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8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Dec. 27, 1974

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

Campaign violations· revealed
by
Brown
..

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
Attorney Gene ral William J . .
Brown said today an ·investigat ion he condu cted mto
solicitation of political contributions by state employes in
the Gilligan administration in
1972 "unc ove r ed numerous
apparent violations of state
civil service laws" but he sa id
'~no criminal prosecution is
warranted ."
Brown conducted the investi~
galion at the r equest of Gov.
John J. Gilligan in connection
with allegations by the Government Accounting Office that
state employes may have been
guilty of misdemeanors by
soliciting the contributions m
connection wtth the purchase
of tickets to a fund raising
dinner.
Brown also said the solicita~

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT lhru SUN .
Dec. 27 28-29

LAOY KUNG FU

and
OUR TIME
{Technicol or)

Starn ng Pa m e la Sue Martm

t PGJ
Show Starts at 7 p.m.

Lions were practiced by both
Democrat and Republican administrations.
In a four-page letter to
Gilligan, Bro,\ n said the investigation which he conducted
"uncovered numerou s apparent violations of slate ClVll
serv1ce laws."
However, Brown sa1d, no
crimimtl prosecution was warranted because of a legal
requirement that "evil pur~
pose'' and ~'wtllfullness'' must
be proved to win convictwru;
under the present state law.
The altorney genera l said the
only Ohio court case which has
interpreted the term "willfullness" under thts law resulted
in acqu1ta l of the defendan t
even though he admitted to a
violtion of the civtl service law.
"None of the eviden~ we
have uncovered demonstrates
that any of the persons mvolved were acting wtth 'evil
purpose contrarv to know dutv
or wilHully,' " Brown said.
"What we have uncovered is
a
conf irmatio n of
the
statement in the GAO report of
February 4, 1974 that 'This
rela t,onship vdween stdte
emp loy ment and po li tical
activ1ty has been in eXIstence
for a number of years under
both
Democratic
and
Republican a dministrations in
Ohio/' Brown added.

'''f'he simple fact is that the chase such tickets.
people we talked to in our in- The solicitation and sale of
vestigation believed they were tickets was carried on by state
acting within the law in employees on state time.
- A review of documents at
solicit ing con t ributio ns and
selling dinner tickets," said state Democratic headqnarBrown. '' It 's been done for . ters showed an e laborate
years: Although what they did coding system was used in
is prohibited by law, there is no eac h state department to
penalty unless .we ca n prove momtor ticket sales and
that they acted with 'evil contributions.
purpose ' and in 'wilfull' viola- State automob iles were
tion of the law. We have no used to carry tickets a nd
s uch evidence."
receipts.
Brown said his investigation
- There was no evidence that
revealed the following :
persons were hired, promoted
- Numerous employes were or fired from classified service
solicited to purchase tickets to because of political activity.
the fund-raising dinner.
-{;orporations contributed
- There-was no evidence of to the Ohio Democratic party
coercion of classified or un- in vwlation of state law but the
classified employees to pur- one-year statute of limitations
for the prosecutions of such
corporations had expired prior
to the completion of the GAO

Contract

WINN il'G DRAW
ELYRIA, Ohio (UPI)
Here are this week's winning
numbers in the Ohio lottery :
Number 622 (six two two)
in any box on ticket wins $20.
Numbers 417 (four one
seven) and 112 (one one two)
in green and blue wins $500.
Numbers 411 and 112 In
blue boxes wins $1,000.
Numbers 411 and 112 In
green boxes eligibl e for
$J OO ,OOO
drawing
and
automatically wins $15,000.

News

•"

•• •

•

in Brief'$

report a nd the commencemen t
of Brown's investigation .
- There was no evidence that
a ny of the sta te em plyes
violated the law willfully . In
fact because the practice in
1972 had been followed under
previ ous Republican and
Democratic administrations, it
SAIGON - THE COMMUNIST CAPTURE of six county
was assumed by the employes
capitals within 12 days has put North Vietruunese tankB within
th at their activi ties with
sirlking distance of two important bases less than 40 miles frOQi
regard to the sa le of tickets to
Saigon, military sources said today ,
the 1972 0 hio Democratic party
Intelligence officers predicted even more intense fighting
·:·:·.·:,·.,·:·:: ..·:·:·: :·.:·:·:;:.-::·:·:::·:·:·:.:::·:::·.;:::::·
dinner were Ia wful.
withir. the next several weekB. Communist troops captured Ute
Brown sa id he be liev ed
county capitals of Dong Xoal, 50 miles north of Saigon, and Tanh
Ohio's sta utes co ncerning
Linh, 70 miles northeast of the capital, · in fierce flghtlnk
political activity by state
Christmas-Day and Thursday, military spokesmen said,
·
employes "are ambiguous and
(Continued from page I)
almost irrlpossible" to en,
ZURICH - THE AMERICAN PRESS by its role In
into the house.
force.
Watergate this year showed the world a democracy conscious of
Jon Shafer. a spokesman for
The attorney general said the
its
values and ready to defend them, Ernest Meyer, director Of
the Indiana Department of
Ohio General Asembly should
the
International Press Institute, said in a report made public
Corrections,
said
Mrs .
study the matter and enact
today.
Napierala's husband and
enforcable new laws.
Meyer, a Swiss citizen, praised information media in the
another daughter were away United
Slates for upholding their rights in a year in which
apparently visiting someone at
freedom
of the press was endangered, attacked or nonexistent In
a Michigan City hospital other parts of the world . In the free world the preas faceS
when Mosley burst into the
economic dangers which led to worrisome concentrationa or
home.
Shafer said Mosley ap- closures, Meyer said.
"In most counlries of the Third WOrld--in Africa, Asia and
parently walked away from the
Jackson County Sheriff Hal p.m. Thursday at a parking lot
Latin
America - the main worry is still the bringing-to-heel of
minimum security prison farm
Fyffe joined Gallia County m Oak Hill .
utrusty a rea" Thursday after- newspapers and broadcasting systems and the increasing
A man later identified by the noon, broke into the home of number of increasingly brutal attacks on the freedom of exSheriff Oscar C. Batrd this
morning in an investigation of woman as David L. Clarkson , Bill Scbopmeyer, foreman of pression," he said. In Conununist countries, Meyer said, to~
the alleged a bducti on Thurs- 34, Oak Hill, is being held for the West Prison Farm facility, censorship temained,
day mght of a 19-year old Oak questioning in connection with and stole a .38-caliber revolver.
the incident.
Hill woman .
" He apparently then walked
According to the report, the -or ran - the I I&gt; miles to the
Batrd did not release the
MARRIAGES ENDED
EXTENDED FORECAST
alleged kidn a pp ed victim ' s man dr ove the victim's car Napierala home and took them
Two divorces have been
Sunday through Tuesday,
name but said the incident from Oak Hill to Galha County. hostage," Shafer said.
granted and a marriage
a chance of showers Sunday
apparently sta rted about 10 The woman reportedly jwnped
Prison officials said Mosley
dissolved in Meigs County ,
and Monday, clearing on
from her car somewhere be- had served three years of a I~
Common Pleas Court. The ·
Tuesday. Highs will be In teh
tween Gino's Bar on Eastern to-2~year prison term for an
marriage of linda and Don A.
50s on Sunday, dropping to
Ave. and the Kanauga Depot, armed robbery conviction· in
Jett was dissolved and granted
the 40s and upper 30s by
then stopped a motorist who Indianapolis and had been
Tuesday. Lows will be In the - divorces on charges of gross
took her to the Kanauga Depot as'signed to the west farm -a
neglect ofduty and extreme
30s on Sunday and Monday,
where she called the sheriff's minimum security unit without
cruelty were Daniel Roush
dropping
to
the
20s
by
· department.
bars or fence s - in August.
from Patricia Roush and Mary
Tuesday.
Clarkson was arrested in
Authorities said Mosley,
Braley from Jack Braley.
The Gallia a rea soon will front of an Eastern Ave. tavern whose parole bid was rejected
DEER KILLED
have a sea food restaurant. It by Galha sheriff's deputies on last June, escaped while
SQUAD SUMMONED
The
Meigs
County Sheriff's
was learned today that Long c harges of disorderly conduct. assigned to a snow detail at the
The
Middleport Emergency
Department reported that a
John Silver Inc., a subsidiary The case is expected to be prison farm. They said .the
Squad was called to 344 Pearl
of Jericho Corporation of turned over to Jackson County prisoner apparently found the doe deer was killed Thursday
St.
at 9:02p.m. Thursday for
at 7:45 p.m. on U.S. 33 in
Louisville , Ky . has purcha sed authorities.
rifle at the Napierala home.
Bedford Township when it ran Alva Newell, who was ill. She
In other action, deputi es
.403 acres in the Silver Bridge
into the path of an auto driven was taken to the Holzer
Shopptng
Plaza
for
a investigated the theft of two
by Larry Ross Whitt, Clifton. Medical Center.
restaurant . The land was tires and wheels this morning
There
was
moderate
purchased from Bob Fraley taken from a Camaro at Don
CALLED TWICE
MONEY COMES
property
damage.
Enterprises, Inc . of Wheelers- Watts Volkswagen lot on Upper
RACINE - The Racine E-R
A total of $8,012,743.50 W&amp;o
Rt. 7. According to the r~port, distributed
burg at the cost of $55,000.
Squad made two runs Thursin
welfare
someone
jacked up llje car and assistance money to Ohio's 88
Long John Silver Inc. is
day. At 9:30 a.m. they transASK TOWED
famous for its sea-food dishes took the two rear tires.
ported Ada Stigliano, Portland,
·counties in November, acWilliam Gregory Peck, 24 , to Veterans Memorial Hospital
A vandalism complaint was cording to Stale Auditor Joseph
such as shrimp, oysters. crabs,
s hell fis h, trout, and other fish reported by M. B. Martin of T. Fe rguson . Of the total , Cheshire, and linda Gail Peck, and at 10 :20 a.m. they took
22, Cheshire; Christopher Paul
delica cies.
Porter who said someone cut Meigs
County
received Haye, 19, Cheshire and Sara Thelma Kiser, Racine, to
his fence in three places.
Holzer Medical Center. Both
$12,671.07.
Elizabeth Burns, 16, Pomeroy. were medical patients.

pome~or

rutland

~~~.:r

bank

the bankot
the century
fttabll8hed 1872

Mother

(Continued from page 1)
the bid for the precipitators
was finalized on June 18, 1974.
The pr ecipi tators will be
ca pable of removing 99.7 per
cent of the particulate matter
I fly ash 1 produced at the plant
befor e 1tescapes via the plant's
two tall stacks.
Each of Sporn's four 150,000kw generatmg units, placed in
operatiOn in the period 195~52,
will be served by an indi vidual
prec1p1Lator. The 450,000-kw
fift h unit, operating since 1960,
will have a uniq ue dual
precipitator, with one stacked
on top of the other. This concept was pioneered by Environmental Elements and
AEP at Appa lachian Power's
John E . Amos Plant near
Charleston .
Plant Manager E. H. Gloss
recalled that the plant's
ori ginal particulate·control
system cost $2.5-million, while
the
present
up grading
program - involv in g the
r e location of some plant
£acilittes, includLng a r oadway
- will involve an expense
about 25 times as grea t. The
four smaller generating units
presently utilize mechanical
du st collec tors with an
operating efficiency design of
85 per cent, while the fifth and
largest unit IS served by a 95
per cent efficient electrosta tis
precipitator .
" To increase that unit's d ust~
collecting ab1lity by only a
sma ll fraction - that is, from
Three defendants were fmed ,
95 per cent to 99.7 per cent will
one
forfeited bond, and another
cost almost $23 million alone,"
was assessed cos ts only in the
he pomted out
court
of Pomeroy Mayor Dale
Completion of each of the
E.
Smith
Thursday night.
five precipitator tnslallaltons
Fined were William Roush,
is scheduled during the period
June-October of 1977. As each, Cheshire, $5 and costs, running
in turn, is " tied in" to the a stop sign; Ronald Fry,
Pome roy , $10 and costs,
ge nerating umt it will serve,
reckless
operation , . and
that unit will be removed from
Richard
Gilkey,
Clifton, $14
operation. Each unit will be out
and
costs,
speeding.
of serv ice for an estimated 30
Forfeiting his $30 bond
days.
Gloss sa1d that completion of posted for disorderly conduct
Lh1s work would bring the plant was Ronnie Williams, Midinto full compliance with state dleport. Assessed costs only on
standards, inasmuch as it is a profane language charge was
already meeting sulfur-dioxide 0. L. Lemaster, Pomeroy .
s tandard s promulgated by
We st Virginia through the
burmng of low-sulfur West
Virginia coa l.
Electrostatic precipitators
(Continued from page 1)
are devices which remove ash
-Representative fll"lllS in
partic les th a t result from the man-made textile fiber and
combustion in a boiler and that plastics industries reported
would otherwise go up the sharp downturns in sales and
slack and in to the atmosphere. output in November and

Your nextdoor neigl tbot;'

The lnn-Piac:e-eThe fun Placel

GEO. HALL
and

The
Hallmarks
JOIN US
FOR
FUNTIME!

FRIDAY and SATURDAY
9:30 TIL 2:00

MEIGS INN
PH. 992-3629

POMEROY

Four in court

..

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES - Harold
Roberts, Buffalo ; Rev. Roy
McCoy , Point Pleasant; Mrs .
Gary Queen and twins, Middleport, and Russell Cundiff,
Mason.

DO
YOU
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OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8 PM
SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM

CALL,

f.

::::
;:~

VAIL, Colo. iUPI)- President

:::.

~::~~ ~a;~~~~h!~de~~~~~::

,_'_:_:·.'_ .:

Llncolo because be thinks " they

:;:~ were stronger lh'IJl almo3t any other
:::: Presidents."
(
~~~~
He said Tnunan took "some
:::: very bold, strong actions In foreign
policy," including Greek-Turkish
:;:: aid, !be Marshall Plan and Korea.
:~:: "He also was subjected to unllnjlted
:::: criticism and never seemed to let it
':': bother him, at least publicly," Ford
i": added.
{
::::
Lincoln was a great President, ::::

f

::::

:~~~id~f~~':~ ~~~~:t~!~e~~t~:

~::: eommunlty of the nation, his

:::: buma'!!tarlanlsm."

·,=-_:,:_:

::::

t::::' interview
Foil! inad'
au. ;.:_':,:._,:';,:'
withe.-,p\&lt;l
UP!'iiatenients
(see Pageln10)
I
.;:::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;~:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;: ;:;:;:·:;:;:;:;:;~ .

GALLIPOLIS - Jackson County
Sheriff Hal Fyffe and his department
Saturday continued an investigation into
the aiieged kidnaping of 19-year old
Pamela J. Ruth of Oak Hill Thursday
night.
Ivan Fife, chief deputy for the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department. said
Saturday that charges are expected to be
filed in the case. He ld for questioning at
the Gallia County jail is David L. Clarkson,
34, of Oak Hil~.
Clarkson was arrested on char ges of
di..Soraerly conduct Thursday nig ht in fr ont
of an Eastern Ave. tavern . He was later
identified by the woman as the man who
forced her to accompany him from Oak

coming in at tree-level and clipped off the
tops of the trees at 50 or 60 feet," a
patrolman said. "Then it appeared the
plan,.. just dived, nose first, into the
ground .''
Officials of the Federal Aviation
Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board were investigating
the incident.

TRAIN DERAILED
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP! ) - The Penn
Cenlral's Broadway limited, carrying 430
passen gers from Chicago to New York and
Washington a nd traveling at the
maximwn curve speed of 55 miles per
hour , derailed Saturday at a curve about
40 miles west of this Pennsylvania capital
city. About 41 persons were injured , none
seriously.

.
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..._ -------------- -----------...
. 0 1974 PllyiU

_.,.
_,

•

Prlnled ln U. S A

.......

.,_._

Gue.~l

Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families
M1ddleport-Pomeroy

PRICE 20 CENTS

' of the many spectacular ice formations at
FROZEN WONDERLAND - One
Hocldng Hills Slate Park litera Uy dwarfs in a group of hik,.-s as they makt their
way alonS\,\he. trail through Old Man's Cave Gorge during the a nnual fin ~&lt;or Hike .
~

•
8 counties
will plan
together

kidnap charge

Sale Ends January 11, 1975

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I,:::::.::;~';:.:. 1Police probing

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SUN DAY, DECEMBER 29, 1974

Ac co rdin g to the c ourt entry,
Harn ngton, alread} awaiting induction,
must enter the service next week.
Harrtn gto n had been charged with
assaultmg Ptl . Ray Rail of \!)e Gallipolis
Police Department Christmas Eve with a
corn kntfe . Hall suff ered minor lacerations
on h1s n ght hand
Ptl. I..on me McGuire, Hall's partner,
filed the warrant agamst Harrington

;:~:;:::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::;:;:: :::::::;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:

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&lt;
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•(O , DO-CliPs $1.00 me re)

:::.

::~

GALLIPOLrS - Upon condition that
defendant JO!Il the armed for ces, an
affid&lt;-lvlt c~arg ing Ed wa rd L. Harrmgton,
18, of Gallipohs, v.1lh as.sa uJting a J&gt;ulice
officer With a dearlly weapon was
d1sm 1ssed Friday m Muni cipa l Court.
The court Mad earlier continued the
case until Harrtn gton sec ured le ga l
counse l Smce he wa s md igent, .Judge
RobertS. Betz appomted Atty . J am es A
Bennett as counsel.
ll1f'

tmts

Sunny today. high in the low
to mid 50s. Probability of
precipitation 10 percent
Sunday. Clearing Monday,
highs in the 40s.

LANCASTER, Ohio (UPI) - Three
pilots were killed Friday when a twinengine Sabre liner jet aircraft owned by the
Anchor Hocking Corp. plunged nose first
into the ground and exploded during a
landing approach to the Fairfi eld County
Airport here .
The victims were identified as the
company's chief pilot, ,John Siefert, 45,
Lancaster, and co-pilots John Squires. 37,
Kirkersville, and Tom Trisbman, 27,
Lancaster. Officials said the men were
returning from Denver, Colo., where they
had flown John Gusbman , the firm's
chairman, and his wife.
Accident Investigators said the victims were burned ''beyond identification ''
in the resulting explosion and fire .
Patrolmen said tbe plane crashed at
8:04p.m. In a wooded area along Ohio 158,
about a mile north of the city during a light
drizzle. "It looked as if the plane was

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:~::
::~:

by Bruce Davis, Rutland marshal, where
he was treated for head injuries.
The Smith car was traveling east and
the Myers ve hicle west at the Lime of the
collis10n. After impact, the Smith car went
over an embankment. to 1ts left and the
Myers car mto a di tch on the right. There
was a heavy downpour of r a m at the time .
Both cars were demoli s hed. The accident
1s shll under investigation.

Services get defendant

+

Weather

Anchor Hocking pilots killed

Veterans Memorial Hospital
· ADMITTED
Harold
Conger. Portland; Nellie ·
Thomas, New Matamoras ;
Ada Stigliano, Portland ;
Beulah Maynard, Ewing ton ;
Eil ee n Clark, Minersville ;
Francis Taylor, New Haven;
Hele n Smith , Pomeroy;
George Carter, Mason ; Bonnie
Mathew s, Racine ; Charles
Lewis , Middleport; Clara
Adams, Racine.
DISCHARGED - None.

lhc head
A Lhtrd passenger, Jeffery Smith, 12,
son of Mrs . Srmth, wa s treated for a nose
InJury and released .
The mother was taken to the hospital
by the Pomeroy E-R squad while the
r htldrc n were tran sported by the Middlepor t squad .
The driver of the second ca r , Ellis E
Myers, 28, Rt. 1, l..a ngsv ille, was taken to
the offt ce of Dr. J .J navi s in Middl eport

::::;·
:;:.

a

N

December. Some big plastics
produeers said orders for basic
resin were off 30 per cent.
Synthetic fiber makers said
December business was off 25
to 50 per cent from early 1974
levels.

SAYRE
HARDWARE
N.:w Haven
W. Va .
'

AUTO DESTROYED - The car a t
left - that Is, what's left of it - was
driven by Shirley Mae Smith, Z9, Rt. I ,
LangsviHe Friday morning when it
crashed headon into another car. Mrs.
Smith and her daughter, age 10, were
hospitalized. The collision occurred un
SR 124 near Langsville, a heavily
trave led but narrow and winding road
ca rrying traffi c from the Pomeroy
Middleport area to the Gavin Mines
ncar Sa lem Ce nter.

Kidnap alleged

Economy

All Accounts Insured to $40,000.00 by the
Federal Deposit ln&lt;~;;- ance Corp.
'

LANGSV-ILLE - A mother a nd her
young daughter were hospitalized
£allowing a headon collision Friday at 11
a m. on SR 124 eigh t tenths of a mile west
o£ Langsv tlle.
The Me1gs County Shertff's Department sa1d Shirley Mae Smith, 29, Rt. 1
Langsville, driver of one or the ca r s. and
her daughter , Brenda, age 10, a passenger,
were admitted to Veterans Memonal
Hospttal. The mother was reported to have
suffered neck and head inJW" ies and the
daughter a fractured leg and la cerat ions of

a

Seafood eatery
coming into
shopping plaza

At this time of new beginnings ...
we look forward to
new opportunities
to prove our friendship.
Come see "your nextdoor neighbor·:

Mother, daughter hospitalized

(Continued from page 1)
••
The bill, which administration officials opposed, was passed
shortly before Congress adjourned. Agriculture -Secretary Eat?.
L. Butz said he advised Ford to veto it. Dechant said in J
statemen~made public todily that unless Ford approves the billi
dairy farmers will be forced to cut milk production to escapa
squeeze caused by high feed costs. That could lead to "a potent181
nutritional disaster fo; the American people," the farm lead~
said.

Hill to Gaiiipolis.
According to her stateme nt, the man
drove her car into Gaiiia County where s he
ran from the car when he stopped somewhere between Gino's Bar on Eastern Ave.
and the Kanauga Depot.
Meanwhile, Galha County shertff's
deputies Saturday were investigating an
alleged rape of a 2~year old woman . The
woman told officers she left an upr iver
tavern with four men who drove her to the
Vinton-Eno Rd. where she was alleg edly
raped by three of the men.
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TRIAL TO OPEN
CIN CIN NATI ( UP ! )
Open in g
sta tements are scheduled for Monday in
Hamilton County Common Pleas Court
here in the kidnaping trial of Clifford
Kroger, 38, Win ter Park, Fla., formerly of
Cincinnati. He ld .in the Hamilton COUIILY
ja il here und er $100,000 bond , he has been
char ged with the kidnaping of 1\.llison
Mechem , 4, the daughter of Cha rles S.
Mechem J r., cha irman of the board of Taft
Broadcasting Co.
RESOLUTION MADE
VAIL, Colo. (UP!) - President Ford
said he re Saturday his 1975 New Year 's
resolution is, "peace on earth, good will to
men."

JUDGE THOMPSON SWORN IN -- Franklin County Prosecuting Attorney
George C. Smith, right, puts his seal on the warrant of office of Tommy L.
Thompson ,lleft , after swearing in h)s former a~isumt as F-ranklin County Common Pleas Court judge Friday. Thompson, a native of Gallia cOunty, a 1952
graduate of Gallia Academy High School and 1962 Ohio State graduate, beglna his
term Jan. I. With him are members of his fa mily, sons, Mark, 11, and Ma tt , 10;
wife, Lavon, and daughter , Lynn , 16. Thompson went to wprk immediately,
holding a conference on one of the first cases he will hea r . He succeeds retiring
Judge Charles R. Petree. (Columbus Citizen-Journal photo).

Park chief to address Gallmns
GALLIPOLIS - Tom Jones, president
of the Galha Coun ty Study Committee,
anno un ced Saturday th at Bill Clift,
commiss ioner of the Monroe County Ohio
Park Dis trict, will be the fea tured spea ker
at the J an . 9 meeting of the Gallia County
Community Development Study Committee .

The meeti ng will be held at 7:30 p.m.
at the J ackson Production Cr edit
Assoc1alion Building on Upper Rt. 7.
Mr. Clift will discuss the method and
feasibility of forming a park dis trict forGallia County . He will a l~o rev1ew various
interests in recreation and educational
projects.

COLUMBUS - The Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley Regional Development
District has received officia l certificatiOn
as a Regional Plannin g and Development
Organization (RPDO).
An RPDO is an association of local
governments designed to help local ofltd " Is deve lop programs that cross
political subdivisions. These programs
include federal and state assislance applications, transportation, manpower and
water and sewer services.
" Increase(\ intergovernm ental
c"''rdinalion through direct Involvement
of local e lected officials, r egional planning
bod1es and citizens will ena ble each level
of government to be more responsive to
the needs of the peop le of Ohio," Gov . John
Gilligan said.
In April, 1973, Gilligan issued an
executive order establis hing 15 Planning
Regions m Ohio. One RPDO will be certified in each Planning Region. BHHVRDD is the RPDO for Planning Region
8 which includes Perry, Morgan, Noble,
Monroe , Hocking, Athens, Washington and
Meigs counties. BH-HVRDD is the first
oon-m e trop olitan Planning Region to
recetve certiFication.
A tolal of $356,490 in state and federal
funds will go to the 15 Planning Regions to
form and support RPDOs In fiscal year
(Continued on page 2

Six miles of scenic wonderland on display Jan. 11
HOCKING HILLS STATE PA RK The Ohio Department of Natural
Resources and Mother Nature team up
Jan . 11 to present a spectacular six-mile
hike through a scenic winter wonderland
here .
The lOth annual Winter Hike, from Old
Man 's Cave to Ash Cave, has grown m
popular ity each year. Some 2,500 hearty
hikers partic ipated in the 1973 Winter Hike
- a stLmning increase over the 140 who
look pa rt in the imti al trek in 1968. The first
Winll!r Hike was JOintly sponsored by the
division of parks and recrea ti on, the
Buckeye Trail Association and the Logan
Daily News.
The late William S. Miller, editor and
publishe r of the Logan Daily News and
then-president of the Buckeye Trail
Association, was instrwnental in initiating
and promoting the annual winter trek . He
look part in the origina l hike in 1966. then
called the " Hocking Hike," serving as one
of the five group leaders.
The 140 who participated in the first
hike braved near-zero weather and more
than a foot of snow to capture the scenic
beauty of the Hocking Hills in both
memories and photographs.
The 1966and '67 Winter Hikes began at
Ash Cave, and concluded at the Upper
Falls near Old Man 's Cave. By 1968, the
popularity of the hike had grown to the
point that it necessitated reversing the
trail because more facilities and parking
spaces were ~yailable at Old Man's Cave.
The year 1968 was m emorable for the
Win !&lt;or Hike. That year participatiOn in the
hike fi~st exceeded the 1,000 mark. Accordin~ to a Logan Daily News account,
"hikers braved knee-deep s now and biting
winds which dropped the chill factor to
below zero.' '
However, the breathtaking ice formations and the snow~overed hemlocks
provided even the most av id camera buff
mfinile opportunities to ta ke that 110nce in
a lifetime picture. "~
The Winter Hike draws a variety of
participants, ranging from the experienced hiker to the "cit) sll cker" ·.vtth
le&lt;ilht"r-:-:nl"d -..) JOt_"; .

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Insulated underwear, electric~liy-:l heated
socks and the rmos bottles of coffee and hot
chocolate are commonplace.
Hikers of all ages have parllclpaled in
the hik es. One of the better known Is the
late Emma Gatewood of Thurman, Ohio,
Gallla County, who received the Governor's Community Action Award and a n
Award of Merit from the Department of
Natural Resources during ceremonies at
the 8th annual Winter Hike in January,

1973.
Grandma Gatewood, as she was fondly
known to the thousands who accompanied
her on hikes, was a group leader on each of
the Winter Hikes until her death in June ,
1973 She was 85.
Th1s year 's hike w1ll start at 9 a.m .
from the. picnic area at the Upper FaUs
near Old Man 's Cave at Hocking Hills
State Park. The park is 12 miles southeast
of Logan on Stale Route 664.
Upon amval, hikers will be split into
groups of about 30 to 35, each with a group
leader familiar with the scenic park landma rks like Old Man's Gorge, Devil's Bathtub, Sphynx Head, Cedar Falls, Ash Cave
and Queer Creek.
More than 2,500 participants a re expected to Lake part in this year's hike, and
the Department of Natura l Resources
suggests that' those planning to attend get
an early start.
Approximately SO group leaders will
be on hand to gu ide the hikers. Fire barrels
will be available at the beginning of .the
hike to help keep hikers warm until they
hit the trail .
Radla...quipped park rangers wi ll be
located along a trail to assist hikers. An
emergency vehicle will be on standby at
the park in case of accidents.
" If the wea ther ·cooperates, there
should be some magnificent ice formati ons
suspended from cliffs along the trail,"
says Bill Loebick, chief naturalist for the
division of parlr.s and recreation.
There will be a lunch break ha lfway
through the hike, where the Logan Kiwanis
Club will serve steammg hnt bean aoup ,
hot chocola te and cornbr£'ljd. Hikers ca n
snpp" rn. •.· ·~ ic snf-l('k with s0:1rk ~ '1 P( !'' &lt;:

The Appaloel&gt;ian Green Parks Project,
a folk music group from Ohio University,
Will e nter tam hiker~ ::.t thP pnrlf\f the trP.k
Buses will be available at Cedar Falls
1the midway point ) and also at Ash Cave to
return hikers to the star ling point at Old
Man's Cave.
A nature mov1e at 8:30p.m. Sa turday
at Hocking Hills Dining Lodge will conc lude the day 's festivities .
Those planning to attend the hike can
make cabin reservations at either Hocking
Hills or nearby Lake Hope State Park .
Hocking Hills has 54 deluxe housekeeping
cabms a nd 170 Class B campsites. Lake
Hct&gt;e has 25 del•1xe cabins and 223 Class B
cam psites.
Loehlck reminded hikers that Ohio's

62 state parks are open year-round, a nd
about 40 of them have designated hiking
trails. Some of the more popular wJnter
hiking trails include ones at Beaver Creek,
Rurr Oak, Dillon, Findley, John Rryan,
Hueston Woods, Van Buren, Mohican,
West Branch, Lake Hope and Pike Lake
state parks.
Severa l Ohio hiking groups have
win ter treks scheduled in the near future.
The Buckeye Trail Association's
annual winter hiking weekend will take
place Feb. 8 at Burr Oa k State Park near
Athens . For a dd it ional information,
contact the Buckeye Trail Association,
Box 254, Worthington, Ohio 43085.
The OSU Mountaineers , a group of
1Continued on page 2

SCENIC BEAUTY -Framed by beautiful snow-&lt;"Overed hemlocks, Cedar '
""ails is one of many pi~turesque winter scenes which draw thousands of hikers to
'ocking HiHs·State Park each year to tal&lt;e (!llrt in the annual Wm_ter Hik•.

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3- The Sunday Tunes -Sentmel, SWJday, Dec 29, 1974

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2- The SWlday Times -Sentme l, Sund&lt;~y, Dec 29, 1974

Jury venire drawn'
GALLIPOLIS A new
Galllpolls Mun1ctpal Cow-l Jur y
venrre has been drawn tn the
office of Galha County Clerk of
Courts , MarJOri e Rmehart
Present for the drawmg were
Jury comrnlsstoner s Dame) C
Notter and Hobart Dtllon, Ch1ef
of Pollee John Ta)lor, Sgt
Dav1d L Proffitt of the Ohw
State Highway Patrol , Judge
Robert S Betz , City Sohc1tor
D Dean Evans and Mrs
Martlene Settle, deputy clerk
Posstble JW"ors are
Mary C Roberts, Georg10a
Jenkms, Thelma Jane Garlic.
Delores S Whttley, Vtctona E

Ratlt ff
Bus h, Gypsy E
Mt chael W!lhams, Car) S
Hunt, Ga rn et M Queen
Gaynell Jeffers, Ha ria Eutsler ·
Charles E Paxton , James H
Clark, Nellie W Smtih, Vwlet
T Mendenhall, Patncw A
He nson, J ohn W Gtlberl
Jess1e C Farney, Glen H
Sar gent, Robert H Terr) , Ida
Mtller Claude E Wtnters
Grace J Ellyson , Howard C
Tay lor, Judtth Webstet, Mat y
E Syler. Helen Lilchfteid ,
Albert L Whtle, Ma r) E
Johnson , Esta M Dee!, Paul F'

Pers tn ger, .J ohn Matthews
Opal A Collms , Myrna T
Whtte , Ezra Hager, Mary N
Butcher Dorts J RWl)an
Glona T Sahsbury, Jenntfer
D Scott, Bobby Dean Slone,
Albert Neal, Normal G Dean
Geor ge E Hym an, Cynthia M
Da tl ey Robert E Myers
Roger 0 FISher Edward K
Fry, Loy W Pauley Orm R
Sheets, Dw1ght N Stevers, Sr
Robert Ear l llav1 s Mar k
Godfrey Ga ) , John T Montgomery, Harry B Yeauger
Ruth M Wroblewski , Gary Lee
De nney: Jr
Brow n Fncda R Moore ,
Jo Ellen Pritchard M10na E !{!&gt; Carroll H Black Ray FISher
Marshall R Cra tg, Beverly I
Rowland Thomas E Wlute ,
Lesh e G Shellne, Douglas G
Lizon, Hoyt l Clark
J oan Ha skms, Phylhs R
Hawley George R Sheets ,
Lulu Mae Bla ke, Mtllard E
Grube, Wtlla F Gtimore, Sue
L Calhcoa t, Jacquehne S
Vance, Martha H Edwards,
By Ralph Novak
WtlbwC Wtlhams , Herman H
One of the hve or SIX small thmgs m the unnerse we have to
Wnght, Pete Aldengt, Irene S
be thankful for these days IS that the negot18tors m ml erna lwnal
We llman, Vtr gmla Eio1se
diploma~ are not as susceptible to mcapactlatmg mJury as, say,
Ellwtl,
Opal S Phtlhps, Goldte
profesSional football players
J W Rtce, Patncta K Slover,
Otherwtse we would be hearin g news broadcasts hke
Maury S Mt ttleman, Ode M
Good evenmg, diplomacy fa ns The btg news tomght 1S that a
Bea\ er Orville 0 Wi seman ,
number of Btg Power superstars are gomg to be out of acl!on m
Ern~.st E Brown, James E
the crucial, upcommg sertes of talks, while a nW"Dber of others
Bmles. James Alden Ntbert,
are gomg to have to negol!ate wtth pam.
Joseph L Cam, Donna J
For the Umled States, Gerry Ford IS reported to have his
Tramble ,
Ros s
Eugene
spramed pact-&lt;;lgnmg hand m a cast but he appears to have
Hamrt ck, M!lhe W Clagg,
recovered from the pulled tongue muscle he suffered last month
Malc olm B Orebaugh, Eva l
while trymg to say "Fat chance" m Arabtc dw-ing the crucial
King, Vtrg te s R1fe, W1lh am L
Mtdeast talks
Myers, E lmer D Walker and
Ford's ace substtlute , Hank Ktssmger, meanwhile , has come
Cora Margaret Peck
up wtth torn hp ligaments because of excesSive grmnmg durmg
his recent appearances Kissinger 1s also still hampered by the
cauliflower left ear he mcurred last seaso n when he listened to
too many whiSpered secrets.
SoVIet standout Lenny Brezhnev 1S also hw-tmg , havmg
suffered severe hand cramps whille holdmg h!S fmgers crossed
Wlder the table durmg his last cruc1al outmg Having his fmgers
permanenUy crossed 1sn 'l expected to keep Brezhnev out of the
RACINE - Ray Manley,
lineup but his bench-rtdden teammate Alexe1 Kosygm 1S still on
Metgs County Shenff's Deputy,
the disabled list wtth an oul~f-Joint nose
mves hgated a car-truck ac
For the French, lanky Val G!Scard d'Estaing 1S lunpmg from
c1dent Satw-day at 3 48 p m at
a cut foot that has been blamed on overenthuSlasllc tightrope
the Intersection of F1flh and
walkmg. The French offer to trade G!Scard to Canada even up
Mam Sts here
for Pierre Trudea u has already been turned down. Trudeau ts
currenUy Sidelined wtth a wrenched larynx, which he suffered
Forrest Ne1gler, 53, Rt 2
Ractne, was eastbound on
when he began yelling, 'My otl ftelds! Mine ' Mme' Mme '"
Ftfth, and MarJone M Wolfe,
durmg recent negotiations.
England's Harold Wilson IS stillm perfect condilwn but there
32, Rt I, Rac10e, was westhas been no Sign that anyone cares, smce hiS team ts agam unbound when Netgler attempted
to tw-n left onto Mam St
scheduled.
Paleshruan quarterback YasSlr Arafat has turned up Wllh a
Both dnvers tr1ed to avOid a
sore arm from overpracticmg h!S qu1ck draw, wh1ch IS, comcolhs wn, but the Wolfe vehicle
ctdentally, the same problem plagumg Israel's Yttzhak Rabrn
struck the Netgler truck m the
In the Eastern DlVISlon, South Vietnam's Nguyen Van Thieu
n g ht rear 1 Manle y sa1d No
still seems reluctant to test h1s chrontcally spramed credtbthty
mrunes were reported and no
and Formosa's Wily Chamg Ka!-&lt;;hek has agam relnJW"ed his
cttatwns were Issued
nose tripprng over h1s beard The Chinese Reds' bnttle veteran
twosome of Mae Tse-tWJg and Chou En-la!lS also bemg called the
"over the hill gang" m some c1rcles, w1th both doubtful starters
)ear We end up wlth products
for upcommg cruc1al negol!ations.
And finally thiS note : Veteran offtctal Kw-t Waldheun IS not as well made or as adreportedly out of act1on mdeflrulely w1th tnJW"les rece1ved wh!le vanced as they could be
Overall, thiS country thereby
knocking hs head agamst the wall m recent aclJon
grows less compelt!tve and
more SUbject to recessiOns
Note , too , that the 1ap1d
asstm1lal10n by mduslry of new
or Improved product tdeas
comm g
from
federally
fmanced research would, 10
nW"Uel ous mstances, result 10
productwn runs considerably
larger than tf the government,
were the sole market Offtclals
By Ray Cromley
mlo mdustnal use at the pace here have es!tma ted that the
WASHfNGTON - ( NEA) of a sma ll boy cleamng hiS exiStence of a Slm llar 10Roughly a decade ago, med1cal room
dustrtal product could mean
men at the Nalwnal Institutes
Reclhfymg thiS unhappy cos t reductions to the governof Health stumbled on a major SituatiOn IS of more than menl m these mstances of as
research breakthrough .
academtc mteres l
much as 20 to 25 per cent, even
They diScovered that the
The caterptllar - hke speed where somewhat diffe r en t
development of revoluttona ry wtlh whtch U S mdustry government · mdustry models
new types of eqwpment came adapts or mcorpora tes new are reqwred
more qwckly tf they broughlm processes and
pr oducts
Fmally, the widespread use
men from a range of d eve loped with Nalwnal of federal processes, properly
professions engmeers, Sc1ence Founda hon , NASA patented, could mean an 1mphysiciSts, ma themaltc1ans, as Defense and Alom1c Energy portant sow-ce of mcome for
well as doctors
funds costs all of us a heavy the federal treasw-y
The federal government pnce
The fed eral governmen t has
and much of the sc!entiftc
It results, for one, tn a poured money mto promolwnai
communtty promptly forgot nd1culously low rate of htera lw-e , pubhc1ty campaigns
this lesson.
producl!VIly growth m many and conferences ad nauseam
In considerable measw-e , areas of manufacturmg and But they've forgotten what th e
1t IS because of this Wlfortunate the serviCe mdustr1es Th1s medical men at th e Natwnal
lapse of memory that so much translates mto higher pnces Ins!ttutes of Health diScovered
of the $20 btlhon th1s govern- and lost voage mcreases, whtch so long ago, lf there 1S to be
ment spends on r esearch and may, m the aggregate, cost us Slgmftcant Improvement m the
development each year moves several btllions of dollars a use by mdustry of federally

RALPH NOVAK
Extra: diplomatic
nose out of joint

Trapeze artist
falls to death

DAVID
... POLING, D.,D.
In search of ~n

SAN JUAN, P R t UPl i A Flortda "oman plunged
100 feet to her death 10 the
m1ddle of a square at the
start ol her " Bettina the
Great'' trapeze performance
Saturday, pollee said She
was tdcnllhed as Betty Boatn ght, of Ange1wood, Fla.
Eye\\ttnesses said s he had
just started her act at 2 p m.
"hen th e 120-foo t metal

American Christmas

By pavld Poling
1t, ow- visions and unages of Christmas have
a Bnllsh accent, For more than two centunes the celebrations
and style of the North Amencan Christmas have been shaped by
English wnters, authors, composers and cooks. Even our Christmas cards come from a Loodon company that started the
tradilton m 1843.
And this •s not a complamt, rather the recogmtion that we
to\\ er supportin g the trapeze
sllll may be searchmg for the true, authentic American ChriStsna pped and se nt her
mas. The British mfluence has rightfully endured: Dtckens
piummetmg to the pavement
wr1Ung some of the world's great literature when he turned out a
of the Plaza de Armas in San
ChriStmas book every year for five years, beginning In 1843 wtlh
Juna' s old quarter.
" A Christmas Carol." And muSic, with George Fredertck Handel
The trapeze arttsl had
producmg the "Messtah" (Dublln, 1742) and getting such a warm
welcome m London that he became a naturalized citizen. English
bee n hired t"o weeks ago by
ChriStmas observations were powerful Indeed.
the Old San Juan Merchants
Assoc 1at1on to attract
Our own history has seen the conununity of North American
crowds and boost holiday
reflect much of the Old World experience. Most of our carols
shopping
come from England or Europe Our menu, our wassail terrrunoiogy, our tree and yule log , our Santa Claus arid Twelfth
N1ghl all come from overseas. Tbe search for an authentic
Amencan ChriStmas may ultunalely be tbe refinement of old
ways rather than the diScovery of new observances.
Dr. Richard 'Knox Smith, Artzona churchman and historum,
has provided us with at least some large clues m this search for
an Amencan celebration Poring over some old copies of the
" Arizona Mmer" (18711-1876) he diScovered that ChriStmas m the
MIDDLEPORT - Ronald
western temtory was wild, JOyous, commumty centered,
Place, pastor of the Groton, N
thoughtful, reverent and a true holiday.
Y Ftrst Umted Chw-ch of
The "Artzona Mmer" recorded the December events of
Chrtst, addressmg the Mid Prescott, Am The ChriStmas celebration mcluded everyone m
dleport - Pomer oy Rotary Club
Sight· cattle and muong people, soldiers, prospectors, clergy,
Fnday even m g at Hea th
town drunks , company commanders and klds. The whole town
Umled Methodtsl Church
decorated a btg tree in the heart of the new courthouse. Sunday
follov.t ng dmner, sa1d people
school classes recited appropriate scripture A qusrtet sang a
should not watt Wllll they rel!re
seasonal hymn. Presents were distributed from the tree, which
to see the world
the paper noted, one year contamed "nearly $3,000 worth of
The husband of the former traps." ThiS was real frontier.
Margaret Houdashell, Pastor
In 1874, the editonal expressed some deep and profound
Place outlined how tow-s of
sentiments concerning the commg of Christ, These beliefs are
Europe ar e orgamzed at not only authenltcally Ameru~an but global in dimens1oo :
m imm al expe nse to each
''Theday is sacred to be sure It commemorates the greatest
travc1er. He said travehng m
and happtesl event! or mankind that has ever occurred since God
Europe broadens the ap- s8ld 'Let there be light' . In this season, tl hs been kept more as a
prectatwn of Amencans for day of JOY than of sorrow ; of JOY for the great VICtory that day
h1slor) and for the culture of ac hieved over the Archfiend and his hosts; over sin, death and
the contment from which the pumshmenl ; of sorrow for the msults and sufferings borne by
ancestors
many Amertcans ChriSt for ow- sake . His teachings, too, must not be forgotten, and
emigrated He was tnlroduced Monday next should fmd the ChriStian people of AriZOna
by program chatrman Vernon prepared to say:
PreSident
Bob
Webe r
0, Spheres that smg 1 0, bells that rmg!
Bumgarner preSided
Lift up your tones to Heaven,
Till every wrong shall rtghted be,
And every foe forg1ven " •
Driver cited
"Except the Apache, ow- tlevil wishes us to say, but, bad as
they are and have been, our s uffering J)eople should be forg!Vmg,
even of them .. "
by patrol officer
A true ChriStmas 1S both forgtvmg and thankful
POMEROY - Wayne E
M1llhoan, 49, Shade, Ohto, was
c1ted to Me1gs Coun ty Cow-t
Frtday for failw-e to stop
w1thm the ass ured clea r
dtstance followmg a trafft c
acctd ent on Rl 7 al1ts JW1 Cl10n
Wllh Rl 143
The Galha-Metgs Post State
H1ghway Patrol satd M1lhoan s
_
By Don Oakley
car slammed mlo the rear of an
There is certainly nothmg illegal about the reSignation of
auto operated by Albert L
Oluo Democratic Sen. Howard M . Metzenbaum and the apSwearmgen, 49, of Rutland
pomlment by Gov. John J. Gilligan of Senator-elect John Glenn
There was moderate damage to re place him, thus gtVIDg Glenn a week or so of senionty over
and no one was InJured
the other mcoming freshmen senators.
Nor UJ the similar case of
Paul Laxalt, newly elected
s ponsored r ese arch and Nevada Republican, who actually beat Glenn by a few days by
deve lopm ent , then busm ess virtue of bemg appomted to fill the seat of resigned Sen. Alan
experts 1n man ufacl unng, Bible
marke!tng and consumer
The prerogahve of governors to ftll congressiOnal vacanctes
reactions must be broughlmto created by death or rCS!gnallon IS clearly stated m the Conthe ptclw-e from the begmmng
st1tut10n. Metzenbaum hunself had been appointed by Gilligan
Only m thiS way wtll 1t be earller this year to fm1sh the term of Sen. William B. Sax be, who
posSible to develop on a suf- restgned to become attorney general, and many Democrats had
ft c tenll y wtd e sca le and begWJurgmgMetzenbaum'sreSignatloninfavorofGiennalmost
reasona bl e tt m etab le the day after the latter's overwhelming election victory in
process mg methods, products November.
Indeed, some of them unrnediately began talldng about
and ms lruments useful both to
the government and to pnvate Glenn as vtce presidential and even prestdenUal timber m 1976.
mdustry
Yet there is somethmg slightly extralegal about the tactic. It
Systems
or
products lS a clever run around the Constituhon, m the spirit if not m
developed wholly
under the letter
bw-eaucrattc superVISIOn , even
Glenn and Laxalt were elected by the people of Ohio and
when contracted to a prtvale Nevada to begin ~rvmg m the 94th Congress, which convenes on
firm as IS usual, normally are Jan 3, 1975, not lll the last days of the 93rd . Abot•t the only adnot eas1ly apphed outside the vantages he will gam by his "seniority" will be in the selection of
agency they were produced offtces m Washington and perhaps a better chance at the comfor Officials, a ll to frequently mittee qssigrunents of his chotec.
lDSlsl on characteristics whtch
MetzenbaW"D had lllitially resisted the urgmgs that he resign
have nolhmg to do w1lh quahty, arguing that it would be unfair to other newly elected senators. Ii
performance or use, but rather 18 Just that, and lt is lobe hoped that the Glenn and Laxalt cases
on some lradttion or other will not become the practice, Wlth state parties IICI"&amp;mbling and
datmg back to the last century dickermg after every electiOn to get the1r boys down to Congress
Research and development ahead of the pack.
costs are so htgh and stagnant
Perhaps 11 won't . II anythmg Is d!Hicult to pry loose from
producllVlly
has
such Washmgton lt IS yow- lame-duck congressman, who Is wont to
disastrous long-range effects savor every moment remammg In his term . Prhaps these are
that we tgnore these problems spectal cases.
at ow- pertl.
l'lut it has been over 10 years smce John Glenn first tried for
the Senate. That's a lot of semonty that nnght bave been. H the
vote of confidence given him by qhioans in November Is an malong Alum Creek
dicahon of the future, he will be in )ubllc office for a lot longer
Members of the Columbus Council, than that. It's too bad he, as well as Laxalt, couldn't have waited
Amencan Youth Hostels recently hiked a a few more days to start.
sec l10n of the Shawnee Backpack Tra1l
•
•
Those mterested In fulw-e hikes should
contact Kw-t McLaughhn , c-&lt;J Columbus
_
Counctl, AYH , Greenndge Rd ., WorthIsraeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin has rejected as
mglon, Oh10 43085
"absurd" the suggestion b~ Egyptian }"resident Anwar ~~~
that m the mterests of peace m the Middle East Israel !restrict tis
murugration for 50 years. The response was predictable and not
without reason.
Yet the understandable Israeli reaction to what in any other
$1 MILLION WANTED
case would be a gratuitous Insult to a sovereign nation has obMA NAGUA, Ntcaragua (UP!)
scured what may well be ~ significant development.
to
E 1ght Jdt wmg g uer1 !lias Sa turd
The Arabs are no closer than they ever were
demanded $1 mtlhon and safe conduct 0 acknowledging Israel's right to nationhood, much less any
of the country 10 exchange lor the hves of national sovereignty. But Wliess Sadat was just playfully lighting
17 promment Ntcaraguans held hostage 10 another match in an explosive s)tuatlon, the fact that he can even
a captured subw-ban mansiOn PreSident contemplate the existence of Israel for another 50 years marks a
Anastas10 Somoz declared martial law and momentous change in Arab attitudes.
No doubt, of course, Sadat is confident that some kind of
summoned his cabmet to consider th
demand
e "final solutioo" to the problem of Israel will be achieved long
before then, with all that those words imply for the fut\D'e of
Jews. The solution need not be military. With or without Immigration to Israel , the statistics of population weigh heavily in
TWO ASSISTED
favor of the Arabs and will weigh more heavily with each passing
POMEROY - The Pomeroy E-R year.
squad look Eliza Powe ll, Hamsonville, to
But If an Arab leader can begin thinking of living with Israel
Veterans Memonal Hospital Saturday at In tenns of hall-centuries, maybe other Arab'! can some day
12 41 p m when s he complamed of chest liegfn thinking ol" it in terms ·of permanence-;-maybe even
pams At 3 22 p.m , sq uadmen were called eventually m peace instead of at armed loggerheads.
to Nye Ave , where they look Elmer Sl!ll to
It 's a slender reed of hope, but there are so few others to.;.
Veterans Memortal Hospital
\1
grasp at m that part of the world.

Advantages of
travel cited

Autos collide

at intersection

RAY CROMLEY
R&amp;D boxscore:

Costs9-Products 0

8 counties
Conlmued from page I
1975 BH-HVRDD wtll rece1ve $19,250
Several maJOr reasons are ctted for
developmg RPDOs ·
- To strengthen the abtllty of local
elected offtclals to parlic1pale m local,
state and federal plans and programs that
direcUy affect the Plannmg Reg10n as a
whole and local governments m particular.
- To qualify. all Ohw commun1hes for
the full range of state and federal grants m
which the communihes themselves WJSh to
parbclpate
- To facilitate and encow-age the
coordUIBI!on of separate fWJctional plans
to mmirruze overlap and av01d duplicatiOn
of effort.
There ar e four other plannmg
organizallons certifted as o!fic1al RPDOs
Miami Valley Regional Planmng Com.
nusston , Toledo Metropolitan Area CoWJctl
of Governments, Oh1o- Kentucky · India na
Regional CoWJcll of Governments, and
Northeast Ohio Four County Regwnal
Planrung and Development Organtzatwn .
Organizations in the other 10 Plannmg
Regions are actively workmg toward
RJ:'p&lt;J status
1,

Wonderland
Contmued from page 1

Ohw State students, W!ll h1ke Jan . 11-12 at
Hocking Hills Stale Park, Jan 18-19 at Tar
Hollow and Feb 22-23 m Shawnee Stale
Forest along the Shawnee Backpack Trail
The h1kes are open to a ll OSU students,
staff m embe rs, faculty , alumm a nd
guests Coordmator of the htkes 1S Chad
Brownhill, 1743 N Fow-th St , Apartment
A, Columbus 43201
The Central Oh10 Htkmg Club,
operatmg out of the CoiW"Dbus YMCA at 40
W Long St., has scheduled a Jan 26 h1ke

TANKS MOVED fN
SAIGON (UP!) - CommuniSt forces
have moved tanks and truckloads of fresh
supplies to key ballieftelds m South
Vtelnam, military sow-ces satd Salw-day
The sow-ces predicted mtense battles
early m 1975 At the same hme, the Sa1gon
command esltmated tha t 30,000 soldiers on
both Sides have been killed, wounded or
captw-ed in the cw-rent three-week up.
surge \ n ftghting m the southern ·half of
South V1etnam
'

or

DON OAKLEY
Jumping the
seniority gun

sen.

Otange in Arab attitude

';it

&lt;

•

'

Municipal court se~tles up

Davis of
Jackson
• •
retirlllg
JACKSON - January 5, 1975
will mark the completion of a
career spanrung 28 years for
Lieutenant William R. " Red"
Dav1s of the Jackson state
highway patrol post
Dav1s, a native of Pomeroy,
wtll be succeeded on that day
by Sergeant William R
Cowg1ll , now stahoned at
Manon , who has been
promoted to the rank of
lieutenant and named commander of the Jackson post.
Davis graduated wtth the
24th patrol academy class on
December 30, 1947 and has
worked
at
Lancaster ,
Pomeroy, Georgetown , New
Philadelphia and hiS present
assignment as conunander of
the Jackson post He took
command of the Jackson post
m August of 1964.
He is a veteran of World War
II, spendmg three years m the
army prtor to JO!rung the highway patrol. He IS very acbve m
local servtce organizatiOns and
has served as county distriCt
commander and Commander
of Voitw-e 40 et 8 of the
Amen can Legwn. He ts a
member of the Jackson FOP
lodge, Farmer - Sportsman
Club aJ:td Is a Boy &amp;out leader.
Lt. DaviS and hts wife, the
former Nellie Brown, along
With the1r three children, C. J ,
Sammy and Michelle, plan to
remam m the Oak Hill area I

24 traffic cases on Friday
GALLIPOLIS - Twenly-fowtrafftc cases wer e termmaled
Friday m Galhpohs Mumctpal
Cow-!
Forfelhng bond s were
Kenneth R Btrchf1eld, 32 , Rt
I, Northup , $28 nssw-ed clear
diStan ce,
F rankhn
E
Wmgrove , 37, Athens, $18
speed; Dean L Rees, 18, R10
Grande, $33 reckless operatiOn
and $108 fleemg a pollee offleer, George Earl Wyer, Jr ,
45 , Greensbor o, N C , $18
speed, Norman E Baum, 44,
Rt 3, Pomeroy, $18 speed

W. R. DAVIS
followmg his retirement.
Ll Davts also has four other
daughters , Vtola Aldrich and
V1rgm1a Cooper, both of
Jackson ; Lorrame DaviS of
Lancaster. Oh1o and Mrs
Barbara Kegley of Kentucky,
and a son, Robert Richard
DaviS of Hif!Sdale, Dlinois. Lt
Davts is the son of Robert A
DaviS and the late Elizabeth
Stiles Davis, Rose Hill.
The new conunander, Lt
Cowgill has served over eleven
years w1th the patrol at
Hamilton, Sandusky, Akron
and Marwn He has attended

several patrol ,

m-servtce

schools

areas

m

the

supervi sion,

POMEROY - The Amer!can
The F-15 Eag le, the most
lnslltute of Aeronaultcs and advanced air s up e rt Orat y
Astronauhcs, a Nalwnal fighter plane m the world
ProfessiOnal
Soctely
of today, was personally accepted
Engmeers and Scientists m the and mspected by PreSident
Aircraft and Space Industry, Ge rald
Ford
m
TAC
se lected John Kunzelman, ce r'emomes at Luke Air Force
formerly of Pomeroy, of Base m Ar1zona on November
Atrcrafl
as 14 The PreSident descnbed the
McD onn ell
rectptent of tts Oulstand mg F -15 as Ha piOneer of peace "
Young ProfessiOnal Av.ard
and a supen or weapon for the
ThiS award, presented at a defen se of freedom ThiS
meeting at the Sl LoutS, ce remony was televised on
M1ssoun Plan eta rium m NBC
November, IS giVen to mThe plane was dehvered
dtvlduals selected
fr om a hea d of sc hedule, after
nommalton s throu ghout the completton of the most sucmduslry for the1r outstandmg cess ful contr acto r de velop.
performance and contributions m ent tr.st and eva luatiOn
to Aerospace technology
program m recent decades
John, a 1959 graduate of Approxtma te ly 3,500 fhghts
Pomeroy H1gh School, holds a have been accompllshed by the
B S Degree m Aeronauhcal Eagle smce 1ts hrst fl1ghl.
Eng m eenng from Embry
In presenlmg the award to
R1ddle College m Flor!da He Kunzelman the Insll lule sta ted
r ece nt ly
returned
to that exce llent tec hmcal perSl Lows after an 18-month formances,
resourcefulness,
asstgnment at the Edwards Air and enthuSiasm resulted m a
Force Fhghl Test Ce nter m mtmmum rtsk and cost savmgs
Ca liforma where he was for
the
program
and
responSible loads engmeer for congratu lated htm on th e
the fllght lest program of the F- achievement
15 Eagle Aircraft
John, hts wtfe, Patti, and two

of

leadership,

have a son, Jason, age one
and

a

31, AddiSon , $18speed, John W
Clark, 23, Rt. 2, Crown Ctly , $28
speed ; Roy J Newell, 46 , Rt. 1,
Middleport, $18 speed, Robert
L Gogo, 49, Baidwm, MICh.,
$18 speed , W1lham A DaviS,
29, Galhpolts , $18 speed,
Michael Dale Jones, 21, Pt
Pleasaut, $18 speed , Damel E
Hall, 26, Rt I, Crown Ctly, $18
speed ; Damel R. Hanna, 20,
Bremen, Ohw, $18 speed,
BW'ton C Green , 48, Columbus,

$23 s peed and Karen E Roush,
32, Galhpohs, $33 s peed

John Kunzelman recognized

Breathalyzer usage and indepth accident mvesl!gatwn
He has also attended workshops at Akron UmverSlty and
Dale Carnegie courses.
Ongmally from Richwood m
Union coWJty, he graduated
from Richwood h1gh school Lt
Cowgill and his wife , Dom,
year,

Rolhbe Kirke ndall, 57, Rl. 4,
Oak H11l, $18 speed and $58
Improper handling of firearms
Kenneth W H1gley 35, Rt 1
Thw-man, $18 speed , Earl
Stewar t, 65, Nor th Fork, W
Va , $18 speed , J ohn Joseph
Barss, 24, Rt 1, Ga lhpohs, $18
speed , Earl M Rtchman, 67 ,
Mound sv til e, W Va , $308
DWI, Mtchael C Shores, 26,
North Branch, M1ch , $23
speed, Dan Fuller, 34, Hunhngton, $18 speed, John Paul
Gr ay , 20, Hunhngton , $23
speed , Vaughn LouiS French,

daughter,

Cassandra, age seven weeks

TOM TIEDE
Over-accentuating
the negative
By Tom Tiede
and ch1c gags had it that things
WASHINGTON - (NEA) would get so bad brokers would
Harry Browne, who have
to
break
their
descnbes himself as " one of hermetically sealed wmdows '
the top financial adviSors In the to JWDp out. Now it's not funny
country/' Is currently ad- anymore, the unrelenting,
verltsmg a book wh1ch he depresSing news and attitudes
ctauns w11l tell "how almost have created momentums for
anyone can proftt fr om m- themselves that are ugly As
Uahon ,
recesston
and someone put 1t: ThiS 1s carrydepressiOn ." Ah, good old lOg the nostalgia craze too far
Amencan mgenU!ty No doubt,
Polls prove the pomt. The ,
on the day of Armageddon , Umvers1ty of M!chtgan 's
someone hke Browne w1ll Survey Research Center says •
publish a commercial en- that consW"Der confidence has
terpriSe to inform almost dropped by e1ght pomts smce •
anyone how they 11 Can ltve on May and 1S n.W at the lowest •
wh1le others aroWJd you d1e rate 10 a quarter cen lury
like flies "
Research
director
Jay •
One llkes to suppose that m a Schm1edeskamp feels the ••
world of brothers, nobody pubhc
1s
talkmg
11- :
w1shes
to
proftt
from self
into
the
blues. •
depression But even if the Everythmg 1s ~~accentuating :
book sales are low (and they the negattve" &amp;hmledeskamp ::;
are not), the harm has been says, the result therefore 1s •
done In a frantic pitch that also negative
assures Amencans the days
Indeed, the negaltve is very '::
ahead are naught but doom often the truth and must be ~
" You wtll have no money, you spread about. But not merely -;
won't have water, sewer, gas to foster more negattvism.
~
or electrictly, yoq. and yow- "Can you unagme a negative
children wtll go to bed cold and Chw-chilJ?" asks Mtchigan's
hungry" - author Browne has Schmtedeskamp, "Can you
contnbuled mightily to a imagme htm at the Battle of .,•
growmg and nasty nahonal Brttatn saytng, 'Well, boys we :.
1
phenomenon - depression may not make it?' " Yet this
psychology Such 15 assuredly seems the lamentable course of
all about us . Browne's book 1S many Amertcan leaders, and ~
only one of dozens now ln print many mtlhons of thetr ~
or m the works, each designed followers as well.
~
to remind the public on every
To a degree the dyspepsia Is, ''
page that dread lS ahead. The if regrettable, compreheiiSlble
•
rest of the medl8, likewise, are As William Fulbright observes, *~
mvolved 10 the excessive and "PeOple have a far greater :!
often self defeating trW"Upeting capactty for endurmg disasters
;:
hard times . Newspapers are than for preventing them," and ;
sending reporters out to the perhaps
the
current
~
railroad tracks to see 1f negativiSm 1s a form of coo••
bumm10g IS on the rise (it is) ; dttion preparation. H it Is,
a New York magazme recently though, too bad; a wiser kind of
•
published an WJcomfortable, pessirrusm to employ in hours
·:
almost fond, journalistic ode to like this is to be negative
•J
the 1930s; a pOpular financial towards that which Is ex- :,..
consultant Pierre Rlnfret, has cess1vely negative.
advised everyone within sound
••
STUDENTSRAU.Y
:.!,
of his gloom to get their money
BANGKOK
(UPI)
::
and energies out of the U. S,
Thousands of demonab"aUng
"'
stock market
Saturday
led
:;
To be sure, 1t should not be students
mounting
public
opposition
to
::
said that tbe times, bad, have
:;
been created by the media ; the return from American exile
.:;
events are , the culprits. Six of ousted military sb"ongman
••
million are jobless, the stock Thanom Kittikachorn less than
a
ihonth
before
the
first
~
exchange is off 400 pomts and
electioo
of
a
Thai
clvlllan
ci
-Hubert Hwnphrey reminda us
:!
that consumer prices have government In more than a
rtsen 53 per cent in seven quarter -century. About
stu.dents rallied at 'j'ham·
years.
masat
University to denounce
"Bologna is now a luxury
Thanom.
I
1tem," as Baltlmore clty
councilwoman Barbara
REBUILDfNG BEGINS
~
Mikulski puts it, adding the
DARWIN (UPI) - The
:l
truism that everybody seems Australian government
~
baffled as to solutions and that
Saturday turned to ,the $1
::
the government's current
billion task of rebuilding Its
::
actions in the crisis resemble northern gateway while
~
nothing so much as "!be
speeding up the mass
"
rearranging of the deck cba1rs evacuation of residents in a to.
'l
on the T1tamc."
plane air shuttle from the
,.
Yet understandable as the
cyclone • devastated city. ,
concern and worries are, the
Prime Mmister E. Gough · "
nation's pantc may be apWh!Uam sai&lt;ll6,000 peaple had
;
proaching that of a self- been fiown out of the city by
:1:
fulfilling prophecy. A few Sat!R'day night and plans wel-e
;
months ago, the talk of
to reduce Darwin's QOPulatlon
,.:i
dep~ssion was as much camp to about 10,1100 from 'lhe usual
as anything, a throwback fad 45,000 by New Year's Dav
I

-"

GOING OUT
OF BUSINESS

SALE

daughters, Angela and Susan,
are
now
residtng
m
Haze lwood, Mo , a s uburb
of St LouiS, where they par·
hctpate m many commumty
activ1hes One of John's most
recent activtbes 1s actmg as a
McDonnell Douglas CorporatiOn AdviSor m nearby St
LouiS CoWJly for a company
sponsored JW110r Achtevement
Progr am fer h1gh school
students
John and hiS family recently
spent a fevt days m Pomeroy
vtslltng h1s mother, Mrs . Mary
K"nzelman,
and
oth e r
relatives

WORW ALMANAC
FACTS

BARGAINS

Mr. Eddy is
near record
POMEROY - For the f1rs l
time m 10 years, the monthly
Clrculal!on of the Me1gs Book
mobtle, " Mr Eddy" has h1t
almost 105,000 volumes w1lh
two days remammg
As of Frtday, the monthly
ctrculatton of the umt had
reached 104,353 for December
The schedule for Monday and
Tuesday m Me1gs County mcludes
MONDAY
Harrtsonv tlle, 6 to 6 30 p m ,
Wolf Pen, 6 45 to 7 15
TIJESDAY
Gravel H1ll, 9 30 a m. , Park
Street , 10 30 , Hobs on and
vtctmly ( Rl 7), 11 30 , MelgsGallta Line, I p.m , Leadmg
Creek Rd , 2, Bradbw-y, 3,
Rutland ( Braley's), 4, New
Lima Road , 5, Cook Gap H1il ,
6 30, Old Rt 7, 7, and EnterpriSe, 7 30

on Friday
The 1875 World Alm a nac
recorded that m 1874, for the
first ttme smce the Ctval War
the Umted Slates elected a
DemocratiC House or
Repre se nt at l\:es
wtth
Democrats winntn g 1n
lrad !llonal Republican
strongholds Jt was noted that
although Ulysses S Gra nt had
been overwhelmmgly r e
elected two years prevwusly
the swmg fro m Republican to
Democrat reflected the gradual
altntwn of Repubitcan strength
dur mg Grants two term s

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
G1fl frwlcakes can always be
used for doorstops
Thought for the day Would
YOU like to deal wtlh the person you see In lbe m1rror each

GALLIPOLIS - No one was
IOJW"ed or charged m three
trafftc acctdents mvesltgaled
Frtday by ctty pollee offiCers
The f1rst occurred at 9 05
a m on the parkmg lot at the
Oh10 Valley Bank where an
a uto drtven by LuAnne DaviS,
18, Galhpohs, struck the rear
end of a car operated by
Thomas S Weaver , 22, of
Galhpohs
A second colllswn occw-red
on Ftrst Ave and State St
where a n auto driv e n by
Palrtck B Davts on, 18 ,
Galhpohs, pulled mto the path
of a car operated by Ellls Paul
Hudson, 40, of Prospect, Ohw .
There was mmor damage to
both cars
A !mal mishap occw-red at
the laundromat on Eastern
Ave \\here an auto dr1ven by
Kalherme D Gardener, 20, of
AddiSon , backed mlo a car
owned by Stanford 0 Cox, 23,
of Galhpohs

mornmg?

412-414 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, ll.

the Collins report.
'

By Oakley Collins
State Senator-Elect
IRONTON - The first meetmg o,f the lllth
General Assembly occurs next Jan. 6 That
f1rst week will be a hect1c one Members and
the1r famthes will be m Columbus for the
sweanng-111 ceremoni es Rules for lhe
operatiOn of the House and Senate wtll be
cons tdered Members w1ll be assigned to
committees
In additton , 1t IS expected that the
Democrats, who now cont rol both the House
and the Senate - durmg the last sess ton ,
Republtcans held the Senate - w!ll attempt to
pass a number of purely pohttcal meas w-es
before lame duck Governor G!lltgan 's term of
off1ce expires
The reason for the haste 1S tha t, due to a
nuke m the Oh10 Consl!lut10n, members of the
legiSlature are sworn m one week earher than
the Governor a nd other slate officers The
Democrats m the iegtslalw-e wtll have to deal
wtth Republican Governor Rhodes after that
f1rsl week of the sess10n, so they're lr)mg to gel
what they conSider to be unporlant legislatwn
before a more fnendly a udience
HERE 'S SOME PRACTICAL advtce on
how to make your vmce heard on leg!Siat ton
already proposed m Columbus, or on leg1slat1on
that you feel should be offered
W1th thousands of separate p1eces of
legtslatlon to consider every yeHr, legtslators tn
Columbus need the op1ruon , adv tce, and
specialized knowledge of !herr constituents to
gu1de them It IS 1mposstble for any legiSlator
to havedetatled knowledge of the techmcah t1e'

Instability could beset
jobless insurance fund
COLUMBUS - The present
method of fm a nc tn g the
Unemplo yment
Insuran ce
Trust Fund places the future
stabth ty of the fund tn pen!, the
Ohw Bureau of Employment
Serv ices \\as told last week by
a n Oh10 Stale Umver51 ty
researcher
ThiS, accord tng to OBES
Admmtslrat or Wtlham E
Garn es, v. as the m os t
SlgDiftcan l ftndtng of the study
cond ucted by ,Je rry L
Wi seman, co nce rmn g t he
f1nancmg of unem pl oyment
compensatiOn m OhiO over the
nex t ten year::;
Garnes satd the study made
no effort to predtcl the futw-e
It d1d , however , mea s ure
prospec llve costs and beneft ts
under favorable a n d un favorable cconomJc assumpti ons ,
under legislative
assumptwns whtch entailed no
hberahzatwn of the cw-re nt
la w , under some 'tl.htch exU, nded potenllal dw-alwn and
mcreased maxtmwn benef1 ts,
and under some wh tch m-

cr ease d
em ployer
co ntnbutwns
' Th e fl extbie max 1mum
weekly benefit provtston m the
cw-rent law," the s tudy pomted
out, 'w tll slgntft cantly ra1se
the average 1o1 eekiy beneft t
amount over the next decade
The result ts a lug her leve l of
annual benefi ts fot any gtven
level of unemployment, " the
OBES Admtmstralor sa td
Garnes noted that the Ohto
Unemployment Trus t Fund
totaled over $792 mtlhon on
Nov 30, 1974, and under s table
economic condittons, was m no
1mmed tate danger However,
even under stable economu:
conditions, current statutory
provtstons v.hiCh may escalate
be nefit
cost5
wtlh oul
co rre spondtn gly mc reasmg
employer con tnbuttons could
re duce the fund to a
'dangerously low level "
Present economic condttJons
tnd!Cale that we may be m a
seve re recess ion Such a
recessiOn , 1f prolonged, could
raptdly
accelerate
the
red uchon of the fund to a poml
of ms olvency ," Garnes sa 1d

GALUP04S
DfJLV TRIBUNE
~ Thlrd Xve Galllpoh.!l OhiO i56.'1l
' Publiahed every w~kday evenmg ex
rept Saturday Soecond Class Posl8ge Pa1d

at GalllPQ!.ia, Ohio 45631
~
TilE DAliA" SENTINEL
Ill Court Sl Pomeroy 0 45769
Publb!IEd every weekday evemn11 except
Sa turday i.ntered.f! second class nuulmg
matter at Pomeroy, Ohio POIJt Offl~
By carrier dally and Sunday liOc per
"eek Motor route $2 60 per mop.lfl
'
MAIL

FROM 1 TO 6 PM

.

DAY NEW

Dream '~

W1ll Be Playrng At The

CROWN CAFE

In Jackson, Ohto
• P M. trt 2 A.M
Admtsston S3 00 per person.
Reservations now betng
accepted

COLO\\ ·
+

•

/'/wain•

Tomght Thru
tuesday
~~----."-&lt;",

/

...... ~ ·· -"'""~~"'­
~

-~

High country adventure!

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
DEC 29
LADY KUNG FU
and

OUR TIME
( Tec hn•color)
Starr rng Pamela Sue Martin
I P G)

Show Starts at 7 p m.

CARTOON

AND

PARTY
DRESSES
PANT SETS
OR
PARTY DRESSES
WERE TO $25

PANT SETS
OR
PARTY DRESSES
WERE TO UO

PANT SETS OR
PARTY DRESSES
WERE TO S38

PANT SETS
OR
PARTY DRESSES
WERE TO S46

$15·
$20·
$25·
$28·

I

·1

(RESTAURANT
12-5 PM)

CLOSED AT 5 PM NEW YEAR'S EVE

•
=

"Eius1ve

Wtth Sandy Bv1cher"'t~ •

PARTY PANT
SETS

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
AS USUAL
SUNDAY, DEC. 29TH

..

ON ENTERPRISE
BIDWELL - Navy Ch1ef
Operaltons Spectahst Dents J
La Cr osse, husband of the
former MISs ElSie Sm1th of
Bidwell, recently parllclpated
1n a n am ph1b10us tramang
exercise wh.ie deployed to the
Western Pactftc aboard the
aircraft
nuclear-powere d
earner, USS Enterpnse

NEW YEAR'S EVE

OF ALL

Happy New Year

,..."

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADM ITTED - Shannon
Cremeans , Coolville ; Lomse
Eshelm an, Pomeroy; DoriS
Haynes, Pomeroy, Leo Jarvts,
Athens, L1sa Herald, Middleport , Brenda Sm1lh, Langs·
v11le, Shtr ley Smtlh , La ngsvt ile, Teresa Shll , Pomeroy ,
Do res Arno ld , Pomeroy,
Em1 iy Kuhn , Guysville
DISCHARGED - Robert
Waidmg, Roland Dodderer

and

CLEARANCE

f

A

•

CHARGED fN MURDERS
MARTINSVILLE, Va ( UP!)
- A local bwidmg company
employe was charged Friday
With ftve counts of mw-der and
one of rape m the &gt;laytngs of a
Henry CoWJly woman and her
four young chtldren Thw-sday
County Sheflff C P W1ll sa1d
the 34-year old suspect, Eddy
Lee Thomas, had not admitted
kilhng Mrs James Altff and
her fow- children Thomas was
employed at Naltonw1de
Homes 1n Martmsville where
the husband of the slam woman
also works, W1tt Said He was
held under bond of $100,000 No
trtal date has been set

Publlshed every Sunday by The Ohto
Valley Publishing Co

WISHES YOU

~

Monday and a chance of rain

or snow aboat Wednesday.
Highs will be in the 40s and
lo\\ er 50s Monday and In the
mid 30s to middle 40s on
Tuesday and Wednesday .
Lows will be in the 30s
Monday, dropping to the 20s
Tuesday and Wednesday.

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

MURPHY'S

.

EXTENDED FORECAST
A chance of showers

For Your Dancmg
Ltstentng Pleasure

I

..••

• •

of every btl! whiCh he must conSider
ThiS means that the leg!Sialor welcomes
yow- letters, even if you oppose a btl! Why ?
Because you are proVldmg hun w1th knowledge
he needs to make a deciSIOn
Every legislator conSiders a large number
of btlls on a wtde range of subj ects When you
wnte your legislator, your letter IS made much
more effecl!ve 1f you ca n refer to the parl!cular
b,ll that mterests you - for example, HB 478
(for House btlls) or SB 478 (for Senate btlls)
Another important element Is a brief
description of the bill's provisions, and an
explanation of the effect which these provisions
will have on you. Finally, you should offer your
advice to your legislator as to how, In your
opinion, he should cast his vote.
Remember, too, that a legiSlator 1S not
gomg to please all the people all the lime He's
got to use his JUdgment, after wetghing the
mterests of all the parltes mvolved. And often tl
w111 be necessary for hm1 to vote agamst a b1ll,
which he favors 10 pr10ctple, because 11 1S so
poor!) drafted that tt w1ll not accomplish the
des1req effect Your advtce IS considered
1be ultimate responSibillty, howe ver , sttll
remaulS m the man or woman m whtch the
Consl!lullon of the Stale of Oh1o a nd you, the
voters, have placed your trust That man or
woman IS your state representative or state
senator.
When the legtslature 1S m sesSion, ll usually
1S better to address your correspondence to me
at Columbus Wnte me 10 car e of the State
House, Columbus, Oh1o, 43215

I
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ON ENTERPRISE
The Gallipoll! Tribune in Ohio and West •
LONG BOTTOM - Chief v1rglnl8. Olle month S2 50, one year 118 00, J
Ma c hm !Sl Male Burl H 1 sit month!! t9 110 three months t6 00
ab.monthslll~
Larson, husband of the former 1 El5ewherel22per~ear
three months 16 :ill motor route $2 60
1
MISs Eleanor T Fredenck of : monlhly
The
DaUy
Sentinel
one
month
12
~
one
Long Bottom, recently paryear SUI 00!" all month! Stl 50 lhr@t
llc!pated m an amph1b10us
onths $6 OD Elsewhere m per ye.ar Slll
The end of the money comes
munthll $11 ~. three month!! 16 :;o motor
long before the end of the year lramm g e xerciSe
while route $2 60 monthly
deployed to th e Western
The Umterl PreM Inl.ematlonal lli e:rWinding up your affairs IS Pac1ftc aboa rd the nuclear. clwnvely entitled to the use for pubhcatlon
only fun II you're 8
aJI news dispatches credited lo th15
powered atrcraft carrier , USS 1C(newspaper
and abo the local news
watchmaker
Enterpme
publiahed herein

.....

ro,ooo

MIDDLEPORT - Two
defendants were fined and
two others forfeited bond m
the court of Mtddleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Frtday
mghl
Gene Canaday, Gallipolis,
forfetled a $50 bond posted on
assault and battery charge
and Kenny Gilkey, New
Haven, W. Va. , forfeited his
$100 bond posted for leaving
the scene of an accident.
Mtllard C.
Spaulding,
Middleport, was fmed $150
and costs and sentenced to
three days In Jail fur drtvmg
while Intoxicated and Oren
L. Ellis, Middleport, was
fined $15 and cos ts for ex·
cesslve s peed.

3 accidents

NOW IN PROGRESS
MANY-MANY-MANY

Bonds forfeited

SORRY • • •
No
Lay Away

G. C.
'

�.

'

'f

...

,.
...

"'

~'(

....

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..
3- The Sunday Tunes -Sentmel, SWJday, Dec 29, 1974

'

2- The SWlday Times -Sentme l, Sund&lt;~y, Dec 29, 1974

Jury venire drawn'
GALLIPOLIS A new
Galllpolls Mun1ctpal Cow-l Jur y
venrre has been drawn tn the
office of Galha County Clerk of
Courts , MarJOri e Rmehart
Present for the drawmg were
Jury comrnlsstoner s Dame) C
Notter and Hobart Dtllon, Ch1ef
of Pollee John Ta)lor, Sgt
Dav1d L Proffitt of the Ohw
State Highway Patrol , Judge
Robert S Betz , City Sohc1tor
D Dean Evans and Mrs
Martlene Settle, deputy clerk
Posstble JW"ors are
Mary C Roberts, Georg10a
Jenkms, Thelma Jane Garlic.
Delores S Whttley, Vtctona E

Ratlt ff
Bus h, Gypsy E
Mt chael W!lhams, Car) S
Hunt, Ga rn et M Queen
Gaynell Jeffers, Ha ria Eutsler ·
Charles E Paxton , James H
Clark, Nellie W Smtih, Vwlet
T Mendenhall, Patncw A
He nson, J ohn W Gtlberl
Jess1e C Farney, Glen H
Sar gent, Robert H Terr) , Ida
Mtller Claude E Wtnters
Grace J Ellyson , Howard C
Tay lor, Judtth Webstet, Mat y
E Syler. Helen Lilchfteid ,
Albert L Whtle, Ma r) E
Johnson , Esta M Dee!, Paul F'

Pers tn ger, .J ohn Matthews
Opal A Collms , Myrna T
Whtte , Ezra Hager, Mary N
Butcher Dorts J RWl)an
Glona T Sahsbury, Jenntfer
D Scott, Bobby Dean Slone,
Albert Neal, Normal G Dean
Geor ge E Hym an, Cynthia M
Da tl ey Robert E Myers
Roger 0 FISher Edward K
Fry, Loy W Pauley Orm R
Sheets, Dw1ght N Stevers, Sr
Robert Ear l llav1 s Mar k
Godfrey Ga ) , John T Montgomery, Harry B Yeauger
Ruth M Wroblewski , Gary Lee
De nney: Jr
Brow n Fncda R Moore ,
Jo Ellen Pritchard M10na E !{!&gt; Carroll H Black Ray FISher
Marshall R Cra tg, Beverly I
Rowland Thomas E Wlute ,
Lesh e G Shellne, Douglas G
Lizon, Hoyt l Clark
J oan Ha skms, Phylhs R
Hawley George R Sheets ,
Lulu Mae Bla ke, Mtllard E
Grube, Wtlla F Gtimore, Sue
L Calhcoa t, Jacquehne S
Vance, Martha H Edwards,
By Ralph Novak
WtlbwC Wtlhams , Herman H
One of the hve or SIX small thmgs m the unnerse we have to
Wnght, Pete Aldengt, Irene S
be thankful for these days IS that the negot18tors m ml erna lwnal
We llman, Vtr gmla Eio1se
diploma~ are not as susceptible to mcapactlatmg mJury as, say,
Ellwtl,
Opal S Phtlhps, Goldte
profesSional football players
J W Rtce, Patncta K Slover,
Otherwtse we would be hearin g news broadcasts hke
Maury S Mt ttleman, Ode M
Good evenmg, diplomacy fa ns The btg news tomght 1S that a
Bea\ er Orville 0 Wi seman ,
number of Btg Power superstars are gomg to be out of acl!on m
Ern~.st E Brown, James E
the crucial, upcommg sertes of talks, while a nW"Dber of others
Bmles. James Alden Ntbert,
are gomg to have to negol!ate wtth pam.
Joseph L Cam, Donna J
For the Umled States, Gerry Ford IS reported to have his
Tramble ,
Ros s
Eugene
spramed pact-&lt;;lgnmg hand m a cast but he appears to have
Hamrt ck, M!lhe W Clagg,
recovered from the pulled tongue muscle he suffered last month
Malc olm B Orebaugh, Eva l
while trymg to say "Fat chance" m Arabtc dw-ing the crucial
King, Vtrg te s R1fe, W1lh am L
Mtdeast talks
Myers, E lmer D Walker and
Ford's ace substtlute , Hank Ktssmger, meanwhile , has come
Cora Margaret Peck
up wtth torn hp ligaments because of excesSive grmnmg durmg
his recent appearances Kissinger 1s also still hampered by the
cauliflower left ear he mcurred last seaso n when he listened to
too many whiSpered secrets.
SoVIet standout Lenny Brezhnev 1S also hw-tmg , havmg
suffered severe hand cramps whille holdmg h!S fmgers crossed
Wlder the table durmg his last cruc1al outmg Having his fmgers
permanenUy crossed 1sn 'l expected to keep Brezhnev out of the
RACINE - Ray Manley,
lineup but his bench-rtdden teammate Alexe1 Kosygm 1S still on
Metgs County Shenff's Deputy,
the disabled list wtth an oul~f-Joint nose
mves hgated a car-truck ac
For the French, lanky Val G!Scard d'Estaing 1S lunpmg from
c1dent Satw-day at 3 48 p m at
a cut foot that has been blamed on overenthuSlasllc tightrope
the Intersection of F1flh and
walkmg. The French offer to trade G!Scard to Canada even up
Mam Sts here
for Pierre Trudea u has already been turned down. Trudeau ts
currenUy Sidelined wtth a wrenched larynx, which he suffered
Forrest Ne1gler, 53, Rt 2
Ractne, was eastbound on
when he began yelling, 'My otl ftelds! Mine ' Mme' Mme '"
Ftfth, and MarJone M Wolfe,
durmg recent negotiations.
England's Harold Wilson IS stillm perfect condilwn but there
32, Rt I, Rac10e, was westhas been no Sign that anyone cares, smce hiS team ts agam unbound when Netgler attempted
to tw-n left onto Mam St
scheduled.
Paleshruan quarterback YasSlr Arafat has turned up Wllh a
Both dnvers tr1ed to avOid a
sore arm from overpracticmg h!S qu1ck draw, wh1ch IS, comcolhs wn, but the Wolfe vehicle
ctdentally, the same problem plagumg Israel's Yttzhak Rabrn
struck the Netgler truck m the
In the Eastern DlVISlon, South Vietnam's Nguyen Van Thieu
n g ht rear 1 Manle y sa1d No
still seems reluctant to test h1s chrontcally spramed credtbthty
mrunes were reported and no
and Formosa's Wily Chamg Ka!-&lt;;hek has agam relnJW"ed his
cttatwns were Issued
nose tripprng over h1s beard The Chinese Reds' bnttle veteran
twosome of Mae Tse-tWJg and Chou En-la!lS also bemg called the
"over the hill gang" m some c1rcles, w1th both doubtful starters
)ear We end up wlth products
for upcommg cruc1al negol!ations.
And finally thiS note : Veteran offtctal Kw-t Waldheun IS not as well made or as adreportedly out of act1on mdeflrulely w1th tnJW"les rece1ved wh!le vanced as they could be
Overall, thiS country thereby
knocking hs head agamst the wall m recent aclJon
grows less compelt!tve and
more SUbject to recessiOns
Note , too , that the 1ap1d
asstm1lal10n by mduslry of new
or Improved product tdeas
comm g
from
federally
fmanced research would, 10
nW"Uel ous mstances, result 10
productwn runs considerably
larger than tf the government,
were the sole market Offtclals
By Ray Cromley
mlo mdustnal use at the pace here have es!tma ted that the
WASHfNGTON - ( NEA) of a sma ll boy cleamng hiS exiStence of a Slm llar 10Roughly a decade ago, med1cal room
dustrtal product could mean
men at the Nalwnal Institutes
Reclhfymg thiS unhappy cos t reductions to the governof Health stumbled on a major SituatiOn IS of more than menl m these mstances of as
research breakthrough .
academtc mteres l
much as 20 to 25 per cent, even
They diScovered that the
The caterptllar - hke speed where somewhat diffe r en t
development of revoluttona ry wtlh whtch U S mdustry government · mdustry models
new types of eqwpment came adapts or mcorpora tes new are reqwred
more qwckly tf they broughlm processes and
pr oducts
Fmally, the widespread use
men from a range of d eve loped with Nalwnal of federal processes, properly
professions engmeers, Sc1ence Founda hon , NASA patented, could mean an 1mphysiciSts, ma themaltc1ans, as Defense and Alom1c Energy portant sow-ce of mcome for
well as doctors
funds costs all of us a heavy the federal treasw-y
The federal government pnce
The fed eral governmen t has
and much of the sc!entiftc
It results, for one, tn a poured money mto promolwnai
communtty promptly forgot nd1culously low rate of htera lw-e , pubhc1ty campaigns
this lesson.
producl!VIly growth m many and conferences ad nauseam
In considerable measw-e , areas of manufacturmg and But they've forgotten what th e
1t IS because of this Wlfortunate the serviCe mdustr1es Th1s medical men at th e Natwnal
lapse of memory that so much translates mto higher pnces Ins!ttutes of Health diScovered
of the $20 btlhon th1s govern- and lost voage mcreases, whtch so long ago, lf there 1S to be
ment spends on r esearch and may, m the aggregate, cost us Slgmftcant Improvement m the
development each year moves several btllions of dollars a use by mdustry of federally

RALPH NOVAK
Extra: diplomatic
nose out of joint

Trapeze artist
falls to death

DAVID
... POLING, D.,D.
In search of ~n

SAN JUAN, P R t UPl i A Flortda "oman plunged
100 feet to her death 10 the
m1ddle of a square at the
start ol her " Bettina the
Great'' trapeze performance
Saturday, pollee said She
was tdcnllhed as Betty Boatn ght, of Ange1wood, Fla.
Eye\\ttnesses said s he had
just started her act at 2 p m.
"hen th e 120-foo t metal

American Christmas

By pavld Poling
1t, ow- visions and unages of Christmas have
a Bnllsh accent, For more than two centunes the celebrations
and style of the North Amencan Christmas have been shaped by
English wnters, authors, composers and cooks. Even our Christmas cards come from a Loodon company that started the
tradilton m 1843.
And this •s not a complamt, rather the recogmtion that we
to\\ er supportin g the trapeze
sllll may be searchmg for the true, authentic American ChriStsna pped and se nt her
mas. The British mfluence has rightfully endured: Dtckens
piummetmg to the pavement
wr1Ung some of the world's great literature when he turned out a
of the Plaza de Armas in San
ChriStmas book every year for five years, beginning In 1843 wtlh
Juna' s old quarter.
" A Christmas Carol." And muSic, with George Fredertck Handel
The trapeze arttsl had
producmg the "Messtah" (Dublln, 1742) and getting such a warm
welcome m London that he became a naturalized citizen. English
bee n hired t"o weeks ago by
ChriStmas observations were powerful Indeed.
the Old San Juan Merchants
Assoc 1at1on to attract
Our own history has seen the conununity of North American
crowds and boost holiday
reflect much of the Old World experience. Most of our carols
shopping
come from England or Europe Our menu, our wassail terrrunoiogy, our tree and yule log , our Santa Claus arid Twelfth
N1ghl all come from overseas. Tbe search for an authentic
Amencan ChriStmas may ultunalely be tbe refinement of old
ways rather than the diScovery of new observances.
Dr. Richard 'Knox Smith, Artzona churchman and historum,
has provided us with at least some large clues m this search for
an Amencan celebration Poring over some old copies of the
" Arizona Mmer" (18711-1876) he diScovered that ChriStmas m the
MIDDLEPORT - Ronald
western temtory was wild, JOyous, commumty centered,
Place, pastor of the Groton, N
thoughtful, reverent and a true holiday.
Y Ftrst Umted Chw-ch of
The "Artzona Mmer" recorded the December events of
Chrtst, addressmg the Mid Prescott, Am The ChriStmas celebration mcluded everyone m
dleport - Pomer oy Rotary Club
Sight· cattle and muong people, soldiers, prospectors, clergy,
Fnday even m g at Hea th
town drunks , company commanders and klds. The whole town
Umled Methodtsl Church
decorated a btg tree in the heart of the new courthouse. Sunday
follov.t ng dmner, sa1d people
school classes recited appropriate scripture A qusrtet sang a
should not watt Wllll they rel!re
seasonal hymn. Presents were distributed from the tree, which
to see the world
the paper noted, one year contamed "nearly $3,000 worth of
The husband of the former traps." ThiS was real frontier.
Margaret Houdashell, Pastor
In 1874, the editonal expressed some deep and profound
Place outlined how tow-s of
sentiments concerning the commg of Christ, These beliefs are
Europe ar e orgamzed at not only authenltcally Ameru~an but global in dimens1oo :
m imm al expe nse to each
''Theday is sacred to be sure It commemorates the greatest
travc1er. He said travehng m
and happtesl event! or mankind that has ever occurred since God
Europe broadens the ap- s8ld 'Let there be light' . In this season, tl hs been kept more as a
prectatwn of Amencans for day of JOY than of sorrow ; of JOY for the great VICtory that day
h1slor) and for the culture of ac hieved over the Archfiend and his hosts; over sin, death and
the contment from which the pumshmenl ; of sorrow for the msults and sufferings borne by
ancestors
many Amertcans ChriSt for ow- sake . His teachings, too, must not be forgotten, and
emigrated He was tnlroduced Monday next should fmd the ChriStian people of AriZOna
by program chatrman Vernon prepared to say:
PreSident
Bob
Webe r
0, Spheres that smg 1 0, bells that rmg!
Bumgarner preSided
Lift up your tones to Heaven,
Till every wrong shall rtghted be,
And every foe forg1ven " •
Driver cited
"Except the Apache, ow- tlevil wishes us to say, but, bad as
they are and have been, our s uffering J)eople should be forg!Vmg,
even of them .. "
by patrol officer
A true ChriStmas 1S both forgtvmg and thankful
POMEROY - Wayne E
M1llhoan, 49, Shade, Ohto, was
c1ted to Me1gs Coun ty Cow-t
Frtday for failw-e to stop
w1thm the ass ured clea r
dtstance followmg a trafft c
acctd ent on Rl 7 al1ts JW1 Cl10n
Wllh Rl 143
The Galha-Metgs Post State
H1ghway Patrol satd M1lhoan s
_
By Don Oakley
car slammed mlo the rear of an
There is certainly nothmg illegal about the reSignation of
auto operated by Albert L
Oluo Democratic Sen. Howard M . Metzenbaum and the apSwearmgen, 49, of Rutland
pomlment by Gov. John J. Gilligan of Senator-elect John Glenn
There was moderate damage to re place him, thus gtVIDg Glenn a week or so of senionty over
and no one was InJured
the other mcoming freshmen senators.
Nor UJ the similar case of
Paul Laxalt, newly elected
s ponsored r ese arch and Nevada Republican, who actually beat Glenn by a few days by
deve lopm ent , then busm ess virtue of bemg appomted to fill the seat of resigned Sen. Alan
experts 1n man ufacl unng, Bible
marke!tng and consumer
The prerogahve of governors to ftll congressiOnal vacanctes
reactions must be broughlmto created by death or rCS!gnallon IS clearly stated m the Conthe ptclw-e from the begmmng
st1tut10n. Metzenbaum hunself had been appointed by Gilligan
Only m thiS way wtll 1t be earller this year to fm1sh the term of Sen. William B. Sax be, who
posSible to develop on a suf- restgned to become attorney general, and many Democrats had
ft c tenll y wtd e sca le and begWJurgmgMetzenbaum'sreSignatloninfavorofGiennalmost
reasona bl e tt m etab le the day after the latter's overwhelming election victory in
process mg methods, products November.
Indeed, some of them unrnediately began talldng about
and ms lruments useful both to
the government and to pnvate Glenn as vtce presidential and even prestdenUal timber m 1976.
mdustry
Yet there is somethmg slightly extralegal about the tactic. It
Systems
or
products lS a clever run around the Constituhon, m the spirit if not m
developed wholly
under the letter
bw-eaucrattc superVISIOn , even
Glenn and Laxalt were elected by the people of Ohio and
when contracted to a prtvale Nevada to begin ~rvmg m the 94th Congress, which convenes on
firm as IS usual, normally are Jan 3, 1975, not lll the last days of the 93rd . Abot•t the only adnot eas1ly apphed outside the vantages he will gam by his "seniority" will be in the selection of
agency they were produced offtces m Washington and perhaps a better chance at the comfor Officials, a ll to frequently mittee qssigrunents of his chotec.
lDSlsl on characteristics whtch
MetzenbaW"D had lllitially resisted the urgmgs that he resign
have nolhmg to do w1lh quahty, arguing that it would be unfair to other newly elected senators. Ii
performance or use, but rather 18 Just that, and lt is lobe hoped that the Glenn and Laxalt cases
on some lradttion or other will not become the practice, Wlth state parties IICI"&amp;mbling and
datmg back to the last century dickermg after every electiOn to get the1r boys down to Congress
Research and development ahead of the pack.
costs are so htgh and stagnant
Perhaps 11 won't . II anythmg Is d!Hicult to pry loose from
producllVlly
has
such Washmgton lt IS yow- lame-duck congressman, who Is wont to
disastrous long-range effects savor every moment remammg In his term . Prhaps these are
that we tgnore these problems spectal cases.
at ow- pertl.
l'lut it has been over 10 years smce John Glenn first tried for
the Senate. That's a lot of semonty that nnght bave been. H the
vote of confidence given him by qhioans in November Is an malong Alum Creek
dicahon of the future, he will be in )ubllc office for a lot longer
Members of the Columbus Council, than that. It's too bad he, as well as Laxalt, couldn't have waited
Amencan Youth Hostels recently hiked a a few more days to start.
sec l10n of the Shawnee Backpack Tra1l
•
•
Those mterested In fulw-e hikes should
contact Kw-t McLaughhn , c-&lt;J Columbus
_
Counctl, AYH , Greenndge Rd ., WorthIsraeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin has rejected as
mglon, Oh10 43085
"absurd" the suggestion b~ Egyptian }"resident Anwar ~~~
that m the mterests of peace m the Middle East Israel !restrict tis
murugration for 50 years. The response was predictable and not
without reason.
Yet the understandable Israeli reaction to what in any other
$1 MILLION WANTED
case would be a gratuitous Insult to a sovereign nation has obMA NAGUA, Ntcaragua (UP!)
scured what may well be ~ significant development.
to
E 1ght Jdt wmg g uer1 !lias Sa turd
The Arabs are no closer than they ever were
demanded $1 mtlhon and safe conduct 0 acknowledging Israel's right to nationhood, much less any
of the country 10 exchange lor the hves of national sovereignty. But Wliess Sadat was just playfully lighting
17 promment Ntcaraguans held hostage 10 another match in an explosive s)tuatlon, the fact that he can even
a captured subw-ban mansiOn PreSident contemplate the existence of Israel for another 50 years marks a
Anastas10 Somoz declared martial law and momentous change in Arab attitudes.
No doubt, of course, Sadat is confident that some kind of
summoned his cabmet to consider th
demand
e "final solutioo" to the problem of Israel will be achieved long
before then, with all that those words imply for the fut\D'e of
Jews. The solution need not be military. With or without Immigration to Israel , the statistics of population weigh heavily in
TWO ASSISTED
favor of the Arabs and will weigh more heavily with each passing
POMEROY - The Pomeroy E-R year.
squad look Eliza Powe ll, Hamsonville, to
But If an Arab leader can begin thinking of living with Israel
Veterans Memonal Hospital Saturday at In tenns of hall-centuries, maybe other Arab'! can some day
12 41 p m when s he complamed of chest liegfn thinking ol" it in terms ·of permanence-;-maybe even
pams At 3 22 p.m , sq uadmen were called eventually m peace instead of at armed loggerheads.
to Nye Ave , where they look Elmer Sl!ll to
It 's a slender reed of hope, but there are so few others to.;.
Veterans Memortal Hospital
\1
grasp at m that part of the world.

