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24 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesda), IX'&lt; . 11. t!J74

News.

Prices up·, sales down, jobles~ gro~ing

• •

•

Market Report

zn Briefs

al slal e sum mary of ohio
l1vestock auct1ons Tuesday ;
Cattle· Compared with last
Tuesday slaughter steers and
he1fers steady to 1 lower,
slaughter cows 2-3 .50 lower .
Slaugh ter steers Choice and

'

By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Buslnes• Writer
Higher foo'd prices are
coming, retail sales are down
and more people are losing
their jobs before Christmas.
J. Dawson Ahalt, an Agriculture Department economist,
said food prices will rise 15 per
cent again next year --the
third consecutive year of annual food prices increases of 15
per cent or more.
The Commerce Department
said retail sales fell for the
tllird consecutive month in
November. The sales drop of
1.3 per cent last month

Night study
offered at
Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - Both Real
Estate Law and Real Estate
Finance will be offered as night
classes during winter quarter
at Rio Grande Community
College.
Sam Smith, assistant dean
for social and adrmmstrat1ve
sciences, said there are two of
four real estate courses
required by the Ohio Real
Estate
Commission
for
salesman
and
broker 's
business.
Real Estate Finance, offered
from 8:10 to 10:50 p.m each
Tuesday, will he taught by
Hugh Graham, secretarytreasw-er and director of tlle
Gallipolis Savings and Loan
Assoctation.
Real Estate Law, from 8:10
to 10:50 p.m. each Thw-sday,
will be taught by Sam Neal,
director of college relations at
Rio Grande who Is also a
licensed real estate salesman.
Registration for these and
other Community College
courses will be Monday ,
January 6, 1975 from 9 a.m.
lUI til 4 p.m. and from 6-8 p.m.
Classes for Winter Quarter
begin Tuesday, January 7.

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

Certificates
5.75 per cent per year
paid on 90 day Certificates of Deposit.
$1,000.00 Minimum.
Interest
Payable
Quarterly.

Meip Co. Branch

..@
The Athens County
Savmgs &amp; Loan Co.

2" Second St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

reflected sagging auto production but also declinmg sales of
non-durable goods.
Xerox Corp. said II was
closing for two weeks a major
manufacturing plant at Webster, N.Y., and several equip-ment reconditlonmg centers
elsewhere, Idling 6,000 workers

two days before Christmas.
, Another 400-:iOO blue collar
and 200 white collar workers
were be dismissed permanently, and those returning will be
put on four-day weeks m
February.
It was the first ma jor plant
shutdown m the company's

Student records
Continued from page 1
the ctrcumstances which
surrounded her being off her
bus driving post two days.
Ray Goodman, vocational
director, outh11ed plans for
adult education programs
which are to ge t underway,
Jan . 7, which the board approved.
Appointed
substitute
teachers in tlle district, pending certification, were Jon
Rothgeb, Mary Kay Henne'ISy,
Robert Dye, James Crow,
Robert W. Downey and carol
Reese . Raymond Cotterill was
named substitute bus driver.
The board agreed to · keep
Kennetll little in a substitute
custodian post for a month
rather than to appomt him as a
custodian for the remainder of
the school year.
The resignation of Clifford
Queen, science teacher and
seventy-eighth grade
basketball coach, effective
Dec. 4, was accepted. Roger
Birch was named to do tlle
coaching for the jtulior high
team .
The resignations of Manny
JOoes and Mary Lew Johnson
from the Meigs Local School
District Library Board of
Trustees were accepted and
appointed were Don Mullen to
fill the unexpu-ed term of JOoes
which nms through 1981, and
Wanda Eblin was named to fill
the tulexpired term of Mrs .
Johnson which runs tllrough
1979.
board
approved
The
payment of $20 a day to Mrs.
Woodrow Jeffers for transporting students to the vision
impaired class at Rio Grande.
However, it was agreed that
Hargraves will check on the
insw-ance coverage provided
by Mrs. Jeffers before any
fw-ther payment is made.
The board set Jan. 14 at 7
p.m.
for
the
1975
organizational meeting and
the regular January meetrng
for 7:30 the same evening. The
closing of tlle Harrisonville
Kindergarten on the afternoon
of Dec. 2 due to bad weather
was approved.
Willard Miller was appointed
teacher of the Carpenter
welding class at $9 an how- for
60 hours. The Carpenters'
Union will pay the difference
between what the board
receives from the state and
what the teacher is paid.
The board accepted Charles
Johnson, a tuition student
released by the Vinton County
Board of Educatin for transportation.
Beverly Gaul was sworn in
as
clerk-custodian
of
vocational activities accounts.
The board approved the
attendance of John William
Blaettnar to the District 17
Distributive Education
Coordinator's meeting in
Lancaster, Dec. 17. The

-----------------------,I
I

teacher corps mtern stipend
was Increased from $90 to $120
per week effective Jan. I. This
IS no additional local cost
above the onginal proposed
budget. The mcrease is
nationwtde.
Hargr aves reported on
several meetings with local
organizations.
Attending the meetrng were
Hargraves, Clerk L. W. McComas, board members
Wendell Hoover, Virgil King,
Snowden, Pierce and Joe
Sayre, w1th Don Dixon
representin g the Meigs Local
Teachers Assoctation. Accompanymg Goms to the
meeting were Frank Sisson
and Don Thomas , active
members of t11e district 's band
boosters

Mr. Gri.Jnm. to be
buried Thursday
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.
Withe D Gnmm, New Haven,
will he burled in Graham
Cemetery Thursday following
funeral services at 1·30 p.m .
from the Foglesong Funeral
Home , Mason . Rev. John
Campbell will
offiCiate.
VisitatiOn will he from 7 to 9
p.m today.
Mr. Grimm was born Sept.
26, 1893, at Graham Station a
son of Elmer Gnmm a'nd
Isabella Boyd Grimm. H1s
Wife, Sarah Elhzabeth Grimm
and a half-brother, Ollie
Roush, preceded him in death .
He is sw-vived by a daughter,
Mrs. Thomas Parsons, four
grandchildren, two greatgrandchildren, and a brother,
Artie 0 . Roush , Leon; fowhalf-sisters, Mrs. Charles
Sm1 th and Mrs Lola Jeffers ,
both of Mason ; Mrs. Ora
Cochran, St. Albans, and Mrs .
Sadie Moore, Huntmgton .

c:

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - lisa Tillis
Rutland; Fred Roush , Racine;
Mary Pickens, Clifton; Mary
Baldwin, Pomeroy; Maxine
Sheets, Pomeroy ; Timothy
Lawrence, Middleport;
Raymond Justis, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Robert
Lawrence , Velvie McDonald,
Mae Boston, Dorothy Driggs.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharges.
Florence
Kinder, Point Pleasant; Mary
M. Harris, Mason; Mrs. Melvin
Alexander, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. James Bw-dette, Point
Pleasant;
Gail
Donhue,
Letart; Iva Yotulg, Buffalo;
Mrs. Eugene McGowan , Point
Pleasant; Connie Sue Berkley,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Charles
Litchfield, Southside ; Mrs.
Larry Patrick, Point Pleasant;
Donella Shafer, Mason; Mrs.
Forest Hargraves, West
Colwnbia; Eunice Hess, "oint
Pleasant; Gary Gregory, West
Columbia; Mrs. Bernard
White, Mason; Brenda Hughes,
Ashton; Michael Badgley,
Buffalo.
REED fNSTALLED
Robert W. Reed, Rt 2,
Pomeroy, was mstalled as
District Educational Officer of
the 12th Masonic Distnct in
installation ce~:emonies as
Harnsonville Saturday. Installing officer was R. W.
Floyd Thompson, district
deputy grand master of the
12th Masonic District, Jackson.

I

NEW

IDEAS ...

plo yed since last Friday when
history.
the
November JObless rate of
Prices on the New York
Exchange
were 6.5 per cent, the highest m 12
Stock
generally higher, Wall Street years, was announced .
President Ford a lso smd he
analysts said the rally was due
to lower interest rates and w"uld meet with company and
md1cahons President Ford umon officia ls from the hardmtght announce new anti· hit a uto mdustry this week.
A Ford Motor Co. vice
recession steps m a speech
president,
Fred G. Secrest, told
tonight.
The Dow Jones industrial a Senate co mmittee that
rndex rose nearly 14 pornts unemployment m the Detroit
593.87 in its biggest gain since area w11l reHch 15 per cent next
month because of poor auto
Nov. 5.
White House Press Secretary sales.
The President was in New
Ron Nessen said the President
York
Tuesday to diScuss the
considered his $2.5 billton
public jobs program "negotia- energy, food a nd materials
ble" within !units with Con- shortages problems With a
panel of experts assembled by
gress.
l New pressw-e has mounted Nelson Rockefeller , his
t~ e nact leg islation for nommee fJr vice prestdent.
providing 10m rnr lhP 11!"li&gt;T't'1.

Funds reported
$627 tO, $591 67 ; flrl(_ equipment. no receip ts, $138.23,
$222.01; swimmmg pool, no
receipts, $11 68, $284.10;
planmng commiSSIOn, no
receipts, $23.86. $219 19; s treet
maintenance,
$2 ,2 67.82,
$2,283 54, $2, 185 53; samtary
sewer, $4,117 96 , $3 ,630.01,
$37,374 35, water, $6,754.18,
$6,718 90 , $24 ,5 02 18; water
meter depos1t trusts, $150,
Mrs. Plummer
$231 47, $7 ,445.H; samtary
sewer escrow, no recetpts, no
named to post
disbur se m en ts, $104 ,595.09;
federal
revenue shanng, no
Robert DeForest, president
of the OhiO Jomt Association receipts, $502.14, $3,218.21; fire
construction,
no
for Mental Health and Mental house
rece1pts,
no
disbursements,
Retardation , today announced
general
bond
tlle appointment of Mrs . Emon $11.99;
no
receipts,
$3,210,
retirement,
(Maxine ) Plummer, executive
director of the Commun1ty $27,742 15
Re cei pt s for the month
Mental Health and Mental
$22 ,998 75
while
RetardatiOn Board of Galha , totaled
were
$24,168.62.
disbursements
Jackson , and Meigs County as
the state chairperson for the The total Indebtedness of the
Joint Committee on Legislation community is $1,518,303.75, or
$545.37 per capita
Affairs.
Mrs. Plummer's committee
will be working with the state
legislators in appropnating
mental health and mental
retardation funds for fiscal
1975-1976 wh1ch will represent
Fow- defendants were fined
55 community mental hea lth Tuesday mght by Middleport
boards in Ohio.
Mayor Fred Hoffman
Fined $150 and costs and
sentenced to three days m Jail
on convictton of driving whtle
intoxicated were. Earl H.
Contmued from page :l
Gilkey 26, Middleport, and
185, Sr
,
Eilts Armmtrout, 45, ColumTackles Jerry Flynn,
bus. John W. Roush, 19, MidLondon, 6-2 , 205, Sr. , Denny
Pearce, Wellston , 6 5, 235, Sr.
dleport, was fined $5 and costs
Middle guard - Joel Flares,
for runmng a red hght, and
Ottawa -Glandorf, 5-11 , 19B, Sr.
Ephnam
He rdman ,
19,
Linebackers
M 1tch
Browning , Loudonville, 5-9,
Pomeroy , $30 and costs for
185, Sr : Greg Fitzpatr~ck. . reckless operation of a motor
Marysville, 6-2, 220, Sr
veh1cle in a school zone
Cornerback - John Groth,
Active and inachve village
funds as of Nov 30 totaled
$235,319.83, Middleport ClerkTreasurer
Gene
Grate
reported Monday to council.
Receipts and expenditures,
respectively , of each fund for
the month and the balance of
each as of Nov. 30 Follow ·
general, $9 ,372 54, $6,791 69,
$30,927.92; cemetery, $336.25,

Four fined by

Mayor Hoffman

Southeast

Gallipolis, S-9, 165, Sr. ; Lanc e
Mehl , Bellaire, 6-3, 195. Jr
Safeties Rod Lew1s,
Dayton Jefferson. 5· 10, 165,
Sr , John Slupsk1, Columbus

DeSales, 5-8, 165, Sr.
Back -of - the-year,
Tim
Burns, Wellington .
L1neman-of-the-year.
J1m
Mitolo, Warren Kennedy .
Coach-of.the-year, Bob Hart.
Norwalk.

Birthstone Jewelry

for MOM and GRANDMA
Fresh. delicate new designs to dei1ght every mother"s heart
One glawmg Simulated stone for each child , m sterl1ng Silver
or yellow gold electro plate . Customized in m1nutes The
moderate pnce mcludes slones and setting plus g1h box
Fam1ly Tree pendant. Only $tO.OO
B1rd perched on nest pin . Only $13.50
Double Circle pendant , Only $11.50

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT &amp; THURS.
DEC. 11 &amp; 12
NOT OPEN

Dave Boerslg, Manemont ;
Mike Coleman, Graham , Bob
Cummins, Brooklyn , Dave
Cattane, St. Cla~rsville ; Tom
Chaplm, Chagrin Falls , Steve
Dallas, Graham: Dean D1xon,
Columbus Watterson , Steve
Er la nger.
Springfield
Shawnee-,
Kevin
Elgm,
Columbus Ready ; Robbie
Everson, Bridgeport, Don
~rench, Morgan, Brad Farrar,

Clyde,

David Graham, Gallipolis;

Jeff Grandstafl, Bridgeport:
Manuel Gleason, Columbus
Mifflm,
Greg
Golding,
Lou1svllle Aquinas; Brian
Ha1rston. Columbus OeSales;
Bill Johnson, Eaton ; Mark
Kepler-, Wellington ; Denny
Murray, Akron St. Vincent;
Frank Myers, Ottawa Glandorf, J1m Niday, Gallipolis;
Dave Perzanowski , Bellaire ;
Greg Searcy , Wyoming ;
LeVale Scruggs, Ashtabula.

Ken

(PG)
Color Cartoons
Show Starts 7 p.m.
I,

Steele.

Shelby;

1195 lb 2-3 37 60-39, 895-1 195 lb 34 3A 36 60, standard 29 25 35.75.
Slaugh ter heifers: Cho1ce 790-

1050 lb 3 • 36 37 85, few 38-38,25,
low dressing 34-35, high choice
and prime 1020 121 5 lb 4 5 33 10-

34 60, good 850-1115 33 34.75, 635980 lb 26 33, standard 19 50·
23.55.
Slaughter cows Utdlfy 11001600 lb 18.25-22 85.
Sl aughter bul l s. I 1150-1970 lb

25 85 28 90

Vealers Cho1ce 150·205 lb 49 ·

54 00

Feeder cattle
Choice and
pr 1me steers 345-490 lb 23 -27.50.

choice 300-500 lb 21 50 25, 500-8A5
lb 23 26.50, good 400·500 lb 20 50·
22 75, 500-645 lb 17 50-22 50,
standard 500·690 lb 17 25-18
Choice heifers 300 5151b 16 5022 85, good 300-400 lb 21 25,
sl andard 500 600 lb 14 50-IB
Hogs Barrows and gilts US

1 2 196 222 lb 41 80 -42.50,
228 238 lb 40 70 41 40

2-3

and 1 3 336 583 lb 31.50-34, lot
us 2-361 3 lb 34.15

at y

Feeder pigs U S 2 3 30 40 lb

9 50 17 per head

Sheep . Cho1 c e slaugh ter
lambs full wool 75 -94 lb 36-39 50,
2 lots 90 91 lb &lt;0

VOL XXVI

Kev1n Adkms,

TO SELL GOODIES
RACINE - Racine E-R
Squad members will be selling
doughnuts and coffee in front of
the Racine Home NatiOnal
Bank Satw-day from 8 a.m.
tmhl noon. They will also be
playmg Christmas carols. The
members reported that they
only owe $700 on the new
ambulance they have purchased
E- R SQUAD CALLED

The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
Charles Riffle residence on US
33 at 6:48a.m. Wednesday for
Fay Pratt who was ill. She was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center
payments to conswner hardship groups
"The poor, the handicapped
and many members of
minonty groups t::onst1tute
hardship cases with regard to
fuel for heating and coolmg as
well as gasoline for trans" he said.

AKRON, OHIO - AN OHIO LAW WHICH forbids a
passenger in a car accident, unless he was a paying guest or the
driver was wilfully negligent, from collecting d!lffil'ges, was
ruled unconstitutional Wednesday by the Ninth Ohio Court of
~peals here.
The three-judge panel ruled the law violates the constitutional right of equal protection of the law. "The cow-t concludes that one - the Ohio guest statute Is unconstitutional and
two- as applied to a negligently injured guest the Ohio statute
vio~tes equal protection _guarantees of the Ohio and U. S. Constitutions,'' the panel said.

Bok,

Elida;

Larry

Gallipolis;

Andy

Bolting ,

Wheelersburg,
Dan Cernansky. Toronto; Craig Cor -

der,

Cadiz ;

Rick

Coflee,

Painesville Harvey ;
Bob
OiFeo, Akron St. Vincent ,
Larry Dumford, Washington

An excellent selection ideal for Christmas giving.

Court House; Mike Ede, Akron
Sam Goldstein, Bexley, Paul
Gonter,

Ridgewood;

Jeff

Groth, Chagrin Falls; Bill
Hurley, Teays Valley; Jeff
Howard, Huron ; Dave Hoover,
Tiffin Calvert; Larry Kirby,

-

· Hamilton Badtn ; Brian Kidd,
Rock Hill ; Steve Leppla ,
Coshocton ;
Mike Manella, Tusky Valley ;

Mike Martin , Elida ; Todd

Sam
Tony
Tom
Don
Greg

Underwood, , New lexington;

Ray Welch, Graham ; Randy

Whitacre, fort Frye ; Steve
Yaroch, C~umbus Watterson .
Bob Zagarijt , Orange

'

MAIN STORE, MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
AND TOY STORE, OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9

-- -----]
••ww

anta Claus will be ;~t the Toy Stbre Thursday 2 to .3
nd Saturday I to 3 p.m.

------

WWWWW

2*WJ 6 I

p.m.-

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY
.

r,

I

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'

By RICHARD E. LERNER
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford invited the
ailing auto industry 's top
executives and union leaders to
a White House meeting today
after promising new proposals
but no ~~drastic action" to
combat inflation or the recession.
Ford, spelling out his latest
views in a speech Wednesday
night, said he Is " deeply
concerned" about "three
domestic evils - inflation,
recession and energy.'' He said
he arranged today's talks
because the auto mdustry's
mounting unemployment and
sagging sales "affect our
economy on a very broad
basis."
Those asked to attend the
mldrn9rnlng White House session were the highest-ranking
officials . of General Motors,
Ford, Chrysler and American
Motors as well as Leonard
Woodcock, president of the
United Auto Workers .
President Ford said he
wanted "a face-to-face discus-

s1on of the industry 's very
spec1a't problems," adding that
it had been "unduly damaged"
m the economic slump.
Ford told a dinner meeting of
the Business Council 11 the
economy is in difficult straits"
and that he would propose "a
number of new or alternative
measures to augment and
update" hiS policy by midJanuary, shortly after the new
Congress convenes, ''if nol
sooner."
The President did not go into
specifics be(ore tlle group of
more tllan 100 corporate officials
'
But he made II clear that he
is not planning a major shift II1
tlle broad policy he advanced
last October, although the
White House said earlier
WedneBday Ford had aU but
abandoned hope for passage
tllis year of his 5 per cent income tax sw-charge proposal
and did not know If he would
put it before the new Congress.
In sum, Ford said in his
speech, "Ow- country is not in
an economic crisis .. . that

li..
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'f

Blood means life

•

e1rut
om e

•

COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Representatives of six Ohio
Cities mel here this week to
map a fight against a proposed
f216 milllon rate increalll! by
Ohio Bell Telephone Co.
Columbus Public Utilities
Dli-ector Robert Newlon said
the clUes represented at the
meeting here were Colwnbus,
Youngstown, bayton,
Springfield, Toledo and Upper
Arlington and the ci!y of Akron
is expected to join the action.
Newlon said the discussions
"were not the type Or things
that should be given publi~lty. "
"When it comes time to hire
the experts, then the matter
will be open," said Newlon,

CANTATA~ET

Meigs County Senior Citizens
Chorus will present Chrlsbnas
Canatata Suilday at 3 m. at
the Pomeroy Junio,r High
School auditorium. The public
Ia invited to attend .

p.

( ;.

I

~

Witnesses said two Israeli jet
fighters first opened fire with
• machine gtuls at "Sport City"
Christmas meaDB twinkling lights, warm glow, gill \:
stadiwn near Beirut Internagiving and We. But for some Chrlatmas meaDB accidents, j:1
tiona! Airport.
,:1:· illness, surgery and a need for blood.
-~
The planes then swept in
:-:
Every 17 seconds thlo holiday oea&amp;on 1omeone will ~~
over the capital and fired
:_~;_.,_1!, need blood, maybe by you, or someone you love.
'-~-~,: rockets at the Sabra refugee
Holidays aloo mean blood shortages, beeauoe not
~
I camp, damaging several
[1[1
enough people lake the Ume to donate. Won't you give this :~ buildings In the area, the
~:: holiday seuon? Won'l yon give a pinl of your blood on -~
witnesses said.
:::: Dec. 18, 197( at Pomeroy Elem.,tary School from 1 to 8 ~
Other reports said another
::~ p.m.? Give We by giving blood!
;~
::::..
.•.,...... .......... . .
-~~ refugee camp, Tel El-Zaatar,
·=·=·=·===·=·=·:·~:.:.:.:.:m:.·.·...~·=·=~-=-=·:·:·:·&gt;.'"=~·=-:-:=::-;-..:-:r-:;:.:.:·:~-:·:·:?.o:-§.:·:·:·:~x;:;~:;wm»X- on Beirut's outskirts, also was
demands immediate and dras- with continuing high rates of attacked.
The air raids came shortly
inflation, declining production
Uc action."
after
the Israeli government
At one point, he drew ap- and rising joblessness, which
to
strike
plause when he told the reached 6.5 per cent last threatened
Palestinian
guerrilla
bases
and
businessmen: "If there are any month .
among you who want me to
But "I cannot and will not
lake . a 180-deg- turn.. from lli'Om• .you a sucldtn~chanll~
inflation-fighting , to recession- for the better," he said because
ary pump-priming, they will be even if addltlonal steps are
disappointed. I will continue to taken now the results "would
treat tllis general economic not be felt for months to
ailment witll a balanced pro- come.''
gram."
Moreover, he said he was
Ford said he knew fw-ther skeptical about "short-term
steps must be taken to deal
(Continued on page 12)

otller targets rn Lebanon in
retaliation for terrorist attacks
such as the grenade explosions
in a Tel Aviv theater Wednesday.
In the see-saw guerrllla
battle, the Palestine Uberation
Organization
claimed
responsibility for the theater
bombing following rocket
attacks on tllree PLO Instaliations in Beirut Tuesday.
Those attacks were in tw-n in
response for the wounding of
two Israelis by three guerrillas
Dec. 6 in the frontier town of
Rosh Hanikra. One of the
guerrillas was killed and the
otllers escaped.

RACfNE - In accordance
with federal law and recommendations of the Meigs
County Board of Education, the
Southern Local School Board
Wednesday night adopted a
pohcy opening all school
records of students to
examination by parents or
guardians.
As in other policies adopted
locally in reference to the mspectwn, administrators must
permit parents or guardians to
mspect such records wtthin a
45 day period from the time the
request Is rece1ved Any entries which the parenl• or
guardians feel are not accurate
or pertment can be striken
from the record following a
closed hearmg.
In routine business, the
board awarded a contract for
the pw-chase of a new bus
chassis to Meigs Equipment
Co, and for the body to the
Wayne Sales Co. Both were low
bidders on the 66 passenger
vehicles.
Approved as s ubstitute
teachers in the distriCt were
James Crow and Mary Kay
Hennessy. Supt. Bob Ord was
authorized to secw-e a Title I
reading consultant. Joyce
Ritchie and William Downie,
Jr ., representing the teachers
of the district, were present to
discuss salary mcreases for the
teachers and $692 35 was
transferred from tlle Geheral
Fund to the Tille 3 Fund.
Fund.
Everett Connolly was employed as a substitute
custodian for the remamder of
tlle cw-rect school year. The
board approved attendance to
speclal meetings of Robert
Beegle, Racine Elementary
Principal, and Bill Baer,
Syracuse Principal. James
Hamm was appointed as a

substitute bus driver The
meeting was recessed until
7:30 p. m. Dec. 30.
Attending were board
members, Grover Salser, Jr.,
Denny Evans, David Nease,
Jack Bostic and Denme Hill ,
Supt. Ord, Mrs. Genevieve
Harvey, clerk, High school
principal James Adams, Bill
Cozart of the transportatiOn
department and two teacher
representatives

~

.... .... ..

·s outhern local
opens records

Ford certain there's no crisis

By JAMES R. KING
United Press International
President Ford says the
nation is not In an economic
crisis and he has no intentions
of changing his anti-inflation
strategy.
''If there are any ... who want
me to take a 186-degree turn
from inflation fighting to
COLUMBUS -Organized labor contributed more than
recessionary pump-priming,
f;l5,000 to Gov. John J. Gilligan's unsuccessful re-election
tlley will be disappointed,''
~paign, reports filed with Secretary of State Ted W. Brown
Ford told a meetrng of top
show. The United Steelworkers Union, with a donation of $13,000,
industrialists and financiers
was the largest contributor.
Wednesday night.
Other contributors Included the Ohio State Council of
The President said he will
Machinists, Cleveland, $5,000; United Rubber Workers of
soon give Congress additional
America, $2,500; an organization known as the Active Ballot Club
economic plans which he
which is the political arm of the Retail Clerks union, donated a - described as "new or alternatotal of $7,000. The Active Ballot Club, Washington, donated
tive measures to augment and
~.000; State Al'llve Ballot Club, Mansfield, $1,000, and Active
update the economic package I
Ballot Club, local 1059, Colwnbus, $1,000.
plijced before the Congreess
two months ago."
COLUMBUS- PRODUCTION PAYROLI..S continued to rise
"The economy ts In difficult
straits,'' Ford said. "We are in
(Continued on page 12)

Friday 2 to 3 p.m.

w•w

Processed Foods and feeds
accounted for a bout three-fiths
of the overall advance, the
Labor Department said.
"A sharp rise for the sugar
a nd con fectionery grouping
resulted in a 3.4 per cent increase for processed foods and
feeds ," the government said.
The seasonally adJusted increase for all farm products
foods and feeds was 2.5 per
cent compared to a 5.1 per cent
rise in October
Sugar and cor.feclionery products accounted for most of the
montly mcrease m prices of
consumer foods while prices of
beef, veal and eggs were lower

BEIRUT !UP!) - Witnesses said Israeli
fighter-bombers today bombed a Palestiman
refugee camp in the heart of Beirut and air raid
sirens wailed throughout the Lebanese capital.
Witnesses said they saw the Israeli jets attack
the Sabra camp around 4 p.m. (9 a.m. EST).
Telephone lines in some sections of Beirut went
dead, making it difficult to determine exactly what
.~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;::::.:·:·:·:::.:·:·:·:·:::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:~:::·:::·::::'.:!:!:!·!·!:!:!:!·:·:·:·:·:·:~,;·:·:::::· had happened. The noise of jets roaring over the city
«
~ was clearly audible in several parts of Beirut.
~
»

a recession. Production is
declining and unemployment is
rising ... Nevertheless, our
country is not In an economic
crisis."
Earlier m the day three
economists testifying before
tlle Senate Budget Committee
forecast, a bleak economic
picture for 1975, with unemployment soaring to 8 per cent
or beyond aod no recovery m
prospect until late in the year.
Democratic economists otto
Eckstein
of
Harvard
University and Arthur M. Okun
of the Brookings Institution
were the most pessimistic.
Arguing tllat recession was a
bigger problem than inflation,
they said the government
should prune the economy with
an income tax cut and by
allowing tlle money supply to
grow at a higher rate.

But Republican Murray Weidenbaum of Washington
University in St. Louis was
wary of any long-range
economic-boosting policies for
fear they could make inflation
-~
worse.
In other developments:
-The prestigious Wharton
School at tlle University of
Pennsylvania issued ita quarterly economic forecast, predicting the recession will
continue for several months
but disappear in time for the
nation's bicentennial celebration In 1976, when inflation
should be about 7 per cent,
-New York City , Mayor
Abraham Beame announced
7,300 jobs will be eliminated by
June 30 -3,725 by inunediate
layoffs and the rest by at.
trition.
- The 42 Republican mem-

being. ,mapped
-

54.

St. Vincent; Dan Elsbrock,
Greenhills: Ken Fritz, lrontori;

TEN CENTS

Bell increase

Waist length jackets and
longer car coat lengths lined and unlined C. P.O.
jackets.
This sale Includes our
entire stock- juvenile boys
sizes 2 to 12, regular boys
sizes 8 to 20- mens size 36 to

Ballantme, John Glenn: Jam1e
Brown,
Dixie;
Perry
Belcastro , Columbus Franklin
Heights ;
Doug
Brown ,

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1974

Fight against

1f3 OFF

Scott

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CINCINNATI- MERGING THE LOUISVIlLE, KY., and
sw-rotulding Jefferson County, Ky., school districts and busing
students across old boundaries to achieve racially balanced
BChools is pennl8slble, the U. S. 6tll Circuit Cow-t of Appeals
sule!l, ,here Wednesday.
_
'" tiia'llnimlmooad~;atl!teeiJuilllePatfelpO!nted iiut tliat
because both dl!trlcts were guilty of 118gregation and because
boundaries had been crossed to promote segregation, the same
could be done to achieve Integration. The court ruled on the
constitutionality of a lower court order that erased the boundaries and called for busing more tban 30,000 of the 140,000
Louisville and Jefferson County students.
However, the appeals Court said the Integration plan could
not begin before the 19Th-76 school year and not until aU appeals
to the decision had been exhausted.

WINTER
JACKETS

Bowman, Circleville, Garry
Barr,
Greenfield;
Gerry
Rochenek , Dayton Carroll;

NO. 170

By United Preoslnteroatlonal
COLUMBUS - LIEUTENANT GOV.-ELECT Richard
Celeste met with Gov.-elect James Rhodes this week and Celeste
said Wednesday he feels he can work with the veteran politician.
Celeste said he requested the meeting and met with Rhodes in the
former governor's offices In a downtown office buUding,
"I entered feeling I could work with him and notllrng
changed my mind," said Celeste. "He is a doer; He appreciates
people who have energy and that's one characteristic we have In
conunon."
"He said something Uke 'You know you're really going to
enjoy it,'" said Celeste. "This politics is terrific," The meeting
lasted about 15 minutes Celeste said.

Sale! Men's and Boys'

Columbus

Hamlllon Township,

en tine

for Noyember compares witll a
2.5 per cent increase in OcIober. For t he la s t three
months, the wholesale pr1ce
index has risen an average of
1.3 per cent a montll.
For tlle third quarter of 1974
-June, July and August-tlle
average monthly increase was
2.7 per cent.
The mdex- which 1s an Indtcator of whal consumer
prices will be like in the near
future-stood at 171.9, 23.5 per
cent above a year ago. That
means tllat products costing
$100 in 1967, the base year, cost
$171.90 last month.

Big auto, labor meeting Ford

\

HONORABLE
MENTION LINEMEN

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
WMlesale Price Index rose 1.2
per cent in November-mostly
because of large increaseJ for
processed foods especially
suga r- but there were indicalions price mcreases were
beginnmg to flatten out, the
Labor Department said today .
"Price increases were less
widesp,read than In the
previous
months,"
the
departn)ent 's Bureau of Labor
Statistics said.
The industrial commodities
mdex for November- which is
a major part of the overall
index -showed a seasonally
adjusted increase of only 0.9
per cent~ the smallest one
month gain for that indicator
since September, 1973 when a
0.7 increase was reported.
The seasonally adjusted increase in the wholesale index

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
CHIEF NAMED
RACINE - Walter Leland
has been elected first aid chief
of the Racme Emergency
Squad. Other officers elected
were assastant first aid chtef,
George Cummins ,; Lt., Gary
Wolfe; ca ptain, Milch Nease;
assiStant
capta m , Greg
Dunning ; president, Raymond
Adams;
vice
president,
Jeanette Lawrence; secretary
and treasw-er, Walter Cleland;
public relations, Randall
Roberts; g nevance com.
m1ttee , J oan Tuttle, Beverly
Curnmms and Sam Pickens.

YOUf! C.I{R!S~MAS GIFT HEADQUARTERS

Htll.

expected to be completed in the spring, will contain T1 one-bedroom umts
and two two-bedroom units It IS located on what was known as the Stansbury property.

•

Sows 300-500 lb 50-1 higher,
60 lower, US med1um

Energy policy to
emphasize saving
without giVIng up essential
heat, cookmg and tr ansportation .
Families
with
instant
television, trash compactors.
microwave ovens and big cars
can contribute to conservation ,
he said, but poor famihes are
already at irreducible levels.
Power
company
rate
structw-es require household s
to pay higher prices than
commercial and industrial
users and " low income
families pay a higher pnce
than high income families ,"
Willett said.
"It seems obvious that
dw-ing a period of energy
scarcity, it is incorrect to
reward htgh vohnne users.
Incentives should instead
promote reduce energy consumption/' he satd.
Hans B. Thorelli, busmess
professor at Indiana Umversity, wants Congress to pass an
excess profits tax for oil
companies and tllis should be
used to finance transfer

us

ACTION IN MIDDLEPORT - No:w construction Is underway at the
corner of Third Ave. and Mill St. where tlle new apartment complex 1s lUI·
derway by the Barr-Circle Development Co., Gallipolis. The apartments,

600 lb

WASHINGTON -IT MAY BE TOO LATE to head off an
increase in skin cancer even if Congress acts right away to
control freon gases being released into the atmosphere from
aerosol sprays andotller sow-ces, Rep. Marvin L. Esch, R-M1ch.,
said today.
"We must immediately begin a comprehensive study so that
steps can he taken to defuse this potential time bomb If a health
hazard is proven," Esch said as Congress began its first investigation of the problem. Scientists have said that freon gases
being released into the air from aerosol sprays, as well as from
refrigerators and air conditioners, may be eating away at the
ozone layer high in the earth's atmosphere. That layer is what
filters out harmful ultraVIolet rays from tlie sun and which, if
seriously depleted, increases the risk of skin cancer throughout
the world.

Bob

Swackhamer, John Glenn; Ned

Gene Hackman

prime 875 -1250 lb 2-3 39.10-oO,

h1gh dressmg 40 41, 3-4 38-39,
choice 3-tl 36.50 ~:11.'75, good 1060·

COLUMBUS - THE CENTER FOR BUSINESS and
Economic Research at Ohio State University reported today that
Ohio payrolls for October rose 4 per cent from the Octo her, 1973
level and were also up 4 per cent for the first 10 months of tlle
year.
The center said all -eight city - county areas surveyed by the
center showed October-to-October increases m production
worker payrolls ranging from 2 per cent in Toledo -Lucas to 9 per
cent in canton -Stark. Other increases were Akron- Summit and
Youngstown- Mahoning, 8 per cent; Cincinnati • Hamilton and
Cleveland - Cuyahoga 5 per cent and Colwnbus - Franklin and
Dayton - Montgomery 4 per cent.

Taylor, Elida ; Craig Treon,
Versa i lles, J1m VIrgin, Rock

Miller,
Bucyrus ,
Reynolds, Barnesville ,
Ramsey, Brookville ;
Sapp, Jefferson Un1on;
Shaw,
Ridgewood,

FR'I.; SAT., SUN.
DEC, 13-14-15
ZANDY'S BRIDE
t Techn !color)

WASHINGTON - THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
says average planting and growing conditions next year could
result in a 30 to 50 cent increase in total feed grain production,
easing the tight supply-lugh cost squeeze for feed now hampering
the livestock industry.
A report prepared for the department's annual outlook
conference said a "decent" planting season coupled with a
favorable growing season could tw-n around the tight feed gram
situation. The 1974 production of feed grains dropped 17 per cent
from 1973 to 165 million tons , primarily due to poor corn and
sorghwn harhests .
Economist James J. Navie said average planting and
growing seasons could bring corn yields up to a range of 87 to 97
bushels an acre-Bubstantially higher than the 73 bushel an acre
average yield this year. The result would he a record corn crop,
allowing feed grain production to "bounce back" 30 to 50 per
cent.

HONORABLE
MENTION BACKS

Jell
RELATIVE DIES
Word has been received here
of the death of Mrs. Emma
Louder bach, 87, of Marietta
Tuesday morning at. the
Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Clara
Shuster of Pomeroy is the only
sw-viving sister and Gerald
Shuster , Pomeroy, is a
nephew . Funeral services will
be held Thursday at the McClure 'Funeral Home in
Marietta.

SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport Emergency
Squad answered a call toRt. I,
Middleport, at 9·53 p .m .
Tuesday for Dorothy Butcher
who was Ill. She was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center.

had been taking the same fertility drug.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
wealthier family can do
without the energy used in a
trash compactor or microwave
oven, but if a poor family uses
less energy, It means giving up
essential transportation or
heat.
A series of witnesses told
Interior Secretary Rogers C. B.
Morton that consumer tn·
terests must be served in any
energy policy that wiU affect
the way 211 million Amencans
work and live. Morton opened
public hearings on tlle policy
this week.
Whenever the policy is announced, it will include strong
doses of conservation, according to Morton. "We are
well aware that U. S. energy
conswnption cannot continue
to grow al 4 to 5 per cent a
year."
Edward B. Willett, professor
of finance of Northeastern
University, said he did not
know how poor people could
conserve any more energy

Prices easing

COLUMBUS (UP I) - Feder -

'

Continued from page I

""

r, •

~

CHRISTMAS PROGRAM . - SoUthern High SChool's
choir and concert band will present a auistrnas program
Sunday at 3 p.m. at·the high school in Racine. The choir is
under the direction of Mrs. Lee Lee and tbe band under the
direction of Joy Bigler. OlOir members taking part are, ftrst
row,l..-, Mrs. Lee Lee, director, Gail Evans, Cindy Lawson,
Cookie Weddle, Barb Thel!s, Patty Robinson, VIcki Boso and
Molly Filher; IIOCond row, Heidi Ashley, Connie fatterson,
Debbie Amott, Bobill Chapman, Sheryl Simpsoh, Glenda
Forester, Leroy Fori!llter~row threj!, Helen Wilcoxen, Karen

Rhodes, J;Jebbie Harden, Sharon Evans, Denise Hendrix,
Melania Waldnig, Mary Anne Andrew; fourlh row, Joy
Neigler, Lori Guinther, Sharon Baker,.Law-a Theiss, Brenda
Lawrence, Megan Brown, Larry Hupp; fifth row, Lee Ord,
lisa Allen, Mitch Nease, Steve Hupp, Becky Sayre, COrena
.Rhodes, Becky Harris; sixth row, Rhonda West, Steve 13oso,
Dave Huddleston , Harold Black, Keith Circle, Larry FIBber,
Koste Hysell ; seventh row, Tony Carnahan, Jeff Circle,
Skipper McMillan, Glen Simpson, Donny Dudclinl! and Okey
Kiser. Accompamst is Mrs. Barbara Baer.

,_;

bers of the Senate adopted
their own set of economic
proposals Wednesday, including tax cuts, 500,000 new
public jobs, mandatory energy
conservation measures and a
tax on wasteful energy consumption.
-A bill to provide more than
$6 bUiion for jobs and jobless
benefits was approved by the
Senate Labor and Public
Welfare Committee. A sbnilar
blllln the House bill provides $2
billion for public service jobo
during the first six months of
next year, plus the same
unemployment benefits as the
Senate bill.

Nobody
gained

The Meigs County Board of
Elections announced today
that the recount for the office of
Governor of Ohio was completed Wednesday and resulted
In no change.
Incwnbent Governor John J
and
apparent
Gilligan
statewide winner James A.
Rhodes each were awarded one
additional vote for a net change
of zero. Independent candidate
Nacy Brown Lazar lost ·two
votes.
Twenty nine of the 40
precincts tallied exactly witll
the previously announced
official cow-l. Neither candidate gained or lost more than
two votes in any precinct.
Board members and officials
stated that the result of the
recOIUlt was a tribute to the
diligence , efficiency and
Extended Outlook
honesty of local precinct
Chance of rain or snow
electlon officers and others
Saturday; snow flurries
Involved in the election
north portion Sunday and
process.
Monday. Highs In lhe COs and
Conducting the recount and
low• In the 20s.
acting as bipartisan judges '*&lt;o?.:?:-:';$:::;:';$::::::::~..--;~O;~.:l:l=.u:l:l.ro::osi~!'l~
under the supervision of the
·
board were Mrs. Edna
LOCAL TEMPS
Schoenleb, Mrs . Carolyn
Temperatw-e in downtown
Teaford, Mrs . Myrtle Walker Pomeroy today at 11 a.m. was
and Mrs. Dolores Will.
48 degrees under cloudy skies.
~.

Courses
open to
adults
Six subject areas have been
selected in an adult education
program conducted by the
Meigs Local School DistriCt,
Ray Goodman, vocational
training dtrector, announced
today.
More cow-ses may be added
later, but concentration at
present is the regiStration of
students for the six cow-ses
selected on an mterest baSis.
More students are needed m
each of the six areas, and
residents interested are to
contact Goodman at the high
school (992-2153).
Cow-ses selected to date
mclude-avialion ground school,
a 32-how- cow-se; typing and
shorthand, weldmg, sewing,
general office training and
household wiring , all 24-howcourses. Four courses require
only a $10 tuition fee; tlle
welding cow-se tuition is $15,
and tlle aviation ground school
is $30. All residents interested
are to contact Goodman by
Dec . 20. Cow-ses are scheduled
to get underway about Jan. 7.
Teachers · for the adult
courses include John M. Van
Meter, aviation ground school;
Mrs. Beverly Gaul, typing and
shortlland; , Willard Miller,
welding; Mrs. Susan Miller,
sewing; Fred Gaul, general
office training, and Everette
Holcomb, household -.yiring.

,

~

'

�": Clark gets his

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, I:lec. 12, 1974

Rhodes, Brown disagree
on recount procedures
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov .•
elect James A. Rhodes and
Ohio Attorney General William
J . Brown strongly disagreed
Wednesday on the correct
procedure wbe followed in the
recount of ballot.o; from Ute
November gubernawrial election .
Brown said witnesses at the
recount, requested by Gov.
John J. Gilligan, could view
each of the more Ulan 3 million
votes ta bu lated, incl udin g
votes tabulated by computer.
Rhodes atwrney John McElroy said, however, the re was
no authority under Ohio law for
appOinting witnesses.
McElroy, in a hand delivered
letter to Ohio Secretary. of
State Ted W. Brown, said each
ca ndidate involved "may
attend and witness Ute recount
and may have an atwrney at
law whom he designates as his
legal counsel to attend and

witness the recoWlt" but not
just anybody cou ld be a witness.
James R. Marsh, assistant
secretary of state, said the
op inion by Attorney General
Brown has 11 generated new
confusion" over the recoWlt
and added that "Ute timing was
atrocious," noting that it came
on the day Ute recount was w
begin.
''This recoWlt is not being
conducted for the benefit of
witnesses," said Marsh. "If the
attorney general's opinon were
literally followed, it would
mean manual handling of each
ballot card, and the boards of
election do not have the perw nnel to do t his without
co nsiderable delay in the
reco WJt ."
The opinion was requested
by Buller County Prosecuwr
John F . Holcomb . Former Gov.
Rhodes defeated Gilligan by

more than 11,000 voles in lhe
Nov. 5 election.
The alwrney general, in his
opinion, said :
- That witnesses have the
right to see each ballot, including those counted by
tabulatin g equipment.
- If less than three out of the
four judges do not agree on how
a ballot should be coun~ed, that
ballot was to be set asid ~ for
later determination .
- Witnesses may suggest to
the judges that a ballot be
challenged.
Marsh said his office was
advisingall88 county boards of
election w follow the secretary
of state's directive if there was
a variance between that and
Ute attorney general's opinion.
All w the right to challenge a
vote, Marsh said, " We don't
have any quarrel with Utat, but
if Utey're going w challenge
every ballot, this constitutes a
delay, and the election official
could ask the witness w be
quiet or leave."
He said witnesses had a
" right to see what's going on
but that Utere is nothing that
requires election officials w
especially prepare the ballots

Saxhe packing
up for move

The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
I NTER EST OF
ME lGS-MASON AREA
_ C HESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Pub l i shed d a i ly
except
Salurday by T h e Ohio Valley
PubliShing Comp any,
111
Cour l St . , ·Pomeroy , O hio
45769 Business Office Ph one
992 2156 . Edi torial Phone 992
2157
Se cond c lass pos tage pai d at
Pom eroy, Oh io .
Nat i ona l
advertis i ng
repr es enlative
Bott i nel li ·
Gallagher , I nc ., 12 East 42nd
St .. N ew York . New Yo r k. .
S ~bscrip ti on
rates .
Deltye red by carrier whe r e
ava ilabl e 60 c enls per week. ;
By Motor Route where carrier
se r vi ce not available . One
mon t h , $2 .60 . By mai l i n Ohio
and W . Va ., One Year, $18 ; Six
mon ths , $9 .50 ; Three months,
,$b . E ls ewhere $'2 2. 00 year ; s i x
mon th s $11 .50, t h ree months,
S6 .50. Subscr i pt ion p ri ce in ·
Su nd ay
Tim es
e lu de s
Sen t 1ne·._:__
1.
_ __
___.J

settled and I am not at Uberty
wmake any disclosures. It will
have to come out of Ute White
House.
"The president Utought that
we might have some decison by
the last of Utls week," said
Saxbe . "It Is Wednesday so I
would guess by Friday or
Saturday, but it could be
·completely noUting to report

even then."
The outspoken Saxbe, ap.
pointed attorney general by
former President Nixon to
replace Elliot Richardson after
the
" Saturday
Night
Massacre" of October, 1973,
previously was a Republican
senator from Ohio.
He was a conservative on
most domestic issues, . but
occasionally broke ranks with
Ute Nixon administration.
He once said Nixon was "out
of his mind" for Ute Christmas
bombing of NorUt Vietiuun and
also called former top Nixon
aides H.R. Haldeman and John
Ehrllchman "a couple of
Nazis."
He once said the Nixon administration was "one of the
most inept" in history.
His penchant for candor
continued after his appointment as attorney general
and got him in trouble at a
seri"' of informal sessions with
reporters earlier this year.
When Patty Hearst was
believed to be a kidnap victim,
Saxbe outraged her parents by
saying Ute FBI would "go get
her" once she was located and
later that she was a "common
criminal.''
He also upset Ute Jewish
community by saying that
during the McCarthy era
Jewish Intellectuals were
"very enamored of the Com·
munlst party."
Saxbe loves traveling -&lt;Je
openly admits to having taken
"every free trip I could get" as
a senator -and apparently
became interested in India
after a 1973 trip.
In 1971, Saxbe spoke on
behalf of Ute Bangladesh independence movement and
cosponsored a resolution
cutting off aid to Pakistan, a
move he said was his greatest
accomplishment in the Senate.

