
suggested the federal governneeds to increase at a 6-per
ment lower income taxes.
cent level.
The Reserve Board, a
"The longer this step is
autonomous. goverrunent body
·
delayed,
the longer the recesthat regulates the nation's
money supply , relaxed its sion will last.. ." Ford said.
The auto executive a lso
monetary policy slightly by
called upon Congress to cut
lowering the interest rates it
charges hanks for loans of income taxes by 10 per cent to
encourage conswner spending,
reserve funds.
The Federal Reserve Board raise gasoline taxes and tmrarely explains Its actions pose an excise tax on all
publicly, but the lower rate was petroleum to cut fuel conviewed as a signal to banks to swnption and provide public
service jobs for the unemcontinue lowering their prime
interesl rates for their best ployed.
Unless the government acts
corporate customers.
quickly,
Ford said, the recesWells Fargo Bank .of San
sion will get worse and perhaps
lead to a depression .
Francisco was the first to
He said-he would like to meet
react, loWering its prime rate personally with President Ford
from 10 1k lo 101'• per cent. First to convince him that recession
National City Bank has held Its and not inflation is the nation's
rate at 10 per cent for two major problem.
weeks.
The White House announced
The Fed's action came as that the President would make
government and private indus- an address on the economy

Wednesday night but Press
Secretary Ron Nessen said he
could not Say whether Ford
planned any new economic
programs.
Nessen said Friday, after the
Novembe• unemployment rate
of 6.5 per cent was announced,
that Ford had nothing new to
add to his economic proposals
previously submitted to Congress.

In other developments:
- Goverrunent officials
warned Americans to beware
of fast buck artists, rapid price
changes and hidden costs when
the ban on gold bullion
ownership is lifted Dec. 31. At
the same time, banking officials laid down stiff guidelines
for financial institutions
dealing in gold.
- Thousands of coal miners
scheduled to end a month-long
strike Monday turned around
and went home when they
found mines picketed by
construction workers who are
still negotiating with mine
owners.
- The stock market did not
react as favorably as expected
to lower Federal Reserve interest rates. "There's too much
uncertainty "
about
the
economy, said one analyst. The
Dow Jones industrial index
which hit a 12-year low Friday
rose 2.34 Monday to 579.94 in an
up and down day.
-Two major sugar companies, Amstar and Sucres!,
,
lowered their wholesale prlees
for the second consecutive
week. Grocery sugar wa s
provements which will be were received and placed at lowered 3.6 cents.\.,a. pound to
necessary on.Beech St., across three entrances-. of the town 65.9 cents.
' ...
from the Middleport Church of were not properly worded,
-General Motors Corp. cut
the Nazarene , were reviewed. Chase said: They have been prices of its cars by $13 in the
Councilman Ailen Lee King taken down and new sig ns first reduction by any auto
again brought up speeding on ordered .
company since the goverrunent
A discussion was held on the removed its
Middleporl Hill and Police
mandatory
Chief J. J. Cremeans said the need of new radio equipment. requirement for the Ignition
hill will be given a ttention by Chief Creme a ns s aid that interlock system.
eqmpment is need ed at village
his department.
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate ' hall and in the police cruiser.
told council that a trustee will The chief and several council
Veterans Memorial Hospital
be appointed for the welfare members will study th e
Admitted - Russell Junior
building and some deciswn problem . Council approved the Tucke r , Racine; Glennie
made on what can be done mayor's re port for November L1ttle , Middl eport; Jam es
about a new hea tin g and showing $2,935 in fines and fee s Eakins, Racine; Edna Stiles,
cooling system 'which is needed and $119 in merchant police Pomeroy ; Viola Edwards,
there. Chase advised coWlcil collections for a total of $3,054. Middlepor t,
Prayer preceding the session
that it cannot wait until spring
Discharged
Barbara
to install the new equipment. was by Rev . Dwight Zavitz. McDa niel , Brenda Hood ,
A discussion was held on the Attending were Chase, Grate, Carolyn Clonch, Ella Roush,
posting of sign, d~aling with a Mayor Hoffman , and council Kenneth Turley , Jr ,, Patricia
recent decision of council not to members William Walte r s, Pauley, David Varner, Tammy
penni! through truck traffic in Carl Horky, Brewer, Mrs. Varner , Patricia Hoffman .
the community . Signs which Cra ig, Kelly and King .

10% pay boost Proposed

COURSE COMPLETED
Ainnan First Class Robert
M. Richards, ,son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert W. Richards of Rt.
4, Pomeroy. has graduated at
Sheppard AFB, Tex., from the
U. S. Air Force electrical
power specialist course conducted by the Air Training
Command. He is a 1974
graduate of Meigs High School.

Full Zen1th quality and dependability, now
in a ra1 nbow of co lors. Our lowest priced
Ze n 1th TV!

Continued from page I
Saturday.
Picketing, the telegram said,
would only ha mper t he
negotiations.
District officers also told the
workerstt tentative agreement
would be reached soon.
But a faction of disgrunted
western Kentucky miners, opposed to Miller leadership a nd
the contract, traveled through
the coal fields Sunday seeking
to disrupt the back.(o-work
movement.
" We may be going back to
work, but we're going back
under protest, " said Ernest
Moore, of UMW District 23, a
stronghold of fonner union
President W. A. "Tony" Boyle.
Moore said Miller used
"scare tactics" to win ratification of the main coal contract
last week by telling them a vote
to reject would prolong the
strike severa l more weeks .
Moore said his group contacted miner s in 111inois,
Pennsylvania, Wyoming,
Arizona, Kentucky and West
Virginia, urging them to honor
all picket lines and e ncouraging construction
workers to "picket everywhere" until the re is a settlement.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Elmer Kiser , Albany;
Marvin Darst, Pomeroy ;
Mildred Ward, Pomeroy; Roy
Ellis, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Elmer Kiser , Franklin
Wolfe , Ma rk Riggs, Paul
Reitmire , Carl Moodispaugh,
Dorothy Jenkins, Barbara
Brown, Wanda Bennett, Marcy
Owens, Kenneth Roush .
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Carolyn Clonch, Middleport ;
Dorothy Driggs, Cambridge;
Melvina Davidson, Pomeroy;
Gregory Boatright, Lon g
Bottom; Kathy Sigman,
Letart, W.
Va . ;
John
McLau g hlin , Pomeroy ;
Debora Oliver, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Grover Klein , Mildred Arnold,
Dick Vaug han, Marabe lle
Frecker.

DIVORCE GRANTED
One divorce was filed and
another granted in Meigs
.County Common Pleas Court.
Cheryl Lee Fry, Middleport,
filed suit against Jerry
Leonard Fry, Middleport,
charging gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruefty , and
Marcelene Katherine Wilson
was granted a divorce from
Carl H. Wilson .

,
DIAGONAL

1949, spo ke fir st dur ing
Saturday's banquet. Before
announcing h1s resignation as
head footba ll coach at Worthington High Sc hool, Wion listed
four ingredients of .life preparation, presen tati on,
applica tion and eva luation. He
discussed each briefly.
Wion, who has been coaching
21 yea r s, compiled an overall
136-58-5 caree r r ecord at
Barnesville, Martins Ferry,
Cov ington , Howe H1gh School
in Indtanapolis, and Worthington.
At Worthington, Wioncoached teams lost only 10
games m seve n years . A
member of the tough Ohio
Conference, Worthington won
one title outri gh t, shared
a nothe r a nd finished second
five times.
Wion told the Art Lanham
Day audience that he pla ns to
spend more time with his wtfe
(the former Leah Thompson of
Ga llipolis) an d d a ugh ter
Kri s ta!, a sophomor e at
Worthmgton High School.
He pla ns to remain on the
faculty at Worthington. " If I
see I won't be happy out of the
coach ing r anks, I'll return ,"
Wwn concluded.
Dr . A. R . Christen se n,
president of Rio Grande
Co lle ge, introdu ced g uests.
Among those in traduced were
the fow- 1974 Hall of Fame
1nductees - Dr . Ra ymon
Allison , Ga llipoli s; Walter
Cook, South Webster ; David W.
Smith, Chesapeake and Bob
Mabry, Dayton .
Members of the 1974-75
basketball squad, cheerleaders
and trainers were also introduc ed, along with Mrs.
Edna Deeds, first homecoming
queen and Toni Miller, 1974
queen.
Coach Leith presented Coach
Lanh a m Saturday night 's
game ball with autographs of
former a nd current R10 Gr ande
College players.
Patty Forgey presented Mrs.
Doris Lanha m 15 longstemmed roses ~ one for each
year s he and Coach Lanham
have been at Rio Grande .
Lanham also reCeived an
e ngraved plaque for his untiring effor ts in the a thletic
program at.Rio the past decade
and a half.
Prof. Paul l.Joyd read a
message from Mrs. Peggy
Th omas, Oak Hill, director of
alumni af£airs. Mrs. Thomas is
r ecovering from an illness and
was unable to attend this
year's ceremony.
Following the banquet ,
Marietta College defeated Rio
Grande 67-47 in a defensive
struggle. A homecoming dance
followed at the Elks Hall in
Gallipolis.

News ... in Brief$.

Pickets

,.

:l.

i.:-,:

.
:·::_
.

'.,:·.~_·:;,

:;;
..,

By United PresslnternaUonal
Four of live coal mines ln,Ohlo closed because ol picketing by con~truction workers
Monday were open and operating normally today, according to United Mille Workent
Dlstrlbt 6 President John Guzek.
Guzek said between 200 and 300 miners •till were off the job at a Peabody Coal Co.,
mine in Coshocton, Ohio, today because ol picketing by coutruction workent. Pickets
were being asked to leave, he said, because tentative agreement on a contract bad been
reached with the Association of Bituminous Contractors.
·
. ., Construction workers at a North American Coal Co., mine In Monroe County, OhJo,
and a !three mines in Me igs County, Ohio, complied with a request to 11ft pickets beeause
ol the agreement, said Guzek. Between 400 and 500 mloent were hack on the job at the
lour mines today .

::~:.!=!~::!:~~:!:::::::::::::::::::.~=~~=:.::::::.::--:~:x:::::::::o::::::::::::::::*::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-.:::::::::::!-:::::::::::::::-..;:::;.oo::::=:::=:::=:::-o:w:::-.::w.«o:;·

Mills won't try
for chairmanship
did not talk direcUy with Mills
WASHINGTON I UP I I exhaustion .
Speaker Carl Albert sa id today
His position as chairman of but that a Erlend oE the
Rep . Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark ., Ways and M~ans has made him Arkansas congressman had
will not seek the chairmanship one of the m ost powerful men done so this morning.
"The final determination of
of th e Way s an d Means in Congress but that power has
Committee because of his substantially decreased In the his future has not been made,"
hea lth ,
controversy surrounding his Albert said , " The main thing is
fri
endship with a Washington he is not a candidate for
Albert said he spoke this
morning with Mills' doctor at stripper, Annabel Battistella .' cha irman of Ways and Means
Bethesda Naval Hospital and
Mills recently appeared on by reason of his health.
" He does not think he can
was told that on the advice of stage in Boston with the
stay
on that job ... The doctor
his doctor, "he is not going to stripper, who goes under the
seek the chairmanship on the professional name " Fanne thought tl1at was a wise
~ ommtttee
on ways a nd Foxe". Albert told newsme n he decision .' '
means ."
Mills, 65, is in his 18th term in
Congress, but Albert sa id a
decision on whether he w1ll
resign from the committee
en tirely , or perhaps from
Congress, has not been made .
" The medical processes
have not been completed and
may not be for a while, " Albert
RUTLAND - 0. 0. Pat- children.
Besides his parents, Pat1
told newsmen. ' His oth er terson, 74, Main St., former
terson
was preceded In death
decisions - staying on !lle s uperintendent of Meigs
by
a
brother, Lawrence, in
committee or whatever else County Schools and formerly a
will be made later ."
repre se ntative from Meigs World War I, and an Infant
Mills has been in Bethesda County to the Ohio General daughter , Jeanne .
Funeral services will be held
Naval Hospital tot. treatment .. ,Asflembly , died MondBy
of wliat was 'described.. as ·eviminj(iit Veterans Memorial' at 2 p.m:' Tliur!idltf at the
Hospital following a lingering Hysell Run Free Methodist
Chw-ch with the Rev. CecU
'?.&lt;i!l!l!l•lllllll!W&lt;..~""::::
.••::;:;;;:;;;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;;;~;: illness.
Wise and the Rev. Paul Neville
31,
1900,
at
Born
on
Oct.
EMPWYMENT OFF
officating.
Burial will be In the
Ca dmus, in Gallia Cou nty
COLUMBUS I UPI) - The
Patterson was the son of the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Ohio State University Center
Friends may call at the
late
Daniel 0. and Katie Isaac
for Business and Economic
Walker
Funeral Home In
Patterson.
He
married
the
Research said today October
Rutland until12 noon Thursday
former
Audrey
Mills
on
Nov.
employment of production
when the body will be taken to
14, 1925.
worke rs and oth er non·
Patterson spent 42 years in the church where It will lie in
supervisory personnel In the
the
field of educalron, serving state . The family will receive
slate declined 2 per cent
as superintendent of the Meigs friends at the funeral home
from October, 1973, levels.
County schools 17 years, 1949- from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9 p.m.
The ce nter said em1966. He was a member of the Wednesday.
ployment for the first 10
Ohw
House of Representatives
months · of 1971 In the
in 1948 but resigned In 1949 to
ca tegory - which excludes
the county superinaccept
agricultural, governmental
tendent's
post. He retired in
and public education em1966.
ployes - was down 1 per
He was a member of tlle
cent from the ~orresponding
Hysell
Run Free Methodist
period last year.
Church whe re he served as a
Ken Morgan, direc tor of the
teac he r , Sunday
Sc hool
Southeastern
Ohio Emergency
superintendent and a· trustee
and was a lifetime member of Medical Service, and David
the Southeastern Ohio Athletic Fry, attorney, asked the Meigs
County commissioners today to
League Officials Assn.
Surviving besides his wife proceed to form a corporation
the bells ; Sc ott See lb ac h, are a son, Paul, Rutland , a of SEOEMS.
Cindy Parker , the tam- daughter , Mrs. Harold (June)
The commissioners agreed
bourines ; Kris Sn owden,
to
appoint three persons to the
Dew hurst of Rutland ; a sister,
J e nnifer Meadows , Mar gie Mrs . William (Marie 1 Adams corporation board later.
Miller, Paula Swisher, Paula of Marion and nine grandMe mbers of the Meigs
Horton, Tracy Hermann, Tina
Cou nty Health Depa r tment
Stewart, and Tamii Hart, the
also met with the comrhythmettes. The chmr officers
missioners in regard to the
are Sammy Plants, president;
hearing division budget.
and Tamii
Hart,
vice
James Roush,
county
president.
a uditor , wa s granted permission to attend a board of
Steve Jones, Meigs - Gallia - taxation mee ung in Columbus
Ma son
District
Scout Thursday and Friday. AtExecutive, today announced a tending were Robert Clark,
change in the meeting site for Henry Wells and Warden Ours,
Thur s da y's
Dec e mber tommissi oners, and Martha
Roundtable conference.
Chambers, clerk.
The meeting will be held a t
the Episcopal Chw-ch, 810 Main
St., in Pt. Pleasant. It was
552 deer killed
originally scheduled at the
Kyger Creek Recreation
in Meigs County
Center.
In charge of discussions
The deer kill in Meigs CoWlty
Thursday are Joan Stewart, last week during the gun
den mothers; Nancy Filkins, season was 552 according to
den leaders ; Bill Wise , Gary Swope, local game
Webelos; Nick Salem, cub- protector, up 35 to 40 pet. over
masters and Bob Matthews, last year. In zone four, which
scoulmasters.
includes 30 counties, 6,389 deer
were killed ,
A list of persons in Meigs
County who killed deer will be
published next week when It Is
compiled, Swope said.

0. 0. Patterson
of Rutland dies

Board will

appoint 3

Youngsters will sing of Christmas
"Song of Christmas" will be
presented by th e newly
organized choir of second,
third and fourth graders at the
Middleport Elementary School
under the direction of Mrs.
Gladys .Foley, music teacher .
The program, the first by the
young_sters, will be presented
twice Monday, first at 9 a.m.
for the school children, then at

7:30p.m. a t a regular Parents - and Paula Horton . A special
soloist will be Amy Erwin and
Teachers Assn . meeting.
Sel ec tions in c lud e ensemble soloists will be
"Carolling,
Caro llin g," Jennifer Meadows , Cher i
"C hri s tma s
H y mn ," Thomas, Tra cy Herman, Pam
"Amazing Grace," "Christ- Walburn , Zandra Vaughan,
mas, " "Do You Hear What I Sammy Plants, Earl Wines,
Hea r1," " Let There Be Peace K1m Fraley, Tami Hart, Craig
on Earth," " Silver Bells," and Darst and Beth Ann Wolfe.
Instrumentalists will be
"The Candy Man ."
Narrators are Kris Snowden Sammy Plants and Earl Wines,

Scout event is

moved to Point

FILES SUIT

SCHOOL CHOm -This Choir made up of second, third
'and fourth graders of the Middleport Elemenlary School will
present Christmas in song Monday at tbe 7:30 p.m. PTA
meeting. front , 1-l', Brian, George, Kris Snowden, Margie
Miller Paula Horten, Jennifer Meadows, Tamii Hart, Paula
Earl Wines , Tracey Hennann ; second row, Lori
Maynard, Cindy Parker, Kim Fraley, Jeff Baughman.
Melissa McMillion, Craig Darst, Charles Ohtinge~, Peggy

Swish;..,

Cremeans, 3lld Susie Pooler; third row, Pam Walburn, Troy
Bauer, Tim F1fe, Robin Ohlinger, Anita Alker, Tin!l Stewart,
Zandra Vaughan, Cheri Thl&gt;mas, Joy Stewart, Scott
Seelbach, Tammie Taylor, Beth Arm Wolfe, Susan Barker,
Amy Erwin, Jody Miller, Davl~ Hoover, and Lilla Hoffman,
with Mrs. Gladys Foley, vocal music teacher, center back.
Not present for tbe picture were Sandra Baughman, Carl
Moodispaugh , and Tonya Stobart.

SHOPPING DAYS
TO CHRISTMAS
J

Willie Harrla, 331 North
Second St., Mlddlepon. fllllcl.
suit for divorce In Melp
County Comlllon Pleaa Cwn
against James N _ a.m., •
Beech
st., Middleport,
charging III'08J neaJeel ~ d1Q .
and extr:twe cruelty.

�._~
'

By the Day

""

JUNIOR MISS CONTEST WINNERS - Susan Spears,
left, and Lou Ellen Roush, shown here walklng down the
ramp while the pageant song is being presented by John
Campbell, were the two winners Saturday night In the Mason
County Junior Miss· Pageant held at Wahama High School.

Intellectuals to
talk with Ford

..

WA,SHINGTON (UP!)- The
vice presidency is a nebulous
job a t best a nd the nominee has
not yet been confirmed, but
neverthe less, President Ford
soug ht advice today fr om some
experts lined up by Nelson
Rockefeller.
Instead of calling the men to
the White House , Ford decided
to fly to New York to confer
with Rockefeller and a group
connecte d with his "Commission on Critical Choices for
America. "
The White House said Ford
had been "a n unofficial
member of the commission for

some time.''
It was the second day· Ford
had scheduled meetings with
intellectuals. On Monday, the
Whi te House announced that
Robert A. Goldwin , a former
political scie nce professor, had
joined the staff as a special

UNUSUAL CONTRAcr
SAN DIEGO (UPI-Veteran
outfielder Bobby Tolan signed
an unusual two-year contract
with the San Diego Padres
Monday.
Tolan played last season
wiUtout a contract so was to be
paid on the basis of his 1973

/ pact. However, President Buzzie Bavasi said the contract
signed Monday gave Tolan a
boost for 1974 as well as setting
a figure for 1975.
Terms were not disclosed but
Bavasi said they represented

"a compromise."

consul tan l.
A. White House spokesman
· said Ford planned to discuss
energy matters as well as the
nat ion 's food policy, with
Rockefeller and seven commission associates, including
nuclear phys icist Edward
Teller and William J . Ronan ·chairman of the New York Port
Authority and one of the
biggest
recipients
of
Rockefeller's financial aid.
Others invited were George
D. Woods, a former president
of the World Bank; John
Foster, a former Pentagon
expert now working for TRW,
Inc.; Carroll Wilson, of the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology; Hans Marks, who
ru ns an Atomic Energy
Commission laboratory, and
lawyer Oscar Reubhausen .

Mrs . Robert Lee, Becky, Bob
Bill spent Thanksgiving day
with Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Grueser and family at Logan .
Mr. and Mrs . Dwight
Swepston and sons Steve and
Mark and friend , all of
Columbus spent Thanksgiving
day with Ralph Lee and Robert
Lee .
Mr. and Mrs . George Circle
and daughter, Cheryl, Mr. and
Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Circle and family or Columbus
spent Thanksgiving with Mrs.
Mary Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Mutli
and family of Mansfield , Miss
Dixie
Circle,
Cleveland
Heights , Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Circle and family , Racine R.
D., Miss Sonya White of
Bashan. Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Harden and family of Morning
Star, Mr. and Mrs, Carl Circle
and family of Racine R. D.
were dinner guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Homer Circle, Verna &amp;
Wavie on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Circle,
Patrice, Jason and Jerrod
spent Thanksgiving day with
Mrs. Edward Foster of
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson,
Toni of Racine , Mr. and Mrs .
Shelby Pickens and children of
Pomeroy and Warren Rose of
Racine R. D. called at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Tllvlor on Sundav.

~

i

spiral.')' tn ;d out of the room.
On the witness stand, E h rlichrnan testified that Nixon
asked him on March 30, 1973,
for advice and assistance on
Wc1tergate. Ehrlichmari intervie\...-ed sever al persons and
wrote tJ1e memo on April 13.
The report was fille&lt;i with
initial s and a bbreviations .
" JNM " IM!tchell ), it sa id,
picked targets for electronic
eavesdroppin g "in the be lief
that the opera tives would be
two or three people removed
from any CREP (Committee to
Re-elect the President ) personnel."
Afte r the buggers were
arrested. th ere " began a n
effort to insure that the five
burglars and 1Watergate masterminds E. Howard ) Hunt and
(G. Gordon) Liddy d i~ not
implicate anyone else.
"(Form er White House
Counsel) John Dean was
enlisted by John Mitchell to
seek help from the White House
in raising money to pa y subsistence and attorney fees, "
Ehrlichman wrote.
"As he apparently has for
literally months , JNM is the
key lo a full disclosure of the
facts of the Watergate nu.ltter," said Ehrlichma n, add in g
that Mitchell, unlike several
others, was unwilling to make
full disclosure.
The report drew objections

fr• ml the l~wyer s for three

other defendants: Mitchell,
former Assis ta nt Attorney
General Robert C. Mardian
and Kenneth W. Parkinson.
who had done legal work for
the reelection committee after
the break-in . EhrlichmaJ1 a nd
H . R. Ha ldeman are the other
defendants.
While Neal did not object the
report, he unleashed the an61fiest, loudest criticism.
" Now what kind of a report is
this from a man that had that
kind of knowled ge? " Neal
shouted, waving the report in
the air a nd pounding the lectern . He said Dean, on March
21, 1973 - the "growing cance r " conversation - ga ve
Nixon " lOtimes the facts" than
there were in the Ehrlichman
report.
" It is phony ... a charade,"
Nea l sa id.
" It was one co-conspirator
giving a self-servin g statement
to another co--conspirator so
th ey could rely on it if things
ever became tutstuck. It is the
ultima te in pulling the wagons
up arotutd the White House and
shove Mitchell out. "
Frates a r gued tha t the
report, which he said had been
found a few months ago at the .
bottom of a box of papers in the
While House , ought to be admitted into evidence as a "good
faith" effort.

TALKING WITH SANTA - Little seven year old, George Gibbs, a second grader at New
Haven Grade School and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Gibbs of New Haven, Is telling Santa
all about his desires and wishes lor the forthcoming Christmas hollday. This special moment
for the youngster came during the annual Winter Festival festivities Saturday, highlighted
with a parade through the community when Santa made his appearance. Inclement weather
cond'~ions forced Santa to seek shelter under an umbrella.

MARKET REPORT
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
December 7, 1974
Sales Report Of
Ohio Valley Livestock Co,
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 20 to
24.75; 300 to 400 lbs. 21.50 to 28;
400 to 500 lbs. 20 to 25.50; 500 to
600 lbs. 22 lo 28; 600 lo 700 lbs.

21.50 to 30; 700 lbs. and Over
22.50 to 33.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
300 lbs. 18 lo 24; 300 to 400 lbs.
17.50 to 22.75; 400 lo 500 lbs. 18
to 23; 500 to 600 lbs. 20 to 23.85 ;
600 to 700 lbs. 21 to 28.25; 700
lbs. and Over 20 to 31.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By
The Head( -Stock Cows 110 to
165 : Stock Cows and Calves 150

to 265; Stock Bulls 125 to 210 ;
Baby Calves 5 to 25; (By the
Pound) - Canners &amp; Cutters
Cows 11 to 17.75; Holstein Cows
19 to 21; Commercial Bulls
(1,000 lbs. and Over) 21 to 27.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 40 to 48; Medium 200
lbs. to 300 21 to 37; Culls 20 to
31.

••~

r.
I -

NEW YORK (UP!) - In a n
tutusual development for so
ea~ly in the season, the top six
teams, led by defending chamPlOD North Carolina Slate
remained in the first wee k of
balloting in lhe same order that
they were chosen in the
preseason ratings by th e
United Press International
Major College Basketball
Ratings Board .
The Woifpack, coming off a
36-1 season which included an
NCAA semifinal playoff win
over UCLA, have easily won
their fll'st four games this year
and were named the top learn
on 31 of the 39 ballots submitted
this week by the coaches.
The next five learns also are
tutbeaten, helping them to hold
their positions , UCLA, w,
received lour of the other top
designations to hold second
but is being pushed by Indlana:
3--0, which received three firstplace nods. The Bruins held a
67-jlOint lead over the Hoosiers
in the pr~n rankings, but
the lead bas slimmed down to
19 points.
Louisville, 2-0, received the
other No. 1 designation to
remain fourth, with North
Carolina, 3--0, and Southern
Cal, 3--0, fifth and sixth, respec.
tively.
Marquette, 3--0, jumped from
ninth to seven,th when South
Carolina lost lo Oklahoma
Saturday, dropping them a 1·
I record and from eighth out of
the rop 10 in the rankings.
Alabama , despite a 2-0

•
:
•
•
•
:
•
•
•
•

:

South

•

~

Kentucky 90 No . Car . 78
•
Murray St. 80 Mo . So . 75
•
Lyn chbg 89 Hmpdn -Syd n't' 82
•
Roanoke 75 Mt . St. M ry·s 69
:
Okia 87 Jacksonv i lle 69
•
So . Car . St . 97 Lander 71
11
Appla chil St . 83 N .C. -As h v l 74
.. Mid Tenn . 94 B elmont 53
•
Vanderb i ll95 T e)( . Te c h 86
:
Troy St . 79 Sam ford 68
•
Fla . 11-4 NW M issouri 51
•
Geoown Ky. 100 Oaklnd Ind . 83
: ., Western Ky . 102 Old Dom 87
Memphis St . 70 Fla . St . 69
1111
•
A labama 91 Ga . Tech 76
Midwest
111
., DayiM 90 Detroit 76
•
Kansas St. 92 Hofs t ra 60
•
Notre Dame 75 Kansas 59
:
Nrthwslrn 82 Vaipr iso 7-4
•
Illino is 77 Iowa Sl. 7l
• Mll ikn 112 Mi llon 110, o l
• Rockford 86 Belo it 73
• Neb .- Omaha 80 No . Iowa 70
:
Idaho St . 72 W~_"m i ng 66

FOR HOME. a nd FAMILY!

••

~

f, ....

I

i1

"'
'"
"'

"

"
''

By CHRIS SCHERF
UP! Sports Writer
Speed toppled a pair of
college basketball's Goliaths
Monday night .
Fifth..-anked North Carolina
dropped a 00.78 decision to
Kentucky 's fast break and
Notre Dame's full-court press
crumpled ninth -ranked
Kansas,'7ii-59.
The visiting ':'ar Heels
jumped to a 31-16 lead before
Jimmy Dan Conner piloted a
fast break that saw the
Wildcats grab a :Jll-34 by the
end of the first half.
Conner's high, arching jump
~01..11nwest

Ok ta

st. 45 E New Mex 41
Ark Coil 84 Ark . -M ntct lo 82
Hndrsn St. 76 S t . Coli Ark 53
Fr esno Sla te 74 Den\ler 67
Ariz . St . 72 Wichi ta St 70
P ~ n Am 71 Arkansas · St. 70
R 1ce 87 Hou ston Sap! 83
Kansas St . 92 Hofstra 60
New Mexico 90 St etson 82
Ce:nt~ n ~ ry 102 NW L a. 89
MiSSISSippi 84 Arkansas 7J
Mdwstrn 80 M cM urry 79
Houston eo w. Tex s t 71
S F · Austin tt7 Su i RosS 90
Va. Cmmnwllh 84 Hrdn Sm mn s
.
St Mary's 76 s w T ex st 68
UT -A r l . 70 SouthwestE.&gt;r n ·61
Adams St . 57 So. Colo . 52
We st
Utah St . 83 Sea ttl e 72
Mont . 70 San J ose St 63
Mont . St . 81 Stout 51.- 79
Purdue 91 San D i ego s t . 87
DePaul 80 Gon zaga 73
Pa c ific 70 San Fran 67

"

shots kept tbe Wildcats in front
in the second half as the
Kentucky senior finished with
a career-high 31 points. Kevin
Grevey added 16 for Kentucky,
while freshman Phil Ford led
North Carolina with 18 points .
Kansas conunitted 24 lur·
novers against the 14th-ranked
Irish's press and sophomore
forward Adrian DanUey scored
31 points as Notre Dame won
its fourth straight game this
season.
Another sophomore forward,
Gary Paterno, .added 19 points
to the Irish offensive, hitting
nine of 13 shots from the floor .
Rick Suttle led Kansas with
18 points as the Jayhawks'
record dropped to 3-2.
Eighth-ranked Alabama had
little trouble with Georgia
Tech, rolling to 91-76 triumph
as junior center Leon Douglas
scored 25 points and hauled in
13 rebotutds . Forward Charles
Russell added 20 points to the
Crimson Tide 's third straight
victory and Charles 'Cleveland"
contributed 14.
No. 16 Purdue rebounded
from Friday's
loss to
California with a 91-117 victory
over San Diego State. Center
John Garrett and guard Bruce
Parkinson each scored 19
points as the Boilermakers

•

'

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on top of the NFC East with St.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) L&lt;mis, at 9--4, the Redskins
·Don't sell the Washington
probably will face the Rams as
Redskins short. There's still
the
NFC wild card team in a
plenty of life left in those old
playoff game here Dec. 22 .
bones.
The Redskins became the That's because the Cardinals
eighth -and final -team to hold a 3--0 edge over them this
make it wthe NFL post-season year.
In their regular season
circus in the last Monday night·
•• TV game of the season.
finales next Sunday, the Cards
:
They did it by beating are at home against the New
: George Allen's former team, York Giants. while the Red·
• the Los Angeles Rams, the skins play host to tbe Chicago
•• NFC West champions and the Bears.
Kilmer completed 19 of 29
, top defensive club in the
passes
for 269 yards . His TD
league, 23-17,
With 4().year-old Sonny Jur- passes were to wide receiver
gensen sitting on the bench for Roy Jefferson (27 yards),
the fourth straight game , Bill running back Larry Brown
(two yards) and tight end
Kilmer, 35, a 13-year pro, fired
three secondiJeriod touchdown Jerry Smith (three yards) .
The scoring strikes came
pa5se11 for Washington.
"Billy did a helluva job," after the Rams, now 9-1, had
said Allen, pumping Kilmer's buill up a 1().0 lead in the
: hand vigorously, "He's just a opening quarter. Brown's TD
put the · Redskins ahead for
' tremendous competlror!'
"Kilmer was great," said good, at 13--10,. after getting the
Chuck Kmx, 'the Rams coach. ball on the LOs Angeles 23 on a
: "You've got to gi1.re the Red- questionable ,bit of strategy on
: skins a lolof credit , They came the Rams' part.
On a fourth-and-12 sllualion,
; out here to play and it was a
Rams
ptutter Mike Burke, a
: real must game for Uiem.''
Although they're deadlocked former high school quar·
terback from Pleasanton,
Calif., tried to surprise the
Redskins with a pass w Tony
TONIGHT ' S
Plununer. but failed to conAREA ACTION

.

Wellston at Meigs
Fairland at Eastern
Symmes Valley at Hannan
Trace
Gallipolis at Jackson
Ironton at Waverlv
Ironton St. Joe al South

$

Poin~

~he

nect.

In the last minute of the
opening half, Los Angeles
quarlel·back James Harris was
knocked dizzy and Knox went
with rookie Ron Jaworski in

First CLhristmos 't:OHS

YEAR AffiR 'VEAl&lt; SANTA
AND MRS. CLAU$ MADt;
AND DI&lt;ESSED T~E UTT~E
FIGURES, TIL.!. ~!: CASn.e:
WAS OVEI&lt;HOWINS WrT~ ·
THEM!

(Tables Not lnduded)

improved their record to 3--1.
Will Connelly, a 6·8
sophomore from Brooklyn,
N.Y ., scored 40 points and
grabbed 16 rebounds for the
Aztecs.
Memphis State transfer Marion Hillard scored with 20
seconds left lo give the · !Blh·
ranked Tigers a 70-&lt;l9 victory
over Florida Slate . Hillard
finished with 19 points and 20
rebounds.
,
In other major games, Johnny
Davis scored 34 points in
leadlng Dayton to a 9().76
victory over Detroiti Vanderbilt won its fourth straight
game with a 95-116 victory over
Texas Tech and lllinois senior
Rick Schmidt scored 34 points
as the ntini defeated Iowa
Stale, 77-71.

"

•

the second baif.
Jaworski turned out to be
more effective than Harris.
While Harris .. .,. 5 for 13 for 66
yards, Jaworski hit 7 of 13
passes for 115 yards. One of
Harris' aerials was a 20-yarder
to Harold Jackson for a firstperiod touchdown, though.
Lawrence McCutcheon, the

Marauder frosh ease
past Rockets 37-19
The Meigs Marauder fresh·
man basketball team, shutting
out Well sto n in the first
quarter, rolled to an easy 37-19
victory over the host Rockets
Monday evening.
The Marauders upped a first
frame 10 point lead at every
whistle stop, leading I~ at
intermission, 29·13 after three
quarters and the t-:7 9 final.
The Marauder f sh, whose
record now stand at 1-2, were
paced by Chuck Follrod who
was perfect from the field ,
hitting all 4 field goal attempts
while canning 2 foul shots for 10
points. He was followed in
scoring by Gene Halley and
Brent Arnold with 6 points
apiece.
Gillard led the Wellston
attack with 6 points.
Arnold
was
the
top
rebounder for Meigs, hauling

a slashing &amp;-I, 185-jlOtutd back,
broke all of all-pro Paul
Warfield 's rushing records a t
Warren Harding a nd easily
piled the most votes of Ohio
coac hes and news media
representatives.
During the Panthers' 12
games •. including two pla yo ff
games, Ziegler rushed for 1,848

AS~D

I'VE SEEN iOO MY\....
TI-!INk!NG OF' YOUI-lGS~..I
TO NAMil. f~EM!

yards, 8.2 yards per carry
average, and scored 26 touchdown;;. His 172 yards rushing in
tlle pl'ayoff semi-final win over
toprated Moeller keyed Harding's 2().10 victor y.
"He's a super kid, extremely
coachable and a real pleasure
to be associated with," sa id
Harding coach Ed Glass .

UPI's All-Ohio selections • ••
•

Cinclnnati St. Xavier, 6-2, 230,
Sr.; Larry Savage, Warren
Howland, 6--3, 210, Sr.
Middle Guard -Jon Gotwald, Strongsville, 6--2, 212, Sr .
Linebackers -Carl McGee,
Cincin nati Woodward, 6--2, 205,
Sr.;
Law re nce Cole,
Dayton
Dunbar,&amp;-2,19,Sr. Cornerbacks
- Dwayne Berry, Cincinnati
Aiken , 6--2, 195, Sr. ; Bill Simpson, Groveport, ~1. 185, Sr.
Safeties - Dave Abrams,
Troy, 6-2, 185, Sr.; Greg
Sullivan, Oxford Talawanda, 6-0, 190, Sr .
THffiD TEAM OFFENSE
Ends - Frank Fritsch, North
Olmsted, 6--1, 175, Sr.; Mark
Schmerge, Cincinnati St.
Xavier, 6-3, 220, Sr.
Tackles -Jack Streicher,
Cincinnati Elder, 6--3, 230, Sr .;
Dave Hojnik, Niles , ~. 220, Sr.
Guards -Rick Stahl, Bar·
berton, 6--1, 20S, Sr.: Doug
Gaines, Kettering Fairmont
West, fi:-3, 210, Sr.
Center
- Kevin
Kane,
Whitehall, 6--3, 225, Sr.
Quarterb ac k - Dick
Albaugh, Anthony Wayne, 6-2,
190 Sr.
Rwming backs -Jeff CUrry,
Cincinnati Moeller, 5-10, 185,
Sr.; Jon Moore , Canton
McKinley, 5-I), 208 Sr.; Dean
Richards, Dover, 5-11, 175, Sr .
THffiD TEAM DEFENSE
End s - Howi e Kurnick,
Willoughby South, 6--2, 210, Sr. ;
Steve Groves, Groveport, 6--3,
190, Sr .
Tackles - George Zollos,
Westlake, &amp;-1, 226, Sr.; Jerry
Fultz, Colwnbus Brookhaven,
6-2, 215, Sr.
Middle
Guard
- Pal
Watkins, Barberton , 5-10, 170,

Sr.
Lin e ba c kers - Kelton
Dansler , Warren Harding, 6-2,
200, Sr. ; Steve Heimkreiter,
Cincinnati Roger Bacon, 6-2,
210, Sr.
Cornerbacks - Andy Ferree,
Columbus Northland, ~. 190,
Sr.; Harry Liggins, Fremont
·
Ross, 6-1, 175, Sr.
Safeties - Terry Adkins,
West Carrollton, !Hl, 170, Sr.;
Jack1e
Hudson,
Warren
Harding, 5-B, 145, Sr.
Lineman-of-the-year -Jay
Case, Cincinnati Moeller.
Back-of-the-year -Jo hn
Ziegler, Warrren Harding .
Coach-of-the-year - Ed
Glass, Warren Harding .
HONORABLE MENTION
BACKS
Scott Arnell, Columbus
Walnut Ridge; Mike Blair,
Dayton Belmont; Tom Brown,
Findlay;
Ron Calgagni,
Youngstown Chaney; Mike

miles ahead of anybody else."
Griffin is the fourth OSU
player to win UPI player of the
year honors since the award
was started in 1950, when the
Buckeyes' Vic Janowicz got it.
Bob Ferguson was awarded the
No. 1 listing in 1961.
Griffin 's teammate Brian
Baschnagel, a junior wingback
from Pittsburgh, secon ded
Hayes' evaluation of Griffin as
the Buckeye leader even if not
the captain --a pos ition Cor
which he will be a lop prospect
next season. Last year Griffin
was the team's most va luable
player winner , and UPI pic ked
him for the first team allAmerican squad.
''It's amazing how he brings
us all together," Baschnagel
com mented . " He mean s
everything to our offense .''