Advantages of
travel cited

Autos collide

at intersection

RAY CROMLEY
R&amp;D boxscore:

Costs9-Products 0

8 counties
Conlmued from page I
1975 BH-HVRDD wtll rece1ve $19,250
Several maJOr reasons are ctted for
developmg RPDOs ·
- To strengthen the abtllty of local
elected offtclals to parlic1pale m local,
state and federal plans and programs that
direcUy affect the Plannmg Reg10n as a
whole and local governments m particular.
- To qualify. all Ohw commun1hes for
the full range of state and federal grants m
which the communihes themselves WJSh to
parbclpate
- To facilitate and encow-age the
coordUIBI!on of separate fWJctional plans
to mmirruze overlap and av01d duplicatiOn
of effort.
There ar e four other plannmg
organizallons certifted as o!fic1al RPDOs
Miami Valley Regional Planmng Com.
nusston , Toledo Metropolitan Area CoWJctl
of Governments, Oh1o- Kentucky · India na
Regional CoWJcll of Governments, and
Northeast Ohio Four County Regwnal
Planrung and Development Organtzatwn .
Organizations in the other 10 Plannmg
Regions are actively workmg toward
RJ:'p&lt;J status
1,

Wonderland
Contmued from page 1

Ohw State students, W!ll h1ke Jan . 11-12 at
Hocking Hills Stale Park, Jan 18-19 at Tar
Hollow and Feb 22-23 m Shawnee Stale
Forest along the Shawnee Backpack Trail
The h1kes are open to a ll OSU students,
staff m embe rs, faculty , alumm a nd
guests Coordmator of the htkes 1S Chad
Brownhill, 1743 N Fow-th St , Apartment
A, Columbus 43201
The Central Oh10 Htkmg Club,
operatmg out of the CoiW"Dbus YMCA at 40
W Long St., has scheduled a Jan 26 h1ke

TANKS MOVED fN
SAIGON (UP!) - CommuniSt forces
have moved tanks and truckloads of fresh
supplies to key ballieftelds m South
Vtelnam, military sow-ces satd Salw-day
The sow-ces predicted mtense battles
early m 1975 At the same hme, the Sa1gon
command esltmated tha t 30,000 soldiers on
both Sides have been killed, wounded or
captw-ed in the cw-rent three-week up.
surge \ n ftghting m the southern ·half of
South V1etnam
'

or

DON OAKLEY
Jumping the
seniority gun

sen.

Otange in Arab attitude

';it

&lt;

•

'

Municipal court se~tles up

Davis of
Jackson
• •
retirlllg
JACKSON - January 5, 1975
will mark the completion of a
career spanrung 28 years for
Lieutenant William R. " Red"
Dav1s of the Jackson state
highway patrol post
Dav1s, a native of Pomeroy,
wtll be succeeded on that day
by Sergeant William R
Cowg1ll , now stahoned at
Manon , who has been
promoted to the rank of
lieutenant and named commander of the Jackson post.
Davis graduated wtth the
24th patrol academy class on
December 30, 1947 and has
worked
at
Lancaster ,
Pomeroy, Georgetown , New
Philadelphia and hiS present
assignment as conunander of
the Jackson post He took
command of the Jackson post
m August of 1964.
He is a veteran of World War
II, spendmg three years m the
army prtor to JO!rung the highway patrol. He IS very acbve m
local servtce organizatiOns and
has served as county distriCt
commander and Commander
of Voitw-e 40 et 8 of the
Amen can Legwn. He ts a
member of the Jackson FOP
lodge, Farmer - Sportsman
Club aJ:td Is a Boy &amp;out leader.
Lt. DaviS and hts wife, the
former Nellie Brown, along
With the1r three children, C. J ,
Sammy and Michelle, plan to
remam m the Oak Hill area I

24 traffic cases on Friday
GALLIPOLIS - Twenly-fowtrafftc cases wer e termmaled
Friday m Galhpohs Mumctpal
Cow-!
Forfelhng bond s were
Kenneth R Btrchf1eld, 32 , Rt
I, Northup , $28 nssw-ed clear
diStan ce,
F rankhn
E
Wmgrove , 37, Athens, $18
speed; Dean L Rees, 18, R10
Grande, $33 reckless operatiOn
and $108 fleemg a pollee offleer, George Earl Wyer, Jr ,
45 , Greensbor o, N C , $18
speed, Norman E Baum, 44,
Rt 3, Pomeroy, $18 speed

W. R. DAVIS
followmg his retirement.
Ll Davts also has four other
daughters , Vtola Aldrich and
V1rgm1a Cooper, both of
Jackson ; Lorrame DaviS of
Lancaster. Oh1o and Mrs
Barbara Kegley of Kentucky,
and a son, Robert Richard
DaviS of Hif!Sdale, Dlinois. Lt
Davts is the son of Robert A
DaviS and the late Elizabeth
Stiles Davis, Rose Hill.
The new conunander, Lt
Cowgill has served over eleven
years w1th the patrol at
Hamilton, Sandusky, Akron
and Marwn He has attended

several patrol ,

m-servtce

schools

areas

m

the

supervi sion,

POMEROY - The Amer!can
The F-15 Eag le, the most
lnslltute of Aeronaultcs and advanced air s up e rt Orat y
Astronauhcs, a Nalwnal fighter plane m the world
ProfessiOnal
Soctely
of today, was personally accepted
Engmeers and Scientists m the and mspected by PreSident
Aircraft and Space Industry, Ge rald
Ford
m
TAC
se lected John Kunzelman, ce r'emomes at Luke Air Force
formerly of Pomeroy, of Base m Ar1zona on November
Atrcrafl
as 14 The PreSident descnbed the
McD onn ell
rectptent of tts Oulstand mg F -15 as Ha piOneer of peace "
Young ProfessiOnal Av.ard
and a supen or weapon for the
ThiS award, presented at a defen se of freedom ThiS
meeting at the Sl LoutS, ce remony was televised on
M1ssoun Plan eta rium m NBC
November, IS giVen to mThe plane was dehvered
dtvlduals selected
fr om a hea d of sc hedule, after
nommalton s throu ghout the completton of the most sucmduslry for the1r outstandmg cess ful contr acto r de velop.
performance and contributions m ent tr.st and eva luatiOn
to Aerospace technology
program m recent decades
John, a 1959 graduate of Approxtma te ly 3,500 fhghts
Pomeroy H1gh School, holds a have been accompllshed by the
B S Degree m Aeronauhcal Eagle smce 1ts hrst fl1ghl.
Eng m eenng from Embry
In presenlmg the award to
R1ddle College m Flor!da He Kunzelman the Insll lule sta ted
r ece nt ly
returned
to that exce llent tec hmcal perSl Lows after an 18-month formances,
resourcefulness,
asstgnment at the Edwards Air and enthuSiasm resulted m a
Force Fhghl Test Ce nter m mtmmum rtsk and cost savmgs
Ca liforma where he was for
the
program
and
responSible loads engmeer for congratu lated htm on th e
the fllght lest program of the F- achievement
15 Eagle Aircraft
John, hts wtfe, Patti, and two

of

leadership,

have a son, Jason, age one
and

a

31, AddiSon , $18speed, John W
Clark, 23, Rt. 2, Crown Ctly , $28
speed ; Roy J Newell, 46 , Rt. 1,
Middleport, $18 speed, Robert
L Gogo, 49, Baidwm, MICh.,
$18 speed , W1lham A DaviS,
29, Galhpolts , $18 speed,
Michael Dale Jones, 21, Pt
Pleasaut, $18 speed , Damel E
Hall, 26, Rt I, Crown Ctly, $18
speed ; Damel R. Hanna, 20,
Bremen, Ohw, $18 speed,
BW'ton C Green , 48, Columbus,

$23 s peed and Karen E Roush,
32, Galhpohs, $33 s peed

John Kunzelman recognized

Breathalyzer usage and indepth accident mvesl!gatwn
He has also attended workshops at Akron UmverSlty and
Dale Carnegie courses.
Ongmally from Richwood m
Union coWJty, he graduated
from Richwood h1gh school Lt
Cowgill and his wife , Dom,
year,

Rolhbe Kirke ndall, 57, Rl. 4,
Oak H11l, $18 speed and $58
Improper handling of firearms
Kenneth W H1gley 35, Rt 1
Thw-man, $18 speed , Earl
Stewar t, 65, Nor th Fork, W
Va , $18 speed , J ohn Joseph
Barss, 24, Rt 1, Ga lhpohs, $18
speed , Earl M Rtchman, 67 ,
Mound sv til e, W Va , $308
DWI, Mtchael C Shores, 26,
North Branch, M1ch , $23
speed, Dan Fuller, 34, Hunhngton, $18 speed, John Paul
Gr ay , 20, Hunhngton , $23
speed , Vaughn LouiS French,

daughter,

Cassandra, age seven weeks

TOM TIEDE
Over-accentuating
the negative
By Tom Tiede
and ch1c gags had it that things
WASHINGTON - (NEA) would get so bad brokers would
Harry Browne, who have
to
break
their
descnbes himself as " one of hermetically sealed wmdows '
the top financial adviSors In the to JWDp out. Now it's not funny
country/' Is currently ad- anymore, the unrelenting,
verltsmg a book wh1ch he depresSing news and attitudes
ctauns w11l tell "how almost have created momentums for
anyone can proftt fr om m- themselves that are ugly As
Uahon ,
recesston
and someone put 1t: ThiS 1s carrydepressiOn ." Ah, good old lOg the nostalgia craze too far
Amencan mgenU!ty No doubt,
Polls prove the pomt. The ,
on the day of Armageddon , Umvers1ty of M!chtgan 's
someone hke Browne w1ll Survey Research Center says •
publish a commercial en- that consW"Der confidence has
terpriSe to inform almost dropped by e1ght pomts smce •
anyone how they 11 Can ltve on May and 1S n.W at the lowest •
wh1le others aroWJd you d1e rate 10 a quarter cen lury
like flies "
Research
director
Jay •
One llkes to suppose that m a Schm1edeskamp feels the ••
world of brothers, nobody pubhc
1s
talkmg
11- :
w1shes
to
proftt
from self
into
the
blues. •
depression But even if the Everythmg 1s ~~accentuating :
book sales are low (and they the negattve" &amp;hmledeskamp ::;
are not), the harm has been says, the result therefore 1s •
done In a frantic pitch that also negative
assures Amencans the days
Indeed, the negaltve is very '::
ahead are naught but doom often the truth and must be ~
" You wtll have no money, you spread about. But not merely -;
won't have water, sewer, gas to foster more negattvism.
~
or electrictly, yoq. and yow- "Can you unagme a negative
children wtll go to bed cold and Chw-chilJ?" asks Mtchigan's
hungry" - author Browne has Schmtedeskamp, "Can you
contnbuled mightily to a imagme htm at the Battle of .,•
growmg and nasty nahonal Brttatn saytng, 'Well, boys we :.
1
phenomenon - depression may not make it?' " Yet this
psychology Such 15 assuredly seems the lamentable course of
all about us . Browne's book 1S many Amertcan leaders, and ~
only one of dozens now ln print many mtlhons of thetr ~
or m the works, each designed followers as well.
~
to remind the public on every
To a degree the dyspepsia Is, ''
page that dread lS ahead. The if regrettable, compreheiiSlble
•
rest of the medl8, likewise, are As William Fulbright observes, *~
mvolved 10 the excessive and "PeOple have a far greater :!
often self defeating trW"Upeting capactty for endurmg disasters
;:
hard times . Newspapers are than for preventing them," and ;
sending reporters out to the perhaps
the
current
~
railroad tracks to see 1f negativiSm 1s a form of coo••
bumm10g IS on the rise (it is) ; dttion preparation. H it Is,
a New York magazme recently though, too bad; a wiser kind of
•
published an WJcomfortable, pessirrusm to employ in hours
·:
almost fond, journalistic ode to like this is to be negative
•J
the 1930s; a pOpular financial towards that which Is ex- :,..
consultant Pierre Rlnfret, has cess1vely negative.
advised everyone within sound
••
STUDENTSRAU.Y
:.!,
of his gloom to get their money
BANGKOK
(UPI)
::
and energies out of the U. S,
Thousands of demonab"aUng
"'
stock market
Saturday
led
:;
To be sure, 1t should not be students
mounting
public
opposition
to
::
said that tbe times, bad, have
:;
been created by the media ; the return from American exile
.:;
events are , the culprits. Six of ousted military sb"ongman
••
million are jobless, the stock Thanom Kittikachorn less than
a
ihonth
before
the
first
~
exchange is off 400 pomts and
electioo
of
a
Thai
clvlllan
ci
-Hubert Hwnphrey reminda us
:!
that consumer prices have government In more than a
rtsen 53 per cent in seven quarter -century. About
stu.dents rallied at 'j'ham·
years.
masat
University to denounce
"Bologna is now a luxury
Thanom.
I
1tem," as Baltlmore clty
councilwoman Barbara
REBUILDfNG BEGINS
~
Mikulski puts it, adding the
DARWIN (UPI) - The
:l
truism that everybody seems Australian government
~
baffled as to solutions and that
Saturday turned to ,the $1
::
the government's current
billion task of rebuilding Its
::
actions in the crisis resemble northern gateway while
~
nothing so much as "!be
speeding up the mass
"
rearranging of the deck cba1rs evacuation of residents in a to.
'l
on the T1tamc."
plane air shuttle from the
,.
Yet understandable as the
cyclone • devastated city. ,
concern and worries are, the
Prime Mmister E. Gough · "
nation's pantc may be apWh!Uam sai&lt;ll6,000 peaple had
;
proaching that of a self- been fiown out of the city by
:1:
fulfilling prophecy. A few Sat!R'day night and plans wel-e
;
months ago, the talk of
to reduce Darwin's QOPulatlon
,.:i
dep~ssion was as much camp to about 10,1100 from 'lhe usual
as anything, a throwback fad 45,000 by New Year's Dav
I

-"

GOING OUT
OF BUSINESS

SALE

daughters, Angela and Susan,
are
now
residtng
m
Haze lwood, Mo , a s uburb
of St LouiS, where they par·
hctpate m many commumty
activ1hes One of John's most
recent activtbes 1s actmg as a
McDonnell Douglas CorporatiOn AdviSor m nearby St
LouiS CoWJly for a company
sponsored JW110r Achtevement
Progr am fer h1gh school
students
John and hiS family recently
spent a fevt days m Pomeroy
vtslltng h1s mother, Mrs . Mary
K"nzelman,
and
oth e r
relatives

WORW ALMANAC
FACTS

BARGAINS

Mr. Eddy is
near record
POMEROY - For the f1rs l
time m 10 years, the monthly
Clrculal!on of the Me1gs Book
mobtle, " Mr Eddy" has h1t
almost 105,000 volumes w1lh
two days remammg
As of Frtday, the monthly
ctrculatton of the umt had
reached 104,353 for December
The schedule for Monday and
Tuesday m Me1gs County mcludes
MONDAY
Harrtsonv tlle, 6 to 6 30 p m ,
Wolf Pen, 6 45 to 7 15
TIJESDAY
Gravel H1ll, 9 30 a m. , Park
Street , 10 30 , Hobs on and
vtctmly ( Rl 7), 11 30 , MelgsGallta Line, I p.m , Leadmg
Creek Rd , 2, Bradbw-y, 3,
Rutland ( Braley's), 4, New
Lima Road , 5, Cook Gap H1il ,
6 30, Old Rt 7, 7, and EnterpriSe, 7 30

on Friday
The 1875 World Alm a nac
recorded that m 1874, for the
first ttme smce the Ctval War
the Umted Slates elected a
DemocratiC House or
Repre se nt at l\:es
wtth
Democrats winntn g 1n
lrad !llonal Republican
strongholds Jt was noted that
although Ulysses S Gra nt had
been overwhelmmgly r e
elected two years prevwusly
the swmg fro m Republican to
Democrat reflected the gradual
altntwn of Repubitcan strength
dur mg Grants two term s

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
G1fl frwlcakes can always be
used for doorstops
Thought for the day Would
YOU like to deal wtlh the person you see In lbe m1rror each

GALLIPOLIS - No one was
IOJW"ed or charged m three
trafftc acctdents mvesltgaled
Frtday by ctty pollee offiCers
The f1rst occurred at 9 05
a m on the parkmg lot at the
Oh10 Valley Bank where an
a uto drtven by LuAnne DaviS,
18, Galhpohs, struck the rear
end of a car operated by
Thomas S Weaver , 22, of
Galhpohs
A second colllswn occw-red
on Ftrst Ave and State St
where a n auto driv e n by
Palrtck B Davts on, 18 ,
Galhpohs, pulled mto the path
of a car operated by Ellls Paul
Hudson, 40, of Prospect, Ohw .
There was mmor damage to
both cars
A !mal mishap occw-red at
the laundromat on Eastern
Ave \\here an auto dr1ven by
Kalherme D Gardener, 20, of
AddiSon , backed mlo a car
owned by Stanford 0 Cox, 23,
of Galhpohs

mornmg?

412-414 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, ll.

the Collins report.
'

By Oakley Collins
State Senator-Elect
IRONTON - The first meetmg o,f the lllth
General Assembly occurs next Jan. 6 That
f1rst week will be a hect1c one Members and
the1r famthes will be m Columbus for the
sweanng-111 ceremoni es Rules for lhe
operatiOn of the House and Senate wtll be
cons tdered Members w1ll be assigned to
committees
In additton , 1t IS expected that the
Democrats, who now cont rol both the House
and the Senate - durmg the last sess ton ,
Republtcans held the Senate - w!ll attempt to
pass a number of purely pohttcal meas w-es
before lame duck Governor G!lltgan 's term of
off1ce expires
The reason for the haste 1S tha t, due to a
nuke m the Oh10 Consl!lut10n, members of the
legiSlature are sworn m one week earher than
the Governor a nd other slate officers The
Democrats m the iegtslalw-e wtll have to deal
wtth Republican Governor Rhodes after that
f1rsl week of the sess10n, so they're lr)mg to gel
what they conSider to be unporlant legislatwn
before a more fnendly a udience
HERE 'S SOME PRACTICAL advtce on
how to make your vmce heard on leg!Siat ton
already proposed m Columbus, or on leg1slat1on
that you feel should be offered
W1th thousands of separate p1eces of
legtslatlon to consider every yeHr, legtslators tn
Columbus need the op1ruon , adv tce, and
specialized knowledge of !herr constituents to
gu1de them It IS 1mposstble for any legiSlator
to havedetatled knowledge of the techmcah t1e'

Instability could beset
jobless insurance fund
COLUMBUS - The present
method of fm a nc tn g the
Unemplo yment
Insuran ce
Trust Fund places the future
stabth ty of the fund tn pen!, the
Ohw Bureau of Employment
Serv ices \\as told last week by
a n Oh10 Stale Umver51 ty
researcher
ThiS, accord tng to OBES
Admmtslrat or Wtlham E
Garn es, v. as the m os t
SlgDiftcan l ftndtng of the study
cond ucted by ,Je rry L
Wi seman, co nce rmn g t he
f1nancmg of unem pl oyment
compensatiOn m OhiO over the
nex t ten year::;
Garnes satd the study made
no effort to predtcl the futw-e
It d1d , however , mea s ure
prospec llve costs and beneft ts
under favorable a n d un favorable cconomJc assumpti ons ,
under legislative
assumptwns whtch entailed no
hberahzatwn of the cw-re nt
la w , under some 'tl.htch exU, nded potenllal dw-alwn and
mcreased maxtmwn benef1 ts,
and under some wh tch m-

cr ease d
em ployer
co ntnbutwns
' Th e fl extbie max 1mum
weekly benefit provtston m the
cw-rent law," the s tudy pomted
out, 'w tll slgntft cantly ra1se
the average 1o1 eekiy beneft t
amount over the next decade
The result ts a lug her leve l of
annual benefi ts fot any gtven
level of unemployment, " the
OBES Admtmstralor sa td
Garnes noted that the Ohto
Unemployment Trus t Fund
totaled over $792 mtlhon on
Nov 30, 1974, and under s table
economic condittons, was m no
1mmed tate danger However,
even under stable economu:
conditions, current statutory
provtstons v.hiCh may escalate
be nefit
cost5
wtlh oul
co rre spondtn gly mc reasmg
employer con tnbuttons could
re duce the fund to a
'dangerously low level "
Present economic condttJons
tnd!Cale that we may be m a
seve re recess ion Such a
recessiOn , 1f prolonged, could
raptdly
accelerate
the
red uchon of the fund to a poml
of ms olvency ," Garnes sa 1d

GALUP04S
DfJLV TRIBUNE
~ Thlrd Xve Galllpoh.!l OhiO i56.'1l
' Publiahed every w~kday evenmg ex
rept Saturday Soecond Class Posl8ge Pa1d

at GalllPQ!.ia, Ohio 45631
~
TilE DAliA" SENTINEL
Ill Court Sl Pomeroy 0 45769
Publb!IEd every weekday evemn11 except
Sa turday i.ntered.f! second class nuulmg
matter at Pomeroy, Ohio POIJt Offl~
By carrier dally and Sunday liOc per
"eek Motor route $2 60 per mop.lfl
'
MAIL

FROM 1 TO 6 PM

.

DAY NEW

Dream '~

W1ll Be Playrng At The

CROWN CAFE

In Jackson, Ohto
• P M. trt 2 A.M
Admtsston S3 00 per person.
Reservations now betng
accepted

COLO\\ ·
+

•

/'/wain•

Tomght Thru
tuesday
~~----."-&lt;",

/

...... ~ ·· -"'""~~"'­
~

-~

High country adventure!

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
DEC 29
LADY KUNG FU
and

OUR TIME
( Tec hn•color)
Starr rng Pamela Sue Martin
I P G)

Show Starts at 7 p m.

CARTOON

AND

PARTY
DRESSES
PANT SETS
OR
PARTY DRESSES
WERE TO $25

PANT SETS
OR
PARTY DRESSES
WERE TO UO

PANT SETS OR
PARTY DRESSES
WERE TO S38

PANT SETS
OR
PARTY DRESSES
WERE TO S46

$15·
$20·
$25·
$28·

I

·1

(RESTAURANT
12-5 PM)

CLOSED AT 5 PM NEW YEAR'S EVE

•
=

"Eius1ve

Wtth Sandy Bv1cher"'t~ •

PARTY PANT
SETS

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
AS USUAL
SUNDAY, DEC. 29TH

..

ON ENTERPRISE
BIDWELL - Navy Ch1ef
Operaltons Spectahst Dents J
La Cr osse, husband of the
former MISs ElSie Sm1th of
Bidwell, recently parllclpated
1n a n am ph1b10us tramang
exercise wh.ie deployed to the
Western Pactftc aboard the
aircraft
nuclear-powere d
earner, USS Enterpnse

NEW YEAR'S EVE

OF ALL

Happy New Year

,..."

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADM ITTED - Shannon
Cremeans , Coolville ; Lomse
Eshelm an, Pomeroy; DoriS
Haynes, Pomeroy, Leo Jarvts,
Athens, L1sa Herald, Middleport , Brenda Sm1lh, Langs·
v11le, Shtr ley Smtlh , La ngsvt ile, Teresa Shll , Pomeroy ,
Do res Arno ld , Pomeroy,
Em1 iy Kuhn , Guysville
DISCHARGED - Robert
Waidmg, Roland Dodderer

and

CLEARANCE

f

A

•

CHARGED fN MURDERS
MARTINSVILLE, Va ( UP!)
- A local bwidmg company
employe was charged Friday
With ftve counts of mw-der and
one of rape m the &gt;laytngs of a
Henry CoWJly woman and her
four young chtldren Thw-sday
County Sheflff C P W1ll sa1d
the 34-year old suspect, Eddy
Lee Thomas, had not admitted
kilhng Mrs James Altff and
her fow- children Thomas was
employed at Naltonw1de
Homes 1n Martmsville where
the husband of the slam woman
also works, W1tt Said He was
held under bond of $100,000 No
trtal date has been set

Publlshed every Sunday by The Ohto
Valley Publishing Co

WISHES YOU

~

Monday and a chance of rain

or snow aboat Wednesday.
Highs will be in the 40s and
lo\\ er 50s Monday and In the
mid 30s to middle 40s on
Tuesday and Wednesday .
Lows will be in the 30s
Monday, dropping to the 20s
Tuesday and Wednesday.

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

MURPHY'S

.

EXTENDED FORECAST
A chance of showers

For Your Dancmg
Ltstentng Pleasure

I

..••

• •

of every btl! whiCh he must conSider
ThiS means that the leg!Sialor welcomes
yow- letters, even if you oppose a btl! Why ?
Because you are proVldmg hun w1th knowledge
he needs to make a deciSIOn
Every legislator conSiders a large number
of btlls on a wtde range of subj ects When you
wnte your legislator, your letter IS made much
more effecl!ve 1f you ca n refer to the parl!cular
b,ll that mterests you - for example, HB 478
(for House btlls) or SB 478 (for Senate btlls)
Another important element Is a brief
description of the bill's provisions, and an
explanation of the effect which these provisions
will have on you. Finally, you should offer your
advice to your legislator as to how, In your
opinion, he should cast his vote.
Remember, too, that a legiSlator 1S not
gomg to please all the people all the lime He's
got to use his JUdgment, after wetghing the
mterests of all the parltes mvolved. And often tl
w111 be necessary for hm1 to vote agamst a b1ll,
which he favors 10 pr10ctple, because 11 1S so
poor!) drafted that tt w1ll not accomplish the
des1req effect Your advtce IS considered
1be ultimate responSibillty, howe ver , sttll
remaulS m the man or woman m whtch the
Consl!lullon of the Stale of Oh1o a nd you, the
voters, have placed your trust That man or
woman IS your state representative or state
senator.
When the legtslature 1S m sesSion, ll usually
1S better to address your correspondence to me
at Columbus Wnte me 10 car e of the State
House, Columbus, Oh1o, 43215

I
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ON ENTERPRISE
The Gallipoll! Tribune in Ohio and West •
LONG BOTTOM - Chief v1rglnl8. Olle month S2 50, one year 118 00, J
Ma c hm !Sl Male Burl H 1 sit month!! t9 110 three months t6 00
ab.monthslll~
Larson, husband of the former 1 El5ewherel22per~ear
three months 16 :ill motor route $2 60
1
MISs Eleanor T Fredenck of : monlhly
The
DaUy
Sentinel
one
month
12
~
one
Long Bottom, recently paryear SUI 00!" all month! Stl 50 lhr@t
llc!pated m an amph1b10us
onths $6 OD Elsewhere m per ye.ar Slll
The end of the money comes
munthll $11 ~. three month!! 16 :;o motor
long before the end of the year lramm g e xerciSe
while route $2 60 monthly
deployed to th e Western
The Umterl PreM Inl.ematlonal lli e:rWinding up your affairs IS Pac1ftc aboa rd the nuclear. clwnvely entitled to the use for pubhcatlon
only fun II you're 8
aJI news dispatches credited lo th15
powered atrcraft carrier , USS 1C(newspaper
and abo the local news
watchmaker
Enterpme
publiahed herein

.....

ro,ooo

MIDDLEPORT - Two
defendants were fined and
two others forfeited bond m
the court of Mtddleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Frtday
mghl
Gene Canaday, Gallipolis,
forfetled a $50 bond posted on
assault and battery charge
and Kenny Gilkey, New
Haven, W. Va. , forfeited his
$100 bond posted for leaving
the scene of an accident.
Mtllard C.
Spaulding,
Middleport, was fmed $150
and costs and sentenced to
three days In Jail fur drtvmg
while Intoxicated and Oren
L. Ellis, Middleport, was
fined $15 and cos ts for ex·
cesslve s peed.

3 accidents

NOW IN PROGRESS
MANY-MANY-MANY

Bonds forfeited

SORRY • • •
No
Lay Away

G. C.
'

�•
~ - Tlw Sm1t b ~

............................................

Timt•:; - Seuinel. Sunday, Dec. 29. 1974

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Dorothy Countryman

Charlene Hoeflich

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Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy -Middleport

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College
News

•
Trial can be as humiliating as crzme

"Why was this law passed ?
Well, maybe one of our
prominent senators in those
days was accused of molesting

•

&lt;)&lt;) .2 ~~ 15()

• -

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:

a barmaid ... and he and his
learned colleagues passed this
law to protect themselves ...
this capricious law which does
not apply in any other crime."
- Frederick J. Ludwig,
Chief Ass'!. State Attorney,
Queens County, New York.
By Andra Medea and
Kathleen Thompson
(Last in a Series)
Onoe you get awa~ from a
rapist, or he leaves, the ordeal
isn't over. Since you probably
won't be thinking clearly
enough to make decisions then,
you ought to try to decide some

Riverview gardeners hold party
REEDSVII.I.F:

The

traditional Chris tmas party of
the Hiverview Garden Club
was held Wednesde:~y eveni ng
at the home of Mrs. Denver
Weber, with ¥.rs . E rn est

Whitehead as co-hostess. The
Weber home wa s decorated for
the holiday season. Roll ca ll
was answe red by .nembers
te llin g ctbout their mus t
tr easure d

Chr istma s

Brown . The door prize went to by the hostesses to the above
Mrs. Chadwell.
· named and Mrs. Frank Bise,
Prese nts for the gift ex- Mrs. Roy R. Hannum, Mrs.
chan ge were 'placed under a Donald Myers, Mrs . Gene
ligh!Pd decorated tree . Acting Young , and Mrs. R. E.
as Santa wa s Mrs. Osborne.
Williams, members , and a
RefreshmenL-; were served guest, Mrs . Warren Pickens.

gi ft.

l!lings now.

Devotions "The Birth of Jesus'

jan's Side

and a reading of a new form of
the Lord 's Prayer were

presented by Mrs. R. H.
Hannwn.
President Mrs. Harli ss
Frank thanked the committee

and all who helped make the
tree lighting a success. A thank

Miss Linda Kay Lewis
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Lewis, Rt. 2, Thurman, wish to armounce the engagement of
thetr only daughter, Linda Kay, to Jerry Michael Dean, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dean, Point Pleasant, W. Va. The
bride-elect is a 1973 graduate of Oak Hill High School while
her fiance is a 1970 graduate of Point Pleasant High School.
Both Linda and Jerry are presently employed by Robbins
and Myers, Gallipolis. A summer wedding is being plarmed.

you note wa s read from Mrs.
Mary Pierce for the flowers
s he received from the club. A
gift for Naomi Pickens and a

potted plant for Mrs. Gladys
Smi th had been purchased by
the club for their Christmas.
The annual Christmas Cookboo ks whic h are favorite
receipes of club members were

dtslributed to the members.
··.·.·=·-·=-~N These books were attractively
made
by
Mrs . J en ny

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

.t

·.·

The Inflation Fighter

Berkheimer and Mrs. Doris

Swain. The club
i!!i

.·.
.·:.

...

Wasteful conveniences

A good way to cut down on energy use is to eliminate electrical gadgets from your life. Separately these seldom use much
electricity, but they add up.
Think about this when you're purchasing a new item - do
you really need an electric knife sharpener, an electric coffee
grrnder , an electnc can opener? Or would a manual version do as
well if you kept it in good condition? - 0. J., Madison, Wise.
WISE FREEZING
Keep your freezer full. This prevents frost buildup in the
gaps, and is more efficient.
Try freezing leftover meat and serve them in a week rather
than the next night. With large items such as roasts or t~rkeys
try making your own TV dinners for nights when you don't want
to bother with cooking a full meal. -E.F., Madisonville Va.
Mn.KMONEY
Learn to use less-expensive forms of milk when possible. For
example, you can use nonfat dry milk in place of while fluid milk
•1

cooking.

Many people are also using the fortified nonfat dry milk for
beverages. You can mix a quart of dry milk with a quart of fluid
nulk for a closer approximation of the taste you're accustomed
to. - J.L.', Princeton, Mo.
..
COFFEE WARMER
After making a fresh pot of coffee, pour it immediately into a
thermos bottle or jug. This way the coffee stays hot for hours
without having to keep the percolater plugged in.
Coffee held in the thermos also stays fresh longer. - VMH,
Ashland, Ohio.
OVEN BAGS
Oven cooking bags can conserve energy. With these selfbasting bags, you won't need to open the oven door often to baste
which releases built up heat and makes the oven work harder.
You can also marinate less-expensive cuts of meat in these
bags. This may cut down on the amoont of lime you have to cook
the meat. And for an additional bonus, you won't have another
dish to wash. - P.K., Alliance, Neb.

:~r:?&amp;M·r····za=·=~===!==~~s:~======:.o:====:=:=r

!il
ll/1

Sacral

!!!!

Calendar~lf

TUESDAY
ANNUAL New Year's party
for members of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
f•milies and guests, beginning
9:30 p.m. Tuesday at post
home . Music by Armand,
organist.

WATCH SERVICE, 7:30
p.m., Ash St. Freewill Baptist
Church, Middleport. A number
of singing groups and several
ministers on hand to present

Mothers club
enjoys dinner
Cra dle to College Mothers
Club Christmas party w•s held
at 7 p.m. Dec. 14 in the
Springfield Grange Hall, Kerr.
The group enjoyed a meal and
fellowship .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Don Smith a.nd Missy, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Luckadoo Bill
Charlie and Susan, Mrs.' Caroi
Johnson, Mindy and Troy, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Pitchford and
Terry, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Twyman and Brandon, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Dee!, Gregg and
Todd, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Puller and Lisa, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Smith, Craig imd Clay,
Mr .. and Mrs. Jimmy Skidmore , Michelle and Brent Mr
and Mrs. Ron Er,;in, Tony and

voted

to

present ea ch with a small gift
in appreciution of their work.
For the prog ram Mrs .

Ronald Osborne read a poem .
Mrs . Her man

Grossnickle

conducted a cand le lighting
ceremony with Mrs. Lyle
Balderson. Mrs . Donald
Putman,
Mrs.
Ronald
Cowdery, Mrs. Frank, Mrs.
Steve Cowdery, Mrs. Ronald
Osborne,
Mrs. • Charles
Swogger, Mrs . Walter Brown,
Mrs. David Chadwell . and Mrs.
R. Larkins , taking part. Carols
were led by Mrs . Whitehead .
Games were conducted by
Mrs. Gene Wilson, with prizes

awarded to Mrs. Claremont
Harris, Mrs. Cowdery. Mrs.

Chadwell . an d Mrs. Walter

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Center, located at 220
Jackson Pike in the old County
Hom e Building, is open
Mond ay through Friday from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule of
events for this week is as

tm

DR. BRENDA M. HARMAN
COLUMBUS - Among the
graduates of Ohio State

by

Dmvthy

I

Are you going to report it to
the police? If so, are you going
to try for a conviction? That is,
' re you willing to go through
all the legal procedure•. the

University 's autumn quarter
exercises Dec. 13 was Brenda

Countryman

Mills Harm on who received
her Doctor of Dental Surgery
degree. Dr. Harman is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mills, Rt. 4, Circleville
and the grandda ughter of Mrs.
Stanley Dillon, Crown City.
Dr. Harman is a 1969
graduate of Logan Elm High
School and a member of the Mu
Mu Chapter of Delta Sigma
Delta Dental Fraternity. She is
also a" member of the Student

GALLIPOLIS - 1975 spreads before us, a new vista to be
explored. At this moment we do not know what it will bring u.s,
nor what we may expect to give it. It will nevertheless be a new
year, a clean slate, on which we may write many things.
Hopefully they'll be good things.
IN 1974 we've seen many things, good and bad. Undoubtedly
our major concern in this department and in every depariment
of the paper has been the awakening awareness of drug and
alcohol abuse.
But there has been much good and light-hearted news: The
restoration of Grace Church; the purchase of the rose window for
the Episcopal Church; the work of Girl Scouts and community
folk to assist Operation Santa Claus; a second successful season
for "Gallia Country"; the opening of "Rivers of Destiny"; the
celebration of Pt. Pleasant's Bicentennial and the planning of
celebration for the national anniversary.
While shortages and problems continue to exist, and undoubtedly always will, we find a certain hope in those happy
events that have graced our pages . The birth of children and the
announcement of weddings and engagements have been
published here, as have records of good deeds done for other
folks and gifts to a world that has longed to receive them. We find
here the happy growth of children, marked by basketball scores
and cheerleading pictures, lists of honor rolls and stories of
birthday parties and we conclude that better times to live just
could not be.

Clinicians of the American
Dental
Association
and

American

Dental

Mrs. Mary fane Tennant

Miss Diane Sue Polcyn

APPOINTED -John Wolfe, Plant Manager, Graham
Plant, Foote Mmeral Co. announced the promotion of Mrs.
Mary Jane Tennant to Personnel Assistant effective Dec. 1,
1974. Mrs. T~nnant has been associated with the Personnel
Department for the past seven years as Benefits Scheduler
Administrator. In her new assignment, Mrs. Tennant's
duties will involve Persormel and Labor Relations al the
Graham Plant. Mrs. Terman! resides with her husband Carl
at Valley Haven Farms, New Haven, W. Va., where she
raises horses and is considered an excellent rider of show
horses in the area .

ANNOUNCE EN_GAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Donald
R. Polcyn, Gallipolis, annoonce the engagement of their
daughter, Diane SUe, to George F . Curry, Jr., son of George
F: Curry, Sr., Delaware, and Mrs. YvoMe Dennis, Cheshire.
Dtane lS a 1973 . graduate of Kyger Creek High School, a
sophomore at Rio Grande College and is employed by the
Kroger Company. George Is also a 1973 graduate of Kyger
Creek High School and is employed at Shunk Chromalloy
Bucyrus. Wedding plans are incomplete.
'

Student
University and sung with the
O.S.U. Symphonic Choir for
three years. She was the
director of · the Agriculture
College Chorale for the past
two years.
She has served as secretary
of her class for two years.
Dr. Harman and her
husband,
William,
are
residents of Upper Arlington .

conventions .

to

her

professional associations , Dr.
Harman has participated in
five medical professions ''Nite-

Out" shows at the Ohio State

REVIVAL BEGINS
The new Faith Temple
Church will begin a revival
New Year's Eve with a watch
service . The church is located
off SR 141 at Meadowlook
Subdivision, one mile west of
Gallipolis. Services each
evening at 7:30 . Public
welcome. Junior McGuire ,

pastor.

WHATEVER you may hope to accomplish in the New Year
before us, remember the beauty and strength of a sustaining available to deal with such
problems," he said.
faith and do not fail to share it with those around you .
" These are the times for
It is on this line that I would share with you a quotation from
individuals
to be aware of
a close friend, "It takes a lot of faith to plant a tree."
Truly there is no better symbol of the season than a tree and particular state - supported
one who has.tbe faith to plani that tree will have the faith to live services that lend a helping
in the world the tree will see when it is grown. If on this New hand ," Bates explained .
The department's services,
Year's weekend we can begin to live with the faith of a planted
tree and begin to leach our children that faith, then surely the the director said, are available
problems will be sorted out and we'll get going in the right to all Ohioans who are eligible,
direction again.
"to help people in need make it
A God powerful enough to aid the sapling's growth, who can through a critical period in
do for those withoot reason all that is needed, can surely-do for their lives and get back on their
we, who think, more than is needed: In the New Year, I wish each f&lt;ee t and able to carry on .
of you a prosperous journey to the star of Bethlehem, that you again. "
may find the Christ born in the manger and tha l your life may be
better for it.

COLUMBUS - Any Ohio
foll ows:
citizen not aware of all the
Monday, Dec. 30, Quilting, 9 many services provided for the
a.m.-3 p.m.; Music Time 1·3 needy by county welfare
'
p.m.
depariment should send for the
Tuesday, Dec. 31, Quilting, 9 Ohio Department of Public
a.m.-3 p.m.; New Year's Eve Welfare's free pamphlet, "A
Party, 8 p.m.
Helping Hand. "
Wednesday ,
Jan .
1,
State Welfare Director
CLOSED.
Charles W. Bates said the
Thursday, Jan. 2, Blood pamphlet may be obtained free
Pressure Check, 1-2 p.m.
by writing to: "A Helping
Friday, Jan. 3, Art Class, 1-3 Hand," Ohio Department of
p.m.; Cards and Games, 7-9 Public Welfare, 32nd Floor
p.m
State Office Tower, 30 E. Broad
Hot meals are served daily St., Columbus, 43215.
and are sponsored by the
Bates said the pamphlet
Senior Nutrition Program.
gives a brief overview of all the
state welfare department's

(CLOSED TODAY)

IN THE
SILVER
BRIDGE
PLAZA

SPORTSWEAR

SALE

come as suddenly a~ a fire or a
plant layoff or as gradually as
the moun ling burden of conillness,
chronic
tinuing
unemployment or lack of skills
or education.

ON REGUlAR PASSBOOK
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

ON 1 YEAR CERTIRCATES OF DEPOSITS
•$1,000 MINIMUM

DECEMBER 29th THRU JANUARY 4th

DINNER BOX

ON 2 YEAR CERTIRCATES OF DEPOSITS
•$1,000 MINIMUM

3 PIECES CHICKEN
•
•

ON 2 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSITS
•~,000 MINIMUM

•

Did Santa Leave A Gift of Money
Under Your Tree?

•
•'
•••
•
•

~

33 Court Street, Gallipolis
Pomeroy

•FRENCH FRIES
•SLAW
eROLL

$149

Phone 446-0699

•
'

I

No Coupons · No Limit

THE ~ALLIPOliS .$AVINGS ...
AND LOAN .COMPANY
-""

.L PHONE 446-3832

the FBI es timates that onl y
one-sixth of all lega l rapes arc
reported, that a fra ction of
these result in arrests, a nd that

about one-te nth of the arrested
end in convictions, you beg in to
see how inadequately women

are protected by the law. Try to

sta te that the victim told them

Even if he does, it is highly
likely that he'll try to make a
deal with the rapist or his
she appeared to be upse t. l• wyer . The ~rosecutor will
Witnesses are an important pr obably offer to drop the rape
verification of your s tory.
charge if the man will plead
If you don 't see anyone, call a guilty to some lesser charge.
fri e nd . Then ca ll the police at
If the rapist's lawyer feels
once. The soo ne r the rape ·is that he has a fairly good
about the rape immediately
after the oecurrence and that

reported, th e more likely it is
thCJt there wil l be an arreSt.
When the pollee come they

will take yo u and your friend to
the nea res t hos pital that
handles rape cases . Not all

hospitals do: in Chicago, for
example, we found that not

even most hospitals do . Their
reasons vary . Many Catholic
hospitals refuse rape cases
becau se proper treatm e nt
would include some measure
towara preventing pregnancy .

"Safe Savin.gs Since 1.886"

•

.,

--""

Your Order Will Be Waiting

&amp;qaltt li4nppr
''THAT OLD "AIIIIONi:D ClOODfiiUI''

2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

Haven, are announcing the
birth of their first child, a
seven pOWJd, nine DWlce son,

Aaron Matthew, Dec. 17 at the
Center.
Holzer Medical
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Hesson,
Point Pleasant, and Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Grate, Rutland,
are the paternal grandparepts.
Great-grandm.others are Mrs.
Garnett Hesson, Letart, w.
Va., and Mrs. E. C. Young,

Talmage Cottrell is now
recuperating at his home after
surgery at Riverside Hospital.
For those wishing to send cards
his address is 3313 Redding
Rd., Columbus, Ohio 43221.
LODGE TO MEET
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;A~, will meet in
regular session at 7:30 p.m.,
Thurtday, at th temple. Ail
Master Masons invited .

SKYLINE LANES
and . PRO-SHOP
"For That Person.al &amp; Professional Touch"
FEATURING

•24 New AMF lanes

c hance of winning the case, he

will probab ly take it to trial.
The tri•l itself can far surpass
anyth ing for sheer brutality . If
it can be proved that this
parti c ular man had intercourse with you, his lawyer

must try to make the jury
believe that you consented to it.
Having every part of your
daily life laid bare for the

GAU.IPOUS, OHIO ·

ONLY

DECEMBER 29TH
GROUP OF LADIES'

DRESS AND
CASUAL
SHOES
Hush Puppies - Risque

$goo

Speci•lizing in AMF &amp;
.Columbta Bowling Batts.

VALUES TO

PROFESSIONAL BALL FITTING.
DRILLING&amp; INSTRUCTION
AVAIL'ABI.E
SPECIAL RATES TO :
· CHURCH GROUPS
PARTIES. STUDENTS•

SUNDAY

Miss America · Naturalizers

Captain's Lounge

NO Subt.

OHIO DEPOSIT GUARANTEE FUND
SUBSTANTIAL INTEREST PENALT)' IS REQUIRED FOR EARLY
WITHDRAWAL ON CERnFICAtES Of DEPOSITS

·Phone 992·2590

a

esnack Bar and

ALL DEPOSITS GUARANTEED BY

'

indic2:1tion or seductiveness - a

rapist. If it can be shown that short skir t, smiling when the
you have ever slept with man r•pist first approached you who is not your husband, or is taken-as confirmation tha t
even that you have a you not only enjoyed the en·
1
'reputation" for not being counter but precipitated it.
chaste, your case will almost
It is a problem to prove
ce rtainly be lost.
anyone's thoughts beyond a
(However, four states - shadow of a doubt, but in the
California, Iowa, Florida and case of rape the courts have

reported to them. Of the men
a ctually charged \vith rape , a
very sma ll min ority are
convicted . One of the few
Studies we found on the subject
sel the figure at less than onetenth . When you cons ider tha t

~

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

The Automobile Club of Southern Ohio

troduced.)
Can you prove yourself to be
completely innocent to the D.
A. and the police' The burden
of proof is on you. The slightest

The police are unable, and to
som e extent, unwilling to make
arrests in most of the cases

--- &amp;tc.

ON 90 DAY CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS
•$1,000 MINIMUM

disasters or individual crisis
outstrip the resources of the

. Call or 'v isit

cumstances in which the
subject's chastity can be in-

raped.

S2'o

community

Turn it into a ye3r-c,round
AAA Membership. It's the
o!liY wav to get superb travel
a1ds and planning services
and protect · yourself on the
road (Emergency
Road
Service, Bail Bond and Personal Trave-l · Accident Insurance).

cir-

'

A crisis, Bates said, may

the program. Public invited.
WATCH NIGHT service, 7:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church with Troy
Fields, Dewey King preaching; Teresa, Mr . and Mrs. Jim
Pastor, Rev. O'Dell Manley, Vinson. Bri•n and Christopher,
invites the public.
B. J. Saunders.
A surprise visit from Santa
highlighed the evening with all
SEEN AND HEARD
the children receiving gifts.
GALLIPOLIS __:, Mr. and
Mrs . Lawrence Gates hosted
their son and daughter-in-law, Dayton, for the Christmas
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Gates
holidays.

the

,

ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS

day care and job training .

''Sometimes

reduce

NEW YEAR

NEW HIGHER INTEREST RATES

public social services, such as

is used in defense of an accused

s hould

HAPPY

NOW PAYING

services - Natural Disaster"
Relief, Food Stamps, Social
Services, Medical Assistance
Aid to Dependent Children and
General Relief - and explains
how to apply for these
programs and additional

prooerty. Therefore, he cannot

be convicted of rape.
The same property concept

states are expected to pass
s imilar laws. The new laws

Shower honors
Mrs. Butcher

FAMOUS BRAND LADIES"

GALLIPOLIS SAViNGS &amp; LOAN

Brochure lists services

A woman can not be raped by
her husband. The right to your
body belongs to him, not to you .
You don't have the right to
keep your husband froin his

pra c tice of introducing a
woman 's previous se xual
activ ity into rape tri a l
proceedings , and five more

keep all !.hat ·in mind when you trolling your emotions . If you
arc deciding whether, and how , seem cal m, you are unlikely to
lo dea l with the legal sys tem. be believed , whatever that
If you decide to go to the calmness may cos t you in
police , here are some things emotional energy . Your atyou can do so that you will be titude will be brought up in
take n se ri ously. Fir.s t, report court as evidence.
the rape to t11e first peop le yo u
If you can get the man
encounter , with one excep tion; arrested, you will have done
don't tell it to a strange man better than most women who
who is ~~ l one . ·
are raped. After the arrest, the
Must states accept th e prosecutor will take over. He
testimony of persons who will may decide not to prosecute .

reason . Sur ely no woman ha s
consented to intercourse if the
man has to hold o knife to her
throat. But if she wns hitchhiking or in the man's apartm e nt, she is going tu have a
hard time proving tha t she was

~
I Events .i

individual or the voluntary
comm unity services generally

HAPPY NEW VEAR.

women as property.

sl&lt;tntiatilly do away with the

stretc hed the point beyond all

Christmas party enjoyed

She is the on ly three-time
representative to the Student
Table Clinics at · the National
American Dental Association
addi lion

individu•L The official laws of
this country reflect these attitudes perfecUy : They trea t

Mieltigan ~ recently passed
l('g is lati on that will sub ·

POMEROY . - The Meigs
court, and having every past
action interpreted as evidence
Senior Citizens Center in the
MIDDLEPOR T - Mary
Pomeroy Junior High School is
of promiscuity , is a miserable ,
Camille
Harri
s,
infant
After
about
two
weeks
you
frustrating
experience.
open 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
should
be
checked
for
venereal
through , Friday
except
Obviously you need a very
POMEROY - While Christmas Day was not all it might Kenneth Harris. Columbus, disease s ince there is now a good case to make going to ·
holidays. Closed Wednesday.
have been for Leo and Jearmie Smith, now living in Berrien was christened Sunday at gvnorrhea epidemic in this . cour t worthwhile. Even if you
Jan. I for New Year's.
Springs,
Mich., after spending years in Middleport, it did have Heath United Methodist country.
have a good case, you may not
Activities this week include:
some happy moments.
Churc
h,
Middleport.
Rev
.
As
soon
as
the
police
are
want to. There are those who
Monday, Dec. 30, Crafts,
SUffering from a collapsed lung, Leo remains hospitalized a t Robert Bumgarner officiated. contacted, they will begin argue that it is your duty to
Square Dancing.
Attending the ceremony questionin g you to get a clear prosecute if you can. We
Tuesday, Dec. 31, Cards and the Berrien Springs General HospitaL He was taken out of intensive care on Tuesday and on Christmas Day was granted the were the grandparents, Mr . description of the man. Try to believe that il takes a brave
Games, Quilting .
cooperate - the attacker may woman to follow a rape charge
Wednesday, Jan. I, New privilege of having a visit from the couple's 10-year-&lt;Jid triplets, and Mrs . Gene Harri s
Betty,
Barbara
and
Sam,
and
their
older
son,
Kenny.
Trearddur
Bay,
Wales
,
and
Dr
:
still be in the vicinity. After to the end . In our s ociety,
CLOSED.
GALLIPOLIS - The Tod- Mrs. Harold Walker and Mr. Year's Day Unfortunately, Leo's condition did not stabilize and he had to and Mrs . L. L. Lovshin. Shaker this. you will be asked to give prosecuting a rapist is an act of
NEW
YEAR.
HAPPY
dlers To Tassels Mothers and Mrs. Floyd Johnson .
Thursday, Jan. 2, Cards and be moved back into intensive care on Thursday . For him our New Heights ; Mr . and Mrs . R W. the details of the attack. This is courage. A woman who will do
League held th eir annual
Year's wish is improved health.
Committee members in Games, Crafts.
Harri s, Columbus ; Miss where your friend will be it is to be admired . But a
Christmas party at the
charge of the dinner were
Marjori e Harris , Sun City , important . Even if you are woman who will not do it
Friday, Jan. 3, Bowling 1-3
Shrine
Club .
Gallipolis
Carol Rupe, Phyllis Stewart, p,m.
GENE and Janet Harris and their 16-year-&lt;Jld daughter, Ariz .; Mr. and Mrs. John Blake capab le of talking about it, shouldn' t be regarded with
Husbands were guests.
Gail Smith and Joann Johnson .
Senior
Citizens
lunch Kathy, are here from Trearddur, Bay, Wales, and appear and Frank, Middleport ; Miss there arc some questions which contempt.
Before the buffet style dinner
delighted ta be back in the old hometown. Janet came early ·this
The next regular meeting
Excerpted from " Against
was served, Cart Gillespie said will be Jan . 21 at the home of program, II :30-12 :30 Monday month and Gene and Cathy arrived the middle of December. Nancy Harris, Columbus; Miss they have no need and no right
Pat Harris, Morehead, Ky.;
to ask. Your friend should be Rape," by Andra Medea and
through
Friday
except
grace.
Joann Johnson.
and Cathy will be returning Jan. 6, but Janet plans a longer Rob
Harris,
Marshall able to help you here by asking Kathleen Thompson. Copyright
holidays. No lunch served New Gene
After dinner several games
.
visit.
HWltinglon,
·and wha l the purpose of the (c) 1974 by Andra Medea and
University,
Year's Dav.
were enjoyed by everyone and
Christmas was very special for them as all the family Kathy Harris, Trearddur Bay, question is.
Kathleen
Thompson
by.
the members exchanged
gathered at the home of John and Margie Harris Blake and Wales ,
You're likely to run into arrangement
with
the
Chrisimas gifts. Secret sisters
young Frank in Middleport. There was Kenneth, his wife, and
The
family
was
joined
for
a
disbelief
and
suspicion
on
the
publsisher,
Farrar,
Straus
and
were revealed.
their three month old daughter, Mary Camille Columbus· buffet luncheon following the part of the police. If you are Giroux, Ind.
.
'
'
Those attending were Mr.
Nancy, who works in the pharmacy department at University christeni ng by Mr. and Mrs.
unmarried , if you look like a
(END SERIES(
and Mrs. Carl Gillespie, Mr.
SERVICE SLATED
Hospital; Pat, a junior at Morehead; Rob, a freshman at Mc.r- Marcus Chambers , Mid- hippie or are black, if you were
(Newspaper
Enterprise
and Mrs. Lester Plymale, Mr.
POMEROY- A four -night
shall, and Kathy, who, of course, attends school in Wales.
dleport, at the home of Mr. and on the streets after dark, if it Assn .)
and Mrs. Robert Gillesp;e, Mr. weekend service will be held at
The only member of the family missing was Mrs. Norma Mrs. Blake.
happened in your own home or
Editor 's Note : This conand Mrs. Glenn Ward, Mr. and the
Pomeroy
We sleyan
Hecox, physically unable to make the trip to Middleport. Mrs.
his home, if you were dressed cludes the series ·on rape
SUNDAY
Mrs. Charles Bostic, Mr. and Holiness Church with Rev.
Hecox, a long-time music teacher and a most gracious lady, has
provocatively or are ugly prevention that has run for the
Mrs. Kenneth Bostic, M:. and William Owen as speaker. REV. John Banks will preach resided in a nursing home in Columbus for the past couple of
any
of
these
or
a
hundred
other
last
five Sundays in the TimesMrs. Norman Stewart, Mr. and There will be special singing at Walnut Ridge Church, 7 p.m. ye .....
to
make
a
things
is
enough
Sentinel.
Anyone wishing more
TIIESDAY
Mrs. Arthur Rupe, Mr. and each night for the 7:30 ser· And, by the way, Kenny has now completed law school and is
policeman
refuse
to
believe
informution on starting a rape
WATCH NIGHT service at the associated with a firm in Columbus.
Mrs. J . D. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. vices. Rev. O'Dell Manley,
you.
crisis
counseling center or
Crown City United Methodist
Robert Taylor, Mr . and Mrs. pastor, extends an invitation to
Either
you
were
asking
for
it,
finding
out about new centers
Church, 8 p.m. until midnight.
Raymond DeLille, Mr. and the public.
IF THE dull, drab days of winter make you feel the same
or
you
are
simply
a
hysterical
that
are
opening should write
Speakers will be Rev. Richard way, perhaps you'd like to put a little excitement into your life
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
it
didn
'
t
happen
at
female
and
Rape Crisis Center Newsletter,
Graham, Rev . Earl Hinkle and with square dancing. Ask any member of the Shade River Belles Jennifer Butcher was recently
all.
So
the
people
to
whom
you
PO
Box 21001i, Washington, D.
honored with a surprise layette
Rev. Charles Lusher. Special ·
and Beaus Square Dance Club and they'lllellyou to "try it, you'll
turn
for
help
may
well
be
C.,
20009.
Rape victims needing
singing will be by the Shafer like it."
shower. Hostesses were Mrs .
,
hosti1e,
contemptuous
or
even
counse
lin
g are advised to
Family. Everyone welcome.
•
.Anyways, Thursday, Jan. 9, at 7 p.m. in the recreation Pat Carson and Mrs. Nora Rice amused. Having a friend with contact the. Columbus Rape
"
THERE will be a watch service building at Royal Oak Park, lessons on western style square and the shower was held at the you who believes you and Crisis Center, c-o Women
at the Centerpoint Freewill dancing will begin and the time to enroll Is now. You can do this Carson home on Broadway St., sympathizes with you can be
Against Rape, PO Box 4442,
Baptist Church, 7:30p.m. Rev.
by either calling Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell of Chester Road, or Roy Middleport.
very important.
Trivillage
Station, Columbus,
Games were played with
Elmer Hill, and Rev. Don Price Test, 304-773-4910.
Don't
worry
about
Ohio 43212 (Phone: 614-221awarded .
being
will bring the messages.
The lessons are given on Thursday nights over a several prizes
restraining
yourself
or
con4447).
Special singing. Rev. W. E. week period and is so far as attire Is concerned, it's kind of Refreshments were served
From the PEDDLER
from a buffet table carry ing
Curfman invites the public.
~~come as you are/' real casual.
"
out the layette theme in pink
WATCH service at the
330 Second Avenul
At the PANTRY
1974 MEIGS High School graduate, David Barnhart, made and blue. Attending were Mrs.
Prospect Baptist Church, 7:30
Butcher's
nei
g
hb
or
s
on
p.m. Different speakers and the President's Club at Ohio Institute of Technology, Columbus,
special singers. F.veryone this past quarter. David, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wllliam Barnhart, Broadway Street, Mrs . Grace
welcome.
came up with a straight "A" for the first quarter there . He's Johnson, Mrs. Phyllis Baker,
All Christma~ Trim Now 40% Off.
majoring in electronics. In addition to carrying a full load at the Mrs. Carrie Kennedy , Mrs.
THURSDAY
Ethel Hatfield, Mrs . Alice
- - State Street - - - -Gallipolis, Ohio ----' VINTON Chapter OES 3i5 college, he works parttime to help with his expenses.
Robeson , Mrs. Char lotte
meet at the Masonic Temple, 8
IF ALL went well, Randy Burt and three of his OSU class- Hanning, Mrs. Aretta Brickles,
p.m. PoUuck.
mates should have arrived in California this morning. The four and the hostesses.
boys, Rose Bowl bound, left Thursday night and planned to drive
straight through stopping only to eat, in the hope of being there in
MEETING SET
Specially Priced
time to do some sightseeing before New Year's Day .
EAGLE RIDGE - There
2-oz.
wili be a Watch meeting Dec.
31 at 8 p.m. at Eagle Ridge
SON BORN
SEEN AND HEARD
Church
featuring the Bissell
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and
GALLIPOLIS - Friends family. The public is welcome .
Mrs. John W. Grate, New here have just learned that L.

Association .

In

confr on tations with the rapist,
t.h e cour troom scene?
The social mores about rape
have little or no concern with
protecting the woman as an

446-3362 '

'23-95
~lt ...

OPEN SUNDAY
1 PM TIL 5 PM

"All New AMF Equipment"
•

Ohio

. ,SILVER 8RIDGE

PL4ZA

•

�•
~ - Tlw Sm1t b ~

............................................

Timt•:; - Seuinel. Sunday, Dec. 29. 1974

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Dorothy Countryman

Charlene Hoeflich

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Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy -Middleport

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College
News

•
Trial can be as humiliating as crzme

"Why was this law passed ?
Well, maybe one of our
prominent senators in those
days was accused of molesting

•

&lt;)&lt;) .2 ~~ 15()

• -

~,~..

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a barmaid ... and he and his
learned colleagues passed this
law to protect themselves ...
this capricious law which does
not apply in any other crime."
- Frederick J. Ludwig,
Chief Ass'!. State Attorney,
Queens County, New York.
By Andra Medea and
Kathleen Thompson
(Last in a Series)
Onoe you get awa~ from a
rapist, or he leaves, the ordeal
isn't over. Since you probably
won't be thinking clearly
enough to make decisions then,
you ought to try to decide some

Riverview gardeners hold party
REEDSVII.I.F:

The

traditional Chris tmas party of
the Hiverview Garden Club
was held Wednesde:~y eveni ng
at the home of Mrs. Denver
Weber, with ¥.rs . E rn est

Whitehead as co-hostess. The
Weber home wa s decorated for
the holiday season. Roll ca ll
was answe red by .nembers
te llin g ctbout their mus t
tr easure d

Chr istma s

Brown . The door prize went to by the hostesses to the above
Mrs. Chadwell.
· named and Mrs. Frank Bise,
Prese nts for the gift ex- Mrs. Roy R. Hannum, Mrs.
chan ge were 'placed under a Donald Myers, Mrs . Gene
ligh!Pd decorated tree . Acting Young , and Mrs. R. E.
as Santa wa s Mrs. Osborne.
Williams, members , and a
RefreshmenL-; were served guest, Mrs . Warren Pickens.

gi ft.

l!lings now.

Devotions "The Birth of Jesus'

jan's Side

and a reading of a new form of
the Lord 's Prayer were

presented by Mrs. R. H.
Hannwn.
President Mrs. Harli ss
Frank thanked the committee

and all who helped make the
tree lighting a success. A thank

Miss Linda Kay Lewis
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Lewis, Rt. 2, Thurman, wish to armounce the engagement of
thetr only daughter, Linda Kay, to Jerry Michael Dean, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dean, Point Pleasant, W. Va. The
bride-elect is a 1973 graduate of Oak Hill High School while
her fiance is a 1970 graduate of Point Pleasant High School.
Both Linda and Jerry are presently employed by Robbins
and Myers, Gallipolis. A summer wedding is being plarmed.

you note wa s read from Mrs.
Mary Pierce for the flowers
s he received from the club. A
gift for Naomi Pickens and a

potted plant for Mrs. Gladys
Smi th had been purchased by
the club for their Christmas.
The annual Christmas Cookboo ks whic h are favorite
receipes of club members were

dtslributed to the members.
··.·.·=·-·=-~N These books were attractively
made
by
Mrs . J en ny

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

.t

·.·

The Inflation Fighter

Berkheimer and Mrs. Doris

Swain. The club
i!!i

.·.
.·:.

...

Wasteful conveniences

A good way to cut down on energy use is to eliminate electrical gadgets from your life. Separately these seldom use much
electricity, but they add up.
Think about this when you're purchasing a new item - do
you really need an electric knife sharpener, an electric coffee
grrnder , an electnc can opener? Or would a manual version do as
well if you kept it in good condition? - 0. J., Madison, Wise.
WISE FREEZING
Keep your freezer full. This prevents frost buildup in the
gaps, and is more efficient.
Try freezing leftover meat and serve them in a week rather
than the next night. With large items such as roasts or t~rkeys
try making your own TV dinners for nights when you don't want
to bother with cooking a full meal. -E.F., Madisonville Va.
Mn.KMONEY
Learn to use less-expensive forms of milk when possible. For
example, you can use nonfat dry milk in place of while fluid milk
•1

cooking.

Many people are also using the fortified nonfat dry milk for
beverages. You can mix a quart of dry milk with a quart of fluid
nulk for a closer approximation of the taste you're accustomed
to. - J.L.', Princeton, Mo.
..
COFFEE WARMER
After making a fresh pot of coffee, pour it immediately into a
thermos bottle or jug. This way the coffee stays hot for hours
without having to keep the percolater plugged in.
Coffee held in the thermos also stays fresh longer. - VMH,
Ashland, Ohio.
OVEN BAGS
Oven cooking bags can conserve energy. With these selfbasting bags, you won't need to open the oven door often to baste
which releases built up heat and makes the oven work harder.
You can also marinate less-expensive cuts of meat in these
bags. This may cut down on the amoont of lime you have to cook
the meat. And for an additional bonus, you won't have another
dish to wash. - P.K., Alliance, Neb.

:~r:?&amp;M·r····za=·=~===!==~~s:~======:.o:====:=:=r

!il
ll/1

Sacral

!!!!

Calendar~lf

TUESDAY
ANNUAL New Year's party
for members of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
f•milies and guests, beginning
9:30 p.m. Tuesday at post
home . Music by Armand,
organist.

WATCH SERVICE, 7:30
p.m., Ash St. Freewill Baptist
Church, Middleport. A number
of singing groups and several
ministers on hand to present

Mothers club
enjoys dinner
Cra dle to College Mothers
Club Christmas party w•s held
at 7 p.m. Dec. 14 in the
Springfield Grange Hall, Kerr.
The group enjoyed a meal and
fellowship .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Don Smith a.nd Missy, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Luckadoo Bill
Charlie and Susan, Mrs.' Caroi
Johnson, Mindy and Troy, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Pitchford and
Terry, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Twyman and Brandon, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Dee!, Gregg and
Todd, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Puller and Lisa, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Smith, Craig imd Clay,
Mr .. and Mrs. Jimmy Skidmore , Michelle and Brent Mr
and Mrs. Ron Er,;in, Tony and

voted

to

present ea ch with a small gift
in appreciution of their work.
For the prog ram Mrs .

Ronald Osborne read a poem .
Mrs . Her man

Grossnickle

conducted a cand le lighting
ceremony with Mrs. Lyle
Balderson. Mrs . Donald
Putman,
Mrs.
Ronald
Cowdery, Mrs. Frank, Mrs.
Steve Cowdery, Mrs. Ronald
Osborne,
Mrs. • Charles
Swogger, Mrs . Walter Brown,
Mrs. David Chadwell . and Mrs.
R. Larkins , taking part. Carols
were led by Mrs . Whitehead .
Games were conducted by
Mrs. Gene Wilson, with prizes

awarded to Mrs. Claremont
Harris, Mrs. Cowdery. Mrs.

Chadwell . an d Mrs. Walter

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizens Center, located at 220
Jackson Pike in the old County
Hom e Building, is open
Mond ay through Friday from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule of
events for this week is as

tm

DR. BRENDA M. HARMAN
COLUMBUS - Among the
graduates of Ohio State

by

Dmvthy

I

Are you going to report it to
the police? If so, are you going
to try for a conviction? That is,
' re you willing to go through
all the legal procedure•. the

University 's autumn quarter
exercises Dec. 13 was Brenda

Countryman

Mills Harm on who received
her Doctor of Dental Surgery
degree. Dr. Harman is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mills, Rt. 4, Circleville
and the grandda ughter of Mrs.
Stanley Dillon, Crown City.
Dr. Harman is a 1969
graduate of Logan Elm High
School and a member of the Mu
Mu Chapter of Delta Sigma
Delta Dental Fraternity. She is
also a" member of the Student

GALLIPOLIS - 1975 spreads before us, a new vista to be
explored. At this moment we do not know what it will bring u.s,
nor what we may expect to give it. It will nevertheless be a new
year, a clean slate, on which we may write many things.
Hopefully they'll be good things.
IN 1974 we've seen many things, good and bad. Undoubtedly
our major concern in this department and in every depariment
of the paper has been the awakening awareness of drug and
alcohol abuse.
But there has been much good and light-hearted news: The
restoration of Grace Church; the purchase of the rose window for
the Episcopal Church; the work of Girl Scouts and community
folk to assist Operation Santa Claus; a second successful season
for "Gallia Country"; the opening of "Rivers of Destiny"; the
celebration of Pt. Pleasant's Bicentennial and the planning of
celebration for the national anniversary.
While shortages and problems continue to exist, and undoubtedly always will, we find a certain hope in those happy
events that have graced our pages . The birth of children and the
announcement of weddings and engagements have been
published here, as have records of good deeds done for other
folks and gifts to a world that has longed to receive them. We find
here the happy growth of children, marked by basketball scores
and cheerleading pictures, lists of honor rolls and stories of
birthday parties and we conclude that better times to live just
could not be.

Clinicians of the American
Dental
Association
and

American

Dental

Mrs. Mary fane Tennant

Miss Diane Sue Polcyn

APPOINTED -John Wolfe, Plant Manager, Graham
Plant, Foote Mmeral Co. announced the promotion of Mrs.
Mary Jane Tennant to Personnel Assistant effective Dec. 1,
1974. Mrs. T~nnant has been associated with the Personnel
Department for the past seven years as Benefits Scheduler
Administrator. In her new assignment, Mrs. Tennant's
duties will involve Persormel and Labor Relations al the
Graham Plant. Mrs. Terman! resides with her husband Carl
at Valley Haven Farms, New Haven, W. Va., where she
raises horses and is considered an excellent rider of show
horses in the area .

ANNOUNCE EN_GAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Donald
R. Polcyn, Gallipolis, annoonce the engagement of their
daughter, Diane SUe, to George F . Curry, Jr., son of George
F: Curry, Sr., Delaware, and Mrs. YvoMe Dennis, Cheshire.
Dtane lS a 1973 . graduate of Kyger Creek High School, a
sophomore at Rio Grande College and is employed by the
Kroger Company. George Is also a 1973 graduate of Kyger
Creek High School and is employed at Shunk Chromalloy
Bucyrus. Wedding plans are incomplete.
'

Student
University and sung with the
O.S.U. Symphonic Choir for
three years. She was the
director of · the Agriculture
College Chorale for the past
two years.
She has served as secretary
of her class for two years.
Dr. Harman and her
husband,
William,
are
residents of Upper Arlington .

conventions .

to

her

professional associations , Dr.
Harman has participated in
five medical professions ''Nite-

Out" shows at the Ohio State

REVIVAL BEGINS
The new Faith Temple
Church will begin a revival
New Year's Eve with a watch
service . The church is located
off SR 141 at Meadowlook
Subdivision, one mile west of
Gallipolis. Services each
evening at 7:30 . Public
welcome. Junior McGuire ,

pastor.

WHATEVER you may hope to accomplish in the New Year
before us, remember the beauty and strength of a sustaining available to deal with such
problems," he said.
faith and do not fail to share it with those around you .
" These are the times for
It is on this line that I would share with you a quotation from
individuals
to be aware of
a close friend, "It takes a lot of faith to plant a tree."
Truly there is no better symbol of the season than a tree and particular state - supported
one who has.tbe faith to plani that tree will have the faith to live services that lend a helping
in the world the tree will see when it is grown. If on this New hand ," Bates explained .
The department's services,
Year's weekend we can begin to live with the faith of a planted
tree and begin to leach our children that faith, then surely the the director said, are available
problems will be sorted out and we'll get going in the right to all Ohioans who are eligible,
direction again.
"to help people in need make it
A God powerful enough to aid the sapling's growth, who can through a critical period in
do for those withoot reason all that is needed, can surely-do for their lives and get back on their
we, who think, more than is needed: In the New Year, I wish each f&lt;ee t and able to carry on .
of you a prosperous journey to the star of Bethlehem, that you again. "
may find the Christ born in the manger and tha l your life may be
better for it.

COLUMBUS - Any Ohio
foll ows:
citizen not aware of all the
Monday, Dec. 30, Quilting, 9 many services provided for the
a.m.-3 p.m.; Music Time 1·3 needy by county welfare
'
p.m.
depariment should send for the
Tuesday, Dec. 31, Quilting, 9 Ohio Department of Public
a.m.-3 p.m.; New Year's Eve Welfare's free pamphlet, "A
Party, 8 p.m.
Helping Hand. "
Wednesday ,
Jan .
1,
State Welfare Director
CLOSED.
Charles W. Bates said the
Thursday, Jan. 2, Blood pamphlet may be obtained free
Pressure Check, 1-2 p.m.
by writing to: "A Helping
Friday, Jan. 3, Art Class, 1-3 Hand," Ohio Department of
p.m.; Cards and Games, 7-9 Public Welfare, 32nd Floor
p.m
State Office Tower, 30 E. Broad
Hot meals are served daily St., Columbus, 43215.
and are sponsored by the
Bates said the pamphlet
Senior Nutrition Program.
gives a brief overview of all the
state welfare department's

(CLOSED TODAY)

IN THE
SILVER
BRIDGE
PLAZA

SPORTSWEAR

SALE

come as suddenly a~ a fire or a
plant layoff or as gradually as
the moun ling burden of conillness,
chronic
tinuing
unemployment or lack of skills
or education.

ON REGUlAR PASSBOOK
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

ON 1 YEAR CERTIRCATES OF DEPOSITS
•$1,000 MINIMUM

DECEMBER 29th THRU JANUARY 4th

DINNER BOX

ON 2 YEAR CERTIRCATES OF DEPOSITS
•$1,000 MINIMUM

3 PIECES CHICKEN
•
•

ON 2 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSITS
•~,000 MINIMUM

•

Did Santa Leave A Gift of Money
Under Your Tree?

•
•'
•••
•
•

~

33 Court Street, Gallipolis
Pomeroy

•FRENCH FRIES
•SLAW
eROLL

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the FBI es timates that onl y
one-sixth of all lega l rapes arc
reported, that a fra ction of
these result in arrests, a nd that

about one-te nth of the arrested
end in convictions, you beg in to
see how inadequately women

are protected by the law. Try to

sta te that the victim told them

Even if he does, it is highly
likely that he'll try to make a
deal with the rapist or his
she appeared to be upse t. l• wyer . The ~rosecutor will
Witnesses are an important pr obably offer to drop the rape
verification of your s tory.
charge if the man will plead
If you don 't see anyone, call a guilty to some lesser charge.
fri e nd . Then ca ll the police at
If the rapist's lawyer feels
once. The soo ne r the rape ·is that he has a fairly good
about the rape immediately
after the oecurrence and that

reported, th e more likely it is
thCJt there wil l be an arreSt.
When the pollee come they

will take yo u and your friend to
the nea res t hos pital that
handles rape cases . Not all

hospitals do: in Chicago, for
example, we found that not

even most hospitals do . Their
reasons vary . Many Catholic
hospitals refuse rape cases
becau se proper treatm e nt
would include some measure
towara preventing pregnancy .

"Safe Savin.gs Since 1.886"

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Your Order Will Be Waiting

&amp;qaltt li4nppr
''THAT OLD "AIIIIONi:D ClOODfiiUI''

2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

Haven, are announcing the
birth of their first child, a
seven pOWJd, nine DWlce son,

Aaron Matthew, Dec. 17 at the
Center.
Holzer Medical
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Hesson,
Point Pleasant, and Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Grate, Rutland,
are the paternal grandparepts.
Great-grandm.others are Mrs.
Garnett Hesson, Letart, w.
Va., and Mrs. E. C. Young,

Talmage Cottrell is now
recuperating at his home after
surgery at Riverside Hospital.
For those wishing to send cards
his address is 3313 Redding
Rd., Columbus, Ohio 43221.
LODGE TO MEET
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;A~, will meet in
regular session at 7:30 p.m.,
Thurtday, at th temple. Ail
Master Masons invited .

SKYLINE LANES
and . PRO-SHOP
"For That Person.al &amp; Professional Touch"
FEATURING

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c hance of winning the case, he

will probab ly take it to trial.
The tri•l itself can far surpass
anyth ing for sheer brutality . If
it can be proved that this
parti c ular man had intercourse with you, his lawyer

must try to make the jury
believe that you consented to it.
Having every part of your
daily life laid bare for the

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indic2:1tion or seductiveness - a

rapist. If it can be shown that short skir t, smiling when the
you have ever slept with man r•pist first approached you who is not your husband, or is taken-as confirmation tha t
even that you have a you not only enjoyed the en·
1
'reputation" for not being counter but precipitated it.
chaste, your case will almost
It is a problem to prove
ce rtainly be lost.
anyone's thoughts beyond a
(However, four states - shadow of a doubt, but in the
California, Iowa, Florida and case of rape the courts have

reported to them. Of the men
a ctually charged \vith rape , a
very sma ll min ority are
convicted . One of the few
Studies we found on the subject
sel the figure at less than onetenth . When you cons ider tha t

~

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

The Automobile Club of Southern Ohio

troduced.)
Can you prove yourself to be
completely innocent to the D.
A. and the police' The burden
of proof is on you. The slightest

The police are unable, and to
som e extent, unwilling to make
arrests in most of the cases

--- &amp;tc.

ON 90 DAY CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS
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disasters or individual crisis
outstrip the resources of the

. Call or 'v isit

cumstances in which the
subject's chastity can be in-

raped.

S2'o

community

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AAA Membership. It's the
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and protect · yourself on the
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cir-

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A crisis, Bates said, may

the program. Public invited.
WATCH NIGHT service, 7:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church with Troy
Fields, Dewey King preaching; Teresa, Mr . and Mrs. Jim
Pastor, Rev. O'Dell Manley, Vinson. Bri•n and Christopher,
invites the public.
B. J. Saunders.
A surprise visit from Santa
highlighed the evening with all
SEEN AND HEARD
the children receiving gifts.
GALLIPOLIS __:, Mr. and
Mrs . Lawrence Gates hosted
their son and daughter-in-law, Dayton, for the Christmas
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Gates
holidays.

the

,

ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS

day care and job training .

''Sometimes

reduce

NEW YEAR

NEW HIGHER INTEREST RATES

public social services, such as

is used in defense of an accused

s hould

HAPPY

NOW PAYING

services - Natural Disaster"
Relief, Food Stamps, Social
Services, Medical Assistance
Aid to Dependent Children and
General Relief - and explains
how to apply for these
programs and additional

prooerty. Therefore, he cannot

be convicted of rape.
The same property concept

states are expected to pass
s imilar laws. The new laws

Shower honors
Mrs. Butcher

FAMOUS BRAND LADIES"

GALLIPOLIS SAViNGS &amp; LOAN

Brochure lists services

A woman can not be raped by
her husband. The right to your
body belongs to him, not to you .
You don't have the right to
keep your husband froin his

pra c tice of introducing a
woman 's previous se xual
activ ity into rape tri a l
proceedings , and five more

keep all !.hat ·in mind when you trolling your emotions . If you
arc deciding whether, and how , seem cal m, you are unlikely to
lo dea l with the legal sys tem. be believed , whatever that
If you decide to go to the calmness may cos t you in
police , here are some things emotional energy . Your atyou can do so that you will be titude will be brought up in
take n se ri ously. Fir.s t, report court as evidence.
the rape to t11e first peop le yo u
If you can get the man
encounter , with one excep tion; arrested, you will have done
don't tell it to a strange man better than most women who
who is ~~ l one . ·
are raped. After the arrest, the
Must states accept th e prosecutor will take over. He
testimony of persons who will may decide not to prosecute .

reason . Sur ely no woman ha s
consented to intercourse if the
man has to hold o knife to her
throat. But if she wns hitchhiking or in the man's apartm e nt, she is going tu have a
hard time proving tha t she was

~
I Events .i

individual or the voluntary
comm unity services generally

HAPPY NEW VEAR.

women as property.

sl&lt;tntiatilly do away with the

stretc hed the point beyond all

Christmas party enjoyed

She is the on ly three-time
representative to the Student
Table Clinics at · the National
American Dental Association
addi lion

individu•L The official laws of
this country reflect these attitudes perfecUy : They trea t

Mieltigan ~ recently passed
l('g is lati on that will sub ·

POMEROY . - The Meigs
court, and having every past
action interpreted as evidence
Senior Citizens Center in the
MIDDLEPOR T - Mary
Pomeroy Junior High School is
of promiscuity , is a miserable ,
Camille
Harri
s,
infant
After
about
two
weeks
you
frustrating
experience.
open 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
should
be
checked
for
venereal
through , Friday
except
Obviously you need a very
POMEROY - While Christmas Day was not all it might Kenneth Harris. Columbus, disease s ince there is now a good case to make going to ·
holidays. Closed Wednesday.
have been for Leo and Jearmie Smith, now living in Berrien was christened Sunday at gvnorrhea epidemic in this . cour t worthwhile. Even if you
Jan. I for New Year's.
Springs,
Mich., after spending years in Middleport, it did have Heath United Methodist country.
have a good case, you may not
Activities this week include:
some happy moments.
Churc
h,
Middleport.
Rev
.
As
soon
as
the
police
are
want to. There are those who
Monday, Dec. 30, Crafts,
SUffering from a collapsed lung, Leo remains hospitalized a t Robert Bumgarner officiated. contacted, they will begin argue that it is your duty to
Square Dancing.
Attending the ceremony questionin g you to get a clear prosecute if you can. We
Tuesday, Dec. 31, Cards and the Berrien Springs General HospitaL He was taken out of intensive care on Tuesday and on Christmas Day was granted the were the grandparents, Mr . description of the man. Try to believe that il takes a brave
Games, Quilting .
cooperate - the attacker may woman to follow a rape charge
Wednesday, Jan. I, New privilege of having a visit from the couple's 10-year-&lt;Jid triplets, and Mrs . Gene Harri s
Betty,
Barbara
and
Sam,
and
their
older
son,
Kenny.
Trearddur
Bay,
Wales
,
and
Dr
:
still be in the vicinity. After to the end . In our s ociety,
CLOSED.
GALLIPOLIS - The Tod- Mrs. Harold Walker and Mr. Year's Day Unfortunately, Leo's condition did not stabilize and he had to and Mrs . L. L. Lovshin. Shaker this. you will be asked to give prosecuting a rapist is an act of
NEW
YEAR.
HAPPY
dlers To Tassels Mothers and Mrs. Floyd Johnson .
Thursday, Jan. 2, Cards and be moved back into intensive care on Thursday . For him our New Heights ; Mr . and Mrs . R W. the details of the attack. This is courage. A woman who will do
League held th eir annual
Year's wish is improved health.
Committee members in Games, Crafts.
Harri s, Columbus ; Miss where your friend will be it is to be admired . But a
Christmas party at the
charge of the dinner were
Marjori e Harris , Sun City , important . Even if you are woman who will not do it
Friday, Jan. 3, Bowling 1-3
Shrine
Club .
Gallipolis
Carol Rupe, Phyllis Stewart, p,m.
GENE and Janet Harris and their 16-year-&lt;Jld daughter, Ariz .; Mr. and Mrs. John Blake capab le of talking about it, shouldn' t be regarded with
Husbands were guests.
Gail Smith and Joann Johnson .
Senior
Citizens
lunch Kathy, are here from Trearddur, Bay, Wales, and appear and Frank, Middleport ; Miss there arc some questions which contempt.
Before the buffet style dinner
delighted ta be back in the old hometown. Janet came early ·this
The next regular meeting
Excerpted from " Against
was served, Cart Gillespie said will be Jan . 21 at the home of program, II :30-12 :30 Monday month and Gene and Cathy arrived the middle of December. Nancy Harris, Columbus; Miss they have no need and no right
Pat Harris, Morehead, Ky.;
to ask. Your friend should be Rape," by Andra Medea and
through
Friday
except
grace.
Joann Johnson.
and Cathy will be returning Jan. 6, but Janet plans a longer Rob
Harris,
Marshall able to help you here by asking Kathleen Thompson. Copyright
holidays. No lunch served New Gene
After dinner several games
.
visit.
HWltinglon,
·and wha l the purpose of the (c) 1974 by Andra Medea and
University,
Year's Dav.
were enjoyed by everyone and
Christmas was very special for them as all the family Kathy Harris, Trearddur Bay, question is.
Kathleen
Thompson
by.
the members exchanged
gathered at the home of John and Margie Harris Blake and Wales ,
You're likely to run into arrangement
with
the
Chrisimas gifts. Secret sisters
young Frank in Middleport. There was Kenneth, his wife, and
The
family
was
joined
for
a
disbelief
and
suspicion
on
the
publsisher,
Farrar,
Straus
and
were revealed.
their three month old daughter, Mary Camille Columbus· buffet luncheon following the part of the police. If you are Giroux, Ind.
.
'
'
Those attending were Mr.
Nancy, who works in the pharmacy department at University christeni ng by Mr. and Mrs.
unmarried , if you look like a
(END SERIES(
and Mrs. Carl Gillespie, Mr.
SERVICE SLATED
Hospital; Pat, a junior at Morehead; Rob, a freshman at Mc.r- Marcus Chambers , Mid- hippie or are black, if you were
(Newspaper
Enterprise
and Mrs. Lester Plymale, Mr.
POMEROY- A four -night
shall, and Kathy, who, of course, attends school in Wales.
dleport, at the home of Mr. and on the streets after dark, if it Assn .)
and Mrs. Robert Gillesp;e, Mr. weekend service will be held at
The only member of the family missing was Mrs. Norma Mrs. Blake.
happened in your own home or
Editor 's Note : This conand Mrs. Glenn Ward, Mr. and the
Pomeroy
We sleyan
Hecox, physically unable to make the trip to Middleport. Mrs.
his home, if you were dressed cludes the series ·on rape
SUNDAY
Mrs. Charles Bostic, Mr. and Holiness Church with Rev.
Hecox, a long-time music teacher and a most gracious lady, has
provocatively or are ugly prevention that has run for the
Mrs. Kenneth Bostic, M:. and William Owen as speaker. REV. John Banks will preach resided in a nursing home in Columbus for the past couple of
any
of
these
or
a
hundred
other
last
five Sundays in the TimesMrs. Norman Stewart, Mr. and There will be special singing at Walnut Ridge Church, 7 p.m. ye .....
to
make
a
things
is
enough
Sentinel.
Anyone wishing more
TIIESDAY
Mrs. Arthur Rupe, Mr. and each night for the 7:30 ser· And, by the way, Kenny has now completed law school and is
policeman
refuse
to
believe
informution on starting a rape
WATCH NIGHT service at the associated with a firm in Columbus.
Mrs. J . D. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. vices. Rev. O'Dell Manley,
you.
crisis
counseling center or
Crown City United Methodist
Robert Taylor, Mr . and Mrs. pastor, extends an invitation to
Either
you
were
asking
for
it,
finding
out about new centers
Church, 8 p.m. until midnight.
Raymond DeLille, Mr. and the public.
IF THE dull, drab days of winter make you feel the same
or
you
are
simply
a
hysterical
that
are
opening should write
Speakers will be Rev. Richard way, perhaps you'd like to put a little excitement into your life
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
it
didn
'
t
happen
at
female
and
Rape Crisis Center Newsletter,
Graham, Rev . Earl Hinkle and with square dancing. Ask any member of the Shade River Belles Jennifer Butcher was recently
all.
So
the
people
to
whom
you
PO
Box 21001i, Washington, D.
honored with a surprise layette
Rev. Charles Lusher. Special ·
and Beaus Square Dance Club and they'lllellyou to "try it, you'll
turn
for
help
may
well
be
C.,
20009.
Rape victims needing
singing will be by the Shafer like it."
shower. Hostesses were Mrs .
,
hosti1e,
contemptuous
or
even
counse
lin
g are advised to
Family. Everyone welcome.
•
.Anyways, Thursday, Jan. 9, at 7 p.m. in the recreation Pat Carson and Mrs. Nora Rice amused. Having a friend with contact the. Columbus Rape
"
THERE will be a watch service building at Royal Oak Park, lessons on western style square and the shower was held at the you who believes you and Crisis Center, c-o Women
at the Centerpoint Freewill dancing will begin and the time to enroll Is now. You can do this Carson home on Broadway St., sympathizes with you can be
Against Rape, PO Box 4442,
Baptist Church, 7:30p.m. Rev.
by either calling Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell of Chester Road, or Roy Middleport.
very important.
Trivillage
Station, Columbus,
Games were played with
Elmer Hill, and Rev. Don Price Test, 304-773-4910.
Don't
worry
about
Ohio 43212 (Phone: 614-221awarded .
being
will bring the messages.
The lessons are given on Thursday nights over a several prizes
restraining
yourself
or
con4447).
Special singing. Rev. W. E. week period and is so far as attire Is concerned, it's kind of Refreshments were served
From the PEDDLER
from a buffet table carry ing
Curfman invites the public.
~~come as you are/' real casual.
"
out the layette theme in pink
WATCH service at the
330 Second Avenul
At the PANTRY
1974 MEIGS High School graduate, David Barnhart, made and blue. Attending were Mrs.
Prospect Baptist Church, 7:30
Butcher's
nei
g
hb
or
s
on
p.m. Different speakers and the President's Club at Ohio Institute of Technology, Columbus,
special singers. F.veryone this past quarter. David, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wllliam Barnhart, Broadway Street, Mrs . Grace
welcome.
came up with a straight "A" for the first quarter there . He's Johnson, Mrs. Phyllis Baker,
All Christma~ Trim Now 40% Off.
majoring in electronics. In addition to carrying a full load at the Mrs. Carrie Kennedy , Mrs.
THURSDAY
Ethel Hatfield, Mrs . Alice
- - State Street - - - -Gallipolis, Ohio ----' VINTON Chapter OES 3i5 college, he works parttime to help with his expenses.
Robeson , Mrs. Char lotte
meet at the Masonic Temple, 8
IF ALL went well, Randy Burt and three of his OSU class- Hanning, Mrs. Aretta Brickles,
p.m. PoUuck.
mates should have arrived in California this morning. The four and the hostesses.
boys, Rose Bowl bound, left Thursday night and planned to drive
straight through stopping only to eat, in the hope of being there in
MEETING SET
Specially Priced
time to do some sightseeing before New Year's Day .
EAGLE RIDGE - There
2-oz.
wili be a Watch meeting Dec.
31 at 8 p.m. at Eagle Ridge
SON BORN
SEEN AND HEARD
Church
featuring the Bissell
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and
GALLIPOLIS - Friends family. The public is welcome .
Mrs. John W. Grate, New here have just learned that L.

Association .

In

confr on tations with the rapist,
t.h e cour troom scene?
The social mores about rape
have little or no concern with
protecting the woman as an

446-3362 '

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1 PM TIL 5 PM

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The Sunday Times- Sen Iinel, Sunday, Dec. 29, 1974

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The Sunday Times- Sen Iinel, Sunday, Dec. 29, 1974

.

'

'

'

ARMOUR STAR BOSTON BUTT
.

.

ARMOUR STAR

PORK
_STEAK
~

•

LB.
..____ _......,. ARMOUR
STAR-

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ARMOUR STAR

OR

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HOT DOG

SOLID HEADS

PKGS.

OF
8's

LB.
TONY'S PIZZA .

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PKG.

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Carpenter News, Event

.

.v
'

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED- Mr. antl Mrs. Ramie
Fox, Rt. 2, Albany, are aMouncing the engagement of their
daughter, Teresa Lynn Hayes , to Richard L. Beitzel, son of
the late Arlington Beitzel. The bride-elect is a senior at Meigs
High School. Her fiance, a 1973 graduate of Alexander High
School, is employed by Carl Crabtree, Albany. An open
church wedding is pla!Uled for Mar ch 29 .

Miss ]o Ann Hendricks

Miss Jane Ann Bahr

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E.
Hendricks, Newport, are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Jo Ann, to Robert
Stanley Coates, son of Mr. and Mrs . Robert Elberfeld, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and the late RobertS. Coates,&amp;. Miss llendricks,
a 1974 graduate of Marietta College, is employed in the WoU
Creek School District, Waterford, teaching history in the
seventh and eighth grades. Her fiance is a senior at Marietta
College where he is majoring in geology. Wedding plans arc
incomplete .

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr ; and Mrs. Victor
A. Bahr, Rt. I, Reedsville, are al&gt;nouncing the engagement
and approaching marriage of their daughter, Jane Ann, to
Roger D. Coates, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alva J. Coates, Rt. 1,
Minersville. Miss Bahr is a senior at Eastern High School.
Her fiance is an employee at Rigid Tool Co., Elyria. The open
church wedding will be an event of Jan. 11 at 2:30p.m. at the
South Bethel United Methodist Church on Silver Ridge. A
reception will be held at the U. M. Annex in Tuppers Plains.

By Charlene Hoeflich
POMEROY - The joy of the
season, surpassed only by the
significance of the ,birth of a
Saviour, is perhaps the
reuniting of famili es. F or
many it marks a once-a-year
time together. the exchange of
tokens
of
love.
the
strengthening of ties .
In the Bend area there were
many family celebrations of
Christmas.
For the family of Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Riggs, the observance of the holiday began
following the candlelight
service at Tr in it y Chu r c h

'
Christmas Eve . The coup!
opened their spacious an
elaborately decorated home
for an II p.m. dinner party.
Their guests were Larry
Tracy , New York City ; Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Hester, Jr.',
daug hters, Jil and Heidi, Ashville , N C.: Mr . and Mrs . Waid
Leonard , Reedsville ; Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Burt, Jeffrey ,
Randall, David and Melanie,
Miss Sybil Ebersbach, Terri
Russell, Pomeroy; Caralynn
and
Maralynn
Tracy,
daughters of the hosts ; Dan
Williams , Washington , D. C.;

~Js suggests-

-p&amp;\4
SPORTSWEAR
Crmse into Spring
Sizes 6-18

~ --

j Gallipolis,

.. ./. •

f.t-C.

Ohio

Terry Hendricks, Columbus;
and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Riggs,
Jason, and Kenny Ray, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy.
Christmas night all of
those attending the Riggs
party, with the e&lt;ception of the
Gene Riggs family and Terri
Russell, were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs . Ben Neutzling,
Pomeroy.
FOR MR. and Mrs. Clarence
King, this year marked a real
family Christmas as all of their
sons and daughters gathered at
their Middleport home. There
on Christmas Day were Mr.
and Mrs. Dean King , Randy
and Lisa , New Haven, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Jim King,
daughter Missy, Waterford;
Mr. and Mrs. Arland King,
Michl and Marsha, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Neutzling
and Cindy, Syracuse; Mr . and
Mrs. Richard Warden, and Mr.
and Mrs. John Elias and Erica,
Middleport.

place at their Middleport children and women's shoes,
home. Here for the holiday and his wife in the office of the
were Mr. and Mrs. Donald advertising department, were
Brown and son, Christopher, here for a brief visit returning
Westerville , and Mr. and Mrs . to New York on Christmas
Ron Thompson and Samuel , Day. Other guests were Mr.
New Haven. They were joined and Mrs.
Robert Jay,
for Christmas dinner by Mrs. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Clay
Ida Bachner, Middleport.
Tuttle, Mrs. Stella Grueser,
and Mrs. Clyda Allensworth,
A DINNER party and gift Middleport. Christmas Day,
exchange was enjoyed by the the family was joined by Mr.
family of Mr. and Mrs . William and Mrs. Michael Gerlach and
Grueser, Grant St., Middleport their year old daughter, Tara,
on Christmas Eve. Mr. and Middleport. The Michael
Mrs. Don Grueser, Rochester, Gerlach family spent ChristN. Y., hath associated with mas Eve in Chillicothe with his
Sibley 's, Don as a buyer of

PTA gets grant,
studies alcohol abuse

parents, Mr. and Mrs . Wendell
Gerlach.
MAKING a weekend pre .
Christmas visit with Mr . and
Mrs. B. F. Turner was Dale K.
Roush, their son-in-law, and
grandchildren, Steven, home
from Atlantic University, Boca
Rotan, Fla., and Cathy, Apple
Creek.
The
Turners'
daughter,
Janet,
was
unable to come due to illness.
The Roush family also visited
in Syracuse with Mr. and Mrs .
Milton Roush and in Racine
with Mr . and Mrs. Owen
Watson as well as other
relatives in the area. Christmas Day, Mr. and Mrs. Turner
received a telephone call from
their grandson, Keith Roush,.

Connie,

Yvonne,

John,

PHILCO"
SIDE-BY-SIDE

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GUARD

Over A

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CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL
PRICE

Decade

$46995
PHILCO

Carl and Richard, New
Boston, Ill. , are spending
several days during the holiday
vacation here with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Dun ham and Mr. and Mrs.

SAVES· FOOD
Even at 110 degrees, a Phi leo Sideby-Side cools quicker, keeps its
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Easy-to-adjust cantilever shelves.

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•

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Clcaranc•

CHRISTMAS guests of Mr.
and Mrs. William Barnhart,
daughter, Elaine, were their
children, Sgt. and Mrs. Wayne
Barnhart, Rickentfacker Air
Force Base, Columbus; David
Barnhart, student at the Ohio
Institute of Technology,
Colllmbus and William Barnhart, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

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.

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

PR06A6L'I DELIVERED TO
THE WRONG ADDRESS ..

(L)I-lEELIE.;. '(ET 1
600D GRIEF!

tJEt.L , I &gt;10PE Wf.lOEVER
60T IT. Er..J0'/5 17;'

'

• By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - As a
native Hoosier born in 1912 I
deeply resent your remarks
about Adelle Davis. I was :ery
much alive at the time she
received her bachelor degree
in 1927. Farm kids in Indiana
did not walk two miles to one-

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Nobody - no, nobody - is as
narrow~minded, provincial ar1d
just plain ignorant about the
U.S. A. outside the limits of
their own cement jungle as
New Yorkers. You included!
DEAR READER - Feel
better? You won ' t when you
find out I was neither born nor
raised in New York. I have only
visited there an business.
Guess what - I was born and
raised on a Kansas farm and
walked from one to two miles
to a one-room school until 1939
at the beginning of World War
II . I can't speak lor what you
had in your community, but I
can assure you that in the '30s
many farm kids walked to
school and ate from the lunch
pail. Now, you do"n' t suppose
that other farm communities in ·
the country might have been
different from your experience, do you?
No, I' ll stick to my
statement. The nutrition
problems in the country have
changed drastically since
before World War II. That has
a lot to do with the change in
the incidence of heart and
vascular "disease . The same
can be said for physical activity as part of the life style.
We eat more and richer foods
and exercise less as a society,
and tt begins each day with the
kids riding to school.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
1 had diverticulitis and "ave
suffered for years. It got so I
suffered from one spell after
the other. I was to have an
operation for it. Then I got the
piece you had in the paper and
went on the bulk diet and
haven't har ap!n since. It's

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been more than a month now . I
fee l like a new person , and I
want to thank you for the
wonderful help you have given
me .
Will you please answer' these
questions for me ? Can I eat

tomatoes with seeds, corn and
nuts? I have been on a bland
diet for years.
DEAR READER - I'm
delighted to hear that you have
done so well. Many patients
wilh diverticulosis improve
markedly when they get their
bowelproblerns licked and that
usually requires increasin g the
bulk in the diet. Sometimes a
complete bowel training
program is also necessa ry .
Those who want more information on using bulk in the

diet and bowel training for this
condition can write to me at P .
0. Box 1551 , Radio City Station ,
New York , N.Y. 10019 and ask
for the booklet on diverticu!osis. Send 50 cents to cover

costs.
After years of a bland diet
you sometimes have to feel
your way along on what you
can eat. I should think you
could use tomatoes all right.
The corn should also be no
problem . If y"ou had experienced bleeding from your
diverticula, I might suggest a
little more caution . The nuts
are a little more difficult for
some people, but try a few and
find out . Meanwhile, keep up
your diet with plenty of bulk for
good bowel function .