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
recently read in the San An·
tonio News an article that
frightened me half to death. It
was about screw worms in
Texas. The aoticle staled screw
worms affected people as well
as animals. It stated there
wer.e 8,900 cases treated in
Texas last year and 75 per cent
of these were in South Texas
anq the San Antonio area .
We plan to re tire and make
our home in San Antonio so you
can understand why I might be
somewhat concerned with his
problem. •
I am especially interested
in knowing who and how screw
worms attack. What is the
incidence and what area seems
w be most alfected? How can
Utey be recognized and controlled ' How can we protect
ourselves fr om contact with
Utem ? If they should atlack a
person what is the percentage
of fatality?
We have two children and
since our possible reUrement
sites are limitless, I wouldn't
want to make any move that

EARLY S UNDAY MIXED
Decemb e r 8, 1914
Won Lost
Tom'S Carry O ut
88
40
Eagles C lub
78
50
Pu ll ins E·~ c avating
76
52
Friend l y Tavern
54
7.:1
Mayer 8. Hill Barbers
.:16
82
Swi sher &amp; L o h se Ph arm .
42
84
'
H igh lnd
Game Larr y
Dugan 214, Belty Smi lh 21 5 ;
Jeff Wilson 21 1, Marlen e
W il son 207 .
H igh Seri~s - Larr y Duga n
556 .. Jr
Phelps 529 ; Belly
Sm1 th 576, Marlene Wilson 573 .
Team H igh Game - Pullins
Ex c avatino 716 .
T eam H igh Ser ies - Pullin s
t:xcaval ing 2057 .
·

Because regu lar quar·
terback Ken Anderson is hurt
•
Clark will start at Pittsburgh
against the Stcelers. '
Just as he did with the San
Diego Olargers for several
seasons, Clark has spent most
of his first season here sitting
on the bench.
. However, the 27-year-old
fourUt year pro played most of
Ute second half last Sunday
against Detroit after Anderson
suffered an injured back and
was finished for the season.
Although several of Clark's
passeS were way short, he did
guide Ute Bengals to a touchdown, even though Detroit
• wiped it out with a score in Ute
closing seconds w win 23--19.
Only Caller Available
Because third-string
· quarterback Mike Ernst was
kicked off the team a few
weeks ago a fter being arrested
':;" on a narcotics charge, Clark is
• Ute ooly signal caller ava ilable
•· for Saturday.
Should Clark get hurt, Coach
' Paul Brown says he will move
...
:': Ken Riley from the defensive
backfield and let him try to
':' guide Ute offense. Riley last
w played quarterback seven
m years ago in college at Florida

Archie the greatest says his coa.ch
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ohio Hayes who appeared, along he had not even considered his
State football coach Woody wiUt Griffin, on NBC's Today chances in professional foQt·
Hayes said today that Heisman show. HHe accepts, listens and ball when he graduates.
Trophy winner Archie Griffin has the best attitudes of any
" I've been putting it out of
was Ute best player he has ever fooball player I've ever had." my mind," said Griffin.
coached.
Hayes said he always tries w
"Arch drives as if every pla y be fair wiUt his players.
were a touchdown , " said
"I don't care if the players
DEER SLAIN
disllke me. I want Ut em to
A deer was killed Wednesday
respect me, you never make a
at
12; 00 p. m. on US 33 when it
New York City 's first street- tackle wiUt a smile on your
ran
into the path of a car driven
cars rumbled into serv ice in face, " said Hayes .
by
Mary
J. Barnhart, Chester.
!832. The horse-dr awn cars
Griffin said he was "not
resembling stagecoaches ran shooting for the Reisman The Meigs County Sheriff's
on granite-supported rails along trophy next year, just looking Department said there were no
Fourth Avenue between Prince w get better."
per sonal injuries and only
and 14Ut streets.
The junior tailback also said moderate damage to the car .

: A&amp;M.

... TO CHERISH
CHRISTMAS AFTER CHRISTMAS

As far as Ute playoffs go, Ute
:: Bengals-Steelers clash is mea~ ningless. Pittsburgh, 9·3-1,
" clinched Ute American Con•" ference's Central Division title
;: last weekeild and Cincinnati, 7.. 6, was eliminated from a
• playoff spot.
:::; However, Brown says the
• game is "important" for other
•• reasons.
:
"This is a very important
:. week for this football team ,"
~ he said. "This is the week we 'll

::

For

may endanger their lives· in
any way.
DEAR READER - Relax!
That article was about the
inciden ce
in
a nim a ls
and
peo ple .
f
talked to the County Health
Department · in San Antonio,
and they confirmed my impression that human infestation was quite rare, including in San Antonio. About
Utree years ago there were 10
cases in humans. There was
also one death near San Antonio. The rest of the problems
were in animals, not humans.
Screw worms are the larvae
from Ute screw worm fly. The
fly lays its eggs in a cut or
injured area. The eggs hatch
and produce larvae. Being
raised on the farm, I treated
several cases In farm animals
when f was a boy. If detected
and treated early the animal
doesn ' t have an? problems.
The cattle on a large ranch or
animals not under C'lose
supervision are not so lucky.
Humans get screw worms
Ute same way. Most of Ute 10
cases were in children wiUt
scalp problems from lack of

hygiene. The scratched area
provided a place for the fly to
lay a few eggs. In better circumstances human infections
do not occur.
r have seen only two cases
and both were in Kansas, not
Texas. In both Instances Ute
vicUms were inclined to drink
excessively and would be lying
outdoors in a stu)l(ir. While in
this state the flies entered Ute
nose· and left their eggs.
So, unless you are going to be
lying aroWJd somewhere unconscious for some reason,
such as from too much alcohol,
I think you need not fear any
problems at all from screw
worms.
The screw worm problem
concerns farnQers and ran.
chers, and there are national
programs for fly control w
protect livestock. That is why it
is of public interest, not
because it is a significant
health problem for people.
San Antonio Is a lovely town
and entirely safe healthwise . If
Ute screw worm problem is all
that alarms you Uten you have
nothing to worry about.

.

Bulova

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~

I"EW YORK (UP!) - L'uriosily not only killed the cal, it keeps
killing a lot of people also , particularly when for the very life nf
them, they simply can 1 t ferret out the reason for the most lopsided deal in the past two months.
. Why' Why ' Why ? Why in the world did the San Francisco
Giants ever give up Bobby Bonds to the New York Yankees for
Bobby Murcer' Nobody ca n figure it out. Everybody agrees the
Giants gave up far more than they got back. Everybody a lso
suspects the Giants got money in the deal, but the fact is they
didn't .
The deal was a straight player one, Bonds for Mureer, as
orig inally annoWJced. Here's what wasn't announced though.
Shortly after the season was over, Bcbby Bonds, who lives in
that area, visited the Giants' offices at Candlestick Park in San
Francisco . Owner Horace SUienham was in a nd the two talked
aw hile about some of Ute things which occurred this past season.
Pretty soon their conversation look on the wne of a
preliminary contracl talk. A disagreement arose between
Horace Stoneham and Bobby Bonds, and the next thing you know
they were raising their voices. Both men got hot. They grew
increasingly emotional, and the more they did, Ute louder they
became.
They never reached agreement, and eventually Bonds got
up to leave. He had spoken his mind, and Stoneham had spoken
his. When the Giants' owner finally emerged !rom his office, he
was still btJning.
"He's fini shed," Stoneham sa id . "He'll never play another
game for me.''
Horace Stoneham calls a ll the shots for Ute Giant.o;. What he
says goes. At times he can be and has been, the mosl wann, the
most considerate, the most generous club owner in the entire
game. He also can be hard, unbending and abrasive.
After Bonds left his office that day, Swneham, who had feelers
for Bonds during the World Series, now went about seeing what
he could get for his fleet, 27-year-&lt;Jld super slugger in earnest.
Several clubs carne up with offers. The Yankees offered Murcer
even up. Swneham said he'd think it over.
He told some of his front office people he liked the idea of
Murcer for Bonds. They wid him they didn't like the idea, but he
said he intended to make the dea l anyway . They pleaded with
him wthink it over some more. His mind was made up , though,
and he got on the phone with Ute Yankees and wid them it was a
deal.
Those who might be tempted to criticize Stoneham for parting
wiUt Bonds precipiwusly should also know that during their
disagreement, Bonds told Stoneham he'd never play for Ute
Giant.o; anymore. He was giving Swneham an ultimatum, and no
owner lakes that from a ballplayer. Why should he ? After all, Ute
ballplayer is working for the owner, not the other way around.
The Giant.o; were the ones who initiated Ute deal with the
Yankees for Bonds. Originally, the Giants asked lor Murcer and
pitcher Doc Medich for Bonds, pitcher Tom Bradley and a third
player. The Yanks wouldn't go for that.
Then they came up with Murcer for Bonds. They mealioned it
wa Giants' official, who relayed it to Swneham, and the deal was
made.
Everybody now is going around saying Bcbby Bends will tear
up the American League, which he probably will. Think of it this
way, though: What if Bobby Murcer has an even better year for
the Giant.o;' What if he has such a good year, he winds up MVP'
Maybe that isn't likely , but it could happen .
What do you think Horace Stoneham would say then' l think
he'd merely smile and not say anything.

MTS COINS

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Everette Connally is
visiting her daughter m
Marietta, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
and son, Rocky, were Thanksgiving Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Bass and
daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
were Thanksgiving Day guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt ·
Fergerson at Pl. Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Schindler
and daughter Dawn of
Amherst, 0 ., were weekend·
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner and Mrs. Ada Norris
Thanksgiving.
Mr. ana Mrs. wayne
McLaughlin and children of
Columbus, Mrs. Nina Wagoer
were Thanksgiving guest.o; of

_________

......

Sat. 1:30-8:00

~~t~~~:~~E~:~~M.~N

Apple Grove News, Events

Little As '5.00

Guaranteed accurate to

1!!!111

"'

Gift Ideas From As

H

Within a minute a month . •

'Wt will adjuat to tl'lls precise'"'"
If nectsU!)'. Quirentee 11

:n7s
who
"It will give us a chance to
study people and appra ise
them as real pros and see how
wugh they hang in there. "
Players No Use
Because of injuries, Brown
says II players from the 47man roster are of "no use " w
the Bengals against P it tsburgh. The 11 are Anderson,
Essex Johnson, Boobie Cla rk,
Lenvil Elliott, Vern Holland,
Bcb Joh nson, Sherman White,
Jim Leclair, Bernard Jackson,
Ken Sawyer a nd Lemar
Parrish.
The injuries co ntinue lo
leave Cincin na ti's rushing
statistics unbelievably low .
Going inw the final game the
club's leading ground -gainer,
Elliott, has 345 yards. Second is
Anderson with 314 ya rds and
third is Clark with 312. None of
the trio will play Sa turday .
Cincy last year had two
rushers -Johnson and Clark right at 1,000-yards.
For 66-year-old Brown, in his
40th season of coaching the
injuries have wrecked what
looked like a bright season .
In his office one day this
week Brown mused, ''It's just
Utal this season has been so ... "
He let the sentence trail off.
Someone offered "dis·
couraging?''
"No," he said. " I'm nol sure
that's the right word . It's just
that when a team is as
decimated as we are you ge t
frustrated."
Brown also was ''frustrated''
over a local newspaper headline recently implying he had
considered retiring .
" I haven't committed myself
on the futw-e," he said. "I
make these decisions as lime
goes by . I won 't give it much
Utoughl until I'm well rested
and away from the rigors of
this season.'l

~

IN
BEAUTIFUL

OF GALLIPOLIS

121 State St.

PH. 446-1842

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Adams.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Archie Jarrell
and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Findley and Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush, Louie ' Pickett,
Edward and Mary Findley,
spe nt Thanksgiving with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Michael and
children.
Mrs . Eileen Buck, Mr. ana
Mrs. Pete Shields, Mr. and
Mrs. Pal Greene of Atbens,
Mrs. Marlene Fisher and
children, Molly, Larry and
Amy , were Thanksgiving
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Doo Beegle and children at
Racine .
Early Roush returned home
Sunday night after being on a
Grange
tour
through
Ca lifornia, Arizona, Texas and

SELECTION.
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SAVE HEAT

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BEFORE COLD
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Ladies '

.

ST . LOUIS (UP!) - Running
backs Archie Griffin of Ohio
State and Joe Washington of
Oklahoma, the only two juniors
on the squad, highlighted Ute
offensive backfield chosen for
The Sporting News' 1974 All·
America team.
Griffin was named college

football Player of the Year
Tuesday by the sports weekly
and
Maryland 's
Jerry
Claiborne was picked as Coach
of Ute Year.
Also on the offensive $Quad
a re wide receivers Larry
Burwn of Purdue and Emmett
Edwards of Kansas. tight end

Balanced attack
aids Zip cause
By Uolted Press International
Bcb Marlin pumped in 22
Akron enjoys a 2-1 record points at home to lead Ute
today, Utanks largely w three Defiance Yellow Jackets to an
Zips who scored more than 20 easy 90-&amp;4 Hoosier Buckeye
points each Wednesday night. Conference vicwry over EarlNate Barnett tallied· 25 point.o; ham.
Bernard Pope added 16
and teammates Jim Abrams
and Casimer Moss added 21 markers for the Yellow Jackapiece in pacing Akron to an a.- ets, 3-1 overall this season and
75 vktory at Western Dlinois. 3-0 in the confe rence.
AI Donhoff dumped in 21
Western led, 47-43, at half·
lime, but the Zips went ahead points to lead Ohio Northern to
to stay on a 15-foot jumper by 54-40 come-from-behind vicAbrams with just under nine wry over Bluffwn .
minutes left to play.
Junior guard Jim Schmitt
Western, which was led in pumped in 29 points and Gluck
scoring by Bobby Dye wiUt 22 Galloway garnered 18 to lead
points, committed 28 turnovers West Liberty (W. Va.) past
in Ute ragged game. Akron had Ashland, 95.01.
22 turnovers.
In other games involving
·western is now 1·1.
Ohio teams Wednesday evening, Miami downed Ball State,
Mus~ingum College, led by
guards Larry Harrison and 65-54, Malone dumped Tiffin,
Tim Gebhardt, easily drove 9U9, a nd Ohio Dominican
past Washington &amp; Jefferson defeated Wilberforce, 73-70.
Only three games are on lap
(Pa.), 65-57, at home Wednesday ' night ln a non· lor slate squads l•mlght. Mount
Union is a l Eckerd (Fla .),
conference game .
Harrison led all scorers with Otterbein hosts Urbana and
20 point.o;, and Gebherdt con- Wooster visits Hiram.
tributed 18 for · Ute Muskies,
now 2-2 for the season.
Ed Tomko with 12 point.o; and
Tim Nard with 11 were the only
W &amp; J players in double
figures. The
Presidents
dropped w l-2 for Ute season.
Guard Jim Rippe hit oo 10 of
12 shots from the field for 22
points to lead Xavier to 10li-49
victory over Union College
(Ky.) .
xavier, which hit on 59 per
cent of Its field goals, led at
halftime, 43-24. The point wtal
lor the Cincinnati team was Ute
highest since the 1970-71
season. Xavier had six players
in double figures.

Middleport, Ohio

'

tall•~ pair

Pearl

Clocks,
· and

Co ll ege Basketb a ll Re sults
By Unit ed Pre ss Int er nationa l
Ea sl
Wr cst r Pol y 79 Bowdn 78
F QU R t hr l d 77 l ana 61
K ing s Pt 85 Qu een s Coil. 75
L a Sa l l e 71 L a f aye tt e 58
Le h man 82 Ston y B r oo k 76
Bo sl on Col i 88 R I U 67
Tr i nit y 04 A mhers t 62
El i zl o wn 77 Leh ig h 62
E Slrd sbg 80 Chey n e y 77
Br own 9'1 Y .Jie 66
Al brig h l 74 Ssqueh n n a 69
Pace 71 Pr a tt 1\4
Pt. Pa rk 8 1 St . Fr an P a. 59
Genev a 87 St. Vince nt 81
Sli ppr y Rc k 92 I nd . .P a . 80
L eb V alley 95 Swarthm ore 7B
De l Valle y 7V U rs in us 78
Verm ont 70 N o r w i ch 47
Sou1h
Am IJ . '16Loya\B (Md . ) S2

N avy 77 George Mason 56
So Car 89 St. Jos . Pa . 54
Vi r gin i a 73 Wm &amp; Mary 51
va Union lOS Sh aw 81

M sk ingm 85 Wa sh .&amp; Jeff 57
111. W slvn 71 V a l pri so 59
Aq sl na Ill. 97 M il lik in 7 1
Ak ron 84 W es t ern Il l. 75
Rock fo rd 7'J A ur ora 67
Wi s .. Prk sd c 66 No . 111. 65
Mi ami 0 . 65 B a l l St 54
Gosh en 78 G ra ce 66
B ul ler 79 Il l inoi s St 78
F r an k l in 92 Ind . Cent 83
Oa kln d M ic h 83 Chi Crc le 75
Southwest
Tex A rl 80 H r dn Smmn s 64
West
Boi se St 96 Gre a l F al l s 89
Ore St 76 Po r tland St 70
Wash . Sl. 83 De pa u l 69
Xavi e r lOS Union , Ky . 49
Wes t l i b erl y, W . V a 95 As h l and
61
Mu skingum 85 W &amp;J (Pa .) 57
Ohio Nor thern 54 B l ufft on 40
W es tmin s t er IPa .l 84 Oh io
Wesl eyan 65
D efia n c e 9tl Earlham , Ind . 6 4
M \aml 65 Ball S, e,e Sl\
Akron 84 W est("rn Illinoi s 75
Malon e 93 T i ff in 09
Ohio Domin i c an 73 Wilberfor c e

10

MOORE'S

Your Christmas Gift Headquarters

OPEN NITES TIL 8

other places of interest.
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Roush
spent Friday evening wiUt Mr.
ani' Mrs. Ott Boswn at Racine.
Mrs. Boswn was admitted w
Veterans Memoriill Hospital
Mooday as a medical patient.

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10% TO 30%
ON

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SPORTS EQUIPMENT
TOOLS &amp; HOUSEWARES

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STEVE SNOWDEN

553 RusH II 51., &lt;Grnol Hill)
Middleport, 0.
I'll . 992-7155

STATE FARM

POMEROY ·

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Gilberts Motorized Potters Wheel Reg. $17.49 $12.99

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until fire red uces your underinsured home to ashes to find
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how a State Farm Homeowners Policy with Inflation Coverage can keep your hQme
insured for all it's worth.

Goessle-r 's Jewelry Store

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Candle Making Kits ..........•...................... .$4.99
Wood Ornament Kits Reg. $3.00................ $2.29

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·Di•mond Pendanh &amp;
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992-2709 _.

B•nds,

record ."
Haye s and the school's
The coach 's action came as a athletic dire cwr, Joseph H.
surprise. Marshall's new presi- McMuHen, said they would
dent, Robert B. Hayes, said he launch an immediate search
had written a letter welcom ing for a new coach.
Le ngyel back for tl1e 1975
Lengye l, a 39-year-&lt;~ld forseason and had it prepared for mer Air Force captain, arrived
mailing to the news media.
here in March, 1971. He was
Lengyel said he has no new given the job of rebuilding
job, and gave no indication of Marshall 's footba ll program . A
his p.lans.
jetliner crash near Tri-State
Airport in November , 1970,
claimed the lives of most of Ute
Thundering Herd 's football
players, 'coaches, staff and
several fans who were
returning from a game.
Before accepting the Marshall post, Lengyel held a
similar post at the College of
Wooster, where his rebuilding
prowess improved the Fighting
Scot.o; from a I.JI mark in 1956 w
Charles Wadd ell of North an 11-1 record and the Ohio
Ca rolina, tackles Dennis Har- Conference cha mpionship in
rah of Miami of Florida and 1970. Lengyel also has coached
Ku rt Schumacher of Oh io at the University of Akron ,
a nd
Cornell
State, guards Bill Bain of Heidelberg
Southern Cal and Ken Huff of University.
A former football player in
North Carolina, center Kyle
Davis of · Ok lahoma and his native Akron, he faced an
quarterback Dave Humm of uphill climb here over the past
Nebraska.
four years, and injurles to key
The defensive line consists of players often frustrated his
ends Mack Mitchell of Houston endeavors to establish winning
and Randy White of Maryland football on campus.
"The past four years have
and tackles Pete Cusick of Ohio
been
very cha llenging in many
State and Mike Fanning of
Notre Dame. Olosen in the ways and I will always a~
defensive backfield are line· preciate the opportunity of
backers Bob Bruening of having been a part of Ute
Arizona State, Ralph Ortega of progra m at Marshall, " he
Florida and Rod Shoate of wrote in his resignation letter .
Oklahoma, sa feties Dave
Brown of Michigan and Mike
Williams of Louisiana State
Murra y St 115 Ark . Coli . 91
and cornerbacks Neal Colzie of
Ro an oke 92 E . T enn . Sl. 85
La Tec h 83 E . K entucky 77
Ohio State and Robert Giblin of
W k~ F rest 100 App l a chn St 69
Houston .
Midwest
l n d 9.:1 Not re Dam e 84
Maryland's Steve MikeLoyola l it 101 Neb . W styn 66
Mayer is the placekicker and
SIU Cr bnd l e 87 M ich i gan 67
P urd ue 9.:1 W es t Virgin i a 83
Skip Boyd of Washington was
0 North ern 54 Blu lllon &lt;~0
named punter w round out the
D ef i ance 90 Earlham 64

Sporting News makes it

ment.
Groce said he wid team
members about the resignation
Monday and turned the
resignation letter in Tuesday to
chancellor Claude Babin.

Tacs, Tie BarS and
Key
Protectors ,
Speidel
Wa·tch

~ -511\Mlrplate

HOURS: MON. THRU FRI. 7 AM TIL 5 PM
' SATURDAY: 7 AM TIL 12:0o NO&lt;,N

923 S. 3rd Ave.

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PRINCESS

stgns h~1n g m g from dor mitorie s
and
stud ent
newsp!lper editorials urging
his departure followin g a 1-10
season had "littl e t.o do" with
his decision .
In his letter of resignation
l...€ngyel said, " the past seaso n
was disappo inting to all of us ,
and as head coach ,! ac cept the
full responsibility for the poor

GROCE RESIGNS
MONTICELLO, Ark. (UP!)
- Bill Groce, 44, head football
coach at the University of
Arkansas at Monticello for five .
years, r-esigned Tuesday.
Groce had a record of 11-39,
including a 3-7record Utis year.
He will remain at Ute school as
an assistant professor in the
physical edu~atlon depart,

NOW!
Delightful
To Give
Wonderful
To Get

HUNTINGTON, W. Va .
IUPJI ~ Jack Lengyel,
Marshall University's football
'~"~ 1ch the past four seasons,
res igned Wednesday "for the
good u£ the program ."
Lengyel, who came here in
1971 to rebuild Marshall's
football program following the
tragic ai rplane crash which
wiped out the entire team, sa id

Pin &amp; Ear Rings,
Piercltd Ear Rings,

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Wil son 20 t , Marl ene W il son 182 .
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D ec . 3, 1974
MORNING GLOR IES

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WEDNESDAY
E ARLY BIRO
D ec. 4, 1974
Sta nding s

IN ~EO 6-EAUTIFOL. CA5'fl.E'

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BAKER FURNITURE

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1 fE~~ YOU, n11NG5 WERE
HUMMI~G

OF' WAGONS ... )

for vi•wing by the witnesses
and no provisions for them w
examine the ballots in detail. "

TUESDAY TRIPLICATE
Dec . 3, U74
Sta nd ings
Team
Ro y a l Cr own Btl.
76 44
Ki n g B ui l d Supp l y
67 53
F r iendly T a v ern
65 SS
NY Cl o th . Hou se
57 6)
Roy a l Oak Par k
54 66
T ur n er 's Grocery
d1 79
Hi g h I n d . G am e
Pal
Ca r son 180, Ri la B uc k le y 160
Hi g h Serie s -- Pat Carton ,
Betty Smith .
Team
Hi g h
Gam e
F ri endl y Tav er r1 462
Team
H i gh
Seri e s
F r i en d ly Ta\l er n 1286 .

by P. Pasroret and D. Baur

r - -- - -- ---~----,"
SANTA MMJ~ ~~!ODS F'OR HIS
ES!'.IMO i=RIEND$ ~
HAD NSVER HEARD

Screw wonns cause worry

Gift Suggestions

wall mirr'Ois
add a·bit·of charm
to your home.

l:hc Fir.st [hristrna.s l:lius

DR. LAMB

to Indian post
WASHINGTON ( UP!) -Atwrney General William B.
Saxbe will be nominated as
ambassador to India, sources
said Wednesday.
Beth the State Department
and Saxbe declined to comment on the report.
Saxbe, in office almost a
year as the fourtlr attorney
general since June of 1972,
would replace Daniel Patrick
Moynihan in New Delhi.
Moynihan was understood to
be planning to resign soon to
resume teaching at Harvard
University after nearly two
years as ambassador.
Scripps-Howard newspapers
reported Tuesday that Saxbe
and President Ford met this
week to dlsct.sa Ute attorney
general's resignation, but it
was not known who initiated
Ute talk.
Saxbe, in Columbus, Ohio, to
attend Ute funeral of prominent
insurance man Fred Jones, a
long-t ime friend, said Utere
may be an official announcement "possibly later in Ute
week" but also added, uor
Utere might be nothing."
"The only tiling Utat I can
say, I am not privileged to
make any statement," Saxbe
said, "but Utat I did have a
meeting wiUt President Ford
on Monday at some lengUt and
we discussed some things but
Utere are a number of element.o;
involved and Utere Is noUting

.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,.Thursda y, Dec. 12, 1974

...
_.

I

&lt;;

••

�": Clark gets his

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, I:lec. 12, 1974

Rhodes, Brown disagree
on recount procedures
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov .•
elect James A. Rhodes and
Ohio Attorney General William
J . Brown strongly disagreed
Wednesday on the correct
procedure wbe followed in the
recount of ballot.o; from Ute
November gubernawrial election .
Brown said witnesses at the
recount, requested by Gov.
John J. Gilligan, could view
each of the more Ulan 3 million
votes ta bu lated, incl udin g
votes tabulated by computer.
Rhodes atwrney John McElroy said, however, the re was
no authority under Ohio law for
appOinting witnesses.
McElroy, in a hand delivered
letter to Ohio Secretary. of
State Ted W. Brown, said each
ca ndidate involved "may
attend and witness Ute recount
and may have an atwrney at
law whom he designates as his
legal counsel to attend and

witness the recoWlt" but not
just anybody cou ld be a witness.
James R. Marsh, assistant
secretary of state, said the
op inion by Attorney General
Brown has 11 generated new
confusion" over the recoWlt
and added that "Ute timing was
atrocious," noting that it came
on the day Ute recount was w
begin.
''This recoWlt is not being
conducted for the benefit of
witnesses," said Marsh. "If the
attorney general's opinon were
literally followed, it would
mean manual handling of each
ballot card, and the boards of
election do not have the perw nnel to do t his without
co nsiderable delay in the
reco WJt ."
The opinion was requested
by Buller County Prosecuwr
John F . Holcomb . Former Gov.
Rhodes defeated Gilligan by

more than 11,000 voles in lhe
Nov. 5 election.
The alwrney general, in his
opinion, said :
- That witnesses have the
right to see each ballot, including those counted by
tabulatin g equipment.
- If less than three out of the
four judges do not agree on how
a ballot should be coun~ed, that
ballot was to be set asid ~ for
later determination .
- Witnesses may suggest to
the judges that a ballot be
challenged.
Marsh said his office was
advisingall88 county boards of
election w follow the secretary
of state's directive if there was
a variance between that and
Ute attorney general's opinion.
All w the right to challenge a
vote, Marsh said, " We don't
have any quarrel with Utat, but
if Utey're going w challenge
every ballot, this constitutes a
delay, and the election official
could ask the witness w be
quiet or leave."
He said witnesses had a
" right to see what's going on
but that Utere is nothing that
requires election officials w
especially prepare the ballots

Saxhe packing
up for move

The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
I NTER EST OF
ME lGS-MASON AREA
_ C HESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Pub l i shed d a i ly
except
Salurday by T h e Ohio Valley
PubliShing Comp any,
111
Cour l St . , ·Pomeroy , O hio
45769 Business Office Ph one
992 2156 . Edi torial Phone 992
2157
Se cond c lass pos tage pai d at
Pom eroy, Oh io .
Nat i ona l
advertis i ng
repr es enlative
Bott i nel li ·
Gallagher , I nc ., 12 East 42nd
St .. N ew York . New Yo r k. .
S ~bscrip ti on
rates .
Deltye red by carrier whe r e
ava ilabl e 60 c enls per week. ;
By Motor Route where carrier
se r vi ce not available . One
mon t h , $2 .60 . By mai l i n Ohio
and W . Va ., One Year, $18 ; Six
mon ths , $9 .50 ; Three months,
,$b . E ls ewhere $'2 2. 00 year ; s i x
mon th s $11 .50, t h ree months,
S6 .50. Subscr i pt ion p ri ce in ·
Su nd ay
Tim es
e lu de s
Sen t 1ne·._:__
1.
_ __
___.J

settled and I am not at Uberty
wmake any disclosures. It will
have to come out of Ute White
House.
"The president Utought that
we might have some decison by
the last of Utls week," said
Saxbe . "It Is Wednesday so I
would guess by Friday or
Saturday, but it could be
·completely noUting to report

even then."
The outspoken Saxbe, ap.
pointed attorney general by
former President Nixon to
replace Elliot Richardson after
the
" Saturday
Night
Massacre" of October, 1973,
previously was a Republican
senator from Ohio.
He was a conservative on
most domestic issues, . but
occasionally broke ranks with
Ute Nixon administration.
He once said Nixon was "out
of his mind" for Ute Christmas
bombing of NorUt Vietiuun and
also called former top Nixon
aides H.R. Haldeman and John
Ehrllchman "a couple of
Nazis."
He once said the Nixon administration was "one of the
most inept" in history.
His penchant for candor
continued after his appointment as attorney general
and got him in trouble at a
seri"' of informal sessions with
reporters earlier this year.
When Patty Hearst was
believed to be a kidnap victim,
Saxbe outraged her parents by
saying Ute FBI would "go get
her" once she was located and
later that she was a "common
criminal.''
He also upset Ute Jewish
community by saying that
during the McCarthy era
Jewish Intellectuals were
"very enamored of the Com·
munlst party."
Saxbe loves traveling -&lt;Je
openly admits to having taken
"every free trip I could get" as
a senator -and apparently
became interested in India
after a 1973 trip.
In 1971, Saxbe spoke on
behalf of Ute Bangladesh independence movement and
cosponsored a resolution
cutting off aid to Pakistan, a
move he said was his greatest
accomplishment in the Senate.

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
recently read in the San An·
tonio News an article that
frightened me half to death. It
was about screw worms in
Texas. The aoticle staled screw
worms affected people as well
as animals. It stated there
wer.e 8,900 cases treated in
Texas last year and 75 per cent
of these were in South Texas
anq the San Antonio area .
We plan to re tire and make
our home in San Antonio so you
can understand why I might be
somewhat concerned with his
problem. •
I am especially interested
in knowing who and how screw
worms attack. What is the
incidence and what area seems
w be most alfected? How can
Utey be recognized and controlled ' How can we protect
ourselves fr om contact with
Utem ? If they should atlack a
person what is the percentage
of fatality?
We have two children and
since our possible reUrement
sites are limitless, I wouldn't
want to make any move that

EARLY S UNDAY MIXED
Decemb e r 8, 1914
Won Lost
Tom'S Carry O ut
88
40
Eagles C lub
78
50
Pu ll ins E·~ c avating
76
52
Friend l y Tavern
54
7.:1
Mayer 8. Hill Barbers
.:16
82
Swi sher &amp; L o h se Ph arm .
42
84
'
H igh lnd
Game Larr y
Dugan 214, Belty Smi lh 21 5 ;
Jeff Wilson 21 1, Marlen e
W il son 207 .
H igh Seri~s - Larr y Duga n
556 .. Jr
Phelps 529 ; Belly
Sm1 th 576, Marlene Wilson 573 .
Team H igh Game - Pullins
Ex c avatino 716 .
T eam H igh Ser ies - Pullin s
t:xcaval ing 2057 .
·

Because regu lar quar·
terback Ken Anderson is hurt
•
Clark will start at Pittsburgh
against the Stcelers. '
Just as he did with the San
Diego Olargers for several
seasons, Clark has spent most
of his first season here sitting
on the bench.
. However, the 27-year-old
fourUt year pro played most of
Ute second half last Sunday
against Detroit after Anderson
suffered an injured back and
was finished for the season.
Although several of Clark's
passeS were way short, he did
guide Ute Bengals to a touchdown, even though Detroit
• wiped it out with a score in Ute
closing seconds w win 23--19.
Only Caller Available
Because third-string
· quarterback Mike Ernst was
kicked off the team a few
weeks ago a fter being arrested
':;" on a narcotics charge, Clark is
• Ute ooly signal caller ava ilable
•· for Saturday.
Should Clark get hurt, Coach
' Paul Brown says he will move
...
:': Ken Riley from the defensive
backfield and let him try to
':' guide Ute offense. Riley last
w played quarterback seven
m years ago in college at Florida

Archie the greatest says his coa.ch
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ohio Hayes who appeared, along he had not even considered his
State football coach Woody wiUt Griffin, on NBC's Today chances in professional foQt·
Hayes said today that Heisman show. HHe accepts, listens and ball when he graduates.
Trophy winner Archie Griffin has the best attitudes of any
" I've been putting it out of
was Ute best player he has ever fooball player I've ever had." my mind," said Griffin.
coached.
Hayes said he always tries w
"Arch drives as if every pla y be fair wiUt his players.
were a touchdown , " said
"I don't care if the players
DEER SLAIN
disllke me. I want Ut em to
A deer was killed Wednesday
respect me, you never make a
at
12; 00 p. m. on US 33 when it
New York City 's first street- tackle wiUt a smile on your
ran
into the path of a car driven
cars rumbled into serv ice in face, " said Hayes .
by
Mary
J. Barnhart, Chester.
!832. The horse-dr awn cars
Griffin said he was "not
resembling stagecoaches ran shooting for the Reisman The Meigs County Sheriff's
on granite-supported rails along trophy next year, just looking Department said there were no
Fourth Avenue between Prince w get better."
per sonal injuries and only
and 14Ut streets.
The junior tailback also said moderate damage to the car .

: A&amp;M.

... TO CHERISH
CHRISTMAS AFTER CHRISTMAS

As far as Ute playoffs go, Ute
:: Bengals-Steelers clash is mea~ ningless. Pittsburgh, 9·3-1,
" clinched Ute American Con•" ference's Central Division title
;: last weekeild and Cincinnati, 7.. 6, was eliminated from a
• playoff spot.
:::; However, Brown says the
• game is "important" for other
•• reasons.
:
"This is a very important
:. week for this football team ,"
~ he said. "This is the week we 'll

::

For

may endanger their lives· in
any way.
DEAR READER - Relax!
That article was about the
inciden ce
in
a nim a ls
and
peo ple .
f
talked to the County Health
Department · in San Antonio,
and they confirmed my impression that human infestation was quite rare, including in San Antonio. About
Utree years ago there were 10
cases in humans. There was
also one death near San Antonio. The rest of the problems
were in animals, not humans.
Screw worms are the larvae
from Ute screw worm fly. The
fly lays its eggs in a cut or
injured area. The eggs hatch
and produce larvae. Being
raised on the farm, I treated
several cases In farm animals
when f was a boy. If detected
and treated early the animal
doesn ' t have an? problems.
The cattle on a large ranch or
animals not under C'lose
supervision are not so lucky.
Humans get screw worms
Ute same way. Most of Ute 10
cases were in children wiUt
scalp problems from lack of

hygiene. The scratched area
provided a place for the fly to
lay a few eggs. In better circumstances human infections
do not occur.
r have seen only two cases
and both were in Kansas, not
Texas. In both Instances Ute
vicUms were inclined to drink
excessively and would be lying
outdoors in a stu)l(ir. While in
this state the flies entered Ute
nose· and left their eggs.
So, unless you are going to be
lying aroWJd somewhere unconscious for some reason,
such as from too much alcohol,
I think you need not fear any
problems at all from screw
worms.
The screw worm problem
concerns farnQers and ran.
chers, and there are national
programs for fly control w
protect livestock. That is why it
is of public interest, not
because it is a significant
health problem for people.
San Antonio Is a lovely town
and entirely safe healthwise . If
Ute screw worm problem is all
that alarms you Uten you have
nothing to worry about.

.

Bulova

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HOLIDAY

~

I"EW YORK (UP!) - L'uriosily not only killed the cal, it keeps
killing a lot of people also , particularly when for the very life nf
them, they simply can 1 t ferret out the reason for the most lopsided deal in the past two months.
. Why' Why ' Why ? Why in the world did the San Francisco
Giants ever give up Bobby Bonds to the New York Yankees for
Bobby Murcer' Nobody ca n figure it out. Everybody agrees the
Giants gave up far more than they got back. Everybody a lso
suspects the Giants got money in the deal, but the fact is they
didn't .
The deal was a straight player one, Bonds for Mureer, as
orig inally annoWJced. Here's what wasn't announced though.
Shortly after the season was over, Bcbby Bonds, who lives in
that area, visited the Giants' offices at Candlestick Park in San
Francisco . Owner Horace SUienham was in a nd the two talked
aw hile about some of Ute things which occurred this past season.
Pretty soon their conversation look on the wne of a
preliminary contracl talk. A disagreement arose between
Horace Stoneham and Bobby Bonds, and the next thing you know
they were raising their voices. Both men got hot. They grew
increasingly emotional, and the more they did, Ute louder they
became.
They never reached agreement, and eventually Bonds got
up to leave. He had spoken his mind, and Stoneham had spoken
his. When the Giants' owner finally emerged !rom his office, he
was still btJning.
"He's fini shed," Stoneham sa id . "He'll never play another
game for me.''
Horace Stoneham calls a ll the shots for Ute Giant.o;. What he
says goes. At times he can be and has been, the mosl wann, the
most considerate, the most generous club owner in the entire
game. He also can be hard, unbending and abrasive.
After Bonds left his office that day, Swneham, who had feelers
for Bonds during the World Series, now went about seeing what
he could get for his fleet, 27-year-&lt;Jld super slugger in earnest.
Several clubs carne up with offers. The Yankees offered Murcer
even up. Swneham said he'd think it over.
He told some of his front office people he liked the idea of
Murcer for Bonds. They wid him they didn't like the idea, but he
said he intended to make the dea l anyway . They pleaded with
him wthink it over some more. His mind was made up , though,
and he got on the phone with Ute Yankees and wid them it was a
deal.
Those who might be tempted to criticize Stoneham for parting
wiUt Bonds precipiwusly should also know that during their
disagreement, Bonds told Stoneham he'd never play for Ute
Giant.o; anymore. He was giving Swneham an ultimatum, and no
owner lakes that from a ballplayer. Why should he ? After all, Ute
ballplayer is working for the owner, not the other way around.
The Giant.o; were the ones who initiated Ute deal with the
Yankees for Bonds. Originally, the Giants asked lor Murcer and
pitcher Doc Medich for Bonds, pitcher Tom Bradley and a third
player. The Yanks wouldn't go for that.
Then they came up with Murcer for Bonds. They mealioned it
wa Giants' official, who relayed it to Swneham, and the deal was
made.
Everybody now is going around saying Bcbby Bends will tear
up the American League, which he probably will. Think of it this
way, though: What if Bobby Murcer has an even better year for
the Giant.o;' What if he has such a good year, he winds up MVP'
Maybe that isn't likely , but it could happen .
What do you think Horace Stoneham would say then' l think
he'd merely smile and not say anything.

MTS COINS

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Everette Connally is
visiting her daughter m
Marietta, 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
and son, Rocky, were Thanksgiving Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Bass and
daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner
were Thanksgiving Day guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt ·
Fergerson at Pl. Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Schindler
and daughter Dawn of
Amherst, 0 ., were weekend·
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner and Mrs. Ada Norris
Thanksgiving.
Mr. ana Mrs. wayne
McLaughlin and children of
Columbus, Mrs. Nina Wagoer
were Thanksgiving guest.o; of

_________

......

Sat. 1:30-8:00

~~t~~~:~~E~:~~M.~N

Apple Grove News, Events

Little As '5.00

Guaranteed accurate to

1!!!111

"'

Gift Ideas From As

H

Within a minute a month . •

'Wt will adjuat to tl'lls precise'"'"
If nectsU!)'. Quirentee 11

:n7s
who
"It will give us a chance to
study people and appra ise
them as real pros and see how
wugh they hang in there. "
Players No Use
Because of injuries, Brown
says II players from the 47man roster are of "no use " w
the Bengals against P it tsburgh. The 11 are Anderson,
Essex Johnson, Boobie Cla rk,
Lenvil Elliott, Vern Holland,
Bcb Joh nson, Sherman White,
Jim Leclair, Bernard Jackson,
Ken Sawyer a nd Lemar
Parrish.
The injuries co ntinue lo
leave Cincin na ti's rushing
statistics unbelievably low .
Going inw the final game the
club's leading ground -gainer,
Elliott, has 345 yards. Second is
Anderson with 314 ya rds and
third is Clark with 312. None of
the trio will play Sa turday .
Cincy last year had two
rushers -Johnson and Clark right at 1,000-yards.
For 66-year-old Brown, in his
40th season of coaching the
injuries have wrecked what
looked like a bright season .
In his office one day this
week Brown mused, ''It's just
Utal this season has been so ... "
He let the sentence trail off.
Someone offered "dis·
couraging?''
"No," he said. " I'm nol sure
that's the right word . It's just
that when a team is as
decimated as we are you ge t
frustrated."
Brown also was ''frustrated''
over a local newspaper headline recently implying he had
considered retiring .
" I haven't committed myself
on the futw-e," he said. "I
make these decisions as lime
goes by . I won 't give it much
Utoughl until I'm well rested
and away from the rigors of
this season.'l

~

IN
BEAUTIFUL

OF GALLIPOLIS

121 State St.

PH. 446-1842

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Adams.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Archie Jarrell
and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Findley and Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush, Louie ' Pickett,
Edward and Mary Findley,
spe nt Thanksgiving with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Michael and
children.
Mrs . Eileen Buck, Mr. ana
Mrs. Pete Shields, Mr. and
Mrs. Pal Greene of Atbens,
Mrs. Marlene Fisher and
children, Molly, Larry and
Amy , were Thanksgiving
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Doo Beegle and children at
Racine .
Early Roush returned home
Sunday night after being on a
Grange
tour
through
Ca lifornia, Arizona, Texas and

SELECTION.
OiOOSE

SAVE MONEY
SAVE HEAT

,,·1'.,

YOUR HOME
BEFORE COLD
WEATHER
" ,

Ladies '

.

ST . LOUIS (UP!) - Running
backs Archie Griffin of Ohio
State and Joe Washington of
Oklahoma, the only two juniors
on the squad, highlighted Ute
offensive backfield chosen for
The Sporting News' 1974 All·
America team.
Griffin was named college

football Player of the Year
Tuesday by the sports weekly
and
Maryland 's
Jerry
Claiborne was picked as Coach
of Ute Year.
Also on the offensive $Quad
a re wide receivers Larry
Burwn of Purdue and Emmett
Edwards of Kansas. tight end

Balanced attack
aids Zip cause
By Uolted Press International
Bcb Marlin pumped in 22
Akron enjoys a 2-1 record points at home to lead Ute
today, Utanks largely w three Defiance Yellow Jackets to an
Zips who scored more than 20 easy 90-&amp;4 Hoosier Buckeye
points each Wednesday night. Conference vicwry over EarlNate Barnett tallied· 25 point.o; ham.
Bernard Pope added 16
and teammates Jim Abrams
and Casimer Moss added 21 markers for the Yellow Jackapiece in pacing Akron to an a.- ets, 3-1 overall this season and
75 vktory at Western Dlinois. 3-0 in the confe rence.
AI Donhoff dumped in 21
Western led, 47-43, at half·
lime, but the Zips went ahead points to lead Ohio Northern to
to stay on a 15-foot jumper by 54-40 come-from-behind vicAbrams with just under nine wry over Bluffwn .
minutes left to play.
Junior guard Jim Schmitt
Western, which was led in pumped in 29 points and Gluck
scoring by Bobby Dye wiUt 22 Galloway garnered 18 to lead
points, committed 28 turnovers West Liberty (W. Va.) past
in Ute ragged game. Akron had Ashland, 95.01.
22 turnovers.
In other games involving
·western is now 1·1.
Ohio teams Wednesday evening, Miami downed Ball State,
Mus~ingum College, led by
guards Larry Harrison and 65-54, Malone dumped Tiffin,
Tim Gebhardt, easily drove 9U9, a nd Ohio Dominican
past Washington &amp; Jefferson defeated Wilberforce, 73-70.
Only three games are on lap
(Pa.), 65-57, at home Wednesday ' night ln a non· lor slate squads l•mlght. Mount
Union is a l Eckerd (Fla .),
conference game .
Harrison led all scorers with Otterbein hosts Urbana and
20 point.o;, and Gebherdt con- Wooster visits Hiram.
tributed 18 for · Ute Muskies,
now 2-2 for the season.
Ed Tomko with 12 point.o; and
Tim Nard with 11 were the only
W &amp; J players in double
figures. The
Presidents
dropped w l-2 for Ute season.
Guard Jim Rippe hit oo 10 of
12 shots from the field for 22
points to lead Xavier to 10li-49
victory over Union College
(Ky.) .
xavier, which hit on 59 per
cent of Its field goals, led at
halftime, 43-24. The point wtal
lor the Cincinnati team was Ute
highest since the 1970-71
season. Xavier had six players
in double figures.

Middleport, Ohio

'

tall•~ pair

Pearl

Clocks,
· and

Co ll ege Basketb a ll Re sults
By Unit ed Pre ss Int er nationa l
Ea sl
Wr cst r Pol y 79 Bowdn 78
F QU R t hr l d 77 l ana 61
K ing s Pt 85 Qu een s Coil. 75
L a Sa l l e 71 L a f aye tt e 58
Le h man 82 Ston y B r oo k 76
Bo sl on Col i 88 R I U 67
Tr i nit y 04 A mhers t 62
El i zl o wn 77 Leh ig h 62
E Slrd sbg 80 Chey n e y 77
Br own 9'1 Y .Jie 66
Al brig h l 74 Ssqueh n n a 69
Pace 71 Pr a tt 1\4
Pt. Pa rk 8 1 St . Fr an P a. 59
Genev a 87 St. Vince nt 81
Sli ppr y Rc k 92 I nd . .P a . 80
L eb V alley 95 Swarthm ore 7B
De l Valle y 7V U rs in us 78
Verm ont 70 N o r w i ch 47
Sou1h
Am IJ . '16Loya\B (Md . ) S2

N avy 77 George Mason 56
So Car 89 St. Jos . Pa . 54
Vi r gin i a 73 Wm &amp; Mary 51
va Union lOS Sh aw 81

M sk ingm 85 Wa sh .&amp; Jeff 57
111. W slvn 71 V a l pri so 59
Aq sl na Ill. 97 M il lik in 7 1
Ak ron 84 W es t ern Il l. 75
Rock fo rd 7'J A ur ora 67
Wi s .. Prk sd c 66 No . 111. 65
Mi ami 0 . 65 B a l l St 54
Gosh en 78 G ra ce 66
B ul ler 79 Il l inoi s St 78
F r an k l in 92 Ind . Cent 83
Oa kln d M ic h 83 Chi Crc le 75
Southwest
Tex A rl 80 H r dn Smmn s 64
West
Boi se St 96 Gre a l F al l s 89
Ore St 76 Po r tland St 70
Wash . Sl. 83 De pa u l 69
Xavi e r lOS Union , Ky . 49
Wes t l i b erl y, W . V a 95 As h l and
61
Mu skingum 85 W &amp;J (Pa .) 57
Ohio Nor thern 54 B l ufft on 40
W es tmin s t er IPa .l 84 Oh io
Wesl eyan 65
D efia n c e 9tl Earlham , Ind . 6 4
M \aml 65 Ball S, e,e Sl\
Akron 84 W est("rn Illinoi s 75
Malon e 93 T i ff in 09
Ohio Domin i c an 73 Wilberfor c e

10

MOORE'S

Your Christmas Gift Headquarters

OPEN NITES TIL 8

other places of interest.
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Roush
spent Friday evening wiUt Mr.
ani' Mrs. Ott Boswn at Racine.
Mrs. Boswn was admitted w
Veterans Memoriill Hospital
Mooday as a medical patient.

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Middleport, 0.
I'll . 992-7155

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992-2709 _.

B•nds,

record ."
Haye s and the school's
The coach 's action came as a athletic dire cwr, Joseph H.
surprise. Marshall's new presi- McMuHen, said they would
dent, Robert B. Hayes, said he launch an immediate search
had written a letter welcom ing for a new coach.
Le ngyel back for tl1e 1975
Lengye l, a 39-year-&lt;~ld forseason and had it prepared for mer Air Force captain, arrived
mailing to the news media.
here in March, 1971. He was
Lengyel said he has no new given the job of rebuilding
job, and gave no indication of Marshall 's footba ll program . A
his p.lans.
jetliner crash near Tri-State
Airport in November , 1970,
claimed the lives of most of Ute
Thundering Herd 's football
players, 'coaches, staff and
several fans who were
returning from a game.
Before accepting the Marshall post, Lengyel held a
similar post at the College of
Wooster, where his rebuilding
prowess improved the Fighting
Scot.o; from a I.JI mark in 1956 w
Charles Wadd ell of North an 11-1 record and the Ohio
Ca rolina, tackles Dennis Har- Conference cha mpionship in
rah of Miami of Florida and 1970. Lengyel also has coached
Ku rt Schumacher of Oh io at the University of Akron ,
a nd
Cornell
State, guards Bill Bain of Heidelberg
Southern Cal and Ken Huff of University.
A former football player in
North Carolina, center Kyle
Davis of · Ok lahoma and his native Akron, he faced an
quarterback Dave Humm of uphill climb here over the past
Nebraska.
four years, and injurles to key
The defensive line consists of players often frustrated his
ends Mack Mitchell of Houston endeavors to establish winning
and Randy White of Maryland football on campus.
"The past four years have
and tackles Pete Cusick of Ohio
been
very cha llenging in many
State and Mike Fanning of
Notre Dame. Olosen in the ways and I will always a~
defensive backfield are line· preciate the opportunity of
backers Bob Bruening of having been a part of Ute
Arizona State, Ralph Ortega of progra m at Marshall, " he
Florida and Rod Shoate of wrote in his resignation letter .
Oklahoma, sa feties Dave
Brown of Michigan and Mike
Williams of Louisiana State
Murra y St 115 Ark . Coli . 91
and cornerbacks Neal Colzie of
Ro an oke 92 E . T enn . Sl. 85
La Tec h 83 E . K entucky 77
Ohio State and Robert Giblin of
W k~ F rest 100 App l a chn St 69
Houston .
Midwest
l n d 9.:1 Not re Dam e 84
Maryland's Steve MikeLoyola l it 101 Neb . W styn 66
Mayer is the placekicker and
SIU Cr bnd l e 87 M ich i gan 67
P urd ue 9.:1 W es t Virgin i a 83
Skip Boyd of Washington was
0 North ern 54 Blu lllon &lt;~0
named punter w round out the
D ef i ance 90 Earlham 64

Sporting News makes it

ment.
Groce said he wid team
members about the resignation
Monday and turned the
resignation letter in Tuesday to
chancellor Claude Babin.