Clark, Cincinnati 'Indian Hill;
Mike Campo, Parma Padua;
Ray Duffell, Canfield; Mike
Dwyer , Cincinnati Elder i
Bryan Ferguson, Troy; Les
Freshwater,
New
Philadelphia; Steve Fawcett,
Tiffin Columbian ; Rich Flad,
Nord.onia ; Doug Greenleaf,
Stow; John Giroux, Columbus
Northland; Gary Ginther,
Upper Arlington ; Bill Harmon,
Ma ss illon ; Roch Honlas,
Canton McKinley; Jondy Hoke,
Kettering Fairmont East ; Sam
Anderson, Cleveland Kennedy;
Ron Jewsikow, Clayton
Northmont; Gene Jones ,
Zanesville; Reggie Jones ,
Ci ncinnati Woodward; Jud
Jerome, Fairborn Baker;
Louis King, Ravenna; Jim
Kemper, Logan ; Gary Martin,
Zanesville; Chris McDaniel,
Marietta; Dave Minich,
Fremont Ross; Brad Manier,
Celina; Mike Nail, Akron
Kenmore; Dave Nelsen, Walsh
Jesuit; Wade Nelson, Avon
Lake ; Bob Perkins, Dayron
Belmont; Jim Richburg,
Warren Harding; Joe Romano,
Oregon Clay;
Mark Streeter, Massillon;
Joe Surniak, Fairview ; Bob
Stallings, Marion Harding;
Tim
Seabrook,
Dayton
Roosevelt ; Mik e Sugden ,
Westerville; Bill Sam stag ,
West Geauga ; John Tenuta,
Upper Arlington ; Phil Tidrick,
New Philadelphia; Woodie
Thompson, Cleveland John
Marshall; Rick Underman,
Elyria ; Virg il Williams,
Lorain; Tracy Wilson, Xenia;
Norman Warren, Cleveland 1
John Adams; Steve Ziegler,
Niles McKinley; Ed Zinni,
Parma Valley Forge,

''The key to his success is his
excelerat ion, ' 'Glass sa id of his
star runne r, who has timed in
9.9 in the 100 yard dash a nd 4.5
in the 40. " He's going full speed
after one step. He isn' t particularly shifty. He'll run over
yo u. He 's the kind of back wh o
wiU hit in there again and
again ."
Followed In Footsteps
The 6--4, 22()..pound Case, in
winning the lineman of the
year honors, follow s in the
footsteps of another Moeller
tackle, giant Steve Niehaus. He
captured the award in 1971 and,
between knee operations, has
been a starter for Notre Dam e
since his freshman year.
" He's a great all-around
athlete/' Moeller coach Gerry
Faust said of Case, who also is
the Crusaders' heavyweight
wrestler a nd an all-league
oulfielder on the baseball
team.
Case, who runs a 4.85 40 and,
like Ziegler, is being recruited
by nearly every college in the
country, sit a Moeller record
the past season for assisted
tackles, 105.
more more
Thts Week's Spectal

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w

even · better. I've never seen
~i~ incensed at a player, official or coach. And besides
being a grea t runner, he's also
an ouL&lt;.;landing blocker.
'' Res t Ever Seen"
l·le's the best college football
pl&lt;~yer I've ever seen and the
most popular player ever at
Ohio Slate. He's a great team
leader in a quiet sort of way."
Hayes also direCted Howard
" Hopalong" Cassady, another
Columbus native who won the
Heisma n t rophy an d UPI
player of the year honors in
1955, and sa id there was lillie
comparison between the two
stars.
''Hop was a great one, but
Arch is better," Hayes said.
"G riffin is stronger, faster
than Hop was. I'm biased, of
cou rse, but I feel Arch stands

Panther top Ohio hack

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
1974 United Press International
Class AAA All.{)hio Football
Team :
FIRSf TEAM OFFENSE
Ends - Ken Brown, Cincinnati Elder, 5-11 , 175, Sr.;
Mark Angelo, Lake')'ood St.
Edward, 6-2, 190, Sr.
Tac kle s - John Arbezm k,
Cleveland St. Ignatius, 6--4, 220,
Sr.; Tim Burke, Wapakoneta,
6--4, 235, Sr.
Guards -John Schramm,
Findlay, 6--3, 220, Sr. ; Bob
Golic, Cleveland St. Joseph, fl.
2, 240, Sr.
Center - Mark Heidel,
Cincinnati Moeller, 6-1 , 210, Sr.
Quarterback - Tim Morris,
Willoughby South,~. 190, Sr .
Running bac ks - John
SEOAL FRESHMEN
Ziegler,
Warren Harding , 6--1 ,
Team
W l
P . OP
185, Sr .; Kris Haines, Sidney, 6-G aiHpoi is
3 0 149 11 2
At h ens
2 0 85 77
0, 175, Sr.j Jim Browner,
L ogan
2 1 1'27 84
Warren Western Reserve, 6-2,
Wav er ly
2 1 103 95
Iro nton
1 \ 54 52
205, Sr.
Meigs
1 2 113 114
FIRST TEAM DEFENSE
Jackson
0 3 101 142
Ends - Bill Norris, Clayton
W ells ton
0 3 64 110
TOTALS
11 11 796 796
Norlhmont, ~2. 205, Sr.; Brian
Monday ' s results:
DeCree, Warren Western
Gallipol is 49 Jackson .tJ
Reserve, 6-1, 180, Sr.
Athen~ 40 Logan 39 lot)
wav erly 33 I ro n to n 2'l
Tackles -Jay Case, CinMeigs 37 Wellston 19
cinnati
Moeller, 6--4, 220, Sr.;
Tllurs day's game s:
Bryon
Cato,
Lorain Admiral
Gallipolis at Logan
Athens at Waver ly
King, 6--3, 240, Sr.
I r ont on at Mei gs
Middle Guard -Scott Cook,
Wel lston at Jackson
MansfieldMadison,&amp;-3, 244, Sr.
Linebackers
- Tom
Cousineau, Lakewood St.
Edward, 6--3, 220, Sr.; Bob
Orkis, Gahanna Lincoln, 6--2 ,
195, Sr.
Cornerbacks - Larry Liggins ,
Rams' second.year running Fremont Ross, ~1, 17 , Sr.;
back, increased his ~eason John Dantonio, Zanesville, 6--4,
190, Sr.
rushing rota!
1,064 yards by
Safeties -Rock Supan,
gaining 60 yards on 17 carries. Parma Padua, 6--1, 185, Sr.;
He figures to break his own John Hillard, Princeton , 5-10,
club rushing mark of 1,097 175, Sr.
yards in Los Angeles' regular
SECOND TEAM OFFENSE
Ends - Brad Baker, North
season final game against
Canton Hoover, 6--2, 172, Sr.;
Buffalo here Sunday.
Ted
Metcalf,
New
Philadelphia , 6--1, 190, Sr.
Tackles -Jeff Lear, Elyria,
6-4, 250, Sr.; Ray Amos,
Warren Harding, 6--2, 210, Sr.
Guards - Dan Wells, Lemon
Monroe, 6--2, 220, Sr.; Ct'll"is
Wilson, Troy, S-2, 210, Sr.
Center
- Joe Struder,
Masslllon, S-1, 203, Sr.
in 7 of the learn's 26 caroms,
Quarterback - Bob Maxwell,
while Brent Stanley, who Cuyahoga Falls, 6--1, 175, Sr.
suffered a back injw-y in the
Running
backs
-Rod
early going, snagged 5 missed Stewart, Lancaster, 6--3, 200,
shots.
Sr .; Jeff Feichl, . Kettering
.
Fairmont West, 5-9, 180, Sr.;
Th e Marau ders hlt 50 pet. Ed Prosuch, Lake Catholic,~.
ri-om the field, connecting 15 195' sr.
times in 30 tries, but shot a
SECOND TEAM DEFENSE
freezing 7 of 22 from the
Ends - Quentin Lowry,
charity stripe lor 32 pet.
Shaker Heights, 6--3, 215, Sr.;
Thursday, the Marauder Joe Hornik, Lakewood St.
frosh host the Ironton Tigers at Edward, 6--3, 215, Sr.
5:15 in the Morrison Gym_;) Tackles - Andy Schoenhoft,
nasmm.
MEIGS (37)- Follrod 4-2-10,
G. Halley 3--0-6, Arnold 3--0-6,
Winebrenner 1-l.J, Witte 1-0-2,
Rawlings 1-1-3, Caoey ().2-2,
Ebersbach 1·1·3, Hall 1-0-2.
TOTALS 15-7-37.
WELLSTON ( 19) - Baker 2D-4, Cox l.J.-5, Gillard 2-2-6,
Swingle 1-0-2, Rapp 0-2-2,
TOTALS 6-7-19.

hones show life

:
:
•
•
••
:
:
•
:

ll onorable mentions went. to
By the end of the season
quarterbacks Steve Bar- Gliffin had ga ined I ,620 yard'
tkowski of Ca lifornia , Steve and ,.verctged 147.3 a game, to
Joachim of Temple, Tom fi nish second nationally behind
L1ements of Notre Dctme and Utah Sta~e·s Louie Giammona,
Freddie Solomon of Tampa, who averaged 153.4. The OSU
rwming b&lt;-1ck Tony Dorsett uf spCed~ter. however, carried
Pi tts bu rgh a nd defen sive the ball nearly 100 times less
tac kle Randy \Vhite of th a n Gia mmona, and h is
Maryland.
average or 6. 7 yards a carry
Griffin posted a record £or we~s the nation 's tops.
grou nd ga ining consistency
Hayes said il was no sw-prise
this season which was un- to him to hea r his a ll-Ame rican
matche&lt;i in college history, and back was UPI's No. 1 player of
thus became the first junior to the year , for he had been an
win the UP! award since 0 ..J. outstancling player each game.
Simpson of Southern Ca l in
"The amaz ing thing about
1967.
Arc hie is that he's good every
Griffin piled up more than week," his coac h said. ''Tha t
100 yards in each of Ohio means every tea m keys on
State's 11 games and se t an him_ His ability to spin around
NCAA record of 22 consecu tive and keep his balance is far and
games in which he lopped the away the hp_c;;t
century mark .
!;But his mental balance is

CO LUMBUS ( UP!)
Warr en
Hardin g's
star
tailback John Henry Ziegler
was a runaway winner in the
back of the year balloting for
the 1974 United Press International Class AAA All.{)hio
football team where Cincinnati
Moeller's ace tackle Jay Case
took defensive honors. Ziegler ,

press stop cage giants

~ Redskin

FOUND GUILTY
LANCASfER, Ohio (UP!)Three teenagers were found
guilty Monday of criminal
endangerment in the recent
Pickerington School fire after
their original arson charge was .
reduced.
The Fairfield Juvenile Court
ordered Steven Andriof, 16, and
Kenneth Hickman, 17, pennanently committed to the ctJBio.. 1
dy of the Ohio Youth ComBy Motor ROute where carrief
mission. Robert Hickman, IS,
tervice not ava il able. One
S2.60. By mall in Ohio
was temporarily committed w month,
and W . Va., One Year. S18 ; Six
1
months, $9 .50 ; Three months,
the OYC's Child Study Center
$6. Elsewhere $22 .00 year ; six
for a 30-&lt;lay diagnostic
months $11.50, three months,
$6.50 . Subscript ion pri c e in examination.
cludes
Sunday
T imes

more concerned a bou I. passing
tests than g&lt;-~ t.hering honors.
But he's also been busy
collecting post-season a wa rdoe;.
Last week the Columbus native
was awarded the Heisman
Trophy, college football's top
accolade.
Griffin, proclaimed by OSU
coach Woody Hayes as "the
best football player I've ever
seen, " ha d little trouble gelling
his latest laurels. He received
nearly six times as many votes
as his nearest competi tor,
Oklahoma jtutior running bac k
Joe Washington, in th e
balloting of sports writers and
sportscasters from across the
nation .
Consistent Gainer
The Buckeye back, a consist·
ent 100-plus yard ground gainer
all season, was picked as the
player of the year on 57 of the
80 ballots cast, while Washington received 10 . Anthonv
Davis, runnerup to Griffin in
Reisman balloliilg, failed to gel
a single vote.

Kentucky break, Irish

•

DEVOTED TO THE
INTER EST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
'• C,HESTER L . TANNEHILL
E•ec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Published dai l y except
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
Publ i shing Company, 111
Court St., Pomeroy , Oh i o
-45769 . Bus i ness Off ice Phone
992-2156 . Editor ial Phone 9922157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio
Naliona l advertising
representative
Bott inelti Gallagher , Inc ., 12 Easl 42nd
St ., New York, New York :
Subscription
rates:
Delivered by carrier where
availab l e 60 cents per week-

avoid excess fat . Also yow- diet
should be a low-fat, lowcholesterol diet and low enough
in calories to prevent obesity.
If you smoked I would of course
tell you that you should quit at
once.
Body temperature varies
from ·the head to the toes. The
feet tend to be considerably
cooler than the face . At night
the circulation slows down, and
since the feel and legs are
farthest from the heart, they
cool the most. Cool muscles are
more inclined wcramp. Many
readers have written into tell
me about the good results they
have gotten from using warm
socks,
Don ' t use a heating pad or
something like that to warm
your feet as it may get too hot
while you are asleep and burn
you . With poor circulation, if
that is your problem, that
would cause you serious dif·
ficulties . Let me know hoY' you
get along.

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...

COLUMBUS , Ohio 1UP!) - ·
Ohio Slate's sta r running bac k
Archie Griffin. today said he
was surpirsed to be selected
college footba ll's player of the
record, dropped from seve nth year by Uniled ' Press Internato eighth, but the Gamecocks' tional and considers it "a grea t
loss allowed Kansas, 3--1, to honor."
climb one position to ninth and
The 5-foot-9, 184-pound junior
Maryla nd, 3--0, now is in lOth rtutning back was studying for
place.
fin al exainalions today when
NEW YORK WP II
The informed of the award.
Un.ted Pr ess
lnterna1ionu l's
The little speedster had just
Boa rd ot Coaches f irst week of
co llege basketball r ating s , with returned from Florida and a
number of f i r st pla ce votes an d
reco rds in pa r en theses ( 39 of J2 Kodak All-American Team
coarhe s vo tin g J .
pi cture taking session after
T ('a m
Points
deciding
not to go lo New York
IN C St . 13 1 ) (40 )
J7J
2. UCLA (4) (4 OJ
City lor U!night's National
3 Indi ana (]) (J 01
JIO
Football Foundation's Hall of
•1. Loui svil le ( 1 J (2 OJ
5. North Carol ina (J OJ
Fame celebration. He said he
6. Sou th E&gt;r n Ca l (J 0)
16\
7. Marquette (2 OJ
113 had changed his mind because
8. Alabama ( 2 0 )
of his need for a last-minute
9. Kansas ( J t )
95
exam
studying with a friend at
10 Maryland (3 OJ
93
11. Notre Da mE&gt; 13 -0J
33 his apartment here.
17 Sou th c'a r o lina I I 11
32
" I'm studying real hard for
IJ Penn (J 0)
10
14 . Arizona State (3 Ol
the tests," he said, adding he
15 Ar i zo n a (.1 Ol
15 presently is giving no thought
16. (T ie) P urdue {2 I )
16. fTiE'l Oregon St . {4 -0)
to the future other than getting
18 Memph is St . (2 OJ
8 a position in industrial rela19 (Tie .I Oregon {3 OJ
7
19 (T i ~) Michigan (2 -0)
7 tions. He indicated he was

rating spots

College Basketball Results
By United Pre ss lnlernational
Ea st
SE Mass . 90 Lowe ll T ech 82
Queens Co l i. 71 NY Martime 65
Lafayelte 75 Brow n 71
Ursinus 86 Swarthm or e 81
Del Val. 74 Phila . Pha rm 70
Montcla ir St. ll2 Kea n 84
Jrsy Cty St. 67 Trntn St 80
Canisius 58 LeMoyne 53
Bowdoin 83 M I T 82
Fairfld 90 51. ~eter's 78
N !agar a 77 Buffa l o 58
Clarion 57 Frednia St . 53
Marshall 80 Morhed St 69

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Just In
Time For
The
Hol,days!

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He11t may help leg cramps

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The ~ily Sentinel

younger, leg cramps can be
ca used by in adequate circulation.
This can happen because
there is a blockage in the large
arteries in the pe lvis or upper
thigh. If the arteries below this
area are open, a vascular
surgeot:~ can simply put in a
g raft of a tube or hose-like
syn thetic material and detour
the blood around the blocked
area.
In some cases the arteries
are severely blocked all the
way to the toes and ther. there
is nothing to detour lo, because
the arteries are like a dead-end
stree t. But, if you can make a
detour, the operation is usually
very successful .
If you don't have a problem
that can be corrected ~
there are two other things I
would suggest. Be sw-e you get
plenty of calcium . A quart of
milk a day should meet yowneeds, and with your history I
would prefer [l be Skim milk to

.

l To;ili}";.idl UPI tabs Bucks' Griffin the best

memo blames

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E . Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - For the
past tw o years I have had
severe leg cramps , calf and
thigh , mostly ~t night, but
sometimes during the day.
About two years ago I had a
prostate gland operation. My
prostate was aboullhe size of a
grapefrqjt bul no tumor.
I take 200 mg. quinine capsules every eight hours or
Quinamm tablets at bedtime,
but relief from the leg cramps
is only slight. I exercise my
toes, feet and legs by flexing ,
twisting , bending, rubbing, etc.
I'm 61 and have severe
pulm onary emphysema and
chroni c bronchitis. I don 't
smoke. Do you have any
comments on my condition or
ways to correct it?
DEAR READER - . The
medicines you are taking are
often prescribed for leg
cramps.. I presume you have
had a careful examination of
the circulation in your legs. I~
your age g;roup , and s~metim~s

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Mitchell for cover-up

Carmei News,

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, . 3 - T?e. ~~~y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,_O., Tuesday, Dec. lU 1974
r~-~ &amp;::··················· ·
.

~ong-lost

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2- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. IO, 1974

By WESLEY. li , PIPPERT
WASHINGTON ( UPI) John D. Ehrlichman is offering
in his defense a long-lost report
which he says he delivered to
Richard Nixon in April, 1973,
that blames former Attorney
General John N. Mitchell for
much of the Watergate coverup .
Chief Prosecutor James F.
Neal says the report, which
Ehrlichman said he wrote by
hand on seven pages of White
House stationery. is "a
charade ... the ultimate in
pulling wagons up around the
White House ... ' '
U.S. District Court Judge
John J . Sirica said he would
rule today on whether the
report could be ·admitted as
evidence.
Neal and William S. Frates,
Ehrlichman's lawyer, had a
noisy confrontation over the
report Monday with the jury
he~ing the Watergate con-

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By the Day

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JUNIOR MISS CONTEST WINNERS - Susan Spears,
left, and Lou Ellen Roush, shown here walklng down the
ramp while the pageant song is being presented by John
Campbell, were the two winners Saturday night In the Mason
County Junior Miss· Pageant held at Wahama High School.

Intellectuals to
talk with Ford

..

WA,SHINGTON (UP!)- The
vice presidency is a nebulous
job a t best a nd the nominee has
not yet been confirmed, but
neverthe less, President Ford
soug ht advice today fr om some
experts lined up by Nelson
Rockefeller.
Instead of calling the men to
the White House , Ford decided
to fly to New York to confer
with Rockefeller and a group
connecte d with his "Commission on Critical Choices for
America. "
The White House said Ford
had been "a n unofficial
member of the commission for

some time.''
It was the second day· Ford
had scheduled meetings with
intellectuals. On Monday, the
Whi te House announced that
Robert A. Goldwin , a former
political scie nce professor, had
joined the staff as a special

UNUSUAL CONTRAcr
SAN DIEGO (UPI-Veteran
outfielder Bobby Tolan signed
an unusual two-year contract
with the San Diego Padres
Monday.
Tolan played last season
wiUtout a contract so was to be
paid on the basis of his 1973

/ pact. However, President Buzzie Bavasi said the contract
signed Monday gave Tolan a
boost for 1974 as well as setting
a figure for 1975.
Terms were not disclosed but
Bavasi said they represented

"a compromise."

consul tan l.
A. White House spokesman
· said Ford planned to discuss
energy matters as well as the
nat ion 's food policy, with
Rockefeller and seven commission associates, including
nuclear phys icist Edward
Teller and William J . Ronan ·chairman of the New York Port
Authority and one of the
biggest
recipients
of
Rockefeller's financial aid.
Others invited were George
D. Woods, a former president
of the World Bank; John
Foster, a former Pentagon
expert now working for TRW,
Inc.; Carroll Wilson, of the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology; Hans Marks, who
ru ns an Atomic Energy
Commission laboratory, and
lawyer Oscar Reubhausen .

Mrs . Robert Lee, Becky, Bob
Bill spent Thanksgiving day
with Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Grueser and family at Logan .
Mr. and Mrs . Dwight
Swepston and sons Steve and
Mark and friend , all of
Columbus spent Thanksgiving
day with Ralph Lee and Robert
Lee .
Mr. and Mrs . George Circle
and daughter, Cheryl, Mr. and
Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Circle and family or Columbus
spent Thanksgiving with Mrs.
Mary Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Mutli
and family of Mansfield , Miss
Dixie
Circle,
Cleveland
Heights , Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Circle and family , Racine R.
D., Miss Sonya White of
Bashan. Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Harden and family of Morning
Star, Mr. and Mrs, Carl Circle
and family of Racine R. D.
were dinner guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Homer Circle, Verna &amp;
Wavie on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Circle,
Patrice, Jason and Jerrod
spent Thanksgiving day with
Mrs. Edward Foster of
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson,
Toni of Racine , Mr. and Mrs .
Shelby Pickens and children of
Pomeroy and Warren Rose of
Racine R. D. called at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Tllvlor on Sundav.

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spiral.')' tn ;d out of the room.
On the witness stand, E h rlichrnan testified that Nixon
asked him on March 30, 1973,
for advice and assistance on
Wc1tergate. Ehrlichmari intervie\...-ed sever al persons and
wrote tJ1e memo on April 13.
The report was fille&lt;i with
initial s and a bbreviations .
" JNM " IM!tchell ), it sa id,
picked targets for electronic
eavesdroppin g "in the be lief
that the opera tives would be
two or three people removed
from any CREP (Committee to
Re-elect the President ) personnel."
Afte r the buggers were
arrested. th ere " began a n
effort to insure that the five
burglars and 1Watergate masterminds E. Howard ) Hunt and
(G. Gordon) Liddy d i~ not
implicate anyone else.
"(Form er White House
Counsel) John Dean was
enlisted by John Mitchell to
seek help from the White House
in raising money to pa y subsistence and attorney fees, "
Ehrlichman wrote.
"As he apparently has for
literally months , JNM is the
key lo a full disclosure of the
facts of the Watergate nu.ltter," said Ehrlichma n, add in g
that Mitchell, unlike several
others, was unwilling to make
full disclosure.
The report drew objections

fr• ml the l~wyer s for three

other defendants: Mitchell,
former Assis ta nt Attorney
General Robert C. Mardian
and Kenneth W. Parkinson.
who had done legal work for
the reelection committee after
the break-in . EhrlichmaJ1 a nd
H . R. Ha ldeman are the other
defendants.
While Neal did not object the
report, he unleashed the an61fiest, loudest criticism.
" Now what kind of a report is
this from a man that had that
kind of knowled ge? " Neal
shouted, waving the report in
the air a nd pounding the lectern . He said Dean, on March
21, 1973 - the "growing cance r " conversation - ga ve
Nixon " lOtimes the facts" than
there were in the Ehrlichman
report.
" It is phony ... a charade,"
Nea l sa id.
" It was one co-conspirator
giving a self-servin g statement
to another co--conspirator so
th ey could rely on it if things
ever became tutstuck. It is the
ultima te in pulling the wagons
up arotutd the White House and
shove Mitchell out. "
Frates a r gued tha t the
report, which he said had been
found a few months ago at the .
bottom of a box of papers in the
While House , ought to be admitted into evidence as a "good
faith" effort.

TALKING WITH SANTA - Little seven year old, George Gibbs, a second grader at New
Haven Grade School and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Gibbs of New Haven, Is telling Santa
all about his desires and wishes lor the forthcoming Christmas hollday. This special moment
for the youngster came during the annual Winter Festival festivities Saturday, highlighted
with a parade through the community when Santa made his appearance. Inclement weather
cond'~ions forced Santa to seek shelter under an umbrella.

MARKET REPORT
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
December 7, 1974
Sales Report Of
Ohio Valley Livestock Co,
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 20 to
24.75; 300 to 400 lbs. 21.50 to 28;
400 to 500 lbs. 20 to 25.50; 500 to
600 lbs. 22 lo 28; 600 lo 700 lbs.

21.50 to 30; 700 lbs. and Over
22.50 to 33.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
300 lbs. 18 lo 24; 300 to 400 lbs.
17.50 to 22.75; 400 lo 500 lbs. 18
to 23; 500 to 600 lbs. 20 to 23.85 ;
600 to 700 lbs. 21 to 28.25; 700
lbs. and Over 20 to 31.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS (By
The Head( -Stock Cows 110 to
165 : Stock Cows and Calves 150

to 265; Stock Bulls 125 to 210 ;
Baby Calves 5 to 25; (By the
Pound) - Canners &amp; Cutters
Cows 11 to 17.75; Holstein Cows
19 to 21; Commercial Bulls
(1,000 lbs. and Over) 21 to 27.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 40 to 48; Medium 200
lbs. to 300 21 to 37; Culls 20 to
31.

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NEW YORK (UP!) - In a n
tutusual development for so
ea~ly in the season, the top six
teams, led by defending chamPlOD North Carolina Slate
remained in the first wee k of
balloting in lhe same order that
they were chosen in the
preseason ratings by th e
United Press International
Major College Basketball
Ratings Board .
The Woifpack, coming off a
36-1 season which included an
NCAA semifinal playoff win
over UCLA, have easily won
their fll'st four games this year
and were named the top learn
on 31 of the 39 ballots submitted
this week by the coaches.
The next five learns also are
tutbeaten, helping them to hold
their positions , UCLA, w,
received lour of the other top
designations to hold second
but is being pushed by Indlana:
3--0, which received three firstplace nods. The Bruins held a
67-jlOint lead over the Hoosiers
in the pr~n rankings, but
the lead bas slimmed down to
19 points.
Louisville, 2-0, received the
other No. 1 designation to
remain fourth, with North
Carolina, 3--0, and Southern
Cal, 3--0, fifth and sixth, respec.
tively.
Marquette, 3--0, jumped from
ninth to seven,th when South
Carolina lost lo Oklahoma
Saturday, dropping them a 1·
I record and from eighth out of
the rop 10 in the rankings.
Alabama , despite a 2-0

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South

•

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Kentucky 90 No . Car . 78
•
Murray St. 80 Mo . So . 75
•
Lyn chbg 89 Hmpdn -Syd n't' 82
•
Roanoke 75 Mt . St. M ry·s 69
:
Okia 87 Jacksonv i lle 69
•
So . Car . St . 97 Lander 71
11
Appla chil St . 83 N .C. -As h v l 74
.. Mid Tenn . 94 B elmont 53
•
Vanderb i ll95 T e)( . Te c h 86
:
Troy St . 79 Sam ford 68
•
Fla . 11-4 NW M issouri 51
•
Geoown Ky. 100 Oaklnd Ind . 83
: ., Western Ky . 102 Old Dom 87
Memphis St . 70 Fla . St . 69
1111
•
A labama 91 Ga . Tech 76
Midwest
111
., DayiM 90 Detroit 76
•
Kansas St. 92 Hofs t ra 60
•
Notre Dame 75 Kansas 59
:
Nrthwslrn 82 Vaipr iso 7-4
•
Illino is 77 Iowa Sl. 7l
• Mll ikn 112 Mi llon 110, o l
• Rockford 86 Belo it 73
• Neb .- Omaha 80 No . Iowa 70
:
Idaho St . 72 W~_"m i ng 66

FOR HOME. a nd FAMILY!

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By CHRIS SCHERF
UP! Sports Writer
Speed toppled a pair of
college basketball's Goliaths
Monday night .
Fifth..-anked North Carolina
dropped a 00.78 decision to
Kentucky 's fast break and
Notre Dame's full-court press
crumpled ninth -ranked
Kansas,'7ii-59.
The visiting ':'ar Heels
jumped to a 31-16 lead before
Jimmy Dan Conner piloted a
fast break that saw the
Wildcats grab a :Jll-34 by the
end of the first half.
Conner's high, arching jump
~01..11nwest

Ok ta

st. 45 E New Mex 41
Ark Coil 84 Ark . -M ntct lo 82
Hndrsn St. 76 S t . Coli Ark 53
Fr esno Sla te 74 Den\ler 67
Ariz . St . 72 Wichi ta St 70
P ~ n Am 71 Arkansas · St. 70
R 1ce 87 Hou ston Sap! 83
Kansas St . 92 Hofstra 60
New Mexico 90 St etson 82
Ce:nt~ n ~ ry 102 NW L a. 89
MiSSISSippi 84 Arkansas 7J
Mdwstrn 80 M cM urry 79
Houston eo w. Tex s t 71
S F · Austin tt7 Su i RosS 90
Va. Cmmnwllh 84 Hrdn Sm mn s
.
St Mary's 76 s w T ex st 68
UT -A r l . 70 SouthwestE.&gt;r n ·61
Adams St . 57 So. Colo . 52
We st
Utah St . 83 Sea ttl e 72
Mont . 70 San J ose St 63
Mont . St . 81 Stout 51.- 79
Purdue 91 San D i ego s t . 87
DePaul 80 Gon zaga 73
Pa c ific 70 San Fran 67

"

shots kept tbe Wildcats in front
in the second half as the
Kentucky senior finished with
a career-high 31 points. Kevin
Grevey added 16 for Kentucky,
while freshman Phil Ford led
North Carolina with 18 points .
Kansas conunitted 24 lur·
novers against the 14th-ranked
Irish's press and sophomore
forward Adrian DanUey scored
31 points as Notre Dame won
its fourth straight game this
season.
Another sophomore forward,
Gary Paterno, .added 19 points
to the Irish offensive, hitting
nine of 13 shots from the floor .
Rick Suttle led Kansas with
18 points as the Jayhawks'
record dropped to 3-2.
Eighth-ranked Alabama had
little trouble with Georgia
Tech, rolling to 91-76 triumph
as junior center Leon Douglas
scored 25 points and hauled in
13 rebotutds . Forward Charles
Russell added 20 points to the
Crimson Tide 's third straight
victory and Charles 'Cleveland"
contributed 14.
No. 16 Purdue rebounded
from Friday's
loss to
California with a 91-117 victory
over San Diego State. Center
John Garrett and guard Bruce
Parkinson each scored 19
points as the Boilermakers

•

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on top of the NFC East with St.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) L&lt;mis, at 9--4, the Redskins
·Don't sell the Washington
probably will face the Rams as
Redskins short. There's still
the
NFC wild card team in a
plenty of life left in those old
playoff game here Dec. 22 .
bones.
The Redskins became the That's because the Cardinals
eighth -and final -team to hold a 3--0 edge over them this
make it wthe NFL post-season year.
In their regular season
circus in the last Monday night·
•• TV game of the season.
finales next Sunday, the Cards
:
They did it by beating are at home against the New
: George Allen's former team, York Giants. while the Red·
• the Los Angeles Rams, the skins play host to tbe Chicago
•• NFC West champions and the Bears.
Kilmer completed 19 of 29
, top defensive club in the
passes
for 269 yards . His TD
league, 23-17,
With 4().year-old Sonny Jur- passes were to wide receiver
gensen sitting on the bench for Roy Jefferson (27 yards),
the fourth straight game , Bill running back Larry Brown
(two yards) and tight end
Kilmer, 35, a 13-year pro, fired
three secondiJeriod touchdown Jerry Smith (three yards) .
The scoring strikes came
pa5se11 for Washington.
"Billy did a helluva job," after the Rams, now 9-1, had
said Allen, pumping Kilmer's buill up a 1().0 lead in the
: hand vigorously, "He's just a opening quarter. Brown's TD
put the · Redskins ahead for
' tremendous competlror!'
"Kilmer was great," said good, at 13--10,. after getting the
Chuck Kmx, 'the Rams coach. ball on the LOs Angeles 23 on a
: "You've got to gi1.re the Red- questionable ,bit of strategy on
: skins a lolof credit , They came the Rams' part.
On a fourth-and-12 sllualion,
; out here to play and it was a
Rams
ptutter Mike Burke, a
: real must game for Uiem.''
Although they're deadlocked former high school quar·
terback from Pleasanton,
Calif., tried to surprise the
Redskins with a pass w Tony
TONIGHT ' S
Plununer. but failed to conAREA ACTION

.

Wellston at Meigs
Fairland at Eastern
Symmes Valley at Hannan
Trace
Gallipolis at Jackson
Ironton at Waverlv
Ironton St. Joe al South

$

Poin~

~he

nect.

In the last minute of the
opening half, Los Angeles
quarlel·back James Harris was
knocked dizzy and Knox went
with rookie Ron Jaworski in

First CLhristmos 't:OHS

YEAR AffiR 'VEAl&lt; SANTA
AND MRS. CLAU$ MADt;
AND DI&lt;ESSED T~E UTT~E
FIGURES, TIL.!. ~!: CASn.e:
WAS OVEI&lt;HOWINS WrT~ ·
THEM!

(Tables Not lnduded)

improved their record to 3--1.
Will Connelly, a 6·8
sophomore from Brooklyn,
N.Y ., scored 40 points and
grabbed 16 rebounds for the
Aztecs.
Memphis State transfer Marion Hillard scored with 20
seconds left lo give the · !Blh·
ranked Tigers a 70-&lt;l9 victory
over Florida Slate . Hillard
finished with 19 points and 20
rebounds.
,
In other major games, Johnny
Davis scored 34 points in
leadlng Dayton to a 9().76
victory over Detroiti Vanderbilt won its fourth straight
game with a 95-116 victory over
Texas Tech and lllinois senior
Rick Schmidt scored 34 points
as the ntini defeated Iowa
Stale, 77-71.

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the second baif.
Jaworski turned out to be
more effective than Harris.
While Harris .. .,. 5 for 13 for 66
yards, Jaworski hit 7 of 13
passes for 115 yards. One of
Harris' aerials was a 20-yarder
to Harold Jackson for a firstperiod touchdown, though.
Lawrence McCutcheon, the

Marauder frosh ease
past Rockets 37-19
The Meigs Marauder fresh·
man basketball team, shutting
out Well sto n in the first
quarter, rolled to an easy 37-19
victory over the host Rockets
Monday evening.
The Marauders upped a first
frame 10 point lead at every
whistle stop, leading I~ at
intermission, 29·13 after three
quarters and the t-:7 9 final.
The Marauder f sh, whose
record now stand at 1-2, were
paced by Chuck Follrod who
was perfect from the field ,
hitting all 4 field goal attempts
while canning 2 foul shots for 10
points. He was followed in
scoring by Gene Halley and
Brent Arnold with 6 points
apiece.
Gillard led the Wellston
attack with 6 points.
Arnold
was
the
top
rebounder for Meigs, hauling

a slashing &amp;-I, 185-jlOtutd back,
broke all of all-pro Paul
Warfield 's rushing records a t
Warren Harding a nd easily
piled the most votes of Ohio
coac hes and news media
representatives.
During the Panthers' 12
games •. including two pla yo ff
games, Ziegler rushed for 1,848

AS~D

I'VE SEEN iOO MY\....
TI-!INk!NG OF' YOUI-lGS~..I
TO NAMil. f~EM!

yards, 8.2 yards per carry
average, and scored 26 touchdown;;. His 172 yards rushing in
tlle pl'ayoff semi-final win over
toprated Moeller keyed Harding's 2().10 victor y.
"He's a super kid, extremely
coachable and a real pleasure
to be associated with," sa id
Harding coach Ed Glass .

UPI's All-Ohio selections • ••
•

Cinclnnati St. Xavier, 6-2, 230,
Sr.; Larry Savage, Warren
Howland, 6--3, 210, Sr.
Middle Guard -Jon Gotwald, Strongsville, 6--2, 212, Sr .
Linebackers -Carl McGee,
Cincin nati Woodward, 6--2, 205,
Sr.;
Law re nce Cole,
Dayton
Dunbar,&amp;-2,19,Sr. Cornerbacks
- Dwayne Berry, Cincinnati
Aiken , 6--2, 195, Sr. ; Bill Simpson, Groveport, ~1. 185, Sr.
Safeties - Dave Abrams,
Troy, 6-2, 185, Sr.; Greg
Sullivan, Oxford Talawanda, 6-0, 190, Sr .
THffiD TEAM OFFENSE
Ends - Frank Fritsch, North
Olmsted, 6--1, 175, Sr.; Mark
Schmerge, Cincinnati St.
Xavier, 6-3, 220, Sr.
Tackles -Jack Streicher,
Cincinnati Elder, 6--3, 230, Sr .;
Dave Hojnik, Niles , ~. 220, Sr.
Guards -Rick Stahl, Bar·
berton, 6--1, 20S, Sr.: Doug
Gaines, Kettering Fairmont
West, fi:-3, 210, Sr.
Center
- Kevin
Kane,
Whitehall, 6--3, 225, Sr.
Quarterb ac k - Dick
Albaugh, Anthony Wayne, 6-2,
190 Sr.
Rwming backs -Jeff CUrry,
Cincinnati Moeller, 5-10, 185,
Sr.; Jon Moore , Canton
McKinley, 5-I), 208 Sr.; Dean
Richards, Dover, 5-11, 175, Sr .
THffiD TEAM DEFENSE
End s - Howi e Kurnick,
Willoughby South, 6--2, 210, Sr. ;
Steve Groves, Groveport, 6--3,
190, Sr .
Tackles - George Zollos,
Westlake, &amp;-1, 226, Sr.; Jerry
Fultz, Colwnbus Brookhaven,
6-2, 215, Sr.
Middle
Guard
- Pal
Watkins, Barberton , 5-10, 170,

Sr.
Lin e ba c kers - Kelton
Dansler , Warren Harding, 6-2,
200, Sr. ; Steve Heimkreiter,
Cincinnati Roger Bacon, 6-2,
210, Sr.
Cornerbacks - Andy Ferree,
Columbus Northland, ~. 190,
Sr.; Harry Liggins, Fremont
·
Ross, 6-1, 175, Sr.
Safeties - Terry Adkins,
West Carrollton, !Hl, 170, Sr.;
Jack1e
Hudson,
Warren
Harding, 5-B, 145, Sr.
Lineman-of-the-year -Jay
Case, Cincinnati Moeller.
Back-of-the-year -Jo hn
Ziegler, Warrren Harding .
Coach-of-the-year - Ed
Glass, Warren Harding .
HONORABLE MENTION
BACKS
Scott Arnell, Columbus
Walnut Ridge; Mike Blair,
Dayton Belmont; Tom Brown,
Findlay;
Ron Calgagni,
Youngstown Chaney; Mike

miles ahead of anybody else."
Griffin is the fourth OSU
player to win UPI player of the
year honors since the award
was started in 1950, when the
Buckeyes' Vic Janowicz got it.
Bob Ferguson was awarded the
No. 1 listing in 1961.
Griffin 's teammate Brian
Baschnagel, a junior wingback
from Pittsburgh, secon ded
Hayes' evaluation of Griffin as
the Buckeye leader even if not
the captain --a pos ition Cor
which he will be a lop prospect
next season. Last year Griffin
was the team's most va luable
player winner , and UPI pic ked
him for the first team allAmerican squad.
''It's amazing how he brings
us all together," Baschnagel
com mented . " He mean s
everything to our offense .''

