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8 - The Daily Sentinel', Middlepo r t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Oec. :to. 1!174

Bill Welker of Gahruma dies
Delber t William 1Pi ll 1 Eileen Welker of Colwnbus and
Welker, 49, Gahanna, formerly Geneview Well of Pomeroy.
of Pomeroy, died Saturday. He
FWleral services will be held
had served in the a rmed forces a t 10 a. m. Tuesday at the
a number ot years.
Margarwn and. Son Funeral
He is sur vived by h1s wife, Home, 3:!5 .fohnstown Road,
Jane Sauer Welker, form erly Gahanna, where friends may
of Middleport; his mother, call from 7 to 9 this evening.
Mrs . Eula Welker, Colwnbus; BW'ial will be in the Riverview
two daug hters, Debra Janell Cemetery at Middleport at 3 p.
Welker and Linda Katherine m. Tuesday where graveside
Wel ker , both at home ; a services will be held. Friends
brother , Ralph Welker, of may, if they w1sh, contribute to
Pomeroy, and two sisters , the Colwnbus Cancer Clinic.

Leanna Grover died on Sunday
Leanna H. Grover, 71, a
resident of Cheshire, died
&amp;mday morning in Holzer
Medical Center. She had been
in failing health several years
and in serious condition the
past four weeks.
She was born March 7, 1903,
near RuUand, daughter of the
late Alonzo and Elizabeth Sims
Darst. She Is survived by her
husband, Ivan Grover, whom
she married on Sept. 28,1922, in
Gallipolis; two daughters, Mrs.
Douglas (Elizabeth) Rile ,
Co lumbus, and Mrs. Ray
(Leta) Shamblin, Tavernier,
Fla.; five grand- and two
great-grandchildren, and these
brothers, _and sisters, Walter
Darst, Mesa, Ariz.; James
Darst, Albany, Ohio; Douglas
Darst, Cheshire; Mrs. Frank
(Pearl) Mackins, Ewington;
Mrs. James (Patty) Stewart,
Toledo, and Mrs . Forest
(Alma) Rathburn, Colwnbus.
One brother preceded her in
death.
She had resided in the
Cheshire area 53 years. She
was a member of tbe Cheshire
Methodist
Church,
vice
president of the WSCS, and a.
member of the Cheshire
Garden Club.
Funeral services wiU be held
1 p. m . Wednesday at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home in Gallipolis with Rev.

William Beagle officiating.
Burial will ·be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home between 6 and 9
p.m. Tuesday .
Pallbearers will be Grover
Cremeens, Lee Clark, lArry
Stewart, Wayne Palmer, Gary
Palmer, Davey Reidnenour.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests contributions be made
to the Cheshire Methodist
Church.

.

Mrs. l-lt'lm Lil'h
dit·d on Monday

Criininal, civil dockets up

"Be at war with your vices,
at peace with your neigh.
bors, and let every New
Year find you a beHer
man."

Have

a safe New
Year's Holiday - we

need our customers!

PT. PLEASANT - Judge
James Lee Thompson will open
the January term of Mason
County Circuit Court Monday,
January 6, to consider a docket
mostly of civil actions.

Mr . ard Mrs. Ush returned
home around 9 p. m . Sunday
after having been at the bed·
side of Mrs. Lish. They were
notified later that she had died
at 12:30 a.m. Monday. She was
the mother of 10 children.
FWleral arran gements will be
announced.

Ray Reithmiller
died on Sunday

Hubert M . Hinson. et al;
BerfiH Jordan, et al vs . Mrs.
Georgi
Valencia ;
The
Charlestion National Bank , a
national banking assoc . vs .
Emogene Green Kelley ; The
Charleston National Bank, a
national banking assoc. vi .
Ellen Perry.
Ray Tucker, Sr. vs. Ada M.
The criminal docket, already
Roush
Kinney, et al; Gary R.
scheduled, may have ad - Hou chen,
et al vs . Robert Gene
ditional presentments , said McDowell : Mobile Educators
Don Kingery, prosec uting Credit Union vs. Mary Sue
Driver and Charles Scott
attorney .
Driver ;
C ommerce
Charges already on the Clearinghouse Corp. a W. Va.
criminal docket are of child corp. vs. Val D. Bailey, et al;
abuse,
false
pretenses, Xerox Corporation, a corp. vs.
W. R. C. Co .. Inc .. a Virginia
negligent homicide, malicious Corp. dba- Red Carpet Inn of
and feloniou s assault and Point Pleasant.
Moore Business Form s, Inc.
grand larceny.
a corp . vs . W.R.C. Co., In c., a
Grand jW'ors are to report to Virginia Corp. dba · Red Carpet
Judge Thompson at 9:30a.m. Inn of Point Pleasant.Cocain the courtroom next Monday. Cola Bottling Works of
Charleston
Inc ..
dba .
Petit jurors are to he report a Parkersburg Coca·Cola Bot·
week later, January 13, at 9:25 tling Co. vs . W.R.C. Co . Inc. , a
Virginia Corp .• dba· Red Carpet
a.m.
Inn of Point Pleasant ; Two
During the January term of River Motor ComPany. a corp.
Circuit Court, which is to in- vs . William Mack Flowers, et
clude both January and al : Julius Pasquale, dba -Gallia
Refriaeration Co. v~ . WRC
February, Jud~e Thompson Company. Inc .. dba Red
will be in Mason County Mon· Carpet fnn ; Wagner Broad.
day, Tuesday , Thursday and casting Corporation, dba ·
Radio Station vs. W. R.
Friday of each week . The jurist WJEH
C. Co ., InC., a VIrginia Corp.
will hold court in Winfield for dba -Red Carpet Inn of Point
Putnam County on Wednesday Pleasant ; Richard Ord vs.
Floyd Kemper, et al ; Jones
of each week for this two- Appliance
Service. Inc. vs.
month period.
George Perry ; Larry Patrick
The trial docket for the vs . John Leslie Bennett.
The Charleston National
January term of Mason County Bank,
a national banking
Circuit Court was released assoc. vs . Jimmy Thornton ;
today by Howard Schultz, Mary Elizabetl"' Patterson vs.
William H. Pa«erson , et al ;
Circuit Clerk, and includes:
The Peoples Bank of Point
CIVIL ACTIONS
Pleasant, a corp. vs. Donald
State of West Virginia by Kapp; James C. Sommer vs.
Charles J . Hyer, Deputy Scott Cottrell, dba- Slurdi·
Comm. vs. James Leonard House Mfg. ; Charles L. Brown,
Hutton , et a l ;
Carolyn Jr. vs . Michael Oliver ; Willis
Meadows Harris vs . Sheldon B. Lee Williams ; vs . Dav id Lee
Hill , Jr . and Ina J. Jones;
Forshee; Velma M . Neal vs.
Carolyn Cl"'llds Wilson vs . John Leslie Bennett.
Charles J. Hyer ; Richard L.
Housing Author ity of the City
Dalley . State Tax Comm . of Point Pleasant, a public
successor to Charles H . Haden,
Corp . vs. Charles Stewart and
II vs . Roy B. Rollins, et al;
Ruth Stewart.
Emogene Mynes vs . Douglas
Elmer Ca ldwell, et al vs.
Wheat011, et al ; State of West Danny Griffith ; George Ingels,
Virginia by Charles J. Hyer,
dba lnqels Furnlture Co. vs.
Deputy Comm . vs . Hiram
Stephenson, et al; City of Point
Pleasant vs. Lewis A. Allen, et
a!.
pany vs. Odis Burris ; Charles
A Parsons vs . Jerry Lee
Mull ins ; Heck ' s Inc. of Point
Pleasant, a W. Va . Corp . vs .
Shlela Goodman. et al ; Pau l R.
Raynes vs . James A. Starcher,
et al ; Evelyn Ravnes vr. .
James A. Starcher, et al ;
Royal- Globe Insurance Co .. a
corp. vs. Willard B. Leach;
Norma M. Loomis vs. Helen J.
Fruth.
Allee Stover vs . Pearl H.
Riffle; Southern States Point
Pleasant Cooperative, Inc., et
al vs. Darrell C. Stone. City Ice
&amp; Fuel Co., et al ; Jon M.

Lisle: The Charlest011 National

Standings

Tum

Ph.

H &amp; R Firestone
74
Sears Catalog Merchants
74
Rawlings Auto Part s
72
Roach'S Gun ShOp
64
Pomerov Cement Block Co 60
Midwest Stee l Co
40
High individual game John Tyree 232 ; second high

BEST WISHES FOR A

HAPPY NEW YEAR

ind. game - Bil l Radford 224 .
H tgh series - B i ll Radford
597; se co nd high series - A . L.
Phelps Jr . 591.
Team high game - Roach's

Gun ShOP' 996 .

Team high ser ies Gun Shop 2716 .

HECK'S WILL BE

CLOSED
ALL DAY TUESDAY
DECEMBER 31
FQR INVENTORY

Tri·County League
Dec. 18,1914

Tum

Standings ·

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY
New Year's Day
12 .NOON TO 8 PM

Pts.
86

Zide's Sport Shop

Young's Super Market
Regatta In
12
Smith Nelson Motors
68
Ten th Framers
60
Nelson Drug Co .
High individual game
Willard Boyer 238 ; I. Couch
202 ; Second high ind . game A. L. Phelps Jr . 22.4 ; C.
Bachner 199.
HIQI"' series - Willard Boyer
6.4.4 ; Betty Smith 527; Second
high series - Char les Smith
62.4 ; Carolyn Bachner .507

"

••

Team high game -

OPEN

Roach 's

Sport Shop 729.
Team h igh series Sport Shop 2127 .

Zid~'s

Zide's

MEIGS THEATRE ·
TONIGHTthru THUR.
NOT OPEN
Fri. -Sat.-Sun.

Jan. 3·4-5 ·
THE LAST OF SHEILA
( Technicolor)
Storrlng Raquel Welch
(PGI

r

: OOp.m .

''

' .,...

Stanley ·Aleshire; · Nebert Noe
vs. Carl C. France; American
Acceptance Corp . vs. Wm . H.
Mallory ; Perry Sh1nn, dba vs.
Charles McDonald ; Mason
County Bank -·vs c Jesse F.
HarrelL Jr. : The Cl"'arleston
National Bank , a national
banking assoc. vs. James T.
Vaughn : Dakota L. Laudermilt
vs. Vincent Laudermilt; James
R. Smith, et al vs . Wayne
Mayes , linda Darlyn Lan·
dak~r
vs . Jol"'n Franklin
Landaker ; The National Bank
of Commerce of Cha rl eston vs.
Max A. Graham.

CIVIL APPEAL
Lou ise Miller vs. James R.
Smith

CONTEMPT CASES
Bartow Edman Pearson vs.
Ruth Ann Pearson ; Delores
Louise Neal vs. Harley Neal ;
Yvonne Fran ces Graham vs.
Charles Everett Graham,
Jr. ; Linda L. Lanham vs. David
Lee Lanham ; Ma~y E. Lyver~
vs. Milford D.' Lyvere ; Pamela
L Fielder vs. Micl"'aet BrPnt
Fielder; Carol Oldaker vs .
Marlin R. Oldaker; Evelyn B.
Danbury vs
RI Chard 0.
Danbury.
Marsha Joan Huddleston vs.
Thonias Edward Huddleston ;
Ruth Laura Hall vs. Paul R.
Hall; Sharon Kaye landers vs.
Jack
Ed'o)'ard
Landers ;
Will ogene M . Skeen vs . Charles

WASHINGTON (UPf) Rep. Wilbur Mills, D-Ark.,
acknowledged today he Is an
alcoholic but said he will stop
drinking entirely and will stay
in the House of Representatives.
MiUs, who entered Bethesda
Naval Hospital Dec. 3 for what
was described as ""haustion,
said in a stall'ment released
through the office of the Ways
and Means Committee :
" I ask the understanding of
the members of Congress
about w9at my tragic experiences has been. I know that
I am a well man as long as I do
not drink ;md, by the grace of
God and with competent
medical advice, and the support of friends, f will remain
well.

Lee

Holland;

.

.

Mills, who baa already ·announced he will not seek the
chairmanship of the House
Ways and Means Conunittee ·
which he headed for more than
a decade and a half, said (le
realizes now his behavior of the
past several months was not
that of "the Wilbur Mills who
has spent 36 years in Collgress."
The behavior cllmaxed wilh
an incident in Washington
involving a stripper, Annabel
Batt !stella, whom Mills said he
had known for some Ume and
with whom he later appeared
on a Boston stage.

i.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Hanes

LARRY POWELL

®

Kim -

berly Ann Walker vs. Bobby S. ·
Walker ; Harold R. Shirley vs.
Florence E . Shirley ; Frances
Audrey Wells vs . Michael C.

Wells.

, Anita Carol Leach vs. Loren
Jeffery Leach ; Deborah Ann
Nowlin vs. James Delton
Nowlin; Shirley Ann Bartles
vs . John Fredrick Bartles and
Nancy Lee Neal vs. Randal Lee

CRIMINAL CASES

Va. vs . John

Mounts, !Child Abuse) ; Slate

of W. Va. vs. Michael W . Fisher
(False Pretense) ; State of W.
Va. vs. Paul A . Thomas
(Negligent Homicide) ; State of
W, Va . vs. James L Donahue
(Malicious
&amp;
Felonious
Assault); State of W. Va. vs.
Gerald Frank Johns (Grand
Larceny).

1/

f
" ---".

Bank a national banking assoc.

Vs. Melvin Henry .

Frank E. Mil ler vs . Herbert
E. Myers dba-Herbert E .
Myers &amp; Sons Excavating

Contractors; State of West
Virginia, Ex Ret · Richard L.

Dailey, State Tax Comm. vs.
Jean Ann Grant dba-Gino's

Pizza of Point Pleasant; T. W.

Lawrence dba - Lawrence
Heating &amp; Electric vs . Gilbert

PT. PLEASANT - Three
drivers were charged with
DWI, while two drivers were
cited for other traffic violations
in four of seven highway accidents investigated during the
weekend by area law enforcement officers ..
No serious injw-ies were
reported, although property
damages were high .
State Police Cpl. J. L. Fitzwater said that Thomas N.
Cooke , 20, of Middleport, and
John W. Morrison of 2609
Jefferson Ave . were Injured
when the vehicles they were
driving collided early Sunday.
Neither driver apparently was
treated at area hospitals.
Fitzwater arrested both on
charges of intoxication and
driving while intoxicated.
According to police, the
mishap occurred at 2:30 a. m .
Sunday on State Route 62 near
the Red Carpet Inn. Police said
Cooke was traveling north and
pulled out of the Red Carpet
Inn and was on the wrong side
of the road when Morrison ,
traveling south, met Cooke.
Morrison attempted to pass
on the left, police said, when
the right fronts of the vehicles
collided . Cooke's car was
knocked off the highway and
Morrison's truck caromed into
a field.
Police esliffiated damages to
the Cooke car at $1,200 with
$1,0011 to Morrison's truck .
A Charleston man, William
Henry Mallory, was charged
with DWI and was reported
slightly injured when the
vehicle he was driving wrecked
at 5:08 p . m. Saturday on U.s.
35 near Henderson in a single
car mishap.
State police made investigation and said Mallory
was traveling west on U. S. 35
when he ran off the berm and
lost control, striking an em-

E. Pull in and Thomas M.
Pullin dba-Anchor Restaurant;
David Oldaker, et al vs. Fred
E. lahrmer, et al; Charlest9n
Area Medical Center, Inc. a
corp. vs. Russell Casto, Jr. ; ban~ent.
louise Miller and Aliena
Damages to his vehicle were
Sprague vs. Ellestlne Smith
and James R. Smith; Jack J. estimated to be $800.
Riley and Ruth A. Riley vs.
Two Point Pleasant women,
Mark A. Bart011 .
Thelma Mae Filson of 10011 22nd
Anita Jackson, an Infant, et
al vs . Delphine L. Starling and Street and Betty Martin of 1915
Emery H. Starling; Samuel 0. MI. Vernon Avenue, were
Littlepage vs. Rona ld lesion admitted to Pleasant Valley
Mil ler, Jr.; The Bank of Cross Hospital for observation after
Lanes, a West Virginia Cor .
poratlon vs. George Stover and the car in which they were
Dannie Stover; RK E Federa l riding wrecked Saturday night.
Credit _Union vs. Marvin R.
Sheriff's deputies N . E.
Fielder, lila Jean Fielder,
Benson and Dayton Raynes

News

• • •

•

zn Briefs
•'

made investigation of the
single car mishap at the intersection of State Routes 2 and
62 at·7:30 p. m. Mrs. Filson was
identified as the driver .
According to police, apparently the driver failed to
round a curve, striking some
guard rails. The car came to a
stop over an embankment. The
car was a total loss.

__.!;:~

I.

You can wash them and
wash !hem and wash them
and they'll still feel good.
They're made of cotton
that keeps its shape. And
remforced where it counts.
to res1st sagging. S1zes
S. M, l, XL

3for

4.29

Claudia Mae Wolfe, New
Haven, W. Va ., has flied for
support under the Reciprocal
Agreement Act against Paul
Allen Wolfe, Minersville, in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
SERVICE SET
LETART FALI..S - Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 will
sponsor a watch meeting ~t the
community hall Tuesday, Dec.
31, at 8 p.m. Potluck refresh·
ments will be served.
Everyone is welcome.

Give him perfect comfort
Hanes briefs are cut
for gentle support all day
long. The elast1c waistband
is heat resistant. so the
comfort lasts longer. Sizes
28 to 44.

.

BILL ANDERsoN, POMEROY, manager of the Elberfeld
Department Store- "That governments at all levels perform as
they were elected to perform - provide the people under their
jurisdiction with leadership necessary to accomplish the objectives of the people. These objectives could be anything from
sustaining world peace to keeping streets and roads clean and in
good repair. It all depends on the level of government involved;
but the principle Is the same. It Is also my hope that a show of
strong leadership will restore confidence in our country to those
who dOubt her. We should all remem!ler in 1975 that the United
States may be having problems, but Is still the greate~t country
in tbe world. Uke the TV corrunercial says, 'Look up, America,
see what we've got.' 11

.

'·

ELEANOR ROBSON, MINERSVILLE, Meigs County
Recorder - "! hope for 1975 good health, pesce and prosperity
for all mankind .''

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

BETTYOHUNGER, MIDDLEPORT, owner and operator of
Marguerite's Shoe Store - "! wish a bright future for Meigs
County good health and prosperity for all, a better understa~ing between people, and pea~ throughout the world."
JANE'[ MORRIS, RUTLAND, employe of the Meigs County
Probate Court- "I wish peace and prosperity for all the world;
an ·end to tbe bickering and disagreements within our own
country, and a return to the pride and happiness of being an
American in a wonderful America."

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·~

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-

By United Preoo International
PA'ITAN, ,PAKISTAN - MUSHA KOOV stepped out of the
farmhouse with his two brothers to chop wood for the fireplace.
"Almost before I had tlme to turn around the whole house
collapsed," he silld, Koov and his brothers ran to the rubble and
began digglng,,l~ut tQeir mother and three nephews were dead by
the time the wreckage was cleared away.
Constable Mlana Zar was saying evening prayers at the
pollee station mosque. "Suddenly the whole building started
shaking;" he said. ''The' roof Qf tbe moeque caved in." Three of
Zar's fellow officers were killed .In the mosque, but rescue
workers managed to pull hiJh alive from the wreckage. He had
leg and Chest wounds.
Offlclal.s reported at least 4,700 periiOils killed and more than
15,000 injured In an earthquake that nunbled Saturday night
through 8 mof\llta!AA'Inunecj valley In northwestern Pakistan.
Army officers said today the !lf!U.11! was expected to increase as
relief workers reached remote Pakistani areas still cut off by

!ands!ldes.

MIDDLETOWN, OHIO- ARMC&lt;) S;I$EL CORP. officials
today blamed rising costs siiice July for an a·v erage overall price
Increase on a' limited nwnber of steel products representing
about one-thlr4 ,of the firm's ship~JW~Jits ,
.,
.
. Prices Increased; on plates, structurals, bars, tubulars, rods
and cl.rtain wires and wire products.'No clianges were made o~
flat rolled carbon s,teel. producta, which are Armco's mqjor
product llne. '·
·
'
OL!j:AN, N. Y. - A I!JGH SCHOO~ RIFLE' team star firing
at random frotn the window of a thlrd..floor .chool'l'oom killed
three pawrsby and woilnded · ll others Monday, police ilaid.
Officers subdued him with a tear.gas grenade to end the 00(Continued on page 14)

.

BAKER FURNITURE .

ELEANOR ROBINSON

BEITY OHLINGER

JANET MORRIS

en tine

Devoted To The lnterests of 1'he Meigs -Mason Area

. GERALD POWELL, Pomeroy, associated with the Ewing
Funeral Home - "Peace In the Middle East; people working
together for a worldwide brotherhond; a stronger economy; good
health and happiness, and that everyone wiU see the completion
of their Ideas and projects."

4.49

SUIT FILED

wrth a single contro l.

Continued froni Jlllge 1
in determining the price of oil. Fa!Sal was picked because he
~'was a principal actor In bringing about the quadrupled price of
oil and now h'l!d!r more power than any other leader to lower
them or raise them anew," Time said Sunday.
The king's decisions on oil affected "the lives and' pockethooks of virtUally every hmnan being," Tlme said. It added that
the "shrewd and dedicated king" played a key role in the •'Increasing cohesion and power of the Arab world. Botli in his own
right and as a symbOl of the other newly po-,erful potenta:es of
oil, Saudi Arabia's King Far! ls the 'Man of the Year',· the
magaZIJie sard.
.
1

3for

Briefs

BILL ANDERSON

a1

EARL INGEI..S, Middleport, mimager of the Meigs County
Branch of the Athens County Savings and Loan and past
president of the Pomeroy Chamber of Conunerce - •'Greater
Iaith in the American economy with a leveling off of inflation and
a decrease in the unemployment rate. Tbe realization from our
local goverrunent officials to affect a better end and that we must
all pull together in common cause. That each individual shall
take to heart tbe phase 'The greatest good one can do Is to .be
good to all.,' " .

T•Shirts

TREE PICKUP SET
RUTLAND - Christmas
trees wiU be picked up here
Thursday by Rutland village.
Trees are to be placed next to
the highway .

GERALD POWELL

•

Seven Meigs Countians were invited Monday to express their
hopes for the New Year. Hope for_good health, peace, and a cure
for the country 's economy was a central theme running through
most of the comments. They hope to see in 1975:
LARRY POWELL, a new Pomeroy resident and owner of
Powell'sSuperValu - "To see a reduction in the cost of living. It
has been rough on all of us bot those on a fixed income have had it
really bad. I personally hope to become more involved in this
conununlty that has been so good to me and my family . I am
really appreciative of the reception we have enjoyed in Pomeroy
and the.Big Bend a~ea. We would like to extend our best wishes to
all of you for a prQSperous 1975."

Neal.

State of W.

EARL INGEI..S

Health, peace,
•
prosperzty are
high 1975 hopes

T·Shirt &amp; Brief

J. Skeen; Betty Sue Holland vs.

Cl"'ester

"In light of the above, ll'is
my intention to continue In the
Congress ofthe United States,"

S. S. Logan Packing Com.

banking assoc . vs. Robert E.

oec. l 7,1914

.
.hut expects to c~e It :

Three charged for DWI

died on Saturday
Holzer Medical Center
(Births)
NEW FAVEN, W. Va. Friday - Mr. and Mrs.
Herman
Donald Ohlinger, 63,
Dennis Roush, daughter, PortNew
Haven,
died Saturday in Leighty vs. Walter M. Windland.
Medical
Center sor; Keith Newberry, et al vs .
Saturday - Mr. and Mrs. Holzer
·Jack Hess; Duane Plants , et al
Terry C. Adkins, son, following · a brief illness. He vs. S. E. Fowlkes, Raymond l .
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. was a well ktwwn Mason Barnette, et al : Nancy Howe,
et al vs. Gary L. WestCharles L. Casto, daughter, County farmer.
moreland. et al; Barbara
Funeral services will be held Lucas vs. Mason County
. New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Aune, · son, Ravens· Tuesday at 1:30 p .m . at the Hospital, Inc. dba - Pleasant
Valley Hospital. el al.
wood ; Mr. and Mrs. Carl R. Foglesong Funeral Home in
Avco Sec urities Corp. a corp.
Johnson, son, Gallipolis ; Mr. Mason. The Rev. Dave Fields, vs. Bernard Hudson; Hobert
and Mrs. Marion Parsons, son, Jr., will officiate and burial Bennett Myers and Carrie Mae
vs . Fred 0. Me·
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Turner will be In the Graham Carroll
Callister.
et al: Albert l.
Saunders, son, Oak Hill; Mr. Cemetery. . Friends wi)l be Stephens, et al .vs. Jim Wa lter
and Mrs. Edgar Spencer, son, received at the funeral home Homes. Inc.; Krodel, Inc., a W.
Va . Corp. vs. Cecil E. Roach;
after 4 p .m. tnday.
Jackson.
James H. Elias vs. Benjamin
Mr.
Ohlinger
was
born
Dec.
Sunday - Mr. and Ml:s.
F. Roush, Sr.;· GertruC:Ie H.
Ronald Carter, Jr., son, Ray; 13, 1911, in Broad Run, a son of Smith vs. Sally Wears
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Hern, Joseph and Millie Roush Wo lfinbarger; Smith McCausland, et al vs. Georgina
son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Ohlinger. He Is survived by his McCausland McDermitt, et aL
Harley Johnson, Jr., son, wife, Naomi Roush Ohlinger;
Thomas Brock vs. William
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs. one son, Herman M. Ohlinger, D. Foglesong aka Dona ld
Foglesong; James Merry
William Newman, daughter, Gallipolis Ferry; two brothers, Stone Company vs. Herb
Lester, of New Haven, and Myers dba- Herb Myers &amp; Son;
Jackson.
Harold, of Broad Run, and two Katie WOyan vs. -~obert Mcgrandsons, Ted and Mike Cartney ; A. E. Baumgar.dner'
vs. Nationwi de
Insurance
Ohlinger.
Company; Faye Stewart vs.
Ug011 Specialized Hauler, Inc.
a corp., et a l; The Charleston
National Bank , a national
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tri· County Lanes

alcoholis~U

Mills admits

before jud.ge next Monday

Mason .

Hennan Ohlinger

·•

~

PT. PLEASANT Mrs.
Helen !Jsh, 69 , of Wellsburg,
W. Va .. died early today in a
Wheeling hospital. She was the
mother of Joseph Lish of

RACINE - Ray Rerthmiller,
86, formerly of Racine, a
promin e nt plastering and
lathin g contractor, died
Sunday at the home of a
daughter , Mrs. Leonard
(Josephine) PPale in Brewster,
N. Y.
Mr . and Mrs . Reithmiller,
who have been residing in
Sarasota, Fla ., since Mr.
Reithmiller's retirement, had
flown to Brewster to spend the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Christmas holiday season with
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS their daughter and her
- Thomas Sarver, Pomeroy; husband, the Rev . Leonard
Leora Strom, Pomeroy ; Calvin Peale , a brother of the famous
Imboden, Minersville ; Eliza theologian Norman Vincent
Powell, Pomeroy ; Elmer Still, Peale.
Pomeroy.
Mr. Reithmiller was born
SATURDAY DISCHARGES and reared in Racine, the son
Amanda Hawk, Martha of the late M~rlin and Ellen
Anderson, Carolyn Thompson , Pickens Reithmiller. He was
Sophia Davis, Sandra Payton, also preceded in death by a
Francis Taylor, Teresa Still, sister, lna , and a brother,
Yvonne Edwards , Charles Ross.
Nease, Sr., Helen Smith, Floyd
Mr. Rei thmiller was the
Gould.
contractor for the Kroger
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS building
constructed
In
Charles Stewart, Cheshire; Pomeroy by the iate Henry
Mary Jones, Pomeroy; Jerry Ewing about 20 years ago and
Ferguson, Middlepor t; also had the plastering and
Deborah Taylor, Pomeroy; lathing contract on the Ohio
Shirley Gregory, Pomeroy; State Offic e Building in
Mildred Bissell , Chester; Colwnbus.
Donna Connolly, Long Bottom;
Surviving besides his widow,
. Aaron Hysell , Pomeroy; the former Josephine Coe, and
·ltltlt·• • Velma Newell, Reedsville;
his daughter, Josephine, are a
Ermalean Johnson, Reeds- · nwnber of cousins, and a
ville ; Paul Sigman , Mid- sister-in-law, Mrs. Ann Coe of
dleport ; Shelby Rosser, Racine .
Columbus; Joanne White ,
The body is being nown from
Colwnbus.
Brewster to Sarasota where
SUNDAY DISCHARGES funeral arrangements are
Kathryn Werry , Leona Strom, being made.
Martin
Gibbs,
Beulah
Maynard.

.

~

.

,

VOL. XXVI NO. 182

PO M ER OY-MI DDLEPORT, ...::.
0-H1..:._
0 _ _ _ ___T..::..
UE
::..::S..:....
DA--Y.__D:.:.EC.:..:E-M.::..:
BE:.....
R....:.3_:_
l ,_l_97_4_ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ _T_E_
N _CE_N_TS

Jury has

atergate ·case

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

No Gls
•
lost m
Vietnam

:)

Movie stars, congressmen first buyers

figur es
Records available in Saigon
do not show the last year in

;,~~~t":et~er~i~~:rner~c~n

They showed that from 1957
through 1973, at least one
American died in combat each
year.
The last American killed in
VIetnam was an Army capUlin
slain in the Viet Cong ambush
of a helicopter-borne team
searching for. U.S. war dead
near Saigon on Dec. 15, 1973.
Between 1960and the Jan. 27,
197~, peace agreement on
Vietnam, 45 ,941 American
trQOps were killed in action.
The Saigon government, in a
New Year's Eve communique,
predicted more fighting next
year and threated "ap propriate measures '' to protect
its territory.
In
Cambodia,
pro ~
Communist rebel forces began
an apparent drive to capture
the nation's rich northwest rice
lands, overrunning one village
and attacking at least three .
other goverrunent · positions.
Spokesmen in Saigon said
· that during 1974, 62,019 Communist troops, 15,241 government soldiers and 3,454
clvillans died during combatthe second highest toll of
Vietnamese in the war.
In 1972, the most deadly
year, 128,694 Communists and
27,748 government soldiers
were killed. Civilian casualUes
(Continued on page 14)

Road conditions
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
American
Automobile
Association
re ports
the
following road conditions
today :
Ohio: Roads in southern Ohio
are wet ; roads in the northwest
and extreme north are light
snow covered; roads arotmd
the Akron-Canton area have
some ice.
Ohio Turnpike : Damp to wet.
Pennsylvania Turnpike:
Damp to wet.
New York Thruway : Clear.
Wes t Virginia Turnpike :
Wet.
Kentucky: Wet.
Indiana Turnpike: W&lt;·: .
J.ower

Miciu ~ t~ n :

Cll•:u·

:-:-

•'• '