Tacs, Tie BarS and
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Speidel
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stgns h~1n g m g from dor mitorie s
and
stud ent
newsp!lper editorials urging
his departure followin g a 1-10
season had "littl e t.o do" with
his decision .
In his letter of resignation
l...€ngyel said, " the past seaso n
was disappo inting to all of us ,
and as head coach ,! ac cept the
full responsibility for the poor

GROCE RESIGNS
MONTICELLO, Ark. (UP!)
- Bill Groce, 44, head football
coach at the University of
Arkansas at Monticello for five .
years, r-esigned Tuesday.
Groce had a record of 11-39,
including a 3-7record Utis year.
He will remain at Ute school as
an assistant professor in the
physical edu~atlon depart,

NOW!
Delightful
To Give
Wonderful
To Get

HUNTINGTON, W. Va .
IUPJI ~ Jack Lengyel,
Marshall University's football
'~"~ 1ch the past four seasons,
res igned Wednesday "for the
good u£ the program ."
Lengyel, who came here in
1971 to rebuild Marshall's
football program following the
tragic ai rplane crash which
wiped out the entire team, sa id

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WEDNESDAY
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Sta nding s

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for vi•wing by the witnesses
and no provisions for them w
examine the ballots in detail. "

TUESDAY TRIPLICATE
Dec . 3, U74
Sta nd ings
Team
Ro y a l Cr own Btl.
76 44
Ki n g B ui l d Supp l y
67 53
F r iendly T a v ern
65 SS
NY Cl o th . Hou se
57 6)
Roy a l Oak Par k
54 66
T ur n er 's Grocery
d1 79
Hi g h I n d . G am e
Pal
Ca r son 180, Ri la B uc k le y 160
Hi g h Serie s -- Pat Carton ,
Betty Smith .
Team
Hi g h
Gam e
F ri endl y Tav er r1 462
Team
H i gh
Seri e s
F r i en d ly Ta\l er n 1286 .

by P. Pasroret and D. Baur

r - -- - -- ---~----,"
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DR. LAMB

to Indian post
WASHINGTON ( UP!) -Atwrney General William B.
Saxbe will be nominated as
ambassador to India, sources
said Wednesday.
Beth the State Department
and Saxbe declined to comment on the report.
Saxbe, in office almost a
year as the fourtlr attorney
general since June of 1972,
would replace Daniel Patrick
Moynihan in New Delhi.
Moynihan was understood to
be planning to resign soon to
resume teaching at Harvard
University after nearly two
years as ambassador.
Scripps-Howard newspapers
reported Tuesday that Saxbe
and President Ford met this
week to dlsct.sa Ute attorney
general's resignation, but it
was not known who initiated
Ute talk.
Saxbe, in Columbus, Ohio, to
attend Ute funeral of prominent
insurance man Fred Jones, a
long-t ime friend, said Utere
may be an official announcement "possibly later in Ute
week" but also added, uor
Utere might be nothing."
"The only tiling Utat I can
say, I am not privileged to
make any statement," Saxbe
said, "but Utat I did have a
meeting wiUt President Ford
on Monday at some lengUt and
we discussed some things but
Utere are a number of element.o;
involved and Utere Is noUting

.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,.Thursda y, Dec. 12, 1974

...
_.

I

&lt;;

••

�4- The Daily Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday,

!Je&lt;;. 12,1974
\
5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursda y, Dec. 12, 1974

Raiders dominate AFC All-Star team
NEW YORK (UP! I - TI1e
Oakla nd Raiders , who have put
wgelher the best record in the
National Football Lea gue
entering the final game of the
season, placed seven players
on the 1974 United Press International American Conference All Star team.
The Raider contingent is led
by quarterback Ken Stabler,
whose 24 touchdown passes is
by far lops in the league, and
wide receiver Cliff Bbranch,
his favorite target, who pulled
in 10 TO passes. The 11-2
Raiders also had tackle Art
Shell named w the offense and
tackle Otis Sistrun k, linebaker
Phil ViUapiano, safely Jack
Tatum and punter Ray Guy
·chosen on the defensive unit.
Guy, who led the AFC in
punting with better than 41
yards a kick, was the leadin g
vote-getter in the balloting,
being named on 34 of the 39
ballots cast by a na tionwid e
:panel of sports writer, th ree
"from each AFC city.
The Buffalo Bills, who will
·make their first playoff ap-

peara nl:e in 10 years this
season , and the Pittsburgh
Steelers, in fo r the third

straight season after missin g

out for 40 years, e a~.:h lwd four

the past two seasons, had only
players named. The World three players named. The Bills
Champ ion Miami Dolp hins, and Steelers face each other in
who dom inated the ball oting openin g round playoff action

and the Dolphins take on the
Raiders.
LeP.ding the Bills named is
runniag back O.J. Simpson,

Maryland's
ite UPI
lineman of the year

The
Footwear

The Dolphins had guard
Larry Little and center Jim
Langer named to the offensi~e
unit and end Bill Stanfill to the
defense.
Riley Odoms of Denver was
the runaway choice at tight end
and Isaac Curtis, Cincinnati's
long-range threat,
joins

tea m .
The selection or Tatum and
Greene ends a stanglehold by
Miami safeties Dick Anderson
and J ake Scott. Both were
na med to the second team.
Pittsburgh had only kicker
Roy Gerela named to the offensive unit but had three
members of its defense chosen.
Tackle J oe Greene and linebacker Jack Ham drew the
highest nwnber of votes among
defensive players, 27, and end
L.C. Greenwood makes his
first apPearance on the team.

BRUSSEI.S ( UPI 1 _ Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissmger conferred with Western
European
foreign
ministers today to brief them
on Soviet-American detente
and review the impac t of the
world economic crisis.
Kissinger met with French
Foreign Minister Jean Sauvagnargues in the morning and
then the two diplomats joined
offici~ls from North Atlantic
Treaty Organization countries ,
in two days or talks.
T::ie secretary of state said he
conferred with Sauvagnargues
about Friday's summit talks in
Martinique between President
Ford and French President
Valery Giscard d'Estaing.
"We had a good review, and

Branch at wide receiver .
Winston Hill of the Jets
repeated at tackle. Middle
linebacker Willie Lanier a nd
cornerback Emmitt Thomas,
both of Ka nsas City, complete
the defensive unit.

NEW YORK 1UPI I - Randy nation. White received 58 votes
White of Maryland , a to
eas il y
outdistance
musc)l!ar, 6-foot-4, 248-pounder linebacker Rod Shoate of
whom manv consider the best .Oklahoma , who polled 26.
interior lin~man .eve r to play
Others receiving votes were
collegiate footba ll, today was guard J ohn Roush of Oknamed Lineman or the Year by lahoma, middle guard Rubin
the United Press International.
Carter of Miami (Fla .), middle
The senior defensive tackle, guard Dewey Selmon of Okwinner of the Outland Trophy lahom a, defensive tac kle
as the nation 's top lineman,
Lucius Selmon of Oklahoma,
was a n easy winner in lhe
defensive tackle Pete Cusick of
balloting conducted of 120 Ohio Sta te, wide receiver Pete
s ports writers a nd s port- Demmerle of Notre Dame and
scasters f r om ac ross the wide receiver Pat Mclnally of

Harva rd.
ed with as an interior lineman,
There have been few linemen offensively or defensively ,"
in college history who combine says his coach, Jerry Claiborthe speed a nd strength or ne. " He 's as big as most of
White. He ca n run the 40 in 4.65 them, he's faster than all of
and bench press 4~0 pounds, them, and he 's stronger than
and this incredible com- all of them . He's also the type
bination makes him the choice of person who had decided all
or ma~y pro scouts to be the he wants to do is prepare
first player chosen in next himself for a pro football
month's college draft.
career."
Even though the opposition
White bas spent three years
most of the time decided to run getting ready . When he first
the opposite way from White, mel Claiborne just before
he still was credited with 147 spring practice entering his
tackles and led the team in sophomore year, he was a
quarterback sacks ( 12) and fullback who weighed only 212,
minus yardage.
could do no better than a 4.9 40"If I had to put it in flat-&lt;&gt;ut yard dash and could barely
terms, he's the best football press 22il pounds.
player l've ever been associat"I thought about using him
as a back," Claiborne recalls,
" but I didn't think he had the
natural running action. We sat
down and talked, and we talked
his players feel. "Frankly , I
about what he had to do to be a
don't give a damn what other the beginning or the season, he football player. He has made
people think-&lt;Jiurnni or wri- suffered a heart attack, but himself what he is because he
ters. The people that fir e hasn't let it get him down .
wanted to be a great football
coaches are players."
"I've worked harder this player. He wanted to be an AllTo his players, he says, " I'm year than I ever have, " Hayes America. "
honest and straightforward. I says. 11 l'm not worried about
White managed to build
believe in positive reinfor- another heart attack. I knew I himself up to his current size
cement, like that fellow Skin- could do it. I'll either work and through a calculated weight
ner. I get out of a man just coach qr get out. It's still fun . I program instituted by Claiborwhat I expect from him . He love to win. I die when I lose." ne . Football has become his
gets better what he puts into it
On the field, Hayes' biggest life's work, and he works at it
for the team. That 's what the advance offensively has been with zeal.
country needs today ."
due to tailback Archie Griffin.
"I haven't got time for
But Hayes can be nice on the Griffin , who received the anything else but football,"
field to his players-;Jnder the Heisman Trophy as the White says. "I love it more
right circwnslances.
nation's outstanding college than anything else in life. I like
"You have to rebuild confi- football player, has rushed for everything about it, the hitting,
dence in the players after a better than 100 yards in 22 the competition. You know, it's
defeat. That 's the only time straight games and given that fun. It's what I want to do."
I'm a nice man on the field . If position more importance in
What does the opposition
you can laugh off a loss you'll the Buckeyes' "button.flhoe" have to say about White?
~lay badly. I raise hell when
offense. But even Hayes says
"He is the greatest lineman
we're going good. That's when that when it comes to scoring rve ever seen/' says Syracuse
we need it."
inside the H)-yard line it will be coach Frank Maloney. "4Jld
Hayes is strict with himself the fullback who will carry the that includes Alan Page and all
as well as his players. Before ball -not Griffin.
the rest."

:Woody worried about too
:much California kindness
· NEW YORK ( UP!)
:O,uege football is reknowned
Ja r its innovative play,
'\!Specially in the area or of:fense . But Ohio State Coach
:Woody Hayes is not known for
'his liberal thinking either on:or off- the field.
. Hayes , 61, whose learns have
.been known as the prime
&lt;!Xample Of the " three yards
and a cloud of dust" philosop hy, is not exactly your bastion
&lt;1f liberal thinking in his perSonal beliefs, either .
His Buckeyes are going out
to Pasadena to meet Southern
Cal in the 197~ Rose Bowl game
·a nd one of Hayes' biggest
worries, although he tries to
disguise it as a joke, is the
."kindness" the Tournament of
Roses Association will show his
learn.
"We're going to give up two
touchdowns by going out ther"
{or two weeks," Hayes says.
:"They'll kill us with kindness."
· Just this quote, taken alone,
might easily be taken for a
quip, but not when followed up
\vith the following:
"That's the trouble with
society today-we're too soft.

slowed b)l injuries t his season
but still able to go over the
1,000-yard mark . Reggie
McKenzie was named at one of
the guards, Robert Jam es
repeated at cornerback and
Tony Greene, the Bills' defensive sparkplug before being
injured a week ago, wa s
selected at free safely.
Joining Simpson in the ba.ckfield is Otis Armstrong of
Denver, the NFL's leading
rusher with 1,265 yards entering his final game. It is
Armstrong 's debut on the

Detente, economic ills
reviewed by Kissinger

Those wh o remember the
depression know we're too
soft."
As a coach, Hayes thinks of
himself "as a benevolent
despo t. Somebod~ has to run
things. If I didn 't limit the
players from talking to you
newsmen, a player could say
something to embarrass us and
himself. I'm not abo ut to do
that.
"We're a family . We 'll keep
our troubles within the family .
I may have argued with a
player on the field but I might
then turn around and soap his
back in the shower ... it all gets
pretty honest and open when a
ma n is stripped down to
himself.
11
I have never criticized a
football player publicly in my
24 years of coaching. I deserve
the same thing."
Hayes doesn't care what
others think of him-only what

NHL Standings
By United Pres s International
Divi sion 1
w. I. t. pis gf ga
Philadelphi 17 6 4 3t! 100 62
Atlanta
13 12 5
NY Ran g er s 12 a 6
NY Is landers I I 9 a
Division 2
w. 1. t.
Vancouver
18 74
Chicago
12 12 3
St . L oui s
10 12 5
Minnesota
9 16 4

Demonstration

IN OUR STORE

The factory representative is here tomorrow
preparing foods in the Radarange and giving
the food away when you visit this showing .
This is a wonderful opportunity to see the
Radarange in action ... good time to select
one for Christmas giving. Visit Ingels Furniture tomorrow from 2 until 5 p.m. It will be
your lucky day.

89 94
81 1 15

124
ga
42
91
98

WHA Standings
By United Press International
East
w . 1. t . pis gt ga
New Englnd 17 8 0 34 97 81
Cleveland
lO a I 2 1 58 58
Chicago
9 15 0 18 8 1 96
Indi anapoli s 5 27 0 10 62 125
West
w. ·1. t . pts gf ga
Houston
16 9 0 36 123 80
San Diego
Phoen ix

12 12 1 25 78
101 2 2 22 81

Minnesota
Michigan

101 3 0 20 91 94
7 17 1 15 67 110

87
a7

Canad ~ an

w. 1. t . pts gt ga
16 11 1 33 125 105

Toronto
Quebec .
W inn ipeg

15
14

9 0 30 101 83
a · 1 29 100 65

Edmonton
11 8 0 22 74 59
Vancouver
10 12 1 21 73 80
Wednesday's Result ~
New Eng 3 M i nne so ta 1
Quebec 5 Edmonton 4
Houston 5 Vancouver 2
Thursday ' s Games
Winnipeg at Michigan
Cleveland at Queb ec
Vancouver at Phoenix

WEARABLE

CiiFTS FDR BDYS

VITALE HOSPITAUZED
DETROIT
(UP!)
University
of
Detroit
basketball Coach Dick Vitale
was hospitalized Wednesday to
undergo diagnostic tests for a
stomach ailment.
Vitale's physician, Dr. John
Shuey, said Vitale will be
hospitalized for about a week
and will miss Saturday's game
with Central Michigan and
Monday's game with ·!lowling
.
Green.
·''

Donmoor Corduroys

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total
woman

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For Christmas '7 4

fe minine ,

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22

Detroit
9 14 J 21 76 107
Wa sh ington . 2 23 3
7 62 150
Division 4
w . I. I . pis gf ga
Buffal o
21 4 4 46 140 89
Boston
14 7 6 34 116 83
Toronto
7 14 6 20 89 110
California
6 18 5 17 67 12 3
Wednesday 's Resulls
Chicago 5 At l anta 2
L os Angeles 4 Toronto 1
Thursdav's Games
NY Rangers at W ash i ng ton
Montreal at Pitt sb ur g h
St . Lou is at De troit
Minnes ota a t Philadelphia
Los Angeles at B uffal o
Califor nia at K an sas City

Center

th ese

87
79
77

ph gf ga
40112 80
27 95 72

Kansas City
4 2 1 7 10 64
Division 3
· W. I.t . pfsgf
Los Angeles 15 2 9 39 84
Montrea l
156939128
P i t ~sbur:gh
9 13 4 22 103

Gift

Then

31 82
30 101
30 94

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992-2284iii

POMEROY, OHIO. .

or course we will be meeting
again
in
Martinique,"
Kissinger said after the breakfast meeting. ''We prepared
the ground for Martinique, at
least most of it."
Giscard d'Estaing flew from
Paris today for a visit to the
Caribbe~n
island
of
Guadaloupe before the summit
talks with Ford . The two
presidents were expected w
discuss the world economic
and energy crises:
Kissinger wa s expected to
brief NATO foreign ministers
on the U.S ..Soviet agreement
in Vladivostok to limit nuclear
warheads and missiles to a
fixed number .
An issue expected w domi-

N BA Standings
By United Pre ss International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Div is ion
w 1. pet. g .b .
Bu ffa lo
18
8 .692
New Yor.k
17
a .680
' '
Boston
15 10 .600
21 2
Phi la de lph ia
10 16 385
a
Central Divi sion
w 1. pet . g .b .
Washi ngton
19
7 731
Cleveland
14 10 585
4
Atlan ta
12 13 480
61 7
Houston
12 14 .462
7
NewOrlean s
3 23 . 115 16
Western Conference
Midwest Oivi.s ion
w . 1. pet. g . b.
Detroit
14 13 5 19
KC Omaha
13 14 . 48 1
I
11 13 .458
1' 2
Ch icago
Mi lwaukee
10 15 .400
3
Pacific Di v i sio n
w . I . pet . g .b .
Gol d en State
17
9 654
Seattle
14 15 .483
4' 7
Plloeni)(
12 15 444
5 1 -;
Portland
12 16 .429
6
LosAngeles
11 15 .423
6
Wedn es d a y· s Re sults
Detroit 103 Washin g ton 89
Philadelphia 103 Houston 96
New Or lean s 106 Go l den St 103
Pho enix 104 Port land 100
Cleve land 97 Seattle 95
Thursday 's Gam es
Hou ston vs . B uffalo
at Toronto
Golden Stat e al Allanta
K C Omaha at Milwaukee

HE KNOWS
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UP! )
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar
knows what's going on inside
Bill Walton because the 7-foot-2
Milwaukee Bucks center has
been there himself.
"[ know all about it," said
Jabbar, referring to Walton's
reported unhappiness with
professional basketba U in his
first year with the Portland
Trailblazers.
jjPeople always expect more
than you can give, especially if
you're good at what you do,"
said Jabbar. nThat's human
nature and you have t.o live
with it."
GIANElLI INJURED
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
New York Knlcks said Wednesday that John Gianelli, their
top rebounder, will miss at
least one or this weekend's
games against the Buffalo
Braves because of a &lt;~modera­
te" sprain of the right ankle .
Gianelli was injured during
Tuesday night's game , iii
which the Knicks defeated the
KansasCity.Omaha Kings, 106102. He has averaged eight
rebounds and 7.9 points a
game.

but th ey can ta ke rough-an d-t umb le times home or
away. W ith flared legs they co me in powerhouse
plaids .. . smart ly tex tured window pan.es .. . or sassy
so lid s. Easy-care-j us! as yoU:d expect from
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pants.

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Striped shirt. S5.50·S7.00
Printed plaid corduroy pants. 57.50
Two-tone shirt . $4.60-55.50

Marguerite's
SHOES
BETTY
OHLINGER
Main St.

.,r
\~ ll)!} I.

Windowpane corduroy pants. S8.00·S10.00
Turtleneck· shirt. S4.75-U .oo

5

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The

new

subpoe na

was out of town an d has not

been served, a uthorities said.
Hefner is expec ted back in
town later thi s WPPk ~ nrl will

18 months was one of the puff-

tai led waitress-I1C1stesses at the
Ch icago Playboy club.
For most of the 18 months.
she worked at the club, she
lived at the Chic,.go Playboy
mansion , bu t moved out
shortly before her death. Her
body was found in he r apartment by her bovfrifln.-t

hP

after Miss Pollack's death and
left no forwarding address.
tions of Playboy bunnies and
A federal grand jury also is
other Playboy Enterprises em- investigating the alleged use or
ployes made ou t the death drugs at Playboy mansions
certificate and the coron er's here and in Beverly Hills,
oHicc l i~ted the cause of death Cal if.
as "acu te cardia c dilation ...
Thus far, 20 persons, includa:-;:o;oc iated in the use Of ing pr esent and fo rmer
Methaqualone." The drug is a Playboy bunnies and Hefner
depressanl.
aides, have been st.:bpoenaed to
In mldition to Hefner, su bpo- testify before the federal grand
enas have been prepared for jury look in g into drug use at
M1ss Po llack's former boy- Hefn er's
posh
Playboy
fr iend and the doctor who residences. Hefner himself has
made out the death cer tifi ca te . not been su bpoenae d in the
'111e doctor left wwn shortly federa l im:estigation.

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BIBLES

Max Factor's

JJ~

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I-Iden a H uhenstt&gt;iJr
Heaven Sent
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Wild Meadow

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a man should
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UGHTS AND
ACCESSORIES
Gift
Wrap,
Ribbon.
Bows.
General Electric
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Light
Sets. Tinsel.

Part of him belongs to
the job .
Part of ·him belongs to you .
So give him two
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Our after shave for them .
Our cologne for you .
If he'd like to make a good
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The "Besi Bet" gift
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Ladl,s B!llfolds

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Trlfold and Two Fold
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lla~~liieB8 rs
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TOYS

as~

Citru·s-crisp, light. lasting.
Imported from France. $6

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Par-

Adrienne Pollack, 23, who for

A docwr who reportedly
conducted physical examina-

Sundlly 10:MID12:Ma1011 SID ta.lll.

---·!--Ill·--- •

NEXT DRAWING SAT., DEC 14
1:00 PM
FOR GIFT CERTIFICATES

was

issued Wednesday but Hefner

Authoritie.s said he was expected to appear before the
grantl jury nex t mon U1.
The grar:td j Uf}' is looking into
the September, 1973, death of

PR'ESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

MACHINE
•

G re ek Premier Constanlinc
Carama nlis asking for talks on
Greece's ruture sta tus within
NATO.
Greece announced in August
it would leave the NATO
military structure because the
a lliance failed w stop Turkey 's
July invasion of. Cyprus.
Diplomats said they still do
not know what Greece will do
in practice or whether it will
change its mind .

Hefner has been named in a

subpoena order ing hi m to
appear before a county grand
jury investigating the drug
death of a Playboy " bunni e."
About 20 of Hefner 's employes -aides and burmies have a lready been subpoenaed
in a federal probe of drug use
at Playboy mansions.

served the subpoena t hen.

Ktnntlll McCullo ..h, R. Pll. CMriH Rlfflo, R. Ph.
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FURNITURE

announl·cd today it would
layoff 000 workers at its
Flshrr F'abricatin,l!; pbnt at
its &lt;·omph•x h&lt;'rf•.
:=-:::::::::::~:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::

nate _the meeting, however,
wa s the Wes t's recent
economic downturn, touched
orr by the energy crisis and
inflation.
''The economic and energy
sit uation
will
be
the
ba ckgro und to all our
delib eratio n s,''
NATO
Secretary Gene~al Joseph
Luns said Thursday .
Luns announced that NATO
had received a letter from

American Greetings
loose Cards
For the Family

Gold ·Star

•

Hefner subpoenaed in bunnie's death

ABA Standings
By Unit ed Pr ess Int ernational
East
w . I. pet . g .b .
Kentucky
16
7 .M6
N ew York
18
9 667 St . Louis
11 18 .379
8
Memphis
B 19 . 296 10
V irginia
5 20 200 12
West
w
L pet . g.b.
Oen11er
24
4 .857
Sa n A ntonio
16 10 .015
7
Utah
13 14 .481 1QI -;
Indi ana
10 13 .435 111 l
Sa n D iego
9 16 .360 1J I ?
Wednesday 's R es ult s
New York 11 7 St Louis 96
Memphis 104 Kentucky 97
Uta h liS Vi r ginia 9l
Denver 11? I nd iana 114
Ttwr sday's Games
Utah at. s t . Lou is
Sa n Diego at Sa n Antonio

Pomeroy Merchants
These ribbed corduroy pa nts may be soft-touches

900 f.OlNG IDLE
l.OROSTOWN. Ohio 1Ul'l !
- General Motors ('orp.

For

tllet extra

*

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Statton.. y lw tim or Hlr. Aho
PajMr Mllte l"ena.

A GOLD STAR STORE - FREE TICK TS

Also . Compl~te line Whitman ' s Candy

�4- The Daily Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday,

!Je&lt;;. 12,1974
\
5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursda y, Dec. 12, 1974

Raiders dominate AFC All-Star team
NEW YORK (UP! I - TI1e
Oakla nd Raiders , who have put
wgelher the best record in the
National Football Lea gue
entering the final game of the
season, placed seven players
on the 1974 United Press International American Conference All Star team.
The Raider contingent is led
by quarterback Ken Stabler,
whose 24 touchdown passes is
by far lops in the league, and
wide receiver Cliff Bbranch,
his favorite target, who pulled
in 10 TO passes. The 11-2
Raiders also had tackle Art
Shell named w the offense and
tackle Otis Sistrun k, linebaker
Phil ViUapiano, safely Jack
Tatum and punter Ray Guy
·chosen on the defensive unit.
Guy, who led the AFC in
punting with better than 41
yards a kick, was the leadin g
vote-getter in the balloting,
being named on 34 of the 39
ballots cast by a na tionwid e
:panel of sports writer, th ree
"from each AFC city.
The Buffalo Bills, who will
·make their first playoff ap-

peara nl:e in 10 years this
season , and the Pittsburgh
Steelers, in fo r the third

straight season after missin g

out for 40 years, e a~.:h lwd four

the past two seasons, had only
players named. The World three players named. The Bills
Champ ion Miami Dolp hins, and Steelers face each other in
who dom inated the ball oting openin g round playoff action

and the Dolphins take on the
Raiders.
LeP.ding the Bills named is
runniag back O.J. Simpson,

Maryland's
ite UPI
lineman of the year

The
Footwear

The Dolphins had guard
Larry Little and center Jim
Langer named to the offensi~e
unit and end Bill Stanfill to the
defense.
Riley Odoms of Denver was
the runaway choice at tight end
and Isaac Curtis, Cincinnati's
long-range threat,
joins

tea m .
The selection or Tatum and
Greene ends a stanglehold by
Miami safeties Dick Anderson
and J ake Scott. Both were
na med to the second team.
Pittsburgh had only kicker
Roy Gerela named to the offensive unit but had three
members of its defense chosen.
Tackle J oe Greene and linebacker Jack Ham drew the
highest nwnber of votes among
defensive players, 27, and end
L.C. Greenwood makes his
first apPearance on the team.

BRUSSEI.S ( UPI 1 _ Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissmger conferred with Western
European
foreign
ministers today to brief them
on Soviet-American detente
and review the impac t of the
world economic crisis.
Kissinger met with French
Foreign Minister Jean Sauvagnargues in the morning and
then the two diplomats joined
offici~ls from North Atlantic
Treaty Organization countries ,
in two days or talks.
T::ie secretary of state said he
conferred with Sauvagnargues
about Friday's summit talks in
Martinique between President
Ford and French President
Valery Giscard d'Estaing.
"We had a good review, and

Branch at wide receiver .
Winston Hill of the Jets
repeated at tackle. Middle
linebacker Willie Lanier a nd
cornerback Emmitt Thomas,
both of Ka nsas City, complete
the defensive unit.

NEW YORK 1UPI I - Randy nation. White received 58 votes
White of Maryland , a to
eas il y
outdistance
musc)l!ar, 6-foot-4, 248-pounder linebacker Rod Shoate of
whom manv consider the best .Oklahoma , who polled 26.
interior lin~man .eve r to play
Others receiving votes were
collegiate footba ll, today was guard J ohn Roush of Oknamed Lineman or the Year by lahoma, middle guard Rubin
the United Press International.
Carter of Miami (Fla .), middle
The senior defensive tackle, guard Dewey Selmon of Okwinner of the Outland Trophy lahom a, defensive tac kle
as the nation 's top lineman,
Lucius Selmon of Oklahoma,
was a n easy winner in lhe
defensive tackle Pete Cusick of
balloting conducted of 120 Ohio Sta te, wide receiver Pete
s ports writers a nd s port- Demmerle of Notre Dame and
scasters f r om ac ross the wide receiver Pat Mclnally of

Harva rd.
ed with as an interior lineman,
There have been few linemen offensively or defensively ,"
in college history who combine says his coach, Jerry Claiborthe speed a nd strength or ne. " He 's as big as most of
White. He ca n run the 40 in 4.65 them, he's faster than all of
and bench press 4~0 pounds, them, and he 's stronger than
and this incredible com- all of them . He's also the type
bination makes him the choice of person who had decided all
or ma~y pro scouts to be the he wants to do is prepare
first player chosen in next himself for a pro football
month's college draft.
career."
Even though the opposition
White bas spent three years
most of the time decided to run getting ready . When he first
the opposite way from White, mel Claiborne just before
he still was credited with 147 spring practice entering his
tackles and led the team in sophomore year, he was a
quarterback sacks ( 12) and fullback who weighed only 212,
minus yardage.
could do no better than a 4.9 40"If I had to put it in flat-&lt;&gt;ut yard dash and could barely
terms, he's the best football press 22il pounds.
player l've ever been associat"I thought about using him
as a back," Claiborne recalls,
" but I didn't think he had the
natural running action. We sat
down and talked, and we talked
his players feel. "Frankly , I
about what he had to do to be a
don't give a damn what other the beginning or the season, he football player. He has made
people think-&lt;Jiurnni or wri- suffered a heart attack, but himself what he is because he
ters. The people that fir e hasn't let it get him down .
wanted to be a great football
coaches are players."
"I've worked harder this player. He wanted to be an AllTo his players, he says, " I'm year than I ever have, " Hayes America. "
honest and straightforward. I says. 11 l'm not worried about
White managed to build
believe in positive reinfor- another heart attack. I knew I himself up to his current size
cement, like that fellow Skin- could do it. I'll either work and through a calculated weight
ner. I get out of a man just coach qr get out. It's still fun . I program instituted by Claiborwhat I expect from him . He love to win. I die when I lose." ne . Football has become his
gets better what he puts into it
On the field, Hayes' biggest life's work, and he works at it
for the team. That 's what the advance offensively has been with zeal.
country needs today ."
due to tailback Archie Griffin.
"I haven't got time for
But Hayes can be nice on the Griffin , who received the anything else but football,"
field to his players-;Jnder the Heisman Trophy as the White says. "I love it more
right circwnslances.
nation's outstanding college than anything else in life. I like
"You have to rebuild confi- football player, has rushed for everything about it, the hitting,
dence in the players after a better than 100 yards in 22 the competition. You know, it's
defeat. That 's the only time straight games and given that fun. It's what I want to do."
I'm a nice man on the field . If position more importance in
What does the opposition
you can laugh off a loss you'll the Buckeyes' "button.flhoe" have to say about White?
~lay badly. I raise hell when
offense. But even Hayes says
"He is the greatest lineman
we're going good. That's when that when it comes to scoring rve ever seen/' says Syracuse
we need it."
inside the H)-yard line it will be coach Frank Maloney. "4Jld
Hayes is strict with himself the fullback who will carry the that includes Alan Page and all
as well as his players. Before ball -not Griffin.
the rest."

:Woody worried about too
:much California kindness
· NEW YORK ( UP!)
:O,uege football is reknowned
Ja r its innovative play,
'\!Specially in the area or of:fense . But Ohio State Coach
:Woody Hayes is not known for
'his liberal thinking either on:or off- the field.
. Hayes , 61, whose learns have
.been known as the prime
&lt;!Xample Of the " three yards
and a cloud of dust" philosop hy, is not exactly your bastion
&lt;1f liberal thinking in his perSonal beliefs, either .
His Buckeyes are going out
to Pasadena to meet Southern
Cal in the 197~ Rose Bowl game
·a nd one of Hayes' biggest
worries, although he tries to
disguise it as a joke, is the
."kindness" the Tournament of
Roses Association will show his
learn.
"We're going to give up two
touchdowns by going out ther"
{or two weeks," Hayes says.
:"They'll kill us with kindness."
· Just this quote, taken alone,
might easily be taken for a
quip, but not when followed up
\vith the following:
"That's the trouble with
society today-we're too soft.

slowed b)l injuries t his season
but still able to go over the
1,000-yard mark . Reggie
McKenzie was named at one of
the guards, Robert Jam es
repeated at cornerback and
Tony Greene, the Bills' defensive sparkplug before being
injured a week ago, wa s
selected at free safely.
Joining Simpson in the ba.ckfield is Otis Armstrong of
Denver, the NFL's leading
rusher with 1,265 yards entering his final game. It is
Armstrong 's debut on the

Detente, economic ills
reviewed by Kissinger

Those wh o remember the
depression know we're too
soft."
As a coach, Hayes thinks of
himself "as a benevolent
despo t. Somebod~ has to run
things. If I didn 't limit the
players from talking to you
newsmen, a player could say
something to embarrass us and
himself. I'm not abo ut to do
that.
"We're a family . We 'll keep
our troubles within the family .
I may have argued with a
player on the field but I might
then turn around and soap his
back in the shower ... it all gets
pretty honest and open when a
ma n is stripped down to
himself.
11
I have never criticized a
football player publicly in my
24 years of coaching. I deserve
the same thing."
Hayes doesn't care what
others think of him-only what

NHL Standings
By United Pres s International
Divi sion 1
w. I. t. pis gf ga
Philadelphi 17 6 4 3t! 100 62
Atlanta
13 12 5
NY Ran g er s 12 a 6
NY Is landers I I 9 a
Division 2
w. 1. t.
Vancouver
18 74
Chicago
12 12 3
St . L oui s
10 12 5
Minnesota
9 16 4

Demonstration

IN OUR STORE

The factory representative is here tomorrow
preparing foods in the Radarange and giving
the food away when you visit this showing .
This is a wonderful opportunity to see the
Radarange in action ... good time to select
one for Christmas giving. Visit Ingels Furniture tomorrow from 2 until 5 p.m. It will be
your lucky day.

89 94
81 1 15

124
ga
42
91
98

WHA Standings
By United Press International
East
w . 1. t . pis gt ga
New Englnd 17 8 0 34 97 81
Cleveland
lO a I 2 1 58 58
Chicago
9 15 0 18 8 1 96
Indi anapoli s 5 27 0 10 62 125
West
w. ·1. t . pts gf ga
Houston
16 9 0 36 123 80
San Diego
Phoen ix

12 12 1 25 78
101 2 2 22 81

Minnesota
Michigan

101 3 0 20 91 94
7 17 1 15 67 110

87
a7

Canad ~ an

w. 1. t . pts gt ga
16 11 1 33 125 105

Toronto
Quebec .
W inn ipeg

15
14

9 0 30 101 83
a · 1 29 100 65

Edmonton
11 8 0 22 74 59
Vancouver
10 12 1 21 73 80
Wednesday's Result ~
New Eng 3 M i nne so ta 1
Quebec 5 Edmonton 4
Houston 5 Vancouver 2
Thursday ' s Games
Winnipeg at Michigan
Cleveland at Queb ec
Vancouver at Phoenix

WEARABLE

CiiFTS FDR BDYS

VITALE HOSPITAUZED
DETROIT
(UP!)
University
of
Detroit
basketball Coach Dick Vitale
was hospitalized Wednesday to
undergo diagnostic tests for a
stomach ailment.
Vitale's physician, Dr. John
Shuey, said Vitale will be
hospitalized for about a week
and will miss Saturday's game
with Central Michigan and
Monday's game with ·!lowling
.
Green.
·''

Donmoor Corduroys

of
•

for the
total
woman

r...SINGER
~:..-,

A wom an and g la d oi it&gt;

Sewing Machine
For Christmas '7 4

fe minine ,

flat te ring , fas hi o n-kn owin g

25
22

Detroit
9 14 J 21 76 107
Wa sh ington . 2 23 3
7 62 150
Division 4
w . I. I . pis gf ga
Buffal o
21 4 4 46 140 89
Boston
14 7 6 34 116 83
Toronto
7 14 6 20 89 110
California
6 18 5 17 67 12 3
Wednesday 's Resulls
Chicago 5 At l anta 2
L os Angeles 4 Toronto 1
Thursdav's Games
NY Rangers at W ash i ng ton
Montreal at Pitt sb ur g h
St . Lou is at De troit
Minnes ota a t Philadelphia
Los Angeles at B uffal o
Califor nia at K an sas City

Center

th ese

87
79
77

ph gf ga
40112 80
27 95 72

Kansas City
4 2 1 7 10 64
Division 3
· W. I.t . pfsgf
Los Angeles 15 2 9 39 84
Montrea l
156939128
P i t ~sbur:gh
9 13 4 22 103

Gift

Then

31 82
30 101
30 94

shoes a r e ju st for yo u .

Th;•f~bri~ w;~;

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Brown
Black
Green
Grey

111 W. Second

iJ

992-2284iii

POMEROY, OHIO. .

or course we will be meeting
again
in
Martinique,"
Kissinger said after the breakfast meeting. ''We prepared
the ground for Martinique, at
least most of it."
Giscard d'Estaing flew from
Paris today for a visit to the
Caribbe~n
island
of
Guadaloupe before the summit
talks with Ford . The two
presidents were expected w
discuss the world economic
and energy crises:
Kissinger wa s expected to
brief NATO foreign ministers
on the U.S ..Soviet agreement
in Vladivostok to limit nuclear
warheads and missiles to a
fixed number .
An issue expected w domi-

N BA Standings
By United Pre ss International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Div is ion
w 1. pet. g .b .
Bu ffa lo
18
8 .692
New Yor.k
17
a .680
' '
Boston
15 10 .600
21 2
Phi la de lph ia
10 16 385
a
Central Divi sion
w 1. pet . g .b .
Washi ngton
19
7 731
Cleveland
14 10 585
4
Atlan ta
12 13 480
61 7
Houston
12 14 .462
7
NewOrlean s
3 23 . 115 16
Western Conference
Midwest Oivi.s ion
w . 1. pet. g . b.
Detroit
14 13 5 19
KC Omaha
13 14 . 48 1
I
11 13 .458
1' 2
Ch icago
Mi lwaukee
10 15 .400
3
Pacific Di v i sio n
w . I . pet . g .b .
Gol d en State
17
9 654
Seattle
14 15 .483
4' 7
Plloeni)(
12 15 444
5 1 -;
Portland
12 16 .429
6
LosAngeles
11 15 .423
6
Wedn es d a y· s Re sults
Detroit 103 Washin g ton 89
Philadelphia 103 Houston 96
New Or lean s 106 Go l den St 103
Pho enix 104 Port land 100
Cleve land 97 Seattle 95
Thursday 's Gam es
Hou ston vs . B uffalo
at Toronto
Golden Stat e al Allanta
K C Omaha at Milwaukee

HE KNOWS
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UP! )
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar
knows what's going on inside
Bill Walton because the 7-foot-2
Milwaukee Bucks center has
been there himself.
"[ know all about it," said
Jabbar, referring to Walton's
reported unhappiness with
professional basketba U in his
first year with the Portland
Trailblazers.
jjPeople always expect more
than you can give, especially if
you're good at what you do,"
said Jabbar. nThat's human
nature and you have t.o live
with it."
GIANElLI INJURED
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
New York Knlcks said Wednesday that John Gianelli, their
top rebounder, will miss at
least one or this weekend's
games against the Buffalo
Braves because of a &lt;~modera­
te" sprain of the right ankle .
Gianelli was injured during
Tuesday night's game , iii
which the Knicks defeated the
KansasCity.Omaha Kings, 106102. He has averaged eight
rebounds and 7.9 points a
game.

but th ey can ta ke rough-an d-t umb le times home or
away. W ith flared legs they co me in powerhouse
plaids .. . smart ly tex tured window pan.es .. . or sassy
so lid s. Easy-care-j us! as yoU:d expect from
Donmoo r 1 Sizes8- 14, 4-7.
If

Ribbed corduroy

You
Don ' t
Know Her
Size , Give
Our Gift Ce rtifi cate

pants.

S7.00-S9.00

Striped shirt. S5.50·S7.00
Printed plaid corduroy pants. 57.50
Two-tone shirt . $4.60-55.50

Marguerite's
SHOES
BETTY
OHLINGER
Main St.

.,r
\~ ll)!} I.

Windowpane corduroy pants. S8.00·S10.00
Turtleneck· shirt. S4.75-U .oo

5

.P omeroy

OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 PM
SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
GALLIPOUS, OHIO
PH. 446-9522

Shop.

Come and See It All At • . •

INGELS

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CHILDIIiN'$ fASHIONS
:(, ·

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"

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The

new

subpoe na

was out of town an d has not

been served, a uthorities said.
Hefner is expec ted back in
town later thi s WPPk ~ nrl will

18 months was one of the puff-

tai led waitress-I1C1stesses at the
Ch icago Playboy club.
For most of the 18 months.
she worked at the club, she
lived at the Chic,.go Playboy
mansion , bu t moved out
shortly before her death. Her
body was found in he r apartment by her bovfrifln.-t

hP

after Miss Pollack's death and
left no forwarding address.
tions of Playboy bunnies and
A federal grand jury also is
other Playboy Enterprises em- investigating the alleged use or
ployes made ou t the death drugs at Playboy mansions
certificate and the coron er's here and in Beverly Hills,
oHicc l i~ted the cause of death Cal if.
as "acu te cardia c dilation ...
Thus far, 20 persons, includa:-;:o;oc iated in the use Of ing pr esent and fo rmer
Methaqualone." The drug is a Playboy bunnies and Hefner
depressanl.
aides, have been st.:bpoenaed to
In mldition to Hefner, su bpo- testify before the federal grand
enas have been prepared for jury look in g into drug use at
M1ss Po llack's former boy- Hefn er's
posh
Playboy
fr iend and the doctor who residences. Hefner himself has
made out the death cer tifi ca te . not been su bpoenae d in the
'111e doctor left wwn shortly federa l im:estigation.

r::c=ANOE-1
I

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All New Models
I
iiii HIM!
The Schick
Elec. Razors

At
REDUCED

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LADIES
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RAZORS
I
HAIR DRYERS ri, l I
I
ClAIROL and . I

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Mush for M e n . English
leather Toiletries ,

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Faberge, Brut, Dana's,
Canoe Toiletries. Old
Spice , Aqua Velva , Max
Factor . Hai Karate and
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PRICES

LADY SCHICK
AIR BRUSH
STYLING DRYER

FOR HIM!

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WONDERFUL TO GIVEDELIGHTFUL TO RECEIVE I

New Collection

Uarw -,;

Costume ,
Jewelry I
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00•• d

up

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Good

Selection
of

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Christmas

CARDS
box
and up

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CHRISTMAS
GIVEAWAY

BIBLES

Max Factor's

JJ~

: ~:

I-Iden a H uhenstt&gt;iJr
Heaven Sent
Courant
Chane! No . 5
Wild Meadow

' .

a man should
do it twice.

UGHTS AND
ACCESSORIES
Gift
Wrap,
Ribbon.
Bows.
General Electric
Indoor
Light
Sets. Tinsel.

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

~.·

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For Men &amp; Women

:;~c~=

JUSTIN l.fAlHER GOODS
Mens Billfolds
Ladl,s B!llfolds

.

$5.00 up
5.00 up

See Our Justin Purses
For Her. A Fine Gift
Trlfold and Two Fold
Billfolds, s 10-00

$3.50

lla~~liieB8 rs
PIPES
Kaywoodie.
Yellow
Bole,
Dr. .
Grabow ,
Medico
and
Zi ppo
lighters.

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· TIMEX WA'IatES
Shockproof
Waterproof
$9 .95 up
Electric
Timex Watches $25.00 up ·
Alarm Clocks by Wefl.:;lox
Windup and Elec:trlc

qi\PV'fG···

KODAK
INSTAMATIC
CAMERAS

TOII:ETRIE S FOR t/ EN

~-------FOR HIM!
General Electric
HOT LATHER

Woodhue
Tigress
Xandu
Aphrodisia

Hypnolique
Aquarius
Secret of Venus

l li

and up
Large Assortment

Faher·ge 's

Tabu
Ambush
20 Carats

i:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::;::::::::~:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;J:

TOYS

as~

Citru·s-crisp, light. lasting.
Imported from France. $6

I

Par-

Adrienne Pollack, 23, who for

A docwr who reportedly
conducted physical examina-

Sundlly 10:MID12:Ma1011 SID ta.lll.

---·!--Ill·--- •

NEXT DRAWING SAT., DEC 14
1:00 PM
FOR GIFT CERTIFICATES

was

issued Wednesday but Hefner

Authoritie.s said he was expected to appear before the
grantl jury nex t mon U1.
The grar:td j Uf}' is looking into
the September, 1973, death of

PR'ESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

MACHINE
•

G re ek Premier Constanlinc
Carama nlis asking for talks on
Greece's ruture sta tus within
NATO.
Greece announced in August
it would leave the NATO
military structure because the
a lliance failed w stop Turkey 's
July invasion of. Cyprus.
Diplomats said they still do
not know what Greece will do
in practice or whether it will
change its mind .

Hefner has been named in a

subpoena order ing hi m to
appear before a county grand
jury investigating the drug
death of a Playboy " bunni e."
About 20 of Hefner 's employes -aides and burmies have a lready been subpoenaed
in a federal probe of drug use
at Playboy mansions.

served the subpoena t hen.

Ktnntlll McCullo ..h, R. Pll. CMriH Rlfflo, R. Ph.
Open Dolly., ............ ,. , .... .

'

A GIFT-A-RAMA STORE
PH. 992-2635
MIDDLEPORT

CIII CAGU 1UPI I - Playboy
Enterprises emperor Hu gh

OPEN EVERY
EVENING

Perfect Gift!

Get Free Tickets At All
ticipating Gold Star Stores.

FURNITURE

announl·cd today it would
layoff 000 workers at its
Flshrr F'abricatin,l!; pbnt at
its &lt;·omph•x h&lt;'rf•.
:=-:::::::::::~:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::

nate _the meeting, however,
wa s the Wes t's recent
economic downturn, touched
orr by the energy crisis and
inflation.
''The economic and energy
sit uation
will
be
the
ba ckgro und to all our
delib eratio n s,''
NATO
Secretary Gene~al Joseph
Luns said Thursday .
Luns announced that NATO
had received a letter from

American Greetings
loose Cards
For the Family

Gold ·Star

•

Hefner subpoenaed in bunnie's death

ABA Standings
By Unit ed Pr ess Int ernational
East
w . I. pet . g .b .
Kentucky
16
7 .M6
N ew York
18
9 667 St . Louis
11 18 .379
8
Memphis
B 19 . 296 10
V irginia
5 20 200 12
West
w
L pet . g.b.
Oen11er
24
4 .857
Sa n A ntonio
16 10 .015
7
Utah
13 14 .481 1QI -;
Indi ana
10 13 .435 111 l
Sa n D iego
9 16 .360 1J I ?
Wednesday 's R es ult s
New York 11 7 St Louis 96
Memphis 104 Kentucky 97
Uta h liS Vi r ginia 9l
Denver 11? I nd iana 114
Ttwr sday's Games
Utah at. s t . Lou is
Sa n Diego at Sa n Antonio

Pomeroy Merchants
These ribbed corduroy pa nts may be soft-touches

900 f.OlNG IDLE
l.OROSTOWN. Ohio 1Ul'l !
- General Motors ('orp.

For

tllet extra

*

a llox of

Statton.. y lw tim or Hlr. Aho
PajMr Mllte l"ena.

A GOLD STAR STORE - FREE TICK TS

Also . Compl~te line Whitman ' s Candy

�•
6 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 6., Thursday, Dec. 12, Hl74

;i

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'

From skating to }lying

Polly 's Pointers
By Polly Cramer

Polish remover
descujjs shoes
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - How do you clean black scull marks off
children's white vinyl shoes without scratching them ? Also , what
is the best way to safely clean ao electric can opener? - LUCY.