Clark, Cincinnati 'Indian Hill;
Mike Campo, Parma Padua;
Ray Duffell, Canfield; Mike
Dwyer , Cincinnati Elder i
Bryan Ferguson, Troy; Les
Freshwater,
New
Philadelphia; Steve Fawcett,
Tiffin Columbian ; Rich Flad,
Nord.onia ; Doug Greenleaf,
Stow; John Giroux, Columbus
Northland; Gary Ginther,
Upper Arlington ; Bill Harmon,
Ma ss illon ; Roch Honlas,
Canton McKinley; Jondy Hoke,
Kettering Fairmont East ; Sam
Anderson, Cleveland Kennedy;
Ron Jewsikow, Clayton
Northmont; Gene Jones ,
Zanesville; Reggie Jones ,
Ci ncinnati Woodward; Jud
Jerome, Fairborn Baker;
Louis King, Ravenna; Jim
Kemper, Logan ; Gary Martin,
Zanesville; Chris McDaniel,
Marietta; Dave Minich,
Fremont Ross; Brad Manier,
Celina; Mike Nail, Akron
Kenmore; Dave Nelsen, Walsh
Jesuit; Wade Nelson, Avon
Lake ; Bob Perkins, Dayron
Belmont; Jim Richburg,
Warren Harding; Joe Romano,
Oregon Clay;
Mark Streeter, Massillon;
Joe Surniak, Fairview ; Bob
Stallings, Marion Harding;
Tim
Seabrook,
Dayton
Roosevelt ; Mik e Sugden ,
Westerville; Bill Sam stag ,
West Geauga ; John Tenuta,
Upper Arlington ; Phil Tidrick,
New Philadelphia; Woodie
Thompson, Cleveland John
Marshall; Rick Underman,
Elyria ; Virg il Williams,
Lorain; Tracy Wilson, Xenia;
Norman Warren, Cleveland 1
John Adams; Steve Ziegler,
Niles McKinley; Ed Zinni,
Parma Valley Forge,

''The key to his success is his
excelerat ion, ' 'Glass sa id of his
star runne r, who has timed in
9.9 in the 100 yard dash a nd 4.5
in the 40. " He's going full speed
after one step. He isn' t particularly shifty. He'll run over
yo u. He 's the kind of back wh o
wiU hit in there again and
again ."
Followed In Footsteps
The 6--4, 22()..pound Case, in
winning the lineman of the
year honors, follow s in the
footsteps of another Moeller
tackle, giant Steve Niehaus. He
captured the award in 1971 and,
between knee operations, has
been a starter for Notre Dam e
since his freshman year.
" He's a great all-around
athlete/' Moeller coach Gerry
Faust said of Case, who also is
the Crusaders' heavyweight
wrestler a nd an all-league
oulfielder on the baseball
team.
Case, who runs a 4.85 40 and,
like Ziegler, is being recruited
by nearly every college in the
country, sit a Moeller record
the past season for assisted
tackles, 105.
more more
Thts Week's Spectal

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a fantasy by P. Pascoret and D. Baur

ON\: DA'I ·MRS. Cl-AUS
H!:R HUSB.\ND".

w

even · better. I've never seen
~i~ incensed at a player, official or coach. And besides
being a grea t runner, he's also
an ouL&lt;.;landing blocker.
'' Res t Ever Seen"
l·le's the best college football
pl&lt;~yer I've ever seen and the
most popular player ever at
Ohio Slate. He's a great team
leader in a quiet sort of way."
Hayes also direCted Howard
" Hopalong" Cassady, another
Columbus native who won the
Heisma n t rophy an d UPI
player of the year honors in
1955, and sa id there was lillie
comparison between the two
stars.
''Hop was a great one, but
Arch is better," Hayes said.
"G riffin is stronger, faster
than Hop was. I'm biased, of
cou rse, but I feel Arch stands

Panther top Ohio hack

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
1974 United Press International
Class AAA All.{)hio Football
Team :
FIRSf TEAM OFFENSE
Ends - Ken Brown, Cincinnati Elder, 5-11 , 175, Sr.;
Mark Angelo, Lake')'ood St.
Edward, 6-2, 190, Sr.
Tac kle s - John Arbezm k,
Cleveland St. Ignatius, 6--4, 220,
Sr.; Tim Burke, Wapakoneta,
6--4, 235, Sr.
Guards -John Schramm,
Findlay, 6--3, 220, Sr. ; Bob
Golic, Cleveland St. Joseph, fl.
2, 240, Sr.
Center - Mark Heidel,
Cincinnati Moeller, 6-1 , 210, Sr.
Quarterback - Tim Morris,
Willoughby South,~. 190, Sr .
Running bac ks - John
SEOAL FRESHMEN
Ziegler,
Warren Harding , 6--1 ,
Team
W l
P . OP
185, Sr .; Kris Haines, Sidney, 6-G aiHpoi is
3 0 149 11 2
At h ens
2 0 85 77
0, 175, Sr.j Jim Browner,
L ogan
2 1 1'27 84
Warren Western Reserve, 6-2,
Wav er ly
2 1 103 95
Iro nton
1 \ 54 52
205, Sr.
Meigs
1 2 113 114
FIRST TEAM DEFENSE
Jackson
0 3 101 142
Ends - Bill Norris, Clayton
W ells ton
0 3 64 110
TOTALS
11 11 796 796
Norlhmont, ~2. 205, Sr.; Brian
Monday ' s results:
DeCree, Warren Western
Gallipol is 49 Jackson .tJ
Reserve, 6-1, 180, Sr.
Athen~ 40 Logan 39 lot)
wav erly 33 I ro n to n 2'l
Tackles -Jay Case, CinMeigs 37 Wellston 19
cinnati
Moeller, 6--4, 220, Sr.;
Tllurs day's game s:
Bryon
Cato,
Lorain Admiral
Gallipolis at Logan
Athens at Waver ly
King, 6--3, 240, Sr.
I r ont on at Mei gs
Middle Guard -Scott Cook,
Wel lston at Jackson
MansfieldMadison,&amp;-3, 244, Sr.
Linebackers
- Tom
Cousineau, Lakewood St.
Edward, 6--3, 220, Sr.; Bob
Orkis, Gahanna Lincoln, 6--2 ,
195, Sr.
Cornerbacks - Larry Liggins ,
Rams' second.year running Fremont Ross, ~1, 17 , Sr.;
back, increased his ~eason John Dantonio, Zanesville, 6--4,
190, Sr.
rushing rota!
1,064 yards by
Safeties -Rock Supan,
gaining 60 yards on 17 carries. Parma Padua, 6--1, 185, Sr.;
He figures to break his own John Hillard, Princeton , 5-10,
club rushing mark of 1,097 175, Sr.
yards in Los Angeles' regular
SECOND TEAM OFFENSE
Ends - Brad Baker, North
season final game against
Canton Hoover, 6--2, 172, Sr.;
Buffalo here Sunday.
Ted
Metcalf,
New
Philadelphia , 6--1, 190, Sr.
Tackles -Jeff Lear, Elyria,
6-4, 250, Sr.; Ray Amos,
Warren Harding, 6--2, 210, Sr.
Guards - Dan Wells, Lemon
Monroe, 6--2, 220, Sr.; Ct'll"is
Wilson, Troy, S-2, 210, Sr.
Center
- Joe Struder,
Masslllon, S-1, 203, Sr.
in 7 of the learn's 26 caroms,
Quarterback - Bob Maxwell,
while Brent Stanley, who Cuyahoga Falls, 6--1, 175, Sr.
suffered a back injw-y in the
Running
backs
-Rod
early going, snagged 5 missed Stewart, Lancaster, 6--3, 200,
shots.
Sr .; Jeff Feichl, . Kettering
.
Fairmont West, 5-9, 180, Sr.;
Th e Marau ders hlt 50 pet. Ed Prosuch, Lake Catholic,~.
ri-om the field, connecting 15 195' sr.
times in 30 tries, but shot a
SECOND TEAM DEFENSE
freezing 7 of 22 from the
Ends - Quentin Lowry,
charity stripe lor 32 pet.
Shaker Heights, 6--3, 215, Sr.;
Thursday, the Marauder Joe Hornik, Lakewood St.
frosh host the Ironton Tigers at Edward, 6--3, 215, Sr.
5:15 in the Morrison Gym_;) Tackles - Andy Schoenhoft,
nasmm.
MEIGS (37)- Follrod 4-2-10,
G. Halley 3--0-6, Arnold 3--0-6,
Winebrenner 1-l.J, Witte 1-0-2,
Rawlings 1-1-3, Caoey ().2-2,
Ebersbach 1·1·3, Hall 1-0-2.
TOTALS 15-7-37.
WELLSTON ( 19) - Baker 2D-4, Cox l.J.-5, Gillard 2-2-6,
Swingle 1-0-2, Rapp 0-2-2,
TOTALS 6-7-19.

hones show life

:
:
•
•
••
:
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•
:

ll onorable mentions went. to
By the end of the season
quarterbacks Steve Bar- Gliffin had ga ined I ,620 yard'
tkowski of Ca lifornia , Steve and ,.verctged 147.3 a game, to
Joachim of Temple, Tom fi nish second nationally behind
L1ements of Notre Dctme and Utah Sta~e·s Louie Giammona,
Freddie Solomon of Tampa, who averaged 153.4. The OSU
rwming b&lt;-1ck Tony Dorsett uf spCed~ter. however, carried
Pi tts bu rgh a nd defen sive the ball nearly 100 times less
tac kle Randy \Vhite of th a n Gia mmona, and h is
Maryland.
average or 6. 7 yards a carry
Griffin posted a record £or we~s the nation 's tops.
grou nd ga ining consistency
Hayes said il was no sw-prise
this season which was un- to him to hea r his a ll-Ame rican
matche&lt;i in college history, and back was UPI's No. 1 player of
thus became the first junior to the year , for he had been an
win the UP! award since 0 ..J. outstancling player each game.
Simpson of Southern Ca l in
"The amaz ing thing about
1967.
Arc hie is that he's good every
Griffin piled up more than week," his coac h said. ''Tha t
100 yards in each of Ohio means every tea m keys on
State's 11 games and se t an him_ His ability to spin around
NCAA record of 22 consecu tive and keep his balance is far and
games in which he lopped the away the hp_c;;t
century mark .
!;But his mental balance is

CO LUMBUS ( UP!)
Warr en
Hardin g's
star
tailback John Henry Ziegler
was a runaway winner in the
back of the year balloting for
the 1974 United Press International Class AAA All.{)hio
football team where Cincinnati
Moeller's ace tackle Jay Case
took defensive honors. Ziegler ,

press stop cage giants

~ Redskin

FOUND GUILTY
LANCASfER, Ohio (UP!)Three teenagers were found
guilty Monday of criminal
endangerment in the recent
Pickerington School fire after
their original arson charge was .
reduced.
The Fairfield Juvenile Court
ordered Steven Andriof, 16, and
Kenneth Hickman, 17, pennanently committed to the ctJBio.. 1
dy of the Ohio Youth ComBy Motor ROute where carrief
mission. Robert Hickman, IS,
tervice not ava il able. One
S2.60. By mall in Ohio
was temporarily committed w month,
and W . Va., One Year. S18 ; Six
1
months, $9 .50 ; Three months,
the OYC's Child Study Center
$6. Elsewhere $22 .00 year ; six
for a 30-&lt;lay diagnostic
months $11.50, three months,
$6.50 . Subscript ion pri c e in examination.
cludes
Sunday
T imes

more concerned a bou I. passing
tests than g&lt;-~ t.hering honors.
But he's also been busy
collecting post-season a wa rdoe;.
Last week the Columbus native
was awarded the Heisman
Trophy, college football's top
accolade.
Griffin, proclaimed by OSU
coach Woody Hayes as "the
best football player I've ever
seen, " ha d little trouble gelling
his latest laurels. He received
nearly six times as many votes
as his nearest competi tor,
Oklahoma jtutior running bac k
Joe Washington, in th e
balloting of sports writers and
sportscasters from across the
nation .
Consistent Gainer
The Buckeye back, a consist·
ent 100-plus yard ground gainer
all season, was picked as the
player of the year on 57 of the
80 ballots cast, while Washington received 10 . Anthonv
Davis, runnerup to Griffin in
Reisman balloliilg, failed to gel
a single vote.

Kentucky break, Irish

•

DEVOTED TO THE
INTER EST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
'• C,HESTER L . TANNEHILL
E•ec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Published dai l y except
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
Publ i shing Company, 111
Court St., Pomeroy , Oh i o
-45769 . Bus i ness Off ice Phone
992-2156 . Editor ial Phone 9922157.
Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio
Naliona l advertising
representative
Bott inelti Gallagher , Inc ., 12 Easl 42nd
St ., New York, New York :
Subscription
rates:
Delivered by carrier where
availab l e 60 cents per week-

avoid excess fat . Also yow- diet
should be a low-fat, lowcholesterol diet and low enough
in calories to prevent obesity.
If you smoked I would of course
tell you that you should quit at
once.
Body temperature varies
from ·the head to the toes. The
feet tend to be considerably
cooler than the face . At night
the circulation slows down, and
since the feel and legs are
farthest from the heart, they
cool the most. Cool muscles are
more inclined wcramp. Many
readers have written into tell
me about the good results they
have gotten from using warm
socks,
Don ' t use a heating pad or
something like that to warm
your feet as it may get too hot
while you are asleep and burn
you . With poor circulation, if
that is your problem, that
would cause you serious dif·
ficulties . Let me know hoY' you
get along.

. ·, :·. ~· · ,', . ' . ·. '

...

COLUMBUS , Ohio 1UP!) - ·
Ohio Slate's sta r running bac k
Archie Griffin. today said he
was surpirsed to be selected
college footba ll's player of the
record, dropped from seve nth year by Uniled ' Press Internato eighth, but the Gamecocks' tional and considers it "a grea t
loss allowed Kansas, 3--1, to honor."
climb one position to ninth and
The 5-foot-9, 184-pound junior
Maryla nd, 3--0, now is in lOth rtutning back was studying for
place.
fin al exainalions today when
NEW YORK WP II
The informed of the award.
Un.ted Pr ess
lnterna1ionu l's
The little speedster had just
Boa rd ot Coaches f irst week of
co llege basketball r ating s , with returned from Florida and a
number of f i r st pla ce votes an d
reco rds in pa r en theses ( 39 of J2 Kodak All-American Team
coarhe s vo tin g J .
pi cture taking session after
T ('a m
Points
deciding
not to go lo New York
IN C St . 13 1 ) (40 )
J7J
2. UCLA (4) (4 OJ
City lor U!night's National
3 Indi ana (]) (J 01
JIO
Football Foundation's Hall of
•1. Loui svil le ( 1 J (2 OJ
5. North Carol ina (J OJ
Fame celebration. He said he
6. Sou th E&gt;r n Ca l (J 0)
16\
7. Marquette (2 OJ
113 had changed his mind because
8. Alabama ( 2 0 )
of his need for a last-minute
9. Kansas ( J t )
95
exam
studying with a friend at
10 Maryland (3 OJ
93
11. Notre Da mE&gt; 13 -0J
33 his apartment here.
17 Sou th c'a r o lina I I 11
32
" I'm studying real hard for
IJ Penn (J 0)
10
14 . Arizona State (3 Ol
the tests," he said, adding he
15 Ar i zo n a (.1 Ol
15 presently is giving no thought
16. (T ie) P urdue {2 I )
16. fTiE'l Oregon St . {4 -0)
to the future other than getting
18 Memph is St . (2 OJ
8 a position in industrial rela19 (Tie .I Oregon {3 OJ
7
19 (T i ~) Michigan (2 -0)
7 tions. He indicated he was

rating spots

College Basketball Results
By United Pre ss lnlernational
Ea st
SE Mass . 90 Lowe ll T ech 82
Queens Co l i. 71 NY Martime 65
Lafayelte 75 Brow n 71
Ursinus 86 Swarthm or e 81
Del Val. 74 Phila . Pha rm 70
Montcla ir St. ll2 Kea n 84
Jrsy Cty St. 67 Trntn St 80
Canisius 58 LeMoyne 53
Bowdoin 83 M I T 82
Fairfld 90 51. ~eter's 78
N !agar a 77 Buffa l o 58
Clarion 57 Frednia St . 53
Marshall 80 Morhed St 69

•
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Just In
Time For
The
Hol,days!

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w

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He11t may help leg cramps

,.

"

The ~ily Sentinel

younger, leg cramps can be
ca used by in adequate circulation.
This can happen because
there is a blockage in the large
arteries in the pe lvis or upper
thigh. If the arteries below this
area are open, a vascular
surgeot:~ can simply put in a
g raft of a tube or hose-like
syn thetic material and detour
the blood around the blocked
area.
In some cases the arteries
are severely blocked all the
way to the toes and ther. there
is nothing to detour lo, because
the arteries are like a dead-end
stree t. But, if you can make a
detour, the operation is usually
very successful .
If you don't have a problem
that can be corrected ~
there are two other things I
would suggest. Be sw-e you get
plenty of calcium . A quart of
milk a day should meet yowneeds, and with your history I
would prefer [l be Skim milk to

.

l To;ili}";.idl UPI tabs Bucks' Griffin the best

memo blames

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E . Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - For the
past tw o years I have had
severe leg cramps , calf and
thigh , mostly ~t night, but
sometimes during the day.
About two years ago I had a
prostate gland operation. My
prostate was aboullhe size of a
grapefrqjt bul no tumor.
I take 200 mg. quinine capsules every eight hours or
Quinamm tablets at bedtime,
but relief from the leg cramps
is only slight. I exercise my
toes, feet and legs by flexing ,
twisting , bending, rubbing, etc.
I'm 61 and have severe
pulm onary emphysema and
chroni c bronchitis. I don 't
smoke. Do you have any
comments on my condition or
ways to correct it?
DEAR READER - . The
medicines you are taking are
often prescribed for leg
cramps.. I presume you have
had a careful examination of
the circulation in your legs. I~
your age g;roup , and s~metim~s

~

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Sent inel.

r-

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·'
..... '' '.-

_,

Mitchell for cover-up

Carmei News,

~

, . 3 - T?e. ~~~y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,_O., Tuesday, Dec. lU 1974
r~-~ &amp;::··················· ·
.

~ong-lost

,,

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I

2- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. IO, 1974

By WESLEY. li , PIPPERT
WASHINGTON ( UPI) John D. Ehrlichman is offering
in his defense a long-lost report
which he says he delivered to
Richard Nixon in April, 1973,
that blames former Attorney
General John N. Mitchell for
much of the Watergate coverup .
Chief Prosecutor James F.
Neal says the report, which
Ehrlichman said he wrote by
hand on seven pages of White
House stationery. is "a
charade ... the ultimate in
pulling wagons up around the
White House ... ' '
U.S. District Court Judge
John J . Sirica said he would
rule today on whether the
report could be ·admitted as
evidence.
Neal and William S. Frates,
Ehrlichman's lawyer, had a
noisy confrontation over the
report Monday with the jury
he~ing the Watergate con-

.
.
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�.
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday Dec.
~~Q •-· w..~.~
m~:::

.

ti -Pomeroy
~l
~-~
•_. Personal Notes ~-

I

Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Knight , Wintersville. returned
home SWiday after visiting
here a week with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight.
Visiting on the Thanksgiving
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Knight and son, Steve,
Caledonia . Wednesday Mr . and
Mrs . Knight entertained with a
dinner party in observance of
the birthday of Mr s . Bill
Matlack. The Knights· guests
were their sons and their
families, and Mr. and Mrs .
Matlack.
Mrs . Fred Goeglein •pent
Thursday at Millersport
visitmg Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
Karr .
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Ma tlack
were
the
Thank sgiving
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. George Dallas and
family , St. Paris.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Mitchell, Ma son,
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Webb
and daughters , Carol, Wanda
and Penny, South Point.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEF'ORT Masonic
Lodge 363, 7:30 p.m. Work in
E.A. degree . All master
masons invited.
HARRISONVILLE Chapter
OES, regular meeting at 8 p.m.

Practice

for

installation

follows.

•·

'

.

DISABLED
Ameri ca n
Veterans Meigs Chapter 53 at
7:30p.m. at chapter home on
Butternut Ave. Refreshments .
All members urged to attend.
WINDING Trail Garden
Club, Christmas dinner party
at Trinity Church served by the
Happy Harvesters Club with
Mrs. Wilma Terrell as hostess .
Roll call, a Bible verse ;
program by Mrs. Terrell, " The
Unadorned Tree," gift exchange . Dinner at 6 p.m .
SYRACUSE PTA, 7:30 p.m .
at the Syracuse Elementary
School.
TOPS, 7 p.m . Tuesday ,
American Legion Hall, Middleport.
WEDNESDAY
WHITE
Rose
Lodge,
Christmas dinner, 6:30 Wednesday night at the Meigs Inn.
Regular meeting, I :30 .Wednesday at the American Legion
Hall, Middleport.
POMEROY Uons Club, 12
noon, Wednesday, Meigs Inn,
Christmas party with members to take gift for exchange.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Masonic Temple.
BOSWORTH Council, 46,
Royal and Select Masters, 8:30
p .m .
Pomeroy
Masonic
Temple.
SOUTHERN Local Board of
Education, 7:30 p.m . at high
schooL
· ,
QUARTERLY Luncheon
Club, planned potluck, noon at
the home of Mrs. Dale Smith
with a $1 gift exchange.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Waller Crooks, annual
Christmas party with a $3 gift
exchange.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m . home of
Mrs. Walter Crooks. Gift exchange with packages to be
judged.
LEBANON GOLDEN Age
Club at noon, with Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Hilton . Potluck
dinner. $1 gift exchange;
program
in
afternoon .

Everyone welcome.
THURSDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at hall in
Chester . All Master Masons
invited.
PROGRAM on Appalachian
music by Jennifer Sheets, vice
president, when the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society meets at 7:30 p.m. at
the . Meigs Museum. Membership dues for new year now
payable.
PAST OFFICERS Club,
Racine Chapter, O.E.S.,
Masonic Temple. New officers
· elected, gift exchange. Mrs.
Ruth
Barnitz
presents .
program. Refreshments will be
potluck.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
6:30 p.m. potluck dinner with
meat to be furnished by the
-Grange. Members to take their
own table service.
EASTERN Local Board of
Education, 7:30p.m. postponed
from Tuesday, at high school.

,Puily '.~· Poiniers
R~· PoJI~·

5 - The DaUv Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomerov.

Racine OESinstalls new officers

('ram&lt;'r

An old standby
for wood stains
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Can you tell me huw to r(lrnOV&lt;' a white
coating on a polished hardwood floor left ~fter a radial or leukN :
- H. McC.

DEAR H. McC - My old standby for removing white spots
from furniture is to make a paste with cold clgare«e ashes and
either butter or margarine. Rub In very hard following the grain
of the wood until spot dltiappeArs. It seems logical that this
should work just as weD oo a polished floor but perhaps some of
you readers may have better Ideas. - POU. Y.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with electric mixers that
a re made with such short legs on the beaters that each time I trv
to whip any quantity of potatoes or make an angel cake 1which is
often ) U1c beaters are far too short and the mixture is all clogged
up underthe mixer. Thts is very frustrating for with beaters a bit
longer we could do so many jobs to much better. - ISABEL.
DEAR POLLY - I used to let the coffee and tea stains stay in
my pots as I could not get rid of the bleach taste for a week after
s uch cleaning. Now after bleaching them I rinse with water, put a
small amount of vinegar in each pot, swish around until all the
Inside of the pot has been touched by the vinegar, rinse again and
all is clean with no taste of bleach.
POU.Y'S NOTE : I flod electric dishwasher detergent In
water is great for soaking staiDS out of my while porcelain-lite
coffee pot .
My paper-towel holder is an older one made to accommodate
the smaUer rolls and is really overstuffed when I try to put in a
big economy roiL To remedy this I first use a new roll to clean the
windows and by lhe lime it is needed In the kitche n, it is down to
the right size for my holder. - MRS. L. L.
DEAR POU. Y - I keep a small whisk broom underneath my
Christmas tree skirt. When needles fa ll from the tree onto the
skirt, I pull out my hidden broom and simply sweep the needles
Into my hand. - NANCY B.
DEAR POLLY - I have discovered a great solution to use on
the underarms of shirts to remove perspiration stains. Make a
thin paste of water and a mixture of haU baking soda and haU
gran.tlar detergent. Allow stains to soak In this for about 20
minutes and then proceed to launder In the usual manner.-

HM 'INI': -· M~~&gt;al Dl\1!11"
and llen Phils4Jn wt•N....ins.tallcd

; ,~ s udtl1 c

patron: Grella
Si1npson, secrc lary; Chlorus
a s wor1 hy matron and worthy Grimm, tressurer; Catherine
p.rtfr(tn or Haci nr Chapter J:l4. Wood , condut·Lrcssi Romaine
Order of lhl' f:(.lstern Star, in Fr."'dcric k, associate coninst&lt;tllati on ceremonies con· duc lress ; Lillian Weese ,
rl ucted Monday ni~ht at the chaplain;
Laura
Circ le,
Masonic Temple .
marshall; Shirley Johnson ,
Others inslalled were Mrs. org anis t ; Barbara Du gan ,
Barba ra Roush, assoc ia te Adah; Patsy White, Ruth;
matron ;
James
Roush, Jane Wa~ner, Esther; Bernice

Theiss, Martha; Martha West,
Electa; Kathleen McNickle,
warder; .and Helen Pickens,
sentin eL

stalling chaplain ; Letha
Morris, install ing conduc tress ;

Leona Hensley, wa rd er , and
Ada Bissell , sentineL

, llns lalling officer we:ts Lou ise

Stewart, assisted · by Laura

A welcome

to

open

the

cha pter was g iven by Lillian

Circle, inviting marshall ; Cora

Weese, worthy matron, and

Webb and Ralph Webb, installing marshalls ; Lucil le
Swackhamer,
installing
organist; Jeane Fisher, in-

Ra lph Webb , worthy patron.
Introduced were Dr. Howard
Shull , associate grand patron;
Do n Spring, deputy grand
matron; Elsie Sc hoe ni an ,
to
g ra nd representativ e

Michigan; Mary Shul l, grand

Senior citizens to sing cantata
The cantata, " Th e Holy
Nighp- by Don Besig will he
presented by the Senior
Citizens Chorus Sunday at 3
p.m. in the auditorium of the
former Pomeroy JW!ior High
School building .
Mrs . Corrie Neutzling is
director with Mrs . Hazel

tenor; and Ralph Kerns, bass.
The choral group is composed of Mrs . Clara Thomas,
Miss Mae Web&lt;ir, Dean Blackwood, Mrs . Thora Blackwood,
Mrs . Vida ·Green, Mrs .
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs . Alma
Miller, Ira Wolfe, Ralph Kerns,
Mrs. Rose McDade, Mrs .
Thomson as the accompanist. Virginia Gulley, Mrs. Nellie
Narrator for the cantata will be Russell, Mrs. Caryl Cook, Mrs.
Mrs . Neya Seyfried.
Taking-roles will be Mr . and
Mrs . William E. Watson, Mary
VISITS MOTHER
and Joseph ; Gene McElroy ,
Mrs.
Harold Weaver and
Orville Graham, Linouil
daughter,
Peggy,
St.
Johnson, shepherds; Jewell
Curtis , Dayton and Kermit Lottisvme, spent a day recently
McElroy, the wise men . visiting his mother, Mrs. Roy
Soloists will be Sarah Winebrenner and brother,
Phillbrick, soprano; Ira WoUe , William G. Winebrenner and
family . Visiting 'I)Ianksgivlng
weekend with the Weaver
family at St. Louisville were
HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Lester Hart , Pomeroy, Mr . and Mrs. WiUiam G.
is a medical patient at St. Winebrenner, Mary Ann,
Joseph 's Hospital in Parkers· Paula and Becky and Mrs. Roy
Winebrenner.
burg, W. Va .

representative to Okla homa;

past matrons and past patron ~.
of
Racine
Chapter '
disti nguished masons, and past'
matrons and past patrons of
visiting chapters. The worthy
matron and patron extended
thanks for cooperating during.
the past year .
Arrangements made by Mrs.
Diddle decorated . the chapter
room a nd dining room where
refreshments of sandwiches
cookies, nuts, pWICh and coffee
were se rved by Helen Pickens
and her committee.

Say Merry Christmas to Her

.

WIDE SELECTION

Kathleen Ward, Mrs. Cora
Hilton, Mrs. Ethel Johnson,
Mrs. Ethel Hug hes, Mrs.
Teresa Byer, Mrs. Eth el
Stewart, Mrs. Ralph Kerns,
Mrs. Phillbrick, Mrs. Jessie
Houchins and Mrs . Rose
Ginther.
Preceding the cantata, there
will he group carol singing, and
piano duets of carols by Mrs.
Neutzling and Mrs . Thomson .

.-------.,
Now! Lay It Away

SINGER
~· mall deposit will hold

The Fabric Shop
111 W. Second

Th

Tl MEX · FEATURING

GIFT
Perflct
latcll

STAINLESS STEEL BACKS,
UNBREAKABLE
MAINSPRING AND
SHOCK RESISTANT.
THERE'S A TIM EX
WATCH FOR EVERYONE.

Fat
Chrtstiiias

up

I
I

I

992-2281

'

REG. '14.95
CHRISTMAS
PRICE

------------------N&amp;N Sports Shop

As the years pass by, the
value of most property tends
to increase... but one serious;
mistake many people make
is . falling to keep their fire
insurance up to date. How
long has it been sin~e you've
· l'lad an ekpert evaluation of

your

300 E. MAIN

Baker Furniture

POMEROY, OHIO

Pomeroy

IF YOU HAVE SCALE THAT BUILDS UP
IN PANS AND APPLIANCES

YOU'D
BETTER ·cALL

...,."'Wl"'

guarantees you · ~, ..:.·. ~ .
~II
I
' BRIDAL
SET
;'! exce en! va ue in every ('_
.SO
162
.
purchase you make
~

~,-..""- -~'• ·" - #~ ·•"-.#'··"'-

20% OFF ON A---..:/Z.J
LIVING ROOM SUITES

TV

0·

Everything is going up, even the
most basic needs-clothes, food,
fuel, medical services, you
name it.
We're being clobbered by the
'
same enemy.
It doesn't matter whether we're
buying wire or trucks or insulators or the common power pole.
We keep paying more and more.
Our operating expense keeps
climbing· and climbing and
climbing.

•

And the price we have to pay for
money to maintain efficiency
and build for .the future is staggering.

of a ton of coal has risen over
200%. So, you have a devastat. ing fuel adjustment cost on
' bill.
every
'

The tough part is we have no
choice. We must pay the price.
' If we don't, we run the risk of not
having coal to burn to generate
the :electricity you need. A situatiori neither of us could tolerate.
Incidentally, we hope you understand that not a single penny of
the fuel adjustment cost you pay
do we keep. It goes directly to
our fuel suppliers.
There is one other cost we face
that is a major reason why electricity bills are more today. The
cost of meeting state and federal
environmental regulations.
Clean air, for instance.
It certainly is something we all
warit.

Our fuel q,PI!ts? They've gone
right thro'ugh tile roof. The cost

So,.we have equipment to
re'!love fly ash. And tall stacks to
disperse gases high in the

atmosphere. And a sophisticated, computerized, monitoring
system to be sure we don't
violate the clean air standards.

'

SOOD 'Sl'ATE
lUNDER 8 SPEEDS

WAFFLE BAKER
~

$31 99

Ebersbach Hardware
POMEROY .

STIHL 016

Th is

is

THE REAL NUMBER 1
VALUE IN AN

t he

AUTOMATIC MINI-SIZE SAW

world 's best SO LID
STATE cloc k with
many

exclusive
features :
in stant
alarm
display ,

eAUIDMATIC OILING
e"ALL-BEARING" ENGINE
•EXTRA QUIET MUFFLER
eAND MANY OTHER
TOP QUALITY FEATURES.

brightness contro l,
AM · PM
m arker ,
int erruption

si gnal . .. an d more
See it and enter the
world of electronic
l ime!$6 9. 9.5

·,

P:OMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
YOUR COMPLETE TIRE QNTER
POMEROY, O.

Pomeroy, Ohio

100 ~~T. SOLID STATE
CHSSIS .: . no tubes to weaken
or butfn out
uses less
electricity, too.

THE ROYAL E10. Miniature
AM pock~t portable radio. Fea-

eA special gift
eSpecially priced
eFor that ,pedal
person ·
Only

•444

tures private listening enjoy·
ment with earphone attachment.
Automatic gain control . Built-

. INGl~.S .

in Wave magnet ®antenna. Oper·
on 9-volt battery pack (in ·

FURNITURE

ates

eluded) . Avail
·in
White or Beige c01·i&gt;ts.

I

Gold ,

INGS

Gilt-A-Ram a Store
992-263$':,~:: ·
Midd~port

locks In the automatic picture,
yet allows changes for taste.

from

Pickens Hardware
Mason, W.Va.

Bring in a bicycle. Buy a Honda.
Help others. Help r,~un~~!· Chrlslmas.

25

!~~.~

measure
piclure

Sears Catalog Merchant Store

your

participating Honda dealer i s of ·
ter-ln g

one

of

the

most

uniQue

Christma s giff .glvlng ideas ever . It
will help needy youngsters get the
tun o f a bi c ycle tor Christmas . And
make it easier for you to give your
youn gster th e tun of a new Honda .
Her e's how i t works : Bring in anv
re gular metal b icyc le or tricycle In
r id able con d itio n and your Honda
de., ler will pay you $20 for It when
you purchase one of th ese smaller
Hondas- a QA -50, Z· SOA , MR ·SO.
ATC 70 , CT 70 Then , h e will give
the
bicycle
or
t ncyc1e '"your name
to the Marine Corps
Reser ve
Toys -For -

Program or
charitable
or ga ni zati on . It all
adds up to a better
Ch ristmas
tor
everyone. · See your
dealer for all the
e)(citina dettt il!i
Tots

an o t he r

FREE ACTION POSTERS. There's a lree
for
'lUST fbf V1S1T1ng your
Honda dealership - a full -size, four .co lor Honda action poster . Supply' s.,.llmlted, so
camP. In t.odav . .'
·

to sew

knit"

extra -bright color phosphors
surrounded with black

Console Color 1V

~

" easy

SU PE; R
CH ROM I XI r I
BLAC K MATRIX SCREEN .. .

100% solid state

GE, SUNBEAM,
and RIVAL

Just
Arrived

ADJUSTABLE ONE BUT TON COLOR ... one control

'

I.

'·.

atest
Se th
as clock form
se lves
el ec ically
before
eyes . Yet there
no mov ing parts
nothing to wear

OPEN

...

COFFEE POTS
from $1499

num er al s on th is

The rate increase we 've .!iS ked
for will be only the second one
in 50 years of serving you.

Company

FULLY AUTOMATIC

CLOCK OF THE FUTURE

out .

Fill that
stocking
with small
appliances by

9 CUP

$3329

0

Believe it or not, we're sorry
about that.

We know you can never be
happy about our getting a rate
increase but we hope you have a
better understanding of why we
need it.

1 GAL
OOOKER-FRYER

'

Take galloping general inflation,
staggering money costs and
necessary environmental costsput them all together and you
come to the unhappy conclusion
that we need a raise, too.

A MESSAGE FROM THE PEOPLE OF

...

~2997

Po ero

The cost of buying, installing
and operating all this hardware
runs into millions upon millions
upon millions. And that cost is
part of the price we all must pay
if we want clean air.

...

SAYRE
HARDWARE
.
W.VA.

'39.95

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

'

re's American

No lender .will give us a short
.term loan:Tro; 'a cost less than
12 to 1.5o/o i'lfyou've tried to get
a mortg~ge or a loan lately, you
know what we mean.
'

REG.

heritage house

.

Sunbeam Applia.nces

Makes delicious drip col·
fee automatically! Heating
element brews coffee fast;
warmer plate maintains
drinking temperature! Self·
cltaning metal tank. With
25 disposable filters,
50-ounce heat-resistant
glass decanter.

on

Inflation is no longer nibbling at
your income. It's taking giant
chunks of it.

POMEROY

MR. COFFEE 11
10-CUP COFFEE
BREWER
as

41.25

For all the days of Christmas,
and a whole new season
ahead . .. exciting new
Poll -Parrots, alight
with fashion news,
of holiday zing. And
very down to earth in
matters of cr&lt;1ftsmanst1ii
. top-quality materials,
built-in shape retention and support!

essler's Jewelry·

POMEROY, O.

en?

" HIS" TO MATCH

DESIGN MAY VARY SLIGHTLY

JACK'S FURNITURE

seen

\

NEWHAVEN

Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp; Mason Counties
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
PH. 992-2181

~.·· {9,~; ;:,~u9tr7tytian ~,~

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

..,.

PH. 992·5130
107 Sycamore

POMEROY LANDMARK

POMEROY, 0.

~

you.n
a .rru.se

Insurance coverage?

REUTERBROGAN
INSURANCE

MOD EL HDB772

lUNG S ENLARGtD TO SHOW DETAil

Paper

and Lavinia Simpson sang
"Star of the East," with Mrs.
Urcle at the organ. Prayer by
Rev. Shiveley and group
singing of "Blest Be the Tie"
concluded the program.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Crit Bradford, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Ervin and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Hill, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph McKenzie, Mrs.
Frances Roberts, Rev. and
Mrs. Howard Shiveley and
John, Mrs. Lavinia Simpson,
Mrs. Mattie Circle, Mr. and
Mrs. Vernal Blackwood, Mr.
and Mrs. Roher! Hill, Mrs.
Raymond Hensler , Miss Edith
Hayman, Mrs. Alleyne Reese,
and Mr . and Mrs . Olden
Thaxton.

FEATURE-PACKED
CONVERTIBLE
DISH-POTWASHER

~ll

Wesleyans
have party

"The

$1235

Speci" I Christmas Sale
Begins Friday.

•

PORTSMOUTH
The
Portsm outh
Community
Concert Association has an~
noW! ced a change in their
schedule for the nex t concert.
The concert, to be presented by
Barbara Hendricks, soprano,
originally
planned
for
Tuesday, Jan . 7, 1975, has been
changed and will be at 8 p.m.
this Thursday in the Ports·
mouth High &amp;hool auditorium.
A large audience enjoyed the
Tri-CoWity Community Con.

Doesn't Come." Mrs. Circle

!

'}

Portsmouth concert set

Robert Hill,

. I

BASKETBALL

Roll s where needed now--easily bui lt in later - 5
Cycle Sel ections Dish &amp; Pol Washerdesigned to remove dr ied·on and baked· in soils
tram po ts, pan s and casser oles Normal
Wash--for thorough washing of everyday loads
- R~n se &amp; Hold- to precondit ion dishes for later
wa shing - · Shar i Wash- For lightl y soi led or
sm all loads - Plate Warmer- warms dishes to
ju st the r i ght servi ng temperature - Llft -A Le\lel Upper Rack - Multi -level Wash ing Ac .
tion - High· Eff i ciency Wa sh Mechanism - Dual
Detergent Di spenser Wash .Water Tem perature Maintenance - Self-Cleaning Action
with Saft . food Disposer - Whisper Cleanlr)
Sound Insula tion Cushion .Coated Random
Loading Racks Whi l e Porcelain ·Enamel
Interior - Maple Wood Top - Unicouple Wafer
Fauce t Connector l ets you dr aw wa ter while the
diswa sher is wa shing dishes .

Thi s fur lounge i s contoured for comfort and upholstered
in soft but dur abl e orion for that romantic touch. Thick
polyfoam cush ion ing and bu ilt in head rest for extra
co m fort.

You will receive a dollar U PoUy uses your favorite homemaking Idea, Pel Peeve, PoUy's Problem or solution to a
problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

Circle, "Grandma Says" i

~~

CB2
.