of gold bullion in U.S. since 1933

'\\[
.;;:
··
:::\
~GON (UPl) -::- The, ye.iiJ;. :;;:
1974marked the first in at least ·:·:
17 years that no American was :;:;
killed in combat in South '&gt;
Vietnam. But more than 80,0011 /
Vietnamese died, the second ::;:
highest death toll in two ;:;:

~~~!~~~a~~ficial

&lt;

Unlted Press International
bu lng
Gold bulllon went on sale to Americans today lor the flnl Ume since 1933, and y
and selling of wafers, sticks, blll'll and gold certllicales began brlllkly even before dawn .
Movie stlll'll and congressmen wer~ among the lint to buy gold.
.
The fre~om to buy buiUOll was celebrated by dealers and pretty gfirls a~ltbhe$Mid·
America Commodlty Exchange In Chlcago with a champagne party, a ter wh c 1.32
million ln certificates of gold changed hands. There were many claims by those wanting
to be the first person to buy gold after It was legal or to be the first mlnl to produce a gold ·
medalllon. Sen. James Buckley, R-N.Y., a proponent of the legallzaUon, bought 2112
ounces of gold at exa ctly 12:01 a .m.
. At exactly midnight EST, the Golden State Colo Exchange In Tarzana, CaiU;d~al~~:

\'

what done,

.•::
:.::.:

by whom?

:::[
}

WASHINGTON (UP!) Bolstered
by gallons of govern··
.:.:.: ment cafeteria coffee, 12 or.·. dinary citizens In a windowlRETIRES - W. Clifford
·:': ess, second-floor room are
grappling
with
11
historic
PhllUps,
Mlnersvllle, retired
)
problem:
Was
there
a
Watertoday from the Stlile
{
gate cover-up, and II so, who's
Department of Highways
after .seven yean servjce as
/
sold for
[:: goilty ?
Two
and
a
half
years
alter
right
of way agent and
{.'
$197.50 an ounce.
&lt;::
the
bugging
of
Democratic
Umekeeper. Phllllps was
At least two mints claimed to be first to stamp new gold coins or medals, at one
....
Party headquarters, two years
exployed at the Parkersburg
after Richard Nixon's landRig and Reelfor31 years and
}
·.':·.':.,·.'·. slide re-election and live
at
Kelth Gobel Ford for
:;::
Franklin Mint in Philadelphia said It became the first In the country alter the ban on
months
alter
his
resignation
in
seven yea &amp;"s. His wJfe,
}
private ownership to cut a gold coin - the 1975100'bulboa of the Republic of Panama.
disgrace, the job of solving the
Mildred, retlred as pori~
.),.:...,,,:.:::::::::· ., :·•·:·:·:·:·..•:::,::·::-:,:-: .... •&lt;·: . :::::::::::::::::::: ,.;.:-:·•·:•:::::::::::::::::::·:::·::::::::·:·:....,: .........·.;.·. ·.·:·.. :·::::::::::::: ·:·•::•::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: mysteries of Watergate has at
master at Minersville aller
last fallen to a jury.
22 years of service. Phllllps
"The object of this trial is to
plans ''to just take It easy"
ascertain the truth about the
and enjoy his retirement.
Issues that have been submitted for your determination," Judge John J.
The Meigs County Com· Sirica said Monday , sending
mi ssioners th is morning ac· the case to the jury after 13
cepted the resig nati on of weeks of trial.
His voice quivering with
Robert Buck as assis tan t
Thirty Big Bend merchants pages 10-11) a r e Welk er's prosecuting attorney.
emotion, he reminded them the
are offe rin g prizes in the 1975 Ashland Station, A. &amp; P.,
Buck resigned the post to case ''was not brought for
Daily Sentinel Baby De~by.
Goessler's Jewelry, Village asswne his duties as county revenge" against anyone but
Parents of the first baby of Pharmacy, Citizens National court judge .
simply to ascertain the truth.
the New Year in Meigs County Bank, Moore's Store, Craw's
Th e com mis sioners are He said they should put
will receive a nwnber or giflo;; Steak House, Hartley Shoes, expected to approve the budget everything out of their minds
RACINE - The resignation
contributed by the :!0 business Dudley's Florist, The Kiddie for 1975 today . Attending were - including Nixon's pardon of Mrs. Genevieve Harvey as .·.
houses as a part of the derby. Shop pe, Swisher and Lohse Robert Cla rk , Warden Ours, save the evidence they have clerk-treasurer of the Southern
According to the contes t Drug Store, Sears, Mark V and Henry Wells, com- heard.
Local School District Board of · ·..
Scaling the mountain of Education was accepted by the
rules, parenls of the fir st Supe r Market, Pomeroy missioners, and Martha
evidence presented against board In a recessed session
arrival of 1975 must be legal Nat iona l Bank , L. and Z. Dress Chambers, clerk.
fonner Nixon lieutenants John Monday night.
residents of Meigs Cou nty Shop .
:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;::::::::::::::::::::
N. Mitchell, H. R. Haldeman,
although the fa ther may be m
Mrs . Harvey has held the
EXTENDED
OU!fLOOK
John
D. Ehrllchman, Robert C. post since last August. Ap- ~
the armed forces and the
Racine Home Natio~al . B~nkJ .
Thu,rsdoy
through
Mardla n and Kenneth W. plications for the position will ·
family stationed at a distant Pomeroy
Flower
Shop,
Saturday,
a
chance
of snow
Parkinson seems a staggering be accepted until noon JBJl'J..
poin t.
Western Auto, Landmark,
Thursday or Friday and task.
The exact time of birth must Waid Cross Sons, The Meigs
by Supt. Bobby Drd. The board
party cloudy Saturday.
After their first 3 hours 50 will meet for Its organizational
be spec ified in a written Inn , K. ~ nd C. Jewelers,
Highs In the 30s, lows In the minutes in the jury room, the
statement from the attending Rutland F urni ture, Stiffler's
session at 7:30 that evening.
20s
and low 30s •
jurors sent Sirica a note asking
physician . The statement of the Store, Racine Department
Jean Alkire, William Downie
birth must be received at The Store, The Fabric Shop, Racine ;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:; for transcripts of Mitchell's and Ted and Joyce Trotter
grand jury tesUmony, plus the discussed a pay increase
Daily Sentinel office, ill Cour t Food Market, Heritage House,
MARRIAGE LICENSE
St., Pomeroy, no later tha n H. and R. Firestone, Royal
"Kenneth Ray Nelgler, 22, trial testimony of Mitchell, request from the teachers of
Jan. 10.
Crown Cola, Kroger Co., and Racine, and Sandra Ray Work- John W. ,Dean Ill, Jeb Stuart the district. While no definite
(Continued on page 14)
Contributing the prizes (see Powell's Super Valu .
man, 18, Pomeroy.
decision was made, It was
agreed that any raise given
will be retroactive to Jan. 1,
1975.
The 1975 budget from the
'Meigs Budget Commission was
open heartll era at Gary," crime situation here,'' Hatcher he said.
approved as was a temporary
By JOHN L. TAYLOR
will
he
no
severance
There
said
.
Traver
Hartill,
director
of
budget for 1975 so that bills can
GARY, Ind (UP!) - The
" We already have 4,000 pay for those laid off, Hartlll be paid until a breakdown Ill
"open hearUt era" at United community affairs for the steel
States Steel ends in Gary firm, said. "After more than 30 people out of work because of said. ''They will get their last completed on the appropria.ted
the coal strike," Hatcher said. week's pay and then ita up to funds . The board discussed a
today,- settling for the moment years, this is it."
"This will really hurt us. We the state -in the fonn of recent action which gave non·
U.S
.
Steel,
the
nation's
a pollution Issue but leaving
have
asked for emergency WJemploymenl."
largest
steelmaker,
announced
certified employes a . pay in2,500 persons out of jobs and
It could take two weeks or crease in conjunction with the
assistance
from the governtriggering predictions of crime Friday it would close its open
hearth furnaces here rather ment in the form of jobs and more before the total 2,500 new mlnlmwn pay laws. ·
increases.
Board members present .
"You can call it the end of the than pay $2,300 a day in fines money. But it wiU take a persons are selected, Hartill
said.
while."
for pollution violation .
were Grover Salser, Jr ., Denny
Lonnie Anthony, a five-year Evans, David Nease and Jack
Hartill said he didn't know
Gary Mayor Richard G.
:::.::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;: Hatcher said Mvnday he was how to reply to Hatcher's veteran of tbe hearth furnace Bostic.
NO PAPER WEDNESDAY
"dismayed" by the decision to charge of an increase in crime shop, said "Its going to put a lot
of people out of work.
Thf Dally Sentinel will not
close the furnace and predicted because of the layoff.
Pollution 's been here every
"All
I
know
is
that
we
are
LOCAL TEMPS
there would be a direct
be published Wednesday in
since
we've
been
here
...
but
I
under
a
court
order
.
This
is
a
Temperature
in downtown
order to permit employees to
rela t ionship between fu ture
wouldn't
pay
$2,300
a-day
to
case
of
a
full
court
order.
They
Pomeroy . Tuesday at 10 :15
c·rime. increases and ·Jllem·
ohSl'T\'(' tht• Nt'\\
Yt:ar · ~
want us to opE"rate by paying a keep this plant open, either."
li !i •', rl ' t l !' j, , h ie ri ty.
a.m. was 43 degrees, under
huli~ln ~
rainy skies.
• .• t ' l ) will affecL ..he · fine ... we can '1 go Lhat way,"
·.· ··:::·· ·..
·.::::::: ..

;:;::~~~::::eg~!~.~.":!~.t: ::~~~~':'::~h~~!~:::..~c7t~~~~=~~r~~~:

J;:.::

~~:~.:a~ r;;:snl!:'~a~:~ ~:~~~=.o~7:lc;e~id!:t ~o~~b;:~;:~~.~~:

32 merchants
offer prizes

Buck resigns
to take bench

Resignation,;
accepted at ::
Southem

Open hearth steel era at Gary ended

.....

\

•••

l

~

�2 - The Dati) Sentmel Mtddleport-Pomct O\ 0, Tuesd"'• Dec 3! 1074

Traffi~ rules change in O_hio
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Do you
get annoyed by motortsts who
hog tlle passmg lane and go
slower than the speed lurut •
These dnvers who ' loaf" m
tlle out&gt;;1de lane wtll be subject
to penalttes under a new lrafftc
safel) law whtch takes effect
Jan I
Thts mfractwn and other new
ones Will draw two pomts on

the dnver's record Other
vtolatwns tn the revtsed code
could brmg a maxunum $100
fme
Rep Alan E NorriS, RWestervtlle, ch1ef sponsor of
tlle new law, el&lt;plams that unttl
now, motortsts have been
reqwred to 'keep nght except
to pass ,,
Volunlar) comphance has
not always been forthcommg,

Norns

sa)s,

so

the

requtrement w11l be underscored wtth a penalty
Involves Federal Funding
The law IS des1gned to brmg
Oh to 's standards mto conformity wtth the Federal Htgh-

"ay Safety Act of 1966 Fa1lure re.tr llso \ ISlbh' for ~ ~ le.t~L 500
to do so mtghl have caused a 10 feN
per cent reductton tn federal
Prdestnans under the mflufundtng for slate htghway ence of alcohol or a drug may
proJects
not "·•lk on the highwav, nor
Many of the changes merely rna) anyone sohclt wh1le
put into law commonly accep1- slandmg tn the road
ed requtrement&gt;; For example,
Pedestrian Rules
drtvers wtll have to slop for a
Pedestrtans also must walk
stopped school bus tnstde or factng traffic, and on tlle
outstde a mumctpal corpora- Sidewalk If there ts one They
lion And they may not drtve must y1eld to pubhc safety
tllrough, around or under a vehicles and may only cross
closed ratlroad crosstng gate the
street
tn
marked
or signal
crosswalks
The new law also contatns
The new law also
provtstons for pedestrians and
- Forbids dnvers to move
operators of motorcycles, btcy- rtght or left on the highway
cles and lrtcycles
Without stgnahng for at least
Motorcyclists and thetr pass- 100 feet ahead of ttme A s1gnal
engers wtll have to face for- also must be giVI.n before
ward w1tll one leg on each s tde pulling out of a parking place
of tlle vehicle No cycliSt may
carry anytllmg or a nyone that
prevents hun from keepmg at
least one hand on the han- WIN AT BRIDGE
dlebars
B1cycles may not be rtdden
on tlle sidewalk, and must have
a front hghl vtstble 500 feet
ahead and a red hght on the
NORTH
31

r1 u

I
ll.'\t'

or

~

r n'- k flrlvcrs to

lt 1r flasht.~l1'; •1s , J cou r ~esy

DR. LAMB

WEST
EAST
. 987&gt;
.43
¥ 965
¥ 832
t 876
t Q 10 5
• K73
• 96542
SOUTH IDI
• A J 62
¥A 10 7 4
tAK3

Aged need
stretch exercise

~

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

1

s1gncll
Bcqu1res dnvers ilP·
pro.1chan~ a dead.end m.
tersect1on not controlled by a
signal or stgn to yaeld to trHff1c
on t he rtght
- Reqwrcs drtvers to yteld to
pedeslrtans m a crosswalk
- Forbtds leavmg a motor
vehtcle unat tended wtthout
stopping tlle ongme, lockmg
the 1grutwn , removmg the key,
settmg tlle parktng brake and
turmng the front wheels
toward the curb on a grade
- Forbtds opemng tlle door
on the traffiC s1de unless It will
not tnletiere With traffic, and
tllen only long enough to unload
passengers
pc:~ssmg

Sexy ls As Sexy Dresses?
Dear Helen and Sue
o# A whtle back, you sided wttll a gtrl when she complamed
about her boyfnend spanking her for wearing short, sexy dresses
to work when they had agreed on a "no-&lt;;ex" arrangement
Seems she had been a conservative dresser before, but decided to
wow 'em at the office
Although 1 think her guy's actlon was a bit violent, he sure had
thertghttdea 1 I personally fmd the "look at the goodies but don't
touch" atUlude mfurtating I don 't let 1t show, however. And
don't think 1 am totally Iibera 1m my sex standards - I'm all for
tlle r1ght tune, place, degree and care m choosmg tlle partner
But I DO beheve tllat any gtrl who doesn't have, or wish th
acknowledge, as Intense a btologtcal drtve as a male (as
evidenced by tlle "no-sex agreement"), and who glves guys the
come"'n anyway (as evtdenced by the sexy clothes), deserves
whatever befalls her
like the heavy hand of Justice (as
evtdenced by her boyfriend)
Some version or other of the golden rule should be applied to
her hypocritical behavior - MIKE
Dear Mike
Here's another letter from a guy who agrees wttll you

TUESDAY, DECEMBER Jt, 1m
6 oo-News 3,4,8, 10.13, 15,
ABC News ' ' Etec. Co. 20; 1ft
Recllal 33
6 »-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, hwllcf\ed 6; CBS fteWI
8,10, Zoom 20; Biography 33
7 oo-Truth or Con• 3,4, Bowling lor Dollers 6; Whet•• My linl
8. News 10, Name That Tune 13; To h Annovnm IS; An.
tlques 20, Mountain Scene 33
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Wild Wild World of Anlmels l;
Buck Owens B, New Price Is Righi 10, To Tell the Trvth IJ:
RFD 20, Marco Spartllte 33
7 55-Rose Bowl Bound 4
8 oo-Orange Bowl Parade 3,4,15, Sugar Bowl I , 13r Good Times
8, 10, America 20,33
8 J()-MASDH 8.10, Bonnie Rail! &amp; Paul Butterfield 33, Movie
' Blood and Sand" 20
9 OG-Movle "Frankenstein" 3,4, 15, Hawaii Five 0 1.10.
9 30-Barenbolm on Beethoven 33
10 OG-Barnaby Jones 8, 10, Evening of Championship Skell~~g
20, Soundstage 33
11 OG-News 3,4,6,8, 10. 13, 15, ABC News 33
11 31f-Movle "The Wise Guys" 3, Wide World Special IJ;
Johnny Carson 4, 15, FBI 6 , New Year's Eve with Gu,
Lombardo 8.10, Janakl 33
1 00- Tomorrow 4, Movie usavage Pampe~" 10, News 11
1 30-Movle "Kiss of Evil" 3
2 OG-Movle "Shall We Dance" 4
3 30-Movle ' The Projected Man" 3. Movie "Swi~~g Time" 4,
5 31f-Movle Eye of the Cat" 3

If a chtck flaunts something she derues ber boyfriend, she
deserves a spanking for her lack of modesty. So he took ber out
on a secluded road and spanked her when he saw her dressed In
after that kmg of c lubs
Whtle South was !hmkmg super-sexy clothes I admire hts restramt He COULD have done
East had been domg so me much worse, bemg turned on to that new ''come-on'' of hers
thmkmg of hts own He had
When a man sees a tight, tl11gh~ngh dress, he's not just
worked out JUSt what Soutll s admtrmg a good set of legs And if a gtrl dressed like tllat won't
problem was Now when these
cond htgh dtamond was led produce, she's guilty of false advertising - BIG BROTHER
East was ready He dropped !he
Dear Guys
queen'
South fell for 1t ltke a ton of
You already know our stand Let's hear what other women
brtcks He !messed dummy s have to say - HELEN AND SUE
ntne and East scored hts 10
+++
spot
Rap
To settle 'l,uesttons on !be btd
My mother IS boycotting sugar And at holiday tune, that's
dmg , North s four clubs Was
1
No Chrtst111B8
Gerber South's fo ur notrump rruserable No Thanksgtvmg "punkin" p1e
rebtd showed three aces
cookies
My sweet tooth •ches from ma!nutrtUon
She won't even buy package dessert mixes because that
Nt:W.SPA I'EH t:NTt:R PRJSE AS.SNI
helps the sugar mdustry, which she says IS gouging conswners
for no good reason Around our house, if I'm seen eatmg a candy

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY

I,""

6 OG-Sunrlse Seminar 4, 6 25-Farm Report 13.
6 31f-Five Monutes to Live By 4, News 6: Bible Ana...,.. I;
School Scene 10, The Story 13
6 35--Columbus Today 4, 6 45-Motnlng Report 3

Farmtlme
10
'
7 OG-Today 3,4, Yogi's Gang 6, CBS Newt 1,10, Far,.,.•s
Daughter 13
7 30-New Zoo Revue 6, Lldsvltle 13
8 OG-Capt Kangaroo 8, Jeff'l Collie 6; ,.._,. 10; New lao
Revue 13 Sesame St 33 , 1 2s-c.pt. l(engeroo It; Jack
LaLanne 13
8 31f-To Be Announced 6, I 55-N~..-~ 13.
9 OG-A M 3, Paul Dixon 4, Wild Wl,d West I , Phlt Oonaltw u 1
Bullwlnkle 8, Movie "Come Blow Y&lt;Nr Horn" 13; M11tw
Rogers 33
9 25--Chuck White Reports tO
9 30-Not For Women Only 3. Hazel I ; Tallleflln 10• z-n 3J
10 OG-Junlor Orange Bowl Parade 3,&lt;1, 15; Company 6; RoM
Parade Preview I, 10, Mountain ~ 33
10 30-Cotton Bowl Festival Parade 8,10; Sara McS~ 33

B) La"rence E Lamb, MD
often be
corrected
by
.108
DEAR DR
LAMB
progresstve stretchmg exer
Ne1ther vulnerable
Chron1calll Ill and ag tng c1ses over a pertod of weeks
pattents often have one or both and months These must be
West
North Easl
South
knees bent m a ftxed posttton
done before changes tn the
What are the causes of thJs ? carttlage and bony structure tn
bar, I'm ostractzed.
!NT
How can 11 be prevented and the JOtnl are affected
Pass
4.
Pass
4NT
Could you please say sometllmg about deprived families•
The btddtng has been
"hat can be done to reheve the sometimes called a frozen
Pass
7N T Pass
Pass
31 When I obJect, she JUst says, "Go eat an apple t" - AGAINST
cond t t ton ? Apparently JOint'
THE SUGAR FAMINE
Opemng lead - 9 •
West
North East
stratghlentng the knees out
South
10 45-Rose Parade Preview 3,4, 15
lnc1denlall}, stretch exercauses pam and discomfort cises are also Important fo r the
11 OG-Money Maze 6, Password All Stars 13, The Way 11
Dear ATSF
33
DEAR READER In trunk muscles The muscles By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Go
eat
an
apple
t
Pass
1+
Pa ss
I•
11 31f-Tournament of Roses Parade 3,4,15,8,10; Brady Bunch
general the body has opposmg over the front of the ches t can
We wmd up 1974 With a defen
Pass
3•
Pass
?
Sorry, we've got a sugar boycott gomg at our house too; and,
13 , Lucy Show 6, Sesame St 33
muscle groups The knee IS a become overcontracted too , stve gem that may well be tlle
You Sooth hold
happy day I I've lost two pounds already - HELEN
12 OG-Password All Stars 6; News 13.
good example One set of co ntnbutmg
•K764 3 ¥A2e9.AK732
to
r ounde d swmdl~ of tllts or any year
12 31f-Spllt Second 6, Afternoon with D J 13:
+++
·To hAn.
Playrng at a normal SIX
Wllat do you do now'
nounced 33
muscles over the front of the should.ers and decreased chest
Dear
ATSF
notrump
,
declarer
makes
13
A81d
three
spades
Your
12
45--Eiec
Co
33
thtgh stratgh tens the knee , wall fun ctton whtch can trtcks by successfully fmessmg
As a person suffermg from sugar wttlldrawal pams, 1
parlner IS showmg strength and you
1 OG-AII My Children 6, 13, 1 15-To Be Announm
another group over the back of compromtse how well the lun gs for the kmg of clubs At one VJoBDI to te ll h1m about your ftflh sympathtze But look , we'll never brmg prices down unless we do
1
JO-Let'sMakeADeal6,13, llllasYoge&amp;You:JJ
'
!he thtgh causes 1t to bend
wtthout
"ork So, don l forget to stretch table m the duphcate game spade
2
OG-Circus
Town
3,
15,
110,000
Pvramld6,13,
Bob
BriWI'I
When a person ts tnacttve, - tt wtll stretch your youthful where the hand was played
Club 4, Cotton Bowl 8, 10, Restless Earth 33.
Good-bye, sweet things (But not forever, 1 hopei)- SUE
TODAY S QUESTION
parttcularly at bed rest, the appearance over more year s Nor!b jumped all the way to
2 JO-alg Showdown 6,13
Your
partner
contmues
to
three
seven notrump
muscles that cause the bendmg as well as help your health
3 00--Magic Holiday 3.4,15, General Hospital ,,131 RFD 21.
Sooth dectded that down one notrump What do you do now?
shorten , and so do tlle tendons
Answer
Tomorrow
3 30-NBC News Special 3, 15, One Life to Live 13; Truth 01
or two at seven would be the
Cons 4, Lassie 6, Antiques 20
allached to these muscles The
same matcb-potnl zero After Send $1/or JACOBY MODERN FUNNY BUSINESS
4 OG-Rose Bowl Bound 4, Gilligan's Is. 6; 5-me St. 20 :IJI
mature tllought he proceeded to liook to Wm at Bfldge (clo
same thmg happens as you get
Mike Douglas 13
'
cas
h
ht
s
ace
and
ktng
of
older tf you don't watch tl 1
thrs newspaper I P 0 Box 489
30-Rose
Bowl
Pre
Game
Show
3,4,
15,
Mo!f
Squad
'',
4
dtamonds If the queen fatled tn Rad1o C1ty Statton New York
somettmes say we begm lo lose
drop he would sltll be able to go NY 10019
4 45-Rose Bowl 3,41, 15,
•
the war agams t gravtty and
5 OG-Andy Griffith 8, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 2t,:IJ~
are gradually bent and beaten
Green Acres 10, Raymond Burr !3.
•
down from the upnght posthon
WIN
AT
BRIDGE
5 ]()-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies I, HadgtpOC!gw UM!ge 21,'
You have seen many older
Death Valley Days 10, Elec. Co 33 persons, rm sure, who have
6 OG-News 8, 10, 13. ABC News 6; Elec. Co. 20; lllrenlllllm
001
Beethoven 33
sltghtly bent kn ees, !be ankle
Startmg January 3, Pomeroy
tendon to the heel shortens and
Mtddleport Librartes wtll
the toe ts dtsplaced down , the mcrease their service to the
cards a.. small dtamond rrom
NORTH
dummy
That leaves Soutll wtUt
htp JOint a lso bends forward
pubhc by nearly 50 pet w1th a
• 10 53 2
two
hearts
and tllree diamonds
The elbows also become bent new schedule mcreasmg thetr
¥ K82
whtle
dummy
holds three
To sland uprtght, these people hours of opemng from 60 to 87 '&gt;
• K64
heart
s
and
two
dtamonds
and
4954
must place !be feet w1de apart
poor East holds ht s head m
hours per week, a gam of 46
WESTtDI
EAST
The posture of the older person pel Thts means Me1gs counpam
• 64
.87
He has to come down to ftve
walkmg shghtly on ttptoes, fee t ttans wtll have more tune and
• 93
• Q J 10 7 54
cards also and must unguard
apart and tn a half.,rouched opportumty to use th eir
tiO 5
+QJ98 2
one of h1s queens It doesn 't
positiOn, IS a result of hbranes
4AKQJ876
matter wh1ch one If South
generaltzed s hortenmg of
Under the new schedule, both
SOUTH
counts he wtll know whether hts
muscles and tendons
•AKQJ9
IO!b trtck wtll be scored by hts
the Middleport and Pomeroy
¥A 6
You can help to prevent th1s Itbrartes wtll be open from
thtrd dtamond or dummy s
thtrd heart
• A 73
problem The way ts by making 10 30 am to 5 p m Monda y
Can the squeeze be m1ssed ?
"'10
3
2
sure that JOtnts of the body are through Saturday, and 2 to 4 30
Yes
If South refuses to cash hts
North -South vulnerable
moved through thetr full range p m on Sunday Tuesday and
last trump tlle squeeze JUSt
of motwn every day tn suf Thursday tlle Pomeroy hbrary
won t have developed
ftctenl amount to stretch to the wtllbeopen7pm to8 30pm
N~WSI AI'I::H ENT£11f&gt;HI.sl:: ASSN I
North East
S&lt;Motb
fullest all the muscles and on Wednesday the MidStretchmg cxerctses are JUSt as dleport ltbrary wtll be open
Pass
Pass
tmporlan t as strength exer- agatnfrom7pm to8 30pm
Pass
Pass
Cises Thts ts the way you keep
The btddtng has been
Openmgiead-K 4
your body hmber, nextble and
youthful Many people Ieadmg
West
North Ea!Jt
South
THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, lf7S
apparently normal ltves are
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
actually havmg changes they
6 OG-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Sunrise Semnt.r 10; 6: 25-Ferm
Happy New Year readel's'
Report 13
could prevent tf they would use
We are gomg to slart tlle year
6 30-Five Minutes to Live By 4; N.ws 6; Bible Ani....., I;
regular stretchmg exerctses
off wtth the Stmplest squeeze
School Scene 10, Patterns for Living 13.
Stretch that ankle tendon by
play tllere ts It IS so simple
6 35-Columbus Today 4, 6.45-Mornlng Report 3; Fermtlme
ra1smg the toes up to" ard the
10
that the only read way to avotd
worktng tt IS to give up and conshtn as far as posstble
7 OG-Today 3,4,15, Make A Wish 6, CBS News 1,10; Fermer'1
A man doesn t get up at 5 cede down one, because you are
Daughter 13
stratghten the knees, move the
a m because he wants to only lookm~ at ntne top tncks
7
30-New
Zoo Revue 6: Tennessee TuxitC!o 13.
htp JOtnts through tlle full socialize w1th Holstems
South mtght double West s
8
OG-Capt
Kangaroo I, Jeff's Collie 6; P~ 10; New lao
range of motwns
- AgricuJture Secretary Earl four.,lub openmg , but no one
Revue 13; Sesame St 33
These measures are very Butz defendtng profits for can blame htm for hts four
8 11f-Your Future Is Now 20
~
spade btd
unporlant m bed pattents to da1rymen
·~
8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10, Jack LaLanne 13.
~
Thmgs don't start out well
prevent disabling contractures
8
30-Brady
Bunch
6,
8
55-News
13
'
'There IS a sexual blurnng goyou are descnbmg Datly mg on The boys are lookmg smce West cashes tllree clubs
9 OG-A M 3. Paul Dixon 4, Wild WlldWnt 61Phll 0on.11ue U; •
nght off tlle bat Then It doesn t
Rocky &amp; Friends B, Movie "Anythlllg C.n u'Pillll" 13; :
exerc tses should be part of more femmme But they aren't matter what he shift&gt;; to SupMIsler Rogers 33
•
every patient's routme wtle.ss sexy Maybe tt s hke those rats pose he leads a trump as IS
9 25-Chuck While Reports 10.
•
the paltent ts really so stck that who when overcrowded, get most likely South stmply runs
9
30-Not
For
Women
Only
3,
Hazel
I;
To
h
Announm
10·
:
ts 1mposs1ble Even then very bland and lose all mterest off all hts ftve trumps and dtsZoom 33
' ..
passtve ex:erctses by a tramed m sex '
10 00--Name That Tune 3, 15, Company 6, Jolcer'1 Willi 1 II • ••
Episode Action 33.
' ' :
phys1cal theraptst often help a -Author Gore Vidal on young
peoples' changmg sexual at10
J()-W
Inning
Streak
3,
15,
Phil
Donahue
4;
Gel!lblt
1,10•
Unto
•
great deal
hludes
the Hills 33.
""
'
:
Contraction deformities can
11 00--High Rollers 3,4, 15, Money /Nu 6; Now You S.. It 1 lit
· Yam Arafat s propagandtsts l.Jnscramble these four Jumbles,
Pass~ord_All Stars 13; Biography 33.
'
:
use the methods of (Josef) one letter to each square, to
11 ]()-HollyWood Sq.
:1,4, 15; Brady BIHicf\ IJ; Lucy Show 6t :
Goebbels Wtth our hmtted form four ord1nary words
Love ot LITe o,IU; Sesame St 33.
•
means , we haYe a tnugh ttme
11
55-CBS
News
8,
Dan
lmel'l
World
10.
:
ftghttng them "
DEVOTED TO THE
ARSYC
12 OD-Jackpot 3, 15, Pauword All Stars 61 Bob lr•un's JO.ID •
INTEREST OF
-Michael
Shasar , Israel's
11
Club 4, News 8, 10, 13.
:
MEIGS MASON AREA
Minister of Information, stating
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
DAILY
CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's
how
to
work
It:
12
»-Celebrity
Sweepstaku
3,15;
Split
S.Ccuu
Seereh,.,
•
1
E xe c Ed
the Palestine Liberation
A
ll:
y
D
L
A
A
ll:
Tomorrow
8,
10;
Afternoon
with
D.J.
13;
To
3J.
:
ROBERT HOEFLICH
8
8
Organization 's Information
City Ed1tor
12 o15-Eiec Co. 33 ; 12· 55-NBC Ntw1 3, 11.
•
THICY
Pub l is hed dally except
sources use tactics similar to
II
L
0
N
G
F
B
L
L
0
W
1
oo-News3;
All
My
Children
6,13;
Phil
Donettue
II
YCIU!If.
:
Sat 1rday by The Oh10 Valley
those of Nazt Germany's
One letter simply ,standi for another. In thlo oample A 11
the R•tleSI 10; Not For Women Only IS.
•
Publ l ... h lng Company
111
propaganda minister
Court Sl
Pomeroy Ohio
used for the three L s, x for the two o•a, etc Slnrle !etten, 1: 15-To Be Announced 33.
:
45769 Bus1ness Off1 ce Phone
apoatropheo, the length and formation of the word• are au 1 311--:-Jeopardy 3,4, 15; Ltra /Nke • DHI 6,13; As the Worlll :
992 2156 Ed 1l0r1al Phone 992
'
'The constantly advancmg
hints Each day the code !etten are dllferent
Turns 8,10, Llll•• Yoga &amp; You 33.
•
2157
pnces of meat are capable of
A ~00t7 "-15TE'i5FC
Second class pos tage pa d at
ISMALEY±
Pomeroy Oh10
diVIdmg the people 1nto two
2' otti'g~~y:.l~. ~ah~~3~,~~~10,CJIO "Yretnld •• 131 Gui"'"' :
CRYPTOQUOTBS
5HOU~J:!' "-ENt7
Nat i onal
advertis ing
larger
m
classes
those
wtth
YOU
THI'!So
representative
Bott 1netl 1
:
2·JO-Doctora3,4,15; Big Showdown 6,131 J;dguf Nltltfl 11
YKLE LE YKT VFT
comes and the vegetartans '
Ga llagh er Inc
12 Eas t 42nd
RMN
BT
ETY
3:0D-Another
World
3,4,15,
Price
II
Rlallt
1,10
Q..;.,ll
•
St
New York New York
1
- West German Chancellor
Hoopltel6, 13; Llll11 Yoga &amp; You 20; Huntlneton VA HOIPI'-1
Subscr1pf10n
ra t es
:
MELRT YV BLEK NVO
Helmut
Schmidt
on
Del vered by carr1er where
PELP/N
Now
the circled !etten
33
~
KMUULFTEE
available 60 cents per week
skyrocketing food prices
•
V
"1
to
form
lhe
IUrpri&amp;e
anawer,
u
3
30-How
lo
Survive
a /Nrrlege 3.4, 15; One Lfr. to Lift Ill
By Motor Rou t e where car r 1er
•
throughout the world .
serv1ce not ava /able
One
WVJT
Laule
6;
Match
Game
1,
10;
Yow
Future
Ia
Now
•
To
~~h.~~~~~==:::::::~~:::'.._,'llu&amp;eested
by the abore cartoon.
TJTHN
•
RMN
VG
1
YKT
month S2 60 By mall n Oh1o
••
Announced 33
"It s easy to accuse th e
and w Va One Year SlS Six
1'00
..
SURPRISUNSW!!I
flirt
NTMH.months $9 50 Three months
4 OG-Mr. Cartoon 3,1 Bonannra 4; s-r..t lS I Gill,._., "- ' '
:
UOXXWT
freshmen cl.ss of betng brtghtTRLYVHE
$6 Elsewhere S22 00 year s 'X
•
Tattletales 8, Seiame St. 2U,33; Movie "llMt Sherlrt w.1 •
eyed
bushytatled
a
nd
un
(AftiWI!N
IOftiOrrow,
months S II 50 three months
Lady"
10;
Mike
Douglas
13.
:
S6 50 Subscr 1pt1on pnce m
Ju1nhh·• SWOOP MACAW JERSEY FLABBY
realtstlc but thiS group ts not
Yesterdey's Cryptoquote: IF YOU FIND A GOOD THING, 4 30-Bewltched 3; Mcid 5quad6; Lucy Show I; Bon.,. 11.
v...ll'rd•v.
•
eludes
Sunday
Times
wtlltng
to
stop
at
self·
Senlmel
DO
NOT REJOICE. IF YOU LOSE A GOOD THING, DO NOT 5 oo-FBI3, lw.rv Griffin 4; Andy Griffith I; Miller Rrgsrs•
All,.w.-r ThP tenor who U'OII n former nprro Jtlm• ti(W/t. t~r,
congratulation They are s kep·
DESPAIR.-RUSSIAN PROVERB
l uu rmd herame lluJf- A BASS
Neighborhood 20,33; Raymond Burr 13. ,
sll?r4rw6' Beverly Hlllblllln 1: t'&lt;lllglprfaa LAllie .,
l
1\
'" s est 155; Elec. Co. 33
-~
1

,.

w..

so.•

Libraries will

he open longer

A simple squeeze for New Year

·-

4.

tz:a: t:J ~~r;tj$ :1

What people
are saying ...

1-+--t-+

The

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rubber match

In

nl

PASADCNA Ca hf l UP!) IW~ He1sman fl'oph\ \\Hiner Ar

.mnu.ll Hosl:' Bm~ I but the
b1 1lhdnl Oluu St.Jlt.• L: ulb.lr k
stressed 1t '"ould uot IJc ,1 om·un-i&gt;ne b.1ttle D.tvts fm ashed
sc~ond to Gt affm tn t he
Hetsman Tt oph' vot mg ttus
season
I m &lt;l leam pla} er ' Grtffm

cljte Griffm and Ohto Slates

!'~ Buckeyes, who c lobbered

Southern Ca hforma m the Rose
·• Bowl a \ear ago are favored
;[1 by one touchdown to beat U1e
TroJans agam tn the Ne\\
Year's Dav classtc
Z!&gt;m Griffm, .who has one more
.,, season left at Oh10 State, '""
be niatched aga mst Pactftc-11
rushing ktng Anlllony Davts
who IS closmg out a brtlhanl
'"'collegiate career
For the Btg Ten co.,hampwn
,: 1 Buckeyes, Ill-! and No 2m the
,,..nauon, and the Pac-11 l tlltst
TrOJans, 9-1-1 and No 4, tl Y.tll
be the1r tlltrd stratgh l Rose
Bowl confronlatton USC won
• 42-!7 two yea rs ago but Ohw
Slate got even 42-2llasl season
Wednesday s 2 p m PST
Pasadena classic - Southern
Ca hforma 's sevent h appearance rn rune years-Is
expected to draw more than
100,1100 fans Last season s
game drew a record crowd of
106,869
Griffin-Davis Match
.&amp;
The Griffin Davts match ts
tlle b1g a ttractton of the 61st

By Umted Press lnternatwnal
The hangover came one day
earhet than the one Southern
Caltfor nt a 's fifth-ranked
college basketball team expected to ha vc
And, oh boy , does tl hurt I
The TroJans were supposed
to have eas; ptckmgs agamst
Fordham m the champtonshlp
game of tlle ECAC tournament
at Madtson Square Garden
Monday mghl but ran mto one
of the biggest upsets of the last
few seasons when tlle Rams
scored a 83.Q6 vtclory
So, mstead of headmg home
for Califorma on the gtddy
wmgs of a New Year's Eve
vtctory party, the TroJans
leave New York as another
VIc tun of ''Garden-tbs ''
Coac h Bob Boyd dtdn't
crtttclze h1s players and gractously admitted tllat Fordham
'outplayed us m every department" bu t couldn't htde his
disappomtment at tlle result
Fordham led by only ~32 at
halftune but went on an 18-10
spurt m the second half and
controlled the game the rest of
!be way Darryl Brown scored
24 pomts, repeatedly outfought
tlle laller Trojans off both
backboards, had 14 rebounds
and was named the tournament's Most Valuable
Player Rutgers took third
place tn Ute tournament by
defeatmg St Joseph s, 91..56, m
tlle ftrst game of tlle doubleheader
St John's, a nother unranked
Eastern team. scored a second
btg ijpset when tt defeated 13thranked Providence, 91-79, m

We wtll conttn u e
to gtve the It nest

servtce to you 1n

19'75

•

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d ~t

fm oua lt.l lll ll

wh 1t's lxs1
s

!Jet n s.ud

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£

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• • •

,.

v.
~ HAPPY NEW YEAR ,

••

~
;I)'~
-~'4

our~

Drake look thtrd place m the
tournament by bealtng South
Caro hn a , 92 71, as Larry
Haralson and Terry Benka
combmed for 41 pomts m tlle
ftrsl game of that doubleheader
Kansas won the Btg Etght
tournament by defeatmg Iowa
State, 7().75, on R1ck Suttle s
turn-around JUmper wttll 38
seconds left at Kansas Ctt),
Mo Kansas, wmner of Its lith
t1tle m the tournament s 29year history, Ira tied by as
many as 13 pomt&gt;; after Kansas
State topped Nebraska, ~.
for ll11rd place
In non-tournament games,
Wtchtla Slate h.!d four sta rts

SQUAD

-~ .

NEW YEAR
IS UERE!
\ e \\

o;.enl1mPnt ..

Stay tuned
happme--

tn

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our m a n}

(OI{]I(S

t il( H1g l eu ( tfl'( 1

( ,fllflll
I Wdllllg

r~tonJ

()WI~ l h('

huldu

lop I u~htl

cll lt.f

combme for 79 pomts and a 9591 tnumph ove r 20th..-anked
Memphis Sla te tn the ftrsl
home loss for the Ttgers, Brtan
Frtshman and Mark Ha ndy
scored 20 pomts each m leadtng
Brtgham Young to a 100-87
VIctory over Bradley, 18thranked Arizona downed Stanford, 80-67, wtlh Bob Elhott
scormg 30 pomts, Adrtan
Danlley scored 35 potnts and
helped Notre Dame wtthsland
a last mmute challenge to lead
tlle irtsh over Buller, 93-83, a nd
Dave Corzme's 20 pomts paced
DePaul to a 7~3 lrtumph over
Northwe stern "ht ch gave
Coach Ray Meyers the 501st
wm of h1s career

P.1&lt;:-8
Will llt folu s of most (jf lhe
/\11 ,ltltnlJon
i\.wcrltdS who wil l be pbymg .
Ar &lt;:h as uut only Lhe best
l1en•
pl.tyt'l I vt• u er CO&lt;.iC hed s.ud
Ohw State h.t ~ flvr of Lhem
Otuu Sl.il(' co.:1rh Woody llayes
c;nffm offen SIVe hn cm cn Kur t
but he s c~lso the most
Schumd(her .-~nO Steve Myer-s,
pnpul.tr ll~e s d wolH.ierful
delenslve end V tn J);Cree .md

OUTSTANDING PLAYER
KANSASCITY,Mo I UP!) Oklahom,J s Alvan Adams who
broke a 23-j ear-old career
sconng record tn the Btg Eight
Basketball Tournament, was
voted the tournament's Most
Ou!standmg Pia) er Mond a}
rught
Adams who scored 97 potnts
tn three games, boosted hts
total to 227 for hts three-year
career The old record of 223
was held by Kansas ' Clyde
Lovellette and set tn 1949-00-51
Adams
led
the
alltourname nt team, wh1ch a lso
tncluded Hercle IV) and Art
Johnson of Iowa State, Wtlhe
Smtih of Mtssourt and M1ke
Evans of Kansas Slate

named Marshall coach
quarte1 back became backtt~ ld coach at Ohw State m
1958 He ente red the A1r Force
m 1959 and v.as freshman
coach two years a t the
academ)' be£or e becom tn g
offensave coordinator under
head coach Ben Marun
Returns To OSU
He returned to Ohto Stale m
1962 as defens1ve backfield
coach In 1962, and was
defensive ~.:oordm a t or Jn 1963

and 1964 before JO tmn ~ Btll
Hess coacl11 ng staff at Ohto
Unrvcrs1ty
Ellwood was offensave
coordmator c1ght seasons for
the Bobcats before sw1tchmg
to th e defense
Hess , who coached Ellwood
as an O h 10 State fres hman tr 1
1953, ca lled htm, the greatest
person I ve ever wor ked with m
football

Pro Standings
N BA St an dm9 s
By Un1ted Press Inter national

Eas t ern Confer en ce

Boston
N ew York

Philad elphia

Central
wash nglon
Cleveland
Houslon
Atlanta
New Orleans

Western

9 b

629
6 18
559
400

,' ''
8

DIVI SIOn
w 1 pet

26
lll
19
15
3

9 b

9
14
15
71

743
563
559
4 17

11

30

091

22

a

19

17

KC Omaha
C h1 cago

20
17

18
17

Milwaukee

14

g b

528
5?6
500
4 74

1

19
PaCifiC DI VI SIOM

Golden St ate

w 1
23 12
16 19
15 18

31

pel
657
457
455

g b

Wash 1ngton 103 Cleveland 90

De trod 86 Ch1cago 8 1
Go lden Sl 110 K C Omaha 102
Tue sdays Games
I No games schedu l ed!

w 1
Bu fl a o

V1rq1n1a

11

14

14

10

9 15

Mcmph1 s

' n

pel
697

Denver

Jl

1
5

SanAnton o
Utah
lnd1ana

20

13

19

20

11

17

78 197

8

t

5
6

pt s gf

ga
53 167 1'11
46 172 116

Los Ange es a! Ch cago
WHA Sla r1d 1ngs
By Un1ted Pre$$ tnt ernat1on al

E as I
N ew Englnd

w I I pts gf ga
19 13 I 39 120 1 12

C le¥e and

13 16

(h i CiiQO

Jnd1anapo 1s

II 20
6 21:1

Houslon
Phoen1x

West
w I 1 pi!. 91 ga
., 1 1 l 0 46 159 99
I I I J 2 36116107
16 15 0 37 133 11 5

368

11

265

I &lt;l

2 57

I5

v.t mil rful

fH

r

SOli

C.nffm

&lt;.1

5 1J

IRO priUnd er,

h.1s rusherl f&lt;Jr rnhrt th.m 100
). 1rd s lfl '!.2 stl a a ~hli4&lt;:UIICS wuJ
h 1 ~ &lt;inldSSl d

me ludm~

Vdrds

{_&lt;J fCer
I 620 m h1s

1 064

JUruo.- seo~so n
lr OJUfiS fans tlunk Da\ 1:; 1s
the better uf the tw&lt;• of course,

md tht y h.tve sldtlstics to bdck

up the1 r- daam The 5~~ 181
puund la rlh .H: k fmm Si:tn
h ."rntH H]IJ CalJf

ha.&lt;.&gt; 52 tlJU( h

d(Jwn.-; &lt;md ~ 627 rushtng yo rrl&lt;;
ol USI
IJ!JVIS 1gnalt!d US( 'l.i mcred1
blr 55 24 to me f rom beh1nd
VH'lory fJV~ r Notre Dame i\o o,
30by 143lurnrng the second Mlf
kl&lt;:korr 102 YrHd&lt;&gt; for a toul h
down

I 3 1 106 114
?4 88 15 ?
Canad an
w I 1 pf s gf ga
I 50

I~ 1

W1nn1peg

3 8 139 1?0
3S 128 101

E d monton
Van c ouv e r

17 10 0
l 5 14 'J

]4 105
J? 97

88
97

Mond ay
12

13 ~
14 1

San 0 ego
13 71
382 17
Jo: games be h1nd based on lsi
pl ace t eam
Mondays Re5ulh

Kent ucky 104 V1rg1n a 85
New York 128 MemphiS 119
Utah 105 San Anton o 104
Tuesday ~Ga m e!&gt;
l nd ana at S an Anton o

N H L Slandmgs
By Un•t ed Pr ess 1nternat1ona 1
01VI S IOO I

5

Texas blasted
By DAVID MOtTl'!'
UP! Sports Wrtter
JACKSONVJLJ 1':
F'la
( UP II - Aubutn p layed
g1vewa} with 1 ex~1s an the
Gator Bowl and sltll scored a
deClSIVC upset
The ftflh..-.tnked Tiget s lted
t\loo (;a tor Bowl fumble records

A1

Resul1 s

Phocn1x 6 Quebec 3
Tuesday 5 Games
Pho entx al M1Ch1gan
(h•c.agoat Cleve land

F1RST MOVE
GREEN BAY, Wts (UP! ) ·Bart Starr offtcta lly took over
as head coach and general
manager of the Green Bay
Packers Monday and h1s ftrsl

Muru.iay

mght when lney lost

f1ve of seven

yet bedt the

f~\oored

I onghoa ns, 27 3
We ccrtamly duln I expect
l cxas to be so g€'nerous ' said
Auburn Coach Ralph Shug"
J ot dan Rut th&lt;•n we dtdn 'l
~1kc advanlc:t~e of ,til our opportumtiCS

1 he 1 1gea s broke the game
open ear ly by scormg two

Cage top 20
NEW YORK I UP! ) - !'he
Umted P r ess Tnternallonal
Board of Coaches co ll ege
ba sketba ll raltngs, wtth
number of first place votes and
records through Saturday,
Dec 28m parentheses 136 of 42
coaches votmg) (4th week )
Team Points I N C St (21J (80) 338 2. Indiana (11) (10-ll) 313
3 UCLA (1) (8-0) 302 4.
Louisville (3) (7~) 245 5
Southern Cal (8-0) 210 6
Alabama (5-0) 134 7 Maryland
(7-1) 92 8 North Carolina (5-1)
83 9 Kentucky (7-11 50 10
Oregon (7~) 38 11. Arizona Sl
(9-1)30 12 South Carolina (5-2)
26 13 Providence (7~) 25 14
Marquette (5-2) 20 15
Mtchtgan (7-1) 1416. Penn (7-11
1317 Kansas (6-4) 918 Arizona
(8-1) 8 19. Bradley t&amp;-1) 7 2Q
Memphis Sl ( 8-2) 5

College Ba sketball
Results
By UnJted Press lnternattonal
Tournaments
Fmal Round Action
B1g 8 Tournament
Champ1onsh1p
Kansas 76 Iowa Sf 75
Con so lat1on Round
Kan 51 80 Nebraska 63
Okla 51 101 Colo 73
Mo 83 Ok ta 81 2 ots
ECAC Hohday Fesf•val
Champ10nsh1p
Fordham 83 Sou th e rn Cal 66
Consolaf1on Round
Rutgers 91 Sf Jos 56
Far West Clas s•c
Champion s hip
Oregon 74 Wash St 65
ConsolatiOn Round
An z Sf BO Ore Sf 71
Boston Coli 86 Iowa 81
Wake Forest 70 Cre 1ghton 6V
Ocean State Cla sstc
Champ1onsh1p
Sf J ohn s NY 91 Prov 79
Con so !afton Round
Drak e 92 So Car 71
Holy Cross 107 Ass umpt on BB
Brown 67 Rhode I s land 61
Rambow Class1c
Consolation Round
Sa n Jose Sl 83 Fla 80
Tu lsa 81 Pe nn 75
Sugar Bowl
Champ1onsh1p
Lasalle 77 Alabama 72
Consolation Round
Furman 89 Hou st on BO
V a Commonwealth ClaSSIC
Champ1onsh1p
Te&gt;~
A&amp;M 84 Va
Com
monwealth 70
Consolat•on Round

1

?0 13 I
19 15 0
17 l-1 l

QuebeG

g b

1 ?7 8 3 97
22 100 121
13 76 15?

0
I

15 16

Tor on lo

"'
pc1
861
541
487
4.'i7

99 142

10

T uesday s Gam es
Cal.torn1a at Oet ro1t

g b

We ~t

w

24
20

II '1.2

23
25

23

NY Ranger!'. B M nne so1a 1

e as r

Kentucky

32 142 1)8

Boston
10
Tor o n to
1118 6 28117138
Cal 1forn1a
9 22 6 24 98 154
Monday s R es ult s
P n sburq h 7 To ronlo 5
Lo s Ange les 3 Delrod 'J

M nne!.ola

I

ph gf ga
5 1 162 105
49 1 10 ~5

01\o'I SIOn 4

ABA Sta nd109 s
By Un 1t e d Pre ss lnt er nat1 ona1

w

14 84 159

7

l
15 19 441
7' 1
15 21
417
a•,
Monday s Res ult s
Ho uston 120 L os Angeles 107
MilWaukee 106 Buffa o 91

New York
St Lou ~

I 7 14 4 38 173 94
15 15 6 36 125 12 9
II ?0 5 'J7 100 153

Kan sasC dy
5 26 1
DIVISIOn J
w I 1
Mon I r eal
20 6 11
LOS Ange l es 19 5 II
P1 t tsburgh
12 16 B
Detro11
9 20 s
Wash 1ngton
J 30 4

6 ,

MidWeSt D IV ISIOn
w t pel

Se at11 e
Phoen1x
Portland
L osAnge es

1

Cont~rence

Detro t

Ch 1cago
S t LO UI S

M , neso ta

AtlantiC DIVISIOn
w 1 pet

22 13
21 IJ
19 15
14 21

1

only the fifth
JUIIIUI II) hl StOJ y to Win the
II ( ISII Id fl II ophy .llld DriVIS
&lt;.tiffin

In

Former Buckeye star

Bu tt alo

'" But

lu~tory, uctv.oof t hc stvtn

Colz1e
RadMrd Wood IS
USC s olht&gt;r All 1\menca
(.rccne Ready
In add1l10n the Buck eves
lurve the 1974 Hose Bow l s MVP
1n quarterback Cornelius Gree

St

Peters 73 Fa1r h eld 77

Oth er Scores
Notre Dame 93 Bu tl e r 83
New Mex 51 62 UTEP 39
St LOU IS 89 (lOCI 68
Mrrmck 93 So Conn St n

BYU 100 Brad ley 87

Dayton 77 Harvard M
Oh10 U 76 Lyla ( li lt 63
S F Austm 95 NW La 78

Su ff olk 75 Co lby 74
De Pau l 76 Northwe s ter n 63
Wm &amp; Mary 75 Columb1a 63
San Fran Sc 77 Ccrnet l 67
Montana 67 Puget Sound 58
U ta h St 98 Sant a Clara 74
W1ch1ta Sl 95 M e mph iS St 91
A Peay 91 So M 1ss BJ
Vanderbil t Bl M1d Tenn 68

touchdmHIS

a 1 43 span
the fu st
pertnd l11ey earned the ftrst
one by marching 60 yards but
1he second one wa:; a gift
The f1rst score c&lt;~me at 6 52
of the f1rst per1od on a seven
yard p(:;ISS from Ph al Garg1s to
Ed Butler Auburn recovered a
fumble at !he Texas ftve on the
next play but unmedialely
rumbled the ball back Three
plays later , " Texas fumble
gave Auburn the ball .c~t the
Longhorns' 27 and Mtlzt Jackson took It m on runs of 2.5 and
two )ards
Everything after that was
ucademlC
Texa s had a 35 yard held
goa l by Btlly Schott wtth 59
seconds left tn the ftrsl pertod
Auburn lost
ball vta fumble
Ctt the Texas one madway
through the second pertod but
Jtm McKinnel blocked a punt
for a safet) to gtve the Tigers a
16-3 lead Auburn held for
downs at tls rune wtlh 59
seconds left tn the half to take
that lead mto the dressmg
tn

nltdway th rough

!be

room
I he second half wa s all
Auburn c~llhough th~ flgers di d
not score m the third pl!rwd
Auhurn had d 53 yard touch
down run on a pass tn
terceptron by McKannev
canceled bv d chp ea rly 111 tht'
fmdl period But Gargis threw
a ll)atdTDpasstoBullerand
added d two-pmnt conversiOn
pa ss to Dan Nugent wtlh 5 34
left to rnake 1t 24-3 and Chrts
Wtlson added a 28-yard fteld
gaul nme seconds from the end
We v.ere outplayed m ever}
dep.11 tmcnt
sun! I exas
Coach Darrell Royal
We
cornmttled so many errors We
got bchtnd and had to desert
ou r sty le of pia) 11 he
Longhorns, who seldom pass
tllrew the ball 21 tunes Monda)
mght)
• When you do that often the
dam breaks, and m this case,
tl dtd .
Texas fullback Earl ('_ampbell, leadmg rusher 1n the
game wtlh 91 yards satd " tl
was more wha t we did to
ourse lves than what they did to
us
Monday was Auburn s stxlh
Gator Bow l v1s1t ~tnd the
Tigers' fourth wm here Texas,
whtch had hoped to go to the
Cotton Bowl for the seventh
stratght year, was makmg lt.s
ftrst Gator Bowl appearance
after fathng to wtl\"l'lfe South
west Confe rence tttle

HCan I afford
an independent
insurance expert
to figure out
what's best for me?"
Sure .
An independent~~~~
agent makes
no extra
charge for
his services.
t\ t.;

Jnllcpcnde nl

ag~nr~

r lllJl 1n 11.:s W~.: 1rc

we

free

fur ~Ill r &lt;.: 1r hunu. t r
Lh 1r g~..: t ~ r th l'&gt; \l'f\.· 1(1.!'

A unc &lt;.:

lll1 P&lt;lll\ ..,

r~.:prc'i~.: nl

sever d &lt;.; trnn g Jn'l uran -.:c

In ...dc cl I he nght
hu.,llll''&gt;'&gt;

111d

kmd uf

wt.:

1n~urancc

J1 1 1kc no

dc\rnan on the {!her hand

mu ~ r

cx tr.1
ncccs

r JI\ If) I 1 '.d ] \ (I I lhC pniH; I. h i \ 1.. llllJ 11\ l fCI ~
\ ~ ndq nd~.:nl 1n ~u r n Lo.; 1 g ~.: 11~ 'A t: 1t rcr )Ill

D 1fcrcm.:c m

ln'&gt;uranc~:

I I 1: B1g
OLH .:u nllnLJIIII! n~:r~on d ttl c ntwn

(i.il lu ~

Wtlham D Chtlds

Downing-Childs Agency, Inc.

move was t.o r etam defensive

coordinator Dave Hanner as an
assistant coach
40 14&lt;1 116
Hanner has been wtth the
Allan Ia
16 15 6 3!1 104 lOB
NY sl.anders 1&lt;1 1&lt;1 9 37 122 103 Packers for 23 years- 13 as a
01 VI5.10 n 2
w 1 t pfs 9f 9a player and the last 10 as a
Van cou ver
22 IO 5 49 1'~9 110 coach under Vmce Lombardi,
Phtl Bengtson and Dan Devtne
Starr also satd two front
-=========="'il office personnel would be
relamed, Tom Mtller as assistant to the general manager and
Bob Harlan as asststant
general manager
W I I pt s gf

Ph• ad ph a 2&lt;~ 7 5
NY Ranger s 1611 a

53 137

ga
7~

- 7:30
TUESo.-;,"'"'
~ ,.,
. P.M
· -

SEES ''SUDDEN DEATH"
BELLOWS FALLS, Vt
IUPI) Vermont Gov
Thomas Salmon, who p1cked
tlle Super Bowl parttc1pants
hefore tlle season slarted, sees
'sudden death ' tn the unmedtate future of the Ptttsburgh Steelers and Mmnesola
Vtktngs
The second-term Democrat

lh====~~:=:;;,:=:;;,,;;;::===;=========::!.l

predicted Monday at" Rotary
(.1ub meeun~ Pillsbur~h wtll
wtn Super Bowl IX 2:!-17, tn
overt nne

fM r•ea'e

and

'Yoo II Like Our Oual1ty Way of Do1ng Bus1no:.&lt;:.s
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY

lJI J

lm d

s

IJ neb~tcke r

fnencl . .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

'"

defensive b~1c k Nc.tl