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DEAR LUCY - I clean scuff marlu off my own white vinyl
patent shoes with nail polish remover. It seems this would apply
as well for children's shoes but perhaps readers with small
children will tell us of their experiences.
I find whlte vinegar poured on a cloth or crushed paper towel
does a good job of removing the dark greasy substance that
accumulat~s around the cutting wheel on my electric can opener.
Wipe away with cloth wet with detergent and then rinse the same
way. Work in and all around. DO BE SURE to first unplug your
can opener. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with the manufacturers of
knitting yarn. I use a lot of it and it takes so much time rolling the
skeins into balls. I live alone and have no one to hold the skein as
I wind so have to put it over the back of a straight chair. It seems
they could wind the yarn into balls as they do crochet thread and
twine and save us hours of work .
As a big yarn user I had accumulated lots of leftover yarn. I
used some of it to make a sweater of squares like.a patchwork
quilt and find it goes with any slacks or skirts because of its many
colors. - WIUJE MAE .
DEAR POLLY - I think the tone of a pocket.,.;ize transistor
radio is improved by placing it in an empty open fruit jar with the
speaker side down but do be sure to leave air space between the
radio and the jar. The jar acts like a resonance chamber to bring
out the bass tones .
If a whetstone is not handy when you want to sharpen the
edge of a knife, try using the rim of a clay flower pot. With this
emergency stone you can hone the edge of a paring knife to razor
sharpness. - EILEEN.
DEAR POLLY ·- I save tubes from waxed paper, foil and
best of all Christmas wrap, as they are larger. Cut.off a slice of a
tube with a sharp knife and put it around bows on Christmas
packages being mailed so as to keep the bows from being
crushed. - ELLA.
POLLY'S NOTE: When such tubes are not large enough, use
cardboard cut to the proper size and stapled together.
DEAR POLLY - Never throw away a quilted bed pad
because it is worn in the center. I recycle my worn ones by using
the good parts, usually around the edges, as a padding lor pot
holders. When recovering my vinyl kitchen chairs a section of a
pad was used to make the seats much more comfortable. - MRS.

••'

J.

·'

POLLY'S NOTE: When making tle-&lt;~n pads for chairs, such
paddlng makes great Inside liners as they are not thick enough to
heighten the chair too much.

..

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s.

Nifty Stitchers enjoy dinner

I

·'

The Nilly Stitchers held their
annual Christmas dinner party
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
F ollowing the dinner members
e xchanged g ifts . Get-well

Auxiliary plans
Christmas party
CHESTER - Plans for the
Christmas party were completed by the Ladies Auxiliary
of the Fire Dept. at their
meeting Wednesday evening at
the firehouse. Firemen and
their families will be guests of
the Auxiliary. The party will
begin at 5 p.m. with a covered
dish dinner on Dec. 15. There
will be a gift exchange lor the
ladies.
The meeting, presided over
by Margaret Christy, opened
with prayer. Minutes of the
previous meeting were read by
Clara
Conroy and
the
treasurer 's report by Opal
Widkham. Committee reports
were given and it was voted to
1buy Christmas decorations for
the tree. Roll call was an1swered by Margaret Chirsty,
. Opal Wickham, Clarice Allen,
Clara Conroy, Opal Hollon,
Erma Cleland, lnzy Newell,
Ethel Orr, Opal Eichinger,
Dorothy Myers and Virginia
Burke.

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cards were signed for Mrs.
Hugh Bearhs who has been
confined to her home with a
br oken hip, and to Mrs .
Eleanor Walter, Toledo, a
former member.
Attending the dinner party
were Mrs . Dwight Logan, Mrs.
Thomas Bowen, Mrs. Herpert
Dixon, Mrs. Lorenzo Davis,
Mrs. Max Folmer, Mrs. Grace
Warner , Mrs. Marlene Wilson ,
Mrs. Carl Moore and Mrs.
Janet Korn. The Jan . 30
meeting will be at the home of
Mrs. Davis.
;

Katharos youth
enjoy dinner
Approximately 30 attended
the Katharos Youth Fellowship
Thanksgiving dinner at the
Sutton Methodist Church.
Guests welcomed by the
youth group members were
Rick and Bob Deeter, Randy
Me Daniel, Cookie Weddle, Joy
Neigler and Stan Davis.
Devotions were given by
Sharon Baker and Denise
Hendrix. Molly Fisher gave
prayer . The entire meal was
prepared by the members.
Rev, Steve Wilson and Cathy
Smith, youth director, were
presented for the dinner.

••

dingo Boots

.
.•'''

Leather and
Blue Denim
Infants 5-8
Boys 8lh-6
Men's 6lh-13
.

.•

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Free Gift
Wrap With
Purchase

h~ritage

house

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

.

Hostages released, prisoners give up

Airlines queen enjoys travel
By GAY Pt\ULEY
UPl Women's Editor
NEW YORK t UP!) - Dorothy Lee , 24, loved the excitement and competition of
the roller derby rink . But going
around in circles simply was
not travel enough .

So the Oakland, Ca lif ..

transcendental med1tat10n and
Zen, an~ has some strong
th ought s On the women 's
libe ration move ment .
"If we're doing the same job
as a man, we should have the
same pay," she said.
"But I like to be treated like

a lady. I like men opening
doors for me. I don 't want to go
dutch treat. I don't think we
can think only in terms of •get,
ge t, get' ."
Nor does Miss Lee fret about

ed about the stewardess job.
"What problems stewardesses
wings·. became an airlines
may
have they could have
stewardess, and is U1e reigning
on themselves," she
brought
Miss Airlines International.
said .
"I'm not the type to sit at one
" On the plane, I just do my
thing," said the stewardess
the "coffee, tea or me" image job and think about what I'm
who a lso models , studies
that some people have project- going to do when I get off."
"Most people are nice and
'&amp;?
"3{ -,-&amp;8!~~~&amp;-::::::::::::w.::::::::~~ friendly and just want to talk."
H there is a troublesome
passenger, she has a little talk
with him- "1 figure someone's
A girt excha nge around 3
Peter Marshall.
third
in
an
ar tis tic
not going to treat me like a
lighted tree and a C.i:lrol sin g
bunch of nothing and expect
It wa s announced that arrangements class in the
followed a holiday dinner party several members had par· senior division ,
me to treat him nice."
THURSDAY
Neither does Miss Lee
for members of the Winding ticipat ed in the Christmas
In artistic arrangements,
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
Trail Garden Club Tuesday flower show of the county Mrs. Lewis won a red , Mrs .
consider sexist the stewardess
nigh t at Trinity Church in association and that Mrs. Thompson, two yellow ; Mrs. F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at hall in
being used by some airlines
Pomeroy.
advertising~at 11 l'm (girl's
Addalou Lewis was the winner Miller, a yellow. Members of Chester , All Master Masons
Mrs. Wilma Terrell had of the horticulture sweep- the sunbonnet girls , Shari invited .
name), fly me" slogan of one
carrier and the " We really
PROGRAM on Appalachian
charge or arrangements for the stakes. She won a blue, two Mitch and Maria Legar, were
move our tail for you" slogan
party. She presented favors of reds, and two yellows in the both ribbon winners in the music by Jennifer Sheets, vice
red and green net pompons . division. Mrs. Alice Thompson junior artistic classes and in president, when the Meigs
of her own employer, Continental Airlines, for instance.
The social room was decorated won two blues , a red, and two the educational division . County Pioneer and Historical
"I think OW"S is neat and
with Chr istmas trees , a yellows; Mrs. Terrell, two Members of the Winding Trail Society meets at 7:30p.m. at
catchy," she said. "And that's
Madonna scene. and a vase of blues and two reds , and Mrs. Club receiv ing educational the Meigs Museum. Memwhat advertising is all about."
white poinse ttias . The dinner Susie Miller, a blue a nd a red. display ribbons were Mrs. bership dues for new year now
"Besides," she said, " if
was served by the Happy Anna Wiles of the junior club Lewis , Mrs . Terrell a nd Mrs. payable.
you're serving cocktails and
Harves ters.
PAST OFFICERS Club,
won a red ribbon , and also took Miller .
Racine Chapter, O.E.S. , meals to 100 or so passengers
Mrs. Iris Kelton presided at
the business meeting and it
Masonic Temple. New officers on a one-hour flight from
elected, gift exchange. Mrs . Portland to San Jose, you do
was noted that the Sunbonnet
just what our slogan says."
Ruth
Barnitz
presents
girls had received $45 for the
The stewardess grew up in
Sears . Civic [mprovement
Insta llation of officers lor Christian pers onhood; Mrs . program. Refreshments will be
potluck.
Qakland, Calif., one of five
Project at the Beach Grove
1975 was combined with a Nan
program
Moore,
children of Mr. and Mrs.
Cemetery entrance. Winding Christmas program for the resources;
ROCK
SPRINGS
Grange,
Mrs .
Mary
George Lee. Her lather, lore6:30p.m.
potluck
dinner
with
Trail Club received $35 lor the
Monday night meeting of the Rinehart, membershiR,_ Mrs.
Pomeroy Fire Department United Methodist Women of Emma Wayland, supportative meat to be furnished by the man with an industrial firm,
plantings.
loved the sport of roller derby
Heath Church, Middleport.
community; Mrs . Lettie Grange. Members to take their
own table service .
For the program Mrs.
Rev . Robert Bumgarner Young, public relations ; Mrs.
Terrell read Betty Perpetue installed the officers - Mrs. Jane Gilkey , nominating
EASTERN Local Board of
Mina 's "The Unadorned Tree" Euve tta Bechtle, president; commi ttee.
Education, 7:30p.m, postponed
which concludes wilh a plea for Mrs . Frances Brewington, vice
Members contributed to the from Tuesday, at high school.
Christ to strip away the "tinsel presideol; Mrs. Clara Criswell,
new distric t building at The
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
bright, hypocrisy and artificial sec r etary; Mrs. Elizabeth
Plains and it was noted that the United Methodist Church, 7:30
lighl" and adorn with the Jove Hibbs, treasurer: Mrs. Juanita E leanor Circle and the AJ.
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
that comes from God , the Bachtel. secretary of social
ternoon Circle took io ap- Charles Bradbury. Gift eximmortality . concerns;
or name nts
Mrs .
Ruth proximately $500 on the holiday change with wrappings to be
Mrs. Terrell concluded the Bumgarner , Christian Global bazaar. A piano prelude by
program with a prayer by concerns; Mrs. Grace French, Mrs. Beulah Jones and a poem judged.
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612
ti tied "Christmas Spirit"
Christmas party at the hall at
opened the meeting.
7:30 p.m. Potluck refreshMrs. Donna Byer and Mrs.
ments and a $1 gift exchange.
APPLE GROVE
A served after members gave the Betty Fultz presented the
FRIDAY
program on the orphans in Lord's Prayer. Mrs. Roberta program . They read " Let's
Harvesters, Trinity
HAPPY
Vietnam was presented at a Thaxton presented a medley of Keep Christmas" by Peter
Church,
Christmas
party, 6
mee ting of the Apple Grove Christmas songs. Others at- Marshall. Mrs. Fultz read the
United Methodist Women tending were Mrs. Dorothy origin of several carols with p.m. dinner followed by party,
THE
Katharos
Youth
Tuesday night at the church. Roseberry, Mrs . Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Jones playing them on the
Fellowship
of
the
Racine
area
Prayer by Mrs . Lucille Mrs. Alice Balser, Mrs. Shirley. piano and the members singing
\lake
sale,
9
a.m.
will
sponsor
a
Rhodes oepned the meeting Ables , Mrs. Bertha Robinson , them. Included were "0 Come
•
and Mrs. Beth Parsons was at Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mrs. Julia All Ye Faithful " , " Joy to the to 12 noon in front of the Racine
the piano for singing of " Silent Norris, Mrs. Florence Smith, World", " Hark the Herald Bank.
Night". Several reports were Mrs. Betty Shiveley, Mrs. Iona Angels Sing", "I Heard the
MARY SHRINE 37, White
prepared and arrangements Hupp, Mrs. Jan Norris and Bells on Christmas Day", "It Shrine of Jerusalem, 8 p.m.
were made to present a gilt to Vicki Ables. Tracy Norri~ was Came Upon the Midnight Masonic Temple, Pomeroy,
the minister for Christmas a guest. The birthdays of ')'ilrs. Clear", "The First Noel", "0 Reception for Jesse Brinker,
along with one to Jean Kisor, a Norris , Mrs. Cora Buck and Little Town of Bethlethem" deputy supreme watchman of
shut-in .
Mrs. Stella Jarrell were noted. and "Silent Night". Mrs. Fultz shepherds, and Christmas
Pie, cookies and coffee were
closed with a Christmas party with potluck refreshprayer.
ments.
Christmas cookies and punch
SATURDAY
at
Salem
were served by Miss Nellie
SONGFEST
Zerkle, Miss Hallie Zerkle, Community Church, West
Columbia, W. Va., 'l p.m.
Christmas dinner at the Susan Fleshman for the rug Mrs . Mae Lambert, Mrs.
Holiday Inn, Dec. 18, followed squares contributed to the Cecile Kincaid and Mrs. Penny featuring the Revelators,
Compton.
Columbus. George Hoschar,
by a party at the home of Mrs. Pomeroy Library.
Mrs.
pastor.
invites the public.
Flo Strickland was planned Martha Hoffman furnished a
MODERN Woodman of
during a recent meeting of the
new mystery box which was !il;888111181118!1l8881~5&amp;18l81ill8:1181188lal'O::&lt;.'&gt;:'='&lt;Iio:ll88l'~·-;
Burlingham
Camp
7230
Sew-Rite-Bewing Club at the guessed by Mrs. Lenora ~
Christmas party, 6 p.m. Bring
home of Mrs. Mildred Wells. McKnight. Mrs. Hoffman ::~
.;.;covered dish . Meat, beverage,
Read at the meeting con- received a birthday gilt from ::&gt;,
and rolls will l;)e provided,
ducted by Mrs. Ann Browning her secret pa 1, and Mrs. Wells w
:::~
Children will have 50 cent gift
was a thank you note from Miss an anniversary gift. Mrs. Betty ·:&lt;
exchange
and
present
Wehrung gave the treasurer 's
program. Santa will distribute
report and Mrs. Evelyn ~
treats.
Gilmore the secretary's report.
TICKETS AVAILABLE
CHRISTMAS dance, 8 to 11
Games were played with
Five tickets remain lor the
SUNDAY
p.m. at Eastern High School.
French Art Colony trip to "The Mrs. Lucy White winning a
AMERICAN
Legion Music provided by Jeff Clark of
11
Nutcracker performed by the prize . A dessert course was Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Cincinnati Symphony Or- served to those named and Post 128, s to 7 p.m. at th ehall. radio station WADC. Adchestra and Ballet, Friday, Mrs. Carolyn Me Daniel, Mrs. Dinner with meat and coffee mission $1 per person; $1.75 a
Dec. 27. Cost of the tickets is Barbara Mullen and Mrs. furnished. $2 gift exchange. couple. Refreshments .'
Sponsored by Eastern Future
$22.50 and the fee covers the Nettie Boyer.
Potluck.
Homemakers
of America,
bus trip to Cincinnati, tickets
CHRISTMAS dinner, 5 p.m.
PRECEPTOR Chapter, Beta
and luncheon . As a special
for the ladies auxiliary of the
Sigma Phi Sorority Christmas
treat the group will be given a
Chester Fire Department.
party, at Meigs Inn, 8 p.m.;
backstage tour at the theater
Bring covered dish .
VISIT
FRIENDS
Buffet
at 10 p.m.
following the performance .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Criswell
1
Anyone wishing to attend
spent
the
weekend
in
should contact Mrs. Donald
HipP'I"steel at 446-4886 im- Bridgeport visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Shudic. ·
mediately.
beautv traded her skates for

Carols, gifts enjoyed by club

I Social J.
I Calendad

Ladies install officers

BOSTON (UP!) - Eight " I would have killed them 1 Uw
Walpole State Prison inmates hosta ges), with 110 hesiWtion .''
who held three hostages for 26
Norfolk Co un ty Di stric t
hour s to drama tize th e ir Attorney George G. Burke sa id
grievances released them late the prisoners, five of them
W. jnesday nieht and surren- sr rvin g life se ntences fo r
dered.
murder , wou ld be charged with
Prison officials refused to ta king hostages and assa ulti ng
grant a nmnesty but agreed to &lt;i correction s offi cer '
"be reaso nable' ' in discussing
The two guards were l':e ized
other inmate demands. Com- Tuesday night after a surprise
missioner Frank A. Hall said weapons search that forced
he would meet wilh the in- ca nc ellation of the annual
mates today.
Christmas banquet for lifers
One of the eigh t inmates , and t heir familie s.
The third hostage, a para mePeter Ladetto, said if Hall
hadn't agreed to the meeting, dic, was captured after he and
a doclor were a llowed by in-

'

and encouraged
the Alameda, Cll.lil .,
Derby School.
She was 14 when she made
her debut with the San Francisco Bombers, skating with
them for six years while she
finished high school and two
years at Merritt College in
Oakland. She was named roller
derby's rookie of the year in

1965.
It's not all the burly sport
some people think, she said.
" Mostly it's endurance." She
kept her weight at 13()..."all
muscle" -while skating but for
the airlines job trimmed her !;leet.S inch frame down to 115
pounds "mostly by a diet of
grapes all day.''
She joined Continental three
years ago "because I wanted to
do mdte travel than I could do
with the derby." Most of her
flights are on the West Coast
from her current base in
Seattle.
She models through the
Florence Humble Agency in
Seattle. She also serves as a
consultant on pageants and one
year was Miss Washington
International and another year
a runner-up in the Miss World
contest.
Last spring she won the
international airlines title in
Miami, competing against
girls from 17 other carriers .

mates to exc1mine the two
senlcn c:c. We cm1 only take so
The list of demands ranged
guards.
much, " said Brown " Instead fr'olll implementation of furNcgutialio n s
in volv ed uf ct correct ions in."i titution, it 's lough, educational and work
(.'O rrCctiuns uffi~.:ials, two state a madhouse."
release programs to installing
legislators :1nd Marga re t
Brown sai d th'e decidmg pay ph ones and U.S. mail
Hurnh;nn, attorney for the · factor in releasing the host~ges boxes inside the prison .
priso ne rs. · P&lt;:~rt of the
wax Ms. Burnham 's statement
James McAlister, a lifer,
ag reement to surrender was Ural nffk1a ls wouldn 't wa it said the purpose of a cor rectha t the inmates would be
indefinite ly
fur
hostage tions instit ution should be
allowed lo ta lk to reporters.
reJCClSC.
rehab ilitation, but tha t was not
Enfrid Brown Jr ., serving n
He abo sa id he fe:1 rec-l other , being
accompli shed
at
life term for murder , said the
uninvolved inmates would be Walpole.
incident wa s tri ggered try encta ngen'&lt;l if guards and stale
" You wouldn't send your
continu ous h:J rassment by offi- po lice mov('d in.
luvE'tl one to a hospital with
ci~lls and th e lack of rehabilitn " It '&gt;va s; t po!t&gt;r1tinl di ~wstPr,' ' two- thirds of the patients
tion programs at Wa lpole.
said State IIPp . Willi;un Ov.·ens, dy ing, would you? '' he asked .
" It was bad enqugh to get
formrrly &lt;t Wa lpole in mate. "I
Seve n of the inmates are
sentenced. Now I f &lt;:~cc another a pplaud them for not lifting one bla cks, as IS Owens. Ladetto
fin ger to hurt the hostages ."
was the on ly wh ite.

Key House committee turns left
MAKING UP THE MEIGS High School's mining maintenance class are, I tor , Dorsel
Smith, Art McKinney, Mike Buskirk, Randel Simpson and Dowell Kitchen.

"Educational Toys, Kid!"

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
House ~ommitte e that will
handle tax r eform , nationa l
health insurance and w e lft~re
reform next year has been
flo oded with liberal new
members, including , its first
black .
The House Ways and Means
Com mittee - a traditionally
conservative body dominated
for a lmos t 17 years by Rep .
Wilbur Mills - is not con-

Record deer

scrva ti ve any more, slig htly
less powerful Glnd no longer
dominated by anyone .
Co mpl e ting the trans itio n
begun by Mills' fall fr om power
and resignation e1s chairman ,
both
Dem oc ratic
and
Rep ublican policy bodies have
nominated members to the
newly ex p.and ed commi ttee,
who likely will c hange its
outlook.
''They are more li beral in
ph ilosophy, but I fee l they will
be responsible," sa id Rep. AI
Ullman of Oregon, the new

con ull lttec c halrm an.
Ull man is ('Xpcc l.ed !o be
more democra tic and open in
committee affa irs 1.llall Mills.

DAU(;IITER BORN
HACINE - Mr. " "d Mrs.
Allen (;r:-Jham , Wilmi ngton.
Ohi o, a nnounce the birth of a
da ug te r. Rache l Marie , Dec 9,
weighiu ~ H lb s., 11 ozs
Gra ndpare nts are Mr. and
Mrs. Ha rry Wilford , Rctcine.
The couple has a sun , Eric h
Todd .

ki11 listed
COLUMBUS (UP! l - The
Division of Wildlife of the Oh io
of
Natur a l
Dep artme nt
Reso ur ces Wednesday an :
nounced a record mnnber of
deer harvested by Ohio hun ters
during the 1974 deer gun season
whic h ended last Salurday .
Preliminary figures for this
year 's gun season showed 9,255
deer shot, a 50 per cent increase over 1973, when 6,168
deer were shot.
Dan C. Armbruster, chief of
the division. sa id the 1974
figures would increase slightly
when the final report was
compiled .
Muskingum Counly led the
state with 708 deer taken ,
followed by Athens Coun ty,
626 ; Morgan, 615 ; a nd
Washington, 587 .

or

UMW discusses Vietnam orphans

r-------------·---Gift Suggestions For Christmas
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Hu s h Puppi es Boots , Men -Women
Ang e l Treads Hou se Slippers
.
Gold or Silver Pumps lor Chnstmas Parties
Children 's Whit e Over -th e - Fool Boots , s1zes
s to 9
Girl s Over - the · Foot Boots, completely
wat erproof. s iz es 9 to 4.
Ho ""' Slippers lor all the family.
Me n 's Boots
Gill Certificate
Ope n Evening s Unli I 8 0 ' Clock

THESHOEBOX
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

ffio
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CHAIR BUY

WINS TOP PRIZE

SUNBEAM

Sewing club has meeting

Social
j
Calendarl

Pound sterling lowest ever
LONDON (UP!) - The
pound sterlin g, one-lime
keys to ne of
the world
monetary system, has plunged
to its lowest level in history ,
reflecting Britain's grave

Teflon-coated cookin1 surfac..
. Hiah vented dort'IC! cover. C~e
removes fOf easy elunina.

I

GOOD GRIEF!
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UP! )
- Michael Sellers, 16, fell
asleep watching television.
When ·he woke up he found
himseU beneath the bumper of
an automobile which had
crashed through his living
room wall.
Sellers suffered a minor cu t
to the back of his head. The
driver of the car, James
Tumrell, 22, was lined $100 for
drunken driving.
" I was partly under the
bumper, part of the TV set was
·in the bathroom and you'd have
• trouble finding any piece of the
stereo set," said Sellers,
recalling his rude awakening
early Wednesday.

OTHER SUNBEAM Gins

TOQsters • Irons • Mixers
Percolators -· CoHee Pots
1 Can Openers - Electric Knife
OTHERS
Mlrro-IAatlc Corn Poppers
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'A" VARIABLE

~

high outflow of cash for a
nation that relies heavily on
profitable foreign trade , also
was credited with pushing the
London stock exchange to a 20.:
year low .
The Financial Times Index
dropped 6.7 points Wednesday
to 150.4.
The pound closed a t $2.3175
on international markets
Wednesday,
down
from
Tuesday's close of $2.3245. It
was the pOW ld's worst performance to date .

NEW YORK (UP!) - New
York Daily News photographer
Dan Farrell today was named
winner of the top prize of $250
in the New York Racing
Association's annual pholor
journalism contest.
Farrell 's winning entry,
"Pounding the Turf," shows a
running Thoroughbred kicking
up dirt in the foreground of a
picture of jockey Ron Turcotte
riding Miss Martie across the
finish line .
United Press International's
Jack Bailetti took second place
with his picture, "Home
Happy," which showed jockey
Miguel Rivera smiling as he
crossed the finish line after
wiMing the Belmont Stakes.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency
Squad was called to Hobson for
Lester Caldwell, 80, at 1:14 p.
m. Wednesday. Caldwell, who
was ill, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

I

·"'C:/ Bisek s.

COLORS, COLORS: BLUE AND GREEN

Middleport
Department Store

I

economic status.
The pound fell 21.4 per cent
against other world currencies
Wednesday after the American
Exxon Oil Company confirmed
Saudi Arabia would no longer
accept sterling for oil
payments.
The British government,
faced with the worst economic
crisis since World War II , was
soon expected to announce a
November trade deficit of up to
$1. 44 billion.
The deficit, an unacceptably

.; · y

59 N. :&gt;econd St.
Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY
'

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See the

Sale! VINYL RECLINERS

Entire

Holiday
Collection
At

Kerm's '
Korner

Regular 159.95

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Drop in
and see our
full line of

•

7- 'l'he DaUv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Dec. 12, 1974

Sale

Elegant recliners des1gned with com fort
and appearance upper-most in mind .
Easy clean vinyl.

$

95
FREE DELIVERY

�•
6 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 6., Thursday, Dec. 12, Hl74

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From skating to }lying

Polly 's Pointers
By Polly Cramer

Polish remover
descujjs shoes
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - How do you clean black scull marks off
children's white vinyl shoes without scratching them ? Also , what
is the best way to safely clean ao electric can opener? - LUCY.

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,_
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"

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DEAR LUCY - I clean scuff marlu off my own white vinyl
patent shoes with nail polish remover. It seems this would apply
as well for children's shoes but perhaps readers with small
children will tell us of their experiences.
I find whlte vinegar poured on a cloth or crushed paper towel
does a good job of removing the dark greasy substance that
accumulat~s around the cutting wheel on my electric can opener.
Wipe away with cloth wet with detergent and then rinse the same
way. Work in and all around. DO BE SURE to first unplug your
can opener. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with the manufacturers of
knitting yarn. I use a lot of it and it takes so much time rolling the
skeins into balls. I live alone and have no one to hold the skein as
I wind so have to put it over the back of a straight chair. It seems
they could wind the yarn into balls as they do crochet thread and
twine and save us hours of work .
As a big yarn user I had accumulated lots of leftover yarn. I
used some of it to make a sweater of squares like.a patchwork
quilt and find it goes with any slacks or skirts because of its many
colors. - WIUJE MAE .
DEAR POLLY - I think the tone of a pocket.,.;ize transistor
radio is improved by placing it in an empty open fruit jar with the
speaker side down but do be sure to leave air space between the
radio and the jar. The jar acts like a resonance chamber to bring
out the bass tones .
If a whetstone is not handy when you want to sharpen the
edge of a knife, try using the rim of a clay flower pot. With this
emergency stone you can hone the edge of a paring knife to razor
sharpness. - EILEEN.
DEAR POLLY ·- I save tubes from waxed paper, foil and
best of all Christmas wrap, as they are larger. Cut.off a slice of a
tube with a sharp knife and put it around bows on Christmas
packages being mailed so as to keep the bows from being
crushed. - ELLA.
POLLY'S NOTE: When such tubes are not large enough, use
cardboard cut to the proper size and stapled together.
DEAR POLLY - Never throw away a quilted bed pad
because it is worn in the center. I recycle my worn ones by using
the good parts, usually around the edges, as a padding lor pot
holders. When recovering my vinyl kitchen chairs a section of a
pad was used to make the seats much more comfortable. - MRS.

••'

J.

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POLLY'S NOTE: When making tle-&lt;~n pads for chairs, such
paddlng makes great Inside liners as they are not thick enough to
heighten the chair too much.

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s.

Nifty Stitchers enjoy dinner

I

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The Nilly Stitchers held their
annual Christmas dinner party
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
F ollowing the dinner members
e xchanged g ifts . Get-well

Auxiliary plans
Christmas party
CHESTER - Plans for the
Christmas party were completed by the Ladies Auxiliary
of the Fire Dept. at their
meeting Wednesday evening at
the firehouse. Firemen and
their families will be guests of
the Auxiliary. The party will
begin at 5 p.m. with a covered
dish dinner on Dec. 15. There
will be a gift exchange lor the
ladies.
The meeting, presided over
by Margaret Christy, opened
with prayer. Minutes of the
previous meeting were read by
Clara
Conroy and
the
treasurer 's report by Opal
Widkham. Committee reports
were given and it was voted to
1buy Christmas decorations for
the tree. Roll call was an1swered by Margaret Chirsty,
. Opal Wickham, Clarice Allen,
Clara Conroy, Opal Hollon,
Erma Cleland, lnzy Newell,
Ethel Orr, Opal Eichinger,
Dorothy Myers and Virginia
Burke.

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cards were signed for Mrs.
Hugh Bearhs who has been
confined to her home with a
br oken hip, and to Mrs .
Eleanor Walter, Toledo, a
former member.
Attending the dinner party
were Mrs . Dwight Logan, Mrs.
Thomas Bowen, Mrs. Herpert
Dixon, Mrs. Lorenzo Davis,
Mrs. Max Folmer, Mrs. Grace
Warner , Mrs. Marlene Wilson ,
Mrs. Carl Moore and Mrs.
Janet Korn. The Jan . 30
meeting will be at the home of
Mrs. Davis.
;

Katharos youth
enjoy dinner
Approximately 30 attended
the Katharos Youth Fellowship
Thanksgiving dinner at the
Sutton Methodist Church.
Guests welcomed by the
youth group members were
Rick and Bob Deeter, Randy
Me Daniel, Cookie Weddle, Joy
Neigler and Stan Davis.
Devotions were given by
Sharon Baker and Denise
Hendrix. Molly Fisher gave
prayer . The entire meal was
prepared by the members.
Rev, Steve Wilson and Cathy
Smith, youth director, were
presented for the dinner.

••

dingo Boots

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Blue Denim
Infants 5-8
Boys 8lh-6
Men's 6lh-13
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Hostages released, prisoners give up

Airlines queen enjoys travel
By GAY Pt\ULEY
UPl Women's Editor
NEW YORK t UP!) - Dorothy Lee , 24, loved the excitement and competition of
the roller derby rink . But going
around in circles simply was
not travel enough .

So the Oakland, Ca lif ..

transcendental med1tat10n and
Zen, an~ has some strong
th ought s On the women 's
libe ration move ment .
"If we're doing the same job
as a man, we should have the
same pay," she said.
"But I like to be treated like

a lady. I like men opening
doors for me. I don 't want to go
dutch treat. I don't think we
can think only in terms of •get,
ge t, get' ."
Nor does Miss Lee fret about

ed about the stewardess job.
"What problems stewardesses
wings·. became an airlines
may
have they could have
stewardess, and is U1e reigning
on themselves," she
brought
Miss Airlines International.
said .
"I'm not the type to sit at one
" On the plane, I just do my
thing," said the stewardess
the "coffee, tea or me" image job and think about what I'm
who a lso models , studies
that some people have project- going to do when I get off."
"Most people are nice and
'&amp;?
"3{ -,-&amp;8!~~~&amp;-::::::::::::w.::::::::~~ friendly and just want to talk."
H there is a troublesome
passenger, she has a little talk
with him- "1 figure someone's
A girt excha nge around 3
Peter Marshall.
third
in
an
ar tis tic
not going to treat me like a
lighted tree and a C.i:lrol sin g
bunch of nothing and expect
It wa s announced that arrangements class in the
followed a holiday dinner party several members had par· senior division ,
me to treat him nice."
THURSDAY
Neither does Miss Lee
for members of the Winding ticipat ed in the Christmas
In artistic arrangements,
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
Trail Garden Club Tuesday flower show of the county Mrs. Lewis won a red , Mrs .
consider sexist the stewardess
nigh t at Trinity Church in association and that Mrs. Thompson, two yellow ; Mrs. F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at hall in
being used by some airlines
Pomeroy.
advertising~at 11 l'm (girl's
Addalou Lewis was the winner Miller, a yellow. Members of Chester , All Master Masons
Mrs. Wilma Terrell had of the horticulture sweep- the sunbonnet girls , Shari invited .
name), fly me" slogan of one
carrier and the " We really
PROGRAM on Appalachian
charge or arrangements for the stakes. She won a blue, two Mitch and Maria Legar, were
move our tail for you" slogan
party. She presented favors of reds, and two yellows in the both ribbon winners in the music by Jennifer Sheets, vice
red and green net pompons . division. Mrs. Alice Thompson junior artistic classes and in president, when the Meigs
of her own employer, Continental Airlines, for instance.
The social room was decorated won two blues , a red, and two the educational division . County Pioneer and Historical
"I think OW"S is neat and
with Chr istmas trees , a yellows; Mrs. Terrell, two Members of the Winding Trail Society meets at 7:30p.m. at
catchy," she said. "And that's
Madonna scene. and a vase of blues and two reds , and Mrs. Club receiv ing educational the Meigs Museum. Memwhat advertising is all about."
white poinse ttias . The dinner Susie Miller, a blue a nd a red. display ribbons were Mrs. bership dues for new year now
"Besides," she said, " if
was served by the Happy Anna Wiles of the junior club Lewis , Mrs . Terrell a nd Mrs. payable.
you're serving cocktails and
Harves ters.
PAST OFFICERS Club,
won a red ribbon , and also took Miller .
Racine Chapter, O.E.S. , meals to 100 or so passengers
Mrs. Iris Kelton presided at
the business meeting and it
Masonic Temple. New officers on a one-hour flight from
elected, gift exchange. Mrs . Portland to San Jose, you do
was noted that the Sunbonnet
just what our slogan says."
Ruth
Barnitz
presents
girls had received $45 for the
The stewardess grew up in
Sears . Civic [mprovement
Insta llation of officers lor Christian pers onhood; Mrs . program. Refreshments will be
potluck.
Qakland, Calif., one of five
Project at the Beach Grove
1975 was combined with a Nan
program
Moore,
children of Mr. and Mrs.
Cemetery entrance. Winding Christmas program for the resources;
ROCK
SPRINGS
Grange,
Mrs .
Mary
George Lee. Her lather, lore6:30p.m.
potluck
dinner
with
Trail Club received $35 lor the
Monday night meeting of the Rinehart, membershiR,_ Mrs.
Pomeroy Fire Department United Methodist Women of Emma Wayland, supportative meat to be furnished by the man with an industrial firm,
plantings.
loved the sport of roller derby
Heath Church, Middleport.
community; Mrs . Lettie Grange. Members to take their
own table service .
For the program Mrs.
Rev . Robert Bumgarner Young, public relations ; Mrs.
Terrell read Betty Perpetue installed the officers - Mrs. Jane Gilkey , nominating
EASTERN Local Board of
Mina 's "The Unadorned Tree" Euve tta Bechtle, president; commi ttee.
Education, 7:30p.m, postponed
which concludes wilh a plea for Mrs . Frances Brewington, vice
Members contributed to the from Tuesday, at high school.
Christ to strip away the "tinsel presideol; Mrs. Clara Criswell,
new distric t building at The
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
bright, hypocrisy and artificial sec r etary; Mrs. Elizabeth
Plains and it was noted that the United Methodist Church, 7:30
lighl" and adorn with the Jove Hibbs, treasurer: Mrs. Juanita E leanor Circle and the AJ.
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
that comes from God , the Bachtel. secretary of social
ternoon Circle took io ap- Charles Bradbury. Gift eximmortality . concerns;
or name nts
Mrs .
Ruth proximately $500 on the holiday change with wrappings to be
Mrs. Terrell concluded the Bumgarner , Christian Global bazaar. A piano prelude by
program with a prayer by concerns; Mrs. Grace French, Mrs. Beulah Jones and a poem judged.
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612
ti tied "Christmas Spirit"
Christmas party at the hall at
opened the meeting.
7:30 p.m. Potluck refreshMrs. Donna Byer and Mrs.
ments and a $1 gift exchange.
APPLE GROVE
A served after members gave the Betty Fultz presented the
FRIDAY
program on the orphans in Lord's Prayer. Mrs. Roberta program . They read " Let's
Harvesters, Trinity
HAPPY
Vietnam was presented at a Thaxton presented a medley of Keep Christmas" by Peter
Church,
Christmas
party, 6
mee ting of the Apple Grove Christmas songs. Others at- Marshall. Mrs. Fultz read the
United Methodist Women tending were Mrs. Dorothy origin of several carols with p.m. dinner followed by party,
THE
Katharos
Youth
Tuesday night at the church. Roseberry, Mrs . Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Jones playing them on the
Fellowship
of
the
Racine
area
Prayer by Mrs . Lucille Mrs. Alice Balser, Mrs. Shirley. piano and the members singing
\lake
sale,
9
a.m.
will
sponsor
a
Rhodes oepned the meeting Ables , Mrs. Bertha Robinson , them. Included were "0 Come
•
and Mrs. Beth Parsons was at Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mrs. Julia All Ye Faithful " , " Joy to the to 12 noon in front of the Racine
the piano for singing of " Silent Norris, Mrs. Florence Smith, World", " Hark the Herald Bank.
Night". Several reports were Mrs. Betty Shiveley, Mrs. Iona Angels Sing", "I Heard the
MARY SHRINE 37, White
prepared and arrangements Hupp, Mrs. Jan Norris and Bells on Christmas Day", "It Shrine of Jerusalem, 8 p.m.
were made to present a gilt to Vicki Ables. Tracy Norri~ was Came Upon the Midnight Masonic Temple, Pomeroy,
the minister for Christmas a guest. The birthdays of ')'ilrs. Clear", "The First Noel", "0 Reception for Jesse Brinker,
along with one to Jean Kisor, a Norris , Mrs. Cora Buck and Little Town of Bethlethem" deputy supreme watchman of
shut-in .
Mrs. Stella Jarrell were noted. and "Silent Night". Mrs. Fultz shepherds, and Christmas
Pie, cookies and coffee were
closed with a Christmas party with potluck refreshprayer.
ments.
Christmas cookies and punch
SATURDAY
at
Salem
were served by Miss Nellie
SONGFEST
Zerkle, Miss Hallie Zerkle, Community Church, West
Columbia, W. Va., 'l p.m.
Christmas dinner at the Susan Fleshman for the rug Mrs . Mae Lambert, Mrs.
Holiday Inn, Dec. 18, followed squares contributed to the Cecile Kincaid and Mrs. Penny featuring the Revelators,
Compton.
Columbus. George Hoschar,
by a party at the home of Mrs. Pomeroy Library.
Mrs.
pastor.
invites the public.
Flo Strickland was planned Martha Hoffman furnished a
MODERN Woodman of
during a recent meeting of the
new mystery box which was !il;888111181118!1l8881~5&amp;18l81ill8:1181188lal'O::&lt;.'&gt;:'='&lt;Iio:ll88l'~·-;
Burlingham
Camp
7230
Sew-Rite-Bewing Club at the guessed by Mrs. Lenora ~
Christmas party, 6 p.m. Bring
home of Mrs. Mildred Wells. McKnight. Mrs. Hoffman ::~
.;.;covered dish . Meat, beverage,
Read at the meeting con- received a birthday gilt from ::&gt;,
and rolls will l;)e provided,
ducted by Mrs. Ann Browning her secret pa 1, and Mrs. Wells w
:::~
Children will have 50 cent gift
was a thank you note from Miss an anniversary gift. Mrs. Betty ·:&lt;
exchange
and
present
Wehrung gave the treasurer 's
program. Santa will distribute
report and Mrs. Evelyn ~
treats.
Gilmore the secretary's report.
TICKETS AVAILABLE
CHRISTMAS dance, 8 to 11
Games were played with
Five tickets remain lor the
SUNDAY
p.m. at Eastern High School.
French Art Colony trip to "The Mrs. Lucy White winning a
AMERICAN
Legion Music provided by Jeff Clark of
11
Nutcracker performed by the prize . A dessert course was Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Cincinnati Symphony Or- served to those named and Post 128, s to 7 p.m. at th ehall. radio station WADC. Adchestra and Ballet, Friday, Mrs. Carolyn Me Daniel, Mrs. Dinner with meat and coffee mission $1 per person; $1.75 a
Dec. 27. Cost of the tickets is Barbara Mullen and Mrs. furnished. $2 gift exchange. couple. Refreshments .'
Sponsored by Eastern Future
$22.50 and the fee covers the Nettie Boyer.
Potluck.
Homemakers
of America,
bus trip to Cincinnati, tickets
CHRISTMAS dinner, 5 p.m.
PRECEPTOR Chapter, Beta
and luncheon . As a special
for the ladies auxiliary of the
Sigma Phi Sorority Christmas
treat the group will be given a
Chester Fire Department.
party, at Meigs Inn, 8 p.m.;
backstage tour at the theater
Bring covered dish .
VISIT
FRIENDS
Buffet
at 10 p.m.
following the performance .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Criswell
1
Anyone wishing to attend
spent
the
weekend
in
should contact Mrs. Donald
HipP'I"steel at 446-4886 im- Bridgeport visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Shudic. ·
mediately.
beautv traded her skates for

Carols, gifts enjoyed by club

I Social J.
I Calendad

Ladies install officers

BOSTON (UP!) - Eight " I would have killed them 1 Uw
Walpole State Prison inmates hosta ges), with 110 hesiWtion .''
who held three hostages for 26
Norfolk Co un ty Di stric t
hour s to drama tize th e ir Attorney George G. Burke sa id
grievances released them late the prisoners, five of them
W. jnesday nieht and surren- sr rvin g life se ntences fo r
dered.
murder , wou ld be charged with
Prison officials refused to ta king hostages and assa ulti ng
grant a nmnesty but agreed to &lt;i correction s offi cer '
"be reaso nable' ' in discussing
The two guards were l':e ized
other inmate demands. Com- Tuesday night after a surprise
missioner Frank A. Hall said weapons search that forced
he would meet wilh the in- ca nc ellation of the annual
mates today.
Christmas banquet for lifers
One of the eigh t inmates , and t heir familie s.
The third hostage, a para mePeter Ladetto, said if Hall
hadn't agreed to the meeting, dic, was captured after he and
a doclor were a llowed by in-

'

and encouraged
the Alameda, Cll.lil .,
Derby School.
She was 14 when she made
her debut with the San Francisco Bombers, skating with
them for six years while she
finished high school and two
years at Merritt College in
Oakland. She was named roller
derby's rookie of the year in

1965.
It's not all the burly sport
some people think, she said.
" Mostly it's endurance." She
kept her weight at 13()..."all
muscle" -while skating but for
the airlines job trimmed her !;leet.S inch frame down to 115
pounds "mostly by a diet of
grapes all day.''
She joined Continental three
years ago "because I wanted to
do mdte travel than I could do
with the derby." Most of her
flights are on the West Coast
from her current base in
Seattle.
She models through the
Florence Humble Agency in
Seattle. She also serves as a
consultant on pageants and one
year was Miss Washington
International and another year
a runner-up in the Miss World
contest.
Last spring she won the
international airlines title in
Miami, competing against
girls from 17 other carriers .

mates to exc1mine the two
senlcn c:c. We cm1 only take so
The list of demands ranged
guards.
much, " said Brown " Instead fr'olll implementation of furNcgutialio n s
in volv ed uf ct correct ions in."i titution, it 's lough, educational and work
(.'O rrCctiuns uffi~.:ials, two state a madhouse."
release programs to installing
legislators :1nd Marga re t
Brown sai d th'e decidmg pay ph ones and U.S. mail
Hurnh;nn, attorney for the · factor in releasing the host~ges boxes inside the prison .
priso ne rs. · P&lt;:~rt of the
wax Ms. Burnham 's statement
James McAlister, a lifer,
ag reement to surrender was Ural nffk1a ls wouldn 't wa it said the purpose of a cor rectha t the inmates would be
indefinite ly
fur
hostage tions instit ution should be
allowed lo ta lk to reporters.
reJCClSC.
rehab ilitation, but tha t was not
Enfrid Brown Jr ., serving n
He abo sa id he fe:1 rec-l other , being
accompli shed
at
life term for murder , said the
uninvolved inmates would be Walpole.
incident wa s tri ggered try encta ngen'&lt;l if guards and stale
" You wouldn't send your
continu ous h:J rassment by offi- po lice mov('d in.
luvE'tl one to a hospital with
ci~lls and th e lack of rehabilitn " It '&gt;va s; t po!t&gt;r1tinl di ~wstPr,' ' two- thirds of the patients
tion programs at Wa lpole.
said State IIPp . Willi;un Ov.·ens, dy ing, would you? '' he asked .
" It was bad enqugh to get
formrrly &lt;t Wa lpole in mate. "I
Seve n of the inmates are
sentenced. Now I f &lt;:~cc another a pplaud them for not lifting one bla cks, as IS Owens. Ladetto
fin ger to hurt the hostages ."
was the on ly wh ite.

Key House committee turns left
MAKING UP THE MEIGS High School's mining maintenance class are, I tor , Dorsel
Smith, Art McKinney, Mike Buskirk, Randel Simpson and Dowell Kitchen.

"Educational Toys, Kid!"

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
House ~ommitte e that will
handle tax r eform , nationa l
health insurance and w e lft~re
reform next year has been
flo oded with liberal new
members, including , its first
black .
The House Ways and Means
Com mittee - a traditionally
conservative body dominated
for a lmos t 17 years by Rep .
Wilbur Mills - is not con-

Record deer

scrva ti ve any more, slig htly
less powerful Glnd no longer
dominated by anyone .
Co mpl e ting the trans itio n
begun by Mills' fall fr om power
and resignation e1s chairman ,
both
Dem oc ratic
and
Rep ublican policy bodies have
nominated members to the
newly ex p.and ed commi ttee,
who likely will c hange its
outlook.
''They are more li beral in
ph ilosophy, but I fee l they will
be responsible," sa id Rep. AI
Ullman of Oregon, the new

con ull lttec c halrm an.
Ull man is ('Xpcc l.ed !o be
more democra tic and open in
committee affa irs 1.llall Mills.

DAU(;IITER BORN
HACINE - Mr. " "d Mrs.
Allen (;r:-Jham , Wilmi ngton.
Ohi o, a nnounce the birth of a
da ug te r. Rache l Marie , Dec 9,
weighiu ~ H lb s., 11 ozs
Gra ndpare nts are Mr. and
Mrs. Ha rry Wilford , Rctcine.
The couple has a sun , Eric h
Todd .

ki11 listed
COLUMBUS (UP! l - The
Division of Wildlife of the Oh io
of
Natur a l
Dep artme nt
Reso ur ces Wednesday an :
nounced a record mnnber of
deer harvested by Ohio hun ters
during the 1974 deer gun season
whic h ended last Salurday .
Preliminary figures for this
year 's gun season showed 9,255
deer shot, a 50 per cent increase over 1973, when 6,168
deer were shot.
Dan C. Armbruster, chief of
the division. sa id the 1974
figures would increase slightly
when the final report was
compiled .
Muskingum Counly led the
state with 708 deer taken ,
followed by Athens Coun ty,
626 ; Morgan, 615 ; a nd
Washington, 587 .

or

UMW discusses Vietnam orphans

r-------------·---Gift Suggestions For Christmas
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Hu s h Puppi es Boots , Men -Women
Ang e l Treads Hou se Slippers
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Gold or Silver Pumps lor Chnstmas Parties
Children 's Whit e Over -th e - Fool Boots , s1zes
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Ho ""' Slippers lor all the family.
Me n 's Boots
Gill Certificate
Ope n Evening s Unli I 8 0 ' Clock

THESHOEBOX
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

ffio
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CHAIR BUY

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SUNBEAM

Sewing club has meeting

Social
j
Calendarl

Pound sterling lowest ever
LONDON (UP!) - The
pound sterlin g, one-lime
keys to ne of
the world
monetary system, has plunged
to its lowest level in history ,
reflecting Britain's grave

Teflon-coated cookin1 surfac..
. Hiah vented dort'IC! cover. C~e
removes fOf easy elunina.

I

GOOD GRIEF!
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UP! )
- Michael Sellers, 16, fell
asleep watching television.
When ·he woke up he found
himseU beneath the bumper of
an automobile which had
crashed through his living
room wall.
Sellers suffered a minor cu t
to the back of his head. The
driver of the car, James
Tumrell, 22, was lined $100 for
drunken driving.
" I was partly under the
bumper, part of the TV set was
·in the bathroom and you'd have
• trouble finding any piece of the
stereo set," said Sellers,
recalling his rude awakening
early Wednesday.

OTHER SUNBEAM Gins

TOQsters • Irons • Mixers
Percolators -· CoHee Pots
1 Can Openers - Electric Knife
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Mlrro-IAatlc Corn Poppers
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If 41 ..