MRS. A. P.

jazz musicians included Art
Hodes, direc tor and pianist ;
Franz Jackson, clarinet and
sax; Jimmy Johnson , string
bass, and Hillard Brown ,
drums.
Their varied program traced
the broad spectrum of jau.,
from early Dixieland, ragtime,
all-time favorites ( tributes to
Judy Garland, George M.
Cohan, Sophie Tucker and Ted
Lewis ) up to the SOWids of
today in " Yesterday " and
"
Watermelon Man ." Their
cert Association 's
fir s t
presentaton last month, a program a lso paid special
concert by the Art Hodes Jau. tributes to the music of George
Four. The four accomplished Gershwin and several songs
made popuTar by Louis Arm·
strong.
Almost all of the selections
featured each memher of the
foursome in solo passages, and
vocalizing by Franz Jackson
added to many of the numbers .
Following the concert, a
RACINE - A family night reception was held at the home
observance and Christmas of Dr. and Mrs. Charles E.
party was held Wednesday Holzer.
night at the Racine United
The next concert to be
Wesleyan Church . .
presented by the local
Ham and turkey were association will be the Paul
featured in a potluck dinner Kuenlz Chamber Orchestra of
with the social room being Paris at 3 p .m ., Feb. 9, 1975.
decorated in keeping with the
yuletide season. Ed ith Hayman
and Mattie Urcle were in
charge of the program which
opened with "Joy to the
World." Prayer was by Rev .
Howard Shiveley, and Mrs.
Betty Blackwood had a solo,
" 0 Holy Night. "
Mrs. Eta Mae Hill read "A
Prayer"; Mrs. Ora Hill, 11 A
Friend"; Mrs. Beulah Bradford, " My Prayer"; Mrs.

For Only

992-5081

(ONTEMPORARY
CHAISE LOUNGE

Sewing Machine
For Chrisbnas '74

Voit

NEW

882-2525

,I

..

Books
$169 50
The Sewing_Center
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN MON., TUES., WED. NIGHTS6 : 30 -8:30

�.
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday Dec.
~~Q •-· w..~.~
m~:::

.

ti -Pomeroy
~l
~-~
•_. Personal Notes ~-

I

Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Knight , Wintersville. returned
home SWiday after visiting
here a week with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight.
Visiting on the Thanksgiving
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Knight and son, Steve,
Caledonia . Wednesday Mr . and
Mrs . Knight entertained with a
dinner party in observance of
the birthday of Mr s . Bill
Matlack. The Knights· guests
were their sons and their
families, and Mr. and Mrs .
Matlack.
Mrs . Fred Goeglein •pent
Thursday at Millersport
visitmg Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
Karr .
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Ma tlack
were
the
Thank sgiving
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. George Dallas and
family , St. Paris.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Mitchell, Ma son,
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Webb
and daughters , Carol, Wanda
and Penny, South Point.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEF'ORT Masonic
Lodge 363, 7:30 p.m. Work in
E.A. degree . All master
masons invited.
HARRISONVILLE Chapter
OES, regular meeting at 8 p.m.

Practice

for

installation

follows.

•·

'

.

DISABLED
Ameri ca n
Veterans Meigs Chapter 53 at
7:30p.m. at chapter home on
Butternut Ave. Refreshments .
All members urged to attend.
WINDING Trail Garden
Club, Christmas dinner party
at Trinity Church served by the
Happy Harvesters Club with
Mrs. Wilma Terrell as hostess .
Roll call, a Bible verse ;
program by Mrs. Terrell, " The
Unadorned Tree," gift exchange . Dinner at 6 p.m .
SYRACUSE PTA, 7:30 p.m .
at the Syracuse Elementary
School.
TOPS, 7 p.m . Tuesday ,
American Legion Hall, Middleport.
WEDNESDAY
WHITE
Rose
Lodge,
Christmas dinner, 6:30 Wednesday night at the Meigs Inn.
Regular meeting, I :30 .Wednesday at the American Legion
Hall, Middleport.
POMEROY Uons Club, 12
noon, Wednesday, Meigs Inn,
Christmas party with members to take gift for exchange.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Masonic Temple.
BOSWORTH Council, 46,
Royal and Select Masters, 8:30
p .m .
Pomeroy
Masonic
Temple.
SOUTHERN Local Board of
Education, 7:30 p.m . at high
schooL
· ,
QUARTERLY Luncheon
Club, planned potluck, noon at
the home of Mrs. Dale Smith
with a $1 gift exchange.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Waller Crooks, annual
Christmas party with a $3 gift
exchange.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m . home of
Mrs. Walter Crooks. Gift exchange with packages to be
judged.
LEBANON GOLDEN Age
Club at noon, with Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Hilton . Potluck
dinner. $1 gift exchange;
program
in
afternoon .

Everyone welcome.
THURSDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at hall in
Chester . All Master Masons
invited.
PROGRAM on Appalachian
music by Jennifer Sheets, vice
president, when the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society meets at 7:30 p.m. at
the . Meigs Museum. Membership dues for new year now
payable.
PAST OFFICERS Club,
Racine Chapter, O.E.S.,
Masonic Temple. New officers
· elected, gift exchange. Mrs.
Ruth
Barnitz
presents .
program. Refreshments will be
potluck.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
6:30 p.m. potluck dinner with
meat to be furnished by the
-Grange. Members to take their
own table service.
EASTERN Local Board of
Education, 7:30p.m. postponed
from Tuesday, at high school.

,Puily '.~· Poiniers
R~· PoJI~·

5 - The DaUv Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomerov.

Racine OESinstalls new officers

('ram&lt;'r

An old standby
for wood stains
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Can you tell me huw to r(lrnOV&lt;' a white
coating on a polished hardwood floor left ~fter a radial or leukN :
- H. McC.

DEAR H. McC - My old standby for removing white spots
from furniture is to make a paste with cold clgare«e ashes and
either butter or margarine. Rub In very hard following the grain
of the wood until spot dltiappeArs. It seems logical that this
should work just as weD oo a polished floor but perhaps some of
you readers may have better Ideas. - POU. Y.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with electric mixers that
a re made with such short legs on the beaters that each time I trv
to whip any quantity of potatoes or make an angel cake 1which is
often ) U1c beaters are far too short and the mixture is all clogged
up underthe mixer. Thts is very frustrating for with beaters a bit
longer we could do so many jobs to much better. - ISABEL.
DEAR POLLY - I used to let the coffee and tea stains stay in
my pots as I could not get rid of the bleach taste for a week after
s uch cleaning. Now after bleaching them I rinse with water, put a
small amount of vinegar in each pot, swish around until all the
Inside of the pot has been touched by the vinegar, rinse again and
all is clean with no taste of bleach.
POU.Y'S NOTE : I flod electric dishwasher detergent In
water is great for soaking staiDS out of my while porcelain-lite
coffee pot .
My paper-towel holder is an older one made to accommodate
the smaUer rolls and is really overstuffed when I try to put in a
big economy roiL To remedy this I first use a new roll to clean the
windows and by lhe lime it is needed In the kitche n, it is down to
the right size for my holder. - MRS. L. L.
DEAR POU. Y - I keep a small whisk broom underneath my
Christmas tree skirt. When needles fa ll from the tree onto the
skirt, I pull out my hidden broom and simply sweep the needles
Into my hand. - NANCY B.
DEAR POLLY - I have discovered a great solution to use on
the underarms of shirts to remove perspiration stains. Make a
thin paste of water and a mixture of haU baking soda and haU
gran.tlar detergent. Allow stains to soak In this for about 20
minutes and then proceed to launder In the usual manner.-

HM 'INI': -· M~~&gt;al Dl\1!11"
and llen Phils4Jn wt•N....ins.tallcd

; ,~ s udtl1 c

patron: Grella
Si1npson, secrc lary; Chlorus
a s wor1 hy matron and worthy Grimm, tressurer; Catherine
p.rtfr(tn or Haci nr Chapter J:l4. Wood , condut·Lrcssi Romaine
Order of lhl' f:(.lstern Star, in Fr."'dcric k, associate coninst&lt;tllati on ceremonies con· duc lress ; Lillian Weese ,
rl ucted Monday ni~ht at the chaplain;
Laura
Circ le,
Masonic Temple .
marshall; Shirley Johnson ,
Others inslalled were Mrs. org anis t ; Barbara Du gan ,
Barba ra Roush, assoc ia te Adah; Patsy White, Ruth;
matron ;
James
Roush, Jane Wa~ner, Esther; Bernice

Theiss, Martha; Martha West,
Electa; Kathleen McNickle,
warder; .and Helen Pickens,
sentin eL

stalling chaplain ; Letha
Morris, install ing conduc tress ;

Leona Hensley, wa rd er , and
Ada Bissell , sentineL

, llns lalling officer we:ts Lou ise

Stewart, assisted · by Laura

A welcome

to

open

the

cha pter was g iven by Lillian

Circle, inviting marshall ; Cora

Weese, worthy matron, and

Webb and Ralph Webb, installing marshalls ; Lucil le
Swackhamer,
installing
organist; Jeane Fisher, in-

Ra lph Webb , worthy patron.
Introduced were Dr. Howard
Shull , associate grand patron;
Do n Spring, deputy grand
matron; Elsie Sc hoe ni an ,
to
g ra nd representativ e

Michigan; Mary Shul l, grand

Senior citizens to sing cantata
The cantata, " Th e Holy
Nighp- by Don Besig will he
presented by the Senior
Citizens Chorus Sunday at 3
p.m. in the auditorium of the
former Pomeroy JW!ior High
School building .
Mrs . Corrie Neutzling is
director with Mrs . Hazel

tenor; and Ralph Kerns, bass.
The choral group is composed of Mrs . Clara Thomas,
Miss Mae Web&lt;ir, Dean Blackwood, Mrs . Thora Blackwood,
Mrs . Vida ·Green, Mrs .
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs . Alma
Miller, Ira Wolfe, Ralph Kerns,
Mrs. Rose McDade, Mrs .
Thomson as the accompanist. Virginia Gulley, Mrs. Nellie
Narrator for the cantata will be Russell, Mrs. Caryl Cook, Mrs.
Mrs . Neya Seyfried.
Taking-roles will be Mr . and
Mrs . William E. Watson, Mary
VISITS MOTHER
and Joseph ; Gene McElroy ,
Mrs.
Harold Weaver and
Orville Graham, Linouil
daughter,
Peggy,
St.
Johnson, shepherds; Jewell
Curtis , Dayton and Kermit Lottisvme, spent a day recently
McElroy, the wise men . visiting his mother, Mrs. Roy
Soloists will be Sarah Winebrenner and brother,
Phillbrick, soprano; Ira WoUe , William G. Winebrenner and
family . Visiting 'I)Ianksgivlng
weekend with the Weaver
family at St. Louisville were
HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Lester Hart , Pomeroy, Mr . and Mrs. WiUiam G.
is a medical patient at St. Winebrenner, Mary Ann,
Joseph 's Hospital in Parkers· Paula and Becky and Mrs. Roy
Winebrenner.
burg, W. Va .

representative to Okla homa;

past matrons and past patron ~.
of
Racine
Chapter '
disti nguished masons, and past'
matrons and past patrons of
visiting chapters. The worthy
matron and patron extended
thanks for cooperating during.
the past year .
Arrangements made by Mrs.
Diddle decorated . the chapter
room a nd dining room where
refreshments of sandwiches
cookies, nuts, pWICh and coffee
were se rved by Helen Pickens
and her committee.

Say Merry Christmas to Her

.

WIDE SELECTION

Kathleen Ward, Mrs. Cora
Hilton, Mrs. Ethel Johnson,
Mrs. Ethel Hug hes, Mrs.
Teresa Byer, Mrs. Eth el
Stewart, Mrs. Ralph Kerns,
Mrs. Phillbrick, Mrs. Jessie
Houchins and Mrs . Rose
Ginther.
Preceding the cantata, there
will he group carol singing, and
piano duets of carols by Mrs.
Neutzling and Mrs . Thomson .

.-------.,
Now! Lay It Away

SINGER
~· mall deposit will hold

The Fabric Shop
111 W. Second

Th

Tl MEX · FEATURING

GIFT
Perflct
latcll

STAINLESS STEEL BACKS,
UNBREAKABLE
MAINSPRING AND
SHOCK RESISTANT.
THERE'S A TIM EX
WATCH FOR EVERYONE.

Fat
Chrtstiiias

up

I
I

I

992-2281

'

REG. '14.95
CHRISTMAS
PRICE

------------------N&amp;N Sports Shop

As the years pass by, the
value of most property tends
to increase... but one serious;
mistake many people make
is . falling to keep their fire
insurance up to date. How
long has it been sin~e you've
· l'lad an ekpert evaluation of

your

300 E. MAIN

Baker Furniture

POMEROY, OHIO

Pomeroy

IF YOU HAVE SCALE THAT BUILDS UP
IN PANS AND APPLIANCES

YOU'D
BETTER ·cALL

...,."'Wl"'

guarantees you · ~, ..:.·. ~ .
~II
I
' BRIDAL
SET
;'! exce en! va ue in every ('_
.SO
162
.
purchase you make
~

~,-..""- -~'• ·" - #~ ·•"-.#'··"'-

20% OFF ON A---..:/Z.J
LIVING ROOM SUITES

TV

0·

Everything is going up, even the
most basic needs-clothes, food,
fuel, medical services, you
name it.
We're being clobbered by the
'
same enemy.
It doesn't matter whether we're
buying wire or trucks or insulators or the common power pole.
We keep paying more and more.
Our operating expense keeps
climbing· and climbing and
climbing.

•

And the price we have to pay for
money to maintain efficiency
and build for .the future is staggering.

of a ton of coal has risen over
200%. So, you have a devastat. ing fuel adjustment cost on
' bill.
every
'

The tough part is we have no
choice. We must pay the price.
' If we don't, we run the risk of not
having coal to burn to generate
the :electricity you need. A situatiori neither of us could tolerate.
Incidentally, we hope you understand that not a single penny of
the fuel adjustment cost you pay
do we keep. It goes directly to
our fuel suppliers.
There is one other cost we face
that is a major reason why electricity bills are more today. The
cost of meeting state and federal
environmental regulations.
Clean air, for instance.
It certainly is something we all
warit.

Our fuel q,PI!ts? They've gone
right thro'ugh tile roof. The cost

So,.we have equipment to
re'!love fly ash. And tall stacks to
disperse gases high in the

atmosphere. And a sophisticated, computerized, monitoring
system to be sure we don't
violate the clean air standards.

'

SOOD 'Sl'ATE
lUNDER 8 SPEEDS

WAFFLE BAKER
~

$31 99

Ebersbach Hardware
POMEROY .

STIHL 016

Th is

is

THE REAL NUMBER 1
VALUE IN AN

t he

AUTOMATIC MINI-SIZE SAW

world 's best SO LID
STATE cloc k with
many

exclusive
features :
in stant
alarm
display ,

eAUIDMATIC OILING
e"ALL-BEARING" ENGINE
•EXTRA QUIET MUFFLER
eAND MANY OTHER
TOP QUALITY FEATURES.

brightness contro l,
AM · PM
m arker ,
int erruption

si gnal . .. an d more
See it and enter the
world of electronic
l ime!$6 9. 9.5

·,

P:OMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
YOUR COMPLETE TIRE QNTER
POMEROY, O.

Pomeroy, Ohio

100 ~~T. SOLID STATE
CHSSIS .: . no tubes to weaken
or butfn out
uses less
electricity, too.

THE ROYAL E10. Miniature
AM pock~t portable radio. Fea-

eA special gift
eSpecially priced
eFor that ,pedal
person ·
Only

•444

tures private listening enjoy·
ment with earphone attachment.
Automatic gain control . Built-

. INGl~.S .

in Wave magnet ®antenna. Oper·
on 9-volt battery pack (in ·

FURNITURE

ates

eluded) . Avail
·in
White or Beige c01·i&gt;ts.

I

Gold ,

INGS

Gilt-A-Ram a Store
992-263$':,~:: ·
Midd~port

locks In the automatic picture,
yet allows changes for taste.

from

Pickens Hardware
Mason, W.Va.

Bring in a bicycle. Buy a Honda.
Help others. Help r,~un~~!· Chrlslmas.

25

!~~.~

measure
piclure

Sears Catalog Merchant Store

your

participating Honda dealer i s of ·
ter-ln g

one

of

the

most

uniQue

Christma s giff .glvlng ideas ever . It
will help needy youngsters get the
tun o f a bi c ycle tor Christmas . And
make it easier for you to give your
youn gster th e tun of a new Honda .
Her e's how i t works : Bring in anv
re gular metal b icyc le or tricycle In
r id able con d itio n and your Honda
de., ler will pay you $20 for It when
you purchase one of th ese smaller
Hondas- a QA -50, Z· SOA , MR ·SO.
ATC 70 , CT 70 Then , h e will give
the
bicycle
or
t ncyc1e '"your name
to the Marine Corps
Reser ve
Toys -For -

Program or
charitable
or ga ni zati on . It all
adds up to a better
Ch ristmas
tor
everyone. · See your
dealer for all the
e)(citina dettt il!i
Tots

an o t he r

FREE ACTION POSTERS. There's a lree
for
'lUST fbf V1S1T1ng your
Honda dealership - a full -size, four .co lor Honda action poster . Supply' s.,.llmlted, so
camP. In t.odav . .'
·

to sew

knit"

extra -bright color phosphors
surrounded with black

Console Color 1V

~

" easy

SU PE; R
CH ROM I XI r I
BLAC K MATRIX SCREEN .. .

100% solid state

GE, SUNBEAM,
and RIVAL

Just
Arrived

ADJUSTABLE ONE BUT TON COLOR ... one control

'

I.

'·.

atest
Se th
as clock form
se lves
el ec ically
before
eyes . Yet there
no mov ing parts
nothing to wear

OPEN

...

COFFEE POTS
from $1499

num er al s on th is

The rate increase we 've .!iS ked
for will be only the second one
in 50 years of serving you.

Company

FULLY AUTOMATIC

CLOCK OF THE FUTURE

out .

Fill that
stocking
with small
appliances by

9 CUP

$3329

0

Believe it or not, we're sorry
about that.

We know you can never be
happy about our getting a rate
increase but we hope you have a
better understanding of why we
need it.

1 GAL
OOOKER-FRYER

'

Take galloping general inflation,
staggering money costs and
necessary environmental costsput them all together and you
come to the unhappy conclusion
that we need a raise, too.

A MESSAGE FROM THE PEOPLE OF

...

~2997

Po ero

The cost of buying, installing
and operating all this hardware
runs into millions upon millions
upon millions. And that cost is
part of the price we all must pay
if we want clean air.

...

SAYRE
HARDWARE
.
W.VA.

'39.95

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

'

re's American

No lender .will give us a short
.term loan:Tro; 'a cost less than
12 to 1.5o/o i'lfyou've tried to get
a mortg~ge or a loan lately, you
know what we mean.
'

REG.

heritage house

.

Sunbeam Applia.nces

Makes delicious drip col·
fee automatically! Heating
element brews coffee fast;
warmer plate maintains
drinking temperature! Self·
cltaning metal tank. With
25 disposable filters,
50-ounce heat-resistant
glass decanter.

on

Inflation is no longer nibbling at
your income. It's taking giant
chunks of it.

POMEROY

MR. COFFEE 11
10-CUP COFFEE
BREWER
as

41.25

For all the days of Christmas,
and a whole new season
ahead . .. exciting new
Poll -Parrots, alight
with fashion news,
of holiday zing. And
very down to earth in
matters of cr&lt;1ftsmanst1ii
. top-quality materials,
built-in shape retention and support!

essler's Jewelry·

POMEROY, O.

en?

" HIS" TO MATCH

DESIGN MAY VARY SLIGHTLY

JACK'S FURNITURE

seen

\

NEWHAVEN

Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp; Mason Counties
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
PH. 992-2181

~.·· {9,~; ;:,~u9tr7tytian ~,~

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

..,.

PH. 992·5130
107 Sycamore

POMEROY LANDMARK

POMEROY, 0.

~

you.n
a .rru.se

Insurance coverage?

REUTERBROGAN
INSURANCE

MOD EL HDB772

lUNG S ENLARGtD TO SHOW DETAil

Paper

and Lavinia Simpson sang
"Star of the East," with Mrs.
Urcle at the organ. Prayer by
Rev. Shiveley and group
singing of "Blest Be the Tie"
concluded the program.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Crit Bradford, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Ervin and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Hill, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph McKenzie, Mrs.
Frances Roberts, Rev. and
Mrs. Howard Shiveley and
John, Mrs. Lavinia Simpson,
Mrs. Mattie Circle, Mr. and
Mrs. Vernal Blackwood, Mr.
and Mrs. Roher! Hill, Mrs.
Raymond Hensler , Miss Edith
Hayman, Mrs. Alleyne Reese,
and Mr . and Mrs . Olden
Thaxton.

FEATURE-PACKED
CONVERTIBLE
DISH-POTWASHER

~ll

Wesleyans
have party

"The

$1235

Speci" I Christmas Sale
Begins Friday.

•

PORTSMOUTH
The
Portsm outh
Community
Concert Association has an~
noW! ced a change in their
schedule for the nex t concert.
The concert, to be presented by
Barbara Hendricks, soprano,
originally
planned
for
Tuesday, Jan . 7, 1975, has been
changed and will be at 8 p.m.
this Thursday in the Ports·
mouth High &amp;hool auditorium.
A large audience enjoyed the
Tri-CoWity Community Con.

Doesn't Come." Mrs. Circle

!

'}

Portsmouth concert set

Robert Hill,

. I

BASKETBALL

Roll s where needed now--easily bui lt in later - 5
Cycle Sel ections Dish &amp; Pol Washerdesigned to remove dr ied·on and baked· in soils
tram po ts, pan s and casser oles Normal
Wash--for thorough washing of everyday loads
- R~n se &amp; Hold- to precondit ion dishes for later
wa shing - · Shar i Wash- For lightl y soi led or
sm all loads - Plate Warmer- warms dishes to
ju st the r i ght servi ng temperature - Llft -A Le\lel Upper Rack - Multi -level Wash ing Ac .
tion - High· Eff i ciency Wa sh Mechanism - Dual
Detergent Di spenser Wash .Water Tem perature Maintenance - Self-Cleaning Action
with Saft . food Disposer - Whisper Cleanlr)
Sound Insula tion Cushion .Coated Random
Loading Racks Whi l e Porcelain ·Enamel
Interior - Maple Wood Top - Unicouple Wafer
Fauce t Connector l ets you dr aw wa ter while the
diswa sher is wa shing dishes .

Thi s fur lounge i s contoured for comfort and upholstered
in soft but dur abl e orion for that romantic touch. Thick
polyfoam cush ion ing and bu ilt in head rest for extra
co m fort.

You will receive a dollar U PoUy uses your favorite homemaking Idea, Pel Peeve, PoUy's Problem or solution to a
problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

Circle, "Grandma Says" i

~~

CB2
.

MRS. A. P.

jazz musicians included Art
Hodes, direc tor and pianist ;
Franz Jackson, clarinet and
sax; Jimmy Johnson , string
bass, and Hillard Brown ,
drums.
Their varied program traced
the broad spectrum of jau.,
from early Dixieland, ragtime,
all-time favorites ( tributes to
Judy Garland, George M.
Cohan, Sophie Tucker and Ted
Lewis ) up to the SOWids of
today in " Yesterday " and
"
Watermelon Man ." Their
cert Association 's
fir s t
presentaton last month, a program a lso paid special
concert by the Art Hodes Jau. tributes to the music of George
Four. The four accomplished Gershwin and several songs
made popuTar by Louis Arm·
strong.
Almost all of the selections
featured each memher of the
foursome in solo passages, and
vocalizing by Franz Jackson
added to many of the numbers .
Following the concert, a
RACINE - A family night reception was held at the home
observance and Christmas of Dr. and Mrs. Charles E.
party was held Wednesday Holzer.
night at the Racine United
The next concert to be
Wesleyan Church . .
presented by the local
Ham and turkey were association will be the Paul
featured in a potluck dinner Kuenlz Chamber Orchestra of
with the social room being Paris at 3 p .m ., Feb. 9, 1975.
decorated in keeping with the
yuletide season. Ed ith Hayman
and Mattie Urcle were in
charge of the program which
opened with "Joy to the
World." Prayer was by Rev .
Howard Shiveley, and Mrs.
Betty Blackwood had a solo,
" 0 Holy Night. "
Mrs. Eta Mae Hill read "A
Prayer"; Mrs. Ora Hill, 11 A
Friend"; Mrs. Beulah Bradford, " My Prayer"; Mrs.

For Only

992-5081

(ONTEMPORARY
CHAISE LOUNGE

Sewing Machine
For Chrisbnas '74

Voit

NEW

882-2525

,I

..

Books
$169 50
The Sewing_Center
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN MON., TUES., WED. NIGHTS6 : 30 -8:30

�.,

•

'

.

·.

I
- The Daily Sentinel, Middleix&gt;rt-Pomeroy, 0., 'l'uesday, Dec . 1·0, 1974

•

6- .The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'l'uo.sctay, Dec. 10, 1974

Sorority will provide for family

Students on field trip
Hogpr Dixm1, sun of ;'vir. and

As a special serv in · project

uf· Mrs. A . ·H.

for Chris t.mas. Xi Ga mm;1 Mu

c hctlJlt~ r

Cha pter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will give $100 to a

toy s:d(' Saturday

needy

family

of

the

cmn-

munity .
Mee ting recently at the home

K nigh t, Ill\•

ma de fina l plans for a
&lt;.~ I

Ponwroy

Vi ll a i~t·

Hall . t\ final wnrkshup
to pr('p:m• the toy s for tllf' salt•

will br ll'll ig ht ;1 t ; p .ln . at t_lw
houw of J'Vlr s. Jane n ounw .

/ Local folk attend meeting
uf tlw second cr ntury .
11 con cerned the raisinJ;: of
twt• m illi on rlollars to be used
for !' pecial projects h onoring
s ix pHs t bishops of the di ocese
Ttley nre the F'aith in Life
End owm ent
Fu nd .
the
Cr inun a l .Ju sti ce Progr::.m. the

Rev . and Mrs . Har old Dcc tn.

Mr. a nd Mrs. Patrick 1.och~1ry.
and Mr . £Hid

Mrs . Anr o n

Ke lton,
Church,

Grace Episcopal
Pomeroy, we re in
Columbus Saturdav for tlw
luncheon and rali~~ of the
Diocese of Southern Ohio at tJ1t:'
Lausche Building.
The occasion a ttended by
over 500 members marked the
celebration of the ending of the
firs t century and the beginning

Di oce se Adve nture Fund,
se r\' it't' to ch ildren. Chris lian

reconciliation abroad, and a
fin:
ye&lt;1r
evangelism .

prog ram

of

OU faculty favors bargaining
ATHENS , Ohio 1 UPI1 Ohio
University
fa c ult y
member s fav or co ll ec ti\' e
bargaining with tht.• schoo l bv a

i5 pe1· cent ma jority.
The group. in a recent vote ,
indica ted it wished to see
ba r gai n ing procedures se t
fo rth , although the ballot did
not include options on potenti"a l
ba rgaining agents.
The e lection was sponsored
by the fa c ulty se n a te to
de ter mi ne interes ts only.
The next step will be for
faculty members r epresentin g
or mo re
potential
one
bargaining agencies to ap·
proach OU trustees to discuss
con diti ons under which an
election might be arranged.
Choice of a barga ining agent
ma y require another election .
Of i95 fa culty mem bers
eli gible to vote on the Athens
and four branch cam puses. 74
per cent turn ed in ballots.

SECOND CHILD HORN
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Don P. Smi th, Rt. 1, Racine,
a nn· nee the bir th of their
second child, a n B : i ., 6 ozs .
s on , David Allen Sm rt h. Dec. 1
at the Holze r 1\rl~di ca l Cente r .
Grandparents ar e Mr. and
Mrs . Dan Smith, Racine: Mrs .
IJetty Wilson, Pomeroy, and
Carl Wils on, Sr ., Middleport.
Great.grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Smith, Racine;
Mrs. Esther Fowler, Letart, W.
Va ., and Mr. a nd Mrs. Howard
Wi lson, Middleport. Greatgrea t-grandparents are Mrs.
Etna Bugg, Henderson , W.Va .,
a nd Mrs. Cora Runyon, Buffalo , W. Va . Mr . and jMrs .
Smith have another son, Jerry
Lee, 3.

WORW ALMANAC
FACTS

I

The Pt D
A 1

..

"''"~

;... :: ..,, "· •· r '""
" "'" I .; ,.,.
. K" k l·j.
s·,.~: .. :r. ·:

t.u·

"N

"·

•j

.&lt;s:'"&lt;..:
~~
A"'

, ·.·...

Th• P40. ;, . .::

"·~

, ..

.

-~ · · .,
"."•'co •• ;·

tr:.

:i .• :-r.
.t.

rt,,..

·. ts.armu
Am e ri can s howman whose
imag inat ion. s hre\vdness. wit
a nd keen sen s~ of publicity
lwlpecl popula ri ze t he circ us
a s a n a mu seme nt in Ameri ca,

'T

.•

~

:

elt.,.,·t;•:" ~r.• . •:,L· --:· r W·'''''"
o; n rmy '"''w
_ ·co ..,,;··~·! •.•,.,.

r,

The P40. Ail :c.--:

The World A lm anac reca ll s.
In 1880, Bamum jawed forces

New Haven 1 W. Va .

882-2525

with ma n ageria l gen i us
J ames A. Bai ley, crea ting
"The Greate s t' Show o n
Eart h. " Th e P .T . Barnum
Museum i s l ocate d in
Bri dgeport. Conn. , \\&lt;'here he
was e lected rnavor fo r one
year in 1875.
·

Tit~

~!.ate

(.'1/0Vt'ntion Wi::l.:s
anrwunc(•d for May Hi, 17 and

Mrs. Herbert ' Dixon, Rt. :l,

Pum e roy, w.as one of 12
lR at 1tw Ramada Inn , MariE'liH Co llege juniors and
se niors t&lt;ike n on a fi eld trip by
l'll.'ve lund . T he Chri stmas
~
:u·Ht.hon Oil the week before
dinner and parly was announced for Friday, Dec. 20 at
i : ;JQ (&gt;.rll. at the M~igs Inn ,
Mrs. Hu th Riffl e and Mrs .
Beverly I ,ong ~ave the cultural
n·porl titled " The Good Life ."
Mrs . Ruth Riffle a nd Mrs.
Lind a HHfle served refresh1i1cnts .

Anniversary
celebrated

1
The 30th wedding anniversary or Mr. a nd Mrs . Paul
Baer, Rt. 1, Minersville , was
observed Sunday with a surprise d inner party at Seddoms ,
Gr a nd Central Shopping Mall ,
Vienna, W.' Va .
The pa rty was hosted by
their childre n, Mr . and Mrs.
Dennis McCune, Columbus,
aod Mr . and Mrs. Curtis Kin,
Rt. 1, Minersville. The organist
pl ayed appropriate music
while the hostess brought the
anniversary cake topped with a
sparkler and inscribed "Happy
Anniversary."

PARTY SCHEDULED
The December birthd ay
party a t the Veterans Hospit•l
in Ch illicothe will be Thursday
and members of Drew Webster
P ost :~9 . Ame ri can Legion
Auxi liary,, are r eminded that
cakes and candies are to be left
befl e 9 a .m . a t either the
Pomeroy
Pastry
Sh op,
Pomeroy, or the home of Mrs .
Grace Pr a tt , Third Ave.,
Middleport.

Thanksgiv ing .
The g roup left on . the Friday
before Thanksgiving for New
Orleans , La., a nd from there
-9 went out intO the Gulf of
Mex ico to observe the off·shore
rigging . They also toured the
Louisiana State Oniversity and
other pla ces or interest in the
oil producing and refinery
business before returning to
Marie tla . Wednesday. Dixon is
a
major
in
petroleum
e ngineerin g at Marietta
College.

DA UGHTER BORN
R/\CINF. ~ Mr · and Mrs.
Mart y Morarity ·are an·
nounc in g th e birth of a
dau ghter., Ca rrie Renee,
Monday , Dec. 2, weighing 6
lbs ., 10 oz. Ma ternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
INJURED IN FALL
Cha rles Theiss , Racine, and
Mrs.
Wilma
Stobart,
the paternal grandmother is Pomeroy, broke her arm in a
Pauline
Morarity . fall last Wednesday and is
Mrs .
Paternal g randfather was the confin ed to Veterans Memorial
late Arthur Morarity.
Hospital.

AT CF:LF:BRA TJON
RACINE · - Mr . an d Mrs .
Ralph Webb, Racine , returned
home Thursday after visiti ng
in Colwnbus with relatives.
They went especially for the
filth birthday of the ir gr andson, Adam Webb.
.

~~~~~-==
F4 ~

• BROTHER DIES
Mrs. George Nesselroad, Sr.,
Pomeroy, received word of the
death of her brother, Pea rl
(Tool&lt;;} Karr , Dover, Ohio,
former ly of j'Jiners vill e .
Se rvi ces will. be Thursday at
Dover.

Can't Do Better
Anywhere!

"

i

~l

r~
10
0
Sun.
1
to
Open
Daily
9
to
10
SUPER MARKET
,,,

CHRISTMAS TREES
CUT YOUR OWN AT
BRADFORD'S GROVE

VISIT PARENTS
Mr. and Mr s . Dwight
Wallace, Middleport, were in
McConnelsville Thursday to
visit Mrs . Wallace's parents,
Mr . and Mrs . G. C. Knox , on
the occasion of the 67th wedding anniversary .

Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east at Darwin
onto Rt. 681. go 4 miles to Mil epost 13, turn
south on gravel road 1'1• miles to grove .
..
•
Watch For Signs
Hours : 12 til dark except weekends , 9 til dark.

USD,tl CHOICE 51 RLOIN

TIP ROAST

lb.

l

zg

USDA CHOICE
FULL CUT BONELESS

GROUND BEEF

ROUND STEAK

GROUND CHUCK

A DISCOUNT

Prices Are In Effect Tuesday 5 pm

GROUND ROUND

.••in time for Christmas

. . . '" "88

USDA CHOICE

$3 22

ELECTRIC
.

CUBE

SAUSAGE

•

SUPERIORS SKINLESS

WALL

auorted color
bo• es.
S1ve
29c on eac tl
ba• .

~ WOMENS SHOES

pkg.

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

Reg. $3.99

66¢

F~~~~

12 oz_

WIENERS

CLOCKS

DOOR/WALL DECORATIONS

--::--.I
On Sale Tuesday 5 PM,_Tbru

BOLOG •• A

69¢

49

12 oz.

Pk&amp;-

...___________ --J
Prices

.

·

I

Huny In and Save

CHRISTMAS
BIFTSt"-:

SHIRTS
'4~

SCOT LAD

'"'"" .,_.. 56•

SALTINES

Tins el

SPORT
REGULAR

TREE DRAPE ;:
.

COMPAREAT79c

lEIS PERMANENT PRESS

A thought for the day :
American poet Emily Dickinson
said, " Success is coun~
sweetest by those who never
succeed .''

QUEEN OF SCOT

300 STRANDS OF SILVER

AND '5"

Huge Selection

.'

tree

-

in

d_rape is. wrapped o n 01
nng ~ yo u just plac e
an
top
of
tree .
M eta ll•:z e d
pl;utic .
Fireproof. Fa r door,
window or mantel, tao .

See Our

'I

your

•, . . . . . . . . . . ._______
101_ _ _ _ _ _._

ALL METAL -:
TREE STAND .;;

Of

·-

Sizes

S-M·L·XL

l~b.49¢

99~-~

STRONG .

STURDY

SCOT LAD
ROUNP •.. .
CRACKERS
SCOT LAD
GRAHAM
CRACKERS

10oz.iar

box

I

!b.J~--­
Men's "Derby"

BRIEFS OR
T·SHIRTS

------

10 !NtH ELECTRIC

STAR
TREE

(Irregulars)

Brand

10 LIGHTS

MENS
DRESS

box
18 FEET

4 Styles

TINSEL
GARl:AND

.

---- -- ------·

MEN'S

LITIER

BASKET

Regular
Values
To $5.94

Perteu

tor

5g•
't

With Rising Sugar Prices ...
... Who Else Sells Candy
At Discount PriCes?

$399

Dress
and
Sport

CHRISTMAS
r.HERUB ANGEL

gtane1 . etc.

CHRISTMAS CANDY

POLYESTER
SHIRTS .

$499

OPEN TONIGHT AND
EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 PM

Fits OVer Hump
paper or scrap
dhpOUI.
Can ·
8110 be used tor
1torage of maps ,

MEN'S

FLANNEL SHIRTS

GOOD GIFT FOR LITTER BUGS

TO '3.44

Values To S9.87

MEN'S

WIND

:~$700
R~!~~$1.27 66c
MIRROR
AND
SHELF

Ror:m Di vi . er

12" wide z 64" Hi

ROOM DIVIDER

39.95

CURIO SHELF
~9.95, I
!

New items . . . new addition to our store. Ideal. gifts for the home.
Attractive! Sturdy! Handy!

I

OUICK .CURL

·• Silver
• Gold
• Blue
·Green

Gold Antique
Plastic ·

59~·

Fun For All Ages!

WAND

DRAW
-- ·.POKER

-..

CHRISTMAS REPLACEMENT BULBS -:.
I

doz.

-

OUTDOOR SIZE :

,_
=
q·---111-111--111------ ------:-

99e

PRODUCE BONUS BUY

,.

18FoR $}\!:,:

. Great Gifts

69e

12 oz .

16 oz. bots.

"
';

LUGGAGE
SALE
(eeep-Price Culs)

gal.
jug

112

O&amp;C BRAND
POTATO STICKS

6 pak
only

RALSTON CORN
CHEXS CEREAL

16 oz .
box

·NYLON
HOUSEHOLD MOPS

*599
24 lnc.h_or lUnch ReQ . $9.88 or $10.88 '6 99

WINCHESTER
LlnU~ CIGARS

Regular $8.88

'MEN'S

RC COLA

1::$1
..
5
8

each
only

pak

Everyday, Price ~a Pak $1.59

carton
pack , 23c

FITS
SIZE
9 to 11

Modern Dairy.

..
-.

.j

w.a..-----.....-.~

Save More At Shoppers Mart- ··See For Yourself

Twin Pak

(

I

I

$

Favorite

16 ounce

lion
\

I

BREAD
4.rvs. Sl

MILK
·r

tor

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

8

16 oz.
btls.

'J1

· .

can

SCOT LAD
ROOT BEER

EPSI·~COL

C91J4

4 Wanted ·'shades

while away the hours .

'.

?' ' ' ~
Ream Egg Noodles.... ...... 8 oz. bag .1:1
~
Scot Lad. F. F. Potatoes ... 5 lb. bag 1.39 ~
Scot Lad Knnkle Potatoes ..... 5 lb. bag 1.39 •·

.

PREM
LUNCHEON MEAT

EGGS

Bll.

KNEE HIGH
NYLONS

·

G

~

WOMEN'S SEAMLESS

Battery operated · Lei them

You'll

2 ~:~ 6 9 &lt;:

GRADE AMEDIUM

"12~

WOMEN'S.
21 1nc h or OV ern~te

REG. 94c

l-Ib. CAN

~

~

ORANGES..............5b':g 59¢

FIREPROOF
ICICLES

Two Piece Miniature

CONSOLE SET

COTTAGE FRIE
,. S

200 STRANDS

Made In U.S.A.

Only Shopper's
Marl

'•.

~

FLOlliDA

GLOVES

$244

Combed Colton

=~--

13 oz_

TOP

1 •89

1
,,

ORE-IDA

GROUND COFFEE
.

:

FRIED CHICKEN
2 ~~X 1. 9

New! CHOCK FULL'O NUTS

l~b­

He'll Use

BANQUET

frl•d c hicken
dinner

INST Aft~T COFFEE

box

....

..,
_

Fits Mosf Trees

~8" X

STEAK

.· ' 30% !!FDay

Selling now at prices you eKpect ln
January . Not iust 1 few, but dozens of
prints, che~:ks , solids. Our entire stock
reduced.

IJ

RUMP ROAST

lb.

SUPERIORS POLISH

Regular Values to $4.94

blu e ,

Solid

1

19

WIENERS

BLOUSEST~

:.~~~:·;:; ;'~!~\.:~;

lb.

USDA CHOICE

SUPERIORS ALL BEEF

WOMEN'S PANT TOPS

lb.

lb.

EXTRA LEAN

Shop Your Nearest Store

' ' •.eve uvre_s polyest e r
or nylon . Scequined
types , ba s.cs. slripe s,
twa-tone s a h uge
vari ety allh is one low
Pr•ce.