KATHY DANIELS

"SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY

E HOURS:
9 lo 9 Monday
9 to 7 Tuesday
Closed Wednesday
Thur. · Fri .-Sal.
9A.M. to9 P. M .
Closed Sundays

¢
lb.
BONELESS BEEF

NEW

II

BEEF CHUCK

A~Utt Po! R~tlb_ggc
SCOTTY HilL

FOR YOUR NEW YEAR'S FEAST

Birthday
observed

75% LEAN FRESH

SIRLOIN OR RIB HALF

3-lb . Pkg .

RACINE - Scotty Hill, three
on Ghristmas Day , Wtis
reCe ntly honored with par ties
in celebration of his bir thday ill
the home of his parents, \1r.
and Mr s. Roger E. Hill ,
Racine .
Monday he enjoyed the af·
ternoon with several of hi s
fri ends who presented him with
gifts. Cupca kes, ice cream ,
Kool-Aid, Christmas Ctindies,
hats and flutes were given as
favors. Aimee Wolfe won Lilt&gt;
door prize and attending were
Angie and Sally Hill, Donn a
Rae, Aimee and Jerry Wolfe .
Unable to attend but pre"'"·
ling gifts were Jeff and Tim
Parry and Mr . and Mr s.
Bernard Diddle.
Christmas Eve, &amp;utty wa s
again honored in observcmce of
his birthday. Santa Claus cake ,
ice cream, and candy canes
were served to Mr. and Mrs'.
Jerry Powell, Mrs. Ine z Hill .
Mr. an d Mrs. Oval Diddle, Mrs.
Maym e Custer, Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Wolfe , llime e and
Jerry.

Or larger

-

80% LE.&lt;.N. FRESH

lb.
REGULAR OR COUN TRY STYLE

Fresh Spareribs .
Pork Chops
•

SLICED PORK LOIN

lb.

•

1
"

•

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pkg. of

4 Center
!., 2 R1b

Chops

• •

SUPER RIGHT' " SMOKED

PORK SHOULDER ARM

• • •••

.69~

PMw£ c~ ~~:r:,
F~kC~ !·!~. Red RWke3 ~-~~,
G'tWt Caldtage
Large
Head 1

Cemetery's Namesake
Pere Lachaise is the great
Parisian cemeterv on the site of
a religiou s setlle.ment founded
by the Jesuits in 1626 . later
enlarged by King Loui s IV 's
confessor, Pere Lachaise. After
the Revolution , the grounds
were laid out for the cemetery
and first used in 1804.

Large
Head

$
for

DAhl THOMAS
AND SON
"Serving you since 1936"
Gallipolis, Ohio

Col6~

--·- l
in the

)

Prices effective thru Saturday, December 28th in all A&amp;P WEO's.

The doc's rw effete Eastener

..,
,•.

I

I HAVE A FEELING IT (&lt;),'.5

DR .. LAMB

11.SIHB

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Mr . and Mrs . John Davidson,
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Carson
and Jeff, Mr . and Mrs. Wendell
Grate and J e nny , Meigs
County Jaycees, Susan Flesh·
man, Annette Knight, Alma
White .
~ urel Cliff Health Club, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles E . Blakeslee,
Mr. and Mrs .. Mike Hammer,
First Southern Baptist Church,
Pomeroy, Auxiliary D.A.V. 53,
Pomeroy , Church of Christ,
Middleport, Ik~ Jackson,
An1erican Legion Post 128,
Middleport, Racine Baptist
Church Sunday School, Maxine
Coats Gaskill.

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Church, Class 12,. Middleport,
Mr . and Mrs . Ja ck Hawley,
Eastern Stars, Pomeroy .
R C Bottling Co. , Middleport,
William ·Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
William Nelson, Mr. and Mrs.
Die~ Karr, Mr . and Mrs. Ted
Mathews , Mildred Sisson, Jean
Warner , Senior
Ctizens,
Pomeroy, Pomeroy Nazarene
Church, Mrs. Dale Dutton.
Mary Seaman, Trinity
Church Senior Choir. Joan
Sorden, Church
of the
Nazarene , Middleport , The
Eagles , Kn ights Templar ,
Langsville Yough Group,
Salvation Army, Bradbury
Church Youth Group .

~ Erb, Heath United Methodist

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room school houses.

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VINTON - Entertainment
by Miss Kathy Daniels and a
vii;it from Santa Claus !Herb
Smith )
hi ghlighted
the
December meetin g of Cub
Seoul Pack 232 recently.
Dens One, Two and Three
displayed the ceram ic tree
ornaments made by the scouts.
The young people were the
guests of Mrs . Beatrice Clark,
Rio Grande, for several of their
meetings. While at her home
they made lhe ornaments from
utensils and clay provided by
Mrs. Clar k.
Awards were pi-esented to
Allen Smith of Den . Two and
Tim Lanier of the Webelos
during the evening. Allen
received his bear badge, gold
arrow and silver arrow and
Tim
was awarded . the
scholarship, scientist, artist
and geologist awards and a
three year pin .
Santa distributed treats to
the ch ildren attending at the
dose of the meeting.

: Mrs. Don Rea and Mrs. Grover

BAKER. FURN.IT·URE

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Adn1lraL

C1h.dlt

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SCLARCOLOR TV

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ENJOY COLOR T.V.

AT IT'S FINEST••••

POMEROY - Residents of
the Meigs County Infirmary
again enjoyed another Christmas holiday - thanks to the
generosity of a number of
individuals and organizations.
Those giving to insure that
the holiday was a success at
the home included: Dale
Dutton, Pomeroy · Baptist
Church, Mrs. Cassie Hall,
United Methodist Church,
Letart Falls, Reedsv ille United
Methodist Women , Rutland
Church of Christ, a Cheshire
Church, St. John's Lutheran
Church, Pine Grove.
Meigs CoUI)ty Avon · Ladies,
Harold and Wilma Sargent,
American Legion Auxiliary
Unit No. 39, Gerald Wildermuth, Chester Garden Club,
Frances
Reed,
Rutland
Campfire Girls, Laurel Cliff
F . M . -W.M.S., Barbara
Sargent, Reorganized Church
Of Jesus Christ Of Latter Day
Saints, Racine
Florence Michael , Hearthstone Class First Baptist
Church, Middleport, Pearl
Reynolds, American Legion ,
Sr. and Jr . Unit 128, Middleport, Mr . and Mrs, Bert
BodimPr, Pomeroy NPtional
Bank,
Gerald
Anthony,
Carolyn Salser, First Southern
Baptist Church, Pomeroy .
Mrs. Howard Nolan, George
Horak, Oris Hubbard, Mr. and

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MANY SPECIAL
BARGAINS ON
MANY SPECIAL
ITEMS
20% TO 50% OFF

RUtg Ut ~· Hew
elllt. RUtg up
G s . 31

- Donations to ·infirmary noted

I

SAlE

Bozeman, Mont

AWARDWINNERS-AllenSrnith, left, and Tim Lanier,
receive awards at the December meeting of Vinton Cub Pack
232. Allen is a member of Den Two and Tim is a Webelos
scout.

01 1•

End of the Year

Coupk wed in

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THE
KIDDIE SHOPPE

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Corner of Rt. 7 &amp; Union Ave .

CHICAGO - The Ohio
development of two brochures
PTA is one of 18 state PT Aswhich will meet the need for
PTSAs (Parent-Teachercomprehensive information on
Associations)
HOME for a holiday visit Student
the Teenage Institute and its
receiving
a
mini-grant from program, and provide the
with their parents, Mr . and
the National PTA for the
Mrs. James Brewington,
specific steps which local
of finding solutions to
purpose
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs .
communities can take to
the growing problem of
Alva Luckeydoo, New Haven,
establish their own educational
are Mr. and Mrs. Roger alcoholism among young programs for young people.
MR. AND Mrs. Bert Grinun
Luckeydoo ( Sandra Brew- people . These awards to states
The National PTA's Q"iteria returned Friday · from St.
are
part
of
a
contract
of
close
ington) and their
two
for grantee selection · were Clairsville where they spent
daughters, Amy, three, and to $100,000 awarded to the programs which are innovative Christmas \ with their son,
Lee Marie, an infant, Ket- National PTA by the National in approach, can be easily Russell and his family.
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
tering.
duplicated, and involve all Saturday they were joined at
Alcoholism, for a joint project
members of a community.
their Letart Falls home for a
on alcohol educa lion.
MR. AND Mrs. Jack Kane
Other state PTAs-PTSAs post-Christmas celebration
According to Mrs. Jean Dye
(Sherrie Blackston), Wintersearning mini-grants from with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grimm
of
Cleveland Heights, president
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
ville, joined her parents, Mr.
$1,900 to $4,125 per P• ogram for
and family, Columbus.
of the Ohio PTA, Ohio is being
and Mrs. Harold Blackston,
new projects include : Arizona,
Bruce and Bob for Christmas. awarded a mini-grant of $2,150 Ar~ansas, California, Iowa,
On Christmas Day they were to conduct a new, one-year Michigan, New York, South
alcohol education program.
all guests of Mrs. Blackston's
Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, and
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William The Ohio PTA was chosen for Oregon. Mini-grants also are
the award after submitting a
Grueser.
being awarded to seven other
proposal to the National PTA,
state PTAs-PTSAs for the
in competition with other state
MRS.
Carol
Painter,
continuation of exis ling alcohol
Columbus, joined her parents, PTAs-PTSAs throughout the education programs, in the
nation.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Anamoun Is of $700 to $1,300 per
In relating the specific program.
derson, Middleport, for Christhighlights of the Ohio PTA's
mas.
proposal, Mrs. Toni Winkle,
Cincinnati,
PTA alcohol
MISS Sybil Ebersbach,
project chairperson for Ohio,
Pomeroy, went to Columbus
Thursday for a visit with her and a member of staff for the
POMEROY - In a cancousins, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Ohio Department of Health's
Alcoholism Program, stated: dlelightceremony at 5:30p.m.,
Rader.
"For the past 10 years, the Dec . 23, Mrs. Betty Roberts,
Ohio Department of Health's R t. 2, Pomeroy, and Edgar
SPENDING Christmas Day
Alcoholism Program has Eugene Butcher, Barberton,
with Mr. and Mrs. Tony
funded
a statewide youth were married. Rev. Eugene
Fowler, Middleport, were Mr.
education program, entitled Deeter officiated at the wedand Mrs . Mark Fowler,
the Teenage Institute on ding which took place at the
Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. Arland
Alcohol and Other Drugs, in home of the bride, daughter of
King, Michl and Marsha,
which the Ohio PTA has par- Mrs. Webster (Sue) Hodge.
Pomeroy.
ticipated. The Institute is
Attending were Mrs. Sylvia
currently attracting some 300 Carman, Mrs. Edna Carman,
CHRISTMAS guests of Mr.
EXCLUSIVE ADMIRAL SOLAII:COLOR- more than 100% .
high school students annually. Mrs. Emma Broderick, Mr .
br1 ghter th.1n ;m y previ ous Admira l p ic tu re. 1\ flat, Black
and Mrs. Ray Cunningham,
but even more young , people and Mrs. Adrian Roberts, Mrs .
M,Uri.:
simoun cb each ph osphor dot , absorbi ng exlerndl
Ron and Eric, Syracuse, were
15" Diagonal Meas ure 015 sq. in. rectangul;~rpicture)
ambient light, usu rin g that each co lo r dot is fu lly and
could be reached if there were Ada Starcher and Sherry, Mr .
Mrs. Oscar Roush, Middleport;
&lt;~ccura tel y illuminated . The Admira l Solarcolor pictu re
• Admir~l Fnst•nt Pl •y- im mt:di~ t e pi~tu rr
adequate
informational and Mrs. James Soulsby and
is the briglu es t, clearest Admira l picture ever.
and sound
,
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Cunningham,
materials available which Cindy, Faye Will, Edgar Mitch,
• 1\dm i r~ l Space Ag~ Solid Slate Comp on&lt;' nls
Havre De Grace, Md.; Mr. and
ADMIRAL CINESCREEN 25 COLOR PICTURE TURE~Add s
presented an overview of the Mr. and Mrs. George Roberts,
• l'ldmirill Roll-About CH!ers give you t ot ~l
breath
ta
king
di
memion
to
color
televisi
on-315
sq
.
in.
Mrs . Alan Cunningham,
ronvl!nipnce
rectingular panorami c screen with "squ arer" comer!i .
entire
program.
Such Rev. and Mrs. Deeter, Mr. and
Gallipolis; Paul, home from
• ,' \dmiral "Super Scope" All-channel UHF/
rna terials would help to Mrs. ·webster Hodge, all of
VHr tuning sy11ern.
NEW ADMIRAL AFCI CM CONTROL- Admiral integ ra tes
Mountain State College,
publicize the Institute, so that Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs. Glen
Automat ic Fin e Tu n• ilg tA FCl an d Colo r Monito r to lo c~
Fwm 1he (,,.,~ Gw op w m" &lt;he Medi -~~
Parkersburg. The family was
m l ite correct signal freq uen cy and preferred flesh Iones
IC'rt.lnean loo~ . Sculptured elegance 10
-.:::::.••
all communities in Ohio would Hensler and Bill, Middleport,
with
.1
single
control.
flchl
y gr~1ned pe(.l~ ftl'l l$h on hardbc.1rd
joined Friday by Mr. and Mrs.
be aware of their opportunity and Delwon Roberts, Masop,
Daniel Neff, Findlay.
to send students. Another W. Va .
priority need is the develop•
MR. AND Mrs. Bradford
ment of ·a set · of printed
Maag traveled to Columbus for
SEEN AND HEARD
the
'in/ int )d (·I
guidelines for planning and
Christmas with their daughter
GAI,.LIPOLIS Becky
and son-in-iaw, Mr. and Mrs . . operating youth education Plymale, daughter of Mr. and
programs similar to the
Mrs . Charles E. Plymale,
Richard Lowe, and grandon
a
local
Teenage
Institute,
children, Tracy and Stevie.
Whitehouse, will be marching
level.
with the Anthony .Wayne High
"Therefore, the Ohio PTA
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THE FAMILY gat~ering of
School band in the Cotton Bowl
and the Ohio Department of
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
U.e Everett Bachners took
Parade New Year 's Day in
Health are cooperating in the Dallas.

""

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The Day NurseJY

25"

SAVES TIME

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Bringing Children.

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Available in colors
to match ·nearly any
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REGULAR PRICE

The Most
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Advance
in
Refrigerators
In

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The Day Nurserj

Meigs family reunions highlight holidays

"

December meet

By Mrs. Mendel Jordan
Reed J effers and other
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
relatives in the area.
were in Columbus on Friday
Spec. 6. and Mrs . Bert
and Saturday where they
Christian and daughter,
visited his sister, Jessie Jewell ,
Catrina, Clarksville, Tenn., are
in a . hos pital there co n·spending a furlough here
valescing from a broken hip,
during the holidays with
attended a party at the home of
relatives including her mother,
Mr . and Mrs. Ed Haaf in Canal
Mrs . Gordon Perry. Spec. 6
Winchester then were guests at
Chris tian is now stationed at
the annual Christmas party of
Fort Campbell, Kentucky:
tl,e Grange Mutual Casulalty
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Hooper,
Insurance Company Directors
Albany,
were Sunday guests of
and families .
her parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs . William
William Stout and Mrs. Stout
Culwell were guests on Sunday
and Joyce celebrated their
at the home of his brother-inbirthdays.
law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. T.
,Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wal sh
H. Blanton and Gre g in
entertained in honor of the
Jackson.
ninth birthday of their
Roberta Parker, Bolivar, is
daug hter, Beth. Those present
staying with her father , Ney
· were Tennie Brown, Kelley
Carpenter, who has been
Jarvis, Mr . and Mrs. Jewell
confined to Pleasant Valley
Jones , Alice Walsh, Mr . and
Hospital, Pt. Pleasant, for
several days for observation "Mrs. Alfred Walsh, Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Jones and Mrs. Ted
and treatment for back and
.Jones
and daughters, Megan
kidney ailments.
and Brittany, along with the
Mr . and Mrs. Ed Marshall
host family .
and grandchildren, Lancaster,
called at the home of her
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs . R. A. Whittington and
also at the Joe McWhorter
home.
Relatives and friends from
the area· attended
the
Christmas program at the
Albany Elementary School.
Mr . and Mrs. Emzie Davis,
Parkersburg, W. Va ., spent a
day with her brothers, Paul
and William C. Peck and
helped Paul Peck celebrate his
birthday.
Those attending a family
holiday dinner at the home of
Open New Year's Eve
Mr. and Mrs. William Cheadle
Starting al6:00
Bring your child and enjoy a
were Mr . and Mrs . Bob
night out.
Harrison and family , Stoutsville, ·Metta Fisher, Mr. and
Call 992-7608
Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don and
or 742-4902
Kathy and Mr . and Mrs. Rexie
Cheadle, all local.
Reasonable Rates
Mr. and Mrs . John Dunham,
Any Age Child

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Miss Teresa Lynn Hayes

Pack 232 has

A Super&amp; 81

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In 8rotil'

3 b~~ c~89
$

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II 32-oz.
•
1ar
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II· Seedless Raisins . .

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EIGi·IT 0 CLOCK

Instant Coffee

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Spaghetti &amp; Meatballs • 1~ 49c:
Cheese Pizza Mix • • 79~'

CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE

SUN MAID

VACUUM PACK

end Rich
rTees

ranc 0 .~.~

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Maxwell House Coffee •~~~-

$129

CHEF-BOY-A.R-DEE

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pk.

7-UP
Ralston Crisp1ts
· l 49&lt;. Keebler .fudge Stripes
c:.sc Alka Selt~er
Lipton Cup of Soup, Cream of Chicken ,,,,
of
fil
.l · l&gt;l

L•l. w

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8 16oz.,47
bots.
Plus Deposit
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l&gt;kl"' 99c
pkJ

oJ '45

53c .

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Carpenter News, Event

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ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED- Mr. antl Mrs. Ramie
Fox, Rt. 2, Albany, are aMouncing the engagement of their
daughter, Teresa Lynn Hayes , to Richard L. Beitzel, son of
the late Arlington Beitzel. The bride-elect is a senior at Meigs
High School. Her fiance, a 1973 graduate of Alexander High
School, is employed by Carl Crabtree, Albany. An open
church wedding is pla!Uled for Mar ch 29 .

Miss ]o Ann Hendricks

Miss Jane Ann Bahr

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT- Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E.
Hendricks, Newport, are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Jo Ann, to Robert
Stanley Coates, son of Mr. and Mrs . Robert Elberfeld, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and the late RobertS. Coates,&amp;. Miss llendricks,
a 1974 graduate of Marietta College, is employed in the WoU
Creek School District, Waterford, teaching history in the
seventh and eighth grades. Her fiance is a senior at Marietta
College where he is majoring in geology. Wedding plans arc
incomplete .

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr ; and Mrs. Victor
A. Bahr, Rt. I, Reedsville, are al&gt;nouncing the engagement
and approaching marriage of their daughter, Jane Ann, to
Roger D. Coates, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alva J. Coates, Rt. 1,
Minersville. Miss Bahr is a senior at Eastern High School.
Her fiance is an employee at Rigid Tool Co., Elyria. The open
church wedding will be an event of Jan. 11 at 2:30p.m. at the
South Bethel United Methodist Church on Silver Ridge. A
reception will be held at the U. M. Annex in Tuppers Plains.

By Charlene Hoeflich
POMEROY - The joy of the
season, surpassed only by the
significance of the ,birth of a
Saviour, is perhaps the
reuniting of famili es. F or
many it marks a once-a-year
time together. the exchange of
tokens
of
love.
the
strengthening of ties .
In the Bend area there were
many family celebrations of
Christmas.
For the family of Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Riggs, the observance of the holiday began
following the candlelight
service at Tr in it y Chu r c h

'
Christmas Eve . The coup!
opened their spacious an
elaborately decorated home
for an II p.m. dinner party.
Their guests were Larry
Tracy , New York City ; Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Hester, Jr.',
daug hters, Jil and Heidi, Ashville , N C.: Mr . and Mrs . Waid
Leonard , Reedsville ; Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Neutzling, Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Burt, Jeffrey ,
Randall, David and Melanie,
Miss Sybil Ebersbach, Terri
Russell, Pomeroy; Caralynn
and
Maralynn
Tracy,
daughters of the hosts ; Dan
Williams , Washington , D. C.;

~Js suggests-

-p&amp;\4
SPORTSWEAR
Crmse into Spring
Sizes 6-18

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j Gallipolis,

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f.t-C.

Ohio

Terry Hendricks, Columbus;
and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Riggs,
Jason, and Kenny Ray, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy.
Christmas night all of
those attending the Riggs
party, with the e&lt;ception of the
Gene Riggs family and Terri
Russell, were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs . Ben Neutzling,
Pomeroy.
FOR MR. and Mrs. Clarence
King, this year marked a real
family Christmas as all of their
sons and daughters gathered at
their Middleport home. There
on Christmas Day were Mr.
and Mrs. Dean King , Randy
and Lisa , New Haven, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Jim King,
daughter Missy, Waterford;
Mr. and Mrs. Arland King,
Michl and Marsha, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Neutzling
and Cindy, Syracuse; Mr . and
Mrs. Richard Warden, and Mr.
and Mrs. John Elias and Erica,
Middleport.

place at their Middleport children and women's shoes,
home. Here for the holiday and his wife in the office of the
were Mr. and Mrs. Donald advertising department, were
Brown and son, Christopher, here for a brief visit returning
Westerville , and Mr. and Mrs . to New York on Christmas
Ron Thompson and Samuel , Day. Other guests were Mr.
New Haven. They were joined and Mrs.
Robert Jay,
for Christmas dinner by Mrs. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Clay
Ida Bachner, Middleport.
Tuttle, Mrs. Stella Grueser,
and Mrs. Clyda Allensworth,
A DINNER party and gift Middleport. Christmas Day,
exchange was enjoyed by the the family was joined by Mr.
family of Mr. and Mrs . William and Mrs. Michael Gerlach and
Grueser, Grant St., Middleport their year old daughter, Tara,
on Christmas Eve. Mr. and Middleport. The Michael
Mrs. Don Grueser, Rochester, Gerlach family spent ChristN. Y., hath associated with mas Eve in Chillicothe with his
Sibley 's, Don as a buyer of

PTA gets grant,
studies alcohol abuse

parents, Mr. and Mrs . Wendell
Gerlach.
MAKING a weekend pre .
Christmas visit with Mr . and
Mrs. B. F. Turner was Dale K.
Roush, their son-in-law, and
grandchildren, Steven, home
from Atlantic University, Boca
Rotan, Fla., and Cathy, Apple
Creek.
The
Turners'
daughter,
Janet,
was
unable to come due to illness.
The Roush family also visited
in Syracuse with Mr. and Mrs .
Milton Roush and in Racine
with Mr . and Mrs. Owen
Watson as well as other
relatives in the area. Christmas Day, Mr. and Mrs. Turner
received a telephone call from
their grandson, Keith Roush,.

Connie,

Yvonne,

John,

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Dun ham and Mr. and Mrs.

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CHRISTMAS guests of Mr.
and Mrs. William Barnhart,
daughter, Elaine, were their
children, Sgt. and Mrs. Wayne
Barnhart, Rickentfacker Air
Force Base, Columbus; David
Barnhart, student at the Ohio
Institute of Technology,
Colllmbus and William Barnhart, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

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.

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

PR06A6L'I DELIVERED TO
THE WRONG ADDRESS ..

(L)I-lEELIE.;. '(ET 1
600D GRIEF!

tJEt.L , I &gt;10PE Wf.lOEVER
60T IT. Er..J0'/5 17;'

'

• By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - As a
native Hoosier born in 1912 I
deeply resent your remarks
about Adelle Davis. I was :ery
much alive at the time she
received her bachelor degree
in 1927. Farm kids in Indiana
did not walk two miles to one-

.,
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Nobody - no, nobody - is as
narrow~minded, provincial ar1d
just plain ignorant about the
U.S. A. outside the limits of
their own cement jungle as
New Yorkers. You included!
DEAR READER - Feel
better? You won ' t when you
find out I was neither born nor
raised in New York. I have only
visited there an business.
Guess what - I was born and
raised on a Kansas farm and
walked from one to two miles
to a one-room school until 1939
at the beginning of World War
II . I can't speak lor what you
had in your community, but I
can assure you that in the '30s
many farm kids walked to
school and ate from the lunch
pail. Now, you do"n' t suppose
that other farm communities in ·
the country might have been
different from your experience, do you?
No, I' ll stick to my
statement. The nutrition
problems in the country have
changed drastically since
before World War II. That has
a lot to do with the change in
the incidence of heart and
vascular "disease . The same
can be said for physical activity as part of the life style.
We eat more and richer foods
and exercise less as a society,
and tt begins each day with the
kids riding to school.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
1 had diverticulitis and "ave
suffered for years. It got so I
suffered from one spell after
the other. I was to have an
operation for it. Then I got the
piece you had in the paper and
went on the bulk diet and
haven't har ap!n since. It's

'

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been more than a month now . I
fee l like a new person , and I
want to thank you for the
wonderful help you have given
me .
Will you please answer' these
questions for me ? Can I eat

tomatoes with seeds, corn and
nuts? I have been on a bland
diet for years.
DEAR READER - I'm
delighted to hear that you have
done so well. Many patients
wilh diverticulosis improve
markedly when they get their
bowelproblerns licked and that
usually requires increasin g the
bulk in the diet. Sometimes a
complete bowel training
program is also necessa ry .
Those who want more information on using bulk in the

diet and bowel training for this
condition can write to me at P .
0. Box 1551 , Radio City Station ,
New York , N.Y. 10019 and ask
for the booklet on diverticu!osis. Send 50 cents to cover

costs.
After years of a bland diet
you sometimes have to feel
your way along on what you
can eat. I should think you
could use tomatoes all right.
The corn should also be no
problem . If y"ou had experienced bleeding from your
diverticula, I might suggest a
little more caution . The nuts
are a little more difficult for
some people, but try a few and
find out . Meanwhile, keep up
your diet with plenty of bulk for
good bowel function .

KATHY DANIELS

"SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY

E HOURS:
9 lo 9 Monday
9 to 7 Tuesday
Closed Wednesday
Thur. · Fri .-Sal.
9A.M. to9 P. M .
Closed Sundays

¢
lb.
BONELESS BEEF

NEW

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A~Utt Po! R~tlb_ggc
SCOTTY HilL

FOR YOUR NEW YEAR'S FEAST

Birthday
observed

75% LEAN FRESH

SIRLOIN OR RIB HALF

3-lb . Pkg .

RACINE - Scotty Hill, three
on Ghristmas Day , Wtis
reCe ntly honored with par ties
in celebration of his bir thday ill
the home of his parents, \1r.
and Mr s. Roger E. Hill ,
Racine .
Monday he enjoyed the af·
ternoon with several of hi s
fri ends who presented him with
gifts. Cupca kes, ice cream ,
Kool-Aid, Christmas Ctindies,
hats and flutes were given as
favors. Aimee Wolfe won Lilt&gt;
door prize and attending were
Angie and Sally Hill, Donn a
Rae, Aimee and Jerry Wolfe .
Unable to attend but pre"'"·
ling gifts were Jeff and Tim
Parry and Mr . and Mr s.
Bernard Diddle.
Christmas Eve, &amp;utty wa s
again honored in observcmce of
his birthday. Santa Claus cake ,
ice cream, and candy canes
were served to Mr. and Mrs'.
Jerry Powell, Mrs. Ine z Hill .
Mr. an d Mrs. Oval Diddle, Mrs.
Maym e Custer, Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Wolfe , llime e and
Jerry.

Or larger

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REGULAR OR COUN TRY STYLE

Fresh Spareribs .
Pork Chops
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.69~

PMw£ c~ ~~:r:,
F~kC~ !·!~. Red RWke3 ~-~~,
G'tWt Caldtage
Large
Head 1

Cemetery's Namesake
Pere Lachaise is the great
Parisian cemeterv on the site of
a religiou s setlle.ment founded
by the Jesuits in 1626 . later
enlarged by King Loui s IV 's
confessor, Pere Lachaise. After
the Revolution , the grounds
were laid out for the cemetery
and first used in 1804.

Large
Head

$
for

DAhl THOMAS
AND SON
"Serving you since 1936"
Gallipolis, Ohio

Col6~

--·- l
in the

)

Prices effective thru Saturday, December 28th in all A&amp;P WEO's.

The doc's rw effete Eastener

..,
,•.

I

I HAVE A FEELING IT (&lt;),'.5

DR .. LAMB

11.SIHB

'.r

Mr . and Mrs . John Davidson,
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Carson
and Jeff, Mr . and Mrs. Wendell
Grate and J e nny , Meigs
County Jaycees, Susan Flesh·
man, Annette Knight, Alma
White .
~ urel Cliff Health Club, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles E . Blakeslee,
Mr. and Mrs .. Mike Hammer,
First Southern Baptist Church,
Pomeroy, Auxiliary D.A.V. 53,
Pomeroy , Church of Christ,
Middleport, Ik~ Jackson,
An1erican Legion Post 128,
Middleport, Racine Baptist
Church Sunday School, Maxine
Coats Gaskill.

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Church, Class 12,. Middleport,
Mr . and Mrs . Ja ck Hawley,
Eastern Stars, Pomeroy .
R C Bottling Co. , Middleport,
William ·Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
William Nelson, Mr. and Mrs.
Die~ Karr, Mr . and Mrs. Ted
Mathews , Mildred Sisson, Jean
Warner , Senior
Ctizens,
Pomeroy, Pomeroy Nazarene
Church, Mrs. Dale Dutton.
Mary Seaman, Trinity
Church Senior Choir. Joan
Sorden, Church
of the
Nazarene , Middleport , The
Eagles , Kn ights Templar ,
Langsville Yough Group,
Salvation Army, Bradbury
Church Youth Group .

~ Erb, Heath United Methodist

I I

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room school houses.

·'

VINTON - Entertainment
by Miss Kathy Daniels and a
vii;it from Santa Claus !Herb
Smith )
hi ghlighted
the
December meetin g of Cub
Seoul Pack 232 recently.
Dens One, Two and Three
displayed the ceram ic tree
ornaments made by the scouts.
The young people were the
guests of Mrs . Beatrice Clark,
Rio Grande, for several of their
meetings. While at her home
they made lhe ornaments from
utensils and clay provided by
Mrs. Clar k.
Awards were pi-esented to
Allen Smith of Den . Two and
Tim Lanier of the Webelos
during the evening. Allen
received his bear badge, gold
arrow and silver arrow and
Tim
was awarded . the
scholarship, scientist, artist
and geologist awards and a
three year pin .
Santa distributed treats to
the ch ildren attending at the
dose of the meeting.

: Mrs. Don Rea and Mrs. Grover

BAKER. FURN.IT·URE

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SCLARCOLOR TV

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ENJOY COLOR T.V.

AT IT'S FINEST••••

POMEROY - Residents of
the Meigs County Infirmary
again enjoyed another Christmas holiday - thanks to the
generosity of a number of
individuals and organizations.
Those giving to insure that
the holiday was a success at
the home included: Dale
Dutton, Pomeroy · Baptist
Church, Mrs. Cassie Hall,
United Methodist Church,
Letart Falls, Reedsv ille United
Methodist Women , Rutland
Church of Christ, a Cheshire
Church, St. John's Lutheran
Church, Pine Grove.
Meigs CoUI)ty Avon · Ladies,
Harold and Wilma Sargent,
American Legion Auxiliary
Unit No. 39, Gerald Wildermuth, Chester Garden Club,
Frances
Reed,
Rutland
Campfire Girls, Laurel Cliff
F . M . -W.M.S., Barbara
Sargent, Reorganized Church
Of Jesus Christ Of Latter Day
Saints, Racine
Florence Michael , Hearthstone Class First Baptist
Church, Middleport, Pearl
Reynolds, American Legion ,
Sr. and Jr . Unit 128, Middleport, Mr . and Mrs, Bert
BodimPr, Pomeroy NPtional
Bank,
Gerald
Anthony,
Carolyn Salser, First Southern
Baptist Church, Pomeroy .
Mrs. Howard Nolan, George
Horak, Oris Hubbard, Mr. and

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MANY SPECIAL
BARGAINS ON
MANY SPECIAL
ITEMS
20% TO 50% OFF

RUtg Ut ~· Hew
elllt. RUtg up
G s . 31

- Donations to ·infirmary noted

I

SAlE

Bozeman, Mont

AWARDWINNERS-AllenSrnith, left, and Tim Lanier,
receive awards at the December meeting of Vinton Cub Pack
232. Allen is a member of Den Two and Tim is a Webelos
scout.

01 1•

End of the Year

Coupk wed in

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THE
KIDDIE SHOPPE

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Corner of Rt. 7 &amp; Union Ave .

CHICAGO - The Ohio
development of two brochures
PTA is one of 18 state PT Aswhich will meet the need for
PTSAs (Parent-Teachercomprehensive information on
Associations)
HOME for a holiday visit Student
the Teenage Institute and its
receiving
a
mini-grant from program, and provide the
with their parents, Mr . and
the National PTA for the
Mrs. James Brewington,
specific steps which local
of finding solutions to
purpose
Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs .
communities can take to
the growing problem of
Alva Luckeydoo, New Haven,
establish their own educational
are Mr. and Mrs. Roger alcoholism among young programs for young people.
MR. AND Mrs. Bert Grinun
Luckeydoo ( Sandra Brew- people . These awards to states
The National PTA's Q"iteria returned Friday · from St.
are
part
of
a
contract
of
close
ington) and their
two
for grantee selection · were Clairsville where they spent
daughters, Amy, three, and to $100,000 awarded to the programs which are innovative Christmas \ with their son,
Lee Marie, an infant, Ket- National PTA by the National in approach, can be easily Russell and his family.
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
tering.
duplicated, and involve all Saturday they were joined at
Alcoholism, for a joint project
members of a community.
their Letart Falls home for a
on alcohol educa lion.
MR. AND Mrs. Jack Kane
Other state PTAs-PTSAs post-Christmas celebration
According to Mrs. Jean Dye
(Sherrie Blackston), Wintersearning mini-grants from with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grimm
of
Cleveland Heights, president
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
ville, joined her parents, Mr.
$1,900 to $4,125 per P• ogram for
and family, Columbus.
of the Ohio PTA, Ohio is being
and Mrs. Harold Blackston,
new projects include : Arizona,
Bruce and Bob for Christmas. awarded a mini-grant of $2,150 Ar~ansas, California, Iowa,
On Christmas Day they were to conduct a new, one-year Michigan, New York, South
alcohol education program.
all guests of Mrs. Blackston's
Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, and
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William The Ohio PTA was chosen for Oregon. Mini-grants also are
the award after submitting a
Grueser.
being awarded to seven other
proposal to the National PTA,
state PTAs-PTSAs for the
in competition with other state
MRS.
Carol
Painter,
continuation of exis ling alcohol
Columbus, joined her parents, PTAs-PTSAs throughout the education programs, in the
nation.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Anamoun Is of $700 to $1,300 per
In relating the specific program.
derson, Middleport, for Christhighlights of the Ohio PTA's
mas.
proposal, Mrs. Toni Winkle,
Cincinnati,
PTA alcohol
MISS Sybil Ebersbach,
project chairperson for Ohio,
Pomeroy, went to Columbus
Thursday for a visit with her and a member of staff for the
POMEROY - In a cancousins, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Ohio Department of Health's
Alcoholism Program, stated: dlelightceremony at 5:30p.m.,
Rader.
"For the past 10 years, the Dec . 23, Mrs. Betty Roberts,
Ohio Department of Health's R t. 2, Pomeroy, and Edgar
SPENDING Christmas Day
Alcoholism Program has Eugene Butcher, Barberton,
with Mr. and Mrs. Tony
funded
a statewide youth were married. Rev. Eugene
Fowler, Middleport, were Mr.
education program, entitled Deeter officiated at the wedand Mrs . Mark Fowler,
the Teenage Institute on ding which took place at the
Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. Arland
Alcohol and Other Drugs, in home of the bride, daughter of
King, Michl and Marsha,
which the Ohio PTA has par- Mrs. Webster (Sue) Hodge.
Pomeroy.
ticipated. The Institute is
Attending were Mrs. Sylvia
currently attracting some 300 Carman, Mrs. Edna Carman,
CHRISTMAS guests of Mr.
EXCLUSIVE ADMIRAL SOLAII:COLOR- more than 100% .
high school students annually. Mrs. Emma Broderick, Mr .
br1 ghter th.1n ;m y previ ous Admira l p ic tu re. 1\ flat, Black
and Mrs. Ray Cunningham,
but even more young , people and Mrs. Adrian Roberts, Mrs .
M,Uri.:
simoun cb each ph osphor dot , absorbi ng exlerndl
Ron and Eric, Syracuse, were
15" Diagonal Meas ure 015 sq. in. rectangul;~rpicture)
ambient light, usu rin g that each co lo r dot is fu lly and
could be reached if there were Ada Starcher and Sherry, Mr .
Mrs. Oscar Roush, Middleport;
&lt;~ccura tel y illuminated . The Admira l Solarcolor pictu re
• Admir~l Fnst•nt Pl •y- im mt:di~ t e pi~tu rr
adequate
informational and Mrs. James Soulsby and
is the briglu es t, clearest Admira l picture ever.
and sound
,
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Cunningham,
materials available which Cindy, Faye Will, Edgar Mitch,
• 1\dm i r~ l Space Ag~ Solid Slate Comp on&lt;' nls
Havre De Grace, Md.; Mr. and
ADMIRAL CINESCREEN 25 COLOR PICTURE TURE~Add s
presented an overview of the Mr. and Mrs. George Roberts,
• l'ldmirill Roll-About CH!ers give you t ot ~l
breath
ta
king
di
memion
to
color
televisi
on-315
sq
.
in.
Mrs . Alan Cunningham,
ronvl!nipnce
rectingular panorami c screen with "squ arer" comer!i .
entire
program.
Such Rev. and Mrs. Deeter, Mr. and
Gallipolis; Paul, home from
• ,' \dmiral "Super Scope" All-channel UHF/
rna terials would help to Mrs. ·webster Hodge, all of
VHr tuning sy11ern.
NEW ADMIRAL AFCI CM CONTROL- Admiral integ ra tes
Mountain State College,
publicize the Institute, so that Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs. Glen
Automat ic Fin e Tu n• ilg tA FCl an d Colo r Monito r to lo c~
Fwm 1he (,,.,~ Gw op w m" &lt;he Medi -~~
Parkersburg. The family was
m l ite correct signal freq uen cy and preferred flesh Iones
IC'rt.lnean loo~ . Sculptured elegance 10
-.:::::.••
all communities in Ohio would Hensler and Bill, Middleport,
with
.1
single
control.
flchl
y gr~1ned pe(.l~ ftl'l l$h on hardbc.1rd
joined Friday by Mr. and Mrs.
be aware of their opportunity and Delwon Roberts, Masop,
Daniel Neff, Findlay.
to send students. Another W. Va .
priority need is the develop•
MR. AND Mrs. Bradford
ment of ·a set · of printed
Maag traveled to Columbus for
SEEN AND HEARD
the
'in/ int )d (·I
guidelines for planning and
Christmas with their daughter
GAI,.LIPOLIS Becky
and son-in-iaw, Mr. and Mrs . . operating youth education Plymale, daughter of Mr. and
programs similar to the
Mrs . Charles E. Plymale,
Richard Lowe, and grandon
a
local
Teenage
Institute,
children, Tracy and Stevie.
Whitehouse, will be marching
level.
with the Anthony .Wayne High
"Therefore, the Ohio PTA
I
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THE FAMILY gat~ering of
School band in the Cotton Bowl
and the Ohio Department of
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
U.e Everett Bachners took
Parade New Year 's Day in
Health are cooperating in the Dallas.

""

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Meigs family reunions highlight holidays

"

December meet

By Mrs. Mendel Jordan
Reed J effers and other
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
relatives in the area.
were in Columbus on Friday
Spec. 6. and Mrs . Bert
and Saturday where they
Christian and daughter,
visited his sister, Jessie Jewell ,
Catrina, Clarksville, Tenn., are
in a . hos pital there co n·spending a furlough here
valescing from a broken hip,
during the holidays with
attended a party at the home of
relatives including her mother,
Mr . and Mrs. Ed Haaf in Canal
Mrs . Gordon Perry. Spec. 6
Winchester then were guests at
Chris tian is now stationed at
the annual Christmas party of
Fort Campbell, Kentucky:
tl,e Grange Mutual Casulalty
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Hooper,
Insurance Company Directors
Albany,
were Sunday guests of
and families .
her parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs . William
William Stout and Mrs. Stout
Culwell were guests on Sunday
and Joyce celebrated their
at the home of his brother-inbirthdays.
law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. T.
,Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wal sh
H. Blanton and Gre g in
entertained in honor of the
Jackson.
ninth birthday of their
Roberta Parker, Bolivar, is
daug hter, Beth. Those present
staying with her father , Ney
· were Tennie Brown, Kelley
Carpenter, who has been
Jarvis, Mr . and Mrs. Jewell
confined to Pleasant Valley
Jones , Alice Walsh, Mr . and
Hospital, Pt. Pleasant, for
several days for observation "Mrs. Alfred Walsh, Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Jones and Mrs. Ted
and treatment for back and
.Jones
and daughters, Megan
kidney ailments.
and Brittany, along with the
Mr . and Mrs. Ed Marshall
host family .
and grandchildren, Lancaster,
called at the home of her
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs . R. A. Whittington and
also at the Joe McWhorter
home.
Relatives and friends from
the area· attended
the
Christmas program at the
Albany Elementary School.
Mr . and Mrs. Emzie Davis,
Parkersburg, W. Va ., spent a
day with her brothers, Paul
and William C. Peck and
helped Paul Peck celebrate his
birthday.
Those attending a family
holiday dinner at the home of
Open New Year's Eve
Mr. and Mrs. William Cheadle
Starting al6:00
Bring your child and enjoy a
were Mr . and Mrs . Bob
night out.
Harrison and family , Stoutsville, ·Metta Fisher, Mr. and
Call 992-7608
Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don and
or 742-4902
Kathy and Mr . and Mrs. Rexie
Cheadle, all local.
Reasonable Rates
Mr. and Mrs . John Dunham,
Any Age Child

~ "

Miss Teresa Lynn Hayes

Pack 232 has

A Super&amp; 81

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In 8rotil'

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$

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II· Seedless Raisins . .

'

EIGi·IT 0 CLOCK

Instant Coffee

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Spaghetti &amp; Meatballs • 1~ 49c:
Cheese Pizza Mix • • 79~'

CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE

SUN MAID

VACUUM PACK

end Rich
rTees

ranc 0 .~.~

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$129

CHEF-BOY-A.R-DEE

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Ralston Crisp1ts
· l 49&lt;. Keebler .fudge Stripes
c:.sc Alka Selt~er
Lipton Cup of Soup, Cream of Chicken ,,,,
of
fil
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L•l. w

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bots.
Plus Deposit
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pkJ

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53c .

�•

11 - The Sunday Tim~s- &amp;lntinel, Sunday, Dec. 29, 1974

-

'

War likely
says Ford.

REX SATURNAIJA - Mark Waller was crowned
Saturnalia King by Debbie Baird, right, during festivities at
the Kyger Creek High School Latin Club Saturnalia recently .

iSaturn honored Dec. 10
CH!':SHIRE - The Kyger
Creek S.P.Q.R. Latin Club held
the Saturnalia, an ancient
Roman holiday in honor of the
:god Saturn, Dec. 10 in the
·, cafeteria of the high school.
' The tables were moved into' a
U-shape. In the middle of each
; table was a centerpiece of
evergreen , red and white
·poinsettias and holly . The
·buffet table was covered with a
'tablecloth decorated with red
'poinsettias. In the center of the
·U-shaped tables was the king 's
-chair. It was covered with a
'blue cloth. Purple and gold
·crepe paper (the Latin Club's
·colors) and mistletoe were
)lung from the ceiling. A
'C hristmas tree decorated with
ornaments completed the

'decorations.
For entertainment Latin
Club members and their guests
played a variety of games.
After the recreation, members
and their guests were seated
around the tables for the
crowning of the king. The
winner of the close election was
Mark Waller. Debbie Baird,
one of the consuls, crowned the
new king. Marie Grose, the
other consul, presented Mark
with his sceptor and a gift of a
travel kit .
The new King Mark announced the refreshments
were served. A buffet of

assorted sandwiches, cookies,
punch and two kinds of candy
had been prepared by the
refre s hment committee.
Members of that committee
were Debbie Baird and Cynthia
Clark, chairpersons; and Fred
Westfall.
The entertainment committee was made up of Marie
Grose, chairperson ; Steve
Harrison, and George Thomp-

son.
Members of the decorating
committee were Raymond
Pennington, Rick Winebrenner, Mark Waller, and Pauline
White, chairperson.
People attending the party
were Gevrge Thompson, Arthur Leach, Tony Shamblin ,
Marie Grose, Bob Grim,
Cynthia Clarke, Raymond
Pennington, Debbie Baird,
Rick Winebrenner, Steve
Roush, Judy Berkley, Roger
Berkley, Kim Reynolds, Jan
Drummond , Peggy Hill,
Debbie Hayes, Jody Fox,
Shelley Grovnevor, Debbie
Clevenger, Anna Jarrell , Uz
Hood, Oliver Taylor, Sue
Hughes, Carolyn Nibert, Susan
Swisher, Carl Myers, Connie
Haskins, Gary Barr, Ronnie
Barr, Mark Waller, Diana
Tucker, Terry Lucas, Pauline
White and Mrs . Faye Sauer,
club sponsor.

o

~ Beat...

Of the Bend _.;_,._,- ~
By Bob Hoeflich

~ •

•

POMEROY - Well, most of us made it through the Christmas holiday, and wasn't it a dandy!
It was a relief this year to get away from the energy crisis of
1973 when homes of the county were darkened since outside
ctecorations were "out." There were maey . attractively
decorated and lighted homes in the county this year. They do
brighten the scene.
Almost unbelievable this year were the sales staged locally
and in the cities to attract shoppers and to put a shot in the arm
into business. The sales weren't really a "first," however. Way
back in 1896, some 78 years ago, Bend merchants resorted to the
same measures during December to boost holiday sales.
Elberfelds -which had stores in Pomeroy and Columbus at
the time- sold seal capes for $13.50 and $18.50 while "plush"
capes were going from $3.75 to $10.50. Into the bargain, a $400
pia!lO was being given away to some lucky winner following the
holiday season.
·
The New York Clothing House reduced men's heavy chinchilla coats and vest to $3.70 and men's black cheviot suits went
at $3.90. Heavy duck coats for men were selling at 88cents each!
Newman's Store advertised "in the heart of the season,"
feather boas for 39 cents; cHiico at three cents a yard; EngUsh
cashmeres at 14¥.! cents a yard; ladies all wool suiting material,
54 inches wide yet, for 33 cents a yard. Newman's was located on
the "midway" block in Pomeroy. The Red Anchor advertised
greatly reduced prices - about half of the nonnal price - on
ladies and children's jackets and offered a gift with each purchase.
The prices for merchandise were almost give-away by
today's standards but, then, I suspect it might have been a
problem to scrape together that $3.75for an overcoat or the $1.90
for a child's all wool suit with double seat and knees.
IN tltE NEWS, Rev. Sparks preached about Jezabel, that
wiciled Biblical character, at the Simpson M. E. Church and he
]iroVtid (by her career) that it does not pay in the .end to be bad,
according to the reporters of the day. Miss Bertha Osborn came
to Pomeroy from Marietta College to spend a holiday.
In those days, the mountaln did come to Mohammed. For
example, Dr. A. B. Barker, Jr., eye, throat and ear specialist of
Cincinnati, was in Pomeroy, making arrangements for regular
visits to the city. It was reported that Dr. Barker "romes highly
recOmmended, the senior Dr. Barker having been a practitioner
·
in Cincinnati for the past 30 years."
Miss Ollie Thomas of the Meigs Children's Home, left
Pomeroy to take a position in the Franklin &gt;County Children's
Home, Columbus, being the third Meigs County girl to go to the
Col~bus home. The others were Mollie ·cornell and Mary
Conde.
John Goins, a driver of one of the hacks at a child's funeral,
bad a serious accident when his horses became frightened at the
traiD and would have run into Hart's Jewelry Store had not the
vehicle caught on a telephone pole.
Frank Wright fell from his bicycle through the post office
window and two rallroad tickets were sold locally to ·widely.
different points. One was to Miss Alice McFarland t~ Prince
Edward Island and the other to Miss Clara M. Skinner to San
Bern8rdino Calif. There was a big cake walk at Bauer's Hall
witli five sl.arters and ' Heck Jackson and Lucy Bryant, Middleport, coming out "f~ best."
AN ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE contest was held at the
Presbyterian Church with first place winner being Miss Rilla ·
VJncentfor
her version of "lips That Touch liquor Must Never
.
Touch' Mine."
At nearby Hartford, George .I'd· Newton's fine mare "Mayme
Melwdrtl&gt;'' met with what could have proved to be a fatal accident She was in her paddock and becoming " hig!Hpirlted,"
ran oul while the hostler was at work and attempted to jump an

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
Vail, Colo.
(UP!)
President Ford fll11lly believes
there Is a "high likelihood of
war in the Middle East" unless
the United States can get Israel
and the Arabs to negotiate
further
military
disengagements.
· Ford would have second
thoughts about seeking the
presidency in 1976 should there
be some "personal family

'

,....

...

w

r

Exclusive interview witn the
President reveals views on
}

economy, war, his running,

\j\i

w_age and price control ideas

:·:·

me rn

i

'''

\110'"0

progress."
As for the Nixon pardon,
Ford sald: "I don't think I
(Continued on p'llge 11_

m~
Pl'&gt;nn~

~ " ' '" "'l

¥

iJr:l~m~m
44'

•

•

-Stood by his P'!rdon of his
predecessor, Richard M.
Nixon, saying: "!think I did it
at the right time and did it for
the right reasons." He conceded Nixon did not tell all
about his . Watergate role, but
sald acceptance of the pardon
can be interpreted as a confession .
- Refused to go into
specifics, but sald next year's
federal deficit will "be larger
than I would like." He blamed
inflation, unexpected domestic
and international demands and
· "the fact that Congess forced
us to spend more money than
we anticipated."
The President's warning
about the possibility of Middle
East war came when he was
asked about a columnist's
report that Ford believed
renewed fighting could break
out in the area in six months.
"! firmly believe, unless
there is some movement on a
step-by-step basis (toward)
peace in the Middle East,
there's a high degree, there's a
high likelihood of war," he
sald.
Asked what he planned to do
about it, Ford replied : "Keep
on working, trying to get
Israelis and Arabs to expand
the disengagement efforts that
were successful in 1973 and
1974,
to
broaden
the
agreements (between) the
Israelis and the Arab nations.
If we keep working on it, and
get some success, I think we
can prevent another bloody

~

.-. . .

·

'~

r • .,

•

·-

M

Slit

ahead" in the pursuit of four
more years in the W'bite
House?
"That 's right/' Ford said
with a smile.
The President said he expects the country to be out of its
economic slump by the time he
hits the campaign trail .
"!think every expert, liberal
and conservative, in the field of
economics, seems to indicate
that by · the third or fourth
quarters of 1975 we'll he on our
way," he said.
Asked whether his economic
policy would aim at recession
or inflation, Ford said : "! think
it probably has a slight tilt
toward the problems of the
recession right now, but you
certainly can't ignore the
serious danger of recurrence of
high infla lion.
"So what you have to do is
give the right medicine for the
more serious (problem)
without undercutting the efforts you made in the field of
inflation in the past.' '
Ford adamantly opposed a
gaso!ine tax increase, saying
those who are pushing for it are
engaged in "one of the most
amusing propaganda efforts
I've seen." He said the word
reaching him from Congress
"is that they're not going to
pass it. Don't send it up. It'll
tear things up.''
He sald gasoline supplies
were adequate for now and he
saw no need for rationing.
The President disagreed
with those who consider him a
babe in the woods in the
diplomatic arena. He said hls
long years on congressional
committees gave him a solid
background on military
problems and the strategic
arms limitation negotiations
with Russia .
Ford has participated so far
in two major sunnmit meetings
-one with Soviet party leader
Leonid I. Brezhnev in
Vladivostok, and the other with
French President Valery
Giscard d'Estaing in Martinique.
11
1've been very impressed
with all the foreign leaders I've
met," he said. "They're all
different.''
Asked if he considered
Brezhnev a man of peace, Ford
sald he was impressed by the
Russian leader's emphasis on

•
•
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WITH

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the wile ola aubllantlal Florentine "18fchant nained Glocondo
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going shopping. 01 couraa, II she'd hod Muter ()herge,
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MORTON HOUSE

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looking, they will he adapted to
the times.
"! just hope that when they
are finalized , and made available to the Congress and the
public, they'll be supported."
Ford sometimes puffed on
his pipe. But most or the time
he simply held it in his hand,
relighting It occasionally and
then letting it go out. He
frequently began •n answer
with hearty laughter, as though
Indicating ~e knew there were
pitfalls to be avoided.
tragedy," such as a re~rrence
He made clear he felt he had
of the cancer that forced his
taken
in stride his first months
wife Betty to undergo breast
in the presidency with its
surgery.
.awesome responsibilities. He
In an exclusive year-end
sald he loved and enjoyed it.
interview with UP!, the President also foresaw an economic
"I think I'm more enthusias·
upturn in the last half of 1975,
tic about it now than I was
ruled out wagei&gt;rice controls
before," Ford sald.
as the ''worst remedy" for
"It's the challenge of some
·
inflation and sald his priorities
new problem, trying to study it,
now have a 11slight tilt" toward
make an honest decision,
reversing the recession.
working with people In solving
He declined to say whether
the problems. I get up with the
he would propose a tax cut,
same real enthusiasm for this
although he is under strong
job as I did with the Congress
pressure to do so. But he said
in the 25-plus years I was
he will propose "very strong
there."
measures " to the heavily
He confessed decision
Democratic 94th Congress to
making was the "lonely" part
pull the economy out of its
of the job. When you are bufslump and curtail oil consumpfeted by conflicting advice on
tion.
whether to sign or veto a bill,
"The public cooperation efhe said, ''you realize that you
fort (to save oil) has not
are the only one that has to
achieved all we feel is
make the decision."
necessary," Ford said. "So
Although he promised "comthere will be stronger measpromise and conciliation" in
.ures."
his first address to Congress,
' The President, relaxed and
Ford has used his veto power
casually dressed In grey plaid
more than any other president
slacks and a white cable knit conflict .... "
in a comparable period. Apsweater over a grey shirt,
Declaring he was en- parently he will continue to do
calmly inventoried the nation's couraged despite rising ten- so when his "integrity" is at
problems in front of a sions in the area, Ford said: ' 'I stake.
crackling fire in the recreation think all parties recognize
"! don't think I should base
room of his borrowed winter another war would be a real my decisions on whether to
vacation chalet.
tragedy, both in lives lost and veto or not veto on whether the
Sitting In an' easy chair-and the financial cost. I think its veto will be upheld," he said.
finally succumbing to the consequences could be very "!think that's an abdication of
temptation to prop his feet on serious."
prerogatives and responsibilithe coffee table- Ford apof' the President. If he
ties
The President said it would
peared to enjoy fielding be "inappropriate" to com- thinks legislation is wrong , he
questions although refusing to ment on recurring reports should veto it.
be pinned down in areas he there is a National Security
"!think the presidency loses
considered too sensitive or Council contingency plan for its Integrity if you make those
premature.
the United States to take over decisions on vetos on whether
The President:
some Arab oil flelds-&lt;Jr help Congress will sustain or over-Said Housing Secretary Israel to do so-il there is ride."
James T. Lynn would be his another embargo.
He explalned that as House
new budget director, replacing
· Ford rejected charges, in- Republican leader he someRoy Ash, who is returning to cluding some by members of times had to bend to win
private life. Ford also said his own party, that he had passage of legislation. "But
Edward Levi, the 63-year-&lt;&gt;ld failed to display leadership in I'm in a different job now," he
president of the University of the current critical period. He sald.
. Chicago, would make "an said: "We do have very serious
Reminded that critics say he
outstanding attorney general" economic problems, We have bas a stubborn streak and
and left no ·doubt he would had serious decisions to make sometimes puts his party
nominate him despite con- in foreign policy. Anybody who above the nation, the President
servative criticism.
doesn't agree with you has a sald:
-Said there will be further tendency to say, 'You don ' t
"I strongly disagree with
changes In the Nixon holdover display leadership.' I think we that. I think that if you believe
cabinet. While refusing to get have, definitely, in the field of yourself to be right, philosophinto a ''numbers game," Ford foreign pollcy. I think we have ically or otherwise--lf you
noted that "some people have shown initiatives in domestic compromise, you lose any
been there a long, long time ... I policy.
integrity . I don't think that's in
think they all worked hard in a
''Certain circumstances the comtry's best interest,
tough time."
overtook us and Congress either.
-Said Secretary of State didn't act on the main portions
"So it's a fine dividing line
Henry A. Kissinger was "a of our program. So we're in the between having principles and
very indispensible man for the process right now of final having responsible comcountry" and indicated he had evaluation of what we should promise and just being a
changed his mind about getting do in the area of energy, what political eunuch. And I don't
rid of Defense Secretary we should recommend In the think I ever want to stoop to
James Schlesinger. He said field of the economy. Those that position."
Schlesinger was doing a good decisions will be made, and I
Would Ford change his mind
job in a tough spot.
think they will be very forward about seeking the presidency in
his own right In 1976 if there
were a recurrence of hls wife's
iron fence at the Newton residence. She caught on the top of the
illness?
fence and tore her breast and legs ''fearfully." Dr. Petty sewed
"Well, certalnly any perup the wounds requiring some 200 stitches.
sonal tragedy in her caseJohn Gallagher of Racine won a horse and buggy raffled off
personal family tragedy would
in Pomeroy. The Horton property had been divided into 100 acre
have an impact. But we don't
tracts - 1,500acres near Pomeroy -and was being sold. Dr. and
foresee it. There is no evidence
Mrs. Petty came from Jackson to Portland to attend the funeral
from her doctor, or any others
of her brother, John Simmons, but were a few hours late.
associated with her case, that
And, that'~ the way it was in Meigs County, 78 years ago this
she has any substantive fears
morning.
remaining.''
Looking ahead now, do let us wish you a happy and
"So you're going to forge
prosperous 1975.

.

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international problems and
that this should he encouraging
to the world because it "gives
us the opportmity to make real

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11 - The Sunday Tim~s- &amp;lntinel, Sunday, Dec. 29, 1974

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War likely
says Ford.

REX SATURNAIJA - Mark Waller was crowned
Saturnalia King by Debbie Baird, right, during festivities at
the Kyger Creek High School Latin Club Saturnalia recently .

iSaturn honored Dec. 10
CH!':SHIRE - The Kyger
Creek S.P.Q.R. Latin Club held
the Saturnalia, an ancient
Roman holiday in honor of the
:god Saturn, Dec. 10 in the
·, cafeteria of the high school.
' The tables were moved into' a
U-shape. In the middle of each
; table was a centerpiece of
evergreen , red and white
·poinsettias and holly . The
·buffet table was covered with a
'tablecloth decorated with red
'poinsettias. In the center of the
·U-shaped tables was the king 's
-chair. It was covered with a
'blue cloth. Purple and gold
·crepe paper (the Latin Club's
·colors) and mistletoe were
)lung from the ceiling. A
'C hristmas tree decorated with
ornaments completed the

'decorations.
For entertainment Latin
Club members and their guests
played a variety of games.
After the recreation, members
and their guests were seated
around the tables for the
crowning of the king. The
winner of the close election was
Mark Waller. Debbie Baird,
one of the consuls, crowned the
new king. Marie Grose, the
other consul, presented Mark
with his sceptor and a gift of a
travel kit .
The new King Mark announced the refreshments
were served. A buffet of

assorted sandwiches, cookies,
punch and two kinds of candy
had been prepared by the
refre s hment committee.
Members of that committee
were Debbie Baird and Cynthia
Clark, chairpersons; and Fred
Westfall.
The entertainment committee was made up of Marie
Grose, chairperson ; Steve
Harrison, and George Thomp-

son.
Members of the decorating
committee were Raymond
Pennington, Rick Winebrenner, Mark Waller, and Pauline
White, chairperson.
People attending the party
were Gevrge Thompson, Arthur Leach, Tony Shamblin ,
Marie Grose, Bob Grim,
Cynthia Clarke, Raymond
Pennington, Debbie Baird,
Rick Winebrenner, Steve
Roush, Judy Berkley, Roger
Berkley, Kim Reynolds, Jan
Drummond , Peggy Hill,
Debbie Hayes, Jody Fox,
Shelley Grovnevor, Debbie
Clevenger, Anna Jarrell , Uz
Hood, Oliver Taylor, Sue
Hughes, Carolyn Nibert, Susan
Swisher, Carl Myers, Connie
Haskins, Gary Barr, Ronnie
Barr, Mark Waller, Diana
Tucker, Terry Lucas, Pauline
White and Mrs . Faye Sauer,
club sponsor.

o

~ Beat...

Of the Bend _.;_,._,- ~
By Bob Hoeflich

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POMEROY - Well, most of us made it through the Christmas holiday, and wasn't it a dandy!
It was a relief this year to get away from the energy crisis of
1973 when homes of the county were darkened since outside
ctecorations were "out." There were maey . attractively
decorated and lighted homes in the county this year. They do
brighten the scene.
Almost unbelievable this year were the sales staged locally
and in the cities to attract shoppers and to put a shot in the arm
into business. The sales weren't really a "first," however. Way
back in 1896, some 78 years ago, Bend merchants resorted to the
same measures during December to boost holiday sales.
Elberfelds -which had stores in Pomeroy and Columbus at
the time- sold seal capes for $13.50 and $18.50 while "plush"
capes were going from $3.75 to $10.50. Into the bargain, a $400
pia!lO was being given away to some lucky winner following the
holiday season.
·
The New York Clothing House reduced men's heavy chinchilla coats and vest to $3.70 and men's black cheviot suits went
at $3.90. Heavy duck coats for men were selling at 88cents each!
Newman's Store advertised "in the heart of the season,"
feather boas for 39 cents; cHiico at three cents a yard; EngUsh
cashmeres at 14¥.! cents a yard; ladies all wool suiting material,
54 inches wide yet, for 33 cents a yard. Newman's was located on
the "midway" block in Pomeroy. The Red Anchor advertised
greatly reduced prices - about half of the nonnal price - on
ladies and children's jackets and offered a gift with each purchase.
The prices for merchandise were almost give-away by
today's standards but, then, I suspect it might have been a
problem to scrape together that $3.75for an overcoat or the $1.90
for a child's all wool suit with double seat and knees.
IN tltE NEWS, Rev. Sparks preached about Jezabel, that
wiciled Biblical character, at the Simpson M. E. Church and he
]iroVtid (by her career) that it does not pay in the .end to be bad,
according to the reporters of the day. Miss Bertha Osborn came
to Pomeroy from Marietta College to spend a holiday.
In those days, the mountaln did come to Mohammed. For
example, Dr. A. B. Barker, Jr., eye, throat and ear specialist of
Cincinnati, was in Pomeroy, making arrangements for regular
visits to the city. It was reported that Dr. Barker "romes highly
recOmmended, the senior Dr. Barker having been a practitioner
·
in Cincinnati for the past 30 years."
Miss Ollie Thomas of the Meigs Children's Home, left
Pomeroy to take a position in the Franklin &gt;County Children's
Home, Columbus, being the third Meigs County girl to go to the
Col~bus home. The others were Mollie ·cornell and Mary
Conde.
John Goins, a driver of one of the hacks at a child's funeral,
bad a serious accident when his horses became frightened at the
traiD and would have run into Hart's Jewelry Store had not the
vehicle caught on a telephone pole.
Frank Wright fell from his bicycle through the post office
window and two rallroad tickets were sold locally to ·widely.
different points. One was to Miss Alice McFarland t~ Prince
Edward Island and the other to Miss Clara M. Skinner to San
Bern8rdino Calif. There was a big cake walk at Bauer's Hall
witli five sl.arters and ' Heck Jackson and Lucy Bryant, Middleport, coming out "f~ best."
AN ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE contest was held at the
Presbyterian Church with first place winner being Miss Rilla ·
VJncentfor
her version of "lips That Touch liquor Must Never
.
Touch' Mine."
At nearby Hartford, George .I'd· Newton's fine mare "Mayme
Melwdrtl&gt;'' met with what could have proved to be a fatal accident She was in her paddock and becoming " hig!Hpirlted,"
ran oul while the hostler was at work and attempted to jump an

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
Vail, Colo.
(UP!)
President Ford fll11lly believes
there Is a "high likelihood of
war in the Middle East" unless
the United States can get Israel
and the Arabs to negotiate
further
military
disengagements.
· Ford would have second
thoughts about seeking the
presidency in 1976 should there
be some "personal family

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Exclusive interview witn the
President reveals views on
}

economy, war, his running,

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w_age and price control ideas

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progress."
As for the Nixon pardon,
Ford sald: "I don't think I
(Continued on p'llge 11_

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Pl'&gt;nn~

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-Stood by his P'!rdon of his
predecessor, Richard M.
Nixon, saying: "!think I did it
at the right time and did it for
the right reasons." He conceded Nixon did not tell all
about his . Watergate role, but
sald acceptance of the pardon
can be interpreted as a confession .
- Refused to go into
specifics, but sald next year's
federal deficit will "be larger
than I would like." He blamed
inflation, unexpected domestic
and international demands and
· "the fact that Congess forced
us to spend more money than
we anticipated."
The President's warning
about the possibility of Middle
East war came when he was
asked about a columnist's
report that Ford believed
renewed fighting could break
out in the area in six months.
"! firmly believe, unless
there is some movement on a
step-by-step basis (toward)
peace in the Middle East,
there's a high degree, there's a
high likelihood of war," he
sald.
Asked what he planned to do
about it, Ford replied : "Keep
on working, trying to get
Israelis and Arabs to expand
the disengagement efforts that
were successful in 1973 and
1974,
to
broaden
the
agreements (between) the
Israelis and the Arab nations.
If we keep working on it, and
get some success, I think we
can prevent another bloody

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ahead" in the pursuit of four
more years in the W'bite
House?
"That 's right/' Ford said
with a smile.
The President said he expects the country to be out of its
economic slump by the time he
hits the campaign trail .
"!think every expert, liberal
and conservative, in the field of
economics, seems to indicate
that by · the third or fourth
quarters of 1975 we'll he on our
way," he said.
Asked whether his economic
policy would aim at recession
or inflation, Ford said : "! think
it probably has a slight tilt
toward the problems of the
recession right now, but you
certainly can't ignore the
serious danger of recurrence of
high infla lion.
"So what you have to do is
give the right medicine for the
more serious (problem)
without undercutting the efforts you made in the field of
inflation in the past.' '
Ford adamantly opposed a
gaso!ine tax increase, saying
those who are pushing for it are
engaged in "one of the most
amusing propaganda efforts
I've seen." He said the word
reaching him from Congress
"is that they're not going to
pass it. Don't send it up. It'll
tear things up.''
He sald gasoline supplies
were adequate for now and he
saw no need for rationing.
The President disagreed
with those who consider him a
babe in the woods in the
diplomatic arena. He said hls
long years on congressional
committees gave him a solid
background on military
problems and the strategic
arms limitation negotiations
with Russia .
Ford has participated so far
in two major sunnmit meetings
-one with Soviet party leader
Leonid I. Brezhnev in
Vladivostok, and the other with
French President Valery
Giscard d'Estaing in Martinique.
11
1've been very impressed
with all the foreign leaders I've
met," he said. "They're all
different.''
Asked if he considered
Brezhnev a man of peace, Ford
sald he was impressed by the
Russian leader's emphasis on

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looking, they will he adapted to
the times.
"! just hope that when they
are finalized , and made available to the Congress and the
public, they'll be supported."
Ford sometimes puffed on
his pipe. But most or the time
he simply held it in his hand,
relighting It occasionally and
then letting it go out. He
frequently began •n answer
with hearty laughter, as though
Indicating ~e knew there were
pitfalls to be avoided.
tragedy," such as a re~rrence
He made clear he felt he had
of the cancer that forced his
taken
in stride his first months
wife Betty to undergo breast
in the presidency with its
surgery.
.awesome responsibilities. He
In an exclusive year-end
sald he loved and enjoyed it.
interview with UP!, the President also foresaw an economic
"I think I'm more enthusias·
upturn in the last half of 1975,
tic about it now than I was
ruled out wagei&gt;rice controls
before," Ford sald.
as the ''worst remedy" for
"It's the challenge of some
·
inflation and sald his priorities
new problem, trying to study it,
now have a 11slight tilt" toward
make an honest decision,
reversing the recession.
working with people In solving
He declined to say whether
the problems. I get up with the
he would propose a tax cut,
same real enthusiasm for this
although he is under strong
job as I did with the Congress
pressure to do so. But he said
in the 25-plus years I was
he will propose "very strong
there."
measures " to the heavily
He confessed decision
Democratic 94th Congress to
making was the "lonely" part
pull the economy out of its
of the job. When you are bufslump and curtail oil consumpfeted by conflicting advice on
tion.
whether to sign or veto a bill,
"The public cooperation efhe said, ''you realize that you
fort (to save oil) has not
are the only one that has to
achieved all we feel is
make the decision."
necessary," Ford said. "So
Although he promised "comthere will be stronger measpromise and conciliation" in
.ures."
his first address to Congress,
' The President, relaxed and
Ford has used his veto power
casually dressed In grey plaid
more than any other president
slacks and a white cable knit conflict .... "
in a comparable period. Apsweater over a grey shirt,
Declaring he was en- parently he will continue to do
calmly inventoried the nation's couraged despite rising ten- so when his "integrity" is at
problems in front of a sions in the area, Ford said: ' 'I stake.
crackling fire in the recreation think all parties recognize
"! don't think I should base
room of his borrowed winter another war would be a real my decisions on whether to
vacation chalet.
tragedy, both in lives lost and veto or not veto on whether the
Sitting In an' easy chair-and the financial cost. I think its veto will be upheld," he said.
finally succumbing to the consequences could be very "!think that's an abdication of
temptation to prop his feet on serious."
prerogatives and responsibilithe coffee table- Ford apof' the President. If he
ties
The President said it would
peared to enjoy fielding be "inappropriate" to com- thinks legislation is wrong , he
questions although refusing to ment on recurring reports should veto it.
be pinned down in areas he there is a National Security
"!think the presidency loses
considered too sensitive or Council contingency plan for its Integrity if you make those
premature.
the United States to take over decisions on vetos on whether
The President:
some Arab oil flelds-&lt;Jr help Congress will sustain or over-Said Housing Secretary Israel to do so-il there is ride."
James T. Lynn would be his another embargo.
He explalned that as House
new budget director, replacing
· Ford rejected charges, in- Republican leader he someRoy Ash, who is returning to cluding some by members of times had to bend to win
private life. Ford also said his own party, that he had passage of legislation. "But
Edward Levi, the 63-year-&lt;&gt;ld failed to display leadership in I'm in a different job now," he
president of the University of the current critical period. He sald.
. Chicago, would make "an said: "We do have very serious
Reminded that critics say he
outstanding attorney general" economic problems, We have bas a stubborn streak and
and left no ·doubt he would had serious decisions to make sometimes puts his party
nominate him despite con- in foreign policy. Anybody who above the nation, the President
servative criticism.
doesn't agree with you has a sald:
-Said there will be further tendency to say, 'You don ' t
"I strongly disagree with
changes In the Nixon holdover display leadership.' I think we that. I think that if you believe
cabinet. While refusing to get have, definitely, in the field of yourself to be right, philosophinto a ''numbers game," Ford foreign pollcy. I think we have ically or otherwise--lf you
noted that "some people have shown initiatives in domestic compromise, you lose any
been there a long, long time ... I policy.
integrity . I don't think that's in
think they all worked hard in a
''Certain circumstances the comtry's best interest,
tough time."
overtook us and Congress either.
-Said Secretary of State didn't act on the main portions
"So it's a fine dividing line
Henry A. Kissinger was "a of our program. So we're in the between having principles and
very indispensible man for the process right now of final having responsible comcountry" and indicated he had evaluation of what we should promise and just being a
changed his mind about getting do in the area of energy, what political eunuch. And I don't
rid of Defense Secretary we should recommend In the think I ever want to stoop to
James Schlesinger. He said field of the economy. Those that position."
Schlesinger was doing a good decisions will be made, and I
Would Ford change his mind
job in a tough spot.
think they will be very forward about seeking the presidency in
his own right In 1976 if there
were a recurrence of hls wife's
iron fence at the Newton residence. She caught on the top of the
illness?
fence and tore her breast and legs ''fearfully." Dr. Petty sewed
"Well, certalnly any perup the wounds requiring some 200 stitches.
sonal tragedy in her caseJohn Gallagher of Racine won a horse and buggy raffled off
personal family tragedy would
in Pomeroy. The Horton property had been divided into 100 acre
have an impact. But we don't
tracts - 1,500acres near Pomeroy -and was being sold. Dr. and
foresee it. There is no evidence
Mrs. Petty came from Jackson to Portland to attend the funeral
from her doctor, or any others
of her brother, John Simmons, but were a few hours late.
associated with her case, that
And, that'~ the way it was in Meigs County, 78 years ago this
she has any substantive fears
morning.
remaining.''
Looking ahead now, do let us wish you a happy and
"So you're going to forge
prosperous 1975.

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international problems and
that this should he encouraging
to the world because it "gives
us the opportmity to make real

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�12- The Sunday Times Senttnel, SWJday, Dec. 29, 1974

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Gallia
Ry Hobart Wilso11 Jr.

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ERA SHIRLEY
LETART, W Va - Era
Meredith Sh1rl ey. 67, of Letart
was dead on arnval ear ly
Saturday at Pleasant Va lley
Hosp1tal
Funeral serv1ces will be held
Monday at 1 JO p m f rom the
Star Advent Church of wh 1ch
she wa s a member The Rev
Wilbur Baxt er will offiCiate
and buna l will be 1n the
Roanoke Cemetery Friends
will be re c e1ved at the
Fog les ong Funera l Home after

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A great loss for southeastern Ohio
That was the reactton loca lly last "eek follow mg the death of
Oak H1ll's Edward E Dav1s, 73, 1et1red mdustnahst, r~ct1ve
banker and farmer
One commuruty leader was qwck to pomt out that "Eddte"
Davts dtd more for southeastern Oluo m the past 15 years than
any other mdtvtdual
,
Mr DaVIs served as prestdent of the Southeastern Ohw
Reg tonal Council for more than 10 years Through thts agency, he
was able to untte southern Ohio comm uruttes for better roads,
schools, hospttals and recreation facthttes
When a commuruty needed help, tts leaders would go to Eddte
DaviS As far as we know, he never refused anybody assistance
when they needed tt
Desptte hts tremendous success m many fields, Edd te DaVIs
remamed a very humble and fnendly per&lt;l&lt;ln
Eddte Davts, called "Mr Southeastern Ohto " by many of his
frtends, wtll be great!&gt; mtssed by restdents m this regwn

2 p m Sunday

Mr s
Sh1r ley was born
August 11 1907 1n Pomt
Pleasan t, a daughter of the late
Henry Clay Coope r and
Blanche P1 erce Cooper She
wa s preceded 1n death by her
husband Ralph Hobert Sh1rley
m 1956 one bro lher, Albert
and one s1s ler , Mrs Macy
Cromley
Surv1vors mc!ude tr. -ee sons
Ralph Hobert Sh 1rley Mt
Al to Robert Mason Sh~rtey
Leon Rt 1 and R~ehard He nry
Sh~rley
Pomt
Pleasant
S1sters, Velma Jean Clark
Mr s Garnet Agnes Gerlach
Rt 1 Letart
Mrs Qu 1lla
Elizabe th Ohl1nger Mt Alto
20 gra ndch ildren and one

+++
Ed Clark, edttor of the Ja ckson Journal-Herald wrote these
lines about E E Davts m hts Sun-Spots column Fnday
"Many of you who read these hnes knew the la te Edd te DaVIS
far better than I HIS life and hts career were rooted and
flouriShed m southeastern Ohto a nd he had countless close
busmess, ctvtc and personal assoctates here
"As a young newspaperman m J ackson, I knew of Eddte
Davts, by reputation, as a wealthy and successful busmessman
before I met hun personally Over the decades, I met him many
times a t local and area meetings and fun ctiOns. He was a qmet,
soft-spoken and rutassurrung man , a lways unfatlmgly polite
" We were among those present at countless meetmgs at
which a rea prOJects were planned and dtscussed Some were
hatched and became reahltes Many did not In most msta nces, I
was there because tt was my JOb I often wondered why Eddte
Davts was there, spendmg many long hours, many of them unpmducltve He could eastly have delegated Uus chore to another
" I think the answer IS a s unple one I thmk Eddte DaVIs
smcerely wanted this area to progress a nd move ahead And I
think many of the successful projects moved forward only
because he gave it his personal presence, mterest and force
"Eddte DaVIs could eastly have afforded a vtlla 10 the
Canbbean, a lodge m the western mountams or a locallon li1
some favorite spa of the wealthy if he had so chosen
" But even m the past years when he relmqutshed some of his
active busmess responstbtlitles, he remamed a man of
southeastern Ohto and mvested hiS mcreased tune and ene rgy m
the creation of a f10e hill coWJtr) farm m Jackson county His
mterest , hts philantrophtes and hts energtes m a long and frUitf ul
life were centered m southeastern Ohto And the fqtce and
quality of thiS area ts dimimshed by his death "

+++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the ftles of the Datly Trtbrute
and weekly Gallta Times
Fire levels Arthur Rupe's Idling
station at Kyger .. Seven mile tmpro\ ement proJect on Rt 35
approved by state highway department
Wtlllam Lanter, 85,
retU'ed Crown Ctty postmaster, clauned by death .. Columbus
Blue Imps down
East hands GAHS fll'sl cage setback, 69-53
Cheshll'e varstty 64-48 for 34th consecutive triUmph

Benny was proud
of old home town
prtvate lessons
WAUKEGAN, lll (UPI) The old home town was m
"He couldn 't watt to get
mourmng Frtday for tis here ,' 5abon jtan said "He
brought hts staff along and
favortte son, Jack Benny
" He was really proud of patd all the expenses aga10 and
Waukegan," satd Mayor rat sed some thmg like $25,000 to
Robert SabonJtan of this ctty on put the thtng over for us "
the ll110ms-Wtscons10 hne
The comedtan, 80, dted of
cancer of the pancreas at hts
Beverly Htlls, Calif , home ,
late Thursday
" He was a n ms htutwn
around here ," SabonJian satd
"Never too busy for us always ready to do somethmg
for Waukegan

HELD OUT 30 YEARS
JAKARTA (UP!) - A party
of Indonestan and Japanese
offtctals left Jakarta for
Morotat Island today to meet a
man believed to be a World
War II Japanese holdout The
man, who tdenttfted hunself as
Teruo Nakamura, a 57-year-old
native of Tat wan, was forutd by
an Indonesian Air Force
search party Thursday after
holdmg out m the Ptlowo forest
on Morotat tsland for more
than 30 years Morotat ts Indonesia's northernmost tsland
m theMoluccas group

"Last summer I asked hun
tf he could come up and play a
beneftt for the ctty's symphony
orcheslra , whtch was m bad
fmanctal shape He came, JUSt
as he had on many other occasions- you know, to help out
hts town - and he ratsed
several thousand doUars, and
patd for all of his expenses "
SabonJtan recalled another
occaswn when he made an
appeal to Benny m behalf of the

TAKEN TO HOLZER
RACINE - The Racme ER
squad transported Lort Parsons, Racme, RD, to Holzer
Medical Center Saturday at
9 45 am

c1ty's muSic center, whtch was
on the verge of bankruptcy
The center ts mostly for
chtldren who can't afford

. D;;ths___l New year entered; like it or not

grea t grand child
The body w1 11 be taken to the
church one hour before the

serv 1ce

G W CLONCh

RUTLA ND
Wash1ngton

George
Clonch.

80,

Rutland Route 1 d1ed Fnday
at

Ve t er an s

Memor1al

Hosp1tal
Mr Clonc h was born May 25
1894 m Mason County, W Va
the son of the late Thomas and
M1ssoun Sh1t tz Clonch He was
a vete ran of Wor ld War I
hav1ng served n France and
Germany He was a farmer
and a ra dro.a der
On Apnl 1, 1921 he marned
the former Frances Newel l
who surv1ves Other surv1vors
are f1ve sons Robert, Mtd
dleport Paul Logan Clyde
Bremen , Wilbert Lynchberg,
Leland ( 8111) Pomeroy Ro ute
4 e1gh t da ughters, Mrs Bess1e
Clouse
North Hollywood,
Ca lif
Mrs
Dorot hy
Demoskey, M 1ddleport Mrs
Bett y
Goodw 1n ,
North
Carol1na
M1 ss
Kath le en
Clonch Col umbus Mrs Alta
F1sh, Rutland Route 1, M rs
.Au d rey Keesee and Mrs
Ma x 1ne Keesee , bot h of
Columbus, and Mtss Mar 1or1e
Clonch, a t hom e
Al so su rv iv ing are 48
grandchildren and 15 great
grandchildren
a brother
Wdl 1am o f Bradbur y, and a
s1ster, Mrs Lavma Hutton, no
a ddress li sted Preced1 ng h1m
1n

death bes1des h1s parents

Serious crime
up 16 %; worse
in old South
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
FBI reports serious cnme rose
16 per cent across the country
m the first mne months of 1974
and the btggest mcrease was m
the South
The January - to- September
statistics were accompamed
Thur sday by call from
outgomg Attorney General
Wtlham B Saxbe for law enforcement agenctes to work

harder on preventing crtme
and to msure sw1ft prosecuhon
as a deterrent
Crtmes aga mst property,
such as auto theft, were up 17
per cent whtle murder, rap~.
robbery, assault and other
vwlent cnmes rose 8 per cent
over the ftrst lhree-&lt;1uarters of
1973
Crtme rose 20 per cent tn the
South ove r the first mn e
months of last year, the FBI
satd The mcrease was 15 per
ce ntm the north-central part of
the coruttry, 14 per cent m the
West and 13 per cent m the
heavtly populated northeast

DORES ARNOLD ILL
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
E-R squad was called to Rock
Sprmgs at I 04 p m Frtday for
Dares Arnold, who was tll. He
was taken to Veterans
Memortal Hospttal and admtlted

Greetings and a happy New Year to
many friends and kind patrons. It's b€:en
a privilege to serve you. We present
our NEW YEAR'S EVE offerings:
Complimentary Brandy Egg
Chicken Noodle Soup
ooo
Salad Bar
B~OILED AUSTRALIAN LOBSTER TAIL
PRIME FILET MIGNON
ROAST PRIME RIB OF BEEF
ROAST LOIN OF PORK
Baked Potato - Cauliflower Gratmee
Beans - Carf'ots a !'Orange

Ry Goldie Clendenin
weight, or put tl on, stopped
PORTLAND - The hme for smokmg, planted that tree, let
rcsolvm g IS here agam
up on nagg mg m 1974
We stand at the doorway of a
Then many ate ca bbage,
new year once more, qmle and, or sa uerkraut on New
Wlhke the door ptctured where Year's Day, and went rtght on
th
of
Chrtst stands at e door
our mak tn g the
same
' ole
hearts and knocks, and we mtslakes
have free agency to mvtle Htm
Could th1s be the year to
m For lhts door opens mto a make fewer resolutions, and
spankmg new year and we go more effort to do things that
through - ready, or wtllmg or should be done, when they
not For the old year draws should be done, and the way
swt flly to tts close and wtll soon they should be done " And
have passed
resolve to be more moderate m
Wtth tts passmg many many thmgs
thmgs wtll also have passed
To laug h more with people,
Some cause us to fee l a great and less at people
loss , others we are happy to
To throw off the chip, and

were
three bro lh ers and lo ve
51
s~~~~ral servJC:s will be held
al 2 P m Monday al lhe
Rutland Church of the
Na zarene wolh lhe Rev Lloyd
0 Gnmm, Jr • off 1c1atmg
Buroa l woll be '" lhe Wells
Ceme lery Fnends may ca ll at
the Walker Fu nera l Home 1n
2Rulland
p m unt1
any
l 12
lome
noonSun
onday
Monday
Irom
when th e body wtll be laken to
lhe church The famtly woll
rece ive
fr ie2nd
home
from
tos4 at
andthe
7 tofun
9 pera
ml
Sunday Mo 1olary n tes wo11 be
con dueled by Rutland Posi 467.
Amerocan Leg ton
JAMES A HAWLEY
Ml DDLE PORT - Jam es A
Hawley
49,WoOdstock
formerly Il of
Middleport
l
doed Fro day even tng al see go
Woods lock Memortal Hospttal
So here we are , to resolve to
Mr
Hawley
was
born
Oc
t
3
"do
thts " and " don't ddo that "
1925 1n Me1gs County the son of
the late Ja mes and Spa rkl e A new year, a new ay - a
Fraz,er Hawley He was also slate, clean , clear of broken
preceded
'" dealh by a son, a promtses to ourselves ar.:l
515
others Three hundred a nd
10 fer an d a brother He served
both t he army and navy
durtng the World Wa r II era
SIKly-five days of chances
Su rv1 v1ng are two so ns
ahead to make, and, or, break
Steven and Robert s1sters.
ti
Mr s
Donald 1 Kalhleen) good mten ons
Man ley, Mrs Allred (Helen)
Accordtng to esltmates, half
Farley and Mrs Elt I Bonnie) the people wtll wake up
all of Moddleport
fEbersbach,
1ve
brothers
F ra nk. grouchy and headachy because
Columbus
Nor man, Mld
of last mght's mdulgcnce, now
dleporl Delmar. Crystal Lake, the TV ts too loud , brea kfast ts
Ill John
Rochard
ol and
Belefontaone
no good , everyone else talks
and
of Rutl
Funeral servoces woll be held too much, NOTHING ts rtght
Tuesday at 2 30 p m from the
But the other half awakes
Rawlongs Coats Funeral Home clear headed and comfortably
w1th the Rev O'De ll Man ley 1n
I
d
charge Bur~al will fol low 1n
re axes,
a nd
reammg
Chesh1re
Gra .... el
Hilt
dreams , always somewhere ,
Cemetery Fr~ends may call someone resolves to wm, and
4
79
from
P m Monday
doe s Somewhere, someone
at
the2funand
era l home
lived wtthm thetr means, lost

I wtll be sincere and humble
In the work I have to do;
I will praise Instead of censure
And wtll see the good In you

"Daddy, all the a jus wen
out of my bicycle, can you fit it
for me?
"Soon as Santa Claus leaves
Mth hiS 'Ho, Ho, Ho " m comes
January crying woe, woe, woe .
[ don't rmnd gettmg bills so
11
much, but hate to have to pay
them
"Maybe we can dispose ()f
the turkey in time, but what
can w~ do With a gaUon of egg

I wtll do what I am able
To advance a worthy cause,

I wtll strtve to lessen eVIl
And obey God's rtghteous laws
I wtll pray for Him togutde me
In Ute stratght and narrow

1r

t

t

way,

nag"

I wtll sheen false prtde &amp; folly
I wtll live my best today
-GrenvtlleKietSer
Never a Cliristmas mormng ,
never the Old Year ends but
bod th k of
bod
some y m s some
y,
old days, old times,oldfrtends

" What I hate about gomg to
the Complamt Dept IS having
to watt in hne to get my chance
to holler
"Daddy, a kid borrowed my
sled and ran mto a tree and
k
ff t C
bro e a runner o 1 - an you
ftt tt for me?"

In "'Twas the Day After
Chrtstmas" followmg are
remarks one always hears on
the day after Christmas
" Daddy, can you ftx my new
doll? She broke her head "
" Just thmk we have only 364
days left to enJOY before we
have to go through it all agam
' 'Somehow 1t dtdn't seem
nght for Chrtstmas to fall on
Wednesay
what's to
celebrate on a Wednesday?
" Chrtstmas is a year-round
industry -takes SIX months to

PORCH STRUCK
POMEROY - A car drtven
by Ronald Smith, Hemlock
Grove, was heavUy damaged
at 2:57 a.m Saturday on East
Mam St. when Smith lost
conlrol, went left of center
through a hedge and slruck the
porch of a home owned by Mrs
Norma Wtlson. Smith, charged
mth reckless operatton, was
not hurt

A It ts effective Wednesd ay, November 2 7,
1974,. at all FDIC Insured banks
Q . How can I tell whether my depostt ts tnsu red by
FDIC7
A. Each of th e 14,500 F DIC-msured banks m the
Umted States has an off1c1al stgn at each teller's
wmdow us1ng the FDIC logo that appears at the
bottom of th1s ad
a. Can I get more than $40,000 msu ranee at the
same bank?
A Yes, 1f you hold accounts m different legal
ownership capac1ties For example, 1f you are
marned, you ca n have an account In your name
Insured up to $40,000; your spouse can have an
account 1n h1s or her name msured up to $40,000;
and you and your spouse can have a JOint account
1nsured up to $40,000. If you hold several ac
counts m the same ownership capac1ty, however,
the max1mum In surance to whtch you are entitled
1s $40,000-even 1f the total amount mall of the
accounts 1s more. The new law has not changed
the rules-only the dollar amount of tnsurance has
been changed
a. How frequently do FDIC tnsured banks fatl7
A. In the past ten years, ftve or SIX FDIC 1nsured
banks on the average have failed each year-about
four one hundredths of one percent of all msured
banks in the country. The year 1974 will proba·
bly be no different m this respect than past years.
Q. What ts the record of depositor protection for
msured banks that have fatled7
A To date ' tn all failed banks msured by FDIC,
over 99 percent of all depos its, 1nsured and unInsured comb1ned, have been pa1d or made ava1l
able to the1r owners.
a. If an FDIC-insured bank fatls, when and how wtll
I get my deposit back7 '
A. If an FDIC-insured bank ts closed and ltqUI
dated, FDIC will start to pay msured deposttors
up to the statutory It m1t wtth 1n ten days after the
closmg. As the bank's assets are ltquidated, owners of cla1ms m excess of the $40,000 tnsurance
ltmtt will share tn the proceeds wtth other general
creditors. In cases where the deposit ltabilittes of
a faded bank are taken over by another sound
bank With fmanc1al assistance from the FDIC,
deposttors have the use of all the~r funds to the
same extent they had m the faded bank before tt
closed.
Q. How good is FDIC msurance7
A. Smce 1ts creat1on m 1933, the FDIC has never
failed to honor its depostt 1nsurance commttment.

• WASIDNGTON ( UPI) - The
National Highway Traffic
Safety Admimstratlon, concerned because alcohol IS Involved in half the natton 's htghway deaths, IS ISsuing a call for
active-and sometimes drastic
-mterventlon by frtends and
relatives to keep drmkers off
the highways.
An advertisement prepared
In recent weeks under a
government contract tells
hosts what to do before the
party begins to lessen dangers
of alcohol abuse.
Among the tips : Always
serve food along wtth alcohol
Use a Jigger to measure drmks.
Stop servmg alcohol about an

•

over the years?
A. Puttmg to one stde for the moment the nation's two largest bank failures (United States
National Bank, San Diego, m 1973 and Franklin
National Bank, New York, -last month) the
FDIC's net loss tn 506 bank fa1lu'res since 1933
has been approximately $75 mill1on.

WASHINGTON &lt;UPI) - Since October the
jurors at the Watergate cover-up trial have sat
silent and inscrutable, a mute testament to a
judicial system that can and does call to account
even the most powerful men in the land
When they fmally speak, probably later this
week, it will be with a smgle voice - to convtct or
acquit each of five defendants who once savored
power with President Richard M. Nixon and now
stand charged with plotting to hush up the bugging
scandal that drove Nixon from office

facts about FDIC and federal deposit insurance?
A. Informat1on may be obtained by writing to
the Publtc lnfermation Office, Federal Depostt
Insurance Corpp ration, Washington , D.C. 20429.

•

.'

"

'

~-L~.~~~'-$1~-~~,~-----

AUTO BANl&lt; ·
THIRD AVE.

•'

.
•

I

•

FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
i

'

~. . . .- - - -. .~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ..a. .n.-.u.~~~~~~ ~~ . ~ ~

..................

.. _,
__ ____
,..,..