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'A" VARIABLE

~

high outflow of cash for a
nation that relies heavily on
profitable foreign trade , also
was credited with pushing the
London stock exchange to a 20.:
year low .
The Financial Times Index
dropped 6.7 points Wednesday
to 150.4.
The pound closed a t $2.3175
on international markets
Wednesday,
down
from
Tuesday's close of $2.3245. It
was the pOW ld's worst performance to date .

NEW YORK (UP!) - New
York Daily News photographer
Dan Farrell today was named
winner of the top prize of $250
in the New York Racing
Association's annual pholor
journalism contest.
Farrell 's winning entry,
"Pounding the Turf," shows a
running Thoroughbred kicking
up dirt in the foreground of a
picture of jockey Ron Turcotte
riding Miss Martie across the
finish line .
United Press International's
Jack Bailetti took second place
with his picture, "Home
Happy," which showed jockey
Miguel Rivera smiling as he
crossed the finish line after
wiMing the Belmont Stakes.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency
Squad was called to Hobson for
Lester Caldwell, 80, at 1:14 p.
m. Wednesday. Caldwell, who
was ill, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

I

·"'C:/ Bisek s.

COLORS, COLORS: BLUE AND GREEN

Middleport
Department Store

I

economic status.
The pound fell 21.4 per cent
against other world currencies
Wednesday after the American
Exxon Oil Company confirmed
Saudi Arabia would no longer
accept sterling for oil
payments.
The British government,
faced with the worst economic
crisis since World War II , was
soon expected to announce a
November trade deficit of up to
$1. 44 billion.
The deficit, an unacceptably

.; · y

59 N. :&gt;econd St.
Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY
'

'

-

See the

Sale! VINYL RECLINERS

Entire

Holiday
Collection
At

Kerm's '
Korner

Regular 159.95

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• • especially if they are

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and see our
full line of

•

7- 'l'he DaUv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Dec. 12, 1974

Sale

Elegant recliners des1gned with com fort
and appearance upper-most in mind .
Easy clean vinyl.

$

95
FREE DELIVERY

�.·

..

., .

·.:

\

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Thursday, Dec. 12. 1974

'·'

8 - The Daily Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Dec . 12. 1974

Rebates pose

•

Berrys V\/orld
- -- --

complications
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The
Federal Energy Administraton.
says it will reimburse the
public fo r possibly $2 billion in
overcharges for gasoline, fuel
oil and other petroleum products .
But it doesn 'I know how it
will do this, or when, or who
will be reimbursed, or by how
much.

·

Gorman Smith, an acting
assiStant FEA administrator ,
sa id at a Senate hearing
Wednesday
hi s
age ncy
suspects the petroleum in·
dustry has charged $1.4 billion
more than price contro ls
allowed.
These controls allow pe.

a lot of hurdles before that
happens .
It will take time to trace
a ll eged ove rc harges . Man¥
charges may turn out to be
perfectly legal.
Many may involve a refiner

overcharging a wholesaler who
did not pass the price hike on to

sa ler would get a refund but not
lhe public .
No one knows just how to

toaay.
"!lstening lJJ the tapes, it
became clear lJJ me that in
least four major instances, the

impressions given me by the
former President were false .. .
I feel there is an ample
showing on this I trial) record
that I was deceived," he said. '
"I am perfectly willing lJJ
stand on the record of those
tapes. Those tapes show that
lime after lime after lime I
advocated full disclosure of the

facts.''

Prosecutor James F. Neal,
coiled over the lectern like a
cougar, pounced on Ehrlich·
man's repeated assertions that
he wanted to "get the truth
out."
· Did Ehrlichman tell the FBI
he had learned the bugging was
· a Nixon campaign operation?
That clandestine payments
began to the burglars almost
immediately ? That he had
Ohio Power Co. to State of cautioned Nixon within three
weeks of the Watergate arrests
Ohio, parcels, Columbia.
that granting clemency would
Ira E . Van Cooney to Sidney
be risky?
E. Ellis, Vicki S. Ellis, lot,
" No" was the answer in each
Middleport.

Meigs

Property

Transfers

Co., et al, to Western Reserve
Telephone Co., merger, Meigs.
Sybil Ebersbach, Comm.,
Everett H. Thomas, dec. to
Clara
Thomas,
Horton
Thomas, Eugene Thomas, Don
Thomas, Fay DeWees, lot,
Pomeroy.
Gregory N. Wood, Cheryl L.
Wood to Lee 0 . Wood , Beatrice
Wood , lot, Rutland.
Freeland S. Norris, Lucille
E. Norris to Dallas B. Clelland,
Geraldine Clelland, .68 acre,
Sutton.
Sidney J. Ervin, Agnes
E,.,in, Nellie Rowley, Carl K.
Rowley to John Krawsczyn,
' Sr., Billie Jo Krawsczyn , lot,
Middleport.
Emily Carroll to Anna
Lyons , Russell Lyons, lot ,
Middleport.
State of Ohio to Thomas D.
Ball, Benjamin W. Ball, Claire
M. Ball, Sr., parcel, Columbia.
John
Harrison ,
Judy
Harrison to Marvin L. Randolph, Mary B. Randolph, 1.88
acre, Salisbury.

Choose .

a

chain .for
any purpose

teachers in 27 school districts
in the 11kounty area served by
RESA . It's objec tives is to

a:;sessmen t survey to determine wh(:!.t teachers need to
improve themselves in the

guide in-service training of
teachers.
The needs assessment in-

profession.
The Southeastern

Ohi o-

strument !!'as developed
through the cooperation of area

Reg ional Education ServiCe
Agency provides services for

supervisors, principals, and
te achers composed of the

27 school districts in Athens,

following :

Margaret

Beard,

Hocking , Jackson,

elementary supervisor, Per ry

Meig s , Monroe , Morgan ,
Perry, VinlJJn, and Washington

County Schools; Louis Belt,
director of special curriculum ,

filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court and a divorce has

case.
,.
"There was a whole constel-

lation of things 1 didn't ten
Utem," said Ehrlichman, explaining that he only answered
questions the agents asked him
and volunteered nothing .
" Did you tell them you
wanted to get the truth out?"
Neal demanded.

been granted .
Joan Riffle, Pt . Pleasant,
filed for support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Ac t
again st Curtis F. Ri!fle ,
Pomeroy. Bernice McKinney
has been granted a divorce
Samuel
Eugene
from
McKin ney on charges of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.

" ThiS is a very popular toy this year. All
your child has to do is plug it in and wa tch it
,
play!"

"Of course not," came the
reply.
Nor, Ehrlichman conceded,
did he tell what he knew to
John N. Mitchell, bead of the
Nixon campaign, or H. R.
Haldeman, the White House

Monroe County Schools; R9ger
Thompson,
assist~nt
superi ntendent, Athens .City
Sehools;
and Tom Vilchner,
Bumgardner,
s upervisor,
principal,
Trimble Local
Marietta City Sehools; Joy ·
Schools.
Cre ighto n, teacher, Athens
As a part of the development
City Schools ; Tim Haught,
of
the assessment instrument
director of special curricu\wn ,
1
survey).
members of the
·Monroe Co unty Schools ;
eommitlee
decided
what would
William McDonald , principal,
Jackson City Sch.ools; Greg be in it and how b~oad it would
Morris , principal, Logan City be. The information to be
Sc ho ols; Will iam Northup, · ga thered by the survey is of a
guidance coun se lor , Buckeye- general nature, augmented by
Hills Career Center; Ethel follow-up assessments that will
Pfalzgraf, general c;onoervisor , provide greater specificity and
detail to the total picture. of
a r ea in-service needs ~nd
request. The survey was field
tested, then further refined.·
The first step in an effor( to
provide com pre hensive ' in·

DANCE PLANNED
RACINE - A dance will be
held at Southern High School,
Racine,
following
the
basketball game . Bob Jones,
disc jockey, will provide the
music. Admission is $1. The
eve nt is being sponsored by the
se nior claSs .

Mrs .

HOSPITALIZED
Olan Genheimer,

Minersville, is a pa tient at

Holzer Medical Center shere
she is undergoing treatment
and observation . Her room

number is 227.

'," 'Ohio CoWtcil on Alcoholi sm
I l l. h ~ ld
its first meetin g
1
: : :1•November 30 at the
Holiday

on

: ~ ~· Inn in Marietta.

The Southeast Council is
(""designated Region 8 according
', ""tti the sta le program, and
·Hucovers the counties of Athens ,
;,~Hocking, Meigs, Munroe.
~ :cMorgan, Noble, Perry and

LONG BOTTOM - William
Everett Evans, 80, Long
Bottom, died Wednesday at
Portsmouth.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, Nute and E lla
Wells Evans; his wife, Nora;
one son, Donald ; a daughter,
Virginia; a brother, Wilbur,

OMITTED
RUTLAND - Mrs. Harry
Williamson was co .. hostess for
the annual Christmas party of
the Rutland Garden Club held
Monday night at tbe home of
Mrs. C. 0 . Chapman and Mrs.
Ann Webster. Her name was
unintentionally omitted from
an earlier .account of the
meeting.

and one sister, Nellie.
Mr , Evans is survived by five
sons, Raymond, Minersville ;

William and Harold , both of
Long Bottom, and Paul and
Normand, both of Portland ;
four daughters, Mrs. Ninnie
Pullins, Canton; Mrs. Della
Coleman, Columbus, and Mrs .
Ruth Ann Long and Mrs .
Janice Lunger, both of East
!lverpool ; a brother, Richard,
of Ravenswood, W. Va .; 29 ·
gra ndchildren, 10 great·
gra ndchildren, and several
nieces and nephews .

Funeral services wiU be held
Friday at 2 p.m . at Ewing
Chapel. Burial will be in
Chester Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home ·
anytime. Rev. Edward Griffith
will be ,In charge.

serv ic e

~n

..

the field of in-service to cover
all teachers .
'
The assessment is lhe out·
come of an assessment done
one year ago of which lt}e
results indicate thai in-service
opportunities were needed.

"

''Twenty.:.sevfm

voice rising.

"

mutiny

'"
, ,,._

41

tion ' ' :

...
" '"I
I

NEW
PHILCO''
SIDE-BY-SIDE

COLD
GUARD
Refrigerator

'"
"'

...

An

&lt;H.l-hoc co mmitl ee ,
c ha r~ l·d with rec ruiting a fu..ll timr pr nject director, is
{"O!llposed of Carolyn M. Belyk
1 Athens). Hcv . Willi am Perrin
I Meigs 1, Wade C. McKelvey
1Monroe 1. Frederic k M. Cux,
M .D . 1Nobl e 1, .and Father
Dona l A. O 'Carr oll r Marie tta l.

presiclen l., Cene vc1 L. Riley of

J\lhcns &lt;"IS vke-prcsidenl , ami
Mary 1\11n Nau of No b le
County, lr~asurcr .
Arm ~ lr o ng pledged hi s d for t.s toward ac hi evi ng the
and lk vicw , OVHSF .
objectives uf the program and
Offi ce rs selceted for the new imm e d i;.IIP iy assumed t he

)"O"""OlL OO

liP

SILlY PUID
Solid liquid

•tN

•.u •. .;

,

Sure, I'm a hard-hat type,"

agreed Nuchow, a veteran of
the 5th Army that servt!d in
Italy during World War II, "but
I still can't imagine this
happening in 1974."
Nuchow said 1,200 Gls stationed in Gl!rmany have signed
a petition to Congress asking
that the charges be dropped.
" And Robert has a lot of
support among the Local 840
membership too," the teamster official said. ' 'There are a
lot of long-llaired veterans of
Korea and VietNam in Local

840 who are behind us ."

,., ,., , ,• COt~ 01

MIDGET
TREE LIGHTS

3 Hour Fireplace Logs
Burns in Colors
Case of 6

Game

in co lor~
S l.2 5 Value

Every Penny Counts .

SAVES TIME
Easy-to-adjust cantilever shelves.

2 Rolls Foil
90 sq. fl.
S2.59 Value

max

WHITMAN'S
SAMPLET
FOR CHRISTMAS

"' Gillette

1000 WATT DRYER

ONE POUND

American Tree
!. Wreath

7-FOOT
SCOTCH PINE
CHRISTMAS TREES

CLAIROL

CRAZY CURL
Steam curl ing iron. Twist a
curl in only 10 seco nds, non ~t i!:,k J;Ojl tinQc uses tap, water.
Lightweight and easy to
handle.
$22 .99
Value

I@

FUNDALE FARM SEl
44 piece set includes co lo rf u l
st i c animals. fences,
ra ctor." impl ements and
large m e lal barn.

Rea l looking tr ees are easy
to assem ble and last tor
years . Features ri ch green
color, fu l l shape , flame
re tardant
and
s trong

LIBERTY DRUM
Ha s break -resistant. tuff .
beat playing head, sprj ngs
and 2 drum sti cks. · '
American flag des ign .

branches. to hold

$30.00 Value

$1995

MORSE ELECTROPHONIC
CLAIROL

SKIN MACHINE

. Automatic Cleanspng Brui s h
Scrub s away face
dirt with thou sands
of
so ft
rotating
bristles. Comes with
ba tter ies. storage
case and Fastex f~c e.
ba r .

COTY

HAND &amp; BODY
LOTION
SPECIAL

5

PANASONIC

8-TRACK TAPE PLAYER

COMPLETE STEREO SYSTEM

" Dynamite B"

Features bu ilt -in 8 tr ack ta pe
playe r. 50 watts inp ut power,
AM- FM FM sle r eo radio,
de luxe bui lt· in BSR recor d
changer &amp; two powerful
matching s peakers, co m ·
plete with cart, r ecord ,
headp hon es and dust cover.
$225.00 Value

Un i que
design
f eatur es pu sh - in
change
c h ann e I
se lector . bull' s eye
program
indicator
Com pl ete w ith AC
cord and 6 batterie s.
Choi ce of color s.
$49.95 Va lu e

$16995

Authent ic
kerosin e
lamps ar e 12" high

1,75

Choice of Co lor s

TOASTMASTER

SAVES SPACE

.

'

'\

'

"

'

....

~ ·=

•····o

- ·"
' '
'

1. I

' · ,..,
.'.'·
.~

'"

It's time to take shoplifting seriously.

'

.

\.'.

"'

-

•

Foreman &amp; Abbott
MIDDLEPORT,

Ohin£aouncil Against Shoplifting

OHIO

Attorney General William.J .

' " ' ;&gt;

·"

''

Brown, Chairman

Cooperating Organizations: Ohio Council of Retail Merchants . Ohio Chamb er of Comme rce · Ohio School
Boards Association · Ohio Association of Chiefs o f Police · Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association .
Buckeye State S h eriffs Association • Ohio Retail Jewelers Association

/

•

\ "\

,.,

"

SLAUGHTER STEERS
Standard 800.1100 lbs. 29-29.75.
. SLAUGHTER HEIFERS Standard 700.1000 lbs. 22·22.10.
SLAUGHTER CO WS (Jommercial16-20, Utility 18. 75·
21.80, Canner &amp; Cutter 16-18,
Bulls over 1000 lbs. 21.60.
VEAL - Choice &amp; Prime 190225 lbs. 52.
./
HOGS - U.S. 1·3 190-240 lbs.
41 , U.S. 1·3 240.260 lbs. 39.5().40,
Sows, U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 211-32,
Boars 3()()..6()() lbs. 23-23.75, Pigs
( by head) 2().40 lbs. 4-12, 4()..60 ·
lbs. 12-14.50, 60 lbs. plus 18-21.
YEARLING STE ERS Good &amp; Choice 5()()..600 lbs.
18.50-25.75.
YEARLING HEIFERS Good &amp; Choice 50()..600 lbs. 1824.
STEER CALVES - 300.400
lbs. 20.24.50, t()().SOO lbs. 19·
22.50.
BULL CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice 3(1()..400 lbs. 17.50-20, 400.
500 lbs. 111-25, 50()..600 lbs. 2023.50.
HE!' ' ER CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice
!00 lbs. 18-22, 400.550
lbs. Ill-&lt;,
Cows &amp; Calves (by
head) JII!J.... J.
BABY CALVES (by head ) 33, Holstein &amp; Brown

... ' '""'"

•

Swiss 8-23 .

mmer
14 Day Home Triiill
S~7 . 9S Value

'23.99
FREE BONUS
With Purchase
Of An y Fluamatic

SCHICK
FAMILY
STYLING DRYER , .___~~-

SCHICK
HOT LAntER
MACHINE
2 Refills of lather
$19.99 Va lue

PORTABLE HEATER

$26.95 Value

~

super sharp blades .

- pop in repla cement head

Insta nt heat i n 6 seconds. com pact des ign 4505 BTU rati ng at
1320 watt s. 7 heat selections.
Turns off if upset.

Reg . $2.98

,:

SCHICK 400
R.EXAMATIC
SHAVER

Ask for Coupon at Store
Expires Jan . 20, 1915

No. RG-830-S

KEROSENE
LAMPS

12 oz .

all

nam ents.

$3.15
Value

$495

$5.95 Value

$17"

GILLETTE

MAX FOR MEN
Norelco Automatic

:.l. - ·-·

SELF-BUTTERING
CORN POPPER

...

$18.95 Value

Style Dryer for
Men . Now with 650
Watts a nd 2
grooming attachments

DRIP FILTER
COFFEE MAKER

'I

Butter ·up Corn Popper
Mak es Perfect popcorn
r.vPr•1ti1m e. U L approved.
year warranty .

December7, 1974

,.

The next meeting of tl:
council wi ll be J an uar y 8,
noon in Mariette~, thP lt)(:a t ,,
to be announced .

pro·

MARKET REPORT
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

,,

attend .

1 Rolls Paper

$2.06
Value

shing or stea dy bur•1in!1l
U l Apprdved
20 Liles
$2 .54 Valu e

Market Report

And when you put your cash on the counter, you may find things
cost more than expected.
One reason is the ,price tag on shoplifting. Last year, shoplifting
losses in Ohio totaled more than $488,000,000. Because stores are
unable to absorb this entire loss, it costs your family $150 per year to
pay for what shoplifters steal.
Half of all shoplifting occurs now, during the holiday season. How
can you help? Simple. Just tell a store clerk if you see someone who
may be shoplifting. You won't become involved.
Now more than ever we've got tb make every penny. count.

Atte nding t he reg ional
meeting fr om Athens Coun ty
were Carolyn M. Belyk , JoAnn
George, GcnevC~ L. Rilcv and
Emerso n Spe nce r ; ·from
Was hing ton County, Louis R.
Armstr ong , Dorothy A. Barrett

PAPER
&amp; FOIL

Card

Mold II ~
Boun ce II .
Pickup comics

Hamilton Beach

Over A
Decade

Even at 110 degrees, a Phi leo Sideby-Side cools quicker, keeps its
cold longer, than any other
· refrigerator-freezer tested!

OVHSF.

9 Roll

&lt;f
. '
'

In

·
SAVES FOOD

CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL
PRICE

' •'

' "'.

The Most
Exciting
Advance
in
RefrigeratOIS

charges."

The senior Nuchow, secretary-lr"'!surer of Teamsters
Local 940, talked to his son last
week.
"He said 'Dad, you might not
like this because you're sort of
a hard-hat type guy, but I'm
still standing up for my principles.'

.. .'

Watergate principals; or using
the CIA to block the FBI's
investigation.

men in the

battery went on a 24-hour
strike. When an officer threatened to . 9:\~s,e,.!h£.A~~ ~ill\
insuhordiriailon ana mutiny' 10
·Of the men gave in. The 17 who
stood firm are now facing

40

passing
"veiled
assurances" .of clemency to

&lt;lkuhul se rv ices.
The Code of Hcgu la ti ons :md
by -l :m s for the Reg io na l
Coundl were p r esented &lt;.llld
n: vi t'\l"~d by David Frey, Legal
Counse l, Director of Ana lysis

offi ("e of pn's idcut.

CHRISTMAS GIFT IDEAS
ROOK
-

~; tluta1\fme!

:wear

Mitchell and Haldeman are
among those now on trial.
Nixon is an unindlcted coconspirator.
·:I want the jury to understand," Neal said. "Tell the
jury who you told in an effort to

1 had no reasoh to ,"
Ehrlichman shrugged.
. Throughout the long day,
Neal conlronted Ehrlichman
with his own grand jury
testimony that appeared to
contradict what he said on the
witness stand. Each time,
Ehrlichman came up with an ·
explanation -twice that he had
41
ffiisspoken" and wished to
correct the record.
He denied having any hand in
or knowledge of hush money
payments to the burglars to
''keep them on the reserva-

( "(IU/1('!1 Wl'l"l' Loui s R. Arm ('OCJI'dination of s trong uf Washing ton Cuunty,

[)i!llSion, ami

1.::'-1'

, }Jy JULIANNE HASTINGS
... NEW YORK (UP!) - WiiJ•u ---~
• .JHIIII Nuchow Teamsters
~:union official, World War II
~;11eteran, and self-describ~d
.,~ :J;ll!rd.flat type" -will fty to
West Berlin Friday to testify
.that SOldiers have a right to
long hair and beards.
:~; At issue is the fate of his son,
"~l. Robert Nuchow, 19, and 16
other young soldiers. They will
be tried for mutiny starting
Monday because they went on
strike when told they would
have to shave off their beards
and cut their hair.
The maximum penalty for
mutiny is hanging.
In an interview Thursday,
Nuchow said he stands "100 per
cent" behind his son, who is
attached to Battery C of the
Artillery
Berlin
94th
Brigade.
Nuchow said the dispute
developed last mon th a nd
quickly escalated when the
men in the unit were prohibited
from wearing hair or beards.

and into

tell anyone?" asked Neal, his

prujet·l ...; 111 development , L'X-

.,

the

get the story out."
A pause. 11 I'm not sure about
Ulat ."
" Don 't you know you didn't

administrative structure for
the s tate-wide plan of loca l an d

"

assessment is an initial effort
towards moving out of the
special education area

I'

:.hack
son
......

':op-

coordinator,

~ -~

n1

portunities identified by the
survey . The IRC will not dictate to the school districts what
should be done in their area.
According to William ·'o.

Elmore,

Health

DURAFLAME

Upon

training

Hic hant Dav is ,
Co ns ult:mt fo r the Ohio
Dt·p~lrlm e nt
uf
HP&lt;J.llh 1\lcoholis m Program. repor ted
on Publie l..:-1ws efft•cting tht
prugmm for Oh io and dPt~1ilcd
1:-usun be twee n ·the State of
Ohiu a nd loe:1l alcoholi s m

Col umbus , Ohio. Dodor Grd :
ncr expla ined tht&gt; desig n and

-

hnl '

request, the IRC will provide
assistance to each district to
facilitate the provisions oC. the
in-servi ce

'·
Project

fih d Development Consultant

v~.Hard -hat

assessment results will be fed
back lo the districts to assist
them in planning and · im·
pl e menting meaningful. 'In·
activtties.

of

tr ca lrn ~!

ii' 'On Alcoholism for The Oh io
~ · ..Valley
Health
Service s
:: Foundation, Inc ., ( OVHSF) of
h " 1\thens, called lhe meeting to

to teachers, the

servic e

Department

regiona l alcoholi:;; m
and Cil r c program .

;. '" Harold J . Rolph, Planning

William Everett Evans,

80, died on Wednesday

orde r cmd in troduced guests
and participan ts.
Gue st speaker for the
meeting w:o1 s Thomas Gardner,
M.D ., Assistant Director, Ohio

and F'ather Dona l A. O'Carn .' i,
from Mon roe County, Wad1• ';_
McKel vey and Rev. Paul 1.
Price ; from Noble County,
Frederick M . Cox, M .D. ;, I
Mary Ann Na u; and Ht
Wi lliam P e rrin r eprescn ~ J
Meigs County . Represenlat l\ ·~
fr om Hocking, Morgan ~H ' !
Perry CoW1ty were un a ble 111

: : Washington .

chief of staff, or even Nixon.

Available in colors
to match nearly any
kitchen decor.

. RACINE, OHIO

Ohio -Re g iona l Education
Service Agency (RESAI has
deve lope d a compre he nsive

MARlETTA ~Officers were
elected and broad objectives
:"::1\utlined when the Sou theastern

Marietta City Schools; Charl es
Bethel, principal, Northern
Local Sc hools; Dora J ean

A suit for support has been

All 16.6 cu. ft. models now only 30"
wide.

Star Supply

strudion.al Hesourrc Center
( IRC) of th e Southeastern

Action filed
. for support

just fooled by Nixon

Southeastern Ohio Telephone

In -

cons wners . Then th e whole-

Ehrlichman no crook,
By JANE DENISON
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - As
John D. Ehrlichman sees it, he
IS no Watergate crook but a
man deceived -by Richard M.
Nixon, the president of the
United States whom he had
served loyally and well for
years.
"As I look back now and add
it all up, I knew pitifully little
about this matter," he testified
Wednesday . Ehrlichman's aJ)pearance defending himself at
the cover-up trial is due to end

The

cmmties.
The su rv ey will be administered tu m ore tha n 3,300

Gallia,

refund money to the public.
Smith said one possibility is to
have gasoline stations c ut
prices by a given amount for a
set period of t ime, thus
repaying Lhe '~public" but not
necessarily
the
same
trolewn firms to raise prices customers who were overonly as much as their costs go charged.
up .
Another possibility, he said,
"The emphasis in remedial is to make companies hold
actions is getting the money back price increases t hey
back to the public, " Smith said. otherwise would legally be
But he made clear there will be allowed in the future.

Council on Alcoholism organizes for action

Teacher assessment survey planned
--.c.
ATHF.N S

The rr uject pla ce for the
Southeastern Oho Council on
Alco hol ism, conta ini ng a
resri urce
in ven to ry
wa s
presented and reviewed by Ann
Fugate, Directo r of Co mmunity Hea lth Services ,

10· 12 Cups
Mak es be tter coffee. Coffee
never boil s
so it's never
bitter .

$39.95
Valu e

•12 99

--

Reg. $26.59

$1899

OLD SPICE
SPRAY DEODORANT
7 oz.
'1.65 Value
$119

ICE BUCKETS

KODAK POCKET

Choose from No. 4442, 31 "2 qt. chrome
plat ed or No. 4187, b ig beer tanka rd .

CANDLE
FACTORY
4 reusable
mold s, wax , wick s.
coloring
&amp;
fragrance.
$10.95 Va lue

$699

- ~ ·&amp;~. ; .(l.@

No. 4442- !8.29 Value

$599

No. 4187-S10.39 Value

~?

No . A-10- RE

INSTAMATIC 10 KIT
Little Camer a
Big pict ures . K i.
includes camera, fi l m, Magicu be &amp;
Mag icube extender .

$24.95
Val

llTRONtX ELECTRONI.C

ENGLISH
LEATHER

KODAK POCKET
SMILE SAVER KIT
Kit includes ins. tama tic 10 camera,
case, 3 magicubes , film, magi
ex t ender, pri nt f rame and
s.tructions .

After Shave
4 oz .

$29 .95
Value

•1999
'T

POCKET CALCULATOR
A thoughitul gill for Mom . Dad or a
student.
8 digit display - solid state desig n ,
fea t ures clear entry key, clear key,
f lo ating ·decimal. Perform s t11ain
computations . No moving parts to
wear out. One year guarantee.
Optional AC adapter avai labl e .

.......

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m .oo

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~ 11.! IB:. f, 11 ~ ~m,.:rrr

1IJ~.i.'!.l4 11n ...... ~T~ '

72"x90" Twin or Full
.. '"'"

J

20% OFF

BRITE'WATCH BANDS

____....

MEN'S or LADIES'
Choose from many slylesMAKESAGREATGfFT

·---

~"·

100 pet. Acrylic with
n ylon
binding ,
permanap
reduces
shedd ing &amp; piling ,
warmth
w i thout
weight .
Washable.
Choice of colors.

$8.00 Value

$699

�.·

..

., .

·.:

\

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Thursday, Dec. 12. 1974

'·'

8 - The Daily Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Dec . 12. 1974

Rebates pose

•

Berrys V\/orld
- -- --

complications
WASHINGTON (UP! )- The
Federal Energy Administraton.
says it will reimburse the
public fo r possibly $2 billion in
overcharges for gasoline, fuel
oil and other petroleum products .
But it doesn 'I know how it
will do this, or when, or who
will be reimbursed, or by how
much.

·

Gorman Smith, an acting
assiStant FEA administrator ,
sa id at a Senate hearing
Wednesday
hi s
age ncy
suspects the petroleum in·
dustry has charged $1.4 billion
more than price contro ls
allowed.
These controls allow pe.

a lot of hurdles before that
happens .
It will take time to trace
a ll eged ove rc harges . Man¥
charges may turn out to be
perfectly legal.
Many may involve a refiner

overcharging a wholesaler who
did not pass the price hike on to

sa ler would get a refund but not
lhe public .
No one knows just how to

toaay.
"!lstening lJJ the tapes, it
became clear lJJ me that in
least four major instances, the

impressions given me by the
former President were false .. .
I feel there is an ample
showing on this I trial) record
that I was deceived," he said. '
"I am perfectly willing lJJ
stand on the record of those
tapes. Those tapes show that
lime after lime after lime I
advocated full disclosure of the

facts.''

Prosecutor James F. Neal,
coiled over the lectern like a
cougar, pounced on Ehrlich·
man's repeated assertions that
he wanted to "get the truth
out."
· Did Ehrlichman tell the FBI
he had learned the bugging was
· a Nixon campaign operation?
That clandestine payments
began to the burglars almost
immediately ? That he had
Ohio Power Co. to State of cautioned Nixon within three
weeks of the Watergate arrests
Ohio, parcels, Columbia.
that granting clemency would
Ira E . Van Cooney to Sidney
be risky?
E. Ellis, Vicki S. Ellis, lot,
" No" was the answer in each
Middleport.

Meigs

Property

Transfers

Co., et al, to Western Reserve
Telephone Co., merger, Meigs.
Sybil Ebersbach, Comm.,
Everett H. Thomas, dec. to
Clara
Thomas,
Horton
Thomas, Eugene Thomas, Don
Thomas, Fay DeWees, lot,
Pomeroy.
Gregory N. Wood, Cheryl L.
Wood to Lee 0 . Wood , Beatrice
Wood , lot, Rutland.
Freeland S. Norris, Lucille
E. Norris to Dallas B. Clelland,
Geraldine Clelland, .68 acre,
Sutton.
Sidney J. Ervin, Agnes
E,.,in, Nellie Rowley, Carl K.
Rowley to John Krawsczyn,
' Sr., Billie Jo Krawsczyn , lot,
Middleport.
Emily Carroll to Anna
Lyons , Russell Lyons, lot ,
Middleport.
State of Ohio to Thomas D.
Ball, Benjamin W. Ball, Claire
M. Ball, Sr., parcel, Columbia.
John
Harrison ,
Judy
Harrison to Marvin L. Randolph, Mary B. Randolph, 1.88
acre, Salisbury.

Choose .

a

chain .for
any purpose

teachers in 27 school districts
in the 11kounty area served by
RESA . It's objec tives is to

a:;sessmen t survey to determine wh(:!.t teachers need to
improve themselves in the

guide in-service training of
teachers.
The needs assessment in-

profession.
The Southeastern

Ohi o-

strument !!'as developed
through the cooperation of area

Reg ional Education ServiCe
Agency provides services for

supervisors, principals, and
te achers composed of the

27 school districts in Athens,

following :

Margaret

Beard,

Hocking , Jackson,

elementary supervisor, Per ry

Meig s , Monroe , Morgan ,
Perry, VinlJJn, and Washington

County Schools; Louis Belt,
director of special curriculum ,

filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court and a divorce has

case.
,.
"There was a whole constel-

lation of things 1 didn't ten
Utem," said Ehrlichman, explaining that he only answered
questions the agents asked him
and volunteered nothing .
" Did you tell them you
wanted to get the truth out?"
Neal demanded.

been granted .
Joan Riffle, Pt . Pleasant,
filed for support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Ac t
again st Curtis F. Ri!fle ,
Pomeroy. Bernice McKinney
has been granted a divorce
Samuel
Eugene
from
McKin ney on charges of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.

" ThiS is a very popular toy this year. All
your child has to do is plug it in and wa tch it
,
play!"

"Of course not," came the
reply.
Nor, Ehrlichman conceded,
did he tell what he knew to
John N. Mitchell, bead of the
Nixon campaign, or H. R.
Haldeman, the White House

Monroe County Schools; R9ger
Thompson,
assist~nt
superi ntendent, Athens .City
Sehools;
and Tom Vilchner,
Bumgardner,
s upervisor,
principal,
Trimble Local
Marietta City Sehools; Joy ·
Schools.
Cre ighto n, teacher, Athens
As a part of the development
City Schools ; Tim Haught,
of
the assessment instrument
director of special curricu\wn ,
1
survey).
members of the
·Monroe Co unty Schools ;
eommitlee
decided
what would
William McDonald , principal,
Jackson City Sch.ools; Greg be in it and how b~oad it would
Morris , principal, Logan City be. The information to be
Sc ho ols; Will iam Northup, · ga thered by the survey is of a
guidance coun se lor , Buckeye- general nature, augmented by
Hills Career Center; Ethel follow-up assessments that will
Pfalzgraf, general c;onoervisor , provide greater specificity and
detail to the total picture. of
a r ea in-service needs ~nd
request. The survey was field
tested, then further refined.·
The first step in an effor( to
provide com pre hensive ' in·

DANCE PLANNED
RACINE - A dance will be
held at Southern High School,
Racine,
following
the
basketball game . Bob Jones,
disc jockey, will provide the
music. Admission is $1. The
eve nt is being sponsored by the
se nior claSs .

Mrs .

HOSPITALIZED
Olan Genheimer,

Minersville, is a pa tient at

Holzer Medical Center shere
she is undergoing treatment
and observation . Her room

number is 227.

'," 'Ohio CoWtcil on Alcoholi sm
I l l. h ~ ld
its first meetin g
1
: : :1•November 30 at the
Holiday

on

: ~ ~· Inn in Marietta.

The Southeast Council is
(""designated Region 8 according
', ""tti the sta le program, and
·Hucovers the counties of Athens ,
;,~Hocking, Meigs, Munroe.
~ :cMorgan, Noble, Perry and

LONG BOTTOM - William
Everett Evans, 80, Long
Bottom, died Wednesday at
Portsmouth.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, Nute and E lla
Wells Evans; his wife, Nora;
one son, Donald ; a daughter,
Virginia; a brother, Wilbur,

OMITTED
RUTLAND - Mrs. Harry
Williamson was co .. hostess for
the annual Christmas party of
the Rutland Garden Club held
Monday night at tbe home of
Mrs. C. 0 . Chapman and Mrs.
Ann Webster. Her name was
unintentionally omitted from
an earlier .account of the
meeting.

and one sister, Nellie.
Mr , Evans is survived by five
sons, Raymond, Minersville ;

William and Harold , both of
Long Bottom, and Paul and
Normand, both of Portland ;
four daughters, Mrs. Ninnie
Pullins, Canton; Mrs. Della
Coleman, Columbus, and Mrs .
Ruth Ann Long and Mrs .
Janice Lunger, both of East
!lverpool ; a brother, Richard,
of Ravenswood, W. Va .; 29 ·
gra ndchildren, 10 great·
gra ndchildren, and several
nieces and nephews .

Funeral services wiU be held
Friday at 2 p.m . at Ewing
Chapel. Burial will be in
Chester Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home ·
anytime. Rev. Edward Griffith
will be ,In charge.

serv ic e

~n

..

the field of in-service to cover
all teachers .
'
The assessment is lhe out·
come of an assessment done
one year ago of which lt}e
results indicate thai in-service
opportunities were needed.

"

''Twenty.:.sevfm

voice rising.

"

mutiny

'"
, ,,._

41

tion ' ' :

...
" '"I
I

NEW
PHILCO''
SIDE-BY-SIDE

COLD
GUARD
Refrigerator

'"
"'

...

An

&lt;H.l-hoc co mmitl ee ,
c ha r~ l·d with rec ruiting a fu..ll timr pr nject director, is
{"O!llposed of Carolyn M. Belyk
1 Athens). Hcv . Willi am Perrin
I Meigs 1, Wade C. McKelvey
1Monroe 1. Frederic k M. Cux,
M .D . 1Nobl e 1, .and Father
Dona l A. O 'Carr oll r Marie tta l.

presiclen l., Cene vc1 L. Riley of

J\lhcns &lt;"IS vke-prcsidenl , ami
Mary 1\11n Nau of No b le
County, lr~asurcr .
Arm ~ lr o ng pledged hi s d for t.s toward ac hi evi ng the
and lk vicw , OVHSF .
objectives uf the program and
Offi ce rs selceted for the new imm e d i;.IIP iy assumed t he

)"O"""OlL OO

liP

SILlY PUID
Solid liquid

•tN

•.u •. .;

,

Sure, I'm a hard-hat type,"

agreed Nuchow, a veteran of
the 5th Army that servt!d in
Italy during World War II, "but
I still can't imagine this
happening in 1974."
Nuchow said 1,200 Gls stationed in Gl!rmany have signed
a petition to Congress asking
that the charges be dropped.
" And Robert has a lot of
support among the Local 840
membership too," the teamster official said. ' 'There are a
lot of long-llaired veterans of
Korea and VietNam in Local

840 who are behind us ."

,., ,., , ,• COt~ 01

MIDGET
TREE LIGHTS

3 Hour Fireplace Logs
Burns in Colors
Case of 6

Game

in co lor~
S l.2 5 Value

Every Penny Counts .

SAVES TIME
Easy-to-adjust cantilever shelves.

2 Rolls Foil
90 sq. fl.
S2.59 Value

max

WHITMAN'S
SAMPLET
FOR CHRISTMAS

"' Gillette

1000 WATT DRYER

ONE POUND

American Tree
!. Wreath

7-FOOT
SCOTCH PINE
CHRISTMAS TREES

CLAIROL

CRAZY CURL
Steam curl ing iron. Twist a
curl in only 10 seco nds, non ~t i!:,k J;Ojl tinQc uses tap, water.
Lightweight and easy to
handle.
$22 .99
Value

I@

FUNDALE FARM SEl
44 piece set includes co lo rf u l
st i c animals. fences,
ra ctor." impl ements and
large m e lal barn.

Rea l looking tr ees are easy
to assem ble and last tor
years . Features ri ch green
color, fu l l shape , flame
re tardant
and
s trong

LIBERTY DRUM
Ha s break -resistant. tuff .
beat playing head, sprj ngs
and 2 drum sti cks. · '
American flag des ign .

branches. to hold

$30.00 Value

$1995

MORSE ELECTROPHONIC
CLAIROL

SKIN MACHINE

. Automatic Cleanspng Brui s h
Scrub s away face
dirt with thou sands
of
so ft
rotating
bristles. Comes with
ba tter ies. storage
case and Fastex f~c e.
ba r .

COTY

HAND &amp; BODY
LOTION
SPECIAL

5

PANASONIC

8-TRACK TAPE PLAYER

COMPLETE STEREO SYSTEM

" Dynamite B"

Features bu ilt -in 8 tr ack ta pe
playe r. 50 watts inp ut power,
AM- FM FM sle r eo radio,
de luxe bui lt· in BSR recor d
changer &amp; two powerful
matching s peakers, co m ·
plete with cart, r ecord ,
headp hon es and dust cover.
$225.00 Value

Un i que
design
f eatur es pu sh - in
change
c h ann e I
se lector . bull' s eye
program
indicator
Com pl ete w ith AC
cord and 6 batterie s.
Choi ce of color s.
$49.95 Va lu e

$16995

Authent ic
kerosin e
lamps ar e 12" high

1,75

Choice of Co lor s

TOASTMASTER

SAVES SPACE

.

'

'\

'

"

'

....

~ ·=

•····o

- ·"
' '
'

1. I

' · ,..,
.'.'·
.~

'"

It's time to take shoplifting seriously.

'

.

\.'.

"'

-

•

Foreman &amp; Abbott
MIDDLEPORT,

Ohin£aouncil Against Shoplifting

OHIO

Attorney General William.J .

' " ' ;&gt;

·"

''

Brown, Chairman

Cooperating Organizations: Ohio Council of Retail Merchants . Ohio Chamb er of Comme rce · Ohio School
Boards Association · Ohio Association of Chiefs o f Police · Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association .
Buckeye State S h eriffs Association • Ohio Retail Jewelers Association

/

•

\ "\

,.,

"

SLAUGHTER STEERS
Standard 800.1100 lbs. 29-29.75.
. SLAUGHTER HEIFERS Standard 700.1000 lbs. 22·22.10.
SLAUGHTER CO WS (Jommercial16-20, Utility 18. 75·
21.80, Canner &amp; Cutter 16-18,
Bulls over 1000 lbs. 21.60.
VEAL - Choice &amp; Prime 190225 lbs. 52.
./
HOGS - U.S. 1·3 190-240 lbs.
41 , U.S. 1·3 240.260 lbs. 39.5().40,
Sows, U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 211-32,
Boars 3()()..6()() lbs. 23-23.75, Pigs
( by head) 2().40 lbs. 4-12, 4()..60 ·
lbs. 12-14.50, 60 lbs. plus 18-21.
YEARLING STE ERS Good &amp; Choice 5()()..600 lbs.
18.50-25.75.
YEARLING HEIFERS Good &amp; Choice 50()..600 lbs. 1824.
STEER CALVES - 300.400
lbs. 20.24.50, t()().SOO lbs. 19·
22.50.
BULL CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice 3(1()..400 lbs. 17.50-20, 400.
500 lbs. 111-25, 50()..600 lbs. 2023.50.
HE!' ' ER CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice
!00 lbs. 18-22, 400.550
lbs. Ill-&lt;,
Cows &amp; Calves (by
head) JII!J.... J.
BABY CALVES (by head ) 33, Holstein &amp; Brown

... ' '""'"

•

Swiss 8-23 .

mmer
14 Day Home Triiill
S~7 . 9S Value

'23.99
FREE BONUS
With Purchase
Of An y Fluamatic

SCHICK
FAMILY
STYLING DRYER , .___~~-

SCHICK
HOT LAntER
MACHINE
2 Refills of lather
$19.99 Va lue

PORTABLE HEATER

$26.95 Value

~

super sharp blades .

- pop in repla cement head

Insta nt heat i n 6 seconds. com pact des ign 4505 BTU rati ng at
1320 watt s. 7 heat selections.
Turns off if upset.

Reg . $2.98

,:

SCHICK 400
R.EXAMATIC
SHAVER

Ask for Coupon at Store
Expires Jan . 20, 1915

No. RG-830-S

KEROSENE
LAMPS

12 oz .

all

nam ents.

$3.15
Value

$495

$5.95 Value

$17"

GILLETTE

MAX FOR MEN
Norelco Automatic

:.l. - ·-·

SELF-BUTTERING
CORN POPPER

...

$18.95 Value

Style Dryer for
Men . Now with 650
Watts a nd 2
grooming attachments

DRIP FILTER
COFFEE MAKER

'I

Butter ·up Corn Popper
Mak es Perfect popcorn
r.vPr•1ti1m e. U L approved.
year warranty .

December7, 1974

,.

The next meeting of tl:
council wi ll be J an uar y 8,
noon in Mariette~, thP lt)(:a t ,,
to be announced .

pro·

MARKET REPORT
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

,,

attend .

1 Rolls Paper

$2.06
Value

shing or stea dy bur•1in!1l
U l Apprdved
20 Liles
$2 .54 Valu e

Market Report

And when you put your cash on the counter, you may find things
cost more than expected.
One reason is the ,price tag on shoplifting. Last year, shoplifting
losses in Ohio totaled more than $488,000,000. Because stores are
unable to absorb this entire loss, it costs your family $150 per year to
pay for what shoplifters steal.
Half of all shoplifting occurs now, during the holiday season. How
can you help? Simple. Just tell a store clerk if you see someone who
may be shoplifting. You won't become involved.
Now more than ever we've got tb make every penny. count.

Atte nding t he reg ional
meeting fr om Athens Coun ty
were Carolyn M. Belyk , JoAnn
George, GcnevC~ L. Rilcv and
Emerso n Spe nce r ; ·from
Was hing ton County, Louis R.
Armstr ong , Dorothy A. Barrett

PAPER
&amp; FOIL

Card

Mold II ~
Boun ce II .
Pickup comics

Hamilton Beach

Over A
Decade

Even at 110 degrees, a Phi leo Sideby-Side cools quicker, keeps its
cold longer, than any other
· refrigerator-freezer tested!

OVHSF.

9 Roll

&lt;f
. '
'

In

·
SAVES FOOD

CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL
PRICE

' •'

' "'.

The Most
Exciting
Advance
in
RefrigeratOIS

charges."

The senior Nuchow, secretary-lr"'!surer of Teamsters
Local 940, talked to his son last
week.
"He said 'Dad, you might not
like this because you're sort of
a hard-hat type guy, but I'm
still standing up for my principles.'

.. .'

Watergate principals; or using
the CIA to block the FBI's
investigation.

men in the

battery went on a 24-hour
strike. When an officer threatened to . 9:\~s,e,.!h£.A~~ ~ill\
insuhordiriailon ana mutiny' 10
·Of the men gave in. The 17 who
stood firm are now facing

40

passing
"veiled
assurances" .of clemency to

&lt;lkuhul se rv ices.
The Code of Hcgu la ti ons :md
by -l :m s for the Reg io na l
Coundl were p r esented &lt;.llld
n: vi t'\l"~d by David Frey, Legal
Counse l, Director of Ana lysis

offi ("e of pn's idcut.

CHRISTMAS GIFT IDEAS
ROOK
-

~; tluta1\fme!

:wear

Mitchell and Haldeman are
among those now on trial.
Nixon is an unindlcted coconspirator.
·:I want the jury to understand," Neal said. "Tell the
jury who you told in an effort to

1 had no reasoh to ,"
Ehrlichman shrugged.
. Throughout the long day,
Neal conlronted Ehrlichman
with his own grand jury
testimony that appeared to
contradict what he said on the
witness stand. Each time,
Ehrlichman came up with an ·
explanation -twice that he had
41
ffiisspoken" and wished to
correct the record.
He denied having any hand in
or knowledge of hush money
payments to the burglars to
''keep them on the reserva-

( "(IU/1('!1 Wl'l"l' Loui s R. Arm ('OCJI'dination of s trong uf Washing ton Cuunty,

[)i!llSion, ami

1.::'-1'

, }Jy JULIANNE HASTINGS
... NEW YORK (UP!) - WiiJ•u ---~
• .JHIIII Nuchow Teamsters
~:union official, World War II
~;11eteran, and self-describ~d
.,~ :J;ll!rd.flat type" -will fty to
West Berlin Friday to testify
.that SOldiers have a right to
long hair and beards.
:~; At issue is the fate of his son,
"~l. Robert Nuchow, 19, and 16
other young soldiers. They will
be tried for mutiny starting
Monday because they went on
strike when told they would
have to shave off their beards
and cut their hair.
The maximum penalty for
mutiny is hanging.
In an interview Thursday,
Nuchow said he stands "100 per
cent" behind his son, who is
attached to Battery C of the
Artillery
Berlin
94th
Brigade.
Nuchow said the dispute
developed last mon th a nd
quickly escalated when the
men in the unit were prohibited
from wearing hair or beards.

and into

tell anyone?" asked Neal, his

prujet·l ...; 111 development , L'X-

.,

the

get the story out."
A pause. 11 I'm not sure about
Ulat ."
" Don 't you know you didn't

administrative structure for
the s tate-wide plan of loca l an d

"

assessment is an initial effort
towards moving out of the
special education area

I'

:.hack
son
......

':op-

coordinator,

~ -~

n1

portunities identified by the
survey . The IRC will not dictate to the school districts what
should be done in their area.
According to William ·'o.

Elmore,

Health

DURAFLAME

Upon

training

Hic hant Dav is ,
Co ns ult:mt fo r the Ohio
Dt·p~lrlm e nt
uf
HP&lt;J.llh 1\lcoholis m Program. repor ted
on Publie l..:-1ws efft•cting tht
prugmm for Oh io and dPt~1ilcd
1:-usun be twee n ·the State of
Ohiu a nd loe:1l alcoholi s m

Col umbus , Ohio. Dodor Grd :
ncr expla ined tht&gt; desig n and

-

hnl '

request, the IRC will provide
assistance to each district to
facilitate the provisions oC. the
in-servi ce

'·
Project

fih d Development Consultant

v~.Hard -hat

assessment results will be fed
back lo the districts to assist
them in planning and · im·
pl e menting meaningful. 'In·
activtties.

of

tr ca lrn ~!

ii' 'On Alcoholism for The Oh io
~ · ..Valley
Health
Service s
:: Foundation, Inc ., ( OVHSF) of
h " 1\thens, called lhe meeting to

to teachers, the

servic e

Department

regiona l alcoholi:;; m
and Cil r c program .