~~~

.-

FRESH AND LEAN

DEPARTMENT STOltE

CHRISTMAS
ORNAMENTS

'

(JHIO LOTTERY TICKE TS HERE

FRESH AND LEAN

BtG2 W' SIZE

'

~-~~~~.e~r~M~il~l~an~d~Se~c·o·nd..S.ts~-~w···R·e~.r.ve·Th--··R-ig.ht·t·o·l·j··ni·t·Q~. .nt.i!i····. ... . . . . .MalnDnOLmt~l'l~~~\

••

POINT PLEASANT - MASON
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

.

W r&gt; Ac&lt;'PfJI Fed,.rnl Food .,';tilmp.~
PHONE 992 3480

· ALL FALL STYLES REDUCED!
The Almanac
By United Press lntemallonal
Today is Tuesday, Dec . 10,
the 344th day of 1974 with 21 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its
new phase .
The morning stars are
Mercury , Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus
and Jupiter .
Those born on this date in
history are under the sign of
Sagittarius.
American poet Emily Dickinson wa s boro Dec. 10, 1830. This
is actress Dorothy Lamour's
60th birthday.
On this day in history:
In 1817, Mississippi was
admitted to the Union as the
20th sta te.
In 1898, Spain signed a treaty
officially ending the SpanishAmerican War . It gave Guam,
Puerto Rico and the Philippines
to the United States.
In 1941 , Japanese troops
landed on northern Luzon in the
Philippines in the early days of
World Wa r II in the Pacific
Theater.
In 1971 , the Senate confirmed
President Nixon's nomination of
William Rehnquist to the U.S.
Supreme Court.

~

�.,

•

'

.

·.

I
- The Daily Sentinel, Middleix&gt;rt-Pomeroy, 0., 'l'uesday, Dec . 1·0, 1974

•

6- .The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'l'uo.sctay, Dec. 10, 1974

Sorority will provide for family

Students on field trip
Hogpr Dixm1, sun of ;'vir. and

As a special serv in · project

uf· Mrs. A . ·H.

for Chris t.mas. Xi Ga mm;1 Mu

c hctlJlt~ r

Cha pter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will give $100 to a

toy s:d(' Saturday

needy

family

of

the

cmn-

munity .
Mee ting recently at the home

K nigh t, Ill\•

ma de fina l plans for a
&lt;.~ I

Ponwroy

Vi ll a i~t·

Hall . t\ final wnrkshup
to pr('p:m• the toy s for tllf' salt•

will br ll'll ig ht ;1 t ; p .ln . at t_lw
houw of J'Vlr s. Jane n ounw .

/ Local folk attend meeting
uf tlw second cr ntury .
11 con cerned the raisinJ;: of
twt• m illi on rlollars to be used
for !' pecial projects h onoring
s ix pHs t bishops of the di ocese
Ttley nre the F'aith in Life
End owm ent
Fu nd .
the
Cr inun a l .Ju sti ce Progr::.m. the

Rev . and Mrs . Har old Dcc tn.

Mr. a nd Mrs. Patrick 1.och~1ry.
and Mr . £Hid

Mrs . Anr o n

Ke lton,
Church,

Grace Episcopal
Pomeroy, we re in
Columbus Saturdav for tlw
luncheon and rali~~ of the
Diocese of Southern Ohio at tJ1t:'
Lausche Building.
The occasion a ttended by
over 500 members marked the
celebration of the ending of the
firs t century and the beginning

Di oce se Adve nture Fund,
se r\' it't' to ch ildren. Chris lian

reconciliation abroad, and a
fin:
ye&lt;1r
evangelism .

prog ram

of

OU faculty favors bargaining
ATHENS , Ohio 1 UPI1 Ohio
University
fa c ult y
member s fav or co ll ec ti\' e
bargaining with tht.• schoo l bv a

i5 pe1· cent ma jority.
The group. in a recent vote ,
indica ted it wished to see
ba r gai n ing procedures se t
fo rth , although the ballot did
not include options on potenti"a l
ba rgaining agents.
The e lection was sponsored
by the fa c ulty se n a te to
de ter mi ne interes ts only.
The next step will be for
faculty members r epresentin g
or mo re
potential
one
bargaining agencies to ap·
proach OU trustees to discuss
con diti ons under which an
election might be arranged.
Choice of a barga ining agent
ma y require another election .
Of i95 fa culty mem bers
eli gible to vote on the Athens
and four branch cam puses. 74
per cent turn ed in ballots.

SECOND CHILD HORN
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Don P. Smi th, Rt. 1, Racine,
a nn· nee the bir th of their
second child, a n B : i ., 6 ozs .
s on , David Allen Sm rt h. Dec. 1
at the Holze r 1\rl~di ca l Cente r .
Grandparents ar e Mr. and
Mrs . Dan Smith, Racine: Mrs .
IJetty Wilson, Pomeroy, and
Carl Wils on, Sr ., Middleport.
Great.grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Smith, Racine;
Mrs. Esther Fowler, Letart, W.
Va ., and Mr. a nd Mrs. Howard
Wi lson, Middleport. Greatgrea t-grandparents are Mrs.
Etna Bugg, Henderson , W.Va .,
a nd Mrs. Cora Runyon, Buffalo , W. Va . Mr . and jMrs .
Smith have another son, Jerry
Lee, 3.

WORW ALMANAC
FACTS

I

The Pt D
A 1

..

"''"~

;... :: ..,, "· •· r '""
" "'" I .; ,.,.
. K" k l·j.
s·,.~: .. :r. ·:

t.u·

"N

"·

•j

.&lt;s:'"&lt;..:
~~
A"'

, ·.·...

Th• P40. ;, . .::

"·~

, ..

.

-~ · · .,
"."•'co •• ;·

tr:.

:i .• :-r.
.t.

rt,,..

·. ts.armu
Am e ri can s howman whose
imag inat ion. s hre\vdness. wit
a nd keen sen s~ of publicity
lwlpecl popula ri ze t he circ us
a s a n a mu seme nt in Ameri ca,

'T

.•

~

:

elt.,.,·t;•:" ~r.• . •:,L· --:· r W·'''''"
o; n rmy '"''w
_ ·co ..,,;··~·! •.•,.,.

r,

The P40. Ail :c.--:

The World A lm anac reca ll s.
In 1880, Bamum jawed forces

New Haven 1 W. Va .

882-2525

with ma n ageria l gen i us
J ames A. Bai ley, crea ting
"The Greate s t' Show o n
Eart h. " Th e P .T . Barnum
Museum i s l ocate d in
Bri dgeport. Conn. , \\&lt;'here he
was e lected rnavor fo r one
year in 1875.
·

Tit~

~!.ate

(.'1/0Vt'ntion Wi::l.:s
anrwunc(•d for May Hi, 17 and

Mrs. Herbert ' Dixon, Rt. :l,

Pum e roy, w.as one of 12
lR at 1tw Ramada Inn , MariE'liH Co llege juniors and
se niors t&lt;ike n on a fi eld trip by
l'll.'ve lund . T he Chri stmas
~
:u·Ht.hon Oil the week before
dinner and parly was announced for Friday, Dec. 20 at
i : ;JQ (&gt;.rll. at the M~igs Inn ,
Mrs. Hu th Riffl e and Mrs .
Beverly I ,ong ~ave the cultural
n·porl titled " The Good Life ."
Mrs . Ruth Riffle a nd Mrs.
Lind a HHfle served refresh1i1cnts .

Anniversary
celebrated

1
The 30th wedding anniversary or Mr. a nd Mrs . Paul
Baer, Rt. 1, Minersville , was
observed Sunday with a surprise d inner party at Seddoms ,
Gr a nd Central Shopping Mall ,
Vienna, W.' Va .
The pa rty was hosted by
their childre n, Mr . and Mrs.
Dennis McCune, Columbus,
aod Mr . and Mrs. Curtis Kin,
Rt. 1, Minersville. The organist
pl ayed appropriate music
while the hostess brought the
anniversary cake topped with a
sparkler and inscribed "Happy
Anniversary."

PARTY SCHEDULED
The December birthd ay
party a t the Veterans Hospit•l
in Ch illicothe will be Thursday
and members of Drew Webster
P ost :~9 . Ame ri can Legion
Auxi liary,, are r eminded that
cakes and candies are to be left
befl e 9 a .m . a t either the
Pomeroy
Pastry
Sh op,
Pomeroy, or the home of Mrs .
Grace Pr a tt , Third Ave.,
Middleport.

Thanksgiv ing .
The g roup left on . the Friday
before Thanksgiving for New
Orleans , La., a nd from there
-9 went out intO the Gulf of
Mex ico to observe the off·shore
rigging . They also toured the
Louisiana State Oniversity and
other pla ces or interest in the
oil producing and refinery
business before returning to
Marie tla . Wednesday. Dixon is
a
major
in
petroleum
e ngineerin g at Marietta
College.

DA UGHTER BORN
R/\CINF. ~ Mr · and Mrs.
Mart y Morarity ·are an·
nounc in g th e birth of a
dau ghter., Ca rrie Renee,
Monday , Dec. 2, weighing 6
lbs ., 10 oz. Ma ternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
INJURED IN FALL
Cha rles Theiss , Racine, and
Mrs.
Wilma
Stobart,
the paternal grandmother is Pomeroy, broke her arm in a
Pauline
Morarity . fall last Wednesday and is
Mrs .
Paternal g randfather was the confin ed to Veterans Memorial
late Arthur Morarity.
Hospital.

AT CF:LF:BRA TJON
RACINE · - Mr . an d Mrs .
Ralph Webb, Racine , returned
home Thursday after visiti ng
in Colwnbus with relatives.
They went especially for the
filth birthday of the ir gr andson, Adam Webb.
.

~~~~~-==
F4 ~

• BROTHER DIES
Mrs. George Nesselroad, Sr.,
Pomeroy, received word of the
death of her brother, Pea rl
(Tool&lt;;} Karr , Dover, Ohio,
former ly of j'Jiners vill e .
Se rvi ces will. be Thursday at
Dover.

Can't Do Better
Anywhere!

"

i

~l

r~
10
0
Sun.
1
to
Open
Daily
9
to
10
SUPER MARKET
,,,

CHRISTMAS TREES
CUT YOUR OWN AT
BRADFORD'S GROVE

VISIT PARENTS
Mr. and Mr s . Dwight
Wallace, Middleport, were in
McConnelsville Thursday to
visit Mrs . Wallace's parents,
Mr . and Mrs . G. C. Knox , on
the occasion of the 67th wedding anniversary .

Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east at Darwin
onto Rt. 681. go 4 miles to Mil epost 13, turn
south on gravel road 1'1• miles to grove .
..
•
Watch For Signs
Hours : 12 til dark except weekends , 9 til dark.

USD,tl CHOICE 51 RLOIN

TIP ROAST

lb.

l

zg

USDA CHOICE
FULL CUT BONELESS

GROUND BEEF

ROUND STEAK

GROUND CHUCK

A DISCOUNT

Prices Are In Effect Tuesday 5 pm

GROUND ROUND

.••in time for Christmas

. . . '" "88

USDA CHOICE

$3 22

ELECTRIC
.

CUBE

SAUSAGE

•

SUPERIORS SKINLESS

WALL

auorted color
bo• es.
S1ve
29c on eac tl
ba• .

~ WOMENS SHOES

pkg.

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

Reg. $3.99

66¢

F~~~~

12 oz_

WIENERS

CLOCKS

DOOR/WALL DECORATIONS

--::--.I
On Sale Tuesday 5 PM,_Tbru

BOLOG •• A

69¢

49

12 oz.

Pk&amp;-

...___________ --J
Prices

.

·

I

Huny In and Save

CHRISTMAS
BIFTSt"-:

SHIRTS
'4~

SCOT LAD

'"'"" .,_.. 56•

SALTINES

Tins el

SPORT
REGULAR

TREE DRAPE ;:
.

COMPAREAT79c

lEIS PERMANENT PRESS

A thought for the day :
American poet Emily Dickinson
said, " Success is coun~
sweetest by those who never
succeed .''

QUEEN OF SCOT

300 STRANDS OF SILVER

AND '5"

Huge Selection

.'

tree

-

in

d_rape is. wrapped o n 01
nng ~ yo u just plac e
an
top
of
tree .
M eta ll•:z e d
pl;utic .
Fireproof. Fa r door,
window or mantel, tao .

See Our

'I

your

•, . . . . . . . . . . ._______
101_ _ _ _ _ _._

ALL METAL -:
TREE STAND .;;

Of

·-

Sizes

S-M·L·XL

l~b.49¢

99~-~

STRONG .

STURDY

SCOT LAD
ROUNP •.. .
CRACKERS
SCOT LAD
GRAHAM
CRACKERS

10oz.iar

box

I

!b.J~--­
Men's "Derby"

BRIEFS OR
T·SHIRTS

------

10 !NtH ELECTRIC

STAR
TREE

(Irregulars)

Brand

10 LIGHTS

MENS
DRESS

box
18 FEET

4 Styles

TINSEL
GARl:AND

.

---- -- ------·

MEN'S

LITIER

BASKET

Regular
Values
To $5.94

Perteu

tor

5g•
't

With Rising Sugar Prices ...
... Who Else Sells Candy
At Discount PriCes?

$399

Dress
and
Sport

CHRISTMAS
r.HERUB ANGEL

gtane1 . etc.

CHRISTMAS CANDY

POLYESTER
SHIRTS .

$499

OPEN TONIGHT AND
EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 PM

Fits OVer Hump
paper or scrap
dhpOUI.
Can ·
8110 be used tor
1torage of maps ,

MEN'S

FLANNEL SHIRTS

GOOD GIFT FOR LITTER BUGS

TO '3.44

Values To S9.87

MEN'S

WIND

:~$700
R~!~~$1.27 66c
MIRROR
AND
SHELF

Ror:m Di vi . er

12" wide z 64" Hi

ROOM DIVIDER

39.95

CURIO SHELF
~9.95, I
!

New items . . . new addition to our store. Ideal. gifts for the home.
Attractive! Sturdy! Handy!

I

OUICK .CURL

·• Silver
• Gold
• Blue
·Green

Gold Antique
Plastic ·

59~·

Fun For All Ages!

WAND

DRAW
-- ·.POKER

-..

CHRISTMAS REPLACEMENT BULBS -:.
I

doz.

-

OUTDOOR SIZE :

,_
=
q·---111-111--111------ ------:-

99e

PRODUCE BONUS BUY

,.

18FoR $}\!:,:

. Great Gifts

69e

12 oz .

16 oz. bots.

"
';

LUGGAGE
SALE
(eeep-Price Culs)

gal.
jug

112

O&amp;C BRAND
POTATO STICKS

6 pak
only

RALSTON CORN
CHEXS CEREAL

16 oz .
box

·NYLON
HOUSEHOLD MOPS

*599
24 lnc.h_or lUnch ReQ . $9.88 or $10.88 '6 99

WINCHESTER
LlnU~ CIGARS

Regular $8.88

'MEN'S

RC COLA

1::$1
..
5
8

each
only

pak

Everyday, Price ~a Pak $1.59

carton
pack , 23c

FITS
SIZE
9 to 11

Modern Dairy.

..
-.

.j

w.a..-----.....-.~

Save More At Shoppers Mart- ··See For Yourself

Twin Pak

(

I

I

$

Favorite

16 ounce

lion
\

I

BREAD
4.rvs. Sl

MILK
·r

tor

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

8

16 oz.
btls.

'J1

· .

can

SCOT LAD
ROOT BEER

EPSI·~COL

C91J4

4 Wanted ·'shades

while away the hours .

'.

?' ' ' ~
Ream Egg Noodles.... ...... 8 oz. bag .1:1
~
Scot Lad. F. F. Potatoes ... 5 lb. bag 1.39 ~
Scot Lad Knnkle Potatoes ..... 5 lb. bag 1.39 •·

.

PREM
LUNCHEON MEAT

EGGS

Bll.

KNEE HIGH
NYLONS

·

G

~

WOMEN'S SEAMLESS

Battery operated · Lei them

You'll

2 ~:~ 6 9 &lt;:

GRADE AMEDIUM

"12~

WOMEN'S.
21 1nc h or OV ern~te

REG. 94c

l-Ib. CAN

~

~

ORANGES..............5b':g 59¢

FIREPROOF
ICICLES

Two Piece Miniature

CONSOLE SET

COTTAGE FRIE
,. S

200 STRANDS

Made In U.S.A.

Only Shopper's
Marl

'•.

~

FLOlliDA

GLOVES

$244

Combed Colton

=~--

13 oz_

TOP

1 •89

1
,,

ORE-IDA

GROUND COFFEE
.

:

FRIED CHICKEN
2 ~~X 1. 9

New! CHOCK FULL'O NUTS

l~b­

He'll Use

BANQUET

frl•d c hicken
dinner

INST Aft~T COFFEE

box

....

..,
_

Fits Mosf Trees

~8" X

STEAK

.· ' 30% !!FDay

Selling now at prices you eKpect ln
January . Not iust 1 few, but dozens of
prints, che~:ks , solids. Our entire stock
reduced.

IJ

RUMP ROAST

lb.

SUPERIORS POLISH

Regular Values to $4.94

blu e ,

Solid

1

19

WIENERS

BLOUSEST~

:.~~~:·;:; ;'~!~\.:~;

lb.

USDA CHOICE

SUPERIORS ALL BEEF

WOMEN'S PANT TOPS

lb.

lb.

EXTRA LEAN

Shop Your Nearest Store

' ' •.eve uvre_s polyest e r
or nylon . Scequined
types , ba s.cs. slripe s,
twa-tone s a h uge
vari ety allh is one low
Pr•ce.

~~~

.-

FRESH AND LEAN

DEPARTMENT STOltE

CHRISTMAS
ORNAMENTS

'

(JHIO LOTTERY TICKE TS HERE

FRESH AND LEAN

BtG2 W' SIZE

'

~-~~~~.e~r~M~il~l~an~d~Se~c·o·nd..S.ts~-~w···R·e~.r.ve·Th--··R-ig.ht·t·o·l·j··ni·t·Q~. .nt.i!i····. ... . . . . .MalnDnOLmt~l'l~~~\

••

POINT PLEASANT - MASON
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

.

W r&gt; Ac&lt;'PfJI Fed,.rnl Food .,';tilmp.~
PHONE 992 3480

· ALL FALL STYLES REDUCED!
The Almanac
By United Press lntemallonal
Today is Tuesday, Dec . 10,
the 344th day of 1974 with 21 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its
new phase .
The morning stars are
Mercury , Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus
and Jupiter .
Those born on this date in
history are under the sign of
Sagittarius.
American poet Emily Dickinson wa s boro Dec. 10, 1830. This
is actress Dorothy Lamour's
60th birthday.
On this day in history:
In 1817, Mississippi was
admitted to the Union as the
20th sta te.
In 1898, Spain signed a treaty
officially ending the SpanishAmerican War . It gave Guam,
Puerto Rico and the Philippines
to the United States.
In 1941 , Japanese troops
landed on northern Luzon in the
Philippines in the early days of
World Wa r II in the Pacific
Theater.
In 1971 , the Senate confirmed
President Nixon's nomination of
William Rehnquist to the U.S.
Supreme Court.

~

�8- ThE" Dml y Sent mel. Mld rllE'JXl! t l 011 t r n'

&lt;J

1 1 t' ~&lt; ' . t \

J~~

1

4

1

ll t~lo

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Notice

Help Wanted
SE J&lt;! V IC E.
11 1T

Watch ThiS Spot
For Our
lnyentory Sale!
Startmg Dec 15th

CJo1 I !O il

ol S S I:&gt;Io;ll I

o1 rH1 !&gt; I CII 0 11 111 { Hi
F'r(' t {' r Ol dl' r P &lt; r !&gt; on

l Qt r

tnt
1\p pl y

11

PNSOn

O Nl Y 'II
Mtddl i tOr i
l.H I W C \ 11
~ W
il nd
I p I ll
0N L Y
NO phonp Coll i&lt;;
IC
PowP I I S ' tii1 0 CO

U

IJ I I

d
I}

NOVELTY FABRIC
&amp;CRAFTS
SUN. 1-5
WEEKDAYS9-9
EFFECT IV E Jan uary 1 197'}
th e mon thl y ra te tor ca ble TV
se rv rce •n Pom eroy"" I b e&gt; 'IS
fo low s Pr rvatf' Resrden ct
s mgt e se t se r v ce $~ per
m ')nth
Sen or
Crt len s
Drsa bted sr ng te set '!.-!SO per
mont h Custorne rs 11&lt;1'11 nq any
q ues t ons Sho u rd ca ll 997 2'i0 5
PorniV •ew Cab le TV
I? 10 ti C

\

Phon e

1t 76'J6fc

lOR tunk ca r s
c!Pirve red ~ 7 1unked
bo d c-s Ph one 9 t9 t1 8t

~10

I I

99 " '18 !~

Re-w n rd o tt en:-d
11 d 6t c

Pt&gt;"&gt; ror Sale
l'i

CASHSS$'!US
FO R
JU N K
CARS
Ca m p
FRYE S

'"

LO ST
B l ack cowh 1de b ll fold
H found p lease re t u r n t o T m
T nyl o t
837 E
Mil n
St
Poll1 C roy

CA.:J H p atd fo r a l l mak es a n d
r-To d e l s o t m obil e h o m es
Phone area c od e 6 1A 423 953 1
4 13 tfc

TRUCK il n d /\U T O PARTS
Rutlilnd pho n e l .J'} 609 1

$15
auto
71 16tp

OLD turn turc ce bOll€'5 brass
b e as or compleh:- hous~ho ld s
Wr I£' M D Mrll&lt;: r Rt I
~"'o11f'roy
0 11 o C,lll 99'} 71110
0 7 7I

old r egrstert&gt; d IE'nl&lt;liC
aut os com pl e te and
tree nq Wi!l kcr coonhound JJNK
del rve rea to our ynr d we
~7 5 f' hon c I 61~ 667 Jfl 7 1
pr ck up a uto bod res t'lnd buy
17 I! ) I c
all ktnds o f sc r ap me t &lt;~ I&lt;; .=.n d
1r on Rrde r s 5.=! 1\l.=lqf&gt; St Rt
PUBLIC NOTIC E
1/ 1 R t 4
PomNoy Oh •o
cit II 9Q2 54613
TO JAMES N HARR S AD
10 17 li e
DRE SS UNK NOWN WHO SE
LA ST KNOW N ADDRE SS WA S
206 BE E Ct-~ STREET MID
OL EPORT OHIO
MO

4 FAM ILY Yar d Sale lOIS of
c totllrng and m rsc Mo nday
l ues il n d Wed 9 a m 10 3
In the Common Pleas Court of
p m Fourt h Ave
Reeds\/ li e Merq s County Ohro PomNoy
Oh ro
•o Case No 15 70B IAJ tt.e
17 6 .31 c Oh
Harr s P larnlr ff vs Jilmes N
Harr s De te ndanl a Compta rnt
NEW lr v rng room su tes Ear ly lor d vorce exctustve cus tody
Am e r ca n
Modern
a n d ol mrnor Chi ld an d oth er relret
Tra drtr on Also m any ot her has been tried aga ns f yo u You
hou se ho ld llems upholstery r~ r e r ~.:qurre d to answe r til e
s up pl res &lt;~ n d foam
lor Comp lilrnt w thm twenty e g ht
c us hr ons
All uph oi StE'ry days &lt;1ncr the last pub l ca l on
s up p li es a nd foam 10 perc£'n l
o ff I 1 Chr rs tmas Jack s
La rr y Spencf:' r
F urn lur e and Upho lste r y
Clerk ot Cour ts
Su ppltes 236 E Matn St
Mergs Cou n ty Ohro
Pomeroy Ohro Phone 992
3903
(1/ ) 10 17 14 31 ( 1) 7 14 61C
12 " 71 c
N O TICE ON FILING
HAVE your deer tr o phy
OF INVENTORY
moun ted Also other small
AND APPRAISEMENT
an ma ts and brrds Phone
Th e Stat e of OhiO Me 1g s
Howa rd Brrch tre ld Rutland
County , Court of Common
742 5932
Pl ea s Probate Dtvtston
t 2 J lfc
To !he Exec ut or of th e estate
to
such of th e fo ll ow ng as are
r&lt;0 5CO T
K O S METI CS
res rdents ot th e Slate of Ohro
Rem e mb e r Chrt s tma s rs
vtz
!h e su r v1v mg s pouse th e
comrng w e ha\le man y new
of krn th e benefr crarr es
produ cts tha t wil l m a ke nrce next
un d er the wri t an d to the at
gi fts Phon e BROW N S f:l 92
tor n ey
or
a tl orneys
5113
r
epresentrn
g
a
n
y
of th e
11 3 ti C
a foremen tr one d pe rson s
Leona r d War d Ph llbrrck
AUCTION
Th ur s da y And
Rac rne Oh tO Sult on Townshr p
Saturday n1 ght 7 p m a t
No 71 195
Mason Auc tton Horton Sr m
You a r e hereby noftft ed !hat
Ma son W Va Con s1 gn m ents
the
In ventor y
and
Ap
w e l c.om~
Phon e {304) 773
prarsement Of the esta te of the
5471
aforement ron ed decea sed late
10 3 ffc ol sa rd Count y was f1led n thrs.
Co ur t Sar d Invento r y a n d
CHR IS TMAS Ho use Baza ar Ap pra rseme nt wtl l be lor
locat ed a cross fr om Pomeroy hearrng before thrs Court on lh t&gt;
Post Off tee wr it be ope n lues
73 rd d ay of Decem ber 1974 a t
thru Fr1 day 7 trll 9 p rn
1{) 00 o c lock AM
Hom ema d e rtems Su pp ly
An y person d es1r rng to f le
11m li ed
e x ce ~r ons
the r eto mus t file
12 9 Jtc
th em At l~as t f• ve da ys pr ro r to
the dat e se l for hea rm g
Gtven un de r my ha nd a nd
G UN SHOOT Satu rda y De c
seat of sa rd Cour t th rs 7th da y of
14 a t 7 p m Mil e Hr tl Roa d
As sort ed me at s Fa c to r y Decem ber 197J
choked gun s only Sponsored
by Ra ctne Ftre Dept
Ma n ntng B Webs ter
J udge
12 9 6tc
By An n 8 Watson
Deputy Clerk
{12) 10 17 7tc
For Sat e
ONE Courter MllOO lrne ar 12 CONNORS FAVORED
volt one 8 tra ck tape p la yer
LAS VEGAS (UP! ) - Oddfor car fo ur 15 n x 6 hole
r ms for Che vy or G M c smaller Jmuny "the Greek"
ptc kup Ph one 992 2244
~nyder has m~de Junmy
12 10 3tc
Connors an 8-.5 favorite over
-For-----------Rent
veteran Rod Laver m thetr
7 ROOM and ba t h house for
$100,000 match m February
rent
8 Lrberty
Av e
Pomeroy J us t above Jon es
The two lefthanders meet m
Boys call 99 2 7135
a
best-&lt;&gt;f-flve-sets match here
12 10 31c
------ -------Feb 2

Racine
Social Events
B) Mrs Francis Morris
V1s 1hng wt th Mr and Mrs

Jake Lee dunng Thanksg1vmg
hohrla} s we re Mr a nd Mrs
Jer n Lee Sco tt and Je rry, Mr
and ~· rs J effrey Lee Tedd)
J ohnson , T1m and Teddy . all of
Columbus and Mr and Mrs
Asa Jorda n of Middleport
Mrs Franki e Ne 1g ler a ccom pam ed Mr and Mr s
Geor ge Ne1gler t o Columbus
Th a nk s g1vm g Mrs Ne1g ler
was a dmne r guest of Mr and

fo r
9 1q

r

s ~11~

:nrn

youth
The state board, m calling
for half of Ohio's mvestment m
elementary and secondary
education to come from state
revenue, also urged statewide
assessment, collect10n and disIJ"Ibutlon of taxes on public
utility properties, mcludmg
electric, gas ~nd railroad
"Vast electrical power generatmg plants are bemg built m
sparsely populated areas,
which results m creating unfrur
pockels of wealth SIIICC aU
Oh1oans are consumers,"
Lyons sa1d
Another state board recommendatiOn sa1d school distnct
tax rates should not be reduced
followmg reappraisal. Loopholes m the current law
pernut operating tax rates to
be cut to provide the same
amount of revenue to schools

1972 VEGA GT
51995
Hatchba ck. low milea ge by l owner ne w w w fires tran s
ferred from new ca r , 4 s peed trans radiO green flnt sh,
blac k \ltn y l mte rtor de luxe trtm

Prepar1ng Teachers," the
board adopted w1th minor
amendments the recommendations of a 30-memher
advisory committee. They
were formulated after more
than 120 teacher educaUon
redesign meetings mvolving
more than 3,600 Ohioans dunng
the past 18 months
oThe new standards, designed
to bring urgently needed
refonns to teacher education
institutions, will be phased m
over a four-year periOd arting
Jan . I, 1976 OhiO tolleges and
untvers1t1es prepanng
teachers are to be m full
compliance With the new
standards by July 1, 198().
New reqwremer,U; called for
prospecUve teachers to get
more and earlier ln...chool
el'perlences, and chnlcal
preparation for the diagnosiS of

·

BEDRO OM tr a tler at corn er
o-f
Broadway and E lm
Mt ddlepor t
No p e t s or
ch tldr e n Ca ll 991 25 BO aft er 6
P

12 5

also would he

possible In
distncts which have h1gh rates

Iearmng difficulties and prescnption of appropirate mstrucUonal procedures
Colleges and umvers1lles
also will be requ1red to
organize teacher education
courses m a systematic
manner similar to other
professions,
prepare all
teachers for the teaching of
reading and proVIde lower
facuJtY-atudent ratios to assure
greater college superv1s1on
and more effective evaluation
of classroom mstruct1on.
Continued tmprovements m
teacher preparatwn were
called for by the board through
the establislunent of an Ohw
Teacher Education
Certification Advisory Committee
1t will have rewesentatlves of
school district pel"l!Omel Including teachers, supel"VISOrs
and administrators; higher

education mcludmg college
students, professors, deans
and presidents, and the
public.
The commission will help
proJect the number of teachers
needed to be prepared In
various subbjects, so there w1U
be no surplus or shortage of
mstructors. It also will deal
with standards for teacher
education and certifications,

review campus evaluations
and
analyze
flnane~al
requirements on teacher
education .
In other action, the board
allocated 65 per cent matching
vocational construction funds
totaling f2,072,573 for an addition to Waite High School,
Toledo, and f190,000 as 50 per
cent matching funds for the
new Bethel-Godown Road H1gh
School, Columbus.

PHONE
949 J832 or 843 2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf fa a houn
Patntmg , sidtng, roofing ,
paper hangtng , krtchen
cabtnets, etc

Sat
6PM

WEDNESDAY, DEC II , 1974
Sunrise Semester 4 Sunnse Semester 10
Farm Report 13
F1ve Minutes To Live By 4, News 6 Bible An swers 8
School Scene 10 , The Slory 13
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Morning Report 3 Farmtlme 10
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15 Yogi's Gang 6 CBS News 8 10 Farmer's
Daughter 13
7 30- New Zoo Revue 6 , Lldsvllle 13
a 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, Jeff's Collte 6 Popeye 10 New Zoo
Revue 13, Sesame Street 33
8 25- Capt Kangaroo 10 , Jack Lalanne 1J
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13
9 00- AM 3, Paul Dixon 4 W1ld Wild West 6, Ph1l Donahue
15 , Bullwlnkle 8 , Movie ' Tiger By The Tall" ' ll
9 30 - Not For Women Only 3 HazelS , TaHietales 10
10 00- Name That Tune 3. IS Company 6, Joker' s W1ld 8 10
10 30- Winning Streak 3, 1S Phil Donahue 4 Gambll8, 10
11 00- H1gh Rollers 3, 4, 15 Secret Santa 6 , Now You See It 8
10 . Password 13
11 30- Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 13 Love of Life
8, 10
II SS- CBS News B. Dan lmel"s World 10
12 00 - JackpolJ. 15. SO SO Club 4, News 8, 10, 1l
12 30- Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 15, Search For Tomorrow 8, 10 ,
Atternoon With D J 13
12 45 - Electric Company 33
12 55- NBC News 3. IS
1 00- News 3, All My Children 13 , Phil Donahue 8, Young and
Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15
1 30- Jeopardy 3, 4, 1S. lel's Make A Deal6, 13, As The World
Turns 8. 10
2 00- Days of Our Lives l, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13. Guiding
Light 8, 10
2 30- Doctors 3. 4. 15 , Girl In My l1te 13 , Ed~e of Night 8, 10
3 00- Another World 3. 4. 15 , General Hosp1tal 13 Price Is
Right 8, 10
3 30- HQw To Survive A Marriage 3, 4, 15 , One Life to Live 13 ,
Match Game 8, 10
4 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Bonanza 4, Somerset 15 , Tattletales 8,
Movie " Fuller Brush Girl" 10
4 30 - Bewitched 3, Afterschool Speclal13. Lucy Show 8 Santa
Claus 15
5 00- FBI 3, Merv Grill In 4 , Andy Grofflth 8, Bonanza 15 ,
Mister Rogers 20, 33
5 30 - Beverly Hillbillies 8. Family Classics 13 Electric
Company 33
6 00- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13
6 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8. 10, ABC News 13. Zoom

All Small ApplianceS
Lawn MoweiS
Next to HighWi\Y
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

6 00 6 25 6 30 -

I

tfc

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

j

CONSTRUCTION

Open Mon

BAM

BOWERS
REPAIR

0&amp;0

m

li,&gt;7t CUTLASS Supre m e a rr 7 AEDROO M dou b le Wt de
mob rl e home rn Sy rac use
co n drtroned am fm ma ny
Depos rt reQur red No c h ildr en
more ex tr as Reduc ed prr ce
or pets Ca ll 992 '1 -14 1 aft e r 6
Phone 997 9Q!!l
pm
17 B 3tc
12 1 lf c

"Hence, both personallDCome
and proper-ty values should be
constdered in order to have a
fatrsystem"
The board recommended the
"d
legislature glVe serious conSI eration to replacing the present
SChool foundation fonnula wtth
an " equal )'leld" plan. It would
guarantee school districts a
nununum level of state and
local doUar support per pupil
for each mill of local tax
Based on school diStrict
wealth and local tax effort, an
"equal y1eld" plan would
equalize the revenue raismg
ability of school districts and
proVIde a strong mcentiv~ to
brlng t ax rat es upward m
districts havmg low tax rates,
Lyons said. Reduction of taxes

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
Ph 992 -5682 or 992 - 71~1
"All Mechamcal Work

For Rent
7

Racme , O.

·- ,

On State Rt 124, •12 mt from
Route 7 by pass towards
Rutland

OPEN EVES. 8:00P. M .
POMEROY, OHIO

Teacher preparation system reformed
COLUMBUS (UP!) -MaJor
refonns m teacher preparation
have been adopted and a broad
15-member Ohio Teacher Education and Certification Ad. vlsory Commission has been
created by the state Board of
EducaUon.
The board, in other action at
the regular monthly meeting
Monday, named Mrs. Allee
Vesely, Cleveland, to the state
Ubrlll}' Board; approved 8,069
special education and 6,947
vocational education classes
for the current school year; allocated f2,262,573 m matchmg
vocational construction funds,
and &amp;S8Iglled the Hamilton
!.Deal School District In Franklin County to the Eastland
Joint Vocational School District
After a lengthy public hearIng on proposed " Standards for
Colleges or
Umversltles

r -- -- --

777 Pearl Street
Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992 5367 or 992-3U I

RACINE GARAGE
5th St

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10,1974
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, ll IS. Electric Company 20. lTV
Utilization 33
6 30- NBC News 3. 4. 15 ABC News 13. Bewitched 6, CBS
News 8, 10 , Zoom 20
1 00 - Truth or Consequences 3, 4 Bowling 6, What s My Line?
8, News 10, TBA IS
7 30- Hollvwood SQuares 3, 4 World of Animals 6 $25,000
Pyramid 8, Proce Is R1ghl 10 . To Tell the Truth 13 RFD
20
8 00- Adam 12 3, A, 15, Year Wtlhout A Santa Claus 6 13 Good
Times 8, 10 America 20, 33
8.30 - After the Fall 3 4 IS . MASH 8. 10 People' s BuSiness
20
9 00- Out To Lunch 6, 13 Hawau Five 0 8, 10 , New England
Christmas 33
9· 30 - Woman 20 , Barenbotm on Beethoven 33
10 00 - Marcus Welby 6, 13 Barnaby Jones 8 10 , News 20
Soundstage JJ
10:30 - Your Future Is Now 20
11 00 - News3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13,15 33
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, W1de World Mystery 13 FBI6,
Movie "Rome Like Ch1cago" 8 M.ov1e 'Two Loves" 10
Janak! 33
1 00- Tomorrow 3, 4, News 13
2 00- News 4

8-K EXCAVATING
I·
OOMPANY

Ptck up dally 1n Pomeroy &amp;
Mtddleport
All
work
guaranteed Phone 949-3611 .