go to the r,u!el ltmtt· In expre--

Year

Ill

t.lllll~

~

qlf.

RACINE EMERGENCY

We'll

I

Ohm St.;lh' &lt;-.H I wm without mt
I lllkt'(l /\I Jlx ll llol r.u: t·~ Ntl il
.uul th,Jl s lrue F'ach g.une I Nol!t f).llll( In the Or-,HJgc
\\ ,mt to pl.av belte1 lh.m th£• Howl uu Nt&gt;w Vt•.u 's NwhL
~une before ,tncl I w&lt;.tnt to
/\ Notre O.um upsel 1n
m.tke thas my bes l game '
MI.Uill (ould clev&lt;Jle lhc Hose
The Ohio Slate USC confron Bowl wm ne1 mto the No 1 spot

HU NTINGTON, W Va
IUPI) - The name Ellwood
was a fixture m htgh school and
college footba ll tn Ohto slarltng
m 1942 Btll, Dtck Frank and
553 RUltel 51
~
Tom
pla;ed for Dover s Tor
&lt;Gravel HUll
nado 1n that order and then
Mlddl•~:~:ort Ohio ~
con tmued m college foo tball
PH m 1lS5
F rank , the only Ellwood
brother to enter coachmg, was
named head footba ll coach
LIAr A CIIOII N11ghbor,
Monda) at Marshall UmverSwr f~rm It T~ere
stly
The 39-year old Ellwood who
has
been an asststant coach at
"""'
Ohto Umverst ly the past 10
Comp1rnet
..
,
r • ilsurance
rtomt Olliftt!
,
seasons, succeeds Jack Len~._~':'""":;·•:••:.;
~":I":"~'_::;;";;';;";;'·:·:"·;.J the finals of the Ocea.n State r yel, another Oh!O nat1ve who
c
Classtc at Provtdence, R 1
restgned on the heels of a 1·10
record
It "as Lengyel who came
•
herem the wake of the Nov 14
1970, atrplane crash that ktlled
VIrtually all the Marshall
players and coaches and began
bwldm g a new progra m The
Herd had 2-8 records the ftrsl
tw o campatgns and bu1ll that to
4-7 m 1973 before beatmg on ly
Le ng}el's alma mater - Akron
- the past fall
I JUSl love lhts football, '
Ellwood satd on takmg the JOb,
saymg he had no spect ft c
phtlosoph) on the game
Football "as an tmportanl
word around our house, and so
k
was college 1
Ellwood quarte rbacked Ohw
W r rr marchwg wto a
......•'14'
Stale to the Rose Bowl
champtonshtp 20 years ago this
lmght \ "'' Year 1uth uur
....~ '%
week He followed hts brother,
Dtck a ltnehacker to Oh to
• $
heads held luf[h and
•
Slate
4 •
hearts full nf hof!'' W e rc • !il
Ellwood served two s tmts as
#
w*
a
coac
htng atde at OhiO Stale
%
glad /o be )OUr frwnds 1
and spent three years as an Air
Force assistant coac h
Woody Ha)es cont.acled at
Pasadena Caltf where he ts
pr epa nn g Ohto Sta le for
another Rose Bow l game, said
Frank Ell wood wtll do a good
JOb as a head coach anywhere
He ha s a fme foot ball mtnd and
ts very talented '
The new Mar-shall coach was
an Academ1c All Amenca and
a n Academtc All Btg Ten
Confe rence quarterback and
was named the oulslandtng Ai r
Force ROTC cadet at Ohto
Stale
Ellwood, after serv mg one
season as as assistan t coach at
Dover High School where he
wa s a four-year regular at

'"" ,,,.

Plll iJ IJIIIdU t C lh~
u llwn II t h.unpum s met Nu I
I lOll

USC gets early
hangover, 83-66

I

Sentinel

•

;Bucks favored by 7

Television Log

+++

Rap

East wins big swindle of '74
• K Q LO
¥ K QJ
• J 9 42
o!oAQJ

...

r·=·,.&lt;,··:::o:=--~~~--.,., ~Oi&lt;li~~~~"'I

\IDUB•TV20

u1fen1l1j, you'll rollnlu11q un l it our IJP-~1/"'I"llliJII'I,h n
rurrl 010 h ~ra lfe ll lh'JYI!r ' for IJOIII IO!If~r/et'U' 111

BOB'S GULF STATION

!IS '

'formerly the Beacon Service Station'
_________:;BO;.;B;~·J,;O;.Y;;.C,;;E.;A;,;;.N,;;,;D;.,;S;.T;,;E;.VI.,;..E______•

1

�2 - The Dati) Sentmel Mtddleport-Pomct O\ 0, Tuesd"'• Dec 3! 1074

Traffi~ rules change in O_hio
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Do you
get annoyed by motortsts who
hog tlle passmg lane and go
slower than the speed lurut •
These dnvers who ' loaf" m
tlle out&gt;;1de lane wtll be subject
to penalttes under a new lrafftc
safel) law whtch takes effect
Jan I
Thts mfractwn and other new
ones Will draw two pomts on

the dnver's record Other
vtolatwns tn the revtsed code
could brmg a maxunum $100
fme
Rep Alan E NorriS, RWestervtlle, ch1ef sponsor of
tlle new law, el&lt;plams that unttl
now, motortsts have been
reqwred to 'keep nght except
to pass ,,
Volunlar) comphance has
not always been forthcommg,

Norns

sa)s,

so

the

requtrement w11l be underscored wtth a penalty
Involves Federal Funding
The law IS des1gned to brmg
Oh to 's standards mto conformity wtth the Federal Htgh-

"ay Safety Act of 1966 Fa1lure re.tr llso \ ISlbh' for ~ ~ le.t~L 500
to do so mtghl have caused a 10 feN
per cent reductton tn federal
Prdestnans under the mflufundtng for slate htghway ence of alcohol or a drug may
proJects
not "·•lk on the highwav, nor
Many of the changes merely rna) anyone sohclt wh1le
put into law commonly accep1- slandmg tn the road
ed requtrement&gt;; For example,
Pedestrian Rules
drtvers wtll have to slop for a
Pedestrtans also must walk
stopped school bus tnstde or factng traffic, and on tlle
outstde a mumctpal corpora- Sidewalk If there ts one They
lion And they may not drtve must y1eld to pubhc safety
tllrough, around or under a vehicles and may only cross
closed ratlroad crosstng gate the
street
tn
marked
or signal
crosswalks
The new law also contatns
The new law also
provtstons for pedestrians and
- Forbids dnvers to move
operators of motorcycles, btcy- rtght or left on the highway
cles and lrtcycles
Without stgnahng for at least
Motorcyclists and thetr pass- 100 feet ahead of ttme A s1gnal
engers wtll have to face for- also must be giVI.n before
ward w1tll one leg on each s tde pulling out of a parking place
of tlle vehicle No cycliSt may
carry anytllmg or a nyone that
prevents hun from keepmg at
least one hand on the han- WIN AT BRIDGE
dlebars
B1cycles may not be rtdden
on tlle sidewalk, and must have
a front hghl vtstble 500 feet
ahead and a red hght on the
NORTH
31

r1 u

I
ll.'\t'

or

~

r n'- k flrlvcrs to

lt 1r flasht.~l1'; •1s , J cou r ~esy

DR. LAMB

WEST
EAST
. 987&gt;
.43
¥ 965
¥ 832
t 876
t Q 10 5
• K73
• 96542
SOUTH IDI
• A J 62
¥A 10 7 4
tAK3

Aged need
stretch exercise

~

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

1

s1gncll
Bcqu1res dnvers ilP·
pro.1chan~ a dead.end m.
tersect1on not controlled by a
signal or stgn to yaeld to trHff1c
on t he rtght
- Reqwrcs drtvers to yteld to
pedeslrtans m a crosswalk
- Forbtds leavmg a motor
vehtcle unat tended wtthout
stopping tlle ongme, lockmg
the 1grutwn , removmg the key,
settmg tlle parktng brake and
turmng the front wheels
toward the curb on a grade
- Forbtds opemng tlle door
on the traffiC s1de unless It will
not tnletiere With traffic, and
tllen only long enough to unload
passengers
pc:~ssmg

Sexy ls As Sexy Dresses?
Dear Helen and Sue
o# A whtle back, you sided wttll a gtrl when she complamed
about her boyfnend spanking her for wearing short, sexy dresses
to work when they had agreed on a "no-&lt;;ex" arrangement
Seems she had been a conservative dresser before, but decided to
wow 'em at the office
Although 1 think her guy's actlon was a bit violent, he sure had
thertghttdea 1 I personally fmd the "look at the goodies but don't
touch" atUlude mfurtating I don 't let 1t show, however. And
don't think 1 am totally Iibera 1m my sex standards - I'm all for
tlle r1ght tune, place, degree and care m choosmg tlle partner
But I DO beheve tllat any gtrl who doesn't have, or wish th
acknowledge, as Intense a btologtcal drtve as a male (as
evidenced by tlle "no-sex agreement"), and who glves guys the
come"'n anyway (as evtdenced by the sexy clothes), deserves
whatever befalls her
like the heavy hand of Justice (as
evtdenced by her boyfriend)
Some version or other of the golden rule should be applied to
her hypocritical behavior - MIKE
Dear Mike
Here's another letter from a guy who agrees wttll you

TUESDAY, DECEMBER Jt, 1m
6 oo-News 3,4,8, 10.13, 15,
ABC News ' ' Etec. Co. 20; 1ft
Recllal 33
6 »-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, hwllcf\ed 6; CBS fteWI
8,10, Zoom 20; Biography 33
7 oo-Truth or Con• 3,4, Bowling lor Dollers 6; Whet•• My linl
8. News 10, Name That Tune 13; To h Annovnm IS; An.
tlques 20, Mountain Scene 33
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Wild Wild World of Anlmels l;
Buck Owens B, New Price Is Righi 10, To Tell the Trvth IJ:
RFD 20, Marco Spartllte 33
7 55-Rose Bowl Bound 4
8 oo-Orange Bowl Parade 3,4,15, Sugar Bowl I , 13r Good Times
8, 10, America 20,33
8 J()-MASDH 8.10, Bonnie Rail! &amp; Paul Butterfield 33, Movie
' Blood and Sand" 20
9 OG-Movle "Frankenstein" 3,4, 15, Hawaii Five 0 1.10.
9 30-Barenbolm on Beethoven 33
10 OG-Barnaby Jones 8, 10, Evening of Championship Skell~~g
20, Soundstage 33
11 OG-News 3,4,6,8, 10. 13, 15, ABC News 33
11 31f-Movle "The Wise Guys" 3, Wide World Special IJ;
Johnny Carson 4, 15, FBI 6 , New Year's Eve with Gu,
Lombardo 8.10, Janakl 33
1 00- Tomorrow 4, Movie usavage Pampe~" 10, News 11
1 30-Movle "Kiss of Evil" 3
2 OG-Movle "Shall We Dance" 4
3 30-Movle ' The Projected Man" 3. Movie "Swi~~g Time" 4,
5 31f-Movle Eye of the Cat" 3

If a chtck flaunts something she derues ber boyfriend, she
deserves a spanking for her lack of modesty. So he took ber out
on a secluded road and spanked her when he saw her dressed In
after that kmg of c lubs
Whtle South was !hmkmg super-sexy clothes I admire hts restramt He COULD have done
East had been domg so me much worse, bemg turned on to that new ''come-on'' of hers
thmkmg of hts own He had
When a man sees a tight, tl11gh~ngh dress, he's not just
worked out JUSt what Soutll s admtrmg a good set of legs And if a gtrl dressed like tllat won't
problem was Now when these
cond htgh dtamond was led produce, she's guilty of false advertising - BIG BROTHER
East was ready He dropped !he
Dear Guys
queen'
South fell for 1t ltke a ton of
You already know our stand Let's hear what other women
brtcks He !messed dummy s have to say - HELEN AND SUE
ntne and East scored hts 10
+++
spot
Rap
To settle 'l,uesttons on !be btd
My mother IS boycotting sugar And at holiday tune, that's
dmg , North s four clubs Was
1
No Chrtst111B8
Gerber South's fo ur notrump rruserable No Thanksgtvmg "punkin" p1e
rebtd showed three aces
cookies
My sweet tooth •ches from ma!nutrtUon
She won't even buy package dessert mixes because that
Nt:W.SPA I'EH t:NTt:R PRJSE AS.SNI
helps the sugar mdustry, which she says IS gouging conswners
for no good reason Around our house, if I'm seen eatmg a candy

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY

I,""

6 OG-Sunrlse Seminar 4, 6 25-Farm Report 13.
6 31f-Five Monutes to Live By 4, News 6: Bible Ana...,.. I;
School Scene 10, The Story 13
6 35--Columbus Today 4, 6 45-Motnlng Report 3

Farmtlme
10
'
7 OG-Today 3,4, Yogi's Gang 6, CBS Newt 1,10, Far,.,.•s
Daughter 13
7 30-New Zoo Revue 6, Lldsvltle 13
8 OG-Capt Kangaroo 8, Jeff'l Collie 6; ,.._,. 10; New lao
Revue 13 Sesame St 33 , 1 2s-c.pt. l(engeroo It; Jack
LaLanne 13
8 31f-To Be Announced 6, I 55-N~..-~ 13.
9 OG-A M 3, Paul Dixon 4, Wild Wl,d West I , Phlt Oonaltw u 1
Bullwlnkle 8, Movie "Come Blow Y&lt;Nr Horn" 13; M11tw
Rogers 33
9 25--Chuck White Reports tO
9 30-Not For Women Only 3. Hazel I ; Tallleflln 10• z-n 3J
10 OG-Junlor Orange Bowl Parade 3,&lt;1, 15; Company 6; RoM
Parade Preview I, 10, Mountain ~ 33
10 30-Cotton Bowl Festival Parade 8,10; Sara McS~ 33

B) La"rence E Lamb, MD
often be
corrected
by
.108
DEAR DR
LAMB
progresstve stretchmg exer
Ne1ther vulnerable
Chron1calll Ill and ag tng c1ses over a pertod of weeks
pattents often have one or both and months These must be
West
North Easl
South
knees bent m a ftxed posttton
done before changes tn the
What are the causes of thJs ? carttlage and bony structure tn
bar, I'm ostractzed.
!NT
How can 11 be prevented and the JOtnl are affected
Pass
4.
Pass
4NT
Could you please say sometllmg about deprived families•
The btddtng has been
"hat can be done to reheve the sometimes called a frozen
Pass
7N T Pass
Pass
31 When I obJect, she JUst says, "Go eat an apple t" - AGAINST
cond t t ton ? Apparently JOint'
THE SUGAR FAMINE
Opemng lead - 9 •
West
North East
stratghlentng the knees out
South
10 45-Rose Parade Preview 3,4, 15
lnc1denlall}, stretch exercauses pam and discomfort cises are also Important fo r the
11 OG-Money Maze 6, Password All Stars 13, The Way 11
Dear ATSF
33
DEAR READER In trunk muscles The muscles By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Go
eat
an
apple
t
Pass
1+
Pa ss
I•
11 31f-Tournament of Roses Parade 3,4,15,8,10; Brady Bunch
general the body has opposmg over the front of the ches t can
We wmd up 1974 With a defen
Pass
3•
Pass
?
Sorry, we've got a sugar boycott gomg at our house too; and,
13 , Lucy Show 6, Sesame St 33
muscle groups The knee IS a become overcontracted too , stve gem that may well be tlle
You Sooth hold
happy day I I've lost two pounds already - HELEN
12 OG-Password All Stars 6; News 13.
good example One set of co ntnbutmg
•K764 3 ¥A2e9.AK732
to
r ounde d swmdl~ of tllts or any year
12 31f-Spllt Second 6, Afternoon with D J 13:
+++
·To hAn.
Playrng at a normal SIX
Wllat do you do now'
nounced 33
muscles over the front of the should.ers and decreased chest
Dear
ATSF
notrump
,
declarer
makes
13
A81d
three
spades
Your
12
45--Eiec
Co
33
thtgh stratgh tens the knee , wall fun ctton whtch can trtcks by successfully fmessmg
As a person suffermg from sugar wttlldrawal pams, 1
parlner IS showmg strength and you
1 OG-AII My Children 6, 13, 1 15-To Be Announm
another group over the back of compromtse how well the lun gs for the kmg of clubs At one VJoBDI to te ll h1m about your ftflh sympathtze But look , we'll never brmg prices down unless we do
1
JO-Let'sMakeADeal6,13, llllasYoge&amp;You:JJ
'
!he thtgh causes 1t to bend
wtthout
"ork So, don l forget to stretch table m the duphcate game spade
2
OG-Circus
Town
3,
15,
110,000
Pvramld6,13,
Bob
BriWI'I
When a person ts tnacttve, - tt wtll stretch your youthful where the hand was played
Club 4, Cotton Bowl 8, 10, Restless Earth 33.
Good-bye, sweet things (But not forever, 1 hopei)- SUE
TODAY S QUESTION
parttcularly at bed rest, the appearance over more year s Nor!b jumped all the way to
2 JO-alg Showdown 6,13
Your
partner
contmues
to
three
seven notrump
muscles that cause the bendmg as well as help your health
3 00--Magic Holiday 3.4,15, General Hospital ,,131 RFD 21.
Sooth dectded that down one notrump What do you do now?
shorten , and so do tlle tendons
Answer
Tomorrow
3 30-NBC News Special 3, 15, One Life to Live 13; Truth 01
or two at seven would be the
Cons 4, Lassie 6, Antiques 20
allached to these muscles The
same matcb-potnl zero After Send $1/or JACOBY MODERN FUNNY BUSINESS
4 OG-Rose Bowl Bound 4, Gilligan's Is. 6; 5-me St. 20 :IJI
mature tllought he proceeded to liook to Wm at Bfldge (clo
same thmg happens as you get
Mike Douglas 13
'
cas
h
ht
s
ace
and
ktng
of
older tf you don't watch tl 1
thrs newspaper I P 0 Box 489
30-Rose
Bowl
Pre
Game
Show
3,4,
15,
Mo!f
Squad
'',
4
dtamonds If the queen fatled tn Rad1o C1ty Statton New York
somettmes say we begm lo lose
drop he would sltll be able to go NY 10019
4 45-Rose Bowl 3,41, 15,
•
the war agams t gravtty and
5 OG-Andy Griffith 8, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 2t,:IJ~
are gradually bent and beaten
Green Acres 10, Raymond Burr !3.
•
down from the upnght posthon
WIN
AT
BRIDGE
5 ]()-News 6, Beverly Hillbillies I, HadgtpOC!gw UM!ge 21,'
You have seen many older
Death Valley Days 10, Elec. Co 33 persons, rm sure, who have
6 OG-News 8, 10, 13. ABC News 6; Elec. Co. 20; lllrenlllllm
001
Beethoven 33
sltghtly bent kn ees, !be ankle
Startmg January 3, Pomeroy
tendon to the heel shortens and
Mtddleport Librartes wtll
the toe ts dtsplaced down , the mcrease their service to the
cards a.. small dtamond rrom
NORTH
dummy
That leaves Soutll wtUt
htp JOint a lso bends forward
pubhc by nearly 50 pet w1th a
• 10 53 2
two
hearts
and tllree diamonds
The elbows also become bent new schedule mcreasmg thetr
¥ K82
whtle
dummy
holds three
To sland uprtght, these people hours of opemng from 60 to 87 '&gt;
• K64
heart
s
and
two
dtamonds
and
4954
must place !be feet w1de apart
poor East holds ht s head m
hours per week, a gam of 46
WESTtDI
EAST
The posture of the older person pel Thts means Me1gs counpam
• 64
.87
He has to come down to ftve
walkmg shghtly on ttptoes, fee t ttans wtll have more tune and
• 93
• Q J 10 7 54
cards also and must unguard
apart and tn a half.,rouched opportumty to use th eir
tiO 5
+QJ98 2
one of h1s queens It doesn 't
positiOn, IS a result of hbranes
4AKQJ876
matter wh1ch one If South
generaltzed s hortenmg of
Under the new schedule, both
SOUTH
counts he wtll know whether hts
muscles and tendons
•AKQJ9
IO!b trtck wtll be scored by hts
the Middleport and Pomeroy
¥A 6
You can help to prevent th1s Itbrartes wtll be open from
thtrd dtamond or dummy s
thtrd heart
• A 73
problem The way ts by making 10 30 am to 5 p m Monda y
Can the squeeze be m1ssed ?
"'10
3
2
sure that JOtnts of the body are through Saturday, and 2 to 4 30
Yes
If South refuses to cash hts
North -South vulnerable
moved through thetr full range p m on Sunday Tuesday and
last trump tlle squeeze JUSt
of motwn every day tn suf Thursday tlle Pomeroy hbrary
won t have developed
ftctenl amount to stretch to the wtllbeopen7pm to8 30pm
N~WSI AI'I::H ENT£11f&gt;HI.sl:: ASSN I
North East
S&lt;Motb
fullest all the muscles and on Wednesday the MidStretchmg cxerctses are JUSt as dleport ltbrary wtll be open
Pass
Pass
tmporlan t as strength exer- agatnfrom7pm to8 30pm
Pass
Pass
Cises Thts ts the way you keep
The btddtng has been
Openmgiead-K 4
your body hmber, nextble and
youthful Many people Ieadmg
West
North Ea!Jt
South
THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, lf7S
apparently normal ltves are
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
actually havmg changes they
6 OG-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Sunrise Semnt.r 10; 6: 25-Ferm
Happy New Year readel's'
Report 13
could prevent tf they would use
We are gomg to slart tlle year
6 30-Five Minutes to Live By 4; N.ws 6; Bible Ani....., I;
regular stretchmg exerctses
off wtth the Stmplest squeeze
School Scene 10, Patterns for Living 13.
Stretch that ankle tendon by
play tllere ts It IS so simple
6 35-Columbus Today 4, 6.45-Mornlng Report 3; Fermtlme
ra1smg the toes up to" ard the
10
that the only read way to avotd
worktng tt IS to give up and conshtn as far as posstble
7 OG-Today 3,4,15, Make A Wish 6, CBS News 1,10; Fermer'1
A man doesn t get up at 5 cede down one, because you are
Daughter 13
stratghten the knees, move the
a m because he wants to only lookm~ at ntne top tncks
7
30-New
Zoo Revue 6: Tennessee TuxitC!o 13.
htp JOtnts through tlle full socialize w1th Holstems
South mtght double West s
8
OG-Capt
Kangaroo I, Jeff's Collie 6; P~ 10; New lao
range of motwns
- AgricuJture Secretary Earl four.,lub openmg , but no one
Revue 13; Sesame St 33
These measures are very Butz defendtng profits for can blame htm for hts four
8 11f-Your Future Is Now 20
~
spade btd
unporlant m bed pattents to da1rymen
·~
8 25-Capt Kangaroo 10, Jack LaLanne 13.
~
Thmgs don't start out well
prevent disabling contractures
8
30-Brady
Bunch
6,
8
55-News
13
'
'There IS a sexual blurnng goyou are descnbmg Datly mg on The boys are lookmg smce West cashes tllree clubs
9 OG-A M 3. Paul Dixon 4, Wild WlldWnt 61Phll 0on.11ue U; •
nght off tlle bat Then It doesn t
Rocky &amp; Friends B, Movie "Anythlllg C.n u'Pillll" 13; :
exerc tses should be part of more femmme But they aren't matter what he shift&gt;; to SupMIsler Rogers 33
•
every patient's routme wtle.ss sexy Maybe tt s hke those rats pose he leads a trump as IS
9 25-Chuck While Reports 10.
•
the paltent ts really so stck that who when overcrowded, get most likely South stmply runs
9
30-Not
For
Women
Only
3,
Hazel
I;
To
h
Announm
10·
:
ts 1mposs1ble Even then very bland and lose all mterest off all hts ftve trumps and dtsZoom 33
' ..
passtve ex:erctses by a tramed m sex '
10 00--Name That Tune 3, 15, Company 6, Jolcer'1 Willi 1 II • ••
Episode Action 33.
' ' :
phys1cal theraptst often help a -Author Gore Vidal on young
peoples' changmg sexual at10
J()-W
Inning
Streak
3,
15,
Phil
Donahue
4;
Gel!lblt
1,10•
Unto
•
great deal
hludes
the Hills 33.
""
'
:
Contraction deformities can
11 00--High Rollers 3,4, 15, Money /Nu 6; Now You S.. It 1 lit
· Yam Arafat s propagandtsts l.Jnscramble these four Jumbles,
Pass~ord_All Stars 13; Biography 33.
'
:
use the methods of (Josef) one letter to each square, to
11 ]()-HollyWood Sq.
:1,4, 15; Brady BIHicf\ IJ; Lucy Show 6t :
Goebbels Wtth our hmtted form four ord1nary words
Love ot LITe o,IU; Sesame St 33.
•
means , we haYe a tnugh ttme
11
55-CBS
News
8,
Dan
lmel'l
World
10.
:
ftghttng them "
DEVOTED TO THE
ARSYC
12 OD-Jackpot 3, 15, Pauword All Stars 61 Bob lr•un's JO.ID •
INTEREST OF
-Michael
Shasar , Israel's
11
Club 4, News 8, 10, 13.
:
MEIGS MASON AREA
Minister of Information, stating
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
DAILY
CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's
how
to
work
It:
12
»-Celebrity
Sweepstaku
3,15;
Split
S.Ccuu
Seereh,.,
•
1
E xe c Ed
the Palestine Liberation
A
ll:
y
D
L
A
A
ll:
Tomorrow
8,
10;
Afternoon
with
D.J.
13;
To
3J.
:
ROBERT HOEFLICH
8
8
Organization 's Information
City Ed1tor
12 o15-Eiec Co. 33 ; 12· 55-NBC Ntw1 3, 11.
•
THICY
Pub l is hed dally except
sources use tactics similar to
II
L
0
N
G
F
B
L
L
0
W
1
oo-News3;
All
My
Children
6,13;
Phil
Donettue
II
YCIU!If.
:
Sat 1rday by The Oh10 Valley
those of Nazt Germany's
One letter simply ,standi for another. In thlo oample A 11
the R•tleSI 10; Not For Women Only IS.
•
Publ l ... h lng Company
111
propaganda minister
Court Sl
Pomeroy Ohio
used for the three L s, x for the two o•a, etc Slnrle !etten, 1: 15-To Be Announced 33.
:
45769 Bus1ness Off1 ce Phone
apoatropheo, the length and formation of the word• are au 1 311--:-Jeopardy 3,4, 15; Ltra /Nke • DHI 6,13; As the Worlll :
992 2156 Ed 1l0r1al Phone 992
'
'The constantly advancmg
hints Each day the code !etten are dllferent
Turns 8,10, Llll•• Yoga &amp; You 33.
•
2157
pnces of meat are capable of
A ~00t7 "-15TE'i5FC
Second class pos tage pa d at
ISMALEY±
Pomeroy Oh10
diVIdmg the people 1nto two
2' otti'g~~y:.l~. ~ah~~3~,~~~10,CJIO "Yretnld •• 131 Gui"'"' :
CRYPTOQUOTBS
5HOU~J:!' "-ENt7
Nat i onal
advertis ing
larger
m
classes
those
wtth
YOU
THI'!So
representative
Bott 1netl 1
:
2·JO-Doctora3,4,15; Big Showdown 6,131 J;dguf Nltltfl 11
YKLE LE YKT VFT
comes and the vegetartans '
Ga llagh er Inc
12 Eas t 42nd
RMN
BT
ETY
3:0D-Another
World
3,4,15,
Price
II
Rlallt
1,10
Q..;.,ll
•
St
New York New York
1
- West German Chancellor
Hoopltel6, 13; Llll11 Yoga &amp; You 20; Huntlneton VA HOIPI'-1
Subscr1pf10n
ra t es
:
MELRT YV BLEK NVO
Helmut
Schmidt
on
Del vered by carr1er where
PELP/N
Now
the circled !etten
33
~
KMUULFTEE
available 60 cents per week
skyrocketing food prices
•
V
"1
to
form
lhe
IUrpri&amp;e
anawer,
u
3
30-How
lo
Survive
a /Nrrlege 3.4, 15; One Lfr. to Lift Ill
By Motor Rou t e where car r 1er
•
throughout the world .
serv1ce not ava /able
One
WVJT
Laule
6;
Match
Game
1,
10;
Yow
Future
Ia
Now
•
To
~~h.~~~~~==:::::::~~:::'.._,'llu&amp;eested
by the abore cartoon.
TJTHN
•
RMN
VG
1
YKT
month S2 60 By mall n Oh1o
••
Announced 33
"It s easy to accuse th e
and w Va One Year SlS Six
1'00
..
SURPRISUNSW!!I
flirt
NTMH.months $9 50 Three months
4 OG-Mr. Cartoon 3,1 Bonannra 4; s-r..t lS I Gill,._., "- ' '
:
UOXXWT
freshmen cl.ss of betng brtghtTRLYVHE
$6 Elsewhere S22 00 year s 'X
•
Tattletales 8, Seiame St. 2U,33; Movie "llMt Sherlrt w.1 •
eyed
bushytatled
a
nd
un
(AftiWI!N
IOftiOrrow,
months S II 50 three months
Lady"
10;
Mike
Douglas
13.
:
S6 50 Subscr 1pt1on pnce m
Ju1nhh·• SWOOP MACAW JERSEY FLABBY
realtstlc but thiS group ts not
Yesterdey's Cryptoquote: IF YOU FIND A GOOD THING, 4 30-Bewltched 3; Mcid 5quad6; Lucy Show I; Bon.,. 11.
v...ll'rd•v.
•
eludes
Sunday
Times
wtlltng
to
stop
at
self·
Senlmel
DO
NOT REJOICE. IF YOU LOSE A GOOD THING, DO NOT 5 oo-FBI3, lw.rv Griffin 4; Andy Griffith I; Miller Rrgsrs•
All,.w.-r ThP tenor who U'OII n former nprro Jtlm• ti(W/t. t~r,
congratulation They are s kep·
DESPAIR.-RUSSIAN PROVERB
l uu rmd herame lluJf- A BASS
Neighborhood 20,33; Raymond Burr 13. ,
sll?r4rw6' Beverly Hlllblllln 1: t'&lt;lllglprfaa LAllie .,
l
1\
'" s est 155; Elec. Co. 33
-~
1

,.

w..

so.•

Libraries will

he open longer

A simple squeeze for New Year

·-

4.

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What people
are saying ...

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PASADCNA Ca hf l UP!) IW~ He1sman fl'oph\ \\Hiner Ar

.mnu.ll Hosl:' Bm~ I but the
b1 1lhdnl Oluu St.Jlt.• L: ulb.lr k
stressed 1t '"ould uot IJc ,1 om·un-i&gt;ne b.1ttle D.tvts fm ashed
sc~ond to Gt affm tn t he
Hetsman Tt oph' vot mg ttus
season
I m &lt;l leam pla} er ' Grtffm

cljte Griffm and Ohto Slates

!'~ Buckeyes, who c lobbered

Southern Ca hforma m the Rose
·• Bowl a \ear ago are favored
;[1 by one touchdown to beat U1e
TroJans agam tn the Ne\\
Year's Dav classtc
Z!&gt;m Griffm, .who has one more
.,, season left at Oh10 State, '""
be niatched aga mst Pactftc-11
rushing ktng Anlllony Davts
who IS closmg out a brtlhanl
'"'collegiate career
For the Btg Ten co.,hampwn
,: 1 Buckeyes, Ill-! and No 2m the
,,..nauon, and the Pac-11 l tlltst
TrOJans, 9-1-1 and No 4, tl Y.tll
be the1r tlltrd stratgh l Rose
Bowl confronlatton USC won
• 42-!7 two yea rs ago but Ohw
Slate got even 42-2llasl season
Wednesday s 2 p m PST
Pasadena classic - Southern
Ca hforma 's sevent h appearance rn rune years-Is
expected to draw more than
100,1100 fans Last season s
game drew a record crowd of
106,869
Griffin-Davis Match
.&amp;
The Griffin Davts match ts
tlle b1g a ttractton of the 61st

By Umted Press lnternatwnal
The hangover came one day
earhet than the one Southern
Caltfor nt a 's fifth-ranked
college basketball team expected to ha vc
And, oh boy , does tl hurt I
The TroJans were supposed
to have eas; ptckmgs agamst
Fordham m the champtonshlp
game of tlle ECAC tournament
at Madtson Square Garden
Monday mghl but ran mto one
of the biggest upsets of the last
few seasons when tlle Rams
scored a 83.Q6 vtclory
So, mstead of headmg home
for Califorma on the gtddy
wmgs of a New Year's Eve
vtctory party, the TroJans
leave New York as another
VIc tun of ''Garden-tbs ''
Coac h Bob Boyd dtdn't
crtttclze h1s players and gractously admitted tllat Fordham
'outplayed us m every department" bu t couldn't htde his
disappomtment at tlle result
Fordham led by only ~32 at
halftune but went on an 18-10
spurt m the second half and
controlled the game the rest of
!be way Darryl Brown scored
24 pomts, repeatedly outfought
tlle laller Trojans off both
backboards, had 14 rebounds
and was named the tournament's Most Valuable
Player Rutgers took third
place tn Ute tournament by
defeatmg St Joseph s, 91..56, m
tlle ftrst game of tlle doubleheader
St John's, a nother unranked
Eastern team. scored a second
btg ijpset when tt defeated 13thranked Providence, 91-79, m

We wtll conttn u e
to gtve the It nest

servtce to you 1n

19'75

•

s,ud

I 11\ lo

d ~t

fm oua lt.l lll ll

wh 1t's lxs1
s

!Jet n s.ud

,

ttl.;; jj
.....
£

I

• • •

,.

v.
~ HAPPY NEW YEAR ,

••

~
;I)'~
-~'4

our~

Drake look thtrd place m the
tournament by bealtng South
Caro hn a , 92 71, as Larry
Haralson and Terry Benka
combmed for 41 pomts m tlle
ftrsl game of that doubleheader
Kansas won the Btg Etght
tournament by defeatmg Iowa
State, 7().75, on R1ck Suttle s
turn-around JUmper wttll 38
seconds left at Kansas Ctt),
Mo Kansas, wmner of Its lith
t1tle m the tournament s 29year history, Ira tied by as
many as 13 pomt&gt;; after Kansas
State topped Nebraska, ~.
for ll11rd place
In non-tournament games,
Wtchtla Slate h.!d four sta rts

SQUAD

-~ .

NEW YEAR
IS UERE!
\ e \\

o;.enl1mPnt ..

Stay tuned
happme--

tn

t'J

our m a n}

(OI{]I(S

t il( H1g l eu ( tfl'( 1

( ,fllflll
I Wdllllg

r~tonJ

()WI~ l h('

huldu

lop I u~htl

cll lt.f

combme for 79 pomts and a 9591 tnumph ove r 20th..-anked
Memphis Sla te tn the ftrsl
home loss for the Ttgers, Brtan
Frtshman and Mark Ha ndy
scored 20 pomts each m leadtng
Brtgham Young to a 100-87
VIctory over Bradley, 18thranked Arizona downed Stanford, 80-67, wtlh Bob Elhott
scormg 30 pomts, Adrtan
Danlley scored 35 potnts and
helped Notre Dame wtthsland
a last mmute challenge to lead
tlle irtsh over Buller, 93-83, a nd
Dave Corzme's 20 pomts paced
DePaul to a 7~3 lrtumph over
Northwe stern "ht ch gave
Coach Ray Meyers the 501st
wm of h1s career

P.1&lt;:-8
Will llt folu s of most (jf lhe
/\11 ,ltltnlJon
i\.wcrltdS who wil l be pbymg .
Ar &lt;:h as uut only Lhe best
l1en•
pl.tyt'l I vt• u er CO&lt;.iC hed s.ud
Ohw State h.t ~ flvr of Lhem
Otuu Sl.il(' co.:1rh Woody llayes
c;nffm offen SIVe hn cm cn Kur t
but he s c~lso the most
Schumd(her .-~nO Steve Myer-s,
pnpul.tr ll~e s d wolH.ierful
delenslve end V tn J);Cree .md

OUTSTANDING PLAYER
KANSASCITY,Mo I UP!) Oklahom,J s Alvan Adams who
broke a 23-j ear-old career
sconng record tn the Btg Eight
Basketball Tournament, was
voted the tournament's Most
Ou!standmg Pia) er Mond a}
rught
Adams who scored 97 potnts
tn three games, boosted hts
total to 227 for hts three-year
career The old record of 223
was held by Kansas ' Clyde
Lovellette and set tn 1949-00-51
Adams
led
the
alltourname nt team, wh1ch a lso
tncluded Hercle IV) and Art
Johnson of Iowa State, Wtlhe
Smtih of Mtssourt and M1ke
Evans of Kansas Slate

named Marshall coach
quarte1 back became backtt~ ld coach at Ohw State m
1958 He ente red the A1r Force
m 1959 and v.as freshman
coach two years a t the
academ)' be£or e becom tn g
offensave coordinator under
head coach Ben Marun
Returns To OSU
He returned to Ohto Stale m
1962 as defens1ve backfield
coach In 1962, and was
defensive ~.:oordm a t or Jn 1963

and 1964 before JO tmn ~ Btll
Hess coacl11 ng staff at Ohto
Unrvcrs1ty
Ellwood was offensave
coordmator c1ght seasons for
the Bobcats before sw1tchmg
to th e defense
Hess , who coached Ellwood
as an O h 10 State fres hman tr 1
1953, ca lled htm, the greatest
person I ve ever wor ked with m
football

Pro Standings
N BA St an dm9 s
By Un1ted Press Inter national

Eas t ern Confer en ce

Boston
N ew York

Philad elphia

Central
wash nglon
Cleveland
Houslon
Atlanta
New Orleans

Western

9 b

629
6 18
559
400

,' ''
8

DIVI SIOn
w 1 pet

26
lll
19
15
3

9 b

9
14
15
71

743
563
559
4 17

11

30

091

22

a

19

17

KC Omaha
C h1 cago

20
17

18
17

Milwaukee

14

g b

528
5?6
500
4 74

1

19
PaCifiC DI VI SIOM

Golden St ate

w 1
23 12
16 19
15 18

31

pel
657
457
455

g b

Wash 1ngton 103 Cleveland 90

De trod 86 Ch1cago 8 1
Go lden Sl 110 K C Omaha 102
Tue sdays Games
I No games schedu l ed!

w 1
Bu fl a o

V1rq1n1a

11

14

14

10

9 15

Mcmph1 s

' n

pel
697

Denver

Jl

1
5

SanAnton o
Utah
lnd1ana

20

13

19

20

11

17

78 197

8

t

5
6

pt s gf

ga
53 167 1'11
46 172 116

Los Ange es a! Ch cago
WHA Sla r1d 1ngs
By Un1ted Pre$$ tnt ernat1on al

E as I
N ew Englnd

w I I pts gf ga
19 13 I 39 120 1 12

C le¥e and

13 16

(h i CiiQO

Jnd1anapo 1s

II 20
6 21:1

Houslon
Phoen1x

West
w I 1 pi!. 91 ga
., 1 1 l 0 46 159 99
I I I J 2 36116107
16 15 0 37 133 11 5

368

11

265

I &lt;l

2 57

I5

v.t mil rful

fH

r

SOli

C.nffm

&lt;.1

5 1J

IRO priUnd er,

h.1s rusherl f&lt;Jr rnhrt th.m 100
). 1rd s lfl '!.2 stl a a ~hli4&lt;:UIICS wuJ
h 1 ~ &lt;inldSSl d

me ludm~

Vdrds

{_&lt;J fCer
I 620 m h1s

1 064

JUruo.- seo~so n
lr OJUfiS fans tlunk Da\ 1:; 1s
the better uf the tw&lt;• of course,

md tht y h.tve sldtlstics to bdck

up the1 r- daam The 5~~ 181
puund la rlh .H: k fmm Si:tn
h ."rntH H]IJ CalJf

ha.&lt;.&gt; 52 tlJU( h

d(Jwn.-; &lt;md ~ 627 rushtng yo rrl&lt;;
ol USI
IJ!JVIS 1gnalt!d US( 'l.i mcred1
blr 55 24 to me f rom beh1nd
VH'lory fJV~ r Notre Dame i\o o,
30by 143lurnrng the second Mlf
kl&lt;:korr 102 YrHd&lt;&gt; for a toul h
down

I 3 1 106 114
?4 88 15 ?
Canad an
w I 1 pf s gf ga
I 50

I~ 1

W1nn1peg

3 8 139 1?0
3S 128 101

E d monton
Van c ouv e r

17 10 0
l 5 14 'J

]4 105
J? 97

88
97

Mond ay
12

13 ~
14 1

San 0 ego
13 71
382 17
Jo: games be h1nd based on lsi
pl ace t eam
Mondays Re5ulh

Kent ucky 104 V1rg1n a 85
New York 128 MemphiS 119
Utah 105 San Anton o 104
Tuesday ~Ga m e!&gt;
l nd ana at S an Anton o

N H L Slandmgs
By Un•t ed Pr ess 1nternat1ona 1
01VI S IOO I

5

Texas blasted
By DAVID MOtTl'!'
UP! Sports Wrtter
JACKSONVJLJ 1':
F'la
( UP II - Aubutn p layed
g1vewa} with 1 ex~1s an the
Gator Bowl and sltll scored a
deClSIVC upset
The ftflh..-.tnked Tiget s lted
t\loo (;a tor Bowl fumble records

A1

Resul1 s

Phocn1x 6 Quebec 3
Tuesday 5 Games
Pho entx al M1Ch1gan
(h•c.agoat Cleve land

F1RST MOVE
GREEN BAY, Wts (UP! ) ·Bart Starr offtcta lly took over
as head coach and general
manager of the Green Bay
Packers Monday and h1s ftrsl

Muru.iay

mght when lney lost

f1ve of seven

yet bedt the

f~\oored

I onghoa ns, 27 3
We ccrtamly duln I expect
l cxas to be so g€'nerous ' said
Auburn Coach Ralph Shug"
J ot dan Rut th&lt;•n we dtdn 'l
~1kc advanlc:t~e of ,til our opportumtiCS

1 he 1 1gea s broke the game
open ear ly by scormg two

Cage top 20
NEW YORK I UP! ) - !'he
Umted P r ess Tnternallonal
Board of Coaches co ll ege
ba sketba ll raltngs, wtth
number of first place votes and
records through Saturday,
Dec 28m parentheses 136 of 42
coaches votmg) (4th week )
Team Points I N C St (21J (80) 338 2. Indiana (11) (10-ll) 313
3 UCLA (1) (8-0) 302 4.
Louisville (3) (7~) 245 5
Southern Cal (8-0) 210 6
Alabama (5-0) 134 7 Maryland
(7-1) 92 8 North Carolina (5-1)
83 9 Kentucky (7-11 50 10
Oregon (7~) 38 11. Arizona Sl
(9-1)30 12 South Carolina (5-2)
26 13 Providence (7~) 25 14
Marquette (5-2) 20 15
Mtchtgan (7-1) 1416. Penn (7-11
1317 Kansas (6-4) 918 Arizona
(8-1) 8 19. Bradley t&amp;-1) 7 2Q
Memphis Sl ( 8-2) 5

College Ba sketball
Results
By UnJted Press lnternattonal
Tournaments
Fmal Round Action
B1g 8 Tournament
Champ1onsh1p
Kansas 76 Iowa Sf 75
Con so lat1on Round
Kan 51 80 Nebraska 63
Okla 51 101 Colo 73
Mo 83 Ok ta 81 2 ots
ECAC Hohday Fesf•val
Champ10nsh1p
Fordham 83 Sou th e rn Cal 66
Consolaf1on Round
Rutgers 91 Sf Jos 56
Far West Clas s•c
Champion s hip
Oregon 74 Wash St 65
ConsolatiOn Round
An z Sf BO Ore Sf 71
Boston Coli 86 Iowa 81
Wake Forest 70 Cre 1ghton 6V
Ocean State Cla sstc
Champ1onsh1p
Sf J ohn s NY 91 Prov 79
Con so !afton Round
Drak e 92 So Car 71
Holy Cross 107 Ass umpt on BB
Brown 67 Rhode I s land 61
Rambow Class1c
Consolation Round
Sa n Jose Sl 83 Fla 80
Tu lsa 81 Pe nn 75
Sugar Bowl
Champ1onsh1p
Lasalle 77 Alabama 72
Consolation Round
Furman 89 Hou st on BO
V a Commonwealth ClaSSIC
Champ1onsh1p
Te&gt;~
A&amp;M 84 Va
Com
monwealth 70
Consolat•on Round

1

?0 13 I
19 15 0
17 l-1 l

QuebeG

g b

1 ?7 8 3 97
22 100 121
13 76 15?

0
I

15 16

Tor on lo

"'
pc1
861
541
487
4.'i7

99 142

10

T uesday s Gam es
Cal.torn1a at Oet ro1t

g b

We ~t

w

24
20

II '1.2

23
25

23

NY Ranger!'. B M nne so1a 1

e as r

Kentucky

32 142 1)8

Boston
10
Tor o n to
1118 6 28117138
Cal 1forn1a
9 22 6 24 98 154
Monday s R es ult s
P n sburq h 7 To ronlo 5
Lo s Ange les 3 Delrod 'J

M nne!.ola

I

ph gf ga
5 1 162 105
49 1 10 ~5

01\o'I SIOn 4

ABA Sta nd109 s
By Un 1t e d Pre ss lnt er nat1 ona1

w

14 84 159

7

l
15 19 441
7' 1
15 21
417
a•,
Monday s Res ult s
Ho uston 120 L os Angeles 107
MilWaukee 106 Buffa o 91

New York
St Lou ~

I 7 14 4 38 173 94
15 15 6 36 125 12 9
II ?0 5 'J7 100 153

Kan sasC dy
5 26 1
DIVISIOn J
w I 1
Mon I r eal
20 6 11
LOS Ange l es 19 5 II
P1 t tsburgh
12 16 B
Detro11
9 20 s
Wash 1ngton
J 30 4

6 ,

MidWeSt D IV ISIOn
w t pel

Se at11 e
Phoen1x
Portland
L osAnge es

1

Cont~rence

Detro t

Ch 1cago
S t LO UI S

M , neso ta

AtlantiC DIVISIOn
w 1 pet

22 13
21 IJ
19 15
14 21

1

only the fifth
JUIIIUI II) hl StOJ y to Win the
II ( ISII Id fl II ophy .llld DriVIS
&lt;.tiffin

In

Former Buckeye star

Bu tt alo

'" But

lu~tory, uctv.oof t hc stvtn

Colz1e
RadMrd Wood IS
USC s olht&gt;r All 1\menca
(.rccne Ready
In add1l10n the Buck eves
lurve the 1974 Hose Bow l s MVP
1n quarterback Cornelius Gree

St

Peters 73 Fa1r h eld 77

Oth er Scores
Notre Dame 93 Bu tl e r 83
New Mex 51 62 UTEP 39
St LOU IS 89 (lOCI 68
Mrrmck 93 So Conn St n

BYU 100 Brad ley 87

Dayton 77 Harvard M
Oh10 U 76 Lyla ( li lt 63
S F Austm 95 NW La 78

Su ff olk 75 Co lby 74
De Pau l 76 Northwe s ter n 63
Wm &amp; Mary 75 Columb1a 63
San Fran Sc 77 Ccrnet l 67
Montana 67 Puget Sound 58
U ta h St 98 Sant a Clara 74
W1ch1ta Sl 95 M e mph iS St 91
A Peay 91 So M 1ss BJ
Vanderbil t Bl M1d Tenn 68

touchdmHIS

a 1 43 span
the fu st
pertnd l11ey earned the ftrst
one by marching 60 yards but
1he second one wa:; a gift
The f1rst score c&lt;~me at 6 52
of the f1rst per1od on a seven
yard p(:;ISS from Ph al Garg1s to
Ed Butler Auburn recovered a
fumble at !he Texas ftve on the
next play but unmedialely
rumbled the ball back Three
plays later , " Texas fumble
gave Auburn the ball .c~t the
Longhorns' 27 and Mtlzt Jackson took It m on runs of 2.5 and
two )ards
Everything after that was
ucademlC
Texa s had a 35 yard held
goa l by Btlly Schott wtth 59
seconds left tn the ftrsl pertod
Auburn lost
ball vta fumble
Ctt the Texas one madway
through the second pertod but
Jtm McKinnel blocked a punt
for a safet) to gtve the Tigers a
16-3 lead Auburn held for
downs at tls rune wtlh 59
seconds left tn the half to take
that lead mto the dressmg
tn

nltdway th rough

!be

room
I he second half wa s all
Auburn c~llhough th~ flgers di d
not score m the third pl!rwd
Auhurn had d 53 yard touch
down run on a pass tn
terceptron by McKannev
canceled bv d chp ea rly 111 tht'
fmdl period But Gargis threw
a ll)atdTDpasstoBullerand
added d two-pmnt conversiOn
pa ss to Dan Nugent wtlh 5 34
left to rnake 1t 24-3 and Chrts
Wtlson added a 28-yard fteld
gaul nme seconds from the end
We v.ere outplayed m ever}
dep.11 tmcnt
sun! I exas
Coach Darrell Royal
We
cornmttled so many errors We
got bchtnd and had to desert
ou r sty le of pia) 11 he
Longhorns, who seldom pass
tllrew the ball 21 tunes Monda)
mght)
• When you do that often the
dam breaks, and m this case,
tl dtd .
Texas fullback Earl ('_ampbell, leadmg rusher 1n the
game wtlh 91 yards satd " tl
was more wha t we did to
ourse lves than what they did to
us
Monday was Auburn s stxlh
Gator Bow l v1s1t ~tnd the
Tigers' fourth wm here Texas,
whtch had hoped to go to the
Cotton Bowl for the seventh
stratght year, was makmg lt.s
ftrst Gator Bowl appearance
after fathng to wtl\"l'lfe South
west Confe rence tttle

HCan I afford
an independent
insurance expert
to figure out
what's best for me?"
Sure .
An independent~~~~
agent makes
no extra
charge for
his services.
t\ t.;

Jnllcpcnde nl

ag~nr~

r lllJl 1n 11.:s W~.: 1rc

we

free

fur ~Ill r &lt;.: 1r hunu. t r
Lh 1r g~..: t ~ r th l'&gt; \l'f\.· 1(1.!'

A unc &lt;.:

lll1 P&lt;lll\ ..,

r~.:prc'i~.: nl

sever d &lt;.; trnn g Jn'l uran -.:c

In ...dc cl I he nght
hu.,llll''&gt;'&gt;

111d

kmd uf

wt.:

1n~urancc

J1 1 1kc no

dc\rnan on the {!her hand

mu ~ r

cx tr.1
ncccs

r JI\ If) I 1 '.d ] \ (I I lhC pniH; I. h i \ 1.. llllJ 11\ l fCI ~
\ ~ ndq nd~.:nl 1n ~u r n Lo.; 1 g ~.: 11~ 'A t: 1t rcr )Ill

D 1fcrcm.:c m

ln'&gt;uranc~:

I I 1: B1g
OLH .:u nllnLJIIII! n~:r~on d ttl c ntwn

(i.il lu ~

Wtlham D Chtlds

Downing-Childs Agency, Inc.

move was t.o r etam defensive

coordinator Dave Hanner as an
assistant coach
40 14&lt;1 116
Hanner has been wtth the
Allan Ia
16 15 6 3!1 104 lOB
NY sl.anders 1&lt;1 1&lt;1 9 37 122 103 Packers for 23 years- 13 as a
01 VI5.10 n 2
w 1 t pfs 9f 9a player and the last 10 as a
Van cou ver
22 IO 5 49 1'~9 110 coach under Vmce Lombardi,
Phtl Bengtson and Dan Devtne
Starr also satd two front
-=========="'il office personnel would be
relamed, Tom Mtller as assistant to the general manager and
Bob Harlan as asststant
general manager
W I I pt s gf

Ph• ad ph a 2&lt;~ 7 5
NY Ranger s 1611 a

53 137

ga
7~

- 7:30
TUESo.-;,"'"'
~ ,.,
. P.M
· -

SEES ''SUDDEN DEATH"
BELLOWS FALLS, Vt
IUPI) Vermont Gov
Thomas Salmon, who p1cked
tlle Super Bowl parttc1pants
hefore tlle season slarted, sees
'sudden death ' tn the unmedtate future of the Ptttsburgh Steelers and Mmnesola
Vtktngs
The second-term Democrat

lh====~~:=:;;,:=:;;,,;;;::===;=========::!.l

predicted Monday at" Rotary
(.1ub meeun~ Pillsbur~h wtll
wtn Super Bowl IX 2:!-17, tn
overt nne

fM r•ea'e

and

'Yoo II Like Our Oual1ty Way of Do1ng Bus1no:.&lt;:.s
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
POMEROY

lJI J

lm d

s

IJ neb~tcke r

fnencl . .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

'"

defensive b~1c k Nc.tl

go to the r,u!el ltmtt· In expre--

Year

Ill

t.lllll~

~

qlf.

RACINE EMERGENCY

We'll

I

Ohm St.;lh' &lt;-.H I wm without mt
I lllkt'(l /\I Jlx ll llol r.u: t·~ Ntl il
.uul th,Jl s lrue F'ach g.une I Nol!t f).llll( In the Or-,HJgc
\\ ,mt to pl.av belte1 lh.m th£• Howl uu Nt&gt;w Vt•.u 's NwhL
~une before ,tncl I w&lt;.tnt to
/\ Notre O.um upsel 1n
m.tke thas my bes l game '
MI.Uill (ould clev&lt;Jle lhc Hose
The Ohio Slate USC confron Bowl wm ne1 mto the No 1 spot

HU NTINGTON, W Va
IUPI) - The name Ellwood
was a fixture m htgh school and
college footba ll tn Ohto slarltng
m 1942 Btll, Dtck Frank and
553 RUltel 51
~
Tom
pla;ed for Dover s Tor
&lt;Gravel HUll
nado 1n that order and then
Mlddl•~:~:ort Ohio ~
con tmued m college foo tball
PH m 1lS5
F rank , the only Ellwood
brother to enter coachmg, was
named head footba ll coach
LIAr A CIIOII N11ghbor,
Monda) at Marshall UmverSwr f~rm It T~ere
stly
The 39-year old Ellwood who
has
been an asststant coach at
"""'
Ohto Umverst ly the past 10
Comp1rnet
..
,
r • ilsurance
rtomt Olliftt!
,
seasons, succeeds Jack Len~._~':'""":;·•:••:.;
~":I":"~'_::;;";;';;";;'·:·:"·;.J the finals of the Ocea.n State r yel, another Oh!O nat1ve who
c
Classtc at Provtdence, R 1
restgned on the heels of a 1·10
record
It "as Lengyel who came
•
herem the wake of the Nov 14
1970, atrplane crash that ktlled
VIrtually all the Marshall
players and coaches and began
bwldm g a new progra m The
Herd had 2-8 records the ftrsl
tw o campatgns and bu1ll that to
4-7 m 1973 before beatmg on ly
Le ng}el's alma mater - Akron
- the past fall
I JUSl love lhts football, '
Ellwood satd on takmg the JOb,
saymg he had no spect ft c
phtlosoph) on the game
Football "as an tmportanl
word around our house, and so
k
was college 1
Ellwood quarte rbacked Ohw
W r rr marchwg wto a
......•'14'
Stale to the Rose Bowl
champtonshtp 20 years ago this
lmght \ "'' Year 1uth uur
....~ '%
week He followed hts brother,
Dtck a ltnehacker to Oh to
• $
heads held luf[h and
•
Slate
4 •
hearts full nf hof!'' W e rc • !il
Ellwood served two s tmts as
#
w*
a
coac
htng atde at OhiO Stale
%
glad /o be )OUr frwnds 1
and spent three years as an Air
Force assistant coac h
Woody Ha)es cont.acled at
Pasadena Caltf where he ts
pr epa nn g Ohto Sta le for
another Rose Bow l game, said
Frank Ell wood wtll do a good
JOb as a head coach anywhere
He ha s a fme foot ball mtnd and
ts very talented '
The new Mar-shall coach was
an Academ1c All Amenca and
a n Academtc All Btg Ten
Confe rence quarterback and
was named the oulslandtng Ai r
Force ROTC cadet at Ohto
Stale
Ellwood, after serv mg one
season as as assistan t coach at
Dover High School where he
wa s a four-year regular at

'"" ,,,.

Plll iJ IJIIIdU t C lh~
u llwn II t h.unpum s met Nu I
I lOll

USC gets early
hangover, 83-66

I

Sentinel

•

;Bucks favored by 7

Television Log

+++

Rap

East wins big swindle of '74
• K Q LO
¥ K QJ
• J 9 42
o!oAQJ

...

r·=·,.&lt;,··:::o:=--~~~--.,., ~Oi&lt;li~~~~"'I

\IDUB•TV20

u1fen1l1j, you'll rollnlu11q un l it our IJP-~1/"'I"llliJII'I,h n
rurrl 010 h ~ra lfe ll lh'JYI!r ' for IJOIII IO!If~r/et'U' 111

BOB'S GULF STATION

!IS '

'formerly the Beacon Service Station'
_________:;BO;.;B;~·J,;O;.Y;;.C,;;E.;A;,;;.N,;;,;D;.,;S;.T;,;E;.VI.,;..E______•

1

�Yanks, Tribe give Catfish beSt bait
AHOSKIE , N.C. t UP!)
Jim "Catfish " Hunter jus t may
celebra te New Yea r 's Wedw:&gt; s·
day by deciding what maJor
league baseball tea m will get
the services of ttis awa rdwinnin g righl arm. probi1bl y
for something in th e neig hborhood of $3 million.
The field ha s bee n narrowed
to four teams, a process tha t
'included rejection of a $2.6
million offer from the Philadelphia Phillies Monday . One
of Hunter's a ttorneys sa id a
fin a l deci s ion co uld co me
Wednesday, though it might
not be announced un ti l later ,
probably in the success ful city.
The Phillies' offer , said J oe
Flythe, a member of Hunter's
Ahoskie law £irm , was "con siderably lower tha n some \ Ve
have received. ''
Flythe said the field of team s
under considera tion by the 1974
Cy Young Award wirrner was
first narrowed to six MondayCleveland , th e New Yor k
Yanke es, Sa n Diego, Los
Angeles, Pitts burgh and
Kansas City.
By Monday night , Flyth e
said two more tea ms had bee n
ruled out, though he declined to
name them until the two tearns
were notified Ia ter in the day
today .
The Yankees a nd the Ind ians
appeared to be two of the
strongest bets. Both teams sent
represenatives to Ahoskie
again Monday , the Yankee
people going in and out three

Innes .
C I r v e Ia n d
l n dian s'
Ex~?c u t i vc Vice Pres ident Alva
''Ted'' Bonda sa id hr thou ght
Hw11er w ~1 s close to ac.:ccpting
acontractoffer fr orn the Tribe.
The multiyea r pac t was
bel ieved nem the $2 million
mark , including &lt;I bonus for U1e
28-n•ar-old Cr Young Award
wi~er.
·
·• J' ve been in co nstan t
negotia tions a lm os t every 'iay
by phone since we last met ,"
Ronda s;-tid from his home in
Wes t Palm Beach, Fla. "We
ca me very close a t times . a nd 1
thought he might accep t our
offer."

Bvndei a nd Tr ilx- (;.enrr;ll F l y ~h l' ~a i d :.hey h;:1d been ruled
Manager Phil Seghi £lew to ou! sincr ''the irs was not one of
Ahoskie Monda y to re;1ffi rm tlw lx&gt; tter offers."
the Indian:-; ' offer .
Fl v rhe al•o said the possibili" Mone)' will be the final
ty uf side ben efi ts in the form of
dec iding fa c tor , I th ink," · television commercials and the .
Banda sa id .
like, while they had been
"He 1Hunter ) has indicated considered as factors , were
· that he likes Cleveland as a " not of that great a value" in
ci ty.
ma kin g a dech;ion .
" He also will take into ac.
He conceded tha t such offers
cou nt the quality of the club might be easirr to come by in,
he'd be joining . I see no real for example, New York or Los
proble m lor us if he likes our
Angeles , but that, " really, you
package, " Banda said.
have th a t sort of thing pretty
A spokesman for Montreal
mu ch available anywhere
said Mond ay that President
these days ."
Jim Fannin s till believe&lt;! the
In addition to the Phillies,
Expos were in the running but

Flyer coach gets
•

200th career win
Bv United Press International