;. '" Harold J . Rolph, Planning

William Everett Evans,

80, died on Wednesday

orde r cmd in troduced guests
and participan ts.
Gue st speaker for the
meeting w:o1 s Thomas Gardner,
M.D ., Assistant Director, Ohio

and F'ather Dona l A. O'Carn .' i,
from Mon roe County, Wad1• ';_
McKel vey and Rev. Paul 1.
Price ; from Noble County,
Frederick M . Cox, M .D. ;, I
Mary Ann Na u; and Ht
Wi lliam P e rrin r eprescn ~ J
Meigs County . Represenlat l\ ·~
fr om Hocking, Morgan ~H ' !
Perry CoW1ty were un a ble 111

: : Washington .

chief of staff, or even Nixon.

Available in colors
to match nearly any
kitchen decor.

. RACINE, OHIO

Ohio -Re g iona l Education
Service Agency (RESAI has
deve lope d a compre he nsive

MARlETTA ~Officers were
elected and broad objectives
:"::1\utlined when the Sou theastern

Marietta City Schools; Charl es
Bethel, principal, Northern
Local Sc hools; Dora J ean

A suit for support has been

All 16.6 cu. ft. models now only 30"
wide.

Star Supply

strudion.al Hesourrc Center
( IRC) of th e Southeastern

Action filed
. for support

just fooled by Nixon

Southeastern Ohio Telephone

In -

cons wners . Then th e whole-

Ehrlichman no crook,
By JANE DENISON
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - As
John D. Ehrlichman sees it, he
IS no Watergate crook but a
man deceived -by Richard M.
Nixon, the president of the
United States whom he had
served loyally and well for
years.
"As I look back now and add
it all up, I knew pitifully little
about this matter," he testified
Wednesday . Ehrlichman's aJ)pearance defending himself at
the cover-up trial is due to end

The

cmmties.
The su rv ey will be administered tu m ore tha n 3,300

Gallia,

refund money to the public.
Smith said one possibility is to
have gasoline stations c ut
prices by a given amount for a
set period of t ime, thus
repaying Lhe '~public" but not
necessarily
the
same
trolewn firms to raise prices customers who were overonly as much as their costs go charged.
up .
Another possibility, he said,
"The emphasis in remedial is to make companies hold
actions is getting the money back price increases t hey
back to the public, " Smith said. otherwise would legally be
But he made clear there will be allowed in the future.

Council on Alcoholism organizes for action

Teacher assessment survey planned
--.c.
ATHF.N S

The rr uject pla ce for the
Southeastern Oho Council on
Alco hol ism, conta ini ng a
resri urce
in ven to ry
wa s
presented and reviewed by Ann
Fugate, Directo r of Co mmunity Hea lth Services ,

10· 12 Cups
Mak es be tter coffee. Coffee
never boil s
so it's never
bitter .

$39.95
Valu e

•12 99

--

Reg. $26.59

$1899

OLD SPICE
SPRAY DEODORANT
7 oz.
'1.65 Value
$119

ICE BUCKETS

KODAK POCKET

Choose from No. 4442, 31 "2 qt. chrome
plat ed or No. 4187, b ig beer tanka rd .

CANDLE
FACTORY
4 reusable
mold s, wax , wick s.
coloring
&amp;
fragrance.
$10.95 Va lue

$699

- ~ ·&amp;~. ; .(l.@

No. 4442- !8.29 Value

$599

No. 4187-S10.39 Value

~?

No . A-10- RE

INSTAMATIC 10 KIT
Little Camer a
Big pict ures . K i.
includes camera, fi l m, Magicu be &amp;
Mag icube extender .

$24.95
Val

llTRONtX ELECTRONI.C

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LEATHER

KODAK POCKET
SMILE SAVER KIT
Kit includes ins. tama tic 10 camera,
case, 3 magicubes , film, magi
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s.tructions .

After Shave
4 oz .

$29 .95
Value

•1999
'T

POCKET CALCULATOR
A thoughitul gill for Mom . Dad or a
student.
8 digit display - solid state desig n ,
fea t ures clear entry key, clear key,
f lo ating ·decimal. Perform s t11ain
computations . No moving parts to
wear out. One year guarantee.
Optional AC adapter avai labl e .

.......

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m .oo

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~ 11.! IB:. f, 11 ~ ~m,.:rrr

1IJ~.i.'!.l4 11n ...... ~T~ '

72"x90" Twin or Full
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20% OFF

BRITE'WATCH BANDS

____....

MEN'S or LADIES'
Choose from many slylesMAKESAGREATGfFT

·---

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100 pet. Acrylic with
n ylon
binding ,
permanap
reduces
shedd ing &amp; piling ,
warmth
w i thout
weight .
Washable.
Choice of colors.

$8.00 Value

$699

�10 - The Dally Sent mel Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday Dec 12 1174

tn

Fairview News Notes
By Mn Herbert Roush

Mr and Mrs Gar) Miller
and daughter of Bellville 0
were Thanksg1vmg weekend
guests of Mr and Mrs Charles
Lawson Ol11er guests of the
Lawsons were Mr and Mrs
Edward Lawson and bah) Mr
and Mrs Harold Lawson and
Charles Letart W Va Mr
and Mrs Bill Parsons and
sons AntiqUity Mr and Mrs
Robert Lawson and farmlJ
Mr and Mrs Jerry Bachus
of Ravenna 0 Mr and Mrs
Sam Bachus of Cambndge 0 ,
Mr and Mrs Frank Stepp and
children of Ironton, K) at
tended funeral sen Ices for
theu mother and grandmother,
Mrs Rose Bachus at the Ewmg
Funeral Home
Eldred Hart and daughter
Debb1e of Eliott, Mame VISited
Mr and Mrs Herbert Sayre

Wolfpen
News, Notes
Thanksgiving Day guesl.s of
Mrs Helen Johnson \'.ere Mr
and Mrs Everelt Ra) Johnson
Jeff Audra Enc of Dublin
Mrs Walter Hamm Mr and
Mrs James W Johnson Jamte
Sue Todd Teresa Mrs Lee
Roush, Rodney Cher) 1 Joey of
Pomeroy and Mr and Mrs
Kenneth Johnson Annette and
Duane
Mr and Mrs Tom Johnson
and Mrs Ll oyde Beets of
Grove City were Saturda)
visitors of Mr and Mrs James
J ohnson and family
ThanksgiVIng Day dinner
guesl.s of Mr and Mrs Fred
Tuckerman were Mr and Mrs
James Reeves Mr and Mrs
Eugene Hanmg Rhonda and
Ronald Mr and Mrs Jack
Elam B11l and Carolyn Mr
Robert Reeves and Bryan Mr
Chnlon Orr and Mrs Ermel
Parks of Canal Wmchester
Mr and Mrs Carl McElroy
of Columbus Mrs Mable
Wood, Mr and Mrs John Wood
and Allen of Wilkesville Mr
and Mrs James Reed of
Coliunbus, Mr and Mrs Leo
Davidson Wilma Donna and
Annabelland Mr and Mrs Bill
McElroy Jeff and Joey
Mr and Mrs Harley T
Johnson and Otto Johnson were
fhanksglVmg dmner guests of
Mr and Mrs Harley E
Johnson, Tammy Cheryl and
Terry
Mr and Mrs Charley Sm1th

N LO V N V fv\!::J\ 1 I&lt;!
ol
M&lt;trq 1rf't Lyn( l w 10 pr1 sS eU
iiW'ly I II' V('dr'&gt; &lt;IQO DlC 11

luesd,ty

Mr and Mrs Herberl Sayre
\\ere Thdnksgivmg dinner
guesl' of M1 and Mrs Buck
Rodgers at Columbus rellll'
mng hom e Fnday Other
guests of the Rodg ers were Mr
and Mrs Bnce Sayre Mr and
Mrs Danny Sayre
Mrs Pegg) Gregory of
F::~Irborn spent

Thanksgiving

wtlh her mother Mr and Mrs
David Sayre Mrs Sayre was
relurned Io her home at An
tiqUity ThanksgiVIng Day after
bemg conhned to Holzer
Medical Center four daJs
Mr and Mrs Bill Robmson
and
famll)
Raymond
Robinson and g1rlfnend of
Norfolk Va Jackie Orr of
Columbus were ThanksglVmg
Da) guests of Mrs Bertha
Robmson
Mrs Arnold Hupp and Don
Manuel were at Canton 0
Fnday wbrmg Don s son Bill
w VISit over Thanksg~vmg with
the Manuels and Mr and Mrs
Ray Proft1tl B1ll 1s enJoymg
deer hunting
Edward
Hupp
Eber
Pickens, Jeff Hams are en)oymg deer hunting m PennS) lvama for tWo weeks
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
TO Lu c l i e w them whose
l ast known p lace of res dence
was Glouster OhtO and whose
address s unknown and cannot
w t h reasonable d l1gence be
ascerta n ed
T O M nne 0 Sm th whose
last Known place of restdence
was Tecumseh Oklahoma and
whose add r ess tS unknown and
canno t
wtth
reasonable
d l1gen c e be ascerta ned
TO
8 rd e Leona Meyer
whose lasl known p lac e of
res dence
was
Tecumseh
Oklahoma and whose address
s unknown and ca nnot w1th
re asonab e
dtl gence
be
asce rtamed
TO The unknown he r"S and
dev1sees of Thomas. R Sm tih
T O The unknown hetrs and
devtsees of Lau ra H.:tndley
TO The unknown hers and
dev1sees. of L awrence D Me
Master
9
TO The unknown he rs and
dev sees of Thomas D Sm th
TO Th e unknown hers and
dev sees of M nn e D Sm th
TO The unknown hers and
dev sees of
Btrd1e
Leona
Meyer and
TO Th e unknown hers and
dev sees o f Grace McMaster
Hard ng

You are he reb y not fed that
you have been named delen
dants n a l ega l act on ent11ted
Ada l ene
Sm th
Flechtner
Pia ntlff vS LUC tl e WITHEM
ET AL
Defendants Th1S ac
t on has been ass gned Case No
IS .)22 n the Cou rt ol Common
P l eas of Me gs County Oh o
The ob 1ect of tl'1e Comptatnt s
to reform the deed recorded n
Volume 11
Page 154 Me1gs
County Deed Records to n
elude the entre mterest n the
sa td real estate and to qu1etthe
Idle of the Plamttff as aga nsf
ail of the D efe ndanTs n the
tallow ng descr bed real estate
S tuate tn the VII age of
were Thanksgiving dmner
M ddleport County of Me tgs
State of Oh o be ng the
guesl.s of Mr and Mrs Doyle and
followtng descr bed p eces or
Knapp, Ka1l
Kevin and parcels of land and the bu dl ng
s tuated thereon
Charles
A part of Town Lot Number
Mr and Mrs Larry Johnson
S1xly Seven (67) n Jones Plat
M ddleport and descr bed as
Gma, Tahnee and Brady and of
follow s
Commenc mg at the
Mrs Geneva Shumate were
southwest
corner
ot
Lol
Number
S xty seven
(67)
ThanksgiVIng guesl.s of her son
running northerly on the north
and brother Mr and Mrs
and south I ne of sa d lot
d twenty three feet and
Leon Shwnate and sons of atoresa
four
nche s
thence 1n an
Bantytown W Va
easterly d re c t on and parallel
with the eas t and wes.t 1 ne of
Mr and Mrs Tom Sum
sa td ot f1fty feet thence south
merfleld and daughters of and paralle l w tl'1 tl'1e nortl'1 and
th I ne of sa d lot e1ght (8)
lllin01s, Mr and Mrs Donald sou
feet
!hence easterly and
parall el w1th the 1 ne of sad lot
Russell, Mr and Mrs Ronald
the east 1 ne of sa1d Lot
Russell, children and Mr and to
Number 67
thence to the
Mrs Steve Haggy, daughter
so utheast corner of sa1d lot
thence westerly on the south
were Thanksgiving holiday
I ne of sa1d Lot Number .)7 to
guesl.s of Mr and Mrs Robert
the southw est co rner of satd Lot
Number 67 and be tng the place
Russell
of. begmn ng
Also the followmg descr bed
real estate sttualed
n the
v l lage of M ddleport Metgs
County Stal e of Oh o bounded
The Almanac
and descr bed as follows
A
str p of Lot Number 66 m Jones
By United Press Internaltonal
Plat of Mtdd le port be ng e ght
Today 1s Thursday, Dec 12, nches Wide and one hundred
and fh1rleen feet long off of the
the 346th day of 1974 w1th 19 to north
s de of sa1d Lot No 66
Also the follow ng real estate
follow
Com
The moon IS approachmg Its descr bed as follows
m encmg Twenty s x (26) feet tn
new phase
a southerly dtrect on from the
corner of Lot No
The mornmg stars are nortl'1east
S •ly seve n (67) m
Jones
Mercury, Mars and Saturn
Survey of Middleport
Oh o
The evemng stars are Venus thence westerly stxly three {63)
feet more or less to the Bank
and Jupiter
Bu ld ng OCCUpied by E C Fox
now owned by Dee ward
Those born on this date are and
then ce southerly seven and one
under the s1gn of Sag1ttarms
half (7 2l teet to the I me of the
lot owned by T
R
Sm 1th
John Jay, lust ch1ef JUstice of thence
easterly on the 1me of
the United States was born sai d T R Sm1th lots xty three
(63) feet to the alley tl'1en ce
Dec 12, 1745
northerly seven and one ha t
On th1s day m hiStory
17 1l feet to the place of
In 1901 a wireless message beg nn1ng
Together w th the prtv 1Jege of
was transmttted across the tngre ss and egress to the
of the north and sou th
Atlanhc Ocean for the f1rst owners
port ons of sa d br ck bu ld ng
bme
to the r hers and ass1gns and to
In 1937, Japanese planes the r agents tenants and em
ployees tn the 101n1 use of 11'1e
bombed and sank the U S hailwa~ s lead1ng to F rst
gunboat Panay m the Yangtze Second and Th rd stor es of the
budd ng on sad premtses
R1ver above N ankmg Chma
Bemg the same prem tses
Japan later sa1d 1t was a case bequeathed 1n the Last Wdl and
Testament of Cornelia Ade l tne
of mistaken Identity
Sm th to Frances H Sm th and
Glenn Sm th and thereafter"
In 1947, John L LewiS cAonveyed
by A Glenn Sm th to
withdrew hls Umted Mme Frances H Smtth by deed
Workers Umon from the Amen- recorded m Volume 151 Page
492 of the Metgs County Deed
can Federation of Labor for the Records
Reference Deed Vo l ume 252
second time
Page 623 Metgs County Deed
In 1953 Maj Charles Yeager R Ecor"dS
are requ red to answer
new a Bell CIA Jel research theYou
Compleunt W1fhm 28 days
plane more than 2\'z tunes the after the last pub! te at on of th s
not ce wl'1 tch wilt be publiShed
speed of sound
once each week for SIX sue
cess1ve
weeks
The
last
"A thought for the day publt ca t,on Wtll be made on
December 19 1974 and the 28
Bntlsh statesman SU' Winston days for answer Wi ll commence
Churchill sa1d, ' Politics are on that date
In case of your failur e to
almost as exciting as war and answer or otherw se respond as
bv the OhtO Rules of
qm te as dangerous In war you requtred
CIVtl Procedures tudgment by
can only be killed once, but m default Will be rendered agamst
yov for the relief demanded n
politics many times '
lh s Comp lamt
Arct1c terns (sea b~rds) hold
Larry E Spencer
tlle record for long-distance
Clerk of Court
Me1gs County
m1gratlon Tw1ce a year they
Pomeroy Oh o
commute about 12 000 m1les

from Pole to Pole

( Il l 14 21

28 ( 12) 5 12

Memory

19 6tc

"'

WI &lt;'I I wou l d w r: q v e to c la s.p H' r

hclnd
Her hrppy I~ C"C 10 SC ('
To h i ~r 1 ('r vo1 cf: an d c;.cc her
'

NQ!Ice
EARL Y YEAR E ND l nven l ory
Sa e
BE'g nn ng F r day 13
pr1 ces dra st colly redu ced on
both Fa br c s and C rafts
Cr a ll cla sses every Thur sd ay
n qhl
B elp re Nov e lly and
Cra tt s. Be l pre Oh o Hour s. 1
S Sunday 9 9 w ce~a ays
11 11 4tc
OUR FLORIDA F RUIT HAS
ARR I VED
Ham In oranges
nave l oranges
tangeloes
p nk and wh te g rap efru t
Call MEIGS FF A 997 2159 t or
de liv ery or come lo the Vo Ag
Departmen 1 or ront a c t any
F F..; member
12 11 6t c
SWEEPER r epa r parts and
s. uppl es
Oav s
vacuum
cle aner
' mile up Georges.
Creek Rd o il State Route 7
Phone 446 0294
12 11 ltc
SHOOTING match Rae ne Gun
C u b Sun day D~ c 15 I p m
12 11 4tc
TO C VE AWAY s. matl black
male puppy lo good home
I ouse bro ken Phone 992 3091
12 17 3t c

For Rent

G ROC ER Y busn ess for sa te
Flulld l g f o r sa l e or l ease
F-- hone 773 5618 f rom 8 30 p m
lo
0 p n
tor appo n tm c nl
J 70 I c

17 1 tt c

3 HE D ROOM hom e Iorg e I v ng
room a nd bu II n k !chen
wal 10 wall carpet
bree.te
way c losed m larg e utll ty
room
furntshed
or
ur
fur n shed SlS a w ee k plu s
ul 1 li es
m l e pas! Beacon
Sf niJOn on R JJ n ea r church
es and g rad e and h1gh sc hool
Ca ll 991 2050 after 12
12 10 61C

-

On State Rt ll4 'h mi from
Route 7
Rutland

Area

Racine,

stat on ass stant
manager and star1on attend
an i
Pr efe r older person
App ly n p erso n ONLY at
Powells Sunoco Middleport
between 5 30 and 7 p m
ONLY No phone c alls ac
cepted
12 10 3tc
----

COUNTY MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th e lollowtng documents
were rece ved or prepared bv
The
Ohto
Env,ronmental
Protectton Agency durmg the
prev1ous
weeK
Anyone
aggr cved or adversely affected
by ISsuance or renewal of any
perm f(sJ
I cense(s)
or
var1ance{s may request an
ad 1Udt ca t1on hearmg bv wriften
reques t pursuant to Oh o
Rev sed Code Sect on 3745 07
w lhm thirty (30l days of the
d1rectors proposed actton to
1Ssue or deny such documents
That statute does not prov de
lor hear ng requests to the
OEPA
on
appl1cat ons
revocat1ons
mod f1cat ons
co m pi a1nts
ver1f ed
com
plamts cerhflcat1ons
leases
orders or ftnal act ons
W1th n 30 days of publtcat on
of thtS not ce any person may
also
( 1) Subm 11
wr t tten
comments re l atmg to act ons
proposed actions compla nts
or ver fled com pia nts
( 2l
Request a public meet ng
regard ng proposed actions
and or (3) Request nottce of
further act tons on proceed ngs
Requests for heartngs on f na l
aCIIOnS to ISSUe deny mod fy
revoKe or renew perm ts
I censes or var ances that are
not preced&amp;d by proposed ac
!tons and so tdenttf ed m thts
not1ce sl'1ould be sent to The
Env ronmental
Board
of
Rev ew Su te 505 33 North H1g1'1
Street Columbus Ohto 43215
Ail other requests tor ad
!Udlcet on hear ngs and other
commun cat1ons concern ng
publiC
hear ngs
publ c
meet ngs
ad1Ud1cattor't
hearings comp latnts of any
ktnd and regutattOns should be
addressed to the Legal Records
Sect1on Ohto EPA P 0 Box
1049 Columbus Oh 10
AJ2I6
(~14) 466 6037
Unless otherw1se stated n
part~eu l ar
not ces
all other
com m unicatlons
1nclud l ng
comments on proposed act ons
anct,
requests
for
pub l c
meetmgs should be addressed
ether to the New Source A1r or
NPOES Perm t Records Sec
ton whIChever s appropnate
at tl'1e 01'11o EPA P 0 Box 10A9
Columbus Oh o 43216
Appl cat on for perm1t to
nstall
Columbus Gas TransmiSSIOn
Corp
Lebanon Compressor
Stat 1on 2 2 ml N of Co Rd 35
on Twp Rd 138
Lebanon Twp OhiO
Appltcatton No 06 107
New A r Con tam nant Source
Ad t Udlcatton
heartng
scheduled
Excels1or Si!llt Works In c
Man St
Pomeroy 01'110
Adtudtcat oh
hearing
scheduled lor 10 00 A M on Jan
14 1975 at Seneca Towers 361
E Broad St Columbus Oh10
Docket No 74 AP 483
Ent,tv
hearing
request
regardmg denta l of an ap
pi tcatton for a per-m tt to
operate
(12) 12 ltc

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Cue No 21334
Estate of Gertrude McBride
Deceased
Not1 ce is hereby g ven that
Ed son Hob stetter of Pomeroy
Meigs Coun t y Ohio has been
duty appointed Executor of the
Estare of Gertrude McBnde
deceased
!ate of Svracuse
Me1gs County OhtO
Cre-d1tors are required to tue
their cla1ms wtth said fiduciary
w1th1n four months
Dated thts 3rd dav
of
December 197A
Manntng 0 Webster Judge
Court of Common Pleas
Probate D1v1s on Me1gs County
(12l 5 1 ~ 19 3tc

FURNISHED
apartment
util t es furniShed
su table
tor two workmg men or
r e ttred c ouple L vmg room
k tchen shower and bath On
mam htghway Mason W Va
Phone 773 5147
10 27 lfc
FURNISHED apt 3 rooms and
bath
deal for work1ng
couple Phone 991 2937

e

tr"a1ler

POMEROY LANDMARK!
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2181

BUILDING lot 80ft frontage x
165 fl The second lot on. left on
R verv1ew Drtve
Lincoln
Htll Pomeroy Oh o 11 n
teres ted •call 992 3230 alter 5
p m

10 17 lfc

F tzpatr ck Orchard
Ste~te
Route 689
Phone
Wtlkesv tie M9 3785
11 21 26tc

VACUUM c leaners Electro
Hyg1ene new demonstrators
have all cleanmg attachments
plus the new Electro Suds for
shampooing carpet
Only
$27 50
ca""h
or
term$
ava I able Phone 992 7755
12 11 tfc
STEREO RADIO 8 tracK tape
comb nalton AM FM rad o
Balance $109 7-4 or terms
Call 992 3965
12 11 tfc
LOSE we1ght w th New Sha pe
Tab lets and Hydrex Water
P lis at Dullon Drug M d
dleport and Nelson Drug
12 10 31p
cHRISTMAS trees on old Rt 33Phone Opha Offutt 992 3296
12 20 12tp
------ ---~----

REFRIGERATOR
ktlchen
range
sofa
d1nene set
lamps
record
player
bedroom sui tes antiques and
other tems Phone 992 3457
12 10 7tc

BEDROOM hou se lor sa le
$500 down $70 per month
Phone 992 l975 or 992 2571
12 3 lfc

2 STORY 5 bedroom k tchen
b g hv ng room n~creat on
room and lor m Mason w va
on Rt 33 Pl'1one (304 ) 773
5147
12 10 lOtc
7 ROOM house bath garage
full basement arge garden
n ewly remodeled tn Racene
Call 949 2836 alter 7 p m
12 3 12tc
FIVE ROOM one floor home
redecorated ns 1de and out
Small concrete parktng area
m front
n ce back yard
ut l ty bu ld ng new Lux a re
furnace system 205 Spr ng
Ave
Pomeroy
Prtced
reasonably Phone 992 5292
12 5 tfc

News 13

6 00 - Sunnse Semmar 4 Sunnse Semester 10
6 ::.5- Farm Report 13
6 30 - F1ve Minutes to Live By 4 News 6 B1ble Answers
Pubhc Affa1rs 10

1971 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass
Supreme 1 owner new set of
rad a l t res
6 000 m les
perfect cond t ton Personally
owned
Arnold
Grate
Rut la nd
See at Rutland
Furn lure Company
Phone
742 A211 day n ght call 7A2
5541
12 3 tfc

Blue R1dge Quartet 13

s

6 35- Columbus Today 4
6 45- Morn1ng Report 3 Farmt1me 10

7 00 - Today 3 4 15 Goober 6 CBS News 8 10 Art of Ra1s1ng
Parents and Children 13
7 30 - New Zoo Re11ue6 Tennessee Tuxedo 13
8 00- Capt Kangaroo 8 Jeffs Coll•e 6 Popeye 10 New Zoo
Revue 13 Sesame Street 33
8 25- Capt Kangaroo 10 Jack LaLanne 13

8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55- News 1J
9 00 - AM 3 Paul Dixon 4 W1id Wild West 6 Phil Donahue
15 Bullwinkle 8 Movie Cheyenne Autumn Part 1I 13
30- Not For Worrien Onty3 Hazel 8 Tattietaie~JQ
00- Mane That Tune 3 15 Company 6 Joker s W1ld 8

JO- Winning Streak J 15 Phil Donahue 4 Gambit B 10
00 - H1gh Rollers J 4 15 $10 000 Pyramid 6 Now You See 11
8 10 Password All Stars 13
Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 13

30 -

,

6 Love of Life 8 10

Lucy Show

f1 55 - CBSNews8 DanlmelsWorld
12 00-JackpotJ 15 Password All Stars6 50 50Club4 News

10 IJ

a

12 30- Celebnty Sweepstakes 3 15 Split Second 6 Search For
Tomorrow 8 10 Afternoon w ith OJ 13
12 45 - Electnc Company 33
12 55- NBC News 3 15
1 00- News 3 All My Children 6 13 Phil Donahue B Young
and Restless 10

Not for Women Only 15

• 1 30 - Jeopardy 3 4 15 Lei s Make A Deal 6 1J As the World
Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our lives 3 4, 1S Newlywed Game 13 Guiding

Light 8 10
2 30 - Doctors 3 4&gt; 15 Girl in My L1fe 6 13 Edge of Nlghl8 10

,.,3

00- Another World 3 4 15 General Hosptfal 6 13

Pnce Is

R1ght B 10 Book Beat 20
3 30- How to Survtve A Marriage 3 4 lS One Life to Ltve 13
Lassie 6 Match Game 8 10 Woman 20

Carrascolendas 33

4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Bonanza 4 Yomerset 15 G1lligan s
Island 6 Tattletales 8 Movie The Mob 10 Mike Douglas
1J
JO- Bewitched 3 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show B Santa Claus 5
15
" 5 00- FBI 3 Merv Gnffln 4 Andy Gnff1th B Raymond Burr
13

Bonanza 15

5 JO- News6 Beverly H1llblll1es 8 Electric Company 33
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Electnc Company
20

6 JO-

Personality and Behavior 33

5 ltf~
------------...
OEMEAN"S
CONCRET!O
deltvered Monday throuol'1
Saturday
and
evenings
Phone A46 1142
6 13 tfc

You see, I m female, WJder 19, unmarned and therefore, a
zero tn the eyes of cred1t managers even though I earn a fairly
good wage Each tune I asked for a gasoline cred1t card back
came the same answer
'Please send further proof and
references
So, fmally I got smart and signed my application 'J T
Turner ' rather than Joan T Turner '
W1thm two weeks, I had my credit card, the envelope addressed to Mr J T TURNER ' Click 1" - FIN AU. y A
WINNER

9 00- S1x Million Dollar Man 6 13
Evening at Symphony 33

Masterpiece Theatre 20

NORTH

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

CASHSSSSSS'S
FOR
JUNK
CARS
Camp
FRYE S
TRUCK and AUTO PARTS
Rutland phone 742 6094
11 26 26tc

12 10

ltO FOR
1unk cars
$15
S7 iunked auto
cfel vered
bod1es Phone 949 448A
11 24 26tp

ED PETERSEN

OLD furn1ture 1ce boxes orass

oft he
Soctal Secur1ty

beds or complete househol ds
Wnte M D M1ller Rt 4
Pomer"oy Oh10 Call 992 7760
10 7 74

31~

...
••

~

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan
19) You st1ll have a tendency
at th1s time to rely too heav11y
on people who aren I all that
dependable to beg1n w th

counsel available before s1gn
1ng any contracts or docu
ments that could bind you
legally

AQUARIUS (Jan

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

20 Feb

19) Someone whom you re
very fond of and see eye to
eye w1th on most ISsues

not 1n command of you So
what 11 tl all can I be lln1shed
today?

d1ametncally opposes
v1ews Be ca refu l

your

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Th1nk all your moves through
care fully today or you could
do somethtng whiCh would
make you took bad m trent of
others

today m front of others much
your chagrin

VIRGO (Aug 23 Seot 22)

w w

DEAR LMBCAT
Adults get somethmg done With boycotts If theater
managers hear yoU k1ds are organizing one, and see a few picket
lines, maybe they lllower prices down wyour budget - SUE

+++

Dear L
Since under 18-year-olds are restricted as to what they can
VIew ,It seems only fatr theu- admission hckel.s should be no more
expens1ve lhan those of 1:1-year-olds
And if hall-empty theaters can be filled by lowering the
pr1ce, nobody loses Theater managers take note ' - HELEN
Dear Helen and Sue
I'm 12 My mother sa1d I'd grow out of 1t, but I didn t I LOVE
horses 1 I owned a horse, but we couldn t keep him Now I've
faUen In love w1th another horse that 1s for sale, but my folks say
lhey can t afford It She's a good jumper w1th good movements,

and I m crazy about Jumpmg and horse shows, and rac1ng, and
everythmg about horses
Please tell me how a girl my age can make money so I can
buy the horse I love, before shes sold (Besides a newspaper
route ) - DESPERATE
Dear Des
What's wrong Wllh a newspaper route• They re htrlng girls
tllese days
You might help neighbors with cleanmg and gardemng, walk
dogs, babysit, make doll clothes or handicrafts for Christmas
gifts, 'Sit" with the elderly
Ask around your block for odd
JObs Good luck' - HELEN AND SUE

JJl1Jl~1brn® I4J ~.... ~"" ..-~ ,.._
l nl'icramhl~ thest-foor Jumbles
one letter to each !!quare to
form four ordtnary words

0/Ul,lM

I I

11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 1J 15 J3
11 30 -

1

Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Wide World Special 13 Movte
Murder Inc
6 Janaki 33 Movie Valle'{"of Gwangi
Movie First Men In The Moon 10
00- Mtdntght Special 3 4 15 Don Kirshner s Rock Cancel t
6 News 13
30 - Movte Dr Renault s Secret 10
30 - Movie Mark of the Hawk 4
00 - Movie Mambo •
30- Movie The DP,dreamer 4

a

[j

~~·eeV&gt;td
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Synan
I Sheik s
City
wom en
5 Desert
2 Stage
crosser
remark
10 Hebrew
3 Go by
lyre
auto
II Sllff net
4 My
12 Bapllsm
Defenses
for

one

-

13 Zoroastrian

b1ble
U Taro root
15 - Fleder
rna us
16 Legislative
body
(abbr )
17 Legendary
magiCian
19 Pub
order
20 Small
fish
21 Sunday
newspaper
sec bon
22 Regarding
(2 wds )
24 FIJUshed
25 Price
paid
:!6 Storage
box
27 Magi gu1de
28 Exaggerate
, 32 Composer
33 Macaw
34 faucet
word
35 Lure
37 Suggestion
38 Sifted
39- Boleyn
40 More
painful
n Forest
creature

ment
twixt
powers

9 Shanty
( hyph wd)
II Pme
1 ree state
15 Caper

+Q!062
.J973

M

NAIT/C~

Now arranre the circled letters
to form the aurpriH anawer, aa

I~==~~~==;=~~~~~=-~·=u:':'•:•:ted~
I
bytheabovec~oon
V"

L.l_.cc.:Prill:::.:llli::.:SliiPIIISI=:.::IIISWIII=Illn=--___jl [

XI XX)

(Anlwen lomorrow)

Ju•uJ.l.,R LATHE

SWISH

~ rau~ed

AFLOAT

SAVAGE

lo IU&lt;'rt&gt;lltt-OlASSES

UGMEIUB

YUMVWGH
WTSB

LTH

AN

• 74

• A85

10:15A M.on

WMPO

.

,.

lvest

North

Easl

South

~ass
l'ass

3•

Pass
Pass

4•

-

Pass

water
basement w1th coa l
furnace m Syracuse $3 000 00

YoJJ th' worse
one I know fer
()ett,n' stuck 1n
th1ns, RufJJs 1

: Opemng lead-2t

NEW HOME 3 bedrooms
ceram1c tile bath dark oak
k1tchen
electnc heat
and
garage $20 000 00

MAIN
PO.M.ERQV 0
NICE 1 FLOOR PLAN -

7 rooms J BR

modern bath nat gas furnace
and garaqe $12 000 00

LAUREL CLIFF- 5 rooms
bath electnc heat and garage

$7500 00
MIDDLE PORT

Bnck

bus mess buildmg with 6 rooms

5

rooms
bath
porches
garage carpeted paneled &amp;
tiled - Pnced for quick sale

$9 500 00
9 MOSTLY
RUTLAND -

CHRISTMAS TREES

608 E

TILLABLE

ACRES- TPwater on good
blacktop road close to some
shopp1ng Ideal for homes or
mobile homes
Close to
recreat1on areas S5 800 00
45 ACRE5-Pasture woods
culhvatlon stocked pond all
fenced m1nerals close In

$11 000 00
MINE AREA -

10 acres

LABlANC s lver" lri.Jmpet and
case by V ctor
Excellent
cond1tton appra sed at S300
sell S250 G 1rl s r"OIIer skating
Shoes
SIZe 7 White
S10
Mens spori't tacket medium
blue size 36 and rrousers to
match used very few times
$30 783 ft cured red and
wh te oak planks $100 Phone
985 4110
12 10 o)tp

AT

•

eBLACK &amp;
WHITE TV
eSTER EO

---- ------

Easy Terms!
Free Dehvery I

MASON FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
773 5592
MASI'IN, W VA

~ Hard Luck Joe won the
d)amond lead and Jromptly
cashed the ace an kmg of
t~umps The su1t failed to
break and w1th the heart ace
right 1n back of hiS kmg Joe
Wllund up losmg one trump
ttlree hearts and hts temper
~ ~Why does It always hap
P.en to me? he screamed

fmesses never wm

suits

never break I ought to take
up backgammon but I'd
pFobably be JUSt as unlucky
at
game
was unlucky. bul he
have made h1s con
by
leavmg trumps

~'f£~~~~rr:~f~That
so

deuce ot
was probably
at lrtck two

OTHER BARGAINS IN
REAL ESTATE - STOP
AND SEE

COLOR TV

1974
ZIG ZAG
SEWING
MACH IN E S l ett In layaway
All bu It n to buttonhole do
stretch sew1 ng and fancy
stitch ng Pay just SA8 75 cnh
or terms available Trade ms
accepted Phone 992 7755
12 3 tfc

PUBLIC NOTICE!
AUCTION SALE

ZENITH

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

• Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east at Darwin
onto Rt 681, go 4 miles to Milepost 13, turn
south on gravel road 11.~ miles to grove
Watch For S1gns
Hours 12 111 dark except weekends, 9 til dark

located on good fishing creek
and good blacktop road
approved for sept1c tank
$5 800 00 Make an offer

992 2259 or 992 25'8

F lR EWOOD lor sate !.15 per
loa d Phone 7&lt;12 4831
12 10 12tp

CUT YOUR OWN AT
BRADFORD'S GROVE

have cashed Ihe
h1gh d1amond Then
d1amond cash the ace
oft~l~lbs, ruff a club m dum
lead the last diamond
ruff once East discarded
hiS last club and lead a

305 N. SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

would cash his

® 50'( 1HAT JOEY DELL
SURE 15 MY5TEr?:IOUe&gt;
HE NEVER. 010 TELL

WHAT ON EAQTH COJLD
HE; HAvt= N TI4E:RE:
THAT HE DOE,N'T
WANT ANYONE

105EE?r?

ME 1/o/HY HE. SPENT
TlME IN PRISON

three

hS.ir~s. but Joe would have

,e,L.wllnthe ace· jack 10
and West s next
o~!~~:~~~!1~, g1ve Joe the 1est
~~
tr1cks 1rrespect1ve of
location of the queen of

. Advertised for
Saturday, Dec. 14
Has Bean

BARNEY

Cancelled

North

East

South

INT

2•

It
Pass

M"' MAN LUKEV
PUT ONE OF THEM
LEETLE PEEPHOLES

1111 OUR
DOOR

Due to the hospitalization
of the scheduled auctioneer.

The Bradfold AuCtiOn Co.
'

I

WINNIE
AND 1HE WAY HE KEEPS
"THAT DCXJR L..CCKED
WON T LET ANYONE
IN HIS ROOM

THAT AINT
NOfHIN'TO
CROW ABOUT

I: GOT
WALL-TO-WALL
PEEPHOLES

M

W1 S B

AN

lUG

NTOE

JHANTC

P0 GNI

M

M

I 1o&lt;:JIJ6H 1

N AYF

- LHMCYAN

&lt;C 191.f. Kina FeaturH Syndicate, Inc: )

DICK TRACY

East West vulne1 able

how to work it.

WM YTC
Yesterday's Cryptoquote IN A FREE AND REPUBUCAN
GOVERNMENT YOU CANNOT RESTRAIN THE VOICE OF
THE MULTITUDE -GEORGE WASHINGTON

SOUTH &lt;DI

Off1ce W111 Be

Here's

CRYPTOQUOTES

A 6AM E THERE
C:OU Lt7 ~E A LOT TO

•Q32
'JIO
+J85
.KQI064

~AQ94

'

AXYOLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

EAST

•5

f r om

19 Rt:.--cumbent
en nui
22 The
29 European
Merchant
nver
of Vemce
30 Bell
23 Ch1ef
U&gt;lls
eleva tor
poet
opera lor
31 Aquatic
24 Sills or
beast
Sutherland 33 Maple
for
gen us
example
36 - got 1t'
25 Levy
37 Owned

,.-.,.:-r,--.,--

12

.2

s Answer
26 Suffering

measure

8 Covenant

• K9 7 4
'8652
+A K 93

WEST

18 LIQUid

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

0

j

\ A.•""""r Mn11

Yesterday

One letter ltmply stands for another In lh1s sample A Ia
used for the three L s X for the tY.o 0 s f'lC Smgle letters
apostrophes the length and formation o f th e words are all
h~nts Each day the code letters are dtft'erenl

t
I I

\ .. ,l .. rd•y"

Down

5 Grotto
6 Pothouse
specialty
1 Sk1d row
establish

11

l·"iTAFLE
9 30 - Hause Without A Christmas Tree 8 10
10 OO - PollceWoman3 .t 15 N tghtStalker6 13 News20 Paul
Nuchims 33

useful mentor for you th1s year
You won 1 stumble tnlo the old
p !falls Exctt ng c hanges more
to you r lt~ tng are n store

• AJI086
'K73

On Kaleidoscope
Thursday at

JUNK autos
complete and
delivered to our vard We
pick up auto bodtes and buy
aU k nds of scrap metals and
ron R der s Salvage St Rt
124 Rt A Pomeroy Oh10
Call 992 5468
10 17 tfc

d1rect you today '" S1tuattons
where you should be lead 1ng
them Noth ng very frUitful can
result

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You d be w1se to seek the best

to

23

21) You II let others

+++

Joe makes his
own hand luck

EXPERIENCED m1ddle aot
man wants t8n1tor work. o~
rest~urant
work
steady
Phone 367 7196

4 13 tic

Dec:

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Avoid

Dear Helen and Sue
I'm 15 and broke I like
go
the moVIes, but lalely the
adnusswn price went up - again' I must pay $2 f&gt;O, same as
adults, but I can't see the R-rated shows My 11-year-&lt;Jld siSter
pays only a dollar for the same kind of show
What really gels me IS that theaters are only about half-full,
usually Wouldn l 1t be smarter to lower pr1ces and gel full
houses every mght? After aU, they'd make a lot more on popcorn,
etc
At leas! they should have a teen admission, smce we re
classed With little kids m what were allowed U&gt;see
How do we go about gellmg somethmg done• - LOVES
MOVIES BUT CAN'T AFFORD THEM

1
2

Employment Wanted

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

An arrangement you ve had
w1th another that was of
dub1ous value •s not l1~ely to
endure It w111 be tennmated
abruptly

Note From Helen
So now I have a Boy Named Sue
We may have come along way, baby, but we've got a long
way to go' - HELEN

5

CAaH par~ for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531

You tend to be careless w1th
your possessions today
Something could get lost or
stolen Don 1 leave lhtngs scat
tered about

TAURUS (April 20 May 20)

a fnend who always tnes to
upstage you She II do 11 aga1n

+++

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)

on others today If you sense
rt.s1stance change the sub
J8Ct Back off a lew steps

Dec 13 1974
Past expenence w tl serve as a

23 Oct 23)

Plan your day carefully so you
won I be dotng unnecessary
runmng around If you don t
make appomtments you wont
ftnd people 1n

For Friday, Dec 13,1974
ARIES (March 21 April 19)
Don t try to tmpose your Ideas

Pace yourself so that you re 1n
command of your work and its

News 10 News 10 Jimmy Dean 1J I Spy 15

8 oo- Sanford and Son J 4 15 Kung Fu 6 13 Dr Seuss 8 10
Washington Week In Review 20 33
JO - HallmJrk Hall of fame J 4 15 Rudolph The Red Nosed
, Reindeer B 10 Wall St Week 20 JJ

LIBRA (Sept

Dear Fmally
Memo from S V Bottel age 20 I got smart, too After a year
knocking on ml company doors, I om1tted the 'Suzanne,' and
now I am the proud owner of a gas company credit card 1 -SUE

SEP""rfC
fANKS
cleanJ"..f,
Modern Santtatlon 992 3954 or
992 13A9
9 18 tfc
~,.

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Your moods wtll cast a shadow
over your ent1re househo ld to
day tf you put on a lona t:~ce
Let some sunsh1ne tn

P
t'

How to Beat the System
Rap
Say hey ' 1 JUS! beat the system'
After lhree unsuccessful 1nes,l fmallv got a credit card from
a maJOr otl companJ 1

4

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

.'::»»&amp; -. »W${~' ·~-~

Generation Rap

!

-------------w~~ ·

WantP.II To Buy

=-«;:::

7 00- Truth or Consequences 3 4 Bowling 6 WCHS Report 8
Porter Wagoner 3 Masquerade Parade 4 Cand1d
Camera 6 Popl Goes the Country 8 Black Perspective 20
33 Treasure Hunt 10 To Tell the Truth 13

Auctioneer
Complete Service
Pl'1one 949 3821 or 949 3161
RactnetOhio
Crt II Bradford

::::

NBC News J 4, 15 AABC News 1J, Bewitched 6 CBS
News B 10 Zoom 20

7 30 -

"L.l'\;-.;;::-uwo

-

fty Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NEW LISTING - 5 rooms c1ty

HAMPSTER hog boys 2 whee l
btke 1~ nch Aurora race
track Call after 5 p m 949
4935
12 lO 3tc

WALNUT stereo radiO- -;,;;- fm
8 track tape comb nat1on
Balance SilO ~9 or terms Call
992 3965
12 3 lfc

reasonable rates
Ph
AA6
A782 Glliipolls John Russell
owner and operator
5 12 tfc

Real Estate For Sale
L

APPLES

TWIN
NEEDLE
SEWING
MACHINES 197A model tn
walnut stand
All features
bu It m to make fancy des gns
and do stretch sew 1ng Also
buttonholes blind hems etc
543 35
cash
Or"
terms
ava !able Phon e 992 7755

6 5 tfc

sE"i'rrc-- TA"NKs - cfeaned

1973 CHEVROLET picKup truck
for sale Phone John Rose
949 2822
12 5 6tc

SEWI NG Mach tnes brand new
Z 1g Zag n n1ce walnut table
!n or gmal carton s
Neve'r
used
Clearance on
7A
Models
(Only
a
few
ava I ab le)
S43 40 c ash or
t erm s ava tlab e Phone 992
7755
10 15 lfc

MICROWAVE
OVEN
Only •231 •.52

~

for Sale

3891

00

HOT POINT

OLD HOU Se n Sy racu se on 2
n ce l ots !.3000 or best offer
Phone 992 5898
12 12 4IC
Phone

ONE BEDROOM Ira ler al l
ut I li es and cable TV Fur
n shed Phone 992 3719 after
4 30 p m
12 9 tfc

VB

POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
OPEN EVES 8
PM
For Sale

12 6 6tc NEW
bt leve l
home
3
--------bedrooms
bu II tn k. tchen
l BEDROOM house Phone 992
basement w th one ca r
3975 or 992 2571
garage Phone 742 3615 or see
12 3 tic
M lo Hul c h s.on
11 1 lie
~-

clean mterlor aqua finish good tires
automatic P steenng air conditioned

by

I!:XCELSIOR ~alt Works, ~
Main Sf • Pomeroy ACI kind'S.
ot salt water pellets ..water
nugget• block nit and own
Ohio River Salt Phone 992

11295

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA
4 door

cl~arlng

the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator with over
20 years experience Pullins
Excavating Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tfc

11"5

e

2 11 tfc

-------

DOZER work land

Monte Carlo 350 V
automatic power steering power
brakes dark blue finish blue 1nterlor blue vmyl roof
factory air cond1honmg like new white wall tires radio
Many other extras

0

12 86tp
ONE bedroom
997 3509

---...--..:::::--

2 door V
automatic, power steering black vinyl top
w1th red hn1sh good wh1te wall tires, radio local 1 owner
car and servtced regularly by us

For Her Chnstmas

Real Estate For Sale

2 00 -

SEWINb IYI~\.rliNES Repair•
servtce all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Authorized Smger Sales and
Service We sharpen Scissors
3 29 tfc

POMEROY, OHIO

FURNISHED apt AduiiS only
M ddleport Phone 992 3874
11 14 tfc
UN F URNISHED
house
4
rooms and bath 1650 Ltncoln
He ghls Ph one 992 3874
11 14 He

5232

$2250

1970 CHEVROLET

Tomorrow 3 4
News 4

1 00 -

":XCAVATlNG dozer loader
~nd backhoe
work
:septic
tanks tnstatled dump truclfit:s
and to boys tor h~re will haul
fill dirt top so11 limestone &amp;
graver CCIII 'Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
.n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992

Motor Co.

1972 NOV A

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

FBI 6

12 30 - W1ld Wild West 6

HOME
Improvement
and
Repatr Serv1ce Anvthlng
fixed around the home from
roof to basement You II l1ke
our work and rates Phone
742 5081
12 .t 12tp

Phone 949 5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

OF
QUALITY

'Cou'NTRY

SE~V tCE

11 30- Johnny Carson 3 4 15 W1de World Spec1allJ
TBA 8 Mov1e 7 Seas to Calais 10

CAR !=lET 1nstallat1on ~~ :t:&gt; per
yard Phone RIchard West
843 2667
111326tp

Fully Insured
BEND TIRE CENTER
~-"-"'
M_a_s_on-..w_v_a~ 1 . - - - - - - - - -A
_u_t_o Sales
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy

1 BEDROOM house tra ler for
rent n Rutland Phone 742
4465 anyt me
12 12 3t c

10 30- Your Future Is Now 20 Caught In The Act 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 JJ

FRIDAY DECEMBER 13 1974

Complete plumbmg &amp;
heatmg serv1ce Free
Est1mates

FREE ESTtMA TE

Sl M ddleporl
SHOOT NG MATCH
Corn
2 8 6tp
Hollow Gun Cub turn f rst
r ghl afler M tes Cemetery
Ru t land
Facto r y choked J AND 4 ROOM turn shed and
unfurniShed
apartments
___
g uns only Su nday Dec 15 1
Phone 992 5A3&lt;1
p m
A 12 tt c
12 12 3t c - - - - - - - - - - - - -PL A NTATION grown Chr1st
mas tr ees.
Sc otch P ne
PRIVATE
meet
ing
room
for
HAVE
your
de e r
trophy
Norwa y Sp ru ce Blue Spruce
any
organ
zallon
phone
992
mounted A so other sma l l
and Douglas F r Reasonable
3975
an1mals and b rd s
Phone
3 11 tf c
pr ces Shop early for best
Howard B1rcht eld Rol l and
setectJcns
Bo bs Markel
7J 2 'j 9J 2
Mason W Va 773 572 1
MoD~e-No;;
Park
12 3 lfc
12 11 If
R t 33 ten m ties north of
Pomeroy
Large lots w tl'1
A UCTION
Thursday
rtnrl
concrete patios
s dewalks 3 SPACE gas healers $30 each
Saturday n ght 7 p m
at
two new bedroom set Early
unners
and
off
street
Mason Auct on Horton St n
A mer can 6 months old S250
parkmg
Also
spaces for
Mason W Va Cons gnments
250 Amp gasol n e welder
s.mall trailers Phone 992 7479
w elc. ome
PhOn e (304) 773
$~00
Qu1 c kway valve fac ng
1 21 tfc
547 1
mach ne aulomot ve $750 12
I 0 3 ttc 4 RM turn shed apt close to
f rst 1 ne B F G II r es one floor
safe S135 John Deere farm
Powell s Su p er Valu phone
trac tor Model A S250 as s
GUN SH OOT Sat urday Dec
992 3658
14 at 7 p m M te H II Road
Master a1r cond 1 on 1ng t ool
11 20 tfc
sel gas s t at on TBA 1lems
Assorted meats
Factory
A l l lor sell or trade Arnold
c hoked gu n s only Spons.ored
l970VALIANT 65x l2 3bedroom
Octeau Sel lers R dge Port
by Rae ne F1re Dept
fully carpeted LP gas heat
lanct Oh o any lime
12 9 Me
Phone 992 7751
12 11 8tc
8 25 ftc
CHRISTMAS House Bazaar
located acros s from Pomeroy
TWO pones
1 saddle and
Post Off ce wtl l b e open Tues
HOU SE 4 rooms and ball'1 n ce
br die S85 complete see
thru Fr day 7 ftll 9 p m
yard an d dr veway
Also
Arnold
Ocfeau
Sellers
Ho memade Items
Supp ly
turn,shed apt Ca ll 991 2780 or
R dge
Portland
Oh10 any
1m ted
992 343 ?
l1me
17 9 Jtc
12 12 lf c
121 1 8tc

Help Wanted

None But the Brave 10
,..,JQ 00 - Mavin On J 4 15 Harry 06 13 News 20 Woman 33

READY MIX
CONCRETE
deltvered r1ght to your
project Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 3284
Goeglein Readv Mix Co
M iddleport Oh1o
6 30 trc

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

S1erra 3 4 15 Odd Couple 6 13 Walton s 6 10 The Wa y

II Was 20 From All Of Us JJ
8 30 - Paper Moon 6 13 What Now Amer.ca? 20
9 00-lronsldeJ 4 15 Streets of San Franc1sco6 Mov 1e Blue
Hawan 8 Soul 20 33 They Search for Surv11;al 13 Mo 11 •e

Phone ( 304) 773 5503

HElL

0.