197 v vo~-~.LJANT 65xl2 3bedrooni
tully carpeted LP gas heat
Phon e 992 77 51
8 25 tfc

Protect Your Home
Or Busmess

JOHNSON'S

GHEEN'S PAINTING

Brown's Fire &amp;
Safety Equipment

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

949-3295

Sales &amp; Serv1ce
F1re Exftngurshers, Home
Ftre Alarms, Teshng &amp;
Reftlhng
Phone 742 4673 or 742 5595
Btll Brown, Owner
Rutland, Ohro

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work
FREE ESTIMATE

Phone (304) 773-5503

Fully Insured

l._.,..--

For Sale
TW O G78 15 belted lrrP.&lt;; hnth
for S2S Phon e 992 2759
12 9 3tc

rad10 a m fm
8 tra c k tap e comb 1nalton
Balance S107 45 or terr.1s Call
992 3965
11 19 lfc

WALNUTster ~: v

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

CHR! STM AS tr eeson old Rt 33
Phon e Opha Offutt 992 3296
12 20 12t p

For Her Christmas

R EF RI GERA TOR
k 1lchen
r ang e s of a d1n el te set
la m ps
record
player
bedroom surtes anti QUes and
oth e r tle ms Phon e 997 34 57
12 10 7tc

LAB l ANC sil ve r trum pet and
ca se by Vrc tor Excell ent
cond1t1on appratsed a t SJOO
sell S250 G tr l s roll e r skattng
shoes srze 7 While StO
Mens sport ra c ket medrum
blue S1Ze 36 and trouse rs to
match used very few t rm es
SJ.O 783 ft cured red and
wh rte oak planks SIOO Phone
985 4110
12 10 6tp

--------------HOME
Improvement and

Repatr Servtee - Anythtng
frxed around the home from
roof to basement You ' ll like
our work and rates Phone
742 5081
12412tp

MICROWAVE
OVEN
Only '231.52

EXCAVATING dozer, loader
and backhoe work , septrc
tanks installed dump truCtlks
and lo boys for hire, will haul
flit dirt , top :soli , limestone &amp;
graver Call Bob or Roger
J effers day phone 992 7089, 1
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc 1

POMEROY LANDMARK 1
Jack W Carsey , Mgr

'

,

P~one992

2181

SEWING Ma chmes brand new
Ztg Zag tn niCe walnu t table
In ortg 1nal car tons Never
used
Cleal" ~ nc e
on '74
Models
{Only
a
few
available) S4J 40 cash or
terms avat tabte Phone 992
7755

10 15 tfc

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD
\/rt ;11

II

f,.,if.,, .-1

f\' .. ~'

::.1t.',&lt;ch,Jr\rr

&lt;,tr,

Oh&lt;tl ,·, 1·1

1974
ZIG ZAG
SEW ING
MACH IN ES left tn layaway
All butlt rn to buttonho le do
stretch sew1ng and fancy
slttchmg Pay tust $48 75 cash NEW liSTING- 5 rooms, clly
or terms available Trade ms water. basement wtth coal
accepted Phone 992 7755
furnace In Syracuse $3,000 00
12 3 lfc

FURNISH E 0 apt Adu lts on ly
Middleport Phone 992 3874
1114 Hc
- - - - - - -- -- - - - -UNFURNISHED house
4
rooms and bath 1650 Lmcoln WALNUT s tereo ra d1o am fm
Herghls Phone 992 3874
8 tra c k tape comb rnalton
Balan ceS 1tO 69or term s Call
_
___ - ~------ ~ 2_~fc
992 3965
12 3 tic
FURNI S HED
apartm e nt
utt1rt1es furntshed surtab le
for two work1ng men or VACUUM Cleaners, Brand new
tank type mod e ls wtth 5 at
ret 1red couple Lrvtng room
ta chments Only $2-1 so cash
k1tchen shower and bath On
or terms available New
main htghway Mason, w Va
Uprtght models S29 90 cash or
Phone 773 5147
terms available Trade tns
10 27 tfc
accepted Phone 992 7755
12 3 lfc
FURN ISHED apt 3 rooms and
bath
td eal for work1ng
couple Phone 992 2937
ELECTROLUX
VactJum
12 8 6tp
Cleaner complete w1th at
tachm e nts cordwmder and
patn f Spray Used bul rn ltke
TRAILER space tor rent
new cond ttron Pay S34 -15
Phone 367 7743
cash or budget plan availabl e
l1 26 12tp
Phone 992 7755
--- - - - - - -- - - -- 11 26 ttc
ONE bedroom trailer Phone ---- - -- -- -~ --99 2 3509
SEWING Mach1nes brand new
12 6 6tc
z ,g Zag 1n n rce walnut table
- - - - - -- - - - -In or rg1nat cartons Never
'l. BE:.OROOM mobtle home tn
used
Clearan ce on '74
Rae me ar ea Phone 992 5858
mode ls
(Only
a
few
11 29 ttc
avarlab le) $43 40 cash or
terms available Phone 992
- - - - - -- - - - - -- 7755
3 BEDROOM house Phone 992
3975 or 992 2571
l1 26 tfc
123tfc STEREO rad•o combrnal•on 8
track tape am fm radio 4
ONE BEDROOM trailer , all
speaker
s.ound
system
util1tres and cable TV Fur •
Balance
$106
84
or
te
rms
Call
nrshed Phone 992 3719 after
99 2 3965
4 30 p m
11 26 tk
129tfc
- --- ----- ----1957 C-Ht:VY parts
NEW
Lakewood tract ron bars ht
lacker a 1r shoc ks , hooker
headers , w1th 3 'co ll ectors for
APP LE S F1tzpa trt ck Orchard
small bloc k Call 992 3496
State Route 689, Phone
after 6 p m BE ST OFFER
Wrlkesvtlle 669 3785
10 17 tfc
- - - ---- -~ -- - ------- - - -112126tc
- - - --12 CUBIC feet Kenmore uprtght
290 JOHN Deere corn planter
freezer Phone 992 5621 or 992
with herbscrde attachments
3901
and rubber press wheels IS
12 8 Jtc
rolls of new 4 ft field fence
No 46 lnternatronal hay
recap trres, F7B 14 S20
baler 3 bottom lnternaftonal 2 NEW
two F711 14 rn studded tires
plow 14 hydraulic on rubber
mounted on whee ls S50, one
w1th double actlon cyltnder
7 25 15 tn hre mounted In to
and 10 ft hO$e No 64 In
hole Wheel, $25, one 40 m elec
ternatronal comb1ne Phone
base board heater , S20 Two
BAJ 2664 after 6 p m
beagterabbttdogs S60 Phone
12 4 6tc
742 5322. Nata Vanaman,
---~ -- -------Rutland
FLANNEL , $189 yd Zippers,
-12 Blip
15c ea 2 for 25c , 10 for Sl 00
polyester S2 98 yd , cotton 69c SINGER sewmg ma c h•n~. 11k. e
yd and up Panerns 35c
new, 1973 model 1n n1ce
Novelty Fabr1 c &amp; Crafts,
wa lnut cabtne t Makes design
,B e lpre , Sunday 1 to 6 p m
stttches
ztg zags , but
Wee kdays 9 to 9 p m
tonholes , blind hems , etc
12 5 6tc
Only $84 Call Ravenswood
27J 9521 or after 5 p m 273
NEW l1vlng room suites 20 pet
9893
off t!l Christmas See us
12 1 lfc
before you buy a Jtvmg room
surte You'll be glad you d1d
G~ROCERY busm es s for sate
J a c ks
Furn1ture
&amp;
Bulld1ng for sate or lease
Upholstery Supplies, 236 E
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
Mam Sf
Pomeroy OhtO
to tO p m for .appomtment
Phone 992 J903
'::..,_
3 20-tfc
12 4 7tc

S ULATED
FREE
ES TIMATES CALl,. 992 3993
12 s 6tc

HOTPOINT

REDUCE safe and fast wrth
GoBese Tab lets and E Vap
water prl ls " Ne lson Drug
17 10 ltc 2 BEDROOM house for sale
$500 down $70 per month
NEW Improved Ztppr es the
Phone 992 3975 or 992 2571
g rea t 1ron prtt now w1th
123tfc
V1tamln C Ne lson Drug
12 10 ltc
LOSE wetght Wtt h New Shape
Table ts. and Hydr ex Water
Pills at Dutton Drug M1d
d leport an d Nel son Dl"ug
12 10 3tp

CUT THE FUEL BILLS DOWN
HAVE YOUR HOME
IN

0

HAMPSTER hog boy 's 2 wheel
b•ke 26 rnch Auro r a ra ce
track Ca ll aft e r 5 o m 949
4935
12 10 Jtc
FIREWOOD for sal e $1 5 per
toa d Phon e 742 4831
12 10 12tp

CAR PET 1nstallat1on S1 25 per
yard Phone Rr chard West ,
843 2667
11 l3 26tp

For Sale

l'·.ll1lr·r11y

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

Racine, 0.

Alumtnum stdmg, rooftng,
complete res1dent1al construction Wiring, plumbtng,
elec
heatrng,
kttchen
cabtnets etc
27 Yrs expenence m canst
trade

NEW HOME - 3 bedrooms
ceram1c f1le bath , dark oak
k1tchen . e lectnc heat. and
garage $20,000 00
RUTLAND - 7 rooms, 3 BR,
modern bath , nat gas furnace,
and garage $12.000 00

t&lt;effarr
serv1ce, all makes 992 2284
The Fabrtc Shop Pomeroy
Author1zed Singer Sales and
Servtce We sharpen Scl5sors
3 29 tfc

WIN AT BRIDGE

-

- - - - - --

~XCELSIOR

-

-----

evenlnQS

6 13 tfc
I

.SEPT IC TANKS cleaned
Modern San 1tatlon, 992 3954'or
992 7349
9 18 +tc

Real Estate For Sale

... , vRY 5 bedroom, kitchen ,
btg lrvtng room , recreation
room and tor m Mason W V"a
on Rt 33 Phone {304) 773
5U7
1
12 10 lOtc

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

For Sale

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

----------

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

_____________

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

BUILDING lot, 80 tt frontage x
165ft Ttie second lot on left on
R tvervtew Drive, Llnc;~rf1
Hrll, Pomeroy, Ohio If 1n..1
terested,•call 992 J230 after .s
pm
10 17 ·~
------ -------~

West

-• 2•
Pass

_I I

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don I le t any more lime g o by
rega rdtng a bustness S1tua t1on
that you re dtspleased wtth
Work 11 out at once tf possible
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
T earn effort ts called for today
Be sure you re equally as lndustnous as your counterpart
or he II get bugg ed Wt1h you
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
The early par1 ot the day you II
b e somewha1 lackadaiSi cal
about your chores By after
noon you II have a full head of
steam up
LEO (July 23-Aug 221 You
need a slight change o l pace
now Plan someth1ng for lh!s
evemng that 15 pleasurable so
the week wont seem so long

farmer."
Then, on the same page, a third tlem headlmed, "End of
World Hunger Is Seen," but the nutr1tlomst who predicted this
saw 1t for the dim future when ''the world changes 1ts eating
habits "
A fourth article (still on page A-&lt;1) began , "The Umted States
should discontinue food aid to starving, overpopulated countries,' says a professor of human ecology ... " He unplied we can
never conquer excessive breeding so long as we encourage It by
feeding the breeders.
.. And after reading all this, we felt more than a little s1ck 1
Isn~ something awfuUy wrong with a country that condones
the tr&amp;Bhlng of potential food while tittle children starve
and
pollUc1ans argue?
Granted fanners have survival womes too, but why turn
food mto garbage? Why not, as a few already have, ra1se fun'!'
and slup the meat to underprivileged people - mcludmg many m
our own land!
This would not depress the market further, for such people
aren~ potential buyers But It WOULD help f1ght malnutrition
while our learned leaders bassle over solutions that wtil come
much too late for those swoUen-bellied Indian and A!r1can youngsters, dying in the streets.
We realize this Is short-term and madequate - a tiny effort
against a mighty problem, but It's something we can do NOW,
while waiting for a global solution.
Let's hope tbat global solution fmaily comes 1 - RAP

and draggy

VIRGO (Aua 23·ct., .. t

?2)

ACROSS
I Barbecut rod
5 Denture
10 llallan.rlver

llJocular

3 One kind
of tube
'Dress
5 SimonI Scandina-

term of
vian
endearment
man 's
U Lacking
name
flexlbillty
7 Macaw
(hyph. wd)
8 Nervous
1t Take a
twitch
gander
10 It's a
15 Certain flier•
mouse'
18 London
11 Slowed
dry goods
down
dealer
13 Coat
18 Grassland
feature
21- canto
17 French
Z% Moat
priest •
Z% Betray
18 Card game
(hyph wd.) 19 Before tee
!'I Twiddling
20 Stubborn
one's
person

thwnbs

22

23
2'

25

Yesterday's
Worry
Understand
(sl)
" - to a
Skylark"
German
city

%6 The (precocious
conduct)
30 Greetmg
for Dolly
31 Expunge

Z8 Street (Fr.) ~~rr
29 Kind of

•

ch1ck He sa1d I was too young and inexpenenced I waa
miserable, but fmally found a 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld guy I like. Now, No. 1
has broken llp With h1s old woman, and wants me to move in with
him I know he'll drop me when somethmg better cornea along.
How can ! sa y " No " when I -WANTTOSAYYES
WTSY
. Loud and clear 1 And if you weaken, remember It's better
he "young and mexperlenced" than "young and used." HELEN AND SUE

w

•

+++
Dear Rap:
My girlfriend and I are 13 and look much older. ThiS surmner
we were at a motel and met some guys . The friendlier one got our
address and baa written several times. He is 22 and thinks we are
around 18.
He wants to vlalt us when he makes a trip to our c1ty, but
we're afraid to tell our parents. You see, he IS black, and they are
kind of old-tashloned. Should we sneak out and meet hun, or JUSt
stop writing• He seems awfully nice -THE GIRlS

ll/AJI/IVS

I I

+++

I I

22, left me to move m w1th an older

8, 10

-:c

dealer

33 French
COD1IllWIO

3C Nylon
rnl!hap
31 lnatructlon
to • typiJt
(hyph. wd)

40 Ought
to

Is Scout
d Donna or
Oilver

DOWN
1 Back talk

z Snooped

It:

AXYDLBAAXII
LONGFELLOW

used lor the three L'o, X for the two O's, etc Single letten,
opoatrophtl, the lenl!h and formation of the wordo are all
hlnto. Each do)' the code !etten ore different

~

CRYPTOQUOTE
HOLDS YOU~ A~M
AT YOLJR "BIDE:.

[J

Now arnnl't the circled lettera
to fonn the aurpriH anawtr, u
•ua:ctsltd. by the abovt eartoon.

A

r x r rx r xJ

(Aa1wrn tomorrow)

Jumhlt'a EXULT
""•Vrd•y"•

how to woTk

One letter olmply otandl for another In thlo sample A Ia

tJ

1 Prill 111e SllftPRISl ANSWEtlllere 1

11 00- NewsJ, 4, 6,8, 10, 12, 15,33
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Miss World Pageant 13, Movie
"DesperadoS' 1 8, Movie "Brave Bulls" 10
12· 30- Wild, Wild West 6
1 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4, News 13
200-Newo4

patching
disk
35 Requirement
36 Shush'
31 Greek
letter
38 Subatomlc
particle
3!1 Average

muffin

II

Girls.
Here's a solution· Why not level with the 22--year-&lt;&gt;ld man
about your ages. When he hears you are only 13, I'm pretty sure
he won'tshowupat your door. -SUE

trimming

33 Boiler-

~~~=-

I
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

r

32Dress

Tennis pr0
U His horse

Unscramble tht:!it: rour Jumbles,
o11e letter to each •quare, lo
form four ordtnary words

1

A01wer ' '

30 Derby

n

JJ!YWIDlbrn®::::.:::::~

Dear Girls :
Don't Slleak! If you're ashamed to level w1th your parents,
maybe you already sense there's somethmg wrong With this
situation . I'd say: Either ask their pennisslon to meet this "older
man" or forget him! - HELEN

Rap :
I'm 16. My boyfriend,

-

by THOMAS JOSEPH

APPLY

IMPEND

VOYAGE

\ Annrrr } rmlhllll httnt lrrmh/( - PUPPY LOV~

NG

NI

NA

UKA

GJK

ZHHGKP

GH

NAIGNAVG

DPUNZK

MJDG

~ast

OKDEGNCES

U HZK

DAP

G J D A

GJKUIKSQK1 - R D U K I

ZEIIKSS
SHMKSS
Yeotenlay'a Cryploquote: MANY WEEP FOR THE SIN,
WHILE THEY LAUGH OVER THE PLEASURE.-

MAJIGUERITE DE VALOIS

DICK TRACY

2'
Pass

Pass
Pass

CAPTAIN EASY

South

I'
4'

Pessim tsttc Pete looked
over dummy Then he playe,d
1ts ace of clubs on Wests
.,kmg Next came a trump to
the ace and when both oppo' nents followed Pete relaxed.
- He saw that no matter how
badlr the rest of the cards lay
nothmg could keep h1m from
scormg 10 tncks game and
rubber
He played two more
trumps to pull East"s teeth
and proceeded to lead a lo~
diamond toward dummy s
nme West ducked so the mne
held Pete played a diamond
back and West took h1s queen
He shifted to the seven of
spades Pete played low from
.dummy and East was m w1th
the queen He made h1s best
play whch was to return a
club. but Pete r~ffed and
knocked out Wests ace of
diamonds
West Jed a second ~pade
Pete rose w1th dummy s ace,
ruffed a club to get back t,o
h1s hand. d1scarded dummy s
jack of spades on the long
'lhamond and made the hand
'in spite of everythmg hemg
wrong
-or course, an o'!enma
spade lead woul
have
beaten him, but West was a
br.dge player, not a man w1th
second s1ght

'
T HIS IS M Y CHA NCE' TO
MAKfZ UP FOR SIUPI DLY
F OLLOW INS THE a UG"S OF
I t-€ LAS T TV0 CRIM ES
TO THIS - BLUS H "r -

THIS CASE 16
SO

HOP6~E'SS

IT wo.rr PO
/WV ~TO
~\CL!

Of.l IT,
FOSDICK-

F LO WER

~

Fl\'6-1».'1

~~
OF l,c()Rs #i!E

SHOP ~~

oor

•

Ai..L"G' ~
~.
'PJ'I&lt;E
u~

eur

•

al ~1(61-l)S!

'INNIE
JOHN BAI&lt;{OU I ~
OIN6 10 S'TEAL
&lt;JR DE~15NBf~

USTKNOWI

15N'r 1HERE IW&gt;'"Tl' ING'&gt;OU WECAN

DO 10 BlOP HIM?

I

Lt:B;J :~ ,,tP,ttt !1

1'
SGuth
?

3'

You South hold
• 4
A Q10 8 6 + K J4 .. A Q"'
1 What do yOu do now?
t A-Bid one notrump
\'out
hand Ia unsuitable ror a doubh•
~cause you only hold two small
• des and the notrump overcall
sf::ws your balanced 16 point•
With at least one diamond atop
TODAY"S QUESTION
Your parlner b•ds two s pade!
What &lt;k you do now?
~

WHAT IN
THUNDER DOES
THAT FEMALE
Wfi!IJT THIS
TIME OF NIGHT ?

t II /I

ill /I t
II'////

NI

OKGGKZ

~

'

I'
1

North

' r
..

ON YOUR DIAL

S IZC

Both vulnerable

1

WMP0/1390

Readers All .
·
Recently, we opened our newspaper to see the picture of a
skeleton-thin Bangladash chtld, crying for food Immediately
below was a shot of Midwest fanners shootmg thetr cattle m
protest over low market pnces .
The first story told of grinding hunger and the vanous
political proposals and conferences a1111ed at solutwns to
widespread famine. The second descrlbe&lt;f how cattle, hogs and
sheep were lined up m a large trench, slaughtered and buned m
"an effort to shock lhe Whlte House mto realiZmg the phght of the

&lt;!!l,~~•"rr

"'9

I*

like a person,

For Wedneaday Dec 11
1974
ARIES (March 21·Apnl 19)
A fru slra t1ng condti10n IS about
to change You II be better
able to c ome to gnps wtth •t
and reduce tt to a manageable

Edllorlal Time

+

: The brddmg has been
Wrest
North
East

We talk to you

By Helen and Sue Hottel

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

bedrooms , built In kitchen ,
basement with one car
garage Phone 747 3615 or Sfe
Mtlo Hutchison
11 1 tlt:

NICE I FLOOR PLAN - 5
rooms,
bath,
porches ,
garage, carpeted. part(!'led &amp;
tiled- Pnced for quick sale,
$9.500 00
9 MOSTLY TillABLE
ACRES- TPwaler, on good
blacktop roftd, close to some
shopping, Ideal for homes or
mobtle homes Close- to
recreation areas $5,800 00
4S ACRE5-Paslure, woods,
culftvatlon, stocked pond , all
fenced, minerals, close In
$11,000 00
MINE AREA - 10 acres
located on good fishing creek
and good blacktop road,
approved for septic tank
55.800 00 Make an offer
OTHER BARGAINS IN
REAl ESTATE - STOP
AND SlOE •
992-22S9or 992 256a

~

Dec 11 , 11174
Th1s year w111 ftnd you In
several very ambitious under·
taktngt where you II put all
you r chipS pown and play to
wm 11 you rely on Aflort and not
luck you II do OK

Opemng lead - K•

tRdelivered
~MEANs -coN'tRET~·
Monday throu_gh
Saturday and
.,hone 446 1142

Generation Rap

lr!Lt.i Uti.Y1'1J\1' 1\f'mJ..t;

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

c er.f~D~l:IRO Auclr ~mt:o::·~
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161 1
RacmerOhlo
...
Crrtt Bradford
5 I If~

Your palteoce Is very thtn·
sk1nned today espectallv to
ward evemng when you mtght
be grump1er to lamlly members
1hiin ts usual
LIBRA ISept 23-0cl 23)
You II evoke resentment from
others 1t your remarks are too
sharp or c ulling today Think
carelully before you speak
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22)
You re too concemed now as
to y,flether you II get What s
comtng to you Your acltOOS
Will lead others to thtnk you re
selfish
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 ·
Dec 21) Be careful you don t
overreac t If everything doesn t
go exactly your way You can
be ftrm JUS! don I be too tor·
ceful
CAPRICORN 10..: 22-Jon
19) Something will occur to·
day that w111 annoy you Bring It
out m the open Clear It up
QUICkly rather than hide It and
te l 11 smolder
AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob
19) You II leave something 1m~
portant hall llmshed thinking
you II get back to tl later You
won I Valuable 11me will be
lost
PISCES (Feb 20-Morch 20)
In compet1IIV8 Stluatl0f't8 don I
be blurted by your opponent
The odds favor you to come
out on top

:10

NORTH
10
• II J6
' 8 64 2
9 63
"'A65
WEST
EAST
• 752
.KQ43
'9
'J53
tAQ84
t75
"'KQJ107
"'8432
SOUTH IDl
• 1098
'A K Q 10 7
t K J 10 2

j

sait Works, ~~E I
Matn St •, Pomeroy Arl kindS
of salt water pellels, ~wair
nuggets, block salt and ' n
Ohio Rlvir Salt Phone 9 2
3891
I
6 5 tfc
S EP'fiC l ANKS -C ieanfd,
reasonable rates Ph 4:46
4782, Gallrpolls John Russell ,
owner and operator
1
_:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
5_
12...1...tfc

------------NEW
bt leve l
nome , - ' 3

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

Pete maintains winning streak

DOZER work, tand clhr1ng by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds, roads, etc Large
dozer and operator with oVer
20 years experience Pullins
Excavatmg, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 fttc
READY- MiX--(ONCR~ e ' , t:
delivered r~ght to your
Pro1ect Fast and easy Ftee
estimates Phone 992 32;84
Goegle1n Ready Mix Co.
Middleport Oh 10
r
6 30JffC

-~--------

MIDDLE PORT
Bnck
bus1ness bu1ldtng with 6 rooms

7 30- Pollee Surgeon 3. Name That Tune 4, lel"s Make A Deal
6 Mel Tillis Time 8, ThiS Is Music 10, To Tell The Truth 13
8 00- Little House on the Prairie 3, 4. 15. That's My Mama 6.
13 Tony Orlando and Dawn 8, 10, Feeling Good 20.
8 30.:_ Movie "' The Tribe"' 13 . Movle"'Reluclant Heroes" 6
9 00- William Christmas Special 3, 4, IS, Cannon a. 10, Da
Vinci 20
10 oo - Flip Wilson 3. 4. IS. Get Christie Love 6, 13, Man Hunter

••~LMtNta

--------------:-jp.
lAUREl CliFF- 5 rooms,
bath, electnc heat, and garage
57500 00

1.:Truth or Consequences 3, 4, Whet's My Line? 8, News
10, Celebrlth Sweepstakes 13. I Spy 10

___ . . _ ___- --- --- --..=:::r..u
5 EW!t-.u

""lltlllllimr&lt;Rf&lt;lllllll!iljlltlllll!iljlr&lt;Rf&lt;IIIIIIIIII~Z«t&gt;:&lt;~:··::%%.."*-»:·&gt;.:~~X«-=~;
X•

Television Log

__...,. .,

Water, Electric, Gas, Sewer
Lines, Installed
Work
guaranteed
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks '
Lrmestone &amp; Frll Dirt
Commerctal Restdtntl•l
Construction &amp; Remodel

OOMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

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

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

pay for education," Lyons said

'

Complete plumbmg &amp;
heatmg serv1ce. Free
Est1mates .

3 BEDROO M hom e lar g e l1vr ng
r oom a n d bu It 1n k tche n
wa ll t o wal l carp et bre eze
way closed tn large ultltl y
r oom
turnt s h ed or u n
h1s pa r e nts. Mr and Mrs Ben
tur n shed $35 a wee k p lu s
utrllltes J ~ mil e pas t Bea con
Ph1lson and h1s g randmother ,
Sta t on on RI J3 n ear churc h
es and g r ade a nd h1gh sc hoo l
Mrs Clyde Cross a nd Mr and" Mrs Mma Lew1s
Call 992 2050 after 12
Mrs
Margaret
Houdashelt
Mrs Ne tgler we r e dmner
12 106tc
gues ts of the1r son-m-law s s pent ThanksgiVIng w1th Mr
and Mrs
Ronm e Sm1th, FURNI SHED apartmen t -1
parenls. Mr and Mrs Miller
rooms and bath Please call
P
omeroy
Gues ts of Mrs Hazel earalter 3 p m 992 5908
12 4 ~lc
Mr and Mrs
Thereon
naha n were Mrs He len Kmg of
Riley, Ka ns a s. "ho s pent J ohnson. Miss Ed1th Hayman 2 BEDRO OM mobtle home
c lose tn county local ron Call
se ve r a l
days
Spe ndwg and Dr Kathryn Philson were
9q 2 76-19 after -1 p m
,
Thanksgiving
guests
of
Mr
Saturday we r e Mrs Vernon
12 4 ~t c
Bobb and so n, Dav 1d of and Mrs Scott Wheeler a nd
J AND 4 ROOM furn iShed and
Co lumbus and Mrs John fam1ly at &amp;10tov1lle
unfurnished
apartments
Mr and Mrs Mike Hayman
Parsons and da ug hter, Juh . of
Phone 992 5-13 4
4 12tfc
a nd childre n of Dunkirk . Mr
Tol edo
Beth Ann Hart , young and Mrs Ray Hayman of PRIVATE meetmg room fo r
any organ1zatton phone 992
Pla n ts . and Mrs
Gretta
daughter of Mr and Mrs
3975
Stmpson,
local
,
observed
R ob e rt Hart , und erwent
3 11 tfc
fhank sgiVIng on Fnday at the
s urgery at Holzer Medical
':fRAI L ER s pa ce 7 miles from
home of Mr and Mrs W1lham
Center last week
Pome roy Rt 143 Phon e 992
ssse
Tha nksgtvm g dmner guests Hayman
10 27 tf c
Mr and Mrs Clarence
of Mr and Mrs Billy H1ll and
Bradford spent the weekend COUNTR Y Mobil~ Home Park
famtly were Mr and Mrs
R t 33 ten m rles nor th of
Ralph Badg ley , Mrs Helen with their son-m-law and
Pomeroy Large lots wtth
daughter , Mr and Mrs Leon
con c rete pat 1os SldP.walks
Stmpson and Mr and Mrs
ru nner s and oft street
Jordan at Thornville. Oh10
Bnan S 1mpson and fam1ly
parkrng
Also spaces for
Kenneth Turley spent a &gt;\eek
sma ll trailers Phone 992 7479
Thanksgiving dinner guests
7 21 tfc
of Mr and Mrs Gerald Simp- deer hunting m West V1rg1n1a
son we re Mrs Gretta Stmpson, mountams Mrs Turley and LARGE home 2 stor1e s un
tur n1shed 1n Middleport Can
local, and Mrs Betty Spaun son spent several days over
be rented to etther 1 or 2
Thanksg1vmg w1th Mr and
and ch1ldre n of Rutland
fam Ires Call 992 317 3
12 8 4t,c
Mrs Isabel Simpson spent Mrs Clarence Turley and Mr
Thanksg1vmg w1th Mr and and M"" Dale Ball at St
4
ROOM furnr shed upstarrs
apartment wr th bath Will be
Mrs Joe Beckwith and Shelley Albans, W Va
ava rtabte after Dec 15 No
Mrs Lavm1a Simpson spent
at Parkersburg
pets or chrtdren 814 E Marn
St Pomeroy 0 Phone 992
Mr and Mrs Rush Phil- a week m Colwnbus vtsthng
5Rl0
~
son , Er1ch and Sarah. Syracuse her daughter. Mrs Manan
12 ll l tc
were ThanksgiVIng guests of Kmghtstep and daughter
3 ROOM furntshed apar tment
utllr t1 es pa 1d 35 6 N Fourth
St M dd leport
12 8 61p

after reappraisal as before, so
that school financing 1s not
related to the changmg Ohio
economy
Increased property values
from reappraisal reduce state
support, Lyons said
'The need for many new
school leVIes just to mamtam
current levels of mcome could
be avoided if reapprisal tax
cuts were ehmmated," he
explamed
The state board also recommended the amount of state
funds going to a school distr1ct
should be deterrmned by both
the personal income of the
distriCt res1dents and the
property values
''Property values, Ute only
factor used to equalize state
support among districts at the
present time, no longer reflect
the ability of a school distnct to

'

&amp; 'HEATING

under plan ..taken up by state hoard
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state board of education has
adopted
leg1slat1ve
recomendatlons a1med at
assuring better flnanc1al
stability for the Ohio's 617
school distncts and equalizing
more the educational opportunities for 2.6 m1lhon
school-age youth.
"The more than 40 carefully
developed recommendatiOns
will he subrmtted m January
for consideration by the governor and the Ill th General
Assembly," sa1d state board
legislative chatrman Robert A
Lyons Sr , Dayton
The maJor proposals adopted
Monday included school
finance reform, Improved
preparation of educatiOn
personnel and further expansion in career education,
work skill trammg and
habilitation of handicaped

--:- .:

Business Services
-

Pomeroy ' HElL '
Motor Co. RACINE PLUMBING

1972 DODGE DART CUSTOM
12495
a Door , local 1 owner car , 318 V 8 engtne, a utomaftc trans .
powe r steermg , a 1r condtlloned , vmyl tn m vmyt top
Au tumn gold fi nt sh w w t1res. like new radto

School finances would he improved

'

~

19740PELMANTA
12895
2 Door or;:~ ng e fmtsh blk vmyl rntenor buc ket sea ts less
tha n !J 000 mt tes &amp; 3 mo old Ra dro deluxe bumpers

197 t OLD SMOB ILE Cut la ss
Su preme 1 ow n ~? r new se t of
r a d1a l t.r es. 6 000 m rl es.
perf ec t cond•t ron Pe rson a ll y
owned
Arno ld
Grat e
Ru ll a n d Sec at Rutl a nd
F urn lur e Com pany
Ph one
7J? -17 11 da y
1rg h! Ci'lll 742
SS&lt;t1
11 3 lf c

.9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1974

Phone Joh n Ro se
12 5 61C

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

WantPrt To Buy

Sales

11/ 3 C H EVRO L E T p tcku p t r uu ,

WOOOSTOC'- S SlDf(IES Alll.ii~S
STAI1T OFF 6000 6!/T
T~E'(

T~EN

GE T VER&lt;I SAD

�8- ThE" Dml y Sent mel. Mld rllE'JXl! t l 011 t r n'

&lt;J

1 1 t' ~&lt; ' . t \

J~~

1

4

1

ll t~lo

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Notice

Help Wanted
SE J&lt;! V IC E.
11 1T

Watch ThiS Spot
For Our
lnyentory Sale!
Startmg Dec 15th

CJo1 I !O il

ol S S I:&gt;Io;ll I

o1 rH1 !&gt; I CII 0 11 111 { Hi
F'r(' t {' r Ol dl' r P &lt; r !&gt; on

l Qt r

tnt
1\p pl y

11

PNSOn

O Nl Y 'II
Mtddl i tOr i
l.H I W C \ 11
~ W
il nd
I p I ll
0N L Y
NO phonp Coll i&lt;;
IC
PowP I I S ' tii1 0 CO

U

IJ I I

d
I}

NOVELTY FABRIC
&amp;CRAFTS
SUN. 1-5
WEEKDAYS9-9
EFFECT IV E Jan uary 1 197'}
th e mon thl y ra te tor ca ble TV
se rv rce •n Pom eroy"" I b e&gt; 'IS
fo low s Pr rvatf' Resrden ct
s mgt e se t se r v ce $~ per
m ')nth
Sen or
Crt len s
Drsa bted sr ng te set '!.-!SO per
mont h Custorne rs 11&lt;1'11 nq any
q ues t ons Sho u rd ca ll 997 2'i0 5
PorniV •ew Cab le TV
I? 10 ti C

\

Phon e

1t 76'J6fc

lOR tunk ca r s
c!Pirve red ~ 7 1unked
bo d c-s Ph one 9 t9 t1 8t

~10

I I

99 " '18 !~

Re-w n rd o tt en:-d
11 d 6t c

Pt&gt;"&gt; ror Sale
l'i

CASHSS$'!US
FO R
JU N K
CARS
Ca m p
FRYE S

'"

LO ST
B l ack cowh 1de b ll fold
H found p lease re t u r n t o T m
T nyl o t
837 E
Mil n
St
Poll1 C roy

CA.:J H p atd fo r a l l mak es a n d
r-To d e l s o t m obil e h o m es
Phone area c od e 6 1A 423 953 1
4 13 tfc

TRUCK il n d /\U T O PARTS
Rutlilnd pho n e l .J'} 609 1

$15
auto
71 16tp

OLD turn turc ce bOll€'5 brass
b e as or compleh:- hous~ho ld s
Wr I£' M D Mrll&lt;: r Rt I
~"'o11f'roy
0 11 o C,lll 99'} 71110
0 7 7I

old r egrstert&gt; d IE'nl&lt;liC
aut os com pl e te and
tree nq Wi!l kcr coonhound JJNK
del rve rea to our ynr d we
~7 5 f' hon c I 61~ 667 Jfl 7 1
pr ck up a uto bod res t'lnd buy
17 I! ) I c
all ktnds o f sc r ap me t &lt;~ I&lt;; .=.n d
1r on Rrde r s 5.=! 1\l.=lqf&gt; St Rt
PUBLIC NOTIC E
1/ 1 R t 4
PomNoy Oh •o
cit II 9Q2 54613
TO JAMES N HARR S AD
10 17 li e
DRE SS UNK NOWN WHO SE
LA ST KNOW N ADDRE SS WA S
206 BE E Ct-~ STREET MID
OL EPORT OHIO
MO

4 FAM ILY Yar d Sale lOIS of
c totllrng and m rsc Mo nday
l ues il n d Wed 9 a m 10 3
In the Common Pleas Court of
p m Fourt h Ave
Reeds\/ li e Merq s County Ohro PomNoy
Oh ro
•o Case No 15 70B IAJ tt.e
17 6 .31 c Oh
Harr s P larnlr ff vs Jilmes N
Harr s De te ndanl a Compta rnt
NEW lr v rng room su tes Ear ly lor d vorce exctustve cus tody
Am e r ca n
Modern
a n d ol mrnor Chi ld an d oth er relret
Tra drtr on Also m any ot her has been tried aga ns f yo u You
hou se ho ld llems upholstery r~ r e r ~.:qurre d to answe r til e
s up pl res &lt;~ n d foam
lor Comp lilrnt w thm twenty e g ht
c us hr ons
All uph oi StE'ry days &lt;1ncr the last pub l ca l on
s up p li es a nd foam 10 perc£'n l
o ff I 1 Chr rs tmas Jack s
La rr y Spencf:' r
F urn lur e and Upho lste r y
Clerk ot Cour ts
Su ppltes 236 E Matn St
Mergs Cou n ty Ohro
Pomeroy Ohro Phone 992
3903
(1/ ) 10 17 14 31 ( 1) 7 14 61C
12 " 71 c
N O TICE ON FILING
HAVE your deer tr o phy
OF INVENTORY
moun ted Also other small
AND APPRAISEMENT
an ma ts and brrds Phone
Th e Stat e of OhiO Me 1g s
Howa rd Brrch tre ld Rutland
County , Court of Common
742 5932
Pl ea s Probate Dtvtston
t 2 J lfc
To !he Exec ut or of th e estate
to
such of th e fo ll ow ng as are
r&lt;0 5CO T
K O S METI CS
res rdents ot th e Slate of Ohro
Rem e mb e r Chrt s tma s rs
vtz
!h e su r v1v mg s pouse th e
comrng w e ha\le man y new
of krn th e benefr crarr es
produ cts tha t wil l m a ke nrce next
un d er the wri t an d to the at
gi fts Phon e BROW N S f:l 92
tor n ey
or
a tl orneys
5113
r
epresentrn
g
a
n
y
of th e
11 3 ti C
a foremen tr one d pe rson s
Leona r d War d Ph llbrrck
AUCTION
Th ur s da y And
Rac rne Oh tO Sult on Townshr p
Saturday n1 ght 7 p m a t
No 71 195
Mason Auc tton Horton Sr m
You a r e hereby noftft ed !hat
Ma son W Va Con s1 gn m ents
the
In ventor y
and
Ap
w e l c.om~
Phon e {304) 773
prarsement Of the esta te of the
5471
aforement ron ed decea sed late
10 3 ffc ol sa rd Count y was f1led n thrs.
Co ur t Sar d Invento r y a n d
CHR IS TMAS Ho use Baza ar Ap pra rseme nt wtl l be lor
locat ed a cross fr om Pomeroy hearrng before thrs Court on lh t&gt;
Post Off tee wr it be ope n lues
73 rd d ay of Decem ber 1974 a t
thru Fr1 day 7 trll 9 p rn
1{) 00 o c lock AM
Hom ema d e rtems Su pp ly
An y person d es1r rng to f le
11m li ed
e x ce ~r ons
the r eto mus t file
12 9 Jtc
th em At l~as t f• ve da ys pr ro r to
the dat e se l for hea rm g
Gtven un de r my ha nd a nd
G UN SHOOT Satu rda y De c
seat of sa rd Cour t th rs 7th da y of
14 a t 7 p m Mil e Hr tl Roa d
As sort ed me at s Fa c to r y Decem ber 197J
choked gun s only Sponsored
by Ra ctne Ftre Dept
Ma n ntng B Webs ter
J udge
12 9 6tc
By An n 8 Watson
Deputy Clerk
{12) 10 17 7tc
For Sat e
ONE Courter MllOO lrne ar 12 CONNORS FAVORED
volt one 8 tra ck tape p la yer
LAS VEGAS (UP! ) - Oddfor car fo ur 15 n x 6 hole
r ms for Che vy or G M c smaller Jmuny "the Greek"
ptc kup Ph one 992 2244
~nyder has m~de Junmy
12 10 3tc
Connors an 8-.5 favorite over
-For-----------Rent
veteran Rod Laver m thetr
7 ROOM and ba t h house for
$100,000 match m February
rent
8 Lrberty
Av e
Pomeroy J us t above Jon es
The two lefthanders meet m
Boys call 99 2 7135
a
best-&lt;&gt;f-flve-sets match here
12 10 31c
------ -------Feb 2

Racine
Social Events
B) Mrs Francis Morris
V1s 1hng wt th Mr and Mrs

Jake Lee dunng Thanksg1vmg
hohrla} s we re Mr a nd Mrs
Jer n Lee Sco tt and Je rry, Mr
and ~· rs J effrey Lee Tedd)
J ohnson , T1m and Teddy . all of
Columbus and Mr and Mrs
Asa Jorda n of Middleport
Mrs Franki e Ne 1g ler a ccom pam ed Mr and Mr s
Geor ge Ne1gler t o Columbus
Th a nk s g1vm g Mrs Ne1g ler
was a dmne r guest of Mr and

fo r
9 1q

r

s ~11~

:nrn

youth
The state board, m calling
for half of Ohio's mvestment m
elementary and secondary
education to come from state
revenue, also urged statewide
assessment, collect10n and disIJ"Ibutlon of taxes on public
utility properties, mcludmg
electric, gas ~nd railroad
"Vast electrical power generatmg plants are bemg built m
sparsely populated areas,
which results m creating unfrur
pockels of wealth SIIICC aU
Oh1oans are consumers,"
Lyons sa1d
Another state board recommendatiOn sa1d school distnct
tax rates should not be reduced
followmg reappraisal. Loopholes m the current law
pernut operating tax rates to
be cut to provide the same
amount of revenue to schools

1972 VEGA GT
51995
Hatchba ck. low milea ge by l owner ne w w w fires tran s
ferred from new ca r , 4 s peed trans radiO green flnt sh,
blac k \ltn y l mte rtor de luxe trtm

Prepar1ng Teachers," the
board adopted w1th minor
amendments the recommendations of a 30-memher
advisory committee. They
were formulated after more
than 120 teacher educaUon
redesign meetings mvolving
more than 3,600 Ohioans dunng
the past 18 months
oThe new standards, designed
to bring urgently needed
refonns to teacher education
institutions, will be phased m
over a four-year periOd arting
Jan . I, 1976 OhiO tolleges and
untvers1t1es prepanng
teachers are to be m full
compliance With the new
standards by July 1, 198().
New reqwremer,U; called for
prospecUve teachers to get
more and earlier ln...chool
el'perlences, and chnlcal
preparation for the diagnosiS of

·

BEDRO OM tr a tler at corn er
o-f
Broadway and E lm
Mt ddlepor t
No p e t s or
ch tldr e n Ca ll 991 25 BO aft er 6
P

12 5

also would he

possible In
distncts which have h1gh rates

Iearmng difficulties and prescnption of appropirate mstrucUonal procedures
Colleges and umvers1lles
also will be requ1red to
organize teacher education
courses m a systematic
manner similar to other
professions,
prepare all
teachers for the teaching of
reading and proVIde lower
facuJtY-atudent ratios to assure
greater college superv1s1on
and more effective evaluation
of classroom mstruct1on.
Continued tmprovements m
teacher preparatwn were
called for by the board through
the establislunent of an Ohw
Teacher Education
Certification Advisory Committee
1t will have rewesentatlves of
school district pel"l!Omel Including teachers, supel"VISOrs
and administrators; higher

education mcludmg college
students, professors, deans
and presidents, and the
public.
The commission will help
proJect the number of teachers
needed to be prepared In
various subbjects, so there w1U
be no surplus or shortage of
mstructors. It also will deal
with standards for teacher
education and certifications,

review campus evaluations
and
analyze
flnane~al
requirements on teacher
education .
In other action, the board
allocated 65 per cent matching
vocational construction funds
totaling f2,072,573 for an addition to Waite High School,
Toledo, and f190,000 as 50 per
cent matching funds for the
new Bethel-Godown Road H1gh
School, Columbus.

PHONE
949 J832 or 843 2667
All Types of
BUILDING
and REMODELING
From a shelf fa a houn
Patntmg , sidtng, roofing ,
paper hangtng , krtchen
cabtnets, etc

Sat
6PM

WEDNESDAY, DEC II , 1974
Sunrise Semester 4 Sunnse Semester 10
Farm Report 13
F1ve Minutes To Live By 4, News 6 Bible An swers 8
School Scene 10 , The Slory 13
6 35 - Columbus Today 4
6 45 - Morning Report 3 Farmtlme 10
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15 Yogi's Gang 6 CBS News 8 10 Farmer's
Daughter 13
7 30- New Zoo Revue 6 , Lldsvllle 13
a 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, Jeff's Collte 6 Popeye 10 New Zoo
Revue 13, Sesame Street 33
8 25- Capt Kangaroo 10 , Jack Lalanne 1J
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13
9 00- AM 3, Paul Dixon 4 W1ld Wild West 6, Ph1l Donahue
15 , Bullwlnkle 8 , Movie ' Tiger By The Tall" ' ll
9 30 - Not For Women Only 3 HazelS , TaHietales 10
10 00- Name That Tune 3. IS Company 6, Joker' s W1ld 8 10
10 30- Winning Streak 3, 1S Phil Donahue 4 Gambll8, 10
11 00- H1gh Rollers 3, 4, 15 Secret Santa 6 , Now You See It 8
10 . Password 13
11 30- Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 13 Love of Life
8, 10
II SS- CBS News B. Dan lmel"s World 10
12 00 - JackpolJ. 15. SO SO Club 4, News 8, 10, 1l
12 30- Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 15, Search For Tomorrow 8, 10 ,
Atternoon With D J 13
12 45 - Electric Company 33
12 55- NBC News 3. IS
1 00- News 3, All My Children 13 , Phil Donahue 8, Young and
Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15
1 30- Jeopardy 3, 4, 1S. lel's Make A Deal6, 13, As The World
Turns 8. 10
2 00- Days of Our Lives l, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13. Guiding
Light 8, 10
2 30- Doctors 3. 4. 15 , Girl In My l1te 13 , Ed~e of Night 8, 10
3 00- Another World 3. 4. 15 , General Hosp1tal 13 Price Is
Right 8, 10
3 30- HQw To Survive A Marriage 3, 4, 15 , One Life to Live 13 ,
Match Game 8, 10
4 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Bonanza 4, Somerset 15 , Tattletales 8,
Movie " Fuller Brush Girl" 10
4 30 - Bewitched 3, Afterschool Speclal13. Lucy Show 8 Santa
Claus 15
5 00- FBI 3, Merv Grill In 4 , Andy Grofflth 8, Bonanza 15 ,
Mister Rogers 20, 33
5 30 - Beverly Hillbillies 8. Family Classics 13 Electric
Company 33
6 00- News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13
6 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15, CBS News 8. 10, ABC News 13. Zoom

All Small ApplianceS
Lawn MoweiS
Next to HighWi\Y
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

6 00 6 25 6 30 -

I

tfc

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

j

CONSTRUCTION

Open Mon

BAM

BOWERS
REPAIR

0&amp;0

m

li,&gt;7t CUTLASS Supre m e a rr 7 AEDROO M dou b le Wt de
mob rl e home rn Sy rac use
co n drtroned am fm ma ny
Depos rt reQur red No c h ildr en
more ex tr as Reduc ed prr ce
or pets Ca ll 992 '1 -14 1 aft e r 6
Phone 997 9Q!!l
pm
17 B 3tc
12 1 lf c

"Hence, both personallDCome
and proper-ty values should be
constdered in order to have a
fatrsystem"
The board recommended the
"d
legislature glVe serious conSI eration to replacing the present
SChool foundation fonnula wtth
an " equal )'leld" plan. It would
guarantee school districts a
nununum level of state and
local doUar support per pupil
for each mill of local tax
Based on school diStrict
wealth and local tax effort, an
"equal y1eld" plan would
equalize the revenue raismg
ability of school districts and
proVIde a strong mcentiv~ to
brlng t ax rat es upward m
districts havmg low tax rates,
Lyons said. Reduction of taxes

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
Ph 992 -5682 or 992 - 71~1
"All Mechamcal Work

For Rent
7

Racme , O.

·- ,

On State Rt 124, •12 mt from
Route 7 by pass towards
Rutland

OPEN EVES. 8:00P. M .
POMEROY, OHIO

Teacher preparation system reformed
COLUMBUS (UP!) -MaJor
refonns m teacher preparation
have been adopted and a broad
15-member Ohio Teacher Education and Certification Ad. vlsory Commission has been
created by the state Board of
EducaUon.
The board, in other action at
the regular monthly meeting
Monday, named Mrs. Allee
Vesely, Cleveland, to the state
Ubrlll}' Board; approved 8,069
special education and 6,947
vocational education classes
for the current school year; allocated f2,262,573 m matchmg
vocational construction funds,
and &amp;S8Iglled the Hamilton
!.Deal School District In Franklin County to the Eastland
Joint Vocational School District
After a lengthy public hearIng on proposed " Standards for
Colleges or
Umversltles

r -- -- --

777 Pearl Street
Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992 5367 or 992-3U I

RACINE GARAGE
5th St

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10,1974
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, ll IS. Electric Company 20. lTV
Utilization 33
6 30- NBC News 3. 4. 15 ABC News 13. Bewitched 6, CBS
News 8, 10 , Zoom 20
1 00 - Truth or Consequences 3, 4 Bowling 6, What s My Line?
8, News 10, TBA IS
7 30- Hollvwood SQuares 3, 4 World of Animals 6 $25,000
Pyramid 8, Proce Is R1ghl 10 . To Tell the Truth 13 RFD
20
8 00- Adam 12 3, A, 15, Year Wtlhout A Santa Claus 6 13 Good
Times 8, 10 America 20, 33
8.30 - After the Fall 3 4 IS . MASH 8. 10 People' s BuSiness
20
9 00- Out To Lunch 6, 13 Hawau Five 0 8, 10 , New England
Christmas 33
9· 30 - Woman 20 , Barenbotm on Beethoven 33
10 00 - Marcus Welby 6, 13 Barnaby Jones 8 10 , News 20
Soundstage JJ
10:30 - Your Future Is Now 20
11 00 - News3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13,15 33
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, W1de World Mystery 13 FBI6,
Movie "Rome Like Ch1cago" 8 M.ov1e 'Two Loves" 10
Janak! 33
1 00- Tomorrow 3, 4, News 13
2 00- News 4

8-K EXCAVATING
I·
OOMPANY

Ptck up dally 1n Pomeroy &amp;
Mtddleport
All
work
guaranteed Phone 949-3611 .

197 v vo~-~.LJANT 65xl2 3bedrooni
tully carpeted LP gas heat
Phon e 992 77 51
8 25 tfc

Protect Your Home
Or Busmess

JOHNSON'S

GHEEN'S PAINTING

Brown's Fire &amp;
Safety Equipment

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

949-3295

Sales &amp; Serv1ce
F1re Exftngurshers, Home
Ftre Alarms, Teshng &amp;
Reftlhng
Phone 742 4673 or 742 5595
Btll Brown, Owner
Rutland, Ohro

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work
FREE ESTIMATE

Phone (304) 773-5503

Fully Insured

l._.,..--

For Sale
TW O G78 15 belted lrrP.&lt;; hnth
for S2S Phon e 992 2759
12 9 3tc

rad10 a m fm
8 tra c k tap e comb 1nalton
Balance S107 45 or terr.1s Call
992 3965
11 19 lfc

WALNUTster ~: v

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

CHR! STM AS tr eeson old Rt 33
Phon e Opha Offutt 992 3296
12 20 12t p

For Her Christmas

R EF RI GERA TOR
k 1lchen
r ang e s of a d1n el te set
la m ps
record
player
bedroom surtes anti QUes and
oth e r tle ms Phon e 997 34 57
12 10 7tc

LAB l ANC sil ve r trum pet and
ca se by Vrc tor Excell ent
cond1t1on appratsed a t SJOO
sell S250 G tr l s roll e r skattng
shoes srze 7 While StO
Mens sport ra c ket medrum
blue S1Ze 36 and trouse rs to
match used very few t rm es
SJ.O 783 ft cured red and
wh rte oak planks SIOO Phone
985 4110
12 10 6tp

--------------HOME
Improvement and

Repatr Servtee - Anythtng
frxed around the home from
roof to basement You ' ll like
our work and rates Phone
742 5081
12412tp

MICROWAVE
OVEN
Only '231.52

EXCAVATING dozer, loader
and backhoe work , septrc
tanks installed dump truCtlks
and lo boys for hire, will haul
flit dirt , top :soli , limestone &amp;
graver Call Bob or Roger
J effers day phone 992 7089, 1
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc 1

POMEROY LANDMARK 1
Jack W Carsey , Mgr

'

,

P~one992

2181

SEWING Ma chmes brand new
Ztg Zag tn niCe walnu t table
In ortg 1nal car tons Never
used
Cleal" ~ nc e
on '74
Models
{Only
a
few
available) S4J 40 cash or
terms avat tabte Phone 992
7755

10 15 tfc

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD
\/rt ;11

II

f,.,if.,, .-1

f\' .. ~'

::.1t.',&lt;ch,Jr\rr

&lt;,tr,

Oh&lt;tl ,·, 1·1

1974
ZIG ZAG
SEW ING
MACH IN ES left tn layaway
All butlt rn to buttonho le do
stretch sew1ng and fancy
slttchmg Pay tust $48 75 cash NEW liSTING- 5 rooms, clly
or terms available Trade ms water. basement wtth coal
accepted Phone 992 7755
furnace In Syracuse $3,000 00
12 3 lfc

FURNISH E 0 apt Adu lts on ly
Middleport Phone 992 3874
1114 Hc
- - - - - - -- -- - - - -UNFURNISHED house
4
rooms and bath 1650 Lmcoln WALNUT s tereo ra d1o am fm
Herghls Phone 992 3874
8 tra c k tape comb rnalton
Balan ceS 1tO 69or term s Call
_
___ - ~------ ~ 2_~fc
992 3965
12 3 tic
FURNI S HED
apartm e nt
utt1rt1es furntshed surtab le
for two work1ng men or VACUUM Cleaners, Brand new
tank type mod e ls wtth 5 at
ret 1red couple Lrvtng room
ta chments Only $2-1 so cash
k1tchen shower and bath On
or terms available New
main htghway Mason, w Va
Uprtght models S29 90 cash or
Phone 773 5147
terms available Trade tns
10 27 tfc
accepted Phone 992 7755
12 3 lfc
FURN ISHED apt 3 rooms and
bath
td eal for work1ng
couple Phone 992 2937
ELECTROLUX
VactJum
12 8 6tp
Cleaner complete w1th at
tachm e nts cordwmder and
patn f Spray Used bul rn ltke
TRAILER space tor rent
new cond ttron Pay S34 -15
Phone 367 7743
cash or budget plan availabl e
l1 26 12tp
Phone 992 7755
--- - - - - - -- - - -- 11 26 ttc
ONE bedroom trailer Phone ---- - -- -- -~ --99 2 3509
SEWING Mach1nes brand new
12 6 6tc
z ,g Zag 1n n rce walnut table
- - - - - -- - - - -In or rg1nat cartons Never
'l. BE:.OROOM mobtle home tn
used
Clearan ce on '74
Rae me ar ea Phone 992 5858
mode ls
(Only
a
few
11 29 ttc
avarlab le) $43 40 cash or
terms available Phone 992
- - - - - -- - - - - -- 7755
3 BEDROOM house Phone 992
3975 or 992 2571
l1 26 tfc
123tfc STEREO rad•o combrnal•on 8
track tape am fm radio 4
ONE BEDROOM trailer , all
speaker
s.ound
system
util1tres and cable TV Fur •
Balance
$106
84
or
te
rms
Call
nrshed Phone 992 3719 after
99 2 3965
4 30 p m
11 26 tk
129tfc
- --- ----- ----1957 C-Ht:VY parts
NEW
Lakewood tract ron bars ht
lacker a 1r shoc ks , hooker
headers , w1th 3 'co ll ectors for
APP LE S F1tzpa trt ck Orchard
small bloc k Call 992 3496
State Route 689, Phone
after 6 p m BE ST OFFER
Wrlkesvtlle 669 3785
10 17 tfc
- - - ---- -~ -- - ------- - - -112126tc
- - - --12 CUBIC feet Kenmore uprtght
290 JOHN Deere corn planter
freezer Phone 992 5621 or 992
with herbscrde attachments
3901
and rubber press wheels IS
12 8 Jtc
rolls of new 4 ft field fence
No 46 lnternatronal hay
recap trres, F7B 14 S20
baler 3 bottom lnternaftonal 2 NEW
two F711 14 rn studded tires
plow 14 hydraulic on rubber
mounted on whee ls S50, one
w1th double actlon cyltnder
7 25 15 tn hre mounted In to
and 10 ft hO$e No 64 In
hole Wheel, $25, one 40 m elec
ternatronal comb1ne Phone
base board heater , S20 Two
BAJ 2664 after 6 p m
beagterabbttdogs S60 Phone
12 4 6tc
742 5322. Nata Vanaman,
---~ -- -------Rutland
FLANNEL , $189 yd Zippers,
-12 Blip
15c ea 2 for 25c , 10 for Sl 00
polyester S2 98 yd , cotton 69c SINGER sewmg ma c h•n~. 11k. e
yd and up Panerns 35c
new, 1973 model 1n n1ce
Novelty Fabr1 c &amp; Crafts,
wa lnut cabtne t Makes design
,B e lpre , Sunday 1 to 6 p m
stttches
ztg zags , but
Wee kdays 9 to 9 p m
tonholes , blind hems , etc
12 5 6tc
Only $84 Call Ravenswood
27J 9521 or after 5 p m 273
NEW l1vlng room suites 20 pet
9893
off t!l Christmas See us
12 1 lfc
before you buy a Jtvmg room
surte You'll be glad you d1d
G~ROCERY busm es s for sate
J a c ks
Furn1ture
&amp;
Bulld1ng for sate or lease
Upholstery Supplies, 236 E
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
Mam Sf
Pomeroy OhtO
to tO p m for .appomtment
Phone 992 J903
'::..,_
3 20-tfc
12 4 7tc

S ULATED
FREE
ES TIMATES CALl,. 992 3993
12 s 6tc

HOTPOINT

REDUCE safe and fast wrth
GoBese Tab lets and E Vap
water prl ls " Ne lson Drug
17 10 ltc 2 BEDROOM house for sale
$500 down $70 per month
NEW Improved Ztppr es the
Phone 992 3975 or 992 2571
g rea t 1ron prtt now w1th
123tfc
V1tamln C Ne lson Drug
12 10 ltc
LOSE wetght Wtt h New Shape
Table ts. and Hydr ex Water
Pills at Dutton Drug M1d
d leport an d Nel son Dl"ug
12 10 3tp

CUT THE FUEL BILLS DOWN
HAVE YOUR HOME
IN

0

HAMPSTER hog boy 's 2 wheel
b•ke 26 rnch Auro r a ra ce
track Ca ll aft e r 5 o m 949
4935
12 10 Jtc
FIREWOOD for sal e $1 5 per
toa d Phon e 742 4831
12 10 12tp

CAR PET 1nstallat1on S1 25 per
yard Phone Rr chard West ,
843 2667
11 l3 26tp

For Sale

l'·.ll1lr·r11y

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

Racine, 0.

Alumtnum stdmg, rooftng,
complete res1dent1al construction Wiring, plumbtng,
elec
heatrng,
kttchen
cabtnets etc
27 Yrs expenence m canst
trade

NEW HOME - 3 bedrooms
ceram1c f1le bath , dark oak
k1tchen . e lectnc heat. and
garage $20,000 00
RUTLAND - 7 rooms, 3 BR,
modern bath , nat gas furnace,
and garage $12.000 00

t&lt;effarr
serv1ce, all makes 992 2284
The Fabrtc Shop Pomeroy
Author1zed Singer Sales and
Servtce We sharpen Scl5sors
3 29 tfc

WIN AT BRIDGE

-

- - - - - --

~XCELSIOR

-

-----

evenlnQS

6 13 tfc
I

.SEPT IC TANKS cleaned
Modern San 1tatlon, 992 3954'or
992 7349
9 18 +tc

Real Estate For Sale

... , vRY 5 bedroom, kitchen ,
btg lrvtng room , recreation
room and tor m Mason W V"a
on Rt 33 Phone {304) 773
5U7
1
12 10 lOtc

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

For Sale

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

----------

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

_____________

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

BUILDING lot, 80 tt frontage x
165ft Ttie second lot on left on
R tvervtew Drive, Llnc;~rf1
Hrll, Pomeroy, Ohio If 1n..1
terested,•call 992 J230 after .s
pm
10 17 ·~
------ -------~

West

-• 2•
Pass

_I I

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don I le t any more lime g o by
rega rdtng a bustness S1tua t1on
that you re dtspleased wtth
Work 11 out at once tf possible
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
T earn effort ts called for today
Be sure you re equally as lndustnous as your counterpart
or he II get bugg ed Wt1h you
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
The early par1 ot the day you II
b e somewha1 lackadaiSi cal
about your chores By after
noon you II have a full head of
steam up
LEO (July 23-Aug 221 You
need a slight change o l pace
now Plan someth1ng for lh!s
evemng that 15 pleasurable so
the week wont seem so long

farmer."
Then, on the same page, a third tlem headlmed, "End of
World Hunger Is Seen," but the nutr1tlomst who predicted this
saw 1t for the dim future when ''the world changes 1ts eating
habits "
A fourth article (still on page A-&lt;1) began , "The Umted States
should discontinue food aid to starving, overpopulated countries,' says a professor of human ecology ... " He unplied we can
never conquer excessive breeding so long as we encourage It by
feeding the breeders.
.. And after reading all this, we felt more than a little s1ck 1
Isn~ something awfuUy wrong with a country that condones
the tr&amp;Bhlng of potential food while tittle children starve
and
pollUc1ans argue?
Granted fanners have survival womes too, but why turn
food mto garbage? Why not, as a few already have, ra1se fun'!'
and slup the meat to underprivileged people - mcludmg many m
our own land!
This would not depress the market further, for such people
aren~ potential buyers But It WOULD help f1ght malnutrition
while our learned leaders bassle over solutions that wtil come
much too late for those swoUen-bellied Indian and A!r1can youngsters, dying in the streets.
We realize this Is short-term and madequate - a tiny effort
against a mighty problem, but It's something we can do NOW,
while waiting for a global solution.
Let's hope tbat global solution fmaily comes 1 - RAP

and draggy

VIRGO (Aua 23·ct., .. t

?2)

ACROSS
I Barbecut rod
5 Denture
10 llallan.rlver

llJocular

3 One kind
of tube
'Dress
5 SimonI Scandina-

term of
vian
endearment
man 's
U Lacking
name
flexlbillty
7 Macaw
(hyph. wd)
8 Nervous
1t Take a
twitch
gander
10 It's a
15 Certain flier•
mouse'
18 London
11 Slowed
dry goods
down
dealer
13 Coat
18 Grassland
feature
21- canto
17 French
Z% Moat
priest •
Z% Betray
18 Card game
(hyph wd.) 19 Before tee
!'I Twiddling
20 Stubborn
one's
person

thwnbs

22

23
2'

25

Yesterday's
Worry
Understand
(sl)
" - to a
Skylark"
German
city

%6 The (precocious
conduct)
30 Greetmg
for Dolly
31 Expunge

Z8 Street (Fr.) ~~rr
29 Kind of

•

ch1ck He sa1d I was too young and inexpenenced I waa
miserable, but fmally found a 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld guy I like. Now, No. 1
has broken llp With h1s old woman, and wants me to move in with
him I know he'll drop me when somethmg better cornea along.
How can ! sa y " No " when I -WANTTOSAYYES
WTSY
. Loud and clear 1 And if you weaken, remember It's better
he "young and mexperlenced" than "young and used." HELEN AND SUE

w

•

+++
Dear Rap:
My girlfriend and I are 13 and look much older. ThiS surmner
we were at a motel and met some guys . The friendlier one got our
address and baa written several times. He is 22 and thinks we are
around 18.
He wants to vlalt us when he makes a trip to our c1ty, but
we're afraid to tell our parents. You see, he IS black, and they are
kind of old-tashloned. Should we sneak out and meet hun, or JUSt
stop writing• He seems awfully nice -THE GIRlS

ll/AJI/IVS

I I

+++

I I

22, left me to move m w1th an older

8, 10

-:c

dealer

33 French
COD1IllWIO

3C Nylon
rnl!hap
31 lnatructlon
to • typiJt
(hyph. wd)

40 Ought
to

Is Scout
d Donna or
Oilver

DOWN
1 Back talk

z Snooped

It:

AXYDLBAAXII
LONGFELLOW

used lor the three L'o, X for the two O's, etc Single letten,
opoatrophtl, the lenl!h and formation of the wordo are all
hlnto. Each do)' the code !etten ore different

~

CRYPTOQUOTE
HOLDS YOU~ A~M
AT YOLJR "BIDE:.

[J

Now arnnl't the circled lettera
to fonn the aurpriH anawtr, u
•ua:ctsltd. by the abovt eartoon.

A

r x r rx r xJ

(Aa1wrn tomorrow)

Jumhlt'a EXULT
""•Vrd•y"•

how to woTk

One letter olmply otandl for another In thlo sample A Ia

tJ

1 Prill 111e SllftPRISl ANSWEtlllere 1

11 00- NewsJ, 4, 6,8, 10, 12, 15,33
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Miss World Pageant 13, Movie
"DesperadoS' 1 8, Movie "Brave Bulls" 10
12· 30- Wild, Wild West 6
1 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4, News 13
200-Newo4

patching
disk
35 Requirement
36 Shush'
31 Greek
letter
38 Subatomlc
particle
3!1 Average

muffin

II

Girls.
Here's a solution· Why not level with the 22--year-&lt;&gt;ld man
about your ages. When he hears you are only 13, I'm pretty sure
he won'tshowupat your door. -SUE

trimming

33 Boiler-