·Day ton Uni ver sity head bas·
ke tball coach Don Donoher
finally notched his 200th career
coac hing v ictor y Monday
night, bu t not before his Flyers
tu rn ed back a determin ed
Harvard· rally .
Donoh er , in his lith season,
chalked up hi s 200th win
aga inst jus t 90 losses with the

WISIHJ~S

in ftlhle

NEW

Good luck, good health,
good cheer ... ?Ood friend;hips, old
and new. May your heart's desire come
true and your days be bright.

-Hartley's Shoes

-----YEIR

Midd.le of Upper Block in Pomeroy
'

77-64 victory over the Crimson .
The Flyers had to struggle
with Harvard, however , before
pulling away in the second half
to take their s ixth win in nine
outings this season . Dayton
nursed a lour-point lead, 44-40,
with just 14 minutes remaining
in the game before finally
l&lt;l king command .
Johnny Davis swished
through 23 points to lead
Dayton , while Lou Silver
dropped in 12points to pace the
visiting Crlmson , noW ~ for
the season .
In other a ction Monday
ni ght, Ohio State had to settle
lor fourth place in the Rainbow
Classic holiday tournament in
Honolulu after getting nipped,
88-87, by Villanova, Ohio
University got past Loyola of
Chicago , 75-63, while Cincinnati dropped an 89-68
contest to St. Louis.
The Buckeyes, recuperating
from a 102-71 thrashing a t the
hands of Indiana Saturday
night, came back · from a 23- ·
point deficit to make the
consolation game agianst Villanova a last-second affair.
With only eight seconds
remaining in the game, center
Craig Taylor missed the
second of two free throws to
provide the margin of victory
for the Pennsylvania team
after the Buckeyes had stormed back by outscoring
Villanova 34-12 in the last 9: 10
the game.
Bill Andreas led the Buckeyes, now 6-4, with 20 points.
Walter Luckett, Ohio University 's sharp-shooting guard,
ripped the nets for 31 points to
lead the Bobcats past Loyola.
Ohio U. outscored their hosts

or

SV AC standings
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Hannan Trace
North Gall ia
Southwestern
Southern

6 2 522 443
4 1 345 282
3 3 281 341
3 A 334 373
l 4 240 279

Kyger Creek

Eastern

1 6 369
0 6 308
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L P
Hannan Trace
5 0 344
North Ga l lia
4 1 345

Symmes Valley

New Year
is being

422
405
OP
253
282

Southwestern

3 2 275 284

Southern

2 J 241 271
l 3 223 245
0 3 151 174
0 3 155 225

Eastern
Kyger Creek
Symmes Vall ey

of kick to it,
partners!

Nnrth r-.allia

4

1 171

Hannan Trace

3

2 160 160

2

1 102

Sym-mes Valley

2 1 113 98
2 3 182 181
2 3 134 165
0 4 112 148

Southwestern
Eastern

86

This week's games:
Friday - Kyger Creek at
North Galli a ; Southwestern at
Wahama; Southern at Symmes
Va ll ey and Eastern at Hannan

Trace.
Saturday - Buffalo at Kyger

Creek and Ironton St. Joe at
Southwestern .

Court St.

MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; Co•

1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

(Serving America for 100 Years}

.

. Offers all exc~ing opportunity to operate a business of
your own with a very small investment. We are interested
in a qualified Sales oriented person with previous retail
experience to own and operate a catalog store in Pomeroy,
Ohio.

If )'OU are· willing to acc_ept respo_nsibi_li~y in return for a
future in your own busmess, wnte g1vmg full personal
qualifications to:

E A S "th 4-1
0

0

m1 I
1000 s. Monroe Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21232

1.~--------------------------------_.

•

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday , Dec. 31,
the 365th and last day of 1974.
This is New Year 1S Eve.
The moon is between its full
pha se and last quarter.
The morning stars are Mars
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mer-·
cury, Venus and Jupiter .
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Capricorn.
French explorer Jacques Cartier was born Dec. 31, 1491.
On this day in history :
In 1879, Thomas Edison gave
the first public demonstration
of the incandescent lamp in
Menlo Park, N.J .
In 1890, Ellis Island in New
York Harbor became the
receiving station for immigrants arriving from Europe.
In 1946, President Truman
proclaimed &lt;the official enq of
World War II, well over a year
after the surrender of Germany
and Japan.
In 1972, Pittsburgh Pirates
baseball star Roberto Clemente
and fow- other persons were
killed in a crash of a chartered
cargo plane Qn a mercy mission
to
earthquake-devastated
Nicaragua.

nn

· K yg erC.ree·k

Southern

Goessler's Jewelry Store

..

by a 26-8 margin in a 11l-minute
span just before halltime to
overcome an early Ramblers'
lead and take a 34-20 advantage
to the locker room. Loyola
came back to within three
points, 38-35, early in the
second period but never got
any closer to the Bobcats, now
4-4 for the season.
St. Louis relied on Lewis
McKinney, the high scorer with
26 points, lo change the complexion of their scrap with
Cincinnati from a nip-and-tuck
first half to a Billikens '
runaway in the final stanza.
The lead changed hands 16
times in the first hall and
ended with St. Louis ahead 4440 a t the intermission. The
Bearcats turned frigid in the
second half, however, hitting
only 12 of 39 shots from the field
and getting only three buckets
in the Ia st 10 minutes.
The loss evened the Bear eats
record at 4-4, while St. Louis
registered its third win in
~even starts.

SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP

rounded up. Hope
'· if's got o lot

•

•

4 _ The Da ilv Senline l, Middl eport-Pomero y. 0 .. Tuesday, Der. :11, 1974

F1RST TIME .
JOHANNESBURG,
South
Africa (UP!) -A black soccer
team played a white team for
the first time in South Africa,
sports officials disclosed Mon·
day.
The blacks defeated the
whites 3-1, Sunday at Johannesbu;g's Fuller Park. A white
refereed the first hall and a
black the .second. There were .
no incidents.
The black team, Katlehong

-

Tuesday, Dec. 31, 1974

another casua lty in the highpriced a utionee ring .Monday
was the Minneso\6 '1\\.·ins, .who
stepped aside when a $2 million
offer was spurned .
Philadelphia President Ruly
carpenter said "I could not go
any further (than $2.6 million)
without jeopardizing the
planned development program
and the fin a ncial structure of
the entire Phillies organiza tion."
Hunter, a native of nearby
Hertford, has been the center
of a bidding war since being
declared a free agent Dec. 14 in
a historic arbitration ruling
that said Oakland A's owner
Charles 0 . Finley broke Hunter's Oakland· contract by
failing to pay him $50,000 he
was due .
Flythe said Hunter " hasn't
given himsell any deadline"
lor picking the club, but might
narrow the field to two by the
end of the day and could make
the final decision by Wednesday .

Program given at church
BEST WISHES FOR A
HAPPY NEW YEAR

'..

'i .

HECK'S STORES

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1
NEW YEAR'S DAY

12 NOON TO 8 PM
Dale Dee Dillon to wed in june

MEIGS BRANCH

REEDSVIlLE - Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Dillon, Route 1,
Reedsville, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Dale Dee, to George Luster, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. George T. Luster, Sr., Middleport. Miss Dillon attends
Meigs High School and ber fiance is employed at Krogers m
Pomeroy.
.
The open church wedding will be an event of June 1 at the
Nazarene Church, Middleport.

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN
COMPANY
POMEROY, OHIO

Has a Special New Year's Announceme~t:

A NEW HIGHER RATE OF RETURN ON YOUR SAVINGS
3/
14 OJ
/0

COMPLETES TEST
RACINE: - Locust Grove
Florie, a senior two year old
registered Guernsey, owned by
Edson Roush, Locust Grove
Farms, has completed an
official
DHIR
actual
production record of 15,760

pounds of milk and 758 pounds
of buttertal, in 30; days on two
times a day milking, according
to The American Guernsey
Cattle Club. The testing was
s upervised by Ohio State
University.

PER YEAR ON A NEW 6 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
.
.
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

PER YEAR ON A 30 MONTH CERTIFICATE OF
DEPosrt
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT-INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

.

%%
'·.

,

. r~~~·

''H~Ne.w Y~''
As the old year nears completion, we
look forward to the new ... with thanks
in our hearts for our good fortune!

PER YEAR ON A 90 DAY CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
$1,000.00 : MIN I MUM DEPOSIT-INTEREST PAl D
QUARTERLY.

Pomeroy
Ben Franklin Store

PAID ON ALL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS, INTEREST PAID
FROM DATE OF DEPOSIT TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL, AS LONG AS ACCOUNT REMAINS OPEN.
NO MINIMUM OR MAXIMUM DEPOSITS NEEDED.

Mrs. Helen Hill was named
"Christmas Queen" of the
Meigs TOPS Club during a
recent meeting at
the
American Legion Hall in
Middleport.
Selection of Mrs. Hill for the
honor was based on total
·weight loss for the year. She
was presenteda $5 gift from the
club. Queen for the week was
Phyllis McMillian and the
runnei-s-up were Mrs. Betty
Fife and Debra M. Hill. The
hall was decorated in the
holiday theme and diet punch
was served to the 17 members
attending. Group singing of
Christmas carols and an exchange of gifts concluded the
meeting.

NOTICE:
BYFEDERAL REGULATIONS, A SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY IS
INVOKED ON ALL CERTIFICATE ACCOUNTS WITHDRAWALS
PRIOR TO THE DATE OF MATURITY.
ALL ACCOUNTS INSURED BY THE F.S.LI.C., AN AGENCY OF
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, UP TO $40;000.00. REMEMBER, NO ONE HAS EVER LOST BY DEPOSITING IN AN INSURED 1SAVINGS AND LOAN COMPANY. ALL FUNDS
DEPOSIT ED WITH US ARE USED TO PROVIDE GOOD HOMES
FOR THE PEOPLE IN THE AREAS WE SERVICE. SEE US
FIRST.

"LARGE ENOUGH TO SERVE YOU, YET SMALL ENOUGH TO KNOW YOU."

:C~~~~~Y;~~r::~e ':hi~

:=':·

,::&lt;.1:' ·~ r:..::=::: .. ::&lt;=: ·:·:

CGJiffiiE'iErrrrrN(@§

National Football League.

BRINGS ASSISTANTS

of the NEW YEAR

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN
COMPANY

The old year draws to a dose - and our thoughts
turn to all the kind 'people who helped to make
it a good one. We wish you each a New Year full
oi happiness, contentment, good fortune and good
. I
cheer. May peace and serenity bless your I1ves.

296 W. Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Earl F. Ingels, Jr., Vice Pres.

FROM All OF US AT
·!...,.,

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
"

seawn. ·

POMEROY, 0.
~
·
M:
· :A~IN:.,;S~T;.._.;..__________,...;.._i"_______•
l

'

I
I '

.

I

I

~-

•I

At the evening service Mrs.
Freda Henderson and Barbara
Colmer were in charge with
Randy Snider, Jimmie Snider,
Billy Colmer, Rusty Nitz ,
Ricky Nitz, Jimmie Morton
and Shiela Pullins taking part.
Debbie
Schaefer,
Anna
McKinney, Shari Colmer, ami
Tammy Snider read the
Christmas story from the
Bible. The young people
presented a play with singing
of Christmas carols between
the scenes.
The evening service con·
eluded with a candlelight
service and communion.

Adult class
of chtjrch dines

Adult class of the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene
gathered at the Steamboat
Restaurant in Racine for a
holiday dinner party. Table
decorations carried out the
holiday theme.
Following
the
dinner
members went to the home of
the Rev. and Mr s. Clyde
Henderson for a dessert course
and colfee. There was group
singing of carols, reading of
poetry and a gift exchange .
Attending were the Rev. and
Mrs . Clyde Henderson, Mr. and
Mrs . Glen McClung, Carol
LWlsford, Mr. and Mrs . Fred
Pullins, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Colmer, Paulette Leach, Jim
Farley, Mr . and Mrs . William
Stephenson, Virginia Smith,
~m?.~~'MiiijWi!'AA!IjW~ !ona Brickles, Mr. and Mrs.
E:slie Mossman , Myrtle Durst,
:S
Patty M1chels, and Mr. and
~
Mrs . Raymond Walburn .

by Meigs 'TOPS' )

PER YEAR ON A 1 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT-INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

%

Dinner is given
by the Storys

Queen named

PER YEAR ON A 4 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT-INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

lh%

g,athercd around the altar .
AnK clia Curtis was soloist £or
lh c selec tion and the children
joinf'd in for one verse. The
nativit y s&lt;:e ne was presented
by th e light from a star and
candle s placed a bout the
san c tuary . Concluding number ·
was "Silent Night" . with the
Rev. Sydenstricker givmg the
benedictiorl .

Program given in morning

OPEN

296 W. SECOND STREET

Recitations, carol singing , HuJ1nel sang " What Child i ~
and a liv e nativity scene were Til i:;."
in c luded on the annual
Tiik ing pa ri in th e live
Christmas E:ve program at the nalivi ty scene were Becky
Enterprise United Me thodis t Tmwehill as Mary: Mark
Church.
Tiinnehill as Joseph; ' Beverly
To open the program, Enuna and Delores Will the angels ,
Lou Davis presen ted a piano and Charles Warth and Don
prelude with Mr . and Mrs. Dale Hunnel , the sheplierds. , The
Davis · singing , "Christma_s . choir sang "0 Come Little
Reflections . "
Openin g ('hilrlr('n" ri~ the chilrlrpn
scripture by the Rev . William
Sydenstrickcr was taken from
Isaiah 9 and the Congregation
sang "Joy to the World ."
Recitations were "The
Greate s t Cift " by Missy
Annual Christmas program
Foster ; "Welcome " by Amy of the Pomeroy Church of the
Beth Brothers; "Away in a Nazarene was held on the
Manger~~ by Gina Scarberry; Sunday before Christmas
" The Little Babe" by Billy during the morning service.
Brothers, Darrin Warth , Artie
Participating were . Jamie
Hunncl , and Brian Tannehill ; Leach, Timmy Colmer, Kenny
"Little Jesus" by Chris Davis; Lunsford, Davy Leach, Sheila
" Because It's Jesus' Birthdc.:'y" Pullins, Pam Walburn, Brian
by Mindy Spencer; " Special Nutz, Trina Reeves, Billy
Reason '' bv Steve Musser; Colmer, Jimmy Snider, Rusty
" My Wish ': by Valerie Van Nitz, Ricky Nitz, and John
Meter; "For You" by Vicky McKinney. Debbie Scheafer
Carter ; "A Wish" by Cathy played "The First Noel" on the
Carter; " Little Lord Jesus" by flute. Mrs . Mamie Stephenson
Crissie Sydenstricker.
had charge of the recitations.
Other recitations included
"Lord uf All" by Jeannie
Pullins; "When Jesus Came"
by Bobby Foster; "What
Christmas Is " by Terry Smith;
" Keeping Christmas" by
Deanna
Pullins;
"The
The Kingsbury Road home of
Christmas Mood" by Angeha
Mr.
and Mrs. Leo Story was the
Curtis; "To Bethlehem " by
scene
of a holiday gathering on
Brian Will; " Jesus is Born" by
Cindy Curtis and "Glad News" Sunday, Dec. 29.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
by Brian Spencer.
David
McConnaughey, CinSelections by the children's
choir direc ted by Mrs. Dale cinnati; Mr. and Mrs . E . L.
Davis with Becky Will as ac- McDonald and sons, Rick and
companist, were "Frosty, the Mark, Nelsonville; Mr. and
Snowman," "Thirty-Two Feet Mrs. Fritz Bookman and sons,
and Eight Little Tails, " "Sleep Chris, Patrick and Timothy of
My Saviour Sleep" and " Away Buchtel; Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Lash, Mr . and Mrs. William
in a Manger."
Nelson,
Pat, Steve and J. D.
David Warth presented "A
Favorite Story" which led into Story, and Mr . and Mrs . Art
the scripture reading by his Argeries , Pomeroy ; Mrs.
mother, Mrs . Charles Warth · Golda Roush, Middleport; Mr .
from Luke 2. Laura, Ann and and Mrs. Arthur Argeries,
Phil Ohlinger and Mrs. Don Rochester, N. Y. : . Miss
Elizabeth Glaros, Pittsburgh,
Pa .; Miss Linda Wilson,
Murray City

City, had been linoited to
playing in the black Afnean
National Soccer League. The

SEATTLE, Wash. (UP!) New University of Washington
football Coach Don James said
Monday he wlll bring four of
his assistants at Kent State
with him when he makes his
final move to Washington.
James told a news conference the Kent _ State
assistants who will come to
Washington are Kay Dorr and
Bob Stull, both offensive
coaches, defensive coach Skip
Hall and defensive coordinator
Dick Scesniak.
James was named Coach of
the Huskies a week ago to
succeed Jim Owens who
retired at the end of the 1974

'

~

Pomeroy . . .

personaI Notes

.Mrs. Sadie Brown and Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Brown spent
the Christmas holidays in
Dayton with Dr. and Mrs.
Robert Brown and son, Robbie.
On Friday evening Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Brown, Dr.
Harold Brown, and Mrs. Agnes
Brown, joined Mrs. Sadie
Brown at her Minersville home
lor a Christmas party and gift
exchange.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grueser
and son, Larry, and Mrs. Vena
Whaley, were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs . Bob Grueser and
Kimberly of CaldweU.
Harry Keiser, Minersville,
remains a patient at Doctor's
Hospital North, Room 387,
Colwnbus. ·He is recuperating
from pneumonia.
Mrs. Robert Kuhn is in
McKeesport, Pa. with her stepfather, William A. Miller, who
underwent major surgery
Friday at tbe McKeesport
Hos pitaL
Betty and Bill Smith of
Alexandria, Va . visited over
the holiday with Mrs . Addie
Heilman, Pomeroy . Mrs.
Smith is the former Betty
E:bersbach.
Christmas holiday guests of
Mr.and Mrs. George Korn, Sr.,
were Mr. and Mrs. George
Korn Jr., Brett, Bryan and
Bracy,
Mrs.
Christine
O'Donnell and Mr. and Mrs.
Benjie O'Donnell, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Andrea Owens and
daughter, Shari, of Marshall,
Mich. were holiday weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. John
Cunningham and Mrs . Arthur
Evans, Gallipolis; .Mr. and
Mrs. Don Hunnel, Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Ohlinger, and Mr . and
Mr~. Charles Warth, Pomeroy.

Holidt.zy parties
held by classes
Holiday parties for the junior
class and the senior high class
of the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene were held recently at
the home of the Rev. and Mrs.
Clyde Henderson.
Hosting the junior class
party were Mrs. Mary Pullins
and Mrs. Barbara Colmer who
served punch, ice cream and
potato chips. Games were
played. Attending were Jimmie Snider, Billy Colmer, John
and Chris McKinney, Denise
and Bruce Brickles, Rusty
Nitz, Ricky Nitz, and Vickie
Nitz and Mrs. !ona Bric]&lt;les.
Members of the senior high
class exchanged gifts and
enjoyed refreshments served
to them by Mrs. Henderson . In
the group besides the Rev. and
Mrs . Henderson were Randy
Snider, Anna McKinney, Shari
Colmer, Sam Terzoppolus, and
Tammy Snider.

IN HOSPITAL
Kelly Gilmore, Middleport,
remains a patient at the
Charle•ton Memorial Hospital ,
Room Nwnber 336, Charleston ,
w. Va . He will be confined
there for a few mor_o; weeks.

AT KETTERING - At the altar, Mark Loose, State Master Councilor of DeMolay; left to
right, Tony Chariie, State Scribe ; Jeff Jackson, Devid Morgan , PMC-MSA ; Mark Boyd,
Bertram Moshier, State RD Club's Scribe.

Fashion show is
given at school
A fashion show was staged
recently at Meigs Hig h School
by the clothing classes of Mrs .
Frances Roberts assisted by
her student teacher, Miss Ellen
Huber , Ohio University.
Shown were pant suits , some
double knit and some denim,
dresses., smock tops, blouses,
and skirts. Parents and friends
of the students were guests.
The show was sponsored by the
Meigs Chapter of the Future
Homemakers of America and
held in the Meigs High School
cafeteria whichwas decorated
in party fashion. Refreshments
were in keeping with th~
theme .

'

PARTY HOSTED
Mary Walburn, Mamie
Stephenson, and Freda Henderson hosted a Chrisimas
party for the kindergarten and
primary classes of the
Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene held at the home of
the Rev. Clyde Henderson.
Games were played and
Christmas songs sun g during
the afternoon party. Ice cream
sandwiches, cookies and KoolAid were served to Timmy
Colmer, Davy Leach~ Jamie
Leach, Sheila Pullins, Shelly
Pullins , Michele Capehart,
Tammy Capehart , Timmy
Michels , Pam Walburn, Brian
Nitz, Mary Pullins, Barbara
Colmer, Paulette Leach, and
Patty Michels.

SUPPER GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Ohlinger,
Laura, Ann and Phil hosted a
spaghetti supper foll owing a
caroling party by s everal
members of the Enterprise
United Methodist Church.
Attending were Becky and
Brenda Will , Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Will, Beverly and Brian, Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Davis and Chris,
E:mma Lou and Joyce Davis,
Patty Edwards, Mrs . Mike
Brothers, Mrs. Becky Tannehill, Brian and April, Mr.
and Mrs . Don Hunnel and Artie
and the Rev . William Sydenstricker.

Meigs DeMolay visits
three chapter ceremonies
Mei gs Chapter Order of
DeMolay,
through
its
r epr es entative s,
visited
Belpre 's Job 's Daughters
Be thel , Chillicothe's DeMolay
Chapter, and Kettering 's
DcMolay Chapter installations
las t Friday and Saturday.
Going to Belpre's installation
were Mike Hendrickson, Carl
H. Myers Jr . and " Dad" Bill
Quickel. all of Cheshire. Kim
Ze igler wa s in s talled as
Honored Qu ee n by Jenny
Berry , the installing honor
quee n. The boys attended the
reception and then went for
pizz a s a t the Parkersburg
Mall.
At Chillicothe Meigs Chapter
was represented by Mr . and
Mrs. D. Qui ckie , " Dad"
Quickel , Carl Myers and Mike

K.erm Says:

Thank You
For 1974

Family wmes over
Christmas holidays

CHESTER Christmas
holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
DINEATSAVRE:S
Curtis Wolle were Mr. and
GREAT B E ;~ID - Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wolfe and Ricky,
Mrs. Paul Sayre entertained Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
with a family dinner Sunday at Pannell, Marietta; Mr. and
their home in Great Bend. Mrs. Gene Van Meter of
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Granville; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Pa ul Kautz, Mrs. Edith Kautz, Clary , Newark. Other callers
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs . Reid were Mr. and Mrs . Bob HutYoung, Sheri and Nola: Mr. chinson of Omaha, Neb.; Mr.
and Mrs. Pe arl Mora, , and Mrs. Erroll Conroy, Mrs.
Pomer oy. Route 3, Miss Sandy Afice Dodson, and Mr. and
Sayr e, s tudent at Ohio Mrs. John Hayes, local; Mr.
University , Paula Sayre, 1 and Mrs. Henry Hartman and
daughters of the hosts, and I daughters, and Mrs. Alice
Tom Gwnp .
Ferguson, Huntington, W. Va.

RING
IN
'

THE

•
'

SING PLANNED
There will he a hymn sing at
Hazel Community Church
Saturday, Jan. 4 at 7:30p.m. J .
B. and The Tiny Trio from
Vienna will be the featured
singers. Pastor is E:stil Hart.
Everyone is welcome.

He ndri ckson . Installed was
John A. Dick by Pat King Jr.
At Kettering Meigs Chapter
was represented by Bert
Moshier (Master Councilor of
Meigs) as the installing senior
deacon , Sendri Corfias, and
" Mom" Moshier. Installed was
Scott Graphen by Mark Loose,
Stale Master Councilor. The
boys attended a swim party at
the Chapter- Advisor's home,
then spent the night at David
Morgan 's
home .
Meigs
Chapter meets on the first and
third Mondays and will be
having a bean dinner Jan . II ,
at 5 p.m

.

NEW!
It's the beginning of a. whole new
year _ a time for setting new
goals for a happier and more
fulfi lied I if e. It's time to
celebrate lasting friendships
and memories with old friends
and to look forward to new a_nd
rewarding experiences. We wtsh
you a very happy new year.

Thank You
For Our Best Year!

HOPE TO SEE YOU
DINE IN BEVERLY
A pre-Christmas dinner of
the family of the late Harry
Pickens was held at the home
of Mr . and Mrs. William
Meredith in Beverly. Attending
were their sons, Chuck from
Rochester, N. Y., and Roger of
Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Sauer, Mary Ruth and Joy,
Middleport, Route 1; Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Pickens, Mr. and
Mrs . Denver Weber, Mark and
David, home from Ohio
University; Mr. and Mrs .
Ernes t Whitehead and Jull and
Jane, hom.hrom Ohio, and Mr .
and Mrs . Isaac Frydman, Ohio
State University stlljlents.

SEARS

IN 1975

· Catalog Merchant
New York Clothing House
~
POMEROY, OHIO
'.

r

.fl.

Auld Lang Syne ~
,.

'

LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
220 E. MAIN 992·2178 POMEROY
Will Be Closed For Inventory
WED. &amp; THURS., JAN. 1 &amp; 2
•

�Yanks, Tribe give Catfish beSt bait
AHOSKIE , N.C. t UP!)
Jim "Catfish " Hunter jus t may
celebra te New Yea r 's Wedw:&gt; s·
day by deciding what maJor
league baseball tea m will get
the services of ttis awa rdwinnin g righl arm. probi1bl y
for something in th e neig hborhood of $3 million.
The field ha s bee n narrowed
to four teams, a process tha t
'included rejection of a $2.6
million offer from the Philadelphia Phillies Monday . One
of Hunter's a ttorneys sa id a
fin a l deci s ion co uld co me
Wednesday, though it might
not be announced un ti l later ,
probably in the success ful city.
The Phillies' offer , said J oe
Flythe, a member of Hunter's
Ahoskie law £irm , was "con siderably lower tha n some \ Ve
have received. ''
Flythe said the field of team s
under considera tion by the 1974
Cy Young Award wirrner was
first narrowed to six MondayCleveland , th e New Yor k
Yanke es, Sa n Diego, Los
Angeles, Pitts burgh and
Kansas City.
By Monday night , Flyth e
said two more tea ms had bee n
ruled out, though he declined to
name them until the two tearns
were notified Ia ter in the day
today .
The Yankees a nd the Ind ians
appeared to be two of the
strongest bets. Both teams sent
represenatives to Ahoskie
again Monday , the Yankee
people going in and out three

Innes .
C I r v e Ia n d
l n dian s'
Ex~?c u t i vc Vice Pres ident Alva
''Ted'' Bonda sa id hr thou ght
Hw11er w ~1 s close to ac.:ccpting
acontractoffer fr orn the Tribe.
The multiyea r pac t was
bel ieved nem the $2 million
mark , including &lt;I bonus for U1e
28-n•ar-old Cr Young Award
wi~er.
·
·• J' ve been in co nstan t
negotia tions a lm os t every 'iay
by phone since we last met ,"
Ronda s;-tid from his home in
Wes t Palm Beach, Fla. "We
ca me very close a t times . a nd 1
thought he might accep t our
offer."

Bvndei a nd Tr ilx- (;.enrr;ll F l y ~h l' ~a i d :.hey h;:1d been ruled
Manager Phil Seghi £lew to ou! sincr ''the irs was not one of
Ahoskie Monda y to re;1ffi rm tlw lx&gt; tter offers."
the Indian:-; ' offer .
Fl v rhe al•o said the possibili" Mone)' will be the final
ty uf side ben efi ts in the form of
dec iding fa c tor , I th ink," · television commercials and the .
Banda sa id .
like, while they had been
"He 1Hunter ) has indicated considered as factors , were
· that he likes Cleveland as a " not of that great a value" in
ci ty.
ma kin g a dech;ion .
" He also will take into ac.
He conceded tha t such offers
cou nt the quality of the club might be easirr to come by in,
he'd be joining . I see no real for example, New York or Los
proble m lor us if he likes our
Angeles , but that, " really, you
package, " Banda said.
have th a t sort of thing pretty
A spokesman for Montreal
mu ch available anywhere
said Mond ay that President
these days ."
Jim Fannin s till believe&lt;! the
In addition to the Phillies,
Expos were in the running but

Flyer coach gets
•

200th career win
Bv United Press International
·Day ton Uni ver sity head bas·
ke tball coach Don Donoher
finally notched his 200th career
coac hing v ictor y Monday
night, bu t not before his Flyers
tu rn ed back a determin ed
Harvard· rally .
Donoh er , in his lith season,
chalked up hi s 200th win
aga inst jus t 90 losses with the

WISIHJ~S

in ftlhle

NEW

Good luck, good health,
good cheer ... ?Ood friend;hips, old
and new. May your heart's desire come
true and your days be bright.

-Hartley's Shoes

-----YEIR

Midd.le of Upper Block in Pomeroy
'

77-64 victory over the Crimson .
The Flyers had to struggle
with Harvard, however , before
pulling away in the second half
to take their s ixth win in nine
outings this season . Dayton
nursed a lour-point lead, 44-40,
with just 14 minutes remaining
in the game before finally
l&lt;l king command .
Johnny Davis swished
through 23 points to lead
Dayton , while Lou Silver
dropped in 12points to pace the
visiting Crlmson , noW ~ for
the season .
In other a ction Monday
ni ght, Ohio State had to settle
lor fourth place in the Rainbow
Classic holiday tournament in
Honolulu after getting nipped,
88-87, by Villanova, Ohio
University got past Loyola of
Chicago , 75-63, while Cincinnati dropped an 89-68
contest to St. Louis.
The Buckeyes, recuperating
from a 102-71 thrashing a t the
hands of Indiana Saturday
night, came back · from a 23- ·
point deficit to make the
consolation game agianst Villanova a last-second affair.
With only eight seconds
remaining in the game, center
Craig Taylor missed the
second of two free throws to
provide the margin of victory
for the Pennsylvania team
after the Buckeyes had stormed back by outscoring
Villanova 34-12 in the last 9: 10
the game.
Bill Andreas led the Buckeyes, now 6-4, with 20 points.
Walter Luckett, Ohio University 's sharp-shooting guard,
ripped the nets for 31 points to
lead the Bobcats past Loyola.
Ohio U. outscored their hosts

or

SV AC standings
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Hannan Trace
North Gall ia
Southwestern
Southern

6 2 522 443
4 1 345 282
3 3 281 341
3 A 334 373
l 4 240 279

Kyger Creek

Eastern

1 6 369
0 6 308
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L P
Hannan Trace
5 0 344
North Ga l lia
4 1 345

Symmes Valley

New Year
is being

422
405
OP
253
282

Southwestern

3 2 275 284

Southern

2 J 241 271
l 3 223 245
0 3 151 174
0 3 155 225

Eastern
Kyger Creek
Symmes Vall ey

of kick to it,
partners!

Nnrth r-.allia

4

1 171

Hannan Trace

3

2 160 160

2

1 102

Sym-mes Valley

2 1 113 98
2 3 182 181
2 3 134 165
0 4 112 148

Southwestern
Eastern

86

This week's games:
Friday - Kyger Creek at
North Galli a ; Southwestern at
Wahama; Southern at Symmes
Va ll ey and Eastern at Hannan

Trace.
Saturday - Buffalo at Kyger

Creek and Ironton St. Joe at
Southwestern .

Court St.

MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; Co•

1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

(Serving America for 100 Years}

.

. Offers all exc~ing opportunity to operate a business of
your own with a very small investment. We are interested
in a qualified Sales oriented person with previous retail
experience to own and operate a catalog store in Pomeroy,
Ohio.

If )'OU are· willing to acc_ept respo_nsibi_li~y in return for a
future in your own busmess, wnte g1vmg full personal
qualifications to:

E A S "th 4-1
0

0

m1 I
1000 s. Monroe Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21232

1.~--------------------------------_.

•

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday , Dec. 31,
the 365th and last day of 1974.
This is New Year 1S Eve.
The moon is between its full
pha se and last quarter.
The morning stars are Mars
and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mer-·
cury, Venus and Jupiter .
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Capricorn.
French explorer Jacques Cartier was born Dec. 31, 1491.
On this day in history :
In 1879, Thomas Edison gave
the first public demonstration
of the incandescent lamp in
Menlo Park, N.J .
In 1890, Ellis Island in New
York Harbor became the
receiving station for immigrants arriving from Europe.
In 1946, President Truman
proclaimed &lt;the official enq of
World War II, well over a year
after the surrender of Germany
and Japan.
In 1972, Pittsburgh Pirates
baseball star Roberto Clemente
and fow- other persons were
killed in a crash of a chartered
cargo plane Qn a mercy mission
to
earthquake-devastated
Nicaragua.

nn

· K yg erC.ree·k

Southern

Goessler's Jewelry Store

..

by a 26-8 margin in a 11l-minute
span just before halltime to
overcome an early Ramblers'
lead and take a 34-20 advantage
to the locker room. Loyola
came back to within three
points, 38-35, early in the
second period but never got
any closer to the Bobcats, now
4-4 for the season.
St. Louis relied on Lewis
McKinney, the high scorer with
26 points, lo change the complexion of their scrap with
Cincinnati from a nip-and-tuck
first half to a Billikens '
runaway in the final stanza.
The lead changed hands 16
times in the first hall and
ended with St. Louis ahead 4440 a t the intermission. The
Bearcats turned frigid in the
second half, however, hitting
only 12 of 39 shots from the field
and getting only three buckets
in the Ia st 10 minutes.
The loss evened the Bear eats
record at 4-4, while St. Louis
registered its third win in
~even starts.

SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP

rounded up. Hope
'· if's got o lot

•

•

4 _ The Da ilv Senline l, Middl eport-Pomero y. 0 .. Tuesday, Der. :11, 1974

F1RST TIME .
JOHANNESBURG,
South
Africa (UP!) -A black soccer
team played a white team for
the first time in South Africa,
sports officials disclosed Mon·
day.
The blacks defeated the
whites 3-1, Sunday at Johannesbu;g's Fuller Park. A white
refereed the first hall and a
black the .second. There were .
no incidents.
The black team, Katlehong

-

Tuesday, Dec. 31, 1974

another casua lty in the highpriced a utionee ring .Monday
was the Minneso\6 '1\\.·ins, .who
stepped aside when a $2 million
offer was spurned .
Philadelphia President Ruly
carpenter said "I could not go
any further (than $2.6 million)
without jeopardizing the
planned development program
and the fin a ncial structure of
the entire Phillies organiza tion."
Hunter, a native of nearby
Hertford, has been the center
of a bidding war since being
declared a free agent Dec. 14 in
a historic arbitration ruling
that said Oakland A's owner
Charles 0 . Finley broke Hunter's Oakland· contract by
failing to pay him $50,000 he
was due .
Flythe said Hunter " hasn't
given himsell any deadline"
lor picking the club, but might
narrow the field to two by the
end of the day and could make
the final decision by Wednesday .

Program given at church
BEST WISHES FOR A
HAPPY NEW YEAR

'..

'i .

HECK'S STORES

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1
NEW YEAR'S DAY

12 NOON TO 8 PM
Dale Dee Dillon to wed in june

MEIGS BRANCH

REEDSVIlLE - Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Dillon, Route 1,
Reedsville, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Dale Dee, to George Luster, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. George T. Luster, Sr., Middleport. Miss Dillon attends
Meigs High School and ber fiance is employed at Krogers m
Pomeroy.
.
The open church wedding will be an event of June 1 at the
Nazarene Church, Middleport.

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN
COMPANY
POMEROY, OHIO

Has a Special New Year's Announceme~t:

A NEW HIGHER RATE OF RETURN ON YOUR SAVINGS
3/
14 OJ
/0

COMPLETES TEST
RACINE: - Locust Grove
Florie, a senior two year old
registered Guernsey, owned by
Edson Roush, Locust Grove
Farms, has completed an
official
DHIR
actual
production record of 15,760

pounds of milk and 758 pounds
of buttertal, in 30; days on two
times a day milking, according
to The American Guernsey
Cattle Club. The testing was
s upervised by Ohio State
University.

PER YEAR ON A NEW 6 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
.
.
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT- INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

PER YEAR ON A 30 MONTH CERTIFICATE OF
DEPosrt
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT-INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

.

%%
'·.

,

. r~~~·

''H~Ne.w Y~''
As the old year nears completion, we
look forward to the new ... with thanks
in our hearts for our good fortune!

PER YEAR ON A 90 DAY CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
$1,000.00 : MIN I MUM DEPOSIT-INTEREST PAl D
QUARTERLY.

Pomeroy
Ben Franklin Store

PAID ON ALL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS, INTEREST PAID
FROM DATE OF DEPOSIT TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL, AS LONG AS ACCOUNT REMAINS OPEN.
NO MINIMUM OR MAXIMUM DEPOSITS NEEDED.

Mrs. Helen Hill was named
"Christmas Queen" of the
Meigs TOPS Club during a
recent meeting at
the
American Legion Hall in
Middleport.
Selection of Mrs. Hill for the
honor was based on total
·weight loss for the year. She
was presenteda $5 gift from the
club. Queen for the week was
Phyllis McMillian and the
runnei-s-up were Mrs. Betty
Fife and Debra M. Hill. The
hall was decorated in the
holiday theme and diet punch
was served to the 17 members
attending. Group singing of
Christmas carols and an exchange of gifts concluded the
meeting.

NOTICE:
BYFEDERAL REGULATIONS, A SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY IS
INVOKED ON ALL CERTIFICATE ACCOUNTS WITHDRAWALS
PRIOR TO THE DATE OF MATURITY.
ALL ACCOUNTS INSURED BY THE F.S.LI.C., AN AGENCY OF
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, UP TO $40;000.00. REMEMBER, NO ONE HAS EVER LOST BY DEPOSITING IN AN INSURED 1SAVINGS AND LOAN COMPANY. ALL FUNDS
DEPOSIT ED WITH US ARE USED TO PROVIDE GOOD HOMES
FOR THE PEOPLE IN THE AREAS WE SERVICE. SEE US
FIRST.

"LARGE ENOUGH TO SERVE YOU, YET SMALL ENOUGH TO KNOW YOU."

:C~~~~~Y;~~r::~e ':hi~

:=':·

,::&lt;.1:' ·~ r:..::=::: .. ::&lt;=: ·:·:

CGJiffiiE'iErrrrrN(@§

National Football League.

BRINGS ASSISTANTS

of the NEW YEAR

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS AND LOAN
COMPANY

The old year draws to a dose - and our thoughts
turn to all the kind 'people who helped to make
it a good one. We wish you each a New Year full
oi happiness, contentment, good fortune and good
. I
cheer. May peace and serenity bless your I1ves.

296 W. Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Earl F. Ingels, Jr., Vice Pres.

FROM All OF US AT
·!...,.,

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
"

seawn. ·

POMEROY, 0.
~
·
M:
· :A~IN:.,;S~T;.._.;..__________,...;.._i"_______•
l

'

I
I '

.

I

I

~-

•I

At the evening service Mrs.
Freda Henderson and Barbara
Colmer were in charge with
Randy Snider, Jimmie Snider,
Billy Colmer, Rusty Nitz ,
Ricky Nitz, Jimmie Morton
and Shiela Pullins taking part.
Debbie
Schaefer,
Anna
McKinney, Shari Colmer, ami
Tammy Snider read the
Christmas story from the
Bible. The young people
presented a play with singing
of Christmas carols between
the scenes.
The evening service con·
eluded with a candlelight
service and communion.

Adult class
of chtjrch dines

Adult class of the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene
gathered at the Steamboat
Restaurant in Racine for a
holiday dinner party. Table
decorations carried out the
holiday theme.
Following
the
dinner
members went to the home of
the Rev. and Mr s. Clyde
Henderson for a dessert course
and colfee. There was group
singing of carols, reading of
poetry and a gift exchange .
Attending were the Rev. and
Mrs . Clyde Henderson, Mr. and
Mrs . Glen McClung, Carol
LWlsford, Mr. and Mrs . Fred
Pullins, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Colmer, Paulette Leach, Jim
Farley, Mr . and Mrs . William
Stephenson, Virginia Smith,
~m?.~~'MiiijWi!'AA!IjW~ !ona Brickles, Mr. and Mrs.
E:slie Mossman , Myrtle Durst,
:S
Patty M1chels, and Mr. and
~
Mrs . Raymond Walburn .

by Meigs 'TOPS' )

PER YEAR ON A 1 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT-INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

%

Dinner is given
by the Storys

Queen named

PER YEAR ON A 4 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF
DEPOSIT
$1,000.00 MINIMUM DEPOSIT-INTEREST PAID
QUARTERLY.

lh%

g,athercd around the altar .
AnK clia Curtis was soloist £or
lh c selec tion and the children
joinf'd in for one verse. The
nativit y s&lt;:e ne was presented
by th e light from a star and
candle s placed a bout the
san c tuary . Concluding number ·
was "Silent Night" . with the
Rev. Sydenstricker givmg the
benedictiorl .

Program given in morning

OPEN

296 W. SECOND STREET

Recitations, carol singing , HuJ1nel sang " What Child i ~
and a liv e nativity scene were Til i:;."
in c luded on the annual
Tiik ing pa ri in th e live
Christmas E:ve program at the nalivi ty scene were Becky
Enterprise United Me thodis t Tmwehill as Mary: Mark
Church.
Tiinnehill as Joseph; ' Beverly
To open the program, Enuna and Delores Will the angels ,
Lou Davis presen ted a piano and Charles Warth and Don
prelude with Mr . and Mrs. Dale Hunnel , the sheplierds. , The
Davis · singing , "Christma_s . choir sang "0 Come Little
Reflections . "
Openin g ('hilrlr('n" ri~ the chilrlrpn
scripture by the Rev . William
Sydenstrickcr was taken from
Isaiah 9 and the Congregation
sang "Joy to the World ."
Recitations were "The
Greate s t Cift " by Missy
Annual Christmas program
Foster ; "Welcome " by Amy of the Pomeroy Church of the
Beth Brothers; "Away in a Nazarene was held on the
Manger~~ by Gina Scarberry; Sunday before Christmas
" The Little Babe" by Billy during the morning service.
Brothers, Darrin Warth , Artie
Participating were . Jamie
Hunncl , and Brian Tannehill ; Leach, Timmy Colmer, Kenny
"Little Jesus" by Chris Davis; Lunsford, Davy Leach, Sheila
" Because It's Jesus' Birthdc.:'y" Pullins, Pam Walburn, Brian
by Mindy Spencer; " Special Nutz, Trina Reeves, Billy
Reason '' bv Steve Musser; Colmer, Jimmy Snider, Rusty
" My Wish ': by Valerie Van Nitz, Ricky Nitz, and John
Meter; "For You" by Vicky McKinney. Debbie Scheafer
Carter ; "A Wish" by Cathy played "The First Noel" on the
Carter; " Little Lord Jesus" by flute. Mrs . Mamie Stephenson
Crissie Sydenstricker.
had charge of the recitations.
Other recitations included
"Lord uf All" by Jeannie
Pullins; "When Jesus Came"
by Bobby Foster; "What
Christmas Is " by Terry Smith;
" Keeping Christmas" by
Deanna
Pullins;
"The
The Kingsbury Road home of
Christmas Mood" by Angeha
Mr.
and Mrs. Leo Story was the
Curtis; "To Bethlehem " by
scene
of a holiday gathering on
Brian Will; " Jesus is Born" by
Cindy Curtis and "Glad News" Sunday, Dec. 29.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
by Brian Spencer.
David
McConnaughey, CinSelections by the children's
choir direc ted by Mrs. Dale cinnati; Mr. and Mrs . E . L.
Davis with Becky Will as ac- McDonald and sons, Rick and
companist, were "Frosty, the Mark, Nelsonville; Mr. and
Snowman," "Thirty-Two Feet Mrs. Fritz Bookman and sons,
and Eight Little Tails, " "Sleep Chris, Patrick and Timothy of
My Saviour Sleep" and " Away Buchtel; Mr. and Mrs . Paul
Lash, Mr . and Mrs. William
in a Manger."
Nelson,
Pat, Steve and J. D.
David Warth presented "A
Favorite Story" which led into Story, and Mr . and Mrs . Art
the scripture reading by his Argeries , Pomeroy ; Mrs.
mother, Mrs . Charles Warth · Golda Roush, Middleport; Mr .
from Luke 2. Laura, Ann and and Mrs. Arthur Argeries,
Phil Ohlinger and Mrs. Don Rochester, N. Y. : . Miss
Elizabeth Glaros, Pittsburgh,
Pa .; Miss Linda Wilson,
Murray City

City, had been linoited to
playing in the black Afnean
National Soccer League. The

SEATTLE, Wash. (UP!) New University of Washington
football Coach Don James said
Monday he wlll bring four of
his assistants at Kent State
with him when he makes his
final move to Washington.
James told a news conference the Kent _ State
assistants who will come to
Washington are Kay Dorr and
Bob Stull, both offensive
coaches, defensive coach Skip
Hall and defensive coordinator
Dick Scesniak.
James was named Coach of
the Huskies a week ago to
succeed Jim Owens who
retired at the end of the 1974

'

~

Pomeroy . . .

personaI Notes

.Mrs. Sadie Brown and Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Brown spent
the Christmas holidays in
Dayton with Dr. and Mrs.
Robert Brown and son, Robbie.
On Friday evening Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Brown, Dr.
Harold Brown, and Mrs. Agnes
Brown, joined Mrs. Sadie
Brown at her Minersville home
lor a Christmas party and gift
exchange.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grueser
and son, Larry, and Mrs. Vena
Whaley, were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs . Bob Grueser and
Kimberly of CaldweU.
Harry Keiser, Minersville,
remains a patient at Doctor's
Hospital North, Room 387,
Colwnbus. ·He is recuperating
from pneumonia.
Mrs. Robert Kuhn is in
McKeesport, Pa. with her stepfather, William A. Miller, who
underwent major surgery
Friday at tbe McKeesport
Hos pitaL
Betty and Bill Smith of
Alexandria, Va . visited over
the holiday with Mrs . Addie
Heilman, Pomeroy . Mrs.
Smith is the former Betty
E:bersbach.
Christmas holiday guests of
Mr.and Mrs. George Korn, Sr.,
were Mr. and Mrs. George
Korn Jr., Brett, Bryan and
Bracy,
Mrs.
Christine
O'Donnell and Mr. and Mrs.
Benjie O'Donnell, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Andrea Owens and
daughter, Shari, of Marshall,
Mich. were holiday weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. John
Cunningham and Mrs . Arthur
Evans, Gallipolis; .Mr. and
Mrs. Don Hunnel, Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Ohlinger, and Mr . and
Mr~. Charles Warth, Pomeroy.

Holidt.zy parties
held by classes
Holiday parties for the junior
class and the senior high class
of the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene were held recently at
the home of the Rev. and Mrs.
Clyde Henderson.
Hosting the junior class
party were Mrs. Mary Pullins
and Mrs. Barbara Colmer who
served punch, ice cream and
potato chips. Games were
played. Attending were Jimmie Snider, Billy Colmer, John
and Chris McKinney, Denise
and Bruce Brickles, Rusty
Nitz, Ricky Nitz, and Vickie
Nitz and Mrs. !ona Bric]&lt;les.
Members of the senior high
class exchanged gifts and
enjoyed refreshments served
to them by Mrs. Henderson . In
the group besides the Rev. and
Mrs . Henderson were Randy
Snider, Anna McKinney, Shari
Colmer, Sam Terzoppolus, and
Tammy Snider.

IN HOSPITAL
Kelly Gilmore, Middleport,
remains a patient at the
Charle•ton Memorial Hospital ,
Room Nwnber 336, Charleston ,
w. Va . He will be confined
there for a few mor_o; weeks.

AT KETTERING - At the altar, Mark Loose, State Master Councilor of DeMolay; left to
right, Tony Chariie, State Scribe ; Jeff Jackson, Devid Morgan , PMC-MSA ; Mark Boyd,
Bertram Moshier, State RD Club's Scribe.

Fashion show is
given at school
A fashion show was staged
recently at Meigs Hig h School
by the clothing classes of Mrs .
Frances Roberts assisted by
her student teacher, Miss Ellen
Huber , Ohio University.
Shown were pant suits , some
double knit and some denim,
dresses., smock tops, blouses,
and skirts. Parents and friends
of the students were guests.
The show was sponsored by the
Meigs Chapter of the Future