My L.: tne?

15 Aging 20
8 00 -

complete residential con
struchon Wiring plumbing,
elec
heahng
kttchen
cab1nets e1c
21 Yrs expenence 1n const
trade

Phone 742 4673 or 742 5595
Btll Brown Owner
Rutland, Oh1o

Sat

5

Is R1ght8 Wild Kingdom 10 To Tell the Truth 13 Get Smart

Aluminum s1d1ng, roofing,

Ftre Extmgutshers
Home
Ftre Alarms
Testmg &amp;
Reflllmg

949-329.5

It's

l027tfcl
J ROOM turn shed apartment
ul I I es pa1d 3S6 N Fou rth

Brown's Fire &amp;
Safety Equipment

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

GHEEN'S PAINTING

1 owes!

the

towards

Truth or Consequences 3 4 Bowftng 6 What

Street 20 Nova JJ
30- Hollywood Squares 3 4 Fred Taylor Bask etball 6 Pnce

.

- I
1n

7 00 -

8 News 10 Lets Make A Deall J Sports Desk 15 Two Way

JOHNSON'S

BAM 6PM

T1re Pnce•

TRAILER space 2m les from
Pomeroy Rt 143 Phone 991
585 8

News 3 4 8 10 13 15 ABC New ~ 1o E lectriC Com pany
20 Teaching Children 33
6 JO - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 CBS New s B 10
Bewitched 6 Zoom 20 What Now Amer1..:a 10

J

Protect Your Home
Or Busmess

Sales &amp; Serv1ce

Open Mon

~--·--·--...;
the

by pass

Ph 992 5682 or 992 7121
All Mechamcal Work

O N E Cour er ML oa I n ear 12
volt one 8 tra c K !ape p l ayer
IC'Ir c ar four 15 n x 6 hole
r ms for Chevy or G M C
ptckup Phon e 99 2 214&lt;1
11 I 0 31c

For

Business
Services
---- - - ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

70 oc t olf on anyth ng n hard
wM e Stewarl s Ha r dware
Man Sl Rulland
11 11 Jt c

7 ROOM an d balh hou se for
rcnl
8
L berty
Ave
Pom eroy Jus t above Jones
Boys ca ll 992 7135
12 10 31c

~~

THURSDAY DECEMBER 1l 1974

. -- - - - - '- - ·-·

} BEDROOM tr ailer al corn er
ot
Broadway
and
E lm
M ddl eport
No p e t s or
c h1ldrcn Call 992 1580 alter 6
P m
195! C H E VY part s
NEW
12 5 ((
LaK ewood tr act on bars h
hooKer
ta cke r at r s h oc~s
heade r s w1lh 3 co l lec tor s tor
] BEDROOM double w de
s ma ll b lock
Cal
99? 3496
mob If' home
n Syra c use
after 6 p m B E ST OFFER
Depos t rcqu red N o c h ld r cn
10 17 f c
or pets C 'l 997 71 1 1ft c r 6
p

.. Television Log
6 00 -

9 ti c

I1

11 - The Da1ly Sent mel, M1ddlep"' l Pomeroy 0 Thursda' Dec 12 J•l/4
~«WN~~

Classifieds Get Results!

F S Ie

lc

n ean so 11uct to me
~rt ctlv
m ssed by d1uqh1~er
ne tt v ~nd r rtm ly
17 11 lt c

11 a

sen tzn e l

.., lls or 1\ I' nl W nl c d
GOOD M I\ N l o I II YiiC.Jn c y tn
e
Pol c roy 1rca No cxpcr ,encf'
l~"'CCSS Hy
1\q('
not
Jll
port'l nt
Good Chflra c tcr a
mus t Wet r ct~ n A r Mal r 5
D ck Pres
Southwe s tern
Q( 3
P lr o " ' Corp
r t Worth WALNUT st ereo r ado :l"'1 l m
1'
ape co mbmtt t on
9 lrrt c k
17 I I 1\tc
Ro l cl n ce '$ Of 15 or 1er m o.s Ca ll
9?1 J ? 6~

IT~ 1~.\T

STVP D

(V~TOD IAN

WiTH HIS
\lOP

�10 - The Dally Sent mel Middleport Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday Dec 12 1174

tn

Fairview News Notes
By Mn Herbert Roush

Mr and Mrs Gar) Miller
and daughter of Bellville 0
were Thanksg1vmg weekend
guests of Mr and Mrs Charles
Lawson Ol11er guests of the
Lawsons were Mr and Mrs
Edward Lawson and bah) Mr
and Mrs Harold Lawson and
Charles Letart W Va Mr
and Mrs Bill Parsons and
sons AntiqUity Mr and Mrs
Robert Lawson and farmlJ
Mr and Mrs Jerry Bachus
of Ravenna 0 Mr and Mrs
Sam Bachus of Cambndge 0 ,
Mr and Mrs Frank Stepp and
children of Ironton, K) at
tended funeral sen Ices for
theu mother and grandmother,
Mrs Rose Bachus at the Ewmg
Funeral Home
Eldred Hart and daughter
Debb1e of Eliott, Mame VISited
Mr and Mrs Herbert Sayre

Wolfpen
News, Notes
Thanksgiving Day guesl.s of
Mrs Helen Johnson \'.ere Mr
and Mrs Everelt Ra) Johnson
Jeff Audra Enc of Dublin
Mrs Walter Hamm Mr and
Mrs James W Johnson Jamte
Sue Todd Teresa Mrs Lee
Roush, Rodney Cher) 1 Joey of
Pomeroy and Mr and Mrs
Kenneth Johnson Annette and
Duane
Mr and Mrs Tom Johnson
and Mrs Ll oyde Beets of
Grove City were Saturda)
visitors of Mr and Mrs James
J ohnson and family
ThanksgiVIng Day dinner
guesl.s of Mr and Mrs Fred
Tuckerman were Mr and Mrs
James Reeves Mr and Mrs
Eugene Hanmg Rhonda and
Ronald Mr and Mrs Jack
Elam B11l and Carolyn Mr
Robert Reeves and Bryan Mr
Chnlon Orr and Mrs Ermel
Parks of Canal Wmchester
Mr and Mrs Carl McElroy
of Columbus Mrs Mable
Wood, Mr and Mrs John Wood
and Allen of Wilkesville Mr
and Mrs James Reed of
Coliunbus, Mr and Mrs Leo
Davidson Wilma Donna and
Annabelland Mr and Mrs Bill
McElroy Jeff and Joey
Mr and Mrs Harley T
Johnson and Otto Johnson were
fhanksglVmg dmner guests of
Mr and Mrs Harley E
Johnson, Tammy Cheryl and
Terry
Mr and Mrs Charley Sm1th

N LO V N V fv\!::J\ 1 I&lt;!
ol
M&lt;trq 1rf't Lyn( l w 10 pr1 sS eU
iiW'ly I II' V('dr'&gt; &lt;IQO DlC 11

luesd,ty

Mr and Mrs Herberl Sayre
\\ere Thdnksgivmg dinner
guesl' of M1 and Mrs Buck
Rodgers at Columbus rellll'
mng hom e Fnday Other
guests of the Rodg ers were Mr
and Mrs Bnce Sayre Mr and
Mrs Danny Sayre
Mrs Pegg) Gregory of
F::~Irborn spent

Thanksgiving

wtlh her mother Mr and Mrs
David Sayre Mrs Sayre was
relurned Io her home at An
tiqUity ThanksgiVIng Day after
bemg conhned to Holzer
Medical Center four daJs
Mr and Mrs Bill Robmson
and
famll)
Raymond
Robinson and g1rlfnend of
Norfolk Va Jackie Orr of
Columbus were ThanksglVmg
Da) guests of Mrs Bertha
Robmson
Mrs Arnold Hupp and Don
Manuel were at Canton 0
Fnday wbrmg Don s son Bill
w VISit over Thanksg~vmg with
the Manuels and Mr and Mrs
Ray Proft1tl B1ll 1s enJoymg
deer hunting
Edward
Hupp
Eber
Pickens, Jeff Hams are en)oymg deer hunting m PennS) lvama for tWo weeks
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
TO Lu c l i e w them whose
l ast known p lace of res dence
was Glouster OhtO and whose
address s unknown and cannot
w t h reasonable d l1gence be
ascerta n ed
T O M nne 0 Sm th whose
last Known place of restdence
was Tecumseh Oklahoma and
whose add r ess tS unknown and
canno t
wtth
reasonable
d l1gen c e be ascerta ned
TO
8 rd e Leona Meyer
whose lasl known p lac e of
res dence
was
Tecumseh
Oklahoma and whose address
s unknown and ca nnot w1th
re asonab e
dtl gence
be
asce rtamed
TO The unknown he r"S and
dev1sees of Thomas. R Sm tih
T O The unknown hetrs and
devtsees of Lau ra H.:tndley
TO The unknown hers and
dev1sees. of L awrence D Me
Master
9
TO The unknown he rs and
dev sees of Thomas D Sm th
TO Th e unknown hers and
dev sees of M nn e D Sm th
TO The unknown hers and
dev sees of
Btrd1e
Leona
Meyer and
TO Th e unknown hers and
dev sees o f Grace McMaster
Hard ng

You are he reb y not fed that
you have been named delen
dants n a l ega l act on ent11ted
Ada l ene
Sm th
Flechtner
Pia ntlff vS LUC tl e WITHEM
ET AL
Defendants Th1S ac
t on has been ass gned Case No
IS .)22 n the Cou rt ol Common
P l eas of Me gs County Oh o
The ob 1ect of tl'1e Comptatnt s
to reform the deed recorded n
Volume 11
Page 154 Me1gs
County Deed Records to n
elude the entre mterest n the
sa td real estate and to qu1etthe
Idle of the Plamttff as aga nsf
ail of the D efe ndanTs n the
tallow ng descr bed real estate
S tuate tn the VII age of
were Thanksgiving dmner
M ddleport County of Me tgs
State of Oh o be ng the
guesl.s of Mr and Mrs Doyle and
followtng descr bed p eces or
Knapp, Ka1l
Kevin and parcels of land and the bu dl ng
s tuated thereon
Charles
A part of Town Lot Number
Mr and Mrs Larry Johnson
S1xly Seven (67) n Jones Plat
M ddleport and descr bed as
Gma, Tahnee and Brady and of
follow s
Commenc mg at the
Mrs Geneva Shumate were
southwest
corner
ot
Lol
Number
S xty seven
(67)
ThanksgiVIng guesl.s of her son
running northerly on the north
and brother Mr and Mrs
and south I ne of sa d lot
d twenty three feet and
Leon Shwnate and sons of atoresa
four
nche s
thence 1n an
Bantytown W Va
easterly d re c t on and parallel
with the eas t and wes.t 1 ne of
Mr and Mrs Tom Sum
sa td ot f1fty feet thence south
merfleld and daughters of and paralle l w tl'1 tl'1e nortl'1 and
th I ne of sa d lot e1ght (8)
lllin01s, Mr and Mrs Donald sou
feet
!hence easterly and
parall el w1th the 1 ne of sad lot
Russell, Mr and Mrs Ronald
the east 1 ne of sa1d Lot
Russell, children and Mr and to
Number 67
thence to the
Mrs Steve Haggy, daughter
so utheast corner of sa1d lot
thence westerly on the south
were Thanksgiving holiday
I ne of sa1d Lot Number .)7 to
guesl.s of Mr and Mrs Robert
the southw est co rner of satd Lot
Number 67 and be tng the place
Russell
of. begmn ng
Also the followmg descr bed
real estate sttualed
n the
v l lage of M ddleport Metgs
County Stal e of Oh o bounded
The Almanac
and descr bed as follows
A
str p of Lot Number 66 m Jones
By United Press Internaltonal
Plat of Mtdd le port be ng e ght
Today 1s Thursday, Dec 12, nches Wide and one hundred
and fh1rleen feet long off of the
the 346th day of 1974 w1th 19 to north
s de of sa1d Lot No 66
Also the follow ng real estate
follow
Com
The moon IS approachmg Its descr bed as follows
m encmg Twenty s x (26) feet tn
new phase
a southerly dtrect on from the
corner of Lot No
The mornmg stars are nortl'1east
S •ly seve n (67) m
Jones
Mercury, Mars and Saturn
Survey of Middleport
Oh o
The evemng stars are Venus thence westerly stxly three {63)
feet more or less to the Bank
and Jupiter
Bu ld ng OCCUpied by E C Fox
now owned by Dee ward
Those born on this date are and
then ce southerly seven and one
under the s1gn of Sag1ttarms
half (7 2l teet to the I me of the
lot owned by T
R
Sm 1th
John Jay, lust ch1ef JUstice of thence
easterly on the 1me of
the United States was born sai d T R Sm1th lots xty three
(63) feet to the alley tl'1en ce
Dec 12, 1745
northerly seven and one ha t
On th1s day m hiStory
17 1l feet to the place of
In 1901 a wireless message beg nn1ng
Together w th the prtv 1Jege of
was transmttted across the tngre ss and egress to the
of the north and sou th
Atlanhc Ocean for the f1rst owners
port ons of sa d br ck bu ld ng
bme
to the r hers and ass1gns and to
In 1937, Japanese planes the r agents tenants and em
ployees tn the 101n1 use of 11'1e
bombed and sank the U S hailwa~ s lead1ng to F rst
gunboat Panay m the Yangtze Second and Th rd stor es of the
budd ng on sad premtses
R1ver above N ankmg Chma
Bemg the same prem tses
Japan later sa1d 1t was a case bequeathed 1n the Last Wdl and
Testament of Cornelia Ade l tne
of mistaken Identity
Sm th to Frances H Sm th and
Glenn Sm th and thereafter"
In 1947, John L LewiS cAonveyed
by A Glenn Sm th to
withdrew hls Umted Mme Frances H Smtth by deed
Workers Umon from the Amen- recorded m Volume 151 Page
492 of the Metgs County Deed
can Federation of Labor for the Records
Reference Deed Vo l ume 252
second time
Page 623 Metgs County Deed
In 1953 Maj Charles Yeager R Ecor"dS
are requ red to answer
new a Bell CIA Jel research theYou
Compleunt W1fhm 28 days
plane more than 2\'z tunes the after the last pub! te at on of th s
not ce wl'1 tch wilt be publiShed
speed of sound
once each week for SIX sue
cess1ve
weeks
The
last
"A thought for the day publt ca t,on Wtll be made on
December 19 1974 and the 28
Bntlsh statesman SU' Winston days for answer Wi ll commence
Churchill sa1d, ' Politics are on that date
In case of your failur e to
almost as exciting as war and answer or otherw se respond as
bv the OhtO Rules of
qm te as dangerous In war you requtred
CIVtl Procedures tudgment by
can only be killed once, but m default Will be rendered agamst
yov for the relief demanded n
politics many times '
lh s Comp lamt
Arct1c terns (sea b~rds) hold
Larry E Spencer
tlle record for long-distance
Clerk of Court
Me1gs County
m1gratlon Tw1ce a year they
Pomeroy Oh o
commute about 12 000 m1les

from Pole to Pole

( Il l 14 21

28 ( 12) 5 12

Memory

19 6tc

"'

WI &lt;'I I wou l d w r: q v e to c la s.p H' r

hclnd
Her hrppy I~ C"C 10 SC ('
To h i ~r 1 ('r vo1 cf: an d c;.cc her
'

NQ!Ice
EARL Y YEAR E ND l nven l ory
Sa e
BE'g nn ng F r day 13
pr1 ces dra st colly redu ced on
both Fa br c s and C rafts
Cr a ll cla sses every Thur sd ay
n qhl
B elp re Nov e lly and
Cra tt s. Be l pre Oh o Hour s. 1
S Sunday 9 9 w ce~a ays
11 11 4tc
OUR FLORIDA F RUIT HAS
ARR I VED
Ham In oranges
nave l oranges
tangeloes
p nk and wh te g rap efru t
Call MEIGS FF A 997 2159 t or
de liv ery or come lo the Vo Ag
Departmen 1 or ront a c t any
F F..; member
12 11 6t c
SWEEPER r epa r parts and
s. uppl es
Oav s
vacuum
cle aner
' mile up Georges.
Creek Rd o il State Route 7
Phone 446 0294
12 11 ltc
SHOOTING match Rae ne Gun
C u b Sun day D~ c 15 I p m
12 11 4tc
TO C VE AWAY s. matl black
male puppy lo good home
I ouse bro ken Phone 992 3091
12 17 3t c

For Rent

G ROC ER Y busn ess for sa te
Flulld l g f o r sa l e or l ease
F-- hone 773 5618 f rom 8 30 p m
lo
0 p n
tor appo n tm c nl
J 70 I c

17 1 tt c

3 HE D ROOM hom e Iorg e I v ng
room a nd bu II n k !chen
wal 10 wall carpet
bree.te
way c losed m larg e utll ty
room
furntshed
or
ur
fur n shed SlS a w ee k plu s
ul 1 li es
m l e pas! Beacon
Sf niJOn on R JJ n ea r church
es and g rad e and h1gh sc hool
Ca ll 991 2050 after 12
12 10 61C

-

On State Rt ll4 'h mi from
Route 7
Rutland

Area

Racine,

stat on ass stant
manager and star1on attend
an i
Pr efe r older person
App ly n p erso n ONLY at
Powells Sunoco Middleport
between 5 30 and 7 p m
ONLY No phone c alls ac
cepted
12 10 3tc
----

COUNTY MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th e lollowtng documents
were rece ved or prepared bv
The
Ohto
Env,ronmental
Protectton Agency durmg the
prev1ous
weeK
Anyone
aggr cved or adversely affected
by ISsuance or renewal of any
perm f(sJ
I cense(s)
or
var1ance{s may request an
ad 1Udt ca t1on hearmg bv wriften
reques t pursuant to Oh o
Rev sed Code Sect on 3745 07
w lhm thirty (30l days of the
d1rectors proposed actton to
1Ssue or deny such documents
That statute does not prov de
lor hear ng requests to the
OEPA
on
appl1cat ons
revocat1ons
mod f1cat ons
co m pi a1nts
ver1f ed
com
plamts cerhflcat1ons
leases
orders or ftnal act ons
W1th n 30 days of publtcat on
of thtS not ce any person may
also
( 1) Subm 11
wr t tten
comments re l atmg to act ons
proposed actions compla nts
or ver fled com pia nts
( 2l
Request a public meet ng
regard ng proposed actions
and or (3) Request nottce of
further act tons on proceed ngs
Requests for heartngs on f na l
aCIIOnS to ISSUe deny mod fy
revoKe or renew perm ts
I censes or var ances that are
not preced&amp;d by proposed ac
!tons and so tdenttf ed m thts
not1ce sl'1ould be sent to The
Env ronmental
Board
of
Rev ew Su te 505 33 North H1g1'1
Street Columbus Ohto 43215
Ail other requests tor ad
!Udlcet on hear ngs and other
commun cat1ons concern ng
publiC
hear ngs
publ c
meet ngs
ad1Ud1cattor't
hearings comp latnts of any
ktnd and regutattOns should be
addressed to the Legal Records
Sect1on Ohto EPA P 0 Box
1049 Columbus Oh 10
AJ2I6
(~14) 466 6037
Unless otherw1se stated n
part~eu l ar
not ces
all other
com m unicatlons
1nclud l ng
comments on proposed act ons
anct,
requests
for
pub l c
meetmgs should be addressed
ether to the New Source A1r or
NPOES Perm t Records Sec
ton whIChever s appropnate
at tl'1e 01'11o EPA P 0 Box 10A9
Columbus Oh o 43216
Appl cat on for perm1t to
nstall
Columbus Gas TransmiSSIOn
Corp
Lebanon Compressor
Stat 1on 2 2 ml N of Co Rd 35
on Twp Rd 138
Lebanon Twp OhiO
Appltcatton No 06 107
New A r Con tam nant Source
Ad t Udlcatton
heartng
scheduled
Excels1or Si!llt Works In c
Man St
Pomeroy 01'110
Adtudtcat oh
hearing
scheduled lor 10 00 A M on Jan
14 1975 at Seneca Towers 361
E Broad St Columbus Oh10
Docket No 74 AP 483
Ent,tv
hearing
request
regardmg denta l of an ap
pi tcatton for a per-m tt to
operate
(12) 12 ltc

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Cue No 21334
Estate of Gertrude McBride
Deceased
Not1 ce is hereby g ven that
Ed son Hob stetter of Pomeroy
Meigs Coun t y Ohio has been
duty appointed Executor of the
Estare of Gertrude McBnde
deceased
!ate of Svracuse
Me1gs County OhtO
Cre-d1tors are required to tue
their cla1ms wtth said fiduciary
w1th1n four months
Dated thts 3rd dav
of
December 197A
Manntng 0 Webster Judge
Court of Common Pleas
Probate D1v1s on Me1gs County
(12l 5 1 ~ 19 3tc

FURNISHED
apartment
util t es furniShed
su table
tor two workmg men or
r e ttred c ouple L vmg room
k tchen shower and bath On
mam htghway Mason W Va
Phone 773 5147
10 27 lfc
FURNISHED apt 3 rooms and
bath
deal for work1ng
couple Phone 991 2937

e

tr"a1ler

POMEROY LANDMARK!
Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2181

BUILDING lot 80ft frontage x
165 fl The second lot on. left on
R verv1ew Drtve
Lincoln
Htll Pomeroy Oh o 11 n
teres ted •call 992 3230 alter 5
p m

10 17 lfc

F tzpatr ck Orchard
Ste~te
Route 689
Phone
Wtlkesv tie M9 3785
11 21 26tc

VACUUM c leaners Electro
Hyg1ene new demonstrators
have all cleanmg attachments
plus the new Electro Suds for
shampooing carpet
Only
$27 50
ca""h
or
term$
ava I able Phone 992 7755
12 11 tfc
STEREO RADIO 8 tracK tape
comb nalton AM FM rad o
Balance $109 7-4 or terms
Call 992 3965
12 11 tfc
LOSE we1ght w th New Sha pe
Tab lets and Hydrex Water
P lis at Dullon Drug M d
dleport and Nelson Drug
12 10 31p
cHRISTMAS trees on old Rt 33Phone Opha Offutt 992 3296
12 20 12tp
------ ---~----

REFRIGERATOR
ktlchen
range
sofa
d1nene set
lamps
record
player
bedroom sui tes antiques and
other tems Phone 992 3457
12 10 7tc

BEDROOM hou se lor sa le
$500 down $70 per month
Phone 992 l975 or 992 2571
12 3 lfc

2 STORY 5 bedroom k tchen
b g hv ng room n~creat on
room and lor m Mason w va
on Rt 33 Pl'1one (304 ) 773
5147
12 10 lOtc
7 ROOM house bath garage
full basement arge garden
n ewly remodeled tn Racene
Call 949 2836 alter 7 p m
12 3 12tc
FIVE ROOM one floor home
redecorated ns 1de and out
Small concrete parktng area
m front
n ce back yard
ut l ty bu ld ng new Lux a re
furnace system 205 Spr ng
Ave
Pomeroy
Prtced
reasonably Phone 992 5292
12 5 tfc

News 13

6 00 - Sunnse Semmar 4 Sunnse Semester 10
6 ::.5- Farm Report 13
6 30 - F1ve Minutes to Live By 4 News 6 B1ble Answers
Pubhc Affa1rs 10

1971 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass
Supreme 1 owner new set of
rad a l t res
6 000 m les
perfect cond t ton Personally
owned
Arnold
Grate
Rut la nd
See at Rutland
Furn lure Company
Phone
742 A211 day n ght call 7A2
5541
12 3 tfc

Blue R1dge Quartet 13

s

6 35- Columbus Today 4
6 45- Morn1ng Report 3 Farmt1me 10

7 00 - Today 3 4 15 Goober 6 CBS News 8 10 Art of Ra1s1ng
Parents and Children 13
7 30 - New Zoo Re11ue6 Tennessee Tuxedo 13
8 00- Capt Kangaroo 8 Jeffs Coll•e 6 Popeye 10 New Zoo
Revue 13 Sesame Street 33
8 25- Capt Kangaroo 10 Jack LaLanne 13

8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55- News 1J
9 00 - AM 3 Paul Dixon 4 W1id Wild West 6 Phil Donahue
15 Bullwinkle 8 Movie Cheyenne Autumn Part 1I 13
30- Not For Worrien Onty3 Hazel 8 Tattietaie~JQ
00- Mane That Tune 3 15 Company 6 Joker s W1ld 8

JO- Winning Streak J 15 Phil Donahue 4 Gambit B 10
00 - H1gh Rollers J 4 15 $10 000 Pyramid 6 Now You See 11
8 10 Password All Stars 13
Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Brady Bunch 13

30 -

,

6 Love of Life 8 10

Lucy Show

f1 55 - CBSNews8 DanlmelsWorld
12 00-JackpotJ 15 Password All Stars6 50 50Club4 News

10 IJ

a

12 30- Celebnty Sweepstakes 3 15 Split Second 6 Search For
Tomorrow 8 10 Afternoon w ith OJ 13
12 45 - Electnc Company 33
12 55- NBC News 3 15
1 00- News 3 All My Children 6 13 Phil Donahue B Young
and Restless 10

Not for Women Only 15

• 1 30 - Jeopardy 3 4 15 Lei s Make A Deal 6 1J As the World
Turns 8 10
2 00 - Days of Our lives 3 4, 1S Newlywed Game 13 Guiding

Light 8 10
2 30 - Doctors 3 4&gt; 15 Girl in My L1fe 6 13 Edge of Nlghl8 10

,.,3

00- Another World 3 4 15 General Hosptfal 6 13

Pnce Is

R1ght B 10 Book Beat 20
3 30- How to Survtve A Marriage 3 4 lS One Life to Ltve 13
Lassie 6 Match Game 8 10 Woman 20

Carrascolendas 33

4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Bonanza 4 Yomerset 15 G1lligan s
Island 6 Tattletales 8 Movie The Mob 10 Mike Douglas
1J
JO- Bewitched 3 Mod Squad 6 Lucy Show B Santa Claus 5
15
" 5 00- FBI 3 Merv Gnffln 4 Andy Gnff1th B Raymond Burr
13

Bonanza 15

5 JO- News6 Beverly H1llblll1es 8 Electric Company 33
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Electnc Company
20

6 JO-

Personality and Behavior 33

5 ltf~
------------...
OEMEAN"S
CONCRET!O
deltvered Monday throuol'1
Saturday
and
evenings
Phone A46 1142
6 13 tfc

You see, I m female, WJder 19, unmarned and therefore, a
zero tn the eyes of cred1t managers even though I earn a fairly
good wage Each tune I asked for a gasoline cred1t card back
came the same answer
'Please send further proof and
references
So, fmally I got smart and signed my application 'J T
Turner ' rather than Joan T Turner '
W1thm two weeks, I had my credit card, the envelope addressed to Mr J T TURNER ' Click 1" - FIN AU. y A
WINNER

9 00- S1x Million Dollar Man 6 13
Evening at Symphony 33

Masterpiece Theatre 20

NORTH

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

CASHSSSSSS'S
FOR
JUNK
CARS
Camp
FRYE S
TRUCK and AUTO PARTS
Rutland phone 742 6094
11 26 26tc

12 10

ltO FOR
1unk cars
$15
S7 iunked auto
cfel vered
bod1es Phone 949 448A
11 24 26tp

ED PETERSEN

OLD furn1ture 1ce boxes orass

oft he
Soctal Secur1ty

beds or complete househol ds
Wnte M D M1ller Rt 4
Pomer"oy Oh10 Call 992 7760
10 7 74

31~

...
••

~

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan
19) You st1ll have a tendency
at th1s time to rely too heav11y
on people who aren I all that
dependable to beg1n w th

counsel available before s1gn
1ng any contracts or docu
ments that could bind you
legally

AQUARIUS (Jan

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

20 Feb

19) Someone whom you re
very fond of and see eye to
eye w1th on most ISsues

not 1n command of you So
what 11 tl all can I be lln1shed
today?

d1ametncally opposes
v1ews Be ca refu l

your

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Th1nk all your moves through
care fully today or you could
do somethtng whiCh would
make you took bad m trent of
others

today m front of others much
your chagrin

VIRGO (Aug 23 Seot 22)

w w

DEAR LMBCAT
Adults get somethmg done With boycotts If theater
managers hear yoU k1ds are organizing one, and see a few picket
lines, maybe they lllower prices down wyour budget - SUE

+++

Dear L
Since under 18-year-olds are restricted as to what they can
VIew ,It seems only fatr theu- admission hckel.s should be no more
expens1ve lhan those of 1:1-year-olds
And if hall-empty theaters can be filled by lowering the
pr1ce, nobody loses Theater managers take note ' - HELEN
Dear Helen and Sue
I'm 12 My mother sa1d I'd grow out of 1t, but I didn t I LOVE
horses 1 I owned a horse, but we couldn t keep him Now I've
faUen In love w1th another horse that 1s for sale, but my folks say
lhey can t afford It She's a good jumper w1th good movements,

and I m crazy about Jumpmg and horse shows, and rac1ng, and
everythmg about horses
Please tell me how a girl my age can make money so I can
buy the horse I love, before shes sold (Besides a newspaper
route ) - DESPERATE
Dear Des
What's wrong Wllh a newspaper route• They re htrlng girls
tllese days
You might help neighbors with cleanmg and gardemng, walk
dogs, babysit, make doll clothes or handicrafts for Christmas
gifts, 'Sit" with the elderly
Ask around your block for odd
JObs Good luck' - HELEN AND SUE

JJl1Jl~1brn® I4J ~.... ~"" ..-~ ,.._
l nl'icramhl~ thest-foor Jumbles
one letter to each !!quare to
form four ordtnary words

0/Ul,lM

I I

11 00 - News3 4 6 8 10 1J 15 J3
11 30 -

1

Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Wide World Special 13 Movte
Murder Inc
6 Janaki 33 Movie Valle'{"of Gwangi
Movie First Men In The Moon 10
00- Mtdntght Special 3 4 15 Don Kirshner s Rock Cancel t
6 News 13
30 - Movte Dr Renault s Secret 10
30 - Movie Mark of the Hawk 4
00 - Movie Mambo •
30- Movie The DP,dreamer 4

a

[j

~~·eeV&gt;td
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Synan
I Sheik s
City
wom en
5 Desert
2 Stage
crosser
remark
10 Hebrew
3 Go by
lyre
auto
II Sllff net
4 My
12 Bapllsm
Defenses
for

one

-

13 Zoroastrian

b1ble
U Taro root
15 - Fleder
rna us
16 Legislative
body
(abbr )
17 Legendary
magiCian
19 Pub
order
20 Small
fish
21 Sunday
newspaper
sec bon
22 Regarding
(2 wds )
24 FIJUshed
25 Price
paid
:!6 Storage
box
27 Magi gu1de
28 Exaggerate
, 32 Composer
33 Macaw
34 faucet
word
35 Lure
37 Suggestion
38 Sifted
39- Boleyn
40 More
painful
n Forest
creature

ment
twixt
powers

9 Shanty
( hyph wd)
II Pme
1 ree state
15 Caper

+Q!062
.J973

M

NAIT/C~

Now arranre the circled letters
to form the aurpriH anawer, aa

I~==~~~==;=~~~~~=-~·=u:':'•:•:ted~
I
bytheabovec~oon
V"

L.l_.cc.:Prill:::.:llli::.:SliiPIIISI=:.::IIISWIII=Illn=--___jl [

XI XX)

(Anlwen lomorrow)

Ju•uJ.l.,R LATHE

SWISH

~ rau~ed

AFLOAT

SAVAGE

lo IU&lt;'rt&gt;lltt-OlASSES

UGMEIUB

YUMVWGH
WTSB

LTH

AN

• 74

• A85

10:15A M.on

WMPO

.

,.

lvest

North

Easl

South

~ass
l'ass

3•

Pass
Pass

4•

-

Pass

water
basement w1th coa l
furnace m Syracuse $3 000 00

YoJJ th' worse
one I know fer
()ett,n' stuck 1n
th1ns, RufJJs 1

: Opemng lead-2t

NEW HOME 3 bedrooms
ceram1c tile bath dark oak
k1tchen
electnc heat
and
garage $20 000 00

MAIN
PO.M.ERQV 0
NICE 1 FLOOR PLAN -

7 rooms J BR

modern bath nat gas furnace
and garaqe $12 000 00

LAUREL CLIFF- 5 rooms
bath electnc heat and garage

$7500 00
MIDDLE PORT

Bnck

bus mess buildmg with 6 rooms

5

rooms
bath
porches
garage carpeted paneled &amp;
tiled - Pnced for quick sale

$9 500 00
9 MOSTLY
RUTLAND -

CHRISTMAS TREES

608 E

TILLABLE

ACRES- TPwater on good
blacktop road close to some
shopp1ng Ideal for homes or
mobile homes
Close to
recreat1on areas S5 800 00
45 ACRE5-Pasture woods
culhvatlon stocked pond all
fenced m1nerals close In

$11 000 00
MINE AREA -

10 acres

LABlANC s lver" lri.Jmpet and
case by V ctor
Excellent
cond1tton appra sed at S300
sell S250 G 1rl s r"OIIer skating
Shoes
SIZe 7 White
S10
Mens spori't tacket medium
blue size 36 and rrousers to
match used very few times
$30 783 ft cured red and
wh te oak planks $100 Phone
985 4110
12 10 o)tp

AT

•

eBLACK &amp;
WHITE TV
eSTER EO

---- ------

Easy Terms!
Free Dehvery I

MASON FURNITURE
HERMAN GRATE
773 5592
MASI'IN, W VA

~ Hard Luck Joe won the
d)amond lead and Jromptly
cashed the ace an kmg of
t~umps The su1t failed to
break and w1th the heart ace
right 1n back of hiS kmg Joe
Wllund up losmg one trump
ttlree hearts and hts temper
~ ~Why does It always hap
P.en to me? he screamed

fmesses never wm

suits

never break I ought to take
up backgammon but I'd
pFobably be JUSt as unlucky
at
game
was unlucky. bul he
have made h1s con
by
leavmg trumps

~'f£~~~~rr:~f~That
so

deuce ot
was probably
at lrtck two

OTHER BARGAINS IN
REAL ESTATE - STOP
AND SEE

COLOR TV

1974
ZIG ZAG
SEWING
MACH IN E S l ett In layaway
All bu It n to buttonhole do
stretch sew1 ng and fancy
stitch ng Pay just SA8 75 cnh
or terms available Trade ms
accepted Phone 992 7755
12 3 tfc

PUBLIC NOTICE!
AUCTION SALE

ZENITH

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

• Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east at Darwin
onto Rt 681, go 4 miles to Milepost 13, turn
south on gravel road 11.~ miles to grove
Watch For S1gns
Hours 12 111 dark except weekends, 9 til dark

located on good fishing creek
and good blacktop road
approved for sept1c tank
$5 800 00 Make an offer

992 2259 or 992 25'8

F lR EWOOD lor sate !.15 per
loa d Phone 7&lt;12 4831
12 10 12tp

CUT YOUR OWN AT
BRADFORD'S GROVE

have cashed Ihe
h1gh d1amond Then
d1amond cash the ace
oft~l~lbs, ruff a club m dum
lead the last diamond
ruff once East discarded
hiS last club and lead a

305 N. SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

would cash his

® 50'( 1HAT JOEY DELL
SURE 15 MY5TEr?:IOUe&gt;
HE NEVER. 010 TELL

WHAT ON EAQTH COJLD
HE; HAvt= N TI4E:RE:
THAT HE DOE,N'T
WANT ANYONE

105EE?r?

ME 1/o/HY HE. SPENT
TlME IN PRISON

three

hS.ir~s. but Joe would have

,e,L.wllnthe ace· jack 10
and West s next
o~!~~:~~~!1~, g1ve Joe the 1est
~~
tr1cks 1rrespect1ve of
location of the queen of

. Advertised for
Saturday, Dec. 14
Has Bean

BARNEY

Cancelled

North

East

South

INT

2•

It
Pass

M"' MAN LUKEV
PUT ONE OF THEM
LEETLE PEEPHOLES

1111 OUR
DOOR

Due to the hospitalization
of the scheduled auctioneer.

The Bradfold AuCtiOn Co.
'

I

WINNIE
AND 1HE WAY HE KEEPS
"THAT DCXJR L..CCKED
WON T LET ANYONE
IN HIS ROOM

THAT AINT
NOfHIN'TO
CROW ABOUT

I: GOT
WALL-TO-WALL
PEEPHOLES

M

W1 S B

AN

lUG

NTOE

JHANTC

P0 GNI

M

M

I 1o&lt;:JIJ6H 1

N AYF

- LHMCYAN

&lt;C 191.f. Kina FeaturH Syndicate, Inc: )

DICK TRACY

East West vulne1 able

how to work it.

WM YTC
Yesterday's Cryptoquote IN A FREE AND REPUBUCAN
GOVERNMENT YOU CANNOT RESTRAIN THE VOICE OF
THE MULTITUDE -GEORGE WASHINGTON

SOUTH &lt;DI

Off1ce W111 Be

Here's

CRYPTOQUOTES

A 6AM E THERE
C:OU Lt7 ~E A LOT TO

•Q32
'JIO
+J85
.KQI064

~AQ94

'

AXYOLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

EAST

•5

f r om

19 Rt:.--cumbent
en nui
22 The
29 European
Merchant
nver
of Vemce
30 Bell
23 Ch1ef
U&gt;lls
eleva tor
poet
opera lor
31 Aquatic
24 Sills or
beast
Sutherland 33 Maple
for
gen us
example
36 - got 1t'
25 Levy
37 Owned

,.-.,.:-r,--.,--

12

.2

s Answer
26 Suffering

measure

8 Covenant

• K9 7 4
'8652
+A K 93

WEST

18 LIQUid

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

0

j

\ A.•""""r Mn11

Yesterday

One letter ltmply stands for another In lh1s sample A Ia
used for the three L s X for the tY.o 0 s f'lC Smgle letters
apostrophes the length and formation o f th e words are all
h~nts Each day the code letters are dtft'erenl

t
I I

\ .. ,l .. rd•y"

Down

5 Grotto
6 Pothouse
specialty
1 Sk1d row
establish

11

l·"iTAFLE
9 30 - Hause Without A Christmas Tree 8 10
10 OO - PollceWoman3 .t 15 N tghtStalker6 13 News20 Paul
Nuchims 33

useful mentor for you th1s year
You won 1 stumble tnlo the old
p !falls Exctt ng c hanges more
to you r lt~ tng are n store

• AJI086
'K73

On Kaleidoscope
Thursday at

JUNK autos
complete and
delivered to our vard We
pick up auto bodtes and buy
aU k nds of scrap metals and
ron R der s Salvage St Rt
124 Rt A Pomeroy Oh10
Call 992 5468
10 17 tfc

d1rect you today '" S1tuattons
where you should be lead 1ng
them Noth ng very frUitful can
result

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You d be w1se to seek the best

to

23

21) You II let others

+++

Joe makes his
own hand luck

EXPERIENCED m1ddle aot
man wants t8n1tor work. o~
rest~urant
work
steady
Phone 367 7196

4 13 tic

Dec:

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Avoid

Dear Helen and Sue
I'm 15 and broke I like
go
the moVIes, but lalely the
adnusswn price went up - again' I must pay $2 f&gt;O, same as
adults, but I can't see the R-rated shows My 11-year-&lt;Jld siSter
pays only a dollar for the same kind of show
What really gels me IS that theaters are only about half-full,
usually Wouldn l 1t be smarter to lower pr1ces and gel full
houses every mght? After aU, they'd make a lot more on popcorn,
etc
At leas! they should have a teen admission, smce we re
classed With little kids m what were allowed U&gt;see
How do we go about gellmg somethmg done• - LOVES
MOVIES BUT CAN'T AFFORD THEM

1
2

Employment Wanted

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

An arrangement you ve had
w1th another that was of
dub1ous value •s not l1~ely to
endure It w111 be tennmated
abruptly

Note From Helen
So now I have a Boy Named Sue
We may have come along way, baby, but we've got a long
way to go' - HELEN

5

CAaH par~ for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531

You tend to be careless w1th
your possessions today
Something could get lost or
stolen Don 1 leave lhtngs scat
tered about

TAURUS (April 20 May 20)

a fnend who always tnes to
upstage you She II do 11 aga1n

+++

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)

on others today If you sense
rt.s1stance change the sub
J8Ct Back off a lew steps

Dec 13 1974
Past expenence w tl serve as a

23 Oct 23)

Plan your day carefully so you
won I be dotng unnecessary
runmng around If you don t
make appomtments you wont
ftnd people 1n

For Friday, Dec 13,1974
ARIES (March 21 April 19)
Don t try to tmpose your Ideas

Pace yourself so that you re 1n
command of your work and its

News 10 News 10 Jimmy Dean 1J I Spy 15

8 oo- Sanford and Son J 4 15 Kung Fu 6 13 Dr Seuss 8 10
Washington Week In Review 20 33
JO - HallmJrk Hall of fame J 4 15 Rudolph The Red Nosed
, Reindeer B 10 Wall St Week 20 JJ

LIBRA (Sept

Dear Fmally
Memo from S V Bottel age 20 I got smart, too After a year
knocking on ml company doors, I om1tted the 'Suzanne,' and
now I am the proud owner of a gas company credit card 1 -SUE

SEP""rfC
fANKS
cleanJ"..f,
Modern Santtatlon 992 3954 or
992 13A9
9 18 tfc
~,.

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Your moods wtll cast a shadow
over your ent1re househo ld to
day tf you put on a lona t:~ce
Let some sunsh1ne tn

P
t'

How to Beat the System
Rap
Say hey ' 1 JUS! beat the system'
After lhree unsuccessful 1nes,l fmallv got a credit card from
a maJOr otl companJ 1

4

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

.'::»»&amp; -. »W${~' ·~-~

Generation Rap

!

-------------w~~ ·

WantP.II To Buy

=-«;:::

7 00- Truth or Consequences 3 4 Bowling 6 WCHS Report 8
Porter Wagoner 3 Masquerade Parade 4 Cand1d
Camera 6 Popl Goes the Country 8 Black Perspective 20
33 Treasure Hunt 10 To Tell the Truth 13

Auctioneer
Complete Service
Pl'1one 949 3821 or 949 3161
RactnetOhio
Crt II Bradford

::::

NBC News J 4, 15 AABC News 1J, Bewitched 6 CBS
News B 10 Zoom 20

7 30 -

"L.l'\;-.;;::-uwo

-

fty Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
NEW LISTING - 5 rooms c1ty

HAMPSTER hog boys 2 whee l
btke 1~ nch Aurora race
track Call after 5 p m 949
4935
12 lO 3tc

WALNUT stereo radiO- -;,;;- fm
8 track tape comb nat1on
Balance SilO ~9 or terms Call
992 3965
12 3 lfc

reasonable rates
Ph
AA6
A782 Glliipolls John Russell
owner and operator
5 12 tfc

Real Estate For Sale
L

APPLES

TWIN
NEEDLE
SEWING
MACHINES 197A model tn
walnut stand
All features
bu It m to make fancy des gns
and do stretch sew 1ng Also
buttonholes blind hems etc
543 35
cash
Or"
terms
ava !able Phon e 992 7755

6 5 tfc

sE"i'rrc-- TA"NKs - cfeaned

1973 CHEVROLET picKup truck
for sale Phone John Rose
949 2822
12 5 6tc

SEWI NG Mach tnes brand new
Z 1g Zag n n1ce walnut table
!n or gmal carton s
Neve'r
used
Clearance on
7A
Models
(Only
a
few
ava I ab le)
S43 40 c ash or
t erm s ava tlab e Phone 992
7755
10 15 lfc

MICROWAVE
OVEN
Only •231 •.52

~

for Sale

3891

00

HOT POINT

OLD HOU Se n Sy racu se on 2
n ce l ots !.3000 or best offer
Phone 992 5898
12 12 4IC
Phone

ONE BEDROOM Ira ler al l
ut I li es and cable TV Fur
n shed Phone 992 3719 after
4 30 p m
12 9 tfc

VB

POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
OPEN EVES 8
PM
For Sale

12 6 6tc NEW
bt leve l
home
3
--------bedrooms
bu II tn k. tchen
l BEDROOM house Phone 992
basement w th one ca r
3975 or 992 2571
garage Phone 742 3615 or see
12 3 tic
M lo Hul c h s.on
11 1 lie
~-

clean mterlor aqua finish good tires
automatic P steenng air conditioned

by

I!:XCELSIOR ~alt Works, ~
Main Sf • Pomeroy ACI kind'S.
ot salt water pellets ..water
nugget• block nit and own
Ohio River Salt Phone 992

11295

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA
4 door

cl~arlng

the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator with over
20 years experience Pullins
Excavating Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tfc

11"5

e

2 11 tfc

-------

DOZER work land

Monte Carlo 350 V
automatic power steering power
brakes dark blue finish blue 1nterlor blue vmyl roof
factory air cond1honmg like new white wall tires radio
Many other extras

0

12 86tp
ONE bedroom
997 3509

---...--..:::::--

2 door V
automatic, power steering black vinyl top
w1th red hn1sh good wh1te wall tires, radio local 1 owner
car and servtced regularly by us

For Her Chnstmas

Real Estate For Sale

2 00 -

SEWINb IYI~\.rliNES Repair•
servtce all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy
Authorized Smger Sales and
Service We sharpen Scissors
3 29 tfc

POMEROY, OHIO

FURNISHED apt AduiiS only
M ddleport Phone 992 3874
11 14 tfc
UN F URNISHED
house
4
rooms and bath 1650 Ltncoln
He ghls Ph one 992 3874
11 14 He

5232

$2250

1970 CHEVROLET

Tomorrow 3 4
News 4

1 00 -

":XCAVATlNG dozer loader
~nd backhoe
work
:septic
tanks tnstatled dump truclfit:s
and to boys tor h~re will haul
fill dirt top so11 limestone &amp;
graver CCIII 'Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
.n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992

Motor Co.