ULTIMATE IN all' condll!oning IS enjoyed by Paulo
Filho of Rio de Janell'o who constructed the custom Volkswagen m ftve months from a VW chassiS a nd 100 pet cent
wrought U'on Ftlho.satd ram and wmd are a problem when
drtvmg but he would never part wtth tl, even though offered
$3,1100 and a new VW for his Wltque crealton
The mter10r secretary wtU
acqull'e the lands by donatiOn,
purchase, exchange or transfer
although any public lands
which may be mvolved may be
acqutred
only
through
donation All land acqutStttons
must be " substantially complete" wtthin stx years
The measure , one of 158 btUs
Prestdent Ford took on a sktmg
vacation to Vat!, Colo , establiShes Ohto's fll'st national
park. Ohio wtll conlrtbute
another $4 2 million toward the
cost
The proposed park ts
bounded on the north by
Rockstde Road, to JUSt south of
Bath Road m Sumnut County
More than 5 million persons
live wtthin an hour drtve of the

- Phystcally restram him tf
he still mstSts Though this step
sounds drastic, a drunk must
not be allowed to drive
-Call a trun to, take him
home Pay for the rtde your
self
- Wt.en other measures fatl,

valley
II was uncertain whether the
Prestdent would approve the
bill, espectally Since he had
Wltil rrudmght Frtday to take
action and no favorable a nnouncement had been made by
tha t tune.
Members of Congress, which
overwhelmingly approved tl
earlier m the month, had sa td
they would re..submtt tt early
next month if tt wasn 't stgned
Both Sen Robert Taft, DOhto, and former Sen Howard
M Metzenbaum made lith
hour telephone pleas to President Ford Frtday, to urge
pass age of the btll They
stressed the tdea the park
would be a good mvestment

call the police As agressive as
tht s sounds "any measure
must be taken to prevent
someone who has had too muc h
lQ drink from drtvmg "
The ad says · " When a
problem drmker dnves, tt's
your problem "

Zany cast of old days
together today, but one
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Just like In the old radio and
television days, the cast- save one -will he together ouce
again.
Eddie " Rochester" Anderson, the gravel-voiced
butler; Don Wilson, the belly-laughing amumncer ; Mel
Blanc, who did aU those funny voices ; Dennis Day, tho
boyish Irish Crooner, and Mary Uvlngston, the
wisecracking girHrlend. Jack Benny, sawing away at his
vloUn pressed to hill chin as he awaited laughter from joke
to joke, wUI be missing.
More than 1,000 persons, Including a Who 's Who of
celebrities from sbow business, music and poUllcs, will
attend funeral services for Benny today at Hlllside
Memorial Park In suburban Culver City. Two of Benny's
cl011est friends and fellow comedians - Bob Hope and
George Burns - will deUver the eulogy for the ageless
comic wbo succumbed unexpectedly at his home Friday
. from cancer,
::
Rabbi Edgar F. Maguln will preside at the services
:=. scheduled for noon (3 p.m. EST).
=·:
11te pallbearers will be Gregory Peck, Frank Sinatra,
: MUton Berle, Billy Wilder, Fred DeCordova, Leonard
Gershe, Armand Deutsch, Irving A. Fein (Benny's longtime manager), Mervyn Leroy and Hilliard Marks, brotber

U.S. District Judge John J . staff; John D. Ehrllchnlan,
Slrlca will deliver his instruc- once Nixon 's No 2 aide;
tlons 1o the Jurors Monday, Robert C. Mardtan, a former
Jli'Obably including a charge assistant attorney general and
that they should not let the offlctal of the Nixon r~ection
Nixon's full pardon enter mto coiiiliiittee; and Kenneth W
their decisions. Then he will Parkinson, a Washington
send them to their windowless lawyer hired to defend the
jury room to deliberate.
~ COIIIliiitttee after Watergate.
Veteran courthouse obAll are charged wtth con- vers are guessing the rune spll'acy to obstruct justice and
wcmen and three men who defraud the United States-the
comprised the jury may be out heart of the government's
.•
for two or three days. Bet they case.
see little likelihood of "a hung
All but Mardian are also
jury"--80 hopelessly dlvlo;led it charged with actual obC81Uloi make up Its mind.
"Siruelion of justice. MtlcheU,
"I've never seen such a Haldeman and Ehrllchman are
strong-minded, independent faced with perJUI'J1 _counts as
group In my life," ooe defense well.
VAIL, Colo (UP!) - Three
attorney said privately last
All five took the stand to
eek
protest their innocence and all
months after he pardoned
w
jurors must consider the blamed others-primarily forRichard M Nixon for a ny
testimony of 85 witnesses ; mer White House COWJsel John - Watergate crunes, President
more than 12,000 pages of w Dean m
Ford slill feels he did the nght
tranacript; nearly three dozen
"Isn't tt sirange how all the thmg at the right time. And he
White House tapes; several defendants in this case take the says4ItS compass~on for Nixon
score of documentary exhibits; post!ion that this whole ~ from thetr 10/lg-tune
and final arguments from eight massive cover-&lt;Ip was con- frtendshlp.
cocted planned and carried •
Ford discussed his attitude
lawyers that ran 21 hours.
They must determine the out by 'the IIUie privates in this tOward his predecessor m a
gull! or lmocence of John N. army?" Chtef Prosecutor UPI interview He was asked
Mitchell, the former attorney JamesF. NealaskedFrtday in whether, In vtew of the
general and Nixon's campaign his summatton to the Jury
Wa tergate trials and the
""r H R Haldeman the
"If you believe that, find the Widespread crtticiSffi of the
mana,.. ; · ·
•
formei White: House chief of defendants not ,guilty "
,1 pard0~· Ntxon shou ld mak e a

"

SUNDAY DECEMBER 29. 1974

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
coveted openmg on the Senate
Judtctary Comrruttee m the
94th Congress has trtggered a
hattie between three hberal
a nd
two
conservative
Democrats
The liberals are Sen Lee
Metcalf of Montana, a thirdtermer , Sen James Abourezk
of South Dakota, a firs ttermer a nd Senator-elect
Palrtck Leahy of Vermont
The conservatives are Sen
James B Allen of Alabama,
who has JUSt won a second
term
a nd Se nat or-e lect
Robert Morg an of North
Car olma
The comnuttee, now nearly
evenly
d tvtded
along
tdeologtcallmes, may constder
s uch sensitive Issues as co nsh tu ttonal amendments on
abortion , school prayer , and
busmg, posstble changes m the
ame ndment dealing wtth
select10 n of a new vtce
president, and extenswn of Lhe
voting ttghts act
The smgle vacancy on the
Democral!c stde was created
b&gt; the rettrement of Sen Sam
J Erv m Jr of North Carolma
1\ ts probable, however, that
the Democratic Steermg Commtttee, head ed by Senate
leader Mtke Mansfteld, wtll
recommend enlargement of

the panel to reflect Democrallc
gams m the Nov S electiOns
A
numbe r
of
other
Democratic mcumbents are
also seekmg new comrru ttees
F trst term Sens Bennett
Johnston of LoUistana a nd
Walter Huddleston of Kentucky
have requested the Appropriations Comrruttee
Sen Sam Nunn of Georgta
ha s requested the Budget
Commtttee , a nd Sen Dtck
Clark of Iowa wants the
Foretgn Relahons and Armed
SerVIces Commtttees, m that
order of preference
Sen Adlat Stevenson Ill of
Ulmms has asked for seats on
the Democrallc Polley Commtttee, the Legtslattve Revtew
Commtttee an d the Jomt
Atomtc Commtttee.
Sens. Floyd K Haskell of
Colorado a nd Wtlham Ha thaway of Mmnc have asked for

PAGE 13

public confesswn of hiS exact
role In the scandals.
The President replied that " I
don't think r made a miStake m
giving the pardon I think I dtd
tt at the right tune and did tt for
the rtghl reasons "
As for any Nrxon "confession ," Ford satd "!don't thmk
I should be a JUdge as to what
Mr. Ntxon should or should not

say."
He went on to say that " tt
would appear from the trials
tltat one or many versiOns of
that period are con'~Ptg out

VAIL. Colo. (UP I) President Ford Is generally
aware of threa ts against his
life but says " I just don' t
think we can worry about
those things."
Asked In a n Interview If he
had gotten used to the
rcstricllons that go with
being President, Ford said
he gets along ''very well"
with his Secret Servtce
agents "Are you aware of
threats that come to the
Wh1te Hnu se?" he was
asked
Generally , I' m advi se d , '~
he re plied ' "Not e very
detail There have been one
or two incidents where they
called my attention to
something specific "
"Does It frighten you In
any way?"

the Fmance Conumttee, Sens
Edward M Kennedy of Massachusetts and Thomas F Eagleton of M1ssoun want on the
Jomt Economic Comllllttee,
Se ns
John
Tunney
of
Califorma and Mtke Gravel of
Alaska would like the Jomt
Atomtc Comm ittee, and
Joseph Btden of Delaware,
Foretgn Relattons
The new Democrats' fll'st
chotces are Gary Hart of

Colorado, Armed Services;
Wendell Ford of Kentucky,
Commerce, Dtck Stone of
Flonda and Dale Bumpers of
Arkansas, F m a nce , John
Culver of Iowa, Foreign
Relattons, Leahy and Morgan,
Judtctary, and John Glenn of
Ohw has requested asstgrunent
to Government Operations

Laws forgotten in recount
of Fairfield votes charged
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - Rep
Donald Maddux, R-Lancaster,
chatrman of the Ohio House
subcomrruttee on Elecllons,
Saturday asked Secretary of
State Ted W Brown w mvesttgate several ''unusual"
mctdents mvolvmg the recount
of votes m the gubernatortal
race tn Fairfield County
Gov John J Gtlltgan caUed
off the recount when tl showed
that Gov -elect J ames A
Rhodes would retam his Nov. 5
to
ed
f
u 000
VIC ry
ge 0 over •
votes
"As chatrman of the House
subcommtttee on elections and
because o( the questtonable
nature of some of the recountmg activities, I request your
offtctal response to some of the
Circums ta nce whtch I wtll
brmg to you r attention,"
Maddux smd
a letter to
10
Brown
"Smce Governor Gtlllgan
has ca lled off the recount the
purpose of thts commruttcation
Is not an attempt to gain votes
but merely to ascertain from
you as the state's chtef electton
officer your optmon on some of
therecountacttVIttes," he said
" It ts my understandmg that
the function of a recorutt IS to
scruhmze as closely as
posstble all the ballots cast and
then co rut! only those whtch are
100 per cent free from any type
of controversy or JUdgement
called on the part of those
counting the ballots,"he S81d,

"thus the purpose of the
recorutt ts to ehmtnate all
illegal ballots or all mtsmarked
ballots or all ballots m whic h
there IS any mdtcabon of Im·
proper vollng
' I personally fmd that some
of th e acltVItes tn Fall'fteld
County are of a very questiOna ble na lure," satd Maddux
Among other thmgs , Maddux
S3ld, ballots m unlocked or
unsealed co ntamers were
counted and ballots m contamers whtch dtd not have the
stgnature of a precmct Judg e
were counted
"I want hun (Brown) to list
under what state law he
allowed ballots to be counted
which were m unsealed contamers, which had more than
one or two or three markmgs
on tl and where the prestdmg
JUdge dtd not put hts stgna ture
on the baUot, " satd Maddux
"In my opuuon tbe purpose
of a recorutt ts to corut t only

those votes which are 100 per
cent clear," he srud." If there
IS any doubt about any vote m a
recoWJt I thmk that vote should
not be counted "
Brown satd there was no
chance a nother recount would
be ordered by hun or a nybody
else
"That recount was handled
m excellen t s ha pe," sat d
Brown
" They can file a protest of
election and take it into court.
But tt will be absolutely worthless No court m tbe land will
upset an elechon of this type,
because this election was just
about as perfect as an electwn
can be
"I thmk that a nyone who
queshons tl or the validity of
the process of the recount IS not
well mformed on our Oluo
electwn statutes," Brown said
Brown said, however, he
would loo k mt o Maddux'
protests

Nothing
daunts
•
tounsts
ORLANDO, Fla (UPI)
TouriSts from the North smiled
m the face of a gloomy
economy thts week and followed Santa to Florida tn
record numbers, causrng turnstile-watche rs to shake theU'
heads tn wonder
A surpriSing surge of holiday
travelers forced the gates
closed for four hours at Walt
Dtsney World Frtday when a
capactty crowd of 74,597 was
counted, supassing the old
attendance record of 73,168 set
on Aprtl 17, 1973---before gas
ran short and money got tight
Bnght weather at the week's
end portended more banner
business for Central Flonda's
!&lt;Jur iSt attraction , while Mtanu
Beach's towermg hotels were
95 per cent full
" We more tha n doubled our
attendance record yesterday
and they 're still commg," satd
Dick Weaver, spokesman for
another attraction, Sea World
Joe Fincher, gene&gt;al manager of Busch Gardens m Tampa,
satd his park had 20,000 VISitors
Frtday for the btggest stngle
day m almost two years
" Stnce Monday the mflux ol
toun s ts
has
been
phenomenal,'' he satd . Fmcher
S81d he expects a continued
crush through Sunday, then a
gradual easmg off
Record crowds were also
reported at Cypress Gardens
and Circus World Showcase
In vlew of light economtc
sttuatwn, no one was entll'ely
sure why there had been the
heavy influx of out.of ... tate
VISitors, which accounted fo r
about 70 per cent of the crowds
at Dtsney World and "at least
95 per cent" at Sea World But
most speculated that one factcr
was that families are takmg
thetr vacattons now m fear that
some form of gas rahoning wtll
go mto effect tn 1975 or they
won't be able to afford the trip
next year
PAUL DIXON DIES
CINCINNATI (UP)) - Pa ul
Dixon, host of the popular Paul
Dtxon Show on the Avco
Broadcastmg televiSion network, dted Saturday m ChriSt
Hospttal here He had suffered
heart trouble and bee n
hospttalized smce Dec 18

Appliance makers ~o switch
PITTSBURGH (UP!) Weshnghouse Electrtc Corp
has agreed to sell tts maJOr
appliance busmess to Whtte
Consolidate&lt;! Industnes, Inc , of
Cleveland, Ohw, m exchange
for cash and seCW'Ittes of
Whtte , the two ftrms annorutced
Saturday
The sales agreement mcludes

Friend Ford was sorry for Nixon

Th~

wheeling," mvo!VIng a philosophtcal dtscusston of the baste
causes behmd the current Illness m the American economy
Nessen stressed that no fmal dectStons had been made by Ford,
but he satd the Prestdent had tndicated the general dire elton he
wants hts new economtc program to take
Nessen srud Ford was gettmg tdeas from a vanety of sources,
mcludmg outstde economtc experts, members of Congress , labor
and management
In another a rea, Nessen satd Ford and top rudes wtll go over a
specta l report on alleged Illegal domesttc spymg by the Central
Intelligence Agency soon after his return wWahington next week
and wtliiSsue a statement a few days afterward
Nessen refused to dtscuss a published report that Secretary of
State Henry A Kissmger had urged Ford to set up a spec tal
Ctltzen's commttlee l&lt;l mvesl!gate charges that the CIA spted on
thousands of antt-war protesters and other disstdents durtng the
Ntxon years

Fight on for Ervin seat

':~,;.:, ,:m:: : ·,: : ·: ~;,:.,·:e::: h::o=:m:: :e=: =:=t:=o.:=:W: :D: : :B: :enny
: : :.: : : : : :co::: l:lll: : t: a: : n:.:t: i: Y: : : :kl: : : d:: d:: e: :d::.: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ::: : ,: :: :~'

Q. How can I obtain additional information and

-....

VOL. 9 NO 48

of Mn. Benny·
Honorary pallbearers included the supporting cast of
Benny's radio aod television show that ran for 35 yean, and
political fl(ures Including Gov. Ronald Reagan, Mayor
Tom Bradley, Sen. John Tunney and former senator and
entertainer George Murphy.
Alao, Danny Kaye, Jack Lemmon, Walter Mattbau,
James Stewart, Johnny Carson, George Jesse!, Phil Harris,
Eddie Anderson, Zubln Mehta, Isaac Stern and Gregory
Ptatigorsky.
..
Tributes to Benny, who died at age 80 but remained
:;: "39" through much of hill career, came from penonages
. l'BDglng from President Ford to the mayor of Waukegan,

I thought the FDIC agreed to pay $1.7 billion to
the Federal RFserve System to retire the liquidity
loan Franklin needed before it closed.
A. It dtd, but It has the nght to collect assets
earned on Franklin's books at more than $2 bil liOn tn order to pay off this loan .

•

hour before the party IS over,
offering coffee and snacks
instead.
But the after-the-party hints,
based on the $100,()()(), ornemonth study, suggests SIX
types of active mtervention "if
one of your guests has been
drmkmg excesstvely" ·
-Suggest that you drtve him
home He can return later for
his car
-Suggest he stay overntght,
a posstble mconvemence but a
potential lifesaver.
- Take hts car keys away if
he mstSts on drtvtng He may
resent it, but if he's too drunk
to listen to reason then you
must take charge

Nessen declmed to discuss s pectft cs on the dtrect1on of Ford~s
new program He sa td the Prestdent had cauttoned hts advtsers
agam " not to diScuss pubhca lly tdeas and proposals under
discuss ion "
He quoted Ford as telling the adVIsers ·you 've been patient
and constructive, but not a lways unammous It 's been very
he lpful '
After the confe rence was over, Ford went skimg and told
reporters tl had been 'a very, very good meetmg "
Nessen sa td that the meetmg dealt wtth the 1975 and 1976
federal budgets It apparently covered pro,ected dollar estimates , thetr effects on the President's economtc program and
the effect of Ford's future econorruc proposals on the budget
Ford's new economtc program and his anllcipated energy
proposals are closely Imked, Nessen satd He srud the advt sers
also studted " forecasts of future factors effectmg the economy "
The press secretary satd part of th e meeting was "free-

junbag- ~imts - jentintl

experts went over tt A White
House source satd earlier tt
was "rup and tuck" as to
whether he would approve tt m
VIew of the controversy over
the police and fll'e proVISions
The new law authortzes the
new recreatton area to spend
not more tt.w. $34.5 rrullion to
acqull'e land and $500,000 to
develop it.
The area comprises approxtamtely 20,000 acres between
Akron and Cleveland and will
be administered by the mtenor
secretary as part of the
national park system He wiU
be charged m overseemg tl m a
way that wUI "preserve tts
scemc, natural and histortc
settmg while proVIdtng for the
recreahonal and educational
needs of the vtsitmg pubhc."
The White House descnbed
the area as a floodplam regwn
featurmg heavily wooded valleys and ravmes and mcludmg
a variety of plants a nd wtldlife

Watergate jurors
about to speak

Most of those must have been very small banks.
What about the $1 billion United States National
Bank and the $3.6 btllion Franklin National
Bank?
A. The FDIC latd out about $370 mtllton in connectton w1th the failure of Un1ted States National
Bank, but 1t expects to recover a substantial portion of thts amount as the receivership of that
bank progresses. In the case of Franklin National
Bank, the FDIC's only outlay so far has been
$100 mtll1on for a capital note of EuropeanAmerican Bank &amp; Trust Company and a small
amount for initial liqUidation exl?enses (since repaid). Further outlays are possible, but the
FDIC's net loss, d any, Will probably be very
small. No depoSito r.-;pf course, lost a nickel in
e1ther failure.

VINTON BRANCH
VINTON, OHIO

The President also was quoted by Nessen as te lling his
economtc experts that he wanted 'no gunmtcks," whtch the
press secre tary described as "qu1ck c ures" which would not
have a lastmg effect
" He satd he wanted a hard and tough State of the Umon (address)," Nessen srud "What this whole program IS auned at IS to
get the economy back to stabthty "
" It was a consensus that this was a watershed penod as far as
the economy goes It needs more than a gurumck to get out"
In an a ppa rent reterence to the forces of recessiOn, Nessen a lso
satd. "Thts IS the moment when fundamental changes are
needed to avmd consequences down the road "
Nessen mdicated Ford will bastcally scrap the 31-pomt
econorruc program he presented to Congress last October on
grorutds that the ptcture has changed
But, he sa1d, ''that IS not to say that some of It won't be used'' m
the new proposals

Drinkers wanted: off highways

~

MAIN OFFICE
SECORD AVE.

Repvrling on a 41&gt; hour conference between Ford and hiS top
economic adviSers, Nessen also said the Prestdent had found
"across the board unanuruty" that there would be an upturn m
the economy durmg the last half of 1975
He satd everyone at the meeting agreed that the economy,
whipsawed between sunultaneous recession a nd mflation, " faces
serious problems."

The Prestdent had delayed
slgnmg of the measure while

a. How large have the insurance losses of FDIC been

Q.

together"

areas," Ford satd.

The federal deposit msurance fund, whtch has
been built up from Insurance premtums paid by
F D IC-1 nsured banks and the mvestment 1ncome
on such prem1ums, now stands at more than $6
bill1on, and ts mcreasing each year by about $400
million . In addition, the FDIC, by law, can borrow from the United States Treasury an addition
al $3 billion 1f it finds this necessary for deposit
1nsurance purposes. The FDIC has never found it
necessary to borrow any money from the Treasury, however. In fact, although the deposit tnsur·
ance fund has never been much larger than 1% of
all 1nsured depos1ts in the country, the FDIC has
never had to use more than a small amount of the
fund at any one t1me, even when very large banks
have failed .

a.

By GRANT DilLMAN
VAIL, Colo. (UP!) - Prestdent Ford wtll propose " hard and
tough" cures for the nation's economic tUs m hts State of the
Union message nP.Xtmonth, but "it won 't mean a big reductwn m
the standard of living of the average Amencan," hiS chtef
spokesman S81d Saturday
Press Secretary Ron Nessen S3ld Ford's proposals "wtU deal
with the fundamental ailments wtth the economy and getting
back stability m a long term sense, not to JUSl patch thmgs

VAIL, Colo. (UP! ) - Prestdent Ford signed a btll
Saturday establishing the
Cuyahaga Valley Nallonal Recreation area m Ohto, saymg tt
"paves the way for the
preservaton of thousands of
acres of rutspmled land for the
enjoyment of present and
future generations "
The President said he had
reservations, however, about a
provtsion of the measure
authorizing the lntertor Secretary to pmvtde federal police
or fire protection in the area or
reimburse local agenctes perfomung such servtces
"I asked the Congress to
amend thts legtsla lion to
remove this proVIsion so that
pohce and fire services are
provided by local agenctes,
Without reunbursement, as m
other such federal recreattonal

Pursuant to a rece nt Act of Congress wh1ch was s1gned by l&gt;res1dent Ford on October 2B, 1974, the general l1m1t
on fede ral deposit msurance has been rat sed from $20,000 to $40,000 for each depositor m banks Insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance CorporatiO n, a US Government agency.

a. When IS thts mcrease effective?

Near painless cure for econoniy ills promised

Ford signs
•
recreation
area hill

,

3 L.OOATIONS
TO SERVE YOU!

OF GALLIPOLIS
RESERVATIONS
446-0090

I

get ready for Santa and 8
months to clean up after he ,ls
gone.
"I dtdn't want nothin' much
for ChrtstrQas, and that's w~t
1 got
I

Now- each depositor insured to

M

(

chtp m our best
To help solve the problem,
&amp;IId not be part of tl
To let bygones be bygones
It should be a good yea r,
espectally, if we wtsh tl so and
d th
t
k
are w1llmg to o mgs o rna e
tt so Remember that good
mtentions never carrted out
make ruts table steppmg stones
for ourselves, and others for
whom the good Intentions were
formulated because they fall to
cheer the sad, comfort the
bereaved, help the weary and
lift the fallen Many good mten lions fall woefully short of
thell' mark
A NEW BEGINNING
I wtll start today serenely
Wlth a true and noble alffi;
I w11l giVe unselfish service
To enrtch another•s name

I wtll speak a word of courage
To a soul enslaved by fear ;
I will &lt;Jtsstpate drab diScord
Wtth the sunshme of good
cheer

And for r:1e to comment on chly defended Ntxon until
what verston ts rtghl or wrong almost the final stages of the
would certatnly be map- Watergate cover-up, was asked
proprtate until the lrtals are if he felt he had been "used "
over"
He nodded and satd " ObVIAsked about hts personal ously, he didn't leU th~ whole
Judgment of Ntxon's role, the stQry."
Prestdent noted he had satd
He then was asked whether
previously that Ntxon's actions his compassion for Ntxon
"shamed the presidency" and stemmed from a feeling the
that hiS acceptance of the fanner Prestdent had been
pardon "can be mterpreted as treated rutfatrly or from his
a confession ''
long-time frtendshtp wtth his
"I don't feel I should go predecessor
further than that ," Ford •atd
" I think ltj; bastcally the, old
The \President, who staun- friendship,"'tord satd

maJor Wes tmghouse appliance
plants m Columbus, Mansfield
and Newark, Ohto , Edtson,
N J , and the firm's motor
plant m Athens , Tenn , as well
as Weshnghouse's major I!Jlpliance marketmg orgamzabon

and consumer serv1ce orgamzatwn Tenns of the transachon
were not an nounced
The announcement satd the
agreement also anticipates the
sale of the household appUance
business of Westinghouse Canada Ltd , subjec t to approval of
the Westmg house Canada
Board of Dtrectors and the
Canadian government
The agreement also gtves
Whtte the option to buy later,
as ts the tr mtent, the Westinghouse appliance operations m
three
foretgn
countries,
Venezuela, Spam an d Italy,
after approval ts obtamed from
the governmentS of these
coun tries
D C Burnham, Westmghouse
chatrman , satd 'the entire
Westmghouse ma;or appliance
busmess wtll bec,ome part of
Whtte and the 'inanufacture,

I

i

sale and se rvi ce of products
under the Westmghouse name
will contmue
"Thts means a conUnwty of
the qualtty products and
services which Westinghouse
has tradthonally supplies "
Burnham sa td the lransactton
also enables Westinghouse to
concenlrate tts "fmanctal and
management resoW'ces m areas
wh1ch are our mam strengths "
Burnham esttmal&lt;jd that the
sale would reduce Westmghouse
1974 net mcome by about $50
m!lhon, but added thattt would
unprove the firm's cash posilton by about $100 mtllion in
1975,
E S Reddig, chall'man of
White, satd he expected the
acqws1hon to 1 'benefit our
employes the maJOr appliance
mdustry as a wbole, and . .our
stockholders "
"We mtend, as Wlth all our
acquisihons, to keep the Westinghouse operation as an
mdependent busmess serving
the public through tts broad
network ohfnarket)ng oul}efs,"
Reddtg satd

•

�12- The Sunday Times Senttnel, SWJday, Dec. 29, 1974

r-------------------------1
I
I

! Dateline
I

II

Gallia
Ry Hobart Wilso11 Jr.

,

~--Ar~~

._ !

I

ERA SHIRLEY
LETART, W Va - Era
Meredith Sh1rl ey. 67, of Letart
was dead on arnval ear ly
Saturday at Pleasant Va lley
Hosp1tal
Funeral serv1ces will be held
Monday at 1 JO p m f rom the
Star Advent Church of wh 1ch
she wa s a member The Rev
Wilbur Baxt er will offiCiate
and buna l will be 1n the
Roanoke Cemetery Friends
will be re c e1ved at the
Fog les ong Funera l Home after

I

~

:.
I

A great loss for southeastern Ohio
That was the reactton loca lly last "eek follow mg the death of
Oak H1ll's Edward E Dav1s, 73, 1et1red mdustnahst, r~ct1ve
banker and farmer
One commuruty leader was qwck to pomt out that "Eddte"
Davts dtd more for southeastern Oluo m the past 15 years than
any other mdtvtdual
,
Mr DaVIs served as prestdent of the Southeastern Ohw
Reg tonal Council for more than 10 years Through thts agency, he
was able to untte southern Ohio comm uruttes for better roads,
schools, hospttals and recreation facthttes
When a commuruty needed help, tts leaders would go to Eddte
DaviS As far as we know, he never refused anybody assistance
when they needed tt
Desptte hts tremendous success m many fields, Edd te DaVIs
remamed a very humble and fnendly per&lt;l&lt;ln
Eddte Davts, called "Mr Southeastern Ohto " by many of his
frtends, wtll be great!&gt; mtssed by restdents m this regwn

2 p m Sunday

Mr s
Sh1r ley was born
August 11 1907 1n Pomt
Pleasan t, a daughter of the late
Henry Clay Coope r and
Blanche P1 erce Cooper She
wa s preceded 1n death by her
husband Ralph Hobert Sh1rley
m 1956 one bro lher, Albert
and one s1s ler , Mrs Macy
Cromley
Surv1vors mc!ude tr. -ee sons
Ralph Hobert Sh 1rley Mt
Al to Robert Mason Sh~rtey
Leon Rt 1 and R~ehard He nry
Sh~rley
Pomt
Pleasant
S1sters, Velma Jean Clark
Mr s Garnet Agnes Gerlach
Rt 1 Letart
Mrs Qu 1lla
Elizabe th Ohl1nger Mt Alto
20 gra ndch ildren and one

+++
Ed Clark, edttor of the Ja ckson Journal-Herald wrote these
lines about E E Davts m hts Sun-Spots column Fnday
"Many of you who read these hnes knew the la te Edd te DaVIS
far better than I HIS life and hts career were rooted and
flouriShed m southeastern Ohto a nd he had countless close
busmess, ctvtc and personal assoctates here
"As a young newspaperman m J ackson, I knew of Eddte
Davts, by reputation, as a wealthy and successful busmessman
before I met hun personally Over the decades, I met him many
times a t local and area meetings and fun ctiOns. He was a qmet,
soft-spoken and rutassurrung man , a lways unfatlmgly polite
" We were among those present at countless meetmgs at
which a rea prOJects were planned and dtscussed Some were
hatched and became reahltes Many did not In most msta nces, I
was there because tt was my JOb I often wondered why Eddte
Davts was there, spendmg many long hours, many of them unpmducltve He could eastly have delegated Uus chore to another
" I think the answer IS a s unple one I thmk Eddte DaVIs
smcerely wanted this area to progress a nd move ahead And I
think many of the successful projects moved forward only
because he gave it his personal presence, mterest and force
"Eddte DaVIs could eastly have afforded a vtlla 10 the
Canbbean, a lodge m the western mountams or a locallon li1
some favorite spa of the wealthy if he had so chosen
" But even m the past years when he relmqutshed some of his
active busmess responstbtlitles, he remamed a man of
southeastern Ohto and mvested hiS mcreased tune and ene rgy m
the creation of a f10e hill coWJtr) farm m Jackson county His
mterest , hts philantrophtes and hts energtes m a long and frUitf ul
life were centered m southeastern Ohto And the fqtce and
quality of thiS area ts dimimshed by his death "

+++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the ftles of the Datly Trtbrute
and weekly Gallta Times
Fire levels Arthur Rupe's Idling
station at Kyger .. Seven mile tmpro\ ement proJect on Rt 35
approved by state highway department
Wtlllam Lanter, 85,
retU'ed Crown Ctty postmaster, clauned by death .. Columbus
Blue Imps down
East hands GAHS fll'sl cage setback, 69-53
Cheshll'e varstty 64-48 for 34th consecutive triUmph

Benny was proud
of old home town
prtvate lessons
WAUKEGAN, lll (UPI) The old home town was m
"He couldn 't watt to get
mourmng Frtday for tis here ,' 5abon jtan said "He
brought hts staff along and
favortte son, Jack Benny
" He was really proud of patd all the expenses aga10 and
Waukegan," satd Mayor rat sed some thmg like $25,000 to
Robert SabonJtan of this ctty on put the thtng over for us "
the ll110ms-Wtscons10 hne
The comedtan, 80, dted of
cancer of the pancreas at hts
Beverly Htlls, Calif , home ,
late Thursday
" He was a n ms htutwn
around here ," SabonJian satd
"Never too busy for us always ready to do somethmg
for Waukegan

HELD OUT 30 YEARS
JAKARTA (UP!) - A party
of Indonestan and Japanese
offtctals left Jakarta for
Morotat Island today to meet a
man believed to be a World
War II Japanese holdout The
man, who tdenttfted hunself as
Teruo Nakamura, a 57-year-old
native of Tat wan, was forutd by
an Indonesian Air Force
search party Thursday after
holdmg out m the Ptlowo forest
on Morotat tsland for more
than 30 years Morotat ts Indonesia's northernmost tsland
m theMoluccas group

"Last summer I asked hun
tf he could come up and play a
beneftt for the ctty's symphony
orcheslra , whtch was m bad
fmanctal shape He came, JUSt
as he had on many other occasions- you know, to help out
hts town - and he ratsed
several thousand doUars, and
patd for all of his expenses "
SabonJtan recalled another
occaswn when he made an
appeal to Benny m behalf of the

TAKEN TO HOLZER
RACINE - The Racme ER
squad transported Lort Parsons, Racme, RD, to Holzer
Medical Center Saturday at
9 45 am

c1ty's muSic center, whtch was
on the verge of bankruptcy
The center ts mostly for
chtldren who can't afford

. D;;ths___l New year entered; like it or not

grea t grand child
The body w1 11 be taken to the
church one hour before the

serv 1ce

G W CLONCh

RUTLA ND
Wash1ngton

George
Clonch.

80,

Rutland Route 1 d1ed Fnday
at

Ve t er an s

Memor1al

Hosp1tal
Mr Clonc h was born May 25
1894 m Mason County, W Va
the son of the late Thomas and
M1ssoun Sh1t tz Clonch He was
a vete ran of Wor ld War I
hav1ng served n France and
Germany He was a farmer
and a ra dro.a der
On Apnl 1, 1921 he marned
the former Frances Newel l
who surv1ves Other surv1vors
are f1ve sons Robert, Mtd
dleport Paul Logan Clyde
Bremen , Wilbert Lynchberg,
Leland ( 8111) Pomeroy Ro ute
4 e1gh t da ughters, Mrs Bess1e
Clouse
North Hollywood,
Ca lif
Mrs
Dorot hy
Demoskey, M 1ddleport Mrs
Bett y
Goodw 1n ,
North
Carol1na
M1 ss
Kath le en
Clonch Col umbus Mrs Alta
F1sh, Rutland Route 1, M rs
.Au d rey Keesee and Mrs
Ma x 1ne Keesee , bot h of
Columbus, and Mtss Mar 1or1e
Clonch, a t hom e
Al so su rv iv ing are 48
grandchildren and 15 great
grandchildren
a brother
Wdl 1am o f Bradbur y, and a
s1ster, Mrs Lavma Hutton, no
a ddress li sted Preced1 ng h1m
1n

death bes1des h1s parents

Serious crime
up 16 %; worse
in old South
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
FBI reports serious cnme rose
16 per cent across the country
m the first mne months of 1974
and the btggest mcrease was m
the South
The January - to- September
statistics were accompamed
Thur sday by call from
outgomg Attorney General
Wtlham B Saxbe for law enforcement agenctes to work

harder on preventing crtme
and to msure sw1ft prosecuhon
as a deterrent
Crtmes aga mst property,
such as auto theft, were up 17
per cent whtle murder, rap~.
robbery, assault and other
vwlent cnmes rose 8 per cent
over the ftrst lhree-&lt;1uarters of
1973
Crtme rose 20 per cent tn the
South ove r the first mn e
months of last year, the FBI
satd The mcrease was 15 per
ce ntm the north-central part of
the coruttry, 14 per cent m the
West and 13 per cent m the
heavtly populated northeast

DORES ARNOLD ILL
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
E-R squad was called to Rock
Sprmgs at I 04 p m Frtday for
Dares Arnold, who was tll. He
was taken to Veterans
Memortal Hospttal and admtlted

Greetings and a happy New Year to
many friends and kind patrons. It's b€:en
a privilege to serve you. We present
our NEW YEAR'S EVE offerings:
Complimentary Brandy Egg
Chicken Noodle Soup
ooo
Salad Bar
B~OILED AUSTRALIAN LOBSTER TAIL
PRIME FILET MIGNON
ROAST PRIME RIB OF BEEF
ROAST LOIN OF PORK
Baked Potato - Cauliflower Gratmee
Beans - Carf'ots a !'Orange

Ry Goldie Clendenin
weight, or put tl on, stopped
PORTLAND - The hme for smokmg, planted that tree, let
rcsolvm g IS here agam
up on nagg mg m 1974
We stand at the doorway of a
Then many ate ca bbage,
new year once more, qmle and, or sa uerkraut on New
Wlhke the door ptctured where Year's Day, and went rtght on
th
of
Chrtst stands at e door
our mak tn g the
same
' ole
hearts and knocks, and we mtslakes
have free agency to mvtle Htm
Could th1s be the year to
m For lhts door opens mto a make fewer resolutions, and
spankmg new year and we go more effort to do things that
through - ready, or wtllmg or should be done, when they
not For the old year draws should be done, and the way
swt flly to tts close and wtll soon they should be done " And
have passed
resolve to be more moderate m
Wtth tts passmg many many thmgs
thmgs wtll also have passed
To laug h more with people,
Some cause us to fee l a great and less at people
loss , others we are happy to
To throw off the chip, and

were
three bro lh ers and lo ve
51
s~~~~ral servJC:s will be held
al 2 P m Monday al lhe
Rutland Church of the
Na zarene wolh lhe Rev Lloyd
0 Gnmm, Jr • off 1c1atmg
Buroa l woll be '" lhe Wells
Ceme lery Fnends may ca ll at
the Walker Fu nera l Home 1n
2Rulland
p m unt1
any
l 12
lome
noonSun
onday
Monday
Irom
when th e body wtll be laken to
lhe church The famtly woll
rece ive
fr ie2nd
home
from
tos4 at
andthe
7 tofun
9 pera
ml
Sunday Mo 1olary n tes wo11 be
con dueled by Rutland Posi 467.
Amerocan Leg ton
JAMES A HAWLEY
Ml DDLE PORT - Jam es A
Hawley
49,WoOdstock
formerly Il of
Middleport
l
doed Fro day even tng al see go
Woods lock Memortal Hospttal
So here we are , to resolve to
Mr
Hawley
was
born
Oc
t
3
"do
thts " and " don't ddo that "
1925 1n Me1gs County the son of
the late Ja mes and Spa rkl e A new year, a new ay - a
Fraz,er Hawley He was also slate, clean , clear of broken
preceded
'" dealh by a son, a promtses to ourselves ar.:l
515
others Three hundred a nd
10 fer an d a brother He served
both t he army and navy
durtng the World Wa r II era
SIKly-five days of chances
Su rv1 v1ng are two so ns
ahead to make, and, or, break
Steven and Robert s1sters.
ti
Mr s
Donald 1 Kalhleen) good mten ons
Man ley, Mrs Allred (Helen)
Accordtng to esltmates, half
Farley and Mrs Elt I Bonnie) the people wtll wake up
all of Moddleport
fEbersbach,
1ve
brothers
F ra nk. grouchy and headachy because
Columbus
Nor man, Mld
of last mght's mdulgcnce, now
dleporl Delmar. Crystal Lake, the TV ts too loud , brea kfast ts
Ill John
Rochard
ol and
Belefontaone
no good , everyone else talks
and
of Rutl
Funeral servoces woll be held too much, NOTHING ts rtght
Tuesday at 2 30 p m from the
But the other half awakes
Rawlongs Coats Funeral Home clear headed and comfortably
w1th the Rev O'De ll Man ley 1n
I
d
charge Bur~al will fol low 1n
re axes,
a nd
reammg
Chesh1re
Gra .... el
Hilt
dreams , always somewhere ,
Cemetery Fr~ends may call someone resolves to wm, and
4
79
from
P m Monday
doe s Somewhere, someone
at
the2funand
era l home
lived wtthm thetr means, lost

I wtll be sincere and humble
In the work I have to do;
I will praise Instead of censure
And wtll see the good In you

"Daddy, all the a jus wen
out of my bicycle, can you fit it
for me?
"Soon as Santa Claus leaves
Mth hiS 'Ho, Ho, Ho " m comes
January crying woe, woe, woe .
[ don't rmnd gettmg bills so
11
much, but hate to have to pay
them
"Maybe we can dispose ()f
the turkey in time, but what
can w~ do With a gaUon of egg

I wtll do what I am able
To advance a worthy cause,

I wtll strtve to lessen eVIl
And obey God's rtghteous laws
I wtll pray for Him togutde me
In Ute stratght and narrow

1r

t

t

way,

nag"

I wtll sheen false prtde &amp; folly
I wtll live my best today
-GrenvtlleKietSer
Never a Cliristmas mormng ,
never the Old Year ends but
bod th k of
bod
some y m s some
y,
old days, old times,oldfrtends

" What I hate about gomg to
the Complamt Dept IS having
to watt in hne to get my chance
to holler
"Daddy, a kid borrowed my
sled and ran mto a tree and
k
ff t C
bro e a runner o 1 - an you
ftt tt for me?"

In "'Twas the Day After
Chrtstmas" followmg are
remarks one always hears on
the day after Christmas
" Daddy, can you ftx my new
doll? She broke her head "
" Just thmk we have only 364
days left to enJOY before we
have to go through it all agam
' 'Somehow 1t dtdn't seem
nght for Chrtstmas to fall on
Wednesay
what's to
celebrate on a Wednesday?
" Chrtstmas is a year-round
industry -takes SIX months to

PORCH STRUCK
POMEROY - A car drtven
by Ronald Smith, Hemlock
Grove, was heavUy damaged
at 2:57 a.m Saturday on East
Mam St. when Smith lost
conlrol, went left of center
through a hedge and slruck the
porch of a home owned by Mrs
Norma Wtlson. Smith, charged
mth reckless operatton, was
not hurt

A It ts effective Wednesd ay, November 2 7,
1974,. at all FDIC Insured banks
Q . How can I tell whether my depostt ts tnsu red by
FDIC7
A. Each of th e 14,500 F DIC-msured banks m the
Umted States has an off1c1al stgn at each teller's
wmdow us1ng the FDIC logo that appears at the
bottom of th1s ad
a. Can I get more than $40,000 msu ranee at the
same bank?
A Yes, 1f you hold accounts m different legal
ownership capac1ties For example, 1f you are
marned, you ca n have an account In your name
Insured up to $40,000; your spouse can have an
account 1n h1s or her name msured up to $40,000;
and you and your spouse can have a JOint account
1nsured up to $40,000. If you hold several ac
counts m the same ownership capac1ty, however,
the max1mum In surance to whtch you are entitled
1s $40,000-even 1f the total amount mall of the
accounts 1s more. The new law has not changed
the rules-only the dollar amount of tnsurance has
been changed
a. How frequently do FDIC tnsured banks fatl7
A. In the past ten years, ftve or SIX FDIC 1nsured
banks on the average have failed each year-about
four one hundredths of one percent of all msured
banks in the country. The year 1974 will proba·
bly be no different m this respect than past years.
Q. What ts the record of depositor protection for
msured banks that have fatled7
A To date ' tn all failed banks msured by FDIC,
over 99 percent of all depos its, 1nsured and unInsured comb1ned, have been pa1d or made ava1l
able to the1r owners.
a. If an FDIC-insured bank fatls, when and how wtll
I get my deposit back7 '
A. If an FDIC-insured bank ts closed and ltqUI
dated, FDIC will start to pay msured deposttors
up to the statutory It m1t wtth 1n ten days after the
closmg. As the bank's assets are ltquidated, owners of cla1ms m excess of the $40,000 tnsurance
ltmtt will share tn the proceeds wtth other general
creditors. In cases where the deposit ltabilittes of
a faded bank are taken over by another sound
bank With fmanc1al assistance from the FDIC,
deposttors have the use of all the~r funds to the
same extent they had m the faded bank before tt
closed.
Q. How good is FDIC msurance7
A. Smce 1ts creat1on m 1933, the FDIC has never
failed to honor its depostt 1nsurance commttment.

• WASIDNGTON ( UPI) - The
National Highway Traffic
Safety Admimstratlon, concerned because alcohol IS Involved in half the natton 's htghway deaths, IS ISsuing a call for
active-and sometimes drastic
-mterventlon by frtends and
relatives to keep drmkers off
the highways.
An advertisement prepared
In recent weeks under a
government contract tells
hosts what to do before the
party begins to lessen dangers
of alcohol abuse.
Among the tips : Always
serve food along wtth alcohol
Use a Jigger to measure drmks.
Stop servmg alcohol about an

•

over the years?
A. Puttmg to one stde for the moment the nation's two largest bank failures (United States
National Bank, San Diego, m 1973 and Franklin
National Bank, New York, -last month) the
FDIC's net loss tn 506 bank fa1lu'res since 1933
has been approximately $75 mill1on.

WASHINGTON &lt;UPI) - Since October the
jurors at the Watergate cover-up trial have sat
silent and inscrutable, a mute testament to a
judicial system that can and does call to account
even the most powerful men in the land
When they fmally speak, probably later this
week, it will be with a smgle voice - to convtct or
acquit each of five defendants who once savored
power with President Richard M. Nixon and now
stand charged with plotting to hush up the bugging
scandal that drove Nixon from office

facts about FDIC and federal deposit insurance?
A. Informat1on may be obtained by writing to
the Publtc lnfermation Office, Federal Depostt
Insurance Corpp ration, Washington , D.C. 20429.

•

.'

"

'

~-L~.~~~'-$1~-~~,~-----

AUTO BANl&lt; ·
THIRD AVE.

•'

.
•

I

•

FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
i

'

~. . . .- - - -. .~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ..a. .n.-.u.~~~~~~ ~~ . ~ ~

..................

.. _,
__ ____
,..,..

ULTIMATE IN all' condll!oning IS enjoyed by Paulo
Filho of Rio de Janell'o who constructed the custom Volkswagen m ftve months from a VW chassiS a nd 100 pet cent
wrought U'on Ftlho.satd ram and wmd are a problem when
drtvmg but he would never part wtth tl, even though offered
$3,1100 and a new VW for his Wltque crealton
The mter10r secretary wtU
acqull'e the lands by donatiOn,
purchase, exchange or transfer
although any public lands
which may be mvolved may be
acqutred
only
through
donation All land acqutStttons
must be " substantially complete" wtthin stx years
The measure , one of 158 btUs
Prestdent Ford took on a sktmg
vacation to Vat!, Colo , establiShes Ohto's fll'st national
park. Ohio wtll conlrtbute
another $4 2 million toward the
cost
The proposed park ts
bounded on the north by
Rockstde Road, to JUSt south of
Bath Road m Sumnut County
More than 5 million persons
live wtthin an hour drtve of the

- Phystcally restram him tf
he still mstSts Though this step
sounds drastic, a drunk must
not be allowed to drive
-Call a trun to, take him
home Pay for the rtde your
self
- Wt.en other measures fatl,

valley
II was uncertain whether the
Prestdent would approve the
bill, espectally Since he had
Wltil rrudmght Frtday to take
action and no favorable a nnouncement had been made by
tha t tune.
Members of Congress, which
overwhelmingly approved tl
earlier m the month, had sa td
they would re..submtt tt early
next month if tt wasn 't stgned
Both Sen Robert Taft, DOhto, and former Sen Howard
M Metzenbaum made lith
hour telephone pleas to President Ford Frtday, to urge
pass age of the btll They
stressed the tdea the park
would be a good mvestment

call the police As agressive as
tht s sounds "any measure
must be taken to prevent
someone who has had too muc h
lQ drink from drtvmg "
The ad says · " When a
problem drmker dnves, tt's
your problem "

Zany cast of old days
together today, but one
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Just like In the old radio and
television days, the cast- save one -will he together ouce
again.
Eddie " Rochester" Anderson, the gravel-voiced
butler; Don Wilson, the belly-laughing amumncer ; Mel
Blanc, who did aU those funny voices ; Dennis Day, tho
boyish Irish Crooner, and Mary Uvlngston, the
wisecracking girHrlend. Jack Benny, sawing away at his
vloUn pressed to hill chin as he awaited laughter from joke
to joke, wUI be missing.
More than 1,000 persons, Including a Who 's Who of
celebrities from sbow business, music and poUllcs, will
attend funeral services for Benny today at Hlllside
Memorial Park In suburban Culver City. Two of Benny's
cl011est friends and fellow comedians - Bob Hope and
George Burns - will deUver the eulogy for the ageless
comic wbo succumbed unexpectedly at his home Friday
. from cancer,
::
Rabbi Edgar F. Maguln will preside at the services
:=. scheduled for noon (3 p.m. EST).
=·:
11te pallbearers will be Gregory Peck, Frank Sinatra,
: MUton Berle, Billy Wilder, Fred DeCordova, Leonard
Gershe, Armand Deutsch, Irving A. Fein (Benny's longtime manager), Mervyn Leroy and Hilliard Marks, brotber

U.S. District Judge John J . staff; John D. Ehrllchnlan,
Slrlca will deliver his instruc- once Nixon 's No 2 aide;
tlons 1o the Jurors Monday, Robert C. Mardtan, a former
Jli'Obably including a charge assistant attorney general and
that they should not let the offlctal of the Nixon r~ection
Nixon's full pardon enter mto coiiiliiittee; and Kenneth W
their decisions. Then he will Parkinson, a Washington
send them to their windowless lawyer hired to defend the
jury room to deliberate.
~ COIIIliiitttee after Watergate.
Veteran courthouse obAll are charged wtth con- vers are guessing the rune spll'acy to obstruct justice and
wcmen and three men who defraud the United States-the
comprised the jury may be out heart of the government's
.•
for two or three days. Bet they case.
see little likelihood of "a hung
All but Mardian are also
jury"--80 hopelessly dlvlo;led it charged with actual obC81Uloi make up Its mind.
"Siruelion of justice. MtlcheU,
"I've never seen such a Haldeman and Ehrllchman are
strong-minded, independent faced with perJUI'J1 _counts as
group In my life," ooe defense well.
VAIL, Colo (UP!) - Three
attorney said privately last
All five took the stand to
eek
protest their innocence and all
months after he pardoned
w
jurors must consider the blamed others-primarily forRichard M Nixon for a ny
testimony of 85 witnesses ; mer White House COWJsel John - Watergate crunes, President
more than 12,000 pages of w Dean m
Ford slill feels he did the nght
tranacript; nearly three dozen
"Isn't tt sirange how all the thmg at the right time. And he
White House tapes; several defendants in this case take the says4ItS compass~on for Nixon
score of documentary exhibits; post!ion that this whole ~ from thetr 10/lg-tune
and final arguments from eight massive cover-&lt;Ip was con- frtendshlp.
cocted planned and carried •
Ford discussed his attitude
lawyers that ran 21 hours.
They must determine the out by 'the IIUie privates in this tOward his predecessor m a
gull! or lmocence of John N. army?" Chtef Prosecutor UPI interview He was asked
Mitchell, the former attorney JamesF. NealaskedFrtday in whether, In vtew of the
general and Nixon's campaign his summatton to the Jury
Wa tergate trials and the
""r H R Haldeman the
"If you believe that, find the Widespread crtticiSffi of the
mana,.. ; · ·
•
formei White: House chief of defendants not ,guilty "
,1 pard0~· Ntxon shou ld mak e a

"

SUNDAY DECEMBER 29. 1974

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
coveted openmg on the Senate
Judtctary Comrruttee m the
94th Congress has trtggered a
hattie between three hberal
a nd
two
conservative
Democrats
The liberals are Sen Lee
Metcalf of Montana, a thirdtermer , Sen James Abourezk
of South Dakota, a firs ttermer a nd Senator-elect
Palrtck Leahy of Vermont
The conservatives are Sen
James B Allen of Alabama,
who has JUSt won a second
term
a nd Se nat or-e lect
Robert Morg an of North
Car olma
The comnuttee, now nearly
evenly
d tvtded
along
tdeologtcallmes, may constder
s uch sensitive Issues as co nsh tu ttonal amendments on
abortion , school prayer , and
busmg, posstble changes m the
ame ndment dealing wtth
select10 n of a new vtce
president, and extenswn of Lhe
voting ttghts act
The smgle vacancy on the
Democral!c stde was created
b&gt; the rettrement of Sen Sam
J Erv m Jr of North Carolma
1\ ts probable, however, that
the Democratic Steermg Commtttee, head ed by Senate
leader Mtke Mansfteld, wtll
recommend enlargement of

the panel to reflect Democrallc
gams m the Nov S electiOns
A
numbe r
of
other
Democratic mcumbents are
also seekmg new comrru ttees
F trst term Sens Bennett
Johnston of LoUistana a nd
Walter Huddleston of Kentucky
have requested the Appropriations Comrruttee
Sen Sam Nunn of Georgta
ha s requested the Budget
Commtttee , a nd Sen Dtck
Clark of Iowa wants the
Foretgn Relahons and Armed
SerVIces Commtttees, m that
order of preference
Sen Adlat Stevenson Ill of
Ulmms has asked for seats on
the Democrallc Polley Commtttee, the Legtslattve Revtew
Commtttee an d the Jomt
Atomtc Commtttee.
Sens. Floyd K Haskell of
Colorado a nd Wtlham Ha thaway of Mmnc have asked for

PAGE 13

public confesswn of hiS exact
role In the scandals.
The President replied that " I
don't think r made a miStake m
giving the pardon I think I dtd
tt at the right tune and did tt for
the rtghl reasons "
As for any Nrxon "confession ," Ford satd "!don't thmk
I should be a JUdge as to what
Mr. Ntxon should or should not

say."
He went on to say that " tt
would appear from the trials
tltat one or many versiOns of
that period are con'~Ptg out

VAIL. Colo. (UP I) President Ford Is generally
aware of threa ts against his
life but says " I just don' t
think we can worry about
those things."
Asked In a n Interview If he
had gotten used to the
rcstricllons that go with
being President, Ford said
he gets along ''very well"
with his Secret Servtce
agents "Are you aware of
threats that come to the
Wh1te Hnu se?" he was
asked
Generally , I' m advi se d , '~
he re plied ' "Not e very
detail There have been one
or two incidents where they
called my attention to
something specific "
"Does It frighten you In
any way?"

the Fmance Conumttee, Sens
Edward M Kennedy of Massachusetts and Thomas F Eagleton of M1ssoun want on the
Jomt Economic Comllllttee,
Se ns
John
Tunney
of
Califorma and Mtke Gravel of
Alaska would like the Jomt
Atomtc Comm ittee, and
Joseph Btden of Delaware,
Foretgn Relattons
The new Democrats' fll'st
chotces are Gary Hart of

Colorado, Armed Services;
Wendell Ford of Kentucky,
Commerce, Dtck Stone of
Flonda and Dale Bumpers of
Arkansas, F m a nce , John
Culver of Iowa, Foreign
Relattons, Leahy and Morgan,
Judtctary, and John Glenn of
Ohw has requested asstgrunent
to Government Operations

Laws forgotten in recount
of Fairfield votes charged
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - Rep
Donald Maddux, R-Lancaster,
chatrman of the Ohio House
subcomrruttee on Elecllons,
Saturday asked Secretary of
State Ted W Brown w mvesttgate several ''unusual"
mctdents mvolvmg the recount
of votes m the gubernatortal
race tn Fairfield County
Gov John J Gtlltgan caUed
off the recount when tl showed
that Gov -elect J ames A
Rhodes would retam his Nov. 5
to
ed
f
u 000
VIC ry
ge 0 over •
votes
"As chatrman of the House
subcommtttee on elections and
because o( the questtonable
nature of some of the recountmg activities, I request your
offtctal response to some of the
Circums ta nce whtch I wtll
brmg to you r attention,"
Maddux smd
a letter to
10
Brown
"Smce Governor Gtlllgan
has ca lled off the recount the
purpose of thts commruttcation
Is not an attempt to gain votes
but merely to ascertain from
you as the state's chtef electton
officer your optmon on some of
therecountacttVIttes," he said
" It ts my understandmg that
the function of a recorutt IS to
scruhmze as closely as
posstble all the ballots cast and
then co rut! only those whtch are
100 per cent free from any type
of controversy or JUdgement
called on the part of those
counting the ballots,"he S81d,

"thus the purpose of the
recorutt ts to ehmtnate all
illegal ballots or all mtsmarked
ballots or all ballots m whic h
there IS any mdtcabon of Im·
proper vollng
' I personally fmd that some
of th e acltVItes tn Fall'fteld
County are of a very questiOna ble na lure," satd Maddux
Among other thmgs , Maddux
S3ld, ballots m unlocked or
unsealed co ntamers were
counted and ballots m contamers whtch dtd not have the
stgnature of a precmct Judg e
were counted
"I want hun (Brown) to list
under what state law he
allowed ballots to be counted
which were m unsealed contamers, which had more than
one or two or three markmgs
on tl and where the prestdmg
JUdge dtd not put hts stgna ture
on the baUot, " satd Maddux
"In my opuuon tbe purpose
of a recorutt ts to corut t only

those votes which are 100 per
cent clear," he srud." If there
IS any doubt about any vote m a
recoWJt I thmk that vote should
not be counted "
Brown satd there was no
chance a nother recount would
be ordered by hun or a nybody
else
"That recount was handled
m excellen t s ha pe," sat d
Brown
" They can file a protest of
election and take it into court.
But tt will be absolutely worthless No court m tbe land will
upset an elechon of this type,
because this election was just
about as perfect as an electwn
can be
"I thmk that a nyone who
queshons tl or the validity of
the process of the recount IS not
well mformed on our Oluo
electwn statutes," Brown said
Brown said, however, he
would loo k mt o Maddux'
protests

Nothing
daunts
•
tounsts
ORLANDO, Fla (UPI)
TouriSts from the North smiled
m the face of a gloomy
economy thts week and followed Santa to Florida tn
record numbers, causrng turnstile-watche rs to shake theU'
heads tn wonder
A surpriSing surge of holiday
travelers forced the gates
closed for four hours at Walt
Dtsney World Frtday when a
capactty crowd of 74,597 was
counted, supassing the old
attendance record of 73,168 set
on Aprtl 17, 1973---before gas
ran short and money got tight
Bnght weather at the week's
end portended more banner
business for Central Flonda's
!&lt;Jur iSt attraction , while Mtanu
Beach's towermg hotels were
95 per cent full
" We more tha n doubled our
attendance record yesterday
and they 're still commg," satd
Dick Weaver, spokesman for
another attraction, Sea World
Joe Fincher, gene&gt;al manager of Busch Gardens m Tampa,
satd his park had 20,000 VISitors
Frtday for the btggest stngle
day m almost two years
" Stnce Monday the mflux ol
toun s ts
has
been
phenomenal,'' he satd . Fmcher
S81d he expects a continued
crush through Sunday, then a
gradual easmg off
Record crowds were also
reported at Cypress Gardens
and Circus World Showcase
In vlew of light economtc
sttuatwn, no one was entll'ely
sure why there had been the
heavy influx of out.of ... tate
VISitors, which accounted fo r
about 70 per cent of the crowds
at Dtsney World and "at least
95 per cent" at Sea World But
most speculated that one factcr
was that families are takmg
thetr vacattons now m fear that
some form of gas rahoning wtll
go mto effect tn 1975 or they
won't be able to afford the trip
next year
PAUL DIXON DIES
CINCINNATI (UP)) - Pa ul
Dixon, host of the popular Paul
Dtxon Show on the Avco
Broadcastmg televiSion network, dted Saturday m ChriSt
Hospttal here He had suffered
heart trouble and bee n
hospttalized smce Dec 18

Appliance makers ~o switch
PITTSBURGH (UP!) Weshnghouse Electrtc Corp
has agreed to sell tts maJOr
appliance busmess to Whtte
Consolidate&lt;! Industnes, Inc , of
Cleveland, Ohw, m exchange
for cash and seCW'Ittes of
Whtte , the two ftrms annorutced
Saturday
The sales agreement mcludes

Friend Ford was sorry for Nixon

Th~

wheeling," mvo!VIng a philosophtcal dtscusston of the baste
causes behmd the current Illness m the American economy
Nessen stressed that no fmal dectStons had been made by Ford,
but he satd the Prestdent had tndicated the general dire elton he
wants hts new economtc program to take
Nessen srud Ford was gettmg tdeas from a vanety of sources,
mcludmg outstde economtc experts, members of Congress , labor
and management
In another a rea, Nessen satd Ford and top rudes wtll go over a
specta l report on alleged Illegal domesttc spymg by the Central
Intelligence Agency soon after his return wWahington next week
and wtliiSsue a statement a few days afterward
Nessen refused to dtscuss a published report that Secretary of
State Henry A Kissmger had urged Ford to set up a spec tal
Ctltzen's commttlee l&lt;l mvesl!gate charges that the CIA spted on
thousands of antt-war protesters and other disstdents durtng the
Ntxon years

Fight on for Ervin seat

':~,;.:, ,:m:: : ·,: : ·: ~;,:.,·:e::: h::o=:m:: :e=: =:=t:=o.:=:W: :D: : :B: :enny
: : :.: : : : : :co::: l:lll: : t: a: : n:.:t: i: Y: : : :kl: : : d:: d:: e: :d::.: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ::: : ,: :: :~'

Q. How can I obtain additional information and

-....

VOL. 9 NO 48

of Mn. Benny·
Honorary pallbearers included the supporting cast of
Benny's radio aod television show that ran for 35 yean, and
political fl(ures Including Gov. Ronald Reagan, Mayor
Tom Bradley, Sen. John Tunney and former senator and
entertainer George Murphy.
Alao, Danny Kaye, Jack Lemmon, Walter Mattbau,
James Stewart, Johnny Carson, George Jesse!, Phil Harris,
Eddie Anderson, Zubln Mehta, Isaac Stern and Gregory
Ptatigorsky.
..
Tributes to Benny, who died at age 80 but remained
:;: "39" through much of hill career, came from penonages
. l'BDglng from President Ford to the mayor of Waukegan,

I thought the FDIC agreed to pay $1.7 billion to
the Federal RFserve System to retire the liquidity
loan Franklin needed before it closed.
A. It dtd, but It has the nght to collect assets
earned on Franklin's books at more than $2 bil liOn tn order to pay off this loan .

•

hour before the party IS over,
offering coffee and snacks
instead.
But the after-the-party hints,
based on the $100,()()(), ornemonth study, suggests SIX
types of active mtervention "if
one of your guests has been
drmkmg excesstvely" ·
-Suggest that you drtve him
home He can return later for
his car
-Suggest he stay overntght,
a posstble mconvemence but a
potential lifesaver.
- Take hts car keys away if
he mstSts on drtvtng He may
resent it, but if he's too drunk
to listen to reason then you
must take charge

Nessen declmed to discuss s pectft cs on the dtrect1on of Ford~s
new program He sa td the Prestdent had cauttoned hts advtsers
agam " not to diScuss pubhca lly tdeas and proposals under
discuss ion "
He quoted Ford as telling the adVIsers ·you 've been patient
and constructive, but not a lways unammous It 's been very
he lpful '
After the confe rence was over, Ford went skimg and told
reporters tl had been 'a very, very good meetmg "
Nessen sa td that the meetmg dealt wtth the 1975 and 1976
federal budgets It apparently covered pro,ected dollar estimates , thetr effects on the President's economtc program and
the effect of Ford's future econorruc proposals on the budget
Ford's new economtc program and his anllcipated energy
proposals are closely Imked, Nessen satd He srud the advt sers
also studted " forecasts of future factors effectmg the economy "
The press secretary satd part of th e meeting was "free-

junbag- ~imts - jentintl

experts went over tt A White
House source satd earlier tt
was "rup and tuck" as to
whether he would approve tt m
VIew of the controversy over
the police and fll'e proVISions
The new law authortzes the
new recreatton area to spend
not more tt.w. $34.5 rrullion to
acqull'e land and $500,000 to
develop it.
The area comprises approxtamtely 20,000 acres between
Akron and Cleveland and will
be administered by the mtenor
secretary as part of the
national park system He wiU
be charged m overseemg tl m a
way that wUI "preserve tts
scemc, natural and histortc
settmg while proVIdtng for the
recreahonal and educational
needs of the vtsitmg pubhc."
The White House descnbed
the area as a floodplam regwn
featurmg heavily wooded valleys and ravmes and mcludmg
a variety of plants a nd wtldlife

Watergate jurors
about to speak

Most of those must have been very small banks.
What about the $1 billion United States National
Bank and the $3.6 btllion Franklin National
Bank?
A. The FDIC latd out about $370 mtllton in connectton w1th the failure of Un1ted States National
Bank, but 1t expects to recover a substantial portion of thts amount as the receivership of that
bank progresses. In the case of Franklin National
Bank, the FDIC's only outlay so far has been
$100 mtll1on for a capital note of EuropeanAmerican Bank &amp; Trust Company and a small
amount for initial liqUidation exl?enses (since repaid). Further outlays are possible, but the
FDIC's net loss, d any, Will probably be very
small. No depoSito r.-;pf course, lost a nickel in
e1ther failure.

VINTON BRANCH
VINTON, OHIO

The President also was quoted by Nessen as te lling his
economtc experts that he wanted 'no gunmtcks," whtch the
press secre tary described as "qu1ck c ures" which would not
have a lastmg effect
" He satd he wanted a hard and tough State of the Umon (address)," Nessen srud "What this whole program IS auned at IS to
get the economy back to stabthty "
" It was a consensus that this was a watershed penod as far as
the economy goes It needs more than a gurumck to get out"
In an a ppa rent reterence to the forces of recessiOn, Nessen a lso
satd. "Thts IS the moment when fundamental changes are
needed to avmd consequences down the road "
Nessen mdicated Ford will bastcally scrap the 31-pomt
econorruc program he presented to Congress last October on
grorutds that the ptcture has changed
But, he sa1d, ''that IS not to say that some of It won't be used'' m
the new proposals

Drinkers wanted: off highways

~

MAIN OFFICE
SECORD AVE.

Repvrling on a 41&gt; hour conference between Ford and hiS top
economic adviSers, Nessen also said the Prestdent had found
"across the board unanuruty" that there would be an upturn m
the economy durmg the last half of 1975
He satd everyone at the meeting agreed that the economy,
whipsawed between sunultaneous recession a nd mflation, " faces
serious problems."

The Prestdent had delayed
slgnmg of the measure while

a. How large have the insurance losses of FDIC been

Q.

together"

areas," Ford satd.

The federal deposit msurance fund, whtch has
been built up from Insurance premtums paid by
F D IC-1 nsured banks and the mvestment 1ncome
on such prem1ums, now stands at more than $6
bill1on, and ts mcreasing each year by about $400
million . In addition, the FDIC, by law, can borrow from the United States Treasury an addition
al $3 billion 1f it finds this necessary for deposit
1nsurance purposes. The FDIC has never found it
necessary to borrow any money from the Treasury, however. In fact, although the deposit tnsur·
ance fund has never been much larger than 1% of
all 1nsured depos1ts in the country, the FDIC has
never had to use more than a small amount of the
fund at any one t1me, even when very large banks
have failed .

a.

By GRANT DilLMAN
VAIL, Colo. (UP!) - Prestdent Ford wtll propose " hard and
tough" cures for the nation's economic tUs m hts State of the
Union message nP.Xtmonth, but "it won 't mean a big reductwn m
the standard of living of the average Amencan," hiS chtef
spokesman S81d Saturday
Press Secretary Ron Nessen S3ld Ford's proposals "wtU deal
with the fundamental ailments wtth the economy and getting
back stability m a long term sense, not to JUSl patch thmgs

VAIL, Colo. (UP! ) - Prestdent Ford signed a btll
Saturday establishing the
Cuyahaga Valley Nallonal Recreation area m Ohto, saymg tt
"paves the way for the
preservaton of thousands of
acres of rutspmled land for the
enjoyment of present and
future generations "
The President said he had
reservations, however, about a
provtsion of the measure
authorizing the lntertor Secretary to pmvtde federal police
or fire protection in the area or
reimburse local agenctes perfomung such servtces
"I asked the Congress to
amend thts legtsla lion to
remove this proVIsion so that
pohce and fire services are
provided by local agenctes,
Without reunbursement, as m
other such federal recreattonal

Pursuant to a rece nt Act of Congress wh1ch was s1gned by l&gt;res1dent Ford on October 2B, 1974, the general l1m1t
on fede ral deposit msurance has been rat sed from $20,000 to $40,000 for each depositor m banks Insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance CorporatiO n, a US Government agency.

a. When IS thts mcrease effective?

Near painless cure for econoniy ills promised

Ford signs
•
recreation
area hill

,

3 L.OOATIONS
TO SERVE YOU!

OF GALLIPOLIS
RESERVATIONS
446-0090

I

get ready for Santa and 8
months to clean up after he ,ls
gone.
"I dtdn't want nothin' much
for ChrtstrQas, and that's w~t
1 got
I

Now- each depositor insured to

M

(

chtp m our best
To help solve the problem,
&amp;IId not be part of tl
To let bygones be bygones
It should be a good yea r,
espectally, if we wtsh tl so and
d th
t
k
are w1llmg to o mgs o rna e
tt so Remember that good
mtentions never carrted out
make ruts table steppmg stones
for ourselves, and others for
whom the good Intentions were
formulated because they fall to
cheer the sad, comfort the
bereaved, help the weary and
lift the fallen Many good mten lions fall woefully short of
thell' mark
A NEW BEGINNING
I wtll start today serenely
Wlth a true and noble alffi;
I w11l giVe unselfish service
To enrtch another•s name

I wtll speak a word of courage
To a soul enslaved by fear ;
I will &lt;Jtsstpate drab diScord
Wtth the sunshme of good
cheer

And for r:1e to comment on chly defended Ntxon until
what verston ts rtghl or wrong almost the final stages of the
would certatnly be map- Watergate cover-up, was asked
proprtate until the lrtals are if he felt he had been "used "
over"
He nodded and satd " ObVIAsked about hts personal ously, he didn't leU th~ whole
Judgment of Ntxon's role, the stQry."
Prestdent noted he had satd
He then was asked whether
previously that Ntxon's actions his compassion for Ntxon
"shamed the presidency" and stemmed from a feeling the
that hiS acceptance of the fanner Prestdent had been
pardon "can be mterpreted as treated rutfatrly or from his
a confession ''
long-time frtendshtp wtth his
"I don't feel I should go predecessor
further than that ," Ford •atd
" I think ltj; bastcally the, old
The \President, who staun- friendship,"'tord satd

maJor Wes tmghouse appliance
plants m Columbus, Mansfield
and Newark, Ohto , Edtson,
N J , and the firm's motor
plant m Athens , Tenn , as well
as Weshnghouse's major I!Jlpliance marketmg orgamzabon

and consumer serv1ce orgamzatwn Tenns of the transachon
were not an nounced
The announcement satd the
agreement also anticipates the
sale of the household appUance
business of Westinghouse Canada Ltd , subjec t to approval of
the Westmg house Canada
Board of Dtrectors and the
Canadian government
The agreement also gtves
Whtte the option to buy later,
as ts the tr mtent, the Westinghouse appliance operations m
three
foretgn
countries,
Venezuela, Spam an d Italy,
after approval ts obtamed from
the governmentS of these
coun tries
D C Burnham, Westmghouse
chatrman , satd 'the entire
Westmghouse ma;or appliance
busmess wtll bec,ome part of
Whtte and the 'inanufacture,

I

i

sale and se rvi ce of products
under the Westmghouse name
will contmue
"Thts means a conUnwty of
the qualtty products and
services which Westinghouse
has tradthonally supplies "
Burnham sa td the lransactton
also enables Westinghouse to
concenlrate tts "fmanctal and
management resoW'ces m areas
wh1ch are our mam strengths "
Burnham esttmal&lt;jd that the
sale would reduce Westmghouse
1974 net mcome by about $50
m!lhon, but added thattt would
unprove the firm's cash posilton by about $100 mtllion in
1975,
E S Reddig, chall'man of
White, satd he expected the
acqws1hon to 1 'benefit our
employes the maJOr appliance
mdustry as a wbole, and . .our
stockholders "
"We mtend, as Wlth all our
acquisihons, to keep the Westinghouse operation as an
mdependent busmess serving
the public through tts broad
network ohfnarket)ng oul}efs,"
Reddtg satd

•

�1 iJ -

·-

T'

. ay tmes-Sentinei , Sunday,Dec. 29.1974

It was a year of magic

. . -·

.,....... - '

Dec. 29, 1974

14-The Sunday Times

rne .:Sund

:numbers on sports scene
•

ARMOUR.* STAR SELECTED PORK- U.S. GOYT. IISPECTED

FR

H

.PORK LOIN ,.

ROASTS

U.S. No. 1 Grade
IDAHO ALL PURPOSE

POTATOES
Qake-Em
Boil-Em

r.

RIB HALF

lb.

By the Piece Only

CUT TO ORDER

FRESH PORK LOll ROAST

(loin

lb.$1.09

Half) By :,~Pilce

Mash-Em
Fry-Em

lb.

s1 !!

Remove
bone before roast
IS
brought to
table.

SPECIAL LOW PRICE

E
,

10-lb.
BAG

Anchor
meat
firmly with fork ,
then cut down
along side of
each nb bone.
One slice will
contain the rib .
the ne&lt;t one Will
be boneless.

lb.

NEW GREEN

CABBAGE

WE WILL LOOSEI
THE BACK BOlE
SO THAT...

Crisp and Tender

ARMOUR u STAR SELECTED PORK
U.S. Govt. Insp.

lb.

ARMOUR tr $TAR SELECTED PORK- U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

FRESH PORK

BUn ROASTS

FRESH

PORK
ROASTS

29c
Folgers Coffee •• '! $1 25i!$2'49

Crisp Pascal Celery • • •

stalk

~

"PICNIC STYLE"

Armour -tr Star Selected Porlc-U.S. Govt. Insp.

lb.

PORK CHOPS FIRST CUTS , , , , , , ~ , , • , , , • , , , , , , , lb.
FAMILY PAK PORK CHOPS 9 ~:~;£~h;~~~eg~/' ........ lb.
CENTER CUT RIB PORK CHOPS •••••••••••••• lb.

99c
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ALL PORK CITY CHICKEN ••••••••••••••••••
FRESH r»O~JK STEAKS IIOMI-IN • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

SAVE 35•

THOROFARE
ASSORTED

LS

LIBBY'S
DEEP BROWN

OAKEN KEG

BEANS
14-oz. Can

PICKLES
Qt. Jar

Jumbo Rolls

for

BAGS
50-et. Pkg.

Wiener or
Sandwich

BUNS
Pkg. of8

MATO
SAUCE
8-oz. Can

1-lh. Can

for

Pro Standings

DONALD DUCK
FROZEN

HUNT'S

PEACHES
Halves or Sliced

ORANGE.JUICE
1-Pt. Can

..

SAVE 50"

··-·- ........
TOP CHOICE

DOG FOOD

:!·.
.... $189

. . .ular 8etall Without Coupori-12.33
Umlt One Pile. Per t;ouDOn
Valid 1hru Tues .. lift, 31. 1974

Limit o...·eoupori Per Customer

WESSON

OIL

1-lit.
HI,

....

$

'1,

VA-INI .

INTENSIVE CARE
HAND LOhON

R. .ular il:etall Without Coup0n-t1.79
Limit One lot. Pw Coupon
ValltiTh'ruTues.,O.C.31,1974
Limit OneCo- Pw Cuot- ·

•

"
n

••

•

WE REQEJ:~ U.S. GOVT. FOOD STAMPS
I

•

'

College Basketball Results

1:

SWEET

THOROFARE

BAGGIES
FOOD STORAGE

..

By STEVE SNIDER
intotheNFCtitlegameagainst
regular season . Alabama
UPI Sports Writer
the Los Angeles Rams, who
ranked No . 1 in the ratings by
~
NEW YORK (UP!) - The ousted the Washington RedUPI's board of coaches but
• magtc numbers in a dazzling skins.
Oklahoma was unlisted as a
year of sports were 8, 715, 3, 9,
The financially tro ubl ed
result of a ruling by the
516 and 45.
WFL staggered w the end of its
American Football Coaches
There were others, notably first season with Birmingham
Associaton, 35 of whose mem106, 118 and 123, but none quite winnin g the championship
bers make up the UP! board,
matched the magic numbers game a gainst the Florida
not to consider any team on
that meant championships , Blazers and league officials
NCAA probation for lhe nationas tronomic~ l financial returns looking for fresh money for
a1 championship.
or per sonal glory for the 1975.
Oklahoma, in the second
athletes who soared to dizzy
Other vital numbers were the
year of a two-year probation .
hetgnts lll 1974.
118 stolen bases by blazer Lou for recruiting violations, was
"
No. 8 was magic for Brock of the St . Louis Car·
the major casualty of that
'
Muhammad Ali, who knocked dinals, an all-time record; 106 · ruiing. The Sooners also were
out George Foreman in the relief pitching appearances by
banned from appearances if,
postseason bowl games and on
etghth round and regained the Mike Marshall of the Dodgers,
world heavyweight boxing an all-time record ; 123,
NCAA telecasts, two sanctions
championship in a bizarre representing lhe number of that put crimps in the athletic
setting under a 4 a .m. African years the U.S . has held budgetsatOklahomaaswellas
moon in Kinshasha, Zaire, on yachting's America's O!p- other Big 8 conference schools
Oct. 30. Each fighter collected retained off Newport, R.I., in
that
would
share
in
$5 million as Ali reclaimed the September in a four -race
Oklahoma's bowl income.
tiUe stripped from him in 1967 sweep by Co w-ageous over the
Long delayed "firsts " were
when he refused to enter challenging Southern Cross of achieved by Frank Robinson of
military service because of Australia.
the Cleveland Indians, named
• religious convictions.
No . 1, in college football , was baseball's first black manager,
;~.
It was No.8 and a 3, l&lt;lo, fo r a source of controversy all and by pro golfer Lee Elder,
Z: pro golfer Johnny Miller. He season long . Alabama and who won the Monsanto Open,
:. won 8 tournaments on the U.S Oklahoma, both 11-0, emerged thereby becoming 'lhe first
- tour, including lhe first 3 of the as the only major unbeaten black player to earn an in·
:;: year, while amassing a record teams. At the end of the vitation to the Masters wur.
:; $353,021 for the season.
.,.
Greatest Single Moment
No.715 marks the greatest
t; single moment in recent base~: ball history, yet history books
By Uniled Press International
Pl'llsb
Cl .
,_
will
preserve an even higher
Tourn'ments
ury
ass•c
n
..Clemson 63 Auburn 59
:::; number for the feats of Henry
(Final Round Action)
Minnesota 68 Navy 35
"'"· Louis " Hank " Aaron of the
Gator Bowl
Motor City Classic
~ All ta B
h . his
Championship
Mich . 82 W. Mi chigan 62
:,·
an
raves, w a, U1
Penn St. 61 Mmphs St. 54
E. Mich . 62 Detroit 60
,. . .,. 40th year and 21st season of
Consolation
,........
Las Vegas Classic
;;: major league baseball, became
Jacksnvl 63 Temple 52
Fresno St. 69 Idaho St . 67
Poinsettia Classic
UN · L.V. 99 So. Ala . St. 8(l
' the all-time home run king.
~
Championship
Pacemaker Classic
:
When Hank blasted career
Furman 89 Lafayette 81
Tulane 88 La . Tech 40
~ homer No . 715 off AI Downing
Consolation
NE Louisiana 86 Ri ce 71
:::. of the Los Angeles Dodgers in a
Bar' or BB Geo. Wshngtn 74
other Games
" game at Atianta the night of
ouisvCihllaemHpolloidnasyhi.CPiassic
Wash . 117 Grambling St. 90
•
LSU 113 St. Peter 's 101
: April 8 , the right-handed,
Louisvi lle 79 Fla . St. 61
Lyla 111. 82 Wchta st. 74
w Alabama-born
s lu gger
Consolation
Ohio U. 61 Valparaiso 58
•
Western Ky . 92 Purd ue BO
Ky , St . 1K&gt; UW. LaCrosse 65
achieved the "impossible" by
tst Round Aclion
UT.Chalt. 113 Ala St. 89
surmounting Babe Ruth's
Ocean St. Holiday Classic
Bklyn Coli 56 Ramapo 55
record
of
714 .
That St. John's INY J 78 RIU 56
Montclr St. 82 Am Inti 73
58 ·c
Millon 101 Slout ~
Drake 70
monumental mark had stoo d
FarBrown
West Classo
S
w rthmre Coli 73 Pha . Pharm
since
the
Bambino's Wash . St. 67 Wake Frst 61
71
retit;ement in 1935, when Aaron Oregon St. 97 Iowa 60
Cmbrlnd 90 M. Harvey aa, ot
was a one-year-&lt;&gt;ld. An
AII. College
Luther BO Dana 70
No. T ex. St. 83 Niagara 72
Susq ue hanna 67 Upsala 64
es timated
40
million Cen tena ry 90 Pacif ic 81
Union 75 RPI 59
American s saw Aaron's
Big Eight
Dallas Bapt 84 Eau Claire 73
historic homer on television , Iowa St. 107 Colorado 82
Morav ian BO Del Val 62
Kansas
St.
84
M
issouri
67
Oberlin
81 Concord 63
more people than Saw the Babe
Milwaukee Classic
Wstm nstr 87 Fresno-Pac 74
in person during his entire Marquette 100 Georgia 70
Hartford 92 Brandeis as
career .
Vi rginia 86 Wisconsin 78
Roanoke 83 Gettysbg 61
By the end of 1974, Aaron had
Maryland Invitational
Leb Val 61 Albright 56
Maryland 105 Ga . Tec h 67
W . New Mex 63 No. Colo. 62
etched 733 on his home run line UCLA 78 St. Bonnie 62
Seina 104 Albany Sl. ao
in the record books with the
Indiana St. Cla ssic
Ind . Pa. 83 Kutztn 63
Sl. 81 So. Ill. 75
Colo. Mines 90 Metro St. 76
promise of more to come as a Miss.
Ind . St. 65 Santa Clara 64
Earlham 88 Wh ea ton 83
result of his switch to the
Old Dominion Cla ssic
Marietta 80 Urbana 60
Malone 80 Ind. Central 75
American League Milwaukee Cal i fornia 84 Ar i zona 82
Grove Ufy 82 Bldwn·WII ce 72
Brewers where he will perfonn Old Dom. 80 Co lumbia 67
Raleigh Holiday
0. Wslyn 82 Case-Western 50
as a designated hitter.
Duke 89 Pittsburgh 75
Den ison 66 Findlay 62
No. 3 stands for a third N .C. St. 99 Kent St. 61
Kenyon 75 MacMurray 68
Lobo Classic
Wright St. 44 0 . Nrlhrn 37
straight world series chamStanford B9 lllinC';S 76
Samford 63 Baltimore 62
pionship by the wonder men of New M exico 95 Army 65
Mount Union 84 Walsh 73
..;, the west, the Oakland A's, who
Oral Rober ts Classic
Fai rmont Ill Steubnvl 86
Winoa 85 Armstrong 80
downed the Los Angeles Dodg- Bowling Grn 73 S.D. St. 68
erts 91 Harvard 84
Gus Adolphus 72 Newbrry 71
l:;, ers in five games with Joe 0. RobEvansville
Cla ssic
Slippry Rck 113 Marian 107
&gt;i&gt;'• Rudi's homer providing the Miami 0 . 91 Denver 77
Coe 77 Wabash 69
M i dland 94 Kan . Wslyn sa
:: winning 3-2 margin in the finale Evansvl 78 Portland 69
San Fran Invitational
Kearney St. 91 Mo.-KC 87
t Oct. 17. The A's thus became
San Francisco 99 TCU 86
Pikevl 103 W. Va . Tech 83
:::only the third team in history to
Kodak Classic
Cmbrlnd 90 M . Harvey 88
Sanla Mnca 72 W. L.A . 69
: win the world series three. Dartmth 96 Rchstr NY 90
'" times in a row . Yankee teams Geotown 71 Syracuse 70
::made it four in a row in 1940
; and five in a row in U:i3,
":leaving the A's a high mark to
shoot at.
'
NBA Standings
Lo s Angeles
18 4 11 47 105 60
Jockeys' Record
By Unit ed Pre ss Inte rnational
Pittsbu r gl1
11 16 7 29 132 130
Eastern Conlerence
No. 9 belongs to Ivory
Atlant ic Division
Detroit
9 19 s 23 97 139
; Crockett, a 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld IBM
w . 1. pet. g .b . washington
3 29 A 10 78 190
Buffalo
22 1 1 .667
Division 4
::representative and former Boston
19 13 . 59 4
21 1 ~
w . 1. t . ph gf ga
18 14 . 563
31 1
~.track star at Southern Dlinois New Yo rk
Buffalo
24 7 5 53 165 116
lphia
14 21 . 400
9
Bos ton
20 9 6 46 168 110
~.University, who ran the first 9- Philad e Central
Division
Toronto
10 17 6 26 109 130
w . 1. pet . g.b. Californ ia
: second 100 yard dash in
8 n 6 22 95 152
Wash i ngton
25
9 .7.35 -Friday's Result s
mstory. No. 516 marked a one Clevela nd
17 13 .567
6
NY Ran ge rs 9 Bulfato s
17 15 .531
7
~year record for jockeys as 19- Hou s ton
Montreal 7 Detroit 1
14 20 .4 12 11
Cat iforn i ll 5 Boston '1
:;year-()ld Chris McCarron on a Atlanta
N ew Or l ea n s
3 29 .094 2 1
: mount at Laurel Dec. 17,
W ester n Conference
WHA Standings
Midwest Division
Bv United Press International
~de his 516\h willller of 1974
w . 1. pet. g. b.
East
17 15 .53 1
"ff nd brought down Sandy Chi cago
w. I. 1. pis gf ga
KC -Omaha
19 17 528
N ew Eng ln d 19 12 1 39 119 106
Hawley's record of 515 set only Det
r oit
17 17 .s oo
1
Cl eve lan d
13 14 1 27 81 88
Milwaukee
12 19 .3 87
411:1
a year ago.
Chicago
11 19 ,0 22 97 117
Pacific
Division
Indianapolis 6 27 1 13 72 147
Ohio State football fans-and
w . 1. pet . g . b.
West
all Buckeye opponents-ean Go ld en Sta te 22 11 667
w. 1. 1. pis gf ga
e
16 16 . 47 1
Houston
22 11 0 44 147 ' 95
tell you about No. 45. That's the Seattl
Phoeni)(
15 18 .455
Phoeni x
15 13 2 32 107 102
jersey number worn by Archie Portland
15 18 "':455
San Diego
15 15 1 31 102 108
LosAng eles
15 19 .441
Griffin, winner of the Heisman
Friday's Results
Minnesota
15 15 0 30 127 115
Trophy as the outstanding Lo s Ar1geles lOS Chicago 93
M ic higan
10 21 2 22 83 145
108 Phoen ix 92
Canadian
college football player in the Buffalo
KC-Omaha 108 Seattle 98
w . I. t. pts gf ga
United States. Griffin, a junior,
Toron to
20 13 1 41 150 125
ABA
Stand
ings
Quebec
18 14 0 36 13 2 11 3
also won UPI's player of the
By United Pr ess International • Winnipeg
16 13 1 33 1,19 91.
East
year award.
w . 1. pet. g.b . Edmonton
16 10 0 32 100 84
No. 2 was a magic number x Kentucky
21 10 .677
1j 2
Vancouver 15 14 2 32 97 97
23
11
.fJ7!J
New
Yor
k
for the Miami Dolphins, who
Friday ' s Results
\ 4 22 .389 10
St Lou is
Cleveland 4 Quel:tec 3
won their second straight Mempi1
9 23 .28 1 13
is
Toronto 4 Ctricago 2
9 24 . 273 13 111 Minneso ta 6 New England 3
Super Bowl game last January Virg inia
We st
lndp ls _1 '{an~ouver 1, ot
·by downing the Minnesota
w . 1. pet. g .b .
29
5 .853
Vikings, but No. 3 was. not. In Denver
Sa n A n tonio
70 ' 16 .556 10
addition w a strike by NEL Ut
ah
18 20 .474 13
VACHON STU.L LEADS
players that disrupted all
Ind ia na
14 17 .452 13'h
1h
San
Di
ego
12
21
.
364
16
NEW YORK (UPI) -Goal·
teams during the 1974 training
x-s tand ing ·a ccording to per·
tender Rogle Vachon of the Los
season, the Dolphins also were cent age
Fr
iday
'
s
Res
ults
Angeles Kings retained the
jolted when three of their l&lt;lp Virginia 11 8 I ndia na 116
lead
for the second consecutive
stars-Larry Csonka, Paul San An tonio 108 N .Y . 103
Uta h 97 St. Lou is 90
month·
today in the Seven
Warfield and Jim Kiick- San Diego 11 5 Denver 103
Crowns of Sports $10,000
agreed to jump to the new
hockey competition.
N HL Standings
World Football League in 1975.
By United Press International
·Based on a computer evalua·
Then , after reaching the
Oivi.s.ion 1
tion
system, in which all
w
.
1.
t
.
pts
gf
ga
playoffs, the Dolphlils were
Philadlphii. 2J 6 5 51 131 70 players in the National Hockey
beaten by Oakland in the first
16 15 5 37 101 105 League are rated against a
round and dreams of Super Atl a n ta
NY Ra n gers 14 11 8 3613 4 114 common schle , Vachon had an
Bowl victory No. 3 were NY Islanders 13 IJ 9 35 114 100
efficiency rating of 88.5.
Division 2shattered. Victory for the
w . 1. t. pts gf ga
Phil Esposito of the Boston
Raiders qualified them for the Vancouver 21 10 5 47 133 106
15 14 4 34 116 91 Bruins was second with a
AFC championship game Cnicago
St. Louis
111 14 6 34 119 122 rating of 76.2 and another
against
the
Pittsburgh Minnesota
11 18 .S 27 97 141
Steelers, winners over Buffalo. Kansas Ci t y 5 24 4 14 8 1 150 goalie, Bernie Parent of the
Division l
Philadelphia Flyers, was third
The Vikings drubbbed the St.
w . 1. 1. pts gf ga
. J9 6 li 49 155 "4 with 70.~ .
Louis ~ ardin'$s an&lt;l moved Montrea l

.'

nament a t Augusta, Ga .
An unexpected "first" in·
volved Jim "Catfish" Hunter ,
whose finan cia l differences
with A's owner Charles 0 .
Finley went to arbitration and
resulted in free-agency status
for the star pitcher. Hunter's
services thus became available
w the highest bidder .
No. l 's in other sports :
Tennis-Jimmy Connors,
winner of the Australian ,
Wimbledon and U.S. 0 p e n
championships, ended the year
as the top male player in the ·
world and was the money
leader with $285,49R His erstwhile fiancee, Chris Evert, also
won Wimbledon and led the '"'
women in prize money with
$193,585 wilh some late tournaments unreported. Billie Jean
King won her third U.S. Open
at Forest Hills , her fow-th
major singles crown on the
famous grass that 's being
replaced by artificial surfaces
for 1975.
Hockey - The NHL expansion Philadelphia Flyers, a
team of muscle men dubbed
the "Broad Street Bullies,"
hulled their way l&lt;l the Stanley
O!p by downing 1)Je Boston
Bruins.IntheWHA,itwasthe
Houston Aeros, led by 45-yearold Gordie Howe and his two
sons. Gordie was the league's
MVP, son Mark the rookie-&lt;&gt;fthe year.
G lf-J h
M'll
N
o
o nny 1 er was o.
1 in everything except "major
tiUes." Those went to Gary
Player (Masters and British
Open), Lee Trevino ( PGA) and
Hale Irwin (U.S. Open.
Slulttered Dominance
College basketball - North
Carolina
State
shattered
UCLA 'ssevenayeardominance
f th
C
h
' h. b
o eN AA c amp10ns tp Y
bringing down the Bruins in the
se mi-finals at Greensboro,
N . . , 8"77
b t
"' , an d wen t on '"
w ea
Marquette for lhe title.
Pro basketball-Boston Celtics won the NBA crown from
the Milwaukee Bucks; New
York Nets made it in the ABA
final series against the Utah
Stars. Retirements at the end
of the season: Jerry West,
Oscar Robertson, Dave DeBus·
sehere, Willis Reed, Jerry
Lucas, Wilt Chamberlain (as a
coach.)
Auto racing- Emerson Fittipaldi of Brazil won the
Formula One driving championship with a fourth place
finish at Watkins Glen , N.Y.,
on the final Gtand Prix ride of
the year. Johlllly Rutherford
won lhe Indy 500 but Bobby
Unser piled up the points in
other events to claim the U.S.
Auto Club's championship
circuit crown . Richard Petty,
with 10 victories in 30 stars, led
the NASCAR circuit for the
fifth time. , .
Horse racmg - Cannonade
won the Kentucky Derby, Little
O!rrent scored in the Preilk·
ness and Belmont Stakes.
Neilher won again after the
Triple Crown events and have
been retired to the stud .
Forego, a four-year-&lt;&gt;ld gelding
handicap rwmer, was named
thoroughbred Horse of the
Year with an 8 for 13 record,
including the Jockey Club Gold
O!p.
Other numbers, like 1,124,162
no-shows for National Football
League regular season games,
were beginning w looiL more
tragic than magic for the year
to come.
Minor SlgnUicance
The NFL's no-shows, 100,000
more than last year, represented tickets already sold but
unused for one reason or
another . ln many cases, fans
stayed home to watch sold-&lt;&gt;ut
games on home TV because
those games may have had
minor significance in the late·
season going. But there's also a
hint, in these days of economy
crunch, that many may have
remained away because it was
cheaper to watch on TV than w
head for a stadiwn where
parking fees, programs, tips to
ushers, hot dogs, beer or
whatever can mangle the
family budget.
Inflation hit horse racing In
such vital areas as the price of
hay ($93 a ton, up from ~).
higher payrolls and maintenance costs. The University of
Vermont dropped intercollegiate football because of a severe
budget deficit.
PGA ·golf tourists will be
playing for an estimated
$800,000 less in 1975 than in '74.
New leagues, such as the World
Football League and World
Team Tennis , have been
having their troubles dredging
up new financin g. Some
franchises in old leagues are
less than finn in their account
books.

If you feel that the privilege
of IMMEDIATE WITHDRAWAL
without loss of interest is
important to you ...
(as it is to most savers),
you're already saving at
Ohio Valley Bank ...

.I

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COMPOUNDED DAILY

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Ohio"\'!M~Y Ba~
·I
I

I

•

�1 iJ -

·-

T'

. ay tmes-Sentinei , Sunday,Dec. 29.1974

It was a year of magic

. . -·

.,....... - '

Dec. 29, 1974

14-The Sunday Times

rne .:Sund

:numbers on sports scene
•

ARMOUR.* STAR SELECTED PORK- U.S. GOYT. IISPECTED

FR

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U.S. No. 1 Grade
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Boil-Em

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lb.

By the Piece Only

CUT TO ORDER

FRESH PORK LOll ROAST

(loin

lb.$1.09

Half) By :,~Pilce

Mash-Em
Fry-Em

lb.

s1 !!

Remove
bone before roast
IS
brought to
table.

SPECIAL LOW PRICE

E
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10-lb.
BAG

Anchor
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firmly with fork ,
then cut down
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each nb bone.
One slice will
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the ne&lt;t one Will
be boneless.

lb.

NEW GREEN

CABBAGE

WE WILL LOOSEI
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SO THAT...

Crisp and Tender

ARMOUR u STAR SELECTED PORK
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ARMOUR tr $TAR SELECTED PORK- U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

FRESH PORK

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Folgers Coffee •• '! $1 25i!$2'49

Crisp Pascal Celery • • •

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Armour -tr Star Selected Porlc-U.S. Govt. Insp.

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PORK CHOPS FIRST CUTS , , , , , , ~ , , • , , , • , , , , , , , lb.
FAMILY PAK PORK CHOPS 9 ~:~;£~h;~~~eg~/' ........ lb.
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SAVE 35•

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I

•

'

College Basketball Results

1:

SWEET

THOROFARE

BAGGIES
FOOD STORAGE

..