Homemakers of America and
held in the Meigs High School
cafeteria whichwas decorated
in party fashion. Refreshments
were in keeping with th~
theme .

'

PARTY HOSTED
Mary Walburn, Mamie
Stephenson, and Freda Henderson hosted a Chrisimas
party for the kindergarten and
primary classes of the
Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene held at the home of
the Rev. Clyde Henderson.
Games were played and
Christmas songs sun g during
the afternoon party. Ice cream
sandwiches, cookies and KoolAid were served to Timmy
Colmer, Davy Leach~ Jamie
Leach, Sheila Pullins, Shelly
Pullins , Michele Capehart,
Tammy Capehart , Timmy
Michels , Pam Walburn, Brian
Nitz, Mary Pullins, Barbara
Colmer, Paulette Leach, and
Patty Michels.

SUPPER GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Ohlinger,
Laura, Ann and Phil hosted a
spaghetti supper foll owing a
caroling party by s everal
members of the Enterprise
United Methodist Church.
Attending were Becky and
Brenda Will , Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Will, Beverly and Brian, Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Davis and Chris,
E:mma Lou and Joyce Davis,
Patty Edwards, Mrs . Mike
Brothers, Mrs. Becky Tannehill, Brian and April, Mr.
and Mrs . Don Hunnel and Artie
and the Rev . William Sydenstricker.

Meigs DeMolay visits
three chapter ceremonies
Mei gs Chapter Order of
DeMolay,
through
its
r epr es entative s,
visited
Belpre 's Job 's Daughters
Be thel , Chillicothe's DeMolay
Chapter, and Kettering 's
DcMolay Chapter installations
las t Friday and Saturday.
Going to Belpre's installation
were Mike Hendrickson, Carl
H. Myers Jr . and " Dad" Bill
Quickel. all of Cheshire. Kim
Ze igler wa s in s talled as
Honored Qu ee n by Jenny
Berry , the installing honor
quee n. The boys attended the
reception and then went for
pizz a s a t the Parkersburg
Mall.
At Chillicothe Meigs Chapter
was represented by Mr . and
Mrs. D. Qui ckie , " Dad"
Quickel , Carl Myers and Mike

K.erm Says:

Thank You
For 1974

Family wmes over
Christmas holidays

CHESTER Christmas
holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
DINEATSAVRE:S
Curtis Wolle were Mr. and
GREAT B E ;~ID - Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wolfe and Ricky,
Mrs. Paul Sayre entertained Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
with a family dinner Sunday at Pannell, Marietta; Mr. and
their home in Great Bend. Mrs. Gene Van Meter of
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Granville; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Pa ul Kautz, Mrs. Edith Kautz, Clary , Newark. Other callers
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs . Reid were Mr. and Mrs . Bob HutYoung, Sheri and Nola: Mr. chinson of Omaha, Neb.; Mr.
and Mrs. Pe arl Mora, , and Mrs. Erroll Conroy, Mrs.
Pomer oy. Route 3, Miss Sandy Afice Dodson, and Mr. and
Sayr e, s tudent at Ohio Mrs. John Hayes, local; Mr.
University , Paula Sayre, 1 and Mrs. Henry Hartman and
daughters of the hosts, and I daughters, and Mrs. Alice
Tom Gwnp .
Ferguson, Huntington, W. Va.

RING
IN
'

THE

•
'

SING PLANNED
There will he a hymn sing at
Hazel Community Church
Saturday, Jan. 4 at 7:30p.m. J .
B. and The Tiny Trio from
Vienna will be the featured
singers. Pastor is E:stil Hart.
Everyone is welcome.

He ndri ckson . Installed was
John A. Dick by Pat King Jr.
At Kettering Meigs Chapter
was represented by Bert
Moshier (Master Councilor of
Meigs) as the installing senior
deacon , Sendri Corfias, and
" Mom" Moshier. Installed was
Scott Graphen by Mark Loose,
Stale Master Councilor. The
boys attended a swim party at
the Chapter- Advisor's home,
then spent the night at David
Morgan 's
home .
Meigs
Chapter meets on the first and
third Mondays and will be
having a bean dinner Jan . II ,
at 5 p.m

.

NEW!
It's the beginning of a. whole new
year _ a time for setting new
goals for a happier and more
fulfi lied I if e. It's time to
celebrate lasting friendships
and memories with old friends
and to look forward to new a_nd
rewarding experiences. We wtsh
you a very happy new year.

Thank You
For Our Best Year!

HOPE TO SEE YOU
DINE IN BEVERLY
A pre-Christmas dinner of
the family of the late Harry
Pickens was held at the home
of Mr . and Mrs. William
Meredith in Beverly. Attending
were their sons, Chuck from
Rochester, N. Y., and Roger of
Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Sauer, Mary Ruth and Joy,
Middleport, Route 1; Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Pickens, Mr. and
Mrs . Denver Weber, Mark and
David, home from Ohio
University; Mr. and Mrs .
Ernes t Whitehead and Jull and
Jane, hom.hrom Ohio, and Mr .
and Mrs . Isaac Frydman, Ohio
State University stlljlents.

SEARS

IN 1975

· Catalog Merchant
New York Clothing House
~
POMEROY, OHIO
'.

r

.fl.

Auld Lang Syne ~
,.

'

LOU &amp; THELMA OSBORNE
220 E. MAIN 992·2178 POMEROY
Will Be Closed For Inventory
WED. &amp; THURS., JAN. 1 &amp; 2
•

�•
'

..

'
' '

•

'

.

'

6 - The Da ily Sentinel . Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., TuesdHy, Dec. 31, 1974

'

~

- The Daily ~nlinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesd,J)' , Dec. jl, 197~

C@JIRIEIE1riTNC@§

Close At 6 New Year's
'' .

I .
', .

.

The old year draws to a close - and o ur th oughts
turn to all the kind people who he lped to make
it a good one. We wish you eac h a New Year full
o f happiness. con te ntm ent. good fortune a nd good ·
cheer. May peace and serenity bless your lives '

)
'

.

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
W t!

FHOM THE EM PLO YEES

...._

Acf·ept Federal Food !)ru mp.•
PHONE: 992-3480

to Limit

THE DAILY SENTINEL

MARGARET LEHEW

CHA RLENE HOEFLICH

AN U

.

RICHARD OWE N

EMMA W U DAVIS

USDA CHOICE BEEF

MIODLEPORT Q·

CUBE STEAK

'

0:{.Q ~e?;:~ ·tr}i)

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

69~

ICE............ 10 lb. bag

....
'

CARNATION HOT

-

New ~ze
30 oz. jar

COCOA MIX

~

•

Wed., Jan. J FREE oN-sTREET
PARKING

of the NEW YEAR .

--

Ev· ~e-Open

.

_,

$1

lb.
lean and
Tender

·

-~

"•' . .
.t ;

•

'

USDA CHOICE
:,.

1

'

.'

"'

.. '

LAUNDRY DETERGENT
BILL RIZE R

JAMES DANNER

DONALD WRIGHT J R.

CHARLES SNODGRASS

. I.; --(
·o·
---. -~

..

'.::.__ ~

320L0zo89

ERA

HE LEN DAVIS

USDR

USDA CHOICE

SIRLOIN STEAK .••• ~b:.1

49

USDA CHOICE

T-BONE STEAK •••• ~b:.1

69

PORTERHOUSE •••• .'~·.1

69

1

USDA CHOICE

·CHOICE

.

ROUND STEAK •••••'~·•.

49

.

FRESH AND LEAN

•

LUNCHEON MEAT

\

~'79~

12 oz.
can

TREET.

/

.. \_

'i

GROUND BEEF

~

Ground Chuck, fresh lean ••• lb. 1.09
Ground Round, extra lean •• ·lb. 1.19

.
" .!.

SUPERIORS

/ SUPERIORS

.
DON COLEMAN

FRE D HOF FMAN

DENNY FOBES

JIM CRUMP

Polish Sausage
.

MARGARET FINNICUM

PURINA

(For eats)

$1
5
59
STICKS
C
bxs.
for

Choice Morsels
O&amp;C
-

.' .
..

.i ... .

'

~ ~·

E RMA LYONS

.....
·· ~
. · 1....· ~

'
'
' ..
. .

· ~ ~. 1

.

GAYLAND BUSH

PIZZA

CHEESE, PEPPERON SAUSAGE

99¢

.

.

l...

~

~

TOM SKINNE R

'\

·, .._,- .
SHARON WILSON

MIKE WILLIAMS

,.

BOB HOEFLICH

twin
pak

HOMO MILK

SCOT LAD .

gal.

5 lb. bag

FRENCH FRIES

'
I

•

.

i

1.

10 oz.
1ar

J OHN PATTE RSON

CHE T TANNEHILL

HOBAR1' WILSON JR.

~

DON WRIGHT

~ ·
-.

~
'

POTATOES

39

(UNCLASSIFIED)

50 lb. bag

10 lb. 11 oz.

FAMILY SIZE

\
BEA LISLE

•

. . . __ __L_

· --- ~'-- - ' _:_ . J_..:_ _

_

_ : __

__._L__

_

.

KATIE CROW

. OTHO MATTOX

MIKE JIVIDEN

RC
DIET COLA
$ 00

"'

•

I

__._ _ _ _ _ _:.....-.__'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;...___ji~ L-~ - --·-c--!.._-~
l -·~
\ _
llo

__

.J..:.......__ __._.:....._

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~~ I

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.....
~........-;...:............-..............._
. . . . . . . . . .. . .

_......:.__,__.!..:....::...J.J....-...:•~.:.....i--:.-....;..--/.··.

qt. "
bois.

·(No Coupon Necessary)

..

1

8

8
'

'

99e

1~$125
pak

OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREE)

DOZEN

•

•

lb.

.DAD'S ROOT BEER

Sweet and Juicy

I•

f.

!.

RC COLA
.

FLA-..ORANGES

359
RICK GRAHAM

I

$1.99

IDE

DALE ROTHGEB

69e

HAM SALAD

COFFEE ·

;

~'

l
- lt

WIENERS

$1 39

Hous~
INSTANT

\

79e

- - ---- - ------ ------ I~ --- - --- - ---- ------·
HOME MADE
SUPERIORS

pkg.

Maxwell

•

I ~~g~Z-

THURSDAY ONL V

MOD!RN DAIRY ·

,

.PJ'~·t')ij

BILL HOFF MA N

79e

lb.

12oz.

'

"

MIKE HOFFMAN

lt All Beef Wieners

I '

. .. k( ., . ... .
tt

LARGE SIZE

JOHN'S

6 PACK

POTATO

'&gt; . ~ . • •

I

�•
'

..

'
' '

•

'

.

'

6 - The Da ily Sentinel . Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., TuesdHy, Dec. 31, 1974

'

~

- The Daily ~nlinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesd,J)' , Dec. jl, 197~

C@JIRIEIE1riTNC@§

Close At 6 New Year's
'' .

I .
', .

.

The old year draws to a close - and o ur th oughts
turn to all the kind people who he lped to make
it a good one. We wish you eac h a New Year full
o f happiness. con te ntm ent. good fortune a nd good ·
cheer. May peace and serenity bless your lives '

)
'

.

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10 - Sun. 10 to 10
W t!

FHOM THE EM PLO YEES

...._

Acf·ept Federal Food !)ru mp.•
PHONE: 992-3480

to Limit

THE DAILY SENTINEL

MARGARET LEHEW

CHA RLENE HOEFLICH

AN U

.

RICHARD OWE N

EMMA W U DAVIS

USDA CHOICE BEEF

MIODLEPORT Q·

CUBE STEAK

'

0:{.Q ~e?;:~ ·tr}i)

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

69~

ICE............ 10 lb. bag

....
'

CARNATION HOT

-

New ~ze
30 oz. jar

COCOA MIX

~

•

Wed., Jan. J FREE oN-sTREET
PARKING

of the NEW YEAR .

--

Ev· ~e-Open

.

_,

$1

lb.
lean and
Tender

·

-~

"•' . .
.t ;

•

'

USDA CHOICE
:,.

1

'

.'

"'

.. '

LAUNDRY DETERGENT
BILL RIZE R

JAMES DANNER

DONALD WRIGHT J R.

CHARLES SNODGRASS

. I.; --(
·o·
---. -~

..

'.::.__ ~

320L0zo89

ERA

HE LEN DAVIS

USDR

USDA CHOICE

SIRLOIN STEAK .••• ~b:.1

49

USDA CHOICE

T-BONE STEAK •••• ~b:.1

69

PORTERHOUSE •••• .'~·.1

69

1

USDA CHOICE

·CHOICE

.

ROUND STEAK •••••'~·•.

49

.

FRESH AND LEAN

•

LUNCHEON MEAT

\

~'79~

12 oz.
can

TREET.

/

.. \_

'i

GROUND BEEF

~

Ground Chuck, fresh lean ••• lb. 1.09
Ground Round, extra lean •• ·lb. 1.19

.
" .!.

SUPERIORS

/ SUPERIORS

.
DON COLEMAN

FRE D HOF FMAN

DENNY FOBES

JIM CRUMP

Polish Sausage
.

MARGARET FINNICUM

PURINA

(For eats)

$1
5
59
STICKS
C
bxs.
for

Choice Morsels
O&amp;C
-

.' .
..

.i ... .

'

~ ~·

E RMA LYONS

.....
·· ~
. · 1....· ~

'
'
' ..
. .

· ~ ~. 1

.

GAYLAND BUSH

PIZZA

CHEESE, PEPPERON SAUSAGE

99¢

.

.

l...

~

~

TOM SKINNE R

'\

·, .._,- .
SHARON WILSON

MIKE WILLIAMS

,.

BOB HOEFLICH

twin
pak

HOMO MILK

SCOT LAD .

gal.

5 lb. bag

FRENCH FRIES

'
I

•

.

i

1.

10 oz.
1ar

J OHN PATTE RSON

CHE T TANNEHILL

HOBAR1' WILSON JR.

~

DON WRIGHT

~ ·
-.

~
'

POTATOES

39

(UNCLASSIFIED)

50 lb. bag

10 lb. 11 oz.

FAMILY SIZE

\
BEA LISLE

•

. . . __ __L_

· --- ~'-- - ' _:_ . J_..:_ _

_

_ : __

__._L__

_

.

KATIE CROW

. OTHO MATTOX

MIKE JIVIDEN

RC
DIET COLA
$ 00

"'

•

I

__._ _ _ _ _ _:.....-.__'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;...___ji~ L-~ - --·-c--!.._-~
l -·~
\ _
llo

__

.J..:.......__ __._.:....._

· ~"

.

~~ I

~·

I
.....
~........-;...:............-..............._
. . . . . . . . . .. . .

_......:.__,__.!..:....::...J.J....-...:•~.:.....i--:.-....;..--/.··.

qt. "
bois.

·(No Coupon Necessary)

..

1

8

8
'

'

99e

1~$125
pak

OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREE)

DOZEN

•

•

lb.

.DAD'S ROOT BEER

Sweet and Juicy

I•

f.

!.

RC COLA
.

FLA-..ORANGES

359
RICK GRAHAM

I

$1.99

IDE

DALE ROTHGEB

69e

HAM SALAD

COFFEE ·

;

~'

l
- lt

WIENERS

$1 39

Hous~
INSTANT

\

79e

- - ---- - ------ ------ I~ --- - --- - ---- ------·
HOME MADE
SUPERIORS

pkg.

Maxwell

•

I ~~g~Z-

THURSDAY ONL V

MOD!RN DAIRY ·

,

.PJ'~·t')ij

BILL HOFF MA N

79e

lb.

12oz.

'

"

MIKE HOFFMAN

lt All Beef Wieners

I '

. .. k( ., . ... .
tt

LARGE SIZE

JOHN'S

6 PACK

POTATO

'&gt; . ~ . • •

I

�•
9- The DaUy Sent~l-~ Mlddleport.P&lt;meroy, 0., Tuesday ,1Jec.,31, 11'74
8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 1'uesday, Dec . 31, 1974

•

Addie Meredith died in Phoenix

Local news hig4lights of 1974
JANUARY

-

Heside nl s

welcomed in the New Year at

lpm pC"ra r urr s
around zt•nJ .

the annual ball of the Pomeroy
Fire Department and th e
coldest , weather hit with

g oing

down

1'011!11)' IU.ill'ked

ils

fatalily

firs !

uf I Ill' year on.Jan. 2 when .Johri

'Allen L&lt;x:ke, :H. died when it
presi dent of the Meigs Coun ty la nk on a wafer tow er
Boal'd o£ Comm is:; ione rs. The e o ll:~p st•d near Danville . The
Fe~nners Bank and Savings Co.
building's second floor became
well occupied with offices. Don
Pcarch of Hysell St., Middl epor t, bega n serving on the
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs. Gas locally jumped to
50 ce nts a gallon as Meigs
joined th e nation with a
g&lt;:Jsoline s hortage problem . On
Jan . 4 Jim Rickn\an , MidFrom 9:30P.M. TIL 1:30 A.M.
dleport businessman, was
MUSIC BY
named pres id ~nt of the Middl e por I Chamber of Commcrce . Marie Krawsczyn or
Admission: $6.00 Per Couple
Middleport was injurec when
Have A Happy And Siife Neu· } eilr
.she was s truck by an auto.
Ml•igs we nt on Daylight
From All The Officers and Firefighters of the
Savings Time again as a part or
Pomeroy
Volunteer
Fire
Dept .
and
the nationwide ef£or f to save
Emergency Squad.
e ner gy.
Jan . 6, Dwight Goins, Meigs
High band instructor, won the
dis trict 93 spea kup comretition
of the Jaycees . Jan . 7, Harry
Davis and Phil Globokar began
THANKSFORYOURPATRONAG E
terms of office as new
THROUGHOUT THE YEAR . ..
Pomeroy coun cil memhers and
Paul Huston , Syracuse, was
ins talled as new president of
If you a planning a New Year's
the local bricklayers, masons
and plasterers union . Jim Mees
party give us a call and lei us
resigned fr om
Pomeroy
make you a special arrangement
Council:
Eastern
Local
&amp;hoot
to set th e scene for ringing out
District went against Daylight
the old and in the new year'
Savings Time and started
classes an hour later. On
January 9, the Pomeroy Middleport
Lions
Club
celebrated its 25th annive'rsary. Harold Roush was
namedpresident of the Meigs
County Board of Education .
Tom Wolfe was named
president of the Racine HomeNationa l Bank . Horner-Hill
Carry Out on the Harrisonville
Roadwashitbya breaking and .
ente rin g. On Jan . 11 Meigs
Local &amp;hools were closed due
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Millard Van Meter
to flooding of roads by heavy
992-2039
Pomeroy
rains.
Bernard Gilkey was named
president of the Meigs County
Association of Township Clerks
and Trustees. On Jan. 13 a
se ries of events began honoring
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee
• •
on Mr . Blakeslee's retirement
as Meigs County Agricultural
Agent after 35 years of service.
The Meigs Local School
Dis trict approved a $2,326,283
budget. A robbery at the A. &amp;
P. was foiled by a conductor on
the C. and 0. Railroad. Peg
O'Brien and Jan Holter went to
Mt. Vernon to compete in
Ohio 's Junior Miss Pageant.
On Jan . 21 the Middleport Fire
most
Department launched
successful public fund drive for
a new emergency vehicle. The
Senior Citizens Center with the
eelebrat e
Meigs Health Department
cooperating
hegan giving fiu
New Year
shots to sen ior citizens at cost.
in a grand
Point-View TV Cable CD. extended service to Minersville
tradition!
and Syracuse. New Haven was
We hope it
selected as the site of a new
will bri11g much joy and
power plant with activities at
the site being curtailed much
peace to you and yours.
later in the year. Racine's
Harold Carnahan was honored
for being the oldest member in
length of service of a district
Sl'rvice b&lt;&gt;ard in the sl&lt;lte by
the Ohio Federation of Soil and
Water Service. John Rice;
Hubert Clark

WELCOME IN THE NEW YEAR

WITH THE POMEROY VOLUNTEER FIRE
DEPARTMENT AND EMERGENCY SQUAD·
DANCING AT THE POMEROY
JUNIOR HIGH AUDITORIUM
"THE AMBASSADORS"

Pomeroy Flower Shop

CUUe~CO!He

NEW
YEAR

a

Starts Thursday, Jan. 2 at 9:00 a.m.

Big Name Brands at BIG SavingS/' -

riJfl11er

Meig s Counlian or

Musking,um

nam&lt;'d new
fur Meigs.
Comnnmity
down .as a

County,.

wa s

agrieullura) agent
The Middleport
Park was turned
location for the

plC!nned sc hool for the mentally
retarded . Pat Holter wa s

named ne\\-' president ur t he
Pomeroy · Middleport Library
Board : Jennifer Shee ts was
named as a new member . The
hrst anniversary of the Senior
Ci tizens RSVP program was
observed with a luncheon at the
Meigs Inn.
FEBRUARY --On Feb . llhe
Rev . Robert Bwngarner was
named new president o( 'the
Middleport - Pomeroy Lions
Club. Feb. 2, Eastern Local
District teachers were given
sa lary increases and-insurance
benerits. Feb. 4, Lou Osborne
and John Manley were appointed to rill vacancies on
Pomeroy Village Council. Feb.
5, Orion W. Roush , Salem
Center, was named a new
director of the Pomeroy
National Bank. Wayne Edwin
Chappelear, Pomeroy Route 4,
father of three, was killed in a
tractor accident. Feb. 7, E . F .
Hobins on announced hi s
retirement as a Pomeroy
businessman or many years .
Feb. 9, gasoline supplies at
Meigs County service sl&lt;llions
dwindled with purchases
limited and some stations
being completely out of
gasoline. Feb. 10, some 400
residents paid high tributes to
C. E. Blakeslee at Meigs High
School on his retirement. The
Meigs Local School Board
heard plans for a teacher corps
reading
program
which
materialized later in the year .
Feb. 13 , Bowers Drive-In on
East Main St. was heavily
damaged by fire. Bobby Ord
was rehired as Southern Local
School District Superin·tendenl: Middleport firemen
ordered their new emergency
vehicle with funds mostly
'c ontributed by the public. Ezra
Kiser was the first Meigs High
School senior to hecome a
Na tiona I Merit Scholarship
finalist. Jenny Chapman was
crowned swee theart queen a t
Meigs High &amp;hool. Pomeroy
Village was assured a new
water system. Feb. 18, illness
hit the Meigs Local School
District schools, later closed by
the epidemic . The first meeting
was held to organize Meigs
County's bicentennial observance. Rocky Hupp, Southern
High~chool, ranked high in the
state in FFA work . George
Hall, local entertainer, was
shot at a Route 7 night .;lub.
Terry Ohlinger. Philo, was
named superintendent of the
Franklin Local &amp;hool District.
Middleport protested the C.&amp;O.
Hailroad pullout . Meigs Local
&amp;hoots closed on Feb. 25 due to
illness, Eastern joined later
with Southern escaping the
wave of illness. Carson Crow
presented a recodification of
Pomeroy ordinance to village
officials culminating three
years of work.
MARCH - All schools of the
Meigs Local &amp;hool District as
well as buses were disinfected
as school officials battled a
wave of illness. among
students. March 2, Syracuse
Village received its first new
police cruiser. Margaret
Follrod, backed by Preceptor
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, pushed for a cleanup
of Pomeroy Village. Bill Slack
became the first Meigs High
wrestler to win district honors
and proceed to state competition. On March 5, General
James Hartinger, formerly of
Middleport, was given a VIP

POLLY'S PROBLEM
' POLLY - Please tell me how to remove crayon
DEAR
marks from a chalk board. I also would like to know how to wash
and dry an electric blanket. - P.J.D.
•

I

DEAR P.J.D.- Only wash one electric blanket at a lime.
Wrap the plug with several thicknesses of cloth and tle It securely
so it does not scratch the washer. I am surprised you do not'
·have a tag that came with your blanket giving the mawfacturer's directions for washlug and, more especially, lor drying.
One manufachtrer of washer§ suggests the following general
directlous when none are available lor a particular brand: Pretreat very soiled spots with a detergent. Always use a full lob of
water and a liquid detergent suitable for wool. Immerse blanket
completely. Agitate It one minute in cool water on gentle speed.
Sonk five or ten minutes. Allow washer to complete clycle; U JRlt
in the dryer tumble ONLY unlll binding Is dry and then remove,shape to original size and finish drying over two Unes placed
rather close tOgether. When dry brushing will bring np the nap.
The entire drying process also could be done over two llnes and
then the binding touched up wllb an iron. The lollowlug letter
may be the answer to your other question. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - If you children scribbled on wallpaper with
wax crayons I have found that carefully using veryfine steel wool
will remove the markings with little damage done.- MAR.E
Polly's note -One remedy lor removing crayon marks from
painted swfaces Is to sponge them with cleaning fluid. If marks
still remain try a mixture of fuller's earth (buy at the drug store)
and water, let dry and wipe off.
DEAR POLLY -My Pet Peeve is with manufacturers who
do not securely sew elastic to underwear. It seems that nearly
every pair of underpants have· the elastic -separated from the
body some place along the line. Then I have to get busy mending
a new garment. Thankfully I have found a short ·cut for such
mending. I put the separated place over mY embroidery hoops,
the h'Oops stretch the elastic in place and I am able to sew the
body of the garment to it even though it is provoking to have to do
it. Thank you for a wonderful meeting place for those of us who
hate to do housework. - BEVERLY ANN.
DEAR POLLY - I have found dental floss very useful in the
kitchen . It is great for trussing a fowl or sewing it up after the
inside is filled with dressing. Also it is great when tying up spices
_when making preserves. - EDNA.

\

.

Mrs. Addie Meredith, 79, of
Phoenix, Ariz. died Saturday
at a hospital there. Born in
Nelsonville, she .was th e
daughter of the late William
and Sathrona Jobes, and spent
most of her lifetime in Meigs
County.
Mrs. Meredith was preceded
in death by her husband , Ray,
a son, Elroy , a brother and
two sisters. Survivors in clude
SERVICE GIVEN
A ca rol and candlelight
service was .held at the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church
on the Sunday before Christmas. The Rev. Robert Kuhn
conducted

the

service

NO JOKE
LAS VEGAS; Nev. (UP!) Thalia Dondero, the first
woman elected to the Clark
- County Commission, thought
her fellow commissioners were
joking when they said she could
he secretary and take notes of
meetings.
They weren't.
"They actually did ask me to
take notes. They are all a
bunch of chauvinists," Mrs.
Dondero told reporters Mon,
day .
Africa for a year in con- junction with his employment
with Foote Mineral. March 28,
the names of eight delegates to
Buckeye Girls State were
announced . March 29, the
Shenang Springs Nile Club was
robbed. March 30, Beth
Bastiani of Gallipolis was
named Miss Southern Ohio of
1974.

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See Us Now,

its 50th birthday. June Epple
resigned as clerk of the
Eastern Board of Education.
March 20, the Rev. Father
John Nadzam began his duties
as pastor of Sacred Heart
Church. Judy Owen of Middleport was named a district

in

298 SECOND ST
POMEROY, OHIO

.,

•

39, American Legion, observed

Legion's, American government test. March 21, James
Glaze, Middleport, and Charles
Bailey, 29, Pomeroy, were hurt
in an auto accident on
Pomeroy 's West Main St.
March 24, Ingrid Hawley
received the annual scholars hip award from the auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion. Mary J.
Roush won $500 in the
Massachusetts Stale Lottery.
March 25, Sonia Ash became
the
the county's winner
annual spelling bee. The new
drive in facility of the Pomeroy
National Bank was dedicated.
Vocational week got underway
at Meigs High &amp;hool. March
26, Bradbury &amp;hool students
left on a several day jaunt to
points of interest in Michigan .
Roy Track, Sr., died at his
Middleport residence. Plans
were reported for Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Rupe to go to South

PRICES GOOD THRU
JAN. 4, 1975

'I'!

,

hot lunch program go t underway at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
March 19, Drew Webster Post

winner

'

'

PORK
STEAK

OPEN ALL DAY
WED., JAN. 1

"

, .~

~

.

near Gallipolis. March 6, the
Donald Roach home in Hartford was destroyed by fire .
March 7, Senior Citizens swung
into the cleanup campaign to
make the river bank area
across from their center quite
attractive. March 8, Jennie
Maria Black , 40, was killed
when she ran into the path of a
truck on the Houle 7 bypass
near Hobson. March 8, the Rev.
Father Bernard Krajcovic was
assigned a new post and the
DAR honored Patricia Woods,
Chryll Kimes and Joyce Davis,
Good Citizenship Contest
winners. March 9, m-rnbers of
the Meigs Humarye Society
prepared for the opening of a
thrift shop to raise s helter
funds.
March II, the l?omeroy
Chamber
of
Comme rce
selected " Fun Time in '74 " as
the Big Bend Hegatta theme:
Middleport Council tabled a 30
percent natural gas rate increase. March 12, the Meigs
Local &amp;hoot District's Board
announced plans to phase out
Pomeroy sl&lt;ldium. March 13,
Mike Hoffman of Middleport,
was injured in an auto accident
on ·County Road 20. Old
structures at the corner of
Third and Mill .Sts. in Middleport were bein g razed.
March 14, the final meeting of
the Meigs County Tuherculosis
and Health Assn., one of the
county's oldest groups, was
held with Mrs . Thelma Dill
presiding. March 15, a vacant
home at·the corner of Race and
North Fo!lfth in Middleport
was heavily damaged by fire
and was later razed. March 16,
the
Southeastern
Ohio
Hereford Assn. held its annual
show and sale at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds and five
persons were injured in an auto
accident near the Middleport

"' "

three sons, William of Beverly,
Sherwood of Pomeroy, R. D.,
and Robert of Phoenix, and a
daughter, Marion Murphy of
Sandusky. She is also survived
by 10 grandchildren, three
great-grandchildren , and three
sisters, Clara Radford of
Syracuse , Ada ·Vickers of
Coolville, and Melissa Sharer
of Fort Worth, Texas.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Friday in Phoenix
with burial there . Going from
here for the services will be
Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood
Meredith, Mr : and Mrs.
William Meredith, Roger and
Chuck, and Mrs . Marian
Murphy.

with .

Mrs. Kuhn at the organ for
carol singing. All members of
the congregation participated
in the candlelighting service
while singing "Silent Night. "
San~&lt;! visited with treats at the '
conclusion of the program .

:

•

'

1

I

•

for

�•
9- The DaUy Sent~l-~ Mlddleport.P&lt;meroy, 0., Tuesday ,1Jec.,31, 11'74
8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 1'uesday, Dec . 31, 1974

•

Addie Meredith died in Phoenix

Local news hig4lights of 1974
JANUARY

-

Heside nl s

welcomed in the New Year at

lpm pC"ra r urr s
around zt•nJ .

the annual ball of the Pomeroy
Fire Department and th e
coldest , weather hit with

g oing

down

1'011!11)' IU.ill'ked

ils

fatalily

firs !

uf I Ill' year on.Jan. 2 when .Johri

'Allen L&lt;x:ke, :H. died when it
presi dent of the Meigs Coun ty la nk on a wafer tow er
Boal'd o£ Comm is:; ione rs. The e o ll:~p st•d near Danville . The
Fe~nners Bank and Savings Co.
building's second floor became
well occupied with offices. Don
Pcarch of Hysell St., Middl epor t, bega n serving on the
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs. Gas locally jumped to
50 ce nts a gallon as Meigs
joined th e nation with a
g&lt;:Jsoline s hortage problem . On
Jan . 4 Jim Rickn\an , MidFrom 9:30P.M. TIL 1:30 A.M.
dleport businessman, was
MUSIC BY
named pres id ~nt of the Middl e por I Chamber of Commcrce . Marie Krawsczyn or
Admission: $6.00 Per Couple
Middleport was injurec when
Have A Happy And Siife Neu· } eilr
.she was s truck by an auto.
Ml•igs we nt on Daylight
From All The Officers and Firefighters of the
Savings Time again as a part or
Pomeroy
Volunteer
Fire
Dept .
and
the nationwide ef£or f to save
Emergency Squad.
e ner gy.
Jan . 6, Dwight Goins, Meigs
High band instructor, won the
dis trict 93 spea kup comretition
of the Jaycees . Jan . 7, Harry
Davis and Phil Globokar began
THANKSFORYOURPATRONAG E
terms of office as new
THROUGHOUT THE YEAR . ..
Pomeroy coun cil memhers and
Paul Huston , Syracuse, was
ins talled as new president of
If you a planning a New Year's
the local bricklayers, masons
and plasterers union . Jim Mees
party give us a call and lei us
resigned fr om
Pomeroy
make you a special arrangement
Council:
Eastern
Local
&amp;hoot
to set th e scene for ringing out
District went against Daylight
the old and in the new year'
Savings Time and started
classes an hour later. On
January 9, the Pomeroy Middleport
Lions
Club
celebrated its 25th annive'rsary. Harold Roush was
namedpresident of the Meigs
County Board of Education .
Tom Wolfe was named
president of the Racine HomeNationa l Bank . Horner-Hill
Carry Out on the Harrisonville
Roadwashitbya breaking and .
ente rin g. On Jan . 11 Meigs
Local &amp;hools were closed due
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Millard Van Meter
to flooding of roads by heavy
992-2039
Pomeroy
rains.
Bernard Gilkey was named
president of the Meigs County
Association of Township Clerks
and Trustees. On Jan. 13 a
se ries of events began honoring
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee
• •
on Mr . Blakeslee's retirement
as Meigs County Agricultural
Agent after 35 years of service.
The Meigs Local School
Dis trict approved a $2,326,283
budget. A robbery at the A. &amp;
P. was foiled by a conductor on
the C. and 0. Railroad. Peg
O'Brien and Jan Holter went to
Mt. Vernon to compete in
Ohio 's Junior Miss Pageant.
On Jan . 21 the Middleport Fire
most
Department launched
successful public fund drive for
a new emergency vehicle. The
Senior Citizens Center with the
eelebrat e
Meigs Health Department
cooperating
hegan giving fiu
New Year
shots to sen ior citizens at cost.
in a grand
Point-View TV Cable CD. extended service to Minersville
tradition!
and Syracuse. New Haven was
We hope it
selected as the site of a new
will bri11g much joy and
power plant with activities at
the site being curtailed much
peace to you and yours.
later in the year. Racine's
Harold Carnahan was honored
for being the oldest member in
length of service of a district
Sl'rvice b&lt;&gt;ard in the sl&lt;lte by
the Ohio Federation of Soil and
Water Service. John Rice;
Hubert Clark

WELCOME IN THE NEW YEAR

WITH THE POMEROY VOLUNTEER FIRE
DEPARTMENT AND EMERGENCY SQUAD·
DANCING AT THE POMEROY
JUNIOR HIGH AUDITORIUM
"THE AMBASSADORS"

Pomeroy Flower Shop

CUUe~CO!He

NEW
YEAR

a

Starts Thursday, Jan. 2 at 9:00 a.m.

Big Name Brands at BIG SavingS/' -

riJfl11er

Meig s Counlian or

Musking,um

nam&lt;'d new
fur Meigs.
Comnnmity
down .as a

County,.

wa s

agrieullura) agent
The Middleport
Park was turned
location for the

plC!nned sc hool for the mentally
retarded . Pat Holter wa s

named ne\\-' president ur t he
Pomeroy · Middleport Library
Board : Jennifer Shee ts was
named as a new member . The
hrst anniversary of the Senior
Ci tizens RSVP program was
observed with a luncheon at the
Meigs Inn.
FEBRUARY --On Feb . llhe
Rev . Robert Bwngarner was
named new president o( 'the
Middleport - Pomeroy Lions
Club. Feb. 2, Eastern Local
District teachers were given
sa lary increases and-insurance
benerits. Feb. 4, Lou Osborne
and John Manley were appointed to rill vacancies on
Pomeroy Village Council. Feb.
5, Orion W. Roush , Salem
Center, was named a new
director of the Pomeroy
National Bank. Wayne Edwin
Chappelear, Pomeroy Route 4,
father of three, was killed in a
tractor accident. Feb. 7, E . F .
Hobins on announced hi s
retirement as a Pomeroy
businessman or many years .
Feb. 9, gasoline supplies at
Meigs County service sl&lt;llions
dwindled with purchases
limited and some stations
being completely out of
gasoline. Feb. 10, some 400
residents paid high tributes to
C. E. Blakeslee at Meigs High
School on his retirement. The
Meigs Local School Board
heard plans for a teacher corps
reading
program
which
materialized later in the year .
Feb. 13 , Bowers Drive-In on
East Main St. was heavily
damaged by fire. Bobby Ord
was rehired as Southern Local
School District Superin·tendenl: Middleport firemen
ordered their new emergency
vehicle with funds mostly
'c ontributed by the public. Ezra
Kiser was the first Meigs High
School senior to hecome a
Na tiona I Merit Scholarship
finalist. Jenny Chapman was
crowned swee theart queen a t
Meigs High &amp;hool. Pomeroy
Village was assured a new
water system. Feb. 18, illness
hit the Meigs Local School
District schools, later closed by
the epidemic . The first meeting
was held to organize Meigs
County's bicentennial observance. Rocky Hupp, Southern
High~chool, ranked high in the
state in FFA work . George
Hall, local entertainer, was
shot at a Route 7 night .;lub.
Terry Ohlinger. Philo, was
named superintendent of the
Franklin Local &amp;hool District.
Middleport protested the C.&amp;O.
Hailroad pullout . Meigs Local
&amp;hoots closed on Feb. 25 due to
illness, Eastern joined later
with Southern escaping the
wave of illness. Carson Crow
presented a recodification of
Pomeroy ordinance to village
officials culminating three
years of work.
MARCH - All schools of the
Meigs Local &amp;hool District as
well as buses were disinfected
as school officials battled a
wave of illness. among
students. March 2, Syracuse
Village received its first new
police cruiser. Margaret
Follrod, backed by Preceptor
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, pushed for a cleanup
of Pomeroy Village. Bill Slack
became the first Meigs High
wrestler to win district honors
and proceed to state competition. On March 5, General
James Hartinger, formerly of
Middleport, was given a VIP

POLLY'S PROBLEM
' POLLY - Please tell me how to remove crayon
DEAR
marks from a chalk board. I also would like to know how to wash
and dry an electric blanket. - P.J.D.
•

I

DEAR P.J.D.- Only wash one electric blanket at a lime.
Wrap the plug with several thicknesses of cloth and tle It securely
so it does not scratch the washer. I am surprised you do not'
·have a tag that came with your blanket giving the mawfacturer's directions for washlug and, more especially, lor drying.
One manufachtrer of washer§ suggests the following general
directlous when none are available lor a particular brand: Pretreat very soiled spots with a detergent. Always use a full lob of
water and a liquid detergent suitable for wool. Immerse blanket
completely. Agitate It one minute in cool water on gentle speed.
Sonk five or ten minutes. Allow washer to complete clycle; U JRlt
in the dryer tumble ONLY unlll binding Is dry and then remove,shape to original size and finish drying over two Unes placed
rather close tOgether. When dry brushing will bring np the nap.
The entire drying process also could be done over two llnes and
then the binding touched up wllb an iron. The lollowlug letter
may be the answer to your other question. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - If you children scribbled on wallpaper with
wax crayons I have found that carefully using veryfine steel wool
will remove the markings with little damage done.- MAR.E
Polly's note -One remedy lor removing crayon marks from
painted swfaces Is to sponge them with cleaning fluid. If marks
still remain try a mixture of fuller's earth (buy at the drug store)
and water, let dry and wipe off.
DEAR POLLY -My Pet Peeve is with manufacturers who
do not securely sew elastic to underwear. It seems that nearly
every pair of underpants have· the elastic -separated from the
body some place along the line. Then I have to get busy mending
a new garment. Thankfully I have found a short ·cut for such
mending. I put the separated place over mY embroidery hoops,
the h'Oops stretch the elastic in place and I am able to sew the
body of the garment to it even though it is provoking to have to do
it. Thank you for a wonderful meeting place for those of us who
hate to do housework. - BEVERLY ANN.
DEAR POLLY - I have found dental floss very useful in the
kitchen . It is great for trussing a fowl or sewing it up after the
inside is filled with dressing. Also it is great when tying up spices
_when making preserves. - EDNA.

\

.

Mrs. Addie Meredith, 79, of
Phoenix, Ariz. died Saturday
at a hospital there. Born in
Nelsonville, she .was th e
daughter of the late William
and Sathrona Jobes, and spent
most of her lifetime in Meigs
County.
Mrs. Meredith was preceded
in death by her husband , Ray,
a son, Elroy , a brother and
two sisters. Survivors in clude
SERVICE GIVEN
A ca rol and candlelight
service was .held at the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church
on the Sunday before Christmas. The Rev. Robert Kuhn
conducted

the

service

NO JOKE
LAS VEGAS; Nev. (UP!) Thalia Dondero, the first
woman elected to the Clark
- County Commission, thought
her fellow commissioners were
joking when they said she could
he secretary and take notes of
meetings.
They weren't.
"They actually did ask me to
take notes. They are all a
bunch of chauvinists," Mrs.
Dondero told reporters Mon,
day .
Africa for a year in con- junction with his employment
with Foote Mineral. March 28,
the names of eight delegates to
Buckeye Girls State were
announced . March 29, the
Shenang Springs Nile Club was
robbed. March 30, Beth
Bastiani of Gallipolis was
named Miss Southern Ohio of
1974.

UPDATEVOUR

~;~g;J

the

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adequate protection? Are
you paying -too much? Are
you over-insured? Are there
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we'll answer these questions
for you .

Children's

LADIES'
SHOES

ONLY

MAINST.

SHOES
ONLY

MARQUERITE'S SHOES
...
BettyOhlinger

POMEROY,O.

STORE HOURS

OPEN 8 AM • 10 PM MON.-SAT.
lO A.M. · 10 P.M. SUNDAYS

•

•
....
~

'

H

107 Sycamore

GROUND CHUCK..~~99e
USDA Choice

',,,.

.

MEDIUM YELLOW

~

I

I 11 '

oas

I

ONIONS

Hert is the rout with practically no
wast:e, easy carving. and wonderful
flavor.

"'
"'
I

:. "

c
lb.

lb.

Pomeroy

.o. s. cHoicE

-

ENGLISH

Ls
ROAST.~ ••••••••• ~

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•

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•••
••

..••
•••
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••
•

••

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••
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•

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•••
"

-•
R

good year; we look forward to one

••
••

even better, shared with our friends.

••

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

With The Purchase of

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••

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Ph. 992-5759
271 N. 2nd Ave.

8 COUNT

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..

SHOWBOAT
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Pork and Beans ................

••
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PEACHES .......... .

••

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This is the best basis
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to all our friends: may your New
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May· peace, prosperity, joy -be yours!

-

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For A Free

American

or

'

See Us Now,

its 50th birthday. June Epple
resigned as clerk of the
Eastern Board of Education.
March 20, the Rev. Father
John Nadzam began his duties
as pastor of Sacred Heart
Church. Judy Owen of Middleport was named a district

in

298 SECOND ST
POMEROY, OHIO

.,

•

39, American Legion, observed

Legion's, American government test. March 21, James
Glaze, Middleport, and Charles
Bailey, 29, Pomeroy, were hurt
in an auto accident on
Pomeroy 's West Main St.
March 24, Ingrid Hawley
received the annual scholars hip award from the auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion. Mary J.
Roush won $500 in the
Massachusetts Stale Lottery.
March 25, Sonia Ash became
the
the county's winner
annual spelling bee. The new
drive in facility of the Pomeroy
National Bank was dedicated.
Vocational week got underway
at Meigs High &amp;hool. March
26, Bradbury &amp;hool students
left on a several day jaunt to
points of interest in Michigan .
Roy Track, Sr., died at his
Middleport residence. Plans
were reported for Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Rupe to go to South

PRICES GOOD THRU
JAN. 4, 1975

'I'!

,

hot lunch program go t underway at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
March 19, Drew Webster Post

winner

'

'

PORK
STEAK

OPEN ALL DAY
WED., JAN. 1

"

, .~

~

.

near Gallipolis. March 6, the
Donald Roach home in Hartford was destroyed by fire .
March 7, Senior Citizens swung
into the cleanup campaign to
make the river bank area
across from their center quite
attractive. March 8, Jennie
Maria Black , 40, was killed
when she ran into the path of a
truck on the Houle 7 bypass
near Hobson. March 8, the Rev.
Father Bernard Krajcovic was
assigned a new post and the
DAR honored Patricia Woods,
Chryll Kimes and Joyce Davis,
Good Citizenship Contest
winners. March 9, m-rnbers of
the Meigs Humarye Society
prepared for the opening of a
thrift shop to raise s helter
funds.
March II, the l?omeroy
Chamber
of
Comme rce
selected " Fun Time in '74 " as
the Big Bend Hegatta theme:
Middleport Council tabled a 30
percent natural gas rate increase. March 12, the Meigs
Local &amp;hoot District's Board
announced plans to phase out
Pomeroy sl&lt;ldium. March 13,
Mike Hoffman of Middleport,
was injured in an auto accident
on ·County Road 20. Old
structures at the corner of
Third and Mill .Sts. in Middleport were bein g razed.
March 14, the final meeting of
the Meigs County Tuherculosis
and Health Assn., one of the
county's oldest groups, was
held with Mrs . Thelma Dill
presiding. March 15, a vacant
home at·the corner of Race and
North Fo!lfth in Middleport
was heavily damaged by fire
and was later razed. March 16,
the
Southeastern
Ohio
Hereford Assn. held its annual
show and sale at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds and five
persons were injured in an auto
accident near the Middleport

"' "

three sons, William of Beverly,
Sherwood of Pomeroy, R. D.,
and Robert of Phoenix, and a
daughter, Marion Murphy of
Sandusky. She is also survived
by 10 grandchildren, three
great-grandchildren , and three
sisters, Clara Radford of
Syracuse , Ada ·Vickers of
Coolville, and Melissa Sharer
of Fort Worth, Texas.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Friday in Phoenix
with burial there . Going from
here for the services will be
Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood
Meredith, Mr : and Mrs.
William Meredith, Roger and
Chuck, and Mrs . Marian
Murphy.

with .

Mrs. Kuhn at the organ for
carol singing. All members of
the congregation participated
in the candlelighting service
while singing "Silent Night. "
San~&lt;! visited with treats at the '
conclusion of the program .

:

•

'

1

I

•

for

�'.

10 - The Da ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom•roy, 0 ., Tuesday ,

.'

Dec.31 , 1974

11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pqmer oy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 31, 1974

•

RULES:

Who Will It Be In 1975?

Winning ~aby must be born to p·a rents, who are
Iega I residents of Meigs County_

WHO WILL IT BE IN 1975

..

All such babies are eligible.

Listed on this page and facing page are gifts offered by local merchants that go to the first baby
born of Meigs County parents. Parents of children born after Midnight, Dec. 31, 1974 are asked to

Exact time of birth must be specified in written
statement by attending physician.

send their name, address and· doctor's report to The Dai~ Sentinel not later than Jan. 10, 1975.

Application must be filed in this office by Jan. 10,
1975. In case of a tie, award will be distributed at
discretion of contest committee.
Prizes must be claimed by Jan . 31, 1975 .

...•
,..

~ itt

'

:~ WAID

To The
First Baby Of
1975
2 Cases
of
Nut
Baby Food

CROSS SONS

FIRST BABY

Of 1975's
FIRST BABY

GIFT

BATTERY OPERATED
LOUICLOCK
AND

CERTIFICATE

heritage.house
of shoes
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

YOUR

STORE

Peesent
. The f"nt
"Miss" or "Mr."
I

Royal Crown Bottling Co.

OUR GIFT
TO THE FIRST
BABY OF
1975

I

MI·LK

PACKAGE OF
DIAPERS

STIFFLER$

STORES INC.

·WESTERN AUTO

FOR THE 1975
NEW YEAR
SURPRISE

Parents

WIU. RECEIVE

OUR GIFT:
;·
.
· .',
'

I

,
.~

·
'

LARGE
NON
AllERGIC
TOY
TO THE
FIRST BABY
OF THE
'75 NEW YEAR

FROM •••

: H&amp;R FIRESTONE

SATIN QUILTED
BLANKET

From .••

OUR GIFT TO ·
THE FIRST
ARRIVAL OF
1975

FEEDER SET

BABY BUNTING

1975's FIRST

A Glass Flower
. Vase
••

Rutland Furniture
ARNOLD GRATE

RUTLAND, OHIO

SAVINGS ACCOUNT
A GIFT OF THE

.RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK

First Baby of 1975

OHIO

FOR MEIGS
FIRST .
LimE
.
•

3 Boxes of
New Born
PAMPERS

$5.00 PURr.HASE OF

I
I

FOR FABRIC
FROM

•

.....

SOMEIHING NICE FROM

The L &amp; Z Dress Shop
POMEROY

::- I
••
~

; 1975's First

M

~

:,

,,•

••

...
...•"'
~

.

....
'"
~

..::..
.

RACINE, 0.
•' . 'I I

'

'W'!'

• •

•

'

s ,.

FOR THE
FIRST
1975'
BABY

SWISHER ·-LO
. Pharmacy
Kenneth MC!Cuilough, R. Ph.

Char..l RIHie, R. Ph.

~r-....-

.

$10.00

ElO GALLONS OF
~

:.

GASOLINE

~

~

..
~

'

WELKER'S

,
\

.I .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.-.
..
3
-.~
....
::1

g

....

....

....~"
..,.
=
:..
~

~

.~
•..
"

FOR MEIGS COUNTY'S
FIRST
ARRIVAL OF
1975.

lHE FIRST
BABY Of .lHE
NEW YEAR
WILL RECEIVE

'• /

DUDLEY'S
.59 N. Second

992-5560

Our Gift To The
1975
New Year's
·
,
Baby

Middleport

OUR GIFT
WILL BE

A

.FREE

ANY Tt11NG
ORDERED FROM THE
SEARS CATALOG ·
Authorized Catalog Merchant
LOU &amp; THE I MA OSBORNE
POMEROY, OHIO

A PAIR OF

.

Cuddle
Washable
BEAR

GIFT CERTIFICATE
TOWARD PURatASE
OF BABY CLOTHES

•

FROM

JtUagr

·i'~ ~ARTtEY'S SHOES
:

4.85

5

. slo.oo

i POLL PARROT BABY SHOES
-~-

OUR GIFT TO
THE
1975 BABY
WILL BE

OUR Gltl

J~armatg

MOORE'S

"THE &lt;.~'EATOR OF ·
REASONABLE DRUG !;&gt;RICES"

POMEROY. OHIO.

211 N. 2nd Ave.

'

I

.' .
, ' .
1-~
~~~-~~~--~~~~---~~~~L-~-~·~· ----------~~ ~~----------~~--------I