~~~=-

I
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

r

32Dress

Tennis pr0
U His horse

Unscramble tht:!it: rour Jumbles,
o11e letter to each •quare, lo
form four ordtnary words

1

A01wer ' '

30 Derby

n

JJ!YWIDlbrn®::::.:::::~

Dear Girls :
Don't Slleak! If you're ashamed to level w1th your parents,
maybe you already sense there's somethmg wrong With this
situation . I'd say: Either ask their pennisslon to meet this "older
man" or forget him! - HELEN

Rap :
I'm 16. My boyfriend,

-

by THOMAS JOSEPH

APPLY

IMPEND

VOYAGE

\ Annrrr } rmlhllll httnt lrrmh/( - PUPPY LOV~

NG

NI

NA

UKA

GJK

ZHHGKP

GH

NAIGNAVG

DPUNZK

MJDG

~ast

OKDEGNCES

U HZK

DAP

G J D A

GJKUIKSQK1 - R D U K I

ZEIIKSS
SHMKSS
Yeotenlay'a Cryploquote: MANY WEEP FOR THE SIN,
WHILE THEY LAUGH OVER THE PLEASURE.-

MAJIGUERITE DE VALOIS

DICK TRACY

2'
Pass

Pass
Pass

CAPTAIN EASY

South

I'
4'

Pessim tsttc Pete looked
over dummy Then he playe,d
1ts ace of clubs on Wests
.,kmg Next came a trump to
the ace and when both oppo' nents followed Pete relaxed.
- He saw that no matter how
badlr the rest of the cards lay
nothmg could keep h1m from
scormg 10 tncks game and
rubber
He played two more
trumps to pull East"s teeth
and proceeded to lead a lo~
diamond toward dummy s
nme West ducked so the mne
held Pete played a diamond
back and West took h1s queen
He shifted to the seven of
spades Pete played low from
.dummy and East was m w1th
the queen He made h1s best
play whch was to return a
club. but Pete r~ffed and
knocked out Wests ace of
diamonds
West Jed a second ~pade
Pete rose w1th dummy s ace,
ruffed a club to get back t,o
h1s hand. d1scarded dummy s
jack of spades on the long
'lhamond and made the hand
'in spite of everythmg hemg
wrong
-or course, an o'!enma
spade lead woul
have
beaten him, but West was a
br.dge player, not a man w1th
second s1ght

'
T HIS IS M Y CHA NCE' TO
MAKfZ UP FOR SIUPI DLY
F OLLOW INS THE a UG"S OF
I t-€ LAS T TV0 CRIM ES
TO THIS - BLUS H "r -

THIS CASE 16
SO

HOP6~E'SS

IT wo.rr PO
/WV ~TO
~\CL!

Of.l IT,
FOSDICK-

F LO WER

~

Fl\'6-1».'1

~~
OF l,c()Rs #i!E

SHOP ~~

oor

•

Ai..L"G' ~
~.
'PJ'I&lt;E
u~

eur

•

al ~1(61-l)S!

'INNIE
JOHN BAI&lt;{OU I ~
OIN6 10 S'TEAL
&lt;JR DE~15NBf~

USTKNOWI

15N'r 1HERE IW&gt;'"Tl' ING'&gt;OU WECAN

DO 10 BlOP HIM?

I

Lt:B;J :~ ,,tP,ttt !1

1'
SGuth
?

3'

You South hold
• 4
A Q10 8 6 + K J4 .. A Q"'
1 What do yOu do now?
t A-Bid one notrump
\'out
hand Ia unsuitable ror a doubh•
~cause you only hold two small
• des and the notrump overcall
sf::ws your balanced 16 point•
With at least one diamond atop
TODAY"S QUESTION
Your parlner b•ds two s pade!
What &lt;k you do now?
~

WHAT IN
THUNDER DOES
THAT FEMALE
Wfi!IJT THIS
TIME OF NIGHT ?

t II /I

ill /I t
II'////

NI

OKGGKZ

~

'

I'
1

North

' r
..

ON YOUR DIAL

S IZC

Both vulnerable

1

WMP0/1390

Readers All .
·
Recently, we opened our newspaper to see the picture of a
skeleton-thin Bangladash chtld, crying for food Immediately
below was a shot of Midwest fanners shootmg thetr cattle m
protest over low market pnces .
The first story told of grinding hunger and the vanous
political proposals and conferences a1111ed at solutwns to
widespread famine. The second descrlbe&lt;f how cattle, hogs and
sheep were lined up m a large trench, slaughtered and buned m
"an effort to shock lhe Whlte House mto realiZmg the phght of the

&lt;!!l,~~•"rr

"'9

I*

like a person,

For Wedneaday Dec 11
1974
ARIES (March 21·Apnl 19)
A fru slra t1ng condti10n IS about
to change You II be better
able to c ome to gnps wtth •t
and reduce tt to a manageable

Edllorlal Time

+

: The brddmg has been
Wrest
North
East

We talk to you

By Helen and Sue Hottel

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

bedrooms , built In kitchen ,
basement with one car
garage Phone 747 3615 or Sfe
Mtlo Hutchison
11 1 tlt:

NICE I FLOOR PLAN - 5
rooms,
bath,
porches ,
garage, carpeted. part(!'led &amp;
tiled- Pnced for quick sale,
$9.500 00
9 MOSTLY TillABLE
ACRES- TPwaler, on good
blacktop roftd, close to some
shopping, Ideal for homes or
mobtle homes Close- to
recreation areas $5,800 00
4S ACRE5-Paslure, woods,
culftvatlon, stocked pond , all
fenced, minerals, close In
$11,000 00
MINE AREA - 10 acres
located on good fishing creek
and good blacktop road,
approved for septic tank
55.800 00 Make an offer
OTHER BARGAINS IN
REAl ESTATE - STOP
AND SlOE •
992-22S9or 992 256a

~

Dec 11 , 11174
Th1s year w111 ftnd you In
several very ambitious under·
taktngt where you II put all
you r chipS pown and play to
wm 11 you rely on Aflort and not
luck you II do OK

Opemng lead - K•

tRdelivered
~MEANs -coN'tRET~·
Monday throu_gh
Saturday and
.,hone 446 1142

Generation Rap

lr!Lt.i Uti.Y1'1J\1' 1\f'mJ..t;

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

c er.f~D~l:IRO Auclr ~mt:o::·~
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161 1
RacmerOhlo
...
Crrtt Bradford
5 I If~

Your palteoce Is very thtn·
sk1nned today espectallv to
ward evemng when you mtght
be grump1er to lamlly members
1hiin ts usual
LIBRA ISept 23-0cl 23)
You II evoke resentment from
others 1t your remarks are too
sharp or c ulling today Think
carelully before you speak
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22)
You re too concemed now as
to y,flether you II get What s
comtng to you Your acltOOS
Will lead others to thtnk you re
selfish
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 ·
Dec 21) Be careful you don t
overreac t If everything doesn t
go exactly your way You can
be ftrm JUS! don I be too tor·
ceful
CAPRICORN 10..: 22-Jon
19) Something will occur to·
day that w111 annoy you Bring It
out m the open Clear It up
QUICkly rather than hide It and
te l 11 smolder
AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob
19) You II leave something 1m~
portant hall llmshed thinking
you II get back to tl later You
won I Valuable 11me will be
lost
PISCES (Feb 20-Morch 20)
In compet1IIV8 Stluatl0f't8 don I
be blurted by your opponent
The odds favor you to come
out on top

:10

NORTH
10
• II J6
' 8 64 2
9 63
"'A65
WEST
EAST
• 752
.KQ43
'9
'J53
tAQ84
t75
"'KQJ107
"'8432
SOUTH IDl
• 1098
'A K Q 10 7
t K J 10 2

j

sait Works, ~~E I
Matn St •, Pomeroy Arl kindS
of salt water pellels, ~wair
nuggets, block salt and ' n
Ohio Rlvir Salt Phone 9 2
3891
I
6 5 tfc
S EP'fiC l ANKS -C ieanfd,
reasonable rates Ph 4:46
4782, Gallrpolls John Russell ,
owner and operator
1
_:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
5_
12...1...tfc

------------NEW
bt leve l
nome , - ' 3

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

Pete maintains winning streak

DOZER work, tand clhr1ng by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds, roads, etc Large
dozer and operator with oVer
20 years experience Pullins
Excavatmg, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 fttc
READY- MiX--(ONCR~ e ' , t:
delivered r~ght to your
Pro1ect Fast and easy Ftee
estimates Phone 992 32;84
Goegle1n Ready Mix Co.
Middleport Oh 10
r
6 30JffC

-~--------

MIDDLE PORT
Bnck
bus1ness bu1ldtng with 6 rooms

7 30- Pollee Surgeon 3. Name That Tune 4, lel"s Make A Deal
6 Mel Tillis Time 8, ThiS Is Music 10, To Tell The Truth 13
8 00- Little House on the Prairie 3, 4. 15. That's My Mama 6.
13 Tony Orlando and Dawn 8, 10, Feeling Good 20.
8 30.:_ Movie "' The Tribe"' 13 . Movle"'Reluclant Heroes" 6
9 00- William Christmas Special 3, 4, IS, Cannon a. 10, Da
Vinci 20
10 oo - Flip Wilson 3. 4. IS. Get Christie Love 6, 13, Man Hunter

••~LMtNta

--------------:-jp.
lAUREl CliFF- 5 rooms,
bath, electnc heat, and garage
57500 00

1.:Truth or Consequences 3, 4, Whet's My Line? 8, News
10, Celebrlth Sweepstakes 13. I Spy 10

___ . . _ ___- --- --- --..=:::r..u
5 EW!t-.u

""lltlllllimr&lt;Rf&lt;lllllll!iljlltlllll!iljlr&lt;Rf&lt;IIIIIIIIII~Z«t&gt;:&lt;~:··::%%.."*-»:·&gt;.:~~X«-=~;
X•

Television Log

__...,. .,

Water, Electric, Gas, Sewer
Lines, Installed
Work
guaranteed
Dozer, Backhoe, Trucks '
Lrmestone &amp; Frll Dirt
Commerctal Restdtntl•l
Construction &amp; Remodel

OOMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

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

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

pay for education," Lyons said

'

Complete plumbmg &amp;
heatmg serv1ce. Free
Est1mates .

3 BEDROO M hom e lar g e l1vr ng
r oom a n d bu It 1n k tche n
wa ll t o wal l carp et bre eze
way closed tn large ultltl y
r oom
turnt s h ed or u n
h1s pa r e nts. Mr and Mrs Ben
tur n shed $35 a wee k p lu s
utrllltes J ~ mil e pas t Bea con
Ph1lson and h1s g randmother ,
Sta t on on RI J3 n ear churc h
es and g r ade a nd h1gh sc hoo l
Mrs Clyde Cross a nd Mr and" Mrs Mma Lew1s
Call 992 2050 after 12
Mrs
Margaret
Houdashelt
Mrs Ne tgler we r e dmner
12 106tc
gues ts of the1r son-m-law s s pent ThanksgiVIng w1th Mr
and Mrs
Ronm e Sm1th, FURNI SHED apartmen t -1
parenls. Mr and Mrs Miller
rooms and bath Please call
P
omeroy
Gues ts of Mrs Hazel earalter 3 p m 992 5908
12 4 ~lc
Mr and Mrs
Thereon
naha n were Mrs He len Kmg of
Riley, Ka ns a s. "ho s pent J ohnson. Miss Ed1th Hayman 2 BEDRO OM mobtle home
c lose tn county local ron Call
se ve r a l
days
Spe ndwg and Dr Kathryn Philson were
9q 2 76-19 after -1 p m
,
Thanksgiving
guests
of
Mr
Saturday we r e Mrs Vernon
12 4 ~t c
Bobb and so n, Dav 1d of and Mrs Scott Wheeler a nd
J AND 4 ROOM furn iShed and
Co lumbus and Mrs John fam1ly at &amp;10tov1lle
unfurnished
apartments
Mr and Mrs Mike Hayman
Parsons and da ug hter, Juh . of
Phone 992 5-13 4
4 12tfc
a nd childre n of Dunkirk . Mr
Tol edo
Beth Ann Hart , young and Mrs Ray Hayman of PRIVATE meetmg room fo r
any organ1zatton phone 992
Pla n ts . and Mrs
Gretta
daughter of Mr and Mrs
3975
Stmpson,
local
,
observed
R ob e rt Hart , und erwent
3 11 tfc
fhank sgiVIng on Fnday at the
s urgery at Holzer Medical
':fRAI L ER s pa ce 7 miles from
home of Mr and Mrs W1lham
Center last week
Pome roy Rt 143 Phon e 992
ssse
Tha nksgtvm g dmner guests Hayman
10 27 tf c
Mr and Mrs Clarence
of Mr and Mrs Billy H1ll and
Bradford spent the weekend COUNTR Y Mobil~ Home Park
famtly were Mr and Mrs
R t 33 ten m rles nor th of
Ralph Badg ley , Mrs Helen with their son-m-law and
Pomeroy Large lots wtth
daughter , Mr and Mrs Leon
con c rete pat 1os SldP.walks
Stmpson and Mr and Mrs
ru nner s and oft street
Jordan at Thornville. Oh10
Bnan S 1mpson and fam1ly
parkrng
Also spaces for
Kenneth Turley spent a &gt;\eek
sma ll trailers Phone 992 7479
Thanksgiving dinner guests
7 21 tfc
of Mr and Mrs Gerald Simp- deer hunting m West V1rg1n1a
son we re Mrs Gretta Stmpson, mountams Mrs Turley and LARGE home 2 stor1e s un
tur n1shed 1n Middleport Can
local, and Mrs Betty Spaun son spent several days over
be rented to etther 1 or 2
Thanksg1vmg w1th Mr and
and ch1ldre n of Rutland
fam Ires Call 992 317 3
12 8 4t,c
Mrs Isabel Simpson spent Mrs Clarence Turley and Mr
Thanksg1vmg w1th Mr and and M"" Dale Ball at St
4
ROOM furnr shed upstarrs
apartment wr th bath Will be
Mrs Joe Beckwith and Shelley Albans, W Va
ava rtabte after Dec 15 No
Mrs Lavm1a Simpson spent
at Parkersburg
pets or chrtdren 814 E Marn
St Pomeroy 0 Phone 992
Mr and Mrs Rush Phil- a week m Colwnbus vtsthng
5Rl0
~
son , Er1ch and Sarah. Syracuse her daughter. Mrs Manan
12 ll l tc
were ThanksgiVIng guests of Kmghtstep and daughter
3 ROOM furntshed apar tment
utllr t1 es pa 1d 35 6 N Fourth
St M dd leport
12 8 61p

after reappraisal as before, so
that school financing 1s not
related to the changmg Ohio
economy
Increased property values
from reappraisal reduce state
support, Lyons said
'The need for many new
school leVIes just to mamtam
current levels of mcome could
be avoided if reapprisal tax
cuts were ehmmated," he
explamed
The state board also recommended the amount of state
funds going to a school distr1ct
should be deterrmned by both
the personal income of the
distriCt res1dents and the
property values
''Property values, Ute only
factor used to equalize state
support among districts at the
present time, no longer reflect
the ability of a school distnct to

'

&amp; 'HEATING

under plan ..taken up by state hoard
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state board of education has
adopted
leg1slat1ve
recomendatlons a1med at
assuring better flnanc1al
stability for the Ohio's 617
school distncts and equalizing
more the educational opportunities for 2.6 m1lhon
school-age youth.
"The more than 40 carefully
developed recommendatiOns
will he subrmtted m January
for consideration by the governor and the Ill th General
Assembly," sa1d state board
legislative chatrman Robert A
Lyons Sr , Dayton
The maJor proposals adopted
Monday included school
finance reform, Improved
preparation of educatiOn
personnel and further expansion in career education,
work skill trammg and
habilitation of handicaped

--:- .:

Business Services
-

Pomeroy ' HElL '
Motor Co. RACINE PLUMBING

1972 DODGE DART CUSTOM
12495
a Door , local 1 owner car , 318 V 8 engtne, a utomaftc trans .
powe r steermg , a 1r condtlloned , vmyl tn m vmyt top
Au tumn gold fi nt sh w w t1res. like new radto

School finances would he improved

'

~

19740PELMANTA
12895
2 Door or;:~ ng e fmtsh blk vmyl rntenor buc ket sea ts less
tha n !J 000 mt tes &amp; 3 mo old Ra dro deluxe bumpers

197 t OLD SMOB ILE Cut la ss
Su preme 1 ow n ~? r new se t of
r a d1a l t.r es. 6 000 m rl es.
perf ec t cond•t ron Pe rson a ll y
owned
Arno ld
Grat e
Ru ll a n d Sec at Rutl a nd
F urn lur e Com pany
Ph one
7J? -17 11 da y
1rg h! Ci'lll 742
SS&lt;t1
11 3 lf c

.9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1974

Phone Joh n Ro se
12 5 61C

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

WantPrt To Buy

Sales

11/ 3 C H EVRO L E T p tcku p t r uu ,

WOOOSTOC'- S SlDf(IES Alll.ii~S
STAI1T OFF 6000 6!/T
T~E'(

T~EN

GE T VER&lt;I SAD

�!J'

.. ·~ .... -

••

"

·~.