By STEVE SNIDER
intotheNFCtitlegameagainst
regular season . Alabama
UPI Sports Writer
the Los Angeles Rams, who
ranked No . 1 in the ratings by
~
NEW YORK (UP!) - The ousted the Washington RedUPI's board of coaches but
• magtc numbers in a dazzling skins.
Oklahoma was unlisted as a
year of sports were 8, 715, 3, 9,
The financially tro ubl ed
result of a ruling by the
516 and 45.
WFL staggered w the end of its
American Football Coaches
There were others, notably first season with Birmingham
Associaton, 35 of whose mem106, 118 and 123, but none quite winnin g the championship
bers make up the UP! board,
matched the magic numbers game a gainst the Florida
not to consider any team on
that meant championships , Blazers and league officials
NCAA probation for lhe nationas tronomic~ l financial returns looking for fresh money for
a1 championship.
or per sonal glory for the 1975.
Oklahoma, in the second
athletes who soared to dizzy
Other vital numbers were the
year of a two-year probation .
hetgnts lll 1974.
118 stolen bases by blazer Lou for recruiting violations, was
"
No. 8 was magic for Brock of the St . Louis Car·
the major casualty of that
'
Muhammad Ali, who knocked dinals, an all-time record; 106 · ruiing. The Sooners also were
out George Foreman in the relief pitching appearances by
banned from appearances if,
postseason bowl games and on
etghth round and regained the Mike Marshall of the Dodgers,
world heavyweight boxing an all-time record ; 123,
NCAA telecasts, two sanctions
championship in a bizarre representing lhe number of that put crimps in the athletic
setting under a 4 a .m. African years the U.S . has held budgetsatOklahomaaswellas
moon in Kinshasha, Zaire, on yachting's America's O!p- other Big 8 conference schools
Oct. 30. Each fighter collected retained off Newport, R.I., in
that
would
share
in
$5 million as Ali reclaimed the September in a four -race
Oklahoma's bowl income.
tiUe stripped from him in 1967 sweep by Co w-ageous over the
Long delayed "firsts " were
when he refused to enter challenging Southern Cross of achieved by Frank Robinson of
military service because of Australia.
the Cleveland Indians, named
• religious convictions.
No . 1, in college football , was baseball's first black manager,
;~.
It was No.8 and a 3, l&lt;lo, fo r a source of controversy all and by pro golfer Lee Elder,
Z: pro golfer Johnny Miller. He season long . Alabama and who won the Monsanto Open,
:. won 8 tournaments on the U.S Oklahoma, both 11-0, emerged thereby becoming 'lhe first
- tour, including lhe first 3 of the as the only major unbeaten black player to earn an in·
:;: year, while amassing a record teams. At the end of the vitation to the Masters wur.
:; $353,021 for the season.
.,.
Greatest Single Moment
No.715 marks the greatest
t; single moment in recent base~: ball history, yet history books
By Uniled Press International
Pl'llsb
Cl .
,_
will
preserve an even higher
Tourn'ments
ury
ass•c
n
..Clemson 63 Auburn 59
:::; number for the feats of Henry
(Final Round Action)
Minnesota 68 Navy 35
"'"· Louis " Hank " Aaron of the
Gator Bowl
Motor City Classic
~ All ta B
h . his
Championship
Mich . 82 W. Mi chigan 62
:,·
an
raves, w a, U1
Penn St. 61 Mmphs St. 54
E. Mich . 62 Detroit 60
,. . .,. 40th year and 21st season of
Consolation
,........
Las Vegas Classic
;;: major league baseball, became
Jacksnvl 63 Temple 52
Fresno St. 69 Idaho St . 67
Poinsettia Classic
UN · L.V. 99 So. Ala . St. 8(l
' the all-time home run king.
~
Championship
Pacemaker Classic
:
When Hank blasted career
Furman 89 Lafayette 81
Tulane 88 La . Tech 40
~ homer No . 715 off AI Downing
Consolation
NE Louisiana 86 Ri ce 71
:::. of the Los Angeles Dodgers in a
Bar' or BB Geo. Wshngtn 74
other Games
" game at Atianta the night of
ouisvCihllaemHpolloidnasyhi.CPiassic
Wash . 117 Grambling St. 90
•
LSU 113 St. Peter 's 101
: April 8 , the right-handed,
Louisvi lle 79 Fla . St. 61
Lyla 111. 82 Wchta st. 74
w Alabama-born
s lu gger
Consolation
Ohio U. 61 Valparaiso 58
•
Western Ky . 92 Purd ue BO
Ky , St . 1K&gt; UW. LaCrosse 65
achieved the "impossible" by
tst Round Aclion
UT.Chalt. 113 Ala St. 89
surmounting Babe Ruth's
Ocean St. Holiday Classic
Bklyn Coli 56 Ramapo 55
record
of
714 .
That St. John's INY J 78 RIU 56
Montclr St. 82 Am Inti 73
58 ·c
Millon 101 Slout ~
Drake 70
monumental mark had stoo d
FarBrown
West Classo
S
w rthmre Coli 73 Pha . Pharm
since
the
Bambino's Wash . St. 67 Wake Frst 61
71
retit;ement in 1935, when Aaron Oregon St. 97 Iowa 60
Cmbrlnd 90 M. Harvey aa, ot
was a one-year-&lt;&gt;ld. An
AII. College
Luther BO Dana 70
No. T ex. St. 83 Niagara 72
Susq ue hanna 67 Upsala 64
es timated
40
million Cen tena ry 90 Pacif ic 81
Union 75 RPI 59
American s saw Aaron's
Big Eight
Dallas Bapt 84 Eau Claire 73
historic homer on television , Iowa St. 107 Colorado 82
Morav ian BO Del Val 62
Kansas
St.
84
M
issouri
67
Oberlin
81 Concord 63
more people than Saw the Babe
Milwaukee Classic
Wstm nstr 87 Fresno-Pac 74
in person during his entire Marquette 100 Georgia 70
Hartford 92 Brandeis as
career .
Vi rginia 86 Wisconsin 78
Roanoke 83 Gettysbg 61
By the end of 1974, Aaron had
Maryland Invitational
Leb Val 61 Albright 56
Maryland 105 Ga . Tec h 67
W . New Mex 63 No. Colo. 62
etched 733 on his home run line UCLA 78 St. Bonnie 62
Seina 104 Albany Sl. ao
in the record books with the
Indiana St. Cla ssic
Ind . Pa. 83 Kutztn 63
Sl. 81 So. Ill. 75
Colo. Mines 90 Metro St. 76
promise of more to come as a Miss.
Ind . St. 65 Santa Clara 64
Earlham 88 Wh ea ton 83
result of his switch to the
Old Dominion Cla ssic
Marietta 80 Urbana 60
Malone 80 Ind. Central 75
American League Milwaukee Cal i fornia 84 Ar i zona 82
Grove Ufy 82 Bldwn·WII ce 72
Brewers where he will perfonn Old Dom. 80 Co lumbia 67
Raleigh Holiday
0. Wslyn 82 Case-Western 50
as a designated hitter.
Duke 89 Pittsburgh 75
Den ison 66 Findlay 62
No. 3 stands for a third N .C. St. 99 Kent St. 61
Kenyon 75 MacMurray 68
Lobo Classic
Wright St. 44 0 . Nrlhrn 37
straight world series chamStanford B9 lllinC';S 76
Samford 63 Baltimore 62
pionship by the wonder men of New M exico 95 Army 65
Mount Union 84 Walsh 73
..;, the west, the Oakland A's, who
Oral Rober ts Classic
Fai rmont Ill Steubnvl 86
Winoa 85 Armstrong 80
downed the Los Angeles Dodg- Bowling Grn 73 S.D. St. 68
erts 91 Harvard 84
Gus Adolphus 72 Newbrry 71
l:;, ers in five games with Joe 0. RobEvansville
Cla ssic
Slippry Rck 113 Marian 107
&gt;i&gt;'• Rudi's homer providing the Miami 0 . 91 Denver 77
Coe 77 Wabash 69
M i dland 94 Kan . Wslyn sa
:: winning 3-2 margin in the finale Evansvl 78 Portland 69
San Fran Invitational
Kearney St. 91 Mo.-KC 87
t Oct. 17. The A's thus became
San Francisco 99 TCU 86
Pikevl 103 W. Va . Tech 83
:::only the third team in history to
Kodak Classic
Cmbrlnd 90 M . Harvey 88
Sanla Mnca 72 W. L.A . 69
: win the world series three. Dartmth 96 Rchstr NY 90
'" times in a row . Yankee teams Geotown 71 Syracuse 70
::made it four in a row in 1940
; and five in a row in U:i3,
":leaving the A's a high mark to
shoot at.
'
NBA Standings
Lo s Angeles
18 4 11 47 105 60
Jockeys' Record
By Unit ed Pre ss Inte rnational
Pittsbu r gl1
11 16 7 29 132 130
Eastern Conlerence
No. 9 belongs to Ivory
Atlant ic Division
Detroit
9 19 s 23 97 139
; Crockett, a 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld IBM
w . 1. pet. g .b . washington
3 29 A 10 78 190
Buffalo
22 1 1 .667
Division 4
::representative and former Boston
19 13 . 59 4
21 1 ~
w . 1. t . ph gf ga
18 14 . 563
31 1
~.track star at Southern Dlinois New Yo rk
Buffalo
24 7 5 53 165 116
lphia
14 21 . 400
9
Bos ton
20 9 6 46 168 110
~.University, who ran the first 9- Philad e Central
Division
Toronto
10 17 6 26 109 130
w . 1. pet . g.b. Californ ia
: second 100 yard dash in
8 n 6 22 95 152
Wash i ngton
25
9 .7.35 -Friday's Result s
mstory. No. 516 marked a one Clevela nd
17 13 .567
6
NY Ran ge rs 9 Bulfato s
17 15 .531
7
~year record for jockeys as 19- Hou s ton
Montreal 7 Detroit 1
14 20 .4 12 11
Cat iforn i ll 5 Boston '1
:;year-()ld Chris McCarron on a Atlanta
N ew Or l ea n s
3 29 .094 2 1
: mount at Laurel Dec. 17,
W ester n Conference
WHA Standings
Midwest Division
Bv United Press International
~de his 516\h willller of 1974
w . 1. pet. g. b.
East
17 15 .53 1
"ff nd brought down Sandy Chi cago
w. I. 1. pis gf ga
KC -Omaha
19 17 528
N ew Eng ln d 19 12 1 39 119 106
Hawley's record of 515 set only Det
r oit
17 17 .s oo
1
Cl eve lan d
13 14 1 27 81 88
Milwaukee
12 19 .3 87
411:1
a year ago.
Chicago
11 19 ,0 22 97 117
Pacific
Division
Indianapolis 6 27 1 13 72 147
Ohio State football fans-and
w . 1. pet . g . b.
West
all Buckeye opponents-ean Go ld en Sta te 22 11 667
w. 1. 1. pis gf ga
e
16 16 . 47 1
Houston
22 11 0 44 147 ' 95
tell you about No. 45. That's the Seattl
Phoeni)(
15 18 .455
Phoeni x
15 13 2 32 107 102
jersey number worn by Archie Portland
15 18 "':455
San Diego
15 15 1 31 102 108
LosAng eles
15 19 .441
Griffin, winner of the Heisman
Friday's Results
Minnesota
15 15 0 30 127 115
Trophy as the outstanding Lo s Ar1geles lOS Chicago 93
M ic higan
10 21 2 22 83 145
108 Phoen ix 92
Canadian
college football player in the Buffalo
KC-Omaha 108 Seattle 98
w . I. t. pts gf ga
United States. Griffin, a junior,
Toron to
20 13 1 41 150 125
ABA
Stand
ings
Quebec
18 14 0 36 13 2 11 3
also won UPI's player of the
By United Pr ess International • Winnipeg
16 13 1 33 1,19 91.
East
year award.
w . 1. pet. g.b . Edmonton
16 10 0 32 100 84
No. 2 was a magic number x Kentucky
21 10 .677
1j 2
Vancouver 15 14 2 32 97 97
23
11
.fJ7!J
New
Yor
k
for the Miami Dolphins, who
Friday ' s Results
\ 4 22 .389 10
St Lou is
Cleveland 4 Quel:tec 3
won their second straight Mempi1
9 23 .28 1 13
is
Toronto 4 Ctricago 2
9 24 . 273 13 111 Minneso ta 6 New England 3
Super Bowl game last January Virg inia
We st
lndp ls _1 '{an~ouver 1, ot
·by downing the Minnesota
w . 1. pet. g .b .
29
5 .853
Vikings, but No. 3 was. not. In Denver
Sa n A n tonio
70 ' 16 .556 10
addition w a strike by NEL Ut
ah
18 20 .474 13
VACHON STU.L LEADS
players that disrupted all
Ind ia na
14 17 .452 13'h
1h
San
Di
ego
12
21
.
364
16
NEW YORK (UPI) -Goal·
teams during the 1974 training
x-s tand ing ·a ccording to per·
tender Rogle Vachon of the Los
season, the Dolphins also were cent age
Fr
iday
'
s
Res
ults
Angeles Kings retained the
jolted when three of their l&lt;lp Virginia 11 8 I ndia na 116
lead
for the second consecutive
stars-Larry Csonka, Paul San An tonio 108 N .Y . 103
Uta h 97 St. Lou is 90
month·
today in the Seven
Warfield and Jim Kiick- San Diego 11 5 Denver 103
Crowns of Sports $10,000
agreed to jump to the new
hockey competition.
N HL Standings
World Football League in 1975.
By United Press International
·Based on a computer evalua·
Then , after reaching the
Oivi.s.ion 1
tion
system, in which all
w
.
1.
t
.
pts
gf
ga
playoffs, the Dolphlils were
Philadlphii. 2J 6 5 51 131 70 players in the National Hockey
beaten by Oakland in the first
16 15 5 37 101 105 League are rated against a
round and dreams of Super Atl a n ta
NY Ra n gers 14 11 8 3613 4 114 common schle , Vachon had an
Bowl victory No. 3 were NY Islanders 13 IJ 9 35 114 100
efficiency rating of 88.5.
Division 2shattered. Victory for the
w . 1. t. pts gf ga
Phil Esposito of the Boston
Raiders qualified them for the Vancouver 21 10 5 47 133 106
15 14 4 34 116 91 Bruins was second with a
AFC championship game Cnicago
St. Louis
111 14 6 34 119 122 rating of 76.2 and another
against
the
Pittsburgh Minnesota
11 18 .S 27 97 141
Steelers, winners over Buffalo. Kansas Ci t y 5 24 4 14 8 1 150 goalie, Bernie Parent of the
Division l
Philadelphia Flyers, was third
The Vikings drubbbed the St.
w . 1. 1. pts gf ga
. J9 6 li 49 155 "4 with 70.~ .
Louis ~ ardin'$s an&lt;l moved Montrea l

.'

nament a t Augusta, Ga .
An unexpected "first" in·
volved Jim "Catfish" Hunter ,
whose finan cia l differences
with A's owner Charles 0 .
Finley went to arbitration and
resulted in free-agency status
for the star pitcher. Hunter's
services thus became available
w the highest bidder .
No. l 's in other sports :
Tennis-Jimmy Connors,
winner of the Australian ,
Wimbledon and U.S. 0 p e n
championships, ended the year
as the top male player in the ·
world and was the money
leader with $285,49R His erstwhile fiancee, Chris Evert, also
won Wimbledon and led the '"'
women in prize money with
$193,585 wilh some late tournaments unreported. Billie Jean
King won her third U.S. Open
at Forest Hills , her fow-th
major singles crown on the
famous grass that 's being
replaced by artificial surfaces
for 1975.
Hockey - The NHL expansion Philadelphia Flyers, a
team of muscle men dubbed
the "Broad Street Bullies,"
hulled their way l&lt;l the Stanley
O!p by downing 1)Je Boston
Bruins.IntheWHA,itwasthe
Houston Aeros, led by 45-yearold Gordie Howe and his two
sons. Gordie was the league's
MVP, son Mark the rookie-&lt;&gt;fthe year.
G lf-J h
M'll
N
o
o nny 1 er was o.
1 in everything except "major
tiUes." Those went to Gary
Player (Masters and British
Open), Lee Trevino ( PGA) and
Hale Irwin (U.S. Open.
Slulttered Dominance
College basketball - North
Carolina
State
shattered
UCLA 'ssevenayeardominance
f th
C
h
' h. b
o eN AA c amp10ns tp Y
bringing down the Bruins in the
se mi-finals at Greensboro,
N . . , 8"77
b t
"' , an d wen t on '"
w ea
Marquette for lhe title.
Pro basketball-Boston Celtics won the NBA crown from
the Milwaukee Bucks; New
York Nets made it in the ABA
final series against the Utah
Stars. Retirements at the end
of the season: Jerry West,
Oscar Robertson, Dave DeBus·
sehere, Willis Reed, Jerry
Lucas, Wilt Chamberlain (as a
coach.)
Auto racing- Emerson Fittipaldi of Brazil won the
Formula One driving championship with a fourth place
finish at Watkins Glen , N.Y.,
on the final Gtand Prix ride of
the year. Johlllly Rutherford
won lhe Indy 500 but Bobby
Unser piled up the points in
other events to claim the U.S.
Auto Club's championship
circuit crown . Richard Petty,
with 10 victories in 30 stars, led
the NASCAR circuit for the
fifth time. , .
Horse racmg - Cannonade
won the Kentucky Derby, Little
O!rrent scored in the Preilk·
ness and Belmont Stakes.
Neilher won again after the
Triple Crown events and have
been retired to the stud .
Forego, a four-year-&lt;&gt;ld gelding
handicap rwmer, was named
thoroughbred Horse of the
Year with an 8 for 13 record,
including the Jockey Club Gold
O!p.
Other numbers, like 1,124,162
no-shows for National Football
League regular season games,
were beginning w looiL more
tragic than magic for the year
to come.
Minor SlgnUicance
The NFL's no-shows, 100,000
more than last year, represented tickets already sold but
unused for one reason or
another . ln many cases, fans
stayed home to watch sold-&lt;&gt;ut
games on home TV because
those games may have had
minor significance in the late·
season going. But there's also a
hint, in these days of economy
crunch, that many may have
remained away because it was
cheaper to watch on TV than w
head for a stadiwn where
parking fees, programs, tips to
ushers, hot dogs, beer or
whatever can mangle the
family budget.
Inflation hit horse racing In
such vital areas as the price of
hay ($93 a ton, up from ~).
higher payrolls and maintenance costs. The University of
Vermont dropped intercollegiate football because of a severe
budget deficit.
PGA ·golf tourists will be
playing for an estimated
$800,000 less in 1975 than in '74.
New leagues, such as the World
Football League and World
Team Tennis , have been
having their troubles dredging
up new financin g. Some
franchises in old leagues are
less than finn in their account
books.

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without loss of interest is
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•
17 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 29, 1974

16 - The SWlday Tunes- Sent mel, SWlday. Dec. 29, 1974

EL PASO, Tex . (UPI) Super Sophomore Walter
Packer ran for two touchdowns
and rushed for a re&lt;X&gt;rd 183
ya rds to spark Mississippi
Stale to a 26-24 vtctory
Saturday over North Carolina
m the 40th annua l Sun Bowl.
Packer, lhe leading rusher ln
the Southeast Conference this
year wtlh 994 yards , led the
n eet of bulhsh Bulldog runners
who nddled North Carohna 's
defense for 455 yards on the
groWld
Packer, tn erasing the Sun
Bowl rushing mark of 172 yards
set by Texas Tech's George
Smith m 1.972 against the Tar
Heels, ran for touchdowns of I
and 16 yards. Bulldog fre shman ful lba ck Terry Vitrano,

whose best performance was 65
Yj rds agamsl William &amp; Mary,
bulled his way for 164 yards on
20 carries and a touchdown run
of 2 yards with only 3.41left in
the game to win the bowl 's
Most Valuable Player award.
Other Mtssissippi Slate
scores came on held goals of 24
and 32 yards by semor NICk

Results
Xen•a 78 Miami sburg 70
Yellow Spn ng s 63 Greeneview

62
Morgan 70 New Concord John
Glenn 66
Shendan 68 Tn Valley 51
West Musk 1ngum 60 fhilo 57
Crooksville 73 New Lexington

55
Youngs to wn
South
95
Youngstown North 79
Boardman 63 Struthers 46
Jackson M1l ton 76 Farmmgton

51
H1 ckor y 55 Ene Eas t 52
Warren JFK 59 La brae 53
Niles 78 Girard 47
East Pal esti n e 52 Poland 51
Seb rmg 73 South Range 55
Al iqu ippa 58 Sha ron 45
Lake view 68 Shenango 44
Nes hann ock 69 Lang ley ( Pa )

62
Young stown Cardinal Mooney
47 Youngstown Ursu line 34
Sharon Kennedy 66 Campbell
Memori a l 64
Oregon Clay 70 Tol Roger!i 65
Tal Start 49 Tal. St. John 's 41
Tol. Central Catholi c 78 Tol
Woodward 55
Tal Scott 70 Cle Shaw 54
Col. Centra l 85 Tal Bowsher 72
Rossford 63 Ta l Waite 42
Sp nngf•eld 77 Delta 58
Perry sbur g 74 Westwood 60
Nor th wood 52 New Reigel 50
Norwalk St Paul 50 North
Balt1more 49
Defiance 62 Fa1rv1ew 61
Patnck Henry 73 Le•ps1c 51
Upper Sandusk y 60 Kenton 46
Old For t 98 Lakes1de 69
Fayette 71 Morenci (Mich .) 59

MONZON ARRESTEl)
SANTA FE, Argentina (UP!)
- Police, acting on a judge's
ruling, issued an arrest order
Friday for Qarlos Monzon,
World Boxing Assoctation middleweight champion, accused
of hitting another man during
an argument.

started us wmrung drive wllh
Nichels.
North Carolma, which suf- 10 :32 left in the game alter
fered from a leaky defense Alexander had gtven the Tar
through most of its 7-4 season , Heels a four-pomt cushton .
Wtth quarterback Rocky
took a 24-20 lead early m the
Felker
directing the drive, the
fourth quarter on a 2&amp;-yard
Bulldogs
moved 80 yards in 16
field goa l by Ellis Alexander
plays,
wtth
a l:i-ya rd run by
after the two teams had traded
the lead throughout the third Felker on a fourth-and-two
siluatwn to the North Carolina
period
The Tar Heels, who were 10 being the key play in the
maktng the1r fourth bowl march.
Felker, the Southeastern
appearance in five years, got
Conference's
Most Valuable
touchdown runs of 1 and 6
Player
this
season,
kept it
yards from tailback James
'·Boom Boom" Betterso n and a again from the 10 and rambled
29-yard pass from Chrts Kupec to the two on the next play.
Vitrano plunged m from there
to Jumny Jerome.
Mtssisstppi State, makmg its w give the Bulldogs their first
first bowl trtp m . 11 years , lJowl victory since lhev beat

Ute 1983 Ltberty Bowl.
Mississippi State , which
flmshed the season with a 9-3
mark, its finest record in 26
years, also rolled up a Sun
Bowl record of 499 total yards
off its potent veer offense. Theprevious standard was 497
yards by Hardin-Sumnons tn
1937 against Texas Western.
Tne Bulldogs' defense held
North Carolina's highly louted
fWlning duo of Bettersoo and
Mike V01ght to a combined 47
yards. The two had each
rushed for more than 1,000
yards this season while
alternatmg at the tailback
spot.

Peach Bowl stalemate

The
ATLANTA (UP! ) Vanderbilt Commodores and
Texas Tech Red Raiders both
played sterling goalline
defense Saturday and wound
up with each scoring only : a
pair of field goals lor a &amp;&lt;;tie m
the 7th annual Peach Bow I.
The final and lymg field goal
fias a 35--yard kick by Texas
'tech's Brian Hall with 2:21lefl
in the &lt;X&gt;nlesl.
The Commodores had taken
the lead less than three
minutes earlier on a 2&amp;-yard
fteld goal by Mark Adams after
Vanderbilt failed to advance

following a fumble recovery at
the Texans' seven yard line.
Vanderbtlt, 7-3-1 in regular
season play, drew first blood
four minutes mto the second
period on a 3~yard fie ld goal
by Adams, and Texas Tech tied
the score at 3-3 with 3: 11 left in
the third perwd on a 25-yard
field goal by Hall.
Texas Tech, 6-4-! in the
regular season , actually
dominated play with runrungbacks Cliff Hoskms and
Larry Isaac rushing for 118 and
112 yards, respechvely .
But the Vanderbilt defense

thtrd downplay lost two yards,
Adams kicked his first field
goal.
A 41-yard pass interception
return by Vanderbilt's Jay
Chesley and a 14-yard
facemask penalty gave the
Conunodores a first down at
the Texas Te¢1 14 with the five
minutes left in the hall, but
defensive back Randy Olson
made an end zone interception
to end that threat.
Texas Tech then drove 79
yards to the Vanderbilt one
with 4( seconds remaining in
the half, but three straight
plays gained no yardage and
time ran out before the Red
Raiders could get off their
fourth play.
Tech started from its seven
:.:: yard line midway in tbe third
.·.·
yards on the ground tlns year. USC's point total in 1974 was period and drove all the way 1o
Ohio State iS rated No. 2 and the second highest ever for a the Vanderbilt 10 before calling
on Hall for his first field goal.
Southern Califorma No. 4 Pasadena loser.
The Raiders got down 1o the
nationally. If No. 1 Alabama
Hayes, whose Buckeyes were
loses to Notre Dame in the Big Ten c~hampions with Vanderbilt seven early in the
Orange Bowl on New Year's Michigan at 7-1 and 10-1 final period but then were
Nigbt, the Rose Bowl wirmer overall, sees less point produc- pushed back to the 17 and
Dennis Harrison, a 205-pound
could turn out to get the lion in 1975.
national title .
" The more often teams play freshman, broke through to
"This might be for the against each other," he said, block Hall's field goal attempt.
After Adams' second field
national championship," " the less 1le element of suragreed Davis. "A lot of our prise is involved. The scoring goal put Vanderbilt ahead 6-3
guys may want revenge for should go down. There's little with 5:06 left in the game,
what happened in the Rose about each other's teams that Lawrence Williams got off a
Peach Bowl record 54-yard
Bowl last year. I don't. 1 just we don't know."
want us to play a good game
But McKay, whose Trojans kickoff return and the Raiders
and win. There's no hate in my went 9-1-1 during the regular then drove inside the Vanderbilt 20 before calling on Hall
body "
season, isn't so sure.
In the 1973 Rose Bowl, USC
"You might see 122 points in for the game-tying field goal.
Vanderbilt had a last.,second
was a 42-17 winner over Ohio this game alone," he declared.
Slate. That's a total of 122 "OhiD Slate is by far the best chance w break the tie when
points in the last two Pasadena team we'll see. With the out- Harrison recovered a Hoskins
classics.
standing offense they have, fumble at the Tech 37, but there
Historically, the Rose Bowl there's always a good chance ' was time for only one more
play and that was a pass that
has been a defensive contest. for a hig!Micoring game.
Eighteen of the 60 previous
"Our only chance is to score gained only a yard as the game
ended.
games have been shutouts. more points than they do."
held on three consecutive plays
from the Conunodore one yard
line at the end of the first hall,
blocked a 33-yard Hall field
goal attempt midway through
the final period and recovered
two Red Raider fumbles in the
closing minutes of play.
Neither team threatened in
the first period, but Vanderbilt
drove 71 yards w reach the
Texas Tech 12 yard line early
in the second period.
The Conunodores appeared
w have a first down there, but a
remeasurement showed they
were inches short and when the

Owners took the! ii~s~; ;_,;y ,;~tti~ :ri.;tiO~;i'iiti~ ~
::::
··:·

fun out of NBA
ByMURRAYOLDERMAN
SAN FRANCISCO - I NEA)
- He has not been a glamorous
co mn11ss 10ner in the Pete
Rozelle mold. Hts votce sllll
ca rnes t h e in tonation of
Connec h cut Iris h and he
doesn't come on as a strong,
forceful executive. He is the
sa m e man who used to shill
Nolre Dame and the Har Iem
Globetrotters with equal mtenstly .
Walter Kennedy has been the
commissiOner of the National
Baske tball Associatton for 11
eventful years, during which
that pro sport has bec ome the
burgeoning game of the 1970s
wtlh the highest paid performers m professional team
sports.
And now he's steppmg out at
the still vigorous age of 61 when
other men are thinking of
runnmg
for
President.
Althoug h he won ' t say 1t, he 's
sick and ltred of the mess of
high-pressure sports.
This is his las t hurrah, a
travelling swing aroWld his
domain.
The world of Walter Kennedy
has changed dramahcally
from the time he was a 12-yearold kid in Stamford, Conn.
where he s till liv'es 49 years
later Back then, he was the
scorekeeper for the local pro
team which played in the
Stamford Armory against such
teams as the Original Celtics,
with Dutch De hnert , Joe
Lapchick and the great Nat
Holman
Kennedy grew up never far

Weather to play
key role today
By United Press International
Don 't underestimate the
weather as an important factor
m th1s Sunday 's N a twnal
Football League semifinal
playoffs.
Despite the mystique that
pro football players are immune w such things as the
bitter cold of wmler, the fact is
most would rather play in
warmer climes any day.
But a team used to playing in
&lt;X&gt;lder weather very often has
an advantage over a team that
lS used to warm temperatures.
Los Angeles, for example,
has won only one game in its
last 10 trips w Minnesota, and
that is no small reason why the
Vikings have been made a 4'hpoint pick over the Rams in
Sunday's National Conference
championship game.
The Rams , of course, are
taking precautions against the
possibility of snow and the
probability
of
sub-zero
weather. In preparation for
whatever develops they are
bringing with them to
Bloomington foul weather
gear.
Escaping from the wintry
East .Coast may have a
pleasing affect on the Pittsburgh Steelers, who will find
.Oakland a lot more palatable,
weatherwise at least, to the
skin . The Steelers, who will be
meeting the Raiders for the
AFC championship, are a 6point underdog, having been
beaten 17~ by Oakland earlier
this year at Pittsburgh.
However, Coach Chuck Noll
believes his club is vastly
improved since that game and
given good weather conditions
in which to operate, Steelers'
quarterback Terry Bradshaw
ca n throw w,i th the best of
them.
/ The pl4ying lield i~lf is

NorthCarolmaSlale,16-12,l~::in

considered a plus for the
Dolphins since it is made of
artificial turf whereas Pittsburgh is used to regular grass.
Then, too, there is the home
field advantage which many
oddsmakers feel is worth at
least three points to the host
club.
Oakland Coach John Madden! though, doesn't see it
exactly that way.
"Neither an off field nor who
the fans are rooting for makes
that much difference,'' he said.
"There is too much at stake for
anyone to be looking for an
excuse. All the players are
fired up, which is the way it
should be, and I think we are
going to see one helluva
game.''

away from basketball . He
coached 1t at the prep level and
was a referee, and when the
Nat t ona l Basketball
Assoctatton started m 1946, he
was its first pubhcity director .
But Kennedy did a lot of
other things over the years,
too, starting with an education
at Notre Dame University
when Knule Rockne was s till
the coach .
Frank Leahy hired him in
1943 as Notre Dame 's sports
public ity man . Kennedy
remembers his Irish years
fondly . He remembers Ed
McKeever, a silky Texan,
subs tituting for Leahy when
the coach went off to war, and
how Ed's lather used to
commute to all the Notre Dame
games from Texas.
The old man had a mmor
heart attack en route to the
1944 Army game and was taken
off the train in Kansas City.
McKeever called his dad and
ascertamed he was okay.
The next day , Kennedy
recalls, McKeever "laced hts
squad in the dressing room: ''I
don't want w sound like
Rockne,
!elias,
but
my
father
is
m a
hos·
pita! in Kansas City and he
may be dymg. He told me on
the phone last night that he had
one last wish, that you !elias go
out and beat Army lor him."
The fired-up Irish raced onto
the field .
Late in the third quarter,
tackle Ztggy Czarobski of the
Iri sh looked up at the
scoreboard from hts post bon oil
the turf. II read , " Army 59,
Notre Dame 0. "
" I guess," said Ziggy to his
mates, "McKeever's old man
must be dead by now."
In 1951, after five years with
the NBA in its formative stage,
Waller became associated with
the Harlem Globetrotters and
later look them on their first
tnp to Moscow. He also worked
on a football broadcast team
with the late Ted Husing .
In 1959, he was elected the
mayor of his home town of
Stamford and pohtics became
his interest until , in a surprise
move, he was appointed to
succeed MauriCe Podoloff as
the head of the NBA.
His power then was absolute.
Walter made a decision . That
was it . A handshake would seal
a deal.
But that has changed now.
The commissioner, m any
sport, spends more than 50 per
cent of his time haggling on
le ga l matters. The commisswner 's authority was
aborted a few years ago when
Sam Shulman, owner of the
Seattle Super Sonics, look hiin
(Continued on page 19)

By JIM COUR
UP! Sports Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) Blasted 42-21 by Ohio State a
year ago, University of Southern California's Trojans get
another crack at Woody Hayes '
Buckeyes and Heisman Trophy
winner Archie Griffin in the
6!st Rose Bowl on New Year's
Day .
It will be the third straight
USC-Ohio State confrontation
in the granddaddy of all bowl
games and, as Trojan coach
John McKay said, "This is
GRIFFITH INTERESTED
BLOOMINGTON ,
Minn.
(UP! I - Calvm Griffith,
president of the Minnesota
Twins, said today he is very
interested in signing free agent
pitcher Jun Hunter, formerly
of the Oakland A's, but "!think
it could take more than $1
million to sign him."

Hoople picks Fighting Irish, Trojans
By Major Amos B. Hoople
(NEM
Egad, friends, the collegtale
football world is sllll in a hzzy
following the astonishing
se~ond-half comeback of the
Southern California TrOJans m
their winning effort against
Notre Dame. An amazing turn
of events, the likes of which
your faithful correspondent
has not witnessed in nigh onto a
half century of chromchng
such events - um-kwnph 1
Now, can the Trojans contmue at such lever pitch
against a very fine Ohio Stale
club in the.Rose Bowl? Can the
Irish regain their composure to
upset an excellent Alabama
team tn the Orange Bowl ? Is
this really the year of the
upset' Remember Michigan
State Ohio State? And
Harvard - Yale? What effect
will
Ara
Parseghian's
resignation, effective alter the
Alabama game, have on hts
Notre Dame stalwarts'

IIIPLE•I

Fl•.TIILL

Stram gets the ax
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)- player contracts, and (4)
Hank Stram, the man who was
revitalize the promotional
once credited with developing
program to insure strong
''theoffense of the '70s,'' now is conununity involvement with
a coach without a job.
the team.
But the 51-year-&lt;Jld Stram
Steadman has been general
does have the option of drawing manager in name only the past
a salary of an estimated three years since Stram signed
$100,000 for the next seven a !~year contract after the
years if he chooses.
1971 season. At that time,
The Kansas City coach was Stram undertook tl!.e signing of
fired Friday by Chiefs' owner the players and was a one-man
Lamar Hunt .
committee in the Chiefs'
Executive Vice President drafting procedures.
and General Manager Jack
Hunt and Steadman both said
Steadman once again was head talent scout Tommy
given control of the team. Hunt O'Boyle will be given more
outlined Steadman's new latitude and authority in
duties as ( I I seek out and developing future Chiefs'
employ the best qualified drafts.
coach available; (2) " review
Hunt; the multimillionaire
and update the Chiefs' college Dallas resident and son of the
scouti~Jg program; (3 ) direct
late H. L. Hunt, said his
the financial affairs of the club, decision to fire Stram was an
including ,,the qegohating of emotion61 one and it Iivas not

I

becoming an intersectional."
Coming off an incredible 5:i24 come-from-behmd wm over
Notre Dame at Los Angeles
Nov. 30, the Trojans will be
appearing here lor the seventh
time in nine years:
" We're looking forward 1o
having a chance to do
something we couldn't do last
season," adde!l McKay.
The game features the No. 2
finisher in thiS year's Heisman
Trophy voting, too-USC's Anthony Davis.
In three years at Ohio State,
Griffin, a junior, has rushed for
4,064 yards . a Big Ten record.
In three seasons at USC, Davis,
a senior, has carried for 3,627
yards, a Pacific-8 mark.
Davis has 52 career touchdowns compared w 22 for
Griffin. Griffin, a 5-9, 18~
pounder, has rushed for 1,620
yards this season while the :i--9,
183-p-ound Davis has 1,354

finalized until Friday morning.
Hunt, the founder of the
American Football League and
the Chiefs, then the Dallas
Texans, was hesitant to describe Stram's feelings toward
his decision . But he added,
"I'm sure as a coach and a
.
professiOnal man, Hank was
disappointed."
Stram did not attend the--'• '"news co nference and refu~
w
't ake telephone calls at his
house. A son said Stram
' 'wanted to be alone."
Stram's combined record for
all games with the Chiefs was
lfl.7-103-11, but their record this
past season was only :i--9-the
first loser since 1963.
Steadman said he •will begin
immediately searching lor a
new coach and he and Hunt
both said they had no preconceived ideas about a &lt;X&gt;ath.

Let us deal with the btg bowls
m chronological order:
Monday, Dec. 30
Gator Bowl at Jacksonville
Texas 35, Auburn 18
The first upset of major
proportwns m the bowl season
as the late bloommg - heh-heh
- Longhorns roll over Auburn,
rated No. 6 m the collegiate
polls. Texas, actmg like one of
Darrell Royal's clubs of old,
racked up 113 points in 1ts last
two games and 364 lor the
season. All in all they have too
much for Shug Jordan 's hardnosed ball club.
Tuesday, December 31
Sugar Bowl at New Orleans
Florida 25, Nebraska 21
Sporting identicalll-3 records
the Florida Gators and the
Corn huskers are just as evenly
matched
in
personnel.
Nebraska has the edge on
paper in the offensive
department but we look for
Flonda to have a big night on
defense and claun the ultimate
victory - um-kumph 1
Wednesday, January I
Cotton Bowl at Dallas
Baylor 21, Penn State 17
It's Baylor's first-ever trip to
the Cotton Bowl and the Bears
mean to make the most of it.
All year long the Bears have
played fine football winning
five m a row at the end of the
season to lake the Southwest
Conference crown and they will
have to be at thetr best to
conquer Joe Paterno's very,
very good Nittany Lions. Thts
wtll be an extremely close
game.
Rose Bowl at Pasadena
So. California 33, Ohio State 28
Matching the nation's No.3
and 5 teams in the polls and
sporting
the
Buckeye's
Heisman Trophy winner,
Archie Griffin, who 'll be
matching strides with Heisman
runnerup Anthony Davis, this
will be a game to remember.
Your fearless forecaster gives
the edge to John McKay's
explosive Trojans over the
excellently coached Woody
Hayes team. The Trojans, still
skyhigh from the amazing
comeback against the Irish,
will be looking to Notre Dame
to knockoff Wlbeaten Alabama
later in the evening, thus
moving Southern California to
the top of the standings. The
G -ff D - d 1 'll k
n m- aviS ue wi
eep
you glued to your seats, dear
readers..
Orange Bowl at Miami
NotreDame35, Alabama21
Determmed to regam the
preslige_Iost aga~l Southern
Cahforma, the Ftghti~g Irtsh
wtll go all out to prove il was ·a
Ouke
lhrolthng Alabama.
Thts Will b~ no easy task as the
Cnmson Ttde, rated No. 1 m
the COWl try ,o sports the only
unblemislied record of lll l)' ,of
bhe bowl contenders,but Nn rc
Dame has Iii" cr~de~llals ;md

players to succeed. In total averaging 434.5 yards per
defense the Irish lead the contest while Alabama stands
nation allowing only 195.2 16th with a 388.3 average lor
yards per game for 11 contests. the year. Alas, 'twill be a
Alabama ranks fifth giving up disheartening, albeit valiant,
an average-of 220.1 yards. In eighth straight bowl game
total offense, N.D. rates fourth defeat for the Alabama lads ...

The

and a glorious farewell gift for
Irish coach Ara Parseghian Harrwnph!
1974 Record
Right Wrong Ties PeL
449 183
14 .710

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MODeL 207 fFilR

Redmen topple Tigers
•

BY DENNY FOBES
MARIETTA - II was only a
matter of time before Lady
Luck began smiling tn the R10
Grande Redmen .
Fallowing two consecultve
last
second
losses
to
Wilmington and Dyke, the
Redmen cagers took thetr turn
at wmning a cliffha nger,
turmng back highly-touted
University to the South 72-70 m
the opening round of the
Marietta Invitatwnal Shrine
Tourney here Frtday mght.
• It was the fir st loss for the
Tigers m seven outings
Saturday
night
Art
Lanham's crew faced host
Marietta, an 80-60 winner over
Urbana, in the championship
game, whJle th e Sewanee,
Tenn., quintet squared off with
the Blue Knights in the consolation game.
II took the somewhat clutch
foul shooting and last mmute
board work for the Redmen fo

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'

'

.

to bolt into the lead for the first
lime in the game.
Sublet t responde&lt;) from
lm derneath again to g ive the

Rio-South box. ..
RIO GRANDE (72)

PLAYER
Mac Barbee

FG-A FT-A TP PF
7-11 1 2 15
3
Jim Noe
7-18 3-&lt; 17
4
Paul Albanese
1-6
4-8
6
0
Gil Price
13
2-2
4
2
Andy Davenport
3-6
12
7
5
Gary Swmehart
01
0-0
1
0
Brownie Wilson
0 1
00
1
0
Dan Bolinger
7-16 5-5 19
3
J1m Stewart
2-6
0-1
4
1
TOTALS
28-68 16-24 72 20
UN lVERSITY OF SOUTH (70)
PlAYER
FG-A FT-A TP PF
Harry Hoffman
8-12 2-2 18
4
Tom P1ggott
1-3
0-0
4
2
Doug Fifner
0-0
1-2
1
0
Peter Lemonds
3 11
2-2
B
2
Char lie Little
6 10
2-2
14
5
Eddie Krenson
8-14 1-4 17
1
John Sublet1
5- 10 0-1 10
4
Larry Cash
0-0
0-0
0
2
TOTALS
31-60 8-13 70 22
Halftime= R1o 39 South 33

Soul h a 64-1&gt;1 lead, before
Redman Andy Davenport, in
foul trouble most of the game ,
cashed in from 17 £eet and Mac
B£~rbee bombed one m from 22
fee l out to put Rio back on lop
Junt or
Paul
Albanese
dropped m the front end of the
one-and.one, before Barbee did
hkewise to put Rto m front by
three at 67-64. But the Tigers
came right back on a layup by
Peter
Lemonds
before
Albanese a gam sank the firs t of
two in a one-and-onE s ituatiOn
to l'P the count to 2 at 63-66 Rto .
Going to a stall, the Redmen
appeared to pullhe game out of
reach when Jim Noe Was left
alone under the basket for an
easy bunny, but the South rose
again to cut the margin to 2 at

70-68 on a 17 footer bv 'E ddie
Kn·nsun with just 1i seconds
remotining.
Again , Rio Gra nde seemed to
put the icmg on the cake \'I hen
Dan Solinger sank a patr of
free throws after being in·
tenlio nll y loul ~d wt lh jus t
seven seconds remammg
But the Tigers tallied in four
seconds on a long pass and
ensumg layup by Harry Hoffman , and th e South Im·
mediately called lime out to
force Rio into a last second
m bounds pass.
Albanese was found open in
the corner, and he was 1m·
medtately fouled by 5-10 Tiger
guard Charlie Little.
Albanese missed the oneand-one opportunity, but the
last second ticked off the clock
before the South could callltme
after reboWlding the m1ssed
char ily toss .
Rio's Bollinger was the
leading scorer on the nighl 'Wllh
19 pomts, 12 of those coming in
the 2nd half. He. was followed
by teammates Jim Noe wtlh 17
Team
ALLGAMJt pOP and Barbee wtlh 15, 11 of those
coming after intermisswn
For the South , Hoffman
pumped m 18, Krenson, 17,
Portsm outh
5 2 436 383 Little 14 and Sublett 10.
Wheelersburg
5 2 393 327
The South connected on 31 of
Jackson
4 2 342 305
60
field attempts for 52 pel. and
Gallipolis
3 2 287 252
Ironton
4 3 473 430 8 of 13 at the l:i-foot line, while
Athens
2 6 453 474 the Redmen cashed in on 28 of
Meigs
1 4 290 325
Wellston
0 5 236 340 68 floor chances for 41 pet_and
16 of 24 free throws.
Friday's results:
Portsmouth 65 Waverly 50
The Redmen held a dislmcl
Wheelersburg 65 West 34
37-27
reboWldlng edge, while
Friday's games:
commttting 19 turnovers to 21
Gallipolis at Waver ly
Ironton at Jackson
fur the Tigers.
Meigs at Logan
In t'r1day's opening batllc,
Wellston at Athens
Bidwell's
Arthur Clark and
Wheelersburg at Green
Spnngf1eld S. at Portsmouth J ell Faloba poured In 18 points
Eastern at Hannan Trace
apiece as the Pioneers pulled
Saturday's games :
away
from a 37-37 halftime
South Point at Kermit
deadlock,
reeling off 17
".,rtsm outh at Boyd Cot.Jnty
M1.
·ri at Wheelersburg
unanswered points at one spot
early In the second half.
SEOAL VARSITY
Other Pioneers in double
Team
W L
P OP fi~ures were Dennis Dronzek
Waverly
4 0 247 210
Gallipolis
3 1 242 202 wtlh 16 and Chuck Robinson
Ironton
3 1 275 232 • wtlh 13, while Glenn Johnson
logan
2 2 223 235 ha d 16, A. J . Collins 13 and John
Jackson
2 2 216 211
11
Athens
1 3 219 21 8 Ti man 10 for Urbana.

ceprric•t 11u Tile
llrot•r C1 1111111 u•
Pneu 100• S11w
Dec 1t tlln l.n 4,
1'7' , '" bi i• PihS
1nd Pomuor Kracer

Stores

We resene tile

r•1~t

to hm•l quJnhllfl
NONE SOlD TO
OUUIIS

Holiday Store Hours

CLOSED
New Year's Day

OPEN
NEW YEAR'S EVE

Basketball

TIL 6 PM

standings

Sw ed ges South ernf~J;~~+~~ce i lm~~
P ATRJOT - Wt th three
players in double ftgures ,
Coac h Richard Hamilton' s
Southwestern Highlanders
moved into sole possession of
third place m the SV AC
standings here Friday mght
wtlh a 64-57 vtclory over
Southern.
Going into the contest, Coach
Carl Wolfe 's Tornados and SW

were tied with 2-2 league
marks. The win evened SW's
season record at 3-3. Southerh
dropped to 3-4.
Friday n!gh~, Southwestern
jumped into a 12-10 lead at the
end of the first period and
never was seriously threatened
until the final period when
Southern cut the lead to three

pomts, but costly turnovers
helped the Htghlanders increase their lead.
Leading the way was senior
guard Terry Carter who
pumped in 20 pomts on seven
baskets and six free throws.
Uoyd Wood, 6-2 senior center,
dumped in 17 points and Kevin
Walker, senior forward added
13.
Pacing Southern 's attack
was 6-1 jWlior Dan Brown wtth
20 points and 20 rebound s.
Brown hit mne field goals and
two c harily losses. Mike
Roberts, 6-{) jWlior guard, had
18 points. The Tornados played
wi thou! the service of Greg
Dunmng and Tim HilL Dunning
IS m Texas for the Christmas
Holidays and Hill has a chipped
bone in his knee.
charity stripe
Southern hit 25 of 71 Ooor
Waverly shot better, 43 pet., attempts for 35 pel. and seven
as they connected on 2.1 of 53 of 14 at the free throw strtpe.
and four of eight at the line.
Southwestern sank 18 of 26 foul
On the boards the TroJans shots . Southern had 44 total
held a slight edge, 39-31, with reboun ds.
Underwood pulling down nine
Southwestern also took the
for the host team while Duduit
reserve game , 41·38. Fortner
also had nine lor the Tigers. .
led the winners with 12 points.
Friday the Tigers seek theF
Richard Teaford had 15 in a
fourth conseculive SEOAL losing cause.
victory when they host
Southern travels to Symmes
Galhpohs.
Valley Friday night. SouthBox score:
western is at Wahama that
WAVERLY (SOl- Tracy 3-0- same evening.
6 ; Holland 5-0-10; Duduil 5-1 Box Score
11 ; Pfeiffer 5-2 12 ; Laswel l 5-111 TOTALS 23-4-50.
Southern (57) - Nease; 1--{)-2;
PORTSMOUTH (65) - Tyler Ervin, 4-0--8; Robert, 7-4-18;
6 1-13; Green 1-0 'J Underwood
Brown, 9-2-20; Shultz, 2-ll-4;
4-4-12 ;
White
8-0- 16
Williamson 6-4-16 ; Goolsby 3-o'. · Huffman, 2-!-5. Totals 25-7-57.
6. TOTALS 28-9-65.
Southwestern (64) - Walker,
5COI(J by quarrers:
4-5-13
; Wood, 6-5-11 ; Carter, 7Waverly
10 16 14 lQ--50
Portsmouth
10 18 1.4 23-65
6-20; Nida, !--{)-2; Lewis, 2-0-4;
Reserves: Portsmouth 65,
Grate, 3-2-8. Totals 23-18-64.
Waverly 55.
By Quarters:
Ohio Hrgh School
Southern
10 10 12 25-57
Baskelba II Resutls
S. Western
12 18 15 1~4
By United Press International
Reserves : SW 41 Southern 38
Friday

Trojans pound
Waverly 65-50
PORTSMOUTH - A quick,
high - jumpwg Portsmouth
Trojan
quintet
ended
Waverly's winning strea k
Friday night as PHS battled
from behind to post a 6:i-50 nonleague win over the SEOAL
team.
The loss followed seven
stratght wins by the Tigers
while the Trojans record
jumped to 5-2 on the young
season.
A rash of personal fouls
against the Tigers early in the
contest contributed to the loss
as Waverly was unable w play
an effechve defense in the final
period in which the TrOJans
outscored them 23--10.
Doug Tracy, one of the stalwarts for the Tigers, ptcked up
three personal fouls in the
initial period, which ended in a
1~10 deadlock.
The score was tied seven
times in the second quarter
before Portsmouth's Dave
Underwood canned a pair of
free throws to give his team a
28-26 halftime lead.
Waverly finally grabbed the
lead in the third period and
increased it to 36-32 with 3:19
remaining m the quarter .
However the Trojans ripped
off six straight points to take
the lead at 311-36 and the score
was tied at 38 and again at 40
before the canto ended with
Portsmouth leadwg 42-40.
The Trojan s were never
behind as they took it to the
foul-plagued Tigers as the lead
eventually swelled to seven
points before the final 15-poin l
spread.
Four Trojans finished in
double figures led by Dan
White and Rick Wtlliamson
with 16 pomts each while Dan
Tyler threw in 13, and Dave
Underwood 12.
Waverly also placed lour
players in double-digit scoring
led by Tom Pleifer's 12 points,
with Butch Laswell and Tim
Duduiteach getting 11, and Joe
Holland 10.
Laswell fouled out in the
fourth period,while three other
Tiger starters had four personals.
Statistics show Portsmouth
hitting 41 pet. on 28 of 67 shots
and converting nine of 14 at the

Whitehall 64 Westerville 60
Mount Vernon 53 Delaware 52
Reynoldsburg 58 Gahanna 55
Upper Arlington 72 Lan cas ter

Z.=tnesville 62 Chillicothe 46
Canton
Lehman
49
Col ,
Mohawk 44
Newark 58 Col. Walnut R1dge
55

Col. Bishop Hartley 69 Col
West 60
Col.

Bishop Wehrle 62 New

Albany 61

Grandview 68 Col.

B1shop

Meigs

Wellston
TOTALS

I

3 244

Me1gs
Athen s

3 1
3 1

Gallipolos
Logan

3 1 167 153
3 1 172 158

Waverly
Ironton
Jackson

2 2 124
1 3 135
1 3 191

Wellston
TOTALS

MOBILE
HOMES

85
146
133
161
195

SEOAL FRESHMEN
W l
P OP
Team
Alhens
3 1 15~ 144
Logan
3 1 172 120

Galllpoli~

3 1 185

Meigs

2 2 155 152

Waverly
Ironton
Jackson
Wellston

2
2
1
0

TOTALS

157
136
122
169
157

16 16 1157 1157

Thursday's Games:
Waverly at Gallipolis
Jack son at Ironton
Logan at Meigs
Athens at Wellston

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CHARLOTIESVILI..E, Va.
(UP!)- University of Virginia
football Coach Sonny Randle
Thursday promoted defensive
tackle &lt;X&gt;ach Turnley Todd w
defensive coordinator for the
Cavaliers.
Todd, who has been an
assistant =chat UVA for four
seasons, replaces Carl Reese,
who resigned to join the newly
assembled &lt;X&gt;aching staff at
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carpet eBeautiful decOIS are hightighted by quality draperies, furniture and
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ga in their second wtn of the
season, as the Tigers overcame
Rio 62~1 on a layup by 6-6
sophomore center John Sublet!

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•
17 - The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 29, 1974

16 - The SWlday Tunes- Sent mel, SWlday. Dec. 29, 1974

EL PASO, Tex . (UPI) Super Sophomore Walter
Packer ran for two touchdowns
and rushed for a re&lt;X&gt;rd 183
ya rds to spark Mississippi
Stale to a 26-24 vtctory
Saturday over North Carolina
m the 40th annua l Sun Bowl.
Packer, lhe leading rusher ln
the Southeast Conference this
year wtlh 994 yards , led the
n eet of bulhsh Bulldog runners
who nddled North Carohna 's
defense for 455 yards on the
groWld
Packer, tn erasing the Sun
Bowl rushing mark of 172 yards
set by Texas Tech's George
Smith m 1.972 against the Tar
Heels, ran for touchdowns of I
and 16 yards. Bulldog fre shman ful lba ck Terry Vitrano,

whose best performance was 65
Yj rds agamsl William &amp; Mary,
bulled his way for 164 yards on
20 carries and a touchdown run
of 2 yards with only 3.41left in
the game to win the bowl 's
Most Valuable Player award.
Other Mtssissippi Slate
scores came on held goals of 24
and 32 yards by semor NICk

Results
Xen•a 78 Miami sburg 70
Yellow Spn ng s 63 Greeneview

62
Morgan 70 New Concord John
Glenn 66
Shendan 68 Tn Valley 51
West Musk 1ngum 60 fhilo 57
Crooksville 73 New Lexington

55
Youngs to wn
South
95
Youngstown North 79
Boardman 63 Struthers 46
Jackson M1l ton 76 Farmmgton

51
H1 ckor y 55 Ene Eas t 52
Warren JFK 59 La brae 53
Niles 78 Girard 47
East Pal esti n e 52 Poland 51
Seb rmg 73 South Range 55
Al iqu ippa 58 Sha ron 45
Lake view 68 Shenango 44
Nes hann ock 69 Lang ley ( Pa )

62
Young stown Cardinal Mooney
47 Youngstown Ursu line 34
Sharon Kennedy 66 Campbell
Memori a l 64
Oregon Clay 70 Tol Roger!i 65
Tal Start 49 Tal. St. John 's 41
Tol. Central Catholi c 78 Tol
Woodward 55
Tal Scott 70 Cle Shaw 54
Col. Centra l 85 Tal Bowsher 72
Rossford 63 Ta l Waite 42
Sp nngf•eld 77 Delta 58
Perry sbur g 74 Westwood 60
Nor th wood 52 New Reigel 50
Norwalk St Paul 50 North
Balt1more 49
Defiance 62 Fa1rv1ew 61
Patnck Henry 73 Le•ps1c 51
Upper Sandusk y 60 Kenton 46
Old For t 98 Lakes1de 69
Fayette 71 Morenci (Mich .) 59

MONZON ARRESTEl)
SANTA FE, Argentina (UP!)
- Police, acting on a judge's
ruling, issued an arrest order
Friday for Qarlos Monzon,
World Boxing Assoctation middleweight champion, accused
of hitting another man during
an argument.

started us wmrung drive wllh
Nichels.
North Carolma, which suf- 10 :32 left in the game alter
fered from a leaky defense Alexander had gtven the Tar
through most of its 7-4 season , Heels a four-pomt cushton .
Wtth quarterback Rocky
took a 24-20 lead early m the
Felker
directing the drive, the
fourth quarter on a 2&amp;-yard
Bulldogs
moved 80 yards in 16
field goa l by Ellis Alexander
plays,
wtth
a l:i-ya rd run by
after the two teams had traded
the lead throughout the third Felker on a fourth-and-two
siluatwn to the North Carolina
period
The Tar Heels, who were 10 being the key play in the
maktng the1r fourth bowl march.
Felker, the Southeastern
appearance in five years, got
Conference's
Most Valuable
touchdown runs of 1 and 6
Player
this
season,
kept it
yards from tailback James
'·Boom Boom" Betterso n and a again from the 10 and rambled
29-yard pass from Chrts Kupec to the two on the next play.
Vitrano plunged m from there
to Jumny Jerome.
Mtssisstppi State, makmg its w give the Bulldogs their first
first bowl trtp m . 11 years , lJowl victory since lhev beat

Ute 1983 Ltberty Bowl.
Mississippi State , which
flmshed the season with a 9-3
mark, its finest record in 26
years, also rolled up a Sun
Bowl record of 499 total yards
off its potent veer offense. Theprevious standard was 497
yards by Hardin-Sumnons tn
1937 against Texas Western.
Tne Bulldogs' defense held
North Carolina's highly louted
fWlning duo of Bettersoo and
Mike V01ght to a combined 47
yards. The two had each
rushed for more than 1,000
yards this season while
alternatmg at the tailback
spot.

Peach Bowl stalemate

The
ATLANTA (UP! ) Vanderbilt Commodores and
Texas Tech Red Raiders both
played sterling goalline
defense Saturday and wound
up with each scoring only : a
pair of field goals lor a &amp;&lt;;tie m
the 7th annual Peach Bow I.
The final and lymg field goal
fias a 35--yard kick by Texas
'tech's Brian Hall with 2:21lefl
in the &lt;X&gt;nlesl.
The Commodores had taken
the lead less than three
minutes earlier on a 2&amp;-yard
fteld goal by Mark Adams after
Vanderbilt failed to advance

following a fumble recovery at
the Texans' seven yard line.
Vanderbtlt, 7-3-1 in regular
season play, drew first blood
four minutes mto the second
period on a 3~yard fie ld goal
by Adams, and Texas Tech tied
the score at 3-3 with 3: 11 left in
the third perwd on a 25-yard
field goal by Hall.
Texas Tech, 6-4-! in the
regular season , actually
dominated play with runrungbacks Cliff Hoskms and
Larry Isaac rushing for 118 and
112 yards, respechvely .
But the Vanderbilt defense

thtrd downplay lost two yards,
Adams kicked his first field
goal.
A 41-yard pass interception
return by Vanderbilt's Jay
Chesley and a 14-yard
facemask penalty gave the
Conunodores a first down at
the Texas Te¢1 14 with the five
minutes left in the hall, but
defensive back Randy Olson
made an end zone interception
to end that threat.
Texas Tech then drove 79
yards to the Vanderbilt one
with 4( seconds remaining in
the half, but three straight
plays gained no yardage and
time ran out before the Red
Raiders could get off their
fourth play.
Tech started from its seven
:.:: yard line midway in tbe third
.·.·
yards on the ground tlns year. USC's point total in 1974 was period and drove all the way 1o
Ohio State iS rated No. 2 and the second highest ever for a the Vanderbilt 10 before calling
on Hall for his first field goal.
Southern Califorma No. 4 Pasadena loser.
The Raiders got down 1o the
nationally. If No. 1 Alabama
Hayes, whose Buckeyes were
loses to Notre Dame in the Big Ten c~hampions with Vanderbilt seven early in the
Orange Bowl on New Year's Michigan at 7-1 and 10-1 final period but then were
Nigbt, the Rose Bowl wirmer overall, sees less point produc- pushed back to the 17 and
Dennis Harrison, a 205-pound
could turn out to get the lion in 1975.
national title .
" The more often teams play freshman, broke through to
"This might be for the against each other," he said, block Hall's field goal attempt.
After Adams' second field
national championship," " the less 1le element of suragreed Davis. "A lot of our prise is involved. The scoring goal put Vanderbilt ahead 6-3
guys may want revenge for should go down. There's little with 5:06 left in the game,
what happened in the Rose about each other's teams that Lawrence Williams got off a
Peach Bowl record 54-yard
Bowl last year. I don't. 1 just we don't know."
want us to play a good game
But McKay, whose Trojans kickoff return and the Raiders
and win. There's no hate in my went 9-1-1 during the regular then drove inside the Vanderbilt 20 before calling on Hall
body "
season, isn't so sure.
In the 1973 Rose Bowl, USC
"You might see 122 points in for the game-tying field goal.
Vanderbilt had a last.,second
was a 42-17 winner over Ohio this game alone," he declared.
Slate. That's a total of 122 "OhiD Slate is by far the best chance w break the tie when
points in the last two Pasadena team we'll see. With the out- Harrison recovered a Hoskins
classics.
standing offense they have, fumble at the Tech 37, but there
Historically, the Rose Bowl there's always a good chance ' was time for only one more
play and that was a pass that
has been a defensive contest. for a hig!Micoring game.
Eighteen of the 60 previous
"Our only chance is to score gained only a yard as the game
ended.
games have been shutouts. more points than they do."
held on three consecutive plays
from the Conunodore one yard
line at the end of the first hall,
blocked a 33-yard Hall field
goal attempt midway through
the final period and recovered
two Red Raider fumbles in the
closing minutes of play.
Neither team threatened in
the first period, but Vanderbilt
drove 71 yards w reach the
Texas Tech 12 yard line early
in the second period.
The Conunodores appeared
w have a first down there, but a
remeasurement showed they
were inches short and when the

Owners took the! ii~s~; ;_,;y ,;~tti~ :ri.;tiO~;i'iiti~ ~
::::
··:·

fun out of NBA
ByMURRAYOLDERMAN
SAN FRANCISCO - I NEA)
- He has not been a glamorous
co mn11ss 10ner in the Pete
Rozelle mold. Hts votce sllll
ca rnes t h e in tonation of
Connec h cut Iris h and he
doesn't come on as a strong,
forceful executive. He is the
sa m e man who used to shill
Nolre Dame and the Har Iem
Globetrotters with equal mtenstly .
Walter Kennedy has been the
commissiOner of the National
Baske tball Associatton for 11
eventful years, during which
that pro sport has bec ome the
burgeoning game of the 1970s
wtlh the highest paid performers m professional team
sports.
And now he's steppmg out at
the still vigorous age of 61 when
other men are thinking of
runnmg
for
President.
Althoug h he won ' t say 1t, he 's
sick and ltred of the mess of
high-pressure sports.
This is his las t hurrah, a
travelling swing aroWld his
domain.
The world of Walter Kennedy
has changed dramahcally
from the time he was a 12-yearold kid in Stamford, Conn.
where he s till liv'es 49 years
later Back then, he was the
scorekeeper for the local pro
team which played in the
Stamford Armory against such
teams as the Original Celtics,
with Dutch De hnert , Joe
Lapchick and the great Nat
Holman
Kennedy grew up never far

Weather to play
key role today
By United Press International
Don 't underestimate the
weather as an important factor
m th1s Sunday 's N a twnal
Football League semifinal
playoffs.
Despite the mystique that
pro football players are immune w such things as the
bitter cold of wmler, the fact is
most would rather play in
warmer climes any day.
But a team used to playing in
&lt;X&gt;lder weather very often has
an advantage over a team that
lS used to warm temperatures.
Los Angeles, for example,
has won only one game in its
last 10 trips w Minnesota, and
that is no small reason why the
Vikings have been made a 4'hpoint pick over the Rams in
Sunday's National Conference
championship game.
The Rams , of course, are
taking precautions against the
possibility of snow and the
probability
of
sub-zero
weather. In preparation for
whatever develops they are
bringing with them to
Bloomington foul weather
gear.
Escaping from the wintry
East .Coast may have a
pleasing affect on the Pittsburgh Steelers, who will find
.Oakland a lot more palatable,
weatherwise at least, to the
skin . The Steelers, who will be
meeting the Raiders for the
AFC championship, are a 6point underdog, having been
beaten 17~ by Oakland earlier
this year at Pittsburgh.
However, Coach Chuck Noll
believes his club is vastly
improved since that game and
given good weather conditions
in which to operate, Steelers'
quarterback Terry Bradshaw
ca n throw w,i th the best of
them.
/ The pl4ying lield i~lf is

NorthCarolmaSlale,16-12,l~::in

considered a plus for the
Dolphins since it is made of
artificial turf whereas Pittsburgh is used to regular grass.
Then, too, there is the home
field advantage which many
oddsmakers feel is worth at
least three points to the host
club.
Oakland Coach John Madden! though, doesn't see it
exactly that way.
"Neither an off field nor who
the fans are rooting for makes
that much difference,'' he said.
"There is too much at stake for
anyone to be looking for an
excuse. All the players are
fired up, which is the way it
should be, and I think we are
going to see one helluva
game.''

away from basketball . He
coached 1t at the prep level and
was a referee, and when the
Nat t ona l Basketball
Assoctatton started m 1946, he
was its first pubhcity director .
But Kennedy did a lot of
other things over the years,
too, starting with an education
at Notre Dame University
when Knule Rockne was s till
the coach .
Frank Leahy hired him in
1943 as Notre Dame 's sports
public ity man . Kennedy
remembers his Irish years
fondly . He remembers Ed
McKeever, a silky Texan,
subs tituting for Leahy when
the coach went off to war, and
how Ed's lather used to
commute to all the Notre Dame
games from Texas.
The old man had a mmor
heart attack en route to the
1944 Army game and was taken
off the train in Kansas City.
McKeever called his dad and
ascertamed he was okay.
The next day , Kennedy
recalls, McKeever "laced hts
squad in the dressing room: ''I
don't want w sound like
Rockne,
!elias,
but
my
father
is
m a
hos·
pita! in Kansas City and he
may be dymg. He told me on
the phone last night that he had
one last wish, that you !elias go
out and beat Army lor him."
The fired-up Irish raced onto
the field .
Late in the third quarter,
tackle Ztggy Czarobski of the
Iri sh looked up at the
scoreboard from hts post bon oil
the turf. II read , " Army 59,
Notre Dame 0. "
" I guess," said Ziggy to his
mates, "McKeever's old man
must be dead by now."
In 1951, after five years with
the NBA in its formative stage,
Waller became associated with
the Harlem Globetrotters and
later look them on their first
tnp to Moscow. He also worked
on a football broadcast team
with the late Ted Husing .
In 1959, he was elected the
mayor of his home town of
Stamford and pohtics became
his interest until , in a surprise
move, he was appointed to
succeed MauriCe Podoloff as
the head of the NBA.
His power then was absolute.
Walter made a decision . That
was it . A handshake would seal
a deal.
But that has changed now.
The commissioner, m any
sport, spends more than 50 per
cent of his time haggling on
le ga l matters. The commisswner 's authority was
aborted a few years ago when
Sam Shulman, owner of the
Seattle Super Sonics, look hiin
(Continued on page 19)

By JIM COUR
UP! Sports Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) Blasted 42-21 by Ohio State a
year ago, University of Southern California's Trojans get
another crack at Woody Hayes '
Buckeyes and Heisman Trophy
winner Archie Griffin in the
6!st Rose Bowl on New Year's
Day .
It will be the third straight
USC-Ohio State confrontation
in the granddaddy of all bowl
games and, as Trojan coach
John McKay said, "This is
GRIFFITH INTERESTED
BLOOMINGTON ,
Minn.
(UP! I - Calvm Griffith,
president of the Minnesota
Twins, said today he is very
interested in signing free agent
pitcher Jun Hunter, formerly
of the Oakland A's, but "!think
it could take more than $1
million to sign him."

Hoople picks Fighting Irish, Trojans
By Major Amos B. Hoople
(NEM
Egad, friends, the collegtale
football world is sllll in a hzzy
following the astonishing
se~ond-half comeback of the
Southern California TrOJans m
their winning effort against
Notre Dame. An amazing turn
of events, the likes of which
your faithful correspondent
has not witnessed in nigh onto a
half century of chromchng
such events - um-kwnph 1
Now, can the Trojans contmue at such lever pitch
against a very fine Ohio Stale
club in the.Rose Bowl? Can the
Irish regain their composure to
upset an excellent Alabama
team tn the Orange Bowl ? Is
this really the year of the
upset' Remember Michigan
State Ohio State? And
Harvard - Yale? What effect
will
Ara
Parseghian's
resignation, effective alter the
Alabama game, have on hts
Notre Dame stalwarts'

IIIPLE•I

Fl•.TIILL

Stram gets the ax
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)- player contracts, and (4)
Hank Stram, the man who was
revitalize the promotional
once credited with developing
program to insure strong
''theoffense of the '70s,'' now is conununity involvement with
a coach without a job.
the team.
But the 51-year-&lt;Jld Stram
Steadman has been general
does have the option of drawing manager in name only the past
a salary of an estimated three years since Stram signed
$100,000 for the next seven a !~year contract after the
years if he chooses.
1971 season. At that time,
The Kansas City coach was Stram undertook tl!.e signing of
fired Friday by Chiefs' owner the players and was a one-man
Lamar Hunt .
committee in the Chiefs'
Executive Vice President drafting procedures.
and General Manager Jack
Hunt and Steadman both said
Steadman once again was head talent scout Tommy
given control of the team. Hunt O'Boyle will be given more
outlined Steadman's new latitude and authority in
duties as ( I I seek out and developing future Chiefs'
employ the best qualified drafts.
coach available; (2) " review
Hunt; the multimillionaire
and update the Chiefs' college Dallas resident and son of the
scouti~Jg program; (3 ) direct
late H. L. Hunt, said his
the financial affairs of the club, decision to fire Stram was an
including ,,the qegohating of emotion61 one and it Iivas not

I

becoming an intersectional."
Coming off an incredible 5:i24 come-from-behmd wm over
Notre Dame at Los Angeles
Nov. 30, the Trojans will be
appearing here lor the seventh
time in nine years:
" We're looking forward 1o
having a chance to do
something we couldn't do last
season," adde!l McKay.
The game features the No. 2
finisher in thiS year's Heisman
Trophy voting, too-USC's Anthony Davis.
In three years at Ohio State,
Griffin, a junior, has rushed for
4,064 yards . a Big Ten record.
In three seasons at USC, Davis,
a senior, has carried for 3,627
yards, a Pacific-8 mark.
Davis has 52 career touchdowns compared w 22 for
Griffin. Griffin, a 5-9, 18~
pounder, has rushed for 1,620
yards this season while the :i--9,
183-p-ound Davis has 1,354

finalized until Friday morning.
Hunt, the founder of the
American Football League and
the Chiefs, then the Dallas
Texans, was hesitant to describe Stram's feelings toward
his decision . But he added,
"I'm sure as a coach and a
.
professiOnal man, Hank was
disappointed."
Stram did not attend the--'• '"news co nference and refu~
w
't ake telephone calls at his
house. A son said Stram
' 'wanted to be alone."
Stram's combined record for
all games with the Chiefs was
lfl.7-103-11, but their record this
past season was only :i--9-the
first loser since 1963.
Steadman said he •will begin
immediately searching lor a
new coach and he and Hunt
both said they had no preconceived ideas about a &lt;X&gt;ath.

Let us deal with the btg bowls
m chronological order:
Monday, Dec. 30
Gator Bowl at Jacksonville
Texas 35, Auburn 18
The first upset of major
proportwns m the bowl season
as the late bloommg - heh-heh
- Longhorns roll over Auburn,
rated No. 6 m the collegiate
polls. Texas, actmg like one of
Darrell Royal's clubs of old,
racked up 113 points in 1ts last
two games and 364 lor the
season. All in all they have too
much for Shug Jordan 's hardnosed ball club.
Tuesday, December 31
Sugar Bowl at New Orleans
Florida 25, Nebraska 21
Sporting identicalll-3 records
the Florida Gators and the
Corn huskers are just as evenly
matched
in
personnel.
Nebraska has the edge on
paper in the offensive
department but we look for
Flonda to have a big night on
defense and claun the ultimate
victory - um-kumph 1
Wednesday, January I
Cotton Bowl at Dallas
Baylor 21, Penn State 17
It's Baylor's first-ever trip to
the Cotton Bowl and the Bears
mean to make the most of it.
All year long the Bears have
played fine football winning
five m a row at the end of the
season to lake the Southwest
Conference crown and they will
have to be at thetr best to
conquer Joe Paterno's very,
very good Nittany Lions. Thts
wtll be an extremely close
game.
Rose Bowl at Pasadena
So. California 33, Ohio State 28
Matching the nation's No.3
and 5 teams in the polls and
sporting
the
Buckeye's
Heisman Trophy winner,
Archie Griffin, who 'll be
matching strides with Heisman
runnerup Anthony Davis, this
will be a game to remember.
Your fearless forecaster gives
the edge to John McKay's
explosive Trojans over the
excellently coached Woody
Hayes team. The Trojans, still
skyhigh from the amazing
comeback against the Irish,
will be looking to Notre Dame
to knockoff Wlbeaten Alabama
later in the evening, thus
moving Southern California to
the top of the standings. The
G -ff D - d 1 'll k
n m- aviS ue wi
eep
you glued to your seats, dear
readers..
Orange Bowl at Miami
NotreDame35, Alabama21
Determmed to regam the
preslige_Iost aga~l Southern
Cahforma, the Ftghti~g Irtsh
wtll go all out to prove il was ·a
Ouke
lhrolthng Alabama.
Thts Will b~ no easy task as the
Cnmson Ttde, rated No. 1 m
the COWl try ,o sports the only
unblemislied record of lll l)' ,of
bhe bowl contenders,but Nn rc
Dame has Iii" cr~de~llals ;md

players to succeed. In total averaging 434.5 yards per
defense the Irish lead the contest while Alabama stands
nation allowing only 195.2 16th with a 388.3 average lor
yards per game for 11 contests. the year. Alas, 'twill be a
Alabama ranks fifth giving up disheartening, albeit valiant,
an average-of 220.1 yards. In eighth straight bowl game
total offense, N.D. rates fourth defeat for the Alabama lads ...

The

and a glorious farewell gift for
Irish coach Ara Parseghian Harrwnph!
1974 Record
Right Wrong Ties PeL
449 183
14 .710

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Redmen topple Tigers
•

BY DENNY FOBES
MARIETTA - II was only a
matter of time before Lady
Luck began smiling tn the R10
Grande Redmen .
Fallowing two consecultve
last
second
losses
to
Wilmington and Dyke, the
Redmen cagers took thetr turn
at wmning a cliffha nger,
turmng back highly-touted
University to the South 72-70 m
the opening round of the
Marietta Invitatwnal Shrine
Tourney here Frtday mght.
• It was the fir st loss for the
Tigers m seven outings
Saturday
night
Art
Lanham's crew faced host
Marietta, an 80-60 winner over
Urbana, in the championship
game, whJle th e Sewanee,
Tenn., quintet squared off with
the Blue Knights in the consolation game.
II took the somewhat clutch
foul shooting and last mmute
board work for the Redmen fo

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to bolt into the lead for the first
lime in the game.
Sublet t responde&lt;) from
lm derneath again to g ive the

Rio-South box. ..
RIO GRANDE (72)

PLAYER
Mac Barbee

FG-A FT-A TP PF
7-11 1 2 15
3
Jim Noe
7-18 3-&lt; 17
4
Paul Albanese
1-6
4-8
6
0
Gil Price
13
2-2
4
2
Andy Davenport
3-6
12
7
5
Gary Swmehart
01
0-0
1
0
Brownie Wilson
0 1
00
1
0
Dan Bolinger
7-16 5-5 19
3
J1m Stewart
2-6
0-1
4
1
TOTALS
28-68 16-24 72 20
UN lVERSITY OF SOUTH (70)
PlAYER
FG-A FT-A TP PF
Harry Hoffman
8-12 2-2 18
4
Tom P1ggott
1-3
0-0
4
2
Doug Fifner
0-0
1-2
1
0
Peter Lemonds
3 11
2-2
B
2
Char lie Little
6 10
2-2
14
5
Eddie Krenson
8-14 1-4 17
1
John Sublet1
5- 10 0-1 10
4
Larry Cash
0-0
0-0
0
2
TOTALS
31-60 8-13 70 22
Halftime= R1o 39 South 33

Soul h a 64-1&gt;1 lead, before
Redman Andy Davenport, in
foul trouble most of the game ,
cashed in from 17 £eet and Mac
B£~rbee bombed one m from 22
fee l out to put Rio back on lop
Junt or
Paul
Albanese
dropped m the front end of the
one-and.one, before Barbee did
hkewise to put Rto m front by
three at 67-64. But the Tigers
came right back on a layup by
Peter
Lemonds
before
Albanese a gam sank the firs t of
two in a one-and-onE s ituatiOn
to l'P the count to 2 at 63-66 Rto .
Going to a stall, the Redmen
appeared to pullhe game out of
reach when Jim Noe Was left
alone under the basket for an
easy bunny, but the South rose
again to cut the margin to 2 at

70-68 on a 17 footer bv 'E ddie
Kn·nsun with just 1i seconds
remotining.
Again , Rio Gra nde seemed to
put the icmg on the cake \'I hen
Dan Solinger sank a patr of
free throws after being in·
tenlio nll y loul ~d wt lh jus t
seven seconds remammg
But the Tigers tallied in four
seconds on a long pass and
ensumg layup by Harry Hoffman , and th e South Im·
mediately called lime out to
force Rio into a last second
m bounds pass.
Albanese was found open in
the corner, and he was 1m·
medtately fouled by 5-10 Tiger
guard Charlie Little.
Albanese missed the oneand-one opportunity, but the
last second ticked off the clock
before the South could callltme
after reboWlding the m1ssed
char ily toss .
Rio's Bollinger was the
leading scorer on the nighl 'Wllh
19 pomts, 12 of those coming in
the 2nd half. He. was followed
by teammates Jim Noe wtlh 17
Team
ALLGAMJt pOP and Barbee wtlh 15, 11 of those
coming after intermisswn
For the South , Hoffman
pumped m 18, Krenson, 17,
Portsm outh
5 2 436 383 Little 14 and Sublett 10.
Wheelersburg
5 2 393 327
The South connected on 31 of
Jackson
4 2 342 305
60
field attempts for 52 pel. and
Gallipolis
3 2 287 252
Ironton
4 3 473 430 8 of 13 at the l:i-foot line, while
Athens
2 6 453 474 the Redmen cashed in on 28 of
Meigs
1 4 290 325
Wellston
0 5 236 340 68 floor chances for 41 pet_and
16 of 24 free throws.
Friday's results:
Portsmouth 65 Waverly 50
The Redmen held a dislmcl
Wheelersburg 65 West 34
37-27
reboWldlng edge, while
Friday's games:
commttting 19 turnovers to 21
Gallipolis at Waver ly
Ironton at Jackson
fur the Tigers.
Meigs at Logan
In t'r1day's opening batllc,
Wellston at Athens
Bidwell's
Arthur Clark and
Wheelersburg at Green
Spnngf1eld S. at Portsmouth J ell Faloba poured In 18 points
Eastern at Hannan Trace
apiece as the Pioneers pulled
Saturday's games :
away
from a 37-37 halftime
South Point at Kermit
deadlock,
reeling off 17
".,rtsm outh at Boyd Cot.Jnty
M1.
·ri at Wheelersburg
unanswered points at one spot
early In the second half.
SEOAL VARSITY
Other Pioneers in double
Team
W L
P OP fi~ures were Dennis Dronzek
Waverly
4 0 247 210
Gallipolis
3 1 242 202 wtlh 16 and Chuck Robinson
Ironton
3 1 275 232 • wtlh 13, while Glenn Johnson
logan
2 2 223 235 ha d 16, A. J . Collins 13 and John
Jackson
2 2 216 211
11
Athens
1 3 219 21 8 Ti man 10 for Urbana.

ceprric•t 11u Tile
llrot•r C1 1111111 u•
Pneu 100• S11w
Dec 1t tlln l.n 4,
1'7' , '" bi i• PihS
1nd Pomuor Kracer

Stores

We resene tile

r•1~t

to hm•l quJnhllfl
NONE SOlD TO
OUUIIS

Holiday Store Hours

CLOSED
New Year's Day

OPEN
NEW YEAR'S EVE

Basketball

TIL 6 PM

standings

Sw ed ges South ernf~J;~~+~~ce i lm~~
P ATRJOT - Wt th three
players in double ftgures ,
Coac h Richard Hamilton' s
Southwestern Highlanders
moved into sole possession of
third place m the SV AC
standings here Friday mght
wtlh a 64-57 vtclory over
Southern.
Going into the contest, Coach
Carl Wolfe 's Tornados and SW

were tied with 2-2 league
marks. The win evened SW's
season record at 3-3. Southerh
dropped to 3-4.
Friday n!gh~, Southwestern
jumped into a 12-10 lead at the
end of the first period and
never was seriously threatened
until the final period when
Southern cut the lead to three

pomts, but costly turnovers
helped the Htghlanders increase their lead.
Leading the way was senior
guard Terry Carter who
pumped in 20 pomts on seven
baskets and six free throws.
Uoyd Wood, 6-2 senior center,
dumped in 17 points and Kevin
Walker, senior forward added
13.
Pacing Southern 's attack
was 6-1 jWlior Dan Brown wtth
20 points and 20 rebound s.
Brown hit mne field goals and
two c harily losses. Mike
Roberts, 6-{) jWlior guard, had
18 points. The Tornados played
wi thou! the service of Greg
Dunmng and Tim HilL Dunning
IS m Texas for the Christmas
Holidays and Hill has a chipped
bone in his knee.
charity stripe
Southern hit 25 of 71 Ooor
Waverly shot better, 43 pet., attempts for 35 pel. and seven
as they connected on 2.1 of 53 of 14 at the free throw strtpe.
and four of eight at the line.
Southwestern sank 18 of 26 foul
On the boards the TroJans shots . Southern had 44 total
held a slight edge, 39-31, with reboun ds.
Underwood pulling down nine
Southwestern also took the
for the host team while Duduit
reserve game , 41·38. Fortner
also had nine lor the Tigers. .
led the winners with 12 points.
Friday the Tigers seek theF
Richard Teaford had 15 in a
fourth conseculive SEOAL losing cause.
victory when they host
Southern travels to Symmes
Galhpohs.
Valley Friday night. SouthBox score:
western is at Wahama that
WAVERLY (SOl- Tracy 3-0- same evening.
6 ; Holland 5-0-10; Duduil 5-1 Box Score
11 ; Pfeiffer 5-2 12 ; Laswel l 5-111 TOTALS 23-4-50.
Southern (57) - Nease; 1--{)-2;
PORTSMOUTH (65) - Tyler Ervin, 4-0--8; Robert, 7-4-18;
6 1-13; Green 1-0 'J Underwood
Brown, 9-2-20; Shultz, 2-ll-4;
4-4-12 ;
White
8-0- 16
Williamson 6-4-16 ; Goolsby 3-o'. · Huffman, 2-!-5. Totals 25-7-57.
6. TOTALS 28-9-65.
Southwestern (64) - Walker,
5COI(J by quarrers:
4-5-13
; Wood, 6-5-11 ; Carter, 7Waverly
10 16 14 lQ--50
Portsmouth
10 18 1.4 23-65
6-20; Nida, !--{)-2; Lewis, 2-0-4;
Reserves: Portsmouth 65,
Grate, 3-2-8. Totals 23-18-64.
Waverly 55.
By Quarters:
Ohio Hrgh School
Southern
10 10 12 25-57
Baskelba II Resutls
S. Western
12 18 15 1~4
By United Press International
Reserves : SW 41 Southern 38
Friday

Trojans pound
Waverly 65-50
PORTSMOUTH - A quick,
high - jumpwg Portsmouth
Trojan
quintet
ended
Waverly's winning strea k
Friday night as PHS battled
from behind to post a 6:i-50 nonleague win over the SEOAL
team.
The loss followed seven
stratght wins by the Tigers
while the Trojans record
jumped to 5-2 on the young
season.
A rash of personal fouls
against the Tigers early in the
contest contributed to the loss
as Waverly was unable w play
an effechve defense in the final
period in which the TrOJans
outscored them 23--10.
Doug Tracy, one of the stalwarts for the Tigers, ptcked up
three personal fouls in the
initial period, which ended in a
1~10 deadlock.
The score was tied seven
times in the second quarter
before Portsmouth's Dave
Underwood canned a pair of
free throws to give his team a
28-26 halftime lead.
Waverly finally grabbed the
lead in the third period and
increased it to 36-32 with 3:19
remaining m the quarter .
However the Trojans ripped
off six straight points to take
the lead at 311-36 and the score
was tied at 38 and again at 40
before the canto ended with
Portsmouth leadwg 42-40.
The Trojan s were never
behind as they took it to the
foul-plagued Tigers as the lead
eventually swelled to seven
points before the final 15-poin l
spread.
Four Trojans finished in
double figures led by Dan
White and Rick Wtlliamson
with 16 pomts each while Dan
Tyler threw in 13, and Dave
Underwood 12.
Waverly also placed lour
players in double-digit scoring
led by Tom Pleifer's 12 points,
with Butch Laswell and Tim
Duduiteach getting 11, and Joe
Holland 10.
Laswell fouled out in the
fourth period,while three other
Tiger starters had four personals.
Statistics show Portsmouth
hitting 41 pet. on 28 of 67 shots
and converting nine of 14 at the

Whitehall 64 Westerville 60
Mount Vernon 53 Delaware 52
Reynoldsburg 58 Gahanna 55
Upper Arlington 72 Lan cas ter

Z.=tnesville 62 Chillicothe 46
Canton
Lehman
49
Col ,
Mohawk 44
Newark 58 Col. Walnut R1dge
55

Col. Bishop Hartley 69 Col
West 60
Col.

Bishop Wehrle 62 New

Albany 61

Grandview 68 Col.

B1shop

Meigs

Wellston
TOTALS

I

3 244

Me1gs
Athen s

3 1
3 1

Gallipolos
Logan

3 1 167 153
3 1 172 158

Waverly
Ironton
Jackson

2 2 124
1 3 135
1 3 191

Wellston
TOTALS

MOBILE
HOMES

85
146
133
161
195

SEOAL FRESHMEN
W l
P OP
Team
Alhens
3 1 15~ 144
Logan
3 1 172 120

Galllpoli~

3 1 185

Meigs

2 2 155 152

Waverly
Ironton
Jackson
Wellston

2
2
1
0

TOTALS

157
136
122
169
157

16 16 1157 1157

Thursday's Games:
Waverly at Gallipolis
Jack son at Ironton
Logan at Meigs
Athens at Wellston

"-~

"'-"'~

Lb.

and

Country (2-lb . Rol l $1 .97 )

Gunnoe's
Sausage . . .

•MARLETTE
•ELCONA
•ARLINGTON
•GRANVILLE
•SPRINGBROOK
"We service what we sell" I

FRENCH CITY
MOBILE HOMES, INC.
Upper Rt. 7
Gallipolis

Phone 446-9340
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79¢

With Coupon

=--

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;:.._, Subject to apphullle state and local tax
- :
V 12 ~ouron hjU&lt;S Sat.l}lnl411915 Ai1tliiii ,...___,

de~r. Be happy, everyone! ~~

3

With Coupon

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Btls.

Ptus O.paslt

Rossford 63 Toledo Waite 42
Wheelersburg 64 Portsmouth

Sprite or

West 35

Coca-Cola

Valley 69 South Webster 66
West Liberty -Salem 82 Botkins
&lt;13
Minst~r 75 New Bremen 45
N\arioh 64 St. Henry 50
New Knoxville 56 Ru\sla 52

8$,29

16-ol.

Ills.

Vanlue 81 Carey 74

Lima Bath 74 Lima Shawnee 56
Midpark 47 Mayfield 43
Independence 52 Brecksville .49
Lorain Catholic 89 Cle Chanel

65

Plus Doposlr

Round White

Ashtabula Harbor 79 Ashtabula

51. John 78
Cle St. Joseph 52 Wash . D.C. W

Potatoes

W1fson 35
Cle East Tech 70 Akron Gar·

lield 62
Lakewood 60 Cle West Tech 47
Be a c hwoocl 74 Perry SB
Cle Benedictine 65 Cle
Lutheran East 54
Ctearvlew 63 Cotumbla 62 (0Tl
River V i ew 67 Maysville 56
Ridgewood 72 tndlan Valley

·

New Philadelphia 66 Mansfield
Madison 54
Mansfield Senior 61 Findlay 58
Crestv1ew 61 Lucas 56
Wynford 61 Bucyrus 51

Mild

Yellow
Onions

Willard 105 Colonel Crawford
80
.
Ashland 70 Woosler 66
Canton McKinley 75 Col. South
34
Massillon 69 Cle. John Hay 61

West Branch 73 United Local 45
Dayton Chaminade 73 Kel tering Fatrmont East 71

·

Northmont .16 Day'lon Stebbins
46

ll.

CARTER -&amp; EVANS INC.
OLIVE STREET

..:,.

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

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

-=
:

Sub 1ect to applluble state nd laul tu
:
Coulon hpuu SJt Jan 4 Jm ...alii;

Th• Uncola

Springfield South 86 South
Central 60
Portsmouth 65 Waverly 50

Stow 45 Akron Firestone 42
Tallmadge 8oJ Akron Hoban 48

C)&lt;)O'().-. JIIIG'i

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~

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Alliance 81 Akron North 6.4

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§ Yide Detergent § § Maxwell House §
S 3-lb.Box1-oz.
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·lb. $289
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Bloom-Carroll
57
Col.
Academy 39
Logan Elm 77 Westfall 73

Canton South 58 Glenwood 34

(

Vac Pac Coffee

42
Hitand 79 Tusky Calholtc J9

CHARLOTIESVILI..E, Va.
(UP!)- University of Virginia
football Coach Sonny Randle
Thursday promoted defensive
tackle &lt;X&gt;ach Turnley Todd w
defensive coordinator for the
Cavaliers.
Todd, who has been an
assistant =chat UVA for four
seasons, replaces Carl Reese,
who resigned to join the newly
assembled &lt;X&gt;aching staff at
the University of Kansas under
Bud ~core. , •

Roll

99 ¢-

Margarine

Garaway 46 Newcomerstown

TODD PROMOTED

1-Ib

Clover Valley (Quarters)

SECTIONAL
HOMES

Let's give a cheer ... loud and
. . . for a joyful, bright New Year ... to all

( . ) " the friends we hold so

·a

3 lbs,

or more

Pork
Chops .....

See Our Large
Selection of

o 4 122 21 5
16 16 1246 1246

2 139
2 123
3 138
4 91

Chuck Roast

Quarter Pork Loin Sliced Into

SEOAL RESERVES
Team
W L P OP
150
195

U.S. Govt. Graded Choice
People's Choice, Center Blade Cut

269

0 4 196 285
16 16 1U2 1862

\)\~\\es for the~

57

North 58

eTruss type roof beams el6" on center e2"x4" sidewaU strips eWhispera1re
Heating/Cooling system eSolid hardwood paneling •Padded wall to wall
carpet eBeautiful decOIS are hightighted by quality draperies, furniture and
accessoriss, coordinated by Vi"dale's interior design.

ga in their second wtn of the
season, as the Tigers overcame
Rio 62~1 on a layup by 6-6
sophomore center John Sublet!

'

New

25-lb.
Bag
• • •

Yor~

$239 Fresh
Cabbage

�19 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 29, 1974
18 - The Sunday Times- Sentmel , Sunda~. Dec. 29 , 1974
:.::::: :: :::.·:.:.·:.-: ....:.·:.·:.·:.·:.·:.·:.·:·:.·: :.-:.:.-:.·:.· :.·:.&lt;.&lt;.&lt;.·:.-:.· .·:.·:.·:.·••·:.·:.·:.·••·••·••·:.·••·:.·.•·:.· .·: .-:.·: .·:.·:.··.· ..· .·: ·.·:.·: ....·:.·:.·:.-:.·:.·..·:.·:.·:.· :.·:.·:.··.-:.-:.:.·:.·:.·:.·&gt;:- ·.·&gt; ..·: ..·•· .·.·••.·.·•·.· .·.· .· ... ·•.. ·.· •..·..·.· ..· .·.·.··• '•'•'•'•
.. '' .• .•. ••.. ••. .. '' •• ••• ••••• ••••• •••' .. '.
' .. ::·:·:·:·::-:·:·:·:-:-:-:.:-:.:-:·:.··:·:·:···:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:··.:·······

..

:=:

:~:

•

Scandal rocks medical world with its
own brand of April Watergate affair

OUTUOORSCOLUMl'l

Your Wayne National Forest : Ohio scenic river project advanced
:~ ~

By T. Allan Wolter,
district ranger
IRONTON - If there are a few
spare hours over the holidays, perhaps
you could sandwich somethmg different
in between playing with the kiddies '
toys or watching football.
What I have in mind requires skills
that everyone may not possess. II involves a very baste form of cooking All
you really need know is how to operate
a knife. salt shaker, how to turn on the
··: oven and how to read a recipe. That
:.:.: s hould frighhte n off only those who have
. some psyc o1ogtca 1 fear of kitchens.
The rectpe is one I picked up on a
Wyoming hunting trip about five years
.,., ago. It's called venison jerky. If you're
:-. looking for an excuse to drop out
because you have no venison , the recipe
is e xactly the same for beef Jerky, so gotcha!
.::
Ingredients : 2-5 lbs. of venison or
:,::,. gre
be ocf, lrb) ottie of LidqwtdhSmoke (ask yourf
e ; sa11 an o er seasomngs o
..:
:;: your choice, I sharp knife (an electric
::: kntfe works best if you have one )
Slice (tallow and fat free ) meat into

·::-:·:-:-:·:-:-:-:-::·-:·-:.:·:·:::::::·::··:··

6 to 8 inch strips, not over one-quarter
inch !htck . Brush 'one stde of each s tnp
with a dtluted solutiOn of Uqwd Smoke
1twa-thirds water , one-thtrd smoke 1. A
butter brush works well for this. Salt
same side of each strip heavily 1unhl
meat turns white! and add other
seasonmg of your choice . About the
only other seasoning I add Is pepper but
I have tried garlic and a mixture of
spices called "seasoning salt."
Place strips of meat criss-eross
fashion in the bottom ol a large stramer
or pan until built to a height of ~~ inches. Place a heavy weight on top of
th1• stack overmght. A large mixmg
howl full of water will work but make
sure It's s table and will not topple over
during the night.
Thts overnight process allows the
spices and juices to work mto the meat
and excess liquid to drain off. II also
shortens the drying time.
About ail that's left to do is dry the
meat (not cook 11) on the racks in a 150
degree oven. No hotter or the meat w11l
cook, a real na-no. The drying period
will take from 6-9 hours depending on

: ··: =··:-:-: ..&lt;:···:·:::·:::::::::::::·:::::::::;:.:·:·.: .

:·-: . :

By DAVE BOWRING
Wrillen liy UPI
Although
six month s late and
·=·
:;: not qutte as certam as 1t w:1s l:l
.:: year ago, state scenic nver
·.~ .~ status for the Stillwater River
moved closer to reality last
::·

w~~Iiiam Nye, director of the

state Natural Resources De.::: partment, announced his inten:.::. \ton to designate the Sllllwater
· a scenic stream, thereby
··:
beginnmg a 60-day watlmg
period durmg which public
·· reaction to the proposal is
·:·:
·:· requested.
•.:·.::.
"The department 's been getting
a good bit of mail on the
··:
proposal, most of tl tn sup:;: port," said Scenic Rtvers
:::
·.. Planner John Kopec , who
·.· works under Scenic Rivers
:_
:.,: Administrator Ed Hammett .
Kopec said in the past, Nye
:
::: has based his final decision on
·=· scenic rivers designation
.·.·.·::~ "pretty much on the basts of a
.·
: ..::-.-:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·: .·.·. :-:-;.;.•.;.· simple majority of pros and
cons in the mail received. We'll
have a new director (Dr .
Robert Teater of Ohio State
University) here when the 60day period is over, but I thmk

on redistricting plan
By John C. Rice

Ext. Agent, Agriculture

voiWJteer advisors.

.·.::

he '11 handle tt the same a~
Nye ."
Th e proposal calls for designation of 57 miles of the
Stillwater, from Beamsville
south to Dayton, plus 30 miles
of Greenville creek, from
Fisher Rd. to the Stillwater .
Pub tic meetings were held in
each of the three counties
through which the river flows
- Darke, Miami and Montgomery. At each meeting, local
landowners expressed fears
that state government would
take over their lands and thst
public trespass and littering
would be increased, if the river

is designated scenic.
John Kopec disagrees.
" We have seven other rivers
already m the program, and at
no lime have any of these fears
materialized/ ' he said. "There
is a certain amount of trespass
on the Stiltwater now, but this
will neither be increased nor
decreased by s~enie status. It
just doesn't happen."
Harold Barefoot, a Tipp City
canoe merchant and strong
advocate of lhe pro[X)sal, noted
oppositiOn to the program
when he srud :
"When the Miami county
commissioners voted :l-1 to

withdraw support of the proposal, I think the public should
look into the reasons why. Nye
can't have the public best
interest m mind with a decision
like that. ",
Kopec said the Miami county
actiOn is the only such negative
reaction to the proposal received among all political
subdiVIsions along the lengths
of both the Stiltwater and
Greenville creek.
The 61Klay waiting period
wtll last until mid-February.
Letters should be sent to
Director, Ohio DNR, Fountam
Square, Columbus 43224.

'

What does 4-H offer? Over 180 4-H projects, including, for

example, livestock, engmeering, clothing, nutrition, outdoor life,
to mention a few. You can start at the bottom and work to the top
m a project area.
Olst? It may vary from less than $1 for flower seeds or a
yar~ of fabric, to several hundred dollars for a horse and riding
eqwpment.
The 1975 4-H season will be getting underway soon. Contact
your local 4-H club advisor or call the Extension Office at 9923895.
Wanted! Men and woman to be 4-H advisors. We guarantee
many enjoyable moments and a feelmg of accomplishments. We
provide help and literature.
Let's have a great 4-H year!

by Dick Turner

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Legislative Oemocra ts, meeting in a
caucus Friday, failed to come
to agreement on a congressional redistricting ptan they hope
to pass before Gov .-elect
James A. Rhodes takes office
but they did agree on four other
policy bills.
The Ohio General Assembly,
with the Democrats holding a
59-40 edge in the House and a
21-12 margin in the Senate, will
be sworn in Jan. 6, one week
PLAYBOY SUED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Actress Stella Stevens sued
Playboy magazine and its
publisher, Hugh Hefner, for $7
mitlion Friday, charging invasion of privacy for prmting
photos of her in the nude. She
complained that Playboy had
often published photos of her
during the past 15 years, and
mcluded photos m a " 20 years
of Playboy" article that portrayed her "m a degradmg and
humiliating manner." Some
photos were taken without her
consent while she was filming
scenes for
the
mov1e
"Slaughter," she charged.

ASK TOWED
POMEROY
James
Freeman Wilhams, til, Rt. I,
Minersville, and Doris Lynn
Wells, 17, Rt. I, Long Bottom.

Blue Lake

FUNNY BUSINESS
By Roger Bollen

before Rhodes is sworn into his
third tenn.
Senate Democrats mustered
ji.NO T&gt;E. X-IQ ...
only 16 of the 17 votes they
TI-le. Pi&lt;ICE TAG
needed to pass a redistricting
bill that would be favorable to
Democratic congressional can&lt;lidates while in the House,
Speaker-designate Vernal
Riffe, D-New Boston,fetl shy of
the 50 supporters needed in
that chamber.
House Democrats are scheduled to meet a~am Thursday,
said Riffe.
Bills that will be introduced
and probably passed before
Rhodes lakes office include:
- Increasing the number of
weeks for drawing unemployment benefits from 26 to 39 and
repealing a current prohibition
against benefits for workers
laid off from jobs because of
strikes in related industries.
- Transfer of the slate income tax collection machinery
from the taxation department
to the office of Democratic
Treasurer Gertrude Donahey,
thus protecting a number of
JObs.
--Consolidating all consumer
protection functions into the
office of Democratic Attorney
General William J. Brown,
taking them away from the
Commerce Department, which " We need more hme between
would also protect a number of the 'buy now" and the 'pay
later.' "
jobs.
- Permitting door-to-door
voter registration, a measure
favored by Democrats.

New horizons beckon . . . new beginnings,
new challenges, new plans for a brighter future.
As the old year becomes a memory, the new
a reality, we think of all our good friends and
hope your fondest dreams come true.
FROM ALL OF US AT

''

Meigs Equipment Co.
YOUR INTERNATIONAL DEALER
PH. 992-2176

POMEROY

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NOW AT

Your Federal Land Bank Association can halpt
Are you a city-dweller who would like to buy your first
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plan to build, or buy a new home? We can help
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The qualifications are Simple So why not come in and
talk to us about your mortgage
credit needs.

LANDMARK

228 Upper River Road
P.O. Box 207, Gallipolis

Clyde B. Walker. Mgr.

Enquirer price is hiked

scribers.
Wtlham
J.
Keating,
president of the newspaper,
announced Friday the price of
delivered Sunday
home
editions will be increased to 50
cents, up 10 cents. Daily
newspapers delivered to homes
will cost 15 cents, up two and
one-half cents.
The prices will match newstand prices which have been
in effect.
"The continuing rise year
after ye.a r in the cost of
everything involved in the
publishing and delivery of a
daily quality morning newspa-

per leaves us no alterJUltive,"
Keatin g said. "Cost increases
which the enquirer is continually forced to meet are in
such items as wlte services,

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lei hoppiness and
kindness be your guide.

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

Phone 992-2181

The year is young

and time to start
knew. Much success
to att in t975. '

. ,,

I

Louisville, Ky . died of a rare
tumor , angiCJsarcoma of the
hver . Within weeks after the
d1sdosure, other cases were
disco vered in New York ,
Texas, West V1rgmia and
elsewhere .
The medical detectives have
traced lhts alarmingly high
mctdence of the rare liver
cancer to the fact that affected
workers have been heavily
exposed to the chemicals
po!yvinyl chlonde ( PVC ) and
vinyl chloride. They are widely
used in the production of
plastics, some of which are
actually called vinyls.
The federal government has
put a limit on the amount of
vinyl chloride factory workers
can be exposed to, but there
was controversy among industry,
consumer
and
government scientists as to
just how much - If any - vinyl
chloride might cause cancer.
It will be a long time before
this is known, for en vironmental carcinogens carry
wtth them somethmg known as
the 20-year rule, which means
that it usually takes a human
being 20 to 30 years to develop
cancer after beng exposed to
an environ111enlal carcinogen.
All of the plastics workers who
came down with the rare liver
cancer had been exposed to the
chemical for at least 20 years
Acupuncture continued to
make news in 1974. In mid-year
hundreds of newspapers ran
stones exposing how hundreds

Lame ducks
mostly how

Want a loan to buy
a country home?