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK

OFF ON

Citizens National Bank

. MRS . .MILLAR'.IJ VAN METER
J»OMEROY, OHIO

.~

SAVINGS ACCOUNT

CUT
FLOWER
ARRANGEMENT

5.00

FROM THE

~ 279

$10.00

FOR THE ARST
BABY

1

SAVINGS
.....--.. ACCOUNT

#

A

A BEAUTIFUL GIFT

Meal To The Mother
OF '75's FIRST BABY

••'

CROW'S STEAK-HOUSE
POMEROY, 0.

•

....

\

The New Year's
First New Baby
Will Be Gifted
With A

SERVICE
~ I ·.~ ASHLAND
Pomeroy, Ohio
W. Main

c:

·Racine Food :Mkt. ·

.....

We1re Looking Ahead ·
For 1975's
First
Baby With
Our Gift

POMEROY AND RUTLAND

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

OUR GIFT TO
THE FAMILY OF

~

~

Mark V Super Mkt.

ON THE T
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

••

=
...

Pomeroy F1o\.er Shop

~

~

•

From •••

'5.00
GIFT CERTIFICATE

,HE KIDDIE SHOPPE
.

.....

••

· A BABY PLANTER

To HelpJThe First
Baby Grow
Big and
Strong
Our Gift
ACASE OF
GERBER
FOODS FOR BABY

..
=

•

..•

"MR." or "Miss"

....=.
!

....
-

:1

r.
\

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

:l

CERTIFICATE

POMEROY, 0.

.

..•

A$10.00

RACINE

THE FABRIC -SHO.P

FREE

I

A SLIP

118 E. MAIN

~

..••'"
..-."'
,"'

FIRST BABY .

992-2181 .
Pomeroy, 0.

$3.00 GIFT

PRESENT THIS CJUPON FOR A I

.I
I_________________________
BABY NEEDS

Will Receive
Our Gift Of A
.,..

.•...

. 1975

540 E. Main

WILL RECEIVE · ·

..•

FOR THE FUTIJRE

A 3-PIECE

A

THE MOTHER
OF
1975's
FIRST BABY

I

I

;;

:

First Arrival

. POMEROY, OHIO

OUR GIFT TO
MEIGS COUNTY'S
1975 ARRIVAL

•

Of 1975's

THE MEIGS INN

RACINE, OHIO

MIDDLE

OUR GIFT FOR

II

1975's First
..t: \ ' Baby-

5..

Free Meal For The
Lucky Couple At. • •

Racine Dept. Store ·

MIDDLEPORT, 0 . .

POMEROY, 0.

·------------------------,
I TO WHOM IT MA', CONCERN:
1

SUPER VALU .

Our Gift To The

'•

STUFFED
TOY

FIRST FAMILY

OUR GIFT:
3 Boxes of
New Born
Pampers

Middleport, Ohio

'

Meigs County's
t First Baby
i
Of 1975
f
; will receive a

GIFT FOR THE

POWELL'S

'

·i

""UtiCONOM' OR I(illtoUU

AT

Of 1975 With A ...
CASE OF
KROGER ·

MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY

FOR
THE 1975 .
FIRST
ARRIVAL
FROM THE FOLKS

We Wll

2 FREE CASES OF
ROYAL CRaNN

SUPER MARKET

sur GIFT CERTIFICATE
' PomeroJ,O.

$5.00

RACIN E, OHIO

I

Our Gift to The Family

OUR GIFT TO THE

Our Gift
is to the
mother
of the·
first baby

Middleport, Ohio

'

POMEROY, 0.

STAINLESS STEEL
3 PIECE CHILD'S SET
BY ONEIDA

IS PRESENTED
TO THE FIRST
ARRIVAL

OF
.1975 BY

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St;

Ohio

�'.

10 - The Da ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom•roy, 0 ., Tuesday ,

.'

Dec.31 , 1974

11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pqmer oy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 31, 1974

•

RULES:

Who Will It Be In 1975?

Winning ~aby must be born to p·a rents, who are
Iega I residents of Meigs County_

WHO WILL IT BE IN 1975

..

All such babies are eligible.

Listed on this page and facing page are gifts offered by local merchants that go to the first baby
born of Meigs County parents. Parents of children born after Midnight, Dec. 31, 1974 are asked to

Exact time of birth must be specified in written
statement by attending physician.

send their name, address and· doctor's report to The Dai~ Sentinel not later than Jan. 10, 1975.

Application must be filed in this office by Jan. 10,
1975. In case of a tie, award will be distributed at
discretion of contest committee.
Prizes must be claimed by Jan . 31, 1975 .

...•
,..

~ itt

'

:~ WAID

To The
First Baby Of
1975
2 Cases
of
Nut
Baby Food

CROSS SONS

FIRST BABY

Of 1975's
FIRST BABY

GIFT

BATTERY OPERATED
LOUICLOCK
AND

CERTIFICATE

heritage.house
of shoes
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

YOUR

STORE

Peesent
. The f"nt
"Miss" or "Mr."
I

Royal Crown Bottling Co.

OUR GIFT
TO THE FIRST
BABY OF
1975

I

MI·LK

PACKAGE OF
DIAPERS

STIFFLER$

STORES INC.

·WESTERN AUTO

FOR THE 1975
NEW YEAR
SURPRISE

Parents

WIU. RECEIVE

OUR GIFT:
;·
.
· .',
'

I

,
.~

·
'

LARGE
NON
AllERGIC
TOY
TO THE
FIRST BABY
OF THE
'75 NEW YEAR

FROM •••

: H&amp;R FIRESTONE

SATIN QUILTED
BLANKET

From .••

OUR GIFT TO ·
THE FIRST
ARRIVAL OF
1975

FEEDER SET

BABY BUNTING

1975's FIRST

A Glass Flower
. Vase
••

Rutland Furniture
ARNOLD GRATE

RUTLAND, OHIO

SAVINGS ACCOUNT
A GIFT OF THE

.RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK

First Baby of 1975

OHIO

FOR MEIGS
FIRST .
LimE
.
•

3 Boxes of
New Born
PAMPERS

$5.00 PURr.HASE OF

I
I

FOR FABRIC
FROM

•

.....

SOMEIHING NICE FROM

The L &amp; Z Dress Shop
POMEROY

::- I
••
~

; 1975's First

M

~

:,

,,•

••

...
...•"'
~

.

....
'"
~

..::..
.

RACINE, 0.
•' . 'I I

'

'W'!'

• •

•

'

s ,.

FOR THE
FIRST
1975'
BABY

SWISHER ·-LO
. Pharmacy
Kenneth MC!Cuilough, R. Ph.

Char..l RIHie, R. Ph.

~r-....-

.

$10.00

ElO GALLONS OF
~

:.

GASOLINE

~

~

..
~

'

WELKER'S

,
\

.I .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.-.
..
3
-.~
....
::1

g

....

....

....~"
..,.
=
:..
~

~

.~
•..
"

FOR MEIGS COUNTY'S
FIRST
ARRIVAL OF
1975.

lHE FIRST
BABY Of .lHE
NEW YEAR
WILL RECEIVE

'• /

DUDLEY'S
.59 N. Second

992-5560

Our Gift To The
1975
New Year's
·
,
Baby

Middleport

OUR GIFT
WILL BE

A

.FREE

ANY Tt11NG
ORDERED FROM THE
SEARS CATALOG ·
Authorized Catalog Merchant
LOU &amp; THE I MA OSBORNE
POMEROY, OHIO

A PAIR OF

.

Cuddle
Washable
BEAR

GIFT CERTIFICATE
TOWARD PURatASE
OF BABY CLOTHES

•

FROM

JtUagr

·i'~ ~ARTtEY'S SHOES
:

4.85

5

. slo.oo

i POLL PARROT BABY SHOES
-~-

OUR GIFT TO
THE
1975 BABY
WILL BE

OUR Gltl

J~armatg

MOORE'S

"THE &lt;.~'EATOR OF ·
REASONABLE DRUG !;&gt;RICES"

POMEROY. OHIO.

211 N. 2nd Ave.

'