1972 NOV A

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

FBI 6

12 30 - W1ld Wild West 6

HOME
Improvement
and
Repatr Serv1ce Anvthlng
fixed around the home from
roof to basement You II l1ke
our work and rates Phone
742 5081
12 .t 12tp

Phone 949 5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

OF
QUALITY

'Cou'NTRY

SE~V tCE

11 30- Johnny Carson 3 4 15 W1de World Spec1allJ
TBA 8 Mov1e 7 Seas to Calais 10

CAR !=lET 1nstallat1on ~~ :t:&gt; per
yard Phone RIchard West
843 2667
111326tp

Fully Insured
BEND TIRE CENTER
~-"-"'
M_a_s_on-..w_v_a~ 1 . - - - - - - - - -A
_u_t_o Sales
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy

1 BEDROOM house tra ler for
rent n Rutland Phone 742
4465 anyt me
12 12 3t c

10 30- Your Future Is Now 20 Caught In The Act 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 JJ

FRIDAY DECEMBER 13 1974

Complete plumbmg &amp;
heatmg serv1ce Free
Est1mates

FREE ESTtMA TE

Sl M ddleporl
SHOOT NG MATCH
Corn
2 8 6tp
Hollow Gun Cub turn f rst
r ghl afler M tes Cemetery
Ru t land
Facto r y choked J AND 4 ROOM turn shed and
unfurniShed
apartments
___
g uns only Su nday Dec 15 1
Phone 992 5A3&lt;1
p m
A 12 tt c
12 12 3t c - - - - - - - - - - - - -PL A NTATION grown Chr1st
mas tr ees.
Sc otch P ne
PRIVATE
meet
ing
room
for
HAVE
your
de e r
trophy
Norwa y Sp ru ce Blue Spruce
any
organ
zallon
phone
992
mounted A so other sma l l
and Douglas F r Reasonable
3975
an1mals and b rd s
Phone
3 11 tf c
pr ces Shop early for best
Howard B1rcht eld Rol l and
setectJcns
Bo bs Markel
7J 2 'j 9J 2
Mason W Va 773 572 1
MoD~e-No;;
Park
12 3 lfc
12 11 If
R t 33 ten m ties north of
Pomeroy
Large lots w tl'1
A UCTION
Thursday
rtnrl
concrete patios
s dewalks 3 SPACE gas healers $30 each
Saturday n ght 7 p m
at
two new bedroom set Early
unners
and
off
street
Mason Auct on Horton St n
A mer can 6 months old S250
parkmg
Also
spaces for
Mason W Va Cons gnments
250 Amp gasol n e welder
s.mall trailers Phone 992 7479
w elc. ome
PhOn e (304) 773
$~00
Qu1 c kway valve fac ng
1 21 tfc
547 1
mach ne aulomot ve $750 12
I 0 3 ttc 4 RM turn shed apt close to
f rst 1 ne B F G II r es one floor
safe S135 John Deere farm
Powell s Su p er Valu phone
trac tor Model A S250 as s
GUN SH OOT Sat urday Dec
992 3658
14 at 7 p m M te H II Road
Master a1r cond 1 on 1ng t ool
11 20 tfc
sel gas s t at on TBA 1lems
Assorted meats
Factory
A l l lor sell or trade Arnold
c hoked gu n s only Spons.ored
l970VALIANT 65x l2 3bedroom
Octeau Sel lers R dge Port
by Rae ne F1re Dept
fully carpeted LP gas heat
lanct Oh o any lime
12 9 Me
Phone 992 7751
12 11 8tc
8 25 ftc
CHRISTMAS House Bazaar
located acros s from Pomeroy
TWO pones
1 saddle and
Post Off ce wtl l b e open Tues
HOU SE 4 rooms and ball'1 n ce
br die S85 complete see
thru Fr day 7 ftll 9 p m
yard an d dr veway
Also
Arnold
Ocfeau
Sellers
Ho memade Items
Supp ly
turn,shed apt Ca ll 991 2780 or
R dge
Portland
Oh10 any
1m ted
992 343 ?
l1me
17 9 Jtc
12 12 lf c
121 1 8tc

Help Wanted

None But the Brave 10
,..,JQ 00 - Mavin On J 4 15 Harry 06 13 News 20 Woman 33

READY MIX
CONCRETE
deltvered r1ght to your
project Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 3284
Goeglein Readv Mix Co
M iddleport Oh1o
6 30 trc

RACINE PWMBING
&amp; HEATING

Interior &amp;
Exterior Work

S1erra 3 4 15 Odd Couple 6 13 Walton s 6 10 The Wa y

II Was 20 From All Of Us JJ
8 30 - Paper Moon 6 13 What Now Amer.ca? 20
9 00-lronsldeJ 4 15 Streets of San Franc1sco6 Mov 1e Blue
Hawan 8 Soul 20 33 They Search for Surv11;al 13 Mo 11 •e

Phone ( 304) 773 5503

HElL

0.

My L.: tne?

15 Aging 20
8 00 -

complete residential con
struchon Wiring plumbing,
elec
heahng
kttchen
cab1nets e1c
21 Yrs expenence 1n const
trade

Phone 742 4673 or 742 5595
Btll Brown Owner
Rutland, Oh1o

Sat

5

Is R1ght8 Wild Kingdom 10 To Tell the Truth 13 Get Smart

Aluminum s1d1ng, roofing,

Ftre Extmgutshers
Home
Ftre Alarms
Testmg &amp;
Reflllmg

949-329.5

It's

l027tfcl
J ROOM turn shed apartment
ul I I es pa1d 3S6 N Fou rth

Brown's Fire &amp;
Safety Equipment

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

GHEEN'S PAINTING

1 owes!

the

towards

Truth or Consequences 3 4 Bowftng 6 What

Street 20 Nova JJ
30- Hollywood Squares 3 4 Fred Taylor Bask etball 6 Pnce

.

- I
1n

7 00 -

8 News 10 Lets Make A Deall J Sports Desk 15 Two Way

JOHNSON'S

BAM 6PM

T1re Pnce•

TRAILER space 2m les from
Pomeroy Rt 143 Phone 991
585 8

News 3 4 8 10 13 15 ABC New ~ 1o E lectriC Com pany
20 Teaching Children 33
6 JO - NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 CBS New s B 10
Bewitched 6 Zoom 20 What Now Amer1..:a 10

J

Protect Your Home
Or Busmess

Sales &amp; Serv1ce

Open Mon

~--·--·--...;
the

by pass

Ph 992 5682 or 992 7121
All Mechamcal Work

O N E Cour er ML oa I n ear 12
volt one 8 tra c K !ape p l ayer
IC'Ir c ar four 15 n x 6 hole
r ms for Chevy or G M C
ptckup Phon e 99 2 214&lt;1
11 I 0 31c

For

Business
Services
---- - - ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

70 oc t olf on anyth ng n hard
wM e Stewarl s Ha r dware
Man Sl Rulland
11 11 Jt c

7 ROOM an d balh hou se for
rcnl
8
L berty
Ave
Pom eroy Jus t above Jones
Boys ca ll 992 7135
12 10 31c

~~

THURSDAY DECEMBER 1l 1974

. -- - - - - '- - ·-·

} BEDROOM tr ailer al corn er
ot
Broadway
and
E lm
M ddl eport
No p e t s or
c h1ldrcn Call 992 1580 alter 6
P m
195! C H E VY part s
NEW
12 5 ((
LaK ewood tr act on bars h
hooKer
ta cke r at r s h oc~s
heade r s w1lh 3 co l lec tor s tor
] BEDROOM double w de
s ma ll b lock
Cal
99? 3496
mob If' home
n Syra c use
after 6 p m B E ST OFFER
Depos t rcqu red N o c h ld r cn
10 17 f c
or pets C 'l 997 71 1 1ft c r 6
p

.. Television Log
6 00 -

9 ti c

I1

11 - The Da1ly Sent mel, M1ddlep"' l Pomeroy 0 Thursda' Dec 12 J•l/4
~«WN~~

Classifieds Get Results!

F S Ie

lc

n ean so 11uct to me
~rt ctlv
m ssed by d1uqh1~er
ne tt v ~nd r rtm ly
17 11 lt c

11 a

sen tzn e l

.., lls or 1\ I' nl W nl c d
GOOD M I\ N l o I II YiiC.Jn c y tn
e
Pol c roy 1rca No cxpcr ,encf'
l~"'CCSS Hy
1\q('
not
Jll
port'l nt
Good Chflra c tcr a
mus t Wet r ct~ n A r Mal r 5
D ck Pres
Southwe s tern
Q( 3
P lr o " ' Corp
r t Worth WALNUT st ereo r ado :l"'1 l m
1'
ape co mbmtt t on
9 lrrt c k
17 I I 1\tc
Ro l cl n ce '$ Of 15 or 1er m o.s Ca ll
9?1 J ? 6~

IT~ 1~.\T

STVP D

(V~TOD IAN

WiTH HIS
\lOP

�•• •

''

!I

"'..
...

~

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thm·&lt;ctay, Dee. 12, 1974

4 SV AC gridders

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzt•r Mt.·dil·al &lt;.:t•nter
t IJisrharged, Nov. 11)

Veterans Mcmorinl Hospital

ADMITTED
Pursley,

Marte

Racine;

Rola nd

Dodderer. Reedsvtlle.
DISCHARGED - Sandra
Shields. Sylvia Wolfe, Gold ie

Crewey, Melvin E . Davis III ,
Kathleen Dempsey, Patrici a
Doerfer. K~nneth
Dra y.
Gladys Green, Mrs . ~ckic
Harra son and so n. c1ara
Huston , Martha James, Mark

Lawson, Mary McCallum , Bert
B&lt;XIimer, Jason Ward .

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES
Leo
Wellington, Vinton; Mrs. H. D.

Layne. Ca rolyn Mtller, Ket th
Nance, De lores Neal , Edith
Newsome, Kenneth Newsome.
Bon me Porter , Sigrid Ragland ,
Evelyn A. Rlcc, Thomas Rose,
Eva Roush, Juamta Sa rgent,

Roush. Point Pleasant; Mrs.

Thomas Hughes and daughter,
Ashtnn; William Whitehead,
Pomt Plea sant ; Ruby Sayre,
Hobertsburg; James O'Neal.
Point Pleasant; Lottie King ,
Red House ; Mrs. Raymond
Watson, Point Pleasant; Mrs .
Thomas Jones, Cheshire; Mrs .
Russell Cundiff, Mason; Loyal
Wright, Henderson; Mrs ..John
Swisher, Ches hire; Mrs Uoyd

Rosedean Skeen, Mrs. Ronald
Smith and sun , Anna Stearns,
Susan Steven s, Mary M .
Swlsher, Dahha Thacke r. Anna
Mae Walk er, Maxine Walters,

Donald Weed, Huey White ,
Wanda
White ,
Connie
Wtseman, Joshua Wood , Stella
Young
t Births I
Mr and Mrs. James W.
Dunn. a daughter. HendHson,
W. Va ; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Essman, a daughter, Wellston;

Gordon , Grimms Landing.

Stodola perfect
in attendance

iI

riamed All-Ohio

Grace Abbott. John Casto.
Ruth Ctrcie, Phtlip Chck,
Kenneth Crawford, Tamara

Paul Stodola received a Mr. and Mrs . Thomas Salyers,
perfect attendance award for a daughter. Jackson ; Mr. and
1973-74 from C. J . Struble when Mrs . James Slone , a son,
the Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Northup , Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Club met for a Christmas Tredway , a son. Willow Wood .
luncheon and gift exchange at
the Meigs Inn at noon Wednesday .
Cloudy tonight and Friday,
Lou Osborne played "Santa"
for tbe gift exchange and the lows in mid 30s . Highs Friday'
club presented Joyce Quillen, in the mid 40s. Probability of
Meigs Inn waitress, with a gift. precipitation 90 per cent today
The Rev . William Mid· and 20 per cent tonight and
dleswarth gave prayer and Friday .
there was singing of "Silent
Night" and "Jingle Bells."
NOW YOU KNOW
Twenty-two members atThe
United States is the only
tended. A guest for tbe party
was Carl Matzke, taken by industrial country in the world
not on the metric system.
Struble.

Weather

Students give piano .recital
"Christ Came to Bethlehem"
by Camille Swmdell ; " It Came
Upon a Midnight Clear" and
"Hard the Herald Angels Sing"
by Sonia Ash; and "Cantique
"Christmas 1974" was the the Noel" by Tonia Ash.
theme of the program which
Punch and Christmas
included "Holly Jolly Christ- cookies were served followmg
mas" by Tonia Ash; "Here the recital.
Come Santa C1aus" bv Carrie
Guinther; " White Christmas"
by M"eg Amberger; "Let it
Snow " by Carol Morris ;
"W inter Wonderland" by
(continued from page I l
Diane Nease; " Have Yourself panaceas" such as an Immedia Merry , Merry Christmas" by ate return to wage and price
Camille Swindell; " What Child controls, mandatory -gasoline
Manger" by Carrie Guinther.

programs that treat the symp-

"May There Be Peace on

Jr

T ackles
Kyle
Utt,
H anov erton Un1ted , 6· 2, 230,
Sr; Bryan Gorby , CrookSville,
6 0, 235 , Jr
M1ddle Guard Denn1s
Morr i S, Cory -Rawson, 5 9, 172,

by

Diane

Jr

Mike Bosett1 ,
Tuscarawas Catholic, 6 0, 185 ,
5r ; Matt Granger. Marion
Ca thol i c , 6 .2, 195, Sr .
Cornerbacks ~ John Gudgel,
Yellow Sp rings , 6 0. 165, Sr ..

Ford said be Is sure the
nation will start pulling out of
the recession in the months
ahead and that there already

Nease;

All District 6
mines working

are signs of improvement in
CHRISTMAS TREE S f or sale,
any s1z e. $3 a piece W1dt'
se le c tion
Phone 7 42 601 L
Eugene Morrison .

the battle to restrain prices.
"1 expect inflation will move

12 12 12tp

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
DEC. 12
NOT OPEN

FRI., SAT., SUN .
DEC. 13-14-15
ZANDY'S BRIDE

(Technicolor)
Starring Gene Hackman

Rated PG

Linebacke r s ~

toms but retard the cure."

Earth" by Meg Amberger;
"Star of the East" by Carol
Morris; " Do You Hear What I
Hear''

Tackles ~ Pat Elkmg ,
Mar1on Local. 6 I , 205, Sr .
Mark Joh nston , Greenev1ew , 6·
L 205, S r
Guards - Randy Anderson ,
Liberty Benton. 5 10 , 170 , Sr;
F rank Gatto, L isbon. 5 10, 2'20,
Ce nter Brad Young ,
Wynford , 6 L 190 . Sr .
Quarterback
Larry
F ortner , Lora1 n Clearview , 6 .s,
200, Sr
Runnmg backs - Joe Guyer.
Fremont St Joseph. 6· 1, 200,
Sr , T im Vogler , Covington, 6
J , 205, Sr . Tom Harrington.
Montpet1er , 6 o, 185. Sr .
SECOND TEAM DEFENSE
Ends - Bruce Krtll, Mont
pe11er, 6 3, 175, Sr . Chris
Muh l enkamp , Ansonia, 6 3, 210,

Big auto

rationing or "other compulsory

Sr

Sr

SYRACUSE
Piano
students of Mrs. Rose Ann
Jenkins presented a Christmas
recital recently at the Asbury
United Methodist Church.

is This" and " Away in a

'COL UMBU S {U Pi l
Fo ur
~o u th e rn
valley
A lhl e l 1c
Confere n ce (S VA CI football
plil yt'r s w er e nam ed today to
111t' Cla ss A All Ohio UPI
toot baH lea rn
l or
honorable
Se l ected
m en t 1on ba c k fi e ld spot !. were
M1jch N e&lt;~se of So utl;\ern an d
K yger Creek's Chns Preston.
wh il e D ave W1 se of Kyger
Cr ct' k &lt;~nd Steve Holt er of
E a s t ern
we r e
named
hono r ab le men t 1on lm emen
Fo llOWing 1S th e c omple te
l1 stm g of ~l a y ers honored
FIRST T~AM OFFENSE
En d s
Terry Vogle r ,
Cov in g ton. 6 2, 200 . Sr . Rob
Ga rr ett , W 1ndham , 6 3, 205 , Sr
M alt Clem ens.
Ta ck l es
Middletown Fe nw tck, 6 ) , 2'JO ,
Sr . Rodger Barth , Sycamore
Mohawk. 5 10 2'24, Sr
Gua rd s ' Mike Vantilburg ,
R1verdale . 5 11 205. Sr . M1ke
Was aa s. Norw alk 5 1 Paul , 6 0 ,
200. Sr
Center
M 1c k R uta n ,
Mechanicsburg, 6 o. 205 , Sr
Quarterback
Ron Sc h
m utz . Blutfton , 6 I, lBO . Sr
Runn i ng Backs Mike
Harkrader ,
Middletown
Fenw1ck , 59 , 170 . Jr , Pa t
Sin gleton . WoodS f ie ld . 5 11. 185,
Sr , Gar y Vowell, Pla1n C1l y
Jonan1an A l de r , 6 0. 200. Sr
FIRST TEAM DEFENSE
E n ds
Dave
RiedeL
Buckeye Centr a l, 6 3. 177 , Sr ,
R1ck Pfou t s, R1dg emont . 6 0 ,
185, Sr
Tackles -- Jerry Bayer .
Ca nal Wmchester , 6 0 , 225. Sr .
T om N ewman , R 1dgemont. 6 2,
21 5, Sr
M1ddle guard Jim Lay ,
Rock ford Parkway , 6 2. 215 . Sr
Lmebackers - Matt Huff
man , Cor y Rawson , 6 0. 195 .
Sr . Dave Flega l , Wrndham , 6
I , 205 Sr
Cornerbacks
Jo hn
Gavelda , Fat rport Harbor , 5
11. 175. Sr . Jeff DelBene.
McDona ld , 5 10 , 190, Sr
Safeties Charles Black.
Bloom Carroll , 5· 10 , 160 , Sr ..
Kevin Babcock, Sycamore
Mohawk . 5 -11. 168, Jr .
·
SECOND TEAM OFFENSE
Ends - P hi l Case y, Ollawa
H il ls . 6 -2. 170. Sr ; Bil l Pert ,
Fremont St Joseph , 6·2, 185 ,

steadily down from the intolerable double-digit level"
because

11 Conditions

are

changing rapidly," he said.
Ford appealed to the
business executives to do their
best to restore public confidence in the American
economy. He said he hopes
congressional leaders from
both parties would comply with
his request for "a moratorium

BELLAIRE, Ohio ( UPI) An official of District 6 of the
United Mine Workers Union
said today all mines in the
district, which covers EasterJ
Ohio and the Northern
Panhandle of West Virginia,
were working with the ex·
ceplion of one in West Virginia

which was closed because of a
local dispute.
Buck Mowery, a field
representative for the UMW,

on partisan economics" while

said

the administration reviews the
situation.

workers did not put up any
pickets at the mines today as
they did earlier in the week ·
when 1,500 UMW workers in
the district stayed off the job in
honoring the picket lines.

mine

construction

50 DIE IN CRASH
SAIGON (UP!) - A giant
helicopter transporting South
Vietnamese troops to a Mekong
Delta battlefield west of Saigon
crashed today, killing all 50

VISIT DUnoN•s

persons aboard, military
sources said. It was the worst
chopper crash ever in the war-

7' SCOTCH

ltorn country.

PINE TREE

and save several dollars
on your shopping list.
"VISIT US SOON"

DUTTON'S
PRESCRIPTIONS ARE OUR
MAIN BUSINESS

'

' ' '

'

'

Quarterback - Stev e Gray .
Buc keye Centra l. 6 2, 190, Sr
Runn1ng backs Mark
Newell. Mapleton , 6 2, 180. Sr .
Dan Witch , Arl i ngton, 5 11 , 18 5.
Sr . Dave Stratt on. B l u ffton . 6
o, 185 . S r
•
THIRD TEAM DEFENSE
En d s
Ph il
Agoston ,
M1ddletown Fe nw 1ck, 6 2, 180,
Sr , Albert Looney, Yettow
Sp r ings , 6 0 , 195 , Sr
Tackles ~ Ji m Rasmu ssen ,
Fairport Harbor. 6 1, 205, Sr :
P et e Re tt ere r . R idg emont , 6 0 ,
207. Sr
Middle guard
f'l\ark
Haul er . Monroeville , 57, 170 ,

arc this week's ,winning

fire chief
at Otester
CHESTER - Ross Cleland
was elected fire chief by the
Cheste r

Fire

Department

Wednesday evening.
Others elected were Harold
Newell, assistant fire chief ;
Larry Cleland , captain ;
Hobart Newell, firslll. ; Elmer
Newell, second It ; John
Ridenour, third ll .; Keith
Woods, fourth It .;

numbers ln the Ohio lottery :
(one five

Number 150

t.ero) In any box on tleket
wino $20.
Numbers 041 t zero fou r
one) and 369 (three six nine)

In green and blue wins $500.
Numbers 041 and 369 ln
blue boxes wins $1,000.
Numbers 041 and 369 in
green boxes eligible for
$300,000 drawing
and
automatically wins $15,000.

Stage band going
~o state pageant
w.

MASON ,

va

Recognition came to Wahama

Ivan Woods, vice president;

Keith Woods, secretary; John

was mvlted this week to par-

ttctpale in the State Junior
Miss Pageant in January .
For the past five years the
Wahama Stage Band has had a
key role in the Mason county
Junior

Mlss

Pageant ,

providing entertainment for
the audience and hve music for

Wichman, treasurer .

Building committee members are Paul Larry Smtih,
Bob Woods, Roy Christy and

Don Vanmeter ; ways and
m ea n committee, Bruce

Myers, Harold Newell, J . M.
Gaui and Bob Woods.
A dinner of oyster stew and

steak wa s served to the 19
persons attending .

-

Linebacke r s - M 1ke Doyl e,
Be llaire St John ' s, 6-1. 215,
Sr , Brett Stratton . Bluffton , 6
0 :ws, Sr
Cornerbacks ~ Steve Boyles,
She nandoah , 5 10, 175. Sr .;
Larry
Sowers.
Frankfort
Adena , 6 0 , 170, Sr
Safelles
Tom
P i ca,
Tus c arawas Ca tholic , 5 10 . 175.
Sr , Sam
Nicolosi . Marton
CatholiC, 5 10, 165. Sr
Back of the Year ~ M i ke
Harkrader ,
Midd l etown
Fenwock
Li nem·an o l the Year - Malt
Clemens , M id dletown Fe n ·
WiC k
Coach of the Year - A r ch
Rodgers , Buckeye Central
HONORABLE MENTION
BACKS
Jeff Auchmuty, Columbus
Grove . M itch Belknap, Indian
Va lley North ; Jelf Bla c k ,
Canal Wmchester, Tom Baker.
N ewark
Catho lic ,
Ch u ck
Borgeson . Norwalk St Paul ,
Joe Cobb. Ottawa Hill s, M 1ke
El li s, Zanesville Rosecrans ,
Dan
Gerhart ,
Wynford ,
Charles George,
Bu c keye
west , Rusy .,Gordon, Mapleton ,
Clark Gilmore. Frankfort
Adena, Terry Griner . Minster
Randy Holfhines , Rockford
Parkway , Jack Harshbarger ,
Rivers 1de , Roland James ,
Greenev1ew .
Rudy Jov 1c,
Sha dySide . Steve Johnson .
Newark Catholic, Jerry Kalb,
Buc keye Central ; Ken Keele,
Richmond Heigh ts , Barry
Lyons ,
W i ndham.
Ken
Loushin , R 1chmond Heights ;
Mike Monnig, Ironton St.
Joseph; Gil Mat1nez, Loarln
Clearv rew ;
Loren
Miller,
Berksh1re
M1tch
Nease ,
Southern;
Lynn
Oberlm ,
Montpelier ; S tuart Patton ,
Glouster
Trimb le;
Chris
Preston, Kyger Creek ; Brad
Perry, Norlhmor , M1ckey
Roberts, Middletown Fenw 1ck ,
J ack Ruen. Columbus Grove ,
Brian Rosptock, Kirtland ,
Dave R i dgeway , Hanoverton
Un i ted ;
Dennis
Shaner ,
Waynesfield Goshen ; Jerry
Soltis , Middlefield Cardinal ,
Jeff Taylor, Stanton Local ,
Herb Woodby. Woodsfield ;
M1ke White. Perry ; Steve
Zsigray , Bellaire St . John's

I

.

·

IH

I

0 Q

.•r'

uu

;

and poise and appearanc~

CLASS TO MEET
The Happy Harvesters Class
will meet at 6 p m Friday at
the Trinity Church in Pomeroy
with a party to follow.

Tuesday evening, Susl:\,~
Stanton , chairman of the State

Junipr Miss Pageanl called
Director Charles Yeago to
invite him and the band to
perform at the State Pageant

By RICHARD HUGHES
UPI Business Writer

Jan . 18 and 19 at Concor4

College.

Auto fn dus try executives
from President Ford's ·home

.

The band was chosen upo~
, recommerldations of the state

judges who year after year
have reported to the state
chairman of the success of the
Mason County Junior Mi~
Pageant.
The State Pageant is now

I.

working to provide meals,
housing , and money to cover .
expenses for the musicians.

r

,,

I

Coordinate
Sportswear

Blazer Jackets, Shirt Jackets, Vests,
Wrap Sweaters , Pleated Skirts,
Straight-leg Pants, V-Neck Sweaters,
Cuffed Shirts, Print Shirts, Long Sleeve
Turtlenecks ... All in sizes 7-8 thru 17-18
in holiday colots of Sea Mist , Carnation ,
Oyster.

Save

1/3 OFF
The.Regular Price

ews •. in Briefsf

I

THERE'S NO MORE TO ALL THIS THAN COINCIDENCE,
but today is a day of portents. It will start with a partial eclipse of
the sun and end with a meteor shower. Astronomer Larry Ciupik
of Chicago's Adler Planetarium declined to speculate whether it
added up to a bad omen, but he noted "there are on the average
two to five partial eclipses on Friday the 13th over the entire
world every 217 years."
In the morning, the moon w!ll move between the earth and
the sun and cast a shadow on the sun in most of the eastern
United States. Americans east of a line from the Great Lakes to
West Texas will be able to see the phenomenon, barring cloudy
skies.
·

'

Buy A Christmas

'•

CHAIR
Now In Our Third Aoor
Fumiture Department

In The Toy Store

FRIDAY 2·3 pro
SATURDAY 1·3 pm

workers, said he challenged

variety of industries, including
textiles, autos, paper , alwni-

economy was in ' 'difficult
strait.s" but not in a crisis.
"I think it 's a crisis situation.

and Save

e

,.'

",.

20%

FREE DELIVERY
BANK RATE CREDIT TERMS

VOL. XXVI

NO. 171

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Crude oil
price hiked

Teachers going
back to school

RACINE - Elementary elementary teachers designed
teachers of the Southern Local to update teachers in the area
School District will return to of learning disabilities, parthe classroom themselves hcularly disabilities that affect
Thursday for some learning a child's ability to read successfully.
experiences of their own .
The teachers will practice
Thursday night will be the
first of two sessions for the

Continued on page 10

WASHINGTON (UP!) University
of
Chicago
President Edward H. Levi will
be nominated as attorney
general to succeed William B.
Sax be, who Is expected to
resign and become am:
basaador to India, according to
a White House source.
The source, who asked not to
be Identified, indicated Thursday that the often outspoken
Saxbe would be named to
replace Daniel Patrick Moynihan as U.S. amhasaador in
New Delhi.

Moynihan, a Nixon appointee, is expected to resume
his teaching post at Harvard
University after two years in
India.
The source also said President Ford was considering
Levi for the top Justice
Department post. But neither
the White House nor officials at
the Justice Department would
confinn the reports.
Saxbe told UP! Thursday he
had talked with Ford Monday
but any announcement on the
shift would have to come from

the White House.
According to another Wljite
House official, Ford suggested
Saxbe resign and accept
another position in the government because he wants to put
his own men in a number of lop
jobs including the Justice
Department.
The official indicated Saxbe's replacement Is tbe first In
what was expected to be a
major series of cabinet · shifts
by early next year.
Levi, 63, Is a highly regarded
legal scholar. He served as

dean of the University of
Chicago Law School for 12
years before becoming president of the university in 1968.
He was also first assistant In
the Jqtrtice Department's War
Division from 1940 to 1945, and
was chairman of an interdepartmental government
.commlss!on on monopolies and
cartels in the Antitrust
Division in 1944.
Levi has already announced
plans to retire as president of
the University of Chicago in
Continued on page 10

Christmas festival is Sunday

'

Main Store- Toy Store- 'Warehouse Open 9:30 to 9 p.m. Every Shopping Day
Until Christmas.

The "Creative Arts" Christmas festival, open to the
,public, will be staged at the
"Meigs Hlgh School at 2 p.m.
Sunday.'
There will be music by the
Christmas Chorale, directed by
Christine J. Guthrie and
- carr,ftors. will be members

EL·BERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

SAVE YOUR SA~ESLIPS FOR VALUABLE PREMIUMS
•

Ford's statement that the

It's higbly critical ... feeding on
1tself and may go to worse
conditions," Woodcock said.
The recession, he said, could

lead to a depression.

from

ler, American Motors and Lhe

UAW, along with Michigan
Gov. William G. Milliken, met
for two hours with Ford , urging
him to do some pumPiJriming
to help the auU&gt; industry in its
worst sales period m 15 years.

Milliken satd the President
gave a "clear indication " he
would consider a tax cut to

moved to create public service
jobs and expand unemployment benefits for the
hundreds or thousands persons
thrown out of work by the
recession .

The Senate passed a $7
billion program and the House
began debate on a similar bill
and passed one that extenda
Wlemployment insurance from

provide more dollar s for
buying cars. Press Secretary

39 to 52 weeks.
In other developments :
- The Labor Department

Ron Nessen said President

said inflationary prtce in·

Ford promised to "do
something" but said nothing
about a tax cut.

creases may be leveling off.
The department's wholesale
price index rose only 1.2 per
cent in November, half the gain
of prior months. Most of the
increase was caused by higher
Continued on page 10

Lee Iacocca, president of

Ford also once again ruled

Ford Motor Co ., told the

out a big boost in gasoline taxes

President tbe auto industry is a
"disaster area."

to conserve energy.
Both houses of Congress

•

enttne

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

Levi expected in Saxhe post

In The Middle Block

verging on a depression .
Elsewhere, workers from a

at
0

'I

.,

SANTA CLAUS

with some 200,000 laid-off

•

CINCINNATI- "ADOPT A SIMPLER life-&lt;llyle by eating
less and consider fasting one or more days a week," is the
message going to a haU.million Ohio Catholics this weekend.
"Catholics are being urged to "help ease the world hunger
crisis" by donating money they save from making fewer food
purchases to charities that distribute food to needy persons.
VIENNA (UP!) - The world's major oil exThe reconunendations are from bishops of the 19&lt;ounty
Archdiocese of Cincinnati, which counts 260 parishes and 500,000 porting nations decided today to increase the price
Catholics among lis numbers. The bishops' "challenge to the of crude oil by 7.4 per cent from Jan . I , 1975, Iran 's
parishes" Is included in letters to be read in all archdiocese
Interior Minister Jamshid Amouzegar said.
churches this Sunday.
t
The new price will be $10.46 a Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar,
barrel, Amouzegar said, com· Saudi Arabia and VenezuelaCLEVELAND - THE PETROLEUM INDUSTRY may be
pared with the present average produce 85 per cent of world oil
forced to allocate fuel oil to consumers in the face of a sharp
selling
price of crude of $9.74 exports.
increase in demand caused by nationwide cutbacks in the supply
dollars a barrel.
The posted price is a
of natural gas to industry, an official of the Standard Oil Co., of
The
new
price
will
be
Wlder
a
theoretical
price of crude oil
Ohio (Sohio) said Thursday. Robert Griffin, marketing vice
unified
pricing
system,
ending
from
which
actual prices are
president for Sollio, said the recently-announced cutbacks may
the
posted
price
system
which
by
a complicated
worked
out
· · p~Xte a heavy.borden on tbe petroleum industry because the
set
prices
at
an
artificially
high
of
U!xes
and royalties
system
demand for fuel oil could rise significantly to offset the cutbacks.
paid by oil companies to the
level.
"The petroleum Industry had been prepared to meet the
producers.
The
new
price
for
a
42-i!allon
forecasted needs of its traditional customers during the coming
Present posted price is $11.65
barrel of oil was fixed by
months, barring disruption of crude oil supplies, or an unusually
a
barrel
but the actual pnce is
ministers of the 13-member
cold winter,'' said Griffm. ''But the drastic reductions in natural
Organization of Petroleum Ex- about' $9.74.
gas to Industrial consumers which includes oU refineries, will
The OPEC ministers also
porting
Countries meeting in
have a profound impact on our industry," Griffin added. Griffin
agreed
to hold a special
Vienna.
said Sohio's residential customers "will continue to ge l top
on a proposed
strategy
session
"We agreed to abolish the
priority."
posted price system-the root global oil summit in Algiers
of
excess profits by oil com- Jan 8.
WASHINGTON -DESPITE CONCERN THAT Congress
panies,"
Amouzegar said.
was about to endorse a merger of great wealth with great power,
"We all agreed that a single
Venezuelan Mines Minister
the House Judiciary Committee has recommended the conflnnal!on of Nelson A. Rockefeller as vice president. By a vole of unified price system must be Valentin Hernandez-Acosta
adopted. The new system will said the Algiers meeting will
26 to 12 -there were four more negative votes than Gerald R.
be in the interest of the con- discuss the proposal by French
Ford got for the same job a year ago - the panel cleared the
Rockefeller nomination Thursday for its next obstacle, eigbl sumer. It will limit the profits President Valery Giscard
d 'Es taing for a three-way
hours of debate and a vote by the full House next Thursday or of oil companies."
summit
of oil producers,
OPEC's
members
Abu
Friday.
consumers
and developing
Dhabi,
Algeria,
Ecuador,
Many of the members said they were concerned about a
Gabon,
Indonesia,
Iran,
Iraq,
nations.
potential conflict of interest if the vice president belonged to a
family which collectively Is worth billion, much of it invested
in the nation's richest corporations. The 17 Republicans and 9
Democrats who voted for Rockefeller said they could tolerate
that, but the 12 Democrats who opposed him said they could not.

We've· just received a spec! a I
purchase from the famous
maker of our most popular line
of Misses Coordinate Sportswear ... and we're passing the
savings along to our Customers

To See

says, calling it a disaster

executives

Ford, General Motors, Chrys-

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1974

TEN CENTS

..···,·"'"'')!''-"
.......... ··»
· .................
dl!"'!'!lilllt'~fm~::«&gt;:~w~
·.-.vr.•;•
....,. ·" ·~·~::""&lt;~~::«&gt;:~~li:O:'&gt;·.«&lt;~:..-~
... ........
•:-.-.:0:•!-;o;oi':&gt;.•;o.•~

• By Unl~d l'rfss International .

Sale

Bring Your Children

United Auto Workers, a union

_And Budget Director Roy
Ash told a Senate hearing the
next six months will be so bad
in terms of unemployment and
sagging business the nation
will want to see them to pass
into htstorv "as soon as

.I

LINEMEN
Mike Barney, Lancaster
F1 sh er,
Ron
Bernosky ,
Buckeye west , Tony Borgia ,
Norwalk St Paul ; John Baker ,
N ewcome rs tow n , Dan Belt,
Grand Valley ; Pat Barry,
Zanesville Rosecrans; John
BQehm, Newark CatholiC,
Br1an Conrad, Gibsonburg,
Ken Creagh, Berksh i re ; Jeff
Champa, R ichmond He1ghts ,
Denn is Day , Newbury- ; Mike
Hagans, Windham .
Steve Holter, Easlern ; Dav1d
Hartley , Glouster Trimble;
Chuck Habig, Woodsfield ;
Mark Hartman, Canal Win chester.
Mark
Hess ,
Berkshire;
Steve
Haines ,
Greeneview; Joe Kraiicek,
Cedarville ; Rod King, Glouster
Trimble ,
Paul
Knoefel,
Newark Catholic; Jim Kruse ,_..
Sidney Lehman . Scott K irk ·
patrick , Indian Valley North ;
Phd LuginbuhL Bluffton .
Doug
Llwellyn.
Albany
Alexander:
Doug
Long ,
Monroevi lie; Mike Molyet ,
Fremont St. Joseph; Dave
Melma. Ashtabula St. John ;
Jeff Martin, Mapleton ; Pat
Mc0'1',...;.*'t·i-Middlefield Car
dmal , Bill Norr1s , Frontier ,
Rick
Prokop ,
Richmond
He i ghts,
Mike
Pastore,
Lisbon ; John Robinett, Canal
Winchester, Blenn Reese,
Sta tnon Local
Greg Sm1 th , Pro c torville
Fairland, Todd Stah l. Wyn .
ford, Doug Swarfz, Covington ;
Matt Schaber, Woodsfield ;
Tony Sarchet, Xenia Woodrow
Wilson,
M ike
Schrock,
Garaway ;
AI
Swearigen,
Triad,
Ken
Schafe r,
Monroeville , Kev1n Smith,
Norwalk St
Paul ,
Brad
Tim mons, Mechanicsburg ;
-Doug Van Atta, Ada; Jeff
Wagner , Liberty Union ; Dave
Wise, Kyger Creek; Alan
.z1elke, R 1chmond Heights .

my is in worse shape than he

sporting goods, were laid off or

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9

The top

However, he sald, Ute economy will recover in the second

state of Michigan told the
President Thursday the econo-

given notices Thursday .

CHRISTMAS FUN - Two and one~aU year old Carl
Bourne has had a ball during the loy project of Xi Gamma
Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at the home of his
mother, Mrs. Larry (Jane Baer ) Bourne over the past few
weeks. Sorority members collected several hundred toys and
have worked at the Baer home to put them in good order.
This Saturday beginning at 9 a.m., sorority members will sell
the toys at the former ftre department room on the first floor
of Pomeroy Village Hall. No toy is priced over $5, and
practically all of them are under that price. Carl has been on
hand to enjoy the toys as they have been readied for the sale.

possible."
half of 1975.
At the White House, Leonard
Woodcock, president of the

num, clothing, appliance and

YOUR CHRISTMAS
GIFT HEADQUARTERS
•

HONORABLE MENTION

WASHINGTON (UP!) - IN A FEW YEARS Instead of
buying a "fifth" of whiskey or wine you'll have to buy 760
milllliters. As part of a nationwide conversion to ·the metric
system, the Treasury Department said Tuesday that domestic
and imported wines must be bottled in seven standard metric
sizes beginning Jan. I, 1979.
The department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Flreanns
will propose similar ruJes for distilled spirits in a few weeks. The
new size closest to ihe fifth will be 750 mlllllllters, or 25.4 ounces,
justa fraction smaller than the fifth's 25.6ounce size.
Domestic wine Is now sold in' J6 different bottle sizes and
imported wine in 'll. Treasury Secretary William E. Simon said
the new standards "should facilitate buyer comparison and un!J
pricing . ~· Old wine, al$dy aging in bottles when the conversion
sold ~ is.
takes place, can

'i

Ford challenged on
shape of economy

i t

l

~

High's Stage Band when it routines .

Donnie

Kirk Chevalier, president;

...

contestantS'' physical fitness

Vanmeter, fifth lt. ; Lowell
Ridenour, publicity chai rman ;

•••••

Jr

(Continued from page I)
in Ohio in October. Ohio payrolls for October, 1974, rose 4 per cent
from ,the October, 1973, level, the Center for Business and
Economic Research at Ohio State University reported Wednesday. The center also said payrolls were up 4 per cent for the
first 10 months of the year when compared with the same period
In 1973.
'
All eight city-(!Ollnty areas surveyed by the center showed
. October-to-October Increases in production worker payrolls
ranging from 2 per cent in Toledo-L~as to 9 per cent In CantonStark, the' center said. The center said other increaseS were
Akron-summit and Youngstown-Maboning, 8 per cent; Clnclnnati-Hamilton and Cleveland-Cuyahoga 5 per cent and
Columtius-~'ranklin and Dayton-Montgomery 4 per cent.

Shop at Dutton's

_

Sr

WINI&lt;I"'r. DRAW
TROY, Ohio iUPI) .::_ Here

News ... in Briefs

REG. $18.95

Middleport, 0.

Jotlll Bur t ch . Ro c kford Pork.
way . 6 1, 178, Sr
Harry McV ey,
Sa l et1eS Cl1n to n Ma ss i e, 5 10 , 160. Sr . ;
G&lt;Jry L1eb , Li ber ty Benton . S
10, 170 . Sr
THIRD TEAM OFFENSE
Ends
Kev1n
Joli ff.
R 1vcrdate , 6 'l. 185, Sr . P et e
F unk e, K 1rlland. 6 'l , 190. Sr
Tac kl es
R 1c k Ma ag .
Co l umbus Grov{' , IJ d . 205 , Sr .
Boston
Chu ck Darby , New
G lenwood. 6 1. 195. Sr
G u ar ds John K 1ngstey-,
Tw1n Val l ey South , 6 1. 'llO, Sr ,
John Sag an 1c h . McDonald. 6 0.
2 15, Sr
Center -· Dean Reichma n.
l n d1a n Valley North , 5 10 . 185.

Oeland is

."'.,..

of the speech class of Dwight
Goins. In the foyer, exhibits
from the art class of Jack
Slavin and the welding
students of Willard Miller and
Kenneth Eblin will be
dlsp)ayed. Celia McCoy of the
faculty is in charge of a
&lt;
tableaux.

.•

Usherettes will include Follow, 0 Listen to the Angel's
Georgene Grate, Tami Hun- Song, As Lately We Walc~ed, 0
nell, Carol Lewis and Jeannie Little Town of Bethlehem, We
Harris(l,, Bernice Hoffman Three Kings of Orient, The Gift
arranged the printed program. of Love, The Hallelujah
The program will include : Chorus , from the Messiah, and
0 Come, 0 Come Immanuel, Recessional .
What Child is This, Silent
Continued on '!lage 10
Night, Rise . Up Shepherd and

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through Tuesday,
chance of snow flurries

Monday and Toesday. Highs
In the lOs Sunday, lowering
Into the 30s Monday and
Tuesday. Lows In the 20s.

Boil your water!
Restdents of both Pomeroy
and Middleport are to boil all
dnnkmg water until further
notice, the Meigs County

Forceless
revolution
is proposed
STOCKHOLM (UP!)
Alexander I. Solzheni tsyn
finally spoke his piece Thursday, giving a four-hour
discourse about life in the
Soviet Union and calling for a
moral and religious revolution
throughout the world.
"For the East, but also for
the West , there is no salvation

except moral and religious
awakening," the

56-year~ld

exiled Russian Nobel Prize.
winning author told newsmen
at what he billed was his first
news conference in nine years.
Because of what he called the
world's "psychological" prob-

Department of Health advised
today .
The health department
reported that the second of

wlth the water at the present .

without the boiling processes

However, the health depart-

by the health department.

ment will not okay the water
for consumptio n without

boiling , until the third report
has been received and until

The test reports come from

th e Southeastern District
Health Department Office at
Logan.

after Monday when further

tests will be taken in both

three test results have been . towns. Under that plan, it was
received on Pomeroy's water to be at least Wednesday next
and that these two tests have week before tl1e water is
indtcated that all is m order okayed for co nsump tiO n

Again, residents are urged to
b01l water for at least 10
minutes and to cool it rapidly in

order to help the taste of the
water

Juveniles confess guilt
Sheriff Robert c. Har· the Letart F'alls Cemetery
tenbach said today four youths where a chain saw, clippers
of the Letart Falls area under and an assor tmen t of other
age 18 have confessed gmlt in tools were taken .
- Burglary of guns from
four recent burglaries in the
Racine-Letart Falls vicinity. Cloisl Badgley, Rt. 2, Racme
Taken into custody and [Letart).
- Burglary of tools , inque stioned Wednesday, and
advised of their rights, the cluding an electric saw , were
youths admitted implication taken from the residence of
in:
Theron Johnson, Rl. 2, Racme.
- Breaking and ent.&gt;ring (by
- Burglary of a tool shed at

one of the four ) of the Letart
Falls elementary school m
wh1ch money was stolen.

Shertff Hartenbach said the
boys, after signing confessions,
were released to the custody of
their parents pending formal
charges in the Meigs County
Juvenile Court. The sheriff
indicated some of the property

reported stolen probably will
be recovered, but not all of it,
as some has been sold .

lems, he said a moral
revolution was necessary, but

Complaint procedure set up

he refused to say whether he,
himself, believed in religion.
" I believe the most

EASTERN - Procedures on

Board of Education met 'I'hurs·

substitute bus driver . It was

how comlaints against any

day night.
According to the policy of the

agreed to help the Tuppers
Plains Booster Club purchase a
new piano and to help the
Chester PTA wtlh a school

promising is the moral
revolution that I have men-

school employe are to be aired

tioned," he said. "The method
of physical revolutions should
stop throughout the world,

Eastern Local School District

beca1.1!..! never have problems

Assistant

been solved by this method.
"As to my country ... how
can they defend lbe present
pseudo-sociahsm in rer.ent
years when too much has come

out about Lenin. Another
tendency Is emerging. First
Stalin was the scapegoat, now

they bury Lenin and resort to
Marx.' '

GAME ON TIJBE
The championship game for
the Marshall Memorial Invitational Basketball tournament will be televised
Saturday by WSAZ Television
Channel 3. Tournament
favorite, Oral Roberts, ( 3-0) is
expected to adVance to the

finals with a victory over Idaho
Stale University ( 4-1 ) in the
opening round tonight with
Marshall University (2-2 ), the
defending Tournament
Champion, expecting a win

over Long Island University ( 2-

were

outlined

when

the

employe should, as the first
step, arrange for a conference

director
is wanted
The Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society is
looking for an assistant
director.

then the matter is to be brought
to the attention of Supt. John
Riebel. If this is not satisfactory, the complaint " to be
taken to the Board of
Education.
The board also, in ac cordance with new federal law,

passed a policy Thursday mghl
providing for inspec tion of
school records of students by

proje c t The organizatiOnal
meehng was set for 7 p.m.,

Jan . 14 with a regular meeting
to foll ow at 1:30 p.m.
Supt. John Riebel was ·
authorized to investigate the
possibilities of securing an aide

for the third grade at Chester.
Enrollment in the class stands
at 39, too many for one teacher
and not enough to divide into
two c lasse s, Rlebel said.
Riebel's
contract
as
supermtende11t of the district
was renewed for three years.

Bills were approved for
This was decided Thursday their parents or guardians. payment.
night when the society met at Adminislr~tors must produce
Attending the meeting were
the museum . Liz Hilferty is such records for inspection Howard Caldwell, Jr., Oris
currently the director and the within a maximwn period of 45 Smith, Clyde Kuhn, Dorset
assistant will be required to days. Parents or guardians can Larkins, Starling Massar.
type , must have an interest in appeal any entries which they board members; Mrs . Jean
historical activities and the feel are inaccurate or in Sexson, president of the
initiative to help expand the violation of the student's Chester PTA, C. 0 . New land,
operation and will maintain a nghts.
clerk of the board, Chester
register of the society 's
The board approved James Gooding, iugh school principal,
acquisitions.
Crow and Mary Kay Hennessy and Supt. Riebel.
During the business session as substitute teachers and
with C. E. Blakeslee, employed Elmer Althouse as a
president, in charge, an expression of thanks was made to

SHOOT SCHEDULED
The Meigs Muzzle Loaders
will hold a public shoot
beginning all2 :30 p.m. Sunday
at the Izaak Walton League

Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority for a
monetary contribution to the
society . Plans were also
discussed
for
making

Farm near Chester.

arrangements as soon as

possible to open the museum in
Pomeroy one day each week
for research and consultation.
Memberships for the new
year are now payable to Mrs.
Dolly Hayes, 13 Oak St.,
Pomeroy, Mrs . James Sheets,
vir; president, preEenled the
~rogram
of Appalachian
Music, including some Appalachian Christmas songs,

SHOPPING DAYS
TO CHRISTMAS

with that employe through the
school principal. If the conference is not sa tisfactory,

2).

t~.

board, a resldent havmg a
complaint against a school

singing and playing the
dulcimer. Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee

WE&gt;..ather

Werner wins

OSU honors

Cloudy, cooler tonight and
Saturday, cha nce of snow
tomght. Lows in the lower 30s

and highs aturday m the upper
and mid 30s.

Richard Paul (Rick) Werner, son of Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Werner, Lincoln Hill Road,

Pomeroy, will graduate
summa cum laude from Ohio
Stale University Friday.
C. William O'Neill, Chief
Justice of the Ohio Supreme
Court, will deliver the

LOCAL TEMPS
temperature in downtown

Pomeroy Friday alii a.m. was
43 degrees under cloudy skies .

com~

mencement address to the
1,350 graduates in ceremonies

beginning at 9:30 a.m. in St.
John Arena.
majored in

Werner has
Aeronautical

served refreshments from a

Engineering. He plans to enter

table carrring out a Christmas
holiday m&lt;hif.

mediately.

the Master 's .irogram im-

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency
Squad was called to 188 Walnut
St., at 5:19p.m. Thursday for
Elizabeth Leifheit. She was
taken tO/o, the Holzer otledical
Center by the squad.

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