"Cut down on the commercials on the Saturday night movies!
Viewers are complaining they forgel what the story is aboun"

falsification of dala . He at· falstfymg results ."
tributed the episode to ··exIn the canc@r r esea r ch field,
treme pressure placed on me the American Cancer Society
by the Institute director "
Environmental Cancer
That director ts Dr. Robert Research Project, headed by
A Good, who had been heavily Drs . E. Cuyler Harr.mond and
touhng Swnrnerlin's work ever
Irvmg Selikoff began in 197~ to
since it .,wa s first annoWlced, answer questions about how
and had used its spec tacular envtronmental changes affect
na ture to improve fund rais1ng people. They are looking for
for hts institution .
data to confirm the World
Dr Good concluded that lit Health Orgpmzatton est1mate
was an unfortunate episode, that some 85 per cent of all
and noted that "In sctence, it is cancer is deriv ed from enc ompletely sensel ess (to vironmental sources.
falsify I. The nature of research
In January it was revealed
~ is to test and retest until that seven workers (of fewer
~ something stands up . A tha1\ 300) working at the B. F.
scientist cannot get away wtth Goodnch plas tics plant in
merlin falsified potentially
important research findings.
Controversy swirled in the
scientific commumty £or
months in what wa s widely
BY RUBY SAUNDERS
Harold Saunders were at the
referred to as "a medical
Mr . and Mrs. Marshall Kmg Chilli c othe s hoppmg mall
Watergate. "
and two children, Bryan and domg some shoppmg recently.
A year or more before, Angela and his father, Mr. and
Capt.am Air Force nurse
Summerlin had reported that Mrs . Manual King spent a re c ru1tm g offtcer, Brenda
he could transplant ttssue be- recent weekend with Mr. and
Belleville of New Orleans, La .
tween different animals Mrs . Don · King and two spent the Christmas holiday
without using dangerous drugs children of West Jefferson .
with her parents, Mr and Mrs
to suppress the body's natural
Bryant Belleville and famtly .
Mrs Kennison Saunders and
reaction - rejection and death
She wtll also visit friends at
of the tissue . If true, that ob- son, Ntis, spent a few days wtth Chicago, Ill. before returning
servation held spectacular her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
to her base. Miss Belleville
imphcat10ns
for
trans- James Moore of Vienna , W. Va.
The Christmas program spent se veral months m Spain.
plantation of tissues and
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Willis
organs as well as cancer recently at Victory Baptist of near Ironton were Friday
Church was ~·ell attended.
research.
evemng guests of their son, Mr .
Mr. and Mrs . Bert Harrison
But Summerlin was charged
and Mrs . Cleland Willis and
with falsifying his research left Gallipolis a few weeks ago two children, Lou Ann and
data and painting black pat- to spend the wmter months at Matthew, and they ali enjoyed
ches on white mice to make Bradenton, Fla. Their son, Mr
a gill exchange
them look as If they had had and Mrs. Don Harrison and
Mtss Teresa Bane IS spenfamily visited them there
accept~d skin grafts from
dmg her vacati on wtth her
recently.
black mice.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ri chard
Mr.. Margaret Kail and lady
Summerlin admitted to
Bane and son, Jeff. Miss Bane
darkening the skm of the mice, fnend were recent guests of
as a fr.eshman ·at Miami
but
denied
any
other Mr. and Mrs Homer Porter.
UniversHy.
Mrs . Cline Thompson and
M•s. Ruby Saunders Is en daughter, Cindy of Grove City
JOying a week's vacation from
spent a few days wtth her
her dulles as a fo ster grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Brady
mother at GSI.
Sheets.
Mr . and Mrs Homer Porter
Mr. and Mrs . Harold
assisted Mr and Mrs . Russell
Saunders and two chHGI'en ,
Taylor m tying the1r tobacco.
Winston and Kim, were recent
Mr. and Mrs . Merrill Cox and
guests at a pre-holiday dmner
son were recen t guests of has
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
parents , Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
James Craft and son, Jurume .
Cox .
They all enjoyed a gift exThe Christmas program at
change, The Crafts ' daughter,
the Mercerville Baptis t Church
Linda, who is a student at
on Saturday evening was well
Morehead Univers ity
in
atte nded and enjoyed very
Kentucky, was also home on
muc h by all present.
the holiday vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wright
Bruce Smith, who is a
and family were Sunday afstudent
at Ohio
State
ternoon guests of her parents,
University at Columbus , Is
Mr . and Mrs. Floyd Cox
spendmg his holiday vacation
Mr. and Mrs George Sheets
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs .
and two children, Monte and
Carroll Smith and family .
Amber, were recent Sunday
The youth group from the
dmner guests of Mr and Mrs .
Victory Baptist Church led by
Homer Porter.
their pastor and wife, Rev and
Mr. and Mrs . Brent Saunders
Mrs . Kenneth ~ .. nders , sang
of Belpre were recent overChristmas carols at the home
mght gues ts of hts brother, Mr.
of the elderly and shut-ms
and Mrs Kennison Saunders
Christmas Eve.
and family
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Shaw of
Mrs Charles Cox and baby
near Akron are spending the
and Mrs Harold Hazelbaker
holidays and a few days at his
MODESTY never one of
and daug hter , Carolyn were
boyhood home near the Victory
Edy WIll lams more noted
recent gueslo;; of Mr and Mrs .
Baptist Church He purchased
virtues, the American acFloyd Cox .
the place some time ago.
tress boards a jet In Rome
Mr . and Mrs . Jimmie
Mr . and Mrs . Don Harnson
following her brief visit to
Chapman and daughter , Tamt,
and family of Grove City were
England. Miss Willia.ns
of Crown Cit~ were recent
recent guests of his aunt, Mr.
went there on business,
guests of her mother , Margaret
and Mrs . Homer Porter.
stopping by Lloyd's of
Johnson .
Franklin Smtih of near
London which has Insured
Denv e r Johnson was 1n
Akron ts spendmg a few days
her breasts for $1 million,
Columbus
recently
and
wtth hts parents, Mr. and Mrs
brought his two c hildren,
Grover Smith.
Bonnie and Denver Lee home
Mr. and Mrs . John Belcher of
with him to s pend the
Colwnbus were recent overChris tmas holiday.
night guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Grover Smtih is a medical
George Sheets.
patient at Holzer Mdical
Mrs . Christina Walters was
Center .
recent guest of Mr. and Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Pack,
Homer Porter.
Jr and family, Roger, Ronnie
Mr. and Mrs . Bryant
By RUTH GRUBER
and Rodney, were recent
Belleville had all of their
LIEVIN, France (UPI)
guests of his father, Mr . and
children
home for dinner
Coal miners unions today
Mrs . Oscar Pack, Sr. and
vowed to stage a 24-hour Chris tmas. Present were family , Kermit, W. Va.
general strike across France Captam Brenda Bellville of
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Pack
during the mass funeral for 42 New Orleans, La. ; Mr . and and daughter, Angell were
miners killed in an explosion Mrs . Craig Belleville of Christmas Eve guests of his ·
and cave-In at the state-run Hymera, [nd .; Jimmie at grandmother , Mrs. Margaret
home, and her parents, Mr.
mine in Lievin.
Johnson.
An explos!on ripped through and Mrs. Clarence Sines of
Mine Shaft No . 3, half a mile Leon, W. Va .
Matthew Willis was Ill a few
below the surface of this tiny
French town Friday, killing ~I days with a virus.
Mr . and Mrs. Haskell
miners and badly burning six
Saunders
were recent Sunday
~IISII .$08!
others.
dinner
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
WIL.t. PICK
The death toll rose today
'
~M UP IN
James
Vinson
and
two
after one of the injured miners
TWO
HOURS··
children,
Brian
and
died during the night .
Throughout the day Friday, Christopher of near Vmton .
Mrs. Kennison Saunders and
women and children stood m
son,
Nils, were recent guests of
the heavy rain outside the iron
gate at the mine waiting to her sister, Mr . and Mrs . Mike
Summers and family of Belpre.
identify their dead .
Mr. and Mrs. Craig Belleville
Trade union officials said
of
Hymera, Ind. arrived home
they called the walkout to
emphasize the dangerous to spend the Christmas holiday
conditions under which the with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
miners of Fiance must work. Bryant Belleville and -her
The funeral is scheduled for 10 parents, Mr. and Mrs . Harold
a .m. Tuesday in the Llevin SaUnders and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Enc Saunders
,
town square.
Sunday dmner guests of
were
Premier Jacques Chirac said
his
parents,
Mr , and Mrs .
be would attend the ceremoHarold Saunders.
nies.
Cline Thompson and some
Representatives of the mf·
friends
from Grove City
ners' associations and town
assisted
his father, Aaron
officials met today to plan
funeral arrangements for the Thompson of this community
victims of the blast" -the m tying his tobacco .
Mrs . Cleland Willis, Mrs.
country's worst mine disaster
Robert
Spencer and Mrs .
'
in 30 years .

Wrap up '7'

Special Savings!

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
price for home deliv~ry of the
daily and Sunday Cincinnati
Enquirer will be increased this
Sunday, ending a policy of
extending a discount to sub-

By David Hendin '
One of the biggest stones m
the field of medicine m 1974
was a scandal
In Apnl Dr. William T.
Summerlin , a physi cianscientist at the Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
m New York, was permanently
relieved of his position and
given a year's pay with the
proviso that he received
psychiatric counseling .
It was charged that Sum-

Democrats fail to agree

POMEROY - Off with the old and on with the new! How
many times have you heard that this time of year?
We .in "extension" may not use the same slogan, but we
would like to offer your son or daughter a ntw experience
through 4-H. Experiences in 4-H may be many and varied: 4-H
members can plan their own programs and within cer!J!in
guidelines, run their 4-H club as they see fit;' 4-H is working
together, sharing knowledge and experiences with someone else,
and 4-H is citizenship, leadership, or just plain having fun.
Can you belorlg? If you are nine years old (or in the third
grade), and not 19 years old, you can be a member. Ahnost
200,000 youths were enrolled in 4-H last year supervised by 20 000

CARNIVAL

chew
I've found jerky to be a real tasty
variation of both venison and beef. It
can easily be carried on any tnp afield
and, when broken into small pieces,
makes a flavorful addition to gravies
and soups.
Any portion of the animal may be
used for jerky. What often winds up in
the hamburger ptle can be used for
jerky. The chewier the better 1 Meat
can be taken from the freezer and made
into jerky, the same as fresh meats.
Jerky needs no refrigeration, even
m the summer months. Simply store in
a loosely covered frutt jar or some
other covered container.
The explanation may appear to be
long and involved but it's qwte a simple
operatiOn. If I can do it, anybody can!
HAPPY HOLIDAYS I

: : .; ;.;. : .. :. ;.;.·.: .· ·.· . : :.:::.:;:::::::::::::::::;:.:·:. ·.. •.;.;.·.·

County agent's
corner

the mOisture con lent of the meat.
Properly dried jerky will bend'
double without breaking so s tart
checking after SIX hours of drying.
There is no real harm done if the jyrky
is brittle, it's just a little harder to

Miners vow
to strike

,,

•

'

'

I,

out early

of doc tors are takmg three-&lt;ia y
quickie courses m acupuncture
and then gomg out and trying 1!
on pahents. Su~h courses are
little more than ~Iploma mills
AcupWlctw'e climes across
the country continued to do a
booming business, and more
were in operation than ever
before But Dr John Bonica,
chairman of the Ad Hoc
Committee on Acupuncture of
the National Institutes of
Health and the American
Society of Anesthesiologists,
made important concluswns
after intensive study of
acupunCture here nd in China.
"The mtsuse of therapeutic
acupuncture is an Important
health problem and the
widespread chmcal use of
acupWlctw-e is unwarranted at
the present time, " Dr. Bomca
said .
Articles m medical journals
detailed various complications
acupuncture
therapy
of
rangmg from damaged nerves
and arteries to puncture of the
lung and at least one death
caused by a blood teak in the
heart after needhng in the
area .
Dr . Samuel Rosen , New York
ear speciahst, dld a six-month
research study to determine
whether acupuncture could
relieve nerve deafness, as
many proponents had claimed.
Res ults were negative. "We
see no basis for recommending
acupW1clw-e as a treatment
modality for children with
profound
neuro-sensory
deafness. I do not do thts
myself, nor do I recommend it
to my colleagues," said Dr.
Rosen.
Some
other
medical
developments of the year The controversial Professional
Standard s
Review
Organiza twns ( PSROs ) got
underway in 1974 . The firs!
contract for peer rev1ew of
phystctans went to the Utah
PSRO, whtch served as a
model for the peer review
legi slation . The program
provides for peer review of
medical work performed on
patients whose bills are paid in
any way by the federal
government.
- In July Prof. Douglas
Bevis, a Bntish gynecologist at
Leeds University, announced
that three babies that had been
conceived in test tubes had
been born normally . But
controversy
over
the
development upset Bevis, who
later announced that he was
g1ving up h1s research in this
area altogether.
- The federal government
reported m 1974 that more
evidence has been compiled to
show that cigarette smoking is
the major cause oflung cancer,
which killed 72,000 Americans
in 1973. The U.S. Department of
HEW also said that cigarette
smoking is the primary cause
of chronic bronchitis and
emphysema and IS a contributing factor leading to
heart disease.

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Most of the Senate's 11 lame
duck members are retiring a
few days before their terms
expire Jan. 3and therefore will
get a 6.3 per cent increase in
retirement pay.
,
They get the bonus by
stepping down before the end of
the year --a technicality in law
passed by Congress several
years ago to encourage early
retirement throughout the Civil
Service and the military.
Those who have announced
they will step down before the
year's end are Sens. J . William
Fulbright, D-Ark.; Wallace F.
Bennett, R-Utah; Alan Bible,
D-Nev . ; Marlow W. Cook, R·
Ky.; Edward J. Gurney, RFla.; NorrisH.Cotton,R-N.H.,
and Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C.
Howard H. Metzenbaum, DOhio, appointed to the Senate
when William B. Saxbe
became attorney general, dtd
not serve long enough to
qualify for a pension but also
retired early.
Three tame duck senators
chose to finish out their terms :
George D. Aiken, R-Vt.;
Harold E. Hughes, D-Iowa, and
Peter H Dominick, R-Colo.
Aiken told UP! : "My contract expires Jan. 3, and I
intend to tive out my contract."
Dominick may remain in
goverrunenl service, possibly
as ambassador to Switzerland,
and Hughes plans to devote his
life to religious work.
By retiring early, the others
give their successors a slight
seniority edge when the new
NEW YOR){ (UPI) - The
Congress convenes in January, state of California placed seven
since they can assume office as players on the 12th annual Allof the date of tbe resignation. American High School football
Fulbright's successor, team announced today by
Arkansas Gov. Dale Bumpers, Parade Magazine with Texas
decided
for
"technical and !ltinois each placing five
reasons" to forego this and and Ohio four .
wait until Jan . 14 to be sworn in
Tony Nathan, who scored 24
with the rest of the new touchdowns and a pair of twoCongress.
point
converstons
for
Woodlawn High School in
Birmingham, Ala., led the
voting among the backs while
WiUie Yotmg of Lincoln High
School in Jersey City, N,J,, was
an overwhelming selection as
the top lineman In the nation.
Only three juniors were
selected on the 50 player squad,
which was chosen by high
' school and college coaches and
sportswriters and radio and
television announcers. The
juniors are quarterback Tony
Capozzoli of St. Dominic's in
Oyster Bay, N.Y,, and running
backs Vegas Ferguson of Richmond High School in Richmond, Ind., and Matt Suhey of
State College in State College,
Pa.
The Ohioans included running back Jonathan Moore,
Canton McKinley; offensive
end Mark Schmerge, Cincinnati St. Xavier; defensive
lineman Jay Case of Cincinnati
Moeller and linebacker Tom
Cousineau of Lakewood St.
Edwards.

California

POLITICS MAKE STRANGE bedfellows indeed. Former Sen. Eugene McCart~y (right), a
liberal, has teamed with Ira Glasser (left), director of the New York Civil Liberties Union and
Conservative Sen. James Buckley of New York to challenge the 1974 campaign reform bill. The
trio cliiims the bill violates the Bill of Rights' guarantee of free expression and that it stifles
political dissent.
'

-------------------------~~
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
than 300 words tong (or be subjtct to reducUon by the
editor) and must be signed with the signee's address.
Names may be withheld upon publication. However, on
request, names will be disclosed. Letters should be in good
taate, addressing Issues, not personalities.

1J.eat.J. 7':6 ~

.•. ?Jtt. ~: ...,.: :; ; ;
Favors widest circulation
Gallipolis, Ohio
Dec. 22, 1974
Dear S1r:
We would like to make a comment about the rape prevention
series and its placement on the society page in reply to the Jetter
to the editor published December 22nd.
In view of the rising number of rape cases reported all over
the nation and the demeaning effects of these crimes on females
of ALL ages, it seems of the utmost importance that this be
brought to the attention of the public and practical suggestions be
made for rape prevention.
Although it may seem an unpleasant and indelicate topic,
especially when published on the society page where so many
happy events are announced, what other page is read so
thoroughly and often by female readers' Also,lf a young woman
were 1o read the articles and practice the precautions they
suggest, perhaps she might, in the future, be able to submit her
Qwn engagement and wedding announcements joyfully and with
no ugly tragic memories to haunt her of a rape that could have
been prevented.
It is worthwhile to note that these crimes take place not onty
in big cities but also in small towns. Cases of rape have been
published in which the victims ranged from 10 months to 80 years
old so no female is irrunune. - A Mother and daughter of the
community.
(We request that our names be withheld for fear that we will
be made the objects of this crime due to our outspoken nature
about 1!.)

Owners

.

'

near high school

(Contmued from Page 16)
RACINE - Sheriff Robert C.
to court because Kennedy
Dept .
inruled that his team could not Harbenbach ' s
vestigated
a
single
car
acSpencer
Haywood
sign
(because his college class had cident in which no personal
not graduated ). Shulman won. inJurles were reported Friday
No longer was a com- at 11 :45 a.m. on SR 12~ m
missioner the czar of all, as Racme in front of the high
Kenesaw Mountain Landis, the school.
David Eugene Kiser, 16,
first true commissioner of
modern sports, had been. Now, Racine, sa1d his car's steering
locked whtch caused him to
says Kennedy, when he makes
lose
control, spm around in the
a decision, he first turns it over
and strike a telephone
htghway
to counsel for proper wording
to protect himself against suit. pole. There was moderate
Now he's dealing with lawyers damage to the car. none to the
instead of basketball people . pole . No citation was issued .
An NBA meeting used to
have 11 or 12 owners and the
FULBRIGHT DONE
c ommisstoner an a caucus
WASHINGTON
( UP! )
room . Now there are four or
five times that many - each Sen J . Wilham Fulbnght, Downer has counsel and so do Ark ., wtll resign effective Dec.
31 Fulbright, whose 30-year
the1r general managers.
Senate
career ended when he
· The spice has gone out of it
for Kennedy. He blames it on lost the primary to Gov . Dale
the "gutless owners" who Bumpers , is (ollowing the
didn't rally behind him course adopted by most
originally on the Shulman . .senators who were defeated or
are retmng . tly~-resigning
. matter.
Walter isn't retreating into early, Fulbright will give
limbo after this season . He Bumpers slight seniority over
likes to travel and a com- other newcomers who take
fortable NBA pension has been office Jan . 3
arranged for him. He and
Marion have four grandFINCH TO RUN
children m Connecticut with
SAN MARINO, Calif. (UPI)
whom they can spend more - Robert Finch, 49, once one of
time. •
former President Richard
He'll still be a consultant to Nixon's top advisers and close
the NBA but basketball won't friend, announced his canbe the same. At least, not for . didacy for the U.S. Senate
Walter Kennedy .
Friday, saying he had nothing
to do with Watergate. "Like
most Americans, certainly tlke
most Republicans, I feel an
enormous sense of betrayal by
BURIED UNDER SNOW
A cold front swept over the people who perpetrated
Washington state Friday , Watergate," Finch said.

puts 7 on
All -Am en"ca

•

Steering locked

burymg Olympia and Tacoma
under 10 inches of snow.
Portions of the southwest were
digging out of the heaviest
snowfall in a decade, the UPI
reported. '
"

Ford views
Contmued from page 10)
made a mistake ... I think I did
it at the right time and dld .it for
the right reason."
The President declined to
say whether Nixon should
· confess his exact role In
Watergate
to
clarify
statements made during the
trial of his former aides that he
was a central figure .
"It would appear from the
trials that one or many versions of that period are coming
out. And for me to comment on
what version is right or wrong
would certainly be inappropriate until the trials are
over," he said.
Asked whether he had
reached a judgment on Nixon,
Ford said: "I think I've said on
one or more occasions that
what actions he took, as I saw It
then and see It now, shamed
the presidency ... and the
acceptance of the pardon can
be interpreted as a confession.
I don't think I ought to go
further than that."
The President said he felt his
family "has adjusted very
well" to its new life style. "The
boys, who are all spread out,
enjoy coming home to the
White House," be said.
Then, with a hearty laugh,
Ford added: "Susan doesn't
seem to be inhibited at all."

CROWDS GATHER
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.
( UPI) -Hundreds of curiosity
seekers snarled traffic,
ignored barricades
and
trampled lawns of Bebe
Rebozo's neighbors Wednesday to get a glimpse of
former President Richard
Nixon's Key Biscayne vacation
compound.
Rebozo had suspected this
would happen when government barricades were lifted,
and he and several neighbors
last week asked the Dade
County Commission that the
area be made private. But they
were turned down .

NO RESOLUTIONS YET
VAIL, COLO, (UP!)- First
Lady Betty Ford has not yet
made any New Year's resolutions.
"I don't like to make them
because I know I'll break
them," she said.
Then, as an afterthought,
Mrs. Ford· said that If she did
make a New Year's resolution
it would be to "try to think
before I speak." The First
Lady's views on the subject
were relayed by Sheillo Rabb
Weidenfeld, her press secretary .

FAVORS TAX CUT
TUCSON, Ariz. (UP!)
Rep. Morris K. Udall of
Arizona, an announced candidate for the Democratic
presidential nomination in
1976, said Friday he favors a
tax cut. Udall said he hopes the
next Congress wilt "enact
quickly a tax cut to stimulate
the economy" of ~~about 10 per
cent or so" for low income
groups , to be made up by
NOW YOU KNOW
phasing out tax deductions
The word "bachelor" comes
such as the oil depletion
from the Gaelic word for
allowances.
~
shepherd .

•

I

I

�19 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 29, 1974
18 - The Sunday Times- Sentmel , Sunda~. Dec. 29 , 1974
:.::::: :: :::.·:.:.·:.-: ....:.·:.·:.·:.·:.·:.·:.·:·:.·: :.-:.:.-:.·:.· :.·:.&lt;.&lt;.&lt;.·:.-:.· .·:.·:.·:.·••·:.·:.·:.·••·••·••·:.·••·:.·.•·:.· .·: .-:.·: .·:.·:.··.· ..· .·: ·.·:.·: ....·:.·:.·:.-:.·:.·..·:.·:.·:.· :.·:.·:.··.-:.-:.:.·:.·:.·:.·&gt;:- ·.·&gt; ..·: ..·•· .·.·••.·.·•·.· .·.· .· ... ·•.. ·.· •..·..·.· ..· .·.·.··• '•'•'•'•
.. '' .• .•. ••.. ••. .. '' •• ••• ••••• ••••• •••' .. '.
' .. ::·:·:·:·::-:·:·:·:-:-:-:.:-:.:-:·:.··:·:·:···:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:··.:·······

..

:=:

:~:

•

Scandal rocks medical world with its
own brand of April Watergate affair

OUTUOORSCOLUMl'l

Your Wayne National Forest : Ohio scenic river project advanced
:~ ~

By T. Allan Wolter,
district ranger
IRONTON - If there are a few
spare hours over the holidays, perhaps
you could sandwich somethmg different
in between playing with the kiddies '
toys or watching football.
What I have in mind requires skills
that everyone may not possess. II involves a very baste form of cooking All
you really need know is how to operate
a knife. salt shaker, how to turn on the
··: oven and how to read a recipe. That
:.:.: s hould frighhte n off only those who have
. some psyc o1ogtca 1 fear of kitchens.
The rectpe is one I picked up on a
Wyoming hunting trip about five years
.,., ago. It's called venison jerky. If you're
:-. looking for an excuse to drop out
because you have no venison , the recipe
is e xactly the same for beef Jerky, so gotcha!
.::
Ingredients : 2-5 lbs. of venison or
:,::,. gre
be ocf, lrb) ottie of LidqwtdhSmoke (ask yourf
e ; sa11 an o er seasomngs o
..:
:;: your choice, I sharp knife (an electric
::: kntfe works best if you have one )
Slice (tallow and fat free ) meat into

·::-:·:-:-:·:-:-:-:-::·-:·-:.:·:·:::::::·::··:··

6 to 8 inch strips, not over one-quarter
inch !htck . Brush 'one stde of each s tnp
with a dtluted solutiOn of Uqwd Smoke
1twa-thirds water , one-thtrd smoke 1. A
butter brush works well for this. Salt
same side of each strip heavily 1unhl
meat turns white! and add other
seasonmg of your choice . About the
only other seasoning I add Is pepper but
I have tried garlic and a mixture of
spices called "seasoning salt."
Place strips of meat criss-eross
fashion in the bottom ol a large stramer
or pan until built to a height of ~~ inches. Place a heavy weight on top of
th1• stack overmght. A large mixmg
howl full of water will work but make
sure It's s table and will not topple over
during the night.
Thts overnight process allows the
spices and juices to work mto the meat
and excess liquid to drain off. II also
shortens the drying time.
About ail that's left to do is dry the
meat (not cook 11) on the racks in a 150
degree oven. No hotter or the meat w11l
cook, a real na-no. The drying period
will take from 6-9 hours depending on

: ··: =··:-:-: ..&lt;:···:·:::·:::::::::::::·:::::::::;:.:·:·.: .

:·-: . :

By DAVE BOWRING
Wrillen liy UPI
Although
six month s late and
·=·
:;: not qutte as certam as 1t w:1s l:l
.:: year ago, state scenic nver
·.~ .~ status for the Stillwater River
moved closer to reality last
::·

w~~Iiiam Nye, director of the

state Natural Resources De.::: partment, announced his inten:.::. \ton to designate the Sllllwater
· a scenic stream, thereby
··:
beginnmg a 60-day watlmg
period durmg which public
·· reaction to the proposal is
·:·:
·:· requested.
•.:·.::.
"The department 's been getting
a good bit of mail on the
··:
proposal, most of tl tn sup:;: port," said Scenic Rtvers
:::
·.. Planner John Kopec , who
·.· works under Scenic Rivers
:_
:.,: Administrator Ed Hammett .
Kopec said in the past, Nye
:
::: has based his final decision on
·=· scenic rivers designation
.·.·.·::~ "pretty much on the basts of a
.·
: ..::-.-:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·: .·.·. :-:-;.;.•.;.· simple majority of pros and
cons in the mail received. We'll
have a new director (Dr .
Robert Teater of Ohio State
University) here when the 60day period is over, but I thmk

on redistricting plan
By John C. Rice

Ext. Agent, Agriculture

voiWJteer advisors.

.·.::

he '11 handle tt the same a~
Nye ."
Th e proposal calls for designation of 57 miles of the
Stillwater, from Beamsville
south to Dayton, plus 30 miles
of Greenville creek, from
Fisher Rd. to the Stillwater .
Pub tic meetings were held in
each of the three counties
through which the river flows
- Darke, Miami and Montgomery. At each meeting, local
landowners expressed fears
that state government would
take over their lands and thst
public trespass and littering
would be increased, if the river

is designated scenic.
John Kopec disagrees.
" We have seven other rivers
already m the program, and at
no lime have any of these fears
materialized/ ' he said. "There
is a certain amount of trespass
on the Stiltwater now, but this
will neither be increased nor
decreased by s~enie status. It
just doesn't happen."
Harold Barefoot, a Tipp City
canoe merchant and strong
advocate of lhe pro[X)sal, noted
oppositiOn to the program
when he srud :
"When the Miami county
commissioners voted :l-1 to

withdraw support of the proposal, I think the public should
look into the reasons why. Nye
can't have the public best
interest m mind with a decision
like that. ",
Kopec said the Miami county
actiOn is the only such negative
reaction to the proposal received among all political
subdiVIsions along the lengths
of both the Stiltwater and
Greenville creek.
The 61Klay waiting period
wtll last until mid-February.
Letters should be sent to
Director, Ohio DNR, Fountam
Square, Columbus 43224.

'

What does 4-H offer? Over 180 4-H projects, including, for

example, livestock, engmeering, clothing, nutrition, outdoor life,
to mention a few. You can start at the bottom and work to the top
m a project area.
Olst? It may vary from less than $1 for flower seeds or a
yar~ of fabric, to several hundred dollars for a horse and riding
eqwpment.
The 1975 4-H season will be getting underway soon. Contact
your local 4-H club advisor or call the Extension Office at 9923895.
Wanted! Men and woman to be 4-H advisors. We guarantee
many enjoyable moments and a feelmg of accomplishments. We
provide help and literature.
Let's have a great 4-H year!

by Dick Turner

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Legislative Oemocra ts, meeting in a
caucus Friday, failed to come
to agreement on a congressional redistricting ptan they hope
to pass before Gov .-elect
James A. Rhodes takes office
but they did agree on four other
policy bills.
The Ohio General Assembly,
with the Democrats holding a
59-40 edge in the House and a
21-12 margin in the Senate, will
be sworn in Jan. 6, one week
PLAYBOY SUED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Actress Stella Stevens sued
Playboy magazine and its
publisher, Hugh Hefner, for $7
mitlion Friday, charging invasion of privacy for prmting
photos of her in the nude. She
complained that Playboy had
often published photos of her
during the past 15 years, and
mcluded photos m a " 20 years
of Playboy" article that portrayed her "m a degradmg and
humiliating manner." Some
photos were taken without her
consent while she was filming
scenes for
the
mov1e
"Slaughter," she charged.

ASK TOWED
POMEROY
James
Freeman Wilhams, til, Rt. I,
Minersville, and Doris Lynn
Wells, 17, Rt. I, Long Bottom.

Blue Lake

FUNNY BUSINESS
By Roger Bollen

before Rhodes is sworn into his
third tenn.
Senate Democrats mustered
ji.NO T&gt;E. X-IQ ...
only 16 of the 17 votes they
TI-le. Pi&lt;ICE TAG
needed to pass a redistricting
bill that would be favorable to
Democratic congressional can&lt;lidates while in the House,
Speaker-designate Vernal
Riffe, D-New Boston,fetl shy of
the 50 supporters needed in
that chamber.
House Democrats are scheduled to meet a~am Thursday,
said Riffe.
Bills that will be introduced
and probably passed before
Rhodes lakes office include:
- Increasing the number of
weeks for drawing unemployment benefits from 26 to 39 and
repealing a current prohibition
against benefits for workers
laid off from jobs because of
strikes in related industries.
- Transfer of the slate income tax collection machinery
from the taxation department
to the office of Democratic
Treasurer Gertrude Donahey,
thus protecting a number of
JObs.
--Consolidating all consumer
protection functions into the
office of Democratic Attorney
General William J. Brown,
taking them away from the
Commerce Department, which " We need more hme between
would also protect a number of the 'buy now" and the 'pay
later.' "
jobs.
- Permitting door-to-door
voter registration, a measure
favored by Democrats.

New horizons beckon . . . new beginnings,
new challenges, new plans for a brighter future.
As the old year becomes a memory, the new
a reality, we think of all our good friends and
hope your fondest dreams come true.
FROM ALL OF US AT

''

Meigs Equipment Co.
YOUR INTERNATIONAL DEALER
PH. 992-2176

POMEROY

On Floor and
Display Models
NOW AT

Your Federal Land Bank Association can halpt
Are you a city-dweller who would like to buy your first
country home? Or do you already live in the country and
plan to build, or buy a new home? We can help
with a
rural home loan
The qualifications are Simple So why not come in and
talk to us about your mortgage
credit needs.

LANDMARK

228 Upper River Road
P.O. Box 207, Gallipolis

Clyde B. Walker. Mgr.

Enquirer price is hiked

scribers.
Wtlham
J.
Keating,
president of the newspaper,
announced Friday the price of
delivered Sunday
home
editions will be increased to 50
cents, up 10 cents. Daily
newspapers delivered to homes
will cost 15 cents, up two and
one-half cents.
The prices will match newstand prices which have been
in effect.
"The continuing rise year
after ye.a r in the cost of
everything involved in the
publishing and delivery of a
daily quality morning newspa-

per leaves us no alterJUltive,"
Keatin g said. "Cost increases
which the enquirer is continually forced to meet are in
such items as wlte services,

--------------------COLD WEATHER
AHEAD!
INSULATED COVERALLS

SET

•2800

Air Conditioner

Refngerator

Range

Dryer

Washer

Compactor

POMEROY

PAIR t7H

Serving
Meii!S,
Gallia

GLOVES
"Cheaper by
the· Dozen "

ana
Mason

Counties

features, news print, ink,

'

metals, machinery, payrolls,
transportation
and · dis. trlbution :"
·

I

Dishwasher

DUKE BOOTS

lei hoppiness and
kindness be your guide.

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

Phone 992-2181

The year is young

and time to start
knew. Much success
to att in t975. '

. ,,

I

Louisville, Ky . died of a rare
tumor , angiCJsarcoma of the
hver . Within weeks after the
d1sdosure, other cases were
disco vered in New York ,
Texas, West V1rgmia and
elsewhere .
The medical detectives have
traced lhts alarmingly high
mctdence of the rare liver
cancer to the fact that affected
workers have been heavily
exposed to the chemicals
po!yvinyl chlonde ( PVC ) and
vinyl chloride. They are widely
used in the production of
plastics, some of which are
actually called vinyls.
The federal government has
put a limit on the amount of
vinyl chloride factory workers
can be exposed to, but there
was controversy among industry,
consumer
and
government scientists as to
just how much - If any - vinyl
chloride might cause cancer.
It will be a long time before
this is known, for en vironmental carcinogens carry
wtth them somethmg known as
the 20-year rule, which means
that it usually takes a human
being 20 to 30 years to develop
cancer after beng exposed to
an environ111enlal carcinogen.
All of the plastics workers who
came down with the rare liver
cancer had been exposed to the
chemical for at least 20 years
Acupuncture continued to
make news in 1974. In mid-year
hundreds of newspapers ran
stones exposing how hundreds

Lame ducks
mostly how

Want a loan to buy
a country home?

"Cut down on the commercials on the Saturday night movies!
Viewers are complaining they forgel what the story is aboun"

falsification of dala . He at· falstfymg results ."
tributed the episode to ··exIn the canc@r r esea r ch field,
treme pressure placed on me the American Cancer Society
by the Institute director "
Environmental Cancer
That director ts Dr. Robert Research Project, headed by
A Good, who had been heavily Drs . E. Cuyler Harr.mond and
touhng Swnrnerlin's work ever
Irvmg Selikoff began in 197~ to
since it .,wa s first annoWlced, answer questions about how
and had used its spec tacular envtronmental changes affect
na ture to improve fund rais1ng people. They are looking for
for hts institution .
data to confirm the World
Dr Good concluded that lit Health Orgpmzatton est1mate
was an unfortunate episode, that some 85 per cent of all
and noted that "In sctence, it is cancer is deriv ed from enc ompletely sensel ess (to vironmental sources.
falsify I. The nature of research
In January it was revealed
~ is to test and retest until that seven workers (of fewer
~ something stands up . A tha1\ 300) working at the B. F.
scientist cannot get away wtth Goodnch plas tics plant in
merlin falsified potentially
important research findings.
Controversy swirled in the
scientific commumty £or
months in what wa s widely
BY RUBY SAUNDERS
Harold Saunders were at the
referred to as "a medical
Mr . and Mrs. Marshall Kmg Chilli c othe s hoppmg mall
Watergate. "
and two children, Bryan and domg some shoppmg recently.
A year or more before, Angela and his father, Mr. and
Capt.am Air Force nurse
Summerlin had reported that Mrs . Manual King spent a re c ru1tm g offtcer, Brenda
he could transplant ttssue be- recent weekend with Mr. and
Belleville of New Orleans, La .
tween different animals Mrs . Don · King and two spent the Christmas holiday
without using dangerous drugs children of West Jefferson .
with her parents, Mr and Mrs
to suppress the body's natural
Bryant Belleville and famtly .
Mrs Kennison Saunders and
reaction - rejection and death
She wtll also visit friends at
of the tissue . If true, that ob- son, Ntis, spent a few days wtth Chicago, Ill. before returning
servation held spectacular her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
to her base. Miss Belleville
imphcat10ns
for
trans- James Moore of Vienna , W. Va.
The Christmas program spent se veral months m Spain.
plantation of tissues and
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Willis
organs as well as cancer recently at Victory Baptist of near Ironton were Friday
Church was ~·ell attended.
research.
evemng guests of their son, Mr .
Mr. and Mrs . Bert Harrison
But Summerlin was charged
and Mrs . Cleland Willis and
with falsifying his research left Gallipolis a few weeks ago two children, Lou Ann and
data and painting black pat- to spend the wmter months at Matthew, and they ali enjoyed
ches on white mice to make Bradenton, Fla. Their son, Mr
a gill exchange
them look as If they had had and Mrs. Don Harrison and
Mtss Teresa Bane IS spenfamily visited them there
accept~d skin grafts from
dmg her vacati on wtth her
recently.
black mice.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ri chard
Mr.. Margaret Kail and lady
Summerlin admitted to
Bane and son, Jeff. Miss Bane
darkening the skm of the mice, fnend were recent guests of
as a fr.eshman ·at Miami
but
denied
any
other Mr. and Mrs Homer Porter.
UniversHy.
Mrs . Cline Thompson and
M•s. Ruby Saunders Is en daughter, Cindy of Grove City
JOying a week's vacation from
spent a few days wtth her
her dulles as a fo ster grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Brady
mother at GSI.
Sheets.
Mr . and Mrs Homer Porter
Mr. and Mrs . Harold
assisted Mr and Mrs . Russell
Saunders and two chHGI'en ,
Taylor m tying the1r tobacco.
Winston and Kim, were recent
Mr. and Mrs . Merrill Cox and
guests at a pre-holiday dmner
son were recen t guests of has
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
parents , Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
James Craft and son, Jurume .
Cox .
They all enjoyed a gift exThe Christmas program at
change, The Crafts ' daughter,
the Mercerville Baptis t Church
Linda, who is a student at
on Saturday evening was well
Morehead Univers ity
in
atte nded and enjoyed very
Kentucky, was also home on
muc h by all present.
the holiday vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wright
Bruce Smith, who is a
and family were Sunday afstudent
at Ohio
State
ternoon guests of her parents,
University at Columbus , Is
Mr . and Mrs. Floyd Cox
spendmg his holiday vacation
Mr. and Mrs George Sheets
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs .
and two children, Monte and
Carroll Smith and family .
Amber, were recent Sunday
The youth group from the
dmner guests of Mr and Mrs .
Victory Baptist Church led by
Homer Porter.
their pastor and wife, Rev and
Mr. and Mrs . Brent Saunders
Mrs . Kenneth ~ .. nders , sang
of Belpre were recent overChristmas carols at the home
mght gues ts of hts brother, Mr.
of the elderly and shut-ms
and Mrs Kennison Saunders
Christmas Eve.
and family
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Shaw of
Mrs Charles Cox and baby
near Akron are spending the
and Mrs Harold Hazelbaker
holidays and a few days at his
MODESTY never one of
and daug hter , Carolyn were
boyhood home near the Victory
Edy WIll lams more noted
recent gueslo;; of Mr and Mrs .
Baptist Church He purchased
virtues, the American acFloyd Cox .
the place some time ago.
tress boards a jet In Rome
Mr . and Mrs . Jimmie
Mr . and Mrs . Don Harnson
following her brief visit to
Chapman and daughter , Tamt,
and family of Grove City were
England. Miss Willia.ns
of Crown Cit~ were recent
recent guests of his aunt, Mr.
went there on business,
guests of her mother , Margaret
and Mrs . Homer Porter.
stopping by Lloyd's of
Johnson .
Franklin Smtih of near
London which has Insured
Denv e r Johnson was 1n
Akron ts spendmg a few days
her breasts for $1 million,
Columbus
recently
and
wtth hts parents, Mr. and Mrs
brought his two c hildren,
Grover Smith.
Bonnie and Denver Lee home
Mr. and Mrs . John Belcher of
with him to s pend the
Colwnbus were recent overChris tmas holiday.
night guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Grover Smtih is a medical
George Sheets.
patient at Holzer Mdical
Mrs . Christina Walters was
Center .
recent guest of Mr. and Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Pack,
Homer Porter.
Jr and family, Roger, Ronnie
Mr. and Mrs . Bryant
By RUTH GRUBER
and Rodney, were recent
Belleville had all of their
LIEVIN, France (UPI)
guests of his father, Mr . and
children
home for dinner
Coal miners unions today
Mrs . Oscar Pack, Sr. and
vowed to stage a 24-hour Chris tmas. Present were family , Kermit, W. Va.
general strike across France Captam Brenda Bellville of
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Pack
during the mass funeral for 42 New Orleans, La. ; Mr . and and daughter, Angell were
miners killed in an explosion Mrs . Craig Belleville of Christmas Eve guests of his ·
and cave-In at the state-run Hymera, [nd .; Jimmie at grandmother , Mrs. Margaret
home, and her parents, Mr.
mine in Lievin.
Johnson.
An explos!on ripped through and Mrs. Clarence Sines of
Mine Shaft No . 3, half a mile Leon, W. Va .
Matthew Willis was Ill a few
below the surface of this tiny
French town Friday, killing ~I days with a virus.
Mr . and Mrs. Haskell
miners and badly burning six
Saunders
were recent Sunday
~IISII .$08!
others.
dinner
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
WIL.t. PICK
The death toll rose today
'
~M UP IN
James
Vinson
and
two
after one of the injured miners
TWO
HOURS··
children,
Brian
and
died during the night .
Throughout the day Friday, Christopher of near Vmton .
Mrs. Kennison Saunders and
women and children stood m
son,
Nils, were recent guests of
the heavy rain outside the iron
gate at the mine waiting to her sister, Mr . and Mrs . Mike
Summers and family of Belpre.
identify their dead .
Mr. and Mrs. Craig Belleville
Trade union officials said
of
Hymera, Ind. arrived home
they called the walkout to
emphasize the dangerous to spend the Christmas holiday
conditions under which the with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
miners of Fiance must work. Bryant Belleville and -her
The funeral is scheduled for 10 parents, Mr. and Mrs . Harold
a .m. Tuesday in the Llevin SaUnders and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Enc Saunders
,
town square.
Sunday dmner guests of
were
Premier Jacques Chirac said
his
parents,
Mr , and Mrs .
be would attend the ceremoHarold Saunders.
nies.
Cline Thompson and some
Representatives of the mf·
friends
from Grove City
ners' associations and town
assisted
his father, Aaron
officials met today to plan
funeral arrangements for the Thompson of this community
victims of the blast" -the m tying his tobacco .
Mrs . Cleland Willis, Mrs.
country's worst mine disaster
Robert
Spencer and Mrs .
'
in 30 years .

Wrap up '7'

Special Savings!

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
price for home deliv~ry of the
daily and Sunday Cincinnati
Enquirer will be increased this
Sunday, ending a policy of
extending a discount to sub-

By David Hendin '
One of the biggest stones m
the field of medicine m 1974
was a scandal
In Apnl Dr. William T.
Summerlin , a physi cianscientist at the Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
m New York, was permanently
relieved of his position and
given a year's pay with the
proviso that he received
psychiatric counseling .
It was charged that Sum-

Democrats fail to agree

POMEROY - Off with the old and on with the new! How
many times have you heard that this time of year?
We .in "extension" may not use the same slogan, but we
would like to offer your son or daughter a ntw experience
through 4-H. Experiences in 4-H may be many and varied: 4-H
members can plan their own programs and within cer!J!in
guidelines, run their 4-H club as they see fit;' 4-H is working
together, sharing knowledge and experiences with someone else,
and 4-H is citizenship, leadership, or just plain having fun.
Can you belorlg? If you are nine years old (or in the third
grade), and not 19 years old, you can be a member. Ahnost
200,000 youths were enrolled in 4-H last year supervised by 20 000

CARNIVAL

chew
I've found jerky to be a real tasty
variation of both venison and beef. It
can easily be carried on any tnp afield
and, when broken into small pieces,
makes a flavorful addition to gravies
and soups.
Any portion of the animal may be
used for jerky. What often winds up in
the hamburger ptle can be used for
jerky. The chewier the better 1 Meat
can be taken from the freezer and made
into jerky, the same as fresh meats.
Jerky needs no refrigeration, even
m the summer months. Simply store in
a loosely covered frutt jar or some
other covered container.
The explanation may appear to be
long and involved but it's qwte a simple
operatiOn. If I can do it, anybody can!
HAPPY HOLIDAYS I

: : .; ;.;. : .. :. ;.;.·.: .· ·.· . : :.:::.:;:::::::::::::::::;:.:·:. ·.. •.;.;.·.·

County agent's
corner

the mOisture con lent of the meat.
Properly dried jerky will bend'
double without breaking so s tart
checking after SIX hours of drying.
There is no real harm done if the jyrky
is brittle, it's just a little harder to

Miners vow
to strike

,,

•

'

'

I,

out early

of doc tors are takmg three-&lt;ia y
quickie courses m acupuncture
and then gomg out and trying 1!
on pahents. Su~h courses are
little more than ~Iploma mills
AcupWlctw'e climes across
the country continued to do a
booming business, and more
were in operation than ever
before But Dr John Bonica,
chairman of the Ad Hoc
Committee on Acupuncture of
the National Institutes of
Health and the American
Society of Anesthesiologists,
made important concluswns
after intensive study of
acupunCture here nd in China.
"The mtsuse of therapeutic
acupuncture is an Important
health problem and the
widespread chmcal use of
acupWlctw-e is unwarranted at
the present time, " Dr. Bomca
said .
Articles m medical journals
detailed various complications
acupuncture
therapy
of
rangmg from damaged nerves
and arteries to puncture of the
lung and at least one death
caused by a blood teak in the
heart after needhng in the
area .
Dr . Samuel Rosen , New York
ear speciahst, dld a six-month
research study to determine
whether acupuncture could
relieve nerve deafness, as
many proponents had claimed.
Res ults were negative. "We
see no basis for recommending
acupW1clw-e as a treatment
modality for children with
profound
neuro-sensory
deafness. I do not do thts
myself, nor do I recommend it
to my colleagues," said Dr.
Rosen.
Some
other
medical
developments of the year The controversial Professional
Standard s
Review
Organiza twns ( PSROs ) got
underway in 1974 . The firs!
contract for peer rev1ew of
phystctans went to the Utah
PSRO, whtch served as a
model for the peer review
legi slation . The program
provides for peer review of
medical work performed on
patients whose bills are paid in
any way by the federal
government.
- In July Prof. Douglas
Bevis, a Bntish gynecologist at
Leeds University, announced
that three babies that had been
conceived in test tubes had
been born normally . But
controversy
over
the
development upset Bevis, who
later announced that he was
g1ving up h1s research in this
area altogether.
- The federal government
reported m 1974 that more
evidence has been compiled to
show that cigarette smoking is
the major cause oflung cancer,
which killed 72,000 Americans
in 1973. The U.S. Department of
HEW also said that cigarette
smoking is the primary cause
of chronic bronchitis and
emphysema and IS a contributing factor leading to
heart disease.

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Most of the Senate's 11 lame
duck members are retiring a
few days before their terms
expire Jan. 3and therefore will
get a 6.3 per cent increase in
retirement pay.
,
They get the bonus by
stepping down before the end of
the year --a technicality in law
passed by Congress several
years ago to encourage early
retirement throughout the Civil
Service and the military.
Those who have announced
they will step down before the
year's end are Sens. J . William
Fulbright, D-Ark.; Wallace F.
Bennett, R-Utah; Alan Bible,
D-Nev . ; Marlow W. Cook, R·
Ky.; Edward J. Gurney, RFla.; NorrisH.Cotton,R-N.H.,
and Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C.
Howard H. Metzenbaum, DOhio, appointed to the Senate
when William B. Saxbe
became attorney general, dtd
not serve long enough to
qualify for a pension but also
retired early.
Three tame duck senators
chose to finish out their terms :
George D. Aiken, R-Vt.;
Harold E. Hughes, D-Iowa, and
Peter H Dominick, R-Colo.
Aiken told UP! : "My contract expires Jan. 3, and I
intend to tive out my contract."
Dominick may remain in
goverrunenl service, possibly
as ambassador to Switzerland,
and Hughes plans to devote his
life to religious work.
By retiring early, the others
give their successors a slight
seniority edge when the new
NEW YOR){ (UPI) - The
Congress convenes in January, state of California placed seven
since they can assume office as players on the 12th annual Allof the date of tbe resignation. American High School football
Fulbright's successor, team announced today by
Arkansas Gov. Dale Bumpers, Parade Magazine with Texas
decided
for
"technical and !ltinois each placing five
reasons" to forego this and and Ohio four .
wait until Jan . 14 to be sworn in
Tony Nathan, who scored 24
with the rest of the new touchdowns and a pair of twoCongress.
point
converstons
for
Woodlawn High School in
Birmingham, Ala., led the
voting among the backs while
WiUie Yotmg of Lincoln High
School in Jersey City, N,J,, was
an overwhelming selection as
the top lineman In the nation.
Only three juniors were
selected on the 50 player squad,
which was chosen by high
' school and college coaches and
sportswriters and radio and
television announcers. The
juniors are quarterback Tony
Capozzoli of St. Dominic's in
Oyster Bay, N.Y,, and running
backs Vegas Ferguson of Richmond High School in Richmond, Ind., and Matt Suhey of
State College in State College,
Pa.
The Ohioans included running back Jonathan Moore,
Canton McKinley; offensive
end Mark Schmerge, Cincinnati St. Xavier; defensive
lineman Jay Case of Cincinnati
Moeller and linebacker Tom
Cousineau of Lakewood St.
Edwards.

California

POLITICS MAKE STRANGE bedfellows indeed. Former Sen. Eugene McCart~y (right), a
liberal, has teamed with Ira Glasser (left), director of the New York Civil Liberties Union and
Conservative Sen. James Buckley of New York to challenge the 1974 campaign reform bill. The
trio cliiims the bill violates the Bill of Rights' guarantee of free expression and that it stifles
political dissent.
'

-------------------------~~
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
than 300 words tong (or be subjtct to reducUon by the
editor) and must be signed with the signee's address.
Names may be withheld upon publication. However, on
request, names will be disclosed. Letters should be in good
taate, addressing Issues, not personalities.

1J.eat.J. 7':6 ~

.•. ?Jtt. ~: ...,.: :; ; ;
Favors widest circulation
Gallipolis, Ohio
Dec. 22, 1974
Dear S1r:
We would like to make a comment about the rape prevention
series and its placement on the society page in reply to the Jetter
to the editor published December 22nd.
In view of the rising number of rape cases reported all over
the nation and the demeaning effects of these crimes on females
of ALL ages, it seems of the utmost importance that this be
brought to the attention of the public and practical suggestions be
made for rape prevention.
Although it may seem an unpleasant and indelicate topic,
especially when published on the society page where so many
happy events are announced, what other page is read so
thoroughly and often by female readers' Also,lf a young woman
were 1o read the articles and practice the precautions they
suggest, perhaps she might, in the future, be able to submit her
Qwn engagement and wedding announcements joyfully and with
no ugly tragic memories to haunt her of a rape that could have
been prevented.
It is worthwhile to note that these crimes take place not onty
in big cities but also in small towns. Cases of rape have been
published in which the victims ranged from 10 months to 80 years
old so no female is irrunune. - A Mother and daughter of the
community.
(We request that our names be withheld for fear that we will
be made the objects of this crime due to our outspoken nature
about 1!.)

Owners

.

'

near high school

(Contmued from Page 16)
RACINE - Sheriff Robert C.
to court because Kennedy
Dept .
inruled that his team could not Harbenbach ' s
vestigated
a
single
car
acSpencer
Haywood
sign
(because his college class had cident in which no personal
not graduated ). Shulman won. inJurles were reported Friday
No longer was a com- at 11 :45 a.m. on SR 12~ m
missioner the czar of all, as Racme in front of the high
Kenesaw Mountain Landis, the school.
David Eugene Kiser, 16,
first true commissioner of
modern sports, had been. Now, Racine, sa1d his car's steering
locked whtch caused him to
says Kennedy, when he makes
lose
control, spm around in the
a decision, he first turns it over
and strike a telephone
htghway
to counsel for proper wording
to protect himself against suit. pole. There was moderate
Now he's dealing with lawyers damage to the car. none to the
instead of basketball people . pole . No citation was issued .
An NBA meeting used to
have 11 or 12 owners and the
FULBRIGHT DONE
c ommisstoner an a caucus
WASHINGTON
( UP! )
room . Now there are four or
five times that many - each Sen J . Wilham Fulbnght, Downer has counsel and so do Ark ., wtll resign effective Dec.
31 Fulbright, whose 30-year
the1r general managers.
Senate
career ended when he
· The spice has gone out of it
for Kennedy. He blames it on lost the primary to Gov . Dale
the "gutless owners" who Bumpers , is (ollowing the
didn't rally behind him course adopted by most
originally on the Shulman . .senators who were defeated or
are retmng . tly~-resigning
. matter.
Walter isn't retreating into early, Fulbright will give
limbo after this season . He Bumpers slight seniority over
likes to travel and a com- other newcomers who take
fortable NBA pension has been office Jan . 3
arranged for him. He and
Marion have four grandFINCH TO RUN
children m Connecticut with
SAN MARINO, Calif. (UPI)
whom they can spend more - Robert Finch, 49, once one of
time. •
former President Richard
He'll still be a consultant to Nixon's top advisers and close
the NBA but basketball won't friend, announced his canbe the same. At least, not for . didacy for the U.S. Senate
Walter Kennedy .
Friday, saying he had nothing
to do with Watergate. "Like
most Americans, certainly tlke
most Republicans, I feel an
enormous sense of betrayal by
BURIED UNDER SNOW
A cold front swept over the people who perpetrated
Washington state Friday , Watergate," Finch said.

puts 7 on
All -Am en"ca

•

Steering locked

burymg Olympia and Tacoma
under 10 inches of snow.
Portions of the southwest were
digging out of the heaviest
snowfall in a decade, the UPI
reported. '
"

Ford views
Contmued from page 10)
made a mistake ... I think I did
it at the right time and dld .it for
the right reason."
The President declined to
say whether Nixon should
· confess his exact role In
Watergate
to
clarify
statements made during the
trial of his former aides that he
was a central figure .
"It would appear from the
trials that one or many versions of that period are coming
out. And for me to comment on
what version is right or wrong
would certainly be inappropriate until the trials are
over," he said.
Asked whether he had
reached a judgment on Nixon,
Ford said: "I think I've said on
one or more occasions that
what actions he took, as I saw It
then and see It now, shamed
the presidency ... and the
acceptance of the pardon can
be interpreted as a confession.
I don't think I ought to go
further than that."
The President said he felt his
family "has adjusted very
well" to its new life style. "The
boys, who are all spread out,
enjoy coming home to the
White House," be said.
Then, with a hearty laugh,
Ford added: "Susan doesn't
seem to be inhibited at all."

CROWDS GATHER
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.
( UPI) -Hundreds of curiosity
seekers snarled traffic,
ignored barricades
and
trampled lawns of Bebe
Rebozo's neighbors Wednesday to get a glimpse of
former President Richard
Nixon's Key Biscayne vacation
compound.
Rebozo had suspected this
would happen when government barricades were lifted,
and he and several neighbors
last week asked the Dade
County Commission that the
area be made private. But they
were turned down .

NO RESOLUTIONS YET
VAIL, COLO, (UP!)- First
Lady Betty Ford has not yet
made any New Year's resolutions.
"I don't like to make them
because I know I'll break
them," she said.
Then, as an afterthought,
Mrs. Ford· said that If she did
make a New Year's resolution
it would be to "try to think
before I speak." The First
Lady's views on the subject
were relayed by Sheillo Rabb
Weidenfeld, her press secretary .

FAVORS TAX CUT
TUCSON, Ariz. (UP!)
Rep. Morris K. Udall of
Arizona, an announced candidate for the Democratic
presidential nomination in
1976, said Friday he favors a
tax cut. Udall said he hopes the
next Congress wilt "enact
quickly a tax cut to stimulate
the economy" of ~~about 10 per
cent or so" for low income
groups , to be made up by
NOW YOU KNOW
phasing out tax deductions
The word "bachelor" comes
such as the oil depletion
from the Gaelic word for
allowances.
~
shepherd .

•

I

I

�20 - The Sunday Tunes- Sentmel , Stmdav , Dec. 29, 1974
21 - The Sunday Tunes- Sentmel, Sunday , Dec. 29 , !974

•

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memory
IN LO V IN G rnf'mory o f Amy
Cl ark. wno pas se d away 1()
y ea rs ago toda y. D ec 29, 1964

Television Log
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29,1974
6 00- T hts IS the Lrfe 10
6 Jo-tnternattonal Zone .f L'En fance D11 Ch trst 10
7 00- Thts Week 4, Comm unrque 6 Talkt~ g Hands 8; J erry
Falwe l l 13
7 15- Tele Btble Ttme 4
7 30-Th1s ts t he Ltfe 3 Chur ch by the stde of th e Road 4
Revtval F tres 6; Publ tc Af far ts 8 . Camera Three 10

i
I

8 00- Mormon Cho tr 3; Day of Dt scovet y 4, Gos pel Caravan 6,
Re v Leona rd Repa ss 8, Mr Gospel Gu 11ta r 10, Mamre
Chur ch 10, Mamre Church lJ
B Jo--Oral Roberts 3, Your Hea lt h 4, Kathryn Kuhlman 6, Day
of DtscoVery 8 , Jam es Robrson Presents 10 . Rex Hum bard
13, To Be Announced 15
8 55- Black Cameo 4
9 00-Gospel Si ng rng Jub tl ee 3; Cadle Cha pel 4, Ora l Roberts
10 , Rex Hum bard 6, To Be Announced a , Across !h e Fence

15

9·30-Yours f or the Asking 4 . Wha t Does !he B 1bl e Plainly Say
a, Church SerVICe 10 , Ch r iS t IS Ihe Answer 13, l nstght 15.
10 00--Btg Blue Marbl e 3, Chur ch Servtce 4; Le r oy Jenkms 6 ,
Kathryn Kuhlman a. Mov1e ''You're Never T oo Young" 10,
Jtmmy Swaggarl 13, Faith for Today 15
10 30-Go3 , La ss ie6 , I!J.s tght 4, Publ 1c Affatrs 8, What Does the
8 tb le P lamly Say 13, Thi s 1s the L tf e 15
11 00~ TV Chapel 3, Goober 7 ; Focus on Col umbus 4; Point of
V 1ew 6, Rex Hum bard 8, 15, Rev H en ry Mahan 13
11 30- T h1s IS t he Answer J , Ma ke a W1 sh 13 , Two-Way St reet 4,

Btshop Sheen 6

'

12 00- A t I ssue 3, To Be Announced 4 Bow ltnQ 6 , Face the
N a ti o n 8 , Amer ic an Ltfe Style 10 , Rev Ca l v1n Evans 13,
Sacred H ear t 15, 12 15- 0pen Btb le 15
12 3Q-Meet the Press 3,4, 1~ N FL Pre. Game Show 8, 10 ; Day of
M trac les 13
J·QO-Th e Seed s 3, Bonanza 4 To Be Announced 15, NFC
Cha mptonshtp a,JO , Lower Ltghthouse 13
1 30 Issue s &amp; Allswe r s 6, 13
It Takes r ' Th ie f 3 , Movie " J ourn ey Into Fear'
'4, W al l y 's Wcrksb
.s, M ov1e "The Cobr a " 13
2 30-M , s~mn lmpvs st ble 6 To Be Announced 15
3 QO-NFL Gan ,c- oflt-.e W eek 3
3 15- (o fi l li on Bal l H1ghl1ghts 4

') oc

3 30- Super Bowl Htg hl1ghts 3, Probe · Th e World H1ghl1ghts 3;
The W orld Around Us 4 , J •mmy Dean 6 , Mov•e
" Pygmy I sland 13
4
FC ChampJonshJp3 , 4,15 , , Other People, Other Places 6 ,
T o Be An nounced 8,· M ov 1e 10, A n t tques 33
A 30- ln ner Space 6 , En ca 33
Probe

oo-,.

4 45- Chang,ng Times 13, Makmg T h mg s W ork 33
S OG-Untamed W orld 6, To Be Announced 8, "The Cape tw t own
Affair " 13, Unto the Hil ls 33

5 3()--FBI 6, The Wa y It Was 33
oo- T o Be Announce d a, Vil la Alegre 33

On lh 1S day , Mama dear .
Remem br an c e sh eds another
t ea r
As et c h ed upon I de s wmdow
pane
We see your smll m g f a ce agam
Ou r hearts great yearn fmd s no
r el1ef
Ye t hop e 1S not beyond bel1ef
Tha t w e will c l asp each other's
hand
Somewhere , some l 1me we 11
understand
Sa dl y
m 1ssed
by
ttl e
chlldre n w
12 29 ltp
IN MEMORY of Ernes t D
Jo hn son Who dted a t H olzer
Ho sp 1tal , Dec 28 1970

30- News 6 . World of Surv1val 13,

Zoom

33

7 DO- La st of t he Wi ld 3, L ast of the W1 ld 4, T1me of Man 6 , Wdd

a,

K tngdom 15 , Ammal Wor l d
In the Know 10 ;
Kmgdom 13, Wa lsh's An1ma l s 20 ; Lt/ 1as Yoga &amp; You 33

Wild

For Rent

Auto Sales

Real Estate For Sale

7 30--World of Disney 3, 4, 15,; Apple's Way 8. 10 ; Nova 20,
Untam ed World 13 ; Feeling Good 33 8 0()--Sonny Comedy
Revue 6,13
a 3D-Co lumQo 3,4, 15, Ko1ak 8, 10, Masterpt ece Theatre 20.33.
9 DO-Movte " Judg e Dee In the M onas tery Murders" 6,13

9 3()--CBS News Spectal 8, ; Ftretng Line 20,33 ,

I 1974

Budding Block for Tom orrow 10
10 30-We Think You Should Know 3, News 4,8 ; Po l tee Surgeon
15, Moun tam Scene 33; Htgh R oa d to Adventu r e 10 ; Sound ·
s tag e 20.

11 OG--Ne ws 3, 10, 15, ABC News 13, Sta r Trek 4. My Partner

The Ghost6 , CBS News 8; Janak i 33
11 15- M ov ie " Laura " 8 , CBS News 10 . N ews 13
l1 30--Movte " N1ght After N1g h t" J, Johnny Carson 15 , Face
t he Nat 1on 10, D on Kirshner's R ock Concer t 13
1\ 55~Rose B ow\ B ound 4
12.oo-Johnny Carson 4; Good News 6 , U r banleague 10.
12 3D-ABC News 6 , M ov 1e " The Sh oes o f th e F tsherman" 10.
I IJO--News 13.
1 3Q-Npwc;, tl

MONDAY, DECEMBER 30,1974
6 DO-Sunrise Se mmar 4, Sunrise Semester 10

6 2s--Farm Report 13.
6 3G-Five Mtnutes to Ltve By 4, Ne w s 6 ; Bible Answers 8 ;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10 , Good News
Concerns &amp;
Comments 10 . Good N ews 13

a,

6 ' 35- Columbus Today

6 45- Morn i ng Report 3, Farmtime 10
7 00--Today 3,4,15,; Bug s B unny 6 ; CBS N ews 8, 10, Fa rmer 's
Daughter 13
7 30--New Zoo Revu e 6, Etughty Days 13
8 oo-Captain Kangaroo 8 , J eff's Collie 6; Popeye 10 , New Zoo
Revue 13 , Sesame St 33.
8 25- Capt. Kangaroo 10, Jack Lalanne 13
a. S5- News 13

9:00- AM 3; Paul Dtxon 4, Wtld W1ld West 6. Bullw1nkl e 8,
M ov ie " The Challenge" 13; Phil Donahue IS ; Mi ster Rogers

33
9 2s--Chuck Wh 1te Reports 10.

9 30- N o t For W omen Only 3, Hazel 8 , T attletales 10, Zoom 33

10 IJO--Name That Tune 3, 15, Company 6, Joker's Wtld 8, 10 ,
Feeling Good 33.
10 3Q-Winning Streak 3, 15 ; Phd Donahue 4 , Gambit a, 10

11 IJO--H1gh Rollers 3,4, 15 , Money Ma ze 6, Now You See 118.10 ,
Password All Siars 13; Caught m the Acl33
11 3()-- Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Brady Bunch 13 ; Lucy Show
6 , Love of Life a, 10, Sesame St. 33

11 55- CBS News 8, Dan lmel's Wor ld 10
12 IJO--Jackpot 3, 15, Password All Stars 6, Bob Braun's 50 50
club 4, N ews 8, 10,13
12 3G-Cei ebr ity Sweepstake s 3, 15, Spli t SEcond 6, Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 , Aft ernoon w 1th 0 M 13, To Be Announced

•33.
12: 45-E iec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3,15
I IJO--News 3. Al l My Ch 1ldren 6, 13 . Phtl Dona hue 8, Young &amp;
the Res tless 10 , Not For Women Only 15.
1: 15- To B e Announ ced 33
I 30- Jeopardy 3,4, Let's Make A Dea l 6, 13, As the Wrorld
Turn s 8, 10, Nova 33
2· QO--Oays o f Our l1ves 3,4, 15. $10,000 Pyramid 6, 13, Gu 1drng

L1ght 8, lif.
2 3()--Doctors 3,4,15 , B1g Showdown 6,13, Edge of N1gh t 8,10;
Soundstage 33.

Card of Thanks

TEAFORD

''

~

IN THE COUNTRY - 5 acres
C tt B df d
rl
ra or ·
and a 2 bedroom hom e w 1th fu ll
Mr. and Mr s Rock Young basement
$6500 00 .
and Andy of Columbus spen t Reasonable down pa y m ent
Sunday and Monday w1th her 33 ACRES - 3 bedroom s, ele
parents, Mr . and Mrs Martm furnace , Oh 1o Powe r, built in
w ·I
stove. doubl e sin k , cabinets ,
1 Coxen.

,..c ity

Mr and Mrs. Bob Wtnes and
By Mrs. Francis Moorls
fam1ly and Mr . and Mrs. Net!
The annual Christmas Baker and daughter of
mee ting of the Booster Sunday
I
School Class of F1rs t Baptist Co umbus spent the weekend
wtth the1r mother. Mrs Anna
Church was held at the home of
Wtnes celebrating Christmas
Mrs Gretta Simpson wh1ch on Sunday
was extens1vely decorated for
Mr and Mrs . Frank Cleland
the occas10n and Mrs Isabel entertamed with a pre Stmpson was cO-hostess. The
.
meehng opened with the song, Chnstmas famtl y dmner
Tuesday evemng, Dec. 24.
"0 Come, All Ye Fa1thful" Those present were Mr and
followed by Scripture, Luke
Mrs. Steve Clela nd and sons,
2· 1-15 and prayer by Mrs
Mr and Mrs . John Leary and
B1kacsan. Readings, brought
frumly , Mrs . Evelyn Young
and read by members included
and sons , J . F and Aaron, Mr.
"Good Cheer/"'the Chnstmas and Mrs. Jeffrey Hill.
Sp1rit," " The Most Pnceless
Mr;; Anna Wmes and Karen
Gifl1s Chrtstmas, " "The Real
spent Chnstmas w1th Mr . and
Christmas Story," " The Gift of
Mrs Steve Cleland

water,

' $25,500.00
INCOME -

and

m tnera ls ,

a room s,

2 baths,
a nd a 4

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
On State Rt . 124 , 'h mi. from
Route

7

by .pass

towards

Rutland .
Ph, 992 -5682 or 992 -7121
All Mechanical Work
Open Mon . Sat.

-

8A.M. 6PM
~

4 n1ce BRs , bath , db I sink,
carport.

2

outbutldtngs

Ntce

Garden $16,500.00
NO MONEY DOWN- a lmost
new 3 bedroom s, bath, gas
furnace , closets , stove and
refrigerator . One acre Only

$17,500.00.

" The
L1ttle
Star ,"
''RedlScovermg Christmas, ''
" A Child ' s Faith, " "'Tis
Chrtstmas," " The Spirit of
Christmas ," " The Fnendly
Beasts " In the busmess
sesswn a nominating committee named was Helen
S1mpson, Dorothy Badgley ,
and Vera Beegle. The meeting
closed w1th the Lord 's Prayer
In
u mson
During
the
fellowship hour , gifts from
under a lighted ChrlStmas tree
were exchanged and the
hostess es served delic10us
refreshmen ts to fourteen
members
Mrs . Mattie Circle was
adm1tted at Pleasant Valley
Hospital , Pt Pleasant, W.
Va.
Mr,
Owen Watson 1c::
conftned to his home w1th
til ness
Mrs . Lavinia S1mpson has
been 111 at her home for two
weeks
Mr . and Mrs . William Lake,
Lori and Sean , of Columbus
V!Sited their grandparents, Mr
and

Mrs.

Francis

Morns

J

The Almanac
By United Press International
TOday 1s Sunday, Dec. 29, the
363rd day of 1974 with two to
follow
PO.MEROY-8·10
EThe moon IS between its full Almost new home, 3 BR with
phase and last quarter .
double closets , love ly kit ·
The morning stars are Mars c hen, dm1ng R , large livtng
and Saturn
R, H.W. floors wtth lots of
carpettng,
full basem ent has
The evening stars are Merlarge
re
c
reatton
room ,
cury , Venus and Jupi~r .
shower, utiltty R Carport,
Those born on thLS date are Wi th s torage build1ng YOU
under the ~1 gn of Capncorn.
MUST SEE THIS. $27,000
Andrew Jolinson, 17th presi- REEDSVILLE - Rt 124 - 9
dent of the Umted States, was ACRES lovely building sites,
born Dec. 29, 1806 Th1s 1s mostly tillable, TP water ,
c lose to recreat1on area
actress Mary Tyler Moore's $5,800
38th birthday
45
RUTLAND AREA On thLS day tn his tory:
ACRES - Fen ced, stocked
In 1848, gas hghts were pond, good spring , m1neral s,
mstalled at the Wlute House for lots of bu1ld1ng sites . $11,000
POMEROY
Just
the first time.
renovated - 4 BR , 2 baths,
In 1851, the flrst Young Men's
R. sewing R , car.
Chrisl!an Association chapter IPOiin&lt;J, oan&lt;&gt;ll;lno. ltle, full
opened in Boston .
w1th recreat1on
In 1940, Naz1 Germany
workshop ,
porches ,
unleas hed one of its most IQ•traoe. patio , double lot .
violent bombing raids on
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
London.
HOME , LET US SELL IT
In 1972, a jumbo jetliner, an FOR YOU
L1011, crashed near Miami, L_.!!;!:!;~~~ill&gt;!__ __j
Fla., k1lhng 99 persons. Seventy-seven survived.

HElL
RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
F r e e
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992 -3995
or 992-5700

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

_,

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

Real Estate For Slile
I F I NTERESTED 1n own rn g a
n1ce h ome 1n M 1dd l eport t hat
will pay for It self , ca ll 949 4984
a fter 5 p m any day Can be
seen by appo 1ntment
12 27 3t c

DOZER wor k , land cleanng by
!h e ac r e, ho ur ly o r contra c t
Farm ponds , roads, etc
Lar ge dozer and opera l or
W1t h ove r 20 years ex
per1ence Pu llms E x cavat1n g
Pom eroy , Oh 10
Phone 992
2478
12 19 tfc

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

WILL t r 1m or cu t tr ees or
Sh r u bbe ry ,
clean
out
basements, a tt1 cs, etc 949
3221 or 742 4441
12 15 26 t c

Strout Realty
NEW - All elec, ca rpeted , i
BR ,

air

$17,500.00

RUTLAND -

condlttoning,

3 bedroom

home, ba sement, all electric,

$18,500 00.

ACREAGE NEEDED - We
have buyer s.

Happy New Year
To All!!
307 Spring Avenue
Pomeroy
992-2298
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

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

CREMEAN S CONCRE T E de
liv e red Mond ay
th rou g h
Saturday
a nd
evenmgs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 tfc

AmiiTIOI
We talk to you

During our all out Inventory Re duction of New &amp; Used Trucks and Cars .
As much as $1 , 000.00 off on New Cars, Used Cars &amp; Truc ks for qu ick
sale . Your pn ze will be our low pr_ice.

CA RPET lnSt allaltOn, S1 25 per
yar d P hone R 1chard West ,
12 24 261p
SEPTIC
T A NK S
c l eaned
Modern Sa n1tat 10n , 992 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 ffC

.

PIANO
tunmg and r epa1 r
Charles Scot t, 992 3716
12 13 32t p

Carrier Wanted

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

C BRADFOR D , Auct iO neer
Complete Serv1c e
Phon e 949 382 1 or 949 316 1
Rac1ne, Oh 10
Cntt Bradford
s 1 tf c

In

NEW HAVEN

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

SE PTIC tanks, excava tin g
du mp tru ck Phone 742 3'rd2

Agee or Older

20Z~tc

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

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille
Charcoal grey with leather interior, full power
equipment, AM-F M stereo, new steel radial
tires, climate control ai r conditioning ..-

'"
"

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

--·
"

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

'"

EXCELSIOR Salt Works , East
Mam St, Pomer oy All k1nd s
of salt , water pell e t s, water
nuggets, block salt and own
OhiO R1ver Salt Phone 992
3891
65uc

Apollo yellow, brown viny l top, Climate
Control air conditioning, T&amp; T wheel, AM·FM
stereo &amp; tape, new w -s -w tires.

·-

..,

Choice $7 500

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER .:

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

dancer
Dan•sh 1sland
Declare
Stage wh 1sper
Abstra c t
betng
St•gmattzed

137 D1tlseed
139 Kna ve at ca rd s
140 Cron1e s
(colloq l
141 Venom
143 Levantme
vessel
145 Golf mound
146 Make ready
148 Adorned w1th
panelmg
,\
150 Sea nymph s
152 G1rl s name
153 Horse's neck
harr
154 So lar d1sk

18 Go 1n
20
23
25
27

Ne~rro w open 1ng

~

90 Bound boo k ~
91 Pro ve r b
.:

Mor e co mp etent 77
Ne ck p1 eces
92 R es1du e
:
6 Wtngs
78
Pt erce
93 Enthus1asm •
10 Underga rm en t
80
Assert
94 Sym bol l o r ,.~
14 Th1cket
81
28 M ale swa n s
t ellu num
"'
19 Charges
31 M erg anser
96
Son
of
A
da
n\:
21 Farm bu1ldmg
82
33 Temporary b e d s 97 M elod y
22 Yearnings
84 Ed1t
100 N o te o f sca le-:
36 E)&lt;;plted
23 Unproduct1v e
86 M ore obese
38 M an's name
102
W eak food 24 Ceremon tes
87 Restore
40 Young g 1rl
Mr P res1denw':
105
26 Pours off
strength
4 1 Workman
109
Mans
na m e "
28 Sat1sf1ed
89 Th e kava
43 Beauty slang !
1 12 C ravats
""
29 Poe m
9 2 Showy flo wer
45 J omed
1 13 Godd ess o r ..:
30 Vessel
95 Choose
46 Gtrl s name
you th
32 Apport ion
98 Part of s t ove
47 Pos se ss1ve
114
All
33 Jacket
99 PunctuatiOn
156 Seal
pronoun
116 Collec ti ons
34 Pedal d1g1t
mark
157 Chem •ca l
49 Bespatter
o f facts
35 Sp 1kenard
10 1 Squanders
com pound
51 Fall 1nto d1suse
1 18 Q,. o f Celebes
37 Domestica te
103 Brother of
158 War god
52 Re tur n
120 lng red 1en 1
39 Anctent
Ja cob
159 Rage
53 Emm e t s
12 1 Severs
40 rennJs strokes 104 Propos1t1on
160 South Af11 c ;;~n
54 Vesse l
I n name on ly
122
41 German titl e
105 Conflag ration
Du tch m en
56 Uncove red
Afr1
can
123
42 Depos•ted
106 Not e of sca le
stadtum sea t s
ante lo p es
44 Stupefy
107 Greetmg
DOWN
59 Att acked w1th
125 Form o f
46 Small rugs
108 Erase lprmtrng 1
artillery
m su ran c e
47 Provtdes crew
110 Tran sg ress
1 D ress protector 60 l ease
12 6 Extras
48 Conduct
11 1 Span1sh art•cle
2 Pertatmng to the 61 Footless
127 Sto ry
·''
50 Small g lass
112 R ocky hills
br1de
63 Stunted
129 Peru se
for w 1ne
113 Ma ss1 ve
3 True to t h e fac t 65 Frnal
131 Sower
52 Peel o f lr u 1t
115Sungod
4 Old Fren ch c orn 67 Cyprmo 1rJ
132 Fru 1t
53 Hebrew month 11 7 G~rl' s name
5 Ha rvest
f 1sh
133 Journey forth
55 Co lorles s
119 Compass po1nt
6 H ebrew month 69 Behold'
~4 Chmbmg p l an ts
57 Chmese m1l e
120 Ireland
7 Young boy
70 Make am end s fo r 136 Hasten s
58 Organs of
12 1 Un 111n g w tth
72 St r~ct
138 T na ls
8 Reg 1on
heanng
m o rtar
9 S urround
74 Roman gbd s
140 Young sa lmon
59 TWISt
124 l 1Q u1d mea su re 10 Chutch counc1l 76 Lega l sea l
14 I Weather
60 E)&lt;;clamat,on
126 Wtnter v eh 1cle 11 Latv 1an nat1v e
letbbr 1
tndt ca tor
62 Bow
127 Metallic
12 Tho se hold tJag
77 G1ve ex treme
14 2 Bri st le
64 Dete ct ive •
c yl1nder
off1c e
unc l!on to
144 Baby s b e d
I slang ~
128 Powerfu l
13 Po stsc ript
79 D u t ch l awn
147 Amer1can
66 Note of scale
per sons
l abbr I
83 D evou red
essav 1st
68 Greek lette r
130 Cn es hke dove 14 Jargo n
85 Oes1re With
148 Eq ual1t y
69 Affect1on
132 S 1m1ans
15 Worthless
eage r ness
149 La~r
70 Tear
133 Doom
le avtng
86 Ward off
15 1 The self
71 Marble s
134 rmy amou n t
16 Sham
87 Garm ent
153 Parent ~ coll oq 1
73 Covered w1th
135 Before
17 Spamsh t1lle
88 Bad
155 Symbol f or
beads
menttoned
l pl l
89 Thr ee t oed s lo th
n1ton

992-5342

Open Eves. Til6 -

Til 5 P . M.

111 Court St., Pomeroy
Phone 992 -2156
CA RHO P wanted
app ly m
person at
Crew ' s Steak.
House
12 29 10 t c

Sale s Help Wanted
A N OH I O O IL CO
off e rs
PLENTY OF MONEY p l us
c a sh bonuses fnnge bene f1 IS
t o m a tur e 1n d tv1du al
1n
Pome roy area R egard l ess ot
ex perten ce a1rmall G
1
Re ad ,
Pr es,
AmeriCan
Lu br 1can ts Co
Box 696 ,
Day t on , Oh1o 45401
12295 tp

tran s, a1 r c ond ,
v myl t op, 4 dr

500 E. MAIN Sl
For Sale

For Sale

ELECTROLUX Swee p er de l uxe
model
Comp l ete w1lh al l
c l ean1 n g attac hme nts and
uses paper ba gs s t ,gh t ly u sed
but c l ean s and looks l tke new
Wrll se ll lor SJ7 25 cash or
terms availa ble Ph one 992
7755
12 18 lfc

V 8 4 door, au toma tiC tran smi SS IOn . power st eenng , and
power brakes, viny l 1ntenor, vtny l roof. red fmt sh , good
while wa ll t1r es, rad 10, fac t ory a 1r

ST EREO RADI O 8 tra c k ta pe
com b,nat1on
am fm rad 1o
Balnn ce $ 109 sa or t erms Cal l
99'} J96S
1'2 2J lfc
A K C 1 yei'lr old lr1 s h Sett er
e)(ce ll en t pel
$60 Howard
8 1r CI1f 1Ci d
Pholle 74? 59 3'2
12 i &lt;t ti c

CtiJYri\IN F:I\SY
AT ANY RATE CA5Y 1 I&lt; E C O ~\M EN J !I'

YL'IJ A5 MY MOS.T

TIW~fl:l)

TIW Ut!U:O

~HOO T ER

WITH M Y '50"-' 1.'.1 LAI'I,
WA5-H TUSSG A5 VOUR BA CK UP MMJ'

~ Fflc l&lt; lHJ o.:&gt; l" ~

'" 1 •

..,. 1""4riO JJ r \1

H /1 PF~

t,J -"','1)

1972 DODGE .•.••.................. ,_ ..s2495
Da rt Cus tom , 4 door, local 1 owne r ca r J I B V 8 en g m e,
automa t1 c tra n smi SS IOn an d power steer mg , a ~r con
dti10n1ng , v inyl tn m . v myl top, ra dm , wh1te wall It r es.
gold ftnt sh

POMEROY, OHIO
For Sale

CLOSE OUT on new Z1g Zag
sew m g mach m es For sewmg
str e t c l1 fab n cs bu tt onhol es
$ l 'i e a c h
Hols te1n
fancy d es 1gn s, e lc
P a 1n l P t GS
Her ef ord he 1t er, $ 175 On e to n
s l tg h t l y bl em1shed Ch ot ec o f
1% 5 F ord tr u c k 6 c y l 1nder
carry ,n g case or sew1 n g
$550 C W R1ce phone 949
s t an d $49 BO cash or t erms
21 IS
avat l ab l e Phon e 99 2 775 5
12 796 tp
12 18 t f c

I HA l

"'; H ~I I&gt;.

• J!IN I ! l •-Hi\1..:
IF H, \ •_,. A(\. E PI !&lt;I'

f

ll E"P E,~T

F IREW OO D
7 1/ 5387

lor

sa l e

Phone

1:177 Jt c

1971 CHEVROLET 2 TON ......'3495

DOBE RMA N p1n c her p u p s,
t.K C Rcq Call 533 0761
1'1'17 3t c

Cab &amp; ch assis - 102" Cab to axle , 350 V 8 eng m e,
15,000 lb 2 sp eed rear ax le, good 875x20 ftr es, clean
P,

DUE IO t o tUI dl 5abi i i1Y mu sl
se ll co mpl et e f lock N lll e ~ e g
Su ff o lk e w es 1 yr old bred
ancl pa p ered
One Sutto lk
rum
non rf'lfl ted
Cal l 919
3073 &lt;my t un e
12 'l? 6tc
W il li no sod a t
all no c ~ rp e t s c l ea ned wilh
B lu e Lu st re
R ent e1ec l r1C
shilm pooe r ~I
B,lk.f'r Fu r
n 1ture Compa ny
12 7? Jt c

HAPPY NEW YEAR TO 1ILU

SIJH

IM "' Oi'Jt1 RET&gt;
f3.Ur J Ml • a
~&lt;'l !' ~ A T WIIAr~
HI E Jl5_!._~ )

SPINE1
CO N SOL E PIANO
W,lnlcd R es ponsible party to
pu r chase sp 1net p1ano on low
mo n1t1t y payment s Ca n be
see n
l oca ll y
W r 1te
R ep re se ntat1ve Ken Bay l ess.
P 0
Bo)( 216 Sh r&gt; l byvll l e
lnd1an a ,161 76
17 27 7tp

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126 Open Eves. Till 8 Pomeroy

&amp; N day ol d or st ar ted
L eg h orn pul l ets Aoth fl oor or
c age
qrown
ava ilab l e
hou s 1n g
.Jnd
Pou ltr y
auloma l1 on Mod ern Pou lt ry,
399 W Main Pomeruy . 99?

1973 STA R CRAF T 74 fl t rav el
trail er Ph one 88 :7 JJ91
12 29 5tp
:;REA T DANE PUP S 8 we ek. s
ol d $50 Phone 99 7 5718 alter 6
p m

I :7 29 61p
H : RE FOR D Hol st e1n Cal f 1S 10
days old A lso 352 Fo r d mo l or
and f l a t hea d 6 c yl Dodg e
mo tor Ph on e an 2353
12 295t c
ITI Z E N S N af 1ona 1 Ba nK will
offer t or sa te al thetr o ff 1ce tn
Midd le port , OhiO l Oam Ja n
8 197 5 a 19Ml Dodg e Corne t
500 7 dr h I , Scr1a l No
P7 3f: 8G 108629
111 9 l t c
NA L NUT s tereo rad10, AM
FM
8 t rack t ape com
b.n at10n Ba la nce $110 69 or
te r m s Cal l 997 ]965
12 J lf c
:;ROCERY bu s,n ess for sale
Bu ild111 9 fo r sn lc or lease
Phon e 77 3 5618 from ll 30p m
to 10 p m tor a ppo1ntm ent
3 10 tt c
I\IA L NT U st ero rad10, AM F M
8 tr ack tape comb m ahon
Bal ancc$107 45or te r ms Call
99 2 3965
I I 19 lf c

DEAR D.:
Tell hun the truth: you don't want a back seat romance .
Besides, December 1s too cold for parking.
H you can't apply the brakes w1thout puttmg him in neutral,
you're e1ther a poor driver, or he 's too racy for you. --SUE

9 57 CHEVY pa rt s
N EW
Lakewood tr ac t 1on bars, h1
1a cke r a1r shoc k. s, hook er
he ade r s, W1 th 3' co ll ec tors for
small b lock
Call 992 3496
a ft er 6 p m BES T OF F ER
10 I? tf c
YOU I&lt;'E,O.LIZE )CO l.t..
HAVE TO eE PuT

A R corn for sa l e
?481 or 388 9991

P hon e

For Rent

For Rent

F UR NI S H E D
apar tm e nt .
ut ili ti eS furni Shed
SUi tab l e
tor two wo rk 1ng men or
r e t.r ed coup l e L 1v1ng room
kll chcn , shower and ba t h On
ma1n highway , Mason , 'W Va
Phone 7?3 5 1&lt;1 7
10 27 li e

"'A L K E R coon ll ou nd , Le onard
1 D ailey L ong Bottom
12 27 3tp

~.: Maybe
aahe

s~ge

advertised

like a person.
Kuhl's Bargain Center

WMP0/1390

PERSONAL to "Not Quite Ready Yet":
Consider Rhoda :
A nurse asked, " Did you use on oral contraceptive before

"At Caution Light, Rt. 7" '

niarrtage?"

ON YOUR DIAL

Phone 667-3858
OPEN WED. THRU
SU
'A.M.. 7 P.M.

Tuppers Plains, Oh1o

'

1'1'1" ln u t'il ~ 't1:ur •· •,, n.l l ll '&lt;' 11'1

'

'.

l

' ........_ _ _ _ ______ __ - - -

.l....i._....__.~.--"--_

: Rhoda : "Yes."
, Nurse: "What kind ?"
: RIWda: "Well ... I said 'No' a lot."
--Okay?-HELEN AND SUE

J

Plt.145.9374- 245·5021
We rent mobile home lots,
not just a plac e to park your
home We have ITIOre to offer
than any mob1le t.-ommun1ty
1n Southtas.tern Ohio

P

m

12 5 lf c

2

BE 0 ROOM tr a il er.
on l y Phon e 99'2 3324

adull 5

MOB I LE HOME CLO SE TO
GS I
Ca l l &lt;1111 0 168
Call 1n
for enoon
lO ! tf

15 NEW Regency Inc A p t
bed r ooms c arp et ed to tal
electri C localed on Sa·nd Hill
Road PI P l easant P" 675
510,1 or 675 53B6
269 II
1/)(60 3 BR Mobile Home on
pr~vate lo t 111 c lly l1mlf s 1i150
per mo Ca ll J46 9710
303 6

HOU SE 11 room s and ba th. n 1ce
ya rd and dr 1veway
A lso
fu r n1 shed a pt Call 99 '1 7780 or F URN apartm ent , 3 rooms and
b &lt;l th m Cl l'f Air 446 1703 or
9?2 ] 432
Jd6 1522
12 12 tt c
303 6

2 BR mobile hom e U pp er R t 1
446 0008
301 If
SMAL L fi r s ! lloor Bradbu ry
e ff 1C 1en cy ilpar lm e nl
Al l
ut!11 11es pa1d 729 Second Ave
J46 09 57
300 tf
LARGE lra ii~C r space on Rl 35
one mil e t rom hOSPi t al d46
3805

27 41f

3

[J

'
he needs an ego trip at thi.s
of his life. Let him
work it out his own way. Possibly he 1sn t as repuls1ve to others
is to an ex-girlfriend, who really MIGHT be a tittle jealous.
...!HELEN

Contact Newt Jones
Rodney -Cora Rd.
Rodn ey , Ohto

UN FU R NI SH E D
h ouse,
4
room s and bath 1650 Lm coln
H e1gh t s Phon e 992 387&lt;1
11 14 tt c

2 BEDROOM tr aile r a t corner
o1
B r oadway and
Elm
M i ddl epo r t
No p ets or
c h1ldren Ca ll 992 2580 after 6

BR
t railer
LOU'I I ed at
C h esh ,r e Oh10 A 1r c on d Ph
~?S 5&lt;13 5
303 6

Quat! Creek
Mobile Community
&amp;. Sales

FUR NI SH ED apt A dult s on ly
Midd l eport
Phon e 997 387&lt;1
I I 11 lie

tt n sc ramhl ~ these rour Jumhl es,
one leiter to each square, t o
form four ord1nary word s.

E.S.B.:
.
Ego trippers hardly ever llsten to ex-gll'lfnends, because
they peg them as jealous.
: Let this guy learn the hard way. --SUE

Does no1 apply to layaways

?

PRIV ATE meet1ng room l or
any organ,za t,on , phone 992
] 975
3 11 tfc

;..E.S.B.

On all Cash Sales of
Used Appliances &amp;
Used Furniture thru
December 29.

For Rent

3 and .1 RO OM t u rn 1shed and
unfur ni s h e d
apa rtm en ts
Phone Q92 543!1
4 12 lfc

1RA ILER space 2 m iles f rom
Pomeroy R 1 143, Ph one 992
5858
10 27 li e

adull s, no
ap T Jol1n
soutt1 o f
7
172961D

FUR NI SHED mob il e hom e l or
ren l
A l bf'rl Hil l
R,l ( lnC
Oh 10 Ph one 9.19 126 1
1279 61(

COU N TRY Mob il e Hom e Park
Rt 33 l en m1 le!'; n or t h of
Pom er oy
L arq P lot s w 1th
c on cr e te pat 10 S Sid ewa lk s
runner s
and
o lf
st reet
p;;trk1ng
A lso
spac es for
smv ll tr ade rs Ph one 997 7479
7 21 t f c

12 17 tfc

found

4 RM apt furnt shed
drunk s, A lso , J rm
Sheel s
3 m 1les
M i ddl eport on R t

" RM tu rn 1sh ed a pt close t o
Pow e ll s Sup er Vi! l u pho n e
992 J65S
II 20 ti c

]bl

12 20 7tc

AWAY, FQSDICI(
20 012 30QU16T YIEN&lt;S
AT BIABBt..IHG ~
MAY COOL 10....1 OFF

ca b

350 V 8, au to , P S, rad1o , 15,500 miles, loca l
own er , tires s.,ow l ittle wear , gra y fini sh , spotl ess
Interior

1229 li e

UTI'Lf OflPIIAN ANN IE:

SOl id

00 • • • • • 00 • • •

7 164

By Helen and Sue Hottel

I

1973 CHEVROLET.•
'2995
CUSTOM DEWXE, 8' FLEETSIDE

r ROM wall 10

H

•

20%
Discount

1971 MATADOR ........................s1595

Now Service is Building Our

PH. 992-2174

Generation Rap

My e~-boyfriends thmks he's the All American Body
ileautiful. That's the reason I broke up with hun. It began during
iimuner vacation. When he returned, he was on th1s ego tnp and
ever since he's been sickening.
~ He's so hung up on his "super masculimty" that he s tarts
(ights with guys and tries to start up with every girl he sees
•
•
:.. and he isn't even good looking 1
". I try to tell him he's making a fool of h111lSelf, but he thmks
f•m joking. Slould 1 give up and let him learn the hard way - by
tosuig all his friends? Honestly, I don't even LIKE him any more.

autom a t1 c tran s, power
steer mg , radt o loc a l I owner &amp; only 15 500 m il es g r ey
l1 n1 sh , delu)(e v tn y l 1n ter 1Qr

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

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

p

8' F lee t s1d e Ptckup , 350 V 8

tr a ns, v1ny l lop, radto

We BUJit Our Business on Serv1ce Business .

Mobile Homes For Sale

~DEAR RD.:
,
Seems to me that a fellow with any kind of imaginat1on could
:-come up with a dozen ideas for inexpensive dates - unless he's
:got a onl-lrack mind.
Maybe you should wear a sing, "No Parking Without a
:Perrnit.''-HELEN.

Local 1 owner car &amp; on ly '10 000 mtl es automnt ~e tra n s,
rad to wh1te wa ll t 1res, vmyl 1n tenor, sha rp a s a tack
Orange fm1 sh

$795

2 SMALL dogs , one dark brown MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE
named Tammy , lh e oth er 2 BE DRO O M 10..&lt;55 mobtl e
male l ig ht brown Los! in area
home ,
new
ca rp e t
an..ct.
of K 1ngsbury, r ew ard offered
washer . furn 1sh ed $3500 oo
Phone 992 5629
Phone 992 7d39
12 27 6tp
12 26 31c

•

5,000

1973 DATSUN 1200 2 DR. CPE... s2250

•1295

Sat.

He Wa.Dts Free Parking?
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I've been dating this 17-year-old guy for four me eks. He
promises to take me out a lot , as soon as he gets the money. I can
understand his positlon because he doesn't have a job, and I don 't
mind. We really dig each other.
But every time we've gone out, we've just parked, and he
goes farther than I really want him to go. He tells me constantly
that he loves me, but I'm afrrud he's JUSt usmg me.
How do I tell him to slow down on our relat10nsh1p w1thout
puttmg him into neutral ? - D.C.T.

2 Door, 4 speed t ran sm iSSIOn , bucker sed f s, rad1 o
ac tun l miles, orange ftn1 sh , vmyl 1nt enor

4 Dr , V 8, P S , P B , a ut o

radto ,

See one ot these courteous salesmen ;
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

- ------- ---

CREAM P UFF

1967 Electra 225

P B , auto

Pomeroy

llAP:

or previous
specials.

The Daily Sentinel

PS,

V 6.

"You 'l l l t ke Our Qua l tty Way of Dotng Bu s m ess"

Lost

.4 d oor, 1 owner car, a nd on l y 10,400 miles, V 8 eng1ne w 1th
automatt c power st eenng, power brakes fa ct or y atr,
tmtcd glass d el ux e body and w h eel opentng moldtng s
sa ndston e VI nyl seats beaul 1fu l dr~rk r ed 11n1 sh TRU LY M

1973 CHEVROLET C-10 ...............s2995

M'! I&lt;' E"C(.)"VoiE io.Jf'
1\J 1\) .'J .

Cad1llac. Old smob1le
GMAC Financtng Ava1lable

1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA.·-··-····'4295

Red coupe , 4 spd , floor
shtft, radio .

·~-

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29 1974

PASSENGER CARS

Middleport

Help Wanted

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

75 B tb l1 c al

992-2196

3rd Ave.

SEVERAL NEW '74 CHEVROLET

1971 VW Karman Ghia

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.

______________

EXCAVAT IN G, doz er , loader
and backhoe work , sept1c
tanks mstalled , dump tru c ks
and lo boys fo r h.re , will haul
f ill d 1rt , lop so il , l tmestone &amp;
gravel , Call Bob or Roge r
Jeffers , day phon e 992 7089 ,
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 ttc

I Pontiacs I
HAPPY
NEW YEAR

'

Great Used Car New Year Offers

WE INVITE COMPARISON

N i::IGLE R BUILDING SUP
PLY FO R REMODELIN G
A ND K IT CH E N CABINE TS
CALL GUY NEIGH LER,
RACINE , OH I O PH O NE 949
3604
12 19.-26
. ._, tc

Onall NEW 74C HEVI ESi n s tock.'h to&gt;/,ton
PICKUPS 1 Ton Chevy Van

A nice way to take your family through 1975 is in a full sized
Pontiac Catalina. Dollar for dollar , Catalina is co n s i ~re d to
be one of the best buys in Am eri ca. Come in today and see for
yourself.

"THE CLOSER YOU LOOK-THE BETTER
WE LOOK"

843 2667

A thought for the day: Irish
poet, wit and dramatist Oscar
Wilde said, "There is only one
thing in the world worse than
bemg talked about, and that is
not being talked about. "

GET

MORE For Your Trade-In and Take LESS Difference

Phone ( 304 J 773-5503

12

'

Opels

We Will Allow You

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

ACROSS

-

DAN PRICE FIGHTER SAYS:
You CAN Afford A New Ford

Alum1num s1dmg.. roofmg,
complete residential construction. Wrring, plumbing,
elec.
heat1ng ,
krtch en
cabinets etc.
27 Yrs experience m const.
tra de

I

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Plus freight and opt. equipt. Now outselling all brands combined 1975 new
series recently announced .

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

New Year Sale!