I

.' .
, ' .
1-~
~~~-~~~--~~~~---~~~~L-~-~·~· ----------~~ ~~----------~~--------I

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK

OFF ON

Citizens National Bank

. MRS . .MILLAR'.IJ VAN METER
J»OMEROY, OHIO

.~

SAVINGS ACCOUNT

CUT
FLOWER
ARRANGEMENT

5.00

FROM THE

~ 279

$10.00

FOR THE ARST
BABY

1

SAVINGS
.....--.. ACCOUNT

#

A

A BEAUTIFUL GIFT

Meal To The Mother
OF '75's FIRST BABY

••'

CROW'S STEAK-HOUSE
POMEROY, 0.

•

....

\

The New Year's
First New Baby
Will Be Gifted
With A

SERVICE
~ I ·.~ ASHLAND
Pomeroy, Ohio
W. Main

c:

·Racine Food :Mkt. ·

.....

We1re Looking Ahead ·
For 1975's
First
Baby With
Our Gift

POMEROY AND RUTLAND

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

OUR GIFT TO
THE FAMILY OF

~

~

Mark V Super Mkt.

ON THE T
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

••

=
...

Pomeroy F1o\.er Shop

~

~

•

From •••

'5.00
GIFT CERTIFICATE

,HE KIDDIE SHOPPE
.

.....

••

· A BABY PLANTER

To HelpJThe First
Baby Grow
Big and
Strong
Our Gift
ACASE OF
GERBER
FOODS FOR BABY

..
=

•

..•

"MR." or "Miss"

....=.
!

....
-

:1

r.
\

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

:l

CERTIFICATE

POMEROY, 0.

.

..•

A$10.00

RACINE

THE FABRIC -SHO.P

FREE

I

A SLIP

118 E. MAIN

~

..••'"
..-."'
,"'

FIRST BABY .

992-2181 .
Pomeroy, 0.

$3.00 GIFT

PRESENT THIS CJUPON FOR A I

.I
I_________________________
BABY NEEDS

Will Receive
Our Gift Of A
.,..

.•...

. 1975

540 E. Main

WILL RECEIVE · ·

..•

FOR THE FUTIJRE

A 3-PIECE

A

THE MOTHER
OF
1975's
FIRST BABY

I

I

;;

:

First Arrival

. POMEROY, OHIO

OUR GIFT TO
MEIGS COUNTY'S
1975 ARRIVAL

•

Of 1975's

THE MEIGS INN

RACINE, OHIO

MIDDLE

OUR GIFT FOR

II

1975's First
..t: \ ' Baby-

5..

Free Meal For The
Lucky Couple At. • •

Racine Dept. Store ·

MIDDLEPORT, 0 . .

POMEROY, 0.

·------------------------,
I TO WHOM IT MA', CONCERN:
1

SUPER VALU .

Our Gift To The

'•

STUFFED
TOY

FIRST FAMILY

OUR GIFT:
3 Boxes of
New Born
Pampers

Middleport, Ohio

'

Meigs County's
t First Baby
i
Of 1975
f
; will receive a

GIFT FOR THE

POWELL'S

'

·i

""UtiCONOM' OR I(illtoUU

AT

Of 1975 With A ...
CASE OF
KROGER ·

MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY

FOR
THE 1975 .
FIRST
ARRIVAL
FROM THE FOLKS

We Wll

2 FREE CASES OF
ROYAL CRaNN

SUPER MARKET

sur GIFT CERTIFICATE
' PomeroJ,O.

$5.00

RACIN E, OHIO

I

Our Gift to The Family

OUR GIFT TO THE

Our Gift
is to the
mother
of the·
first baby

Middleport, Ohio

'

POMEROY, 0.

STAINLESS STEEL
3 PIECE CHILD'S SET
BY ONEIDA

IS PRESENTED
TO THE FIRST
ARRIVAL

OF
.1975 BY

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St;

Ohio

�.'

l·

. '

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec . 31, 1974

•

Underdog Gators
primed for Sugar Bowl
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) The holiday atmosphere of the
French Quarter has done
nothing w help both teams
prepare but like it or not,
seventh.,.anked Nebraska and
No. t{ Florida tangle tonight
before a national televiSion
audience in the 41st annual
Sugar Bowl.
"Frankly, the past two or ·
three days haven't been fabulous," Nebraska Coach Tom
Osborne said Monday. "In the
past four or five bowl games
we 've been right on the day of

the game, but there's no

coach.
"You hear so much about
Nebraska and how we're 12point underdogs, but I don't
think Nebraska is a super

won

w

Mit c h e ll' s Trro
H F rank 's G1rls

12 5
7A

L.

11
62

S imon' s P1ck a Pa1 r
66 66
Shakl ee Gir l s
60 76
Ward·s Ro ll elles
42 94
Meigs Sa te t y ett es
39 97
H rgh team ser1es - Mil
Chell's. T rio 1568 . S1mon 's Pick
a Pa rr 1376, H Frank 's
Gi rt s 1359
Hig h team game M1l
Che ll' s Trio 535, 525 and 50 8
H 19h ind ividual serres Wanda Teaford 593 . Shirley
M i tc hell 575 . Opal Hupp 467
H 1g h rnd ivrdual game Wanda Teaford 732 : Sh irley
M itc hell 705 and 189.

assurance we 'll do it here."
Osborne"s lh3 Cornhuskers
were favored over the Ga l&lt;&gt;rs
but F1orida Coach Doug Dickey
predicted · his team might be
primed for an upset.
"I think the whole thing will
boil down to turnovers and
motivation - which team wants
Thursday Sfrrkcrs
wwin and which team makes
Dec. 26, 1974
the fewest mistakes," Dickey
W. l.
Mitche ll 's Tr io
lo 2
said . "I think the kids are Shaklee Gir ts
0 2
saying, 'It's time to play the Sr mon' s Pr ck a Par r
'
4
Mergs Safefyettes
4 4
game, we've done all we can WArd 's Rol lettes
2 6
and let's get out there .' I thmk H Fra nk 's Gir ls
2 6
High team ser res
Mif
they're right, it's time to play " Che
l l ' s Tri o 1363 , Ward's
135 1.
Uke Nebraska, the Gai&lt;&gt;rs Rolle t tes
Meigs
Sale tye ttes 1325
are lh3 on the season and
High team game M rt
coming off a loss in their Last che ll' s Trio 49 7, Sha k.lee Gir l s
War d 's Rol!e ftes 478 .
Sugar Bowl appearance. Flori- 483H;igh
individua l game da dropped a 20-18 decision w Wanda Teaford 203. Mar len e
Wi l son [SUb/ , and Donna
Missouri in 1966, and a year M
cF arland
170;
Lorene
Later, Nebraska was trounced Spradling 169
High individual se r ies 34-7 by Ken Stabler and the Marlene
Wilson (sub) 499 ·
Shirl ey Mitchell 486. Wand~
Alabama Crimson Tide.
''The question of the whole Teaford 484 .
game is whether we have a
Small Family
Uttle more speed," Dickey
Capt Wilson Kettle 1born
said . " We have w be faster. If 1860 I of Grand Bay. Port Aux
we're not quicker or a little Basques, Newfoundland, died
faster somewhere, then it's a on Jan . 25, 1963 . aged 102, leav·
case of a good big man against ing
II
children.
65
a good little man. "
grandchildren . 201 great·
Florida linebacker Glenn grandchildren, and 305 great·
Cameron agreed with his great-grandchildren, a .total off

2 SIGNS

champion.

1917 CHEVROLET

C 20 J/4 ton , 8' Fle ets ide, V -8 engine, 4-speed tran smis sion ,
heavy duty 15" tire S", solid cab , radio .

boys until th e Restoration.

1973 CHEVROLET

8' Fleetside p ickup, 350 V -B automatic, power stee ring,

form in public

was

radio, 15,500 miles. local 1 owner , t rres show little wear,
grey fin1sh, spotless inter ior.

Margaret

FACTS

WE WOU L D lr ke to thank. all ttle
people who have he lped in so
many ways dur rng our time of
trou bl e. Today you hear of all
the apathy and cruelness. but
you can ' t rmagine how truly
good and krnd people really
are We would lrke to name
everyon e who has help ed, but
rt would be imposs i b le . They
know . and th ey should have a
very good fee lrng A tot of
these peopl e we d idn 'I even
know . but they h elped and
we'll alway s r emember how
kind everyone was . Signed.
Mr . and Mrs Monty Proffi t t
and ch ildren .
12 29 4t c

••

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

Taxation was one of the ma-

jor

causes

Notice

of the 13 American

AUCJIO N .
Thursday
and
'Saturday night. 7 p . m at
Mason Auction, Horton St. rn
Mason , w. Va . Consignments
welcome . Phone (304) 773 5.:171
10-3 tf c

Colonies rebellion against the
British Emptre . " TaxatiOn
wtthout ripresentation is tyranny" became a rallymg cry
throughout the Colonies. The
World Almanac recalls that this -------- - - -- - - - quote is attributed to James " OIL OF Mink Cosmetics ."
Sound drllerent? We have a
Otis in his speech . "Argument
com p lete l rne that will satisfy
even you . Call us , we have
on the Illegality of the Writs of
given

Co urt
of
in February.

Mass achu setts

to

t 761.

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer

COLUMBUS .(UP!) - From
the time Woody Hayes suffered
his heart attack June 6 until
Archie Griffin was named the
40th Heisman Trophy winner,
Ohio State football dominated
the Buckeye State's sports
pages i!!, 1974 and it's not over
yet.
The many chapters of the
Ohio State football story overshadowed such others .as the
Cincinnati Reds' losing fight w
overtake the Los Angeles
Dodgers in the National League's Western Division and the
Cleveland Indians' naming of
Frank Robinson as the major
league's first black manager.
Mter eight convincing wins,
Ohio State's march towards the
national collegiate football
championship was severely
damaged by a controversial!&amp;.
13 loss w Michigan State,
complete with one of the
wildest finishes to a game ever

seen.
The loss was a bitter one for
Hayes and the Buckeyes, who
thought they had scored on the
final play of the game, only to
have officials rule otherwise. It
was more than 30 minutes after
the game ended before Big Ten
Commissioner Wayne Duke
announced the Spartans as the
winners.

Despite the loss, which cost
Hayes' team its No. I rating,
the chance for a perfect season
and an outright Big Ten title,
they bounced back the next
week with a win over Iowa,
setting the stage for the annual
battle with Michigan.
Kicked Four Goals
· The Wolverines brought a It).
0 record w Ohio Stadium, but
the Buckeyes' Czechoslovakian
soccer-style kicker, Tom
Klaban, kicked four field goals,
three of them over 40 yards, for
a 1Z-10 Ohio State win,
It left the Buckeyes . and
Wolverines .tied for the conference title for the third straight
year, again throwing lhe Rose
Bowl bid in I&lt;&gt; the laps of league
athletic directors.

In a secret balloting, the
athletic directors again
selected the Buckeyes as the

conference's

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

11iJ68 GMC Dump T ruck, 7500
se rie s. Trr a~~:le
Jusr been
overhauled . SJ,500
Contact
La wr ence L ee, Lark in s St .,
Ru tland, Ohro
12-27 6tc

1963 CA DIL LAC
742 6751.

----$225 .

Phone

12 2.4 6tp

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

- --------~-4--~-=-2~c
NANTED . deep well Pump
Phone 98 5 3849
12 29 -6tp
--~~----------

HOME
Impr ovement
and
Repair Servi ce - Anyth rng
fi~&lt;ed around th e home , from
root to ba sement You Will
l rke our wo rk and rates .
Phone 742 5081
12 29 ff c

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

CARPET rn stallation , S l 25 per
ya rd . Phon e R rchard west ,
8&lt;~3 2667 .
12 24 26t p

- --------

--~------

4 RM furn ished apt. close to
· Powell 's Super Valu , phone
99 2 3658 .
I I 20 -tfc

--------------COU NTRY Mobil e Home Park,

Rt . 33 , ten miles nort h of
Pomeroy
Large lo ts with
con crete patios, sidewalks ,
runn ers
and
off
street
parking Phone 992 7479 .
12 -3 t -lf c

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

4 ROOM furni shed apt . Call 992
5908 before 1 p .m
12 -31 -6tc

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

--------------JUNK auto s, complete and

delivered to our yard. We prck
up auto bod ies and buy all
l&lt;inds ot scr ap metals and
iron . R1der 's Salvage, St . Rt .
124, Rt . 4, Pomeroy , Oh io .
Ca ll 992 5468 .
10 -17 -t f c

__________ ___ _

For Sale

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

OLD furnitur e, rce box es, brass
beds, or complete households .
Write M . D . Miller, Rt 4,
Pom eroy , Ohio . Call 992 -7760 .
10 -7-74

PIANO
tun rng and repair ,
Charles Scott, 997 -3718.
,___ 12 -13 -32tp

1957 CHEVY parts . NEW
Lakewood traction ba;-s , hi ·
jacker a i r shocks, hooker
headers , with 3" collectors for
small block . Call 992 -3496
after 6 p . m . BEST OFFER.
10 -11 -lf c

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

DUE to tota l disab ility , must
sell co mplete flo ck. Nine Reg .
Suffo lk ewes ; 1 yr old, bred
and paper ed
One Suffo l k
ram . non related Call 949 3073 , any lim e.
12 27 -6tc
A K C. 4 year old Ir ish Setter ,
e~~:cellent pe t, S60. Howard
Birchfield . Phone 742 -5932
12 ·24 -tfc

SMA LL house , idea l for 2
working men, Middleport ------------area Phone 992 7791 after 5 PIG S, SIS each . Holstein
p.m .
.Hereford heifer. Sl25. One -ton
1965 Ford truck. 6-cylinder,
17 31 -3tc
t550. C. W Rice , phone 949 -------------21 15
3 and 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurnished
apartments .
------------12 -29 -6tp
Phone 992-5434 .
4-12 -tl c

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

FUEL OIL

HEATERS

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

,I

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

-·

.._ · ~- .

~

-...

READY MIX CONCREf"E~
lrve red right to your project .
Fast
and
easy .
Free
es timates . Phone 992 3284
Goegle in Ready -Mil&lt; Co .,
Middleport Ollie .
6-30 -ff c
SEWING MACH I NE , Repa irs ,
service. all makes, 992 -22fl4 .
Th e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service . We sharpen Sc issors .
3-29 -tfc
DOZER work, land clearing by
the acre, hourly or contract.
Farm ponds, roads, etc.
Large dozer and operator
with over 20 years ex .
perience . Pullins Excavating ,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Phone 992 2478 .
12-19 -tfc
WILL trim or cut trees or
shrubbery,
clean
out
basements, attrcs, etc . 949 3221 or 742-4441.
12-1526tc

-CREMEANS
-------------CONCRETE de l i vered Monday
through
Saturday
and
evenings .
Phone 446-1142.
6-13 -tfc

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

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
and backhoe work ; septic
tanks Installed; dump trucks
and lo -boys for hire ; will haul
fill dirt , top soiL limestone &amp;
gravel ; Cal l Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 992 -7089 ;
night phone 992 -3525 or 992 5232.
2-11 -tfc

--------------EXCELSIOR Salt Works , East
Main St ., Pomeroy . All kinds
of salt, water pellets , water
nuggets , block salt .!rnd own
Ohio River Salt. Phone 992
3891
' 6-5-tfc

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19)
Something of an urgent nature
will suddenly p op up in the
afternoon , causing you to think
more of bus 1n ess than
pleasure.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
Don't say yes to anythmg too
far 10 advance of the event.
Later you 'll want to change
your mind and you' ll need
room to back out.
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)
'You'll be making a reso lut io n to
get something wrapp ed up that
you've let hang.fl re t oo long
This time you' ll do It
CANCER (Ju.,. 21-.luly 22) A
matter that requires communication s hou l dn't be
treated in such a tardy fashion
Get on It now - 11 will bo
hai"der to re aCh your party
later.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22)
Someone to whom yo u 're
related has a rather Interesting
proposition tor you . You
shoutd hear it through befo re
you prejudge.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopl 22) Step
In and take over II you're involved ' in something with
another and you kn ow a better
and qu1cker way to handle
matters.
LIBRA (Sopt 23·0ct 23) You 're
going to have something you'll
'" like given to you quite unexpectedly· from one who has
been extremely considerate of
you lately.
&lt;.
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)
One you'll be ta lk lng w ith will
Implant the seed o f a g ood idea
In your mind . You'll later use rt
to your p.ersonal advantage .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·Doc
21) An ambitious interest of
yours can be advanced
through an opportunity of a
fleeting nature If you play coy.
it won 't happen .
CAPRICORN (Doc 22.Jon 19)
You wlll be recetv1ng some
good n8ws from one you 're
fond of but Is separated from
you by a considerab le distance .
AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob 19)
Someone w tll offer you
·someth tng of material value If
you want It, speak up now.
Later the same offer witt have
strings attaGhed·.
PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20)
Base to day's decisions on co nditions as they presently extst
look ing neither too far ahead
,._, , nor too hu behin d.

Help Wanted

NEW HAVEN

For Sale

The Daily Sentinel

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

-----

- -----.....,---------

w

Reasonable
rates,
free
estimates,
pi c kup
.!rnd
delivery , prompt service .
Mowrey's Upholstery, Poin t
Pleasan t, W Va . ~hone 675 ·

1

- ------------Mobile Homes For Sale

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

w

'Norwalk and Middletown Fenwick . Back in March, the high
school basketball tournament
winners were Cincinnati Elder,
Akron Manchester and Lorain
Clearview.
Ohio University won the MidAmerican Conference basketball title last spring, then lost
its veteran coach of 25 yeal's,
Jim Snyder, who retired and
was replaced by assistant Dale
Bandy.
Miami, with new coach Dick
Crum, rolled to Its · second
straight u·ndefeated season and
MAC football championship,
earning a second straight trip
It&gt; the TAngerine Bowl.

2 SMALL dog s, one dark brown
named Tammy , the other
mate light brown . Lost in area
of Kingsbury , reward offered .
Phone 992 -5629 .
12 -27 -6tp

--------- ----J-For Renl

HOUSE 4 room s and bafh . nice
yard and driveway . Also, .
furnished apt . Call 992 -2780 or
992 3432.
12 -12 -ffc

--------------4 RM apt. furnished adults, no

drunk s, Also , 3 rm . apt . John
Sheets, 3 m lies south of '
Middleport on Rt . 7.
12 29-6tp

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

FUR NI SHED mob ile hom·e· for
rent . Albert Hill , Ra r:.r ne.
Ohio . Phon e 949 ·2261.
12 -29 -6tc

12 31 -26tp

Bemlce
Oaol
ThurodaJ - Jon. 2, 1175

1.

rL -

• .•

. ~EROY,._Q,

PoMEROY- 8·10 ACREAlmost new home, 3 BR with
double closets, lovely klt-1.
chen, dining R, large living '

R, H. W. floors with lots of '
carpeting, full basement has '
large recreation
room,
s~ower, utility R . Carport,;

1

w•th storage building. YOU .·
MUST SEE THIS. S27,000.,
RI;.EDSVI LLE - Rt. 124 - 9 ·
ACRES lovely bu!lding sites, 1

You'll waste a tot of your time
and that of others' asking ad vice which you won 't follow .
"Proceed with your own ideas
as you Intended to do
LEO (July 23 -Aug 22) Be
cautious In your commercial
'dealings tOday. There could be
a sharp hook beneath ·the bait
10meone uses to promote his
wares.
·VIRGO (AUQ 23-Sopt 22) You ' it
be angered by one whose path
crosses yours, but don't g ive
vent to your ·emotions. Think
things through and you'll appreciate Its trivallty.
LtiRA (8op123-0ct 23) Today
you can depend on persons
with whom you have strong
emotlon&amp;ltles while Individuals
you know only 9oclally won't
prove so ret lable.
ICOAPIO (Ocl 2•-Nov 22)
You'd be wise not to lend your
p01sesslons to one· you haven 't
known too long.
IAGJnAAIUir (Nov 23-Doc
You won't accomplish as
'muCh as you're capable of totlay because you'll divert your
lttentlon from major goals to

mostly tillable, TP water. '
close to recreation area. I

$5,800.
RUTLAND AREA - 45 :
ACRES - Fenced, stocked ;
pond, good spring, minerals, ·
lots of building sites. $11 1 000_

POMEROY

Jud

renovated - .:1 BR, 2 baths,
recp. R., sewing R, car-

peting, paneling, tile, full
basement with recreation
R.,
workshop, porches 1
garage, patio, double lot.

$19,900.
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME, LET US SELL IT
FOR YOU.
992·2259or m·2568

'

7 ROOM
HOUSE

CALL 992-3877

' rk

Mrs.
Walletr

LlL ABNER

--::'-:==::;----

BORN LOSER

EVER. 6Eof!&lt;S5

NAMEI..Y THE CHIEF 11
ANT- BRA INED Tfial6H
H5 15- He NIAY STUM6LE'
W THE ll&lt;llTH f!-

OF THE

LING!ORING
MSMORY i f
THIS "50tt..
ENRIOIER'

&lt;'

il'~, HOW CO

~'ttT YOUR
~~~

1/CO'IJG bar
1l:&gt; Elf A 1/eR'i
IM!ORTAtJT

... "Wft::J'S

11E'

1

'WilO'S'~Y'~~~&lt;l

ALLEY OOP
WEt.!.

DON'T LOOK

60 GLUM, OSCAIZ,,

'IO'RE ALLOWED ONE CALL

I WON'T

AFORE I LOCK 'IE UP,
SNUFFV

BE HOME FER
SUPPER!!

-~

.,

MASON fURNITURE

w. ~

.·
·t

•

•
••
:

par1nerahlp you' ll enter
with one who 11 oldltr and

wHI odd now doplh ond
~MUnce to your ltfe.

• ,f

, MASON, W.

a

fn6o
-"'"oty rotlable. Thlo person

•

HERMAN GRATE

•

~ITTL£

DICK TRACY

ORPHAN ANNIE-PliiH 'EM liP .JAC:It

FINDING TfiAT.IS
ICH,q~l\.~ IN~A~~5'

OF
OF ~!QUID LEFT' .
CAN AT THE SCENE
OF DAN NY'S BODY
OETS UNDER WAY.
ND SO, ANA~YSIS

!

'

JASOLINE ALLEY

CAPTAIN EASY

want to
watch the
Suqar Bowl .

Come ori, Slim'

Be a pair lhis
CJame

A? YOU KIJOW -- I WI-5-H YOU TO
E"S('OilT MY F IR?T - &amp;OR:r.J CH ILD
THE U.S A. TO BE EDUCAT E D\

..

is a

draq•

YEAR 0' 1q75
ON TH' PLANE!

FUL. OF TOY$ FR OM
McKEe 15 Ai.L RE"Att&gt;'

TO WHEEL. IN!

.\ ..
&lt; "

.'!~

,JL ABNER
WHO'LL YOL.ll'm;:eR
TO 55RVE TH'

DON'T WOR:IlY A&amp;OIJT
H15&gt; GIFT?! THS T~Uo'JK­

11_,

BORN LOSER
IF WE HAS
OLR DRUTHERs

6l.f1""- IF 11\AH L I 'L

HEAP! HAif\J'I

IN

W~ALL

DRUTHER

IT - AH l,\ON'T

MAKE A 6000

NOT!'T

SOME~».~

f&lt;ECOI&lt;D ·'~ -

eA.QfH?

'IOJ'Re

60tl.lb ID

Kl~i..

"'CVR%LF
CHAS IN6
P/&gt;-RKED CAAs!

VINNIE .
~ MY~IlTV I\OI'IK'
"Eire l&amp;ALMOIIT

DONE I

•
NO.'V 10 PICKUI"AN
INVITATION 50 I CAN
RETURN AGAIN
IN ANOTHER
DIS6U 1:7E.

ALLEY OOP

I3UT !3EFOR:E I 00
mAC, I "AVE TO

.-IA/\K~ ON~ .OOT?E

eTOP.... HEllE!

SURl!",,.IF 1T 1$
NaT '1tXl MUCH

BO'Tl·U:ll .1

•

nurwttt
lllfllllllr - J ... 2, 1111
You
bo lol'lunole lhla year

•STEREO .

773'.1592

.ITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

20-Morch 20)
You're going to taka a position
o~ an laue that will be popular
lllh your lriend&amp; but not to
~ur bnt advantage.
..

WHITE TV

--~- ~~

Slim,

:f.Ct:l l'ob

ZENITt.l
COLOR TV

like a person,

----

room
with

ide Ia lUes.

CAPRICORN (Doc 22.Jon 18)
Conditions are ripe to brinR a
&lt;JII'Oblem Into the open. There
tt•can be dealt with Instead of
A)-etendlng •It's non-existent.
AOUARIIIS (Jon 20-Ftb 18)
~r a very curious reason, one
)IIOu know is attempt ing to
11'11-'d you from someth ing
.other wants to share with
)'OU. Their maneuvers won't

Bath and 112, excellent
neighborhood, wall-towall carpeting, storm
windows, large lot, 3
car garage, reasonable
utilities.

We talk to you

-

IS

fl)

•BLACK &amp;

.
- -- - ._ •

•competent.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)

•

.- ------------;--

-~- ~-'-- ~

All11!8 (M.-ch 21-Aprll 18)
·•..This will be a very busy day for
""YOU with dozens of small
chores lhat need attending to .
...Don't 'overtax yourself .
·'TAURUS (Ap~l 20·Moy 20)
' Something that you're Involved
In socially Is very complicated.
Be tactful or you may hurt
feeUngs and tears could result .
~ GEMINI (Moy 21.Juno 20) You
handle matters that directly
affect your family very wefl tO·
day. In some other situations,
you're not nearly so adroit and

608 EJ
11\AIN

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

ON YOUR DIAL ·,

l.tMOU~INE

UNDERGOING TUNE-UP:

"'

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

Building for sale or lease .
Phone 773 -5618 from 8 : 30 p . m.
to 10 p . m . tor appointment .
3· 10 -tfc

Easy Terms!
Free Delivery!

UNI'ORTUNATEI.Y HIS

ROYAL

Real Estate For S&lt;ile
3 BEDROOM house , 3 miles out
on
State
Route
143 ,
References
and
deposit
requrred No pets Phone 94937 16 .
!
12 -31 -4tc

------------GROCERY business for Sale.

WMP0/1390

5E..,OI~G THJoS HL!MS1.6 C'ONVE YA~C&amp;: TO PICK VOU IJP !

teresting surprises thal .w lil be
to your hking Through several
new acquaintances, valuable
and profitable knowledge wilt
be ac(luired

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

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

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

HI? HIGHNE-56, Ttte 5HE-IK OF
MlllHA&amp;A 1 APOLOG1Ziio5 FOR

Your Blrthd•r - Jan. t, 1875
Th•s year contains some in-

•

4\54

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

w

CAN ·· CiET IT?

CAPTAIN EASY

· ·~

--------------FURNITURE Upholstering,

Real Estate For Sale

Carrier Wanted

DICE.

P &gt;J-1

?I'.:

·'

!

trade.

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

FURNISHED
apartment.
util rt ies furnished , su itab le ---- ----------fo r two working men or SEPTIC t anks , excavat ing
dump t ruc k . Phon e 742-3742 .
retired cou ple . Livrng r oom ,
l2 - 20 -261c
k it chen, Shower and bath On
main h ighway, Ma so(l, W Va . --- -----------Phone 773 -5147.
10 -27 -tf c

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

kitchen

27 Yrs. experience in const .

N.E IGLER BU IL DING SUP PLY FOR REMODELING
A ND K ITCHEN CABINETS.
CALL GUY NEIGH LE R ,
RACINE, OH I O. PHONE 949 3604

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

" most
representative team," setting
up a third straight confrontation with Southern
California New Year's Day.
Topping off the year for Ohio
State was the :HI, !tlt).pound
Griffin winning the Heisman
Trophy, only the fifth junior in
the history of the award wdo
so.
Griffin had another super
year, rushing for 1,620 yards in
11 games and running his
consecutive streak of !OO.yard
rushing games to 22, including
last year's Rose Bowl.
Five Buckeye players, including Griffin, were named w
the UP! All-American first
team and one to the second.
Griffin was also named Player
of the Year.
The Reds, who worked some
late season magic the year
before to overtake the
Dodgers, couldn't do it twice in
a row.
Trailing by 11 games just
prior w the Ali.Star Game
break, the Reds got to within a
game and a half of the Dodgers
only to finish four games back
of the NL West champions,
w
despite winning 98 games.
Provided Biggest Tbrlll
Hank Aaron provided Riverfront Stadium with perhaps the
biggest thrill in its five-year
history when he hammered the
7!4th home run of his career on
the opening day of the season,
tying him with Babe Ruth for
the all-time home run production. The Atlanta star broke the
mark less than a week Ia ter.
The Cleveland Indians had
one of their most interesting
and productive years for quite
some time, much of it due to
the brothers Perry, Gaylord
and Jim.
Gaylord, atJS the younger of
the two, lost his first start of
the year but then ran off 15
straight wins, one short of the
American League record. The Firestone Country Club went w
world champion Oakland Ath- Jim Colbert in a fourol'nan
letics beat hini 4-3 in 10 innings sudden death playoff, while
in his try for 16 and he finished Lee Trevino nipped Gary
the season with a 21-13 record. Player for the World Series of
Jim, at 37, returned w the Golf title, also at Firestone and
club where he began his major . also in sudden death.
league career and fashioned a
The Ohio-Kings Island Open
fine 17-12 mark . .
at'~ Mason, near · Cincinnati,
The low point of the year for went to veteran Miller Barber.
the Indians and for baseball
The LPGA's two 1974 Ohio
was lhe "free beer night" mele events, at Medina and Columin early June, which resulted in bus, went to Sandra Haynie, in
the forfeiture of a game to the sudden death over Gloria
Texas Rangers .
Ehret, 'and Sharon Miller.
The game was halted in the " Kim Heisler of Aurora, a
ninth inning, tied 5-.'i, when senior at Florida State Univerhundreds Qf rowdy fans con- sity, captured the Ohio Amaverged on I&lt;&gt; the.fie1d ·and mixed teur golf championship . at

elec.
heating,
cabinets etc .

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

PRIVATE meeting room for
SIEGLER and
any organization ; phon e 992 MONOGRAM
ANNUAL Deer Feed at the
3975 .
Racine Gun Club . Sat, Jan . 4,
3-11-t fc
6 p .m Open to the pu b lic
12 31 4tc CASH paid for all makes and
F URNISHED apt . Adults on l y
it up with players from both ----~--------mode l s of mobile homes .
Middleport. P-hone 992 -3874
teams.
GUN SHOOT, Mil e Hill Road ,
Phone area code 61 4-423 9531
11-14 -tfc
Jan 4, 7 p .m . Assorted meats
4 13 ftc
--------------Following the season, Frank
Factory choked guns only .
' UNFURNISHED
hou se,
4
Sponsored bv Rac ine Fire
Robinson, former MVP in both
rooms
and
bath
,
1650
Lincoln
WANTED
ol
d
upright
pianos
,
Dept .
Heights . Phone 992 -3874.
any condit ron
Pay ing $10
the American and National
12 -30 Jrc
11 -14 -tfc
each
F
irst
floor
only
.
Write
to
Pricea For \oiUICk Sale
League, was named the In- -------------and giv e d irections to Witt en - --- ----------TRAILER
space,
2
miles
from
dians' new manager, making
Piano Co , Bo~~: 188. Sa rdi s,
PUBLIC NOTICE
IPOMEROY LANDMARK
Pomeroy, Rt. 143, Phone 992Ohio. 439 46 .
him the first black manager in TO JA ME S N . HARRIS, AD ·
5858
Jack W. Cuny, Mtr.
12 -24 -6tp
~
Phone 992-2111
10
-27
-t
fc
-the major leagues.
DRE SS UNKNOWN, WHOSE
----------LA
ST
K
NOWN
ADDRESS
WAS
Robinson, obtained from the
2 BEDROOM traile r at corner
206 BEECH STR EET. MID
of
Broadway and
Elm ,
California Angels Late in the DLEPORT , OHIO
Middleport.
No pets or
season as a player, replaced
ch i ld ren Call 992 -2580 after 6
In the Common Pleas Court ot
OLD t HOUSE in Syracuse on 2
p.m .
Ken Aspromonte, who was Meigs County, Ohio , P ome roy ,
nice lot s, $3,000. Witt lear
12
-5-lfc
house-down , if wanted . Phone
fired despite having the In- Ohio, Case No . 15,708 , Wi l lie
--------------992 -5898 .
.
Harris . P l a intr ff , vs . James N .
dians in contention much of the Harri s, Defendant, a Comp l ain!
In
12
-29
-7tp
2 BEDROOM tra iler , adults ------------ - -year. The Tribe also drew for divorce . exclusive custody
on l y . Phone 992-3324.
of m inor ch ild and other relief
12 -17 -tfc BUILDING lot, 80 ft . frontage
more than 1,000,000 fans for the has been fil ed against you . You
by 165ft. The second lot on left
are
requ1red
lo
answer
t
he
first time in recent years.
on Riverview Dr·i ve, Lincoln
Co mplaint within twenty .eight
Hill, Pomeroy , Ohio . If in Age 8 or Older
The Browns finished with a 4- day s after the last publi cation .
terested call 992 -3230 after 5 p.
10 record, the worst in their
ELECTROLUX Sweeper delux:e
m.
Larry Spencer
model. Complete with all
10 -17 -tfc
history, and head coach Nick
Clerk of Courts
cleaning attachments and
Meigs
County,
Ohio
Skorich was asked to step down
uses paper bags. Slightly use d
but cleans and looks like new
as soon as the season ended. ( 12 ) 1o, 11, 24, 31 ( \l 7, 14 , 6tc
I II Court St., Pomeroy
Will Sell for $37 .25 cash or
Owner Art Modell was looking
terms available . Phone 992Phone 992-2156
7755.
for a new coach as the year
12 -IB -tfc,
drew to a close.
--------MAN tor work in retail store,
CLOSE OUT on new Zig Zag
While the Browns had not
p refer 35 to 55 years old . Must
sewing macl")ines . For sewing
be able to sell and service
been expected to make the Dayl&lt;&gt;n's National Cash Regisstretch fabrics, but t onholes ,
Massey Ferguson Lawn and
fancy designs , etc. Paint
playoffs, the Cincinnati Ben- ter courses.
g a r den equrpment Apply to
slightly blemished . Choice of NEW LISTING 6 room .
Marvin
Glasgo
,
Modern
gals, under coach Paul Brown,
carrying case or sewing
Captured Jug
Supply , Pomeroy, Oh1o .
frame, 3 bedrooms , bath , nat.
stand
.
S49
80
cash
or
terms
thought they would but didn't.
Armbro Omaha, driven by
l2 -31 -3tc
gas, furnace, city water.
available Phone 992-7-755.
The Bengals, wracked by Billy Haughton, captured the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 12 -18 tfc S7500.00. Wilt sell on time .
RHOP wan te d , apply i n
IN THE COUNTRY - 5 acres
injuries and possibly some Little Brown Jug three-year- CAperson
at Crow·~ Steak MODERN Walnut stereo
and a 2 bedroom home With full
House .
internal problems, finished a old pacing classic at the
radio, 8 track tape com .
basement. ' $6500.00.
bination,
am fm
radio
dismal 7-7 record, their worst Delaware County Fairgrounds, ----------- 12 -29-lOtc
Reasonable down payment .
Balance t108 .6J or terms . Call
since 1970.
992 -3965 .
33 ACRES- 3 bedrooms, ele.
while the Jug Preview at Scioto Sates Help Wanted
12 -31-tfc furnace, Ohio Power. built -In
Prior
the season, the Downs, near Columbus, went AN OH.IO QIL CO. offers
PLENTY OF MONEY plus - ------- - ----stove, double sink, cabinets,
Bengals took on the new World
Titleholder, owned by Jerry
cash bonuses , fringe benefits NEW Improved " Zippies," the city water. and minerals ,
g reat iron pill now w rth
to mature i nd ivr dual in
Football League in court in Osborn of Mentor and driven
$25,500.00.
Vitamin C Nelson Drug
Pomeroy area . ' Regardless of
connection with the WFL's by Tom Brinkerhoff.
experience, airmail G 1.
12 -31 ltp INCOME - 8 rooms. 2 baths,
Read
,
Pres
.
,
American
-------------signing of Bill Bergey. Mter
,.neling, carpeting. and a 4
Dream of Glory, owned by
Lubrican ts Co ., Box 696, REDUCE safe and fast with room rental. All for $18,000.00.
the court decision, Bergey was Leo Soehnlen of Canwn and
Dayt on . Oh io .:15401.
GoBese Tablets &amp; E -Vap
" water pills. " Nel son Drug . COUNTRY HOME - 7 rooms,
dealt to the Philadelphia trained and driven by his son,
12 -29-Stp
12-31 -ltp 4 nice . BRs, bath, .dbl. sink,
Eagles for a couple of draft Plus, was voted the nation's wp
carport, 2 outbuildings . Nice
-------------EXPERIENCED fuel oil driver
choices.
Garden.
$16,500.00 .
three-year-&lt;Jid trotter.
1973 STARCRAFT 24ft rravel
needed . Send replies to Box
trailer
.
Phone
882
-3391
.
On Their Way
729C
,
co
The
Daily
Sentinel,
NO
MONEY
DOWN-almost
The state's wp thoroughbred
12 -29 -Stp new 3 bedrooms, bath, gas
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
The Cleveland Cavaliers of race, the $100,000 Ohio Derby
12 -30-6tc GREAT DANE PUPS . 8 week s furnace~ closets, stove and
the NBA, after four frustrating at
Thistledown,
near
old. 550. Phone 992 -5728 after 6 refrigerator. One acre. Only
seasons, were above the .SOO Cleveland,' went Stonewalk.
p m.
517,500.00.
mark past the midiJOint In
12 -29 -6tp
The Professional Bowlers
December and apparen'Uy on Association held five events in TRAILER for rent or sale , 3 HEREFORD Holstein Catf is 10
bedroom s, unfurnished,
days old. Also, 352 Ford motor
the way to their first playoff the Buckeye State in 1974, with
utilities paid , located at new
and
flat hea,d , 6 cyl Dodge
action .
..41.-tii le
Hom e
Park
in
three of them, including the
motor . Phone 843 -2353 .
IBurlingham . Phone 992 -7751.
The Cleveland Crusaders of $125,000 Fireswne Tournament
12 -29 -Stc
12 -31 -lfc
the World Hockey League of Champions, going
Early -------------CITIZEN'S National Bank Will
1970 F LE ETWOOO mobile
made the playoffs last spring, Anthony of Tacoma, Wash.
offer for sale at their office in
1
home , 1 t~ bath, 2 bedroom ,
Middleport, Ohio. lOa .m . Jan .
but were eliminated in the first
l2x70: Phone 742-5864 .
The 1974 state high school
8. 1975, a 1968 Dodge Cornet
12
31-3tc
round by Toronto.
500, 2 dr h .t ., Serial No .
football playoff championships - --------- - - - - P23F8G 108629.
The American Golf Classic at went to Warren Harding,
12 -29-3tc
- -- -- -- ----- - ~

struction. Wiring, plumbing,

Phone (304) 773-5503

C BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 -3fl21 or 949 3161
Ra c ine , Ohio
Critt B r adford
5· 1-tfc

For Rent

siding,. roofing,

Aluminum

complete residential con -

8 A.M.· 6 P.M.

3 ROOM and bath furni shed apt.
U til itr es paid. 356 North
Fourth Sf , M iddleport
12 31 -tfc

Wanted To Buy

r HRIFT Shop located across
from Pom eroy Post Office .
Clothi ng , bargain prices and
glassware
12 -31 3t c

,,
'

1964 OLD SMOBILE Luxury
Model in good cond ition . Set
of r a dia l ti res, size IR 70 15 in
good shap e. 21 inch black and
wh rt e te lev ision ampl rfrer for
a p a
system . For i n
formation , call 992 -2501l or see
at 131 La ure l St., Pome ro y,
Oh 10
12-29 -6tc

- -·- - - - -· - -

REMODEliNG &amp; CONST..

Open Mon. - Sat .

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

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

SHOOTIN G mat ch, Racine Gun
Club , Sunday I p m . Assorted
meats and fa c tory cho ke guns
only

sports news in Ohio

1968 CHEVE LLE. 327, 4 speed,
good body and interior: . Phone
992 1489 .
12 -31-4tp

WILL BABY SIT in my hcime for
working mother . Phone 98 5
4102.
12 -30 7tc

- - - - - - - - - - - -·- -

OSU football dominated

--------

Employment Wanted

sp ecials a lithe time . You ' ll be
su rpr ised BROW N.' S, 992
5113.
1229 1fc

the

Assistance ,"

S uperior

19 57 CHEVROLET Bella rr 4 d r
ex ce ll (&gt; nf co nditron Phone
7-12 4111.
12 31 -3tc

-----

GARAGE
Ph. 992-5682 or 992-712 I
All Mechanical Work

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

POMEROY, OHIO

WORLD ALMANAC

JOHNSON'S

WALL pap er hangrng an d aH SEPTIC
TAN KS
c l eaned .
rnterior finish rng Phon e 742
Modern Sanitation .992 -3954or
508 1
992 73 49
1229 -12tp
9 18-ll c

POMEROY
MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.

Hughes , playmg Desdamona in
Othello at a theater in Clare
Market, London . on Dec. 8,
1660.

582 Jiving descendants !

(EDITOR'S NOTE: The top
sporting events In Ohio during
197C saw the Ohfo State
Univeraity Buckeyes earn
another trip to the Rose Bowl,
Archie Grlffln wln the Heisman
Trophy and Frank Robinson
hired as the first black
manager in ·major league
baseball. In the following
dispalt!h Gene Caddes, United
Press International's Ohio
. sports writer, summarizes the
top· sports events In Ohio In
197C.)

$2995

CAN, NO

BUT, IDENTIFYING THIS

FRAGMENT OF TA)( STAMP
A5 COMINQ FROM THIS

Wedn•day -Jan. 1, 1975

ROGER HYSEU.'S
On State Rt . 124, 1h mi . from
Route 1· by-pass towards
Rutland .

heating service ·and
general sheet metal
works.
Free
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

$2795

Charles II, in 1662 1ssued a
license granting women the
privilege of acting upon the
stage . The first actr: ss to per·

HElL

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
Complete plumbing . &amp;

1971 CHEVROLET7.TON
$3495
Cab &amp; Cha,.ssis., 102 " cab to axle , V 8, 350 eng ine, 15.000 lbs .
2-speed rear axle, good 825x20 fires , sol id cab.

Wrong Roles
Female parts on the English
stage were always taken by

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

OF
QUALITY

ship, " he said. "Of course , this
team has a winning tradition
and I respect them very much ,
but definitely they're not a
super team ."

"When people start talking
about Nebraska ....the y ar e
Pomeroy Lane s

the nutional

NOW, IDENTIFYINQ TAAT
PIECE OF METAL. AS
COMINQ FROM THIS ~

Auto Sales

talking abou\ the Nebraska
team of three years ago that

team," Cameron said.

Thursday Strikers
Dec . 19 , Hl74
S tandin gs a t elld of fir s t ha l f .

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

Alwayt Saowtaa
'SDow forms within most "
!110'!!'. clouds all year round and
climates, even the most
Sunmer thunderstorms
snow but on the
the war•
its toll, and the
. melt Into raindrops .

'.'

!ARNEY

SiMMER DOWN, PRISSY..
HERE'S 'lORE SASSER
MILK

IT CAN'T 6E ,&gt;. NEW
&lt;~e,&gt;.R ALREAO~ ..

.._, ,

I'M I&lt;IOT FINISHED
li)ITH LA5i '(EA~t!!

",.

.!

·~

.

•

'

..

•

�.'

l·

. '

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec . 31, 1974

•

Underdog Gators
primed for Sugar Bowl
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) The holiday atmosphere of the
French Quarter has done
nothing w help both teams
prepare but like it or not,
seventh.,.anked Nebraska and
No. t{ Florida tangle tonight
before a national televiSion
audience in the 41st annual
Sugar Bowl.
"Frankly, the past two or ·
three days haven't been fabulous," Nebraska Coach Tom
Osborne said Monday. "In the
past four or five bowl games
we 've been right on the day of

the game, but there's no

coach.
"You hear so much about
Nebraska and how we're 12point underdogs, but I don't
think Nebraska is a super

won

w

Mit c h e ll' s Trro
H F rank 's G1rls

12 5
7A

L.

11
62

S imon' s P1ck a Pa1 r
66 66
Shakl ee Gir l s
60 76
Ward·s Ro ll elles
42 94
Meigs Sa te t y ett es
39 97
H rgh team ser1es - Mil
Chell's. T rio 1568 . S1mon 's Pick
a Pa rr 1376, H Frank 's
Gi rt s 1359
Hig h team game M1l
Che ll' s Trio 535, 525 and 50 8
H 19h ind ividual serres Wanda Teaford 593 . Shirley
M i tc hell 575 . Opal Hupp 467
H 1g h rnd ivrdual game Wanda Teaford 732 : Sh irley
M itc hell 705 and 189.

assurance we 'll do it here."
Osborne"s lh3 Cornhuskers
were favored over the Ga l&lt;&gt;rs
but F1orida Coach Doug Dickey
predicted · his team might be
primed for an upset.
"I think the whole thing will
boil down to turnovers and
motivation - which team wants
Thursday Sfrrkcrs
wwin and which team makes
Dec. 26, 1974
the fewest mistakes," Dickey
W. l.
Mitche ll 's Tr io
lo 2
said . "I think the kids are Shaklee Gir ts
0 2
saying, 'It's time to play the Sr mon' s Pr ck a Par r
'
4
Mergs Safefyettes
4 4
game, we've done all we can WArd 's Rol lettes
2 6
and let's get out there .' I thmk H Fra nk 's Gir ls
2 6
High team ser res
Mif
they're right, it's time to play " Che
l l ' s Tri o 1363 , Ward's
135 1.
Uke Nebraska, the Gai&lt;&gt;rs Rolle t tes
Meigs
Sale tye ttes 1325
are lh3 on the season and
High team game M rt
coming off a loss in their Last che ll' s Trio 49 7, Sha k.lee Gir l s
War d 's Rol!e ftes 478 .
Sugar Bowl appearance. Flori- 483H;igh
individua l game da dropped a 20-18 decision w Wanda Teaford 203. Mar len e
Wi l son [SUb/ , and Donna
Missouri in 1966, and a year M
cF arland
170;
Lorene
Later, Nebraska was trounced Spradling 169
High individual se r ies 34-7 by Ken Stabler and the Marlene
Wilson (sub) 499 ·
Shirl ey Mitchell 486. Wand~
Alabama Crimson Tide.
''The question of the whole Teaford 484 .
game is whether we have a
Small Family
Uttle more speed," Dickey
Capt Wilson Kettle 1born
said . " We have w be faster. If 1860 I of Grand Bay. Port Aux
we're not quicker or a little Basques, Newfoundland, died
faster somewhere, then it's a on Jan . 25, 1963 . aged 102, leav·
case of a good big man against ing
II
children.
65
a good little man. "
grandchildren . 201 great·
Florida linebacker Glenn grandchildren, and 305 great·
Cameron agreed with his great-grandchildren, a .total off

2 SIGNS

champion.

1917 CHEVROLET

C 20 J/4 ton , 8' Fle ets ide, V -8 engine, 4-speed tran smis sion ,
heavy duty 15" tire S", solid cab , radio .

boys until th e Restoration.

1973 CHEVROLET

8' Fleetside p ickup, 350 V -B automatic, power stee ring,

form in public

was

radio, 15,500 miles. local 1 owner , t rres show little wear,
grey fin1sh, spotless inter ior.

Margaret

FACTS

WE WOU L D lr ke to thank. all ttle
people who have he lped in so
many ways dur rng our time of
trou bl e. Today you hear of all
the apathy and cruelness. but
you can ' t rmagine how truly
good and krnd people really
are We would lrke to name
everyon e who has help ed, but
rt would be imposs i b le . They
know . and th ey should have a
very good fee lrng A tot of
these peopl e we d idn 'I even
know . but they h elped and
we'll alway s r emember how
kind everyone was . Signed.
Mr . and Mrs Monty Proffi t t
and ch ildren .
12 29 4t c

••

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

Taxation was one of the ma-

jor

causes

Notice

of the 13 American

AUCJIO N .
Thursday
and
'Saturday night. 7 p . m at
Mason Auction, Horton St. rn
Mason , w. Va . Consignments
welcome . Phone (304) 773 5.:171
10-3 tf c

Colonies rebellion against the
British Emptre . " TaxatiOn
wtthout ripresentation is tyranny" became a rallymg cry
throughout the Colonies. The
World Almanac recalls that this -------- - - -- - - - quote is attributed to James " OIL OF Mink Cosmetics ."
Sound drllerent? We have a
Otis in his speech . "Argument
com p lete l rne that will satisfy
even you . Call us , we have
on the Illegality of the Writs of
given

Co urt
of
in February.

Mass achu setts

to

t 761.

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer

COLUMBUS .(UP!) - From
the time Woody Hayes suffered
his heart attack June 6 until
Archie Griffin was named the
40th Heisman Trophy winner,
Ohio State football dominated
the Buckeye State's sports
pages i!!, 1974 and it's not over
yet.
The many chapters of the
Ohio State football story overshadowed such others .as the
Cincinnati Reds' losing fight w
overtake the Los Angeles
Dodgers in the National League's Western Division and the
Cleveland Indians' naming of
Frank Robinson as the major
league's first black manager.
Mter eight convincing wins,
Ohio State's march towards the
national collegiate football
championship was severely
damaged by a controversial!&amp;.
13 loss w Michigan State,
complete with one of the
wildest finishes to a game ever

seen.
The loss was a bitter one for
Hayes and the Buckeyes, who
thought they had scored on the
final play of the game, only to
have officials rule otherwise. It
was more than 30 minutes after
the game ended before Big Ten
Commissioner Wayne Duke
announced the Spartans as the
winners.

Despite the loss, which cost
Hayes' team its No. I rating,
the chance for a perfect season
and an outright Big Ten title,
they bounced back the next
week with a win over Iowa,
setting the stage for the annual
battle with Michigan.
Kicked Four Goals
· The Wolverines brought a It).
0 record w Ohio Stadium, but
the Buckeyes' Czechoslovakian
soccer-style kicker, Tom
Klaban, kicked four field goals,
three of them over 40 yards, for
a 1Z-10 Ohio State win,
It left the Buckeyes . and
Wolverines .tied for the conference title for the third straight
year, again throwing lhe Rose
Bowl bid in I&lt;&gt; the laps of league
athletic directors.

In a secret balloting, the
athletic directors again
selected the Buckeyes as the

conference's

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

11iJ68 GMC Dump T ruck, 7500
se rie s. Trr a~~:le
Jusr been
overhauled . SJ,500
Contact
La wr ence L ee, Lark in s St .,
Ru tland, Ohro
12-27 6tc

1963 CA DIL LAC
742 6751.

----$225 .

Phone

12 2.4 6tp

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

- --------~-4--~-=-2~c
NANTED . deep well Pump
Phone 98 5 3849
12 29 -6tp
--~~----------

HOME
Impr ovement
and
Repair Servi ce - Anyth rng
fi~&lt;ed around th e home , from
root to ba sement You Will
l rke our wo rk and rates .
Phone 742 5081
12 29 ff c

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

CARPET rn stallation , S l 25 per
ya rd . Phon e R rchard west ,
8&lt;~3 2667 .
12 24 26t p

- --------

--~------

4 RM furn ished apt. close to
· Powell 's Super Valu , phone
99 2 3658 .
I I 20 -tfc

--------------COU NTRY Mobil e Home Park,

Rt . 33 , ten miles nort h of
Pomeroy
Large lo ts with
con crete patios, sidewalks ,
runn ers
and
off
street
parking Phone 992 7479 .
12 -3 t -lf c

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

4 ROOM furni shed apt . Call 992
5908 before 1 p .m
12 -31 -6tc

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

--------------JUNK auto s, complete and

delivered to our yard. We prck
up auto bod ies and buy all
l&lt;inds ot scr ap metals and
iron . R1der 's Salvage, St . Rt .
124, Rt . 4, Pomeroy , Oh io .
Ca ll 992 5468 .
10 -17 -t f c

__________ ___ _

For Sale

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

OLD furnitur e, rce box es, brass
beds, or complete households .
Write M . D . Miller, Rt 4,
Pom eroy , Ohio . Call 992 -7760 .
10 -7-74

PIANO
tun rng and repair ,
Charles Scott, 997 -3718.
,___ 12 -13 -32tp

1957 CHEVY parts . NEW
Lakewood traction ba;-s , hi ·
jacker a i r shocks, hooker
headers , with 3" collectors for
small block . Call 992 -3496
after 6 p . m . BEST OFFER.
10 -11 -lf c

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

DUE to tota l disab ility , must
sell co mplete flo ck. Nine Reg .
Suffo lk ewes ; 1 yr old, bred
and paper ed
One Suffo l k
ram . non related Call 949 3073 , any lim e.
12 27 -6tc
A K C. 4 year old Ir ish Setter ,
e~~:cellent pe t, S60. Howard
Birchfield . Phone 742 -5932
12 ·24 -tfc

SMA LL house , idea l for 2
working men, Middleport ------------area Phone 992 7791 after 5 PIG S, SIS each . Holstein
p.m .
.Hereford heifer. Sl25. One -ton
1965 Ford truck. 6-cylinder,
17 31 -3tc
t550. C. W Rice , phone 949 -------------21 15
3 and 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurnished
apartments .
------------12 -29 -6tp
Phone 992-5434 .
4-12 -tl c

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

FUEL OIL

HEATERS

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

,I

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

-·

.._ · ~- .

~

-...