'

.

'

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"•',,
10-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pome roy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1974

Jurors selected
PT . PLEASANT - Grand aoo petit jurors were selected Monday afternoon for the January
term of Mason County Circuit Court, by Jinuny Layne and Mrs. Ralph E. Warner, jury commissioners, in the office of Howard Schultz, Circuit Clerk.
Mason County's winter term opens January 6 and grand JUrors are to report on this day to Judge
James Lee Thompson in the Courtroom at 9 :30a .m .
PeUt jurors are advised to
meet one week later with a Bailey , Rt. 1, Leon .
Gallipolis Ferry; Florence V.
COOPER - Mary L. Adkins, Finnicum , Mason ; Vis ta D.
variation in time of hve
minutes . They are to report to R t. 2, Letart.
Ste wart , Rt 1, Gle nwood ;
Judge Thompson January 13 at
GRAHAM - James H. Ball, Georgie M. Rowsey, Rt. 4,
New Haven ; Rosaline L. Wolfe, Milton .
9:25 a .m . in the Courtroom .
St. , New Haven.
Howard
During the Mason County
Alah M. Darst, 3207 Frankhn
HANNAN - David L. Ball, Ave., Point Pleasant; Dorothy
~rm of Circuit Court, Judge
Thompson will hold court in Ashton; Mary L. Lilly. Glen- M. Not\, McNeil ave . Point
this county on Monday , wood.
Pleasant ; Linda J . Fisher, 2605
LEWIS - Lawrence E . Jefferson
Ave .,
Poml
Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
and because of tlle tw...,ounty Eshenaur, Rt . 3, Point Pleasant ; Jame s A. King ,
Circuit will hold court m the Pleasant ; Otis M. Young, 2602 Mason .
Avenue ,
Point
Wirlield Courthouse in Putnam Lincoln
Edgar Sayre, Rt . 3, Leon;
Pleasant ; Jane M. Thabet, 204 Robert R . Vi c kers, New
County on Wednesday only.
The above schedule prevails Main St., Point Pleasant .
Haven ; Irene I. Whittington,
ROBINSON
Raymond
K.
for the two-month period of
Rt. 2, Point Pleasant; Patricia
J . Young, Gallipolis Ferry .
January and February m the Zuspan, West Columbia .
UNION - Vernon Witllrow,
Mason County Court term.
Pa ul B. Powell, New Haven;
Presently Judge Thompson is Rl. 3, Leon.
Marlene Worster, Rt. 2, Box
WAGGENER - Lilah J. 325, Point Pleasant; Frankie L.
holding Court in Putnam
County and is in Mason County Zirkle, Mason ; Ralph w. Shinn, 2916 Maple Ave.; ' Pt.
each week on Friday only, until Zirkle, Hartford.
Pleasant ; ; Kathy I. Elliott,
(ALTERNATES)
2412 Madison Ave ., Point
the new term hegins here.
· Arbuckle ,
Thomas
J. Pleasant.
Jury selections were made
Bumgarner,
Southside;
Clinton R. Sayre, 2509 Linas follows :
Graham
,
Celia
S.
Roush
,
coln
Ave ., Point Pleasant;
GRAND JURY
Letart; Hannan, George A. Donna M. Underwood, Rt. 2,
ARBUCKLE - Clara Y. Ball, Rt. 2, Glenwood ; Lewis, Point Pleasant ; Lucy E .
Wallie Allen, Rt. 2, Point Wright, Gallipolis Ferry;
Kay, Southside.
CLENDENIN - Effie E. Pleasant and Harry S. . Barbara Arnold , Mason;
Roach, Henderson; Mildred Woomer, 2609Mt. Vernon Ave. , Elaine D. Swisher, Rt. I, Camp
Beerbower, Gallipolis Ferry. Pomt Pleasant; Waggener , Conley, Point Pleasant.
Lawrence E . Crotty, 241S
COLOGNE - Beulah J . Raymond J . Williamson,
Mason .
Jefferson
Ave. ,
Point
Pleasant; Vernon L. Dalton,
MEIGS THEATRE
PETIT JURORS
Henderson;
Dorothy
J.
Elizabeth H. Reichert, New Winebrener, Letart; Dorothy
Haven; Gilbert E. Messick, M. Barnett, Rt. I, West
MON.Ihru THURSDAY
Gallipolis Ferry; Sheldon H. Columbia; Kennetll Wood, Jr.,
Morrison , Rt. 1, Leon ; and Rt. I, Leon .
Julia H. Barton, Mason.
Carol J . Ebert, Henderson ;
Roher!
L.
Pumphrey,
Rt.
2,
Wilma
J . Stoer, Apple Grove ;
DEC. 9-12
Box 119A, Leon ; Bernice L. Dallas Earl Holley, Rt . I,
Swisher, Rt. 2, Point Pleasant; Milton ; Doris J. Fitzsimmons,
Virgil A. Byus, 2413 Jackaon Rt. I, Sandy Heights, Point
NOT OPEN
Ave .,
Point
Pleasant ; Pleasant; Gladys E. Williams,
Margaret H. Burdette, Rt. 1, Rt. 1, Box 103-A, GaUipolis
Sandy Heigh Is, Point Pleasant. Ferry.
Thelma
F.
Campbell,
Clarence S. Costen, Ohio
River Rd., Point Pleasant;
Reta
M.
Pauley,
2221
Washington Ave . , Point
PleasaQt; Sonja Capehart, 3009
Parrish Ave., Point Pleasant;
Mary Susan Gerlach , 1101
Meadowbrook Dr. , Point
Pleasant; Betty G. Knight, 2903
Parrish Ave ., Point Pleasant.
Betty J . Cadle, Carson Rd.,
Mason ; Howard F. Wagenhals,
3rd St. , New Haven; Sharon L.
Vickers, New Haven; Nathan
C. Yonker, Rt. 1, Letart;
Wanda J . Tolliver, Glenwood;
Cecil Absten , Rt. 3, Leon.

A

PERSONAL
CHECKING
ACCOUNT

Defendanl fined

Advertising the convenience of a checkIng account In this day and age seems
kind of silly-but there•s:··stlll many of
you out there that are using that old·
fashioned stuff called cash. You know,
you don't need a lot of money to open a
checking account-and you'll love the
convenience!

· One defendant was fined and
another forfeited bond in
Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's court Monday night.
Robert E . Davis, Racine,
waB fined $10 and costs, left of
center, and WW!am E . Eakins,
Racine, forfeited a $200 bond on
charges of operating a motor
vehicle while under the inRuence of alcohol.
The two defendants were
cited to court by Pollee Chief
Milton Varian.

ALL DEPOSITS INSURED
TO '40,000.00
MEMBER

FDIC
Join our Christmas Club today!
Make 49 prompt weekly payments and
the 5oth payment is Free.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGh

lllbens ,alional
~II,.CINC

INN A Tl

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OFJIO
Member Federal Depaoli lasuraace Cerpontloo

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged Dec. 9)
William
Blankenship ,
Normal Dean, Mrs. Rodney
Ferguson and daugh~r, Anthony Grate, Carolyn Harrah,
Lenna Hubbard, Frankie
Hurley, Peggy Lewis, Mrs.
Bernard Lyons and daughter,
Wendell Morgan, Anna Myers,
Melissa Nancy, Steve Rhea,
Ricky Wiseman.
CAIU ANSWERED
The Middleport EmergellCy
Squad answered a call to the
home of Martin Abbott, 276 Ash
St., at 11:33 a.m. Monday.
Abbott was taken to tl1e Holzer
Medical Center. At 2:56p.m.,
Monday the squad waB called
to 5931', North Front St., for
Viola Edwards,who was ill. She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

Food prices will Second B&amp;E in two
continue to climb days probed at SBSP .
M•re tllan $3,4 75 in merchandise and money was taken
food prices to continue_rising at an annual rate of 15 in a breaking and entering
per cent through the ftrst half of next year, partly_ early Monday morning in tlle
because supplies have been reduced by this year's Full House of Cards Store
poor crops, an Agriculture Department economist located in the Silver Bridge
predicted today .
Shopping Plaza.
But tlie food picture for 1975 as a whole depends
The Gallia Countv Sheriff's
heavily on whether farm crops make a hoped-for
recovery next year, USDi\ official J _ Dawson Abalt
said in a speech prepared for delivery to the
department's annual Outlook Conference.
Mrs. Katherine D. Boles,
He said in an interview that good crops could
Columbus,
wife of Ewing T.
produce a 1975 grocery bill averaging less than 10
per cent above 1974 - but another poor crop could Boles, a major stockholder and
director of the Ohio Valley
push the annual average more than 15 per cent
Publishing Company, died
above this year.
Monday in Riverside Hospital.
Grocery store food prices for 1974 as a whole are
Mrs. Boles, who was active
currently expected to average about 15 per cent on the Women 's Board of
above 1973 following a 16.3 per cent increase last Children's Hospital, was an
associate member of the
year.
Ahalt said next year's price increases will be Women's Board of Pilot Dogs,
due to a combination of higher raw farm product Inc.; of the Hannab Nell Home
for Children, Inc., and past
prices as well as "further advances" in food
president of tlle Ohio Day
marketing costs, which accounted for more than 80 Nursery.
per cent of the total 1974 increase in retail food
In addition to her husband,
prices.
Mrs. Boles is survived by one
&amp;:::::::::::::::.«:::::::::::::::=::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::o:•:·:--:!:::;:;:;&amp;-:::;!"§..v.:w.w.
son, Dr. E. Thomas Boles, Jr .;
four grandchildren, 'Katherine
Susan, Stephen Thomas,
Robert Stewart and Janice Ann
Boles, all of Columbus, and one
MASON, W. Va. - Santa Howard Johnson was reelected brother,
John
Dwyer,
Claus wW he coming to Mason president. Denver Blake Is tlle Thousand Oaka, Calif.
soon to distribute treats ac. new vice president. Otllers
Funeral services wiU be held
cording to tlle Mason Volunteer reelected were George Van Wednesday at 2 p.m. at St.
Fire Dept. which met Monday Maire, secretary, and Roger John's Episcopal Church,
evening at the fire station. Hysell, treasurer.
Wortlllngton, with tlle Rev.
Officers also were elected.
Other officers to serve next Starke DiUard officiating.
Santa will he at the fire year are Carl "Bingo" JobnFriends may call at tlle
station Dec. 20 and will begin son, assistant chief; Cbal;ley Schoedinger State Street
distribution of treats at 6:30 Sayre, Department chief; Chapel Tuesday from s to 8
p.m. to children served by the Eddie Johnson and Brad p.m. Interment wiU he in
Mason
Volunteer
Fire Johnson, captains, and Brian Walnut Grove Cemetery.
Department.
Kearns and Dick Carson ,
AcUve pallbearers will be
In tlle election, Ross Roush lieutenants.
Stephen Boles, Robert Boles,
will continue a• fire chief and
Anthony Gentile, George W.
Byers, Jr., W. B. Hard, Jr., and
Joe Ray, Jr.
Honorary pallbearers are
George W. Byers, Sr., James
By United Press Internatlonal later in the week whether to W. Overstreet, Simon P .
Union
representatives return to work next Monday. Dunkle, Harold Wilson, Donald
tenialively approved a new
Up to one-quarter of the C. Fanta, John W. Wolfe, Dr.
contract for coal mine con- nation ' s 120,000 soft c9al Thomas S. Morse, John F .
struction workers today and workers - their own contr~t HavenS, Dr. John H. Means,
one union source said the already approved and official Dr. Henry E . Hoagland, Dr.
waning nation-wide co31 strike - conUnued to honor picket Thomas Spragens, and Walter
might end completely next lines thrown up by the con- R. Chambers, Jr.
week .
struction workers in several
In lieu of flowers tlle family
The agreement came at 2 states.
suggests contributions be
a .m. in Washington after
made to Children's Hospital. ·
several days of bargaining. ::-~:::?&amp;~~..:W""W .:.,.
The terms were not im·
EXTENDED WEATHER
mediately announced.
Thursday
throug.b
The United Mine Workers
Saturday, a chance of snoW
Bargaining Council will begin
Rurrles Thursday. mostly
looking over the new pact
fair Friday and Saturday.
Wednesday and the union
Highs will be In the 30s In the
source said if tlle council apnorthern part of the 1tate
proves, the 4,000 mine conand in the upper 30s or lower
struction workers could vote
40s in the south. Overnlghl
lows early Thursday wiU be
in the 30s and In the 20s early
Friday and Saturday.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - FederWi\SIIINGTON

WPI)- Consumers can expect

Mrs. Boles dies
in Columbus

Santa Oaus is coming

Coal strike end is near

ZIG•ZAG sewing machine
NOW
• Sews button·
holes, sews on
buttons, over·
REG. $109. 95 edges, mono- ,
C
.
grams, mends ...
arrxmg case
all Without
or cabmet extra attachments
• Bullt·in blind-hem stitch
• Ex tra-wide zig·zag capability
• Fabnc selling dial
• 3 needle positions

all -state summary of Ohio ~-.-..-_rc.-.:r...:.x.:.:..o:o:o·&lt;~&amp;&amp;@&amp;lw.~U&amp;~w~
livestock auctions Monday :
~-:.....-:"l~N.-x.-.y~·~«O'.bi
~ .. ~ ·Y.JIY

Cattle: Slaughter steers :
Choice' and prime 900·1310 II&gt;
yield gra'de 2-4 38-39.75, high
dressing 40-41 .60, choice 3639.50, low dressing 34-35, good
yield grade 2 4 35-37, yield
grade 3-4 31-35, standard 28.5033.60, high dressing 34-35.
Slaughter heifers: Choice and
prime 810-1055 lb yield grade 2
and choice 775-1055
4 35-37
lb y•el grade 3·4 34.25·35AO.
few low dressing 30.50-32.75,
good 25.50-29, standard 20.5026.50.
Slaughter cows: Utility and

'
I

I

'

'3ood

' ' SAYING THANKS
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Unit of tlle Southeas~rn Ohio
Emergency Medical Service is
tllanking all residents who
donated and supported \he
Christmas
bazaar
last
Saturday. Additional items are
still at the station if anyone
cares to make purchases.

'

but nothing was taken.
::
Gallia sheriff's deputies al$i&gt;
investigated the tlfeft of a 10
speed bike, jumper cables,
four motorcycle helmets a~~
loggmg tools from the Charles
Yarbrough home on Bulaville
Rd .
'

department said someone
entered the building after 5
a.m . Monday. Ta ken were 10
wall clocks , 22 men's and
women 's electric watc hes,
miscellaneous silverwa re and
office desk se ts , a $100 bill and
$100 in change. Entry was
made by prying the door open
It was the second store m the
shopping plaza hit Sunday
night or early Monday The
Sears Store was also e ntered

-

Martin Abbott :
'
of Middleport :
died' on Monruiy

Mrs. Lena Wells
died Monday

'·

F uneral services for Martin
E. Abbott, 60, Middleport, w~o
a pparently died Monday at l!is
home , will be at 2 p.m. Thursday
at the Rawlings-Coats
Mrs. Lena Barbara Wells, 91 ,
~
Pomeroy Route 3, died Monda y Funeral Home .
Mr. Abbott was born in
at the Elmwood Nur sing
Middleport Nov. 28, 1914. He
Home.
The daughter of the late was preceded in death by his
Henry and Elizabetll Rasp father , Sterile Abbott.
Surviving are his wife ,
Klein, she was also preceded in
death by her husband, William Minnie (Midge) Manley Abbott; a daughter, Mrs. Vivian
Wells, in 1965.
M.
Ingles , Ravenswood, W.
Surviving are two s ons,
Henry Wells, Meigs Coun ty Va . ; a son , Martin Gene AbCommissioner, and Edward bott, Lancaster ; his mother,
Wells, botll of Rt. 2 Pomeroy; Mrs . Edith Herrmann Abbott,
four grandchildren, Don s Middleport ; two sisters, Mrs.
( Virginia)
Wears ,
Woodyard, Pomeroy ; Sandra Pe te
Spencer, Marietta ; Rue lla Pome roy; and Mrs . Gene
Collins, Columbus, and Jane (Gertrude) Swartz , Belpre ;
Mil&lt;: hell, Ravenswood, W. Va. ;• two brothers, Harold, Parkersa sister, Mrs. Emma Shoen~ burg, W. Va., and Lawrence of
berger, Rt. 2 Pomeroy, and six Arizona , and eight grand·
great-grandchildren.
children.
Funeral services will be held
Mr. Abbott was a member l&gt;f
at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164, F
Sacred Heart Church in and AM , and was a member of
Pomeroy witll tlle Rev. Father the Ancient Accepted Scottish
Paul Welton officiatin g. Rite , Valley of Columbus. •
Officiating at services will he
Rosary services will be held at
7:30 this evening at tlle Ewing Rev . George Oiler. Burial will
Funeral Home where friends be m the Gravel Hill Cemetery
at Cheshire. Friends may call
may call at any time.
at the funeral home after noon
Wednesday . The Pomeroy .
ASK TOWED
Charles Michael McLain, 20, Masonic Lodge will hold .
Racine, and Patricia Ann Masonic services Wednesday:,
French, 18, Gallipolis.
a t 7 p.m. at tlle funeral holl\e .'

News

• • •

PA.RTYDA.TESET
Preceptor Chapter of Beta
Siglllll Phi Sorority will hold its
annual Christmas party at 8
p.m. Saturday at tlle Meigs
Inn. There will be a buffet at 10
400-500 lb 18.75-22.50, 500-600 lb a .m.
16.50-19.50, standard 300-400 tb

1375-2230 lb 26.30-31.25.
Vealers : Choice 140-230 lb 5462.
Feeder cattle: Choice steers
300-400 lb 25.50-28.50, 500-600 lb
22-24, 620-970 lb 22.75-29.50, good

14-22, 400-500 lb 19.50-23, choice
heifers 3D0-600)b 19-25.50, good

WifO lb. 18.50-22. 400-600 lbs.

Hogs: Barrows and g111s US

1-3 204·233 lb 40.50-41.40, us 2·3
239 265lb 39.60-40.40.
Sows US 1-3 328·546 lb 30.2534·20·
Feeder pigs US 2-3 30-40 lb 1017.25 per head.

sl;~~r~r l;~~~e,.~n~.Jr~~~

shorn with no. 1-3 pelts 85-123 lb
37.25-39.80, choice lull wool 88-93
lb 34.50-35.50.

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LOCAL TEMPS
Tempera ture in downtown
Pomeroy today at 11 a.m. was
54 degrees under swmy skies .

Saxhe will leave post
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - U.S.
Attorney General William B.
Sax be will resign soon ,
possibly for another assignment within the Ford Administration, it was reported
today .
Scnpps-Howard Newspapers
said President Ford discussed
the resignation and possible
reassignment with Saxbe
during a White House meeting
ea rlter this week .

The newspapers said tha t
while there was no off1 cial
conftrma tion , sources said the
resignation was certain . What
remains to be worked out , the
sources told the newspapers,
are its tuning and details of the
ne w assigrunent.
Th e White House med ia
office and Saxbe's chief aide
would issue only "no com·
ment" responses to queries

46 arrested by police

Guns today doing their own thinking
By DAVE BOWRING
Written For UPJ
GALIJA - It was only a small gray
songbird, its proper name unknown to tlle
four men in our grouse hunting party.
It had soft gray plwnage with a touch of
bright crimson under its tllroat. We bad seen
it llltling among the thorny branches of a
trailside multUlora rose hedge when one
hunter in our party spoke to his son.
"Shoot that bird, son," he said, pointing to
the little songster on the branch several yards
away.
The boy raised his 12-g\lage shotgun,
squinted down the barrel and squeezed the
trigger. The litUe bird was blown off the tlmb .
It fell tlmp and Ufeless frQIIl tlle hedge.
The boy ran to retrieve it while his fatller
looked on approvingly.
" Patterns tlle shotgun," he said In •·eply to
my stare. "He hadn't fired tllat_gun with shot

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Bring you!"' children to see Santa in our Toy Store, Wedn~sday, Thursday and Frid11y 2 to 3 p.m. and Saturday 1 to 3.

Salle Your Saleslips For Valuable Premiums

ELBERFELPS IN POMEROY_

I

'I.

WELLSTON ROCKET Harry McKinnis stretches high in an attempt to get his shot over
Marauder Milch Meadows (32) as Meigs' Steve Randolph (14) and Mick Da venport close in
on the left. The IHi Meadows , a junior, starting his first varsity game, pumped in 15 poin ts and
gra bbed 7 rebounds in the Marauders' 79-Wvictor y. See story on Page 3.

Devoted To 'Fhe Interests Of The leig.~-Mason Are11
WEDN ESDAY, DECEMBER 11 , 1974

!!!!!

Ballerina and Scuff Styles.
-.

.;:;.;:::::;.;.;:;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;.;:;.;:;.;:;.;·:·:·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·=*:~

Records of students in the . registered by board member discipline for band members
Meigs Local School District a re Robe rt Snowden , a nd the either a t practice sessions or
now open to parental or recommendations will be ta ken while participating in events.
guardian inspection in accord - unde r study before achon is Member Carol Pierce sa1d that
Goins had done witll the ba nd
ance with a pohcy adopted by taken
the distnc t 's Board of
Dwight Goms , district band just what he had been emEducation in regular session direc tor , explained his policy ployed to do .
Tuesday night.
in dealin g with band members
Goins ' comments came after
The policy, in keeping with a at out of town foo tball games. C"''rles Blake, · ratller of a
n.~ wJeder'!llaw•..m:9vides !hat.., , He, sai!l musicians_ are given former band student ; a~peiu eo'
· 'iiafenfsllr · guardians ma y the third quarter of the game to before the board for the sec ond
request to see their children 's go to restrooms, gel refresh- lime last night. He said tha t
complete school records and ment s and do an y oth er his daughter had violated the
administrators are required to necessary activities. He sa id rule, but had done what was
meet the request within 45 the rule is necessary in copmg -' right which led to her vwlating
w1th 160 band members in the rule . Blake warned that
days.
Parents o~ guardians can regard to their sa fety a nd rules sometimes backfire.
The lone of the discussion
c hallenge a nything they welfare.
consider detrimental , inacHe staled that the rule has e nded amiably with Goin s
curate or mtsleading, and a been in effect for the three express mg his respect for the
hearing must be held . The years he has been here and that Blake family bemg disturbed
hearings must he closed, and if students who have violated 1l over the incident. Blake conparents are upheld , the have been punished by being elud ed that apparently th e
re mark s written on records by suspended from the ma rchi n~ situation was Just a difference
teachers are to be stricken.
band for one week
of opm10n .
He said many tim es,
Goms then proceeded to
The board in a long session
also
considered
recom- stud ents do have good reasons outline plans for the purchase
mendations from its Com- for violating the rule, tha t 1s of new umforms for the 160
munications
Committee not bemg back to a mee ting piece Meigs Marching Band.
composed of Supt . George point at the end of the third Total cost of the new uniforms
Hargraves , ~ oard member, quarter,. However, he sa id, is $20,475 and one tllird was
Carol Pierce and two teachers "making exceptiOns is d1!- paid when the order was
about how to treat complaints ficult , and the rule cannot be placed. Go ins said that a
from the board members, the bent."
savings of 12 pet. will be
public , teachers and adThe boar d of education went realized since tlle cost jumped
mimstrators.
on rec ord unanimou sly m Ulat amount in December. He
Ho~ever,dissatisfaction was favor of Gow s ' rule and said uniforms last eight to 10
years and that the present
uniforms are now eight years
old.
Kim Jones modeled the new
uniforms. Goins asked for
One arrest each was II JcuJe financial help from the board
Middleport police made 46
for running a stop sign, £ail urc on the purchase.
arrests in November, Chief J .
to yield the n ght of way .
However , the board asked
J . Cremeans r e ported to
passmg a stoppod school bus, that the request he tabled until
council Monday night.
leavm g the scene of an ac- the end of the year when tlle
Of the total , 12 arrests were cident, reckl ess operation , left board will have a report on tlle
for driving while intoxicated, of c ente r, des truction of financial condition of the
six for disorderly manner, four property, assault and battery, district . Goins agreed.
for no operator's license, three failure to pa y parking tickets,
The uniforms must he paid
lor disturbing _the peace, four and fightmg.
for in full witllin 3~ days after
Parking me ter r ece 1pts delivery - which could be
for speeding, two for spinning
totaled
$99:! while the po li~e sometime between March and
tires and two for running a red
cruiser
was
drtven 4,31 7 mUJs. May - or an interest charge on
light.

WASHINGTON- FOR REP. JOE WAGGONER, D-La., it
was a painful and delicate mission: He had to ask Rep . Wilbur
Mills, D-Ark., whether he was ready to step down as chairmWJ of
tlle House Ways and Mans Committee.
Mills' response was a surprise for a man who has jealously
guarded tlle prerogatives of one of tlle most powerful jobs on
Capitol Hill. "I want out," Mills said. Then, according to
Waggoner, Mills called his wife Polly and, for tlle first time,
smiled.
Waggoner visited Mills at Bethesda Naval Hospital, where
tlle 65-year-old Democrat is heing treated for exhaustion.

Reg. *4.00 and •3.50

COlOR TV '

30s to near 40 and overnight
l ow s \\iiJ be in th e 20s and
lowe r 30s.

in it yet tllis year and I wanted to see what it
would do."
Later, when the boy, a 12-year-old seventh
grader, was alone, I asked why he had shot
tlle songbird.
"! dunno," he mumbled, unruffled by the
pointedness of tlle question . "! just did ." .
He turned the bird's stilll'larm body over
and over in his hanoi, probing into its breast
feathers witll his tllumb. Then he tossed it into
some tratiside weeds, dismissing tlle subject.
''Get the bird and we'll see what y&lt;lu shot,"
I said, hoping tllat would reopen the subjeci
for more conversation. I WBB sure he knew
that killing songbirds was illegal, but wanted
him to breach the subject himself.
"Aw, I can't find it now," he hedged.
"Besides, it's already dead."
His utter • calm · and unconcern was
something of a hidden hysteria for me. He
had, at his father's direction, kllled a small,
inedible, protected liird, and aU he could sar
i

.,

I

Now YouKnow
The state with the most pos t
offi ces, 1,818, 1s Pennsylvania ;
Delaware has the least - 56.

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

ent recor s opene

COLUMBUS - .PRESIDENT FORD'S EFFORT to trim
food and medical benefits received by the nation's poor people
has received "vigorous opposition" from state Welfare Director
Charles W. Bates. Bates said he wrote Ford the nation 's
"already fragile 'Olanksgivlng holiday was shattered for
millions of Americans by your announcement of a drive to cut
food and medical benefits for tlle poor."
Bates said with rlsing unemployment, soaring food costs and
a shaky economy, tlle Chrlstmas holidays ''are bleak enough for
tlle nation's disadvantaged witHout the demise of governmental
assistance. ' 1 Ford 1 on Nov. Zl, annOlmced he had sent proposals
• to Congress which would cause low~ncome people to pay more
for food stamps, and cause the elderly and handicapped to pay
for a greater percentage of hospital and doctor bills.

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will be fa ir with a chance of

r3in or snow Sa turd ay.
DayLime highs will be in the

enttne

congr~SBionol

J..y.ar
worrantr'

SAYRE HARIMARE

workers have not yet returned
to work although they have
taken down the picket lines.

E XTENDED F_ORF.CAST
Frid a y through Sund a y

•

By United Press lnteruatlonal
BRUSSELS - SECRETARYOF STATE Henry A. Kissinger
met witll Turkish Foreign Minister Melih Esenhel today in the
fll'st round of daylong, threNiation talks to work out a Cyprus
settlement. "We are hopeful that we will get some positive
results in tlle foreseeable future, " Esenbel said in a joint press
·conference witll Kissinger after tlle Hilton Hotel breakfast
meeting.
He said in spite of tlle U. S. Congress - ordered cutoff in
mWtary aid tO Turkey tllat V(ent into effect today, "the course of
action tllat Turkey had decided to follow might not change and

77

333-SS

BELLAIRE , Ohio (UP! ) ArthW' Nelms, vice president
of District 6 of the United Mine
Workers Union, said today
about 1,500 mmers who stayed
off the job Tuesday in observance of picket lines set up
by construction workers were
back at work today.
Nelms said 10 mines did not
open in the District in eastern
Ohio Tuesday and tlle Northern
Panhandle of West Virginia
because of picket lines set up
by the construction workers
who do work at the mmes.
A tentative labor contract
settlement with t he mine
construction worker s was
announced late Tuesday .
However, the construction

r ectwn s lt... ra nk Hall wa s
studying the demands and " Is
going to get back with me la ter
in the day about tllem. "

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

'5.77

.

The Health depart ment
advises to he effective water
should he boiled for 10 minutes
and tllen cooled rapidly in
order to retain a good taste.
The department wlll notify the
public when tllree "satisfactory " reports on Pomeroy
water have been received from
the Southeast District oifil'e of
tlle Ohio Department of Health
at Logan.

SAN JOSE, CALIF. - THE BREATHING of the tllree
surviving Lange sextuplets Improved today but their condition
remained guarded. Doctors at tlle Valley Medical Center said the
next several days are tlle ''most crucial'' for Jolene, Brian and
Jason Lange, who remained in respirators in the hospital's intensive care unit.
Kelly and Core~ Lange died Tuesday because of respiratory
failure . Kelly also suffered cardiac failure. The first member of
tlle sextuplets died Sunday shorUy after heing born at O'Comor
Hospital. The babies were born to Mrs. Charlotte Lange, 26, tl1ree
montlls prematurely. John weighed less than two pounds while
the others were 21'.! pounds. Mrs. Lange had taken a fertility
drug.
Less than 13 months ago tlle mother was delivered of
quadruplets but all died at birth. When they were conceived, she
Continued on page 24

_

Slavghter bulls: Yield grade 1

1,500 more go to pits

residents to consume wa ter
without boilmg.

VOL. XXVI .NO. 169

.,

' '.......

told him they were " willing to
die r ather than be dehtm1ani·
zed . They felt they had been
dehumanized one time too
many. Th ey will no t be
dehwnanized any lon ger." He
did not elaborate on the
corrunent .
Owe ns later said Massachusetts Commissioner of Cor-

Rain likely tonight, lows in
the rrud 30s. Rain Thursday,
ending by evening, highs in the
40s.

Continued from page I
•
current fiscal year.
•
He said 11,419 persons had been added to tlle rolls in the'
tllree-montll period, compared to 1,625 during the same period a·.
year earlier. There were SOS,925 persons, including 355,747"
children, on the rolls Oct . I, compared to 494,506, including
351,961 children, three months earlier.

Reg. $8.98

,
convicted murderers .
The eight issued demands for
Owens to forward in order to
obta in the rel ease of th e
liostages. He did not se• th e
hostages, but saJd he was infor med of their condition by the
prisoners and another prison
medic.
The legislator said the men

Weather

in Briefs·:
.

hostage were in good condition,
and drank coffee and played
cards while their captors
issuect a list of 18 prison
demands and called for a
meeting with top state officials.
Owens, newly elected to the
Senate and tlle first black
legislator ever to join that
body, met with the e ight
prisoners for about 90 minutes
at daybreak. The three hostages were captured Tuesday
evening by the knife-wielding
prisoners, fiv e of whom are

Water needs boiling
Pom er oy residents are
ad vised to continue boiling
their drinking water until
fu rther notice, the Meigs
County Health Depart ment
said today.
A spokesman at the
department office said that
samples of Pomeroy water are
heing taken each day through
today for testing and that
sa ti sfactory testing results
must be received from three
reports before the health
dep a rtm ent
will
advise

,.

19.25.

115 W. 2nd

I

WALPOLE , Mass. (UP!) Eight prisoners holding three
hos t~ge s at Walpole Stat e
Prison told a negotiator today
they were ready to die rather
than he dehumanized .
" They are adamant and they
no longer wW tolerate tlle
treatment they have been
receiving ," Rep. William
Owens , D-Boston, a black
senator-elect and former Wal pole inmate, said after meeting
witll the eight.
He said the twn prison
guards and a medic held

•

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Market Report

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature· In downtown Pomeroy at II a.m. today
was 42 degrees under sunny
skies.

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Relief or death say prisoners

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. 333

FASHION MATE*

•
••
•,.
••I '

was "I dwmo ."
If sport hunting -legal sport hunting --is
to survive, it will have to survive the 12-yearolds who let tlle firearm in their hands do
their thinking for them. It will have to survive
the fathers of the world who view the act of
killing, in and of itself, as some sort of macho
to be desired by youngsters just entering the
sport.
Later I started to question the father about
his son's act 1 but got only a surprised stare, as
if in wonder that I would concern myself with
such trivialities.
Later I discovered that tllls father could
hardly he expected to set much of ap example
of sportsmanship for his 12-yearpld. He had
killed two deer, tagging one himsclf while his
son tagged the otller.
" If anybody asks me wbo killed the deer
hanging in my garage, ! til just tell tllem 'to
read the tags," the man chuckled .

the balance will be levied.
The boa rd heard Thurma n
Ga rsey, fa ther of a Bradbury
student, who lodged a complaint on how discipline is
admin istered a t the Bradbury
School. It was agreed tha t
Hargraves will set up a conference among tlle parents, the
pr inei:pal•tm.&lt;i ·~·.:.. .,_.,"'
The boa rd discussed with
Allee Globokar the use of two
days of s1ck lea ve resulting
over a r ecent incident at a
board of education meeting. It
was agreed to discuss that
problem in executive session .
Mrs. Globokar observed she
did not believe she should ha ve
to use the s1ck leave in view of
Con tmu ed on page 24

Construction
of apartments
is undenvay
Construc ti on has begun on
Middleport 's newest low ren t
a pa rtm e nt com plex a t the
corner or Mill a nd Third Sts
Loca ted on what was kn own
1n th e co mmuni ty as the
" Sta nsbury " pr operty , th e
complex will have 27 onebedroom uni ts and two twobedroom umts . ll is bemg
constructed by the Barr-Circle
Development Co , Gallipolis.
The same firm own s the
Rlverside Apartments on N
Front St . in Middleport.

State engineer
testifies today
"SiA'Rt.ESTON , W. ·va: (UPI ) -- A West Virginia Department of Highways engineer was to take the stand today in the
Silver Bridge trial to de/ermine U tlle state had heen negligent in
the span 's collBpse in 1967. The testimony of A. G. Lichtenstein, a
consulting engineer of Teaneck, N. J., was concluded Tuesday
following lengthy cross- examination by state Attorney General
Chauncey Browning .
Charleston Attorney Chester wvett, representing the estate
of Melvin Cantrell of Point Pleasant, told the West Virginia Court
of Claims he pl anned to call highways deparlment engineer
Joseph S. Jones when tlle case was resumed today. wvett also
indicated that Jon es would he his final witness, then he would
rest his case .
The t hree-judge co ur t 1s
She rm a n's main witn ess ,
hearmg two test cases from 56
engineer
I. Stephen Tuba of
c!pims filed to determme if the
stale had been neg lige nt m its Pttlsburgh , contended that
maml enance of the Sil ver barge wrecks in to the bridge
Bridge. Th e s pan, whi c h caused significan t damage to
crossed the Ohio River at Poin t the piers a nd contributed to its
Pleasan t, collapsed amid rush- stress , whic h ul timate ly
hour traffic on Dec IS , 1967, reached the breakmg point.
Lichtens tein , Lovett's main
killing 46 per sons. Claim s
totali ng $6.5 m illion have been w1tness, tes tified that the
bridge wasn 'l built according
fi led .
After Lov1ett concludes h1 s to the original design plans
case, the tri al pr obably will be and , fr om the start, didn 't have
continued W1til January when a suffi cie nt factor of safety.
The suspension bndge was
Browning will beg in the stat&lt; 's
of only th ree in the world
one
defense.
supported
by a linking cha in of
Attorn ey Ha rry A. Sherm an
50-fool eyebar s. Its twm , buill
of Pitlsburgh, representing the
at St. Ma r ys, eventually was
estate of Ja mes Whit&lt; of PI
torn down . The third span s till
Pleasant, previOusly presented
stands
at F lorianopolis, BraziL
his case to the court.

Syracuse park funding
expected within weeks
bankin g boa rds of th e bags in the barrels at" the
basketball court have been former s ta te park. Mayor
installed and t ha t Eber wndon warned that persons
Pickens, counCil member, is ca ught dumping garabage
still asking estimates on a new bags will be cited to court and
electric type water fountain. fined.
The mayor also suggested lbat
It was also suggested tllat an
council devise a way to stop
water spilling from the hill- inventory of all property owned
sides onto SR 124 causing icy by the village be made the first
places ip upper Syracuse. The of each year .
mayor also said that SO feet of
curbing is needed along that
The mayor said ihat formal road as well as additional dirt record show his appreciation to
approval of tlle project ts ex- in tlle area . Eventually curbing Erne st Wingett for his
pected within a matter of should · he placed the entire assistance in helping the
weeks and that it will be length of Sand Hill ' Road W!age receive funding for tlle
grant for tlle park project.
Wingett said .
initiated by early spring.
In rega rd to the guardrail
Council President Robert
Mayor London is to appoint
Wingett, project coordinator, near tlle Nazarene Church,
an
advisory committee in
explained what the project Wingett indicated Don Roush is
regard
to Rood insurance for
kl bring in a driver and put in
includes and ita cost.
the
village
and call a meeting
the railing. Pickens reported
According to Wingett, it will that the picnic tables have been within a week.
Attending were Mayor
in~lude lights for the existing 'Stored in the barn for the
IJJndon,
Pickens, . Barry Me·
ball field, light poles, trans- winter.
Coy,
Ed
Neutzling,
and Robert
former, site improvement, 800
CounciiiDen also suggested
feet of chain ·)ink fence and that pine trees he planted along Wingett, council members,
paving at a total cost of $12,500. Snowball Hill to keep the hill Rev . Harold Black, who opeDed
the meeting with prayer; .
Cost to the village will he from slipping .
$6,250, or SO pct.
.
It was reported that Milton Varian, pollee chief,
'Mayo r London said .• th e -. residents are dumping g, rbage and Kathryn Croll, clerk. '• -~

SYRACUSE - This town's
application for a federal grant
for tlle proposed municipal
park project has gotten over its
biggest obstacle.
Mayor Herman London
Tuesday night told Syracuse
Council William B . Nye,
director of tlle Ohio DepartmentofNatural Resources, tlle
application · has heen recommended for fun din~.

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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