Great Savings
for your budget

Smith Nelson Mtrs

1975 Ford Grantda 2 Dr.
Price '369800

JOHNSON'S

WAL L paper hang1n g and al l READ Y MIX CONCRETE de
mter1or f rn 1Sh 1ng Phone 742
liv ered r 1g ht to your pr o1ect
508 1
Fast
and
easy
Free
12 29 121p
es t1 mates Phone 992 32 84
Goegle1n Ready M1 x Co
HOME
Improve me nt
and
M1dd leport Oh10
Repa 1r Serv1 ce Anyth mg
6 JO tfc
f 1xed ar ound t he hom e, from
roof t o basement You W1ll SEWING MACHINE , Repa1r s,
l 1ke our work an d ra t e5
se r v1ce, a l l makes, 99 2 2284
Phone 742 508 1
The Fabr •c Shop, Pomeroy ,
'&lt;.,
1229tf c
Au thonz ed Smg er Sa l es and
- - -__ - - - - - Serv1 ce We Shar pen SC ISSOrS
3 29 lf c

panelmg, carpettng ,
room rental All for $ 18.000 00
COUNTRY HOME _ 7 rooms,

Chnstmas," "Christmas ,''

Sunday for a pre-Christmas
celebration
3 oo-Another Wor l d 3, 4, 15 , Gene ra l Hosptfal 6, 13 ; Price 1s
Mr. and Mrs . Frank Cleland
Right 8, 10 ; Feeling Good 20
and Mrs. Betty Sayre enjoyed a
3:3Q-How to Survive a Marri age 3, 4, 15 , One Life to Live 13,
family gathering of twenty at
La ss te 6, Match Game 8,10; Villa Alegre 33
the home of their parents, Mr .
and Mrs William WoOds at
4 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Bonan za 4; Somerset 15, G1ll 1gan's Is. 6,
Jacksonville Sunday.
Tattletales 8; Sesame St 20, 33 , Movie " Branded" 10 ; M1ke
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush
Douglas 13.
of Columbus are visiting her
4·JD--Bewitched 3, M od Squ ad 6; Lucy Show 8, Bonanza 15.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Owen
5 04}-FBI 3; Merv Griffm 4, Andy Gn ffi t h a, Mtste r Rogers '
Watson.
20,33, Raymond Burr 13.
Mr and Mrs. John Leary and
5 3()-- News 6, Beverly H1llbtllt es 8. Hodg epodge Lodge 20,
Trails W est 15 , Elec Co 33
frumly of Pt. Pleasant were
6·00- News 3,4; ABC News 6, News B, 10, 13, 15 ; Elec. Co 20,
guests of her parents, Mr. and
Adlerian Counseling 33.
Mrs . Frank Cleland, Friday.
6:3()--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13 , Bewitched 6, CBS News
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Swift of
8, 10 , Zoom 20
Columbus
visited Mrs. Swift's
7·DO-Truthor Cons 3, Rush for the Roses 4 ; Bowling for Dollars
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Francis
6; What 's My Line 8; News 10 , New Candid Camera 13;
Wally's Works hop 15; Ohto ThiS Week 20; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You
Moms on Tuesday, Dec ,~.
33.
Mr and Mrs . Roy Riffle were
7. 30--That Good Ole Nashvill e Mus tc 3) Pollee Surgeon 6;
Sunday dinner guests of Miss
$25,000 Pyramid 8; This Is Mus1c 10 , To Tell the Truth 13;
Pall! Shain at Antiqmty.
Untamed World 15, Washington Straight Talk' 20 , Episode
Another guest there was Mrs.
Action 33.
Judy Rmg1sen .
8:00-Born Free 3,4; Rookies 6, 13 ; Gunsmoke 8, 10; Qual tty of
Ltfe 20,33.
Mr. Kenneth Swart of Akron
9 CIO-Movie " Frankenstein T he True Story, " Part 1 3,4, 15 ,
came Fnday to s pend over
GAtor Bowl6, 13 , Maude a, 10, Sch ool for W1 ves 20,33.
Christmas with h1s mother
9:3()--Rhoda 8, 10; The Sess ton 20,33.
Mrs James Swart and th~
10· 00-Med i cal Center 8, Sports 1974 · 10 ; N ews 20 , Wash 1ngton
Alfred Crow family .
trolghl Talk 33
10:3()--Behind the Lines 33
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Hill of
11 :IJO--News 3,4,8, 10. ABC News 33
Add1son were Frtday evening
11 : 30-J o hnn y Carson 3,4,15. Movie " Head " 8, Movte "The
guests of Mr. and Mrs Frank
Reluctant Debutante" 10 , Jana ki 33
Clela nd.
12 ·1J0--News 6,13
Mr and Mrs . Orland Mit12:3()--FBI 6 , Untouchables 13
c hell and Mr . a nd Mrs
1 oo-T OM or row 3, 4
I 30- News 1' .
Leo M1 tche ll
of ParkI

Business Services

~--~--

Racine
Social Events

Great deals on Great Cars

Auto Sales

AUCTIO N ,
Thursday
and 'liS CHEV Vun va sta ndard
Saturday n1ght , 7 p m at
transm 1SS 10n $375 Ph on e 992
Ma son AuctiOn. Hor t on Sf m
70 01
Ma so n . W Va Con s1gnments
11 n 61c
welcome
Phone {304) 773
S471
OL D fu r n , ture ICe bo;.;es, b r ass
1o 3 11 c
beds or com plete househOlds
Wrtfe M 0
Miller , Rt 4
SHOO TIN G match , Rac m e Gun
Pomeroy , Oh iO Ca ll 99'} 7760
Cl ub Sund ay 1 p rn Assorted
10 1 7 4
meats and fa c to r y c ho ke guns
only
J UNK a uto s, complete and
11 22 l f c
del 1ver ed to our yard We p1 c k
up au to bod 1es and buy al l
O I L OF Mmk Co smetiCs "
kmds o t scra p met a l s and
Soun d d 1fferenf? We have a
1ron R1d er s Sa lvage , Sl Rl
comple t e l 1n e that wil l sa tl 5f y
124 , Rt 4, Pomeroy, Oh10
eve n you Cal l us we have
Call 992 5468
sp ec1a l s al l t h e t 1me You'l l be
1o 17 tf c
surpr1sed BROWN'S , 99?
5I I3
CAS H pa 1d for al l makes an d
12 29 !f c
mode l s o f mob ile t1omes
Pho n e area code 6 14 423 9531
4 t J lfc
P ONY lo g1ve away. al so
wanted , deep well pump
Phone 985 38d9
12 29 6tp

Noth1ng ca n ever tak.e away
Th e lovmg a heart hOl ds dear ,
Fond memor 1es lm ge r eve r y
day.
Remembran ces keep h1m near
BAC H ELOR typ e apa rtm ent
Sad l y m1ssed by wde ,
F urn1 shed
Ph one 992 51 31
Emma , chil d ren and grand
c hildren
12 24 Jl c
1961 O LD SMOB I LE Lu xu r y
12 29 Jtp
Mo d el 1n good condlf 1on Sef
o f rad 1al tr res, sue 1R 70 15 1n
IN LOV ING memory of Ralp h
good shape 21 1nch b l ack and
Barton w h o pas se d away ,
Wh1t e te l eV ISIOn amp l 1f 1e r for
D ec 28, 1970
OLD HOUSE 10 Syracuse on 2
a p a
sys tem
F or
rn
n 1ce l o ts, $3 000 W il l t ea r
format1 on, ca ll 992 2508 or 5ee
M1dn1te sta r s shme upon h1s
house down , 1f wanted Phone
at 131 L a urel St, Pomeroy,
g rav e where s l ee p ~ng
Oh iO
992 5898
Bu t we could not save
12 29 7fp
12 29 6tc
A p r eCiou s f r om u s ha s go ne
--------A voi ce we lov eG 1S stil l
1968 G M C Dump Truck, 7500 8 ROOM S and ba th , gas furna ce
A sh a dow over ou r l 1f e IS ca st
se n cs
Tr1 axle
J u st been
and ce ntr a l a 1r Phon e 992
Th e one we lo st 4 years ago
ove r hauled
$3 500
Contac t
700 1
Sa dly m 1ssed by wife ,
L awrence Le e L arkm s Sf,
122261c
H azel , c hildren and grand
R Ul land Oh 10
c hild r en
12 27 61 c
12 29 lt p
BUILDING lo l. 80ft fron ta~e
1963 CADI LL AC $225 Phon e
by 165ft Th e second Jot on l ett
74267 51
on R1verv1 ew Drtve , L.ncol n
12 24 6tp
Hrll. Pomeroy , Oh10 II tn
te r es ted c a l l 992 3230 a ft er 5 p
WE WOULD lik e to t hank a l l th e 19 73 COMET , 6 cyl auto t rans
m
p eople w h o hav e he l ped 1n so
p w
18,500 m lies L 1ke new
10 17 tf c
many way s dur,ng our t1 me of
Ca ll 667 3442 an y l 1me
trouble Today you h ea r of all
11 22 61p
the apathy and r: ru elne ss , but
you ca n ' t 1mag1ne how truly
W A N TED old upr1gh t p1anos,
good and kmd peop l e reallY
any c ond1l1on
Pay1ng $10
ar e We would l1k e to name
ea c h F1r s l floor only Wr11e to
everyone who h as h elp ed , but
VIICjllfl f, ·,ilntd '"
and g1Vf:' d 1r ecrlons fa W11len
1t would be ImpoSSibl e They
ll111ko·r
P1ano Co, Box 186 Sa rd1S ,
know. an d th ey shou l d hav e a
ll1l Mo'c h.r •111 Sll•·•·f
Oh10, 4)946
very g ood feeling A to! or
PollH'I o·; Oh1o l S7oY
12 24 61p
th ese peop l e we d1dn't even
know , but they helped and
we 'l l a lw ays r emember how
NEW LISTING - 6 roo m
k1nd everyo n e was S1g ned,
frame , 3 bedrooms , bath , nat
Mr and M r s Monty P ro ft1 1t
ersburg
s p e nt
Sunday gas , furna ce , city wa t er
an d Ch ildren
a fte rnoon w1th Mr and Mrs. S7500 00 Will sell on ttm e
12294tc

6

6

Notice

.

WE'RE BLOWING OFF THE ROOF!

t/'Rl!li'Y r
)

I

I

J

&gt;&lt; AN D Y FOR' DATE'.S •

"\1, ~ a.rranw-e th e c trcled l etters
to form th e surprise an swer . as

;::=======~==~_''::"~"":":;sted by

~___~
Pria·l!ie::..:S::::
URPIISI
=•::::
NSW::.::!II=hm:.:..____JI

I ....

RM

and

b ath turn
apt ,
en l rance
Mobde
home , c lose to GSI
Mo?ile
Home close to Crown C1ty ,
Call 446 0168 Call 1n for en oon
2~5 If
pr~vate

theabo\e cartoon.

o r xx x J

J ""' '''" PYLON HONOR UPROAR INFECT
' • · llrLf .• , ,
\. ,
.- I hrfi(/Mlm /1J i111 hu f,rrxf - ATYPH OO N

UPS T A IR S furn1shed apart
ment 3 r ooms and bath a l l
446 OJn
626
u t11 111es. pa1d
lh 1rd Ave
29 2 If
MOBILE hom e total eleclnc 2
bedroom S100
3 bedroom
S125 Ph one Jd6 0175 or J46
19 3J
28 6 tf
U N!= UR NI SH ED
e ll i(ot'llC Y
apt
~ 1~~ per
110
Pl1
116
\6 I]

�20 - The Sunday Tunes- Sentmel , Stmdav , Dec. 29, 1974
21 - The Sunday Tunes- Sentmel, Sunday , Dec. 29 , !974

•

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memory
IN LO V IN G rnf'mory o f Amy
Cl ark. wno pas se d away 1()
y ea rs ago toda y. D ec 29, 1964

Television Log
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29,1974
6 00- T hts IS the Lrfe 10
6 Jo-tnternattonal Zone .f L'En fance D11 Ch trst 10
7 00- Thts Week 4, Comm unrque 6 Talkt~ g Hands 8; J erry
Falwe l l 13
7 15- Tele Btble Ttme 4
7 30-Th1s ts t he Ltfe 3 Chur ch by the stde of th e Road 4
Revtval F tres 6; Publ tc Af far ts 8 . Camera Three 10

i
I

8 00- Mormon Cho tr 3; Day of Dt scovet y 4, Gos pel Caravan 6,
Re v Leona rd Repa ss 8, Mr Gospel Gu 11ta r 10, Mamre
Chur ch 10, Mamre Church lJ
B Jo--Oral Roberts 3, Your Hea lt h 4, Kathryn Kuhlman 6, Day
of DtscoVery 8 , Jam es Robrson Presents 10 . Rex Hum bard
13, To Be Announced 15
8 55- Black Cameo 4
9 00-Gospel Si ng rng Jub tl ee 3; Cadle Cha pel 4, Ora l Roberts
10 , Rex Hum bard 6, To Be Announced a , Across !h e Fence

15

9·30-Yours f or the Asking 4 . Wha t Does !he B 1bl e Plainly Say
a, Church SerVICe 10 , Ch r iS t IS Ihe Answer 13, l nstght 15.
10 00--Btg Blue Marbl e 3, Chur ch Servtce 4; Le r oy Jenkms 6 ,
Kathryn Kuhlman a. Mov1e ''You're Never T oo Young" 10,
Jtmmy Swaggarl 13, Faith for Today 15
10 30-Go3 , La ss ie6 , I!J.s tght 4, Publ 1c Affatrs 8, What Does the
8 tb le P lamly Say 13, Thi s 1s the L tf e 15
11 00~ TV Chapel 3, Goober 7 ; Focus on Col umbus 4; Point of
V 1ew 6, Rex Hum bard 8, 15, Rev H en ry Mahan 13
11 30- T h1s IS t he Answer J , Ma ke a W1 sh 13 , Two-Way St reet 4,

Btshop Sheen 6

'

12 00- A t I ssue 3, To Be Announced 4 Bow ltnQ 6 , Face the
N a ti o n 8 , Amer ic an Ltfe Style 10 , Rev Ca l v1n Evans 13,
Sacred H ear t 15, 12 15- 0pen Btb le 15
12 3Q-Meet the Press 3,4, 1~ N FL Pre. Game Show 8, 10 ; Day of
M trac les 13
J·QO-Th e Seed s 3, Bonanza 4 To Be Announced 15, NFC
Cha mptonshtp a,JO , Lower Ltghthouse 13
1 30 Issue s &amp; Allswe r s 6, 13
It Takes r ' Th ie f 3 , Movie " J ourn ey Into Fear'
'4, W al l y 's Wcrksb
.s, M ov1e "The Cobr a " 13
2 30-M , s~mn lmpvs st ble 6 To Be Announced 15
3 QO-NFL Gan ,c- oflt-.e W eek 3
3 15- (o fi l li on Bal l H1ghl1ghts 4

') oc

3 30- Super Bowl Htg hl1ghts 3, Probe · Th e World H1ghl1ghts 3;
The W orld Around Us 4 , J •mmy Dean 6 , Mov•e
" Pygmy I sland 13
4
FC ChampJonshJp3 , 4,15 , , Other People, Other Places 6 ,
T o Be An nounced 8,· M ov 1e 10, A n t tques 33
A 30- ln ner Space 6 , En ca 33
Probe

oo-,.

4 45- Chang,ng Times 13, Makmg T h mg s W ork 33
S OG-Untamed W orld 6, To Be Announced 8, "The Cape tw t own
Affair " 13, Unto the Hil ls 33

5 3()--FBI 6, The Wa y It Was 33
oo- T o Be Announce d a, Vil la Alegre 33

On lh 1S day , Mama dear .
Remem br an c e sh eds another
t ea r
As et c h ed upon I de s wmdow
pane
We see your smll m g f a ce agam
Ou r hearts great yearn fmd s no
r el1ef
Ye t hop e 1S not beyond bel1ef
Tha t w e will c l asp each other's
hand
Somewhere , some l 1me we 11
understand
Sa dl y
m 1ssed
by
ttl e
chlldre n w
12 29 ltp
IN MEMORY of Ernes t D
Jo hn son Who dted a t H olzer
Ho sp 1tal , Dec 28 1970

30- News 6 . World of Surv1val 13,

Zoom

33

7 DO- La st of t he Wi ld 3, L ast of the W1 ld 4, T1me of Man 6 , Wdd

a,

K tngdom 15 , Ammal Wor l d
In the Know 10 ;
Kmgdom 13, Wa lsh's An1ma l s 20 ; Lt/ 1as Yoga &amp; You 33

Wild

For Rent

Auto Sales

Real Estate For Sale

7 30--World of Disney 3, 4, 15,; Apple's Way 8. 10 ; Nova 20,
Untam ed World 13 ; Feeling Good 33 8 0()--Sonny Comedy
Revue 6,13
a 3D-Co lumQo 3,4, 15, Ko1ak 8, 10, Masterpt ece Theatre 20.33.
9 DO-Movte " Judg e Dee In the M onas tery Murders" 6,13

9 3()--CBS News Spectal 8, ; Ftretng Line 20,33 ,

I 1974

Budding Block for Tom orrow 10
10 30-We Think You Should Know 3, News 4,8 ; Po l tee Surgeon
15, Moun tam Scene 33; Htgh R oa d to Adventu r e 10 ; Sound ·
s tag e 20.

11 OG--Ne ws 3, 10, 15, ABC News 13, Sta r Trek 4. My Partner

The Ghost6 , CBS News 8; Janak i 33
11 15- M ov ie " Laura " 8 , CBS News 10 . N ews 13
l1 30--Movte " N1ght After N1g h t" J, Johnny Carson 15 , Face
t he Nat 1on 10, D on Kirshner's R ock Concer t 13
1\ 55~Rose B ow\ B ound 4
12.oo-Johnny Carson 4; Good News 6 , U r banleague 10.
12 3D-ABC News 6 , M ov 1e " The Sh oes o f th e F tsherman" 10.
I IJO--News 13.
1 3Q-Npwc;, tl

MONDAY, DECEMBER 30,1974
6 DO-Sunrise Se mmar 4, Sunrise Semester 10

6 2s--Farm Report 13.
6 3G-Five Mtnutes to Ltve By 4, Ne w s 6 ; Bible Answers 8 ;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10 , Good News
Concerns &amp;
Comments 10 . Good N ews 13

a,

6 ' 35- Columbus Today

6 45- Morn i ng Report 3, Farmtime 10
7 00--Today 3,4,15,; Bug s B unny 6 ; CBS N ews 8, 10, Fa rmer 's
Daughter 13
7 30--New Zoo Revu e 6, Etughty Days 13
8 oo-Captain Kangaroo 8 , J eff's Collie 6; Popeye 10 , New Zoo
Revue 13 , Sesame St 33.
8 25- Capt. Kangaroo 10, Jack Lalanne 13
a. S5- News 13

9:00- AM 3; Paul Dtxon 4, Wtld W1ld West 6. Bullw1nkl e 8,
M ov ie " The Challenge" 13; Phil Donahue IS ; Mi ster Rogers

33
9 2s--Chuck Wh 1te Reports 10.

9 30- N o t For W omen Only 3, Hazel 8 , T attletales 10, Zoom 33

10 IJO--Name That Tune 3, 15, Company 6, Joker's Wtld 8, 10 ,
Feeling Good 33.
10 3Q-Winning Streak 3, 15 ; Phd Donahue 4 , Gambit a, 10

11 IJO--H1gh Rollers 3,4, 15 , Money Ma ze 6, Now You See 118.10 ,
Password All Siars 13; Caught m the Acl33
11 3()-- Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Brady Bunch 13 ; Lucy Show
6 , Love of Life a, 10, Sesame St. 33

11 55- CBS News 8, Dan lmel's Wor ld 10
12 IJO--Jackpot 3, 15, Password All Stars 6, Bob Braun's 50 50
club 4, N ews 8, 10,13
12 3G-Cei ebr ity Sweepstake s 3, 15, Spli t SEcond 6, Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 , Aft ernoon w 1th 0 M 13, To Be Announced

•33.
12: 45-E iec Co 33
12 55-NBC News 3,15
I IJO--News 3. Al l My Ch 1ldren 6, 13 . Phtl Dona hue 8, Young &amp;
the Res tless 10 , Not For Women Only 15.
1: 15- To B e Announ ced 33
I 30- Jeopardy 3,4, Let's Make A Dea l 6, 13, As the Wrorld
Turn s 8, 10, Nova 33
2· QO--Oays o f Our l1ves 3,4, 15. $10,000 Pyramid 6, 13, Gu 1drng

L1ght 8, lif.
2 3()--Doctors 3,4,15 , B1g Showdown 6,13, Edge of N1gh t 8,10;
Soundstage 33.

Card of Thanks

TEAFORD

''

~

IN THE COUNTRY - 5 acres
C tt B df d
rl
ra or ·
and a 2 bedroom hom e w 1th fu ll
Mr. and Mr s Rock Young basement
$6500 00 .
and Andy of Columbus spen t Reasonable down pa y m ent
Sunday and Monday w1th her 33 ACRES - 3 bedroom s, ele
parents, Mr . and Mrs Martm furnace , Oh 1o Powe r, built in
w ·I
stove. doubl e sin k , cabinets ,
1 Coxen.

,..c ity

Mr and Mrs. Bob Wtnes and
By Mrs. Francis Moorls
fam1ly and Mr . and Mrs. Net!
The annual Christmas Baker and daughter of
mee ting of the Booster Sunday
I
School Class of F1rs t Baptist Co umbus spent the weekend
wtth the1r mother. Mrs Anna
Church was held at the home of
Wtnes celebrating Christmas
Mrs Gretta Simpson wh1ch on Sunday
was extens1vely decorated for
Mr and Mrs . Frank Cleland
the occas10n and Mrs Isabel entertamed with a pre Stmpson was cO-hostess. The
.
meehng opened with the song, Chnstmas famtl y dmner
Tuesday evemng, Dec. 24.
"0 Come, All Ye Fa1thful" Those present were Mr and
followed by Scripture, Luke
Mrs. Steve Clela nd and sons,
2· 1-15 and prayer by Mrs
Mr and Mrs . John Leary and
B1kacsan. Readings, brought
frumly , Mrs . Evelyn Young
and read by members included
and sons , J . F and Aaron, Mr.
"Good Cheer/"'the Chnstmas and Mrs. Jeffrey Hill.
Sp1rit," " The Most Pnceless
Mr;; Anna Wmes and Karen
Gifl1s Chrtstmas, " "The Real
spent Chnstmas w1th Mr . and
Christmas Story," " The Gift of
Mrs Steve Cleland

water,

' $25,500.00
INCOME -

and

m tnera ls ,

a room s,

2 baths,
a nd a 4

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
On State Rt . 124 , 'h mi. from
Route

7

by .pass

towards

Rutland .
Ph, 992 -5682 or 992 -7121
All Mechanical Work
Open Mon . Sat.

-

8A.M. 6PM
~

4 n1ce BRs , bath , db I sink,
carport.

2

outbutldtngs

Ntce

Garden $16,500.00
NO MONEY DOWN- a lmost
new 3 bedroom s, bath, gas
furnace , closets , stove and
refrigerator . One acre Only

$17,500.00.

" The
L1ttle
Star ,"
''RedlScovermg Christmas, ''
" A Child ' s Faith, " "'Tis
Chrtstmas," " The Spirit of
Christmas ," " The Fnendly
Beasts " In the busmess
sesswn a nominating committee named was Helen
S1mpson, Dorothy Badgley ,
and Vera Beegle. The meeting
closed w1th the Lord 's Prayer
In
u mson
During
the
fellowship hour , gifts from
under a lighted ChrlStmas tree
were exchanged and the
hostess es served delic10us
refreshmen ts to fourteen
members
Mrs . Mattie Circle was
adm1tted at Pleasant Valley
Hospital , Pt Pleasant, W.
Va.
Mr,
Owen Watson 1c::
conftned to his home w1th
til ness
Mrs . Lavinia S1mpson has
been 111 at her home for two
weeks
Mr . and Mrs . William Lake,
Lori and Sean , of Columbus
V!Sited their grandparents, Mr
and

Mrs.

Francis

Morns

J

The Almanac
By United Press International
TOday 1s Sunday, Dec. 29, the
363rd day of 1974 with two to
follow
PO.MEROY-8·10
EThe moon IS between its full Almost new home, 3 BR with
phase and last quarter .
double closets , love ly kit ·
The morning stars are Mars c hen, dm1ng R , large livtng
and Saturn
R, H.W. floors wtth lots of
carpettng,
full basem ent has
The evening stars are Merlarge
re
c
reatton
room ,
cury , Venus and Jupi~r .
shower, utiltty R Carport,
Those born on thLS date are Wi th s torage build1ng YOU
under the ~1 gn of Capncorn.
MUST SEE THIS. $27,000
Andrew Jolinson, 17th presi- REEDSVILLE - Rt 124 - 9
dent of the Umted States, was ACRES lovely building sites,
born Dec. 29, 1806 Th1s 1s mostly tillable, TP water ,
c lose to recreat1on area
actress Mary Tyler Moore's $5,800
38th birthday
45
RUTLAND AREA On thLS day tn his tory:
ACRES - Fen ced, stocked
In 1848, gas hghts were pond, good spring , m1neral s,
mstalled at the Wlute House for lots of bu1ld1ng sites . $11,000
POMEROY
Just
the first time.
renovated - 4 BR , 2 baths,
In 1851, the flrst Young Men's
R. sewing R , car.
Chrisl!an Association chapter IPOiin&lt;J, oan&lt;&gt;ll;lno. ltle, full
opened in Boston .
w1th recreat1on
In 1940, Naz1 Germany
workshop ,
porches ,
unleas hed one of its most IQ•traoe. patio , double lot .
violent bombing raids on
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
London.
HOME , LET US SELL IT
In 1972, a jumbo jetliner, an FOR YOU
L1011, crashed near Miami, L_.!!;!:!;~~~ill&gt;!__ __j
Fla., k1lhng 99 persons. Seventy-seven survived.

HElL
RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Complete plumbing &amp;
heating service and
general sheet metal
works.
F r e e
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992 -3995
or 992-5700

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

_,

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

Real Estate For Slile
I F I NTERESTED 1n own rn g a
n1ce h ome 1n M 1dd l eport t hat
will pay for It self , ca ll 949 4984
a fter 5 p m any day Can be
seen by appo 1ntment
12 27 3t c

DOZER wor k , land cleanng by
!h e ac r e, ho ur ly o r contra c t
Farm ponds , roads, etc
Lar ge dozer and opera l or
W1t h ove r 20 years ex
per1ence Pu llms E x cavat1n g
Pom eroy , Oh 10
Phone 992
2478
12 19 tfc

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

WILL t r 1m or cu t tr ees or
Sh r u bbe ry ,
clean
out
basements, a tt1 cs, etc 949
3221 or 742 4441
12 15 26 t c

Strout Realty
NEW - All elec, ca rpeted , i
BR ,

air

$17,500.00

RUTLAND -

condlttoning,

3 bedroom

home, ba sement, all electric,

$18,500 00.

ACREAGE NEEDED - We
have buyer s.

Happy New Year
To All!!
307 Spring Avenue
Pomeroy
992-2298
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

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

CREMEAN S CONCRE T E de
liv e red Mond ay
th rou g h
Saturday
a nd
evenmgs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 tfc

AmiiTIOI
We talk to you

During our all out Inventory Re duction of New &amp; Used Trucks and Cars .
As much as $1 , 000.00 off on New Cars, Used Cars &amp; Truc ks for qu ick
sale . Your pn ze will be our low pr_ice.

CA RPET lnSt allaltOn, S1 25 per
yar d P hone R 1chard West ,
12 24 261p
SEPTIC
T A NK S
c l eaned
Modern Sa n1tat 10n , 992 3954 or
992 7349
9 18 ffC

.

PIANO
tunmg and r epa1 r
Charles Scot t, 992 3716
12 13 32t p

Carrier Wanted

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

C BRADFOR D , Auct iO neer
Complete Serv1c e
Phon e 949 382 1 or 949 316 1
Rac1ne, Oh 10
Cntt Bradford
s 1 tf c

In

NEW HAVEN

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

SE PTIC tanks, excava tin g
du mp tru ck Phone 742 3'rd2

Agee or Older

20Z~tc

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

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille
Charcoal grey with leather interior, full power
equipment, AM-F M stereo, new steel radial
tires, climate control ai r conditioning ..-

'"
"

74 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

--·
"

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

'"

EXCELSIOR Salt Works , East
Mam St, Pomer oy All k1nd s
of salt , water pell e t s, water
nuggets, block salt and own
OhiO R1ver Salt Phone 992
3891
65uc

Apollo yellow, brown viny l top, Climate
Control air conditioning, T&amp; T wheel, AM·FM
stereo &amp; tape, new w -s -w tires.

·-

..,

Choice $7 500

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER .:

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

dancer
Dan•sh 1sland
Declare
Stage wh 1sper
Abstra c t
betng
St•gmattzed

137 D1tlseed
139 Kna ve at ca rd s
140 Cron1e s
(colloq l
141 Venom
143 Levantme
vessel
145 Golf mound
146 Make ready
148 Adorned w1th
panelmg
,\
150 Sea nymph s
152 G1rl s name
153 Horse's neck
harr
154 So lar d1sk

18 Go 1n
20
23
25
27

Ne~rro w open 1ng

~

90 Bound boo k ~
91 Pro ve r b
.:

Mor e co mp etent 77
Ne ck p1 eces
92 R es1du e
:
6 Wtngs
78
Pt erce
93 Enthus1asm •
10 Underga rm en t
80
Assert
94 Sym bol l o r ,.~
14 Th1cket
81
28 M ale swa n s
t ellu num
"'
19 Charges
31 M erg anser
96
Son
of
A
da
n\:
21 Farm bu1ldmg
82
33 Temporary b e d s 97 M elod y
22 Yearnings
84 Ed1t
100 N o te o f sca le-:
36 E)&lt;;plted
23 Unproduct1v e
86 M ore obese
38 M an's name
102
W eak food 24 Ceremon tes
87 Restore
40 Young g 1rl
Mr P res1denw':
105
26 Pours off
strength
4 1 Workman
109
Mans
na m e "
28 Sat1sf1ed
89 Th e kava
43 Beauty slang !
1 12 C ravats
""
29 Poe m
9 2 Showy flo wer
45 J omed
1 13 Godd ess o r ..:
30 Vessel
95 Choose
46 Gtrl s name
you th
32 Apport ion
98 Part of s t ove
47 Pos se ss1ve
114
All
33 Jacket
99 PunctuatiOn
156 Seal
pronoun
116 Collec ti ons
34 Pedal d1g1t
mark
157 Chem •ca l
49 Bespatter
o f facts
35 Sp 1kenard
10 1 Squanders
com pound
51 Fall 1nto d1suse
1 18 Q,. o f Celebes
37 Domestica te
103 Brother of
158 War god
52 Re tur n
120 lng red 1en 1
39 Anctent
Ja cob
159 Rage
53 Emm e t s
12 1 Severs
40 rennJs strokes 104 Propos1t1on
160 South Af11 c ;;~n
54 Vesse l
I n name on ly
122
41 German titl e
105 Conflag ration
Du tch m en
56 Uncove red
Afr1
can
123
42 Depos•ted
106 Not e of sca le
stadtum sea t s
ante lo p es
44 Stupefy
107 Greetmg
DOWN
59 Att acked w1th
125 Form o f
46 Small rugs
108 Erase lprmtrng 1
artillery
m su ran c e
47 Provtdes crew
110 Tran sg ress
1 D ress protector 60 l ease
12 6 Extras
48 Conduct
11 1 Span1sh art•cle
2 Pertatmng to the 61 Footless
127 Sto ry
·''
50 Small g lass
112 R ocky hills
br1de
63 Stunted
129 Peru se
for w 1ne
113 Ma ss1 ve
3 True to t h e fac t 65 Frnal
131 Sower
52 Peel o f lr u 1t
115Sungod
4 Old Fren ch c orn 67 Cyprmo 1rJ
132 Fru 1t
53 Hebrew month 11 7 G~rl' s name
5 Ha rvest
f 1sh
133 Journey forth
55 Co lorles s
119 Compass po1nt
6 H ebrew month 69 Behold'
~4 Chmbmg p l an ts
57 Chmese m1l e
120 Ireland
7 Young boy
70 Make am end s fo r 136 Hasten s
58 Organs of
12 1 Un 111n g w tth
72 St r~ct
138 T na ls
8 Reg 1on
heanng
m o rtar
9 S urround
74 Roman gbd s
140 Young sa lmon
59 TWISt
124 l 1Q u1d mea su re 10 Chutch counc1l 76 Lega l sea l
14 I Weather
60 E)&lt;;clamat,on
126 Wtnter v eh 1cle 11 Latv 1an nat1v e
letbbr 1
tndt ca tor
62 Bow
127 Metallic
12 Tho se hold tJag
77 G1ve ex treme
14 2 Bri st le
64 Dete ct ive •
c yl1nder
off1c e
unc l!on to
144 Baby s b e d
I slang ~
128 Powerfu l
13 Po stsc ript
79 D u t ch l awn
147 Amer1can
66 Note of scale
per sons
l abbr I
83 D evou red
essav 1st
68 Greek lette r
130 Cn es hke dove 14 Jargo n
85 Oes1re With
148 Eq ual1t y
69 Affect1on
132 S 1m1ans
15 Worthless
eage r ness
149 La~r
70 Tear
133 Doom
le avtng
86 Ward off
15 1 The self
71 Marble s
134 rmy amou n t
16 Sham
87 Garm ent
153 Parent ~ coll oq 1
73 Covered w1th
135 Before
17 Spamsh t1lle
88 Bad
155 Symbol f or
beads
menttoned
l pl l
89 Thr ee t oed s lo th
n1ton

992-5342

Open Eves. Til6 -

Til 5 P . M.

111 Court St., Pomeroy
Phone 992 -2156
CA RHO P wanted
app ly m
person at
Crew ' s Steak.
House
12 29 10 t c

Sale s Help Wanted
A N OH I O O IL CO
off e rs
PLENTY OF MONEY p l us
c a sh bonuses fnnge bene f1 IS
t o m a tur e 1n d tv1du al
1n
Pome roy area R egard l ess ot
ex perten ce a1rmall G
1
Re ad ,
Pr es,
AmeriCan
Lu br 1can ts Co
Box 696 ,
Day t on , Oh1o 45401
12295 tp

tran s, a1 r c ond ,
v myl t op, 4 dr

500 E. MAIN Sl
For Sale

For Sale

ELECTROLUX Swee p er de l uxe
model
Comp l ete w1lh al l
c l ean1 n g attac hme nts and
uses paper ba gs s t ,gh t ly u sed
but c l ean s and looks l tke new
Wrll se ll lor SJ7 25 cash or
terms availa ble Ph one 992
7755
12 18 lfc

V 8 4 door, au toma tiC tran smi SS IOn . power st eenng , and
power brakes, viny l 1ntenor, vtny l roof. red fmt sh , good
while wa ll t1r es, rad 10, fac t ory a 1r

ST EREO RADI O 8 tra c k ta pe
com b,nat1on
am fm rad 1o
Balnn ce $ 109 sa or t erms Cal l
99'} J96S
1'2 2J lfc
A K C 1 yei'lr old lr1 s h Sett er
e)(ce ll en t pel
$60 Howard
8 1r CI1f 1Ci d
Pholle 74? 59 3'2
12 i &lt;t ti c

CtiJYri\IN F:I\SY
AT ANY RATE CA5Y 1 I&lt; E C O ~\M EN J !I'

YL'IJ A5 MY MOS.T

TIW~fl:l)

TIW Ut!U:O

~HOO T ER

WITH M Y '50"-' 1.'.1 LAI'I,
WA5-H TUSSG A5 VOUR BA CK UP MMJ'

~ Fflc l&lt; lHJ o.:&gt; l" ~

'" 1 •

..,. 1""4riO JJ r \1

H /1 PF~

t,J -"','1)

1972 DODGE .•.••.................. ,_ ..s2495
Da rt Cus tom , 4 door, local 1 owne r ca r J I B V 8 en g m e,
automa t1 c tra n smi SS IOn an d power steer mg , a ~r con
dti10n1ng , v inyl tn m . v myl top, ra dm , wh1te wall It r es.
gold ftnt sh

POMEROY, OHIO
For Sale

CLOSE OUT on new Z1g Zag
sew m g mach m es For sewmg
str e t c l1 fab n cs bu tt onhol es
$ l 'i e a c h
Hols te1n
fancy d es 1gn s, e lc
P a 1n l P t GS
Her ef ord he 1t er, $ 175 On e to n
s l tg h t l y bl em1shed Ch ot ec o f
1% 5 F ord tr u c k 6 c y l 1nder
carry ,n g case or sew1 n g
$550 C W R1ce phone 949
s t an d $49 BO cash or t erms
21 IS
avat l ab l e Phon e 99 2 775 5
12 796 tp
12 18 t f c

I HA l

"'; H ~I I&gt;.

• J!IN I ! l •-Hi\1..:
IF H, \ •_,. A(\. E PI !&lt;I'

f

ll E"P E,~T

F IREW OO D
7 1/ 5387

lor

sa l e

Phone

1:177 Jt c

1971 CHEVROLET 2 TON ......'3495

DOBE RMA N p1n c her p u p s,
t.K C Rcq Call 533 0761
1'1'17 3t c

Cab &amp; ch assis - 102" Cab to axle , 350 V 8 eng m e,
15,000 lb 2 sp eed rear ax le, good 875x20 ftr es, clean
P,

DUE IO t o tUI dl 5abi i i1Y mu sl
se ll co mpl et e f lock N lll e ~ e g
Su ff o lk e w es 1 yr old bred
ancl pa p ered
One Sutto lk
rum
non rf'lfl ted
Cal l 919
3073 &lt;my t un e
12 'l? 6tc
W il li no sod a t
all no c ~ rp e t s c l ea ned wilh
B lu e Lu st re
R ent e1ec l r1C
shilm pooe r ~I
B,lk.f'r Fu r
n 1ture Compa ny
12 7? Jt c

HAPPY NEW YEAR TO 1ILU

SIJH

IM "' Oi'Jt1 RET&gt;
f3.Ur J Ml • a
~&lt;'l !' ~ A T WIIAr~
HI E Jl5_!._~ )

SPINE1
CO N SOL E PIANO
W,lnlcd R es ponsible party to
pu r chase sp 1net p1ano on low
mo n1t1t y payment s Ca n be
see n
l oca ll y
W r 1te
R ep re se ntat1ve Ken Bay l ess.
P 0
Bo)( 216 Sh r&gt; l byvll l e
lnd1an a ,161 76
17 27 7tp

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126 Open Eves. Till 8 Pomeroy

&amp; N day ol d or st ar ted
L eg h orn pul l ets Aoth fl oor or
c age
qrown
ava ilab l e
hou s 1n g
.Jnd
Pou ltr y
auloma l1 on Mod ern Pou lt ry,
399 W Main Pomeruy . 99?

1973 STA R CRAF T 74 fl t rav el
trail er Ph one 88 :7 JJ91
12 29 5tp
:;REA T DANE PUP S 8 we ek. s
ol d $50 Phone 99 7 5718 alter 6
p m

I :7 29 61p
H : RE FOR D Hol st e1n Cal f 1S 10
days old A lso 352 Fo r d mo l or
and f l a t hea d 6 c yl Dodg e
mo tor Ph on e an 2353
12 295t c
ITI Z E N S N af 1ona 1 Ba nK will
offer t or sa te al thetr o ff 1ce tn
Midd le port , OhiO l Oam Ja n
8 197 5 a 19Ml Dodg e Corne t
500 7 dr h I , Scr1a l No
P7 3f: 8G 108629
111 9 l t c
NA L NUT s tereo rad10, AM
FM
8 t rack t ape com
b.n at10n Ba la nce $110 69 or
te r m s Cal l 997 ]965
12 J lf c
:;ROCERY bu s,n ess for sale
Bu ild111 9 fo r sn lc or lease
Phon e 77 3 5618 from ll 30p m
to 10 p m tor a ppo1ntm ent
3 10 tt c
I\IA L NT U st ero rad10, AM F M
8 tr ack tape comb m ahon
Bal ancc$107 45or te r ms Call
99 2 3965
I I 19 lf c

DEAR D.:
Tell hun the truth: you don't want a back seat romance .
Besides, December 1s too cold for parking.
H you can't apply the brakes w1thout puttmg him in neutral,
you're e1ther a poor driver, or he 's too racy for you. --SUE

9 57 CHEVY pa rt s
N EW
Lakewood tr ac t 1on bars, h1
1a cke r a1r shoc k. s, hook er
he ade r s, W1 th 3' co ll ec tors for
small b lock
Call 992 3496
a ft er 6 p m BES T OF F ER
10 I? tf c
YOU I&lt;'E,O.LIZE )CO l.t..
HAVE TO eE PuT

A R corn for sa l e
?481 or 388 9991

P hon e

For Rent

For Rent

F UR NI S H E D
apar tm e nt .
ut ili ti eS furni Shed
SUi tab l e
tor two wo rk 1ng men or
r e t.r ed coup l e L 1v1ng room
kll chcn , shower and ba t h On
ma1n highway , Mason , 'W Va
Phone 7?3 5 1&lt;1 7
10 27 li e

"'A L K E R coon ll ou nd , Le onard
1 D ailey L ong Bottom
12 27 3tp

~.: Maybe
aahe

s~ge

advertised

like a person.
Kuhl's Bargain Center

WMP0/1390

PERSONAL to "Not Quite Ready Yet":
Consider Rhoda :
A nurse asked, " Did you use on oral contraceptive before

"At Caution Light, Rt. 7" '

niarrtage?"

ON YOUR DIAL

Phone 667-3858
OPEN WED. THRU
SU
'A.M.. 7 P.M.

Tuppers Plains, Oh1o

'

1'1'1" ln u t'il ~ 't1:ur •· •,, n.l l ll '&lt;' 11'1

'

'.

l

' ........_ _ _ _ ______ __ - - -

.l....i._....__.~.--"--_

: Rhoda : "Yes."
, Nurse: "What kind ?"
: RIWda: "Well ... I said 'No' a lot."
--Okay?-HELEN AND SUE

J

Plt.145.9374- 245·5021
We rent mobile home lots,
not just a plac e to park your
home We have ITIOre to offer
than any mob1le t.-ommun1ty
1n Southtas.tern Ohio

P

m

12 5 lf c

2

BE 0 ROOM tr a il er.
on l y Phon e 99'2 3324

adull 5

MOB I LE HOME CLO SE TO
GS I
Ca l l &lt;1111 0 168
Call 1n
for enoon
lO ! tf

15 NEW Regency Inc A p t
bed r ooms c arp et ed to tal
electri C localed on Sa·nd Hill
Road PI P l easant P" 675
510,1 or 675 53B6
269 II
1/)(60 3 BR Mobile Home on
pr~vate lo t 111 c lly l1mlf s 1i150
per mo Ca ll J46 9710
303 6

HOU SE 11 room s and ba th. n 1ce
ya rd and dr 1veway
A lso
fu r n1 shed a pt Call 99 '1 7780 or F URN apartm ent , 3 rooms and
b &lt;l th m Cl l'f Air 446 1703 or
9?2 ] 432
Jd6 1522
12 12 tt c
303 6

2 BR mobile hom e U pp er R t 1
446 0008
301 If
SMAL L fi r s ! lloor Bradbu ry
e ff 1C 1en cy ilpar lm e nl
Al l
ut!11 11es pa1d 729 Second Ave
J46 09 57
300 tf
LARGE lra ii~C r space on Rl 35
one mil e t rom hOSPi t al d46
3805

27 41f

3

[J

'
he needs an ego trip at thi.s
of his life. Let him
work it out his own way. Possibly he 1sn t as repuls1ve to others
is to an ex-girlfriend, who really MIGHT be a tittle jealous.
...!HELEN

Contact Newt Jones
Rodney -Cora Rd.
Rodn ey , Ohto

UN FU R NI SH E D
h ouse,
4
room s and bath 1650 Lm coln
H e1gh t s Phon e 992 387&lt;1
11 14 tt c

2 BEDROOM tr aile r a t corner
o1
B r oadway and
Elm
M i ddl epo r t
No p ets or
c h1ldren Ca ll 992 2580 after 6

BR
t railer
LOU'I I ed at
C h esh ,r e Oh10 A 1r c on d Ph
~?S 5&lt;13 5
303 6

Quat! Creek
Mobile Community
&amp;. Sales

FUR NI SH ED apt A dult s on ly
Midd l eport
Phon e 997 387&lt;1
I I 11 lie

tt n sc ramhl ~ these rour Jumhl es,
one leiter to each square, t o
form four ord1nary word s.

E.S.B.:
.
Ego trippers hardly ever llsten to ex-gll'lfnends, because
they peg them as jealous.
: Let this guy learn the hard way. --SUE

Does no1 apply to layaways

?

PRIV ATE meet1ng room l or
any organ,za t,on , phone 992
] 975
3 11 tfc

;..E.S.B.

On all Cash Sales of
Used Appliances &amp;
Used Furniture thru
December 29.

For Rent

3 and .1 RO OM t u rn 1shed and
unfur ni s h e d
apa rtm en ts
Phone Q92 543!1
4 12 lfc

1RA ILER space 2 m iles f rom
Pomeroy R 1 143, Ph one 992
5858
10 27 li e

adull s, no
ap T Jol1n
soutt1 o f
7
172961D

FUR NI SHED mob il e hom e l or
ren l
A l bf'rl Hil l
R,l ( lnC
Oh 10 Ph one 9.19 126 1
1279 61(

COU N TRY Mob il e Hom e Park
Rt 33 l en m1 le!'; n or t h of
Pom er oy
L arq P lot s w 1th
c on cr e te pat 10 S Sid ewa lk s
runner s
and
o lf
st reet
p;;trk1ng
A lso
spac es for
smv ll tr ade rs Ph one 997 7479
7 21 t f c

12 17 tfc

found

4 RM apt furnt shed
drunk s, A lso , J rm
Sheel s
3 m 1les
M i ddl eport on R t

" RM tu rn 1sh ed a pt close t o
Pow e ll s Sup er Vi! l u pho n e
992 J65S
II 20 ti c

]bl

12 20 7tc

AWAY, FQSDICI(
20 012 30QU16T YIEN&lt;S
AT BIABBt..IHG ~
MAY COOL 10....1 OFF

ca b

350 V 8, au to , P S, rad1o , 15,500 miles, loca l
own er , tires s.,ow l ittle wear , gra y fini sh , spotl ess
Interior

1229 li e

UTI'Lf OflPIIAN ANN IE:

SOl id

00 • • • • • 00 • • •

7 164

By Helen and Sue Hottel

I

1973 CHEVROLET.•
'2995
CUSTOM DEWXE, 8' FLEETSIDE

r ROM wall 10

H

•

20%
Discount

1971 MATADOR ........................s1595

Now Service is Building Our

PH. 992-2174

Generation Rap

My e~-boyfriends thmks he's the All American Body
ileautiful. That's the reason I broke up with hun. It began during
iimuner vacation. When he returned, he was on th1s ego tnp and
ever since he's been sickening.
~ He's so hung up on his "super masculimty" that he s tarts
(ights with guys and tries to start up with every girl he sees
•
•
:.. and he isn't even good looking 1
". I try to tell him he's making a fool of h111lSelf, but he thmks
f•m joking. Slould 1 give up and let him learn the hard way - by
tosuig all his friends? Honestly, I don't even LIKE him any more.

autom a t1 c tran s, power
steer mg , radt o loc a l I owner &amp; only 15 500 m il es g r ey
l1 n1 sh , delu)(e v tn y l 1n ter 1Qr

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

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

p

8' F lee t s1d e Ptckup , 350 V 8

tr a ns, v1ny l lop, radto

We BUJit Our Business on Serv1ce Business .

Mobile Homes For Sale

~DEAR RD.:
,
Seems to me that a fellow with any kind of imaginat1on could
:-come up with a dozen ideas for inexpensive dates - unless he's
:got a onl-lrack mind.
Maybe you should wear a sing, "No Parking Without a
:Perrnit.''-HELEN.

Local 1 owner car &amp; on ly '10 000 mtl es automnt ~e tra n s,
rad to wh1te wa ll t 1res, vmyl 1n tenor, sha rp a s a tack
Orange fm1 sh

$795

2 SMALL dogs , one dark brown MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE
named Tammy , lh e oth er 2 BE DRO O M 10..&lt;55 mobtl e
male l ig ht brown Los! in area
home ,
new
ca rp e t
an..ct.
of K 1ngsbury, r ew ard offered
washer . furn 1sh ed $3500 oo
Phone 992 5629
Phone 992 7d39
12 27 6tp
12 26 31c

•

5,000

1973 DATSUN 1200 2 DR. CPE... s2250

•1295

Sat.

He Wa.Dts Free Parking?
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I've been dating this 17-year-old guy for four me eks. He
promises to take me out a lot , as soon as he gets the money. I can
understand his positlon because he doesn't have a job, and I don 't
mind. We really dig each other.
But every time we've gone out, we've just parked, and he
goes farther than I really want him to go. He tells me constantly
that he loves me, but I'm afrrud he's JUSt usmg me.
How do I tell him to slow down on our relat10nsh1p w1thout
puttmg him into neutral ? - D.C.T.

2 Door, 4 speed t ran sm iSSIOn , bucker sed f s, rad1 o
ac tun l miles, orange ftn1 sh , vmyl 1nt enor

4 Dr , V 8, P S , P B , a ut o

radto ,

See one ot these courteous salesmen ;
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

- ------- ---

CREAM P UFF

1967 Electra 225

P B , auto

Pomeroy

llAP:

or previous
specials.

The Daily Sentinel

PS,

V 6.

"You 'l l l t ke Our Qua l tty Way of Dotng Bu s m ess"

Lost

.4 d oor, 1 owner car, a nd on l y 10,400 miles, V 8 eng1ne w 1th
automatt c power st eenng, power brakes fa ct or y atr,
tmtcd glass d el ux e body and w h eel opentng moldtng s
sa ndston e VI nyl seats beaul 1fu l dr~rk r ed 11n1 sh TRU LY M

1973 CHEVROLET C-10 ...............s2995

M'! I&lt;' E"C(.)"VoiE io.Jf'
1\J 1\) .'J .

Cad1llac. Old smob1le
GMAC Financtng Ava1lable

1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA.·-··-····'4295

Red coupe , 4 spd , floor
shtft, radio .

·~-

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29 1974

PASSENGER CARS

Middleport

Help Wanted

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

75 B tb l1 c al

992-2196

3rd Ave.

SEVERAL NEW '74 CHEVROLET

1971 VW Karman Ghia

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.

______________

EXCAVAT IN G, doz er , loader
and backhoe work , sept1c
tanks mstalled , dump tru c ks
and lo boys fo r h.re , will haul
f ill d 1rt , lop so il , l tmestone &amp;
gravel , Call Bob or Roge r
Jeffers , day phon e 992 7089 ,
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 ttc

I Pontiacs I
HAPPY
NEW YEAR

'

Great Used Car New Year Offers

WE INVITE COMPARISON

N i::IGLE R BUILDING SUP
PLY FO R REMODELIN G
A ND K IT CH E N CABINE TS
CALL GUY NEIGH LER,
RACINE , OH I O PH O NE 949
3604
12 19.-26
. ._, tc

Onall NEW 74C HEVI ESi n s tock.'h to&gt;/,ton
PICKUPS 1 Ton Chevy Van

A nice way to take your family through 1975 is in a full sized
Pontiac Catalina. Dollar for dollar , Catalina is co n s i ~re d to
be one of the best buys in Am eri ca. Come in today and see for
yourself.

"THE CLOSER YOU LOOK-THE BETTER
WE LOOK"

843 2667

A thought for the day: Irish
poet, wit and dramatist Oscar
Wilde said, "There is only one
thing in the world worse than
bemg talked about, and that is
not being talked about. "

GET

MORE For Your Trade-In and Take LESS Difference

Phone ( 304 J 773-5503

12

'

Opels

We Will Allow You

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

ACROSS

-

DAN PRICE FIGHTER SAYS:
You CAN Afford A New Ford

Alum1num s1dmg.. roofmg,
complete residential construction. Wrring, plumbing,
elec.
heat1ng ,
krtch en
cabinets etc.
27 Yrs experience m const.
tra de

I

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Plus freight and opt. equipt. Now outselling all brands combined 1975 new
series recently announced .

REMODELING &amp; CONST.

New Year Sale!

Great Savings
for your budget

Smith Nelson Mtrs

1975 Ford Grantda 2 Dr.
Price '369800

JOHNSON'S

WAL L paper hang1n g and al l READ Y MIX CONCRETE de
mter1or f rn 1Sh 1ng Phone 742
liv ered r 1g ht to your pr o1ect
508 1
Fast
and
easy
Free
12 29 121p
es t1 mates Phone 992 32 84
Goegle1n Ready M1 x Co
HOME
Improve me nt
and
M1dd leport Oh10
Repa 1r Serv1 ce Anyth mg
6 JO tfc
f 1xed ar ound t he hom e, from
roof t o basement You W1ll SEWING MACHINE , Repa1r s,
l 1ke our work an d ra t e5
se r v1ce, a l l makes, 99 2 2284
Phone 742 508 1
The Fabr •c Shop, Pomeroy ,
'&lt;.,
1229tf c
Au thonz ed Smg er Sa l es and
- - -__ - - - - - Serv1 ce We Shar pen SC ISSOrS
3 29 lf c

panelmg, carpettng ,
room rental All for $ 18.000 00
COUNTRY HOME _ 7 rooms,

Chnstmas," "Christmas ,''

Sunday for a pre-Christmas
celebration
3 oo-Another Wor l d 3, 4, 15 , Gene ra l Hosptfal 6, 13 ; Price 1s
Mr. and Mrs . Frank Cleland
Right 8, 10 ; Feeling Good 20
and Mrs. Betty Sayre enjoyed a
3:3Q-How to Survive a Marri age 3, 4, 15 , One Life to Live 13,
family gathering of twenty at
La ss te 6, Match Game 8,10; Villa Alegre 33
the home of their parents, Mr .
and Mrs William WoOds at
4 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Bonan za 4; Somerset 15, G1ll 1gan's Is. 6,
Jacksonville Sunday.
Tattletales 8; Sesame St 20, 33 , Movie " Branded" 10 ; M1ke
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush
Douglas 13.
of Columbus are visiting her
4·JD--Bewitched 3, M od Squ ad 6; Lucy Show 8, Bonanza 15.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Owen
5 04}-FBI 3; Merv Griffm 4, Andy Gn ffi t h a, Mtste r Rogers '
Watson.
20,33, Raymond Burr 13.
Mr and Mrs. John Leary and
5 3()-- News 6, Beverly H1llbtllt es 8. Hodg epodge Lodge 20,
Trails W est 15 , Elec Co 33
frumly of Pt. Pleasant were
6·00- News 3,4; ABC News 6, News B, 10, 13, 15 ; Elec. Co 20,
guests of her parents, Mr. and
Adlerian Counseling 33.
Mrs . Frank Cleland, Friday.
6:3()--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13 , Bewitched 6, CBS News
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Swift of
8, 10 , Zoom 20
Columbus
visited Mrs. Swift's
7·DO-Truthor Cons 3, Rush for the Roses 4 ; Bowling for Dollars
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Francis
6; What 's My Line 8; News 10 , New Candid Camera 13;
Wally's Works hop 15; Ohto ThiS Week 20; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You
Moms on Tuesday, Dec ,~.
33.
Mr and Mrs . Roy Riffle were
7. 30--That Good Ole Nashvill e Mus tc 3) Pollee Surgeon 6;
Sunday dinner guests of Miss
$25,000 Pyramid 8; This Is Mus1c 10 , To Tell the Truth 13;
Pall! Shain at Antiqmty.
Untamed World 15, Washington Straight Talk' 20 , Episode
Another guest there was Mrs.
Action 33.
Judy Rmg1sen .
8:00-Born Free 3,4; Rookies 6, 13 ; Gunsmoke 8, 10; Qual tty of
Ltfe 20,33.
Mr. Kenneth Swart of Akron
9 CIO-Movie " Frankenstein T he True Story, " Part 1 3,4, 15 ,
came Fnday to s pend over
GAtor Bowl6, 13 , Maude a, 10, Sch ool for W1 ves 20,33.
Christmas with h1s mother
9:3()--Rhoda 8, 10; The Sess ton 20,33.
Mrs James Swart and th~
10· 00-Med i cal Center 8, Sports 1974 · 10 ; N ews 20 , Wash 1ngton
Alfred Crow family .
trolghl Talk 33
10:3()--Behind the Lines 33
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Hill of
11 :IJO--News 3,4,8, 10. ABC News 33
Add1son were Frtday evening
11 : 30-J o hnn y Carson 3,4,15. Movie " Head " 8, Movte "The
guests of Mr. and Mrs Frank
Reluctant Debutante" 10 , Jana ki 33
Clela nd.
12 ·1J0--News 6,13
Mr and Mrs . Orland Mit12:3()--FBI 6 , Untouchables 13
c hell and Mr . a nd Mrs
1 oo-T OM or row 3, 4
I 30- News 1' .
Leo M1 tche ll
of ParkI

Business Services

~--~--

Racine
Social Events

Great deals on Great Cars

Auto Sales

AUCTIO N ,
Thursday
and 'liS CHEV Vun va sta ndard
Saturday n1ght , 7 p m at
transm 1SS 10n $375 Ph on e 992
Ma son AuctiOn. Hor t on Sf m
70 01
Ma so n . W Va Con s1gnments
11 n 61c
welcome
Phone {304) 773
S471
OL D fu r n , ture ICe bo;.;es, b r ass
1o 3 11 c
beds or com plete househOlds
Wrtfe M 0
Miller , Rt 4
SHOO TIN G match , Rac m e Gun
Pomeroy , Oh iO Ca ll 99'} 7760
Cl ub Sund ay 1 p rn Assorted
10 1 7 4
meats and fa c to r y c ho ke guns
only
J UNK a uto s, complete and
11 22 l f c
del 1ver ed to our yard We p1 c k
up au to bod 1es and buy al l
O I L OF Mmk Co smetiCs "
kmds o t scra p met a l s and
Soun d d 1fferenf? We have a
1ron R1d er s Sa lvage , Sl Rl
comple t e l 1n e that wil l sa tl 5f y
124 , Rt 4, Pomeroy, Oh10
eve n you Cal l us we have
Call 992 5468
sp ec1a l s al l t h e t 1me You'l l be
1o 17 tf c
surpr1sed BROWN'S , 99?
5I I3
CAS H pa 1d for al l makes an d
12 29 !f c
mode l s o f mob ile t1omes
Pho n e area code 6 14 423 9531
4 t J lfc
P ONY lo g1ve away. al so
wanted , deep well pump
Phone 985 38d9
12 29 6tp

Noth1ng ca n ever tak.e away
Th e lovmg a heart hOl ds dear ,
Fond memor 1es lm ge r eve r y
day.
Remembran ces keep h1m near
BAC H ELOR typ e apa rtm ent
Sad l y m1ssed by wde ,
F urn1 shed
Ph one 992 51 31
Emma , chil d ren and grand
c hildren
12 24 Jl c
1961 O LD SMOB I LE Lu xu r y
12 29 Jtp
Mo d el 1n good condlf 1on Sef
o f rad 1al tr res, sue 1R 70 15 1n
IN LOV ING memory of Ralp h
good shape 21 1nch b l ack and
Barton w h o pas se d away ,
Wh1t e te l eV ISIOn amp l 1f 1e r for
D ec 28, 1970
OLD HOUSE 10 Syracuse on 2
a p a
sys tem
F or
rn
n 1ce l o ts, $3 000 W il l t ea r
format1 on, ca ll 992 2508 or 5ee
M1dn1te sta r s shme upon h1s
house down , 1f wanted Phone
at 131 L a urel St, Pomeroy,
g rav e where s l ee p ~ng
Oh iO
992 5898
Bu t we could not save
12 29 7fp
12 29 6tc
A p r eCiou s f r om u s ha s go ne
--------A voi ce we lov eG 1S stil l
1968 G M C Dump Truck, 7500 8 ROOM S and ba th , gas furna ce
A sh a dow over ou r l 1f e IS ca st
se n cs
Tr1 axle
J u st been
and ce ntr a l a 1r Phon e 992
Th e one we lo st 4 years ago
ove r hauled
$3 500
Contac t
700 1
Sa dly m 1ssed by wife ,
L awrence Le e L arkm s Sf,
122261c
H azel , c hildren and grand
R Ul land Oh 10
c hild r en
12 27 61 c
12 29 lt p
BUILDING lo l. 80ft fron ta~e
1963 CADI LL AC $225 Phon e
by 165ft Th e second Jot on l ett
74267 51
on R1verv1 ew Drtve , L.ncol n
12 24 6tp
Hrll. Pomeroy , Oh10 II tn
te r es ted c a l l 992 3230 a ft er 5 p
WE WOULD lik e to t hank a l l th e 19 73 COMET , 6 cyl auto t rans
m
p eople w h o hav e he l ped 1n so
p w
18,500 m lies L 1ke new
10 17 tf c
many way s dur,ng our t1 me of
Ca ll 667 3442 an y l 1me
trouble Today you h ea r of all
11 22 61p
the apathy and r: ru elne ss , but
you ca n ' t 1mag1ne how truly
W A N TED old upr1gh t p1anos,
good and kmd peop l e reallY
any c ond1l1on
Pay1ng $10
ar e We would l1k e to name
ea c h F1r s l floor only Wr11e to
everyone who h as h elp ed , but
VIICjllfl f, ·,ilntd '"
and g1Vf:' d 1r ecrlons fa W11len
1t would be ImpoSSibl e They
ll111ko·r
P1ano Co, Box 186 Sa rd1S ,
know. an d th ey shou l d hav e a
ll1l Mo'c h.r •111 Sll•·•·f
Oh10, 4)946
very g ood feeling A to! or
PollH'I o·; Oh1o l S7oY
12 24 61p
th ese peop l e we d1dn't even
know , but they helped and
we 'l l a lw ays r emember how
NEW LISTING - 6 roo m
k1nd everyo n e was S1g ned,
frame , 3 bedrooms , bath , nat
Mr and M r s Monty P ro ft1 1t
ersburg
s p e nt
Sunday gas , furna ce , city wa t er
an d Ch ildren
a fte rnoon w1th Mr and Mrs. S7500 00 Will sell on ttm e
12294tc

6

6

Notice

.

WE'RE BLOWING OFF THE ROOF!

t/'Rl!li'Y r
)

I

I

J

&gt;&lt; AN D Y FOR' DATE'.S •

"\1, ~ a.rranw-e th e c trcled l etters
to form th e surprise an swer . as

;::=======~==~_''::"~"":":;sted by

~___~
Pria·l!ie::..:S::::
URPIISI
=•::::
NSW::.::!II=hm:.:..____JI

I ....

RM

and

b ath turn
apt ,
en l rance
Mobde
home , c lose to GSI
Mo?ile
Home close to Crown C1ty ,
Call 446 0168 Call 1n for en oon
2~5 If
pr~vate

theabo\e cartoon.

o r xx x J

J ""' '''" PYLON HONOR UPROAR INFECT
' • · llrLf .• , ,
\. ,
.- I hrfi(/Mlm /1J i111 hu f,rrxf - ATYPH OO N

UPS T A IR S furn1shed apart
ment 3 r ooms and bath a l l
446 OJn
626
u t11 111es. pa1d
lh 1rd Ave
29 2 If
MOBILE hom e total eleclnc 2
bedroom S100
3 bedroom
S125 Ph one Jd6 0175 or J46
19 3J
28 6 tf
U N!= UR NI SH ED
e ll i(ot'llC Y
apt
~ 1~~ per
110
Pl1
116
\6 I]

�23 -

22 - T he SWJday Times- Sentinel, SWlday , Dec. 29, 1974

For Fast R'esults ,Use The Sunday 1!imes-Sentinel Classif;eds
In Memory

- -·-· -c--·-~ ---,

PARSON'S
FURNITURE

306 1

lost
SM A L L

K a na uga - Ga II i poli s
Fa c tory Outl e t Sal e . All
types of l iv ing roo m suite s,
ex t ra
ch ests,
b e d ro om
suites, dine tte set s. Thi s and

Seal Poi nt Si amPse ,
to name Boag te , l os t

~n s we r s

tn Eve r green . H as a l l e r gtes to
m i l k and f ts h Re w a rd Ca ll
4.:1 6 0876 or 446 . 2651
3 0~

I
·-·

l ot s,
305 3

Pets
Bo b b t' s Poodl e Bouti qu e
P RO F E SS I ONA L groomt n g by
appomtm en t on l y P h Bobb1e
Cas to . .4 46 1 9 4 ~ .
212 If

SARGENT BR OS CON ST
A LL t y p es o f ca r pent e r work ,
co n c r e t e f inishmg , pai nting
F r ee es t imates
reasona l be
rates P h J67 72 39 or 367 7777
'11 4 7

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

No

20 7 tf
ST OP A ND C H A T
buy . D ec oupage

6

Ph. 446.92)0

TRA IL ER spac es . l arge
p r 1va te . 367 7 .:~ 38

Auction Sal e will be in
Po r ter at Be ach AC
Station on Jan . 11 . To
se ll y ou r e quip . call
Col. Jay Sheppard
tod ay, 446-0001 or 367 ·
0300 .

Circ le L K en nel s
BOA R D I N G , A K C Pupp tes. 1
m i les from ci t y, 446 4824
] 15 ! f
P IN E R ID GE CO L L I ES
AKC R eg Co ll ies , sa b l e and
w h i t e (6 14) 256 1267
283 H

Browse or

BOA RDIN G &amp; AK C P UP PI E S.
K &amp; P Kenne l s , 388 8 274 . R t
554 , 11 m 1. eas t of Por ter .
305 tf

T WO WAY R a di os Sal es &amp;
Servtce New &amp; used CB 's ,
poli ce mo nit o r s , a n te nn as.
e t c . Bob's Ci t i ze n Band Rad io A K C R e g
E qu i p , G eo r ges Cr ee k Rd ..
puppi es ,
Gal l ipo l i S, Oh io &lt;1 46 &lt;15 17
bl o n d e .
212 tf
$65 e a c h

SW EEPE R R epoi r , Pa rts and
Supp lies
P ic k
up
an d
d el •ve r y
D av1s
Vacc u m
1
C l ea n er . 1 m i le up Geo r ges
Cr eek Road . P h . &lt;1 46 029 4
7 5-ff
R U SS'S G L A SS S ER V I CE ,
Storm wmdo w s r e pa ired .
P l ex,g l ass .
au to
g l ass ,
mi rr o r s , d ecora t or a n d c ut to
s1ze 435 Sec Ave . . a cr oss
fro m the P 0 in G a ll i p o l is .
P h 1'1 46 7632
223 78

Wanted To Buy
STA N DIN G

t i mb er .

388 81'190 .
30 6 l

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

Help Wanted
B ABYS I T TE R •n my h om e 2. 30
p m t il l 9 p .m . 245 92 12
305 3

EX P ER I E N C ED
ba rt en d e r
and wa i tr ess . App l y K i ngs
Arm K n ig ht Club , Rt
7,
Ch eshir e .
306 3

for Rent
TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
.,
:
1112 Baths
Pay Only One Utility
Addison, Ohio
For Informat ion
Call Shirley Adkins

367-7250
5 R OOM house an d .one large
ttai l er sp a ce, Kyger Creek
Sc h oo l D 1str ic t. P h . 367 7350.
306 -7

. Spring Valley
Green Apartments
Now ready
for occupancy.
Model Open Daily
10- 12 noon &amp; 4-6 p.m .
Sal. &amp; Sun 1·4 p.m .
&amp;

2 bed r oom

B&amp; S M O BIL E HO MES
PT PLE A SA NT
Pa :- kwood 10x5 6 2 BR
NatiOna l 1(lx5 0 2 BR
Came lot 12:1!. 55 3 B!=i!
G lob em aster 12x60 2 BR
Sratesmari 12xso 2 B R
F awn 12)(60 1 BR
PMC 12x60 3 BR
ABC 8)(32 1 B R

--------------TRI - STATE
MOBILE HOMES
12 20 ~ a s t er n Ave.
M Sy stem
8x28 I BR
Brans tra ll er 2 BR
Marie tt a 2 BR
Wolve r i n e 2 BR
Marl ette 2 BR
Belmont 2 BR
K a ywoo d 2 BR
446-7577

apar1ments, rent starts from
s 135 per month.

ECO N OMY Mot or &amp; M obi l e
Home Sale s ~ Det r o i t er 10ft
w i de , lar ge li vi n g room. li ke
new ih sic:re· or o ut ; Sk y l ine, 2
8 R Yo u c ou ld sp end mo r e
an d no t get th e qual ify No ,
1t 's n ot n ew a8 ju st l ooks l i ke
i t . 1401 E a ste rn A v e . nex t to
t h e Laun d r o m a t . P h. 446 -1425.
291 tf
B&amp; S MOBILE HOME S
Pt. Pl e asan t
Con co r d 12x60 2 BR
Cha mpion 12)(60 2 BR
New Moon l Ox 55 2 B R
C h amp ion 12x60 2 B R
Li b er t y 12x50 2 BR
Grea t L a k e 8x45 2 BR

For Sale

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

MOBIL E H O M ES for r enl. P h .
446 075 6.
297 If
12)( 60 M OBI LE H ome . One
mil e fr o m hos pi ta l ' A d u lts
Ph . 44 6 3805 .
T R A ILER in RO lland , Ohio 4&lt;1 6
3981
277 If - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

----~ --- ~ - - --2_0 4 ·6
F IL .E S, cab ine ts, f i l i ng su p
pl1es, d esks, o ffi ce c h ai r s.
Si mmons Ptg . &amp; Off i ce Eq u i p .
306 -tf
1956 FORD wi t h ca ttl e r ac k
$475 . A fron t en d loader $375.
11 h ead o f Ho l ste in ca l ves .
ca rl 446 .4871.
30 6 3
---- - ----- -~--

10x 5 0
MOB I LE
ho m e ,
2
bedroom w i th por c h · a n d
a wn ing on a large size lot w ith
garden sp~ce . 6 miles fr om
th e hos p i ta l on old 160 tor S90 a
month . Call 446 -3589 aft er
4 : 30
306 6

--------..
I

\

----- - -

--

ALL
T YPES
of
bui l dt n g
IT)ate r ials , b lo c k , b r i c k , sewer
pi p es , windows , l i ntels , et c.
Cl aude Winters , Rio Gra nd e,
0 Ph on e 24 5·5121 after S.
123 tf

--------------L OCU ST f en ce p osts . Ca ll 256 ·
624 7.

297.tf

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

SEE our l arge se l ection o f
diamonds
an d
wa t c h es
Con1'par e our pr i c@s . Tawn ey
J ew ele rs .
278tf

--·- --

-----------

OH I O STO K ER , W Va. l ump
c oa l , fir ewood . Bl ocks , t ile .
ceme n t mor t ar . G a ll ipolis
Bl ock Co . Ph 41'1 6 27 83.
293 If
GO T an e y e for a buy ? Man y
it ems on s p ec1 a l
Corner
Cr afts , Ch ill i COt h e R d
287 I f
GRAVE L . l i m est on e , sa nd ,
Ma son sa n d. f ill d1r t P1 t ru n .
Del iver ed by I h e l on ,J.16 114 1.
'l J7 lf

-·- - - -

SEAR S B ic ycl e built for two .
on e y ea r Old . ex ce l len t c on
d 1tion , equipped w i th ligh ts ,
$7 5
P hone 24 5-51&lt;1 6 a fte r 6
P m.
305 3
LIM E ST O NE for dr1v eway s
r:: arl W mters . Phon e 245 51 15
21'15 If
N ew GMC
T r u ck H ea dqu ar t ers
1
1968 ? T . GMC P 1c kup
1966 11 T G M C
1970 J~ T . Ch ev P rc kup
1974 ' ~ T Ch ev Pi c kup
1968 J~ T GM C P 1c kup
196 5 11 T G MC P ick up
19 69 11 T GMC P 1c k up
1971 11 T F ord Pi c k up
1968 1? T G MC P 1ckup
1971 2 T . D od ge Cab and Ch ass is
196 7 11 T GMC P 1ck up
1968 11 T . GMC P1 c k up
1968 I "J T GMC P ickUp
1968 11 T Chevy P 1c kup
19 71 GMC Sub ur b an
1967 1' T F ord P ic kup
SOMMERS G. M . C.
TRUCKS, IN C.
t JJ Pine St .
446 · 2532
147 If

ALBERT EHMAN
W a t er D eli ve ry Servic e
P a t ri ot Sla r , GallipOliS
Ph . 379 -2133
243 tf

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

BANKS TRE E SERVICE
FREE es t i m a t es, l i ab il i t y in
surance . P rtJni ng, t ri mm i ng
and ca vit y work, t r ee and
stump re m ova l . Ph . 446 -4953.
?J if

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

71 G!-!!EMLI N 6 c yl st d. t ra n s. ,
n ew t ir es, 52 .000 ac t u al mi l es ,
$1200 Oa k Hill 68 2-7934 J
mi l es E on St. R t 279.

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

FU R N .
ap a r t me n t
near
down town Ga llipo l is. Ca ll 446 ·
0239 .
286 -tf

_L

1 :~ AC R ES Good barn .
ot her outbu il d in g s an d an old
hou se, ni ce p la ce m t he
coun tr y
Poss i b l e
l and
conlra ct to qua l if i ed buyer .

25 AC R ES Good small
farm , h as a t wo b ed room
mobile home , larg e ba rn ,
l arge pond b e 1n g bu •lt ,
l oba cc o ba se . lo ca t ed 5 miles
t rom to w n 1n c1t y sc h .
di stri c t Be tt er hurry , th i s
w on 'I l as t l ong

Evenings Call
John M. Fuller 446 -4327
L ee John son 256 -6740
Dou g
Wetherholt 446-4244

PO PE ' S E l ec tri c a l Contra ct rng .
I n dust r ial. c omm er c ral and
r es 1dent 1a t. Ph da y 38 8 87 &lt;17
or eve n 1n gs, 388 8657 .
283 tf
SAN DY an d Be aver I n su r an ce
Co h a s o ff er ed se rv •ces for
F 1re In suranc e c over age in
G al l ia Coun t y for al mos t a
ce ntury != arms , hom e s and
p er sona l prop er t y , co ve ra g e s
ar e a va i labl e to m eet in
d1 v idual n ee d s . Co nt ac t T . F
Burl es on . you r n eig hbor an d
ag ent
298 6

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

E LE CT R I C A L
se r v i ce ,
r emo d e l1 n g, gu tte r w o rk .
Fre e es timat es . Ca ll 4&lt;16 25 82
a ft er 5 p . m
304 tf

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

'

25 L ocu st St .
Ho w ard Brannon , B roker
Off. 446 -26 74
Lu c ill e Br a nnon
E ve. 446-1226 or 446 -267 4
BEAU T IFUL BRIC K - near
to wn on l '"J acre , we ll c ared
for lo t 3 BR , 111 2 ba t h , w w
c a rp er , spac i ou s banQue t
sty l e ki tc h en wi th DW &amp; all
th e built -in for com fort . Ful l
div i d ed basemen t , pan eled
do u ble garage , c on c re t e
dr i v e &amp; p at io . The pn c e is
on l y $36,000 .
t52 ACRE S - L ocated 12 mi .
f r om c it y
40 A . ti ll a b le ,
bal an ce in tim ber &amp; p ast u re
wit h p l en ty coa L 3,000 lb .
tob ac co b a se, 2 barns, on e
stor y home r emode l ed &amp; in
g ood con di t ion
3 A CRE S on St Rt 160 w i t h
t2' 1(65' m obi l e hom e l ik e
new . 3 BR, de ta c hed ga rag e,
p ony ba rn A rea l g ood buy
NEW and NEAR
NEW
HO M ES - 3 BR wi th 11h &amp; 2
b a t hs
Pr ice d $2 5,5 00
$29 , 500.
2 ACRES - On e St or y 3 BR
hom e, fa r ge eat . in k i tc h en &amp;
din i n g r oom , 1 c ar g arage, 1
b a rn &amp; c h ic k en
h·ou se.
Lo ca t e d at Ce nt e rp o i n t .
$22.0(''"1 .

NEAL REALTY
bath , rural w ater , loc ated s·
mi. f r om town on b l a c ktop
roa d .

Office Ph. 446·1694

-·- ~- - -- --------

----------

-

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

and sho we r . v ani t ies and Blu e G IL LE NW ATER'SSE PTI C
Ri dge P a in! Ph . 388 -857 6.
TA N K
CLEA NIN G
AND
N ew Onwer s
RE P A I R . ALSO
H O U SE
Arnold Smith and
W R E CK IN G Ph
4 46 -94 99.
Charles Sm•th
Estab li sh ed in ' 1940.
231 .ff
169 .1f

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

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

Leadingham Agency
Writes All Types of Insurance For
Your Auto, Home or Business
Represent
Llghtni'\9 Rod Mutual
Insurance Company
• Low.. Co st AUra lnsur anc~ ompare Our ra tes .
• L ow Co st Homeowner Policy.
·
• Low Cost Homeowners P olicy for Rent efs .
eFar mown er s Polic y - Complete Prote ct ion i n One Polic y.
• A Modern Mobile Homeowne r Poli cy .

e Low

Cost Fire Poll ey.

e A Specia l Multi- Per il

Packag e Pol ley for Yo ur Bus iness.

·not compare our rates with your present
DOIIic11? We know we can save YOU money .

Leadingham Agency
Ph. ·446-7699
512 Second Affe. ' Gallipolis, Ohio·
' '

.... '..

Whe n we s acrifice profi ts as we are doin g
now , w e prefer that the s aving s go to ou r
F ri e nd s and Customers !

••

••

NO DEALERS PLEA.SE

.•

HURRY

' •'•

'

M E _IGS C OUNT Y 190 A .
rol l rng p as tu r e farm N ice ly
remod el ed hom e w it h 5 r m s.,
ba t h and b a se m en t . 2 pond s ,
fr ee ga s and 6 p el fi na nc in g
ava il ab l e

11 Room s, modern spl it level hom e, 2 fire p laces, famil y
room, 2 ba ths, 2 ca r ga r age, basem ent , 1 acr e p lu s, n ice
landscape d ya r d with tot s of s hrubber y . Good blac k top
road , 4 m il es f rom Ga ll i p ol i s, lot s of r oom fo r lot s o f
possibil it ies w ith t his hom e.

DEC. 31, 1974

.

89 Cars In Stock

'..

Evenings

Charles M. Neal, 446·1S46
J. Michael Neal , 446 -1503
Sam Neal , 446-7358

RANCHO COMP A NY
R ea ltors ~ Au c tion ee r s
446 -0001 . 367 -0300 .
N I CE b ui l di n g l o t. Fai rf ie ld
B u i l d to su rt. Five acre hom e
si t e $5 ,000 42 A . f arm , n ew
hom e, $24 ,900 .
27l -tf

I

Type 4 Luxury
Sedans &amp; Wagons

..··-'"

..

N i ce comfor t ab le 5 room h ousEi, loca t ed on 1 a c r e o f land
w it h lots of sha de tr ees, b a sement, modern k itc h en ,
na t u r a l gas, furnace, city w ater , la r ge n ice ca r port Rea l
good 16' x18 ' sto r age bui ld ing, ga r den space. Ju st l isted .
Ask i ng $18,900 . Call now .

.•

------- ------FARM FOR SALE

124 A. , good house, barn. 2
out-buildings, tobacco ba se,
mineral rights &amp; 7 tenths mi .
road frontage _ on blacktop

4 BEDROOM

v..

A m odern h om e loca ted on
acre bea uti ful la ndsc ap ed
yard , 112 m il e from Ga ll ipol is. 7 roo m s p l us 2112 b ath s, large
scree ne d i n p orch, la r ge livi n g room wit h bea m ce il i ng
an d a wood burnin g firep lace, air conditi on ed, n ice
mod ern k itc hen . See i t n ow . L ess tha n S40, 000.

3 BEDROOM, 2 YR. OLD HOUSE

..,.

67 RENAULT

"

Full Pri ce

..

74AMC
HORNET
HATCHBACK

7J AMC
GREMLIN

$AVE

$AVE

road. Ph. 388.8463,

TRUE

N EIG HBO R HOOD R D . - 2
hou ses on n ea rl y 3 A . l ot No .
1, h as 8 r m s . • bath , enc los ed
por ch and olent v sto r a oe
room . P l enty g ood , f r e e
w ate r . N o 'i, ha s 3 rm s.,
• p r op e rt y ha s 2 ce ll ars
topped with s tor a ge b ldg s .:
g ar . with s tor a ge ove-rhead ,
work s hop a nd 2 pou lt ry
!l ou se s L and 1S exc ell en t tor
gLJ~den r ng . T h is prop er t y i s
be1ng so l d to sen l e a n e stat e
, and pr 1ced t or a Quick sa l e at
$26,000. (,Potent ial plus l.

.

0818.

RUSSELL
\'OX)
•"

'

1624.00

11IE

1293

1

68 Ply .

68 INT'L
TRAVELETTE
Was$ 1.095.00

'689.00

HURRY

o

73 PINTO
SQUIRE•
WAGON

72 FORD
LTD

Sa ve $300

SAVE 1500

7JCHEV .
MALIBU
Now

7J P lY .
F URY
4Dr. H.T.

AGENCY

C- 10 Pa ne l

$AVE

Now '1342

Truck &amp; Topper

70 CAMARO
Red

68 NOVA

$AVE

$AVE

$AVE

$AVE

$AVE

Tell 'em

2 Dr . Sedan, 250 6 c yl. eng ine, aut o.
t r a ns ., b rig ht ye ll ow, W· S· W tires,
AM ra d io . M ore to choo se f r om .

St ick er Pr ic e
$3531

cyl. engi n e,
b r i g ht r ed i n c olor , power rack
i on st eer i ng ,
power disc brakes, fron t &amp; rear bum per guard s, ai r ,
rad1o , ex te r ior accen t group.
Stick er Pri ce S472S.
Many more to choose f r o m!
1

*3,340

S4 300
' .

OFFER ENDS JANUARY 15th, 1975

.

GALLIPOLIS
CH.RYSLERPLYMOUTH

L.

Best Selection of Trucks in the Tri-County Area

'

Owner Anxious To

O VEL Y BY - LEVE L
With 5 bed r oo m s. 2 b a t hs .
fa m 11y room , 2 c a r gar ag e,
C air , fu ll y carp e ted , l arg e
fl at l ot , city s cllools .
P er fect f or l a r ge o r sm a ll
f ami l y . Low Fort i es .
VE R Y NI CE RAN CH w i t h ful l basemen t. 3 B R ,
f a m ily roo m , fir e p l ace ,
ver y n ice k1t chen and a
coun tr y se tt ing
A SS UME
THI S
EX ·
C ELLEN T L O A N 7 10
int , '$1 86 .00 pe r m o. 18 y r s .
t er ms , $4 , 000 down or your
rea so n a b le ott er . Pri ce
$26, 500 . .v e ry
n ic e
3
bedrooms, tully c apr e t ed
hom e wit h C a 1r , garag e
an d
mi d . c ou ntr y
at .
mosphere , 1 m i l e fr om
tow n .
G . l. APPROVED No
m on ey dow n . 3 bedroom
home w ith f u ll baseme nt ,
new w to w . ca r peti ng,
ni ce ki tche n and garage ,
q ui e t loca t ion , $25,900 . 1
m ile from town .

CLAS SI C BRICK
1600
sq . ft . of beaut i f u l l i v ing
area
Yo u must see l o
ap pr ec 1a te t his beauty .
Carp e t throughout , 2 f u ll
baths , 3 B . rooms , utilit y
room , fami l y r oom i n ·
e l udes f i r e p l ace , l arge
ki t c h en w i t h dish w ., and
d i sposa l , fo rmal din i n g
r oom. large attached tw o
car garage , full ba se men t ,
natu ra l gas hea t . One a c r e
lot.

4 Dr . hardtop, radio, auto. t r a n s ., P. steering ,
P . br~ke~ , lac . air cond. , w -s -w tires, green
m e t a l1 c fmlsh , matching inter ior , vinyl top,
low mileage .

YMOUTH

Sell

.,.

H er e is one of the very best locations in Gallipolis - Th e
seH i ng is per f ect · th e v iew of th e ri ver and We st V a . h i ll s
ca n't b e b eat. It In cl udes a l arge l i v ing r oom w ith
fl repl~ ce, 3 n ice s i zed bed r oo m s, 1'h baths, family r o om .
la r ge kit c hen , a nd f r ont por c h all the way a c r oss the f ro nt .
Olm er must se ll ( m ov ing out of st a t e ) . M a ke us a n offer.
I

71 CHEVROLET IMPALA

Bill Jot Johnson

(FINAL 1974 CLEARANCE SALE

NE A R HOSPITAl - New
painton thi s t hr ee bed room
home . L ocate d in f ine
neig ll borhood , n at ura l g as
hea t , one fl oo r p la n . P ri ced
to sel l. $24,900 .

·-·,.
"

GRE EN A CR ES
Bi
le ve l. 3 b edroo m , moder n
kit, fam 1l y room. g ara ge , 'J
bath s , lot s of st or ag e, la r ge
f l at lol . Pr iced to se ll .

,

•

.~

..•••

..

-•·
~

.

COUN T RY
A T ·
MO,S P HERE N ear l y
ne..., f u ll y c arpe t ed , 3
bedroom home , ki t. i n c l ude s d i shwashe r and
r ang e, p len ty Qf cabinets,
atta c h ed ga r age, all on .87
ac r e P r i ce r ed u ced .

M

~

...

~

BRAND NEW - T hi S we ll
bu i! t home in c ludes 3 la r ge
b ed r ooms , fu ll y equi p pe d
kit. Ca r pe t t hro u g h o u t,
with f ini shed 2 c a r ga ra ge .
Ut i1 1t y room , Jlh bat hs. A ll
e lectri c .

G allkt Co.1s L arg es t Ne ar
E state Sales Agency
Ofllce 446 -3643
EvenirJg s Call
Ike Wi se man 446 - 37'9 6.
E . N . Wi se man, 446 -4500
Bud McGhee, 446-125s

•

I

1971 VW BUG, Check This One________________s1695
1972 VW SUPER BEEnE, auto stick shift _________ ,s1895
1969 VW SQUAREBACK, 4 speed._____ _______ __ s1295
1969 VW FASTBACK, Sale Priced _______________ Sfi99
1973 MAVERICK 2 DR., only 16,000 miles. ________s2695
1972 PLYM. DUSTER 2 DR., Twister, 6 cyl.. ___ ____ .$2195
1970 MERCURY MONTEGO, Super Buy ________ ____s888
1968 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DR·---------------- SS95
1970 FORD 1h TON PICKUP, 4 5Peed---- ------ - .s1495
1968 FORD lh TON PICKUP, CamP,.er, h~ topper, ____ s1295
1974 DfM lh TON PICKUP, only 10,000 miles. ____ s30()()
1971 FORD LTD 4 DOOR.__________ _________ s1595
1972 CAMARO RALLYS SPORL __ __: __ ___ _____.$2695
1973 PONTIAC VENTURA 2 DR., air cond. - - ---- -- s2395
40 OTHER USED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM
v- CHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU BUY

.GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
1639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLI~, 446-3273

'2095
WOOD MOTOR SALES
EASTERN AVE .

FOR R E NT

I

30 a c r es , mod er n c oun try
h om e , ca r peted , panelling ,
h ook up for wa s h er , barn ,
tobac c o base . S125 a rrionth ,
Se cur 1t y depo s it of $ 125
r equ i r e d p l us fir st month 'S
r en t .
MODERN 3 b ed r oom hom e,
carpeted, t hre e y ear s ol d ,
u t il i ty
r oo m ,
c ab i nets ,
ga r age loca t ed in Coun try .
Ai r s ub -div is i on . '$165 a
month . re f eren ces r equ i r ed .
446- 1066
446· 46 18 aller 5 p . m .

anything

BarR or

f ac ts s tr a1 g n t re g a r a 1ng
som ething you were told when
you go to repeat it to someone

fo r

else.

at our Auc11on
In your home. f=or

l nfo~mation and pickup
urvtce call 256-6967 at1er

p.m.
Every Sat,urday Night
Al7p.m .

s

Some- 8ddltional di sc ipline is
requ ired if 'y ou /io p e to keep
yOur h ousehold bu dget in line.

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
·

ai Onve

Siandoy"-Doc. 2,, 1974
4AIES (March 21-4prll 19)

~

Buy o nly what's needed.
T4Uf\US (4prll 20-Moy 20)
Yo u'll fl ave trodb le keef?i ng th e

GEM INI (Moy 2t-Jurie 20) It
will take some sk illfu l •pers ua .
si an .on your behalf to get
b acking or assis tan ce you may ·
need fr om another. Have a
good story ready.
C4NCER (June 21 -July 22) A
plan you liave iS a g ood one, so
d on't let one who d oesn't com p re/i end rt punch p etty holes m
II.

:

LEO (July 23· Aug 22) You
have troub le k eep ing s ec rets
today . You·r e apt to talk about
something very per son al and
confiden tial to t h e w r ong
listeners.
VIRGO (Aug 23- Se p t 22 )
O thers w ill carry ta le s to you
about a friend o f long stand i ng.
Weigh their wor ds carefully.
being awar e they have a n a x to
grind .

LIBR4 (SOpt 23-0 ct 23) Keep
p ersgns ou t of your b usiness
or c cfr eer p roblem s w ho h ave ·

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

WIN AT BRIDGE

Wrong contract proves fatal
NORTH

28

• 9 63

' A96

+8 7 63

... AJ 10
WEST

EAST 101

'+K

• 54

• J7

' Q IOS

8 43
A 104

+ ,)952

... 9 6 3 2

... KQ74

SOUTH

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc
21) T h1s IS not

::3: good d ay fo r
you to b ecbme too d eeply im mersed m busine!i s affa1 r s
Pos tpone t liem u nttl y au ·re
more commerc ially mmded .

It's hard for y ou to stic k with an
ove r - all game p l an , even
though you k now you shou ld .
Instead you'll m ake to o many
short-range ad justments .

AQU4R1US (Jon 20-Fob 19) If
rou fi ne! yourself wllh a b it o f a
surplus . it would b e a good
1dea to repa y an o l d rn debtedness m part

PISC ES (Feb 20-Morch 20)
Spend today wit h fr iend s wh o
kno w how to enjo y themselv es .
rather t han With th ose you f eel
yo u
must en te rt ai ~ ev ery
mi nu te .
·

... 8 5

F OR sa l e or trad e for land in
Ga l l ia Co unl y, b y own er , 40
ac r es i n Vin ton Co un ty , v..
m i le b lac kto p r oa d fr on t age .
Ca ll 446 .3277 .

SC ORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22 )
Pleasurable pl ans you 'v e made
tor yours elf today will b e d tsru pted . if you let one w hose
id eas d on't j1bew1th yours in on
them .

'+ J

. AKQI082
72
KQ

For Sale or Trade

no o trr c 1al role rn them Their
adv1ce wrll only contu se you
more .

305 3

Your Blrthdoy- Dtc. 28, 1974
There w ill be a g o od market f or
your creativity th is com rng year
1t you' ll tak e t he p ains to look
arou nd . The right assoc•ate
ca n be f ound for id eas you
ca n 't sw ing on your own.
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

C4PR1CORN (Dec 22-Joo HI)

FOR SALE

Kelly
sent you.

Mustang Muslan9 11 2+ 2,

CHARLIE WE BST E R SAYS: THESE CA RS HAVE GOT TO MOVE!

Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis. Ohio
Ph . 446 -9800

M&amp;-1066

..

Maverick

Large Selection of New Torinos &amp; LTD's-ln Stock

ltEALIDR

.!'J e wly
Rem 0 d Pi e d
Twa.Storv House For Sale i n Cit y
~
~uumrnum
siding, nice
kitchen , 4 larg e b e drooms,
. den , famil y room , din i ng
room , basem ent with ne,w
natural g as furnlce, lar g e
private
patio ,
s t ora ge
building atta ch ed in rea r, W·
w carp eting fir st floor, 1'12
baths, 2 fi r eplaces, summ er
and w i n.fer porch upsta i r s,
k itchenette up stairs, l it rg e
l ot. Yo u h a v e to see th ts
hom e to appr e c ia t e th (' 1
' beaut y and space. Phon e 4$6
1854 or 446-YJH alter 5:00 .

'3,060

Sticker Pric e $3293

69CHEV .

70 DUST ER

Satellite

56 JEEP

Pinto

2 dr . sedan , sil ve r bl ue i n co l or , steel belted W·S · W
t i res, p . steer i ng, fu ll y carpeted , a ccen t gro u p . See It to be lieve It!
M ore to t;: hoose f r om .

$AVE

2910.00

1

69IMPALA
4 Dr. H.T.

DON WATTS V.W.
RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP

WISEMAN

...

ill "' ..

~ -

A Specia I on Every New &amp; Used Car .

PLANTS SUB · DIV . - Good
5 rm . house wi t h fu ll basem .
I t h as H W . fl oors. ga s F A .
h ea t ,
co pp er p lumbing,
car port an d 1 , A . l ot . On ly
$73,500 .

H R. 446 -19'98

70 FAIRLANE
Now

1

......

'"It . . . .

SALE ENDS DEC. 31 AND ALL PRICES
RETURN TO NORMAL.

HED G EWOOD OR .~ 7 r m
home on la r g e lot . H . w
fl oo r s , b asem e n t , s t o r m
doo r s and windows . P r i ce
$20,000 .

~NY

74 TRIUMPH
750 BIKE

SAVE '500.00 SAVE '445.00

"

•·

leo P. King, Associates
Home Phone 446-4994

NE A R ROONEY P r 1ce
red uc ed o n t his near new, 7
rm . frame home , a ll el ec . a ll
ca r p et an d p l ent y stor age
r m . It has a 2 car gar . arl d
ut i l 1ty bldg . L oca t ed on a "1 A
fenc ed lot. w it h pond and
Young p i ne trees . Pr i ce
$38, 500.

SPRING VALLEY
3 or 4 BR, ~ cook ' s deli ght
kitchen , play r oom &amp; family
room, a i r cond. , carp et ed , 2
car garage . By owner , 446·

7 ROOM " CENTURY"
.
HOME '
Low er Riv er Rd ., 3 B R , t wo
1:2 &amp; 1 fu ll bath . 2 fi r epl aces ,
sc r eened in br eeze wa y,
barn , 3.9 a cres . Shown b y
a ppo int men t . Ph . 256 ·6786
after 5 p .m . Ave n Lusk .

•

Phone 446-7699
Willis T. Leadingham
Home Phone 446-9539

Realty, 32 State St

CLARK - EVANS
RD .
Baby Fa r m · 2 to 15 A . 5 r m . 2
s tor y h o•Jse w il h ba th . A lso
h~ s a ba rn . P r ice $12, 600,
w •lh 2 A . o f good garden
land .

YOUR DREAM COME

71 FORD
Now

$15,500.00.
WE NEED LISTINGS. CALLUS NOW.

73 MONTE
CARLO

47.00

modern k it c h en , carpeting, plen ty of go od w ater . Like to
fis h ? Close to Tycoon Lake . Screened i n front porc h , J ust
a real nice new countr y h ome on clea n leve l la nd. Only

BULAVtLLE - POR T ER RD .
- 76 A som e bo tto m , some
t imbe r . d rill ed we ll an d
f en c.ed o n 3 s i des . $15,000.

. ..... ., ... .,

Sticker $3444 .20
Discount 404. 1
NOW $3 040 .10

$AVE

1

His Economy
Buys for '75

E x ample

5 In Serv ice
2- 2 Door s
1-4 Doors
3-Wagons

Cou n try Grocery Stor e, stock , and eq u ip men t, large block
b ui ld i ng wi th 3 r oom apartmen t ; one 3 roo m c abi n, al so
new b asem en t. cone:: rete floor b lock wa ll s for a ne w ho m e
start ed , locat e d on 2 acre p l u s, leve l land i n T yc oon Lak e
a r e a . Li ke fi s h ing?

MASSIE

..

Special Demo.
Discounts

SAVE s400.00

2 ACRE S PLUS SMALL BUSINESS

WORLD ' S LARG EST
T HE LEADER SIN CE 1900
IN
SE RVIN G
T HE
N A TION 'S BU YERS A ND
SEL L ER S.
Ph . 446·0008

FARM - Whea t on R d . 80 A
stoc k farm , 6 r m hou se w i th
f u r . h ea t an d ba th , p l enty
water. 2 Mobi l e home s
partia l ly fu r Good t r ac to r
an d oth er fa r m too l s . Buy th e
b un d l e fo r $43, 500

Bee tl e Demo's

. ""•

"
/.
••
* •• 't .....

AMC G re mlins
&amp; Hornet s

~

JU ST OUT OF CIT Y LIMITS, STATE RT. 141

US 35 - 10 A .. appro x . 1, 850
f t r d . fr onta g e, a ll ut!lit1 es
av a il ab l e . B uy a nd s ub
d i vid e

CHATHAM AVE . - Loo ki ng
for a p l ace to p ut som e
money . Hav e 2 hou ses on 1
Cit y l ot Bo t h h ave ga s Ilea l ,
both ar e on 2 l eve ls, both in
good re p air and bo th a r e
r ented . Boug ll t fo r '!i 22 ,600

for you!

MUST SELL- GIVE US AN OFFER

NEAR P A T R I OT 147 A .,
52 A . Sa nd F or k Bo ltom
Balance i n pa stu r e an d
w ood s, l o ts of wa l n u t t 1mb er
6 r m h om e , la r ge barn , 1,7 35
lb tab b ase , $75,000

GREEN AC RE S- Bes t buy
I h ave seen l h 1s yea r. Nea r
new 5 r ms ., bath and l aundry
r m . F .A . ga s h eat , a ll carpet,
attached gar . and fl at l ot .
$2J ,700 .

SALE ENDS

..._,
'

Is cooking ·up
something

WE ARE OVERSTOCKED-

•..

3

*

YEAR END TAX SALE

•~"
...

..·-•

Cou n t r y a t mosp here, but th i s bea ut ifu l h om e is lo cated
ab out 3 m iles from Ga ll i p ol i s on good h i g hway wi t h n a t .
gas, ru r a l water , la rge living r oom . 2 f irepla ces, full
basem ent , lot s of beautiful sh r ubber y , modern b a th &amp;
k itc h en . Ca ll now.

EUREKA - Hol iday Sp ec i a l
- 5 rm s . and ba t h on main
fl oo r ; f ull f1 n i shed b a se w i t h
gar and l am ily r m . Located
on n ear 1 A . R i v er f r on t lo t
Pr i c ed u nder r ep l a c em en t
cos t $2 1, 400.

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

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

-~

~

CHESTNUT ST. Cozy
li tt l e cott age , with 5 rms . and
ba th , a ttac h ed ga r . N u -Sa s h
w i n d ows , plu s st orm w in
an d drs . Sh1 ng l e s i ding .
Cheap at $ 12, 500

IS A . fa r m 5 rm . house wi th

- --·------------ - -

-3 ARAGE , aft 1c an d base m en t DOZ E R w or k , c lea rin g , ex c lea n mg . T r a sh ha ulin g . Free
cavati n g , s t ump rem o va l.
estimat es . Ph . 446 -0355 or 446 ·
bu sll hoggi n g . P h . 446 005 1.
2950 .
280 -tf
718 -tf
----....----- - -·- - - - - M&amp; M
DRAFTI NG SERVICE
R OOFI N G &amp; Spo u t i n g Sh mg le
DE SI GNER - D r aftsma n wil l
an d Buildup roof . H ot and
do Topo s i t e, remo d el in g ,
Co l d pro c e ss . H ome i m .
or
n ew
c omme r c ial.
p ro v eme n t i n genera l . !=or
r esi d ent .al p lan s . 15 yea r s
fr ee es t ima t es , pllone Rob er t
expe r i en ce i n CIVi! and ar
Me ad e , 388 ·8 1 14, Bi dw el l ,
c h it ectura l. Ph 1-682-7498 .
Ohio .
285 -tf
263 1f
---C REMEANS PIP E &amp;
D. P . Ma rt in &amp; Son s Wa t er
SUPPLIES
D eli ve ry
Se r vice .
Yo ur
B i dw ell , Ohio
p atr ona ge
will
be
ap .
HO_T .an d t;:ol 9 pla sti c p 1p e an d
p rec i at ed Ph . 446-0463 .
f 1tt mg s, sew er an d dr ai n p1p e,
2.tf
kitc h en sink s, f i ber lga ss tu bs

* * *GIGANTIC* *

~·

...