READY MIX CONCREf"E~
lrve red right to your project .
Fast
and
easy .
Free
es timates . Phone 992 3284
Goegle in Ready -Mil&lt; Co .,
Middleport Ollie .
6-30 -ff c
SEWING MACH I NE , Repa irs ,
service. all makes, 992 -22fl4 .
Th e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service . We sharpen Sc issors .
3-29 -tfc
DOZER work, land clearing by
the acre, hourly or contract.
Farm ponds, roads, etc.
Large dozer and operator
with over 20 years ex .
perience . Pullins Excavating ,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Phone 992 2478 .
12-19 -tfc
WILL trim or cut trees or
shrubbery,
clean
out
basements, attrcs, etc . 949 3221 or 742-4441.
12-1526tc

-CREMEANS
-------------CONCRETE de l i vered Monday
through
Saturday
and
evenings .
Phone 446-1142.
6-13 -tfc

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

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
and backhoe work ; septic
tanks Installed; dump trucks
and lo -boys for hire ; will haul
fill dirt , top soiL limestone &amp;
gravel ; Cal l Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 992 -7089 ;
night phone 992 -3525 or 992 5232.
2-11 -tfc

--------------EXCELSIOR Salt Works , East
Main St ., Pomeroy . All kinds
of salt, water pellets , water
nuggets , block salt .!rnd own
Ohio River Salt. Phone 992
3891
' 6-5-tfc

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19)
Something of an urgent nature
will suddenly p op up in the
afternoon , causing you to think
more of bus 1n ess than
pleasure.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
Don't say yes to anythmg too
far 10 advance of the event.
Later you 'll want to change
your mind and you' ll need
room to back out.
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)
'You'll be making a reso lut io n to
get something wrapp ed up that
you've let hang.fl re t oo long
This time you' ll do It
CANCER (Ju.,. 21-.luly 22) A
matter that requires communication s hou l dn't be
treated in such a tardy fashion
Get on It now - 11 will bo
hai"der to re aCh your party
later.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22)
Someone to whom yo u 're
related has a rather Interesting
proposition tor you . You
shoutd hear it through befo re
you prejudge.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopl 22) Step
In and take over II you're involved ' in something with
another and you kn ow a better
and qu1cker way to handle
matters.
LIBRA (Sopt 23·0ct 23) You 're
going to have something you'll
'" like given to you quite unexpectedly· from one who has
been extremely considerate of
you lately.
&lt;.
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)
One you'll be ta lk lng w ith will
Implant the seed o f a g ood idea
In your mind . You'll later use rt
to your p.ersonal advantage .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·Doc
21) An ambitious interest of
yours can be advanced
through an opportunity of a
fleeting nature If you play coy.
it won 't happen .
CAPRICORN (Doc 22.Jon 19)
You wlll be recetv1ng some
good n8ws from one you 're
fond of but Is separated from
you by a considerab le distance .
AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob 19)
Someone w tll offer you
·someth tng of material value If
you want It, speak up now.
Later the same offer witt have
strings attaGhed·.
PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20)
Base to day's decisions on co nditions as they presently extst
look ing neither too far ahead
,._, , nor too hu behin d.

Help Wanted

NEW HAVEN

For Sale

The Daily Sentinel

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

-----

- -----.....,---------

w

Reasonable
rates,
free
estimates,
pi c kup
.!rnd
delivery , prompt service .
Mowrey's Upholstery, Poin t
Pleasan t, W Va . ~hone 675 ·

1

- ------------Mobile Homes For Sale

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

w

'Norwalk and Middletown Fenwick . Back in March, the high
school basketball tournament
winners were Cincinnati Elder,
Akron Manchester and Lorain
Clearview.
Ohio University won the MidAmerican Conference basketball title last spring, then lost
its veteran coach of 25 yeal's,
Jim Snyder, who retired and
was replaced by assistant Dale
Bandy.
Miami, with new coach Dick
Crum, rolled to Its · second
straight u·ndefeated season and
MAC football championship,
earning a second straight trip
It&gt; the TAngerine Bowl.

2 SMALL dog s, one dark brown
named Tammy , the other
mate light brown . Lost in area
of Kingsbury , reward offered .
Phone 992 -5629 .
12 -27 -6tp

--------- ----J-For Renl

HOUSE 4 room s and bafh . nice
yard and driveway . Also, .
furnished apt . Call 992 -2780 or
992 3432.
12 -12 -ffc

--------------4 RM apt. furnished adults, no

drunk s, Also , 3 rm . apt . John
Sheets, 3 m lies south of '
Middleport on Rt . 7.
12 29-6tp

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

FUR NI SHED mob ile hom·e· for
rent . Albert Hill , Ra r:.r ne.
Ohio . Phon e 949 ·2261.
12 -29 -6tc

12 31 -26tp

Bemlce
Oaol
ThurodaJ - Jon. 2, 1175

1.

rL -

• .•

. ~EROY,._Q,

PoMEROY- 8·10 ACREAlmost new home, 3 BR with
double closets, lovely klt-1.
chen, dining R, large living '

R, H. W. floors with lots of '
carpeting, full basement has '
large recreation
room,
s~ower, utility R . Carport,;

1

w•th storage building. YOU .·
MUST SEE THIS. S27,000.,
RI;.EDSVI LLE - Rt. 124 - 9 ·
ACRES lovely bu!lding sites, 1

You'll waste a tot of your time
and that of others' asking ad vice which you won 't follow .
"Proceed with your own ideas
as you Intended to do
LEO (July 23 -Aug 22) Be
cautious In your commercial
'dealings tOday. There could be
a sharp hook beneath ·the bait
10meone uses to promote his
wares.
·VIRGO (AUQ 23-Sopt 22) You ' it
be angered by one whose path
crosses yours, but don't g ive
vent to your ·emotions. Think
things through and you'll appreciate Its trivallty.
LtiRA (8op123-0ct 23) Today
you can depend on persons
with whom you have strong
emotlon&amp;ltles while Individuals
you know only 9oclally won't
prove so ret lable.
ICOAPIO (Ocl 2•-Nov 22)
You'd be wise not to lend your
p01sesslons to one· you haven 't
known too long.
IAGJnAAIUir (Nov 23-Doc
You won't accomplish as
'muCh as you're capable of totlay because you'll divert your
lttentlon from major goals to

mostly tillable, TP water. '
close to recreation area. I

$5,800.
RUTLAND AREA - 45 :
ACRES - Fenced, stocked ;
pond, good spring, minerals, ·
lots of building sites. $11 1 000_

POMEROY

Jud

renovated - .:1 BR, 2 baths,
recp. R., sewing R, car-

peting, paneling, tile, full
basement with recreation
R.,
workshop, porches 1
garage, patio, double lot.

$19,900.
ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME, LET US SELL IT
FOR YOU.
992·2259or m·2568

'

7 ROOM
HOUSE

CALL 992-3877

' rk

Mrs.
Walletr

LlL ABNER

--::'-:==::;----

BORN LOSER

EVER. 6Eof!&lt;S5

NAMEI..Y THE CHIEF 11
ANT- BRA INED Tfial6H
H5 15- He NIAY STUM6LE'
W THE ll&lt;llTH f!-

OF THE

LING!ORING
MSMORY i f
THIS "50tt..
ENRIOIER'

&lt;'

il'~, HOW CO

~'ttT YOUR
~~~

1/CO'IJG bar
1l:&gt; Elf A 1/eR'i
IM!ORTAtJT

... "Wft::J'S

11E'

1

'WilO'S'~Y'~~~&lt;l

ALLEY OOP
WEt.!.

DON'T LOOK

60 GLUM, OSCAIZ,,

'IO'RE ALLOWED ONE CALL

I WON'T

AFORE I LOCK 'IE UP,
SNUFFV

BE HOME FER
SUPPER!!

-~

.,

MASON fURNITURE

w. ~

.·
·t

•

•
••
:

par1nerahlp you' ll enter
with one who 11 oldltr and

wHI odd now doplh ond
~MUnce to your ltfe.

• ,f

, MASON, W.

a

fn6o
-"'"oty rotlable. Thlo person

•

HERMAN GRATE

•

~ITTL£

DICK TRACY

ORPHAN ANNIE-PliiH 'EM liP .JAC:It

FINDING TfiAT.IS
ICH,q~l\.~ IN~A~~5'

OF
OF ~!QUID LEFT' .
CAN AT THE SCENE
OF DAN NY'S BODY
OETS UNDER WAY.
ND SO, ANA~YSIS

!

'

JASOLINE ALLEY

CAPTAIN EASY

want to
watch the
Suqar Bowl .

Come ori, Slim'

Be a pair lhis
CJame

A? YOU KIJOW -- I WI-5-H YOU TO
E"S('OilT MY F IR?T - &amp;OR:r.J CH ILD
THE U.S A. TO BE EDUCAT E D\

..

is a

draq•

YEAR 0' 1q75
ON TH' PLANE!

FUL. OF TOY$ FR OM
McKEe 15 Ai.L RE"Att&gt;'

TO WHEEL. IN!

.\ ..
&lt; "

.'!~

,JL ABNER
WHO'LL YOL.ll'm;:eR
TO 55RVE TH'

DON'T WOR:IlY A&amp;OIJT
H15&gt; GIFT?! THS T~Uo'JK­

11_,

BORN LOSER
IF WE HAS
OLR DRUTHERs

6l.f1""- IF 11\AH L I 'L

HEAP! HAif\J'I

IN

W~ALL

DRUTHER

IT - AH l,\ON'T

MAKE A 6000

NOT!'T

SOME~».~

f&lt;ECOI&lt;D ·'~ -

eA.QfH?

'IOJ'Re

60tl.lb ID

Kl~i..

"'CVR%LF
CHAS IN6
P/&gt;-RKED CAAs!

VINNIE .
~ MY~IlTV I\OI'IK'
"Eire l&amp;ALMOIIT

DONE I

•
NO.'V 10 PICKUI"AN
INVITATION 50 I CAN
RETURN AGAIN
IN ANOTHER
DIS6U 1:7E.

ALLEY OOP

I3UT !3EFOR:E I 00
mAC, I "AVE TO

.-IA/\K~ ON~ .OOT?E

eTOP.... HEllE!

SURl!",,.IF 1T 1$
NaT '1tXl MUCH

BO'Tl·U:ll .1

•

nurwttt
lllfllllllr - J ... 2, 1111
You
bo lol'lunole lhla year

•STEREO .

773'.1592

.ITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

20-Morch 20)
You're going to taka a position
o~ an laue that will be popular
lllh your lriend&amp; but not to
~ur bnt advantage.
..

WHITE TV

--~- ~~

Slim,

:f.Ct:l l'ob

ZENITt.l
COLOR TV

like a person,

----

room
with

ide Ia lUes.

CAPRICORN (Doc 22.Jon 18)
Conditions are ripe to brinR a
&lt;JII'Oblem Into the open. There
tt•can be dealt with Instead of
A)-etendlng •It's non-existent.
AOUARIIIS (Jon 20-Ftb 18)
~r a very curious reason, one
)IIOu know is attempt ing to
11'11-'d you from someth ing
.other wants to share with
)'OU. Their maneuvers won't

Bath and 112, excellent
neighborhood, wall-towall carpeting, storm
windows, large lot, 3
car garage, reasonable
utilities.

We talk to you

-

IS

fl)

•BLACK &amp;

.
- -- - ._ •

•competent.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)

•

.- ------------;--

-~- ~-'-- ~

All11!8 (M.-ch 21-Aprll 18)
·•..This will be a very busy day for
""YOU with dozens of small
chores lhat need attending to .
...Don't 'overtax yourself .
·'TAURUS (Ap~l 20·Moy 20)
' Something that you're Involved
In socially Is very complicated.
Be tactful or you may hurt
feeUngs and tears could result .
~ GEMINI (Moy 21.Juno 20) You
handle matters that directly
affect your family very wefl tO·
day. In some other situations,
you're not nearly so adroit and

608 EJ
11\AIN

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

ON YOUR DIAL ·,

l.tMOU~INE

UNDERGOING TUNE-UP:

"'

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

Building for sale or lease .
Phone 773 -5618 from 8 : 30 p . m.
to 10 p . m . tor appointment .
3· 10 -tfc

Easy Terms!
Free Delivery!

UNI'ORTUNATEI.Y HIS

ROYAL

Real Estate For S&lt;ile
3 BEDROOM house , 3 miles out
on
State
Route
143 ,
References
and
deposit
requrred No pets Phone 94937 16 .
!
12 -31 -4tc

------------GROCERY business for Sale.

WMP0/1390

5E..,OI~G THJoS HL!MS1.6 C'ONVE YA~C&amp;: TO PICK VOU IJP !

teresting surprises thal .w lil be
to your hking Through several
new acquaintances, valuable
and profitable knowledge wilt
be ac(luired

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

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

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

HI? HIGHNE-56, Ttte 5HE-IK OF
MlllHA&amp;A 1 APOLOG1Ziio5 FOR

Your Blrthd•r - Jan. t, 1875
Th•s year contains some in-

•

4\54

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

w

CAN ·· CiET IT?

CAPTAIN EASY

· ·~

--------------FURNITURE Upholstering,

Real Estate For Sale

Carrier Wanted

DICE.

P &gt;J-1

?I'.:

·'

!

trade.

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

FURNISHED
apartment.
util rt ies furnished , su itab le ---- ----------fo r two working men or SEPTIC t anks , excavat ing
dump t ruc k . Phon e 742-3742 .
retired cou ple . Livrng r oom ,
l2 - 20 -261c
k it chen, Shower and bath On
main h ighway, Ma so(l, W Va . --- -----------Phone 773 -5147.
10 -27 -tf c

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

kitchen

27 Yrs. experience in const .

N.E IGLER BU IL DING SUP PLY FOR REMODELING
A ND K ITCHEN CABINETS.
CALL GUY NEIGH LE R ,
RACINE, OH I O. PHONE 949 3604

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

" most
representative team," setting
up a third straight confrontation with Southern
California New Year's Day.
Topping off the year for Ohio
State was the :HI, !tlt).pound
Griffin winning the Heisman
Trophy, only the fifth junior in
the history of the award wdo
so.
Griffin had another super
year, rushing for 1,620 yards in
11 games and running his
consecutive streak of !OO.yard
rushing games to 22, including
last year's Rose Bowl.
Five Buckeye players, including Griffin, were named w
the UP! All-American first
team and one to the second.
Griffin was also named Player
of the Year.
The Reds, who worked some
late season magic the year
before to overtake the
Dodgers, couldn't do it twice in
a row.
Trailing by 11 games just
prior w the Ali.Star Game
break, the Reds got to within a
game and a half of the Dodgers
only to finish four games back
of the NL West champions,
w
despite winning 98 games.
Provided Biggest Tbrlll
Hank Aaron provided Riverfront Stadium with perhaps the
biggest thrill in its five-year
history when he hammered the
7!4th home run of his career on
the opening day of the season,
tying him with Babe Ruth for
the all-time home run production. The Atlanta star broke the
mark less than a week Ia ter.
The Cleveland Indians had
one of their most interesting
and productive years for quite
some time, much of it due to
the brothers Perry, Gaylord
and Jim.
Gaylord, atJS the younger of
the two, lost his first start of
the year but then ran off 15
straight wins, one short of the
American League record. The Firestone Country Club went w
world champion Oakland Ath- Jim Colbert in a fourol'nan
letics beat hini 4-3 in 10 innings sudden death playoff, while
in his try for 16 and he finished Lee Trevino nipped Gary
the season with a 21-13 record. Player for the World Series of
Jim, at 37, returned w the Golf title, also at Firestone and
club where he began his major . also in sudden death.
league career and fashioned a
The Ohio-Kings Island Open
fine 17-12 mark . .
at'~ Mason, near · Cincinnati,
The low point of the year for went to veteran Miller Barber.
the Indians and for baseball
The LPGA's two 1974 Ohio
was lhe "free beer night" mele events, at Medina and Columin early June, which resulted in bus, went to Sandra Haynie, in
the forfeiture of a game to the sudden death over Gloria
Texas Rangers .
Ehret, 'and Sharon Miller.
The game was halted in the " Kim Heisler of Aurora, a
ninth inning, tied 5-.'i, when senior at Florida State Univerhundreds Qf rowdy fans con- sity, captured the Ohio Amaverged on I&lt;&gt; the.fie1d ·and mixed teur golf championship . at

elec.
heating,
cabinets etc .

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

PRIVATE meeting room for
SIEGLER and
any organization ; phon e 992 MONOGRAM
ANNUAL Deer Feed at the
3975 .
Racine Gun Club . Sat, Jan . 4,
3-11-t fc
6 p .m Open to the pu b lic
12 31 4tc CASH paid for all makes and
F URNISHED apt . Adults on l y
it up with players from both ----~--------mode l s of mobile homes .
Middleport. P-hone 992 -3874
teams.
GUN SHOOT, Mil e Hill Road ,
Phone area code 61 4-423 9531
11-14 -tfc
Jan 4, 7 p .m . Assorted meats
4 13 ftc
--------------Following the season, Frank
Factory choked guns only .
' UNFURNISHED
hou se,
4
Sponsored bv Rac ine Fire
Robinson, former MVP in both
rooms
and
bath
,
1650
Lincoln
WANTED
ol
d
upright
pianos
,
Dept .
Heights . Phone 992 -3874.
any condit ron
Pay ing $10
the American and National
12 -30 Jrc
11 -14 -tfc
each
F
irst
floor
only
.
Write
to
Pricea For \oiUICk Sale
League, was named the In- -------------and giv e d irections to Witt en - --- ----------TRAILER
space,
2
miles
from
dians' new manager, making
Piano Co , Bo~~: 188. Sa rdi s,
PUBLIC NOTICE
IPOMEROY LANDMARK
Pomeroy, Rt. 143, Phone 992Ohio. 439 46 .
him the first black manager in TO JA ME S N . HARRIS, AD ·
5858
Jack W. Cuny, Mtr.
12 -24 -6tp
~
Phone 992-2111
10
-27
-t
fc
-the major leagues.
DRE SS UNKNOWN, WHOSE
----------LA
ST
K
NOWN
ADDRESS
WAS
Robinson, obtained from the
2 BEDROOM traile r at corner
206 BEECH STR EET. MID
of
Broadway and
Elm ,
California Angels Late in the DLEPORT , OHIO
Middleport.
No pets or
season as a player, replaced
ch i ld ren Call 992 -2580 after 6
In the Common Pleas Court ot
OLD t HOUSE in Syracuse on 2
p.m .
Ken Aspromonte, who was Meigs County, Ohio , P ome roy ,
nice lot s, $3,000. Witt lear
12
-5-lfc
house-down , if wanted . Phone
fired despite having the In- Ohio, Case No . 15,708 , Wi l lie
--------------992 -5898 .
.
Harris . P l a intr ff , vs . James N .
dians in contention much of the Harri s, Defendant, a Comp l ain!
In
12
-29
-7tp
2 BEDROOM tra iler , adults ------------ - -year. The Tribe also drew for divorce . exclusive custody
on l y . Phone 992-3324.
of m inor ch ild and other relief
12 -17 -tfc BUILDING lot, 80 ft . frontage
more than 1,000,000 fans for the has been fil ed against you . You
by 165ft. The second lot on left
are
requ1red
lo
answer
t
he
first time in recent years.
on Riverview Dr·i ve, Lincoln
Co mplaint within twenty .eight
Hill, Pomeroy , Ohio . If in Age 8 or Older
The Browns finished with a 4- day s after the last publi cation .
terested call 992 -3230 after 5 p.
10 record, the worst in their
ELECTROLUX Sweeper delux:e
m.
Larry Spencer
model. Complete with all
10 -17 -tfc
history, and head coach Nick
Clerk of Courts
cleaning attachments and
Meigs
County,
Ohio
Skorich was asked to step down
uses paper bags. Slightly use d
but cleans and looks like new
as soon as the season ended. ( 12 ) 1o, 11, 24, 31 ( \l 7, 14 , 6tc
I II Court St., Pomeroy
Will Sell for $37 .25 cash or
Owner Art Modell was looking
terms available . Phone 992Phone 992-2156
7755.
for a new coach as the year
12 -IB -tfc,
drew to a close.
--------MAN tor work in retail store,
CLOSE OUT on new Zig Zag
While the Browns had not
p refer 35 to 55 years old . Must
sewing macl")ines . For sewing
be able to sell and service
been expected to make the Dayl&lt;&gt;n's National Cash Regisstretch fabrics, but t onholes ,
Massey Ferguson Lawn and
fancy designs , etc. Paint
playoffs, the Cincinnati Ben- ter courses.
g a r den equrpment Apply to
slightly blemished . Choice of NEW LISTING 6 room .
Marvin
Glasgo
,
Modern
gals, under coach Paul Brown,
carrying case or sewing
Captured Jug
Supply , Pomeroy, Oh1o .
frame, 3 bedrooms , bath , nat.
stand
.
S49
80
cash
or
terms
thought they would but didn't.
Armbro Omaha, driven by
l2 -31 -3tc
gas, furnace, city water.
available Phone 992-7-755.
The Bengals, wracked by Billy Haughton, captured the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 12 -18 tfc S7500.00. Wilt sell on time .
RHOP wan te d , apply i n
IN THE COUNTRY - 5 acres
injuries and possibly some Little Brown Jug three-year- CAperson
at Crow·~ Steak MODERN Walnut stereo
and a 2 bedroom home With full
House .
internal problems, finished a old pacing classic at the
radio, 8 track tape com .
basement. ' $6500.00.
bination,
am fm
radio
dismal 7-7 record, their worst Delaware County Fairgrounds, ----------- 12 -29-lOtc
Reasonable down payment .
Balance t108 .6J or terms . Call
since 1970.
992 -3965 .
33 ACRES- 3 bedrooms, ele.
while the Jug Preview at Scioto Sates Help Wanted
12 -31-tfc furnace, Ohio Power. built -In
Prior
the season, the Downs, near Columbus, went AN OH.IO QIL CO. offers
PLENTY OF MONEY plus - ------- - ----stove, double sink, cabinets,
Bengals took on the new World
Titleholder, owned by Jerry
cash bonuses , fringe benefits NEW Improved " Zippies," the city water. and minerals ,
g reat iron pill now w rth
to mature i nd ivr dual in
Football League in court in Osborn of Mentor and driven
$25,500.00.
Vitamin C Nelson Drug
Pomeroy area . ' Regardless of
connection with the WFL's by Tom Brinkerhoff.
experience, airmail G 1.
12 -31 ltp INCOME - 8 rooms. 2 baths,
Read
,
Pres
.
,
American
-------------signing of Bill Bergey. Mter
,.neling, carpeting. and a 4
Dream of Glory, owned by
Lubrican ts Co ., Box 696, REDUCE safe and fast with room rental. All for $18,000.00.
the court decision, Bergey was Leo Soehnlen of Canwn and
Dayt on . Oh io .:15401.
GoBese Tablets &amp; E -Vap
" water pills. " Nel son Drug . COUNTRY HOME - 7 rooms,
dealt to the Philadelphia trained and driven by his son,
12 -29-Stp
12-31 -ltp 4 nice . BRs, bath, .dbl. sink,
Eagles for a couple of draft Plus, was voted the nation's wp
carport, 2 outbuildings . Nice
-------------EXPERIENCED fuel oil driver
choices.
Garden.
$16,500.00 .
three-year-&lt;Jid trotter.
1973 STARCRAFT 24ft rravel
needed . Send replies to Box
trailer
.
Phone
882
-3391
.
On Their Way
729C
,
co
The
Daily
Sentinel,
NO
MONEY
DOWN-almost
The state's wp thoroughbred
12 -29 -Stp new 3 bedrooms, bath, gas
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
The Cleveland Cavaliers of race, the $100,000 Ohio Derby
12 -30-6tc GREAT DANE PUPS . 8 week s furnace~ closets, stove and
the NBA, after four frustrating at
Thistledown,
near
old. 550. Phone 992 -5728 after 6 refrigerator. One acre. Only
seasons, were above the .SOO Cleveland,' went Stonewalk.
p m.
517,500.00.
mark past the midiJOint In
12 -29 -6tp
The Professional Bowlers
December and apparen'Uy on Association held five events in TRAILER for rent or sale , 3 HEREFORD Holstein Catf is 10
bedroom s, unfurnished,
days old. Also, 352 Ford motor
the way to their first playoff the Buckeye State in 1974, with
utilities paid , located at new
and
flat hea,d , 6 cyl Dodge
action .
..41.-tii le
Hom e
Park
in
three of them, including the
motor . Phone 843 -2353 .
IBurlingham . Phone 992 -7751.
The Cleveland Crusaders of $125,000 Fireswne Tournament
12 -29 -Stc
12 -31 -lfc
the World Hockey League of Champions, going
Early -------------CITIZEN'S National Bank Will
1970 F LE ETWOOO mobile
made the playoffs last spring, Anthony of Tacoma, Wash.
offer for sale at their office in
1
home , 1 t~ bath, 2 bedroom ,
Middleport, Ohio. lOa .m . Jan .
but were eliminated in the first
l2x70: Phone 742-5864 .
The 1974 state high school
8. 1975, a 1968 Dodge Cornet
12
31-3tc
round by Toronto.
500, 2 dr h .t ., Serial No .
football playoff championships - --------- - - - - P23F8G 108629.
The American Golf Classic at went to Warren Harding,
12 -29-3tc
- -- -- -- ----- - ~

struction. Wiring, plumbing,

Phone (304) 773-5503

C BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 -3fl21 or 949 3161
Ra c ine , Ohio
Critt B r adford
5· 1-tfc

For Rent

siding,. roofing,

Aluminum

complete residential con -

8 A.M.· 6 P.M.

3 ROOM and bath furni shed apt.
U til itr es paid. 356 North
Fourth Sf , M iddleport
12 31 -tfc

Wanted To Buy

r HRIFT Shop located across
from Pom eroy Post Office .
Clothi ng , bargain prices and
glassware
12 -31 3t c

,,
'

1964 OLD SMOBILE Luxury
Model in good cond ition . Set
of r a dia l ti res, size IR 70 15 in
good shap e. 21 inch black and
wh rt e te lev ision ampl rfrer for
a p a
system . For i n
formation , call 992 -2501l or see
at 131 La ure l St., Pome ro y,
Oh 10
12-29 -6tc

- -·- - - - -· - -

REMODEliNG &amp; CONST..

Open Mon. - Sat .

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

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

SHOOTIN G mat ch, Racine Gun
Club , Sunday I p m . Assorted
meats and fa c tory cho ke guns
only

sports news in Ohio

1968 CHEVE LLE. 327, 4 speed,
good body and interior: . Phone
992 1489 .
12 -31-4tp

WILL BABY SIT in my hcime for
working mother . Phone 98 5
4102.
12 -30 7tc

- - - - - - - - - - - -·- -

OSU football dominated

--------

Employment Wanted

sp ecials a lithe time . You ' ll be
su rpr ised BROW N.' S, 992
5113.
1229 1fc

the

Assistance ,"

S uperior

19 57 CHEVROLET Bella rr 4 d r
ex ce ll (&gt; nf co nditron Phone
7-12 4111.
12 31 -3tc

-----

GARAGE
Ph. 992-5682 or 992-712 I
All Mechanical Work

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

POMEROY, OHIO

WORLD ALMANAC

JOHNSON'S

WALL pap er hangrng an d aH SEPTIC
TAN KS
c l eaned .
rnterior finish rng Phon e 742
Modern Sanitation .992 -3954or
508 1
992 73 49
1229 -12tp
9 18-ll c

POMEROY
MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.

Hughes , playmg Desdamona in
Othello at a theater in Clare
Market, London . on Dec. 8,
1660.

582 Jiving descendants !

(EDITOR'S NOTE: The top
sporting events In Ohio during
197C saw the Ohfo State
Univeraity Buckeyes earn
another trip to the Rose Bowl,
Archie Grlffln wln the Heisman
Trophy and Frank Robinson
hired as the first black
manager in ·major league
baseball. In the following
dispalt!h Gene Caddes, United
Press International's Ohio
. sports writer, summarizes the
top· sports events In Ohio In
197C.)

$2995

CAN, NO

BUT, IDENTIFYING THIS

FRAGMENT OF TA)( STAMP
A5 COMINQ FROM THIS

Wedn•day -Jan. 1, 1975

ROGER HYSEU.'S
On State Rt . 124, 1h mi . from
Route 1· by-pass towards
Rutland .

heating service ·and
general sheet metal
works.
Free
Estimates.
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 992-3995
or 992-5700

$2795

Charles II, in 1662 1ssued a
license granting women the
privilege of acting upon the
stage . The first actr: ss to per·

HElL

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
Complete plumbing . &amp;

1971 CHEVROLET7.TON
$3495
Cab &amp; Cha,.ssis., 102 " cab to axle , V 8, 350 eng ine, 15.000 lbs .
2-speed rear axle, good 825x20 fires , sol id cab.

Wrong Roles
Female parts on the English
stage were always taken by

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

OF
QUALITY

ship, " he said. "Of course , this
team has a winning tradition
and I respect them very much ,
but definitely they're not a
super team ."

"When people start talking
about Nebraska ....the y ar e
Pomeroy Lane s

the nutional

NOW, IDENTIFYINQ TAAT
PIECE OF METAL. AS
COMINQ FROM THIS ~

Auto Sales

talking abou\ the Nebraska
team of three years ago that

team," Cameron said.

Thursday Strikers
Dec . 19 , Hl74
S tandin gs a t elld of fir s t ha l f .

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!

Alwayt Saowtaa
'SDow forms within most "
!110'!!'. clouds all year round and
climates, even the most
Sunmer thunderstorms
snow but on the
the war•
its toll, and the
. melt Into raindrops .

'.'

!ARNEY

SiMMER DOWN, PRISSY..
HERE'S 'lORE SASSER
MILK

IT CAN'T 6E ,&gt;. NEW
&lt;~e,&gt;.R ALREAO~ ..

.._, ,

I'M I&lt;IOT FINISHED
li)ITH LA5i '(EA~t!!

",.

.!

·~

.

•

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..

•

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,,

14 - ThP Da ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome'roy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 31, 1!174

News

• • •

Weather

in Briefs

WASHINGTON - FOR THOSE OF YOU WITH ATOMIC
clocks, the new year will be a second late. Scientists in charge of
precision atomic clocks around the world have agreed to stop
their time pieces for one second to let the earth catch up to the
world's time scale.
·
The "leap second" is required because earth's rotation is
slowing slightly. This means the atomic Clocks which tick off
hours, minutes and seconds of the same length would get ahead
of the earth after a while. Twelve noon would come earlier and
ea rlier in the day.
COLUMBUS - THE DffiECTOR OF the Ol!io Department of
Hea lth has designated four diagno8tic and treatment centers for
coal miners suffering from black lung disease to begin operating
within the next 30 days at four cities around the slate.
State Health Director Dr. John W. Cashman said Monday the
centers were located at Good Sarmailan Hospital, Zanesville ;
Bellaire Clinic, Bellaire; Grant Hospital, Columbus; and Good
Samaritan Hospital, Cincinnati. Cashman said a fifth treatment
center had been proposed at Athens and information and referral
centers would be located at . Cleveland and Dayton.

•••.

Ra in toni ght , c han ce of ~··
s howe r s Wedn esday . Low ·:~:·:;:
tonight mid 30s. High Wed- :;::
nesday upper 30s. Probability
of precipitation\ 80 percent
tonight , 40 percent Wednesday . ·

(Continued from page 1)
minute spree. ('olice arrested Anthony B11rbaro 17, of Olean, a
senior , a n "A" student at the school who had ju1 t won a college
scbolarship, and an expert rifleman . He was examined at a
ho~pital a nd then jailed.
. The dead, in this rural town 55 miles southeast of Buffalo '
mcluded a gas company worker, a janitor and a 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld
woma n driving by the school in her car. The woman 's 12-year-&lt;&gt;ld
brother was wounded. Authorities said there was no apparent
motive for the shooting, and teachers a nd relatives of Barbaro
were stunned that he had been accused.

rii.iSMI.oi
iiblc
!S~I.a~,::¥.::: ::~:l~r
:~
;:;.

«

Stripping controlJ o~t · for now

AT ROSE BOWL
Karen Griffith , daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Griffith,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, left Friday
with the Ohio Slate University
Marching Band of which she is
a member to participate in the
band 's activities in conjunction
with the Rose Bowl.
SUPPORT FILED
Vona Whitt, Middleport, filed
for support
under the
reciprocal agreement act in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court against Keith Iiadsell,
Bellmont, N. Y.

No Gls

··

TUESDAY
ANNUAL New Year 's party
for members of Drew Webster
Pos t 39, Ainerican Legion ,
families and guests,· beginning
9:30 p.m . Tuesday at post
hom e. Mu s ic by Armand ,
organis t.
WAT CH SERVICE, 7: 30
p.m., Ash St. Freewill Baptist
Churc h, Middleport. A number
of singing groups and several
ministers on hand to present
the program . Public invited.
WATCH NIGHT service, 7:30
p.m . at Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church with Troy
Fields , Dewey King preaching ;
Pastor , Rev. O'Dell Manley,
in vites th~ public.
WATCH meeting Tuesda y 8
p.m . at Eag le Ridge Church
featuring the Bissell family .
Public welcome.
THURSDAY
CHRISTMAS trees to be
picked up Thursday in Rutland
by Rutland Village. Have trees
next to highway .
FREE clothin g day a t
Sal va~ ion Army, 115 Butternut
· Ave ., Pomeroy, Thursday from
10 a .m. until noon . All area
residen Is welcome.
FRIDAY
POMEROY Lodg e 164 ,
F&amp;AM regular meeting , 7:30
p.in. Thursday at temple . All
Master Masons invited.
POMONA Grange, Bp.m .
Thursday at the Rock Springs
Hall. Columbia Grange to be
host.

William Henry

WASHIN GTON (UPI ) · nation " should not unduly
Preside nt l''ord Monday pocket impair our a bility to use it

aga inst the nation 's needs for
increased coal production."

that he is now
engaged in a ma jor review of
nati' onal energy pol 1·c1·es and
felt
that
" unnecessa ry
restrictions on coal production
would limit our nation 's
freedom to adopt Uie best
energy options."
" In sum," Ford . said in a
statement, "I f1'nd that the
adverse impact of this bill on
our domestic coal production is
unacceptable at a time when
the nation can ill afford
significant losses from this
critical energy resource.
" It would also further
complicate our battle a gainst
inflation ."
But he pledged to continue
''tO strive diligently to insure
that laws and regulations are
in effect which establish environmental protection and
reclamation requirements
appropriately
balanced

voice votes in both houses.
F or d' s energy ad mm1s
· · t rator,
F ra n k Zar b , 1mme
·
d'1a t e Iy
recommended a veto.
Sen . Henry Jackson , DWash ., who helped draft the
legislation , said he intended to
seek senate passage of the
· th e new congress.
same bill m
" If the President again vetoes
this vital measure," he said,
" the Congress will this time
have the opportunity to
override the yelp."
.
The veto was applauded by
the National Coal Association
as "a necessary step which
lays the foundation for a secure
and adequate energy supply
for the future ."
The association said in a
statement that surface-mined
land will nonetheless be effec·tively reclaimed without
federal law because every

it Ca Iend ar Il ·-~~~: ~:~~ips~i~~:~~~:d:~~~ pr~r!~~~
reclaiming la nd surface-mined
for coal a nd authorized a
reclamation fee on a ll coal
production ·
Ford said the bill would have
limited the na tion 's energy
resources a nd hurt the economy.
Ford said he decided not to
sig n the bill, whic h envirnomenialists had sought for
years, beca use it would have
cut coal production, ca used
unemployment in the c oal
fields and related industries
and required "excessive "
federal expenditures.
Noting that coal is the most
abundant e ner gy source over
which the United Slates has
total control, Ford said the

(Continued from page 1)
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for 1972 are unknown .
Admitted - Oris Hubbard,
The Foreign Affairs Ministry
Syracuse; Cha rl es Burris ,
in Saigon blamed the CommuMason ; Tracy Reed, Pomeroy ;
nists for the recent upsurge in
Ward Sayre, Racine; Emma
fighting and said "The ComAdams, Racine ,
munist side must bear full
Dischar ged
Ha r old
responsibililJ for the grave
Conger, Frieda Lewis , Bonnie
consequences."
Mathews.
The Communists have capVAIL, COLO. - PRESIDENT FORD ARRANGED to
tured nine district (county)
welcome the New Year quietly, with family and friends at his
BOARD TO MEET
capitals since the Jan. 28, 1973,
rented ski lodge, after a day of skiing and some work at his desk.
CHESHIRE
- The Gallia peace agreement. Six of the
Ford made plans to fly back to Washington after New Year's Day
Meigs
Community
Ac tion
nine have been seized since
and is scheduled to arrive at the White House Thursday evening.
Agency Executive board will
fighting increased last Dec. 6.
An aide expected Ford today to deal with the 115 bills
hold
its organizational meeting
In
Cambodia ,
proawa iting his action. They were passed as Congress adjourned
Jan . 2, at 7:30p.m.
Thursday,
Communist rebels Monday
and must be acted on by midnight Saturday. Among them is the
in the Cheshire Community
overran An Laung Kop, a
controversial bill to give the Soviet Union a most-favored nation
All board m embers are
Center.
trading treatment, passed after Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., . village in northwestern Baturged
to
attend .
lambang Province, a ricewas satisfied Russia would permit thousands of Soviet Jews to
growing region 155 miles from
leave the country. Ford signed the $2.7 billion foreign ·aid bill
SING SLATED
Phnom Penh.
Monday and cast his 19th and 20th vetos to reject the strip-mining
There will be a hymn sing at
Other attacks throughout the
bills a nd legislation that would have required that 30 per cent of
the
Hazel Community Church,
on
the
normally
quiet
province
imported oil be carried in American tankers by June 30, 1977.
CRUISER CRASHES
Jan
.
4 at 7:30 p.m. J . B. and
Thai border signaled the
WESTBROOK, Maine (UPI)
The Tiny Trio, Vienna , W. Va .,
TO MEET THURSDAy
beginning of-a "rice offensive"
- An Alcohol Safety Action
will be the featured singers.
by the rebels, military sources
Program cruiser crashed into
The Meigs County Com- · 'd
Pastor is Estil Hart. Everyone
a tree · over the weekend after
mittee for the Mentally sru ·
is welcome.
someone hit the driver on the
Retarded will meet at 7:30p.m.
Tonight thru Thursday
head
with a beer bottle.
Thursday at the courthouse.
CHIEF NAMED
NOT OPEN
Authorit.ies said police of·-tach civic, educational,
COLUMBUS
(UPI) - Atficer Lloyd Murphy was
religious, youth and social
(Continued from page 1)
Fri. -Sat. Sun .
driving on Main Street when torney General William J.
Ol'ganization is asked to have at
Magruder and Fred LaRue.
Jan. 3-4-5
someone threw a beer bottle Brown has named slate Adleast one representative
THE LAST OF SHEILA
The judge called the jurors, from a passing car. The bottle ministrative Services Director
present for the mee.ting. The
(Technicolorl
looking tired and bedraggled, struck Murphy on the side of Joseph J . Sommer to head his
committee, headed by Mrs.
Sta rri ng Raquel Welch
into the courtroom and gently the head and knocked him consumer frauds and crimes
(PG)
Harold Sauer, is &lt;jesigned to
turned them down. Tran- unconscious.
section, effective ~an . 13.
Cotorcartoon :'
maintain liaison between the
Pirate Byrd
scripts, he explained, are
Murphy was reported in
county commissioners and the ·
Show Starts at 7:00p.m .
never provided to a jury and satisfactory condition at a
public on the education of the
that reading the testimony hospital .
mentally retarded .
back to them would lake about
three weeks.
" It would be almost impossible," Sirica said. "We'd be
trying this case all over NO ANSWER
MIAMI (UPI) - Notre
again."
Dame
football Coach Ara
Prosecution and defense
Parseghian,
fielding questions
lawyers refused to speculate
about what request meant, but from the press Monday ,
it appeared the jurors were acknowledged a raised hand in
having difficulty remembering the back of the room.
"I'd like to know," the
crucial testimony from witnesses in the early days of the auestioner be~an, "if Alabama
had the ball on its own 2-yard
trial.
• At midafternoon , a huge urn like with third-and-eight, ~hat
from the cafeteria in the .kind of defense would Notre
basement of the federal court- Dame play?"
There was no answer, only
house was wheeled into the
laughter
from the press corps.
jury room -part of the stanThe
questioner
was Bear.
ding order of two gaUons of
coffee three times a day.
• Bryant, the Alabama coach.
All defendants are charged
with conspiracy in the cover-up
and all but Mardian with actual
ADDED ATI'RACfiON
obstruction of justice. Mitchell,
PITI'SBURGH (UPI) -Dis-Haldeman and Ehrlichman are
trict Magistrate Maurice Myalso accuSed in the 12-count
indictment with lying to the sets Is hoping New Year's Eve
party goers will stop at his
grand jury or the Senate
place for "one for the road."
Watergate Committee.
For the seventh straight
The
defendants
were
year, Mysels is opening his
secluded with their families
OPENING AT6 TONIGHT
courtroom
in suburban Fo1·est
and lawyers in their suite of ·
Hills tO anyone interested in
FOR NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY
offices a few steps down the
having "a sobering excorridor.
perience" of coffee and
John A. Hoffar, 57, a retired
Closed All Day New Year's Day
doughnuts before going home
U.S. Park Police officer and
from a party.
January 1
registered Republican who
As an added attraction, the
sometimes dozed during aftermagistrate said, "anyone
noon testimony, was elected by
stopped for drunken driving
his fellow jurors as foreman.
who is on the way to my
He is the lone white man on the
POMEROY, OHIO
courtroom
will be pardoned."
jury.

..

'

m~~nt~st:ss:;~: c::op~~

.

.'

s• ''

of Mason is dead ~
·.

~ '.

MASON, W. Va. - Willi~
Edward (Billy) Henry, ~,
Mason , died this morning ' n
Pleasant Valley Hospital. ""
Funeral services will tie
conduc ted 1:30 p.m . ThursddY
at the Foglesong Funer!jl
Home.• Mason . Rev. Clarente
McCloud will offici~te arid
burial· will be in the CliftOn
Cemetery. Vislation hours at
the funeral home will be afte~ 3
p.m. Wednesday.
Mr. Henry was born Aug. 25,
1926 at Clifton and was a son of..
the late Darius and Flo Stewart
Henry. He is survived by tw.o
sisters,
Mrs.
Christene
Luikart, Mason , and Mr11 .
Frances Jeffers, Pomeroy; one
half-sister, Mrs . Jean Taylor,
Mason, and one brothel',
Delbert Henry , Mason.
'

.,
major mining state alreadyhas laws carrying such
provisions.
•·

••

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'The Management and Employees
wish you all
a very Happy New Year 1975
We will be closed all day Wednesday, Jan. 1.
Open Thursday 9:30 to 5, Friday and saturday 9:30 to 8

MEIGS THEATRE

Watergate

ELB~RFELDS

IN POMEROY

r---~-------------------------------.~

THE MEIGS lNN

.,,
·•

'
•

•·

.

;._

"'
.,,"..
"l

It's a spanking new year, filled with new opportunities for all!

Here's hoping it brings prosperity, h~alth and happiness to you,

NOW YOU KNOW
•
The cuckoo is difficult to
track because two of its toes
point forward, two point backward, and It Is almost Impossible to determine from the
x-shaped imprint which way
the bird went.

.
. you
our good friends and customers. We've enioyed serv1ng

throughout the past year and we look forward to serving you ·
again in the year to come.
OFFICERS

DIRECTORS
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.
Thereon Johnson
Leslie F. Fultz
E. Robert Schellhase
Fred W. Crow, Jr.

BEST WISHES
FOR A
...... .....
.HAPPY NEW YEAR

Richard C. Follrod
C. Wayne Swisher
Dr. Fred R. Carsey, Jr .
Ferman E. Moore

HECK'S STORES

OPEN

•\1\ary P. Young
Lois N. Burt
Jean Werry
Susan Andrews
Jon Karschnik
Mary Riggs
Sharon Smith
Dottie 'Musser

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1
NEW YEAR'S DAY
12 NOON TO 8 · PM

Thank you for your
loyal patrona,ae this
past year.

STAFF

Charlene Thomas
Recka McGuire
Jenny Smith
Joan Vaughan
George Hicks
Diana King
Susan Abbott

'

The ~armers Bank &amp; ·$ a.v ings Co.

From All of Us At

heritage house
'Aiddleport, Ohi

'

Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Pr.esident
Thereon Johnson, Exec. Vice President
Paul E. Kloes, Vice President
Roger W. Hysell, Cashier
·
Joanne J. Williams, Assistant Cashier
Evelyn G. Lanning, Assistant Cashier
Addle W. Norris, Loan Officer

POMEROY, OHIO

,

f.

/-.

.,
I

.\

I

'

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