Tel. 614-446-1998

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

T OOL
s harp e ning ,
s aws ,
sc isso r s , shears , !l o m e and
ga r d en · too l s. Shar p Shop ,
At l ey rea r , 14 7 Sec ond .
216 tf

.......,
~·

D O N ' T BE BEAT BY IN ·
I n vest
yo u r
F LA TI ON
sav rng s 1n l an d . E xpe rt s
c on c lud e t hat !h e n a t io n 's
land will r ise in v alu e b y a t
l ea s t 15 pe t m 1974 W e h ave
32 8 acr es of wood l and 9 m i
f rom to wn fo r on ly $130 p er
a cre

REALTY

FREN C H CITY BLOCK . 41'1 6 Pa ul Sm ith , 24 hr
w r ecker
3608, loca t ed at Ker r . Be th el
se r v i ce . P h 245 5034 or 446
K emp er Ho l low i ntersec ti on .
93 11
150 If
263 If

-· ---------- - - - - - -

AD DI SON TWP .
N ew
sec tion a l h om e is a ll e l ec t r ic
fo r y our c on veni en ce a n d
co m fo rt . Fea tur es 3 B R s,
ba t h , s h ag c a r p et . ki t c h en
w .th
r a n ge ,
h oo d
an d
r e f r1ge r a t or . Si tu a t ed on a
lar ge f lat l ot on a B T rd

!/JilfUIIUJIL

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

T E RMITE P ES T CONTROL
FREE ins p ec t ro n . Ca ll 446 3245 .
Me rrill O'De ll , Op er ato r b y
Ex t ermin a l Termi t e Ser vice,
tO Bel mo nt D r
267 -tf

FH A A PPRO V ED
'l y r
ol d ran c h ha s 3 BP. s . car p e t,
nalur a l ga s h ea t . b ri ck f r on t
and ga r a g e Lo ca t e d on a fl al
lo t on Bu l av i ll e R d . $20,000

..---

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.
Real · Estate Broker
512 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

2 314 A cres , clean l evel la nd , 6 room s, p lus nice bath ,

GE N E RA L CONT RA CTIN G
Hom e i mpro ve m ents and ad
d 1t ion s R oofm g , vtnyl S1d ing
Cal l 41'16 0668 or 245 5138
152 56

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

ME I GS C OUNT Y
1q0 A
r o ll i ng p as tur e f arm . N ic e tY
remod e led h om e w it h 5 rm s ,
ba th and ba seme nt , 2 pood s,
fr ee gas an d 6 p e t . f m an c ing
a vai la b l e

Don Watts Volkswagen
Riverside AMC-Jeep

Real Estate For 5ale

RANNY BLACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGER

Services Offered

H OL ST E IN CO N C R ETE , all
t y p es o f concre t e wo rk ,
f ooti ng s, wa ll s , c oncre t e
f rni shi n g , c a r pen t er wo r k .
Free est i mat e&lt;&gt;. P h . 367 041 7
or 446 7795
276 -80

L i k e n ew
bri c k and fr ame r a n c h o ff er s
J .larg e B R s. 2 ba t h s , f ac tor y
krt c h en , for m ill d in in g r m,
ww carp el , ga ra ge, pa t i o
and l arg e fl a t l o t

R EMOD EL ED 2 STOR Y Thi s lov el y home is loc at ed
in A d d 1son Twp and offer s
lo ts of good li v ing fo r on l y
$23 ,900 . Some featur e s ar e
new aluminum si din g, s torm
w ind ows , natu r a l gas h eat.
new f actory kitc h en wi th
cabi n ets. r an g e, dish wash er
an d refrige r a t o r , form a l
d in ing r m . an d almost 2
acres c lose to t ow n .

f i n a n ci ng

KOTALIC LANDSCAPIN G
RIO GRAr.IO E, OHIO
C OM PL E TE PROGRE SSIVE
LAND SCAPING
SH R UBS ,
TREE S,
RO CK
G A -R D E N S ,
A L L
GU.O. R A N TEED . Patio an d
pool l andscaping . St on e, sa nd ,
c oa l , shru b bery l r 1mm i ng .
Du mp tru c k s erv1 ces . 2&lt;1 5
9 13 1.
187 tf

0 J ~WH I TE RD .

IN EX PEN SI VE C OUNTR Y
LIVIN G - 5 rm s and bath ,
c e l lar . sm a l l ba r n . s hop and
2 a cr es n ear Vin ton , $ 10,500. ·

WE BUY, SELL, TRADE

COM P LETE Cer ami c St udio
EQIJ•pmen l , la r g e kiln . 184,
mo l d s g l aze , s t ain s, and
ac cessor i es . ~h . 304·675 1599
Pt P le asant , w. Va
306 3

OW N ER
W IL L
H ELP
FINA N CE - M oder n ho m e
6
r ms
ba th .
o ff ers
base me nt und over ' l a c r e of
r o lli nq l a na.. J u s t l 1s t ed .
I
$15, 500.

MA K E SUR E YOU SEE
THI S ON E . Lik e new tr J.
l ev e l offe r s 2, 800 sq . ft . of
l i vmg space p l u s a 2 c ar
garag e . Ot h er f e a t u r es ar e 4
BR s . 2' ·7 baths , sunken L R
d ream kitc ll en , f amily rm ·
with WB f irep la c e , ce nt a1r ,
p at1o , and larg e lo t L o cated
•n on e of the a r ea ' s n ic er
subdiV ISi on s

1

VA

BAB Y
F AR M
N EAR
V I N TON
13 1 ~ ac r es of
cl ean r o t1 1n g l and , pond ,
larg e gard en spa c e , 2 b arn s,
ce llar h ou se , 5 rm s . an d
b a t h $18, 500.

MOB ILE H OME P A RK i n
C h es ll i r e wi th 6 re n t a l u ni ts
ha s re nt p ot en t ia l o f o v er
Si700 per month
A good
m o n e y mak er f o r on l y
S3 9,500

N E W BR I CK RA N C H
Ve ry
n •ce
wil h
three
be droom s ,
1 1 :~
ba t h s.
f i r ep la ce. fu l l y ca rp ete d , t wo
ca r gara ge , loc a t ed on a n 1c e
lot 5 m i l es fro m to wn .

TRI - STAR
T HOMA S Fa i n Ex t"!'r m in ati n g
El e ctric Contr a ctor s
Co . Termi te an d Pest Contro L COM P LETE e l ec t r i ca l se r vice.
W h ee l er s b ur g , Ohio
Galli polis , Oh io P h . 367-031 1.
233.tf
207 tf

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

SL EE P ING R OOM S, week ly
rates Pa r k Cen tra l Ho te l.
306 -tf

GARF I ELD AVE . N i ce
two bedroom h om e w i th a
bea ut i fu l v 1ew o f t h e r .v er ,
fu l l y f ur n i shed , ga ra ge and
n ice lot

F H A and
ava i l abl e .

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

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

Phone 446-1599

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

1964 O L D SM O BILE l u x u r y ,
m odel , g ood shap e, se t o f
radial t 1r es . si xe L R 70 15 Ph .
992 2508 or see a t 131 L aur el
St, P ome r oy , 0 .
306 6

P ROTEC T your m obile home
wi th TIE DOW N A NC H O R S
Ca ll Ron Skidmore , 446 1756
a l te r 3 p .m .
22 1 tf

" FOR a ro b we l l d on e fee l i ng ,"
c l ean car p ets w i th Blu e
Lus tr e .
Re nt
elec t ric
Sh a mpooe r
$1 .
Centra l
WE H AVE sp ace m a Second
Suppl y .
Av-e
bus i ness
b uild i n g .
306 6
Su i tab'fe f o r office, b ar .
b ersho p , bea ut y s h op or sm a ll 8" DUR O p or tab l e elec tr ic saw ,
b u si n ess. Ph 446 · 169 4
c ompl ete w i t h tabl e, join er
$1 50. P h . 367 -7426
268 tf
306 2
2 BR tota l el e c . M H at Quai l
Cr e ek , 245 -502 1.
N AO M I's W 1g Sty ling . Se ll
285-ff
and s t y l e a ll f ash 1ons W igs ,
wig l ets , fa lls . Phone 388·8308 .
BR A DB UR Y effici ency apt ,
286 tf
se cond f loor , adu lt s on l y. no
p ets Phon e 446 095 7.
GOOD c l ean lump an d sto ke r
_ .!!_ __ - - - - - - _ _ _ _ _ !_69 -tf
coal. Car l Wi nt ers ,
Rio
G r ande P h . 245 -511 5.
SL EEP I N G r o om s , weekly
245-tf
ra te G a ll ia Ho t el.
257-tf

l'lx60 M ob rl e Hom e On e m il e
fro m h ospit al Adu lf s Ph 446
3805
287 i f

Services Offered

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

ga r d en

R E M O DELI N G, a ll t y p es b ui lt
in cab in e t s. al uminu m srd in g.
r oofin g,
p a n el i n g .
l= re e
es t im at e, 2&lt;1 5 56&lt;17
282 30

305 3

COMPLE T EL Y remode l ed , 2
b e droo m hom e with 4. 6 2
acr e s Clo se to town . Ca ll 446
28 90 .
304 3

1970
1967
1962
1968
1966
1957

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

SEA R S ad d 1ng machi n e, li ke
ne w . C all 446 4376 afte r 5. 30
0 m

M OB I LE home , l o cat ed n ear
town on Rt . 141 , ni ce l ot. 446
4052
305 6

18X45
2 BR
10x 50
l 0x5 0
10x 50
l 0x 50
10x5 0
10x50

USE D F U R NI T U RE
G E D r yer l i k e new , b ed roo m
suite w i th ma tt r e ss an d bo x
springs
Cor b in &amp;
Sny der
if ur n .
30 I If

F I R EP LA CE log s , re a son able .
F r ee d eli ve ry 37 9 2257
305 3

Year End Clearance
Sale . lOxSO
2 BR
mobil e home . your
choice $1750, Tri - State
Mobile Homes .
1220 Ea s tern Ave .

1964
196 5
196 5
1968
1970
1972
1967
19 53

R I CE'S NE W &amp; U SE D F U R N .
SEA L Y MAT T RESSES 549.95 ,
COMPARE AT B 9. 9S . 854
Secon d , 446 · 9511 .
298 If

Ga l lipolis, Ohio 4SU1
LOVELY RA N CH HOM E You w ill lik e th e t hr ee la r g e
b edr oom s, tam il y room , wi fe
a pp r ov ed ki t ch en , P ~ bath s,
l iv1 ng ro om with f 1rep la c e .
b ase m ent . l ar ge two car
garage w ith e lec tri c ey e
Nice l eve l lot on Rt 35

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

Mobi'e "lor~ es For Sale

- -·--- - - - - - - - - -

TE XAS R E FI NERY C O RP
offers PLENTY O F MONEY
ptus c ash bonu ses, f r i nge
benef 1IS to m a t u r e i n div id ua l
in Ga l l i pO l i S area . Rega rd less
o f ex penen ce, airmail G I.
Pate , Pres ., Te x a s Re f ine r y
Cor p ., Box 71 1, Fort Wor th ,
T e)(a s 76101.
306 4

. Cocker
Sp a ni el
7 weeks o l d , shots ,
On l y 2 fema i es .
Phon e 446 · 03 11 .

Osur laird, John Puller,
ooul w ethe r hol1 ,
!12 Secorlcf'Av•nue

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

Chil l ic o t h e R d

280 If

IIIOitllll

I O R yo ur T1 re a nd Billt ery
needs , com e 10 Sea r s T 1r e
Sh op in Tt~ e Si l ve r Bridq e
P ta za
2]6 I f

1973 IN T ER NA T IO N A L 1800
se r 1es, lat ium a K! e . P ll 256
65 74
30 6 6

PE K I NGE S E PUPP ieS A KC.
'$75 Hol d fo r Ch r is t mas , 67 5
503 0 aft er 4 "30.
293 12

and othe r
Co r ner
C r a ft s ,

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT REALTY

6J CH EV R OLE T pi ckup , 6 c yl.
S400. See Mr Shaw up st a 1r s.
9 19 Second Av e
302 6

SLE E PING
room ,
ran ge,
r e f r 1g e r a 1o r . $)0 pe r mo
V l tltl 1eS pa 1d Men only .J.\6
4 116 a ft er 1 p rn .
305 6

Consignment Sale.

DE A D s to c k r e m oved
c ha r ge Ct~ lt 7J5 55 1·1

s

Real Estate For Sale

PIL E i s sofl and lofty
c olor s
r e ta 1n br i ll ianc e in ca rp ets
c lean ed wi th B l ue Lu slre
R ent e lec l r ic s hampooer S1 .
Centr al Sup p ly .
301 6
·I H OG S, 5 p igs . Re c or d p layer
wi t h ra d1 o s ter eo comb . S200 .
Ph . 3RB 8J08
303 6

For Rent

Farm Equipment

g Il l s

muc h more . Open 9 t o
aa y s p er week .

3

Notice

For Sale

For Sale

IN
ME M OR Y
Of
Lu l a
Oa r ltng f on Kt r by wh o p asse d
a w ay December 28 . 1 ~3 0 .
S ad l y miSSed by Cht ld re n
and l o ved on es

Times - Se ntlner;SWJday, Dec.' 29, 1974

Wanted To Do
CU ST OM se win g. a l te rat ion s on
a ll t yp es o f c lot h i n g , f ur s .
Re w e aving . Ph . 446 ·7520 or
~46 - 1 77 1

? .U If
---- --~- ------

T YP I NG SER V I CE S. "'{il l do
a ll k i nd s of typ in g i r'1 m y
'h om e . Ca ll 446 -4999.
2~ 4 t t
WALL
P a p e r in g ,
int e r i or
p a1n trng . Re ason a bl e r ate~
Pll . ~A 6 4423 or 4.4 6 363 1
.' ,., • f

Wes t

N ur(h

Pa ss

IN .T

Pass
Pass ·

Pllimbing &amp; Heating
GE N E PL A N TS&amp; SO N
P L UM B IN G - H eat1ng - Ai r
Condit i on ing , 30 0 Fourth Ave
Ph 446 -1637 .
48 If
STA N DAR D
P lu mbi ng . H e ati ng
214 Third A ve., 446-3782
187 1f
CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND H EA TIN G
cor . Fourt h &amp; P i n e
Phone 446· 3888 or 446 -4477
165 tt
R U SSE L L ' S
PLUMB IN G&amp; H E A T I NG
Gallipoli s, 446 -4782

N ort h -South vu l nerab le

297 tf

DEWITT ' S PLUMB I NG
AND HEATIN G
Rou te 160 at Ev f.! r9r ee n
Ph ~ &lt;:' 446-7735
~
,
'&lt;t'"
,
1117 II

u

East
14
Pass
Pass

South

I.

3.
Pass

Opening lead-24
By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby
"Why did n't you r a ise my
notr u mp bid?" aske d North.
"Why didn 't you re bid your
no tru mp?" was Sout h's quest ion in reply to t he q uestion.
T hree no trump would have
been a c inch contr act. We
fee l that South's rebid sho uld
have been a notrump raise .
His six spad es would have
been tr icks at notrump a nd
he d idn' t h ave a ny s ingletons
in his ha nd . North. a lso might
have re bid notr ump instead
of goi ng to four spa d es. North
sa id th at it wou ld ha ve bee n
an exer cise in fut ili ty because South wou ld have gone
to four spades a·nyway.

really ~oo d lry. He played
dummy s 10 or c lubs a t tric k
one . East took his queen and
led ba ck the fou r or dia monds. ~ ou tn won with the
king; dre w t r um~s with two
lea ds a nd led h1s queen of
d ia monds.
East took his ace a nd led a
third diamond which South
r uffed. So uth e nte red dummy
w ith the nine or . trumps·
r uffed the last diamond' and
played his last trump while
d isca rding a heart from dummy to com e down to a four c a rd ending .
T he n he led a he a r t to dummy's ace. At this point East
had a chance to be a hero or'a
goat. He tur ned out to be a
hero when he drop~d his
king of he arl.:i to avmd being
caught in a n endplay. '

LZ:B;I:~•!MMth
The bidding has been:
West
North
East
Pas's
Pass
Pass

1+

tN.T..

u

Pass
Pass
Pass

1•

28 '

South

2" • ·

?

You, South, hold:
• K 7 6 4 3 • A 2 +9 +AK 7 3 2
What do you do now'!
A ~ Pass or bid four spados. II
all depends on how censervatlve
your partner Is.
TODAY'S QUESTION
I n s t e ad

of

r e b id d i n g

one

_1\Qlrumpyour partner has bid two
dia m onds Over your- one ' spade.

~o uth gave t he hand a Wb a t do -y~u do noW?

�23 -

22 - T he SWJday Times- Sentinel, SWlday , Dec. 29, 1974

For Fast R'esults ,Use The Sunday 1!imes-Sentinel Classif;eds
In Memory

- -·-· -c--·-~ ---,

PARSON'S
FURNITURE

306 1

lost
SM A L L

K a na uga - Ga II i poli s
Fa c tory Outl e t Sal e . All
types of l iv ing roo m suite s,
ex t ra
ch ests,
b e d ro om
suites, dine tte set s. Thi s and

Seal Poi nt Si amPse ,
to name Boag te , l os t

~n s we r s

tn Eve r green . H as a l l e r gtes to
m i l k and f ts h Re w a rd Ca ll
4.:1 6 0876 or 446 . 2651
3 0~

I
·-·

l ot s,
305 3

Pets
Bo b b t' s Poodl e Bouti qu e
P RO F E SS I ONA L groomt n g by
appomtm en t on l y P h Bobb1e
Cas to . .4 46 1 9 4 ~ .
212 If

SARGENT BR OS CON ST
A LL t y p es o f ca r pent e r work ,
co n c r e t e f inishmg , pai nting
F r ee es t imates
reasona l be
rates P h J67 72 39 or 367 7777
'11 4 7

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

No

20 7 tf
ST OP A ND C H A T
buy . D ec oupage

6

Ph. 446.92)0

TRA IL ER spac es . l arge
p r 1va te . 367 7 .:~ 38

Auction Sal e will be in
Po r ter at Be ach AC
Station on Jan . 11 . To
se ll y ou r e quip . call
Col. Jay Sheppard
tod ay, 446-0001 or 367 ·
0300 .

Circ le L K en nel s
BOA R D I N G , A K C Pupp tes. 1
m i les from ci t y, 446 4824
] 15 ! f
P IN E R ID GE CO L L I ES
AKC R eg Co ll ies , sa b l e and
w h i t e (6 14) 256 1267
283 H

Browse or

BOA RDIN G &amp; AK C P UP PI E S.
K &amp; P Kenne l s , 388 8 274 . R t
554 , 11 m 1. eas t of Por ter .
305 tf

T WO WAY R a di os Sal es &amp;
Servtce New &amp; used CB 's ,
poli ce mo nit o r s , a n te nn as.
e t c . Bob's Ci t i ze n Band Rad io A K C R e g
E qu i p , G eo r ges Cr ee k Rd ..
puppi es ,
Gal l ipo l i S, Oh io &lt;1 46 &lt;15 17
bl o n d e .
212 tf
$65 e a c h

SW EEPE R R epoi r , Pa rts and
Supp lies
P ic k
up
an d
d el •ve r y
D av1s
Vacc u m
1
C l ea n er . 1 m i le up Geo r ges
Cr eek Road . P h . &lt;1 46 029 4
7 5-ff
R U SS'S G L A SS S ER V I CE ,
Storm wmdo w s r e pa ired .
P l ex,g l ass .
au to
g l ass ,
mi rr o r s , d ecora t or a n d c ut to
s1ze 435 Sec Ave . . a cr oss
fro m the P 0 in G a ll i p o l is .
P h 1'1 46 7632
223 78

Wanted To Buy
STA N DIN G

t i mb er .

388 81'190 .
30 6 l

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

Help Wanted
B ABYS I T TE R •n my h om e 2. 30
p m t il l 9 p .m . 245 92 12
305 3

EX P ER I E N C ED
ba rt en d e r
and wa i tr ess . App l y K i ngs
Arm K n ig ht Club , Rt
7,
Ch eshir e .
306 3

for Rent
TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
.,
:
1112 Baths
Pay Only One Utility
Addison, Ohio
For Informat ion
Call Shirley Adkins

367-7250
5 R OOM house an d .one large
ttai l er sp a ce, Kyger Creek
Sc h oo l D 1str ic t. P h . 367 7350.
306 -7

. Spring Valley
Green Apartments
Now ready
for occupancy.
Model Open Daily
10- 12 noon &amp; 4-6 p.m .
Sal. &amp; Sun 1·4 p.m .
&amp;

2 bed r oom

B&amp; S M O BIL E HO MES
PT PLE A SA NT
Pa :- kwood 10x5 6 2 BR
NatiOna l 1(lx5 0 2 BR
Came lot 12:1!. 55 3 B!=i!
G lob em aster 12x60 2 BR
Sratesmari 12xso 2 B R
F awn 12)(60 1 BR
PMC 12x60 3 BR
ABC 8)(32 1 B R

--------------TRI - STATE
MOBILE HOMES
12 20 ~ a s t er n Ave.
M Sy stem
8x28 I BR
Brans tra ll er 2 BR
Marie tt a 2 BR
Wolve r i n e 2 BR
Marl ette 2 BR
Belmont 2 BR
K a ywoo d 2 BR
446-7577

apar1ments, rent starts from
s 135 per month.

ECO N OMY Mot or &amp; M obi l e
Home Sale s ~ Det r o i t er 10ft
w i de , lar ge li vi n g room. li ke
new ih sic:re· or o ut ; Sk y l ine, 2
8 R Yo u c ou ld sp end mo r e
an d no t get th e qual ify No ,
1t 's n ot n ew a8 ju st l ooks l i ke
i t . 1401 E a ste rn A v e . nex t to
t h e Laun d r o m a t . P h. 446 -1425.
291 tf
B&amp; S MOBILE HOME S
Pt. Pl e asan t
Con co r d 12x60 2 BR
Cha mpion 12)(60 2 BR
New Moon l Ox 55 2 B R
C h amp ion 12x60 2 B R
Li b er t y 12x50 2 BR
Grea t L a k e 8x45 2 BR

For Sale

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

MOBIL E H O M ES for r enl. P h .
446 075 6.
297 If
12)( 60 M OBI LE H ome . One
mil e fr o m hos pi ta l ' A d u lts
Ph . 44 6 3805 .
T R A ILER in RO lland , Ohio 4&lt;1 6
3981
277 If - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

----~ --- ~ - - --2_0 4 ·6
F IL .E S, cab ine ts, f i l i ng su p
pl1es, d esks, o ffi ce c h ai r s.
Si mmons Ptg . &amp; Off i ce Eq u i p .
306 -tf
1956 FORD wi t h ca ttl e r ac k
$475 . A fron t en d loader $375.
11 h ead o f Ho l ste in ca l ves .
ca rl 446 .4871.
30 6 3
---- - ----- -~--

10x 5 0
MOB I LE
ho m e ,
2
bedroom w i th por c h · a n d
a wn ing on a large size lot w ith
garden sp~ce . 6 miles fr om
th e hos p i ta l on old 160 tor S90 a
month . Call 446 -3589 aft er
4 : 30
306 6

--------..
I

\

----- - -

--

ALL
T YPES
of
bui l dt n g
IT)ate r ials , b lo c k , b r i c k , sewer
pi p es , windows , l i ntels , et c.
Cl aude Winters , Rio Gra nd e,
0 Ph on e 24 5·5121 after S.
123 tf

--------------L OCU ST f en ce p osts . Ca ll 256 ·
624 7.

297.tf

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

SEE our l arge se l ection o f
diamonds
an d
wa t c h es
Con1'par e our pr i c@s . Tawn ey
J ew ele rs .
278tf

--·- --

-----------

OH I O STO K ER , W Va. l ump
c oa l , fir ewood . Bl ocks , t ile .
ceme n t mor t ar . G a ll ipolis
Bl ock Co . Ph 41'1 6 27 83.
293 If
GO T an e y e for a buy ? Man y
it ems on s p ec1 a l
Corner
Cr afts , Ch ill i COt h e R d
287 I f
GRAVE L . l i m est on e , sa nd ,
Ma son sa n d. f ill d1r t P1 t ru n .
Del iver ed by I h e l on ,J.16 114 1.
'l J7 lf

-·- - - -

SEAR S B ic ycl e built for two .
on e y ea r Old . ex ce l len t c on
d 1tion , equipped w i th ligh ts ,
$7 5
P hone 24 5-51&lt;1 6 a fte r 6
P m.
305 3
LIM E ST O NE for dr1v eway s
r:: arl W mters . Phon e 245 51 15
21'15 If
N ew GMC
T r u ck H ea dqu ar t ers
1
1968 ? T . GMC P 1c kup
1966 11 T G M C
1970 J~ T . Ch ev P rc kup
1974 ' ~ T Ch ev Pi c kup
1968 J~ T GM C P 1c kup
196 5 11 T G MC P ick up
19 69 11 T GMC P 1c k up
1971 11 T F ord Pi c k up
1968 1? T G MC P 1ckup
1971 2 T . D od ge Cab and Ch ass is
196 7 11 T GMC P 1ck up
1968 11 T . GMC P1 c k up
1968 I "J T GMC P ickUp
1968 11 T Chevy P 1c kup
19 71 GMC Sub ur b an
1967 1' T F ord P ic kup
SOMMERS G. M . C.
TRUCKS, IN C.
t JJ Pine St .
446 · 2532
147 If

ALBERT EHMAN
W a t er D eli ve ry Servic e
P a t ri ot Sla r , GallipOliS
Ph . 379 -2133
243 tf

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

BANKS TRE E SERVICE
FREE es t i m a t es, l i ab il i t y in
surance . P rtJni ng, t ri mm i ng
and ca vit y work, t r ee and
stump re m ova l . Ph . 446 -4953.
?J if

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

71 G!-!!EMLI N 6 c yl st d. t ra n s. ,
n ew t ir es, 52 .000 ac t u al mi l es ,
$1200 Oa k Hill 68 2-7934 J
mi l es E on St. R t 279.

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

FU R N .
ap a r t me n t
near
down town Ga llipo l is. Ca ll 446 ·
0239 .
286 -tf

_L

1 :~ AC R ES Good barn .
ot her outbu il d in g s an d an old
hou se, ni ce p la ce m t he
coun tr y
Poss i b l e
l and
conlra ct to qua l if i ed buyer .

25 AC R ES Good small
farm , h as a t wo b ed room
mobile home , larg e ba rn ,
l arge pond b e 1n g bu •lt ,
l oba cc o ba se . lo ca t ed 5 miles
t rom to w n 1n c1t y sc h .
di stri c t Be tt er hurry , th i s
w on 'I l as t l ong

Evenings Call
John M. Fuller 446 -4327
L ee John son 256 -6740
Dou g
Wetherholt 446-4244

PO PE ' S E l ec tri c a l Contra ct rng .
I n dust r ial. c omm er c ral and
r es 1dent 1a t. Ph da y 38 8 87 &lt;17
or eve n 1n gs, 388 8657 .
283 tf
SAN DY an d Be aver I n su r an ce
Co h a s o ff er ed se rv •ces for
F 1re In suranc e c over age in
G al l ia Coun t y for al mos t a
ce ntury != arms , hom e s and
p er sona l prop er t y , co ve ra g e s
ar e a va i labl e to m eet in
d1 v idual n ee d s . Co nt ac t T . F
Burl es on . you r n eig hbor an d
ag ent
298 6

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

E LE CT R I C A L
se r v i ce ,
r emo d e l1 n g, gu tte r w o rk .
Fre e es timat es . Ca ll 4&lt;16 25 82
a ft er 5 p . m
304 tf

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

'

25 L ocu st St .
Ho w ard Brannon , B roker
Off. 446 -26 74
Lu c ill e Br a nnon
E ve. 446-1226 or 446 -267 4
BEAU T IFUL BRIC K - near
to wn on l '"J acre , we ll c ared
for lo t 3 BR , 111 2 ba t h , w w
c a rp er , spac i ou s banQue t
sty l e ki tc h en wi th DW &amp; all
th e built -in for com fort . Ful l
div i d ed basemen t , pan eled
do u ble garage , c on c re t e
dr i v e &amp; p at io . The pn c e is
on l y $36,000 .
t52 ACRE S - L ocated 12 mi .
f r om c it y
40 A . ti ll a b le ,
bal an ce in tim ber &amp; p ast u re
wit h p l en ty coa L 3,000 lb .
tob ac co b a se, 2 barns, on e
stor y home r emode l ed &amp; in
g ood con di t ion
3 A CRE S on St Rt 160 w i t h
t2' 1(65' m obi l e hom e l ik e
new . 3 BR, de ta c hed ga rag e,
p ony ba rn A rea l g ood buy
NEW and NEAR
NEW
HO M ES - 3 BR wi th 11h &amp; 2
b a t hs
Pr ice d $2 5,5 00
$29 , 500.
2 ACRES - On e St or y 3 BR
hom e, fa r ge eat . in k i tc h en &amp;
din i n g r oom , 1 c ar g arage, 1
b a rn &amp; c h ic k en
h·ou se.
Lo ca t e d at Ce nt e rp o i n t .
$22.0(''"1 .

NEAL REALTY
bath , rural w ater , loc ated s·
mi. f r om town on b l a c ktop
roa d .

Office Ph. 446·1694

-·- ~- - -- --------

----------

-

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

and sho we r . v ani t ies and Blu e G IL LE NW ATER'SSE PTI C
Ri dge P a in! Ph . 388 -857 6.
TA N K
CLEA NIN G
AND
N ew Onwer s
RE P A I R . ALSO
H O U SE
Arnold Smith and
W R E CK IN G Ph
4 46 -94 99.
Charles Sm•th
Estab li sh ed in ' 1940.
231 .ff
169 .1f

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

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

Leadingham Agency
Writes All Types of Insurance For
Your Auto, Home or Business
Represent
Llghtni'\9 Rod Mutual
Insurance Company
• Low.. Co st AUra lnsur anc~ ompare Our ra tes .
• L ow Co st Homeowner Policy.
·
• Low Cost Homeowners P olicy for Rent efs .
eFar mown er s Polic y - Complete Prote ct ion i n One Polic y.
• A Modern Mobile Homeowne r Poli cy .

e Low

Cost Fire Poll ey.

e A Specia l Multi- Per il

Packag e Pol ley for Yo ur Bus iness.

·not compare our rates with your present
DOIIic11? We know we can save YOU money .

Leadingham Agency
Ph. ·446-7699
512 Second Affe. ' Gallipolis, Ohio·
' '

.... '..

Whe n we s acrifice profi ts as we are doin g
now , w e prefer that the s aving s go to ou r
F ri e nd s and Customers !

••

••

NO DEALERS PLEA.SE

.•

HURRY

' •'•

'

M E _IGS C OUNT Y 190 A .
rol l rng p as tu r e farm N ice ly
remod el ed hom e w it h 5 r m s.,
ba t h and b a se m en t . 2 pond s ,
fr ee ga s and 6 p el fi na nc in g
ava il ab l e

11 Room s, modern spl it level hom e, 2 fire p laces, famil y
room, 2 ba ths, 2 ca r ga r age, basem ent , 1 acr e p lu s, n ice
landscape d ya r d with tot s of s hrubber y . Good blac k top
road , 4 m il es f rom Ga ll i p ol i s, lot s of r oom fo r lot s o f
possibil it ies w ith t his hom e.

DEC. 31, 1974

.

89 Cars In Stock

'..

Evenings

Charles M. Neal, 446·1S46
J. Michael Neal , 446 -1503
Sam Neal , 446-7358

RANCHO COMP A NY
R ea ltors ~ Au c tion ee r s
446 -0001 . 367 -0300 .
N I CE b ui l di n g l o t. Fai rf ie ld
B u i l d to su rt. Five acre hom e
si t e $5 ,000 42 A . f arm , n ew
hom e, $24 ,900 .
27l -tf

I

Type 4 Luxury
Sedans &amp; Wagons

..··-'"

..

N i ce comfor t ab le 5 room h ousEi, loca t ed on 1 a c r e o f land
w it h lots of sha de tr ees, b a sement, modern k itc h en ,
na t u r a l gas, furnace, city w ater , la r ge n ice ca r port Rea l
good 16' x18 ' sto r age bui ld ing, ga r den space. Ju st l isted .
Ask i ng $18,900 . Call now .

.•

------- ------FARM FOR SALE

124 A. , good house, barn. 2
out-buildings, tobacco ba se,
mineral rights &amp; 7 tenths mi .
road frontage _ on blacktop

4 BEDROOM

v..

A m odern h om e loca ted on
acre bea uti ful la ndsc ap ed
yard , 112 m il e from Ga ll ipol is. 7 roo m s p l us 2112 b ath s, large
scree ne d i n p orch, la r ge livi n g room wit h bea m ce il i ng
an d a wood burnin g firep lace, air conditi on ed, n ice
mod ern k itc hen . See i t n ow . L ess tha n S40, 000.

3 BEDROOM, 2 YR. OLD HOUSE

..,.

67 RENAULT

"

Full Pri ce

..

74AMC
HORNET
HATCHBACK

7J AMC
GREMLIN

$AVE

$AVE

road. Ph. 388.8463,

TRUE

N EIG HBO R HOOD R D . - 2
hou ses on n ea rl y 3 A . l ot No .
1, h as 8 r m s . • bath , enc los ed
por ch and olent v sto r a oe
room . P l enty g ood , f r e e
w ate r . N o 'i, ha s 3 rm s.,
• p r op e rt y ha s 2 ce ll ars
topped with s tor a ge b ldg s .:
g ar . with s tor a ge ove-rhead ,
work s hop a nd 2 pou lt ry
!l ou se s L and 1S exc ell en t tor
gLJ~den r ng . T h is prop er t y i s
be1ng so l d to sen l e a n e stat e
, and pr 1ced t or a Quick sa l e at
$26,000. (,Potent ial plus l.

.

0818.

RUSSELL
\'OX)
•"

'

1624.00

11IE

1293

1

68 Ply .

68 INT'L
TRAVELETTE
Was$ 1.095.00

'689.00

HURRY

o

73 PINTO
SQUIRE•
WAGON

72 FORD
LTD

Sa ve $300

SAVE 1500

7JCHEV .
MALIBU
Now

7J P lY .
F URY
4Dr. H.T.

AGENCY

C- 10 Pa ne l

$AVE

Now '1342

Truck &amp; Topper

70 CAMARO
Red

68 NOVA

$AVE

$AVE

$AVE

$AVE

$AVE

Tell 'em

2 Dr . Sedan, 250 6 c yl. eng ine, aut o.
t r a ns ., b rig ht ye ll ow, W· S· W tires,
AM ra d io . M ore to choo se f r om .

St ick er Pr ic e
$3531

cyl. engi n e,
b r i g ht r ed i n c olor , power rack
i on st eer i ng ,
power disc brakes, fron t &amp; rear bum per guard s, ai r ,
rad1o , ex te r ior accen t group.
Stick er Pri ce S472S.
Many more to choose f r o m!
1

*3,340

S4 300
' .

OFFER ENDS JANUARY 15th, 1975

.

GALLIPOLIS
CH.RYSLERPLYMOUTH

L.

Best Selection of Trucks in the Tri-County Area

'

Owner Anxious To

O VEL Y BY - LEVE L
With 5 bed r oo m s. 2 b a t hs .
fa m 11y room , 2 c a r gar ag e,
C air , fu ll y carp e ted , l arg e
fl at l ot , city s cllools .
P er fect f or l a r ge o r sm a ll
f ami l y . Low Fort i es .
VE R Y NI CE RAN CH w i t h ful l basemen t. 3 B R ,
f a m ily roo m , fir e p l ace ,
ver y n ice k1t chen and a
coun tr y se tt ing
A SS UME
THI S
EX ·
C ELLEN T L O A N 7 10
int , '$1 86 .00 pe r m o. 18 y r s .
t er ms , $4 , 000 down or your
rea so n a b le ott er . Pri ce
$26, 500 . .v e ry
n ic e
3
bedrooms, tully c apr e t ed
hom e wit h C a 1r , garag e
an d
mi d . c ou ntr y
at .
mosphere , 1 m i l e fr om
tow n .
G . l. APPROVED No
m on ey dow n . 3 bedroom
home w ith f u ll baseme nt ,
new w to w . ca r peti ng,
ni ce ki tche n and garage ,
q ui e t loca t ion , $25,900 . 1
m ile from town .

CLAS SI C BRICK
1600
sq . ft . of beaut i f u l l i v ing
area
Yo u must see l o
ap pr ec 1a te t his beauty .
Carp e t throughout , 2 f u ll
baths , 3 B . rooms , utilit y
room , fami l y r oom i n ·
e l udes f i r e p l ace , l arge
ki t c h en w i t h dish w ., and
d i sposa l , fo rmal din i n g
r oom. large attached tw o
car garage , full ba se men t ,
natu ra l gas hea t . One a c r e
lot.

4 Dr . hardtop, radio, auto. t r a n s ., P. steering ,
P . br~ke~ , lac . air cond. , w -s -w tires, green
m e t a l1 c fmlsh , matching inter ior , vinyl top,
low mileage .

YMOUTH

Sell

.,.

H er e is one of the very best locations in Gallipolis - Th e
seH i ng is per f ect · th e v iew of th e ri ver and We st V a . h i ll s
ca n't b e b eat. It In cl udes a l arge l i v ing r oom w ith
fl repl~ ce, 3 n ice s i zed bed r oo m s, 1'h baths, family r o om .
la r ge kit c hen , a nd f r ont por c h all the way a c r oss the f ro nt .
Olm er must se ll ( m ov ing out of st a t e ) . M a ke us a n offer.
I

71 CHEVROLET IMPALA

Bill Jot Johnson

(FINAL 1974 CLEARANCE SALE

NE A R HOSPITAl - New
painton thi s t hr ee bed room
home . L ocate d in f ine
neig ll borhood , n at ura l g as
hea t , one fl oo r p la n . P ri ced
to sel l. $24,900 .

·-·,.
"

GRE EN A CR ES
Bi
le ve l. 3 b edroo m , moder n
kit, fam 1l y room. g ara ge , 'J
bath s , lot s of st or ag e, la r ge
f l at lol . Pr iced to se ll .

,

•

.~

..•••

..

-•·
~

.

COUN T RY
A T ·
MO,S P HERE N ear l y
ne..., f u ll y c arpe t ed , 3
bedroom home , ki t. i n c l ude s d i shwashe r and
r ang e, p len ty Qf cabinets,
atta c h ed ga r age, all on .87
ac r e P r i ce r ed u ced .

M

~

...

~

BRAND NEW - T hi S we ll
bu i! t home in c ludes 3 la r ge
b ed r ooms , fu ll y equi p pe d
kit. Ca r pe t t hro u g h o u t,
with f ini shed 2 c a r ga ra ge .
Ut i1 1t y room , Jlh bat hs. A ll
e lectri c .

G allkt Co.1s L arg es t Ne ar
E state Sales Agency
Ofllce 446 -3643
EvenirJg s Call
Ike Wi se man 446 - 37'9 6.
E . N . Wi se man, 446 -4500
Bud McGhee, 446-125s

•

I

1971 VW BUG, Check This One________________s1695
1972 VW SUPER BEEnE, auto stick shift _________ ,s1895
1969 VW SQUAREBACK, 4 speed._____ _______ __ s1295
1969 VW FASTBACK, Sale Priced _______________ Sfi99
1973 MAVERICK 2 DR., only 16,000 miles. ________s2695
1972 PLYM. DUSTER 2 DR., Twister, 6 cyl.. ___ ____ .$2195
1970 MERCURY MONTEGO, Super Buy ________ ____s888
1968 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DR·---------------- SS95
1970 FORD 1h TON PICKUP, 4 5Peed---- ------ - .s1495
1968 FORD lh TON PICKUP, CamP,.er, h~ topper, ____ s1295
1974 DfM lh TON PICKUP, only 10,000 miles. ____ s30()()
1971 FORD LTD 4 DOOR.__________ _________ s1595
1972 CAMARO RALLYS SPORL __ __: __ ___ _____.$2695
1973 PONTIAC VENTURA 2 DR., air cond. - - ---- -- s2395
40 OTHER USED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM
v- CHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU BUY

.GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
1639 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLI~, 446-3273

'2095
WOOD MOTOR SALES
EASTERN AVE .

FOR R E NT

I

30 a c r es , mod er n c oun try
h om e , ca r peted , panelling ,
h ook up for wa s h er , barn ,
tobac c o base . S125 a rrionth ,
Se cur 1t y depo s it of $ 125
r equ i r e d p l us fir st month 'S
r en t .
MODERN 3 b ed r oom hom e,
carpeted, t hre e y ear s ol d ,
u t il i ty
r oo m ,
c ab i nets ,
ga r age loca t ed in Coun try .
Ai r s ub -div is i on . '$165 a
month . re f eren ces r equ i r ed .
446- 1066
446· 46 18 aller 5 p . m .

anything

BarR or

f ac ts s tr a1 g n t re g a r a 1ng
som ething you were told when
you go to repeat it to someone

fo r

else.

at our Auc11on
In your home. f=or

l nfo~mation and pickup
urvtce call 256-6967 at1er

p.m.
Every Sat,urday Night
Al7p.m .

s

Some- 8ddltional di sc ipline is
requ ired if 'y ou /io p e to keep
yOur h ousehold bu dget in line.

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
·

ai Onve

Siandoy"-Doc. 2,, 1974
4AIES (March 21-4prll 19)

~

Buy o nly what's needed.
T4Uf\US (4prll 20-Moy 20)
Yo u'll fl ave trodb le keef?i ng th e

GEM INI (Moy 2t-Jurie 20) It
will take some sk illfu l •pers ua .
si an .on your behalf to get
b acking or assis tan ce you may ·
need fr om another. Have a
good story ready.
C4NCER (June 21 -July 22) A
plan you liave iS a g ood one, so
d on't let one who d oesn't com p re/i end rt punch p etty holes m
II.

:

LEO (July 23· Aug 22) You
have troub le k eep ing s ec rets
today . You·r e apt to talk about
something very per son al and
confiden tial to t h e w r ong
listeners.
VIRGO (Aug 23- Se p t 22 )
O thers w ill carry ta le s to you
about a friend o f long stand i ng.
Weigh their wor ds carefully.
being awar e they have a n a x to
grind .

LIBR4 (SOpt 23-0 ct 23) Keep
p ersgns ou t of your b usiness
or c cfr eer p roblem s w ho h ave ·

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

WIN AT BRIDGE

Wrong contract proves fatal
NORTH

28

• 9 63

' A96

+8 7 63

... AJ 10
WEST

EAST 101

'+K

• 54

• J7

' Q IOS

8 43
A 104

+ ,)952

... 9 6 3 2

... KQ74

SOUTH

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Doc
21) T h1s IS not

::3: good d ay fo r
you to b ecbme too d eeply im mersed m busine!i s affa1 r s
Pos tpone t liem u nttl y au ·re
more commerc ially mmded .

It's hard for y ou to stic k with an
ove r - all game p l an , even
though you k now you shou ld .
Instead you'll m ake to o many
short-range ad justments .

AQU4R1US (Jon 20-Fob 19) If
rou fi ne! yourself wllh a b it o f a
surplus . it would b e a good
1dea to repa y an o l d rn debtedness m part

PISC ES (Feb 20-Morch 20)
Spend today wit h fr iend s wh o
kno w how to enjo y themselv es .
rather t han With th ose you f eel
yo u
must en te rt ai ~ ev ery
mi nu te .
·

... 8 5

F OR sa l e or trad e for land in
Ga l l ia Co unl y, b y own er , 40
ac r es i n Vin ton Co un ty , v..
m i le b lac kto p r oa d fr on t age .
Ca ll 446 .3277 .

SC ORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22 )
Pleasurable pl ans you 'v e made
tor yours elf today will b e d tsru pted . if you let one w hose
id eas d on't j1bew1th yours in on
them .

'+ J

. AKQI082
72
KQ

For Sale or Trade

no o trr c 1al role rn them Their
adv1ce wrll only contu se you
more .

305 3

Your Blrthdoy- Dtc. 28, 1974
There w ill be a g o od market f or
your creativity th is com rng year
1t you' ll tak e t he p ains to look
arou nd . The right assoc•ate
ca n be f ound for id eas you
ca n 't sw ing on your own.
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

C4PR1CORN (Dec 22-Joo HI)

FOR SALE

Kelly
sent you.

Mustang Muslan9 11 2+ 2,

CHARLIE WE BST E R SAYS: THESE CA RS HAVE GOT TO MOVE!

Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis. Ohio
Ph . 446 -9800

M&amp;-1066

..

Maverick

Large Selection of New Torinos &amp; LTD's-ln Stock

ltEALIDR

.!'J e wly
Rem 0 d Pi e d
Twa.Storv House For Sale i n Cit y
~
~uumrnum
siding, nice
kitchen , 4 larg e b e drooms,
. den , famil y room , din i ng
room , basem ent with ne,w
natural g as furnlce, lar g e
private
patio ,
s t ora ge
building atta ch ed in rea r, W·
w carp eting fir st floor, 1'12
baths, 2 fi r eplaces, summ er
and w i n.fer porch upsta i r s,
k itchenette up stairs, l it rg e
l ot. Yo u h a v e to see th ts
hom e to appr e c ia t e th (' 1
' beaut y and space. Phon e 4$6
1854 or 446-YJH alter 5:00 .

'3,060

Sticker Pric e $3293

69CHEV .

70 DUST ER

Satellite

56 JEEP

Pinto

2 dr . sedan , sil ve r bl ue i n co l or , steel belted W·S · W
t i res, p . steer i ng, fu ll y carpeted , a ccen t gro u p . See It to be lieve It!
M ore to t;: hoose f r om .

$AVE

2910.00

1

69IMPALA
4 Dr. H.T.

DON WATTS V.W.
RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP

WISEMAN

...

ill "' ..

~ -

A Specia I on Every New &amp; Used Car .

PLANTS SUB · DIV . - Good
5 rm . house wi t h fu ll basem .
I t h as H W . fl oors. ga s F A .
h ea t ,
co pp er p lumbing,
car port an d 1 , A . l ot . On ly
$73,500 .

H R. 446 -19'98

70 FAIRLANE
Now

1

......

'"It . . . .

SALE ENDS DEC. 31 AND ALL PRICES
RETURN TO NORMAL.

HED G EWOOD OR .~ 7 r m
home on la r g e lot . H . w
fl oo r s , b asem e n t , s t o r m
doo r s and windows . P r i ce
$20,000 .

~NY

74 TRIUMPH
750 BIKE

SAVE '500.00 SAVE '445.00

"

•·

leo P. King, Associates
Home Phone 446-4994

NE A R ROONEY P r 1ce
red uc ed o n t his near new, 7
rm . frame home , a ll el ec . a ll
ca r p et an d p l ent y stor age
r m . It has a 2 car gar . arl d
ut i l 1ty bldg . L oca t ed on a "1 A
fenc ed lot. w it h pond and
Young p i ne trees . Pr i ce
$38, 500.

SPRING VALLEY
3 or 4 BR, ~ cook ' s deli ght
kitchen , play r oom &amp; family
room, a i r cond. , carp et ed , 2
car garage . By owner , 446·

7 ROOM " CENTURY"
.
HOME '
Low er Riv er Rd ., 3 B R , t wo
1:2 &amp; 1 fu ll bath . 2 fi r epl aces ,
sc r eened in br eeze wa y,
barn , 3.9 a cres . Shown b y
a ppo int men t . Ph . 256 ·6786
after 5 p .m . Ave n Lusk .

•

Phone 446-7699
Willis T. Leadingham
Home Phone 446-9539

Realty, 32 State St

CLARK - EVANS
RD .
Baby Fa r m · 2 to 15 A . 5 r m . 2
s tor y h o•Jse w il h ba th . A lso
h~ s a ba rn . P r ice $12, 600,
w •lh 2 A . o f good garden
land .

YOUR DREAM COME

71 FORD
Now

$15,500.00.
WE NEED LISTINGS. CALLUS NOW.

73 MONTE
CARLO

47.00

modern k it c h en , carpeting, plen ty of go od w ater . Like to
fis h ? Close to Tycoon Lake . Screened i n front porc h , J ust
a real nice new countr y h ome on clea n leve l la nd. Only

BULAVtLLE - POR T ER RD .
- 76 A som e bo tto m , some
t imbe r . d rill ed we ll an d
f en c.ed o n 3 s i des . $15,000.

. ..... ., ... .,

Sticker $3444 .20
Discount 404. 1
NOW $3 040 .10

$AVE

1

His Economy
Buys for '75

E x ample

5 In Serv ice
2- 2 Door s
1-4 Doors
3-Wagons

Cou n try Grocery Stor e, stock , and eq u ip men t, large block
b ui ld i ng wi th 3 r oom apartmen t ; one 3 roo m c abi n, al so
new b asem en t. cone:: rete floor b lock wa ll s for a ne w ho m e
start ed , locat e d on 2 acre p l u s, leve l land i n T yc oon Lak e
a r e a . Li ke fi s h ing?

MASSIE

..

Special Demo.
Discounts

SAVE s400.00

2 ACRE S PLUS SMALL BUSINESS

WORLD ' S LARG EST
T HE LEADER SIN CE 1900
IN
SE RVIN G
T HE
N A TION 'S BU YERS A ND
SEL L ER S.
Ph . 446·0008

FARM - Whea t on R d . 80 A
stoc k farm , 6 r m hou se w i th
f u r . h ea t an d ba th , p l enty
water. 2 Mobi l e home s
partia l ly fu r Good t r ac to r
an d oth er fa r m too l s . Buy th e
b un d l e fo r $43, 500

Bee tl e Demo's

. ""•

"
/.
••
* •• 't .....

AMC G re mlins
&amp; Hornet s

~

JU ST OUT OF CIT Y LIMITS, STATE RT. 141

US 35 - 10 A .. appro x . 1, 850
f t r d . fr onta g e, a ll ut!lit1 es
av a il ab l e . B uy a nd s ub
d i vid e

CHATHAM AVE . - Loo ki ng
for a p l ace to p ut som e
money . Hav e 2 hou ses on 1
Cit y l ot Bo t h h ave ga s Ilea l ,
both ar e on 2 l eve ls, both in
good re p air and bo th a r e
r ented . Boug ll t fo r '!i 22 ,600

for you!

MUST SELL- GIVE US AN OFFER

NEAR P A T R I OT 147 A .,
52 A . Sa nd F or k Bo ltom
Balance i n pa stu r e an d
w ood s, l o ts of wa l n u t t 1mb er
6 r m h om e , la r ge barn , 1,7 35
lb tab b ase , $75,000

GREEN AC RE S- Bes t buy
I h ave seen l h 1s yea r. Nea r
new 5 r ms ., bath and l aundry
r m . F .A . ga s h eat , a ll carpet,
attached gar . and fl at l ot .
$2J ,700 .

SALE ENDS

..._,
'

Is cooking ·up
something

WE ARE OVERSTOCKED-

•..

3

*

YEAR END TAX SALE

•~"
...

..·-•

Cou n t r y a t mosp here, but th i s bea ut ifu l h om e is lo cated
ab out 3 m iles from Ga ll i p ol i s on good h i g hway wi t h n a t .
gas, ru r a l water , la rge living r oom . 2 f irepla ces, full
basem ent , lot s of beautiful sh r ubber y , modern b a th &amp;
k itc h en . Ca ll now.

EUREKA - Hol iday Sp ec i a l
- 5 rm s . and ba t h on main
fl oo r ; f ull f1 n i shed b a se w i t h
gar and l am ily r m . Located
on n ear 1 A . R i v er f r on t lo t
Pr i c ed u nder r ep l a c em en t
cos t $2 1, 400.

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

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

-~

~

CHESTNUT ST. Cozy
li tt l e cott age , with 5 rms . and
ba th , a ttac h ed ga r . N u -Sa s h
w i n d ows , plu s st orm w in
an d drs . Sh1 ng l e s i ding .
Cheap at $ 12, 500

IS A . fa r m 5 rm . house wi th

- --·------------ - -

-3 ARAGE , aft 1c an d base m en t DOZ E R w or k , c lea rin g , ex c lea n mg . T r a sh ha ulin g . Free
cavati n g , s t ump rem o va l.
estimat es . Ph . 446 -0355 or 446 ·
bu sll hoggi n g . P h . 446 005 1.
2950 .
280 -tf
718 -tf
----....----- - -·- - - - - M&amp; M
DRAFTI NG SERVICE
R OOFI N G &amp; Spo u t i n g Sh mg le
DE SI GNER - D r aftsma n wil l
an d Buildup roof . H ot and
do Topo s i t e, remo d el in g ,
Co l d pro c e ss . H ome i m .
or
n ew
c omme r c ial.
p ro v eme n t i n genera l . !=or
r esi d ent .al p lan s . 15 yea r s
fr ee es t ima t es , pllone Rob er t
expe r i en ce i n CIVi! and ar
Me ad e , 388 ·8 1 14, Bi dw el l ,
c h it ectura l. Ph 1-682-7498 .
Ohio .
285 -tf
263 1f
---C REMEANS PIP E &amp;
D. P . Ma rt in &amp; Son s Wa t er
SUPPLIES
D eli ve ry
Se r vice .
Yo ur
B i dw ell , Ohio
p atr ona ge
will
be
ap .
HO_T .an d t;:ol 9 pla sti c p 1p e an d
p rec i at ed Ph . 446-0463 .
f 1tt mg s, sew er an d dr ai n p1p e,
2.tf
kitc h en sink s, f i ber lga ss tu bs

* * *GIGANTIC* *

~·

...

Tel. 614-446-1998

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

T OOL
s harp e ning ,
s aws ,
sc isso r s , shears , !l o m e and
ga r d en · too l s. Shar p Shop ,
At l ey rea r , 14 7 Sec ond .
216 tf

.......,
~·

D O N ' T BE BEAT BY IN ·
I n vest
yo u r
F LA TI ON
sav rng s 1n l an d . E xpe rt s
c on c lud e t hat !h e n a t io n 's
land will r ise in v alu e b y a t
l ea s t 15 pe t m 1974 W e h ave
32 8 acr es of wood l and 9 m i
f rom to wn fo r on ly $130 p er
a cre

REALTY

FREN C H CITY BLOCK . 41'1 6 Pa ul Sm ith , 24 hr
w r ecker
3608, loca t ed at Ker r . Be th el
se r v i ce . P h 245 5034 or 446
K emp er Ho l low i ntersec ti on .
93 11
150 If
263 If

-· ---------- - - - - - -

AD DI SON TWP .
N ew
sec tion a l h om e is a ll e l ec t r ic
fo r y our c on veni en ce a n d
co m fo rt . Fea tur es 3 B R s,
ba t h , s h ag c a r p et . ki t c h en
w .th
r a n ge ,
h oo d
an d
r e f r1ge r a t or . Si tu a t ed on a
lar ge f lat l ot on a B T rd

!/JilfUIIUJIL

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

T E RMITE P ES T CONTROL
FREE ins p ec t ro n . Ca ll 446 3245 .
Me rrill O'De ll , Op er ato r b y
Ex t ermin a l Termi t e Ser vice,
tO Bel mo nt D r
267 -tf

FH A A PPRO V ED
'l y r
ol d ran c h ha s 3 BP. s . car p e t,
nalur a l ga s h ea t . b ri ck f r on t
and ga r a g e Lo ca t e d on a fl al
lo t on Bu l av i ll e R d . $20,000

..---

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.
Real · Estate Broker
512 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

2 314 A cres , clean l evel la nd , 6 room s, p lus nice bath ,

GE N E RA L CONT RA CTIN G
Hom e i mpro ve m ents and ad
d 1t ion s R oofm g , vtnyl S1d ing
Cal l 41'16 0668 or 245 5138
152 56

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

ME I GS C OUNT Y
1q0 A
r o ll i ng p as tur e f arm . N ic e tY
remod e led h om e w it h 5 rm s ,
ba th and ba seme nt , 2 pood s,
fr ee gas an d 6 p e t . f m an c ing
a vai la b l e

Don Watts Volkswagen
Riverside AMC-Jeep

Real Estate For 5ale

RANNY BLACKBURN, BRANCH MANAGER

Services Offered

H OL ST E IN CO N C R ETE , all
t y p es o f concre t e wo rk ,
f ooti ng s, wa ll s , c oncre t e
f rni shi n g , c a r pen t er wo r k .
Free est i mat e&lt;&gt;. P h . 367 041 7
or 446 7795
276 -80

L i k e n ew
bri c k and fr ame r a n c h o ff er s
J .larg e B R s. 2 ba t h s , f ac tor y
krt c h en , for m ill d in in g r m,
ww carp el , ga ra ge, pa t i o
and l arg e fl a t l o t

R EMOD EL ED 2 STOR Y Thi s lov el y home is loc at ed
in A d d 1son Twp and offer s
lo ts of good li v ing fo r on l y
$23 ,900 . Some featur e s ar e
new aluminum si din g, s torm
w ind ows , natu r a l gas h eat.
new f actory kitc h en wi th
cabi n ets. r an g e, dish wash er
an d refrige r a t o r , form a l
d in ing r m . an d almost 2
acres c lose to t ow n .

f i n a n ci ng

KOTALIC LANDSCAPIN G
RIO GRAr.IO E, OHIO
C OM PL E TE PROGRE SSIVE
LAND SCAPING
SH R UBS ,
TREE S,
RO CK
G A -R D E N S ,
A L L
GU.O. R A N TEED . Patio an d
pool l andscaping . St on e, sa nd ,
c oa l , shru b bery l r 1mm i ng .
Du mp tru c k s erv1 ces . 2&lt;1 5
9 13 1.
187 tf

0 J ~WH I TE RD .

IN EX PEN SI VE C OUNTR Y
LIVIN G - 5 rm s and bath ,
c e l lar . sm a l l ba r n . s hop and
2 a cr es n ear Vin ton , $ 10,500. ·

WE BUY, SELL, TRADE

COM P LETE Cer ami c St udio
EQIJ•pmen l , la r g e kiln . 184,
mo l d s g l aze , s t ain s, and
ac cessor i es . ~h . 304·675 1599
Pt P le asant , w. Va
306 3

OW N ER
W IL L
H ELP
FINA N CE - M oder n ho m e
6
r ms
ba th .
o ff ers
base me nt und over ' l a c r e of
r o lli nq l a na.. J u s t l 1s t ed .
I
$15, 500.

MA K E SUR E YOU SEE
THI S ON E . Lik e new tr J.
l ev e l offe r s 2, 800 sq . ft . of
l i vmg space p l u s a 2 c ar
garag e . Ot h er f e a t u r es ar e 4
BR s . 2' ·7 baths , sunken L R
d ream kitc ll en , f amily rm ·
with WB f irep la c e , ce nt a1r ,
p at1o , and larg e lo t L o cated
•n on e of the a r ea ' s n ic er
subdiV ISi on s

1

VA

BAB Y
F AR M
N EAR
V I N TON
13 1 ~ ac r es of
cl ean r o t1 1n g l and , pond ,
larg e gard en spa c e , 2 b arn s,
ce llar h ou se , 5 rm s . an d
b a t h $18, 500.

MOB ILE H OME P A RK i n
C h es ll i r e wi th 6 re n t a l u ni ts
ha s re nt p ot en t ia l o f o v er
Si700 per month
A good
m o n e y mak er f o r on l y
S3 9,500

N E W BR I CK RA N C H
Ve ry
n •ce
wil h
three
be droom s ,
1 1 :~
ba t h s.
f i r ep la ce. fu l l y ca rp ete d , t wo
ca r gara ge , loc a t ed on a n 1c e
lot 5 m i l es fro m to wn .

TRI - STAR
T HOMA S Fa i n Ex t"!'r m in ati n g
El e ctric Contr a ctor s
Co . Termi te an d Pest Contro L COM P LETE e l ec t r i ca l se r vice.
W h ee l er s b ur g , Ohio
Galli polis , Oh io P h . 367-031 1.
233.tf
207 tf

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

SL EE P ING R OOM S, week ly
rates Pa r k Cen tra l Ho te l.
306 -tf

GARF I ELD AVE . N i ce
two bedroom h om e w i th a
bea ut i fu l v 1ew o f t h e r .v er ,
fu l l y f ur n i shed , ga ra ge and
n ice lot

F H A and
ava i l abl e .

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

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

Phone 446-1599

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

1964 O L D SM O BILE l u x u r y ,
m odel , g ood shap e, se t o f
radial t 1r es . si xe L R 70 15 Ph .
992 2508 or see a t 131 L aur el
St, P ome r oy , 0 .
306 6

P ROTEC T your m obile home
wi th TIE DOW N A NC H O R S
Ca ll Ron Skidmore , 446 1756
a l te r 3 p .m .
22 1 tf

" FOR a ro b we l l d on e fee l i ng ,"
c l ean car p ets w i th Blu e
Lus tr e .
Re nt
elec t ric
Sh a mpooe r
$1 .
Centra l
WE H AVE sp ace m a Second
Suppl y .
Av-e
bus i ness
b uild i n g .
306 6
Su i tab'fe f o r office, b ar .
b ersho p , bea ut y s h op or sm a ll 8" DUR O p or tab l e elec tr ic saw ,
b u si n ess. Ph 446 · 169 4
c ompl ete w i t h tabl e, join er
$1 50. P h . 367 -7426
268 tf
306 2
2 BR tota l el e c . M H at Quai l
Cr e ek , 245 -502 1.
N AO M I's W 1g Sty ling . Se ll
285-ff
and s t y l e a ll f ash 1ons W igs ,
wig l ets , fa lls . Phone 388·8308 .
BR A DB UR Y effici ency apt ,
286 tf
se cond f loor , adu lt s on l y. no
p ets Phon e 446 095 7.
GOOD c l ean lump an d sto ke r
_ .!!_ __ - - - - - - _ _ _ _ _ !_69 -tf
coal. Car l Wi nt ers ,
Rio
G r ande P h . 245 -511 5.
SL EEP I N G r o om s , weekly
245-tf
ra te G a ll ia Ho t el.
257-tf

l'lx60 M ob rl e Hom e On e m il e
fro m h ospit al Adu lf s Ph 446
3805
287 i f

Services Offered

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

ga r d en

R E M O DELI N G, a ll t y p es b ui lt
in cab in e t s. al uminu m srd in g.
r oofin g,
p a n el i n g .
l= re e
es t im at e, 2&lt;1 5 56&lt;17
282 30

305 3

COMPLE T EL Y remode l ed , 2
b e droo m hom e with 4. 6 2
acr e s Clo se to town . Ca ll 446
28 90 .
304 3

1970
1967
1962
1968
1966
1957

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

SEA R S ad d 1ng machi n e, li ke
ne w . C all 446 4376 afte r 5. 30
0 m

M OB I LE home , l o cat ed n ear
town on Rt . 141 , ni ce l ot. 446
4052
305 6

18X45
2 BR
10x 50
l 0x5 0
10x 50
l 0x 50
10x5 0
10x50

USE D F U R NI T U RE
G E D r yer l i k e new , b ed roo m
suite w i th ma tt r e ss an d bo x
springs
Cor b in &amp;
Sny der
if ur n .
30 I If

F I R EP LA CE log s , re a son able .
F r ee d eli ve ry 37 9 2257
305 3

Year End Clearance
Sale . lOxSO
2 BR
mobil e home . your
choice $1750, Tri - State
Mobile Homes .
1220 Ea s tern Ave .

1964
196 5
196 5
1968
1970
1972
1967
19 53

R I CE'S NE W &amp; U SE D F U R N .
SEA L Y MAT T RESSES 549.95 ,
COMPARE AT B 9. 9S . 854
Secon d , 446 · 9511 .
298 If

Ga l lipolis, Ohio 4SU1
LOVELY RA N CH HOM E You w ill lik e th e t hr ee la r g e
b edr oom s, tam il y room , wi fe
a pp r ov ed ki t ch en , P ~ bath s,
l iv1 ng ro om with f 1rep la c e .
b ase m ent . l ar ge two car
garage w ith e lec tri c ey e
Nice l eve l lot on Rt 35

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

Mobi'e "lor~ es For Sale

- -·--- - - - - - - - - -

TE XAS R E FI NERY C O RP
offers PLENTY O F MONEY
ptus c ash bonu ses, f r i nge
benef 1IS to m a t u r e i n div id ua l
in Ga l l i pO l i S area . Rega rd less
o f ex penen ce, airmail G I.
Pate , Pres ., Te x a s Re f ine r y
Cor p ., Box 71 1, Fort Wor th ,
T e)(a s 76101.
306 4

. Cocker
Sp a ni el
7 weeks o l d , shots ,
On l y 2 fema i es .
Phon e 446 · 03 11 .

Osur laird, John Puller,
ooul w ethe r hol1 ,
!12 Secorlcf'Av•nue

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

Chil l ic o t h e R d

280 If

IIIOitllll

I O R yo ur T1 re a nd Billt ery
needs , com e 10 Sea r s T 1r e
Sh op in Tt~ e Si l ve r Bridq e
P ta za
2]6 I f

1973 IN T ER NA T IO N A L 1800
se r 1es, lat ium a K! e . P ll 256
65 74
30 6 6

PE K I NGE S E PUPP ieS A KC.
'$75 Hol d fo r Ch r is t mas , 67 5
503 0 aft er 4 "30.
293 12

and othe r
Co r ner
C r a ft s ,

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT REALTY

6J CH EV R OLE T pi ckup , 6 c yl.
S400. See Mr Shaw up st a 1r s.
9 19 Second Av e
302 6

SLE E PING
room ,
ran ge,
r e f r 1g e r a 1o r . $)0 pe r mo
V l tltl 1eS pa 1d Men only .J.\6
4 116 a ft er 1 p rn .
305 6

Consignment Sale.

DE A D s to c k r e m oved
c ha r ge Ct~ lt 7J5 55 1·1

s

Real Estate For Sale

PIL E i s sofl and lofty
c olor s
r e ta 1n br i ll ianc e in ca rp ets
c lean ed wi th B l ue Lu slre
R ent e lec l r ic s hampooer S1 .
Centr al Sup p ly .
301 6
·I H OG S, 5 p igs . Re c or d p layer
wi t h ra d1 o s ter eo comb . S200 .
Ph . 3RB 8J08
303 6

For Rent

Farm Equipment

g Il l s

muc h more . Open 9 t o
aa y s p er week .

3

Notice

For Sale

For Sale

IN
ME M OR Y
Of
Lu l a
Oa r ltng f on Kt r by wh o p asse d
a w ay December 28 . 1 ~3 0 .
S ad l y miSSed by Cht ld re n
and l o ved on es

Times - Se ntlner;SWJday, Dec.' 29, 1974

Wanted To Do
CU ST OM se win g. a l te rat ion s on
a ll t yp es o f c lot h i n g , f ur s .
Re w e aving . Ph . 446 ·7520 or
~46 - 1 77 1

? .U If
---- --~- ------

T YP I NG SER V I CE S. "'{il l do
a ll k i nd s of typ in g i r'1 m y
'h om e . Ca ll 446 -4999.
2~ 4 t t
WALL
P a p e r in g ,
int e r i or
p a1n trng . Re ason a bl e r ate~
Pll . ~A 6 4423 or 4.4 6 363 1
.' ,., • f

Wes t

N ur(h

Pa ss

IN .T

Pass
Pass ·

Pllimbing &amp; Heating
GE N E PL A N TS&amp; SO N
P L UM B IN G - H eat1ng - Ai r
Condit i on ing , 30 0 Fourth Ave
Ph 446 -1637 .
48 If
STA N DAR D
P lu mbi ng . H e ati ng
214 Third A ve., 446-3782
187 1f
CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND H EA TIN G
cor . Fourt h &amp; P i n e
Phone 446· 3888 or 446 -4477
165 tt
R U SSE L L ' S
PLUMB IN G&amp; H E A T I NG
Gallipoli s, 446 -4782

N ort h -South vu l nerab le

297 tf

DEWITT ' S PLUMB I NG
AND HEATIN G
Rou te 160 at Ev f.! r9r ee n
Ph ~ &lt;:' 446-7735
~
,
'&lt;t'"
,
1117 II

u

East
14
Pass
Pass

South

I.

3.
Pass

Opening lead-24
By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby
"Why did n't you r a ise my
notr u mp bid?" aske d North.
"Why didn 't you re bid your
no tru mp?" was Sout h's quest ion in reply to t he q uestion.
T hree no trump would have
been a c inch contr act. We
fee l that South's rebid sho uld
have been a notrump raise .
His six spad es would have
been tr icks at notrump a nd
he d idn' t h ave a ny s ingletons
in his ha nd . North. a lso might
have re bid notr ump instead
of goi ng to four spa d es. North
sa id th at it wou ld ha ve bee n
an exer cise in fut ili ty because South wou ld have gone
to four spades a·nyway.

really ~oo d lry. He played
dummy s 10 or c lubs a t tric k
one . East took his queen and
led ba ck the fou r or dia monds. ~ ou tn won with the
king; dre w t r um~s with two
lea ds a nd led h1s queen of
d ia monds.
East took his ace a nd led a
third diamond which South
r uffed. So uth e nte red dummy
w ith the nine or . trumps·
r uffed the last diamond' and
played his last trump while
d isca rding a heart from dummy to com e down to a four c a rd ending .
T he n he led a he a r t to dummy's ace. At this point East
had a chance to be a hero or'a
goat. He tur ned out to be a
hero when he drop~d his
king of he arl.:i to avmd being
caught in a n endplay. '

LZ:B;I:~•!MMth
The bidding has been:
West
North
East
Pas's
Pass
Pass

1+

tN.T..

u

Pass
Pass
Pass

1•

28 '

South

2" • ·

?

You, South, hold:
• K 7 6 4 3 • A 2 +9 +AK 7 3 2
What do you do now'!
A ~ Pass or bid four spados. II
all depends on how censervatlve
your partner Is.
TODAY'S QUESTION
I n s t e ad

of

r e b id d i n g

one

_1\Qlrumpyour partner has bid two
dia m onds Over your- one ' spade.

~o uth gave t he hand a Wb a t do -y~u do noW?

�.

-- -

24 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dl'r . 29, 1974

Friday, Saturday review in briefs

Pamphlet tells about service thru welfare
CO LUMBUS -- Ohio citizens
not a wa re of services pr ovided
for the needy by county welfare
department should send for the
Oh io Department of Public
Welfare's free pa mphlet, "A
Helpin g Hand. ''

Slate Welfa re Director
Charles W. Bates sa id the
pamphlet may be obtained free
by writing to : "A Helping
Hand," Ohio Department of
Public Welfare , 32nd Floor.

State O£fice Tower. 30 E B• oad

day ca re &lt;:m d job traini ng .

St., Columbus, Ohio 43215 .

A crisis, Bates said , may
come as suddenly as a fire or a
p lant layoff or as gr adually as
the mounting burden of con·

The pamphlet gives a brief

overview of a ll the state
welfare department's serv ices
- Natural Disaster Relief.
Food Stamps, Social Services,

tinuin g

Medical

or education .

Assistance,

Aid

to

Dependent Children an d
General Relief - and explains
how to apply for th ese
pr og rams

an d

ad diti ona l

public soc ial services, such aS

THIS YEAR .•
WATCH OHIO
STATE AND
THE ROSE
BOWL ON A
ZENITH
COLOR T.V.

illness,

ch r onic

unemployment or lack of sk ills

"So meti mes tcommunity
disasters or indi\•idual crisis
outstrip the resources of the
individual or the voluntary
commtmity services generally
ava ilab le to dea l ·with such
pr oblems, " he said .
"These are the times for
individuals to be aware of
partic ular s tate-supporled
services that lend a he lping
hand," Bates explained .
The department's services,
the director said, are available
to all Ohioans who are eligib le,
" to help people in need make it
through a critica l period in
their lives and get ba ck on their
feet a nd able to carry on
a gain ."

COMPLETEs BASIC
PT. PLEASANT - Marine
Pvt. Byrd M. Leonard, son of
Mr . a nd Mrs . Les ter L .
Leonard of Poi nt Pleasant, W.
Va., graduated fr om recruit
training at the Marine Corps
Recruit Depot, Parris Island.
S. C.

MODEL
F-4002

THE
"STEEN"
1975
Diagonal

•

COMPACT

19"

ONLY

A GOOD
NEIGHBOR

5

348

OF YOURS

4744 25"

s..

Di agonal
Solid State

him

,,"''

Contemporary

your

Diagonal

E4744 25"

!lmily

Solid State
Contempora ry
On Castors .

PAUL CU NNINGHAM

Cunningham is

MSC student
of the quarter
SY RA CUSE - Paul K.
Cunnin g ha m , son or Mrs.
Raymond Cunn in gha m of
Syracuse, has been named
Student of the quarter at
Mountain State Co ll ege in
Parkersbur g.
Enrolled in the Business
Admini s tration . Prog r am,
ma joring in Accounting, he is
an honor studen t who will be
graduated next March. Paul
has won the respec t and admiration of the staff at the
Co ll ege and of his fell ow
s tude nts by de monstrat in g
outs tandi ng qualitie s of
leadership, cooperation and
organization.
He organized a trip to a
Cincinnati Reds ba seball game
in October for the student
bod y, was instrumental of
sponsoring a Chri stmas pa rty
for the collection of gifts and
food for the needy, and is activ e in the Co llege Bowl
League. In addition to his
college work, Paul is employed
as an accounting clerk by
Firestone Stores .

inSUfBRCII

niBdt.
Carrol

011-tER MODELS AVAILABLE
SAVE UP TO '200.00

RIDENOUR 'S

By United Press International
TOWSON, MD. - ABO\IT 7,500 EMPLOYES of Black and
Decker Inc., which manufactures power tools, will be laid off
from seven plants around the nation for one week beginning J an.
13 because of the sagging national econom y.
The company announced Friday that the 'one week furlough
without pay at the plants is intended to bring production costs
closer to current sales rates a nd prevent ov~rstocking of
domestic inventories. Frank Farnan, vice president for public
relations of Black and Decker, said the layoffs will aflect all
employes , including top executives, in the U: S. Power Tools
Division.

Park

Secon d Ave. , Gallipoli s
Ph . 44, -4190, Hom e 44 6 -Hl8

..... .....

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

PH. 985-3307

Central Hot el Bldg .

CHESTER, OHIO

Lil.1 1

good 111ighbm;
ON&gt;~ ··~ · ~

a,,,._
Stitt Flnt

St ate farm Insurance Companies
Hom!! Offices : BtoominQ"ton. Ill inois

. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

- - - - - - - p 7305-

NEVILLE REPORTS
PT. PLEASANT - Marine
PFC. Everett R. Neville, of 104
Hi gh St., Point Pleasant,
reported for duty at the Marine
Corps Air Station, Cherry
Point, N. C.

NEW YORK ~ AMY VANDERBILT, COLUMNIST and
etiquette expert whose book on manners became a standard for
American behavior. died in a plunge from her seeond-«tory
apartment Friday night . She was 66. Pollee at first said it appeared to be a suicide, but today said it had not been determined
whether she jumped or fell . An official ruling with withheld
pending an inquiry and an a utopsy.
Police said no suicide note was found. Her husband, Curtis
Kellar, was inside the apartment when the fatal plunge occurred.
He said he walked into the front room, noticed his wife was not
present and saw the open window, police said. Police said a
passerby found the body of the author of " The New Complete
Book of Etiquette" lying on the sidewalk in front of her apartment at 7:55 p.m .
MICHIGAN CITY , IND .~ THREE INMATES escaped from
the Indiana Slate Prison early Saturday, only one day after a
convict fled the prison 's minimum security facility and killed two
women he was holding hostage.
State police said the three, includi~ a man serving a life
sentence for murder, sealed prison walls with ropes and fled.
The t hree were identified as Chuck Bailey, 26, sentenced to life in
prison for murder in Lake County, Ind .; Percy Hunt , 'XI; and
Anthony Paolelo, 30.

DACCA, BANGLADESH~T PE BANGLADESH government declared a nationwide state of emergency today because
security and economic stability have "been threatened by internal disturbances ." The government statement did oot specify
the disturbances , but Bangladesh has been afflicted with floods ,
famines and political assassinations since it won its independence from Pakistan three years ago.
The statement was issued just after the arrival of King
Jigme Singye Wangchuk of Bbutan for a three-day official visit .
The announcement said the state of " emergency has been
proclaimed in the whole of Bangladesh as security and economic
life have been threatened by internal disturbances.

Elberfelds .In Pomeroy

COLUMBUS~ A STUDY OF THE STATE'S transportation
needs rontracted by the Ohio Transportation Department Friday
suggested a series of new taxes to fmance additional highway
improvements over the next 10 years. The study was rompiled by

and low 30s, Mostly cloudy
Tuesday, cbance of rain afternoon; high in the upper 40s.
Probability of preciptation 10
percent today and tonight and
40 percent Tuesd~.

VOL. )(XVI NO. 181

j

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

•

Stereo and Home Entertainment Centers·

~lJ'iJ

diagonal

~~l]@@
100%SolidState

©©(kQ]'UV/
'

.

t'

Tilt UVIlANO

I

osm

pid~"

Choose From Consoles and
Portables-Free Delivery-Prompt

I•

..'

'l
~

'

\

Expert Service

,•

I',

I

Main Store - Toy Store· Warehouse.Open This
Week Monday · Tuesday - Thursday 9:30 to 5
p.m . Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 8 p.m.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

I

..,

DONATION ~ In keeping with the holiday spirit of
"glviug," ¢diaon Hotstetter, president of the Pomeroy
National Bank, Saturday presented a check for $50 to
Dorothy Fisher, president of the Meigs County Humane
Society to further tbe efforts of that organization.

e~s .• in Briej;f

I'

Burgundy, Burgundy top , AM-F M-Tape , -a ir ,
bucket seats, 7090 miles .

3997
3997
$3397

Bl ack , black La ndau. AM-Tape, air, steel be lt
t ires.

1974 OLDS DELTA 88
official's car. air, prem tires. Ni ce.

1974 BUICK CENTURY
4 Dr ., air , 75 Centu ry trade.

1973 BUICK REGAL
2 Dr . Hdtp ., a ir, AM-FM, steel bell ed tires
20,326 miles , s harp .
'

'3895

PRICES GOOD THRU DEC. 31

1973 DiEV IMPALA ST. WAGON '

DOC SMITH SAYS: UNCLE SAM'S
LOSS IS YOUR GAIN.

'4795

1974 MONTE CARLO

4 Dr., GM

IS

WAS

J}uto . t.rans., P. steering, brakes . Check this,
worth more.

That's right folks, on January 1st we have to pay personal
property tax on all cars in inventory. Rather than pay this tax
we want to pass the savings on to you .
'

1973 OPEL TUDOR MANTA
Auto trans ., radio, 21.000 miles, 25 MPG.
'

1

WAS

'3150

By United Press International
NEW YORK ~ AMY VANDERBILT, AMERICt. 'S first lady
of etiquette who died in a plunge from her second-6\ory window
Friday, could. have fallen accidentally because of dizziness
brought on by hypertension, according to an autopsy report.
Dr. Yung Rho, the city's Deputy Chief Medical Examiner,
said evidence of hypertension, a condition involving high
cholesterol deposits in the circulatory system, was shown in the
autopsy on MisS Vanderbilt, who was 66. Rho said there was no
Signs of brain damage, but added dizzy speiiB occasionally occur
In hypertense !patients without brain damage. ·
Her death, said the pathologist, occurred "strictly as a result
of the !all" fr,om a seconC.-«tory window in her townhouse on
Manhattan's East Side.
ATHENS T GEORGE PAPADOPOULOS, tbe once-powerful
mllltary ruler now living in exile on a tiny Aegean Island, will he
tiled next month on charges of high treason and insurrection.
The maxtmwll penalty is death. Athens Appeals Court Judge
George Voltis flew by heUcopter to the island of Kea Sunday to
read the char~es to Papdopoulos and four of his top aides.
A court spo~esman said the five men, leaders ol a 1967 coup
that brought seven years of military rule to Greece, would testify
before an investigating magistrate on Jan. 15. Under Greek law,
insurrection carries the death penalty while high treason is
punillhable by. up to 20 years in prison.
Premier Corlstantine Caramanlls exiled Papadopoulos and his
aides to the tint resort island last October, three months after the
sudden collapf! of the military regime during last summer's

IS

$2197
2197

j

1973 MAZDA, RX2, SEQAN

Rotary .engine, automatic, air c:ond ., 18,000
miles.

ON ALL

1975 BUICK CENTURYS &amp; REGALS
1975 PONTIAC LeMANS

$3497 1974 PONTIAC LEMANS
$3397
•3900

1972 BUICK RIVIERA
AM· f..M, bu cket sea ts. steel belted tires, mag
wheels, sporty.

One owner ; 25, 12.4 miles . air. Expect the best .

4 Dr., air cond., loaded. Brand New

1973 BUICK LeSABRE
2 Dr . Hdtp. , ai r , AM-FM, custom inter ior .

ONLY ONE

1973 BUICK LeSABRE

Specials

4 Dr . Hdtp ., 26,501 miles , AM-FM . Nice family

car .

WAS
'995

1969 OPEL TUDOR
Rally e, .4 speed. 28 miles, P . Gal.

1973 CHEV. MALIBU .ST. WAG.

1969 BUICK LeSABRE

Air, tape , 11,900 miles. Extra nice.

4 Dr. hdtp., air, runs good.

1973 BUICK APOLLO

397

4 Dr .. auto .• P . steeri"ri'g, brakes, 28,22 1 'miles.

1974 OPELS

St. Wagons, Tudors Brand New

1969 OLDS DELTA 88 SEDAN
One owner .

Cyprus war!~•

Sed. , air, 37,000 miles. Nice family car .

'995

'497 1972 DiEV IMPALA QJST.
2 Dr . Hdtp., air, mint green , matching vinyl
'397 top, worth more.

795

DiEV PICKUP
'297 1972
Red, sf;a ndard, 36,000 miles, 8ft. bed.

1

·; \

4

1968 lnercury 2 DR. HDTP.
Average, runs good.

1968 BUICK SKYLARK (ONV.
It' s a 90 unit. it. has go to.

1967 BUICK ELECTRA
4 Dr. hdtp., air, one Owner, good transportation .

S~NDA Y SHOPPERS

WELCOME

-

'697

•297

'797

•397

SJ97

•297

1975 PONTIAC

GRAN PRIX

COME IN &amp; BROWSE AROUND

/

MANAGUA, NICARAGUA~NICARAGUA HAS agreed
to free a group,of political prisoners in exchange for 13 prominent
hostages, but ' has balked at paying a $5 million ransom
demanded by !l.ftist guerrillas. The guerrillas threatened to kill
their hostages one by one starting at 11 a. m . New Year's Day
Wlless tbe govenunent pays the full ransom and frees the
prisoners. ·
·
Nicaraguan President Anastasio Somosa agreed to fly the
prisoners to cuba, but offered only $1 million in ransom. "There
are not that many dollars in all the blinks in Nicaragua," a
spokesman for Sonlosa said. Somosa met with aides at his home
today to work out detalls of the exchange.
COLUMBUS, OHIO ~ A FUNERAL WilL BE held here
Tuesday at St:M.ary Magdalene Church for Clarence M. Young,
84, veteran sports writer for the Columbus Citizen-Journal, a
Scripps-Howard newspaper, who died Saturday of a bear! attack
at his home. ,
Young,. who suffered another heart attack in August, died
before a fire emergency squad arrived at his home. Young
started his newspaper career with the old Ohio State Journal in
1929, one year ifter be was graduated from high school.
CLEVELAND - THE PLAIN DEALER, Ohio's largest
newspaper 1 today raised tbe price of its home delivered editions
fo 15 cents peli copy or 10 cents a week . There was no change in
the li-Cents-a-j:Opy .newsstand price, but beginning Sunday the
IIUggested priq, of the Sunday Plain Dealer, home delivered and
newsstand, w!ll be iricreased from 35 to !iO cents.
"These latest increases are made necessary by the spiraling
costs of prodllcilon, transportation and labor," management
stated In a front page insert. "Materials, including newsprint and
ink, have lilcrfased substantially in the past year.

.GALLIPOLIS, OHI()

EASTERN AVENUE

...

closed its doors to business for
the day about 4 p.m. Saturday.
Destroyed in the fire besides
the stock and equipme nt of the
two businesses were three
auto mobiles. Two of the
vehicles belonged· to Layton
Sayre, now of Florida , who had
left the cars with Rawlings to
seU. The third vehicle belonged
to Rawlings . A fourth car in the
building was remov ed by
Middleport firemen before the
roof collapsed .
Middleport fireman Kenneth
Imboden was taken to Holzer
Medical Center by the Middleport E-R unit at the peak of
the fire when he was thrown
from a ladder during an ex·
plosion. Imboden suffered head
and back injuries but was
reported In satisfactory condition Sunday evening.
Rawlings was first notified of
the fire by Rose who had heard
of it on bis police scanner . He
was then notified by Mid·
dleport night dispatcher
Martha Howell .
Firemen were on the scene
for up to 17 hours. Many of the
firemen on the sce ne from the
first re mained unti1 10 a.m.
Sunday when others came to
relieve some of them. Firemen
were still at Ole scene a t 5 p.m.
Sunday afternoon the Mason
Fire Dept., assisted by Mid·
dleport men, brought down
bri ck walls at the front of the
large building. The walls were
regarded dangerous if left
standing .
The roof of the structure had
been reptaced about five years
ago and the interior of the
buildin g actually two
structures - joined for the
Rawlings business, was
re modeled some 15 years ago.
There was a minlmwn of
insurance coverage, it was
reported. It had not been
detennined Sunday if the inJERUSALEM (UP!) surance would cove r the
Israel · has appointed a top automobiles lo st in the
nuclear scientist to the structure .
strategic planning division ol
Middleport Fire Chief Byer
the Defense Ministry, news expressed thanks to Pomeroy
reports said today.
and Mason fireme n for such
The reports came three able assistance and to the
weeks
after
President Middleport and Pomeroy
Ephraim Katzir said Israel had police Depts. for capa bly handa nuclear potential that should ling traffic in the area .
cause concern throughout the
Hundr eds of s ightseers
world .
visited the scene Sunday
The English language morning and afternoon .
Jerusalem Post said Prof.
Saa1ia Arnie!, a nuclear
chemist at Hebrew University
and a senior staff member at
the Nahal Sorek experimental
nuclear research center, would
The Meigs Co unt y co mserve as deputy to Yehoshafat
Harkavi, assistant to Defense missioners will leave it to
Minister Shimon Peres for residents of the Tuppers Plains
area to form their own sewage
strategic policy .
Arnie! has been a scientific district, it was decided Friday
adviser to tbe general staff's at a meeting with represenplanning branch for ·years, the ta tives of the Environmenlal
Post said.
The Post also said Yuval
Ne'eman, pr~ldent of Tel Aviv
University and one of Israel's
top physicists, would soon be
The Meigs County Sheriff's
appointed a senior adviser to
Dept. investigated three acthe Defense Ministry. It said
cidents over the weekend.
Ne'eman, a fonner chief of
Saturday on SR 7 in
military intelligence, is ex·
Salisbury
Township , time
peeled to work on projects
unknown, a car owned by
including consulting on re·
Sylvia R. Snyder, Rt .1, Midsearch and develo[XIlent for
dleport, was parked along Rt . 7
sttategic weapons systems.
After Katzir spoke of Israel's in front of the owner's
nuclear poientlal Dec. 1, the residence when it was. hit by
another vehicle which did not
govenunent issued clarifica·
tions saying that the potential stop . There was moderate
was based on its technological damage.
Sunday ·at 11 :25 a . m. on
expertise and emphasized that
County
Road 10 in Salem
the Jewisb state wouid not be
the first to Introduce such Township, Deborah A. Burdge,
weapons in the Middle East. Rt. 1, Dexter, was traveling
Though lsraelhas signed the south and Pamela Ann Herdtreaty banning nuclear tests in man, Pomeroy, was traveling

lt was· reported doors at the
the blaze of und eter mined
rear
of the establishment found
origin were the volunteer fire
dw-ing an earlier routine
a
jar
departments of Wddleport ,
Mason and Pomeroy which check hhd been closed.
Middleport firemen were
sent 65 men and 13 pieces of
called
and Middleport Fire
equipment into action .
The fire was discovered at Chief Bob Byer summoned
1:30 a .m. Sunday by officer Pomeroy and Mason to help
Don Roush patrolling iil the when he determined th e
Middleport police cruiser after magnitude of the blaze . The
space between a fal se ceiling
· observing heavy smoke.
and the arched roof of the
structure apparently was in
names when firemen arrived .
When the blaze broke
through theroof, flames burst
high, showering sparks on
nearby homes . •
The roof collapsed within a
short time .
Firemen were hampered not
only by heavy smoke which
had enveloped the area when
they arrived but also by small
explosions, apparently of oil
and aerosol cans .
The W-year old Rawlings
building for years had been
used for the operation of the
motor co . which several years
ago had marked its 100th anniversary . However, more
recently the structure had
beed
used
for
an
auto
parts
business
in
the front, operated by the
building 's owner, Richard
Rawlings of Pomeroy . There
was a brake and alignment
center at the rear of the
structure operated by Hershel
Rose.
Th e establishment had

' ~ TIME ·MAGAZINE HAS NAMED King
NEW YOI;tK
Fa~ of Saudi Arabia its " Man of tbe Year" for 1974 for his Qlle
dontinued on page 8
'

TEN CENTS

DICK RA WUNGS OF POMEROY sta nds in the rubble of
the R. H. Rawlings and Sons building demolished by fire
early Sunday morning in Middleport. Rawlings was the
owner of the approximate W-year-old structure which for
years housed the Rawlings Motors Co.
-

former Rawlings and Sons auto agency structure
ByBobHoefllch
Losses hav~ been unofficially
set at $100,1100 as the result of a
three·alarm
fire
which
demolished the R. H. Rawlings
and Sons bulWing at the corner
of Second and Mill Sts. in
Middleport early Sunday
morning . One fireman was
injured.
On the scene at the peak of

Romlrunners are cuckoos .

PHONE 992·2156

Loss estimated at $iOO,OOO in recently remodeled

i'

1974 MONTE CARLO .

Devoted To 'Phe Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Are11
.MONDAY. DECEMBER 30. 197 4

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

Is Headquarters For RCA Television,

MIMitl
25" di•ronll

Now YouKnow

enttne

Low tonight in the upper 20s

Our Mechanic Street Warehouse

non

•

Weather

nine consultants led by E. S. Preliton a fanner state Highway
Dtrector. t. total of 318 witnesses were heard by the study grQilp
over the past 18 months .
A major segment of the study called for an increase in state
spending to $585.4 million a year and combined with local and
federal funda to provide a $1.5 billion almua! transportatiDn
progr~. The increase in state spending would come frOm,
according to recommendations in the study, an increase of ooeJo
three cents a gallon to the seven cents a galloo gasoline tu, II"
mcrease of $10 to $18 in the $10 auto Ucense tu and a Hknill tax
upon vehicles based upon their values.
The office of Gov. John J. Gilllgan said he would have no
comment on the report because he is leaving office and would•
leave it for incoming Gov. James A. Rhodes and the new
Democratic Legislature.

ADDIS ABABA (UP!) ~ THE BITTER REBEL war in
Ethiopia's northern province of Eritrea intensified Saturday
with the disclosure that 18 more persons have been strangled
with piano wire . Western diplomats reported the deaths, which
brings to nearly !iO the number koown to have been killed corn·
mand&lt;Hrtyle in Asmara, the capital of Eritrea, since the violence
began last Sunday.
The diplomats said all the victims were students in their late
teens or early twenties. Most were found in doorways and alleys.
There has been no official explanation who is responsible for the
violence, but Ethiopia's military rulers said Friday they are
trying to find a peaceful solution to ·the war for independence
fought by the Eritrean Liberation Front.

.

,.

\

' I

i

'

Nuclear
threat
tipped

• •

BRICK WAlLS still standing on the Second Ave. side of
the Rawlings building in Middleport destroyed by fire were

pulled down Sunday afternoon by Mason firemen assisted by
Middleport firemen. Firemen, .called to the bliue at 1:30
a.m., were on the scene until about 5p.m . SWlday.

Steps advised for new sewage district
Protection Agency (EPA ) and
the Buckeye Hills Hocking
Valley Regional Developm ent
agency at the Tuppers Pla ins
Community building.
The commiss ioners outlined

Parked auto hit

the atmosphere, it never
signed the nuclear nonproliferation treaty.
Israel abstained from a vote
in the U.N . General Assembly
last month on a resoluUon
calling for the Middle East to
be designated a nuclear-free
reg_ion.
TAKEN TO HOLZER
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called to the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy at 9:21 a.m. Suriday
where Mrs. Eva Dessauer of
Pomeroy had become ill . She
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center. ( .

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::;:; :;:~:

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wedn es day through
Friday, a chance of showers
Wednesday, fair Thursday
and Friday. Highs In the 40s;
lows in the 30s Wednesday.
Highs '{ltursday and Friday
in the 30s; lows in the 20s.

north . As Deborah 3urdge
lopped the crest of a hill she
sa w the Herdman vehicle. She
applied brakes, whic h . caused
her car to skid and Herdma n
pulled to the right into a ditch.
Mrs. Brudge was left of C·e nler
and the ve hicles sideswiped.
There was mode rate property
damage, no injuries, or
arrests .
At 11 :04 p . m. Sunday on the
Flatwoods road in Chester
township a doe deer was killed
when it ran into the path of a
ca r driven by Robert H.
Bratton of Rt . 3, Pomer oy.

four necessary steps to lift the be smaller than the long rural
sewage ban : firs t, create a water services and would ensewage district using the sa me
form ula they used to form the
wate r district; second, have a
plan study m ade showing
need; third , apply for a
discharge permit, a nd fourth,
to a pply for a sewage permit .
The annual New Year 's
The EPA will lift the ban
Ball of th e Pom eroy
Pven if the study shows that it
Volunteer Fire Department
is not fcasib1e. Representatives
and Emergency Squad will
of the Buckeye Hills group will
be staged Tuesday night
do the preliminary pla nning
beginning at 9:30p.m. in the
free of charge .
Pomeroy jUnior hlgh school
_Lindsay Lyons, president of
auditorium.
the Tuppers Plains - Chester
Music for this year's event
Water Distric t, expla in ed. the
will be by "T he AmpurpLse of · the mee ting and
bassador!i. " Dancing will
int roduced offi cia ls of the
continue until 1:30 a . m .
agencies present.
Wednesday. Fire men are
The building ban was orcleaning and decorating the
dered duri ng a " buildin g
auditorium in preparation
boo m " in Tuppers P1ains
for the event. The public is
resul ting
in
se werage
Invited to help welcome In
problems in some of the areas .
the new year with the
Lyons reported that the area
department.
for the sewage distr ict would

Annual ball is
Tuesday night

compass only areas affected by
the project.
Al teinling
were
ap proximately 25 re s iden ts ,
commissi oners Robert Clark,
Henry Well s, and Warden
Ours; Cha rles Knight, Meigs
County assistant prosecuting
attorney; Lyons and other
personnel of the water district;
trustees of Orange and Olive
Townships , and represe n·
tatives of the two agencies.
CHARGE FILED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called to South Fourth
Ave. at 12 :12 p.m. Sunday for
Jerry Fergu son who was
reported to have been beaten.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospita l where he
was admitted . Monday morning, an assault charge against
Robert Gerlach. Letart. W.
Va ., was fil ed in the Meigs
County Court in conjunction
with the inc ident.

Brezhnev turns cool to Arabs
By United Press Internalional

The Soviet Union announced
today that Communist party
General Secretary Leonid I.
Brezhnev has postponed indefinitely his scheduled January
visit to Egypt, Syria and Iraq.
;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::_
:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::;:: Arab sources said cancellation
of the visit followed Egyptian
refusal to .permit Soviet miliLOCAL TEMPS
The temperatW'e in down- tary advisers to return . to
town Pomeroy at 11 a .m. Egypt.
The SoViet an~ouncernent
Monday was 48 degl&gt;ees under
was
made by the Tass news
cloudy skies.

agency and was broadcast by firmed reports by Arab news
Moscow Radio, ending a six· agencies of the postponement
day Russian new~ ' 1ckout on but gave no reason. Soviet
Brezhnev's plans
visit the announcements have stressed
Middle East. The i' . 1sians had that the talks between the
reported on t .
current visiting Egyptians and the
Moscow visit of Egyptian Kremlin had been friendly .
in
Diploma tic reports
Foreign Minister !~mail Fahmi
London
and
Beirut
said
an d new · War Minister
Brezhnev was prepared to
Mohamed Gamassy .
Tass sa id a new date for replace the arms Egypt lost in
Brezhnev 's Middle East visit the 1973 Yom Kipvur War with
w.ould be :lllnounced later. The lsr ael and had'.,romised adSoviet an nouncemenl con· vanced MIG25· fighter planes

and supersophisticated SAM
missiles if Egypt would permit
the return of Russian military
advisers expelled by President
Anwar Sadat in 1972.
Wes ter n d'i plomats
discounted reports irom Paris
that Brezhnev was unwell
during his recent talks there
with President Valery Giscard
d'Estain~. They said Brezhnev
arrived til\\d but soon"\l&lt;&gt;rked

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